<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/items/browse?output=omeka-xml&amp;page=226" accessDate="2026-05-10T14:26:16+00:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>226</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>4375</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="2963" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3448">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/acd0f98c45adc52b3304098a423ee053.pdf</src>
        <authentication>a762cfa461b8089c1154c97b7d8ac411</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68722">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 14</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68723">
              <text>Winter sessions inserted between fall and spring</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68733">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90040">
              <text>er&#13;
Wednesday , November 30, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 14&#13;
ll ll Nobody can commit photog- ()()&#13;
00 raphy alone. I/ I/&#13;
- Marshall McLuhan&#13;
'&#13;
Winter session inserted&#13;
between fall and spring&#13;
UW-Parkside will add another "term" to its school year with the&#13;
addition of the first Wintersession during the period Jan. 3 - Jan . 13.&#13;
Wintersession is a between-semesters opportunity for college&#13;
students and community residents to take contemporary " minicourses"&#13;
for credit or personal enrichment. Twenty-one courses will&#13;
be offered, carrying one or two credits and meeting between four and&#13;
nine times for about three hours each session .&#13;
Registration for Wintersession can be made in advance, which is&#13;
encouraged, or can be made at the first class meeting Tuesday, Jan . 3.&#13;
Classes run Jan . 3 through Friday, Jan. 6, then continue Monday, Jan .&#13;
9, through Friday, Jan. 13 . Regular second semester classes for the&#13;
Spring semester begin Monday, Jan . 16.&#13;
Advance registration for Wintersession must be made by Dec. 17&#13;
using registration forms which will be available at the Union&#13;
Information Center beginning Monday, Dec. 5, and whi ch will appear&#13;
in the Kenosha News and Racine Journal-Times Dec . 6 and Dec. 7,&#13;
respectively. The Wintersess1on registration form / flyer will contain&#13;
course descriptions and enrollment procedures .&#13;
Ad·.ance registration forms should be brought to the Union&#13;
/&#13;
Information Center or Community Student Services, Room 115,&#13;
Tallent Hall, or mailed to Community Student Services no later than&#13;
Dec. 17. Advance registrations will be confirmed by mail Payment of&#13;
fees must accompany advance registration&#13;
Persons registering in advance will have preference over those&#13;
registering at the first class meeting in cases where courses have size&#13;
limitation, such as certain physical education activity courses&#13;
Wintersession fees will be considerably lower than regular terms&#13;
and no parking permit will be required. Per-credit cost will be S24 25&#13;
for Wisconsin residents ($96.50 for out-of-state) Courses can be&#13;
audited (taken for no credit) at half-price&#13;
Fifteen of the 21 Wintersession courses meet every day, three meet&#13;
five days, one meets four days, one three days, and one, the only&#13;
three-cred it course, involves a three-week trip to Washington D.C. to&#13;
study national policy-making.&#13;
With the exception of the three-credit Washington trip, students&#13;
are limited to two credits - two one-credit courses or one two-credit&#13;
course . Registration for Wintersess1on courses may not be made after&#13;
the second class meeting&#13;
Schedules will be available in the Info Center and Kiosk&#13;
Grlld ·school: easy decision?&#13;
CP.S - Graduate school can be a means towards a professional and&#13;
for some students, while others see it as a means for avoiding the end&#13;
altogether, of their education .&#13;
Consider the choices made by three grad students between the&#13;
ages of 26 and 27 after they received their B.A.'s:&#13;
Jerry graduated from a school in Ohio after concentrating in radio&#13;
and television . He labored in a factory for two years with a stint in a&#13;
restaurant, saving money for out-of-state tuition . After receiving a&#13;
master's degree in television , Jerry landed a cable TV job&#13;
Disenchanted after a year with the job, Jerry went to work as a&#13;
counselor in a.children's home and now admits that a degree in social&#13;
work would have been a better choice that the one he made while in&#13;
college, and has decided not to return to school until he is more&#13;
certain of his vocation. • •&#13;
Tom graduated from an Ivy league school with a degree in&#13;
engineering and went to sea for the US Oceanography Department in&#13;
1972. Tom traveled for six years and began his master's in&#13;
oceanography in California this fall at the government's expense.&#13;
Abby split her four undergraduate years between two schools,&#13;
declaring several majors until she decided on religioCls studies four&#13;
years ago. She went to work as a secretary on a university research&#13;
prorect, put in some time at the college religious center and then&#13;
lobbied against world hunger.&#13;
The students have one thing in common . They were unsure about&#13;
what to do after college and all are passing through the 'trying&#13;
twenties .'&#13;
In Passages, by Gail Sheehy, the trying twenties are the years in&#13;
which individuals move from stages of choosing what they don't&#13;
want to do to doing what they are supposed to do. The role of&#13;
· graduate student is often a safe and familiar form for transition&#13;
during that period.&#13;
"Stop Out"&#13;
Currently, 20 percent of all undergraduates "stop out" or drop out&#13;
of school temporarily to experiment, test workday situations and&#13;
vocational interests Graduate academ1c1ans, counselors anct&#13;
employment recru iters are advising potential graduate stud nts to&#13;
take this route&#13;
Eugene Piedmont, Graduate Registrar at the Un ivers1ty of&#13;
Massachusetts at Amherst, found that older graduate students ha&#13;
definite career goals&#13;
evertheless, many graduate students should not be on campu ,&#13;
according to Dick Leter, a per onal and psychological couns lor at&#13;
Boston University . Leter found dissatisfaction among younger_&#13;
students because they are either in a rush to get ahead or postpone&#13;
life's dec1s1ons .&#13;
David's Daillie, Director of the Counseling Assistance for Old r&#13;
Student at the University of Massachusetts , advises students over 25&#13;
Older students are more motivated and able to use their abilities and&#13;
resources to propel themselves into other fields , sometimes younger&#13;
students find it difficult because they have never ventured away from&#13;
school, according to Daill1e .&#13;
Beceline dangers&#13;
"Those who go straight through getting degrees in human service,&#13;
without peer interactions and professional experience, and then&#13;
assume the role of doctor, become dangerous to themselves and&#13;
others ," added Daillie&#13;
Employment recruiters apparently appreciate older, advanced&#13;
degree job candidates .&#13;
"We're looking for a graduate with a clear idea of where they are&#13;
and a clear idea of where they are 'headed It takes time to get from&#13;
number one to number two," s.aid Virginia Long of Sanders&#13;
Associates, an .electronics research and design firm "It's readily&#13;
apparent to the job interviewer whether they have reachea number&#13;
two," Long added .&#13;
Graduate schooJ is not an easy decision and the second part of this&#13;
report will deal with graduate programs and how well they fill the&#13;
needs of both students and employers . ' &#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University o1 Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
•• views Ranger Newspaper, University ol Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year IQr U.S.A.&#13;
\ -&#13;
Kid prefers bottle over lobotomy&#13;
To the Editor: pampered kids that go to school&#13;
here won't even give a .,decent&#13;
bum the time of day. You come&#13;
to school in your sunday-go-tobar&#13;
best duds and what do you&#13;
get? - a bunch of stares and&#13;
snickers. I don't laugh at those&#13;
ties? I marched. I got drunk.&#13;
Where were you kids?, Well?&#13;
you did - you smoked that&#13;
___ damn hippie marijuana&#13;
and turned Rock and Roll over&#13;
to the perverts and faggots. Yo.u•&#13;
started listening to John Denver&#13;
and phony Joni Mitchell and&#13;
turned your bac1&lt;s on the&#13;
movement. Let's face it, you've&#13;
become a bunch of creeps!&#13;
happened to going into a bar and&#13;
ordering a shot and a beer? No,&#13;
not anymore, you sissies come in&#13;
and say, " I'll have a Manhattan,&#13;
please, or Bartender, a whisky&#13;
sweet, please." Jeez, makes a&#13;
decent self-respecting derelict&#13;
damned depressed . babies in their ___ damn&#13;
As a concerned student at this&#13;
campus, I am personally apalled&#13;
by the lack of derelict&#13;
participation. What has happened?&#13;
Where do people's priorities&#13;
lie? I've panhandled these mean&#13;
brick hallways for about seven&#13;
years now and talk about lean&#13;
times !! Why, these sissy&#13;
disco shirts and high heels! lmean&#13;
what did we fight for in all those&#13;
demonstrations during the sixI&#13;
remember the old battle cry,&#13;
"Work is the curse of the&#13;
drinking class." "I'd rather have a&#13;
bottle in front of me instead of--a&#13;
frontal lobotomy." "Reality is for&#13;
those who can't face alcoholism&#13;
." Yes, I man we fought and&#13;
drank and threw up. ·What did&#13;
you sissies do? I' ll tell you what&#13;
Jack Kerouac would be&#13;
ashamed of you . And so would&#13;
Foster Brooks . What ever&#13;
Listen babies, drink up or get&#13;
off the pot! We've had it!&#13;
Kid Derelict and his All-Stars&#13;
.. ROSAlYNN,&#13;
WAATS MY&#13;
BROTHER&#13;
DOIOOON&#13;
THE ROOF?&#13;
f&#13;
&lt;&#13;
Courtesy of&#13;
([hica.no [tibune&#13;
Carter:, iust an image, no substance&#13;
by Ken Sokolow&#13;
College Press Service&#13;
(Baltimore) - Back in November of '75,&#13;
the Democrats held a · Presidential&#13;
Candidate Forum here in Baltimore, on the&#13;
campus of the John Hopkins University. At&#13;
that mini-convention of sorts, six men who&#13;
sought the 1976 nomination got a chance&#13;
to state their views to an audience&#13;
composed almost entirely of liberals&#13;
(A.D.A., N.O.W., N.D.C. - get the&#13;
picture?). Morris Udall, Sargent Shriver,&#13;
Birch Bayh, Milton Shapp, and Fred Harris&#13;
all tried to out-liberal each other, while&#13;
Terry Sanford, who had been governor of&#13;
North Carolina in antediluvian days, posed&#13;
as a voice of moderation, more in tune&#13;
with the national mood .&#13;
Obscure character&#13;
An even more obscure character than&#13;
those guys (and none of them was exactly&#13;
a household word), a former governor of&#13;
Georgia named Carter, was scheduled to 1&#13;
appear at the forum but did not show up. A&#13;
spokesman explained that governor Carter&#13;
was in Florida trying to convince party&#13;
activists there that he, and not George .&#13;
Wallace, was the true voice of the South .&#13;
This line drew some applause from the&#13;
audience. They sure as hell didn't know&#13;
who Jimmy Carter was, but anybody trying&#13;
to take votes away from Wallace was all&#13;
right in their book. In mine, too.&#13;
I went to New Hampshire in January of&#13;
'76 - it was the site of my first and only&#13;
meeting with Jimmy Carter.&#13;
Fans from Georgia&#13;
The food was good at the party at&#13;
Jimmy's headquarters, the crowd of people&#13;
waiting for Jimmy's arrival friendly, but&#13;
there was something odd about the&#13;
gathering: everybody else there was from&#13;
Georgia. 'fhe grand opening and .Jimmy's&#13;
speech were ope-;:j'to the public, but the&#13;
natives did not show up to be enlightened.&#13;
No, the Carter campaign had flown up&#13;
dozens of shock-troops from the&#13;
candidate's home state to spread the&#13;
gospel according to peanuts and it was&#13;
these reverse carpetbaggers (along with&#13;
several network reporters and myself) who&#13;
comprised his first audience in Nashua.&#13;
Jimmy strode into the little storefront&#13;
headquarters clad in a Levi's leisure suit, a&#13;
man of average height with orange-brown&#13;
hair, a wrinkled face, and that godawful&#13;
grin which the voters came to_ love (and,&#13;
much of the press to despise.) He climbed&#13;
on top of a table and was off and running&#13;
with his short trademark speech: "I'm not a&#13;
lawyer and I'm not from Washington ." ·&#13;
Nashville flashback&#13;
Now, I had seen Robert Altman's&#13;
Nashville , in which soundtrucks brought&#13;
unseen candidate Hal Philip Walker's&#13;
message to the people: "There are too&#13;
many Washington lawyers in government."&#13;
Here-, in the flesh, was Hall Philip&#13;
Walker. Life doesn't always _ imitate art.&#13;
Sometimes it imitates .shock!&#13;
"I'm a farmer and a nuclear engineer,"&#13;
Jimmy continued . On days when he was&#13;
feeling especially self-confident, I later&#13;
learned, the candidate would call himself&#13;
"A nuclear physicist." Today he was using&#13;
the soft sell. Carter soon threw it open for&#13;
questions, his aides and their shills asked&#13;
some carefully rehearsed ones for the&#13;
benefit of the TV cameras, and Carter gave&#13;
his standard answers, usually starting with&#13;
"When l'm)1resident ... "&#13;
Straight answers ·&#13;
I asked him what he thought about the&#13;
proposed nuclear power plant on the New&#13;
Hampshire seacoast. He gave me a long,&#13;
convoluted answer, trying to touch all&#13;
bases. I had phrased the question so&#13;
-ambiguously -that · he had no way of&#13;
knowing where I stood on the issue, so he&#13;
could not simply tell me what I wanted to&#13;
hear.&#13;
Jimmy praised solar energy, called it the&#13;
wave of the future, expressed his desire to&#13;
develop fully our coal reserves, affirmed&#13;
that he would guarantee the country an&#13;
adequate oil supply, and finally admitted&#13;
that nuclear energy was our only feasible&#13;
way out of the energy crunch.&#13;
The upshot was that he was all for the&#13;
construction of the plant, the same one&#13;
the Clamshell Alliance later made a name&#13;
for itself figliting against. I appreciated&#13;
Carter's honesty in giving me an answer,&#13;
albeit a circuitous one. Jimmy may not&#13;
have been the "human waffle" his&#13;
primary opponents made him out to be.&#13;
He did have a few definite opinions. He&#13;
1ust made you wait a while if you wanted&#13;
to hear them .&#13;
I told you so!&#13;
All these exculpatory reminiscences on&#13;
my part are just a long-winded way ot&#13;
saying "I told you so" to the millions of my&#13;
fellow Democrats who voted for President&#13;
Carter, and who are·now burned up at him&#13;
for his ·mcompetence, dismayed by his&#13;
lack of vision, shocked by his refusal to&#13;
admit mistakes _and rectify them,&#13;
despairing for his tack. of a coherent&#13;
economic program . No, Vernon Jordan,&#13;
you should have expected what you got.&#13;
Remember Jerry?&#13;
Actually, Carter does have an economic&#13;
policy. Do you recognize it? You should.&#13;
It's Jerry Ford's "High unemployment, tight&#13;
money, to curb inflation ." Carter has even&#13;
retained Nixon and Ford's money czar,&#13;
Chairman Arthur "Third Degree" Burns .&#13;
But we shouldn't criticize Jimmy now&#13;
for his lack of action of unemployment.&#13;
We should have criticized him for it during&#13;
the campaign - he didn't have any ideas&#13;
on the subject then, either. We bought the&#13;
image of the smiling honest farmer, we&#13;
voted for the image, ·and that's what we&#13;
' got" Just an image, no substance.&#13;
Can Carter point to any success in the&#13;
field of foreign policy to compensate for&#13;
our domestic economic stagnation? Not&#13;
really . The President harbors some&#13;
Wilsonian pretensions of being a&#13;
peace-maker, but the Israelis and the&#13;
Arabs agree on nothing but this : neither&#13;
side trusts Jimmy Carter. "Go, and catch a&#13;
falling star. Get with child a mandrake&#13;
root" - easier to accomplish than to briniz&#13;
peace to the Middle East. In fairness to&#13;
Carter, no one can accomplish that.&#13;
But Carter can point to another foreign&#13;
policy coup: The Panama Canal Treaty.&#13;
This treaty has been condemned by&#13;
conservatives in the President's own party&#13;
as well as by the Republican National&#13;
Committee. Its chances of passing in the&#13;
Senate do not look good . But one other&#13;
national leader has come out in favor of&#13;
the treaty - Jerry Ford . And why not?° It's&#13;
his treaty .&#13;
I can only conclude that, for the kind of&#13;
government and leadership we'xe been&#13;
getting from Carter, we Democrats might&#13;
as well have thrown our nomination and&#13;
support to Jerry Ford. Jimmy, after the first&#13;
eight months of , your administration,&#13;
which is shaping up as the most&#13;
undistinguished since Warren G. Hard·&#13;
ing's, I can only say this: You have&#13;
one-term President written all over you .&#13;
1 Born-again Cynics ·&#13;
The moral of this story is that Lincoln's&#13;
famous dictate is ultimately irrelevant.&#13;
You don't have to fool all of the people all&#13;
of the time. You just have to fool enough&#13;
of them to get yourself 270 electoral votes.&#13;
Oh, Jimmy, you have made born-again&#13;
cynics of us all, yea, even the true&#13;
believers you have betrayed. &#13;
/&#13;
news&#13;
UW poll· reveals student world&#13;
[CPS] - While books and&#13;
surveys are hitting the national&#13;
market about what really&#13;
happened to those children of&#13;
the sixties, a University of&#13;
Wisconsin poll has taken those&#13;
questions to the survivors of the&#13;
seventies and found that today's&#13;
youth " does what it's told, sits&#13;
happily 20 hours a week in front&#13;
of television , and while they can&#13;
identify the newscasters, they&#13;
• have trouble with the newsmakers&#13;
.&#13;
Political Science majors have&#13;
become Farah Fawcett majors .&#13;
About 300 University students&#13;
in introductory history courses&#13;
responded to the survey which&#13;
found that next to the former&#13;
Charlie's Angel, Wafter Mondale&#13;
was the most recognized person .&#13;
Least known public figure was&#13;
Stansfield Turner, director of the&#13;
CIA.&#13;
Quite a few students said you&#13;
should brush your teeth with MK&#13;
Ultra (which was actually an&#13;
insidious drug program conducted&#13;
by the CIA on college&#13;
campuses during the SO's). The&#13;
same group thought the DEA was&#13;
a campus fraternity .&#13;
Wet t-shirts attract protesters&#13;
[CPS] - Wet T-shirt contests&#13;
have become quite the drawing&#13;
card at bars across the country.&#13;
But a bar in Madison, Wisconsin&#13;
has been drawing more than the&#13;
expected. Demonstrators, last&#13;
week numbering more than 80,&#13;
are protesting and picketing the&#13;
bar during the weekly contests,&#13;
reports the Madison Daily&#13;
Cardinal.&#13;
The protestors, who view the&#13;
T-shirt contest as a "sexist&#13;
capitalist atrocity", say they will&#13;
keep up the protests as long as&#13;
necessary. The management said&#13;
they would continue unless&#13;
someone came up with 'good,&#13;
sound arguments' as to why the&#13;
contest should cease .&#13;
The contest involves several&#13;
women , dressed in wh ite T-shirts&#13;
that say " Life at the Big 10,"&#13;
standing on a makeshift stage&#13;
an d d anci ng. The emcee&#13;
continually douses their breasts&#13;
with large beer glasses full of ice&#13;
cold water and comments on the&#13;
spectacle, period ically asking&#13;
the crowd it s opinion .&#13;
Crafts Fair to attract&#13;
90 exhibitors&#13;
More than 90 exhibitors frorr.&#13;
throughout Wisconsin and&#13;
northern Illinois will participate&#13;
in Parkside Activities Board's&#13;
third annual holiday arts and&#13;
crafts fair from 10 a.m . to 4 p .m .&#13;
on Saturday, Dec. 3, in Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
There is no admission charge&#13;
for the event and ticket free&#13;
parking is available in the&#13;
Communication Arts lot.&#13;
Items on exhibit will include&#13;
Christmas decorations, jewelry,&#13;
decoupage, pottery, macrame,&#13;
dried floral arrangements, woodworking,&#13;
toys, sculpture, paintings,&#13;
dough art, ceramics, doll&#13;
clothes, Christmas cards, quilts,&#13;
rosemaling, weavings, candles,&#13;
portrait drawings and basketry.&#13;
The Burger Shoppe and book&#13;
store will be open during the fair.&#13;
Protestor Faye Alroy explained&#13;
that the event was an example of&#13;
sexist exploitation of women's&#13;
bodies . "When a women gets up&#13;
on stage and has cold water&#13;
thrown on her, wearing only a&#13;
White T-shirt, it's not just her as&#13;
an individual that's being treated&#13;
this way, it's all the women in&#13;
this community," she said .&#13;
The contest exploits both men&#13;
and women, Alroy contends,&#13;
=· ,·.&#13;
...&#13;
because it says something about&#13;
the relationship between men&#13;
and women, that it can be&#13;
exploited for money. ·&#13;
The women who participate in&#13;
the contest say they do so&#13;
'because it's fun'-and because it's&#13;
quick and easy money . One did&#13;
object to the tactics of the&#13;
management, who offered the&#13;
women free drinks and tried " to&#13;
get them drunk" .&#13;
Chamber singers perform " King David," a symphonic&#13;
psalm by Swiss composer Arthur&#13;
Honegger, will be presented by&#13;
the Parkside Chamber Singers&#13;
and Chorus and a student-faculty&#13;
instrumental ensemble at 3:30&#13;
p.m . on Sunday, Dec . 4, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Frank Mueller will conduct the&#13;
free public program .&#13;
The concert opera describes&#13;
the life of the biblical King David&#13;
from his youth as a shepherd boy&#13;
until his death as emperor and&#13;
will be sung in Engli,sh .&#13;
Composed in 1921 and using the&#13;
original theater orchestration,&#13;
the work is adapted from a&#13;
drama by Rene Morax.&#13;
Soloists will be Helen Ceci,&#13;
soprano; well known to&#13;
Milwaukee area audiences for&#13;
her recital and chamber work&#13;
including appearances with the&#13;
Sullivan Chamber Ensemble and&#13;
the Florentine Opera Company;&#13;
Carol Irwin, mezzo-soprano, a&#13;
member of the UW-Parkside&#13;
music faculty specializing in&#13;
oratorio ahd lieder who has&#13;
performed solo recitals in the&#13;
U.S., Europe and Asia; and&#13;
Dougfas Krekling, tenor, a UW-P&#13;
graduate now directing choral&#13;
music for St. Francis High School&#13;
and a frequent soloist with area&#13;
choral ensembles&#13;
Norman McPhee, managing&#13;
director of the Racine Theater&#13;
Guild, will be the narrator and&#13;
Rhoda-Gale Pollack of the&#13;
dramatic arts faculty will portray&#13;
the Witch of Endor&#13;
Minority aid shows decline&#13;
[CPS/HED] - Despite all the furor over special&#13;
treatment of minority college applicants-, a new&#13;
study shows that minority participation in all five&#13;
Federal student aid programs dropped from 1974-75&#13;
to 1976-77.&#13;
The largest decline - nine percent - was in the&#13;
Supplemental Grants (SEOG) program , with the&#13;
minority share down from 47.8 t~ 39.1 percent in&#13;
those two years, according to the report by the&#13;
American Council on Education's Higher Education&#13;
Panel. The proportion of minority Basic Grants&#13;
( BEOG) students dropped five percent, from 48 .1 to_&#13;
43 percent, and College Work-Study (CW-S)&#13;
minority participation fell three percent, from 32.6&#13;
to 29.3 percent.&#13;
The, Federal student loan programs, however,&#13;
registered the smallest drops in minority&#13;
participation Minority Direct Loans ( DSL)&#13;
borrowers declined three precent, from 28 .9 to 25 .7&#13;
percent, while minority Guaranteed Student Loans&#13;
(GSL) recipients fell only one percent, from 18 to 17&#13;
percent, according to the report .&#13;
In contrast, female participation in the five&#13;
student aid programs " remained virtually&#13;
unchanged over the two years," the panel said . In&#13;
both years, the percentage of women student aid&#13;
recipients hovered around one-half.&#13;
Lucky winner Jon Flanagan (second from left), 310&#13;
Milwaukee Ave., Burlington, is the recipient of a&#13;
$500 scholarship awarded by Josten's of&#13;
Minneapolis, a school ring company and the&#13;
Parkside Bookstore. The junior major in busines&#13;
and labor economics is shown receiving&#13;
congratulations from (from left) Jim Magnuson of&#13;
Josten's, Jan Ocker, UW-P Financial Aids director,&#13;
and Paul Hoffman, manager of the Parkside Book&#13;
Store. Flanagan, an "A" student, was the&#13;
beneficiary of a lucky entry made by Hoffman at a&#13;
recent trade convention at which he submitted&#13;
Parkside's name in a drawing to determine six&#13;
colleges and universities nationally to receive a&#13;
scholarship for a student at their school.&#13;
UW-Parkside was drawn as a regional winner and a&#13;
scholarship committee, headed by Ocker, chose&#13;
Flanagan.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On Tap At Union Square&#13;
HAVE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
Wit T is Coupon -&#13;
Ladies Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
0 tlle Corner&#13;
1 Per Custo&#13;
of 57tll &amp; 23 Ave.&#13;
P.A.B. PRESENTS&#13;
YOWZAA&#13;
Hours&#13;
M-T&#13;
7p.m ..&#13;
10 p.m.&#13;
Tappers&#13;
2sr&#13;
Mic.&#13;
35c&#13;
THE BRITINS&#13;
Saturda~. December 3rd&#13;
• TICKETS&#13;
TICKETS&#13;
9:00 p.m.&#13;
in&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
(odv.) $2.00 U.W.P. Students&#13;
(odv.) $2.50 General&#13;
$3.00 Door (everuone)&#13;
AVAILABLE- INFO CENTER &#13;
Cheerleaders inspire another victory&#13;
.,&#13;
Basketball season&#13;
starts with-a bang&#13;
by Dave Jones&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Coach Stephens, less a superstar, is pushing on the potential of all&#13;
twelve players with proven success. All twelve men had playing time&#13;
in the first two games . This proves the depth of the team, unlike&#13;
Stephen's team in the past, which wou ld consist of a superstar (AllAmerican),&#13;
who'd run the offense practically all alone. One player in&#13;
particular " ' he's pushing is Joe Foots.&#13;
In talking with Joe after the game, he commented, "Steve's a good&#13;
coach. He doesn't pull the wool over your eyes . He's stressing my&#13;
potential and telling me to drive hard into the basket to get the easy&#13;
two."&#13;
Coach's push on Joe produced some good returns . Joe's&#13;
performance in Friday's game was impressive as he was leading scorer&#13;
in both games . Friday Joe had 19 points, 9 rebounds, 5 assists, and 3&#13;
steals . That wasn't the whole of the game though; Lester Thompson&#13;
had 11 points and 10 rebounds; Marvin Chones also with ·11 points&#13;
and 4 rebounds; Reginald Anderson, a freshman, had 10 points and 4&#13;
rebounds ; Stevie King had only 8 points, but gave the team 7 assists, 4&#13;
rebounds, and 4 steals. This, along with Lonnie Lewis' 6 points and 4&#13;
rebounds , and Jerry Luckett's 5 points and 4 rebounds, Walter Green's&#13;
2 points and 2 rebounds, and Mike Mathews' 2 points . -and 3&#13;
rebounds , gave the Ranger's their first win of the season .&#13;
Parkside beat Milton College Friday night, November 25, 73-54. In&#13;
team totals the Ranger's had 33 goals {41% from the floor), 7 points&#13;
(53% from the line), 48 rebounds, 17 personal foul~, 73 total points,&#13;
and 14 assists .&#13;
The game on Saturday was no different, with four players in double&#13;
figures and another good effort from Joe Foots, Marvin Chones, and&#13;
Stevie King. The Ranger's went on to defeat Wayne State University&#13;
outstandingly by a score of 88-65 . The team seemed a little more&#13;
relaxed and played the first half exceptionally by shooting 76% from&#13;
the floor 1 and 85% from the free throw line.&#13;
Coach Stephens' situation type offense works very well, with the&#13;
balanced squad he possesses . The first two games proved this, yet&#13;
individual effort is very important. Without Stevie King's quickness&#13;
and ballhandling, Joe Foot's scoring, and Marvin Chones' defense, the&#13;
Ranger's would not be as strong as they've proven to be in their first&#13;
two games .&#13;
TheRanger'snextoppositionwillcomefromSt. XavierCollegeon Stevie Ki·ng draws a foul as he goes up.&#13;
Wednesday, November 30, ~t 7:30 in Chicago, Illinois.&#13;
---- _..,..._ -------------- - -~- --&#13;
Joe Foots an!~.&#13;
lj &#13;
0 r,~onnie Lewis put pressure on Wayne State.&#13;
Wayne State defenders can only watch&#13;
as Marvin Chones hooks one in.&#13;
Photos by Philip L. Livingston and Allen C. Fredrickson &#13;
shows· Cabaret at UW-P&#13;
Experimental theatre&#13;
turns studio into tavern&#13;
The popular musical "Cabaret"&#13;
will be performed at UWParkside&#13;
by a national touring&#13;
company, including musicians,&#13;
on Thursday, Dec . 1, at 8 p .m . in&#13;
the Communication Arts theater.&#13;
Reserved seat tickets ($5) are&#13;
on sale at Sears in Kenosha,&#13;
Team Electronics in Racine and&#13;
at the UW -P Union Information&#13;
Center ($3 for Parkside students&#13;
avai+able only at UW-P) . '&#13;
by Wendy Ratner&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Have you ever sat through a play' wishing you had something to&#13;
drink but afraid to 'leave· for fear of missing an important moment?&#13;
Have you ever squinted through an entire play and later bumped&#13;
into the star without realizing it?&#13;
Never before have your wildest fantasies been fulfilled. Now, for&#13;
the first time at Parkside, Diane Johnson invites you to participate in&#13;
an unique theatre experience. With John Dickson's help, Studio B&#13;
will be converted into a bar, where all the actions takes place. And&#13;
you, the audience are part of the set! Actors and actresses will&#13;
mingle with you on the same level. Not only will they be drinking&#13;
but you will, too - beer or soda (because of obvious reas~os, drinks&#13;
are limited two per customer). ,&#13;
Wanda, played by Donna Linde, is a school teacher devoted to&#13;
President Kennedy but looks for the "better things" in life.&#13;
Sparger, a former actor tells us of the decline of "inspired&#13;
amateurs to would-be professionals?" Through his story, we learn&#13;
how "B~ffo's suicide marks the end of any kind of artistic&#13;
community." Anthony D. Warren portrays this individual.&#13;
Carla is very sensitive and human. She has dreamed of being a&#13;
sex goddess but her story deals with "getting ahead" as an- actress.&#13;
Jody Jones plays this unique last survivor in a world of ready-made&#13;
images.&#13;
Mark (Robert C. Jilk), a veteran of Viet Nam, asks himself the&#13;
~ two basic questions that other veterans have themselves wondered.&#13;
"Why am I here? What does this war mean?" A man who has lost&#13;
his naivety in a world of drugs and has nof yet found reality.&#13;
Lastly we come to the young rebellious Rona. The action child of&#13;
the Sixties wonders what she's doing in the- apathetic Seventies.&#13;
She is striving to find a cause worthy enough to fight for.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
A little about the play - Kennedy's Children, by Robert Patrick&#13;
was first performed at the Oark Center in New York Oty, but later&#13;
made its debut at the King's Head in London on October 22, 1974.&#13;
There has been much controversy over his work: can a manuscript&#13;
of an interwoven dialogue be called a "play?" The audience might&#13;
want to decide for themselves.&#13;
Kennedy's Children will be Rresented on December 2, 3, and 4 at&#13;
8:00 p.m. in Studio B, Communication Arts Theatre. Tickets must&#13;
be bought ($1) in advance and will not be sold at the door, due to&#13;
limited seating. The ticket allows you beer or soda but more&#13;
importantly, it takes you into the fantastic idea of experimental&#13;
theatre. For reservations, call Ext. 2457 or 2522. Tickets on sale in&#13;
CA 294, T and TH, 10-3.&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
There are five main characters and one bartender (John Burdick&#13;
- where would we be without him) that Patrick's play is centered&#13;
around. ·&#13;
Cast for "Kennedy's Children,"&#13;
which will be presented at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Dec. 2, 3 and 4 at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
AAA WORLD WIDE&#13;
TRAVEL AGENCY&#13;
Full Seni&lt;-&lt;s&#13;
Tra•PI Aj!;eD&lt;'Y&#13;
•Airlit11&gt; TkkPU • Tours&#13;
•fruun · lfoil • llotf'l&#13;
390'1-52nd 654-0202&#13;
\&#13;
•, ~ \&#13;
1 studio theater B includes Jody&#13;
Jones, Racine, atop the piano,&#13;
Janine Hunter, Kenosha, foreground,&#13;
and Anthony Warren,&#13;
Kenosha, at the keyboard. The&#13;
drama tells the story of \ the&#13;
children of Camelot a decade&#13;
older when all their heroes have&#13;
failed them.&#13;
ISHIRTS+&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
3900 Erie· Street. Racine 414-639-6662&#13;
Open Daily 9am-9pm&#13;
Saturday 9am-5: 3Dpm&#13;
quality corrmercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street · 658-8990&#13;
The Fine Arts and Dramatic Arts Discipline&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
An Adaptation of&#13;
Robert Patrick's&#13;
Kennedy's Children&#13;
December 2, 3, and 4&#13;
Studio B CA D 155A&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Donation of $1.00 includes performance&#13;
and beverage.&#13;
,.&#13;
I I Limited Seating A vailahle_. I&#13;
Tickets can be purchased in advance on Tuesdays and ffl"'&#13;
Thursdays from 10:00 a.m. to 3 :00 p.m. in CA 294. fit &#13;
sports&#13;
Bob Langenohl (532), a UW-Parkside freshman from Franklin, Wis.,&#13;
became the third all-American in UW-P cross-country recently as he&#13;
placed 17th in the NAIA national championship meet here. Running&#13;
with him at this point is Kenosha senior Ray Fredericksen, who&#13;
finished 57th overall. UW-P placed 18th in the 53-te.am field; the&#13;
winning squad was Adams State College of Colorado.&#13;
Photo by P .J. Azzolina&#13;
Club holds&#13;
lecture&#13;
The UW-Parkside cross-country&#13;
ski club and the UW-P&#13;
athletic office will sponsor a&#13;
public lecture Dec . 1 by former&#13;
U.S. team member Peter Davis.&#13;
The free lecture will start at 8&#13;
pm. in rooms 104-106 of the&#13;
Parkside Union . Davis will focus&#13;
on various aspects of cross-country&#13;
skiing, including training,&#13;
waxing, touring, technique,&#13;
competition, equipment and&#13;
course layouts.&#13;
Davis, now director of the&#13;
Telemark Academy at Cable,&#13;
Wis., was a member of the U S&#13;
cross-country ski team from&#13;
1968-73 and the world championship&#13;
team in 1970.&#13;
He coached the 1977 World&#13;
Junior team In St Croix,&#13;
Switzerland, and Is also serving&#13;
as Central Division coach for the&#13;
U.S. team .&#13;
... clinic&#13;
Parks1de's Ski Club will&#13;
sponsor a cross-country skiing&#13;
clinic and show on December 4,&#13;
1977 The club's general goal Is&#13;
the promotion of cross-country&#13;
sk11ng in all respects.&#13;
The show and clinic is&#13;
designed to bring in new skier&#13;
and acquaint them with the&#13;
sport, and also to Imtruct k1ers&#13;
at all levels of prof,c1ency in&#13;
areas such as equipment,&#13;
clothing, techniques, and training&#13;
&#13;
In order to ensure the success&#13;
of this endeavor the club is&#13;
attempting to as emble a wide&#13;
variety of e pertIse from this part&#13;
of Wisconsin&#13;
The , clinic, in the Physical&#13;
Education Building, will open on&#13;
Sunday, December 4, at 1 00&#13;
p .m and close at 5:00 p .m.&#13;
Four hundred runners c_ompete in NAIA Na·tionals&#13;
by John VanDenBrandt&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
On Saturday, November 18, at&#13;
11 a.m., a gunshot echoed&#13;
through the woods and prairie of&#13;
Kenosha County. Deer hunting in&#13;
Northern Wisconsin? No, this&#13;
gun was a starter's pistol and its&#13;
crack sent more than 400 runners&#13;
thundering over Parkside's cross&#13;
country course, in a five mile&#13;
race that would decide the&#13;
N.A.I.A. National Championship.&#13;
The ground trembled and dust&#13;
flew as the tide of runners&#13;
poured over the course. A once&#13;
tightly bunched crowd soon&#13;
transformed itself into a long and&#13;
winding snake of runners that&#13;
grew to be nearly a mile long by&#13;
the race's end. Three harriers&#13;
headed the procession : Bob&#13;
McCloud and Mark Rabuse of&#13;
Pittsburg State (Kansas), along&#13;
with Gary Henry of Pembroke'&#13;
State (North Carolina). With only&#13;
200 yards remaining, Henry&#13;
finally edged away to capture&#13;
the individual title in a record&#13;
breaking 24:11 .0. Two Wisconsin&#13;
runners finished among the top&#13;
twenty-five, earning them a&#13;
berth on the All-American Team .&#13;
Joe Hanson of LaCrosse capped&#13;
his college career with a sixth&#13;
place finish. Parkside's freshman&#13;
sensation, Bob Langenhol&#13;
wrapped up a superlative season&#13;
with his sparkling 17th place&#13;
effort. langenhol is Parkside's&#13;
third Cross Country AllAmerican&#13;
. He joins the ranks of&#13;
Lucian Rosa and Rudy Alvarez .&#13;
Parks1de's other four scorers&#13;
were Ray Fredricksen, 57th; Jeff&#13;
Miller, 85th; Bill Werve, 226th,&#13;
and John Poulokas, 247th .&#13;
The Rangers tallied 518 points&#13;
to take 18th in the team scoring&#13;
Adams State (Colorado) won the&#13;
meet with 102 points and in&#13;
second came Saginaw Valley&#13;
(Missouri) scoring 133 points&#13;
Other Wisconsin team's finishes&#13;
included UW-LaCros e whom&#13;
netted 7th place and UWEauClaire&#13;
took th 14th team&#13;
spot Altogether there were fiftythree&#13;
teams competing in the&#13;
at,onal meet&#13;
The Ranger distance men now&#13;
join the other members of the&#13;
track team to open up the&#13;
1977-78 indoor track season with&#13;
an inter-squad "mini-meet" in&#13;
Parkside' PE Budding at 6 00&#13;
p.m, Friday, December 2, 1977.&#13;
Women's b~sketball team plays their first varsity game&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Friday, November 25, Parkside's&#13;
Women's Basketball team&#13;
played their first varsity game&#13;
against UW-Milwaukee at 5:15,&#13;
preceding the Men's game. They&#13;
lost a disappointing game at&#13;
48-57, after leading 27-24 at the&#13;
half. The team has a two week&#13;
lay-over till the next game which&#13;
will be Friday, December 9,&#13;
against UW-Stout and Saturday,&#13;
December 10, against UW-River&#13;
Falls, both games away.&#13;
Leading scorers for Parkside&#13;
were Colleen Douglas (15), and&#13;
Frozene Hayes (15). Colleen&#13;
Douglas had 6 goals, shooting an&#13;
amazin·g 42% from the floor and&#13;
with 3 points (60%) at the line.&#13;
Frozene Hayes, with 5 goals and&#13;
5 points at the line. Other Parkside&#13;
scorers included Lydia Allen&#13;
(6 points); Diana Kolovos (6&#13;
points); and Marylou Moreno&#13;
also (6 points). The team shot a&#13;
very discouraging 23% from the&#13;
floor and 53% at the line.&#13;
UW-Milwaukee headed their&#13;
scoring contingency with Marge&#13;
Dethloff (15 points) with 4 goals&#13;
and 7 points at the line. Other&#13;
top scorers included Betty Willis&#13;
(12), Cheryl Patane (10}, and&#13;
Jean Muron (6).&#13;
· The Ranger's team totals went&#13;
as follows : 17 for 73 from the&#13;
floor, 14 for 26 at the line, 45&#13;
rebounds, and 22 personal fouls .&#13;
The fouls column really tells the&#13;
story, with Diana Kolovos&#13;
fouling out half way through the&#13;
second period which aided&#13;
Milwaukee to then pull away&#13;
from Parkside. With three other&#13;
starters in foul trouble (Pershell&#13;
Denson-4, Colleen Douglas-4,&#13;
and Frozene Hayes-4), it became&#13;
difficult for the Ranger's to really&#13;
play a tight defense when&#13;
Milwaukee took the jump.&#13;
Commenting on the game,&#13;
Coach Sue Tobachnik said, "I'm&#13;
pleased with the game overall,&#13;
because we did well in areas I&#13;
had not expected to, but it also&#13;
shows we've got a lot of work&#13;
ahead of us. We're going to&#13;
really be working on shot&#13;
selection, because some of the&#13;
players are going to have to learn&#13;
to discriminate better. I was&#13;
especially pleased with Colleen&#13;
Douglas and Marylou Moreno,&#13;
as they showed good control and&#13;
really set the pace with their&#13;
good hustling. I'll also be&#13;
expecting to see a lot more from&#13;
Lydia Allen and Diana Kolovos&#13;
as they both showed reai&#13;
improvement, which showed in&#13;
their scoring tonight . Wrapping&#13;
it up I'd have to say that we have&#13;
the potential to do well, but it's&#13;
going to have to take a lot of&#13;
hard work on everyone's part."&#13;
The 1977-78 Women's arsity&#13;
Basketball Team includes Lydia&#13;
Allen (Racine Park}, fre hman;&#13;
Pershell Denson (Milwaukee&#13;
orth}, freshman , Colleen&#13;
Douglas (Racine Park), freshman;&#13;
Frozene Hayes (Racine Park),&#13;
sophomore, Diana Kolovos&#13;
(Wilmot}, senior, Martha&#13;
Leonard (Belleville East}. fresnman;&#13;
Marylou Moreno (Racine&#13;
St Catherine's). freshman ;&#13;
Annette Moutry (Milwaukee&#13;
Madison), freshman; and Carol&#13;
Shinske (Kenosha Bradford).&#13;
sophomore. Second semester&#13;
they'll be Joined by Aleta (Dita}&#13;
Hunter (Kenosha Bradford),&#13;
sophomore. The team is headed&#13;
by Coach Sue Tobachnik. &#13;
events&#13;
Thursday, December 1&#13;
Natural Childbirth Colloquium Two presentations&#13;
open to the public 2:00 p.m. and 6:30 p.m . in CL&#13;
105. Jeanne Rose, University of Michigan, Natural&#13;
Childbirth Instructor and Sister Colette, Head OB&#13;
Nurse, St. Catherine's Hospital will speak .&#13;
Friday, December 2&#13;
Lecture Man in Competition with the Spruce&#13;
Budworm - an Application ot' Computing&#13;
Science and Differential Equations by Ph i lip&#13;
Tuchinsky, Professor of Mathematics, Ohio&#13;
Wesleyan University. 3:30 p1m . in CL 107 {Coffee:&#13;
3:00 p.m. in CL 111). This is a Mathematics&#13;
Colloquium .&#13;
Lecture Formation . of Glacial Features around&#13;
Burroughs Glacier in S.E. Alaska · by , Dave&#13;
Mickelson, University o·f Wisconsin-Madison.&#13;
12noon in CR 113. Tliis is an Earth Scien&lt;c:e&#13;
· Colloquium.&#13;
Film Dog Day Afternoon 8:00 p.m . in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Saturday, December 3&#13;
Dance with the Britians (Last appeared here at last&#13;
year's The End) 9:00 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
Art Fair in Main Place 10:00 'a.m . tQ 4:00 a.m. Free!&#13;
Sunday, December 4&#13;
Film Dog Day Afternoon at 7:30 p.m. in Union_&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00. ,&#13;
Tuesday, December 6&#13;
Lecture Student Teaching Abroad, Education in&#13;
Europe, and Current Education Issues in the U.S.&#13;
by Ron Podesch, Associate Professor of Education&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. 4:00 p.m. to&#13;
7:00 p·.m. in WLLC D-173 (Main Place conference&#13;
room) . Interested parties are invited to drop in&#13;
anytime during this period.&#13;
Wednesday, December 7&#13;
Mime Graciela, prominent woman mimist, will&#13;
perform in the Communication Arts Theatre at 8:00&#13;
p.m . Tickets at Info. Center. Sponsored by the&#13;
P.A.B. Performing Arts and Lecture Committee.&#13;
Wednesday, December 14&#13;
Readers your last issue of Ranger for Fall Semester.&#13;
With luck the construction of our new office and&#13;
darkroom will be completed so next semester,&#13;
expect imp~ovements! First Spring issue will be&#13;
published Wednesday, January 18, 1978 and every&#13;
Wednesday until May 10.&#13;
Thursday, December 15&#13;
Next Basketball Home Game Rangers vs .&#13;
UW-Whitewater at 7:30 p.m . in the Phy~ical&#13;
Building. Early season games with one of Parkside's&#13;
favorite rivals have always been exciting.&#13;
Chi-Rho active in Advent&#13;
The Campus Ministers at Chi-Rho Center announce the following&#13;
Advent schedules and i1:ivite your participation .&#13;
SUNDAYS - The theme of the celebrations at 10:00 and 11 :30&#13;
a.m . during the three Sundays preceeding. Christmas will be a&#13;
response to the question "Is GOD-WITH-US?", which is a translation&#13;
Weed reference&#13;
book published f&#13;
Marijuana is probably the&#13;
' most used and abused drug to&#13;
entice the American people&#13;
since alcohol. Understanding the&#13;
Weed, Michael Keith McBride's&#13;
everything-you-wanted-to-know&#13;
book about marijuana. (Greatlakes&#13;
Living Press, $4.95) is a&#13;
mini-encyclopedia about the&#13;
drug and what the 13-million&#13;
folks who use it do with it. Of&#13;
course they smoke it, but they&#13;
also use it ,to liven up&#13;
home-made date bars and&#13;
leftover spaghetti .sauce. By the&#13;
, way, George Wjishington was&#13;
said to have grown it but not&#13;
smoked it, and Queen Victoria&#13;
-used it to relieve monthly female&#13;
trouble.&#13;
This book lays ' bare the&#13;
substance and its use, discusses&#13;
addiction, side effects, THC (the&#13;
drug's narcotic substance), and&#13;
reviews today's drug laws - with&#13;
information on local, state,&#13;
national and international restrictions.&#13;
&#13;
Besides being an encyclopedia&#13;
for pot smokers, Understanding&#13;
the Weed offers parents of pot&#13;
smokers the kind of information&#13;
they will oeed . to talk&#13;
intellige~tly with their kids aboµt&#13;
the use and abuse of marijuana.&#13;
All the buzz words are here, and&#13;
details on cigarettes, joints,&#13;
pipes, bongs·, roaches, water&#13;
pipes and other aspects of using&#13;
the weed are explained in clear&#13;
and concise language - simple&#13;
enough for those over 30 to&#13;
nderstahd.&#13;
of the Hebrew word, Emmanuel. Participation in the Uturgical 1&#13;
services, besides being an immediate preparation for the celebration&#13;
qf the historical coming of Jesus, will be an experience of His&#13;
Kingdom as it comes and is present ·in our daily lives. '&#13;
WEDNESDAYS - An evening of reflection and prayer is planned&#13;
for Wednesday, December 7 at 7:30 p.m . It is an opportunity to slow '&#13;
down, to take a personal inventory, to question, to reflect and to get&#13;
in touch with oneself and others. The evening concludes with the&#13;
celebration of Mass in anticipation of 'Thursday's feast of the&#13;
Immaculate Conception .&#13;
On Wednesday, December 14 at 7:30 p.m. we will view the film,&#13;
SON OF MAN. It is an opportunity to get acquainted with the Jesus&#13;
whose life we say helps shape our daily lives. It is the story of a&#13;
person who struggles within a culture, at a certain time in history, to&#13;
discover answers to the same questions we ask ourselves each day. To&#13;
see the film is to..make his experience our experience.&#13;
Wednesday, December 21 at 7:30 p.m. is set aside for a communal&#13;
penance celebration. We pause to ask God's · healing for ourselves&#13;
and we extend the same forgiving spirit to those who share our .daily&#13;
lives and cares. Please join· us if you can!&#13;
Chi-Rho Center is located at 3825 12th Street in Kenosha. More&#13;
information may be obtained by phoning the Center at 552-8626.&#13;
GRACIELA&#13;
Wed. Dec. 7&#13;
adm: $2.50 adv&#13;
$3.00 door&#13;
/ Comm Arts&#13;
Theatre&#13;
tickets at&#13;
Info Center&#13;
A mime artist of International Reputation&#13;
. .................................................... .&#13;
ARTS &amp; C~AFTS FAIR&#13;
SATURDA1, DECEMBER 3&#13;
10-4&#13;
MAIN PLACE&#13;
FREE&#13;
-</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68719">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 6, issue 14, November 30, 1977</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68720">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68721">
                <text>1977-11-30</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68724">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68725">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68726">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68727">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68728">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68729">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68730">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68731">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68732">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="110">
        <name>community</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="372">
        <name>information center</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1225">
        <name>jimmy carter</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="4552">
        <name>winter classes</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2962" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3447">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/c951a00270e5ffea4d0e4331a6fd8495.pdf</src>
        <authentication>c298d53a6c57d1543dd13d75316657f1</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68707">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 13</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68708">
              <text>New Parking lot opens</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68718">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90039">
              <text>an er&#13;
Wednesday, November 23, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 13&#13;
()() We are all robots when uncrltl- $)~&#13;
cally involved with our&#13;
technologies.&#13;
Marshall McLuhan&#13;
Quentin Flore&#13;
War and Peace In the Global&#13;
VIiiage&#13;
New parking lot opens&#13;
The new Physical Education Parking Lot opened&#13;
lot has&#13;
last&#13;
two&#13;
Monday&#13;
entrances&#13;
to both red and&#13;
white parking permit bearers. The on County 'JR'.&#13;
Image survey suggests&#13;
. c~a-nges at UW-P Library&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Parkside's library image survey, recently distributed to&#13;
approximately 7500 students, faculty and staff, and special&#13;
borrowers, has concluded that respondents would like to receive&#13;
more designated quiet work areas in the library, the need for&#13;
additional recreational readings and periodicals, and more sufficent&#13;
information in the way of maps, posters, pamphlets, etc .&#13;
Respondents also criticized in the form of written comments, the&#13;
library's delay in shelving books, and the library's limited hours of&#13;
service.&#13;
The intention of the questionnaire was to gather data concerning&#13;
the community-awareness of the Parkside library and the services it&#13;
has to offer. Through the tabulated responses, analyze data was&#13;
obtain and calculated into mathematical means and standard&#13;
deviations.&#13;
Nine hundred fifty-six questionnaires were returned, tabulated,&#13;
and broken down as follows : 118 freshmen , 111 sophomores, 60&#13;
juniors, 102 seniors, 94 special students, 66 faculty, 62 staff, 307&#13;
special borrowers, and 36 giving no identification. Of the faculty an.d&#13;
' students, 475 were full time, and 144 part time. Of all the gro_ups,&#13;
special borrowers were the most positive in their responses about the&#13;
library's image and students were the least Overall, the survey's&#13;
results showed a positive image of the library&#13;
Due to the survey's results, members of the library study team have&#13;
begun changes requested by survey respondents . Now there are&#13;
rooms available to accommodate students needs for quietness&#13;
Respondents felt a strong need for materials not related for&#13;
curriculum study . The library administration is now m the process of&#13;
investigating approaches for providing recreational reading material&#13;
In the near future, both the Kenosha and Racine public libraries,&#13;
along with Parkside's library, will be involved in a paperback&#13;
book exchange. Library users will be permitted to exchange a paperback&#13;
book of theirs for one in the library's paperback collection .&#13;
Further investigation includes the possibility of a joint rental&#13;
current fiction collection between Kenosha, Racine, and Parkside&#13;
libraries . All three library institutions would rent a sizable wllection&#13;
and circulate the books among themselves&#13;
Another survey of library services will be enclosed in the spring&#13;
semester registrational packets. The survey's main goal is to&#13;
determine new services which library users believe Parkside might&#13;
provide. The survey will also determine how successful Parkside is in&#13;
providing existing services . &#13;
education . ,&#13;
Breadth and academic&#13;
advising become&#13;
university policy&#13;
The Faculty Senate has given final approval to the breadth and&#13;
academic advising requirements. The breadth of knowledge rule,&#13;
~hich will apply only to new students entering during and after the&#13;
fall of 1978, will require the students to successfully complete a&#13;
required core of 30 credits.&#13;
The specific areas from which the courses mtrst be selected is&#13;
outlined below.&#13;
The academic advising rule will require all students to meet with a&#13;
volunteer faculty advisor before they register ......for school. Summer&#13;
sessions won't be included. This poticy also becomes effective with&#13;
the fall registration.&#13;
Under the academic advising rule, all students must also declare an&#13;
area of interest before completing 45 credits, and a major before 60&#13;
credits are completed. If the student fails to declare a major before 60&#13;
"credits are finished, he will be transferred to special student status.&#13;
The Senate also approved a proposal to form an Interim Committee&#13;
on Graduate Programming which will handle academic, educational&#13;
and scholastic matters which pertain to graduate programming, until&#13;
these functions are permanently transferred to standing committees.&#13;
The final rules qn academic advising and the breadth requirement&#13;
follow:&#13;
30 cr&#13;
*The total of 9 credits per unit must include work in at least two&#13;
disciplines. No more than 6 credits iri anyone discipline may be&#13;
counted toward fuffifling the Breadth of Knowledge requirement.&#13;
Academic Skills courses, English 090, 100, &amp; 100, O-Ievel mathematics&#13;
courses and foreign language courses taken to fulfiJI the language&#13;
requirement, will not count toward the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
Requirement.&#13;
This policy is in effect for students first entering Parkside in the fall&#13;
semester of 1978. Other students may opt to graduate under this&#13;
policy by specific request.&#13;
3 cr&#13;
POLICY ON ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
The UWP Faculty is committed to the belief that academic&#13;
advising of students should be done by the faculty, and hereby enacts&#13;
the following policy: .&#13;
[1] Formal declaration of an area of interest must be made upon&#13;
completion of 45 credits. Formal declaration of a major is required&#13;
upon completion ot 60 credits. A student who fails to make such&#13;
formal declarations by these deadlines will be transferred to&#13;
special student status and will be so notified. Students are&#13;
encouraged to identify an area of interest as early as possible in&#13;
·their academic careers, but they are free, of course, to change the&#13;
area of interest or major.&#13;
[2] Every student shall have an assigned advisor or advising officer as&#13;
provided below:&#13;
(a) Students with declared majors or area of interest shall be&#13;
advised by faculty members in theit major or area of interest.&#13;
It is the responsibility of the divisions to decide the advising&#13;
format for their unit.&#13;
(b) Students ...who have not declared a major or area of interest&#13;
shall be assigned faculty advisors bv-the Office of the Dean of&#13;
the Faculty. These advisors will be assigned according to the&#13;
students' preliminary interests, if any. All such assignments&#13;
will be made with the prior -'consent of the proposed&#13;
faculty advisor.&#13;
[3] A student who is a candidate for a degree must secure his advisor's&#13;
signature, or the signature of the advisor's designee, prior to each&#13;
registration, excluding summer session. The signature indicates&#13;
only that the opportunity for advising has occurred.&#13;
[4] These policies shall become effective with the fall registration of&#13;
1978 .&#13;
POLICY ON THE BREADTH OF KNOWLEDGE REQUIREMENT&#13;
To insure that the degree programs of UW-Parkside students&#13;
include study in a variety of academic fields, the following&#13;
requirements are established. To obtain a UWP degree, a student&#13;
must accumulate 9 credits in each of 3 designated areas of study and&#13;
3 credits in the 4th area, making the core of studies of 30 credits.&#13;
The areas are defined by courses offered by the following academic&#13;
divisions:&#13;
1. Fine Arts and Humanities&#13;
2. Social and Behavioral Sciences&#13;
3. Science&#13;
4. Management Science, Engineering Science, Labor&#13;
Economics and Education (excluding Physical&#13;
Education courses)&#13;
9 cr"&#13;
9 cr"&#13;
9 cr"&#13;
...&#13;
_~an~er is w~tten a.no edited by students 01 the&#13;
University 01 'WIsconsln·Parkside and they are solely&#13;
re,sponsible lor its editorial polley and content.&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, University 01 'Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year lor U.S.A.&#13;
education .,&#13;
,,&#13;
Breadth and academic&#13;
advisillg beCo-me&#13;
unive&#13;
_rsity policy&#13;
The Faculty Senate has given final approval to the breadth and&#13;
academic advising requirements. The breadth of knowledge rule,&#13;
which will apply only to new students entering during and after the&#13;
fall of 1978, will require the students to successfully complete a&#13;
required core of 30 credits .&#13;
The specific areas from which the courses mtJst be selected is&#13;
outlined below.&#13;
The academic advising rule will require all students to meet with a&#13;
volunteer faculty advisor befoce they register- for school. Summer&#13;
sessions won't be included . This policy also becomes effective with&#13;
the fall registration .&#13;
POLICY ON THE BREADTH OF KNOWLEDGE REQUIREMENT&#13;
To insure that the degree programs of UW-Parkside students&#13;
include study in a variety of academic fields, the following&#13;
requirements are established . To obtain a UWP degree, a student&#13;
must accumulate 9 credits in each of 3 designated areas of study and&#13;
3 credits in the 4th area, making the core of studies of 30 Cfedits .&#13;
The areas are defined by courses offered by the following academic&#13;
divisions:&#13;
1. Fine Arts and Humanities&#13;
2. Social.and Behavioral Sciences&#13;
3. Science&#13;
4. Management Science, Engineering Science, Labor&#13;
Economics and Education (excluding Physical&#13;
Education courses)&#13;
9 er*&#13;
9 er*&#13;
9 er*&#13;
3 er&#13;
30 er&#13;
*The total of 9 credits per unit must include work in at least two&#13;
disciplines . No more than 6 credits in any one discipline may be&#13;
counted toward fulfilling the Breadth of Knowledge requirement.&#13;
Academic Skills courses, English 090, 100, &amp; 100, 0-/eve/ matliematics&#13;
courses and foreign language courses taken to fulfill the language&#13;
requirement, will not count toward the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
Requirement.&#13;
This policy is in effect for students first entering Parkside in the fall&#13;
semester of 1978. Other students may opt to graduate under this&#13;
policy by specific request.&#13;
1&#13;
Under the academic advising rule, all students must also declare an&#13;
area of interest before completing 45 credits, and a major before 60&#13;
credits are completed. If the student fails to declare a major before 60&#13;
-credits are finished, he will be transferred to special student status .&#13;
The Senate also approved a proposal to form an Interim Committee&#13;
on Graduate Programming which will handle academic, educational&#13;
and scholastic matters which pertain to graduate programming, until&#13;
these functions are permanently transferred to standing committees .&#13;
The f inal rules ~n acadell)ic advising and the breadth requirement&#13;
follow :&#13;
POLICY ON ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
The UWP Faculty is committed to the belief that academic&#13;
advising of students should be done by the faculty , and hereby enacts&#13;
the following policy : ·&#13;
[1] Formal declaration of an area of interest must be made upon&#13;
completion of 45 credits . Formal declaration of a major is required&#13;
upon completion ot 60 credits. A student who fails to make such&#13;
formal declarations by these deadlines will be transferred to&#13;
special student status and will be so notified. Students are&#13;
en·couraged to identify an area of interest as early as possible in&#13;
their academic careers, but they are free, of course, to change the&#13;
area of interest or major.&#13;
[2] Every student shall have an assigned advisor or advising officer as&#13;
provided below:&#13;
(a) Students with declared majors or area of interest shall be&#13;
advised by faculty members in their major or area of interest.&#13;
It is the responsibility of the divisions to decide the advising&#13;
format for their unit.&#13;
(bl Students, who have not declared a major or area of interest&#13;
shall be assigned faculty advisors by the Office of the Dean of&#13;
the Faculty . These advisors will be assigned according to the&#13;
students' preliminary interests, if any. All such assignments&#13;
will be made with the prior ' consent of the proposed&#13;
faculty advisor.&#13;
[3] A student who is a candidate for a degree must secure his advisor's&#13;
signature, or the signature of the advisor's designee, prior to each&#13;
registration, excluding summer session. The signature indicates&#13;
only that the opportunity for advising has occurred.&#13;
[ 4] These policies shall become effective with the fall registration of&#13;
1978.&#13;
-~an~er is wr!tten a_nd edited by students of the&#13;
University ~I Wisc~nsin-~ar~side and they are solely&#13;
re,sponsible for its editorial policy and cont ent.&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A. &#13;
•&#13;
views&#13;
"Viewing humans"&#13;
criticize review&#13;
Dear Editor: minimal appeal. Also, a&#13;
specialization was not "canned"&#13;
as indicated in your editorial.&#13;
Rather, labels were replaced,&#13;
courses added and deleted, to&#13;
provide a rather clear sense of&#13;
purpose to the Mass Communication&#13;
option, which was not'&#13;
present under the Public&#13;
Information heading.&#13;
Second, we are not equivalent&#13;
in school size, facilities, or&#13;
number of faculty to provide&#13;
programs comparable in scope&#13;
to those offered by Madison,&#13;
Minnesota, or Northwestern.&#13;
Third, the work load in Mass&#13;
Communication is currently&#13;
shared by one tenure track&#13;
professor in Communication and&#13;
one lecturer in Humanities. The&#13;
discipline has recognized the&#13;
need for an additional tenure&#13;
track position in Mass Communication.&#13;
And, contrary to the&#13;
statement or implication in your&#13;
editorial, we did try for such a&#13;
position, but were denied it by&#13;
the administration.&#13;
And fourth, our new professor&#13;
slot in Organizational Communication&#13;
evidences our "common&#13;
sense" because the interest of&#13;
'the students and the mission of&#13;
the University call for an&#13;
extended Organizational Communication&#13;
program. With the&#13;
help of a senior person,&#13;
Communication will increase its&#13;
chances for faculty expansion in&#13;
the future.&#13;
As mentioned earlier, we&#13;
appreciate the coverage given&#13;
Communication by the Ranger.&#13;
We just ask that such coverage&#13;
be fair, be based on complete&#13;
information, and take into&#13;
consideration the realities of&#13;
financing and program development.&#13;
Bruce Weaver, Coordinator&#13;
Alan Rubin&#13;
Re6ecc~ Rubin&#13;
The Communication Discipline&#13;
would like to thank the&#13;
Ranger for publicizing recent&#13;
changes in the Communication&#13;
program. As' these changes&#13;
suggest, our faculty has spent&#13;
long hours in clarifying and&#13;
adding internal order to the&#13;
~Communication major. Your&#13;
November 16 editorial does not&#13;
reflect the merits of these&#13;
changes, however, as you fail to&#13;
consider the following points.&#13;
First, a new program is rarely&#13;
designed to meet the needs or&#13;
desiresof one or two individuals.&#13;
Instead, it is usually created to&#13;
provide a good number of&#13;
students with basic knowledge in&#13;
the field and the opportunity to&#13;
make choices in that field. We&#13;
feel that the new Mass&#13;
Communication option allows&#13;
students to pursue different&#13;
goals as is evidenced by our&#13;
television, radio, and yes even,&#13;
journalism courses. Certainly,&#13;
the "publishing" major proposed&#13;
',., your editorial would have&#13;
interacting with humans In a&#13;
production that stresseda reality&#13;
of the human condition,&#13;
estrangement. The alienation of&#13;
friends and family by a common&#13;
fallibility of mankind, a lie.&#13;
Hellman wasn't asking, "Can&#13;
two friends love each other too&#13;
much?" Ms. Ratner is selling&#13;
Hellman short by suggesting her&#13;
only concern in writing this play&#13;
was to answer questions about&#13;
homosexuality, or even human&#13;
sexuality.&#13;
Ms. Ratner did give credit to&#13;
both Deborah Bell and John&#13;
Dickson in what may have been&#13;
a compliment. We would like to&#13;
give credit to Rhoda-Calle&#13;
Pollack, as well as Deborah Bell&#13;
and John Dickson and all the&#13;
members of Parkside Theatre, for&#13;
giving to us a performance that&#13;
was neither phony nor artificial.&#13;
- Mil", Lynn M.ki&#13;
Sunn unwn&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Wendy Ratner's review (in the&#13;
Nov.9 issue)of lillian Hellman's&#13;
The Children's Hour, a Parkside&#13;
Theatre production, compels us&#13;
to write.&#13;
Ms. Ratner "witnessed a&#13;
courageous effort by the&#13;
members of the Parkside&#13;
Theatre, to perform. . (a) complicated&#13;
play, ... " Ms. Ratner&#13;
also "thought that the theatre&#13;
members knew their roles well."&#13;
But she asks, "why then did the&#13;
play seem so phony and&#13;
artificial?" Opening night was&#13;
"compared to a typical dress&#13;
rehearsal", mistake laden, in&#13;
other words.&#13;
We also viewed the play on&#13;
opening night and sensed some&#13;
opening night jitters. But we did&#13;
not let that interfere with our&#13;
experience of the players or the&#13;
play. We were viewing humans&#13;
Fair, shmair, if the Mass&#13;
Communication specialization&#13;
was more developed, we would&#13;
probably attract more than six&#13;
students to put out a weekly&#13;
newspaper. -Editor&#13;
FOR THE&#13;
YOUNGSTER&#13;
IN YOUR LIFE&#13;
IDEAL&#13;
CHRISTMAS GIFTS&#13;
Kf \Tf R FOOl)&#13;
M1' f R 1lIi. \\ rH&#13;
Best Selection Ever!!&#13;
. over&#13;
1000&#13;
.,Juvenile Titles In Stock&#13;
An Ideal&#13;
Christmas G~ft UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore "ONLY .$150 MUdl! - Ihmdl! 9 1.1. - 1 p.II.&#13;
fridlY 9 1.11. - • p.I.&#13;
Silurdl! 10 1.11. - 1 p.llI.&#13;
CLOSED THANKSGIYIIG WEmlD&#13;
• views D&#13;
Communication discip.line ~ . ~,,,&#13;
k R • -Ai-~ H.~ as . s anger to be fair =,o::-~.-.:~~ -w·~ : ~ : ..-...&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
The Communication Discipline&#13;
would like to thank the&#13;
Ranger for publicizing recent&#13;
changes in the Communication&#13;
program . As• these changes&#13;
suggest, our faculty ~as spent&#13;
long hours in clarifying and&#13;
adding internal order to the&#13;
, Communication major. Your&#13;
November 16 editorial does not&#13;
reflect the merits of these&#13;
changes, however, as you fail to&#13;
consider the following points .&#13;
First, a new program is rarely&#13;
designed to meet the needs or&#13;
desires of one or two individuals.&#13;
Instead, it is usually created to&#13;
provide a good number of&#13;
students with basic knowledge in&#13;
the field and the opportunity to&#13;
make choices in that field . We&#13;
feel that the new Mass&#13;
Communication option allows&#13;
students to pursue different&#13;
goals as is evidenced by our&#13;
television, radio, and yes even,&#13;
journalism courses . Certainly,&#13;
the "publishing" major proposed&#13;
'." your editorial would have&#13;
minimal appeal. Also, a&#13;
specialization was not "canned"&#13;
as indicated in your editorial.&#13;
Rather, labels were replaced,&#13;
courses added and deleted, to&#13;
provide a rather clear sense of&#13;
purpose to the Mass Communication&#13;
option, which was not&#13;
present under the Public&#13;
Information heading.&#13;
Second, we are not equivalent&#13;
in school size, facilities, or&#13;
number of faculty to provide&#13;
programs comparable in scope&#13;
to those offered by Madison,&#13;
Minnesota, or Northwestern .&#13;
Third, the work load in Mass&#13;
Communication is currently&#13;
shared by one tenure track&#13;
professor in Communication and&#13;
one lecturer in Humanities. The&#13;
discipline has recognized the&#13;
need for an additional tenure&#13;
track position in Mass Communication.&#13;
And, contrary to the&#13;
statement or implication in your&#13;
editorial, we did try for such a&#13;
position, but were denied it by&#13;
the administration.&#13;
And fourth, our new professor&#13;
slot in Organizational CommuniIDEAL&#13;
&#13;
CHRISTMAS GIFTS&#13;
cation evidences our "common&#13;
sense" because the interest of&#13;
the students and the mission of&#13;
the University call for an&#13;
extended Organizational Communication&#13;
program. With the&#13;
help of a senior person,&#13;
Communication will increase its&#13;
chances for faculty expansion in&#13;
the future.&#13;
As mentioned earlier, we&#13;
appreciate the coverage given&#13;
Communication by the Ranger.&#13;
We just ask that such coverage&#13;
be fair, be based on complete&#13;
information, and take into&#13;
consideration the realities of&#13;
financing and program development.&#13;
&#13;
Bruce Weaver, Coordinator&#13;
Alan Rubin&#13;
Rebecca Rubin&#13;
Fair, shmair, if the Mass&#13;
Communication specialization&#13;
was more developed, we would&#13;
probably attract more than six&#13;
students to put out a weekly&#13;
newspaper. -Editor&#13;
'~Viewing humans''&#13;
• • • • cr1t1c1ze review&#13;
Jo the Editor:&#13;
Wendy Ratner's review (in the&#13;
ov. 9 issue) of Lillian Hellman's&#13;
The Children's Hour, a Parkside&#13;
Theatre production, compels us&#13;
to write.&#13;
Ms . Ratner " witnessed a&#13;
courageous effort by the&#13;
members of the Parkside&#13;
Theatre, to perform (a) complicated&#13;
play, " Ms . Ratner&#13;
also "thought that the theatre&#13;
members knew their roles well."&#13;
But she asks, "why then did the&#13;
play seem so phony and&#13;
artificial?" Opening night was&#13;
" compared to a typical dress&#13;
rehearsal" , mistake laden, in&#13;
other words.&#13;
We also viewed the play on&#13;
opening night and sensed some&#13;
opening night jitters. But we did&#13;
not let that interfere with our&#13;
experience of the players or the&#13;
play. We were viewing humans&#13;
interacting with humans in a&#13;
production that stressed a reality&#13;
of the human cond1t1on ,&#13;
estrangement The alienation of&#13;
friends and family by a common&#13;
fallibility of mankind, a lie&#13;
Hellman wasn't asking, "Can&#13;
two friends love each other too&#13;
much?" Ms Ratner 1s selling&#13;
Hellman short by suggesting her&#13;
only concern in writing this play&#13;
was to answer questions about&#13;
homosexuality, or even human&#13;
sexuality&#13;
Ms. Ratner did give credit to&#13;
both Deborah Bell and John&#13;
Dickson in what may have been&#13;
a compliment. We would like to&#13;
give credit to Rhoda-Galle&#13;
Pollack, as well as Deborah Bell&#13;
and John Dickson and all the&#13;
members of Parkside Theatre, for&#13;
giving to us a performance that&#13;
was neither phony nor art1f1c1al&#13;
-Mary Lynn Maid&#13;
Susan Larsen&#13;
BOOKTI-RIFT FOR THE&#13;
YOUNGSTER HARDCOVER IN YOUR LIFE&#13;
l \7f&#13;
~ Best Selection Ever!! . over&#13;
1000&#13;
, Juvenile Titles In Stock&#13;
An Ideal&#13;
Christmas G~ft&#13;
ONLY&#13;
*I so&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
Monday - Thursday 9 a. . - 7 p.&#13;
f riday 9 a.m. - 4 p. .&#13;
Saturday 10 a.m. - 1 p.m.&#13;
CLOSED THANKSGIVING WEEKEND &#13;
arts&#13;
Concert- date changed&#13;
Enrichment&#13;
near total&#13;
rejoin his&#13;
1977 -78 Accent on&#13;
series. He is now&#13;
recovery and will&#13;
orchestra in January.&#13;
The university had the option&#13;
of cancelling the concert but&#13;
decided that series subscribers&#13;
who had purchased tickets&#13;
expecting Kenton would prefer&#13;
to delay the concert to insure his&#13;
appearance. The January date&#13;
also will enable Kenton, and his&#13;
musicians to conduct an&#13;
afternoon clinic here for area&#13;
high school students.&#13;
The Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series is sold out. &lt;, )~&#13;
Da Vinci fest continues&#13;
The Parks ide Accent on&#13;
Enrichment concert by Stan&#13;
Kenton and his orchestra&#13;
scheduled for Dec. 13 has been&#13;
moved to Thursday, Jan. 26, the&#13;
university announced today.&#13;
Series season ticket holders have.&#13;
been notified.&#13;
The concert was moved to&#13;
January at Kenton's request, so&#13;
that he could appear personally&#13;
with his orchestra, an Accent on&#13;
Enrichment spokesman said.&#13;
Kenton's orchestra has been&#13;
conducted by others since he&#13;
'suffered a head injury in a fall&#13;
earlier this year, after the time he&#13;
had been booked into the&#13;
The Leonardo Da Vinci&#13;
Festival at Parkside will include&#13;
several lectures by visiting&#13;
Leonardists, films on the&#13;
Renaissance genius' work and&#13;
displays, in addition to the&#13;
gallery exhibit of models of his&#13;
drawings.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
Quality co-crerctct printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990&#13;
Leonardo da Vinci: Profile of&#13;
the Artist will be the topic of a&#13;
lecture by JamesBeck, professor&#13;
of art history at Columbia&#13;
University at 8 p.m. on Dec. 8 in&#13;
the theater.&#13;
In conjunction with the&#13;
festival, the academv-awardwinning&#13;
film I, Leonardo will be&#13;
shown at the Colden Rondelle&#13;
Theater in Racine at 7:30 p.m. on&#13;
Nov. 28, and the film Leonardo,&#13;
Giant of the Renaissance will be&#13;
shown at the Kenosha Public&#13;
Museum at 2:00 p.m. on Dec. 4.&#13;
The Parks ide library will&#13;
display materials from its&#13;
Leonardo collection through&#13;
December 15and a video display&#13;
featuring art works by Leonardo&#13;
will be in operation in Main&#13;
Place of the Library-Learning&#13;
Center during the festival.&#13;
All festival events are free and&#13;
open to -the public Persons&#13;
wishing to attend the film at the&#13;
Rondelle should call the box&#13;
office for free reservations.&#13;
The festival had its formal&#13;
opening November 13 in the&#13;
Parkside Union, which was the&#13;
setting for "Arr Evening With&#13;
Leonardo da Vinci," a Renaissance&#13;
style dinner and entertainment.&#13;
OPEl 8 U1. TIL 10:30 P.•.&#13;
2615 WI.hil"toll IWt. 6M-217S&#13;
Ladle,Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
o. tIIo C.r ... r&#13;
.f 57t11&amp; 23 A.o&#13;
,Graciella 'to perform&#13;
at Comm. Arts Theatre&#13;
Cracteta, considered one of&#13;
the foremost female mimes, will&#13;
perform Wednesday, Dec. 7, at 8&#13;
p.m., in the Communication Arts&#13;
theater.&#13;
A former pupil of the great&#13;
french mime Marcel Marceau,&#13;
Graciela is 29-year old Graciela&#13;
Binaghi, a native of Argentina.&#13;
Her one-woman show is in two&#13;
acts, 'featuring a variety of&#13;
routines. that showcase her&#13;
talents as an actress, comedienne,&#13;
dancer, mimic, choreographer&#13;
and clown, all in&#13;
pantomime.&#13;
Her characters range from&#13;
comic to tragic, including a&#13;
faint-hearted bullfighter, punchdrunk&#13;
boxer, fidgety school girl,&#13;
tough Apache dancer, sultry&#13;
stripper, panhandling drunk and&#13;
terrified adult.&#13;
Tickets are a,vailable in&#13;
advance at Sears in Kenosha,&#13;
Team Electronics in Racine and&#13;
at the UW-Parkside Union Information&#13;
Center ($2.50 in advance,&#13;
$3 at the door, $2 in advance for&#13;
UW-P students}. Her appearance&#13;
is being sponsored by the&#13;
student Parks ide Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
Marceau has written of&#13;
Graciela: "She has a great poetic&#13;
force and one finds in her the&#13;
elegance of the gazelle combined&#13;
with the impetuosity of a&#13;
lioness. I am pound to present to&#13;
you my pupil who has become&#13;
the very talented Graciela, who&#13;
will go further and further on&#13;
that marvelous road we call&#13;
pantomime."&#13;
She was originally a dancer.&#13;
Why mime?&#13;
"I believe that the most&#13;
important moments in our lives&#13;
happen in silence," she says. "A&#13;
look is more eloquent than a&#13;
thousand words; a gesture is&#13;
more truthful than a brilliant&#13;
dissertation "&#13;
Graciela began the study of&#13;
ballet at the age of five. By the&#13;
time she was 18 she had become&#13;
sertouslv interested in modern'&#13;
dance. Three years of work with&#13;
Rodolfo Danton and Cecilia&#13;
Bullaude plus several performances&#13;
convinced her to leave&#13;
Argentina to study in Europe.&#13;
In 1969 she moved to Paris and&#13;
studied modern dance with&#13;
Jerome Andrews and Michele&#13;
Tvar and joined the dance-mime&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the SlIhmlrine&#13;
San.wfieh&#13;
i~_; ..'·"&amp;'i:&#13;
~&#13;
HAYE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
Wltll Tlals c••p•••&#13;
1 Por C.st •• or YOWIII&#13;
Noun&#13;
M-T&#13;
7 p.m ••&#13;
10 p.m.&#13;
T_"on&#13;
25'&#13;
Mle.&#13;
35"&#13;
MI.oll Dri.ks,&#13;
40"&#13;
workshop at Carcassone. She&#13;
then attended the Ecole International&#13;
de Mime Marcel&#13;
Marceau. While at school she&#13;
joined the Compagnie International&#13;
de Mime directed by&#13;
Ella Jarosewicz, with whom she&#13;
toured in France.&#13;
At Marceau's school Graciela&#13;
joined forces with fellow mime&#13;
Jack Hill to form the Mask and&#13;
Mime Theatre which came to the&#13;
United States in 1970 and&#13;
received a grant from the New&#13;
York Council of the Arts while&#13;
they were artists in residence at&#13;
the State University of New York&#13;
at New Paltz. They toured t~&#13;
US. and Argentina, including&#13;
appearances at New York's&#13;
Cubiculo Theatre, for the next&#13;
two years.&#13;
Graciela was artist in&#13;
residence at 'the North Carolina&#13;
School of the Arts, winstonSalem,&#13;
North Carolina, during&#13;
the summer of 1976 where she&#13;
began performing her one&#13;
woman show. Since then she has&#13;
toured extensively and served&#13;
residencies at a number of&#13;
college.s and communi'ty&#13;
theaters.&#13;
arts&#13;
Concert date changed&#13;
The Parkside Accent on&#13;
Enrichment conceft by Stan&#13;
Kenton and his orchestra&#13;
scheduled for Dec . 13 has been&#13;
moved to Thursday, Jan . 26, the&#13;
un iversity announced today .&#13;
Series season ticket holders have.&#13;
been notified .&#13;
The concert was moved to&#13;
January at Kenton's request, so&#13;
that he could appear personally&#13;
with his orchestra, an Accent on&#13;
Enrichment spokesman said .&#13;
Kenton's orchestra has been&#13;
conducted by others since he&#13;
-suffered a head injury in a fall&#13;
earlier this year, after the time he&#13;
had been booked into the&#13;
1977-78 Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series. He is now near total&#13;
recovery and will rejoin his&#13;
orchestra in January.&#13;
The university had the option&#13;
of cancelling the concert but&#13;
decided that series subscribers&#13;
who nad purchased tickets&#13;
expecting Kenton would prefer&#13;
to delay the concer:_t to insure his&#13;
appear:.ance. The January date&#13;
also will enable Kenton, and his&#13;
musicians to conduct an&#13;
afternoon clinic here for area&#13;
high school students. ,&#13;
The Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series is sold out. '\ /.&#13;
Da Vinci fest continues&#13;
The Leonardo Da Vinci&#13;
Festival at Parkside will include&#13;
several lectures by visiting&#13;
Leonardists , films on the&#13;
Renaissance genius' work and&#13;
displays, in addition to the&#13;
gallery exhibit of models of his&#13;
drawings .&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
quality corrmerciol printers&#13;
1417 50th street - 658-8990&#13;
Leonardo da Vinci: Profile of&#13;
the Artist will be the topic of a&#13;
lectu·re by James Beck, professor&#13;
of art history at Columbia&#13;
University at 8 p .m. on Dec. 8 in&#13;
the theater. ,&#13;
In conjunction - with the&#13;
festival , the academy--awardwinning&#13;
film /, Leonardo will be&#13;
shown at the Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theater in Racine at 7:30 p.m . on&#13;
Nov. 28, and the film Leonardo,&#13;
Giant of the Renaissance will be&#13;
shown at the Kenosha Public&#13;
Museum at 2:00 p.m . on Dec. 4.&#13;
The Parkside Library will&#13;
display materials from its&#13;
Leorsiardo collection through&#13;
December 15 and a video display&#13;
featuring art works by Leonardo&#13;
will be in operation in Main&#13;
Place of the Library-Learning&#13;
Center during the festival.&#13;
All festival events are free and&#13;
open to ·the publ]J: Persons&#13;
wishing to attend the film at the&#13;
Rondelle should call the box&#13;
office for free reservations.&#13;
The festival had its formal&#13;
opening November 13 in the&#13;
Parkside Union, whkh was the&#13;
setting for "Arr Evening With&#13;
Leonardo da Vinci," a Renaissance&#13;
style dinner and entertainment,&#13;
&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
San~l1ieh&#13;
;-~m"~:&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
261S W11hlngton IWe. 634-2373&#13;
HAVE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
With This Coupon -&#13;
1 Per Customer YOW ZAA&#13;
Ladies Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Ont•ecorner&#13;
of 57tll &amp; 23 Ave.&#13;
Hours&#13;
M-T&#13;
7 p.m. - 10p.m.&#13;
Tappers&#13;
25t&#13;
Mic.&#13;
35c&#13;
Mixed Drinks&#13;
40c "&#13;
_,&#13;
_Gracie Ila -to Perform&#13;
at Comm. Arts Theatre&#13;
Graciela, considered one of&#13;
the foremost female mimes, will&#13;
perform Wednesday, Dec. 7, at 8&#13;
p.m ., in the Communication Arts&#13;
theater.&#13;
A former pupil of the great&#13;
French mime Marcel Marceau,&#13;
Graciela is 29-year old Graciela&#13;
Binaghi, a native of Argentina.&#13;
Her one-woman show is in two&#13;
acts, featuring a variety of&#13;
routines that showcase her&#13;
talents as an actress, comedienne,&#13;
dancer, mImIc, choreographer&#13;
and clown, all in&#13;
pantomime.&#13;
Her characters range from&#13;
comic to tragic, including a&#13;
faint-hearted bullfighter, punchdrunk&#13;
boxer, fidgety school girl,&#13;
tough Apache dancer, sultry&#13;
stripper, panhandling drunk and&#13;
terrified adult.&#13;
Tickets are a_vailable in&#13;
advance at Sears in Kenosha,&#13;
Team Electronics in Racine and&#13;
at the UW-Parkside Union Information&#13;
Center ($2.50 in advance,&#13;
$3 at the door, $2 in advance for&#13;
UW-P students). Her appearance&#13;
is being sponsored by the&#13;
student Parkside Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
Marceau has written of&#13;
Graciela: "She has a great poetic&#13;
force and one finds in her the&#13;
elegance of the gazelle combined&#13;
with the impetuosity of a&#13;
lioness . I am pound to present to&#13;
you my pupil who has become&#13;
the very talented Graciela, who&#13;
will go further and further on&#13;
that marvelous road we call&#13;
pantomime."&#13;
She was originally a dancer. -&#13;
Why mime?&#13;
"I believe that the most&#13;
important moments in our lives&#13;
happen in silence," she says . "A&#13;
look is more eloqyent than a&#13;
thousand words; a gesture is&#13;
more truthful than a brilliant&#13;
dissertation ."&#13;
Graciela began the study of&#13;
ballet at the age of five. By the&#13;
time she was 18 she had become&#13;
serio_usly interested in modern'&#13;
dance. Three years of work with&#13;
Rodolfo Danton and Cecilia&#13;
Bullaude plus several -performances&#13;
convinced her to leave&#13;
Argentina to study in Europe.&#13;
In 1969 she moved to Paris and&#13;
studied modern dance with&#13;
Jerome Andrews and Michele&#13;
Tyar and joined the danc_e-mime&#13;
workshop at Carcassone. ·she&#13;
then attended the Ecole International&#13;
de Mime Marcel&#13;
Marceau . While at school she&#13;
joined the Compagnie International&#13;
de Mime directed by&#13;
Ella Jarosewicz, with whom she&#13;
toured in France.&#13;
At Marceau's school Graciela&#13;
joined forces with fellow mime&#13;
Jack Hill to form the Mask and&#13;
Mime Theatre which came to the&#13;
United States in 1970 and&#13;
received a grant from the New&#13;
York Council of the Arts while&#13;
they were artists in residence at&#13;
the State University of New York&#13;
at New Paltz . They toured tht?&#13;
U.S.. and Argentina, including&#13;
appearances at New York's&#13;
Cubiculo Theatre, for the next&#13;
two years.&#13;
Graciela was artist in&#13;
residence at 'the North Carolina&#13;
School of the Arts, WinstonSalem,&#13;
North Carolina, during&#13;
the summer of 1976 where she&#13;
began performing her one&#13;
woman show. Since then she has&#13;
toured extensively and served&#13;
residencies at a number of&#13;
college.s and community&#13;
theaters . &#13;
news&#13;
'Close Encounters'&#13;
deals with 'them'&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
the other day, a serous movie tan was overheard&#13;
saying; "Hev. what's happening with that Speilberg&#13;
movie, you know, Third Encounters of a Close&#13;
News reports on Close En~ounters of the Third kind?"&#13;
Kind-Steven Spielberg's science fiction/facti And then there are stories from those who have&#13;
speculation extravaganza scheduled for release this served on the film crew and who know a whole lot&#13;
coming Christmas-are almost unavoidably comical. more about the movie than we do. These reports&#13;
Take for example an early "scoop" on the interviewed Vilmos Zaigmond, who photographed&#13;
production in that same publication that cracked the movie, and who speaks at length in the&#13;
the Watergate story, The Washington Post. This interview about some of the other films he has&#13;
report, published in the summer of 1976, tells all: photographed (McCabe and Mrs. Miller,&#13;
how the movie begins, how the plot thickens, Deliverance, Cinderella Liberty, Obsession, and&#13;
practically how the movie ends-plus what it was Speilberg's The Sugarland Express) until he is asked&#13;
like to watch the shooting of the picture on the to name the most difficult filming sequence he has&#13;
closed set in Mobile, Alabama, last year. "The ever done, His answer: "The final scene of Close&#13;
Washington Post tried everything to get onto our Encounters that was shot in Alabama." Asked why:&#13;
set," says Stephen Speilberg in a recent interview in "Because we had the biggest set of all times to light.&#13;
Sight and Sound magazine. "Their reporter, who - The site was so big that when 1 turned one brute on&#13;
likened himself to Bob Woodward, decided that it was like lighting a match. I had to turn on four or&#13;
the best way to break our security was to interview five brutes on together to make a noticable change&#13;
some of the extras at night in bars when they're on the set.c Asked whether this problem was finally&#13;
loose and fancy free, and then write his story in the solved, Zsigrncnd delivers the following intriguing&#13;
first person, as though he had been there reporting statement: "Oh, I think we finally conquered it. It&#13;
the whole thing himself. It was printed, and it was was very, very difficult not only because of the&#13;
the most erroneous, far-fetched encounter of the hugeness of the set but also because we were&#13;
fifth kind I had ever read." dealing with something we had to believe in. We&#13;
Other papers trying, too didn't want to go into a science-fiction treatment&#13;
More often, reports on Close Encounters of the where anything goes. We had to handle it like it can&#13;
Third Kind are far less brazen than The Washington really happen and if you see the movie you would&#13;
Post's, and just a little off-key, echoing the gentle believe in them. So we had to deal with the fantasy&#13;
uncertainty- felt by most of us-when we venture to basically, but at the same time it had to be real." No&#13;
speak of a production shrouded in mystery. An item explanation is' given of what he means by "them".&#13;
in Cue magazine for example, states that Dr. J. Spielberg, in order to be able to film the final&#13;
Allen Hyneck, an investigator of UFO phenomena scenes of the movie, had to rent the "world's largest&#13;
and the former associate director of the aircraft hangar" which just happens to be at&#13;
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory at Harvard, ......Mobile, Alabama. A 24-hour guard_ was posted at&#13;
"recently served as the technical advisor for the the hangar because some of the special effects of&#13;
soon-to-be-released Columbia picture, Close the final scenes were labeled as being "extremely&#13;
Encounters of the Third Kind." That's all right. Just dangerous".&#13;
Punishment&#13;
beats&#13;
Monday&#13;
nigh.t sports&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On Tap Al Union Square&#13;
by Bob Hensen&#13;
_ Ranger Staff&#13;
Monday, November 14th, the&#13;
Parkside Philosophical Society&#13;
and Richard Wasserstrom took&#13;
on Monday night football and&#13;
Won. 78 students, lawyers, and&#13;
other community people showed&#13;
up to hear P..r.of.Wasserstrom&#13;
give a talk on Punishment.&#13;
Wasserstrom, a professor of law&#13;
and philosophy at U.CLA.,&#13;
lectured on the rightness of&#13;
punishing people on moral and&#13;
utilitarian grounds and came to&#13;
~ the conclusion that since there is&#13;
no one theory that covers all&#13;
instances where punishment is&#13;
used, it is not right to punish&#13;
people.'&#13;
Tuesday there was an informal&#13;
discussion on sexism. 44 people&#13;
were in attendance to hear&#13;
Wasserstrom make statements to&#13;
the effect that sex and race&#13;
should be treated no differently&#13;
than eye color. "In all 122 people&#13;
heard an intelligent man give&#13;
two talks that had relevance to&#13;
today's society, spoken in&#13;
language they could understand,&#13;
and they were able to ask any&#13;
questions they had on the issues,&#13;
said a society spokesman.&#13;
,&#13;
"Light&#13;
UW·pinvited to Winterim '78'&#13;
Parkside students have been&#13;
invited to participate in&#13;
"Washington Winterim '78" next&#13;
January in the nation's capital.&#13;
The three-week concentrated&#13;
program examines the making of&#13;
national policy and laws through&#13;
briefings at government offices,&#13;
lectures, topical discussions, and&#13;
meetings with people and&#13;
organizations that have an&#13;
impact on national decisionmaking.&#13;
The Washington program is a&#13;
project of the Washington&#13;
Center for Learning Alternatives,&#13;
a non-profit, independent 00·&#13;
cational organizatTon which&#13;
arranges academic programs&#13;
Cocaine. may not be&#13;
classified 'narcotic'&#13;
Court cases in states where&#13;
cocaine is classified as a narcotic&#13;
are challenging that classification.&#13;
They say that since narcotic&#13;
drugs are so classified because of&#13;
their physically addictive properties&#13;
(such as the opiates -&#13;
heroin, morphine and methadone),&#13;
cocaine, as a psvcbologically&#13;
addictive drug, should&#13;
not be in the same class.&#13;
In Illinois, attorneys for three&#13;
men arrested last winter on&#13;
charges of alleged sale of&#13;
cocaine say that charges should&#13;
be dropped because the Illinois&#13;
Controlled Substances law&#13;
"erroneously" labels cocaine a&#13;
narcotic. At the hearing, the&#13;
lawyers produced three affidavits&#13;
from accredited doctors with&#13;
supporting evidence.&#13;
with field experience components&#13;
for college and university&#13;
students&#13;
Prof Samuel J. Pernacciaro,&#13;
who is coordinating the program&#13;
at UW-Parkside, said it offers&#13;
students an opportunity to turn&#13;
the break between semesters&#13;
into a rewarding, educational&#13;
off-campus experience The&#13;
program cernes three UW-P&#13;
political science credits. Pernacciero&#13;
said the S325 fee includes&#13;
housing accommodations. Persons&#13;
interested in registering for&#13;
the program should contact him&#13;
at Greenquist Hall Room 313&#13;
(telephone 553-2427 or 553-2316)&#13;
Statement, filed by Dr. Robert&#13;
G Newman, associate general&#13;
director of operations at Beth&#13;
Israel Medical Center in New&#13;
York City, said that cocaine,&#13;
even when used repeatedly and&#13;
with large doses does not cause&#13;
physical dependence, and that it&#13;
has a very low Incidence of&#13;
medical complications In sharp&#13;
contrast with narcotics&#13;
Richard Trais, student attorney&#13;
at Western tlhnots University,&#13;
said that cases of thts type "will&#13;
make waves, just as the majonty&#13;
of people changed their views&#13;
about marijuana in the last ten&#13;
years. Cultural attitudes, political&#13;
attitudes - the whole thing IS&#13;
symbolic, a reaction to certain&#13;
American norms"&#13;
ONLy'1595&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
~)c&gt;&#13;
v.&#13;
Up Your Life!!&#13;
with the&#13;
Versatile Lamp From Luxo&#13;
use it anywhere- tables, desks, workbenches, headboards, shelves,&#13;
, ladders, drafting tables, sewing machines, or chairs!&#13;
:' -, ~ ...&#13;
..~...&#13;
. .&#13;
1lIIU, - nllYI, , u. -1 , .•.&#13;
friO, , u. - 4 , .•.&#13;
Sllml' 11U. - 1 , .•.&#13;
CLOSED THAMKSGIYlIC IEmlD&#13;
···&#13;
news&#13;
'Close Encounters' UW-P invited to Winterim '78'&#13;
deals with 'them'&#13;
Parkside students have been&#13;
invited to partIcIpate in&#13;
"Washington Winterim 78" next&#13;
January in the nation's capital.&#13;
The three-week concentrated&#13;
program examines the making of&#13;
national policy and laws through&#13;
briefings at government offices,&#13;
lectures, topical discussions, and&#13;
meetings with people and&#13;
organizations that have an&#13;
impact on national decisionwith&#13;
field experience components&#13;
for college and unIversIty&#13;
students .&#13;
Prof Samuel J. Pernacciaro,&#13;
who Is coordinating the program&#13;
at UW-Parks1d , said It offers&#13;
students an opportunity to turn&#13;
the break between semesters&#13;
into a rewarding, educational&#13;
off-campus experience. The&#13;
program ames three UW-P&#13;
political science credits . Pernacciaro&#13;
said the S325 fee includes&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
News reports on Close Encounters of the Third&#13;
Kind-Steven Spielberg' s science fiction / fact/&#13;
speculation extravaganza scheduled for release this&#13;
coming Christmas-are almost unavoidably comical.&#13;
Take for example an early "scoop" on the&#13;
production in that same publication that cracked&#13;
the Watergate story, The Washington Post. This&#13;
report, published in the summer of 1976, tells all :&#13;
how the movie begins, how the plot thickens,&#13;
practically how the movie ends-plus what it was&#13;
like to watch the shooting of the picture on the&#13;
closed set in Mobile, Alabama, last year. "The&#13;
Washington Post tried everything to get onto our&#13;
set," says Stephen Speilberg in a recent interview in&#13;
Sight and Sound magazine. "Their reporter, who&#13;
likened himself to Bob Woodward, decided that&#13;
the best way to break our security was to interview&#13;
some of the extras at night in bars when they're&#13;
loose and fancy free, and- then write his story in the&#13;
first person, as though he had been there reporting&#13;
the whole thing himself. It was printed, and it was&#13;
the most erroneous, far-fetched encounter of the&#13;
fifth kind I had ever read."&#13;
Other papers trying, too&#13;
More often, reports on Close Encounters of the&#13;
Third Kind are far less brazen than The Washington&#13;
Post's, and just a little off-key, echoing the gentle&#13;
uncertainty felt by most of us-When we venture to&#13;
speak of a production shrouded in mystery . An item&#13;
in Cue magazine for example, states that Dr. J.&#13;
Allen Hyneck, an investigator of UFO phenomena&#13;
and the former associate director of the&#13;
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory at Harvard,&#13;
"recently served as the technical advisor for the&#13;
soon-to-be-released Columbia picture, Close&#13;
Encounters of the Third Kind." That's all right . Just&#13;
Punishment&#13;
beats&#13;
Monday&#13;
nigh_t sports&#13;
by Bob Hansen&#13;
_ Ranger Staff&#13;
the other day, a serous movie fa11 was overheard&#13;
saying; "'Hey, what's happening with that Speilberg&#13;
movie, you know, Third Encounters of a Close&#13;
kind?"&#13;
And then there are stories from those who have&#13;
served on the film crew and who know a whole lot&#13;
more about the movie than we do. These reports&#13;
interviewed Vilmos Zsigmond, who photographed&#13;
the movie, and who speaks at length in the&#13;
intervi€w about some of the other films he has&#13;
photographed (McCabe and Mrs. Miller,&#13;
Deliverance, Cinderella Liberty, Obsession, and&#13;
Speilberg's The Sugarland Express) until he' is asked&#13;
to name the most difficult filming sequence he has&#13;
ever done, His answer: "The final scene of Close&#13;
Encounters that was shot in Alabama ." Asked why :&#13;
" Because we had the biggest set of all times to light.&#13;
• The site was so big that when I turned one brute on&#13;
it was like lighting a match. I had to turn on four or&#13;
five brutes on together to make a noticable change&#13;
on the set." Asked whether this problem was finally&#13;
solved, Zsigmond delivers the following intriguing&#13;
statement: "Oh, I think we finally conquered it. It&#13;
was very, very difficult not only because of the&#13;
hugeness of the set but also because we were&#13;
dealing with something we had to believe in. We&#13;
didn't want to go into a science-fiction treatment&#13;
where anything goes. We had to handle it like it can&#13;
really happen and if you see the movie you would&#13;
believe in them . So we had to deal with the fantasy&#13;
basically, but at the same time it had to be real." No&#13;
explanation is' given of what he means by "them".&#13;
Spielberg, in order to be able to film the final&#13;
scenes of the movie, had to rent the " world's largest&#13;
aircraft hangar" which just happens to be at&#13;
Mobile, Alabama . A 24-hour guard was posted at&#13;
the hangar because some of the special effects of&#13;
the final scenes were labeled as being "extremely&#13;
dangerous".&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
Oa Tap At Union Square ~--.&#13;
..., .,&#13;
making.&#13;
The Washington program is a&#13;
project of the Washington&#13;
Center for Learning Alternatives,&#13;
a non-profit, independent edcational&#13;
organization which&#13;
arranges academic programs&#13;
housing accommodations. Persons&#13;
interested in registering for&#13;
the program should contact him&#13;
at Greenquist Hall Room 313&#13;
(telephone 553-2427 or 553-2316)&#13;
•&#13;
Cocaine. may not be&#13;
classified 'narcotic'&#13;
Court cases in states where&#13;
cocaine is classified as a narcotic&#13;
are challenging that classification&#13;
. They say that since narcotic&#13;
drugs are so classified because of&#13;
their physically addictive properties&#13;
(such as the opiates -&#13;
heroin, morphine and methadone),&#13;
cocaine, as a psychologically&#13;
addictive drug, should&#13;
not be in the same class&#13;
In Illinois, attorneys for three&#13;
men arrested last winter on&#13;
charges of alleged sale of&#13;
cocaine say that charges should&#13;
be dropped because the Illinois&#13;
Controlled Substances Law&#13;
"erroneously" labels cocaine a&#13;
narcotic. At the hearing, the&#13;
lawyers produced three affidavits&#13;
from accredited doctors with&#13;
supporting evidence.&#13;
Statements filed by Dr Robert&#13;
G ewman, associate general&#13;
director of operations at Beth&#13;
Israel Medical Center in New&#13;
York City, said that cocaine,&#13;
even when used repeatedly and&#13;
with large doses does not cause&#13;
physical dependence, and that It&#13;
has a very low incidence of&#13;
medical complications in sharp&#13;
contrast with narcotics.&#13;
Richard Tra1s , student attorney&#13;
at Western Illinois University,&#13;
said that cases of this type "will&#13;
make waves, ju t as th ma1onty&#13;
of people changed their views&#13;
about marijuana in the last ten&#13;
years Cultural attitudes, political&#13;
attitudes - the whole thing is&#13;
symbolic , a reaction to certain&#13;
American norms "&#13;
~- N\~u,c ~ o~ill\O S\ree~3&#13;
Open 32,\ . ~\~ 5 .@63&#13;
Mon. &amp; Fr, . " ?\IC.\oe, 1 ,qA,) @4- Noon til 9 ~~,._..&#13;
Sat. Noon ti/ 5&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS- JOKES - NOVELTIES&#13;
.. - .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. . . . . ., .. •••• , t •&#13;
\_." _:&#13;
:· . .. . . .&#13;
··tight Up Your Life!!&#13;
with the&#13;
Versatile Lamp From Luxo&#13;
Monday, November 14th, the&#13;
Parkside Philosophical Society&#13;
and Richard Wasserstrom took&#13;
on Monday night football and&#13;
won . 78 students, lawyers, and&#13;
other community people showed&#13;
up to hear Prof. Wasserstrom&#13;
give a talk on Punishment.&#13;
Wasserstrom, a professor of law&#13;
and philosophy at U.C.L.A.,&#13;
lectured on the rightness of&#13;
punishing people on moral and&#13;
utilitarian grounds and came to&#13;
the conclusion that since there is&#13;
no one theory that covers all&#13;
instances where punishJ"Q_ent is&#13;
used, it is not right to punish&#13;
people. ·&#13;
Tuesday there was an informal&#13;
discussion on sexism . 44 people&#13;
were in attendance to hear&#13;
Wasserstrom make statements to&#13;
the effect that sex and race&#13;
should be treated no differently&#13;
than eye color. " In all 122 people&#13;
heard an intelligent man give&#13;
two talks that had relevance to&#13;
today's society, spoken in&#13;
language they could understand,&#13;
and they were able to ask any&#13;
questions they had on the issues,&#13;
said a society spokesman.&#13;
use it anywhere- tables, desks, workbenches, headboards,&#13;
, ladders, drafting tables-, sewing machines, or chair !&#13;
helve&#13;
ONLY$ 1595&#13;
UW Parkside ~o ~ay - n,ruay 9 a.a. - 7 ,.a.&#13;
F ri~ay 9 a.a. - 4 ,.a.&#13;
Bo kstore Sat1rby 10 a.a. - 1 ,.a.&#13;
CLOSED THANKSGIVING WEEKEND&#13;
' &#13;
news&#13;
Dow' Chemical. not indebted&#13;
to Freedom of Spee,ch gt CMU&#13;
(CPS) - "WE have a new body of rulers; tyrants whose names you&#13;
don't know and faces you don't recognize, but who control your life."&#13;
It didn't take long for Jane Fonda's rhetorical villain to assume a&#13;
definite person. Hours after 1300 students heard her October 10&#13;
speech, Central Michigan University (eMU) president Harold Abel&#13;
opened a letter expressing regret that eMU had permitted&#13;
"communist sympathiser" Fonda to "spread her venom against free&#13;
enterprise." Written by Paul Oreffice, president of Dow Chemical&#13;
USA, the letter advised that "support of any kind from Dow Chemical&#13;
to eMU has been stopped."&#13;
"We must be certain that our funds are never used to support.&#13;
people intent upon destruction of freedom," wrote Oreffice.&#13;
Dow bankrolls eMU to the annual tune of 'about $70,000 dollars. ,&#13;
While the bulk is targeted for specific, scientific projects, a small&#13;
portion is funneled into the general fund from which Fonda drew her&#13;
$3500 dollar fee. .&#13;
It wasn't her speech&#13;
Fonda's speech - basically a pitch for greater economic diversity&#13;
and democracy - mentioned Dow Chemical only in an aside. When&#13;
pressed for examples of what Oreffice found particularly venomous&#13;
in her remarks, Dow spokesman Phil Schneider admitted that it&#13;
wasn't Fonda's speech per se, but the anti-business aura now&#13;
permeating the universities that Dow found objectionable.&#13;
Dow's action reflects a growing philosophy of industrial&#13;
non-support to colleges critical of 'free enterprise'. In ·1976, then&#13;
Treasury Secretary William E. Simon warned that unless industry&#13;
consider economic sanctions against liberal colleges, the "largesse of&#13;
Where&#13;
are they&#13;
now?&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT.PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658·2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
More than half of all the men&#13;
and women who fought in&#13;
America's wars, from the&#13;
Revolution to the Vietnam&#13;
conflict, are still alive, the&#13;
Veterans Administration reports.&#13;
Atotal 44.5 million persons have&#13;
worn their country's uniform&#13;
during periods of conflict, and&#13;
VA estimates some 29.8 million&#13;
are still living.&#13;
•&#13;
Mention this odl&#13;
Member Porkside 200&#13;
Notionol Vorsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha ,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
.~~ 'tIP&#13;
10% DISCOUNT&#13;
To Parkside students and faculty&#13;
members only, on all merchandise&#13;
in our store. Parkside I.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
Kenoshll'. DI8mond center&#13;
5617 - 6th Avenue&#13;
Phone 858·2525 Kenosha,Wisconsin&#13;
the free enterprise system will continue to finance its own&#13;
destruction ."&#13;
Without money collapse&#13;
Simon's argument wasn't original. In 1972, disgruntled Princeton&#13;
alumni formed an organization advocating the use of financial&#13;
leverage to maintain traditional academic standard~. Dubbed the&#13;
r "Concerned Alumni of Princeton", they spearheaded a letter writing&#13;
campaign urging business leaders to adopt guidelines insuring that&#13;
their gifts would. not be used in "any _way, shape of fashion to&#13;
undercut the free enterprise system." They theorize that without&#13;
. industrial support, universities will collapse.&#13;
According to Bailey Brower (Princeton 1949), the group has&#13;
received only one "uncomplimentary response". That sour note was&#13;
sounded by Gulf &amp; Western president Samuel J. Silberman who noted&#13;
that, "economic arm-twisting of education is a dangerous path."&#13;
While most critics of Simon and" the Princeton group agree that the&#13;
movement is a reaction to recent polls indicating student skepticism&#13;
of the ethical, moral and public service records of the private sector,&#13;
they suggest that business look for the key under their own doormat.&#13;
On November 4, Abel and Oreffice issued a joint statement saying&#13;
that future Dow money will be used only for approved programs such&#13;
as "sponsorship of a program on free enterprise." Abel went on to add&#13;
that CMU was not asked "to make any 'promises concerning our&#13;
future behavior nor did we make any." They announced that CMU&#13;
students, who reacted angrily' to what they interpreted as an attempt&#13;
by Dow to gag first amendment rights, will be able to hear Oreffice&#13;
rebut Fonda sometime in 1978.&#13;
I&#13;
Art: for&#13;
brain's sake&#13;
[CPS] According to&#13;
Saturday Review last month,&#13;
children deprived of art may&#13;
suffer brain damage.&#13;
Written by Roger Williams, the&#13;
article is based on the/work of&#13;
husban,d and wife team Dr.&#13;
Robert Masters and Dr. Jean&#13;
Houston.&#13;
A child deprived of art&#13;
stimulation is "systematically cut&#13;
off from the ways he can&#13;
perceive the world ... his brain is&#13;
systematically damaged," says&#13;
Houston.&#13;
Dr. Masters explained that if&#13;
"current thinking is correct, that&#13;
arts come out of the right side or&#13;
visual side of the brain, you are&#13;
obviously damaging the brain if&#13;
you do not cultivate that side as&#13;
well as the analytic side."&#13;
The researchers see the deemphasizing&#13;
of the arts in early&#13;
education as a retardent to brain&#13;
development.&#13;
This kind of stunting may&#13;
effect the child's ability to grasp&#13;
abstract concepts in math and&#13;
science.&#13;
"Inevitably," writes Williams,&#13;
"the arts are among the first&#13;
victims of scalpel wielding&#13;
administrators."&#13;
Evil influence, at&#13;
Beachy Head&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
. The chalk cliffs of Beachy Head tower nearly 600&#13;
feet above the gray water of the English Channel. It&#13;
is the loftiest headland in Southern England, a&#13;
lonely spot in the midst of the Sussex Downs, where&#13;
few people care to loiter.&#13;
High among the chalk crags where the wind&#13;
always howls even on the balmiest summer days,&#13;
dwells the most malevolent spirit in Britain.&#13;
It is an evil influence which, it is claimed, has in&#13;
the last 20 years, hurled more than 100 victims over&#13;
the edge to their deaths on the cruel wave-washed&#13;
rocks below.&#13;
"- Many people have stated positively(some under&#13;
oath) that they have felt the evil influence on the,&#13;
cliffs. They said they had to combat violently a&#13;
power which attempted to force them over the&#13;
precipice.&#13;
Hypnotic power&#13;
Few can stand near the edge of Beachy Head&#13;
without being aware that some almost hypnotic&#13;
power lurks in its towering cliffs. A 'ew years ago a&#13;
young girl stumbled hysterically over the downs&#13;
leading from the Head and up to a patrolling&#13;
policeman. She.said that while resting on the cliffs,&#13;
a dark shadow-had suddenly descended around her.&#13;
She said she felt herself in a strange, dark&#13;
atmosphere although the sun 'was shinning brightly&#13;
at the time.&#13;
She got up and began to run, and "some huge,&#13;
menacing form seemed to follow her toward the&#13;
edge of the cliffs," Screaming for help, she turned&#13;
and ran away from the cliffs - to safety.&#13;
Area residents agree that the cliffs have a strange&#13;
and menacing atmosphere. But the influence of the&#13;
mysterious power extends even beyond the cliffs. A&#13;
nearby manor house for centuries has regularly&#13;
been visited by disaster and plagues which have&#13;
killed off scores of animals and people. _&#13;
In fact, it is from this house that the trouble is&#13;
said to stem. When Britain's monasteries were&#13;
dissolved in 1538, monks from a nearby priory took&#13;
refuge in the manor.&#13;
The owner of the manor is said to have betrayed&#13;
their hiding place. The monks laid a curse on the&#13;
man, his family, and his possessions; and this, it is&#13;
claimed, is the cause of the mysterious influence on&#13;
the cliffs and surrounding districts.&#13;
Exorcism works?&#13;
For centuries people in the district have left the&#13;
phenomenon alone. But at midnight in February,&#13;
1952, a grou~of people gathered on the cliff top&#13;
intending to exorcise the evil s urtt once and for all.&#13;
In a macabre scene, unprecendentsd in occult&#13;
research, the presence attacked the medium in&#13;
charge of the investigation and urged him to jump&#13;
over the cliff himself.&#13;
About 100 people accompanied the medium, Ray&#13;
de Vekey, to the top of Beachy Head on a wild&#13;
night in February. By the light of pressure lamps,&#13;
they gathered to try to contact the spirits of some of&#13;
the people who had committed suicide over the&#13;
Head.&#13;
De Vekey said afterward that the spirit that&#13;
seized him was fully visible to him. It was of an&#13;
elderly bearded man wearing an ankle-length robe&#13;
like a monks habit, with a black mark on his back.&#13;
After the seance, De Vekey explained:&#13;
"This was the strongest influence I have ever&#13;
encountered. I seemed impelled toward the cliff&#13;
edge. The specter was of someone who was&#13;
chained, perhaps the victim of a sacrifice who has&#13;
hated, and wished ill to all ever since." ,&#13;
A week later, the group again climbed the cliff,&#13;
and De Vekey said prayers. This time, nothing&#13;
unusual happened. Afterward the medium said:&#13;
"I think the unquiet spirit has been laid to rest&#13;
forever."&#13;
• Malign presence&#13;
But has it?, on-ly recently, two climbers felt a&#13;
"malign presence" hovering over them as they&#13;
walked along the downs behind Beachy Head. Is&#13;
the mysterious evil thing which lurks above the sea&#13;
again ready to claim more victims?&#13;
...&#13;
/&#13;
news&#13;
/&#13;
Dow Chemical riot indebted Art: ·for&#13;
brain's sake -;&#13;
[CPS] According to&#13;
to Freedom of Speech ~t CMU Saturday Review last month,&#13;
children deprived of art may&#13;
suffer brain damage.&#13;
Written by Roger Williams, the&#13;
article is based on theJwork of&#13;
husband and wife team Dr. (CPS) - "WE have a new body of rulers; tyrants whose names you&#13;
don't know and faces you don't recognize, but who control your life."&#13;
It didn't take long for Jane Fonda's rhetorical villain to assume a&#13;
definite person . Hours after 1300 students heard her October 10&#13;
speech, Central Michigan University (CMU) president Harold Abel&#13;
opened a letter expressing regret that CMU had permitted&#13;
" communist sympathiser" Fonda to " spread her venom against free&#13;
enterprise." Written by Paul Oreffice, president of Dow Chemical&#13;
USA, the letter advised that " support of any kind from Dow Chemical&#13;
to CMU has been stopped ."&#13;
"We must be certain that our funds are never used to support&#13;
people intent upon destruction of freedom," wrote Oreffice. ·&#13;
Dow bankrolls CMU to the annual tune of about $70,000 dollars .&#13;
While the bulk is targeted for specific, scientific projects, a s~all&#13;
portion is funneled into the general fund from which Fonda drew her&#13;
$3500 dollar fee . ·&#13;
~ It wasn't her speech&#13;
Fonda's speech - basically a pitch for greater economic diversity&#13;
and democracy - mentioned Dow Chemical or-ily in an aside. When&#13;
pressed for examples of what Oreffice found particularly venomous&#13;
in her remarks, Dow spokesman Phil Schneider admitted that it&#13;
wasn't Fonda's speech per se, but the anti-business aura now&#13;
permeating the universities that Dow found objectionable.&#13;
Dow's action reflects a growing philosophy of industrial&#13;
non-support to colleges critical of 'free enterprise'. In · 1976, then&#13;
Treasury Secretary William E. Simon warned that unless industry&#13;
consider economic sanctions against liberal colleges, the "largesse of&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT. PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
Where&#13;
are they&#13;
now?&#13;
More than half of all the men&#13;
and women who fought in&#13;
America' s wars , from the&#13;
Revolution to the Vietnam&#13;
conflict, are still alive, the&#13;
Veterans Administration reports .&#13;
A total 44.5 million persons have·&#13;
worn their country's uniform&#13;
during periods of conflict, and&#13;
VA estimates som·e 29.8 million&#13;
are still living.&#13;
443 7 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin ' Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
j&#13;
10% DISCOUNT 4&#13;
••&#13;
To Parkside students and faculty 4&#13;
members only, on all merchandise I·&#13;
• in our store. Parkside I.D. required '&#13;
t ' I Graduate Gemologist '&#13;
I Graduate Diamontologist 4&#13;
Y~cSo,,u&#13;
'&#13;
I I '&#13;
I&#13;
Kenosha"• Diamond Center I 5617 - 6th Avenue j&#13;
Phone 658-2525 Kenosha, Wisconsin I ~&#13;
the free enterprise system will continue to finance its own&#13;
destruction."&#13;
I&#13;
Robert Masters and Dr. Jean&#13;
Houston . Without money collapse&#13;
Simon's argument wasn't original. In 1972, disgruntled Princeton&#13;
alumni formed an organization advocating the use of financial&#13;
leverage to maintain traditional academic standard\. Dubbed the&#13;
A child deprived of art&#13;
stimulation is " systematically cut&#13;
off from the ways he can&#13;
perceive the world .. . his brain is&#13;
systematically damaged," says&#13;
Houston.&#13;
, "Concerned Alumni of Princeton", they spearheaded a letter writing&#13;
campaign urging business leaders to adopt guidelines insuring that&#13;
their gifts would . not be used in "any .way, shape of fashion to&#13;
undercut the free enterprise system." They theorize that without Dr. Masters explained that if&#13;
" current thinking is correct, that&#13;
arts come out of the right side or&#13;
visual side of the brain, you are&#13;
obviously damaging the brain if&#13;
you do not cultivate that side as&#13;
well as the analytic side."&#13;
. industrial support, universities will collapse.&#13;
According to Bailey Brower (Princeton 1949), the group has&#13;
recelved only one "uncomplimentary response". That sour note was&#13;
sounded by Gulf &amp; Western president Samuel J. Silberman who noted&#13;
that, "economic arm-twisting of education is a dangerous path."&#13;
While most critics of Simon and the Princeton group agree that the&#13;
movement is a reaction to recent polls indicating student skepticism&#13;
of the ethical, moral and public service records of the private sector,&#13;
they suggest that business look for the key under their own doormat.&#13;
The researchers see the deemphasizing&#13;
of the arts in early&#13;
education as a retardent to brain&#13;
development. On November 4, Abel and Oreffice issued a joint statement saying&#13;
that future Dow money will be used only for approved prog~ams sµch&#13;
as "sponsorship of a program on free enterprise." Abel went on to add&#13;
that CMU was not asked "to make any ·promises concerning our&#13;
future behavior nor did we make any." They announced that CMU&#13;
students, who reacted angrily· to what they interpret~ as an attempt&#13;
by Dow to gag first amendment rights, will be able to hear Oreffice&#13;
rebut Fonda sometime in 1978.&#13;
This kind of stunting may&#13;
effect the child's ability to grasp&#13;
abstract concepts in math and&#13;
science.&#13;
"Inevitably," writes Williams,&#13;
"the arts are among the first&#13;
victims of scalpel wielding&#13;
administrators ."&#13;
Evil influence at&#13;
.Beachy Head&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The chalk cliffs of Beachy Head tower nearly 600&#13;
feet above the gray water of the Engl ish Channel. It&#13;
is the loftiest headland in Southern England, a&#13;
lonely spot in the midst of the Sussex Downs, where&#13;
few people care to loiter.&#13;
High among the chalk ~rags where the wind&#13;
always howls even on the b~lmiest summer days,&#13;
dwells the most malevolent spirit in Britain .&#13;
It is an evil influence which, it is claimed, has in&#13;
the last 20 years, hurled more than 100 victims over&#13;
the edge to their deaths on the cruel wave-washed&#13;
rocks below. ....__&#13;
Many people have stated positively(some under&#13;
oath) that they have felt the evil influence on the ,&#13;
cliffs . They said they had to combat violently a&#13;
power which attempted to force them over the&#13;
precipice.&#13;
Hypnotic power&#13;
Few can stand near the edgP of Beachy Head&#13;
without being aware that some almost hypnotic&#13;
power lurks in its towering cliffs. A 'ew years ago a&#13;
young girl stumbled hysterically over the dow'ns&#13;
leading from the He.ad and up to a patrolling&#13;
policeman. She_ said that while resting on the cliffs&#13;
a dark shadow had suddenly descended around her'.&#13;
She said she felt herself in a strange, dark&#13;
atmosphere although the sun was shinning brightly&#13;
at the time.&#13;
She got up and began to run, and " some huge,&#13;
menacing form seemed to follow her toward the&#13;
edge of the cliffs," Screaming for help, she turned&#13;
and ran away from the cliffs - to safety .&#13;
Area residents agree that the cliffs have a strange&#13;
and menacing atmosphere. But the influence of the&#13;
mysterious power extends even beyond the cliffs . A&#13;
nearby manor house for centuries has regularly&#13;
been visited by disaster and plagues which have&#13;
kill~d off scores 'of an·imals and people.&#13;
In fact, it is from this house that the trouble is&#13;
said to stem. When Britain's monasteries were&#13;
dissolved in 1538, monks from a nearby priory took&#13;
refuge in the manor.&#13;
The owner of the manor is said to have betrayed&#13;
their hiding place. The monks laid a curse on the&#13;
man , his family, and his possessions · and this it is&#13;
claimed , is the ~ause of the mysterio~s influen~e on&#13;
the cliffs and surrounding distri cts .&#13;
Exorcism works?&#13;
For centuries people in the district have left the&#13;
phen~menon alone. But at midn ight in February,&#13;
1952, a group of people gathered on the cl iff top&#13;
intending to ex'orcise the evils )irit once and for all .&#13;
In a macabre scene, unprecendented in occult&#13;
research, the presence attacked t he medium in&#13;
charge of the investigation and urged him to jump&#13;
over the cliff himself.&#13;
About 100 people accompanied the medium, Ray&#13;
de Vekey, to the top of Beachy Head on a wild&#13;
night in February . By the light of pressure lamps,&#13;
they gathered to try to contact the spirits of some of&#13;
the people who had committed suicide over the&#13;
Head .&#13;
De Vekey said afterward that the spirit that&#13;
seized him was fully visible to him . It was of an&#13;
elderly bearded man wearing an ankle-length robe&#13;
like a monks habit, with a black mark on his back .&#13;
After the seance, De Vekey explained :&#13;
"This was the strongest influence I have ever&#13;
encountered . I seemed impelled toward the cliff&#13;
edge. The specter was of someone who was&#13;
chained, perhaps the victim of a sacrifice who has&#13;
hated, and wished ill to all ever since." '&#13;
A week later, the group again climbed the cliff,&#13;
and De Vekey said prayers . This time, nothing&#13;
unusual happened . Afterward the medium said:&#13;
"I think the unquiet spirit has been laid to rest&#13;
forever."&#13;
• Malign presence&#13;
But has it?, only recently, two climbers felt a&#13;
" malign presence" hovering over them as they&#13;
walked along the downs behind Beachy Head . Is&#13;
the mysterious evil thing which lurks above the sea&#13;
again ready to claim more victims? &#13;
sports&#13;
Ranger Relays hosted twelve schools&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Friday, November 18, the&#13;
Uw-Parksfde Men's and Women's&#13;
Swim teams held the fifth&#13;
annual Ranger Relays. This is a&#13;
co-ed swim meet which consists&#13;
entirely of relays, plus the one&#13;
meter dive. In the relay events&#13;
there are two men and two&#13;
women together on a relay team.&#13;
The first year the Relays were&#13;
held was in 1973 with six teams&#13;
attending. By 1977 the Ranger&#13;
Relays have expanded to twelve&#13;
competing teams, from Carroll&#13;
College, Carthage, Univ. of&#13;
Chicago, George Williams,&#13;
Illinois Benedictine, Chicago&#13;
Circle, Lake Forrest, lawrence,&#13;
Valpraiso, UW-Milwaukee, UWWhitewater,&#13;
and UW-Parkside.&#13;
Taking first place in the Relays&#13;
this year with 111 points was&#13;
University of Illinois-Chicago&#13;
Circle, by capturing first place in&#13;
seven of the ten events, and also&#13;
taking one second and one third.&#13;
In second overall was lake&#13;
Forrest College with 89 points,&#13;
including two firsts and three&#13;
second place finishes. Close&#13;
behind in third was UW-Milwaukee&#13;
with 87 points overall,&#13;
including three seconds and two&#13;
thirds. UW-Parkside made a fine&#13;
showing by coming in eighth out&#13;
of twelve with 45 points, beating&#13;
out Carroll College, Illinois&#13;
Benedictine, lawrence University,&#13;
and University of Chicago;&#13;
to make 1977 their highest&#13;
scoring and best overall finish in&#13;
the history of the Relays.&#13;
Parkside's highest placing relay&#13;
wasin the 450 Breastroke, with a&#13;
fourth place' finish, team&#13;
membersconsisted of Kauffman,&#13;
Haas,Melotik, and Wtipil.&#13;
Nader KO's the sports industry&#13;
[CPS] - "Ralph Nader KO's the sports industry." "Mail is 99.9% in support," Ford said. "Everyone&#13;
Such may be future headlines as the consumer is complaining about bad treatment by stadium&#13;
saviors' latest venture revs up for action. managers or feeling ripped off."&#13;
Nader'snew consumer protection group, Fight to Another challenge to FANSwill be destroying the&#13;
Advance the Nation's Sports (FANS) will take on myth that sports is a non-profit entity. A look at&#13;
organized sports with traditional Nader tactics. And figures show otherwise. Television network&#13;
what a fight it promises to be with sports fans revenues for last year alone were $656 million.&#13;
'providing the action instead of players. Football fans pay the highest ticket prices which&#13;
Tackling organized sports will be Nader's biggest average $9.67, going as high as $11.79.&#13;
challenge to date. Fans (the traditional kind) are a Terming sportsa "monopoly industry," Ford said&#13;
diverse group but have one quirk in common. that "like all monopolies it breeds arrogance." He&#13;
They're junkies about sports. like all junkies they've proposesthat FANSattempt to curb that arrogance&#13;
passivelypaid the rising costs of their addiction. So by demanding public disclosure of profits. The&#13;
passively that the average fan may eventually be consumer group has already begun a campaign&#13;
priced out of the arena. against the National Football league to regulate&#13;
Nader's challenge will be to convince once next year's ticket prices by imposing a ceiling that&#13;
passivefans to become militant FANS. The major would_be lower than this year's highest prices.&#13;
goal of the consumer group will be to lower ticket FANS contends that the public pays for sports&#13;
prices, but it's questionable if S" arts enthusiasts will whether or not they attend sports events. For&#13;
be willing (or able) to apply Nader's tactics. Can instance, the Washington Redskins stadium was&#13;
they go cold turkey with a boycott if the industry built with public funds. Tickets are sold on a&#13;
proves hard nosed? seasonal basis with corporations buying up huge&#13;
Spokesperson Jim Ford from FANS headquarters blocks of seats. Ten thousand members of the&#13;
in Washington Dt thinks so. taxpaying public are on a waiting list for seats.&#13;
"Response had been slow at first because of Adding to public inaccessibility TV blackouts of&#13;
negative media coverage. But membership and local games is standard in numerous cities.&#13;
inquiry letters have tripled in the last tWQweeks. A Therefore a large segment of the public is denied&#13;
second wave started." any accessto a sporting event, FANS claim.&#13;
Ford is optimistic about meeting FANS goal for Then there's those cold hot dogs and warm&#13;
10-20,000 members (at $9 a membership) by suds.&#13;
January.&#13;
Trading sex for grades&#13;
(CPS) The scenario: a&#13;
darkened campus except for the&#13;
sporadic office lights of this or&#13;
that professor logging overtime&#13;
helping students with their&#13;
scholarly pursuits. They've just&#13;
exhausted the literary implications&#13;
of Melville, or perhaps the&#13;
funeral practices of the Bantu.&#13;
Papers are shuffled, throats&#13;
e- cleared, books closed and the&#13;
professor swivels around to face&#13;
tbe answer to his/her proposition.&#13;
It is, in the phrase of the&#13;
Southern Illinois University at&#13;
Edwardsville Alestle, another&#13;
case of "sex for grades."&#13;
Although no formal grievance&#13;
has ever been filed by an SlUE&#13;
student, Vice President C.&#13;
'Scully' Stikes considers sex in&#13;
academia a commonplace ocCurrence.&#13;
"I suspect its like the&#13;
iceberg phenomena," he said;&#13;
"only the tip is showing."&#13;
Professors engaging in such&#13;
activity could incur dismissal&#13;
under the sexual misconduct and&#13;
moral turpitude provisions of the&#13;
school statutes.&#13;
Earllazerson, provost at SlUE,&#13;
feels that students are wary of&#13;
engaging in formal grievance&#13;
procedures because "there's a&#13;
possibility of harassment."&#13;
Philosophy professor Sheila Ruth&#13;
attributes it to fear. "Its almost&#13;
impossible to get a conviction on&#13;
rape or sexual abuse," she said.&#13;
Ruth-drew an analogy between&#13;
the university and industry,&#13;
where women have to "put out&#13;
to improve their position."&#13;
Women's volleyball second at WWIAC&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
SportsEditor&#13;
The 1977 ParkSIde Women's&#13;
Volleyball Team took a second&#13;
place finish in the WWIAC State&#13;
Volleyball Tournament, November&#13;
11 an_d 12. On Sunday&#13;
afternoon, November 13, Parkside's&#13;
Coach linda Draft&#13;
received an 'at large bid' to the&#13;
1977 Midwest Regionals at Ohio&#13;
Northern, on November 19 and&#13;
20. At regionals the team&#13;
finished sixth out of twelve&#13;
schools and beat out lewis&#13;
College (7th place). whose beat&#13;
them twice, earlier in the season.&#13;
In the finals at state, Parkside&#13;
was defeated by Carroll College&#13;
in a three out of five match, 15-9,&#13;
16-14,15-9. Thus Carroll won the&#13;
right to the Midwest Regionals,&#13;
but Parkside also won the right&#13;
through an 'at large bid'.&#13;
I'l, regionals competition,&#13;
Parkside's first opponent was&#13;
Spring Arbor (Michigan's state&#13;
champs); whom the Rangers&#13;
defeated 15-7, 15-9 Their next&#13;
opponent was Mount St. Josephs&#13;
(Ohio's state champs and last&#13;
year's regional champs), whom&#13;
they lost to 15-5, 15-10 Though&#13;
they lost Parksrde played well&#13;
and proved to be one of St.&#13;
Joseph's toughest competitors,&#13;
asSt. Joe'swent on to regain the&#13;
1977 Regtonals title Parkside&#13;
made it to the quarterfinals,&#13;
where they played George&#13;
Williams College (Hlinors' state&#13;
champs). and were defeated&#13;
15-13, 15-4. George Williams&#13;
went on to capture second place&#13;
and Carroll College (Wisconsin&#13;
state champs) took third, which&#13;
will gain them a bid to Nationals.&#13;
"The team really peaked at the&#13;
right time". commented volleyball&#13;
Coach Linda Draft. "They&#13;
turned in their best performance&#13;
ever this weekend and were&#13;
paved many compliments by&#13;
other coaches and officials on&#13;
their fine teamwork. You can&#13;
look for the team to be back at&#13;
Regronalsagain next year"&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
ISHI RTS+&#13;
3900 Erie Street. Racine 414-639-6662&#13;
Open Daily 9am-9pm&#13;
Saturday 9am-5 :30pm&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
:&#13;
.&#13;
..&#13;
...:&#13;
8tHJ1tI1Jy fII, "lind&#13;
49'&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
1hIU, • nl.!u, -1 , .•.&#13;
Fri••, !u. - 4 , .•.&#13;
S.ln., 11U. - 1 ,.•.&#13;
CLOSED THANKSGIVING WEEKEND&#13;
sport~&#13;
Ranger Relays hosted twelve schools&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Friday, November 18, the&#13;
UW-Parkside Men's and Women's&#13;
Swim teams held the fifth&#13;
annual Ranger Relays . This is a&#13;
co-ed swim meet which consists&#13;
entirely of relays, plus the one&#13;
meter dive. In the relay events&#13;
there are two men and two&#13;
women together on a relay team .&#13;
The first year the Relays were&#13;
held was in 1973 with six teams&#13;
attending. By 1977 the Ranger&#13;
Relays have expanded to twelve&#13;
competing teams, from Carroll&#13;
College, Carthage, Univ . of&#13;
Chicago, George Williams ,&#13;
Illinois Benedictine, Chicago&#13;
Circle, Lake Forrest, Lawrence,&#13;
Valpraiso, UW-Milwaukee, UWWhitewater,&#13;
and UW-Parkside.&#13;
Taking first place in the Relays&#13;
this year with 111 points was&#13;
University of Illinois-Chicago&#13;
Circle, by capturing first place in&#13;
seven of the ten events, and also&#13;
taking one second and one third .&#13;
In second overall was Lake&#13;
Forrest College with 89 points,&#13;
including two firsts and three&#13;
second place finishes . Close&#13;
behind in third was UW-Milwaukee&#13;
with 87 points overall,&#13;
including three seconds and two&#13;
thirds . UW-Parkside made a fine&#13;
showing by coming in eighth out&#13;
of twelve with 45 points, beating&#13;
out Carroll College, Illinois&#13;
Benedictine, Lawrence University,&#13;
and University of Chicago;&#13;
to make 1977 their highest&#13;
scoring and best overall finish in&#13;
the history of the Relays .&#13;
Parkside's highest placing relay&#13;
was in the 450 Breastroke, with a&#13;
fourth place finish, team&#13;
members consisted of Kauffman,&#13;
Haas, Melotik, and Wtipil.&#13;
Nader KO' s the sports industry [CPS] - "Ralph Nader KO's the sports inrJustry ." "Mail is 99.9% in support," Ford said " Everyone&#13;
Such may be future headlines as the consumer is complaining about bad treatment by stadium&#13;
saviors' latest venture revs up for action . managers or feeling ripped off."&#13;
Nader's new consumer protection group, Fight to Anoth~r challenge to FANS will be destroying the&#13;
Advance the Nation's Sports (FANS) will take on myth that sports is a non-profit entity . A look at&#13;
organized sports with traditional Nader tactics.And figures show otherw ise . Television network&#13;
what a fight it prom ises to be with sports fans revenues for last year alone were $656 mill ion&#13;
• providing the action instead of players . Football fans pay the highest t icket prices which&#13;
Tackling organized sports will be Nader's biggest average $9.67, going as high as $11.79.&#13;
challenge to date. Fans (the traditional l&lt;.ind) are a Terming sports a "monopoly industry," Ford said&#13;
diverse group but have one quirk in common. that " like all monopolies it breeds arrogance." He&#13;
They're junkies about sports. Like all junkies they've proposes that FANS attempt to curb that arrogance&#13;
passively paid the rising costs of their addiction . So by demanding publ ic disclosure of profits. The&#13;
passively that the average fan may eventually be consumer group has already begun a campaign&#13;
priced out of the arena. against the National Football League to regulate&#13;
Nader's challenge will be to convince once next year's ticket prices by imposing a ceiling that&#13;
passive fans to become militant FANS. The major would be lower than this year's highest prices .&#13;
goal of the consumer group will be to lower ticket FANS contends that the public pays for sports&#13;
prices, but it's questionable ifs· orts enthusiasts will whether or not they attend sports events . For&#13;
be willing (or able) to apply Nader's tactics . Can instance, the Washington Redskins stadium was&#13;
they go cold turkey with a boycott if the industry built with public funds. Tickets are sold on a&#13;
proves hard nosed? seasonal basis with corporations buying up huge&#13;
Spokesperson Jim Ford from FANS headquarters blocks of seats . Ten thousand members of the&#13;
in Washington DC thinks so. taxpaying public are on a waiting list for seats .&#13;
" Response had been slow at first because of Adding to public inaccessibility TV blackouts of&#13;
negative media coverage . But membership and local games is standard in numerous cities .&#13;
inquiry letters have tripled in the last two weeks . A Therefore a large segment of the public is denied&#13;
second wave started ." any access to a sporting event, FANS claim .&#13;
Ford is optimistic about meeting FANS goal for Then there's those cold hot dogs and warm&#13;
10-20,000 members (at $9 a membership) by suds ...&#13;
Jil'ading sex for grades&#13;
Philosophy professor Sheila Ruth&#13;
attributes it to fear. "Its almost&#13;
impossible to get a conviction on&#13;
rape or sexual abuse," she said.&#13;
Ruth drew an analogy between&#13;
the university and industry,&#13;
where women have to "put out&#13;
to improve their position."&#13;
Women's volleyball second at WWIAC&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The 1977 Parkside Women's&#13;
Volleyball Team took a second&#13;
place finish in the WWIAC State&#13;
Volleyball Tournament, ovember&#13;
11 and 12. On Sunday&#13;
afternoon, November 13, Parkside'&#13;
s Coach Linda Draft&#13;
received an 'at large bid' to the&#13;
1977 Midwest Regionals at Ohio&#13;
Northern, on ovember 19 and&#13;
20 . At regionals the team&#13;
finished sixth out of twelve&#13;
schools and beat out lewis&#13;
College (7th place), whose beat&#13;
them twice, earlier in the season.&#13;
In the finals at state, Parkside&#13;
was defeated by Carroll College&#13;
in a three out of five match, 15-9,&#13;
16-14, 15-9. Thus Carroll won the&#13;
right to the Midwest Regionals,&#13;
but Parkside also won the right&#13;
through an 'at large bid'&#13;
lrt regionals competition ,&#13;
Parkside's first opponent was&#13;
Spring Arbor (Michigan's state&#13;
champs ), whom the Rangers&#13;
defeated 15-7, 15·9. Their next&#13;
- opponent was Mount St. Jo phs&#13;
(Ohio's state champ and la t&#13;
year's regional champs); whom&#13;
they lost to 15-5, 15-.10 Though&#13;
they lost Parkside played well&#13;
and proved to be one of St.&#13;
Joseph's toughest competitors,&#13;
as St. Joe's went on to regain the&#13;
1977 Regionals title. Parkside&#13;
made it to the quarterfinals,&#13;
where they played George&#13;
Williams College (Illinois' state&#13;
champs), and were defeated&#13;
15-13, 15-4. George Williams&#13;
went on to capture second place&#13;
and Carroll College (Wisconsin&#13;
state champs) took third, which&#13;
will gain them a bid to Nationals&#13;
"The team really peaked at the&#13;
right tame" , commented volleyball&#13;
Coach Linda Draft "They&#13;
turned an their best performance&#13;
ever this weekend and were&#13;
payed many compliments by&#13;
other coaches and officials on&#13;
their fine teamwork. You can&#13;
look for the team to be back at&#13;
Regionals again next year "&#13;
ISHIRTS+&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
3900 Erie Street. Racine 414-639-6662&#13;
Oper.i Daily 9am-9pm&#13;
Saturday 9am-5: 30pm&#13;
:• .. ·:&#13;
·. : .... •&#13;
(CPS) - The scenario: a&#13;
darkened campus except for the&#13;
sporadic office lights of this or&#13;
that professor logging overtime&#13;
helping students with their&#13;
scholarly pursuits. They've just&#13;
exhausted the literary implications&#13;
of Melville, or perhaps the&#13;
funeral practices of the Bantu.&#13;
Papers are shuffled, throats&#13;
cleared, books closed and the&#13;
professor swivels around to face&#13;
tbe answer to his/her proposition.&#13;
It is, in the phr.ase of the&#13;
Southern Illinois University at&#13;
Edwardsville Alestle, another&#13;
case of "sex for grades."&#13;
Although no formal grievance&#13;
has ever been filed by an SIUE&#13;
student, Vice President C.&#13;
, 'Scully' Stikes considers sex in&#13;
academia a commonplace occurrence.&#13;
"I suspect its like the&#13;
iceberg phenomena," he said,&#13;
"only the tip is showing."&#13;
BooD l,y f/,e Pound&#13;
Professors engaging in such&#13;
activity could incur dismissal&#13;
under the sexual misconduct and&#13;
moral turpitude provisions of the&#13;
school statutes.&#13;
Earl Lazerson, provost at SIUE,&#13;
feels that students are wary of&#13;
engaging in formal grievance&#13;
procedures because "there's a&#13;
possibility of harassment."&#13;
49D -UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
lll1Nay - n1ruay 9 a.1. - 7 ,.1.&#13;
Fri•ay 9 a.1. - 4 ,.1.&#13;
Sat1r•ay 11 a.1. - 1 J.1.&#13;
CLOSED THANKSGIVING WEEKEND &#13;
events&#13;
Little Matthew Malza n gets an ear y introduction&#13;
to a microscope in the University of&#13;
wisconsin-Patkside classroom where his mother&#13;
Marianne [Mrs. Mark Malzahn] felt her first labor&#13;
pains just six weeks ago. They're shown with Prof.&#13;
Anna Maria Williams, left, who teaches the&#13;
microbiology class which was -in .progress when&#13;
Matthew announced his imminent arrival. Mrs.&#13;
Malzahn, a nursing student, missed only one class&#13;
before returning to school. The Malzahns live at&#13;
6731 32nd Ave., Kenosha; .&#13;
Wednesday, November 23&#13;
Turkey Dance with the Crystals at 9:00 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square. Admission $1.00 students and $1.50&#13;
guests. ID's required.&#13;
Friday, November 25&#13;
Basketball Season Opener Rangers vs. Milton at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the P.E. Building.&#13;
Saturday, November 26&#13;
Basketball Rangers vs. Wayne State' at 2:00 p.rn. in&#13;
the P.E. Building.&#13;
Tuesday, November 27&#13;
Concert Parkside Percussion Ensemble at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
in the Communication Arts Theatre:&#13;
Wednesday, November 30&#13;
Concert student recitals at 3:00 p.m. in CA D-118.&#13;
Basl&lt;etball Rangers vs. St. Xavier in Chicago at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
classified&#13;
Need Rid_II Need a tall gOod-lookIng guy&#13;
with a Monte Carlo (red preferably) to&#13;
chauffer me from the. main concourse to&#13;
Tallent partdng lot. call: 654--5308.&#13;
1973 Klwaukl 175 cern, 7000 miles,&#13;
excellent condition. S280. with helment.&#13;
Further Information call Goetz, Burlington,&#13;
763-ll564.&#13;
Host hmlly ¥i.ntlld Helpl, I'm 20 years old&#13;
and looking for a host family In Kenosha. I&#13;
am an I.C.Y.E. exchange student from&#13;
Germany. If yOUare inter'88ted. please call&#13;
652-8620.&#13;
NeIld Ride Student from Burlington wants&#13;
rider to share driving &amp; expenses. Call Jim&#13;
(414) 534-6232.&#13;
Friday, December 2&#13;
Movie Dog Day Afternoon at 8:00 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
Rt 5 TRI CljED&#13;
PMKIN(,&#13;
Sunday, December 4&#13;
Fall Sports Banquet&#13;
.&#13;
in the Union Cafeteria at&#13;
.,&#13;
6:00&#13;
p.m. Tickets are $5.00 on sale in the P.E. Office.&#13;
,&#13;
Women and law ,&#13;
discussed today&#13;
Attorney Mary Sfasciotti will talk on "Women and the Law" at a&#13;
brown bag lunch at the University of Wisconsin-Parks ide at noon on&#13;
Wednesday, November 23, in the Union, Room 207. The program,&#13;
sponsored by the office of Community Student Services, is open to&#13;
the public as well as the campus community. '&#13;
Ms. Sfasciotti is in private practice in Kenosha and Chicago and is&#13;
chairman of the Chicago Bar Association Committee on Immigration&#13;
and- Naturalization and a member of the National Association of&#13;
Immigration and-Naturalization Lawyers. She previously was senior&#13;
trial attorney for the Equal Opportunity Commission Chicago&#13;
Litigation Center. She received her JD degree from Northwestern&#13;
University and has been a faculty member at John Marshall Law&#13;
School of Chicago.&#13;
UNION&#13;
SGUARE&#13;
PRESENTS :&#13;
THANKSfJlVlNfJ&#13;
_HAPWHOUR&#13;
W ay 3-6 Pm&#13;
BEER 2S~&#13;
PITCHER BEER'&#13;
~1.2S&#13;
P.A.B.'S PERFORMING ARTS &amp; LECTURE&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
NATIONAL TOUR-BROADWAY CAST&#13;
CABARET&#13;
TH.URS., DEC. 1 8:00 p.m.&#13;
COMM. ARTS THEATRE'&#13;
Adm, U.W. P. Students 53.00·&#13;
General 55.00&#13;
......................................................&#13;
ARTS &amp; CRAFTS FAIR&#13;
SATURDAl, DECEMBER 3&#13;
10-9&#13;
MAIN PLACE I&#13;
r&#13;
FREE&#13;
events&#13;
Little Matthew Ma za n gets an ear y introduction&#13;
to a microscope in the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside classroom where his mother&#13;
Mar.ianne [Mrs. Mark Malzahn] felt her first labor&#13;
pains just six weeks ago. They're shown with Prof.&#13;
Anna Maria Williams, left, who teaches the&#13;
microbiology class which was in progress when&#13;
Matthew announced his imminent arrival. Mrs.&#13;
Malzahn, a nursing student, missed only one class&#13;
before returning to school. The Malzahns live at&#13;
6731 32nd Ave., Kenosha;&#13;
Wednesday, November 23&#13;
Turkey Dance with the Crystals at 9:00 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square. Admission $1.00 students and $1.50&#13;
guests. ID's required.&#13;
Friday, November 25&#13;
Basketball Season Opener Rangers vs. Milton at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the P.E. Building.&#13;
Saturday, November 26&#13;
Basketball Rangers vs. Wayne State· at 2:00 p.m . in&#13;
the P.E. Building.&#13;
Tuesday, November 27&#13;
Concert Parkside Percussion Ensemble at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
in the Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Wednesday, November 30&#13;
Concert student recitals at 3:00 p.m. in CA D-118.&#13;
Basketball Rangers vs. St. Xavier in Chicago at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Friday, December 2&#13;
Movie Dog Day Afternoon at 8:00 p.m. in Union&#13;
Gnema.&#13;
Sunday, December 4&#13;
Fall Sports Banquet in the Union Cafeteria at 6:00 . ...., p.m. Tickets are $5.00 on sale in the P.E. Office.&#13;
classified&#13;
NNd ~Id• II Neoo a tall good-look Ing guy&#13;
with a Monte Carlo (red preferably) to&#13;
chauller me from the main concourse to&#13;
Tallent parking lot. Call: 654-5308.&#13;
1973 Kawuakl 175 ccm, 7000 miles,&#13;
excellent condition. $280. with helment.&#13;
Further Information call Goetz, Burlington,&#13;
763-8564.&#13;
Host Family Wanted Helpl, I'm 20 years old&#13;
and looking for a host family in Kenosha. I&#13;
am an I.C.Y.E. exchange student from&#13;
Germany. If you are interested, please call&#13;
652-ll620.&#13;
NNd Rlcle Student from Burlington wants&#13;
rider to share driving &amp; expenses. Call Jim&#13;
(414) 534-6232.&#13;
RE.5 fRJC:1jED&#13;
PARKING&#13;
!&gt;EC"'- ,. ~Al.&#13;
a&#13;
:....... I C -·I&#13;
1Y,f2 j&#13;
f)&#13;
..&#13;
I&#13;
Women and law&#13;
discussed today&#13;
Attorney Mary Sfasciotti will talk on "Women and the Law" at a&#13;
brown bag lunch at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside at noon on&#13;
Wednesday, November 23, in the Union, Room 207. The program,&#13;
sponsored by the office of Community Student Services, is open to&#13;
the public as well as the campus community. '&#13;
Ms. Sfasciotti is in private practice in Kenosha and Chicago and is&#13;
chairman of the Chicago Bar Association Committee on Immigration&#13;
and Naturalization and a member of the National Association of&#13;
Immigration and-Naturalization Lawyers. She previously was senior&#13;
trial attorney for the Equal Opportunity Commission Chicago&#13;
Litigation Center. She received her JD degree from Northwestern&#13;
University and has been a faculty member at John Marshall Law&#13;
School of Chicago.&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
PRESENTS:&#13;
THANKSfJIV/NfJ&#13;
_HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Wednesday 3-6 Pm&#13;
BEER 2St&#13;
PITCHER BEER -&#13;
*1.2S&#13;
P.A.B.'S PERFORMING ARTS &amp; LECTURE&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
NATIONAL TOUR-BROADWAY CAST&#13;
CABARET&#13;
THURS., DEC. 1 8:00 p.m.&#13;
COMM. ARTS THEATRE&#13;
Adm: U.W. P. Students $3.00&#13;
General $5.00&#13;
······················································&#13;
ARTS &amp; CRAFTS FAIR&#13;
SATURDA1, DECEMBER 3&#13;
10-9&#13;
MAIN PLACE&#13;
FREE . </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68704">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 6, issue 13, November 23, 1977</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68705">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68706">
                <text>1977-11-23</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68709">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68710">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68711">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68712">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68713">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68714">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68715">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68716">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68717">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="3178">
        <name>academic advising</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1417">
        <name>breadth of knowledge requirement</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="293">
        <name>parking</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1034">
        <name>physical education</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2961" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3446">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/3532db2af58c855da304bf788a896979.pdf</src>
        <authentication>2db62b9f2d7a09b3fe550e99bb368809</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68692">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 12</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68693">
              <text>UW-Milwaukee students chop Athletic budget</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68703">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90038">
              <text>-,&#13;
Wednesday, November 16, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 12&#13;
an er ()() Universities are full of 99&#13;
knowledge; the freshmen bring&#13;
a little in and the seniors take&#13;
none away, and knowledge&#13;
accumulates.&#13;
UW-Milwaulcee students&#13;
chop A th le tic budget&#13;
The Student Association-Senate of UW-Milwaukee voted Sunday&#13;
night, November 7, to cut off funds to the_ Athletic Department in&#13;
1980 unless provision is made for equitable student representation on&#13;
the Athletic Board _ Currently the Senate allocates approximately&#13;
$150,000 per semester to the Athletic Department.&#13;
University Committee limits student input&#13;
The resolution was promted by the discovery Friday that the&#13;
University Committee had recommended increasing the faculty and&#13;
·academic staff positions on the Athletic Board, while the number of&#13;
student seats remained the same. The University Committee&#13;
recommended the change as an interim composition of the Athletic&#13;
Board when it seemed unlikely that the Faculry Senate would be able&#13;
to deal with the final Athletic Board Charter this year or anytime in&#13;
the near future . Members of the University committee cited a full&#13;
calendar and the "low legislative priority of the Athletic Board&#13;
charter" as the reason for an interim composition of the Board .&#13;
The current composition of the Athletic Board is 7 faculty&#13;
members, 4 students, and 2 alumni . The charter that the Faculty&#13;
Senate is postponing calls for a composition of 4 faculty, 4 students, 3&#13;
academic staff and 2 alumni . The composition suggested by the&#13;
University Committee in the interim was 8 faculty, 4 students, 1&#13;
academic staff and 2 alumni .&#13;
Taxation without representation&#13;
Chairperson of the Student Legislative Affairs Committee, David&#13;
Olson, compared the change in the Athletic Board to taxation&#13;
without representation .&#13;
he Senate passed the resolution on their authority to allocate&#13;
funds and organize themselves in a manner they determine under&#13;
Wisconsin Statute 36.09(5) which gives students primary responsibility&#13;
in areas of student life, services, and interests . The statute,&#13;
passed in 1971 when the two state university systems were merged,&#13;
grants authority to the Board of Regents, Chancellors, Faculty,&#13;
and Students in their respective areas of interests.&#13;
Because Wisconsin is the only state in the country with a statute of&#13;
this kind, there have been problems forming an athletic board that&#13;
meets with the approval of the NCAA but does not violate the&#13;
Legislature's grant of authority to students in this area. Chancellor&#13;
Baum has agreed to seek an exception from the NCAA.&#13;
The text of the resolution followsPassed&#13;
by Student Association Senate, University of WisconsinMilwaukee&#13;
November 6, 1977.&#13;
U9-USS-2&#13;
WhereasStudents&#13;
have primary responsibility for areas of student life, services&#13;
and interests, with Athletics being one of those areas; and&#13;
WhereasStudent&#13;
segregated fee funding is the primary-support for the Athletic&#13;
Department; and&#13;
WhereasThe&#13;
University Committee has recommended an interim solution for&#13;
the composition of the athletic Board, while they delay on the actual&#13;
Athletic Board Charter, to consist of an additional faculty and an&#13;
additional academic staff position, and&#13;
WhereasThis&#13;
results in a total composition of 8 faculty , 2 alumni, 1 academic&#13;
staff, and only 4 students; and&#13;
WhereasThi&#13;
s effectively eliminates student participation on the Athletic&#13;
Board to a significant degree, therefore,&#13;
BE I.T RESOLVEDThat&#13;
if the faculty take control of the Athletic Board in this manner,&#13;
and students do not maintain their current proportion on the Board,&#13;
Student Association shall eliminate in total funding for the Athletic&#13;
Department as of 1980, or as soon as possible.&#13;
Co-,,munication reorganized&#13;
by Philip l. Livingston&#13;
Last week the Academic Planning and Program Review Committee&#13;
approved a reorganization of the communication discipline. The&#13;
reorganization includes rearr~ngement of the Organizational&#13;
Communication specialization and the replacement of the Public&#13;
Information specialization with Mass Communication. A new&#13;
specialization, Speech Communication, was also approved. The&#13;
reorganization will be sent to central administration in Madison for&#13;
approval before the changes are implemented .&#13;
If approved, the Communication discipline would be organized in&#13;
the following manner (course designation numbers of new courses&#13;
may change}:&#13;
Requirements for the Communication major&#13;
The following courses constitute the core requirements:&#13;
Comm 101 An Introduction to Human Communication 3 er&#13;
DA 110 Idea of Theatre 3 er&#13;
Comm 102&#13;
.Comm 260&#13;
Introduction to Organizational&#13;
Communication '&#13;
Mass Media in American Society&#13;
3 er&#13;
3 er&#13;
28 credits shall be earned in one of the following options: Speech&#13;
Communication, Organizational CommJJnication, Mass Communication,&#13;
or Dramatic Arts.&#13;
Speech Communication&#13;
In addition to the core requirement, the stude~t specializing in&#13;
Speech Communication must· complete the following courses or their&#13;
equivalents:&#13;
Comm 105&#13;
Comm 201&#13;
Comm 320&#13;
Comm 445&#13;
Public Speaking&#13;
Group Dynamics&#13;
Communication Theory&#13;
Communication Research&#13;
Electives (communication or related&#13;
courses; subject to advisor's written&#13;
approval)&#13;
3 er&#13;
3 er&#13;
3 er&#13;
3 er&#13;
16 er&#13;
Organizational Communication&#13;
In addition to the core requirement, the student specializing in&#13;
Organizational Communication must complete the following courses&#13;
or their equivalents :&#13;
Comm 202 Conference Techniques and 3 er&#13;
Group Discussion&#13;
.Comm 302 Theories of Organizational 3 er&#13;
Communication&#13;
Comm 222 or 277 Business and Professional 3 er&#13;
Comm 445&#13;
Speaking or Communication in Business&#13;
Communication Research&#13;
Electives (communication or related&#13;
courses; subject to advisor's written&#13;
Approval}&#13;
Mass Communication&#13;
3 er&#13;
16 er&#13;
In addition to the core requirement, the student specializ-ing in&#13;
Mass Communication must complete the following courses or their&#13;
equivalents:&#13;
Comm 360 Theories of Mass Communication&#13;
Comm 375 Public Opinion and Communication&#13;
Two of the following:&#13;
Comm 109 Basic Filmmaking&#13;
Comm 248 Radio Production&#13;
Cbmm 249 Television Production&#13;
Electives (communication or related&#13;
courses; subject to advisor's written&#13;
approval)&#13;
Explanation of discipline structure&#13;
3 er&#13;
3 er&#13;
6 er&#13;
16 er&#13;
The following is an explanation of the communication major at&#13;
Parkside as it will appear in the next catalog of course descriptions.&#13;
The 40 credits major in Communications is an interdisciplinary&#13;
program preparing students for positions which meet the business,&#13;
industrial and aesthetic needs of the-~ommunity. The core of&#13;
required courses comprise an introduction to the four options:&#13;
-Speech Communication, Organizational Communication, Mass&#13;
Communication, and Dramatic Arts.&#13;
Continued on page 8 &#13;
editorials&#13;
Even Oshkosh ,has apathy&#13;
The following guest editorial first appeared in the&#13;
October 13 issue of adft°fice•lilaft&#13;
Apathy is like a silent fart.&#13;
The more silent the fart is, the deadlier the&#13;
smell gets, causing people in the surrounding&#13;
area to have breathing difficulties.&#13;
Student apathy is like that because the more&#13;
silent students become towards campus&#13;
organizations, the deadlier the work becomes for&#13;
people involved, smothering chances to make&#13;
their involvement a su.ccess. \&#13;
Student apathy is a problem people have 'been&#13;
trying to suppress for quite some time.&#13;
All the ways to get students to change their&#13;
apathetic ways, ranging from editorials to rallies,&#13;
have not started any monumental changes.&#13;
Nothing seems to get students to rise to any sort&#13;
of occasion unless it deals with ~ good time.&#13;
UW-O is no exception.&#13;
Last week, the Oshkosh Student Association&#13;
held their senate election. 4.5 per cent of the&#13;
students attending this university voted.&#13;
It's surprising to find how many students turn&#13;
their backs when questioned about anything&#13;
.&#13;
' concerning their school. Responses run from&#13;
"Don't bother me," to "Get the hell out of my&#13;
way," to '.'I don't care."&#13;
Headlfnes across the nation's newspapers are&#13;
full of statements claiming that the intelligence of&#13;
America's college , students bprders on the&#13;
illiterate stage. Non-involvement in student&#13;
activities is one way to prove ~uch_ a statement.&#13;
Getting students involved is ~ very difficult&#13;
1 proce~s and it's possible that organizations such&#13;
as OSA may be going the wrong way in trying to&#13;
motivate everybody.&#13;
'Speeches in the Titan Room during the lunch&#13;
hours, or pamphlets concerning the OSA election&#13;
and the nominees explaining the whole election&#13;
are just a couple of ways that might motivate the&#13;
students. But it is still up to the studen·ts to pick&#13;
up the pencil and fill in the ballot.&#13;
Mommy. and Daddy are not here anymore to&#13;
lead us by the hand to get things done. Students&#13;
every day are trying to prove that they can handle&#13;
themselves without their parents. But by being&#13;
apathetic to just about every cause except their&#13;
own is one way to show that they haven't cut the&#13;
apron strings yet .&#13;
Play it again, Co~munication&#13;
The broader university political network&#13;
determines such compromises as lefting Parkside&#13;
grant a B.A. in fine arts instead of a Bachelor of&#13;
Fine Arts (B.F.A.), or giving Parkside permission&#13;
to set up a business graduate school that may&#13;
grant a Master of Administrative Sciences&#13;
(M.A.S.) instead of the traditional Master of&#13;
Business Administration (M.B.A.). This political&#13;
system was also responsible for not offering a&#13;
Journalism major at Parkside.&#13;
Between Chicago and Milwaukee, there are -&#13;
many publishing companies: Chicago is thought&#13;
by many, to be the number two publishing city in&#13;
the United States, following New York. With&#13;
these types of surroundings, and given that&#13;
Parkside is one of the few four year universities in&#13;
the corridor between Chicago and Milwaukee, you&#13;
would think the UW-System would use a little&#13;
creativity and perhaps institute a Publishing&#13;
major at Parkside or at least the time honored&#13;
Journalism major. Nope!&#13;
Finally, in the Communication discipline&#13;
reorganization, the nebulous Public Information&#13;
specialization was canned and replaced with a&#13;
new nebulous Mass Communication specialization.&#13;
This is the same catch-all major offered at&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. In Mass eommunication you can&#13;
stuff film studies, radio, television, in addition to&#13;
some other communication courses. To graduate&#13;
with a Mass Communication degree from&#13;
Parkside in the overcrowded field of journaf1sm&#13;
and compete with graduates from the finest&#13;
schools in Journalism (UW-Madison, University&#13;
of Minnesota, ·Northwestern), is a noble endeavor&#13;
indeed. ,,&#13;
If Parkside had a radio station (the one that GTI&#13;
garnered), a television station, or some major&#13;
publishing concern, a degree in Mass&#13;
Communication might be attractive. Parkside has&#13;
one untenured professor teaching in the Mass&#13;
Communication specialization. The rest of the&#13;
workload is shared by adhocs (professionals not&#13;
necessarily endowed with research degrees) ..&#13;
One of the biggest laughs thrs year is that&#13;
Communication received permission for one more&#13;
professor in ,the discipline. Well, you would think&#13;
they_ would try to get one in Mass&#13;
Communications. Mass Communication offers&#13;
eighteen courses (the largest offering of any&#13;
specialization in the discipline) and it would seem&#13;
logical to have at least two tenure· track&#13;
professors to advise and teach in the&#13;
specialization. The new professor will teach in&#13;
Organizational Communication. So much for&#13;
common sense. 1&#13;
It would be interesting if administrators and&#13;
decision making professors wo~ld try to answer&#13;
the needs of continuing education in the area and&#13;
the needs_ of students competing with graduates&#13;
of established universities, before trying out&#13;
another reorganization scheme.&#13;
. · Ranger _is written and edited by students of th&#13;
1 University of Wisconsin-Parrside and they are sof I .&#13;
responsib~e for its e_ditor1al policy and content.e Y&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin '53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
... ,. &#13;
• views&#13;
Senior praises Pollack&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would just like to comment&#13;
on the review of Lillian&#13;
Hellman's Children's Hour written&#13;
by Wendy Ratner and&#13;
published in the November 9th&#13;
issue of the Ranger. I do not feel&#13;
that educational theatre can be&#13;
compared with eommunity and&#13;
professional theatre. There are a&#13;
great deal of differences that&#13;
have~ be understood. You can't&#13;
realistically compare community&#13;
theatre or professional theatre to&#13;
a university theatre sit.!Jation . A&#13;
director has different goals for&#13;
his actors/actresses as the play&#13;
progresses to performance level&#13;
in university theatre .&#13;
A student reviewer has to&#13;
consider what the director in a&#13;
university situation has to work&#13;
with when the rehearsals begin&#13;
and measure the progressive&#13;
growth to performance level .&#13;
Here are some aspects to&#13;
consider when deciding to&#13;
review for a university theatre:&#13;
1. How much acting ability the&#13;
Actors/ actresses have had before&#13;
auditioning for the play? (i.e.&#13;
acting, voice, and movement&#13;
classes or actual acting experiences&#13;
on stage.)&#13;
2. Compare director's interpetation&#13;
of the theme of the play&#13;
with the playwright's interpetation&#13;
.&#13;
3. Evaluate how well the actors&#13;
ex~cute the director's overall&#13;
interpetation.&#13;
4 . Criticize the patterns of&#13;
movement, picturization,&#13;
pacing, timing, rhythm and style&#13;
of the play as presented by the&#13;
actors and director.&#13;
When looking at these aspects&#13;
of performance, I feel that Dr.&#13;
Rhoda-Gale Pollack did one&#13;
heck of a job and so did the&#13;
designers, cast and crew . During&#13;
the course of a production&#13;
actors/a~tresses may feel a sense&#13;
of growth or a sense of failure,&#13;
but within this produc'tion there&#13;
has certainly been more growth&#13;
than failure . More than half of&#13;
the actors / actresses in The&#13;
Children's Hour were acting on a&#13;
stage for the first time . You could&#13;
sense when watching the&#13;
performance, that their concentration&#13;
level and enthusiasm was&#13;
extremely high . The females&#13;
were not artifically portrayed as&#13;
mentioned in the review. Those&#13;
students had their first experience&#13;
in playing a highly dramatic&#13;
emotional role on the stage and&#13;
they handled this extremely well .&#13;
It was entrancing to watch, and&#13;
its dramatic pull kept suspense&#13;
within the audience members&#13;
throughout . The actresses were&#13;
sensitive to the author's theme&#13;
and they understood the&#13;
gentleness of their relationships .&#13;
The director had to give a&#13;
combination of mm, courses&#13;
such as a history course on the&#13;
period of the play; an indepth&#13;
acting course on character&#13;
analysis; a vocal and stage&#13;
movement course within 6 weeks&#13;
of rehearsals to aid the students&#13;
in developing characters different&#13;
than themselves . You have to&#13;
know that a director does not&#13;
just put an actor on the stage to&#13;
perform . And an actor can not&#13;
just walk on the stage without&#13;
any real work on lines, voice,&#13;
body and concentratin on&#13;
character.&#13;
And when you look at the&#13;
technical side of the performance&#13;
consider what the designers&#13;
had to work with; students who&#13;
might not know how to hammer&#13;
a nail or sew on a sewing&#13;
machine . Remember when&#13;
watching a theatrical production&#13;
on a university level that the&#13;
students are running the show.&#13;
That it is their first experience of&#13;
having the total responsibility for&#13;
a computerized lighting board,&#13;
sound system, box office or the&#13;
front of house&#13;
I heard many good comments&#13;
by faculty members concerning&#13;
this production. The fact is that&#13;
The Children's Hour was one of&#13;
the most successful plays&#13;
performed at Parkside within the&#13;
past four years .&#13;
A senior at Parkside&#13;
His whole life was a million-to-one shot.&#13;
United Council Legislative Update&#13;
AB 181, 255, 318 et al. - These Assembly bills to raise the lepi&#13;
drinking age to 19 were debated in an Assembly Jud1c1ary Committee&#13;
hearing Tuesday, October 18. United Council and student&#13;
representatives from three UW campuses testified against the bills .&#13;
Although it does not look as if the Judiciary Committee will act on&#13;
these bills (a fate similar to the Senate versions of these bills), It 1s&#13;
important that your legislators know that you oppose raising the legal&#13;
drinking age.&#13;
SB 289,335,363, - Faculty Collective Bargaining was discussed in&#13;
Executive Session of the Senate Labor Committee last Tuesday,&#13;
October 25, in Beloit UC Presfdent Jim Eagon presented amendments&#13;
to the three bills authored by UC and emphasized that student&#13;
involvement in collective bargaining Is necessary to protect students'&#13;
rights in university governance. Although the committee postponed&#13;
action until after the next Regent meeting, action is expected on a&#13;
committee substitute bill in mid November Once the Labor&#13;
Committee reports their bill out, it must be reviewed by the&#13;
Education Committee and Joint Finance Committee before r-eaching&#13;
the Senate floor&#13;
AB 604 - The student regent bill was the subject of an Assembly&#13;
Education Committee hearing Wednesday, October 19, at the State&#13;
Capitol. UC testified strongly supporting the bill and emphasized the&#13;
need for formal student involvement m decision-making at the&#13;
systemwide level Central Administration representatives testified in&#13;
opposition to the student regent proposal An Executive Session will&#13;
be held on this bill in mid ovember&#13;
SB 594, AB 1022 and 1030 - These bills would authorize a school&#13;
of veterinary medicine at UW-Madison with a food animal clinical&#13;
facility established at UW-River Falls&#13;
"Mini-budget'' - The state 1977-79 biennial budget (SB 77) was&#13;
passed last June and will be reviewed during the coming February&#13;
legislative floor period . In addition to the landlord-tenant issue&#13;
SB 426 , other potential issues include the UW graduata&#13;
application fee, the State Hygiene Lab funding, and a sales tax&#13;
exemption on required textbooks . Please contact your campus and&#13;
hometown state legislators about these issues and let them know&#13;
your views . They can't represent you 1f they don't know your posIt1on&#13;
on these and other issues.&#13;
S 1437 - Reform of the Federal Criminal Code. Th is is the latest&#13;
version of the infamous S-1, said to be one of the most regressive&#13;
pieces of legislation since the Alien and Sed1t1on Act of 1798 While&#13;
much of the new bill is necessary in order to clarify and standardize&#13;
federal law, several sections dealing with public assembly,&#13;
demonstrations, and conspiracy are vaguely worded and open to&#13;
abuse. More information will be available from your student&#13;
government officers &#13;
news&#13;
Committee moves t9.&#13;
Copy Editor the traffic on the steep portions would wear them down and change&#13;
the character of the prairie.&#13;
Fourth, outside groups who want to use the nature trail should&#13;
have to get permission from the committee chairman, Eugene&#13;
Casiorkiewicz Professor-Life Science or the Security Department&#13;
before walking the trails. Morris Firebaugh, Professor-Physics,&#13;
questioned the last proposal on the grounds it might discourage use&#13;
of the trails. "We don't want to hamstring law-abiding citizens by&#13;
creating a new bureaucracy," he said. Chairman Gasiorkiewicz&#13;
replied that "it wouldn't form a big bureaucracy .. Security could&#13;
take care of all the requests." The committee approved all four&#13;
actions by consensus.&#13;
The Environmental Concerns Committee has made some final&#13;
recommendations on what Parkside should do with its nature trail.&#13;
First, signs will be posted in the area prohibiting bikes, horses, and&#13;
snowmobiles from traveling on the trails. . I&#13;
Second, the gr~s should be mowed on the perimeter around the&#13;
'area to "isolate the prairie for firebreak purposes". Prairie lands&#13;
should be burned at regular intervals to prevent the encroachment of&#13;
higher plant life such as trees. ~ .&#13;
Third the committee recommended "relocation of the trails to&#13;
avoid steep grades". This meansthat a few portions of the trail will be&#13;
Government harassment&#13;
conference starts today&#13;
A conference open to the&#13;
public entitled, "Government&#13;
SurveilIance and Harassment vs.&#13;
the Majority" will be held at the&#13;
university of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 19, under the&#13;
sponsorship of eight. Racine and&#13;
Kenosha organizations.&#13;
The all-day conference will&#13;
feature general sessions in the&#13;
morning and afternoon, with&#13;
workshops and discussion sessions&#13;
scheduled in between. The.&#13;
registration fee of $7 in advance&#13;
and $8 at the door (students $4)&#13;
includes lunch.&#13;
Sponsoring groups include the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine chapter of the&#13;
American Civil Liberties Union&#13;
(ACLUj, the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Education Associations, Kenosha&#13;
and Racine chapters of the&#13;
National Organization of Women&#13;
(NOWt Wisconsin State&#13;
Employees Union local 2180,the&#13;
Social Concerns committee of&#13;
the Unitarian-Universalist&#13;
Church of Kenosha and Racine&#13;
and the UW-Parkside Student&#13;
Government' Association.&#13;
The general morning sessions&#13;
beginning at 9 a.m. in Classroom&#13;
107 will consider "Groundbreaking&#13;
lawsuits Against Government&#13;
Spying, Harrassment&#13;
and Disruption" presented by&#13;
David Hamlin, executive secretary&#13;
of the Illinois AClU, and&#13;
Robert Schwarz, Milwaukee&#13;
chairman of the Sociatist&#13;
Workers Party. Racine-Kenosha&#13;
AClU President Robert Bramscher&#13;
will moderate.&#13;
The-afternoon general sessions&#13;
beginning at 2:15 in Classroom&#13;
107 wi II be on "Government&#13;
Surveillance of the Women's&#13;
Movement," presented by Nancy&#13;
Borman, editor and co-publisher&#13;
of Majority Report, a New York&#13;
City feminist newspaper, and&#13;
"AClU legislative Program for&#13;
Intelligence Agency Control,"&#13;
featuring-john Shattuck, director&#13;
of the Washington D.C. national&#13;
office of ACLU. Shattuck was the&#13;
attorney for Morton Halperin's&#13;
successful wiretap suit against&#13;
Richard Nixon et al. The session&#13;
will be moderated by Eunice&#13;
Edgar of Milwaukee, executive&#13;
director of the Wisconsin AClU.&#13;
Group discussions and workshops&#13;
from 12:30-2 p.m. will be&#13;
"How to Use the Freedom of&#13;
Inforrnatton Act to Get Secret&#13;
Files," by Hamlin; "Surveillance&#13;
and Harassment of Teachers," by&#13;
leaders of the Kenosha Education&#13;
Associations; "Repressive legislation&#13;
Pending:' by UWMi&#13;
Iwaukee professor David&#13;
Luce, state ACLU executive&#13;
board member; and "lawsuits&#13;
Against Government Spying:&#13;
Whether and How to Sue," by&#13;
William Lynch, legal director for&#13;
the state ACLU.&#13;
The conference will be held in&#13;
the UW-Parkside Union and&#13;
nearby classrooms, with registration-&#13;
beginning at 8:30 a.m.&#13;
outside Classroom 107 where the&#13;
first general session will be held.&#13;
Advance registration can be&#13;
made through Mrs. Ginger&#13;
Clapper, 2321 Washington Ave:,&#13;
Racine, 53403, tel. 634-5086 or&#13;
through the UW-P Union&#13;
Information Center.&#13;
Universities to pay royalties&#13;
Payments of perhaps several&#13;
million dollars a year in royalties&#13;
will be mandatory starting&#13;
January 1, 1978. The federal&#13;
copyright law will no, longer&#13;
exempt universities from royalty&#13;
payments for music played on&#13;
their campuses by action of the&#13;
federal government The impact&#13;
of the new regulations could be&#13;
"devestating" in the short run&#13;
because the change in the law&#13;
becomes effective in the middle&#13;
of the colleges' fiscal year, and&#13;
the payment of royalties was not&#13;
anticipated bv university budgetmakers,&#13;
according to Gary&#13;
English, a representative of one&#13;
of several nationwide university&#13;
groups plunged into the&#13;
confusion over the regulations.&#13;
Three copyright companies&#13;
stand to make sizeable profits&#13;
from the new laws' guidelines.&#13;
Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI)&#13;
represents 47,000 individuals&#13;
who collect royalties through use&#13;
of their lyrics, compositions, and&#13;
music publications; the American&#13;
Society of Composers,&#13;
Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP)&#13;
and SESAC, Inc. collecfivelv&#13;
represent approximately 160,000&#13;
works. Russell Sanjek, a VP of&#13;
8MI, said that "There is no&#13;
difference between the educational&#13;
establishment and the&#13;
dance hall busjness as far as&#13;
copyright law. is concerned."&#13;
Even marching bands will pay&#13;
A proposal presented by BMI&#13;
for the payment of royalty fees&#13;
combines a 10c/student enrolled&#13;
charge for- "non-live" music&#13;
Jotape or&#13;
not to tape&#13;
The Board of Regents&#13;
Education Committee tabled the&#13;
issue of tape recording of class&#13;
until its November meeting. The&#13;
action was a surprise to many'&#13;
who viewed the amendment to&#13;
existing Regent Policy as a&#13;
non-controversial item. The&#13;
action that was being considered&#13;
would have allowed handicapped&#13;
students to use tape&#13;
recorders....in 'classes. Federal&#13;
handicapped regulations state&#13;
that such use of tape recorders _&#13;
cannot be denied to handicapped&#13;
students; thus, the&#13;
amendment would have brought&#13;
Regent resolution 1326 in&#13;
compliance with federal regulations.&#13;
During discussion of the&#13;
issue, .Erv Portman stated that&#13;
United Council supported the&#13;
.amendment, and urged the&#13;
Board to extend the right to tape&#13;
record classes to all students in&#13;
the UW System. Regent Bert&#13;
McNamara responded to this&#13;
idea by stating "Any student who&#13;
needs to use a tape recorder to&#13;
get through a class doesn't&#13;
belong in the University." He&#13;
went on to substantiate his&#13;
remarks by saying "I think of all&#13;
scholars that have existed in the&#13;
past 1500 years, and know that&#13;
none of them ever had the use of&#13;
a tape recorder."&#13;
Discussion continued, and&#13;
Portman explained that in many&#13;
cases the use of a recorder is an&#13;
educational aid, enabling the&#13;
student to better comprehend&#13;
the subject matter being&#13;
discussed. Some faculty spoke&#13;
stating that this would have a&#13;
"chilling effect" on academic&#13;
freedom. They stated that this&#13;
policy would be in violation of&#13;
their constitutional rights. The&#13;
committee then decided to table&#13;
the issue and directed Central&#13;
Administration to work out the&#13;
wording of the amendment with&#13;
respect given to the faculty&#13;
concerns. It was felt that the&#13;
student c,oncerns were not widespread&#13;
and, therefore, the.Board&#13;
would not deal with further&#13;
liberalization of existing policy.&#13;
(piped music, intro or intermission&#13;
music at any event, etc.)&#13;
and a fee schedule for live&#13;
performances (example: $100 for&#13;
10,001to 12,500 seating capacity&#13;
facility). Charges for marching&#13;
band performances would also&#13;
be made. The present advice&#13;
from national officers is not to&#13;
sign any contract now. with the&#13;
copyright corporations.&#13;
the actual payment. Then the&#13;
representative demonstratingthe'&#13;
device can add, for example, six&#13;
inches of insulation to the model&#13;
house, and get a read-out of how&#13;
much such a move would save&#13;
the "homeowner each month&#13;
compared to how much the&#13;
insulation would cost. Other&#13;
energy-saving measures and cost&#13;
comparisons also can be&#13;
calculated by the computer and&#13;
wi II be demonstrated.&#13;
Energy microcomputer demonstrated&#13;
Want to know how much&#13;
money you'd really save - if any&#13;
- by insulating your house,&#13;
dialing down your thermostat or&#13;
eliminating your electric blanket?&#13;
A microcomputer in a suitcasesized&#13;
display which its developers&#13;
claim can do all that and&#13;
more will be demonstrated to the&#13;
public at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Wednesday,&#13;
- Nov. 16, at 4 p.m. and again at&#13;
7:30 p.rn. in Greenquist Hall&#13;
room 103. which is called the "home energy&#13;
Sponsored by UW-P's Center conservation demonstrator."&#13;
for the Application of Cornpu-, The computer calculates ___&#13;
.ters, flie demonstration and talk economic advantages versus&#13;
will feature Ron Weinberg of the various costs of energy-saving&#13;
Energy Education Office of Oak steps, Some 40 knobs on the&#13;
Ridge (Tenn.) Associated Umver- display represent variables in Cl&#13;
sities,' .developer s of the person's home - everything&#13;
computer. Weinberg also will from the number of square feet&#13;
meet infOrmally with anyone in the home to whether the&#13;
interested at 1 p.m. in television set is color or black&#13;
Greenquist 230 .to discuss the and white, instant-on or regular.&#13;
construction of the device, Other variables indicated with-&#13;
---&#13;
the. twist of a knob include&#13;
electricity cost, whether coal, oil&#13;
or gas heats Or cools the house,&#13;
the temperature of the hot water&#13;
and information about appliance&#13;
such as refrigerators, dishwashers,&#13;
freezers and electric&#13;
blankets.&#13;
Two screens display the&#13;
'fesu Its. One reads out the&#13;
device's calculation of the&#13;
individual's current average&#13;
energy bill, usually within 20&#13;
percent and often much closer to&#13;
news&#13;
Com-mittee moves t9 _&#13;
Y c opy Ed·t , or the traffic on the steep portions would wear them down and change&#13;
The Environmental Concerns Committee has made some final&#13;
recommendations on what Parkside should do with its nature trail.&#13;
First, signs will be posted in the area prohibiting bikes, horses, and&#13;
snowmobiles from traveling on the trails . . ,&#13;
Second the grass should be mowed on the perimeter aroun~ the&#13;
area to "isolate the prairie for firebreak purposes". Prairie lands&#13;
should be burned at regular intervals to prevent the encroachment of&#13;
higher plant life such as trees . • ' _&#13;
Third the committee recommended "relocation of the trails to&#13;
avoid st~p grades". This means that a few portions of the trail will be&#13;
the character of the prairie.&#13;
Fourth, outside groups who want to use the nature trail should&#13;
have to get permission from the committee chairman, Eugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz Professor-Life Science or the Security Department&#13;
before walki~g the trai'ls. Morris Firebaugh, Professor-Physics,&#13;
questioned the last proposal on the grounds it might _disco_u_rage use&#13;
of the trails. "We don't want to hamstring law-abiding cItIzens by&#13;
creating a new bureaucracy," he said. Chairman Gasiorkiewicz&#13;
replied that "it wouldn't form a big bureaucracy ... Security could&#13;
take care of all the requests." The committee approved all four&#13;
actions by consensus.&#13;
Government harassment&#13;
·conference starts today&#13;
A conference open to the&#13;
public entitled, "Government&#13;
Surveillance and Harassment vs.&#13;
the Majority" will be held at the&#13;
university of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 19, under the&#13;
sponsorship of eight_ Racine and&#13;
Kenosha organizations.&#13;
The all-day conference will&#13;
feature general sessions in the&#13;
morning and afternoon, with&#13;
workshops and discussion sessions&#13;
scheduled in between. The .&#13;
registration fee of $7 in advance&#13;
and $8 at the door (students $4)&#13;
includes lunch.&#13;
Sponsoring groups include the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine chapter of the&#13;
American Civil Liberties Union&#13;
(ACLU), the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Edu-cation Associations, Kenosha&#13;
and Racine chapters of the&#13;
National Organization of Women&#13;
(NOW), Wisconsin StateEmployees&#13;
Union local 218(), the&#13;
Social Concerns committee of&#13;
the Unitarian-Universalist&#13;
Church of Kenosha and Racine&#13;
and the UW-Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association .&#13;
The general morning sessions .&#13;
beginning at 9 a.m. in Classroom&#13;
107 will consider " Groundbreaking&#13;
Lawsuits Against Government&#13;
Spying, Harrassment&#13;
and Disruption" pre·sented by&#13;
David Hamlin, executive secretary&#13;
of the Illinois ACLU, and&#13;
Robert Sc hwarz, Milwaukee&#13;
chairman of the Socia'list&#13;
Workers Party. Racine-Kenosha&#13;
ACLU President Robert Bramscher&#13;
will moderate.&#13;
The-afternoon general sessions&#13;
beginning at 2:15 in Classroom&#13;
107 will be on "Government&#13;
Surveillance of the Women's&#13;
Movement," presented by Nancy&#13;
Borman, editor and co-publisher&#13;
of Majority Report, a New York&#13;
City feminist newspaper, anct&#13;
"ACLU Legislative Program for&#13;
Intelligence Agency Control,"&#13;
featuring~ohn Shattuck, director&#13;
of the Washington D.C. national&#13;
office of ACLU . Shattuck was the&#13;
attorney for Morton Halperin's&#13;
successful wiretap suit against&#13;
Richard Nixon et al. The session&#13;
will be moderated by Eunice&#13;
Edgar of Milwaukee, executive&#13;
director of the Wisconsin ACLU.&#13;
Group discussions and workshops&#13;
from 12:30-2 p.m. will be&#13;
"How to Use the Freedom of&#13;
lnformqtion Act to Get Secret&#13;
Files," by Hamlin; "Surveillance&#13;
and Harassment of Teachers," by&#13;
. leaders of the Kenosha Education&#13;
Associations; " Repressive Legislation&#13;
Pending," by UWMilwauk_ee&#13;
professor David&#13;
Luce, state ACLU executive&#13;
board member; and "Lawsuits&#13;
Against Government Spying :&#13;
Whether and How to Sue," by&#13;
William Lynch, legal director for&#13;
the state ACLU.&#13;
The conference will be held in&#13;
the UW-Parkside Union and&#13;
nearby classrooms, with registration·&#13;
beginning at 8:30 a.m.&#13;
outside Classroom 107 where the&#13;
first general session will be held.&#13;
Advance registration can be&#13;
made through Mrs . Ginger&#13;
Clapper, 2321 Washington Ave.~&#13;
Racine, 53403, tel. 634-5086 or&#13;
through the UW-P Union&#13;
Information Center.&#13;
Univers.ities to pay royalties&#13;
Payments of perhaps several&#13;
million dollars a year in royalties&#13;
will be mandatory starting&#13;
January 1, 1978. The federal&#13;
copyright law will no , longer&#13;
exempt universities from royalty&#13;
payments for music played on&#13;
their campuses by action of the&#13;
federal gover,1ment. The impact&#13;
of the new regulations could be&#13;
"devestating" in the short run&#13;
because the change in the law&#13;
becomes effective in the middle&#13;
of the colleges' fiscal year, and&#13;
the payment of royal~ies was not&#13;
anticipated by university budgetmakers,&#13;
according to Gary&#13;
English, a representative of one&#13;
of several nationwide university&#13;
groups plunged into the&#13;
confusion over the regulations.&#13;
Three copyright companies&#13;
stand to make sizeable profits&#13;
from the new laws' guidelines.&#13;
Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI)&#13;
represents 47,000 individuals&#13;
who collect royalties through use&#13;
of their lyrics, compositions, and&#13;
music publications; the American&#13;
Society of Composers,&#13;
Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP)&#13;
and SESAC, Inc. colleq:ively&#13;
represent approximately 160,000&#13;
works. Russell Sanjek, a VP ot&#13;
BMI, said that "There is no&#13;
difference between the educational&#13;
establishment and the&#13;
dance hall buslness as far as&#13;
copyright law. is concerned."&#13;
Even marching bands will pay&#13;
A proposal presented by BMI&#13;
for the payment of royalty fees&#13;
combines a 10c/student enrolled&#13;
charge for "non-live" music&#13;
Jo -tape or&#13;
not to tape&#13;
The Board of Regents&#13;
Education Committee ta6Ied the&#13;
issue of tape recording of class&#13;
until its November meeting. The&#13;
action was a surprise to many&#13;
who viewed the amendment to&#13;
existing Regent Policy as a&#13;
non-controversial item. The&#13;
action that was being considered&#13;
would have allowed handicapped&#13;
students to use tape&#13;
recorders"' in • classes. Federal&#13;
handicapped regulations state&#13;
that such use of tape recorder.s -&#13;
cannot be denied to handicapped&#13;
stugents; thus, the&#13;
amendment would have brought&#13;
Regent resolution 1326 in&#13;
compliance with federal regulations&#13;
. During discussion of the&#13;
issue, .Erv Portman stated that&#13;
United Council supported the&#13;
amendment, and urged the&#13;
Board to extend the right to tape&#13;
record classes to all students in&#13;
the UW System. Regent Bert&#13;
McNamara responded to this&#13;
idea by stating "Any student ~ho&#13;
needs to use a tape recorder to&#13;
get through a class doesn't&#13;
belong in the Un~verslty." He&#13;
went on to substantiate his&#13;
remarks by saying "I think of all&#13;
scholars that have existed in the&#13;
past 1500 years, and know that&#13;
none of them ever had the use of&#13;
a tape recorder."&#13;
Discussion continued, and&#13;
Portman explained that in many&#13;
cases the use of a recorder is an&#13;
educational aid, enabling the&#13;
student to bett~r comprehend&#13;
the subject matter being&#13;
discussed. Some faculty spoke&#13;
stating that this would have a&#13;
"chilling effect" on academic&#13;
freedom . Th(!y stated that this&#13;
policy would be in violation of&#13;
their constitutional rights. The&#13;
committee then decided to table&#13;
the issue and directed Central&#13;
Administration to work out the&#13;
wording of the amendment with&#13;
respect given to the faculty&#13;
concerns . It was felt that the&#13;
student concerns were not widespread&#13;
and, therefore, the .Board&#13;
would not deal with further&#13;
liberalization of existing policy.&#13;
(piped music, intro ot intermission&#13;
music at any event, etc.)&#13;
and a fee schedule for live&#13;
performances (example: $100 for&#13;
10,001 to 12,500 seating capacity&#13;
, facility). Charges for marching&#13;
band performances would also&#13;
be made. The present advice&#13;
from national officers is not to&#13;
sign any contract now, with the&#13;
copyright corporations.&#13;
Energy microcomputer demonstrated&#13;
Want to know how much&#13;
money you'd really save - if any&#13;
- by insulating your house,&#13;
dialing down your thermostat or&#13;
eliminating your electric blanket?&#13;
&#13;
A microcomputer in a suitcasesized&#13;
display which its developers&#13;
claim can do all that and&#13;
more will be demonstrated to the&#13;
public at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 16, at 4 p.m. and again at&#13;
7:30 p .m. in Greenquist Hall&#13;
room 103.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-P's Center&#13;
for the Application of Compu-~&#13;
ters, the demonstration and talk&#13;
will feature Ron Weinberg of the&#13;
Energy Education Office of Oak&#13;
Ridge (Tenn.) Associated Universities,&#13;
. developers of the&#13;
computer. Weinberg also will&#13;
meet informally with anyone&#13;
interested at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist 230 to discuss the&#13;
construction of the device,&#13;
which is called the "home energy&#13;
conservation demonstrator."&#13;
The computer calculates .__&#13;
economic advantages versus&#13;
various costs of energy-saving&#13;
steps. Some 40 knobs on the&#13;
display represent variables in -a&#13;
person's home - everything&#13;
from the number of square feet&#13;
in the home to whether the&#13;
television set is color or black&#13;
and white, instant-on or regular.&#13;
Other variables indicated with-&#13;
-&#13;
the twist of a knob include&#13;
electricity cost, whether coal, oil&#13;
or gas heats or cools the house,&#13;
the temperature of the hot water&#13;
and information about appliance&#13;
such as refrigerators, dishwashers,&#13;
freezers and electric&#13;
blankets .&#13;
Two screens display the&#13;
results. One reads out the&#13;
device's calculation of the&#13;
individual's current average&#13;
energy bill, usually within 20&#13;
percent and often much closer to&#13;
the actual payment. Then the,&#13;
representative demonstrati ngthe&#13;
device can add, for example, six&#13;
inches of insulation to the model&#13;
house, and get a read-out of how&#13;
much such a move would save&#13;
the ·homeowner each month&#13;
compared to how much the&#13;
insulation would cost. Other&#13;
energy-saving ~easures and cost&#13;
comparisons also can be&#13;
calculated by the computer and&#13;
will be demonstrated. &#13;
news&#13;
Student publishes&#13;
in research iournal&#13;
UW-Parkside ibr ry&#13;
awarded 3 year grant&#13;
by Diane lalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Mike Evans, Parkside sociology major with an&#13;
anthropology concentration, is the first student to&#13;
publish a co-authored historial research article in&#13;
the Journal of Enthnohistory which will be released&#13;
in the spring.&#13;
Associate Professor of Anthropology, Richard&#13;
Stoffle, is the other co-author of the pre-published&#13;
article entitled, "Resource Competition and&#13;
Population Change A Kaibab Paiute&#13;
Enthnohistorial Case." In the library research&#13;
report. Evans and Staffle analyzed "resource&#13;
competition, population fluctuations, and ethnicity&#13;
change resulting from Euroamerican instrusion in to&#13;
Kaibab Paiute territory in northern Arizona and&#13;
Southern Utah." More specifically, the research&#13;
paper "is an enthnohistoncal reconstruction of how&#13;
the Kaibab Paiutes have dealt with loss of essential&#13;
subsistence resources, depopulation by disease,&#13;
and Euroamerican pressure to relinguish traditional&#13;
ethnicity patterns."&#13;
last March, Professor Stoffle and Mike Evans&#13;
traveled to San Diego, California, where Mike&#13;
presented the 33-page research article to&#13;
approximately 450 world-wtde anthropology&#13;
professors at the annual Society for Applied&#13;
Anthropology meeting.&#13;
Joseph A. Boisse, Director of the library/learning Center, said&#13;
"The bibliographic instruction program seeks to equip students with&#13;
library research skills which will be useful to them not only In their&#13;
academic work, but also in their professional lives after graduation .-&#13;
The UW-Parkside library/learning Center has already been Cited&#13;
as an outstanding teacher library.&#13;
Along with many other anthropology professors,&#13;
Professor Stoffle agreed that Mike did an excellent&#13;
job in presenting the article and "handled himself&#13;
very well during" the questioning' period."&#13;
In Mid-August, Mike independently composed&#13;
another library research article. The second article,&#13;
completed on October 13, 1977, was entitled, "A&#13;
Reexamination of Southern-Most Paiute Populations."&#13;
In this article, Mike attempted "to show how&#13;
to use comparative data as a guide in calculating&#13;
population levels for groups who have similar&#13;
environments, adaptive strategies, culture and&#13;
history."&#13;
American Society for Ethnohistory's 25th annual&#13;
meeting was held in Chicago, Illinois on October&#13;
13-15. Mike, along with others, presented their&#13;
research articles to anthropology professors.&#13;
t\A.4ke was very pleased with his second&#13;
presentation and believed "it was a fairly good&#13;
paper "&#13;
Professor Stoffle was very optimistic about&#13;
Mike's second article being published within a year&#13;
or two. Stoffle believed that more faculty-student&#13;
pieces, with proper guidance in academic research,&#13;
should be composed while students are still&#13;
undergraduates.&#13;
The National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) has awarded&#13;
$72,297 to the University of Wisconsin-Parks ide as part of the College&#13;
library Program. Funded jointly by the National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities and the Council on library Resources, the grant will&#13;
cover a period of three years, beginning January 1, 1978.&#13;
The award will be used to provide additional professional and&#13;
support staff in the library/learning Center to accelerate the&#13;
development of materials for use in the library's bibliographic&#13;
instruction program.&#13;
"Competition for endowment funds is quite rigorous and generally&#13;
only one in every five requests results in an award," Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin saidjn announcing the award.&#13;
,&#13;
Course announcement&#13;
Title: Special Topics in English Magazine Article Writing (English&#13;
490)&#13;
Instructor: Emmett Bedford&#13;
Prerequisite: Consent of Instructor; evidence of advanced writing&#13;
experience in courses or on publications will be required&#13;
Credit: 1 hour&#13;
Description: The course will concern Itself with writing articles for&#13;
the Uw-Parkside publication, Reports of Scholarly and Creative&#13;
Activity at the University of W;sconsin*Parkside. The subject of the&#13;
articles will be research, scholarship, and creative work of Parkside&#13;
faculty and staff. The students will be given Individual assignments&#13;
and will be expected to research the subject's background, Interview&#13;
the subject, and write an article suitable for publication. Depending&#13;
on the scope of the subject and length of the article, one or more&#13;
articles will be required to satisfy a' hour credit. Selected reading in&#13;
books on article writing.&#13;
The class will meet as a seminar periodically throughout the&#13;
semester; there will also be individual conferences.&#13;
Tell: A suitable handbook of grammar and rhetoric and Strunk and&#13;
White, The Elements of Style.&#13;
Students interested in registering for this course Mxt semnter should&#13;
contact Emmett Bedford 553-2020.&#13;
KKK expands operations&#13;
[CPSI - The KKKseems to be&#13;
having an upsurge in popularity,&#13;
Their latest exploit will take on&#13;
the federal immigration service.&#13;
The Klan plans to patrol the&#13;
Mexico-Texas border in search of&#13;
illegal aliens crossing to look for&#13;
work. Although illegal, they have&#13;
publicized the action.&#13;
1S0 members will patrol on&#13;
foot In street clothes Three light&#13;
planes will scour the area as well&#13;
Spokespersons say the Klan&#13;
Will turn any aliens found over to&#13;
the rrnmrgratton authonues In&#13;
one piece It IS hoped&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
CooJe 100ay See bJl'S.&#13;
"This grant will enable us to build our program into one of the most&#13;
comprehensive in the country," Boisse said. "The materials&#13;
developed as a result of the grant will also be. made available to-other&#13;
academic institutions around the country"&#13;
Two seniors nominated&#13;
for Danforth Fellowship&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside - has&#13;
announced selection of its two nominees 'or&#13;
Danforth Foundation Fellowships. They are Gregg&#13;
Hermann, 1215 Carlisle Ave., Racine, a senior with&#13;
majors in English, German and history, and Steve&#13;
Edwards, 1431 College Ave.. Racine, a senior music&#13;
major.&#13;
About 60 to 65 of the fellowships will be awarded&#13;
nationally next April to students selected from&#13;
nominees from individual campuses throughout the&#13;
country. The fellowships are awarded to students&#13;
who plan to teach at the university level and wish&#13;
to study for the Ph. D. degree. They include&#13;
graduate school tuition and fees and a living&#13;
stipend and are normally renewable for four years.&#13;
To be considered for-the awards, students must&#13;
have the recommendation of the faculty of their&#13;
major field, submit essays and interview with a&#13;
campus selection committee headed by their&#13;
university's' Danforth Foundation campus liaison&#13;
officer.&#13;
Members of the selection committee at&#13;
UW-Parkside were Prof. Carol Lee Saffiotti, liaison&#13;
officer ahd committee chairperson, and Profs.&#13;
Constantine Stathatos, Ben Greenebaum, Norbert&#13;
Isenberg, lionel Maldonado .and William Murin.&#13;
Additionally, three Parkside alumni will be&#13;
applying for Danforth Fellowships under the&#13;
Foundations post-baccalaureate program. All&#13;
spring, 1977 graduates, they are Maureen Flynn,&#13;
history, Debbie D1Pasquale, humanities, and Jeffrey&#13;
Nehr. physics. Post-baccalaureate students make&#13;
application directly to the Foundation.&#13;
qUOllfy CXlfTYT"etClal p!lnlen&#13;
1417 50th weer 658·8990&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From Goers Country.&#13;
O. Tap At Uli•• S~lar.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
HOlll8of th8 S.~III.ri ...&#13;
S....w1eh&#13;
C¥~~&#13;
OPEl I A.M. TI 11:31 , .M.&#13;
2615 W......... ",.. 614-2171&#13;
news&#13;
Stu-dent publishes&#13;
resea·rch iournal • 1n&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Mike Evans, Parkside sociology major with an&#13;
anthropology concentration, is the first student to&#13;
publish a co-authored historial research article in&#13;
the Journal of Enthnohistory which will be released&#13;
in the spring.&#13;
Associate Professor of AnthroP.ology, Richard&#13;
Stoffle, is the other co-author of the pre-published&#13;
article entitled, "Resource Competition and&#13;
Population Change A Kaibab Paiute&#13;
Enthnohistorial Case." In the library research&#13;
report, Evans and Stoffle analyzed "resource&#13;
competition, population fluctuations, and ethnicity&#13;
change resulting from Euroamerican instrusion in to&#13;
Kaibab Paiute territory in northern Arizona and&#13;
Southern Utah." More specifically, the research&#13;
paper "is an enthnohistorical reconstruction of how&#13;
the Kaibab Paiutes have dealt with loss of essential&#13;
subsistence resources, depopulation by disease,&#13;
and Euroamerican pressure to relinguish traditional&#13;
ethnicity patterns ."&#13;
Last March, Professor Stoffle and Mike Evans&#13;
traveled to San Diego, California, where Mike&#13;
presented the 33-page research article to&#13;
approximately 450 world-wide anthropology&#13;
professors at the annual Society for Applied&#13;
Anthropology meeting.&#13;
Along with many other anthropology professors,&#13;
Professor Stoffle agreed that Mike did an excellent&#13;
job in presenting the article and "handled himself&#13;
very well during· the questioning· period."&#13;
In Mid-August, Mike independently composed&#13;
another library research article. The second article,&#13;
completed on October 13, 1977, was entitled, "A&#13;
Reexamination of Southern-Most Paiute Populations&#13;
." In this article, Mike attempted "to show how&#13;
to use comparative data as a guide in calculating&#13;
population levels for groups who have similar&#13;
environments, adaptive strategies, culture and&#13;
history."&#13;
American Society for Ethnohistory's 25th annual&#13;
meeting was held in Chicago, Illinois on October&#13;
13-15. Mike, along with others, presented their&#13;
research articles to anthropology professors.&#13;
Mike was very pleased with his second&#13;
presentation and believed " it was a fairly good&#13;
paper."&#13;
Professor Stoffle was very optimistic about&#13;
Mike's second article being published within a year&#13;
or two. Stoffle believed that more faculty-student&#13;
pieces, with proper guidance in academic research,&#13;
should be composed while students are still&#13;
undergraduates.&#13;
,&#13;
Course announcement&#13;
Title: Special Topics in English. Magazine Article Writing (Engli h&#13;
490)&#13;
Instructor: Emmett Bedford&#13;
Prerequisite: Consent of instructor, ev1d nee of advanced writing&#13;
experience in courses or on publications will be required&#13;
Credit: 1 hour&#13;
Description: The course will concern itself with writing articles for&#13;
the UW-Parks1de publication, Reports of Scholarly and Creative&#13;
Activity at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside. The sub1ect of the&#13;
articles will be research, scholarship, and creative work of Parkside&#13;
faculty and staff The students will be given md1v1dual assignments&#13;
and will be expected to research the sub1ect's background, interview&#13;
the subject, and write an article suitable for publication Depending&#13;
on the scope of the subject and length of the article, one or more&#13;
articles will be required to satisfy a 1 hour credit Selected reading in&#13;
books on article writing.&#13;
The class will meet as a seminar periodically throughout the&#13;
semester; there will also be individual conferences.&#13;
Text: A suitable handbook of grammar and rhetoric and Strunk and&#13;
White, The Elements of Style.&#13;
Students interested in registering for this course next semester should&#13;
contact Emmett Bedford 553-2020.&#13;
KKK expands operations&#13;
[CPS] - The KKK seems to be&#13;
having an upsurge in popularity..--&#13;
Their latest exploit will take on&#13;
the federal immigration service&#13;
The Klan plans to patrol the&#13;
Mexico-Texas border in search of&#13;
illegal aliens crossing to look for&#13;
work . Although illegal, they have&#13;
publicized the action&#13;
150 members will patrol on&#13;
foot an stre t clothes Three light&#13;
planes will scour the ar a as well .&#13;
Spokespersons say the Ian&#13;
will turn any aliens found over to&#13;
the immigration authorities . In&#13;
one piece It Is hoped.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIO S UW-Parkside FOR YOU!&#13;
awarded 3 year grant .&#13;
_.,_.. .&#13;
---_ ........ ...... ... _ --~ ____ __ _.. .... _ .&#13;
;, I&#13;
The National Endowment for the Humanities (NfH) has awarded&#13;
$72,297 to the University of Wisconsin-Parkside as part of the College&#13;
Library Program. Funded jointly by the National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities and the Council on Library Resources, the grant will&#13;
cover a period of three years, beginning January 1, 1978.&#13;
The award will be vsed to provide additional professional and&#13;
support staff in the Library/ Learning Center to accelerate the&#13;
development of materials for use in the library's bibliographic&#13;
instruction program .&#13;
"Competition for endowment funds is quite rigorous and generally&#13;
only one in every five requests results in an award," Chancellor Alan&#13;
Gus kin said _in announcing the award.&#13;
Joseph A. Boisse, Director of the Library/ Learning Center, said&#13;
" The bibliographic instruction program seeks to equip students with&#13;
library research skills which will be useful to them not only in their&#13;
academic work, but also in their professional lives after graduation."&#13;
The UW-Parkside Library/ Learning Center has already been cited&#13;
as an outstanding teacher library&#13;
"This grant will enable us to build our prograf'T' into one of the most&#13;
comprehensive in the country," Boisse said. " The material&#13;
developed as a result of the grant will also be.made available to other&#13;
academic institutions around the country "&#13;
-.... ._. .....&#13;
--.,._ .... ...... --- •. ! -- ,)· ... , .... -&#13;
Two seniors nominated Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
for Danforth Fellowship&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside has&#13;
announced selection of its two nominees ,)r&#13;
Danforth Foundation Fellowships·. They are Gregg&#13;
Hermann, 1215 Carlisle Ave., Racine, a senior with&#13;
majors in English, German and history, and Steve&#13;
Edwards, 1431 College Ave., Racine, a senior music&#13;
major.&#13;
About 60 to 65 of the fellowships will be awarded&#13;
natiohally next April to students selected from&#13;
nominees from individual campuses throughout the&#13;
country. The fellowships are awarded to students&#13;
who plan to teach at the university level and wish&#13;
to study for the Ph. D. degree. They include&#13;
graduate school tuition and fees and a living&#13;
stipend and are normally renewable for four years.&#13;
To be considered for ·the awards, students must&#13;
have the recommendation of the faculty of their&#13;
major field, submit essays and interview with a&#13;
campus selection committee headed by their&#13;
university's· Danforth Foundation campus liaison&#13;
officer.&#13;
Members of the selection committee at&#13;
UW-Parkside were Prof. Carol Lee Saffiotti, liaison&#13;
officer and committee chairperson, and Profs.&#13;
Constantine Stathatos, Ben Greenebaum, Norbert&#13;
Isenberg, Lionel Maldonado and William Murin .&#13;
Additionally, three Parkside alumni will be&#13;
applying for Danforth Fellowships under the&#13;
Foundations post-baccalaureate program . All&#13;
spring, 1977 graduates, they are Maureen Flynn,&#13;
history, Debbie DiPasquale, humanities, and Jeffrey&#13;
Nehr, physics . Post-baccalaureate students make&#13;
application directly to the Foundation.&#13;
Tap At Union Square&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the S11~111rine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.ll. TIL 10:30 P .I.&#13;
2615 W11hi119to1 ""· 634-2373&#13;
... &#13;
news&#13;
Market research /&#13;
replaces a"cademics&#13;
[CPS] - The textbook is no longer the 'publish or perish' affair of&#13;
college professors alone. Publishing- companies are entering into&#13;
major collaborative arrangements with authors and in at least one&#13;
case, have virtually written the texts completely through market&#13;
research.&#13;
Authorless wonder ....&#13;
In 1969, the publishers of Psychology Today brought out a new&#13;
college-level textbook, Psychology Today, An Introduction. The First&#13;
edition sold about 180,00Ctcopies, a marked success since the cutoff&#13;
for textbook bestseller status is 20,IXK). But the unusual circumstance&#13;
surrounding the new text was that it was put out by a market research&#13;
corporation, CRM Books, and was essentially written inside the&#13;
publishing house itself by a "book-team" of writers, market&#13;
researchers"and graphic designers. There was no author listed&#13;
anywhere.&#13;
CRM's move into the college market place left an impression on&#13;
other textbook publishers who began moving toward more market&#13;
research, more graphics and more in-house control by publishers&#13;
over the content of textbooks.&#13;
Publishers become professors&#13;
The publisher hasassumedan omnipresent place in what was once&#13;
the professor's realm. The author is getting more help from the&#13;
publisher, and David P. Amerman, vice-present and director of&#13;
marketing of the college division at Prentice-Hall lnc., said recently&#13;
that they are "exercising ... muscle and telling the author the best.&#13;
way to do it, a lot more than (we) used to."&#13;
There has been a glut of college textbooks in recent years and&#13;
according to Amerman, "where you usedto have four or five books in&#13;
a field, today you have 150, and at least 12 of them are good."&#13;
"The competition has made it a selling game," adds Amerman.&#13;
George Madden and Associates, a publishing company in San&#13;
Diego, focuses more on what professors say they want in a textbook&#13;
than on what they use. Madden's service relies on personal interviews&#13;
with a - sample of teachers whereas CR"1 marketing uses&#13;
_computerized surveys of the college market place to help them plan&#13;
their manuscripts.&#13;
Authors; not necessary&#13;
In fact, the original concept at CRM was that an author was not&#13;
necessary but specialists in each area were consulted instead and&#13;
provided chapters. The idea did not work out and was abandoned.&#13;
Addison-Wesley, a major textbook publisher, insiststhat the author&#13;
remains the most important contributor but whether or not he&#13;
actually does the writing varies with the textbook.&#13;
In the meantime, the prospect of a drop in college enrollments and&#13;
a tightening of the market place has caused publishers of college&#13;
texts to become less willing to leave all the decisions about a&#13;
textbook to their authors. -&#13;
Nevertheless, authors still manage to hold their own on campus,&#13;
where students are often required to use books penned by their&#13;
professors.Someof the books are costly; law texts, for example, often&#13;
running as high as $17-20&#13;
Royalties go to school&#13;
One professor at Florida Technological University told his students&#13;
that he specified any royalties he received from FTU sales of his book&#13;
be returned to the university specifically for his department.&#13;
While the price of a text is determined by the publisher, usual&#13;
royalties for an author remain high, about 10 to 15 percent. The&#13;
bookstore receives a 40 to 50 percent profit.&#13;
Says the FTU professor, the author has little control over what&#13;
happens to their text.&#13;
And that is the way the marketing research departments at&#13;
publishing houses will try and keep it.&#13;
Office closes&#13;
Parkside's Office of Student&#13;
Development and Community&#13;
Student Services will be closed&#13;
the evenings of Nov. 23 and 24&#13;
because of the Thanksgiving&#13;
holiday.&#13;
Regular evening hours, which&#13;
extend until 8 p.m. Mondays&#13;
through Thursdays, will resume&#13;
Nov~mber 28.&#13;
Recital Sunday&#13;
A flute recital by Frank&#13;
Suetholz, his wife Barbara and&#13;
three of his Parkside flute&#13;
students will be presented at 8&#13;
p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 20, in the&#13;
UW-P Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. The student participants&#13;
are Marjorie Roth, Lori Meyer&#13;
and Mary )0 Niatupski. Carol Bell&#13;
will be the pianist.&#13;
The program will focus on two&#13;
centuries of French music dating&#13;
from 1731 to 1936. '&#13;
The performance will include&#13;
Suite NO.3 in G minor for solo&#13;
flute and Concerto for Jive&#13;
Flutes, both by Joseph Bodin de&#13;
Boismortier; Fantasie for flute&#13;
and piano by Georges Hue; and&#13;
Suite de 3 Morceaux, Op. 116, by&#13;
Benjamin Godard; and a 1936&#13;
work by EdgardVarese.&#13;
The Suetholz' will also play&#13;
Four Duets in G by Johann&#13;
Adolph Hasse and will be joined&#13;
by Mrs. Bell in Franz and Karl&#13;
Doppler's Hungarian Phantasy.&#13;
Op.35.&#13;
The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
-sports&#13;
Soccer team wins district&#13;
by Alane Adresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
scored five minutes into the first&#13;
half of the game by Earl&#13;
Campbell, giving Parkside the&#13;
lead, 1-0; but ten minutes later&#13;
Platteville tied up the score.&#13;
Then with ten minutes left in the&#13;
half Parkside's Steve Borggren&#13;
scored a goal when Platteville's&#13;
fullback passed the ball back to&#13;
the goalkeeper, who couldn't I&#13;
handle it, thus Steve kicked it in&#13;
to give the Ranger's the lead of&#13;
2-1, at the half.&#13;
The UW-Parkside SoccerTeam&#13;
defeated UW-Platteville Saturday,&#13;
November 5th, by a score of&#13;
4-2 to become the 1977 District&#13;
champions.&#13;
Scoring goals for the Rangers&#13;
were Earl Campbell (3), assisted&#13;
by Mike Oleson (1) and Bob&#13;
Stuewe (2) and Sorggren (1),&#13;
unassisted. The first goal was&#13;
In the second half Coach&#13;
Henderson replaced Bob Stoewe&#13;
in the goal with Mike Oleson,&#13;
, and put Stoewe in the forward&#13;
line. With Bob's speed he beat&#13;
out Platteville's defense and&#13;
layed the ball off on Earl&#13;
Campbell, who then scored with&#13;
only 57 seconds into the half,&#13;
raising the lead to 3-1. Eleven&#13;
minutes later both Bob and Earl&#13;
repeated the same play to boost&#13;
the score to 4-1. Within the last&#13;
Rangers second in midwest&#13;
by John VanDen Brandt&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Winner, finish irtg nineteen&#13;
seconds ahead of the field in a&#13;
course record of 16:35 (l.miles).&#13;
The previous course mark was&#13;
held by world record holder, Peg&#13;
Keppel of Iowa.&#13;
In the final race of the day, the&#13;
Parkside men's team put&#13;
together an impressive effort to&#13;
finish second in the MidAmerica&#13;
Championships, beating&#13;
perennial tevonte University of&#13;
Chicago Track Club, by three&#13;
points. The Rangers were five.&#13;
points shy of the first place&#13;
winners, Sports Complex ltd.&#13;
Tom Burleson of Indiana T.C.,&#13;
shattered the U.S.T.F.F. record&#13;
by twenty-three seconds with his&#13;
winning time of 24:46. Parkside's&#13;
Approximately 400 distance&#13;
runners of all ages gathered on&#13;
the cross country course&#13;
Saturday, November 5, as&#13;
Parkside hosted the U.S.T.F.F.&#13;
National and Mid-America Cross&#13;
Country Charnplonships. The day&#13;
featured eleven - races that&#13;
decided championships in age&#13;
groups from under ten to over&#13;
forty. Racing distances varied&#13;
from one to five miles.&#13;
The Women's Nationals and&#13;
Men's Mid-America championships&#13;
highlighted the meet. In&#13;
the former, Cindy Bremsen of&#13;
Mishicot, was the unchallenged&#13;
Ray Fredricksen was also under&#13;
the previous \ecord, finishing&#13;
sixth in 25:17. The Ranger's&#13;
outstanding freshman, Bob&#13;
Langenhol, wal only seconds&#13;
back taking seventh place. Gary&#13;
Priem rounded out the race's top&#13;
ten, with sophomore jeff Miller&#13;
closely behind in twelfth. Bill&#13;
Werve's 39th place capped the&#13;
scoring. Parkstde's two other&#13;
variety runners, john Poulakos&#13;
and Mike Rummelhart finished&#13;
49th and 53rd, respectively.&#13;
Parks ide hosts the NAIA&#13;
National Cross Country Championships&#13;
on November-;19th.'&#13;
The race will feature nearly five&#13;
hundred runners.&#13;
ten minutes Platteville scored&#13;
. another goal, to make the final&#13;
score 4-2.&#13;
As to the team's championship&#13;
win, Coach Henderson commented,&#13;
"I didn't feel we played&#13;
that well, but the field was soft&#13;
and slick, so with a shuffled up&#13;
line-up I was pleased with the&#13;
results. I'm extremely encouraged&#13;
for the playoffs in&#13;
Minnesota. We seem to be&#13;
coming off our injuries; Mike&#13;
Oleson, Earl Campbell and Dan&#13;
Brieschke appear to be healthy&#13;
again. This is probably the&#13;
healthiest we've been all year,&#13;
coming at the best possible time,&#13;
the playoffs."&#13;
If they should win in&#13;
Minnesota they'll play the&#13;
district champions of Illinois;&#13;
and whoever wins that receives&#13;
the right to go to Alabama over&#13;
Thanksgiving.&#13;
Parkside ranks 12th in NAIA&#13;
UW-Parkside's cross-country&#13;
team istied for 12th in the nation&#13;
in the latest poll of NAIA&#13;
coaches.&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa's Rangers&#13;
made their first appearance in&#13;
the rankings two weeks before&#13;
the NAIA national championship&#13;
run scheduled for Nov. 19 on the&#13;
UW-P's five mile campus course.&#13;
Parkside is tied with Harding&#13;
College (Ark.) and Malone (0.).&#13;
Adams State College (Colorado)&#13;
was ranked first followed by&#13;
.lndiana University (Pa.) and&#13;
Saginaw Valley State' of&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
Cross-country ski meeting planned&#13;
There will be an important&#13;
organization meeting of all&#13;
students, faculty, arid staff, who&#13;
are interested in cross-country&#13;
I skiing activities.&#13;
This year, the club will sponsor&#13;
competitive events, tours, and&#13;
instructional ctintcs , One of the&#13;
club's goals is to organize a&#13;
men's .and women's cr osscountry&#13;
ski team.&#13;
The meeting will be in CL 322&#13;
at 6:45 p.m., on Wednesday,&#13;
November 16. Movies will be&#13;
shown.&#13;
Interested parties not able to&#13;
attend the meeting should&#13;
contact J. Georgeson at&#13;
553-2446.&#13;
I&#13;
news&#13;
Market research /&#13;
replace_&#13;
s a·cademics&#13;
[CPS] - The textbook is no longer the 'publish or perish' affair of&#13;
college professors alone. Publishing, companies are entering into&#13;
major collaborative arrangements with authors and in at least one&#13;
case, have virtually written the texts completely through market&#13;
research .&#13;
Authorless wonder&#13;
In 1969, the publishers of Psychology Today brought out a new&#13;
college-level textbook, Psychology Today, An Introduction. The First&#13;
edition sold about 180,000 copies, a marked success since the cutoff&#13;
for textbook bestseller status is 20,000. But the unusual circumstance&#13;
surrounding the new text was that it was put out by a market research&#13;
corporation , CRM Books, and was essentially written lnside the&#13;
publishing house itself by a " book-team" of writers, market&#13;
researchers -and graphic designers . There was no author listed&#13;
anywhere.&#13;
CRM's move into the college market place left an impression on&#13;
other textbook publishers who began moving toward more market&#13;
research, more graphics and more in-house control by publishers&#13;
over the content of textbooks .&#13;
Publishers become professors&#13;
The publisher has assumed an omnipresent place in what was once&#13;
the professor's realm . The author is getting more help from the&#13;
publisher, and David P. Amerman , vice-present and director of&#13;
marketing of the college division at Prentice-Hall Inc., said recently&#13;
that they are "exercising . . . muscle and telling the author the best&#13;
way to do it, a lot more than (we) used to."&#13;
There has been a glut of college textbooks in recent years and&#13;
according to Amerman, "where you used to have four or five books in&#13;
a field, today you have 150, and at least 12 of them are good ."&#13;
"The competition has made it a selling game," adds Amerman .&#13;
George Madden and Associates, a pubiishing company in San&#13;
-sports&#13;
Diego, focuses more on what professors say they want in a textbook&#13;
than on what they use. Madden's service relies on personal interviews&#13;
with a · sample of teachers whereas CR.\1 marketing uses&#13;
computerized surveys of the college market place to help them plan&#13;
their manuscripts.&#13;
Authors; not necessary&#13;
In fact, the original concept at CRM was that an author was not&#13;
necessary but specialists in each area were consulted instead and&#13;
provided chapters. The idea did not work out and was abandoned .&#13;
Addison-Wesley, a major textbook publisher, insists that the author&#13;
remains the most important contributor but whether or not he&#13;
actually does the writing varies with the textbook .&#13;
In the meantime, the prospect of a drop in college enrollments and&#13;
a tightening of the market place has caused publishers of college&#13;
texts to become less willing to leave all the decisions about a&#13;
textbook to their authors .&#13;
Nevertheless, authors still manage to hold their own on campus,&#13;
where students are often required to use books penned by their&#13;
professors . Some of the books are costly; law texts , for example, often&#13;
running as high as $17-20.&#13;
Royalties go to school&#13;
One professor at Florida Technological University told his students&#13;
that he specified any royalties he received from FTU sales of his book&#13;
be returned to the university specifically for his department.&#13;
While the price of a text is determined by the publisher, usual&#13;
royalties for an author remain high, about 10 to 15 percent. The&#13;
bookstore receives a 40 to 50 percent profit.&#13;
Says the FTU professor, the author has little control over what&#13;
happens to their text .&#13;
And that is the way the marketing research departments at&#13;
publishing houses will try and keep it.&#13;
Office closes&#13;
Parkside's Office of Student&#13;
Development and Community&#13;
Student Services will be closed&#13;
the evenings of Nov. 23 and 24&#13;
because of the Thanksgiving&#13;
holiday.&#13;
Regular evening hours, which&#13;
extend until 8 p.m. Mondays&#13;
through Thursdays, will resume&#13;
November 28.&#13;
Recital Sunday&#13;
A flute recital by Frank&#13;
Suetholz, his wife Barbara and&#13;
three of his Parkside flute&#13;
students will be presented at 8&#13;
p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 20, in the&#13;
UW-P Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. The student participants&#13;
are Marjorie Roth, Lori Meyer&#13;
and Mary Jo Niatupski. Carol Bell&#13;
will be the pianist.&#13;
The program Will focus on two&#13;
centuries of French music dating&#13;
from 1731 to 1936.&#13;
The performance will include&#13;
Suite No. 3 in G minor for solo&#13;
flute and Concerto for .Jive&#13;
Flutes, both by Joseph Bodin de&#13;
Boismortier; Fantasie for flute&#13;
and piano by Georges Hue; and&#13;
Suite de 3 Marceaux, Op. 116, by&#13;
Benjamin Godard; and a 1936&#13;
work by Edgard Varese .&#13;
The Suetholz' will also play&#13;
Four Duets in G by Johann&#13;
Adolph Hasse and will be joined&#13;
by Mrs. Bell in Franz and Karl&#13;
Doppler's Hungarian Phantasy,&#13;
Op. 35 .&#13;
The program is free and open&#13;
to the public .&#13;
-&#13;
Soccer team· wins district&#13;
by Alane Adresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The UW-Parkside Soccer Team&#13;
defeated UW-Platteville Saturday,&#13;
November 5th, by a score of&#13;
4-2 to become the 1977 District&#13;
champions.&#13;
Scoring goals for the Rangers&#13;
were Earl Campbell (3), assisted&#13;
by Mike Oleson (1) and Bob&#13;
Stoewe (2) and Sorggren (1),&#13;
unassisted. The first goal was&#13;
scored five minutes into the first&#13;
half of the game by Earl&#13;
Campbell, giving Parkside the&#13;
lead, 1-0; but ten minutes later&#13;
Platteville tied up the score.&#13;
Then with ten minutes left in the&#13;
half Parkside's Steve Berggren&#13;
scored a goal when Platteville's&#13;
fullback passed the ball back to&#13;
the goalkeeper, who couldn't ,&#13;
handle it, thus Steve kicked it in&#13;
to give the Ranger's the lead of&#13;
2-1, at the half.&#13;
In the second half Coach&#13;
Henderson replaced Bob Stoewe&#13;
in the goal with Mike Oleson,&#13;
and put Stoewe in the forward&#13;
line. With Bob's speed he beat&#13;
out Platteville's qefense and&#13;
layed the ball off on Earl&#13;
Campbell, who then scored with&#13;
only 57 seconds into the half,&#13;
raising the lead to 3-1. Eleven&#13;
minutes later both Bob and Earl&#13;
repeated the same play to boost&#13;
the score to 4-1. Within the last&#13;
Rangers s·econd in midwest&#13;
by John VanDenBrandt&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Approximately 400 distance&#13;
runners of all ages gathered on&#13;
the cross country course&#13;
Saturday, November 5, as&#13;
Parkside hosted the U.S.T.F.F.&#13;
National and Mid-America Cross&#13;
Country Champi&lt;l@hips. The day&#13;
featured eleven races that&#13;
decided championships in age&#13;
groups from under ten to over&#13;
forty. Racing distances varied&#13;
from one to five miles .&#13;
The Women's Nationals and&#13;
Men's Mid-America championships&#13;
highlighted the meet. In&#13;
the former, Cindy Bremsen of&#13;
Mishicot, was the unchallenged&#13;
winner, finishing nineteen&#13;
seconds ahead of the field in a&#13;
co~rse record of 16:35 (3JT1iles).&#13;
The prevjous course mark was&#13;
held by world record holder, Peg&#13;
Keppel of Iowa.&#13;
In the final race of the day, the&#13;
Parkside men's team put&#13;
together an impressive effort to&#13;
finish second in the MidAmerica&#13;
Championships, beating&#13;
perennial favorite University of&#13;
Chicago Track Club, by three&#13;
point~. The Rangers were five.&#13;
points shy of the first place&#13;
winners, Sports Complex Ltd.&#13;
Tom Burleson of Indiana T.C.,&#13;
shattered the U .S.T.F .F. record&#13;
by twenty-three seconds with his&#13;
winning time of 24:46. Parkside's&#13;
Ray Fredricksen was also under&#13;
the previous record, finishing&#13;
sixth in 25:17. The Ranger's&#13;
outstanding freshman, Bob&#13;
Langenhol, wa~ only seconds&#13;
back taking seventh place. Gary&#13;
Priem rounded out the race's top&#13;
ten, with sophomore Jeff Miller&#13;
closely behind in twelfth. Bill&#13;
Werve's 39th place capped the&#13;
scoring. Parkside's two other&#13;
variety runners, John Poulakos&#13;
and Mike Rummelhart finished&#13;
49th and 53rd, respectively.&#13;
Parkside hosts the NAIA&#13;
National Cross Country Championships&#13;
on November-;19th .'&#13;
The race will feature nearly five&#13;
hundred runners.&#13;
ten minutes Platteville scored&#13;
· another goal, to make the final&#13;
score 4-2.&#13;
As to the team's championship&#13;
win, Coach Henderson commented,&#13;
"I didn't feel we played&#13;
that well, but the field was soft&#13;
and slick, so with a shuffled up&#13;
line-up I was pleased with the&#13;
results. I'm extremely encouraged&#13;
for the playoffs in&#13;
Minnesota. We seem to be&#13;
coming off our injuries; Mike&#13;
Oleson, Earl Campbell and Dan&#13;
Brieschke appear to be healthy&#13;
again . This is probably the&#13;
healthiest we'.ve been all year,&#13;
coming at the best possible time,&#13;
the playoffs ."&#13;
If they should win in&#13;
Minnesota they'll play the&#13;
district champions of Illinois;&#13;
and whoever wins that receives&#13;
the right to go to Alabama over&#13;
Thanksgiving.&#13;
Parkside ranks 12th in NAIA&#13;
UW-Parkside's cross-country&#13;
team is tied for 12th in the nation&#13;
in the latest poll of NAIA&#13;
coaches.&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa's Rangers&#13;
made their first appearance in&#13;
the rankings two weeks before&#13;
the NAIA national championship&#13;
run scheduled for Nov. 19 on the&#13;
UW-P's five mile campus course.&#13;
Parkside is tied with Harding&#13;
College (Ark .) and Malone (0.).&#13;
Adams State College (Colorado)&#13;
was ranked first followed by&#13;
-Indiana University (Pa.) and&#13;
Saginaw Valley State' of&#13;
Michigan .&#13;
Cross-country ski meeting planned&#13;
There will be an important&#13;
organization meeting of all&#13;
students, faculty, arid staff, who&#13;
are interested in cross-country&#13;
, skiing activities.&#13;
This year, the club will sponsor&#13;
competitive events, tours, and&#13;
instruction-al clinics _ One of the&#13;
club's goals is to organize a&#13;
men's and women's crosscountry&#13;
ski team.&#13;
The meeting will be in CL 322&#13;
at 6:45 p.m ., on Wednesday,&#13;
November 16. Movies will be&#13;
shown.&#13;
Interested parties not able to&#13;
attend the meeting should&#13;
contact J. Georgeson at&#13;
553-2446. &#13;
Korean diary&#13;
Dinner with Professor Kim: Professor Kim [in Korean dress], Professor&#13;
Dennis Dean, Mrs. Susan Dean. In backgrcJund, Mrs. Kim. We sat in&#13;
chairs and had individual bowls for rice, ribs, and soup. -photo by&#13;
Bob Hulsey&#13;
Korean dining not for squeamish&#13;
by Dennis R. Dean&#13;
Associate Professor of English&#13;
HAVE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
With Thi. Coupon.&#13;
1 Per Cu.tome, YOW IAA , Houn&#13;
M-T&#13;
7 p.m.·&#13;
lOp.m.&#13;
Ta"e,.&#13;
25'&#13;
Despite Kwangju's status as a provincial&#13;
capital in a country dominated by the&#13;
national one, there was lots to do. By far&#13;
the most usual social activity, however,&#13;
was eating out. Though Kwangju boasted a&#13;
fine Japanese restaurant and several&#13;
excellent Chinese ones, together with&#13;
others that attempted to be Western, the&#13;
majority were naturally Korean. As of our&#13;
arrival, my wife and I had never had a&#13;
Korean meal.&#13;
Our first was dinner that Sunday night, 6&#13;
March, when Kim Tae hn invited us and&#13;
David Miller to a Genghis Khan-style meal,&#13;
in which meat, mushrooms, and&#13;
vegetables were heated at the table in a&#13;
water-filled Oesbaoed vessel, with a spicy&#13;
sauce in the center. Having left our shoes&#13;
outside, we were sitting cross-legged&#13;
(insofar as we could manage) on cushions&#13;
in a private room that consisted of a raised&#13;
wooden platform surrounded by thin&#13;
partitions. The table from which we ate -&#13;
all of us with chopsticks - was only a few&#13;
inches high.&#13;
Stark courtesy marks dinner&#13;
Aside from the food, which was fine on&#13;
this occasion, three aspects of a Korean&#13;
dinner might bother the squeamish&#13;
Westerner. The first is that diners often eat&#13;
directly from the serving dishes with their&#13;
own chopsticks. Usually, except for a small&#13;
bowl of rice (usually mixed with barley in&#13;
Korea), there are no individual plates. The&#13;
second aspect, which we learned that&#13;
night, is the Korean custom of passing&#13;
glasses. Having finished your first drink,&#13;
you do not pour a refi II for yourself, but&#13;
pass the empty glass to an esteemed&#13;
friend, who graciously receives it (always&#13;
with the right hand, in both cases) and&#13;
then holds it for you to refill. He then&#13;
drinks from your former glass while you&#13;
wait patiently for some otber friend to&#13;
hand you his and fill. Several might do so&#13;
shortly, so an especially honored quest&#13;
often accumulates a number of filled&#13;
alessesbefore him, all of which must then&#13;
Ladies Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
O.t.eCo,ner&#13;
of 57t11 &amp; 23 Ave&#13;
be emptied (in other words, drunk) and&#13;
passedon - not necessarily to the original&#13;
owner - until all reciprocations have&#13;
been paid. For those who can forget about&#13;
the germ theory of disease, this is a&#13;
pleasant, convivial custom, but it also&#13;
means that how much you drink will pretty&#13;
much be determined by the group. The&#13;
third thing about Korean dinners likely to&#13;
bother some of us is that they normally&#13;
exclude women, including (if the dinner is&#13;
at a private home) the woman who worked&#13;
all day preparing it.&#13;
Raw..octopus!&#13;
A more typically Korean dinner than the&#13;
first was given in my honor by the English&#13;
department at Chonnam on Wednesday,&#13;
16 March. It was attended by about 18&#13;
men, who first sat around for almost an&#13;
hour in our matted room, shoeless,&#13;
cross-legged, and talking in both&#13;
languages. Dinner was then carried in,&#13;
fully laid out, on three large, low tables&#13;
(around which we gathered), each of&#13;
which was loaded with small dishes. The&#13;
particular delicacy of the evening was raw&#13;
octopus. Killed only moments before and&#13;
then seasoned with 'sesame oil, it lay&#13;
silvery and squirming on a platter, like&#13;
translucent rubber. When you try to grab it&#13;
with your chopsticks, it grabs them back or&#13;
fights you off. But I finally succeeded in&#13;
eating a few bites. Small live octopuses&#13;
were regularly for sale at Yongdong&#13;
market. Seeing my fascination with them,&#13;
the fish woman there once reached into&#13;
her tank and dangled forth one unlucky&#13;
octopus by a tentacle. She invited me to&#13;
reach in and dangle one of the others.&#13;
Dave Miller's favorite story is about a&#13;
drunk who once boasted, and then tried to&#13;
prove, that he -could swallow a live&#13;
octopus whole. It clung to the sides of his&#13;
throat and he died of suffocation.&#13;
Koreans are fond of raw things. At&#13;
various times I ate raw fish (frequently),&#13;
raw octopus. and squid, raw stingray, raw&#13;
oysters and shellfish, and raw eel, the last&#13;
being killed before my eyes. Other&#13;
offerings on the 16th included hamburgerlike&#13;
patties, fish, seafood in the half-shell.&#13;
Mle.&#13;
35"&#13;
Mlxell DrI.b&#13;
40"&#13;
ribs in sauce, mushrooms, turnip kimchi,&#13;
and Korean sake. Kimchi, perhaps the&#13;
most typical of all Korean dishes, is a spicy&#13;
pickle, usually made from cabbage and&#13;
seasoned with red pepper, but found also&#13;
in many' other forms. Almost all Korean&#13;
households make their own.&#13;
Two days later Susan and I went for&#13;
dinner at the home of Professor Kim&#13;
(physics), who was renting a bedroom to&#13;
our Peace Corps friend, Bob Hulsey. The&#13;
splendid menu this time included ribs,&#13;
another beef dish, shellfish, eggs and&#13;
meat, spinach, meat soup, rice, fish&#13;
casserole, bean sprouts, chestnuts,&#13;
delicious sesameconfections, lots of plum&#13;
wine, and rice in syrup for dessert. This&#13;
was probably the most enjoyable Korean&#13;
meal we ever had, the menu being&#13;
particularly tactful and the execution&#13;
marvellous. Neither Professor Kim nor his&#13;
wife had ever seen us before.&#13;
On the evening of the 19th we went to a&#13;
concert of Western musk with Bob and,&#13;
on the lOth, went by bus with him to a&#13;
nearby village famed for its bamboo&#13;
manufacture. On 22 March all three of us&#13;
were guests of honor at the English&#13;
Speaking Union (a student group) dinner.&#13;
Afterwards, everyone had to sing songs,&#13;
and the students sang some traditional&#13;
Koreans especially for us. Then a Korean&#13;
friend took us to a tearoom for a while,&#13;
where we talked.&#13;
American Snacks and scotch well received&#13;
On Friday, 25 March, Susan and I hosted&#13;
a reception at our apartment, with Ed&#13;
Wright (who came down from Seoul,&#13;
bringing some of the party supplies with&#13;
him) asguest of honor. BesidesEd and two&#13;
Korean artist friends of his, Dave Miller,&#13;
Bob, his Professor Kim, and ourselves, the&#13;
guests included my colleagues at the&#13;
University: professors Kim Tae [in, Koh,&#13;
Myung, Bum, Pae, Kim Chung Soc, Cho,&#13;
and Dean Shin. Kim Tae jtn I have already&#13;
identified. Koh )i-Moon regularly audited&#13;
my classes, advised me usefully about a&#13;
variety of things, and spent considerable&#13;
time with me discussing literary topics. His&#13;
current research interest is Saul Bellow's&#13;
concept of freedom. Professor Myung, an&#13;
avid tennis player, was one of the most&#13;
gracious and forward-looking of my&#13;
colleagues. Professor Bum, our department&#13;
head, was a reclusive poet, while Pae&#13;
(who resembles him) was a linguist&#13;
capable of some unexpectedly sly humor&#13;
Kim Chung Soc, the oldest active member&#13;
of the department, taught Eliot, Joyce, and&#13;
Donne. Cho, a delightful man, and Dean&#13;
Shin had doctorates; the others did not&#13;
We served American-style snacks, and all&#13;
were well received - as were two bottles&#13;
of Johnny Walker scotch.&#13;
After our party was over, and most of&#13;
the guests gone home, Dave and his&#13;
Korean associate, Mr. Park, surprised Bob&#13;
and us with a dinner invitation, including&#13;
Ed, his two Korean friens, and Dean Shin.&#13;
We nine taxied to a secluded restaurant&#13;
neal the river and had a remarkable formal&#13;
dinner (including hostesses)of turtle. After&#13;
an initial course of turtle blood cocktails (a&#13;
sip will do, thanks), the turtle itself came&#13;
in, together with chicken, seaweed, bean&#13;
sprouts, cucumber kimchi, kimchi soup,&#13;
spinach, turnips, and plum wine. Korean&#13;
pears - they're large and have the texture&#13;
of an apple - were offered for dessert&#13;
And after that, they brought in turtle soupl&#13;
Next day, we went on a short trip WIth&#13;
Ed and friends, who had joined us at the&#13;
apartment for breakfast. And then that&#13;
night we tried a chonjon place with Bob,&#13;
lee Myung-hee (one of my female grad&#13;
students; Bob's and Dave's tutor In&#13;
Korean) and Bill Gerity, another Peace&#13;
Corps volunteer ~The chonjon, or rice&#13;
wine, came with a generous array of&#13;
snacks, including raw octopus, squid,&#13;
oysters, fish, and beef (but we sent thi-t&#13;
back to be cooked), carrots, cucumbers,&#13;
cole slaw, mushrooms, seaweed, soup.&#13;
roast chestnuts, shellfish, and tongue. On&#13;
the last night of the month there was a&#13;
stunning program of Korean dance at the&#13;
public auditorium. So it went, and this was&#13;
only one month out of the four that I was&#13;
there. \&#13;
.. Acquirinl animal virtues by dipstion&#13;
But I must also mention the fine dinner&#13;
at Kim Tae lin's house on 8 April, which&#13;
was remarkable for its conversation.&#13;
Besides the ribs, raw fish, and stingray,&#13;
plum and ginseng wines were passed&#13;
around and we all began to open up.&#13;
Agreeing with an observation of mine,&#13;
Professor Myung said it was traditional&#13;
Korean belief that you acquire the virtues&#13;
of an animal by eating it - turtle for&#13;
longevity, dog for stamina, and so on. (But&#13;
he served us neither when we had a similar&#13;
group dinner at his house the next night.)&#13;
No-one could tell me what virtues one&#13;
acquired through the eating of raw&#13;
octopus. Korean humor was much in&#13;
evidence, a usual form of which is the&#13;
identifying catch-phrase, a personal and&#13;
characteristic response that the proud&#13;
owner thereof would inject Into the&#13;
conversation at every opportunity. Kim&#13;
Tae [in, a particular master of this art, has&#13;
two: "learning by doingl" and "Ladles&#13;
first!", the latter being contrary to Korean&#13;
manners and a big Joke. One interesting&#13;
Korean custom, by the way, ISthat when&#13;
hosting a dinner party at home you&#13;
attempt to make everyone present feel at&#13;
ease by dressmg more tnformaltv than any&#13;
of your guests. Throughout the evening,&#13;
therefore, Kim Tae Jin was in hIS green&#13;
jogging outfit, Professor Myung, the next&#13;
night, wore his tennis clothes&#13;
.As the glasses circulated, there was an&#13;
outpouring of candid talk as well I got&#13;
ribbed about being henpecked because I'd&#13;
said 10 class (WIth reference to "Rrp Van&#13;
Winkle'") that all American husbands are&#13;
"The only difference between Korean men&#13;
and Amencan ones," I retorted, "IS that we&#13;
admit It." How, I was asked, did my first&#13;
impressions of Korea differ from my&#13;
expectations? I had been worned about&#13;
the government and my freedom to teach&#13;
What did I like least about Korea/ Your&#13;
treatment of animals and women On the&#13;
other hand, Korean society emphasizes&#13;
certain desirable humane values much&#13;
more forcefully than we do. One of the&#13;
aspects of Amencan I.fe that Korean&#13;
students find It Impossible to sympathize&#13;
with, for example, is our treatment of the&#13;
elderly. They also find our materialistic&#13;
emphasrs upon the sensual rather funny&#13;
Though It may seem, from this One&#13;
article, as If I did little else but eat while In&#13;
Korea, I actually lost fifteen pounds&#13;
Dinner with Professor Kim: Professor Kim [in Korean dress], Professor&#13;
Dennis Dean, Mrs. Susan Dean. In background, Mrs. Kim. We sat in&#13;
chairs and had individual 'bowls for rice, ribs, and soup. -photo by&#13;
Bob Hulsey&#13;
Korean dining not for squeamish&#13;
by Dennis R. Dean&#13;
Associate Professor of English&#13;
Despite Kwangju's status as a provincial&#13;
capital in a country dominated by the&#13;
national one, there was lots to do. By far&#13;
the most usual social activity, however,&#13;
was eating out. Though Kwangju boasted a&#13;
fine Japanese restaurant and several&#13;
excellent Chinese ones, together with&#13;
others that attempted to be Western, the&#13;
majority were naturally Korean . As of our&#13;
arrival, my wife and I had never had a&#13;
Korean meal.&#13;
Our first was dinner that Sunday night, 6&#13;
March, when Kirn Tae Jin invited us and&#13;
David Miller to a Genghis Khan-style meal,&#13;
in which meat, mushrooms, and&#13;
vegetables were heated at the table in a&#13;
water-filled O-shaped vessel, with a spicy&#13;
sauce in the center. Having left our shoes&#13;
outside, we were sitting cross-legged&#13;
(insofar as we could manage} on cushions&#13;
in a private room that consisted of a raised&#13;
wooden platform surrounded by thin&#13;
partitions . The table from which we ate -&#13;
all of us with chopsticks - was only a few&#13;
inches high .&#13;
Stark courtesy marks dinner&#13;
Aside from the food, which was fine on&#13;
this occasion, three aspects of a Korean&#13;
dinner might bother the squeamish&#13;
Westerner. The first is that diners often eat&#13;
directly from the serving dishes with their&#13;
own chopsticks . Usually, except for a small&#13;
bowl of rice (usually mixed with barley in&#13;
Korea), there are no individual plates. The&#13;
second aspect, which we learned that&#13;
night, is the Korean custom of passing&#13;
glasses . Having finished your first drink,&#13;
you do not pour a refill for yourself, but&#13;
pass the empty glass to an esteemed&#13;
friend, who graciously receives it (always&#13;
with the right hand, in both cases} and&#13;
then holds it for you to refill . He then&#13;
drinks from your f~rrner glass while you&#13;
wait patiently for some other friend to&#13;
hand you his and fill. Several might do so&#13;
shortly, so an especially honored quest&#13;
often . accumulates a number of filled&#13;
glasses before him, all of which must then&#13;
be emptied (in other words, drunk} and&#13;
passed on - not necessarily to the original&#13;
owner - until all reciprocations have&#13;
been paid. For those who can forget about&#13;
the germ theory of disease, this is a&#13;
pleasant, convivial custom, but it also&#13;
means that how much you drink will pretty&#13;
much be determined by the group. The&#13;
third thing about Korean dinners likely to&#13;
bother some of us is that they normally&#13;
exclude women, including (if the dinner is&#13;
at a private home} the woman who worked&#13;
all day preparing it.&#13;
Raw octopus!&#13;
A more typically Korean dinner than the&#13;
first was given in my honor by the English&#13;
department at Chonnarn on Wednesday,&#13;
16 March. It was attended by about 18&#13;
men, who first sat around for almost an&#13;
hour in our matted room, shoeless,&#13;
cross-legged , and talking in both&#13;
languages. Dinner was then carried in,&#13;
fully laid out, on three large, low tal5Ies&#13;
(around which we gathered}, each of&#13;
which was loaded with small dishes . The&#13;
particular delicacy of the evening was raw&#13;
octopus. Killed only moments before and&#13;
then seasoned with ·sesame oil, it lay&#13;
silvery and squirming on a platter, like&#13;
translucent rubber. When you try to grab it&#13;
with your chopsticks, it grabs them back or&#13;
fights you off. But I finally succeeded in&#13;
eating a few bites . Small live octopuses&#13;
were regularly for sale at Yongdong&#13;
market. Seeing my fascination with them,&#13;
the fish woman there once reached into&#13;
her tank and dangled forth one unlucky&#13;
octopus by a tentacle. She invited me to&#13;
reach in and dangle one of the others.&#13;
Dave Miller's favorite story is about a&#13;
drunk who once boasted, and then tried to&#13;
prove, that he could swallow a live&#13;
octopus whole. It clung to the sides of his&#13;
throat and he died of suffocation.&#13;
Koreans are fond of raw things . At&#13;
various times I ate raw fish (frequently},&#13;
raw octopus and squid, raw stingray, raw&#13;
oysters and shellfish, and raw eel, the last&#13;
being killed before my eyes. Other&#13;
offerings on the 16th included hamburgerlike&#13;
patties, fish, seafood in the half-shell.&#13;
HAVE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
With This Coupon •&#13;
1 Per Customer,&#13;
_ Ladies Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
On tlle Corner&#13;
of 57111 &amp; 23 Ave.&#13;
YOWZAA&#13;
Hours&#13;
M-T&#13;
7p.m. -&#13;
10 p.m.&#13;
ribs in sauce, mushrooms, turnip kirnchi,&#13;
and Korean sake Kirnchi, perhaps the&#13;
most typical of all Korean dishes, Is a spicy&#13;
pickle, usually made from cabbage and&#13;
seasoned with red pepper, but found also&#13;
in many other forms . Almost all Korean&#13;
households make their own&#13;
Two days later Susan and I went for&#13;
dinner at the home of Professor Kim&#13;
(physics), who was renting a bedroom to&#13;
our Peace Corps friend, Bob Hulsey. The&#13;
splendid menu this time included ribs,&#13;
another beef dish, shellfish, eggs and&#13;
meat, spinach, meat soup, rice, fish&#13;
casserole, bean sprouts, chestnuts ,&#13;
delicious sesame confections, lots of plum&#13;
wine, and rice in syrup for dessert. This&#13;
was probably the most enjoyable Korean&#13;
meal we ever had, the menu being&#13;
particularly tactful and the execution&#13;
marvellous. Neither Professor Kim nor his&#13;
wife had ever seen us before.&#13;
On the evening of the 19th we went to a&#13;
concert of Western music with Bob and,&#13;
on the 20th, went by bus with him to a&#13;
nearby village famed for its bamboo&#13;
manufacture. On 22 March all three of us&#13;
were guests of honor at the English&#13;
Speaking Union (a student group) dinner.&#13;
Afterwards, everyone had to sing songs,&#13;
and the students sang some traditional&#13;
Koreans especially for us. Then a Korean&#13;
friend took us to a tearoom for a while,&#13;
where we talked .&#13;
American Snacks and scotch well received&#13;
On Friday, 25 March, Susan and I hosted&#13;
a reception at our apartment, with Ed&#13;
Wright (who came down from Seoul,&#13;
bringing some of the party supplies with&#13;
him) as guest of honor. Besides Ed and two&#13;
Korean artist friends of his, Dave Miller,&#13;
Bob, his Professor Kirn, and ourselves, the&#13;
guests included my colleagues at the&#13;
University: professors Kirn Tae Jin, Koh,&#13;
Myung, Bum, Pae, Kim Chung Soo, Cho,&#13;
and Dean Shin. Kim Tae Jin I have already&#13;
identified. Koh Ji-Moon regularly audited&#13;
my classes, advised me usefully about a&#13;
variety of things, and spent considerable&#13;
time with me discussing literary topics . His&#13;
current research interest is Saul Bellow's&#13;
concept of freedom Prof~ssor Myung, an&#13;
avid tennis player, was one of the most&#13;
gracious and forward-looking of my&#13;
colleagues . Professor Bum, our department&#13;
head, was a reclusive poet, while Pae&#13;
(who resembles him) was a linguist&#13;
capable of some unexpectedly sly humor&#13;
Kim Chung Soo, the oldest active member&#13;
of the department, taught Eliot, Joyce, and&#13;
Donne. Cho, a delightful man, and Dean&#13;
Shin had doctorates; the others did not&#13;
We served American-style snacks, and all&#13;
were well received - as were two bottles&#13;
of Johnny Walker scotch .&#13;
After our party was over, and most of&#13;
the guests gone home, Dave and his&#13;
Korean associate, Mr Park, surprised Bob&#13;
and us with a dinner invitation, including&#13;
Ed, his two Korean fnens, and Dean Shin .&#13;
We nine taxied to a secluded restaurant&#13;
nea the river and had a remarkable formal&#13;
dinner (including hostesses) of turtle After&#13;
an initial course of turtle blood cocktails (a&#13;
sip will do, thanks), the turtle itself came&#13;
in, together with chicken, seaweed, bean&#13;
sprouts, cucumber kimch1, k1mch1 soup,&#13;
spinach, turnips, and plum wme Korean&#13;
pears - they're large and have t~ texture&#13;
of an apple - were offered for dessert.&#13;
And after that, the brought m turtle soup!&#13;
ext day, we went on a short trip with&#13;
Ed and friends, who had joined us at the&#13;
apartment for breakfast. And then that&#13;
night we tried a chon1on place with Bob,&#13;
Lee Myung-hee (one of my female grad&#13;
students, Bob's and Dave's tutor in&#13;
Korean) and Bill Centy, another Peace&#13;
Corps volunteer. 0&#13;
The chon1on, or nee&#13;
wine, came with a generous array of&#13;
snacks, including raw octopus, squid,&#13;
oysters, fish, and beef (but we sent that&#13;
back to be cooked); carrots, cucumbers,&#13;
cole slaw, mushrooms, seaweed, soup,&#13;
roast chestnuts, shellfish, and tongue On&#13;
the last night of the month there was a&#13;
stunning program of Korean dance at the&#13;
public auditorium So it went, and this was&#13;
only one month out of the four that I was&#13;
there&#13;
Acquiring animal virtues by digestion&#13;
But I must also mention the fine dinner&#13;
at Kim Tae Jin's house on 8 April, which&#13;
was remarkable for its conversation&#13;
Besides the ribs, raw fish, and stingray,&#13;
plum and ginseng wines were passed&#13;
around and we all began to open up&#13;
Agreeing with an observation of mine,&#13;
Professor Myung said It was traditional&#13;
Korean belief that you acquire the virtues&#13;
of an animal by eating it - turtle for&#13;
longevity, dog for stamina, and so on (But&#13;
he served us neither when we had a similar&#13;
group dinner at his house the next night.)&#13;
No-one could tell me what virtues one&#13;
acquired through the eating of raw&#13;
octopus. Korean humor was much m&#13;
evidence, a usual form of which is the&#13;
identifying catch-phrase, a personal and&#13;
characteristic response that the proud&#13;
owner thereof would inject mto the&#13;
conversation at every opportunity. Kim&#13;
Tae Jin, a particular master of this art, has&#13;
two: " Learning by doing!" and " Ladies&#13;
first!", the latter being contrary to Korean&#13;
manners and a big joke. One mterestmg&#13;
Korean custom, by the way, Is that when&#13;
hosting a dinner part at horn you&#13;
attempt to make everyone pres nt f I at&#13;
ease by dressing more informally than any&#13;
of your guests Throughout the evening,&#13;
therefore, Kim Tae Jin was m his green&#13;
Jogging outfit, Profe or Myung, the ne t&#13;
night, wore his tennI cloth&#13;
As the glass s circulated, th re was an&#13;
outpouring of candid talk a well . I got&#13;
ribbed about being h npecked b au I'd&#13;
said in class (with r fer n e to " Rip Van&#13;
Winkle"} that all American hu band ar&#13;
"The only difference b tw n or an m n&#13;
and American on ," I r torted, " 1 that w&#13;
admit 1t." How, I was a ked, d id my first&#13;
impressions of Korea d1ff r from my&#13;
expectation ? I had be n worn d about&#13;
the gov rnment and my fr edom to teach .&#13;
What did I lik I ast about Korea? Your&#13;
treatm nt of animals and women. On the&#13;
other hand, Korean oci ty mpha Ize&#13;
certain desirable human values much&#13;
more forcefully than we do. On of the&#13;
aspects of American life that orean&#13;
students fmd I impo s1ble to ympathize&#13;
with, for example, i our treatment of the&#13;
elderly. They al o find our material! ti&#13;
emphasis upon the sensual rather funny.&#13;
Though It may eem, from this one&#13;
article, as 1f I did little else but eat while in&#13;
Korea, I actually lost fifteen pounds. &#13;
events ..&#13;
Smokeout - T~~u;::~~:u~v::~ne: ~:cietY is askingCham ber&#13;
individuals to take one day off from smoking.&#13;
Pledge cards are-being distributed in the Health&#13;
Office.&#13;
Discussion - Support group for single- parents.&#13;
Tallent 115 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday, November 18&#13;
Film - The Exorcist., Held at 8 p.rn, in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Life Science - Dr. Emil T. Kaiser. Cl 105 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Women's Swimming- Parkside hosts Ranger Relays&#13;
(coed) at 3:30 p.rn. .&#13;
Concert - Oriana Trio performs in CAT at 8 p.rn.&#13;
Saturday, November 19 .&#13;
Cross Country - NAIA National Championship at&#13;
UW-P at 11 a.m.&#13;
Conference - Cov't Survellance vs. the Majority at&#13;
8:30-4:30 p.m. in Student Union. lunch included.&#13;
Details a-nd Advance T-ickets attainable at Information&#13;
Center. Registration in Cl, 107.&#13;
Sunday, November 20&#13;
Film - The Exorcist, 7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Concert - Parkside Orchestra in CAT at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Concert - Flute Recital CAT 8:00 p.m,&#13;
Tuesday, November 22&#13;
Concert - Jazz Ensembles I and 11 at 8 p.m. in CAT.&#13;
Notes&#13;
The Broadway musical Cabaret will be presented by&#13;
a 4O-member touring company, including musicians."&#13;
Dec. 1, CAT. Tickets $3 students, $5 others, on sale&#13;
at Union Information Center November 17.&#13;
Communication fro~ page one&#13;
The Speech Communication option is designed to provide&#13;
practical and theoretical instruction in the speech field. Students in&#13;
this option often enter careers such as teaching, county extension&#13;
communication, ombundsperson, consumer information, publishing,&#13;
legislation, "hotline" management, speech writing, and the ministry,&#13;
or continue their education in fields such as law, speech therapy, and&#13;
communication.&#13;
Within the Organizational Communication option lies the&#13;
opportunity for an interdisciplinary program of study. Students learn&#13;
about communication in various organizational settings and may&#13;
take courses in management science and behavioral science to better&#13;
prepare themselves for employment in industry. This option is&#13;
designed to prepare students for positions in organizational&#13;
communication consulting, personnel, public relations, organizational&#13;
development, biomedical communication, labor relations&#13;
communication, and job placement, as well as graduate study in&#13;
organizational communication and business management.&#13;
The Mass Communication option encourages learning of both&#13;
theoretical and applied media principles. Students may enter such&#13;
careers as broadcasting, film, journalism, teaching, media servies,&#13;
and media consultation. This option also provides a strong&#13;
theoretical background for graduate study in mass communication.&#13;
The option in Dramatic Arts prepares students for careers in&#13;
education, community theatre, and other theatre related areas. This&#13;
option also prepares students for graduate study in all areas of&#13;
theatre. Course descriptions are found in the Fine Arts Division&#13;
section.&#13;
Communication courses also serve as electives in other programs&#13;
of study such as business management, labor economics, social&#13;
science behavioral science, and the humanities.&#13;
COM'NG~1&#13;
Thursday; Dec. 1&#13;
A Natjonal Tour Broadway&#13;
Cast of&#13;
CABARET&#13;
8:110 P.M. COMM. ARTS THEATRE&#13;
ADM, $3.00 UW-PARKSIDE STUDENTS SS.OOGENERAL&#13;
Tickets will be available at the Union&#13;
Info Center starting Thurs., Nov. 17&#13;
SPONSORED BY P.A.B.&#13;
Symphony&#13;
performs Mozart&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Chamber Symphony&#13;
will present its fall concert at&#13;
3:30 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 20, in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater&#13;
with David Schripsema conducting&#13;
and Timothy Bell as clarinet&#13;
soloist. The- event is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
"Romanian Folk Dances" of Bela&#13;
Bartok, Mozart's "Symphony -No.&#13;
29 in A major," Charles tves'&#13;
"Unanswered Question" and&#13;
Mozart's "Concerto for Clarinet&#13;
and Orchestra."&#13;
Bell, a member of the&#13;
UW-Parkside music faculty since&#13;
1975, previously taught at North&#13;
Texas State University and was&#13;
first chair clarinet in its concert&#13;
band. He is a member of the&#13;
Parkside Contemporarv Players&#13;
and teaches woodwind students&#13;
in 'addition to directing UW-P's&#13;
award-winning Jazz Ensembles.&#13;
In addition to his conducting&#13;
assignment at UW-P, Schripsema&#13;
also directs the Kenosha&#13;
Symphony and the Bradford&#13;
High School orchestra. He holds&#13;
a master's degree from Michigan&#13;
. State University and in 1973&#13;
received the diploma of&#13;
conducting from the Mozarteum&#13;
in Salzburg, Austria. He has&#13;
conducted in several major&#13;
European music centers and has&#13;
been guest conductor of the&#13;
Michigan State University Orchestra&#13;
and the Aspen {Colo.)&#13;
Festival Repertoire Orchestra.&#13;
Smoke··out this week&#13;
The Parkside Campus Health.&#13;
Office will cooperate with the&#13;
American Cancer Society in&#13;
promoting "The Great American&#13;
Smokeout," a day to stop&#13;
smoking, on Nov. 17.&#13;
On Nov. 16 volunteers will&#13;
staff tables on campus asking&#13;
students and faculty to sign&#13;
pledge .cards in which they&#13;
promise not to smoke the&#13;
following day.&#13;
In announcing the project,&#13;
Campus Nurse Edith Isenberg&#13;
pointed out that smoking causes&#13;
lung cancer, emphysema and&#13;
chronic bronchitis; kills an&#13;
estimated 300,000 persons in the&#13;
U.S. each year; and causes&#13;
irritation, discomfort and Illness&#13;
to many non-smokers.&#13;
classified&#13;
NMd Ride Student from Burlington wants&#13;
rider to share driving &amp; expenses. Call Jim&#13;
(414) 534-6232.&#13;
HOlt Family Wanted Helpl, I'm 20 years old&#13;
and lOOkingfor a host family In Kenosha. I&#13;
am an I.C.Y.E. exchange student from&#13;
Germany. If you are interested, please call&#13;
652-8620. I&#13;
1973 Kawasaki 175 cern, 7000 miles,&#13;
excellent condition. $28()". with helment.&#13;
Further information call Goetz, Burlington,&#13;
763-&lt;l564.&#13;
!,W UW-Parkside&#13;
'" Semester Break&#13;
CA&#13;
Jln. 6-11. 1'78 "299 .Ccmp'ete bosed&#13;
~ on 2 to a room&#13;
EXTRA SEATS&#13;
NOW AVAILABLE&#13;
.ORIGINAL TRIP&#13;
SOLDOUTl&#13;
SIGN UP TODAY&#13;
UNION OFFICE, RM. 209&#13;
553-2200&#13;
Nearly 30 million persons have&#13;
stopped smoking in the U.S., but&#13;
there are still about 50 million&#13;
adult smokers in the country, she ,,-&#13;
said. Over half of all cigarette&#13;
smokers say that they want to&#13;
quit, she added. "The Great&#13;
American Smokeout" is designed&#13;
to give them an incentive to do&#13;
so.&#13;
ISHIRTS+&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
3900 Erie Street. Racine 414-639~6662&#13;
Open Daily 9am-9pm&#13;
Saturday Barn-S:30pm&#13;
PAHAo\I\OUNl f'K·lUHl ~ PHISlNT&lt;; \&#13;
A TURMAN-FOSTER COMPANY&#13;
PRODUCTION "FIRST LOVE"&#13;
Starring WILLIAM KATT SUSAN DEY&#13;
Screenplay by JANE STANTON&#13;
HITCHCOCK and DAVID FREEMAN&#13;
Produced by LAWRENCE TURMAN&#13;
and DAVID FOSTER Directed by&#13;
lOAN DARLING&#13;
N Showi 554-6970&#13;
NOW SHOWING, OW Sot.owmq ~~ &amp; Sun.: ... • '&#13;
1,30, 3,30: DO. ],30 &amp; 903'&#13;
We.knlfes: ]:30 &amp; 9:30&#13;
events .-&#13;
\ Thursday,November17 Chambe-r Symphony&#13;
Mozart·&#13;
Smokeout - The Smokeout begins. Society is as~ing&#13;
individuals to take one day off from smoking.&#13;
Pledge cards are-being distributed in the Health&#13;
Office.&#13;
Discussion Support group for single parents.&#13;
Tallent 115 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday, November 18&#13;
Film - The Exorcist. Held at 8 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Life Science - Dr. Emil T. Kaiser. CL 105 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Women's Swimming- Parkside hosts Ranger Relays&#13;
(coed) at 3:30 p.m. ·&#13;
Concert - Oriana Trio performs in CAT at 8 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, November 19 •&#13;
Cross Country - NAIA National ChampiQnship at&#13;
UW-P at 11 a.m.&#13;
Conference - Gov't Survellance vs. the Majority at&#13;
8:30-4:30 p.m. in Student Union. Lunch included.&#13;
Details a-nd Advance Tickets attainable at Information&#13;
Center. Registration in CL 107.&#13;
Sunday, November 20&#13;
Film - The Exorcist, 7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Concert - Parkside Orchestra in CAT at 3_:30 p.m.&#13;
Concert - Flute Recital CAT 8:00 p.m:&#13;
Tuesday, November 22&#13;
Concert - Jazz Ensembles I and II at 8 p.m. in CAT.&#13;
Notes&#13;
The Broadway musical Cabaret will be presented by&#13;
a 40-member touring company, including musicians, -&#13;
Dec. 1, CAT. Tickets $3 students, $5 others, on sale&#13;
at Union Information Center November 17.&#13;
Communication from page one&#13;
The Speech Communication option is designed to provide&#13;
practical and theoretical instruction in the speech fiefd . Students in&#13;
this option often enter careers such as teaching, county extension&#13;
communication, ombundsperson, consumer information, publishing,&#13;
legislation, "hotline" management, speech writing, and the ministry,&#13;
or continue their education in fields such as law, speech therapy, and&#13;
communication .&#13;
Within the Organizational Communication option lies the&#13;
opportunity for an interdisciplinary program of study. Students learn&#13;
about communication in various organizational settings and may&#13;
take courses in management science and behavioral science to better&#13;
prepare themselves for employment in industry . This option is&#13;
designed to prepare students for positions in organizational&#13;
communication consulting, personnel, public relations, organizational&#13;
development, biomedical communication, labor relations&#13;
communication, and job placement, as well as graduate study in&#13;
organizational communication and business management.&#13;
The Mass Communication option encourages learning of both&#13;
theoretical and applied media principles. Students may enter such&#13;
careers as broadcasting, film, journalism, teaching, media servies,&#13;
and media consultation. This option also provides a strong&#13;
theoretical background for graduate study in mass communication .&#13;
The option in Dramatic Arts prepares students for careers in&#13;
education, community theatre, and other theatre related areas . This&#13;
option also prepares students for graduate study in all areas of&#13;
theatre. Course descriptions are found in the Fine Arts Division&#13;
section .&#13;
Communication courses also serve as electives in other programs&#13;
of study such as business management, labor economics, social&#13;
science behavioral science, and the humanities.&#13;
COMINGll ·&#13;
Thu~sday: Dec. l&#13;
A Natjonal T9ur Broadway&#13;
Cast of&#13;
CABARET&#13;
8:00 P.M. COMM. ARTS THEATRE&#13;
ADM: $3.00 UW..PARKSIDE STUDENTS $5.00 GENERAL&#13;
Tickets will be available at the Union&#13;
Info Center starting Thurs., Nov. 17&#13;
SPONSORED BY P.A.B.&#13;
performs&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Chamber Symphony&#13;
will present its fall concert at&#13;
3:30 p .m . on Sunday, Nov. 20, in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater&#13;
with David Schripsema conducting&#13;
and Timothy Bell as clarinet&#13;
soloist. The- event is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
"Romanian Folk Dances" of Bela&#13;
Bartok, Mozart's "Symphony No.&#13;
29 in A major," Charles Ives'&#13;
"Unanswered Question" and&#13;
Mozart's "Concerto for Clarinet&#13;
and Orchestra."&#13;
Bell, .a member of the&#13;
UW-Parkside music faculty since&#13;
1975, previously taught at North&#13;
Texas ~tate University and was&#13;
first chair clarinet in its concert&#13;
band. He is a member of the&#13;
Parkside !=ontempprary Players&#13;
and teaches woodwind students&#13;
in addition to directing UW-P's&#13;
award-winning Jazz Ensembles.&#13;
In addition to his conducting&#13;
assignment at UW-P, Schripsema&#13;
also directs the Kenosha&#13;
Symphony and the Bradford&#13;
High School orchestra. He holds&#13;
a master's degree from Michigan&#13;
· State University and in 1973&#13;
received the diploma of&#13;
conducting from the Mozarteum&#13;
in Salzburg, Austria. He has&#13;
conducted in several major&#13;
European music centers and has&#13;
been guest conductor of the&#13;
Michigan State University Orchestra&#13;
and the Aspen (Colo,)&#13;
Festival Repertoire Orchestra.&#13;
-&#13;
Smolce~out tbis weelc&#13;
The Parkside Campus Health&#13;
Office will cooperate with the&#13;
American Cancer Society in&#13;
promoting "The Great American&#13;
Smokeout," a day to stop&#13;
smoking, on Nov. 17.&#13;
On Nov. 16 volunteers will&#13;
staff tables on campus asking&#13;
students and faculty to sign&#13;
pledge _cards in which they&#13;
promise not to smoke the&#13;
following day.&#13;
In announcing the project,&#13;
Campus Nurse Edith Isenberg&#13;
pointed out that smoking causes&#13;
lung cancer, emphysema and&#13;
chronic bronchitis; kills an&#13;
estimated 300,000 persons in the&#13;
U.S. each year; and causes&#13;
irritation, discomfort and illr:iess&#13;
to many non-smokers.&#13;
classified&#13;
Need Ride Student from Burlington wants&#13;
rider to share driving &amp; expenses. Call Jim&#13;
(414) 534-6232.&#13;
Host Family Wanted Help!, I'm 20 years old&#13;
and looking for a host family In Kenosha. I&#13;
am an I.C.Y.E. exchange student from&#13;
Germany. If you are Interested, please call&#13;
652-8620.&#13;
1973 K-aaakl 175 ccm, 7000 miles,&#13;
excellent condition. $280. with helment.&#13;
Further Information call Goetz, Burlington,&#13;
763-8564.&#13;
~ I.If/ OW-Parkside ~ff Semester Break&#13;
r.A&#13;
Jan.· 6-13, 1978 ~299 Complete based .. on2toaroom&#13;
EXTRA SEATS&#13;
NOW AVAIL.ABLE&#13;
, ORIGINAL TRIP&#13;
SOLDOUT!&#13;
SIGN UP TODAY&#13;
UNION OFFICE, RM. 209&#13;
553-2200&#13;
Nearly 30 million persons have&#13;
stopped smoking in the U.S., but&#13;
there are still about 50 million&#13;
adult smokers in the country, she /'&#13;
said . Over half of all cigarette&#13;
smokers say that they want to&#13;
quit, she added. "The Great&#13;
American Smokeout" is designed&#13;
to give them an incentive to do&#13;
so.&#13;
ISHIRTS+&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
3900 Erie Street. Racine 414-639-6662&#13;
Open Daily 9am-9pm&#13;
Saturday 9ar:n-5: 30pm&#13;
PAl&lt;AMOUNl PK"TUl&lt;l~ PIU,l T,&#13;
A TURMAN-FOSTER COMPANY&#13;
PRODUCTION "FIRST LOVE"&#13;
Starring WILLIAi\1 KATT SUSAN DEY&#13;
Screenplay by JANE STANTON&#13;
HITCHCOCK and DAVID FREEMAN&#13;
Produced by LAWRENCE TURMAN&#13;
and DAVID FOSTER Directed by JOAN DARLING&#13;
Now Showing&#13;
NOW SHOWING, Sot. &amp; Sun.,&#13;
1,30, 3,30, 5,30, 7,30 &amp; 9,30,&#13;
Weeknites, 7,30 &amp; 9,30&#13;
554~970 </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68689">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 6, issue 12, November 16, 1977</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68690">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68691">
                <text>1977-11-16</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68694">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68695">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68696">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68697">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68698">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68699">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68700">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68701">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68702">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="421">
        <name>board of regents</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="4551">
        <name>ku klux klan</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1033">
        <name>NCAA</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="4550">
        <name>student publication</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2960" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3445">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/834c208cbfa08761c6d14d5325973696.pdf</src>
        <authentication>057d2239114097123aa70ff5d74e3b87</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68677">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 11</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68678">
              <text>Faculty Senate receives breadth and academic advising proposals</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68688">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90037">
              <text>aD&#13;
Wednesday, November 9, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 11&#13;
er Illl If fIlty million people say a ()()&#13;
UU foolish thing, It Is still a 1111&#13;
foolish thing.&#13;
-Anatola France&#13;
Faculty -Senate receives breadth&#13;
and academic advising proposals&#13;
. The Faculty Senate will meet at 3:30 p.m., Tuesday, November 15,&#13;
m CL D-105, to act on the new Academic Advising proposal and the&#13;
Breadth Requirement. If the Faculty Senate approves the two proposals,&#13;
both the Breadth Requirement and complete Academic Ad-&#13;
,vising will be in effect at Parkside Fall registration of 1978. The texts&#13;
of both proposals follows.&#13;
Affirmative Action Questions&#13;
Another Item on the agenda is a set of questions to Chancellor Alan&#13;
E. Cuskin from Assistant Professor Carol-Lee Satfioti and Associate&#13;
Professor Carole Vopat; both Humanities Senators. It is presumed the&#13;
Chancellor himself will answer the four questions. The text of the&#13;
memorandum is as follows:&#13;
November 1, 1977&#13;
To: Alan Guskin, Chancellor&#13;
From: Carol Lee and Carole Vopat&#13;
Senate Representatives for I:'umanities&#13;
Subject: In October you reported to the Senate only on affirmative&#13;
action in hiring at UW-Pj we have the following questions:&#13;
1977 Affirmative Action Progress&#13;
1. What has bee« the overall progress made through affirmative&#13;
action during the past year? How much have nonrenewals and&#13;
resignations affected any apparent progress?&#13;
Affirmative Action PI.."&#13;
2. Why has there been no official public response to the Aff"mati ....e&#13;
Action Plan submitted last May?&#13;
3. Why was there no indication made, during your report at the last&#13;
Senate meeting, concerning nonrenewals and resignations which&#13;
might have affected progress in hiring and promotion among&#13;
faculty and staff? .&#13;
Affirmative Action Officer appointment&#13;
4. Why has your special assistant been designated the Affirmative&#13;
Action Officer for the campus, when this position has in the past&#13;
been conceived of as an independent position; and why has this&#13;
decision not been announced to the university community?&#13;
Continued on page two&#13;
Administration holds open faculty meeting&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Parks ide an ins ructor who&#13;
wishes to take a sabbatical could&#13;
then be replaced by an ad-hoc&#13;
for a year.&#13;
Since ad-hoes cost far less&#13;
than regular faculty members,&#13;
the person on a sabbatical could&#13;
still receive half pay and the&#13;
ad-hoc would teach his classes at&#13;
no extra cost to the university&#13;
system. At this point, the number&#13;
of sabbaticals available to each&#13;
campus is limited to 1.5% of the&#13;
total full time faculty. "It's&#13;
absurd that Central won't give&#13;
you an option on it, even though&#13;
you can replace the instructors&#13;
with ad-hoes at no extra cost,"&#13;
said Guskin.&#13;
Chancellor Cuskin and ViceChancellor&#13;
Ratner held an&#13;
informal meeting with the&#13;
faculty last THursday to discuss&#13;
anything faculty members wanted&#13;
to bring up.&#13;
One of the' subjects Guskin&#13;
discussed was that of faculty&#13;
sabbaticals. At this point&#13;
Parkside is only allowed one&#13;
person to take a sabbatical per&#13;
year at half pay, which is the&#13;
minimum allowed by- UW&#13;
regulations. Cuskin said the UW&#13;
system should change its policy&#13;
to remove restrictions on the&#13;
number of positions, because at&#13;
Guskin and Ratner were asked&#13;
if Parkslde will meet the&#13;
November 15 deadline for&#13;
recruiting of ad-hoes and regular&#13;
faculty members. Guskin said&#13;
Parkside wiII be ready, and&#13;
Ratner said "We should be able&#13;
to start recruiting at an&#13;
appropriate time."&#13;
Morris Firebaugh, ProfessorPhysics,&#13;
told Guskln that the&#13;
budget in the science department&#13;
for replacement of capital&#13;
equipment is too small to pay.-for&#13;
new equipment to replace old&#13;
tube-type instruments which are&#13;
wearing out due to heavy use&#13;
Guskin replied that Central&#13;
Administration doesn't understand&#13;
that equipment doesn't&#13;
last forever, and only lets him&#13;
budget once for each piece of&#13;
equipment. Guskin said he will&#13;
talk to Central and try to get&#13;
some more money, and that&#13;
several other measures are&#13;
available.&#13;
In response to a question from&#13;
Richard Pomazal, Assistant&#13;
Professor-Psychology, about the&#13;
direction Parks ide is taking&#13;
concerning the development of&#13;
its natural areas, Cuskin said&#13;
there is virtually no posstbilitv of&#13;
ever building another parking lot&#13;
here 'We want to keep these&#13;
tracts the way they are for&#13;
Prairie land •&#13;
In danger of marina development&#13;
by 'ohn McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Prairie land adjacent to Parkside-owned Chiwaukee Prairie is in&#13;
danger of being commercially developed by the Trident Marina,&#13;
according to the newly-formed Environmental Concerns Committee.&#13;
According to the committee, the grass on the land has been cut and&#13;
the land disced by farm tractors.&#13;
The committee chairman, Eugene Gasiorkiewicz, Professor-Life&#13;
Science, said he will check with Kenosha County's zoning&#13;
administrator to see what use Trident has proposed for the land.&#13;
According to a committee member, "the very reason we acquired the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie in 1965 was to keep Trident from making it&#13;
commercial." Richard Pomazal, Assistant Professor-Psvchologv, said&#13;
the committee should move to help prevent the deyelopment of the&#13;
adjacent area.&#13;
Signs to be posted&#13;
As for the Parkside-owned portion of the prairie, the committee&#13;
agreed that educational signs should be posted telling that the land is&#13;
to be preserved for ecological studies. The committee believed&#13;
educational signs explaining why vehicles should be kept off the&#13;
prairie would be more effective than the "No trespassing" type of&#13;
signs which are currently in use and have a tendency to "evaporate."&#13;
James Galbraith, Director-Planning and Construction, said he talked&#13;
to a young man who had been motorcycling on the prairie, and "had&#13;
he known what he was doing, he wouldn't have been doing It"&#13;
The signs might mention that the Chiwaukee Prairie is a state&#13;
scientific area and a nation a.! monument (Galbraith has a bronze&#13;
plaque which could be erected) in addition to being university&#13;
property. The area has also been nominated for national coastal zone&#13;
status.&#13;
University should encourage support&#13;
According to Morris Firebaugh, Professor-Physics, the university&#13;
"should encourage use of the prairie by people in an environmentally&#13;
sound manner. This would improve the chance of its surviving,&#13;
because the people who use it could then become its defenders,&#13;
reporting any violations."&#13;
The type of sign the committee is considering is similar to those&#13;
found in state and national parks: wooden sign{s) engraved with&#13;
lettering. -&#13;
Nature tr..ils to be discussed&#13;
The committee might make some final decisions on the Chiwaukee&#13;
matter this week. At the same time, the committee will consider the&#13;
use or misuse of the Parkside nature trail or whether it should have&#13;
ever been constructed. According to Pomazal, "I used to take walks&#13;
out there all the time, to see the sun rise, and I had no difficulty&#13;
getting through the area without the assistance of a nature trail. The&#13;
nature trail is unnecessary."&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday, November 9, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 11&#13;
() 11 If fifty million people say a ()()&#13;
l) foolish thing, It Is still a ll V&#13;
foolish thing.&#13;
-Anatole France&#13;
Faculty Senate receives breadth&#13;
·and academic advising proPosals&#13;
The Faculty Senate will meet at 3:30 p.m., Tuesday, November 15&#13;
in Cl D-105, to act on the new Academic Advising proposal and th~&#13;
Breadth Requirement. If the Faculty Senate approves the two proposals,&#13;
both the Breadth Requirement and compl-ete Academic Aci-&#13;
,vising will be in effect at Parkside Fall registration of 1978. The texts&#13;
of both proposals follows.&#13;
Affirmative Action Questions&#13;
Another item on the agenda is a set of questions to Chancellor Alan&#13;
E. Cuskin from Assistant Professor Carol-lee Saffioti and Associate&#13;
Professor Carole Vopat; both Humanities Senators. It is presumed the&#13;
- Chancellor himself will answer the four quest-ions. The text of the&#13;
, memorandum is as follows:&#13;
November 1, 1977&#13;
To: Alan Guskin, Chancellor&#13;
From: Carol Lee and Carole Vopat&#13;
Senate Representatives for J:tumanities&#13;
Subject: In October you reported to the Senate only on affirmative&#13;
action in hiring at UW-P; we have the following questions:&#13;
1977 Affirmative Action Progress&#13;
1. What has Qeen the overall progress made through affirmative&#13;
action during the past year? How much have nonrenewals and&#13;
resignations affected any apparent progress?&#13;
Affirmative Action Plan&#13;
2. Why has there been no official public response to the Affirmative&#13;
Action Plan submitted last May?&#13;
3. Wh y was there no indication made, during your report at the last&#13;
Senate meeting, concerning nonrenewals and resignations which&#13;
might have affected progress in hiring and promotion among&#13;
faculty and staff? ·&#13;
Affirmative Action Officer appointment&#13;
4. Wh y has your special assistant been designated the Affirmative&#13;
Action Officer for the campus, when this position has in the past&#13;
been conceived of as an independent position; and why has this&#13;
decision not been announced to the university community?&#13;
Continued on page two&#13;
Administration holds open faculty meeting&#13;
by John cK os ey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Chancellor Guskin and ViceChancellor&#13;
Ratner held an&#13;
informal m~eting with the&#13;
faculty last Tllursday to discuss&#13;
anything faculty members wanted&#13;
to bring up .&#13;
One of the ' subjects Guskin&#13;
discussed was that of faculty&#13;
sabbaticals. At this point&#13;
Parkside is only allowed one&#13;
person to take a sabbatical per&#13;
year at half pay, which is the&#13;
minimum allowed by - UW&#13;
regulations. Guskin said the UW&#13;
system should change its policy&#13;
to remove restrictions on the&#13;
nymber of positions, because at&#13;
Parl&lt;side an ins ructor who&#13;
wishes to take a sabbatical could&#13;
then be replaced by an ad-hoc&#13;
for a year.&#13;
Since ad-hoes cost far less&#13;
than regular faculty members,&#13;
the person on a sabbatical could&#13;
still receive half pay and the&#13;
ad-hoc would teach his classes at&#13;
no extra cost to the university&#13;
system. At this point, the number&#13;
of sabbaticals available to each&#13;
campus is limited to 1.5% of the&#13;
total full time faculty. " It's&#13;
absurd that Central won't give&#13;
you an option on it, even though&#13;
you can replace the instructors&#13;
with ad-hoes at no extra cost,"&#13;
said Guskin .&#13;
Guskin and Ratner were asked&#13;
if Parkside will meet the&#13;
November 15 deadline for&#13;
recruiting of ad-hoes and regular&#13;
faculty members. Guskin said&#13;
Parkside will be ready, and&#13;
Ratner said "We should be able&#13;
to start recruiting at an&#13;
ap0&#13;
propriate time."&#13;
Morris Firebaugh, ProfessorPhysics,&#13;
told Guskin that the&#13;
budget in the science department&#13;
for replacement of capital&#13;
equipment is too small to pay for&#13;
new equipment to replace old&#13;
tube-type instruments which are&#13;
wearing out due to heavy use&#13;
Guskin replied that Central&#13;
Administration doesn't understand&#13;
that equipment doesn't&#13;
last forever, and only lets him&#13;
budget once for each piece of&#13;
equipment. Guskin said he will&#13;
talk to Central and try to get&#13;
some more money, and that&#13;
several other measures are&#13;
available.&#13;
In response to a question from&#13;
Richard Pomazal, Assistant&#13;
Professor-Psychology, about the&#13;
direction Parkside is taking&#13;
concerning the development of&#13;
its natural areas, Guskin said&#13;
there is virtually no possibility of&#13;
ever building another parking lot&#13;
here. "We want to keep these&#13;
tracts the way they are for&#13;
Prairie land in danger Of marina development&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
, Copy Editor&#13;
Prai;ie land adjacent to Parkside-owned Chiwaukee Prairie 1s m&#13;
danger of being commercially developed by the Trident Marina,&#13;
according to the newly-formed Environmental Concerns Committee .&#13;
According to the committee, the grass on the land has been cut and&#13;
the land disced by farm tractors.&#13;
The committee chairman, Eugene Casiorkiewicz, Professor-life&#13;
Science, said he will check with Kenosha County's zoning&#13;
administrator to see what use Trident has proposed for the land.&#13;
Acc"ording to a committee member, "the very reason we acquired the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie in 1965 was to keep Trident from making it&#13;
commercial." Richard Pomazal, Assistant Professor-Psychology, said&#13;
the committee should move to help prevent the deyelopment of the&#13;
adjacent area .&#13;
Signs to be posted&#13;
As for the Parkside-owned portion of the prairie, the committee&#13;
agreed that edu'cational signs should be posted telling that the land is&#13;
to be preserved for ecological studies. The committee believed&#13;
educational signs explaining why vehicles should be kept off the&#13;
prairii;- would be more effective than t_he "No trespassing" type of&#13;
signs which are currently in use and have a tendency to "evaporate."&#13;
James Galbraith, Director-Planning and Construction, said he talked I '&#13;
to a young man who had been motorcycling on the prairie, and "had&#13;
he known what he was doing, he wouldn't have been doing 1t."&#13;
The signs might mention that the Chiwaukee Prairie is a state&#13;
scientific area and a nationaJ. monument (Galbraith has a bronze&#13;
plaque which could be erected) in addition to being university&#13;
property. The area has also been nominated for national coastal zone&#13;
status.&#13;
University should encourage support&#13;
According to Morris Firebaugh, Professor-Physics, the university&#13;
"should encourage use of the prairie by people in an environmentally&#13;
sound manner. This would improve the chance of its surviving,&#13;
because the people who use it could then become its defenders,&#13;
reporting any violations."&#13;
The type of sign the committee is considering is similar to those&#13;
found in state and national parks: wooden sign(s) engraved with&#13;
lettering . -&#13;
Nature trails to be discussed&#13;
The committee might make some final decisions on the Chiwaukee&#13;
matter this week. At the same time, the committee will consider the&#13;
use or misuse of the Parkside nature_ trail or whether it should have&#13;
ever been constructed. According to Pomazal, "I used to take walks&#13;
out there all the time, to see the sun rise, and I had no difficulty&#13;
getting through the area without the assistance of a nature trail. The&#13;
nature trail is unnecessary." &#13;
Ranger is-written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its eCiitorial policy and content.&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, University of Wisconsin~Parkside&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Sub.scriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
Handicapped Parkside students can expect to see some improvements&#13;
in their ease o.f access to the building complex, but not right&#13;
away.&#13;
Among the improvements will be a pressure-plate automatic&#13;
sliding door to the Classroom building, according to Gary Goetz -&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Administration and Fiscal Affairs. Goetz said&#13;
"the door will be installed as soon as possible, but since it's part of&#13;
_the state building program, we won't get the money for another year&#13;
or so." Estimating the cost of the door at $25,()(X) to $30,(0), Goetz&#13;
said it will be a "major construction project" and expressed hope that&#13;
"the state will become more responsive to the needs, of the handicapped&#13;
by establishlng a fund for this type of construction."&#13;
Facul~y Senate from page 1 Resolutions on Academic Advising&#13;
Academic Policies Committee assumes from&#13;
discussion and a survey that the majority of UWP&#13;
faculty are committed to the belief that academic&#13;
advising of students should be done by faculty.&#13;
APC strongly endorses this position and has&#13;
developed the following resolutions from that&#13;
premise.&#13;
(1) Formal declaration of an area of interest must&#13;
be made upon completion of 45 credits.&#13;
Formal declaration of a major is required upon&#13;
. completion of 60 credits. A student who fails&#13;
to make such formal declarations by these&#13;
deadlines will be transferred to special stu-&#13;
'dent status and will be so notified. Students&#13;
are encouraged to identify an area of&#13;
interest as early as possible in their academic&#13;
careers, but they are free, of course, to&#13;
change the area of interest or major.&#13;
(2) Every student shall have an assigned advisor&#13;
or advising officer as provided below:&#13;
(a) Students' with declared majors or area of&#13;
interest shall be advised by faculty members&#13;
in their major or area of interest. It is&#13;
the responsibility of the divisions to decide&#13;
the advising format for their unit.&#13;
(b) Students who have not declared a major&#13;
or area of interest shall be assigned faculty&#13;
advisors by the Office of the Dean of&#13;
Faculty. These advisors will be assigned&#13;
according to the students' preliminary&#13;
interests, if any. All such assignments&#13;
will be made with the prior consent of the (&#13;
proposed faculty advisor.&#13;
mutimTirmrn:n:7IT~~~=~~~~~&#13;
,&#13;
WEDDING -&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
~r .r:&#13;
,&#13;
,.'&#13;
c.&#13;
..=-&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
@! .' -~~~&#13;
~" ~-'._~~&#13;
quality corrrnercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990&#13;
AAA WORLD WIDE&#13;
TRAVEL AGENCY&#13;
full Sen-iN;&#13;
•&#13;
Tr-a \ pi Al'l:eot'y&#13;
• ({ail -lIotf'1&#13;
3904-561h 65-'-0202&#13;
.Prairie pg. 1 '&#13;
decades : to come," he said,&#13;
_adding that shuttle bus service&#13;
may in the future be funded by&#13;
the users. "We could let them&#13;
park in the East lot for free, and&#13;
then charge a dime to let them&#13;
use the bus service," said&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Guskin said that to help attract&#13;
more students to the campus,&#13;
Parkside might enter into 'a&#13;
program with the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha Unified school districts&#13;
to let Parks ide instructors go into&#13;
local high schools to teach&#13;
advanced classes, or have the&#13;
classes come t'o Parkside, 'which&#13;
would give advanced students an&#13;
opportun ity to become acquainted&#13;
with the campus. This&#13;
would also tend 'to attract more&#13;
outstanding students to attend&#13;
here, he said.&#13;
\&#13;
(3) A student who is a candidate for a degree&#13;
must secure his/her advisor's signature, or&#13;
the signature of the advisor's designee, prior&#13;
to each registration. The signature indicates&#13;
only that the opportunity for advising has&#13;
occurred.· (&#13;
(4) These policies shall become effective with the&#13;
fall registration of 1978.&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge proposal&#13;
To insure that the degree programs of&#13;
UW-Parkside students include study in a variety&#13;
of academic fields, the following. requirements&#13;
are established. To obtain a UWP degree, a&#13;
student must accumulate 9 credits in each of 3&#13;
designated areas of study and 3 credits in a 4th&#13;
area, making a core of studies of 30 credits.&#13;
Fine Arts and Humanities&#13;
Social and Behavioral Sciences&#13;
Science&#13;
arid&#13;
Management Science, Engineering&#13;
Science, Labor&#13;
Economics and Education (excluding&#13;
Physical Education courses)&#13;
9 cr "&#13;
s cr "&#13;
9 cr "&#13;
3cr&#13;
30cr&#13;
• The total of 9 credits per unit must include&#13;
work in-at least two disciplines. No more than 6&#13;
credits in any one discipline may be counted&#13;
toward fulfilling the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
requirement. Academic Skills courses, English&#13;
090, 100, and 101, o-ievet mathematics courses· , ,&#13;
and foreign language courses taken to fulfill the&#13;
language requirement, will not count toward the&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge requirement.&#13;
lSHIRTS+ thought that the theatre members knew their roles&#13;
well. Why then did the play seem so phony and&#13;
.J artificial? \&#13;
On Thursday, October 27, at eight o'clock, 1- It seemed to me that there was a certain&#13;
witnessed a courageous effort by the members of distance between the actresses. Words were&#13;
the Parkside Theatre, to perform Lillian Hellman's uttered without feeling, as if they had just&#13;
complicated play, The Children's Hour. It is a memorized their lines. In fact opening night can be&#13;
story about Mary Tilford (Donna Linde) who compared to a typical dress rehearsal with hardly&#13;
destroys four peoples' lives by telling a malicious any differences at all. ,&#13;
lie. Through her lively dialogue, Hellman raises The missing cues and feelings of awkwardness&#13;
Important questions of intimacy between can be easily blamed on opening night. I am sure&#13;
individuals of the same sex. Can two friends love that the members of the play recognized \their&#13;
each other too much? Are there boundaries of faults and performed with ease the following three&#13;
normal and 'unnatural' love? Is it fair for a society nights.&#13;
to establish restrictions on the individuals' Technically, the costumes and props that took&#13;
relationship? approximately one month to complete were made&#13;
The answers are not of surface quality. with the utmost precision. Both Deborah Bell&#13;
Hellman's theme of friendship versus. lesbianism is (Costume Designer) and John Dickson (Scenic&#13;
not only hard to convey to an audience, but it is and Lighting Designer) ought to be given a&#13;
difficult to establish this theme among the standing ovation for correlating the wardrobe and&#13;
actresses and actors as well. The director, scenery so well. Never have I-seen both elements&#13;
Rhode-Galle Pollack, stressed the significance of match with one another as well as the individual,&#13;
character knowledge in hopes of her "students either in community or professional theatre. They&#13;
portraying a realistic individual. It" you can both tied together thus ,creating a perfect&#13;
establish a believeable character on stage then atmosphere and flavor to the play.&#13;
your chances of having a realistic play are high. I&#13;
by Wendy Ratner&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
3900 Erie Street. Racine 414-639-6662&#13;
Open Daily 9am-9pm&#13;
Saturday" 9am-5: 30pm&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Ho...e 01'the SIbil.tine&#13;
S.ndwich&#13;
~~)) . ''-~'"\'':&gt; ... '." .:.:.," . ",.,"::.'..... ,.' ·'\h),;'·"':::' ':" ...'.'"&#13;
OPEU U. TIL10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 WI.hi .. ton Itwt. 6M-2i7J&#13;
news&#13;
Ranger is- written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its ec:titorial policy and content.&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A. ·Prairie pg. 1 '&#13;
Handicapped students c_an&#13;
expect campus improvements __&#13;
By John McKloskey The committee to which the handicapped are invited to brm~ their&#13;
decades · to come," he said,&#13;
-adding that shuttle bus service&#13;
may in the future be funded by&#13;
the users. "We could let them&#13;
park in the East Lot for free , and&#13;
then charge a dime to let them&#13;
use the bus service," said&#13;
Guskin .&#13;
Guskin said that to help attract&#13;
more students to the campus,&#13;
Parkside might enter into 'a&#13;
program with the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha Unified school districh&#13;
to let Parkside instructors go into&#13;
local high schools to teach&#13;
advanced classes, or have the&#13;
classes come to Parkside, 'which&#13;
would giv·e advanced students an&#13;
opportunity to become acquainted&#13;
with the campus. This&#13;
would also tend ·to attract more&#13;
outstanding students to attend&#13;
here, he said.&#13;
Copy Editor access problems is the Campus Planning Committee; the student&#13;
Handicapped Parkside students can expect to see some improvements&#13;
in their ease of access to the building complex, but not right&#13;
member of which is Elizabeth Perry. The faculty members of the&#13;
committee will be elected within the next few weeks. Rick Folsom of&#13;
PSGA said he will be bringing the problems of the handicapped to the&#13;
attention of the committee. "These students would be forever&#13;
grateful to the 5=ommittee if it would get goi~g on these projects," he&#13;
said. "Sometimes the handicapped have to. yell and kick the door to&#13;
get someone to open the door for them."&#13;
away. Among the improvements will be a pressure-plate automatic&#13;
sliding door to the Classroom building, according to Gary Goetz -&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Administration and Fiscal Affairs. Goetz said&#13;
"the door will be installed as soon as possible, but since it's part of&#13;
- the state building program, we won't get the money for another year&#13;
or so." Estimating the cost of the door at $25,000 to $30,000, Goetz&#13;
said it will be a "major construction project" and expressed hope that&#13;
"the state will become more responsive to the need~ of the handicapped&#13;
by establishing a fund for this type of construction."&#13;
Parkside's campus nurse, Edith lsenbe'rg, said she has set up a&#13;
program to help prevent that. "I don't think they usually have to yell,&#13;
because we in' the Health:- Office usually send someone at a prearranged&#13;
time to let them in", she said, adding that this year's&#13;
wheelchair population is the highest it has ever been at Parkside. "We&#13;
have seven or eight, which is a lot for this size campus," she said.&#13;
Faculty Senate from page 1 Resolutions on Ac;ademic Advising (3) A student who is a candidate for a degree&#13;
must secure his/her advisor's signature, or&#13;
the signature of the advisor's designee, prior&#13;
to each registration. The signature indicates&#13;
WEDDING only that the opportunity for· advising has&#13;
INVITATIONS ·&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
.~ /&#13;
quality corrrnerc,al printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990&#13;
AAA WORLD WIDE&#13;
Full Senil'e&#13;
Tro,el A~en&lt;'y&#13;
•Airli,u• TickPt• • Tour.•&#13;
•(.rui#P• • /foil • I/or,,/&#13;
•f'ur RP#Prra1io11•&#13;
3904-5611, 654-0202&#13;
Academic Policies Committee assumes from&#13;
discussion and a survey that the majority of UWP&#13;
faculty are commiUed to the belief that academic&#13;
advising of students should be done by faculty.&#13;
APC strongly endorses this position and has&#13;
developed the following resolutions_ from that&#13;
premise.&#13;
(1) Formal declaration of an area of interest must&#13;
be made upon completion of 45 credits.&#13;
Formal declaration of a major is required upon&#13;
completion of 60 credits. A student who fails&#13;
to make such formal declarations by these&#13;
deadlines will be transferred to special student&#13;
status and will be so notified. Students&#13;
are encouraged to identify an area of&#13;
- interest as early as possible in their academic&#13;
careers, but they are free, of course, to&#13;
change the area of interest or major.&#13;
(2) Every student shall have an assigned advisor&#13;
or advising officer as provided below:&#13;
(a) Students with declared majors or area of&#13;
interest shall be advised by faculty members&#13;
in their major or a·rea of interest. It is&#13;
the responsibility of the divisions to decide&#13;
the advising format for their unit.&#13;
(b) Students who have not declared a major&#13;
or area of interest shall be assigned faculty&#13;
advisors by the Office _of the Dean of&#13;
Faculty. These advisors will be assigned&#13;
according to the students' preliminary&#13;
interests, if any. All such assignments&#13;
will be made with the prior consent of the r&#13;
proposed faculty advisor.&#13;
occurred. · (&#13;
(4) These policies shall become effective with the&#13;
fall registration of 1978.&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge Proposal&#13;
To insure that the degree programs of&#13;
UW-Parkside students include study in a variety&#13;
of academic fields, the following requirements&#13;
are established. To obtain a UWP degree, a&#13;
student must accumulate 9 credits in each of 3&#13;
designated areas of study and 3 credits in a 4th&#13;
area, making a core of studies of 30 credits.&#13;
Fine Arts and Humanities&#13;
Social and Behavioral Sciences&#13;
Science&#13;
and&#13;
Management Science, Engineering&#13;
Science, Labor&#13;
Economics and Education (excluding&#13;
Physical Education courses)&#13;
9cr *&#13;
9 er*&#13;
9 er*&#13;
3cr&#13;
30cr&#13;
* The total of 9 credits per unit must include&#13;
work in -at least two disciplines. No more than 6&#13;
credits in any one discipline may be counted&#13;
toward fulfilling the Breadth of Knowledge&#13;
requirement. Academic Skills courses, English&#13;
090, 100, and 101 , 0-level mathematics courses,.&#13;
and foreign language courses taken to fulfill the&#13;
language requirement, will not count toward the&#13;
Breadth of Knowledge requirement.&#13;
ISHIRTS+&#13;
EWREVIEWREVIEWREVIEWREVIEWREVIEWREVIE&#13;
by Wendy Ratner&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
On Thursday, October 27, at eight o'clock,&#13;
witnessed a courageous effort by the members of&#13;
the Parkside Theatre, to perform Lillian Hellman's&#13;
complicated play, The Children's Hour. It is a&#13;
story about Mary Tilford (Donna Linde) who&#13;
destroys four peoples' lives by telling a malicious&#13;
lie. Through her lively dialogue, Hellman raises&#13;
imp6rtant questions of intimacy between&#13;
individuals of the same sex. Can two friends love&#13;
each other too much? Are there boundaries of&#13;
normal and 'unnatural' love? Is it fair for a society&#13;
to establish restrictions on the individuals'&#13;
relationship?&#13;
thought that the theatre members knew their roles&#13;
well. Why then did the play seem so phony and&#13;
artificia1?&#13;
It seemed to me that there was a certain&#13;
distance between the actresses. Words were&#13;
uttered without feeling, as if they had just&#13;
memorized their lines. In fact opening night can be&#13;
compared to a typical dress rehearsal with hardly&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
3900 Erie Street. Racine 414-639-6662&#13;
Open Daily 9am-9pm&#13;
Saturda{ 9am-5: 30pm&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of ·the Suhmarine&#13;
San~wieh&#13;
OPEN B A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
2615 Washington /We. 634-2373&#13;
The answers are not of surface quality.&#13;
Hellman's theme of friendship versus. lesbianism is&#13;
not only hard to convey to an audience, but it is&#13;
difficult to establish this theme among the&#13;
actresses and actors as well. The director&#13;
Rhoda-Galle Pollack, stressed the significance of&#13;
character knowledge in hopes of her -students&#13;
portraying a realistic individual. If you can&#13;
establish a believeable character on stage then&#13;
your chances of having a realistic play are high. I&#13;
any differences at all. ,&#13;
The missing cues and feelings of awkwardness&#13;
can be easily blamed on opening night. I am sure&#13;
that the members of the play recognized I their&#13;
faults and performed with ease the following three&#13;
nights.&#13;
Technically, the costumes and props that took&#13;
approximately one month to complete were made&#13;
with the utmost precision. Both D~borah Bell&#13;
(Costume Designer) ~nd John Dickson (Scenic&#13;
and Lighting Designer) ought to be given a&#13;
standing ovation for correlating the wardrobe and&#13;
scenery so well. Never have 1-seen both elements&#13;
match with one another as well as the individual,&#13;
either in community or professional theatre. They&#13;
both tied together thus creating a perfect&#13;
atmosphere and flavor to the play. &#13;
•&#13;
p Views&#13;
Parkside administrators should CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
by Rusty Smith stop proiecting their mistakes&#13;
President, P.S.G.A. To the Editor: brought about the slow death of&#13;
the woods as a natural area.&#13;
... Couldn't the admanistrators&#13;
foresee that their wish to exploit&#13;
the woods might be shared by&#13;
others? How dare they cry&#13;
"abuse" to runners, minibikers,&#13;
and horse riders after the&#13;
university caused so much&#13;
damage to the environment by&#13;
building the trail itself. How can&#13;
Parks ide be naively surprised to&#13;
see that now that they have&#13;
made the area accessible, it is&#13;
being used and abused like all&#13;
public lands.&#13;
It seems that people who have&#13;
the power to make such&#13;
decisions about the environment&#13;
should have the intelligence and&#13;
responsibility to consider the&#13;
simple question of whether a&#13;
project such as a nature trail will&#13;
bring more destruction or benefit&#13;
to the land. As a runner and a&#13;
photographer, I have never&#13;
neededa path to enjoy that area,&#13;
and the environment never&#13;
suffered from my occasional&#13;
visits. However, now that the&#13;
university,has made it easier and&#13;
easier to travel through, it is&#13;
becoming less and less worth&#13;
traveling through.&#13;
I hope the Parkside administrators&#13;
will stop projecting their&#13;
mistakes onto others and realize&#13;
they're stumbling over the&#13;
consequences of their past&#13;
actions. I end witl&gt;-the plea that&#13;
the University administrators&#13;
show their concern for the area&#13;
by taking appropriate steps to&#13;
return the woods to its previous&#13;
condition.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Association, Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, Schirley Schmerling, and Wayne Dannehl are making plans for&#13;
a Winterfest celebration to be held in January or February. Since&#13;
Parkside has no home coming or similar activity, we hope to institute&#13;
this event as a tradition for our campus.&#13;
The main events would be a basketball game and dance on Friday&#13;
night and a formal dance including dinner on Saturday night. Other&#13;
activities would be scheduled campus wide during the two days and&#13;
possibly on Sunday, too. Some 'of the ideas that are being tossed&#13;
around include: cross country skiing, a snowman building contest&#13;
(with Mother Nature's assistance, of course), ice sculpting, bingo,&#13;
sleigh rides, softball on Wyllie pond, snowball throwing contests, and&#13;
ice skating.&#13;
Need more students&#13;
We need the help of students who are willing to organize and&#13;
conduct some of the activities. We would also appreciate any helpful&#13;
ideasor suggestionsfor other events. Think about it! What would you&#13;
like to see happening during a Winterfest celebration at your school?&#13;
Let is know!&#13;
Towing insurance&#13;
A representative from Triple A (AAA) auto insurance will be on&#13;
campus from 9:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. November 7th through&#13;
November 12th. His table will be located on the concourse, and he&#13;
will be offering towing insurance plus several extras to students at a&#13;
cost of $22.00 per year. He is being sponsored by the P.5.GA Senate.&#13;
Student Voice anyongJ&#13;
I would also like to announce that there are several openings for&#13;
students on University Committees. Among them are the Campus&#13;
Ceremonies Committee which helps to plan our December&#13;
Commencement and other formal occasions, the Parking Appeals&#13;
Committee, the "Academic Appeals Committee, The Academic&#13;
Policies Committee and the Library Learning Center Committee. I&#13;
would gladly welcome any student who wishes to become involved&#13;
in any of these or any other area of campus governance.&#13;
Our society has a chronic&#13;
inability to anticipate the&#13;
consequences of its acts. As a&#13;
country, we often engage in&#13;
programs, plans, and projects&#13;
with reckless enthusiasm, then&#13;
become perturbed and frustrated&#13;
when we are forced to deal with&#13;
the disastrous, unforseen, consequencesof&#13;
our actions.&#13;
The Parkside nature trail&#13;
project seemsto be a classic case&#13;
in point. Parkside decided to&#13;
"develop" a heavily wooded area&#13;
by building a three mile trail&#13;
through it (perhaps the idea that&#13;
we consider untouched woods&#13;
"underdeveloped" says something&#13;
about our egosand values).&#13;
Now that the project is&#13;
complete, the university is&#13;
bewildered over the fact that the&#13;
"success" of their project has&#13;
John Van Den Brandt&#13;
Amen, brother! -editor&#13;
YES! INTERNATIONAL SPEED READING COURSE WILL BE&#13;
TAUGHT HERE IN THE RACINE·KENOSHA AREA&#13;
National Reading Enrichment&#13;
Institute (a non profit organization)&#13;
will offer a 4 week course in speed&#13;
reading to a limited number of&#13;
qualified people in the KenoshaRacine&#13;
area. NREI panoramic&#13;
method of instruction Is the most&#13;
innovative and effective program&#13;
available in the United States. Not&#13;
only"doesthis famous course reduce&#13;
your time in the classroom to just&#13;
oneclass per week for 4 short weeks&#13;
but it also includesan advance speed&#13;
reading course on cassette tape so&#13;
that you can continue to improve for&#13;
the rest of your life. In just four&#13;
weeksthe average student should be&#13;
reading 3 to 10times faster. In a few&#13;
months some students are reading&#13;
20to 30times faster obtaining speeds&#13;
that approach 6000 words per&#13;
minute. In their Instances speedsup&#13;
to 20,000words per minute have been&#13;
documented.&#13;
Our Average graduate reads 3 to&#13;
10tlmesfaster upon completion with&#13;
greatly increased comprehension&#13;
and concentration. For those who&#13;
would like additional Information&#13;
and series of FREE 1 - hour orientation&#13;
lectures have been scheduled.&#13;
At the free meetings the course will&#13;
be explained in complete detail&#13;
including classroom procedures,&#13;
instruction methods, class schedule&#13;
and a special Introductory tuition&#13;
that is qne half the cost of similar&#13;
courses.You must attend anyone of&#13;
these meetings for information"&#13;
about classes.&#13;
These orientations are opened to&#13;
the public above age 14 (persons&#13;
under 18should·be accompanied by&#13;
a parent if possible). if you have&#13;
always wanted to be a speed reader&#13;
but found the cost prohibitive or the&#13;
course too time consuming...Now&#13;
you can, lust by attending one evening&#13;
per week for four short weeks&#13;
read 3to 10times faster with greater&#13;
comprehension and concentration.&#13;
If you are a student who would like&#13;
to make A's Insteadof B's or C's, or&#13;
if you are a business person who&#13;
wants to stay abreast of todays&#13;
everchanging accelerating world&#13;
then this course is an absolute must.&#13;
These special THREE one hour&#13;
meetings will be held at the&#13;
follOWing times and places In the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine area:&#13;
November 7th Two meetings, one at&#13;
6:30 P.M. and again at&#13;
8:30 P.M.&#13;
R r&#13;
Ranger errors&#13;
To the Editor: from the nature trails.&#13;
Unfortunately, despite all the&#13;
efforts to clearly mark the course&#13;
a few runners got lost in the&#13;
heavily wooded area and strayed&#13;
onto the nature trails. However,&#13;
the race itself was not contested&#13;
on the nature trails.&#13;
AIHalbur&#13;
Cross-country runner&#13;
I would like to clarify some&#13;
points made in the RANGER&#13;
article, "Nature Trails Being&#13;
Abused". The article stated that&#13;
on October 30, Parks ide&#13;
Athletics Department hosted a&#13;
cross country meet on the nature&#13;
trails.&#13;
That statement is in error on&#13;
two accounts. First, Parkside&#13;
Athletics had no connection&#13;
with the meet. The race was&#13;
conceived of and promoted by&#13;
runners Ray Fredericksen and&#13;
Bob Langanoh.&#13;
More importantly, the race&#13;
was NOT run on the Parkside&#13;
nature trails. The day before the&#13;
race Fredericksen received&#13;
requests by university personnel&#13;
to change the site of the race.&#13;
Fredericksen complied, rerouting&#13;
the entire race away&#13;
November 8th Two meetings. one at&#13;
6: 30 P.M. and again at&#13;
8:30 P.M.&#13;
November 9th Two meetings, one at&#13;
6: 30 P.M. and again at&#13;
8:30 P.M.&#13;
Ranger was well represented at&#13;
the event. Parkside Athletics did&#13;
co-ordinate the event along with&#13;
Professor Eugene Gasiorkiewicz,&#13;
Asst. Chancellor O. Clayton&#13;
Johnson, and Asst. Chancellor&#13;
Gary Goetz. The fact that things&#13;
got confused may be because of&#13;
this mass involvement. The race&#13;
was run on the nature trails along&#13;
the south side of the creek. The&#13;
front page photograph was of&#13;
tbis area. -edjtor&#13;
TWO FINAL MEETINGS&#13;
November 10th One at 6: 30 P.M. and&#13;
again at 8: 30 P.M.&#13;
These meetings will be held In the&#13;
Holiday Inn at 5125-6th Street in&#13;
Kenosha.If you are a businessman,&#13;
a student, housewlte, or executive&#13;
this course, which took years of&#13;
intensive research to develop is a&#13;
must, you can read 3 to 10 times&#13;
faster, com prehend more, concentrate&#13;
better, and remember&#13;
longer. This course can be taught to&#13;
industry or qlvlc groups at group&#13;
rates upon request. Besure to attend&#13;
whichever free orientation that fits&#13;
in your schedule. REMEMBER&#13;
TUITION FOR THIS COURSE IS&#13;
ONE HALF THAT OF SIMILAR&#13;
COURSES, MONEY SPENT IN&#13;
SELF-IMPROVEMENT IS NOT AN&#13;
EXPENSE IT IS AN IN~&#13;
VESTMENT. MAKE AN INVESTMENT&#13;
TODAY.&#13;
HAVE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
With Thi. Coupon. YOW IIA&#13;
1 Per Cu.tomer H&#13;
our.&#13;
M-T&#13;
7p.m ••&#13;
lOp.m.&#13;
Tapper.&#13;
25'&#13;
Mic.&#13;
. 35"&#13;
Milled Drinks&#13;
W&#13;
Ladiei Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
o. the Cor•• r&#13;
of 57th &amp; 23 Ay •• •&#13;
.,&#13;
• views&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, P .S.G.A.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Association, Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, Schirley Schmerling, and Wayne Dannehl are making plans for&#13;
a Winterfest celebration to be held in January or February. Since&#13;
Parkside has no home coming or similar activity, we hope to institute&#13;
this event as a tradition for our campus .&#13;
The main events would be a basketball game and dance on Friday&#13;
night and a formal dance including dinner on Saturday night. Other&#13;
activities would be sch~duled campus wide during the two days and&#13;
possibly on Sunday, too. Some 'of the ideas that are being tossed&#13;
around include: cross country skiing, a snowman building contest&#13;
(with Mother Nature's assistance, of course), ice sculpting, bingo,&#13;
sleigh rides, softball on Wyllie pond, snowball throwing contests, and&#13;
ice skating.&#13;
Need more students&#13;
We need the help of students who are willing to organize and&#13;
conduct some of the activities. We would also appreciate any helpful&#13;
ideas or suggestions for other events. Think about it! What would you&#13;
like to see happening during a Winterfest celebration at your school?&#13;
let is know!&#13;
Towing insurance&#13;
A representative from Triple A (AAA) auto insurance will be on&#13;
campus from 9:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. November 7th through&#13;
November 12th. His table will be located on the conc9urse, and he&#13;
will be offering towing insurance plus several extras to students at a&#13;
cost of $22.00 per year. He is being sponsored by the P.S.G.A. Senate.&#13;
Student Voice anyongl&#13;
I would also like to announce that there are several openings for&#13;
students on University Committees. Among them are the Campus&#13;
Ceremonies Committee which helps to plan our December&#13;
Commencement and other formal occasions, the Parking Appeals&#13;
Committee, the Academic Appeals Committee, The Academic&#13;
Policies Committee and the Library Learning Center Committee. I&#13;
would gladly welcome any student who wishes to become involved&#13;
in any of these or any other area of campus governance.&#13;
R • d r&#13;
Ranger errors&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to clarify some&#13;
points made in the RANGER&#13;
article, "Nature Trails Being&#13;
Abused". The article stated that&#13;
on October 30, Parkside&#13;
Athletics Department hosted a&#13;
cross country meet on the nature&#13;
trails.&#13;
That statement is in error on&#13;
two accounts. First, Parkside&#13;
Athletics had no connection&#13;
with the meet. The race was&#13;
conceived of and promoted by&#13;
runners Ray Fredericksen and&#13;
Bob Langanoh .&#13;
More importantly, the race&#13;
was NOT run on the Parkside&#13;
nature trails. The day before the&#13;
race Fredericksen received&#13;
requests by university personnel&#13;
to change the site of the race.&#13;
Fredericksen complied, rerouting&#13;
the entire race away&#13;
from the nature trails.&#13;
Unfortunately, despite all the&#13;
efforts to clearly mark the course&#13;
a few runners got lost in the&#13;
heavily wooded area and strayed&#13;
onto the nature trails. However,&#13;
the race itself was not contested&#13;
on the nature trails.&#13;
Al Halbur&#13;
Cross-country runner&#13;
Ranger was well represented at&#13;
the event. Parkside Athletics did&#13;
co-ordinate the event along with&#13;
Professor Eugene Gasiorkiewicz,&#13;
Asst. Chancellor 0 . Clayton&#13;
Johnson, and Asst. Chancellor&#13;
Gary Goetz. The fact that things&#13;
got confused may be because of&#13;
this mass involvement. The race&#13;
was run on the nature trails along&#13;
the south side of the creek. The&#13;
front page photograph was of&#13;
.this area. -edjtor&#13;
HAYE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
With This Coupon •&#13;
Ladies Night&#13;
Wad.&#13;
0• tlle Corner&#13;
1 Per Customer&#13;
of 57111 &amp; 23 Ave.&#13;
YOWZAA&#13;
Hours&#13;
'M-T&#13;
7 p.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
Tappers&#13;
25r&#13;
Mic.&#13;
35c&#13;
nka&#13;
'&#13;
Parkside administrators should&#13;
stop proiecting their mistakes&#13;
To the Editor: brought about the slow death of&#13;
the woods as a natural area.&#13;
to the land. As a runner and a&#13;
photographer, I have never&#13;
needed a path to enjoy that area,&#13;
and the environment never&#13;
suffered from my occasional&#13;
visits . However, now that the&#13;
university has made it easier and&#13;
easier to travel through, it is&#13;
becoming less and less worth&#13;
traveling through&#13;
Our society has a chronic&#13;
inability to anticipate the&#13;
consequences of its acts. As a&#13;
country, we often engage in&#13;
programs, plans, and projects&#13;
with reckless enthusiasm, then&#13;
become perturbed and frustrated&#13;
when we are forced to deal with&#13;
the disastrous, unforseen, consequences&#13;
of our actions.&#13;
Couldn't the administrators&#13;
foresee that their wish to exploit&#13;
the woods might be shared by&#13;
others? How dare they cry&#13;
"abuse" to runners, minibikers,&#13;
and horseriders after the&#13;
university caused so much&#13;
damage to the environment by&#13;
building the trail itself. How can&#13;
Parkside be naively surprised to&#13;
see that now that they have&#13;
made the area accessible, it is&#13;
being used and abused like all&#13;
public lands.&#13;
I hope the Parkside administrators&#13;
will stop projecting their&#13;
mistakes onto others and realize&#13;
they're stumbl ing over the&#13;
consequences of their past&#13;
actions. I end with-the plea that&#13;
the University administrators&#13;
show their concern for the area&#13;
by taking appropriate steps to&#13;
return the woods to its previous&#13;
condition.&#13;
The Parkside nature trai I&#13;
project seems to be a classic case&#13;
in point. Parkside decided to&#13;
"develop" a heavily wood~ area&#13;
by building a three mile trail&#13;
through it (perhaps the idea that&#13;
we consider untouched woods&#13;
" underdeveloped" says something&#13;
about our egos and values).&#13;
Now that the project is&#13;
complete, the university is&#13;
bewildered over the fact that the&#13;
"success" of their project has&#13;
It seems that people who have&#13;
the power to make such&#13;
decisions about the environment&#13;
should have the intelligence and&#13;
responsibility to consider the&#13;
simple question of whether a&#13;
project such as a nature trail will&#13;
bring more destruction or benefit&#13;
John Van Den Brandt&#13;
Amen, brother! -editor&#13;
,...&#13;
YES! INTERNATIONAL SPEED READING COURSE WILL BE&#13;
TAUGHT HERE IN THE RACINE-KENOSHA AREA&#13;
National Reading Enrichment&#13;
Institute (a non profit organization)&#13;
will offer a 4 week course in speed&#13;
reading to a limited number of&#13;
qualified people in the KenoshaRacine&#13;
area. NRE I panoramic&#13;
method of instruction is the most&#13;
innovative and effective program&#13;
available in the United States. ~ot&#13;
only-does this famous course reduce&#13;
your time in the classroom to just&#13;
one class per week for 4 short weeks&#13;
but it also includes an advance speed&#13;
reading course on cassette tape so&#13;
that you can continue to improve for&#13;
the rest of your life. In just four&#13;
weeks the average student should be&#13;
reading 3 to 10 times faster. In a few&#13;
months some students are reading&#13;
20to 30 times faster obtaining speeds&#13;
that approach 6000 words per&#13;
minute. In their instances speeds up&#13;
to 20,000words per minute have been&#13;
documented.&#13;
Our Average graduate reads 3 to&#13;
10 times faster upon completion with&#13;
greatly increased comprehension&#13;
and concentration. For those who&#13;
would like additional information&#13;
and series of FREE 1 - hour orientation&#13;
lectures have been scheduled.&#13;
At the free meetings the course will&#13;
be explained in complete detail&#13;
including c1assroom procedures,&#13;
instruction methods, class schedule&#13;
and a special introductory tuition&#13;
that is Qne half the cost of similar&#13;
courses. You must attend any one of&#13;
these meetings for information·&#13;
about classes.&#13;
These orientations are opened to&#13;
the public above age 14 ( persons&#13;
under 18 should -be accompanied by&#13;
a parent if possible). If you have&#13;
always wanted to be a speed reader&#13;
but found the cost prohibitive or the&#13;
course too time consuming ... Now&#13;
•&#13;
you can, just by attending one evening&#13;
per week for four short weeks&#13;
read 3 to 10 times faster with greater&#13;
comprehension and concentration.&#13;
If you are a student who would like&#13;
to make A's instead of B's or C's, or&#13;
if you are a business person who&#13;
wants to stay abreast of todays&#13;
everchanging accelerating world&#13;
then this course is an absolute must.&#13;
These special THREE one hour&#13;
meetings will be held at the&#13;
following times and places in the&#13;
Kenosha -Racine area:&#13;
November 7th Two meetings, one at&#13;
6: 30 P.M. and again at&#13;
8:30 P.M .&#13;
November 8th Two meetings, one at&#13;
6: 30 P.M. and again at&#13;
8: JO P.M .&#13;
November 9th Two meetings, one at&#13;
6: JO P.M . and again at&#13;
8: 30 P.M.&#13;
TWO FINAL MEETINGS&#13;
November 10th One at 6: 30 P .M . and&#13;
again at 8· JO P.M .&#13;
These meetings wlll be held In the&#13;
Holiday Inn at 5125-6th Street in&#13;
Kenosha. If you are a businessman,&#13;
a student, house"'lfe, or executive&#13;
this course, which took years of&#13;
intensive research to develop is a&#13;
must, you can read 3 to 10 times&#13;
faster, comprehend more, concentrate&#13;
better, and remember&#13;
longer. This course can be taught to&#13;
industry or c;lvlc groups at group&#13;
rates upon request. Be sure to attend&#13;
whichever free orientation that fits&#13;
in your schedule. REMEMBER&#13;
TUITION FOR THIS COURSE IS&#13;
ONE HALF THAT OF SIMILAR&#13;
COURSES, MONEY SPENT IN&#13;
SELF-IMPROVEMENT IS NOT AN&#13;
EXPENSE IT IS AN IN!&#13;
VESTMENT. MAKE AN INVESTMENT&#13;
TODAY. &#13;
health&#13;
Fiberous fodder forage&#13;
frees food followers&#13;
(CPS) - The word is out. You&#13;
can take the bran flakes out of&#13;
the medicine cabinet.&#13;
Mom was right, but shedidn't&#13;
have all the facts. When she told&#13;
you to eat bran for "occasional&#13;
irregularity", she didn't know&#13;
that high fiber is "the word" in&#13;
healthy diets this year.&#13;
And that means that bran,&#13;
being one of the best high-fiber&#13;
foods, bas become the hip cereal&#13;
of the year, ranking right up&#13;
there with granola. The&#13;
high-fiber-craze has also uplifted&#13;
the status of lowly celery, apples&#13;
and broccoli.&#13;
Here's why. To start with, fiber&#13;
is the tough structural portion of&#13;
foods composed essentially of&#13;
stiff cell walls that give plants&#13;
their body and strength.&#13;
Fiber is not digestable by&#13;
humans. The best thing about it&#13;
is that it has the ability to absorb&#13;
and hold water.&#13;
Stools are the key ,&#13;
Why is that so outstanding?&#13;
Well, here's a somewhat messyexplanation,&#13;
and it has to do&#13;
with ... stools. Not your kitchen&#13;
or bar stool, but the one your&#13;
doctor pronounces with aslightly&#13;
fastidious "yew" sound&#13;
to it. Styewls. Yes.&#13;
You don't need to take Stool&#13;
Analysis 101 to know that&#13;
sometimes your stools aren't as&#13;
soft, squishy and spontaneous as&#13;
they ought to be. Chances are&#13;
this has to do with diet. The&#13;
average American diet includes&#13;
basicmeat, milk, eggs, sugarand&#13;
fat, which, co-incidentally,&#13;
contains little or no fiber. This&#13;
kind of diet will produce stools&#13;
that are hard, small and&#13;
strenuous. Eating more fiber will&#13;
produce the more desirable&#13;
aforementioned stool, and you&#13;
will 'stool' more often,&#13;
They used to cal! high-fiber&#13;
foods "roughage" and say the&#13;
same things -ebout the benefits.&#13;
But the word "roughage" has&#13;
taken on a medicinal {mage, the&#13;
"It'v-good-tor-vcu" aura that&#13;
surrounds the suspicious likes of&#13;
lima beans, swiss chard, or liver.&#13;
Diverticulosis&#13;
Besides, the big news is not&#13;
only that you should "go" more&#13;
often, it's that high fiber food&#13;
probably (some say "wtll") wards&#13;
off the painful disease of&#13;
diverticulosis.&#13;
Diverticulosis is nothing to&#13;
burp at. Approximately 40&#13;
percent of Americans over 40&#13;
suffer from it with a higher&#13;
percentage in older age groups.&#13;
It occurs when tiny pouches&#13;
(diverticula) form on~ the&#13;
intestine _wall, start collecting&#13;
bits of food and get infected.&#13;
Now, a stool without much&#13;
fiber forces intestinal muscles to&#13;
contract and strain _to push it&#13;
along. After years of such effort,&#13;
weak spots may develop in&#13;
intestinal walls.and develop into&#13;
diverticula. Thus it is easy to see&#13;
that a soft, easily moved stool&#13;
would rarely provoke diverticulosis.&#13;
Most everyone agrees that a&#13;
high-fiber diet is important in&#13;
elimination, but as in most&#13;
health 'movements', there will be&#13;
radicals claiming that the diet is&#13;
essential in curing most&#13;
diagnosable diseases.&#13;
Wjud off diseases&#13;
Someof these opinions sprang&#13;
from a study done in Africa by&#13;
British surgeon Dr. Denis P.&#13;
Burkitt. He observed that rural&#13;
Africans eating a high-fiber diet&#13;
had a very low incidence of&#13;
appendicitis, diverticulosis,&#13;
. hemorrhoids, 'heart -attack,&#13;
cancer of the colon and rectum,&#13;
gall-stones, hiatus hernia, and&#13;
obesity.&#13;
Most epidemiologists (students&#13;
of disease) relate these&#13;
diseases to a diet that is&#13;
low-fiber, but more importantly&#13;
high in fat and sugar. But many&#13;
give credibility to the claim that&#13;
a low-fiber diet results in an&#13;
Increased incidence of cancer of&#13;
the colon.&#13;
When the friendly bacteria in'&#13;
the intestines break down certain&#13;
substances, particularly bile&#13;
acids, carcinogenic (cancer&#13;
causing) chemicals are created.&#13;
If the stool is small, the&#13;
carcinogens are concentrated in&#13;
small areas. If the stool moves&#13;
slowly, the carcinogens have&#13;
more.time to affect the intestinal&#13;
walls.&#13;
Dr. Burkitt's fiber eating&#13;
Africans rarely get cancer of the&#13;
colon. But when they moved to&#13;
the city and began eating more&#13;
refined foods the cancer rate&#13;
began to resemble that of the&#13;
urbanites. ... ,&#13;
As for the heart disease claim,&#13;
many doctors," including the&#13;
respected Harvard nutritionist&#13;
Dr. Jean Mayer, say that a high&#13;
fat diet correlates far better than&#13;
low-fiber to increased heart&#13;
disease.&#13;
,Study before you sleep&#13;
Are you the kind of student&#13;
who usually studies hard before&#13;
going to bed, or the kind who&#13;
goes to bed, sets the alarm for&#13;
five or six o'clock and then&#13;
crams? If you're a pre-sleep&#13;
studier, GLAMOUR Magazine&#13;
reports you may be getting better&#13;
grades as a result of your study&#13;
habits than someone who does&#13;
the work afterward.&#13;
Recent research into steepand&#13;
study habits shows that sleep&#13;
prior to study disrupts memory&#13;
significantly, unless considerable&#13;
.Mascara ~ay&#13;
make- you blind&#13;
(CPS) - Mascara and other through the applicator wand.&#13;
eye makeups can cause infection Without an adequate preservaand&#13;
blindness, the FDA tive system the micro- organisms&#13;
announced recently. After re- can survive and multiply inside&#13;
ceiving several reports of corneal. the container. When the mascara&#13;
ulceration caused by bacteria is used again, if the microintroduced&#13;
when the cornea was organisms on the wand come&#13;
scratched, the FDA said it plans into contact with a scratched or&#13;
to require cosmetic manufac- damaged. cornea, the eye can&#13;
turers to include a preservative become infected. It the infection&#13;
in mascara and'other cosmetics. isn't treated immediately, it can&#13;
The bacteria is one often lead to partial or total blindness&#13;
present on the skin, and is in the injured eye.&#13;
absorbed by the cosrnetic s&#13;
waking time is allowed before&#13;
digging into the material vou&#13;
want to learn.. The shorter the&#13;
period of sleep that precedesthe&#13;
studying, the more this sleep&#13;
disrupts learning. Sleeping four&#13;
hours or less was found to be&#13;
highly disturbing to memory;&#13;
sleeping six hours disturbed it&#13;
less.&#13;
Researchersaren't exactly sure&#13;
how sleep disturbs the memory&#13;
process, but they believe it might&#13;
involve hormones. In laboratory&#13;
tests on mice, the hormone&#13;
somatotrophin, produced naturally&#13;
during sleep, severely&#13;
affected the memory of mice&#13;
injected with it.&#13;
I-fyou have a test to study for,&#13;
study first instead of putting it&#13;
off until the next morning. Better&#13;
grades might be your reward.&#13;
Sing-song birdseeds&#13;
mysteriouslY vanish&#13;
(CPS) - A major chain of'&#13;
British -Cofumbla pet stores&#13;
removed all packages of&#13;
Sing-SongTreat birdseed from its&#13;
display shelves recently after it&#13;
was suspected that the product&#13;
contained quantities of highgrade&#13;
African marijuana seeds.&#13;
The manufacturer of SingSongsaid&#13;
on the Packagethat its&#13;
product "promotes singing in&#13;
canaries and other song birds"&#13;
and that its ingredients would&#13;
"also aid weak and sick birds to&#13;
recover from illness".&#13;
Apparently Canadian consumers&#13;
enjoyed- Sing-Song's 15&#13;
percent of. "Nigerseed". One&#13;
storekeeper said, "We've had a&#13;
lot of people coming into our&#13;
stores buying packages of&#13;
Sing-Song who really don't look&#13;
like they own canaries.&#13;
'Vitamin C licks heroin&#13;
(CPS)- Vitam~n C has been acknowledged to cure everything, butare&#13;
doctors going too far when they include heroin addiction?&#13;
Dr. Alfred F. Libby, who pioneered the theory of orthomolecular&#13;
medicine (the use of vitamins to cure disease) thinks not. Libby&#13;
claims he lias used vitamin therapy .on 75 addicts at his Calif. clinic&#13;
and has had -cornplete.success.&#13;
Libby's most startling claim is that the addict can't get high after&#13;
receiving a massive dose of the vitamin. Vitamin C detoxifies the&#13;
heroin. The appetite returns in a few days and a feeling of well being&#13;
as well. Addicts report few of the discomforts of withdrawl or&#13;
methadone accompanying the vitamin cure.&#13;
Another voice in favor of the vitamin cure is Dr. Linus Pauling, two&#13;
times Nobel Prize winner. "I'd perhaps be a tittle cautious in saying&#13;
that large quantities of sodium ascorbate can detoxify heroin&#13;
inimediately, but I think there's no doubt that very large ,doses of&#13;
vitamin C will rel!eve addiction ."&#13;
[rmQ (]tBmrnmOO~&#13;
(5wQ0 illU&#13;
(](5mrnmOO~IlQU(5(]§&#13;
Universal Imports&#13;
SERVICE-PARTS CAR SALES -&#13;
A~&#13;
••••&#13;
•••• ~"&#13;
2301 Durand&#13;
554-9412 Racine&#13;
Ave.,. ~QCine&#13;
552-8580 Kenosha&#13;
rFrida;:N;;;;ber l1th-,&#13;
tvance's Sports Association Presents,&#13;
t&#13;
Rocket 88 ,&#13;
Plus WZUU Superstar ,&#13;
I LARR~a~~~mLEGEND I&#13;
t Prizes-Contests-Pabst on tap 50' ,&#13;
t&#13;
Tickets on Sale Now $3.00 , , Llmlte~::~;~:s, ~:;urry , ,&#13;
l&#13;
1-94 &amp; Hy. 11 Phone: 886-9998 ,&#13;
~~~~..-........-....---.......-..I.&#13;
WIII""I"I11"""!"I11IIII11"I11I"""I11III11"II11II11IIII11III11III11""III11UIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII11III1111II!!! IfOR -TODA V'S LOOK I&#13;
i i&#13;
I IT'S I&#13;
= E&#13;
~ ~ ~&#13;
GUYS GIRL.S&#13;
i:(~1&#13;
JJ)Stud10~&#13;
Phone 654-6154&#13;
5 Borbers-Stylists-3 Beouty-Stylists&#13;
E =&#13;
~ 3919 - 52nd KenoshQ I&#13;
§1II1111111111111111111111111U1III11I1II11II1UIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIulilllUllIUlIIlIlIUm&#13;
health·-&#13;
Fiberous fodder forage&#13;
frees food followers&#13;
(CPS) - T~e word is out. You that are hard, small and&#13;
can take the bran flakes out of strenuous. Eating more fiber will&#13;
the medicine cabinet. produce the more desirable&#13;
Mom was right, but she didn't aforementioned stool, and you&#13;
have all the facts. When she told will 'stool' more often,&#13;
you to eat bran for "occasional They used to call high-fiber&#13;
irregularity", she didn't know foods "roughage" and say the&#13;
that high fiber is "the word" in sam~ things about the benefits .&#13;
healthy diets this year. But the word "roughage" has&#13;
And that means that bran, taken on a medicinal image, the&#13;
being one of the best high-fiber "it's-good-for-you" aura that&#13;
foods, llas become the hip cereal surrounds the suspicious likes of&#13;
of the year, ranking right up lima bea~s, swiss chard, or liver.&#13;
there with granola. The Diverticulosis&#13;
high-fibeF-craze has also uplifted Besides, the big news is not&#13;
the status of lowly celery, apples only that you should ,;go" more&#13;
and broccoli. often, it's that high fiber food&#13;
Here's why . To start with, fiber probably (some say "will:') wards&#13;
is the tough·structural portion of off the painful disease of&#13;
foods composed essentially of diverticulosis-.&#13;
stiff cell walls that give plants Diverticulosis is nothing to&#13;
their body and strength . burp at . Approximately 40&#13;
Fiber is not digestable by percent of Americans over 40&#13;
humans . The best thing about it suffer from it with a higher&#13;
is that it has the ability to absorb percentage in older age groups .&#13;
and hold water. It occurs when tiny pouches&#13;
Stools are the key ' (diverticula) form on _ the&#13;
Why is that so outstanding? intestine _wall, start collecting&#13;
Well , here's a somewhat messy bits of food and get infected .&#13;
explanation, and it has to do Now, a stool without much&#13;
with ... stools . Not your kitchen fiber forces intestinal muscles to&#13;
or bar stool, but the one your contract and strain to push it&#13;
doctor pronounces with a - along. After years of such effort,&#13;
slightly fastidious "yew" sound weak spots may develop in&#13;
to it. Styewls . Yes . intestinal walls and develop into&#13;
You don't need to take Stool diverticula. Thus it is easy to see&#13;
Analysis 101 to know that that a soft, easily moved stool&#13;
sometimes your stools aren't as would rarely provoke diverticusoft,&#13;
squishy and spontaneous as losis.&#13;
they ought to be. Chan'ces are Most everyone agrees that a&#13;
this has to do with diet. The high-fiber diet is important in&#13;
average American diet includes elimination, but as in most&#13;
basic meat, milk, eggs, sugar and health 'movements', there will be&#13;
fat, which, co-in_cidentally, radicals claiming that the diet is&#13;
contains little or no fiber. This essential in curing most&#13;
kind of diet will produce stools diagnosable diseases .&#13;
Are you the kind of student&#13;
who usually studies hard before&#13;
going to bed, or the kind who&#13;
goes to bed, sets the alarm for&#13;
five or six o'clock and then&#13;
crams? If you're a pre-sleep&#13;
studier, GLAMOUR Magazine&#13;
reports you may be getting better&#13;
grades as a result of your study&#13;
habits than someone who does&#13;
the work afterward.&#13;
Recent research into sleep and&#13;
study habits shows that sleep&#13;
prior to study disrupts memory&#13;
significantly, unless considerable&#13;
waking t ime is allowed before&#13;
digging into the material ·you&#13;
want to learn. The shorter the&#13;
period of sleep that precedes the&#13;
studying, the more this sleep&#13;
disrupts learning. Sleeping four&#13;
hours or less was found to be&#13;
highly disturbing to memory;&#13;
sleeping six hours disturbed it&#13;
less.&#13;
Researchers aren't exactly sure&#13;
how sleep disturbs the memory&#13;
process, but they believe it might&#13;
involve hormones. In laboratory&#13;
tests on mice, the hormone&#13;
.-Mascara may&#13;
make_ you blind&#13;
(CPS) - Mascara and other through the applicator wand .&#13;
eye makeups can cause infection Without an adequate preservaand&#13;
blindness, the FDA tivesystem the micro- organisms&#13;
announced recently . After re- can survive and multiply inside&#13;
ceiving several reports of corneal. the container. When the mascara&#13;
ulceration caused by bacteria is used again, if the microintroduced&#13;
when the cornea was organisms on the wand come&#13;
scratched, the FDA said ~it plans into contact with a scratched or&#13;
to require cosmetic manufac- damaged cornea, the eye can&#13;
turers to include a preservative become infected. It the infection&#13;
in mascara and other cosmetics. isn't treated immediately, it can&#13;
The bacteria is one often lead to partial or total blindness&#13;
present on the skin, and is in the injured eye.&#13;
absorbed by the cosmetics&#13;
W,ud off diseases&#13;
Some of these opinions sprang&#13;
from a study done in Africa by&#13;
British surgeon Dr. Den is P.&#13;
Burkitt. He observed that rural&#13;
Africans eating a high-fiber diet&#13;
had a very low incidence of&#13;
appendicitis, diverticulosis,&#13;
- hemorrhoids, tie art ~attack,&#13;
cancer of the colon and rectum,&#13;
gall-stones, hiatus hernia, and&#13;
obesity.&#13;
Most epidemiologists (students&#13;
of disease) relate these&#13;
diseases to a diet that is&#13;
low-fiber, but more importantly&#13;
high in fat and sugar. But many&#13;
give credibility to the claim tfi'at&#13;
a low-fiber diet results in an&#13;
increase_d incidence of cancer of&#13;
the colon . . ~&#13;
When the friendly bacteria in&#13;
the intestines break down certain&#13;
substances, particularly bile&#13;
acids, carcinogenic (cancer&#13;
causing) chemicals are created .&#13;
If the stool is small, the&#13;
carcinogens are concentrated in&#13;
small areas . If the stool moves&#13;
slowly, the carcinogens have&#13;
more. time to affect the intestinal&#13;
walls .&#13;
Dr. Buc.kitt' s fiber eating&#13;
Africans rarely get cancer of the&#13;
colon. But when they moved to&#13;
the city and began eating more&#13;
refined foods the cancer rate&#13;
began to resemble that of the&#13;
urbanites .&#13;
As for the heart disease claim,&#13;
many doctors,· including the&#13;
respected Harvard nutritioni~t&#13;
Dr. Jean Mayer, say that a high&#13;
fat diet correlates far better than&#13;
low-fiber to increased heart&#13;
disease.&#13;
somatotrophin, produced naturall&#13;
y during sleep, severely&#13;
affected t he memory of mice&#13;
injected with it.&#13;
l·f you have a test to study for,&#13;
study first instead of putting it&#13;
off until the next morning. Better&#13;
grades might be your reward.&#13;
~ Vitamin C licks heroin&#13;
(CPS) - Vitam~n Chas been acknowledged to cure everything, butare&#13;
doctors going too far when they include heroin addiction?&#13;
Dr. Alfred F. Libby, who pioneered the theory of orthomolecular&#13;
medicine (the use of vitamins to cure disease) thinks not. Libby&#13;
claims he has used vitamin therapy .on 75 addicts at his Calif. clinic&#13;
and has had complete.success.&#13;
Libby's most startling claim is that t.he addict can't get high after&#13;
receiving a massive dose of the vitamin. Vitamin C detoxifies the&#13;
heroin . The appetite returns in a few days and a feeling of well being&#13;
as well . Add.icts report few of the discomforts of withdraw! or&#13;
methadone accompanying the vitamin cure .&#13;
Another voice in favor of the vitamin cure is Dr. Linus Pauling, two&#13;
times Nobel Prize winner. "I'd perhaps be a little cautious in saying&#13;
that lirge quantities of sod.ium ascorbate can detoxify heroin&#13;
immediately, but I think tnere's no doubt that very large doses of&#13;
vitamin C will rel!eve addiction."&#13;
Universal Imports&#13;
SERVICE-PARTS CAR SALES&#13;
2301 Durand Ave.,_ ~cine&#13;
554-9412 Racine 552-8580 Kenosha&#13;
' .., &#13;
eyes Silver Lake, Wisconsin&#13;
Sunday, November 6, 1977, p.m.&#13;
"&#13;
I&#13;
Philip l. Livmgs ton pholognphs&#13;
eyes Silver Lake, Wisconsin&#13;
Sunday, November 6, 1977, p.m.&#13;
Philip L. Lmn~ston photo raphs &#13;
Korean diary&#13;
City life in Korea: diverse and exciting&#13;
by Dennis R. Dean&#13;
Associate Professor of English&#13;
Campus activities for faculty members&#13;
at Chonnam National University in&#13;
Kwangju, where I taught, were generally&#13;
more predictable than they are here. For&#13;
example, many of the teachers had only&#13;
two suits - one for summer and one for&#13;
winter - and a few more virtually&#13;
identical clothing day after day, as if&#13;
remembering the school uniforms of their&#13;
younger years. There was actually a set day&#13;
on campus for the switch to allowably&#13;
informal summer wear. 1,however, dressed&#13;
as I pleased and when I started showing up&#13;
in short sleeves ahead of, everyone else,&#13;
the students joked that summer came&#13;
earlier for me.&#13;
None of my colleagues owned cars, so&#13;
almost all of them depended upon the free&#13;
but overcrowded faculty bus. As a result,&#13;
faculty members were generally on&#13;
campus from about" 8:30 to 5:10 every day,&#13;
with lunch in the school cafeteria (where I&#13;
also ate). But it was cheap and easy to&#13;
come and go by taxi (40 cents) or&#13;
commercial bus (8 cents). so I did.&#13;
Although taxi drivers usuallv Ispoke no&#13;
English, we soon learned enough Korean to&#13;
direct them to the campus ("Chonnam&#13;
Dai-Hakvo"). or downtown ("YMCA")or to&#13;
our apartment ("Jai-II Mansion"). Because&#13;
my pronounciation was so bad, I carried&#13;
with me the first and third of these written&#13;
in Korean, and had to use them once or&#13;
twice. Going other places than these three&#13;
by taxi required help from friends, who&#13;
either wrote out the Korean, instructed the&#13;
driver personally, or (as often happened)&#13;
came along. Economical, courteous, and&#13;
readily available transportation was one of&#13;
the pleasures of Kwangju.&#13;
Because distances were short, I often&#13;
chose to walk downtown (past small&#13;
shops, street vendors, and horse carts),&#13;
usually attracting some attention when I&#13;
did. My wife and I were not, however, the&#13;
only Americans in Kwangju. On Sunday, 6&#13;
March, for example - the day after we&#13;
arrived - Kim Tae [In invited us for an&#13;
authentic Korean dinner (our first) at a&#13;
local restaurant and introduced us to&#13;
David Miller, the 27-year-old head of the&#13;
United States Information Service in&#13;
Kwangju, who immediately became and&#13;
remained one of our closest friends. USIS&#13;
sponsored occasional free showings of&#13;
American movies, talks !:y visiting U.S.&#13;
scholars, and a regular discussion group on&#13;
current American fiction (choosing and&#13;
supplying books). It also had a fine&#13;
English-language library and was responsible&#13;
for evacuating U.S. citizens in the&#13;
event of war. Under USIS -sponsorship, I&#13;
gave a talk in Kwangju "Asian&#13;
Influences on American Literature" - and&#13;
then repeated it at a Christian college in&#13;
Chonju and a Buddhist one in Iri, receiving&#13;
lavish welcomes in both places as well as&#13;
the unexpected company of Ed Wright,&#13;
who came down from Fulbright House in&#13;
Seoul to hear me. Dave often invitedpeople&#13;
t~ his home (U.S. government&#13;
property, with an elaborate security&#13;
system) for repast prepared by his resourceful&#13;
housekeeper, Miss Kim. Besides&#13;
an agreeable supply of anecdotes, Dave&#13;
also had the best and most generous liquor&#13;
cabinet in Kwangju, which was frequently&#13;
restocked from the Embassy commissary in&#13;
Seoul. Koreans, it seemed; would put up&#13;
with about anything for the sake of Johnny&#13;
Walker scotch, but would scarcely tolerate&#13;
its absence.&#13;
On Monday, 7' March, our first official&#13;
teaching day on campus, Susan and I met&#13;
Bob Hulsey. then 24, a wonderfully&#13;
personable and extremely obligingPeace&#13;
Corps volunteer from the Kansas/Oklahoma&#13;
area who was teaching English&#13;
conversation and composition at&#13;
Chonnam. Bob was invaluable to us&#13;
throughout our stay and we spent more&#13;
time in his company (often between&#13;
classes) than witt) any other person. He,&#13;
my wife, and I shared an office together&#13;
and Bob was extremely thoughtful in&#13;
assisting Susan to get through the first few&#13;
days of her unanticipated duties as a&#13;
teacher. OR this particular Monday, as on&#13;
many other days, the three of us had lunch&#13;
together in the newly opened school&#13;
cafeteria (Fnenu in Korean). Later, Bob&#13;
came by the apartment for us at 5 and we&#13;
walked to USIS for Fred Astaire a.nd Ginger&#13;
Rogers in "Top Hat," which the audience&#13;
of Korean students obviously enjoyed. We&#13;
then had dinner at a Chinese restaurant.&#13;
The next day, after classes, Bob and Mrs.&#13;
Kim introduced us to Yongdong market, a&#13;
fascinating array of shops, (ish vendors,&#13;
butchers. live animal sellers, men in old&#13;
costumes, and so on, where we bought a&#13;
variety of needed household goods and&#13;
were amazed at Mrs. Kim's success in&#13;
bargaining on our behalf Anyone who&#13;
thinks Oriental women are inherently&#13;
demure and passive has never seen them&#13;
haggle.&#13;
I&#13;
Be-sides Dave and Bob, there were other&#13;
Americans in Kwangju. At least three more&#13;
Peace Corps volunteers taught in local&#13;
schools; the Mormons, Adventists, and&#13;
Presbyterians all had missionary contingents,&#13;
and the Presbyterians ran an&#13;
impressive hospital. Sometimes, small&#13;
groups of U,S. soldiers from a nearby&#13;
airbase would come to town, usually for&#13;
the sake of drunken ruckuses or a debauch&#13;
on pleasure street. We saw the volunteers&#13;
and missionaries occasionally.&#13;
Despite the, language batrier, we also&#13;
dealt regularly with a number of Koreans&#13;
whose names I never knew: our laundryman,&#13;
his wife, and children: bank and&#13;
postal clerks; our tailor, from whom I&#13;
bought three pairs of custom-made slacks;&#13;
my barber; waiters in the va'rious&#13;
restaurants; bus girls and taxi drivers;&#13;
clerks in the supermarkets; and it large&#13;
number of small shop keepers, both&#13;
downtown and in Yondong market. There&#13;
being no laundromats in town (and no&#13;
washing machines that we could discover)&#13;
laundry was done by hand, but it was&#13;
always done well, and with invariable&#13;
courtesy. My paychecks in dollars were the&#13;
first my bank had ever handled. Even in&#13;
Korean currency, checks are unusual;&#13;
salaries at the university, for example, are&#13;
pard in cash. Any bank transaction&#13;
-requires not only your signature but your&#13;
seal of chop ("tojang" is the Korean word),&#13;
so I had -to have one made. At the post&#13;
office, there are no stamp machines and&#13;
the stamps you buy are without glue,&#13;
which you must put on yourself from jars.&#13;
(As a special courtesy, however, my&#13;
stamps were sometimes put on for me.)&#13;
Arriving packages had to be picked up at&#13;
narrowly designated times, and were&#13;
subject to duty. The Korean government is&#13;
empowered to inspect both incoming and&#13;
outgoing mail for possible propaganda as&#13;
well.&#13;
As my tailor got to know me.chts price&#13;
came down, each pair of slacks I bought&#13;
being cheaper than the last. A haircut in&#13;
Korea includes, for those who want it, not&#13;
only shampoo and massage but a&#13;
considerable amount of agreeable female&#13;
attention as well; the whole thing costs a&#13;
buck.&#13;
The usual pattern of small shops is&#13;
slowly changing in Kwangju, although the&#13;
few so-called department stores never had&#13;
anything we wanted. There were also two&#13;
small supermarkets, with a variety of&#13;
goods, open shelves, and fixed prices. We&#13;
were cautious about meat and relied in our&#13;
~ IJY UW-Parkside&#13;
..",,, Semester Break&#13;
CA&#13;
J.d. 6-13, 197.&#13;
$299 - Complete based&#13;
on 2 to u room&#13;
Make Reservation&#13;
Deposit Now&#13;
Full Payment Due Dec. 6&#13;
CONTACT, PARKSIDE UNION OffiCES&#13;
RM. 209 CALL 553-2200&#13;
81Z .. ,&#13;
NUTS TO&#13;
tout&#13;
".Ad oth., ...... too&#13;
.t&#13;
10 ... -4plI&#13;
P.,k.I •• Union&#13;
own home upon canned and frozen thing&#13;
brought down from Seoul, but otherwis&#13;
found much to like in Kwangju and&#13;
patronized the two supermarkets regularly.&#13;
I also gave some business to the small&#13;
shops, on~ of which (for instance) sold m&#13;
three eggs every Saturday, so that I coul&#13;
make my usual omelette the next 'day.&#13;
The most interesting shops in Kwangju&#13;
- for me at least - were those devoted t&#13;
antiques and 'art. While there, I developed&#13;
a considerable respect for Korea's cultural&#13;
heritage, which is not simply a footnote to&#13;
the Chinese but vigorous and significan&#13;
itself. Korean cufture seems to&#13;
underrated for three reasons: 1( th&#13;
relative lack of Korean scholars in th&#13;
West; 2( the unfortunate policies of th&#13;
Japanese occupation (1910 - 1945), which&#13;
attempted to Nipponize Korea; and 3( th&#13;
poor jqb that the Koreans themselve&#13;
have done in researching and popularizin&#13;
their cultural legacy. How man&#13;
Americans are aware, for example, tha&#13;
Koreans were printing from moveable tv&#13;
before Gutenberg, or that it was th&#13;
Koreans who taught not only ceramics bu&#13;
architecture to the Japanese?&#13;
I wou ld have loved to have an exampl&#13;
of early Korean printing, but we neve&#13;
succeeded in finding one for sale. As fo&#13;
ceramics, they are readily available, and&#13;
widely collected by Koreans, but the bes&#13;
pieces are hazardous to buy (for reasons a&#13;
expense, fragility, and authenticity) and&#13;
are almost impossible to export - unless,&#13;
of course, your friend knows the friend in&#13;
charge! ....&#13;
Modern Korean ceramics are well worth&#13;
having, and they also do some interestin&#13;
trade work with black lacquer, especiall&#13;
as inlaid with mother of pearl. The mos&#13;
popular Korean items right now, however,&#13;
are antique chests, which once were used&#13;
in every hyme for storage, there bein&#13;
typically no closets. As I mentioned&#13;
earlier, Ed Wright is a fervent collector.&#13;
Among cqntemporary Korean arts,&#13;
landscape painting ~is surely the mos&#13;
popular, and Kwangju has long been not&#13;
for the quality of its artists. Whethe&#13;
antique or modern, landscape screens,&#13;
scrolls, and paintings are much in&#13;
evidence, but good work is by no means&#13;
cheap. I own one small, slightly damaged&#13;
scroll done in 1928 and a book&#13;
reproducing the works of a major artis&#13;
who lived upon Mt. Mudung until hi·&#13;
death last February - but no othe&#13;
originals, and that's one of my regrets&#13;
Harpsichordist plays&#13;
British harpstchordist Jane&#13;
Clark will present two programs&#13;
at the Universtiy of WisconsinParks&#13;
ide on Thursdav, Nov. 10.&#13;
Both are free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
- At 10 a.m., after a short&#13;
reception sponsored by the&#13;
music discipline and-the student&#13;
chapter - of 'Music Educators&#13;
National Conference (MENC),&#13;
Miss Clark will present a lecturerecital.&#13;
At 11 a.m. she will teach&#13;
a master class for applied&#13;
harpsichord students. Both&#13;
events are in Communication&#13;
Arts Bldg. Room 0-118.&#13;
Miss Clark is active in london&#13;
as a performing artist, teacher&#13;
and critic. She broadcasts&#13;
frequently '00 the BBC both as a&#13;
music commentator and harpsichord&#13;
soloist and has appeared&#13;
on Ang-ha Television and&#13;
recorded for Radio Eireann and&#13;
Radiodiffusion Television&#13;
Francaise. Last year she&#13;
participated in the English Bach&#13;
Festival in london and the&#13;
Festival Estiva! , de Paris,&#13;
presenting programs on Scarlatti&#13;
and Spain.&#13;
Korean diary&#13;
City life in Korea: diverse aqd exciting&#13;
by Dennis R. Dean&#13;
Associate Professor of English&#13;
Campus activities for faculty members&#13;
at Chonnam National University in&#13;
Kwangju, where I taught, were generally&#13;
more predictable than they are here. For&#13;
example, many- of the teachers had only&#13;
two suits - one for summer and one for&#13;
winter - and a few more virtually&#13;
identical clothing day after day, as if&#13;
remembering the school uniforms of their&#13;
younger years. There was actually a set day&#13;
on campus for the switch to allowably&#13;
informal summer wear. I, however, dressed&#13;
as I pleased and when I started showing up&#13;
i11 short sleeves ahead of, everyone else,&#13;
the students joked that summer came&#13;
earlier for me.&#13;
None of my colleagues owned cars, so&#13;
almost all of them depended upon the free&#13;
but overcrowded faculty bus. As a result,&#13;
faculty members were generally on&#13;
campus from about" 8:30 to 5:10 every day,&#13;
with lunch in the school cafeteria (where I&#13;
also ate). But it was cheap and easy to&#13;
come and go by taxi (40 cents) or&#13;
commercial bus (8 cepts), so I did.&#13;
Although taxi drivers usually 'spoke no&#13;
English, we soon learned enough Korean to&#13;
direct them to the campus ("Chonnam&#13;
Dai-Hakyo"), or downtown (''YMCA") or to&#13;
our apartment ("Jai-11 Mansion"). Because&#13;
my pronounciation was so b&amp;d, I carried&#13;
with me the first and third of these written&#13;
in Korean, and had to use them once or&#13;
twice. Going other places than these three&#13;
by taxi required help from friends, who&#13;
either wrote out the Korean, instructed the&#13;
driver personally, or (as often happened)&#13;
came along. Economical, courteous, and&#13;
readily available transportation was one of&#13;
the pleasures of Kwangju.&#13;
Because distances were short, I often&#13;
chose to walk downtown (past small&#13;
shops, street vendors, and horse carts),&#13;
usually attracting some attention when I&#13;
did. My wife and I were not, however, the&#13;
only Americans in Kwangju. On Sunday, 6&#13;
March, for example - the day after we&#13;
arrived - Kim Tae Jin invited us for an&#13;
authentic Korean dinner (our first) at a&#13;
local restaurant and introduced us to&#13;
David Miller, the 27-year-old head of the&#13;
United States Information Service in&#13;
Kwangju, who immediately became and&#13;
remained one of our closest friends. USIS&#13;
sponsored occasional free showings of&#13;
American movies, talks by visiting U.S.&#13;
scholars, and_ a regular discussion group on&#13;
current American fiction ( choosing and&#13;
supplying books). It also had a fine&#13;
English-language library and was responsible&#13;
for evacuating U.S. citizens in the&#13;
event of war. Under USIS sponsorship, I&#13;
gave a talk in Kwangju - "Asian&#13;
Influences on American Literature" - and&#13;
then repeated it at a Christian college in&#13;
Chon ju and a Buddhist o~e in lri, receiving&#13;
lavish welcomes in both places as well as&#13;
the unexpected company of Ed Wright,&#13;
who came down from Fulbright 'House in&#13;
Seoul to hear me. Dave often invited&#13;
people t~ his home (U.S. government&#13;
property, with an elaborate security&#13;
system) for repast prepared by his resourceful&#13;
housekeeper, Miss Kim. Besides&#13;
an agreeable supply of anecdotes, Dave&#13;
also had the best and most generous liquor&#13;
cabinet in Kwangju, which was frequently&#13;
restocked from the Embassy commissary in&#13;
Seoul. Koreans, it seemed,' would put up&#13;
with about anything for the sake of Johnny&#13;
Walker scotch, but would scarcely tolerate&#13;
its absence.&#13;
On Monday, 7 March, our first official&#13;
teaching day on campus, Susan and I met&#13;
Bob Hulsey, then 24, a wonderfully&#13;
personable and extremely obliging Peace&#13;
Corps volunteer from the Kansas/Oklahoma&#13;
area who was teaching English&#13;
conversation and composition at&#13;
Chonnam. Bob was invaluable to us&#13;
throughout our stay and we spent more&#13;
time in his company (often between&#13;
classes) than witlJ any other person. He,&#13;
my wife, and I shared an office together&#13;
and Bob was extremely thoughtful in&#13;
assisting Susan to get through the first few&#13;
days of her unanticipated duties as a&#13;
teacher. OR this particular Monday, as on&#13;
many other days, the three of us had lunch&#13;
together in the newly opened school&#13;
cafeteria [menu in Korean). Later, Bob&#13;
came by the apartment for us at 5 and we&#13;
walked to USIS for Fred Astaire ~.nd Ginger&#13;
Rogers in "Top Hat," which the audience&#13;
of Korean students obviously enjoyed. We&#13;
then had dinner at a Chinese restaurant.&#13;
The next day, after classes, Bob and Mrs.&#13;
Kim introduced us to Yongdong market, a&#13;
fascinating array of shops, fish vendors,&#13;
.):&gt;utchers, live animal sellers, men in old&#13;
costumes, and so on, where we bought a&#13;
varfety of needed household goods and&#13;
were amazed at Mrs. Kim's success in&#13;
bargaining on our behalf. Anyone who&#13;
thinks Oriental women are inherently&#13;
demure and passive has never seen them&#13;
haggle. I&#13;
B;sides Dave and Bob, there were other own home upon canned aQd frozen thing&#13;
Americans in Kwangju. At least three more brought down from Seoul, but otherwis&#13;
Peace Corps volunteers taught in local found much to like in Kwangju and&#13;
schools; the Mormons, Adventists, and patronized the two supermarkets regularly.&#13;
Presbyterians all had missionary con- I also gave some business to the small&#13;
tingents, and the Presbyterians ran an shops, one of which (for instance) sold m&#13;
·impressive hospital. Sometimes, small three eggs every Saturday, so that I coul&#13;
groups of U,S. soldiers from a nearby make my usual omelette the next day.&#13;
airbase would come to town, usually for The most interesting shops in Kwangju&#13;
the sake of drunken ruckuses or a debauch - for me at least - were those devoted t&#13;
on pleasure street. We saw the volunteers antiques and art. While there, I developed&#13;
and missionaries occasionally. a considerable respect for Korea's cultural&#13;
Despite the1 language barrier, we also heritage, which is not simply a footnote to&#13;
dealt regularly with a number of Koreans the Chinese but vigorous and significant&#13;
whose names I never knew: our laundry- itself. Korean cufture seems to be&#13;
man, his wife, and children; ban'k and underrated for three reasons: 1( the&#13;
postal clerks; our tailor, from whom I relative lac~ of Korean scholars in the&#13;
bought three pairs of custom-made slacks; West; 2{ the unfortunate policies of the&#13;
my barber; waiters in the various Japanese occupation (1910 - 1945), which&#13;
restaurants; bus girls and taxi drivers; attempted to Nipponize Korea; and 3( th&#13;
clerks in the supermarkets; and a large poor jqb that the Koreans themselve&#13;
number of small shop keepers, both have done in researching and popularizin&#13;
downtown and in Yondong market. There their cultural legacy. How man&#13;
being no laundromats in town (a'nd no Americans are aware, for example, tha&#13;
washing machines that we could discover) Koreans were printing from moveable ty&#13;
laundry was done by hand, but it was before Gutenberg, or that it was th&#13;
always done well, and with invariable Koreans who taught not only ceramics bu&#13;
courtesy. My paychecks in dollars were the architecture to the Japanese?&#13;
first my bank had ever handled. Even in I would have loved to have an exampl&#13;
Korean currency, checks are unusual; of early Korean printing, but we neve&#13;
salaries at the university, for example, are succeeded in finding one for sale. As fo&#13;
paia in cash. Any bank transaction ceramics, they are readily available, and&#13;
, requires not only your signature but your widely collected by Koreans, but the bes&#13;
seal of chop ("tojang" is the Korean word), pieces are hazardous to buy (for reasons o&#13;
so I had -to have one made. At the post expense, fragility, and authenticity) and&#13;
office, there are no stamp machines and are almost impossible to export - unless,&#13;
the stamps you buy are without glue, of course, your friend knows the friend in&#13;
which you must put on yourself from jars. charge!&#13;
(As a special courtesy, however, my Modern Korean ceramics are well worth&#13;
stamps were sometimes put on for me.) having, and they also do some interestin&#13;
Arriving packages had to be picked up at trade work with black lacquer, especial!&#13;
narrowly designated times, and were as inlaid with mother of pearl. The mos&#13;
subject to duty. The Korean government is popular Korean items right now, however,&#13;
empowered to inspect both incoming and are antique chests, which once were used&#13;
outgoing mail for possible propaganda as in every h_,ome for storage, there bein&#13;
well. typically no closets. As I mentioned&#13;
As my tailor got to know me,his price earlier, Ed Wright is a fervent collector.&#13;
came down, each pair of slacks I bought Among cqntemporary Korean arts,&#13;
being cheaper than the last. A haircut in landscape painting is surely the mos&#13;
Korea includes, for those who want it, not popular, and Kwangju has long been noted&#13;
only shampoo and massage but a for the quality of its artists. Whethe&#13;
considerable amount of agreeable female antique or modern, landscape screens,&#13;
attention as well; the whole thing costs a scrolls, and paintings are much in&#13;
buck. evidence, but good work is by no means&#13;
The usual pattern of small shops is , cheap. I own one small, slightly damaged&#13;
slowly changing in Kwangju, although the scroll done in 1928 and a book&#13;
few so-called department stores never had reproducing the works of a major artis&#13;
anything we wanted. There were also two who lived upon Mt. Mudung until hi.&#13;
small supermarkets, with a variety of death last February - but no othe&#13;
goods, open shelves, and fixed prices. We originals, and that's one of my regrets&#13;
were cautious about meat and relied in our&#13;
Harpsichordist plays&#13;
~ IY/ OW-Parkside&#13;
, ~ff Semester Break NUTS TO&#13;
YOU!&#13;
British harpsichordist Jane&#13;
Clark will present two programs&#13;
at the Universtiy of WisconsinParkside&#13;
on Thursday, Nov. 10.&#13;
Both are free and open to the&#13;
public .&#13;
,.299 Complete based ~ on 2 to a room&#13;
2,3 Filled&#13;
Make Reservation&#13;
Deposit Now&#13;
Full Payment Due Dec. 6&#13;
CONTACT, PARKSIOE UNION OFFICES&#13;
RM. 209 CALL, 553-2200&#13;
... And other 1weefl too&#13;
at&#13;
10 111-4p11&#13;
Park1itle Uni11&#13;
Bazaar&#13;
' At 10 a.m., after a short&#13;
reception sponsored by the&#13;
music discipline and-the student&#13;
chapter · of · Music Educators&#13;
National Conference (MENC),&#13;
Miss Clark will present a lecturerecital.&#13;
At 11 a.m. she will teach&#13;
a master class for applied&#13;
harpsichord students . Both&#13;
events are in Communication&#13;
Arts Bldg. Room D-118.&#13;
Miss Clark is active in London&#13;
as a performing artist, teacher&#13;
and critic. She broadcasts&#13;
frequently oa the BBC both as a&#13;
music commentator and harpsichord&#13;
soloist and has appeared&#13;
on Ang-ha Television and&#13;
r~corded for Radio Eireann and&#13;
Radiodiffusion Television&#13;
Francaise . Last year she&#13;
participated in the English Bach&#13;
Festival in London and the&#13;
Festival Estival. de Paris,&#13;
presenting programs on Scarlatti&#13;
and Spain. &#13;
sports&#13;
Women's volleyball&#13;
meets Carroll&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Women's Volleyball team&#13;
had ,a full schedule this past&#13;
week, playing a tournament in&#13;
Illinois, Saturday, October '29; a&#13;
triangular meet . at home&#13;
Tuesday, November 1; and a&#13;
quadrangular meet also at home&#13;
Friday, November 4.&#13;
Saturday, October 29th, the&#13;
team traveled to Dekalb, Illinois&#13;
to play in the Northern Illinois&#13;
Tournament with - all the top&#13;
teams in the midwest. They lost&#13;
to all four schools there, yet they&#13;
were very 'tomp-etitive with alot&#13;
of very close game scores.&#13;
On Tuesday, November 1,&#13;
Parkside competed against&#13;
Trinity College in the first match&#13;
oftheir triangular meet. Parkside&#13;
soundly defeated Trinity by&#13;
scorers of 15-3, 15-8; with their&#13;
fine team work they totally&#13;
dominated Trinity. In the next&#13;
match, UW-Milwaukee followed&#13;
Parkside's trail to also defeat&#13;
Trinity, 15-7, 15-9, 15-1; in a&#13;
three out of five game match. In&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
clinic&#13;
scheduled&#13;
by Alane.Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Saturday, November 12,&#13;
1977, Parks ide will sponsor its&#13;
eighth annual wrestling clinic for&#13;
high school and junior high&#13;
school students to participate.&#13;
Registration begins at 8:30 a.m.,&#13;
with a nominal fee of $1.00 per&#13;
participant, plus an approximate&#13;
cost of $1.00 for lunch.&#13;
Clinic director is Jim Koch,&#13;
wrestling coach at Parkside for&#13;
the last seven years. He has&#13;
produced 12 All-Americans and&#13;
5 National Champions, with his&#13;
1974 squad scoring 66 points to&#13;
finish 3rd at the National Meet.&#13;
Both are all-time records for&#13;
Wisconsin NAIA teams.&#13;
Also featured will be some&#13;
outstanding coaches and wrestlers&#13;
as instructors. They will&#13;
include Russ Hellickson, assistant&#13;
coach at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin, and winner of two&#13;
Pan American Gold Medals and&#13;
a9- Olympic Silver Medal. Also&#13;
there will be NAIA National&#13;
Champion Ken Martin (currently&#13;
head wrestling coach at Cody&#13;
High School in Wyoming), Joe&#13;
Landers, and Sam Fiorella; and&#13;
NCAA National Champion Jack&#13;
Reinwald, who placed 2nd in the&#13;
1977 World Cup Championships.&#13;
"The emphasis will be on&#13;
making the instruction as&#13;
relevant as possible to the&#13;
particlpante. The clinic is&#13;
designed that each wrestler can&#13;
learn new wrestling techniques.&#13;
Many schools use this clinic as a&#13;
practice session for their teams,"&#13;
said Koch.&#13;
the final match Parkside faced&#13;
UW-Milwaukee in a two out of&#13;
three game match. In the first&#13;
game Parks ide started slow being&#13;
down 1-7, but with good serves&#13;
and hard hitting they made a&#13;
strong comeback to win 15-9,&#13;
and took the match the next&#13;
game 15-11.&#13;
Friday, November 4, the&#13;
Ranger's faced North Central&#13;
College and Lake Forrest College&#13;
at home. Their first match was&#13;
against North Central, whom&#13;
they easily beat 15-4, 15-4. They&#13;
then went on to dominate lake&#13;
Forrest, to take the win with&#13;
15-4, 15-8. In reference to both&#13;
games Coach Draft commented,&#13;
"neither team was much of&#13;
challenge. Everybody played and&#13;
executed well against both&#13;
opponents."&#13;
Next on their schedule is the&#13;
state meet on November 11 and&#13;
12, at Carroll College in&#13;
Waukesha. Parkside should be&#13;
ceded in one of the top three&#13;
positions. As of Friday night the&#13;
Ranger's season record was&#13;
20-10.&#13;
Swim team face WWIAC&#13;
The Women's Swim Tearn will&#13;
conclude its regular season at&#13;
the WWIAC (Wisconsin Women's&#13;
Intercollegiate Athletic&#13;
Conference) Championships Friday&#13;
and Saturday Nov. 11-12 at&#13;
UW-la Crosse. Scoring will be&#13;
for 12 plates, and Coach Barb&#13;
lawson Expects to score points&#13;
from three relays (200 and 400&#13;
Free and the 200 Medley) as well&#13;
as from the learn's top pointgetter,&#13;
Debbie Woinows'ki.&#13;
Debbie will probably enter her&#13;
specialties, the 200 and 500 Free&#13;
as well as the 200 1M, and swim&#13;
in two of the relays. Debbie's&#13;
time in the 500 this fall ranks her&#13;
#4 in the Conference and she's&#13;
within the top 12 in the 200 Free&#13;
and 1M.&#13;
Since Madison is not com peting&#13;
in the Conference this year&#13;
for the first time, it looks as&#13;
though the team title will go to&#13;
La Crosse, based on their depth&#13;
in all events. Parks ide looks to&#13;
finish ahead of River Falls and&#13;
possibly some of the other&#13;
smaller schools. Team members&#13;
will enter their usual events in&#13;
pursuit of personal bests:&#13;
Diving - Donna Peterson and&#13;
Mary Beth Mogensen&#13;
50 Breast - Kay Kauffman and&#13;
Lowrie Melotik&#13;
100 Breast - Kay Kauffman and&#13;
Lowrie Melotik&#13;
50 Free - lynn Peterson, Sally&#13;
Francis, and Maureen Graves&#13;
100 FREE - Sally Francis&#13;
50 and 100 BACK - Maureen&#13;
Graves and lynn Peterson&#13;
During the last week, Parkstde&#13;
placed 12 out of 14 at the&#13;
Madison Invitational and lost to&#13;
Whitewater, 33-84 (up a point&#13;
from the earlier meeting when&#13;
UWP scored 32 to their 89. And&#13;
on Friday afternoon, November&#13;
4, Parkside was beaten by Carroll&#13;
College 71-47 First place&#13;
finishers for the Ranger's&#13;
included Debbie Wojnowski in&#13;
the 200 and 500 freestyle events,&#13;
100 butterfly; and Donna&#13;
Peterson in the one meter dive.&#13;
The WWI AC Meet will hold&#13;
prelims and finals on Friday at&#13;
12:00 and 7:00, and prelims and&#13;
finals on Saturday at 10:00 and&#13;
3:30 p.m. 12 schools will&#13;
compete: Carroll, Carthage,&#13;
UW-Green ..Bay, Eau Claire,&#13;
La Crosse, Milwaukee, Oshkosh,&#13;
Parkside, River Falls, Stevens&#13;
Point, Stout, Whitewater.&#13;
Soccer loses to Kalamazoo&#13;
by Alane Adresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Saturday, October 29, the&#13;
Parks ide Soccer Team traveled&#13;
all the way to Kalamazoo,&#13;
Michigan to play Western&#13;
Michigan University. After&#13;
regulation play the final score&#13;
was 0-0, then in overtime, the&#13;
Rangers lost a very disappointing&#13;
game at 2·0.&#13;
The first zoal came after a&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
FromGod's ~ountry.&#13;
On Tap AI Union Square 1'~~&#13;
~ "&#13;
- ...... _J&#13;
good shot, a hit ball off a cross to&#13;
take the lead for Michigan. The&#13;
final goal was a break away with&#13;
two minutes left in the overtime,&#13;
coming after Parkside had pulled&#13;
everybody up in an attempt to&#13;
score the equalizing goal.&#13;
• In his assessment of the game,&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson commented,&#13;
'We played an outstanding&#13;
defensive game considering the&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVELTIES&#13;
fact that our regular goalkeeper&#13;
did not play. Bob Stoewe, our&#13;
leading scorer, played in the&#13;
goal, thus hurting our offense&#13;
very badly. We did have&#13;
numerous chances to score early&#13;
and actually had a statistical&#13;
edge In shots, 14-10 at the half.&#13;
With fifteen minutes to go, Chris&#13;
Carter was ejected for rough&#13;
play, so we played the last 25'&#13;
minutes a man short."&#13;
sports I&#13;
Swim team face WWIAC&#13;
Women's volleyball&#13;
meets Carroll&#13;
The Women's Swim Team will&#13;
conclude its regular season at&#13;
the WWIAC {Wisconsin Women's&#13;
Intercollegiate Athletic&#13;
Conference) Championships Friday&#13;
and Saturday Nov. 11-12 at&#13;
UW-La Crosse. Scoring will be&#13;
for 12 places, and Coach Barb&#13;
Lawson Expects to score points&#13;
from three relays (200 and 400&#13;
Free and the 200 Medley) as well&#13;
as from the team's top pointgetter,&#13;
Debbie Wojnowski.&#13;
Debbie will probably enter her&#13;
specialties, the 200 and 500 Free&#13;
as well as the 200 IM, and swim&#13;
in two of the relays. Debbie's&#13;
time in the 500 this fall ranks her&#13;
#4 in the Conference and she's&#13;
within the top 12 in the 200 Free&#13;
and IM.&#13;
ing in the Conference this year&#13;
for the first time, It looks as&#13;
though the team title will go to&#13;
La Crosse, based on their depth&#13;
in all events. Parkside looks to&#13;
finish ahead of River Falls and&#13;
possibly some of the other&#13;
smaller schools. Team members&#13;
will enter their usual events in&#13;
pursuit of personal bests:&#13;
Madison Invitational and lost to&#13;
Whitewater, 33-84 (up a point&#13;
from the earlier meeting when&#13;
UWP scored 32 to their 89. And&#13;
on Friday afternoon, November&#13;
4, Parkside was beaten by Carroll&#13;
College 71-47 . First place&#13;
finishers for the Ranger's&#13;
included Debbie Wo1nowski in&#13;
the 200 and 500 freestyle events,&#13;
100 butterfly; and Donna&#13;
Peter on in the one meter dive.&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Women's Volleyball team&#13;
had , a full schedule this past&#13;
week, playing a tournament in&#13;
Illinois, Saturday, October 29; a&#13;
triangular meet at home&#13;
Tuesday, November 1; and a&#13;
quadrangular meet also at home&#13;
Friclay, November 4.&#13;
Saturday, October 29th, the&#13;
team traveled to Dekalb, Illinois&#13;
to play in the Northern Illinois&#13;
Tournament with all the top&#13;
teams in the midwest. They lost&#13;
to all four schools there, yet they&#13;
were very t:omp-etitive with alot&#13;
of very close game scores .&#13;
On Tuesday, November 1,&#13;
Parkside competed against&#13;
Trinity College in the first match&#13;
of their triangular meet. Parkside&#13;
soundly defeated Trinity by&#13;
scorers of 15-3, 15-8; with their&#13;
fine team work they totally&#13;
dominated Trinity . In the next&#13;
match, UW-Milwaukee followed&#13;
Parkside's trail to also defeat&#13;
Trin ity, 15-7, 15-9, 15-1; in a&#13;
three out of five game match . In&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
clinic&#13;
scheduled&#13;
by Alane.Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Saturday, November 12,&#13;
1977, Parkside will sponsor its&#13;
eighth annual wr'estling clinic for&#13;
high school and junior high&#13;
school students to participate.&#13;
Registration begins at 8:30 a.m .,&#13;
with a nominal fee of $1 .00 per&#13;
participant, plus an approximate&#13;
cost of $1 .00 for lunch .&#13;
Clinic director is Jim Koch,&#13;
wrestling coach at Parkside for&#13;
the last seven years . He has&#13;
produced 12 All-Americans and&#13;
5 National Champions, with his&#13;
1974 squad scoring 66 points to&#13;
finish 3rd at the National Meet.&#13;
Both are all-time records for&#13;
Wisconsin NAIA teams .&#13;
Also featured will be some&#13;
outstanding coaches and wrestlers&#13;
as instructors. They will&#13;
include Russ Hellickson, assistant&#13;
coach at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin, and winner of two&#13;
Pan American Gold Medals apd&#13;
• a9- Olympic Silver Medal. Also&#13;
there will be NAIA National&#13;
Champion Ken Martin {currently&#13;
head wrestling coach at Cody&#13;
High School in Wyoming), Joe&#13;
Landers, and Sam Fiorella; and&#13;
NCAA National Champion Jack&#13;
Reinwald, who placed 2nd in the&#13;
1977 World Cup Championships.&#13;
"The emphasis will be on&#13;
making the instruction as&#13;
relevant as possible to the&#13;
participanrt. The clinic is&#13;
designed that each wrestler can&#13;
learn new wrestling techniques.&#13;
Many schools use this clinic as a&#13;
practice session for their teams,"&#13;
said Koch.&#13;
the final match Parkside faced&#13;
UW-Milwaukee in a two out of&#13;
three game match. In the first&#13;
game Parkside started slow being&#13;
down 1-7, but with good serves&#13;
and hard hitting they made a&#13;
strong comeback to win 15-9,&#13;
and took the match the next&#13;
game 15-11.&#13;
Friday, November 4, the&#13;
Ranger's faced North Central&#13;
College and Lake Forrest College&#13;
at home. Their first match was&#13;
against North Central, whom&#13;
they easily beat 15-4, 15-4. They&#13;
then went on to dominate Lake&#13;
Forrest, to take the win with&#13;
15-4, 15-8. In reference to both&#13;
games Coach Draft commented,&#13;
"neither team was much of&#13;
challenge. Everybody played and&#13;
executed well against both&#13;
opponents."&#13;
Next on their schedule is the&#13;
state meet on November 11 and&#13;
12, at Carroll College in&#13;
Waukesha. Parkside should be&#13;
ceded in one of the top three&#13;
positions . As of Friday ntght the&#13;
Ranger's season record was&#13;
20-10.&#13;
Since Madison is not competDiving&#13;
- Donna Peterson and&#13;
Mary Beth Mogensen&#13;
50 Breast - Kay Kauffman and&#13;
Lowrie Melotik&#13;
100 Breast - Kay Kauffman and&#13;
Lowrie Melotik&#13;
50 Free - Lynn Peterson, Sally&#13;
Francis, and Maureen Graves&#13;
100 FREE - Sally Francis&#13;
50 and 100 BACK - Maureen&#13;
Graves and Lynn Peterson&#13;
During the last week, Parkside&#13;
placed 12 out of 14 at the&#13;
The WWIAC Meet will hold&#13;
prelims and finals on Friday at&#13;
12:00 and 7.00, and prelims and&#13;
finals on Saturday at 10.00 and&#13;
3:30 p .m 12 schools will&#13;
compete : Carroll, Carthage,&#13;
UW-Green, Bay, Eau Claire,&#13;
La Crosse, Milwaukee, Oshkosh,&#13;
Parkside, River Falls, Stevens&#13;
Point, Stout, Whitewater.&#13;
Soccer loses to Kalamazoo&#13;
by Alane Adresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Saturday, October 29, the&#13;
Parkside Soccer Team traveled&#13;
all the way to Kalamazoo,&#13;
Michigan to play Western&#13;
Michigan University. After&#13;
regulation play the final score&#13;
was 0-0, then in overtime, the&#13;
Rangers lost a very disappointing&#13;
game at 2-0.&#13;
The first 2oal came after a&#13;
good shot, a hit ball off a cross to&#13;
take the lead for Michigan . The&#13;
final goal was a break away with&#13;
two minutes left in the overtime,&#13;
coming after Parkside had pulled&#13;
everybody up in an attempt to&#13;
score the equalizing goal .&#13;
, In his assessment of the game,&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson commented,&#13;
"We played an outstanding&#13;
defensive game considering the&#13;
fact that our regular goalkeeper&#13;
did not play Bob Stoewe, our&#13;
leading scorer, played in the&#13;
goal, thus hurting our offense&#13;
very badly . We did have&#13;
numerous chances to score early&#13;
and actually had a statistical&#13;
edge in shots, 14-10 at the half.&#13;
With fifteen minutes to go, Chris&#13;
Carter was e1ected for rough&#13;
play, so we played the la t 25&#13;
minutes a man short ."&#13;
Pure Brewed ~ N\~G\C o~O . ~,~e, 3 From God's Country. Open 32,\ ~~\~\~ :&gt;~3&#13;
On Tap At Union Square Mon. &amp; Fri . "7'Cloe, a~) 034--&#13;
Noon t1/ 9 ~~(._A,¥"'&#13;
Sat. Noon t1/ 5 \"..,.-&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
THI.NK&#13;
P.A.B. INVITES YOU TO&#13;
THE GREAT MIDWESTERN&#13;
SKI WEEK /&#13;
WINTER PARK/MARY JANE&#13;
WINTER PAR,C, COLORADO&#13;
JAN. 1-9 only ~ J QOO&#13;
Includes: Round trip bus fare, condominiums (4 to a room),&#13;
lift tickets, parties, dances and MORE!!&#13;
OR BY CAR&#13;
SAVE THE BUS FARE AND STILL GET THE FANTASTIC EXTRAS ...&#13;
Deadline for sign-up Nov. 18&#13;
Meeting for those interested Nov. 8 - Union 207 at 3:30&#13;
Sign up in UW-P Union Office 209 For more info call 553-2278 &#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, November 9&#13;
Walk-in Blood Drive frori110:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., in&#13;
Union 104-105. No appointment necessary:&#13;
Goal: 125 donors. , '&#13;
Thursday, November 10&#13;
Happy Birthday, United States Marine Corps.&#13;
Men's Basketball Scrimmage against Lora College.&#13;
Come and see th is years Ranger Basketball team&#13;
(that intends to win the 1978 NAIA Championships)&#13;
at 6:30 p.rn. in the Physical Education&#13;
Building. &lt;,&#13;
Music British harpsichordist, Jane Clark will give a&#13;
lecture-recital. It will begin at 10 a.m. in ,CL-118.&#13;
Science Club - Features Dr. LEwing. CL 105 at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film Day for Night, in Union Cinema at 2:30 and&#13;
7:30 p.m. Admission $1.00;&#13;
Friday, November 11&#13;
Women's Swimming WWIAC Championships at&#13;
La Crosse at 2:00.&#13;
Women's Volleyball WWIAC State Tournament&#13;
at Waukesha. 4:00 p.m.&#13;
Science Club - Dr. E. Epstein CL 105 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Film The Immigrants in Union Cinema -at 8 p.m.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Saturday, November 12&#13;
Cross Country - Parkside hosts NAIA district #14&#13;
Meet at 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Women's Swimming - WWIAC Championships at&#13;
La Crosse at 2:00 p.m. ' " .&#13;
Women's Volleyball - WWIAC State Tournament at&#13;
Waukesha. Starting at 9:00 a.m.&#13;
Wtestling - Clinic opens Physd Building from&#13;
8:30-4:00 p.m. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Sunday, Novem~er 13&#13;
Film - The Immigraots in Union Cinema at 7:30&#13;
p.m. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Monday, November 14&#13;
Lecture Theories of Punishment, by Richard&#13;
Wasserstrom, Professor of Law and Philosophy at&#13;
U.C.L.A. Sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
\&#13;
Tuesday, November 15&#13;
Informal Discussion on Sexism by Richard Wasserstrom,&#13;
Professor of Law and Philosophy at&#13;
U.C.LA. Sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society. .&#13;
Music - The Gus Giordano Jazz Dance Company&#13;
will perform at 8 p.m. in CA Theatre. Tickets are&#13;
available in Sears' Kenosha, Racine Team Electronics&#13;
and Union' Information Center.&#13;
Video Show - Martian Space Party with Filesign&#13;
Theatre in Union Square at 12:00 noon. Free.&#13;
Wednesday, November 16&#13;
Student Concert - CAT at 3:00 p.m. For further information&#13;
call Bedford in CA 290.&#13;
Movie - Split Second. A screenplay by Irving&#13;
Wallace. 7 p.m. at Rondelle. Call 55'4-2154 for&#13;
reservations.&#13;
Meeting - Communication Student and faculty&#13;
meeting to discuss curricular changes .and introduce&#13;
new faculty. 7:00 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
'"&#13;
NOTES&#13;
.Conference - To be held on Nov. 19 at the Student&#13;
Union, 8:30 a.m. Advance Tickets - $4 for UW-P&#13;
Students, $7 for others at $8 at the door. Includes a&#13;
free lunch. For more details and tickets call the&#13;
Union Information Center.&#13;
Singers team up&#13;
with Jazzband&#13;
The nationally-known Wisconsin&#13;
Singers of UW-Madison&#13;
will' have a Kenosha flavor&#13;
Wednesday night (Nov. 2) when&#13;
they join. forces with the&#13;
UW-Parkside Jazz Ensemble,&#13;
directed by Tim Bell, in a benefit&#13;
concert for the UW Alumni&#13;
Scholarship Fund. Mac Huff, Ir.,&#13;
a Tremper and Madison&#13;
graduate, is in his firh year as&#13;
director of the Singers, while&#13;
Kenoshans Phil Dekok, Dave&#13;
Chase and Trez Tianeo are&#13;
performers with4k€ well-traveled&#13;
group. Former Kenoshan Tom&#13;
Terrien is choreographer and&#13;
stage director.&#13;
Tickets for the 7:30 p.m.&#13;
concert tonight in the Cornmunication&#13;
Arts Theater are on&#13;
sale at the UniUn Information&#13;
Center for $1 and will be available&#13;
at the door for $1.50 for all&#13;
students. General admission is&#13;
$3&#13;
A II proceeds go to the UW&#13;
Alumni Association of Kenosha&#13;
scholarship fund which has&#13;
awarded $18,000 in scholarships&#13;
to students to attend the Parkside&#13;
and Madison campuses&#13;
since the mid 196Os.&#13;
The Wisconsin Singers have&#13;
performed throughout the country&#13;
in their 11-year history, including&#13;
two appearances at the&#13;
White House and on national&#13;
television. Their repertoire&#13;
ranges from show tunes to rock&#13;
and roll, all in an up-beat style,&#13;
fu Ily choreographed and&#13;
costumed.&#13;
The concert will mark the first&#13;
public appearance of the new&#13;
school year for the UW-P Jazz&#13;
Ensemble I, fast establishing a&#13;
..reputation as one of the top&#13;
collegiate jazz groups in the&#13;
state. Director Bell, who has a&#13;
national reputation as a&#13;
clarinetist, will solo on several&#13;
numbers.&#13;
classified&#13;
Wanted:&#13;
Cocktail waitress or ,go go gltt.&#13;
$300.-$400. wk, paid Florida vacation&#13;
and Insurance. No hassles.&#13;
No experience necessary, call (312)&#13;
634-3313.&#13;
Wanted on campus part-lime typist. Should&#13;
be free whole mornings or afternoons. Call&#13;
553-2336.&#13;
RMI Cottage on the take near Carthage. Call&#13;
Stoulenger efter 5:30 on Weekdays for more&#13;
InfOfrT1fl110n.551-7024.&#13;
. Brown Hair - I told you sol B.S.C.&#13;
8adl SMt Chick - Now that I know who&#13;
you finally are, maybe we can get together&#13;
and well you know. I doubt that anyone as&#13;
pretty as you ccurc lOOk prettier In the&#13;
...evenlng. Frustrated No Longer.&#13;
Toot. - Although I only 888 you&#13;
approximately once a week, I think you are&#13;
one of the most prettiest girls In this&#13;
college. How 'bout a date lIometlme? EIJETS.&#13;
I&#13;
The Chiwaukee Prairie Food Co-op will present the Falls City&#13;
Ramblers, Bluegrass concert on Wedn~!day, November 16, at 8:00&#13;
p.m. Tickets are $1.50 in advance, 52.00 at the door. Co-op peanuts&#13;
and cheeses will be sold at the concert. Falls City appeared at "The&#13;
End" two years ago.&#13;
Comm meeting planned&#13;
The faculty of the Communication discipline will host an informal&#13;
social gathering on Wednesday, November 16th at 7:00 P.M. in room&#13;
207 of the Parkside Union. All Communication majors and students&#13;
interested in finding out about the Communication program at&#13;
Parkside are invited to attend.&#13;
The purpose of the meeting is to enable Communication students&#13;
and faculty to meet each other outside the classroom and to provide&#13;
information regarding the curricular changes in the Communication&#13;
program. Refreshments will be served.&#13;
For additional information contact Dr. Alan Rubin in&#13;
Communication ....Arts 273 or at extension 2526.&#13;
._---_..-..-..-_._-~ .---------.. 17~ I&#13;
I /lA.,..~J'...-. I&#13;
I~I&#13;
I DPEN 7 DAYS I&#13;
I Mon.-Sat 10 'til close II I Sun. 6 'til close ,&#13;
I I&#13;
I NOON LUNCHES I&#13;
I Sandwiches 'til midnight I&#13;
I I&#13;
I&#13;
I SAT. lAOIES NITE I&#13;
I&#13;
Ladies' Drinks 112Price [ r with date B 'til close I&#13;
I 1436 Junction, Racine I&#13;
L oJ.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
J&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAINOF.FICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658.2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.l.e.&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsi,ty Club&#13;
~ 4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha, lis• ' Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
I /&#13;
• &lt; .&gt;,,''0' Mention this ad!&#13;
PAS presents the&#13;
GUS GIORDANQ JAZZ DANCE&#13;
COMPANY&#13;
~Tues. Nov.15 COMM ARTS THEATRE 8:00pm&#13;
ADMISSION: ADVANCE- 13.00 UW.-P STUDENTS&#13;
AT- DOOR- 14.00 15.00 GENERAL&#13;
Tickets Available At Union Info. Center&#13;
Wednesday, November 9&#13;
Walk-in Blood Drive from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., in&#13;
Union 104-105. No appointrnent necessary.&#13;
Goal: 125 donors. ~ ,&#13;
Thursday, November 10&#13;
Happy Birthday, United States Marine Corps.&#13;
Men's Basketball Scrimmage against Lora College.&#13;
Come and see this years Ranger Basketball team&#13;
(that i_ntends to win the 1978 NAIA Championships)&#13;
at 6:30 p.m. in the Physical Education&#13;
Building.&#13;
Music British harpsichordist, Jane Clark will give a&#13;
lecture-recital. It will begin at 10 a.m . in ,CL-118.&#13;
Science Club - Features Dr. L. Ewing. CL 105 at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film Day for Night, in Union Cinema at 2:30 and&#13;
7:30 p.m. Admission $1.00i,&#13;
Friday, November 11&#13;
Women's Swimming WWIAC Championships at&#13;
La Crosse at 2:00.&#13;
Women's Volleyball WWIAC State Tournament&#13;
at Waukesha. 4:00 p.m.&#13;
Science Club - Dr. E. Epstein CL 105 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Film The Immigrants in Union Cinema at 8 p.m.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Saturday, November 12&#13;
Cross Country - Parkside hosts NAIA district #14&#13;
Meet at 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Women's Swimming - WWll,\.C Championships at&#13;
La Crosse at 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Women's Volleyball - WWIAC State Tournament at&#13;
Waukesha. Starting at 9:00 a.m.&#13;
Wtestling - Clinic opens Physd Building from&#13;
8:30-4:00 p.m. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Sunday, November 13&#13;
Film - The lmmigraots in Union Cinema at 7:30&#13;
p.m. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Monday, November 14&#13;
Lecture Theories of Punishment, by Richard&#13;
Wasserstrom, Professor of Law and Philosophy at&#13;
U.C.L.A. Sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
Tuesday, November 15&#13;
Informal Discussion on Sexism by Richard Wasserstrom,&#13;
Professor of Law and Philosophy at&#13;
U .C.L.A. Sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
Music - The Gus Glordano Jazz Dance Company&#13;
will perform at 8 p.m. in CA Theatre. Tickets are&#13;
available in Sears' Kenosha, Racine Team Electronics&#13;
and Union Information Center.&#13;
Video Show - Martian Space Party with Filesign&#13;
Theatre in Union Square at 12:00 noon. Free.&#13;
Wednesday, November16&#13;
Student Concert - CAT at 3:00 p.m. For further information&#13;
call Bedford in CA 290.&#13;
Movie - Split Second. A screenplay by Irving&#13;
Wallace. 7 p.m. at Rondelle. Call 554-2154 for&#13;
reservations.&#13;
Meeting - Communication Student and faculty&#13;
meeting to discuss curricular changes _and introduce&#13;
new faculty. 7:00 p.m. in Union 207. I&#13;
NOTES&#13;
.Conference - To be held on Nov. 19 at the Student&#13;
Union, 8:30 a.m. Advance Tickets - $4 for UW-P&#13;
Students, $7 for others at $8 at the door. Includes a&#13;
free lunch. For more details and tickets call the&#13;
Union Information Center.&#13;
/&#13;
Singers team up&#13;
with Ja11band&#13;
The nationally-known Wisconsin&#13;
Singers of UW-Madison&#13;
will · have a Kenosha flavor&#13;
Wednesday night (Nov. 2) when&#13;
they join forces with the&#13;
UW-Parkside Jazz Ensemble,&#13;
directed by Tim Bell, in a benefit&#13;
concert for the UW Alumni&#13;
Scholarship Fund. Mac Huff, Jr.,&#13;
a Tremper and Madison&#13;
graduate, is in his first year as&#13;
director of the Stngers, while&#13;
Kenoshans Phil Dekok, Dave&#13;
Chase and Trez Tianen are&#13;
performers with4Re well-traveled&#13;
group. Former Kenoshan Tom&#13;
Terrien is choreographer and&#13;
stage di rector. _&#13;
Tickets for the 7:30 p.m.&#13;
concert tonight in the &lt;;ommunication&#13;
Arts Theater are on&#13;
sale at the Unit&gt;n Information&#13;
Center for $1 and will be available&#13;
at the door for $1.50 for all&#13;
...&#13;
students. General admission is The Chiwaukee Prairie Food Co-op will present the Falls City&#13;
$3. d h ' . Ramblers, Bluegrass concert on Wednesday, November 16, at 8:00&#13;
All procee s go to t e UW p.m. Tickets are $1.50 in advance, $2.00 at the door. Co-op peanuts&#13;
Alumni Association of Kenosha and cheeses will be sold at the concert. Falls City appeared at "The scholarship fund which has&#13;
awarded $18,000 in scholarships&#13;
to students to attend the Parkside&#13;
and Madison campuses&#13;
since the mid 1960s.&#13;
The Wisconsin Singers have&#13;
performed throughout the country&#13;
in their 11-year history, including&#13;
two appearances at the&#13;
White House and on national&#13;
television. Their repertoire&#13;
ranges from show tunes to rock&#13;
and roll, all in an up-beat style,&#13;
fully choreographed and&#13;
costumed.&#13;
The concert will mark the first&#13;
public appearance of the new&#13;
school year for the UW-P Jazz&#13;
Ensemble I, fast establishing a&#13;
Ieputation as one of the top&#13;
collegiate jazz groups in the&#13;
state. Director Bell, who has a&#13;
national reputation as a&#13;
clarinetist, will solo on several&#13;
numbers.&#13;
classified&#13;
Wanted:&#13;
Cocktail waitress or go go girt.&#13;
$300.-$400. wk. paid Florida vacation&#13;
and Insurance. No hassles.&#13;
No experience necessary, call (312)&#13;
634-3313.&#13;
Wanted on campus part-time typist. Should&#13;
be free whole mornings or afternoons. Call&#13;
553-2336.&#13;
Rent Cottage on the lake near Carthage. Cal I&#13;
Stoutenger after 5 :30 on weekdays for more&#13;
Information. 551-7024.&#13;
Brown Hair - I told you sol B.S.C.&#13;
Baell Seat Chick - Now that I know who&#13;
you finally are, maybe we can get together&#13;
and well you know. I doubt that anyone as&#13;
pretty as you could look prettier In the&#13;
. evening. Frustrated No Longer.&#13;
Toota - Although I only see you&#13;
approximately once a week, I think you are&#13;
one of the most prettiest glr1a In this&#13;
college. How 'bout a date sometime? EVETS.&#13;
End" two years ago.&#13;
Comm ~eeting planned&#13;
The faculty of the Communication discipline will host an informal&#13;
social gathering on Wednesday, November 16th at 7:00 P.M. in room&#13;
207 of the Parkside Union. All Commun-ication majors and students&#13;
interested in finding out about the Communication program at&#13;
Parkside are invited to attend.&#13;
The purpose of the meeting is to enable Communication students&#13;
and faculty to meet each other outside the classroom and to provide&#13;
information regarding the curricular changes in the Communication&#13;
program. Refreshments will be served.&#13;
For additional information contact Dr. Alan Rubin in&#13;
Communication Arts 273 or at extens[on 2526. f7k-----~-7&#13;
~ ~&#13;
!~!&#13;
i OPEN 7 DAYS i i Mon.-Sat 10 'til close i ~ Sun. 6 'til close l&#13;
i i i NOON LUNCHES i -~ Sandwiches 'til midnight ~&#13;
i \&#13;
i SAT. LADIES NITE i&#13;
j Ladies' Drinks ½ Price i f with date 8 'til close ~&#13;
L _,1!~~.Juncti,f!!J, Racine J&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
~ 4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha, ,1.,·· ~ Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
\)W I&#13;
' ~¢.,Y Mention this ad!&#13;
.. ~ ......&#13;
PA·B presents the&#13;
If&#13;
=&#13;
GUS GIORDANO JAZZ DANCE&#13;
COMPANY .&#13;
"" Tues. Nov.15 COMM ARTS THEATRE&#13;
ADMISSION: .ADVANCE- 53.00 UW.-P STUDENTS&#13;
AT DOOR- 54.00 55.00 GENERAL&#13;
Ticketi Available At Union Info. Center </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68674">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 6, issue 11, November 9, 1977</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68675">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68676">
                <text>1977-11-09</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68679">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68680">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68681">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68682">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68683">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68684">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68685">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68686">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68687">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="3178">
        <name>academic advising</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1417">
        <name>breadth of knowledge requirement</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="4548">
        <name>faculty sabbaticals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2127">
        <name>nature trail</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="4549">
        <name>prairie land</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2959" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3444">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/137211c3009ae9c46978c5b63ea142e7.pdf</src>
        <authentication>8adaaa6df2e5a8a8f1c455b5bd2aa29a</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68662">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 10</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68663">
              <text>Nature trails being abused</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68673">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90036">
              <text>An unidentified runner&#13;
nature trails north of&#13;
,&#13;
Wednesday, November 2, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 10&#13;
er II II Men are not against you; they're n()&#13;
UU merely out for themselves. V V&#13;
-GMeFowler&#13;
Forbes&#13;
Nature trails&#13;
being abused&#13;
on the&#13;
last Sunday, October 30, Parkside Athletics hosted "Pumpkin&#13;
Pant", a cross-country meet on the newly developed nature trails&#13;
north of the Union parking lot, A public tnformanon office news&#13;
release described the event as "a trail-blazing 5,(0) meter&#13;
cross-country run on the UW~P nature trails," An inspection of the&#13;
trails by several university people last Friday, revealed the trails are&#13;
also being used by horse riders and mini-bikers&#13;
The nature trails were developed last summer by workers funded&#13;
through a Carter administration job program The work on the&#13;
campus was authorized by Cushing Phillips, Director of the Physical&#13;
Plant, who was also responsible for university supervision of the&#13;
workers&#13;
Committee asks for halt on development&#13;
Two weeks ago, the newly formed committee on Environmental&#13;
Concerns (CECl asked Chancellor Guskin to halt further development&#13;
of the nature trails until the committee could review the plan There&#13;
is some question whether or not there is or was a plan.&#13;
Ranger contacted (CECl Chairman,EugeneGaslorkiewicz,Professor&#13;
of life Science, and asked him what he thought of current use of the&#13;
nature trails by cross-country runners.&#13;
"1 personally feel the use of the trails for racmg is not the intent of&#13;
the nature trails. The exploitation of them for running trails is a&#13;
mistake. If they are wide enough for running, then they should have&#13;
never been made that wide,"saidGasiorkiewicz.He also commen\ed&#13;
on the helpless situation the university is In trying 'to exclude the&#13;
public from what the state of wtsconsrn considers a state park like&#13;
any other university property.&#13;
security has problems with patrolinl trails&#13;
Ranger asked Parks ide Security Chief, Ron Brinkman. what security&#13;
measures could be taken to stop horse riders and rmm-bikers from&#13;
using the nature trails Brinkman said there wasn't much secuntv&#13;
could do, short of getting its own official trail bike, an idea Brinkman&#13;
thinks is impractical. It is currently Impossible for present security&#13;
automobiles to patrol the three miles of trails. It is also difficult to&#13;
hear mini-bikes or horses in the thickly wooded area The Side of the&#13;
natural area that borders County "A" is completely open The only&#13;
fence that borders the natural area is on the west edge facing the golf&#13;
course.&#13;
PSGA elections garner&#13;
record turnout vote&#13;
by Diane jalenskv&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Three bundred sixteen Parks ide students, compared with 72 last&#13;
year, voted in the 1977 fan Parks ide Student Government Association&#13;
(PSGA) election which was held Wednesday and Thursday, October&#13;
19 and 20 on the concourse of the Classroom Building.&#13;
In the Segregated Fee Allocations. winning ballot positionings&#13;
included Tom DaVroy, Maggie Juszkiewicz, Elsa Carpenter, Chelle&#13;
Phelps and Douglas Wright. Candidate-elect Maggie juszkiewicz&#13;
declined her seat in the Senate. Replacement candidate must be&#13;
attain for her position. I&#13;
The Allocations Committee, consisting of 11 voting members, five&#13;
each elected in the fall and spring, and the president of the Student&#13;
Organizational Council) reviews requests for program support and&#13;
budget allocations. In additlon- non-voting members include the&#13;
Assistant Chancellors for Student Affairs and for Administration, and&#13;
the Director ot Budget Planning sits in with the committee.&#13;
John P. Smith and Shaun Helgesen are the newly elected&#13;
candidates attaining seats in the Undeclared Major Category. Other&#13;
students obtaining divisional seats in the Senate include Patrick&#13;
Odell-Humanities, Kenneth Kuehnl, Jr. - Labor Economics, Gerald&#13;
Muchlin - Management Science, Mark Merten - Social Science&#13;
and Harvey Hedden - Science. N9 one ran for the Engineering&#13;
Science seat and so it is vacant.&#13;
The declared divisions mentioned above consist of one senator&#13;
each. An additional senator is added for each additional 700 students&#13;
within the division. The elected candidates' terms last for one year&#13;
The Parks ide student body also had the opportunity to vote on the&#13;
constitutional referendum, which was approved by a vote of 225 to&#13;
49.&#13;
Below is a copy- of the passed constitutional referendum:&#13;
The Allocations Committee as a whole shall deal directly with the&#13;
Chancellor or his/her designee in consultation with the Allocations&#13;
Committee. recommendations.&#13;
The President of P.S.G.A., Inc. and the President Pro Tempore of&#13;
the Senate or his/her designee, who shall be a member of P.S G A&#13;
Inc., shall. b~ voti~g members of the Allocations Committee dU;in~&#13;
the negotiations With the Chancellor. The President or President Pro&#13;
Tempore, if an elected or appointed members of the Allocations&#13;
Committee shall not send a designee to the committee while also&#13;
participating in the negotiation process.&#13;
If the Allocations Committee and the Chancellor can not reconcile&#13;
their differences in the allocation of the allocable portion of&#13;
Segregated University Fees, each will send a set of recommendations&#13;
to the Board of Regents for final disposition. Vacancies on the&#13;
Allo~ations Committee shall be filled through appointment, by the&#13;
President of the P.S.G.A., lnc., with the approval of a simple majority!&#13;
of the entire Senate."&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday, November 2, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 10&#13;
/l ll Men are not again t you; they're Cl()&#13;
UU merely out for themselves l/ l/&#13;
-Gene Fowler&#13;
Forbes&#13;
Nature trails&#13;
being ab~sed&#13;
Last Sunday, October 30, Parkside Athletics hosted "Pumpkin&#13;
Pant'', a cross-country meet on the newly developed nature trail&#13;
north of the Union parking lot A public information office n ws&#13;
release described the event as "a trail-blazing 5,000 meter&#13;
cross-country run on the UW-P nature trails" An inspection of the&#13;
trails by several university people last Friday, revealed the trails are&#13;
also being used by horse riders and m1ni-b1kers.&#13;
The nature trails were developed last summer by workers fund d&#13;
through a Carter administration 10b program . The work on the&#13;
campus was authorized by Cushing Phillips, Director of the Phy ical&#13;
Plant, who was also responsible for university supervision of the&#13;
workers&#13;
Committee asks for halt on development&#13;
Two weeks ago, the newly formed committee on Environmental&#13;
Concerns (CEC) asked Chancellor Guskin to halt further development&#13;
of the nature trails until the committee could review the plan There&#13;
is some question whether or not there is or was a plan.&#13;
Ranger contacted (CEC) Chairman,Eugene Ga iorkiewicz.Profes or&#13;
of Life Science, and asked him what he thought of current use of the&#13;
nature trails by cross-country runners .&#13;
" I personally feel the use of the trails for racing is not the intent of&#13;
the nature trails . The exploitation of them for running trails I a&#13;
mistake. If the are wide enough for running, then they should have&#13;
never been made that wide," saidGasiork1ewicz .He also commen\ed&#13;
on the helpless situation the university 1s in trying to e elude the&#13;
public from what the state of isconsin considers a state park like&#13;
any other university property .&#13;
Security has problems with patroling trails&#13;
Ranger asked Parkside Security Chief, Ron Brinkman, what security&#13;
measures could be taken to stop horse riders and mini-bikers from&#13;
using the nature trails Brinkman said there wasn't much security&#13;
could do, short of getting its own official trail bike, an idea Brinkman&#13;
thinks is impractical It 1s currently 1mposs1ble for present curity&#13;
automobiles to patrol the three miles of trails It 1s also difficult to&#13;
hear mini-bikes or horses in the thickly wooded area. The side of the&#13;
natural area that borders County " A" 1s complete! op n. The only&#13;
fence that borders the natural area is on the west edge facing the golf&#13;
course .&#13;
PSGA · elections garner&#13;
record turnout vote&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Three bundred sixteen Parkside students , compared with 72 last&#13;
year, voted in the 1977 fall Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
(PSGA) election which was held Wednesday and Thursday, October&#13;
19 and 20 on the concourse of the Classroom Building.&#13;
In the Segregated Fee Anocations, winning ballot positionings&#13;
included Tom DaVroy, Maggie Juszkiewicz, Elsa Carpenter, Chelle&#13;
Phelps and Douglas Wright. Candidate-elect Maggie Juszkiewicz&#13;
declined her seat in the Senate. Replacement candidate must be&#13;
attain for her position . I&#13;
The Allocations Committee, consisting of 11 voting members, five&#13;
each elected in the fall and spring, and the president of the Student&#13;
Organizational Council) reviews requests for program support and&#13;
budget allocations . In addition, non-voting members include the&#13;
Assistant Chancellors for Student Affairs and for Administration , and&#13;
the Director ot Budget Planning sits in with the committee.&#13;
John P. Smith and Shaun Helgesen are the newly elected&#13;
candidates attaining seats in the Undeclared Major Category. Other&#13;
students obtaining divisional seats in the Senate include Patrick&#13;
Odell-Humanities, Kenneth Kuehnl, Jr. - Labor Economics, Gerald&#13;
Muchlin - Management Science, Mark Merten - Social Science&#13;
and Harvey Hedden - Science . No one ran for the Engineering&#13;
Science seat and so it is vacant.&#13;
The declared divisions mentioned above consist of one senator&#13;
each. An additional senator is added for each addit ional 700 students&#13;
with in the division . The elected candidates' terms last for one year.&#13;
The Parkside st udent body also had the opportunity to vote on the&#13;
constitut ional referendum , which was approved by a vote of 225 to&#13;
49.&#13;
Below is a copy of the passed constitut ional referendum:&#13;
The Allocations Committee as a whole shall deal directly with the&#13;
Chancellor or his/her designee in consultation with the Allocat ions&#13;
Committee recommendations&#13;
The President of PS.G A, Inc and the President Pro Tempore of&#13;
the Senate or his/her des1gnee, who shall be a member of p S.G A&#13;
Inc ., shall be voting members of the Allocations Committee durin~&#13;
the negotiations with the Chancellor. The President or President Pro&#13;
Tempore, if an elected or appointed members of the Allocations&#13;
Committee shall not send a designee to the committee while also&#13;
participating in the negotiation process .&#13;
If the Allocations Comm ittee and the Chancellor can not reconci le&#13;
their differences in the allocation of the allocable portion of&#13;
Segregated University Fees, each will send a set of recommendations&#13;
to the Board of Regents for f inal disposition . Vacancies on the&#13;
Allo~ations Committee shall be filled through appointment, by the&#13;
President of the P.S.G.A., Inc., with the approval of a simple majority{&#13;
of the entire Senate." &#13;
/&#13;
J&#13;
•&#13;
When Parkslde administrators consented to&#13;
the development of nature trails through the&#13;
northern half of the campus,animportant resource&#13;
became endangered. The last parcel of,&#13;
undevelopedland became"developed". The thick&#13;
brush and wooded areas that once hindered&#13;
recreational traffic\vere removed. Now, the area&#13;
is up for grabs. Cross-country meets are held&#13;
there and mini-bikers and horse riders can&#13;
traverse the area unnoticed by security. Will&#13;
Winter bring snowmobiles?&#13;
The trails that were cut through· this&#13;
undevelopedareaare over four feet wide in some&#13;
places. There is chipped bark on trails near water&#13;
or mud, and steps going u'pa bank. Large blocks&#13;
of cement cut across the creek that bisects the&#13;
area, and the field of prairie grass has been&#13;
divided up into pieces.&#13;
If this is a natural area, is it necessary to&#13;
deveiopH?&#13;
If the purposeof the trail is to provide direction&#13;
for those seeking communion with nature,&#13;
perhapswe should direct these people next door&#13;
to Petrifying Springs County Park.&#13;
Life -Science professors are going to know&#13;
whereto take their classes. Periodic field trips to&#13;
the area by students do not require developed&#13;
"trails". When humanswalk through natural areas'&#13;
editorial&#13;
(&#13;
./&#13;
/&#13;
repeatedly, a small fool' path usually develops.&#13;
These foot' paths should be adequate for&#13;
'educational purposes.&#13;
The presence of wide trails has attracted&#13;
recreational vehicles and horse riders. This&#13;
unnecessarytraffic can only turn this once quiet&#13;
area into just another part of Petrifying Springs.&#13;
Surely w~ can come up with a better plan for the&#13;
use of our campus.&#13;
It is in the best interests of this university to&#13;
protect and preserveany natural areasadjacent to&#13;
the campus. What is to encouragedonors of other&#13;
natural areas to give their land to a campus that&#13;
has ruined its own natural resources?&#13;
It is the business of unlverslty administrators&#13;
-to plan ahead. Someone has clearly made a&#13;
mistake with the nature trails. To prevent further&#13;
abuse of the land, measures should be taken to&#13;
erase what has' been "developed" and return. as&#13;
much o1'it 'as possible to its original state.&#13;
A comprehensive plan of maintenance and&#13;
preservation of natural areas such as Chiwaukee&#13;
Prairie and the Harris Tract is also noticeably.&#13;
\ absent.&#13;
Twenty years from now, when Parkside is&#13;
surrounded by suburbs, will Parkside be&#13;
something to respect or just another abandoned&#13;
lot? -&#13;
Ranger is written. al\d edited by students 01 the&#13;
University 01 Wisconsin·Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible tor its editorial policy and content ..&#13;
Om" \Ii f'itTr'1&#13;
Mary Casswell. Debbie Siwek, Ann St~idl.&#13;
Cb.ris-Ratcks, Marcia. Vlach.&#13;
Pb.ilipL. Livingston 553.2295&#13;
Gcrt&gt;: ri\ M Thomas R. Cooper ;)-;).22-8";&#13;
( 0 L ~- dohl\. R ..McKloskey&#13;
d.~'''''.. Diane dalensky&#13;
r&lt;,&gt;· \) Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Sports Editor Alane Andresen&#13;
C iy \l~ H -, Wen.dy&#13;
Ilc,tta.' Adv~r~ '&gt;J ". l\1 \ aiD alise '2 (&#13;
Ranger Newspaper. Un.iversity 01 Wisconsin-Park.ide&#13;
Kenosh.a. Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 ye&amp;r lor U.S.A.&#13;
i&#13;
)&#13;
• •&#13;
I&#13;
editorial&#13;
(&#13;
/&#13;
When Parksid'e administrators consented to&#13;
the development of nature trails through the&#13;
n_orthern half of the campus.an important resource&#13;
became endangered. The last parcel of&#13;
undeveloped land became "developed". The thick&#13;
brush and wooded areas that once hindered&#13;
recreational traffic were removed. Now, the area&#13;
is up for grabs. Cross-country meets are held&#13;
there and mini-bikers and horse riders can&#13;
traverse the area unnoticed by security. Will&#13;
Winter bring snowmobiles?&#13;
The trails that were cut through · this&#13;
undeveloped area are over four feet wide- in some&#13;
places. There is chipped bark on trails near water&#13;
or mud, and steps going up a bank. Large blocks&#13;
of cement cut across the creek that bisects the&#13;
area, and the field of prairie grass ha$ been&#13;
divided up into pieces.&#13;
If this is a natural area, is it necessary to&#13;
deveiop it?&#13;
If the purpose of the trail is to provide direction&#13;
for those seeking communion with nature,&#13;
perhaps we should direct these people next door&#13;
to Petrifying Springs County Park.&#13;
Life ~science professors are going to know&#13;
where to take their classes. Periodic field trips to&#13;
the area by students do not require developed&#13;
"trails". When humans walk through natural areas&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
repeatedly, a small foof path usually develops.&#13;
These foot' paths should be adequate for&#13;
educational purposes.&#13;
The presence of wide trails has attracted&#13;
recreational vehicles and horse riders. This&#13;
unnecessary traffic can only turn this once quiet&#13;
area into just another part of Petrifying Springs.&#13;
Surely w~ can come up with a better plan for the&#13;
use of our campus.&#13;
It is in the best interests of this university to&#13;
protect and preserve any natural areas adjacent to&#13;
' the campus. What is to encourage donors of other&#13;
natural areas to give their land to a campus that&#13;
has ruined its own natural resources?&#13;
It is the business of university administrators&#13;
-to plan ahead. Someone has clearly made a&#13;
mistake with the nature trails. To prevent further&#13;
abus~ of the land, measures should be taken to&#13;
erase what has· been "developed" and return,_ as&#13;
much ot'it as possible to its original state.&#13;
A comprehensive plan of maintenance and&#13;
preservation of natural areas such as Chiwaukee&#13;
Prairie and the Harris Tract is also noticeably&#13;
, absent.&#13;
Twenty years from now, when Parkside is&#13;
surrounded by suburbs, will Parkside be&#13;
something to respect or just another abandoned&#13;
lot? , -&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University ~f Wisc~nsin-~ar~side and they are solely responsible for ats edatonal policy and content . .&#13;
Ou w -i•,,·&#13;
Mary Casswell, Debbie Siwek, Ann Steidl.&#13;
Chris Ratcks, Marcia Vlach.&#13;
Philip L. Livingston 553-2295&#13;
Thomas R. Cooper 53 ?281&#13;
John R . . McKloskey Diane dalensky&#13;
F.•,\ vi Dan Guidebeck&#13;
· Sports Editor Alane Andresen&#13;
C .\. M , Wendy&#13;
R~ a , u &amp;ill &amp;lise&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, U~iversity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
• I &#13;
letters&#13;
\&#13;
Reader amazed at egocentric rhetoric&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Congratulations lamron! You&#13;
have motivated me (one of the&#13;
apathetic mass, a member of no&#13;
student organization, 9- constant&#13;
complainer) to "get involved."&#13;
As a serious student of human&#13;
behavior I 'am amazed by the&#13;
stunning combination of lack of&#13;
understanding and egocentric&#13;
rhetoric YOU spit out in your&#13;
attem pt to motivate othees to&#13;
"get involved." Your lack of&#13;
understanding is evidenced by&#13;
your insults to the integrity and&#13;
eating habits of the audience&#13;
you are attempting to reach. You&#13;
are not aware of the personal&#13;
circumstances surrounding the&#13;
lives of other students and It IS&#13;
therefore impudent of you to&#13;
suggest that their assessment of&#13;
how much time they can spare.&#13;
for what activities is inferior to&#13;
your assessment&#13;
The impudence borders on&#13;
arrogance when ·those who&#13;
disagree with you are labeled as&#13;
"dumb s hi ts". accused ·of&#13;
engaging in "an example of sheer&#13;
rncromcness" as well as having&#13;
"been eating from a crock of&#13;
shit" (a repugnant image as well&#13;
as an offensive and unnecessary&#13;
insult).&#13;
The egocentric nature of your&#13;
rhetoric is apparent in your&#13;
Cut mud slingi.ng&#13;
and work together&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
I am not writing this letter to&#13;
condone or to condemn. I am&#13;
writing this Jetter in the regards&#13;
as to how I feel. I think that it is&#13;
time for every one to lay down&#13;
the slings and arrows. There have&#13;
been enough' articles in the&#13;
Ranger to condemn and to&#13;
condone the students of&#13;
Parks ide. It is not up -to one or&#13;
two individuals to determine&#13;
what the student population&#13;
should or should not do with&#13;
their free time. It is up to the&#13;
students themselves.&#13;
As a former member of the&#13;
Ranger staff I think that it is time&#13;
to stress the high points of Parkside.&#13;
let us hear from some of&#13;
the student organizations. Show&#13;
us what some of the organization&#13;
have to offer us. Do a feature a&#13;
{ week on -them. It should not be&#13;
so hard.&#13;
Believe me, I am not cutting&#13;
down the Ranger. It is having its&#13;
own problems getting the much&#13;
needed help. What I am doing is&#13;
giving a few suggestions so that&#13;
the students may find out what is&#13;
going on. I don't think that any&#13;
organization is asking for vour&#13;
full 100% free time. But rather a&#13;
couple of hours a week to help&#13;
out once in a while.&#13;
Come on everyone. let us cut&#13;
out the mud slinging and the&#13;
back stabbing and work together&#13;
for a change. Who knows, maybe&#13;
you will get to like Parkstde and.&#13;
what it has to offer.&#13;
JohnA. Gabriel&#13;
P.S. If you would like at least30&#13;
good reasons to go to Parkside, I&#13;
would suggest seeing Prof. Gerry&#13;
Greenfield. He would be most&#13;
willing to tell you.&#13;
United Council Legislative Update&#13;
AS 325 - The decriminalization of marijuana bill was referred to&#13;
the State Affairs Committee, effectively killing bill for this legislative&#13;
session. The vote of 54-11 came after minimal debate and Just&#13;
minutes before the Assembly adjourned until next lanuary (or until&#13;
the Special Session, if held). There seems little hope for passage of&#13;
any decriminalization bill until the next legislature goes Into session&#13;
in January of 1979. United Council strongly supported this bill, but&#13;
the response from the campuses was not strong. AB 325 would have&#13;
removed criminal penalties and created civil penalties for the&#13;
personal possession of two ounces of marijuana, with a maxiumum&#13;
fine of $50&#13;
AB181 255 318et al. - Assemblybills to raisethe legaldrinking&#13;
age to 19: United Council has consistently opposed these bills, and&#13;
will testify against them once again. The UC p~si~ion .is that these&#13;
bills would encroach on the hard won age of majority rights, and do&#13;
nothing to help alcohol abuse. ....&#13;
58289,335,363 - The faculty collective bargaining bills, having&#13;
lain dormant since being introduced last April, may now see some&#13;
action. The Regents discussed the issue in a wide ranging hearing last&#13;
week, at whtch UC testified concerning the necessity for student&#13;
involvement in the process.&#13;
Having met with Senate Labor Committee Ghairman Ti~ Cullen,&#13;
UC President Jim Eagon and lobbyist R~b Steven~ are confldent)ha~&#13;
student concerns will be addressed In any bill reported out 0&#13;
committee. Currently: the UC Executive Board is ready to ~upp.ort&#13;
faculty andacadem!c staff collective bargaining enabling legislation&#13;
that adequately protects student governance rights.&#13;
woeful fear that you exist in a&#13;
world of idiots" I, too, have&#13;
sometimes felt surrounded by&#13;
idiots Reflection often revealed&#13;
that this feeling was caused by&#13;
my own unchecked concert and&#13;
my lack of knowledge about&#13;
those 'idiots." These Idiots"&#13;
often have a we altb- of&#13;
knowledge and innovative ways&#13;
of dealing With di t ti cul ttes .&#13;
However, the gifts they have to&#13;
offer can only be discovered if&#13;
the "idiots" are allowed to speak&#13;
without having others tell them&#13;
to direct their energies in "more&#13;
useful" ways&#13;
You say you are opposed to&#13;
. people infringing on others'&#13;
rights. That is an excellent&#13;
position and 1 commend you for&#13;
having the Insight and courage&#13;
to v tate It publicly Effective&#13;
concern for the rights of others.&#13;
however requrres compassion&#13;
and undervtanding tar beyond&#13;
that required for the mere stating&#13;
of a principle Please, try to&#13;
remember that people will work&#13;
on those thing .. that they (not&#13;
you} have decided are Important&#13;
The only How of energy YOU&#13;
should aspire to direct IS your&#13;
o.. n&#13;
Name Withheld upon request&#13;
'Personali'jed&#13;
Barbering&#13;
MEN WOMAN CHILDREN&#13;
PH. 658·8384&#13;
APPOINTMENT&#13;
~~&#13;
1902·SOth 5TREET NANCY RINALDI&#13;
YES! INTERNATIONAL SPEED READING COURSE WILL BE&#13;
TAUGHT HERE IN THE RACINE·KENOSHA AREA&#13;
National Reading Enrichment&#13;
Institute (a non profit organization)&#13;
will offer a 4 week course in speed&#13;
reading to a limited number of&#13;
qualified people In the Kenosha.&#13;
Racine area. NREI panoramic&#13;
method of instruction is the most&#13;
innovative and effective program&#13;
available In the United States. Not&#13;
only does this famous course reduce&#13;
your time in the classroom to just&#13;
one class per week for 4 short weeks&#13;
but it also includes an advance speed&#13;
reading course on cassette tape so&#13;
that you can continue to improve for&#13;
the rest of your life. In just four&#13;
weeks the average student should be&#13;
reading 3 to 10times faster. In a few&#13;
months some students are reading&#13;
20to 30times faster obtaining speeds&#13;
that approach 6000 words per&#13;
minute. In their instances speeds up&#13;
to 20,000words per minute have been&#13;
documented.&#13;
Our Average graduate reads 3 to&#13;
10times faster upon completion with&#13;
greatly increased comprehension&#13;
and concentration. For those who&#13;
would like additional information&#13;
and series of FREE 1 . hour or ientation&#13;
lectures have been scheduled.&#13;
At the free meetings the course will&#13;
be explained in cqmplete detail&#13;
Including classroom procedures,&#13;
instruction methods, class schedule&#13;
and a special introductory tuition&#13;
that is' one half the cost ot similar&#13;
courses. You must attend anyone ot&#13;
these meetings tor Information&#13;
about classes.&#13;
These orientations are opened to&#13;
the public above age 14 (persons&#13;
under 18 should be accompanied by&#13;
a parent if possible). If you have&#13;
always wanted to be a speed reader&#13;
but found the cost prohibitive or the&#13;
course too time. consuiTllng ... Now&#13;
you can, just by attending one evening&#13;
per week for four short weeks&#13;
read 3 to 10times faster with greater&#13;
comprehension and concentration.&#13;
If you are a student who would like&#13;
to make A's Instead of B's or C's, or&#13;
if you are II business person who&#13;
wants to stay abreast of todays&#13;
everchanging accelerating world&#13;
then this course Is an absolute must.&#13;
These special THREE one hour&#13;
meetings will be held at the&#13;
following times and places in the&#13;
Kenosha·R.acine area: Monday,&#13;
November 7th, two meetings, one at&#13;
6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m. and&#13;
Tuesday, November 8th, two&#13;
meetings, one at 6: 30 p.m. and again&#13;
at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, two&#13;
meetings, one at 6: 30 p.m. and again&#13;
at 8:30 p.m., Wednesday, two&#13;
meetings, one at 6: 30 p.m. and again&#13;
8:30p.m.&#13;
TWO FINAL ME ETINGS&#13;
Thursday, November 3rd, one at&#13;
6:30 p.m. and another at 8:30 p.m.&#13;
These meetings will be held In the&#13;
Holtoay Inn at 5125·6th Street in&#13;
Kenosha. If you are a businessman,&#13;
a student, housewife, or executive&#13;
this course, which took years of&#13;
intensive research to develop Is a&#13;
must, you can read 3 to 10 times&#13;
faster, comprehend more, con.&#13;
centrate better, and remember&#13;
longer. This course can be taught to&#13;
industry or civic groups at group&#13;
rates upon request. Be sure to attend&#13;
whichever free orientation that fits&#13;
in your schedule. REMEMBER&#13;
TUITION FOR THIS COURSE IS&#13;
ONE HALF THAT OF SIMILAR&#13;
COURSES, MONEY SPENT IN&#13;
SELF· IMPROVEMENT IS NOT AN&#13;
EXPENSE IT IS AN iN.&#13;
VESTMENT. MAKE AN IN.&#13;
VESTMENT TODAY.&#13;
letters&#13;
Reader amazed at egocentric rhetoric&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Congratulations Lamron ! You&#13;
have motivated me (one of the&#13;
apathetic mass, a member of no&#13;
student organization, a constant&#13;
complainer) to " get involved."&#13;
rt•mt•mbt•r that peopl&#13;
on tho&#13;
o n&#13;
As a serious student of human&#13;
behavior I 'am amazed by the&#13;
stunning combination of lack of&#13;
understanding and egocentric&#13;
rhetoric you spit out in your&#13;
attempt to motivate other6 to&#13;
"get involved." Your lack of&#13;
understanding is evidenced by&#13;
your insults to the integrity and&#13;
eating habits of the audience&#13;
you are attempting to reach. You&#13;
are not aware of the personal&#13;
circumstances surrounding the&#13;
lives of other students and 1t is&#13;
therefore impudent of you to&#13;
suggest that their assessment of&#13;
how much time they can spare.&#13;
for what activities is inferior to&#13;
your assessment&#13;
woeful fear that you exist "in a&#13;
world of 1d1ots." I, too, have&#13;
sometimes felt surrounded bv&#13;
idiots Reflection otten revealed&#13;
that th1 feeling was cau ed b&#13;
my o'°"n unchecked concet and&#13;
my lack of knm .. ledge about&#13;
those "1d1ots ." These '1d1ots"&#13;
often ha\e a wealtl of&#13;
kno\\ ledge and innO\ at1ve ways&#13;
of dealing w 1th diff1cult1es&#13;
However, the gifts the ha e to&#13;
offer can onlv be discovered 1f&#13;
the '' idiots" are allowed to speak&#13;
without having others tell them&#13;
to direct their energies in " more&#13;
useful ways .&#13;
having the insight and courage&#13;
to tale ,t publicly Effective&#13;
concern for the rights ot others,&#13;
however, requires compa mn&#13;
and und r tandmg far b ond&#13;
that requir d for the m re tatmg&#13;
ot a prmcipl Plea e, try to Name withheld upon requ t&#13;
The impudence borders on&#13;
arrogance when those who&#13;
disagree with you are labeled as&#13;
" dumb shits", accused of&#13;
engaging in " an example of sheer&#13;
moronicness" as well as having&#13;
" been eating from a crock of&#13;
shit" (a repugnant image as well&#13;
as an offensive and unnecessary&#13;
insult).&#13;
The egocentric nature of your&#13;
rhetoric is apparent in your&#13;
Cut mud slingi_ng&#13;
and work together&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
I am not writing this letter to&#13;
condone or to condemn. I am&#13;
writing this letter in the regards&#13;
as to how I feel. I think that it is&#13;
time for every one to lay down&#13;
the slings and arrows. There have&#13;
been enough' articles in the&#13;
Ranger to condemn and to&#13;
condone the students of&#13;
Parkside. It is not up -to one or&#13;
two individuals to determine&#13;
what the student population&#13;
should or should not do with&#13;
their free time. It is up to the&#13;
students themselves.&#13;
As a former member of the&#13;
Ranger staff I think that it is time&#13;
to stress the high points of Parkside.&#13;
Let us hear from some of&#13;
the student organizations. Show&#13;
us what some of the organization&#13;
have to offer us. Do a feature a&#13;
week on them . It should not be&#13;
so hard.&#13;
Believe me, I am not cutting&#13;
down the Ranger. It is having its&#13;
own problems getting the much&#13;
needed help. What I am doing is&#13;
giving a few suggestions so that&#13;
the students may find out what is&#13;
going on. I don't think that any&#13;
organization is asking for your&#13;
full 100% free time. But rather a&#13;
couple of hours a week to help&#13;
out once in a while.&#13;
Come on every one. Let us cut&#13;
out the mud slinging and the&#13;
back stabbing and work together&#13;
for a change. Who knows, maybe&#13;
you will get to like Parkside and&#13;
what it has to offer.&#13;
John A. Gabriel&#13;
P.S. If you would like at least 30&#13;
good reasons to go to Parkside, I&#13;
would suggest seeing Prof. Gerry&#13;
Greenfield . He would be most&#13;
willing to tell you.&#13;
United Council Legislative Update&#13;
AB 325 - The decriminalization of marijuana bill was referred to&#13;
the State Affairs Committee, effectively killing bill for this legislative&#13;
session. The vote of 54-11 came after minimal debate and Just&#13;
minutes before the Assembly adjourned until next January (or until&#13;
the Special Session, if held). There seems little hope for passage_ of&#13;
any decriminalization bill until the next legislature goes into session&#13;
in January of 1979 United Council strongly supported this bill, but&#13;
the response from the campuses was not strong. AB 325 would have&#13;
removed criminal penalties and created civil penalties for the&#13;
personal possession of two ounces of marijuana, with a maxiumum&#13;
fine of $50. AB 181 255 318 et al. - Assembly bills to raise the legal drinking •&#13;
age to 19' united Council has consistently opposed these bills, and&#13;
will testify against them once again. The UC position is that these&#13;
bills would encroach on the hard won age of maiority rights , and do&#13;
nothing to help alcohol abuse. _ .&#13;
SB 289, 335, 363 - The faculty collective bargaining bills, having&#13;
lain dormant since being introduced last April, may now see some&#13;
action . The Regents discussed the issue in a wide ranging hearing last&#13;
week, at which UC testified concerning the necessity for student&#13;
involvement in the process .&#13;
Having met with Senate Labor Committee Chairman Tim Cullen,&#13;
UC President Jim Eagon and lobbyist Rob Stevens are confident that&#13;
student concerns will be addressed in any bill reported out of&#13;
committee. Currently, the UC Executive Board is ready to ~uppmt&#13;
faculty and'academic stc1ff collective bargaining enabling leg1slat1on&#13;
that adequately protects student governance rights .&#13;
I'&#13;
'Personalised&#13;
Barbering&#13;
MEN WOMAN CHILDREN&#13;
PH. 658-8384&#13;
APPOINTMENT&#13;
You say you are opposed to&#13;
people infringing on others'&#13;
rights. That is an excellent&#13;
position and I commend you for&#13;
~~ NANCY RINALDI&#13;
,..&#13;
...&#13;
1902-SOth STREET&#13;
YES! INTERNATIONAL SPEED READING COURSE WILL BE&#13;
TAUGHT HERE IN THE RACINE-KENOSHA AREA&#13;
National Reading Enrichment&#13;
Institute (a non profit organization)&#13;
will offer a 4 week course in speed&#13;
reading to a limited number of&#13;
qualified people in the KenoshaRacine&#13;
area. NREI panoramic&#13;
method of instruction is the most&#13;
innovative and effective program&#13;
available in the United States. Not&#13;
only does this famous course reduce&#13;
your time in the classroom to just&#13;
one class per week for 4 short weeks&#13;
but it also includes an advance speed&#13;
reading course on cassette tape so&#13;
that you can continue to improve for&#13;
the rest of your life. In just four&#13;
weeks the average student should be&#13;
reading 3 to 10 times faster. In a few&#13;
months some students are reading&#13;
20 to 30 times faster obtaining speeds&#13;
that approach 6000 words per&#13;
minute. In their instances speeds up&#13;
to 20,000words per minute have been&#13;
documented.&#13;
Our Average graduate reads 3 to&#13;
l0times faster upon completion with&#13;
greatly increased comprehension&#13;
and concentration. For those who&#13;
would like additional information&#13;
ar'ld series of FREE 1 - hour orientation&#13;
lectures have been scheduled.&#13;
At the free meetings the course will&#13;
be explained in cor:rplete detail&#13;
including classroom procedures,&#13;
instruction methods, class schedule&#13;
and a special intr:oductory tuition&#13;
that is one half the cost of similar&#13;
courses. You must attend any one of&#13;
these meetings for information&#13;
about classes.&#13;
These orientations are opened to&#13;
the public above age 14 (persons&#13;
under 18 should be accompanied by&#13;
a parent if possible). If you have&#13;
always wanted to be a speed reader&#13;
but found the cost prohibitive or the&#13;
course too time consuming ... Now&#13;
you can, just by attending one evening&#13;
per week for four short weeks&#13;
read 3 to 10 times faster with greater&#13;
comprehension and concentration.&#13;
If you are a student who would like&#13;
to make A's instead of B's or C's, or&#13;
if you are a business person who&#13;
wants to stay abreast of todays&#13;
everchanging accelerating world&#13;
then this cotsrse Is an absolute must.&#13;
These special THREE one hour&#13;
meetings will be held at the&#13;
following times and places in the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine area : Monday,&#13;
November 7th, two meetings, one at&#13;
6:30 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m. and&#13;
Tuesday, November 8th, two&#13;
meetings, one at 6: 30 p.m. and again&#13;
at 8: 30 p.m. Wednesday, two&#13;
meetings, one at 6: 30 p.m. and again&#13;
at 8: 30 p.m., Wednesday, two&#13;
meetings, one at 6: 30 p.m. and again&#13;
8:30 p.m.&#13;
TWO FINAL MEETINGS&#13;
Thursday, November 3rd, one at&#13;
6:30 p.m. and another at 8:30 p.m.&#13;
These meetings will be held In the&#13;
Holiciay Inn at 5125-6th Street ln&#13;
Kenosha. If you are a businessman,&#13;
a student, housewife, or executive -&#13;
this course, which took ye rs of&#13;
intensive research to develop Is a&#13;
must, you can read 3 to 10 times&#13;
faster, comprehend more, concentrate&#13;
better, and remember&#13;
longer. Th is course can be taught to&#13;
industry or civic groups at group&#13;
rates upon request. Be sure to attend&#13;
whichever free orientation that fits&#13;
in your schedule. REMEMBER&#13;
TUITION FOR THIS COURSE IS&#13;
ONE HALF THAT OF SIMILAR&#13;
COURSES, MONEY SPENT IN&#13;
SELF-IMPROVEMENT IS NOT AN&#13;
EXPENSE IT IS AN INVESTMENT.&#13;
MAKE AN INVESTMENT&#13;
TODAY.&#13;
.&#13;
I &#13;
news/space&#13;
Construction provides&#13;
office space 'for&#13;
student organizations&#13;
would be in easy access if the&#13;
students had questions or were&#13;
just curious about these- clubs.&#13;
If you have been down in the The bad part, according til&#13;
Coffee Shoppe lately you may· Galbraith, was the fear of closing&#13;
have wondered what all the up Main Place. The use of glass&#13;
construction was for. has preserved the open feeling&#13;
After talking to Jim Galbraith, that is the main attraction to&#13;
Director of Planning and Main Place.&#13;
Construction, many of the The Academic Skills and&#13;
unanswered questions that are I Student Development Offices&#13;
floating around were answered.' are being moved. Academic"&#13;
The basic problem according Skills has already been moved to&#13;
to Galbraith is that 'when the the '01 level of the WLLC and&#13;
'Student Union was b\lilt~there Student Development will move&#13;
wasn't enough space to .lit in all into the. area which Academic&#13;
oftheorpnizationsthatwanted Skills vacated. This will&#13;
to be located in there. After hopefully make students more&#13;
much deliberation, the Campus willing to go and seek help when&#13;
Planning Commtttee ~decided they need or want it, said&#13;
that being located in Main Place Galbraith.&#13;
was the answer for these The big question is "What·&#13;
organizations. about the Coffee'Shoppe!" It will&#13;
This idea had both its good remain open for student&#13;
and bad points, said Galbraith. convenience. I&#13;
The good is that student The target date to finish the&#13;
functions like P.S.G.A., and the construction work and have the&#13;
Ranger would be in the hub of offices filled is about January 16,&#13;
the student activities. They 1978.&#13;
WlIIlIIlllIIllllllIIHltlllllllllllnlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll1111I1II~1II1111!!!&#13;
~ WHO ME? A BLOOO OONOR? ~&#13;
= =&#13;
I ~&#13;
I WALK·IN·BLOOD·DRIVE I&#13;
II WEDNESDAY,NOVEMBER 9th ~ I 10:00·4:00 i&#13;
= = § UNION 104 &amp; 105 §&#13;
I No appointment necessary I&#13;
I&#13;
FOR INFORMATION CALL I&#13;
THE CAMPUS HEALTH OffiCE ;;&#13;
553-2366 PLEASE CONSIDER IT... §&#13;
111111111111_1Rt1l11111111111111111111111ll1ll1ll11l1l11ll11ll11l1111l1111II1II1I111II1111111I111I§&#13;
by Mary Lasswell&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Chlwaulcee Prairie/Harris Tract&#13;
4&#13;
/ I&#13;
. . . - .&#13;
Committee Investigates&#13;
Parkside's natural areas&#13;
by John D. Hoefflin&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
'A. visit was made to the Chi-"&#13;
waukee Prairie by the Environmental&#13;
Concerns Committee last&#13;
Tuesday morning. The purpose&#13;
of the trip was to investigate&#13;
damage done to the area by&#13;
molorcylces and other off-road&#13;
vehicles. People have been&#13;
trespassing and riding on the&#13;
land for the past few .vears.&#13;
Previous attempts to discourage&#13;
riders by building fences have&#13;
failed, and the committee is&#13;
considering possible alternative&#13;
solutions.&#13;
This problem is of major&#13;
concern to the committee&#13;
because the Chiwaukee Prairie,&#13;
which is under Parkside ownership&#13;
and care, is considered to&#13;
be the last area of its size in the&#13;
Midwest that has never been&#13;
tampered with by man. It is also&#13;
one of the few examples of a&#13;
"wet prairie" left in the United&#13;
States. According to Professor&#13;
Eugene Casiorkiewicz, Environmental&#13;
Concerns Committee&#13;
Chairman.' the main problem is&#13;
how to "maintain the integrity of&#13;
this area without molestation."&#13;
He went on to sav, "Just as we&#13;
must put fences around zoos to&#13;
keep the wild animals in, now we&#13;
must put up fences to keep man&#13;
out." The Chiwaukee Prairie has&#13;
been designated a Natural&#13;
Scientific Area by the State&#13;
Preservation Council and the&#13;
Department of Natural Resources&#13;
in Wisconsin. It has also been&#13;
declared a National Monument&#13;
under the provisions of the&#13;
Department of tile Interior.&#13;
The damages done to the area&#13;
include the cutting of fences and&#13;
wide trails left by motorcycles&#13;
and dune buggies. Fences were&#13;
;rso pushed over in several&#13;
places. Unfortunately for one&#13;
vandal, when he drove over the&#13;
fence, his license plate was torn&#13;
off and was left at the si,te.It is&#13;
now being traced; and charges&#13;
wi II be brought against the&#13;
owner of the vehicle.&#13;
Possible solutions being considered&#13;
include stronger fences,&#13;
trenches, posts sunk in the&#13;
ground, and the posting of signs&#13;
warning of fines far trespassing.&#13;
The committee would also like&#13;
to see more regular patrolling of&#13;
the area by Sheriff's squads, and&#13;
....possibly, some arrests.According&#13;
to Kenosha Sheriff Deputy Hardy&#13;
Schmalfeldt, "Parkside Security&#13;
has made a blanket request that&#13;
if we find anyone on the prairie,&#13;
then we can take appropriate&#13;
action."&#13;
- -&#13;
_Pluto discovery a coincidence?&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
"Ever since celestial mechanics in the skillful&#13;
hands of Leverrier and Adams led to the discovery&#13;
of Neptune, a belief has existed begotten of that&#13;
success that still other planets lay beyond, only&#13;
waiting to be found," wrote Percival lowell in his&#13;
Memoir on a Trans-Neptunian Planet, published in&#13;
1915,&#13;
Lowell proceeded to caution against simple&#13;
wishful thinking; but in that now-famous Memoir&#13;
he himself claimed to have evidence for a "Planet&#13;
X" lying beyond Neptune and Making itself evident&#13;
through gravitional influe~.&#13;
Discoverer dies&#13;
lowell was not exactly laughed at, but neither&#13;
was he taken at his word.~A wealthy Bostonian,&#13;
Lowell was .undeterred by the public's apathy,&#13;
because he owned his own observatory, Lowell&#13;
Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. He' went ...there&#13;
and dedicated his time and energy to proving his&#13;
theory single-handedly; but, having proved&#13;
nothing, he died only a year- later. His quest,&#13;
however, had become a matter of family honor and&#13;
dedication. The Lowell Observatory would carry on&#13;
in his name.&#13;
Family canies on research&#13;
From 1916on, the problem was not so much that&#13;
of locating "Planet X" as it was that of acquiring&#13;
telescopesand cameras sensetive enough to record&#13;
the dim and distant object expected to be only in&#13;
about 15th magnitude (a correct assumption).&#13;
In 1925, observatory trustee Cuy Lowell bought,&#13;
with his own money, a component that promised&#13;
success: a rough 13-inch disc that had to be&#13;
polished into a-finished lens. But Cuy died before&#13;
the task could be completed, and another member&#13;
of the family, Percival's brother, A. Lawerence&#13;
Lowell, then President of Harvard, took up the&#13;
torch in 1927. He contributed the funds needed to&#13;
complete the telescope-camera assembly.&#13;
Once operational, the photo-telescope had to be&#13;
manned constantly, and hundreds of photographic&#13;
plates had to be collected and compared. The task&#13;
fell to an apprentice in Flagstaff, Clyde Tornbaugh,&#13;
a 23-year-old astronomy lover who could not afford&#13;
a college education. '&#13;
Discovery earns a scholarship&#13;
After he had been plate-making for nearly a year,&#13;
Clyde finally saw something meaningful on two of&#13;
his plates: a tiny point of light wasn't at the same&#13;
position two nights in a row. Clyde has discovered&#13;
"Planet X", and won himself a scholarship to&#13;
college.&#13;
The unnamed planet conformed so closely to&#13;
what Lowell had predicted for it that no onehas&#13;
seriously considered the prediction and the&#13;
discovery mearly a coincidence. Planet X soon&#13;
became Pluto, named by a eleven year old girl,&#13;
according to a persistent story, after the god of&#13;
darkness.&#13;
The discovery of Pluto was announced on March&#13;
13, 1930, on the double anniversaries of Percival&#13;
Lowell's birth and William Herschel's 1781&#13;
discovery of the planet Uranus.&#13;
Pluto is still a mystery&#13;
$0 little is known about Pluto that it would seem&#13;
more appropriate to continue calling it Planet X.&#13;
And much of what we do know is perplexing. It is&#13;
now understood that Pluto is a terrestrial rather&#13;
than a gaseous planet in defiance of the accepted&#13;
planetological theory that outer planets should be&#13;
composed primarily of gases. Also, the orbit of&#13;
Pluto is so erratic that some of the time (currently&#13;
as a matter of fact) it is nearer to the sun than&#13;
Neptune. Many believe Pluto to be a errant satellite&#13;
of Neptune or Uranus. ",&#13;
"Pluto," saysspacescape'artist Don Dixon, "is so&#13;
-ter away that we can do little but guess about its&#13;
nature."&#13;
Even a guess, however, must be based upon&#13;
whatever knowledge IS available. Dixon,&#13;
determined t9 be as accurate as possible, has&#13;
reasonedthat the planet "many be Gold enough to&#13;
have placid lakes of liquid methane, unrippled by&#13;
tides or weather."&#13;
news/.space&#13;
Construction pro·vides&#13;
off ice space ·for&#13;
student organizations&#13;
by Mary Lasswell&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
If you have been down in the&#13;
Coffee Shoppe lately you may&#13;
have wondered what all the&#13;
construction was for.&#13;
After talking to Jim Galbraith,&#13;
Director of Planning and&#13;
Constructio·n, many of the&#13;
unanswered questions that ar~&#13;
floating around were answered.&#13;
The basic problem according&#13;
to Galbraith is that when the&#13;
Student Union Wa$· liuilt.there&#13;
wasn't enough space to fit in .all&#13;
of the organizations t~at wanted&#13;
to be located in there: After&#13;
much deliberation, the Campus&#13;
Planning Committee _decided&#13;
that being located in Main Place&#13;
was the answer for these&#13;
organizations.&#13;
This idea had both its good&#13;
and bad points, said Galbraith.&#13;
The good is that student&#13;
functions like P.S.G.A., and the&#13;
Ranger would be in the hub of&#13;
the student activities. They&#13;
would be in easy access if the&#13;
students had questions or were&#13;
just curious about these clubs.&#13;
The bad part, according tQ&#13;
Galbraith, was the fear of closing&#13;
up Main Place. The use of glass&#13;
has preserved the open feeling&#13;
that is the main attraction to&#13;
Main Place.&#13;
The Ac~demic Skills and&#13;
Student Development Offices&#13;
are being moved. Academic&#13;
Skills has already been moved to&#13;
the 'r&gt;1 level of the WLLC and&#13;
Studeot-Development will move&#13;
into the area which Academic&#13;
Skills vacated . This will&#13;
hopefully make students more&#13;
willing to go and seek help when&#13;
they need or want it, said&#13;
Galbraith. .&#13;
The big question is "What ·&#13;
about the Coffee·Shoppe?" It will&#13;
remain open for student&#13;
convenience. ,&#13;
The target date to finish the&#13;
construction work and have the&#13;
offices filled is about January 16,&#13;
1978.&#13;
WIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~&#13;
§ WHO ME? A BLOOD DONOR? §&#13;
WALK-IN-BLOOD-DRIVE&#13;
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9th&#13;
10:00 - 4:00&#13;
UNION 104 &amp; 105&#13;
i No appointment necessary i&#13;
I FOR INFORMATION CALL i&#13;
I THE CAMPUS HEAL TH OFACE ~ I · 553-2366 PLEASE CONSIDER IT... ii§&#13;
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllllllllllll5&#13;
~ IT/ OW-Parkside&#13;
~,, Semester Break Jan. 6-1 i, 1978&#13;
.IAMAlr.A&#13;
*299&#13;
Chlwaukee Prairie/Harris Tract&#13;
. . . - .&#13;
·committee 1nvest1gates&#13;
Parkside' s natural areas&#13;
by John D. Hoefflin&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
I'&#13;
'A visit was made to the Chiwaukee&#13;
Prairie by the Environmental&#13;
Concerns Committee last&#13;
Tu_esday morning. The purpose&#13;
of the trip _ was to investigate&#13;
damage done to the area by&#13;
mo'torcylces and other off-road&#13;
vehicles. .People have been&#13;
trespassing and riding on the&#13;
land for the past few years.&#13;
Previous attempts to discourage&#13;
riders by building fences have&#13;
failed, and the committee is&#13;
considering possible alternative&#13;
solutions.&#13;
This problem is of major&#13;
concern to the committee&#13;
because the Chiwaukee Prairie,&#13;
which is under Parkside ownership&#13;
and care, is considered to&#13;
be.the last area of its size in the&#13;
Midwest that has never been&#13;
tampered with by man. It is also&#13;
one of the few examples of a&#13;
"wet prairie" left in the United&#13;
States. According to Professor&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiewicz, Environmental&#13;
Concerns Committee&#13;
Chairman,· the main problem is&#13;
how to "maintain the integrity of&#13;
this area without molestation."&#13;
He went on to say, " Just as we&#13;
must put fences around zoos to&#13;
keep the wild animals in, now we&#13;
must put up fences to keep man&#13;
out." The Chiwaukee Prairie has&#13;
been designated a Natural&#13;
Scientific Area by the State&#13;
Preserv~tion Council and the&#13;
Department of Natural Resources&#13;
in Wisconsin. It has also been&#13;
declared a National Monument&#13;
under the provisions of the&#13;
Department of the Interior.&#13;
and dune buggies. Fences were&#13;
.Jso pushed over in several&#13;
places. l:lnfortunately for one&#13;
vandal, when he drove over the&#13;
fence, his license plate was torn&#13;
off and was left at the si,te. It is&#13;
now being traced, and charges&#13;
will be brought against the&#13;
owner of the vehicle.&#13;
Possible solutions being considered&#13;
include stronger fences,&#13;
trenches, posts sunk in the&#13;
ground, and the posting of signs&#13;
warning of fines for trespassing.&#13;
The committee would also like&#13;
to see more regular patrolling of&#13;
the area by Sheriff's squads, a.nd&#13;
, possibly, some arrests. According&#13;
to Kenosha Sheriff Deputy Hardy&#13;
Schmalfeldt, " Parkside Security&#13;
has made a blanket request that&#13;
if we find anyone on the prairie,&#13;
then we can take appropriate&#13;
action."&#13;
The damages done to the area&#13;
include the cutting of fences and&#13;
wide trails left by motorcycles&#13;
Pluto discovery a coincidence?&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
" Ever since celestial mechanics in the skillful&#13;
hands of Leverrier and Adams led to the discovery&#13;
of Neptune, a belief has existed begotten of that&#13;
success that still other planets lay beyond, only&#13;
waiting to be found," wrote Percival Lowell in his&#13;
Memoir on a Trans-Neptunian Planet, published in&#13;
1915.&#13;
Lowell proceeded to caution against simple&#13;
wishful thinking; but in that now-famous Memoir&#13;
he himself claimed to have evidence for a " Planet&#13;
X" lying beyond Neptune and Making itself evident&#13;
through gravitional influeii'ces.&#13;
Discoverer dies&#13;
Lowell was not exactly laughed at, but neither&#13;
was he taken at his word. -A wealthy Bostonian,&#13;
Lowell was -undeterred by the public's apathy,&#13;
because he owned his own observatory, Lowell&#13;
Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. He' went -there&#13;
and dedicated his time and energy to proving his&#13;
theory si ngle-handedly; but, having proved&#13;
nothing, he died only a year- later. His quest,&#13;
however, had become a matter of family honor and&#13;
dedication. The Lowell Observatory would carry on&#13;
in his name.&#13;
Family carries on research .&#13;
From 1916 on, the problem was not so much that&#13;
of locating "Planet X" as it was that of acquiring&#13;
telescopes and cameras sensetive enough to record&#13;
the dim and distant object expected to be only in&#13;
about 15th magnitude (a correct assumption).&#13;
In 1925, observatory trustee Guy Lowell bought,&#13;
with his own money, a component that promised&#13;
success: a rough 13-inch disc that had to be&#13;
polished into a .finished lens. Bµt Guy died before&#13;
the task could be completed, and another member&#13;
of the fami ly, Percival's brother, A. Lawerence&#13;
Lowell, then President of Harvard, took up the&#13;
torch in 1927. He contributed the funds needed to&#13;
complete the telescope-camera assembly.&#13;
Once operational, the photo-telescope had to be&#13;
manned constantly, and hundreds of photographic&#13;
plates had to be collected and compared . The task&#13;
fell to an apprentice in Flagstaff, Clyde Tombaugh,&#13;
a 23-year-old astronomy lover who could not afford&#13;
a college education. '&#13;
Discovery earns a scholarship&#13;
After he had been plate-making for nearly a year,&#13;
Clyde finally saw something meaningful on two of&#13;
his plates: a tiny point of light wasn't at the same&#13;
position two nights in a row. Clyde has discovered&#13;
" Planet X", and won himself a scholarship to&#13;
college.&#13;
The unnamed planet conformed so closely to&#13;
what Lowell hacf predicted for it that no one.has&#13;
seriously considered the prediction and the&#13;
discovery mearly a coincidence. Planet X soon&#13;
became Pluto, named by a eleven year old girl,&#13;
according to a persistent story, after the god of&#13;
darkness.&#13;
The discovery of Pluto was announced on March&#13;
13, 1930, on the double anniversaries of Percival&#13;
Lowell's birth and William Herschel's 1781&#13;
discovery of the planet Uranus.&#13;
Pluto is still a mystery&#13;
So little is known about Pluto that it would seem&#13;
more appropriate to continue calling it Planet X.&#13;
And much of what we do know is perplexing. It is&#13;
now understood that Pluto is a terr-estrial rather&#13;
than a gaseous planet in defiance of the accepted&#13;
planetological theory that outer planets should be&#13;
composed primarily of gases. Also, the orbit of&#13;
Pluto is so erratic that some of the time (currently&#13;
as a matter of fact) it is nearer to the sun than&#13;
Neptune.Many helie~e Pluto to be a errant satellite&#13;
of Neptune or Uranus. '&#13;
" Pluto," says spacescape -artfst Don Dixon, "is so&#13;
-tar away that we can do little but guess about its&#13;
nature."&#13;
Even a gues~, however, must be based upon&#13;
whatever knowledge Is avai lable . Dixon,&#13;
determined to be as accurate as possible, has&#13;
reasoned that t he planet " many be c;;old enough to&#13;
have placid lakes of liquid methane, unrippled by&#13;
tides or weather." &#13;
Volleyball team&#13;
wins invitational&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
•&#13;
On Friday, October 21, the&#13;
Parkside Women's Volleyball&#13;
team traveled to the 2nd Annual&#13;
Whitewater Invitational, to bring&#13;
home the first place trophy of&#13;
the two-day tournament.&#13;
In pool play the Rangers won&#13;
three out of four, 11 point two&#13;
game matches. They defeated&#13;
Rock Valley 11-5~ 11-6; Marquette&#13;
11-8, 11-4; and UWOshkosh&#13;
8-11,11-6,12-10. Their&#13;
only loss being to U~-Platteville&#13;
11-0, 1-11, 5-11. In the&#13;
semi-finals Parkside defeated&#13;
Whitewater 8-15,15-6,15-5, in a&#13;
two out of three match. In the&#13;
finals, the Rangers again met&#13;
UW-Qshkosh in a three out of&#13;
five game match. Parkside beat&#13;
them rapidly, winning three&#13;
straight games 15-7, 15-7, 15-12;&#13;
to capture first place .&#13;
In a triangular meet at&#13;
Parkside, tuesday, October 26,&#13;
the Rangers met lewis University&#13;
and Carroll College. In the first&#13;
round of play, UW-P was beat by&#13;
lewis 11-5, 15-13, 0-15. The&#13;
Parks ide ,players were not&#13;
working very well together, and&#13;
Parkside spirit&#13;
born or reborn&#13;
by Mary Lasswell&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Parkside's school -spint is&#13;
being reborn. This veal twentythree&#13;
girls tried out to fill the&#13;
eight openings on the cheer-,.&#13;
leading squad. Two girls were&#13;
held over from last year's squad.&#13;
They are Debbie Catlett and&#13;
Crystal McCoy. Six girls were&#13;
chosen to be regulars on the&#13;
squad. They are Lowrie Melotik,&#13;
lynn Sage, Noreen Myers,&#13;
PamelaMitchell, Cindy Johnson&#13;
and Shiela Taylor. The two&#13;
alternates are Sheryl Setum and&#13;
Cheviere lomax.&#13;
The judges, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Johnson, Barb Lawson, linda&#13;
Draft, SuO' Tobachnik and&#13;
Adviser Shirly Smirling awarded&#13;
each girls points on how well&#13;
they did in each event, The&#13;
events they were judged on&#13;
were: how well they did a group&#13;
cheer, a cartwheel, a solo cheer&#13;
of their choice, a solo stunt, and&#13;
their overall appearance. The&#13;
girls with the eight highest&#13;
scores were awarded the&#13;
positions.&#13;
The cheerleaders will, be&#13;
cheering for the basketball&#13;
games and traveling with the&#13;
team to Some of the away games.&#13;
They will also cheer at the major&#13;
track, swimming and tencing&#13;
events '&#13;
lost many of their serves into the&#13;
net. In second round action,&#13;
Lewis went on to also defeat&#13;
Carroll 15-12, 12-15, 15-10. In the&#13;
final round of play found'&#13;
Parks ide vs. Carroll, with the&#13;
Rangers ready for revenge after&#13;
their loss to Carroll -a few&#13;
weekends back. In a very well&#13;
played volleyball match, from&#13;
Parkside's stendpotnt, they&#13;
defeated Carroll in two games&#13;
straight 15-7, 15-10.&#13;
In speaking with Coach Draft,&#13;
she commented "We seemed to&#13;
be a slow starting team, our&#13;
second match is always better&#13;
than our first. We'll be working&#13;
on this and trying to overcome it&#13;
before the state tournament,&#13;
November 11 and 12. One good&#13;
point is that the team again&#13;
demonstrated' its ability "to pull&#13;
together when they are down "&#13;
The Volleyball team's next&#13;
match will be another triangular&#13;
at home, on Friday, November 4&#13;
at 6;30 p.m. at the P.E. Bldg.&#13;
They'll by playing against North&#13;
Central and lake Forrest" both&#13;
teams are from Illinois.&#13;
sports&#13;
Parbide .occer team lo.e. to IUinoi.&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
shoulder, which means its&#13;
doubtful ,f he'll be back m time&#13;
to finish out the season&#13;
According to Coach Hal&#13;
Henderson, "We played a&#13;
basically defensive game. The&#13;
team played very well even&#13;
though they lost, we were JUst&#13;
-out matched" Their next game&#13;
will be for the Dutrict&#13;
championship against Platteville,&#13;
at 1200 Saturday,&#13;
November 5, to be played there&#13;
If they Win they'll be traveling to&#13;
Minnesota for the regronal&#13;
playoffs.&#13;
On Saturday, October 22nd,&#13;
the Parks Ide Soccer players were&#13;
beat by nationally ranked&#13;
Eastern lllmors by a score of 5-0,&#13;
here at Parkside&#13;
Parkside's defense started the&#13;
game well, holding the score to&#13;
0-0 for the first 30 minutes of&#13;
play By the end of the first hall&#13;
though, Parks ide was down 2-0,&#13;
and In the end lost 5-0. Yet the&#13;
biggest loss carne in the last few&#13;
minutes of play when goalie Dan&#13;
Brieschke re-seoer ated hIS&#13;
ISHIRTS+&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
3900 Erie Street. Racine 414-639-6882&#13;
Open Daily 9am-9pm&#13;
Saturday 9am-5: 30pm&#13;
3. Three word. containing 5 "e's":&#13;
Your challenge is to spell a word, or words, using the letters shown below.&#13;
Each word must contain the letter the indicated number of times.&#13;
2. A word containing 5 "a's":&#13;
4. Fo~r word. containing 4 "o's":&#13;
5. Two word. containing 4 ..u' ... :&#13;
When there's a challenge,&#13;
quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope 90u have some fun with the .challenge.&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon is the Number 1 beer In&#13;
Milwaukee: beer capital of the world. .&#13;
That's why we have the confidence to Issue&#13;
another challenge-the Pabst challenge. Taste and&#13;
compare Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other prem,u,!,&#13;
beer. You'll like Pabst because Blue Ribbon quality&#13;
means the best-tasting beer you can gel. _&#13;
Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through.&#13;
PABST BREWING COMPANY, M'lwaukee. W,s Peo"a HeIghts. III Newark. N J, los Angeles Cal,I Pabst. Geo'gla&#13;
snoru nurru 'Srl0lndnJ::&gt;sun 'i WOOJlOOll::&gt;S'wooJ"IIooq 'jOOl$IOO, ',oOJdIOO.:l .-&#13;
Jada.np~k 'a::&gt;uapuadapJalu, 'a::&gt;ua:lU"Jal'3 £ e'QlI'pl:lelqy c: ~llIiQISIMPU. l :' •• IUY&#13;
sports&#13;
Vol-leyball team&#13;
wins invitational&#13;
Parkside soccer team loses to lllinoi&#13;
b Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Saturda Octob r 22nd,&#13;
the Parkside Soccer pla ers were&#13;
beat b nationally ranked&#13;
Eastern Illinois by a scor of 5-0,&#13;
here at Parkside&#13;
Parks,de's defense started the&#13;
game well, holding the score to&#13;
0-0 for the first 30 minute of&#13;
play By the end of the first half&#13;
though, Parkside was down 2-0,&#13;
and in the end lost 5-0. Yet the&#13;
biggest loss came m th last few&#13;
minutes of play when goalie Dan&#13;
Brieschke re-separated his&#13;
hould r, wh, h m an ,t&#13;
doubtful 1f he'll b b in time&#13;
to finish out th on&#13;
Coach Hal&#13;
play d a&#13;
ame Th&#13;
II v n&#13;
champion hip a am t&#13;
die, at 12 00 aturda •,&#13;
ov mb r 5, to be play d th re.&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
On Friday, October 21, the&#13;
Parkside Women's Volleyball&#13;
team traveled to the 2nd Annual&#13;
Whitewater Invitational, to bring&#13;
home the first place trophy of&#13;
the two-day tournament.&#13;
In pool play the Rangers won&#13;
three out of four, 11 point two&#13;
game matches_. They defeated&#13;
Rock Valley 11-5, 11-6; Marquette&#13;
11-8, 11-4; and UWOshkosh&#13;
8-11, 11-6, 12-10. Their&#13;
only loss being to UW-Platteville&#13;
11-0, 1-11, 5-11. In the&#13;
semi-finals Parkside defeated&#13;
Whitewater 8-15, 15-6, 15-5, in a&#13;
two out of three match. In the&#13;
finals, the Rangers again met&#13;
UW-Oshkosh in a three out of&#13;
five game match. Parkside beat&#13;
them rapidly, winning three&#13;
straight games 15-7, 15-7, 15-12;&#13;
to capture first place.&#13;
In a triangular meet at&#13;
Parkside, tuesday, October 26,&#13;
the Rangers met Lewis University&#13;
--i.nd Carroll Coll.ege. In the first&#13;
round of play, UW-P was beat by&#13;
Lewis 11-5, 15-13, 0-15. The&#13;
Parkside , players were not&#13;
working very well together, and&#13;
Parkside spirit&#13;
born or re born&#13;
by Mary Lasswell&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Parkside's school --spirit ,s&#13;
being reborn. This year twentythree&#13;
girls tried out to fill the&#13;
eight openings on the cheerleading&#13;
squad . Two girls were'&#13;
held over from last year's squad.&#13;
They are Debbie Catlatt and&#13;
Crystal McCoy . Six girls were&#13;
chosen to be regulars on the&#13;
squad. They are Lowrie Melotik,&#13;
Lynn Sage , Noreen Myers,&#13;
Pamela Mitchell, Cindy Johnson&#13;
and Shiela Taylor. The two&#13;
alternates are Sheryl Setum and&#13;
Cheviere Lomax.&#13;
The judges, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Johnson, Barb Lawson, Linda&#13;
Draft, Sue Tobachnik and&#13;
Adviser Shirly Smirling awarded&#13;
each girls points on how well&#13;
they did in each event. The&#13;
events they were judged on&#13;
were: how well they did a group&#13;
cheer, a cartwheel, a solo cheer&#13;
of their choice, a solo stunt, and&#13;
their overall appearance. The&#13;
girls with the eight highest&#13;
scores were awarded the&#13;
positions.&#13;
The cheerleaders wi II be&#13;
cheering for the basketball&#13;
games and traveling with the&#13;
team to some of the away games.&#13;
They will also cheer at the major&#13;
track, swimming and tencing&#13;
P.vents.&#13;
If th • wm th ~11 be tra eling to •&#13;
Minnesota for the regional&#13;
pla offs&#13;
lost many of their serves into the&#13;
net. In second round action,&#13;
Lewis went on to also defeat&#13;
Carroll 15-12, 12-15, 15-10. In the&#13;
final round of play found&#13;
Parkside vs. Carroll, with the&#13;
Rangers ready for revenge after&#13;
their loss to Carroll ·a few&#13;
weekends back. In a very well&#13;
played volleyball match, from&#13;
Parkside's standpoint, they&#13;
defeated Carroll in two games&#13;
straight 15-7, 15-10.&#13;
second match is always better&#13;
than our first. We'll be working&#13;
on this and trying to overcome 1t&#13;
before the state tournament,&#13;
November 11 and 12. One good&#13;
point is that the team again&#13;
demonstrated its ability to pull&#13;
together when they are down ."&#13;
The Volleyball team's next&#13;
match will be another triangular&#13;
at home, on Friday, November 4&#13;
at 6:30 p .m. at the P.E. Bldg.&#13;
They'll by playing against North&#13;
Central and Lake Forrest,· both&#13;
teams are from Illinois.&#13;
ISHIRTS+&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
In speaking with Coach Draft,&#13;
she commented "We seemed to&#13;
be a slow starting team, our&#13;
3900 Erie Str9et. Reane 414-639-6662&#13;
Open Daily 9am-9pm&#13;
Saturday 9am-5: 30pm I&#13;
Your challenge is to spel! a word, or words, using the letters shown below.&#13;
Each word must contain the letter the indicated number of times.&#13;
1. A word containing 6 "i's":&#13;
2. A word containing 5 "a's":&#13;
3. Three words containing 5 "e's" :&#13;
4. Four words containing 4 "o's":&#13;
5. Two words containing 4 "u's" :&#13;
When there's a challenge, quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope 9ou have some fun with the ~hallenge.&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon is the Number 1 beer in&#13;
Milwaukee: beer capital of the world. .&#13;
That's why we have the confidence to issue&#13;
another challenge-the Pabst challenge. Taste_and&#13;
compare Pabst Blue Ribbon to any other premium&#13;
beer. You'll like Pabst because Blue Ribbon quality&#13;
meaAs the best-tasting beer you can get.&#13;
Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
II&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through. PABST BREWING COMPANY, Milwaukee w ,s Peoria He1gh1s . Ill ewark NJ Los Angeles . Catir Pabst. Georgia&#13;
snonunwn1 ·sno1ndn1:,sun c; woo,100~:,s ·woo, ooq ·100111001 ·,oo,d100.i • Htdaa)(aaq ·a:,uapuadapH:t1u1 ·a::,ua:,saA.HIJl3 t e,qepa:,e,qy z -'t111Cl1S1MPUt l ·,•••uw &#13;
news&#13;
,United Council supports&#13;
Student .Regent ,BiIlAB604&#13;
"&#13;
Reading:&#13;
no big deal?&#13;
(CPS) - College students are&#13;
no longer being asked to handle&#13;
as much required reading as their&#13;
counterparts of 15 or 20 years&#13;
ago, according to a sport survey&#13;
taken by the New York Times.&#13;
"Ten years ago, anyone&#13;
coming to college would have&#13;
read book, like 'Huckleberry&#13;
Finn,' or 'The Hunchback of&#13;
Notre Dame' but now they&#13;
haven't and what they do read&#13;
tends to be faddish, comtemporary&#13;
and of their own culture,"&#13;
said Perry Lentz, an assoctate "&#13;
professor of English at Kenyon&#13;
College in Ohio.&#13;
But some believe that the&#13;
situation is not as negative as it&#13;
appears.&#13;
"If we do read less, and I'm not&#13;
ready to concede this in every&#13;
case, it is partly a function that&#13;
we ask them to do more with&#13;
what they read," said William B.&#13;
Coley of the English department&#13;
at Wesleyan.&#13;
"I think students do more&#13;
interesting things ... " he said.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR. YOU!&#13;
Come Today See \Ours.&#13;
quality comnercial printers&#13;
1417 50th sireet . 658-8990&#13;
At an Assembly Education Committee meeting Wednesday&#13;
October 19, United Council strongly supported AS 604, a bill that&#13;
would create student membership on the UW Board of Regents.&#13;
United Council CUe) legislative Affairs Director, Rob Stevens, told&#13;
the committee that there is a need for formal student participation on&#13;
the board. While emphasizing that the UW Regents and Central&#13;
Administration have a tradition of being open with United Council,&#13;
Stevens encouraged the committee "not to consider this matter of&#13;
access to the Board moot just because there is a tradition of relative&#13;
openness to student opinion. Students have a continuing struggle to&#13;
be listened to and taken seriously."&#13;
Student participation&#13;
United Council stated that there were three issues related to the&#13;
student regent proposal, the nature of a "constituent" board, student&#13;
accessto the beard, and the selection" of the students. The fear of the&#13;
Regents becoming a constituent board mired in interest group&#13;
rhetoric is not valid according to United Council. Student&#13;
membership would not increase the amount of board time devoted to&#13;
student issues unless there was a need for extended discussion.&#13;
Stevens remarked that "students are not a mere interest group in the&#13;
university decision making process." I&#13;
Both UC and Wisconsin Student Association (WSA) President Paul&#13;
Rusk stressed the need for formal student access to the Regents.&#13;
Present student involvement at the system wide level is informal and&#13;
"is dependent on the good will of the Regent'," said Rusk. "The&#13;
general make up of the Board can change, thus leaving the students&#13;
out in the cold; formal student membership on the Board will prevent&#13;
this." Stevens indicated that while the chancellors and faculty ha~e&#13;
their system-wide policy forums funded by the university, the&#13;
students have had to develop and fund their system-wide&#13;
involvement in governance out of their own pockets. "Students&#13;
should have formal access to the board in the interests of parity."&#13;
Precedent for student involvement&#13;
United Council also emphasized that the student regents would&#13;
have to be selected by students in order to be credible as s(udent&#13;
representatives. Stevens indicated that there is precedent for&#13;
ex-officio Regent membership in Wisconsin with the State&#13;
Superintendent of Schools and the VTAE Board President serving in&#13;
that capacity, and in both the SUNY (State Universities of New York)&#13;
and CUNY (City Universities of New York) systems the system student&#13;
association presidents serve as ex-officio student regents. In the two&#13;
California systems, Florida, Purdue, and Indiana, the student trustees&#13;
are chosen by the governor from a list of candidates submitted by the&#13;
students. Whoever the student regents are, they must be responsive,&#13;
and accountable to the students in the system.&#13;
UW-Centrat Administration representative Wally Lemon testified&#13;
in opposition to the bill on behalf of Regent John Lavine. In a letter&#13;
to the committee, Lavine related his experience with student&#13;
membership on the Board of Trustees of Coker College (Minnesota)&#13;
where, he felt the problems of "tokenism" and decreased diversity-of&#13;
student input were detrimental to student interests. Lavine&#13;
concluded that adequate student input to the board is best served by&#13;
maintaining the present system.&#13;
Rep. Dave Clarenbach, sponsor and author of A.B 604 told the&#13;
committee that students should have a significant role in the&#13;
university decision making- process. he felt that this was consistent&#13;
with the growing consumer movement, and that those who are most&#13;
affected by decisions should participate in making those decisions.&#13;
He urged the committee to recognize the need for, and importance&#13;
of student participation on the regent level, and pass AS 604.&#13;
Members of the Education Committee with universities in their&#13;
districts include Rep,. Flintrop (Oshkosh), Miller (Madi,on), and&#13;
Travis (Platteville).&#13;
Pie poli ics gaining&#13;
slapstick credibility&#13;
(CPS) - "Co ~o hell you asshole," said E. Howard Hunt, scraping Despite such forebears: pieing lacked, as Marx pointed out in his&#13;
the new politics off his face. Hunt had just been pied; a fate he shares "18th Brurnaire", a concrete praxis. It attained puberty one frigid day&#13;
with a stellar lineup stretching from Bill Buckley and Daniel in Washington DC, 'when Yippie Tom Fourcade blasted a member of&#13;
Moynihan to anti-feminist Phyllis Schlafly. the Presidential Commission on Obscenity and Pornography.&#13;
c This evolution from pastry to politics is not a recent phenomena. Although history records the year as 1970 it does not mention the&#13;
While some historians seepieing as a twentieth century update of the flavor of that historic pie. '&#13;
medieval custom of throwing the gauntlet, most trace its theoretical Lull in pieing&#13;
roots to the anarchic slapstick of Laurel &amp; Hardy and Soupy Sales. After Fourcade, pieing hit a lull. For years you would read of a few&#13;
\. . scattered pie-niks splattering this or that obnoxious luminary, but the Big brother whole thing seemed like another leftist confection and not the real&#13;
pap. Like the early sDs, it lacked a program.&#13;
t P d It was Aron Kay who. figuratively speaking, arrived on the sealed&#13;
a ur ue train and read the situation correctly. For three years Kay brooded&#13;
over Fourcade's historic heave. He brooded in the New York.Cttv&#13;
subwevs. he brooded over cappucino in the Village, he brooded at&#13;
the latest Warhol opening. Then, in 1973, he propelled a tentative,&#13;
first pie at guru-new Rennie Davis. He missed.&#13;
"Press the flesh"&#13;
A wiser and wilier Kay attributes the miss to poor tactics. "When&#13;
push comes to shove," he said, "you got to press the flesh and that&#13;
means there is no substitute for body contact. It's the only way I&#13;
know of to intensify the contradictions between the pie. and the&#13;
mighty." Like a good guerilla, the practiced pier needs patience,&#13;
surprise and an ability to fade comparable to a good pair of Levis.&#13;
Kay's west coast com padre is Frankie Lee, who specializes in the&#13;
personalized pie. He greeted the cerebral experimenter Jose Delgado&#13;
with a pie of cowbrains and tomato sauce. Eldridge Cleaver received&#13;
an oreo cream pie. "~hy do I do it," asks the rhecorical, introspective&#13;
Lee? "For one thing it's not as much work as organizing the working&#13;
class and its less boring,"&#13;
Pieticipatory democracy&#13;
Several proponents of pieticipatory democracy have come to grief&#13;
at th~ hands of humorless, enraged mobs. Pat Halley, who creamed&#13;
~ess.!ah Maharaj ji, had his skull fractured by a gang of premies.&#13;
Yippie Steve Coni iff, who polished off Ohio Covernor ~hodes faces a&#13;
possible seven months in jail. \ '{&#13;
C?ne plus for the politics of pie is media hype. The Vancouver&#13;
pieing of Eldridge Cleaver drew more coverage in Montreal papers&#13;
than a 10,000 strong union march held that same day in Montreal.&#13;
Aron Kay, who has parlayed his piepularity into the New York City&#13;
mayoral .race, inaugurated his campaign against incumbent Abe&#13;
B~ame With an apple crrumb pie and proclaimed that Beame was "the&#13;
biggest crllmb in. the big apple."&#13;
~), . N\~G\C&#13;
~ O~O.. ~\t'ee'&#13;
. \ ~4)\{\. '" ,tn3&#13;
Open 3Z.· ~\~_'5~3&#13;
Mon. &amp; Fri. ~ ..... .,.rioe. .A." ()34'- '&#13;
Noontii9~~(4~" ., '&#13;
Sat, Noon u f 5 '" 1V--&#13;
MAGIC TRiCKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
HAVE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
With This Coupon.&#13;
1 Per Customer YOW IAA&#13;
- .Hours&#13;
M.;.. T&#13;
7 p.m••&#13;
lOp.m.&#13;
Tappers'&#13;
,.,~~ ....."'"- '25'&#13;
Ladies Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
o. till Corner&#13;
of 57t11 &amp; 23 Aye&#13;
Mic.&#13;
35'&#13;
Mlxld Drinks&#13;
40'&#13;
(CPS) - Purdue University in&#13;
Lafayette, Ind. is using videotape&#13;
cameras to patrol crowds at&#13;
football game, .&#13;
The filmin'g lias been in&#13;
operation for two years but the&#13;
practice wai riot revealed until&#13;
one of the camera's victims&#13;
found out h~ was in movies.&#13;
Plirduf Police Chief Donald&#13;
lanes called the technique very&#13;
successful- in spotting illegal&#13;
alcohGI.andmarijuana use. The&#13;
camera also helped to assist&#13;
r:rnergency'situations that arose&#13;
at the games.&#13;
Early in October, eight people&#13;
were arrested and taken to jail on&#13;
dope charges, thanks to the&#13;
camera's roving eye. '&#13;
In addition to the camera&#13;
officers sit in the press box at the&#13;
footbal t games and scan the&#13;
crowd with binoculars.&#13;
The film, says Jones, is used as&#13;
evidence in Court. The taping is&#13;
legal and does not invade&#13;
privacy laws or constitute police&#13;
harrassment, according to Jones.&#13;
/&#13;
news&#13;
Reading:&#13;
no big deal?&#13;
(CPS) - College students are&#13;
no longer being asked to handle&#13;
as much required reading as their&#13;
counterparts of 15 or 20 years&#13;
ago, according to a sport survey&#13;
taken by the New York Times.&#13;
"Ten years ago, anyone&#13;
coming to college would have&#13;
read books like 'Huckleberry&#13;
Finn,' or 'The Hunchback of&#13;
Notre Dame' but now they&#13;
haven't and what they do read&#13;
tends to be faddish, comtempor-'&#13;
ary and of their own culture,"&#13;
said Perry Lentz, an associate&#13;
professor of English at Kenyon&#13;
College in Ohio.&#13;
But some believe that the&#13;
situation is not as negative as it&#13;
appears.&#13;
"If we do read less, and I'm not&#13;
ready to concede this in every&#13;
case, it is partly a function that&#13;
we ask them to do more with&#13;
what they read," said William B.&#13;
Coley of the English department&#13;
at Wesleyan.&#13;
"I think students do more&#13;
interesting things. " he said.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR_ YOU!&#13;
.United Council supports ,,&#13;
Student ·Regent.Bill AB604&#13;
At an Assembly Education Committee meeting Wednesday&#13;
October 19, United Council strongly supported AB 604, a bill that&#13;
would create student membership on the UW Board of Regents.&#13;
United Council (UC) Legislative Affairs Director, Rob Stevens, told&#13;
the committee that there is a need for formal student participation on&#13;
the board. While emphasizing that the UW Regents and Central&#13;
Administration have a tradition of being open with United Council,&#13;
Stevens encouraged the committee "not to consider thfs matter of&#13;
access to the Board moot just because there is a tradition of relative&#13;
openness to student opinion Students have a continuing struggle to&#13;
be listened to and taken seriously."&#13;
Student participation&#13;
United Council stated that there were three issues related to the&#13;
student regent prop~sal, the nature of a "constituent" board, student&#13;
access to the ,board, and the selection of the students_ The fear of the&#13;
Regents becoming a constituent board mired in interest group&#13;
rhetoric is not valid according to United Council. Student&#13;
membership would not increase the amount of board time devoted to&#13;
student issues unless there was a need for extended discussion.&#13;
Stevens remarked that "students are not a mere interest group in the&#13;
university decision making process."&#13;
Both UC and Wisconsin Student Association (WSA) Presidenl Paul&#13;
Rusk stressed the need for formal student access to the Regents.&#13;
Present student involvement at the system wide level is informal and&#13;
"is dependent on the good will of the Regents," said Rusk. "The&#13;
general make up of the Board can change, thus leaving the students&#13;
out in the cold; formal student membership on the Board will prevent&#13;
this." Stevens indicated that while the chancellors and faculty ha~e&#13;
their system-wide policy forums funded by the university, the&#13;
students have had to develop and fund their system-wide&#13;
involvement in governance out of their own pockets. "Students&#13;
should have formal access to the board in the interests of parity."&#13;
Precedent for student involvement&#13;
United Council also emphasized that the student regents would&#13;
have to be selected by students in order to be credible as sfudent&#13;
representatives. Stevens indicated that there is precedent for&#13;
ex-officio Regent members.hip in Wisconsin with the State&#13;
Superintendent of Schools and the VT AE Board Pr~sident serving in&#13;
that capacity, and in both the SUNY (State Universities of New York)&#13;
and CUNY (City Universities of New York) systems the system student&#13;
association presidents serve as ex-officio student regents. In the t',Vo&#13;
California systems, Florida, Purdue, and Indiana, the student trustees&#13;
are chosen by the governor from a list of candidates submitted by the&#13;
students. Whoever the student regents are, they must be responsive,&#13;
and accountable to the students in the system.&#13;
UW-Central Administration representative Wally Lemon testified&#13;
in opposition to the bill on behalf of Regent John Lavine. In a letter&#13;
to the committee, Lavine related his experience with student&#13;
membership on the Board of Trustees of Coker College (Minnesota)&#13;
where, he felt the problems of "tokenism" and decreased diversity-of&#13;
student input were detrimental to student interests. Lavine&#13;
concluded that adequate student input to the board is best served by&#13;
maintaining the present system.&#13;
Rep . Dave Clarenbach, sponsor and author of hB 604 told the&#13;
committee that students should have a significant role in the&#13;
university decision making process. he felt that this was consistent&#13;
with the growing consumer movement, and that those who are most&#13;
affected by decisions should participate in making those decisions.&#13;
He urged the committee to recognize the need for, and importance&#13;
of student participation on the regent level, and pass AB 604.&#13;
Members of the Education Committee with universities in their&#13;
districts include Reps. Flintrop (Oshkosh), Miller (Madison), and&#13;
Travis (Platteville).&#13;
Pie poli ics gaining·&#13;
slapstick · credibility&#13;
(CPS} - "Go to hell you asshole," said E. Howard Hunt, scraping Despite such forebears; pieing lacked, as Marx pointed out in his&#13;
the new politics off his face. Hunt had just been pied; a fate he shares "18th Brumaire", a concrete praxis. It attained puberty one frigid day&#13;
with a stellar lineup stretching from Bill Buckley and Daniel in Washington DC,"when Yippie Tom Fourcade blasted a member of&#13;
Moynihan to anti-feminist Phyllis Schlafly. the Presidential Commission on Obscenity and Pornography.&#13;
This evolution from pastry to politics is not a recent phenomena. Alth&lt;;_ugh history records the year as 1970, it does not mention the&#13;
~hile some historians see pieing as a twentieth century update of the flavor of that historic pie.&#13;
medieval custom of throwing the gauntlet, most trace its theoretical Lull in pieing&#13;
roots to the anarchic slapstick of Laurel &amp; Hardy and Soupy Sales. After Fourcade, pieing hit a lull. For years you would read of a few&#13;
Big brother&#13;
at Purdue&#13;
(CPS) - Purdue University in&#13;
Lafayette, Ind. is using videotape&#13;
cameras to patrol crowds at&#13;
football games.&#13;
scattered pie-niks splattering this or that obnoxious luminary, but the&#13;
whole thing seemed like another leftist confection and not the real&#13;
pap. Like the early SOS, it lacked a program .&#13;
It was Aron Kay w.bo, figuratively speaking, arrived on the sealed&#13;
train and read the situation correctly. For three years Kay brooded&#13;
over Fourcade's historic heave. He brooded in the New York..City&#13;
subways, he brooded over cappucino in the Village, he brooded at&#13;
the latest Warhol opening. Then, in 1973; he propelled a tentative,&#13;
fir?t pie at guru-new Rennie Davis . He missed.&#13;
"Press the flesh"&#13;
MAGIC TRICK·s - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
The - filmin"g h~s been in&#13;
operation for two years but the&#13;
practice was riot revealed until&#13;
one of the camera's victims&#13;
found out he was in movies .&#13;
A wiser and wilier Kay attributes the miss to poor tactics . "When&#13;
push comes to shove," he said , "you got to press the flesh and that&#13;
means there is no substitute for body contact. It's the only way I&#13;
know of to intensify the contradictions between the pie and the&#13;
mighty." Like a good guerilla, the practiced pier needs patience, HAVE A FREE-DRINK ON THE BEAN surprise and an ability to fade comparable to a good pair of Levis .&#13;
With This Coupon -&#13;
1 Per Cu_stomer.&#13;
ladies Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
On tlle Corner&#13;
of 57111 &amp; 23 Ave.&#13;
YOWZAA&#13;
Hours&#13;
M~T&#13;
7p.m.-&#13;
10p.m.&#13;
Tappers25("&#13;
&#13;
Mic.&#13;
35c&#13;
Purduf Police Chief Donald&#13;
Jones called the technique very&#13;
successful in spotting illegal&#13;
-alcohol and marijuana use. The&#13;
camera also helped to assist&#13;
emergency situations that arose&#13;
at the games.&#13;
Early in October, eight people&#13;
were arrested and taken to jail on&#13;
dope charges, thanks to the&#13;
camera's roving eye. '&#13;
In addition to the camera&#13;
officers sit in the press box at th~&#13;
football games and scan the&#13;
crowd with binoculars.&#13;
The film, says Jones, is used as&#13;
evidence in court. The taping is&#13;
legal and does not invade&#13;
privacy laws or constitute police&#13;
harrassment, according to Jones.&#13;
Kay's west coast compadre is Frankie Lee, who specializes in the&#13;
personalized pie. He greeted the cerebral experimentor Jose Delgado&#13;
with a pie of cowbrains and tomato sauce. Eldridge Cleaver received&#13;
an oreo cream pie. "Why do I do it," asks the rhecorical, introspective&#13;
Lee? " For one thing it's not as much work as organizing the working&#13;
class and its less boring."&#13;
Pieticipatory democracy&#13;
Several proponents of pieticipatory democracy have come to grief&#13;
at the hands of humorless, enraged mobs . Pat Halley, who creamed&#13;
messiah Maharaj ji, had his skull fractured by a gang of premies.&#13;
Yipp1e Steve Conliff, who polished off Ohio Governor Rhodes faces a&#13;
poss1 "bl e seven months ) ' in jail. \&#13;
_ One plus for the politics of pie is media hype. The Vancouver&#13;
pieing of Eldridge Cleaver drew more coverage in Montreal papers&#13;
than a 10,CJ90 strong union march held that same day in Montreal.&#13;
Aron Kay, who _has parl~yed his piepularity into the New York City&#13;
mayoral _race, inaugurated his campaign against incumbent Abe&#13;
Beame with an apple &lt;1:rumb pie and proclaimed that Beame was "the&#13;
biggest crumb in the big apple." &#13;
Student paper&#13;
weaned&#13;
(CPS) - The Wildcat News &amp; Review in Chico,&#13;
California, joined the ranks of more than 100&#13;
student newspapers nationally late last spring when&#13;
the paper severed its umbilical cord to the university&#13;
and entered into a contractual arrangement&#13;
with the school.&#13;
Overrtle past few years student newspapers&#13;
which could possibly support themselves on combined&#13;
advertising revenue and student fees money,&#13;
have been incr~singly opting for a contractual&#13;
arrangement with the student government and/or&#13;
the administration.&#13;
The arrangement benefits everyone. The student&#13;
paper gets a healthy dose of reality as it learns that&#13;
advertisers are the lifeblood of a newspaper.&#13;
The student government learns that _with a&#13;
contract it can not expect to ma-nipulate the&#13;
editorial content of the paper or threaten it with a&#13;
funding cut the first time the president of the&#13;
student government is criticized in print.&#13;
The students are also freed to use and develop in&#13;
their own skills as journalists without an instructor&#13;
breathing down their necks.&#13;
Although many administrators over the years&#13;
have treated their students as less than journalists,&#13;
court rulings haven't. Most censorship and ha-rassment&#13;
of the college media results from lack of&#13;
information rather than from genuine power-mad&#13;
malice.&#13;
The birth of The Wildcat News &amp; Review is&#13;
significant since it embodies the major issues that&#13;
have been at play in the.college media cver tbe last&#13;
year. The Wildcat had always had a stormy relationship&#13;
with the school, expecially as the Wildcat&#13;
continued to wander off-campus and increase its&#13;
coverage of community events.&#13;
Reporters sit on&#13;
secret documents&#13;
(CPS) - The editors at the Stanford Daily, Stanford University's&#13;
student daily, walked right into a scoop and all it took was a used&#13;
desk purchased from the university last month.&#13;
Two weeks ago, the Stanford Daily bought a used desk which had&#13;
formerly been used by the foreign studies program. One drawer still&#13;
held some confidential documents.&#13;
The records were 500 pages of confidential correspondence&#13;
exchanged between 1962 and 1972 by Stanford's overseas studies&#13;
headquarters and directors of its special studies campuses in England,&#13;
France Germany and Austria. The material referred to students'&#13;
medical and sexual situations. drug habits, and other matters&#13;
protected by both university rufes and federal statutes regarding&#13;
confidentiality .&#13;
"It's as though the Nixon White House had delivered its own secret&#13;
files to the Washington Post,".said Stanford Daily editor Jacob Young.&#13;
An embarrassed director of the overseas studies program_&#13;
commented, "I really can't say how it happened."&#13;
Editor Young is awaiting word from the newspaper's lawyer on&#13;
what to do with the secret papers now.&#13;
But the beans have been spilled and the first fall issue contained&#13;
the story headlined "University Mishandles Overseas Records."&#13;
u(]rn 1]~(]rn(]OO~&#13;
~(Dm§ (DU&#13;
1]~(]rn(]OO~ (JrnU~[$§&#13;
•&#13;
UnNersl1 Imports&#13;
SERVICE·PARTS CAR SALES&#13;
2301 OlKand Ave.,. Racine&#13;
554-9412 Racine 552.$580 Kenosha&#13;
news&#13;
The Oriana Trio: left to right, Harry Sturm, Carol&#13;
Bell, Eden Vaning. Dedicated to lithe enrichment of&#13;
those who love chamber music", the ensemble&#13;
played more' than 20 concerts last yeAr in Kenosha&#13;
schools and this year will present A concert leries in&#13;
the R.J.cine Ichoob.&#13;
Oriana trio plays Shostakovich&#13;
The first concert of the&#13;
1977-78 season in Parkside's New&#13;
Music Series will be presented&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 6, at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater,&#13;
under the direction of August&#13;
Wegner.&#13;
The featured work will be the&#13;
Shostakovich Piano Trio performed&#13;
by the Oriana Trio,&#13;
UW-P's faculty chamber ensemble,&#13;
consisting of violinist&#13;
Eden Vaning, cellist Harry Sturm&#13;
and pianist Carol Bell.&#13;
Other works programmed are&#13;
Mario Davidowsky's "Synchronisms&#13;
for Cello and Magnetic&#13;
Tape", performed by John White&#13;
who gave the world premiere of&#13;
the work; White's "Variations for&#13;
Clarinet and Piano", performed&#13;
by clarinetist Timothy Bell and&#13;
pianist Wegner; and Olivier&#13;
Messiaen's "Cantevodjava", performed&#13;
by Stephen Swedish,&#13;
UW-P artist-in-residence.&#13;
Concert-goers are invited to&#13;
attend a wine and cheese&#13;
reception after the concert.&#13;
Other programs in the series&#13;
are scheduled for Sunday, Feb.&#13;
,2, and Friday, April 7. Those&#13;
performances will include the&#13;
premieres of several new works.&#13;
All concerts in the series are free.&#13;
Information on the series is&#13;
available from the UW-Parkside&#13;
Fine Arts Division Office&#13;
(Telephone 553-2481).&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
HOIII. 01the S.~•• ,I..&#13;
S..wlth&#13;
~~~&#13;
OPEl I u. Tl 11:38 P.1.&#13;
2615Wu~I"'" Alt. 614-2171&#13;
APPLICA TIONS ARE NOW&#13;
BEING ACCEPTED FOR 1978&#13;
Mailletter of application and resume to&#13;
Don Kopriva&#13;
Public Information Office -,&#13;
U niversi ty ofWisconsin- Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Phone 551-2404&#13;
Applications due on&#13;
or before Nov. 9th,&#13;
Student paper&#13;
weaned&#13;
(CPS) - The Wildcat News &amp; Review in Chico,&#13;
California, joined the ranks of more than 100&#13;
student newspapers nationally late last spring when&#13;
the paper severed its umbilical cord to the university&#13;
and entered into a contractual arrangement&#13;
with the school.&#13;
Overtne past few years student newspapers&#13;
which could possibly support themselves on combined&#13;
advertising revenue and student fees money,&#13;
have been incr~singly opting for a contractual&#13;
,- arrangement with the student government and/ or&#13;
the administration .&#13;
The arrangement benefits everyone. The student&#13;
paper gets a healthy dose of reality as it learns that&#13;
advertisers are the I ifeblood of a newspaper.&#13;
The student government learns that _ with a&#13;
contract it can not expect to manipulate the&#13;
editorial content of the paper or threaten it with a&#13;
funding cut the first time the president of the&#13;
student government is criticized in print.&#13;
The students are also freed to use and develop in&#13;
their own skills as journalists without an instructor&#13;
breathing down their necks.&#13;
Although many administrators over the years&#13;
have treated their studeryts as less than journalists,&#13;
court rulings haven't . Most censorship and harrassment&#13;
of the college media results from lack of&#13;
information rather than from genuine power-mad&#13;
malice.&#13;
The birth of The Wildcat News &amp; Review is&#13;
significant since it embodies the major issues that&#13;
have been at play in the college media ove the last&#13;
year. The Wildcat had always had a stormy relationship&#13;
with the school, expecially as the Wildcat&#13;
continued to wander off-campus and increase its&#13;
coverage of community events.&#13;
Reporters sit on&#13;
secret documents&#13;
(CPS) - The editors at the Stanford Daily, Stanfotd University's&#13;
student daily, walked right into a scoop and all it took was a used&#13;
desk purchased from the university last month .&#13;
Two weeks ago, the Stanford Daily bought a used desk which had&#13;
formerly been used by the foreign studies program. One drawer still&#13;
held some confidential documents.&#13;
The records were 500 pages of confidential correspondence&#13;
exchanged between 1962 and 1972 by Stanford's overseas studies&#13;
headquarters and directors of its special studies campuses in England,&#13;
France, Germany and Austria. The material referred to students'&#13;
medical and sexual situations, drug habits, and other matters&#13;
protected by both university rules and federal statutes regarding&#13;
confidentiality.&#13;
"It's as though the Nixon White House had delivered its own secret&#13;
files to the Washington Post,".said Stanford Daily editor Jacob Young.&#13;
An embarrassed director of the overseas studies program _&#13;
commented, " I really can't say how it happened."&#13;
Editor Young is awaiting word from the newspaper's lawyer on&#13;
what to do with the secret papers now.&#13;
But the beans have been spilled and the first fall issue contained&#13;
the story headlined "University Mishandles Overseas Records."&#13;
(l(]GJ ($(B(]l](]00ij&#13;
(B(DGJ§ (D'I]&#13;
L$CBCDl](]00ij lluJOCBl:E§&#13;
-&#13;
Uaiversal Imports&#13;
SERVICE-PARTS CAR SALES&#13;
2301 Durand Ave.,_ Racine&#13;
554-9412 Racine 552-8580 Kenosha&#13;
news&#13;
The Oriana Trio: left to right, Harry Sturm, Carol&#13;
Bell, Eden Vaning. Dedicated to "the enrichment of&#13;
those who love chamber music", the ensemble&#13;
played more than 20 concerts lut year in Keno ha&#13;
schools and this year will present a concert series in&#13;
the Racine schools.&#13;
•&#13;
ra a trio&#13;
The first concert of the&#13;
1977-78 season in Parkside's New&#13;
Music Series will be presented&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 6, at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater,&#13;
under the direction of August&#13;
Wegner.&#13;
The featured work will be the&#13;
Shostakovich Piano Trio performed&#13;
by the Oriana Trio,&#13;
UW-P's faculty chamber ensemble,&#13;
consisting of violinist&#13;
Eden Vaning, cellist Harry Sturm&#13;
and pianist Carol Bell.&#13;
Other works programmed are&#13;
Mario Davidowsky's "Synchronisms&#13;
for Cello and Magnetic&#13;
Tape", performed by John White&#13;
who gave the world premiere of&#13;
the work; White's "Variations for&#13;
Clarinet and Piano", performed&#13;
by clarinetist Timothy Bell and&#13;
pianist Wegner; and Olivier&#13;
ays Shostakovich&#13;
Messiaen's "Canteyodjaya", performed&#13;
by Stephen Swedish,&#13;
UW-P artist-in-residence.&#13;
Concert-goers are invited to&#13;
attend a wine and cheese&#13;
reception after the concert.&#13;
Other programs in the series&#13;
are scheduled for Sunday, Feb.&#13;
12, and Friday, April 7. Those&#13;
performances will include the&#13;
premieres of several new works.&#13;
All concerts in the series are free.&#13;
Information on the series is&#13;
available from the UW-Parkside&#13;
Fine Arts Division Office&#13;
(Telephone 553- 24811.&#13;
APPLICATIONS ARE NOW&#13;
BEING ACCEPTED FOR 1978&#13;
Mail letter of application and resume to&#13;
Phone 55~-2404&#13;
Applications due on&#13;
or before Nov. 9th.&#13;
Don Kopriva&#13;
Public Information Office&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141 &#13;
events&#13;
NOTES&#13;
Life Science Field Trip to Horicon Marsh 8:00 a.rn.,&#13;
Saturday, November 12, from Tallent Hall parking&#13;
lot. Return by 3:00 p.m. Brown bag lunch. $1.00&#13;
advanced fee. $1.50 after November 10. Contact&#13;
Richard Wagner at 639-3828.&#13;
classified&#13;
Wanted: 'The RANGER needs people, or Whatever, to&#13;
write feature etcrree. do book-play-meyl&amp;-&#13;
and-record reviews. Or anything else you&#13;
can think 01.&#13;
Please come to 'renent Hall, Am. 11287on&#13;
Mondays from 3:00 til 6:00.&#13;
Cocktail •• It.... or 00 go girl.&#13;
S3OO.-$400.wk, paid Florida vacation&#13;
and 1nsllrance. No hassles.&#13;
No experience neceS$liry, call (312)&#13;
634-3313.&#13;
Wanttd: Any old or new Johnny Cash&#13;
singles. Contact EVENTS 634-5680.&#13;
Brown tt.lr: Yes it Is me. Drama with&#13;
Polleck has never been 80 Interesting&#13;
before. Don't you agree? You were'eyelng&#13;
mealllastWedn~ybut I'll tell you something&#13;
honey. I look a helluva lot bettsr in the&#13;
evening. The Back seat Chick.&#13;
Wanted: part-Hme typist. Should be free&#13;
whole mornings or afternoons. Call&#13;
553-2228.&#13;
John:.. ThanKs for your slJpport last week.&#13;
You anl right about Mr. Jambols but tell me&#13;
what makes you 80 sure that I am male and&#13;
not female? Unlversltybf Vermont -lamron.&#13;
An Intereslecl'ella In the back row wants 10&#13;
know If the beMdlful bruMtte In the second&#13;
row of History 10'1, 11-11:50a.m., MWF., Is&#13;
spolten for. How about a date somellrne?&#13;
a.c.: SMt ChIck: I am also In Drama and sit&#13;
fairly near the front but every time I look for&#13;
you alii see Is that mouse blocking the view&#13;
with his death-like Iod!.s. Who the hell are&#13;
you? F ru8trated but not brown haired.&#13;
Math Club sponsors&#13;
hyperbolic space tallc&#13;
The Math Club will sponsor a&#13;
colloquium this Friday, November&#13;
4, on the subject of&#13;
"hyperbolic space". The 3.:30&#13;
talk, to be preceded by a coffee&#13;
hour, will feature Proles&#13;
Jorgensen, a Denmark native&#13;
who presently teaches at the&#13;
University of Minnesota, after&#13;
being Benjamin Pierce assistant&#13;
professor of math of Harvard&#13;
from 1975-1977.&#13;
Jorgensen's area of research is&#13;
that of discrete groups. This talk,&#13;
aimed at undergraduates, will be&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. in CL 107, preceded&#13;
by a coffee hour at 3 p.m. in CL&#13;
111.&#13;
Comm 'Arts Ga.llery&#13;
17~----'--l&#13;
I I&#13;
1~1&#13;
I OPEN 7 DAYS I&#13;
I Mon.-Sat 10 'til close I&#13;
I Sun. 6 'til close I&#13;
Grnquist 103 ! I&#13;
I NOON LUNCHES I&#13;
I Sandwiches 'til midnight - !&#13;
! I&#13;
I SAT. LADIES NITE I&#13;
II Ladies' Drinks Y2 Price - II I With date a 'til close I&#13;
L_~~JU~iO~J~~_J I&#13;
r- From Madison ----~I Friday No. 4th ,&#13;
t DR. BOP &amp; . ,&#13;
t THE HEADLINES I&#13;
t Featurl;9&#13;
p&#13;
.:&#13;
e&#13;
_ ~h:.: Raven ,&#13;
t&#13;
Advance $4.50 Pabst on ,&#13;
At the Door $5.00 . Tab 50' t&#13;
'f Vance's Bar t&#13;
l&#13;
1-94 &amp; Hy. 11 (Racine County)&#13;
r&#13;
---------'&#13;
UW-Parkside art faculty.&#13;
Holmes, who held a National&#13;
Endowment for the Arts craftsman&#13;
fellowship during 1976-77,&#13;
previously taught at UW-Mil-·&#13;
waukee. He has exhibited&#13;
throughout the Midwest and in&#13;
New York and had a one-man&#13;
invitational show last summer at&#13;
the Kohler Art Center in&#13;
Sheboygan. In 1975, he won a&#13;
major award at the Lakefront&#13;
Festival of the Arts at the&#13;
Milwaukee Art Center. He holds&#13;
an MFA-..degree from UW-Mad~&#13;
tson and also has studied mItalv.&#13;
Kohlstedt has .an MFA degree&#13;
Reading competence&#13;
test offered&#13;
The first offering of the Reading&#13;
Competence Test, a requirement&#13;
of the Parkstde-Collegiate&#13;
Skills Program, will be held&#13;
according to the following&#13;
schedule:&#13;
Monday, November 21:&#13;
English 101 students:&#13;
Students currently enrolled&#13;
in a Monday&#13;
class. CIests will be adrninistered&#13;
during the&#13;
regular class period in&#13;
the regular classrooms.)&#13;
Monday, November 21:&#13;
Non-English 101 students:&#13;
For students not&#13;
currently in English 101.&#13;
All such students must&#13;
register for the test in&#13;
the Educational Program&#13;
Support Office&#13;
(EPS)in the D-l level of&#13;
the library between&#13;
Oct. &lt;6, and Nov. 14.&#13;
. Students scoring 80&#13;
of'abova on the English&#13;
Placement test&#13;
but not enrolled in&#13;
Eng. 101 this semester.&#13;
- Transfer students&#13;
needing to complete&#13;
the Reading Competence&#13;
test.&#13;
The [aetest-groioing&#13;
Premium Beer in America.&#13;
On tap at Union ~quare&#13;
.~vM.-_::~ - . ..- .'"&#13;
Thursday, November 3&#13;
Life Science Club Meeting 5:00 p.m. in Union room&#13;
104. Drug Use and Human values will be discussed&#13;
by Richard J. Pomazal, Assistant Professor of&#13;
Psychology. Coffee and Kringle will be served.&#13;
Competence Test: No books, notes or calculators&#13;
allowed. GR 103.11-12:30,2-3:30, and 6-7:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday, November 4&#13;
Film A Clockwork Orange in Union Cinema. Show&#13;
at)8:00 p.m. Admission $1.00. .&#13;
Science: Dr. J. Gorman talks on Amoebae Genetics&#13;
in the S~ime Mold, Physarum Polvcephahnn. CL Art fal'ulty exhibits&#13;
_ 105.at 2.00 p.m. , ..&#13;
Science: Dr.. Bill Cordua- from UW River Falls will •&#13;
speak on Ancient Mountain Building Events of In&#13;
Wyoming and Montana;,&#13;
Saturday November 5 The P.arkside Art Faculty will&#13;
, .' present an exhibition from Oct.&#13;
Cross Country: USTFF Mid-America at \JW-P. Starts 26 through Nov. 17 in the&#13;
at 3:00 p.m. Communicat!on Arts Gallery.&#13;
C t 'Entertainment: features Peter Alsop, Formal opening of the show will&#13;
on empary . . .11b be Nov. 1, when a public&#13;
Paffrath and Dvkhuis. Advanced tickets WI .e reception will be held from 7 to 9&#13;
sold in the Union Square center. Starts at 9:00 In p.m.&#13;
the Union Square. Artists and their media are&#13;
Competence Test: Will be held in GR 103 at 10-11:30 Rollm Jansky, sculpture; John&#13;
Satre Murphy, ceramics: John&#13;
_a.m. No books, notes or calculators are allowed. Goray, paintings; Dennis BayuSoccer:&#13;
Parkside at UW-Platteville. Starts at 2:00 zick, prints and drawings; Dale&#13;
p m Kohlstedt, prints; and David&#13;
. . Valentine Holmes, sculpture.&#13;
Sunday November 6 Bayuzick, Kohlstedt and&#13;
Film A Clockwork Orange in Union Cinema. Show Holmes are new this year to the&#13;
begins at 7:30 p.m. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Music: Starring the Oriana Trio playing the,&#13;
Shostakovitch Piano Trio. CAT 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, November 9 ~&#13;
Film: Day for Night in the Union Cinema. Starts at&#13;
2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Movie: Inherit the Wind starring Spencer Tracy and&#13;
Frederic March. For reservations call the Golden&#13;
Rondelle, 554-2154. Free. Starts at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Women's Brown Bag Lunch: Florence Shipek of the&#13;
Anthropology facultv will talk on 'A Role Model&#13;
Of Our Own.' CL 111 (Faculty Lounge), at 12 noon.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment: Features the Stan Kenton&#13;
Orchestra .'&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES aDARD&#13;
PRESENTS THE&#13;
BO"&#13;
~&#13;
. HO~&#13;
.. SEARCHJOR&#13;
TOP IN&#13;
COLLEGIATE TALLENT _&#13;
l.i'-~· ' Y ~-~ -Apply Union&#13;
~~;(4' 207&#13;
JUdging Mon., Noy. 7&#13;
- TIME&#13;
10:00 to 10:50 a.m.&#13;
2:00 to 2:S0 p.m.&#13;
6:00 to 6:50 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, November 22:&#13;
English 101 students:&#13;
Students currently enrolled&#13;
irr a Tuesday&#13;
class. (Tests will. be administered&#13;
during the -&#13;
regular class period in&#13;
the regular classrooms.)&#13;
ROOM&#13;
Applications by&#13;
Fri., Noy. 4,&#13;
4:30 p.m.&#13;
~ath test offered&#13;
The "end of 1st 6 wee,&#13;
module" offering of the&#13;
Mathematics Competence Test&#13;
will be held according to the&#13;
below listed schedule on&#13;
Thursday and Saturday, Nov. 3&#13;
and 5 in GR 103. This test is a&#13;
requirement of the CoJJegiate&#13;
Skills Program.&#13;
Testing Schedule&#13;
Thursday, November 3:&#13;
11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.&#13;
2:00 p.m.- 3:30 p.m.&#13;
. 6:00 p.m.- 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Saturday: November 5:&#13;
10:00 a:m.-l1 :30 a.m.&#13;
from. UW-Milwaukee, where he&#13;
taught design and-was a project&#13;
assistant in printmaking and in&#13;
the Fine Arts Gallery. He also has&#13;
taught at the secondary school&#13;
level. .Bavuzick has an MFA&#13;
degree from Ohio University and&#13;
is a doctoral candidate there. He&#13;
also taught at Ohio and has&#13;
shown his painting in the East&#13;
and Midwest.&#13;
Regular gallery hours are&#13;
Mondays through Thursdays&#13;
from noon to 5 p.m., Tuesdays.&#13;
and Wednesdays from 7 to 10&#13;
p.m. and Fridays by appointment.&#13;
I&#13;
events&#13;
Thursday, November 3&#13;
Life Science Club Meeting 5:00 p.m. in Union room&#13;
104. Drug Use and Human values will be discussed&#13;
by Richard J. Pomazal, Assistant Professor of&#13;
Psychology. Coffee and Kringle will be served.&#13;
Competence Test: No books, notes or calculators&#13;
allowed. GR 103. 11-12:30, 2-3:30, and 6-7:30 p.m.&#13;
Math Club sponsors&#13;
hyperbolic space tallc&#13;
The Math Club will sponsor a being Benjamin Pierce assistant&#13;
colloquium this Friday, Novem- professor of math of Harvard&#13;
ber 4, on the subject of from 1975-1977.&#13;
"hyperbolic space". The 3.:30 Jorgensen's area of research is&#13;
Math test offered&#13;
talk, to be preceded by a coffee that of discrete groups. This talk,&#13;
Friday, November 4 hour, will feature Proles aimed at undergraduates, will be&#13;
Film A Clockwork Orange in Ur:iion Cinema. Show Jorgensen, a Denmark native at 3:30 p.m . in CL 107, preceded&#13;
The "end of 1st 8 weel..&#13;
module" offering of the&#13;
Mathematics Competence Test&#13;
will be held according to the&#13;
below listed schedule on&#13;
Thursday and Saturday, Nov. 3&#13;
and 5 in GR 103. This test is a&#13;
requirement of the Collegiate&#13;
Ski /Is Program .&#13;
who presently teaches at the by a coffee hour at 3 p.m . in CL at)8:00 p.m. Admission $1.00. University of Minnesota, after 111.&#13;
Testing Schedule&#13;
Thursday, November 3:&#13;
11 :00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.&#13;
2:00 p.m .- 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Science: Dr. J. Gorman talks on Amoebae Genetics • •&#13;
in the S~ime Mold, Physarum Polycephalum. CL Art faculty exh·,b,ts · 6:00 p.m.- 7:30 p.m.&#13;
105 at 2.00 p.m .&#13;
- Science: Dr_. Bill Cordua· from UW River Falls will •&#13;
speak on Ancient Mountain Building Events of f ft&#13;
Wyoming and Montana. Coinm 'Arts Ga.llery&#13;
Saturday,' November 5:&#13;
10:00 a:m.-11 ::30 a.m.&#13;
Saturday, N'ovember 5&#13;
Cross Country: USTFF Mid-America at lJW-P. Starts&#13;
at 3:00 p.m. _&#13;
Contempary Entertainment: features Peter Alsop,&#13;
Paffrath and Dykhuis. Advanced tickets will be&#13;
sold in the Union Square center. Starts at 9:00 in&#13;
the Union Square.&#13;
CompetenceTest:Willbeheld in GR 103 at 10-11 :30&#13;
. a.m. No books, notes or calculators are allowed.&#13;
Soccer: Parkside at UW-Platteville. Starts at 2:00&#13;
p.m .&#13;
Sunday November 6&#13;
"' Film A Clockwork Orange in Union Cinema. Show&#13;
The P.arkside Art Faculty will&#13;
present an ~xhibition from Oct.&#13;
26 through Nov. 17 in the&#13;
Communication Arts Gallery.&#13;
Formal opening of the show will&#13;
be Nov. 1, when a public&#13;
reception will be held from 7 to 9&#13;
p.m .&#13;
Artists and their media are&#13;
Rollin Jansky, sculpture; John&#13;
Satre Murphy, ceramics; John&#13;
Coray, paintings; Dennis Bayuzick,&#13;
prints and drawings; Dale&#13;
Kohl stedt, prints; and David&#13;
Valentine Holmes, sculpture.&#13;
Bayuzick, Kohlstedt an·d&#13;
Holmes are new this year to the&#13;
UW-Parkside art faculty.&#13;
Holmes, who held a National&#13;
Endowment for the Arts craftsman&#13;
fellowship during 1976-77,&#13;
previously taught at UW-Mil- ·&#13;
waukee. He has exhibited&#13;
throughout the Midwest and in&#13;
New York and had a one-man&#13;
invitational show last summer at&#13;
the Kohler Art Center in&#13;
Sheboygan . In 1975, he won a&#13;
major award at the Lakefront&#13;
Festival of the Arts at the&#13;
Milwaukee Art Center. He holds&#13;
an MFA-...degree from UW-Madison&#13;
and also has studied in 'Italy.&#13;
Kohlstedt has -an MFA degree&#13;
from. UW-Milwaukee, where he&#13;
taught design and-was a project&#13;
assistant in printmaking and in&#13;
the Fine Arts Gallery. He also has&#13;
taught at the secondary school&#13;
level. · Bayu7ick has an MFA&#13;
degree from Ohio University and&#13;
is a doctoral candidate there . He&#13;
also taught at Ohio and has&#13;
shown his painting in the East&#13;
and Midwest. ·&#13;
Regular gallery hours are&#13;
Mondays through Thursdays&#13;
from noon to 5 p.m., Tuesdays.&#13;
and Wednesdays from 7 to 10&#13;
p.m . and Fridays by appointment.&#13;
&#13;
begins at 7:30 p.m. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Music: Starring the Oriana Trio playing th,e&#13;
Shostakovitch Piano Trio. CAT 3:30 p.m .&#13;
Wednesday, November 9&#13;
Reading competence j"7k' _____ l&#13;
test offered ! ~ ! Film: Day for Night in the Union Cinema. Starts at&#13;
2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Admission $1 .00.&#13;
Movie: Inherit the Wind starring Spencer Tracy and&#13;
Frederic March. For reservations call the Golden&#13;
Rondelle, 554-2154. Free. Starts at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Women's Brown Bag Lunch: Florence Shipek of the&#13;
Anthropology factJJty will talk on 'A Role Model&#13;
Of Our Own.' CL 111 (Faculty Lounge), at 12 noon.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment: Features the Stan Kenton&#13;
Orchestra.&#13;
NOTES&#13;
Life Science Field Trip to Horicon Marsh 8:00 a.m .,&#13;
Saturday, November 12, from Tallent Hall parking&#13;
lot. Return by 3:00 p.m. Brown bag lunch. $1 .00&#13;
advanced fee . $1.50 after November 10. Contact&#13;
Richard Wagner at 639-3828.&#13;
classified&#13;
Wanted:&#13;
Cocktail wait- or go go glr1.&#13;
$300.-$400. wk. paid Florida vacation&#13;
and Insurance. No hassles.&#13;
No experience necessary, call (312)&#13;
634-3313.&#13;
Brown Hair: Yes It Is me. Orama wl\h&#13;
Pollack has newr been so Interesting&#13;
before. Don't you agree? You were·eyelng&#13;
me all last Wednesday but I'll tell you something&#13;
honey, I look a helluva lot better In the&#13;
ewnlng. The Back Seat Chick.&#13;
·The RANGER needs people, or whatever, to&#13;
write feature stories, do book-ptay-movleand-record&#13;
reviews. Or anything else you&#13;
can think of.&#13;
Please come to Tallent Hall, Rm. #287 on&#13;
Mondays from 3:00 1116:00.&#13;
Wanted: Any old or new Johnny Cash&#13;
singles. Contact EVENTS 634-5680.&#13;
Wanted: part-time typist. Should be free&#13;
whole mornings or afternoons . Call&#13;
553-2228.&#13;
The f irst offering of the Reading&#13;
Competence Test, a requirement&#13;
of the Parkside Collegiate&#13;
Skills Program, will be held&#13;
according to the following&#13;
schedule:&#13;
Monday, November 21:&#13;
English 101 students:&#13;
Students currently enrolled&#13;
in a Monday&#13;
class. (Tests will be administered.&#13;
during the&#13;
regular class period in&#13;
the regular classrooms.)&#13;
Monday, November 21:&#13;
Non-English 101 students:&#13;
For students not&#13;
currently in English 101.&#13;
All such students must&#13;
register for the test in&#13;
the Educational Program&#13;
Support Office&#13;
(EPS) in the D-1 level of&#13;
the library between&#13;
Oct. '26, and Nov. 14.&#13;
- Students scoring 80&#13;
orabove on the English&#13;
Placement test&#13;
but not enrolled in&#13;
Eng. 101 this semester.&#13;
&#13;
· - Transfer students&#13;
needing to complete&#13;
the Reading Competence&#13;
test.&#13;
John: Thanks for your support last week.&#13;
You are right about Mr. jambols but tell me&#13;
what makes you so sure that I am male and&#13;
not female? Unlwrslty'of Vermont - Lamron.&#13;
An Interested fella In the back row wants to&#13;
know If the beautllul brunette In the second&#13;
row of History 101, 11-11 :50 a.m., MWF., Is&#13;
spoken for. How about a date sometime?&#13;
BIid! Seit Chick: I am also In Orama and sit&#13;
fairly near the front but every time I look for&#13;
you all I see la that mouse blocking the view&#13;
with his death-like looks. Who the hell are&#13;
you? Frustrated but not brown haired .&#13;
The fastest-growing&#13;
Premium Beer in America.&#13;
On tap at Union ~quare&#13;
-¥i&#13;
~ ---!&#13;
i Mon.-Sat 10 'til close i&#13;
i Sun. 6 'til close i - TIME&#13;
10:00 to 10:50 a.m.&#13;
ROOM&#13;
2:00 to 2:50 p.m. Grnquist 103 i i&#13;
6:00 to 6:50 p.m. i NOON LUNCHES i&#13;
Tuesday, November 22:&#13;
ErJglish 101 students:&#13;
i Sandwiches 'til midnight i&#13;
i i&#13;
i SAT. LADIES NITE ~&#13;
) La~ies' Drinks ½ Price ~ j i with date 8 'til close i&#13;
L--~~.J!n~~:1~~-J ,&#13;
r ~om M=.o ... n-~Frlday7o.7,';7&#13;
t DR. BOP &amp; t&#13;
Students currently enrolled&#13;
irr a Tuesday&#13;
class. (Tests will be administered&#13;
during the -&#13;
regular class period in&#13;
the regular classrooms.)&#13;
t THE HEADLINES t t featuring the White Raven&#13;
9 p.m. - 1 a.m. t t Advan..ce $4.50 Pabst on&#13;
At the Door $5.00 Tab so• t&#13;
•t Vance's Bar t L 1-94 &amp; Hy. 11 [ Racine County J&#13;
,... ~~~~~~-.~~&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
PRESENTS THE&#13;
Applications by&#13;
Fri., Nov. 4,&#13;
4:30 p.m.&#13;
BO~&#13;
HOPE&#13;
RCHJ~&#13;
TOP IN~"/&#13;
COLLEGIATE TALLENT&#13;
,~·&#13;
::v... -" -&#13;
.. ,, .... '&#13;
Judging Mon., Nov. 7&#13;
Apply Union&#13;
207&#13;
..... </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68659">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 6, issue 10, November 2, 1977</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68660">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68661">
                <text>1977-11-02</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68664">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68665">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68666">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68667">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68668">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68669">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68670">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68671">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68672">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="4547">
        <name>chiwaukee prairie</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="4487">
        <name>eugene gasiorkiewicz</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2127">
        <name>nature trail</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="222">
        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2958" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3443">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/8b29dc319e187581b6b7ad11cc8625c1.pdf</src>
        <authentication>3e1fad51d797839a2f8b8bdb24fc0da1</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68647">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 9</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68648">
              <text>Management Day features J.I case</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68658">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90035">
              <text>aD,&#13;
eatures&#13;
Eleven executives of the j.1.&#13;
Case Co., including Thomas J.&#13;
Guendel, president and chief&#13;
executive, will serve as faculty&#13;
for the.second annual "Management&#13;
Day" to be held Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 27, here at Parkside.&#13;
The Case executives will take&#13;
over all instruction of Parkside&#13;
juniors and seniors during the&#13;
day and evening program,&#13;
conducting seminars in nine&#13;
different business areas. Each&#13;
seminar will be given three&#13;
times, at 10 a.m., 2 p.m. and 7&#13;
p.m., so that all students have a&#13;
chance to participate, according&#13;
to Prof. Robert Graham, coordinator&#13;
of the program.&#13;
Guendel will keynote the&#13;
pjogram at 9 a.m., then speak&#13;
again to lead off the evening&#13;
session at 6 p.m.&#13;
Topics and executives participating&#13;
are:&#13;
marketing, J.J. Gill, vice&#13;
president and general manager,&#13;
construction equipment division&#13;
finance, John Stevenson,&#13;
president of the Case Credit&#13;
Corporation&#13;
business economics/information&#13;
systems, Bill Chao', business&#13;
economics manager, Finance&#13;
and Corporate Planning Division&#13;
accounting, Tom Bradburn,&#13;
controller, Agriculture Division&#13;
environment, Dr. Peter J.&#13;
Schultz, chief environmental&#13;
scientist, Corporate Operations&#13;
labor relations/personnel, Ralph&#13;
Wagner, senior vice president,&#13;
Corporate Relations&#13;
advertising/public relations,&#13;
Richard Charlton,&#13;
Communications and Public&#13;
Affairs director, and Kathie&#13;
Kormack, advertising&#13;
administrator&#13;
planning and corporate strategy,&#13;
John Boylan, vice president and&#13;
general manager, Service Parts&#13;
Supply Division&#13;
manufacturing and operations,&#13;
E. Fred Golding, vice president&#13;
and general manager,&#13;
Agriculture Division.&#13;
Students are being asked to&#13;
pre-register for their preferred&#13;
sections in order to keep the&#13;
seminars small enough for&#13;
discussion. Non-Parkside students&#13;
can register by calling the&#13;
Management Science divisional&#13;
office, 553-2243. There is no&#13;
charge.&#13;
Last April, about 550 students&#13;
attended. Management Day&#13;
conducted by executives of the&#13;
Weyerhaeuser Co. Representatives&#13;
of J.I. Case sat in as&#13;
er&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
Wednesday, OCtober 26, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No.9&#13;
~~ We have no more right to con- ()()&#13;
sume happiness without pro- 1I11&#13;
ducing it than to consume&#13;
wealth without producing It,&#13;
- George Bernard Shaw&#13;
ase&#13;
the world's top 10 companies in&#13;
its respective industry.&#13;
Case equipment is manufactured&#13;
in 20 plants around the&#13;
world, including 10 in North&#13;
America. The largest complex, a&#13;
three-plant operation, is located&#13;
in Racine. Case employs about&#13;
24,000 persons in all its&#13;
locations; 1977 sales exceeded&#13;
S1.3 billion.&#13;
Case is the No. 1 producer of&#13;
digging equipment and a world&#13;
leader in the construction equipment&#13;
industry. Products include&#13;
tractors, tillage equipment and&#13;
tools, loader-backhoes, a variety&#13;
of loaders and dozers, forklifts,&#13;
wheel and track hydraulic&#13;
excavators, and Unimog machines,&#13;
which are large fourwheel&#13;
drive tractors for use&#13;
under adverse conditions such&#13;
as snow.&#13;
A variety of Case equipment&#13;
will be on display on the lawn&#13;
outside the Library-Learning&#13;
Center during the week of Oct.&#13;
24-28, as well as indoor displays&#13;
in Main Place. The equipment&#13;
will include the Unimog, the&#13;
2870 Tractor King 4WD&#13;
agricultural tractor, the Wheel&#13;
Loader Model W36, and the&#13;
Backhoe/Loader.&#13;
Chancellor Guslcin clarifies&#13;
observers, in preparation for this&#13;
year's program.&#13;
Prof. Graham saicfthe program&#13;
was one of the first of its kind in&#13;
the Midwest. "The primary&#13;
purpose is to give our upper&#13;
division students the chance to&#13;
meet and talk with men involved&#13;
with and responsible for major&#13;
policies, practices and problemsolvi&#13;
ng faced by modern&#13;
business concerns," he said.&#13;
Prof. Arthur Dudycha, chairman&#13;
ofthe Management Science&#13;
Division, pointed out that "the&#13;
seminars also provide for an&#13;
interchange of ideas between&#13;
Parkside business faculty and&#13;
executives." Dudycha emphasized&#13;
that students and faculty&#13;
from fields of study other than&#13;
business also are welcome to&#13;
attend the seminars.&#13;
).1. Case, founded in 1842, is a&#13;
Tenneco Company, a broadly&#13;
diversified parent company&#13;
involved in agricultural and&#13;
construction machinery, auto&#13;
parts, shipbuilding, oil, chemicals,&#13;
natural gas pipelines,&#13;
packaging and land development.&#13;
If all the seven major&#13;
Tenneco divisions, including J.1.&#13;
Case, were operated independently,&#13;
each would rank among&#13;
community-based concept&#13;
by John McKI05key&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Omar Amin, Associate Professor&#13;
of Life Science here at&#13;
Parkside, has asked Chancellor&#13;
Cuskin to clarify his position on&#13;
campus-based research. In a&#13;
letter directed to the Parkside&#13;
Faculty Senate, Amin asked&#13;
Guskin:&#13;
"I am concerned about the&#13;
repeated statement in the State&#13;
of the Campus Address regarding&#13;
the future orientation of&#13;
UW-Parkside as 'community&#13;
based' not 'research based'. The&#13;
statement' seems to reflect an&#13;
'either lor'. proposition. Please&#13;
clarify specifically,&#13;
(1) How can we have a&#13;
community based-tor any other)&#13;
campus without research?&#13;
(2) How can we emphasize&#13;
quality teaching by quality&#13;
professors without quality research?&#13;
(3) What are the implications for&#13;
research support at Parkside?"&#13;
Cuskin responded before the'&#13;
Senate that he is a strong&#13;
supporter of research by faculty&#13;
at this University, ... "this past&#13;
year I was one of the prime&#13;
movers for the creation of the&#13;
Committee on Research and&#13;
Creative Activity and for&#13;
providing them with a budget&#13;
and autonomous status. I have&#13;
also strongly emphasized our&#13;
need for experienced quality&#13;
faculty who have a good&#13;
research background."&#13;
"In direct answer to your&#13;
statement and questions:&#13;
"a. My statement does not reflect&#13;
an-veitbee/or proposition",&#13;
but rather by referring to a&#13;
teacher-scholar model assumes&#13;
the obvious .:- that quality&#13;
faculty means faculty who are&#13;
good teachers, good researchers&#13;
as well as invoh..ed in community&#13;
andlor public service.&#13;
b. We cannot have a&#13;
community-based University&#13;
without research.&#13;
c. We cannot emphasize quality&#13;
teach ing by qual ity professors&#13;
without quality research.&#13;
d. I remain strongly committed&#13;
to support research at UW-Parkside.&#13;
Please feel free to share this&#13;
with your colleagues."&#13;
In other Senate business, larry&#13;
Deutsch was elected chairman&#13;
by acclamation.&#13;
eatures_&#13;
Eleven executives of the J.I.&#13;
Case Co., including Thomas J.&#13;
Guendel, president and chief&#13;
executive, will serve as faculty&#13;
for th~econd annual "Management&#13;
Day" to be held Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 27, here at Parkside.&#13;
The Case executives will take&#13;
over all instruction of Parkside&#13;
juniors and seniors during the&#13;
day and evening program,&#13;
conducting seminars in nine&#13;
different business areas. Each&#13;
seminar will be given three&#13;
times, at 10 a.m ., 2 p.m. and 7&#13;
p.m ., so that all students have a&#13;
chance to participate, according&#13;
to Prof. Robert Graham, coordinator&#13;
of the program.&#13;
Guendel will keynote the&#13;
program at 9 a.m., then speak&#13;
again to lead off the evening&#13;
session at 6 p.m.&#13;
Topics and executjves participating&#13;
are:&#13;
marketing, J.J. Gill, vice&#13;
president and general manager,&#13;
construction equipment division&#13;
finance, John Stevenson,&#13;
president of the Case Credit&#13;
Corporation&#13;
business economics/information&#13;
systems, Bill Chao, business&#13;
economics manager, Finance&#13;
and Corporate Planning Division&#13;
accounting, Tom Bradburn,&#13;
controller, Agriculture Division&#13;
environment, Dr. Peter J.&#13;
Schultz, chief environmental&#13;
scientist, Corporate Operations&#13;
labor relations/personnel, Ralph&#13;
Wagner, senior vice president,&#13;
Corporate Relations&#13;
advertising/public relations,&#13;
Richard Charlton,&#13;
Communications and Public&#13;
Affairs director, and Kathie&#13;
Kormack, advertising&#13;
administrator&#13;
planning and corporate strategy,&#13;
John Boylan, vice president and&#13;
general manager, Service Parts&#13;
Supply Division&#13;
manufacturing and operations,&#13;
E. Fred Golding, vice president&#13;
and general manager,&#13;
Agriculture Division .&#13;
Students are being asked to&#13;
pre-register for their preferred&#13;
sections in order to keep the&#13;
seminars small enough for&#13;
discussion . Non-Parkside students&#13;
can register by calling the&#13;
Management Science divisional&#13;
office, 553-2243. There is no&#13;
charge.&#13;
Last April, about 550 students&#13;
attended . Management Day&#13;
conducted by executives of the&#13;
Weyerhaeuser Co. Representatives&#13;
of J.1. Case sat in as&#13;
er&#13;
-&#13;
observers, in preparation for this&#13;
year's program.&#13;
Prof. Graham saicfthe program&#13;
was one of the first of its kind in&#13;
the Midwest. "The primary&#13;
purpose is to give our upper&#13;
division students the chance to&#13;
meet and talk with men involved&#13;
with and responsible for major&#13;
policies, practices and problemsolving&#13;
faced by modern&#13;
business concerns," he said.&#13;
Prof. Arthur Dudycha, chairman&#13;
of the Management Science&#13;
Division, pointed out that "the&#13;
seminars also provide for an&#13;
interchange of ideas between&#13;
Parkside business faculty and&#13;
executives." Dudycha emphasized&#13;
that students and faculty&#13;
from fields of study other than&#13;
business also are welcome to&#13;
attend the seminars.&#13;
J.I. Case, founded in 1842, is a&#13;
Tenneco Company, a broadly&#13;
diversified parent company&#13;
involved in agricultural and&#13;
construction machinery, auto&#13;
parts, shipbuilding, oil, chemicals,&#13;
natural gas pipelines,&#13;
packaging and land development.&#13;
If all the seven major&#13;
Tenneco divisions, including J.I&#13;
Case, were operated independently,&#13;
each would rank among&#13;
Wednesday, October 26, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 9&#13;
()() We have no more right to con-~()&#13;
sume happiness without pro- 1/&#13;
ducing it than to consume&#13;
wealth without producing It.&#13;
- George Bernard Shaw&#13;
ase&#13;
the world's top 10 companies m&#13;
its respective industry.&#13;
Case equipment is manufactured&#13;
in 20 plants around the&#13;
world, including 10 in North&#13;
America. The largest complex, a&#13;
three-plant operation, is located&#13;
in Racine. Case employs about&#13;
24,000 pers9ns in all its&#13;
locations; 1977 sales exceeded&#13;
S1.3 billion.&#13;
Case is the No. 1 producer of&#13;
digging equipment and a world&#13;
leader in the construction equipment&#13;
industry. Products include&#13;
tractors, tillage equipment and&#13;
tools, loader-backhoes, a variety&#13;
of loaders and dozers, forklifts,&#13;
wheel and track hydraulic&#13;
excavators, and Unimog machines,&#13;
which are large fourwheel&#13;
drive tractors for use&#13;
under adverse conditions such&#13;
as snow.&#13;
A variety of Case equipment&#13;
will be on display on the lawn&#13;
outside the Library-Learning&#13;
Center during the week of Oct&#13;
24-28, as well as indoor displays&#13;
m Mam Place. The equipment&#13;
will include the Unimog, the&#13;
2870 Tractor King 4WO&#13;
agricultural tractor, the Wheel&#13;
Loader Model W36, and the&#13;
Backhoe/Loader.&#13;
Chancellor Guslcin clarifies&#13;
community-based concept&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Omar Amin, Associate Professor&#13;
of Life Science here at&#13;
Parkside, has asked Chancellor&#13;
Guskin to clarify his position on&#13;
campus-based research . In a&#13;
letter directed to the Parkside&#13;
Faculty Senate, Amin asked&#13;
Guskin :&#13;
"I am concerned about the&#13;
repeated statement in the State&#13;
of the Campus Address regarding&#13;
the future orientation of&#13;
UW-Parkside as 'community&#13;
based' not 'research based'. The&#13;
statement ' seems to reflect an&#13;
'either/ or'. proposition. Please&#13;
clarify specifically,&#13;
(1) How can we have a&#13;
community based-(or any other)&#13;
campus without research?&#13;
(2) How can we emphasize&#13;
quality teaching by quality&#13;
professors without quality research?&#13;
&#13;
(3) What are the implications for&#13;
research support at Parkside?"&#13;
Guskin responded before the '&#13;
Senate that he is a strong&#13;
supporter of research by faculty&#13;
at this University, ... "this past&#13;
year I was one of the prime&#13;
movers for the creation of the&#13;
Committee on Research and&#13;
Creative Activity and for&#13;
providing them with a budget&#13;
and autonomous status. I have&#13;
also strongly emphasized our&#13;
need for experienced quality&#13;
faculty who have a good&#13;
research background."&#13;
"In direct answer to your&#13;
statement and questions:&#13;
"a. My statement does not reflect&#13;
an ·"either/ or proposition",&#13;
but rather by referring to a&#13;
teacher-scholar model assumes&#13;
the obvious ...:. that quality&#13;
faculty means faculty who are&#13;
good teachers, good researchers&#13;
as well as involved in community&#13;
and/or public service.&#13;
b . We cannot have a&#13;
community-based University&#13;
without research .&#13;
c. We cannot emphasize quality&#13;
teaching by quality professors&#13;
without quality research .&#13;
d . I remain strongly committed&#13;
to support research at UW-Parkside.&#13;
&#13;
Please feel free to share this&#13;
with your colleagu-es."&#13;
In other Senate business, Larry&#13;
Deutsch was elected chairman&#13;
by acclamation. &#13;
2&#13;
'Co"egeattendance is&#13;
privilege; not a righ'&#13;
to listen to what you have to say.&#13;
Of course, if you have a stoneface&#13;
all the time, YOu may be&#13;
ignored because who cares to&#13;
talk to a statue? All the students&#13;
and facu Ity I have come in&#13;
contact with are more than&#13;
helpful and downright friendly.&#13;
Ask vourself , "Do I feel&#13;
privileged to be attending&#13;
Parkside (or any other college) or&#13;
do I feel I have a 'right' to be&#13;
here at school?"&#13;
All those who have "rights" are&#13;
dead right - for they will only&#13;
lead a dead existence in their&#13;
life.&#13;
Those who feel privileged will&#13;
use the privilege to grow and&#13;
expand their knowledge and life&#13;
to the-benefit of all.&#13;
Name withheld by request&#13;
Ranger is written a.ndedited by students of the&#13;
Uaiversity 01Wiscon.sin-Pa.rkaide~d they are solely&#13;
respo,n.siblelor its editorial policy aJ\d content. letters&#13;
State employees&#13;
thank Parks ide&#13;
for support&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On behalf of the members of&#13;
the State Employees Union,&#13;
Local 2180, I would like to thank&#13;
the people at Parkside who&#13;
supported us during our&#13;
state-wide strike in July. There&#13;
were many students, professors,&#13;
and other non-represented&#13;
personnel who backed our&#13;
cause.&#13;
A recent arbitration award&#13;
dated October 10, 1977 reads:&#13;
The mediated non-recrimination&#13;
agreement which was&#13;
comsumated on or about July&#13;
17, 1977 applies to Limited&#13;
Term Employees ..&#13;
We will now demand back pay&#13;
or other appropriate reiief for&#13;
any (state employee) who&#13;
suffered recrimination as a result&#13;
of supporting us. If you have any&#13;
problems or questions contact&#13;
me.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Joe O'Hara, President&#13;
WSEU Local.2180&#13;
a&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Having attended three previous&#13;
college 'environments.&#13;
Parkside being number four, I&#13;
find students have not changed,&#13;
in the last five years, at all.&#13;
They carp and complain about&#13;
just about everything, but rarely&#13;
take the initiative to come up&#13;
with a workable solution to their&#13;
problems. A typical example&#13;
would be the student who, upon&#13;
receiving a poor grade from a&#13;
professor, states "veah, the prof&#13;
was a real jerk. He had so many&#13;
'pets' in class and he just-didn't&#13;
like me." While the troth of the&#13;
matter was that the student&#13;
attended class on Iy 50-60% of&#13;
the time and failed to do most of&#13;
the required readings.&#13;
What- is wrong with .that&#13;
student? I believe that the&#13;
student above, along with a&#13;
majorify of others, fails to understand&#13;
that their attendance at&#13;
college is a privilege - not a&#13;
right! Professors do not "owe"&#13;
the student a good grade - you&#13;
must earn it. No one was forced&#13;
to attend this, or any other.&#13;
college or university. You chose&#13;
to come here for an education,&#13;
not to party every night, or sit in&#13;
the Union all day, or avoid going&#13;
to work for four years. If you did&#13;
come here for those reasons, I&#13;
am sure you have a very rude&#13;
awakening coming.&#13;
The people and professors on&#13;
this campus are as friendly and&#13;
nice as at the small colleges I&#13;
have previously attended, both&#13;
dormitory and cornrnuter.. Anyone&#13;
will talk to you and hastlme&#13;
Ranger, student groups defended&#13;
Dear EditorL&#13;
Unlike Mr. Iarnbois in his&#13;
letter, (Oct. 19 issue), this letter&#13;
is coming to you from a very&#13;
calm, cool and collected mind.&#13;
Also unlike Mr. Iarnbois, this&#13;
letter is directed to those who&#13;
happen to read it. I am not using&#13;
it as something (or someone) to&#13;
sharpen my claws on.&#13;
I'm a lover of people. I carry a&#13;
button which says,"I've gotta be&#13;
me." You students, how can you&#13;
do something -and not put yourself&#13;
into it? The Ranger, just like&#13;
every other organization on this&#13;
campus, is run by students.&#13;
People who are giving to the rest&#13;
of us, a little bit of themselves.&#13;
How can we sit back and tell&#13;
them they're wrong or that&#13;
they're no good? I was on the&#13;
Ranger staff for a semesterand a&#13;
half, and not once did I feel the&#13;
paper was "no good", and I still&#13;
don't.&#13;
People, no matter who or what&#13;
they are, make up these student&#13;
organizations and if you take the&#13;
people away you'll have nothing!&#13;
So keep it up, keep on bitching&#13;
and complaining and being&#13;
apathetic. Soon we'll have a&#13;
campus with nothing but&#13;
academics, \no student union,&#13;
and the students' will be&#13;
comprised of faceless, feelingless&#13;
robots! Maybe we should try&#13;
a few weeks or even a semester&#13;
without any student organizations.&#13;
I'll bet the campus would&#13;
die.&#13;
Just one last word to those of&#13;
you who complain about these&#13;
organizations, I'd like to take a&#13;
quote that is heard often and&#13;
change a few of the words&#13;
because it so rightly fits the&#13;
occasion. "Those who can, and&#13;
care, do. Those who can't, and&#13;
won't, gripe!" If you think you&#13;
can do better then let's see you&#13;
try or SHUT-UP! Oh, by the way,&#13;
Ranger needs an editor next&#13;
semester, how about it?&#13;
\ Karen Putman&#13;
,&#13;
Quality professors must do research&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
A major concern is developing&#13;
at Parkside. This is the declining&#13;
level Or research. Why? Because&#13;
what we, the students, expect&#13;
from the University of Wisconsin&#13;
is top-quality professors and&#13;
instruction. We have recently&#13;
lost some of our best professors&#13;
due to "Leaves of Absence",&#13;
resignation, etc. The result has&#13;
been the hiring of temporary and&#13;
short-term instructors to conduct&#13;
the programs and classesof the&#13;
departed, yet the ability or&#13;
motivation of the replacements&#13;
are well below that of the&#13;
departed faculty!&#13;
What is the root of this state of&#13;
affairs? Competent instructors&#13;
need to know what is happening&#13;
in their respective fields, yet&#13;
knowledge is expanding continously&#13;
every day. The only way&#13;
toremain current isthru research;&#13;
challenge and exchange of&#13;
research data maintains the&#13;
"razor-edge" on instructors&#13;
(along with the challenge of the&#13;
undergraduates' questions). Our&#13;
Chancellor, however, has expressed&#13;
'hesitation' about supporting&#13;
continuing research at&#13;
Parkside dU'eto a nebulous "fear&#13;
of student.opposition."&#13;
I feel that this is a fallacy:&#13;
what students fear is incompetent&#13;
or unconcerned instructors,&#13;
or perhaps that Parkside will&#13;
become a miniaturized version&#13;
of Madison with TA instructors&#13;
and professors who are engaged&#13;
in full-time academic politics.&#13;
As for the proposed "community-centered"&#13;
college idea, is&#13;
this what is wanted or needed? '&#13;
The U.W.-Extension program&#13;
here is strong (but could be&#13;
expanded) and has traditionally&#13;
served in such a' role." Another&#13;
existing program has been the&#13;
Science Division's "modular"&#13;
and evening courses, which are&#13;
aimed towards giving continuing&#13;
education and explaining today's&#13;
concepts in science to nonUse&#13;
the· bus and&#13;
conserve energy&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
At this time in Parkside's&#13;
history when parking is at a&#13;
premium, it is appropriate to&#13;
urge people to make use of the&#13;
city bus system that comes to the&#13;
campus. While each of us can&#13;
make up an excuse for not riding&#13;
the bus, here are a list of reasons&#13;
why we should:&#13;
1. Door front servicec-, no need&#13;
to walk that somettmes Jengthv&#13;
distance from you car to the&#13;
buildings.&#13;
2. Money - after insurance, gas,&#13;
and a parking sticker for your car&#13;
- it costs much more than fifty&#13;
cents a day to ride out here and&#13;
back. Besides, we've already&#13;
paid for part of the bus ride with&#13;
tuition and federal tax money.&#13;
3. Convenience - Don't worry&#13;
about starting your car on cold&#13;
winter mornings.&#13;
4. Energy conservation - Mass&#13;
transit is here to stay. Let's get&#13;
used to it. Savegasand help save&#13;
the environment.&#13;
If enough people ride the&#13;
Racine or Kenosha bus, it's&#13;
possible they may even increase&#13;
bus service to every half hour or&#13;
possibly into the evening hours.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Jerry Feucht&#13;
science majors. These could be&#13;
expanded to meet the needs of&#13;
the 'community' relatively easily&#13;
WITHOUT degrading our own&#13;
University Programs.&#13;
Dear Chancellor - do not give&#13;
us a watered-down version of&#13;
Carthage College or a 4-year&#13;
Extension University; give us&#13;
what was promised and&#13;
demanded from the beginning: a&#13;
strong, professionally-oriented&#13;
University with a faculty&#13;
dedicated to teaching and&#13;
supported with a well-developed&#13;
and planned research program.&#13;
Paul W. Hinds&#13;
Senior;Medical&#13;
Technology&#13;
'Lamron' responds -to Jambois&#13;
To the Editor and to&#13;
my dearest Mr. lambois:&#13;
I must inform you to the fact&#13;
that Phil. Livingston did not write&#13;
last week's article. I, Lamron,&#13;
did. If you indeed felt that last&#13;
week's issue was a direct attack&#13;
on the students here then I am&#13;
afraid that this letter will not&#13;
humor you. BecauseI" again will&#13;
lambast the Parkside Students&#13;
for their apathetic altitude.&#13;
The students.' are responsible&#13;
for any educational institution. If&#13;
Parkside has the reputation of&#13;
being boring, the students have&#13;
made it so. I can't begin to count&#13;
the number of student.organizetions&#13;
and clubs this University&#13;
offers. The facilities here are&#13;
remarkable and available to&#13;
student use without any red tape&#13;
hassles. Did you know that· in&#13;
Madison, one must be either a&#13;
junior or senior to run audio&#13;
visual equipment? Not so here.&#13;
Did you know that the Parkside&#13;
CA theatre, is one of the best&#13;
equipped theatres in the entire&#13;
state of Wisconsin? Chances are&#13;
that onIy a few students know&#13;
these two things and the rest&#13;
don't care. Well if you don't&#13;
care, why bitch about Park~de's&#13;
inadequacies? I'd like to think&#13;
that you all aren't as stupid as&#13;
you pretend to be but under the&#13;
circumstances, it is almost&#13;
impossible. Thank Cod for the&#13;
small miracle of imagination or&#13;
I'd be lost in a world of idiots.&#13;
If you, Mr. Jambois, and your&#13;
supporters think-that a few hours&#13;
of your precious time is going to&#13;
pull your CPA average down&#13;
from a 3.0 to a 2.0 then you have&#13;
been eating from a crock of shit.&#13;
Feeding such ludicrous notions is&#13;
an example of sheer moronicness.&#13;
It is also disgusting to think&#13;
that I would go to the same&#13;
'school with such feeble minded&#13;
people. But I think that your&#13;
main idea of writing this week's&#13;
editoral was to burn Phil livingston.&#13;
Please do not abuse the , , .&#13;
Ranger this way. I am appealing&#13;
to your finer instincts, but have&#13;
been told by certain people that.&#13;
you do not possessany. The only&#13;
reason Mr. livingston's average&#13;
went down and the reason why&#13;
he is only carrying two coursesis&#13;
simply that he works f.ull time on&#13;
the Ranger and at home. And for&#13;
a journalist what better&#13;
experience could you ask for?&#13;
A student's first responsibility&#13;
is to himself. But when he starts&#13;
infringing on my rights and the&#13;
rights of others then he deserves&#13;
a good lecture on morals. I call it&#13;
infringement when all a person&#13;
does is sit and bitch about how&#13;
lousy Parkside is. I go here and&#13;
am damned proudto be a part of&#13;
this system. When 'Dumb shits'&#13;
like you criticize this institution&#13;
(and can't even back their statements&#13;
up) then those criticisms&#13;
are impudent. Mr. Jambois,what&#13;
are you doing to improve your&#13;
. institution? .....&#13;
I'm enthused that these hard&#13;
workers are paying..·for their&#13;
college education. I sympathize&#13;
with the student that puts in&#13;
eighteen credit hours here at&#13;
Parkside then works seven nights&#13;
a week at another job. But tell&#13;
me something, Robert my friend,&#13;
how can they possibly have the&#13;
strength and energv to complain&#13;
about Parks ide's socihl Ii~ -&#13;
especially since they don't have&#13;
the time to get involved? That&#13;
energy should be directed to&#13;
something more useful and that&#13;
is my main argument.&#13;
University of vermont&#13;
alias Lamron&#13;
letters&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the University ol Wisconsin-Parkside ~nd they are solely&#13;
respo,nsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
College attendance· is State employees a privilege; not a right thank Parkside To the editor:&#13;
Having attended three previ&#13;
ou s college ·environments,&#13;
Parkside being number four, I&#13;
find students have not changed,&#13;
in the last five years, at all.&#13;
student? I believe that the&#13;
student above, along with a&#13;
majority of others, fails to understand&#13;
that their attendance at&#13;
college is a privilege - not a&#13;
right! Professors do not "owe"&#13;
the student a good grade - you&#13;
must earn it. No one was forced&#13;
to attend this, or any other.&#13;
college or university. You chose&#13;
to come here for an education,&#13;
not to party every night, or sit in&#13;
the Union all day, or avoid going&#13;
to work for four years. Jf you did&#13;
come here for those reasons, I&#13;
am sure you have a very rude&#13;
awakening coming.&#13;
to listen to what you have to say.&#13;
Of course, if you have a stoneface&#13;
all the time, you may be&#13;
ignored because who cares to&#13;
talk to a statue? All the students&#13;
and faculty I have come in&#13;
contact with are more than&#13;
helpful and downright friendly.&#13;
Ask yourself, "Do I feel&#13;
privileged to be attending&#13;
Parkside (or any other college) or&#13;
do I feel I have a 'right' to be&#13;
here at school?"&#13;
for support They carp and complain about&#13;
just about everything, but rarely&#13;
take the initiative to come up&#13;
with a workable solution to their&#13;
problems. A typical example&#13;
would be the student who, upon&#13;
receiving a _poor grade from a&#13;
professor, states "yeah, the prof&#13;
was a real jerk. He had so many&#13;
'pets' in class and he just didn't&#13;
like me." While the truth of the&#13;
matter was that the student&#13;
attended class only 50-60% of&#13;
the time and failed to do most of&#13;
the required readings.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On behalf of the members of&#13;
the State Employees Union,&#13;
Local 2180, I would like to thank&#13;
the people at Parkside who&#13;
supported us during our&#13;
state-wide strike in July. There&#13;
were many students, professors,&#13;
and other non-represented&#13;
personnel who backed our&#13;
cause.&#13;
A recent arbitration award&#13;
dated October 10, 1977 reads:&#13;
The mediated non-recrimination&#13;
agreement which was&#13;
comsumated on or about July&#13;
17, 1977 applies to Limited&#13;
Term Employees. ·&#13;
We will now demand back pay&#13;
or other appropriate relief for&#13;
any (state employee) who&#13;
suffered recrimination as a result&#13;
of supporting us . If you have any&#13;
problems or questions contact&#13;
me.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Joe O'Hara, President&#13;
WSEU Local.2180 What is wrong with . that&#13;
Ranger, student groups defended&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
Unlike Mr. )ambois in his&#13;
letter, (Oct. 19 issue), this letter&#13;
is coming to you from a very&#13;
calm , cool and collected mind.&#13;
Also unlike Mr. Jambois, this&#13;
letter is directed to those who&#13;
happen to read it. I am not using&#13;
it as something (or someone) to&#13;
sharpen my claws on.&#13;
I'm a lover of people. I carry a&#13;
button which says, "I've gotta be&#13;
me." You students, how can you&#13;
do something ..ind not put yourself&#13;
into it? The Ranger, just like&#13;
every other organization on this&#13;
campus , is run by students.&#13;
People who are giving to the rest&#13;
of us, a little bit of themselves.&#13;
How can we sit back and tell&#13;
them they're wrong or that&#13;
they're no good? I was on the&#13;
Ranger staff for a semester and a&#13;
half, and not once did I feel the&#13;
paper was "no good", and I still&#13;
don't.&#13;
People, no matter who or what&#13;
they are, make up these student&#13;
organizations and if you take the&#13;
people away you'll have nothing!&#13;
So keep it up, keep on bitching&#13;
and complaining and being&#13;
apathetic . Soon we'll have a&#13;
campus with nothing but&#13;
academics, no student union,&#13;
and the students· will be&#13;
comprised of faceless, feelingless&#13;
robots! Maybe we should try&#13;
a few weeks or even a semester&#13;
without any stude~t organizations.&#13;
I'll bet the campus would&#13;
die.&#13;
Just one last word to those of&#13;
you who complain about these&#13;
organizations, I'd like to take a&#13;
quote that is heard often and&#13;
change a few of the words&#13;
because it so rightly fits the&#13;
occasion. "Those who can, and&#13;
care, do. Those who can't, and&#13;
won't, gripe!'' If you think you&#13;
can do better then let's see you&#13;
try or SHUT-UP! Oh, by the way,&#13;
Ranger needs an editor next&#13;
semester, how about it?&#13;
' Karen Putman&#13;
'&#13;
Quality professors must do research&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
A major concern is developing&#13;
at Parkside. This is the declining&#13;
level or research. Why? Because&#13;
what we, the students, expect&#13;
from the University of Wisconsin&#13;
is top-quality professors and&#13;
instruction. We have recently&#13;
lost some of our best professors&#13;
due to "Leaves of Absence",&#13;
resignation, etc. The result has&#13;
been the hiring of temporary and&#13;
short-term instructors to conduct&#13;
the programs and classes of the&#13;
departed, yet the ability or&#13;
motivation of the replacements&#13;
are well below that of the&#13;
departed faculty!&#13;
What is the root of this state of&#13;
affairs? Competent instructors&#13;
need to know what is happening&#13;
in their respective fields, yet&#13;
knowledge is expanding continously&#13;
every day. The only way&#13;
to remain carrent is thru research;&#13;
challenge and exchange of&#13;
research data maintains the&#13;
"razor-edge" on instructors&#13;
(along with the challenge of the&#13;
undergraduates' questions). Our&#13;
Chancellor, however, has expressed&#13;
'hesitation' about supporting&#13;
continuing research at&#13;
Parkside due to a nebulous "fear&#13;
of student .opposition."&#13;
I feel that this is a fallacy:&#13;
what students fear is incompetent&#13;
or unconcerned instructors,&#13;
or perhaps that Parkside will&#13;
become a miniaturized version&#13;
of Madison with TA instructors&#13;
and professors who are engaged&#13;
in full-time academic politics.&#13;
As for the proposed "community-centered"&#13;
college. idea, is&#13;
this what is wanted or needed_? '&#13;
The U.W.-Extension program&#13;
here 1s strong (but could be&#13;
expanded) and has traditionally&#13;
served in such a' role.' Another&#13;
existing program has been the&#13;
Science Division's "modular"&#13;
and evening courses, which are&#13;
aimed towards giving continuing&#13;
education and explaining today's&#13;
concepts in science to non-&#13;
'lamron' responds -to Jambois&#13;
To the Editor and to&#13;
my dearest Mr. Jambois:&#13;
I must inform you to the fact&#13;
that Phil.Livingston did not write&#13;
last week's article. I, Lamron,&#13;
did. If you indeed felt that last&#13;
week's issue was a direct attack&#13;
on the students here then I am&#13;
afraid that this letter will not&#13;
humor you . Because I' again will&#13;
lambast the Parkside Students&#13;
for their apathetic attitude.&#13;
The students . are responsible&#13;
for any educational institution. If&#13;
Parkside has the reputation of&#13;
being boring, the students have&#13;
made it so. I can't begin to coun~&#13;
the number of student organizations&#13;
and clubs this University&#13;
offers. The facilities here are&#13;
remarkable and avciilable to&#13;
student use without any red tape&#13;
hassles. Did. you know that . in&#13;
Madison, one must be either a&#13;
junior or senior to run audio&#13;
visual equipment? Not so here.&#13;
Did you know that the Parkside&#13;
CA theatre , is one of the best&#13;
equipped theatres in the enti~e&#13;
· state of Wisconsin? Chances are&#13;
that only a few students know&#13;
these two things and the rest&#13;
don't care. Well if you don't&#13;
care, why bitch about Park~de's&#13;
inadequacies? I'd like to think&#13;
that you all aren't as stupid as&#13;
-you pretend to be but under the&#13;
circumstances, it is almost&#13;
impossible. Thank God for the&#13;
small· miracle of imagination or&#13;
I'd be lost in a world of idiots.&#13;
If you, Mr. )ambois, and your&#13;
The people and professors on&#13;
this campus are as friendly and&#13;
nice as at the small colleges I&#13;
have previously attended, both&#13;
dormitory and commuter .. Anyone&#13;
will talk to you and has time&#13;
All those who have "rights" are&#13;
dead right - for they will only&#13;
lead a dead existence in their&#13;
life.&#13;
Those who feel privileged will&#13;
use the privilege to grow and&#13;
expand their knowledge and life&#13;
to the · benefit of all.&#13;
Name withheld by request&#13;
Use the· bus and&#13;
conserve energy&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
At this time in Parkside's&#13;
history when parking is at a&#13;
premium, it is appropriate to&#13;
urge people to make use of the&#13;
city bus system that comes to the&#13;
campus . While each of us can&#13;
make up an excuse for not riding&#13;
the bus, here are a list of reasons&#13;
why we should :&#13;
1. Door front service ,_ no need&#13;
to walk that sometimes lengthy&#13;
distance from you car to the&#13;
buildings.&#13;
2. Money - after insurance, gas,&#13;
and a parking sticker for your car&#13;
- it costs much more than fifty&#13;
cents a day to ride out here and&#13;
science majors. These could be&#13;
expanded to meet the needs of&#13;
the 'community' relatively easily&#13;
WITHOUT degrading our own&#13;
University Programs.&#13;
Dear Chancellor - do not give&#13;
us a watered-down version of&#13;
Carthage College or a 4-year&#13;
Extension University; give us&#13;
what was promised and&#13;
demanded from the beginning: a&#13;
strong, professionally-oriented&#13;
University with a faculty&#13;
dedicated to teaching and&#13;
supported with a well-developed&#13;
and planned research program.&#13;
Paul W. Hinds&#13;
Senior,~edical&#13;
Technology&#13;
back. Besides, we've already&#13;
paid for part of the bus ride with&#13;
tuition and federal tax money.&#13;
3. Convenience - Don't worry&#13;
about starting your car on cold&#13;
winter mornings.&#13;
4. Energy conservation - Mass&#13;
transit is here to stay. Let's get&#13;
used to it. Save gas and help save&#13;
the environment.&#13;
If en~ugh people ride the&#13;
Racine or Kenosha bus, it's&#13;
possible they may even increase&#13;
bus service to every half hour or&#13;
possibly into the evening hours.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Jerry Feucht&#13;
reason Mr. Livingston's average&#13;
went down and the reason why&#13;
he is only carrying two courses is&#13;
simply that he works full time on&#13;
the Ranger and at home. And for&#13;
a journalist what better&#13;
~xperience could you ask for?&#13;
A student's first responsibility&#13;
is to himself. But when he starts&#13;
infringing on my rights and the&#13;
rights of others then he deserves&#13;
a good lecture on morals. I call it&#13;
infringement when all a person&#13;
does is sit and bitch about how&#13;
lousy Parkside is. I go here and&#13;
am damned proud_to be a part of&#13;
this system. When 'Dumb shits'&#13;
like you criticize this institution&#13;
(and can't even back their statements&#13;
up) then those criticisms&#13;
are impudent. Mr. )ambois, what&#13;
are you doJng to improve your&#13;
supporters think-that a few hours institution?&#13;
of your precious time is going to I'm enthused that these hard&#13;
pull your GPA average down workers are paying · for their&#13;
from a 3.0 to a 2.0 then you have college education. I sympathize&#13;
been eating from a crock of shit. with the student tnat puts in&#13;
Feeding such ludicrous notions is eighteen credit hours here at&#13;
an example of sheer moronic- Parkside then works seven nights&#13;
ness. It is also disgusting to think a week at another job. But tell&#13;
that I would go to the same me so"1ething, Robert my friend,&#13;
·school with such feeble minded how can they possibly have the&#13;
people. But I think that your strength and e.ciergy to complain&#13;
main idea of writing this week's about Parkside's social lif.e - editoral was to burn Phil living- especially since they don't have&#13;
ston. Pleasr do not abuse the . the time to get involved? That&#13;
Ranger this way. I am appealing energy should be directed to&#13;
to your finer instincts, but have something more useful and that&#13;
been told by certain people that. is my main argument.&#13;
you do not possess any. The only University of verrnont&#13;
alias Lamron &#13;
views/news&#13;
The Parkside Ranger Newspaper&#13;
Bylaws&#13;
, Purpose ,&#13;
The purpose of this corporation is to edit, publish, sell and/or&#13;
-dtstnbute a newspaper known as the Ranger, and to perform any and&#13;
all other acts and things in any manner necessary, convenient,&#13;
adapted or incidental to the accomplishing of any or all of the&#13;
purposes of the corporation pursuant to the first amendment of the&#13;
Constitution of the United States of America.&#13;
Membership&#13;
It is the policy of this corporation on the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
campus not to discriminate on the basis of sex or race in its&#13;
membership, activities, or services. Inquiries regarding compliance&#13;
with Title IX relating to sex discrimination may be directed to the&#13;
Title IX Coordinator. Inquiries related to racial discrimination may be&#13;
directed to the Affirmative Action Officer. Both may be reached&#13;
through the Chancellor's Office at Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Membership is open to all registered students at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks ide. Members are eligible to vote in staff decisions at&#13;
staff meetings. Members may petitTon for the position of Editor to the&#13;
Ranger Advisory Board and for other editorial positions to the Editor.&#13;
Members shall be identified as members by a press pass authorized&#13;
by the Editor with an expiration date no longer than one year from&#13;
the date of the installation of the Editor.&#13;
Termination of Membership&#13;
.Membership is terminated by: 1) Termination of student status; 2)&#13;
Resignation from the corporation; 3) Violation of journalistic&#13;
standards by decision of the Editorial Board.&#13;
Meetings&#13;
Regular meetings shall be called at least once each semester at&#13;
times and places set by the Editor. Meetings and notification of&#13;
meetings shall comply with open meeting laws of the State of&#13;
Wisconsin, UW-System, and the University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Meetings shall be conducted pursuant to Robert's Rules of Order.&#13;
Editorial Board&#13;
The following individuals shall comprise the Editorial Board: the&#13;
Editor, the General Manager (Business Manager/Managing Editor),&#13;
the Copy Editor, the News Editor, the Feature Editor, and the Sports&#13;
Editor .&#13;
Board of Directors&#13;
There shall be seven (7) directors of this corporation as follows:&#13;
1( The President (Editor)&#13;
2( The Vice-presidentlTreasurer (General Manager)&#13;
3( The Secretary (Advertising Manager)&#13;
4( The News Editor&#13;
5( A staff member elected at large&#13;
6( A staff member elected at large&#13;
7( Faculty Advisor&#13;
The Board of Directors shall appoint two members of the faculty,&#13;
two academic staff including the advisor, and one staff member&#13;
elected by the staff, to serve on the Advisory Board for the purpose of&#13;
selecting the Editor. Standing members of the Advisory Board are:&#13;
Editor, General Manager, and all former Editors of the Ranger. The&#13;
Board of Directors are the officers of the corporation.&#13;
Editor&#13;
The Editor, selected annually by the Advisory Boardjnust carry at&#13;
least six (6) academic credits at the University of wlsconstn-Parkstde.&#13;
The Editor may appoint the necessary amount of subordinate editors&#13;
and managers to fulfill the purpose of the corporation. All&#13;
subordinate editors and managers must carry at least six (6) academic&#13;
credits at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside. The Editor may be&#13;
terminated by the Advisory Board for just cause. Just cause shall be&#13;
defined as follows; 1) Violation of corporate bylaws; 2) Termination&#13;
of student status; 3) Violation of journalistic standards. The Advisory&#13;
Board must prove willful intent of the Editor in violation of bylaws or&#13;
journalistic standards.&#13;
Duties and Responsibilities&#13;
The Editor is responsible for the editorial Quality and financial&#13;
.stability of the newspaper. The Board of Directors shall-manage the&#13;
affairs of the newspaper.&#13;
r Disbursement of Funds&#13;
As long as the Ranger remains an official student organiza~ion. at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parks ide with its funds on deposit With&#13;
the Bursar at said university, there shall be dual signatures on all&#13;
vouchers in addition to the signature of the faculty advisor. Those&#13;
two signatures shall be those of the Editor and General Manager.&#13;
During the time when the newspaper is not being published .and the&#13;
Editor and General Manager are unavailable or their positrons are&#13;
vacant, the faculty advisor may initiate vouchers alone.&#13;
Books and Records&#13;
All books and records of the corporation shall be kept pursuant to&#13;
Sect. 1M .27 of the Wisconsin State Statutes .•&#13;
Amendments&#13;
These bylaws may be amended by a two-thirds vote of the Board of&#13;
Directors.&#13;
APPLICA TIONS ARE NOW&#13;
BEING ACCEPTED FOR 1978&#13;
Charges&#13;
• against&#13;
Reinert&#13;
d,ropped&#13;
Chancellor Alan E.&#13;
Guskirr notified the&#13;
Academic Staff Committee&#13;
that the complaint&#13;
against Thomas Reinert&#13;
was dropped Monday,&#13;
October 17.&#13;
October 24, 1977&#13;
To: Philip l.livingston, Editor,&#13;
Rarkside Ranger&#13;
From: Chancellor Alan E. Guskin&#13;
Subject: Complaint OIIOIinst&#13;
Thomas Reinert&#13;
I am writing to accept the&#13;
formal withdrawal of your&#13;
complaint against Thomas&#13;
Reinert received October 17,&#13;
1977. As you know, before the&#13;
complaint with Withdrawn, I&#13;
forwarded it to the Academic&#13;
Staff Committee as the appropriate&#13;
hearing body for review,&#13;
under UWPA 10.04 (l,c). After&#13;
being informed of the withdrawal,&#13;
the Academic Staff Committee&#13;
unanimously passed the&#13;
following resolution:&#13;
that Reinert must be presumed&#13;
completely innocent&#13;
by the committee members,&#13;
and that no records of this&#13;
action be entered into his&#13;
personnel files ."!&#13;
The committee also recommended,&#13;
acting on the request of&#13;
Thomas Reinert, that this&#13;
resolution be published in the&#13;
Ranger. I concur with that&#13;
recommendation and ask that it&#13;
be printed as soon as possible.&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student govemment&#13;
Student government&#13;
supports Ranger&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, PSCA, Inc.&#13;
It's really a shame that certain individuals on this campus have&#13;
nothing better to do with their time than to slanderize the reputation&#13;
of a fellow student who is actively working to improve conditions at&#13;
Parkside. It seems to me that Robert J. Iembots' recent letter to the&#13;
Editor has the overtones of a personal vendetta.&#13;
Without student participation in extra curricular activities what&#13;
services would be offered on campus at all? There would be no films,&#13;
dances, or coffee houses without P.A.B.! There would be no formal&#13;
student voice with the faculty or administration without Student&#13;
Government! There would be no source of information on critical&#13;
issues or general happenings without Ranger! I could go on and on&#13;
listing the services provided by every student organization, but my&#13;
point is that there would be no services at all without students who&#13;
are willing to donate their time and effort to provide them&#13;
Fortunately for Parkside these students do exist, but they are a&#13;
minority. The entire student body must be made to realize that in&#13;
order to improve things around here they are going to have to pitch tn&#13;
and work. Being involved in extra-curricular activities can be as much&#13;
of a learning experience as any class on campus.&#13;
Icriticize no student who chooses not to participate, due to lack of&#13;
time, a heavy class load, or whatever, but Iunderstand the frustration&#13;
of those who put in endless hours with little or no assistance.&#13;
Mention this adl&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
~, .,&#13;
NEEDED&#13;
STUDENT HELP&#13;
Social Science Division&#13;
Keypunc!lina and typing&#13;
Keypunc!lina and typina&#13;
Fred Jones GR:I02 2S18&#13;
Sam Pemoa:ioro GR 313 2427&#13;
Preparation of clossroom materiols Oliver Hor-&lt;! a 337 2697&#13;
indudina research and some typ;na&#13;
Generol office -"; typina&#13;
essential&#13;
DivisionalOffice a. 368 2316&#13;
Mail letter of applica tion and resume to&#13;
Don Kopriva&#13;
Public Information Office&#13;
University ofWisconsin-Parksid&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Phone 55~-2404&#13;
Applications due on&#13;
or before Nov. 9th,&#13;
views/news&#13;
The Parkside Ranger Newspaper&#13;
Bylaws&#13;
Purpose&#13;
The purpose of this corporation is to edit, publish, sell and/or&#13;
-distribute a newspaper known as the Ranger, and to perform any and&#13;
all other acts and things in any manner necessary, convenient,&#13;
adapted or incidental to the accomplishing of any or all of the&#13;
purposes of the corporation pursuant to the first amendment of the&#13;
Constitution of the United States of America.&#13;
Membership&#13;
It is the policy of this corporation on the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
campus not to discriminate on the basis of sex or race in its&#13;
membership, activities, or services. Inquiries regarding compliance&#13;
with Title IX relating to sex discrimination may be directed to the&#13;
Title IX Coordinator. Inquiries related to racial discrimination may be&#13;
directed to the Affirmative Action Officer. Both may be reached&#13;
through the Chancellor's Office at Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Membership is open to all registered students at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Members are 1:?ligible to vote in staff decisions at&#13;
staff meetings. Members may petition for the position of Editor to the&#13;
Ranger Advisory Board and for other editorial positions to the Editor.&#13;
Members shall be identified as members by a press pass authorized&#13;
by the Editor with an expiration date no longer than one year from&#13;
the date of the installation of the Editor.&#13;
Termination of Membership&#13;
, Membership is terminated by: 1) Termination of student status; 2)&#13;
Resignation from the corporation; 3) Violation of journalistic&#13;
standards by decision of the Editorial Board.&#13;
Meetings&#13;
Regular meetings shall be called at least once each semester at&#13;
times and places set by the Editor. Meetings and notification of&#13;
meetings shall comply with open meeting laws of the State of&#13;
Wisconsin, UW-System, and the University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Meetings shall be conducted pursuant to Robert's Rules of Order.&#13;
Editorial Board&#13;
The following individuals shall comprise the Editorial Board: the&#13;
Editor, the General Manager (Business Manager/ Managing Editor),&#13;
the Copy Editor, the News Editor, the Feature Editor, and the Sports&#13;
Editor.&#13;
Board of Directors&#13;
There shall be seven (7) directors of this corporation as follows :&#13;
1( The President (Editor)&#13;
2( The Vice-president/Treasurer (General Manager)&#13;
3( The Secretary (Advertising Manager)&#13;
4( The News Editor&#13;
5( A staff member elected at large&#13;
6( A staff member elected at large&#13;
7( Faculty Advisor&#13;
The Board of Directors shall appoint two members of the faculty,&#13;
two academic staff including the advisor, and one staff member&#13;
elected by the staff, to serve on the Advisory Board for the purpose of&#13;
selecting the Editor. Standing members of the Advisory Board are:&#13;
Editor, General Manager, and all former Editors of the Ranger. The&#13;
Board of Directors are the officers of the corporation .&#13;
Editor&#13;
The Editor, selected annually by the Advisory Board, must carry at&#13;
least six (6) academic credits at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside .&#13;
The Editor may appoint the necessary amount of subordinate editors&#13;
and managers to fulfill the purpose of the corporation . All&#13;
subordinate editors and managers must carry at least six (6) academic&#13;
credits at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside. The Editor may be&#13;
terminated by the Advisory Board for just cause. Just cause shall be&#13;
defined as follows ; 1) Violation of corporate bylaws; 2) Termination&#13;
of student status; 3) Violation of journalistic standards. The Advisory&#13;
Board must prove willful intent of the Editor in violation of bylaws or&#13;
journalistic standards.&#13;
Duties and Responsibilities&#13;
The Editor is responsible for the editorial quality and financial&#13;
stability of the newspaper. The Board of Directors shall ,manage the&#13;
affairs of the newspaper.&#13;
Disbursement of Funds&#13;
As long as the Ranger remains an official ~tudent organ iza~ion. at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside with its funds on deposit with&#13;
the Bursar at said university, there shall be dual signatures on all&#13;
vouchers in addition to the signature of the faculty advisor. Those&#13;
two signatures shall be those of the Editor and General Manager.&#13;
During the time when the newspaper is not being published and the&#13;
Editor and General Manager are unavailable or the) r positions are&#13;
vacant, the faculty advisor may initiate vouchers alone.&#13;
Books and Records&#13;
All books and records of the corporation shall be kept pursuant to&#13;
Sect. 1M .27 of the Wisconsin State Statutes.&#13;
Amendments&#13;
These bylaws may be amended by a two-thirds vote of the Board of&#13;
Directors.&#13;
Charges&#13;
• against&#13;
Reinert&#13;
dropped&#13;
Chancellor Alan E.&#13;
Guskin notified the&#13;
Academic Staff Committee&#13;
that the complaint&#13;
against Thomas Reinert&#13;
was dropped Monday,&#13;
October 17.&#13;
October 24, 1977&#13;
To: Philip L. Livingston, Editor,&#13;
Rarkside Ranger&#13;
From: Chancellor Alan E. Guskin&#13;
Subject: Complaint against&#13;
Thomas Reinert&#13;
I am writing to accept the&#13;
formal withdrawal of your&#13;
complaint against Thomas&#13;
Reinert received October 17,&#13;
1977. As you know, before the&#13;
complaint with withdrawn, I&#13;
forwarded it to the Academic&#13;
Staff Committee as the appropriate&#13;
hearing body for review,&#13;
under UWPA 10.04 (1,c). After&#13;
being informed of the withdrawal,&#13;
the Academic Staff Committee&#13;
unanimously passed the&#13;
following resolution :&#13;
that Reinert must be presumed&#13;
completely innocent&#13;
by the committee members,&#13;
and that no records of this&#13;
action be entered into his&#13;
personnel files ."&#13;
The committee also recommended,&#13;
acting on the request of&#13;
Thomas Reinert, that this&#13;
resolution be published in the&#13;
Ranger. I concur with that&#13;
recommendation and ask that it&#13;
be printed as soon as possible.&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
Student government&#13;
supports Ranger&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, PSGA, Inc.&#13;
It's really a shame that certain individuals on this campus have&#13;
nothing better to do with their time than to slandenze the reputation&#13;
of a fellow student who is actively working to improve conditions at&#13;
Parkside. It seems to me that Robert J Jambo1s' recent letter to the&#13;
Editor has the overtones of a personal vendetta&#13;
Without student participation m extra curricular activ1t1es what&#13;
services would be offered on campus at all? There would be no film ,&#13;
dances, or coffee houses without PA B I There would be no formal&#13;
student voice with the faculty or administration without Student&#13;
Government! There would be no source of information on critical&#13;
issues or general happenings without Ranger! I could go on and on&#13;
listing the services provided by every student organization, but my&#13;
point is that there would be no services at all without students who&#13;
are willing to donate their time and effort to provide them .&#13;
Fortunately for Parkside these students do exist, but they are a&#13;
minority. The entire student body must be made to realize that in&#13;
order to improve things around here they are going to have to pitch in&#13;
and work. Being involved in extra-curricular actIv1tIes can be as much&#13;
of a learning experience as any class on campus&#13;
I criticize no student who chooses not to partIcIpate, due to lack of&#13;
time, a heavy class load, or whatever, but I understand the frustration&#13;
of those who put in endless hours with little or no assistance.&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention this adl&#13;
NEEDED&#13;
STUDENT HELP&#13;
Social Science Division&#13;
Keypunching and typing&#13;
Keypunching and typing&#13;
Fred Jones GR 302 2518&#13;
Som Pemocciaro GR 313 2427&#13;
Preparation of classroom materials Oliver Hayword&#13;
including research and some typing&#13;
General office work; typing&#13;
essential&#13;
Divisional Office&#13;
Cl 337 2697&#13;
ct 368 2316&#13;
APPLICATIONS ARE NOW&#13;
BEING ACCEPTED FOR 1978&#13;
Mail letter of application and resume to&#13;
Phone 55~-2404&#13;
Applications due on&#13;
or before Nov. 9th.&#13;
~on Kopriva&#13;
Public Information Office&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parksid&#13;
Ket).osha, Wisconsin 53141 &#13;
campus&#13;
Want a career? See Mrs. I.&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
list. I work with the ones that&#13;
come on campus to recruit and&#13;
those which don't. Those that&#13;
don't come on campus, call in&#13;
job openings. I normally_ get 3&#13;
job openings a day. Many&#13;
employers say that we have the&#13;
best placement service in the&#13;
state. I developed the business&#13;
and industry part of Placement&#13;
and now I'm presently the&#13;
coordinator .&#13;
Ranger: So you get people jobs,&#13;
right?&#13;
No free jobs&#13;
Mrs. Zimmermann: I do not get&#13;
anyone a job. I aid [n the proMrs.&#13;
Verna Zimmermann is&#13;
Parkside's Coordinator of Employment&#13;
Placement. In an&#13;
interview with RANGER, she tells&#13;
what she does for Parkside&#13;
students and gives a picture of&#13;
the present employment situation.&#13;
Ranger: Mrs. Zimmermann,&#13;
"What do you do as the&#13;
Coordinator of Placement?"&#13;
Mrs. Zimmennann: I work with&#13;
600 industries almost 90% of&#13;
which are on the Fortune ·1000&#13;
The !aate.t.growing&#13;
Premium Beer in America.&#13;
HAVE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
W!tlt ni,C,.,.R .&#13;
1Plrc••t••• r YOWIII&#13;
Noun&#13;
M-T&#13;
7p.m.-&#13;
10 p.m.&#13;
,.... __ ~ ....)""' ...T.,pp.r.&#13;
25'&#13;
Ladles Nigllt&#13;
Wed.&#13;
o.til.C.r .. r&#13;
.f 57t11&amp; 23 Aw.&#13;
Mle.&#13;
35"&#13;
M... dDriRirs&#13;
40"&#13;
cess. Any job that comes in&#13;
that a candidate qualifies for, I&#13;
send out their credennars which&#13;
consists of a personal data form,&#13;
references and academic records&#13;
unless the "student wishes to&#13;
control the release of" their&#13;
credentials. That means I can't&#13;
send those credentials out without&#13;
their OK. -&#13;
Ranger: It is mostly seniors that&#13;
use your service, right? -&#13;
Mrs. Zimmerman: Yes, second&#13;
semester seniors. We hold&#13;
workshops during registration.&#13;
There is one in the morning,&#13;
noon, and evening so that all&#13;
,.&#13;
may have a chance to attend&#13;
one. Any student is welcome to&#13;
come to the workshops. After the&#13;
workshops at which - I give&#13;
general information, 1 have&#13;
'individual appointments with all&#13;
concerned. It is best not to wait&#13;
until graduation is near to start&#13;
looking for a career. The job&#13;
market fQC the fall semester&#13;
graduate is over at Thanksgiving.&#13;
From the beginning of October&#13;
to Thanksgiving the employer is&#13;
out there looking" at all the&#13;
candidates and, of course, they&#13;
want the best they can get. They&#13;
then make the hard decisions at&#13;
Thanksgiving after -that the&#13;
market is mostly-unexpected job&#13;
openings. In the spring recuiting&#13;
is from the first of February to&#13;
Easter.The minute you graduate&#13;
you are unemployed so if you&#13;
wait until you graduate you hav~&#13;
to account for the time you were&#13;
unemployed - }'Vhy were you&#13;
unemployed? and - Why were&#13;
y~m not good enough to have&#13;
gotten a job? In the summer it's&#13;
almost 100% call-in job&#13;
openings as no one comes on&#13;
campus to recruit during the&#13;
summer. .People that I've never&#13;
contacted contact me to recruit&#13;
or to phone in job openings. It&#13;
has.now reached the point where&#13;
industries seek us out because&#13;
our reputation has spread. Many&#13;
employers say that the students&#13;
here are very polished, very&#13;
sophisticated. Well, I guess I&#13;
have to say, that I work with 435&#13;
students a year and I help them&#13;
polish their job hunting skills,&#13;
which Madison, and Milwaukee_&#13;
can't do. ~&#13;
.Data Processing in demand&#13;
Ranger: What are some of the&#13;
fields of study that are in the&#13;
greatest demand, and what are&#13;
some sample pay scales?&#13;
Mrs. Zimmerman: The Data Processing&#13;
field is in the greatest&#13;
demand. The demand far&#13;
exceeds the supply. Accounting&#13;
has reached its peak and is&#13;
starting to taper off. Chemistry is&#13;
also "high. CETA has created a&#13;
demarid for psychology and&#13;
sociology majors.&#13;
The average graduate entry&#13;
pay is $9;000-10,000 a year, but&#13;
one student last year started at&#13;
the entry level at $15,500 a year.&#13;
He had a Business Management&#13;
major.&#13;
Ranger: What do you recomment&#13;
for underclassrnent;&#13;
Mrs. Zimmermann: You should&#13;
ask yourself as a freshman, "what&#13;
am , going to do with my major?"&#13;
.Investigate every direction that&#13;
you can go with your chosen&#13;
major and use your electives to&#13;
enhance your major. That gives&#13;
more job opportunities. But they&#13;
suggest they get academic and&#13;
career counseling while they are&#13;
freshmen.&#13;
Most graduates on file&#13;
Ranger; Did all the graduates&#13;
come thru' the placement office,&#13;
and should a student who is&#13;
going to go to graduate school&#13;
come to you?&#13;
Mrs. Zimmermann:- Last year all&#13;
but 15 of the graduates walked&#13;
through our door. Yes, even if a&#13;
student is going to go to&#13;
graduate school this is a good&#13;
place to use as a central point for&#13;
their references. They'll always&#13;
be on file, so if a professor or an&#13;
employer goes to Timbucktoo or&#13;
has forgotfen who they are, they&#13;
still have that reference. My&#13;
philosophy is to be fair and&#13;
candid to the ~niversity, the&#13;
industry, to the student, and to&#13;
myself, with no order of priority.&#13;
Next week: Student government&#13;
grg~.n~"I"&#13;
Professor stu'dies OR tap at Union Square -&#13;
cg'ic&#13;
........ - --'"&#13;
• enrollment motivation_&#13;
I&#13;
Richard 1. Pomazal, assistant professor of&#13;
Psychology, gave two presentations reporting the&#13;
results of his latest motivational research October&#13;
IOand 17, before the Recruitment Committee. The&#13;
study was funded through O. Clayton Johnson,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Educational Services.&#13;
A job, time, and Parkside&#13;
The results reflected Parkside's pragmatic&#13;
commuter orientation. Two important reoccuring&#13;
motivational issues were; being able to keep a job&#13;
while attending _Parkside, and not taking up too&#13;
much time. Most intenders felt that enrolling at&#13;
Parkside would allow them to obtain a quality&#13;
education which thev" believed would benefit&#13;
them in the future. Persons not motivated to&#13;
enroll believed Parkside would interfere with their&#13;
work schedule and did not think it would help&#13;
them financially in the future.&#13;
Pomazal explained the four types of statistical&#13;
analyses applied to his data; simple T-tests&#13;
comparing means (beliefs, values, and feelings),&#13;
correlations between key enrollment issues and&#13;
intentions, multiple correlation an-alysis of&#13;
intentions, and factor analysis of motivational&#13;
variables.&#13;
Theory widely employed&#13;
In addition to understanding enrollment&#13;
motivation, the applied theory of behavioral&#13;
intention has been used to increase knowledge of&#13;
consumer behavior, blood donation, drug use,&#13;
and church attendance. According to a marketing&#13;
version of the theory, a person's behavioral&#13;
intention is a function of two components; 1)&#13;
attitude toward the act itself (personal attitupe&#13;
towards enrolling at Parksidej.and 2) social norms&#13;
(what other people thilik the Indfvidual should&#13;
do).&#13;
Persons interested in -..obtaining more&#13;
information about Parkside enrollment motivations&#13;
can contact Professor Pomazal at 552-2426.&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
campus&#13;
may have a chance to attend&#13;
one. Any student is welcome to&#13;
come to the workshops. After the&#13;
workshops at which - I give&#13;
general information, I have&#13;
individual appointments with all&#13;
concerned. It is best not to wait&#13;
until graduation is near to start&#13;
looking for a career. The job&#13;
market tor the fall semester&#13;
graduate is over at Thanksgiving.&#13;
From the beginning of October&#13;
to Thanksgiving the employer is&#13;
out there looking - at all the&#13;
candidates and, of course, they&#13;
want the best they can get. They&#13;
then make the hard decisions at&#13;
Thanksgiving after that the&#13;
market is mostly1.mexpected job&#13;
openings . In the spring recuiting&#13;
- Mrs. Zimmerman: The Data Processing&#13;
field is in the greatest&#13;
demand . The demand far&#13;
exceeds the supply . Accounting&#13;
has reached its peak and is&#13;
starting to taper off. Chemistry is&#13;
also high . CETA has created a&#13;
demand for psychology and&#13;
sociology major.s.&#13;
The average graduate entry&#13;
pay is $&lt;J;0()0-10,000 a year, but&#13;
one student last year started at&#13;
the entry level at $15,500 a year.&#13;
He had a Business Management&#13;
major.&#13;
Ranger: What do you recomment&#13;
for underclassmen?,&#13;
Mrs. Zimmermann: You should&#13;
ask yourself as a freshman, "what&#13;
am I going to do with my major?"&#13;
.1 nvestigate every direction that&#13;
you can go with your chosen&#13;
major and use your electives to&#13;
enhance your major. That gives&#13;
more job opportunities . But they&#13;
suggest they get academic and&#13;
career counseling while they are&#13;
freshmen.&#13;
Most graduates on file&#13;
Ranger: Did all the graduates&#13;
come thru· the placement office,&#13;
and should a student who is&#13;
going to go to graduate school&#13;
come to you? -&#13;
Want a career? See Mrs. ·z.&#13;
is from the first of February to&#13;
Easter. The minute you graduate&#13;
you are unemployed so if you&#13;
wait until you graduate you have&#13;
to account for the time you were&#13;
unemployed - Why were you&#13;
unemployed? and - Why were&#13;
ybu not good enough to have&#13;
gotten a job? In the summer it's&#13;
almost 100% call-in job&#13;
openings as no one comes on&#13;
campus to recruit during the&#13;
summer. ·People that I've never&#13;
contacted contact me to recruit&#13;
or to phone in job openings. It&#13;
has now reached the point where&#13;
industries seek us out because&#13;
our reputation has spread. Many&#13;
employers say that the students&#13;
here are very polished, very&#13;
sophisticated. Well, I guess I&#13;
have to say, that I work with 435&#13;
students a year and I help them&#13;
polish their job hunting skills,&#13;
which Madison, and Milwaukee&#13;
can't do. _ -&#13;
Mrs. Zimmermann:- Last year all&#13;
but 15 of the graduates walked&#13;
through our door. Yes, even if a&#13;
student is going to go to&#13;
graduate school this is a good&#13;
place to use as a central point for&#13;
their references. They'll always&#13;
be on file, so if a professor or an&#13;
employer goes to Timbucktoo or&#13;
has forgotten who they are, they&#13;
still have that reference. My&#13;
philosophy is to be fair and&#13;
candid to the University, the&#13;
industry, to the student, and to&#13;
myself, with no order of priority.&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Mrs. Verna Zimmermann is&#13;
Parkside's Coordinator of Employment&#13;
Placement. In an&#13;
interview with RANGER, she tells&#13;
what she does for Parkside&#13;
students and gives a picture of&#13;
the present ~mployment situation.&#13;
&#13;
Ranger: Mrs . Zimmermann,&#13;
"What do you do as the&#13;
Coordinator of Placement?"&#13;
Mrs. Zimmermann: I work with&#13;
600 industries almost 90% of&#13;
which are on the Fortune 1000&#13;
list. I work with the ones that&#13;
come on campus to recruit and&#13;
those which don't. Those that&#13;
don't come on campus, call in&#13;
job openings. I normally get 3&#13;
job openings a day. Many&#13;
employers say that we have the&#13;
best placement service in the&#13;
state. I developed the business&#13;
and industry part of Placement&#13;
and now I'm presently the&#13;
coordinator.&#13;
Ranger: So you get people jobs,&#13;
right? -&#13;
No free jobs&#13;
Mrs. Zimmermann: I do not get&#13;
anyone a job._ I aid in the proThe&#13;
fastest-growing&#13;
Premium Beer in America.&#13;
cess . Any job that comes in&#13;
that a candidate qualifies for, I&#13;
send out their ,credential's which&#13;
consists of a personal data form,&#13;
references and academic recoras&#13;
unless the student wishes to&#13;
control the release of ' their&#13;
credentials . That means I can't&#13;
send those credentials out without&#13;
their OK.&#13;
Ranger: It is mostly seniors that&#13;
use your service, right? -&#13;
Mrs. Zimmerman: Yes, second&#13;
semester seniors . We hold&#13;
workshops during registration .&#13;
There is one in the morning,&#13;
noon, and evening so that all&#13;
, .&#13;
. Data Processing in demand&#13;
Ranger: What are some of the&#13;
fields of study that are in the&#13;
greatest demand, and what are&#13;
some sample pay scales?&#13;
I&#13;
Professor-studies&#13;
results&#13;
On tap at Union Square . -&#13;
citf'i + -'\ . - _ ;;,,r&#13;
· enrollment motivation&#13;
HAVE-A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN&#13;
With This Coupon ·&#13;
1 Per Custo•er YOW ZAA&#13;
Ladies Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
0• the Cor•er&#13;
of 57th &amp; 23 Awe.&#13;
Noun&#13;
M-T&#13;
7p.m.-&#13;
10p.m.&#13;
Tappers&#13;
25r&#13;
Mic.&#13;
35c&#13;
Mixed Drinks&#13;
40c&#13;
Richard J. Pomazal, assistant professor of&#13;
Psychology, gave two presentations reporting the&#13;
results of his latest motivational research October&#13;
10and 17, before the Recruitment Committee. The&#13;
study was funded through 0. Clayton Johnson,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Educational Services.&#13;
A job, time, and Parkside&#13;
The results reflected Parkside's pragmatic&#13;
commuter orientation. Two important reoccuring&#13;
motivational issues were; oeing able to keep a job&#13;
while attending Parkside, and not taking up too&#13;
much time. Most intenders felt that enrolling at&#13;
Parkside would allow them to obtain a quality&#13;
education which they· believed would benefit&#13;
them in the future. Persons not motivated to&#13;
enroll believed-Parkside would interfere with their&#13;
work schedule and did not think it would help&#13;
them financially in the future.&#13;
Pomazal explained the four types of statistical&#13;
analyses applied to his data; simple T-tests&#13;
comparing means (beliefs, values, and feelings),&#13;
correlations between key enrollment issues and&#13;
intentions, multiple correlation analysis of&#13;
intentions, and factor analysis of motivational&#13;
variables.&#13;
Theory widely employed&#13;
In addition to understanding enrollment&#13;
motivation, the applied theory of behavioral&#13;
intention has been used to increase knowledge of&#13;
consumer· behavior, blood donation, drug use,&#13;
and church attendance. According to a marketing&#13;
version of the theory, a person's behavioral&#13;
intention is a function of two components; 1)&#13;
attitude toward the act itself (personal attitude&#13;
towards enrolling at Parkside).,and 2) social norms&#13;
(what other people thif\k the ini::lividual should&#13;
do).&#13;
Persons interested in - obtarning more&#13;
information about Parkside enrollment motivations&#13;
can contact Professor Pomazal at 552-2428. &#13;
campus&#13;
Members of the Office of Student Development in the Career Resource library in Tallent Hall: Jock Elmore-Director,Barb larsen-Coreer PIO~ing.&#13;
Mar, Fox..£ducotionol Placement, Joseph Obalton~ Research activities on students and minor~ies, Verna ZilJ'lmermann-Coordinotor of Placement,&#13;
Tim Desc~reer .Planning and High School relations, and Abisola Gallagher-Placement and minority affairs.&#13;
Office of Student Development:&#13;
representatives of UW-Parkside&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The Offices of- Student&#13;
Development and. Community&#13;
Student Services were originally&#13;
called the Career Planning and&#13;
Placement Office, Counseling&#13;
Office, Advising, Admissions,&#13;
and High School Relations. All&#13;
these functions were manned by&#13;
one or two people but with that&#13;
massive fragmentation, if you&#13;
had a task that is reasonably&#13;
large you don't have the peoplepower&#13;
to get it done. But, when&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Clay fohnson&#13;
came to Parks ide he&#13;
integrated all these functions&#13;
into one large group and then&#13;
divided it into two groups. The&#13;
Office of Student Development,&#13;
and the office of Community&#13;
Student Services. The Office of&#13;
Student Development deals with&#13;
traditional college age students,&#13;
while the Office of Community&#13;
Student Service deals with the&#13;
older college students,&#13;
The Office of Student&#13;
Development deals with the&#13;
incoming students who are&#13;
generally coming right out of&#13;
high school. Mr. Jack Elmore, the&#13;
office's director, said "we ask the&#13;
incoming students to come in&#13;
and try to tell them a bit about&#13;
what they can expect while here&#13;
at school, everything from what&#13;
is a credit hour to what is going&#13;
to happen to me at registration,&#13;
where do I get my books, where&#13;
do I hang my coat ... there are a&#13;
lot of Questions bouncing around&#13;
and we try to correct any&#13;
misconceptions they have about&#13;
what college life is like.&#13;
"Our function' is to really try to&#13;
be a service to students, and to&#13;
help them with. ttle type of&#13;
~concerns they have. Those&#13;
concerns may be from a very&#13;
personal problem type of thing,&#13;
may be psychological in nature,&#13;
to dealing with very nutsv-boltv&#13;
type of problems,like how do I&#13;
sign up for a one credit module&#13;
in volcanoes. The function of&#13;
student services is to provide a&#13;
series of services, from helping&#13;
students get jobs when they get&#13;
out (which many faculty&#13;
members are involved in), to&#13;
helping students understand the&#13;
institution when they come in, to&#13;
going out to talk about the&#13;
institution.&#13;
"We go to all the high schools&#13;
in this area to talk about&#13;
Parkside, and we also have&#13;
college nights. We go to Brown&#13;
Deer, Racine lutheran, Horlick,&#13;
Greenfield, Janesville, Gase,&#13;
Kenosha Bradford, South Mil~&#13;
waukee, St. Francis, Waterford,&#13;
and St. Catherines'. In the spring,&#13;
with the local schools, we set up&#13;
our table in there every month,&#13;
and students stop by to talk and&#13;
to ask questions. One thing we&#13;
try to get across IS for the&#13;
students to get involved in&#13;
something here at Parkside.&#13;
If they would, they would find&#13;
life more pleasant. I tell them to&#13;
get involved in something. I&#13;
don't care if it's Earth Science&#13;
Club or if you become a&#13;
professional Foes-ball player.&#13;
Just get involved in something.&#13;
The people who work for&#13;
Elmore are: Miss Abisola&#13;
Gallagher - She has been active&#13;
with minorities and the minority&#13;
business club. Miss Mary Fox -&#13;
She deals with educational&#13;
placement. Mrs. Barbara larson&#13;
- Career Planning and she also&#13;
deals with the pre-professionals.&#13;
Mr. Tim Desch - Career&#13;
planning and High School&#13;
relations. Mr . Joseph Obalton&#13;
- Research activities on the&#13;
students and minorities. Mrs.&#13;
Ambassador to spealc at Uw·p is the first person to hold that&#13;
post, a part of a program&#13;
initiated by the Department of&#13;
State in which senior foreign&#13;
service officers are assigned to&#13;
university campuses as resource&#13;
persons.&#13;
David E. Mark, until recently&#13;
the American Ambassador to&#13;
Burundi, Africa, will be at the&#13;
University of Wiscons-in-Piukside&#13;
on Wednesday, Oct. 26, to meet&#13;
with political science and history&#13;
classes and talk with students&#13;
interested in foreign service&#13;
work.&#13;
The session for persons&#13;
interested in the foreign service&#13;
will be at 12:30 p.m. in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 111._&#13;
Mark is currently diplomal-inresidence&#13;
at UW-Milwaukee and&#13;
Verna Zimmermann - Coordinator&#13;
of Placement.&#13;
All these people, including Mr.&#13;
Elmore, have a first and foremost&#13;
responsibility: recruiting, admissions&#13;
and advising.&#13;
Students who would like to&#13;
work with Mr. Elmore and his&#13;
staff when they visit area high&#13;
schools should contact them and&#13;
make your interests known.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
Come Today See ~&#13;
QUOllfy COl"lTl'&amp;OCi prtrferS&#13;
141750rh sheet 658·8990&#13;
vmm ($(]mUJmoo~&#13;
(](iJ(B§ (iJ'i!&#13;
($(]mUJmoo~~(BV(]($§&#13;
• U.If" .. 1IlIIporll&#13;
SEIVICE-PARTS CAl SAlIS&#13;
2301 Durand A••. , Racino&#13;
554-9412 Racino 552-t580 KonotIIa&#13;
campus&#13;
Members of the Office of Student Development in the Career Resource librory in Tallent Hall: Jade: Elmore-Oirector,Borb larsen-Oireer Plo"!'ing,&#13;
Mary Fox-Educational Placement, Joseph Obalton- Research activities on students and minorties, Verna Zimmerma~oordinator of Placement,&#13;
Tim Desch-Career .Planning and High School relations, and Abisola Gallagher.Placement and minority affairs.&#13;
Office of Student Development:&#13;
representatives of OW-Parkside&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATI~S&#13;
FOO YOU!&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The Offices of- Student&#13;
Development and Community&#13;
Student Services were originally&#13;
called the Career Planning and&#13;
Placement Office, Counseling&#13;
Office, Advising, Admissions,&#13;
and High School Relations. All&#13;
these functions were manned by&#13;
one or two people but with that&#13;
massive fragmentation, if you&#13;
had a task that is reasonably&#13;
large you don't have the peoplepower&#13;
to get it done. But, when&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Clay Johnson&#13;
came to Parkside he&#13;
integrated all these functions&#13;
into one large group · and then&#13;
divided it into two groups. The&#13;
Office of Student Development,&#13;
and the offiae of Community&#13;
Student Services. The Office of&#13;
Student Development deals with&#13;
traditional college age students,&#13;
while the Office of Community&#13;
Student Service deals with the&#13;
older college students.&#13;
The Office of Student&#13;
Development deals with the&#13;
incoming students who are&#13;
generally coming right out of&#13;
high school. Mr. Jack Elmore, the&#13;
. .&#13;
office's director, said "we ask the&#13;
incoming students to come in&#13;
and try to tell them a bit about&#13;
what they can expect while here&#13;
at school, everything from what&#13;
is a credit hour to what is going&#13;
to happen to me at registration,&#13;
where do I get my books, where&#13;
do I hang my coat . .. there are a&#13;
lot of questions bouncing around&#13;
and we try to correct any&#13;
misconceptions they have about&#13;
what college life is like.&#13;
"Our function· is to really try to&#13;
be a service to students, and to&#13;
help them with tb_e type of&#13;
concerns they have . Those&#13;
concerns may be from a very&#13;
personal problem type of thing,&#13;
may be psychological in nature,&#13;
to dealing with very nutsy-bolty&#13;
type of problems,like how do I&#13;
sign up for a one credit module&#13;
in volcanoes. The function of&#13;
student services is to provide a&#13;
series of services, from helping&#13;
students get jobs when they get&#13;
out (which many faculty&#13;
members are involved in)., to&#13;
helping students understand the&#13;
institution when they come in, to&#13;
going out to talk about the&#13;
institution.&#13;
"We go to all the high schools&#13;
in this area to talk about&#13;
Parkside, and we also have&#13;
college nights. We go to Brown&#13;
Deer, Racine Lutheran, Horlick,&#13;
Greenfield, Janesville, Gase,&#13;
Kenosha Bradford, South Milwaukee,&#13;
St . Francis, Waterford,&#13;
and St. Catherines'. In the spring,&#13;
with the local schools, we set up&#13;
our table in there every month,&#13;
and students stop by to talk and&#13;
to ask questions. One thing we&#13;
try to get across 1s for the&#13;
students to get involved in&#13;
something here at Parkside.&#13;
If they would, they would find&#13;
life more pleasant. I tell them to&#13;
get involved in something. I&#13;
don't care if it's Earth Science&#13;
Club or if you become a&#13;
professional Foos-ball player.&#13;
Just get involved in something.&#13;
The people who work forE&#13;
Imo re are: Miss Abisola&#13;
Gallagher - She has been active&#13;
with minorities and the minority&#13;
business club. Miss Mary Fox -&#13;
She deals with educational&#13;
placeme,:it. Mrs. Barbara Larson&#13;
- Career Planning and she also&#13;
deals with the pre-profession,ls .&#13;
Mr . Tim Desch - Career&#13;
planning and High School&#13;
relations. Mr . Joseph Obalton&#13;
- Research activities on the&#13;
students and minorities. Mrs.&#13;
Ambasslldor to speak at UW-P&#13;
Da ·d E. M k t'l ti interested in foreign service is the first person to hold that v1 . , ar , un I recen Y post a part of a program the American Ambassador to work. . .. • Buru d' Af · -&#13;
11 b t the The session for persons m1t1ated by the Department of n 1, rica, w1 e a . · h' h · f · U · · f · · · k ·d · t rested in the foreign service State m w 1c semor ore1gn mvers1ty o Wisconsin-Par s1 e m e . . tt· · ed Wed - ·11 be at 12 ·30 p.m. in service o 1cers are assign to&#13;
on nesday, Oct. 26, to meet wi · 111 university campuses as resource&#13;
with political science and history Classroom Bldg. Roo~ · -,.&#13;
classes and talk with students _ Mark is currently_ diplomat-in- persons .&#13;
residence at UW-M1lwaukee and&#13;
Verna Zimmermann - Coordinator&#13;
of Placement.&#13;
All these people, including Mr.&#13;
Elmore, have a first and foremost&#13;
responsibility: recruiting, admissions&#13;
and advising&#13;
Students who would like to&#13;
work with Mr. Elmore and his&#13;
staff when they visit area high&#13;
schools should contact them and&#13;
make your interests known&#13;
~Today Yours.&#13;
1!0@ ($(B0GJ000ij&#13;
(B(DI]§ ill'il&#13;
l:$lB0GJ000ij IJl]OlB §&#13;
-&#13;
Universal Imports&#13;
SERVICE-PARTS CAR SALES&#13;
2301 Durand Ave., Racine&#13;
554-9412 Roane 552~ Kenosha &#13;
1977 Women's Swim Team:- From ieh to-right&#13;
Back row: Sally Francis, Debbie Wojnowski,&#13;
Lowrie' Melotik, Lynn Peterson, Coach Barbara&#13;
Lawson. Front row: Donna Peterson, Maureen&#13;
Graves, Kay Kaufemann, Mary Beth Mogensen.&#13;
Woinowski sets two records&#13;
The UW-P Women's Swim&#13;
Team traveled to Green Bay on&#13;
Oct. 8th for a meet 'IS UW-GB&#13;
and Lawrence University. The&#13;
Rangers lost 27-101 to GB and&#13;
39-72 to LU. Debbie Wojnowski&#13;
established two pool records in&#13;
the new facility, 2:15.54 in the&#13;
200 Free and &amp;:00.9 in the 500&#13;
Free.&#13;
Lowrie Melotik was named&#13;
swimmer of the meet by Coach&#13;
Lawson for her improvements of&#13;
:02.2 in the 50 Breast, :04.4 in the&#13;
100 Breast and :01.13 in the 50&#13;
Free in the Free Relay. Donna&#13;
Peterson scored the 2nd highest&#13;
total.of her diving career with a&#13;
98.9 on the l-M board, while&#13;
teammate Mary Beth Mogensen&#13;
upped her PR to 78.85. Sally&#13;
Francis lowered her personal&#13;
best in the 50 Free by half a&#13;
second to :30.4 and by :00.3 to&#13;
1:09.1 in the 100 Free. Maureen&#13;
Graves lowered her split in the&#13;
Free Relay by 2' seconds, while&#13;
the total relay \Vent 5 seconds&#13;
faster than on the 4th of&#13;
October.&#13;
Parlcside wins&#13;
own invitational&#13;
I&#13;
Get basketball season passes now&#13;
Parks ide's Physical Education&#13;
and Athletics department is&#13;
currently making plans for the&#13;
coming basketball season. Season&#13;
passes for pur faculty and&#13;
staff are available in the Physical&#13;
Education Office. The cost is&#13;
$12.50 for adults and $7.50 for&#13;
students. This year, season&#13;
tickets will be good for 12 home&#13;
games.&#13;
For the fi~t time, UW-Parkside&#13;
is hosting the Ranger Classic&#13;
Basketball Tournament on December&#13;
28 and 29/1977. This&#13;
tournament will feature in the&#13;
first round Parkside 'IS, Carthage&#13;
College and UW-Superior 'IS.&#13;
Pikeville, Kentucky.&#13;
Season tickets are not good for&#13;
the Ranger Classic Tournament,&#13;
You may purchase these tournament&#13;
tickets in advance as&#13;
follows: (Advance tickets are for&#13;
both nights of the tourney only)&#13;
General Public&#13;
$4.00 (good for both nights)&#13;
Students with 10 (limit 2)&#13;
$3.00 (good for both nights)&#13;
Tickets at the door will be&#13;
$3.00 per person per night.&#13;
Interested parties may wish to&#13;
order reserved tickets for the&#13;
Ranger Classic now with their&#13;
order for season passes. Tickets&#13;
are available. at the Physical&#13;
Education Office.&#13;
,Soccerteam defeats Marquette&#13;
\&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parksido! Soccer Team&#13;
defeated Marquette University,&#13;
Saturday, October 15 on&#13;
Marquette's home field in&#13;
Milwaukee, 4-2.&#13;
It was a close game with a half&#13;
time score of 1-1, then with only&#13;
ten minutes remaining in the&#13;
second half the score was still&#13;
tied 2-2. Yet the Rangers came&#13;
through with two more goals in&#13;
the last ten minutes to take the&#13;
win.&#13;
Parkside goal scorers included&#13;
Earl Campbell with two goals,&#13;
one assisted by Ale Mora and the&#13;
other coming on a penalty kick;&#13;
single goals by Chris Carter&#13;
assisted by Niall Power, and&#13;
Stathi Gianou, unassisted. Gianou&#13;
had a very fortunate goal, in&#13;
which he kicked the ball out&#13;
from about forty yards, chipping&#13;
it in over the goalkeepers head.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson commented,&#13;
"It was a very frustrating&#13;
game, mainly because we played&#13;
on a very hard surfaced field,&#13;
while we're used to playing on&#13;
soft grass. This definitely had an&#13;
effect on our game. We are a&#13;
better team than them, which&#13;
showed in the fact that we had&#13;
control over most of the play of&#13;
the game. However each time we&#13;
scored a goal they would get "-&#13;
penalty kick to tie it up, both of&#13;
their goals were on penalty&#13;
kicks."&#13;
On Wednesday, October 19th&#13;
Parkside met Lake Forrest here at&#13;
3:45, and lost in a twenty minute&#13;
overtime, 1-0.&#13;
The onlv- goal scored came&#13;
2:30 into the first half of the&#13;
twenty minute overtime on, a&#13;
penalty kick. This game was also&#13;
particularly frustrating because&#13;
Parkside dominated the game,&#13;
but just could not score.&#13;
Their record as of October 19&#13;
is 4-&amp;. Their next game will be&#13;
played in Kalamazoo, Michigan,&#13;
against Western Michigan,&#13;
Saturday, October 29th at 1:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
First women's varsity basketball team begins&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Parkside's first women's varsity&#13;
basketball team will start its first&#13;
practice November 'Lat 3:30. All&#13;
interested women pleace . contact&#13;
Sue Tobachnik, Rm. 127,&#13;
P.E. Bldg., or call 553-2318 for&#13;
more information.&#13;
at 7:30, after Northwestern had&#13;
defeated Carthage earlier. Parkside&#13;
went on to defeat&#13;
Parkside's Women's Volleyball Northwestern, 15-8 and 15-11.&#13;
'ream took first place out of a Both games started out very&#13;
total of six teams in the Parkside close with Parkside pulling away&#13;
Invitational held here Saturday, in the end, Fifteen minutes later&#13;
October 15. , the Rangers went out and met&#13;
The Ranger's took first winning Carthage and were defeated in a&#13;
nine games and losing only one. very close first game 13-15 and&#13;
Second was Carthage &amp;-4; third, then 8-15.&#13;
Loyola 5-5 beat Whitewater who "In either one of our matches&#13;
was also 5-5 in a third place did we play to the best of our&#13;
playoff, 2-0; so Whitewater was ability", said Coach Draft. "At&#13;
fourth, 5-5; Oshkosh fifth, 4-&amp;; times we were able to get some&#13;
and Chicago State was Sixth, 1-9. play sets off. Yet, against&#13;
Each team competed with each Northwestern we started out vFry&#13;
other in round robin play, cold and had a hard time getting&#13;
playing two games to 11 points going. Fortunately they made&#13;
or eight minutes of playing time. more mistakes than us."&#13;
Parkside defeated Carthage, "Against Carthage we made&#13;
11-2, 11-7; Chicago State, 11-7, more. mental errors than in any&#13;
11-7; Oshkosh, 11-8, 11&lt;5; previous match, with about 50%&#13;
Whitewater, 11-7, 11-4; and split of our serves going into the net.&#13;
with loyola, 11-4, 2-~1. Unfortunately Carthage played&#13;
In championship play, Park- their best game, they weren't&#13;
side went against Carthage in the making their previous mental&#13;
vie for first, beating them in errors."&#13;
regular 15 point games, two ~ As of October 18, the&#13;
games put of three, 14-1&amp;, 15-9, volleyball team's season record&#13;
15-4. In vying for third place, is 13-5. They'll De headed to&#13;
loyola University defeated lIIin'ois for the Northern Illinois&#13;
UW-Whitewater, 15-4, 15-10; Tournament, Friday and Saturand&#13;
in competing for the fifth day, October 28 &amp; 29. This will&#13;
slot UW-Oshkosh defeated be a tough tournament for the&#13;
Chicago State, 15-0, 15-4, Rangers, against such big name&#13;
On Tuesday, October 18th, the -midwest teams as Chicago&#13;
Rangers ~ain faced Carthage in • Circle, George Williams, Kellogg&#13;
a triangular meet, also including Community College, DePaul&#13;
Northwestern Illinois, Their first University, and Northern Illinois.&#13;
match was against Northwestern&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
-Last year Parkside competed&#13;
as a club sport, with a ten game&#13;
schedule. This year as a varsity&#13;
sport they will play a twenty&#13;
game schedule-with most games&#13;
preceding the men's varsity&#13;
games. Away games include trips&#13;
to Whitewater, Platteville, Green&#13;
Bay, an overnighter in River&#13;
Falls, and is highlighted by a&#13;
game against Marquette University,&#13;
preceding the men's game.&#13;
Their first home game 'will be&#13;
Friday, November 25 against&#13;
UW-Milwaukee at 5:15 p.m.,&#13;
scheduled before the men's&#13;
game.&#13;
1977 Women's Volleyball Team&#13;
from left to right: BACK ROW:&#13;
Diana KoIoV05, Cindy Ackerman,&#13;
Manager LeRoy Jeffenon, Coach&#13;
linda Draft, Diann Dorlack, Terri&#13;
Bieser, MIDDLE ROW: Tess&#13;
Manzano, Julie Workman, Chris&#13;
Flahive, Eileen Beres, linda./&#13;
Zeihen, FRONT ROW: Tracy&#13;
"' Faustino, Martha Aiello, Liz&#13;
Vend, Lynn Sale.&#13;
1977 Women's Swim Team. From left to~ right&#13;
Back row: Sally Francis, Debbie Wojnowski,&#13;
Lowrie Melotik, Lynn Peterson, Coach Barbara&#13;
Lawson. Front row: Donna Peterson, Maureen&#13;
Graves, Kay Kaufemann, Mary Beth Mogensen.&#13;
Woinowski sets two records&#13;
The UW-P Women's Swim&#13;
Team traveled to Green Bay on&#13;
Oct. 8th for a meet vs UW-GB&#13;
and Lawrence University. The&#13;
Rangers lost 27-101 to GB and&#13;
39-72 to LU . Debbie Wojnowski&#13;
established two pool records in&#13;
the new facility, 2: 15 .54 in the&#13;
200 Free and 6:00.9 in the 500&#13;
Free.&#13;
Lowrie Melotik was named&#13;
swimmer of the meet by Coach&#13;
Lawson for her improvements of&#13;
:02 .2 in the 50 Breast, :04.4 in the&#13;
100 Breast and :01.13 in the 50&#13;
Free in the Free Relay. Donna&#13;
Peterson scored the 2nd highest&#13;
total.of her diving career with a&#13;
98.9 on the 1-M board, while&#13;
teammate Mary Beth Mogensen&#13;
upped her PR to 78.85. Sally&#13;
Francis lowered her personal&#13;
best in the 50 Free by half a&#13;
second to :30.4 and by :00.3 to&#13;
1:09.1 in the 100 Free . Maureen&#13;
Graves lowered her split in the&#13;
Free Relay by 2 seconds, while&#13;
the total relay 'went 5 seconds&#13;
faster than on the 4th of&#13;
October.&#13;
Parkside wins&#13;
own invitational&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Parkside's Women's Volleyball&#13;
team took first place out of a&#13;
total of six teams in the Parkside&#13;
Invitational hetd here Saturday,&#13;
October 15.&#13;
The Ranger's took first winning&#13;
nine games and losing only one.&#13;
Second was Carthage 6-4; third,&#13;
Loyola 5-5 beat Whitewater who&#13;
was also 5-5 in a third place&#13;
playoff, 2-0; so Whitewater was&#13;
fourth, 5-5; Oshkosh fifth, 4-6;&#13;
and Chicago State was sixth, 1-9.&#13;
Each team competed with each&#13;
other in round robin play,&#13;
playing two games to 11 points&#13;
or eight minutes of playing time.&#13;
Parkside defeated Carthage,&#13;
11-2, 11-7; Chicago State, 11-7,&#13;
11-7; Oshkosh, 11-8, 11-5;&#13;
Whitewater, 11-7, 11-4; and split&#13;
with Loyola, 11-4, 2-11.&#13;
In championship play, Parkside&#13;
went against Carthage in the&#13;
vie for first, beating them in&#13;
regular 15 point games, two&#13;
games out of three, 14-16, 15-9,&#13;
15-4. In vying for third place,&#13;
Loyola University defeated&#13;
UW-Whitewater, 15-4, 15-10;&#13;
and in competing for the fifth&#13;
slot UW-Oshkosh defeated&#13;
Chicago State, 15-0, 15-4.&#13;
On Tuesday, October 18th, the&#13;
Rangers again faced Carthage in&#13;
a triangular meet, also including&#13;
Northwestern Illinois. Their first&#13;
match was against Northwestern&#13;
at 7:30, after Northwestern had&#13;
defeated Carthage earlier. Parkside&#13;
went on to defeat&#13;
Northwestern, 15-8 and 15-11.&#13;
Both games started out very&#13;
close with Parkside pulling away&#13;
in the end . Fifteen minutes later&#13;
the Rangers went out and met&#13;
Carthage and were defeated in a&#13;
very close first game 13-15 and&#13;
then 8-15 .&#13;
"In either one of our matches&#13;
did we play to the best of our&#13;
ability", said Coach Draft. "At&#13;
times "Ye were able to get some&#13;
play sets off. Yet. against&#13;
Northwestern we started out Vf ry&#13;
cold and had a hard time getting&#13;
going. Fortunately they made&#13;
more mistakes than us."&#13;
"Against Carthage we made&#13;
more_ mental errors than in any&#13;
previous match, with about 50%&#13;
of our serves going into the net.&#13;
Unfortunately Carthage played&#13;
their best game, they weren't&#13;
making their previous mental&#13;
errors."&#13;
As of October 18, the&#13;
volleyball team's season record&#13;
is 13-5. They'll be headed to&#13;
lllin'ois for the Northern Illinois&#13;
Tournament, Friday and Saturday,&#13;
October 28 &amp; 29. This will&#13;
be a tough tournament for the&#13;
Rangers, against such big name&#13;
midwest teams as Chicago&#13;
&lt;;ircle, George Williams, Kellogg&#13;
Community College, DePaul&#13;
University, and Northern Illinois.&#13;
,.&#13;
Get basketball season passes now&#13;
Parkside's Physical Education&#13;
and Athletics department is&#13;
currently making plans for the&#13;
coming basketball season. Season&#13;
passes for pur faculty and&#13;
staff are available in the Physical&#13;
Education Office. The cost is&#13;
. $12.50 for adults and $7.50 for&#13;
students. This year, season&#13;
tickets will be good for 12 home&#13;
games.&#13;
For the first time, UW-Par~side&#13;
is hosting the Ranger Classic&#13;
Basketball Tournament on December&#13;
28 and 29, ' 1977. This&#13;
tournament will feature in the&#13;
first round Parkside vs. Carthage&#13;
College and UW-Superior vs.&#13;
Pikeville, Kentucky.&#13;
Season tickets are not good for&#13;
the Ranger Classic Tournament,&#13;
You may purchase these tournament&#13;
tickets in advance as&#13;
follows: (Advance tickets are for&#13;
both nights of the tourney only)&#13;
General Public&#13;
$4.00 (good for both nights)&#13;
Students with ID (limit 2)&#13;
$3.00 (good for both nights)&#13;
Tickets at the door will be&#13;
$3.00 per p~son per night.&#13;
Interested parties may wish to&#13;
order reserved tickets for the&#13;
Ranger Classic now with their&#13;
order for season passes. Tickets&#13;
are available . at the Physical&#13;
Education Office.&#13;
Sqccer team defeats Marquette&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside"° Socci::r Team&#13;
defeated Marquette' University,&#13;
Saturday, October 15 on&#13;
Marquette's home field in&#13;
Milwaukee, 4-2.&#13;
It was a close game with a half&#13;
time score of 1-1, then with only&#13;
ten minutes remaining in the&#13;
second half the score was still&#13;
tied 2-2. Yet the Rangers came&#13;
through with two more goals in&#13;
the last ten minutes to take the&#13;
win.&#13;
Parkside goal scorers included&#13;
Earl Campbell with two goals,&#13;
one assisted by Ale Mora and the&#13;
other coming on a penalty kick;&#13;
single goals by Chris Carter&#13;
assisted by Niall Power, and&#13;
Stathi G ianou, unassisted. Gianou&#13;
had a very fortunate goal, in&#13;
which he kicked the ball out&#13;
from about forty yards, chipping&#13;
it in over the goalkeepers head.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson commented,&#13;
"It was a very frustrating&#13;
game, mainly because we played&#13;
on a very hard surfaced field,&#13;
while we're used to playing on&#13;
soft grass. This definitely had an&#13;
effect on our game. We are a&#13;
better team than them, which&#13;
showed in the fact that we had&#13;
control over most of the play of&#13;
the game. However each time we&#13;
scored a goal they would get a.&#13;
penalty kick to tie it up, both of&#13;
their goals were on penalty&#13;
kicks."&#13;
On Wednesday, October 19th&#13;
Parkside met Lake Forrest here at&#13;
3:45, and lost in a twenty minute&#13;
overtime, 1-0.&#13;
The only goal scored came&#13;
2:30 into the first half of tbe&#13;
twenty minute overtir.ne on, a&#13;
penalty kick. This game was also&#13;
particularly frustrating because&#13;
Parkside dominated the game,&#13;
but just could not score.&#13;
Their record as of October 19&#13;
is 4-6. Their next game will be&#13;
played in Kalamazoo, Michigan,&#13;
against Western Michigan,&#13;
Saturday, October 29th at 1: 30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
First women's varsity basketball team begins&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Parkside's first women's varsity&#13;
basketball team will start its first&#13;
practice November 1, at 3:30. All&#13;
interested women pleace . contact&#13;
Sue Tobachnik, Rm. 127,&#13;
P.E. Bldg., or call 553-2318 for&#13;
more information .&#13;
1977 Women's Volleyball Team&#13;
from left to right: BACK ROW:&#13;
Diana Kolovos, Cindy Ackerman,&#13;
Manager LeRoy Jefferson, Coach&#13;
, Last year Parkside competed&#13;
as a club sport, with a ten game&#13;
schedule . This year as a varsity&#13;
sport they will play a twenty&#13;
game schedule;-with most games&#13;
preceding the men's varsity&#13;
games. Away games include trips&#13;
to Whitewater, Platteville, Green&#13;
Bay, an overnighter in River&#13;
/&#13;
Linda Draft, Diann Dorlack, Terri&#13;
Bieser. MIDDLE ROW: Tess&#13;
Manzano, Julie Workman, Chris&#13;
Flahive, Eileen Beres, Linda .,&#13;
Falls, and is highlighted by a&#13;
game against Marquette University,&#13;
preceding the men's game .&#13;
Their first home game ·will be&#13;
Friday, November 25 against&#13;
UW-Milwaukee at 5:15 p .m.,&#13;
scheduled before the men's&#13;
game .&#13;
Zeihen. FRONT ROW: Tracy&#13;
., Faustino, Martha Aiello, Liz&#13;
Venci, Lynn Sage. &#13;
·news&#13;
Bookstore committee asks&#13;
~Carthage for help&#13;
The Bookstore Committee met&#13;
on October 19 to discuss some of&#13;
the alternatives concerning the&#13;
management and operation of&#13;
the bookstore.&#13;
Bookstore manager Paul&#13;
Hoffman reported that there are&#13;
fifteen different text books that&#13;
still have not arrived as of this&#13;
date. These books should be in&#13;
and the text shortage should be&#13;
cleared up by October 28, he&#13;
said.&#13;
Dwayne Olson spoke to .the&#13;
manager at the Carthage College&#13;
bookstore. Carthage owns the&#13;
bookstore. It employs one&#13;
manager, a secretary, a cashier,&#13;
and one stock room man. All of&#13;
these employees are full time&#13;
workers.&#13;
According to the Carthage&#13;
bookstore manager, Charles&#13;
Solberg, "to run a 'successful&#13;
bookstore you must determine&#13;
the objective for the bookstore,&#13;
wether it is to be faculty and&#13;
staff oriented, student oriented&#13;
or purely to make a profit. The&#13;
best one is a balance between&#13;
the three:"&#13;
Carthage also has a bookstore&#13;
presentation at the freshman&#13;
orientation. In the presentation&#13;
they tell what services are&#13;
offered by the store and what&#13;
goods can be bought in the store.&#13;
They also have a pre-registration&#13;
for the spring semester so&#13;
they can have a good idea as to&#13;
the number of students who will&#13;
be taking a course. This helps to&#13;
prevent over- and under-ordering&#13;
of books.&#13;
One point brought out by the&#13;
Carthage bookstore is that the&#13;
sale of new books losses money,&#13;
used books make money and&#13;
other merchandise 'such as&#13;
school shirts and sweaters,&#13;
supplies and cards were the&#13;
biggest money makers.&#13;
Dave Holle, director of&#13;
business services, handed out&#13;
copies of the original contract&#13;
between Parkside and The Follett&#13;
Cornp anv along with the&#13;
extension agreement and the&#13;
amendments that were added&#13;
after the contract was drawn up.&#13;
The' committee members will&#13;
read these papers and pose&#13;
questions at the next meeting.&#13;
Holle also pointed out that&#13;
Parks ides' faculty and staff isn't&#13;
involved or doesn't know enough&#13;
abou t the bookstore to really be&#13;
able to find out if the store is&#13;
being run acceptably. "Bookstore&#13;
complaint forms" are&#13;
available for the faculty and staff&#13;
to use when they have questions&#13;
or problems concerning the&#13;
operation of the bookstore.&#13;
Other alternatives that will be&#13;
discussed at the next meeting&#13;
were a privately owned bookAdult&#13;
student&#13;
association founded&#13;
by Kim T. Michalowski&#13;
The Adult Student Association Isnow being organized on campus&#13;
to help serve the needs of adult students. As the word "adult" is&#13;
difficult to define, we are using a few guidelines to determine which&#13;
students would benefit the most from becoming involved with this&#13;
association:&#13;
1) Students with work-family obligations&#13;
2) Evening students&#13;
3) Students returning to school after a long absence.&#13;
Adult students often encounter problems that are not experienced&#13;
by students straight out of high school. Work and family obligations&#13;
often cause scheduling problems and limit involvement in campus&#13;
social activities. Evening students find that most campus services are&#13;
closed when they are on campus. Students returning to academic life&#13;
after a few years often feel frightened, isolated, and out of touch with&#13;
the study skills they learned in high school.&#13;
Many colleges are beginning to recognize the need for an adultoriented&#13;
association on their campuses. These associations are not&#13;
meant to single out adults and separate-them from the rest of the&#13;
student body, but should supplement existing organizations that&#13;
cannot adequately fill the needs of the adult student population&#13;
because of schedule, time, and interest conflicts.&#13;
Who can best serve the needs of adult students? Adult students, of&#13;
course, students who have experienced the same problems and have&#13;
found ways of over-coming them, or have learned the ropes of&#13;
academia and are willing to help others.&#13;
If you are a Parkside student and need assistance, or have a&#13;
question but don't know where to get an answer, come to us and we'll&#13;
help you or find someone who can. If'you've been here for a while&#13;
and have a few minutes of spare time, come and help us to help&#13;
others.&#13;
If you are interested in becoming involved with the Adult Student&#13;
Association call 553-2269 anddeave a message, or come to the Adult&#13;
Student Association in the Library Learning Center, D-194. Office&#13;
hours are from 8-12 Monday through Friday.&#13;
If you are not available during these hours I'll be happy to meet&#13;
with you at your convenience; just call and make an appointment.&#13;
To accommodate as many adult students as possible in terms of&#13;
meeting times the next meetings are scheduled for Wed., Oct. 26th&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. AND Thur., Oct. 2-7th at 7:00 p.m. Make whichever one is&#13;
most convenient for you. We have already had two organizational&#13;
meetings and would like to get input from other interested students.&#13;
Please come. For this association to help you as an adult student you&#13;
must help it. Thank you.&#13;
store versus a school owned&#13;
bookstore, a co-op with&#13;
Carthage, and the encouragement&#13;
of the already existing used&#13;
book co-op.&#13;
~»- N\~G\C&#13;
~O~O M\~~&#13;
Open 3Z\ ~~ ~\S. 5~&#13;
Alon. &amp; Fri. ~ ~\oe, •A,) @4'-&#13;
Noon iii 9 \LU"".-.nne (~....&#13;
Set. Noon HI 5 "'..,.. -&#13;
WAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
THE CHILDREN'S HOUR&#13;
by Lillian Hellman&#13;
. 8 p.m. Oct. 28. 29, 30&#13;
2 p.m. Oct. 30&#13;
UW-PARKSIOE&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Adm. $3 general public; $2 students,&#13;
UW-P faculty/staff, senior citizens&#13;
Tickets at&#13;
or door.&#13;
Union Information Center (553-2345),&#13;
After 4:30 p.m. caU 553-2016 for&#13;
Box Office information.&#13;
A presentation of the UW-P Fine Arts&#13;
and Dramatic Arts discipline.&#13;
UP&#13;
ON YOURWAll. AND SMILE A LQ'[&#13;
FREE CAMPUS POSTERSWTIH THE&#13;
PURCHASE OF A LARGE SIZE CC&gt;KE.&#13;
The Coca-Cola Company commissioned the&#13;
Hildebrandt brothers (the same artists who did such a&#13;
terrific job on the 1blkien "Lord of The Rings"&#13;
calendar) to create these one-ol-e-kind posters. There&#13;
are five in all. .. each depicting a different view&#13;
of campus life: Freshman Counseling. The Home Game.&#13;
Chemistry 101.Cramming. and Blind Date.&#13;
The posters are gTeat.&#13;
And the way you can get them is great. too. One poster free&#13;
when you buy a large size Coke. So. whatII&#13;
are you waiting for? C'mon. drink up and&#13;
stick 'em up! .&#13;
Ditferent Poster Each Day- Collect A Set&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
_news&#13;
Bookstore committee asks&#13;
-Carthage for help ~ - N\~u\C ~ o~i~\oswee~3&#13;
Open 32,\ • ~\~ 5 .. @63 The Bookstore Committee met&#13;
on October 19 to discuss some ot&#13;
the alternatives concerning the&#13;
management and operation of&#13;
the books tore.&#13;
Bookstore manager Paul&#13;
Hoffman reported that there are&#13;
fiftee n different text books that&#13;
still have not arrived as of this&#13;
date. These books should be in&#13;
and the text shortage should be&#13;
cleared up by October 28, he&#13;
said .&#13;
Dwayne Olson spoke to the&#13;
manager at the Carthage College&#13;
bookstore. Carthage owns the&#13;
bookstore . It employs one&#13;
manager, a secretary, a cashier,&#13;
and one stock room man. All of&#13;
these employees are full time&#13;
workers.&#13;
According to the Carthage&#13;
bookstore manager, Charles&#13;
Solberg, "to run a 'successful&#13;
bookstore you must determine&#13;
the objective for the bookstore,&#13;
wether it is to be faculty and&#13;
staff oriented, student oriented&#13;
or purely to make a profit. The&#13;
best one is a balance between&#13;
the three:"&#13;
Carthage also has a bookstore&#13;
presentation at the freshman&#13;
orientation . In the presentation&#13;
they tell what services are&#13;
offered by the store and what&#13;
goods can be bought in the store.&#13;
They also have a pre-registration&#13;
for the spring semester so&#13;
they can have a good idea as to&#13;
the number of students who will&#13;
be taking a course. This helps to&#13;
prevent over- and under-ordering&#13;
of books.&#13;
One point brought out by the&#13;
Carthage bookstore is that the&#13;
sale of new books losses money,&#13;
used books make money and&#13;
other merchandise such as&#13;
school shirts and sweaters,&#13;
supplies and cards were the&#13;
biggest money makers.&#13;
Dave Holle, director of&#13;
business services, handed out&#13;
copies of the original contract&#13;
between Parkside and The Follett&#13;
Company along with the&#13;
extension agreement and the&#13;
amendments that were added&#13;
after the contract was drawn up.&#13;
The committee members will&#13;
read these papers and pose&#13;
questions at the next meeting.&#13;
Holle also pointed out that&#13;
Parksides' faculty and staff isn't&#13;
involved or doesn't know enough&#13;
about the bookstore to really be&#13;
able to find out if the store is&#13;
being run acceptably. "Bookstore&#13;
complaint forms" are&#13;
available for the faculty and staff&#13;
to use when they have questions&#13;
or problems concerning the&#13;
operation of the bookstore.&#13;
Other alternatives that will be&#13;
discussed at the next meeting&#13;
were a privately owned bookAdult&#13;
student&#13;
association founded&#13;
by Kim T. Michalowski&#13;
The Adult Student Association is'now being organized on campus&#13;
to help serve the needs of adult students. As the word "adult" is&#13;
difficult to define, we are using a few guidelines to determine which&#13;
students would benefit the most from becoming involved with this&#13;
association :&#13;
1) Students with work-family obligations&#13;
2) Evening students&#13;
3) Students returning to school after a long absence .&#13;
Adult students often encounter problems that are not experienced&#13;
by students straight out of high school. Work and family obligations&#13;
often cause scheduling problems and limit involvement in campus&#13;
social activities. Evening students fi nd that most campus services are&#13;
closed when they are on campus. Students returni ng to academic life&#13;
after a few years often fee l fri ghtened, isol ated, and out of touch with&#13;
the study skills they learned in high school.&#13;
Many colleges are beginning to recognize the need for an adultoriented&#13;
association on their campuses. These associations are not&#13;
meant to single out adults and separate\ them from the rest of the&#13;
student body, but should supplement existing organ izations that&#13;
cannot adequately fill the needs of the adult student population&#13;
because of schedule, time, and interest conflicts.&#13;
Who can best serve the needs of adult students? Adult students, of&#13;
course, students who have experienced the same problems and have&#13;
found ways of over-coming them, or have learned the ropes of&#13;
academia and are willing to help others.&#13;
If you are a Parkside student and need assistance, or have a&#13;
question but don't know where to get an answer, come to us and we'I I&#13;
help you or find someone who can . lf'you've been here for a while&#13;
and have a few minutes of spare time, come a(ld help us to help&#13;
others .&#13;
If you are interested in becoming involved with the Adult Student&#13;
Association call 553-2269 and leave a message, or come to the Adult&#13;
Student As~ociation in the Library Learning Center, D-194. Office&#13;
hours are from 8 -12 Monday through Friday.&#13;
If you are not available during these hours I'll be happy _to meet&#13;
with you at your convenience; just call and make an appointment.&#13;
To accommodate as many adult s~udents as possible in terms of&#13;
meeting times the next meetings are scheduled for Wed ., Oct. 26th&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. AND Thur., Oct. 2-7th at 7:00 p.m. Make whiche~er ~ne is&#13;
most convenient for you . We have already had two organizational&#13;
meetings and would like to get input from other interested students.&#13;
Please come . For this association to help you as an adult student you&#13;
must help it. Thank you .&#13;
sto re versus a school owned&#13;
bookstore, a co-op with&#13;
Carthage, and the encouragement&#13;
of the already existing used&#13;
book co-op.&#13;
Mon. &amp; Fri. ~ 7'C.\oe, 1 A..\4,) 634-&#13;
Noon tit 9 ~~ , ..&#13;
Sat. Noon t,t 5 l-"wv·-&#13;
MAG/C TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
THE CHILDREN'S HOUR&#13;
by Lillian Hell111an&#13;
8 p.m. Oct . 28, 29,&#13;
2 p.m. Oct. 30&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
30&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Adm . $3 general public ; $2 students,&#13;
UW-P feculty/steff, senior citizens&#13;
Tickets at Union Information Center {553-2345),&#13;
or door. After 4 :30 p.m. call 553-2016 for&#13;
Box Office information.&#13;
A presentation of the UW-P Fine Arts&#13;
and Dramatic Arts discipline.&#13;
••&#13;
STICK'EMUP&#13;
ON YOURWAll AND SMILE A LOT.&#13;
FREE CAMPUS POSIERSWITII TiiE&#13;
PURCHASE OF A LARGE SIZE COK;E.&#13;
The Coca-Cola Company commissioned the&#13;
Hildebrandt brothers (the same artists who did such a terrific job on the Tolkien "Lord of The Rings"&#13;
calendar) to create these one-of-a-kind poste rs. There a re five in all. . . each depicting a different view of campus life : Freshman Counseling, The Ho.me Game,&#13;
Chemi~try JOI. Cramming, and Blind Date. The posters are great. And the way you can get them is great. too. One poster free&#13;
when you buy a large size Coke. So. what . a re you waiting for? C'mon, drink up and&#13;
stick 'em up!&#13;
Ditferent Poster Each Day- Collect A Set&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM &#13;
D&#13;
-a ...&#13;
-a D&#13;
fit&#13;
.~ ~&#13;
---&#13;
~&#13;
0&#13;
CD&#13;
• , .. CD&#13;
1ft =-r- D.&#13;
• ..&#13;
.. 0&#13;
0&#13;
..&#13;
Children's Hour&#13;
opens 'hisweele&#13;
Lillian Hellman's "The Children's Hour," a drama about a lie and its&#13;
tragic consequences, will be presented by an all-student cast in the&#13;
Parkside Communication Arts Theater at 8 p.m. on Friday, Saturday&#13;
and Sunday (Oct. 28,29,30) and at 2 p.m. on Sun. (Oct. 30).&#13;
"The Children's Hour," Hellman's first play, is a drama in which the&#13;
love of one woman for another becomes a central issue. When it&#13;
premiered, on Nov. 20, 1934, at Maxi'm's Theater in New York, the&#13;
controversial subject matter surprised audiences of the '305. But...says&#13;
director Rhoda-Gale Pollack, Hellman's text is really a gentle one,&#13;
which emphasizes the human need for friendship and trust.&#13;
Hellman's plays include "The Little Faxes," "The Autumn Garden"&#13;
and "Toys in the Attic." She also has written three criticallyacclaimed&#13;
memoirs, "An Unfinished Woman," "Pemimento" and&#13;
"Scoundrel Time."&#13;
"Pentimento" includes the segment on which the forthcoming&#13;
movie "Julia" is based with Jane Fonda playing Hellman and Vanessa&#13;
Redgrave as Julia, the friend the writer helps in a pre-World War II&#13;
effort against fascism. Critics have hailed it as one of the first films to&#13;
deal with the deep friendship of one woman for another.&#13;
The films also contains flashbacks on Hellman's 3O-year love affair&#13;
with writer Dashiell Hammet, the famed mystery writer who&#13;
counseled her to avoid any tinge of sentimentality in writing&#13;
"Children's Hours."&#13;
Mary Stankus and Susan Wishau, both of Racine, play two young&#13;
women who have opened a boarding school for girls. William&#13;
Fitzgerald, Racine, plays Karen's physician-fiance; Jacqueline&#13;
Shallenburg, Kenosha, is his aunt and a benefactress of the school;&#13;
and Donna Linde, Kansasville, plays her granddaughter _ a student&#13;
at the school and a most malicious little girl. Margaret McDarthy,&#13;
Kenosha, portrays a one-time actress, in residence at the school.&#13;
The other students at the school are Cynthia A. Ackerman,&#13;
Catherine A. Matringa, Laura Leigh Bruno and Wendy Sorenson, all of&#13;
Racine; karen Topolovec, Kenosha, plays a housekeeper and Larry&#13;
Horgen, Kenosha, a grocery boy,&#13;
Scenic design and lighting are by John H. Dickson and costumes&#13;
are by Deborah Bell. .&#13;
Dickson's sets underscore the 1930s milieu of the drama with a&#13;
series of projections bearing images of major figures of the pe~riod&#13;
including President Franklin Roosevelt, movie moppet Shirley&#13;
Temple and labor leader John L. lewis.&#13;
Tickets are $3 for the general public; $2 for students, senior&#13;
citizens and Parkside faculty andstatt and are available at the&#13;
Campus Union Information Center (553-2345) or at the door. (After&#13;
4:30 p.m., call 553-2016 for box office information.)&#13;
Parkside's library and Dramatic Arts discipline have sponsored&#13;
displays in area libraries, The displays will be up until early November&#13;
at public libraries in Burlington, Union Grove, Uptown Racine,&#13;
Gilbert Simmons Main (Kenosha), Simmons West Branch, Simmons&#13;
Washington Branch, Simmons Roosevelt Branch and of course in&#13;
Parkside's library in the Wyllie Library learning Center.'&#13;
raise a grade&#13;
(CPS) - Homework was never&#13;
so much fun. Results of an&#13;
extensive study show that as sex&#13;
in one's life increases so do one's&#13;
grades.&#13;
Martin Segrera, a sociologist at&#13;
the University of Puerto Rico,&#13;
conducted a survey among 1000&#13;
students at the University in&#13;
order to find out.if sex plays any&#13;
function in how well a student&#13;
'performs in the classroom,&#13;
Married students and others&#13;
who participated in sexual ..&#13;
intercourse frequently shOwed&#13;
grades that were almost 20&#13;
percent higher than their fellow&#13;
students.&#13;
Males and females both said&#13;
Saturday, October 29 that they noticed no increase in&#13;
Cross Country Parkside at Loras College. 12 noon. grades as intercourse increased,&#13;
. . . but in researching their records&#13;
Soccer Parkside at Western Michigan 1:30 p.m. EST over previous years it was&#13;
r Wednesday, November 2 - - evident that the grades had gone&#13;
up in accordance, Movie Adam's Rib starring Spencer -Tracy. For&#13;
reservations call Rondelle 554-2154. 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
Film The Bank Dick .in Union Cinema. Shows at&#13;
2:30 and 7:30 p.m. $1.00 admission. ?&#13;
Coffeehouse Features Dick Pinney from the Madison&#13;
area. 2:00 in Union 104-106. Wine will be served.&#13;
Notice&#13;
Please turn in all Events either to the Public&#13;
Information office or the Ranger by Wednesday at&#13;
3:30. Thanks -Wendy.&#13;
Students need to get an anonymous message off&#13;
your mind? Fill out a classified form in Tallent 290.&#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, October 26 r_&#13;
Movie The Best Years of Our Lives starring Frederic&#13;
March. CallRondelle for reservations 554-2154.&#13;
7:00 p.m. Free. (&#13;
Brownbag Lunch For women at 12 noon in CL 113.&#13;
"Roles-Conflict or Copesetic!" With Connie&#13;
Cummings, counselor of Comm .. Stud. Services.&#13;
Friday, October 28&#13;
Earth Science Club Has Dr. Robert Weaver as a guest&#13;
speaker. Call Mike for further information&#13;
552-8610 .&#13;
priceless item discovered&#13;
.While perusing a display of costumes and props from- University of&#13;
Wisconsin-River Falls theatre productions, Prof. Walter Nottingham,&#13;
from the art department, spotted an old hat made of twined spruce&#13;
root that looked as if it ought to be a museum piece. Closer&#13;
examination showed that it should, indeed, be, The library there now&#13;
displays the priceless potlatch hat woven by a Haida Indian&#13;
sometime in the 19th century.&#13;
Son of Anato', terrorizes Moscow&#13;
(CPS-EK) - Anatoly the student,&#13;
a 22 year old Soviet 'version of&#13;
'Son of Sam', is patrolling the&#13;
streets of Moscow attacking&#13;
victims who are young, longhaired&#13;
and denim clad. Unlike&#13;
Sam, Anatoly's victims are male.&#13;
Rejecting murder, Anatoly contents&#13;
himself with beating his&#13;
victims senseless.&#13;
In a letter addressed to the&#13;
Soviet newspaper Literaturnaya&#13;
Gazeta, Anatoly confesses" to&#13;
five attacks in such diverse&#13;
places as busy, city square and&#13;
late night commuter trains.&#13;
Often he has beaten, bludgeoned&#13;
and bloodied two victims at&#13;
once.&#13;
Anatoly may be longing to be&#13;
caught. Basically, he claims, he&#13;
is opposed to brawling. It makes&#13;
him physically sick. But until&#13;
Moscow police collar him&#13;
Anatoly will continue hi~&#13;
personal vendetta against the&#13;
decadent, longhaired scions of&#13;
Trotsky who are mucking up -the&#13;
revolution.&#13;
classified&#13;
"&#13;
Brawn HIlk You sllli don't I8COgnlze&#13;
me???11I Come-J'OflIIl (Literally) The Back&#13;
Seat Chief(.&#13;
....... Sue, can you give me another heart&#13;
to heart talk? Maybe thle time I won't forget&#13;
that dinner date. I proml ... Brian,&#13;
~ 01 Vermont I &amp;greed totally with&#13;
your editorial. I hope that Jutt because you&#13;
didn't print your name you won't be afraid to&#13;
reply to Jambols' attack on your article, It Is&#13;
ObYloua that Bob dOeen't know hie from&#13;
his elbow, J.&#13;
Jimmy SrnytM A very Happy but Belated&#13;
Birthday to you, Mary tells me that you're&#13;
too chicken to write to me. I've been told&#13;
that we New YOftlera are' gutaey, And&#13;
everyone who's anybOdy, knowa that. lady'&#13;
does not write to a guy flrstl I hope to Me&#13;
bOth you and Mary in the Spring. Wendy.&#13;
._---------) '7ie I&#13;
I ~A_~JM~_ I&#13;
I ~ I&#13;
I OPEN 7 DAYS I&#13;
I Mon.-Sat 10 't~ close II I Sun. 6 'til close&#13;
I I&#13;
I NOON LUNCHES I&#13;
I Sandwiches 'til midnight I&#13;
I I&#13;
I SAT. LADIES NITE I .I I&#13;
Ladies' Drinks V2 Price I&#13;
I with date B 'til close I&#13;
I .&#13;
l_~~.!!~ionJl~~_J&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 H.OUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
,&#13;
D&#13;
-a -- ...&#13;
-a D&#13;
., ~ .... ----&#13;
~&#13;
0 •&#13;
CD&#13;
... CD&#13;
1ft&#13;
A. =-=--&#13;
.... •&#13;
.... 0 0&#13;
...&#13;
Children's Hour&#13;
opens tltis weel&lt;&#13;
Lillian Hellman's "The Children's Hour," a drama about a lie and its&#13;
tragic consequences, will be presented by an all-student cast in the&#13;
Parkside Communication Arts Theater at 8 p.m. on Friday, Saturday&#13;
and Sunday (Oct. 28, 29, 30) and at 2 p.m. on Sun . (Oct. 30).&#13;
"The Children's Hour, " Hellman's first play, is a drama in which the&#13;
love of one woman for another becomes a central issue. When it&#13;
premiered, on Nov. 20, 1934, at Maxim's Theater in New York, the&#13;
controversial subject matter surprised audiences of the '30s . But, says&#13;
director Rhoda-Gale Pollack, Hellman's text is really a gentle one,&#13;
which emphasizes the human need for friendship and trust.&#13;
Hellman's plays include "The Little Foxes," "The Autumn Garden"&#13;
and "Toys in the Attic." She also has written three criticallyacclaimed&#13;
memoirs, "An Unfinished Woman," "Pentimento" and&#13;
"Scoundrel Time. "&#13;
"Pentimento" includes the segment on which the forthcoming&#13;
movie "Julia" is based with Jane Fonda playing Hellman and Vanessa&#13;
Redgrave as Julia, the friend the writer helps in a pre-World War II&#13;
effort against fascism . Critics have hailed it as one of the first films to&#13;
deal with the deep friendship of one woman for another.&#13;
The films also contains flashbacks on Hellman's 30-year love affair&#13;
with writer Dashiell Hammet, the famed mystery writer who&#13;
counseled her to avoid any tinge of sentimentality in writing&#13;
"Children's Hours."&#13;
Mary Stankus and Susan Wishau, both of Racine, play two young&#13;
women who have opened a boarding school for girls . William&#13;
Fitzgerald, Racine, plays Karen's physician-fiance; Jacqueline&#13;
Shallenburg, Kenosha, is his aunt and a benefactress of the school·&#13;
and Donna Linde, Kansasville, plays her granddaughter - a student&#13;
at the school and a most malicious little girl. Margaret McDarthy,&#13;
Kenosha, portrays a one-time actress, in residence at the school.&#13;
The other students at the school are Cynthia A. Ackerman,&#13;
Catherine A. Matringa, Laura Leigh Bruno and Wendy Sorenson, all of&#13;
Racine; Karen Topolovec, Kenosha, plays a housekeeper and Larry&#13;
Horgen, Kenosha, a grocery boy . ·&#13;
Scenic design and lighting are by John H. Dickson and c~s~mes&#13;
are by Deborah Bell.&#13;
Dickson's sets underscore the 1930s milieu of the drama with a&#13;
series of projections bearing images of major figures of the pe"riod&#13;
including President Franklin Roosev~lt, movie moppet Shirley&#13;
Temple and labor leader John L. Lewis.&#13;
Tickets are S3 for the general public; S2 for students, senior&#13;
citizens and Parkside faculty and staff and are available at the&#13;
Campus Union Information Center (553-2345) or at the door. (After&#13;
4:30 p .m ., call 553-2016 for box office information.)&#13;
Parkside's library and Dramatic Arts discipline have sponsored&#13;
displays in area libraries. The displays will be up until early ~ovember&#13;
at public libraries in Burlington, Union Grove; Uptown Racine,&#13;
Gilbert Simmons Main (Kenosha), Simmons West Branch, Simmons&#13;
Washington Branch, Simmons Roosevelt Branch, and _of course in&#13;
Parkside's library in the Wyllie Library Learning Center.&#13;
events·&#13;
Wednesday, October 26 ,,.. .&#13;
Movie The Best Years of ·our Lives starring Frederic&#13;
March. Call -Rondelle for. reservations 554-2154.&#13;
r 7:00 p.m. Free.&#13;
Brownbag Lunch For worn.en at 12 noon in CL 113.&#13;
"Roles-Conflict or Copesetic!" With Connie&#13;
Cummings, counselor of Comm . . Stud. · Services.&#13;
Friday, October 28&#13;
Earth Science Club Has Dr. Robert Weaver as a guest&#13;
speaker. ·call Mike for furth~r information&#13;
552-8610 .&#13;
Saturday, October 29&#13;
,/&#13;
raise a grade&#13;
(CPS) - Homework was never&#13;
so much fun . Results of an&#13;
extensive study show that as sex&#13;
in one's life increases so do one's&#13;
grades .&#13;
Martin Segrera, a sociologist at&#13;
the University of Puerto Rico,&#13;
conducted a survey among 1000&#13;
students at the University in&#13;
order to find out, if sex plays any&#13;
function in how well a student&#13;
· performs in the classroom.&#13;
Married students and others&#13;
who participated in sexual;,&#13;
intercourse frequently showed&#13;
grades that were almost 20&#13;
percent higher than their fellow&#13;
students .&#13;
Males and fem~les both said&#13;
that they noticed no increase in&#13;
grades as intercourse increased,&#13;
but in researching their records&#13;
over previous years it was&#13;
Cross Country Parkside at Loras College. 12 noon.&#13;
Soccer Parkside at Western Michigan 1:30 p.m. EST&#13;
Wednesday, November 2&#13;
Movie Adam's Rib starring Spencer · Tracy. For&#13;
reservations call Rondelle 554-2154. 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Free .&#13;
- evident that the grades had gone&#13;
up in accordance.&#13;
Film The Bank Dick .in Union Cinema. Shows at&#13;
2:30 and 7:30 p.m. $1.00 adr:iission.&#13;
Coffeehouse Features Dick Pinney from the Madison&#13;
area. 2:00 in Union 104-106. Wine will be served.&#13;
Notice&#13;
Please tur~ in all Events either to the Public&#13;
Information office or the Ranger by Wednesday at&#13;
3:30. Thanks -Wendy.&#13;
Students need to get an _anonymous message off&#13;
your mind? Fill out a classified form in Tallent 290.&#13;
priceless item discovered · Whi le perusing a display of costumes and props from University of&#13;
Wisconsin-River Falls theatre productions, Prof . Walter Nottingham,&#13;
from the art department, spotted an old hat made of twined spruce&#13;
root that looked as if it ought to be a museum piece. Closer&#13;
examination showed that it should, indeed, be. The library there now&#13;
displays the priceless potlatch hat woven by a Haida Indian&#13;
sometime in the 19th century.&#13;
Son_ of Anatoly terrorizes Moscow&#13;
(CPS-EK) - Anatoly the student,&#13;
a 22 year old Soviet -version of&#13;
'Son of Sam', is patrolling the&#13;
streets of Moscow attacking&#13;
victims who are young, longhaired&#13;
and denim clad . Unlike&#13;
Sam, Anatoly's victims are male.&#13;
Rejecting murder, Anatoly contents&#13;
himself with beating his&#13;
victims senseless.&#13;
In a letter addressed to the&#13;
Soviet newspaper Literaturnaya&#13;
Gazeta, Anatoly confesses' to&#13;
five attacks in such diverse&#13;
places as busy, city square and&#13;
late night commuter trains.&#13;
Often he has beaten, bludgeoned&#13;
and bloodied two victims at&#13;
once.&#13;
classified&#13;
8- Hair You still dOn't recognize&#13;
me???l II Come ,on!! I (Llterally) The Back&#13;
Seat Chick.&#13;
~ Sue, can you give me another heart&#13;
to heart talk? Maybe thla time I won't forget&#13;
that dinner date. I promise. Brian.&#13;
Unlwralty Of Vermont I agreed totally with&#13;
your editorial. I hope that fust because you&#13;
didn't print your name you won't be efrald to&#13;
reply to Jambc&gt;ls' attack on your article. It Is&#13;
obvious that BOb doesn't know his from&#13;
his elbow. J.&#13;
Jimmy Smythe A very Happy but Belated&#13;
Birthday to you. Mary tells me that you're&#13;
too chicken to write to me. I've been told&#13;
that we New YOlt(ers are gutsey. And&#13;
8\'er}'One who's anybOdy, knows that a lady&#13;
does not write to a guy flrstl I hope to see both you and Mary In the Spring. Wendy.&#13;
Anatoly may be longing to be&#13;
cdugnt. Basically, he claims, he&#13;
is opposed to brawling. It makes&#13;
him physically sick. But until&#13;
Moscow police collar him&#13;
Anatoly will continue hi;&#13;
personal vendetta against the&#13;
decadent, longhaired scions of&#13;
Trotsky who are mucking up-the&#13;
revolution .&#13;
. .,_..._..._.....,,.. ............. ..,.. ............. ..__..7&#13;
17ie l&#13;
l~l&#13;
\ OPEN 7 DAYS i&#13;
\ Mon.-Sat 10 'til close )&#13;
i Sun. 6 'til close J&#13;
\ i \ NOON LUNCHES \&#13;
\ Sandwiches 'til midnight i&#13;
\ \ i SAT. LADIES NITE i&#13;
\ Ladies' Drinks ½ Price I ~ with date 8 'til close , \ . J&#13;
l--~~J!n~~Jl~~--J&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAlNOFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
. . </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68644">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 6, issue 9, October 26, 1977</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68645">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68646">
                <text>1977-10-26</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68649">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68650">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68651">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68652">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68653">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68654">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68655">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68656">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68657">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1025">
        <name>j.i. case</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="222">
        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1023">
        <name>robert graham</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1024">
        <name>tenneco company</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2957" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3442">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/4c5a97de2b69827612d744c12ae2acdc.pdf</src>
        <authentication>1251b8287621750d06efbd8137831b87</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68632">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 8</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68633">
              <text>The War isn't over for Vietnam veterans</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68643">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90034">
              <text>The unemployment rate for all&#13;
non-white vets between age 20&#13;
and 24 is 25 percent, according&#13;
to the Veteran's Administration.&#13;
For blacks, it's 35 percent.&#13;
vietnam vets count for 20.3&#13;
percent of suicides within&#13;
veterans hospitals, though they&#13;
make up only 9.4 percent of the&#13;
hospitals' population.&#13;
w " Oetolt.r 19, 1977&#13;
YoU, No.1&#13;
er A wise man gets more oul of))~&#13;
his enemies thon a fool gets&#13;
cct of his friends&#13;
One study at the Minnesotl&#13;
St.to Prison fm Adult Offenders&#13;
at Still.,iter, found thilt most&#13;
veterans in the prison hild beee&#13;
convicted of economic Of druarelated&#13;
crimes rather than crimes&#13;
of violence.&#13;
Vietnam vets constitute at lent&#13;
30 percent of the n,ition's prison&#13;
population, according to Dr.&#13;
Peter Selemo, executive director&#13;
of the United Presbyterian&#13;
Church',. Vrieran, Service.&#13;
Some 700,000 Vietntlm vets have&#13;
less-than-honorable discharges,&#13;
and about 500,000 of that&#13;
number served out full tours of&#13;
duty of Vietnam.&#13;
Tlte War isn't over for Vietnam veterans&#13;
(CPS) Remember your childhood. Those Saturday matinees at the&#13;
local theater; flickering newsreels of bombs gutting fields, soldiers&#13;
snaking through torn French villages, Mussolini falls, the Big War is&#13;
over and ticker tape parades in New York City. Millions. of crying,&#13;
joyous people lining the streets as the troops come victoriously&#13;
marching home. The World War li GI was a hero and knew it.&#13;
There are no victorious newsreels of homecoming Vietnam Gis.&#13;
Spirit of forgetting&#13;
Rather a spirit of forgetting has permeated the Vietnam era. The GI&#13;
is an anti-hero. While the bureaucrats who led us into the war have&#13;
become invisible as they turn to affairs of State, the veteran has&#13;
become the symbol of Vietnam. As the symbol the veteran must carry&#13;
the stigma.&#13;
The War isn't over&#13;
For the Vietnam era veteran, the war isn't over. Overall employment&#13;
is 25 percent. 35 percent for minority veterans. Most post-war&#13;
periods however, had to tackle high unemployment. But unlike the&#13;
past, today's veterans face a new form of discrimination. The discrimination&#13;
by a country that wants to forget what they represent. A&#13;
conservative Congress has been reluctant to act on behalf of the&#13;
veteran. Nowhere is this more noticeable than the GI Bill and higher&#13;
education benefits. .&#13;
The disparity of treatment between WWII veterans and Vietnam&#13;
veterans is startling. Thirty years ago, ex-Grs made up 50 percent of&#13;
college enrollments. Not only did the Veterans Administration (VA)&#13;
pay up to $500 for the veteran's tuition but they also received a&#13;
stipendplus free housing in most cases and book money. World War&#13;
II veterans could afford the most expensive colleges.&#13;
From 50% to 2%&#13;
By the late 1960's, veterans comprised two percent of college&#13;
enrollments. ,&#13;
. Claiming extensive abuse of VA money, Congress authorized the&#13;
VA to pay monthly stipends to student veterans. The educa~ional&#13;
benefits now stand at $292 a month. Period. Tuition financing IS not&#13;
..&#13;
•&#13;
awarded unless the veteran IS 10 percent disabled or more Veterans&#13;
then found they had to meet the costs of tumon, books and other&#13;
expensesout of their own pockets because they were not eligible for&#13;
benefits until after they enrolled m college Computers often took as&#13;
long as three months to pay the new student's first stipend Many&#13;
veterans found themselves 10 the same Situation they were 10 before&#13;
the war; out of work and too poor to go to college or trade school&#13;
Co".,... tries to holp&#13;
Congress has attempted to find a solution In 1972, an advanced&#13;
payment plan was worked out which ran into trouble when veterans&#13;
for one reason or another dropped out of school It took the VA.&#13;
computer six weeks to stop checks. The VA told veterans to keep the&#13;
checks if they planned to return to school in the near future, Congress&#13;
killed the program when over-payments came to S1.5 billion&#13;
Next, Congress instituted a prepayment plan 10 1976 whereby&#13;
veterans planning to enroll 10 college or trade school could fill out&#13;
the necessaryforms a month before registering and receive tberr first&#13;
stipend when school began. The only problem was that after the first&#13;
check arrived, stipends continued to come at the end of the month. If&#13;
school began in mid-September, the veteran didn't receive another&#13;
stipend check until the end of October. And, the first stipend check&#13;
was pro-rated to cover only the last half of September Meeting costs&#13;
still remain a problem for the veteran.&#13;
Conarns tries apin&#13;
Now Congress is debating two bills that promise to equalize those&#13;
benefits received by WWII veterans and today's ex-Ct. A. bill introduced&#13;
by US Representative lester WoIHe, D-NY, would accelerate&#13;
payments so vets can get their stipends quicker, enabling them to&#13;
attend a wider range of colleges. Another House bill, authored by&#13;
Representative Albert Quie, R-Minn., is the tuition equalizer bill&#13;
which is intended to let veterans attend the school of their choice&#13;
despite tuition costs. Both bills face heavy opposition, not only from&#13;
Congressbut from lobbyists for Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) and&#13;
Disabled American Veterans (DAV).&#13;
Continued on page 3&#13;
The unemployment rate for all&#13;
non-white vets between age 20&#13;
and 24 is 25 percent, according&#13;
to the Veteran's Administration.&#13;
For blacks, it's 35 percent.&#13;
Vietnilm vets count for 20.3&#13;
percent of suicides within&#13;
veterans hospitals, though they&#13;
mai&lt;e up only 9.4 percent of the&#13;
hospitals' population.&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday, October 19, 1977&#13;
Yol.6, No.I&#13;
I! I! A wise man gets mOfe out of ()()&#13;
OU his enemies than o fool ge s ll ll&#13;
out of his friends&#13;
Boltosor Grotion&#13;
One study at the Minnesota&#13;
State Prison for Adult Offenders&#13;
at Stillwater, found that most&#13;
veterans in the prison had been&#13;
convicted of economic or drugrelated&#13;
crimes rather than crimes&#13;
of violence.&#13;
Vietnam 11ets constitute at lea t&#13;
30 percent of the nation's pri on&#13;
population, according to Dr.&#13;
Peter Selemo, executi e director&#13;
of the United Presb terian&#13;
Church' eteran S rvice.&#13;
The War isn't over for Vietnam veterans&#13;
(CPS) Remember your childhood . Those Saturday matinees at the&#13;
local theater; flickering newsreels of bombs gutting fields , soldiers&#13;
snaking through torn French villages, Mussolini falls, the Big War is&#13;
over and ticker tape parades in New York City . Millions of crying,&#13;
joyous people lining the streets as the troops come victoriously&#13;
marching home. The World War Ii GI was a hero and knew it.&#13;
There are no victorious newsreels of homecoming Vietnam Gls.&#13;
Spirit of forgetting&#13;
Rather a spirit of forgetting has permeated the Vietnam era. The GI&#13;
is an anti-hero. While the bureaucrats who led us into the war have&#13;
become invisible as they turn to affairs of State, the veteran has&#13;
become the symbol of Vietnam. As the symbol the veteran must carry&#13;
the stigma.&#13;
The War isn't over&#13;
For the Vietnam era veteran, the war isn't over. Overall employment&#13;
is 25 percent. 35 percent for minority veterans . Most post-war&#13;
periods however, had to tackle high unemployment. But unlike the&#13;
past, today's veterans face a new form of discrimination . The discrimination&#13;
by a country that wants to forget what they represent. A&#13;
conservative Congress has been reluctant to act on behalf of the&#13;
veteran. Nowhere is this more noticeable than the GI Bill and higher&#13;
education benefits .&#13;
The disparity of treatment between WWII veterans and Vietnam&#13;
veterans is startling. Thirty years ago, ex-Gls made up 50 percent of&#13;
college enrollments. Not only did the Veterans Administration (VA)&#13;
pay up to $500 for the veteran's tuition but they also received a&#13;
stipenci'plus free housing in most cases and book money. World War&#13;
II veterans could afford the most expensive colleges .&#13;
From 50% to 2%&#13;
By the late 1960's, veterans comprised two percent of college&#13;
enrollments. , . Claiming extensive abuse of VA money, Congress authorize~ the&#13;
VA to pay monthly stipends to student veterans . The educa~1onal&#13;
benefits now stand at $292 a month. Period. Tuition financing 1s not&#13;
awarded unles the veteran is 10 percent d1 abled or more t ran&#13;
then found they had to meet the co t of tuItIon , book and oth r&#13;
expenses out of their own pockets because th y w re not 11 1bl for&#13;
benefits until after they enrolled in college Comput r oft n took a&#13;
long as three months to pay the new stud nt' fir t stipend Man&#13;
veterans found themselves in the same ItuatIon the re in b for&#13;
the war; out of work and too poor to o to oil g or trad hool&#13;
Congres tries to help&#13;
Congress has attempted to find a solution In 1972, an ad&#13;
payment plan was worked out which ran into trouble wh n t rans&#13;
for one reason or another dropped out of school It took th A&#13;
computer six weeks to stop checks . The A told v terans to k ep th&#13;
checks if they planned to return to school in the near future. Congr s&#13;
killed the program when over-payments came to S1 S billion&#13;
ext, Congress instituted a prepayment plan In 197&amp; wh r b&#13;
veterans planning to enroll in college or trade chool could fill out&#13;
the necessary forms a month before registering and rec Ive th 1r fir t&#13;
stipend when school began The only problem was that aft r th fir t&#13;
check arrived stipends continued to come at the end of the month . If&#13;
school began in mid-September, the veteran didn't receive another&#13;
stipend check until the end of October And, the first stipend check&#13;
was pro-rated to cover only the last half of September. M eting costs&#13;
still remain a problem for the veteran&#13;
Congress tries again&#13;
ow Congress Is debating two bills that promise to equalize tho e&#13;
benefits received by WWII veterans and today's ex-GI A bill introduced&#13;
by US Representative lester Wolffe, D-NY, would accelerate&#13;
payments so vets can get their stipends quicker, enabling them to&#13;
attend a wider range of colleges Another House bill, authored by&#13;
Representative Albert Quie, R-Minn , is the tuition equalizer bill&#13;
which is intended to let veterans attend the school of their choice&#13;
despite tuition costs . Both bills face hea opposition, not onl fro~&#13;
Congress but from lobb ists for eterans of Foreign Wars ( FW) and&#13;
Disabled American Veterans (DAV)&#13;
Continued on page 3 &#13;
,,&#13;
editorial&#13;
Vietncim -veterans: forgotten and ignored 1&#13;
Vietnam veterans have received the brunt end of&#13;
hatred of the Vietnam War by the American ·&#13;
people. Whether they enlisted or were drafted,&#13;
most of those assigned to Vietnam did what their&#13;
country sent them there to do. Many . came bac~&#13;
altve.&#13;
was never-Preside.nt, think all orientals are alike&#13;
(ignoring their histories) and may nev~r face&#13;
direct consequen9es. ~&#13;
The fact remains that this country spent-a good&#13;
portion -of its money and resources to teach&#13;
Those who died fighting in Vietnam _ never&#13;
· millions of common men how to kill fast and&#13;
efficiently. It is also a fact that these same people&#13;
are arourid you every day on the job and in school;&#13;
if they can find a job or afford to go to_school.&#13;
found out they died for nothing. Those veterans&#13;
who came home and saw South Vietnam handed&#13;
over to Hanoi were justificably angered. If your&#13;
friends died trying to do something that flopped, ·&#13;
how would you feel?&#13;
Television ·news made a big deal out of&#13;
returning prisoners of war and all but ignored the&#13;
thousands of veterans who also got off the planes&#13;
from Vietnam. Commercial television does,&#13;
however, recognize Vietnam veterans · as mass&#13;
murderers, rapists, and hardened criminals in the&#13;
Most veterans are mature and experienced&#13;
enough to accept the public ignorance and lack of&#13;
empathy for their past. 30% of our prison&#13;
population are Vietnam veterans, so it i~ obvious&#13;
that many have not adjusted. What is being done&#13;
to help them?&#13;
Though it may not be fashionable at present to ·&#13;
' fictional episode.s it sells to advertisers.&#13;
have concern for Vietnam Veterans, it may be a&#13;
matter of urgency in the future. At the end of&#13;
WoJld War I, it took a riot on Washington, D.C. to&#13;
develop some national understanding and&#13;
priorities. Hopefully, we are smart enough to&#13;
avoid that.&#13;
The American people can ignore Vietnam&#13;
veterans, forget there was a war, pretend Nixon&#13;
letters - · Enraged Ranger reader calls: fOr editor's resignation&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It is difficult, when shaking&#13;
with rage, to write a clear,&#13;
concise, objective response to a&#13;
series of very serious, unfair&#13;
charges leveled against the&#13;
students of this University by&#13;
you and your paper. I'll make the&#13;
effort and request the indulgence&#13;
of the students who may read&#13;
this letter, if I occasionally sound&#13;
unfair or too personal .&#13;
Unfortunately since I believe&#13;
many of the fundamental&#13;
problems I' ll be addressing, are&#13;
largely due to your deficiencies,&#13;
I will be forced to direct much of&#13;
my attention to you, the editor.&#13;
Beginning with the story on&#13;
page 1 about the ladies restroom&#13;
fire, and culminating with the&#13;
letter from the alleged transfer&#13;
student from Vermont, the bulk&#13;
of the October 12th issue of the&#13;
Ranger was nothing more than a&#13;
/&#13;
diatribe directed ag~inst the themselves in the "outside"&#13;
students of this institution; world . ·with your misplaced&#13;
I will specifically discuss the priorities, you have succeeded in&#13;
issues (charges?), raised in those destroying your academic record&#13;
articles and editorials, but first I (tell us Phil, how many&#13;
would like to analyze your University credits have you&#13;
priorities and the possible completed in how many years -&#13;
motives behind them. what is your C.P.A.?). Rather&#13;
The recurrent theme in articles than recognize ·the errors in. this&#13;
and editorials written by Phil approach, you seem to · be&#13;
Livingston, is the lack of student encouraging other students to&#13;
participation in extra curricular follow you over the edge. A&#13;
activities. In any school, and student's first responsibility is to&#13;
particularly a commuter campus, -obtain as fine and comprehenthe&#13;
number of students who' sive an education as he can.&#13;
choose to involve themselves in Concerning the charges in the&#13;
such activities are a minority. front page story about the&#13;
You seem to feel that failure to burning restroom and the&#13;
involve oneself fn extra consequenteditorial: l'vespoken&#13;
curricular activities is tanta- to eyewitnesses, something you&#13;
mount to ignoring the students clearly didn't do, and found that&#13;
principal responsibility. If most the entire episode lasted less&#13;
students conducted themselves than 3 minutes. In that space of&#13;
as you have in the past several . time, the fire was discovered and&#13;
years, they would be effectively · put out. I suppose you would ·&#13;
precluding any kind of future for have had the 30 students&#13;
selflessly throw themselves on&#13;
the fire in an effort to save a&#13;
trash can in the ladies john! Your&#13;
failure to investigate the matter&#13;
has resulted in the unethical,&#13;
uncalled for condemnation of 30&#13;
students . You owe them an&#13;
apology: / ' ·&#13;
To issue so ringing an&#13;
indictment as that contained in&#13;
the letter from the alleged&#13;
transfer student, and then cloak&#13;
pis identity in annonymity, is the&#13;
epitome of hypocrisy and&#13;
cowardice - both on the part of&#13;
the writer and the publisher.&#13;
Actually, the tortured logic, the&#13;
childish sarcasm, and the&#13;
infantile characterizations&#13;
employed in .that article so·&#13;
closely resemble your own&#13;
normal style, I can't help but&#13;
suspeFt that you are the author.&#13;
Regardless of who wrote it, it&#13;
should be noted that any student&#13;
who attempts to finance his own&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content. ·&#13;
. \&#13;
,Our W dtera&#13;
Dan Guide beck, Robert Hansen, Jeff Prostlto, Kim Wunsch,&#13;
Mary Casswell, Debbie Siwek, Ann Steidl.&#13;
Kat Hermann, Chris R!-tcks, Marcia Vlac.h. ·&#13;
. , . . Editor Philip L. Livingston 555-2296&#13;
Gen.erat Manager Thomas R. Cooper 555~2287&#13;
Copy Editor John R. McKloskey&#13;
N~s Editor Diane Ja.tensky Feature Editor Da.n Guidebeck&#13;
Circu1a.linn M .an,agvr Wendy&#13;
Sales Man.ager 553-2287&#13;
lb.tail Advertising Manaur 553-2287&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141 - Subscriptions; $5.00 year .for U.S.A.&#13;
education is deserving of praise&#13;
and encouragement, rather than&#13;
the vicious treatment he&#13;
received at the hands of the .&#13;
coward who wrote that letter.&#13;
In closing, I feel that you have&#13;
established that you've neither ·&#13;
the intellectual stature or the&#13;
compass of knowledge required .&#13;
to do a creditable job as Editor. I&#13;
believe you would be doing the&#13;
students a great service by&#13;
resigning .&#13;
Robert J. Jambois&#13;
You are right, Bob, it is&#13;
difficult for you t'b write a G!ear&#13;
concise and objective response&#13;
when you are shaking with rage.&#13;
I did not write the letter you are&#13;
so upset about. I am not&#13;
resigning. My term as editor ends&#13;
in December. The rest of your&#13;
en'raged attack does not merit&#13;
my comment. ~Editor&#13;
(.&#13;
\ &#13;
• Views&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
Do you normally entrust&#13;
5112.00 of your hard earned&#13;
money to a group of people you&#13;
know nothing about? Are you&#13;
willing to allow eleven of your&#13;
fellow students to decide what&#13;
will and what will not be funded&#13;
on your campus with absolutely&#13;
no input from you? Are you in&#13;
agreement, for instance, with the&#13;
decision to cancel the Shuttle&#13;
Bus?&#13;
"""".....;;;;;;;;;;......- Vets contlnu.d ·fro.. p.,. 1&#13;
Snap&#13;
Using the same arguments proponents of the bills used, opponents&#13;
at the September 16, 1977, hearing before a House Veteran Affairs&#13;
subcommittee said they believe in equal payment for equal service&#13;
'but didn't believe the bills would do justice to that concept.&#13;
The cost involved proved a weightier argument. The VA estimated&#13;
Quie's bill would cost S1.3 billion over the next five years, while&#13;
accelerated payments would hit 56.1 billion. Wolffe staffers say the&#13;
VA estimate is "50 to 100 percent high because the VA is estimating&#13;
the cost as if every e,ligible veteran will apply". Income ceilings&#13;
would be set, weeding out those veterans with other sources of&#13;
income.&#13;
Scare tadics work&#13;
The scare tactics have worked and the bills are now at a standstill.&#13;
Quie's and Wolffe's offices are at work combining the bills, believing&#13;
they will get a better reception that way. Despite 95 co-sponsors of&#13;
the Wollfe bill, their future looks bad. Similar bills over the years&#13;
were beaten to death in subcommittee.&#13;
Aside from a 6.6 percent cost of living increase for veterans&#13;
approved by the House of Representatives this September, it has&#13;
been difficult to make Congress help veterans without access to jobs&#13;
or college. The nature-of the Vietnam war is one reason. In the spirit&#13;
of forgetfulness, its class dynamics are still operating. Those who&#13;
could not afford college were drafted. Many enlistees signed up&#13;
because they could not find a job with a livable income. These&#13;
veterans find they are still discriminated against, because people&#13;
want to forget Vietnam and because those who fought have the&#13;
fewest resources to challenge Congress for the opportunities that&#13;
might have kept them from going to Vietnam in the first place.&#13;
The Segregated Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee is the single&#13;
most important and influential&#13;
student committee on campus!&#13;
Its budget totals 5450,000.00 and&#13;
is comprised totally of student&#13;
dollars. 5112.00 of every&#13;
full-time student's tuition is&#13;
added to this fund. This is YOUR&#13;
MONEY!Are you aware of how it&#13;
is being spentl Do you know the&#13;
students who are making&#13;
decisions for youl&#13;
The committee consists of&#13;
eleven students. One permanent&#13;
seat is held by the chairperson of&#13;
S.O.c., five seats which are&#13;
elected in the spring, and five&#13;
seats which are elected in the&#13;
fall. Guess what! It's fall, and&#13;
five new members will be&#13;
elected by those of you who cast&#13;
your ballot in the P.S.G.A.&#13;
- elections which will be held on&#13;
the 19th and 20th of October. Do&#13;
you know who's runningl Do you&#13;
know where they stand on the&#13;
issues that are important to youl&#13;
Decisions will be made on the&#13;
level of funding for: Athletics -&#13;
the Child Care Center - the&#13;
Health Office - the Housing&#13;
Office - Intramurals - the&#13;
Newspaper - Performing Arts &amp;&#13;
lectures - Student Government&#13;
- Student Organizations -&#13;
Transportation (the Racine and&#13;
campus bus) - and Union&#13;
Programming. Are you happy&#13;
with each of these areasl Do you&#13;
feel they should get more 0&lt; less&#13;
money? I strongly suggest that&#13;
you pay particular attention to&#13;
the upcoming elections and&#13;
elect the students who wiII carry&#13;
out your desires.&#13;
The committee will !leain&#13;
deliberation in November. The&#13;
meetings are open to any student&#13;
who wishes to attend or&#13;
comment. The time and meetinl&#13;
room will be published in the&#13;
Ranger Events column. I am also&#13;
circulating a survey whereby you&#13;
can indicate your preferences&#13;
and rate each area according to&#13;
need.&#13;
If you've got gripes or don't&#13;
like the way thinllS are bein,&#13;
handled, now i. the time to make&#13;
yourself heard. Don't wait until&#13;
decisions are final and you're&#13;
stuck with them for another&#13;
yearl&#13;
APPLICA nONS ARE NOW&#13;
BEING ACCEPTED FOR 1978&#13;
Mail letter of application and resume to&#13;
Don Kopriva&#13;
Public Information Office&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Park sid&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Phone 553-2404&#13;
for more information&#13;
/&#13;
• views&#13;
Do you normally entrust&#13;
$112.00 of your hard earned&#13;
money to a group of people you&#13;
know nothing about? Are you&#13;
willing to allow eleven of your&#13;
fellow students to decide what&#13;
will and what will not be funded&#13;
on your campus with absolutely&#13;
no input from you? Are you in&#13;
agreement, for instance, with the&#13;
decision to cancel the Shuttle&#13;
Bus?&#13;
continued 'from page 1&#13;
Snags&#13;
Using the same arguments proponents of the bills used, opponents&#13;
at the September 16, 1977, hearing before a House Veteran Affairs&#13;
subcommittee said they believe in equal payment for equal se'rvice&#13;
but didn't believe the bills would do justice to that concept.&#13;
The cost involved proved a weightier argument. The VA estimated&#13;
Quie's bill would cost $1.3 billion over the next five years, while&#13;
accelerated payments would hit $6.1 billion. Wolffe staffers say the&#13;
VA estimate is "SO to 100 percent high because the VA is estimating&#13;
the cost as if every eligible veteran will apply" . Income ceilings&#13;
would be set, weeding out those veterans with other sources of&#13;
income.&#13;
Scare tadics work&#13;
The scare tactics have worked and the bills are now at a standstill.&#13;
Quie's and Wolffe's offices are at work combining the bills, believing&#13;
they will get a better reception that way . Despite 95 co-sponsors of&#13;
the Wolffe bill, their future looks bad. Similar bills over the years&#13;
were beaten to death in subcommittee .&#13;
Aside from a 6.6 percent cost of living increase for veterans&#13;
approved by the House of Representatives this September, it has&#13;
been difficult to make Congress help veterans without access to jobs&#13;
or college. The nature -of the Vietnam war is one reason . In the spirit&#13;
of forgetfulness, its class dynamics are still operating. Those who&#13;
could not afford college were drafted . Many enlistees signed up&#13;
because they could not find a job with a livable income. These&#13;
veterans find they are still discriminated against, because people&#13;
want to forget Vietnam and because those who fought have the&#13;
fewest resources to challenge Congress for the opportunities that&#13;
might have kept them from going to Vietnam in the first place.&#13;
• • . ·-... TCHAIKOVSKY: • The Nutcracker Balet (completo) ! _ Artur Roclzlnski. I.off don Phi·&#13;
: $4.98(2RS)&#13;
: · BAROQUE TRUMPET&#13;
ANDHORN&#13;
- Foat.,.vtrtuool Mawice Andre&#13;
andothcrs&#13;
S9.98tSRS)&#13;
JEAN-PIERRE RAMPA!.:&#13;
Beroqu. flute Concert&#13;
S6~98(3RS)&#13;
lDEL,&#13;
BEETHOVEN:&#13;
·Favorite Plano Sonatas -&#13;
Jllfr•d Brendel performing&#13;
$6.98(3,RS)&#13;
, ___ Messiah - Sir Adrian Soult&#13;
conducts London PhiJ.&#13;
S6.98(3RS) JULIAN BREAM:&#13;
Classlc:al Gutta&lt;&#13;
'$6.98t3RS)&#13;
BACH:&#13;
Four On:hestral Su~es -&#13;
Soloists include Maurice Andr•&#13;
and Roger Bourdin&#13;
S4.98(2RS)&#13;
The Segregated Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee is the single&#13;
most important and influential&#13;
student committee on campus!&#13;
Its budget totals $450,000.00 and&#13;
is comprised totally of student&#13;
dollars. $112 .00 of every&#13;
full-time student's tuition is&#13;
added to this fund . This is YOUR&#13;
MONEY! Are you aware of how it&#13;
is being spent? Do you know the&#13;
students who are making&#13;
decisions for you?&#13;
The committee consists of&#13;
eleven students. One permanent&#13;
seat is held by the chairperson of&#13;
S.O.C., five seats which are&#13;
elected in the spring, and five&#13;
seats which are elected in the&#13;
fall. Guess what? It's fall, and&#13;
five new members will be&#13;
elected by those of you who cast&#13;
your ballot in the P.S.G.A.&#13;
- elections which will be held on&#13;
the 19th and 20th of October. Do&#13;
you know who's running? Do you&#13;
know where they stand on the&#13;
issues that are important to you?&#13;
Decisions will be made on the&#13;
level of funding for: Athletics -&#13;
the Child Care Center - the&#13;
Health Office - the Housing&#13;
Office - lntramurals - the&#13;
Newspaper - Performing Arts &amp;&#13;
Lectures - Student Government&#13;
- Student Organizations -&#13;
Transportation (the Racine and&#13;
campus bus) - and Union&#13;
Programming. Are you happy&#13;
with each of these areas? Do you&#13;
feel they should get more or less&#13;
money? I strongly suggest that&#13;
you pay particular attention to&#13;
the upcoming elections and&#13;
elect the students who will carry&#13;
out your desires.&#13;
The committee will begin&#13;
deliberation m November. The&#13;
meetings are open to any student&#13;
who wishes to attend or&#13;
comment. The time and meeting&#13;
room will be published m the&#13;
Ranger Events column I am also&#13;
circulating a survey whereby you&#13;
can indicate your preferences&#13;
and rate each area according to&#13;
need&#13;
If you've got gripes or don't&#13;
like the way things are being&#13;
handled, now is the time to make&#13;
yourself heard. Don't wait until&#13;
decisions are final and you're&#13;
stuck with them for another&#13;
year!&#13;
APPLICATIONS ARE NOW&#13;
BEING ACCEPTED FOR 1978&#13;
Mail letter of application and resume to&#13;
Phone 553-2404&#13;
for more information&#13;
:&#13;
. .&#13;
. • .. .. .,- ; . •• •• ,_ t •&#13;
Don Kopriva&#13;
Public Information Office&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
\ . :&#13;
S'l"S\,;) 0 ~k F o; .. the Classical Sicie...-&#13;
~f0x &lt;&gt;'+~ 8 of you f \i ~ '£ ~&#13;
~~-&#13;
tl~t~t91Ht 141~1~&#13;
ALBUMS from $1.98 to $14.98&#13;
Mfg. List $3.98 to $27.98&#13;
U. W. Parkside Bookstore&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. 9:00 to 7 :00 Sat. 10:00 to 1 :00 &#13;
1977 UW·Parkside Women's Tennis Team picture&#13;
left to right: Maryann Cairns, Sue Schenning, Pat&#13;
UW·p defeats Carroll&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
RUlaerStaff&#13;
were #2 singles Maryann Cairns,&#13;
6-4, 6-3; #3 Sue Schenning, 6-3,&#13;
0-6,,6-0; #4 Pat Munger, 6-0, 6-2;&#13;
#5 Kathy Feichtner, 6-4, 6-3; and&#13;
#6 Judy Kingsfield, 6-0, 6-1.&#13;
Number one singles went to&#13;
Carroll's Deb.Arps, 6-1, 6-0, over&#13;
'Parkside's Jennifer Zuehlke. Miss&#13;
Arps-has been the number one&#13;
The Parkside women's tennis&#13;
team defeated Carroll College&#13;
7-2, Wednesday, October 12,&#13;
19n; on Carroll's home courts "in&#13;
Waukesha.&#13;
Winning their singles matches&#13;
Soccer kickers take third&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
RmaerStaff&#13;
lost 9-0. Also on Friday,&#13;
UW-Creen Bay beat UW-Platteville&#13;
10-1.&#13;
In the consolation game,&#13;
Parkside went on to defeat&#13;
UW-Platteville, 4-1. Ranger goals&#13;
were scored by Stathi Cianou (2),&#13;
Niall Power (1), and Bob Stoewe&#13;
(1). Three assists were credited to&#13;
Bob Stoewe and the forth to Earl&#13;
Campbell.&#13;
Parkside's record is now 3-5.&#13;
Our team will play two home&#13;
games this week, the first on&#13;
Wednesday, October 19, against&#13;
Lake Forest at 3 o'clock. The next&#13;
will be on Saturday, October 22,&#13;
against fourth-ranked Eastern&#13;
Illinois University at 2 o'clock.&#13;
The second annual UW&#13;
Chancellor's Cup Soccer tournament&#13;
was held at UW-Green Bay,&#13;
FrisJay and Saturday October&#13;
seventh through the eighth.&#13;
Parkside's team took third place,&#13;
behind UW-Milwaukee and&#13;
Green Bay.&#13;
The Ranger's first game was&#13;
Friday against UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
which placed seventh in the&#13;
Midwest region. Parkside gave&#13;
up two goals in the first minute&#13;
and forty-three seconds, fifteen&#13;
minutes later found Parkside&#13;
down 6-0 and they eventually&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19&#13;
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20&#13;
AAA WORLD WIDE&#13;
TRAVEL AGENCY&#13;
•&#13;
VOTE&#13;
ECCHINI&#13;
FOR&#13;
SENATE&#13;
Full Senic~&#13;
Travel AI/:ency&#13;
·AirlitiP Tick"r" oTOUNI&#13;
o{;ruu,"lt •Rail 0 IIOlf'1&#13;
654-0202&#13;
BUT HURRY ... OFFER EXPIRfSOCT. 21&#13;
.101 DININGROOM&#13;
Munger, Jennifer Zuehlke, Coach Sue Tobachnik,&#13;
Kathy Feichtner, Juliy Kingsfield, Marge Balazs.&#13;
Wisconsin state champ- (or the&#13;
last three years, and has the&#13;
record of never being ~eated in&#13;
any college match.&#13;
In doubles action, Parkside's&#13;
number one doubles ZuehlkeCairns&#13;
were defeated in a close&#13;
three set match, 6-3, 6-7, 2-6; to&#13;
Arps-Vetta, Number two doubles,&#13;
. .&#13;
Schenning-Munger defeated Carroll,&#13;
6-1,7-5; and number three&#13;
doubles Feichtner-Balazs soundly&#13;
beat Carroll, 6-0, 6-0. ,&#13;
This vear's squad is headed by&#13;
a new coach; Sue Tobachnik,&#13;
whose received her master's&#13;
degree from the University of&#13;
Illinois. When asked about the&#13;
developments of 'her team, she&#13;
commented, -tcao seethat with&#13;
certain line-up changes the team&#13;
has begun to improve. You can&#13;
seethis through improved match&#13;
, scores, they're much closer&#13;
now." The players also seem&#13;
optimistic saying, "We've been&#13;
doing better and better every&#13;
meet, hopefully we'll peak at&#13;
"Conference this week-end."&#13;
The WWIAC Tennis Conference&#13;
meet will be held at Carroll&#13;
College in Waukesha on&#13;
Thursday, Friday, and Saturday;&#13;
October 20th through the 22nd.&#13;
The Rangers will go into the&#13;
meet with an overall record of&#13;
3-6 and a conference record of&#13;
2-6.&#13;
Volleyball team -'a. balanced squad'_&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
This year's women's volleyball&#13;
team has the potential to be&#13;
Parkside'sbest ever, with a good&#13;
chance to take state and go on to&#13;
regionals.&#13;
The team is headed by a new&#13;
coach, linda Draft. Although&#13;
she studied volleyball at&#13;
Michigan State University and&#13;
played competitively for Hope&#13;
College, this will be her first year&#13;
of coaching volleyball. As to her&#13;
opinion of her team, "They're a&#13;
pretty well balanced squad.&#13;
Their best component is their&#13;
ability to play for each point.&#13;
You can look for us to go to&#13;
state, and we have the potential&#13;
to win it and go on to regionals."&#13;
This year's team includes five&#13;
returning letter winners, with&#13;
one senior, one junior, four&#13;
sophomores, and seven freshmen.&#13;
The team is considered to&#13;
be very young, but they're&#13;
extremely talented, said Draft.&#13;
Returning letter winners include&#13;
Diana Koloves, third year varsity,&#13;
junior Lynn Sage, third .....year&#13;
varsity; and sophomores Eileen&#13;
Berres,Diann Dorlack, and Tracy&#13;
Faustino; each in their second&#13;
year. Also first year sophomore,&#13;
TessManzano has come all the&#13;
way from Makati, Metro&#13;
Manilain, the Philippines, to play&#13;
volleyball at Parkstde.&#13;
Incoming freshmen include&#13;
Cindy Ackerman, Martha Aiello,&#13;
Terri Beiser, Chris Flahive, liz&#13;
Venci, Julie Workman, and linda&#13;
Zeihen. The starters consist&#13;
main Iy of the upperclassmen, yet&#13;
the team is young so it is able to&#13;
experiment with different players&#13;
in different positions. This year's&#13;
team captain is senior Diana&#13;
Koloves and team manager is&#13;
LeRoy Jefferson.&#13;
The Rangers have already&#13;
shown some of their strength in&#13;
previous matches. In a triangular&#13;
meet against the 1976 state&#13;
champs, Carthage and College of&#13;
Dupage, Parkside walked over&#13;
both teams to take first on the&#13;
meet. They beat Colle-ge of&#13;
Dupage first 3-0, and then fifteen&#13;
minutes later took Carthage 33-1.&#13;
On September 23 and 24 the&#13;
Parkside players hit the road for&#13;
a tough tournament in Illinois,&#13;
the DePaul Invitational. They&#13;
were to face volleyball powerhouses&#13;
such as Western l1Iinois,&#13;
DePaul University, and a college&#13;
that placed 3rd in Junior College&#13;
Nationals in 1976, Kellogg&#13;
Community College.&#13;
The first night down there did&#13;
not go well, they weren't playing&#13;
together. They should have been&#13;
able to take a game off Western&#13;
Illinois, but they lost the match&#13;
2-15, 5-15. As Saturday' came&#13;
they had regained their&#13;
momentum in defeating University.of&#13;
Windsor 15-5, 15-8. The&#13;
next match was' against Kellogg.&#13;
Here is where the team showed&#13;
its ability by defeating Kellogg in&#13;
the first game and almost taking&#13;
the match, 15-13, 10-15, 8-15.&#13;
The DePaul match was also very&#13;
close with Parkside winning the&#13;
first game 15-13, but losing the&#13;
last two, 11-15, 5-15. In their&#13;
final match the Rangersdefeated&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Assistance&#13;
ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choosefrom our library of 7,000topics.&#13;
All papershavebeenprepared by our&#13;
staff of professional writers to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1.00.....(air -mail&#13;
postage)for the current edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
iEoUCATiONALSY~1EMS----&#13;
r P.O. Box 25916-E I&#13;
I Los Angeles.Calif. 90025 I&#13;
I Name I&#13;
W. olIO provide orlgln.1 I Address t&#13;
r.... rch t: .11 field.. I City ,I&#13;
Theola .nd dl_n&#13;
L-...... _ olIO .. allabl.. ~~-L 'State _ Zip ~,&#13;
Northeastern Illinois, 8-15, 15-8,&#13;
15-5. ,After the tournament&#13;
Coach Draft commented, "The&#13;
team really demonstrated its&#13;
ability to play with the large&#13;
schools. Kellogg is a powerhouse,&#13;
so obviously the team&#13;
and I are very pleased with our--'"~~Iol&#13;
performances this weekend."&#13;
The .team has also beat&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, Marquette University,&#13;
North Park University of&#13;
Illinois, Mundelein College from&#13;
Illinois, Lake Forest College, and&#13;
the University of Chicago.&#13;
Tuesday October 11, the team&#13;
went to a triangular meet in&#13;
Waukesha against host school,&#13;
Carroll College and UW-Whitewater.&#13;
Parksicle's first contender&#13;
was UW-Whitewater, which they&#13;
beat, 3-2 match score; game&#13;
scores, 4-15, 15-12, 7-15, 15-5,&#13;
15-7. Fifteen minutes later the&#13;
Rangers met Carroll College and&#13;
lost in close games to a match&#13;
score of 3-1. Parkside won the&#13;
first game 15-13, but lost the next&#13;
three, 12-15, 14-16 and 8-15.&#13;
Thus the team's Seasonrecord as&#13;
of October 11, 1977 is 11-4.&#13;
This year should prove to be&#13;
very exciting for the Women's&#13;
Volleyball team. Let's -help to&#13;
cheer them on Tuesday, October ~&#13;
25, which is Parent's Night, also&#13;
their first triangular home match.&#13;
The two schools to contend with&#13;
will be Lewis University out of&#13;
Illinois and number two&#13;
Wisconsin state ranked Carroll&#13;
College. This should prove to be&#13;
an interesting match, with&#13;
Parkside players ready for&#13;
revenge against their loss to&#13;
Carroll two ~eeks ago.&#13;
Come Today See'Mlurs.&#13;
.WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
~ ..... ,---.~&#13;
I quality corrmercial prinlers&#13;
1417 50fh sneet . 658·8990&#13;
1977 UW-Parkside Women's Tennis Team picture&#13;
left to right: Maryann Cairns, Sue Schenning, Pat&#13;
UW-P defeats Carroll&#13;
by Alane AndresenRanger&#13;
Staff&#13;
Munger, Jennifer Zuehlke, Coach Sue Tobachnik,&#13;
Kathy Feichtner, Judy Kingsfield, Marge Balazs.&#13;
Wisconsin state champ fpr the&#13;
last three years, and has the&#13;
record of n~er being ~eated in&#13;
any college match.&#13;
In doubles· action, Parkside's&#13;
number one doubles Zuehlke:.&#13;
Cairns were defeated in a close&#13;
three set match, 6-3, 6-7, 2-6; to&#13;
Arps-Vetta. Number two doubles, ·&#13;
, . Schenning-Munger defeated Carroll,&#13;
6-1, 7-5; and number three&#13;
doubles Feichtner-Balazs soundly&#13;
beat Carroll, 6-0, 6-o. ,&#13;
This year'.s squad is headed by&#13;
a new coach; Sue Tobachnik,&#13;
whose received her master's&#13;
d~gree from the University of&#13;
Illinois. When asked about the&#13;
developments of her team, she&#13;
commented, "I-can see that with&#13;
certain line-up changes the team&#13;
has begun to improve. You can&#13;
see this through improved match&#13;
scores, they're much closer&#13;
now." The players also seem&#13;
optimistic saying, "We've been&#13;
doing b~tter and better every&#13;
meet, hopefully we'll peak at&#13;
-conference this week-end ."&#13;
The WWIAC Tennis Conference&#13;
meet will be held at Carroll&#13;
College in Waukesha on&#13;
Thursday, Friday, and Saturday;&#13;
October 20th through the 22nd.&#13;
The Rangers will go into the&#13;
meet with an overall record of&#13;
3-6 and a conference record of&#13;
2-6. The Parkside women's tennis&#13;
team defeated Carroll College&#13;
7-2, Wednesday, October 12,&#13;
1977; on Carroll's home courts ·in&#13;
Waukesha.&#13;
were #2 singles Maryann Cairns,&#13;
6-4, 6-3; #3 Sue Schenning, 6-3,&#13;
0-6,,6-0; #4 Pat Munger, 6-0, 6-2;&#13;
#5 Kathy Feichtner, 6-4, 6-3; and&#13;
#6 Judy Kingsfield, 6-Q, 6-1.&#13;
Number one singles went to r-----------------------------------------&#13;
-~=;~~:~:,~f:~~;f:: ~~h~'. :;:: Volleyball t~am 'a . balanced squ~d'&#13;
Winning their singles matches Arps--has been the number one&#13;
Soccer kickers ta.ke third&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
The second annual UW&#13;
Chancellor's Cup Soccer tournament&#13;
was held at UW-Green Bay,&#13;
Fri~ay and Saturday October&#13;
seventh through the eighth.&#13;
Parkside's team took third place,&#13;
behind UW-Milwaukee and&#13;
Green Bay.&#13;
The Ranger's first game was&#13;
Friday against UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
which placed seventh in the&#13;
Midwest region . Parkside gave&#13;
up two goals in the first minute&#13;
and forty-three seconds, fifteen&#13;
minutes later found Parkside&#13;
down 6-o and they eventually&#13;
,... AAA WORLD WIDE&#13;
TRAVEL AGENCY&#13;
•&#13;
• ~ full Senice&#13;
. -~ ... Tran•I A,:ency&#13;
•Air/i11t&gt; Tickeu • Tour•&#13;
•Crnuf'• • Rail • /Iott&gt;/&#13;
•Cur fff'•f'rra1io11•&#13;
Ii... 3909-56,h 654-0202&#13;
lost 9-0. Also on Friday,&#13;
UW-Green Bay beat UW-Platteville&#13;
10-1.&#13;
In the consolation game,&#13;
Parkside went on to defeat&#13;
UW-Platteville, 4-1. Ranger goals&#13;
were scored by Stathi GianouJ2),&#13;
Niall Power (1), and Bob Stoewe&#13;
(1). Three assists were credited to&#13;
Bob Stoewe and the forth to Earl&#13;
Campbell.&#13;
Parkside's record is now 3-5.&#13;
Our team will play two home&#13;
games this week, the first on&#13;
Wednesday, October 19, against&#13;
Lake Forest at 3 o'clock. The next&#13;
will be on Saturday, October 22,&#13;
against fourth-ranked Eastern&#13;
Illinois University at 2 o'clock.&#13;
VOTE&#13;
CECCHINI&#13;
FOR&#13;
SENATE&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19&#13;
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
COLLEGIATE CREST&#13;
GLASS&#13;
FREE&#13;
• ..all BUT HURRY ... OFFER EXPIRES OCT. 21&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
This year's women's volleyban&#13;
team has the potential to be&#13;
Parkside's best ever, with a good&#13;
chance to take state and go on to&#13;
regionals.&#13;
The team is headed by a new&#13;
coach, Linda Draft. Although&#13;
she studied volleyball at&#13;
Micliigan State University and&#13;
played competitively for Hope&#13;
College, this will be her first year&#13;
of coaching volleyball. As to her&#13;
opinion of her team, "They're a&#13;
pretty well balanced squad.&#13;
Their best component is their&#13;
ability to play for each point.&#13;
You can look for us to go to&#13;
state, and we have the potential&#13;
to win it and go on to regionals."&#13;
This year's team includes five&#13;
returning letter winners, with&#13;
one senior, one junior, four&#13;
sophomores, and seven freshmen.&#13;
The team is considered to&#13;
be very young, but they're&#13;
extremely talented, said Draft.&#13;
Returning letter winners include&#13;
Diana Koloves, third year varsity,&#13;
junior Lynn Sage, third /year&#13;
varsity; and sophomores Eileen&#13;
Berres, Diann Dorlack, and Tracy&#13;
Faustino; each in their second&#13;
year. Also first year sophomore,&#13;
Tess Manzano has come all the&#13;
way from Makati, Metro&#13;
Manilain, the Philippines, to play&#13;
volleyball at Parkside.&#13;
Incoming freshmen include&#13;
Cindy Ackerman, Martha Aiello,&#13;
Terri Beiser, Chris Flahive, Uz&#13;
Venci, Julie Workman, and Linda&#13;
Zeihen . The starters consist&#13;
mainly of the upperclassmen, yet&#13;
the team is young so it is able to&#13;
experiment with different players&#13;
in different positions. This year's&#13;
team captain is senior Diana&#13;
Koloves and team manager is&#13;
LeRoy Jefferson.&#13;
The Rangers have already&#13;
shown some of their strength in&#13;
previous matches. In a triangular&#13;
meet against the 1976 state&#13;
champs, Carthage and College of&#13;
Dupage, Parkside walked over&#13;
both teams to take first 9n the&#13;
meet. They beat College of&#13;
Dupage first 3-0, and then fifteen&#13;
minutes later took Carthage 33-1.&#13;
On September 23 and 24 the&#13;
Parkside players hit the road for&#13;
a tough tournament in Illinois,&#13;
the DePaul Invitational. They&#13;
were to face volleyball powerhouses&#13;
such as Western Illinois,&#13;
DePaul University, and a college&#13;
that placed 3rd in Junior College&#13;
Nationals in 1976, Kellogg&#13;
Community College.&#13;
The first night down there did&#13;
not go well, they weren't playing&#13;
together. They should have been&#13;
able to take a game off Western&#13;
Illinois, but they lost the match&#13;
2-15, 5-15. As Saturday ' came&#13;
they had regained their&#13;
momentum in defeating University&#13;
,of Windsor 15-5, 15-8. The&#13;
next match was· against Kellogg.&#13;
Here is where the team showed&#13;
its ability by defeating Kellogg in&#13;
the first game and almost taking&#13;
the match, 15-13, 10-15, 8-15.&#13;
The DePaul match was also very&#13;
close With Parkside winning the&#13;
first game 15-13, but losing the&#13;
last two, 11-15, 5-15. In their&#13;
final match the Rangers defeated&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
, Assistance&#13;
ALL su·eJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library of 7,000 topics.&#13;
All papers have been prepared by our&#13;
staff of professional writers to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1 .00" (air -mall&#13;
postage) for the current edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
We also provide original&#13;
r ... arch _-;: all fields.&#13;
Thffla and dt ... rtatlon&#13;
ea1i1tance alto available.&#13;
i EDUCATIONAL SYSTEMS&#13;
r P.O. Box 25916-E, I&#13;
I Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 I&#13;
I Name _ ________ I l Address ________ t&#13;
I City __________ I&#13;
I State _ Zip " I -----------L.. _______________ J&#13;
Northeastern Illinois, 8-15, 15-8,&#13;
15-5. ,After the tournament&#13;
Coach Draft commented, "The&#13;
team really demonstrated its&#13;
ability to play with the large&#13;
schools. Kellogg is a powerhouse,&#13;
so obviously the team&#13;
and I are very pleased with oar&#13;
performances this weekend."&#13;
The _team has also beat&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, Marquette University,&#13;
North Park University of&#13;
Illinois, Mundelein College from&#13;
Illinois, Lake Forest College, and&#13;
the University of Chicago.&#13;
Tuesday October 11, the team&#13;
went to a triangu.lar meet in&#13;
Waukesha against host school&#13;
Carroll College and UW-White~&#13;
water. Parkside's first contender&#13;
- was UW-Whitewater, which they&#13;
beat, 3-2 match score; game&#13;
scores, 4-15, 15-12, 7-15, 15-5,&#13;
15-7. Fifteen minutes later the&#13;
Rangers met Carroll College and&#13;
lost in close games to a match&#13;
score of 3-1. Parkside won the&#13;
first game 15-13, but lost the next&#13;
three, 12-15, 14-16 and 8-15 .&#13;
Thus the team's season record as&#13;
of October 11, 1977 is 11-4.&#13;
This year should prove to be&#13;
very exciting for the Women's&#13;
Volleyball team. Let's -help to&#13;
cheer them on Tuesday, October&#13;
25, which is Parent's Night, also&#13;
their first triangular home match.&#13;
The two schools to contend with&#13;
will be Lewis University out of&#13;
Illinois and number two&#13;
Wisconsin state ranked Carroll&#13;
College. This should prove to be&#13;
an interesting match, with&#13;
Parkside players ready for&#13;
revenge against their loss to&#13;
Carroll two weeks ago.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
,,,~ ·-&#13;
I quality COITYT'efCial printers&#13;
1417 50th street · 658-8990 &#13;
sports&#13;
Harriers need a strong fifth man&#13;
by John VanDen Brandt&#13;
RangerStaff&#13;
Parks ide's distance men had a&#13;
busy schedule recently, competiting&#13;
in the Notre Dame and&#13;
Chicago lakefront Invitational&#13;
Cross Country meets. The two&#13;
meets held on consecutive days,&#13;
annually attracts many of the&#13;
finest collegiate teams in&#13;
Mid-America. Parks ide's harriers&#13;
fared well against such strong&#13;
competition, 'finishing fifth in&#13;
the prestigious Notre Dame&#13;
Invitational and sixth at the&#13;
lakefront contest the next day.&#13;
Each race featured a field of&#13;
twenty-four teams. --&#13;
The Notre Dame competition&#13;
showcased the Ranger's potential,&#13;
both as a team and&#13;
individually. Tearn captain Ray&#13;
Fredricksen sped over the flat&#13;
five mile course in 24: 17 to&#13;
Swimmers&#13;
compete&#13;
this weekend&#13;
The swim team hosts&#13;
UW-0shkosh and UW-Whitewaterhere&#13;
Saturday,Oct 22nd at&#13;
1:00in the PEBuilding. The meet&#13;
has been designated Parent's&#13;
Day. Then next Tuesday, the&#13;
25th, Parks ide will meet&#13;
Carthage in a dual meet here&#13;
starting at 4:30 p.m.&#13;
uJhaclow&#13;
thrill-packed&#13;
chill-packed&#13;
spellbinding&#13;
mystery and&#13;
terror dramas&#13;
Don" miss it!&#13;
-'&#13;
every Wednesday&#13;
8:00 pm&#13;
"i~~~DD&#13;
STEREO&#13;
capture seventh place and the&#13;
highest individual Ranger finish.&#13;
Parks ide's team strength became&#13;
apparent seconds later as Jeff&#13;
Miller, Bob langenhol, and Gary&#13;
Preim, running like mirror&#13;
images of each other, all crossed&#13;
the finish line in 24:48 to capture&#13;
the twenty-second through&#13;
twenty-fourth places, respectively.&#13;
Bill Werve's 26:00 race&#13;
was good for eighty-sixth place&#13;
to finish out Parkside scoring.&#13;
When the team .totals were&#13;
added for the college division,&#13;
Saginaw Valley came out on top,&#13;
with Parkside in the fifth slot, a&#13;
scant point away from fourth&#13;
place Manitoba.&#13;
less than twenty hours later&#13;
the weary harriers lined up at&#13;
Chicago's lakefront Invitational&#13;
for more five mile action. This&#13;
time standout sophomore Jeff&#13;
Miller, shruggin off the previous&#13;
day's fatique and a sloppy, rain&#13;
soaked course, led all the&#13;
Rangers with a creditable&#13;
seventeenth place finish in&#13;
26:21. Bob Langenhol was right&#13;
behind to garner eighteenth with&#13;
a 26:26 clocking. Langenhol is&#13;
considered to be one of the&#13;
finest freshman distance runners&#13;
in the N.A.I.A.&#13;
Ray Fredricksen, showing the&#13;
effects of a cold and his Notre&#13;
Dame effort, was well off his&#13;
usual race, winding up twentysixth&#13;
in 26:35. Gary Preim (41st)&#13;
and Bill Werve (79th) rounded&#13;
out Parkside's scoring contingent.&#13;
Illinois State came out on top,&#13;
taking home the team trophy,&#13;
with Parkside coming in sixth.&#13;
Team tabulations show that&#13;
despite the drain of back-to-beck&#13;
races, the Ranger cross country&#13;
men overwhelmingly defeated&#13;
all five of the other wtsconsm&#13;
schools including 1976 District&#13;
runner-up, Stevens Point&#13;
The day was further highlighted&#13;
by a last second decision by&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa to enter the&#13;
three mile open race; his first&#13;
competition in over a year. Rosa,&#13;
a dtatance running legend,&#13;
proved untouchable as he&#13;
romped over the 2.9 mile course&#13;
in 14:27.&#13;
When asked for an evaluation&#13;
of his cross country team Coach&#13;
Rosa responded, "Our first four&#13;
runners are extremely tough but&#13;
we're lacking the really strong&#13;
fifth man that we'll need in the&#13;
tournaments."&#13;
The answer to Rosa's problem&#13;
may lie in the fast improving Bill&#13;
Werve, or two other varisty&#13;
regulars, lee Allinger and John&#13;
VanDenBrandt, both just returning&#13;
from two week layoHsdue to&#13;
Illness The Ranger's next&#13;
competition is the Carthage&#13;
Invitational on October 22, at&#13;
?etrifying Springs Park&#13;
Baseball team&#13;
heads southThe&#13;
1978 UW-Parkside baseball&#13;
team is planning an&#13;
exhibition tune-up tour down&#13;
South, March 8-21&#13;
Their schedule will consist of&#13;
approximately sixteen games to&#13;
be played in Kentucky, Tennesee,&#13;
and Georgia. In order to&#13;
finance their two week stay, they&#13;
are selling 50 cent candy bars to&#13;
fellow students. You can help&#13;
support the team in its effort by&#13;
buyinK a candy bar from any&#13;
Baseballplayer.&#13;
The 1977UW-P baseball team&#13;
returned last spring from the&#13;
South with a S-4 record. Their&#13;
regular season record was 20-4,&#13;
after having won seventeen&#13;
consecutive games.&#13;
Construct the mystery word in the boxes below.&#13;
Todo this you must fill in the correct missing&#13;
letter in each of the words Iisled in the&#13;
columns. Then transfer the missing jetters to&#13;
the correSpOnding numbered boxes. Keep&#13;
an eraser handy-iI's net as easy as it looks!&#13;
When there's a challenge,&#13;
quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon is the Number 1 beer in Milwaukee,&#13;
beer capital of the world.&#13;
That's why we'd like to offer you another challenge&#13;
-the Pabst challenge. Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'lIlike Pabst&#13;
because Blue Ribbon Quality means the best-tasnnq beer&#13;
you can get. Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through.&#13;
PABST BREWING COMPANY, ~ilwaUkee. Wis., Peoria Heighls, Ill., Newark, N.J., L.oa Angel ••• CallI, Pabst, Georg,a,&#13;
.i.N3""HS31;H3~ :plO'" "J••• ".. ,&#13;
1. CA_E 5. P_AL&#13;
2. BE_T 6. BA_E&#13;
3. CAL_ 7. BAS_&#13;
4. BA_ 8. FA_E&#13;
9. WAN_&#13;
10. FA_&#13;
II TRAI_&#13;
sports&#13;
Harriers need a strong fifth man&#13;
by John VanDenBrandt&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Parkside's distance men had a&#13;
busy schedule recently, competiting&#13;
in the Notre Dame and&#13;
Chicago Lakefront Invitational&#13;
Cross Country meets . The two&#13;
meets held on consecutive days,&#13;
annually attracts many of the&#13;
finest collegiate teams in&#13;
Mid-America. Parkside's harriers&#13;
fared well against such strong&#13;
competition, · finishing fifth in&#13;
the prestigious Notre Dame&#13;
Invitational and sixth at the&#13;
Lakefront contest the next day.&#13;
Each race featured a field of&#13;
twenty-four teams. • -&#13;
The Notre Dame competition&#13;
showcased the Ranger's potential,&#13;
both as a team and&#13;
individually. Team captain Ray&#13;
Fredricksen sped over the flat&#13;
five mile course in 24: 17 to&#13;
Swimmers&#13;
compete&#13;
this weekend&#13;
The swim team hosts&#13;
UW-Oshkosh and UW-Whitewater&#13;
here Saturday, Oct 22nd at&#13;
1:00 in the PE Building. The meet&#13;
has been designated Parent's&#13;
Day . Then next Tuesday, the&#13;
25th, Parkside w i ll meet&#13;
Carthage in a dual meet here&#13;
starting at 4:30 p .m .&#13;
~/,adoVI&#13;
../&#13;
thrill-packed&#13;
chill-packed&#13;
spellbinding&#13;
mystery and&#13;
terror dramas&#13;
Don't miss it!&#13;
Cvery Wedne sday&#13;
8 : 00 pm&#13;
-~?~OD&#13;
STEREO&#13;
capture seventh place and the&#13;
highest individual Ranger finish .&#13;
Parkside's team strength became&#13;
apparent seconds later as Jeff&#13;
Miller, Bob Langenhol, and Gary&#13;
Preim , running like mirror&#13;
images of each other, all crossed&#13;
the finish line in 24:48 to capture&#13;
the twenty-second through&#13;
twenty-fourth places, respectively.&#13;
Bill Werve's 26:00 race&#13;
was good for eighty-sixth place&#13;
to finish out Parkside scoring.&#13;
When the team . totals were&#13;
added for the college division,&#13;
Saginaw Valley came out on top,&#13;
with Parkside in the fifth slot, a&#13;
scant point away from fourth&#13;
- place Manitoba. .&#13;
Less than twenty hours later&#13;
the weary harriers lined up at&#13;
Chicago's Lakefront Invitational&#13;
for more five mile action . This&#13;
time standout sophomore Jeff&#13;
Miller, shruggin off the previous&#13;
day's fatique and a sloppy, rain&#13;
soaked course, led all the&#13;
Rangers w ith a cred itable&#13;
seventeenth place finish in&#13;
26:21 . Bob Langenhol was right&#13;
beh ind to garner eighteenth with&#13;
a 26:26 clocking. Langenhol is&#13;
considered to be one of the&#13;
finest freshman distance runners&#13;
in the N.A.1.A.&#13;
Ray Fredricksen, showing the&#13;
effects of a cold and his Notre&#13;
Dame effort, was well off his&#13;
usual race, winding up twentysixth&#13;
in 26:35 . Gary Preim (41st)&#13;
and Bill Werve (79th) rounded&#13;
out Parkside's scoring contingent.&#13;
&#13;
Illinois State came out on top,&#13;
taking home the team trophy,&#13;
with Parkside coming in sixth.&#13;
Team tabulations show that&#13;
despite the drain of back-to-back&#13;
races, the Ranger cross country&#13;
men overwhelmingly defeated&#13;
all five of the other Wisconsin&#13;
schools including 1976 Distri ct&#13;
runner-up, Stevens Point. •&#13;
The day was f urther highlighted&#13;
by a last second decision by&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa to enter the&#13;
three mile open race; his first&#13;
competition in over a year. Rosa,&#13;
a distance running legend ,&#13;
proved untouchable as he&#13;
romped over the 2.9 mile course&#13;
in 14:27.&#13;
When asked for an evaluation&#13;
of his cross country team Coach&#13;
Rosa responded, "Our first four&#13;
runners are extremely tough but&#13;
we're lacking the really strong&#13;
fifth man that we'll need in the&#13;
tournaments ."&#13;
The answer to Rosa's problem&#13;
may lie in the fast improving Bill&#13;
Werve, or two other varisty&#13;
regulars, Lee Allinger and John&#13;
VanDenBrandt, both just returning&#13;
from two week layoffs due to&#13;
illness Th Ranger' n t&#13;
competItIon is the Carthage&#13;
Invitational on October 22, at&#13;
!'etrifying Springs Park .&#13;
Baseball team&#13;
heads south&#13;
The 1978 UW-Parks1de baseball&#13;
team i s planning an&#13;
exhibition tune-up tour down&#13;
South, March 8-21&#13;
Their schedule will consist of&#13;
approximately sixteen games to&#13;
be played in Kentucky, Tennesee,&#13;
and Georgia In order to&#13;
finance their two week stay, they&#13;
are selling 50 cent candy bars to&#13;
fellow students You can help&#13;
support the team in its effort by&#13;
buying a candy bar from any&#13;
Baseball player.&#13;
The 1977 UW-P baseball team&#13;
returned last spring from the&#13;
South with a 5-4 record . Their&#13;
regular season record was 20-4,&#13;
after having won seventeen&#13;
consecutive games.&#13;
Construct the mystery word in the boxes below.&#13;
To do this you must fill in the correct missing&#13;
letter in each of the words listed in the&#13;
columns. Then transfer the missing letters to&#13;
the corresponding numbered boxes. Keep&#13;
an eraser handy-it's not as easy as it looks!&#13;
1. CA_ E&#13;
2. BE_ T&#13;
s. P_AL&#13;
s. BA_ E&#13;
a. CAL_ 1 . BAS_&#13;
4. BA_ s. FA_ E&#13;
s. WAN _&#13;
10. FA_&#13;
11. TRAI _&#13;
When there's a challenge, quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribpon is the Number 1 beer in Milwaukee.&#13;
beer capital of the world .&#13;
That's why we 'd like to offer you another challenge&#13;
-the Pabst challenge. Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any oth€r premium beer. You'll like Pab_st&#13;
because Blue Ribbon quality means the best-tasting beer&#13;
you can get. Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through. PABST BREWING COMPANY, ~ ilwaukee. Wis., Peo11 a Heights. 11 1., Newark, N.J , Los Angeles, Cahl , Pabsc Geo,v1a&#13;
1N3V'iHS3t:H31:l :p,o• A,a1sAw I &#13;
news&#13;
Book rentals&#13;
at Parkside?&#13;
fiij------"1&#13;
1&#13;
7ie I&#13;
,~l&#13;
I OPEN 7 OAYS I&#13;
I Mon.-5at 10 ·til close .,&#13;
I SII1. 6 'til close&#13;
I&#13;
II 1001 LUICHES&#13;
Sandwiches 'til midnight II&#13;
I&#13;
I 1l'EDNESDA Y. OCTOBER 19&#13;
143&amp;IIIClill, Raci.. TBURSDA Y. OCTOBER 20&#13;
.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiiiii~~;;;:~~~~~IIIIIIIII~~·~III~I.~.;I_:n;l~ (Madison)-A document of&#13;
controversial accreditation stanR&#13;
.. dards for University and College&#13;
epresentotive from VW-milwoukee ii Theatre Bachelor of Arts&#13;
programs is meeting with heated&#13;
School of Business Administrotion discussion following the recent&#13;
• ' Wisconsin Theatre Association&#13;
will be on Compus Tuesdoy. Oct. 25 (WTA) board meeting in Spring&#13;
Green.&#13;
from 9:00 o.rn, to 3:00 p.m. The document, "proposed&#13;
• Minimum f Standards for the&#13;
to tolk to Interested students. Accreditation of Theatre Degree&#13;
Programs," is an official policy of&#13;
the American Theatre Association&#13;
(AlA), since it met approval&#13;
at the association's Chicago&#13;
convention this year.&#13;
This document especially&#13;
aroused interest within the'&#13;
Wisconsin University and College&#13;
Theatre Association&#13;
(WUCTA), a divisional member&#13;
of WTA.&#13;
According to the document&#13;
standards; a college B.A.&#13;
by Milry I.aIaweII Ran.,. Staff&#13;
On October 5, the University&#13;
Bookstore Committee met. The&#13;
election of a new chairperson&#13;
was the first order of business.&#13;
Dennis Stevenson 'was unaminously&#13;
elected to the office.&#13;
The manager of the bookstore,&#13;
Paul Hoffman, reported that ten&#13;
sections of classes did not have&#13;
books at the beginning of the&#13;
semester. Causes of this problem&#13;
were over enrollment in some&#13;
classes, under ordering of some&#13;
texts, and poor responses by&#13;
some companies to the orders,&#13;
These problems can be remedied&#13;
by strictly enforcing the course&#13;
limitations for student enrollments,&#13;
and not ordering from the&#13;
companies -that give _poor&#13;
SAT. LADIES liTE&#13;
ladies' Ori1ks ~ Price&#13;
with date 8 'til close&#13;
responses, said Hoffman.&#13;
Another suggestion by Hoffman&#13;
is to have a student and&#13;
faculty survey similar to the ones&#13;
done by the t.LC. 'and the food&#13;
services. Hoffman hopes he can&#13;
pinpoint the main problems and&#13;
find some good remedies to&#13;
them. A sample 9ralt of the&#13;
proposed survey will be&#13;
presented at the next meeting.&#13;
Many alternatives are being&#13;
considered by the committee,&#13;
which will make a final decision&#13;
by the end of June 1978. The&#13;
main alternatives being- .considered&#13;
are 1) to leave the store&#13;
the way it is under the current&#13;
management, 2) open the&#13;
bidding for a new bookstore&#13;
management firm, or 3) to have&#13;
the university own the bookstore.&#13;
The ideas of having a better&#13;
book co-op and a book rental&#13;
system were also presented. All&#13;
these alternatives will be&#13;
considered and -,discussed at&#13;
future meetings.&#13;
VOTE&#13;
ECCHINI&#13;
FOR&#13;
SENATE&#13;
They will be ot 0 toble next to the&#13;
Bookstore ond ore interested&#13;
in 011 students. J ...... IMIWUWIlUlIIWIUIlIU ....... IIIIYllllllE'-,,,mellwullun'Y''''IIII,,,,,,J&#13;
Ladle. Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
o.... C..... , I&#13;
"57"&amp;23A ••&#13;
uw-p authors help co~pile&#13;
new Racine County ,history&#13;
under aegis of the Racine Countv Burckel adds. The book is both a&#13;
Board of Supervisors, which ~ reference volume for much of&#13;
adopted preparation of the Racine's past and a topical&#13;
volume as a Bicentennial history which a reader can pick&#13;
project. up and enjoy at any point, he&#13;
Beginning Oct. 17, the volume said. '&#13;
will be' available at the Burckel also notes that the&#13;
Journal-Times, Shoreline leader, work has been about three years&#13;
Racine Labor, Burlington Stan- in preparation beginning in the&#13;
dard Press, Waterford Post, spring of 1974 when then County&#13;
Union Grove Sun and the Administrator Gilbert Berthelsen&#13;
U~-Parkside Book Store., In appointed a nine-member Bicenperson&#13;
purchases are 57.50. The tennial Liaison Committee,&#13;
book also may be ordered by ,chaired by Walter Seiannas,&#13;
mail at 59 through the which adopted publicaton of the&#13;
journal- Times Community Rela- book as one of the county's&#13;
tions Office (212 Fourth St., major Bicentennial projects.&#13;
Racine 53403). "local history," Burckel points&#13;
In a forward to the volume, out, "Is much more immediate,&#13;
editor Burckel points out that less removed from the reader's&#13;
"this historv is neither a single life than is a history of the&#13;
author's interpretation of the United States or even of&#13;
past nor a series of personal Wisconsin. In evitably, no matter&#13;
reminiscences. The authors, who.' how comprehensive a volume,&#13;
include historians, a political' some readers will disagree with&#13;
scientist, an economist, a the analyses or conclusions of&#13;
geographer and a librarian, were the-authors. Local histories are&#13;
asked to view their subjects from particularly susceptible to such&#13;
the perspective of their criticisms becuase they deal&#13;
individual areas of expertise and either with participants still&#13;
interest. They were asked to active in an area's affairs or with&#13;
place the local setting in the: the descendents of many people&#13;
context of both Wisconsin mentioned.&#13;
history and the most recent "Nevertheless, avoiding the&#13;
findings of their respective challenge of researching and&#13;
disciplines. writing local history is to risk&#13;
"The result is a wide-ranging losing an important and essential&#13;
series of chapters, each of which component in the history of state&#13;
"can be read alone but which also and nation. Racine County,&#13;
contributes i to the readers' fortunately, did not take that&#13;
understanding of the other risk."&#13;
chapters." The new book is the first&#13;
Each of the chapters was full-scale history of Racine&#13;
written by a scholar, but not County since a two-volume work&#13;
merely for use by scholars, by Fanny Stone was issued about&#13;
. 1916.&#13;
Racine County has a brand&#13;
new history book, &lt;prepared&#13;
during the Bicentennial year by&#13;
ten scholars with professional or&#13;
personal ties to this area. It's due&#13;
off the presses this week.&#13;
Titled "Racine: Growth and&#13;
Change in a Wisconsin County,"&#13;
the hard cover volume has 648&#13;
pages and 75 photographs and&#13;
includes an index and several&#13;
appendices. A limited edition of&#13;
2,000 copies will be printed.&#13;
. The authors and their&#13;
contributions are Nelson Peter&#13;
Ross, writing on Indians and&#13;
early settlement; John D.&#13;
Buenker on the immigrant&#13;
heritage; Chelvadurai Manogar·&#13;
an on geography and agriculture;&#13;
William ,. Murin on politics and&#13;
government from 1838 to 1920&#13;
and Michael Holmes on that&#13;
sector from 1920 to 1976;&#13;
Richard H. Keehn on industry&#13;
and business; Joseph M. Kelly on&#13;
organized labor; Thomas C.&#13;
Reeves on education and&#13;
culture; Russell Gilmore on the&#13;
community in war Urnes; and&#13;
lawrence N. Crumb on rei igion.&#13;
All are associated with the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
except the late Peter R;'ss, who&#13;
was a faculty member at&#13;
Carthage College; Holmes, of&#13;
UW'Milwaukee; Kelly, a former&#13;
faculty member at College of&#13;
Racine; and Gilmore, former&#13;
Curator of the Wisconsin&#13;
Veterans' Museum.&#13;
The history was edited by&#13;
UW-Parkside Archivist Nicholas&#13;
C. Burckel and is published&#13;
Theater accreditation under fire ,&#13;
program must have three&#13;
full-time employees (HE) who&#13;
are theatre trained faculty. Collateral&#13;
faculty who teach degree&#13;
electives and required courses,&#13;
but are not theatre trained, do&#13;
not qualify as HE. Art teachers.&#13;
who may teach palette control,&#13;
and physical education teachers&#13;
who may teach dance, also do&#13;
not qualify as HE faculty.&#13;
Part-time theatre trained&#13;
faculty qualify for percentages-of&#13;
the three FTE. For example, a ¥4&#13;
time faculty member qualifies as&#13;
a .75 HE.&#13;
Accreditation- takes place&#13;
through the National Association&#13;
'of, Schools of Theatre (NAST),&#13;
which is an arm of the ATA. This&#13;
group evaluates a schoolprogram&#13;
through two steps.&#13;
First, self evaluation by the&#13;
school is submitted to NAST.&#13;
Second, a NAST team evaluates&#13;
the program and a provisional&#13;
accreditation is drawn up if all&#13;
standards are not met by the&#13;
school. If the program is not&#13;
upgraded within the time alloted&#13;
by NAST, accreditation' is&#13;
revoked from the school.&#13;
The requirements of this&#13;
document appear to be quite&#13;
stringent, according to AI Katz,&#13;
WUCTA president.&#13;
. In a letter to WUCTA contacts,&#13;
Katz stated, "The contents of it&#13;
(the document) seem to me tobe&#13;
'optimum' not 'minimum' and&#13;
are therefore dangerously exclusionary&#13;
in their impact on many&#13;
theatre programs in the United&#13;
States at this time.'(&#13;
Katz' noted that many of the&#13;
two dozen theatre programs in&#13;
Wisconsin would not qualify for -&#13;
accreditation by these standards.&#13;
•&#13;
Apples changed with chemicals&#13;
(CPS) - In addition to&#13;
chemically fertilizing, spraying&#13;
and waxing apples, agribusiness&#13;
researchers are now using&#13;
chemicals to change its shape.&#13;
Since, most consumers-seem&#13;
to have a strong preference&#13;
toward the elongated over the&#13;
round apple, the Department of&#13;
Agriculture (USDA) had conHAYE&#13;
A FlEE DRINI ON THE BEAN&#13;
W'" TIlls C•• ,.ft .&#13;
1'.r e••t••• r YOWIII&#13;
Hours&#13;
M..;.T·&#13;
7p.m.-&#13;
10 p.m.&#13;
'D".ra&#13;
25&lt;,&#13;
Mle.&#13;
3Se&#13;
MIx.,1DrI."&#13;
40e&#13;
ducted experiments to change&#13;
the shape of the round Red&#13;
Delicious apples, according to&#13;
the USDA Office of Communication.&#13;
)&#13;
The Red Delicious .grown in&#13;
Washington state is naturally&#13;
elongated while the warmer&#13;
climate states produce round&#13;
apples.&#13;
Test apples have now been&#13;
grown successfully in New&#13;
. Zealand as well as in North and&#13;
South Carolina, Michigan and&#13;
other States where producers are&#13;
trying to rid their apples of the&#13;
unsightly roundness.&#13;
"Chemicals to improve the&#13;
shape of the Red Delicious&#13;
apples may now be used,,"&#13;
said the USDA communique.&#13;
r,--------&#13;
news&#13;
Book rentals&#13;
at Parkside?&#13;
by Mary Lasswell&#13;
Ran(Ser Staff&#13;
On October 5, the University&#13;
Bookstore Committee met. The&#13;
election of a new chairperson&#13;
was the first order of business.&#13;
Dennis Stevenson 'was unaminously&#13;
elected to the office.&#13;
The manager of the bookstore,&#13;
Paul Hoffman, reported that ten&#13;
sections of classes did not have&#13;
books at the beginning of the&#13;
semester. Causes of this problem&#13;
were over enrollment in some&#13;
classes, under ordering of some&#13;
texts, and poor responses by&#13;
some companies to the orders.&#13;
These problems can be remedied&#13;
by strictly enforcing the course&#13;
limitations for student enrollments,&#13;
and not ordering from the&#13;
companies -'that give _ poor&#13;
responses, said Hoffman.&#13;
Another suggestion by Hoffman&#13;
is to have a student and&#13;
faculty survey similar to the ones&#13;
done by the l.L.C. 'and the food&#13;
services. Hoffman hopes he can&#13;
pinpoint the main problems and&#13;
find some good remedies to&#13;
them. A sample draft of the&#13;
proposed survey will be&#13;
presented at the next meeting.&#13;
Many alternatives are being&#13;
considered by the- committee,&#13;
which will make a final decision&#13;
by the end of June 1978. The&#13;
main alternatives being _considered&#13;
are 1) to leave the store&#13;
the way it is under the current&#13;
management, 2) open the&#13;
bidding for a new bookstore&#13;
management firm, or 3) to have&#13;
the university own the bookstore.&#13;
&#13;
. The ideas of having a better r-:::.------------7 book co-op and a book rental } ,,,L _&#13;
l system were also presented. All&#13;
J /lie, J these alternatives will be&#13;
i ~ i considered and discussed at t "'-,~ ~ future meetings.&#13;
\ OPEN 7 DAYS i .-----------..&#13;
\ Mon.-Set 10 'til close I VOTE i Sun. 6 'til close J&#13;
1 i C ·l Send~!~sl~!C!~Jn~ht I E CHINI&#13;
i i FOR&#13;
i SAT. LADIES NITE i&#13;
I Ladies' Drinks ½ Price Ii&#13;
with date 8 'tit close&#13;
SENATE&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19&#13;
-&#13;
UW -P authors help co~pile&#13;
new Racine County· history&#13;
Racine County has a brand&#13;
new history book, prepared&#13;
during the Bicentennial year by&#13;
ten scholars with professional or&#13;
personal ties to this area. It's due&#13;
off the presses this week.&#13;
Titled "Racine: Growth and&#13;
Change in a Wisconsin County,"&#13;
the hard cover volume has 648&#13;
pages and 75 photographs and&#13;
includes an index and several&#13;
appendices. A limited edition of&#13;
2,000 copies will be printed.&#13;
. The authors and their&#13;
contributions are Nelson Peter&#13;
Ross, writing on Indians and&#13;
early settlement; John D.&#13;
Buenker on the immigrant&#13;
heritage; Chelvadurai Manogaran&#13;
on geography and agriculture;&#13;
William J. Murin on politics and&#13;
government from 1838 to 1920&#13;
and Michael Holmes on that&#13;
sector from 1920 to 1976;&#13;
Richard H. Keehn on industry&#13;
and business; Joseph M . Kelly on&#13;
organized labor; Thomas C.&#13;
Reeves on education and&#13;
culture; Russell Gilmore on the&#13;
community in war tiJT1es; and&#13;
Lawrence N. Crumb on religion.&#13;
All are associated With the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
except the late Peter Ross, who&#13;
was a faculty member at&#13;
Carthage College; Holmes, of&#13;
UW-Milwaukee; Kelly, a former&#13;
faculty member at CoUege of&#13;
Racine; and Gilmore, former&#13;
Curator of the Wisconsin&#13;
Veterans' Museum. _&#13;
The history was edited by&#13;
UW-Parkside Archivist Nicholas&#13;
C. Burckel and is published&#13;
under aegis of the Racine County&#13;
Board of Supervisors, which -&#13;
adopted preparation of the&#13;
volume as a Bicentennial&#13;
project.&#13;
Beginning Oct. 17, the volume&#13;
will be ' available at the&#13;
Journal-Times, Shoreline Leader,&#13;
Racine Labor, Burlington Standard&#13;
Press, Waterford Post,&#13;
Union Grove Sun and the&#13;
U~-Parkside Book Store.1 In&#13;
person purchases are $7 .50. The&#13;
book also may be ordered by&#13;
mail at $9 through the&#13;
Journal-Times Community Relations&#13;
'Office (212 Fourth St.,&#13;
Racine 53403).&#13;
· In a forward to the volume,&#13;
editor Burckel points out that&#13;
"this history is neither a single&#13;
authoi's interpretation of the&#13;
past nor a series of personal&#13;
remfniscences. The authors, who :&#13;
include historians, a political '&#13;
scientist, an economist, a&#13;
geographer and a librarian, were&#13;
asked to view their subjects from&#13;
the perspective of their&#13;
individual areas of expertise and&#13;
interest. They were asked to&#13;
place the local setting in the .&#13;
context of both Wisconsin&#13;
history and the most recent ·&#13;
findings of their respective&#13;
disciplines.&#13;
"The result is a wide-ranging&#13;
series of chapters, each of which&#13;
can be read alone but which also&#13;
contributes , to the readers'&#13;
understanding of the other&#13;
chapters."&#13;
Each of the chapters was&#13;
written by a scholar, but not&#13;
merely for use by scholars,&#13;
Burckel adds. The book is both a&#13;
reference volume for much of&#13;
Racine's past and a topical&#13;
history which a reader can pick&#13;
up and enjoy at any point, he&#13;
said. •&#13;
Burc~el also notes that the&#13;
work has be-en about three years&#13;
in preparation beginning in the&#13;
spring of 1974 when then County&#13;
Administrator Gilbert Berthelsen&#13;
appointed a nine-member Bicentennial&#13;
Liaison Committee,&#13;
, chaired by Walter Seiannas,&#13;
which adopted publicaton of the&#13;
book as one of the county's&#13;
major Bicentennial projects.&#13;
"Local history," Bµrckel points&#13;
out, "Is much more immediate,&#13;
less removed from the reader's&#13;
life than is a history of the&#13;
United States or even of&#13;
Wisconsin. Inevitably, no matter&#13;
how comprehensive a volume,&#13;
some readers will disagree with&#13;
the analyses or conclusions of&#13;
the · authors. Local histories are&#13;
particularly susceptible to such&#13;
criticisms becuase they deal&#13;
either with participants still&#13;
active in an area's affairs or with&#13;
the descendents of many people&#13;
mentioned.&#13;
"Nevertheless, avoiding the&#13;
challenge of researching and&#13;
writing local history is to risk&#13;
losing an important and essential&#13;
component in the history of state&#13;
and nation. Racine County,&#13;
fortunately, did not take that&#13;
risk."&#13;
The new book is the first&#13;
full-scale history of Racine&#13;
County since a two-volume work&#13;
by Fanny Stone was issued about&#13;
1916.&#13;
Theater accreditation under fire I l. _ 1436 J11ct~'!!Jaci1e ) THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20&#13;
IIIIIIIIIWlllllllllllfflffllfflHfflNRWIIIIIIIINIIDIHIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII (Madi son) - A document of&#13;
I controversial accreditation stanprogram&#13;
must have three&#13;
full-time employees (FTE) who&#13;
are theatre trained faculty. Collateral&#13;
faculty who teach degree&#13;
electives and required courses,&#13;
but are not theatre trained, do&#13;
not qualify as FTE. Art teachers&#13;
_who may teach palette control,&#13;
and physical education teachers&#13;
who may teach dance, also do&#13;
not qualify as FTE faculty.&#13;
Second, a NAST team evaluates&#13;
the program and a provisional&#13;
acc_reditation is drawn up if all&#13;
standards are not met by the&#13;
school. If the program is not&#13;
upgraded within the time alloted&#13;
by NAST, accreditation is&#13;
revoked from the school.&#13;
Representative from VW-ffiilwoukee&#13;
School of Business Administration&#13;
will be on Campus Tuesday, Oct. 25&#13;
from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.&#13;
to talk to interested students.&#13;
§ dards for University and College&#13;
I Theatre Bachelor of Arts&#13;
programs is meeting with-heated&#13;
discussion following the recent&#13;
Wisconsin Theatre Association&#13;
(WT A) board meeting in Spring&#13;
Green.&#13;
The_y will be ot o table next to the&#13;
Bookstore ond ore interested&#13;
I in oll students. , i&#13;
1. IIWIUIIIIIIIIIHHHHHfHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHIIIIIIIIIIIIHllli11111111111111111111nu111mmmmJ&#13;
The document, "proposed&#13;
Minimum , Standards for the&#13;
Accreditation of Theatre Degree&#13;
Programs," is an official policy of&#13;
the American Theatre Association&#13;
(AT A), since _it met approval&#13;
at the association's Chicago ·&#13;
convention this year.&#13;
This document especially&#13;
aroused interest within the&#13;
Wisconsin University and College&#13;
Theatre Association&#13;
(WUCT A), a divisional member HAVE A FREE DRINK ON THE BEAN of WTA.&#13;
With TIiis Coupoa -&#13;
1 Per Customer&#13;
According to the document&#13;
standards, a college B.A.&#13;
Part-time theatre trained&#13;
faculty qualify f_or percentages·of&#13;
the three FTE. For example, a ¾&#13;
time faculty member qualifies as&#13;
a .75 FTE.&#13;
Accreditation takes place&#13;
through the National Association&#13;
'of Schools of Theatre (NAST),&#13;
which is_ an arm of the AT A. Thfs&#13;
group evaluates a school&#13;
program through two steps.&#13;
First, self evaluation by the&#13;
school is submitted to NAST.&#13;
The requirements of this&#13;
document appear to be quite&#13;
stringent, according to Al Katz,&#13;
WUCT A president&#13;
In a letter to WUCTA contacts,&#13;
Kati stated, "The contents of it&#13;
(the document) seem to me to.be&#13;
'optimum' not 'minimum' and&#13;
are therefore dangerously exclusionary&#13;
in their impact on many&#13;
theatre programs in the United&#13;
States at this time.'&lt;&#13;
Katz, noted that many of the&#13;
two dozen theatre programs in&#13;
Wisconsin would not qualify for&#13;
accreditation by these standards. ..&#13;
ladles Night&#13;
Wed.&#13;
YOWZAA&#13;
Noun&#13;
M ....;.y ·&#13;
7p.m.-&#13;
10p.m.&#13;
Apples changed with · chemicals&#13;
0• tlle Coraer /&#13;
of 57tll &amp; 23 Awe&#13;
Mic.&#13;
35c&#13;
Mixed Drlaks&#13;
40c&#13;
(CPS) - In addition to&#13;
chemically fertilizing, spraying&#13;
and waxing apples, agribusiness&#13;
researchers are now using&#13;
chemicals to change its shape.&#13;
Since, most consumers · seem&#13;
to have a strong -preference&#13;
toward the elongated over the&#13;
round apple, the Department of&#13;
Agriculture (USDA) had conducted&#13;
experiments to change&#13;
the shape of the round Red&#13;
Delicious apples, according to&#13;
the USDA Office of Communication.&#13;
)&#13;
The Red Delicious .grown in&#13;
Washington · state is naturally&#13;
elongated while the warmer&#13;
climate states produce round&#13;
apples.&#13;
Test apples hav,e now been&#13;
grown successfully in New&#13;
. Zealand as well as in North and&#13;
South Carolina, Michigan and&#13;
other states where producers are&#13;
trying to rid their apples of the&#13;
unsightly roundness.&#13;
"Chemicals to improve the&#13;
shape of the Red Delicious&#13;
apples may now be used ... 11&#13;
said the USDA communique.&#13;
I .; &#13;
orean diary&#13;
ChonnamNotional University Fine Arts Building&#13;
Korean schools: learning&#13;
is taken seriously&#13;
by Dennis R, De~n&#13;
AssociaJe Professor of Enllish&#13;
Shortly after we moved in that Saturday,&#13;
Imet an urbane and thoroughly delightful&#13;
Kim Tae [In, professor of English and&#13;
advisor to the English-language student&#13;
newspaper, who had fought to have' a&#13;
Fulbrighter in residence at Kwangju (I was&#13;
first) and who was primarily responsible&#13;
for me while 1was there. While Susan and&#13;
"Mrs. Kim" (actually, Korean married&#13;
women do not assume their husbands'&#13;
.... names) were downtown' shopping for some&#13;
last-minute things, he and I exchanged&#13;
pleasantries, some serious ideas, and a lot&#13;
of facts. I learned, for example, that it&#13;
takes 140 credits to graduate from&#13;
Chonnam National University and that&#13;
majoring in English would take up about&#13;
90 of them. We also learned, quite&#13;
unexpectedly, 'that Susan would also be&#13;
teaching while she was here. This was our&#13;
first exposure to the Korean custom of&#13;
gently maneuvering one into situations of&#13;
no real choice.&#13;
At 11 a.m. on Sunday we had a further&#13;
business meeting and then, together with&#13;
the Kims, went by bus to see the campus,&#13;
which was spacroustv arrayed on&#13;
Yongdong ·("dragon-phoenix") hill northwest&#13;
of the city. Atop the hIli was the&#13;
liberal Arts building, in which I taught&#13;
American literature to juniors and seniors.&#13;
The classrooms were much like ours, but&#13;
older and without heat or lights, which&#13;
m!lde s'ome March teaching days rather&#13;
dark and- chilly. I lectured in English&#13;
directly to my Korean students, all of&#13;
whom could follow me if I slowed down&#13;
when speaking', and taught them&#13;
vocabulary as needed. My junior class got&#13;
through about a dozen short stories,&#13;
beginning with Washington Irving, while&#13;
my sen iors studied four contemporary&#13;
short -novels, beginning with John&#13;
Steinbeck. I gave both classes a brief&#13;
review of American history and a survey of&#13;
our major literary periods. For each story&#13;
or novel, I described the region of its&#13;
setting, furnished necessary historical&#13;
background, and emphasized American&#13;
themes and values that it exemplified. I&#13;
was perfectly at liberty (or assumed I was)&#13;
to say whatever I pleased about my own&#13;
country and its government.&#13;
Discipline chief function of school.&#13;
Koreaneducation, however, is substantially&#13;
different from ours, particularly in its&#13;
subordination of the individual to the&#13;
group. Discipline is one of the chief&#13;
functions of the Korean school because&#13;
child rearing in the home (particularly for&#13;
sons) is extremely permissive. Enforcing&#13;
conformity is a second major function of&#13;
Korean education. Though students&#13;
certai nlv have a healthy regard for&#13;
themselves as individuals, they tend to&#13;
define themselves as members of their&#13;
group. As school children (although not at&#13;
the college level) they were required to&#13;
wear uniforms and to observe other dress&#13;
regulations - involving hairstyles, for&#13;
instance.&#13;
Class leaders provide representation&#13;
Each class elects a class leader who&#13;
speaks for members of the class. This&#13;
pattern, begun jn middle school (; jr.&#13;
high), continues at the college level and&#13;
gives the students a certain strength in&#13;
numbers. For example, the leaders in my&#13;
wife's classes did not hesitate to inform her&#13;
that she needed to speak more slowly and&#13;
to write more clearly on the board. Nor did&#13;
the leaders in my own classes fail to&#13;
negotiate with r,J,lea modified exam. On&#13;
the other hand, when one of my take home&#13;
exams was not duplicated in time, I called&#13;
part two&#13;
in the class leaders and got them to&#13;
distribute it well in advance of the next&#13;
class meeting. This is possible largely&#13;
because of the weight given to the major&#13;
in a Korean university. Juniors majoring in&#13;
English, for example, will take almost all&#13;
their classes together; my American lit&#13;
class and my wife's junior-level&#13;
conversation and composition class were&#13;
almost identical in membership.&#13;
Clus ..cts u .. unit&#13;
Sometimes, though, Kor,ean emphasis&#13;
on group activity becomes a little bizarre.&#13;
Students, for example, rarely cut class as&#13;
individuals. But if the class decided that it&#13;
wanted to go on a picnic, or perhaps to&#13;
study for an exam, its leader would politely&#13;
solicit my opinion beforehand. If I agreed&#13;
to cancel class, then all was well. If&#13;
(imprudently) I did not agree, it really&#13;
didn't make any difference because the&#13;
classroom would be deserted anyway, the&#13;
whole bunch of them having bugged out&#13;
en masse. Similarly, if I required an&#13;
assignment, and the class decided it didn't&#13;
want one, nobody would do it, and there I&#13;
was. You can't very well fail an entire class,&#13;
now, can you?&#13;
hrter is common&#13;
How seriously, then, do Korean students&#13;
take their own educations? Well, very&#13;
seriously at times. Koreans are&#13;
traditionally a hard-working people, and&#13;
they place high value upon education. On&#13;
the other hand, individual accomplishment&#13;
is relatively unstressed. In Korea,&#13;
things get done not by consulting experts&#13;
but by consulting friends. Although&#13;
guileless generosity is a national trait -&#13;
Koreans are among the most open people&#13;
in the world - swapping favors is clearly&#13;
expected, and gifts are indistinguishable&#13;
from bribes. The whole society, it seems,&#13;
runs according to a barter system, which is&#13;
generously implemented by the rewards of&#13;
friendship, for to make a friend means to&#13;
acquire all that friend's friends as potential&#13;
assets, a network of connections that soon&#13;
spreads throughout this compact country.&#13;
What a Korean student expects to acquire&#13;
from his college education, therefore, is&#13;
not primarily an enhancement of his&#13;
mental skills but rather membership in that&#13;
increasingly powerful group, his college&#13;
class, the individuals of which are pretty&#13;
much required to do favors for each other&#13;
all their lives. A-student who has achieved&#13;
admission to a prestigious university has&#13;
worked hard to do so, because&#13;
competition is fierce. But once in,&#13;
accomplishment is much less important&#13;
than retaining the goodwill of one's&#13;
fellows.&#13;
Objectivity not ~nobjective&#13;
In consequence, professionalism in&#13;
Korea is not much evident, for&#13;
"objectivity" in dealing with one's friends&#13;
would be an insult. Those serious about&#13;
their work tend to leave the country. For&#13;
example, the staff of Chonnam National&#13;
University includes no professional&#13;
librarians, because (as the director of the&#13;
library explained to us) any who achieve&#13;
such training migrate to the United States.&#13;
Next week: Korean city life&#13;
VOTE&#13;
ECCHINI&#13;
FOR&#13;
•&#13;
Thus, the library has no real acquisitions&#13;
program - there is almost no money -&#13;
and the English lanBuage section of its&#13;
stacks is a haphazard collection of&#13;
discards from other librartes, acquired&#13;
primarily because they are cheap It is&#13;
worth remembering th~t our whole&#13;
emphasis upon the student's individual&#13;
research is not, shared by Korean&#13;
educators, and their institutional libraries&#13;
are accordingly under far less pressure to&#13;
be sound. Surprisingly, however, the&#13;
collection of English language periodicals&#13;
was fairly good.&#13;
Although faculty members at Chonnam&#13;
National University were supposedly&#13;
expected to publish an article every year, I&#13;
knew of only one colleague who actually&#13;
did so. As in other aspects of Korean&#13;
society, becoming a faculty member is the&#13;
hardest professional step. Once in, it is&#13;
again more important to be pleasant than&#13;
to expand one's professional knowledge&#13;
and capacities. Professional staanation,&#13;
therefore, is fairly common and&#13;
substantially affects the curriculum, which&#13;
in all majors consists of required courses.&#13;
For this reason, too, students are not&#13;
encouraged to think critically, and often&#13;
dislike being asked to do so, In Korean&#13;
universities, as I was informed upon&#13;
arrival, the student expects to take only an&#13;
in-class 5O--minutefinal exam designed to&#13;
show that he has dutifully taken notes in&#13;
class and memorized them. There are no&#13;
other tests and little discussion; relations&#13;
between the professor and his students are&#13;
courteous but formal.&#13;
E_ write ~ research "-'&#13;
This was, however, not entirely true in&#13;
my own case, and particularly with regard&#13;
to my graduate school seminar of six&#13;
students dealing with Problems in&#13;
American literature, which was also&#13;
attended by Faculty members (as were my&#13;
other two). Here Ispoke at normal speed,&#13;
regularly exchanged sophisticated ideas&#13;
with both grads and faculty before ~nd&#13;
after class, and actually lot away with&#13;
requiring an original research paper - the&#13;
first they'd ever done&#13;
All classes of the University, by the w~y,&#13;
are co-ed and two of my grads were&#13;
women. Classes are scheduled oddly,&#13;
meeting at different times of day and in&#13;
different places throughout the week&#13;
Students in a class will sometimes vote to&#13;
reschedule themselves. Instructors normally&#13;
take roll, and 10% of the final grade&#13;
supposedly depends upon attendance, but&#13;
the class lists they give you are in Chinese&#13;
No matter what you tell them, students in&#13;
a class stay seated and in place unul their&#13;
instructor leaves the room When you&#13;
meet them outside on campus, students&#13;
smile, say hello, and bow.&#13;
Unless formally eng~ed, couples do not&#13;
walk together; holding hands ~nd other&#13;
affectionate gestures are avoided. Female&#13;
students dress attractively but aVOId&#13;
anatomic~1 display ~ndusually bind their&#13;
breasts. There are no women on the&#13;
English faculty, but the fi"t Iraduate&#13;
student in their recent proaram was one.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19&#13;
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20&#13;
SENATE&#13;
orean diary part two&#13;
Chonnam National University Fine Arts Building&#13;
Korean schools: learning&#13;
is taken ~eriously&#13;
by Dennis R. Dean&#13;
Associate Professor of English&#13;
Shortly after we moved in that Saturday,&#13;
I met an urbane and thoroughly delightful&#13;
Kim Tae Jin, professor of English and&#13;
advisor to the English-language student&#13;
newspaper, who had fought to have · a&#13;
Fulbrighter in residence at Kwangju (I was&#13;
first) and who was primarily responsible&#13;
for me while I was there. While Susan and&#13;
"Mrs. Kim" (actually, Korean married&#13;
women do not assume their husbands'&#13;
~ names) were downtown shopping for some&#13;
last-minute things, he and I exchanged&#13;
pleasantries, some serious ideas, and a lot&#13;
of facts. I learned, for example, that it&#13;
takes 140 credits to graduate from&#13;
Chonnam National University and that&#13;
majoring in English would take up about&#13;
90 of them . We also learned, quite&#13;
unexpectedly, 'that Susan would also be&#13;
teaching while she was here. This was our&#13;
first exposure to the Korean custom of&#13;
gently maneuvering one into situations of&#13;
no real choice.&#13;
At 11 a.m. on Sunday we had a further&#13;
business meeting and then, together with&#13;
the Kims, went by bus to see the campus,&#13;
which was spaciously arrayed on&#13;
Yongdong ·("dragon-phoenix") hill northwest&#13;
of the city. Atop the nill was the&#13;
liberal Arts building, in which I taught&#13;
American literature to juniors and seniors .&#13;
The classrooms were much like ours, but&#13;
older and without heat or lights, which&#13;
made some March teaching days rather&#13;
dark and chilly. I lectured in English&#13;
directly to my Korean students, all of&#13;
whom could follow me if I slowed down&#13;
when speaking·, and taught them&#13;
vocabulary as needed. My junior class got&#13;
through about a dozen short stories, .&#13;
beginning with Washington Irving, while&#13;
my seniors studied four contemporary&#13;
short -novels, beginning with John&#13;
Steinbeck. I gave both classes a brief&#13;
review of American history and a survey of&#13;
our major literary periods. For each story&#13;
or novel, I described the region of its&#13;
setting, furnished necessary historical&#13;
background, and emphasized American&#13;
themes and values that it exemplified. I&#13;
was perfectly at liberty (or assumed I was)&#13;
to say whatever I pleased about my own&#13;
country and its government.&#13;
Discipline chief function of schools&#13;
Korean education, however, is substantially&#13;
different from ours, particularly in its&#13;
subordination of the individual to the&#13;
group. Discipline is one of the chief&#13;
functions of the Korean school because&#13;
child rearing in the home (particularly for&#13;
sons) is extremely permissive. Enforcing&#13;
conformity is a second major function of&#13;
Korean education . Though students&#13;
certainly have a healthy regard for&#13;
themselves as individuals, they tend to&#13;
define themselves as members of their&#13;
group. As school children (although not at&#13;
the college level) they were required to&#13;
wear uniforms and to observe other dress&#13;
regulations - involving hairstyles, for&#13;
instance.&#13;
Class leaders provide representation&#13;
Each class elects a class leader who&#13;
speaks for members of the class. This&#13;
pattern, begun in middle school ( = jr.&#13;
high), continues at the college level and&#13;
gives the students a certain strength in&#13;
numbers. For example, the leaders in my&#13;
wife's classes did not hesitate to inform her&#13;
that she needed to speak more slowly and&#13;
to write more clearly on the board . Nor did&#13;
the leaders in my own classes fail to&#13;
negotiate with me a modified exam. On&#13;
the other hand, ...;,hen one of my take home&#13;
exams was not duplicated in time, I called&#13;
in the class leaders and got them to&#13;
distribute it well in advance of the next&#13;
class meeting. This is possible largely&#13;
because of the weight given to the major&#13;
in a Korean university. Juniors majoring in&#13;
English, for example, will take almost all&#13;
their classes together; my American lit&#13;
class and my wife' s junior-level&#13;
conversation and composition class were&#13;
almost identical in membership.&#13;
Class acts as a unit&#13;
Sometimes, though, Kor,ean emphasis&#13;
on group activity becomes a little bizarre.&#13;
Students, for example, rarely cut class as&#13;
individuals . But if the class decided that it&#13;
wanted to go on a picnic, or perhaps to&#13;
study for an exam, its leader would politely&#13;
solicit my opinion beforehand. If I agreed&#13;
to cancel class, then all was well. If&#13;
(imprudently) I did not agree, it really&#13;
didn't make any difference because the&#13;
classroom would be deserted anyway, the&#13;
whole bunch of them having bugged out&#13;
en masse. Similarly, if I required an&#13;
assignment, and the class decided it didn't&#13;
want one, nobody would do it, and there I&#13;
was . You can't very well fail an entire class,&#13;
now, can you?&#13;
Barter is common&#13;
How seriously, then, do Korean students&#13;
take their own educations? Well , very&#13;
seriously at times . Koreans are&#13;
traditionally a hard-working people, and&#13;
they place high value upon education . On&#13;
the other hand, individual accomplishment&#13;
is relatively unstressed. In Korea,&#13;
things get done not by consulting experts&#13;
but by consulting friends . Although&#13;
guileless generosity is a national trait -&#13;
Koreans are among the most open people&#13;
in the world - swapping favors is clearly&#13;
expected, and gifts are indistinguishable&#13;
from bribes . The whole society, it seems,&#13;
runs according to a barter system, which is&#13;
generously implemented by the rewards of&#13;
friendship, for to make a friend means to&#13;
acquire all that friend's friends as potential&#13;
assets, a network of connections that soon&#13;
spreads throughout this compact country .&#13;
What a Korean student expects to acquire&#13;
from his college education, therefore, is&#13;
not primarily an enhancement of his&#13;
mental skills but rather membership in that&#13;
increasingly powerful group, his college&#13;
class, the individuals of which are pretty&#13;
much required to do favors for each other&#13;
all their lives. A student who has achieved&#13;
admission to a prestigious university has&#13;
worked hard to do so, because&#13;
competition is fierce . But once in,&#13;
accomplishment is much less important&#13;
than retaining the goodwill of one's&#13;
fellows.&#13;
Objectivity not an objective&#13;
In consequence, professionalism in&#13;
Korea is not much evident, for&#13;
"objectivity" in dealing with one's friends&#13;
would be an insult. Those serious about&#13;
their work tend to leave the country. For&#13;
example, the staff of Chonnam National&#13;
University includes no professional&#13;
librarians, because (as the director of the&#13;
library explained to us) any who achieve&#13;
such training migrate to the United States .&#13;
Next week : Korean city life&#13;
~»- N'\pJJ\C ~ ot:l.0 zi\1'5~34°3&#13;
Alon.-&amp;&#13;
Open&#13;
Fri.&#13;
- 32,\&#13;
~ ~i~•&#13;
~ ~\~ _.,\4-) ~-&#13;
5 ~ ·&#13;
Noon t/19 ~~(...-&#13;
Sat. ~OOtl ti/ 5 _ I".,. -&#13;
AIAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
VOTE&#13;
ECCHINI&#13;
FOR&#13;
SENATE&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19&#13;
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20&#13;
•&#13;
Thus, the library has no real acqu1sitrons&#13;
program - there is almost no money -&#13;
and the English language section of rts&#13;
stacks is a haphazard collection of&#13;
discards from other libraries, acquired&#13;
primarily because they are cheap It 1s&#13;
worth remembering that our whole&#13;
emphasis upon the student's rnd1vidual&#13;
research is not shared by Korean&#13;
educators, and their institutional libraries&#13;
are accordingly under far less pressure to&#13;
be sound. Surprisingly, however, the&#13;
collection of English language periodicals&#13;
was fairly good&#13;
Although faculty members at Chonnam&#13;
National University were supposedly&#13;
expected to publish an article every year, I&#13;
knew of only one colleague who actually&#13;
did so. As rn other aspects of Korean&#13;
society, becoming a faculty member is the&#13;
hardest professional step Once in, it rs&#13;
again more important to be pleasant than&#13;
to expand one's professional knowledge&#13;
and capacities . Professional stagnation,&#13;
therefore , is fairly common and&#13;
substantially affects the curriculum, which&#13;
in all majors consists of required courses&#13;
For this reason , too, students are not&#13;
encouraged to think critically, and often&#13;
dislike being asked to do so. In Korean&#13;
universities, as I was informed upon&#13;
arrival, the student expects to take only an&#13;
in-class 50-minute final exam designed to&#13;
show that he has dutifully taken notes in&#13;
class and memorized them . There are no&#13;
other tests and little discussion; relations&#13;
between the professor and his students are&#13;
courteous but formal .&#13;
Ever write a research paperf&#13;
This was, however, not entirely true in&#13;
my own case, and particularly with regard&#13;
to my graduate school seminar of six&#13;
students dealing with Problems in&#13;
American Literature, which was also&#13;
attended by Faculty members (as were my&#13;
other two). Here I spoke at normal speed,&#13;
regularly exchanged soph1strcated ideas&#13;
with both grads and faculty before and&#13;
after class, and actually got away with&#13;
requiring an original research paper - the&#13;
first they'd ever done&#13;
All classes of the University, by th wa ,&#13;
are co-ed and two of my rad w r&#13;
women Classes are cheduled oddly,&#13;
meeting at different times of day and in&#13;
different places throughout the&#13;
Students in a class will sometime vote to&#13;
reschedule themselv s Instructor normally&#13;
take roll, and 10% of the frnal rad&#13;
supposedly depends upon att ndance, but&#13;
the class lists they grve you ar rn Chm&#13;
No matter what you tell th m, tud nt rn&#13;
a class stay seated and rn place until th ir&#13;
instructor leaves the room . Wh n you&#13;
meet them outside on campu , stud n&#13;
smile, say hello, and bow&#13;
Unless formally engaged, couple do not&#13;
walk together, holding hand nd oth r&#13;
affectionate gestur s are avoided. emale&#13;
students dress attract1v ly but avord&#13;
anatomical display and usually brnd th ir&#13;
breasts . There are no women on the&#13;
English faculty, but the fir t raduate&#13;
student in therr recent pro ram was one.&#13;
TIie fastest-growing Premium Bc.-e,-&#13;
inAmerica.&#13;
01 tap at U1io Sqaare &#13;
events&#13;
•&#13;
Wednesday, October 19&#13;
PSGA Election will be held in the lower level&#13;
concourse CL Building.&#13;
Movie My Little Chickadee featuring WC Fields and&#13;
Mae West. 2:30 and. 7:30 in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1".00.&#13;
Education Speaker, Donna Ullman from SWEA.&#13;
Everyone welcome. 1:30 in CL 113 and 7:30 in&#13;
CL 0-128. Contact Shirley Kersey for more info.&#13;
Music featuring Ronald Thomas. Young Artist Series.&#13;
3:00 p.m. CA 0-118.&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Lake Forest-College. 3:00 p.m.&#13;
Behavioral Science Division Grad School&#13;
Colloquium at 2:30 p.m. in Classroom Building&#13;
room 109. Guest Speakers in Psychology,&#13;
Sociology, and Anthropology. Refreshments.&#13;
Thursday, October 20&#13;
PSGA - Election will be held in the lower level&#13;
concourse CL building.&#13;
FILM The Bankdick, starring WC Fields. 2:30 and&#13;
7:30 in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Dean of Student Life Candidate, Ken Barclay, from&#13;
2:30 p.m. to 3:30 open meeting with. students in&#13;
Union 104.&#13;
Friday, October 21&#13;
Chess Meeting at 2:00 in Union 207.&#13;
Earth Science Dr. l.en Weise will show slides and talk&#13;
about the Colorado Field Trip. 12:00 in GR 113.&#13;
Free don uts and coffee.&#13;
Film You Can't Cheat An Honest Man. Starring WC&#13;
Fields. Friday at 8:00 and Sunday at 7:30.&#13;
Admission $1.00 in Union Cinema.&#13;
~aturday, October 22&#13;
lazz Night presents Matrix at 9:00 in Union Square.&#13;
Mixed drinks are available. Tickets are sold in&#13;
Main Place Information Center.&#13;
Cross Country Parkside at Carthage Invitational&#13;
11:30 a.m. ,&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Eastern Illinois at 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Gong Show Midnite Musical Madness 11. 7:30 in&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Sunday, October 23&#13;
Music Harpsichord Recital, Frances Bedford. 4:00&#13;
p.m. at St. Luke's Ch. Racine.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series Starring Robert Merrill,&#13;
baritone. 8:00 p.m. CAT '&#13;
Dimitri The down-mime will perform. Tickets are&#13;
all sold out.&#13;
classified&#13;
.... : 1872 Flat 128, 30 rrlpg, 1750 Of beat&#13;
offer. 834-7880 or 553-2205. WANTED&#13;
1.cII .... ChIck: wanta to know If the g.....t&#13;
looking guy in the 2nd row Is gOing to be In&#13;
Drama thle Fri. I need noleal&#13;
Waitress Go.Go girls. Make up to&#13;
$500 per week. Flexible Mura.&#13;
fUde ....... - Need ride to Racine Call (312) 634-3313.&#13;
T~ and Thuraday to the vicinity of&#13;
Johnaon'sWax on 18th In Racine. 837.9737,&#13;
uk for BOb larsen.&#13;
My extended _mlredon to the brown haired&#13;
...... : Qualified Tutora In Accounting: guy In CAI29 at 11 a.m. You're gorgeCIUe.&#13;
Chem., anet PhysiCS. Applications are The Back seat Chick.&#13;
1M.1Iab1eln WUC D-15O-C. Or call 553-2805.&#13;
W..... : Tutor for 7th gl'8def In Eng .• and&#13;
Math. Twice a week. Will Pay. Call Mrs.&#13;
J.eger, 552-91 M.&#13;
W..... : Babysltt. for one year old.&#13;
MWf 8:45-11 :15. call ccuect at 728-81~.&#13;
.... : ~t 210 programmable ptlbUc&#13;
MNIce band Kan,*. Newl Police, fire&#13;
calls. Retl:1I _. $350, now Only $245. John,&#13;
PeruneI: John In Comm 101, meet me In&#13;
the Sweet Shop after clau. Ann.&#13;
Wented: A cartoonist with a hell of a sense&#13;
of humor to aubml1 one can:oon drawing a&#13;
week. call Ranger Office at 553-2295.&#13;
AnythIng Goes.&#13;
.... : Flute, make-Artlst. Only $35.00&#13;
contact Karen Pu1nam In the Music Depart.&#13;
.... Apt. Two bedrOom spartmerrt In&#13;
Palblde VlIlIIge. Available for sub ....&#13;
during 2nd MfI**. Free rent till January&#13;
15. Call Joe, 5&amp;2-8351.&#13;
Wanted: Several part-time students to work&#13;
In OUr Engineering and Controf Dept. Must&#13;
help In Implementation of preventive&#13;
maintenance program, equipment Inverrtory&#13;
and drafting ald. experience not necessary.&#13;
FOr" appointment call the Physical Plant&#13;
office, 553-2228.&#13;
Warted: A career Resouroe Library Clerk, to&#13;
help students In Career Resource Centeroroer,&#13;
file and maintain materials. MWF&#13;
from 8-2:00. $2.S6 an hour. Cal! 553-2251.&#13;
Studen~ - ~eed to get an anonymous message off&#13;
your mind? Fill out a classified form in Tallent 290.&#13;
CHI~RHO&#13;
sponsors&#13;
workshop&#13;
Catholic Campus Ministry at&#13;
.CHI-RHO CENTERannounces a&#13;
COMMUNICATION FOR BETTER&#13;
LIVING workshop. The six&#13;
sessionworkshop will be held on&#13;
wednesday evenings beginning&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. and run for about 2&#13;
hours. These sessions are a&#13;
response to the growing&#13;
awareness of how' important&#13;
relationships are in giving one's&#13;
life a depth of meaning. The&#13;
workshop is aimed at improving&#13;
the skills' needed to communicate&#13;
as effectively as possible&#13;
and studying the different styles&#13;
of communication that. increase&#13;
our ability to choose and to&#13;
shape relationships more positively.&#13;
The workshop begins on&#13;
Wednesday,October 26 and runs&#13;
through November 30, meeting&#13;
each successive week: There is a&#13;
$3.00 fee. Phone CHI-RHO&#13;
CENTER at 552-8626 for more&#13;
information and/or registration.&#13;
Security&#13;
promotes .&#13;
driving course&#13;
While it is n-ota pre-requisite,&#13;
the CampusSecurity Department&#13;
urgesthat those individuals who&#13;
have not attended a defensive&#13;
driving course since 1970, give&#13;
serious consideration to attendine&#13;
one of these courses in the&#13;
coming year.&#13;
Parkside employees or students&#13;
who contemplate driving&#13;
state-owned vehicles are required&#13;
to take this course before&#13;
permission will be granted them&#13;
to-operata state-owned vehicles.&#13;
Employees are considered to be&#13;
faculty, staff, or volunteer&#13;
drivers. "As a further service to&#13;
the community, those attending&#13;
our defensive driving course are&#13;
invited to bring along any&#13;
members of their immediate&#13;
family to participate in our&#13;
continuing drive to place better&#13;
drivers upon our streets," said&#13;
~urityChief Ronald D. Brtnkmann.&#13;
Jewish&#13;
course&#13;
culture&#13;
offered&#13;
The course is sponsored by the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Center:for Multicultural Studies&#13;
and University Extensionand will&#13;
be taught by Professor Carole&#13;
Vopat of the uW-P English&#13;
faculty&#13;
The course will survey the&#13;
Jewish experience in America&#13;
through the eyes of Jewish&#13;
writers. Authors and works to be&#13;
studied include Saul Bellow's&#13;
"Herzog," Edward lewis wallent's&#13;
"The Pawnbroker," Tillie&#13;
Olsen's "Tell Me a Riddle" and&#13;
Philip Roth's "Goodbye, Columbus"&#13;
and "Portnoy's Complaint."&#13;
Persons wishing to enroll for&#13;
credit should contact Prof.&#13;
Vopat (Phone 553-2117) and&#13;
those wishing to enroll on a&#13;
non-credit - basis should preregister&#13;
with University Exten- I&#13;
sion (Phone 553-2312).&#13;
VOTE&#13;
ECCHINI&#13;
FOR&#13;
SENATE&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19&#13;
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20&#13;
NOTICEI i W UW-Parkside&#13;
-" Semester Break&#13;
The University Is in' the I&#13;
process of remodeling the&#13;
WLLC Coffee Shoppe&#13;
area to make room for&#13;
new student organization&#13;
space, Student Gcvernmentt&#13;
P.S.G.A.) and the&#13;
student newspaper&#13;
(Ranger). In the&#13;
meantime we will try to&#13;
continue to serve you as&#13;
best we can with Coffee&#13;
Shoppe services and a&#13;
NEW vending area&#13;
located just east of the&#13;
Information Kiosk in&#13;
lower Main Place, Please&#13;
bear with us... and sorr:,y&#13;
for any. temporary In·&#13;
convenience.&#13;
Office of Student Life&#13;
JAMAICA&#13;
JIll. 6-11, 1978&#13;
It299 Compiete based&#13;
~ on 2to a room&#13;
• Round Trip Jet Air&#13;
• 7 Nights Lodging&#13;
• Ground Transfers&#13;
• Tour Escort&#13;
• Tips and Taxes&#13;
For Application &amp; information,&#13;
'CONTACT: PARKSlDE UNION OFFICES&#13;
RM. 209 CALL: 553·2200&#13;
P,A.B. FALL FILM SERIES PRESENTS&#13;
W~C. FIELDS&#13;
IN'&#13;
liMY LITTLE CH1CKADEEII&#13;
Wed., Oct. 19,2:30 &amp; 7:30&#13;
AND&#13;
liTHE BANK DICKII&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 20, 2:30 &amp; 7:30&#13;
. AND SPECIAL ADDITION'&#13;
"YOU CAN'T CHEAT AN HONESTMAN"&#13;
Friday, O~t. 21, 8:00 -&amp;&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 23, 7:30&#13;
P.A.B. PerformIng Arts &amp; Lectures&#13;
,&#13;
Presents A Jazz NIght Club with&#13;
MATRIX&#13;
Sat ••Oct. 22" 9:00 P.M.&#13;
'-&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
.,.&#13;
Students sove 0 dollor by buying your&#13;
tickets In''odvoncs ot the Union Info Center&#13;
Adm: UW-P stude~ts In odv, ~1.50&#13;
Guests In odv. ~2.00&#13;
Everyone of the door ~2.50&#13;
mixed Drinks QVOiloble&#13;
Id's reqUired&#13;
_events&#13;
Wednesday, October 19&#13;
PSGA Election will be held in the lower level&#13;
concourse CL Building.&#13;
Movie My Little Chickadee featuring WC Fields and&#13;
Mae West. 2:30 and. 7:30 in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1:C)0.&#13;
Education Speaker, Donna Ullman from SWEA.&#13;
Everyone welcome. 1:30 in CL 113 and 7:30 in&#13;
CL D-128. Contact Shirley Kersey for more info.&#13;
Music featuring Ronald Thomas. Young Artist Series.&#13;
3:00 p.m. CA D-118. -&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Lake Forest- College. 3-: 00 p.m.&#13;
Behavioral Science Division Grad School&#13;
Colloquium at 2:30 p.m. in Classroom Building&#13;
room 109. Guest Speakers in Psychology,&#13;
Sociology, and Anthropology. Refreshments.&#13;
Thursday, October 20&#13;
PSGA - Election will be held in the lower level&#13;
concourse CL building.&#13;
FILM The Bankdick, starring WC Fields. 2:30 and&#13;
7:30 in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Dean of Student Life Candidate, Ken Barclay, from&#13;
2:30 p.m. to 3:30 open meeting with. students in&#13;
Union 104.&#13;
Friday, October 21 ·&#13;
Chess Meeting at 2:00 in Union 207.&#13;
Earth Science Dr. Leri Weise will show slides and talk&#13;
about the Colorado Field Trip. 12:00 in GR 113.&#13;
Free donuts and coffee.&#13;
Film You Can't Cheat An Honest Man. Starring WC&#13;
Fields. Friday at 8:00 and Sunday at 7:30.&#13;
Admission $1.00 in Union Cinema.&#13;
Saturday, October 22&#13;
Jazz Night presents Matrix at 9:00 in Union Square.&#13;
Mixed drinks are available. Tickets are sold in&#13;
Main Place Information Center..&#13;
Cross Country Parkside at Carthage Invitational&#13;
11:30 a.m. ,&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Eastern Illinois at 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Gong Show Midnite Musical Madness 11. 7:30 in&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Sunday, October 23&#13;
Music Harpsichord Recital, Frances Bedford. 4:00&#13;
p.m. at St. Luke's Ch . Racine.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series Starring Robert Merrill,&#13;
baritone. 8:00 p.m . CAT ,&#13;
Dimitri The down-mime will perform. Tickets are&#13;
all sold out.&#13;
classified&#13;
Sale: 1972 Flat 128, 30 rrlpg, $750 ~r best&#13;
offer. 634-7690 or 553-2205.&#13;
Back S..t Chick: wants to know Jf the great&#13;
IOOklng guy In the 2nd row Is going to be In&#13;
Orama this Fri. I "-I notes!&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Waitress Go-Go girls. Make up to&#13;
$500 per week. Flexlble hours.&#13;
Ride N..i.d - Need ride to Racine Call (312) 634-3313. • Tu~ay and Thursday to the vicinity of&#13;
Johnson's Wax on 16th In Racine. 637-9737,&#13;
ask for BOb Larsen. My extended admiration to the brown haired&#13;
Wanted: Qualified Tutors In Accounting, guy In CA129 at 11 a.m. You're gorgeous.&#13;
Chem:, and Physics. Applications are The Back Seat Chick.&#13;
available In WLLC D-150-C. Orcall 553-2605.&#13;
Penonal:John In Comm 101,- meet me In&#13;
Wanted: Tutor tor 7th grader In Eng., and the Sweet Shop after class. Ann.&#13;
Math. Twice a week. WIii Pay. Call Mrs.&#13;
Jaeger, 552-9155.&#13;
Wanted: Babysitter tor one year old.&#13;
MWF 8 :45-11 :15. Call collect at 726-8105.&#13;
... Sale: Bearcat 210 programmable public&#13;
service band scanner. Newl Police, fire&#13;
calls. Retail $350, now only $245. John,&#13;
55-4-6635.&#13;
Sale: Flute, make-Artist. Only $35.00&#13;
contact Karen Putnam In the Music Depart.&#13;
Wanted: A cartoonist with a hell of a- sense&#13;
of humor to submit one cartoon drawing a&#13;
week. Call Ranger Office at 553-2295.&#13;
Anything Goes.&#13;
Wanted: Several part-time students to work&#13;
In our Engineering and Control Dept. Must&#13;
help In Implementation of preventive&#13;
maintenance program, equipment Inventory&#13;
and drafting aid. Experience not necessary.&#13;
For· appointment call the Physical Plant&#13;
office, 553-2228.&#13;
CHl,.RHO&#13;
sponsors&#13;
workshop&#13;
Catholic Campus Ministry at&#13;
.CHI-RHO CENTER announces a&#13;
COMMUNICATION FOR BETTER&#13;
LIVING- workshop . The six&#13;
session workshop will be held on&#13;
Wednesday evenings beginning&#13;
at 7:30 p.m . and run for about 2&#13;
hours. These sessions are a&#13;
response to the growing&#13;
awareness of how- important&#13;
relationships are in giving one's&#13;
life a depth of meaning. The&#13;
workshop is aimed at improving&#13;
the skills · needed to communicate&#13;
as effectively as possible&#13;
and studying the different styles&#13;
of communication that . increase&#13;
our ability to choose and to&#13;
shape relationships more positively.&#13;
&#13;
The workshop begins on&#13;
Wednesday, October 26 and runs&#13;
through November 30, meeting&#13;
each s1.Jccess-ive week: There is a&#13;
$3 .00 fee. Phone CHI-RHO&#13;
CENTER at 552-8626 for more&#13;
information and/or registration.&#13;
Security&#13;
promotes . driving course&#13;
While it is not a pre-requisite,&#13;
the Campus Security Department&#13;
urges that those individuals who&#13;
have not attended a defensive&#13;
driving course since 1970, give '&#13;
serious consideration to attendine&#13;
one of these courses in the&#13;
coming year.&#13;
Parkside employees or students&#13;
who contemplate driving&#13;
state-owned vehicles are required&#13;
to take this course before&#13;
permission will be granted them&#13;
to'operate state-owned vehicles.&#13;
Employees are considered to be&#13;
faculty, staff, or volunteer&#13;
drivers. "As a further service to&#13;
the community, those attending&#13;
our defensive driving course are&#13;
invited to bring along any&#13;
members of their immediate&#13;
family to participate in our&#13;
continuing drive to place better&#13;
drivers upon our streets," said&#13;
~urityChief Ronalc;l D. J3rinkmann&#13;
.&#13;
J~wish cultu,re&#13;
course offered&#13;
The course is sponsored by the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Center for Multicultural Studies&#13;
and University Extension and will&#13;
be taught by Professor Carole&#13;
Vopat of the UW-P English&#13;
faculty.&#13;
The course will survey the&#13;
Jewish experience in America&#13;
through the eyes of Jewish&#13;
writers . Authors and works to be&#13;
studied include Saul Bellow's&#13;
"Herzog," Edward Lewis Wallant's&#13;
"The Pawnbroker," Tillie&#13;
Olsen's "Tell Me a Riddle" and&#13;
Philip Roth's "Goodbye, Columbus"&#13;
and "Portnoy's Complaint."&#13;
Sublet Apt. Two bedroom apartment In&#13;
Par1&lt;slde VIiiage. Available tor sublease&#13;
during 2nd semester. Free rent 1111 January&#13;
15. Call Joe, 552-8357.&#13;
Wanted: A Career Resource Library Cler1&lt;, to&#13;
help students In Career Resource Centerorder,&#13;
file and maintain materials. MWF -&#13;
from 8-2 :00. $2.55 an hour. Cal) 553-2251.&#13;
Persons wishing to enroll for&#13;
credit should contact Prof.&#13;
Vopat (Phone 553-2117) and&#13;
those wishing to enroll on a&#13;
non-credit - basis should preregister&#13;
with University Exten- ,&#13;
sion (Phon~ 553-2312).&#13;
Studen~s - ~eed to get an anonymous message off&#13;
your mmd? Fill out a classified form in Tallent 290.&#13;
~ IY/ OW-Parkside&#13;
,;,ff Semester Break&#13;
Jan. 6-13, 1978&#13;
It 299 Complete based of' on 2 to a room&#13;
• Round Trip Jet Air&#13;
• 7 Nights Lodging&#13;
• Ground Transfers&#13;
• Tour Escort&#13;
• Tips and Taxes&#13;
For Application &amp; information,&#13;
• CONTACT, PARKSIDE UNION OFFICES&#13;
RM. 209 . CALL 553-2200&#13;
VOTE&#13;
ECCHINI _ FOR&#13;
SENATE&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19&#13;
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20&#13;
NOTICE!&#13;
The University is in' the /&#13;
process of remodeling the&#13;
WLLC Coffee Shoppe&#13;
area to make room for&#13;
new student organization&#13;
space, Student Government"&#13;
( P.S.G.A.) and the&#13;
student newspaper&#13;
(Ranger). In the&#13;
l_!leantime we will try to&#13;
continue to serve you as&#13;
best we can with Coffee&#13;
Shoppe services and a&#13;
NEW vending area&#13;
located just east of the&#13;
Information Kiosk in&#13;
lower Main Place. Please&#13;
bear with us ... and sorry&#13;
for any_ temporary inconvenience.&#13;
&#13;
Office oJ Student Life&#13;
P.A.B. FALL Fll.M SERIES PRESENTS&#13;
w~c. FI-ELDS&#13;
IN ,&#13;
"MY LITTLE CH1CKA·DEE"&#13;
Wed., Oct.-19, -2:30 &amp; 7:30&#13;
AND&#13;
"THE BANK DICK"&#13;
Thurs., Oct, 20, 2:30 &amp; 7:30&#13;
. AND SPECIAL ADDITION ,&#13;
"YOU CAN'T CHEAT AN HONEST MAN''&#13;
Friday, O~t. 21, 8:00 -&amp;&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 23, 7:30&#13;
P.A.B. Performing Arts &amp; Lectures&#13;
' Presents A Jazz Night Club with&#13;
-MATRIX&#13;
Sat., Oct. 2211 9:00 p .M. - '&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
-,r&#13;
Students sove o dollor b_y bu_ying _your&#13;
tickets in-·odvonce ot the Unron Info Center&#13;
Adm: UW-P stude~ts in odv. $1.50&#13;
Guests in odv. $2.00&#13;
Ever_yone ot the door $2.50&#13;
ffiixed Drinks ovoiloble&#13;
Id's required </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68629">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 6, issue 8, October 19, 1977</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68630">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68631">
                <text>1977-10-19</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68634">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68635">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68636">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68637">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68638">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68639">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68640">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68641">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68642">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="2852">
        <name>fires</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2482">
        <name>segregated university fee allocation committee (SUFAC)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1022">
        <name>vietnam veterans</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2956" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3441">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/ad13742324b61b61fda6d9784fd4adbf.pdf</src>
        <authentication>cf4ee0149427bf444636a3c7b69df9d8</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68617">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 7</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68618">
              <text>Theatre LTE fired</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="68628">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90033">
              <text>eatre&#13;
er&#13;
VVednesday, October 12, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No.7&#13;
()() Examinations are formidable ~~&#13;
even to the best prepared, for&#13;
the greatest fool may ask more&#13;
than the wisest man can&#13;
answer .&#13;
•&#13;
Ire&#13;
IAcademic Staff Committee called into special session I&#13;
Susan M. Zietz, a former Limited Term Employee&#13;
in the Communication Arts Theatre, was fired by her&#13;
supervisor, Thomas Reinert, Director of the Theatre&#13;
Auditorium/Gallery, Friday, September 30.&#13;
The dismissal was preceeded by a confrontation&#13;
on the stage of the theatre Wednesday night&#13;
(September 28) between Reinert and Zietz, following&#13;
the Carlos Montoya Concert. According to Zietz,&#13;
Reinert criticized the way Zietz performed her duties&#13;
the night of the concert. During this confrontation,&#13;
Zietz noted the strong smell of alcohol on Reinert's&#13;
breath.&#13;
Witnesses will testify&#13;
Two .students. who do not want their names&#13;
disclosed, have told Ranger they witnessed the&#13;
confrontation between Reinert and Zietz on the&#13;
night of September 28. The students told Ranger&#13;
they will testify before a committee or court that on&#13;
that Wednesday evening, Reinert exhibited behavior&#13;
like that of a person who has had too much to drink,&#13;
induding- slurred speech and difficulty walking.&#13;
On Saturday, October 1, Philip L. Livingston,&#13;
Editor of Ranger, took a deposition from Zietz of the&#13;
events leading to her dismissal. The deposition is&#13;
eight pages of single spaced type, and describes&#13;
Zietz' account of her activities in chronological&#13;
order from Tuesday night, September 27 through&#13;
Friday, September 30.&#13;
Crowd watches&#13;
bathroom burn&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Last Thursday a crowd of about 30 students stood in the Parkside&#13;
Union and watched the ladies' room burn. A fire alarm station across&#13;
the hall from the L1 rest room was ignored, and Parkside Security was&#13;
notified of the fire only after Dick Manthy, food service manager for&#13;
the Saga company, pushed through the crowd of students and put out&#13;
the smoky trash fire with an extinguisher.&#13;
Security director Ronald Brinkmann said the incident "really&#13;
bothers me. There could have been someone unconscious trapped in&#13;
one of the stalls." The fumes from the plastic trash liner and the paper&#13;
trash could have been deadly, he said. "We're not asking people to&#13;
become fire-fighters. but if anyone should see smoke (wh!ch was&#13;
billowing through the door) they should pull the alarm .or give us a&#13;
call." He emphasized that Security has no way of knowing an alarm&#13;
has been activated unless someone calls them and tells where he&#13;
hears an alarm There is no "alarm board" in the Security office.&#13;
Brinkmann said that making a buljding out of concrete doesn't&#13;
make it fireproof. "I've seen what fire can d~ to ~o~crete -. th.e heat&#13;
makes it literallv explode," he said. Damage-In this fire was limited to&#13;
smoke and heat damage to the tile surrounding the trash r,ec.eptacle,&#13;
and Brinkmann surmised it was started by a carelessly discarded&#13;
cigarette. . k&#13;
Manthy who put out the fire when alerted by a cafeteria war er,&#13;
said he w~s "really amazed" that no one set off the alarm across the&#13;
hall. "They were literally leaning up against the a1arr:n.The fact that&#13;
no one was concerned about anyone being trapped In there bothers&#13;
me the most," he said.&#13;
Complaint filed&#13;
On Monday, October 3, Livingston forwarded a&#13;
copy of the deposition to Vice Chancellor Lorman&#13;
Ratner, Reinert's supervisor, along with a letter of&#13;
complaint. The Vice Chancellor told Livingston he&#13;
would investigate the matter. Zietz told Ranger she&#13;
talked to the Vice Chancellor on Tuesday, October&#13;
4.&#13;
Committee to review complaint&#13;
On Thursday, October 6, Chancellor Alan Guskin,&#13;
in a letter, a copy of which was sent to Livingston at&#13;
the Ranger office, instructed Walter Shirer, Public&#13;
Information Director, to call a special meeting of the&#13;
Academic Staff Committee to review Livingston's&#13;
complaint in accordance with Academic Staff&#13;
Policies and Procedures. Although the committee&#13;
will investigate the actions of Reinert, Zietz remains&#13;
fired at presstime.&#13;
Ranger contacted Reinert in his office Thursday,&#13;
October 6, by phone. Reinert said he had no&#13;
comment to make to Ranger because it is a&#13;
personnel matter. Reinert did go on to say, however,&#13;
that Livingston was making a "Grave Error" by&#13;
following through with the Zietz incident.&#13;
The Montoyas are on tour in Alaska and Canada&#13;
and could not be reached for comment.&#13;
er&#13;
eatre&#13;
Wednesday, October 12, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 7&#13;
()() Examinations are formidable 5)5)&#13;
even to the best prepared , for&#13;
the greatest fool may ask more&#13;
than the wisest • man can&#13;
answer.&#13;
-&#13;
ire&#13;
I Academic Staff Committee called into special session I&#13;
Susan M. Zietz, a former Limited Term Employee&#13;
in the Communication Arts Theatre, was fired by her&#13;
supervisor, Thomas Reinert, Director of the Theatre&#13;
Auditorium/Gallery, Friday, September 30.&#13;
The dismissal was preceeded by a confrontation&#13;
on the stage of the theatre Wednesday night&#13;
(September 28) between Reinert and Zietz, following&#13;
the Carlos Montoya Concert. According to Zietz,&#13;
Reinert criticized the way Zietz performed her duties&#13;
the night of the concert. During this confrontation,&#13;
Zietz noted the strong smell of alcohol on Reinert's&#13;
breath .&#13;
Witnesses will testify&#13;
Two _?tudents, who do not want their names&#13;
disclosed, have told Ranger they witnessed the&#13;
confrontation between Reinert and Zietz on the&#13;
night of September 28. The students told Ranger&#13;
they will testify before a committee or court that on&#13;
that Wednesday evening, Reinert exhibited behavior&#13;
like that of a person who has had too much to drink,&#13;
induding lu red speech a cl difficu y a ing.&#13;
On Saturday, October 1, Philip L. Livingston,&#13;
Editor of Ranger, took a deposition from Zietz of the&#13;
events leading to her dismissal. The deposition is&#13;
eight pages of single spaced type, and describes&#13;
Zietz' account of her activities in chronologit:al&#13;
order from Tuesday night, September 27 through&#13;
Friday, September 30.&#13;
Crowd watches&#13;
bathroom burn&#13;
by John Mckloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Last Thursday a crowd of about 30 students stood in the Parkside&#13;
Union and watched the ladies' room burn . A fire alarm station across&#13;
the hall from the L 1 rest room was ignored, and Parkside Security was&#13;
notified of the fire only after Dick Manthy, food service manager for&#13;
the Saga company, pushed through the crowd of students and put out&#13;
the smoky trash f ire with an extinguisher.&#13;
Security di~ctor Ronald Brinkmann said the incident " really&#13;
bothers me. There could have been someone unconscious trapped in&#13;
one of the stalls ." The fumes from the plastic trash liner and the paper&#13;
trash could have been deadly, he said . " We're not asking people to&#13;
become fire-fighters but if anyone should see smoke (which was&#13;
billowing th~ough th~ door) they should pull the alarm _or give us a&#13;
call." He emphasized that Security has no way of knowing an alarm&#13;
has been activated unless someone calls them and tells where he&#13;
hears an alarm . There is no " alarm board" in the Security office. ,&#13;
Brinkmann said that making a buifding out of concrete doesn t&#13;
make it fireproof . " I've seen what fire can do to ~on_crete - . th_e heat&#13;
makes it literally explode," he said . Damage in this fire was limited to&#13;
smoke and heat damage to the tile surrounding the trash rec_eptacle,&#13;
and Brinkmann surmised it was started by a carelessly discarded&#13;
cigarette . · k&#13;
Manthy who put out the fire when alerted by a cafeteria wor er,&#13;
said he w~s "really amazed" that no one set off the alarm across the&#13;
hall. " They were literally leaning up against the alarm · The fact that&#13;
b · g trapped in there bothers no one was concerned about anyone ein&#13;
me the most," he said .&#13;
Complaint filed&#13;
On Monday, October 3, Livingston forwarded a&#13;
copy of the deposition to Vice Chancellor Lorman&#13;
Ratner, Reinert's supervisor, along with a letter of&#13;
complaint. The Vice Chancellor told Livingston he&#13;
would investigate the matter. Zietz told Ranger she&#13;
talked to the Vice Chancellor on Tuesday, October&#13;
4.&#13;
Committee to review complaint&#13;
On Thursday, October 6, Chancellor Alan Guskin,&#13;
in a letter, a copy of which was sent to Livingston at&#13;
the Ranger office, instructed Walter Shirer, Public&#13;
Information Director, to call a special meeting of the&#13;
Academic Staff Committee to review Livingston's&#13;
complaint in accordance with Academic Staff&#13;
Policies and Procedures . Although the committee&#13;
will investigate the actions of Reinert, Zietz remains&#13;
fired at presstime.&#13;
anger ontacted Reinert in his office Thursday,&#13;
October 6, by phone. Reinert said he had no&#13;
comment to make to Ranger because it is a&#13;
personnel matter. Reinert did go on to say, however,&#13;
that Livingston was making a " Grave Error" by&#13;
following through with the Zietz jncident.&#13;
The Montoyas are on tour in Alaska and Canada&#13;
and could not be reached for comment. &#13;
editorial&#13;
are unable to list the candidates on the ballot or&#13;
print-a sample ballot. This is unfortunate. Ranger&#13;
shares the same problem with PSGA of having a&#13;
hard time prying students from their automobiles,&#13;
classes, and homes to work on university&#13;
matters.&#13;
Please try to understand and cast a ballot in the&#13;
election. If you can, try to find out about who 'you&#13;
are voting for by asking around. It is a terrible&#13;
thing to represent all the majors in a division with&#13;
only a- handful of votes. Those elected will be&#13;
deciding the fate of parking problems,' shuttle&#13;
buses, food contracts, as well as serving as the&#13;
Chancellor's source of student sentiment&#13;
information. Get out and vote!&#13;
on burning bathrooms&#13;
TV TV on the wall. . . ,I&#13;
Perhaps the passersby didn't know the washroom&#13;
was on fire and that the alarm was on the wall with&#13;
the fire extinguisher. Maybe they thought it was out&#13;
of order or something. Well, if they didn't have }o&#13;
usethe washroom, why bother to get involved with a&#13;
burning building? Maybe they thought the whole&#13;
thingwas on television &lt;IS part of Barke's Bizarre. 'if&#13;
anY,of these things are true then it is obvious they&#13;
don t re.a!lzethey are paying for the building out of&#13;
their tuition every semester. Maybe they just forgot.&#13;
Make sure you never invite this group to vour&#13;
house for crumpets and tea, especially if you have a&#13;
fireplace. If you do, don't let them use th~&#13;
bathroom. '&#13;
I)&#13;
/&#13;
; r&#13;
~al\~er ia written a!'d edited by students oJ the&#13;
UlUver••ty ~fWisconsln ..Park.ide and they are" 1 I&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and cont SOte y&#13;
en .&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen deft Prostko K' W - It '. Imun.ach.&#13;
at "'ermann, Chris Ra.t~k., MarCia.Vlach. I&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 553.2295&#13;
General M"nager Thome.s R. Cooper 553-2287&#13;
Copy Editor dohn R. McKloskey&#13;
. .News Editor Diane dalensky&#13;
Circulahon Ma.nager Karen Putman&#13;
, Sales Manager dohn Gabriel 553 2287&#13;
Retail Advertising Manager Ken. Lusen. 553 ..2287&#13;
RaneeI' Newspaper, University 01 Wisconsln ..Parkaid&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141 e&#13;
Subscriptions: $5.00 year lor U.S.A.&#13;
I&#13;
~&#13;
Solve campus problems_by&#13;
voting in PSGA elections&#13;
The students of this campus grow tired and uninterested&#13;
reading accounts of student government&#13;
actions in the Ranger. We have received&#13;
negative remarks regarding such. accounts in the&#13;
past.&#13;
Among Ranger's editorial priorities, there are a&#13;
few university problems Ranger is able to help&#13;
solve. Most of the activity necessary in solving&#13;
these problems revolves around the actions and&#13;
behavior of the student representative unit,&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association, Inc. ,If&#13;
they are effective and truly represent the best and&#13;
most important interests of students, then&#13;
change can take place.&#13;
The PSGA elections October 19 and 20 are not&#13;
being handled too well." At Ranger presstime, we&#13;
Editor's File . ,&#13;
by Phnip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
I hope the group of students who walked by the&#13;
fire in the Union's concourse level ladies room last&#13;
Friday, never get together again.&#13;
Riding the bus with creeps&#13;
I certainly wouldn't want to ride the shuttle bus'&#13;
with them all together. What if we got in a seriousaccident&#13;
on loop road and were all pinned inside the&#13;
bus? It would be sad to be the only survivor, but&#13;
maybe not. Maybe they would have fun watching _&#13;
the bus burn. Smoke looks nice sometimes&#13;
/&#13;
editorial /&#13;
" .&#13;
Solve campu-s problems_-b;y,&#13;
.. - .&#13;
' - / . -&#13;
voting 1n&#13;
_&#13;
PSGA elections , '&#13;
The students of this campus grow tired and uninterested&#13;
reading accounts of student govern-·&#13;
ment actions in the Ranger. We have received&#13;
negative remarks regarding such. accounts in the&#13;
past.&#13;
Among Ranger's editorial priorities, there are a&#13;
few university problems Ranger is able to help&#13;
solve. Most of the activity necessary in solving&#13;
these problems revolves around the actions and&#13;
behavior of the student representative unit,&#13;
Parkside Student Government Assoc.iation, lnc. -lf&#13;
they are effective and truly represent the best and&#13;
most important interests of studen·ts_, then&#13;
change can take place.&#13;
' The PSGA elections October 19 and 20 are not&#13;
being handled too we11.· At Ranger presstime, we&#13;
are unable to list the candidates on the ballot or&#13;
print a sample ballot. This ls unfortunate. Ranger&#13;
shares the same p(oblem with PSGA of having. a&#13;
hard time prying students fr9m their automobiles,&#13;
classes, and homes to work .on university&#13;
matters.&#13;
. Please try to understand and cast a ballot in the&#13;
election. If you can, try to find out about who'you&#13;
are voting for by asking around. It is a terrible&#13;
thing to represent all the majors in a division with&#13;
only a-handful of votes. Those elected wil'I be&#13;
deciding the fate of parking problems,' shuttle&#13;
buses, food contracts, as well as serving as. the&#13;
Chancellor's source of student sentime.nt&#13;
information. Get out and vote!&#13;
Editor's File ·,&#13;
on burning bathrooms&#13;
by Phi°lip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
' ' TV TV on the wall. . . . I r&#13;
I hope the group of students who walked by, the&#13;
fire in the Union's concourse level ladies room last&#13;
Friday, never get together again. .&#13;
Perhaps the passersby didn't know the washro~m 1&#13;
was on fire and that the alarm was on the wall with&#13;
the fi:re extinguisher. Maybe they thought it was out&#13;
.of order or something. Well, if they didn't have lo&#13;
use the.washroom, why bother.to get involved with! a&#13;
b~rnihg building? Maybe they thought the whole&#13;
thmg was on television -as part of Barke's Bizarre. H&#13;
any 1&#13;
of th~se things are 'true then it is obvious they&#13;
do~ t re_a!1ze-they ~ue paying for the buildirig out of&#13;
their ~u1t1on every semester. Maybe they just forgot.&#13;
Riding tbe bus with creeps&#13;
I certainly wouldn't want to ride the shuttle bus ,&#13;
with the!Jl all together. What if we got in a serious _&#13;
accident on loop_road and were all pinned inside the&#13;
bus? It would be sad to be the only survivor, but&#13;
maybe not. Maybe they would have fun watching&#13;
the bus burn. Smoke looks nice sometimes&#13;
Make sure you never invite this group to yoJr&#13;
~ouse for crumpets and tea, especially if you have ~&#13;
fireplace. If you do, don't let them use th~&#13;
~ bathro~J. ,&#13;
/&#13;
' ,. ~an~er is wr!tten a_nd edited by students of th&#13;
University of W1scons1n-Parkside and they a · el 1&#13;
· re = "bl f . . re so e y spon:sa e or its editorial policy and content. .&#13;
· Our W titers&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen Jeff Prostko K" ,., .:. K ' • am w unsch:&#13;
at Henna.1\1\, Chris Rat&lt;:_ks, Marcia. Vlach. '&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 551•&#13;
2295 General Ml'\nager Thomas R. Cooper 553_&#13;
2287 Copy Editor John R. McKloskey&#13;
·_ . _News Editor Dia.ne Jalensky&#13;
~1rculahon M.,u\ager Karen Putman&#13;
' Sales Manager John Gabriel 553 2287&#13;
Retail Advertising Manager Ken Larsen 55~-2287&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, :clni'!ersity of Wisconsin-Parks"d&#13;
Ke~o!ha., Wisconsin 5314l I e Subscriptions: $5.00 yea.r for U.S.A.&#13;
/&#13;
I '&#13;
/&#13;
I&#13;
' &#13;
•&#13;
views&#13;
Blasts students&#13;
at UW·Parkside&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
. This fall I transferred to Uw-P&#13;
"from the University of Vermont.&#13;
The most apparent thing I&#13;
noticed at Parks ide was the total&#13;
lack of participation in student&#13;
activities. The majority of&#13;
students here seem to 'congregate&#13;
in cliques. Perhaps because&#13;
I come from a dorm related&#13;
campus, everything connected&#13;
with the supposed student life&#13;
here seems so obviously&#13;
apathetic. Unless you're involved&#13;
in certain sports events,&#13;
clubs or major organizations&#13;
such as the student government,&#13;
you fall" into a mundane life&#13;
which consists of getting up,&#13;
going to school, returning home&#13;
and then leaving for work.&#13;
"Welt," replied one student&#13;
tiredly, "I have six hours of&#13;
classes on Mondays, Wednesdays&#13;
and Fridays and then I work&#13;
on Tuesdays and Thursdays to&#13;
help pay for my education. It's&#13;
kind of hard to join a group when&#13;
you're studying and working all&#13;
the time."&#13;
"So you have tried joining a&#13;
club of some kind?"&#13;
"Well, not exactly. But if I did&#13;
I know that it would just be&#13;
another hassle. Besides this&#13;
college doesn't have a club&#13;
anyhow," he told me laughing&#13;
uproariously.&#13;
"Sure they do. In fact the&#13;
majority of Parks ide students are&#13;
enrolled in it. It's called&#13;
APATHY." I retorted.&#13;
At noon I wandered into Main&#13;
Place and sat down on one of&#13;
those orange pyramids. An overburdened&#13;
student sank down&#13;
beside me sighing in relief. I&#13;
decided that she looked slightly&#13;
more intelligent then the walking&#13;
zombies I'd passed earlier in&#13;
Greenquist so I decided to ask&#13;
her what things she'd like to see&#13;
changed at Parks ide. At first she&#13;
shrugged nonchalantly but with&#13;
a little bit of encouragement she&#13;
finally opened up.&#13;
"You know Parks ide is really a&#13;
beautiful campus and all that but&#13;
I think that they should get some&#13;
decent food around here. I&#13;
would eat at the Pub but I'm&#13;
afraid that when I returned for&#13;
my one o'clock class there'll be&#13;
no parking spaces open. And&#13;
Parks ide's suppose to be a&#13;
commuter's college too!", she&#13;
yelled, emphasizing her point&#13;
that parking spaces were&#13;
practically nonexistent. Several&#13;
students passing by couldn't help&#13;
but overhear her remark and&#13;
they smiled understandingly.&#13;
Once past us they resumed their&#13;
mummified walk,&#13;
"Have you heard that new&#13;
parking lots are being built?"&#13;
"That's news to me," __she&#13;
commented, thoughtfully&#13;
chomping on a large wad of&#13;
gum.&#13;
"Yes, as a matter of fact the&#13;
Ranger did an article on it two&#13;
weeks ago."&#13;
"The Ranger"? I stared at her&#13;
in disbelief.&#13;
"Why the hell should I read&#13;
anymore then I have to? look at&#13;
all these books. I must be about&#13;
a hundred pages behind&#13;
already."&#13;
"Well, 1 think that the&#13;
newspaper could tell you something&#13;
worthwhile about going to&#13;
Parkslde. But I doubt very much&#13;
that you'd understand the&#13;
sophisticated diction." I told her&#13;
sarcastically,&#13;
"Yeah, maybe so," she replied&#13;
while continuing to chew away&#13;
on that ridiculous piece of gum,&#13;
Knowing that my sarcasm had&#13;
been wasted I left her abruptly&#13;
and a little bit angrily.&#13;
The next.person I talked to was&#13;
holding up the side of the CA&#13;
wall.&#13;
"I'm a Technical Engineering&#13;
major. Not declared or anything,"&#13;
he informed me hastily.&#13;
"1 wouldn't. mind getting&#13;
involved with the student&#13;
government but I'm transferring&#13;
to Whitewater next semester so it&#13;
would look kind of funny, you&#13;
know?&#13;
"What about working for the&#13;
Ranger staff? I heard that they&#13;
were looking for a sports editor."&#13;
"Well I can't write that well&#13;
but I'd really like to get involved&#13;
with layout. Got any good&#13;
looking chicks on the crew?"&#13;
, I told him, "yes," and he&#13;
shrugged helplessly. "Hell I'm&#13;
going to be transferring so it&#13;
might not be such a good idea."&#13;
"Why Whitewater?"&#13;
"Well my girlfriend goes there&#13;
and besides I could use a couple&#13;
of good laughs."&#13;
"Oh you'd get a good laugh&#13;
working on the Ranger staff. But&#13;
at least they're all involved In&#13;
something worthwhile,"&#13;
While sitting in the Coffee&#13;
Shop it suddenly began to dawn&#13;
on me that the reason why&#13;
students would not get into the&#13;
clubs was simply that they were&#13;
scared. They refuse certain&#13;
commitments because they are&#13;
afraid of the responsibility&#13;
attached with them. They need&#13;
their mundane schedules and&#13;
dull cliques (formed by high&#13;
school pals etc.) to use as a&#13;
security blanket. Show enthusiasm&#13;
for Parkside - God&#13;
Forbid! Peers might label them&#13;
as being dumbshits that don't&#13;
know what they're talking about.&#13;
So most students, when&#13;
questioned about student activtties,&#13;
hide behind answers like, 1'1&#13;
don't have the time." Or "I'm&#13;
transferring, so what's the point!"&#13;
Well my feeling 15 this. If you&#13;
have time to bitch about how&#13;
awful Parkside IS, then you have&#13;
the time to get involved And no&#13;
dorms are going to give you any&#13;
of that much needed courage to&#13;
go out and participate. Dorms&#13;
are built for a strong student&#13;
body, not a bunch of weaklongs&#13;
like those of you at Parkside.&#13;
Anonymous&#13;
Wanted:&#13;
Haunted Houses&#13;
To the editor&#13;
Another writer and I are&#13;
gathering material for a book&#13;
about reportedly "haunted"&#13;
homes or areas and ghost&#13;
sightings in Wisconsin.&#13;
We're interested in expenences&#13;
of actual sightings and/or&#13;
unexplained physical disturbances&#13;
as reported by reliable&#13;
witnesses and preferably occurring&#13;
over a period of some time.&#13;
Indian legends, local lore. family&#13;
journals or diaries could all be&#13;
the basis for submitted material&#13;
We believe this phenomenon&#13;
IS a fascinating, although little&#13;
explored, facet of Wisconsin&#13;
history and, for this reason, we&#13;
hope to include authentic cases&#13;
from as many historical periods&#13;
and areas of the state as possible&#13;
Readers with information on&#13;
the subject should wnte to: Beth&#13;
Scott, PO. Box 352, River Falls,&#13;
WI 54022 Sources of all repltes&#13;
will be held In strictest&#13;
confidence, although for&#13;
accuracy only verified inferrnanon&#13;
can be included in the&#13;
final book&#13;
Beth Scott&#13;
flnyw~ere&#13;
Ware... Wherever you go, tell it like It is in an Imprinted&#13;
shirt. Whether you're In sports. Greeks, love, or&#13;
trouble, stop down at the bookstore and have it&#13;
put on a t-shirt. sweatshirt or jacket. Let everyone&#13;
know just where you're at, in ware that you can&#13;
wear anywhere ... at the bookstore.&#13;
New Shirts&#13;
And T's&#13;
To Fit&#13;
\ Your Needs&#13;
V&#13;
rr / UW Parkside ~ I Bookstore&#13;
_~ 'The Campus Outfitters"&#13;
• views&#13;
Blasts students&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
' This fall I transferred to UW-P&#13;
- from the University of Vermont.&#13;
The most apparent thing I&#13;
noticed at Parkside was the total&#13;
lack of participation in student&#13;
activities. The majority of&#13;
students here seem to congregate&#13;
in cliques. Perhaps because&#13;
I come from a dorm related&#13;
campus, everything connected&#13;
with the supposed student life&#13;
here seems so obviously&#13;
apathetic. Unless you're involved&#13;
in certain sports events,&#13;
clubs or major organizations&#13;
such as the student government,&#13;
you fall' into a mundane life&#13;
which consists of getting up,&#13;
going to school, returning home&#13;
and then leaving for work.&#13;
"Well," replied one student&#13;
tiredly, " I have six hours of&#13;
classes on Mondays, Wednesdays&#13;
and Fridays and then I work&#13;
on Tuesdays and Thursdays to&#13;
help pay for my education. It's&#13;
kind of hara to join a group when&#13;
you're studying and working all&#13;
the time."&#13;
"So you have tried ioinini? a&#13;
club of some kind?"&#13;
"Well , not exactly . But if I did&#13;
I know that it would just be&#13;
another hassle. Besides this&#13;
college doesn't have a club&#13;
anyhow," he told me laughing&#13;
uproariously.&#13;
" Sure they do. In fact the&#13;
majority of Parkside students are&#13;
enrolled in it. It's called&#13;
APATHY." I retorted.&#13;
At noon I wandered into Main&#13;
Place and sat down on one of&#13;
those orange pyramids. An overburdened&#13;
student sank down&#13;
beside me sighing in relief. I&#13;
decided that she looked slightly&#13;
more intelligent then the walking&#13;
zombies I'd passed earlier in&#13;
Greenquist so I decided to ask&#13;
her what things she'd like to see&#13;
changed at Parkside. At first she&#13;
shrugged nonchalantly but with&#13;
a little bit of encouragement she&#13;
finally opened up.&#13;
"You know Parkside is really a&#13;
beautiful campus and all that but&#13;
I think that they should get some&#13;
decent food around here. I&#13;
would eat at the Pub but I'm&#13;
afraid that when I returned for&#13;
my one o'clock class there'll be&#13;
no parking spaces open. And&#13;
Parkside's suppose to be a&#13;
commuter's college too!", she&#13;
yelled, emphasizing her point&#13;
that parking spaces were&#13;
practically nonexistent. Several&#13;
students passing by couldn't help&#13;
but overhear her remark and&#13;
they smiled understandingly.&#13;
Once past us they resumed their&#13;
mummified walk.&#13;
" Have you heard that new&#13;
parking lots are being built?"&#13;
"That's news to me," ~ she&#13;
commented, thoughtfully&#13;
chomping on a large wad of&#13;
gum.&#13;
"Yes, as a matter of fact the&#13;
Ranger did an article on it two&#13;
weeks ago."&#13;
"The Ranger" ? I stared at her&#13;
in disbelief.&#13;
"Why the hell should I read&#13;
anymore then I have to? Look at&#13;
all these books. I must be about&#13;
a hundred pages behind&#13;
already."&#13;
"Well, I think that the&#13;
newspaper could tell you something&#13;
worthwhile about going to&#13;
Parkside. But I doubt very much&#13;
that you'd understand the&#13;
sophisticated diction." I told her&#13;
sarcastically.&#13;
"Yeah, maybe so," she replied&#13;
while continuing to chew away&#13;
on that ridiculous piece of gum.&#13;
Knowing that my sarcasm had&#13;
been wasted I left her abruptly&#13;
and a little bit angrily.&#13;
The nex person I talked to was&#13;
holding up the side of the CA&#13;
wall.&#13;
" I'm a Technical Engineering&#13;
major. Not declared or anything,"&#13;
he informed me hastily.&#13;
" I wouldn 't. mind getting&#13;
involved with the student&#13;
government but I'm transferring&#13;
to Whitewater next semester so it&#13;
would look kind of funny , you&#13;
know?&#13;
"What about working for the&#13;
Ranger staff? I heard that they&#13;
were looking for a sports editor."&#13;
"Well I can't write that well&#13;
but I'd really like to get involved&#13;
with layout. Got any good&#13;
looking chicks on the crew?"&#13;
· I told him, " yes," and he&#13;
shrugged helplessly. " Hell I'm&#13;
going to be transferring so it&#13;
might not be such a good idea."&#13;
"Why Whitewater?"&#13;
"Well my girlfriend goes there&#13;
and besides I could use a couple&#13;
of good laughs."&#13;
"Oh you'd get a good laugh&#13;
working on the Ranger staff. But&#13;
at least they're all involved in&#13;
something worthwhile."&#13;
While sitting in the Coffee&#13;
Shop 1t suddenly began to dawn&#13;
on me that the reason why&#13;
students would not get into the&#13;
clubs was simply that they were&#13;
scared . They refuse certain&#13;
commitments because they are&#13;
afraid of the responsibility&#13;
aUached with them . They need&#13;
their mundane schedules and&#13;
dull cliques (formed by high&#13;
school pals etc.) to use as a&#13;
security blanket Show enthusiasm&#13;
for Parkside - God&#13;
Wanted:&#13;
Forbid! P ers might label th m&#13;
as being dumbsh1ts that don't&#13;
know what th y're talking about&#13;
So most students, when&#13;
questioned about stud nt activities,&#13;
hide behind answers like, ''I&#13;
don't have the trme " Or " I'm&#13;
transfemng, so what's the point?"&#13;
Well my feeling 1s this If you&#13;
have time to bitch about how&#13;
awful Parkside 1s, then you have&#13;
the time to get involved And no&#13;
dorms are going to give you an&#13;
of that much needed courage to&#13;
go out and participate Dorms&#13;
are built for a strong student&#13;
body, not a bunch of weaklings&#13;
like those of you at Parkside&#13;
Anonymous&#13;
Haunted Houses&#13;
To the editor&#13;
Another writer and I are&#13;
gathering material for a book&#13;
about reportedly " haunted"&#13;
homes or areas and ghost&#13;
sightings in Wisconsin .&#13;
We're interested in experiences&#13;
of actual sightings and/ o,&#13;
unexplained physical disturbances&#13;
as reported by reliable&#13;
witnesses and preferably occurring&#13;
over a period of some time&#13;
Indian legends, local lore, family&#13;
journals or diaries cou ld all be&#13;
the basis for submitted material&#13;
We believe this phenomenon&#13;
1s a fascinating, although little&#13;
xplored, facet of Wisconsin&#13;
history and, for this reason, we&#13;
hope to include authentic cases&#13;
from as many historical period&#13;
and areas of the state as possible&#13;
Readers with information on&#13;
the subiect should write to Beth&#13;
Scott, PO Box 352, River Falls,&#13;
WI 54022 Sources of all r plies&#13;
will be held 1n strictest&#13;
confidence , although for&#13;
accuracy only verified information&#13;
can be included in the&#13;
final book&#13;
B th Ott&#13;
Jtnyw~ere Wate ... Wherever you go, tell it like 1t is in an imprinted&#13;
shirt. Whether you're in sports. Greeks. love, or&#13;
trouble, stop down at the bookstore and have it&#13;
put on at-shirt, sweatshirt or jacket. Let everyone&#13;
know just where you're at, in ware that you can&#13;
wear anywhere ... at the bookstore.&#13;
/ ,-=,&#13;
New Shirts&#13;
And T's&#13;
To Fit&#13;
Your Needs&#13;
~,:. / UW Parkside ~ ( Bookstore&#13;
''The Campus Outfitters'' --~ &#13;
Korean diary 4&#13;
to J'apan; to spot low-lying ginseng sheds,&#13;
under which was growing a dust-tasting&#13;
root whose medicinal and aphrodesiac&#13;
powers were regularly believed in; and&#13;
finally to recognize grapes, fruits, and&#13;
other crops in various stages of&#13;
production. As we saw even on that cold&#13;
winter- -day, and would increasingly&#13;
-appreciate with the advent of spring,&#13;
Korea is a ruggedly mountainous country&#13;
with narrow coastal plains in which many&#13;
who "live decently must work hard,&#13;
because of a difficult terrain that&#13;
challenges the people and yet surrounds&#13;
them with beauty.&#13;
At home in Kwangju&#13;
South from Seoul, the landScape&#13;
became increasingly more corrugated,&#13;
much to my, wife's delight, for she 'was&#13;
born in Denver and-has had a lifelong love&#13;
affair with mountains. Going over one last&#13;
range, we found ourselves looking out&#13;
upon an unexpectedly large city, which we&#13;
viewed with heightened interest, for this&#13;
was Kwangju, where we would be living for&#13;
the next four months. Soon we had arrived&#13;
at [ai-l l (meaning Number One) Mansion,&#13;
the just-completed apartment building in&#13;
-which we would be housed. After Fulbright&#13;
House, it looked like a palace. Inside the&#13;
door was an alcove, where we took off our&#13;
shoes and left them, putting on slippers or&#13;
walking around in socks. Our linoleum tile&#13;
living room contained a divan with a bad&#13;
leg.. two armchairs, the phones and their&#13;
table, the radiator, and a wicker tabJe with&#13;
two matching chairs. The bathroom also&#13;
was Western style (more or less), and our&#13;
kitchen included a stove and refrigerator&#13;
brought down earlier by Fulbright. Our two&#13;
bedrooms had ondal floors, heated from&#13;
below, and their papered surfaces were too&#13;
delicate even for slippers. We slept on the&#13;
floor (with mattresses and springs) in one&#13;
bedroom and used the other for the TV set&#13;
we borrowed. We also borrowed a radio&#13;
for the kitchen and could listen to the&#13;
American Forces Korea Network, which&#13;
broadcast in English, was.good company,&#13;
and gave us the only way we had of finding&#13;
out the correct time.&#13;
We were on the third floor of five and&#13;
had balconies to both the north and&#13;
south. Our south balcony looked out upon&#13;
the bamboo yard at left; a major&#13;
intersection of six streets (three of them&#13;
paved); the skyline of the city; and the&#13;
entrance to our building, with its iron&#13;
fence and gate, its ornamental plants and&#13;
rocks, and the gatekeeper's house, to&#13;
which one 'of our phones was connected&#13;
usefully, although he knew no English. Our&#13;
other balcony, though it housed our rattly&#13;
garbage chute, was my favorite, because&#13;
of its spectacular view. We had 180° of&#13;
mountain panorama from there, with the&#13;
traditional and colorful houses of Kwangju&#13;
as foreground; to the east, we had a full&#13;
view of Mt. Mudung, the home ot temples&#13;
and landscape artists. As I watched the sun&#13;
set from this balcony and saw the city&#13;
lights come on, it more than once&#13;
occurred to me that this was probably themost&#13;
beautiful setting in which I would&#13;
ever live.&#13;
in part because it is the unlucky capital of&#13;
an unlucky, devastated nation now&#13;
rebounding vigorously.&#13;
Fulbright House in Seoul (now&#13;
fortunately abandoned) was an outdated&#13;
concrete coffin of eleven stories, the top&#13;
floor of which was generally beyond the&#13;
reach of heated air or water. We spent four&#13;
days freezing there between visits to the&#13;
U.S. Embassy for ID-cards and other timewasting&#13;
bureaucratic nonsense. On the&#13;
other hand, this was also an opportunity to&#13;
I meet Ed Wright, the head of Fulbright in&#13;
Korea who is an affable bachelor with a&#13;
collector's mania for acquiring antique&#13;
Korean chests." Ed's welcoming party&#13;
enabled us to meet the other Fulbrighfers.&#13;
all of whom (with one exception)&#13;
remained as residents of Fulbright House&#13;
throughout their stays. I was the only&#13;
lecturer to live outside of Seoul.&#13;
On Saturday, 5 March, Fulbright'S&#13;
gracious Korean driver, Mr. Park, loaded&#13;
boxes of cooking utensils, bags of Western&#13;
groceries from the Embassy commissary,&#13;
six pieces of luggage, Susan, me, and&#13;
himself into a Datsun coupe we never&#13;
thought' would hold it, and with mixed&#13;
emotions we sped south on Korea's finest&#13;
highway toward Kwangju. This was our&#13;
first real look at the Korean countryside.&#13;
Not even the bleakness of winter and our&#13;
own fatigue could prevent us from staring&#13;
at what we passed, for much of what&#13;
would later become familiar to us we now&#13;
saw for the first time: the richly solid&#13;
mountains, brown on this dav, but later to&#13;
be sheathed with greenery as the seasons&#13;
turned; the irrigated flatlands that would&#13;
become rice paddies in the spring; the&#13;
dome-like graves and various Buddhist or&#13;
Confucians shrines, in honor 'of the dead;&#13;
the small villages, in which Christian&#13;
churches were surprisingly abundant; -and&#13;
the houses, with their swayback tile roofs&#13;
and pointed eves. Of course, much of what&#13;
we saw was beyond our understanding.&#13;
Travelling this same route later on, we&#13;
became accustomed. to Korean plowmen&#13;
with their patient, tawny oxen and wooden&#13;
plows sloshing in the pattered mud,&#13;
though it was always thrilling to us to see&#13;
flocks of large white cranes standing in the&#13;
fields. As the rice matured, it would be&#13;
transplanted by long lines of stooping&#13;
workers in field clothes and sun hats.&#13;
Although they all seemed happy enough,&#13;
there are diseases in the mud, and&#13;
sometimes in the cities we could see old&#13;
people - mostly women - bent double at&#13;
the waist, their trunks parallel to the&#13;
ground as they walked with stubby canes,&#13;
_because they had spent their lives&#13;
transplanting rice until their backs gave&#13;
out. We would also see Korean men of all&#13;
ages carrying heavy loads of bamboo or&#13;
whatever on their backs in A-frames, for&#13;
Korean rural life depends upon such&#13;
burdens. Young mothers of all classes carry&#13;
their children on their backs, usually&#13;
supported with both hands, the fingers&#13;
interlocked. Other women carry parcels on&#13;
their heads.&#13;
~ As our familiarity increased, we learned&#13;
to recognize sandalwood, grown for export&#13;
Next Week: Life and Education in Kwangju, Korea&#13;
f74e ----·--1&#13;
I /!AI ..-JJI"_ I&#13;
\~I&#13;
I . OPEN 7 DAYS I&#13;
\ Mon. -Sat 10 'til close I&#13;
\ Sun. 6 'til dose I&#13;
I I&#13;
I NOON LUNCHES \&#13;
I Sandwiches -,:til midnight I&#13;
I I&#13;
I SAT. LADIES NITE \&#13;
II Ladies' Orin~s Y2 Price I&#13;
I with date 8 'til close \&#13;
I 1436 Junction, Racine I ;...--------..-..-..- ..-J&#13;
Beauty and poverty in&#13;
a country of contrasts&#13;
. by Dennis R. Dean&#13;
Associate Prof_ of English •&#13;
Myanoshita for sightseeing at this famous&#13;
mountain resort. We then continued to&#13;
Kyoto, Japan's most historic and cultural&#13;
city, where we managed to survive the&#13;
chills of an unusually harsh winter without&#13;
losing our enthusiasm. From Kvoto we&#13;
went on to Nara, famous for its deer park&#13;
.and 11{)(}-year-oldtemples, and then had&#13;
one night in Ossaka before flying on-to&#13;
Seoul, ...arriving there as scheduled on 1&#13;
March. -&#13;
from 1 March through 30 June 1977 I&#13;
was a Senior Fulbright Lecturer in Korea.&#13;
This means that I was chosen in national&#13;
competition to represent the 'United States&#13;
(but as a private citizen) for a term while&#13;
serving as a faculty member at a deserving&#13;
foreign institution in this case,&#13;
Chonnam National University, which is in&#13;
Kwangju, a city of some 600,000 persons in&#13;
the rice lands of southwestern Korea. My&#13;
salary was paid by the U.S. government&#13;
and my wife and I lived in housing&#13;
furnished by the univeristy. In part&#13;
because I am the first Parkside faculty&#13;
member to have been awarded a Fulbright&#13;
lectureship, and perhaps, because Korea is&#13;
in the news right now, the editor of this&#13;
paper has asked me to share with you&#13;
some of my experiences and impressions&#13;
while there.&#13;
My wife, Susan, and I left Wisconsin on&#13;
3 February 1977 and, after brief visits with&#13;
our families in Denver and los Angeles,&#13;
flew the Pacific separately and were&#13;
reunited in Tokyo. After several days there,&#13;
including an excursion to - Kamakura&#13;
(where the great Buddha is), we took the&#13;
bullet train to Odawara and then taxied to&#13;
Dismal countryside&#13;
As an introduction to Korea, Seoul is not&#13;
particularly attractive. Even while driving&#13;
in from the airport, one notices the barren,&#13;
depleted mountains that surround much of&#13;
the city, which sprawls chaotically within&#13;
a basin too small to contain it. Habitually&#13;
congested traffic and polluted air are&#13;
apparent. Train riders, usually in western&#13;
dress, tend to crowd together unlike in&#13;
Japan. To make space, they brusquely&#13;
push and shove as needed. Some&#13;
traditionally exotic architecture remains,&#13;
and some of the new construction is&#13;
attractive, but Seoul is mostly a city of&#13;
ugly concrete high rises and oppressively&#13;
compacted single-story shops - in part&#13;
because, like most Asian cities, its growth&#13;
was totally unplanned; in part because it&#13;
adapted Western methods of construction&#13;
, without understanding our aesthetics; and&#13;
WINrERPARK&#13;
SKI fES,rlVAL ~,icc.&#13;
$210 Bus "'WINTER PARK COLORADO if"i'i' %~',&#13;
JANUARY 2-8 • - '~-,&#13;
INCLUDES. ' $137 .CONDOMINIUM LODGING i\ ~,&#13;
Own .6 DAYS OF LIFT TICKETS ~$'''',;&#13;
Transportation ::~T~~~ '" «&#13;
,$.... ~l "?,. 1OcSIGN&#13;
UP IN STUDENT UNION RM. 202&#13;
(DEAQLlNE NOVEMBER 18) it&#13;
P.A.B. invites you to&#13;
•&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
.DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE,&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658·2331&#13;
MEMBER f,D.I.C.&#13;
Korean C,iary to J'apan; to spot low-lying ginsen_g sheds,&#13;
under which was growing a dust-tasting&#13;
root whose medicinal and aphrodesiac&#13;
powers were regularly believed in; and&#13;
finally to recognize grapes, fruits, and&#13;
other crops in var ious stages of&#13;
productipn. As we saw even on that cold&#13;
winter day, and would increasingly&#13;
"appreciate with the advent of spring,&#13;
Korea is a ruggedly mountainous country&#13;
in part because it is the unlucky &lt;:apit~I of&#13;
an unlucky, devastated nation now&#13;
rebounding vigorously .&#13;
Fulbright House in Seoul (now&#13;
'fort unately abandoned) was an outdated&#13;
concrete coffin of eleven stories, the top&#13;
floor of which was generally beyond the&#13;
reach of heated air or water. We spent f&lt;;&gt; ur&#13;
days freezi ng there between visits to the&#13;
U.S. Embassy for I0 ,cards and other timewasting&#13;
bureaucratic nonsense. On the&#13;
other hand, this was also an opportunity to&#13;
; meet Ed Wright, the head of Fulbright in&#13;
Korea, who is an affaj:)le bachelor with a&#13;
collector's mania for acquiring antique&#13;
Korean chests .' Ed's welcoming party&#13;
enabled us to meet the other Fulbrighfers,&#13;
all of whom (with one exception)&#13;
remained as residents of Fulbright House&#13;
throughout their stays . I w~s the only&#13;
lecturer to live&lt; outside of Seoul.&#13;
On Saturday, 5 March, Fulbright's&#13;
gracious Korean driver, Mr. Park, loaded&#13;
boxes of cooking utensils, bags of Western&#13;
groceries from the Embassy commissary,&#13;
six pieces of luggage, Susan, me, and&#13;
himself into a Datsun coupe we never&#13;
thought . would hold it, and with mixed&#13;
emotions we sped south on Korea's finest&#13;
highway toward Kwangju. This was our&#13;
first real look at the Korean countryside.&#13;
Not eve!}_j.he bleakness of winter and our&#13;
own fatigue could prevent us from staring&#13;
at what we passed, for much of what&#13;
with narrow coastal plains in which _many&#13;
who 'live decently must work hard,&#13;
because ot a difficult terrain that&#13;
challenges the people and yet surrounds&#13;
them with beauty.&#13;
At home in Kwangju&#13;
South from Seoul, the landscape&#13;
became increasingly more corrugated,&#13;
much to my wife's delight, for she ·was&#13;
born in Denver and -has had a lifelong love&#13;
affair with mountains. Going over one last&#13;
range, we found ourselves looking out&#13;
upon an unexpectedly large city, which we&#13;
viewed with heightened interest, for this&#13;
was Kwangju, where we would be living for&#13;
the next four months . Soon we had arrived&#13;
at Jai-11 (meaning Number One) Mansion,&#13;
the just-completed apartment building in&#13;
-which we would be housed . After Fulbright&#13;
Beauty and poverty in&#13;
a country of contrasts&#13;
would later become familiar to us we now&#13;
saw for the first time: the richly solid&#13;
mountains, brown on this day, but later to&#13;
be sheathed with greenery as the seasons&#13;
turned; the irrigated flatlands that would&#13;
become rice paddies in the spring; the&#13;
dome-like graves and various Buddhist or&#13;
Confucians shrines, in honor of the dead;&#13;
the small vi llages, in which Christian&#13;
House, it looked like a palace. Inside the&#13;
door was an alcove, where we took off our&#13;
shoes and left them , putting on slippers or&#13;
walking around in socks. Our linoleum tile&#13;
living room contained a divan with a bad&#13;
leg, two armchairs, the phones and their&#13;
table, the radiator, and a wicker tabJe with&#13;
two matching chairs . The bathroom also&#13;
was Western style (more or less), and our&#13;
kitchen included a stove and refrigerator&#13;
brought down earlier by Fulbright. Our two&#13;
bedrooms had ondal floors, heated from&#13;
below, and their papered surfaces were too&#13;
delicate even for slippers. We siept on the&#13;
floor (with mattresses and springs) in one&#13;
bedroom and used the other for the TV set&#13;
we borrowed . We also borrowed a radio&#13;
for the kitchen and could listen to the&#13;
American Forces Korea Network, which&#13;
broadcast in English, was .good company,&#13;
and gave us the only way we had of finding&#13;
out the correct time.&#13;
. by Dennis R. Dean&#13;
Associate Professor of English ·&#13;
From 1 March through 30 June 1977 I&#13;
was a Senior Fulbright Lecturer in Korea .&#13;
This means that I was chosen in national&#13;
competition to represent the United States&#13;
(but as a private citizen) for a term while&#13;
serving as a faculty member at a deserving&#13;
foreign institution - in this case,&#13;
Chonnam National University, which is in&#13;
Kwangju, a city of some 600,000 persons in&#13;
the rice/ands of southwestern Korea. My&#13;
salary was paid by the U.S. government&#13;
and my wife and I lived in housing&#13;
furnished by the univeristy. In part&#13;
because I am the first Parkside faculty&#13;
member to have been awarded a Fulbright&#13;
lectureship, and perhaps, because Korea is&#13;
in the news right now, the editor of this&#13;
paper has asked me to share with you&#13;
some of my experiences and impressions&#13;
while there.&#13;
My wife, Susan, and I left Wisconsin on&#13;
3 February 1977 and, after brief visits with&#13;
our families in Denver and Los Angeles,&#13;
flew the Pacific· separately and were&#13;
reunited in Tokyo. After several days there,&#13;
including an excursion to Kamakura&#13;
(where the great Buddha is), we took the&#13;
bullet train to Odawara and then taxied to&#13;
Myanoshita for sightseeing at this famous&#13;
mountain resort. We then continued to&#13;
Kyoto, Japan's most historic and cultural&#13;
city, where we managed to survive the&#13;
chills of an unusually harsh winter without&#13;
losing our enthusiasm. From Kvoto we&#13;
went on to Nara, famous for its deer park&#13;
and 1100-year-old temples, and then had&#13;
one night in Ossaka before flying on -to&#13;
Seoul,...arriving there as scheduled on 1&#13;
March. •&#13;
Dismal countryside&#13;
As an introduction to Korea, Seoul is not&#13;
particularly attractive. Even while driving&#13;
in from the airport, one notices the barren,&#13;
depleted mountains that surround much of&#13;
the city, which sprawls chaotically within&#13;
a basin too small to contain it. Habitually&#13;
congested traffic and polluted air are&#13;
apparent. Train riders, usually in western&#13;
dress, tend to crowd together unlike in&#13;
Japan . To make space, they brusquely&#13;
push and shove as needed . Some&#13;
traditionally exotic architecture remains,&#13;
and some of the new construction is&#13;
attractive, but Seoul is mostly a city of&#13;
ugly concrete high rises and oppressively&#13;
compacted single-story shops - in part&#13;
because, like most Asian cities, its growth&#13;
was totally unplanned; in part because it&#13;
adapted Western methods of construction&#13;
without understanding our aestheti cs; and&#13;
churches were surprisingly abundant; and&#13;
t he houses , with their swayback t ile roofs&#13;
and pointed eves . Of course, much of what&#13;
we saw was beyond our understanding.&#13;
Travelling this same route later on, we&#13;
became accustomed to Korean plowmen&#13;
with their patient, tawny oxen and wooden&#13;
plows sloshing in the pattered mud,&#13;
though it was always fhrilling to us to see&#13;
·flocks of large white cranes standing in the&#13;
fields. As the rice matured, it would be&#13;
transplanted by long lines of stooping&#13;
workers in field clothes and sun hats.&#13;
Although they all seemed happy enough,&#13;
there are diseases in the mud, and&#13;
sometimes in the cities we could see old&#13;
people - mostly women - bent double at&#13;
the waist, their trunks parallel to the&#13;
ground as they walked with stubby canes,&#13;
_ because they had spent their lives&#13;
transplanting rice until their backs gave&#13;
out. We would also see Korean men of all&#13;
ages carrying heavy loads of bamboo or&#13;
whatever on their backs in A-frames, for&#13;
Korean rural life depends upon such&#13;
burdens . Young mothers of all classes carry&#13;
their ch ildren on their backs, usually&#13;
supported with both hands, the fingers&#13;
interlocked. Other women carry parcels on&#13;
their heads.&#13;
• As our famil iarity increased, we learned&#13;
to recogn ize sandalwood, grown for export&#13;
We were on the third floor of five and&#13;
had balconies to both the north and&#13;
south . Our south balcony looked out upon&#13;
the bamboo yard at left; a major&#13;
intersection of six streets (three of them&#13;
paved); the skyline of the city; and the&#13;
entrance to our building, with its iron&#13;
fence and gate, its ornamental plants and&#13;
rocks, and the gatekeeper's house, to&#13;
which one 'of our phones was connected&#13;
usefully, although he knew no English. Our&#13;
other balcony, though it housed our rattly&#13;
garbage chute, was my favorite, because&#13;
of its spectacular view . We had 180° of&#13;
mountain panorama from there, with the&#13;
traditional and colorful houses of Kwangju&#13;
as foreground ; to the east, we had a full&#13;
view of Mt. Mudung, the home ot temples&#13;
and landscape artists . As I watched the sun&#13;
set from this balcony and saw the city&#13;
lights come on, it more than once&#13;
occurred to me that this was probably the -&#13;
most beautiful setting in which I would&#13;
ever live . -&#13;
Next Week: Life and Education in Kwangju, Korea&#13;
P.A.B. invites you to i7~--~--~-7&#13;
FIRST .WINTER PARK&#13;
l!i • /4--r'&#13;
·SKI ,!ES.TIVAL ~i.,&#13;
$ 21 0 Bus ~ ·WINTER PARK COLORADO ~"" -~ 1 :·'&#13;
s137 Own&#13;
Transportation&#13;
1NcLuDEs : JANUARY 2-8 --. - •&#13;
• CONDOMINIUM LODGING tt ·&#13;
• 6 DAYS OF LIFT TICKETS .,,,. -0. .~ ~~- • PARTIES&#13;
• DANCES A'~ &lt;,::&#13;
-;f:1 {I 1&#13;
•:\ l'ii;-&#13;
S I G N UP IN STUDENT UNION RM . 202&#13;
( DEAQLINE NOVEMBER 18 )&#13;
t //A1~~J.,..A I&#13;
i \--~ . OPEN 7 DAYS i&#13;
i Mon.-Sat 10 'til close i&#13;
\ Sun. 6 'til close i&#13;
i i&#13;
i NOON LUNCHES i&#13;
i Sandwiches _:til midnight \&#13;
i \&#13;
i SAT. LADIES lllTE \&#13;
) Ladies' Drinks ½ Price )&#13;
\ with date 8 'til close i&#13;
L--~~.!~i~Jl~~-J&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
.DOWNTOWN&#13;
MArnOFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE ,&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.0.1.C.&#13;
.. &#13;
news&#13;
State Assembly resists mariiuana&#13;
The State Assembly has killed the decriminal- to discuss the issue on' its merits and not just&#13;
ization of marijuana in Wisconsin by referring AB disposeof the bill. Claiming that the bill would die&#13;
325 to the Committee on State Affairs on a 54 to 41 because of election year caution, Clarenbach said,&#13;
vote late Friday afternoon, September 30, 1977. "If this was a secret vote, you would vote for the bill&#13;
According to Rob Stevens, legislative Affairs because you know on its merits that we shouldn't&#13;
Director for the United Council of UW Student put people in jail for the personal use of&#13;
Governments, this is a major setback for students. marijuana." Rep. leroy litscher {D'Baraboo) held Reduced pefUllties .dopted by lOme&#13;
"The personal use of marijuana is obviously most aloft a sprig of marijuana that had grown wild on A moderate bill, AS 325 was supported by the&#13;
prevalent among the university s-tudent age group, his farm and asked the Assembly why he should be leadership in both the Assembly and Senate and&#13;
and the refusal by the legislature to- deal with this criminally liable for its possession. Oshkosh Rep. was endorsed by such "radical" groups as the&#13;
issue reflects the lack of student political Richard Flintrop urged debate on the bill, saying Wisconsin Police Chief's Association, WIsconsin&#13;
involvement," said Stevens. that this was the "one opportunity to address one of Council on Criminal Justice, the State Council on&#13;
Dorff votes against decrim. the most serious problems we've dealt with here Alcohol and other Drug Abuse, the Department of&#13;
Representatives with universities or significant this year." Many -of the other representatives Health end' Social Services and the Milwaukee&#13;
numbers of students in their districts voting in favor disagreed and were anxious to end their final day of County Board of Supervisors. and dozens of other&#13;
of the bill were Reps. Flintrop (D-Oshkosh), the session and go home. Rep. Trgoning, a individuals Moreover many local efforts to reduce&#13;
Groshek (D-Stevens Point), Looby (D-Eau Claire), Republican from South Western Wisconsin moved pot penalties have developed In communities&#13;
Lorman (R-Whitewater), Medinger (D-la Cr-osse); to refer AB 325 to the State Affairs Committee around the state. Decnrrunalrzanon ordinances&#13;
Metz (D-Green Bay), and Travis (R-Platteville). Another Republican, watching the clock approach have already been adopted by at least 10 local&#13;
Madison Representatives Clarenbach, Muntz, and 6 p.m., complained that he wanted to get home and governments, Including Brookfield. Cudahy&#13;
Miller and Milwaukee Representatives Moody, play football with his kids, "and now I have to listen Madison, Middleton, Milwaukee County. Monona.&#13;
leopold, lee,Coggs, Ward, Elconin, Wahner, ta-some people pontificate." Shorewood. South Milwaukee, St FranCIS and West&#13;
Behnke, Kirby, Soucie, Norquist, and Tuczynski AB 325 would have removed the criminal Allis&#13;
came out en masse in support of the bill, giving the penalties and created civil penalties for the Acording to Messina. there IS now little chance of&#13;
issue a distinct urban versus rural flavor. University personal (lOssesslOn and use of small amounts of decnrntnahz auon rn wecons.n before 1979 'We&#13;
Representatives voting against the bill included marijuana with a maximum fine of S50. local tried to get the-bill moving early this year said&#13;
Ausman (R~Stout), Dorff ID-Parksidel and Murray jurisdictions would have had the option of Messina, realizing that the closer the vote came to&#13;
(D-Superior). enforcement, otherwise it would be enforced by the election time, the less support we'd have We had&#13;
Eloquently defending the bill he sponsored, state. Possession of greater amounts and the sale of lots of legislators who are sold on the merits ot the&#13;
Madison Rep. Dave Clarenbech urged the Assembly marijuana would have remained criminal. offenses Issue. but who were afraid of the votes back home&#13;
--'--~-'-----'-------------....,----- Policies committee&#13;
•&#13;
agrees on' tentative&#13;
advisi'ng proposal&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Parks ide's Academic Policies Committee (APC) proposed a&#13;
tentative resolution on the academic advising policies during last&#13;
Wednesday's (Oct. 5) meeting. The meeting lasted 2Y2 hours.&#13;
Members present at the meeting included learning Disability&#13;
Director Diane German, Professor Stella Gray, Ranger Editor Philip l.&#13;
livingston, Professor William Moy, Vice-Chancellor larry Ratner, Mr.&#13;
Richard Schoene and Professor James Shea, chairman of APe.&#13;
The temporary policies, effective in the fall registration of 1978,&#13;
briefly states that any Parks ide student with an undeclared major is&#13;
required to formally declare his major before he completes the 60&#13;
credits.&#13;
The policy report also asserts that every student shall be counseled&#13;
by an assigned faculty advisor concerning the students' major or area&#13;
of interest. Those students with undeclared majors will be assigned&#13;
faculty advisors by the Office of the Dean of Faculty.&#13;
Finally, APC members agreed that students must secure the&#13;
signature of their assigned advisor prior to each registration.&#13;
with stiff penalties; up to SJO,(X)()fine and 10 years&#13;
imprisonment for second or subsequent offenses&#13;
AS 325 would also have removed previous&#13;
convictions for simple possession from the&#13;
offenders' criminal record&#13;
WLLC offers&#13;
display space&#13;
Below is the tentative proposal&#13;
REPORT OF THE ACADEMIC POLICIES COMMITIEE&#13;
RESOLUTIONS ON ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
(1) Formal declaration of an area of interest must be made upon&#13;
completion of 45 credits. Formal declaration of a major is required&#13;
upon completion of 60 credits. If a student falls to make&#13;
such formal declarations by these deadlines, the student will be&#13;
transferred to special student status and will be so notified Students&#13;
are encouraged to identify an area of interest early in their&#13;
academic careers (the student is free to change the area of interest&#13;
or major).&#13;
(2) Every student shall have an assigned ttdvisor or advising officer ...&#13;
as provided below:&#13;
(a) Students with declared majors or area of interest shall be advised&#13;
by faculty members in their major or area of interest. It is&#13;
the responsibility of the divisions to decide the advising format&#13;
for their unit.&#13;
(b) Students who have not declared a major or area of interest&#13;
shall be assigned faculty advisors by the Office of the Dean of&#13;
Faculty. These advisors will be assigned according to the&#13;
students' preliminary interests, if any. All such asignments must&#13;
be made with the prior consent of the proposed faculty advisor.&#13;
(3) A student who is a candidate for a degree must secure his&#13;
advisor's signttture, or the signature of the advisor's designee,&#13;
prior to each 'registration. The signature indicates only that the&#13;
opportunity for advising has occurred.&#13;
(4) These policies shall become effective with the registration of the&#13;
fall semester of 1978.&#13;
-Phasers'too expensive to kill people'&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
lock all Phasers on Target, Mr. Sulu ... Phasers&#13;
locked on ... Fire main Phasers!!!&#13;
Thusly the crew of the Enterprise have gotten&#13;
themselves in trouble and out of trouble. But will&#13;
Phasers or even lasers for that matter, ever be used&#13;
in battle or will this be a part of science fiction that&#13;
will indeed remain science fiction? •&#13;
Phasers, Masers, lasers or some type of energy&#13;
ray weapon have populated the pages of science&#13;
- fiction for many years. From the Phasers of Star&#13;
Trek, to the lasers of Space: 1999. From the Ray&#13;
Gun from logan's Run, to those fantastic weapons&#13;
and Light Sabers from (May the force be with you)&#13;
Star Wars. But the question remains, will lasers,&#13;
Phasers. or whatever, be used in our lifetime for&#13;
offensive! or defensive reasons?&#13;
According to the Associated Press, "U.S. and&#13;
Soviet scientists are racing for a revolutionary&#13;
breakthrough to laser weaponry that could rival the&#13;
birth of the atomic bomb and the intercontinental&#13;
missle." High powered laser (light-Amplicicationby-Stimulated-Emission-of-Radiation)&#13;
weapons,&#13;
strategically placed, could provide an impregnable&#13;
defense field against atomic attack by vaporizing&#13;
any enemy missle aimed at the country.&#13;
Defense experts are predicting that the Pentagon&#13;
will begin building prototypes as soon as 1979 and&#13;
will have "something in pretty solid form for&#13;
combat use by the late 1980's." Is this the beginning&#13;
of the phaser we&lt;fpan? The government' isn't&#13;
planning on it because, as one scientist put it, "It's&#13;
just too expensive to kill people that way. Bullets&#13;
are cheaper."&#13;
But what about Photon torpedoes?&#13;
-Math council meets here&#13;
The Wisconsin Mathematics&#13;
Council will hold concurrent fall&#13;
meetings at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside and UW·Eau&#13;
Claire on Saturday, Oct. 15, from&#13;
8 a.m. to 3:30 pm.&#13;
Secondary school teachers will&#13;
get a look at "Plato," the most&#13;
advanced computer-based&#13;
teaching system in the world,&#13;
which will be demonstrated by&#13;
its inventor, Donald L. Bitzer ..&#13;
Sponsoring the event are&#13;
UW-Parkside and its Center far&#13;
the Application of Computers&#13;
and Center for Teaching&#13;
Excellence, the Wisconsin&#13;
Mathematics Council and the&#13;
National Council of Teachers of&#13;
Mathematics.&#13;
The library/learning Center IS&#13;
offering campus groups and&#13;
individuals the use of its display&#13;
facilities. Academic disciplmes,&#13;
support services. student orgemz&#13;
atrons , faculty, staff and&#13;
students may present displays&#13;
wruch are Judged by the Llbrary/&#13;
learning Center to be SUItable In&#13;
subject and quality&#13;
The displav cases WIll be&#13;
reserved on a first-come flrstserved&#13;
basis, Participants Will be&#13;
responsible for assembling,&#13;
setting up, and taking down their&#13;
displays. The library/learnlng&#13;
Center does have a staff artIst&#13;
who will be avarlable for help In&#13;
designing and constructing signs&#13;
and labels&#13;
If you or your organization has&#13;
materials that are looking for an&#13;
audience, or a timely tOPIC to&#13;
explore, get In touch with Mary&#13;
McDonald, extension 2356&#13;
.~_ N\~G\C&#13;
~ O~~Z)\"~,ree~&#13;
Open 32\. ~\-:,5 .()363&#13;
Mon, &amp; rn. ." 7&gt;C.,oe· "\4) 634'&#13;
Noon "'9 ~~( ...&#13;
Sat. Noon ttt 5&#13;
MAG'C TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
..&#13;
THE&#13;
2226-57th St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-9909&#13;
~l!!IImJ_ _ ... -&#13;
news&#13;
State Assembly resists -mariiuana&#13;
The State Assembly has killed the decriminalization&#13;
of marijuana in Wisconsin by referring AB&#13;
325 to the Committee on State Affairs on a 54 to 41&#13;
vote late Friday afternoon , September 30, 1977.&#13;
According to Rob Stevens, Legislative Affairs&#13;
Director for the United Council of UW Student&#13;
Governments, this is a major setback for students .&#13;
"The personal use of marijuana is obviously most&#13;
prevalent among the university student age group,&#13;
and the refusal by the legislature to deal w ith this&#13;
issue reflects t he lack of student political&#13;
involvement," said Stevens.&#13;
Dorff votes against decrim.&#13;
Representatives with universities or significant&#13;
numbers of students in their districts voting in favor&#13;
of the bill were Reps. Flintrop (D-Oshkosh),&#13;
Groshek (D-Stevens Point), Looby (D-Eau Claire),&#13;
t orman (R-Whitewater), M edinger (D-La Cr-0sse);&#13;
Metz (D-Green Bay), and Travis (R- Plattevi11e).&#13;
Madison Representatives Clarenbach, M untz, and&#13;
Miller and i'vlilwaukee Representatives Moody,&#13;
Leopold, Lee, Coggs, Ward, Elconin, Wahner,&#13;
Behnke, Kirby, Soucie, Norquist, and Tuczynski&#13;
came out en masse in support of the bill, giving the&#13;
issue a distinct urban versus rural flavor. University&#13;
Representatives voting against the bill included&#13;
Ausman (R-Stout), Dorff [D-Parkside] and Murray&#13;
(D-Superior).&#13;
Eloquently defending the bill he sponsored,&#13;
Madison Rep. Dave Clarenbach urged the Assembly&#13;
to discuss the issue on · its merits and not just&#13;
dispose of the bill. Claiming that the bill would die&#13;
because of election year caution, Clarenbach said,&#13;
"If this was a secret vote, you would vote for the bill&#13;
because you know on its merits that we shouldn't&#13;
put people in jail for the personal use of&#13;
marijuana ." Rep . Leroy Litscher (D-Baraboo) held&#13;
aloft a sprig of marijuana that had grown wild on&#13;
his farm and asked the Assembly why he should be&#13;
criminally liable for its possession. Oshkosh Rep.&#13;
Richard Flintrop urged debate on the bill, saying&#13;
that this was the " one opportunity to address one of&#13;
the most serious problems we've dealt with here&#13;
this year." Many -of the other representatives&#13;
disagreed and were anxious to end their final day of&#13;
the session and go home. Rep. Trgoning, a&#13;
Republican from South Western Wisconsin moved&#13;
to refer AB 325 to the State Affairs Committee&#13;
Another Republican, watching the clock approach&#13;
6 p.m ., complained that he wanted to get home and&#13;
play football with his kids, "and now I have to listen&#13;
to some people pontificate."&#13;
AB 325 would have removed the criminal&#13;
penalties and created civil penalties for the&#13;
personal P._Ossession and use of small amounts of&#13;
marijuana with a maximum fine of $50 Local&#13;
jurisdictions would have had the option of&#13;
enforcement, otherwise it would be enforced by the&#13;
state. Possession of greater amounts and the sale of&#13;
marijuana would have remained criminal.. offenses&#13;
Below is the tentative proposal:&#13;
with stiff penalties; up to S30,000 fine and 10 year&#13;
imprisonment for second or ubsequ nt offen&#13;
AB 325 would also have remo ed pr Ious&#13;
convictions for simple possernon from th&#13;
offenders' criminal record&#13;
Reduced penalties adopted by some&#13;
A moderate bill, AB 325 wa supported by th&#13;
leadership in both the A mbly and nate and&#13;
was endorsed by such "radical" group a th&#13;
Wisconsin Police Chief's A ocIatIon, Wt consin&#13;
Council on Criminal Justice, the tate oun 11 on&#13;
Alcohol and other Dru Abuse, the Department of&#13;
Health and' oc1al Service and the M 1lwauk e&#13;
County Board of Supervisors, and doz ns of oth r&#13;
individuals . Moreover, man local efforts tor du e&#13;
pot penalties ha e developed in commun1tI&#13;
around the state. Decriminaltzat,on ordinance&#13;
have already b n adopted by at lea t 10 lo al&#13;
governments, including Brookfield, Cudahy ,&#13;
Madison , Middleton , Milwaukee County, Monona,&#13;
Shorewood , South Milwaukee, St Francis and We t&#13;
Allis&#13;
Acording to Messina, there Is now ltttle chance o&#13;
decnmmaltzat1on m W1scon in befor 1 7 'VI.&#13;
tried to get the.bill moving early th, ar, ' aid&#13;
Messina, " realizing that the closer the vote ame to&#13;
election time, the le s support \,e'd have \\' had&#13;
lots of legislators who are sold on the m nts of th&#13;
issue, but who were afraid of the otes back horn "&#13;
Policies committee&#13;
• agrees on· tentative&#13;
REPORT OF THE ACADEMIC POLICIES COMMITTEE&#13;
RESOLUTIONS O N ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
WLLC offers&#13;
display space&#13;
advising proposal&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Parkside's Academic Policies Committee (APC) proposed a&#13;
tentative resolution on the academic advising policies during last&#13;
Wednesday's (Oct. 5) meeting. The meeting lasted 2½ hours.&#13;
Members present at the meeting included Learning Disability&#13;
Director Diane German, Professor Stella Gray, Ranger Editor Philip L.&#13;
Livingston, Professor William Moy, Vice-Chancellor Larry Ratner, Mr.&#13;
Richard Schoene and Professor James Shea, chairman of APC.&#13;
The temporary policies, effective in the fall registration of 1978,&#13;
briefly states that any Parkside student with an undeclared major is&#13;
required to formally declare his major before he completes the 60&#13;
credits.&#13;
The policy report also asserts that every student shall be counseled&#13;
by an assigned faculty advisor concerning the students' major or area&#13;
of interest. Those students with undeclared majors will be assigned&#13;
faculty advisors by the Office of the Dean of Faculty.&#13;
Finally, APC members agreed that students must secure the&#13;
signature of their assigned advisor prior to each registration .&#13;
(1) Formal declaration of an area of interest must be made upon&#13;
completion of 45 credits . Formal declaration of a ma1or is required&#13;
upon completion of 60 credits . If a student fails to make&#13;
such formal declarations by these deadl ines, the student will be&#13;
transferred to special student status and will be so notified Students&#13;
are encouraged to identify an area of interest early in their&#13;
academic careers (the student is free to change the area of interest&#13;
or major).&#13;
(2) Every student shall have an assigned advisor or advising officer _&#13;
as provided below:&#13;
(a) Students with declared majors or area of interest shall be advised&#13;
by faculty members in their major or area of interest. It is&#13;
the responsibility of the divisions to decide the advising format&#13;
for their unit.&#13;
(b) Students who have not declared a major or area of interest&#13;
shall be assigned faculty advisors by the Office of the Dean of&#13;
Faculty. These advisors will be assigned according to the&#13;
students' preliminary interests, if any. All such asignments must&#13;
be made with the prior consent of the proposed faculty advisor.&#13;
(3) A student who is a candidate for a degree must secure his&#13;
advisor's signature, or the signature of the advisor's designee,&#13;
prior to each registration. The signature indicates only that the&#13;
opportunity for advising has occurred.&#13;
( 4) These policies shall become effective with the registration of the&#13;
fall semester of 1978.&#13;
The Library/ Learning Center Is&#13;
offering campus group and&#13;
individual the u of I d1 pla&#13;
facil1t1es Acad m1c di 1pl1n ,&#13;
upport ervIc s, stud nt organizations,&#13;
fa cult , ta ff and&#13;
students may pr nt di pla&#13;
which are judged by th Library/&#13;
Learning Center to be suitable in&#13;
subject and quality.&#13;
The d1 pla ca es will be&#13;
reserved on a fir t-com fir t·&#13;
served basis Partic1pan will be&#13;
responsible for ass mblin ,&#13;
setting up, and talong down th tr&#13;
display . The L1brary/ Learnin&#13;
Center does have a staff artist&#13;
who will be available for h Ip in&#13;
designing and onstru ting Ign&#13;
and label&#13;
If you or your organization h&#13;
materials that ar loolon for an&#13;
aud, nc , or a tIm ly topI to&#13;
e plor , g t in tou h with Mary&#13;
M cDonald, ten ion 2356&#13;
Phasers 'too expensive to kill people' '.' ~- N\~G\C ,&#13;
~ o~i~s,ree~3 by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Lock all Phasers on· Target, Mr. Sulu . .. Phasers&#13;
locked on .. . Fire main Phasers!!!&#13;
Thusly the crew of the Enterprise have gotten&#13;
themselves in trouble and out of trouble . But will&#13;
Phasers or even Lasers for that matter, ever be used&#13;
in battl~ or will this be a part of science fiction that&#13;
will indeed remain science fiction? •&#13;
Phasers,. Masers, Lasers or some type of energy&#13;
ray weapon have populated the pages of science&#13;
- fiction for many years . From the Phasers of Star&#13;
Trek to the Lasers of Space: 1999. From the Ray&#13;
Gun.from Logan's Run , to those fantastic weapons&#13;
and Light Sabers from (May the force ,be with you)&#13;
Star Wars . But the question remains, will Lasers,&#13;
Phasers, or whatever, be used in our lifeUme for&#13;
offensive; or defensive reasons?&#13;
According to the Associated Press, " U.S. and&#13;
Soviet scientists are racing for a revolutionary&#13;
breakthrough to laser weaponry that could rival the&#13;
birth of the atomic bomb and the intercontinental&#13;
missle." High powered laser (Light-Amplicicationby-Stimulated-Emission-of-Radiation)&#13;
weapons,&#13;
strategically placed, could provide an impregnable&#13;
defense field against atomic attack by vaporizing&#13;
any enemy missle aimed at the country .&#13;
Defense experts are predicting that the Pentagon&#13;
will begin building prototypes as soon as 1979 and&#13;
will have " something in pretty solid form for&#13;
combat use by the late 1980's." Is this the beginn ing&#13;
of the phaser wecfpon? The government · isn't&#13;
planning on it because, as one scientist put it, " It's&#13;
just too expensive to kill people that way. Bullets&#13;
are cheaper."&#13;
But what about Photon torpedoes?&#13;
Math council meets here Sponsoring the event are&#13;
UW-Parkside and its Center for&#13;
the Application of Computers&#13;
and Genter for Teaching&#13;
Excellence, th'e Wisconsin&#13;
Mathematics Council and the&#13;
National Council of Teachers of&#13;
Mathematics.&#13;
The Wisconsin Mathematics&#13;
Council will hold concurrent fall&#13;
meetings at the University of&#13;
Wisco~sin:Parkside and UW-Eau&#13;
Claire on Saturday, Oct. 15, from&#13;
8 a.m . to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Secondary school teachers will&#13;
get a look at " Plato," the most&#13;
advanced computer-based&#13;
teaching system in the world,&#13;
which will be demonstrated by&#13;
its inventor, Donald L. Bitzer~&#13;
Open 32,\ ~\~ 5 ()363&#13;
Mon. &amp; Fri. "?\Cloe, .t\4,) e,34--&#13;
N~ It/ 9 ~~ ~&#13;
Sat . Noon Ii i 5&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
.. &#13;
news&#13;
Facul_ty split en&#13;
collective bargaining&#13;
The Parkside faculty is split&#13;
exactly 50/50 as to whether it&#13;
wants to bargain collectively&#13;
with the University in the&#13;
matters of compensation, hours,&#13;
and conditions of employment.&#13;
The results are in a survey tally&#13;
released last week by the&#13;
Parkside University Committee,&#13;
which circulated the survey to&#13;
158 eligible faculty and received&#13;
only 78 replies. 34 of the replies&#13;
favored collective bargaining in&#13;
some form, wh iIe 34 opposed&#13;
any collective bargaining. Ten&#13;
replied that they are undecided.&#13;
Of the 34 who replied in the&#13;
affirmative, four thought the&#13;
Parkside faculty should bargain&#13;
collectively on all issues&#13;
including those now covered by&#13;
faculty governance (the faculty&#13;
has its own government&#13;
including a Senate). The other 30&#13;
said they should bargain&#13;
collectively only on the issues of&#13;
salary and fringe benefits.&#13;
late last week Larry Deutsch,&#13;
chairman of the committee,&#13;
went 'to Madison to tell the&#13;
university regents of the results&#13;
of the Parkside survey. The&#13;
regents will then take an official&#13;
stand on the collective bargaining&#13;
bills now before the state&#13;
legislature.&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
,Scholarships bring&#13;
$10,000 10 uw.~&#13;
A provision to continue legislative scholarships for out of state&#13;
students did not make headlines this summer when the state budget&#13;
was passed, but it was big news to University of Wisconsin athletic&#13;
directors around the state, including Parksfde's Wayne Dannehl who&#13;
credited local legislators for saving the measure.&#13;
"It means nearly $10,000 to our athletic program," Dannehl said&#13;
today. "And that's crucial to the successof our program."&#13;
The legislative scholarships, which cover the out of state portion of&#13;
tuition, about S1,6CX) a year, are used extensively at UW campuses for&#13;
athletes, but may be awarded to any student. Each legislator may&#13;
award one such scholarship a year. •&#13;
The scholarships came under fire earlier this year and there were&#13;
three separate bills before the legislature to eliminate them.&#13;
"We are especially indebted to Assemblymen Eugene Dorff and&#13;
Joseph Andrea of Kenosha, who led the fight to include the&#13;
scholarships in the budget," Dannehl said. "And we are extremely&#13;
pleased that seven of our- area legislators continue to support&#13;
Parkside by assigning their scholarships to this campus. The large&#13;
bulk of legislative scholarships go to UW-Madison, so we're very&#13;
happy to have support from almost all of our local representatives,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
In addition to Dorff-and Andrea, legislators who have assigned&#13;
their scholarships to UW-P are Assemblymen Marcel Dandeneau,&#13;
Michael Ferrall and JamesRooney of Racine, Senator John Maurer of&#13;
Kenosha and Assemblyman Russell Olson of Bassett.&#13;
Young Am&lt;rlcans&#13;
of Italian Descent&#13;
PRESENT&#13;
Maynard Fergeson&#13;
in&#13;
Concert&#13;
"henefit for senior Cilizen&#13;
J)f(&gt;jeo"&#13;
-,&#13;
'..&#13;
L&#13;
...... /-&#13;
A Spe.cial Thank! To ./&#13;
Budwe.i!e.r Corp.&#13;
-&#13;
Friday, October 21, 1977&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
St. Joseph's High School Auditorium&#13;
2401 69th Street 0 Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
.Prices 815 and 810&#13;
all.eatl re.erved&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: Joemdt&amp;Ve.turo&#13;
618 55th St,&#13;
./ " With contmued emphasis on&#13;
the trend toward" relevance In&#13;
higher education, the Political&#13;
Science discipline has arranged&#13;
internship opportunities for&#13;
students in Washington, D.C.&#13;
According to Dr, Samuel&#13;
Pernacciaro of the Political&#13;
Science discipline, internships&#13;
are available during the Spring&#13;
semester in Congress ion pi&#13;
offices, executive agencies,&#13;
public interest organizations,&#13;
and judicial agencies as well as&#13;
in many other areas of interest&#13;
such as environment, consumeraffairs,&#13;
journalism, communication,&#13;
the arts, and business.&#13;
Internships have become an&#13;
increasingly popular component&#13;
of students' cirricula as they&#13;
provide students with the&#13;
opportunity to integrate academic&#13;
theory with practice in&#13;
an applied situation. In addition,&#13;
interships have helped to enable&#13;
students to develop professional&#13;
skills, explore career options,&#13;
participate in the professional&#13;
work "experience", and to&#13;
discover strengths and weaknesses&#13;
in their academic background&#13;
so that they may better prepare&#13;
for a career., Internships also&#13;
provide students 'with an&#13;
extraordinary opportunity for&#13;
personal development with the&#13;
wealth of political, historical,&#13;
and cultural attractions available&#13;
in the nation's capital.&#13;
The internships are being&#13;
handled by Pernacciaro and&#13;
have been developed in&#13;
conjunction with the Washington&#13;
Center for learning&#13;
,Alternatives of Washington,&#13;
D.C., a non-profit educational&#13;
agency which develops the&#13;
individual placements and&#13;
provid~s internship placement,&#13;
supervision, evaluation, academic&#13;
courses, seminars, housing,&#13;
and other support services for&#13;
students from colleges and&#13;
universities throughout the&#13;
country. While on an internship&#13;
for a fuli term, students remain&#13;
enrolled at and receive academic&#13;
credit from Parkside based on&#13;
evaluations performed by WClA·&#13;
staff and faculty in Washington&#13;
and facilitated by Parkside's&#13;
faculty liaison with WClA-.&#13;
Most interns are juniors or&#13;
seniors, but some sophomores&#13;
have participated in the&#13;
Washington intern program to&#13;
date. Placements are available in&#13;
a wide range of interests and are&#13;
appropriate for majors in most&#13;
disciplines. Students who are&#13;
interested in pursuing the&#13;
possibility of an I internship in&#13;
Washington, D.C. should contact&#13;
Pernacciaro at Greenquist 313 or&#13;
call extension 2316 for more&#13;
information.&#13;
The deadline for applying for&#13;
the Spring Semester program is \1"""&#13;
November 1, 1977.&#13;
approval for increased student&#13;
participation in the allocation of&#13;
student segregated fees and&#13;
looked forward to good relations&#13;
with the students of the&#13;
UW-Madison.&#13;
Two new vice chancellors&#13;
must be hired along with dealing&#13;
yv'ith the problems facing the&#13;
UW health sciences program.&#13;
Irving Shain, Vice President&#13;
for academic affairs and provost&#13;
of the University of Washington&#13;
in Seattle, was named chancellor&#13;
of the UW-Madison campus by a&#13;
unanimous- vote of the UW&#13;
Regents at their September&#13;
meeting. Shain, former vice&#13;
chancellor at the Madison&#13;
campus will succeed H. Edwin&#13;
Young who left in July to become&#13;
president of .the 27 campus UW&#13;
System. Shain is no new comer&#13;
to the Madison campus, being a&#13;
23 year veteran of a distinguished&#13;
university. Shain's selec:.&#13;
tion came as no surprise to most&#13;
UW observers, but was still&#13;
capable of generating excitement&#13;
upon announcement.&#13;
In remarks. made at a news&#13;
conference Shain gave his&#13;
-Shain- appo'nfed Ma ison Cllancellor&#13;
Labo~ Economics class i~ unique&#13;
The students of UW-Parksid~ have an&#13;
opportunity that is unique on the undergraduate&#13;
level. Specifically, this campus offers a Bachelor's&#13;
Degree in Labor Economics.&#13;
You say, "so what." The "so what" of the matter is&#13;
simply this. Labor Economics, Industrial Relations&#13;
and labor Relations are courses of study usually&#13;
pursued on a graduate level. The essence of labor&#13;
Economics on this campus is essentially of a&#13;
practical nature. In addition to, it provides an&#13;
opportunity for a degree, provides an excellent&#13;
basis for entry into law school or graduate school,&#13;
and allows a student to get involved in realistic&#13;
projects related to union and management&#13;
relations. I.E. (lE 330 is now conducting an organizing&#13;
campaign of LE 313 classes). For example,&#13;
members of one class represent a given union (in&#13;
this instance Precise Local 111 and the evening&#13;
class is I.W.W.) The members of another class&#13;
represent un-organized employees. Given a fact&#13;
situation and a free hand, labor Managemg,nt and )&#13;
employees embark on a campaign the same as in a&#13;
"real life" situation. The Union "organizers" are&#13;
Bruce Kellogg and Elida Saenz. Elections will be&#13;
held on October 13.&#13;
The guidance, instruction, and experience&#13;
provided by Mr. William Petrie both in class and in&#13;
specific projects provides his students with&#13;
applications, not just theory.&#13;
The LE 313 class is basically an introductory&#13;
course. But 'it gets students of all ages, experience,&#13;
and majors involved in an experience with a topic&#13;
that all can relate to.&#13;
Choose from our library of 7,000 topics,&#13;
All paper\s have been prepared by our&#13;
staff of professional writers to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1.00 (air mail&#13;
postage) for the current edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
r~UCATiONA~SYSrEMS----&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916-E, II "-&#13;
I Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 II&#13;
Name I&#13;
W•• 110provide original : A~dress :&#13;
r•••• rch -- all fl.lds. I' CIty I&#13;
Th•• I. and dl••• rtatlon&#13;
L-~.ulstlnc. also av.llabl.. LI State Zip ~~I&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Assistance&#13;
ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FO~YOU!'&#13;
:IJ. It~&#13;
Come Today SeeYours.&#13;
"'" '&#13;
quality corrrnerciol printers&#13;
1417 50thstreet . 658-8990&#13;
news&#13;
Faculty split on&#13;
collective bargaining&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
The Parkside faculty is split&#13;
exactly 50/50 as to whether it&#13;
wants to bargain collectively&#13;
with the University in the&#13;
matters of compensation, hours,&#13;
and conditions of employment.&#13;
The results are in a survey tally&#13;
released last week by the&#13;
Parkside University Committee,&#13;
which circulated the survey to&#13;
158 eligible faculty and received&#13;
only 78 replies. 34 of the replies&#13;
favored collective bargaining in&#13;
some form, while 34 opposed&#13;
any collective bargaining. Ten&#13;
replied that they are undecided.&#13;
Of the 34 who replied in the&#13;
affirmative, four thought the&#13;
Parkside faculty should bargain&#13;
collectively on all issues&#13;
including those now covered by&#13;
faculty governance (the faculty&#13;
has its own government&#13;
including a Senate). The other 30&#13;
said they should bargain,&#13;
collectively only on the issues of&#13;
salary and fringe benefits.&#13;
Late last week Larry Deutsch,&#13;
chairman of the committee,&#13;
went ·to Madison to tell the&#13;
university regents of the results&#13;
of the Parkside survey. The&#13;
regents will then take an official&#13;
stand on the collective bargaining&#13;
bills now before the state&#13;
legislature.&#13;
.scholarships bring&#13;
$10,000 to UW-P&#13;
A provision to continue legislative scholarships for out of state&#13;
students did not make headlines this summer when the state budget&#13;
was passed, but it was big news to University of Wisconsin athletic&#13;
directors around the state, including Parkside'~ Wayne Dannehl who&#13;
credited local legislators for saving the measure.&#13;
"It means nearly $10,000 to our athletic program," Dannehl said&#13;
today. "And that's crucial to the success of our program."&#13;
The legislative scholarships, which cover the out of state portion of&#13;
tuition, about $1,600 a year, are used extensively at UW campuses for&#13;
athletes, but may be awarded to any student. Each legislator may&#13;
award one such scholarship a year. '&#13;
The scholarships came under fire earlier this year and there were&#13;
three separate bills before the legislature to eliminate them.&#13;
"We are especially indebted to Assemblymen Eugene Dorff and&#13;
Joseph Andrea of Kenosha, who led the fight to include the&#13;
scholarships in the budget," Dannehl said. "And we are extremely&#13;
pleased that seven of our area legislators continue to support&#13;
Parkside by assigning their scholarships to this campus. The large&#13;
bulk of legislative scholarships go to UW-Madison, so we're very&#13;
happy to have support from almost all of our local representatives,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
In addition to Dorff and.Andrea, legislator~ who have assigned&#13;
their scholarships to UW-P are Assemblymen Marcel Dandeneau,&#13;
Michael Ferrall and James Rooney of Racine, Senator John Maurer of&#13;
Kenosha and Assemblyman Russell Olson of Bassett.&#13;
Young Amuicans&#13;
of Italian Descfnt&#13;
PRE,ENT&#13;
Maynard Fergeson&#13;
/&#13;
• Ill&#13;
Concert&#13;
"l&gt;t-nefil .for senior citizen&#13;
project ..&#13;
L&#13;
/-'·&#13;
A.. JSpecia&#13;
-- -l Thank• To&#13;
Budwei8er Corp.&#13;
Friday, October 21, 1977&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
St. Joseph's High School Auditorium&#13;
2401 69th Street • Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
JPrices $15 and $10&#13;
all seats reserved&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: Joerndt &amp; Ventura&#13;
618 55th St.&#13;
Announce D.C. internships . .&#13;
for Parkside students I&#13;
~&#13;
With conefnued emphasis qn&#13;
the trend toward· relevance in&#13;
higher education, the Political&#13;
Science discipline has arranged&#13;
internship opportunities for&#13;
students in Washington, D.C.&#13;
According to Dr. Samuel&#13;
Pernacciaro of the Political&#13;
Science discipline, internships&#13;
are available during the Spring&#13;
semester in Congressional&#13;
offices, executive agencies,&#13;
public interest organizations,&#13;
and judicial agencies as well as&#13;
in many other areas of interest&#13;
such as environment, consumer·&#13;
affairs, journalism, communication,&#13;
the arts, and business.&#13;
Internships have become an&#13;
increasingly popular component&#13;
of students' cirricula as they&#13;
provide students with the&#13;
opportunity to integrate academic&#13;
theory with practice in&#13;
an applied situation. In addition,&#13;
interships have helped to enable&#13;
students to develop professional&#13;
skills, explore career options,&#13;
participate in the professional&#13;
work "experience", and to&#13;
discover strengths and weaknesses&#13;
in their academic background&#13;
so that they may better prepare&#13;
for a career. , Internships also&#13;
· provide students ·with an&#13;
extraordinary opportunity for&#13;
personal development with the&#13;
wealth of political, historical,&#13;
and cultural attractions available&#13;
in the nation's capital.&#13;
The internships are being&#13;
handled by Pernacciaro and&#13;
have been developed in&#13;
conjunction with the Washington&#13;
Center for Learning&#13;
,Alternatives of Washington ,&#13;
D.C., a non-profit educational&#13;
agency which develops the&#13;
indiviaual placements and&#13;
provides internship placement,&#13;
supervision, evaluation, academic&#13;
courses, seminars, housing,&#13;
and other support services for&#13;
students from colleges and&#13;
universities throughout the&#13;
country. W hile on an internship&#13;
for a fuli term, students remain&#13;
enrolled at and receive academic&#13;
credit from Parkside based on&#13;
evaluations performed by WCLA ·&#13;
staff and faculty in Washington&#13;
and facilitated by Parkside's&#13;
faculty liaison with WCLA,.&#13;
Most interns are juniors or&#13;
seniors, but some sophomores&#13;
have participated in the&#13;
Washington . intern program to&#13;
date. Placements are available in&#13;
a wide range of interests and are&#13;
appropriate for majots in most&#13;
disciplines. Students who are&#13;
interested in pursuing the&#13;
possibility of an I internship in&#13;
Washington, D.C. should contact&#13;
Pernacciaro at Creenquist 313 or&#13;
call extension 2316 for more&#13;
information.&#13;
- The deadline for applying for&#13;
the Spring Semester program is .rNovember&#13;
1, 1977.&#13;
Shain-appointed Ma ison Chancellor&#13;
Irving Shain, Vice President&#13;
for academic affairs and provost&#13;
of the University of Washington&#13;
in Seattle, was named chancellor&#13;
of the UW-Madison campus by a&#13;
unanimous vote of the UW&#13;
Regents at their September&#13;
meeting. Shain, former vice&#13;
chancellor at the Madison&#13;
campus will succeed H. Edwin&#13;
Young who left in July to become&#13;
president of the 27 campus UW&#13;
System. Shain is no new comer&#13;
to the Madison campus, being a&#13;
23 year veteran of a distinguished&#13;
university. Shain's selec0&#13;
tion came as no surprise to most&#13;
UW ol:&gt;servers, but was still&#13;
capable of generafing excitement&#13;
upon announcement.&#13;
In remarks. made at a news&#13;
conference Shain gave his&#13;
approval for increased student&#13;
participation in the allocation of&#13;
student segregated fees and&#13;
looked forward to good relations&#13;
with the students of the&#13;
UW-Madison.&#13;
Two new vice chancellors&#13;
must be hired along with dealing&#13;
y,,ith the problems facing the&#13;
UW health sciences program.&#13;
- I&#13;
Labo~ Economics class i·~ unique&#13;
The students of UW-Parkside have an&#13;
opportunity that is unique on the undergraduate&#13;
level. Specifically, this campus offers a Bachelor's&#13;
Degree in Labor Economics.&#13;
You say, " so what." The "so what" of the matter is&#13;
simply this. Labor Economics, Industrial Relations&#13;
and Labor Relations are courses of study usually&#13;
pursued on a graduate level. The essence of Labor&#13;
Economics on this campus is essentially of a&#13;
practical nature. In addition to, it provides an&#13;
opportunity for a degree, provides an excellent&#13;
basis for entry into law school or graduate school,&#13;
and allows a student to get involved in realistic&#13;
projects related to union and management&#13;
relations. 1._E. (LE 330 is now conducting an organizing&#13;
campaign of LE 313 classes). For example,&#13;
members of one class represent a given union (in&#13;
this instance Precise Local 111 and the evening&#13;
class is I.W.W .) The members of another class&#13;
represent un-organized employees. Given a fact&#13;
situation and a free hand, Labor Management and&#13;
employ1;es embark on a campaign the ~ame as in a&#13;
"real life" situation. The Union " organizers" are&#13;
Bruce Kellogg and Elida Saenz. Elections will be&#13;
helg on October 13.&#13;
The guidance, instruction, an9 experience&#13;
provided by Mr. William Petrie both in class and in&#13;
specific projects provides his students with&#13;
applications, not just theory.&#13;
The LE 313 class is basically an introductory&#13;
course. But it gets students of all ages, experience,&#13;
and majors involved in an experience with a topic&#13;
that all can relate to.&#13;
Assistance / ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library of 7,000 topics.&#13;
All papers have been prepared by our&#13;
staff of professional writers to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1 .00 (air mail&#13;
po·stage) for the current edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
j EDUCATIONAL SYSTEMS&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916-E, I--,. I Los Angeles, Calif. 90025 1 ·&#13;
I Name ---------- I&#13;
We also provide original l Address ---------- I&#13;
research •• all fields. 1&#13;
. City____________ I&#13;
Thesis and dissertation I&#13;
assistance also available. I State ____ Zip - ----- I L----------~- ·-------------~&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU! -&#13;
Come Today SeeYours.&#13;
~-- quality conn-ercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990 &#13;
sports&#13;
Parkside's 1977 Soccer Team:&#13;
Front row, left to right: Mike Petrovic, Mike Olesen,&#13;
Chris Crowell, Chris Carter, Wilson Corley, Karl&#13;
Goetz, Dan Brieschke. Back row, left to right:&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson, Mike Boyajian, Steve&#13;
Christensen, Alex Burojevich, Joe Eisen, Niall&#13;
Power, Bob Stoewe, Earl Campbell, Jim Andresen,&#13;
lim Worden, Jack Landwehr-manager.&#13;
Irish soccer team shuts&#13;
out Parkside I 4-0&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
RANGER Staff&#13;
On Tuesday, October 4, the Parkside soccer team was defeated by&#13;
the University College of Dublin, Ireland by a score of 4-0.&#13;
Parkside played an almost completely defensive game, with only&#13;
four or five good drives toward Dublin's goal. The first goal came at&#13;
8: 10 of the first half, when Parkside's goalie was pulled out of the goal&#13;
to give the Irish a 1-0 lead. The second goal came with 10:26 left in&#13;
the half, after a pass from the outside corner to a center player, to&#13;
make the halftime score 2-0.&#13;
Two minutes into the second half, Dublin bombed in another goal,&#13;
and five minutes later gained its last point on a penalty kick after a&#13;
Parkside Foul.&#13;
Dublin's goal scorers were Fintan Drury, Colin Kearns, Pat McKeon,&#13;
and Martin Moron.&#13;
Though they lost, Parside's goalie, DanBrleschke, who returned for&#13;
the first time in three weeks after a partial shoulder separation, did a&#13;
fine job of saving many possible goals. Parkside just couldn't get its&#13;
offense working because Dublin kept its defense under constant&#13;
pressure.&#13;
"I was very impressed with their teamwork and their continuous&#13;
'running." said Coach Hal Henderson. "They have what r call a onetwo&#13;
touch on the ball, without a lot of dribbling. This game has&#13;
served as a good tuneup for this weekends (now last weekend's)&#13;
Chancellor's Cup match."&#13;
Parkside's record'going into the Cup is ~-4-o.Their two wins were&#13;
over Trinity College of Illinois 4-2, and atremendous "come from&#13;
behind" 4-3 victory over Rockford College, also from Illinois.&#13;
"Ihev just beat us to every ball," said Parkside goalie Brieschke&#13;
about the loss to the Irish ..&#13;
"They can shoot from anywhere." The Dublin players commented&#13;
in the same way, saying, "they were always playing too slow. Theywould&#13;
kick the ball away and lose control over it."&#13;
The University College of Dublin is finishing four week soccer tour&#13;
of the United States. They stayed in Kenosha till last Thursday, being&#13;
housed and fed by the Soccer Club and friends in the area. They left&#13;
for New Jersey to play the last two games of their tour.&#13;
The team consists of 24 players and four officials. They h~ a ~6&#13;
game schedule in the States, playing in _Florida, Cahfornta&#13;
Minneapolis, Wisconsin, and ending in New Jersey. .. ..&#13;
They were initially sponsored by World Cup Sports Clmtcs, which IS&#13;
the corporation for which Henderson works at summer soccer camps.&#13;
This connection brought them. to Parksi~. ".' "" ,&#13;
What were their impressions of the United States? Fantastic, It s&#13;
great," and "It's too big" were some of the replies. John Flynn of the&#13;
Dublin team commented that "Parkside's a lovely place, you have a&#13;
very attractive campus here."&#13;
Woinowski sets records&#13;
The UW-Parkside women's swim team opened its season on&#13;
October 4 at Carroll College in Waukesha and lost 34-74 to Carroll&#13;
and 47-64 to Ripon College. However fres~man Debbie Wojnowski&#13;
(St. Francis) set three ream records: 2:15.70 in the 200 Free, 1'1627 In&#13;
the 100 Fly, and 601.0 in the SOOFree which also set a poll record for&#13;
Carroll.&#13;
Other Parkside performances Included sophomore Sally Francis&#13;
(Racine Park) placing 1st against Ripon and 2nd against Carroll In the&#13;
50 Free (a personal best of :30.9) as well as 2nd's against both schools&#13;
in the 100 Free. Freshmen Mary Beth Mogensen (Kenosha Tremper)&#13;
placed 2nd against Carroll and 1st against Ripon in 1·meter diving,&#13;
while teammate Donna Peterson, a freshmen from Racine Case, took&#13;
3rd and 2nd in the diving event Another freshman from St. Francis&#13;
was LOWrieMelotik who placed 2nd in 50 and the 100 Breast against&#13;
both schools Freshman Maureen Graves (Kenosha Reuther) placed&#13;
3rd against both 10 the 50 Free, 3rd in the 100 Back, and 2nd vs Ripon&#13;
and 3rd vs Carroll In the 50 Back The 200 Free Relay of FranCIS,&#13;
Wojnowski, Melotik, and Craves placed 1st vs Ripon and 2nd vs&#13;
Carroll&#13;
"I am pleased with the meet as the team scored more POints&#13;
against Carroll than last year Our performances show the&#13;
improvement that I've been expecting from our practice workloads. I&#13;
am especially pleased With our divers, as they both have had to learn&#13;
a full complement of dives for the college COMpetition - notably&#13;
Mary Beth, who never dived before We are gearing for the&#13;
conference meet In November, and will continue to look for better&#13;
times and scores as individuals and the team points will come as a&#13;
result" Parkside travels to Creen Bay Saturday for a meet with&#13;
UW-Creen Bay and Lawrence University&#13;
Heiring is top yankee&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
RANGER Staff&#13;
Kenosha's Jim Heiring, former UW-P walker, was the first American&#13;
to finish in the Lugano Cup Walk held in England on September 24&#13;
and 25.&#13;
Out of a field of 48 of the world's best walkers Heinng came In 36th&#13;
with a time of 1:33:40, 26 seconds off hts all time best In the 20&#13;
kilometer walk. Daniel Bautista of Mexico, the fevcnte, won the Cup&#13;
with a time of 1.24:04.&#13;
"It was great," said Heiring of the walk. "It was a totally great&#13;
experience competing against the best walkers in the world and&#13;
getting to know them all personally To walk In the lugano Cup IS&#13;
bigger than the Olympics,"&#13;
The lugano Cup is sponsored by the Olympic Committee, AAU.&#13;
The United States took eleventh place In a field of 12 countries,&#13;
beating only Hungary.&#13;
~ UY UW-Parksl •• ;,rr S•• esllr Bl1lk&#13;
(;&#13;
Don't 8, A&#13;
Sourp... 1&#13;
IWEmll q,Al ..&#13;
10 ......&#13;
$299~~:··~&#13;
• Round Trip Jel Air&#13;
• 7 Nights lodging&#13;
• Ground Transfers&#13;
• Tour Escon&#13;
• Tips and TOllotS&#13;
For AppIiC:01ion &amp; informa,1on&#13;
(OfilTAcr. PARkSlOE UNION Om(ES&#13;
RM 209 CAU SSU200&#13;
'.,b... a....&#13;
I.ZII'&#13;
Thefiuteot~i"ll Premium Beer&#13;
tnA~&#13;
01 .., at Uli. s... .&#13;
filfj&#13;
~I_j&#13;
- -~&#13;
sports&#13;
Parkside's 1977 Soccer Team:&#13;
Front row, left to right: Mike Petrovic, Mike Olesen,&#13;
Chris Crowell, Chris Carter, Wilson Corley, Karl&#13;
Goetz, Dan Brieschke. Back row, left to right:&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson, Mike Boyajian, Steve&#13;
Christensen, Alex Burojevich, Joe Eisen, Niall&#13;
Power, Bob Stoewe, Earl Campbell, Jim Andresen,&#13;
Jim Worden, Jack Landwehr-manager.&#13;
Irish soccer team shuts . .&#13;
out Parkside, 4-0&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
RANGER Staff&#13;
On Tuesday, October 4, the Parkside soccer team was defeated by&#13;
the University College of Dublin, Ireland by a score of 4-0.&#13;
Parkside played an almost completely defensive game, with only&#13;
four or five good drives toward Dublin's goal. The first goal came at&#13;
8: 10 of the first half, when Parkside's goalie was pulled out of the goal&#13;
to give the Irish a 1-0 lead . The second goal came with 10:26 left in&#13;
the half, after a pass from the outside corner to a center player, to&#13;
make the halftime score 2-0.&#13;
Two minutes into the second half, Dublin bombed in another goal,&#13;
and five minutes later gained its last point on a penalty kick after a&#13;
Parkside Foul.&#13;
Dublin's goal scorers were Fint,3n Drury, Colin Kearns, Pat McKeon,&#13;
and Martin Moron .&#13;
Though they lost, Parside's goalie, Dan'Brieschke, who returned for&#13;
the first time in three weeks after a partial shoulder separation, did a&#13;
fine job of s,aving many possible goals . Parkside just couldn't get its&#13;
offense working because Dublin kept irs defense under constant&#13;
pressure.&#13;
"I was very impressed with their teamwork and their continuous&#13;
-runnirTg," said Coach Hal Henderson . " They have what I call a onetwo&#13;
touch on the ball, without a lot of dribbling. This game has&#13;
served as a good tuneup for this weekends (now last weekend's)&#13;
Chancellor's Cup match ." ,&#13;
Parkside's record'going into the Cup is ~-4-0. Their two wins were&#13;
over Trinity College of Illinois 4-2, and a' tremendous " come from&#13;
behind" 4-3 victory over Rockford College, also from Illinois.&#13;
"They just beat us to every ball," said Parkside goalie Brieschke&#13;
about the loss to the Irish . .&#13;
"They can shoot from anywhere." The Dublin players commented&#13;
in the same way, saying, "they were always playing too slow. They&#13;
would kick the ball away and lose control over it."&#13;
The University College of Dublin is finishing four week soccer tour&#13;
of the United States . They stayed in Kenosha till last Thursday, being&#13;
housed and fed by the Soccer Club and friends in the area. They left&#13;
tor New Jersey to play the last two games of their tour.&#13;
The team consists of 24 players and four officials . They ha? a '.6&#13;
game schedule in the States, playing in . Florida, California&#13;
Minneapolis, Wisconsin, and ending in New Jersey. . . . .&#13;
They were initially sponsored by World Cup Sports Clinics, which 1s&#13;
the corporation for which Henderson w~rks at summer soccer camps.&#13;
This connection brought them_ to Parks1~e. ,, . ,, ,, ,&#13;
What were their impressions of the United States? Fantastic, Its&#13;
great," and "It's too big" were some of the replies. John Flynn of the&#13;
Dublin team commented that "Parkside's a lovely place, you have a&#13;
very attractive campus here."&#13;
Woinowski sets records&#13;
The UW-Parkside women's swim team opened its season on&#13;
October 4 at Carroll College in Waukesha and lost 34-74 to Carroll&#13;
and 47-64 to Ripon College However fresh.man Debbie Wo1now ki&#13;
(St. Francis) set three team records· 2:15.70 in th 200 Free, 1 16 27 in&#13;
the 100 Fly, and 6·01 .0 in the 500 Free which also set a poll record for&#13;
Carroll.&#13;
Other Parkside performances included sophomore Sally Franci&#13;
(Racine Park) placing 1st against Ripon and 2nd against Carroll in the&#13;
50 Free (a personal best of 30 9) as well as 2nd's against both schools&#13;
in the 100 Free. Freshmen Mary Beth Mogensen (K nosha Tremper)&#13;
placed 2nd against Carroll and 1st against Ripon in 1-meter diving,&#13;
while teammate Donna Peter on, a freshmen from Racine Case, took&#13;
3rd and 2nd in the diving event Another freshman from St Francis&#13;
was Lowrie Melotik· who placed 2nd in 50 and the 100 Breast again t&#13;
both schools. Freshman Maureen Graves (Keno ha Reuther) placed&#13;
3rd against both in the 50 Free, 3rd in the 100 Back, and 2nd s Ripon&#13;
and 3rd vs Carroll in the 50 Back The 2 Free Relay of Francis,&#13;
Wojnowski, Melotik, and Graves placed 1st vs Ripon and 2nd vs&#13;
Carroll .&#13;
" I am pleased with the meet as the team scored more points&#13;
against Carroll than last year Our performances show the&#13;
improvement that I've been expecting from our practice workloads . I&#13;
am especially pleased with our divers, as they both have had to learn&#13;
a full complement of dives for the college cor,petition - notabl&#13;
Mary Beth, who never dived before We are gearing for the&#13;
conference meet an ovember, and will continue to look for better&#13;
times and scores as ind1v1duals and the team point will com as a&#13;
result " Parkside travels to Green . Bay Saturday for a m t with&#13;
UW-Green Bay and Lawrence Univers1t&#13;
Heiring is top yankee&#13;
by Alane Andresen&#13;
RANGER Staff&#13;
Kenosha's Jim Heiring, former UW-P walker, was the first Am rican&#13;
to finish in the Lugano Cup Walk held in England on Sept mb r 24&#13;
and 25.&#13;
Out of a field of 48 of the world's best walkers Heiring cam in 36th&#13;
with a time of 1:33 ·40, 26 seconds off his all tIm best m the 20&#13;
kilometer walk Daniel Bautista of Mexico, the favorite, won the up&#13;
with a time of 1 24.04&#13;
" It was great," said Heiring of the walk. " It was a totall gr at&#13;
experience competing against the best walkers in the world and&#13;
getting to know them all personally To walk in the Lugano Cup i&#13;
bigger than the Olympics "&#13;
The Lugano Cup Is sponsored by the 01 mpic Comm1tt , AAU&#13;
The United States took eleventh place in a field of 12 countne ,&#13;
beating only Hungary&#13;
Don't Be A&#13;
Sourpuss I&#13;
SWEETEN UP AT. ..&#13;
10 ••-4f•&#13;
Publ~• U1I••&#13;
81111,&#13;
,U UW-Parkside&#13;
7i7fT Se ester Break&#13;
Jan. 6-13, 1978 ,.299 Complete based&#13;
.. on 2 to o room&#13;
• Round Trip Jet Air&#13;
• 7 Nights Lodging&#13;
• Ground Tronsfers&#13;
• Tour Escort&#13;
• Tips and Tolles&#13;
For Apphc:011on &amp; lnformol,on&#13;
CONTACT PARKSIOE UNION OFFICES&#13;
RM 209 (:AU: SSJ-2200&#13;
Tile fastest-growin~ Premium Beer&#13;
in America. &#13;
events&#13;
Comedian Williams to appear here&#13;
- Mike Williams will be&#13;
appearing at Parkside on Oct. ~5.&#13;
Who is Mike Williams? Mike&#13;
Williams is a comedian,&#13;
musician and ,song-writer, singer&#13;
from Greensboro N.C. who has&#13;
a wide range in voice as well as&#13;
a 12 string guitar. Mike is steadily&#13;
PSGA election&#13;
October 19 a~d 20.&#13;
Wednesday, October 12&#13;
Coffeehouse Barry Drake of the Kenosha area plays&#13;
in Union 104-106. Free. Wine will be served. From&#13;
2-5. .&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Waukesha Tech Institute at 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film Alexander's Ragtime Band starring Don Ameche&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. For reservations call Rondelle,&#13;
554-2154.&#13;
Thursday, October 13&#13;
Health Line Learn all about aspirin. Call 1383.&#13;
Anthro Club Fieldtrip to ethnohistory meetings.&#13;
Must sign up in CL 270 on October 13, 14, and 15.&#13;
Transportation provided by Anthro Club.&#13;
Friday, October 14&#13;
Movie What's Up Tiger Lily. Union Cinema at 8 p.m.&#13;
Admission $1.00. Also playing on Sunday; October&#13;
16 at 7;30. "&#13;
Monday, October 17 ,&#13;
Movie My Little Chickadee. 2:30 and 7:30 at Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Tuesday, OCtober 18&#13;
Coffeehouse Features James Mapes in Union&#13;
104-106. Admission Charged. Wine will be served.&#13;
Fim The Magnificent Amersons starring Orson&#13;
Welles at 7:00 p.m. For reservations call Rondelle&#13;
554-2154. Free.&#13;
Movie The Bank Dick at 7:30 in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Wednesday, October 19&#13;
PSGA Election will be held in Main Place.&#13;
Education Speaker, Donna Ullman from SWEA.&#13;
Everyone welcome. 1:30 in CL .113 and 7:30 in&#13;
CL D-128. Contact Shirley Kersey for more information.&#13;
Thursday, October 20&#13;
PSGA Election will be held in Main Place.&#13;
Saturday, October 22&#13;
Concert Featuring the matrix Jazz Night Club. 9:00&#13;
p.m. in the Union Square. Admission will be&#13;
charged.&#13;
Events must be turned into the Ranger Office by no&#13;
later than Wednesday at 4:30.&#13;
Anyone interested in Debate and Forensics should&#13;
come to Comm Arts room 258 at 2;00 p.m. any&#13;
Friday. If this time conflicts with your schedule, call&#13;
Professor Weaver at 553-2420.&#13;
gaining popularity in the&#13;
Southwest. Songs like "Dumb&#13;
Azz Texas" and "The Donut&#13;
Man" have received much air&#13;
play. .&#13;
Mike's humor ranges from the&#13;
silly to the, shall we say ribald?&#13;
Risque? Obscure? He's one of&#13;
those people who doesn't take&#13;
anything seriously, and has&#13;
strives that are guaranteed to&#13;
keep you laughing for hours.&#13;
Appearing with Mike Williams&#13;
will be Randy Steger. When&#13;
you've missed Mike Williams&#13;
new concept of Picki nand&#13;
Grinnin, you've missed quite an&#13;
act.&#13;
Tickets are available in the&#13;
Union Information Center.&#13;
classified&#13;
For Sale - 1973 Monte carlo, gold with&#13;
black vinyl tee. Excellent condition, 52000&#13;
or best offer. 652-5049, ask for Tom,&#13;
For Sale - lrtsh Setter puppies, S56.&#13;
654-3810 or 654-8383, 2008 81st Street,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
For Sale - Four G60-14 tires on Keystone&#13;
chrome mags. 2000 miles, absOlutely&#13;
excellent condition. 633-1840.&#13;
For Sale - Saab 1972, auto, single owner,&#13;
low miles, best offer. 634-5620 after 5:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
For 811.. -1973 Vega. New ba.!tery, AM~FM&#13;
stereo. Call 658-2033 after 5.&#13;
Peru subject of ~'ecture&#13;
F D b ns a visiting professor ofanthropologv at..the&#13;
Dr. Henry . ~ y ', P kslde in 1974~75 and now at the U' itv of wtsconstn- ar&#13;
U~:~:~::ty of Florida-Gainesville, will present ~ ~est lectu~Jdat&#13;
Parkside on Wednesday, Oct. 12, at 7:30 p.m. In assroom g.&#13;
Room~107b·' .11talk on the Vices Project in Peru as an example of Dr Do yns WI . id d.&#13;
r .. I Dobyns spent two years In rest ence unng&#13;
~i~j~I;~s:~r~~~~~ t~;y ~roject and made an additional six visits to the&#13;
site etween . b 1963 and 1970 His talk sponsored by the Anthropology (1 . ,&#13;
Club.Ts free and open to the public.. .&#13;
- ts orestd t of the American SOCiety for Ethnohistorv. He Dobyns ISprest en. h's 25th annual&#13;
will deliver the presidential address at t e group&#13;
- meeting Oct. 13 through 15 in Chicago.&#13;
PAS FALL FILM SERIES&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
WOODY ALLEN&#13;
in one of his earlier films&#13;
,WHATS~UP TIGE~ LILY&#13;
Fri. Oct. 14, 8:00pm&#13;
s&#13;
Sun. Oct. 16, 7:30pm&#13;
UNION CINEMA $1.00&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD'S&#13;
PERFORMING ARTS AND&#13;
LECTURE PRESENTS&#13;
MATRIX&#13;
SlIII,/,,, Oil. It 9:00,.111.&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
$g. It" ,ni IJIIf "11' N,t", In,_nil ,&#13;
Adm: UW-P students in advance $1.50&#13;
Guests in advance $2.00&#13;
Everyone at the door $2.50&#13;
PA8 PRESENTS&#13;
WITH&#13;
RANDY STEGER&#13;
Sat. Oct. 15 8:00&#13;
UN/o,"l SQUARE&#13;
$LOO UWP Students&#13;
Sl,50 Guests&#13;
S2.00 At the door /&#13;
f ID'S REQUIRED&#13;
'--'""'""l'&amp;1~:W~~~~ .~"';;""'''__'''''''-':':''_'. J ~ . ... ~~€~&#13;
,..&#13;
Parkside Activities Board's Performing Arts&#13;
and Lecture Presents&#13;
JAMES J. MAPES&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 18 .7:30 p.m,&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
Adm: UW-P studen.ts $2.00 General $2.50&#13;
events&#13;
Peru subject of lecture&#13;
Dr. Henry F. Dobyns, a visiting professor of,anthropology at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside in 1974-75 and now at the&#13;
University of Florida-Gainesville, will present a guest lecture at&#13;
Parkside on Wednesday, Oct. 12, at 7:30 p.m . in Classroom Bldg.&#13;
Room 107. ·&#13;
Dr. Dobyns will talk on the Vicos Project in Peru as an example of&#13;
applied anthropology. Dobyns spent two years in residence during&#13;
field research for the project and made an additional six visits to the&#13;
site b~tween 1963 and 1970. His talk, sponsored by the Anthropology&#13;
Oub,' is free and open to the public.&#13;
Dobyns is president of the American Society for Ethnohistory. He&#13;
-will deliver the presidential address at the group's 25th annual&#13;
meeting Oct. 13 through 15 in Chicago.&#13;
Comedian Williams to appear here PAB FALL FILM SERIES&#13;
PRESENTS - Mike Williams will be&#13;
appearing at Parkside on Oct. 15.&#13;
Who is Mike Williams? Mike&#13;
Williams is a comedian,&#13;
musician and song-writer, singer&#13;
from Greensb~ro N .C. who has&#13;
a wide range in voice as well as&#13;
a 12 string guitar. Mike is steadily&#13;
PSGA election&#13;
October 19 and 20.&#13;
Wednesday, October 12&#13;
Coffeehouse Barry Drake of the Kenqsha area plays&#13;
in Union 104-106. Free. Wine will be served. From&#13;
2-5.&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Waukesha Tech Institute at 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film Alexander's Ragtime Ban_d starring_ Don Ameche&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. For reservations call Rondelle,&#13;
554-2154.&#13;
Thursday, October 13&#13;
Health Line Learn all about aspirin. Call 1383.&#13;
Anthro Club Fieldtrip to ethnohistory meetings.&#13;
Must sign up in CL 270 on October 13, 14, and 15.&#13;
Transportation provided by Anthro Club.&#13;
Friday, October 14&#13;
Movie What's Up Tiger Lily. Union Cinema at 8 p.m.&#13;
Admission $1.00. Also playing on Sunday ·October / ' 16 at 7:30.&#13;
Monday, October 17 ,&#13;
Movie My Little Chickadee. 2:30 and 7:30 at Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1 .00.&#13;
. Tuesday, October 18&#13;
Coffeehouse Features James Mapes in Union&#13;
104-106. Admission Charged. Wine will be served.&#13;
Fim The Magnificent Amersons starring Orson&#13;
Welles at 7:00 p.m. For reservations call Rondelle&#13;
554-2154. Free.&#13;
Movie The Bank Dick at 7:30 in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Wednesday, October 19&#13;
PSGA Election will be held in Main Place.&#13;
Education Speaker, Donna Ullman from SWEA.&#13;
Everyone welcome. 1:30 in Cl .113 and 7:30 in&#13;
CL D-128. Contact Shirley Kersey for more information.&#13;
&#13;
Thursday, October 20&#13;
PSGA Election will be held in Main Place.&#13;
Saturday, October 22&#13;
Concert Featuring the matrix Jazz Night Club. 9:00&#13;
p.m. in the Union Square. Admission will be&#13;
charged.&#13;
Events must be turned into the Ranger Office by no&#13;
later than Wednesday at 4:30.&#13;
Anyone interested in Debate and Forensics should&#13;
come to Comm Arts room 258 at 2:00 p.m. any&#13;
Friday. If this time conflicts with your schedule, call&#13;
Professor Weaver at 553-2420.&#13;
gaining popularity in the&#13;
Southwest. Songs like "Dumb&#13;
Azz Texas" and "The Donut&#13;
Man" have received much air&#13;
play.&#13;
Mike's humor ranges from the&#13;
silly to the, shall we say ribald?&#13;
Risque? Obscure? He's one of&#13;
those people who doesn't take&#13;
anything seriously, and has&#13;
strives that are guaranteed to&#13;
keep you laughing for hours.&#13;
Appearing with Mike Williams&#13;
will be Randy Steger. When&#13;
you've missed Mike Williams&#13;
new concept of Pickin and&#13;
Grinnirr, you've missed quite an&#13;
act.&#13;
Tickets are available in the&#13;
Union Information Center.&#13;
classified&#13;
For Sale - 1973 Monte Carlo, gold with&#13;
black vinyl top. Excellent condition. $2000&#13;
or best otter. 652-5049, ask for Tom.&#13;
For Sale - Irish Setter puppies, $50.&#13;
654-3810 or 654-8383. 2008 81st Street,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
WOODY ALLEN&#13;
in one of ~is earlier films - ,WHATS-UP TIGER LILY&#13;
Fri. Pct. 14, 8:00pm&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Sun. Oct. 16, 7:30pm&#13;
UNION CINEMA $1.00&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD'S&#13;
PERFORMING ARTS AND&#13;
LECTURE PRESENTS&#13;
MATRIX&#13;
Sal111i1y, 011. Zt 9:00 p.111.&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
For Sale - Four G60-14 tires on Keystone&#13;
chrome mags. 2000 miles, absolutely&#13;
excellent condition. 633-1840. Sa• 1100 and /Jllf 11111 H1kn1 In a""6n11 , For Sale - Saab 1972, auto, slngIe owner&#13;
low miles, best offer. 634-5620 after 5:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Adm: UW-P students in advance $1.50&#13;
Guests in advance $2.00&#13;
Everyone at the door $2.50 ForSele-1973 Vega. New battery, AM-FM&#13;
stereo. Call 658-2033 after 5.&#13;
,..&#13;
Parkside&#13;
PAB PRESENTS&#13;
WITH&#13;
RANDY STEGER&#13;
Sot. Oct. 15&#13;
UNIO,"&#13;
I -~&#13;
Activities Board's Performing&#13;
and Lecture Presents&#13;
Arts&#13;
JAMES J. MAPES&#13;
Tuesday, Oct •. 18 .7:30-p.m.&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
Adm : Uv\'-P stud en.ts $2. oo&#13;
General $2.50&#13;
. </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68614">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 6, issue 7, October 12, 1977</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68615">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68616">
                <text>1977-10-12</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68619">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68620">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="68621">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68622">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68623">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68624">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68625">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68626">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="68627">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1021">
        <name>academic staff committee</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1020">
        <name>carlos montoya</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="963">
        <name>chancellor alan guskin</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2852">
        <name>fires</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="222">
        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2814" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3427">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/271dd866269032d6743c3422bb2a4120.pdf</src>
        <authentication>3f85a512d2e221d81ebff76f0470d8b7</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66518">
              <text>Nobel Prize winner to speak at Parkside&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66519">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 6</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66520">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90032">
              <text>Nobel Prize&#13;
winner to speak&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
Dr. Severo Ochoa, winner of&#13;
the 1959 Nobel Prize in physiology&#13;
and medicine, will speak&#13;
on the regulation of protein&#13;
synthesis, including its relationship&#13;
to cancer drug research, at 2&#13;
p.m. on Friday, Oct. 7, in&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Ochoa currently is a distinguished&#13;
member of the Roche&#13;
Institute of Molecular Biology in&#13;
Nutley, New Jersey.&#13;
He won the Nobel laureate for&#13;
the biosynthesis of ribonucieic&#13;
acid (RNA), the substance basic&#13;
to the formation of macromolecules&#13;
including proteins&#13;
and hormones. That study, and&#13;
much of his subsequent work,&#13;
deals with the identification andsynthesis&#13;
of chemical components&#13;
of the genetic code, which&#13;
determines heredity.&#13;
Ochoa is the author of almost&#13;
500 papers published in&#13;
professional and scholarly journals.&#13;
He received his M. D. degree&#13;
from the University of Madrid in&#13;
his native Spain and did postdoctoral&#13;
research at several&#13;
other European institutions.&#13;
Ochoa holds 19 honorary&#13;
doctoral degrees, including the&#13;
doctor of humane letters, from&#13;
institutions in the U.S., Europe&#13;
and South America.&#13;
He is a fellow of the American&#13;
Academy for the Advancement&#13;
of Science and the American&#13;
Academy of Arts and Sciences&#13;
and is a member of a number of&#13;
other scientific societies around&#13;
the world including the&#13;
Academy of Sciences of the&#13;
U.S.S.R. He served for six years&#13;
as president of the international&#13;
Union of Biochemistry.&#13;
His free public lecture is&#13;
sponsored by the Parks ide&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee&#13;
and the Life Science Club.&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday,Oclober5,1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No.6&#13;
17 17 If you stop to think about it ()()&#13;
l)O when you are playing, the V V&#13;
spirit disappears.&#13;
-C.rlos Montoy.&#13;
food contract renewed&#13;
without student input&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
When the Sagafood service contract for the Union was renewed on&#13;
June 1 of this year, the Union Operating Board (UOB) was not&#13;
notified so that it could provide student input for or against the&#13;
renewal.&#13;
. Rick Folsom, who was chairman of the UOB last year, said the&#13;
board decided in February to form a subcommittee to deal with the&#13;
food contract renewal. Folsom said Bill Niebuhr, Director of Student&#13;
Life-Union, neglected to contact the sUbcomm~~te.ewhen the&#13;
administration. decided to renew th~ co~tract. NIebuhr ,~ever&#13;
contacted anyone about participating In, the re~ewa,l: .he&#13;
complained to RANGER, and charged Niebuhr with. . taking&#13;
advantage of the UOB during its weakest _m~~ent - during the&#13;
-summer." The contract was renewed for an additional year on June 1.&#13;
Doug Edenhauser,the current chairman of the UOB, told RANGER&#13;
that Niebuhr didn't notify him, either. "I received I.etters on other&#13;
subjects at my home, including some letters fro~ hl~, so he kn~w&#13;
where to send any notices for me." The PS~A offlc: drd not receive&#13;
ti either according to Rusty Smith, president. (See PSGA any no ICe, ,&#13;
CONTACT in this RANGER for her comments.)&#13;
I&#13;
id th t PSGA took a"'survey last year, and the results Fa som sal a . . f d . h h&#13;
. d· d h t t that time the students were dtssat!s Ie Wit t e&#13;
In reate t a a '&#13;
/&#13;
service. "People were getting dcwnrtght vulgar In their comments&#13;
about the pnces and the quality of the food:' he said Niebuhr&#13;
countered that "several questions were asked in a fashion that&#13;
couldn't be properly interpreted:' and that "we could have&#13;
terminated the Sagacontract this year if there had been good reason&#13;
to."&#13;
Niebuhr did say that he won't renew a contract again Without&#13;
student input. "In the future I'd say this wouldn't be done The Saga&#13;
conuact is eligible for another one-veer extension on next June&#13;
"This year it's my hope to have a food service subcommittee of the&#13;
UOB which would be a standing committee:' Niebuhr said, claiming&#13;
that if the UOB had been organized, this wouldn't have happened&#13;
"I'd say the UOB was kind'Of loose in Its first year of existence They&#13;
spend their time putting out little fires, and a standing food service&#13;
committee was not set up"&#13;
Yet Folsom claims the UOB did just that, appointing John Stewart&#13;
as chairman.&#13;
At any rate, the UOB voted unammouslv at its last meeting to&#13;
create a food service committee Two members were appomted: Rick&#13;
Folsom and Terry Zuehlsdorf&#13;
In other UOB business, the board unanimously re-elected Doug&#13;
Edenhauser as chairman The Saga contract is eligible for another&#13;
one-year extension on next June I&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
Nobel Prize&#13;
winner to speak&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
Dr. Severo Ochoa, winner of&#13;
the 1959 Nobel Prize in physiology&#13;
and medicine, will speak&#13;
on the regulation of protein&#13;
synthesis, including its relat ionship&#13;
to cancer drug research, at 2&#13;
p.m. on Friday, Oct. 7, in&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Ochoa currently is a distinguished&#13;
member of the Roche&#13;
Institute of Molecular Biology in&#13;
Nutley, New Jersey.&#13;
He won the Nobel laureate for&#13;
the biosynthesis of ribonucieic&#13;
acid (RNA), the substance basic&#13;
to the formation of macromol&#13;
ec ul es inc ludi ng proteins&#13;
and hormones. That study, and&#13;
much of his subsequent wor ,&#13;
deals with the identification and&#13;
synthesis of chemical components&#13;
of the genetic code, which&#13;
determines heredity.&#13;
Ochoa is t he author of almost&#13;
500 papers published in&#13;
profession al and scholarly journals.&#13;
&#13;
He received his M .D. degree&#13;
from the University of Madrid in&#13;
his native Spain and did postdoctoral&#13;
research at several&#13;
other European i nstitutions .&#13;
O choa hold s 19 honorary&#13;
doctoral degrees, including the&#13;
doctoT of humane letters, from&#13;
institutions in the U.S., Europe&#13;
and South America.&#13;
He is a fellow of the American&#13;
Academy for the Advancement&#13;
of Science and the American&#13;
Academy of Arts and Sciences&#13;
and is a member of a number of&#13;
other scientific societies around&#13;
the world includ ing the&#13;
Academ y of Sciences of the&#13;
U.S.S.R. He s e for s· rs&#13;
as president of the international&#13;
Union of Biochemistry.&#13;
His free public lecture is&#13;
spo nsored by the Parksi de&#13;
Lecture and Fi ne Arts Committee&#13;
and the Life Science Club.&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday, October 5, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 6&#13;
17 17 If you stop to think about 1t ()()&#13;
l)l) when you are playing, the l/ l/&#13;
spirit disappears.&#13;
-Car1os Montoya&#13;
food contract renewed&#13;
without student input&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
When the Saga food service contract for the Union was renewed on&#13;
June 1 of this year, the Union Operating Board (UOB) was not&#13;
notified so that it could provide student input for or against the&#13;
renewal . . Rick Folsom, who was chairman of the UOB last year, said the&#13;
board decided in February to form a subcommittee to deal with the&#13;
food contract renewal. Folsom said Bill Niebuhr, Director of Student&#13;
Life-Union neglected to contact the subcommittee when the&#13;
administration_ decided to renew the contract . " Niebuhr never&#13;
contacted anyone about participating in, the re~ewa!_,'' _he&#13;
complained to RANGER, and charged Niebuhr with . taking&#13;
advantage of the UOB during its weakest .m?ment - during the&#13;
summer." The confract was renewed for an add1t1onal year on June 1.&#13;
Doug Edenhauser, the current chairman of th~ UOB, told RANGER&#13;
that Niebuhr didn't notify him, either. " I received l_etters on other&#13;
subjects at my home, including some letters fron:1 him, so he kn~w&#13;
where to send any notices for me." The PS~A off1c~ did not receive&#13;
any notice, either, accord ing to Rusty Smith, president. (See PSGA&#13;
CONT ACT in thi s RANGER for her comments .)&#13;
I ·d th t PSGA took survey last year, and the results Fo som sa1 a d. . f. d . h th · d . d h t t that time the students were 1ssat 1s 1e wit e in 1cate t a a ,&#13;
service " People were getting downright vulgar in th ir comment&#13;
about the prices and the quality of the food .'' he aid I buhr&#13;
countered that several que t1ons were a k d in a fashion that&#13;
couldn't be properl interpreted," and that " w could hav&#13;
terminated the Saga contract this ear 1f there had b n good r ason&#13;
to "&#13;
iebuhr did say that he won t renew a contract again without&#13;
student input " In the future I'd say this wouldn't be done . The aga&#13;
conuact is eligible for another one-year e tension on next Jun&#13;
"This year it's my hope to have a food service subcommittee of the&#13;
UOB which would be a standing committee," 1ebuhr said, claim in&#13;
that 1f the UO B had been organized, this wouldn't ha e happened&#13;
" I'd sa the UOB was kindof loose in its first ear of existence The&#13;
spend their time putting out little fires, and a standing food erv1ce&#13;
committee was not set up."&#13;
Yet Folsom claims the UOB did Just that, appointing John Stewart&#13;
as chairman .&#13;
At an rate, the UOB voted unanimous! at its last meeting to&#13;
create a food service comm ittee Two members were appointed Rick&#13;
Folsom and Terry Zuehlsdorf&#13;
In other UOB business, the board unai:i1mousl re-elected Doug&#13;
Edenhauser as chairman The Saga contract is eligible for another&#13;
one-year extension on next June I &#13;
. i&#13;
editorial&#13;
/&#13;
Tlte administration&#13;
~andyou&#13;
) After registration, most students rarely have an&#13;
opportunity to do business with administrators.&#13;
This tends to limit a student's understanding of&#13;
how administrative procedures work at Parkside.&#13;
If a student has a problem in class; most likely&#13;
the problem will be resolved with the professor.&#13;
Even a problem with financial- aids or student&#13;
records will be handled by mid-level&#13;
administrators or secretaries. The common&#13;
student rarely meets the folks at the top. Most&#13;
students never meet the Chancellor until&#13;
graduation.&#13;
There are people who receive a good deal of&#13;
money to make decisions students have to live&#13;
with including, but not limited to, parking,&#13;
shuttle buses, and paperwork procedures.&#13;
Administrators of 'any campus as well as&#13;
corporate leaders possess g.reat power to effect&#13;
change in their respective institutions. This&#13;
power is centralized by having special&#13;
information relating to time and circumstances&#13;
that is not available to their constituents. It is the&#13;
business of this newspaper to dig up and decode&#13;
as much of this information as possible and to.&#13;
make it available to everyone.&#13;
Student sentiment and attitudes are&#13;
represented by student government. Views of&#13;
anyone at Parkside can be reproduced in the mass&#13;
media through a letter to the editor of Ranger as&#13;
long as they are typed, double spaced; signed&#13;
and under three pages in length.&#13;
/ Is everybody happy? Remember, just&#13;
complaining and mumbling about shuttle buses&#13;
or parking problems is just as good as having no&#13;
opinion at all. We know there are a lot of unhappy&#13;
people out there. Rang9r. encourages you to&#13;
speak out. Occasionally, an administrator will&#13;
read the newspaper and develop some idea of&#13;
what students are thinking. Ranger knows .the&#13;
Chancellor and his associates read the paper&#13;
because they know it gets sent all over the state&#13;
of Wisconsin. The Board of Regents all get a: copy&#13;
and they are interested in what students think on&#13;
the campuses they govern.. r&#13;
The University of Wisconsin System is known&#13;
for its self governance among faculty. The faculty&#13;
senate will be making a decision on the fate of the&#13;
proposed breadth requirement (required courses&#13;
for graduation) and the academic advising·&#13;
proposal (credit limit for undecided undergraduates&#13;
and the assignment of an area of study as&#13;
well as an assigned faculty advisor earlier in their&#13;
education). The' student gov~rnment will be&#13;
following these proposals by assigning students&#13;
to committees that will formulate upcoming&#13;
policies. . -&#13;
The administration holds up in the "penthouse"&#13;
above Main Place. They arE!'quite content to' do&#13;
what they feel is best for everyone. It is up to you&#13;
to insure they have the right student input. Speak&#13;
up or be lead quietly.&#13;
Parkside's administrators are not a bad bunch.&#13;
A good number of them went to the fine~t schools&#13;
in the east. They have to really mess up to get flak&#13;
from central adrntnlstratton. So, if you have an&#13;
opinion or a problem and can't solve it at your&#13;
level, get in touch with a senator from student&#13;
" .&#13;
government or the editor of Ranger. Those&#13;
administrators might have considerably more&#13;
credentials than we lOWlyundergraduates do, but&#13;
everyone kn.0wsthat they don't know as rtiuch.as&#13;
we do at the front.&#13;
~al\~eris wr!lten &amp;.ndedited by students of the&#13;
Un.lverslty 01 W Isconsu\·Pit.rkside and they are sol I&#13;
respon.sible for its editorial polley and content.e&#13;
y ,&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Han.sen. deft Prostko, Kim. Wun.sch,&#13;
Kat Hermaan, Chris Ratcks, Ma.rc~ Vlach.&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingsto" 55:3.2295&#13;
Genera! Mn"ager Thomas R. Cooper 55:3.2287&#13;
Copy Editor doh" R. McKloskey&#13;
Ne:w$ Editor Diane d'.,len.sky&#13;
Circuta tion Maf\ager Karen Putman&#13;
. Sales Manager doh" Gabriel 553.2287&#13;
Retail Advertising Manager Ke" Larse" 55:3.2287&#13;
Ran.ger Newspaper, University 01 Wisconsin ..Pukside&#13;
K.enosha. Wisconsin 53141&#13;
• Subscriptiol\S: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
•&#13;
editorial I&#13;
\ I&#13;
,'&#13;
. The· administration·&#13;
~and you&#13;
After registration, most students rarely have an&#13;
opportunity to do business with administrators.&#13;
This tends to limit a student's understanding of&#13;
how administrative procedures work at Parkside.&#13;
If a student has a problem in class,- most likely&#13;
,the problem will be resolved with the professor.&#13;
Even a problem with financial~ aids or student&#13;
records will be nandled by mid-level&#13;
administrators or secretaries. The common&#13;
student rarely meets the folks at the top. Most&#13;
students never meet the Chancellor until&#13;
graduation.&#13;
There are people who receive a good deal of&#13;
money to make decisions students have to live&#13;
with including, but nor limited to, parking,&#13;
shuttle buses, and paperwork procedures.&#13;
Administrators of ·any campus as well as&#13;
corporate leaders possess great power to effect&#13;
change in their respective institutions. This&#13;
power is centralized by having special&#13;
information relating to time and circumstances&#13;
that is not available to their constituents. It is the&#13;
business of this newspaper to dig up and decode&#13;
as much of this information as possible and to.&#13;
make it available to everyone.&#13;
Student sentiment and attitudes are&#13;
represented by student government. Views of&#13;
anyone at Parkside can be reproduced in the mass&#13;
media through a letter to the editor of Ranger as&#13;
long as they are typed, double spaced,, signed&#13;
and· under three pages in length.&#13;
Is everybody happy? Remember, just&#13;
complaining and mumbling about shuttle buses&#13;
or parking problems is just as good as having no&#13;
opinion at all. We know there are a lot of unhappy&#13;
people out there. Ranger -encourages you to&#13;
speak out. Occasionally, an administrator will&#13;
read the newspaper and develop some idea of&#13;
what students are thinking. Ranger knows .the&#13;
Chancellor and his associates read the paper&#13;
because they know it gets sent al I over the stat~&#13;
of Wisconsin. The Board of Regents al I get a copy&#13;
arid they are interested in what students think on&#13;
the campuses they govern. ,&#13;
The University of Wisconsin System is known&#13;
for its self governance among faculty. The faculty&#13;
senate will be making a decision on th·e fate of the&#13;
proposed breadth requirement (required courses&#13;
for graduation) and the academic advising ·&#13;
proposal (credit limit for undecided undergraduates&#13;
and the assignment of an area of study as&#13;
.well as an assigned faculty advisor earlier.in their&#13;
education). The· student gov~rnment will be&#13;
following these proposals by assigning students&#13;
to committees that will formulate upcoming&#13;
policies. · -&#13;
The administration holds up in the "penthouse"&#13;
above Main Place. They are' quite content to, do&#13;
what they feel is best for everyone. It is up to you&#13;
to insure they have the right student input. Speak&#13;
up or be lead quietly.&#13;
Parkside's administrators are not a bad bunch.&#13;
A good number of them went to the fine~t schools&#13;
in the east. They h~ve to really mess up to get flak&#13;
from central_ administration. So, if you h~ve an&#13;
opinion or a problem and can't solve it at · your&#13;
l~vel, get in touch with a senator from student&#13;
government or the editor c;&gt;f Ranger. Those&#13;
administrators might have considerably more&#13;
credentials th~n we lowly undergraduates do, but&#13;
everyone knows that they don't know as much. -as&#13;
we do at the front.&#13;
~an~er is wr?tten a_nd edited by students of the&#13;
Un1vers1ty of W 1scons1n-Parkside and they are sol I&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.e Y '&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen, Jeff Prostko, Kun Wunsch,&#13;
Kat Hermann, Chris Ratcks, Marcia Vlach.&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 55.3-2295&#13;
Gen.era{ Ml\n.ager Thomas R. Cooper 553-2287&#13;
Co~y Editor John R. McKloskey&#13;
News Editor Diane Jalensky&#13;
Circulation Manager Karen Putman&#13;
Sales Manager John Gabriel 553-2287&#13;
Retail Advertising Manager Ken Larsen 553-2287&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141 • Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
f&#13;
.., . &#13;
news Participants may&#13;
partake in the following physical&#13;
events Fitness improvement&#13;
program begins&#13;
By Diane lillensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Cyclin,&#13;
500 mile club&#13;
1000 mile club&#13;
louin,&#13;
100 mile club&#13;
500 mile club&#13;
1000mile club&#13;
Swimminl&#13;
so mile club&#13;
100 mile club&#13;
500 mile club&#13;
-,&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
The University of wisconstnParks&#13;
ide physical fitness improvement&#13;
program encourages&#13;
students faculty and staff to&#13;
participate in the program's&#13;
aerobic (respiratory fitness)&#13;
activities such as swimming,&#13;
cycling and jogging.&#13;
The program's primary objective&#13;
is to improve the&#13;
cardio-respiratory fitness of the&#13;
individual.&#13;
Requirements for each category&#13;
must be met to qualify in&#13;
these various events. Participants&#13;
active in the jogging club&#13;
must record not less than one&#13;
mile or exceed the limit of ten&#13;
miles each day. Swimmers must&#13;
record at least \4 mile and&#13;
cyclists are required to ride more&#13;
than 2.5 miles but not exceed 50&#13;
miles a day. Students enrolled in&#13;
jogging and swimming physical&#13;
education classes may count&#13;
exercises during class time&#13;
towards the program, provided&#13;
minimum distances are covered.&#13;
Awards will be administered to&#13;
those individuals who have met&#13;
the required standards. Approximately&#13;
50 lettered t-shirts will be&#13;
awarded to the first participants&#13;
qualifying. All qualifiers will&#13;
receive certificates for their&#13;
endeavor in the program.&#13;
In addition, the American Red&#13;
Cross "Swim and Fit" program&#13;
will offer additional awards upon&#13;
logging, 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50&#13;
miles. These swimmers will&#13;
recceive wallet-sized certificates.&#13;
An emblem and pin may&#13;
be purchased for those swimmers&#13;
who complete 50 miles.&#13;
Interested persons may obtain&#13;
an appointment to test their&#13;
body composition, blood pressure&#13;
and resting pulse rate&#13;
through the Human Performance&#13;
Lab with Coordinator Sue&#13;
Tobachnik at extension 2318 or&#13;
2519.&#13;
PARKSIOE&#13;
FOOD&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
Committee input&#13;
deliberately avoided&#13;
RANGER&#13;
GLASS&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, PSGA&#13;
"-&#13;
last year, students were directly involved in the decision to extend&#13;
Follett Corporatioji's bookstore contract for only one year and to&#13;
begin investigations as to the possibilities of an alternative book&#13;
service here at Parkside. This right is guaranteed to students by&#13;
Merger law: "Students shall have primary responsibility for the&#13;
formulation and review of policies concerning student life, services&#13;
and interests."&#13;
This was not the case with the Saga food contract renewal. In fact,&#13;
student input was. deliberately avoided. .&#13;
On February 28, 1977 the Union Operating Board informed the&#13;
administration, via Mr. Bill Netbuhr. Director of Student&#13;
Life/Parkside Union, that it would form a committee specifically for&#13;
the purpose of reviewing Saga's contract which was up for renewal&#13;
june 1, 1977. The contract was renewed on May 1, 1977. The student&#13;
committee was never notified of discussions or included in any way;&#13;
a direct violation of student rights.&#13;
last week I spoke to Mr. O. Clayton Johnson, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Academic Support &amp; Student Services about this matter, but was&#13;
told that I would have to await the arrival of a new Dean of Student&#13;
life. This is a newly created position that has not yet been filled, and&#13;
until it is, the responsibility for what takes place in this area still lies&#13;
with Mr. Johnson and ultimately, of course, with the Chancellor.&#13;
More On The Parking Issue:&#13;
J am still receiving a number of complaints concerning this&#13;
semester's parking problems in the white lots. A number of students&#13;
who purchased white stickers are being forced to park in the red lots&#13;
due to the shortage of spaces in the Union and Communication Arts&#13;
lots. Though 'Security has put another bus in operation during the&#13;
busy morning hours, these students feel that they have a refund&#13;
coming and should be reissued the less expensive red stickers.&#13;
These lots were oversold to the tune of about 500 spaces. Ron&#13;
Brinkman, Director of Parks ide Security, has announced anyone&#13;
wanting a refund on their white parking sticker should come to the&#13;
Security offices in Tallent Hall. Red stickers may also be purchased&#13;
there.&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
IS LOOKING FOR A RETAIL ADYERTISING&#13;
MANAGER. PAID COMMISSION. INTERESTING&#13;
WORK FOR AN OUTGOING- PERSON.&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION,&#13;
CONTAO JOHN A. GABRIEL&#13;
AT TALLENT 294 OR CALL 553-2287.&#13;
• I&#13;
There will never be&#13;
enough writersl&#13;
P.A.B. invites you to&#13;
WINTER PARK&#13;
SKI FESTIVAL&#13;
._---_._----------~&#13;
NOW&#13;
OPEN!&#13;
I&#13;
• CONDOMINIUM LODGING&#13;
• 6 DAYS OF LIFT TICKETS&#13;
• PARTIES&#13;
• DANCES&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
$210&#13;
$137&#13;
Bus&#13;
For YOI Sweeiie ...&#13;
103m-4pm&#13;
UIION BAZAAR&#13;
Own Transportation&#13;
SIGN UP IN STUDENT UNION RM. 202&#13;
(DEADLINE NOVEMBER 18)&#13;
~._-._._----_.._--~&#13;
news&#13;
~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~===~~~~~~~·&#13;
g/!JC, w~~~d!~.~!&#13;
Committee input&#13;
deliberately avoided&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, PSGA&#13;
Last year, students were directly involved in the decision to extend&#13;
Follett Corporatio_n's bookstore contract for only one year and to&#13;
begin investigations as to the possibilities of an alternative book&#13;
service here at Parkside. This right is guaranteed to students by&#13;
Merger Law: "Students shall have primary responsibility for the&#13;
formulation and review of policies concerning student life, services&#13;
and interests."&#13;
This was not the case with the Saga food contract renewal. In fact,&#13;
student input was. deliberately avoided. ·&#13;
On February 28, 1977 the Union Operating Board informed the&#13;
administration, via Mr. Bill Neibuhr, Director of Student&#13;
Life/Parkside Union, that it would form a committee specifically for&#13;
the purpose of r-eviewing Saga's contract which was up for renewal&#13;
June 1, 1977. The contract was renewed on May 1, 1977 . The student&#13;
committee was never notified of discussions or included in any way;&#13;
a direct violation of student rights.&#13;
Last week I spoke to Mr. 0 . Clayton Johnson, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Academic Support &amp; Student Services about this matter, but was&#13;
told that I would have to await the arrival of a new Dean of Student&#13;
Life. This is a newly created position that has not yet been filled, and&#13;
until it is, the responsibility for what takes place in this area still lies&#13;
with Mr. Johnson and ultimately, of course, with the Chancellor.&#13;
More On The Parking Issue:&#13;
I am still receiving a number of complaints concerning this&#13;
semester's parking problems in the white lots . A number of students&#13;
who purchased white stickers are being forced to park in the red lots&#13;
due to the shortage of spaces in the Unio11 and Communication Arts&#13;
lots . Though ·Security has put another bus in operation during the&#13;
busy morning hours, these students feel that they have a refund&#13;
coming and should be reissued the less expensive red stickers .&#13;
These lots were oversold to the tune of about 500 spaces . Ron&#13;
Brinkman, Director of Parkside Security, has announced anyone&#13;
wanting a refand on their white parking sticker should come to the&#13;
Security offices in Tallent Hall. Red stickers may also be purchased&#13;
there.&#13;
Fitness improvement&#13;
program begins&#13;
By Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
physical fitness improvement&#13;
program encourages&#13;
stvdents, faculty and staff to&#13;
participate in the program's&#13;
aerobic (respi ratory fitness)&#13;
activities such as swimming,&#13;
cycling and jogging.&#13;
The program's primary objecti&#13;
ve is to improve the&#13;
cardio-respiratory fitness of the&#13;
individual.&#13;
Requirements for each category&#13;
must be met to qualify in&#13;
these various events. Participants&#13;
active in the jogging club&#13;
must record not less than one&#13;
mile or exceed the limit of ten&#13;
miles each day. Swimmers must&#13;
record at least ¼ mile and&#13;
cyclists are required to ride more&#13;
than 2.5 miles but not exceed 50&#13;
miles a day. Students enrolled in&#13;
jogging and swimming physical&#13;
education classes may count&#13;
exercises during class time&#13;
towards the program, provided&#13;
minimum distances are covered.&#13;
Awards will be administered to&#13;
those individuals who have met&#13;
the requ ired standards. Approximately&#13;
50 lettered t-shirts will be&#13;
awarded to the first participants&#13;
qualifying. All qualifiers will&#13;
receive certificates for their&#13;
endeavor in the program.&#13;
In addition, the American Red&#13;
Cross " Swim and Fit" program&#13;
will offer additional awards upon&#13;
logging, 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50&#13;
miles. These swimmers will&#13;
recceive wallet-sized certificates.&#13;
An emblem and pin may&#13;
be purchased for those swimmers&#13;
who complete 50 miles.&#13;
Interested persons may obtain&#13;
an appointment to test their&#13;
body composition, blood pressure&#13;
and resting pulse rate&#13;
through the Human Performance&#13;
Lab with Coordinator Sue&#13;
Tobachnik at extension 2318 or&#13;
2519.&#13;
Participants ma&#13;
partake in th following ph ,cal&#13;
e ents&#13;
Jogging&#13;
700 m,le club&#13;
500 mile club&#13;
1000 mile club&#13;
Swimmin&#13;
som,le club&#13;
700 m,/e club&#13;
SOOmtleclub&#13;
C cling&#13;
500 mile club&#13;
7 mile club&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
FOOD&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
RANGER&#13;
GLASS&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
IS LOOKING FOR A RETAIL ADVERTISING&#13;
MANAGER. PAID COMMISSION. INTERESTING&#13;
WORK FOR AN OUTGOING_ PERSON.&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION,&#13;
CONTACT JOHN A. GABRIEL&#13;
AT TALLENT 294 OR CALL 553-2287.&#13;
There ~ril never be&#13;
enough writers!&#13;
p.A.B. invites you to&#13;
------------------~&#13;
NOW&#13;
OPEN!&#13;
For You Sweeiie ...&#13;
10am-4pm&#13;
UNION BAZAAR&#13;
I&#13;
~-----------------·&#13;
¾~.-.~rP"--:&#13;
WINTER PAR·K&#13;
SKI&#13;
-W&#13;
FESTIVAL&#13;
INTER PARK COLORADO&#13;
~&#13;
JANUARY 2-8&#13;
• CONDOMINIUM LODGING&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• 6 DAYS OF LIFT TICKETS&#13;
• PARTIES&#13;
• DANCES&#13;
$210 Bus&#13;
s 137 Own Transportation&#13;
SIGN UP IN STUDENT UNION RM . 202&#13;
(DEADLINE NOVEMBER 18) &#13;
neWs&#13;
No transcripts for&#13;
bankrupt students&#13;
private school.&#13;
The case was brought by&#13;
former students who argued that&#13;
they were covered by the&#13;
Bankruptcy Act, - which "enjoints)&#13;
all creditors whose .debts&#13;
are discharged from, .. employing&#13;
any process to collect such&#13;
debts as personal liabilities of&#13;
the bankrupt." But the court&#13;
found no congressional intent or&#13;
legislative history to indicate the&#13;
act prohibits nonlegal, informal&#13;
ways of prompting the debtor to&#13;
pay up.&#13;
The case was remanded to US&#13;
District Court in Missouri for&#13;
dismissal.&#13;
[HED-CPS) - The Eighth US&#13;
Court of Appeal, has ruied that&#13;
col,leges may wit~hold tranSCripts&#13;
from former students who&#13;
have discharged their student&#13;
loans through bankruptcy.&#13;
The majority opinion in the&#13;
case, Girardier v. Webster&#13;
College (Missouri) said the&#13;
Bankruptcy Act does not bar&#13;
private colleges from refusing to&#13;
issue transcripts to students&#13;
whose loans were discharged in&#13;
bankruptcy. However, the question&#13;
of public-private does not&#13;
enter the case and no college&#13;
should have to furnish records to&#13;
such students be it a public or&#13;
The fastest-growing Premium Beer&#13;
In America;&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
THE&#13;
222&amp;-57th St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-9909&#13;
Adult enrollment&#13;
highest at UW-P the pared to 42 percent last year,&#13;
while the number of minority&#13;
students increased from 295 to&#13;
353 and now make up seven&#13;
percent of the student body.&#13;
The number of students from&#13;
Kenosha and Racine counties&#13;
also increased: 1,986 from&#13;
Kenosha, up from 1,906, and&#13;
2,700 from Racine, up from&#13;
2,6~9. UW-P also showed a&#13;
marked increase in Milwaukee&#13;
County students, as the&#13;
percentage- of the student body&#13;
from Kenosha or Racine counties&#13;
dropped slightly from 91 to 90&#13;
percent.&#13;
Final fall enrollment at Parkside&#13;
is 5,184, an increase of four&#13;
"percent over last fall's figure of&#13;
4,984. /&#13;
New students and transfers to&#13;
Parkside showed the greatest&#13;
increase. A total of 1,163 ~w&#13;
students registered, a nine&#13;
percent gain from the 1,072 in&#13;
1976. Transfer students to UW-P&#13;
increased 13 percent, from 561&#13;
to 636. _ -....&#13;
Continuing students at,UW-P&#13;
number 2,964, up slightly from&#13;
2,952 last year. The remaining&#13;
421 students are those who&#13;
previously attended UW-P but&#13;
did not attend last semester, a&#13;
five percent increase over&#13;
399 of 1976.&#13;
Adult enrollment up'&#13;
The prrce!1tage of part-time&#13;
students "and -those over age 25,&#13;
already the highest in the UW&#13;
System, increased again. Some&#13;
2,528 students-49 percent of&#13;
total enrollment- are attending&#13;
part-time, compared to 2,344 or&#13;
47 percent, I~st year. Those over&#13;
25 increased from 1,555 to 1,734&#13;
and now comprise 33 percent of&#13;
all students.&#13;
Women and minority students&#13;
also increased sign.ificantly.&#13;
Females now comprise 45 percent&#13;
of total enrollment com-&#13;
"Total reserved -&#13;
All 42 -&#13;
The available parking spaces&#13;
are approximately:&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Union lot - 490&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Comm. Arts lot - 440&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Tallent lot - 61&#13;
Total red available&#13;
Tallent lot - 361&#13;
Total red available&#13;
East lot - 910&#13;
Total spaces available&#13;
White - 991, Red - 1)71&#13;
Total - 2,262&#13;
Total Stickers Sold -&#13;
White - 1,506, Red - 1,681&#13;
Total - 3,187&#13;
Total oversell -&#13;
White - 515, Red - 407&#13;
Total - 922&#13;
Some conclusions to be made&#13;
from these statistics are, ,1) that&#13;
the situation is not as bad as it&#13;
has been made out to be. 2) that,&#13;
Parking sticker tally&#13;
- - '&#13;
shC)ws crowding&#13;
by Robert J. Hansen&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Parkside Security released the&#13;
parking sticker tally last week. As&#13;
of September 6, the total parking&#13;
sticker breakdown is as follows:&#13;
Total Annual white -&#13;
Students 606&#13;
Faculty 274&#13;
" Total semester white -&#13;
Students 626&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
Total annual red -&#13;
Students 65&#13;
Faculty 27&#13;
Total semester red -&#13;
Students 1, 589&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
Total annual green -&#13;
Students 55&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
Total semester green -&#13;
Students 830&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
given the fact that at some times&#13;
there are more classes scheduled&#13;
than at others, of course there&#13;
will be problems parking. 3) the,&#13;
institution of green parking&#13;
stickers and the amount of white&#13;
stickers to be used at night could&#13;
lead to a parking problem in the&#13;
early evenings. 4) the fact that&#13;
many red stickered cars use the&#13;
white areas illegally, thus taking&#13;
up many of the spaces that white&#13;
. stickered cars have paid for, also&#13;
adds to the problem.&#13;
To those few who have had to&#13;
park in red areas and feel that&#13;
they have been ripped off by&#13;
Security, Director Ronald Brinkman&#13;
said, "Security will be more&#13;
than happy to help these people&#13;
to gain a refund of their white&#13;
stickers for red ones." Further&#13;
complaints should be directed to&#13;
student government at 553-2244&#13;
or the RANGER at 553-2295.&#13;
!../fUNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PARKSlDE'S CARIBBEAN HOLIDAY&#13;
semester Break '78 - Jan. 6 tbm 13&#13;
includes&#13;
• Round TrIp Jet Via Air Jamaica • 7 Nfghts Lodging at 1st Class "Casa Montego"&#13;
• Ground Transfers • Tour Escort Throughout • Orientation Program&#13;
• All Taxes &amp; Gratatles (Except for $2.00 Jamaican Departure Tax)&#13;
CAREFUL. •• DON'T "JAMAICA" MISTAKE&#13;
(Theirs is $20 less - but why?)&#13;
• 1st Class Hotel in Mo-Bays Main Hotel Dlstrltl&#13;
• S~ort Walk to Shopping, Restaurants, Bars, Disco, Etc.&#13;
• Near M-Bays most popular Beach· "Dr's Cave"&#13;
• Scheduled Flights Via AIr Jamaica&#13;
• Tour Escort Throughout&#13;
• MInimum RequIred Deposit ($50 vs. $100)&#13;
For MorelDformation Contact Parkslde Union, Rm. 209or call: 353-2200&#13;
COMPLETE PRICE BASED&#13;
ON TWIN OCCUPANCY&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
TRIP&#13;
YES&#13;
YE~&#13;
YES&#13;
YES&#13;
YES&#13;
YES&#13;
THEIRS&#13;
NO&#13;
NO&#13;
NO&#13;
YES&#13;
NO&#13;
NO&#13;
news Adult enrollment&#13;
No transcripts for highest· at u·w-P&#13;
bankrupt students Final fall enrollment at Parkside&#13;
is 5,184, an increase of four&#13;
/percent over last fall's figure of&#13;
4,984. ,,&#13;
five percent increase over&#13;
399 of 1976.&#13;
Adult enrollment upthe&#13;
pared to 42 percent last year,&#13;
while the number of minority&#13;
students increased from 295 to&#13;
353 and now make up seven The p~rcentage of rart-time&#13;
students . ancl ·those over age 25,&#13;
already the highest in the UW&#13;
System, increased again. Some&#13;
2,528 students - 49 percent of&#13;
total enrollment- are attending&#13;
part-time, co,mpared to 2,344 or&#13;
47 percent, last year. Those over&#13;
25 increased from 1,555 to 1,734&#13;
and now comprise 33 percent of&#13;
all students.&#13;
[HED-CPS] - The Eighth US&#13;
Court of Appeal; has ruled that&#13;
colleges may wit~hold transcripts&#13;
from former students who&#13;
have discharged their student&#13;
loans through bankruptcy.&#13;
private school.&#13;
The case was brought by&#13;
former students who argued that&#13;
they were covered by the&#13;
Bankruptcy Act, - which "enjoin(s)&#13;
all creditors whose debts&#13;
are discharged . from .. . employing&#13;
any process to c~llect such&#13;
debts as personal liabilities of&#13;
the bankrupt." But the court&#13;
found no congressional intent or&#13;
legislative history to indicate the&#13;
act prohibits nonlegal, informal&#13;
ways of prompting the debtor to&#13;
pay up .&#13;
New students and transfers t9&#13;
Parkside showed the greatest&#13;
increase . A total of 1,163 ~w&#13;
students registered, a nine&#13;
percent gain from the 1,072 in&#13;
1976. Transfer students to UW-P&#13;
increased 13 percent, from 561&#13;
to 636. - ,&#13;
Continuing students at ,UW-P&#13;
number 2,964, up slightly from&#13;
2,952 last year. The remaining&#13;
421 students are those who&#13;
previously attended UW-P but&#13;
did not attend last semester, a&#13;
Women and minority students&#13;
also increased sign..ificantly .&#13;
Females now comprise 45 percent&#13;
of total enrollment com-&#13;
. percent of the student body.&#13;
The number of students from&#13;
Kenosha and Racine counties&#13;
also increased : 1,986 from&#13;
Kenosha, up from 1,906, and&#13;
2,700 from Racine, up from&#13;
2,6:39 . UW-P also showed a&#13;
marked increase in Milwaukee&#13;
County students, as the&#13;
percentage· of the student body&#13;
from Kenosha or Racine counties&#13;
dropped slightly from 91 to 90&#13;
percent.&#13;
The majority opinion in the&#13;
case, Girardier v. Webster&#13;
College (Missouri) said the&#13;
Bankruptcy Act does not bar&#13;
private colleges from refusing to&#13;
issue transcripts to students&#13;
whose loans were discharged in&#13;
bankruptcy. However, the question&#13;
of , public-private does not&#13;
enter the case and no college&#13;
should have to furnish records to&#13;
such students be it a public or&#13;
The case was remanded to US&#13;
District Court in Missouri for&#13;
dismissal. Parking sticker tally&#13;
The fastest-growing Pre~ium Beer&#13;
in America·.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
- - ,&#13;
shc,ws crowding&#13;
by Robert J. Hansen&#13;
Ra.nger Staff&#13;
Parkside Security released the&#13;
parking sticker tally last week. As&#13;
of September 6, the total parking&#13;
sticker breakdown is as follows:&#13;
Total Annual white -&#13;
Students 606&#13;
Faculty 274&#13;
,, Total semester white -&#13;
StudeRts 626&#13;
Faculty0&#13;
Total annual red -&#13;
Students 65&#13;
Faculty 27&#13;
Total semester red -&#13;
Students 1, 589&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
Total annual green -&#13;
Students 55&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
Total semester green -&#13;
Students 830&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
-Total reserved -&#13;
All 42 -&#13;
The available parking spaces&#13;
are approximately:&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Union lot - 490&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Comm. Arts lot - 440&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Tallent lot - 61&#13;
Total red available&#13;
Tallent lot - 361&#13;
Total red available&#13;
E,ast lot - 910&#13;
_ Total spaces available&#13;
White - 991, Red - 1,271&#13;
Total - 2,262&#13;
Total Stickers Sold -&#13;
White - 1,506, Red - 1,681&#13;
Total - 3,187&#13;
Total oversell -&#13;
White - 515, Red - 407&#13;
Total - 922&#13;
Some conclusions to be made&#13;
from these statistics a·re, 1) that&#13;
the situation is not as bad as it&#13;
has been made out to be. 2) that,&#13;
given the fact that at some times&#13;
there are more classes scheduled&#13;
than at others, of course there&#13;
will be problems parking. 3) thei&#13;
institution of green parking&#13;
stickers and the amount of white&#13;
stickers to be used at night could&#13;
lead to a parking problem in the&#13;
early evenings. 4) the fact that&#13;
many red stickered cars use the&#13;
white areas illegally, thus taking&#13;
up many of the spaces that white&#13;
· stickered cars have pai~ for, also&#13;
adds to the problem.&#13;
To those few who have had to&#13;
park in red areas and feel that&#13;
· they have been ripped off by&#13;
Security, Director Ronald Brinkman&#13;
said, "Security will be more&#13;
than happy to help these people&#13;
to gain a refund of their white&#13;
stickers for red ones." Further&#13;
complaints should be directed to&#13;
student government at 553-2244&#13;
or the RANGER at 553-2295.&#13;
tlfuNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE'S CARIBBEAN HOLIDAY&#13;
I'&#13;
COMPLETE PRICE BASED&#13;
ON TWIN OCCUPANCY&#13;
Semester Break '78 - Jan. 6 thru 13&#13;
includes&#13;
• Round Trip Jet Via Air Jamaica • 7 Nights Lodging at 1st Class "Casa Montego''&#13;
• Ground Transfers • Tour Escort Throughout • Orientation ProgFam&#13;
• All Taxes &amp; Graqitles (Except for $2.00 Jamaican Departure Tax)&#13;
CAREFUL ... DON'T "JAMAICA" MISTAKE&#13;
(Theirs is $20 less - but why?)&#13;
• 1st Class Hotel in Mo-Bays Main Hotel District&#13;
• S!1ort Walle to Shopping, Restaurants, Bars, Disco, Etc.&#13;
• Near M-Bays most popular Beach - "Dr's Cave"&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
TRIP&#13;
YES&#13;
YE&amp;.,&#13;
YES • Scheduled Flights Via Air Jamaica YES&#13;
• Tour Escort Throughout&#13;
• Minimum Required Deposit ($50 vs. $100)&#13;
YES&#13;
YES&#13;
For Morelnformation Contact Parkside Union, Rm. 209 or call: 353-2200&#13;
' -&#13;
THEIRS&#13;
NO&#13;
NO&#13;
NO&#13;
YES&#13;
NO&#13;
NO &#13;
•&#13;
mUSIc&#13;
Carlos Montoya is still amazing&#13;
photographs by Philip L. Livin¥ston&#13;
Reuiew by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
The world's most famous flamenco guitarist&#13;
performed to a sellout audience last Wednesday&#13;
night in Parkside's Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
to open this year's Accent on Enrichment&#13;
program. It was enough to make almost everyone&#13;
forget about Eugene Fodor.&#13;
At 73, Montoya still amazes audiences with his&#13;
speed, agility, and musicality. The neck of his&#13;
handmade Arcangel Fernandez guitar remains&#13;
tender to his total command. Montoya produces a&#13;
wide range of tonal timber and rhythmns at will;&#13;
with transitions ranging iTom subtle to violently&#13;
dramatic.&#13;
After his first two arrangements the audience&#13;
seemed to murmur in disbelief that he was going&#13;
to play that fast and furious all night.&#13;
Music of the Gypsies&#13;
Montoya plays the music of the Spanish&#13;
Gypsies. There is no written music to learn. Until&#13;
Montoya made it popular, no one bothered to&#13;
research its origins. There are few today who can&#13;
play his arrangements as well as he does and it&#13;
makes one wonder if any gypsies played as well as&#13;
he. .&#13;
The guitar is Montoya" life. He believes guitars&#13;
must be played and .irat is why he only owns four&#13;
guitars. When he accumulates too many. he sells&#13;
them. The one he plays currently is his favorite.&#13;
He uses it for recording, practicing, and&#13;
performing. A few years ago Montoya returned to&#13;
his home in Madrid and left his favorite guitar at&#13;
his other home in Vermont. When he returned to&#13;
America, he discovered that his favorite was&#13;
"mad" at him. His guitar is very simple. It has&#13;
traditional wooden tuning pegs. Montoya tunes&#13;
his guitar about three half steps down from&#13;
concert pitch and capos up three frets. He tunes&#13;
the guitar in concert by stretching the strings above&#13;
the capo. The guitar is clean of any decoration but&#13;
the wood is perfectly matched on the top, stdes,&#13;
and back. On the back there is a worn spot where&#13;
Montoya holds the guitar to his torso.&#13;
World renown&#13;
Carlos Montoya was the first gultllJisl In many&#13;
parts of Asia, Stalinist Russia, and O&gt;ina before&#13;
the 30's. He remembers O&gt;ina very well and&#13;
would go back at a moment's notice if It were&#13;
possible. He travels light and he and his wife,&#13;
Sally, only carrying two large suitcases, a small&#13;
bag, and of course his guitar They don't&#13;
immediately appear special in a hotel lobby Or on&#13;
the street. After a few minutes walking with Carlos&#13;
and his wife, one learns Carlos is a very lovable&#13;
man. It is very easy for Carlos to get help carrytng&#13;
his bags. No one else carries his guitar, however&#13;
His fingers are long and narrow. When you shake&#13;
his hand they seem very cool even Immediately&#13;
followinq a concert.&#13;
Rehearsal&#13;
During Montoya's rehearsal he would throw his&#13;
head back and close his eyes as he would listen to&#13;
his guitar. He was much more formal in concert.&#13;
Those few who sat in on his rehearsal will not&#13;
soon forget it. because Montoya played his "hard&#13;
stuff' at the rehearsal. Rarely going back to repeat&#13;
difficult complex passages, he combed them with&#13;
subtle and astoundingly energetic transitions. This&#13;
man does not read one note of music.&#13;
Performance&#13;
At Wednesday night's performance, the same&#13;
crowd that put their cigarettes out, industrial&#13;
fashion, on the lobby carpet roared with approval&#13;
and gave Montoya two encores and a standing&#13;
ovation. The smiling gentleman said thank you&#13;
and Leftthe stage. No one could euer clop enough&#13;
for Carlos. When he ploys, the music and the&#13;
gypsies live!&#13;
music •&#13;
Carlos. Montoya is still amazing&#13;
photographs by Philip L. Livin~ston&#13;
Review by Philip L Livingston&#13;
The world's most famous flamenco guitarist&#13;
performed to a sellout audience last Wednesday&#13;
night in Parkside's Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
to open this year's Accent on Enrichment&#13;
program. It was enough to make almost everyone&#13;
forget about Eugene Fodor.&#13;
At 73, Montoya still amazes audiences with his&#13;
speed, agility, and musicality. The neck of his&#13;
handmade Arcangel Fernandez guitar remains&#13;
tender to his total command. Montoya produces a&#13;
wide range of tonal timber and rhythmns at will;&#13;
with transitions ranging -from subtle to violently&#13;
dramatic.&#13;
After his first two arrangements the audience&#13;
seemed to murmur in disbelief that he was going&#13;
to play that fast and furious all night.&#13;
Music of the Gypsies&#13;
Montoya plays the music of the Spanish&#13;
Gypsies. There is no written music to learn. Until&#13;
Montoya made it popular, no one bothered to&#13;
research its origins. There are few today who can&#13;
play his arrangements as well as he does and it&#13;
makes one wonder if any gypsies played as well as&#13;
he.&#13;
The guitar is Montoya' life. He believes guitars&#13;
must be played and ,i1at is why he only owns four&#13;
guitars. When he accumulates too many, he sells&#13;
them. The one he plays currently is his favorite.&#13;
He uses it for recording, practicing, and&#13;
performing. A few years ago Montoya returned to&#13;
his home in Madrid and left his favorite guitar at&#13;
his other home in Vermont. When he returned to&#13;
America, he discovered that his favorite was&#13;
"mad" at l:iim. His guitar is very simple. It has&#13;
traditional wooden tuning pegs. Montoya tunes&#13;
his guitar about three half steps down from&#13;
concert pitch and capos up three frets. He tunes&#13;
the guitar in concert by stretching the strings above&#13;
the capo. The guitar Is clean of any decoration but&#13;
the wood is perfectly matched on the top, ~s.&#13;
and back. On the back there Is a worn spot where&#13;
Montoya holds the guitar to his torso.&#13;
World renown&#13;
Carlos Montoya was the first guitar! In many&#13;
parts of Asia, Stalinist Russia, and Oilna before&#13;
the 30's. He remembers China very well and&#13;
would go back at a moment's notlc if It w re&#13;
possible He travels light and h and hi wlf ,&#13;
Sally, only carrying two IMge ultca a mall&#13;
bag, and of course his guitar. Th y don't&#13;
immediately appear special In a hot I lobby or on&#13;
the street. After a few minutes walking with Carlo&#13;
and his wife, one learn Carlos is a very lovabl&#13;
man. It Is very easy for Carlos to get h Ip carrying&#13;
his bags. No one el e carrle hi gultnr, how v r.&#13;
His fingers are long and narrow When you shak&#13;
his hand they seem very cool even immediately&#13;
following a concert&#13;
Rehearsal&#13;
During Montoya's rehearsal he would throw h'&#13;
head back and close his eye a he would It en to&#13;
his guitar. He was much more formal in cone rt.&#13;
Those few who sat m on hi rehear al will not&#13;
soon forget it, because Montoya played his "hard&#13;
stuff' at the rehearsal. Rarely going back to r peat&#13;
difficult complex passages, he combed them with&#13;
subtle and astoundingly energetic transitions. This&#13;
man does not read one note of music.&#13;
Performance&#13;
At Wednesday night's performance, the same&#13;
crowd that put their cigarette out, industrial&#13;
fashion, on the lobby carpet roared with approval&#13;
and gave Montoya two encores and a standing&#13;
ovation. The smiling gentleman said thank you&#13;
and left the stage. No one could ever clap enough&#13;
for Carlos. When he plays, the music and the&#13;
gypsies live! &#13;
space&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
FOOD&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
/&#13;
YOU AS~ED&#13;
FOR IT!&#13;
HAMBUGER&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
P.A.B. Coffeehouse presents&#13;
CLAUDIA SCHMIDT&#13;
high energy folk virtuoso&#13;
and&#13;
MARK' HELLER&#13;
as her musical sidekick&#13;
WEDNESDAY I OCT. 5th&#13;
2 5 PM&#13;
UNION CONFERENCE ROOMS 104 - 106&#13;
FREE ADMISSION WINE SERVED&#13;
.. -I&#13;
::r 0&#13;
0&#13;
0 til !!I CD&#13;
~&#13;
_.&#13;
~&#13;
00 .. .... _.&#13;
CD&#13;
..&#13;
~ CD&#13;
til&#13;
-I ..&#13;
CD Ct&#13;
-&#13;
Ct.&#13;
-CD -. ~ ~ ..&#13;
:IE :z: ..&#13;
Ct&#13;
_. .. -&#13;
_. - ~&#13;
0 CCt&#13;
~ .- J: 0&#13;
..&#13;
0&#13;
Ct.&#13;
~ r&#13;
Ct ~&#13;
0&lt; CCt&#13;
til CD..&#13;
" -&#13;
.. til&#13;
0 ::r&#13;
!!I 0&#13;
c:&#13;
.. -&#13;
:IE Ct.&#13;
0 n&#13;
0&#13;
..&#13;
0 !!I&#13;
CD&#13;
til-. ..&#13;
&gt;c 0&#13;
"a&#13;
•&#13;
!!I&#13;
•&#13;
lACK It POPULARIEMANI&#13;
MOONLIGHT&#13;
BOWUNG&#13;
II/N FREE lOWUNI, lEER I SOIA&#13;
FRIDA1S &amp; SATURDA1S&#13;
Itin -11,.&#13;
UNION RECREATION CENTER ~&#13;
RESERVATIONS RECOMMENIEI&#13;
,&#13;
S10P IN OR CAU: $$1-1696&#13;
Setting sail&#13;
for a 'comet&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
"The first sailors had gone out almost a hundrttd years before. They&#13;
had started with small sails not over two thousand square miles.&#13;
Gradually the' size of the sails increased. The technique of adiabatic&#13;
packing and the carrying of passengers in individual pods reduced&#13;
the damage done to the human cargo. It was great news when a sailor&#13;
returned to\Earth, a man born and reared under the light of another&#13;
star. He was a man who had spent a month of agony and pain,&#13;
bringing a few sleep-frozen settlers, guiding the immense&#13;
tight-pushed sailing craft ... "&#13;
That's from one of the now-numerous romances of science fiction&#13;
in which star-crossed lovers are at the mercy of old age and the speed&#13;
of light. The story is Cordwainer Smith's "The Lady Who Sailed The&#13;
Soul" dating from the late 50's and featuring a wildly speculative&#13;
notion: that high-speed interstellar craft might be propelled by&#13;
means of an unthinkably large sail pushed by sun and starlight. A&#13;
truly incredible idea!&#13;
Began in 1951&#13;
Actually, the first published mention of solar sailing-according to&#13;
researchers at NASA~dates from only a few years prior to Smith's&#13;
story. In May, 1951, an article by Carl A. Wiley-tusing the pen name&#13;
of Russel Saunders) appeared in the Astounding Science Fiction&#13;
Magazine.&#13;
Entitled "Clipper Ships of Space," Wiley's article proposed a&#13;
"light-jammer" sail-spacecraft which would "ob~ain mechanical&#13;
forces from the sun's radiation of great enough magnitude to drive a&#13;
spaceship between the planets."&#13;
Although science and science-fiction readers have heard little&#13;
about light-sailing since (and the general public has heard nothing&#13;
about it at all), the idea was never allowed.to perish. In 1958, Richard&#13;
L. Garwin' of the IBM Watson Scientific laboratory at Columbia&#13;
University wrote a short paper on "Solar Sailing - a Practical Method&#13;
of Propulsion Within the Solar System" for the American Rocket&#13;
Society's Jet Prooulsiot: Journal.&#13;
Numerous technical articles followed during the 60's and into the&#13;
70's. In 1969, the year in which man first set foot on the moon,&#13;
NASA's Office of Advanced Space Technology funded the first&#13;
-studies by Astro Research Corporation and MacNeal Schwendler&#13;
Corporation on solar sail technology.&#13;
These studies, and "a later one done by NASA's lewis Research&#13;
Center, produced interesting but far from exciting results.&#13;
Finally, a 1973 study at Batelle Memorial Institute produced a&#13;
favorable report for NASA. Headed by Jerome L. Wright, the project&#13;
not only established the feasibility of aluminized plastic solar sails up&#13;
to 800 meters square, but discovered the opportunity of a spacecraft&#13;
rendezvous with Halley's Comet in 1986 using such a sail.&#13;
Sailing to be a Reality&#13;
The idea Cordwainer Smith expressed in his story - the idea&#13;
seemed more fantasy than scientific extrapoation two decades ago is&#13;
about to be given concrete realitv." '"&#13;
NASA's official Solar Sailing Development Program, headquartered&#13;
at the Jet Propulsion Laboratorv (JPL) in Pasadena, asked itself: "Why&#13;
not use the Sun's photon energy to propel a large reflective sail on a&#13;
free ride through space? Why not employ the concept for long-term,&#13;
low-thrust space missions in the 1980's-jncluding the proposed&#13;
.... Halley's Comet rendezvous?" I&#13;
Spokesman at JPL explain their mission. "The Solar Sail would&#13;
employ a mirror-like alumi~ized plastic surface to attract the&#13;
.....photons.; which carry momentum. When reflected, the photons&#13;
change momentum and a force is exerted against the reflective&#13;
A surface-much like a wind against a sail.&#13;
"Speed of the Solar Sailcraft depends upon distance from the sun&#13;
and the size, weight and angle of the sail. The greater the sail surface&#13;
and .proximity to the Sun, the greater the reflectivity pressure or&#13;
energy thrust."&#13;
"The sail, its proponents.sav, has the potentjal of vast improvement&#13;
over ballisticJRocket) propulsion. Since it would carry no fuel, it&#13;
would be cheaper than conventional spacecraft systems."&#13;
"By tracking against (or with) the solar photon stream, the Solar&#13;
Sailcraft could fly inward toward the Sun or outward. NASA and JPL&#13;
will, if the plan succeeds, demonstrate the SOlar Sail with a 1981·2&#13;
launch from the Space Shuttle towards the Sun and a flight to&#13;
intercept Halley's Comet in March, 1986. For the first flight, the furled&#13;
sail would be taken to the Shuttle platform and erected by astronauts&#13;
in the space vacuum. .&#13;
"The technology development program, headed by Louis D.&#13;
Friedman, includes design of an 8OO-meter square plastic film sheet&#13;
that's only 2.5 microns thick, plus ultra-lightweight extensible booms&#13;
for the spars and masts of the Solar Sail." _&#13;
\ Starting outsmall&#13;
~he .NASAsail is only about a half mile square; the one Codwainer&#13;
~mlth Imagined was 2(),(X)() miles wide and 80,(X)()miles long-so large&#13;
It could take days or weeks for a fast-moving robot to scurry out&#13;
along the sail to make repairs. -c., , •&#13;
Bu.t if it s~ms that our feeble first photon flight is insignificant,&#13;
consider the Cerman V-2. It once seemed huge and awesome; tWO&#13;
decades later it was tiny- and quaint and thrust out of memory by the&#13;
thunderous lift-off of an Apollo/Saturn skyscraper. If the sail&#13;
succeeds, subsequent models will be larger and faster and more&#13;
complex. Today a comet, tomorrow the stars?&#13;
space&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
FOOD&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
YOU ASKED J&#13;
FOR IT!&#13;
HAMBUGER&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
. ,._&#13;
P.A.B. Coffeehouse presents&#13;
CLAUDIA SCHMIDT&#13;
high energy folk virtuoso&#13;
and&#13;
MARK-HELLER&#13;
as her musical · sidekick&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 5th&#13;
2 5 .PM&#13;
UNION CONFERENCE ROOMS 104 - 106&#13;
FREE ADMISSION WINE SERVED&#13;
BACK BY POPUIAR IEMANI&#13;
MOONLIGHT&#13;
BOWUNO&#13;
WIN FREE IOWl/NIJ, BEER , SOIA&#13;
FRIDA1S &amp; SATURDA1S&#13;
S.m -11pm&#13;
UNION RECREATION CENTER&#13;
RESERVATIONS RECOMMENIEI&#13;
STOP IN OR CALL: 111-1696&#13;
..&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
:I&#13;
~&#13;
00&#13;
......&#13;
::a -·&#13;
...&#13;
D&#13;
-&#13;
ci"&#13;
::a&#13;
..&#13;
:z:&#13;
D&#13;
--&#13;
0&#13;
::a&#13;
ii:&#13;
0&#13;
::a&#13;
a.&#13;
D&#13;
-c&#13;
flt&#13;
- """' ..&#13;
0&#13;
:I&#13;
i&#13;
0&#13;
..&#13;
0&#13;
flt -· &gt;C&#13;
-a&#13;
• :I&#13;
•&#13;
...&#13;
::r&#13;
0&#13;
flt&#13;
CD&#13;
::a -·&#13;
..&#13;
CD&#13;
..&#13;
CD&#13;
-&#13;
..&#13;
CD&#13;
a.&#13;
::a -·&#13;
• ..&#13;
:::;.-&#13;
-· ::a&#13;
ca&#13;
-"""' 0&#13;
.. \ =-&#13;
CQ = CD&#13;
..&#13;
flt&#13;
::r&#13;
0&#13;
C:&#13;
ii:&#13;
" 0&#13;
:I&#13;
CD&#13;
..&#13;
0&#13;
/&#13;
Setting sail&#13;
· for a · comet&#13;
by Dan Gufdebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
"The first sailors had gone out almost a hundr~d years before. They&#13;
had started with small sails n-ot over two thousand square miles.&#13;
Gradually the size of the sails increased. The technique of adiabatic&#13;
packing and the carrying of passengers in individual pods reduced&#13;
the damage done to the human cargo. It was great news when a sailor&#13;
returned to Earth, a man born and reared under the light of another&#13;
star. He was a man who had spent a month of agony and pain,&#13;
bringing a few sleep-frozen settlers, guiding the immense&#13;
light-pushed sailing craft . . . " ·&#13;
That's from one of the now-numerous romances of science fiction&#13;
in which star-crossed lovers are at the mercy of old age and the speed&#13;
of light. The story is Cordwainer Smith's " The Lady Who Sailed The&#13;
Soul" dating from the late 50's and featuring a wildly speculative&#13;
notion : that high-speed interstellar craft might be propelled by&#13;
means of an unthinkably large sail pushed by sun and starlight. A&#13;
truly incredible idea!&#13;
Began in 1951&#13;
Actually, the first published mention of solar sailing-according to&#13;
researchers at NASA-dates_ from only a few years prior to Smith's&#13;
story . In May, 1951, an article by Carl A. Wiley-tusing the -pen name&#13;
of Russel Saunders) appeared in the Astounding Science Fiction&#13;
Magazine. _&#13;
Entitled "Clipper Ships of Space," Wiley's article proposed a&#13;
" light-jammer" sail-spacecraft which would "ob~ain mechanical&#13;
forces from the sun's radiation of great enough magnitude to drive a&#13;
spaceship between the planets ."&#13;
Although science and science-fiction readers have heard little&#13;
about light-sailing since (and the general public has heard nothing&#13;
about it at all), the idea was never allowed to perish . In 1958, Richard&#13;
L. Garwin of the I BM Watson Scientific Laboratory at Columbia&#13;
University wrote a short paper on "Solar Sailing - a Practical Method&#13;
of Propulsion Within the Solar System" for the American Rocket&#13;
Society's Je( Propulsion Journal.&#13;
Numerous technical articles followed during the 60's and into the&#13;
70's. In 1969, the year in which man first set foot on the moon,&#13;
NASA's Office of Advanced Space Technology funded the first&#13;
studies by Astra Research Corporation and MacNeal Schwendler&#13;
Corporation on solar sail technology.&#13;
These studies, and ·a later one done by NASA's Lewis Research&#13;
Center, produced interesting but far from exciting results .&#13;
Finally, a 1973 study at Batelle Memorial Institute produced a&#13;
favorable report for NASA. Headed by Jerome L. Wright, the project&#13;
not only established the feasibility of aluminized plastic solar sails up&#13;
to 800 meters square, but discovered the opportunity of a sp,acecraft&#13;
rendezvous with Halley's Comet in 1986 using such a sail.&#13;
Sailing to be a Reality&#13;
The idea Cordwainer Smith expressed in his story - the idea&#13;
seemed more fantasy than scientific extrapoation two decades ago is&#13;
about to be given concrete reality: _,&#13;
NASA's official Solar Sailin_g Develop-ment Program, headquartered&#13;
at the Jet Propulsion Laborat ory (JPL) in Pasadena, asked itself: "Why&#13;
not use the Sun's photon energy to propel a large reflective sail on a&#13;
free ride through space? Why not employ the concept for long-term,&#13;
low-thrust space missions in the 1980's-including the proposed&#13;
~ Halley's Comet rendezvous?"&#13;
Spokesman at JPL explain_ their mission . " The Solar Sail would&#13;
employ a mirror-like aluminized plastic surface to attract the&#13;
' photons, which carry momentum . When reflected, the photons&#13;
change momentum and a force is exerted against the reflective&#13;
. surface' much like a wind against a sail.&#13;
"Speed of the Solar Sailcraft depends upon distance from the sun&#13;
and the size, weight and angle of the sail. The greater the sail surface&#13;
and _proximity to the Sun, the greater the reflectivity pressure or&#13;
energy thrust."&#13;
"The sail, its proponents say, has the potential of vast improvement&#13;
over ballistic_ (Rocket) propulsion . Since it would carry no fuel, it&#13;
wou!d be cheaper than conventional spacecraft systems ."&#13;
" By tracking against (or with) the solar photon stream , the Solar&#13;
Sailcraft could fly inward toward the Sun or outward . NASA and JPL&#13;
will , if the plan succeeds, demonstrate the Solar Sail with a 1981-2&#13;
launch from the Space Shuttle towards the Sun and a flight to&#13;
intercept Halley's Comet in March, 1986. For the first flight, the furled&#13;
sail would be taken to the Shuttle platform and erected by astronauts&#13;
in the space vacuum. .&#13;
"The technology development program, headed by Louis D.&#13;
Friedman, includes design of an 800-meter square plastic film sheet&#13;
thafs only 2.5 microns thick, plus ultra-lightweight extensible boom·s&#13;
for the spars and masts of the Solar Sail." -&#13;
Starting out small&#13;
The NASA sail is only about a half mile square· the one Codwainer&#13;
~mith imagined was 2q,ooo miles wide and 80,000 miles long-so large&#13;
it could take days or weeks for a fast-moving robot to scurry out&#13;
along the sail to make repairs. --.... 1 •&#13;
Bu_t if it s~ms that our feeble first photon flight is insignificant,&#13;
consider the Cerman V-2 . It on.ce seemed huge and awesome; two&#13;
decades later it was tiny- and quaint and thrust out of memory by the&#13;
thunderous I ift-off of an 'Apollo/ Saturn skyscraper. If the sail&#13;
succeeds, subsequent models will be larger and faster and more&#13;
complex . Today a comet, tomorrow the stars? &#13;
new~ . Library user survey&#13;
AcademIc ~I(I"spart of national grant&#13;
-moves off'ces by Jeff Prostko&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Morein, a Ph. D. 10 business&#13;
management and a Master in&#13;
library Science. The study does&#13;
involve Dr. Morein's work, and&#13;
he along with the team of&#13;
advisors, will be flying to&#13;
Parkside on several occasions for&#13;
comprehensive evaluations. The&#13;
first such visit will be October 3.&#13;
"We are very excited about&#13;
this opportunity," notes Carla&#13;
Stoffle, Assistant Director of the&#13;
Librafy/Learning Center, "this&#13;
will give us the chance to view&#13;
our library as a whole, not just a&#13;
look at our services and facilities&#13;
offered, but also a look at our&#13;
management, distribution, and&#13;
technology. It will give us a&#13;
chance to know what new&#13;
technology we should Of should&#13;
not adopt."&#13;
This is not the first survey&#13;
taken by the library.&#13;
A survey was taken in 1974&#13;
concerning user views of the&#13;
library and Its facthties and It&#13;
found that over 1,000 people&#13;
thought it was a good library and&#13;
well used last fall, Norman&#13;
Noerper, a lecturer of Applied&#13;
Science and Technology here at&#13;
Parks.de. also did a survey, the&#13;
result of which was the extension&#13;
of library hours.&#13;
So on the whole, the self study&#13;
appears to be very worthwh lie&#13;
and beneficial, not only to the&#13;
library but also Its users&#13;
However, its success is dependent&#13;
on the output. (Those&#13;
people surveyed will be students&#13;
and faculty.) So, as you are&#13;
walking down the hall, and&#13;
someone stops and asks you if&#13;
you've filled out a library survey,&#13;
take a survey and spend a couple&#13;
of minutes filling it in. After all,&#13;
how many times do you help&#13;
spend $21,3501&#13;
The Office of Educational&#13;
Program Support will be moving&#13;
to a new location on October 5,&#13;
1977. Academic skills and the&#13;
Testing Center will be located&#13;
across the hall from our present&#13;
quarters (D175) to the northeast&#13;
section of the D1 level of the&#13;
library in D150-D for the rest of&#13;
this semester. Enter through the&#13;
reserve area of the library.&#13;
The Tutoring Program will be&#13;
Course&#13;
administered at the D150-C&#13;
location. However, tutoring&#13;
sessionswill take place in D 194&#13;
WllC (formerly the Ranger&#13;
Office) beginning on October 5,&#13;
1977.&#13;
Academic Skills classes currently&#13;
held in our present&#13;
quarters will be moved back to&#13;
the room numbers assigned at&#13;
registration. These are:&#13;
last week, the library handed&#13;
out its user surveys. If you filled&#13;
one out, don't throw it away. If&#13;
you do, it would be like throwing&#13;
away $21,350. That's right, the&#13;
surveys are just a small part of a&#13;
large scale self study that deals&#13;
with how efficiently the&#13;
students, faculty and staff here&#13;
at Parkside believe their library is&#13;
run.&#13;
The money ($21,350) is a grant&#13;
from the Council on library&#13;
Resources (ClR), a national&#13;
foundation which granted the&#13;
money to pay for the part time&#13;
secretaries, computer work, and&#13;
duplicating fees involved in&#13;
amassing the information from&#13;
the study.&#13;
The project is to test a manual&#13;
developed by Dr. P. Grady&#13;
Section Room&#13;
09-090 Composition Preparation 1,2 CA 133&#13;
09-090 Composition Preparation 5 CA 128&#13;
09-140 Study Skills 1,2 CA 133&#13;
09-150 Reading Improvement 1,2 CA 133&#13;
09-135 Reading/Study Skills 1,2,3 CA 133&#13;
09-075 English for Foreign Students 1 CA 128&#13;
All changes will begin on ·Academic Skills office telephone&#13;
Wednesday, October 5, 1977 and numbers will remain the same.&#13;
SMI Building&#13;
scheduled&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
A new addition to Parkside's&#13;
classroom building is currently in&#13;
the planning stages, High&#13;
student interest in the academic&#13;
areas of engineering technology,&#13;
management science and labor&#13;
economics has caused the 1,5&#13;
million dollar birth of the&#13;
Modern Industry Building,&#13;
Program's purpose&#13;
The building program's purpose&#13;
is to help meet the local,&#13;
statewide and national needs for&#13;
additional technically trained&#13;
persons.&#13;
According to the Engineer's&#13;
Council for Professional Development,&#13;
"Engineering Technology&#13;
is that part of the&#13;
engineering field which requires&#13;
the application of scientific and&#13;
engineering knowledge and&#13;
methods combined with technical&#13;
skills.&#13;
The program's objective is to&#13;
develop a high-quality Engineering&#13;
Technology major. Three&#13;
basic Technical specialities&#13;
include electrical, industrial&#13;
production and mechanical&#13;
engineering, .&#13;
Program Needs and faCilities&#13;
Parkside requested a facility&#13;
providing 53,0Cl0square feet to&#13;
satisfy the Modern Industry&#13;
Building's needs. The main&#13;
&lt;emphasts in the program's&#13;
development is to provide a&#13;
production laboratory furnished&#13;
with industrial equipment,&#13;
The new classroom building&#13;
and its existing laboratories&#13;
would benefit the Engjneering&#13;
Tech program. Furthermore,&#13;
other academic disciplines will&#13;
be housed in the building and be&#13;
'given suitable space.&#13;
Mr. James F. Galbraith,&#13;
director of the campus construction,&#13;
believes "the campus's&#13;
leaching staff is very enthusiastic&#13;
about the engineering tech&#13;
program." He concluded by&#13;
saying, "Parks ide's students&#13;
should be very proud at the&#13;
building's completions." ,&#13;
This is a cryptogram, a form at code len- "0 TOL~ the "a" always standing tor "A~ the&#13;
guaoo, where letters of the alphtlbet stand "T" for "C:' and the "L" fOt' "T." Your chilifor&#13;
cmer letters of the alphabet. For instance, lengtfis to break the code 01 the cryptogram _&#13;
the words "A CAT" in I cryptogram mighl be below. and discover its hidden message.&#13;
LI DOOWKH&#13;
BHDU ZHtJH&#13;
SODBLQJKROLGDBV&#13;
WRVSRUW&#13;
ZRXOG EH DV&#13;
WHGLRXVDV&#13;
WR ZRUN.&#13;
When there's a challenge,&#13;
quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon IS the Number 1 beer," Milwaukee.&#13;
beer capital of the world. _&#13;
That's why we'd like to offer you another challenge&#13;
-the Pabst challenge Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any other premium beer: vcu'll hke Pabst&#13;
because Blue Ri6bon Quality means the best-tastinq beer&#13;
you can get. Since 1844 It always has&#13;
PABST.Since 1844.The quality has always come through.&#13;
PABST BREWING COMPANY ..... J.allkee W,s. Pea". HeIghts. 111....... rk. N J. los ""ie'''. ClllI, Pabst. Geo,,,,.&#13;
)I~OM OJ. SV snOl031 SV 38 OlnOM reoes OJ.&#13;
SAVQll0H !)NIA'Ild 31::13Mti'f'3A 31-'11'llt:ll AI A.ual-i $;JJ •• Il'$ .."t~S WOli UO'lltlono V .' ••• u.&#13;
.,.,&#13;
new~ . library user survey Academic ~lc,lls part of nationCII grant moves offices&#13;
The Office of Educational&#13;
Program Support will be moving&#13;
to a new location on October 5,&#13;
1977. Academic skills and the&#13;
Testing Center will be located&#13;
across the hall from our present&#13;
quarters (0175) to the northeast&#13;
section of the 01 level of the&#13;
library in O150-D for the rest of&#13;
this semester. Enter through the&#13;
reserve area of the library.&#13;
The Tutoring Program will be&#13;
Course&#13;
09-090 Composition Preparation&#13;
09-090 Composition Preparation&#13;
09-140 Study Skills&#13;
09-150 Reading Improvement&#13;
09-135 Reading/Study Skills&#13;
administered at the O150-C&#13;
location . However. tutoring&#13;
sessions will take place in D 194&#13;
WLLC (formerly the Ranger&#13;
Office) beginning on October 5,&#13;
1977.&#13;
Academic Skills classes currently&#13;
held in our present&#13;
quarters will be moved back to&#13;
the room numbers assigned at&#13;
registration . These are:&#13;
Section Room&#13;
1,2 CA 133&#13;
5 CA 128&#13;
1,2 CA 133&#13;
1,2 CA 133&#13;
1,2,3 CA 133&#13;
09-075 English for Foreign Students 1 CA 128&#13;
All changes will begin on&#13;
Wednesday, October 5, 1977 and&#13;
SMI Building&#13;
scheduled&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
A new addition to Parkside's&#13;
classroom building is currently in&#13;
the planning stages . High&#13;
student interest in the academic&#13;
areas of engineering technology,&#13;
management science and labor&#13;
economics has caused the 1.5&#13;
million dollar birth of the&#13;
Modern Industry Building.&#13;
Program's purpose&#13;
The building program's purpose&#13;
is to help meet the local,&#13;
statewide and national needs for&#13;
additional technically trained&#13;
persons.&#13;
According to the Engineer's&#13;
Council for Professional Development,&#13;
"Engineering Technology&#13;
is that part of the&#13;
engineering field which requires&#13;
the application of scientific and&#13;
engi neering knowledge and&#13;
methods combined with technical&#13;
skills . .. "&#13;
The program's objective is to&#13;
develop a high-quality Engineering&#13;
Technology major. Three&#13;
basic Tec hn ical special ities&#13;
include electri cal , industrial&#13;
production and mechani cal&#13;
engineering.&#13;
Program Needs and Facilities&#13;
Parkside requested a facil ity&#13;
providing 53,000 square feet to&#13;
satisfy the M odern Industry&#13;
Build ing's needs . The main&#13;
·· emphas is in t he program's&#13;
development is to provide a&#13;
production ~aboratory furnished&#13;
with industrial equipment.&#13;
The new classroom building&#13;
and its existing laboratories&#13;
would benefit the En&amp;!neering&#13;
Tech program . Furt hermore,&#13;
other academic disciplines w ill&#13;
be housed in the bui lding and be&#13;
'given suitable space.&#13;
Mr. James F. Galbraith ,&#13;
director of the campus construction&#13;
believes "the campus's&#13;
teac,hing staff is very enthusiastic&#13;
abo ut t he engineering t ech&#13;
program ." He concluded by&#13;
saying, " Parkside's students&#13;
should be very proud at the&#13;
building's completions."&#13;
-Academic Skills office telephone&#13;
numbers will remain the same.&#13;
by Jeff Prostko&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Last week, the library handed&#13;
out its user surveys . If you filled&#13;
one out, don't throw it away. If&#13;
you do, it w.ould be like throwing&#13;
away $21,350. That's right, the&#13;
surveys are just a small part of a&#13;
large scale self study that deals&#13;
with how efficiently the&#13;
students, faculty and staff here&#13;
at Parkside believe their library is&#13;
run .&#13;
The money ($21,350) is a grant&#13;
from the Council on Library&#13;
Resources (CLR), a national&#13;
foundation which granted the&#13;
money to pay for the part time&#13;
secretaries, computer work, and&#13;
duplicating fees involved in&#13;
amassing the information from&#13;
the study .&#13;
The project is to test a manual&#13;
developed . by Dr. P. Grady&#13;
Morein, a Ph . D in business&#13;
management and a Master m&#13;
Library Science. The study does&#13;
involve Dr. Morem's work, and&#13;
he along with the team of&#13;
advisors, w i ll be flying to&#13;
Parkside on several occasions for&#13;
comprehensive evaluations. The&#13;
first such visit will be October 3.&#13;
"We are very excited abo.ut&#13;
this opportunity," notes Carla&#13;
Stoffle, Assistant Director of the&#13;
Libraty/ Leaming Center, "this&#13;
will give us the chance to view&#13;
our library as a whole, not just a&#13;
look at our services and facilities&#13;
offered, but also a look at our&#13;
management, distribution, and&#13;
technology. It will give us a&#13;
chance to know what new&#13;
technology we should or should&#13;
not adopt."&#13;
This is not the first survey&#13;
taken by the library.&#13;
A survey was taken in 197 4&#13;
concerning u er vi ws of the&#13;
library and ,ts fac,lltie and it&#13;
found that over 1, people&#13;
thought it was a good library and&#13;
well used. Last fall, Norman&#13;
oerper, a lectur r of Applied&#13;
Science and Technology here at&#13;
Parkside, also did a survey, the&#13;
result of which was the extension&#13;
of library hour&#13;
So on the whole, the self study&#13;
appears to be very worthwhile&#13;
and beneficial, not only to the&#13;
library but also ,ts users&#13;
However, ,ts success is dependent&#13;
on the output (Those&#13;
people surveyed w,11 be students&#13;
and faculty.) So, as you are&#13;
walking down the hall, and&#13;
someone stops and asks you ,f&#13;
you've filled out a library survey,&#13;
take a survey and spend a couple&#13;
of minutes filling it in After all,&#13;
how many times do you help&#13;
spend S21,350?&#13;
nge.&#13;
This is a cryptogram, a torm ot code Ian- "Q TQL~ the "0 " always standing tor "A~ the&#13;
guage, where letters ot the alphabet stand "T" tor -c~ and the "L" for "T" Your chal· for other letters ot the alphabet. For instance, lenge"is to break the code of the cryptogram • the words "A CAT" in a cryptogram might be below, and discover its hidden message&#13;
BHDU ZHtJH&#13;
SODBLQJ KROLGDBV&#13;
WRVSRUW&#13;
ZRXOG EH DV&#13;
WHGLRXV DV&#13;
WR ZRUN.&#13;
When there's a challenge, quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon is the Number 1 beer in Milwaukee.&#13;
beer capital of the world. _&#13;
That's why we·d like to offer you another challenge&#13;
- the Pabst challenge.Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll like Pabst&#13;
because Blue Ri6bon quality means the best-tasting beer&#13;
you can get. Since 1844 11 always has&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through. PABST BREWING COMPANY. Milwaukee Wis . Peo11a Heights. Ill . Newark. N J . Los Angeles. Cahf , Pabst. Georg1a&#13;
)l!j0M OJ. S Y s nOl03J. S Y 38 a,noM J.tjOdS OJ. SA'IOl10H ~ NIA'lld 3tj3M tj'l3A 3 HJ. 11'1 ~, 111 A,uaH sa,eaosa~e~s wo,1 uo11e1on0 y .,.,uuy &#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 5&#13;
Academic Policies Meeting at 2 p.m.&#13;
Film Wisconsin Artists Film Festival presents. The&#13;
Front Page. 7 p.m. No admission charge. Rondelle&#13;
Reservations, 554-2154.&#13;
Film Sahara 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Coffeehouse Claudia Schmidt of the Green Bay area&#13;
plays in Union 104-106. 2-4 p.m. No admission.&#13;
Wine will be served.&#13;
Film The Front Page starring Ben Hecht. Free at the&#13;
Rondefle.&#13;
Relocation of Offices Academic Skills and testing&#13;
will move from WLLC 0-175 to 0-1 level of the&#13;
library in D-150-C. Call 553-2608 for further&#13;
infprmation.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 6&#13;
Golf Men's NAIA District 14 Tournament, at Spring&#13;
Green through October 8.&#13;
Volleyball Women's at Lake Forest College, with&#13;
University of Chicago, 6 p.m.&#13;
Health-Line An unwanted Pregnancy? How to deal&#13;
with the problem. Through October 13. Dial&#13;
553-2588 and- ask to hear the Health-Line Highlight.&#13;
Film Caine Mutiny 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Philosophical Society organizational meeting at&#13;
4:00 p.m.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 7.&#13;
Soccer Men at UW Chancellors' Cup Tournament:&#13;
Parkside vs. UW-Milwaukee at 1 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
finals begin at 1 p.m. Saturday.&#13;
Wisconsin State Assembly votes on decriminalization&#13;
of marijuana at the Capital in Madison.&#13;
Cross Country Men at Notre Dame invitational. 3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film African Queen 8 p.m. in Union Cinema. $1.00&#13;
admission.&#13;
Lecture Dr. Severo Ochoa, Nobel Laureate, will&#13;
speak about Protein Biosynthesis. GR 103 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 8&#13;
Cross Country Men at Lakefr.ont Invitational,&#13;
Chicago, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Milwaukee with UW-Green&#13;
Bay, 10 a.m.&#13;
Swimming Women at UW Green Bay with Lawrence,&#13;
. 1p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 9&#13;
Film African Queen in Union Cinema at 7:3Q p.m.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Cross Country All comers be there at 12:00 noon..&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 12&#13;
Coffeehouse Barry Drake of the Kenosha area plays&#13;
in Union 104-106. Wine will be served. INo&#13;
admission. •&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Waukesha Tech Institute at 4:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film Alexander's Ragtime Band starring Don Ameche&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. For reservations call Rondelle,&#13;
554-2154. Free.&#13;
. Thursday, Oct. 13 .&#13;
Health Line Learn all about aspirin. Call 1383.&#13;
Anthropology Club Fieldtrip to Ethnohistory&#13;
meetings. Must sign up in CL 270. Transportation&#13;
provided by Anthropology Club.&#13;
_ Saturday, Oct. 15&#13;
Volleybal! Invitational at 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Concert featuring Michael Williams in Union Square&#13;
at 9:00 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Oct, 16&#13;
Film Whi!t's up Tiger Lily at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Artist contest&#13;
announced&#13;
Tuesday, ocr. 18&#13;
Coffeehouse Features James Mapes in Union&#13;
104-106 from 1-4 p.m. Admission is free and wine&#13;
will be served. .&#13;
Film The Magnificent Arne/sons starring Orson&#13;
Welles at 7:00 p:m. Call Rondelle for reservations.&#13;
554-2154. Free admission.&#13;
. Wednesday, Oct. 19&#13;
PSGA ELECTION will be held in Main Place.&#13;
Film My Little Chickadee in the Union Cinema at&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
The Fall season is approaching&#13;
and so is "Wisconsin 77", the&#13;
annual exhibit of paintings,&#13;
drawings and graphics sponsored&#13;
by the Art League of Stevens&#13;
Point, in cooperation with the&#13;
UW-SP College of Fine Arts.&#13;
All artists residing in the State&#13;
of Wisconsin are eligible to&#13;
submit two entries. Work and&#13;
entry blanks must be delivered .&#13;
directly to the Edna Carlston&#13;
Gallery, UW-SP, on October 14,&#13;
15 and 16. Entries must be&#13;
suitably framed and wired for&#13;
r hanging and must not exceed 6'&#13;
by 8' in size. No crafts, sculpture&#13;
or photography wi)1 be eligible.&#13;
Artists may obtain the full&#13;
prospectus and entry blanks&#13;
from Mrs. James Delzell, 1124&#13;
Ridge Road, Stevens Point, Wis.,&#13;
. 54481.&#13;
Juror for "Wisconsin 77" is&#13;
Stephen Prokopoff, Director&#13;
Museum of Contemporary Art,&#13;
Chicago, Illinois.&#13;
The public is invited to attend&#13;
the opening reception and&#13;
announcement of awards at the&#13;
Carlsten Gallery, Fine Arts&#13;
Center, from 8:00 p.m. to 10:30&#13;
p.m. on Saturday, October 29.&#13;
Cash and purchase awards of&#13;
over $2,000 will be presented.&#13;
The show will continue _until&#13;
November 18 during regular&#13;
gallery hours.&#13;
Launched in 1972, the&#13;
"Wisconsin" show has gained&#13;
recognition yearly and promises&#13;
to be one of the year's&#13;
outstanding exhibits inthe state."&#13;
"' Thursday, Oct. 20&#13;
PSGA fLECTION held in Main Place.&#13;
,Film The Bank Dick at 7:30 in Union&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
The Chiwaukee Prairie Food Co-op would like to&#13;
thank everyone who attended the Bluegrass concert&#13;
last Wednesday evening featuring Grass Food and&#13;
Lodging. We hope you enjoyed it as much as we did.&#13;
We'll do it again sometime. Next time we'll try for a&#13;
weekend.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU I&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Assistance&#13;
ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library of 7,000 topics.&#13;
All papers have been prepared by our&#13;
staff 61 professional writers to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1.00 (air mail&#13;
postage) for the current edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
r~UCATiONALSYSTEMS----&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916·E.&#13;
I Los Angele~ Calif. 90025&#13;
I Name ---'-_ I Address _&#13;
IC~ I&#13;
I Slate- _ Zip _______________ J . I -&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
w. allo provide original&#13;
r•••• rch •• all fields.&#13;
Theal •• nd dl ........ tlon&#13;
a •• iltanc •• lao avanable.&#13;
quality c:orrrnercial corres&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990&#13;
UNIOJ CINEMA $1.00&#13;
PAB FALL FILM SERIES PRESENTS&#13;
BOGART WEEK!&#13;
WED. OCT. 5&#13;
SAHARA&#13;
UW-P ID'S REQUIRED&#13;
THURS. OCT. 6&#13;
CAINE MUTINY- FRI. OCT.7 &amp;&#13;
SUN OCT. 9&#13;
I,AFRICAN QUEEN&#13;
FRI. 8,00 PM. SUN. 7,30 PM.&#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 5&#13;
Academic Policies Mee~ing at 2 p.m.&#13;
--&#13;
Film Wisconsin Artists Film Festival presents_ The&#13;
Front Page. 7 p.m. No admission charge. Rondelle&#13;
Reservations, 554-2154.&#13;
Film Sahara 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Coffeehouse Claudia Schmidt of the Green Bay area&#13;
plays in Union 104-1b6. 2-4 p.m. No admission.&#13;
Wine will be served.&#13;
Film The Front Page starring Ben Hecht. Free at the&#13;
Rondefle.&#13;
Relocation of Offices Academic Skills and testing&#13;
will move from WLLC D-175 to D-1 level of the&#13;
library in D-150-C. Call 553-2608 for further&#13;
information.&#13;
'&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 6&#13;
Golf Men's NAIA District 14 Tournament, at Spring&#13;
Green through October 8.&#13;
Volleyball Women's at Lake Forest College, with&#13;
University of Chicago, 6 p.m.&#13;
Health-Line An unwanted Pregnancy? How to deal&#13;
with the problem. Through October 13. Dial&#13;
553-2588 and-- ask to hear the Health-Line Highlight.&#13;
&#13;
Film Caine Mutiny 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Philosophical Society organizational meeting at&#13;
4:00 p.m.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 7&#13;
Soccer Men at UW Chancellors' Cup Tournament:&#13;
Parkside vs. UW-Milwaukee at 1 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
finals begin at 1 p.m. Saturd~y.&#13;
Wisconsin State Assembly votes on decriminalization&#13;
of marijuana at the Capital in Madison .&#13;
Cross Country Men at Notre Dame invitational. 3&#13;
p.m .&#13;
Film African Queen 8 p.m. in Union Cinema. $1.00&#13;
admission.&#13;
Lecture Dr. Severo Ochoa, Nobel Laureate, will&#13;
speak about Protein Biosynthesis. GR 103 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 8&#13;
Cross Country Men at Lakefr.ont lnvrtational,&#13;
Chicago, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Milwaukee with UW-Green&#13;
Bay, 10 a.m.&#13;
Swimming Women at UW Green Bay with_ Lawrence,&#13;
· 1 p.m .&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 9&#13;
Film African Queen in Union Cinema at 7:3Q p.m.&#13;
Admission $1 .00.&#13;
Cross Country All comers be there at 12:00 noon. _&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 12&#13;
Coffeehouse Barry Drake of the Kenosha area plays&#13;
in Union 104-106. Wine will be served. l'No&#13;
admission. '&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Waukesha Tech Institute at 4:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film Alexander's Ragtime Band starring Don Ameche&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. For reservations· call Rondelle·,&#13;
554-2154. Free.&#13;
r ~»- N\r,..o\C ~o~O. s,~ a . Open 3Z\ ~~\~\~ 5~3&#13;
Mon. &amp; Fri . ~ ?\C}\\C• A,) 634-&#13;
Noon ti/ 9 ~~ (.A,\ ,&#13;
Sat. Noon ti/ 5 I"..,.-&#13;
- MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES- NOVEL TIES&#13;
...&#13;
· Thursday, Oct. 13 ·&#13;
Health Line· Learn all about aspirin. Call ·1383.&#13;
Anthropology Club Fieldtrip to Ethnohistory .&#13;
meetings. Must sign up in CL 270. Transportation&#13;
provided by Anthropology Club.&#13;
Artist contest&#13;
announced&#13;
The Fall season is approaching&#13;
and so is "Wisconsin '77", the&#13;
annual exhibit of- paintings&#13;
drawings and graphics sponsored&#13;
by the Art League of Stevens&#13;
Point, in cooperation with the&#13;
UW-SP College of Fine Arts.&#13;
- Saturday, Oct. 15&#13;
Volleyball Invitational at 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Concert featuring Michael Williams in Union Square . /&#13;
at 9:00 p.m .&#13;
Sunday, Oct.16&#13;
Film What's up Tiger Lily at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Tuesday, Oc.t. 18&#13;
Coffeehouse Features Jarnes Mapes in Union&#13;
104-106 from 2-4 p.m. Admission is free and wine&#13;
wi 11 be served.&#13;
Film The Magnificent Amers,ons starring Orson&#13;
Welles at 7 :00 p:m. Call Rondelle for reservations,&#13;
554-2154. Free admission.&#13;
. Wednesday, Oct. 19&#13;
PSGA ELECTION wirl be held in Main Place.&#13;
Film My Little Chickadee in the Union Cinema at&#13;
7:30 p .m. \.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 20&#13;
PSGA £LECTION held in Main Place.&#13;
, Film The Bank Dick at 7:30 in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
The Chiwaukee Prairie Food Co-op would like to&#13;
thank everyone who attended the Bluegrass concert&#13;
last Wednesday evening featuring Grass Food and&#13;
Lodging. We hope you enjoyed it as much as we did.&#13;
We'll do it again sometime. Next time we'll try ·for a&#13;
weekend.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
All artists residing in the State&#13;
of Wisconsin are eligible to&#13;
submit two ~ntries. Work and&#13;
entry blanks must be delivered ·&#13;
directly to the Edna Carlsten&#13;
Gallery, UW-SP, on October 14,&#13;
15 and 16. Entries must be&#13;
suitably framed and wired for&#13;
' hanging and must not exceed 6'&#13;
by 8' in size. No crafts, sculpture&#13;
or photography will be eligible.&#13;
Artists may obtain the full&#13;
prospectus and entry blanks&#13;
from Mrs. James Delzell, -1124&#13;
Ridge Road, Stevens Point, Wis .,&#13;
· 54481.&#13;
Juror for "Wisconsin '77" is&#13;
Stephen Prokopoff, Director&#13;
Museum of Contemporary Art,&#13;
Chicago, Illinois.&#13;
The public is invited to attend&#13;
the opening reception and&#13;
announcement of awards at the&#13;
Carlsten Gallery, Fine Arts&#13;
Center, from 8 :00 p.m. to 10:30&#13;
p.m. on Saturday, October 29.&#13;
Cash and purchase awards of&#13;
over $2,000 will be presented.&#13;
The show will continue until&#13;
November 18 during regular&#13;
gallery hours.&#13;
Launched in 1972, the&#13;
"Wisconsin" show has gained&#13;
recognition yearly and promises&#13;
to be one of the year's&#13;
outstanding exhibits in'the state.&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Assistance&#13;
ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library of 7,000 topics.&#13;
All papers have been prepared by our&#13;
staff et professional writers to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1.00 (air mail&#13;
postage) for the cur.rent edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
Come Today See·Yours.&#13;
qua I ity corrmercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990&#13;
We also provide original&#13;
research -- all fields.&#13;
Thesis and dluerJalion&#13;
assistance also available.&#13;
j EDUCATIONAL SYSTEMS I&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916-E,&#13;
I Los Angeles.,__ Calif. 90025 I&#13;
I N(lme ---------'-- I l Address I&#13;
j City I&#13;
I State:_· __ Zip ____ I •&#13;
'---------l---------- _J&#13;
-PAB FALL FILM SERIES PRESENTS&#13;
.OGART WEEK!&#13;
WED. OCT. 5&#13;
$AHARA&#13;
THURS. 2:30 &amp; 7:30 PM.&#13;
CAINE MUTINYU._P&#13;
ID'S REQUIRED&#13;
FRI. OCT.7 &amp;&#13;
SUN OCT. 9&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 PM&#13;
UNION CINEMA $1.00&#13;
I _AFRICAN QUEEN&#13;
FRI. 8:00 PM. SUN. 7 :30 PM . </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66506">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 6, issue 6, October 5, 1977</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66507">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66508">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="66509">
                <text>Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="66510">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66511">
                <text>1977-10-05</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66512">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66513">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66514">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66515">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66516">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66517">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="568">
        <name>bookstore</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="934">
        <name>food services</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2118">
        <name>severo ochoa</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="391">
        <name>union operating board</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2813" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3426">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/7c1f024c17044f4bb0e9dcc93bf74941.pdf</src>
        <authentication>d4aa4320adb67bed97e2076257fbc604</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66503">
              <text>Watergate reporter tells his story&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66504">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 5</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66505">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90031">
              <text>&lt;,&#13;
Wednesday, September 28, 1977&#13;
YoU, No.5 er ()() The mass media 15 rearrangng oo&#13;
ethos lust hke It rearranges 1I11&#13;
reality.&#13;
-Ron Hunter, WMAQ News&#13;
Watergate reporter&#13;
tells his story&#13;
by Diane [alenskv&#13;
News Editor&#13;
At approximately 11:00 am.,&#13;
last Thursday. thousands of&#13;
anxious students focused their&#13;
attention to the platform located&#13;
in the foreground of UW-Whitewater's&#13;
Williams Center Gymnasium,&#13;
where Campus Conference&#13;
Coordinator, Dr. Richard Nelson&#13;
welcomed young journalists t~&#13;
the 14th Annual High School&#13;
Newspaper Conference&#13;
Following his salutation Dr&#13;
Nelson introduced a inve~tjgative&#13;
reporter who won various&#13;
awards, some including the&#13;
Pul itzer Prize, the Drew Peerson&#13;
Award, the George Pope&#13;
Memorial Award, and the&#13;
University of Missouri Department&#13;
of Journalism Gold Key.&#13;
The individual co-authored two&#13;
Space travel anyone?&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
RangerStaff&#13;
Who hasn't, at one time or another&#13;
dreamed of being an astronaut? Haven't&#13;
we all taken that fantasy trip-imagining the&#13;
rumble of the rockets' roar; the crush of&#13;
acceleration; the dizzying drop of free-fall&#13;
in zero gravity; the thrill of knowing that&#13;
the infinite universe is but a few centimeters&#13;
away, chilling the outside of the&#13;
ship's sleek skin.&#13;
Readers of science fiction have long&#13;
been aware of the ecstasy and excitement&#13;
of spac-e travel. For years we'v,! followed&#13;
the exploits of larger-than-life heros as&#13;
they've eased their way into space and&#13;
beyond. And for many of them it really&#13;
was easy. Robert Heln lein's Starman Jones&#13;
was just a runaway kid who picked up the&#13;
skills needed for spaceflight while on&#13;
board a rocket. Burrough's John Carter was&#13;
a Southern gentleman and Confederate&#13;
soldier who proved a fast learner when&#13;
hastily deposited on Mars. Flash Gordon,&#13;
one of the great space heros of all time,&#13;
got his chance when he was kidnapped by&#13;
a paranoid Dr. Zarkov. It was even easier&#13;
in Have Spacesuit, Will Travel.&#13;
Yes, throughout the history of science&#13;
fiction there have been a host of ordinary&#13;
citizens chosen by fate to experience the&#13;
delights of soaring through outer space.&#13;
The real world of astronautics, however,&#13;
has been dismayingly different in its&#13;
choice of prospective space voyagers. No&#13;
ordinary applicants need apply. The men&#13;
who have flown into space during the past&#13;
two decades have been picked from an&#13;
elite cadre of highly trained and superbly&#13;
conditioned individuals. So few of these&#13;
all-around specimens have been selected&#13;
for actual missions that many a would-be&#13;
astronaut has put aside his or her dreams&#13;
of planet hopping in despair.&#13;
Despair not&#13;
Well, the time may be right to remove&#13;
those dreams of glory from the mothballs.&#13;
As often happens with delightful reliability,&#13;
modern science FACT is finally&#13;
catching up with the traditional science&#13;
FICTION. With the dawning of the Space&#13;
Shuttle era, space will indeed be wide&#13;
open for practically anybody who wants to&#13;
try for it. .&#13;
Enterprise is ready&#13;
On September 17, 1976 the world's first&#13;
re-usable space craft was rolled out of its&#13;
hangar at Palmdale, California, and was&#13;
christened the "Enterprise" to the Star Trek&#13;
theme song. In the invited audience were&#13;
Gene Roddenberry, leonard Nimoy,&#13;
DeForest Kelley, Nichelle Nichols, George&#13;
Takei. and Walter K enig, who all had very&#13;
gratified smiles; the name was changed&#13;
almost at the very last minute by President&#13;
Ford-In response to a massive letter-writing&#13;
campaign mounted by Star Trek fans all&#13;
over the country.&#13;
Wanted: Pilots&#13;
Now, many a science-fiction fan has&#13;
probably imagined sitting steely-eyed and&#13;
square jawed at the helm of some giant&#13;
spaceship, hands firmly gripping the&#13;
throttle as the engines roar and the Earth&#13;
falls far behind. For a few such dreamers&#13;
their wishes may one day be fulfilled. But&#13;
for the most, the numbers aren't there. Not&#13;
in the pilot's seat, anyway.&#13;
In this sense, tlle Shuttle program still&#13;
clings to the elitist theory. Assuming a full&#13;
traffic load of sixty or more Space Shuttle&#13;
flights a year (conducted by a fleet of five&#13;
different vehicles led by the already&#13;
constructed Enterprise) with three flights&#13;
per pilot a year, simple calculations show&#13;
that forty astronauts (a commander and a&#13;
pilot for each mission) could easily handle&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
highly successful books tncludmg&#13;
All the President's Men and&#13;
The Final D~ys. He and hi&gt;&#13;
co-worker, Carl Bernstein undercovered&#13;
Watergate, one of the&#13;
largest governmental scandals In&#13;
the world The young journalist,&#13;
born in Wheatland, Illinois, is a&#13;
reporter for the Wuhington&#13;
Post. His name ISBob Woodward&#13;
As Woodward walked to the&#13;
podium, the audience cheered&#13;
and photographers purged him&#13;
with their cameras In hts&#13;
Introduction, Woodward outlined&#13;
the address In three major&#13;
headings - "The Watergate&#13;
Story", "the press after Watergate"&#13;
and "\he relationship&#13;
between the press and the&#13;
government,"&#13;
continued on page 8&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday, September 28, 1977&#13;
Vol.6, No.S&#13;
()() The mass media 1s rearrangng ()()&#13;
eth1CS Just b e 1t rearranges l/ l/&#13;
reality.&#13;
-Ron Hunter, WMAQ News&#13;
Watergate reporter&#13;
tells his story&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
At approximately 11 :00 am&#13;
last Thursday, thousands ~f&#13;
anxious students focused their&#13;
attention to the platform located&#13;
in the foreground of UW-Vvh1tewater's&#13;
v'villiams Center Gymnasium,&#13;
where Campus Conference&#13;
Coordinator, Dr. Richard 'elson&#13;
welcomed young journalists t~&#13;
the 14th Annual High chool&#13;
ewspaper Conference&#13;
Following his salutation, Dr&#13;
elson introduced a investigative&#13;
reporter who won various&#13;
awards , some including the&#13;
Pulitzer Prize, the Drew Peerson&#13;
Award , the George Pope&#13;
Memorial Award , and the&#13;
University of Missouri Department&#13;
of Journalism Gold Key.&#13;
The individual co-authored two&#13;
highly succe sful books includ -&#13;
ing All the President'&#13;
The Final Da s. H&#13;
co-work r Carl Bernst in und r·&#13;
covered Watergate, on of th&#13;
large t gov rnmental candals in&#13;
the world . Th young Journalist,&#13;
born m Wheatland, lllino1 , Is a&#13;
reporter for the Wa hington&#13;
Post. His name Is Bob v\:oodY.ard.&#13;
As Woodward walked to the&#13;
podium, th audience ch red&#13;
and photographers purg d him&#13;
with their cameras. In his&#13;
introduction, \! ood ard outlined&#13;
the address in thre ma1or&#13;
headings - " The Watergate&#13;
Story", "the pres after Watergate"&#13;
and " \he relationship&#13;
betY.een the press and the&#13;
go ernment "&#13;
continued on page 8&#13;
Space travel anyone?&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Who hasn't, at one time or another&#13;
dreamed of being an astronaut? Haven't&#13;
we all taken that fantasy trip-imagining the&#13;
rumble of t he rockets' roar; the crush of&#13;
acceleration; the dizzying drop of free-fall&#13;
in zero gravity; the thrill of knowing that&#13;
the infinite universe is but a few centimeters&#13;
away, chilling the outside of the&#13;
ship's sleek skin ...&#13;
Readers of science fiction have long&#13;
been aware of the ecstasy and excitement&#13;
of spa&lt;=e travel. For years we'v~ followed&#13;
the exploits of larger-than-life heros as&#13;
they've eased their way into space and&#13;
beyond . And for many of them it really&#13;
was easy . Robert Heinlein's Starman Jones&#13;
was just a runaway kid who picked up the&#13;
skills needed for spaceflight while on&#13;
board a rocket. Burrough's John Carter was&#13;
a Southern gentleman and Confederate&#13;
soldier who proved a fast learner when&#13;
hastily deposited on Mars. Flash Gordon,&#13;
one of the great space heres of all time,&#13;
got his chance when he was kidnapped by&#13;
a paranoid Dr. Zarkov. It was even easier&#13;
in Have Spacesuit, Will Travel.&#13;
Yes, throughout the history of science&#13;
fictioh there have been a host of ordinary&#13;
citizens chosen by fate to experience the&#13;
delights of soaring through outer space.&#13;
The real world of astronautics, however,&#13;
has been dismayingly different in its&#13;
choice of prospective space voyagers. No&#13;
ordinary applicants need apply. The men&#13;
who have flown into space during the past&#13;
two decades have been picked from an&#13;
elite cadre of highly trained and superbly&#13;
conditioned individuals. So few of these&#13;
all-around specimens have been selected&#13;
for actual missions that many a would-be&#13;
astronaut has put aside his or her dreams&#13;
of planet hopping in despair.&#13;
Despair not&#13;
Well, the time may be right to remove&#13;
those dreams of glory from the mothballs.&#13;
As often happens with delightful reliability,&#13;
modern science FACT is finally&#13;
catching up with the traditional science&#13;
FICTION. With the dawning of the Space&#13;
Shuttle era, space will indeed be wide&#13;
open for practically anybody who wants to&#13;
try for it. ·&#13;
Enterprise is ready&#13;
On September 17, 1976 the world's first&#13;
re-usable space craft was rolled out of its&#13;
hangar at Palmdale, California, and was&#13;
christened the "Enterprise" to the Star Trek&#13;
theme song. In the invited audience w~&#13;
Gene Roddenberry, Leonard imoy,&#13;
DeForest Kelley, Nichelle Nichols, George&#13;
Takei, and Walter K enig, who all had very&#13;
gratified smiles; the name was changed&#13;
almost at the very last minute by President&#13;
Ford-in response to a massive letter-writing&#13;
campaign mounted by Star Trek fans all&#13;
over the country.&#13;
Wanted: Pilots&#13;
Now, many a science-fiction fan has&#13;
probably imagined sitting steely-eyed and&#13;
square jawed at the helm of some giant&#13;
spaceship, hands firmly gripping the&#13;
throttle as the engines roar and the Earth&#13;
falls far behind. For a few such dreamers&#13;
their wishes may one day be fulfilled. But&#13;
for the most, the numbers aren't there. ot&#13;
in the pilot's seat, anyway.&#13;
In this sense, tne Shuttle program still&#13;
clings to the elitist theory. Assuming a full&#13;
traffic load of sixty or more Space Shuttle&#13;
flights a year (condt:Kted by a fleet of five&#13;
different vehicles led by the already&#13;
constructed Enterprise) with three flights&#13;
per pilot a year, simple calculations show&#13;
that forty astronauts (a commander and a&#13;
pilot for each mission) could e'™IY handle&#13;
continued on page 6 &#13;
The wisdom of· having&#13;
one shuttle bus&#13;
editorial •&#13;
forever, right? Not yet!&#13;
You may have noticed right at the begin(ling of&#13;
the semester there seemed to be two shuttle&#13;
buses, remember? So much for tKat.&#13;
The bus from Racine is a shuttle bus when it's&#13;
on campus. The Kenosha city bus is -oot a free&#13;
shuttle bus. The only shuttle bus running takes a&#13;
longtime to get around the loop .. The lowly red&#13;
stickered student parker waits at the bottom of&#13;
the hill. Wait until Winter!&#13;
Having just one shuttle bus is turning out to&#13;
be a terrible idea. Even with city buses helping&#13;
once every hour or so, one shuttle bus doesn't&#13;
make it. Many hurried commuter students rush&#13;
away from home only to be confronted with the&#13;
choice of waiting for the bus or walking. When&#13;
you are already fifteen minutes late this decision&#13;
can make a difference. Pouring rain? Hal&#13;
Marriott's Great America (sic) uses bus trains to&#13;
move people from the lots to the money gates.&#13;
Parks ide uses sidewalks and one rather&#13;
inefficient bus. ~&#13;
Well, you asked for it and you are paying for it&#13;
with your tuition money (did you think taxpayers&#13;
would pay for such a stupid system?). So, if you&#13;
are unhappy with such a method of moving&#13;
students to class, get those pens out and write&#13;
the Chancellor, student government, or even the&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
- ,&#13;
interview was very informal and relaxed. It&#13;
must be noted that Kummings rarely uses&#13;
profanity in his classes or in public for that&#13;
matter. I have had him for two courses and&#13;
I quite honestly think he is one of the best&#13;
professors at Parkside . He has a good sense&#13;
of humor, knows his material, and is a&#13;
damn good teacher. He 'is not a vulgar&#13;
man. This is a university newspaper not&#13;
Family Circle. If someone says a relatively&#13;
common curse word, there is no reason&#13;
why we should not print it. All you prudes&#13;
can start your own paper I or become&#13;
Editor of this one and change things.&#13;
Last week Ranger inviewed Professor&#13;
David Beach. Anyone who read the story&#13;
and knows Beach might have pondered&#13;
the a~sence of his polysyllabic responses.&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are sol 1&#13;
responsible for its editorial p~licy and content.e&#13;
y&#13;
c ".&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen, Jeff Proatko, KimWunsch&#13;
Kat Hermann, Chris Re.tcks, Marcia Vlach. '&#13;
F ,..d~{ Philip L. Livingston 553.22~5&#13;
ne a . Thomas R. Cooper 5. 1\.2:1117&#13;
C"py on)f John R. McKloskey&#13;
N,::w~f,( )1 Diane Jalensky&#13;
ecctabon ."i\a c Karen Putman&#13;
::tal ~;\.a er John Gabriel 553..2231&#13;
e 'j r..: 4 a9 Ken Larsen S' 228'1 .&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, Universitr of Wisconsin.Parkside&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions~ $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
In the beginning; one .of the world's prominent&#13;
architects, Gyo Obata, thought Parks/de should&#13;
put aside the concerns of automobile storage by&#13;
placing parking lots on the periphery of the&#13;
campus. This would keep the core campus free&#13;
from automobile problems and the school could&#13;
provide a shuttle bus where professors and&#13;
students could ride to class together.&#13;
Soon after Obata drew up the master plan,&#13;
completed Greenquist Hall, and the Library&#13;
Learning Center, he was promptly kicked off the&#13;
site by the greater state of Wisconsin in a&#13;
misguided legislative effort to rid the state of out&#13;
of state architects. Parkside lost.&#13;
In following years, Parkside started building&#13;
parking lots like crazy. The original plan to keep&#13;
the central campus free from automobile traffic&#13;
has gone the way lof the Gooney Bird. First there&#13;
was the Communication Arts Lot, then came the&#13;
Union Lot and now comes the Physical Education&#13;
Lot (sic). In retrospect, the shuttle bus probably&#13;
didn't fill the needs of our rare, media&#13;
mesmerized, commuter students.&#13;
Last year the administration, student&#13;
government, and the segregated fees committee,&#13;
in great wisdom and financial restraint, chose to&#13;
save money and only employ one shuttle bus this&#13;
fall. After all, when the Physical Education Lot is&#13;
finished we will be rid of ;parking problems&#13;
Editor's File**** Feature Stories: some problems&#13;
by Philip l.livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
about their lives and the business of&#13;
education? These are the questions we&#13;
want answered.&#13;
There is a danger in attempting to&#13;
illustrate people profiles in print. Someone&#13;
might pick up one story in one paper and&#13;
say, "Ugh, what a creep and how stupid."&#13;
T~ fact is, one story can not adequately&#13;
tell you all about a person.&#13;
A few weeks ago Ranger interviewed&#13;
Professor Don Kummings and in the story&#13;
(my story) Kummings used a few Anglo&#13;
Saxon terms to emphasize his plight. The&#13;
Our writer paraphrased Beach's remarks&#13;
and again editing was called out.&#13;
We are not going to give up yet. Ranger&#13;
will continue to tell you about people as&#13;
we find them and we will continue to&#13;
re-examine our editorial standards and our&#13;
responsibilities. We have a free press at&#13;
Parkside and we will keep it free.&#13;
These small problems could be blamed&#13;
on the fact that we do not have a·&#13;
cdmprehensive journalism program here.&#13;
Or perhaps there should be at least one full&#13;
time communications professor with a&#13;
print media background at Parkside.&#13;
Anyone interested in writing for Ranger&#13;
should come to the weekly meetings on&#13;
Mondays, from 2:00 p.rn to 6:00 p.m., in&#13;
Tallent Hall, room 287. And so it goes.&#13;
Sometimes a feature story will write&#13;
itself. That is, everything will fall together&#13;
and all that's needed is a byline and a&#13;
headline. This hasn't happened here yet.&#13;
We have had to pull teeth to get stories&#13;
and have gotten kicked in the process.&#13;
What we are trying to do, in addition to&#13;
printing the campus news, is to reveal&#13;
interesting parts of people's lives. What do&#13;
they think! What do they have to say&#13;
edito·rial •&#13;
, I&#13;
The wisdom of· having&#13;
one shuttle bus&#13;
.,&#13;
In the beginning, one of the world's prominent&#13;
architects, Gyo Obata, thought Parkside should&#13;
put aside the concerns of automobile storage by&#13;
placing parking lots on the periphery of the&#13;
'campus. This would keep the core campus free&#13;
from automobile problems and the school could&#13;
provide a shuttle bus where professors and&#13;
students could ride to class together.&#13;
Soon after Obata drew up the master plan,&#13;
completed Greenquist Hall, and the Library&#13;
Learning Center, he was promptly kicked off the&#13;
site by the greater state of Wisconsin in a&#13;
misguided legislative effort to rid the state of out&#13;
of state architects. Parkside lost.&#13;
In following years, Parkside started building&#13;
parking lots like crazy. The original plan to keep&#13;
the central campus free from automobile traffic&#13;
has gone the way 1&#13;
of the Gooney Bird. First there&#13;
was the Communication Art·s Lot, then came the&#13;
Union Lot and now comes the Physical Education&#13;
Lot (sic). In retrospect, the shuttle bus probably&#13;
didn't fill the needs of our rare, media&#13;
mesmerized, commuter students.&#13;
Last year the , ad,ministration, student&#13;
government, and the segregated fees committee,&#13;
in great wisdom and financial restraint, chose to&#13;
save money and only employ one shuttle bus this&#13;
fall. After all, when the Physical Education Lot is&#13;
finished we will be rid of ;parking problems&#13;
Editor's File**** Feature Stories: some problems&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
Sometimes a feature story will write&#13;
itself. That is, everything will fall together&#13;
and all that's needed is a byline and a&#13;
headl ine. This hasn't happened here yet.&#13;
We have had to pull teeth to get stories&#13;
and have gotten kicked in the process .&#13;
What we are trying to do, in addition to&#13;
printing the campus news, is to reveal&#13;
interesting parts of people's lives . What do&#13;
they think? What do they have to say&#13;
about their lives and the business of&#13;
education? These are the questions we&#13;
want answered .&#13;
There is a danger in attempting to&#13;
illustrate people profiles in print. Someone&#13;
might pick up one story in one paper and&#13;
say, " Ugh, what a creep and how stupid."&#13;
T~ fact is, one story can not adequately&#13;
tell you all about a person .&#13;
A few weeks ago Ranger interviewed&#13;
Professor Don Kummings and in the story&#13;
(my story) Kummings used a few Anglo&#13;
Saxon terms to emphasize his plight. The&#13;
forever, right? Not yet!&#13;
You may have noticed right at the beginriing of&#13;
the semester there seemed to be two shuttle&#13;
buses, remember? So much_ for tKat.&#13;
The bus from Racine is a shuttle bus when it's&#13;
on campus. The Kenosha city bus is -not a free&#13;
shuttle bus. The only shuttle bus running takes a&#13;
long time to get around the loop .. The lowly red&#13;
stickered student parker waits at the bottom of&#13;
the hill. Wait until Winter!&#13;
Having just one shuttle bus is turning out to&#13;
be a terrible idea. Even with city buses helping&#13;
once every hour or so, one shuttle bus doesn't&#13;
make it. Many hurried commuter students rush&#13;
away from home only to be c6nfronted with the&#13;
choice of waiting for the bus or walking. When&#13;
you are already fifteen minutes late this decision&#13;
can make a difference. Pouring rain? Ha!&#13;
Marriott's Great America (sic) uses bus trains to&#13;
move people from the lots · to the money gates.&#13;
Parkside uses sidewalks and one rather&#13;
inefficient bus.&#13;
Well , you asked for it and you are paying for it&#13;
with your tuition money (did you think taxpayers&#13;
would pay for such a stupid system?). So,· if you&#13;
are unhappy with such a method of moving&#13;
students to class, get those pens out and write&#13;
the Chancellor, student government, or even the&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
interview was very informal and relaxed . It&#13;
must be noted that Kummings rarely uses&#13;
profanity in his classes or in public for that&#13;
matter. I have had him for two courses and&#13;
I quite honestly think he is one of the best&#13;
professors at Parkside. He has a good sense&#13;
of humor, knows his material, and is a&#13;
damn good teacher. He 'is not a vulgar&#13;
ma,p . This is a university newspaper not&#13;
Family Circle . If someone says a relatively&#13;
common curse word, there is no reason&#13;
why we should not print it. All you prudes&#13;
can start your own paper, or become&#13;
Editor of this one and change things .&#13;
Last week Ranger inv iewed Professor&#13;
David Beach. Anyone who read the story&#13;
and knows Beach might have pondered&#13;
the absence of his polysyllabic responses.&#13;
Our writer paraphrased Beach's remarks&#13;
and again editing was called out.&#13;
We are not going to give up yet. Ranger&#13;
will continue to tell you about people as&#13;
we find them and we will continue to&#13;
re-examine our editorial standards and our&#13;
responsibilities . We have a free press at&#13;
Parkside and we will keep it free.&#13;
These small problems could be blamed&#13;
on the fact that we do not have a ·&#13;
comprehensive journalism program here.&#13;
Or perhaps there should be at least one full&#13;
time communications professor with a&#13;
print media background at Parkside.&#13;
Anyone interested in writ ing for Ranger&#13;
shou ld come to t he weekly meetings on&#13;
Mondays, from 2:00 p.m . to 6:00 p.m., in&#13;
Tallent Hall, room 287 . And so it goes.&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solel&#13;
responsible for its editorial p~licy and content. y&#13;
(', \.v ,,.&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen, Jeff Prostko, Kim Wunsch&#13;
Kat Hermann, Chris Ratcks, Marcia Vlach. '&#13;
· - f .. it , . Philip L. Livingston S!-3-22~5&#13;
General M;\na.11 Thomas R. Cooper ""..i·2237&#13;
Copy Edi ,r John R. McKloskey&#13;
N~w~ Edit .., Diane Jalensky&#13;
C1rC&gt;ulatlon M.al\a,g,r Karen Putman&#13;
C.,ah&gt; Man,,-:1c- John Gabriel 5.53-2287&#13;
.. "-J\ • ~ . a. Ken Larsen $,55.228""&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, Uni':'ersity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
Subscriptions_: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
j &#13;
news&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
Parking complaints&#13;
voiced by students&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, P.S.G.A.&#13;
I have been receiving an enormous amount of complaints from&#13;
students concerning the lack of parking places in the Union and&#13;
Communication Arts white sticker lots. They were charged $15.00 per&#13;
semester for the right to park in these lots and have not been able to&#13;
find a place by 10:00 in the morning.&#13;
I went to the Security department and spoke with the Director, Mr.&#13;
Ronald D. Brinkmann. He told me that the lots had been oversold to a&#13;
lesser degree than last year and that there should be plenty of room&#13;
for everyone. He said that the current problems are due to a large&#13;
number of illegally parked vehicles (red stickers - no stickers at&#13;
all-etc).&#13;
Security has initated a new policy this year whereby illegally&#13;
parked cars are given two warning notices and then a ticket is issued.&#13;
This discussion took place on Tuesday morning aflast week and I was&#13;
shown a stack of at least 60 or 70 warning notices' that had been&#13;
handed out already during that week.&#13;
If, in fact, this is the cause of the problem, the Security department&#13;
is obviously doing it's best to remedy the situation, but if any of you&#13;
continue to have trouble finding parking places in the white sticker&#13;
lots, please get in touch with me or one of the Senators.&#13;
Offices moved&#13;
OUf offices have been moved. We are now located in WllC D-197.&#13;
That is just down the hall from our old offices and around the corner&#13;
from the Nurses office. OUf telephone number is still 553-2244, but 1&#13;
apologize to anyone who might have tried to call last week. We were&#13;
in the office, but the phone had not yet been moved. Our hours this&#13;
semester will be daily from 10:()() a.m. until 3:00 p.m. Please stop by.&#13;
I would also like to mention the fact that PSGA Elections will be&#13;
held on October 19 and 20. These are important elections! The eight&#13;
Divisional Representatives for the Senate will be chosen at that time&#13;
as will five new members of the Segragated Fees Committee.&#13;
The Segregated Fees Committee decides what will and what will&#13;
not be funded (such as the shuttle bus) by student dollars. This is&#13;
YOUR money! $56.00 of your tuition went into the $450,000.00 fund&#13;
which will be used to support practically every non-academic activity&#13;
on campus. The decisions will be made by an all-student committee.&#13;
You had better pay close attention to whom you elect as your&#13;
representatives on this committee and be sure that they understand&#13;
how you want your money spent!&#13;
If any of you are interested in becoming involved or running for&#13;
one of these positions, stop down at the PSGA office. But don't delay.&#13;
Time is running out.&#13;
Parking lot&#13;
underway&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Construction of a new 410-car capacity parking lot is underway&#13;
next to the Physical Education Building. This new lot for white permit&#13;
holders is to take the place of the "remote and deteriorating" East&#13;
lot.&#13;
Shuttle bus service from the East and Tallent lots will be&#13;
discontinued after the end of the semester, and persons using those&#13;
lots "will have to walk up the hill or use the Racine BUS as a shuttle&#13;
bus," said James E. Galbraith, Parks ide's Director of Planning and&#13;
Construction. He added that he will check with Kenosha Transit to&#13;
see if they can provide the same service.&#13;
Galbraith said that some people will likely end up walking during&#13;
the campus's peak congestion hours of 9-12 a.m. and 6-8 p.m. H~ said&#13;
that the East Lot will be retained as a reserve lot and not demolished&#13;
as was rumored.&#13;
The completion of the new lot may be slightly delayed due to the&#13;
wet weather the construction workers have been experiencing. The&#13;
installation of curbing, for example, was to have been begun last&#13;
Wednesday, but Galbraith said it will probably get under~~y tod~y&#13;
(Wednesday). "In spite of the weather, we hope to be finished In&#13;
October," he said, adding that blacktop must be put in before the&#13;
weather gets too cold. .&#13;
Academic Skills&#13;
offers free help&#13;
by Joyce Ann Brown&#13;
R~nger Staff&#13;
Academic skills is a program&#13;
designed with students in mind.&#13;
It was started to assist students in&#13;
developing the type of academic&#13;
skills needed for success in&#13;
college. The department aids&#13;
students in developing skills that&#13;
will benefit them now and in&#13;
their future academic endeavors.&#13;
Students have the use of tape&#13;
recorders, headphones, an automatic&#13;
tutor, slide presentations,&#13;
film strips and tape. These&#13;
materials consist of Individualized&#13;
English, mechanics of&#13;
spelling, relevance of sound,&#13;
basic English, math, outlining,&#13;
note taking, and effective&#13;
listening. Most of these materials&#13;
have been furnished by the&#13;
Academic Skills department.&#13;
When a student stops in with a&#13;
problem he is usually given a&#13;
diagnostic test to. determine&#13;
areas of strength and weakness.&#13;
Various materials are made&#13;
available to help the student&#13;
strengthen weak areas.&#13;
The department employs&#13;
tutors to work with students in&#13;
understanding basic course&#13;
concepts. There is no fee. To&#13;
obtain a tutor, just stop in the&#13;
Academic Skills office and fill&#13;
out a tutor request form. Don't&#13;
wait until you've failed your first&#13;
test to get help!&#13;
Students who would like to&#13;
become tutors are encouraged to&#13;
Life Science Club&#13;
seeks specimens&#13;
The Life Science Club is&#13;
looking for interesting "speclmens"&#13;
to be a part of academic&#13;
and fun-filled activities: tabogan&#13;
party, skating at Armstrong,&#13;
nature hikes, film clips on&#13;
various operating procedures,&#13;
trips, and renowned speakers are&#13;
part of this years Life Science&#13;
program.&#13;
Dr. C. M. Chen, life Science&#13;
professor, is advisor to all.&#13;
Officers are: Richard Melvin&#13;
Wagner, President, senior in Life&#13;
Science- Pre- dentistry; Dorothy&#13;
Pivovar, vice president, senior in&#13;
Life Science- pre- veterinary;&#13;
Gari Faustino, secretary, treasurer,&#13;
junior in life Science- premed;&#13;
executive comm ittee&#13;
members, jim Schoening, life&#13;
Science- pre- med; Paul Hinds in&#13;
Life Science- med. Tech; and&#13;
Kurt Buska, senior in Life&#13;
Science- pre- dentistry.&#13;
Information on all meetings&#13;
and activities are posted at&#13;
various bulletin boards throughout&#13;
the campus. Members are&#13;
notified by mail.&#13;
Dr. Severo Ochoa, an awardwinning&#13;
Nobel Prize laureate is&#13;
speaking on Friday, October 7,&#13;
1977 at 2:00 p.m. in GR 103 on&#13;
the subject of Protein Piosynthesis.&#13;
life Science Club is&#13;
co-sponsor to his visit here at&#13;
U.W.-Parkside. He has 492&#13;
publications and his awards fill&#13;
three type written pagesl&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
Dr. Chen at Greenquist Hall&#13;
359 Ext. #2434, or Richard&#13;
Wagner at Racine 639-3828, or&#13;
Gari Faustinoat Racine 554-9512.&#13;
contact the Academic Skills&#13;
office for an application&#13;
If you'd like to learn more&#13;
about the Academic Skills&#13;
Program or the services&#13;
provided, stop In and talk to one&#13;
of the staff members Carole&#13;
Hagarty - Director Educattonal&#13;
Program Support (Ac adertu c&#13;
Skills), Richard Ammann&#13;
Reading Specialist, Goeff Cajewski&#13;
- Writing SpeCialIst, Olivia&#13;
LUI-Hayne - Education SpecialISt&#13;
- Study Skills, Charles Kugel&#13;
- Testing Coordmator&#13;
The xcedermc Skills Office&#13;
hours are Monday thru&#13;
Thursday - 8 a m to 8 p.m&#13;
Frtday - 8 a m to 4 30 p.m and&#13;
Saturday 10 a m to 1.00 p m&#13;
THE&#13;
2226-57th St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-9909&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
BOWLING LEAGUES&#13;
NOW FORMINGI&#13;
(BEGIN PLAY OCT. 6)&#13;
Stue'snt Organization league Thurs. 3,00 p.m.&#13;
Student mixed Trio Thurs. 7DO p.m.&#13;
Couples league (4 to Q team) hi. 2,00 p.m.&#13;
mixed Foursome Sun. 7,00 p.m.&#13;
DON'T MISS OUTI&#13;
SIGN UP TODAY • UNION REC CENTER&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Asslstinci&#13;
ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library 017,000 topics.&#13;
All papers neve been prepared by our&#13;
staff of protesslonal writers to Insure&#13;
excellence. Send 51.00 (air mall&#13;
postage) lor the current edltton of our&#13;
mail order catalog. r~iiCATiONAC"iY8T;MI---- I&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916-E. I&#13;
I Los Angeles. Calif. 90025 I&#13;
I Name ------ I&#13;
We alao provide origin" I Address ---------- I&#13;
r.... rch -- oil _. I City ------------ I&#13;
ThHiI and dl... rt.tlon&#13;
L---- ... Ietanc•• Iao ann.ble. I State lip I .L. .J&#13;
news&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
week ly by student government&#13;
Parkirig complaints&#13;
voiced by students&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, P .S.G.A.&#13;
I have been receiving an enormous amount of complaints from&#13;
students concerning the lack of parking places in the Union and&#13;
Communication Arts white sticker lots . They were charged $15.00 per&#13;
semester for the right to park in these lots and have not been able to&#13;
find a place by 10:00 in the morning .&#13;
I went to the Security department and spoke with the Director, Mr.&#13;
Ronald D . Brinkmann. He told me that the lots had been oversold to a&#13;
lesser degree than last year and that there should be plenty of room&#13;
for everyone . He said that the current problems are due to a large&#13;
'number of illegally parked vehicles (red stickers - no stickers at&#13;
all-etc .). ·&#13;
Security has initated a new policy this year whereby illegally&#13;
parked cars are given two warning notices and then a ticket is issued .&#13;
This discussion took place on Tuesday morning of last week and I was&#13;
shown a stack of at least 60 or 70 warning notices · that had been&#13;
handed out already during that week.&#13;
If, in fact, this is the cause of the problem, the Security department&#13;
is obviously doing it's best to remedy the situation, but if any of you&#13;
continue to have trouble finding parking places in the white sticker&#13;
lots, please get in touch with me or one of the Senators .&#13;
Offices moved&#13;
Our offices have been moved . We are now located in WLLC D-197.&#13;
That is just down the hall from our old offices and around the corner&#13;
from the Nurses office. Our telephone number is still 553-2244, but I&#13;
apologize to anyone who might have tried to call last week . We were&#13;
in the office, but the phone had not yet been moved. Our hours this&#13;
semester will be daily from 10:00 a.m . until 3:00 p.m . Please stop by .&#13;
I would also like to mention the fact that PSGA Elections will be&#13;
held on October 19 and 20. These are important elections! The eight&#13;
Divisional Representatives for the Senate will be chosen at that time&#13;
as will five new members of the Segragated Fees Committee .&#13;
The Segregated Fees Committee decides what will and what will&#13;
not be funded (such as the shuttle bus) by student dollars. This is&#13;
YOUR money! $56.00 of your tuition went into the $450,000.00 fund&#13;
which will be used to support pract ically every non-academ ic activity&#13;
on campus . The decisions will be made by an all-student committee .&#13;
You had better pay close attention to whom you elect as your&#13;
representatives on this committee and be sure that they understand&#13;
how you want your money spent!&#13;
If any of you are interested in becoming involved or running for&#13;
one of these positions, stop down at the PSGA office. But don't delay .&#13;
Time is running out.&#13;
Parking lot&#13;
underway&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Construetion of a new 410-car capacity parking lot is underway&#13;
next to the Physical Education Build ing. Th is new lot for white permit&#13;
holders is to take the place of the "remote and deteriorating" East&#13;
Lot.&#13;
Shuttle bus service from the East and Tallent Lots will be&#13;
discontinued after the end of the semester, and persons us ing those&#13;
lots " will have to walk up the hill or use the Racine BUS as a shuttle&#13;
bus," said James E. Galbraith, Parkside's Director of Planning and&#13;
Construction . He added that he will check with Kenosha Transit to&#13;
see if they can provide the same service.&#13;
Galbraith said that some people will likely end up walking during&#13;
the campus's peak congestion hours of 9-12 a.m . and 6-8 p .m . H~ said&#13;
that the East Lot will be retained as a reserve lot and not demolished&#13;
as was rumored .&#13;
The completion of the new lot may be slightly delayed du_e to the&#13;
wet weather the construction workers have been experiencing. The&#13;
installation of curbing, for example, was to have been begun last&#13;
Wednesday, but Galbraith said it will probably get under~~Y tod~y&#13;
(Wednesday). "In spite of the weather, we hope to be finished in&#13;
October," he said, adding that blacktop must be put in before the&#13;
weather gets too cold. ·&#13;
Academic Skills&#13;
offers free help&#13;
by Joyce Ann Brown&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Academi c skills is a program&#13;
designed with students in mind&#13;
It was started to assist students in&#13;
developing the type of academic&#13;
skills needed for success in&#13;
college . The department aids&#13;
students in developing skills that&#13;
will benefit them now and in&#13;
their future academic endeavors .&#13;
Students have the use of tape&#13;
recorders , headphones, an automatic&#13;
tutor, slide presentations,&#13;
film strips and tape . These&#13;
materials consist of Individualized&#13;
English , mechan ics of&#13;
spelling, relevance of sound,&#13;
basic English, math, outlining,&#13;
note taki ng, and effective&#13;
listening. Most of these materials&#13;
have been furnished by the&#13;
Academlc Skills department.&#13;
When a student stops in with a&#13;
problem he is usually given a&#13;
diagnostic test to. determine&#13;
areas of strength and weakness .&#13;
Various materials are made&#13;
available to help the student&#13;
strengthen weak areas .&#13;
The department employs&#13;
tutors to work with students in&#13;
understanding bas i c course&#13;
concepts . There is no fee . To&#13;
obtain a tutor, just stop in the&#13;
Academic Skills office and fill&#13;
out a tutor request form . Don't&#13;
wait until you've failed your first&#13;
test to get help!&#13;
Students who would like to&#13;
become tutors are encouraged to&#13;
Life Science Club&#13;
seeks specimens&#13;
The Life Science Club is&#13;
looking for interesting " specimens"&#13;
to be a part of academic&#13;
and fun-fi lled activities: tabogan&#13;
party, skating at Armstrong,&#13;
nature hikes, film clips on&#13;
various operating procedures,&#13;
trips, and renowned speakers are&#13;
part of this years Life Science&#13;
program .&#13;
Dr. C. M . Chen, Life Science&#13;
professor, is advisor to all.&#13;
Officers are: Richard Melvin&#13;
Wagner, President, senior in Life&#13;
Science- pre- dentistry; Dorothy&#13;
Pivovar, vice president, senior in&#13;
Life Science- pre- veterinary;&#13;
Gari Faustino, secretary, treasurer,&#13;
junior in Life Science- premed&#13;
; executive committee&#13;
members, Jim Schoening, Life&#13;
Science- pre- med; Paul Hinds in&#13;
Life Science- med . Tech; and&#13;
Kurt Bu ska , senior in Life&#13;
Science- pre- dentistry.&#13;
Information on all meetings&#13;
and activities are posted at&#13;
various bulletin boards throughout&#13;
the campus . M embers are&#13;
notif ied by mail .&#13;
Dr. Severo Ochoa, an awardwinning&#13;
Nobel Prize Laureate is&#13;
speaking on Friday, October 7,&#13;
1977 at 2:00 p.m . in GR 103 on&#13;
the subject of Protein Piosynthesis&#13;
. Life Sc ience Club is&#13;
co-.sponsor to his visit here at&#13;
U .W .-Parks ide . He has 49 2&#13;
publications and his awards fill&#13;
three type wrj tten pages !&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
Dr. Chen at Greenquist Hall&#13;
359 Ext. #2434, or Richard&#13;
Wagner at Racine 639-3828, or&#13;
Gari Faustino at Racine 554-9512.&#13;
contact the Academ ic Skills&#13;
office for an application&#13;
Reading Specialist, Go ff Ga1 wsk,&#13;
- Writing pec1al1st, Olivia&#13;
Lui-Hayn - Education pec1alIst&#13;
- tud Skill s, Chari ug I&#13;
- T ting oordinator&#13;
If you'd like to learn more&#13;
about the Academ ic Skills&#13;
Program or the service&#13;
provided, stop in and talk to one&#13;
of the staff members . Carole&#13;
Hagart - Director Educational&#13;
Program Support (Ac ademi c&#13;
Sk ills). Richard Ammann&#13;
The A ad mIc kill Office&#13;
hours are · M onday t h ru&#13;
Thursday - 8 a m to 8 p m&#13;
Frida - 8 am to 4.30 pm and&#13;
aturda 10 a m to 1, pm&#13;
2226-57th St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-9909&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
BOWLING LEAGUES&#13;
NOW FORMING!&#13;
(BEGIN PLAY OCT 6)&#13;
Stuc' ~nt Organization League Thurs 300 p.m.&#13;
Student m ixed Trio Thurs. 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Couples League (4 to a team) Fri. 200 p.m.&#13;
mixed Foursome Sun. 7:00 p.m.&#13;
DON'T MISS OUT!&#13;
SIGN UP TODAY - UNION REC CENTER&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Assistance&#13;
ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library ol 7,000 topics.&#13;
All papers have been prepared by our&#13;
staff of professional writers to Insure&#13;
excellence. SeAd $1 .00 (air mall&#13;
postage) for the current edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
l EDUCATIONAL SYSTEMS I&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916-E. I&#13;
I Los Angeles. Calif. 90025 I&#13;
I Name ---------- I&#13;
We alao provide original l Address ---------- I&#13;
rffearch -- all field•. City___________ I&#13;
ThHia and diHertatlon I I&#13;
aHiatance alao available. I State _ _ _ Zip ---- - I '---------~---------------~ &#13;
news&#13;
Defaulters hurt student loans&#13;
Bank of America's Social Policy&#13;
Department. The banks must be&#13;
very careful about properly&#13;
processing apphcations and&#13;
documenting their efforts in&#13;
collecting from defaulters. Even&#13;
then, according to James Koplev,&#13;
manager of New York Citibank's&#13;
student loan division, "it takes us&#13;
from six to nine months to&#13;
collect from ,the government."&#13;
OE has taken other steps aside&#13;
from contracting with a private&#13;
collection agency. HEW Seerstary&#13;
Joseph Califano has&#13;
consolidated seven loan programs&#13;
into one program which&#13;
will hopefully end duplicated&#13;
effort and waste.&#13;
HEW is also encouraging state&#13;
governments to act as guarantor&#13;
agencies. There are 26 states&#13;
which now act as guarantors and&#13;
results have been positive. Banks&#13;
deal directly with the state and&#13;
the federal government insures&#13;
80 percent of the loan money.&#13;
State lever Management&#13;
The benefits are better&#13;
management at state level and&#13;
less red tape, insuring quicker&#13;
processing of student applications&#13;
and collections on defaults.&#13;
State guarantor agencies may&#13;
eventually make the trip easier&#13;
for students. Citibank reported it&#13;
has increased its student loan&#13;
activity by 23 percent this year.&#13;
Manager Kopley cites a low 3.7&#13;
percent default rate for his bank&#13;
compared to 12.3 percent&#13;
nationally estimated for the&#13;
1977-78 fiscal year.&#13;
Kopley credits Cltibank's low&#13;
figure to working through the&#13;
state as a guarantor agency,&#13;
although Citibank still operates a&#13;
FISL program dealing directly&#13;
with OE.&#13;
implications of taking a loan or&#13;
of the options available for&#13;
repayment such as hardship&#13;
clauses.&#13;
The major source of default&#13;
lies Rot with students but with&#13;
vocational and proprietary&#13;
schools who comprise over 50&#13;
percent of the default claims&#13;
filed by banks. Many FISL&#13;
recipients find that they are&#13;
liable for the loans although&#13;
their vocational school closed&#13;
down or a training institute&#13;
overrated job opportunities and&#13;
that particular job market is&#13;
flooded. One way to cut down&#13;
on such defaults would be for&#13;
the government to enact stricter&#13;
licensing procedures.&#13;
Banks are protecting themselves&#13;
their way. Bank of&#13;
America (the main conduit for&#13;
California students'FISL money)&#13;
will not loan to students entering&#13;
vocational schools. Neither will&#13;
it loan to junior college or first&#13;
year students.&#13;
Bank of America also lowered&#13;
its maximum award from $2500&#13;
in 1976 to $1500 this year. Trust&#13;
Company of Ceorgia will loan to&#13;
students with a one year&#13;
minimum account with if. Some&#13;
banks, such as Security Pacific&#13;
National of California, loan only&#13;
to students who have previouslv&#13;
held loans from them. Successful&#13;
applicants may not hold loans&#13;
with other banks. Security&#13;
Pacific National also decreased&#13;
its student loan activity by 50&#13;
percent since 1976.&#13;
t Banksare leery&#13;
Banksare also leery about the&#13;
retrieval rate on FISL loans.&#13;
"You have to dot every 'i' and&#13;
crossevery 't' to collect from the&#13;
government," says Lu Steiner of&#13;
approach to collection.&#13;
The agency handling the loans&#13;
is in tlie process of contracting&#13;
with a private collection agency.&#13;
Bythe end of the year, the Office&#13;
of Education (GE) will turn over&#13;
50,000 overdue accounts on a&#13;
commission-for-funds collected&#13;
basis.&#13;
Maury Tansey, a special&#13;
assistant to the associate&#13;
Guaranteed Student Loan (GSL)&#13;
commissioner, explained the&#13;
decision to the Higher Education&#13;
Daily:&#13;
"The volume of defaults. has&#13;
continued to increase and we&#13;
have been unable to match that&#13;
increase with an increase in our&#13;
collections resources."&#13;
Because hiring has been&#13;
sporadic, TanseysaysOE has not&#13;
been able to keep up with the&#13;
work According to a recent&#13;
General Accounting Office&#13;
report, by the end of fiscal 1977,&#13;
OE will have paid out $436.5&#13;
million in default claims to&#13;
banks but will have collected&#13;
only $33.8 miiiion on bad debts.&#13;
That is up by about four times&#13;
the $136 million OE had to pay&#13;
out to banks in 1974.&#13;
Degreein no job guarantee&#13;
The increase in defaults has&#13;
been attributed to the economic&#13;
depression of the past few years.&#13;
Students graduating with BA's.,&#13;
MA's and Phd's have found their&#13;
education is not a job guarantee.&#13;
Another factor is the lack of&#13;
information banks and' college&#13;
financial aid offices give to&#13;
students taking loans. Students&#13;
are not fully aware of the&#13;
Bankscut loans&#13;
In many cases across the&#13;
country, banks are cutting their&#13;
student loans by up to 70&#13;
percent. Others have ended their&#13;
loan programs altogether. The&#13;
federal government, having&#13;
insured bank losses against&#13;
default under the Federally&#13;
Insured Student Loan (FISL)&#13;
pro~ram, is also toughening its&#13;
(CPS)Any student relying on&#13;
financial aid can tell you: it's a&#13;
rough trip.&#13;
With one out of every slx&#13;
graduates defaulting-eon their&#13;
student loans, banks have&#13;
adopted stringent guidelines and&#13;
more students are discovering&#13;
that once at their destination it is&#13;
becoming increasingly difficult&#13;
to pay for the cost of that trip.&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK&#13;
JAN. 7-14, 1978&#13;
IIII&#13;
Includes&#13;
• ROUND TRIP JET AIR&#13;
.7 NIGHTS LODGING IN&#13;
EXOTIC MONTEGO BAY&#13;
GROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
&amp; PORTERAGE&#13;
• FULLY ESCORTED&#13;
• TIPS &amp; TAXES ON&#13;
ABOVE&#13;
RESERVATIONS &amp; DETAILS - PAAKSIDE UNION&#13;
JAMAIC&#13;
NOW OPEN!.~&#13;
(Our candy&#13;
stock&#13;
finally&#13;
arrived)&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
Bookstore blames&#13;
COUNTER small publishers&#13;
. featuring:&#13;
Your favorite sweets &amp; candies served the&#13;
old fashioned way&#13;
plus&#13;
sundry items yOUoften need&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Parkside Bookstore manager Paul Hoffman complained to the&#13;
Boo~store Committee last week that the reason some textbooks are&#13;
late ISthat "a few certain publishers are consistently late"&#13;
Hoffman said that the New Amencan Library Penguin Books.....&#13;
Arnold, and Ronald, all small publishers, often du:l not deliver thel;&#13;
ParksIde orders on time As of last Wednesday, eight or nine book&#13;
orders affecting 10 classes had not yet come in Hoffman said the&#13;
publishers Involved claimed they had never received the order&#13;
The committee suggestedto Hoffman that he send a confirmation&#13;
p~~c~rd ~~t~ each order for the publisher to return, but Hoffman&#13;
tht '. pu IS.ers often simply throw them away ... they don't have&#13;
e time to fill them out."&#13;
eU~~~~:i~:!:obrej~cte~ the i~ea of using registered mail fa; sending&#13;
Id b&#13;
oo or ers. At 98c per letter times 100 letters it&#13;
wou e too expensrva" h id ffrnan sai '&#13;
f th d&#13;
·. ' e sal . Ho fman said that another reason&#13;
or e tar mess of the book /I h&#13;
enrolled" s was more t an 20 classeswere overestimate&#13;
's;e~ndl."t·gthlebnumber of students exceeded the original&#13;
, a Ilona ooks had to be ordered&#13;
As a result of the probl th b .&#13;
Bookst C . . ems e ookstore has been having the&#13;
ore ornrmttes will 500 b I k! . '&#13;
present bookstore Althou h n e o~ 109 Into alternatives to the&#13;
he will be excluded f g ~offman Is.amember of the committee,&#13;
"beea e h h rom meetings at which alternatives are discussed&#13;
use e as a pecum .&#13;
doing"'d . rarv Interest In what the committee will be&#13;
, 'Sal commIttee chairman Keith Wa d&#13;
The committee was to h (_ r . ~&#13;
meeting, but no oneontheave&#13;
e e~ted a new chairman at last week's&#13;
told the committee h Icommlttee wanted to be chairman. Ward&#13;
few weeks while a elacer d volunteer to continue in the chair for a&#13;
businessdid not all~eP~~eIT!.entsuccess~r is selected, but that other&#13;
w rm time to continue in the chair indefinitely.&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
PARK~DEUNIONBAZAAR&#13;
10:00 AM -4:00PM&#13;
~&#13;
quality corrrerocr printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658.8990&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
YOU ASKED FOR IT!&#13;
HOME STYLE&#13;
COOKING&#13;
./&#13;
• HOME MADE sOUP DAILY [NELlIE'S SOUP KETILEJ&#13;
• LARGE CHEFS SALADS - ONLY 95'&#13;
• BIG, FRESH DELI TYPE SANDWICHES&#13;
• A BIGGER, BEITER 00- IT- YOURSELF SALAD BAR&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
news&#13;
Defaulters hurt student -loans&#13;
implications of taking a loan or&#13;
of the options available for&#13;
repayment such as hardship&#13;
clauses .&#13;
Bank of America's Social Policy&#13;
Department. The banks must be&#13;
very careful about properly&#13;
processing applications and&#13;
documenting their efforts in&#13;
collecting from defaulters. Even&#13;
then, according to James Kopley,&#13;
manager of New York Citibank's&#13;
student loan division, "it takes us&#13;
from six to nine months to&#13;
collect from _the government."&#13;
(CPS) Any student relying on&#13;
financial aid can tell you: it's a&#13;
rough trip.&#13;
With one out of every six&#13;
graduates defaultin on their&#13;
student loans, banks have&#13;
adopted stringent guidelines and&#13;
more students are discovering&#13;
that once at their destination it is&#13;
becoming increasingly difficult&#13;
to pay for the cost of that trip.&#13;
Banks cut loans&#13;
In many cases across the&#13;
country, banks are cutting their&#13;
student loans by up to 70&#13;
percent. Others have ended their&#13;
loan programs altogether. The&#13;
federal government, having&#13;
insured bank losses against&#13;
default under the Federally&#13;
Insured Student Loan (FISL)&#13;
pro~ram, is also toughening its&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK&#13;
JAN. 7-14, 1978&#13;
--&#13;
Includes&#13;
e ROUND TRIP JET AIR&#13;
e 7 NIGHTS LODGING IN&#13;
EXOTIC MONTEGO BAY&#13;
GROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
&amp; PORTERAGE&#13;
e FULLY ESCORTED&#13;
e TIPS &amp; TAXES ON&#13;
ABOVE&#13;
RESERVATIONS &amp; DETAILS - PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
JAMAIC&#13;
NOW OPEN!~&#13;
(Our candy&#13;
stock&#13;
finally&#13;
arrived)&#13;
t&#13;
. featuring: Your favorite sweets &amp; candies served the&#13;
old fashioned way&#13;
p!us sundry items you often need&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION BAZAAR&#13;
10:00AM-4:00PM&#13;
approach to collection.&#13;
The agency handling the loans&#13;
is in the process of contracting&#13;
with a private collection agency.&#13;
By the end of the year, the Office&#13;
of Education (OE) will turn over&#13;
50,000 overdue accounts on a&#13;
commission-for-funds collected&#13;
basis.&#13;
Maury Tansey, a special&#13;
assistant to the associate&#13;
Guaranteed Student Loan (GSL)&#13;
commissioner, explained the&#13;
decision to the Higher Education&#13;
Daily:&#13;
"The volume of defaults. . has&#13;
continued to increase and we&#13;
have been unable to match that&#13;
increase with an increase in our&#13;
collections resources."&#13;
Because hiring has been&#13;
sporadic, Tansey says OE has not&#13;
been able to keep up with the&#13;
work. According to a recent&#13;
General Accounting Office&#13;
report, by the end of fiscal 1977,&#13;
OE will have paid out $436.5&#13;
million in default claims to&#13;
banks but will have collected&#13;
only $33.8 million on bad debts.&#13;
That is up by about four times&#13;
the $136 million OE had to pay&#13;
out to banks in 1974.&#13;
Degree in no job guarantee&#13;
The increase in defaults has&#13;
been attributed to the economic&#13;
depression of the past few years .&#13;
Students graduating with BA's.,&#13;
MA's and Phd's have found their&#13;
education is not a job guarantee.&#13;
Another factor is the lack of&#13;
information banks and college&#13;
financial aid offices give to&#13;
students taking loans. Students&#13;
are not fully aware of the&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
quality. corrvnercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
YOU ASKED FOR IT!&#13;
HOME STYLE&#13;
COOKING • HOME MADE SOUP DAILY [NELLIE'S SOUP KETTLE)&#13;
• LARGE CHEFS SALADS - ONLY 95•&#13;
• BIG, FRESH DELI TYPE SANDWICHES&#13;
• A BIGGER, BETTER DO- IT- YOURSELF SALAD BAR&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
The major source of default&#13;
lies Rot with students but with&#13;
vocational and proprietary&#13;
schools who comprise over 50&#13;
percent of the default claims&#13;
filed by banks. Many FISL&#13;
recipients find that they are&#13;
liable for the loans although&#13;
their vocational school closed&#13;
down or a training institute&#13;
overrated job opportunities and&#13;
that particular job market is&#13;
flooded. One way to cut down&#13;
on such defaults would be for&#13;
the government to enact stricter&#13;
licensing procedures.&#13;
Banks are protecting themse&#13;
Ives their way. Bank of&#13;
America (the main conduit for&#13;
California siudents'FISL money)&#13;
will not loan to students entering&#13;
vocational schools. Neither will&#13;
it loan to junior college or first&#13;
year students.&#13;
Bank of America also lowered&#13;
its maximum award from $2500&#13;
in 1976 to $1500 this year. Trust&#13;
Company of Georgia will loan to&#13;
students with a one year&#13;
minimum account with it. Some&#13;
banks, such as Security Pacific&#13;
National of California, loan only&#13;
to students who have previously&#13;
held loans from them . Successful&#13;
applicants may not hold loans&#13;
with other ban ks . Security&#13;
Pacific National also decreased&#13;
its st udent loan act ivity by 50&#13;
percent since 1976.&#13;
Banks are leery&#13;
Banks are also leery about the&#13;
retrieval rate on FISL loans.&#13;
"You have tq dot every ' i' and&#13;
cross every 't' to collect from the&#13;
government,"' says Lu Steiner of&#13;
OE has taken other steps aside&#13;
from contracting with a private&#13;
collection agency. HEW Secretary&#13;
Joseph Califano has&#13;
consoliaated seven loan programs&#13;
into one program which&#13;
will hopefully end duplicated&#13;
effort and waste .&#13;
HEW is also encouraging state&#13;
governments to act as guarantor&#13;
agencies. There are 26 states&#13;
which now act as guarantors and&#13;
results have been positive. Banks&#13;
deal directly with the state and&#13;
the federal government insures&#13;
80 percent of the loan money.&#13;
State level Management&#13;
The benefits are better&#13;
management at state level and&#13;
less red tape, insuring quicker&#13;
processing of student applications&#13;
and collections on defaults.&#13;
State guarantor agencies may&#13;
eventually make the trip easier&#13;
for students. Citibank reported it&#13;
has increased its student loan&#13;
activity by 23 percent this year.&#13;
Manager Kopley cites a low 3.7&#13;
percent default rate for his bank&#13;
compared t o 12 .3 percent&#13;
nationally estimated for the&#13;
1977-78 fiscal year.&#13;
Kopley credits Citibank's low&#13;
figure to working through the&#13;
state as a guarantor agency,&#13;
although Citibank still operates a&#13;
Fl SL program dealing directly&#13;
with OE.&#13;
Bo.okstore blames&#13;
small publishers&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Parkside Bookstore manager Paul Hoffman complained to the&#13;
Bookstore Committee last week that the reason some textbooks are&#13;
late Is that " a few certain publishe!s are consistently late ."&#13;
Hoffman said that the New American Library, Penguin Books,&#13;
Arnold, and Ronald, all small publishers, often did not deliver their&#13;
Parkside ord~rs on time. As of last Wednesday, eight or nine book&#13;
orders affecting 10 classes had not yet come in. Hoffman said the&#13;
publishers involved claimed they had never received the order.&#13;
The committee suggested to Hoffman that he send a confirmation&#13;
po.:c~rd ~It~ each order for the publisher to return but Hoffman&#13;
sha, ' . pu is. ers often simply throw them away ... they don't have&#13;
t e time to fill them out."&#13;
Hoffma I · d h · t p k -~ a, so re1ecte t e idea of using - registered mail for sending&#13;
eu ldabr si es book _orders. "At 98c per letter times 100 letters it&#13;
wou e too expensive " h 'd H f . for the t d. · f h ' ' e sai · 0 fman said that another reason&#13;
enrolled" ar mess o t e books a ,, h . w s more t an 20 classes were overestimate&#13;
,s;e~nd1_nt_g thlebnumk ber of students exceede&lt;;l the original&#13;
, a ' ,ona oo s had to be ordered&#13;
Bookstore As a result of the p · bl h · Committee :illems t e book~tore has been having, the&#13;
present bookstore Alth ~oon be I&lt;&gt;?kmg into alternatives to the&#13;
he will be excluded f oug H_offman is _a member of_ the committee,&#13;
"becaus~ he has a rom r:neetmgs at ~hich alternatives are discussed&#13;
doing" -said comm~tetcunihar~ interest_ m what the committee will be&#13;
Th ' I ee c airman Keith Ward . ecommitteewastoh meeting; 1- · - but no one on th/ve e e~ted a new chairman at last week's&#13;
told the committee h ,committee wanted to be chairman. Ward&#13;
few weeks while a r e rou d volunteer to continue in the chair for a&#13;
business did not alloep ~~em_ent success?r is _selected, but that other w im time to continue m the chair indefinitely. &#13;
•&#13;
news&#13;
Drama Dept. announces Debate team preps&#13;
cast for 'Children's Houri for first tournament&#13;
Parkside's Fine Arts Division and the Dramatic&#13;
Arts Discipline will be presenting Lillian Hellman's&#13;
The Children's Hour, October 28, 29 and 30 at 8:00&#13;
p.m. and a matinee October 30 at 2:00 p.m. This&#13;
production will be directed by Dr. Rhoda-Gale&#13;
Pollack, John H. Dickson is the Scenery and&#13;
Lighting Designer. Deborah Bell will be the&#13;
Costume Designer.&#13;
-The Cast for The Children's Hour: Peggy Rogers,&#13;
Cindy Ackerman, Mrs. Lilly Mortar; Margaret&#13;
Madison fifth in gifts&#13;
The University of WisconsinMadison&#13;
ranked fifth among the&#13;
nation's state universities in the&#13;
amount of volunteer financial&#13;
support it received in 1975-76,&#13;
according to the Council for&#13;
Financial Aid to Education. All&#13;
four of the institutions which led&#13;
UW-Madison are multiple campus&#13;
state university systems. In&#13;
another list, which included all&#13;
u.S. colleges and universities -&#13;
public and private - UW-Madison&#13;
ranked 16th in the amount&#13;
of support it received from&#13;
sources such as foundations,&#13;
businesses, alumni and other&#13;
individuals. The $22,341,693 in&#13;
total voluntary support for&#13;
UW-Madison included funds&#13;
from several sources: private&#13;
gifts and donations; additions to&#13;
endowment fund principal;&#13;
receipts ear-marked for the&#13;
university's foundation; and gifts&#13;
from groups such as the&#13;
Wisconsin Alumni Research&#13;
Foundation. Statewide, the ten&#13;
UW System ~niversities which&#13;
contributed to the 1975-76 report&#13;
listed a total of $26.6 million in&#13;
voluntary support.&#13;
McCarthy, Evelyn Munn; Karen Topolovec, Helen&#13;
Burton; Wendy Sorenson, lois Fisher; laura Bruno,&#13;
Catherine; Patti lowe, Rosalie Wells, Catherine&#13;
Casselman, Mary Tilford; Donna Linde, Nancy;&#13;
Teresa Adrianson, Karen Wright; Mary Stankus,&#13;
Martha Dobie: Susan Wishaw, Doctor Joseph&#13;
Cardin; Bill Fitzgerald, Agatha; Cheryl Powalicz,&#13;
Mrs. Amelia Tilford; Iacquie 5hallenburg, and the&#13;
Grocery Boy; larry Hargen.&#13;
Dope is mailed&#13;
to Miss Lillian&#13;
(CPS) The Revolutionary Cannabis Party (RCP) sent President&#13;
Carter's mother a letter urging decriminalization of marijuana aJong&#13;
with two marijuana cigarettes last August. Earlier, Miss Lillian told&#13;
People magazine that she has never smoked dope, but if her son's&#13;
proposal to lift federal criminal penalties for possession of up to one&#13;
ounce becomes law, she hopes to see some.&#13;
Along with instructions on smoking the joints, the Rep warned&#13;
Miss Lillian that there are some disadvantages to smoking pot.&#13;
"One of which is the dreaded munchies .Another disadvantage is&#13;
that marijuana is still illegal .. However, we doubt if you really have&#13;
to be concerned with being arrested. So enjoy yourself." The letter&#13;
was signed "Fidel Castor-oil."&#13;
So far, no word on Miss Lillian.&#13;
The fastest-growing Premium Beer&#13;
in America'.&#13;
~I.&#13;
r~.~&#13;
Get a free calendar with a glan of Old St"le! - .'&#13;
The debate and forensscs&#13;
squad, under the direction of&#13;
Cornmumcenon Professor Bruce&#13;
Weaver. IS preparing for Its first&#13;
intercollegiate tournament&#13;
which will be held at Whitewater&#13;
on October 1 The national tOPiC&#13;
this year IS, Resolved That Law&#13;
enforcement agencies in the U.S&#13;
should be gtven significantly&#13;
greater freedom In the mvesugetron&#13;
and or presecution of&#13;
felony crimes Aside from&#13;
par trcrp atmg In tournaments&#13;
throughout the Midwest, Parkside's&#13;
debate club hopes to&#13;
engage In debates and diSCUS"&#13;
~lonS on local I sv at high&#13;
scbocls and fVIC organizations.&#13;
In the area and In MalO Place&#13;
here at the umversuv&#13;
Member~ Interested In IcrenSICS&#13;
are working on persuasive&#13;
speeches, poetry readings, and&#13;
other mdrvrdual events In&#13;
preparation for their first meet 10&#13;
the middle of October If you are&#13;
Interested In becoming a&#13;
member of thiS ecuve group,&#13;
contact Dr Weaver at 2420 or&#13;
leave your name address. and&#13;
number at CA2S8&#13;
Suits and ties win&#13;
(CPS) - A teacher In leans,&#13;
sneakers and a sportshirt IS a&#13;
teacher who's sympathetic,&#13;
friendly, and tlexible. while a&#13;
teacher in a SUIt and tie IS one&#13;
who's knowledgeable, well·&#13;
prepared and well-organized&#13;
That's the way It seemed to&#13;
students at Pennsylvania State&#13;
University looking at photos of&#13;
teachers In venous modes of&#13;
attire&#13;
Actually, the photos they saw&#13;
were of the same two teachers In&#13;
different clothes Dr Steven A&#13;
Rollman, who directed the study,&#13;
said the students not only&#13;
thought the women Informally&#13;
dressed was sympathetic and&#13;
Inendlv, they also thought she&#13;
was fair and snmulenng&#13;
..&#13;
Library Learning Center Survey&#13;
b r 26-29 the University community--&#13;
During the week of sep~e~r:a resid~nts--will be surveyed refaculty,&#13;
students, .staff anf&#13;
the Library/Learning Center services,&#13;
garding the effectl~e~e~s 0 he surve is part of a year-long selfcollections&#13;
and facliltles. Tt&#13;
f om t~e Council on Library Resources,&#13;
study program fund~d by a gran r&#13;
a national foundatlon.&#13;
com lete the questionnaire and return it&#13;
When conta~ted, Pleas=Ciliiate the return of the questionnaire,&#13;
as soon as posslble. ;0 f 11 have been placed on the concourse&#13;
boxes marked IIL~br~ry urQv~~stionnaires may also be mailed to level in all bUlldlngs. .&#13;
Carla Stoffle, Library/Learnlng Center.&#13;
Your assistance Wl e g ·11 b reatly appreciated.&#13;
Jf O,~ UD~;- of the Library /&#13;
Learning Center&#13;
•&#13;
news&#13;
Drama Dept. announces Debate team preps&#13;
cast for 'Children's Hour' for first tournament&#13;
Parkside's Fine Arts Division and the Dramatic&#13;
Arts Discipline will be presenting Lillian Hellman's&#13;
The Children's Hour, October 28, 29 and 30 at 8:00&#13;
p.m. and a matinee October 30 at 2:00 p.m . This&#13;
production will be directed by Dr. Rhoda-Gale&#13;
Pollack, John H. Dickson is the Scenery and&#13;
Lighting Designer. Deborah Bell will be the&#13;
Costume Designer.&#13;
McCarthy, Evelyn Munn; Karen Topolovec, Helen&#13;
Burton; Wendy Sorenson, Lois Fisher; Laura Bruno,&#13;
Catherine; Patti Lowe, Rosalie Wells; Catherine&#13;
Casselman, Mary Tilford; Donna Linde, ancy,&#13;
Teresa Adrianson, Karen Wright; Mary Stankus,&#13;
Martha Dobie; Susan Wishaw, Doctor Joseph&#13;
Cardin; Bill Fitzgerald, Agatha; Cheryl Powalicz,&#13;
Mrs. Amelia Tilford; Jacquie Shallenburg, and the -The Cast for The Children's Hour: Peggy Rogers, Grocery Boy; Larry Hargen . Cindy Ackerman, Mrs. Lilly Mortar; Margaret&#13;
The debate and foren 1&#13;
squad, under the d1r tIon of&#13;
Commun1cat1on Professor Bruce&#13;
Wea er, i prepann for It fir t&#13;
intercollegiate tournam nt&#13;
which will be held at Whitewater&#13;
on Octob r 1 Th national topic&#13;
this ear I Resol ed That Law&#13;
enforcement agenci in th U S&#13;
should be given s1gnif1cantl&#13;
greater freedom in th in e t1gat&#13;
Ion and / or presecutIon of&#13;
felon crime Aside from&#13;
partIc IpatIng In tournam nt&#13;
throughout th \.11d e t, Par -&#13;
side· debate club hop to&#13;
Madison fifth in gifts&#13;
The University of WisconsinMadison&#13;
ranked fifth among the&#13;
nation's state universities in the&#13;
amount of volunteer financial&#13;
support it received in 1975-76,&#13;
according to the Council for&#13;
Financial Aid to Education. All&#13;
four of the institutions which led&#13;
UW-Madison are multiple campus&#13;
state university systems. In&#13;
another list, which included all&#13;
U.S. colleges and universities -&#13;
public and private - UW-Madison&#13;
ranked 16th in the amount&#13;
of support it received from&#13;
sources such as foundations,&#13;
businesses, alumni and other&#13;
individuals. The $22,341,693 in&#13;
total voluntary support for&#13;
UW-Madison included funds&#13;
from several sources : private&#13;
gifts and donations; additions to&#13;
endowment fund principal;&#13;
receipts ear-marked for the&#13;
university's foundation; and gifts&#13;
from groups such as the&#13;
Wisconsin Alumni Research&#13;
Foundation . Statewide, the ten&#13;
UW System ~niversities which&#13;
contributed to the 1975-76 report&#13;
listed a total of $26.6 million in&#13;
voluntary support.&#13;
Dope iS mailed&#13;
to Miss Lillian&#13;
(CPS) The Revolutionary Cannabis Party (RCP) sent President&#13;
Carter's mother a letter urging decriminalization of marijuana aJong&#13;
with two marijuana cigarettes last August. Earlier, Miss Lillian told&#13;
People magazine that s_he has never smoked dope, . but if her son's&#13;
proposal to lift federal criminal penalties for possession of up to one&#13;
ounce becomes law, she hopes to see some.&#13;
Along with instructions on ~moking the joints, the .RCP warned&#13;
Miss Lillian that there are some disadvantages to smoking pot.&#13;
"One of which is the dreaded munchies .. Another disadvantage is&#13;
_ that marijuana is still illegal ... However, we _doubt if you,,really have&#13;
to be concerned with being arrested. So en1oy yourself. The letter&#13;
was signed "Fidel Castor-oil."&#13;
So far, no word on Miss Lillian .&#13;
P'lliliN1 The fastest-growing Premium Beer&#13;
in America.&#13;
Get a free calendar with a gla88 or Old Style!&#13;
Suits and ties win&#13;
h · teach r in anou mod (CPS) - A teac er m Jeans,&#13;
sneakers and a sportsh1rt Is a&#13;
teacher who' s s mpathet1c,&#13;
fnendl , and flexible, while a&#13;
teacher in a SUit and tie I one&#13;
who's knowledgeabl , wellprepared&#13;
and well-organiz d&#13;
That's the way It seemed to&#13;
students at Penns I ania State&#13;
Un1vers1ty looking at pho os of&#13;
.. Open&#13;
Alon. &amp; Fri.&#13;
Noon t// 9&#13;
Sat. Noon 1,1 5&#13;
MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES - NOVEL TIES&#13;
Library Learning Center Survey&#13;
mber 26-29 the University communi y--&#13;
During the week of Sep~e resid~nts--will be surveyed refaculty,&#13;
students, _staff anf ~~:a Library/Learning Centers r ic s,&#13;
garding the effecti~e~e~s o The survey is part of a year-long fcollections&#13;
and facilities. t from the Council on Library R ourc , study program fund~d by a gran&#13;
a national foundation.&#13;
lete the questionnaire and return it&#13;
When conta?ted, plea;~c~~:iate the return of the questionnair,&#13;
as soon as possible. ~o '' have been placed on the concours&#13;
boxes marked "L~br~ry urQvey stionnaires may also be mailed to&#13;
level in all buildings. ue_&#13;
Carla Stoffle, Library/Learning Center.&#13;
Your assistance Wi. 11 be greatly appreciated.&#13;
Jt o.~ u~~o~ of the Library/&#13;
Learning Center&#13;
of &#13;
• ,&#13;
space&#13;
from page 1&#13;
the duty. For the mission specialist,&#13;
another forty engineers and scientists&#13;
could satisfy all personnel requirements.&#13;
Assuming a average duty of five to ten&#13;
years, the turnover rate of the Space&#13;
Shuttle crew astronauts wo-uld cntvproduce&#13;
about a dozen or so openings a year. These&#13;
numbers aren't much better than the&#13;
highly competitive space corps days of ~he&#13;
Apollo missions. NASA's latest recruitment&#13;
drive (which will culminate in the&#13;
selection of thirty to forty astronauts late&#13;
in 1977) still resembles the old program.&#13;
These new recruits will be career&#13;
astronauts, regular duty crewmen for the&#13;
routine operations of the Space Shuttle.&#13;
Seats up for grabs&#13;
Sound discouraging? Well, things aren't&#13;
as bad as they seem at first glance. For,&#13;
aboard each and every Space Shuttle,&#13;
there will be four additional seatsavailable&#13;
for additional passengers.Not pilots. Not&#13;
engineers. But PASSENGERS!These crew&#13;
members, designated as "payload specialmembers&#13;
will be designated as "payload&#13;
specialists" and will primarily be&#13;
concerned with the scientific and&#13;
technological experiments on the flight.&#13;
And these seats are currently up for grabs!&#13;
A payload specialist is basically a&#13;
part-time astronaut. The specialists are not&#13;
NASA employees nor are they career&#13;
spacemen or spacewomen in any senseof&#13;
the word. They are visitors who take part in&#13;
an expedition in orbit after less than six&#13;
months total training and who&#13;
immediately return to their homes after&#13;
their space sabbaticals to study the results&#13;
of their experimentation.&#13;
The first selection for the part-time&#13;
astronaut program will be taking place&#13;
immediately, with most of the first choice&#13;
being made in 1977 and early 1978.&#13;
NASA estimates that at least five&#13;
hundred payload specialists will be able to&#13;
ride the Space Shuttle in the period&#13;
between 1980 and 1989 alone. Some&#13;
experts predict that the number may&#13;
exceed twice that much. All types of&#13;
people will be included in this "visitor"&#13;
category, too:&#13;
• A technician from a pharmaceutical&#13;
company may spend two weeks in orbit&#13;
operating a vaccine production-module&#13;
which will create drugs of unprecedented&#13;
purity and potency.&#13;
• An astronomer from a small Midwestern&#13;
college might be chosen to implement an&#13;
celestial observation program on a&#13;
NASA-provided infra-red survey telescope&#13;
spectrometer.&#13;
• A graduate student in oceanography&#13;
could do a PhD disertation from orbit,&#13;
charting the tropical currents on&#13;
. continental shelves.&#13;
• A construction foreman might be sent&#13;
into orbit by his building research division&#13;
to oversee the assembly and operation of a&#13;
beam rolling plant which converts Shuttle&#13;
fuel tank aluminum into structural spars a&#13;
half mile long, to be used in the&#13;
construction of a giant radio telescope and&#13;
a solar power station.&#13;
• A neurologist studying balance and&#13;
vertigo mechanisms in an attempt to&#13;
understand normal and abnormal brain&#13;
psychology may bring along a small zoo of&#13;
experimental animals and then be granted&#13;
official permission to test reluctant fellow&#13;
shipmates also.&#13;
• An Air Force technical sergeant from a&#13;
New Englandlaboratory might spend days&#13;
in orbit monitoring the performance of a&#13;
new design for a large unfurable space&#13;
telemetry antenna system.&#13;
Payload Specialist: the common man&#13;
Payload specialists, unlike current&#13;
astronauts, will not be chosen from an&#13;
elite group nor will they be unique in&#13;
any way in terms of backgrounds, interests&#13;
and goals. NASA plans to have both men&#13;
and women in the program, ranging in age&#13;
from their early 20's to late 60's. They may&#13;
be any height from 5'1" to 6'4". They can&#13;
wear glasses, have false teeth, allergies,&#13;
flat feet, pot bellies and bad posture. All&#13;
they have to do is to take what the Air&#13;
Force calls a Class II Flight Physical; a&#13;
standard test which a large part of the&#13;
present day adult population cpuld pass.&#13;
Even Carter could go&#13;
Science buffs will not be the only&#13;
passengers considered for the role of&#13;
payload specialist. Other observers may&#13;
include newsmen, tourists, medical&#13;
patients,' artists and the President of the&#13;
United States.&#13;
Space Shuttle jaunt as a specialist? \l\t:!II,&#13;
NASA itself determines what type of&#13;
experiments will be conducted o~ e~ch&#13;
mission. Once that is done, the principle&#13;
scientists involved form a panel which&#13;
picks the appropriate freelance astronauts&#13;
from matching fields. NASA still hasn't&#13;
come up with a method for picking the&#13;
"space available" payload specialist, but&#13;
they're working on it.&#13;
Space available travel&#13;
On some missions, such as routine&#13;
satellite launchings and the like, NASAwill&#13;
offer seats on a "space available" basis,&#13;
which will not interfere with the primary&#13;
mission. In all cases, it's up to the&#13;
would-be payload specialists to watch out&#13;
for any and all opportunities and then go&#13;
after them with glee.&#13;
But just what are the particulars&#13;
involved in actually being chosen for a&#13;
Who can go&#13;
With the creations of the Shuttle's&#13;
"visiting astronaut" program, many hopeful&#13;
space pioneers wonder; "What field&#13;
should I study in college to increase the&#13;
chances of my becoming an astronaut?"&#13;
Most NASA officials can't answer that&#13;
question directly but can offer a reply in&#13;
reverse. They advise anyone interested at&#13;
all in the space program to study anc(&#13;
i·j I . [' ,-&#13;
"," ·j'll. \ : ~~";:i+:-i-.'\ l'_~;c:, - " /T /i\ : --",.-".__1_ ~.-', I&#13;
,: -: _.--_;".' '.'_' _"_, __ 1 , . __ '._.I~~~&#13;
Space Shuttle: plenty of room for everyone&#13;
, /&#13;
master anyone of a countless number of&#13;
disciplines in school or on the job. But&#13;
they are quick to point out, it should be in&#13;
a field or a subject that the-space lover&#13;
enjoys and can excel in. After the subject&#13;
is picked and knowledge is garnered, then&#13;
and only then should a prospective&#13;
payload specialist look for a possible space&#13;
connection.&#13;
Once an eager space enthusiast hasmet&#13;
NASA's qualifications and has been picked&#13;
as a payload specialist, he or she will have&#13;
to go through a period of preparation. The&#13;
most crucial planning for a mission will&#13;
always be in the subject of specialization&#13;
which justifies the part-time astronaut's&#13;
selection for the tlight in the first place.&#13;
(Remember, the whole purpose of the&#13;
semi-spaceman program is to advance the&#13;
"state of the art" in one's chosen .field.j&#13;
With each payload specialist's ticket to&#13;
space costing over three million dollars,&#13;
those lucky ones chosen had better spend&#13;
a lot of time boning up on his or her top&#13;
subjects, preparing a series of original and&#13;
appropriate experiments to take place on&#13;
board the shuttle.&#13;
As a fu II crew, the embryonic Shuttle&#13;
troupe will go through a series of launch,&#13;
orbit and landing exercises. Finally, the&#13;
payload specialist will study the corollary&#13;
minor experiments which they will&#13;
conduct or assist in for the benefit of other&#13;
scientists not actually on the flight. Once&#13;
finishing the six month of preparation,&#13;
there is only one further task awaiting the&#13;
part-time astronaut; LIFT-OFF!&#13;
So, after years of dreaming, the re~lity of&#13;
space flight for science-fiction fans will&#13;
finaliy be here. The rockets will roar. The&#13;
acceleration will feel crushing. The&#13;
universe will stretch infinitely out-side the&#13;
spaceship's window.&#13;
Space settlements&#13;
The next problem is whene to stay once&#13;
you get there. In an effort to publicize&#13;
their grandest (and as yet unfunded)&#13;
scheme, NASA has published Space&#13;
Settlements - A J Design Study. This&#13;
18S-page, beautifully iilustrated book&#13;
printed on glossy, heavy-stock paper, is&#13;
available from the Superintendent of&#13;
Documents, U.S. Government Printing&#13;
Office, Washington~D.C. 20402 for $5.00.&#13;
The stock number for ordering is&#13;
033-000-00669-1. The report grew out of a&#13;
ten-week program in systems design at&#13;
Stanford Universitv and NASA's Ames&#13;
Research Center,&#13;
O'NeTI is pioneer&#13;
Gerard O'Neil, whose recent book The'&#13;
High Frontier first brought the feasibility of&#13;
orbiting habitats to the public's attention,&#13;
acted as a technical director for the study.&#13;
The groups conclusions are as&#13;
mind-boggling as the concepts discussed:&#13;
it is entirely feasible to house this planet's&#13;
total population in sophisticated space&#13;
habitats in Earth-orbit by the turn of the&#13;
21st century. This can be achieved using&#13;
currently existing technology and&#13;
hardware. Their findings about the&#13;
availability of raw materials in space are&#13;
no less spectacular; a thorough&#13;
examination of the problem suggeststhat&#13;
the Moon and the Asteroid Belt between&#13;
Mars and Jupiter can be mined for ores in&#13;
sufficient quantities as to eliminate the&#13;
need for costly shipments from Earth. The&#13;
habitat is 19 miles long and 4&#13;
miles in diameter. The materials used for&#13;
its construction would be mined and&#13;
manufactured in space using solar power.&#13;
The interior could be landscaped tc .&#13;
resemble the Rocky Mountain·s, the plains&#13;
of South Dakota or the timber forests of&#13;
Oregon, depending on how the builders&#13;
plan it to be. A space colony of this size&#13;
could support a population of two hundred&#13;
thousand to several million depending on&#13;
the design. In this, the- largest of the four&#13;
colonies proposed by Dr. O'Neil, Earth-like&#13;
gravity would be produced by the&#13;
centrifugal force of rotation of the large&#13;
cylinder around its axis every 114 seconds.&#13;
Sunlight coming through the glass&#13;
"windows" would be controlled by mirrors&#13;
outside, so that the days, nights and&#13;
seasons wouf'd resuIt. -&#13;
•&#13;
space&#13;
from page 1&#13;
the duty. For the mission specialist,&#13;
another forty engineers and scientists&#13;
could satisfy all personnel requirements.&#13;
Assuming a average duty of five to ten&#13;
years the turnover rate of the Space&#13;
Shuttle crew astronauts wo·uid only produce&#13;
about a dozen or so openings a year. These&#13;
numbers aren't much better than the&#13;
highly competitive space corps days of ~he&#13;
Apollo missions. NASA's latest recruitment&#13;
drive (which will culminate in the&#13;
selection of thirty to forty astronauts late&#13;
in 1977) still resembles the old program.&#13;
These new recruits will be ,career&#13;
astronauts, regular duty crewmen for the&#13;
routine operations of the Space Shuttle.&#13;
Seats up for grabs&#13;
Sound discouraging? Well, things aren't&#13;
as bad as they seem at first glance. For,&#13;
aboard each and every Space Shuttle,&#13;
there will be four additional seats available&#13;
for additional passengers. Not pilots. Not&#13;
engineers . But PASSENGERS! These crew&#13;
members, designated as "payload specialmembers&#13;
will be designated as "payload&#13;
specia lists" and will primarily be&#13;
concerned with the scientific and&#13;
technological experiments on the flight.&#13;
And these seats are currently up for grabs!&#13;
A payload specialist is basically a&#13;
part-time astronaut. The specialists are not&#13;
NASA employees nor are they career&#13;
spacemen or spacewomen in any sense of&#13;
the word . They are visitors who take part in&#13;
an expedition in orbit after less than six&#13;
months total training and who&#13;
immediately return to their homes after&#13;
their space sabbaticals to study the results&#13;
of their experimentation.&#13;
The first selection for the part-time&#13;
astronaut program will be taking place&#13;
immediately, with most of the first choice&#13;
being made in 1977 and early 1978.&#13;
NASA estimates that at least five&#13;
hundred payload specialists will be able to&#13;
ride the Space Shuttle in the period&#13;
between 1980 and 1989 alone. Some&#13;
experts predict that the number may&#13;
exceed twice that much. All types of&#13;
people will be included in this "visitor"&#13;
category, too:&#13;
• A technician from a pharmaceutical&#13;
company may spend two weeks in orbit&#13;
operating a vaccine production-module&#13;
which will create drugs of unprecedented&#13;
purity and potency.&#13;
• An astronomer from a small Midwestern&#13;
college might be chosen to implement an&#13;
celestial observation program on a&#13;
NASA-provided infra-red survey telescope&#13;
spectrometer.&#13;
• A graduate student in oceanography&#13;
could do a PhD disertation from orbit,&#13;
charting the tropical currents on&#13;
continental shelves.&#13;
• A construction foreman might be sent&#13;
into orbit by his building research division&#13;
to oversee the assembly and operation of a&#13;
beam rolling plant which converts Shuttle&#13;
fuel tank aluminum into structural spars a&#13;
half mile long, to be used in the&#13;
construction of .a giant radio telescope and&#13;
a solar power station.&#13;
• A neurologist studying balance and&#13;
vertigo mechanisms in an attempt to&#13;
understand normal and abnormal brain&#13;
psychology may bring along a small zoo of&#13;
experimental animals and then be granted&#13;
official permission to test reluctant fellow&#13;
shipmates also.&#13;
• An Air Force technical sergeant from a&#13;
New England ·laboratory might. spend days&#13;
in orbit monitoring the performance of a&#13;
new· design for a large unfurable space&#13;
telemetry antenna system.&#13;
Payload Specialist: the common man&#13;
Payload specialists, unlike current&#13;
astronauts, will not be chosen from an&#13;
elite group nor will they be unique in&#13;
any way in terms of backgrounds, interests&#13;
and goals. NASA plans to have both men&#13;
and women in the program, ranging in age&#13;
from their early 20's to late 60's. They may&#13;
be any height from 5'1" to 6'4". They can&#13;
wear glasses, have false teeth, allergies,&#13;
flat feet, pot bellies and bad posture. All&#13;
they have to do is to take what the Air&#13;
Force calls a Class 11 Flight Physical; a&#13;
standard test which a large part of the&#13;
present day adult population c~uld pass.&#13;
, Even Carter could go&#13;
Science buffs will not be the only&#13;
passengers considered for the role of&#13;
payload specialist. Other observers may&#13;
include newsmen , tourists, medical&#13;
patients, artists and the President of the&#13;
United States.&#13;
Space available travel&#13;
On some missions, such as routine&#13;
satellite launchings and the like, NASA will&#13;
offer seats on a "space available" basis,&#13;
which will not interfere with the primary&#13;
mission. In all cases, it's up to the&#13;
would-be payload specialists to watch out&#13;
for any and all opportunities and then go&#13;
after them with glee.&#13;
But just what are the particulars&#13;
involved in actually being chosen for a&#13;
Space Shuttle jaunt as a specialist? ~II,&#13;
NASA itself determines what type of&#13;
experiments will be conducted on e~ch&#13;
mission . Once that is done, the principle&#13;
scientists involved form a panel which&#13;
picks th~ appropriate freelance astronau~&#13;
from matching fields . NASA still hasn t&#13;
come up with a method for picking the&#13;
"space available" payload specialist, but&#13;
they're working on it.&#13;
Who can go&#13;
· With the creations of the Shuttle's&#13;
"visiting astronaut" program, many hopeful&#13;
space pioneers wonder; "What field&#13;
should I study in college to increase the&#13;
chances of my becoming an astronaut?"&#13;
Most NASA officials can't answer that&#13;
question directly but can offer a reply in&#13;
reverse. They advise anyone interested at&#13;
all in the space program to study anf&#13;
Space Shuttle: plenty of room for everyone&#13;
'&#13;
' /&#13;
master any one of a countless number of&#13;
disciplines in school or on the job. But&#13;
they are quick to point out, it should be in&#13;
a field or a subject that the -space lover&#13;
enjoys and can excel in. After the subject&#13;
is picked and knowledge is garnered, then&#13;
and only then should a prospective&#13;
pay lo.ad specialist look for a possible space&#13;
connection. '&#13;
Once an eager space enthusiast has met&#13;
NASA's qualifications and has been picked&#13;
as a payload specialist, he or she will have&#13;
to go through a period of preparation. The&#13;
most crucial planning for a mission will&#13;
always be in the subject of specialization&#13;
which justifies the part-time astronaut's&#13;
selection for the flight in the first place.&#13;
(R~member, the whole purpose of the&#13;
semi-spaceman program is to advance the&#13;
"state of the art" in one's chosen . field.)&#13;
With each payload specialist's ticket to&#13;
space costing over three million dollars,&#13;
those lucky ones chosen had better spend&#13;
a lot of time boning up on his or her top&#13;
subjects, preparing a series of original and&#13;
appropriate experiments to take place on&#13;
board the shuttle.&#13;
As a full crew, the embryonic Shuttle&#13;
troupe will go through a series of launc::h,&#13;
orbit and landing exercises. Finally, the&#13;
payload specialist will study the corollary&#13;
minor experiments which they will&#13;
conduct or assist in for the benefit of other&#13;
scientists not actually on- the flight. Once&#13;
fi nishing the six month of preparation,&#13;
there is only one further task awaiting the&#13;
part-time astronaut: LI FT-OFF!&#13;
So, after years of dreaming, the re~.lity of 1&#13;
space flight for science-fiction fans will&#13;
finally be here. The rockets will roar. The&#13;
acceleration will feel crushing. Jhe&#13;
universe will stretch infinitely out0 side the&#13;
spaceship's window.&#13;
Space settlements&#13;
The next problem is whene to stay once ./&#13;
you get there. In ar. d fort to publicize&#13;
their grandest (and as yet unfunded)&#13;
scheme, NASA has published Space&#13;
Settlements - A , Design Study. This&#13;
185-page, beautifully illustrated book&#13;
printed on glossy, heavy-stock paper, is&#13;
available from the Superintendent of&#13;
Documents, U.S. Government Printing&#13;
Office, Washington,_D.C. 20402 for $5.00.&#13;
The stock number for ordering is&#13;
033-000-00669-1. The report grew out of a&#13;
ten-week program in systems design at&#13;
Stanford University and NASA's Ames&#13;
Research Centei:_.&#13;
O'Neil is pioneer&#13;
Gerard O'Neil, whose recent book The&#13;
High Frontier first brought the feasibility of&#13;
orbiting habitats to the public's attention,&#13;
acted as a technical director for the study.&#13;
The groups conclusions are as&#13;
mind-boggl ing as the concepts discussed:&#13;
it is entir.ely feasible to house this planet's&#13;
total population in sophisticated space&#13;
habitats in Earth-orbit by the turn of the&#13;
21st century. This can be achieved using&#13;
currently existing technology and&#13;
hardware. Their findings about the&#13;
availability of raw materials in space are&#13;
no less spectacular: a thorough&#13;
examination of the problem suggests that&#13;
the Moon and the Asteroid Belt between&#13;
Mars and Jupiter can be mined for ores in&#13;
sufficient quantities as to eliminate the&#13;
need for costly shipments from Earth. The&#13;
habitat is 19 miles long and 4&#13;
miles in diameter. The materials used for&#13;
its construction would be mined and&#13;
rt;1anufactured in space using solar power.&#13;
The inter-ior could be landscaped to ·&#13;
resemble the Rocky Mountains, the plains&#13;
of South Dakota or the timber forests of&#13;
Oregon, depending on how the builders&#13;
plan it to be. A space colony of this size&#13;
could support a population of two hundred&#13;
thousand to several million depending on&#13;
the design. In this, the- largest of the four&#13;
colonies proposed by Dr. O'Neil, Earth-like&#13;
gravity would be produced by the&#13;
centrifugal force of rotation of the large&#13;
cylinder around its axis every 114 seconds.&#13;
Sunlight coming through the glass&#13;
"windows" would be controlled by mirrors&#13;
outside, so that the days, nights and&#13;
seasons wouf'd resu It. . -&#13;
•&#13;
news&#13;
Montoya&#13;
concert&#13;
sold out&#13;
Flamenco guitarist Carlos Montoya, who introduced the Gypsy&#13;
musical idiom to the concert stage and has made the distinctive&#13;
Flamenco style familiar throughout the world, will present the&#13;
opening program in the University of Wisconsin-Parkside's Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 28, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
The series is sold out on a subscription basis. No individual tickets&#13;
are available.&#13;
A Spanish gypsy, born in Madrid, Montoya was a musical prodigy,&#13;
achieving national renown at 14. His debut as a concert artist dye first&#13;
to present 5010 performances of Flamenco guitar without the aid of a&#13;
dancer or singer, was preceded by years of accompaeving such&#13;
distinguished dancers as La Argentina, Vicente Escudero and&#13;
Argentinita.&#13;
Original compositions&#13;
All of the selections Montoya plays are his own compositions and&#13;
all derive from traditional Flamenco themes, usually consisting of one&#13;
short verse, which Montoya uses as a basis for improvisation to create&#13;
a wholly new, self- contained musical entity.&#13;
Since improvisation is the essence of Flamenco music, Montoya&#13;
cannot rely on printed music. Just as well in Montoya's case, since he&#13;
has built an international reputation as a concert and recording artist&#13;
v-Aithoutever learning to read music. Flamenco does, however, have&#13;
strict rules of rhythm and characteristic chord patterns which&#13;
underlie all of Montoya's compositions.&#13;
Consistently acclaimed by critics for his remarkable musicianship.&#13;
Montoya regards as the capstone of his career the performance of his&#13;
"Suite Flamenca" for guitar and orchestra with the St. Louis&#13;
Symphony Orchestra in 1966, the culmination of a 25-year effort to&#13;
transcribe the Flamenco idiom into music for solo guitar and&#13;
orchestra.&#13;
Four sided gypsy&#13;
Montoya is, as the Spaniard's say, "Gitana por los cuatro costados"&#13;
or "Gypsy on all four sides." He studied guitar first with his mother,&#13;
who played for her own enjoyment, and then with a Madrid barber,&#13;
who also taught guitar. After one year, the barber told Montoya he&#13;
had nothing left to teach him. When the famed dancer "La&#13;
Argentina" came to Madrid looking for a guitarist, she chose&#13;
Montoya and he left Spain for the first time to tour Europe with her&#13;
for three years.&#13;
In 1948, he began to give full solo concert recitals of Flamenco&#13;
music and has since toured throughout the world. He has also won&#13;
international fame through his recordings and is the most recorded&#13;
Flamenco artist in history.&#13;
A Week in the Sun!&#13;
CHRISTMAS BREAK&#13;
"Paradise In the Caribbean"&#13;
JAMAICA from $279.00&#13;
Jan. s to Jan. 10&#13;
"A Secret Paradise"&#13;
~1~alWdo(&#13;
Dec. 17to Dec. 24&#13;
Dec. 31 to Jan. 07&#13;
Jan. 07 to Jan. 14&#13;
$339.00&#13;
ALL DEPARTURES FROM CHICAGO&#13;
PRICES PER PERSON - DOUBLE OCCUPANCY&#13;
$100.00 DEPOSIT&#13;
SIGN UP EARLY - SPACE LIMITED!&#13;
GROUP TRAVEL ASSOCIATES, INC.&#13;
202 Division St., Elgin, iL 60120&#13;
Phone: (312) 697·8855&#13;
,Cheated' students sue universities&#13;
(CPS) - Two years ago, Jim Lowenthal was&#13;
working towards a doctoral degree at the graduate&#13;
school of management at Vanderbilt Uruversttv in&#13;
Nashville, Tenn Before long, he realized he was not&#13;
getting what he paid for. _&#13;
By 1974, when the program was not yet a year&#13;
old, problems had set in There was sharp&#13;
disagreement among faculty over the students in&#13;
the program, over the proper methods of research,&#13;
over what constituted legitimate and competent&#13;
doctoral work and over the basic direction of the&#13;
program. Faculty members began urulaterallv&#13;
resigning from qualifying committees of students&#13;
due to internal squabbles. The doctoral committee&#13;
voted not to accept any new students into the&#13;
doctoral program because it was under review.&#13;
Crash review&#13;
In March 1975, the faculty decided to conduct a&#13;
crash review of the entire program and the 12&#13;
students in it. As a result of the review, the faculty&#13;
voted on wheather to retain or expel each student&#13;
and one person got the ax after he had previously&#13;
been admitted.&#13;
After an unsuccessful trip through academic&#13;
channels to get the situation resolved, Lowenthal&#13;
and seven other students in the program took their&#13;
case to court. Last week, a chancery court in&#13;
Nashville ruled that Vanderbilt must pay damages&#13;
of more than $30,000 to the eight former students&#13;
for breach of contract.&#13;
Ilene Ianniello, a former student at the University&#13;
of Bridgeport in Corm., was not so lucky. Ianniello&#13;
charged that a required course she had taken was&#13;
worthless and contended that she was entitled to a&#13;
refund. Her suit complained that she had learned&#13;
nothing in the course, Materials and Methods in&#13;
Education, which whe had attended in the spring of&#13;
1974 and that the university owed her $155 in&#13;
registration fees, $15 for books, $120 for lost wages&#13;
and $180 in travel expenses. A common pleas court&#13;
in Bridgeport said no.&#13;
Education as a commodity&#13;
Many people now consider education a&#13;
commodity and if the buyer is not satisfied with the&#13;
product, he or she can return it to the store for a&#13;
complete fund. Since education is not yet a&#13;
returnable commodity, students and lawyers are&#13;
taking the only course they see open to them and&#13;
suing in order to retrieve damages suffered because&#13;
the product failed to deliver.&#13;
The Vanderbilt case took two years and more&#13;
than $5,000 of the students' funds&#13;
"At first they (Vanderbilt) stonewalled It It was&#13;
like Watergate:' said Lowenthal "Would I do It&#13;
again1 Sure The university is in a posruon to&#13;
resource you to death It takes a lot of time and&#13;
money'&#13;
The students at Vanderbilt had a difficult time&#13;
finding a lawyer to take on their case Four lawyers&#13;
turned them down Finally, Gary Blackburn, a&#13;
district attorney 10 Tenn, agreed to help Lowenthal&#13;
and the other students on the fundamental&#13;
pnncrple that "students in btgher education, as 10&#13;
all other contexts of the market place, should get&#13;
what they're paying for"&#13;
Blackburn could not find any cases where an&#13;
entire program was involved and used legal&#13;
precedents involving state universities which had&#13;
violated due process of law by terminating students&#13;
in programs.&#13;
According to Blackburn, the Ianniello case was&#13;
probably more difficult to win because it is&#13;
"economically unfeasible to sue over failure to&#13;
deliver one course." The judge in the case&#13;
commented that the agreement to provide an&#13;
education between a student and a school cannot&#13;
be viewed in the same light as other consumer&#13;
purchases.&#13;
. (he.tedl&#13;
There are several specific things a student can do&#13;
if he or she feels cheated by a course or program&#13;
The student must obtain a private attorney with&#13;
experience in contract law.&#13;
"Throwaway nothing," advises Blackburn. It IS&#13;
necessary to keep all correspondence, catalogues,&#13;
bulletins for the course, promotions, all class&#13;
materials including the syllabus and any letters&#13;
between students and the administration&#13;
It is helpful to write down everything the student&#13;
can remember about the situation, according to&#13;
Blackburn&#13;
The Vanderbilt case, while a victory for the&#13;
doctoral students, will not bind other courts unless&#13;
appealed and upheld venderbrlts lawyer, Wilham&#13;
Ozier, has appealed the decision&#13;
The Vanderbilt graduate school of management&#13;
is still functioning but there IS a new dean and the&#13;
doctoral program has been terminated&#13;
And Jim Lowenthal has SWitched to the sociology&#13;
department.&#13;
at the&#13;
BRAT STOP&#13;
located at 50 &amp; 1-94&#13;
THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY FREE BEER&#13;
From 8:00 PM to 10:00 P.M&#13;
[With cover cherge)&#13;
Thurs.ar~&#13;
'100 off With valid college 10&#13;
Bar Dnnks and Beer only 50'&#13;
Call Drinks shghtly more&#13;
this week:&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
STORMCROW&#13;
TRUe&#13;
BAD BOY [Formerly Crossfire)&#13;
FRI.&#13;
HEART &amp; SOUL&#13;
SAT.&#13;
AMBERJACK&#13;
news&#13;
Montoya&#13;
concert&#13;
sold out&#13;
Flamenco guitarist Carlos Montoya, who introduced the Gypsy&#13;
musical idiom to the concert stage and has made the distinctive&#13;
flamenco style familiar throughout the world, will present the&#13;
opening program in the University of Wisconsin-Parkside's Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 28, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
The series is sold out on a subscription basis. No individual tickets&#13;
are available.&#13;
A Spanish gypsy, born in Madrid, Montoya was a musical prodigy,&#13;
achieving national renown at 14. His debut as a concert artist, tire first&#13;
to present solo performances of Flamenco guitar without the ~id of a&#13;
dancer or singer, was preceded by years of accompanying such&#13;
distinguished dancers as La Argentina, Vicente Esc~dero and&#13;
Argentinita.&#13;
Original compositions&#13;
All of the selections Montoya play~ are his own compositions and&#13;
all derive from traditional Flamenco themes, usually consisting of one&#13;
short verse, which Montoya uses as a basis for improvisation to create&#13;
a wholly new, self- contained musical entity.&#13;
Since improvisation is the essence of Flamenco music, Montoya&#13;
cannot rely on printed music. Just as well in Montoya's case, since he&#13;
has built an international reputation as a concert and recording artist&#13;
without ever learning to read music. Flamenco does however have&#13;
strict rules of rhythm and characteristic chord 'patterns ~hich&#13;
underlie all of Montoya's compositions.&#13;
Consistently acclaimed by critics for.his remarkable musicianship,&#13;
Montoya regards as the capstone of his career the performance of his&#13;
" Suite Flamenca" for guitar and orchestra with the St. Louis&#13;
Symphony Orchestra in 1966, the culmination of a 25-year effort to&#13;
transcribe the Flamenco idiom into music for solo guitar and&#13;
orchestra .&#13;
Four sided gypsy&#13;
Montoya is, as the Spaniard's say, "Gitano por los cuatro costados"&#13;
or "Gypsy on all four sides." He studied guitar first with his mother,&#13;
who played for her own enjoyment, and then with a Madrid barber,&#13;
who also taught guitar. After one year, the barber told Montoya he&#13;
had nothing left to teach him. When the famed dancer "La&#13;
Argentina" came to Madrid looking for a guitarist, she chose&#13;
Montoya and he left Spain for the first time to tour Europe with her&#13;
for three years .&#13;
In 1948, he began to give full solo concert recitals of Flamenco&#13;
music and has since toured throughout the world . He has also won&#13;
international fame through his recordings and is the most recorded&#13;
Flamenco artist in history.&#13;
A Week in the Sun!&#13;
CHRISTMAS BREAK&#13;
"Paradise In the Caribbean"&#13;
· JAMAICA from $279.00&#13;
Jan. 3' to Jan. 1 0&#13;
"A Secret Paradise"&#13;
&lt;.EliaMdo( $339.00&#13;
Dec. 17 to Dec·. 24&#13;
Dec. 31 to Jan. 07&#13;
Jan. 07 to Jan. 14&#13;
ALL DEPARTURES FROM CHICAGO&#13;
PRICES PER PERSON - DOUBLE OCCUPANCY&#13;
$100.00 DEPOSIT&#13;
SIGN UP EARLY - SPACE LIMITED!&#13;
GROUP TRAVEL ASSOCIATES, INC.&#13;
202 Division St., Elgin, IL 60120&#13;
Phone: (312) 697-·8855&#13;
'Cheated' students sue universities&#13;
(CPS) - Two years ago, Jim Lowenthal was&#13;
working towards a doctoral degree at the graduate&#13;
school of management at Vanderbilt University in&#13;
Nashville, Tenn . Before long, he realized he was not&#13;
getting what he paid for . _&#13;
By 1974, when the program was not yet a year&#13;
old, problems had set in . There was sharp&#13;
disagreement among faculty over the students in&#13;
the program, over the pr'°~per methods of research ,&#13;
over what constituted legitimate and competent&#13;
doctoral work and over the basic direction of the&#13;
program . Faculty members began unilaterally&#13;
resigning from qualifying committees of students&#13;
due to internal squabbles. The doctoral committee&#13;
voted not to accept any new students into the&#13;
doctoral program because it was under review.&#13;
Crash review&#13;
In March 1975, the faculty decided to conduct a&#13;
crash review of the entire program and the 12&#13;
students in it. As a result of the review, the faculty&#13;
voted on wheather to retain or expel each student&#13;
and one person got the ax after he had previously&#13;
been admitted .&#13;
After an unsuccessful trip through academic&#13;
channels to get the situation resolved , Lowenthal&#13;
and seven other students in the program took their&#13;
case to court. Last week, a chancery court in&#13;
Nashville ruled that Vanderbilt must pay damages&#13;
of more than $30,000 to the eight former students&#13;
for breach of contract.&#13;
Ilene Ianniello, a former student at the University&#13;
of Bridgeport in Conn ., was not so lucky . Ianniello&#13;
charged that a required course she had taken was&#13;
worthless and contended that she was entitled to a&#13;
refund . Her suit complained that she had learned&#13;
nothing in the course, Materials and Methods in&#13;
Education, which whe had attended in the spring of&#13;
1974 and that the university owed her $155 in&#13;
registration fees, $15 for books, $120 for lost wages&#13;
and $180 in travel expenses . A common pleas court&#13;
in Bridgeport said no.&#13;
Education as a commodity&#13;
Many peo__Qle now consider educat ion a&#13;
commodity and if the buyer is not satisfied with the&#13;
product, he or she can return it to the store for a&#13;
complete fund . Since education is not yet a&#13;
returnable commodity, students and lawyers are&#13;
taking the only course they see open to them and&#13;
suing in order to retrieve damages suffered because&#13;
the product failed to deliver.&#13;
The Vanderbilt case took two years and mor&#13;
than $5,000 of the students' funds&#13;
"At first they (Vanderbilt) stonewalled It, It was&#13;
like Watergate," said Lowenthal. " Would I do It&#13;
again? Sure The university is in a posItIon to&#13;
resource you to death It takes a lot of time and&#13;
money "&#13;
The students at Vanderbilt had a difficult time&#13;
find ing a lawyer to take on their case r our lawyers&#13;
ti}med them down Finally, Gary Blackburn , a&#13;
district attorney in Tenn ., agreed to help Low nthal&#13;
and the other students on the fundamental&#13;
principle that " students in b1gher education, as in&#13;
all other contexts of the market place, should get&#13;
what they're paying for."&#13;
Blackburn could not find any cases where an&#13;
entire program was involved and used legal&#13;
precedents involving state universities which had&#13;
violated due process of law by terminating students&#13;
in programs .&#13;
According to Blackburn, the Ianniello case was&#13;
probably more difficult to win because it is&#13;
" economically unfeasible to sue over failure to&#13;
deliver one course ." The judge in the case&#13;
commented that the agreement to provide an&#13;
education between a student and a school cannot&#13;
be viewed in the same light as other consumer&#13;
purchases .&#13;
· Cheated?&#13;
There are several specific things a student can do&#13;
if he or she feels cheated by a course or program .&#13;
The student must obtain a private attorney with&#13;
experience in contract law.&#13;
"Throw away nothing,'' advises Blackburn . It Is&#13;
necessary to keep all correspondence, catalogues,&#13;
bulletins for the course, promotions, all class&#13;
materials including the syllabus and any letters&#13;
between students and the administration&#13;
It is helpful to write down everything the student&#13;
can remember about the situation, according to&#13;
Blackburn&#13;
The Vanderbilt case, while a victory for the&#13;
doctoral students , will not bind other courts unle s&#13;
appealed and upheld . Vanderbilt's lawyer, W11l1am&#13;
Ozier, has appealed the decision&#13;
The Vanderbilt graduate school of management&#13;
is still functioning but there I a new dean and th&#13;
doctoral program has been terminated&#13;
And Jim Lowenthal has switch d to the soc,olo&#13;
department .&#13;
at the&#13;
BRAT STOP&#13;
this week:&#13;
THURS.&#13;
located at 50 &amp; 1-94&#13;
THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY FREE BEER&#13;
From s·oo P.M. to 10:0 0 P.M.&#13;
[ with cover charge)&#13;
1&#13;
1.00 off with valid college 10&#13;
Bar Drinks and Beer only 50'&#13;
Call Drinks slightly m ore&#13;
this week:&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
STORMCROW&#13;
TRUC&#13;
BAD BOY&#13;
FRI.&#13;
( Formerly Crossfire)&#13;
SAT.&#13;
SMOKEHOUSE HEART &amp; SOUL AMBERJACK &#13;
Watergate reporter speaks from page 1.&#13;
The Watergate Story the fact that journalists must proble~ that Ca~l B~rnstem a~d I&#13;
Wednesdaf, September 28 Woodward began his speech make people trust in them by have In publi shi ng storres;&#13;
Facult~ and Staff Meeting tnformation session on by disagreeing with Senator learning what's happening and readers expect that the story is&#13;
collective bargaining and discussion of pen.ding Church's (chairman of the senate the reason why. going to be like Watergate. There&#13;
CL committee that investigated the The Bert Lance Affa~ will. never be another Watergate.&#13;
state legislation regarding same. 1:00 p.m. In CIA) statement "the truth always "Too many people were That is something we must&#13;
0-107. comes out' .. 'Woodard challeng- foaming at the mouth looking tor realize. In prlntrn~ the Watergate&#13;
Guitarist Carlos Montoya, Flamenco guitarist. ed Senator Church's opinion. another Watergate Story in the articles we received a lot of&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Serres, p.m. . 8 "I do not have confidence that Lanceaffair", Woodward said. He support from the Washington d&#13;
we learn the truth. During the believed that half to two-thirds Post. It was not extraor inarv, it&#13;
Friday, September 30 Watergate story it was apparent of the stories printed on the was basic reporting. Llike doing&#13;
Film Uptown Saturday Nlg t : p.m. a n . h 8 00 t U ion to me that disclosure hangs on a Lance affair were overplayed, that work and I am going to&#13;
very fragile thread. The method The fantastic power in the post- continue being a reporter."&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00. of getting the truth out is not Watergate morality has capsized&#13;
Saturday, October 1 institutionalized. There is no Americans. The press is powerful&#13;
Cross-Country Parks ide at Nort ern Inois h III·· department of truth in the enough that "reputations can fly&#13;
government, in the. newspaper, out of the "window with one&#13;
Invitational in DeKalb, Illinois 1:00 p.m. nor a television station." morning's story."&#13;
Golf UW-Parkside Invitational (men's) at Brighton Woodward continued, "Certainly Questions and Answers&#13;
Dale Country Club in Brighton Township (Kenosha if you look at the last ten or During the second half of&#13;
:---fifteen years of American Woodward's talk, the audience.&#13;
County), 9:30 a.m. History, it seems that govern- asked questions. One student&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Whitewater Invitational, 9 ment, at least on the national asked Woodward if he was a&#13;
level, often proceeds by Democrat or Republican.&#13;
Volleyball Women at U - a.m. W M'I k .th concealments rather than dis- ~'Iam a registered independent I wau ee WI&#13;
closures. The awful fact is voter. I did vote for Nixon in&#13;
Marquette, 1 p.m. reporters don't often find out 1968 because I was in the Navy&#13;
Thursday, September 29 what really happens and if.we do while the Vietnam War was&#13;
b D· I find out what really happens going on and I was convinced.he Health-line Athlete's Foot. Through Octo er 6. la we're not very good at finding had the best chance of ending&#13;
553-2588 and ask to hear the Health-Line High- out exactly why it happens:'- the war or.more so than Senator&#13;
light. Woodward emphasized that, Humphrey. I did not vote in&#13;
"in reporting the Watergate Story 1972," said Woodward.&#13;
acted as police reporters, city A reporter from the Milwaukee&#13;
reporters - we were very much Sentinel put Woodward in the&#13;
outsiders. If you look back on same category as Iohn Erlichman&#13;
the chronology of the Watergate in taking $3,000 for appearing at&#13;
Story as it unfolded, a lot of it the conference. Woodward&#13;
was very obvious and simple. justified his presence.&#13;
The reporting took a lot of time "I think there is a valid&#13;
and there was a lot of distinction to be made. I am not&#13;
frustration." benefiting financially from&#13;
In undercovering the Water- criminal acts I committed. I&#13;
gate Scandal, Woodward and think of rnvself as a reporter. I&#13;
Bernstein could tel] something feel an obligation, frankly, to&#13;
unlawful was going on by the come out every now and then to&#13;
"uncertainty, fear, and the answer questions, and I feel I&#13;
Waukesha;. concern" they saw in people's should subject myself to&#13;
faces. But yet, how could they questioning."&#13;
expresspeople's fears in writing. In his closing comments,&#13;
Woodward replied by stressing Woodward concluded, "One&#13;
events&#13;
Sunday, October 2&#13;
Film Uptown Saturday Night, 8:00 p.m. at Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
_Monday, October 3&#13;
Auditions Tryouts for Midnight Musical Madness II&#13;
Gong Show. All faculty and students' invited,&#13;
individuals and groups. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Contact&#13;
Eden Vaning at 553-2457 for more information.&#13;
Tuesday, October 4&#13;
Volleyball Women at North Park with Mundelein,&#13;
Chicago; 6:15 p.m.&#13;
Swimming Women at Carroll College,&#13;
6 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, October 5&#13;
Film Wisconsin Artists Film Festival presents "The&#13;
Front Page". 7 p.m. No admission charge.&#13;
Rondelle Reservations, 554-2154.&#13;
Film Sahara 2:30 and'7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Coffeehouse Claudia Schmidt of the Green Bay area&#13;
plays in Union 104-106. 2-4 p.m. No admission.&#13;
Wine will be served.&#13;
Thursday, October 6&#13;
Golf: Men's NAIA District 14 Tournament, at Spring&#13;
Green, through October 8.&#13;
Volleyball Women's at Lake Forest College, with&#13;
University of Chicago, 6 p.m.&#13;
Health-Line An unwanted Pregnancy? How to deal&#13;
with the problem. Through October 13. Dial 553-&#13;
2588 and ask to hear the Health-Line Highlight.&#13;
Film Caine Mutiny, 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Friday, October 7&#13;
Soccer Men at UW Chancellors' Cup Tournament:&#13;
Parkside vs. UW-Milwaukee at 1 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
finals begin at 1 p.m. Saturday.&#13;
Wisconsin State Assembly votes on decriminalization&#13;
of marijuana at the Capitol in Madison.&#13;
Cross Country Men at Notre Dame invitational 3 p.m.&#13;
Film African Queen 8 p.m. in Union Cinema. $1.00&#13;
admission.&#13;
Lecture Dr. Severo Ochoa, Nobel Laureate, will&#13;
speak about Protein Biosynthesis. GR 103 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
-Saturday, October 8&#13;
Cross Country Men at Lakefront Invitational,&#13;
Chicago, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Milwaukee with UW-Green&#13;
Bay, 10 a.m.&#13;
Swimming Women a' JW-Green Bay with Lawrence,&#13;
1p.m.&#13;
'.&#13;
AAA WORLD WIDE&#13;
TRAVEL AGENCY.&#13;
Full Sel'l'ice&#13;
Trovel Agency&#13;
«Airline Tit-kef' -Tour»&#13;
-Rail «Hotel&#13;
-Cor Reserootlons&#13;
3909-56th 654-0202&#13;
, ,&#13;
SELL HI-FI EQUIPMENT&#13;
Be our exclusive rep on your&#13;
campus - ALL BRANDS&#13;
WRITE&#13;
AUDIO OUTLET&#13;
325 Pascack AWIllJI&#13;
WashillqlOn Townstip, .... JIne¥ 01fi7S&#13;
Attention: Arte .. MuzyQ (2011666-8868&#13;
PARPresents good old times with&#13;
"III I&#13;
DANCE&#13;
CONTEST&#13;
of the 50's featuring&#13;
Big AI &amp; The HiFi's&#13;
SAT. OCT.1 9:00 UNIONso.&#13;
50's COSTUME GETS YOU A FREE BEER!&#13;
IlOO UWStudents&#13;
Il50 Others&#13;
UWP &amp; STATE 10's REQ.&#13;
PA,- FALL FILM SERIES&#13;
6.~IIlIE'"lPe••• ER&#13;
1I.II~e6.'"&#13;
And IItARRW.EIAFeN.E&#13;
As 'Geechle Dan&#13;
They get&#13;
funny when&#13;
you mess&#13;
with their&#13;
UNION CINEMA $1.00&#13;
Fri. Sept. 30 - 8:00 pm&#13;
Sun. Oct. 2 - 7:30 pm&#13;
money.&#13;
: ° 0 0 ° ijliiowo&#13;
• ° 0 0 ° :&#13;
: eA.IJR~AW ....."111.:&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 4P •&#13;
events Watergate reporter speaks from page 1&#13;
Wednesday-, September 28 Woodward&#13;
The Watergate Story the fact that journalists must problem that Ca~I Bernstein and I&#13;
Facult; and Staff Meeting&#13;
began his speech make people trust in them by have in publishing stories;&#13;
t.nformation session _on by disagreeing with Senator learning what's happening and readers exp~ct th!lt the story is&#13;
Collective bargaining and discussion of pen_ ding CL Church's&#13;
committee (chairman of the senate the reason why. going to be hke Watergate. There&#13;
state that investigated the The Bert Lance Affair ~ill never be another Watergate.&#13;
0-107.&#13;
legislation regarding same. 1 :00 p.m. in CIA) statement "the truth always "Too many people - were That is something we must&#13;
Guitarist Carlos Montoya, Flamenco&#13;
comes out' .. Woodard challeng- foaming at the mouth looking f9r realize . In printing the Watergate&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series, 8 p&#13;
guitarist. ed Senator Church's opinion. another Watergate Story in the articles we received a lot of&#13;
.m.&#13;
we&#13;
" I do not have confidence that Lance affair", Woodward said. He support from the Washington&#13;
Friday, September 30 Watergate&#13;
learn the truth . During the believed that half to two-thirds Post. It was not extraordinary, it&#13;
Film Uptown Saturday Night&#13;
story it was appaJent of the stories printed on the was basic reporting. Llike doing&#13;
8:00 p.m. at Union&#13;
very&#13;
to me that disclosure hangs on a Lance affair were overplayed. that work and I am going to&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00. fragile thread . The method The fantastic power in the post- continue being a reporter."&#13;
of getting the truth out is not Watergate morality has capsized&#13;
Saturday, October 1 institutionalized. There is no Americans. The press is powerful&#13;
Cross-Country Parkside at Northern 111 inois department of truth in the enough that "reputations can fly&#13;
Invitational&#13;
government, in the. newspaper, out of the -window with one&#13;
Golf UW-Parkside&#13;
in DeKalb, Illinois 1:00 p.m . . nor a television station." morning's story ."&#13;
D&#13;
Invitational (men's) at Brighton Woodward continued, "Certainly Questions and Answers&#13;
a&#13;
le Country Club in Brighton Township (Kenosha if you look at the last ten or During the second ha~f of&#13;
County), ~:30 a.m. - fifteen years of American Woodward's talk, the audience ·&#13;
.&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Wh1tewater&#13;
' History, it seems that govern- asked questions. One student&#13;
Invitational, 9 ment, at least on the national asked Woodward if he was a&#13;
level, often proceeds by D~mocrat or Republican . a.m. ,&#13;
I b Vol ey a&#13;
II W&#13;
omen&#13;
at UW-Milwaukee with concealments rather than . dis- " lamaregisteredindependent&#13;
Marquette, 1 p.m.&#13;
closures. The awful fact is voter. I did vote for Nixon in&#13;
reporters don't often find out 1968 because I was in the Navy&#13;
Thursday, September 29 what really happens and if_ we do while the Vietnam War was&#13;
Health-L·ane Athlete's Foot. Throblgh October 6 . Dial&#13;
we&#13;
find out w~at really happens going on and I was convinced he&#13;
553-2588 and ask&#13;
're not very good at finding had -the best chance of ending&#13;
to hear the Health-Line High- out exactly why it happens.~'· the war, or more so than Senator&#13;
light. Woodward emphasized that, Humphrey. I did not vote in&#13;
" in reporting the Watergate Story 1972," said Woodward.&#13;
acted as police reporters, city A reporter from the Milwaukee&#13;
Sunday, October 2&#13;
Film Uptown Saturday Night, 8:00&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
p.m. at Union reporters - we were very much Sentinel put Woodward in the&#13;
outsiders . If you look back on sa~e category as John Erlichman&#13;
_ Monday, October 3&#13;
Auditions Tryouts for Midnight Musical Madness 11&#13;
Gong Show. All faculty and students invited,&#13;
individuals and groups. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Contact&#13;
Eden Vaning at 553-2457 for more information.&#13;
Tuesday, October 4&#13;
Volleyball Women at North Park with Mundelein,&#13;
Chicago; 6:15 p.m.&#13;
Swimming Women at Carroll College, Waukesha; .&#13;
6 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, October 5&#13;
Film Wisconsin Artists Film Festival presents "The&#13;
Front Page". 7 p.m. No admission charge.&#13;
Rondelle Reservations, 554-2154.&#13;
Film Sahara 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Coffeehouse Claudia Schmidt of the Green Bay area&#13;
plays in Union 104-106. 2-4 p.m. No admission.&#13;
Wine will be served.&#13;
Thursday, October 6&#13;
the chronology of the Watergate in taking $3,000 for appearing at&#13;
Story as it unfolded, a lot of it the conference . Woodward&#13;
was very obvious and simple. justified his presence.&#13;
The reporting took a lot of time " I thirik there is a valid&#13;
and there was a lot of&#13;
frustration."&#13;
In undercovering the Watergate&#13;
Scandal, Woodward and&#13;
Bernstein could telL something&#13;
unlawful was going on by the&#13;
"uncertainty, fear, and the&#13;
concern" they saw in people's&#13;
faces . But yet, how could they&#13;
express people's fears in writing.&#13;
Woodward replied by stressing&#13;
distinction to be made. I am not&#13;
benefiting financially from&#13;
criminal acts I committed. I&#13;
think of myself as a reporter. I&#13;
feel an obligation, frankly , to&#13;
come out every now and then to&#13;
answer questions, and I feel I&#13;
should subject myself to&#13;
questioning."&#13;
In his closing c·omments,&#13;
Woodward concludeq , " One&#13;
PAB Presents good old times w.ith&#13;
• ••• of the 50's featuring&#13;
AAA WORLD WIDE&#13;
TRAVEL AGENCY .&#13;
Full Se,·,ice&#13;
Travel Agency&#13;
•Airline Tickets •Tours&#13;
•Cruises • Rail • Hotel&#13;
•Car Reservations&#13;
3909-56th 654-0202&#13;
Be our exclusive rep on your&#13;
campus-ALL BRANDS&#13;
WRITE&#13;
AUDIO OUTLET&#13;
325 Pascack Avenue&#13;
Washington Township. Nlw Jlrwy 07675&#13;
Ananlion: Alie .. Muzyu (2011666-8868&#13;
Golf: Men's NAIA&#13;
I&#13;
District 14 Tournament, at Spring&#13;
Green, through October 8.&#13;
Volleyball Women's at Lake Forest College, with&#13;
University of Chicago, 6 p.m.&#13;
$1.00 UW Students&#13;
$1.50 Others&#13;
-Big Al &amp;-The HiFi's . DANCE&#13;
CONTEST Health-Line An unwanted Pregnancy? How to deal&#13;
with the problem. Through October 13. Dial 553-&#13;
2588 and ask to hear the Health-Line Highlight.&#13;
Film Caine Mutiny, 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Friday, October 7&#13;
Soccer Men at UW Chancellors' Cup Tournament:&#13;
Parkside vs. UW-Milwaukee at 1 p.m . on Friday,&#13;
finals begin at 1 p.m. Saturday.&#13;
Wisconsin State Assembly votes on decriminalization&#13;
of marijuana at the Capitol in Madison.&#13;
Cross Country Men at Notre Dame invitational 3 p .m.&#13;
Film African Queen 8 p.m. in Union Cinema. $1.00&#13;
admission.&#13;
Lecture Dr. Severo Ochoa, Nobel Laureate, will&#13;
speak about Protein Biosynthesis. GR 103 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
-Saturday, October 8&#13;
Cross Country Men at Lakefront Invitational,&#13;
Chicago, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Milwaukee with UW-Green&#13;
Bay, 10 a.m.&#13;
Swimming Women a' JW-Green Bay with Lawrence ._ I 1 p.m .&#13;
SAT. OCT. 1 9:00 UNION SQ.&#13;
UWP &amp; STATE ID's REQ. 5O's COSTUME GETS YOU A FREE BEER!&#13;
PAB FALL FILM SERIES&#13;
Fri. Sept. 30 - 8:00 pm&#13;
Sun. Oct. 2 - 7:30 pm&#13;
61~NEW 1&gt;91.IER&#13;
1&gt;11.1. S861)W&#13;
And •ARRW lf)El,A1Ji8N'IE&#13;
As "Geech,e Dan&#13;
UNION CINEMA $1.00&#13;
They get&#13;
funny when&#13;
you mess&#13;
with their&#13;
money.&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66491">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 6, issue 5, September 28, 1977</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66492">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66493">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="66494">
                <text>Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="66495">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66496">
                <text>1977-09-28</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66497">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66498">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66499">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66500">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66501">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66502">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="4543">
        <name>bob woodward</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2122">
        <name>drew peerson award</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2120">
        <name>george pope memorial award</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2121">
        <name>pulitzer prize</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="744">
        <name>richard nelson</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="4544">
        <name>space shuttle</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
