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              <text>TheParkside,--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 12 Wednesday, December 1, 1976&#13;
Student, Spanish Center head&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
What do Parkside students do besides attend&#13;
classes? Daniel Ramirez, in addition to carrying 12&#13;
credits this semester is the Executive Interim&#13;
Director of The Spanish Center for Racine,&#13;
Kenosha, and Walworth counties plus the director of&#13;
the Drug and Alcohol Abuse program in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha counties. Daniel became the Interim&#13;
Director on October .21, the day after the former&#13;
director was relieved of his responsibilities. He was&#13;
chosen at a board meeting on OCtober 20.&#13;
Daniel said, "I knew about the meeting and that&#13;
the directorship was in question, but I did not know&#13;
that I was being considered. I had classes at that&#13;
time, so I did not attend."&#13;
Daniel's classes include Crime and Juvenile&#13;
Delinquency, Psychology of Personality, General&#13;
Psychology, and an independent study course in&#13;
education. For his independent study course he&#13;
works " ... with Latino kids which were dropouts&#13;
from high school that I plugged into the Walden III&#13;
program and keep tabs on."&#13;
He needs nine more credits to graduate. Daniel&#13;
remarked, "I hope to graduate next semester with a&#13;
degree in Sociology. I've managed to accumulate a&#13;
pretiy decent grade average up to this semester. I&#13;
believe, if I'm not mistaken it's 3.36. I'm a graduate&#13;
of The Union Grove Prison Farm, coming right&#13;
from the prison farm to Parkside." That was on&#13;
June 5, 1972.&#13;
In August of' 1973, The Spanish Center, in conjunction&#13;
with The Mental Health Assn. spent $1,300&#13;
to train Daniel in Drug and Alcohol counseling.&#13;
After five months, he was successfully evaluated.&#13;
That was the beginning of the Spanish Center's&#13;
Drug and Alcohol Abuse program.&#13;
Prior to April of 1975 the program worked out of&#13;
the Mental Health Assn.'s building. Since then the&#13;
office has been at the Spanish Center in Racine.&#13;
"That was a hectic situation," he said in reference&#13;
to the move in April of '75. "Before I had direction&#13;
and supervision from people who were experienced&#13;
in those areas. I then had to assume all the&#13;
responsibility myself."&#13;
In1976, the Drug and Alcohol Abuse program was&#13;
given $41,500 and branched out to Kenosha county.&#13;
Daniel then became the official director. "Before, I&#13;
didn't nave anyone tu direct, except me, ··com.&#13;
mented Daniel. This year the program has a full&#13;
time counselor in Kenosha, Juan Mendiola and a&#13;
counselor working thirty hours a week in Racine,&#13;
Jose Laborda. Daniel is also a part time counselor&#13;
and Ruby Guardiola is the secretary.&#13;
"The reason we have grown, I feel, is because we&#13;
have provided the services that were obviously&#13;
needed in the community." The Spanish Center&#13;
employs about 16 people for the three counties.&#13;
Daniel said; "It also utilizes volunteers in the&#13;
community, students from the Youth Employment&#13;
program, and adults from the Win program. The&#13;
Win program primarily deals with people on&#13;
welfare. They're trying to develop jobs for them,&#13;
trying to get people off the welfare roles. We also&#13;
get people from the Urban League and OJT, on the&#13;
job training. II •&#13;
The main component of the Spanish Center is the&#13;
Man Power program which is funded through&#13;
CETA, &lt;I ••• which is just like the Win program.".&#13;
The second largest component is the Drug and&#13;
Alcohol Abuse program. Another component is the&#13;
Outreach program which provides transportation,&#13;
translations, court interpretation and information,&#13;
and referral for all social necessities, including&#13;
legal needs of clients.&#13;
"We serve as a liason person for people who&#13;
either don't know their rights or those who are&#13;
unfamiliar with the social and welfare systems&#13;
requirement mechanisms," Daniel explained.&#13;
Daniel has been extremely busy since taking the&#13;
directorship in October. It was an unusual situation&#13;
in which to be placed and one that he had thought&#13;
would be temporary, however he said, "There is&#13;
bope that the position will be filled by the beginning&#13;
of next year and I intend to throw my hat into the&#13;
ring."&#13;
Since taking the position as Interim Executive&#13;
Director, he has found that "There are a tremendous&#13;
amount of things that need to be done in the&#13;
community. Agencies and individuals are coming&#13;
up and offering their support and assistance and&#13;
asking for support and assistance. There are a&#13;
tremendous amount of people wbo have ideas on&#13;
what the Spanish Center should be doing and they&#13;
are surprised to see that their ideas are usually in&#13;
tune with my desires."&#13;
Daruel Ramirez&#13;
Art fair slated&#13;
Ninety exhibitors including 19&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
students will display their wares&#13;
at tbe second annual holiday Arts&#13;
and Crafts Fair to be held at&#13;
Parkside from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
on Saturday, Dec. 4.&#13;
The fair, sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board, will&#13;
be located on all three levels of&#13;
Main Place. It will be free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Exhibitors are limited to a&#13;
maximum price of $SO for anyone&#13;
item. Tbe Burger Shoppe adjoining&#13;
lower level Main Place&#13;
will be open throughout the fair.&#13;
llems being offered include&#13;
ceramics, jewelry, enameled&#13;
sterling, candles, needlework,&#13;
dolls, acrylics, macrame, metal&#13;
sculpture, toys, clay crafts, oil&#13;
painting, pottery, handwoven&#13;
rugs, stained glass, stationery,&#13;
coin and spoon jewetry. watercolors,&#13;
decoupage, leathercrafts,&#13;
batik, dough art, dried Dower&#13;
arrangements. lapidary, prints,&#13;
rosemaling, natwa wall plaques,&#13;
fabrics and weaving.&#13;
Flu&#13;
today&#13;
• •&#13;
»sccinetum&#13;
A swine Ou vaccine clinic is&#13;
scheduled at Parkside from 10&#13;
a.m. to 6 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
Dec. I, in the Greenquisl Hall&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
The free clinic is open to&#13;
Parkside studenta, faculty and&#13;
staff and membel1l of their&#13;
families. The vaccine will not be&#13;
administered to anyone under 18.&#13;
The clinic will be spoIlJOI'ed by&#13;
the Campus Health Service in&#13;
cooperation With the Kenosha&#13;
City Health Department.&#13;
Both monovalent and bivalent&#13;
vaccine will be available.&#13;
PYA&#13;
breaks tradition&#13;
by Mary Ohmer&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action, PYA, Is giving&#13;
students practical experlence in the aocIal and&#13;
behavioral sciences. Itis a new internship program&#13;
at Parkside which differs significantly from the&#13;
traditional approaches to academic learning. It&#13;
offers a learning experience for the studenta, and&#13;
while the students are working and learning, the&#13;
Racine, Kenosha, and Walworth counties are&#13;
benefitting from their work.&#13;
Joyce Fite Hamlin, director of the prOtlram, says&#13;
that through this program students are placed with&#13;
a community service agency in either of the three&#13;
counties. The student will work with the agency for&#13;
a full year, receiving 30 academic credit.!.&#13;
"I see this as a great cbance for the student to&#13;
grow," says Ms. Hamlin. "It Is an opportunity to&#13;
actually apply the theories learned in the classroom&#13;
to problems in the community."&#13;
Twenty-nine students and ten agencies take part&#13;
in this project. Now in us first year it will receive&#13;
funding from Action, a federal agency, for three&#13;
years. In the future PYA may include different&#13;
agencies than it does now, and It Is hoped thallt will&#13;
attract more student volunteers.&#13;
The agencies now participating in the program&#13;
are COordinated Oilld Care, Innovative Youth&#13;
Services, Kenosha Partners, Inc., Radne's&#13;
Northside Redevelopment, Racine County Planning&#13;
Council, Racine County Public Defenders OffIce,&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin Housing Corporation in&#13;
Burlington, Tri-County Library Council, and Ibe&#13;
Urban League of Racine.&#13;
The students are full-time workers at these&#13;
agencies and are required to keep journals of their&#13;
(OnI,m"ed on PO 1&#13;
. YA' elude left to&#13;
Students participating m P ~ b 11'Pau11De&#13;
right, standing, Tom Moore, June. c e , Lavin,&#13;
Moffat, Krista Wiles, Carol Dawsod·~"&lt;:~Neu&#13;
Rutb Rudawski, Jim Ortiz, Sue He, MCCoY'&#13;
Ann Switzer, Steve Klinkhammer, :ree':md pai&#13;
Glen Christiansen, Mary Kapre ~ bt ByrOD&#13;
Carravetta and, kneellDg, left to g,&#13;
Merrick, Jean Thomson, Shal'Oll KraDIIeoberg,&#13;
Kent Cairo, Marla Hoffman, Esther Bartscher,&#13;
CbrlsllDe Meyer, and Joyce Fite HamJln, Director.&#13;
Interns not present wben the pboto was laken are&#13;
Uoda Adams, Faye Jackson, David Johnson,&#13;
Marsba Laws, Arlene MartIn, and LInda Mertens.&#13;
The Parkside--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 12 Wednesday, December 1, 1976&#13;
Student, Spanish Center head&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
What do Parkside students do besides attend&#13;
classes? Daniel Ramirez, in addition to carrying 12&#13;
credits this semester is the Executive Interim&#13;
Director of The Spanish Center for Racine&#13;
Kenosha, and Walworth counties plus the director of&#13;
the Drug and Alcohol Abuse program in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha counties. Daniel became the Interim&#13;
Director on October .21, the day after the former&#13;
director was relieved of his responsibilities. He was&#13;
chosen at a board meeting on October 20.&#13;
Daniel said, "I knew about the meeting and that&#13;
the directorship was in question, but I did not know&#13;
that I was being considered. I had classes at that&#13;
time, so I did not attend."&#13;
Daniel's classes include Crime and Juvenile&#13;
Delinquency, Psychology of Personality, General&#13;
Psychology, and an independent study course in&#13;
education. For his independent study course he&#13;
works " ... with Latino kids which were dropouts&#13;
from high school that I plugged into the Walden III&#13;
program and keep tabs on."&#13;
He needs nine more credits to graduate. Daniel&#13;
remarked, "I hope to graduate next semester with a&#13;
degree in Sociology. I've managed to accumulate a&#13;
pretty decent grade average up to this semester. I&#13;
believe, if I'm not mistaken it's 3.36. I'm a graduate&#13;
of The Union Grove Prison Farm, coming right&#13;
from the prison farm to Parkside." That was on&#13;
June 5, 1972.&#13;
In August of 1973, The Spanish Center, in conjunction&#13;
with The Mental Health Assn. spent $1,300&#13;
to train Daniel in Drug and Alcohol counseling.&#13;
After five months, he was successfully evaluated.&#13;
That was the beginning of the Spanish Center's&#13;
Drug and Alcohol Abuse program.&#13;
Prior to April of 1975 the program worked out of&#13;
the Mental Health Assn. 's building. Since then the&#13;
office has been at the Spanish Center in Racine.&#13;
"That was a hectic situation," he said in reference&#13;
to the move in April of '75. "Before I had direction&#13;
and supervision from people who were experienced&#13;
in those areas. I then had to assume all the&#13;
responsibility myself.''&#13;
In 1976, the Drug and Alcohol Abuse program was&#13;
given $41,500 and branched out to Kenosha county.&#13;
Daniel then became the official director. "Before, I&#13;
didn t nave anyone to direct, except me, ··commented&#13;
Daniel. This year the program has a full&#13;
time counselor in Kenosha, Juan Mendiola and a&#13;
counselor working thirty hours a week in Racine,&#13;
Jose Laborda. Daniel is also a part time counselor&#13;
and Ruby Guardiola is the secretary.&#13;
"The reason we have grown, I feel, is because we&#13;
have provided the services that were obviously&#13;
needed in the community." The Spanish Center&#13;
employs about 16 people for the three counties.&#13;
Daniel said; "It also utilizes volunteers in the&#13;
community, students from the Youth Employment&#13;
program, and adults from the Win program. The&#13;
Win program primarily deals with people on&#13;
welfare. They're trying to develop jobs for them,&#13;
trying to get people off the welfare roles. We also&#13;
get people from the Urban League a1_1d OJT, on the&#13;
job training."&#13;
The main component of the Spanish Center is the&#13;
Man Power program which is funded through&#13;
CETA, " ... which is just like the Win program.".&#13;
The second largest component is the Drug and&#13;
Alcohol Abuse program. Another component is the&#13;
Outreach program which provides transportation,&#13;
translations, court interpretation and information,&#13;
and referral for all social necessities, including&#13;
legal needs of clients.&#13;
"We serve as a liason person for people who&#13;
either don't know their rights or those who are&#13;
unfamiliar with the social and welfare systems&#13;
requirement mechanisms," Daniel explained.&#13;
Daniel has been extremely busy since taking the&#13;
directorship in October. It was an unusual situation&#13;
in which to be placed and one that he had thought&#13;
would be temporary, however he said, "There is&#13;
hope that the position will be filled by the beginning&#13;
of next year and I intend to throw my hat into the&#13;
ring."&#13;
Since taking the position as Interim Executive&#13;
Director, he has found that "There are a tremendous&#13;
amount of things that need to be done in the&#13;
community. Agencies and individuals are coming&#13;
up and offering their support and assistance and&#13;
asking for support and assistance. There are a&#13;
tremendous amount of people who have ideas on&#13;
what the Spanish Center should be doing and they&#13;
are surprised to see that their ideas are usually in&#13;
~ne with my desires."&#13;
Dan tel Ramirez&#13;
Art fair slated • rinety exhibitors including 19&#13;
University of Wisco~in-Parkside&#13;
students will display their wares&#13;
at the second annual holiday Arts&#13;
and Crafts Fair to be held at&#13;
Parkside from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
on Saturday, Dec. 4.&#13;
arrangem ts, lapidary, p n ,&#13;
rosemallng, na all plaqu •&#13;
The fair, sponsored b} the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board, will&#13;
be located on all three levels of&#13;
Main Place. It will be free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Exhibitors are limited to a&#13;
maximum price of $50 for any ooe&#13;
item. The Burger Shoppe djoining&#13;
lower level Main Place&#13;
will be open throughout the fair.&#13;
Items being offered includ.-&#13;
ceramics, jewelry, enameled&#13;
sterling, candles, needlework,&#13;
dolls, acrylics, macrame, metal&#13;
sculpture, toys, clay crafts, oil&#13;
painting, pottery, hand oven&#13;
rugs, stained glass, stationery,&#13;
coin and spoon jewelry, water·&#13;
colors, decoupage, leathercrafts,&#13;
batik, dough art, dried flo er&#13;
fabric and .,..,.,,..,, ...&#13;
Flu&#13;
today&#13;
• • vaccination&#13;
A me flu vacc&#13;
scheduled nt Par d&#13;
PYA&#13;
breaks tradi ion&#13;
by aryOhmer&#13;
t&#13;
. YA · elude left to&#13;
Students participating m P m ' uline&#13;
right standing Tom Moore, June Mitchell, p~vin&#13;
Moff~t, Krista' Wiles, Carol Danis, _ Mary Neu'&#13;
R th R da ki Jim Ortiz Sue Hodel, Gary ' u u ws , • 0 en McCoy&#13;
Ann Switzer, Steve Klinkhammer, liore and Pat . M ry Kapre an,&#13;
Merrick, Jean Thomson, Sharon Krankenberg,&#13;
Kent Cairo, Marla Hoffman, Esther Burtscher,&#13;
Christine Meyer, and Joyce Fite Hamlin, Director.&#13;
Interns not present when the photo was taken are&#13;
Linda Adams, Faye Jackson, David Johnson,&#13;
Marsha Laws, Arlene Martin, and Linda Mertens.&#13;
Services, Kenosha Partners, Inc., Racine'&#13;
Northside Redevelopment, Raclne County Pl nuig&#13;
Council, Racine County Public Defeoo r Office.&#13;
Southeastern isconsin Housing Corporation in&#13;
Burlington, Tri-County Library Council, and th&#13;
Urban League of Racine.&#13;
The students are full-time wo kers at the&#13;
agencies arid are required to ke"? jow-nals of their&#13;
COIi! nuf'llon PO 1&#13;
Glen Christiansen, a ·ght Byron&#13;
Carravetta and, kneeling, left to n ' &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1. 1976&#13;
---EDITOR IAL/OPINION&#13;
Lucy's basic skills testing commended&#13;
by Mlck Andersen&#13;
areas of curriculum need attention, how to improve classroom instruction&#13;
and how to best allocate the resources at their disposal."&#13;
Lucey is also correct in trying to reestablish the state superintendent's&#13;
office as responsible for overseeing the promotion of uniformity and&#13;
quality of evluation and instruction.&#13;
There is a measure of truth too, to his critics' charge that such&#13;
comparison's between school districts are unfair. It would be unfair&#13;
for basic skills testing to degenerate into a blaming match, where&#13;
school administrators quake when their districts fall below the 50&#13;
percent or "average" mark. Clearly other factors, such as parents'&#13;
educational level, social class, and economic standing, interact withl&#13;
the district educational structure to yield, at best, an indirect measure&#13;
of academic achievement.&#13;
Governor Lucey's recent proposal to implement basic skills testing&#13;
for all 4th, 8th, and 12thgraders should be commended as a major step&#13;
by the state towards reestab1ishing itself as \he most effective&#13;
guarantor of educational excellence. 'lbe proposal could also have the&#13;
eftect 01 warding off increasing federal Intrusion In the operation of&#13;
local school districts.&#13;
However, the Governor's initiative m....t be seen only as a hopeful&#13;
half-&lt;ltep where clearly a full one is needed.&#13;
A Baslc Need&#13;
What ma .... educational sense can also make good politics. In a&#13;
Milwaukee Joumal editortal a few days ago it was noted that,&#13;
"historically and legally (education is) a state responsibility." Lucey&#13;
can claim, with justification, his program reflects a majority opinion&#13;
in the United States, an opinion based on the uneasy feeling that&#13;
decllnlng national test scores over the last ten years are indicative of&#13;
an over...ll decline in the quality of education. A current Gallup poll&#13;
shows fully two-thirds of the American people support the establishment&#13;
of standardt2ed exams as a requisite for receiving a diploma.&#13;
The decline in the national test scores of high school seniors is an&#13;
often cited effect of basic skills deficiency. Universities and colleges&#13;
the nation over have been grappling with ways to improve the quality&#13;
of education in the face of such fundamental deficits. Given a fixed&#13;
amount for expenditure, institutions of higher learning have two&#13;
alternatives to achieve educational quality, either the implementation&#13;
or a compensatory basic skills program, or the raising of admission&#13;
standards.&#13;
These rather bleak options are not without cost to the community&#13;
erther-high admission standards mean fewer having the opportunity&#13;
to receive a college education, while refusal to fund expensive compensatory&#13;
programming denies to others the right to a higher level of&#13;
education.&#13;
Arguements beside poinl&#13;
Both Lucey and his critics miss a crucial point however: tI!~&#13;
question is not whether the comparisons are fair, it goes beyond that,&#13;
to whether or not they are appropriate.&#13;
Evaluation by norm level is a tricky business; witness the overall&#13;
decline in national norms over the past decade and half. Traditionally&#13;
the business of education has not been realistically self-evaluative.&#13;
Content to drift along until public pressure forces change, the&#13;
educational bureaucracy has forgone the structural changes needed to&#13;
bring about consistent efforts at upgrading performance. Mter all,&#13;
norm levels only measure typical, generalized performance; they are&#13;
not reflective of potential nor specific skills.&#13;
A better method&#13;
A far wiser method, I believe, would be for the state to hegin&#13;
developing criterion reference testing (what skills are essential for&#13;
the high school graduate to perform) and targeting the specific&#13;
deficiencies present in every district, to be corrected in say, five&#13;
years.&#13;
Criterion referenced testing differs from norm testing in this fundamental&#13;
respect: norm levels give rank percentile in a generalized&#13;
subject (ie: Johnny scores in the 78th percentile in math). However,&#13;
norm levels do not evaluate specific skills (at what level can Johnny&#13;
calculate fractions, decimals, word problems, etc). Criterion&#13;
reference testing facilitates the pinpointing of skill deficiency.&#13;
Criterion testing, unlike norm levels, are constrained but .liot condemned&#13;
by current state-wide levels of performance. It WOUldallow&#13;
educators and administrators a more indepth analysis of deficiency at&#13;
the district level than is presently proposed, while realizing Lucey's&#13;
basic concern for the biggest educational bang for the taxpayer's&#13;
buck.&#13;
While the possibility of unfair comparison of school districts&#13;
remains; the problem of defensive reaction to testing by insecure&#13;
school authorities can be substantially lessened. Administrators can&#13;
rightly point out that, to date, skill proficiency has been only indirectly&#13;
related to high school graduation. With criterion reference testing the&#13;
Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction would have at its disposal&#13;
the hest information with which to generate consistently higher levels&#13;
of performance.&#13;
Lucey's Proposal&#13;
The Lucey proposal calls for the uniform testing of three grade&#13;
levels in reading, mathematics, science, and social studies. It is&#13;
assumed that these tests would be typical of most basic skills&#13;
examinations. a standardized objective test designed to measure&#13;
mastery of essential skills. From these test results, Lucey believes&#13;
norms would he developed to allow comparisons hetween school&#13;
districts.&#13;
What's the cost? About twice that of current testing programs, for a&#13;
tota1 of $285,000.This is a fraction of the $1.47billion spent each year in&#13;
Wisconsin for elementary and secondary public schooling.&#13;
The gains from such a program are numerous. The uniform composition,&#13;
duplication, administration, and compilation of the test data&#13;
will make comparison and generalization of data across district lines&#13;
more feasible. Currenily this information is not readily available as&#13;
the wide variety of testing programs make standardization difficult.&#13;
Lucey is correct when he stated, "It is a small price to pay to help&#13;
teachers, administrators, and school board members decide what&#13;
~~ANGER&#13;
T1l4 ".rUille ........ 1. ~ ....... 1IIKftU"1., ,......-. •• 1•• of tNM ..... by&#13;
.., ................ U"lventfy .. ... .~. t.e"",, ....... ".b...........&#13;
• "c••,lll.".'."" ~.. ... •• Ial, Par1l.~ ......... 1 ... 1..1... , 'U-2211;&#13;
,................ ltI ....... ...Icy -&#13;
N..-w- W42t$.&#13;
e •••••• 0.1111_. alllH'."" ••• -'&#13;
IOITotI·IN.CMII'. J-'M .....&#13;
IUII.,U MAttAO'.' e.-y .......&#13;
AOV•• TI"". MA.....O.. T_ c....,.&#13;
..1., C~D'''.TotI· erwc. W..-.&#13;
OI .... TM,,,TS&#13;
a-.*"".......~ .. ".... McK...uy&#13;
'IATU.' lOtTO_&#13;
,NItTI IDITO.&#13;
V,IAOI 10ITO.,&#13;
l... ' ......&#13;
........, I. ---,.-eIlI. 111I ..,..&#13;
co ..., IDITOa J..........&#13;
"MOTO • Ot TOa&#13;
elaCU"A""&#13;
IT"" • ..,." Mil.." TefTl ...--&#13;
.ay""".• ..." H... "' .... ChrIS Cia",", 'homn hv.etl",&#13;
0.... C.,..... ~ .............. M.ky Ka, 011",_. Larry ~Y ..... 11H.............&#13;
....... Mall ....... J.M ....... ......,., ~ ... L1.... KJI.cItMft., Karl .. UFCMIIl'iltr. Judy ,"'*....Ie............. 1lttlI..., L. Ll"........ DebIM 5"-,""&#13;
Gruhl: DeRanger vulgar&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Congratulations! The article&#13;
tiiled "Birth Control Balled Up"&#13;
which was printed in the&#13;
November 17 issue of your erotic&#13;
DeRANGER supplement hit an&#13;
all-time low for vulgarity. It was&#13;
the diarrhea of a polluted mind&#13;
wbose owner should be in the&#13;
custody of a psychiatrist and not&#13;
pounding a typewriter. Debasing&#13;
human sexuality is neither satire&#13;
or entertaining.&#13;
What's the big idea? Are you&#13;
trying to find out how much&#13;
pornographic garbage you can&#13;
dish out to your readers? You&#13;
have freedom of the press and&#13;
don't know how to use it. Obviously&#13;
there are some&#13;
sophomoric smart alees running&#13;
RANGER who don't know the&#13;
difference between good taste&#13;
and bad.&#13;
Now that you've provoked me&#13;
into writing, hear this! Why don't&#13;
you campus politicians do less&#13;
bitching and report more about&#13;
the good things that are happening&#13;
at Parkside?&#13;
Suggestions: Profiles about&#13;
some distinguished faculty&#13;
people ... about the projects&#13;
supported by grants which are&#13;
going on ... and about the accomplishments&#13;
of students who&#13;
are doing interesling things inside&#13;
and out of school. Surely&#13;
there must be more going on at&#13;
Parkside than what happens in&#13;
the Phy Ed building.&#13;
Another suggestion: Stop&#13;
harping about "The Ad·&#13;
ministration " and what those&#13;
people do and don't do for you.&#13;
I've seen the facilities in the new&#13;
Union building and realize what a&#13;
rough time you have out there&#13;
and you even have to pay for the&#13;
food and drinks' in the cafeteria.&#13;
continued on IXI· 3&#13;
Fire fighting students thanked&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On Friday, November 19, 1976&#13;
at approximately 3:10 p.m., the&#13;
campus experienced a grass fire&#13;
west of the Union parking lot on&#13;
the outer loop road. The fire&#13;
caused a minimum amount of&#13;
damage only because of the ef•&#13;
forts of the students of this&#13;
campus who assisted in contrulling&#13;
the fire until the Somers&#13;
Fire Department arrived.&#13;
I do not know who these&#13;
students were, however, the&#13;
C~mpus Security Department&#13;
WISheSto thank each and every&#13;
one of them for the assistance&#13;
that they gave and also the&#13;
Physical Plant employees who&#13;
were on the scene.&#13;
I have received nothing but&#13;
compliments from the Somers&#13;
Fire Department and' how surprised&#13;
they were that the fire was&#13;
fairly well under control when&#13;
they arrived at the scene.&#13;
Again, to all of those whO&#13;
assisted, a hearty "Thank You"&#13;
for a job well done.&#13;
SincerelY,&#13;
R.D. Brinkmann, Director&#13;
Campus Security Department&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976 i Jr.. The Parkside&#13;
""'/&#13;
RANGER&#13;
--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
Lucy's basic skills testing commended&#13;
by Mick Andersen&#13;
Governor Lucey's recent proposal to implement basic skills testing&#13;
for all 4th, 8th, and 12th graders should be commended as a major step&#13;
by th tate towards reestablishing itself as µte most effective&#13;
guarantor of educational excellence. The proposal could also have the&#13;
effect of warding off increasing federal intnwon in the operation of&#13;
l l hool districts.&#13;
However, the Governor's initiative must be seen only as a hopeful&#13;
half~ p wh re clearly a full one is needed.&#13;
A Basic Need&#13;
What makes educational sense can also make good politics. In a&#13;
Milwaukee Journal editorial a few days ago it was noted that,&#13;
• historically and legally {education is) a state responsibility." Lucey&#13;
n claun, with justification, his program reflects a majority opinion&#13;
in the United States, an opinion based on the uneasy feeling that&#13;
declin national test scores over the last ten years are indicative of&#13;
an over-all decline in the quality of education. A current Gallup poll&#13;
fully twerthirds of the American people support the establishm&#13;
nt of tandardized exams as a requisite for receiving a diploma.&#13;
Th d line in the national test cores of high school seniors is an&#13;
t n ·ted ffect of basic skills deficiency. Universities and colleges&#13;
th tion over have been grappling with ways to improve the quality&#13;
u ation in th face of such fundamental deficits. Given a fixed&#13;
run unt for expenditure, institutions of higher learning have two&#13;
tern ti to achieve educational quality, either the implementation&#13;
compensatory ba ic skills program, or the raising of admission&#13;
ndards.&#13;
Th r ther bleak options are not without cost to the community&#13;
th -high admi ion tandards mean fewer having the opportunity&#13;
to re Iv a college education, while refusal to fund expensive commatory&#13;
pr ramming denie to others the right to a higher level of&#13;
u ation.&#13;
Lucey's Proposal&#13;
The Lucey proposal calls for the uniform testing of three grade&#13;
l els in reading, mathematics, science, and social studies. It is&#13;
that th tests would be typical of most basic skills&#13;
aminations - a standardized objective test designed to measure&#13;
mastery of essential kills. From these test results, Lucey believes&#13;
norms would be developed to allow comparisons between school&#13;
di tricts.&#13;
What' the cost? About twice that of current testing programs, for a&#13;
total of 285,000. This is a fraction of the $1.47 billion spent each year in&#13;
W1scon n for elementary and secondary public schooling.&#13;
The galns from such a program are numerous. The uniform compo&#13;
tion, duplication, administration, and compilation of the test data&#13;
ill make comparison and generalization of data across district lines&#13;
m feasible. Currently this information is not readily available as&#13;
th wid variety of testing programs make standardization difficult.&#13;
Lu y is correct when he stated, "It is a small price to pay to help&#13;
ch , administrators. and school board members decide what&#13;
areas of curriculum need attention, how to improve classroom instruction&#13;
and how to best allocate the resources at their disposal."&#13;
Lucey is :Uso correct in trying to ~eestablish the ~tate sup~rinte~dent's&#13;
office as responsible for overseeing the promotion of unifornuty and&#13;
quality of evluation and instruction.&#13;
There is a measure of truth too, to his critics' charge that such&#13;
comparison's between school districts are unfair. It would be unfair&#13;
for basic skills testing to degenerate into a blaming match, where&#13;
school administrators quake when their districts fall below the 50&#13;
percent or "average" mark. Clearly other factors, such as parents'&#13;
educational level, social class, and economic standing, interact with1&#13;
the district educational structure to yield, at best, an indirect measure&#13;
of academic achievement.&#13;
Arguements beside point&#13;
Both Lucey and his critics miss a crucial point however: th~&#13;
question is not whether the comparisons are fair, it goes beyond that,&#13;
to whether or not they are appropriate.&#13;
Evaluation by norm level is a tricky business; witness the overall&#13;
decline in national norms over the past decade and half. Traditionally&#13;
the business of education has not been realistically self-evaluative.&#13;
Content to drift along until public pressure forces change, the&#13;
educational bureaucracy has forgone the structural changes needed to&#13;
bring about consistent efforts at upgrading performance. After all,&#13;
norm levels only measure typical, generalized performance; they are&#13;
not reflective of potential nor specific skills·.&#13;
A better method&#13;
A far wiser method, I believe, would be for the state to begin&#13;
developing criterion reference testing (what skills are essential for&#13;
the high school graduate to perform) and targeting the specific&#13;
deficiencies present in every district, to be corrected in say, five&#13;
years.&#13;
Criterion referenced testing differs from norm testing in this fundamental&#13;
respect: norm levels give rank percentile in a generalized&#13;
subject (ie: Johnny scores in the 78th percentile in math). However,&#13;
norm levels do not evaluate specific skills (at what level can Johnny&#13;
calculate fractions, decimals, word problems, etc). Criterion&#13;
reference testing facilitates the pinpointing of skill deficiency.&#13;
Criterion testing, unlike norm levels, are constrained but uot condemned&#13;
by current state-wide levels of performance. It womd allow&#13;
educators and administrators a more indepth analysis of deficiency at&#13;
the district level than is presently proposed, while realizing Lucey's&#13;
basic concern for the biggest educational bang for the taxpayer's&#13;
buck.&#13;
While the possibility of unfair comparison of school districts&#13;
remains; the problem of defensive reaction to testing by insecure&#13;
school authorities can be substantially lessened. Acimlnistrators can&#13;
rightly point out that, to date, skill proficiency has been only indirectly&#13;
related to high school graduation. With criterion reference testing the&#13;
Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction would have at its disposal&#13;
the best information with which to generate consistently higher levels&#13;
of performance.&#13;
I Gruhl: DeRanger vulgar&#13;
)10 To the Editor: have freedom of the press and&#13;
don't know how to use it. Obviously&#13;
there are some&#13;
sophomoric smart alecs running&#13;
RANGER who don't know the&#13;
difference between good taste&#13;
and bad.&#13;
going on ... and about the accomplishments&#13;
of students who&#13;
are doing interesting things inside&#13;
and out of school. Surely&#13;
there must be more going on at&#13;
Parkside than what happens in&#13;
the PhyEd building.&#13;
-&#13;
~,, w The Parkside&#13;
..&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Congratulations! The article&#13;
titled "Birth Control Balled Up"&#13;
which was printed in the&#13;
November 17 issue of your erotic&#13;
DeRANGER supplement hit an&#13;
all-time low for vulgarity. It was&#13;
the diarrhea of a polluted mind&#13;
whose owner should be in the&#13;
custody of a psychiatrist and not&#13;
pounding a typewriter. Debasing&#13;
human sexuality is neither satire&#13;
or entertaining.&#13;
Now that you've provoked me&#13;
into writing, hear this! Why don't&#13;
you campus politicians do less&#13;
bitching and report more about&#13;
the good things that are happening&#13;
at Parkside?&#13;
Another suggestion: Stop&#13;
harping about "The Ad·&#13;
ministration" and what those&#13;
people do and don't do for you.&#13;
I've seen the facilities in the new&#13;
Union building and realize what a&#13;
rough time you have out there&#13;
and you even have to pay for the&#13;
food and drinks in the cafeteria.&#13;
IDITD• IN CMIEi' J aH • s.-1&#13;
8USIIIIU MJUtAOl•l Caltly 8tM&#13;
A0\/1.TISIIIO MAIIAGI• T-C- Nl!WS coo•otNATO• a,vce w,- 0 PA.T"'IINU&#13;
•- trat--k J- "'lcKIMlley&#13;
l'IATU!III IOITO• a...le ••- Sl•O!IITS IOITO• JM~ T-,a&#13;
M&lt;-.sarity ,...,.. • ....,.tive of tllose held by "'- ,_11. faulty ..- .clmlni1lraliCN1 of&#13;
,.,..,,... Ed,tor,al alld a.,,,,..n SU-22*7;&#13;
N1tW1,_ "34ltS.&#13;
tSAO OITO!IIS -., I ••ffl&lt;ll , BUI Bartie&#13;
COP'Y IOITO• J 1.•-&#13;
"HOTO IEDITO•&#13;
Cl•CUI.ATION s .. IIAl•-rd1&#13;
naFF&#13;
What's the big idea? Are you&#13;
trying to find out how much&#13;
pornographic garbage you can&#13;
dish out to your readers? You&#13;
Suggestions: Profiles about&#13;
some distinguished faculty&#13;
people . . . about the projects&#13;
supported by grants which are continued on pg. 3&#13;
Fire fighting students thanked&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On Friday, November 19, 1976&#13;
at approximately 3:10 p.m., the&#13;
campus experienced a grass fire&#13;
west of the Union parking lot on&#13;
the outer loop road. The fire&#13;
caused a minimum amount of&#13;
damage only because of the efforts&#13;
of the students of this&#13;
campus who assisted in controlling&#13;
the fire until the Somers&#13;
Fire Department arrived.&#13;
I do not know who these&#13;
students were, however, the&#13;
Campus Security Department&#13;
wishes to thank each and every&#13;
one of them for the assistance&#13;
that they gave and also the&#13;
Physical Plant employees who&#13;
were on the scene.&#13;
I have received nothing but&#13;
compliments from the Somers&#13;
Fire Department and· how sur·&#13;
prised they were that the fire was&#13;
fairly well under control when&#13;
they arrived at the scene.&#13;
Again, to all of those who&#13;
assisted, a hearty "Thank You"&#13;
for a job well done.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
R.D. Brinlanann, Director&#13;
Campus Security Department &#13;
Wedoesday, Dec. 1&#13;
Wargamers Club registration for mini-tournament featuring the&#13;
Game of Austerlitz in CL 140.&#13;
Swine Flu Clinic from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Greenquist concourse.&#13;
Both monovalent and bivalent vaccines will be available.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. Z&#13;
Wargamers Club hosts mini-tournament featuring the Game of Austerlitz&#13;
in CL 140.&#13;
Meeting, Society 01 Physics Students at4 p.m. in Gr. 230.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 3&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12 p.m. in WLLC 295 and&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2to 4p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Union Coffeehouse presents Dave Parker from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Movie, "Lucky Lady," plays at 7and 9:15 p.m, in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Concert Band performs at8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Saturday, Dec .•&#13;
Arts and Crafts Fair from 10a.m.to 4 p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 5&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Chamber Singers present Medieval and&#13;
Renaissance Christmas Music at 3: 30 in the CAT.&#13;
Movie, "Lucky Lady," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 7&#13;
Concert, Parkside Percussion Ensemble performs at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
CAT.&#13;
Wedoesday, Dec. 8&#13;
Business Department Informational Coffee Hour at 2:30 p.m. in CL&#13;
111.&#13;
Mars study gets grant&#13;
The Board of Regents has&#13;
accepted a grant of $7,800 from&#13;
the National Aeronautics and&#13;
Space Administration (NASA) in&#13;
continuing support of a study&#13;
tilled "Mars: Identification,&#13;
Distribution and Signification of&#13;
Volcanic Land Forms" by&#13;
Studentsthankedcontinued&#13;
trom pg. 2&#13;
Who has the water-bed cone&#13;
essions&#13;
Nevertheless, the fact remains&#13;
that those who are inclined to&#13;
gripe the most have yet to serve&#13;
an apprenticeship in a PI'A, In&#13;
my opinion they have a heck of a&#13;
lot to learn before becoming&#13;
eligible to act or talk like a&#13;
Regent.&#13;
It ill behooves you to criticize&#13;
people who have a lot more&#13;
training and experience to draw&#13;
from than you do .... especially if&#13;
you skip classes and-or don't do&#13;
your homework. If the Creator&#13;
intended that students were to&#13;
run the school He would have&#13;
made them first.&#13;
Your time to do so will come&#13;
soon enough. And in the meantime,&#13;
Good luck! ... and keep&#13;
your paper clean!&#13;
ARTHUR GRUHL&#13;
Class of '72&#13;
Eugene 1. Smith, associate&#13;
prolessor of earth science at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The grant brings total NASA&#13;
support of Smith's study,&#13;
initiated in 1973, to $21,171. The&#13;
project is based on analysis of&#13;
photographs from the Mariner 9&#13;
. and 10 space probes and locuses&#13;
on identification of planetary&#13;
surface features.&#13;
Smith said he expects&#13;
photographs from the Viking&#13;
Mars landing to be made&#13;
available to him for study in May.&#13;
Before joining the Parkside&#13;
laculty in 1972, Smith was involved&#13;
in lunar and planetary&#13;
research at the University of New&#13;
Mexico.&#13;
The Regents also accepted $388&#13;
from various donors for the&#13;
Parkside scholarship fund and&#13;
$34.75 lor the Parkside Library.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1. 1976 3&#13;
Classified&#13;
WANTED: P"rl Time Secretary for StUdent&#13;
Group. 10 hours II weft; at $'1 50 lin hOUr&#13;
MUSI be on Work Study. See KIYtlko In WLLC&#13;
0193 or call 5532244&#13;
TYPING DONE elflden,'y .nd&#13;
professionally in my home R:enOf~ble&#13;
rates 651-6061&#13;
WANTED: Part time child care worker&#13;
working with ivveniles aVes lJ·11 in group&#13;
foster home. SJOO per hour. One year exeerreece&#13;
desired In child care work or&#13;
related tleld. Phone 6J6-J.saJ.&#13;
FOR SALE: Grey. wI'Ilte. and orange Per&#13;
sian rug 6·... xJ·.... $350. 552-9J9.1 after Sp_m.&#13;
WILe. 00 any kind of typing at nUoNible&#13;
retes For intMmatJon C." 4523313&#13;
WANTED: Female20years or older to Share&#13;
an apartment. Preferably Jr. Sr. PI\one 694·&#13;
6185 after 6 p.m.&#13;
FOR SALE: Mar.nt, 2015 recer ...er, Jim""&#13;
model" speakers. 1year old S3OO. Phone 63'&#13;
.m&#13;
NEED ride from south side of Milwaukee&#13;
Will pay for '&gt;7 gas. Call 162·6233 162_6231:&#13;
Ask for Carol.&#13;
MEOICAL SCHOOL in MexicO .cceptlng&#13;
Amef"lcan students Pr.ctlce I" .... US. WHO&#13;
listed. HEW approved • .I v.. r COUfM. I~ns&#13;
a.... Il.ble, tM Oecembt't'" ~Intmen' ''I&#13;
yo.tr .re •• calf 219.996-.200.&#13;
WILL do any kind of typing at a r.. sonable&#13;
rete. CaU 65-'·5002 anytime after 5 p.m.&#13;
il8~rr&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action&#13;
A lEW WAY TO LEARI AID SERVE:&#13;
A chance to develop yourself by serving a one-year internship&#13;
in a local community service or action project on a full-time&#13;
basis while receiving intensive in-service training, faculty&#13;
advice and support, 30 units of academic credit, and a subsistence&#13;
living income.&#13;
Several openings lor internships in community agencies will&#13;
be available starling January, 1977.Applications are required,&#13;
and inunediate response is necessary to have applications&#13;
considered.&#13;
In addition to present Parkside students, people who have&#13;
begun but not linished college elsewhere, are over 18, have&#13;
genuine commitment to a year of community improvement&#13;
effort and have above average academic ability or usable&#13;
skills are welcome to apply.&#13;
For further information and applications, write, pbone or visit&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action, University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Room 286, Tallent Hall, Kenosha, WI 53140. Phooe 553-2337,&#13;
from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. weekdays.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. l&#13;
Wargamers Club registration for mini-tournament featuring the&#13;
Game of Austerlitz in CL 140.&#13;
Swine Flu Clinic from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Greenquist concourse.&#13;
Both monovalent and bivalent vaccines will be available.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 2&#13;
Wargamers Club hosts mini-tournament featuring the Game of Austerlitz&#13;
in CL 140.&#13;
Meeting, Society of Physics Students at 4 p.m. in Gr. 230.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 3&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12 p.m. in WLLC 295 and&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Union Coffeehouse presents Dave Parker from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Movie, "Lucky Lady," playsat 7 and 9:15 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Concert Band performs at 8 p.ni. in the CAT.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 4&#13;
Arts and Crafts Fair from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 5&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Chamber Singers present Medieval and&#13;
Renaissance Christmas Music at 3:30 in the CAT.&#13;
Movie, "Lucky Lady," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 7&#13;
Concert, Parkside Percussion Ensemble performs at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
CAT.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 8&#13;
Business Department Informational Coffee Hour at 2:30 p.m. in CL&#13;
111.&#13;
Mars study gets grant&#13;
The Board of Regents has&#13;
accepted a grant of $7,800 from&#13;
the National Aeronautics and&#13;
Space Administration (NASA) in&#13;
continuing support of a study&#13;
titled "Mars: Identification,&#13;
Distribution and Signification of&#13;
Volcanic Land Forms" by&#13;
Students thtJ,nkedcontinued&#13;
from pg. 2&#13;
Who has the water-bed cone&#13;
essions&#13;
Nevertheless, the fact remains&#13;
that those who are inclined to&#13;
gripe the most have yet to serve&#13;
an apprenticeship in a PTA, In&#13;
my opinion they have a heck of a&#13;
lot to learn before becoming&#13;
eligible to act or talk like a&#13;
Regent.&#13;
It ill behooves you to criticize&#13;
people who have a lot more&#13;
training and experience to draw&#13;
from than you do .... especially if&#13;
you skip classes and-or don't do&#13;
your homework. If the Creator&#13;
intended that students were to&#13;
run the school He would have&#13;
made them first.&#13;
Your time to do so will come&#13;
soon enough. And in the meantime,&#13;
Good luck! ... and keep&#13;
your paper clean!&#13;
ARTHUR GRUHL&#13;
Class of '72&#13;
Eugene I. Smith, associate&#13;
professor of earth science at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The grant brings total NASA&#13;
support of Smith's study,&#13;
initiated in 1973, to $21,171. The&#13;
project is based on analysis of&#13;
photographs from the Mariner 9&#13;
· and 10 space probes and focuses&#13;
on identification of planetary&#13;
surface features.&#13;
Smith said he expects&#13;
photographs from the Viking&#13;
Mars landing to be made&#13;
available to him for study in May.&#13;
Before joining the Parkside&#13;
faculty in 1972, Smith was involved&#13;
in lunar and planetary&#13;
research at the University of New&#13;
Mexico.&#13;
The Regents also accepted $388&#13;
from various donors for the&#13;
Parkside scholarship fund and&#13;
$34.75 for the Parkside Library.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976 3&#13;
Classified WANTED : Part Time Secretary for Student&#13;
Group. 10 hours a week at S2.50 an hour&#13;
Must be on Work Study See Kiyoko in WLLC&#13;
o 193 or call 553-224'&#13;
WANTED : Part time child care worker&#13;
working w ith jweniles ages 13 17 ,n group&#13;
foster home. SJ 00 per hour One yur ex,&#13;
perience desired in child care work or&#13;
related field Phone 636-358.J&#13;
WANTED : Female20 years or older to share&#13;
an apartment. Preferably Jr. Sr. Phone 694 -&#13;
6185 after 6 p. m.&#13;
NEED ride from south sld~ of Milwaukee.&#13;
Will pay for 'i&gt; gas. Call 762-6233 762-6231 . Ask for Carol.&#13;
WILL do any kind of typing at a reasonable&#13;
rate. Call ~ -5002 anytime after 5 p.m.&#13;
TYPING DONE efllclen1tv enll&#13;
professionally ,n my home. Reasoneble&#13;
rates. 657 6068.&#13;
FOR SALE: Grey, while, end orange Pers,an&#13;
r119 6' 8" x3'4", S350. 552 -939• after Sp m&#13;
WILi: DO any kind 01 typing at reasonable&#13;
rates For ,ntormation. Call 652 3373.&#13;
FOR SALE: Marantz 2015 receiver, Jensen&#13;
model • speakers, 1 year old . ~ Phone 634&#13;
8655 .&#13;
MEDICAL SCHOOL in Mexico ecc1tptir,v&#13;
American students. Proctice In the VS, WHO&#13;
listed, HEW approved, • year course, loans&#13;
availabfe, tor December eppolntme,nt in&#13;
yovr .,, .. , call 219,996-4200.&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action&#13;
A NEW WAY TO LEARN AND SERVE:&#13;
A chance to develop yourself by serving a one-year internship&#13;
in a local community service or action project on a full-time&#13;
basis while receiving intensive in-service training, faculty&#13;
advice and support, 30 units of academic credit, and a subsistence&#13;
living income.&#13;
Several openings for internships in community agencies will&#13;
be available starting January, 1977. Applications are required,&#13;
and immediate response is necessary to have applications&#13;
considered.&#13;
In addition to present Parkside students, people who have&#13;
begun but not finished college elsewhere, are over 18, have&#13;
genuine commitment to a year of community improvement&#13;
effort and have above average academic ability or usable&#13;
skills are welcome to apply.&#13;
For further information and applications, write, phone or visit&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action, University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Room 286, Tallent Hall, Kenosha, WI 53140. Phone 553-2337,&#13;
from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. weekdays. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976&#13;
Dear Yang,&#13;
Well, I heard through the grapevine&#13;
they've locked you up again.&#13;
I tried 10 visit you in that&#13;
psych. ward but they wouldn't let me in.&#13;
Yang, you know you can't go around these days&#13;
Just being yourself!&#13;
Take my advice; if you wanllo get out&#13;
Impersonale somebody else!&#13;
Love,&#13;
Ying&#13;
P.S. I'am sorry you didn't receive&#13;
the gift I sent through the mail.&#13;
[ wrapped It with tender loving care.&#13;
It .... SO Iragile-I wrote on all six&#13;
sides: KIss This End. It got censored.&#13;
So ['II rewrap and send again.&#13;
love,&#13;
Ying&#13;
P.A.B. Film Series&#13;
Presents:&#13;
WClCYLADY&#13;
/..'-=-5-&#13;
Starring: Llza Mlnnelli&#13;
Gene Hackman&#13;
Burt Reynolds&#13;
Friday, Dec. 3 ·7:00 p.m.&#13;
9:45 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 5 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
PLUS ON FRIDA Y&#13;
A SNEAK PREVIEW OF&#13;
THE ROCKY HORROR&#13;
PICTURE SHOW&#13;
Darkness into light.&#13;
The shadows of dawn at night.&#13;
Walking with tall men, and loving any lady.&#13;
Or trying 10 find one that might.&#13;
Very early in the morning, awaking in&#13;
darkness.&#13;
Alone&#13;
Choose your favorite color. in a wide&#13;
selection of black.&#13;
Are they the colors you lack?&#13;
Or were the colors never there?&#13;
Is it true, the rumor lurking amist&#13;
your friends?&#13;
I wonder who will take amiss,&#13;
or who you may offend.&#13;
I think I was a passing smile.&#13;
The light of the night.&#13;
But with everything I've said and done,&#13;
and know all that I've heard.&#13;
I often sit and wonder about the&#13;
dark side of the twenty-third.&#13;
Dennis John Peylon&#13;
dream No. 2&#13;
crisp old leaves pinned to wall&#13;
crumble dripping to wine tasting of You&#13;
and we walk&#13;
in shadow of sleepless dream&#13;
with running river night&#13;
speaking silence&#13;
snow on wind mind sky&#13;
flakes to silence words of we&#13;
and we laugh&#13;
in spiral memory day&#13;
within imagination love root&#13;
soiling stillness&#13;
jeffrey [. swenck!&#13;
rainy autumn equinox&#13;
pink flamingoes &amp; apple trees&#13;
the green bay packers&#13;
&amp; Your memory&#13;
vampire days &amp; two years&#13;
weeping&#13;
in the sand&#13;
jeffrey j, swencki&#13;
:::::::::::::~:::::~:.;::::.::::;:::~~::~:::;:~~:~:~::~:::~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~~:~:~~~:~~~~~~~:~:~~1:~:~:~:~~~~t~~~:1:~:~:~:~:~~:~:~:~:~:~:~;~:~:;:~:~:~:~:~:~:~!~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:::~:~:~:~:~:~:::~:~~~~~:~:~~::~~~:~~~~~:~~~~~~::~::~~:~:~:~:1:~:;:~:~:1:~:::~:~:~:;:~:;:;~~~&#13;
0'&#13;
SPECIAL RING PROMOTION&#13;
By Josten's&#13;
Date: &lt;VVed.,&#13;
Time: 10-2 5-7&#13;
Place: eNext to the J3ookj.to'te&#13;
in the c4£coue&#13;
* 5 Week Shipment * 5% Discount&#13;
* $1000 Deposit&#13;
Spirit eview&#13;
b,:1B&#13;
......&#13;
The musical g' urilt White (of Earth,&#13;
Wind &amp; FIre) aJMI W-.ler have surfaced&#13;
agam'. In these two~mposers we have&#13;
probably the ndl atill!: spiritual, and&#13;
catalysitic music IiII Ce....inly their rhythm&#13;
and blues success is Y e&lt;:epted.&#13;
Maruice While (iea4""ftiter, composer) of&#13;
Earth, Wind,&amp; FlI&lt;' etIlrt, e~titled SPIRIT&#13;
could be their beSl ' Their last, That's&#13;
THE WAYOF 11IEfI~ Vltna gold record and&#13;
was a Grammy Awa ) SPIRIT features&#13;
their hard driving AM~ .. ay", Like so many&#13;
of E, W, &amp; F songs, are treated or used&#13;
very precussively, .crIg&#13;
"'t slops or beats.&#13;
This is one of th8f ~rs (listen to the&#13;
Emotioos new alblJll, n) . E, W, &amp; F Play,,"&#13;
behind them 10 th\S II .&#13;
E W &amp; F \ntroduo'n01llerhit bound cut .&#13;
, , if g.. In&#13;
"Saturday Nile," re u IDe gOOdgek\own&#13;
guitar and bass work OlDdance to this .. is t er Iunk be one.&#13;
"On Your Fa:=.". as '" Y . at tyPe of'&#13;
song. "Blyou IS{e8tllt~n1Y IDslrumenlal&#13;
on the album. It', a e g, jazzy rock .&#13;
strumental, typically ~ after a somew~~;&#13;
thematic E, W,&amp; F CO features Mauri&#13;
White's virtuoSO~uld on the Kalirnba. ce&#13;
No E, W, &amp; F al ~1l1 ~ COIDpletewitho&#13;
some magical8D~~ lrn~ about lOve u~&#13;
peace, "Burnin' -- I tion" ("Multan&#13;
Y&#13;
OU will fmd peace ilI'e aU the t. lply&#13;
in IIne") Probably the most ;tlti~nd mUsiCal .&#13;
song on the album th "Earth WIsound&#13;
Fire" The lyrics ~ i' ""'temPlat;'; nd, &amp;&#13;
music' is definilely v....~ling. g and the&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976&#13;
Starring: Liza Minnelli&#13;
Gene Hackman&#13;
Burt Reynolds&#13;
rlday, Dec. 3 - 7:00 p.m.&#13;
9:45 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 5 - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
PLUS ON FRIDAY&#13;
A SNEAK PREVIEW OF&#13;
THE OCKY HORROR&#13;
PICTURE SHOW&#13;
Darkness into light.&#13;
The shadows of dawn at night.&#13;
Walking with tall men, and loving any lady.&#13;
Or trying to find one that might.&#13;
Very early in the morning, awaking in&#13;
darkness.&#13;
Alone&#13;
Choose your favorite color, in a wide&#13;
selection of black.&#13;
Are they the colors you lack?&#13;
Or were the colors never there?&#13;
Is it true, the rumor lurking ainist&#13;
your friends?&#13;
I wonder who will take amiss,&#13;
or who you may offend.&#13;
I think I was a passing smile.&#13;
The light of the night.&#13;
But with everything I've said and done,&#13;
and know all that I've heard.&#13;
I often sit and wonder about the&#13;
dark side of the twenty-third.&#13;
Dennis John Peyton&#13;
dreamNo.2&#13;
crisp old leaves pinned to wall&#13;
crumble dripping to wine tasting of You&#13;
and we walk&#13;
in shadow of sleepless dream&#13;
with running river night&#13;
speaking silence&#13;
snow on wind mind sky&#13;
flakes to silence words of we&#13;
and we laugh&#13;
in spiral memory day&#13;
within imagination love root&#13;
softing stillness&#13;
Jeffrey j. swencld&#13;
rainy autumn equinox&#13;
pink flamingoes &amp; apple trees&#13;
the green bay packers&#13;
&amp; Your memory&#13;
vampire days &amp; two years&#13;
weeping&#13;
in the sand&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
SPECIAL RING PROMOTION&#13;
5&#13;
By Josten's&#13;
Date: &lt;Wed.,&#13;
Time: 10-2 5-7&#13;
Place: dVext to the !Book~totte&#13;
in the dffcoue&#13;
eek Shipment * 5% Discount&#13;
$10 Deposit&#13;
Spirit eview &#13;
•&#13;
nneui&#13;
lID&#13;
!White (of Earth,&#13;
ler have surfaced&#13;
~mposerswe have&#13;
e, spiritual, and&#13;
linly their rhythm&#13;
cepted.&#13;
nter, composer) of&#13;
rt, entitled SPIRIT&#13;
Their last, That's&#13;
n • gold record and&#13;
) SPIRIT features&#13;
fay". Like so many&#13;
re treated or used&#13;
..t stops or beats.&#13;
krs (listen to the&#13;
S. E, W, &amp; F plays,&#13;
r hit bound cut in&#13;
ne good get-down&#13;
dance to this one.&#13;
nky beat type of&#13;
, only instrumental&#13;
ng, jazzy rock inafter&#13;
a somewhat&#13;
1 features Maurice&#13;
n the Kalimba,&#13;
complete without&#13;
•ds about love and&#13;
I8tioo" ("Multiply&#13;
, all the time").&#13;
.nd musical sound&#13;
"Earth, Wind, &amp;&#13;
en&gt;plating and the&#13;
ting.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 19765&#13;
haiku&#13;
mind meanders on&#13;
lumberjack logs of rapid&#13;
swirliog&#13;
river Gone&#13;
Must tbe day's journey&#13;
take tbe whole darn day. Must life&#13;
leave life&#13;
jeffrey j. sweockl&#13;
behind,&#13;
Must cancer crush the body, decompose the&#13;
gut,&#13;
deform a woman's breast, and must&#13;
Our Being&#13;
at a moment's notice&#13;
un-Earth its grasping roots ....&#13;
must&#13;
dying never stop?&#13;
Is it foolish trying to hold on to something&#13;
thats not there?&#13;
Daniel Trevino Ramirez&#13;
Like butterflies, somelimes humans attempt&#13;
landings&#13;
on flowers that don't exist yet.&#13;
And we shed tears which crocodiles&#13;
don't understand the meaning of, but&#13;
newborn babies do, and kittens too. No bubble gum&#13;
by Larry Donnelly&#13;
Some record companies seem to be belter than&#13;
others in choosing unique, groundbreaking groups.&#13;
All record companies have to give new talent a try,&#13;
but A&amp;M records sign up more verstile groups and&#13;
has more foresight than most platter producers.&#13;
Just a limited look at their pool of musical genius&#13;
should leave you convinced of this: Peter Frarnpton,&#13;
Cat Stevens, Rick Wakeman, Supertramp, Joan&#13;
Baez, Brothers Johnson, Nils Lofgren, Shawn&#13;
Phillips, Arrnaggedon, East Head and Gray Wright&#13;
when he was with Spooky Tooth. I'll admit that&#13;
A&amp;M also has the kings of bubble gum. The Carpenters&#13;
and Captain &amp; Tennille are under contract&#13;
but the rest of A&amp;M's troup are much more&#13;
sugarless.&#13;
Frampton, Stevens, and Baez are already&#13;
superstars but there are just as many (if not more)&#13;
talented figures who stay in the non-commercial&#13;
background, Lofgren, Phillips, Gallagher, and Lyle&#13;
are these artists, as well as Gino Vannelli.&#13;
GIST OF THE GEMINI, A&amp;M SP-4596&#13;
Vannelli may be even less familiar than Lofgren,&#13;
or Phillips but the talent is there. From the striking&#13;
cover to the striking music you wonder, "Where has&#13;
this man been?" With his brother Joe and his band,&#13;
Gino has come up with some very mellow and&#13;
thought provoking music.&#13;
The vocals from Gino could be coming from the&#13;
likes of Frank Sinatra or any good, male nightclub&#13;
entertainer. Yet, his vocals blend perfectly with the&#13;
music, which reminds me of Gary Wright (little&#13;
guitar, mainly keyboard). The lyrics are moving,&#13;
driving, and meaningful. The arrangement is also&#13;
in good standing while the music escapes nicely&#13;
away from the usual commercial clatter.&#13;
Side one contains alternating light, moving, quick&#13;
tempo songs with a couple of mellow romantic cuts.&#13;
"Love of My Life", "Omens of Love", "Fly into the&#13;
.................................................................... :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
: ArrENT/ON BUSINEU MAJORSI :&#13;
• •&#13;
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• •&#13;
• • • ••&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
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• • • • • •&#13;
• • • •&#13;
• •&#13;
i Sponsored by PI SIGMA EPSILON i&#13;
• •&#13;
~ .&#13;
destruction of no one&#13;
a grain of Gone&#13;
remains&#13;
like voice on&#13;
the wind&#13;
touching lis'ning&#13;
mind song&#13;
singing mutely&#13;
Visage&#13;
passing always&#13;
all ways&#13;
passing always&#13;
through me&#13;
jeffrey j. swenckt&#13;
autumn evening frost&#13;
kaleidoscope darkness in&#13;
a breath of night song&#13;
hare wooded pathway&#13;
leading east of autumn day&#13;
nightly ghost of we&#13;
heavy scent of leaves. .&#13;
autumn carpet laid thick WIth&#13;
lime passing to Gone&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
So when Ispeak of love, don't laugh.&#13;
Be content to know the rain will one day&#13;
wipe out every trace we've left&#13;
upon the sand.&#13;
DaoJeI Trevino Ramirez&#13;
Night" are the personal favorites.&#13;
Side two is a concept side called "The War Suite."&#13;
Instrumentals provide good mood, giving the&#13;
listener the impact of the march, the energy, the&#13;
grief, and the sorrow of baltle. The lyrics are&#13;
slirrring and stay contained in your memory well&#13;
after the rcord is through spinning.&#13;
Gino Vannelli is an artist who will prohably never&#13;
get the recognition he deserves, but iI's always nice&#13;
to know there are the Vannellis and Phillips&#13;
around to provide music that has something more&#13;
to say other than, "Take the money and nul," or,&#13;
"shake your booty"!&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
T-SHIRT SHOP ALL TRANSFERS 50% OFF WITH THIS&#13;
COUPON THRU 12/15&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From Goers Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
m~~t. I : ROO·M CL-lll ~&#13;
:r~1~. D&#13;
I&#13;
S '" .1- II . _ . ~ .~ .If Faculty and students Will preview the spring&#13;
• view&#13;
mposers we have&#13;
, spiritual, and&#13;
inly their rhythm&#13;
epted.&#13;
·ter, composer) of&#13;
t, entitled SPIRIT&#13;
Their last, That's&#13;
a gold record and&#13;
SPIRIT features&#13;
ay". Like so many&#13;
e treated or used&#13;
rt stops or beats.&#13;
s (listen to the&#13;
. E, W, &amp; F plays_&#13;
hit bound cut in&#13;
e good get-&lt;lown&#13;
dance to this one.&#13;
Inky beat type of'&#13;
! only instrumental&#13;
ng, jazzy rock inafter&#13;
a somewhat&#13;
1 features Maurice ·&#13;
n the Kalimba.&#13;
complete without&#13;
:1ds about love and&#13;
liation" ( "Multiply&#13;
i all the time").&#13;
ind musical sound&#13;
"Earth, Wind, &amp;&#13;
.emplating and the&#13;
ting.&#13;
THE PARKStDE RANGER December 1, 1976 5&#13;
haiku&#13;
mind meanders on ,&#13;
lumberjack logs of rapid&#13;
swirling&#13;
river Gone&#13;
Must the day's journey&#13;
take the whole darn day. Must life&#13;
jeffrey j. swenckl&#13;
behind,&#13;
leave life&#13;
Must cancer crush the body, decompose the&#13;
gut, 9-3-76&#13;
deform a woman's breast and must&#13;
Our Being '&#13;
must&#13;
at a moment's notice&#13;
un-Earth its grasping roots ....&#13;
Is it foolish trying to hold on to something&#13;
thats not there?&#13;
dying never stop? Like butterflies, sometimes humans attempt&#13;
landings&#13;
Daniel Trevino Ramirez on flowers that don't exist yet.&#13;
No bubble gum&#13;
And we shed tears which crocodiles&#13;
don't understand the meaning of, but&#13;
newborn babies do, and kittens too.&#13;
So when I speak of love, don't laugh.&#13;
Be content to know the rain will one day&#13;
wipe out every trace we've left&#13;
upon the sand.&#13;
by Larry Donnelly Daniel Trevino Ramirez&#13;
Some record companies seem to be better than&#13;
others in choosing unique, groundbreaking groups.&#13;
All record companies have to give new talent a try,&#13;
but A&amp;M records sign up more verstile groups and&#13;
has more foresight than most platter producers. Night" are the personal favorites.&#13;
Side two is a concept side called "The War Suite."&#13;
Just a limited look at their pool of musical genius&#13;
should leave you convinced of this: Peter Frampton,&#13;
Cat Stevens, Rick Wakeman, Supertramp, Joan&#13;
Baez, Brothers Johnson, Nils Lofgren, Shawn&#13;
Phillips, Armaggedon, East Head and Gray Wright&#13;
when he was with Spooky Tooth. I'll admit that&#13;
A&amp;M also has the kings of bubble gum. The Carpenters&#13;
and Captain &amp; Tennille are under contract&#13;
but the rest of A&amp;M's troup are much more&#13;
sugarless.&#13;
Instrumentals provide good mood, giving the&#13;
listener the impact of the march, the energy, the&#13;
grief, and the sorrow of battle. The lyrics are&#13;
stirrring and stay contained in your memory well&#13;
after the rcord is through spinning.&#13;
Gino Vannelli is an artist who will probably never&#13;
get the recognition he deserves. but it's always nice&#13;
to know there are the annellis and Phillips&#13;
around to provide music that has something more&#13;
to say other than, ' 'Take the money and run," or,&#13;
" shake your booty"!&#13;
Frampton, Stevens, and Baez are already&#13;
superstars but there are just as many (if not more )&#13;
talented figures who stay in the non-commercial&#13;
background. Lofgren, Phillips, Gallagher, and Lyle&#13;
are these artists, as well as Gino Vannelli. PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
GIST OF THE GEMINI, A&amp;M SP-4596 THE MINI-MALL&#13;
Vannelli may be even less familiar than Lofgren,&#13;
or Phillips but the talent is there. From the striking&#13;
cover to the striking music you wonder, ' 'Where has&#13;
this man been?" With his brother Joe and his band,&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
T-SHIRT SHOP ALL TRANSFERS SO°'o OFF WITH THIS&#13;
COUPON THRU 12/15&#13;
Gino has come up with some very mellow and&#13;
thought provoking music. H~_~IA' ~ / The vocals from Gino could be coming from the&#13;
likes of Frank Sinatra or any good, male nightclub&#13;
entertainer. Yet, his vocals blend perfectly with the&#13;
music, which reminds me of Gary Wright (little&#13;
guitar, mainly keyboard). The lyrics are moving,&#13;
driving, and meaningful. The arrangement is also&#13;
in good standing while the music escapes nicely&#13;
away from the usual commercial clatter.&#13;
Side one contains alternating light, moving, quick&#13;
tempo songs with a couple of mellow romantic cuts.&#13;
"Love of My Life", "Omens of Love " , "Fly into the&#13;
• Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
destruction of no one&#13;
a grain of Gone&#13;
remains&#13;
like voice on&#13;
the wind&#13;
touching lis'ning&#13;
mind song&#13;
singing mutely&#13;
Visage&#13;
passing always&#13;
all ways&#13;
passing always&#13;
through me&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
autumn evening frost&#13;
kaleidoscope darkness in&#13;
a breath of night song&#13;
bare wooded pathway&#13;
leading east of autumn day&#13;
nightly ghost of we&#13;
heavy scent of leaves&#13;
autumn carpet laid thick with&#13;
time passing to Gone&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
• ····································································: • • •&#13;
: ArrENTION BUS/NE$$ MAJOR$/ :&#13;
• • • • • • • ~.,...,.-.,_,,........,._.-==-~'""-=-.:::-..-::~,,..,-;;,,,""7--:;,,~::::"':.:::-s:::-,-.:::.:::=....-; • • • • • • • • • • • • •&#13;
• •••••• • • • • • . • /iiilS. 1111*•• . •• • • • • • • ~W-N~\ • • -~•y •&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • •&#13;
• • liiilllllMMl.111111111. ••- • • • • • 111111.iMIN!I!'-' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • L::,.~;..::::-~:...z::..£..:::::,,.~::.....~::::....~-=~..:;...-.L-.=~___;-..._.,._~ •&#13;
• • • • • • i . Sponsored by Pl SIGMA EPSILON i&#13;
• • ~ ................................................................... . &#13;
, THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1. 1976&#13;
ormone&#13;
•&#13;
contreceptioe&#13;
questioned&#13;
•&#13;
EdlI... •• Dole: MI. PeIJII Is a eoIIIIIe1or al PWmed PareDlbood ID&#13;
........ ller 1ft... 1 serle. Is IDre.po_ '" qD.. tIoDioubmlUed by&#13;
PDrUlcIo ...... 11.&#13;
by Beverly oble PeIJII&#13;
u..: Aboul a y.... and a half ago J readaboul an IUD thai was&#13;
auppoeed to work by releam. a hormone. 'Ibis device was supposed to&#13;
be available IOJtIl!tIme this year. Is this device available? U so. how&#13;
JDfe and elfecllve is II?&#13;
Alao, can a woman ~ an IUD _ a vaginal douche?&#13;
AIlIwer: The IUD you are aakIng about is not tecmically an IUD&#13;
(intr ... lertne device). The Federal Drug AdmlnisIration has ruled&#13;
lhla way beca_ It doe. not work the same .. ay as other IUDs. 'Ibis&#13;
device is etIec1lve bee.... of the hormone in II, and once the honnone&#13;
.... off, the device 1.-.a great deal of IIIetIec1lveness.&#13;
The rwne for lhla new contraceptive is "Progesllaerl". It is in the&#13;
shape of the letter "T" and contalns a tiny amount of bonnone, which&#13;
is a tiny fraction of whal you talte with birth control pills. The device is&#13;
new and hard '" find. DocI«s in other stales are using II more than&#13;
docIon here in WI$C&lt;lnSInarea at this stage in time.&#13;
There is MM concern about the lnaertIon of the device being a little&#13;
mora dlfJIcuIl (for the ""tlenl) than other JUDs. Alao. this device has&#13;
10 be replaced every year, un1IItemost IUDs. The f.... is that many&#13;
""llanta won'l setlheae replaced in time and are more likely 10 set&#13;
prepan!. Ilwlll require apedaI foUow-upby the doctor to malte sure&#13;
the ""tlenl returna every y.....&#13;
Planned Parenthood in WIaconsln is not yetlnserllng the device and&#13;
I know of no local docIon who are using II yel. I would suggest you&#13;
checIt with nearby docten and espedally with the toll free hoUine for&#13;
Iamily plannlng Information, 1ll»-24208822. '&#13;
Women IIIInC JUDs can uoe vaginal douches, but there is a lot 01&#13;
conlroveray about the need lor douching anyway. Douching upoell the&#13;
natural PII balance, which taltea care of infections and cleansing the&#13;
VI ina naturally. Weadvlae ""tlenla who douche to do so infrequently,&#13;
and to not \IDe douchea which are perfumed. Douching with a vinegar&#13;
and water mIzture is Jusl as etIec1lve as store-bought concoclIons and&#13;
it's cheaper. ConauJt with YOID' doctor or give us a call for information&#13;
on douching.&#13;
P. Women using dlsphragms sbould not douch within four hours&#13;
.tter inleTCoune.&#13;
u,sss&#13;
Ft.. PIZZI Delivery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phones 652.. 737&#13;
........... C S, nI•• 8M' 0... 4, t •.•.&#13;
:&#13;
WATCH US!!&#13;
Admiral&#13;
1r (ciao. ....... ) l00"Jr. Sohd s ....&#13;
... ·w.,color TV&#13;
IId.a. •• Itywlh, •&#13;
....,. erwo tuper o.,.nd",,* Pre&lt;&#13;
-. L ttwwBlft;.. zPlc.&#13;
t.n w. ~ ,-tryIed&#13;
MocW llCall.&#13;
SUPER SALE PRICED AT••.&#13;
Opera star to appear&#13;
Metropolitan Opera star&#13;
Roberta Peters will appear in&#13;
concert at Parkside on Thursday,&#13;
Dec. 9, at '8 p.m. in the Comrnunication&#13;
Arts Theater. The&#13;
program is part 01 Parkside's&#13;
Accent in Enrichment series.&#13;
A limited numbers 01 tickets&#13;
($7) are available at the Campus&#13;
Infonnation Center, Sears in&#13;
Kenosha and Cook-Gere and&#13;
Team Electronics in Racine.&#13;
Peters, a coloratura soprano,&#13;
made her Metropolitan Opera&#13;
debut in 1950 and since has&#13;
starred in:rl different roles at the&#13;
Metropolitan and has appeared&#13;
in the great opera houses of the&#13;
world. This season, she again is&#13;
making a tour of North America&#13;
and Europe in addition to her&#13;
appearances with the Met.&#13;
In 1972, lollowing a 15 minute&#13;
standing ovation at the Bolshoi,&#13;
she was awarded the coveted&#13;
Bolshoi Medal, the first&#13;
American-born artist to receive&#13;
the prestigious Russian Award.&#13;
Although associated in the&#13;
public mind principally with the&#13;
great classical and romantic&#13;
heroines of opera, she created the&#13;
leading role in Gi&#13;
Menotti's "The Last Sa~~&#13;
the Metropolitan production&#13;
has had works dedicated to&#13;
by such other contern&#13;
writers as Aram Klta.:'&#13;
Paul Creston and Roy HarTial~&#13;
1973.she sang the world p&#13;
of a new work by Darius&#13;
In Carnegie Hall.&#13;
She has recorded&#13;
complete operas for RCA&#13;
(Deutsche GrammPPhon)&#13;
has made more televialon&#13;
pearances than any other&#13;
star in history.&#13;
Phy. Ed. parking lot approve&#13;
Regents of the University 01&#13;
Wisconsin System approved&#13;
construction of a new 4O()..car&#13;
parking lot near the Physical&#13;
Education Building at Parkside.&#13;
The lot originally was&#13;
reconunended in a 1974 Slate&#13;
Building Commission Study&#13;
which included two other close-in&#13;
parking lots already constructed.&#13;
It is expected to ease traffic&#13;
snarls which have developed&#13;
when major public events such as&#13;
concerts, basketball games and&#13;
similar attractions are held in the&#13;
PIIy. Ed. IDdg. as well as provide&#13;
moe. converJent parking for&#13;
conunutlng students and staff&#13;
members, according to James&#13;
Galbraith, director of planning&#13;
and construction at Parkside .&#13;
Galbraith said addition of the&#13;
,&#13;
new lot also is expected to cut&#13;
over...ll costs 01 operating the&#13;
transportation system on campus&#13;
since fewer shuttle busses are&#13;
expected to be needed to carry&#13;
commuters Irom out-lying&#13;
parking areas.&#13;
Access to the lot will be&#13;
Kenosha County Hwy.&#13;
Construction Is expected to&#13;
during 1977.&#13;
Advising week schedul&#13;
Advising week will be held&#13;
December 8, 9, 10, 13, and 14.&#13;
There will be three information&#13;
stations throughout the main&#13;
campus at which students may&#13;
obtain information concerning&#13;
their faculty advisor, discipline,&#13;
and available office hours.&#13;
These stations will be located&#13;
at: I) Main level Greenquist Hall&#13;
in the conunons area. 2) W1J.C&#13;
Film of Nazi&#13;
occupation to show&#13;
Originally compiled from&#13;
sources ranging from wartime&#13;
newsreel and propaganda films&#13;
to interviews with survivors of&#13;
the occupation, the film was&#13;
intended for showing on French&#13;
television. On its completion,&#13;
however I the government&#13;
decided that the French public&#13;
was "not yet mature enough" to&#13;
see the film on TV.&#13;
When the film eventually was&#13;
shown in French movie theaters&#13;
i~caused ne~r-riots among&#13;
Viewers who sought to preserve&#13;
Smith's work is titled "Conunon&#13;
Barnyard Animals: The Cow."&#13;
SmIth also is represented by a&#13;
color intalio, "A Bend of the&#13;
Bow," in Colorprint U.S.A., a&#13;
national print exhibition sponsored&#13;
by the Texas Tech&#13;
~ ~'-",&#13;
~ccent on Enrichment presents&#13;
ROBERTA PETERS&#13;
coloratura soprano&#13;
8 P.M. DEC.9 ADM. $7'&#13;
COMM ARTS THEATER&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
~ickets at Campus Info. Center&#13;
D-Ievel at the information&#13;
and 3) WILC JIlliin'1evelln&#13;
library.&#13;
Counselors. and acllng&#13;
visors for undecided stWlIiIlal&#13;
will also be available to .&#13;
requiring their assistance.&#13;
will be stationed directly&#13;
the main entrance to the&#13;
The limes of their avau.,*~&#13;
will be posted at their stall.&#13;
the national legend of resislanle&#13;
to the Nazis which the film&#13;
largely rebuts. It subsequently&#13;
has been shown in theaters&#13;
throughout the western world to&#13;
high critical acclaim both as an&#13;
historical and a cultural&#13;
document.&#13;
An English narration voic..&#13;
over translation is provided, but&#13;
is dubbed to finish so that the&#13;
original French can also be&#13;
heard, a technique that has been&#13;
praised as particularly effectlve&#13;
in scenes featuring interviews.&#13;
University Department 01 Art, in&#13;
the Departmental Gallel')'&#13;
through Dec. 17.&#13;
Math&#13;
lecture&#13;
slated&#13;
"The Sorrow arxl the Pity,"&#13;
Marcel Ophuls' documentary&#13;
lilm on France during the Nazi&#13;
occupation, will have a free&#13;
public screening at Parkside at I&#13;
p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 2, in&#13;
Classroom Bldg 105.&#13;
The four·hQUT film, which&#13;
documents the collahoratlon of&#13;
tr- the French with their Gennan&#13;
.. captors and probes the moral&#13;
'&#13;
dilemma of an occupied. nation, is&#13;
. •• sponsored by the campus lecture&#13;
and fine arts conunittee and the&#13;
, history discipline.&#13;
Art prof. displays work&#13;
A print by Parkside art&#13;
professor Moishe SmIth Is included&#13;
in the Brooklyn Musewn's&#13;
current invitational show" "30&#13;
Years of American Printmaking,"&#13;
which incorporates the&#13;
20th National Prlnl Eshibitlon.&#13;
Prof. Walter Gautschi, a staff&#13;
member at both the University 01&#13;
Wisconsin Mathemalics&#13;
Research Center in Madison and&#13;
the Purdue University&#13;
mathematics and computer&#13;
science department, will give 8&#13;
free public lecture at UWParkside&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
Dec. 3 in Classroom Bldg. RoOlll&#13;
107.&#13;
His topic will be "Preventive&#13;
Computation-Avoiding Recursive&#13;
Calculations.' ,&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976&#13;
orrnone&#13;
• contraceptive&#13;
questioned&#13;
A&#13;
bJ Be~ rly. ble Pella&#13;
diaphragms should not douch within four hours&#13;
frH Pim Delwery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-1737&#13;
,...,.ra,I11 C~l1b1, Sp19~tftl, R1flell, Bttf&#13;
OPEN 4 p.•. let•·•·&#13;
WATCH US!!&#13;
Opera star to appear&#13;
Metropolitan Opera star&#13;
Roberta Peters will appear in&#13;
concert at Parkside on Thursday,&#13;
Dec. 9, at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. The&#13;
program is part of Parkside's&#13;
Accent in Enrichment series.&#13;
A limited mnnbers of tickets&#13;
($7) are available at the Campus&#13;
Information Center, Sears in&#13;
Kenosha and Cook-Gere and&#13;
Team Electronics in Racine.&#13;
Peters, a coloratura soprano,&#13;
made her Metropolitan Opera&#13;
debut in 1950 and since has&#13;
starred in 37 different roles at the&#13;
Metropolitan and has appeared&#13;
in the great opera hou_ses of the&#13;
world. This season, she again is&#13;
making a tour of North America&#13;
and Europe in addition to her&#13;
appearances with the Met.&#13;
In 1972, following a 15 minute&#13;
standing ovation at the Bolshoi,&#13;
she was awarded the coveted&#13;
Bolshoi Medal, the first&#13;
American-born artist to receive&#13;
the prestigious Russian Award.&#13;
Although associated in the&#13;
public mind principally with the&#13;
great classical and romantic&#13;
heroines of opera, she created the&#13;
leading role in Gi&#13;
Menotti's "The Last Saan-ca&#13;
vage•• the Metropolitan production&#13;
has had works dedicated to ~&#13;
by such other contem ~ writers as Aram Khac?~&#13;
Paul Creston and Roy Harns.&#13;
1973, she sang the world prenu Ir&#13;
of a new work by Dariu., Milh~&#13;
in Carnegie Hall. -~&#13;
She has recorded lllla&#13;
complete operas for RCA and Ii&#13;
(Deutsche Grammpphon) Ille&#13;
has made more television&#13;
pearances than any other 0:&#13;
star in history. a&#13;
Phy. Ed. parking lot approved&#13;
Regents of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System approved&#13;
construction of a new 400-&lt;!ar&#13;
parking lot near the Physical&#13;
Education Building at Parkside.&#13;
new lot also is expected to cut&#13;
over-all costs of operating the&#13;
transportation system on campus&#13;
since fewer shuttle busses are&#13;
expected to be needed to carry&#13;
commuters from out-lying&#13;
parking areas.&#13;
Access to the lot will be fl'lln&#13;
Kenosha County Hwy. J.ft&#13;
Construction is expected to ~&#13;
during 1977.&#13;
The lot originally was&#13;
recommended in a 1974 State&#13;
Building Commission Study&#13;
which included two other close-in&#13;
parking lots already constructed. Advising week scheduled&#13;
It is expected to ease traffic&#13;
snarls which have developed&#13;
when major public events such as&#13;
concerts, basketball games and&#13;
similar attractions are held in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. as well as provide&#13;
moce convenient parking for&#13;
commuting students and staff&#13;
members, according to James&#13;
Galbraith, director of planning&#13;
and construction at Parkside.&#13;
Galbraith said addition of the&#13;
Advising week will be held&#13;
December 8, 9, 10, 13, and 14.&#13;
There will be three information&#13;
stations throughout the main&#13;
campus at which students may&#13;
obtain information concerning&#13;
their faculty advisor, discipline,&#13;
and available office hours.&#13;
These stations will be located&#13;
at: 1) Main level Greenquist Hall&#13;
in the commons area, 2) WLLC&#13;
Filin of Nazi&#13;
occupation to show&#13;
"The Sorrow and the Pity,"&#13;
Marcel Ophuls' documentary&#13;
film on France during the Nazi&#13;
occupation, will have a free&#13;
public screening at Parkside at 1&#13;
p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 2, in&#13;
Classroom Bldg 105.&#13;
Originally compiled from&#13;
sources ranging from wartime&#13;
newsreel and propaganda films&#13;
to interviews with survivors of&#13;
the occupation, the film was&#13;
intended for showing on French&#13;
television. On its completion,&#13;
however, the government&#13;
decided that the French public&#13;
was "not yet mature enough" to&#13;
see the film on TV.&#13;
D-level at the Information Kialk&#13;
and 3) WLLC main ·1evel in th;&#13;
library.&#13;
Counselors, and acting ad,&#13;
visors for undecided students,&#13;
will also be available to aiiycme&#13;
requiring their assistance, and&#13;
will be stationed directly west of&#13;
the main entrance to the library.&#13;
The times of their availability&#13;
will be oosted at their statioo.&#13;
the national legend of resistance .,,&#13;
to the Nazis which the film&#13;
largely rebuts. It subsequently&#13;
has been shown in theaters&#13;
throughout the western world to&#13;
high critical acclaim both as an&#13;
historical and a cultural&#13;
document.&#13;
.. ,.&#13;
The four-hour film, which&#13;
documents the collaboration of&#13;
the French with their German&#13;
captors and probes the moral&#13;
dilemma of an occupied nation, is&#13;
sponsored by the campus lecture&#13;
and fine arts committee and the&#13;
When the film eventually was&#13;
shown in French movie theaters&#13;
i~ caused near-riots amon~&#13;
vtewers who sought to preserve&#13;
An English narration voiceover&#13;
translation is provided, but&#13;
is dubbed to finish so that the&#13;
original French can also be&#13;
heard, a technique that has been&#13;
praised as particularly effective I in scenes featuring interviews history discipline.&#13;
Art prof. displays work&#13;
.. Admiral l 9ai111&#13;
$ave&#13;
$5995&#13;
Reg. s399_95&#13;
$340°0&#13;
5 YEA LI ITED WARRANTY!&#13;
SUPER SALE PRICED AT ...&#13;
A print by Parkside art&#13;
professor Moishe Smith is included&#13;
in the Brooklyn Museum's&#13;
" current invitational show. "30&#13;
Years of American Printmaking,"&#13;
which incorporates the&#13;
20th National Print Exhibition.&#13;
Smith's work is titled "Common&#13;
Barnyard Animals: The Cow."&#13;
Smith also is represented by a&#13;
color intalio, "A Bend of the&#13;
Bow," in Colorprint U.S.A., a&#13;
national print exhibition sponsored&#13;
by the Texas Tech&#13;
University Department of Art, in&#13;
the Departmental Gallery&#13;
through Dec. 17.&#13;
Math&#13;
lecture&#13;
slated&#13;
Prof. Walter Gautschi, a staff&#13;
member at both the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Mathematics&#13;
Research Center in Madison and&#13;
the Purdue University&#13;
mathematics and computer&#13;
science department, will give a&#13;
free public lecture at UWParkside&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
Dec. 3 in Classroom Bldg. Room&#13;
107.&#13;
His topic will be "Preventive&#13;
Computation-Avoiding Recursive&#13;
Calculations." &#13;
? PYA&#13;
• continu~ from 1)9. 1&#13;
faculty advisor and the PYA director. In addition,&#13;
they are assigned readings and are given assignments&#13;
that relate to the kind of work they do at their&#13;
agency. 'They also have classroom sesssions during&#13;
which all student involved in the program are&#13;
present.&#13;
I was invited to attend one of the classes this week&#13;
and I enjoyed the experience. After a short&#13;
discussion and an assignment in problem solving,&#13;
one of the students was asked to tell the class about&#13;
an experience she had had within the program.&#13;
Marla Hoffman, who works at Innovative Youth&#13;
Services in Racine, ahd just spent 11 days at a&#13;
therapeutic community for drug addicts. It is a&#13;
place that many addicts consider their "last&#13;
chance," and some are there because the courts&#13;
have ordered them to be there.&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
A senior at Parkside, Mike Fieramosca was randomly selected for&#13;
this week's interview. His major is psychology, and classes this&#13;
semester include a Group Dynamics course and a Social&#13;
Disorganization class.&#13;
Mike is an employee of American Motors, first shift, and therefore&#13;
has to limit his classes to those offered at night. Previous to his employment&#13;
at American Motors, Mike attended Parkside as a full-time&#13;
student. As he says, "I kinda grew up with the school."&#13;
Photography occupies a large percentage of Mike's lime. He has&#13;
established a small studio for himself, and his business appears to be&#13;
growing. Also occupying his time is snowmobiling. As I interviewed&#13;
Mike, he said he was expecting his new snowmobile to arrive the&#13;
f&lt;ilowingday. He plans on joining a snowmobile club and riding the&#13;
. up North.&#13;
Travelis also important to Mike. "I like to travel," he said. "Me and&#13;
friend of mine did our bicentennial salute .... we went out East."&#13;
. visited Washington D.C., Valley Forge, Martha's Vineyards and&#13;
er historical sights.&#13;
Mikehas both likes and dislikes about Parkside. On the positive side&#13;
stated, "I like the commuter aspect. It's convenient and you can&#13;
. carry on an outside job."&#13;
What he doesn't like is the structure of Union Square. As Mike exined,&#13;
"The Union Square could be a really nice area, but the&#13;
acoustics are so bad. It's like being in a basement. The walls are all&#13;
cement and the floor is cement. It don't like cement."&#13;
Mike also commented on the lighting of the Union building by&#13;
saying, "I can't undersland who the hell built this school that didn't&#13;
have any knowledge of lighting. You go in there and it's all florescent&#13;
lights ... it drives me nuts. That's suppose to be a lounge, a place to&#13;
relax. You don't have florescent lights there, they're so cold and&#13;
sterile."&#13;
One-last change Mike would like to see is diversification of leisure&#13;
activities available at Parkside. Mike feels the activities aren't geared&#13;
to what he or a lot of other students would like to do.&#13;
Band presents concert&#13;
The Parkside Concert Band&#13;
conducted by Craig Kirchhoff&#13;
will present its first concert of the&#13;
season at8 p.m, on Friday, Dec.&#13;
3, in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. The program is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Kircn.'off, in his first year&#13;
Parkside, also is assistant&#13;
director of bands at UWMilwaukee.&#13;
He previously taught&#13;
at UW -Madison where he&#13;
received his graduate degrees.&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza$1.50&#13;
EVERY MONDAY &amp;TUESDAY I&#13;
SPAGHETII FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Includes: Salad, Italian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
Wed. _ Thurs. 9:30 - 11:00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks 60'&#13;
~;erbuis&#13;
~ourt&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
On Spring, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 19767&#13;
Classical honors proposed&#13;
by Bruce Wagner added. onto their diploma. "eum&#13;
laude." Translated from Latin,&#13;
this means "with praise."&#13;
A person getting higher than 3.5&#13;
or 3.75 would receive a magna&#13;
cum Jauoe added or a summa&#13;
cum laude depending on what hisher&#13;
final GPA was.&#13;
These are classical only in the&#13;
sense that they use Latin phrases&#13;
upon the diploma.&#13;
Saffioti told the committee that&#13;
such a proposal had come before&#13;
the Faculty Senate in 1970 but&#13;
failed because of its conflict with&#13;
the Parkside catalogue.&#13;
According to the 1975-77&#13;
catalogue, there is no such&#13;
program on the Parkside campus&#13;
currently. The only section that&#13;
comes close, states that excepuonai&#13;
students may lake&#13;
advantage of accelerated&#13;
schedules, thus enabling them to&#13;
graduate earlier than the other&#13;
students.&#13;
There seemed to be a general&#13;
feeling among the few committee&#13;
members presentlhat there was&#13;
a need for more information&#13;
about the general honors&#13;
program and what types of public&#13;
recognition can be given to&#13;
students.&#13;
Once the fact-finding occurs,&#13;
the Academic PoliciesComrnittee&#13;
will take this up at a future&#13;
meeting.&#13;
There is interest in reshaping&#13;
the format of the diploma given&#13;
to graduating seniors, according&#13;
to a report given to the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee at its beief&#13;
meeting last Tuesday.&#13;
This reshaping would include&#13;
adding honors for students&#13;
surpassing a certain grade point&#13;
average (GPA). According to&#13;
Carol-Lee Saffioti, assistant&#13;
professor of English, this might&#13;
include what is now known as&#13;
•'classical tt honors.&#13;
"Classical" honors is where&#13;
students getting above a certain&#13;
GPA, such as 3.25, would have&#13;
Not only did Marla observe, she particlpated in&#13;
the activities there. "You have to get involved," she&#13;
said, and as she told her story it was clear that the&#13;
rest of the class would like to have become involved&#13;
in similar kinds of experiences related to their filed&#13;
placements.&#13;
This program mean a calendar year of full-time&#13;
commitment and the student is not allowed to work&#13;
or lake other classes while participating in PYA.&#13;
However, they receive an allowance to cover their&#13;
living expenses during the year. Many students&#13;
receive financial aid in addition to their small&#13;
allowance.&#13;
One thing that PYA needs is more interested&#13;
students. Those students who are interested in&#13;
becoming a part of the program starting In January&#13;
may contact Ms. Hamlin at Tallent Hall, Room 286.&#13;
What the others are saging.&#13;
~~~we've already&#13;
~~~~\vtCf/ .~ demonstrated.&#13;
~':Ij"'~ o&#13;
·~e fI • Better engine protection. • Increased&#13;
\.~*b~-~. fuel economy .• Better high-temperature&#13;
~~ ftl"1"s$l'"S~&#13;
performance. • Fast sub-zero starts f1;.trf: t~f"·.JP&#13;
HllfOt,-sl '..# .-,''''&#13;
• Less oil consumption. • A cleaner en- ~t...~...~~&#13;
~~; gine. • 25.000-mile oil change&#13;
C....... A .. 1I0IL AMS/OIL VB PETROLEUM LUBRICANT"&#13;
•• 8IOIL ,..... ..... .. 25.000 .....&#13;
p-&#13;
_tID • ..,- (1J tID+3OCJI'F&#13;
or one,....,&#13;
Lubratton Raf'l9tl CMnpF ...... '&#13;
QUdat60n (-I. ....IKOatty Incr .... ln 84 ,- 12.500 ....... hour by API 'eM, ...&#13;
we. (mg. wt. lea 100 Ibe for 1 hr&#13;
Wrn .. ..,.&#13;
.Q~~~&#13;
byf .. x...,) 1 t "'*8''''''&#13;
FMdttyCil ~&#13;
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SoIid_&#13;
voiallMy t-;' 01 ..... por.tlon @ ~&#13;
2ft, '~~7 tor 22 hrs )&#13;
,.,.&#13;
erankc.ue ,-,"petltura (meMUrad&#13;
during ttandaro running NQuencel&#13;
F\eafl point ..&#13;
-~ .-&#13;
-&#13;
Engine&#13;
Engine crank at 250 RPM&#13;
crank a12SO RPM •&#13;
0 ~&#13;
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already experienced lhese extraordinary performance features AMS/OIL&#13;
was first to commerCially market an SAE 10W-40 synthetiC engine 011 to&#13;
meet API C1asslficaflon SE. which means AMS/OIL can be used In any&#13;
car. So while the new synthehc lubricants you see today were stili In the&#13;
test lab, AMS/OILwas In the crankcases of cars and trucks lust like yours&#13;
And when you're sahsfled, that's the final test of a lubricant&#13;
Reteil . Wholesale See your AMS/OIL dealer today!&#13;
DEALERS WANTED Mike Villers (414)-637-~&#13;
Direct Dealerships A .....ilable.&#13;
Call For Appointment. 2600 West High ~~&lt;,&#13;
No Territory Restrtctionsl&#13;
No F ranch isesl Racine, Wisc. S3404&#13;
No large Inventory or&#13;
Investment Necessery. lhe qulelleader In sgnlbellc lubrlcalloa&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976 7&#13;
Classical honors proposed&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
There is interest in reshaping&#13;
the format of the diploma given&#13;
to graduating seniors, according&#13;
to a report given to the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee at its brief&#13;
meeting last Tuesday.&#13;
This reshaping would include&#13;
adding honors for students&#13;
surpassing a certain grade point&#13;
average (GPA). According to&#13;
Carol-Lee Saffioti, assistant&#13;
professor of English, this might&#13;
include what is now known as&#13;
"classical" honors.&#13;
"Classical" honors is where&#13;
students getting above a certain&#13;
GPA, such as 3.25, would have&#13;
added onto th£,ir diploma, "cum&#13;
laude." Translated from Latin,&#13;
this means "with praise."&#13;
A person getting higher than 3.5&#13;
or 3.75 would receive a magna&#13;
cum la11ile added or a s1Jmm11&#13;
cwn laude depending on what hisher&#13;
final GPA was.&#13;
These are classical only in the&#13;
sense that they use Latin phrases&#13;
upon the diploma.&#13;
Saffioti told the committee that&#13;
such a proposal had come before&#13;
the Faculty Senate in 1970 but&#13;
failed because of its conflict with&#13;
the Parkside catalogue.&#13;
According to the 1975-77&#13;
catalogue, there is no such&#13;
program on the Parkside campus&#13;
1.:urrenUy. Th onl eel on that&#13;
comes clo , tates tilat exceptional&#13;
tudent ma) take&#13;
advantage of accelerated&#13;
schedule , thus enablin tilem to&#13;
graduate earlier than the otiler&#13;
student .&#13;
There med to a eneral&#13;
feeling among the fe committe&#13;
members pre nt that ther wa&#13;
a need for more information&#13;
about the general honor&#13;
program and what types of public&#13;
recognition can be given to&#13;
students.&#13;
Once tile fact-finding occurs,&#13;
the Academic Policies Committee&#13;
will take this up at a futur&#13;
meeting.&#13;
? PYA&#13;
f continued from pg 1 Not only did Marla observe, she participated in&#13;
the activities there. "You have to get involv d," sh&#13;
said, and as she told her story it cl r that u,&#13;
rest of the class ould like to have become involved&#13;
in similar kinds of experiences related to their filed&#13;
placements.&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
A senior at Parkside, Mike Fieramosca was randomly selected for&#13;
this week's interview. His major is psychology, and classes this&#13;
semester include a Group Dynamics course and a Social&#13;
Disorganization class.&#13;
Mike is an employee of American Motors, first shift, and therefore&#13;
has to limit his classes to those offered at night. Previous to his employment&#13;
at American Motors, Mike attended Parkside as a full-time&#13;
student. As he says, "I kinda grew up with the school."&#13;
Photography occupies a large percentage of Mike's time. He has&#13;
established a small studio for himself, and his business appears to be&#13;
growing. Also occupying his time is snowmobiling. As I interviewed&#13;
Mike, he said he was expecting his new snowmobile to arrive the&#13;
following day. He plans on joining a snowmobile club and riding the&#13;
trails up North.&#13;
Travel is also important to Mike. "I like to travel," he said. "Me and&#13;
friend of mine did our bicentennial salute .... we went out East."&#13;
Mike visited Washington D.C., Valley Forge, Martha's Vineyards and&#13;
Uler historical sights.&#13;
Mike has both likes and dislikes about Parkside. On the positive side&#13;
stated, "I like the commuter aspect. It's convenient and you can&#13;
still carry on an outside job."&#13;
What he doesn't like is the structure of Union Square. As Mike explained,&#13;
"The Union Square could be a really nice area, but the&#13;
acoustics are so bad. It's like being in a basement. The walls are all&#13;
cement and the floor is cement. It don't like cement."&#13;
Mike also commented on the lighting of the Union building by&#13;
saying, "I can't understand who the hell built this school that didn't&#13;
have any knowledge of lighting. You go in there and it's all florescent&#13;
lights ... it drives me nuts. That's suppose to be a lounge, a place to&#13;
relax. You don't have florescent lights there, they're so cold and&#13;
sterile.''&#13;
One last change Mike would like to see is diversification of leisure&#13;
activities available at Parkside. Mike feels the activities aren't geared&#13;
to what he or a lot of other students would like to do.&#13;
Band presents concert&#13;
The Parkside Concert Band&#13;
conducted by Craig Kirchhoff&#13;
will present its first concert of the&#13;
season at 8 p.m. on Friday, Dec.&#13;
3, in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. The program is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Kirch1 'Off, in his first year&#13;
Parkside, also is assistam&#13;
director of bands at UWMilwaukee.&#13;
He previously taught&#13;
at UW-Madison where he&#13;
received his graduate degrees.&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
EVERY MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
lndudes: Salad. Italian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
Wed. - Thurs. 9 :30 - 11 :00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks 60*&#13;
On Spring, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~erbu's&#13;
,ourt&#13;
PU1 &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
faculty advisor and the PYA director. In addition,&#13;
they are assigned readings and are given assignments&#13;
that relate to the kind of work they do at their&#13;
agency. They also have classroom sesssions during&#13;
which all student involved in the program are&#13;
present.&#13;
I was invited to attend one of the classes this week&#13;
and I enjoyed the experience. After a short&#13;
discussion and an assignment in problem solving,&#13;
one of the students was asked to tell the class about&#13;
an experience she had had within the program.&#13;
Marla Hoffman, who works at Innovative Youth&#13;
Services in Racine, ahd just spent 11 days at a&#13;
therapeutic community for drug addicts. It is a&#13;
place that many addicts consider their "last&#13;
chance," and some are there because the courts&#13;
have ordered them to be there.&#13;
This program mean a calendar year of full-tim&#13;
commitment and the student is not allo d to work&#13;
or take otiler clas.ses while participat" in PY A.&#13;
However, they receive an allowance to cover th ir&#13;
living expen es during the year. ~any tud ts&#13;
receive financial aid in addition to their small&#13;
allowance.&#13;
One thing that PY A needs is more intere ted&#13;
students. Those students who are inte ted in&#13;
becoming a part of the program tarti in January&#13;
may contact Ms. Hamlin at Tallent Hall, Room&#13;
What the others are saging~&#13;
'f¼ ~we've already&#13;
~ t;iit''~ demonstrated.&#13;
-c...,.,,.c:J\\'-f! ,;{I e Better engine protection. e Increased&#13;
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• Less oil consumption. • A cleaner engine.&#13;
• 25,000-mile oil change&#13;
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was ftrst to commercially market an SAE 10W-40 synt e ,c engine 011 to&#13;
meet API Class1f1cat1on SE. which means AMS/Oil can be used in an&#13;
car So while the new synthetic lubricants you see oday were still in the&#13;
test lab. AMS/OIL was In the crankcases o cars and trucks 1ust h e yours&#13;
And when you're sat1sf1ed, that's the ,nal test of a lubricant&#13;
Retail · Wholesale See your AMS/Oil dealer today!&#13;
~~~~~1~!i:~~Ja~,?. Mike Villers . (414).:t,37-2~726 ·-·-&lt;&#13;
Call For Appointment. 2600 West High • , No Territory Restrictions!&#13;
No Franchises! Racine, Wisc. 53404&#13;
No Large Inventory or&#13;
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• THE PARKSIDE RANGER December I, 1976&#13;
Rangers win two&#13;
Basketball season opens&#13;
byJ .... T.aula points in Saturday's contest.&#13;
Rade Dimitrijevic's outstanding&#13;
aggressive play in the&#13;
forward spot, helped put Larry&#13;
Halverson, laCrosse's second&#13;
highest scorer, out of the game on&#13;
fouls. Halverson totalled four&#13;
fouls by the hall mark.&#13;
In addition to Scott's offensive&#13;
performance, Steve King and&#13;
Marshall Hill added 14 points&#13;
each in the Indian massacre and&#13;
Dimilrijevic had II.&#13;
Stephens also noted King's&#13;
running game on offense and Joe&#13;
Foots' guarding of Mark Murphy&#13;
against the Warhawks.&#13;
The scoring of the remainder of&#13;
the Parkside starting team was&#13;
quite even, as Chones had 15, and&#13;
King and Hill each added 14.&#13;
"I was pleased with our performances&#13;
this weekend. It said&#13;
Coach Stephens. "We played&#13;
beller than Ithought we might in&#13;
the opening of the season. We&#13;
were quite convincing."&#13;
Coach Stephens emphasized&#13;
Parkside's strong team play&#13;
from both the starters and&#13;
reserves, combine1r with the&#13;
shooting of Leartha Scott, led the&#13;
Rangers to victories over UWLaCrosse,&#13;
96-74,Friday and UWWhitewater,&#13;
103-77, Saturday, in&#13;
the season openers here.&#13;
Scott banged in 31 points,&#13;
hitting 15 of 30 shots against&#13;
LaCrosse and, although taking&#13;
fewer shots, making 12 of 23,&#13;
scored 30 points against&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens used his&#13;
bench freely both nights&#13;
without any adverse effects.&#13;
Against LaCrosse, it was&#13;
reserve guard Laurence Brown&#13;
who began Parkside's spurt at 13-&#13;
13 and built up a six point lead.&#13;
Lonnie Lewis, a freshman,&#13;
scored nine Friday and 12&#13;
Saturday on spectacular high&#13;
leaping, left-handed jump shots.&#13;
Lewis sc&lt;red the 100th and 10lst&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mlle oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60'F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 RICK BENTSON&#13;
YOU'AMS/OIL dee", 639-4067&#13;
the sense of team spirit the&#13;
Rangers showed. "Our bench&#13;
came in and really did a good job,&#13;
in addition to the play of our&#13;
starters. Ican't single out anyone&#13;
that didn't playa good game for&#13;
us. "&#13;
Each team showed dominating&#13;
spurts, but Whitewater could&#13;
never bring the game with within&#13;
reach, coming within 17 points.&#13;
'The wins increase Parkside's&#13;
home winning streak to 26.&#13;
Whitewater was the last team to&#13;
defeat the Rangers here, winning&#13;
89-82 in the season opener here in&#13;
1974.&#13;
The Rangers left yesterday for&#13;
a three game road trip, playing&#13;
the University of Texas-EI Paso&#13;
last night. The team will play;he&#13;
University of New Mexico&#13;
Saturday and the University of&#13;
Nebraska-Qrnaha Monday. They&#13;
will return home December 8 to&#13;
play St, Norbert.&#13;
photo by P.J. Azzollnll&#13;
__ J&#13;
Ranger relays held&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside hosted the fourth&#13;
annual Ranger Relays November&#13;
19, in which the Rangers placed&#13;
ninth of 10 teams.&#13;
UW-Whitewater won the meet&#13;
with 85 points, followed by UWMilwaukee&#13;
with 78. Carthage was&#13;
third with 75.&#13;
Both men and women competed&#13;
in the meet, which consisted&#13;
of relay events, with men&#13;
and women alternating.&#13;
Parkside was fifth in the 450&#13;
butterfly relay with a time of&#13;
5:33.914 by Judy Iverson, Bob&#13;
·&#13;
+ ,------------------&#13;
AMHEUS[R·8USCH, 11K .. ST lOUIS&#13;
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: When you&#13;
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say Budweiser., youve said it all!&#13;
~-----E. F.Ma*igraoo-----_---J&#13;
Wilburshide, Gail Olson and Rick&#13;
Kwas.&#13;
The Rangers also scored&#13;
several sixth places. Keith&#13;
Krueger, Iverson, Rick Haas and&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch had a lime of&#13;
8:58.859 in the 700 Individual&#13;
Medley. Krueger, Leitch, Dennis&#13;
Sleeves and Sue Von Behren&#13;
swam the 450 back in 5:21.292, a&#13;
lime 50 seconds faster than the&#13;
Parksidc time in last year's&#13;
meet.- Olson and Bryan Spalla&#13;
were sixth in the diving events&#13;
with 331.50 points.&#13;
Krueger, Olson, Jim Ferraro&#13;
and Sally Francis teamed up for&#13;
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a seventh in the 400 medley and&#13;
an eighth in the 200 free was&#13;
swum by Leitch, Kwas, Ferraro&#13;
and Iverson.&#13;
•'There were some super&#13;
performances by the individuals,&#13;
said Coach Barbara Lawson.&#13;
"We had some surprises in some&#13;
of the relays. but generaDy&#13;
placed about where I had figured.&#13;
We were pleased to earn more&#13;
points than we did in last year',&#13;
Meet."&#13;
This was the last meet of !be&#13;
year for the women's team and&#13;
the first meet for the men In !be&#13;
first season as a varsity team.&#13;
Godfrey resigns&#13;
UW-Parkside athletic director&#13;
Wayne Dannehl announced that&#13;
cross-country coach Vic Godfrey&#13;
has resigned, effective Dec. 31.&#13;
Godfrey, 36, has been at&#13;
Parkside since 1969 and has&#13;
served as cross-country coach,&#13;
assistant men's and head&#13;
women's track coach and&#13;
coordinator of club sports.&#13;
He will become Coordinator of&#13;
the School Sports Program and&#13;
coach the national track and field&#13;
team in the Middle Eastern&#13;
nation of Bahrain.&#13;
"I regret losing a man of Vic's&#13;
caliber," Dannehl said. "He's&#13;
been at Parkside almost since the&#13;
beginning of the university and&#13;
has been an integral figure in the&#13;
growth and development of our&#13;
program. We wish him well in his&#13;
new position. H&#13;
Godfrey has been head crosscountry&#13;
coach at Parkside since&#13;
1972.His teams have qualified for&#13;
the NAIA national meet three&#13;
limes, finishing seventh in 1973,&#13;
15th in 1974,and 26th in the meet&#13;
here last week. His dual meet&#13;
'ecord was 36-18-1. With tracll:&#13;
coach Bob Lawson, be developed&#13;
two all-American and eight alldistrict&#13;
runners.&#13;
In track, his distance runners&#13;
have been most successful, with&#13;
Lucian Rosa and Dennis Biel&#13;
earning all-Amertca honors&#13;
among the men and Kim Merrill&#13;
winning a national marathea&#13;
championship and numerous&#13;
other honors for the women.&#13;
Merritt fourth&#13;
Kim Merritt ran fourth in the&#13;
National Collegiate Cross&#13;
Country Championship at,&#13;
Madison November 13.&#13;
She ran the three miles in&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home 01 the Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEtI 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington 1rIe. 634-2373&#13;
16:43, 14 seconds behind winner,&#13;
Julie Brown of California, but&#13;
only two seconds behind the&#13;
second place finisher.&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976&#13;
Rangers win two&#13;
Basketball season opens&#13;
b · Jean Tenu&amp;a&#13;
1de's trong team play&#13;
from both the tarters and&#13;
re rve , comb ne - with the&#13;
ting of Leartha Scott, led the&#13;
Ran to \ictories over UWLa&#13;
, 96-74, Frida) and UWter,&#13;
103-77, Saturday, in&#13;
a n openers here.&#13;
ott ban ed In 31 points,&#13;
hitting 15 of 30 shots against&#13;
Cr and, although taking&#13;
r shots, making 12 of 23,&#13;
cor d 30 point against&#13;
t ter.&#13;
ch Steve Stephens used his&#13;
b nch fre ly both nights&#13;
ithout any adverse effects.&#13;
A ain t Lacrosse, it was&#13;
r rve rd Laurence Brown&#13;
who began Parkside's purl at 13-&#13;
13 and built up a ix point lead.&#13;
points in Saturday's contest.&#13;
Rade Dimitrijevic's outstanding&#13;
aggressive play in the&#13;
forward spot, helped put Larry&#13;
Halverson, LaCrosse's second&#13;
highest scorer, out of the game on&#13;
fouls. Halverson totalled four&#13;
fouls by the half mark.&#13;
In addition to Scott's offensive&#13;
performance, Steve King and&#13;
Marshall Hill added 14 points&#13;
each in the Indian massacre and&#13;
Dimitrijevic had 11.&#13;
Stephens also noted King's&#13;
running game on offense and Joe&#13;
Foots' guarding of Mark Murphy&#13;
against the Warhawks.&#13;
Toe scoring of the remainder of&#13;
the Parkside starting team was&#13;
quite even, as Chones had 15, and&#13;
King and Hill each added 14.&#13;
the sense of team spirit the&#13;
Rangers showed. "Our bench&#13;
came in and really did a good job,&#13;
in addition to the play of our&#13;
starters. I can't single out anyone&#13;
that didn't play a good game for&#13;
us.',&#13;
Each team showed dominating&#13;
spurts, but Whitewater could&#13;
never bring the game with within&#13;
reach, coming within 17 points.&#13;
The wins increase Parkside's&#13;
home winning streak to 26.&#13;
Whitewater was the last team to&#13;
defeat the Rangers here, winning&#13;
89-82 in the season opener here in&#13;
1974.&#13;
Toe Rangers left yesterday for&#13;
a three game road trip, playing&#13;
the University of Texas-El Paso&#13;
last night. The team will play-the&#13;
University of New Mexico&#13;
Saturday and the University of&#13;
Nebraska-Omaha Monday. They&#13;
will return home December 8 to&#13;
play St. Norbert.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
j&#13;
\&#13;
photo by P.J. Azzollna&#13;
---&#13;
Lonni Le i , a fre.mman,&#13;
scor d nine Friday and 12&#13;
turd y on spec&amp;acular high&#13;
I ping, left-handed jump shots.&#13;
Lewi red the 100th and 101st&#13;
"I was pleased with our performances&#13;
this weekend," said&#13;
Coach Stephens. "We played&#13;
better than I thought we might in&#13;
the opening of the season. We&#13;
were quite convincing."&#13;
Coach Stephens emphasized&#13;
Ranger rel;J_ys held&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mlle oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
• saves 011 RICK BENTSON&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer 639-4067&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside hosted the fourth&#13;
annual Ranger Relays November&#13;
19, in which the Rangers placed&#13;
ninth of 10 teams.&#13;
UW-Whitewater won the meet&#13;
with 85 points, followed by UWMilwaukee&#13;
with 78. Carthage was&#13;
third with 75.&#13;
Both men and women competed&#13;
in the meet, which consisted&#13;
of relay events, with men&#13;
and women alternating.&#13;
Parkside was fifth in the 450&#13;
butterfly relay with a time of&#13;
5:33.914 by Judy Iverson, Bob&#13;
tr--------------------,&#13;
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• When you say Budweiser,youve said it all! ---------E. F. Madrigrano--------J&#13;
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Wilburshide, G&amp;il Olson and Rick&#13;
Kwas.&#13;
The Rangers also scored&#13;
several sixth places. Keith&#13;
Krueger, Iverson, Rick Haas and&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch had a time of&#13;
8:58.859 in the 700 Individual&#13;
Medley. Krueger, Leitch, Dennis&#13;
steeves and Sue Von Behren&#13;
swam the 450 back in 5:21.292, a&#13;
time 50 seconds faster than the&#13;
Parkside time in last year's&#13;
meet.- Olson and Bryan Spalla&#13;
were sixth in the diving events&#13;
with 331.50 points.&#13;
Krueger, Olson, Jim Ferraro&#13;
and Sally Francis teamed up for&#13;
a seventh in the 400 medley and&#13;
an eighth in U1e 200 free was&#13;
swum by Leitch, Kwas, Ferraro&#13;
f'nd Iverson.&#13;
"There were some super&#13;
performances by the individuals,&#13;
said Coach Barbara Lawson.&#13;
"We had some surprises in some&#13;
of the relays. but generally&#13;
placed about where I had figured.&#13;
We were pleased to earn more&#13;
points than we did in last year's&#13;
Meet."&#13;
This was the last meet of the&#13;
year for the women's team and&#13;
the first meet for the men in the&#13;
first season as a varsity team.&#13;
Godfrey resigns&#13;
UW-Parkside athletic director&#13;
Wayne Dannehl announced that&#13;
cross-country coach Vic Godfrey&#13;
has resigned, effective Dec. 31.&#13;
Godfrey, 36, has been at&#13;
Parkside since 1969 and has&#13;
served as cross-country coach,&#13;
assistant men's and head&#13;
women's track coach and&#13;
coordinator of club sports .&#13;
He will become Coordinator of&#13;
the School Sports Program and&#13;
coach the national track and field&#13;
team in the Middle Eastern&#13;
nation of Bahrain.&#13;
"I regret losing a man of Vic's&#13;
caliber," Dannehl said. "He's&#13;
been at Parkside almost since the&#13;
beginning of the university and&#13;
has been an integral figure in the&#13;
growth and development of our&#13;
program. We wish him well in his&#13;
new position."&#13;
Godfrey has been head crosscountry&#13;
coach at Parkside since&#13;
1972. His teams have qualified for&#13;
the NAIA national meet three&#13;
times, finishing seventh in 1973,&#13;
15th in 1974, and 26th in the meet&#13;
here last week. His dual meet&#13;
-ecord was 36-18-1. With track&#13;
coach Bob Lawson, he developed&#13;
two all-American and eight all·&#13;
district runners .&#13;
In track, his distance runners&#13;
have been most successful, with&#13;
Lucian Rosa and Dennis Biel&#13;
earning all-America honors&#13;
among the men and Kim Merritt&#13;
winning a national marathon&#13;
championship and numerous&#13;
other honors for the women .&#13;
Merritt fourth&#13;
Kim Merritt ran fourth in the&#13;
National Collegiate Cross&#13;
Country Championship at,&#13;
Madison November 13.&#13;
She ran thP. three miles in&#13;
16:43, 14 seconds behind winner,&#13;
Julie Brown of California, but&#13;
only two seconds behind the&#13;
second place finisher .&#13;
LEE s·AUSAOE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPE11 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M .&#13;
2615 Washington /we. 634-2373 </text>
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              <text>Bradford inadequate&#13;
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              <text>TheParkside!-------&#13;
RANGER • Vol. V. No. 11 Wednesday, November 24, 1976&#13;
Parkside students react&#13;
Bradford&#13;
by Bob Hoffman&#13;
A group of Parkside students is currently attemPting&#13;
to replace Bradford High School, which&#13;
has been charged with being below minirnwn&#13;
educational standards, has unoffically been&#13;
described as a 'fire trap' and is inadequate to&#13;
students needs, with a new high school.&#13;
Last week Ranger sat down with Ron Parker,&#13;
chairman of the Student Conunittee for a new high&#13;
school, to discuss just what the situation is&#13;
surrounding Bradford.&#13;
First he gave the history of Bradford and of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Bradford is divided into two main Parts: (1) the&#13;
annex, which was builtin 1890and (2) the main part&#13;
of the building which was built in 1925.&#13;
Bradford is built in the inner city of Kenosha on&#13;
3.8 acres of land with no room for expansion. The&#13;
National Education Association recommends that a&#13;
high school have 30 acres for the maximum amount&#13;
of students it holds and 1 additional acre for each&#13;
additional 100 students.&#13;
The debate about a new school has been going on&#13;
for over 50 years 'and it was in 1966 that&#13;
opened its doors. The decision to build Tremper was&#13;
mainly the result ot Bradford being put on splitshift.&#13;
Now ten years after Tremper opened up are&#13;
lhIngs any better? Parker says no. Bradford is&#13;
overcrowded, falling apart and Tremper is vastly&#13;
overcrowded.&#13;
Bradford was built for 1,800students; it now holds&#13;
1,896.Tremper was built for 2,100it now holds 2,730.&#13;
But as Parker says, the question is not only overcrowding&#13;
but also adequate facilities, and the safety&#13;
of the buildings.&#13;
The annex is unsafe. According to Parker, it has&#13;
inadequate&#13;
been unofficially stated by the Fire Department,&#13;
that if tbere was a fire in the annex the building&#13;
would be completely destroyed in a matter of&#13;
seconds.&#13;
Parker said in 1923 the fire chief indicated&#13;
if a new building was built he would condemn the&#13;
annex.&#13;
Students in the annex have been hit by falling&#13;
pieces of plaster. When it rains students are well&#13;
aware of it because it rains inside the annex.&#13;
The facilities are inadequate according to Parker.&#13;
There are no outdoor athletic facilities, students in&#13;
physical education play in the street and run around&#13;
the school. The science department has one lab that&#13;
is not fully adequate. The music department has one&#13;
room that is shared by both the choir and the orchestra,&#13;
and the band practices on the stage,&#13;
thereby robbing drama classes of their facilities.&#13;
Parker also said that the art department has no&#13;
place for students to paint except the halls and since&#13;
there is no adequate ventilation the fumes become&#13;
quite noxious and you also know quite quickly if a&#13;
science experiment didn't turn out well.&#13;
ITall this is true, (the Ranger was able to confirm&#13;
all of these conditions) then why has nothing been&#13;
done? Parker asserts it's not because of a&#13;
disagreement of the condition of Bradford but&#13;
because of the nature of the people of Kenosha. The&#13;
people of Kenosha, Parker says, are very conservative&#13;
and are quite concerned aoout the&#13;
possibility of a tax increase. Six referendums have&#13;
been defeated by big margins, referendums that&#13;
would of have given the school board approval to&#13;
build a new high school.&#13;
So the big question is.will Kenosha's taxes go up if&#13;
a new high school is built? Parker says no. The&#13;
reason {or this is that Kenosha's debt service is&#13;
tontinuN on pg. 7&#13;
Teaching positions&#13;
allocated&#13;
by John McKioskey&#13;
The new position authorizations for the 1977.78.academic year,&#13;
released this week by Chancellor Alan Guskin, mclude .four new&#13;
positions in the Communications discipline, tbe job descnptions of&#13;
which have yet to be decided, and fe,ur new positions in .the&#13;
Management SCience Division which will be put on hold until a&#13;
chairperson is hired for the division.&#13;
According to a statement released by Guskin along with his&#13;
recommendations Guskin does not approve of the present lob&#13;
descriptions for the four new communications instructors. "I am&#13;
doing this because of the APPR (Academic Planning and Program&#13;
Review Conunittee) and consultant recommendations tha~, ~&#13;
program needs to be focused, rather than all things to all people, said&#13;
G~kinsaid that he will work with Acting Vice ~ancellor John&#13;
Campbell to determine the exact nature of the.new (lOSltiO~.&#13;
The four new Management Science positiOns, mclu~ two accounting&#13;
instructors, will be placed on hold pending appomtment of a&#13;
divisional chairperson. h deoartAccording&#13;
jo Humanities chairma~ .Robert Canary, w ose. .~-&#13;
ment received a total of five new positions (~,e ~our Comm":,,,~tiOl1S&#13;
positions Ius a visiting German instructor), Given the limitation on&#13;
'\ think th~ position allocations were reasonable and fair.&#13;
resources . . . thing it wanted But the new That doesn't mean the diviston got every . . . ti' " . 'ty . mnutted to Communlca ons. positions show that the umversi IS co ., t tallin 241&gt;&#13;
Below are the 1977-78Parkside position author1Z8l1ons, 0 g&#13;
full-time positions:&#13;
posmON AUTIlORIZATlONS&#13;
Behavioral Science Division&#13;
New authorizations .' nd E nomic Development)&#13;
Anthropology _ Cultural (Migration a co&#13;
ifi Ii ld to be negotiated Psychology - spec IC e. Multi.National Corporations&#13;
Sociology ',Industrial SoCIOlogyand&#13;
confinued on pg. 3&#13;
Charges dropped&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
The Student Government&#13;
meeting last Wednesday night&#13;
provided a great amount of&#13;
confusion for those who came to&#13;
watch senator Mary Arnold's&#13;
impeachment trial.&#13;
Though Arnold wished the trial&#13;
to take- place in open session, a&#13;
motion intrnduced by President&#13;
Protempore Dan Nielsen and&#13;
passed by the senate was made to&#13;
close the proceedings.&#13;
Nielsen indicated that Robert's&#13;
Rules of Order (parliamentary&#13;
procedure) required that such a&#13;
trial be held in executive session.&#13;
In rebuttal to areuments that&#13;
this would be in violation of&#13;
WisconsinJs Open Meetings Law I&#13;
Nielsen replied that according to&#13;
definitions within this law, "We&#13;
(Student Government) are not a&#13;
governmental body."&#13;
After a short recess Nielsen&#13;
introduced a motion to hold the&#13;
trial in open session which was&#13;
passed unanimously by the&#13;
senate.&#13;
Less than an hour after the&#13;
start of tbe trial, alter a few&#13;
questions and a litUe discussion&#13;
for the most part between Dan&#13;
Nielsen, speaking for the Senate,&#13;
and Kat NaD, speaking on behalf&#13;
0( Mary Arnold, the charges were&#13;
dropped, in the best interests of&#13;
the senate.&#13;
A motion was then made by&#13;
Nielsen requesting Arnold's&#13;
resignation. The motion failed.&#13;
According to some students,&#13;
the feeling was that this matter&#13;
should not have taken up so much&#13;
0( the Senate's time.&#13;
PLATO teaches&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
"It doesn't sound like Star&#13;
Trek," said Dr. Donald Bitzer of&#13;
the University of Illinois.&#13;
Bitzer was referring to the&#13;
voice capability of the PLATO&#13;
computer based educational&#13;
system, which was brought to&#13;
Parks ide last Friday for&#13;
demonstration before approximately&#13;
150 students,&#13;
faculty, and staff.&#13;
According to Bitzer, computerhased&#13;
education (CBE) is where&#13;
"human and computer get&#13;
together and if either one learns&#13;
something, that's CBE."&#13;
The tenninaJ that was brought&#13;
to Parkside is part of the fourth&#13;
system-variation on the original&#13;
PLATO computer which served&#13;
just the Illinois campus. But with&#13;
each improvement on the&#13;
system, it has been built up to the&#13;
point wbere a single channel can&#13;
connect tbe system with 1,000&#13;
users at one time.&#13;
It is possible for studentsfaculty&#13;
using the system have&#13;
access to approximately 16,000&#13;
hours of lesson materials with&#13;
more and more being created all&#13;
over the world each week.&#13;
A typical PLATO terminal&#13;
contains the following: a&#13;
typewriter keyse!, which transmits&#13;
the request or data to the&#13;
computer, and a plasma display&#13;
which can simultaneously show&#13;
computer-generated graphic&#13;
information and computerselected&#13;
photographic color&#13;
slides to the user, plus a speaker&#13;
for voice-audio playbacks.&#13;
NAJA ChampiolUlhiptl were run at Parkaide laot weekend. [see otory page 81&#13;
The Parkside-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
• Vol. V. No.&#13;
Parkside students react&#13;
Bradford&#13;
by Bob Hoffman&#13;
A group of Parkside students is currently attempting&#13;
to replace Bradford High School, which&#13;
has been charged with being below minimwn&#13;
educational standards, has unoffically been&#13;
described as a 'fire trap' and is inadequate to&#13;
students needs, with a new high school.&#13;
Last week Ranger sat down with Ron Parker,&#13;
chairman of the Student Committee for a new high&#13;
school, to discuss just what the situation is&#13;
surrounding Bradford.&#13;
First he gave the history of Bradford and of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Bradford is divided into two main parts: (1) the&#13;
annex, which was built in 1890 and (2) the main part&#13;
of the building which was built in 1925.&#13;
Bradford is built in the inner city of Kenosha on&#13;
3.6 acres of land with no room for expansion. The&#13;
National Education Association recommends that a&#13;
high school have 30 acres for the maximlJ!ll amount&#13;
of students it holds and 1 additional acre for each&#13;
additional 100 students.&#13;
The debate about a new school has been going on&#13;
for over 50 years and it was in 1966 that&#13;
opened its doors. The decision to build Tremper was&#13;
mainly the result of Bradford being put on splitshift.&#13;
&#13;
Now ten years after Tremper opened up are&#13;
things any better? Parker says no. Bradford is&#13;
overcrowded, falling apart and Tremper is vastly&#13;
overcrowded.&#13;
Bradford was built for 1,800 students; it now holds&#13;
1,895. Tremper was built for 2,100 it now holds 2,730.&#13;
But as Parker says, the question is not only overcrowding&#13;
but also adequate facilities, and the safety&#13;
of the buildings.&#13;
The annex is unsafe. According to Parker, it has&#13;
11 Wednesday, November 24, 1976&#13;
inadequate&#13;
been unofficially stated by the Fire Department,&#13;
that if there was a fire in the annex the building&#13;
would be completely destroyed in a matter of&#13;
seconds.&#13;
Parker said in 1923 the fire chief indicated&#13;
if a new building was built he would condemn the&#13;
annex.&#13;
students in the annex have been hit by falling&#13;
pieces of plaster. When it rains students are well&#13;
aware of it because it rains inside the annex.&#13;
The facilities are inadequate according to Parker.&#13;
There are no outdoor athletic facilities, students in&#13;
physical education play in the street and run around&#13;
the school. The science department has one lab that&#13;
is not fully adequate. The music department has one&#13;
room that is shared by both the choir and the orchestra,&#13;
and the band practices on the stage,&#13;
thereby robbing drama classes of their facilities.&#13;
Parker also said that the art department has no&#13;
place for students to paint except the halls and since&#13;
there is no adequate ventilation the fumes become&#13;
quite noxious and you also know quite quickly if a&#13;
science experiment didn't turn out well.&#13;
If all this is true, ( the Ranger was able to confirm&#13;
all of these conditions) then why has nothing been&#13;
done? Parker asserts it's not because of a&#13;
disagreement of the condition of Bradford but&#13;
because of the nature of the people of Kenosha. The&#13;
people of Keuosha, Parker says, are very conservative&#13;
and are quite concerned abOut the&#13;
possibility of a tax increase. Six referendums have&#13;
been defeated by big margins, referendums that&#13;
would of have given the school board approval to&#13;
build a new high school.&#13;
So the big question is will Kenosha's taxes go up if&#13;
a new high school is built? Parker says no. The&#13;
reason for this is that Kenosha's debt service is&#13;
coot,nued on pg 7&#13;
Teaching positions&#13;
allocated&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
The new position authorizations for the 197?-78_ academic year,&#13;
released this week by Chancellor Alan Guskin, include _fo~ new&#13;
positions in the Communications discipline, the job d~~pti_ons of&#13;
which have yet to be decided, and fc ur new positions in . the&#13;
Management &amp;ience Division which will be put on hold until a&#13;
chairperson is hired for the division. . .&#13;
According to a statement released by Guskin along with ?is&#13;
recommendations Guskin does not approve of the present Job&#13;
descriptions for the four new communications instructors. "I am&#13;
doing this because of the APPR (Academic Planning and Program&#13;
Review Committee) and consultant recommendations tha!, o~&#13;
program needs to be focused, rather than all things to all people, said&#13;
Guskin. . v· Ch en John G kin "d th t he will work with Acting ice anc or us sm a ·ti&#13;
Campbell to determine the exact nature of ~e_new J&gt;:OSi o~. two ac&#13;
The four new Management Science pOS1tions, inclu~ •&#13;
counting instructors, will be placed on hold pending appointment of a&#13;
divisional chairperson. h d tAccording&#13;
to Humanities chairman Robert Canary' w ose . ep_ar&#13;
ment received a total of five new_ positions (~.~~our ~i.:~:0~ 0~~&#13;
positions plus a visiting German instructor), iven bl d f . I think the position allocations were reasona e an arr. resources erythin ·t anted But the new That doesn't mean the division got ev g i w · . ti ,, . ·ty · committed to Commumca ons. positions show that the Umversi 15• • • • t tallin 24¼&#13;
Below are the 1977-78 Parkside position authorizations, o g&#13;
full-time positions:&#13;
POSfflON AUTHORIZATIONS&#13;
Behavioral Science Division&#13;
New authorizations . . d E mic Development) Anthropology - Cultural (Migration an cono&#13;
if. r· Id to be negotiated Psychology - spec ic ie M lti N tional Corporations Sociology • Industrial Sociology and u • a&#13;
continued on pg 3&#13;
Charges dropped&#13;
by Douglas Edenhau er&#13;
The Student Government&#13;
meeting last Wednesday night&#13;
provided a great amount of&#13;
confusion for those who came to&#13;
watch Senator Mary Arnold's&#13;
impeachment trial.&#13;
Though Arnold wished the trial&#13;
to talce- place in open session, a&#13;
motion introduced by President&#13;
Protempore Dan Nielsen and&#13;
passed by the Senate was made to&#13;
close the proceedings.&#13;
Nielsen indicated that Robert's&#13;
Rules of Order ( parliamentary&#13;
procedure) required that such a&#13;
trial be held in executive session.&#13;
In rebuttal to arlZUillents that&#13;
this would be in violation of&#13;
Wisconsin's Open Meetings Law,&#13;
Nielsen replied that according to&#13;
definitions within this law, "We&#13;
(Student Government) are not a&#13;
governmental body."&#13;
After a short recess , 'iel n&#13;
introduced a motfon to hold th&#13;
trial in open ·on which wa&#13;
pa ed unanimously by the&#13;
Senate.&#13;
Less than an hour af r th&#13;
start of the tr al, after a few&#13;
questions and a little d" ion&#13;
for the most part between Dan&#13;
Nielsen, speaking for the Senat ,&#13;
and Kai all, peaking on behalf&#13;
of Mary Arnold, the charge re&#13;
dropped, in the best interests or&#13;
the Senate.&#13;
A motion wa then made by&#13;
Niel en reque ting Arnold'&#13;
resignation. The motion failed,&#13;
According to some tuden ,&#13;
the feeling was that this matter&#13;
should not have taken up so much&#13;
of the Senate' time.&#13;
PLATO teaches&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
"It doesn't sound like Star&#13;
Trek," said Dr. Donald Bitzer or&#13;
the University of Illinois.&#13;
Bitzer was referring to the&#13;
voice capability of the PLATO&#13;
computer based educational&#13;
system, which was brought to&#13;
Parkside last Friday for&#13;
demonstration before approximately&#13;
150 students,&#13;
faculty, and staff.&#13;
According to Bitzer, computerbased&#13;
education (CBE) is where&#13;
"human and computer get&#13;
together and if either one learns&#13;
something, that's CBE."&#13;
The terminal that was brought&#13;
to Parkside is part of the fourth&#13;
system-variation on the original&#13;
PLATO computer which rved&#13;
just the Illinois campus. But rtth&#13;
each improvement on the&#13;
system, it ha been built up to the&#13;
point where a ingle channel can&#13;
connect the system ith 1,000&#13;
users at one ti.me.&#13;
It is possible for tudentsfaculty&#13;
using the ystem have&#13;
access to approximately 16,000&#13;
hours of lesson materials with&#13;
more and mor being er ated all&#13;
over the world each ee .&#13;
A typical PLATO terminal&#13;
contains the follo in : a&#13;
typewriter key t ·hich transmits&#13;
the reque t or data to the&#13;
computer, and a plasma d' pla ·&#13;
which can imultaneously show&#13;
computer-gen rated graphic&#13;
information and computerselected&#13;
photographic color&#13;
slides to the us r, plus k r&#13;
for voice-audio pl yb ck .&#13;
contm on pg :, &#13;
2 THE PARKSIOE RANGER November 24. 1976&#13;
~'RAi'II:;E~&#13;
---EDITOR IAL/OPINION&#13;
\&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM&#13;
'Crouse effect' influenced elections&#13;
by IlAlben J.... m....&#13;
A pbenomellOD wblcb I sbBII call !be Crouse effect Influenced Ibis&#13;
,...'. eIedIoc1. 'IbIa Influence cosl both Foreland Carter voles. These&#13;
_ didn't go III McCartb.J or Maddcm. or any oUIer C8Dd1d8te-lbey&#13;
aImpIy alllyed home.&#13;
To retreab your momory. 'I1motby Crouae wrote 11le Do,. .. lbe&#13;
.. an aa:ount 01 cMDP"lgn Journallam tbat w.. thorougb1y studied&#13;
.., vlrluaIIy any reporter do\mlng .. y degree of compeleocy. CerlalnIy&#13;
1IU .. book II DOtaoIeIy responaIIlIe for ''Dew joumaIlam."&#13;
Howev ... It beal ricuIalea the reapollldblHlieII, !be conceMlS. and the&#13;
form 01 "new joornaJIam." Hence. my cbrialeIlIng It the Crouae effect.&#13;
10 bla ,"",",,1Iy .-ring cbrooIde 01 lbo pn!lIII cowrlng the 1972&#13;
prealdentlal ....mpetgn. Crouse both detIoed !be gOllia and metbods of&#13;
modem reportIag wblle polnllng out !be aborlcomIoga oIlbo okktyle&#13;
reporlIDg.&#13;
At _ lime covering • campaign conalaled 01 tr.vellng wilb a&#13;
........,.... ..-clIng bandoula pc ovlded by the candldate·s pn!lIII&#13;
IIlfttary. and fU1llll"formula storl." wilb lbo editor back home. A&#13;
formu1a alory conlained • sborl deacrlpUon 01 !be C8Dd1date·s • .,.&#13;
lIv\lIs for !be day. bla location, !be nlllllber 01 people tbat came to see&#13;
b!m, and !be wea!ber. No elforl _ made to IlIlcover unsavory&#13;
",,_Ign pnctic:ea, and !be candidate w. laken prell)' much for bla&#13;
word. eedIesa to .y. 1IU provided for ralber ~Idal reporlIDg.&#13;
'IbIa all becan to cbange wilb lbo rise and eJection of Jobo F. KenneelY&#13;
(accordlog III Crouael. Bv 19110. presldenUal ""mpalgn coverage&#13;
~'t cbanged mucb from wbatlt bad been In the 3O·s.40·... and 50's&#13;
(lbouib planes b.d replaced trains).&#13;
Bowus. lbere _ • MW Ireed of joumaUst around, collegeeducated.&#13;
CDI.f1dellt.and comfortable wilb abstract concepts. The&#13;
advent of lids new breed bappened to colndde wilb a new president&#13;
9Iict toempllalhlze wilb Ibis sort 01 Joumalisl. At the same time. Ted&#13;
sc.ren.n's book TIle MUlq 01. PresIdent, bad just been released, bit&#13;
lbo best seIler's Uat and aIIIyed lbere for 52 weeks.&#13;
The "new breed" of journalists. lbe David Broders. Ben Bradlees.&#13;
Bob ovaks, weren't satisfied wllb formula .torIes. They analy-red&#13;
poUllca, poUtidanll, and institutions. and In so doing. revolutionized&#13;
!be poIIlIca1 news AmerIcans were reading. Not overnigbt, but slowly,&#13;
~Iy. lbo manner In wblcb news was ga!bered and Interpreted was&#13;
cbangIng.&#13;
'IbIa In-&lt;leplb. analytical reporting whicb perbap. approached Its&#13;
zenllb In !be 1976 election coverage doesn't necessarily tip the elecloraI&#13;
scaJea llMard any one candidate. Indeed, its effect can't be&#13;
o&#13;
mea~~ruy~d. •&#13;
Roughly 55percent of the nation 's eligible voters trekked to the polls&#13;
on November 2. Apathy was at an all time high-in fact even the&#13;
meager turnout exceeded the forecasts of most pollsters. Considering&#13;
it wa. an extremely close election. and lbe wealber was remarkably&#13;
good across lbe country. !be question to be raised is: Why did 45&#13;
percent of the electorate stay bome?&#13;
In 1m wilb McGovern projected to lose by anywbere between 20&#13;
and 30 percent (he lost by 23 percent). 55.6 percent of those eligible to&#13;
vote cast their ballot on Nov. 7. In 1968. 60.6 percent of lbose eligible&#13;
voted. In 1960 it was 64 percent.&#13;
-In eacb election year the press coverage was better, the analysis&#13;
more pragmatic, lbe candidates more eXposed. lbe voter turnout less.&#13;
The most common ellPlanation for voter disinterest blames the&#13;
candidates (neilber candidate is of sufficient sta~ Le. lbey're bolb&#13;
"just pollUcans").&#13;
'IbIa pre-&lt;lUJlp0se8 blatant charcter deficiencies existent In current&#13;
candidates butnol In previous presidentJalaspirants. Carter and Ford&#13;
certainly bave lbeir share of faults. Some people undoubtedly would&#13;
ascribe to one man or !be olber even more !ban bla .bare of defeclB.&#13;
But I don·t beUeve that eilber man is obviously leSs perfect !banthose&#13;
who've come before him. Compare Jimmy Carter to McGovern.&#13;
Humphrey. Johnson. or Kennedy - Jerry Ford to Nixon or Qoldwater.&#13;
AU of these men frequently evaded lbe lasues. occasionally changed&#13;
tbeir minds. even made a mistake once In a wbile.&#13;
The difference Ues In lbe fact that earlier candidates were not as&#13;
lborougbly exposed by the press as were Carter and Ford.&#13;
Eisenbower. It wa. rumored by lbe White House press corpe. never&#13;
read anytblng but Zane Grey we.terns. Kennedy frequently charmed&#13;
bla way lbrough press conferences - avoiding answer. to tough&#13;
questions. Many reporter. bad good reason to believe Johnson was not&#13;
entirely In touch wllb reaUty In lbe last year of his term In office. Yet&#13;
lbese doubts. discoverle •• were not mentioned mucb less explained by&#13;
the media.&#13;
This i. not..to say lbat joum'lists are wrong In dwelling on !be&#13;
candidates' sbortcomings, or eX81.linlng lbe meretricious aspects of a&#13;
campaign. It is wrong tbougb. to submit a man to Ibis lborough an&#13;
examination and then expect him to fare as well In a comparison to&#13;
lbose less rigorously Investigated. .&#13;
Perhap.lbe price we pay for accurate.lborougb, news reporting is a&#13;
disillusioned. even cynical electorate. But I lbink lbe benefits lIIat&#13;
accrue from such reporting (In lbeform of a more alert, aware, better&#13;
Informed voter), outweigh lbe cost •.&#13;
'Rules' for editorial writing listed&#13;
by PbIl Her1IWID&#13;
Writing an editorial can be fun; If you follow certain rules lIIat olber&#13;
newapapers use. like the Racine Journal. The Olicago TrIbune and !be&#13;
ew York nmes. not to mention !be SboreIine \.eader. People who&#13;
write editorials are usually seIf-rigbleolll. InteUectual assbole. wbo&#13;
read • lot. Parkside students, now you too. can write editorials for&#13;
!un and profit; If you follow these simple rules:&#13;
1) PICK A BfG NAME: Use as a subject, some big name; poUticians&#13;
sucbas Mayor Daley. Jimmy Carter or Jerry Forel are good material.&#13;
These are names lIIat are all so well known lIIat people will read your&#13;
stuff and enjoy It no matter wbatyou say.&#13;
2) DO 'TUSE FACTS: Facts only make people IlIlcomfortable, use&#13;
nmor,lnnuendoand Ubelto pul you r point across. Most of the people&#13;
who read your sluff won't know wbat!be hell you're talking about -&#13;
anyway, so wby bore them.&#13;
3) AVOIDSEXUAL TOPiCS: Wbat.would your motb .... and falb ....&#13;
say If you wrote a dirty editorial for your newspaper' keep it clean&#13;
kids' "&#13;
4) USE BIG WORDS: Y011 can easily impress your friends wllb a&#13;
few lour syllable words and your parents wIIllhank God lIIat you got&#13;
your POllllacrws without saying DUty tbIngs like "sbIt" and "damn."&#13;
U It works for Howard ColIell, it can work lor you.&#13;
51 NEVER, AT ANY TIME. ADMIT TIiAT YOU ARE WRONG!:&#13;
'IbIa Is !be most Important rule for an editorial writer, I mean, If&#13;
you're wrong who can you trust. Politicians. teacbers. cbancellors and&#13;
parenlB get .... y with it, wby can't your? You couJd screw up a&#13;
triWant career.&#13;
I) CRI11C1ZE: obody wants to read a non&lt;ritlcal editorial; they&#13;
Ire bortng as beU.QiUdze rel1glon. politic •• leacbers. scbooJsnr even&#13;
your ne!lbhor'. sexual habits. anylldng! 'IbIa will immediately show&#13;
people lbey-abouIdn'tlalk to you because you're pessimisllc.&#13;
7) PICK SAFE SUBJECI'S: Talk about all tho. ., In," oil! lIS lIIat&#13;
Merv and JobnIIy la1k .bout. PolItics, sez, religion, stay away from&#13;
lbIngs like baIIn&amp; ...... you have .t 1easl one black friend you can&#13;
paIDllo and say, "Hell, _ 01 my best friends are ..... "&#13;
II. TAKE IT. WHILE YOU CAN GET IT: Once you aIIIrt writing&#13;
U- _Is 01 .Hdoom you wlllloee most 01 your friends, so enjoy it&#13;
..... you can. U __ offen you. job on !be Ranger or K-Town&#13;
News. take the money and run. be bappy.&#13;
Well, folks.lbat just about cover. it; If you follow lbese .imple rules&#13;
~ou will not .tray from the straigbt and narrow palb of editorial&#13;
Journalism. U you don·t feel Uke getting your rocks off writing, try&#13;
.tudent government, lbese rule. apply there as well.&#13;
Black's firing fought&#13;
To lbe Editor:&#13;
I don't know bow many&#13;
.tudents realize lbat Barriet&#13;
Barker, a former Secretary has&#13;
been fired. You may read'lbis&#13;
and lbink that is not somelblng&#13;
?'It of.the onIInary, but I think It&#13;
IS. 'Ibis case is being fougbt by a&#13;
~ber of people, including lbe&#13;
World Organization whose&#13;
faculty advisor is Mr. Att":ell We&#13;
want the .tudents here 10 k~ow&#13;
what·. going on and get involved&#13;
So many .tudents wouldn't hav~&#13;
time unW it happened to lbem&#13;
By !be way. Miss Barker just&#13;
,&#13;
happens to be a black WOm81l.&#13;
You see, we are trying to&#13;
pressure lbe minorities we have.&#13;
The Third World as an&#13;
organization would appreciate it&#13;
very much if you would inform&#13;
the students and .taff that do not&#13;
read lbe Ranger. If anybody&#13;
wants to get Involved, lbey can&#13;
get in toucb wilb lbe Third World&#13;
or lbey can inquire at lbe information&#13;
Kiosk on the 0.1 level&#13;
outside lbe library.&#13;
CorneUu. Gordon&#13;
Member of the&#13;
Third World Organization&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 2.4, 1976&#13;
--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
0 TIC L FORUM&#13;
'Crouse effect' influenced elections •&#13;
by Robert J. J mbo&#13;
non hich I shall call the Crouse effect influenced this&#13;
on. 1bis influence cost both Ford and Carter votes. These&#13;
didn't o to cCarthy or addox, or any other candidate - they&#13;
y yed home.&#13;
To ~ ur memory, 'nmothy Q-ouse wrote 'Ibe Boys on the&#13;
.N',,unt of campaign journalism that was thoroughly studied&#13;
by virtuall n reporter claiming any degree of competency. Ceron&#13;
book not solely responsible for "ne journalism."&#13;
H , t culates the responsibilities, the concerns, and the&#13;
form of "ne journalism." Hence, my christening it the Crouse effect.&#13;
In frequenUy ring ehronlcle of the pres., covering the 1972&#13;
~aKJ11:ntial campaign, Crouse both defined the goals and met.hom of&#13;
reporting while pointing out the shortcomings of the old~le&#13;
reporting. t time covering a campaign conmted of traveling with a&#13;
cai~late, ding handouts provided by the candidate's press&#13;
tary, and filing ''formula stories" with the editor back home. A&#13;
formula contained a short description of the candidate's acti&#13;
for the da)', his location, the number of people that came to see&#13;
him and the ther. ·o effort was made to uncover WlS8Vory&#13;
\,ilj,,..,.16n practi , and the candidate was taken pretty much for his&#13;
ord. Nflll!dle!IS to say, this provided for rather superficial reporting.&#13;
This all began to change with the rise and election of John F. Kennedy&#13;
(according to Crouse). Bv 1960, presidential campaign coverage&#13;
hadn't chaoSed much from what it had been in the 30's, 40's, and 50's&#13;
(thou h planes had replaced trains).&#13;
H er, thett was a new lreed of journalist around, collegeucated,&#13;
confident, and comfortable with abstract concepts. The&#13;
ad ent of this new breed happened to coincide with a new president&#13;
qui to emphathlze with this sort of journalist. At the same time, Ted&#13;
rensen's book The Mating of a President, had just been released. hit&#13;
the t seller's list and stayed there for 52 weeks.&#13;
"new breed" of journalists, the David Broders, Ben Bradlees,&#13;
Bob •ov ks. weren't satisfied with formula stories. They analyzed&#13;
po , politicians, and institutions, and in so doing, revolutionized&#13;
the political news Americans were reading. Not overnight, but slowly,&#13;
ly: the manner in which news was gathered and interpreted was&#13;
This -&lt;iepth, analytical reporting which perhaps approached its&#13;
th in the 1976 election coverage doesn't necessarily tip the electoral&#13;
l toward any one candidate. Indeed. its effect can't be&#13;
measured--Only surmised.&#13;
Roughly 55 percent of the nation's eligible voters trekked to the polls&#13;
on November 2. Apathy was at an all time high-in fact even the&#13;
meager turnout exceeded the forecasts of most pollsters. Considering&#13;
it was an extremely close election, and the weather was remarkably&#13;
good across the country, the question to be raised is: Why did 45&#13;
percent of the electorate stay home?&#13;
In 197? with McGovern projected to lose by anywhere between 20&#13;
and 30 percent (he lost by 23 percent), 55.6 percent of those eligible to&#13;
vote cast their ballot on Nov. 7. In 1968, 60.6 percent of those eligible&#13;
voted. In 1960 it was 64 percent.&#13;
In each election year the press coverage was better, the analysis&#13;
more pragmatic, the candidates more exposed, the voter turnout less.&#13;
The most common explanation for voter disinterest blames the&#13;
candidates (neither candidate is of sufficient stature i.e. they're both&#13;
"just pollticans").&#13;
This pre~poses blatant charcter deficiencies existent in current&#13;
candidates but not in previous presidential aspirants. Carter and Ford&#13;
certainly have their share of faults. Some people undoubtedly would&#13;
ascribe to one man or the other even more than his share of defects.&#13;
But I don't believe that either man is obviously less perfect than those&#13;
who've come before him. Compare Jimmy Carter to McGovern,&#13;
Humphrey, Johnson, or Kennedy - Jerry Ford to Nixon or Goldwater.&#13;
All of these men frequently evaded the issues, occasionally changed&#13;
their minds, even made a mistake once in a while.&#13;
The difference lies in the fact that earlier candidates were not as&#13;
thoroughly exposed by the press as were Carter and Ford.&#13;
Eisenhower, it was rumored by the White House press corps, never&#13;
read anything but Zane Grey westerns. Kennedy frequently charmed&#13;
his way through press conferences - avoiding answers to tough&#13;
questions. Many reporters had good reason to believe Johnson was not&#13;
entirely in touch with reality in the last year of his term in office. Yet&#13;
these doubts, discoveries, were not mentioned much less explained by&#13;
the media.&#13;
This is not. to say that journ.,.lists are wrong in dwelling on the&#13;
candidates' shortcomings, or exai.lining the meretricious aspects of a&#13;
campaign. It is wrong though, to submit a man to this thorough an&#13;
examination and then expect him to fare as well in a comparison to&#13;
those less rigorously investigated.&#13;
Perhaps the price we pay for accurate, thorough, news reporting is a&#13;
disillusioned, even cynical electorate. But I think the benefits that&#13;
accrue from such reporting ( in the form of a more alert, aware, better&#13;
informed voter), outweigh the costs.&#13;
'Rules' for edi!orial writing listed&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
ditorial can be fun; if you follow certain rules that other&#13;
• like th Racine Journal, The Cllicago Tribune and the&#13;
, no to mention the Shoreline Leader. People who&#13;
usually self.;ighteous, intellectual assholes who&#13;
de udents, n you too, can write editorials for&#13;
p it; lf you follow these simple rules:&#13;
A BIG ' !E: U a a ubject, some big name; politicians&#13;
Jor Daley, Jimmy Carter or Jerry Ford are good material.&#13;
re that are all so ell known that people will read your&#13;
enjoy it no matter hat you say.&#13;
2) 00 'TU FACTS: Facts only make people lmcomfortable use&#13;
lnll1Uer1do nd ll l to put your point across. Most of the pe~ple&#13;
r d our uff l kn at the hell you're talking about - , hy re them.&#13;
3) VOID EXUAL TOPICS: What.would your mothers and fathers&#13;
! } rro dirty editorial for your ne spaper; keep it clean,&#13;
OROS: You can sily impre your friends with a&#13;
. and your parents will thank God that you got&#13;
thout ying nasty things like " shit" and "damn."&#13;
rd Co it can or for you.&#13;
lY TIME, ADMIT TIIAT YOU ARE WRONG!:&#13;
Important rul for an editorial writer, I mean, if&#13;
oc you trust. Politicians, teachers, chancellors and&#13;
Y th i , y can't your? You could screw up a&#13;
News, take the money and run, be happy.&#13;
Well_, folks, that just about covers it; if you follow these simple rules&#13;
~ou ~ not stray from the straight and narrow path of editorial&#13;
Journalism. If you don't feel like getting your rocks off writing, try&#13;
student government, these rules apply there as well.&#13;
Black's firing fought&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I don't know how many&#13;
students realize that Harriet&#13;
Barker' a former Secretary ha&#13;
be r· ' s en ~ed. You ma}' read this&#13;
and think that is not something&#13;
~ut of_the ordinary, but I think it&#13;
lS. ThlS case is being fought by a&#13;
n~ber of people, including the&#13;
Third World Organization whose&#13;
faculty advisor is Mr. Att~ell We&#13;
want, the _students here to k~ow&#13;
what s gomg on and get involved&#13;
~ many students wouldn't ha · time til . ve&#13;
un it happened to th By th em.&#13;
e way, Miss Barker just&#13;
happens to be a black woman.&#13;
You see, we are trying to&#13;
pressure the minorities we have.&#13;
The Third World as an&#13;
organization would appreciate it&#13;
very much if you would inform&#13;
the students and staff that do not&#13;
read the Ranger. If anybody&#13;
wan_ts to get involved, they can&#13;
get m touch with the Third World&#13;
or they can inquire at the Information&#13;
Kiosk on the D-1 level&#13;
outside the library.&#13;
Cornelius Gordon&#13;
Member of the&#13;
Third World Organization &#13;
Benefits&#13;
raised&#13;
On october 15,Congress passed&#13;
a new veterans education bill.&#13;
SolD" of the main points of in-&#13;
""",st to eligible veterans and&#13;
dependents are ltsted below: •&#13;
I. An 8 percent increase in&#13;
IIICllIlbIy benefits for veterans&#13;
and dependents was made effective&#13;
OCtober I, 1978.&#13;
2. MaJdmwn entitlement for&#13;
veterans and dependents was&#13;
iJIcJ'eUed from 36 to 45 months.&#13;
'Ibis increase is not limited to&#13;
pursuit of a stanjlard undergraduate&#13;
college degree as&#13;
was the previous 9 month ex-&#13;
..,tion.,&#13;
, .&#13;
3. There bas been no extention&#13;
of Ibe delimiting date.&#13;
'4. G.I. Bill benefits in their&#13;
present form will be e1iminated&#13;
fer Ibose persons entering service&#13;
after December 31, 1976. A&#13;
WIWltary, contribUtory program&#13;
Involving matching funds will be&#13;
substituted. The government will&#13;
contribute $2.00 for every dollar&#13;
peld into Ibe fund _by the serv1ceperson.&#13;
If you have any questions on&#13;
the above, contact Tim Jatczak in&#13;
Tallent Hall, room 115 or call 553-&#13;
2444.&#13;
S1~:11£ECONOMYIS6ETTlN6WORSE.&#13;
WHAT DO&#13;
YOU Pl-AN&#13;
~~TOOO&#13;
ABOUT IT?&#13;
"&#13;
THE P~RKSIDE RANGER&#13;
Position ellocetions-;__=,",",~"~l---- Education Dlvlalon&#13;
New authorizatiollB&#13;
Mathematics and Science Education (converted fnm B~ and&#13;
Elementary Education Methods continuing authoriution)&#13;
Physical Education (authorization to be withheld pending dlscussion&#13;
of appropraite type of position and funding source)&#13;
Humaalties Division&#13;
New authorizatiollB&#13;
Communication - Media&#13;
Comniunication - Basic Speech Communication&#13;
Communication - Public Address and Business and ProfellSional&#13;
Communication&#13;
Communication - Interpersonal and Public Communication (two of&#13;
these positions to be lenure track, including one senior, and two&#13;
visiting or one year appointments)&#13;
(Note: APPR recommends a specially l'flIIStituled.recruiting commillee&#13;
for the Communication positions)&#13;
German (visiting or one year appointment)&#13;
Science Division&#13;
New authorizatiollB&#13;
Industrial and Environmental Hygiene (placed OIl bold, pending&#13;
Regent approval for implementation - the position will be ullUzed for&#13;
1977-78, to support a Lecturer in Mathematics, with specific reference&#13;
to introductory and basic sIti1\s courses and coordination;&#13;
Mathematics - Stallslics&#13;
Medical Technology (specific pattern for fI1ling this position to be&#13;
discussed with Med Tech Administrative Committee)&#13;
Physics - Solid Slate, APplied Quantum Optics&#13;
Soctal Science Dlvislou&#13;
New anthorizatiollB&#13;
Economics - Public Finance, Urban, Regional, Principlw&#13;
Economics - Managerial, Public Utilities, Transponauon, Principles&#13;
History- Description to be specified&#13;
Political Science - Local Government Education, Public Policy (50&#13;
percent UW-Extension - annual appointment)&#13;
FIne Arts Dlvtslon&#13;
New authorizatiollB&#13;
Dramatic Arts&#13;
Management Science Division&#13;
New authorizatiollS&#13;
Accounting&#13;
LOVE AND COMPASHUN.&#13;
WHEN AWM PRES'bEN1;&#13;
AH'LL GET&#13;
MOREF~'5&#13;
'N' f'I6URE8.&#13;
'/&#13;
BUlj U,I;!(;SIRYuu&#13;
ARE&#13;
P\ti.51DENT.&#13;
'"&#13;
r-----------------;;;~~~~;;R~~·---l&#13;
I WISHES EVERYONE A HRPPY THANKSGIVING I&#13;
WITH A I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
--j&#13;
TURKEY&#13;
DINNER&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 24&#13;
ROAST TOm TURKEY WITH ALL THE&#13;
TRimmiNGS INCLUDIN~ SAVORY&#13;
DRESSING, WHIPPED POTATOES,&#13;
VEGETABLE, CRANBERRY SAUCE AND&#13;
YOUR CHOICE OF FRESH PumPKIN&#13;
OR APPLE PiE ••••••••.•••••• ••••••••••••·&#13;
A REGULAR ~2.95 VALUE&#13;
ONLY ~1.7Q&#13;
November :u. 1976 3&#13;
Accounting&#13;
~titative&#13;
Quantitative&#13;
(1bese four positiona placed on hold, poIICIq Dppainlment of D&#13;
chalrpenon)&#13;
MMagement.-PenIonneI (50 percent position - joint ~lment wtlb&#13;
Labor Economics- description to be specified)&#13;
ubor Ec_ DIvIaIa.&#13;
New ... th__ tIo..&#13;
ubor Economics and Business Manqement (50 permnl p*tIon _&#13;
joint appointment witb B..u- fUugement • de8crIpIIon IIIbe&#13;
speciIIed)&#13;
EnciDeerUlc Sde..,e DIYtalo.&#13;
New DUth__ tIo.&#13;
Mechanical and MDnufDcturing Engineering TeCMOICIIY&#13;
~ ~ The Part&lt;sidB ~&#13;
RANGER&#13;
,...P,..-.... ........ .,............... ......... Ny .... u..............&#13;
.,. .... to........... -- .. ............................. Wi"c... ".· ... 'I1"... ... .,. Ie.et,. "ar1I~ ................ ~.."&#13;
,............. til .-..riM -. c ....... 0.1.1.... ...,.•..•• r.-... --....- IOtTOR-I .. -eHI.": ......... ~&#13;
aUSINns MAN.OI:U e.tlily IIruIl&#13;
ADYEtYIS" .. MAM••••. T.. c...,.&#13;
MIWS ~OI".TO«' arwa w.....&#13;
OE""aTMENTS,&#13;
... 11Iistr ........ "-Mc .... J-. Mete ......&#13;
F"EAYUR. EOtTOII. ~ .......&#13;
S~.TS lEDITOt• .,I ... T.....&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS •...,.,. I...-cIIl .........&#13;
CO'",. EDITOR, J ..... u-.r&#13;
"MOTO EDITOR, v .. TMM~&#13;
C'aCULAnON IM~ ......&#13;
STAFF: WftMIy Md_. T.....i 0 • .,..... .................. CJwM c........ ~ ..........&#13;
0.11,.. C.,IMft, OWII., IE............ _,.., Kay 0ttMft". Larrr ~, J&#13;
Ram-. Madlwt... J.M ........ ltM1" ,...... L. .... K......... K.,. uP...... ..,.&#13;
TnMlrunt. ken ....... rd. ","I, l L,vi",.,... ~ IN ..... I-&#13;
•&#13;
Ft. PIZZI '''If&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone. 652.. 737&#13;
..... lilWI.. C S, , ....... ..,&#13;
ON•• ' I •.•.&#13;
'Tear after year, semester&#13;
I after semester, the&#13;
CollegeMaster from&#13;
Fideli~ Union Life ha&#13;
been tile most accepted,&#13;
most popular plan on&#13;
campuses all over America.&#13;
Find out why.&#13;
Call the Fidelity UniOD&#13;
CoU~eMaster&#13;
Field Associate&#13;
•m your area:&#13;
Unda Truax 552-9131&#13;
Tom Cotner 632-4758&#13;
Benefits&#13;
raised&#13;
On October 15, Congress passed&#13;
new veterans education bill.&#13;
~me of the main points of interest&#13;
to eligible veterans and&#13;
dependents are listed below:&#13;
1_ An 8 percent increase in&#13;
monthly benefits for veterans&#13;
and dependents was made effective&#13;
October 1, 1976.&#13;
2. Maximwn entitlement for&#13;
veterans and dependents was&#13;
inere&amp;sed from 36 to 45 months.&#13;
1bis increase is not limited to&#13;
pursuit of a stanpard undergraduate&#13;
college degree as&#13;
was the previous 9 month ex-&#13;
·~tion.,&#13;
3. There has been no extention&#13;
of the delimiting date.&#13;
4. G.I. Bill benefits in their&#13;
p-esent form will be eliminated&#13;
foc those persons entering service&#13;
after December 31, 1976. A&#13;
voluntary, contributory program&#13;
involving matching funds will be&#13;
substituted. 'The government will&#13;
contribute $2.00 for every dollar&#13;
paid into the fund by the serviceperson.&#13;
&#13;
H you have any questions on&#13;
the above, contact Tim J atczak in&#13;
Tallent Hall, room 115 or call 553-&#13;
2444.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 2-', 1976 3&#13;
Education&#13;
Position&#13;
Division&#13;
allocations-canl_-,-,ompg-1 ----&#13;
New authorizations&#13;
Mathematics and Science Education ( converted from Bilingual and&#13;
El~entary Education Methods continuing authorization)&#13;
Physical Education (authorization to be withheld pending discussion&#13;
of appropraite type of position and funding source)&#13;
Humanities Division&#13;
New authorizations&#13;
Communication - Media&#13;
Communication - Basic Speech Communication&#13;
Communication - Public Address and Business and Professional&#13;
Communication&#13;
Communication - Interpersonal and Public Communication (two of&#13;
these positions to be tenure track, including one senior, and two&#13;
visiting or one year appointments)&#13;
(Note: APPR recommends a specially ('()QStituted-recruiting committee&#13;
for the Communication positions)&#13;
German (visiting or one year appointment)&#13;
Science Division&#13;
New authorizations&#13;
Industrial and Environmental Hygiene (placed on hold, pending&#13;
Regent approval for implementation - the position will be utilized far&#13;
1977-78, to support a Lecturer in Mathematics, with specific reference&#13;
to introductol'y and basic skills courses and coordination;&#13;
Mathematics - Statistics&#13;
Medical Technology (specific pattern for filling this position to be&#13;
discussed with Med Tech Administrative Committee)&#13;
Physics - Solid State, Applied Quantum Optics&#13;
Social Science Division&#13;
New authorizations&#13;
Economics - Public Finance, Urban, Regional, Principlw&#13;
Economics - Managerial, Public Utilities, Transpori.auon, Principles&#13;
History- Description to be specified&#13;
Political Science - Local Government Education, Public Policy (50&#13;
percent UW-Extension - annual appointment)&#13;
Fine Arts Divtston&#13;
New authorizations&#13;
Dramatic Arts&#13;
Management Science Division&#13;
New authorizations&#13;
Accounting&#13;
l-OVE AND COMPASHUN .. WHEN AH'M PRES'DENl; AH'LL GET, MORE FAC S&#13;
'N' f'ISURE.8.&#13;
/&#13;
Accounting&#13;
Quantitabve&#13;
Quantitative&#13;
( These four positions placed on hold pending appointment of a&#13;
chairperson)&#13;
Management-Personnel ( 50 percent position - joint appointment with&#13;
Labor Economics- description to be specified)&#13;
Labor Economics Dlv oo&#13;
. e authorlzatio&#13;
Labor Economics and Busin Management (50 percent po tion -&#13;
joint appointment with Bllml Managem t - desaiplion to be&#13;
specified)&#13;
Engineering Science DlvWon&#13;
Ne authorizatiom&#13;
Mechanical and Manufacturing Eng neerln Technol&#13;
! IT/ The Parkside&#13;
~rr ..&#13;
RANGER&#13;
TIM,..,..,_·-II w,-tn.t, aM ... -&#13;
Wucefts•ft&#13;
lty ltle .,...,.... - - u enlty .. · l"•rlr.11de w • ar• 1elely&#13;
,_. e fw ts e411twial Cy a!HI&#13;
c •• , •• , o,," •• , •••r••••• .,. ...,&#13;
--· ,, ,,__., .... -...... "" -&#13;
,..,,.,._ ·-· fec:wlty - -lfllotr•- .. l•twlal - _._., SU ntl r&#13;
tEOITOlt,IN,CHIIF: JHflfl SI-a&#13;
IUSINtESS MANAGEltS Ca!lly lni&amp;k&#13;
AOVEltTISING .MANAGElt '-• C- IIEWS COOltOINATOlt : lrvce w ..... OE,.AltTMENTS :&#13;
• Adfflo ,stra,_,-.i cies J-.Mcltleney&#13;
FEATUltE EOITOlt: -· la ..... Sl'OltTS EOITOlt JHII T a&#13;
.. _w.2m&#13;
VISAGE EOITOltS 1.ttro I, sw..,c;k I II la •&#13;
COPY EOITOlt• Jlll,e Laa ..&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR• VU T mpClltCULATION&#13;
Sue Mar~ret N&#13;
STAFF• w_, lier, Terri Oayt,art. R- Heftma CM. c, ........ TIM .....&#13;
o,1ne&#13;
Ramona&#13;
car1-.&#13;
Mallltt&#13;
0oltt • Ede , . Mary ltay Otlmer. Larry °""" y, "11 I Herma&#13;
, loll Jambols, •• r1y P , L Ilda lt1u,111 Karlll LaF__,., JNy&#13;
Trvdrunt, Scott R · ard, P II L L ntstot1, o.11111 Sharpe&#13;
A •&#13;
FrH Pizza Dehery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
111 C~l1b1, S••1~tltl. Rlfltll, IHI&#13;
OPEN 4 •·•· II 1 a.a.&#13;
'-learafter~ear._ n1 ter&#13;
Iaftersen1 ter th&#13;
College a ter f ron1&#13;
Fidelit) nion ifi ha&#13;
been the n10 t accept mo t popular plan on . campu all o,er m nca.&#13;
Find out, h . ~&#13;
Call the idelit) College1 a ter&#13;
Field ociate a&#13;
m ) our area:&#13;
• n1on&#13;
Linda Truax 552-9131&#13;
Tom Cotner 632-4 758 &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 24, 1976&#13;
Part I&#13;
Students' sex questions answere~.&#13;
Edh«', N.: MI. p.u. II a c_1« at PIaDDed PweDlIIood III&#13;
KeIMIIIa. Her pre_I aerie, II la fft1lO- lDqaeallolll nbmllled by&#13;
ParbIde ..... ta.&#13;
by Beverly Noble p.u.&#13;
Orpsm was lbe maiD ...... of concern for one husband who&#13;
ieaponded to my last article. lle&lt;ause he asked several questions I&#13;
wouJdllb to dbc:usa, I will answer lbese in next week's Ranger; along&#13;
with a question on a new "IUD". Here are questions received from two&#13;
olber people.&#13;
Qanu.: "It's long bee.. held, in male chauvenlsl dreles, that a&#13;
woman Is solely responslble for gelling pregnant (barring rape).Does&#13;
not !be recent Supreme Court decision, allowing women to have&#13;
abortlons wllb&lt;lut !be consent of their husbands, reinlotce this altitude?&#13;
The rationale for both is that women should have control (and&#13;
presumably, (esponsIblIlty) over lbeir own bodies."&#13;
MY ANSWER: f believe lbere are major differences' ,tween these&#13;
t.Ma. If !be rationale Is that women should have control and couldn't&#13;
responsIbl1Ity over lbeIr own bodies, then these same people must&#13;
__ that malesshouJd NOT or CAN NOT. That is, that they have&#13;
U- uncontroUable urges and that lbey don't use condoms because&#13;
"It doesn't feel good" with them on. It doesn't matter whether or not&#13;
the """",n feels good wltIl the method she is using. And of course no&#13;
woman has lhnse same uncontrollable urges! Heaven forbid we m1gbt&#13;
hav a lot of n}'lJlllh&lt;xlrunning around!&#13;
ThIs altitude places a very large burden on the woman. After all, she&#13;
Is the one who gels pregnant (Ignoring !be fact that men &lt;an he held to&#13;
peyq c:bIId support and may be asked to pay for an abortion or&#13;
delivery &lt;barges).&#13;
Isee the Supreme Court decision as a rlab!' not a resnonsibillty. It&#13;
ys that when a man has that uncontroUable urge, and the woman&#13;
rou\dn'l control her urge either, and gol pregnanl; that she has the&#13;
Ji&amp;bl, not the responsIbillty, to control her own body. It may be a&#13;
responsible decision, and she may choose to involve her husband or&#13;
~er.&#13;
Instead of placing the burden upon her, we have allowed her to&#13;
chooee who shall bear the burden. ThIs Is a choice she might nol have&#13;
hen deddlng whelber or nolto use birth cootrol.&#13;
Perhaps U- same male chauvinist circles felt that since they&#13;
don't wanllo use birth control themselves, they had beller offer the&#13;
WlIlIlllna way out, without being able to control them.&#13;
Fortunately, there are a 101of men who don't hold this sl1Iyattitude&#13;
towards using contraception. These same men would probably want to&#13;
be a part of the decision related to abortion, but would probably not&#13;
feel that she sould be forced to gel their consent.&#13;
Qanliell: "I wanl to 10 on the pill, bul I don'l wanl to go to my&#13;
doctor because I) he', my molber's doctor, 100, and 2) be's a good&#13;
neighbor of ours. Can I go to some cUnic for an examination and to get&#13;
the pill and be sure no one will know? How much does it cost to go on&#13;
the pill?"&#13;
Answ~r: Both Planned Parenthood of Kenosha and Family Planning&#13;
of Racine provide confidential medicallreatmeI't for birth control (as&#13;
do many private doctors). At both clinics, lOur records ~ confidential&#13;
and no one &lt;an even be told if you've ever been there WIthout&#13;
your consent. .&#13;
Both cUnics are staffed by local MD's and family planning nurse&#13;
practitioners, as well as R.N.s, Social Workers, and ot~r staff.&#13;
The fees are based on abl1lly to pay and no one IS ever refused&#13;
services because of a lack of lunds. For a student making less than $50&#13;
a week, it would be approximately $2 for the complete gynecological&#13;
check-up, $2 for the Pap smear ' test for cervical cancer, and $1 for&#13;
each. package of pills.&#13;
ADdfurtbennore: "Is it true that after you've been on the pill, it's&#13;
harder and more dangerous to become pregnant when you want to?&#13;
Does the pill harm your body? How does it 'fool' your hody into&#13;
thinking it's pregnant?"&#13;
Answer: Many doctors recommend that after going off.the pill, you&#13;
should wait until you've had Ihree normal periods before you try to get&#13;
pregnant. The main concern is withhan increased chance of&#13;
miscarriage. Your uterus may not be ready for a pregnancy so soon&#13;
after laking the pill.&#13;
As for problems in conceiving, it's difficult to say, because for m st&#13;
women, we don't know what their fertillty was like before going on the&#13;
pill. I've seen statistics saying that one out of every len married&#13;
couples will be unable to conceive. Another percent will have dilficulties&#13;
in trying to conceive .. (This is not irelated' to any past usage&#13;
of birth control).&#13;
You can't say a woman has fertility problems because of the pill&#13;
unless you know for sure she had no fertility problems before being on&#13;
the pill. Pregnancy and. normal delivery also increase your chances&#13;
of being infertile.&#13;
There are always some risks involved in using any birth control'&#13;
methods. It seems that the more effective the method is, the more&#13;
risks there are with it. The less effective methods carry a higher risk&#13;
of pregnancy. Itis imporlant to study all the methods and weigh these&#13;
factors against how badly you do not want to become pregnant. At both&#13;
clinic you would see a demonstration of all methods where ri,*s and&#13;
side effects are discussed hefore you decide.&#13;
The hormone level, when you are on the pill, is similar to when you&#13;
are pregn:mt and it is believ~ that this prevents you from producing&#13;
an egg. ItIS this pregnancy-like hormohe level that also may give you&#13;
some of the symptoms of pregnancy when you first slart on the birth&#13;
control pill. •&#13;
The Ranger Box Is stl1l at the Informallon Kiosk in lower Main&#13;
Place, You may leave quesllons anonymously or signed,&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Budis sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why'&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a di1Ference.)&#13;
-&#13;
Internships&#13;
open&#13;
The Public Service Inlernshi&#13;
Program (PSIP) at Parkside ~&#13;
spring semester openings for&#13;
stud:nts who. wish to _earn&#13;
political science credit as interns&#13;
In local, state and national&#13;
. governmental agencies.&#13;
PSIP is a separate program&#13;
from Parkside's University Year&#13;
for Action program, a new&#13;
federally. fun?ed internship&#13;
program In which 30 University&#13;
ot' Wisconsin-Parkside students&#13;
MIl "';1m "'&lt;;ademic credit while&#13;
interning WIth community anti.&#13;
poverty agencies during the 1976-&#13;
77 academic year.&#13;
\'SIP was begun the 1976spring&#13;
. semester and already 55 students&#13;
hav~ participated in Ihe&#13;
program.&#13;
PSIP students have worked for&#13;
Senator Nelson, Rep. Lea Aspin&#13;
the City of Kenosha, Racin~&#13;
Police Department, Kenoshs&#13;
Police Departmenl, Racine&#13;
County Planner, Racine County&#13;
Public Defenders Office, Racine&#13;
County Juvenile County, Racine&#13;
Clerk of Courts, and many other&#13;
public and private agencies.&#13;
Three students will Intern&#13;
during the semester in&#13;
Washington, D.C., in Congress,&#13;
the State Department and with&#13;
the Ralph Nader public irterest&#13;
research group.&#13;
Students may enroll for three to&#13;
twelve credits for their internship&#13;
work.&#13;
person's interested in PSIP&#13;
internships can contact Dr.&#13;
Pernacciaro at Greenquist 313or&#13;
they can pick up an application&#13;
form L~Classroom 367.They can&#13;
call for further information aboul&#13;
the program at 553-2316,&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mlle 011change)&#13;
: ~ases SUb-zero starts (-60'F. pour point)&#13;
aves 011 RICK BENTSON&#13;
your AMSIOIL dee/er -639-4067&#13;
When you say Budweiser., you've said it alII&#13;
A.~HEUSH1:'BUSCH. INC • 5T lOUIS&#13;
E.F. lIalkigrano&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 2-4, 1976&#13;
Part I&#13;
Students: sex questions answere~&#13;
Internships&#13;
open&#13;
ote: . Pella is a coamelor at Plauned Parenthood in&#13;
ha. Her present rte is in re poase to questions submitted by&#13;
had uta.&#13;
by Beverly oble Pella&#13;
the pill and be sure no one will know? How much does it cost to go on&#13;
the pill?" . . Answer: Both Planned Parenthood of Kenosha and Family Planning&#13;
of Racine provide confidential medical tr_e~tmePt for birth control ( as&#13;
do many private doctors). At both clinics, 1our records ar~ confidential&#13;
and no one can even be told if you've ever been there wtthout&#13;
your co~nt. . . Both clinics are staffed by local MD's and family planrung nurse&#13;
practitioners, as well as R.N .s, Social Workers, and ot~r staff.&#13;
The fees are based on ability to pay and no one lS ever refused&#13;
services because of a lack of funds. For a student making less than $50&#13;
a week, it would be approximately $2 for the complete gynecological&#13;
check-up, $2 for the Pap Smear· test for cervical cancer, and $1 for&#13;
each package of pills.&#13;
And furthermore: "Is it true that after you've been on the pill, it's&#13;
harder and more dangerous to become pregnant when you want to?&#13;
Does the pill harm your body? How does it 'fool' your body into&#13;
thinking it's pregnant?"&#13;
Answer: Many doctors recommend that after going off the pill, you&#13;
should wait until you've had three normal periods before you try to get&#13;
pregnant. The main concern is wiU1han increased chance of&#13;
miscarriage. Your uterus may not be ready for a pregnancy so soon&#13;
after taking the pill.&#13;
As for problems in conceiving, it's difficult to say, because for m st&#13;
women, we don't know what their fertility was like before going on the&#13;
pill. I've seen statistics saying that one out of every ten married&#13;
couples will be unable to conceive. Another percent will have difficulties&#13;
in trying to conceive .. (This is not 1related1 to any past usage&#13;
of birth control).&#13;
You can't say a woman has fertility problems because of the pill&#13;
unless you know for sure she had no fertility problems before being on&#13;
the pill. Pregnancy and a normal delivery also increase your chances&#13;
of being infertile.&#13;
There are always some risks involved in using any birth control&#13;
methods. It seems that the more effective the method is, the more&#13;
risks there are with it. The less effective methods carry a higher risk&#13;
of pregnancy. It is important to study all the methods and weigh these&#13;
factors against how badly you do not want to become pregnant. At both&#13;
clinic you would see a demonstration of all methods where risks and&#13;
side effects are discussed before you decide.&#13;
The hormone level, when you are on the pill, is similar to when you&#13;
are pregn~t ~ it is believ~ that this prevents you from producing&#13;
an egg. It is this pregnancy-like hormone level that also may give you&#13;
some of the symptoms of pregnancy when you first start on the birth&#13;
control pill.&#13;
The Public Service Internshi&#13;
Program (PSIP) at Parkside hap . s&#13;
spring semester openings f&#13;
stu_d_ents _who . wish to _ea~&#13;
!&gt;°litical science credit as interns&#13;
m local, state and national&#13;
governmental agencies.&#13;
PSIP is ? separate program&#13;
from Parkside's University Yea&#13;
for Action program, a ne;&#13;
federally_ fun~ed internship&#13;
progr~m m_ which 30 University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside students&#13;
~ill ~rn a~demic credit while&#13;
mternmg with community antipoverty&#13;
agencies during the 19'76-&#13;
77 academic year.&#13;
l'SIP was begun the 1976 spring&#13;
semester and already 55 students&#13;
have participated in the&#13;
program.&#13;
PSIP students have worked for&#13;
Senator Nelson, Rep. Les Aspin&#13;
the City of Kenosha, Racin~&#13;
Police Department, Kenosha&#13;
Police Department, Racine&#13;
Coun_ty Planner, Racine County&#13;
Public Defenders Office, Racine&#13;
County Juvenile County, Racine&#13;
Clerk of Courts, and many other&#13;
public and private agencies.&#13;
Three students will intern&#13;
during the semester in&#13;
Washington, D.C., in Congress,&#13;
the State Department and with&#13;
the Ralph Nader public irterest&#13;
research group.&#13;
Students may enroll for three to&#13;
twelve credits for their internship&#13;
work.&#13;
The Ranger Box is still at the Information Kiosk in lower Main&#13;
Place. You may leave questions anonymously or signed. ~==~--~-----------_;_ _ _,:_ Why do sonie people think&#13;
Person's interested in PSIP&#13;
internships can contact Dr.&#13;
Pernacciaro at Greenquist 313 or&#13;
they can pick up an application&#13;
form L'l Classroom 367. They can&#13;
call for further information about&#13;
the program at 553-2316.&#13;
Bud. is sort of special?&#13;
o d n find out why!&#13;
(Br ·in beer right d&#13;
m k diffi en .)&#13;
en ou ay Budweiser, you've said it all! A HEUSER-BUSCH I ·c • ST l OUIS&#13;
E.F. Madrigrano&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil change)&#13;
: :ases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
aves 011 RICK BENTSON&#13;
your AMS/ O/L dealer 639_4067 &#13;
Foreign students&#13;
sample U.S.&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
A comparatively new group of four students have,&#13;
f... the past four months, sampled the living' and&#13;
cultural styles of American living.&#13;
'!bey are Singurlaug Lovdahl, Birgttta Tunestarn,&#13;
Anette Sclunidt and Erich Heinback, foreign exchalIlle&#13;
students visiting the United States for a one&#13;
year stay. t\/lette and Erich represent Germany;&#13;
Birgitta, Sweden and Sigurlaug's homeland is&#13;
Iceland.&#13;
staying with "host families," these exchange&#13;
students all undertake volunteer-type jobs within&#13;
the surrounding community and attend one or two&#13;
c\aSSeSat Parsside. The only learning difficulties&#13;
they have encountered are the natural difficulties of&#13;
fully adapting to a different language in the understanding&#13;
of some terms referred to by their&#13;
II'lfessors or those in text. Aside from this, all four&#13;
exchange students agree their classes pose no&#13;
special problems for them, and believe our college&#13;
system in the United States to be less demanding&#13;
and a degree easier than those in their homelands.&#13;
1be experience of being an exchange student has,&#13;
in most respects, been positive. It is because of&#13;
these feelings that the exchange students wish for&#13;
others to become involved in similar programs. "I&#13;
wish everybody could go for a year to another&#13;
coontry," Birgitta explained.&#13;
'!be organization which sponsors theno is the&#13;
International Christian Youth Exchange. Along&#13;
with the obvious benefits of being a foreign exchange&#13;
student are the anticipated sacrifices an&#13;
individoal must make. "Money is a weak point in&#13;
the exchange program," Erich confided, since the&#13;
exchange students are given a $10.00 alotment per&#13;
week to live on. Their shelter and food costs are&#13;
assumed by their host families, yet the $10.00 figure&#13;
doesn't allow any careless spending.&#13;
Transportation for the exchange students also&#13;
creates a problem. They must primarily rely upon&#13;
their "host families" for privileges to borrow the&#13;
family car. "We are very dependent on other&#13;
people," Birgitta pointed out. They are eager to see&#13;
m.... of Parkside and the surrounding community,&#13;
bit have had little opportunity due to the lack of&#13;
transportation.&#13;
VIsiting the United States during a presidential&#13;
election year, I asked the group their reaction to the&#13;
campaign and tbe proceedings. Erich responded,&#13;
"When I saw the first nominations of tne&#13;
Republicans, Icompared it with Ocloberfest." They&#13;
didn't feel the candidates were as knowledgeable as&#13;
compared to politicians in their own countries. The&#13;
group felt in their countries, "campaigns are much&#13;
harder and intellectual."&#13;
Lonliness for home and family enters their minds&#13;
periodically, but Sigurlaug says, "It's something I&#13;
have to fight. I feel like I've started something&#13;
creative inside myself, that I can't just stop now."&#13;
The group implied that at first, the novelty of being&#13;
a student from a different country attracted people&#13;
to theno, but quickly the novelty wears off. Most all&#13;
agreed they have made some lasting friendships&#13;
here, which will probably not be forgotten when&#13;
they return home in July, yet people's attitudes&#13;
haven't been as enthusiastic as they had expected.&#13;
I approached the group with the question if&#13;
America was what they had expected. Most agreed&#13;
it was not. It was a disappointment to theno to see&#13;
the degree of materialism and very competitive&#13;
attitude most American's displayed and were&#13;
surprised to find America was more pollution&#13;
ridden than they had expected.&#13;
Given the opportunity to do it all over again, all&#13;
four students agreed they would not pick the United&#13;
States as their choice of a country to visit. As&#13;
Birgitta stated, "I think America is a very interesting&#13;
country, but I wouldn't like to live here."&#13;
In concluding our conversation Iasked if they felt&#13;
this experience had helped them to appreciate&#13;
different cultures and different perspectives. They&#13;
agreed that it had, but Birgitta added, "I don't think&#13;
we're going to change so much from our actually&#13;
being here. Ithink it's when we're going back."&#13;
They felt this experience has made them&#13;
"stronger," and that the real value 'of this trip&#13;
would present itself when they could use these&#13;
experiences back in their own countries.&#13;
Birgitta, Sigurlaug, Anette and Erich welcome&#13;
anyone interested in knowing more about the International&#13;
Christian Youth Exdlange to contact&#13;
theno at the following address: Birgitta Tunestarn,&#13;
I.C.Y.E., 1927 Linden Avenue, Racine, Wisconsin.&#13;
Phone: 637-9651.&#13;
Space allocations suggested&#13;
located in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Tallent Hall will be changed&#13;
into Parkside's outreach&#13;
building, with all activities&#13;
directly connected with the&#13;
community being placed in that&#13;
building, according to the Vogt&#13;
report.&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Various recommendations for&#13;
space allocations have been·&#13;
made by David Vogt,&#13;
director of informational&#13;
analysis and registration, to the&#13;
campus planning committee,&#13;
which received copies of the plan&#13;
last week.&#13;
Those recommendations included&#13;
the following:&#13;
'lbe newly organized Student&#13;
Development operation will be&#13;
moving to the area which now&#13;
includes the Ranger, PSGA, and&#13;
formerly housed Student LifePAS,&#13;
and Student Organizations,&#13;
the food service operation in the&#13;
Nocth Buffet room, on the DI&#13;
level of the Wyllie Library&#13;
learning Center (WLLC).&#13;
The aforementioned student&#13;
organizations will be moved to&#13;
where the current vending and&#13;
seating for the coffee shoppe is in&#13;
lower Main Place.&#13;
As for the newly organized&#13;
divisions of Behaviorial Science&#13;
ahd Fine Aris, they have been&#13;
moved to vacant secretarial&#13;
areas on the south side of tl)e&#13;
8eeOnd floor of the Classroom&#13;
Building and the north side of the&#13;
second floor of Communication&#13;
Arts, respectively. '&#13;
The important thing about this&#13;
report, however, is that it&#13;
provides almost complete&#13;
abandonment of Tallent Hall,&#13;
with admissions financial aids,&#13;
- business servi~es, university&#13;
extension, and the two centers for&#13;
Computers and Multicultural&#13;
Studies being the only offices&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 2., 1976 5&#13;
Classified&#13;
WANTED, Par' Time SKrelary fOI" Studenl&#13;
Group 10 hours a ~ al "2 50 an hOur&#13;
MU!oI be on Work Slucly See Kiyoko in WLLC&#13;
o 19'3 or call S53 n ....&#13;
I". PONTIAC 5".INO J IOMCI Mt&gt;talUc&#13;
Slut'. red buCk"". RaUy ~s AM F",....&#13;
FM sl...-eo •• Track $21'S U. 017.&#13;
TYPING DONE .U,c'Hllly and&#13;
Pl"otft$.onally '1'1 my hOm.. RHsen.abI.&#13;
ralet. 6516061&#13;
WANTED' Par' lime child car. workef'&#13;
working with jweoiles 89n 1117 '1'1 9roup&#13;
foslef' home SlOO per hour One year ell&#13;
perlence desired in chiid ure _k or&#13;
relaled field P!'IoM'6J6-uaJ&#13;
FO. SALE Gr.y. w'I'!,le. ..-d ora"'9f: Pe1'&#13;
s..n rug •••.• It )..... U50 1S2nt4 a'* S&#13;
pm&#13;
WILL DO any k,nd of 1J1)int at r....... bL*&#13;
raIn 'For ,nfofmallOn Call 65233'1&#13;
WANTED. Female 20years or alGer to share&#13;
an apartme1tt Pril'fffably sr _Sr Phone " ..&#13;
6115 alter 6 p.m&#13;
NEED ride from SOlJtl'l 50« of '-',!waukN&#13;
Will play tor ." gas Call 76262JJl Ask lor&#13;
Carol&#13;
FO. SALE Mara"ll 2015 receiver. J."Mfl&#13;
mocMl4Is.pHken 1yurold IJOO PhOne~&#13;
""&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
issued to&#13;
.Permanent&#13;
students ond&#13;
discount with&#13;
foculty&#13;
coupon&#13;
members only.&#13;
ond 10 cord ON&#13;
All merchandise in our store.&#13;
GOOD FOR AS LONG AS YOU&#13;
A"END PARISI DE ~--------·aIP ANDSAVE---------,I&#13;
I UW-PARKSlDE STUDENT COURTm CARD I I The bearer of this cord is entitled to a 10% I&#13;
I Courtesy Discount on 011 purchases mode ot I&#13;
I VENTURA AND SONS JEWElERS I&#13;
I 56176th Ave. Kenosha I&#13;
I I&#13;
I The courtesy is extended to 011 UW-PorXside I I Students and Faculty Only. I&#13;
I Bearer I&#13;
I&#13;
l&#13;
No. valid if no' signed. Bearer must show PorItside 10 WI'h I&#13;
.his wd foir Trade Items ucepted I&#13;
-------------------------~ GRADUATE GEMOLOGIST&#13;
GRADUATE DIAMONTOLOGlST&#13;
~~gg~&#13;
leMsM's ~ CAft'.&#13;
5617 - 6tll A.....&#13;
Foreign students&#13;
sample U.S.&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
A comparatively new group of four students have,&#13;
for the past four months, sampled the living and&#13;
cultural styles of American living.&#13;
They are Singurlaug Lovdahl, Bq-gitta Tunestam,&#13;
Anette Schmidt cllld Erich Heinback, foreign exchange&#13;
students visiting the United States for a one&#13;
year stay. Anette and Erich represent Germany~&#13;
Birgitta, Sweden and Sigurlaug's homeland is&#13;
Iceland.&#13;
Staying with "host families," these exchange&#13;
students all undertake volunteer-type jobs within&#13;
the surrounding community and attend one or two&#13;
classes at ParKS~de. The only learning difficulties&#13;
they have encountered are the natural difficulties of&#13;
fully adapting to a different language in the understanding&#13;
of some terms referred to by their&#13;
professors or those in text. Aside from this, all four&#13;
exchange students agree their classes pose no&#13;
special problems for them, and believe our college&#13;
system in the United States to be less demanding&#13;
and a degree easier than those in their homelands.&#13;
The experience of being an exchange student has,&#13;
in most respects, been positive. It is because of&#13;
these feelings that the exchange students wish for&#13;
others to become involved in similar programs. "I&#13;
wish everybody could go for a year to another&#13;
country," Birgitta explained.&#13;
election year, I asked the group their reaction to the&#13;
campaign and the proceedings. Erich responded,&#13;
"When I saw the first nominations of tne&#13;
Republicans, I compared it with Octoberfest." They&#13;
didn't feel the candidates were as knowledgeable as&#13;
compared to politicians in their own countries. The&#13;
group felt in their countries, "campaigns are much&#13;
harder and intellectual. II&#13;
Lonliness for home and family enters their minds&#13;
periodically, but Sigurlaug says, "It's something I&#13;
have to fight. I feel like I've started something&#13;
creative inside myself, that I can't just stop now."&#13;
The group implied that at first, the novelty of being&#13;
a student from a different country attracted people&#13;
to them, but quickly the novelty wears off. Most all&#13;
agreed they have made some lasting friendships&#13;
here, which will probably not be forgotten when&#13;
they return home in July, yet people's attitudes&#13;
haven't been as enthusiastic as they had expected.&#13;
I approached the group with the question if&#13;
America was what they had expected. Most agreed&#13;
it was not. It was a disappointment to them to see&#13;
the degree of materialism and very competitive&#13;
attitude most American's displayed and were&#13;
surprised to find America was more pollution&#13;
ridden than they had expected.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 2-', 1976 5&#13;
Classified WANTED . P.rl T me Seuetar,, for StuOffl&#13;
Group 10 hours • wee!&lt; at '2 50 n hOur&#13;
MustbeonWor .Study SeeK O LC&#13;
o 193 or call SS3 72.U&#13;
WANTED Parl I me Child car• wor ff&#13;
wort&lt; ng .,.,, ruvfflill!S 119,n ll 17 n group&#13;
mrer IM&gt;me SJ 00 Pff hOUr One Hr ex&#13;
per ence dl!S rNI In ch Id ure - or ref•tNI t,•fd p,- 6l6 3583&#13;
WANTED. Female 20 years or older to sh•re&#13;
an aparlmenl Preter•bly Jr Sr Pt,one u 6115 after 6 p m&#13;
NEED nde from sou h ,_ Of I a tt&#13;
,11 play tor , 11as o I 762 62331 As for&#13;
Carol.&#13;
TYPING DONE elflc Pnlly&#13;
protnsion.nv my t,orne RN,-,.11&gt;I&#13;
ra1es 6576068&#13;
rlln For&#13;
FOIi SALE: Marantz 20U reu Yff, J&#13;
model 4 Pff = I r OICI , Phone 634&#13;
am&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
issued to students and faculty members only.&#13;
Permanen! discount with coupon and ID cord ON&#13;
AU merchandise in our store.&#13;
GOOD FOR AS LONG AS YOU&#13;
AnEND PARKSIDE&#13;
The organization which sponsors them is the&#13;
International Christian Youth Exchange. Along&#13;
with the obvious benefits of being a foreign exchange&#13;
student are the anticipated sacrifices an&#13;
individual must make. "Money is a weak point in&#13;
the exchange program," Erich confided, since the&#13;
exchange students are given a $10.00 alotment per&#13;
week to live on. Their shelter and food costs are&#13;
assumed by their host families, yet the $10.00figure&#13;
doesn't allow any careless spending.&#13;
Given the opportunity to do it all over again, all&#13;
four students agreed they would not pick the United&#13;
States as their choice of a country to visit. As&#13;
Birgitta stated, "I think America is a very interesting&#13;
country, but I wouldn't like to live here." --------·cup AND SAve---------, I&#13;
In concluding our conversation I asked if they felt&#13;
this experience had helped them to appreciate&#13;
different cultures and different perspectives. They&#13;
agreed that it had, but Birgitta added, "I don't think&#13;
we're going to change so much from our actually&#13;
being here. I think it's when we're going back."&#13;
I&#13;
,·&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE STUDENT COURTESY CARD I&#13;
They felt this experience has made ti_lem&#13;
"stronger," and that the real value ·of this trip&#13;
would present itself when they could use these&#13;
experiences back in their own countries.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
The bearer of this cord is entitled to a 10&#13;
Courtesy Discount on all purchases made at&#13;
VENTURA AND SONS JEWELERS&#13;
5617 6th Ave. Keno ha&#13;
The courtesy is extended to all UW..Parksid&#13;
Students and Faculty Only.&#13;
I Bearer ________________ _&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Transportation for the exchange students also&#13;
creates a problem. They must primarily rely upon&#13;
their "host families" for privileges to borrow the&#13;
family car. "We are very dependent on other&#13;
people," Birgitta pointed out. They are eager to see&#13;
more of Parkside and the surrounding community,&#13;
but have had little opportunity due to the lack of&#13;
transportation.&#13;
Visiting the United States during a presidential&#13;
Birgitta, Sigurlaug, Anette and Erich welcome&#13;
anyone interested in knowing more about the International&#13;
Christian Youth Ex~ange to contact&#13;
them at the following address: Birgitta Tunestam,&#13;
I.C.Y.E., 1927 Linden Avenue, Racine, Wisconsin.&#13;
Phone: 637-9651. l&#13;
l Not valid if not signed. Beorer mu.st sh f&gt;onuie 10 th I&#13;
this cord Foir Trode Items llcepted I&#13;
-------------------------~&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Space allocations suggested&#13;
GRADUATE GEMOLOGIST&#13;
GRADUATE DIAMONTOLOGIST&#13;
Y~c.s~&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Various recommendations for&#13;
space allocations have been&#13;
made by David Vogt,&#13;
director of informational&#13;
analysis and registration, to the&#13;
campus planning committee,&#13;
which received copies of the plan&#13;
last week.&#13;
Those recommendations included&#13;
the following:&#13;
The newly organized Student&#13;
Development operation will be&#13;
moving to the area which now&#13;
includes the Ranger, PSGA, and&#13;
formerly housed Student LifePAB,&#13;
and Student Organizations,&#13;
the food service operation in the&#13;
North Buffet room, on the D1&#13;
level of the Wyllie Library&#13;
Learning Center (WLLC).&#13;
The aforementioned student&#13;
organizations will be moved to&#13;
where the current vending and&#13;
seating for the coffee shoppe is in&#13;
lower Main Place.&#13;
As for the newly organized&#13;
divisions of Behaviorial Science&#13;
and Fine Arts, they have been&#13;
moved to vacant secretarial&#13;
areas on the south side of the&#13;
second floor of the Classroom&#13;
Building and the north side of the&#13;
second floor of Communication&#13;
Arts, respectively.&#13;
The important thing about this&#13;
report, however, is that it&#13;
provides almost complete&#13;
abandonment of Tallent Hall,&#13;
with admissions, financial aids,&#13;
business services, university&#13;
extension, and the two centers for&#13;
Computers and Multicultural&#13;
Studies being the only offices&#13;
located in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Tallent Hall will be changed&#13;
into Parkside's outreach&#13;
building, with all activities&#13;
directly connected with the&#13;
community being placed in that&#13;
building, according to the Vogt&#13;
report. Phone 658-2S2S&#13;
,no,ho·, Oioaol&gt;d C It&lt;&#13;
5617 • 6th Avenot&#13;
SPECIAL RING PROMATION&#13;
By Josten's&#13;
Date: Wed., December 1st&#13;
Time:&#13;
Place:&#13;
10 - 2 5 - 7&#13;
Next to the Bookstore&#13;
in the Al'?ove&#13;
*5 Week Ship~ent * 5% Discount&#13;
* 810°0 Deposit · &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 24. 1976&#13;
.,&#13;
Exhibit 1&#13;
displayed&#13;
Contact&#13;
weekly by student ~overnment&#13;
by KiyaIlo BowdeD&#13;
'!be ParIadcIe Student Government AssocIation ill proud to announce&#13;
tile lIPPOintment ~ Harvey Hedden as VIce-President and the election&#13;
of DaDlel Nle" sa President fro.ternpcJre of the Senate. VicePresIdent&#13;
Hedden wII1 fUlthe vacancy created by the resignation of&#13;
Robert Vlach. PresIdent fro.ternpcJre Nle1Ien wII1 fill the vacancy&#13;
a-eated wben !be former Prolempore, Robert Foght, didn't run for&#13;
reelection. •&#13;
DIRoDlIDaed pertodleall _&#13;
A five page Us! of pertodleall which are to be clscontinaed by the&#13;
Ubr8ry Is available for Inapeclion at the Student Government office&#13;
(WI,LC 0113) and at the Infonnation Kloak In MaIn Place.&#13;
U you find on !be llal, a periodical that you woa1d like to see continaecl,&#13;
contact Student Government, a student representative on the&#13;
Ubrary and LearnIng Center Committee (Pat Heckel, Francis&#13;
Nwotike, Unda Knudtaon) or go to the Ubrary wbere the fonnal Us! ill&#13;
Ir8pt and aprea your preference to Donnan H. SmIth or call his&#13;
extension 2187.&#13;
It Is Important that studenla ezpress legitimate concern to the&#13;
Ubrary. '!be student representatives to the Ubrary and LearnIng&#13;
Center CommIttee are to be commended for their vigilance.&#13;
WATCH USI&#13;
East Kenosha Records and Tapes&#13;
5707-6th Ave. Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza$1.50&#13;
I EYERY IHIIDAY &amp;TUESDAY&#13;
SPAGHETII FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Includes: Sslad, Itaian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
Wed. - ThIrs. 9:30 - 11:00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks 60'&#13;
~erbu'8&#13;
~urt&#13;
PUa &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
On spmg. West of 31 OJ&#13;
Green Rdge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~IJY ~rr&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action&#13;
A lEI In TO LEAII AID SERVE:&#13;
A f'bance to develop yourself by serving a one-year Internship&#13;
In a Ioca1 community service ... action project on a full-time&#13;
bBsIa while receiving intensive ilHervice training, faculty&#13;
advice and support, 30 units of ac;ademlc credit, and a subsistence&#13;
living Inc&lt;me.&#13;
Several openings f... internships In community agencies wII1&#13;
be availabieslarUng January, 1977. Applications are required,&#13;
and immediate response ill necessary to have applications&#13;
considered.&#13;
In addition to present Parkslde studenla, people who have&#13;
begun but not finished college eiaewhere, are over 18, have&#13;
genuine commitment to a year of community Improvement&#13;
eft..-t and have above average academic ability or usable&#13;
sIdlIa are welcome to apply.&#13;
For farlber information and appUcations, write, phone ... visit&#13;
Parkslde'. Year f... Action, University of WIsconsIn.Parkside&#13;
Room 288, Tallent Hall, Kenoeba, WI 53140. Phone 563-2337:&#13;
fnm 8::10 a.m. unl11 5 p.m. weekdays.&#13;
Openlngs InStalleat Government&#13;
There are sll11many openings In Student Govermnent. If any of the&#13;
committees Interest you and you would like to serve as a student&#13;
representative, please contact K1yoko Bowden, President or a senator.&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
CurrIculum and Program CommIttee , . , .. .' 1 full-time student&#13;
Academic Actions CommIttee ' , full-lime students&#13;
Campus Ceremonies Committee .. ' , , ' , : .- 2 students&#13;
Book store CommIttee ' . . . . . . . . . . , :, , .1student&#13;
Academic Planning and Program Review Committee ' . , 2 full-time&#13;
students&#13;
Allocations Comniittee , .' .. ,.,., ,.,.,.,.4 students&#13;
Student Court-Associate Justices ,.. .. 2 students&#13;
Appellate Court-Chlef Justice .. , ' . '.. .., 1 student&#13;
Appellate Court-Assoclate Justices " .. 2 students&#13;
Student appointments&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following students on their&#13;
appointments: '&#13;
Harvey Hedden .. , . , , Teaching Improvements Grants Committee&#13;
Sue Balewski Teaching Improvements Grants Committee&#13;
Barb Bulgereit , , Teaching Awards Committee&#13;
Sue ShemanskI . , - , Athletic Board&#13;
Tom Fulmer , . , . , . , Athletic Board&#13;
Rusty Tuliewskl. , . , , . , ' . ,Allocations Commlttee-Seat NO.6&#13;
Randalilraun .General Breadth Sub-Commlttee of Academic Policies&#13;
CommIttee&#13;
BI11 Young , , .Assoeiate Justice of the Student Court&#13;
Carayl Williamson, . . , , ChIef Justice of the Student Court&#13;
Maureen Flynn. .,.,. .,.AssocIate Justice of the Student Court&#13;
Pat Heckel , '.' , Treasurer of P.S.G.A.&#13;
TIm Huck .. , Academic Actions Committee&#13;
Robert Black Academic Planning and Program Review CommIttee&#13;
All students are invited to participate In Student Govenunent: these&#13;
students have chosen to. If you would like to join the growing Ust of&#13;
Student Govermnent members, please contact Student Govermnent at&#13;
WLLC 0193 or Call 553-224(&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
The walk-through "10&#13;
house" which ill located In ~&#13;
Place contains a BlcenlenniaI&#13;
exhibit tracing the history Of&#13;
Wisconsin's Stockbridge-M\Ulsee&#13;
Indians-somelimes called the&#13;
"Last of the Mohicans."&#13;
The 14-panel exhibit, on dlsplar&#13;
through Dec. 7, uses narrative&#13;
photographs, maps, artwork and&#13;
other artifacts to trace 376 Ye&amp;ra&#13;
of Stockbrldge-Mensee history&#13;
from the tribe's origins along the&#13;
Hudson River In New York'to Ita&#13;
present-day life In Shawano&#13;
County on land elltab11shed as the&#13;
Stockbrldge-Munsee Reser.&#13;
vatlon:&#13;
The tribe was nearly wiped out&#13;
during the French and Indlan&#13;
Wars In 1757, a struggle&#13;
recounted In James Fenimol'l!&#13;
Cooper's famous novel "The Laat&#13;
of the Mohicans." Renmants 01&#13;
the tribe fled west and setlied In&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
The touring exhibit was&#13;
prepared by the Stockbri~ge.&#13;
Munsee Historical Society with&#13;
grants from the Sons of the&#13;
American Revolution and the&#13;
Wisconsin American RevoluliOll&#13;
Bicentennial COmmission.&#13;
It is sponsored by the UW.P&#13;
Bi e en tennial .c0mmillee,&#13;
Kenosha County American&#13;
Revolution Bicentennial Com.&#13;
mission, Racine County Blcen.&#13;
tennlal Liaison CommIttee and&#13;
Wisconsin Bicentennial Com.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. mission. 24&#13;
Turkey Dance, featuring "Heartstring," at 9 p.m. In the Union&#13;
Square. AdmIssion Is $1 for UW-P students and $1.50 for others.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 26&#13;
Cable TV program "An Inside Look" hosted by UW-P Prof. Paul&#13;
Kleine at 7 p.m. on Chnnnel 8.&#13;
Baskethall game, UW-P vs. UW-Whltewater, at 7:30 p.m. In the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Bldg. Tickets In advance are $lfor UW-P students and $1.50&#13;
for others on sale at the Info Kiosk and at the door for $2:&#13;
for all. Season passes for all sports are available at the&#13;
Athletics office for $7.50 for UW-P students and $10 for all others.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 27 .&#13;
Basketball game, UW-P vs. UW- WhItewater, at 7:30 In the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Bldg. Tickets In advance are $1 for UW-P students and $1.50&#13;
for others on sale at the Info Kiosk and at the door for $2.&#13;
Course offered&#13;
The Campus Security&#13;
Deparlmentls again offering the&#13;
National Safety - Council's&#13;
Defensive Driving Course for&#13;
those employees or students who&#13;
comtemplate driving State.&#13;
owned vehicles. The Defensive&#13;
Driving Course has been a prerequisite&#13;
for any Individual&#13;
operating State-owned vehicles&#13;
since December, 1970.&#13;
The course ill six hours in&#13;
duration, however, In order to get&#13;
the greatest participation, the&#13;
course will be presented In two,&#13;
three hour sessions on Wed.&#13;
nesday, December I, 1976 and&#13;
Thursday, December 2, 1976.&#13;
It Is requested that all faculty,&#13;
staff or students who plan on&#13;
attending notify Officer William&#13;
Carter or Officer Donald Groset,&#13;
Campus Security Department,&#13;
Room 188, Tallent Hall, E,q. 2455&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
1977 Local ACUllntercoliegiate- Tournament Program&#13;
~ .~ ~ ~.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 28&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from Ito 6 p.m. In CL 140.&#13;
Faculty Recital, TImothy Bell on clarinet, and Carol Bell on piano&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. In the CAT.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 30&#13;
Colloqulm, "Moral Freedo~ and Moral ReSPC;nsIbility," given by&#13;
Aaron Snyder; UWP AssocIate Prof. of Phllosophy at 7 p.m. In GR&#13;
101.&#13;
Bowling - Jan. 22 &amp; 23, 197.7 •&#13;
Billiards Jan. 28. 29 &amp; 30, 1977&#13;
Table Tennis - Jan. 28, 29 &amp; 30, 1977&#13;
Foosball- Feb. 4, 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Chess - Feb. 4. 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Local toumament winners to represent P k'&#13;
Regionalsin Madison Wise Feb 17-19 a&#13;
1&#13;
r&#13;
9&#13;
s&#13;
7&#13;
1d7&#13;
at e.&#13;
c&#13;
the ACU&#13;
h&#13;
'&#13;
U· R C .... , . ontaet t e ",on ee- enter for Information or to enter "" 00 f / t&#13;
- . ~I eeenry.&#13;
TOlrnamant director: Rand M '&#13;
Y Dog 'Phone: 553~2695&#13;
•&#13;
,,,&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 24, 1976&#13;
Contact&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Association is proud to announce&#13;
the appoinbnent of Harvey Hedden as Vice-President and the election&#13;
of Daniel Nielsen as President Pr&lt;rtempore of the Senate. VicePresident&#13;
Hedden will fill the vacancy created by the resignation of&#13;
Robert Vlach. President Pro--tempore Nielsen will fill the vacancy&#13;
created when the former Protempore, Robert Foght, didn't run for&#13;
reelection. •&#13;
Discontinued periodicals&#13;
A five page list of periodicals which are to be discontinued by the&#13;
Library is available for inspection at the Student Government office&#13;
(WU£ 0193) and at the Information Kiosk in Main Place.&#13;
U you find on the list, a periodical that you would like to see continued,&#13;
contact Student Government, a student reiresentative on the&#13;
Library and Learning Center Committee (Pat Heckel, Francis&#13;
Nwoltike, Linda Knudtson) or go to the Library where the formal list is&#13;
kept and express your preference to Donnan H. Smith or call his&#13;
extension 2167.&#13;
It is important that students express legitimate concern to the&#13;
Ubrary. The student representatives to the Library and wrning&#13;
Center Corruruttee are to be commended for their vigilance.&#13;
WATCH USI&#13;
East Kenosha Records and Tapes&#13;
5707-6th Ave. Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
EVERY MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Includes: Salad, Italian Bread and a Free Glass of W ine.&#13;
Wed. ~ Thurs. 9 :30 - 11 :00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks so•&#13;
On Spmg, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~erbu~&#13;
~urt&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
~,&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action&#13;
A NEW WAY TO LEARI AND SERVE:&#13;
A fPBnce to develop yourself by serving a one-year internship&#13;
in a local community service or action project on a full-time&#13;
ba • while receiving intensive in-service training, faculty&#13;
advice and support, 30 units of academic credit, and a subsistence&#13;
living income.&#13;
veral openings for internships in community agencies will&#13;
be avallable_starting January, 1m. Applications are required,&#13;
and lnuned1ate response is necessary to have applications&#13;
considered.&#13;
In ddition to present Parkside students, people who have&#13;
begun . but not finished college elsewhere, are over 18 have , g mune commitment to a year of community improvement&#13;
effort and have above average academic ability or usable&#13;
skills are welcome to apply.&#13;
For further information and applications, write, phone or visit&#13;
Parkslde's Year for Action, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Room 286, Tallent Hall, Kenosha, WI 53140. Phone 553-2337:&#13;
from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. weekdays.&#13;
Openings in Student Government&#13;
There are still many openings in Student Government. If any of the&#13;
committees interest you and you would like to serve as a student&#13;
representative, please contact Kiyoko Bowden, President or a senator&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
Curriculum and Program Committee .. .. . .. .. _. . . .. 1 full-time student&#13;
Academic Actions Committee .. . . . .... .. .. . . .. ..... full-time students&#13;
Campus Ceremonies Committee ..... . .... .. ....... . ... . .. . 2 students&#13;
Book store Committee . . . ... . . .. .. . . . . . . .. . .. ......... . .. .. . l student&#13;
Academic Planning and Program Review Committee ... . . . 2 full-time&#13;
students&#13;
Allocations Committee . . .. . . .. .. . . .. . . . . . . ... . . ... . . ... . . .4 students&#13;
Student Court-Associate Justices .... . . .. ......... . .. . . . .. . 2 students&#13;
Appellate Court-Chief Justice ... ..... . . . . .... . .. ... . ........ 1 student&#13;
Appellate Court-Associate Justices ...... . . ... . ...... . .. ... 2 students&#13;
Student appointments&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following students on their&#13;
appoinbnents:&#13;
Harvey Hedden . . . .. ..... Teaching Improvements Grants Committee&#13;
Sue Balewski .. .. . ...... . Teaching Improvements Grants Committee&#13;
Barb Butgereit . .. . .... .. ... .. . ... ..... . Teaching Awards Committee&#13;
Sue Shemanski .. . ..... . ..... . ..... .- ...... .. . .. ....... Athletic Board&#13;
Tom Fulmer .. ... . . ...... . .. . .... . . .. .... ........ . . .. . Athletic Board&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski . . . ...... .... . . . . . .. Allocations Committee-Seat No. 6&#13;
Randal Braun . General Breadth Sub-Committee of Academic Policies&#13;
Committee&#13;
Bill Young .... .. . . . .. .......... Associate Justice of the Student Court&#13;
Caroyl Williamson ..... .. . . . .. . . .. .. Chief Justice of the Student Court&#13;
Maureen Flynn .. .. . .. . .... ... . Associate Justice of the Student Court&#13;
Pat Heckel . .. .. . . . . .. ... . ..... . ... . ... . .. . .... Treasurer of P.S.G.A.&#13;
Tim Huck .... . . . .. . . ... . . . . . ..... . . . . . Academic Actions Committee&#13;
Robert Black . . . Academic Planning and Program Review Committee&#13;
All students are invited to participate in Student Government: these&#13;
students have chosen to. If you would like to join the growing list of&#13;
Student Government members, please contact Student Government at&#13;
WU£ D193 or Call 553-2244·_&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 24&#13;
Turkey Dance, featuring "Heartstring," at 9 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Square. Admission is $1 for UW-P students and $1.50 for others.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 26&#13;
Cable TV program "An Inside Look" hosted by UW-P Prof. Paul&#13;
Kleine at 7 p.m. on Channel 8.&#13;
Basketball game, UW-P vs. OW-Whitewater, at 7:30 p.m. in the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Bldg. Tickets in advance are $1 for UW-P students and $1.50&#13;
for others on sale at the Info Kiosk and at the door for $2:&#13;
for all. Season passes for all sports are available at the&#13;
Athletics office for $7 .50 for UW-P students and $10 for all others.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 27&#13;
Basketball game, UW-P vs. UW- Whitewater, at 7:30 in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Bldg. Tickets in advance are $1 for UW-P students and $1.50&#13;
for others on sale at the Info Kiosk and at the door for $2.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 28&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Faculty Recital, Timothy Bell on clarinet, and Carol Bell on piano&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 30&#13;
&lt;;olloquim, "Moral Freedo~ and Moral Responsibility," given by&#13;
Aaron Snyder, UWP Associate Prof. of Philosophy at 7 p.m. in GR&#13;
101.&#13;
~ (j)&#13;
Bowling - Jan. 22 &amp; 23, 1977 Foosball -&#13;
Exhibit&#13;
displayed&#13;
The walk-through "lo&#13;
house" which is located in M:&#13;
Place contains a Bicentennia)&#13;
exhibit tracing the history of&#13;
Wisconsin's Stockbridge-Munsee&#13;
Indians-sometimes called th&#13;
"Last of the Mohicans." e&#13;
The 14-panel exhibit, on display&#13;
through Dec. 7, uses narrative&#13;
photographs, map.s, artwork anci&#13;
other artifacts to trace 376 Years&#13;
of Stockbridge-Munsee history&#13;
from the tribe's origins along the&#13;
Hudson River in New York to its&#13;
present-day life in Shawano&#13;
County on land e$tablished as the&#13;
Stockbridge-Munsee Reser.&#13;
vation.&#13;
The tribe was nearly wiped out&#13;
during the French and Indian&#13;
Wars in 1757, a struggle&#13;
recounted in James Fenimore&#13;
Cooper's famous novel "The Last&#13;
of the Mohicans." Remnants of&#13;
the tribe fled west and settled In&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
The touring exhibit was&#13;
prepared by the StockbridgeMunsee&#13;
Historical Society with&#13;
grants from the Sons of the&#13;
American Revolution and the&#13;
Wisconsin American Revolution&#13;
Bicentennial Commission.&#13;
It is sponsored by the UW-P&#13;
Bicentennial Committee,&#13;
Kenosha County American&#13;
Revolution Bicentennial Commission,&#13;
Racine County Bicentennial&#13;
Liaison Committee and&#13;
Wisconsin Bicentennial Commission.&#13;
&#13;
Course offered&#13;
The Campus Security&#13;
Department is again offering the&#13;
National Safety Council's&#13;
Defensive Driving Course for&#13;
those employees or students wlw&#13;
comtemplate driving Stateowned&#13;
vehicles. The Defensive&#13;
Driving Course has been a prerequisite&#13;
for any individual&#13;
operating State-owned vehicles&#13;
since December, 1970.&#13;
The course is six hours in&#13;
duration, however, in order to get&#13;
the greatest participation, the&#13;
course will be presented in two,&#13;
three hour sessions on Wednesday,&#13;
December 1, 1976 and&#13;
Thursday, December 2, 1976.&#13;
It is requested that all faculty,&#13;
staff or students who plan on&#13;
attending notify Officer William&#13;
Carter or Officer Donald Grosek,&#13;
Campus Security Department,&#13;
Room 188, Tallent Hall, Ext. 2455&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
I&#13;
Feb. 4, 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Billiards Jan. 28, 29 &amp; 30, 1977 Chess - Feb. 4, 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Table Ten11is - Jan. 28, 29 &amp; 30, 1977&#13;
Tournament director:&#13;
Local tournament winners to represent p k .d&#13;
Regionals in Madison Wisc Feb 17-19 a{g~7e · ate the AC~I&#13;
Union Rec-Center for info~mation . ' . ..,. ooonf tacit t e or to enter. - , ee entry.&#13;
Randy Moog Phone : 553-2695 &#13;
Brad 'ford~'~f1"""';;;-;;;;;;;-;;;f..m..;-;--.f~-&#13;
beCOmingsmaller and smaller each year and that if&#13;
a neW high school is built it will be financed by&#13;
refinaJ1Cing the debt and stretching the debt&#13;
payments over say len or fifteen years.&#13;
However asParker reluctantly admitted, if a new&#13;
high school is not built, there will probal1.ly be a lax&#13;
cut; and laxes will not raise (if the new high school&#13;
is built) only if Kenosha does not raise its expenditures&#13;
on say roads or sewers.&#13;
Another question is with enri1lment declining why&#13;
notwalt ten years and then Tremper and Bradford&#13;
will be able to handle the amount of'students that&#13;
will be then enrolled in school. Ron says that this&#13;
viewiscomrnonly held but it is not substantiated by&#13;
lbe facts.&#13;
Parker says that the facts are as follows: (I) for&#13;
lbe first lime in years first grade enrolbnent has&#13;
gone up in Kenosha and the Assistant Superintendent&#13;
of SChools for Kenosha says that he foresees&#13;
no decline in enrollment, and in fact sees an increase&#13;
in enrolbnent, (2) the question is not only&#13;
enroUment, more importantly the question is the&#13;
quality of education.&#13;
This last point raises a very interesting statistic.&#13;
The average gra&lt;Je point of Bradford students is&#13;
better than the average grade point average of&#13;
students at Tremper. Why is this so? Ron Parker&#13;
says for two reasons: (I) under adverse conditions&#13;
people hand together and (2) because leachers lack&#13;
adequate facilities they may expect less of a student&#13;
at Bradford than they do of a student at Tremper.&#13;
In conclusion we asked Parker two final&#13;
questions: (I) what will happen if the new high&#13;
school is not buill and (2) what will happen if the&#13;
new high school is built?&#13;
"For every month Kenosha waits in building a&#13;
new high school the costs go up thirty thousand&#13;
dollars. If the new IJigh school is not built students&#13;
may have to go on split shifts; educational quality&#13;
will suffer; there might be a fire- in the annex&#13;
with loss of life in the hundreds," said Parker.&#13;
"If a new high school is built laxes will not go up;&#13;
students will not go on split shifts and educational&#13;
quality will rise," he added.&#13;
What can the individual student at Parkside do if&#13;
he or she agrees with Parker? "Well in the spring&#13;
there will be a referendwn on the ballot, the best&#13;
thing the people at Parkside can do is to vote yes on&#13;
the referendwn," he said.&#13;
PLA TO-'~f1"U"f-..m"'f---&#13;
The displayed the touchsensitive&#13;
capablllties of the&#13;
terminal. Bitzer put picture on&#13;
the screen of elementary items,&#13;
suchas an apple;an elephant and&#13;
many others. He touched the&#13;
screen and a magnetic disk&#13;
played back what had been&#13;
touched. ,&#13;
Bitzer also brought along a&#13;
synthesizer with sound which&#13;
played "The Entertainer"&#13;
Fodor&#13;
to teach&#13;
Violinist Eugene Fodor, artistiJH'esidence&#13;
at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-ParkSide, will leach&#13;
biB second set of master classes&#13;
at the eampus on Saturday, Nov.&#13;
28, and Saturday and Sunday,&#13;
Dec. 18 and 19. Registration as a&#13;
participant or auditor can be&#13;
made hy contacting Cindy Gray&#13;
at 553-2488.&#13;
Fodor and Parkside faculty&#13;
pianist Stephen Swedish, who&#13;
bave Just returned from a concert&#13;
tour of Japan, appeared last&#13;
Friday (Nov. 19) on the Johnny&#13;
CarsonTonight Show, where they&#13;
bave heen frequent guests.&#13;
During hi. campus slay, Fodor&#13;
also will present the first in a&#13;
series of tl\ree Young Persons'&#13;
Concerts, at 10:30 a.m. on&#13;
Friday, Nov. 26, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Other concerts in the series are&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 26, when&#13;
saxophonist Tim Bell of the&#13;
music faculty will perform with&#13;
lbe award-winning Parkside Jazz&#13;
Ensemble, and Saturday, April&#13;
16, wben Prof. Swedish will play.&#13;
Tickets are. $1 per concert for&#13;
students and $2 for adults and are&#13;
available by writing Young&#13;
Persons" Concert Series at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Fodor, 26, winner of the 1974&#13;
Tchaikowsky Competition in&#13;
Moscow and the 1972 International&#13;
Paganini Competition&#13;
in Italy, also is featured in the&#13;
COVersolry of the current issue of&#13;
Accent, a magazine for young&#13;
mUsicians.&#13;
- The disks may contain 4,096&#13;
different, audio messages at a&#13;
rate of apprOximately one per&#13;
every .3 of a second.&#13;
Bitzer stated that it is possible&#13;
to have a terminal in every home&#13;
by 1980, providing that people -&#13;
can - afford the cost, which is&#13;
approximately that of a color&#13;
te1evision. It (PLATO) could&#13;
provide world-wide communications&#13;
for millions, he&#13;
stated.&#13;
Currently, PLATO is being&#13;
used at 26 universities, several&#13;
penal institutions, government&#13;
agencies, and. in business and&#13;
induslry.&#13;
PLATO has had programs&#13;
written for it in a variety of areas&#13;
on all educational levels, in&#13;
eluding biology, in which Bitzer&#13;
demonstrated a program&#13;
simulating the genetic behavior&#13;
of fruitflies.&#13;
(&#13;
I&#13;
I.&#13;
Fishin~ &amp; Firin~ Lines&#13;
Hunting safety&#13;
critical&#13;
by Scott Reinhard&#13;
Picture yourse!! duck hunting on a small pond. The morning is foggy&#13;
and rainy. Visihility is poor. SUddenly you see a diver duck only t"':ee&#13;
feet above the water flying directly in front of you. You qwckly raise&#13;
your gun and fire only to be met with the screams of a hunter m a blind&#13;
directly across from you. . .&#13;
• Picture yourself again. This lime it's opening day of deer hunting.&#13;
You're tense and excited with anticipation. To your left you he~&#13;
something coming towards you. It's getting closer and closer. Now '~&#13;
I fifty feet away thrashing in the brush. You see It moving a&#13;
quickly shoulder your rifle and fire. You directly run to the brush and&#13;
find you 've shot your partner. .,&#13;
So d like FairY tales? Hardly! These situations and many more&#13;
un verv vear Hunting in WlSCOllSlDIS now in full bloom.&#13;
E:'~s,::~,: ~n e.timaied ~ thousand hunters were to enter&#13;
s ., oods and harvest approximately 125,000 deer. Every WlSconsm s W handlins&#13;
a1ties occur through careless gun - ....&#13;
year casu k b ter safety course three years ago I was taught five&#13;
When I too '~iliU:;esthat go with hunting and the safe use of fire&#13;
basic responsi confi"~ on P9. 8&#13;
arms.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
.Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN8 U1. TIL 10:38 P.M.&#13;
2615 W.. hi ..... /We. 6~2i7J&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 24, 1976 7&#13;
Plays scheduled&#13;
On December 10, 11, and 12,&#13;
Samuel Beckett's play Endgame&#13;
will be presented in Studio B of&#13;
the Corom-Arts Building. The&#13;
east for this production is: Anthony&#13;
Warren as Hamm, Robert&#13;
Jilk as Clove, Sue Wishau as Nell,&#13;
and Marc Miller as Nagg. Act&#13;
Without Words bas a cast of one.&#13;
This will be played by Oleryl&#13;
Powa1isz.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
Hom Goers Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
FRIDAYS 3-6&#13;
). "l.-~•&#13;
r&#13;
,.,tjll~~ ,,'\o.t ..~...&#13;
,t""1iI ~ \&#13;
IN THE REC CENTER , UNION SQUARE&#13;
Brad f Q rd~continued~frompg--:--- .1 - / -&#13;
becoming smaller anu smcl!er each year and that if&#13;
a new high school is built it will be financed by&#13;
refinancing the debt and stretching the debt&#13;
better than the average grade point average of&#13;
students at Tremper. Why is this so? Ron Parker&#13;
says for two reasons: (1) under adverse conditions&#13;
people band together and (2) because teachers lack&#13;
adequate facilities they may expect less of a student&#13;
at Bradford than they do of a student at Tremper.&#13;
, payments over say ten or fifteen years.&#13;
However as Parker reluctantly admitted, if a new&#13;
high school is not built, there will probably be a tax&#13;
cut; and taxes will not raise (if the new high school&#13;
is built) only if Kenosha does not raise its expenditures&#13;
on say roads or sewers.&#13;
Another question is with enrillment declining why&#13;
not wait ten years and then Tremper and Bradford&#13;
will be able to handle the amount of·students that&#13;
will be then enrolled in school. Ron says that this&#13;
view is commonly held but it is not substantiated by&#13;
the facts.&#13;
In conclusion we asked Parker two final&#13;
questions: (1) what will happen if the new high&#13;
school is not built and (2) what will happen if the&#13;
new high school is built?&#13;
"For every month Kenosha waits in building a&#13;
new high school the costs go up thirty thousand&#13;
dollars. If the new tiigh school is not built students&#13;
may have to go on split shifts; educational quality&#13;
will suffer; there might be a fire in the annex&#13;
with loss of life in the hundreds," said Parker. Parker says that the facts are as follows: (1) for&#13;
the first time in years first grade enrollment has&#13;
gone up in Kenosha and the Assistant Superintendent&#13;
of Schools for Kenosha says that he foresees&#13;
no decline in enrollment, and in fact sees an increase&#13;
in enrollment, (2) the question is not only&#13;
enrollment, more importantly the question is the&#13;
quality of education.&#13;
"If a new high school is built taxes will not go up;&#13;
students will not go on split shifts and educational&#13;
quality will rise," he added.&#13;
What can the individual student at Parkside do if&#13;
he or she agrees with Parker? "Well in the spring&#13;
there will be a referendum on the ballot, the best&#13;
thing the people at Parkside can do is to vote yes on&#13;
This the referendum," he said. last point raises a very interesting statistic.&#13;
Tue average grade point of Bradford students is&#13;
p LA ,TO-contlnued-frompg .l __ _&#13;
The displayed the touchsensitive&#13;
capabilities df the&#13;
terminal. Bitzer put picture on&#13;
the screen of elementary items,&#13;
such as an apple, an elephant and&#13;
many others. He touched the&#13;
screen and a magnetic disk&#13;
played back what had been&#13;
touched.&#13;
Bitzer also brought alo~g a&#13;
synthesizer with sound which&#13;
played "The Entertainer" ,&#13;
Fodor '.&#13;
to teach&#13;
Violinist Eugene Fodor, artistin-residence&#13;
at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, will teach&#13;
his second set of master classes&#13;
at the campus on Saturday, fiov.&#13;
28, and Saturday and Sunday,&#13;
Dec. 18 and 19. Registration as a&#13;
participant or auditor can . be&#13;
made by contacting Cindy Gray&#13;
at 553-2488.&#13;
Fodor and Parkside faeulty&#13;
pianist Stephen Swedish, who&#13;
have just returned from a concert&#13;
tour of Japan, appeared last&#13;
Friday (Nov. 19) on the Johnny&#13;
Carson Tonight Show, where they&#13;
have been frequent guests.&#13;
During hi:s campus stay, Fodor&#13;
also will present the first · in a&#13;
series of ttiree Young Persons'&#13;
Concerts, at 10:30 a.m. on&#13;
Friday, Nov. 26, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Other concerts in the series are&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 26, when&#13;
saxophonist Tim Bell of the&#13;
music faculty will perform with&#13;
the award-winning Parkside Jazz&#13;
Ensemble, and Saturday, April&#13;
16, when Prof. Swedish will play.&#13;
Tickets are . $1 per concert for&#13;
students and $2 for adults and are&#13;
available by writing Young&#13;
Persons' Concert Series at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Fodor, 26, winner of the 1974&#13;
Tchaikowsky Competition in&#13;
Moscow and the 1972 International&#13;
Paganini Competition ·&#13;
in Italy, also is featured in the&#13;
cover sotry of the current issue of&#13;
Accent, a magazine for young&#13;
musicians.&#13;
- The disks may contain 4,096&#13;
different, audio messages at a&#13;
rate of approximately one per&#13;
every .3 of a second.&#13;
Bitzer stated that it is possible&#13;
to have a terminal in every home&#13;
by 1980, providing that people -&#13;
can - afford the cost, which is&#13;
approximately that of a color&#13;
television. It (PLATO) could&#13;
provide world-wide communications&#13;
for millions, he&#13;
(&#13;
I&#13;
\.&#13;
stated.&#13;
Currently, PLATO is being&#13;
used at 26 universities, several&#13;
penal institutions, government&#13;
agencies, and in business and&#13;
industry.&#13;
PLATO has had programs&#13;
written for it in a variety of areas&#13;
on all educational levels, in&#13;
eluding biology, in which Bitzer&#13;
demonstrated a program&#13;
simulating the genetic behavior&#13;
of fruitflies.&#13;
Fishing &amp; Firing Lines&#13;
Hunting safety&#13;
critical&#13;
by Scott Reinhard&#13;
Picture yourseJ.f duck hunting on a small pond. The morning is foggy&#13;
and rainy. Visibility is poor. ~udde~y you see a diver duck _only tm:ee&#13;
feet above the water flying drrectly m front of you. You qw~kly ra.ise&#13;
your gun and fire only to be met with the screams of a hunter m a blind&#13;
directly across from you. . , Picture yourself again. This time it's opening day of deer huntmg.&#13;
You're tense and excited with anticipation. To your left you h~~r&#13;
something coming towards you. It's getting closer and c!oser. ~ow its&#13;
1 fif feet away thrashing in the brush. You see it movmg and&#13;
~~i~kly ~boulder your rifle and fire. You directly run to the brush and&#13;
find you've shot your partner. Sound like Fairy tales? Hardly! These situa?~ns and: many ~ore&#13;
erv vear Hunting in Wisconsm 1s now m full bloom.&#13;
grues~: o~cur :; ~stimated ~ thousand hunters were to enter&#13;
~st a_~ ayoods and harvest approximately 125,000 deer. Every Wisconsin s w h dling alties occur through careless gun an . . year casu k b ter safety course three years ago I was taught five&#13;
When I too ~bil~ti~es that go with hunting and the safe use of fire basic respons1 1 continued on pg 8&#13;
arms.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP,&#13;
· · Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sand11ich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P..M.&#13;
2615 Washington /we. 634-2373&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 24, 1976 7&#13;
Plays scheduled&#13;
On December 10, 11, and 12,&#13;
Samuel Beckett's play Endgame&#13;
will be presented in Studio B of&#13;
the Comm-Arts Building. The&#13;
cast for this production is: Anthony&#13;
Warren as Hamm, Robert&#13;
Jilk as Clove, Sue Wishau as Nell,&#13;
and Marc Miller as Nagg. Act&#13;
Without Words has a cast of one.&#13;
This will be played by Cheryl&#13;
Powalisz.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
FIIDAYS 3-6&#13;
I ·I&#13;
BEER .... .,,,,, . ,t&#13;
\~ .. .&#13;
~&#13;
IN THE REC CENTER &amp; UNION SQUARE&#13;
OPTICAL&#13;
BOUTIQUE&#13;
552-7610&#13;
4425 Taylor&#13;
only ten minutes from Kenosha &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 24, 1976&#13;
NAIA run on home turf&#13;
by Tboma. No.... and&#13;
.Ie. Teauta&#13;
Edinboro . won the learn&#13;
championship with 56 points as&#13;
Foley's teammates Henry&#13;
Wmger and Jeff Foster finished&#13;
fifth and sixth respectively.&#13;
Adams Stale (Colo.) was second&#13;
with 103 points, and the district&#13;
winner from the November 13&#13;
meet at Parkside, UW-I.aCrosse,&#13;
was third with 184. .&#13;
Kebiro kept the individual title&#13;
at Eastern New Mexico for the&#13;
third straight year. Mike Boit,&#13;
another Kenyan, won the title for&#13;
the school in 1974and 1975.&#13;
tenth at 24:44, respectively.&#13;
Also representing Wisconsin in&#13;
the meet were the UW-Stevens&#13;
Point Pointers, who finished&#13;
ninth and the Rangers, who were&#13;
26th.Forty-none full teams and 44&#13;
partial teams were represented&#13;
in the meet.&#13;
John Kebiro, a native of Kenya&#13;
and a student at Eastern New&#13;
Mexico, ran to a counre record ~f&#13;
24 minutes, 21 seconds to outdi.stance&#13;
Kevin Foley of Edinboro&#13;
(Pa.) Slale in the 21st Annual&#13;
ational Athletic Intercollegiate&#13;
Cross Country Championship&#13;
Saturday at the Parkside course.&#13;
Kebiro is the NAIA&#13;
steeplechase record holder at&#13;
3000 meters and set a first mile&#13;
poce of four minutes and 49&#13;
seconds. Approximately 408&#13;
runners started the race and out&#13;
of the 376 that finished, only&#13;
Foley kept close for the five mile&#13;
race,&#13;
Other team scores were fourth&#13;
place Indiana University (Pa.),&#13;
211; Oklahoma Christian, 220;&#13;
Lewis University (Ill.) 261t;&#13;
Malone College (Ohio), 297; Fort&#13;
Hays State (Kan.) 323; UWStevens&#13;
Point, 359; and Central&#13;
Washington State, 377. Parkside&#13;
totalled 637.&#13;
The top 2S individual runners&#13;
will receive all-American honors&#13;
including Desmond O'Connor,&#13;
La Crosse recorded the highest&#13;
finish in the school's history&#13;
behind the perfonnances of twin&#13;
brothers, Jim and Joe Hanson, as.&#13;
they finisbed fourth in 24:36 and&#13;
Rangers debut&#13;
season at-home&#13;
Parkslde's basketball team&#13;
will make their 1976-77 season&#13;
debut against UW-I.aCrosse&#13;
Friday night and will face UWWhitewater&#13;
Saturday night, both&#13;
in the Physical Education&#13;
Building, beginning at 7:30.&#13;
The team will be gunning for its&#13;
third straight NAtA District 14&#13;
title and trip to the NAtA national&#13;
tournament, a feat never before&#13;
accomplished by a Wisconsin&#13;
college. The Rangers have&#13;
finished 24-7and 24-9the past two&#13;
seasons.&#13;
The team has eight returning&#13;
lellermen, including Leartha&#13;
Scott and Stevie King both&#13;
starters from last year. Scott, a 6-&#13;
4 senior forward was the Rangers&#13;
No.2 scorer last season at 20.7.&#13;
King, a 6-0 junior guard, is a slick&#13;
ball handler and very quick.&#13;
Also returning and probably&#13;
starling in the weekend&#13;
contest are Marshall Hill at the&#13;
post, Joe Foots in the backcourt&#13;
and Mike Hanke at the front line.&#13;
other lettermen who should see&#13;
action are senior forward Rade&#13;
Dimitrijevi IJeVlC,sop omore forward h&#13;
PARAPH ER NALIA SQUARE Marvin Chones, and senior guard&#13;
Laurence Brown.&#13;
THE MINI-MALL Newcomers will include center&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE Lester Thompson, guard Jim STEP AHEAD OF CHRISTMAS. LIQUIDATION OF All POTTERY AND Hanke and forward Lonnie&#13;
MACRAME GET A FREE POT WITH COUPON, QUANTITIES LIMITED! Lewis.&#13;
~ ~&#13;
What the others are saging" I&#13;
~ ~we've alreadg /&#13;
~~~.o. demonstrated. I&#13;
'\: fb\~e"",~ • Better engine protection. • Increased I&#13;
~~. ~':/ fuel economy .• Better high-temperature&#13;
,.- s !&#13;
~ performance. • Fast sub-zero starts. I'&#13;
.... • Coss oil consumption ., cleaner en- I ~ "'I gine. • 25,OOO-mile oil change&#13;
AIlS/OIL VS PETROLEUM LUBRICANT" c...... "S/OIL&#13;
AMIJOIL, ... ,. ,..... ., 25.000 "' ....&#13;
I&#13;
e-__&#13;
.. to • "OCJIIf (J' to +3CXJII'F Of' one ,..,.&#13;
0Udd0n (% 'tt8cOIity Inc:r .... InfI.4 Ch8nge FIfIer .t&#13;
houtbyAP' .... , ... ,.... "'2.500 m.....&#13;
--("'0" Io88lOOlbtI tor 1 tw&#13;
by, ........ 1 ,1 milMgrwns ""_.... '. -0- Vo&amp;Iiflllty .' 01 e'It.po,.tlOn @ 3OO"f -- --&#13;
o &lt;~.&#13;
lot 22 lI" I ", - = f ~ '-"'per.... (""""'ed&#13;
durtflG l:C8ndwo,urWng ~l .- -&#13;
--- i;n H7O'F&#13;
Engtne c:r...... 2SO,.,... 0IJIIf '2 ........ 70.-_ .-&#13;
Etlgtne cr8Nl .. 250 RPM • -tCP"" ...--.",.--&#13;
"SuCItKt to USlAl tNnUlecluMg ~&#13;
....,..&#13;
Too good to be true? No. Because thousands of AMS/OIL users have&#13;
already experienced these extraordinary performance feafures AMS/OIL&#13;
was t"st to commerCially market an SAE lOW·40 synthetiC engine 011 to&#13;
meet API ClaSSIfication SE. which means AMS/OIL can be used In any&#13;
Car So while the new synthehc lubricants you see today were stili In the&#13;
test lab. AMS/OIL was In the crankcases of cars and trucks lustltke you IS&#13;
And when you're satisfied. thaI's the final test of a lubncant&#13;
Retail· Wholesale See your AMS/OIL dealer todayl&#13;
DEALERS WANTED Mike Villers (414)-637-2726 Direct Ouler1h,ps Available.&#13;
c.el For Appolntmenl&#13;
No r.rr,tory ReStrICllons'&#13;
No F'8I'ICh Sl'sl Racine, Wise. 53404&#13;
2600 West High ~9&#13;
No L.,~ Inven10rv or&#13;
Invn1" __'" "'~SSOllrv. lhe quael leader In synlhelk lubrlcallon&#13;
-&#13;
Angelo State, third; Garry&#13;
Henry, Pembroke State (N.C.),&#13;
seventh; Steve Littleton,&#13;
University of Pittsburgh&#13;
(Johnstown), eighth; and Tony&#13;
Luttrell, Spring Arbor, (Mich.),&#13;
ninth. .&#13;
The top finisher for the&#13;
Rangers was Ray Fredericksen,&#13;
who was 30th. His coach, Vic&#13;
Godfrey, thought he did an&#13;
uexceptional job. tl&#13;
other Parkside runners were&#13;
Jeff Miller, 131; Gary Priem, 143;&#13;
Mike Rivers. 146; Greg Julich,&#13;
187; Jim Heiring, 212; and Lee&#13;
Allinger, 214.&#13;
Coach Gndfrey was pleased by&#13;
how well the meet went, stating,&#13;
"The meet went perfectly; the&#13;
weather was great as well as the&#13;
awards banquet, with no&#13;
hangups. It was perhaps the best&#13;
championship meet ever held"&#13;
Coach Godfrey noted the f~t&#13;
44 finishers broke the cOUrse&#13;
record.&#13;
The coach bad anticipated his&#13;
team to place seven or eight&#13;
places higher but felt On the&#13;
whole, the team bad a gOOd&#13;
season.&#13;
"We'll only be losing one senior&#13;
for next year's team, so Ithink&#13;
for the next couple of years "e&#13;
should finish in the top ten in'thi.!&#13;
meet." "&#13;
The team had a 5-1 dual meet&#13;
record, tying the best Parkside&#13;
season record, and were the third&#13;
place finishers in Distr:ict 14,this&#13;
season.&#13;
Treat every gun as If It were loaded: "I didn't know it was loaded "&#13;
is the poorest excuse to the worst type of tragedy. The majority 'of&#13;
hunting accidents occur within ones own hunting party. This means&#13;
that the majority of these tragedies involve relatives and close&#13;
friends. Always open the actions of a gun and check it.&#13;
Always point the gun In a safe direction. The muzzle of a gun should&#13;
never be pointed at any person including yourself. Preferably the&#13;
muzzle should be pointed down so that if it should accidently&#13;
discharge it will only hit the ground.&#13;
Be absolutely certain of a target before shooting and know wile....lbe&#13;
bullet will stop. Always fully identify game before shooting at it. Do&#13;
not only shoot at a sound, or patch of color, or any object unW it i.!In&#13;
full view. Know if the bullet is going to stop in the hillside or travel&#13;
miles and stop in a populated area.&#13;
Just recently Bong Public Hunting Grounds were closed to target&#13;
shooting due to an incident which involved two men target shooling.&#13;
With no regards to trajectory these men set their target on a hilltop.&#13;
The bullets were hitling a farm house two miles away.&#13;
Practice courtesy and self control. Courtesy should be employed&#13;
when hunting on another man's land. Respect should be given to&#13;
property and livestock. Remember the impression he receives of you&#13;
reflects on all hunters.&#13;
Self control should be practiced at all times. The hunter is under a&#13;
lot of stress whe'n he focuses his attention on obtaining game. Every&#13;
snapping twig, rustling leaf, or movement out of the corner of your eye&#13;
adds to it. The hunter should be under full control of every action he&#13;
makes.&#13;
Obey the laws. Anti-hunters are ready to devour our sport at any&#13;
moment, and the amount of violations are in their favor. What you do&#13;
now can determine if there will be a next time to do it. Sportsmen can&#13;
do something to stop the outbreak of violations.&#13;
If a person violates-get his back. tag number, car or boat license&#13;
number. Get the best description possible of the individual and how he&#13;
isdressed; approximate age, height, weight, and build are important.&#13;
Mark the spot or spots the hunter stood while shooting. Observe&#13;
closely the hunter's action after the violation. You are urged to carry a&#13;
notebook and pencil and jot down this information at once. Get this&#13;
information to the nearest conservation warden rapidly. The county&#13;
sheriff can get in touch with the warden. Then leave your name, ad.&#13;
dress and phone number so the warden can get in touch with you for.&#13;
further information if necessary.&#13;
featuring:&#13;
a variety of your condy&#13;
and nut fovorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
BRIDGI&#13;
the&#13;
generation&#13;
gap!&#13;
BUY YOUR PARENTS&#13;
SOME BRIOGE MIX!&#13;
Only 95'/ha~ pound&#13;
10 o.m. 4 pm&#13;
LOCATED IN UNION BIZARRE&#13;
s THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 24, 1976&#13;
NAIA run on honte turf&#13;
by 'lboma olan and&#13;
Jean Tenuta&#13;
John Kebiro, a native of Kenya&#13;
and a student at Eastern New&#13;
exico. ran to a course record of&#13;
24 minute , 21 seconds to outdistance&#13;
Kevin Foley of Edinboro&#13;
( Pa.) State in the 21st Annual&#13;
tional Athletic Intercollegiate&#13;
Cro Country Championship&#13;
turday at the Parkside course.&#13;
K biro is the NAIA&#13;
pl chase record holder at&#13;
m ter and set a first mile&#13;
pa £ four minutes and 49&#13;
conds. Approximately 408&#13;
runn tarted the race and out&#13;
the 376 that finished, only&#13;
Fol y k pt close for the five mile&#13;
r&#13;
Edinboro . won the team&#13;
championship with 56 points as&#13;
Foley's teammates Henry&#13;
Winger and Jeff Foster finished&#13;
fifth and sixth respectively.&#13;
Adams State (Colo.) was second&#13;
with 103 points, and the district&#13;
winner from the November 13&#13;
meet at Parkside, UW-LaCrosse,&#13;
was third with 184. .&#13;
Kebiro kept the individual title&#13;
at Eastern New Mexico for the&#13;
third straight year. Mike Boit,&#13;
another Kenyan, won the title for&#13;
the school in 1974 and 1975.&#13;
La Crosse recorded the highest&#13;
finish in the school's history&#13;
behind the performances of twin&#13;
brothers, Jim and Joe Hanson, ~s&#13;
they fini~ed fourth in 24: 36 and&#13;
tenth at 24:44, respectively.&#13;
Also representing Wisconsin in&#13;
the meet were the UW-Stevens&#13;
Point Pointers, who finished&#13;
ninth and the Rangers, who were&#13;
26th. Forty-none full teams and 44&#13;
partial teams were represented&#13;
in the meet.&#13;
Other team scores were fourth&#13;
place Indiana University (Pa.),&#13;
211; Oklahoma Christian, 220;&#13;
Lewis University (Ill.) 26&amp;;&#13;
Malone College (Ohio), 297; Fort&#13;
Hays State (Kan.) 323; UWStevens&#13;
Point, 359; and Central&#13;
Washington State, 377. Parkside&#13;
totalled 637.&#13;
The top 25 individual runners&#13;
will receive all-American honors&#13;
including Desmond O'Connor,&#13;
Rangers debut&#13;
season at home&#13;
Parks1de's basketball team&#13;
ill make their 1976-77 season&#13;
debut against UW-LaCrosse&#13;
rlday night and will face UWWh.it&#13;
water Saturday night, both&#13;
n th Physical Education&#13;
Building, beginning at 7:30.&#13;
Th team will be guMing for its&#13;
third traight NAIA District 14&#13;
UU and trip to the NAIA national&#13;
tournament, a feat never before&#13;
accomplished by a Wisconsin&#13;
college . The Rangers have&#13;
finished 24-7 and 24-9 the past two&#13;
seasons.&#13;
The team has eight returning&#13;
lettermen, including Leartha&#13;
Scott and Stevie King both&#13;
starters from last year. Scott, a 6-&#13;
4 senior forward was the Rangers&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SOUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
STEP AHEAD OF CHRISTMAS LIQUIDATION OF ALL POTTERY ANO&#13;
ACRAME GET A FREE POT WITH COUPON, QUANTITIES LIMITED!&#13;
No. 2 scorer last season at 20.7.&#13;
King, a 6-0 junior guard, is a slick&#13;
ball handler and very quick.&#13;
Also returning and probably&#13;
starting in the weekend&#13;
contest are Marshall Hill at the&#13;
post, Joe Foots in the backcourt&#13;
and Mike Hanke at the front line.&#13;
Other lettermen who should see&#13;
action are senior forward Rade&#13;
Dimitrijevic, sophomore forward&#13;
Marvin Chones, and senior guard&#13;
Laurence Brown. .&#13;
Newcomers will include center&#13;
Lester Thompson, guard Jim&#13;
Hanke and forward Lonnie&#13;
Lewis.&#13;
What the others are saging. \&#13;
~ ~we've already I&#13;
~ ~~-r~~ ~~.~?.!.~!"~!!!.~·! ~ ~-,..::., fuel economy. • Better high-temperature I - 1,.,,. s..,.. t..,..,. I .. ~ _,.o performance. • Fast sub-zero starts. ~ '.c .. di "' 1&#13;
1 ':,!',,'I;. . ~ • Less oil consumption. • A cleaner en- I&#13;
/'" gine. • 25,000-mile oil change. ,&#13;
AMS/OIL&#13;
~ ~~ vs PETROLEUM LU8AICA..,.. Change AMS/OIL l&#13;
Lullrication Range&#13;
o,uoat,on (' Vlecoe,ty Iner-In M&#13;
llo&lt;lrt,yAPI_,&#13;
W- CffiQ w, IOee IIOO IN lo, 1 hr&#13;
t,y Feiex 1-11&#13;
Flulcl,ty ~&#13;
VOie bi ty 1•,., ol ...,aporahon 300'f&#13;
lo, 22 ht1 I&#13;
C,-ca. ..,.,,pere,u,• (,,._,red&#13;
during atan&lt;taro running MQuenc.)&#13;
£"91N crenlt et 250 RPM O 0"f&#13;
AIIIIJOtL 11W.... pwe, ••-,...... et 25,000 mllN&#13;
-eoto+400'I' '1'10+300'f or one, • .,,&#13;
Change Futer et&#13;
9% 102% · 12,soo mllM.&#13;
1.1 mlfllgfem• 3-e mllllgrema&#13;
FlowsReedlly Solldlfled&#13;
1% 28%&#13;
+ 470"F + 360'F&#13;
12AMPS-. 70.AMPs-lde&#13;
22.AMPS-. 270.AMPs-lde&#13;
I&#13;
Too good to be true? No Because thousands of AMS/ OIL users have&#13;
ahead experienced these extraordinary performance features AMS/OIL&#13;
was hrs o commercially ar et an SAE 10W-40 synthetic engine 011 to&#13;
me API C ass1hcat1on SE. which means AMS/ OIL can be used in any&#13;
car So h1le the new s et1c tubncants you see today were still •n the&#13;
t st lab. AMS/OIL was in t e cran cases of cars and trucks 1ust like yours&#13;
And w n you're sa sf,ed, tha s the final test of a lubricant&#13;
Retail · Wholesale See your AMS/OIL dealer today1&#13;
DEALERS WANTED Mike Villers (414)-637-2&#13;
8&#13;
726&#13;
2600 West High If~,&#13;
Racine, Wisc. 53404&#13;
."c:::===========!...:•.:.:.hc:.' q~u~ader In synthetic lubrlcatlon&#13;
Angelo State, third; Garry&#13;
Henry, Pembroke State (N.C.),&#13;
seventh; Steve Littleton,&#13;
University of Pittsburgh&#13;
(Johnstown), eighth; and Tony&#13;
Luttrell, Spring Arbor, (Mich.),&#13;
ninth. .&#13;
The top finisher for the&#13;
Rangers was Ray Fredericksen,&#13;
who was 30th. His coach, Vic&#13;
Godfrey. thought he did an&#13;
"exceptional job."&#13;
Other Parkside runners were&#13;
Jeff Miller, 131; Gary Priem, 143;&#13;
Mike Rivers, 146; Greg Julich,&#13;
187; Jim Heiring, 212; and Lee&#13;
Allinger, 214.&#13;
Coach Godfrey was pleased by&#13;
how well the meet went, stating,&#13;
"The meet went perfectly; the&#13;
weather was great as well as the&#13;
awards banquet, with&#13;
no hangups. It was perhaps the be t&#13;
championship meet ever held~.&#13;
Coach Godfrey noted the fir~t&#13;
44 finishers broke the course&#13;
record.&#13;
The coach had anticipated his&#13;
team to place seven or eight&#13;
places higher but felt on the&#13;
whole, the team had a gooct&#13;
season.&#13;
"We'll only be losing one senior&#13;
for next year's team, so I think&#13;
for the next couple of years we&#13;
should finish in the top ten in1&#13;
this&#13;
meet." ·&#13;
The team had a 6-1 dual meet&#13;
record, tying the best Parkside&#13;
season record, and were the third&#13;
place finishers in District 14, this&#13;
season.&#13;
Sa/ety-con-,inue-dfro-mpg- .7-. ---&#13;
Treat every gun as if it were loaded: "I didn't lmow it was loaded"&#13;
is the poorest excuse to the worst type of tragedy. The majority 'of&#13;
hunting accidents occur within ones own hunting party. This means&#13;
that the majority of these tragedies involve relatives and close&#13;
friends. Always open the actions of a gun and check it.&#13;
Always point the gun in a safe direction. The muzzle of a gun should&#13;
never be pointed at any person including yourself. Preferably the&#13;
muzzle should be pointed down so that if it should accidently&#13;
discharge it will only hit the ground.&#13;
Be absolutely certain of a target before shooting and know where the&#13;
bullet will stop. Always fully identify game before shooting at it. Do&#13;
not only shoot at a sound, or patch of color, or any object until it is in&#13;
full view. Know if the bullet is going to stop in the hillside or travel&#13;
miles and stop in a populated area.&#13;
Just recently Bong Public Hunting Grounds were closed to target&#13;
shooting due to an incident which involved two men target shooting.&#13;
With no regards to trajectory these men set their target on a hill~.&#13;
The bullets were hitting a farm house two miles away.&#13;
Practice courtesy and self control. Courtesy should be employed&#13;
when hunting on another man's land. Respect should be given to&#13;
property and livestock. Remember the impression he receives of you&#13;
reflects on all hunters.&#13;
Self control-should be practiced at all times. The hunter is under a&#13;
lot of stress whe'n he focuses his attention on obtaining game. Every&#13;
snapping twig, rustlL,g leaf, or movement out of the corner of your eye&#13;
adds to it. The hunter should be under full control of every action he&#13;
makes.&#13;
Obey the laws. Anti-hunters are ready to devour our sport at any&#13;
moment, and the amount of violations are in their favor. What you do&#13;
now can determine if there will be a next time to do it. Sportsmen can&#13;
do something to stop the outbreak of violations.&#13;
If a person violates-get his back. tag number, car or boat license&#13;
number. Get the best descripµon possible of the individual and how he&#13;
is dressed; approximate age, height, weight, and build are important.&#13;
Mark the spot or spots the hunter stood while shooting. Observe&#13;
closely the hunter's action after the violation. You are urged to carry a&#13;
notebook and pencil and jot down this information at once. Get this&#13;
information to the nearest conservation warden rapidly. The county&#13;
sheriff can get in touch with the warden. Then leave your name, address&#13;
and phone number so the warden can get in touch with you for ,&#13;
further infoqnation if necessary.&#13;
!Je c9lbe&#13;
~1uttt c&amp;boppt&#13;
10 o.m. 4 pm&#13;
featuring:&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favorties sold&#13;
' the old-fashioned way&#13;
BRIDGI&#13;
the&#13;
generation&#13;
gap!&#13;
BUY YOUR PARENTS&#13;
SOME BRIDGE MIX!&#13;
Only 95• /half pound&#13;
LOCATED IN UNION BIZARRE </text>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66161">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 5, issue 11, November 24, 1976</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66162">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
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              <text>LLC video tapes illegal&#13;
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              <text>LLC video tapes illegal&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
As many as 70 percent of the&#13;
Library Center's video tapes are&#13;
in villation of copyright laws,&#13;
according to Joseph Boisse,&#13;
director of the Center.&#13;
The approximate 300 tapes&#13;
eonsist mostly of reproduced&#13;
television shows, although there&#13;
are some which.were copied. from&#13;
films rented by Parkside ( a&#13;
practice discontinued a couple of&#13;
years ago). said Carla Stoffle,&#13;
assistant director of the LLC.&#13;
Stolfie remarked tha t the&#13;
illegality was noticed when&#13;
Boissetook over as director of the&#13;
merged Library and Learning&#13;
Center last summer.&#13;
The video tapes were originally&#13;
the property Of the former&#13;
Joseph Bolsse&#13;
Learning Center which was&#13;
directed by Beecham Robinson.&#13;
now special consultant-associate&#13;
professor of education.&#13;
When questioned about the&#13;
tapes, Robinson said, "We don't&#13;
have any illegal tapes on the&#13;
shelves - not to myknowledga."&#13;
He said that when video tapes&#13;
such as these were made, they&#13;
Beecham Robinson&#13;
were usually only held for up to a&#13;
semester's length of time.&#13;
Though Boisse contended that&#13;
the tapes were illegal when they&#13;
were made," Robinson said that&#13;
there was confusion at the time&#13;
concerning what was legal to&#13;
copy and that recent copyright&#13;
legislation is probably what&#13;
would make those sort of holdings&#13;
The Pari&lt;side ilI&#13;
_&#13;
eg&#13;
_&#13;
al&#13;
. _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 10 Wednesday, November 17, 1976&#13;
"If there had been some&#13;
question if they (video tapes of&#13;
television programs in general)&#13;
were legal, there would have&#13;
been law suits; but there&#13;
weren't," he said.&#13;
Boisse, who indicated that&#13;
under new legislation he would be&#13;
held legally responsible for any&#13;
villations of copyright laws occurring&#13;
under his administration,&#13;
said that he received a directive&#13;
from Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Clayton Johnson requirtng that&#13;
all materials be kept in accordance&#13;
with copyright laws.&#13;
Campus administration had been&#13;
contacted upon discovery of the&#13;
violations.&#13;
Presently, measures are being&#13;
taken to correct tile situation&#13;
which Stoffle said should be&#13;
rectified by the end of this school&#13;
year. "Were trying to get back&#13;
on-the right course," she added.&#13;
Response to a memo sept to the&#13;
faculty should show which tapes&#13;
are used most regularly for&#13;
classes and then efforts will be&#13;
made to purchase or obtain&#13;
permission to use those tapes.&#13;
The rest will be erased, said&#13;
Stoffle.&#13;
The cost for one half hour of a&#13;
television show is approlllmat.ely&#13;
$350 while the price of fllma is&#13;
higher, said Boisse. He guessed&#13;
that only a small percentage of&#13;
the lLC tapes were moderat.ely&#13;
or heavily used. "We wUl&#13;
probnbl)' be able to obtain these&#13;
one way or another. II&#13;
Although he couldn't estimate&#13;
the amount of money which&#13;
woold be required he said that "it&#13;
would be a sizeable sum."&#13;
The funds to purchase the tapes&#13;
would come from budget balance&#13;
monies; •those funds which are&#13;
left over from Parkside's original&#13;
budget. Boisse plans to request&#13;
purchases of items separately as&#13;
they determine what tapes will be&#13;
needed rather then asking for one&#13;
lump sum.&#13;
When questioned as to what&#13;
chance the LLC had of obtaining&#13;
the needed funds, Boisse said,&#13;
"In past years the LLC has been&#13;
very successful in getting budget&#13;
balance money for special&#13;
projects. The past and present&#13;
administrations have been very&#13;
supportive of the lLC:' Though&#13;
he added that this doesn't mean&#13;
there will be no problems.&#13;
Safety of art labs questioned&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Being a Parkside art major&#13;
could be bazardous to your&#13;
health.&#13;
Among concerns of the Campus&#13;
Planning Committee at their&#13;
meeting last Friday was lbe&#13;
safety of art labs in the Communication&#13;
Arts building and the&#13;
erection of the lower for the&#13;
closed circuit T.V. distribution&#13;
"lIystem.&#13;
Mary Arnold, Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association senator,&#13;
represented the PSGA, stating&#13;
that the veQtilation of the 3-D lab&#13;
(CA 0137) is poor for the type of&#13;
fiberglass work that is currently&#13;
taking place there. Ervin&#13;
Zuelhke. assistant chancellor for&#13;
administration, reported that&#13;
students were not using the&#13;
welding room for their welding,&#13;
and mentioned the removal of&#13;
glass doors in the ceramics firing ~&#13;
area.&#13;
If OSHA were to hear of these&#13;
problems, we would almost have&#13;
to close two art labs (on the D-I&#13;
floor of the Comm. Arts&#13;
building). stated Zuelhke. OSHA&#13;
(The Occupational Safety and&#13;
Health Administration) sets and&#13;
administrates building safety'&#13;
standards.&#13;
The committee decided to&#13;
admonish the fine arts division to&#13;
start a safety committee 10 'Work&#13;
on the problems existing in the&#13;
art labs. Several members of the&#13;
comnrittee. Franklin Lowenthal&#13;
New ·V.P. chosen&#13;
by Douglas' Edenh~user&#13;
The Student Government&#13;
Senate elected a new vicepresident&#13;
at the meeting held&#13;
Wednesday 'November 10.&#13;
Harvey Hedden was sworn in to&#13;
the office that was left vacant by&#13;
the resignation' of Bob Vlach.&#13;
Before the official swearing in,&#13;
Hedden had to resigrf from his&#13;
position as associate justice due&#13;
to a possible conflict of interest.&#13;
He mentioned that he- plans to&#13;
begin helping President Kiyoko&#13;
Bowden with the overload of&#13;
administrative work that exists.&#13;
Hedden was with the Senate prior&#13;
to his election as a senator from&#13;
October 1973 to october 1975.&#13;
The office of president&#13;
pretempore was also filled at the&#13;
meeting. Senator Dan Nielsen&#13;
was elected by thesenate to the&#13;
office by a vote of 7 to 3 over&#13;
Senator Mary Arnold.&#13;
After his election Nielsen made&#13;
a number of proposals that were&#13;
all passed for alterations in the&#13;
structure and proceedings of the&#13;
Senate. .&#13;
One of the structural changes&#13;
that wok place was the realigning&#13;
of the present corrunittee system&#13;
into 4 committees that will now&#13;
do the work of 9 previous ones.&#13;
The standing committees of the&#13;
Senate will now consist of the&#13;
Institutional Policies Committee,&#13;
the Student Services Committee,&#13;
the Ways and Means Committee.&#13;
and the Student Organizational&#13;
Council.&#13;
The reason given for this&#13;
realignment was that there were&#13;
almost as many committees as&#13;
there were senators, leaving no&#13;
one to be on these committees.&#13;
The following appointments&#13;
were made at the meeting:&#13;
William Young to the Associate&#13;
Justice of the Student Court,&#13;
and chairperson of science&#13;
division, James Galbraith,&#13;
director of planning and construction&#13;
and Zuehlke, offered&#13;
their services.&#13;
The lower that was supposed to&#13;
be erected east of the buildings is&#13;
still in the drawing stage, according&#13;
to Galbraith, and&#13;
probably won't be finished until&#13;
the beginning of the next school&#13;
year or possibly not until 1978.&#13;
Committee member&#13;
Chelvadurai Manogaran,&#13;
associate professor of geography,&#13;
was' concerned about the money&#13;
that had been allocated for the&#13;
installation of meterologieal&#13;
instruments, which were purchased&#13;
at a cost of $25,000.&#13;
The money that had been set&#13;
Timothy Huck to lbe Acadermc&#13;
Actions Committee, Maureen&#13;
Flynn as an Associate Justice of&#13;
the Student Court, Caroyl&#13;
Williamson as Chief Justice of the&#13;
Student Court, Pat Heckel as&#13;
treasurer of PSGA, and Robert&#13;
Black to the Academic Planning&#13;
and Program Review Committee.&#13;
A motion was passed by the&#13;
Senate to request permanent use&#13;
of the old Sweete Shoppe as a&#13;
Student Government out-post.&#13;
This was done in an effort to&#13;
acquaint the students better with&#13;
the PSGA.&#13;
The report of the special investigative&#13;
committee to look&#13;
into the impeachment of Senator&#13;
Mary Arnold suggested that the&#13;
Senate try her as soon as possible&#13;
to get the matter out of the way&#13;
and also to provide her with a&#13;
speedy and fair trail.&#13;
aside from the original classroom&#13;
building moneys, according to&#13;
Zuelhke, is in the process of being&#13;
set aside by Central Administration&#13;
for other things. So&#13;
he suggested to the committee&#13;
that they spend it on some of the&#13;
installation necessities, before&#13;
central Administration spends it&#13;
on something else.&#13;
several requests wert made to&#13;
the committee for space on the&#13;
campus, among 'them were&#13;
requests for education learning&#13;
lbas, University Year for Action&#13;
office space, placement of audiovisual&#13;
equipment steeage, and&#13;
W1LC remodeling. These were&#13;
all referred to a special subcommittee.&#13;
INSIDE:&#13;
hapins&#13;
reviewed (pg.&#13;
LLC video&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
tapes illegal&#13;
As many as 70 percent of the&#13;
Library Center's video tapes are&#13;
in villation of copyright laws,&#13;
according to Joseph Boisse,&#13;
director of the Center.&#13;
The approximate 300 tapes&#13;
consist mostly of reproduced&#13;
television shows, although there&#13;
are some which.were copied from&#13;
films rented by Parkside ( a&#13;
practice discontinued a couple of&#13;
years ago), said Carla Stoffle,&#13;
assistant director of the LLC.&#13;
Stoffle remarked that the&#13;
illegality was noticed when&#13;
Boisse took over as director of the&#13;
merged Library and Learning&#13;
Center last summer.&#13;
The video tapes were originally&#13;
the property of the former&#13;
Joseph Boisse&#13;
Learning Center which was&#13;
directed by Beecham Robinson,&#13;
now special consultant-associate&#13;
professor of education.&#13;
When questioned about the&#13;
tapes, Robinson said, "We don't&#13;
have any illegal tapes on the&#13;
shelves - not to my'knowledge. "&#13;
He said that when video tapes&#13;
such as these were made, they&#13;
Beecham Robinson&#13;
were usually only held for up to a&#13;
semester's length of time.&#13;
Though Boisse contended that&#13;
the tapes were illegal when they&#13;
were made, Robinson said that&#13;
there was con.fusion at the time&#13;
concerning what was legal to&#13;
copy and that recent copyright&#13;
le·gislation is probably what&#13;
would make those sort of holdings&#13;
The Parkside----ill-eg_al ____ _&#13;
. '&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 10 Wednesday, November 17, 1976&#13;
" If there had been same&#13;
question if they ( video tapes of&#13;
television programs in general)&#13;
were legal. there would have&#13;
been law suits; but there&#13;
weren't," he said.&#13;
Boisse, who indicated that&#13;
under new legislation he would be&#13;
held legally responsible for any&#13;
villations of cop}Tight laws occurring&#13;
under his administration,&#13;
said that he received a directive&#13;
from Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Clayton Johnson requiring that&#13;
all materials be kept in accordance&#13;
with copyright laws.&#13;
Campus administration had been&#13;
contacted upon discovery of the&#13;
violations.&#13;
· Presently, measures are being&#13;
taken to correct the situation&#13;
which Stoffle said should t,e&#13;
rectified by the end of this school&#13;
year. "We're trying to get back&#13;
on -the ri6ht course," she added.&#13;
Response to a memo setit to the&#13;
facult. should show which tapes&#13;
are used most regularly for&#13;
classes and then efforts will be&#13;
made to purchase or obtain&#13;
permission to use those tapes.&#13;
The rest will be erased, said&#13;
Stoffle.&#13;
The cost for one hall hour of a&#13;
television show is approximately&#13;
$350 while the prire of films is&#13;
higher, said Boi. . He guessed&#13;
that only a smaU percentage of&#13;
the LLC tapes were mod rately&#13;
or heavil used. ·•we will&#13;
prob.lb!;,- be able to obtain the&#13;
one way or another.''&#13;
Although he couldn't estimate&#13;
the amount of money wh ch&#13;
would be required h said that "it&#13;
would be a sizeable um."&#13;
The funds to purchase th tapes&#13;
would come from budget balance&#13;
monies; . those funds which are&#13;
left over from Parkside' or ginal&#13;
budget. Boisse plans to request&#13;
purchase of item eparately a&#13;
they determine what tap will be&#13;
needed rather then asking for one&#13;
lump um.&#13;
When questioned as to what&#13;
chance the LLC had of obtaining&#13;
the needed .Cunds, Boi said,&#13;
" In past year the LLC has b n&#13;
very successful in getting budget&#13;
balance money for sp cial&#13;
projects. The past and pr nt&#13;
administrations have been very&#13;
supportive of the LLC." Though&#13;
he added that this doe n't m an&#13;
there will be no problem .&#13;
Safety of art labs questione_d&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Being a Parkside art major&#13;
could be hazardous to your&#13;
health.&#13;
Among concerns of the Campus&#13;
Planning Committee at their&#13;
meeting last Friday was the&#13;
safety of art labs in the Communication&#13;
Arts building and the&#13;
' ~rection of the tower for the&#13;
closed cir'cuit T.V. distribution&#13;
1.ystem.&#13;
Mary Arnold, Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association senator,&#13;
represented the PSGA, stating&#13;
that the vel)tilation of the 3-D lab&#13;
( CA D1 'J 7/ is poor for the type of&#13;
fiberglass work that is currently&#13;
taking place there . Ervin&#13;
Zuelhke, assistant chancellor for&#13;
administration, reported that&#13;
students were not using the&#13;
welding room for their welding,&#13;
and mentioned the removal of&#13;
glass doors in the ceramics firing ·&#13;
area.&#13;
If OSHA were to hear of these&#13;
problems, we would almost have&#13;
to close two art labs \ on the D-1&#13;
floor of the Comm. Arts&#13;
building), stated Zuelhke. OSHA&#13;
(The Occupational Safety and&#13;
Health Administration) sets and&#13;
administrates building safety·&#13;
standards.&#13;
The committee decided to&#13;
admonish the fine arts division to&#13;
start a safety committee to work&#13;
on the problems existii;ig in the&#13;
art labs. Several members of the&#13;
conuuitke, Franklin Lowenthal&#13;
New ·v.P. chosen&#13;
by Douglas-Edenh~user&#13;
The Student Government&#13;
Senate elected a new vicepresident&#13;
at the meeting held&#13;
Wednesday 'November 10.&#13;
Harvey Hedden was sworn in to&#13;
the office that was left vacant by&#13;
the resignation · of Bob Vlacq.&#13;
Before the official swearing in,&#13;
Hedden had to resign from his&#13;
position as associate justice due&#13;
to a possible conflict of interest.&#13;
He mentioned that he plans to&#13;
begin helping President Kiyoko&#13;
Bowclen with the overload of&#13;
administrative ~ork that exists.&#13;
Hedden was with the Senate prior&#13;
to his election as a senator from&#13;
October 1973 to October 1975.&#13;
The office of president&#13;
pretempore was also filled at the&#13;
meeting. Senator Dan Ni~lsen&#13;
was elected by the ·Senate to the&#13;
office by a vote of 7 to 3 over&#13;
Senator Mary Arnold.&#13;
After his election Nielsen made&#13;
a number of proposals that were&#13;
all passed for alterations in the&#13;
structure and proceedings of the&#13;
Senate . One of the structural changes&#13;
that took place was the realigning&#13;
of the present committee system&#13;
into 4 committees that will now&#13;
do the work of 9 previous ones.&#13;
The stand1ng committees of the&#13;
Senate will now consist of the&#13;
Institutional Policies Committee,&#13;
the Student Services Committee,&#13;
the Ways and Means Committee,&#13;
and the Student Organizational&#13;
Council.&#13;
The reason given for this&#13;
realignment was that there were&#13;
almost as many committees as&#13;
there were senators, leaving no&#13;
one to be on these committees.&#13;
The following appointments&#13;
were made at the meeting:&#13;
William Young to the Associate&#13;
Justice of the Student Court,&#13;
and chairperson of science&#13;
division, James Galbraith,&#13;
director of planning and construction&#13;
and Zuehlke, offered&#13;
their services.&#13;
The tower that was supposed to&#13;
be erected east of the buildings is&#13;
still in the drawing stage, according&#13;
to Galbraith, and&#13;
probably won't be finished until&#13;
the beginning of the next school&#13;
year or possibly not until 1978.&#13;
Committee member&#13;
Chelvadurai Manogaran,&#13;
associate professor of geography,&#13;
was· concerned about the money&#13;
that had been allocated for the&#13;
installation of meterological&#13;
instruments, which were purchased&#13;
at a cost of $25,000.&#13;
The money that had been set&#13;
Timothy Huck to the Academic&#13;
Actions Committee. Maureen&#13;
Flynn as an Associate Justice of&#13;
the Student Court, Caroyl&#13;
Williamson as Chief Justice of the&#13;
Student Court, Pat Heckel as&#13;
treasurer of PSGA, and Robert&#13;
Black to the Academic Planning&#13;
and Program Review Committee.&#13;
-&#13;
A motion was passej by the&#13;
Senate to request permanent use&#13;
of the old Sweete Shoppe as a&#13;
Student Government out-post.&#13;
This was done in an effort to&#13;
acquaint the students better with&#13;
the PSGA.&#13;
The report of the special investigative&#13;
committee to look&#13;
into the impeachment of Senator&#13;
Mary Arnold suggested that the&#13;
Senate try her as soon as possible&#13;
to get the matter out of the way&#13;
and also to pro\;de her with a&#13;
speedy and fair trail.&#13;
aside from the original classroom&#13;
building moneys, according to&#13;
Zuelhke, is in the process of being&#13;
set aside by Central Administration&#13;
for other things. So&#13;
he suggested to the committee&#13;
that they spend it on some of the&#13;
installation necessities, before&#13;
central Administration spends it&#13;
on something else.&#13;
INSIDE:&#13;
Several requests were made to&#13;
the committee for space on the&#13;
campus, among ' them were&#13;
requests for education learni&#13;
!bas, University Year for Action&#13;
office space, placement of audiovisual&#13;
equipment torage, and&#13;
WI.LC remodelin . Th w re&#13;
all referred to a pecial ubcommittee.&#13;
&#13;
hapins reviewed (p Y.&#13;
; &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER No_bet" 17. 1976&#13;
•&#13;
_--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
J&#13;
Liberation: a sense of dignity&#13;
llbrratloo. to '5tt at lJ~rl). rt:l~ij~'...r :n.."\" ;r ..rt 13 ~CJrll.lil~ y,hu!&#13;
the WOrMn's movement IS all about ,,"u: uwre ..... :llt'U.ln ...'l""'~:.&#13;
It adepthofCOftS("lousnessm ...~bl:tourrYo y,t·ln.-f. !~&lt;Ihll'. I JUt'raUu:&#13;
meamlO me a sense of dlgJ'ul) It means cornbtruruz u hea'thv pcrnor.&#13;
of self-.steem and confIdence an h.andhn~ c:U~ sI1UitUOf. You ~lJTlpl~&#13;
don t start mto any venltue with iI dt"feoaust altlllktt'. \'ohler!I ulIllk&#13;
untnowUl8ly, many women do&#13;
I am not a missiooar)' ('alh~ for every Youman to torceablv Jom Uh'&#13;
u.te of Woman's Liberation. Sunpl~' I want t;'\ ery woman 10&#13;
recog,uze possable options 3\'8llable to them flatoff;" IS mureo than 01•.&#13;
r. )'OU can partake of In lire Wtt an' :lut l 'lIIIN ...~1 t1f 100percer.1&#13;
housewife', 100 percent secretar} or )00 p&lt;&gt;rCPIIIlHlIther Rather \H'&#13;
should combine and expand oor ~pt' of mtt"re!'ol U In\'olve Cl~naan\&#13;
are as possible. What 1thmk \\l)men'~ Llb-'r"'lillfl IS trYing to teaeJ:&#13;
US lS to reall1e plt.enQal. r~CO);!.!'IIlt· allerrwtI\ 's .,II,l dl~l'O\"l'r wltlur'&#13;
.:u..rselv the II~J~ oUlit"ts of dL,I.t~ ti'~:-"l I-"'.'~'"''&#13;
It's like sa ing you're twenty-one year after year. You're not, and&#13;
h&#13;
y .. ar comes a little bit more .learnmx. 1110fl' exwith&#13;
ea,' ne·.}e ... So i the case wtth liberation Liber(l,llOil prepares us for" perlenees. is III(; different type of "growing up" SltlWotlon. ~IJ wutr.an shouhl II&lt;:jVt' t::&#13;
rmd herself desperately trying to fit into a mold someone else has&#13;
created for ner. . . I am not a "manhater." Connotatively, that IS the image .many&#13;
ople pt'rceive a feminist to be I am not obnoxiousl- overbearing ur&#13;
:e-sighted ...but I am a ferrlllHst. Stereutypmg has .affel'ted ttl!'&#13;
woman's movement, just as It has any other SOl'I~1 IIW\'elf.lr::t&#13;
Women's Liberation should not be par-alled with these rnlsconceptlOfl:'.&#13;
~ a fen:lini~t I believe I have Ideas and \'Il'WpOIi,ls "IJnh~ of I'Xpression.&#13;
All I expect is to be treated with th~ :ialllC illgnlty an.d worth&#13;
any person should be allowed. 1 don·t want .to be labeled ~lth selfimposing&#13;
limitations. I believ~ in myself. Clod tn my ('apablhtle~, allel :&#13;
think Women's Liberation believes In thiS, too. WHlIlen's 1.1ber~tlOflh&#13;
a hEalthy UI\}t;"ation towards these id('al~ .&#13;
POLITICAL FO,RUM&#13;
Daley losing power&#13;
by Phil HermaDD&#13;
Whal happell8lO a city and stale when a major political figure starls&#13;
10 slip' O1lcago and illinois will be finding that oul in the near future.&#13;
Mayor Richard Daley Is on his way out as head of the Democratic&#13;
party in Illinois. He will still he around, of course, but his power will be&#13;
50 decreased, It will not mean much&#13;
Wby Is Daley losing power'&#13;
I) The last presidential election Daley turned out the Democratic&#13;
vole for Jimmy UIrler, m the city of Chicago, but carter still lost in&#13;
Illinois; lhls means Jimmy owes Daley nothinR.&#13;
Whal carler will do, however,ls bypass Daley and work with Adlai&#13;
~enson, Jr. and Alan Dixon, two suPerstars in tile Illinois&#13;
Democratic party. So Daley will be effectively left out of the national&#13;
scene.&#13;
2) James Thompson slaughtered Daley's boy, Micheal Howlett, in&#13;
the race lor governor. Thompson, a Republican, destroyed Howlett in&#13;
the oty 01 OUcaRo and massacred him downstate. Howlett has&#13;
perennially been the strongesl 01 Daley's proteges and, in fact,&#13;
Howletl's link with the Mayor cost hun the election.&#13;
People outside 01 Chicago are sick of Daley and sick of it being&#13;
I&#13;
)LJ&#13;
Cafeteria outlaws&#13;
r e market&#13;
To EcIltor&#13;
P I acne with yo..- lett« 01&#13;
onmber 1D regarding Ihe&#13;
prlcee and pot\IODS In the _&#13;
cafderia&#13;
Ilhink however lhal you ahould&#13;
",,01'" before labelling lhls&#13;
lullon a. a laUure 01&#13;
capllaIIam .. Our c:afeletla Is,in&#13;
Jact. a prime n,mpJe of Slale&#13;
SociaIIam in pt1ICIice. III .....&#13;
tracl wllh lbe university&#13;
specifically oullaw. the key&#13;
cancepI of Jrcc enlerprbe and&#13;
c:unpWtion. U a lr.., market&#13;
exisIed al Parkside, alternative&#13;
food services would arise to m..,t&#13;
yo..- demands for better and&#13;
cr-per food. 'Their motive: to&#13;
make profit.&#13;
Ulllk!r capitalism, the boycotl&#13;
you auggf:lled _ be successful&#13;
If URi... Sqlllll'e c:onlinued&#13;
10 rip people off, II would go&#13;
bnIlrr&#13;
Jay GrasseD&#13;
Senior Life Sde"""&#13;
Illinois, Chicago instead of l'hlcago, Illinois. The city isn't as important&#13;
anymore since people are moving out of it to find the security&#13;
of the suburbs. Thompson has been quoted as saying, "I wiU work with&#13;
the Mayor as much as possible," but don't bet on it.&#13;
3) "Da city dat works" isn't; Chicago has one of the highest levels of&#13;
poverty in the country, If you don't believe this take a trip to either&#13;
south or north Chicago, Chicago also is in the top thr.., for lJlurder and&#13;
crime, right up there with New York and Detroit. Chicago's&#13;
educational system is so screwed up that the teachers go out on strike&#13;
just to break up the monotony, -&#13;
4) Daley is too old! The people of Illinois are sick of his face; the&#13;
trend is to younger men such as Dixon, Percy and Thompson. This will&#13;
be Daley's last term in office,&#13;
Chicago will be a lot better off when Daley is gone, and the sooner&#13;
the better. He has out-lived his usefulness as a Mayor with his oldfashioned&#13;
tactics. "The city that works" isn't working as well as Daley&#13;
would have the people believe and in the last election the specters of&#13;
the poor, unemployed, under-educated and the dead were saying,&#13;
"Why doesn't it work for us?" Sometime in the very near future,&#13;
Richard J. Daley will knock on a door and be told "Sorry Mayor, this&#13;
is a cloSed meeting."&#13;
! IW' The Parkside-·------ ~rr". RANGER&#13;
T1te P.rksHh A." .... is wrm.ft liltd edited '&#13;
by . .,.. stulMftt, ., t1M Un'"."l''' neu55i1rily repre'ent.tive of thon "eld by&#13;
WlicoftSln-P.rIl:Side Who .,.1 the students. '.culty or administration of&#13;
.... Mibl. tor ue SOlely P.rkside. Editoria' lind ausine55 55)·2217;&#13;
cootenf Opi". its editoriil' polley and Newsroom S53·2295.&#13;
101'1 e.pressed .re not&#13;
EOITOR_~"'_C~IEF: JNnnine $ipsm.&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: e.... ., .rnalt&#13;
AOYEIlTl$INQ MANAGER· Tom C&#13;
•&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR, .r~u w •• ::-r&#13;
EP .... TMENTS:&#13;
AdMiltistr.t"'''oUc5et: John McKloske.,&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: ~ ,&#13;
&lt;;PORTS EDITOR: J.a .. T "'.&#13;
IlSAG£ £DITORS· ietfr· .&#13;
COPY EDIT.R'· .V I. swe..Cliu. Bill Bark. , Julie La..,e&#13;
-HOTO £DITOR: V... ThomplOn&#13;
CIRCULATION; Sue M.rqu.rdt&#13;
STAFF; WenclVMiller. Terri Gayhart R ~Iafte Carlson. Douglas Edenh • obert Hoffman. ChriS Clausen, Thomas Nolen',&#13;
1:amona Maillet, Bob JamboISau:&#13;
er• ~arv Kay Ohmer. Larry Donnelly. Phil Herma ..n.&#13;
rrudl"u.... Snln Reinhard. Philip ~V~_V. Pella. linda Knucttson. Karin LaFourier. Judy&#13;
. 'Vlneston. Debbie Sharpe&#13;
-&#13;
GIVE BLOOD Make appl,' with&#13;
Qunpus Nurse for Nov, 22&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 17, 1976&#13;
t,lf'RANGER&#13;
--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Liberation : a sense of dignity&#13;
a&#13;
It's like saying you're twenty-one year after year. You're not, and&#13;
th h ear Conl,.s· a little bit more l('arnmg . 111ur(' 1•x - w1 ea: ne·. · Y • . S · the case with hberatior, I.1b('rc1l!1•;; prepar.:;; u;; for,;&#13;
~riences o ts _ . different type of "growmg up " s1tuat10n. !\v w&lt;1 1:.c1r, :,lwuld have t:.&#13;
find herself desperately trymg tu ht into a mold someone l'lse ha~&#13;
c-reated for tier. . . I am not a "manhater." Connotatively, that 1s the unage many&#13;
0 le perceive a feminist tn he I am not obr,ox10usl~ owrbt'Hnng 11r&#13;
pe p · hted but I am a fen11r11st. ~terevtypmg hc1s affected th,· one-s1g ... . woman's movement, just as 1t has an.1 other socia t mowrnrr:t&#13;
Women ·s Ube ration should not be para lied w 1th thesP n11~concept1011~&#13;
As a femini!:t I believe I have ideas and \'lt'Wpo11,ts v.urth~ of t'\·&#13;
presswn . All I expect is to be treated with the :.ame Jignity and worth&#13;
an\' person should be allowed . T don 't want to be lc1beled with st'!f1m.posing&#13;
llIDitations. I believe in myself. and m my .-apab1ht1es. and :&#13;
thmk Women's Liberation believes m this, too . W1J111t&gt;n s l.,berat1011 h&#13;
a htalthy 111vt:··ation toward~ these ideal~&#13;
TICAL PO.RUM&#13;
losing power&#13;
b) Phil Hermann&#13;
tlaw&#13;
free market&#13;
0&#13;
JayGrassell&#13;
orUfe ience&#13;
I&#13;
Illinois, Chicago instead of Chicago, Illinois. The city isn't as important&#13;
anymore since people are moving out of it to find the security&#13;
of the suburbs. Thompson has been quoted as saying, "I will work with&#13;
the Mayor as much as possible," but don't bet on it.&#13;
3) " Da city dat works" isn't; Chicago has one of the highest levels of&#13;
poverty in the country. If you don't believe this take a trip to either&#13;
south or north Chicago. Chicago also is in the top three for murder and&#13;
crime, right up there with New York and Detroit. Chicago's&#13;
educational system is so screwed up that the teachers go out on strike&#13;
just to break up the monotony.&#13;
4) Daley is too old! The people of Illinois are sick of his face; the&#13;
trend is to younger rnen such as Dixon, Percy and Thompson. This will&#13;
be Daley's last term in office.&#13;
Chicago will be a lot better off when Daley is gone, and the sooner&#13;
the better. He has out-lived his usefulness as a Mayor with his oldfashioned&#13;
tactics. "The city that works" isn't working as well as Daley&#13;
would have the people believe and in the last election the specters of&#13;
the poor, unemployed, under-educated and the dead were saying,&#13;
' 'Why doesn't it work for us?" Sometime in the very near future,&#13;
Richard J. Daley will knock on a door and be told "Sorry Mayor, this&#13;
is a closed meeting."&#13;
1 W The Parksid~&#13;
~" ..&#13;
RANGER The PArks,de RAnger is written And .elite&lt;!&#13;
by the shKltnts of the University of&#13;
;:,scons,n-P•rlu_ide who •re solely&#13;
co lpOns,bfe for ,ts e&lt;litoriAI policy And&#13;
•tent . Optn1ons @xpressed •re not&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Junnine Sipsma&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS : CA!lty BrnAk&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER · Tom C&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR : Br~ce W ooper DEPARTMENTS Agner&#13;
Adm,n,stnt,on-Policles : John McKtoskey&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR Debbie BAuer&#13;
necessuily representAtive of those held by&#13;
the students, f.culty or administrAtion of&#13;
PArkside. EditoriAI and Business 553-2217;&#13;
Newsroom 553-2295.&#13;
\PORTS EDITOR ; Jun Tt(IUtA&#13;
~:,s:.;~;IOTOITRORS . 1effrey j . swencki, Bill Buke : Julte L11n1e&#13;
OHOTO EDITOR , VAR Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION Sue MArqu.rdt&#13;
STAFF : Wendy Miller. Terri Gayhart . :,11ne Carlson. Dougliis Edenhaus M , Robert Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Thomas Nolen,&#13;
~amonii Ma,ttet. Bob Jambois 8 er, ary Kay Ohmer, Larry Donnelly, Phil Hermann,&#13;
frudrun9, Scott Reinhard, Phili ~verly Pella, Linda Knudtson, Karin LaFourier, Judy&#13;
P . L,v,ngston, Debbie Sharpe&#13;
GIVE BLOOD Make appt. with&#13;
Campus Nurse for Nov. 22&#13;
... &#13;
Part II: student government Survey&#13;
Students respond&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
ONOCTOBER 25th, RANGER ASKED PARK3IDE STUDENTS AT&#13;
RANDOM, WHAT THEY THOUGHT OF' THEIR STUDENT&#13;
GOVERNMENT THIS YEAR. HER!.: ARE SOME OF THE&#13;
RESPONSES:&#13;
"It doesn't affect me at all, I know that we have one but it hasn't&#13;
showed me anything yet" Dente Conti- So\..&gt;,more&#13;
"I don't know anything about it" - Kim Hass- Sophrnore&#13;
"I thi~ it is better ~en la~t years, Kai xau was aiways fighting. This&#13;
year It seems taat Kiyckc IS at least trying to accomplish something.&#13;
But it really doesn't affect me personally" - Jill Geor;ge- Sophmore&#13;
"It doesn't rela~ to me at all,! don't have the tune to care" -Jerry&#13;
Jacobsen - Jumor&#13;
'" don't see much evidence of what it is doing. The elections went&#13;
badly but' don't know if it is because of PSGA or student apathy."&#13;
Bob Hoffman- Freshman.&#13;
"We are understaffed there is too much work and not enough people&#13;
helping." That is the problem with PSGA according to its president,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden. "The people who are in student government right&#13;
now are doing a tremendous job trying to keep up with all the work,"&#13;
said Bowden. "The ones that had to resign are also to be corrunended&#13;
because they had other responsibiliti-es that were more important,&#13;
jobs and their academics."&#13;
To put things in proper personal perspective, Kiyoko said&#13;
Parkside student government is important 1Il Il~Y life, out not tne most&#13;
important; my son and studies come first. If , felt that PSGA was&#13;
hurting either of these' would resign too."&#13;
When asked why students had run for the offices even though they&#13;
THOUGH THEY KNEW OF. THE WORKLOAi), Kiyoko stated,&#13;
"PSGA is not a high school government, the workload is much heavier&#13;
then any of us expected. If more students got involved the workload for&#13;
all of US would greatly be decreased. We are the oniy representatives&#13;
ofthe students that is recognized by the administration 'Jere.&#13;
Why do students know so littie about their student ~wernment.?&#13;
"Siudents have the sallie responsibilities as we do, jobs and their&#13;
studies; this limits their time and some may not be ahle to get as involved&#13;
as they might want." Kiyoko continued, "We do a lot for&#13;
students, even though they might not realize it. My administration has&#13;
been concerned mainly with improving the counseling services and&#13;
improving financial aid. Even if they don't realize it, we are working&#13;
for them all the time."&#13;
What about the recent Senate elections? "We hope that the new&#13;
senators can help greatly with the workload. Because of the&#13;
~gnations and other matters, we have been working up to this point&#13;
with about 30percent of the senate. These new people combining with&#13;
the other senators should improve the situation. Two percent of the&#13;
student population voting is actually higher than usual for fall elections.&#13;
If the students don't take an active part, the the burden falls on&#13;
me to appoint people whom,' feel can do the job," Bowden said.&#13;
To sum it all up Kiyoko said, "We need the help of all&#13;
Parkside students because there is a lot of important work that needs&#13;
doing and it may not get done if we don't get more help. The people&#13;
who are in PSGA now are doing all they can, and they wi! continue&#13;
working hard, because if we don't, who will?"&#13;
Art exhibited&#13;
An exhibition titled "Indian&#13;
Folk Painting from Mexico,"&#13;
collected by John Marlow, an&#13;
Illinois State University art&#13;
lecturer, will be on view through&#13;
Novem ber 23 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The pieces are prime examples,&#13;
according to Marlow, of&#13;
hoth the style and character of&#13;
work being produced by Indians&#13;
who live in or near the central&#13;
valley of Mexico.&#13;
Gallery hours at Parkside are&#13;
noon to 5 p.rn, Mondays through&#13;
Thursdays and Tuesday and&#13;
Wednesday evenings from 7 to 10.&#13;
asked&#13;
answered rarely&#13;
-------.-. I&#13;
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THE PARKSIDE RANGER Novem&amp;er 17, 19763&#13;
Wedneoday, Nov. 17&#13;
Movie, "Brewster McCloud," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. In Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
PSGA Senate meeting, 8:30 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Thursdav, Nov. 18&#13;
Poetry workshop held by Janet Beeler at 4 p.m. in WLLC 0 174.&#13;
Poetry reading given by Janet Beeler at 8 p.m. in the 2nd floor of the&#13;
library.&#13;
Uncle Vinty Show at 9 p.m, in Union Square. Admission is $1.50 for&#13;
students and 52 for others.&#13;
Open demonstration of PLATO, the most complex computer system in&#13;
the world, by the inventory and a team of experts from the&#13;
University of Illinois, from 2 to 3: 15p.m. in Gr 103.&#13;
Friday, Nov, 19&#13;
DEbate and Forensics Association meets at 12 noon in WLLC 295 and&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Ufe Science seminar, "Electromagnetism, Man and the Enviornment,"&#13;
held by Dr. J .H. Battocletti from the M~ical Center of&#13;
Wisconsin at 2 p.m. in GR 0127.&#13;
Coed swirruning meet, 4th Annual RangerRelays, held at 4 p.m. in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Movie, "Day of the Locust," plays at 7 and 9:45 p.m. in Union Cinema,&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
Cable TV program "An Inside Look" hosted by UW-P Pro!. Paul&#13;
Kleine at 7 p.m. on Channel 8.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series: Second City Review satirical theater&#13;
plays at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 20&#13;
Men's cross country ~AIA National Championships held at 11 a.m. at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Dance, featuring "Sass" from 8:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. in Union Square&#13;
Tickets sold by Vet's Club for 51.50 in advance in the WILC concourse&#13;
and $2 at the door.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 21&#13;
WargamersClub meets from Ito 6p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Chorale presents An American sampler at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Vets Club meets at 4 p.m. in WLLC 0174.&#13;
Movie, "Day of the Locust," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Amdission is $1.&#13;
Monday, Nov, 22&#13;
Blood donation drive held from 10a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Bloodmobile in&#13;
the Union Loop Drive. Please make an appointment with the Health&#13;
Service in wu,c 0198 or call 553-2366.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 23&#13;
Concert, Parkside Jazz Ensemble plays at8 p.rn. in the CAT.&#13;
Meeting, Student Organization Council at 4 p.m, in room 0-174, WILC&#13;
(next to the Information Kiosk). All organizations are asked to send&#13;
a representative.&#13;
All events must be submitted to the Ranger, WILe 0194, before&#13;
Wednesday of the week before publication.&#13;
Second City to appear&#13;
Second City, an improvisational&#13;
theater troupe, will&#13;
appear at Parkside at 8 p.rn, on&#13;
Friday, Nov. 19, in the Cornmunication&#13;
Arts Theater. The&#13;
program is a part of Parkside's&#13;
Accent on Enrichment series.&#13;
The show is a return&#13;
engagement for Second City's&#13;
touring company, which&#13;
played on campus last March.&#13;
Admission is $4. A limited&#13;
number of tickets are available&#13;
at the Campus Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
The company. which traces its&#13;
roots back to 1951,has been the&#13;
spawning ground of such talents&#13;
as Elaine May, Mike Nicols,&#13;
Barbara Harris, Shelley Berman.&#13;
David Steinberg, Alan Arion,&#13;
Joan Rivers. Hobert Klein and&#13;
Aver)' Schreiber ano Jack Burns.&#13;
The performers wr Ite their own&#13;
satirical sketches. a series of&#13;
interrelated skits which provide&#13;
social commentary on such&#13;
diverse subjects as politics, sex,&#13;
movies. great books. money and&#13;
psychology. The company&#13;
maintains its 0\\&lt;11 school and&#13;
workshop.&#13;
".&#13;
C"zy QUIIN'(I":,&#13;
. .' , "&#13;
I.'0.° 1&#13;
i .&#13;
)&#13;
Need ride from south side of Milwaukee. Will&#13;
pay for' 1 of gas Call 76'2 6'231 Ask for Carol.&#13;
1914 PONTfAC SPRING a.sceeo Metallic&#13;
Blue. red buckets. Rally wheels AMFM,&#13;
FM stereo, a.r-ec« S'2W5 634-0876&#13;
by&#13;
Philip L. Livingston&#13;
in the&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
Typing done efficiently and professiOnally in&#13;
my home. Reasonable rates 6576068&#13;
FOR SALE Grey, white. and orange per&#13;
sian rug 6'8'· x )'4", S350_ 55'29394 atter 5&#13;
pm&#13;
WILL 00 any kind of typing at reasonable&#13;
rates. For information ceu 65'2,)373.&#13;
FOR SALE· ~arantl 1015 receiver, Jensen&#13;
model;1 speakers, 1 year old_ S300. Phone 63,J&#13;
"&#13;
;&#13;
Part II: student government survey&#13;
Students respond&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
ON OCTOBER 25th, RANGER ASKED PARK'.JIDE STUDENTS AT&#13;
RANDOM, WHAT IBEY THOUGHT OF 'ffiEIR STUDENT&#13;
GOVERNMENT THIS YEAR. HEHL ARE SOME OF THE&#13;
RESPONSES:&#13;
"It doesn't affect me at all, I know tlrnt we h2ve one but it hasn't&#13;
showed me anything yet" Dente Conti- So1-limore&#13;
"I don't know anythlng about it" - Kim Hass- S?phmore&#13;
"I thi_nk it is better ~en la~t years, Kai Nall ·;v;::,; always fighting. This&#13;
year it seems tllat Kiyoko is at least trying to a,~complish something.&#13;
But it really doesn't affect me personally'' - Jill G eocge- Sophmore&#13;
"It doesn't relate to me at all, I don't have the tu.ie to care'' -Jerry&#13;
Jacobsen - Junior&#13;
"I don't see much evidence of what it is doing. The elections went&#13;
badly but I don't know if it is because of PSGA or student apathy."&#13;
Bob Hoffman- Freshman.&#13;
"We are understaffed there is too much work and not enough people&#13;
helping." That is the problem with PSGA according to its president,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden. "The people who are in student government right&#13;
now are doincl a tremendous job trying to keep up with all the work,"&#13;
said Bowden. "The ones that had to resign are also to be commended&#13;
because they had other responsibilities that were more important,&#13;
jobs and their academics."&#13;
To put things in proper personal perspective, Kiyoko said&#13;
Parkside student government is im,1,1orumt u11r:.y life, o•Jt not tne most&#13;
impot.tant; my son and studies come first. If I felt that PSGA was&#13;
hurting either of these I would resign too."&#13;
When asked why students had run for the offices even though they&#13;
THOUGP. '!:'HEY KNEW OF. THE WORKLOAn, Kiyoko stated,&#13;
"PSGA is not a high school government, the worklo,:d is much heavier&#13;
then any of us expected. If more students got involved the workload for&#13;
all of us would greatly be decreased. We are the oni~· representatives&#13;
of the students that is recognized by the administratior. liere.&#13;
Why do students know so little about their student ~wernment?&#13;
··Stuoents have U1e same responsibilities as we th), jobs and their&#13;
studies; this limits their time and some may not be able to get as involved&#13;
as they might want." Kiyoko continued, "We do a lot for&#13;
students, even though they might not realize it. My administration has&#13;
been concerned mainly with improving the counseling services and&#13;
improving financial aid. Even if they don't realize it, we are working&#13;
for them all the time."&#13;
~~~~~~~~&#13;
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THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 17, 1976 3&#13;
Wedn day,. 'ov. 17&#13;
Movie, ··Brewster McCloud," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema Admission is $1.00.&#13;
PSGA Senate meeting, 8:30 p.m. m Union 207.&#13;
Thursdav,, ov.18&#13;
Poetry workshop held by Janet Beeler at 4 p.m. in WLLC D 174.&#13;
Poetry reading given by Janet Beeler at 8 p.m. in the 2nd floor of the&#13;
library.&#13;
Uncle Vinty Show at 9 p.m. in Union Square. Admission is $1.50 for&#13;
students and $2 for others.&#13;
Open demonstration of PLATO, the most complex computer ystem in&#13;
the world, by the inventory and a team of experts from the&#13;
University of Illinois, from 2 to 3: 15 p.m in Gr 103.&#13;
Friday,. ov.19&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12 noon in WLLC 295 and&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p,m. in Union 207.&#13;
Life Science seminar, "Electromagnetism, Man and the Env10rnment,"&#13;
held by Dr. J.H. Battocletti from the Medical Center of&#13;
Wisconsin at 2 p.m. m GR D127.&#13;
Coed swimming meet. 4th Annual Ranger.Relays, held at 4 p.m. in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
~tovie. ··Day of the Locust." plays at 7 and 9:45 p.m. in Union Cin ma.&#13;
Admission is 1.&#13;
Cable T\' program "An Inside Look" ho ted by W-P Prof. Paul&#13;
Kleine at 7 p.m. on Channel 8.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series: Second City Review satirical theat r&#13;
plays at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
aturday, ·o\. 20&#13;
Men's cro country "AIA. ·at1onal Champion hips held at 11 a.m. t&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Dance. featuring "Sa s · from 8:30 p.m. to 1 a .m. in Union ·quare&#13;
Tickets sold by Vet's Club for $1.50 in advance m the WILC concourse&#13;
and $2 at the door.&#13;
Sunday,, ·ov. 21&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Concert. Parkside Chorale presents An American Sampler at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Vets Club meets at 4 p.m. in WLLC D174.&#13;
Movie, "Day of the Locust," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Umon Cinema.&#13;
Amdission is $1.&#13;
~tonday, Noi·. 22&#13;
Blood donation drive held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Bloodmobile in&#13;
the Union Loop Drive. Please make an appoinbnent with the Health&#13;
Service in WLLC D198 or call 553-2366.&#13;
·Tue day, Nov. 23&#13;
Concert, Parkside Jazz Ensemble plays at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Meeting, Student Organization Council at 4 p.m. in room D-174, WLI.C&#13;
( next to the Information Kiosk). All organizations are a ked to end&#13;
a representative.&#13;
All events must be submitted to the Ranger, WLLC D194, before&#13;
Wednesday of the week before publication.&#13;
What about the recent Senate elections? "We hope that the new&#13;
senators can help greatly with the workload. Because of the&#13;
r~ignations and other matters, we have been working up to this point&#13;
with about 30 percent of the senate. These new people combining with&#13;
the other senators should improve the situation. Two percent of the&#13;
student popula~on voting is actually higher than usual for fall elections.&#13;
If the students don't take an active part, the the burden falls on&#13;
me to appoint people whom, I feel can do the job," Bowden said.&#13;
To sum it all up Kiyoko said, "We need the help of all&#13;
Parkside students because there is a lot of important work that needs&#13;
doing and it may not get done if we don't get more help. The people&#13;
who are in PSGA now are doing all they can, and they wil continue&#13;
working hard, because if we don't, who will?"&#13;
Second City to appear&#13;
Second City, an im- Admission 1s 4. A limited&#13;
number of ticket are available&#13;
at the Campus Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
Art exhibited&#13;
provisational theater troupe. will&#13;
appear at Parkside at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Friday, Tov. 19, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. The&#13;
program is a part of Parkside's&#13;
Accent on Enrichment series.&#13;
The company. which trace its&#13;
root back to 1951, ha been the&#13;
pawning round of uch talents&#13;
as Elaine , fay . tike • "icols,&#13;
Barbara Harns, helley Berman,&#13;
Da\·id Steinb rg. Ian Arkin,&#13;
Joan R1\·ers, Robert Klein and&#13;
An exhibition titled "Indian&#13;
Folk Painting from Mexico,"&#13;
collected by John Marlow, an&#13;
IlJinois State University art&#13;
lecturer, will be on view through&#13;
November 23 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The pieces are prime examples,&#13;
according to Marlow, of&#13;
both the style and character of&#13;
work being produced by Indians&#13;
who live in or near the central&#13;
valley of Mexico.&#13;
.c Need ride from south side of MIiwaukee Will&#13;
pay for 1 , of gas. Call 762 6231 Ask for Carol&#13;
1974 PONTIAC SPRING 3 speed Metalbc&#13;
Blue. red buckets. Rally wheels AM FM,&#13;
FM slereo. 8 Track S2195 634 0876&#13;
Typing done effic iently and J)rofessionally n&#13;
my home Reasonable rates 657 6068&#13;
FOR SALE Grey. white. and orange Per&#13;
s,an ru0 6'8" x J'4'" S350 552 9394 after 5&#13;
Pm&#13;
WILL DO any kind of typ,ng al reasonable&#13;
rates For information Call 652,3373&#13;
FOR SALE arantz 2015 receiver. Jensen&#13;
::';~del 4 speakers. 1 year old 5300. Phone 634&#13;
Gallery hours at Parkside are&#13;
noon to 5 p.m. Mondays thro~gh&#13;
Thursdays and Tuesday and&#13;
Wednesday evenings from 7 to 10.&#13;
The show is a return&#13;
engagement for Second City's&#13;
touring company, which&#13;
played on campus last '.\1arch.&#13;
,,-&#13;
t:,azy Q11e1lion,.&#13;
) ' . J.&#13;
asked&#13;
answered rarely , 1fud1nf pul,/ie,Hon&#13;
by&#13;
Philip L. Livingston&#13;
in the&#13;
BOOKSTORE &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 17. 1976&#13;
Hedden,&#13;
new V.P.&#13;
The ParU1de SlUdelII Governmenl Association&#13;
... a new vice pl'eSidenl. Harvey V. Hedden.&#13;
A buIlnoss IDlIII8gemenl and political science&#13;
majar. Hedden Ia a 10"""" ..... tor.&#13;
He Is cunenl1y a member 01the segregated Fees&#13;
Allocation comnlillee. lite student organization&#13;
cound1, the ParUicie Association 01 Wargamers,&#13;
lhe Parbicle Debate and Forerwics Association.&#13;
and uoodate Justice on the student court and a&#13;
IlJI'IMr member 01 the ParUide Ranger editorial&#13;
stall.&#13;
Hedden Is concerned with \lie factionalism that&#13;
currenUy occurs. ()urtng his terwre with \lie PSGA&#13;
nate, he had. In hls knowledge, "a pretty good&#13;
re&lt;onl 01 ~ this problem. When I chaired&#13;
..-qs IU assistant president pro tempore), I&#13;
had no complaints."&#13;
The new Vice President saw no "Inherent"&#13;
problems WIth Rett!ng the goals and objectives of&#13;
• the current PSGA Senate accomplished. With the&#13;
merger law implemented, he saw that PSGA, once&#13;
these factions were split up would have little&#13;
problem getting things done at Parkside.&#13;
He also stated that he was interested in running&#13;
.he meetings not running the people involved in&#13;
those meetings.&#13;
19n Local ICUI Intercollegiate Tournament Program&#13;
r ~ \fit}&#13;
B1w1i &amp; - Jan 22 s 23. 1977&#13;
Blllin Jan 28, 29 s 30. 1977&#13;
T*. l lis - Jan' 28. 29 s 30. 1977&#13;
Foosball - Feb 4, 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Chess - Feb, 4, 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Local tournament winners to represent Parkside at the ACUI&#13;
ReglOnalsIn Madison Wise. Feb, 17-19, 1977. Contact the&#13;
UnIOn Ree-Center for information or to enter. "100 fee/entry.&#13;
Toumement dreCtOr; Randy Moog Phone: 553-2695&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Bud.is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
--&#13;
When you say Budweiser., you've said it all;&#13;
c ""ISO-IUSCII. nle.• IT. Lo:.S&#13;
Seminar on&#13;
work featured&#13;
A seminar on "Work&#13;
satisf action_Dissatisfaction' ,&#13;
featuring a panel of labor and&#13;
industry representatives and an&#13;
industrial chaplain will be held at&#13;
Parkside on Thursday, Nov. 18,&#13;
from 1:30 to 4 p.m. in Classroom&#13;
Bldg. Room D-IJI.&#13;
The seminar is sponsored by&#13;
Parkside, the Wisconsin&#13;
Humanities Council and the&#13;
Kenosha Christian Youth Council&#13;
Bicentennial Committee.&#13;
Representatives of labor, industry&#13;
and area service clubs are&#13;
expected to attend.&#13;
Panelists will be the Rev.&#13;
Rodney Brown, industrial&#13;
chaplain at the R.J. Reynolds&#13;
Company, Winston-salem, N.C'&#13;
Rich Hol1ander, producti~~&#13;
worker and member of U A W&#13;
Local 180 at the J.1. Case Co'&#13;
.. Elige Johnson .. labor relatio~&#13;
director at American Motors&#13;
Corp.; Frances Froh, plant&#13;
manager at Jockey International;&#13;
and John Woodzick&#13;
second shift ~supervisor ai&#13;
MacWhyte Co. Prof. Walter&#13;
Graf!in will act as moderator and&#13;
Prof. Francine Hall, a specialist&#13;
in labor relations, will serve as&#13;
resource person.&#13;
Thi' arrangements committee&#13;
for the seminar includes Graffin&#13;
Riltli and Arthur Milholland oi&#13;
Jockey International.&#13;
Communicalion,&#13;
soc/anthro&#13;
review completed&#13;
by Chris Clausen&#13;
The Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review Committee&#13;
• (APPR) has just finished its&#13;
review of the communications&#13;
and sociology-anthropology&#13;
majors. They have met with both&#13;
the faculty and some students of&#13;
both majors and will soon be&#13;
presenting recommendations on&#13;
each.&#13;
The committee has had to&#13;
schedule both of these reviews in&#13;
close overlapping succession of&#13;
one another in order to finish&#13;
them DY November 15 and&#13;
advise the administration on the&#13;
filling the 24 new faculty&#13;
positions.&#13;
Throughout the meetings with&#13;
the faculty, the committee&#13;
through chairman David Baron~&#13;
(associate professor in&#13;
psychology), expressed that they&#13;
were not only looking for the&#13;
negative aspects in the 2 majors,&#13;
but also the positiye.&#13;
The committee began its&#13;
reviews with communications.&#13;
They reviewed the consultants&#13;
reports and then met with&#13;
various faculty members on&#13;
November I. On Wednesday they&#13;
met with randomly selected&#13;
students with communications&#13;
majors.&#13;
The communications faculty&#13;
explained the general thrust of&#13;
the discipline as well as their&#13;
heavy emphasis on special&#13;
communications skills. The&#13;
committee qJestioned the&#13;
communications faculty on the&#13;
diffusion within the discipline as&#13;
well as job opportunities for&#13;
graduates.&#13;
The. faculty responded to the&#13;
question of diffusion withi&#13;
. 1 In&#13;
commUnications that the plan&#13;
for communications that is tn&#13;
~e current UW-P catalogue had&#13;
been . Written before present '&#13;
fjlculty had been at UW-P The&#13;
comm arts faculty offered no&#13;
suggestions as to how or what&#13;
they would change.&#13;
Randomly selected Comln Arts&#13;
m.::I~or!'lmpt i" a ~!os~ !'n~t'!ti;'--b&#13;
WIth Committee members Larry&#13;
Duetsch (associate professoreconomics)&#13;
and chairman David&#13;
Barone (assistant professorpsychology)&#13;
on Wednesday.&#13;
November ~3to respond to the&#13;
communications faculty. The&#13;
students response will be ineluded&#13;
in the final report.&#13;
The faculty of the soc-anlhro&#13;
listened while APPR Committee&#13;
member Teresa Peck (assistant&#13;
professor-education) listed&#13;
complaints voiced by soc-anlllro&#13;
majors expressed in a closed&#13;
meeting with Peck, and Peter&#13;
Hoff (associate professor -&#13;
English.&#13;
The complaints centered on the&#13;
fact that the students felt a need&#13;
. for more academic counseling by&#13;
the discipline faculty. The&#13;
students also felt that the&#13;
discipline sbould give a degree in&#13;
social work rather than a degree&#13;
in Sociology.&#13;
Tbe soc - anthro faculty&#13;
responded by stating they hoped&#13;
to do exactly that. They, like&#13;
comm arts faculty, would like to&#13;
re-write the catalogue as it&#13;
pertains to soc-anthro.&#13;
The new ca talogue plan of socanthro&#13;
would offer 3 concentrations:&#13;
I. Criminal justice&#13;
in consortum with UWMilwaukee&#13;
for a transfer to UWM&#13;
until UW-P can establish a&#13;
degree in Criminal Justice. 2.&#13;
Applied anthropology, a contemporary&#13;
approach to the socanthro&#13;
discipline. and 3. Life&#13;
cycle developement, which has&#13;
yet to be outlined by the socanthro&#13;
faculty.&#13;
The faculty expressed concem&#13;
over the need to establish a social&#13;
worker e degree at UW-P, but&#13;
stated they could not due to the&#13;
lack of faculty. The faculty had&#13;
requested a new faculty position&#13;
to help institute a social worker&#13;
degree but had been turned down&#13;
by the Committee of Principles&#13;
(C.O.P.). The consultants report&#13;
and Soc-Anthro had made no&#13;
mention of this. The faculty will&#13;
submit an extensive course&#13;
reconstruction for the 77·78&#13;
catalogue. They would also hope&#13;
to fill several vacancies before&#13;
the '77 academic year begins.&#13;
The faculty of both disciplines&#13;
will have time to respond before&#13;
the APPR commillee.subrnits its&#13;
report to the administration.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 17, 1976&#13;
Redden,&#13;
new V.P.&#13;
byBru agner&#13;
·th the factionalism that&#13;
his tenure ·th the PSGA&#13;
no ledg , "a pretty good&#13;
problem. Wh n I chaired&#13;
id nt pro tempore), I&#13;
\\ no 'inherent"&#13;
nd objectives of&#13;
• the current PSGA Senate accomplished. With the&#13;
merger law implemented, he saw that PSGA, once&#13;
th e factions were split up would have little&#13;
problem getting things done at Parkside.&#13;
He also stated that he was interested in running&#13;
U1e m.:etings not running the people involved m&#13;
those meetings.&#13;
-&#13;
Bowling - J 22 &amp; 23. 1911 Foosball - F-eb. 4 . 5 &amp; 6. 1977&#13;
Billiards Chess - F-eb. 4. 5 &amp; 6. 1977 J 20. 29 s 3o. 1977&#13;
Table Tennis - Jan. ·2e. 29 &amp; 3o. 1977&#13;
Local tournament winners to represent Parkside at the ACUI&#13;
Regionals ·n Madison Wisc. Feb. 17-19, 1977. Contact the&#13;
Union Rec-Center for information or to enter. 51°0 fee/entry.&#13;
To n director: Randy Moog Phone: 553-2695&#13;
Why do sonte people think&#13;
Bud. is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
When you say Budweiser., you've said it all!&#13;
11"N£USU-IUSCH, I .. C. • ST. LOUIS&#13;
Seminar on&#13;
work featured&#13;
A seminar on "Work Company, Winston-Salem, N.C.;&#13;
Rich Hollander, production&#13;
worker and member of UAW&#13;
Local 180 at the J.I. Case Co·&#13;
Sa tisf action-Dissatisfaction''&#13;
featuring a panel of labor and&#13;
industry representatives and an&#13;
industrial chaplain will be held at&#13;
Parkside on Thwsday, Nov. 18,&#13;
from 1 : 30 to 4 p .m. in Classroom&#13;
Bldg. Room D-111.&#13;
The seminar is sponsored by&#13;
Parkside, the Wisconsin&#13;
Humanities Council and the&#13;
Kenosha Christian Youth Council&#13;
Bicentennial Committee.&#13;
Representatives of labor, industry&#13;
and area service clubs are&#13;
expected to attend.&#13;
Panelists will be the Rev.&#13;
Rodney Brown, industrial&#13;
chaplain at the R.J. Reynolds&#13;
. Elige Johnson, . labor relatio~~&#13;
director at American Motors&#13;
Corp.; Frances Froh, plant&#13;
manager at Jockey International;&#13;
and John Woodzick&#13;
second shift supervisor at&#13;
MacWhyte Co. Prof. Walter&#13;
Graffin will act as moderator and&#13;
Prof. Francine Hall, a specialist&#13;
in labor relations, will serve as&#13;
resource person.&#13;
The arrangements committee&#13;
for the seminar includes Graffin&#13;
Rikli and Arthw Milholland of&#13;
Jockey International.&#13;
Comm uni cation,&#13;
soc/anthro&#13;
review completed&#13;
by Chris Clausen&#13;
The Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review Committee&#13;
• (APPR) has just finished its&#13;
review of the communications&#13;
and sociology-anthropology&#13;
majors. They have met with both&#13;
the faculty and some students of&#13;
both majors and will soon be&#13;
presenting recommendations on&#13;
each.&#13;
The committee has had to&#13;
schedule both of these reviews in&#13;
close overlapping succession of&#13;
one another in order to finish&#13;
them 6y November 15 and&#13;
advise the administration on the&#13;
filling the 24 new faculty&#13;
positions.&#13;
Throughout the meetings with&#13;
the faculty, the committee&#13;
through chairman David Baron;&#13;
( associate professor in&#13;
psychology), expressed that they&#13;
were not only looking for the&#13;
negative aspects in the 2 majors,&#13;
but also the positive.&#13;
The committee began its&#13;
reviews with communications.&#13;
They reviewed the consultants&#13;
reports and then met with&#13;
various faculty members on&#13;
November 1. On Wednesday they&#13;
met with randomly selected&#13;
students with communications&#13;
majors.&#13;
The communications faculty&#13;
explained the general thrust of&#13;
the discipline as well as their&#13;
heavy emphasis on special&#13;
communications skills. The&#13;
committee qJestioned the&#13;
communications faculty on the&#13;
diffusion within the discipline as&#13;
well as job opportunities for&#13;
graduates.&#13;
The. faculty responded to the&#13;
question of diffusion within&#13;
communications that the plan&#13;
for communications that is in&#13;
the current UW-P catalogue had&#13;
been written before pr;sent&#13;
faculty had been at UW-P The&#13;
comm arts faculty offered no&#13;
suggestions as to how or what&#13;
they would change.&#13;
~domly selected Comm Arts&#13;
rn;i10r&lt;: mpt in " &lt;&gt;ln.,.o.,-1 • .&#13;
with Comntittee- ~~~~;;~c~;~&#13;
Duetsc? ( associate professoreconom1cs)&#13;
and chairman David&#13;
Barone ( assistant professorpsychology)&#13;
on Wednesday.&#13;
November 3 to respond to the&#13;
communications faculty. The&#13;
students response will be incl\lded&#13;
in the final report.&#13;
The faculty of the soc-anthro&#13;
listened while APPR committee&#13;
member Teresa Peck ( assistant&#13;
professor-education) listed&#13;
complaints voiced by soc-anU.-o&#13;
majors expressed in a closed&#13;
meeting with Peck, and Peter&#13;
Hoff (associate professor -&#13;
English.&#13;
The complaints centered on the&#13;
fact that the students felt a need&#13;
for more academic counseling by&#13;
the discipline faculty. The&#13;
students also felt that the&#13;
discipline should give a degree in&#13;
social work rather than a degree&#13;
in Sociology.&#13;
The soc - anthro faculty&#13;
responded by stating they hoped&#13;
to do exactly that. They, like&#13;
comm arts faculty, would like to&#13;
re-write the catalogue as it&#13;
pertains to soc-anthro.&#13;
The new catalogue plan of socanthro&#13;
would offer 3 concentrations:&#13;
1. Criminal justice&#13;
in consortum with UWMilwaukee&#13;
for a transfer to UWM&#13;
until UW-P can establish a&#13;
degree in Criminal Justice. 2.&#13;
Applied afithropology, a contemporary&#13;
approach to the socanthro&#13;
discipline. and 3. Life&#13;
cycle developement, which has&#13;
yet to be outlined by the socanthro&#13;
faculty.&#13;
The faculty expressed concern&#13;
over the need to establish a social&#13;
worker degree at UW-P, but&#13;
stated they could not due to the&#13;
lack of faculty. The faculty had&#13;
requested a new faculty position&#13;
to help institute a social worker&#13;
degree but had been turned down&#13;
by the Committee of Principles&#13;
(C.O.P.). The consultants report&#13;
and Soc-Anthro had made no&#13;
mention of this. The faculty will&#13;
submit an extensive course&#13;
reconstruction for the 77-78&#13;
catalogue. They would also hope&#13;
to fill several vacancies before&#13;
the '77 academic year begins.&#13;
The faculty of both disciplines&#13;
will have time to respond before&#13;
the APPR committee submits its&#13;
report to the administration. &#13;
Methods laid out&#13;
Birth control&#13;
balled up&#13;
The staff members at the DeRanger have been&#13;
asked for equal time for the articles that have been&#13;
printed about Plant Parenthood. So here are "Some&#13;
Methods of Birth c:ontrol that the Noble One missed.&#13;
\. Chastity belts - Chastity belts could be sold at&#13;
reduced rate for students under the age of 19 and&#13;
over the age of 6.&#13;
2.Tie it in a knot. No explanation necessary.&#13;
3. Use Elmer's Glue All as a douche. (Better yet,&#13;
super Glue)&#13;
4. Castration. ,&#13;
5. Make sure one of you is dead.&#13;
6. Leaving your clothes on.&#13;
7. Keeping a thick quilt or lead shielding between&#13;
the two bodies.&#13;
8.Do it with a partner of the same sex.&#13;
9. Attempt intercourse only while exceeding the&#13;
speed limit driving down 1-94the wrong way.&#13;
,&#13;
I 9161 'li J&amp;qwaAON~3~NY~aa 3a1S)l~Yd 3H~&#13;
A number of students atrempt , various&#13;
('ontrnl method« "lJl!~f'..t'f"d h" nf"RttntJf"r.&#13;
birth&#13;
SPECIALLY FOR WOMEN&#13;
\. Only go out with abortionists.&#13;
2. Before going on a date, put a broken popbottle in&#13;
your private parts.&#13;
SPECIALLY FOR MEN&#13;
\. Put your balls in a baggie and ziploc it.&#13;
2. At the last minute, replace penis with large toe.&#13;
EPILOGUE&#13;
These methods are tired and true and guaranteed&#13;
to prevent impregnation. For further information,&#13;
call 632-0091anytime for advice.&#13;
However, some of these methods are considered&#13;
illegal by your local authorities and the FBI. Now&#13;
that we have a president committed to legal&#13;
"shacking up" and just general screwing around,&#13;
the. federal laws will soon change.&#13;
Lost student&#13;
found&#13;
by SheidoD Duagbone&#13;
A fonner Parkside student who has been mIsslng&#13;
since 1973was found today by the campus security&#13;
force purely by mistake.&#13;
. A spokesman for the security force said a division&#13;
involved in a combination parking ticket raid and&#13;
search for a pair of tbe Chancellor's office ad·&#13;
~enturers were combing the woods just south of&#13;
Main Place when one of them stumbled upon a man&#13;
,lothed in bucksin rags sitting in front of a crude&#13;
shelter.&#13;
Alter sharp questioning the officers discovered&#13;
that they hlld found Mr. William Bunion, who was&#13;
last seen 3 years ago just before setting off on foot&#13;
from Greenquist Hall to his car which was located&#13;
in the East Parking Lot.&#13;
Mr. Bunion plans to return to Parkside after he is&#13;
over the shock of re-entering society. When asked&#13;
by this reporter if he will every again park his car in&#13;
the East Parking Lot, Mr. Bunion replied "What is a&#13;
car?"&#13;
It was learned later by this reporter that Mr.&#13;
Bunion was refused admission to the school because&#13;
of his inability to remember what a car is. No one&#13;
was available for comment.&#13;
TheParkside-------------&#13;
DeRANGER&#13;
Vol. V No. 2 Wedne.d,,~. 'io\ember 17. 1976&#13;
UJJZP tastes Saga tragedy&#13;
brutal enterprise, Champoop&#13;
explained, "Well, we were going&#13;
to keep it hushed until next&#13;
semester when a proposed cutback&#13;
in financial aid is to occur.&#13;
in which case the surprise would&#13;
definitely be in our favor. Look, if&#13;
you have time I'll explain the&#13;
whole thing. Sit down and have&#13;
one of our 250 pounders with&#13;
cheese."&#13;
Butch Br inernan, of the&#13;
security force, who led the raid,&#13;
reported that four men and a&#13;
woman were arrested following a&#13;
brief scuffle in the cold storage&#13;
and outer offices over what appeared&#13;
to be a piece of evidence&#13;
but was later confirmed as a pork&#13;
chop. The four men were identified&#13;
as Sydney Dowd, 38, Buddy&#13;
Niechowicz, 26, and Earl "JayBob"&#13;
Rivers, 50 all cafeteria&#13;
cooks, and Rudy Sump, 29; a hair&#13;
stylist from Racine. The woman,&#13;
Eve Skwatlow, 32, was an admitted&#13;
voyeur from Waukegan,&#13;
Illinois.&#13;
Brineman explained that his&#13;
department's actions were based&#13;
purely on suspicion after ..one of&#13;
-e his men, while eating in the&#13;
[" cafeteria, discovered a 1974&#13;
.' Tremper High School class ring&#13;
in his Ranger Burger, while an&#13;
~ anonymous chancellor reported&#13;
;' finding a contact lens on his&#13;
~ chicken sandwich. "Other than&#13;
those two incidents, nothing has&#13;
been reported, which seems&#13;
odd," Brineman said. ..But you&#13;
by Fraiser Stetsonevski&#13;
In a dramatic early morning.&#13;
raid on the Saga Food Service's&#13;
cold storage unit last Friday, the&#13;
Campus Security Police and&#13;
several vigilante PSGA members&#13;
found the gruesome remains of'&#13;
six fonner Parkside drop-outs&#13;
suspended from the ceiling in&#13;
positions which suggest their&#13;
ultimate fate as processed food.&#13;
Though an intense investigation&#13;
for tacts to support&#13;
that conclusion is still underway,&#13;
Peter Champoop, a cafeteria&#13;
worker whose job is to prepare&#13;
cold-cuts and hot sandwiches&#13;
confessed that he was aware of&#13;
tbe atrocity but refused to accept&#13;
full credit for its inception: "I&#13;
wish I had dreamed this up," he&#13;
stated. "We may never have a&#13;
shortage again!"&#13;
When asked why he never&#13;
came forward to expose the&#13;
USDA in8peclor Clyde B~gllie.... review8 the inud~-'&#13;
qu~te eondition8 or the SOIliOcold 810r"lIe&#13;
umt,&#13;
know these college kids. They'd&#13;
eat just about anything."&#13;
A sense of loss and helpless&#13;
anger has pervaded the school&#13;
since the atrocity was&#13;
discovered. :1/ one expected that&#13;
euch an outrage could be cornmitted&#13;
at this quiet, rural !n·&#13;
stitution. "Things just won't be&#13;
the same," reflected Larry&#13;
Flank, a sophomore. "It looks&#13;
like I'll have to go back to&#13;
bringing a bag lunch."&#13;
The PSG A members who&#13;
participated in the raid as the&#13;
arche-typal hysterical mob whichs&#13;
had nearly taken the law into&#13;
their own hands, seemed stunned&#13;
at the fate of their fellow'&#13;
students.&#13;
said senator Jim Lobomeire,&#13;
19, "We could have at least held&#13;
off on the raid until those poor&#13;
guys had been marinated or&#13;
rolled in breadcrwnbs. Anything&#13;
but this! Hell, I knew a few of&#13;
them personally and I can tell&#13;
you with a straight face that not&#13;
less than three of tbem wanted to&#13;
go as deep-fried crullers."&#13;
Another senator, Jean Rabbid,&#13;
sadly remarked, "It's all such a&#13;
waste! Imean, they haven't even&#13;
passed inspection yet!"&#13;
Following the notification of&#13;
relatives, funerals for the&#13;
deceased will be held at their&#13;
respective churches, their times&#13;
yet to be announced, with a wake&#13;
afterwards for the entire group in&#13;
the Union cafeteria.&#13;
Duo&#13;
vanished&#13;
by Jerimiah Johnson&#13;
Two Parkside students have&#13;
been reported missing since last&#13;
Friday afternoon after making a&#13;
seemingly harmless bet with&#13;
several fellow students as to&#13;
whether or not they would be able&#13;
to locate the Chancellor's office.&#13;
Reported as missing to the&#13;
Kenosha police were Richard&#13;
Magellan, 21, of Racine, and&#13;
Robert Polo, 20, of Kenosha. Both&#13;
are history majors at Parkside.&#13;
A friend of the pair said that he&#13;
and another companion were&#13;
silting 10 the Union with the two&#13;
last Friday when Magellan began&#13;
boasting that he was not afraid to&#13;
try to locate the office regardless&#13;
of the rwnors about barricades&#13;
and guard dogs.&#13;
After some preparation. the&#13;
duo set out on their trek equipped&#13;
with a tent, nashllght, sterno&#13;
stove, ropes, and other survival&#13;
equipment, and have not been&#13;
seen nor heard from since. The&#13;
Chancellor was not available for&#13;
comment.&#13;
Wargamers&#13;
cited&#13;
by Adolph PatloD&#13;
Campus Security Police&#13;
searched for six Parkside&#13;
students missing since mid·&#13;
semester after dropping their&#13;
classes Campus Pollee&#13;
discovered on saturday a homemade&#13;
bomb shelter. three&#13;
nuclear warheads, an inunense&#13;
arsenal of ground combat&#13;
equipment, and a World War n&#13;
half.track in the 0-2 level of&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
After an initial investigation,&#13;
the P.arkside Wargamers were&#13;
ci ted by the Kenosha Fire&#13;
Department for neglecting Fire&#13;
safety Regulations, and blocking&#13;
fire lanes .&#13;
The Wargamers were also&#13;
given citations fOl' malicious&#13;
destruction of' private property&#13;
after they dug forty-nine trenches&#13;
on the east campus lawn and&#13;
barb-wired the Library ~&#13;
center.&#13;
Methods laid out&#13;
Birth control&#13;
balled up&#13;
The staff members at the DeRanger have been&#13;
asked for equal time for the articles that have been&#13;
printed about Plant Parenthood. So here are "Some&#13;
Methods of Birth Control that the Noble One missed.&#13;
l. Chastity belts - Chastity belts could be sold at&#13;
reduced rate for students under the age of 19 and&#13;
over the age of 6.&#13;
l 9L6l 'LL .1aqwaA0N H3~N'tHao 3O1S&gt;CH'td 3H.l&#13;
Lost student&#13;
found&#13;
by Sb ldoo Dungbors&#13;
A former Parkside student who has been missing&#13;
since 1973 was found today by the campus ecurity&#13;
force purely by mistake.&#13;
• A spokesman for the ecurity force said a division&#13;
involved in a combination parking ticket raid and&#13;
2. Tie it in a knot. No explanation necessary.&#13;
3. Use Elmer's Glue All as a douche. ( Better yet,&#13;
Super Glue)&#13;
A number of students attempt _ ,:ariou!o,&#13;
c·ontrnl methorl" .. .,~~t&gt;-ted h, Jl.-Rnnuf&gt;r.&#13;
birth&#13;
search for a pair of the Chancellor's office adventurers&#13;
were combing the woods just outh of&#13;
~fain Place when one of them stumbled upon a man&#13;
xlothed in bucksin rags sitting in front of a crude&#13;
shelter.&#13;
After sharp questioning the officers discovered&#13;
Lliat they h~d found tr. William Bunion, who wa&#13;
last seen 3 years ago just before setting off on foot&#13;
from Greenquist Hall to his car which was located&#13;
in the East Parking Lot.&#13;
4. Castration.&#13;
5. Make sure one of you is dead.&#13;
6. Leaving your clothes on.&#13;
SPECIALLY FOR WOMEN&#13;
1. Only go c,ut with abortionists.&#13;
7. Keeping a thick quilt or lead shielding between&#13;
the two bodies.&#13;
8. Do it with a partner of the same sex.&#13;
!I. Attempt intercourse only while exceeding the&#13;
speed limit driving down 1-94 the wrong way.&#13;
2. Before going on a date, put a broken popbottle in&#13;
your private parts.&#13;
SPECIALLY FOR MEN&#13;
1. Put your balls ma baggie and ziploc it.&#13;
2. At the last minute, replace penis with large toe.&#13;
EPILOGUE&#13;
Mr. Bunion plans to return to Parkside after h is&#13;
over the shock of re-entering society. \\'hen asked&#13;
by this reporter if he will every again park his car In&#13;
the East Parking Lot, Mr. Bunion replied "What i a&#13;
car?"&#13;
These methods are tired and true and guaranteed&#13;
to prevent impregnation. For further information,&#13;
call 632-0091 anytime for advice.&#13;
It was learned later by this reporter that tr.&#13;
However, some of these methods are considered&#13;
illegal by your local authorities and the FBI. ~ow&#13;
that we have a president committed to legal&#13;
·'shacking up" and just general screwing around,&#13;
the_ federal laws will soon change.&#13;
Bunion was refused admission to the school becau&#13;
of his inability to remember what a car i . No one&#13;
was available for comment.&#13;
The Parkside------------&#13;
DeR ANGER&#13;
Vol. \" ~o. 2 \\edne .. da~. ~OH~mber 17. 1976&#13;
UW-P tastes Saga tragedy&#13;
by Fraiser Stetsonevski&#13;
In a dramatic early morning.&#13;
raid on the Saga Food Service's&#13;
cold storage unit last Friday, the&#13;
Campus Security Police and&#13;
several vigilante PSGA members&#13;
found the gruesome remains of&#13;
six former Parkside drop-outs&#13;
suspended from the ceiling in&#13;
positions which suggest their&#13;
ultimate fate as processed food.&#13;
Though an intense investigation&#13;
tor tacts to support&#13;
that conclusion is still underway,&#13;
Peter Champoop, a cafeteria&#13;
worker whose job is to prepare&#13;
cold-cuts and hot sandwiches&#13;
confessed that he was aware of&#13;
the atrocity but refused to accept&#13;
full credit for its inception." "I&#13;
wish I had dreamed this up,'' he&#13;
stated. "We may never have a&#13;
shortage again!"&#13;
When asked why he never&#13;
came forward to expose the&#13;
USDA inspector Clyde Buggers reviews the inttd~ - ·&#13;
quate conditions of the Saga cold storage untt.&#13;
brutal enterprise, Champoop&#13;
·E'xplained. ··Well, we were going&#13;
to keep it hushed until next&#13;
semester when a proposed cutback&#13;
in financial aid is to occur,&#13;
in which case the surprise would&#13;
rlefinitely be in our favor. Look, if&#13;
you have time l'il explain the&#13;
whole thing. Sit down and have&#13;
one of our 250 pounders with&#13;
cheese."&#13;
Butch Brineman, of the&#13;
Security force, who led the raid,&#13;
reported that four men and a&#13;
woman were arrested following a&#13;
brief scuffle in the cold storage&#13;
and outer offices over what appeared&#13;
to be a piece of evidence&#13;
but was later confirmed as a pork&#13;
chop. The four men were identified&#13;
as Sydney Dowd, 38, Buddy&#13;
Niechowicz, 26, and Earl '"JayBob"&#13;
Rivers, 50 all cafeteria&#13;
cooks, and Rudy Sump, W, a hair&#13;
stylist from Racine. The woman,&#13;
Eve Skwatlow, 32, was an admitted&#13;
voyeur from Waukegan,&#13;
Illinois.&#13;
Brineman explained that his&#13;
department's actions were based&#13;
purely on suspicion after ..one of&#13;
his men, while eating in the&#13;
cafeteria, discovered a · 1974&#13;
Tremper High School class ring&#13;
in his Ranger Burger, while an&#13;
_ anonymous chancellor reported&#13;
finding a contact lens on his&#13;
;!. chicken sandwich. "Other than . those two incidents, nothing has&#13;
been reported, which seems&#13;
odJ," Brineman said. ··But you&#13;
know these college kids. The_ "d&#13;
eat just about anything."&#13;
A sense of lo.:s and help! s.&#13;
anger has pervaded the chool&#13;
since the atrocity wa ..&#13;
discovered .. • enc C!-.-pected that&#13;
~uch an outrage could be &lt;'Ommitted&#13;
at this quiet, rural institution.&#13;
"Things just won't be&#13;
the same," reflected Larry&#13;
Flank. a sophomore. ··It looks&#13;
like 1"11 have to go back to&#13;
bringing a bag lunch."&#13;
The PSGA members who&#13;
participated in the raid as the&#13;
arche-typal hysterical mob which~&#13;
had nearly taken the law into&#13;
their own hands, seemed stunned&#13;
at the fate of their fellow·&#13;
students.&#13;
Said Senator Jim Lobomeire,&#13;
19, • We could have at least held&#13;
off on the raid until those poor&#13;
guys had been marinated or&#13;
rolled in breadcrumbs. Anythmg .&#13;
but this! Hell, I knew a few of&#13;
them personally and I can tell&#13;
you with a straight face that not&#13;
less than three of them wanted to&#13;
go as deep-fried crullers."&#13;
Another senator, Jean Rabbid,&#13;
sadly remarked, "It's all such a&#13;
waste'. I mean, they haven't even&#13;
passed inspection yet!''&#13;
Following the notification of&#13;
relatives. funerals for the&#13;
deceased will be held at their&#13;
respective churches. their times&#13;
yet to be announced, with a wake&#13;
afterwards for the entire group in&#13;
the Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Duo&#13;
vanished&#13;
by Jcrimi h John on&#13;
Two Parkside tud nts have&#13;
been r ported mi Ing since last&#13;
Friday afternoon after ma ing a&#13;
seemin 1) harmle b t with&#13;
s \'era! fellow tudents as to&#13;
~hether or not they would be able&#13;
to locate the Chancellor's offic .&#13;
Reported as missing to th&#13;
Kenosha police wer Richard&#13;
Magellan, !!l, of Racine, and&#13;
Robert Polo, 20, of Kenosha. Both&#13;
are hi tory majors at Parkside.&#13;
A friend of the pair said that he&#13;
and another comparuon w r&#13;
situn m the nion with th two&#13;
last Friday when 1ag II n began&#13;
boast1 that h was not afraid to&#13;
try to locate th office re ardl&#13;
of the rumor ab ut bamcad&#13;
and uard do .&#13;
After some pr paration, th&#13;
duo s t out on their tr k equipped&#13;
·ith a tent, fla blight, sterno&#13;
stove, rope , and oth r urviv 1&#13;
equipm nt, nd have not b n&#13;
seen nor h ard from sine • Th&#13;
Chane llor ·a not vallabl for&#13;
comm nt.&#13;
Wargamers&#13;
cited&#13;
by Adolph Patton&#13;
Campus Security Polic&#13;
·earched for six Parksid&#13;
tudents m1 "tng inc m dsemester&#13;
fter dropping their&#13;
clas e ampu. Police&#13;
di covered on Saturda) a homemade&#13;
bomb shelter. three&#13;
nuclear warheads, an immen&#13;
arsenal of ground combat&#13;
equipment, and a World War n&#13;
half-track in the D-2 level of&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
After an initial investigation,&#13;
the P.arkside Wargamers were&#13;
cited by the Kenosha Fire&#13;
Department for neglecting Fire&#13;
Safety Regulations, and blocking&#13;
fire lanes.&#13;
The Wargamers were also&#13;
given citations fol' malicious&#13;
destruction of' private property&#13;
after they dug forty-nine trenches&#13;
on the east campus lawn and&#13;
barb-wired the Library Learning&#13;
Center. &#13;
ft61 ·u JaqW8AON il39NYila&lt;J 301S&gt;lilYd 3H1. z&#13;
UW-Pcirkside&#13;
DeRANGER'&#13;
- EDITORIAL-OPINION -&#13;
Sex scandal finally climaxes&#13;
1-&#13;
•&#13;
i&#13;
;&#13;
••&#13;
~&#13;
J.Carter&#13;
Peaceful student&#13;
compromise sought&#13;
by Lester P. Madlock n,Jr.&#13;
What we need in this country more than a five-cent whore or cigar. is&#13;
a liltle law and order. The way that crime is handled in our cities is&#13;
disgusting and shocking. They expect decent, God-fearing, taxpaymg,&#13;
hard-working, child-loving, poorly educated and highly&#13;
emotional people like you and me, to turn in our guns, tanks bazookas,&#13;
sub-machine guns. rifles, anti-aircraft and nuclear weapons, so that&#13;
criminals can rule the world.&#13;
yO\&gt;know, my father used to say, "Just let one of them creeps&#13;
come Into my house, and I'll blow his brains clear across the street",&#13;
that made me feel safe. l'iow all of those mambv, pamby, conunie,&#13;
faggot, dope-addict, and liberal senators in congress, want to take our&#13;
prectousguns, tanks, bazookas, etc., away from us. I say, "go to hell";&#13;
I don't give up any guns of mine to no police. the}' are as crooked as the&#13;
rrooks&#13;
What we do need III this country is good old capital punishment, like&#13;
'In the old days. U somebody killed someone else, lhen they just strung&#13;
them up or shot them on sight. Oh God!, how lloog for those days.&#13;
In mj opinion, all rapists and murderers should have their ey~ put&#13;
out by a hot poker, slowly and painlully, then they should be boiled in'&#13;
t'()1tar and placed in a block of ice, to cool them off, then put out in the&#13;
middle of the street where they can be smashed to pieces, just like&#13;
some beautllullittle squirrel or skunk. This is the ooly way to protect&#13;
decent, god-fearmg, tax-paying, bard working, child-molesting,&#13;
poorly~ucated and highly-emotional people such as you and me.&#13;
Crtnunals must be made to pay, dearly, for their acts of lust. Why&#13;
can't they be like most of us decent, god-fearing, tax-eheating, childmolestmg.&#13;
poorly educated, and highly emotional people and just go&#13;
jerk off in some dirty movie house; no, they go out and hurl somebody.&#13;
Dope peddlers should be hung by the ears and forced to drink a&#13;
pilon a drano, and then put into a rubber room. This would solve the .&#13;
dope problem In this country, you 'betcha'. Don't send those kids to a&#13;
hallway house, send lbem back 10 their decent, hypocritical, taxcheating,&#13;
chll&lt;knolesting, poorly educated and highly emotional&#13;
.. rents; ibIS WIll straighten them out.&#13;
Once you stop the rapISts and the murderers and the dope peddlers,&#13;
this country will be safe for us decent, hypocritical, tax-cheating.&#13;
hlld·mole ling, poorly.educated, liquor-drinking, and highly&#13;
cmbllonal people such as you and me. But remember, pray for your&#13;
enem,-., love your neighbor, and love your God.&#13;
~~DITOR IN CHIEF: "Boss" J. Zipper&#13;
,PUTUM EATER: Gene-Tenlative&#13;
VAGUE EDIBLES: jock swisher, Pill Barfly&#13;
COPIOUS ANTEATER: Juicy Lung&#13;
PHOBIA AND GORE: Vun Tun Sun&#13;
CURLY RAnON: Soup Or Quarts&#13;
-:rUFF' Bill Barke. Phil Hermann, Jeff Litrenla S M&#13;
-"thy Brnak, Phil Livingston, Tom Cooper Bruce 'w ue arquart,&#13;
&gt;oH .. o .. i &lt;:;w~n~k; • agner&#13;
The DeRanger should not be ,.Iltll&#13;
seriously I don't care what you think Of' UV'·&#13;
You folio';'" me? Don't give me that! If'S .11'&#13;
jake. and if you can't see ftillt, you·..., ~&#13;
snet In your. ears. or your brain w'S sh· ...'"f&#13;
off the last tome yOU got a hait.CuI. YOU 90 I&#13;
now? HUh? Well. do y.? Answer me!!&#13;
'"en .nd The Parksi"de DeRange, is wwtl tIM&#13;
adited by $ever. I distu~bed students 01 t&#13;
UnIversity Wisconsin. Parkside whOc.nllO&#13;
be held responsible tor anyfhlng mYc" lets&#13;
its editorial poUc:.,.or content .&#13;
b)' J Carter&#13;
Sex in the high echelons of the Parkside administration d'oes not&#13;
surprise us. The headlines on.a rela~ed inci.dent have become. a blur.&#13;
Their persistence as sensational journalism has worn Uno, and&#13;
repercussions found in the form of Miss Elizabeth Ray's book: The&#13;
Washington Fringe Benefits, have been brief and pathetic, Even in the&#13;
Midwest, long known as.the "elastic in the shorts under the Bible&#13;
Belt", promiscuity in high office b~ely turns a head or sends a&#13;
frustrated school boy to the lavatory.&#13;
When Barbara Noggers, a typist for the humanities department,&#13;
confessed to simultaneous affairs with English professor, Lyle "Slow&#13;
Bob" Angstfot; economics professor, Roland Teemer; communications&#13;
lecturer; Pus Vlednegorkiewicz; German 'professor,&#13;
Juan Mirales; Dr. Baskedd Tucci of the chemistry department;&#13;
Chester Lambuster, advisor for Student Debits .with PAB; Joan&#13;
Hemungga, a typist for the foreign language division; and Manfred&#13;
Nevell, a shuttle bus driver, no. one really cared.&#13;
Her pamphlet, entitled, Parkside Overtime, dida booming busiIless&#13;
in the bookstore for three hours last October, then felt a terrninal cutback&#13;
in sales. The pamphlet was taken off the shelves last week.&#13;
The Deftanger takes a dim view of the entire affair. not only for iis&#13;
pitiful attempt at sensationalism, or Miss Nogger-s questioQable&#13;
judgement in the revelation of it which destroyed the stainless&#13;
reputations of several prestigious academians, but for the shameless&#13;
pride she displays in the matter.&#13;
We feel the investigation in her affairs was incomplete. Questions&#13;
arise which need answering. Even the pamphlet was short of facts.&#13;
For instance: How was Professor Teemer ? Did he use a con..&#13;
traceptive, and what did he say afterward? Was Dr. Tucci's war&#13;
wound a hindrance or did it cause new heart-stopping sensations that&#13;
broughton mulitple climaxes. Is Juan Mirlaes really a kinky fe~?&#13;
Does he really do those things to your navel? And how? How does&#13;
Professor Angslfot manage with only that one arm of his? Whatls his&#13;
favorite position, and could you please describe those "strange"&#13;
undergarments he wears?&#13;
These and other questions must be answered. Perhaps the whole&#13;
shabby controversy can then come to final and blissfully ecstatic&#13;
climax.&#13;
··&#13;
·•=&#13;
---&#13;
Lester P. Madlock n. Jr.&#13;
•&#13;
9l6l 'l.l ,aqwaf.0N ~3!&gt;N\t~ao 3O1S&gt;t~Vd 3Hl. l&#13;
UW-Pcirkside&#13;
De RANGER· - EDITORIAL-O~INION&#13;
Sex scandal finally clim~xes&#13;
• .. ,,.&#13;
~&#13;
J.Carter&#13;
Peaceful student&#13;
compromise sought&#13;
by Le st r P. ad lock II, Jr.&#13;
,,.&#13;
by JCa,ter&#13;
Sex in the high echelons of the Parkside administration &lt;foes not&#13;
surprise us.-The headlines on a related incident have become a blur.&#13;
Their persistence as sensational journalism has worn thin, and&#13;
repercussions found in the form of Miss. Elizabeth-~y's book, The&#13;
Washington Fringe Benefits, have been brief and pathetic. Even in the&#13;
Midwest, long known as the " elastic in the shorts under the Bible&#13;
Belt", promiscuity in high office barely turns a head or sends a&#13;
frustrated school boy to the lavatory.&#13;
When Barbara Noggers, a typist for the humanities department,&#13;
confessed to simultaneous affairs with English professor, Lyle "Slow&#13;
Bob" Angstfot; economics professor, Roland Teemer; communications&#13;
lecturer; Pus Vlednegorkiewicz; German professor,&#13;
Juan Mirales; Dr. Baskedd Tucci of the chemistry department;&#13;
Chester Lambuster, advi~or for Student Debits ,with PAB; Joan&#13;
Hemungga, a typist for the foreign language division; and Manfred&#13;
Nevell, a shuttle bus driver, no_ o!'}e really cared.&#13;
Her pamphlet, entitled, Parkside Overtime, did.a booming busiriess&#13;
in the bookstore for three hours last October, then felt a terminal cutback&#13;
in sales. The pamphlet was taken off the shelves last week.&#13;
The DeRanger takes a dim view of the entire affair, not only for its&#13;
pitiful attempt at sensationalism, or Miss Nogger1s question.able&#13;
judgement in the revelation of it which destroyed the stainless&#13;
reputations of several prestigious academians, but for the shameless&#13;
pride she displays iri the matter.&#13;
We feel the investigation in her affairs was incomplete. Questions&#13;
arise which need answering. Even the pamphlet was short of facts.&#13;
For instance: How was Professor Teemer? Did he use a contraceptive,&#13;
and what did he say afterward? Was Dr. Tucci's war&#13;
wound a hindrance or did it cause new heart-stopping sensations that&#13;
brought-On mulitple climaxes. Is Juan Mirlaes really a kinky fetishist?&#13;
Does he really do those things to your navel? And how? How does&#13;
Professor Angstfot manage with only that one arm of his? What is his&#13;
favorite position, and could you please describe those "strange"&#13;
undergarments he wears?&#13;
· These and other questions must be~answered. Perhaps the whole&#13;
shabby controversy can then come to final and blissfully ecstatic&#13;
climax.&#13;
Lester P. Madlock II, Jr.&#13;
'!-:OITOR rN CHIEF : "Boss" J. Zipper&#13;
iPUTUM EATER: Gene-Tentative The DeRanger should not be ta~en&#13;
se.riously . I don't care what you think or say.&#13;
You follow me? Don't give me that! lt's all a&#13;
ioke, and if you can't see th1at, you've go;&#13;
snot in your_ ears, or your b~ain was sha:tit off the last time you got a ha1t-cut. Yo~?&#13;
now? Huh? Well, do ya? Answer me .·&#13;
VAGUE ED1Bl.ES: _jock swisher, Pill Barfly&#13;
COPIOUS ANTEATER: Juicy Lung&#13;
PHOBIA AND GORE: Vun Tun Sun&#13;
CURLY RATION: Soup Or Quarts&#13;
'&gt;' fUFF : Bill Barke, Phil Hermann Jeff L"tr ta ::athy Brnak, Phil Livingston Tom 'eoo· P 18 en ' Sue Marquart, . • er, ruce Wagner 10 fro" 1 ~'.V~!1~ki .&#13;
The Parkside DeR anger is written a"d&#13;
e.dited by several distutbed students of th~&#13;
University Wisconsin . Parkside who c~~::s&#13;
be held responsible for anything muc&#13;
its editoria.l polic.y or content.&#13;
I &#13;
Poet to read&#13;
by Ludwig von Scbeutz&#13;
poet Bunyon McPheeters will present a workshop and reading at&#13;
Parkside on Wednesday, December 29 from 3-3:18 p.m. in the Wyllie&#13;
Ubrary·Learnmg Center Room D-I07. The event is free and open to&#13;
the general puIrlic who are between the ages of twenty-seven and&#13;
forty-three and will admit to ever ha~ing had scaly. patches on their&#13;
abdomens. .&#13;
McPheeters, most widely known for this tobacco juice stained beard&#13;
and bloodshot eyes, will preface his reading with a creative workshop,&#13;
which WIllinclude push-ups, squat thrusts, a game of tag, an S&amp;M&#13;
encounter session, and a slide presentation dealing with the x-rays of&#13;
Rod McKuen's throat and his subsequent genital disorder.&#13;
For his reading, McPheeters will deal with some of his most recent&#13;
workas well as his earliest, choosing selections from The Sad Enema&#13;
11956),Song of the Whaling Pygmy (1959). Love Never Forgets a Long&#13;
Dislanee Call Collect( 1966), and An Eviction Notice From God (1972).&#13;
An effervescent and willy speaker, McPheeters has met with great&#13;
success at the colleges and girls' reformatories he has visited. Though&#13;
he frequently forgets to bring his selected readings on his tours, he has&#13;
always managed to captivate his audiences with tasteless stories&#13;
about the women he has known, and the religious leaders he 'would liketo&#13;
see dead. or his infantile routine in which he dresses as a streetwalker&#13;
and taunts members of his audience into coming onstage and&#13;
smear his knees an~ shoulders with aftershave lotion.&#13;
Anyone interested in more information on the McPheeters reading&#13;
can contact Steve Lannsky of the Physical Plant at extension 0030.&#13;
it. While we were at it, we came&#13;
(and how!) across the following&#13;
clipping protruding from my&#13;
drawers:&#13;
WASHINGTON, D&amp;C&#13;
(Associated Phress) - TheSecretary&#13;
of Labor announced&#13;
today that three new positions-in&#13;
Community Action, Affirmative&#13;
Action, and .Slide-bolt Action-&#13;
. were being-budgeted for the next&#13;
three consecutive trimester&#13;
periods. Al cumers (preferably&#13;
E.Z.· has&#13;
male) are welcome to apply.&#13;
Whatever skills applicants&#13;
possess will be analyzed according&#13;
to the following criteria:&#13;
1) Ability to erect the appropriate&#13;
office spac.e&#13;
(preferably in 15 minutes);'&#13;
2) Discharge orders, without&#13;
regress, even if it means egg in&#13;
the face;&#13;
3) The guts to back-off from&#13;
stiff resistance. In other words, to&#13;
recognize when the backbone of&#13;
your office staff has gone limp;&#13;
4) The determination 10 boldly&#13;
thrust into new parameters;&#13;
bango timel&#13;
Dear Ranger:&#13;
Allow me to express my&#13;
latitude in having head the&#13;
supreme pleasure of reading a&#13;
'ver'y Noble PeUarticie. My&#13;
friend Rubin Jacov and' I had a&#13;
bang-o: lime skimming through&#13;
e fl6l 'll J8qWaA0N J86ultHaeJ 30IS)lHYd 3H.L&#13;
Catalog&#13;
adds major •&#13;
problem&#13;
read&#13;
Parkside's next catalog is&#13;
expected to contain the following&#13;
new major:&#13;
students who have a problem&#13;
with deciding what major concentration&#13;
they wish to seek at&#13;
Parkside may wish U&gt; seek an&#13;
undecided major.&#13;
Requirements for this major&#13;
will be 120 credits, with no more&#13;
than three classes in each&#13;
discipline. Students will be&#13;
required to take at least 20&#13;
credits of independent study and&#13;
physical education courses to&#13;
supply them with enough breadth&#13;
and basic skills.&#13;
Students must also declare&#13;
their interest at least seven&#13;
semesters before they attend&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
';amt&#13;
Poet Hunyon McPheeters will&#13;
on December- 29th in WLLC&#13;
5) The foresight to abort the&#13;
mission should preventive&#13;
precautions suffer undue&#13;
leakage, causing excessive buildup;&#13;
and&#13;
6) To keep cool .. never squirm&#13;
while in action.&#13;
These positions will be open to&#13;
all Civil, Service examinees&#13;
scoring above a certain&#13;
minimum, with minor revisions&#13;
of the automatic point award&#13;
system made such that specific&#13;
disabilities won't be good for&#13;
shit! ,&#13;
Rubin and I thought -your&#13;
readers might enjoy this little&#13;
bureaucratic P.R. emission.&#13;
What-a thrill it would be if a&#13;
Parkside grad were selected. to&#13;
fill just one of these openingsplush&#13;
office and all! This seems&#13;
unlikely, for it's usually the case&#13;
that a position of such potency is&#13;
filled. with someone from a more&#13;
established institution, like&#13;
Havhard. Tsk. Parkside students&#13;
get all the hard knocks.&#13;
Yours in levity,&#13;
E.Z. Cwnmings.&#13;
May Rain Corps re-founded&#13;
ist Mate: Say, sweety! You rang?&#13;
J.P.J.: How many times must Itell you, sir, that I&#13;
am your captain, oot-your sweety!?! Really. you&#13;
do take your title too seriously!&#13;
1st Mate: Well, at least. sornebody's serious here!&#13;
Join the navy and see the world, my ass! Ididn't&#13;
think it meant painting an atlas on the ship's&#13;
deck.&#13;
J.P.J.: Bitch, bitch, bitch! What'd ya expect, a free&#13;
college education? Now, I called you here to&#13;
discuss those roudy men in the masts. They have&#13;
much too much time on ·their hands.&#13;
1st. Mate: Nice alliteration, sir, and yes, I know.&#13;
They've been using the National Ensi&amp;" for target&#13;
practice again.&#13;
J.P.J.: What!? Those sharpshooters have been&#13;
taking pot shots at our flag? !&#13;
1st Mate: No, sir,-notthe flag. The new ensign from&#13;
Philly. He's been complaining that his braid is&#13;
becoming [raid from their musket ~ire.&#13;
J.P.J.: Nice alliteration. But that's what) mean!&#13;
Those leather heads ...&#13;
1st Mate: Leather necks, sir.&#13;
J.P.J.: What? Oh, yeh, leather necks. They have&#13;
too much time on their hands. What can we do?&#13;
1st Mate: Maybe if they were organized. into. a&#13;
fighting group it would help.&#13;
J.P ..I. How would that help?&#13;
/ 1st Mate: Well, sir, we could teach them how to peel&#13;
_ spuds and mop the floor.&#13;
J.P.J.: Swab the deck.&#13;
'st Mate: I'll get right on it, sir.&#13;
Cunt. un fJH/;!" Ii&#13;
Btson-tenuial MiD;utes&#13;
a one act play&#13;
by&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
Dateline, November 9-10,1775&#13;
Two hundred and one yMrs ago a little known but&#13;
in-famous event took place somewhere east 01&#13;
Obscene, Wisconsin, which was' to be lost in the&#13;
anals of history. It went something like this.&#13;
Act I., Scene INovember&#13;
9,1775&#13;
John Paul Jones is approached. by his FirstMate&#13;
...&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
room D-107.&#13;
Raw lust loathed&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I think something should be&#13;
done about the raw sex that goes&#13;
on down the Main Street of&#13;
Parkside. It is utterly disgusting&#13;
to be walking along and seeing on&#13;
everyone of those couches at&#13;
least two people in reclining&#13;
positions, It's very embarrassing&#13;
for people like me to cast my eyes&#13;
upon this outrageous activity. On&#13;
top of all that, I blush easily. It is&#13;
also very contagious. First one&#13;
couch is filled with intimate&#13;
lovers and then pretty soon all the&#13;
couches are full of the deadly&#13;
lust. I strongly believe that&#13;
something should be done about&#13;
this abhorring situauon. There&#13;
are never any couches open when&#13;
it comes around to my turn with&#13;
my leverfor the day' I feel I have&#13;
just as much right to the couches&#13;
as the others who fill them day&#13;
after day and hour after hour!&#13;
t.uve and Kisses,&#13;
Susie Cream Cheese&#13;
r-ont. 011 pn~f" 8&#13;
The Movie Scene&#13;
by Angel Ramier ea&#13;
For the next month an a half, the film industry will be excreting its&#13;
holiday blockbusters onto big silver screens around the country.&#13;
Squeezed from the bowels of motion picture companies' largest&#13;
budgets, most prestigious directors, and biggest stars, they will splash&#13;
across billboards, T.V. screens, magazine and newspaper features,&#13;
and filmed "coming attractions" in competitive, dazzling and&#13;
sometimes tasteless publicity campaigns.&#13;
Saved [or those last weeks before the deadline for 1976Academy&#13;
Award consideration they are the efforts of canny studio heads who&#13;
are out to grab a percentage of movie goers' Christmas bonus checks.&#13;
In some cases, an over-blown blockbuster manages to barely pass&#13;
wind. and a studio may have to work like hyper banshees to get out of&#13;
the red by next Christmas.&#13;
Here is a run-down of the holiday fare for those with discriminating&#13;
tastes:&#13;
Cough at the Devil- A handsome. wordly circus clown throws up on a&#13;
young girl at a childrens' hospital and is disgraced. He goes to Africa,&#13;
where he finds work as a tap dancer's understudy in a traveling Zulu&#13;
repertory company. After falling in love with a gazelle, he rents an&#13;
abandoned gravel plant and sets up a business manufacturing&#13;
quicksand.&#13;
Overacted by Andy Griffith and Connie Stevens, the film stumbles&#13;
through a predictable script. At least the gazelle had a nice tush.&#13;
The Last Lug Wrench - Despite George C. Scott's sensitive, commanding&#13;
performance as an almost totally paralyzed plumber, this&#13;
film wanders between themes of lonely lasciviousness and dental&#13;
hygiene.&#13;
The story concerns Buford Davis (Stott), a plwnber incapacitated&#13;
from the neck down due to a childhood accident. Though fully capable&#13;
at his job - he fixes toilets and drain pipes by holding tools in his mouth&#13;
- he must face a shattering dilemma. He needs false teeth.&#13;
The film climaxes when Davis, head-strong and persistant, is on his&#13;
back making a delicate adjustment under a garbage disposal, a plyer&#13;
• in his gums, when he gets a runny nose. Whining and squirming, Scott&#13;
manages to convey the rough persistence of a despera te man, with&#13;
insightful determination, against a world gone limp.&#13;
Never a Dull.Hemorrhage • The world goes topsy-turvy in this mad&#13;
farce about a crack emergency room team in a Nel! York hospital.&#13;
Though the plot has some familiar overtones, th~ breakneck pace and&#13;
superb acting, most notably Ernest Borgnine as a wacky, profane&#13;
orderly, and Ed McMahon as "Bump" the sadistic nurse, stand by&#13;
themselves.&#13;
Though the movie may be almost nauseatingly bloodthirsty in parts&#13;
f Director Richard Lester was actually able U&gt; get several fresh c0rpses&#13;
to use in his train wreck and university bombing scenes), it is a&#13;
delight to watch, and will most certainly be a memorable distraction&#13;
during the holiday season.&#13;
Poet to read&#13;
by Ludwig von Scheutz&#13;
Poet Bunyon McPheeters will present a workshop and reading at&#13;
Parkside on W_ednesday, December 29 from 3-3:18 p.m. in the Wyllie&#13;
Library-Learning Center Room D-107. The event is free and open to&#13;
the general p~li_c who ~re between the ages of twenty-seven and&#13;
fortY,-three and will admit to ever having had scaly patches on their&#13;
abdomens. ·&#13;
McPheeters, most widely known for this tobacco juice stained beard&#13;
and bloodshot eyes, will preface his reading with a creative workshop&#13;
which will include push-ups, squat thrusts, a game of tag an S&amp;M&#13;
encounter session, and a slide presentation dealing with th~ x-rays of&#13;
Rod McKuen's throat and his subsequent genital disorder.&#13;
For his reading, McPheeters will deal with some of his most recent&#13;
work as well as his earliest, choosing selections from The Sad Enema&#13;
( 1956), Song of the Whaling Pygmy ( 1959). Love Never Forgets a Long&#13;
Distance Call Collect ( 1966), and An Eviction Notice From God ( 1972).&#13;
t 9L6l 'Ll JaqWiMON Ja6ue~aa 301S&gt;t~'ld 3H.l&#13;
Catalog&#13;
adds • maJor&#13;
problem&#13;
Parkside's next catalog is&#13;
expected to contain the following&#13;
new major:&#13;
Students who have a problem&#13;
with deciding what major concentration&#13;
they wish to s k at&#13;
Parkside may wish to seek an&#13;
undecided major.&#13;
Requirements for this major&#13;
will be 120 credits, with no more&#13;
than three classes in each&#13;
discipline. Students will be&#13;
required t.o take at lea t 20&#13;
credits of independent study and&#13;
physical education cour s to&#13;
supply them with enough breadth&#13;
and basic skills.&#13;
An effervescent and witty speaker, McPheeters has met with great&#13;
success at the colleges and girls' reformatories he has visited. Though&#13;
he frequently forgets to bring his selected readings on his tours, he has&#13;
always managed to captivate his alldiences with tasteless stories&#13;
about the women he has known, and the religious leaders he would liketo&#13;
see dead, or his infantile routine in which he dresses as a streetwalker&#13;
and taunts members of his audience into coming onstage and&#13;
smear his knees an~ shoulders with aftershave lotion.&#13;
Anyone interested in more information on the McPheeters reading&#13;
can contact Steve Lannsky of the Physical Plant at extension 0030.&#13;
Poet Bun_ on Mc Pheeteri,, ~ ill read 'ot Pork~ide&#13;
on Decembt&gt;r 29th m WLLC room D-107.&#13;
Students must also declar&#13;
their interest at least seven&#13;
semesters before they attend&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
E.Z. has&#13;
bango time!&#13;
DPar Ranger:&#13;
Allow me to express my&#13;
latitude in having head the&#13;
supreme pleasure of reading a&#13;
·ver'y Noble Pellarticle. My&#13;
friend Rubin Jacov and I had a&#13;
bang--0 ! time skimming through&#13;
it. While we were at it, we came&#13;
( and how!) across the following&#13;
clipping protruding from my&#13;
drawers:&#13;
WASHINGTON , D&amp;C&#13;
( Associated Phress) - The&#13;
Secretary of Labor announced&#13;
today that three new positions-in&#13;
Community Action, Affirmative&#13;
Action, and Slide-bolt Acuon-&#13;
. were being budgeted for the next&#13;
three consecutive trimester&#13;
periods. Al cumers ( preferably&#13;
male) are welcome to apply.&#13;
Whatever skills applicants&#13;
possess will be analyzed according&#13;
to the following criteria:&#13;
1) Ability to erect the appropriate&#13;
office spac.e&#13;
(preferably in 15 minutes);&#13;
2) Discharge orders, without&#13;
regress, even if it means egg in&#13;
the face;&#13;
3) The guts to back-off from&#13;
stiff resistance. In other words, to&#13;
recognize when the backbone of&#13;
your office staff has gone limp;&#13;
4) The determination lo boldly&#13;
thrust into new parameters;&#13;
5) The foresight to abort the&#13;
mission should preventive&#13;
precautions suffer undue&#13;
leakage, causing excessive buildup;&#13;
and&#13;
6 J To keep cool - never squirm&#13;
while in action.&#13;
These positions will be open to&#13;
all Civil Service examinees&#13;
scoring above a certain&#13;
mirumum, with minor revisions&#13;
of the automatic point award&#13;
system made such that specific&#13;
disabilities won't be good for&#13;
shit!&#13;
Rubin and I thought your&#13;
readers might enjoy this little&#13;
bureaucratic P.R. emission.&#13;
What -a thrill it would be if a&#13;
Parkside grad were selected to&#13;
fill just one of these openingsplush&#13;
office and all! This seems&#13;
unlikely, for it's usually the case&#13;
that a position of such potency is&#13;
filled with someone from a more&#13;
established institution, like&#13;
Havhard. Tsk. Parkside students&#13;
get all the hard knocks.&#13;
Yours in levity.&#13;
E.Z. Cummings.&#13;
May Rain Corps re-founded&#13;
Bison-tenuial Minutes&#13;
a one act play&#13;
by&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
Dateline, November 9-10, 1775&#13;
Two hundred and one years ago a little known but&#13;
in-famous event took place somewhere east of&#13;
Obscene, Wisconsin, which was·to be lost in the&#13;
anals of history. It went something like this.&#13;
Act I., Scene I.&#13;
November 9, 1775&#13;
John Paul Jones is approached, by his First&#13;
Mate ...&#13;
1st Mate: Say, sweety! You rang?&#13;
J.P.J.: How many times must I tell you, sir, that I&#13;
am your captain, nof your sweety ! ? ! Really, you&#13;
do take your title too seriously!&#13;
1st Mate : Well, at least somebody's serious here !&#13;
Join the navy and see the world, my ass! I didn't&#13;
tl'Jnk it meant painting an atlas on the ship's&#13;
deck.&#13;
J.P.J.: Bitch, bitch, bitch! What'd ya expect, a free&#13;
college education? Now, I called you here to&#13;
discuss those roudy men in the masts. They have&#13;
much too much time on ·their hands.&#13;
1st. Mate: Nice alliteration, sir, and yes, I know.&#13;
They've_ been using the National Ensign for target&#13;
practice again.&#13;
J. p .J.: What!? Those sharpshooters have been&#13;
taking pot shots at our flag?!&#13;
1st Mate : No, sir, not the flag. The new ensign from&#13;
Philly. He's been complaining that his braid is&#13;
becoming £raid from their musket fire.&#13;
J .P .J.: Nice alliteration. But that's what _I mean!&#13;
Those leather heads ...&#13;
1st Mate: Leather necks, sir.&#13;
J.P.J.: What? Oh, yeh, leathe: necks. They have&#13;
too much time on their hands. What can we do?&#13;
1st Mate: Maybe if they were organized into a&#13;
fighting group it would. help.&#13;
J.P .. J. Ho" would that help?&#13;
1 1st Mate: Well, sir, we could teach them how to peel&#13;
spuds and mop the floor.&#13;
J.P.J.: Swab the deck.&#13;
1st Mate: I'll get right on it, sir.&#13;
Conl. on pu~t· K&#13;
Raw lust loathed&#13;
•&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
·1 think something should be&#13;
done about the raw sex that goes&#13;
on down the Main Street of&#13;
Parkside. It is utterly disgusting&#13;
to be walking along and seeing on&#13;
everyone of those couches at&#13;
least two people in reclining&#13;
positio:is. It's very embarrassing&#13;
for people like me to cast my eyes&#13;
upon this outrageous activity. On&#13;
top of all that, I blush easily. It is&#13;
also very contagious. First one&#13;
couch is filled with intimate&#13;
lovers and then pretty soon all the&#13;
couches are full of the deadly&#13;
lust. I strongly believe th t&#13;
sc,mething should be done about&#13;
this abhorring ituation. Th re&#13;
are never any couches open when&#13;
it comes around to my turn with&#13;
my iover for the day! I feel I ha,.. •&#13;
just a,; much right to the couch -&#13;
as the others who fill them day&#13;
after day and hour after hour!&#13;
1,ove and Ki es,&#13;
Susie Cream Cheese&#13;
........ OIi pUJ!I' H&#13;
The Movie Scene&#13;
by Angel Ramiern&#13;
For the next month an a half, the film industry \rill bee cretin its&#13;
holiday blockbusters onto big sil\'er screens around the coun~·.&#13;
Squeezed fr_om the bowels of motion picture comparue ' larg st&#13;
budgets, most prestigious directors, and biggest stars, they ~ill splash&#13;
across billboards, T.V. screens, magazine and newspaper featur ,&#13;
and filmed ··conung attractions" 10 competitive, dazzlin nd&#13;
sometimes tasteless publicity campaigns.&#13;
Sa\'ed for those last weeks before the de-adline for 1976 Academy&#13;
Award consideration they are the efforts of canny tudio h a who&#13;
are out to grab a percentage of movie goers' Chri tmas bonus chi&#13;
In some cases, an over-blown blockbuster manages to bar ly pa&#13;
wind. and a studio may have to work like hyp r ban hee to t out of&#13;
the red by next Christmas.&#13;
Here is a run-0own of the holiday fare for tho e with discriminating&#13;
tastes:&#13;
Cough at the Dc,·il - A hand ome. wordly circus clown throws up on a&#13;
young girl at a childrens' hospital and is di raced, H o to Africa,&#13;
where he finds work as a tap dancer's understudy in a traveling Zulu&#13;
repertory compan)'. After falling in love with a gazelle, he rents an&#13;
abandoned gravel plant and ets up a bu ine manufacturin&#13;
quicksand.&#13;
Overacted by Andy Griffith and Connie Stevens, the film stumbl&#13;
through a predictable script. At least the gazelle had a nice tush.&#13;
The La,;t Lug Wrenrh - Despite George C. Scott's ensitive, commanding&#13;
performance as an almost totally paralyzed plumber, this&#13;
film wanders between themes of lonely lasciviousn and dental&#13;
hygiene.&#13;
The story concerns Buford Davis (Scott), a plumber incapacitated&#13;
from the neck down due to a childhood accident. Though fully capable&#13;
at his job - he fixes toilets and drain pipes by holding tools in his mouth&#13;
- he must face a shattering dilemma. He needs false teeth.&#13;
The film climaxes when Davis, head-strong and persistant, is on his&#13;
back making a delicate adjustment under a garbage disposal, a plyer&#13;
• in his gums, when he gets a runny nose. Whining and squirming, Scott&#13;
manages to convey the rough persistence of a desperate man, with&#13;
insightful determination, against a world gone limp.&#13;
Never a Dull Hemorrhage - The world goes topsy-turvy in this mad&#13;
farce about a crack emergency room team in a Ne'! York hospital.&#13;
Though the plot has some familiar overtones, th~ breakneck pace and&#13;
superb acting, most notably Ernest Borgnine as a wacky, profane&#13;
orderly, and Ed McMahon as "Bump" the sadistic nurse, stand b&#13;
themselves.&#13;
Though the movie may be almost nauseatingly bloodthirsty in parts&#13;
t Director Richard Lester was actually able to get several fresh corpses&#13;
to use in his train \\&gt;Teck and university bombing scenes), it is a&#13;
delight to watch, and will most certainly be a memorable distraction&#13;
during the holiday season. &#13;
fl61 'll ~aqW"AONH30NVH&amp;(J 30IS&gt;lHVd 3H.1 ~&#13;
Doctor: Rain? Not today.&#13;
S.N.: No Marines. You know, arrah ..,forget it.&#13;
SceneY.&#13;
Sam returns to Tu.JVTavern on crutches.&#13;
could see a nice tanKardof ale about oow! Ah, Tun&#13;
Tavern! I'll just bop in here and quaff a quick&#13;
one. Hunun, nice alliteration! (to Bartender)&#13;
Bartend, I'll have a pint or ale, please. Say, yo~&#13;
haven't seen any Marines around here, have you.&#13;
Bortend: Nah, it ain't gonna rain. Here's your brew&#13;
bud.&#13;
S.N.: Nice alliteration, but ,I said Marines, not may&#13;
rain.&#13;
Bortend: Who, what?&#13;
S.N.: You know, Arrah arrah, gung ho.... oh, hell!&#13;
Jobn Wayne!&#13;
Bortend: Oh, Marines! Nah, just a few good men&#13;
who want to fight. They're all around.&#13;
S.N.: How can you tell? It-looks pretty peaceful.&#13;
Bortend: Try God save the you-koow-who.&#13;
S.N.: Who, John Wayne? _&#13;
Bartend: No, nerd, the king! You must be an officer!&#13;
S.N.:{;()DSAYE THE KING!!! AHH!!! HELP!!!&#13;
. Sceue iV.&#13;
S.N.: Thanks, doc. You sure I won't get /3bies,&#13;
tetanus, or-get wierd during the full moon. Those&#13;
are pretty nasty bites!&#13;
Doctor: No, you're okay. You'd best stay away from&#13;
wild dog packs. They can be real ~ean.&#13;
S.N.: They were Marines.&#13;
Doctor: Rain? Not today. .&#13;
S.N.: No Marines. You know, arrah ...forget It.&#13;
Scene IV.&#13;
S.N.: Thanks, doc. You sure I won't get rabies,&#13;
tetanus, or get wierdduring the full moon? Those&#13;
are pretty nasty bites!&#13;
Doctor: No, you're okay. You'd best stay away from&#13;
wild dog packs. They can be real mean.&#13;
S.N: They were Marine.s.&#13;
rUlit. (ruIn flair ':'&#13;
J.P.J.: Not you. the Marines!&#13;
lSI Mate: It's not going to rain, sir.&#13;
.t P.J.: Not may r$in! Marine!&#13;
1st Mate: Who, what?&#13;
J.P:J.: You know, arrah arrah, gung ho, take the&#13;
hill! Guard the embassy, first to ftght, Semper&#13;
Fidelis, Halls of Montazuma, Shores of Tripoli!&#13;
lSI Mate: Who, what?&#13;
J.P.J.: John Wayne!!!&#13;
lSI Mate: Dh, Marines! I'll get someone on it right&#13;
away.&#13;
Seenen.&#13;
First Mate meets with Samual Nickolas.&#13;
lSI Mate: ...so that's our problem. We want you to&#13;
organl2e them into a fighting force.&#13;
S.N.: But why me? I know nothing of naval ,&#13;
pr·'. ~..res. Besides, my hair's too short.&#13;
1st: Mate: Perfect!&#13;
S.N.: What's in it for me, anyway?&#13;
lSI Mate: Marine Captain's bars. .&#13;
S.N.: I could dig being a captain '8nd. ~g my&#13;
own pub but why'd you say It may ram.&#13;
1st Mate: Not may rain! Marine! You know, arrah&#13;
arrah, gung bo, take the hill! Guard the embassy,&#13;
first to fight, Semper Fidelis, Halls of Montazuma,&#13;
Shores of Tripoli!&#13;
S.N.: Who, what?&#13;
1st Mate: John Wayne!&#13;
S.N.: Oh,Marines! l'UseewhatI can dig up.&#13;
Scene ill. November 10,1775&#13;
Sam is walking the streets of Philadelphia&#13;
.. arching out a few good men who want to fi£ht.&#13;
S. .: (to selfl I've been humping these streets for&#13;
hours. Where are the Marines when you need&#13;
them~ I'll bet they're all out at the bars. Yeh, I&#13;
S.N.: (to bartender) Thanks, pal! Why didn't YllQ&#13;
warn me? '&#13;
Bortend: I lost five bucks on the Army-Navy 88Ille&#13;
last week. Army won!&#13;
S.N.: (to patrons) All right, you few good men who&#13;
want to fight, who'll be the first 10 sign up and&#13;
help initiate the greatest fighting force in history.&#13;
Who will defend to the death life'"l.iberty and&#13;
pursuit of happiness? Who will begin thl\!ong .&#13;
of proud patriots who will win wars, buy bonds,&#13;
and be always faithful to freedom? Who wanta lb&#13;
annihilate the antagonists ot America?&#13;
Group: Do we get a free college education too?&#13;
S.N.: (to Bartend) What went wrong?&#13;
Bortend: Nice alliteration, bad recruiting. Watch&#13;
.this. FREE ALE TD AL4MARINES!!!&#13;
S.N.: AHH!!! HELP!!!&#13;
Bortend: How's that?&#13;
S.N.: Gr~t, thanks! Hey, what's your name and&#13;
who the Hell are all these men?&#13;
Bortend: I'm Robert Mullens and this is the Continental&#13;
Congress.&#13;
S.N.: Well, Bob, you're now Captain Mullens, the&#13;
first Marine Corps recruiter.&#13;
Bortend: Oh? And I take it you are Captain Samual&#13;
Nickolas, the first Marine Corps Commandant?&#13;
S.N.: Yeh, painfully correct! (to man at the bar)&#13;
Private, could you please remove your boot from&#13;
my throat?&#13;
And that's the way it was, two-hundred~and-oDe&#13;
years ago last week!&#13;
r-unt. Fr-om puge 7&#13;
Johns iibed&#13;
,&#13;
Dear People:&#13;
You know, I get kind of mad&#13;
whenever I go to the john and&#13;
\,have to sit in those damn white,&#13;
sterile, naked stalls. You may not&#13;
know this but in this whole&#13;
stinking building, the only place a&#13;
guy can get any rest and peace is&#13;
in the can. I see to it that I put in&#13;
three or four hours every day.&#13;
It's great, and personally, I like&#13;
the old johns in Greenquist rather&#13;
than some of those bowls they've&#13;
got in the newer ones that are six&#13;
feet off the ground. You know&#13;
what I mean. I come away from&#13;
dangling on those things with a&#13;
.. crease right where the sur. don't&#13;
~ shine .&#13;
.; ----------------, ;i PREVENTS I&#13;
~I PABpresents Wednesday, NOVembe:17 (as usual)&#13;
I Free Lecture: sponsered by Pre-Law Club: "Fixing tickets" Art or I Craft&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Anyway, I was just wonde~&#13;
who I could see about getting a&#13;
couple posters hung up. You&#13;
know, an Alice Cooper or the&#13;
Stones, or Bowie. I don't knO\ll&#13;
what the girls would. want. Wen,&#13;
how ahout it? Hey, and maybe&#13;
some magazines or comic books,&#13;
or a six-pack! Maybe somebody&#13;
could install an eight-track, you&#13;
know?&#13;
Think it over. Hey, and call me.&#13;
I've got a water bed you might be&#13;
interested in using.&#13;
Yours,&#13;
Arthur Bunpbuccer&#13;
ll're tler&#13;
crippled&#13;
Judd GutzbUl!t grapples Elmer Hassen&#13;
oeiology professor in a 13-0 march.&#13;
to the mat, pinning the&#13;
Thursday t November 18&#13;
by world-wide travellers (Parkside Shuttle ~ Wrestlers open season Travel Lecture:&#13;
Drivers)&#13;
PAB Presents: "The-we-advertise-in-toilets-movie" Down The Drain I&#13;
at 7 p.m. at Union _&#13;
I I&#13;
. Friday, Novemher 19 I&#13;
IConcert: featuring the one, the only, fantastic ......... PAB does il Iagain! . I&#13;
Pre·Thanksgiving Turkety Shoot: Contestants must supply weapons.I&#13;
I Parkside faculty supplies turkeys.&#13;
I _ Saturday, November 20 I&#13;
IOutdoor Track Meet: UW-Parkside Streakers v. Petrifying Springs I&#13;
IPark County Sheri~ at 4:00. I&#13;
I Sunday, Novemher21 I&#13;
Parkside Physical Plant Rummage Sale: 12.to 6 p.m. Items for sale I&#13;
IInclude one slightly used Union Bldg., Classroom Bldg., slightly&#13;
~~~--------------j&#13;
by Huty Cosell januned a size lwelve set of gal! deats into my&#13;
face. "&#13;
Cutting a triple-threat swath into the fans in&#13;
record time, the wrestlers were able to find most of&#13;
the faculty members in the stands and drag them&#13;
down to the mats where they held grudge matches.&#13;
Despite an unfair advantage on the part of the&#13;
wrestlers· eight on one - the lans seemed receptive&#13;
to the polished new look of the Ranger team. "II was&#13;
really im!X'essive," remarked junior Amy Rancum.&#13;
"Just watching all those straining, sweating bodies,&#13;
lllrashing and undulating; hard flesh and knotted&#13;
muscle struggling in grim, brutish animal strength.&#13;
II was beautiful!"&#13;
Final ta1lies showed Bill Lockahaw, a Parkside&#13;
senior, leading in points with eleven pins againsl&#13;
five English instructors, three Physics professors,&#13;
lwo librarians, and a Psychology professor. Harold&#13;
Leeth was second in reaching the points with eight&#13;
pins. He confined himsIef to faculty members of the&#13;
ecooomics departments.&#13;
Despite the criticism Lungfekker received on his&#13;
team's new "techniques" following the game, he&#13;
trushed it off with typical Whimsy. "Some punk&#13;
redneck is always sticking his face out When&#13;
something new like this comes along. I've got a&#13;
winning team and that's all that counts."&#13;
If Coach Amo Lunglekker's enthusiasm is any&#13;
indication, Parkside wrest11ng fans can e:q&gt;ect a&#13;
.... ason they'll never forget" from the UW-P&#13;
grappling SOIJ8d ''This team has something&#13;
apodal," Lungfetker exclaimed during a break in&#13;
practice last Thunday. "I've been waiting to coach&#13;
a crack squad like this since the war."&#13;
After watching the sixteen hour practice, and&#13;
FrIday night's _/lOOn match against Carthage,&#13;
it is doubtful if anyone could refnte Lungfekker's&#13;
conunent.&#13;
Having scrapped their usual lightweight togs for&#13;
shoulder pads, hmberjack boots, chain mall, and&#13;
crash helmets, the Ranger team stormed into the&#13;
Carthage Fieldhouse like a troop of psychopathic&#13;
sunural, brandJ.shlng riot clubs. Within a moment&#13;
they had savapiy attacked the opposing team, who&#13;
had been caught In III1SUSpeClingsurprise, and&#13;
beaten them 5O... less.&#13;
After loading the UIlCOOlICious Carthaginians into&#13;
a waiting van which immediately left for Butte,&#13;
Montana, the Parkslde grapplers formed an imposlnIJ&#13;
dragnet artlUnd the East bleachers and&#13;
pressed In on the crowd. As one fan, John Ortbbcn,&#13;
21,e&lt;&gt;mmented: "I thought it was a jote untII one of&#13;
lhoe6 apes said. 'Suck 011this, pinko worm; and&#13;
Team loses again&#13;
by P.J. Sampson&#13;
had the same problem since&#13;
sununer workouts began last&#13;
July. II gets pretty frustratinll&#13;
drawing diagrams for an empty&#13;
room." The Rangers will face •&#13;
UW-Eau Claire in their next&#13;
game here at the yet un'&#13;
discovered Ranger stadIUm.&#13;
"&#13;
The Ranger football team lost&#13;
ita 8th straight game on a forfeit&#13;
last Saturday, this time to uwWhitewater.&#13;
When asked Why the team&#13;
refused to show up at the games,&#13;
C~ch Coeb.-e2th r~plicd, "We'~'e&#13;
9t6l 'll .taqwaAON ~39NV~acJ 30lS&gt;t~Vd 3Hl. l&gt;&#13;
Doctor: Rain? Not today.&#13;
rnnt. (null pK~f" 7&#13;
J.P.J.: • ·ot you, the Marines!&#13;
1 t 1ate : It's not going to rain, sir.&#13;
.1 P • .:.: • ·ot may rain! Marine!&#13;
l t Mate: Who, what?&#13;
could see a nice ianKardof ale about now! Ah, Tun&#13;
Tavern! I'll just bop in here and quaff a quick&#13;
one. Hwnm, nice alliteration! (to Bartender)&#13;
Bartend, I'll have a pint or ale, please. Say, yo~&#13;
haven't seen any Marines around here, have you.&#13;
s.N.: No Marines. You know, arrah ... forget it.&#13;
SceneV.&#13;
Sam returns to Tu,Jl"Tavern on crutches.&#13;
S.N.: (to bartender) Thanks, pal! Why didn't you&#13;
J.P:J.: You know, arrah arrah, gung ho, take the&#13;
hill! Guard the embassy, first to fight, Semper&#13;
Fidelis, Halls of Montazwna, Shores of Tripoli!&#13;
1st Mate: Who, what?&#13;
Bartend: Nah, it ain't gonna rain. Here's your brew&#13;
bud.&#13;
S.N.: Nice alliteration, but ,I said Marines, not may&#13;
rain.&#13;
warn me? ·&#13;
Bartend: I lost five bucks on the Army-Navy game&#13;
last week. Army won!&#13;
s.N.: (to patrons) All right, you few good men who&#13;
want to fight, who'll be the first to sign up and&#13;
help initiate the greatest fighting force in history?&#13;
Who will defend to the death life"liberty and the&#13;
pursuit of happiness? Who will begin the long line&#13;
of proud patriots who will win wars, buy bonds,&#13;
and be always faithful to freedom? Who wants to&#13;
annihilate the antagonists of America?&#13;
J.P.J.: John Wayne!!! Bartend: Who, what?&#13;
1st Mate: Oh, Marines! I'll get someone on it right S.N.: You know, Arrah arrah, gung ho .... oh, hell!&#13;
away.&#13;
Scene Il.&#13;
First Mate meets with Samual Nickolas.&#13;
John Wayne!&#13;
Bartend: Oh, Marines! Nah, just a few good men&#13;
who want to fight. They're all around.&#13;
1st Mate: ... so that's our problem. We want you to&#13;
organize them into a fighting force.&#13;
s.N.: But why me? I know nothing of naval ,&#13;
pr-"~ ~ .. res. Besides, my hair s too short.&#13;
S.N.: How can you tell? It looks pretty peaceful.&#13;
Bartend: Try God save the you-know-who.&#13;
S.N.: Who, John Wayne? _ Group: Do we get a free college education too?&#13;
s.N.: (to Bartend) What went wrong?&#13;
Bartend: No, nerd, the king! You must be an of1&#13;
t: Mate: Perfect!&#13;
' · What's in it for me, anyway?&#13;
ficer!&#13;
S.N.:-GOD SAVE THE KING!!! AHH! ! ! HELP!!! • SC.t'Ut! i\r'.&#13;
Bartend: Nice alliteration, bad recruiting. Watch&#13;
, this. FREE ALE TO ALL&#13;
1 1 MARINES! ! !&#13;
·~ Mate: Marine Captain's bars. .&#13;
s. ·.: I could dig being a captain and owmng my&#13;
own pub, but why'd you say it may rain?&#13;
1 t fate: Not may rain! Marine! You know, arrah&#13;
rrah, ng ho, take the hill! Guard the embassy,&#13;
fir t to fight, Semper Fidelis, Halls of Mont&#13;
zuma , Shores of Tripoli!&#13;
s.N.: Thanks, doc. You sure I won't get /abies,&#13;
tetanus, or-get wierd during the full moon . Those&#13;
are pretty nasty bites!&#13;
S.N.: AHH!!! HELP!!!&#13;
Bartend:. How's that?&#13;
s.N.: Great, thanks! Hey, what's your name and&#13;
who the Hell are all these men? ,&#13;
s .. ·.: Who, what?&#13;
1 t Mate : John Wayne!&#13;
.• '.: Oh.Marine·.! I'll see what I can dig up.&#13;
eene 111. oYember 10, 1775&#13;
Doctor: No, you're okay. You'd best stay away from&#13;
wild dog packs. They can be real mean.&#13;
S.N.: They were Marines.&#13;
Doctor : Rain? Not today.&#13;
S.N.: No Marines. You know, arrah ... forget it.&#13;
Scene IV .&#13;
Bartend: I'm Robert Mullens and this is the Continental&#13;
CQngress.&#13;
s.N.: Well, Bob, you're now Captain Mullens, the&#13;
first Marine Corps recruiter.&#13;
m i walking the streets of Philadelphia&#13;
arching out a few good men who want~ fight.&#13;
s .• ·.: (to self) I've been hwnping these streets for&#13;
hour . Wher are the Marines when you need&#13;
them? I'll bet they're all out at the bars. Yeh, I&#13;
S.N.: Thanks, doc. You sure I won't get rabies,&#13;
tetanus, or get wierd,during the full moon? Those&#13;
are pretty nasty bites!&#13;
Doctor: No, you're okay. You'd best stay away from&#13;
wild dog packs. They can be real mean.&#13;
S.N : They were Marines.&#13;
Bartend: Oh? And I take it you are Captain Samual&#13;
Nickolas, the first Marine Corps Commandant?&#13;
s.N.: Yeh, painfully correct! (to man at the bar)&#13;
Private, could you please remove your boot from&#13;
my throat?&#13;
And that's the way it was, two-hundred-and-one&#13;
years ago last week!&#13;
t·ont. from pu!!e 7&#13;
Johns iibed&#13;
Dear People:&#13;
You know, I get kind of mad&#13;
whenever I go to the john and&#13;
have to sit in those damn white,&#13;
sterile, naked stalls. You may not&#13;
know this but in this whole&#13;
stinking building, the only place a&#13;
guy can get any rest and peace is&#13;
in the can. I see to it that I put in&#13;
three or four hours every day.&#13;
It's great, and personally, I like&#13;
the old johns in Greenquist rather&#13;
than some of those bowls they've&#13;
got in the newer ones that are six&#13;
feet off the ground. You know&#13;
what I mean. I come away from&#13;
dangling on those things with a&#13;
~ crease right where the sun don't&#13;
t shine.&#13;
Anyway, I was just wondering&#13;
who I could see about getting a&#13;
·couple posters hung up. You&#13;
Jcnow, ah Alice Cooper or the&#13;
Stones, or Bowie. I don't know&#13;
what the girls would. want. Well,&#13;
how about it? Hey, and maybe&#13;
some magazines or comic books,&#13;
or a six-pack ! Maybe somebody&#13;
could install an eight-track, you&#13;
know?&#13;
Think it over. Hey, and call me.&#13;
I've got a water bed you might be&#13;
interested in using.&#13;
Yours,&#13;
Arthur Bunphuccer&#13;
-" ~~..-..~~~~~~~~...-.~~~~, !! PREVENTS I 0&#13;
e f :: Wednes_day, November 17 I&#13;
re tier Judd Gutzbust grapple · Elmer Hassen to the mat. pinning the&#13;
t·rippl d oC'iolog} proft- . or in a 13-0 match. '&#13;
t&#13;
;~~ r:::;!:. ~ponsereci ·b~- P;~-~~ -ci~i/ ;,Fi,tl~g .ii~k~::.~ ~~~a~; I&#13;
Craft&#13;
Wrestlers open season&#13;
by Hanky Cos~ll&#13;
If Coach Arno Lungfekker's enthusiasm is any&#13;
ndication, Parkside wrestling fans can expect a&#13;
ason they'll never forget" from the UW-P&#13;
grappling 5411ad. "This team has something&#13;
cial," Lu.ngfekker exclaimed during a break in&#13;
practice la t Thursday. "I've been waiting to coach&#13;
a crack squad like this since the war."&#13;
After atching the sixteen hour practice, and&#13;
Friday night's pre-season match against Carthage,&#13;
it doubtful if anyone could refute Lungfekker's&#13;
comm nt.&#13;
Having scrapped their usual lightweight togs for&#13;
shoulder pads, lumberjack boots, chain mail, and&#13;
crash helmets, the Ranger team stormed into the&#13;
rth e Fieldhouse like a troop of psychopathic&#13;
samurai, brandishing riot clubs. Within a moment&#13;
they had savagely attacked the opposing team, who&#13;
had been caught In unsuspecting surprise, and&#13;
beaten them senseless.&#13;
After lo ding the unconscious Carthaginians into&#13;
a waiting van which immediately left for Butte,&#13;
ontana, the Parkside grapplers formed an imposing&#13;
dragnet around the East bleachers and&#13;
pre in on the crowd . one fan, John Orthbon,&#13;
21 , comm nted: " I thought it was a joke until one of&#13;
th pes id, •suck on this, pinko worm; and&#13;
jammed a size twelve set of gulf _cleats into my&#13;
face."&#13;
Cutting a triple-threat swath into the fans in&#13;
record time, the wrestlers were able to find most of&#13;
the faculty members in the stands and drag them&#13;
down to the mats where they held grudge matches.&#13;
Despite an unfair advantage on the part of the&#13;
wrestlers • eight on one • the fans seemed receptive&#13;
to the polished new look of the Ranger team. "It was&#13;
really impressive," remarked junior Amy Rancum.&#13;
"Just watching all those straining, sweating bodies,&#13;
thrashing and undulating; hard flesh and knotted&#13;
muscle struggling in grim, brutish animal strength.&#13;
It was beautiful!"&#13;
Final tallies showed Biff Lockshaw, a Parkside&#13;
senior, leading in points with eleven pins against&#13;
five English instructors, three Physics professors,&#13;
two librarians, and a Psychology professor. Harold&#13;
Leeth was second in reaching the points with eight&#13;
pins. He confined himslef to faculty members of the&#13;
economics departments.&#13;
Despite the criticism Lungfekker received on his&#13;
team's new "techniques" following the game, he&#13;
brushed it off with typical whimsy. "Some punk&#13;
redneck is always sticking his face out when&#13;
something new like this comes along. I've got a&#13;
winning team and that's all that counts."&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
Thursday, November 18&#13;
Travel Lecture: by world-wide travellers ( Parkside&#13;
Drivers)&#13;
PAB Presents: "The-we-advertise-in-toilets-movie" Down The Drain f&#13;
at 7 p.m. at Union -&#13;
t Friday, November 19 I Concert: featuring the one, the only, fantastic ......... PAB does it&#13;
t again! · t Pre-Thanksgiving Turkety Shoot: Contestants must supply weapons.,&#13;
f Parkside faculty supplies turkeys.&#13;
t . Saturday, November 20 I f Outdoor Track Meet: UW-Parkside Streakers v. Petrifying Springs l I Park County Sheri~ at 4:00. f&#13;
f Sunday, November 21 f ~arkside Phys~cal Plant Rummage Sale: 12. to 6 p.m. Items fo'. sale t f mclude one slightly used Union Bldg., Classroom Bldg., slightly&#13;
l damaged. - j ~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~&#13;
Team loses again&#13;
by P .J. Sampson&#13;
The Ranger football team lost&#13;
its 8th straight game on a forfeit&#13;
last Saturday, this time to UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
When asked why the team&#13;
refused to show up at the games,&#13;
Co:::ch Coc!b:e::!th r~plic1, "We've&#13;
had the same problem si.m::e&#13;
summer workouts began I~st&#13;
July. It gets pretty frustrating&#13;
drawing diagrams for an empty&#13;
room." The Rangers will face&#13;
UW-Eau Claire in their next&#13;
game t un· here at the ye&#13;
discovered Ranger Stadium. &#13;
1fIhJ, /ke ~ ?&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
SyedMohamed Sheerazie is in his second semester at Parkside. He&#13;
IS Iranian by descent "and every other issue you can think of"&#13;
dthough he was born and bred in Madras, India. He someday hopes t"&#13;
o to Iran and "see what the future holds in store for me there, if the&#13;
.S. doesn't get me first. I mean, when I finish my degree, if the&#13;
icture of the United States is still as rosey as had been true before I&#13;
arne here, and still is to a certain extent, then I might consider setling&#13;
here." .&#13;
He came to Parkside because "the University of Wisconsin system&#13;
s supposed to be one of the best in the country and having a relative&#13;
re in Kenosha, who is my dad's younger brother, makes things a&#13;
ittle easier because when you come from so far away· it's good.to have&#13;
eone who can help you break into a western setting. There is so&#13;
uch of a different lifestyle."&#13;
"As far as my adjusting to this lifestyle, I'm easy going and get&#13;
alongwith people so it's been relatively easy." He definitely knows a&#13;
lot of people and has made quite a few friends here. During the half&#13;
bour in which we talked in upper Main Place at least five people&#13;
s~ped and talked for awhile with him. Syed had "an eastern upbringing&#13;
with a western touch, which is a compliment to my parents."&#13;
Syedreceived a Bachelor degree in India in commerce. He is now&#13;
taking prerequisite courses so he can start on a Masters in business,&#13;
pref.... bly at the UW system. Speaking in relation to Parkside he said.&#13;
"The Business division is not as bad as people believe it to be. It's all&#13;
up towhat people can get out of it ; isn't it?"&#13;
As far as his feelings on Americans in general, "I think they are a&#13;
wonderfulbunch of people but they have to make sacrifices because of&#13;
'heir lifElStyle.If they would stop expecting too much of people and&#13;
accept them for what they are, then this mirage that everyone is&#13;
trying to rip everyone off would disappear. With more trust there&#13;
wouldbe so much more happiness around. I know that sounds trite but&#13;
it's true ...1f you remember that, you shouldn't have too many&#13;
","oblemswherever you go. It's up to you what you make of yourself.&#13;
I " what people make of you."&#13;
As far as the need for shrewdness and suspicion in business&#13;
v,alings, he said that common sense is really what you need.&#13;
"yed lives at Parkside Village and is doing very well here. although&#13;
c Jay" that his grades are nothins to write home about.&#13;
Economic institute&#13;
announced&#13;
The establishment of' a&#13;
Parkside economic research and&#13;
education institute was anlIOuncedat&#13;
a luncheon of about 50&#13;
business and labor leaders at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Parkside economic institute&#13;
is being aided by an initial&#13;
grant of $\000from the Wisconsin&#13;
State Council on Economic&#13;
Education, which co-sponsored&#13;
the luncheon with Parkside.&#13;
William J, Hill, executive&#13;
director of the Wisconsin Council,&#13;
•nnounred the grant to Parkside&#13;
and explained the various activities&#13;
of his organization.&#13;
Parkside economics professor,&#13;
Richard Keehn, will- coordinate&#13;
the institute's activities and said&#13;
they will consist of two major&#13;
thrusts:&#13;
... economic education to aid&#13;
understanding of the market&#13;
economy offered in schools.&#13;
companies and adult outreach&#13;
Classes.&#13;
... cconom!c rese3!"ch and&#13;
reporting directly related to the&#13;
local economy .&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home 01 the Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN B A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615W••hington"'e. 6~2J7J&#13;
,&#13;
THEPARKSIDE RANGER November 17. 1976 9&#13;
New major examined&#13;
by John McKloske)&#13;
An expression of student interest&#13;
would help the humanities&#13;
division decide to establish an&#13;
interdisciplinary humanities&#13;
major, according to Peter Hoff, a&#13;
member of the faculty committee&#13;
looking into the matter&#13;
"The humanities major would&#13;
be good for a student in education&#13;
wishing to broaden his&#13;
education," said Hoff, an&#13;
associa te professor of English,&#13;
but" ...the climate is not good for&#13;
developing such a major,&#13;
because of Board of Regents&#13;
resists the creation of new&#13;
majors in order to avoid&#13;
duplication."&#13;
Hoff said that UW-Madison now&#13;
offers a humanities major, but he&#13;
felt a Parkside humanities major&#13;
would not duplicate it because the&#13;
Madison major consists&#13;
primarily of study of the classics.&#13;
Hoff also cited the number of&#13;
approval levels which the&#13;
proposal would have to go&#13;
through before the Regents even&#13;
saw it, saying the major would&#13;
have to be approved by the&#13;
humanities division itself, then&#13;
the Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review Committee, the&#13;
Faculty senate, and Chancellor&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
According to humanities&#13;
Service&#13;
hours&#13;
extended&#13;
Parkside student services&#13;
offices in Tallent Hall will be&#13;
open until 8 p.m. Monday&#13;
through Thursday beginning&#13;
Nov.8.&#13;
A student services spokesman&#13;
said the extended hours are to&#13;
accommodate the increasing&#13;
numbers of adults and others&#13;
employed during the day who are&#13;
interested in pursuing university&#13;
studies.&#13;
Evening services, available to&#13;
continuing Parkside students as&#13;
well as prospective students,&#13;
include information on admissions&#13;
procedures, financial&#13;
aids, career development,&#13;
counseling and academic advising.&#13;
The late hours will not be in&#13;
effect on holidays or evenings&#13;
preceding holidays.&#13;
diVISIOn chairman Dr. Robert&#13;
Canary, ·'the proposal isn't really&#13;
ready to go forward yet... It is a&#13;
good idea, it IS sornethtng the&#13;
division wants." Canary said he&#13;
thought the major was "a year or&#13;
more down the road."&#13;
Hoff estimated that "WIth the&#13;
number of .pprov.l levels the&#13;
proposal has to go through, I'd&#13;
say It will be 2 or 3 years before&#13;
we can offer It," but saId th.t&#13;
favorable response to. proposed&#13;
questionnaire on the subject&#13;
would help the committee make&#13;
up its mind.&#13;
Retreat planned&#13;
The Chi-Rho Center is sponsoring&#13;
a retreat on Saturday,&#13;
December 4th.&#13;
The campus ministers, Fr.&#13;
Wayne and Sr. Collette, encourage&#13;
students to make&#13;
1~5t:1vations t)' December 1. Th:.s&#13;
retreat will be to "take. personal&#13;
inventory; to get in touch with&#13;
yourself; and to queslioo, reflect,&#13;
and to recognize,"&#13;
CaD 55U626 for further information.&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mlle 011change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-6O"F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 RICK BENTSON&#13;
639-4067 your AMSIOIL dealer&#13;
lJe elbe&#13;
~1uttt ~bOppt&#13;
featuring&#13;
a variety of your condy&#13;
and nut fovortles sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
Redskin Peonuts&#13;
onl~ 45' pound&#13;
10 om • pm&#13;
LOCATED IN UNION BIZARRE&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
CASSEnES&#13;
B·TRACIS&#13;
JBL&#13;
nAC&#13;
PIONEER&#13;
GRAND OPENING SUPER SALE&#13;
TIL SATURDAY&#13;
AlAI&#13;
•&#13;
SONY&#13;
ACCUTRAC&#13;
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Sound Sovinqs 01&#13;
SOUND GALLERYI&#13;
Hours&#13;
10 '0 Q do !Ii 0:0 5.30 Sot&#13;
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S;)I 9 Sol &amp; Nt&gt;vlTlO lid&#13;
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Tetecbooe 634- 230 1 •&#13;
photo b~ \\ t&gt;ttd~ \1 illt&gt;r&#13;
'1fl'4- /lu ~7&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
Syed Mohamed Sheerazie is in his second semester at Parkside. He&#13;
,s Iranian by descent "and every other issue you can think of' ·&#13;
. .tlthough he was born and ~red in Madras, India. He someday hopes tci&#13;
o to Iran and "see what the future holds in store for me there, if the&#13;
U.S. doesn't get me first. I mean, when I finish my degree, if the&#13;
picture of the United States is still as rosey as had been true before I&#13;
crune here, and still is to a certain extent, then I might consider settling&#13;
here."&#13;
He came to Parkside because "the University of Wisconsin system&#13;
ts supposed to be one of the best in the country and having a relative&#13;
here in Kenosha, who is my dad's younger brother, makes things a&#13;
little easier because when you come from so far away· it's good to have&#13;
someone who can help you break into a western setting. There is so&#13;
much of a different lifestyle."&#13;
"As far as my adjusting to this lifestyle, I'm easy going and get&#13;
llong with people so it's been relatively easy." He definitely knows a&#13;
lot of people and has made quite a few friends here. During the half&#13;
hour in which we talked in upper Main Place at least five peoplP&#13;
stopped and talked for awhile with him. Syed had "an eastern upbringing&#13;
with a western touch, which is a compliment to my parents."&#13;
Syed received a Bachelor degree in India in commerce. He is now&#13;
taking prerequisite courses so he can start on a Masters in business,&#13;
preferably at the UW system. Speaking in relation to Parkside he said.&#13;
''The Business division is not as bad as people believe it to be. It's all&#13;
up to what people can get out of it; isn't it?"&#13;
As far as his feelings on Americans in general, "I think they are a&#13;
wonderful bunch of people but they have to make sacrifices because of&#13;
'heir lifestyle. If they would stop expecting too much of people and&#13;
accept them for what they are, then this mirage that everyone is&#13;
trying to rip everyone off would disappear. With more trust there&#13;
would be so much more happiness around. I know that sounds trite but&#13;
it's true ... If you remember that, you shouldn't have too many&#13;
11roblems wherever you go. It's up to you what you make of yourself.&#13;
r ,' what people make of you."&#13;
As far as the need for shrewdness and suspicion in business&#13;
"·!alings, he said that common sense is really what you need.&#13;
''yed lives at Parkside Village and is doing very well here. although&#13;
c: .iay!l that his grades are nothin~ to write home about.&#13;
Economic institute&#13;
announced&#13;
The establishment of a&#13;
Parkside economic research and&#13;
education institute was announced&#13;
at a luncheon of about 50&#13;
business and labor leaders at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Parkside economic institute&#13;
is being aided by an initial&#13;
grant of $1000 from the Wisconsin&#13;
State Council on Economic&#13;
Education, which co-sponsored&#13;
the luncheon with Parkside.&#13;
William J. Hill, executive&#13;
director of the Wisconsin Council,&#13;
;innouneed the grant to Parkside&#13;
and explained the various activities&#13;
of his organization.&#13;
Parkside ~conomics professor,&#13;
Richard Keehn, will- coordinate&#13;
the institute's activities and said&#13;
they will consist of two major&#13;
thrusts:&#13;
... economic education to aid&#13;
understanding of the market&#13;
economy offered in schools,&#13;
companies and adult outreach&#13;
classes.&#13;
... economic research and&#13;
reporting directly related to the&#13;
local economy.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SH~P&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
261 S Washington lwe. 634-2373&#13;
THE ,PARKSIDE RANGER November 17, 1976 9&#13;
New inajor examined&#13;
by John l\lcKlo ke}&#13;
An expression of student interest&#13;
would help the humanities&#13;
division decide to establish an&#13;
interdisciplinary humanities&#13;
major, according to Peter Hoff, a&#13;
member of the faculty committee&#13;
looking into the matter.&#13;
"The humanities major would&#13;
be good for a student in education&#13;
wishing to broaden his&#13;
education ," said Hoff, an&#13;
associate professor of English,&#13;
but " ... the climate is not good for&#13;
developing such a major,&#13;
because of Board of Regents&#13;
i"E:si:,;ts the creation of nt&gt;"&#13;
m.!jors in order to avoid&#13;
duplication."&#13;
Hoff said that UW-Madison now&#13;
offers a humanities major, but he&#13;
felt a Parkside humanities major&#13;
would not duplicate it because the&#13;
Madison major consists&#13;
primarily of study of the classics.&#13;
Hoff also cited the number of&#13;
approval levels which the&#13;
proposal would have to go&#13;
through before the Regents e\·en&#13;
saw it, saying the major would&#13;
have to be approved by the&#13;
humanities division itself, then&#13;
the Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review Committee, the&#13;
Faculty Senate. and Chancellor&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
According to humanities&#13;
Service&#13;
hours&#13;
extended&#13;
Parkside student services&#13;
offices in Tallent Hall will be&#13;
open until 8 p.m. Monday&#13;
through Thursday beginning&#13;
Nov. 8.&#13;
A student services spokesman&#13;
said the extended hours are to&#13;
accommodate the increasing&#13;
numbers of adults and others&#13;
employed during the day who are&#13;
interested in pursmng wtiversity&#13;
studies.&#13;
Evening services, available to&#13;
continuing Parkside students as&#13;
well as prospective students,&#13;
include information on admissions&#13;
procedures, financial&#13;
aids, career development.&#13;
counseling and academic advising.&#13;
&#13;
The late hours will not be in&#13;
effect on holidays or evenings&#13;
preceding holidays.&#13;
division chairman Dr. Robert&#13;
Canary. " the proposal isn't really&#13;
ready to go forward yet ... 1t is a&#13;
good idea. it is somelhil)&amp; th&#13;
di,·ision wants." Canary said he&#13;
thought the major was " a year or&#13;
more down the road."&#13;
Hoff estimated that "with the&#13;
number of&#13;
proposal ha&#13;
Retreat planned&#13;
The Chi-Rho Center is sponsoring&#13;
a retreat on Saturday,&#13;
December 4th.&#13;
The campus ministers, Fr.&#13;
Wayne and Sr. Collette, encourage&#13;
students to make&#13;
1 t:it:1 ·dtiuns by Dt"t:t&gt;mtcr ! . This&#13;
r treat will be to " t.ak •&#13;
inventory; to g t in tou h with&#13;
yours If; and to qu tion, r n L,&#13;
and to recognize."&#13;
Call 552-8626 for furth information.&#13;
&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
• saves oil RICK BENTSON&#13;
your AMSI OJL dealer&#13;
10 om • p&#13;
639-4067&#13;
featuring·&#13;
a var'ety of your candy&#13;
and nut fovorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
Reds In Pee.nuts&#13;
onl_y 45c , pound&#13;
GRAND OPENING SUPER SALE&#13;
TIL SATURDAY&#13;
AKAi .. SONY&#13;
ACCUTRAC&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
CASSETTES&#13;
8-TRACKS&#13;
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Sound So. ings o.t&#13;
SOU D GALLERYI&#13;
Hours.&#13;
10 to Q do i; 0 to 5 30 Sot&#13;
I o 5 S oy&#13;
Greenr1dge Plozo&#13;
S mg l eumo.n o&#13;
Wei· 01 Ii * °'!i 31&#13;
Te ephooe 034-2301 &#13;
On Friday November 5, ~e moon .rose on an e~e~g of fun and&#13;
music with Tom Chapin. Neither looking nor sounding like his Irother&#13;
Harry, Tom proved to the .half-filled Parkside Cinema that he is a&#13;
Chapin of his own. His music IS warm, hvely~ and speaks of J&gt;ersonal&#13;
experiences. He encouraged the audience to join in smging with him&#13;
saying, "My theory of a concert is that you guys do part of the work."&#13;
At one point, during a song entitled Oh What A Day!, the audience was&#13;
beating on popcorn boxes and jingling keys in time with the mUSic.&#13;
Many times he would stop in the rruddle of a song to explain why he&#13;
wrote that song.&#13;
Chapin was the host of the children's television show Make A Wiab&#13;
which went off the air this year after 5 seasons. He said that "Broth":&#13;
Harry writes the songs for Make A Wish and I change them." Each&#13;
year the show was fiimed on location in a different part of the world.&#13;
During the third year, when the show was located in Greece, Tom&#13;
began to' write songs to wile away the time in between takes. He has&#13;
been writing songs ever since. Many of these songs are featured on his&#13;
first album which is entitled "Life Is Like That (Fantasy Records).&#13;
Refering to his album he said, "From Make A Wish to Fantasy.&#13;
Sounds like a Disney character."&#13;
Accompanying himself on Bertha, his 6 string guitar, Tom sang a&#13;
few songs from his album and from Make A Wish. During one song&#13;
called Shadow he surprised the audience by playing a kazoo along with&#13;
his guitar. It was a toss-up as to who was enjoying themselves more;&#13;
the audience or Tom. Several times when the audience was singing&#13;
along, he would stop singing and playing and would just listen, During&#13;
one such song he said, HI like this cause Idon't do nothin'." Tomended&#13;
the concert by singing the theme song from Make A Wish and All My&#13;
Life's a Circle, "the Chapin anthem."&#13;
After the concert he commented on the enthusiasm of the audience&#13;
saying, "If the audience is witli you, you can do anyihing." He added&#13;
that he prefers doing concerts to television because "with TV you&#13;
perform for machines and with concerts you perform for people."&#13;
Tom Chapin proved that, with talent and enthusiasm, you C3I) do&#13;
anything. He is a very talented musician, which was proved at the&#13;
concert, and he'Ugo as far as his ambitions take him.&#13;
1 VISAGE&#13;
Tom:&#13;
•&#13;
,•&#13;
•&#13;
1&#13;
J&#13;
!&#13;
1.&#13;
Tom Chapin&#13;
SSSSSSSS&lt;SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS'ES_"'''SSSS&#13;
Ft.. Pizza DeIh."&#13;
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5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
.... """1' C~""I,S~••~tftI.RlfltI', ••• ,&#13;
O'IM 4 ~.•. 111 •.•.&#13;
4f University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
"Ins YOU TO SPEND&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK&#13;
JAI. &amp;-13, 1911&#13;
a Chapin&#13;
of-his own&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
Musical history&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
Harry Chapin was born in 1942, a year after the&#13;
Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. Tom Chapin was&#13;
born two years later, in 1944. Their father was a&#13;
former jazz drummer for big bands like Woody&#13;
Herman and Tommy Dorsey. Even as children&#13;
Harry. and Tom were getting into music. Harry&#13;
started playing trumpet and Tom belonged to a&#13;
boy's choir. Harry later tookup the guitar because&#13;
"girls liked guitar players beller."&#13;
Harry began to perform throughout his college&#13;
years. He started a group called the Chapin&#13;
Brothers with Tom and younger brother Steve in&#13;
1964. The group was going well, but the Vietnam&#13;
War situation was such that Tom and Steve went to&#13;
college in order not to go to Vietnam. Harry then&#13;
went into the documentary film business. He&#13;
started by packing film crates and eventually&#13;
worked his way up to all phases of cinema:&#13;
One movie that he wrote, directed and edited called&#13;
"Le ' gendary Champions" was nominated for an&#13;
Academy Award in 1969. .&#13;
Tom, in the meantime, had found a new medium&#13;
and a new audience. In 1971 he became the host of&#13;
the children's television show Make A Wish, which&#13;
was on the air for five seasons. Each year the show&#13;
as filmed on location in a different are area of the&#13;
world, and during the third year of filming he began&#13;
to write songs. After the show ended, he went on the&#13;
concert circuit and also released his first album.&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
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VISAGE&#13;
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A 1 •••1111a,111 C le 1 , s.,,~tffl. R1fl n., 8111 2&#13;
OPEN 4 •·•· 1 •·•· ~~ ~&#13;
,Jf University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
es OU TO SP 0&#13;
SE ESTER BREAK&#13;
JAN. 6-13, 1977&#13;
t,,,, ~ ... ~9c~,..&#13;
Tom: , .&#13;
a Chapin&#13;
of-his own&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
On Friday November 5, the moon _rose on an evening of run and&#13;
usic with Tom Chapin. Neither lookmg nor sounding like his brother&#13;
:arry, Tom proved to the _ha_lf-filled P~rkside Cinema that he is a&#13;
Chapin of his own. His music is wari:n, hvely'. ~n~ sp~ak~ of personal&#13;
experiences. He encouraged the audience to 10m m smgmg with him&#13;
saying, "My the?ry of a conce:t is that you guys d~ part of ~e work."&#13;
At one point durmg a song entitled Oh What A Day., the audience was&#13;
beating on ~pcorn boxes and jingl~ng keys in time with the music.&#13;
Many times he would stop in the rruddle of a song to explain why he&#13;
wrote that song.&#13;
Chapin was the host of the children's television sho~ Make A Wish,&#13;
which went off the air this year after 5 seasons. He said that "Brother&#13;
Harry writes the songs for Make ~ "'.ish ru:1d I change them." Each&#13;
year the show was filmed on location m a different part of the world.&#13;
During the third year, when the show was located in Greece, Tom&#13;
began to· write songs to wile away the time in between takes. He has&#13;
been writing songs ever since. Many of these songs are featured on his&#13;
first album which is entitled "Life Is Ll.ke That (Fantasy Records).&#13;
Refering to his album he said, "From Mal{e A Wish to Fantas,.&#13;
Sounds like a Disney character."&#13;
Accompanying himself on Bertha, his 6 string guitar, Tom sang a&#13;
few songs from his album and from Make A Wish. During one song&#13;
called Shadow he surprised the audience by playing a kazoo along with&#13;
his guitar. It was a toss-up as to who was enjoying themselves more;&#13;
the audience or Tom. Several times when the audience was singing&#13;
along, he would stop singing and playing and would just listen. During&#13;
one such song he said, "I like this cause I don't do nothin'." Tom ended&#13;
the concert by singing the theme song from Make A Wish and All My&#13;
Llfe's a Circle, "the Chapin anthem."&#13;
After the concert he commented on the enthusiasm of the audience&#13;
saying, "If the audience is with you, you can do anything." He added&#13;
that he prefers doing concerts to television because "with TV you&#13;
perform for machines and with concerts you perform for people."&#13;
Tom Chapin proved that, with talent and enthusiasm, you can do&#13;
anything. He is a very talented musician, which was proved at the&#13;
concert, and he'll go as far as his ambitions take him.&#13;
Musical history&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
Harry Chapin was born in 1942, a year after the&#13;
Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. Tom Chapin was&#13;
born two years later, in 1944. Their father was a&#13;
former jazz drummer for big bands like Woody&#13;
Herman and Tommy Dorsey. Even as children&#13;
Harry and Tom were getting into music. Harry&#13;
started playing trumpet and Tom belonged to a&#13;
boy's choir. Harry later tookup the guitar because&#13;
"girls liked guitar players better."&#13;
Harry began to perform throughout his college&#13;
years. He started a group called the Chapin&#13;
Brothers with Tom and younger brother Steve in&#13;
1964. The group was going well, but the Vietnam&#13;
War situation was such that Tom and Steve went to&#13;
college in order not to go to Vietnam. Harry then&#13;
went into the documentary film business. He&#13;
started by packing film crates and eventually&#13;
worked his way up to all phases of cinema.&#13;
One movie that he wrote, directed and edited called&#13;
"Legendary Champions" was ~ominated for an&#13;
Academy Award in 1969.&#13;
Tom, in the meantime, had found a new medium&#13;
and a new audience. In 1971 he became the host of&#13;
the children's tele,vision show Make A Wish, which&#13;
was on the air for five seasons. Each year the show&#13;
as filmed on location in a different are area of t.'te&#13;
world, and during the third year of filming he began&#13;
to write songs. After the show ended, he went on the&#13;
concert circuit and also released his first album.&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
EVERY MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
lndudes: Salad, Italian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine&#13;
Wed. - Thurs. 9 :30 - 11 :00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks 60'&#13;
On Spring, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151 ,&#13;
~erbu's&#13;
~ourt ·&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT &#13;
storyteller&#13;
of note&#13;
Harry:&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
a&#13;
On ThW"sday November 11, the spot!;vh+ shined&#13;
on America's top story leller, Harry Chapin. He and&#13;
his guitar were warmly received by the sell-out&#13;
crowd of about3,tOO people, the largest group ever&#13;
to be assembled in the field house. He said that he&#13;
felt a little nervous without his back-up group, so he&#13;
introduced the members as if they were slanding on&#13;
stage with him.&#13;
Chapin proved that you don't need a back-up&#13;
group to sing well. During WOLD, a. song about a&#13;
lonely morning disc jockey, he improvised:' ~ parts&#13;
of the missing instruments. He also drove the crowd&#13;
wild when he substituted the line "I am tile morning&#13;
DJ at WRKR. Playing all the hils for you,'&#13;
wherever the hell you are" for the first chorus.&#13;
For a few other songs tha t required extra vocal&#13;
paris he either got tho audience to sing the lines or&#13;
he coaxed a few volunteers from the crowd to help&#13;
him out. Many times he asked the audience to sing&#13;
the chorus from a song or to say a line from the&#13;
song. It was a beautiful example of entertaineraudience&#13;
interaction. .&#13;
Afler WOLD, he introduced "the Cal's in the&#13;
Cradle kid," his son Josh, "the superstar of the&#13;
family." He explained that ever since he wrote&#13;
Cal's in the Cradle, (his wife Sandy wrote the poem&#13;
the song is based on) he brings one of his children on&#13;
tour with him. He said he also goes home a lot more&#13;
than he used to because "I don't want to be Uncle&#13;
Daddy."&#13;
Josh danced to the next three songs. After the&#13;
third song Chapin remarked, "never perform with a&#13;
kid; he'll upstage you every time." Josh swayed&#13;
back and forth to his father's music, oblivious to the&#13;
crowd, creating his own world. After Josh finished&#13;
dancing, he hugged his father before leaving the&#13;
stage. Later he fell asleep at the side of the stage,&#13;
and for the rest of.the night, he received adoring&#13;
looks from his father.&#13;
He then sang his "first country and western"&#13;
song, 30,000Pounds Of Bananas which he feels is his&#13;
most perverted song. He said that he originally&#13;
wrote it for Johnny cash to sing, "But he was too&#13;
damn busy with his Amoco Gas, so I had to do it&#13;
myself." He had the audience singing "30,000&#13;
pounds of bananas" every time that line came up.&#13;
At the end of the song, he had them singing it in&#13;
harmony, with him directing.&#13;
He had a break about halfway through the concert&#13;
where people couldask him questions about himself&#13;
and his family ..Some of the questions asked were&#13;
about his favorite song, which is a toss-up between&#13;
Sniper and A Better Place to Be. It lakes him&#13;
anywhere from 1 hour to 6 months to write a song.&#13;
His wife's name is Sandy and they have 5 children.&#13;
He is involved with several charities, including&#13;
World Hunger Year of which he is the founder, and&#13;
he does several benefits. His wife is presently&#13;
working for her Ph. D. at Columbia University.&#13;
To begin the second half of the concert, he had 4&#13;
people singing 0 Holy Night as a back-up to a song&#13;
about a tailor who wants to be a singer, Mr. Taimer,&#13;
The voices blended with his very well and it's easy to&#13;
see why he is such a popular singer. He ended the&#13;
concert by singing Cat's In The Cradle with the&#13;
audience singing the chorus. He even split the&#13;
audience into male and female chorus as a contest,&#13;
picking one person as a judge of quality and&#13;
quantity. According to the judge, the male chorus&#13;
won on both accounts.&#13;
Chapin received a standing ovation at the end and&#13;
decided to do Taxi. He got about ten people to sing&#13;
"Big John's" high part, and he asked the audience&#13;
to say the tWOspoken lines of the song. He also&#13;
received a slanding ovation for that. He left the&#13;
stage, but was called back by the crowd. He did one&#13;
encore, All My Ufe's A Circle, which he wrote for&#13;
his brother Tom for his TV shOW Make A Wish,&#13;
which has since become the "Chapin anthem." He&#13;
encouraged the audience to sing the chorus with&#13;
him 81)dby the end of the song, the crowd was on ils&#13;
feet, singing and clapping.&#13;
Chapin's warm, husky voice has the ability to&#13;
transpOl t you to the scene of the song. His songs&#13;
have an emotional appeal that is rare in songs&#13;
today. They have a moral to them that seems to&#13;
apply to everyone and they are also very enjoyable&#13;
to hear. Chapin said that he writes his songs from&#13;
personal experiences and he tries to make them as&#13;
realistic as possible without making them sound&#13;
like lectures. By making himself the bad guy or the&#13;
poor soul, he attracts a lot m?re listen~~s than by&#13;
saying "Thou shalt not do thiS or tbat .&#13;
Harry Chapin is the perfect entertamer. He mleracts&#13;
with his audience and he enJOYs himself&#13;
during his concerts, which helps the audience. enjoy&#13;
the concert. He has rightfully earn"!! the title of&#13;
"Mark Twain of the 70's."&#13;
,&#13;
Harry Chapin and son Josh&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
·5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
STOP IN TODAY AT PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE,&#13;
YOU'LL LOVE THE UNIQUE, COMFORTABLE ATMOSPHERE&#13;
1f~ !f?v ~ojeph Ii4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
" ' ,,' Wisconsin Phone 654·0774&#13;
l ':"1.. .. '"~ Mention this ad!&#13;
§""~.&gt;b»-""""''''''''''''''b&gt;«~'''--~'''''''''''''~'''Q'&#13;
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BEER .&#13;
25~&#13;
III THE REC CEIlTER &amp; UIIIOII SQUARE&#13;
VISAGE 2&#13;
One Sweet DrealD&#13;
~!!~.!t&#13;
!v;.~-'~:f\ =&#13;
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• Good thru November.&#13;
• only! One Coupon •&#13;
• per customer per •&#13;
• purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember .•&#13;
• we never close. •&#13;
,........•,&#13;
Hey. scholars, look 01&#13;
these gIft selections.&#13;
Everything for Mind &amp;&#13;
Body is right here at&#13;
two stores . your&#13;
stores with otmospbere.&#13;
• Records 81Tapel. ALL new&#13;
releases stacked Iloor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import .lbums. We're the&#13;
one store in town that&#13;
carries foreign releases.&#13;
• Special ordeu. Hard-to-get&#13;
records end tapes with&#13;
guaea nteed one dav&#13;
deliverv&#13;
• Iewelry. Hand crafted"&#13;
beautiful for style conscious&#13;
guvs and ~8Is.&#13;
• Tapeltrie •. Mobiles. Incense&#13;
burners, Stash&#13;
bo,es&#13;
• tecense. Sucks and cones&#13;
to tickle your nose.&#13;
• Picture •. Decoupege. weu&#13;
hangings. Arusts: Escher&#13;
Pitre, Roger Dean,&#13;
Rosamond&#13;
• lilb1ina 10 create anv&#13;
atmosphere&#13;
• Leather Good •. \\'allebPouches-&#13;
Purses-BeltsHats&#13;
&amp; BCCessones 10 •&#13;
abundance Beauufullv&#13;
ha ndc refted&#13;
• ParapheroBUe - Pipes&#13;
Papers Smoking An e:-;·&#13;
surres. PHrh necessutes&#13;
from around the w crld&#13;
• \\"alerbed •. \\"("r('&#13;
PH'n thlO~ In \\ .tlt'rhcd·&#13;
DO\\'STOWS&#13;
5010 Seventh Avenue&#13;
654-357e&#13;
\UST&#13;
3910 Sevenl\ Fifth Street&#13;
694-2_&#13;
Harry: a&#13;
by Mona Maillet&#13;
On Thursday November 11, the spotJiph+ shined&#13;
on America's top story teller, Harry Chapin. He and&#13;
his guitar were warmly received by the sell-out&#13;
crowd of about 3,100 people, the largest group ever&#13;
to be assembled in the field house. He said that he&#13;
felt a little nervous without his back-up group, so he&#13;
introduced the members as if they were standing on&#13;
stage with him.&#13;
Chapin proved that you don't need a back-up&#13;
group to sing well. During WOLD, a song about a&#13;
lonely morning disc jockey, he improvised '· ~ parts&#13;
of the missing instruments. He also drove the crowd&#13;
wild when he substitutP.d the line "I am the morning&#13;
DJ at WRKR. Playing all the hits for you, ·&#13;
wherever the hGll you are" for the first chorus.&#13;
For a few other songs that required extra vocal&#13;
parts he either got the audience to sing the lines or&#13;
he coaxed a few volunteers from the crowd to help&#13;
him out. Many times he asked the audience to sing&#13;
the chorus from a song or to say a line from the&#13;
song. It was a beautiful example of entertaineraudience&#13;
interaction. ·&#13;
After WOW, he introduc~d "the Cat's in the&#13;
Cradle kid," his son Josh, "the superstar of the&#13;
family." He explained that ever since he wrote&#13;
Cat's in the Cradle, (his wife Sandy wrote the poem&#13;
the song is based on) he brings one of his children on&#13;
tour with him. He said he also goes home a lot more&#13;
than he used to because "I don't want to be Uncle&#13;
Daddy."&#13;
Josh danced to the next three songs. After the&#13;
third song Chapin remarked, "never perform with a&#13;
kid; he'll upstage you every time." Josh swayed&#13;
back and forth to his father's music, oblivious to the&#13;
crowd, creating his own world. After Josh finished&#13;
dancing, he hugged his father before leaving the&#13;
stage. Later he fell asleep at the side of the stage,&#13;
and for the rest of, the night, he received adoring&#13;
looks from his father.&#13;
He then sang his "first country and western"&#13;
song, 30,000 Pounds Of Bananas which he feels is his&#13;
most perverted song. He said that he originally&#13;
wrote it for Johnny Cash to sing, "But he was too&#13;
damn busy with his Amoco Gas, so I had to do it&#13;
myself." He had the audience singing "30,000&#13;
pounds of bananas" every time that line came up.&#13;
At the end of the song, he had them singing it in&#13;
harmony, with him directing.&#13;
He had a break about halfway through the concert&#13;
where people could.ask him questions about himself&#13;
and his family. Some of the questions asked were&#13;
about his favorite song, which is a toss-up between&#13;
Sniper and A Better Place to Be. It takes him&#13;
anywhere from 1 hour to 6 months to write a song.&#13;
His wife's name is Sandy and they have 5 children.&#13;
He is involved with several charities, including&#13;
World Hunger Year of which he is the founder, and&#13;
he does several benefits. His wife is presently&#13;
working for her Ph. D. at Columbia University.&#13;
To begin the second half of the concert, he had 4&#13;
people singing O Holy Night as a back-up to a song&#13;
about a tailor who wants to be a singer, Mr. Taimer,&#13;
The voices blended with his very well and it's easy to&#13;
see why he is such a popular singer. He ended the&#13;
concert by singing Cat's In The Cradle with the&#13;
audience smgmg the chorus. He even split the&#13;
audience into male and female chorus as a contest,&#13;
picking one person as a judge of quality and&#13;
quantity. According to the judge, the male chorus&#13;
won on both accounts.&#13;
Chapin received a standing ovation at the end and&#13;
decided to do Taxi. He got about ten people to sing&#13;
"Big John's" high part, and he asked the audience&#13;
to say the two spoken lines of the song. He also&#13;
received a standing ovation for that. He left the&#13;
stage, but was called back by the crowd. He did one&#13;
encore, All My Life's A Circle, which he wrote for&#13;
his brother Tom for his TV show Make A Wish,&#13;
which has since become the "Chapin anthem." He&#13;
encouraged the audience to sing the chorus with&#13;
him and by the end of the song, the crowd was on its&#13;
feet, singing and clapping.&#13;
Chapin's warm, husky voice has the ability to&#13;
transpm t you to the scene of the song. His songs&#13;
have an emotional appeal that is rare in songs&#13;
today. They have a moral to them that seems to&#13;
apply to everyone and they are also very enjoyable&#13;
to hear. Chapin said that he writes his songs from&#13;
personal experiences and he tries to make them as&#13;
realistic as possible without making them sound&#13;
like lectures. By making himself the bad guy or the&#13;
poor soul, he attracts· a lot m?re listen~~s than by&#13;
saying "Thou shalt not do this or that: .&#13;
Harry Chapin is the perfect enter~mer. ~e interacts&#13;
with his audience and he enJoys himself&#13;
during his concerts, which helps the audience_ enjoy&#13;
the concert. He has rightfully earned the title of&#13;
"Mark Twain of the 70's."&#13;
storyteller&#13;
of note&#13;
Harry Chapin and on Joi,,h&#13;
- PARAPHERNALIA SCJUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
STOP IN TODAY AT PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE,&#13;
YOU'LL LOVE THE UNIQUE COMFORTABLE ATMOSPHERE&#13;
,.,.~&#13;
~ . _ ,\ 443 7 - 22nd A venue Kenosha,&#13;
~ ' .,. Wisconsin Phone 654-0774 , ... , ... ,. . . § · Mention this od!&#13;
·'qi~&#13;
I&#13;
FRIDAY 3-6&#13;
,&#13;
BEER&#13;
•&#13;
25e&#13;
IN THE REC CENTER &amp; UNION SQUARE&#13;
VISAGE 2&#13;
·one&#13;
sweet&#13;
Dream&#13;
,.!!~&#13;
• .,~-, y •&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
- ~ t&#13;
.&#13;
= 8rty~~ i&#13;
= ~~. • • •&#13;
• This Coupon i =&#13;
•&#13;
• worth 5Oc on all •&#13;
• items Ii ted below. •&#13;
• Good thru ·ovember •&#13;
• on! •! One Coupon a&#13;
• per cu tomer per •&#13;
• purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember. •&#13;
• we never clo e. •&#13;
~ ........• ,&#13;
Hey. scholars, look at&#13;
these 1ft selections.&#13;
Everything for Mind &amp;&#13;
Bodr is right here at&#13;
h-vo stores your&#13;
stores with atmosphere.&#13;
• Records &amp; Tape . ALL new&#13;
relea ei; tad.ed floor to&#13;
ceiling'&#13;
• Import album,. we·re the&#13;
one . tore m town that&#13;
ca rrie fore1 n re lea. e • pecial ordeu. Hard-to- t&#13;
record~ and tap w1th&#13;
uarant ed on de&#13;
rl h\er .&#13;
00\\'. 'TO\' •.&#13;
5010. en h .-h nu&#13;
6a4- s,e&#13;
\\"ET&#13;
191 O e\enl\ Fifth Strn t&#13;
694-2404 &#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 17. 1976&#13;
18=)Soccer season ends&#13;
em team&#13;
finishes 12th&#13;
..,.....h_lII&#13;
UW·WbItewater was the site 01&#13;
tile WW1AC Championship ••&#13;
.... re the women'. awIm Ieam&#13;
IInIsbed 12lII, as UW-Madlaon&#13;
carnpIdeIy ckmlnaled the meet&#13;
and _ with III polnts by tbeir&#13;
lllh pJa&lt;oe IInI*s In the 2llO&#13;
medJey relay and 400 l&lt;ft relay&#13;
Iaot FrIday and In the 2llO free&#13;
relay Saturday. The leam beet&#13;
RIwr Falla by a lentb 01 a ...,.,nd&#13;
In the 2llO free&#13;
ecordlng to Coach Barb&#13;
LaWlOll. the hiKbUaht was the 50&#13;
I I here Gall Obon, uu&#13;
cII. Judy 1_ and SaD)&#13;
~'l'andI aD t leMOn highs.&#13;
aIIo her personal&#13;
rwconIs In tbe 50 and 100 breast&#13;
and 110 I franCIs toolt seven&#13;
IleC'lndI 011 01 hor time in the 500&#13;
I and Improved on her leg 01&#13;
the rela .. ny &lt;any came&#13;
throqh IlllCI01' presaure for us&#13;
and.lmproved where we .tood In&#13;
the rela :' said LaWlOll&#13;
The Ieam 1riU c«npete lor the&#13;
time lhla Ie""" In tbe&#13;
Fourth AllIIUaI Raapr Relays&#13;
IIda Saturday. 1IlaIIIInI up with&#13;
the 1IlIlII'. ...... DiYinl comtIlioD&#13;
wlO be8In at 4 p.m. and&#13;
IWlnImIDI at 5 p.m. Ten teams.&#13;
IIlcbJdlnl CarroU. carthage, U 01&#13;
Odc:a&amp;o. Lake Forest, Lawrence,&#13;
Ski&#13;
•&#13;
racIng&#13;
organized&#13;
en. Country sit! Instructor&#13;
c Godfrey orpniJlng a group&#13;
01 cross country sit! racers.&#13;
Any ODe Intereted In this type&#13;
01 raetng abouId conlllct Godfrey&#13;
at ~~ or PE 131 al their&#13;
,1 coavenlence&#13;
George Williams, Valpariso, UWMilwaukee&#13;
and UW-Whitewater&#13;
will participate in tbe meet.&#13;
The men swimmers began&#13;
competitlGn with an intersquad&#13;
meet whore tbe Green team beet&#13;
the White. 41-31.&#13;
AU records were broken at the&#13;
varsity level. Best early _&#13;
performances were turned in by&#13;
Bob Wtlburlhire in the 50 free,&#13;
JIm Ferraro in the 2llOIndividual&#13;
Medley and Riclt Kwas in the 100&#13;
l&lt;ft. .&#13;
Pa.rk3i~·s ,~_" , team, the&#13;
NAJA District 14 soccer champion&#13;
ended their season Saturday&#13;
,losing to Sl. John Univ ersity,&#13;
4-3 tn the first round of playoffs&#13;
at CoUegh'ille, Minnesota.&#13;
The Johnnies scored two goals&#13;
in the lirst 17 minutes 01 the&#13;
contest, but tile Rangers came&#13;
back and tied the score- in the&#13;
next two minutes.&#13;
St. John scored another two&#13;
half way through the second half.&#13;
With a few minutes remaining.&#13;
Steve Sendelbach scored the linal&#13;
point 01 the game on a penalty&#13;
kick.&#13;
Wom~n's basketball&#13;
club planned&#13;
by JeaD Tenulll&#13;
,&#13;
The Athletic Department has&#13;
8IIIIOlIDCCd thaI It will begin a&#13;
women's basketball club this&#13;
year.&#13;
The schedule is limited to 10&#13;
games beginning in January,&#13;
with practice starting Monday.&#13;
December 13 at 4 p.m. The club&#13;
will compete against other clubs&#13;
as well as varsity teams. and&#13;
some contest will he held prior to&#13;
the men's varsity Basketball&#13;
games.&#13;
Participants on the club are&#13;
'expected to carry 12 credits&#13;
during the spring semester as&#13;
tlus year's club will build the&#13;
foundabon lor the 1977-78 school&#13;
year, when women's basketball&#13;
will become a luU-fledged varsity&#13;
sport.&#13;
A staff member will be&#13;
assigned to coordinate the club&#13;
activities tlus year and eventually&#13;
ISSlgD a -head women's&#13;
basketball coach for next year.&#13;
Women interested in participating&#13;
should sign up with&#13;
Orby Moss, Assistant Athl.!'tic&#13;
Director in the Physical&#13;
Education Building during&#13;
. 'ovemher and should also report&#13;
IJW-P loses&#13;
to Carthage&#13;
The Ranger vaI1eyball team&#13;
ended their ...... as Carthage&#13;
the dwnploaslup game of&#13;
I.cousln Women'. Inlen:oll&lt;eclale&#13;
tb1etic Conference&#13;
coli e tournament Ia t&#13;
tw1Iay. aDd qaalified lor the&#13;
Sma1I College Tournament&#13;
turday In •·apen ..llle.&#13;
Carthaile beot the Rangers n&#13;
the one! round and faced&#13;
CarroU. the • 0 .1 seeded team.&#13;
whom lhe) beal I~, I~S&#13;
Par beet UW upenorln the&#13;
IIrst round .ttlle tourney at UWCartha&#13;
e had '-en seeded&#13;
Rd. Wb tewater tIt1rd and&#13;
P rlt ide lo~rth Platte.ille.&#13;
Rl r Falls .upeTlor and Stout&#13;
unoeeded&#13;
The team finished their dual&#13;
t th a 7-13 recwd&#13;
o mber • The Rangers&#13;
deleated OIicago Slate Is.:;, l1-/S&#13;
and 1~11 but lost to Lewis&#13;
Uruversily 1~9,~IS, &amp;-IS.&#13;
on December 13 to gymnasium,&#13;
prepared to play.&#13;
Those interested should also&#13;
watch the Ranger for more inlormation&#13;
and the completed&#13;
schedule. One may participate on&#13;
the club team as well as in their&#13;
cities' recreation departments&#13;
program.&#13;
NAJA to&#13;
be hosted&#13;
Parkside's cross country squad&#13;
qualified for the NAlA National&#13;
OIampionships to be run on their&#13;
home course Saturday at 11 a.m .&#13;
The Rangers finished third in&#13;
the District 14 meet at Parkside&#13;
last Saturday. which was won by&#13;
UW-LaCrosse, with 34 points&#13;
UW-&amp;evens Point was second&#13;
with 4S and Parkside had 78.&#13;
laCrosse and Stevens Point,&#13;
finishing 1-2 in the WSUC meet&#13;
were expected to repeat their&#13;
I97S 1-2 district linish again, but&#13;
the competition was for third&#13;
place which Parkside, Platteville&#13;
and Eau Claire were to battle for.&#13;
The Rangers were way ahead of&#13;
both, as Platteville had 95 and&#13;
Eau Claire had 98. The top three&#13;
teams and top 15 individuals&#13;
qualified for the nationals.&#13;
Jim Hanson was the meet&#13;
winner in 25 minutes, 25.6&#13;
seconds, followed by Joe Hanson.&#13;
both 01 UW-La Crosse. Shawn&#13;
Flanigan of UW-Platteville was&#13;
third, Dan Buniman 01 UWStevens&#13;
Point, fourth and&#13;
Parkside's Ray Fredericksen&#13;
was fifth~.!!~&#13;
• Saves gas (up 1025%) e Saves _ar&#13;
e Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mlle oil change)&#13;
e E_ sub-zero starts (-6O"F.pour polnlt&#13;
• S_ 011 RICK BENTSON&#13;
roo" A~S/OIL _la, 639-4067&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From Goers Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
Both 01 the first two Ranger&#13;
oa1s were scored by Deech&#13;
fsmiall on assists by MIke&#13;
Boyagjian. .&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson CIted two&#13;
reasons for the outcome 01 the&#13;
match.&#13;
"They were faster than we&#13;
were and scored three goals by&#13;
outrwming us," he said, contin&#13;
. g "they did not have a wn, . IK' k&#13;
great deal of skill, playmg a 1C&#13;
and run' type of game. Th&lt;;y&#13;
seldom controlled and did&#13;
anything with the ball and we&#13;
were not prepared for this kind of&#13;
game. 1 think we played the&#13;
better game."&#13;
Statistics for the match were&#13;
close as SI. John had 13 shots to&#13;
Park'side's 12. "It's unhelieveable&#13;
to have as much&#13;
scoring as occurred with so few&#13;
attempts," said Henderson. 51.&#13;
John had 12 corner kicks to&#13;
Parkside's 10 and Parkside had&#13;
three saves to St. John's two.&#13;
Coach Henderson also noted&#13;
other conditions affecting the&#13;
outcome of the match.&#13;
"We had a nice sunny 40&#13;
degree day, but neither team&#13;
played especiaUy well on the field&#13;
that was rough and bumpy,&#13;
something we're not used to. The&#13;
officiating, though was as good as&#13;
I've ever seen," said Henderson.&#13;
"I was extremely pleaaect&#13;
the way the team fought ba I1j&#13;
even when we were do"" by "'-&#13;
goals. We just didn't t&#13;
enough goals during the ~ ...&#13;
The Rangers end their .&#13;
ever season with a 7-78 bot&#13;
and will have 10 01 the 11 .::::&#13;
back, hopefully, for next y .&#13;
squad. ....1&#13;
Ten members 01 llie' Rang&#13;
were named to the All NA~&#13;
District 14 team out of the&#13;
honored for their perl~&#13;
during the season.&#13;
Qualifying for the first&#13;
were Sendelbach, Mike o~&#13;
Chris Carter and Kri. Serafin&#13;
delense and Boyajian and ~&#13;
Campbell on offense.&#13;
Cited for honorable 1lle01lla&#13;
were Bernie Heiner, goalie;NlaI&#13;
Power and Jack Landweh _&#13;
defense and Ismiali on oIf-.&#13;
Henderson was also honored.&#13;
the four team disbict's "CGocb.&#13;
the Year."&#13;
Parkside compieted i!J the firII&#13;
round 01 the playolf8 lor .-&#13;
second time in three yean. Tho,&#13;
lost to 51. John l-ll In 19'1l&#13;
SI. John, upping their recont_&#13;
13-1-3 advances to the ana IIJII&#13;
either Nov. 17 or ?ll agaiIlot.-&#13;
minois winner, probably IaVOhl&#13;
and three-time NAJA cbq&#13;
Quincy College.&#13;
~ee'$OPTICAL Sang .. BOUTIQUE&#13;
t::::(Ji~ ,. 552-7610&#13;
44;25 Taylor&#13;
only ten minutes from Kenosha&#13;
- Student Discount&#13;
Largest selection of&#13;
fashionable frames iff&#13;
southeastern Wisconstn&#13;
-:- Lenses duplicated&#13;
- Physician . .&#13;
prescriptions filled&#13;
50 % off 2nd pair&#13;
n THE PARKSIDE RANGER ovember l7, 1976&#13;
ki&#13;
8&#13;
or&#13;
• ing&#13;
team&#13;
12th Park.,ioc's · • 1 team, the&#13;
'AIA District 14 occer cham·&#13;
pion ended then season Satur·&#13;
day, losing to St. John Uni, ersity,&#13;
4-3, in the first round ,:if playoffs&#13;
at Collegeville, Minnesota.&#13;
The Johnnies scored two goals&#13;
in the first 17 minute,- of the&#13;
conte t but the Rangers cam~&#13;
back ~d Hect the score in the&#13;
next two minutes.&#13;
St. John scored another two&#13;
half way through the secon~ h_alf.&#13;
tth a few minutP:; remammg,&#13;
Steve Sendelbach scored the final&#13;
point of the game on a penalty&#13;
kick.&#13;
olllen 's basketball&#13;
c uh planned&#13;
,&#13;
Departm nt has&#13;
that 1t ill begin a&#13;
basketball club this&#13;
hedule is limited to 10&#13;
mes beginning in January,&#13;
th practice starting Monday,&#13;
mber 13 at ~ p.m. The club&#13;
rill compete against other clubs&#13;
ell as varsity teams, and&#13;
cont twill be held prior to&#13;
varsity Basketball&#13;
m . Participants on the club are&#13;
cted to carry 12 credits&#13;
durin the rin semester as&#13;
y r' club will build the&#13;
foundation for the 19i7-78 school&#13;
., • hen omen's basketball&#13;
~ becom a full-fledged varsity&#13;
on December 13 to gymnasium,&#13;
prepared to play.&#13;
Those interested should also&#13;
watch the Ranger for more information&#13;
and the completed&#13;
schedule. One may participate on&#13;
the club team as well as in their&#13;
cities' recreation departments&#13;
program. •&#13;
NAIA to&#13;
be hosted&#13;
Parkside's cross country squad&#13;
qualified for the NAIA National&#13;
Championships to be run on their&#13;
home course Saturday at 11 a.m .&#13;
anized&#13;
The Rangers finished third in&#13;
the District 14 meet at Parkside&#13;
last Saturday, which was won by&#13;
UW-LaCrosse, with 34 points&#13;
UW-Stevens Point was second&#13;
with 45 and Parkside had 78.&#13;
ucatton Building during&#13;
her and ould lso report&#13;
oses&#13;
hage&#13;
e 15-5, 11-!5&#13;
LaCrosse and Stevens Point,&#13;
finishing 1-2 in the WSUC meet&#13;
were expected to repeat their&#13;
1975 1-2 district finish again, but&#13;
the competition was for third&#13;
place which Parkside, Platteville&#13;
and Eau Claire were to battle for.&#13;
The Rangers were way ahead of&#13;
both as Platteville had 95 and&#13;
Eau Claire had 98. The top three&#13;
teams and top 15 individuals&#13;
qualified for the nationals.&#13;
Jim Hanson was the meet&#13;
winner in 25 minutes, 25.6&#13;
seconds, followed by Joe Hanson,&#13;
both of UW-La Crosse. Shawn&#13;
Flanigan of UW-Platteville was&#13;
third, Dan Buniman of UWtevens&#13;
Point, fourth and&#13;
Parkside's Ray Fredericksen&#13;
was fifth.&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
• saves oil RICK BENTSON&#13;
rAMSI OI d 639-4067&#13;
Both of the first two Ranger&#13;
oals were scored by De~ch f smiali on assists by Mike&#13;
Boyagjian. . Coach Hal Henderson cited two&#13;
reasons for the outcome of the&#13;
match.&#13;
"They were faster than we&#13;
ere and scored three goals by w .d outrunning us," he sat , continuing,&#13;
"they did n~t ha;e. a&#13;
great deal of skill, playmg a Kick&#13;
and run' type of game. Th~y&#13;
seldom controlled and did&#13;
anything with the ball and we&#13;
were not prepared for this kind of&#13;
game. I think we played the&#13;
better game."&#13;
Statistics for the match were&#13;
close, 88 St. John had 13 shots to&#13;
Parkside's 12. "It's unbelieveable&#13;
to have as much&#13;
scoring as occurred with so few&#13;
attempts," said Hender~on. St.&#13;
John had 12 corner kicks to&#13;
Parkside's 10 and Parkside had&#13;
three saves to St. John's two.&#13;
Coach Henderson also noted&#13;
other conditions affecting the&#13;
outcome of the match.&#13;
"We had a nice sunny 40&#13;
degree day, but neither team&#13;
played especially well on the fi~ld&#13;
that was rougn and bumpy,&#13;
something we're not used to. The&#13;
officiating, though was as good as&#13;
I've ever seen," said Henderson.&#13;
"I was extremely plea5e11&#13;
the way the team fought ba ~&#13;
even when we were doWn by&#13;
goals. We just didn't t&#13;
enough goals during the ~c&#13;
The Rangers end their 0d&#13;
ever season with a 7.78&#13;
and will have 10 of the 11 s reCOrt&#13;
back, hopefully, for next~&#13;
squad. rs&#13;
Ten members of the Rang were named to the All ~Al!&#13;
District 14 team out of the&#13;
honored for their perforrna 11&#13;
during the season.&#13;
Qualifying for the first&#13;
were Sendelbach, Mike 01&#13;
Chris Carter and Kriz Serafin&#13;
defense and Boyajian and Eat&#13;
Campbell on offense.&#13;
Citeq f~r honorable menli&#13;
were Berme Hefner, goalie; ·&#13;
Power and Jack Landweh&#13;
defense and Isrniali on offenst&#13;
Henderson was also honored&#13;
the four team district's "Coach or&#13;
the Year."&#13;
Parkside completed in the f&#13;
round of the playoffs for&#13;
second time in three years. Thtr&#13;
lost to St. John 1-0 in 1974.&#13;
St. John, upping their record&#13;
13-1-3 advances to the area final&#13;
either Nov. 17 or 20 against&#13;
Illinois winner, probably favor&#13;
and three-time NAIA ~&#13;
Quincy College.&#13;
H""i"":7"LJ\.!_A'2/&#13;
• · Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
Sanbee'S ~~~~~'uE . t:,t) ,,, 552-7610&#13;
4425 Taylor only ten minutes from Kenosha&#13;
- Student Discount&#13;
Largest selection of&#13;
fashionable frames it'!&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
- Lenses duplicated&#13;
Physician&#13;
prescriptions filled&#13;
50 % off 2nd pair </text>
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              <text>Bowden requests impeachment&#13;
</text>
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              <text>TheParkside,----- _&#13;
•&#13;
RANGER •&#13;
Vol. V. No.9 Wednesday, November 10, 1976&#13;
Bowden requests impeachment&#13;
by DouglasEdenhauser&#13;
At the November 3 Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
(PSGA) meeting. President&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden threatened to&#13;
bring criminal charges against&#13;
senatOr Mary Arnold for the theft&#13;
of the original copy of the PSGA&#13;
newsletter if those materials&#13;
were not returned during the&#13;
meeting .:&#13;
The materials were returned ..&#13;
However, Bowden did request&#13;
impeachment proceedings under&#13;
the following charges: (1) Obstruction&#13;
of presidential duteis,&#13;
(2) Use of senate authority to&#13;
obtain the materials, (3) The&#13;
actual theft, and (4) False information&#13;
as to the whereabouts&#13;
of those materials. A special&#13;
investigative' committee was&#13;
appointed to follow up on this&#13;
matter.&#13;
A resolution was passed stating&#13;
that each senator distribute 50&#13;
copies of the PSGA Newsletter&#13;
twice monthly in an effort to&#13;
better acquaint the students with&#13;
their senators. President Bowden&#13;
mentioned that she has received&#13;
several complaints from senators&#13;
and students concerning the&#13;
anonymity oftne senate.&#13;
The following students were&#13;
appointed to various commitlees.&#13;
Niki Di Paolo to the Student&#13;
Recruitment and Admissions&#13;
Committee, Sue Schmanski to the&#13;
Athletic Board, Tom Fulmer to&#13;
the Athletic Board, Baril'&#13;
Butgereit to the. Teaching&#13;
Awards Committee, Sue&#13;
Balewski and Harvey Hedden to&#13;
the Teaching Improvements&#13;
Grants Committee, and Rusty&#13;
Tutlewski to the Allocations&#13;
Committee .&#13;
The Elections Subcommittee&#13;
announced the results of the&#13;
runoff election held Friday,&#13;
October 28. Rick Folsom defeated&#13;
Carol Bohn and Joan Fuetterer&#13;
for the remaining undeclared&#13;
.seat.&#13;
Blood drive planned&#13;
Campus Nurse, Edith Isenberg, is urging students&#13;
to make appointments now for Parkside's first&#13;
blooddrive. As coordinator, Nurse Isenberg and her&#13;
staff of students in Wu.c 0-194 will try and make&#13;
sure there is a steady supply of students ready to&#13;
donate blood from 10 a.m, to 2 p.m. Monday,&#13;
November 22 in the Union's parking lot driveway .&#13;
The blood drive's director might be a surprise to&#13;
most students around Parkside. Dr. Richard J.&#13;
Pomazal, Assistant Professor of Psychology, is&#13;
better kJlown for his popular psychology of drug&#13;
abuse courses. Blood drives are nothii\g new to Dr.&#13;
Pomazal. He has heen involved in so many he has&#13;
lost count.&#13;
"You meet a lot of friendly poeple when you&#13;
donate blood,", says Pomazal, "I was the first&#13;
person to sign up for this driv..e.."&#13;
Dr. Pomazal also has a professional interest in&#13;
why people donate blood. His' doctoral thesis at the&#13;
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign was&#13;
~&#13;
.-...~.'.&#13;
--t dO........--~I&#13;
._'/- .&#13;
_.~~..~.. ,,~;:;.,~&#13;
• I.,. • ~~ ,"~, •• {i"..... . '.# ..&#13;
-""''''' , . "'Wi .. -~. - •• 'it;·.... II I.. :. ... #. ' .••&#13;
; ; '" -- -. '.. '.--", .- -; .&#13;
'... ,1. If - - .... - .&#13;
,. . .. '.. .- ..&#13;
I ...• ,'#1, -&#13;
.11/I ,', •. ~ '.• \ .. "A ;.. -..... .....- J, . .' 'q. .. • ." , J • f&#13;
"II ;'~ .... _.4r ......&#13;
"'.4ll .. " _.' " .• ' •• ., ... .....&#13;
Doctor Richard J., Pomazal and Camp~s Nurse, .&#13;
~ Ed'th Isenberg R.N. prepare for Parkside's first&#13;
1 tion should be to help people rather than get&#13;
-&#13;
blood drIve. According to Dr. Pomazal, ... the mollva m on Monda November 22in the&#13;
something in return." Donators may give blood from 10a.m, to.2 p. '. y,&#13;
.Union Parking lot Driveway.&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
-&#13;
about altruism or why people help one another. Dr.&#13;
Pomazal's theory, the subject of his recent article in .&#13;
the Journal of Personality and Social Psycbology,&#13;
, briefly asserts that donors and non-donors both&#13;
believe in the same positive consequences of giving&#13;
hlood. What they disagree on is. the negative coosequences;&#13;
non-donors fear pain, fainting, and&#13;
.exhaustion. Donors who have given blood rarely&#13;
have negative feelings.&#13;
"I am interested in why people 'donate blood and&#13;
why they feel good about it afterward. I am against&#13;
giving free beer and other gimmicks designed to&#13;
entice donors." says Pomazal, and about&#13;
Parkside's first drive, "the motivation should be to&#13;
_ help people rather than get something in return."&#13;
Dr. Pomazal also envisions periodic blood drives at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Milwaukee Blood center is providing the&#13;
bloodmobile. The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. and the Vets Club are cosponsoring&#13;
the event.&#13;
8l00DofUVE&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
Joseph Attwell&#13;
Accusation&#13;
called false&#13;
by Jobn McKloskey&#13;
A single source within the Affirmative Action Advisory Committee,&#13;
who asked not to be identified, accused Affirmative Action Officer&#13;
Joseph J. Attwell of "dragging his feet as hard as he can, because&#13;
when the plan is finished, he's out of a Job." Attwell responded, "I&#13;
don't care who it is, they are liars ...they don't know a damn thing&#13;
about it."&#13;
"I have done what 1was hired to do insofar as I have been allowed to&#13;
do," said Attweli, who last February submitted to Olancellor Guskin&#13;
what he called a complete Affirmative Action plan for hiring of female&#13;
and minority employees. Guskin replied in a letter dated May 13that&#13;
the document Attweli submitted was not really a plan. Attwell replied&#13;
to Guskin in a letter dated May 17, quoting UW System Senior VicePresident&#13;
Donald Percy as giving four elements "basic to the&#13;
adequacy of any (Affirmative Action) program." Those four essential&#13;
elements, as outlined by Attwell, are: A. The Work Force Analysis. B.&#13;
The Availability and Utilization Analysis. C. The Goals and&#13;
Timetables. D. A description of actions taken to implement the&#13;
program.&#13;
As far as this reporter can determine, Attwell's February report&#13;
incloded all the above except the timelables, and it also includes&#13;
sections entitled "The Legal Authority for Afrirmative Action" and&#13;
"Workforce Deficiencies at UW·Parkside."&#13;
In the same letter of response to Guskin, Attwell charged that&#13;
Guskin had been slow to institute Affirmative Action. To quote from&#13;
Attwell's letter:&#13;
Nothing In affirmative acllon of .ay practical .lplfIcaace wu&#13;
accomplished la 1973or 1974.Hiring. lew Blacks .Dd .. y.... ".t leut&#13;
there are some," does not constitute affirm.dve acdoR.&#13;
In 1974,as well.s 1975,1 made every pos.lble effort to achieve lOme&#13;
semblaace of affirmative action, bnt 99 perceat of employment .Dd&#13;
affirmative action matters were accompllabed .. Ithout any dl.cullioa&#13;
with me. What admlnlstr.lors wanled 10 do, they did and 1 wa. 1101&#13;
allowed to be lavolved. It Is beginning 10 .ppear th.t • alml1ar&#13;
situation exists now.&#13;
The Plan submitted In February, 1978sbould have beea dIacuaaed&#13;
with me and your senior staff with a view 10 setting firm bIrfng g.... 1D&#13;
the IIgbl of lbe non-existence of .ftIrmatlve actloa. Direct maad.teI&#13;
should have heen gtvee as to blrlag procedures wltb as little .... le of&#13;
time and paper as possible ...&#13;
...I must point out that over. perIod 01 2 years, I have received&#13;
practically no cooperatloa aad very lillie of the pertlaeat information&#13;
whicb 1needed and requested. I received more rbelorlc than aaythlng&#13;
else ...&#13;
Attwell said in an interview that he received no co-operation at aU&#13;
from the Wyllie or Bauer administrations, and that the current administration&#13;
has been more co-operative, He stressed that the reason&#13;
he released the above letter was not to attack or criticize Guskin, but&#13;
to refute the "Ioot-dragging" charge.&#13;
Carole Vopat, chairperson of the Affirmative Action Commiltee,&#13;
was originally unavailable for comment on'the charges, but requested&#13;
that this reporter attend last Thursday's committee meeting, at .. hich&#13;
committee memhers in attendance supported Attwell. Vopat labeled&#13;
the accusations "patently false. Joe has been very helpful and has&#13;
come to every meeting. Joe has not obstructed or hindered us in any&#13;
way." Glenn Doston, a committee member, said that "Attwell has&#13;
agreed to serve and assist all our subconunittees."&#13;
Regardless of whether anyone has been stalling Affirmative Action,&#13;
the formulation of the plan is now progressing rapidly.&#13;
The Affirmative Action Committee has set up a lime schedule by&#13;
which its work on the plan will be completely finished on December 11,&#13;
1976.&#13;
The committee will be meeting almost every Thursday and some&#13;
Saturdays, until then, and has appointed sul&gt;-committees to cover the&#13;
areas of recruiting; monitoring; promotion, retention and tenure; and&#13;
goals and timetables. .&#13;
The only question at this point is how long it will take the administration&#13;
to approve the plan when the committee is finished with&#13;
it.&#13;
The Parkside--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 9 Wednesday, November 10, 1976&#13;
•&#13;
Bowden requests impeachment&#13;
by Douglas_Edenhauser&#13;
At the November 3 Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
(PSGA) meeting_ President&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden threatened to&#13;
bring criminal charges against&#13;
Senator Mary Arnold for the theft&#13;
of the original copy of the PSGA&#13;
newsletter if those materials&#13;
were not returned during the&#13;
meeting. ·&#13;
actual theft, and ( 4) 1''alse information&#13;
as to the whereabouts&#13;
of those materials. A special&#13;
investigative · committee was&#13;
appointed to follow up on this&#13;
matter.&#13;
Recruitment and Admissions&#13;
Committee, Sue Schmanski to the&#13;
Athletic Board, Tom Fulmer to&#13;
the Athletic Board, Barir&#13;
Butgereit to the . Teaching&#13;
Awards Committee, Sue&#13;
Balewski and Harvey Hedden to&#13;
the Teaching Improvements&#13;
Grants Committee, and Rusty&#13;
Tutlewski to the Allocations&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The materials were returned.,&#13;
However, Bowden did request&#13;
impeachment proceedings under&#13;
the following charges: (1) Obstruction&#13;
of presidential dute1s,&#13;
(2) Use of Senate authority to&#13;
obtain the materials, (3) The&#13;
A resolution was passed stating&#13;
that each senator distribute 50&#13;
copies of the PSGA Newsletter&#13;
twice monthly in an effort to&#13;
better acquaint the students with&#13;
their senators. President Bowden&#13;
mentioned that she has received&#13;
several complaints from senators&#13;
and students concerning the&#13;
anonymity ofthe Senate.&#13;
The Elections Subcommittee&#13;
announced the results of the&#13;
runoff el~ction held Friday,&#13;
October 28. Rick Folsom defeated&#13;
Carol Bohn and Joan Fuetterer&#13;
for the remaining undeclared&#13;
,seat.&#13;
The following students were&#13;
appointed to various committees.&#13;
Niki Di Paolo to the Student&#13;
BlOod drive planned&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Campus Nurse, Edith Isenberg, is urging students&#13;
to make appointments now for Parkside's first&#13;
blood drive. As coordinator, Nurse Isenberg and her&#13;
staff of students in WLLC D-194 will try and make&#13;
sure there is a steady supply of students ready to&#13;
donate blood from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday,&#13;
November 22 in the Union's parking lot driveway.&#13;
The blood drive's director might be a surprise to&#13;
most students around Parkside. Dr. Richard J.&#13;
Pomazal, Assistant Professor of Psychology, is&#13;
better known for his popular psychology of drug&#13;
abuse courses. Blood drives are nothing new to Dr.&#13;
Pomazal. He has been involved in so many he has&#13;
lost count.&#13;
"You meet a lot of friendly poeple when you&#13;
donate blood,". says Pomazal, "I was .the first&#13;
person to sign up for this driv.e."&#13;
Dr. Pomazal also has a professional interest in&#13;
why people donate blood. His doctoral thesis at the&#13;
Universlty of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign was&#13;
about altruism or why people help one another. Dr.&#13;
Pomazal's theory, the subject of his recent article in&#13;
the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology,&#13;
, briefly asserts that donors and non-donors both&#13;
believe in the same positive consequences of giving&#13;
blood. What they disagree on is the negative consequences;&#13;
non-donors fear pain, fainting, and&#13;
. exhaustion. Donors who have given blood rarely&#13;
have negative feelings.&#13;
"I am interested in why people ·donate blood and&#13;
why they feel good about it afterward. I am against&#13;
giving free beer and other gimmicks designed to&#13;
entice donors," says Pomazal, and about&#13;
Parkside's first drive, "the motivation should be to&#13;
_ help people rather than get something in return."&#13;
Dr. Pomazal also envisions periodic blood drives at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Milwaukee Blood Center is providing the&#13;
bloodmobile. The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. and the Vets Club are cosponsoring&#13;
the event.&#13;
8U&gt;OOl&gt;R.JVE&#13;
., .&#13;
•&#13;
. -· · · Edith Isenberg R.N. prepare for Parkside's first&#13;
Doctor Richard J. Pomazal and Campus Nurse, . ti h ld be to help people rather than get&#13;
blood drive. According to Dr. Pomazal, " ... the mohva on s ou on Monda November 22in the&#13;
something in return." Donato rs may give blood from 10 a.m. to .&#13;
2 p.m. . Y'&#13;
_ Union Parking lot Driveway.&#13;
Accusation&#13;
called false&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
A single source within the Affirmative Action Advisory Committee,&#13;
who asked not to be identified, accused Affirmative Action Officer&#13;
Joseph J. Attwell of "dragging his feet as hard as he can, because&#13;
when the plan is finished, he's out of a job." Attwell responded, "I&#13;
don't care who it is, they are liars ... they don't know a damn thing&#13;
about it."&#13;
"I have done what I was hired to do insofar as I have been allowed to&#13;
do," said Attwell, who last February submitted to Chancellor Guskin&#13;
what he called a complete Affirmative Action plan for hiring of female&#13;
and minority employees. Guskin replied in a letter dated May 13 that&#13;
the document Attwell submitted was not really a plan. Attwell replied&#13;
to Guskin in a letter dated May 17, quoting UW System Senior VicePresident&#13;
Donald Percy as giving four elements "basic to the&#13;
adequacy of any (Affirmative Action) program." Those four essential&#13;
elements, as outlined by Attwell, are: A. The Work Force Analysis. B.&#13;
The Availability and Utilization Analysis. C. The Goals and&#13;
Timetables. D. A description of actions taken to implement the&#13;
program.&#13;
As far- as this reporter can determine, Attwell's February report&#13;
included all the above except the timetables, and it also includes&#13;
sections entitled "The Legal Authority for Afrirmative Action" and&#13;
"Workforce Deficiencies at UW-Parkside."&#13;
In the same letter of response to Guskin, Attwell charged that&#13;
Guskin had been slow to institute Affirmative Action. To quote from&#13;
Attwell's letter:&#13;
Nothing lo afflrmative action of any practical slgn.fflcance wa&#13;
accomplished in 1973 or 1974. Hiring a few Blac and aylng ' at lea t&#13;
there are some," does not constitute affirmative action.&#13;
In 1974, as well as 1975, I made every pos Ible effort to chleve om&#13;
semblance of affirmative action, but 99 percent of employment and&#13;
affirmative action matters were accomplished with ut any di u Ion&#13;
with me. What administrators wanted to do, they did and I a n t&#13;
allowed to be Involved. It l beginning to appear that a similar&#13;
situation exists now.&#13;
The Plan submitted lo February, 1976 should have be n di u ed&#13;
with me and your senior staff with a view to tting firm hlrlng als lo&#13;
the light of the non-existence of affirmative action. Dlr ct manda&#13;
should have been given as to hiring procedures with a little wa te of&#13;
time and paper as pos Ible ...&#13;
... I must point out that over a period of 2 year , I have rec ved&#13;
practically no cooperation and very little of the pertinent lnform.ati n&#13;
which I needed and reque ted. I received more rhetoric than anything&#13;
else ...&#13;
Attwell said in an interview that he received no co-operation at all&#13;
from the Wyllie or Bauer administrations, and that the current dministration&#13;
has been more co-operative, He stressed that the rea n&#13;
he released the above letter was not to attack or criticize Guskin, but&#13;
to refute the "foot-dragging" charge.&#13;
Carole Vopat, chairperson of the Affirmative Action Committee,&#13;
was originally unavailable for comment on the charges, but requ ted&#13;
that this reporter attend last Thursday's committee meeting, at which&#13;
committee members in attendance supported Attwell. Vopat labeled&#13;
the accusations "patently false. Joe has been very helpful and ha&#13;
come to every meeting. Joe has not obstructed or hindered us in any&#13;
way." Glenn Doston, a committee member, said that "Attwell has&#13;
agreed to serve and assist all our subcommittees."&#13;
Regardless of whether anyone has been stalling Affirmative Action,&#13;
the formulation of the plan is now progressing rapidly.&#13;
The Affirmative Action Committee has set up a time schedule by&#13;
which its work on the plan will be completely finished on December 11,&#13;
1976.&#13;
The committee will be meeting almost every Thursday and some&#13;
Saturdays, until then, and has appointed sub-committees to cover the&#13;
areas of recruiting; monitoring; promotion, retention and tenure; and&#13;
goals and timetables.&#13;
The only question at this point is how long it will take the administration&#13;
to approve the plan when the committee is finished with&#13;
it. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976&#13;
•&#13;
i&#13;
~I¥/ The Parkside ~".. /[ RANGER&#13;
---EDITOR IAL/OPINION&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM.&#13;
Ford thanked'&#13;
\&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
Well, the election is over and Jerry Ford is a loser for the first&#13;
election in his life. The American people didn't say thanks in their _&#13;
vote, but they can still say thanks hy remembering what he did for&#13;
them. True, he was clumsy, and didn't always appear too bright, but&#13;
when you compare him to a monster like Nixon, Jerry Ford comes out&#13;
like a "white Knight" who rode in to save the country. When you&#13;
compare the attitude of the country at the time of his appearance with&#13;
the attitude now, you have to think he did something right.&#13;
When Richard Nixon resigned, this country was wallowing in misery&#13;
and despair. Then Ford appeared, a likeable, honest man with a flair&#13;
for comedy. He did what any decent God-fearing man would have done&#13;
in pardonirig Nixon. I intensely dislike the man, but 1would have felt&#13;
asham'ed if the destruction would have continued. Can you imagine&#13;
what this country would have went through if impeachment&#13;
proceedings would have gone all the way? Watergate is a period of&#13;
time that we have survived, Ford did the right thing in buying it away.&#13;
Watergate was not the only thing that had morale down: we had also&#13;
just been evicted from Vietnam and pride was at an all time low. Our&#13;
allies overseas were disgusted and the Russians were given valuable&#13;
propaganda material, but here again Ford stepped in: The Cam- -&#13;
, bodians tried him out and he passed with flying colors; so if the&#13;
Mayeguez was mainly a publicity stunt, it is nice to know that the&#13;
Russians aren't the only ones with a hold on that market. It returned&#13;
some pride to the American people, and any amount was helpful at the&#13;
time.&#13;
Another aspect of this man, was his wife. Betty Ford was the first&#13;
REAL first lady since Jackie Kennedy. She was intelligent, funny and&#13;
most of all, candid and honest. 1 don't mean to say that Pat Nixon&#13;
wasn't, but one can onlv take. so much phoniness. And add to that the&#13;
intense personal tragedy that the Fords went through, it is amazing&#13;
that they held up.&#13;
'Ithink the American people are a lot better off for knowing 'Jerry&#13;
Ford: he was there when we needed him. A lot of us did not agree with&#13;
him politically, but personally Ithought he was a fine, decent and&#13;
, honest man. And just maybe on the day that Jimmy Carter is sworn in&#13;
as the new president, the people well stepback and say, ','Thanks a hell&#13;
of a lot, Jerry." He deserves it.&#13;
,&#13;
Union membership&#13;
angers (lllumnis&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
When Iwas a student at UW·P I&#13;
was told by high administration&#13;
authority that the hundreds Iwas&#13;
forking over to build the new&#13;
union would buy me membership&#13;
in It as an allumnis. Now I'm&#13;
expected to glow with gratitude&#13;
and delight as I'm told that this&#13;
membership is for one year only, ~&#13;
, suppose I'm overstepping l!!e&#13;
hounds of propriety in mentioning&#13;
that the time a student&#13;
spends at the union in four years&#13;
of, fulltime undergrad study Can&#13;
hardly be approached in duration&#13;
and convenience in even ten&#13;
.years by allumni whose 0pportunities&#13;
to try are so&#13;
• I&#13;
restricted in comparison.&#13;
Well whoever is responsible for&#13;
this has sent the allunmi a&#13;
message loud and clear:&#13;
"Thanks a lot suckers!" Well&#13;
then I've got a message for you&#13;
too pal, whoever you might be:&#13;
"Don't urinate down my back&#13;
and tell me its raining." •&#13;
May 1 never be so stupid as to&#13;
contribute a penny to or lift a&#13;
finger for those at your school&#13;
whose face-slaping policies might&#13;
be furthered, by my doing so. And&#13;
may they never be so foolish as to&#13;
ask.&#13;
James D. Smith Jr,&#13;
Class of '75&#13;
Food 'is overpriced&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Itused to be that the best place&#13;
to have lunch, or supper,&#13;
whatever, was down in the Union&#13;
Square. For $1.25 you could get a&#13;
good sized hamburger or rib&#13;
steak with a large helping of&#13;
giant french fries with a pickle, a&#13;
slice of tomatoe and lettuce to top&#13;
it all off.&#13;
Not bad considering the&#13;
outrageous, ridiculous, over-&#13;
-priced food in the new cafeteria.&#13;
The cold sandwiches are the&#13;
worst buy of all- $.60 for a slice of&#13;
salami and cheese between two&#13;
pieces of unusually stale bread.&#13;
No, maybe the $.30 donut is the&#13;
worst buy, or maybe the large&#13;
cup of coffee. Well, anyone who&#13;
buys anything there knows what&#13;
I'm talking ahout.&#13;
1 realized that a boycott may&#13;
seem a little impractical, and&#13;
perhaps unrealistic considering&#13;
. the amount of people who are&#13;
dependent on Saga Food Service,&#13;
so I was W'!l!ing a personal&#13;
campaign urgIrig people to eat at&#13;
the Union Square (located on the&#13;
0.1 level of'tbe Student Union).&#13;
,But alas, something has&#13;
happened. The rib steaks have&#13;
gotten smaller and are tougher to&#13;
eat. The quantity of french fries&#13;
now served has greatly&#13;
diminished, even the lettuce&#13;
looks undernourished, and now&#13;
we are even served on paper&#13;
plates.&#13;
Wha~ are they (Saga Foods)&#13;
doing to us students?!! Is this&#13;
another bureaucratic "we can't&#13;
do anything about it" situation? I&#13;
. mean you just cannot buy a cup of&#13;
coffee and a donut in the&#13;
morning without losing threequarters&#13;
of your dollar or more.&#13;
The students could eat better&#13;
for a lot less if we had the time&#13;
and inclination to drive out&#13;
somewhere to eat.&#13;
But coming and, going becomes&#13;
awkward and can be very timely,&#13;
So we students chose to eat pn&#13;
campus, paying exorbitant fees&#13;
to stay fed. It shouldn't be&#13;
allowed but it happens here and&#13;
probably at a lot of other places.&#13;
It's nothing new. I'm sure&#13;
we've all seen our capitalistic&#13;
system at its best. Nevertheless,&#13;
Iurge students to bring their own&#13;
lunches, or when feasible, to eat&#13;
elsewhere.&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Name withheld&#13;
Upon request&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Je.nnine Sipsma&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Cathy Brnak&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Cooper&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wagner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
Administriltlon-Poltcies: John McKloskey ,&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jeiln Tenuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jeffrey [. swencki, Bill Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Julie Lange&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marqu.rdt&#13;
STAFF: Wendy Miller, Terri Gayhart, Robert Hoffman, Chris (Iausen Phil Hermann&#13;
Ra~onil Maill~t, Bob .J~mbois, Lindil Knudtson, Karin La Fourher, JUdy'TrUdrUng, Scott&#13;
R"nhard, Philip L. LIVingston, Oebbie Sharpe&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: P.J. Auolina, Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Tile Parkslde Ran .. r is .rin-n and edited&#13;
by ttle stud ants of tha Unlvenlty of&#13;
Wisconsln_Parkside wllo are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
co~..... Opinion, e.pressed are not&#13;
necessarily representative of those held by&#13;
the stUdents, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parhide. Editorial and Business 553-2217;'&#13;
Newsroom 553-2295.&#13;
(&#13;
~*&#13;
~&#13;
•&#13;
•~&#13;
II&#13;
*&#13;
/1&#13;
II&#13;
1&#13;
,&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976&#13;
~ IJ!/ The Parkside&#13;
~,,.. /t&#13;
· R~NGER&#13;
---EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
POLITICAL . FO.RUM.&#13;
Ford thanked&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
Well, the election is over and Jerry Ford is a loser for the first&#13;
election in his life. The American people didn't say thanks in their&#13;
vote, but they can still say thanks by remembering what he did for&#13;
them. True, he was clumsy, and didn't always appear too bright, but&#13;
when you compare him to a monster like Nixon, Jerry Ford comes out&#13;
like a "white Knight" who rode in to save the country. When you&#13;
compare the attitude of the country at the time of his appearance with&#13;
the attitude now, you have to think he did something right.&#13;
When Richard Nixon resigned, this country was wallowing in misery&#13;
and despair. Then Ford appeared, a likeable, honest man with a flair&#13;
for comedy. He dld what any decent God-fearing man would have done&#13;
in pardoning Nixon. I intensely cijslike the man, but I would have felt&#13;
asham'ed if the destruction would have continued. Can you imagine&#13;
what this country would have went through if impeachment&#13;
proceedings would have gone all the way? Watergate is a period of&#13;
time that we have survived, Ford did the right thing in buying it away.&#13;
Watergate was not the only thing that had morale down; we had also&#13;
just been evicted from Vietnam and pride was at an all time low. Our&#13;
Union membership&#13;
angers allumnis&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
When I was a student at UW-P I&#13;
was told by high administration&#13;
authority that the hundreds I was&#13;
forking over to build the new&#13;
union would buy me membership&#13;
in it as an allumnis. Now I'm&#13;
expected to glow with gratitude&#13;
and delight as I'm told that .this&#13;
membership is for one year only. ·&#13;
I suppose I'm overstepping the&#13;
bounds of propriety in mentioning&#13;
that the time a student ·&#13;
spends at the union in four years&#13;
of fulltime undergrad study can&#13;
hardly be approached in duration&#13;
and convenience in even ten&#13;
.years by allumni whose opportunities&#13;
to try are so&#13;
,&#13;
restricted in comparison.&#13;
Well whoever is responsible for&#13;
this has sent the allumni a&#13;
message loud and clear:&#13;
"Thanks a lot suckers!" Well&#13;
then I've got a message for you&#13;
too pal, whoever you might be:&#13;
"Don't urinate down my back&#13;
and tell me its raining." •&#13;
May I never be so stupid as to&#13;
contribute a penny to or lift a&#13;
finger for those at your school&#13;
whose face-slaping policies might&#13;
be furthered by my doing so. And&#13;
may they never be so foolish as to&#13;
ask.&#13;
James D. Smith Jrr&#13;
Class of '75&#13;
allies overseas were disgusted and the Russians were given valuable&#13;
propaganda material, but here again Ford stepped in.' The Carn-&#13;
. bodia'ns tried him out and he passed with flying CE&gt;lors; so if the&#13;
Mayeguez was mainly a publicity stunt, it is nice to know that the&#13;
Russians aren't the only ones with a hold on that market. It returned&#13;
some pride to the American people, and any amount was helpful at the&#13;
time.&#13;
Another aspect of this man, was his wife. Betty Ford was the first&#13;
REAL first lady sirice Jackie Kennedy. She was intelligent, funny and&#13;
most of all, candid and honest. I don't mean to say that Pat Nixon&#13;
wasn't, but one can Qnlv take. so much ohoniness. And add to that the&#13;
intense personal tragedy that the Fords went through, it is amazing&#13;
that they held up.&#13;
'1 think the American people are a lot better off for knowing 0&#13;
Jerry&#13;
Ford; he was there when we needed him. A lot of us did not agree with&#13;
him politically, but personally I thought he was a fine, decent and&#13;
, honest man. And just maybe on the day that Jimmy Carter is sworn in&#13;
as the new president, the people well step,back and say, '.'Thanks a hell&#13;
of a lot, Jerry. " He deserves it.&#13;
Food is overpriced&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It used to be that the best place&#13;
to have lunch, or supper,&#13;
whatever, was down in the Union&#13;
Square. For $1.25 you could get a&#13;
good sized hamburger or rib&#13;
steak with a large helping of&#13;
giant french fries with a pickle, a&#13;
slice of tornatoe and lettuce to top&#13;
it all off.&#13;
Not bad considering the&#13;
outrageous, ridiculous, over-&#13;
.priced food in the new cafeteria.&#13;
The cold sandwiches are the&#13;
worst buy of all - $.60 for a slice of&#13;
salami and cheese between two&#13;
pieces of unusually stale bread.&#13;
No, maybe the $.30 donut is the&#13;
worst buy, or maybe the large&#13;
cup of coffee. Well, anyone who&#13;
buys anything there knows what&#13;
I'm talking about.&#13;
I realized that a boycott may&#13;
seem a little impractical, and&#13;
perhaps unrealistic considering&#13;
, the amount of people who are&#13;
dependent on Saga Food Service,&#13;
so I was w~ing a personal&#13;
campaign urgirig people to eat at&#13;
the Union Square (located on the&#13;
D-1 level of' the Student Union).&#13;
. But alas, something has&#13;
happened. The rib steaks have&#13;
gotten smaller and are tougher to&#13;
eat. The quantity of french fries&#13;
now served has greatly&#13;
diminished, even the lettuce&#13;
looks undernourished, and now&#13;
we are even served on paper&#13;
plates.&#13;
What are they (Saga Foods)&#13;
doing to us students? ! ! Is this&#13;
another bureaucratic "we can't&#13;
do anything about it" situation? I&#13;
· mean you just cannot buy a cup of&#13;
coffee and a donut in the&#13;
morning without losing threequarters&#13;
of your dollar or more.&#13;
The students could eat better&#13;
for a lot less if we had the time&#13;
and inclination to drive out&#13;
somewhere to eat.&#13;
But corning and.going becomes&#13;
awkward and can be very timely,&#13;
So we students chose to eat pn&#13;
campus, paying exorbitant- fees&#13;
to stay fed. It shouldn't be&#13;
allowed but it happens here and&#13;
probably at a lot of other places.&#13;
It's nothing new. I'm sure&#13;
we've all seen our capitalistic&#13;
system at its best. Nevertheless,&#13;
I urge students to bring their own&#13;
lunches, or when feasible, to eat&#13;
elsewhere .&#13;
P.M.&#13;
Name withheld&#13;
Upon request&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Cathy Brnak&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Cooper&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wagner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
Administration-Policies: John McKloskey '&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is written and edited&#13;
by the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin.Park,ide who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
cot,••"t Opinions e,c:pressed are not&#13;
necessarily representative of those held by&#13;
the students, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and Business SSJ-2217; ·&#13;
Newsroom SSJ-2295.&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jean Tenuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jeffrey j. swencki, Bill Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR : Julie Lange&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquardt&#13;
STAFF: Wendy Miller, Terr_i Ga_yhart, Robert Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Phil Hermann,&#13;
Ramona Ma11_1~t, Bob _J~mbo1s, Linda Knudtson, Karin La Fourier, Judy Trudrung, Scott Reinhard, Ph1hp L . L1v1ngston, Debbie Sharpe&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS : P.J. Anolina, Philip L. Livingston&#13;
I &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10. 1'76 3&#13;
~&#13;
Part 1: Student government survey&#13;
'Senators express opinions&#13;
by Chris Clauseo . Senator Meyer said. "People come here and then go home leaving&#13;
the school and their involvement with it behind. At other schools the&#13;
school is the major part of student life. Here, well, it isn't." The&#13;
adult population cannot relate the PSGA and student life in general.&#13;
They don't look to Uw-P to provide anything but an education and&#13;
possibly a degree. Outside of that they aren't involved," she said.&#13;
"Kiyoko Bowden bas put in a tremendous effort in PSGA, but she&#13;
and the Senate can't be expected to do everything," said Senator&#13;
Meyer. "Kiyoko has done a good job as president but she hasn't has&#13;
the time to get the promises she made fulfilled," said Foght. "The lack&#13;
of participation has slowed things down and the necessary positions&#13;
haven't been filled." -&#13;
Foght continued. "Consequently Kiyoko has had to create executive&#13;
committees to get things done. I trust Kiyoko but don't like executive&#13;
conunittees especially when they overlap with committees that the&#13;
Senate has set up."&#13;
"There are bad feelings between some members of the Senate and&#13;
Kiyoko over the setting up of executive committees parallel to the&#13;
Senate but sbe almost had to due to a lack of student participation. All&#13;
and all I think she does an excellent job while carrying 17 credits,"&#13;
said Foght.&#13;
Recently student government has been plagued by a series of&#13;
resignations and a lack of turn out to fill those vacancies. Last week; in&#13;
separate interviews, Senators Mary Arnold, Chris Meyer, and former&#13;
Senator Robert Foght gave Jheir views on student government in&#13;
general student apathy, and President Bowden's administration&#13;
"Student government is a necessary function of any university to&#13;
protect student's rights," said former President Protempors Robert&#13;
Foght. "It's our responsibility to handle the problems students have&#13;
with Parkside and its administrators," he said.&#13;
"When a student gets screwed bv the Parkside Administration, he&#13;
feels like he's all alone and can't Iight back," Senator Mary Arnold&#13;
stated. "When he joins with others he has the power to.get things&#13;
changed. That's what PSGA is all about," the Senator said.&#13;
Senator Arnold continued,l'PSGA has the knowledge of how to fight&#13;
the administration and with the power of a united student body they&#13;
can. Even if just one student has a problem we're the best way to help&#13;
him solve their problems with the administration."&#13;
"Student apathy at UW-P is high, but it is not as bad as it is in the&#13;
rest of the nation. Student governments all over the country are&#13;
closing," stated Foght.&#13;
Music festival this week&#13;
Contemporary music will be&#13;
the f""al point of a festival at&#13;
Parkside November 10 through&#13;
, 13. Visiting artists will be the&#13;
Blackearth Percussion Group&#13;
and visiting composer will be&#13;
Prof. Martin Farren of&#13;
Massachusettes Institute of&#13;
Technology. The festival is part&#13;
of Parkside's Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series.&#13;
,.Festival highlights include:&#13;
- A free public concert by the&#13;
Parkside Contemporary Players&#13;
featuring premiere performances&#13;
of. two works by&#13;
Farren at 8 p.m. on Friday, Nov"&#13;
12, in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater;&#13;
-A concert by the B1ackearth&#13;
Percussion Group, including a&#13;
work composed for the group by&#13;
Farren, at ,8 p.m. on Saturday,&#13;
November 13, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. Tickets&#13;
for the Blackearth concert are&#13;
$1.50 for students and $2 for&#13;
others and are on sale at the&#13;
Campus Information Center,&#13;
Sears in Kenosha, Cook-Gere in&#13;
Racine and Team Electronics in&#13;
Elmwood Plaza;&#13;
-Master classes and workshops&#13;
November 10 through 12 by&#13;
Farren and Blackearth, all free&#13;
and open to the public, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Bldg. room&#13;
lOS.&#13;
The repertoire of the&#13;
Blackearth Percussion' group&#13;
draws on new music from around&#13;
the world as well as works by&#13;
members of the groupand those&#13;
written expressly for them by a&#13;
number of contemporary composers&#13;
including Farren. They&#13;
are the only full-time profess&#13;
ional percussion group in the U.S.&#13;
The Parkside Contemporary&#13;
Players directed by August&#13;
Wegner, himself the composer of&#13;
a number of published contemporary&#13;
works, will give the&#13;
premiere performance of&#13;
Farren's "Magnum Haereditatis&#13;
Mysterium" for ten musicians,&#13;
commissioned by the Parkside&#13;
. Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
The concert also will&#13;
premiere Farren's "Eden Among&#13;
Us" for computer, realized at the&#13;
Experimental to1usic Studio at&#13;
MIT. Also programmed are&#13;
Farren's "Music for Clarinet and&#13;
Piano" and "da," a Farren work.&#13;
for eight hands at one piano, as&#13;
well as several works by other&#13;
composers.&#13;
Their program at Parkside will&#13;
Include "Musica Tridentina"&#13;
written for the group by Farren&#13;
and "Bob's Plain Bobs, to composed&#13;
for them by Robert Morris,&#13;
as well as works by Lou Harrison,&#13;
Richard Hoffman, Bowers,&#13;
James Tenny and William&#13;
Russell.&#13;
Farren discussing music&#13;
theory from 8 a.m. to noon on&#13;
Nov_ 10, his music and experiences&#13;
as a composer at 3 p.m.&#13;
on Nov. 11, and new music and its&#13;
notation from 8 a.m, to noon on&#13;
Nov. 12:&#13;
I Onc 'Sweet.&#13;
IDrealO'&#13;
~.!~~ ·&#13;
~"~-~:.-.&#13;
!~\#t~.-,,-,~ \'l,!&#13;
•.t I _.&#13;
.~. r !f~.&#13;
• " ' ........ "1:- •&#13;
• ~::Y'..:;..,..,. •&#13;
=&#13;
This Coupon is&#13;
= I&#13;
• worth 50c on all •&#13;
• items listed below .•&#13;
• Good thru November.&#13;
• only! One Coupon •&#13;
• per customer per •&#13;
.• purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember .•&#13;
• we never close. •&#13;
,.._...••,&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
~IO Seventh Avenue&#13;
654·3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694·2404&#13;
,&#13;
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eXhlblt and Sale&#13;
of&#13;
• Oriental Art&#13;
A bl~Fla,lf oj OnginaL&#13;
gapanej(J,) Chi I'leje,&#13;
Jnd,ta 11) Trhetan&#13;
atld J{epalcje ArtNov.&#13;
15&#13;
10 a.m. - 5p.m.&#13;
Next to Bookstore&#13;
~at'e::&#13;
Time.:&#13;
~ta.ce::&#13;
COUft~J oj William Sh1rleJ FineAr~~J11C-&#13;
~ox 1)71) mihv. ;WjjC~.~?ZOl&#13;
,&#13;
-&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976 3&#13;
Part 1: Student government survey&#13;
Senators express opinions&#13;
by Chris Clausen Senator Meyer said. "People come here and then go home leaving one&#13;
·sweet Recently student government has been plagued by a series of&#13;
resignations and a lack of turn out to fill those vacancies. Last week, in&#13;
separate interviews, Senators Mary Arnold, Chris Meyer, and former&#13;
Senator Robert Foght gave ,.their views on student government in&#13;
general student apathy, a~d President Bowden's administratiop.&#13;
"Student government is a necessary function of any university to&#13;
pro~ect student's rights," said former President Protempore Robert&#13;
Foght. "It's our responsibility to handle the problems students have&#13;
with Parkside and its administrators," he said.&#13;
"When a student gets screwed bv the Parkside Administration, he&#13;
feels like he's all alone and can't f1ght back," Senator Mary Arnold&#13;
stated. "When he joins with others he has the power to . get things&#13;
changed. Th~t's what PSGA is all about," the Senator said.&#13;
Senator Arnold continued, "PSGA has the knowledge of how to fight&#13;
the administration and with the power of a united student body they&#13;
can. Even if just one student has a problem we're the best way to help&#13;
him solve their problems with the administration."&#13;
"Student apathy at UW-P is high, but it is not as bad as it is in the&#13;
rest of the nation. Student governments all over the country are&#13;
closing," stated Foght.&#13;
the school and their involvement with it behind. At other schools the&#13;
school is the major part of student life. Here, well, it isn't." The&#13;
adult population cannot relate the PSGA and student life in general.&#13;
They don't look to UW-P to provide anything but an education and&#13;
possibly a degree. Outside of that they aren't involved," she said.&#13;
"Kiyoko Bowden has put in a tremendous effort in PSGA, but she&#13;
and the Senate can't be expected to do everything," said Senator&#13;
Meyer. "Kiyoko has done a good job as president but she hasn't has&#13;
the time to get the promises she made fulfilled," said Foght. "The lack&#13;
of participation has slowed things down and the necessary positions&#13;
haven't been filled."&#13;
Foght continued. "Consequently Kiyoko has had to create executive&#13;
committees to get things done. I trust Kiyoko but don't like executive&#13;
committees especially when they overlap with committees that the&#13;
Senate has set up."&#13;
"There are bad feelings between some members of the Senate and&#13;
Kiyoko over the setting up of executive committees parallel to the&#13;
Senate but she almost had to due to a lack of student participation. All&#13;
and all I think she does an excellent job while carrying 17 credits,"&#13;
said Foght.&#13;
I&#13;
Dream&#13;
,.!!~&#13;
• ,,~-c,. - •&#13;
Music festival this-week&#13;
• f; t.L~- ,,,':" ' • • i~'. 'I' •&#13;
• . I • • I •• , •&#13;
. . ·,. '..( ..... .&#13;
~- -•&#13;
Contemporary music will be&#13;
the focal point of a festival at&#13;
Parkside November 10 through&#13;
13. Visiting artists will be the&#13;
Blackearth Percussion Group&#13;
and visiting composer will be&#13;
Prof. Martin Farren of&#13;
Massachusettes Institute of&#13;
Technology. The festival is part&#13;
of Parkside's Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series.&#13;
, Festival highlights include:&#13;
- A free public concert by the&#13;
Parkside Contemporary Players&#13;
featuring premiere performances&#13;
of . two works by&#13;
Farren at 8 p.m. on Friday, Nov.&#13;
12, in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater;&#13;
-A concert by the Blackearth&#13;
Percussion Group, includine: a&#13;
,,,.&#13;
work composed for the group by&#13;
Farren, at 8 p.m. on Saturday,&#13;
November 13, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. Tickets&#13;
for the Blackearth concert are&#13;
$1.50 for students and $2 for&#13;
others and are on sale at the&#13;
Campus Information Center,&#13;
Sears in Kenosha, Cook-Gere in&#13;
Racine and Team Electronics in&#13;
Elmwood Plaza;&#13;
-Master classes and workshops&#13;
November 10 through 12 by&#13;
Farren and Blackearth, all free&#13;
and open to the public, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Bldg. room&#13;
105.&#13;
The repertoire of the&#13;
Blackearth Percussion· group&#13;
draws on new music from around&#13;
the world as well as works by&#13;
members of the group· and those&#13;
written expressly for them by a&#13;
number of contemporary composers&#13;
including Farren. They&#13;
are the only full-time profess&#13;
ional percussion group in the u .S.&#13;
The Parkside Contemporary&#13;
Players dir_ected by August&#13;
Wegner, himself the composer of&#13;
a number of published contemporary&#13;
works, will give the&#13;
premiere performance of&#13;
Farren's "Magnum Haereditatis&#13;
Mysterium" for ten musicians,&#13;
commissioned by the Parkside&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
The concert also will&#13;
premiere Farren's "Eden Among&#13;
Us" for computer, realized at the&#13;
Experimental ~usic Studio at&#13;
MIT. Also programmed are&#13;
Farren's "Music for Clarinet and&#13;
Piano" and "da," a Farren work&#13;
for eight hands at one piano, as&#13;
well as several works by other&#13;
composers.&#13;
Their program at Parkside will&#13;
mclude " Musica Tridentina"&#13;
written for the group by Farren&#13;
and "Bob's Plain Bobs," composed&#13;
for them by Robert Morris,&#13;
as well as works by Lou Harrison,&#13;
Richard Hoffman, Bowers,&#13;
James Tenny and William&#13;
Russell.&#13;
Farren discussing music&#13;
theory from 8 a.m. to noon on&#13;
Nov. 10, his music and experiences&#13;
as a composer at 3 p.m.&#13;
on Nov. 11, and new music and its&#13;
notation from 8 a.m. to noon on&#13;
Nov. 12:&#13;
• ~ ~ 11 - · - - •&#13;
• a Thi Coupon is • a • worth 50c on all a • items listed below. a&#13;
a Good thru November a&#13;
a only! One Coupon a&#13;
a per customer per a&#13;
· a purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember. •&#13;
a we never close. • I, ..•....•• ,&#13;
0O\.\'NTOWN&#13;
5010 e,enth Avenue&#13;
654-3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 event Fifth Street&#13;
694-2404&#13;
Gxh1b1t and Sa le&#13;
of&#13;
• Oriental Art&#13;
A bt~pla __ y ~f Original&#13;
gapaneJe) Chi neje,&#13;
and,1a n, Trhetan&#13;
ar1cl J{epaleJe Art-&#13;
.D a-re:: Nov. 15&#13;
Zime.:: 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.&#13;
} lace:: Next to Bookstore&#13;
Court~ ':f W'illiam Skirley Hne Art-~ Jric,&#13;
box 1;71, m1lw Wijc .. _5:,2.01 &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976.&#13;
Prof. to speak on&#13;
computer map~&#13;
One of two University of Illinois&#13;
professors responsible for a&#13;
beeak-through in use of computer&#13;
computation in higher&#13;
mathematics, Prof. Wolfgang&#13;
Haken, will speak in the&#13;
mathematics lecture series at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin·Parkside&#13;
at 4 p.m, on Thursday, Nov. 11,in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 107,'&#13;
For more than a century,&#13;
mathematicians puzzled over the&#13;
conjecture of a London graduate&#13;
student, the so-called four-color&#13;
conjecture which states that no&#13;
more than four colors are needed&#13;
to shade any map so that no two&#13;
adjoining countries are the same&#13;
color.&#13;
The-expertence of map-makers&#13;
throughout the years have&#13;
supported the four-color theory,&#13;
but mathematicians have never&#13;
beenable to prove it for all cases.&#13;
Last year, Haken and his&#13;
colleague Kenneth Appel finally&#13;
provided the conjecture accurate&#13;
with the aid of a computer. Proof&#13;
of the conjecture has heen hailed&#13;
as a major breakthrough in the&#13;
use of computers to solve fundamental&#13;
questions in higher&#13;
mathematics. Prior to the work&#13;
by Haken and Appel, 'many&#13;
mathematicians had relegated&#13;
computers to tedious, rote tasks&#13;
such as tracking space craft, .&#13;
which involve no new principals.&#13;
To establish proof of the conjecture,&#13;
Haken and Appel con,&#13;
verted the different possible&#13;
maps into a series of dots and&#13;
lines each containing at least one&#13;
of the 1,936 possible basic forms&#13;
they had identified. They thenfed&#13;
the forms into a computer, which&#13;
reported 1,200 hours later that&#13;
each of the forms-could indeed be&#13;
made with only four colors. At&#13;
that point, the four color conjecture&#13;
turned form theory to&#13;
fact, and was announced by&#13;
Haken and Appel in September's&#13;
American Mathematics Society&#13;
"Bulletin."&#13;
Haken's talk will be preceeded&#13;
by a coffee at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room Ill.&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
All j-on-one Yo! price with this coupon at T-shirt Shop&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington lINe, 6S4-237S&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
. I&#13;
Member Parksfde 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd A venue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
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ADMISSION:50~&#13;
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Editor's note: "Who Are You?" will be a regUlar column in which&#13;
students.selected at random will be Interviewed to find O\lt their in·&#13;
terests, background, etc. These are the people we pass by in the balls&#13;
every day, sit next to in class, ride with on the shuttle bus, but&#13;
sometimes never have the opportunity to meet.&#13;
Being interviewed this week is Jim Holt, a Programmer Analyst in&#13;
the Computer Systems Department at Walker )'danufacturing in&#13;
Racine. .&#13;
Two evenings a week Jim attends night courses here at Parkside.&#13;
Currently, his classes include an algebra class and an English course&#13;
in science fiction writing.&#13;
Dressed neatly in suit and tie, Jim exptained that in working full&#13;
time at Walker's he found it time consuming to rush home and change&#13;
clothes. "This summer I made a point three times during the summer&#13;
school to make sure I hurried home and put on some jeans." Now he&#13;
finds, that even in the relaxed dressing styles displayed at Parkside&#13;
that what he is wearing is "inconsequential."&#13;
Parkside offers Jim useful learning experiences, and also a relaxing&#13;
social atmosphere. He enjoys Parkside not only. because of his subjects,&#13;
but also because of the people. "I like to meet people and I don't&#13;
find myself, that often, going out to singles bars and attempting to&#13;
meet people over a screeching band. As much as I love the music, ~&#13;
justfeel that's a difficult way to getto know someone."&#13;
.Jim's reflections of the student body are that they represent a&#13;
"variety of inputs and different perspectives." He finds the people at&#13;
Parkside and their attitudes 'to be very "positive."&#13;
In midterm of our conversation, it was discovered that it was Jim's&#13;
birthday. In asking Jim if he had any regrets about becoming 28, Jim&#13;
stated, "I enjoy my age, mostly hecause of the time I've had to 'enjoy&#13;
experiences and then relate to them. Those experiences help reflect&#13;
future decisions."&#13;
Jim enjoys music, and has attended some of Parkside's musical&#13;
presentations. He enjoys piano, and has played from the age of four.&#13;
Other interests are divided among physical fitness and cooking. Jim&#13;
frequently walks to work, not only to keep active.but to appreciate the&#13;
scenery. As far as cooking is concerned, Jim finds it enjoyable to have&#13;
a group of friends over for dinner, each guest contributing to the&#13;
dinner by helping in the preparation of the meal. "As long as the time&#13;
is there it's fun, just as long as you're not rushed," he said. -&#13;
Jim has been attending Parkside for three years and is majoring in&#13;
husiness management. When asked if he had any complaints about&#13;
Parkside he disclosed one: only that he wished he had more time to&#13;
spend here.&#13;
.• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mile 011change)&#13;
• Eases SUb-zero starts (-60·F~ pour point)&#13;
&lt;$pon~o'l.£d by Ju.nio, &lt;Women'~ Clu.b 0{ cRa.dne • Saves 011 RICK BENTSON&#13;
:' : :: yourAMS/OILd •• ter , .639-4067&#13;
==============~~::::;;;;;'::::;;;;;.~~_-=~~~~__1&#13;
-,&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
Poet Janet Beeler will present&#13;
a workshop and reading, both&#13;
open and free to the. public, at&#13;
Parkside on Thursday, Nov. 18.&#13;
The workshop will be held from&#13;
4 to 5. p.m. in Wyllie LibraryLearning&#13;
Center Room 0-174,&#13;
just off lower level Main Place&#13;
and the reading will be in the&#13;
Library Overlook Lounge on level&#13;
LaFollette&#13;
• •&#13;
raps mInIDg&#13;
•&#13;
cornparues&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Major mining companies have&#13;
heen using shady tactics to gain&#13;
land in northern Wisconsin,&#13;
according to Douglas La Follette,&#13;
Wisconsin's secretary of state&#13;
anda former Parkside professor&#13;
of chemistry, who spoke to&#13;
students on behalf of Parkside's&#13;
earth science club. ,&#13;
He cited examples of Forest&#13;
Cuunty and Rusk County, where&#13;
Kennecott Ming and Exxon have&#13;
heen leasing and purchasing land&#13;
for mining.&#13;
LaFollette called for a&#13;
moratorium on consumption of&#13;
these materials. He felt that&#13;
there is little' need for copper&#13;
currently and that the people in&#13;
those 14 counties :should have&#13;
waited before committing their&#13;
land. The legislatures on both the&#13;
state and federal levels have&#13;
done Ifttle to control these big&#13;
companies. President Ford had&#13;
vetoed two strip-mining bills, the&#13;
last of which Laf'ollette. called&#13;
compromised but somewhat&#13;
. effective.&#13;
LaFollette stated that the&#13;
people should get more money&#13;
out of the mining projects.&#13;
Currently, mining projects mean&#13;
approximately $5 million in&#13;
revenue to the state and the local&#13;
governments. Unfortunately, any&#13;
employment possibilities are&#13;
minimal since little job openings&#13;
are filled with local people.&#13;
. The local governments are&#13;
heing manhandled by companies&#13;
like Kennecott and Exxon by&#13;
asking that lease details be kept&#13;
secret, according to LaFollette.&#13;
The Department of· Natural&#13;
Resources and the State Lands&#13;
Cummission have been victims of&#13;
this in the past, according to the&#13;
Secretary of State, until recently&#13;
when LaFollette disclosed the&#13;
terms of an agreement being&#13;
considered by the commission .&#13;
He stated that the destruction&#13;
of the environment up north can&#13;
he halted. The people can cut&#13;
down on consumption of&#13;
materials, such as copper.&#13;
Recycling can be used to make&#13;
those old toasters come alive,&#13;
since a lot of the wire can be&#13;
remelted to a usable form.&#13;
two at 8 p.m.&#13;
Beeler's recent work has been&#13;
published in American Poetry&#13;
Review, Anteus and Esqurie. She&#13;
currently is translating women's&#13;
poetry of the medieval period in&#13;
France and Provence.&#13;
Additional information on the&#13;
series is available from Carol Lee&#13;
Saffioti or Carole Vopat, both of&#13;
the Parkside Enlllish faculty.&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976 .&#13;
Prof. to Speak on&#13;
computer map~&#13;
One of two University of Illinois&#13;
professors responsible for a&#13;
break-through in use of computer&#13;
computation in higher&#13;
mathematics, Prof. Wolfgang&#13;
Haken, will speak in the&#13;
mathematics lecture series at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
at 4 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 11, in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 107.&#13;
For more than a century,&#13;
mathematicians puzzled over the&#13;
conjecture of a London graduate&#13;
student, the so-called four-color&#13;
conjecture which states that no&#13;
more than four colors are needed&#13;
to shade any map so that no two&#13;
adjoining countries are the same&#13;
color.&#13;
The·experience of map-makers&#13;
throughout the years have·&#13;
supported the four-co1or theory,&#13;
but mathematicians have never&#13;
been·able to prove it for all cases.&#13;
Last year, Haken and his&#13;
colleague Kenneth Appel finally&#13;
provided the conjecture accurate&#13;
with the aid of a computer. Proof&#13;
of the conjecture has been hailed&#13;
as a major breakthrough in the&#13;
use of computers to solve fundamental&#13;
questions in higher&#13;
mathematics. Prior to the work&#13;
by Haken and Appel, ·many&#13;
mathematicians had relegated&#13;
computers to tedious, rote tasks&#13;
such as tracking space craft,&#13;
which involve no new principals.&#13;
To establish proof of the conjecture,&#13;
Haken and Appel converted&#13;
the different possible&#13;
maps into a series of dots and&#13;
lines each containing at least one&#13;
of the 1,936 possible basic forms&#13;
they had identified. They then·fed&#13;
the forms into a computer, which&#13;
reported 1,200 hours later that&#13;
each of the forms could indeed be&#13;
made with only four colors. At&#13;
that point, the four color conjecture&#13;
turned form theory to&#13;
fact, and was announced by&#13;
Haken and Appel in September's&#13;
American Mathematics Society&#13;
"Bulletin."&#13;
Haken's talk will be preceeded&#13;
by a coffee at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 111.&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SCJUARE&#13;
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All iron-ons ½ price with this coupon at T-shirt Shop&#13;
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OPEN B A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
2615 Washington /we. 634-2373&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
. '&#13;
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National Varsity Club&#13;
• 443~ - 22~d Avenue Kenosha ,&#13;
'~~ / W1scons1n Phone 6_54-0774&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
d-fofiday&#13;
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cNovembe't 13 q 14&#13;
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SAT., NOV. 13&#13;
SUN., NOV. 14&#13;
9 A.M. . 6 P.M.&#13;
11 A.M. - 6 P.M.&#13;
ADMISSION: soc&#13;
&lt;Wome n 1&#13;
:1.&#13;
1(1'6 ,i,ie ~'"m?&#13;
Editor's note: ''Who Are You?" will be a regular column in which&#13;
students selected at random will be interviewed to find 01,1t their interests,&#13;
background, etc. These are the people we pass by in the halls&#13;
every day, sit next to in class, ride with on the shuttle bus, but&#13;
sometimes never have the opportunity to meet.&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
Being interviewed this week is Jim Holt, a Programmer Analyst in&#13;
the Computer Systems Department at Walker Manufacturing in&#13;
Racine. _&#13;
Two evenings a week Jim attends night courses here at Parkside.&#13;
Currently, his classes include an algebra class and an English course&#13;
in science fiction writing.&#13;
I&gt;ressed neatly in suit and tie, Jim explained that in working full&#13;
time at Walker's he found it time consuming to rush home and change&#13;
clothes. "This summer I made a point three times during the sw:nmer&#13;
school to make sure I hurried home and put on some jeans." Now he&#13;
finds, that even in the relaxed dressing styles displayed at Parkside&#13;
that what he is wearing is " inconsequential."&#13;
Parkside offers Jim useful learning experiences, and also a relaxing&#13;
social atmosphere. He enjoys Parkside not only.because of his subjects,&#13;
but also because of the people. " I like to meet people and I don't&#13;
find myself, that often, going out to singles bars and attempting to&#13;
meet people over a screeching band. As much as I love the music, I&#13;
justfeel that's a difficult way to get to know someone."&#13;
..Jim's reflections of the student body are that they represent a&#13;
"variety of inputs and different perspectives." He finds the people at&#13;
Parkside and their attitudes to be very "positive."&#13;
In midterm of our conversation, it was discovered that it was Jim's&#13;
birthday. In asking Jim if he had any regrets about becoming 28, Jim&#13;
stated, "I enjoy my age, mostly because of the time I've had to enjoy&#13;
experiences and then relate to them. Those experiences help reflect&#13;
future decisions."&#13;
Jim enjoys music, and has attended some of Parkside's musical&#13;
presentations. He enjoys piano, and has played from the age of four.&#13;
Other interests are divided among physical fitness and cooking. Jim&#13;
frequently walks to work, not only to keep active; but to appreciate the&#13;
scenery. As far as cooking is concerned, Jim finds it enjoyable to have&#13;
a group of friends over for dinner, each guest contributing to the&#13;
dinner by helping in the preparation of the meal. "As long ~s the time&#13;
is there it's fun, just as long as you're not rushed," he said.&#13;
Jim has been attending Parkside for three years and is majoring in&#13;
business management. When asked if he had any complaints about&#13;
Parkside he disclosed one: only that he wished he had more time to&#13;
spend here.&#13;
LaFollette&#13;
• • raps m1n1ng&#13;
• companies&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Major mining companies have&#13;
been using shady tactics to gain&#13;
land in northern Wisconsin,&#13;
according to Douglas La Follette,&#13;
Wisconsin's secretary of state&#13;
and a former Parkside professor&#13;
· of chemistry, who spoke to&#13;
students on behalf of Parkside's&#13;
earth science club . .&#13;
He cited examples of Forest&#13;
County and Rus~ County, where&#13;
Kennecott Ming and Exxon have&#13;
been leasing and purchasing land&#13;
for mining.&#13;
LaFollette called for a&#13;
moratorium on consumption of&#13;
these materfals: He felt that&#13;
there is little · need for copper&#13;
currently and that the people in&#13;
those I4 counties should have&#13;
waited before committing their&#13;
land. The legislatures ori both the&#13;
state and federal levels have&#13;
done lfttle to control these big&#13;
companies. President Ford had&#13;
vetoed two strip-mining bills, the&#13;
last of which LaFollette called&#13;
compromised but somewhat&#13;
effective.&#13;
LaFollette stated that the&#13;
people should get more money&#13;
out of the mining projects.&#13;
Currently, mining projects mean&#13;
approximately $5 million in •&#13;
revenue to the state and the local&#13;
governments. Unfortunately, any&#13;
employment possibilities are&#13;
minimal since little job openings&#13;
are filled with local people.&#13;
The local governments are&#13;
being manhandled by companies&#13;
like Kennecott and Exxon by&#13;
asking that lease details be kept&#13;
secret, according to LaFollette.&#13;
The Department of . Natural&#13;
Resources and the State Lands&#13;
Commission have been victims of&#13;
this in.the past, according to the&#13;
Secretary of State, until recently&#13;
when LaFollette disclosed the&#13;
terms of an agreement being&#13;
considered by the commission.&#13;
He stated that the destruction&#13;
of the environment up north can&#13;
be halted. The people can cut&#13;
down on consumption of&#13;
materials, such as copper.&#13;
Recycling can be used to make&#13;
those old toaster~ come alive,&#13;
since a lot of the wire can be&#13;
remelted to a usable form.&#13;
Poet to read&#13;
:I .. '•&#13;
f&#13;
Poet Janet Beeler will present&#13;
a workshop and reading, both&#13;
open and free to the public, at&#13;
Parkside on Thursday, Nov. 18.&#13;
The workshop will be held from&#13;
4 to 5_ p.m. in Wyllie LibraryLearning&#13;
Center Room D-174,&#13;
just off lower level Main Place&#13;
and the reading will be in th;&#13;
Library Overlook 1',ounge on level&#13;
· two at 8 p.m.&#13;
Beeler's recent work has been&#13;
published in American Poetry&#13;
Review, Anteus and Esqurie. She&#13;
currently is translating women's&#13;
poetry of the medieval period in&#13;
France and Provence.&#13;
Additional information on the&#13;
series is available from Carol Lee&#13;
Saffioti or Carole Vopat, both of&#13;
the Parkside English faculty.&#13;
· •Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil ch~nge)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
• saves oil RICK BENTSON&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer . -639-4067 &#13;
Vaccinations scheduled&#13;
J'he Campus Health Office has received word'&#13;
from the Racine and Kenosha Health Departments&#13;
that the swine flu vaccine for the general public&#13;
(age 18 and over) will he available at the following&#13;
clinics:&#13;
RACINE COUNTY· Sunday, November 14, 10&#13;
a.m-s p.m.&#13;
Dr. John Bryant Center&#13;
Gateway Technical Institute&#13;
Ml. Pleasant Town Hall&#13;
Humble Park&#13;
Goodland School&#13;
Labor Center •&#13;
Caledonia Town Hall East&#13;
County Highway Building&#13;
Masonic Temple&#13;
Veterans' Memorial Building&#13;
KENOSHA COUNTY· Monday, November 15, _&#13;
Sunday, November 21&#13;
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Monday, November 15 12 Noon-ll·p.m. Paddock&#13;
Lake (Christ American Lutheran Church), Local 72&#13;
(Kenosha) &amp; Pleasant Prairie Town Hall. Monday,&#13;
November 15, 10 a.m-s p.m., Somers Town Hall.&#13;
Tuesday, November 1612Noon-s p.m. Twin Lakes&#13;
(St. John's Catholic Church) Local 72, Pleasant&#13;
Prairie &amp; Somers.&#13;
Wednesday, November 17, 12 Noon-a p.m., Twin&#13;
Lake's, Paddock Lake, Sl. Mary's Lutheran Church&#13;
(Kenosha) and Pleasant Prairie.&#13;
Thursday, November 18,12 Noon-a p.m., Local 72,&#13;
Pleasant Prairie &amp; Sl. Mary's Lutheran Church.&#13;
Friday, November 19 12 Noon-a p.m., Paddock&#13;
Lake, Local 72, Sl. Mary's Lutheran Church &amp;&#13;
Pleasant Prairie.&#13;
Sunday., November 21, 12 Noon - 5 p.m., Twin&#13;
Lakes, Local 72, Somers &amp; Pleasant Pr'air-io&#13;
At this time it has not been determined whether&#13;
Parkside will be provided with the swine flu vaccine&#13;
for a campus clinic.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 10&#13;
Martin Farren discusses music theory from 8 a.m. to 12 noon in CA&#13;
105.&#13;
Movie, "The Passenger," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m, in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 11&#13;
Movie, "Hearts of the West," plays at 2:30 to 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Martin Farren discusses his music and experiences as a composer at 3&#13;
p.m. in CA-105.&#13;
Lecture, "On the Four Color Problem," by Professor W. Haken,&#13;
University of Illinois Dept. of Mathematic; at4 p.m. in CL 107.&#13;
Concert, Harry Chapin performs at 8 p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Tickets in advance are $3.00for students, $4.00 for others at the Info&#13;
Kiosk, and will be $5.00 at the door.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 12&#13;
Martin Farren discusses new music and its notation from 8 a.m. to 12&#13;
noon in CA 105.&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12in WLLC 295and I: 30in&#13;
CA 233.&#13;
Ufe Science seminar, "The Behavior of Cranes." by George Archibald,&#13;
Director of Research and Propagation, International Crane&#13;
Foundation, from 2to 4 p.m. in CL 105.&#13;
Movie, "Heart of the West," plays at 7 and 9:15 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is is $1.00.&#13;
Telecable program, "An Inside Look" is hosted by Prof. Paul Kleine&#13;
at 7 p.m. on Channel 8.&#13;
Parkside Contemporary Players perform at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 13&#13;
Men's cross country NAIA District 14 Championship at 11 a.m. at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Concert, Blackearth Percussion Group performs at8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Tickets at $1.50 for students and $2.00 for others at the Info Kiosk.&#13;
. Sunday, Nov. 14&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from I to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Multi-media slide show, "Pilgrimage to Valley Forge," begins at 3&#13;
p.m, in the Union Cinema. Admission is $1.00for students and senior&#13;
citizens, $2.00for others. Sponsored by the Parkside Law Club.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Orchestra performs at3:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Movie, "Hearts of the West," plays at 7: 30p.m, in the Union Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.00. _&#13;
All events must be submitted to the Ranger before Wednesday of the&#13;
. week before publication.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 19765&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted for&#13;
Ranger Editor for&#13;
Spring Semester&#13;
RESUMES MUST BE TURNED IN TO&#13;
DON KOPRIVA,&#13;
288 Tallent Hall by Nov. 11th&#13;
• Salaried position demanding at least 2O.X) hours a week&#13;
• Experience in journalism necessary&#13;
• Applicants will be advised of interview time and ploce&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
Monday - Thursday 9 . 5&#13;
Friday 9 - 8&#13;
Saturday 9 - 1&#13;
Student Discount&#13;
Largest Selection of&#13;
Fashionable Frames&#13;
in South Eastern&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Lenses Duplicated&#13;
Ph,ysician Prescriptions&#13;
Filled&#13;
50 % Off 2nd Pair!&#13;
CARE TO LEARN&#13;
THE FACTS OF LIFE?&#13;
so:nbeG'S&#13;
OPTICAL&#13;
BOUTIQUE&#13;
552-7610&#13;
4425 TAYLOR&#13;
Onl'y Ten minutes From Kenosha!!&#13;
Typing done efficiently and professionally in&#13;
my home. Reasonable rates. 657-6068.&#13;
FOR SALE: Grey, white, and orange Persian&#13;
rug. 6'8" x 3'4". 5350. 552-9391 after 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
WILL DO any kind of typing at reasonable&#13;
rates. For information. call 652·3)73.&#13;
Classified&#13;
Need ride from south side of Milwaukee. Will&#13;
pay for '/2 of gas. Call 762-6231. Ask for Carol.&#13;
WANTED: A female Siamese Kitten between&#13;
5 . 9 weeks old. Would be assured of having&#13;
an excellent home, with tors 01 love, care,&#13;
and attention. Please call 637·1521. Wanted&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
1974 PONTIAC SPRING a-speed Metallic&#13;
Blue, red bu-ckefs, Rally wheels, AM·FM,&#13;
FM stereo, 8-Track $2195. 634-0876.&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plozo&#13;
632-6151&#13;
FOR SALE: Marantz 2015 receiver, Jensen&#13;
model 4 speakers, 1 year old, S3OO.Phone 634·&#13;
8655.&#13;
mos. s TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
HQ5&#13;
~erbll'l!&#13;
~urt&#13;
PUa &amp; •• 'TAUIl&#13;
Specifically, Northwestern Mutual Life.&#13;
A Quiet Company representative will be on campus Wed.. Nov. 17th&#13;
to interview men and women interested in learning about the&#13;
NML life underwriting career.&#13;
We're big ~ world's largest company specializing in individual life&#13;
insurance, and among the nation's 40 largest corporations.&#13;
We're solid - $8 billion of assets; $31.6 billion of life insurance&#13;
in force, and 119 'Y~&lt;HS of experience.&#13;
We're growing - $4.6 billion of sales last year.&#13;
Arrange an interview at your placement office. Persons interested&#13;
in individuality and compensation commensurate with&#13;
productivity are especially welcomed.&#13;
We also have an Internship Program that lets you earn&#13;
while you learn. •&#13;
The Quiet Company&#13;
NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE· MIlW4l)Kff ~&#13;
SUNDAY 0&#13;
All YOU \~~&#13;
WANT c...y..~ FEAST&#13;
&lt;:."'\~~~,,\\' INCLUDES sotoo, ltolton&#13;
C&#13;
~\..\' \\~O Breoo ond 0 FREE qASS c.,y..'\ \\ ",\\',0 OF WINE&#13;
-&#13;
•&#13;
Vaccinations scheduled&#13;
J'he Campus Health Office has received word'&#13;
from the Racine and Kenosha Health Departments&#13;
that the swine flu vaccine for the general public&#13;
(age 18 and over) will be available at the following&#13;
clinics:&#13;
Monday, November 15 12 Noon-8 p.m. Paddock&#13;
Lake ( Christ American Lutheran Church), Local 72&#13;
(Kenosha) &amp; Pleasant Prairie Town Hall. Monday,&#13;
November 15, 10 a.m.~ p.m., Somers Town Hall.&#13;
Tuesday, November 1612 Noon-8 p.m. Twin Lakes&#13;
(St. John's Catholic Church) Local 72, Pleasant&#13;
Prairie &amp; Somers.&#13;
RACINE COUNTY - Sunday, November 14, 10&#13;
a.mAi p.m.&#13;
Dr. John Bryant Center&#13;
Gateway Technical Institute&#13;
Mt. Pleasant Town Hall&#13;
Humble Park&#13;
Goodland School&#13;
Labor Center .&#13;
Caledonia Town Hall East&#13;
County Highway Building&#13;
Masonic Temple&#13;
Wednesday, November 17, 12 Noon-8 p.m., Twin&#13;
Lakes, Paddock Lake, St. Mary's Lutheran Church&#13;
(Kenosha) and Pleasant Prairie.&#13;
Thursday, November 18, 12 Noon-8 p.m., Local 72,&#13;
Pleasant Prairie &amp; St. Mary's Lutheran Church.&#13;
Friday, November 19 12 Noon-8 p.m., Paddock&#13;
Lake, Local 72, St. Mary's Lutheran Church &amp;&#13;
Pleasant Prairie.&#13;
Veterans' Memorial Building .&#13;
Sunday, November 21, 12 Noon - 5 p.m., Twin&#13;
Lakes, Local 72, Somers &amp; Pleasant PrairiP&#13;
KENOSHA COUNTY - Monday, November 15, -&#13;
Sunday, November 21&#13;
At this time it has not been determined whether&#13;
Parkside will be provided with the swine flu vaccine&#13;
~~~~~~~~&#13;
for a campus clinic.&#13;
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Wednesday, Nov. IO&#13;
Martin Farren discusses music theory from 8 a.m. to 12 noon in CA&#13;
105.&#13;
Movie, "The Passenger," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 11&#13;
Movie, " Hearts of the West," plays a t 2:30 to 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Martin Farren discusses his music and experiences as a composer at 3&#13;
p.m. in CA- 105.&#13;
Lecture, "On the Four Color Problem," by Professor W. Haken,&#13;
University of Illinois Dept. of Mathematics at 4 p.m. in CL 107.&#13;
Concert, Harry Chapin performs at 8 p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Tickets in advance are $3.00 for students, $4.00 for others at the Info&#13;
Kiosk, and will be $5.00 at the door.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 12&#13;
Martin Farren discusses new music and its notation from 8 a.m. to 12&#13;
noon in CA 105.&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12 in WLLC 295 and 1: 30 in&#13;
CA 233.&#13;
Life Science seminar, " The Behavior of Cranes," by George Archibald,&#13;
Director of Research and Propagation, International Crane&#13;
Foundation, from 2 to 4 p.m. in CL 105.&#13;
Movie, "Heart of the West," plays at 7 and 9: 15 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is is $1.00.&#13;
Telecable program, "An Inside Look" is hosted by Prof. Paul Kleine&#13;
at 7 p.m. on Channel 8.&#13;
Parkside Contemporary Players perform at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 13&#13;
Men's cross country NAIA District 14 Championship at 11 a.m. at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Concert, Blackearth Percussion Group performs at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Tickets at $1.50 for students and $2.00 for others at the Info Kiosk.&#13;
· Sunday, Nov.14&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Multi-media slide show, " Pilgrimage to Valley Forge," begins at 3&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema. Admission is $1.00 for students and senior&#13;
citizens, $2.00 for others. Sponsored by the Park~ide Law Club.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Orchestra performs at 3: 30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Movie, "Hearts of the West," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.00. _&#13;
All events must be submitted to the Ranger before Wednesday of the&#13;
week before publication.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976 S&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted for&#13;
Ranger Editor for&#13;
Spring Semester&#13;
RESUMES MUST BE TURNED IN TO&#13;
DON KOPRIVA,&#13;
288 Tallent Hall by Nov. 11th&#13;
• Salaried position demanding at least 20-~ hours a week&#13;
• Experience in journalism necessary&#13;
• Applicants will be advised of interview time and place&#13;
S&lt;Jflbee'S&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
OPTICAL&#13;
BOUTIQUE&#13;
552-7610&#13;
Monday - Thursday 9 - 5&#13;
Friday 9 - 8&#13;
Saturday 9 - 1&#13;
Student Discount&#13;
Larqest Selection of&#13;
Fashionable Frames&#13;
in South Eostern&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Le0ses Duplicated&#13;
Ph_ysicion Prescriptions&#13;
Filled&#13;
50 % Off 2nd Poid&#13;
•&#13;
4425 TAYLOR&#13;
Only Ten ffiinutes From Kenosho!!&#13;
Classified Need ride from south side of Milwaukee. Will&#13;
pay for 11, of gas. Call 762-6231 . Ask for Carol.&#13;
Typing done efficiently and professionally in&#13;
m y home. Reasonable rates. 657 -6068.&#13;
FOR SALE : Gr ey, w hite, and orange Persian&#13;
rug. 6'8" x 3'A" . S350. 552-9394 after 5&#13;
p.m .&#13;
1&#13;
CARE TO LEARN&#13;
WANTED: A femal&#13;
THE FACTS OF LIFE? e Siamese l&lt;itten between&#13;
5 . 9 weeks old. Would be assured of having&#13;
an excellent home, w ith loJs of love, car e,&#13;
and attention. Please call 637-1521. Wanted&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
WI LL 00 any k ind of typing at reasonable&#13;
rates. For information. call 652-3373.&#13;
1974 PONTIAC SPRING 3-speed Metallic&#13;
Blue, red bu-ckets, Rally wheels, AM-FM,&#13;
FM stereo, 8-Track S2195. 634-0876.&#13;
FOR SALE : Marantz 20'15 receiver, Jensen&#13;
model 4 speakers, 1 year old, S300. Phone 634-&#13;
8655.&#13;
SUNDAY 0&#13;
moN. &amp; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI ALL YOU \~'°&#13;
WANT ~~~ FEAST i1.QS&#13;
C.""'~"J ~~ INCLUDES: Solod. ltolion&#13;
C~\:..\°' . ,,.')Jo 8,eod ond o FREE qASS&#13;
c'&lt;' '\ \\ fr'.~ ._o OF WINE ....&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plo.zo.&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~;erbu'&amp;&#13;
,ourt&#13;
,ua &amp; RESTAURA&#13;
Specifically, orthwestern Mutual Life.&#13;
A Q uiet Company repre entativc&gt; will be on campus Wed., Nov, 17th&#13;
to interview men and women intere ted in learning about the&#13;
ML life underwriting career.&#13;
W e're big - world's la1ge t company specializing in indi idual life&#13;
insurance, and among the nation's 40 large t corporation .&#13;
W e're solid - $8 b ill ion of assets; 31.6 bi ll ion of life in urance&#13;
in iorce. and 119 years of e perience.&#13;
We're gro\ving - $4.6 bi ll ion of sales last year.&#13;
1 Arrange an i~terview at our rlacemen t office. Persons intere ted&#13;
in individuality and compensation commensurate wi th&#13;
productivity are especially w elcomed.&#13;
W e also have an Internship Program that lets you earn&#13;
while you learn. • The Quiet Company NO RTHWESTER MUTUAL UH · Mil WAUKEE ~ &#13;
I&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November io, 1976&#13;
-,&#13;
Free PI. Delivery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652·8737&#13;
Alit ..... .,1•• C.I.It••• Sp••• IIII. " .... 11. 8."&#13;
OPEII.4 p.•. to I •.•..&#13;
Moon Ught&#13;
BoWling&#13;
Saturdays, 8-11 p.m.&#13;
in the&#13;
Union Recreation, Center&#13;
STOP DOWN OR&#13;
CALL 553-2695 FOR&#13;
RESERVATIONS&#13;
.,------------------. • ANHEUSER· BUSCH, INC • ST. lOUIS :&#13;
· .' •· •/. • •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
: :&#13;
: :&#13;
1 •&#13;
• •&#13;
•&#13;
·&#13;
•&#13;
:&#13;
: :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
: :' /&#13;
!L _W_h_e_R_Y_O_' u__s'a_y_Budweiser., yoqile said it all! -:.&#13;
- E. F. Madrigrano--;~--~':"-'----J •&#13;
j&#13;
'Last Friday evening Tom Chapin proved to a half filled Parkside&#13;
Union Cinema that he is a Chapin of his own. Due to the time and day&#13;
of the concert the Visage reviewers were unable to submitt their&#13;
review of Tom prior to the Ranger copy deadline. A review of Tom will . , ,&#13;
appear along with one on his brother Harry next week. .&#13;
•&#13;
pnoto by Van Thompson&#13;
~I&#13;
by Bill Barke&#13;
Ever since my pet rock died last week after mysteriously falling into&#13;
a cement mixer (1 refuse to even consider suicide), 1 have grown&#13;
,bitter and sullen over rocks in general. I have not spoken to one since,&#13;
and when my overly publicized affair with a nearby stone quarry&#13;
came to an end, leaving me emotionally exhausted, 1 could not help&#13;
but wonder how an unreasonably intelligent person like myself&#13;
became caught in the frenzy of the pet rock phenomenon. More horrid&#13;
is the notion that in the future, people may choose even more exotic&#13;
pieces of matter to smother with adulation.&#13;
In fact, the ultimate object of this perverted lust may have already&#13;
been introduced. Last month, an arnibitous farmer in Minnesota he&#13;
was the owner of the perfect cow pie. Found -in his barn, and kept&#13;
preserved in his Frigidaire, it supposedly has divine powers. When&#13;
standing near this crusty lump, the farmer states that he falls into a&#13;
stupor, sees strange visions of flea markets and crop dusting, then&#13;
passes out. Word went out about the farmer's story, and a f"!:tiJizer&#13;
company picked it up as an ad campaign' gimmick. The advertisers, to&#13;
bring up sales, offered a free Holy Heap, as it was coined, to any&#13;
customer buying a ten pound bag of fertilizer.&#13;
Last week, the farmer began offering tours, and selling miniatures&#13;
on key chains to attract the curious. They came in droves. A movie&#13;
company is now making a documentary on the object, hoping to&#13;
simulate its origin. A broadway musical based on a new popular song&#13;
entitled "1 Love What You're Dung to Me" is in the works.&#13;
Anything can be expected now. A line of jewelry, children's toys, .&#13;
and underwear will appear, as well as a chain of restaurants with&#13;
special dishes for discriminating tastes. Scandal will undoubtedly&#13;
erupt bringing a lawsuit to bear over the rights to the field, the Cow,&#13;
grass, and the feed. Science will probably spend mi11ions to retard&#13;
decay in the rectal artifact (and find a cure for constipation in the&#13;
bargain).&#13;
The cow will receive a Nobel Prize and go on a world tour, and of'&#13;
course, wben it is least expected, a jealous bedwetter from Kansas&#13;
City will assasinate the Heap. Sadly mourned, it will'lay in state in a&#13;
bed of pete moss before being buried in the lower forty, wrapped in a&#13;
baggie.&#13;
The farmer will write his memoirs, which will probably be&#13;
serialized in this column.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ..:- __ "&#13;
,.&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976&#13;
PENI&#13;
Free Pina Delivery&#13;
Cluh Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Altt •,n,.,, •• Chltkll, s,11htftl, RHloll, ... ,&#13;
OPEN 4 •·•· to 1 1.11·.&#13;
Moon Ught&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Saturdays, 8-11 p.m.&#13;
in the&#13;
Union Recreation . Center&#13;
STOP DOWN OR&#13;
CALL 553-2695 FOR&#13;
RESERVATIONS&#13;
II&#13;
photo by Van Thompson&#13;
·Last Friday evening Tom Chapin proved to a haµ filled Parkside&#13;
Union Cinema that he is a Chapin of his own. Due to the time and day&#13;
of the concert the Visage reviewers were unable to submitt their&#13;
review of Tom prior to the Ranger copy deadline. A review of Tom will - , appear along with one on his brother Harry next week.&#13;
·······································~g&#13;
... i]lDQm~~i.~§-(B~ ~ ~ ~' .............................. . • ,..r.11 , ••• •7r•. _,. ••• ,.,.,. ... - ••• ,. by Bill Barke&#13;
Ever since my pet rock died last week after mysteriously falling into&#13;
a cement mixer (I refuse to even consider suicide), I have grown&#13;
.bitter and sullen over rocks in general. I have not spoken to one since,&#13;
and when my overly publicized affair with a nearby stone quarry&#13;
came to an end, leaving me emotionally exhausted, I could not help&#13;
but wonder how an unreasonably intelligent person like myself&#13;
became caught in the frenzy of the pet rock phenomenon. More horrid&#13;
is the notion that in the future, people may choose even more exotic&#13;
pieces of matter to smother with adulation.&#13;
In fact, the ultimate object of this perverted lust may have already&#13;
been introduced. Last month, an amibitous farmer in Minnesota he&#13;
was the owner of the perfect cow pie. Found in his barn, and kept&#13;
preserved in his Frigidaire, it supposedly has divine powers. When&#13;
standing near this crusty lump, the farmer states that he falls into a&#13;
stupor, sees strange visions of flea markets and crop dusting, then&#13;
passes ciut. Word went out about the farmer's story, and a fe,tilizer&#13;
company picked it up as an ad campaign· gimmick. The advertisers, to&#13;
bring up sales, offered a free Holy Heap, as it was coined, to any&#13;
customer buying a ten pound bag of fertilizer.&#13;
Last week, the farmer began offering tours, and selling miniatures&#13;
on key chains to attract the curious. They came in droves. A movie&#13;
company is now making a documentary on the object, hoping to&#13;
simulate its origin. A broadway musical based on a new popular song&#13;
entitled "I Love What You're Dung to Me" is in the works.&#13;
Anything can be expected now. A line of jewelry, children's toys, .&#13;
and underwear will appear, as well as a chain of restaurants with&#13;
special dishes for discriminating tastes. Scandal will undoubtedly&#13;
erupt bringing a lawsuit to bear over the rights to the field, the cow,&#13;
grass, and the feed. Science will probably spend millions to retard&#13;
decay in the rectal artifact ( and find a cure for constipation in the&#13;
bargain).&#13;
The cow will receive a Nobel Prize and go on a world tour, and of&#13;
course, when it is least expected, a jealous bedwetter from Kansas&#13;
City will assasinate the Heap. Sadly mourned, it will'lay in state in a&#13;
bed of pete moss before being buried in the lower forty, wrapped in a&#13;
baggie.&#13;
The farmer will write his memoirs, which will probably be&#13;
serialized in this column.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country .&#13;
. On tap at Union Square &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10. 19767&#13;
Unwanted pregnancy discussed&#13;
,&#13;
Editor's Dote: Ms. Pella is a ceunselor at Planned Parenthood in&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
by Beverly Noble Pella&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mlle 011c~ange)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-50·F. pour .pOint)&#13;
• Saves oil RICK BENTSON&#13;
your AMS/OIL doolor 639-4067&#13;
Competition&#13;
traceptive")&#13;
Are certain positions better for preventing pregnancy? -No, but&#13;
certain positions might be better for encouraging pregnancy, such as&#13;
when the penis is inside the vagina.&#13;
.can you get pregnant if you don't have an orgasm? Yes. Orgasms&#13;
are irrelevant to conception.&#13;
Can you get pregnant the first time you have sex? YES.&#13;
Two weeks from now, Iwould like to use this column to answer your&#13;
questions about sex, birth control, Planned Parenthood, or anything&#13;
rela ted to thes e.&#13;
Students may write questions on a piece of paper and deposit them&#13;
in the Ranger box sitting on the desk at the Information KiDsk located&#13;
• in the lower level of Main Place. Anonymity is assured.&#13;
The Educational Communications&#13;
Board of Wisconsin&#13;
is sponsoring a radio drama&#13;
script writing competition this&#13;
winter .&#13;
Cash awards of $200, '100 and&#13;
$50, which have been provided by&#13;
the Corporation for Public&#13;
Broadcasting, will be granted for&#13;
the top three haH-hour dramas&#13;
submitted by Wisconsin&#13;
residents.&#13;
Scripts must be submitted to&#13;
ECB by January 31, 1977.&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
STARTING MONDAY, NOV. 15&#13;
lje (@llae &lt;lrnffee. 1Kriugle&#13;
.Aula iJagtl mabIe&#13;
Featuring&#13;
FRESH HOT KRINGLE &amp; ASSORTED BAGELS&#13;
MAIN CONCOURSE· CLASSROOM BLDG 7:30 . 10:30 A.M.&#13;
DEEP FRIED' MUSHROOMS&#13;
EAT 'EM AS A SNACK OR WITH YOUR MEAL&#13;
FANTASTICIII&#13;
65~&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM &amp; UNION SQUARE&#13;
NOVEMBER 11 • 20&#13;
fffwcial g;~ on. enWte fftod/&#13;
Records,&#13;
Cossettes,&#13;
8-'rrocks,&#13;
Lowest Prices&#13;
in&#13;
RACINE&#13;
.4ICC(/&#13;
1'·.4Ic&#13;
l'~.4Ic&#13;
A1f~",&#13;
•&#13;
STEREO'S F0R aorns AND CAR!&#13;
Hours;&#13;
10 to Q dculy 10 to ,5:30 Sot&#13;
11 to 5 Sunday&#13;
Greenrldge Ploza&#13;
Spong St. &amp; N~umQn Rd&#13;
West of Highwo.y 31&#13;
Telephone 634-2301&#13;
REmEmBERI&#13;
Sound So.vings o.t&#13;
SOUND GALLERY!&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976 7&#13;
Unwanted pregnancy discussed Competition&#13;
Editor's note: Ms. Pella is a counselor at Planned Parenthood in&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
by Beverly Noble Pella&#13;
In past articles I have discussed female orgasm. There ~ another&#13;
problem that females, and males deal with very often, and that is the&#13;
myths that surround possible pregnancy.&#13;
So far this year I have seen over 400 women for pregnancy testing,&#13;
and more than 90 percent of them did not want to be.pregnant. Most of&#13;
them were not using any method of contraception. Some were using&#13;
very poor methods. A few were using good methods of birth control,&#13;
but some had misused them. ,&#13;
What are the reasons for this obvious denial of the facts of life? They&#13;
are numero~d varied. Here are some examples:&#13;
1) It won't happen to me. NO COMMENT.&#13;
2) We didn't do it very often (or only once).&#13;
· Answer: Russian Roulette.&#13;
3) He always pulled out in time.&#13;
Answer: Useless. Withdrawal is based on the idea that if the male&#13;
doesn't ejaculate inside the woman, she can't get pregnant. Problem:&#13;
every male has secretions that come out prior to ejaculation and these&#13;
secretions contain sperm, and in fact may contain a higher concentration&#13;
of sperm. Withdrawal is usually too late.&#13;
4) We only did it during my safe time.&#13;
Answer: The rhythm method is a lot more than just guesswork. It&#13;
takes six to twelve months of record keeping, following specific instructions&#13;
to figure out your rhythm method. And even if properly&#13;
done, our bodies are not always so predictable.Some people may even&#13;
produce an egg during menstruation. It is not common, but people&#13;
have gotten pregnant during their period.Some people might produce&#13;
an egg twice during once cycle. Sperm can live up to 3 days so you&#13;
could have intercourse one ~Y and get pregnant two days later.&#13;
Unfortunately our cycles are also easily affected by such things as&#13;
illness, travelU1g and stress. .&#13;
5) I didn't think I could get birth control withol!t my parents finding&#13;
out.&#13;
Answer: You can. The services of Planned Parenthood are very&#13;
confidential, and so,are those of many private doctors.&#13;
6) We didn't plan it, it just happened.&#13;
Answer: That is a complete denial of your self as a human being&#13;
with sexual desires and needs. It is a fact that mqst single women have&#13;
been having intercouse .for three months or more before they seek&#13;
contraception. That "happening" has been planned in your head for a&#13;
long time. While you might not have known exactly when it would&#13;
happen, it is irresponsible to say you didn't even know that it might.&#13;
Which is going to hurt you more in the long run? Saying that you&#13;
~ant to be sexually active and want to be responsible for your actions?&#13;
Or denying your sexuality and eventually getting pregnant? Seems to&#13;
me that the first choice shows a lot more maturity and caring for one's&#13;
self as well as the other oeoole involved.&#13;
7) I knew that if I got pregnant I could get an abortion.&#13;
Answer: Maybe you can get an abortion, both safely and legally, but&#13;
no one is going to give you one for free. They cost anywhere from $150&#13;
to $450 or more. And why on earth would you want to put yourself&#13;
through a surgical procedure. involving anesthesia, when it could&#13;
have prevented with a lot less expense? .&#13;
Every method of birth control available is safer than a pregnancy 1s&#13;
to your body. That shoots down the old argument that you didn't want&#13;
to use the pill because of the risks, and besides, there are other effective&#13;
methods available to you.&#13;
8) But I douched right after it. , .&#13;
Answer: Douching is not a method of birth control. If anything,&#13;
douching pushes the sperm upwards and gets them there faster.&#13;
9) (in tears) But we didn't really do it, he just came outside of me.&#13;
Answer: Those little sperm are very good sw~ers, and if they are&#13;
put near the vaginal opening, they may swim on in.&#13;
10) I thought it would be OK, I only missed one pill.&#13;
Answer: If you miss a pill for more than 24 hours, your hormone&#13;
level coUld drop low enough for you to release an egg, and you could&#13;
get pregnant. .&#13;
And here are some of the frequently asked questions about&#13;
pregnancy:&#13;
What are the most effective methods of birth control?&#13;
No. 1 abstinence (not having intercours~)&#13;
No. 2. steruization (male vasectomy, female -tubal ligation)&#13;
No. 3 oral contraception (the pill) ,,&#13;
No. 4 the IUD (intra-ut&lt;'rine device)&#13;
No. 5 the diaphragm (with a contracepti:ve cream) .&#13;
No. 6 condoms ( when used with foam, almost as good as the pill)&#13;
No. 7 rhythm, foam, creams, jellie (must be labeled "con-&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil c~ange)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour .pomt)&#13;
• saves oil RICK BENTSON&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer 639-4067&#13;
traceptive'')&#13;
, The Educational ComAre&#13;
certain positions better for preventing pregnancy? -No, but&#13;
certain positions might be better for encouraging pregnancy, such as&#13;
when the penis is inside the vagina .&#13;
munications Board of Wisconsin&#13;
is sponsoring a radio drama&#13;
script writing competition this&#13;
winter. ·Can you get pregnant if you don't have an orgasm? Yes. Orgasms&#13;
are irrelevant to conception.&#13;
Can you get pregnant the first time you have sex? YES.&#13;
Two weeks from now, I would like to use this column to answer your&#13;
questions about sex, birth control, Planned Parenthood, or anything&#13;
related to these .&#13;
Students may write questions on a piece of paper and deposit them&#13;
in the Ranger box sitting on the desk at the Information Kiosk located&#13;
in the lower level of Main Place. Anonymity is assured.&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
Cash awards of $200, $100 and&#13;
$50, which have been provided by&#13;
the Corporation for Public&#13;
Broadcasting, will be granted for&#13;
the top three half-hour dramas&#13;
submitted by Wisconsin&#13;
residents.&#13;
Scripts must be submitted to&#13;
ECB by January 31, 1977.&#13;
STARTING MONDAY, NOV. 15&#13;
ft ®lht QLnfftt, 1Kringlt&#13;
l\nh iBagtl Wable&#13;
Featuring&#13;
FRESH HOT KRINGLE &amp; ASSORTED BAGELS&#13;
MAIN CONCOURSE - CLASSROOM BLDG 7 :30 - 10:30 A.M .&#13;
DEEP FRIED-MUSHROOMS&#13;
EAT 'EM AS A SNACK OR WITH YOUR MEAL&#13;
FANTASTICIII&#13;
65~&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM &amp; UNION SQUARE&#13;
NOVEMBER 11 - 20&#13;
f7/wcial [!/J~ ~ ~ fJJ/od.l&#13;
•&#13;
R.ecords,&#13;
Cossettes,&#13;
8-~:T rocks,&#13;
Lowest Prices&#13;
in&#13;
RACINE - .&#13;
A1ee&lt;, ,-~Ale&#13;
''"Ate&#13;
Al~AI,&#13;
STEREO'S FOR HOmE AND CARI&#13;
REmEmBER!&#13;
Sound Sovings ot&#13;
SOUND GALLERY!&#13;
Hours·&#13;
10 to Q da,ly 10 to 5 ,30 Sat.&#13;
11 to 5 SuAdoy&#13;
Greenridge Plozo&#13;
Sp,,ng St &amp; eumo" Rd&#13;
West of H,ghwoy 31&#13;
Telephone 634-230 l &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976&#13;
-"i •&#13;
).Soccer 'team WIns&#13;
.._.--------&#13;
/&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
tfeLEADER~&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KENOSHA - for men a~d&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/RACINE - for men&#13;
women&#13;
1\&#13;
1\&#13;
~&#13;
'\&#13;
,/,&#13;
/&#13;
~&#13;
'j&#13;
~&#13;
'I&#13;
'/&#13;
One of the Mi •• est's&#13;
Most Complete.&#13;
SPORTING' GOODS&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
",,,,, II FREE ""11l1&#13;
niilNf}I1,&#13;
~ [}arID!F1ir§ !:~~'fj'~rFl&#13;
14TH. AVENUE AT 62ND. STREET&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
WiN ..... The&#13;
Album of Your&#13;
Choice.&#13;
liP&#13;
Have You Turned Us&#13;
on Lately?&#13;
by Jean Tenula .&#13;
Parkside will meet Minnesota's&#13;
representative in the National&#13;
Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics regional tournament&#13;
over the weekend, after they won&#13;
the . District 14 Championships&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
The Rangers beat UWPlatteville,&#13;
4-0. Platteville had&#13;
gotten past Lakeland Friday in&#13;
the 'first round.&#13;
"We totally dominated the&#13;
game. I can't say enough about&#13;
the team's performance. They&#13;
knew wbat they had to do and&#13;
were just outstanding," said&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson.&#13;
Parkside outshot Platteville 38-'&#13;
6 and Platteville made only two&#13;
shots in the whole first half. The&#13;
score could have been more&#13;
lopsided with the- efforts of&#13;
Platteville's goalie, Jeff Dybdahl,&#13;
who had 20 saves.&#13;
Andy Gutierrez started the&#13;
match off with a corner kick to&#13;
\ score at 1:09 mark. He was&#13;
assisted by Jack Landwehr.&#13;
Niall .Power also scored on a&#13;
corner kick, with ,3 'pass from&#13;
Mike Boyajian, .&#13;
Deech Ismaili scored&#13;
Parkside's last two goals with&#13;
assists from Earl' Campbell and&#13;
Boyajiam.&#13;
Parkside dropped a 1-0 match&#13;
to Lake Forest CQllege&#13;
November 2; which brings thei;&#13;
record to. 7-&amp;-2.This is the most&#13;
wins by a Parkside squad and the&#13;
first lime Parkside had finished&#13;
over the .500 mark in the regular&#13;
season.&#13;
"&#13;
Runners to host championships&#13;
by Jean Tenula&#13;
Parkside will host the NAJA&#13;
District 14 Championships at 11&#13;
a.m. Saturday.&#13;
Parkside was also the site of&#13;
the eighth annual U.S. Track and&#13;
Field Federation Men's MidAmerican&#13;
and Women's National&#13;
Cross Country Championships&#13;
over the weekend.&#13;
. Over 600 runners participated&#13;
in 10 different races, including&#13;
the women's national, which was&#13;
won by UW-Madison's A team&#13;
with 17 points. Kim Merrill&#13;
finished second in the race with&#13;
Peg Neppel of Iowa Slate winning&#13;
in 16:39.9 for the three miles.&#13;
Brenda Webb of Wright Slate was&#13;
third.&#13;
The men's. Mid-American was&#13;
won by Illinois with 30 points.&#13;
Chicago Track Club, who finished&#13;
second with 45, has won the meet&#13;
for the past seven times .&#13;
Parkside's A team was third with&#13;
55 points and Parkside's 3 team.&#13;
Letters awarded&#13;
Parkside _Golf Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens has named seven letterwinners&#13;
for the 1976 season.&#13;
Winning letters are as follows:&#13;
juniors Steve Christensen of&#13;
Racine (Park) and Mark&#13;
Kuyawa of Kenosha (Tremper);&#13;
sophomore Ray Zuzinec of&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper); and fresh,&#13;
men Gary Paskiewicz of Kenosba&#13;
(Bradford), Rick Pedersen of&#13;
. Racine (Park), Tim Rouse of&#13;
South Milwaukee (Hamilton).&#13;
Parkside finished sixth in the&#13;
recent NAIA District 14 golf&#13;
tournament, There will be no&#13;
spring golf season at UW-P. in&#13;
. 1977 since most state schools&#13;
have switched to the fall&#13;
schedule.&#13;
Women's volleyball&#13;
enters championships&#13;
the PaJety!&#13;
GEORGE'S BAR&#13;
FEATURING. TRIP&#13;
2319 - 63rd St.&#13;
8:30 p.m , - 12:30 pvm , SAT., NOV. 13th&#13;
The Ranger women's&#13;
volleyball team will enter&#13;
tournament competition at the&#13;
WWIAC Championships Friday&#13;
and Saturday.&#13;
Parkside defeated Illinois&#13;
Wesleyan last Friday 15-9, 15-6&#13;
from&#13;
-&#13;
and lost to North Central 6-15, 16-&#13;
14"and 7-15 in the double dual.&#13;
The Rangers met Illinois State&#13;
and Northern Illinois at DeKalb,&#13;
'Illinois Saturday and hosted&#13;
Chicago State, Lewis and Carthage&#13;
Tuesday evening. .&#13;
over&#13;
,&#13;
to&#13;
was sixth with 148.&#13;
Bruce Fischer of the Chicago&#13;
Track Club won the meet in 25&#13;
minutes, 20.2 seconds, followed&#13;
by Gary Mumaw of Illinois. -&#13;
Races were also run for boys i8&#13;
and under, 15 and under, and 12&#13;
and under; for girls 10 and under&#13;
and 11 to 13; National Vets, men&#13;
and women; and Men's National&#13;
Masters. Chuck Bradley of the&#13;
Kenosha Lakeshore Olympians&#13;
won the National Vets in 16:16.9&#13;
for the three miles.&#13;
Swim team&#13;
to·compete&#13;
The women's swim team will&#13;
compete in the WWJAC Championships&#13;
at UW-Whitewater&#13;
Friday at 2 p.m, and Saturday at&#13;
10 a.m.&#13;
The Rangers will be led by&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch, who set two&#13;
new school records and won two&#13;
firsts in the team's last dual meet&#13;
against Whitewater last Friday.&#13;
Parkside lost to' the visiting&#13;
. Warhawks, 86-28.&#13;
Leitch took firsts in the '100&#13;
back with a record-breaking time&#13;
of 1: 16.37and the 50 back in 34.869&#13;
seconds to set the new record.&#13;
,&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 10, 1976&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
~ .&#13;
j · Soccer learn wins -- by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside will meet Minnesota's&#13;
representative in the National&#13;
Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics regional tournament&#13;
over the weekend, after they won&#13;
the District 14 Championships&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
· The Rangers beat UWPlatteville,&#13;
4-0. Platteville had&#13;
gotten past Lakeland Friday in&#13;
the ·first round.&#13;
"We totally dominated the&#13;
game. I can't say enough ;ibout&#13;
the team's performance. They&#13;
knew what they had to do and&#13;
were just outstanding," said&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson.&#13;
Parkside outshot Platteville 38-'&#13;
6 and Platteville made only two&#13;
shots in the whole first half. · The&#13;
score could have been mor.e&#13;
lopsided with the- efforts of&#13;
Platteville's goalie, Jeff Dybdahl,&#13;
who had 20 saves.&#13;
Andy Gutierrez started the&#13;
match off with a corner kick to&#13;
score at 1:09 mark. He was&#13;
assisted by J~ck u~dwehr.&#13;
Niall Power also scored on a&#13;
corner kick, with a pass from&#13;
Mike Boy_ajian. · '&#13;
Deech Ismaili scored&#13;
Parkside's last two goals with&#13;
assists from Earl Campbell and&#13;
Boyajiam.&#13;
Parkside dropped a 1-0 match&#13;
to Lake Forest Cqlleg_e,&#13;
November 2; which brings their&#13;
record to 7-6-2. This is the most&#13;
wins by a Parkside squad and the&#13;
first time Parkside had finished&#13;
over the .500 mark in the regular&#13;
season.&#13;
.......... ... , .. , .... ~. ,,. . .,,, .. Runners to host cha1npionships&#13;
tieLEADER~&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside will host the NAIA&#13;
District 14 Championships at 11&#13;
a.m. Saturday.&#13;
Parkside was also the site of&#13;
the eighth annual U.S. Track and&#13;
Field Federation Men's MidAmerican&#13;
and Women's National&#13;
Cross Country Championships&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KENOSHA - for men a~d women over the weekend.&#13;
won by UW-Madison's A team&#13;
with 17 points. Kim Merritt&#13;
finished second in the race with&#13;
Peg Neppel of Iowa State winning&#13;
in 16:39.9 for the three miles.&#13;
Brenda Webb of Wright State was&#13;
third.&#13;
was sixth with 148.&#13;
Bruce Fischer of the Chicago&#13;
Track Club won the meet in 25&#13;
minutes, 20.2 seconds, followed&#13;
by Gary Mumaw of Illinois. .&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/RACINE - for men Over 600 runners participated -----------------------.J in 10 different races, including th_e women's national, which was&#13;
The men's. Mid-American was&#13;
won by Illinois with 30 points.&#13;
Chicago Track Club, who finished&#13;
second with 45, has won the meet&#13;
for the past seven times.&#13;
Parkside'sA team was third with&#13;
55 points and Parkside's 3 team&#13;
Races were also run for boys 18&#13;
and under, 15 and under, and 12&#13;
and under; for girls 10 and under&#13;
and 11 to 13; National Vets, men&#13;
and women; and Men's National&#13;
Masters. Chuck Bradley of the&#13;
Kenosha Lakeshore Olympians&#13;
won the National Vets in 16 :'16.9&#13;
for the three miles.&#13;
One of the Midwest's&#13;
Most Complete.&#13;
SPORTING· GOODS&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
Pl,111f ol FREE P•rkl111&#13;
fftllWtln·&#13;
~f}aml$1ir§ ~~\M,r~~&#13;
WIN ..... The&#13;
Album of Your&#13;
Choice.&#13;
95.&#13;
llP&#13;
Have You Turned Us&#13;
on Lately?&#13;
Letters awarded&#13;
Parkside Golf Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens has named seven letterwinners&#13;
for the 1976 season.&#13;
Winning letters are as follows:&#13;
juniors Steve Christensen of&#13;
Racine (Park) and Mark&#13;
Kuyawa of Kenosha (Tremper);&#13;
sophomore Ray Zuzinec of&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper) ; and freshmen&#13;
Gary Paskiewicz of Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford), Rick Pedersen of&#13;
Racine (Park), Tim Rouse of&#13;
South Milwaukee (Hamilton).&#13;
Parkside finished sixth in the&#13;
recent NAIA District 14 golf&#13;
tourname:1t. There will be no&#13;
spring golf season at UW-P. in&#13;
1977 since most state schools&#13;
have switched to the fall&#13;
schedule.&#13;
Women's volleyball&#13;
·enters championships&#13;
The Ranger women's&#13;
volleyball team will enter&#13;
tournament competition at the&#13;
WWIAC Championships Friday&#13;
and Saturday.&#13;
Parkside defeated Illinois&#13;
Wesleyan last Friday 15-9, 15-6&#13;
and lost to North Central 6-15, 16-&#13;
14,. and 7-15 in the double dual.&#13;
The Rangers met Illinois State&#13;
and Northern Illinois at DeKalb,&#13;
· Illinois Saturday and hosted&#13;
Chicago State, Lewis and Carthage&#13;
Tuesday evening.&#13;
Swim team&#13;
to compete&#13;
The women's swim team will&#13;
compete in the WWIAC Championships&#13;
at UW-Whitewater&#13;
Friday at 2 p.m. and Saturday at&#13;
10 a .m.&#13;
The Rangers will be led by&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch, who set two&#13;
new school retords and won two&#13;
firsts in the team's last dual meet&#13;
against Whitewater last Friday.&#13;
Parkside lost to the visiting&#13;
Warhawks, 86-28.&#13;
Leitch took firsts in the 100&#13;
back with a record-breaking time&#13;
of 1: 16.37 and the 50 back in 34.869&#13;
seconds to set the new record.&#13;
. ~&#13;
~e-w cat 1 . . --~· llt-o~~~&#13;
'&#13;
o11 over to the Pai-ty !&#13;
GEORGE'S BAR&#13;
FEATURING TRIP&#13;
2319 - 63rd St.&#13;
8:30 p.m. - 12:30 p .. m. SAT., NOV. 13th </text>
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              <text>i·.S&#13;
Parks ide planner interviewed&#13;
by Phil Livingston&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No.9 Wednesday, November 3, 1976&#13;
...-.-.._ .._.--..-.-....-._ ..-.._.-..-....-..._-..-..-..-....-...-.....-...-&#13;
"Our firsl goal was 10 respect Ihe natural beauty 01 the site and to&#13;
reflect exisling lopography and ecology. In order 10 UmIt encroachment&#13;
on natural environment auto parkiDg was placed on the&#13;
perimeter of the site with a simple bus system bringing students 8Dd&#13;
faculty to lhe main campus. We placed the parking areas on the less&#13;
desirable land aud kepi much of the center of the campus ill Its natural&#13;
state with mJnimum movement connections between bufldtugs. The&#13;
original idea was to keep the original grass, the wild weeds, and the&#13;
trees undisturbed, and, I hope the campus wUl continue to maintain&#13;
this philosophy. 1\ is so unusual to come 10 a campus and see the laD&#13;
grass rather than to see so much manicured lawn." -Gyo Obata&#13;
mounled aud costumed perf ... •&#13;
mance at Parkside on Wed·&#13;
nesday, Nov. 3 al 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arls Thealer.&#13;
Tickets for the show, pari of the&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series,&#13;
are $5 and are available at the&#13;
Campus Information Center in&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Sears in Kenosha, Cook-Gere in&#13;
Racine and Team Electronics in&#13;
Elmwood Plaza. Parkside&#13;
studenl tickets are available on&#13;
campus only.&#13;
Preceeding lheir public per.&#13;
formance the company will be on&#13;
campus Tuesday, Nov. 2,&#13;
presenting a seminar and&#13;
demonstration from 10to 11 a.m.&#13;
for dramatic arts students and&#13;
conllnued on po. 6&#13;
Gyo Obata is the principal in charge of design for the internationally&#13;
famous architectural firm of Hellmuth, Obata, and.Kassabaum of St.&#13;
Louis. Obata drew the master plan for this campus and supervised the&#13;
construction of the Wyllie Library Learning Center and Greequist HaD&#13;
before the state of Wisconsin ruled out of state architects could not&#13;
continue working on Wisconsin buildings.&#13;
Obata drew master plans and-or campus buildings for Duke,&#13;
Stanford, Cornell, Missouri, Southern Illinois University, Washington&#13;
University (where he is an affiliate professor of architecture) and ~&#13;
g. currently the University of Riyad in Saudi Arabia, one of the largest&#13;
" university projects in the world. RANGER interviewed Gyo Obata&#13;
~ shortly after his address at the Wyllie Library Learning Center&#13;
u' Dedication on Sunday, October 24.&#13;
rdifferently&#13;
if you had your way. I think they basically tried to follow&#13;
wbat we set out to do.&#13;
RANGER: In your address at tbe dedication you brought up the&#13;
parking lois. What is your opinion of the development of the Comm.&#13;
Arts and Union lots close to the buildings as an invasion to your&#13;
original plan?&#13;
OBATA: What happened was the legislature passed a ruling stating&#13;
they didn't want out of state architects to continue to work on&#13;
Wisconsin buildings. Originally, you know, the University and also the&#13;
Engineering Department of the state wanted us to continue working as&#13;
master planner so we would be used as a consultant, but they (the&#13;
state) didn't want us 10 do that so, that's what happened. I knew that&#13;
conlinued on pg 1&#13;
Dancers to perform&#13;
The Utah Repertory Dance&#13;
Theater, a 12 member&#13;
professional modern dance&#13;
company, will present a fullyCareer&#13;
needs projected&#13;
~ 'RANGER: What do you think of our new Student Union?&#13;
§' OBATA: I really don't want to make any comments on the other&#13;
if buildings because, first of all, I haven't really studied the building that&#13;
Gyo Obala carefully.&#13;
RANGER: But as you drove up and saw the Union did you think it fit&#13;
in with the general campus design?&#13;
OBATA: I think they tried to use the same kind of malo rials and bave&#13;
fairly open kind of spaces. AS an architect you always would do things&#13;
TheParkside,---------:.-&#13;
by Barbara Larson&#13;
Career Couselor&#13;
The U. S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, predicts&#13;
that the employment growth through the 1980's will continue to be&#13;
more rapid in industries that produce services than in industries that&#13;
produce goods. Presently about 54 million workers are in service&#13;
producing industries, while around 30 million are in goods producing&#13;
industries.&#13;
The following is a breakdown of the estimated employment growth&#13;
for service producing industries through the middle 1980's: government&#13;
(federal, state and local) 34 percent, trade (wholesale and&#13;
retail) 22 percent, transportation and public utilities 11 percent,&#13;
services and miscellaneous (including health services, maintenance,&#13;
repair, advertising, domestic help and business services) 51 percent.&#13;
The breakdown· for growth in goods producing industries:&#13;
manufacturing 12percent, contract construction 25percent, mining 18&#13;
percent, agriculture " minus 35 percent.&#13;
Changes are projected in the overall occupational structure&#13;
as in growth by industries. Through the mid 1980's there ,,:ill be a&#13;
continuation of the growth in white collar and service OCCUpatIOnsbut.&#13;
a slower that average increase in blue collar occupations.&#13;
Professional and. technical workers are projected to grow ahout 30&#13;
percent between 1974and 1985. The only occupational rate higher is&#13;
clerical with a 33 percent projected growth rate. The manager and&#13;
administrator group has ahout a 22 percent projected growth rate.&#13;
Open meeting law&#13;
interpreted&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
An interpretation of Wisconsin's revised open meetings law has been&#13;
circulated to all faculty and staff members by Secretary of the&#13;
Faculty Walter Feld. This law applies to all governmental bodies meluding&#13;
those at Parkside.&#13;
The open meetings law provides among other things, that unless the&#13;
members of a committee specifically vote in favor of closing a&#13;
meeting, the meeting must be held in the open session, unIe~ it concerns&#13;
certain personnel matters.In addition, any closed meeting must •&#13;
begin in open session; the vote to go into closed s~ion must '?"&#13;
recorded by name; and the business to be undertaken in closed sess~on&#13;
must be announced by the chairperson before the closed session&#13;
hegins. .&#13;
The law appears to be quite strict-and penalties range to $300 for&#13;
each violation-but a serious loophole exists in the penalty section. To&#13;
find the loophole, one must carefully read the language of the penalty&#13;
section:&#13;
...No memb" of a governmental body is liable under this subchapter&#13;
if he or she-nuikes or votes in favor of a motion to prevent the violation&#13;
from occurring, or if,before the violation occurs, his or her votes on aU&#13;
relevant motions were inconsistent with all those circumstances&#13;
which cause the violation ...&#13;
With careful study, one can see that unscrupulous public officials&#13;
continued on pg. 1&#13;
/&#13;
Because government and business will continue to need management&#13;
specialists, the demand for salaried managers is likely to continue to&#13;
increase rapidly as in the past. The trend toward larger business is&#13;
expected to continue, limiting the number of firms as well as limiting&#13;
the number of self-employed managers.&#13;
The operative group, including factory workers and vehicle drivers,&#13;
is expected to grow only 9 percent by 1985.The number of laborers&#13;
needed is also expected to grow about 9 percent during tbat period.&#13;
;rhe actual projected number of workers needed between 1974and&#13;
1985 breakdown as foDows: clerical workers- 16million plus, service&#13;
continued on 00 6&#13;
Inside:&#13;
Dizzie excites crowd page 5&#13;
Parkside planner interviewed&#13;
· by Phil Livingston&#13;
Gyo Oba ta is the principal in charge of design for the internationally&#13;
famous architectural firm of Hellmuth, Obata, and.Kassabaum of St.&#13;
Louis. Obata drew the master plan for this campus and supervised the&#13;
construction of the Wyllie Library Learning Center and Greequist Hall&#13;
before the state of Wisconsin ruled out of state architects could not&#13;
continue working on Wisconsin buildings.&#13;
Obata drew master plans and-or campus buildings for Duke,&#13;
Stanford, Cornell, Missouri, Southern Illinois University, Washington&#13;
-g University (where he is an affiliate professor of architecture) and&#13;
~ currently the University of Riyad in Saudi Arabia, one of the largest&#13;
!l university projects in the world. RANGER interviewed Gyo Obata&#13;
~ shortly after his address at the Wyllie Library Learning Center&#13;
.;· Dedication on Sunday, October 24. r&#13;
~ ·RANGER: What do you think of our new Student Union?&#13;
~- OBATA: I really don't want to make any comments on the other&#13;
g buildings because, first of all, I haven't really studied the building that&#13;
carefully.&#13;
RANGER: But as you drove up and saw the Unioq did you think it fit&#13;
in with the general campus design?&#13;
OBATA: I think they tried to use the same kind of materials and have&#13;
fairly open kind of spaces. As an architect you always would do things&#13;
The Parkside------~&#13;
Vol. V. No. 9 Wednesday, November 3, 1976&#13;
.............. ~ ....... ··-·-·---· ...... -·-·---·~--........ --~ ............... "Our first goal was to respect the natural beauty of the site and to&#13;
reflect existing topography and ecology. In order to limit encroachment&#13;
on natural environment auto parking was placed on the&#13;
perimeter of the site with a simple bus system bringing students and&#13;
faculty to the main campus. We placed the park.Ing areas on the les&#13;
desirable land and kept much of the center of the campus In its natural&#13;
state with minimum movement connections between buildings. The&#13;
original idea was to keep the original grass, the wild weeds, and the&#13;
trees undisturbed, and, I hope the campus will continue to maintain&#13;
this philosophy. It is so unusual to come to a campus and see the tall&#13;
grass rather than to see so much manicured lawn." -Gyo Obata&#13;
differently if you had your way. I think they basically tried to follow&#13;
what we set out to do.&#13;
RANGER: In your address at the dedication you brought up the&#13;
parking lots. What is your opinion of the development of the Comm.&#13;
Arts and Union lots close to the buildings as an invasion to your&#13;
original plan?&#13;
OBATA: What happened was the legislature passed a ruling stating&#13;
they didn't want out of state architects to continue to work on&#13;
Wisconsin buildings. Originally, you know, the University and also the&#13;
Engineering Deparbnent of the state wanted us to continue working as&#13;
master planner so we would be used as a consultant, but they (the&#13;
state) didn't want us to do that so, that's what happened. I knew that continued on pg 7&#13;
Dancers to perfor1n&#13;
The Utah Repertory Dance&#13;
Theater, a 12 member&#13;
professional modern dance&#13;
company' will present a fullymounted&#13;
and costumed performance&#13;
at Parkside on Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 3 at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Career needs projected Tickets for the show, part of the&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series,&#13;
are $5 and are available at the&#13;
Campus Information Center in&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Sears in Kenosha, Cook-Gere in&#13;
Racine and Team Electronics in&#13;
Elmwood Plaza. Parkside&#13;
student tickets are available on&#13;
campus only.&#13;
by Barbara Larson&#13;
Career Couselor&#13;
The U. S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, predicts&#13;
that the employment growth through the 1980's will continue to be&#13;
more rapid in industries that produce services than in industries that&#13;
produce goods. Presently about 54 million workers are in service&#13;
producing industries, while around 30 million are in goods producing&#13;
inrlustries.&#13;
The following is a breakdown of the estimated employment growth&#13;
for service producing industries through the middle 1980's: government&#13;
(federal, state and local) 34 percent, trade (wholesale and&#13;
retail) 22 percent, transportation and public utilities 11 percent,&#13;
services and miscellaneous (including health services, maintenance,&#13;
repair, advertising, domestic help and business seiwices) 51 percent.&#13;
The breakdown -for growth in goods producing industries:&#13;
manufacturing 12percent, contract construction 25 percent, mining 18&#13;
percent, agriculture minus 35 percent.&#13;
Changes are projected in the overall occupational s~ructure&#13;
as in growth by industries. Through the mid 198~'s there "'.1ll be a&#13;
continuation of the growth in white collar and service occupations but.&#13;
a siower that average increase in blue collar occupations. Professional and technical workers are projected to grow about 30&#13;
percent between 1974 and 1985. The only occupational rate higher is&#13;
clerical with a 33 percent projected growth rate. The manager and&#13;
administrator group has about a 22 percent projected growth rate.&#13;
Open 1neeting law&#13;
interpreted&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
An interpretation of Wisconsin's revised open meetings law ha_s been&#13;
circulated to all faculty and staff members by Secretary ~f ~e&#13;
Faculty Walter Feld. This law applies to all governmental bodies mcluding&#13;
those at Parkside.&#13;
The open meetings law provides among other things, that unle~s the&#13;
members of a committee specifically vote in favor of closmg a&#13;
meeting, the meeting must be held in the open session, unle~ it concerns&#13;
certain personnel mattElJ'S. In addition, any closed meeting must&#13;
begin in open session; the vote to go into closed s~ssion must ~e&#13;
recorded by name; and the business to be undertaken m closed sess~on&#13;
must be announced by the chairperson before the closed session&#13;
begins. ·&#13;
The law appears to be quite strict-and penalties range to ~300 for&#13;
each violation- but a serious loophole exists in the penalty section. To&#13;
find the loophole, one must carefully read the language of the penalty&#13;
section:&#13;
... No memb" of a governmental body is liable under this sub~hapter&#13;
if he or she-makes or votes in favor of a motion to prevent the vmlation&#13;
from occurring, or if, before the violation occurs, his or h~r votes on all&#13;
relevant motions were inconsistent with all those circumstances&#13;
which cause the violation ...&#13;
With careful study, one can see that unscrupulous public officials continued on pg. 7&#13;
/&#13;
Because government and business will continue to need management&#13;
specialists, the demand for salaried managers is likely to continue to&#13;
increase rapidly as in the past. The trend toward larger business is&#13;
expected to continue, limiting the number of firms as well as limiting&#13;
the number of self-employed managers.&#13;
The operative group, including factory workers and vehicle drivers,&#13;
is expected to grow only 9 percent by 1985. The number of laborers&#13;
needed is also expected to grow about 9 percent during that period.&#13;
J'he actual projected number of workers needed between 1974 and&#13;
1985 breakdown as follows: clerical workers - 16 million plus, service continued on oa 6&#13;
Inside:&#13;
Preceeding their public performance&#13;
the company will be on&#13;
campus Tuesday, Nov. 2,&#13;
presenting a seminar and&#13;
demonstration from 10 to 11 a .m.&#13;
for dramatic arts students and continued on pg 6&#13;
Dizzie exciies crowd page 5 &#13;
/&#13;
-,&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3,1976 \&#13;
i '1lY the Parkside ~".. RANGER· -&#13;
---EDITOR IAL/OPIN'ION&#13;
Guidelines cause double jeopardy , ,I&#13;
• by Kiyoko Bowden wishes and even demand that a student live where the university&#13;
says, ie. Mandatory Dorm Residency, which still exists at several UW&#13;
system campuses. .'&#13;
I'm not arguing that the Guidelines should only be imposed at dorm&#13;
campuses, ,although it is possible to see some vague, albeit highly&#13;
questionable rationale for "in loco parentis" at them. There are many&#13;
young students who are away frpm home for the first time. Oddly&#13;
enough that is about the same argument used four-hundred years&#13;
ago; and presumablyignores a higher level of sophistication among&#13;
"young'! people now. If these same "young" people, most of whom are&#13;
18 years or older, can vote, sign contracts and marry, then by wbat&#13;
right does the university presume to tell them where they may live and&#13;
how they may act?&#13;
Most of the infractions in the personal misconduct portion of the&#13;
Guidelines deal with inappropriate dorm resident's behavior. We have&#13;
no dorms at Parkside.&#13;
Parkside is not the place to practice "in loco parentis." The Regents&#13;
bear 'substantial blame for requiring that in order to comply with the&#13;
Guidelines-which are now law-Parkside must adopt a philosopby of&#13;
guardianship which is totally incompatible with tbe vast bulk of its&#13;
student population. .&#13;
Ican see no easy way out of our predicament. The-Guidelines'. implementation&#13;
procedures willsoon be completed. Since the civil courts&#13;
tend to examine constitutional rights cases, more often than not, for&#13;
flaws in the procedural due process portion; and most of the blatant&#13;
technical loop-holes will be plugged by the implementation procedures&#13;
now being structured here at Parkside, it may be a long time and a&#13;
costly court battle before we can bope that our substantive Constitutional&#13;
rights as student-citizens will be realized.&#13;
My reasoning that it will be long time before a test case of the&#13;
Constitutional question is, in part, precisely because it will involve a&#13;
costly court battle. We, who have very limited funds, can ill afford to&#13;
pay for the legal counsel that might gain us our rights.&#13;
There may be a little hope amid my prophesies of doom. We can&#13;
hope, for instance, that no one will misbehave. More realistically, we&#13;
can actively seek to bring pressure to bear on the State Legislature,&#13;
thereby removing students from the University's jurisdiction.&#13;
Ultimately, it may only be through legislative action that we may&#13;
• effectively become adults in the eyes of the law. .&#13;
The problem of the Student Disciplinary Guidelines will &lt;not be&#13;
solved with the completion of the implementation procedures. No&#13;
amount of procedural due process will remedy the basic flaw of the&#13;
Guidelines; that bel!Jg the unwarranted imposition of the University in&#13;
an area which it should and must not interfere.&#13;
Civil courts have been establisbed to handle personal misconduct.&#13;
The sanctions are clearly delimited and defined. Yet students,&#13;
whether 18 or 58, are set apart from the rest of society as a group of&#13;
children whose personal conduct must be monitored and for wborn&#13;
special punishments must be meted out.&#13;
We have no promise that civil action won't occur simultaneously&#13;
with University action in the event of an infraction of a University&#13;
personal misconduct. rule. Yet, the Regents, Central Administration&#13;
and our own University administrators argue that no "double&#13;
jeopardy" exists, either potentially or actually. They are most emphatically&#13;
wrong. A test case could argue for tbe interpretation that&#13;
the University and the civil courts, both state funded agencies, were&#13;
indeed capable of subjecting students to two-level, simultaneous&#13;
judgement and punishment. It could also be argued that students&#13;
neither need nor want "special citizen" status. .&#13;
We are not children nor are we mentally retarded. We can and must&#13;
accept responsibility for our actions and face the consequences for&#13;
those actions. I, for one, resent "special treatment." The relevant&#13;
example of the special stalus of women brings forward the reminder&#13;
that "special citizen" classifications can very easily, and frequently&#13;
do, degenerate into "non-citizen" classifications.&#13;
Historically, the concept of "in loco parentis" has its antecedents in&#13;
medieval Europe, where the academic community sought to protect&#13;
and nurture students. Itwas very often necessary for very young boys&#13;
to be sent quite a distance from home to receive education. These&#13;
, children fell under the protection of the local academic community,&#13;
who effectively became their local guardians.&#13;
The concept has carried down through the years as the rationale for&#13;
severe corporal punishment and losses of Adult privileges, so long as&#13;
the individual remained a student and thus under the protective&#13;
jurisdlction of the school. This continues to the present, wben the&#13;
university can demand that a student behave as the university&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM&#13;
by Phil Hermann say, so what? The constitution also says that when people aren't happy&#13;
WIththe government they have the Tight and the duty to change it.&#13;
2) If you don't vote, you have no right to bitch. Bullshit, freedom of&#13;
speech is also in the constitution! It is up to the political parties to&#13;
make me want to vote by offering choices that are acceptable to me.&#13;
Until they do, I'm not voting and I'll keep bitching.&#13;
3) Your vote means as much asanybody's! Bullshit a state like&#13;
. .. '&#13;
,WISCOnS\n only has a fourth of the electoral votes of a state like&#13;
California! Carter or Ford could have won California New York&#13;
.Illinois and about ten other states and would have won 'the election:&#13;
This means that tbfi'ly-seven states wouldn't have had a say.&#13;
Local elections are also ridiculous. If most of the people don't vote&#13;
how can democracy be.attained? Why don't they vote in these crucial&#13;
local election? Becuase they don't know who is running. They don't&#13;
have the time to study all the candidates and all the issues. Most&#13;
working people work fifty-hours a week and have to support families&#13;
and property.&#13;
Politicians such as Les Aspin and Bill Proxmire understand that&#13;
apathy and ignorance are a major part of any election. Aspin and&#13;
Proxmire always come out with at least one news headliQe a month&#13;
just to make sure people know their names. Do you think that if Les&#13;
Aspin was seriously hurting the military, he would still be in office?&#13;
Low voter tarn-out explained&#13;
In 1976voters were expected to stay away from the polls in record&#13;
numbers. Why? Let's examine their other choices'&#13;
1) They could have voted for Gene 'McCarthy, but he was only on.the&#13;
ballot in twenty-nine states (New York not included) and nobody likes&#13;
to vote for somebody who has no chance of winning. McCarthy has&#13;
already called this "the most unconstitutional presidential election&#13;
in history."&#13;
2) They could have voted for Lester Maddox or Gus Hall. Both were&#13;
the extremist candidates and got their share of the lunatic and-or&#13;
fanatic vote.&#13;
3) They 'could have voted for Jimmy Carter, who had smiled them&#13;
and vagued them to death.&#13;
4) They could have voted for Gerald Ford, the incumbent, who at&#13;
'best is a robot-like. 'Republican team player.&#13;
5) They could have written in somebody else,'s name and gotten&#13;
laughs from tbe news media. These five choices were not very appealing&#13;
to almost sixty percent of the American people.&#13;
The choice that over half the country made was not to vote at all and&#13;
who could blame them? If you didn't like either regular candidate you&#13;
had very little choice in alternatives. What is wrong with not voting?&#13;
1) You shouldn't mtsuse your cOjlstllullonal right to vote. To that I&#13;
EDITOR-tN-CHIEF: Junnlne SlpSma&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: C.thy 8mall, JUdy Truclrunt ( ••••. )&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom CooPer ~&#13;
. NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wagner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS;&#13;
.' Administration-PoUcees, John McKloslley&#13;
.. SMI, OilY. Brandt&#13;
.. Stvcten' 9tOUps &amp; speallen; ....&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer -&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR; Jean Tenuta \&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jeffrey ·1.swen~lIi, Bill Barile&#13;
COpy EDITOR: Julie Lan,e&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquardt&#13;
STAFF: Wendy Miller. Terri Gao/hart, RolMlrt Hoffman, Chris Claunn. Brleltet Penlllowltl;l,&#13;
Larry Donn.elly, Phil Hermann, Ramona Maillet, Allen Brown, Carol Arentl, John Oyerman,&#13;
80b Jamboll. Beyerly Pella. Behy Nev, Linda Knudtson. Karin La Fourier JUdy TrUdrun,&#13;
Scott Reinhard, Philip L. L,Jyln,s'on, Debbie Sharpe '.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS, P.J. AUolin •• PhlllpL.LlylnSiston #&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS; Joe LUda, Rick Flasch&#13;
Tbe Parkslde Raneer is written .nd edited&#13;
by the stUdents of tile Unlyenlty 01&#13;
Wisconsin·Parllside who are solely&#13;
respollsibl. for its flIltwlal policy and&#13;
(OVt_"t .Opinlons expr •• sed are no'&#13;
necessarily representatiye of 'hose "eld by&#13;
the sludents, faculty or administra'ion of&#13;
Parhide. Editorial and Buslne .. 553·2217;&#13;
Newsroom 553-2"5.&#13;
/&#13;
2 THE p ARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976&#13;
i JJY the Parksid ' ~".. RANGER - - ... • j&#13;
---EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
Guidelines cause double jeopardy • I&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
The problem of the Student Disciplinary Guidelines will_~ot be&#13;
solved with the completion of the implementation procedures. No&#13;
amount of procedural due process will remedy the basic flaw of the&#13;
Guidelines; that being the unwarranted imposition of the University in&#13;
an area which it should and must not interfere.&#13;
Civil courts have been established to handle personal misconduct.&#13;
The sanctions are clearly delimited and defined. Yet students,&#13;
whether 18 or 58, are set apart from the rest of society as a group of&#13;
children whose personal conduct must be monitored and for whom&#13;
special punishments must be meted out.&#13;
We have no promise that civil action won't occur simultaneously&#13;
with University action in the event of an infraction of a University&#13;
personal misconduct. rule. Yet1 the Regents, Central Administration&#13;
and our own University administrators argue that no "double&#13;
jeopardy" exists, either potentially or actually. They are most emphatically&#13;
wrong. A test case could argue for the interpretation that&#13;
the University and the civil courts, both state funded agencies, were&#13;
indeed capable of subjecting students to two-level, simultaneous&#13;
judgement and punishment. It could also be argued that students&#13;
neither need nor want "special citizen" status. ·&#13;
We are not children nor are we mentally retarded. We can and must&#13;
accept responsibility for our actions and face the consequences for&#13;
those actions. I, for one, resent "special treatment." The relevant&#13;
example of the special status of women brings forward the reminder&#13;
that "special citizen" classifications can very easily, and frequently&#13;
do, degenerate into "non-citizen" classifications.&#13;
Historically, the concept of "in loco parentis" has its antecedents in&#13;
m~eval Europe, where the academic community sought to protect&#13;
and nurture students. It was very often necessary for very young boys&#13;
to be sent quite a distance from home to receive education. These&#13;
children fell under the protection of the local academic community,&#13;
who effectively became their local guardians.&#13;
The concept has carried down through the years as the rationale for&#13;
severe corporal punishment and losses of Adult privileges, so long as&#13;
the individual remained a student and thus under the protective&#13;
jurisdiction of the school. This continues to the present, when the&#13;
university can demand that a student behave as the university&#13;
-&#13;
POLITICAL&#13;
Low voter turn-oui explain~d&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
In 1976 voters were expected to stay away from the polls in record&#13;
numbers. Why? Let's examine their other choices;&#13;
1) They could have voted for Gene McCarthy, but he was only on-the&#13;
ballot in twenty-nine states (New York not included) and nobody likes&#13;
to vote for somebody who has no chance of winning. McCarthy has&#13;
already called this "the most unconstitutional presidential election&#13;
in history."&#13;
2) They could have voted for Lester Maddox or Gus Hall. Both were&#13;
the extremist candidates and got their share of the lunatic and-or&#13;
fanatic vote.&#13;
3) They could have voted for Jimmy Carter, who had smiled them&#13;
and vagued them to death.&#13;
4) They could have voted for Gerald Ford, the incumbent, who at&#13;
best is a robot-like, 'Republican team player.&#13;
5) They could have written in somebody else,'s name and gotten&#13;
laughs from the news media. These five choices were not very appealing&#13;
to almost sixty percent of the American people. .&#13;
The choice that over half the country made was not to vote at alland&#13;
who could blame them? If you didn_'t like either regular candidate you&#13;
had very little choice in alternatives. What is wrong with not voting?&#13;
1) You shol!1d~'t misuse your COJ1stitutional right to vote. To that I&#13;
wishes and even demand that a student live where the university&#13;
says, ie. Mandatory Dorm Residency, which still exists at several UW&#13;
system campuses. · • .&#13;
I'm not arguing that the Guidelines should only be imposed at dorm&#13;
campuses, .although "it is possible to see some vague, albeit highly&#13;
questionable rationale for "in loco parentis" at them. There are many&#13;
young students who are away fr.om home for the first time. Oddly&#13;
enough that is about the same argument used four-hundred years&#13;
ago; and presumably 'ignores a higher level of sophistication among&#13;
"young" people now. If these same "young" people, most of whom are&#13;
18 years or older, can vote, sign contracts and ma,rry, then by what&#13;
right does the university presume to tell them where they may live and&#13;
how they may act?&#13;
Most of _the infriictions· in the personal misconduct portion of the&#13;
Guidelines deal with inappropriate dorm resident's behavior. We have&#13;
no dorms at Parkside.&#13;
Parkside is not the place to practice "in loco parentis." The Regents&#13;
bear'substantial blame for requiring that in order to comply with the&#13;
Guidelines-which are now law-Parkside must adopt a philosophy of&#13;
guardianship which is totally incompatible with the vast bulk of its&#13;
student population.&#13;
I can see no easy way out of our predicament. The-Guidelines'. implementation&#13;
procedures will.soon be completed. Since the civil courts&#13;
tend to examine constitutional rights cases, more often than not, for&#13;
flaws in the procedural due process portion; and most of the blatant&#13;
technical loop-holes will be plugged by the implementation procedures&#13;
now being structured here at Parkside, it may be a long time and a&#13;
costly court battle before we can hope that our substantive Constitutional&#13;
rights as student-citizens will be realized.&#13;
My reasoning that it will be long time before a test case of the&#13;
Constitutional question is, in part, precisely because it will involve a&#13;
costly court battle. We, who have very limited funds, can ill afford to&#13;
pay f~r the legal counsel that might gain us our rights.&#13;
There may be a little hope amid my prophesies of doom. We can&#13;
hope, for instance, that no one will misbehave. More realistically, we&#13;
can actively seek to bring pressure to bear on the State Legislature,&#13;
thereby removing students from the University's jurisdiction.&#13;
Ultimately, it may only be through legislative action that we may&#13;
' effectively become adults in the eyes of the law. ·&#13;
FORUM&#13;
~Y, so what? The constitution also says that when people aren't happy&#13;
with the government they have the right and the duty to change it.&#13;
2) If you don't vote, you have no right to bitch. Bullshit freedom of&#13;
speech is also in the constitution! It is up to the politic;l parties to&#13;
make me want to vote by offering choices that are acceptable to me.&#13;
Until they do, I'm not voting and I'll keep bitching.&#13;
3) Your vote means as much as anybody's! Ifollshit a state like&#13;
, Wiscoils~n only has a fourth of the electoral votes of a state like&#13;
California! Carter or Ford could have won California New York&#13;
.Illinois and about ten other states and would have won 'the election'.&#13;
This means that thirty-seven states wouldn't have had a say.&#13;
Local elections are also r~diculous. If most of the people don't vote,&#13;
how can democracy be attained? Why don't they vote in these crucial&#13;
local electi~n? Becuase they don't know who is runnin~. They don't&#13;
have. the tune to stu~y all the candidates and all the issues. Most&#13;
working people work fifty-hours a week and have to support families&#13;
and property.&#13;
Politicians such as Les Aspin and Bill Proxmire understand that&#13;
apathy_ and ignorance are a major part of any election. Aspin and&#13;
:roxm1re always come out with at least one news headliQe a month&#13;
Just_to make s~e people know their names. Do you think that if Les&#13;
Aspm was seriously hurting the military, he would still be in office?&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jeannine ~ipsma&#13;
The Parkside Ranier is written and edited&#13;
by the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorl'al policy and&#13;
coo••"• .Opinions expressed are not&#13;
necessarily representative of those held by&#13;
the students, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and Business SSl-2217;&#13;
Newsroom SS3-229S.&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: Catlly Brnak, Judy Trudruni (asst.) , · ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Cooper -&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wainer&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
.. Administration-Policies: John McKloskey .. SMI: Dave Brandt&#13;
.. Student group• &amp; speakers:&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jean Tenuta \&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: ielfrey -j. swencki, Bill Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Julie Lanie&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION : Sue Marquardt&#13;
STAFF : Wendy Miller, Terri Ga-.'hart, Robert Hollman, Chri• ClauHn, Bricl9et Penzkowski.&#13;
Larry Donn_elly, Phil Hermann, Ramona Maillet, Allen Brown, Carol Arentz, John Overman,&#13;
Bob Jambo,s, Bev':r!y Pell:'•. Betsy Neu, Linda Knudtson, Karin La Fourier, Judy Trudruni, Scott Reinhard, Phohp L. L1v1n1ston, Debbie Sharpe&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS : P.J. Auolina, Philip L. Livingston #&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS: Joe Landa, Rick FIHch&#13;
) ' &#13;
\&#13;
'-----&#13;
Accounting in sad shape&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
• My purpose in writing this&#13;
letter is to appeal to the administration&#13;
of Parkside to begin&#13;
a serious search for additional&#13;
accounting instructors. I never&#13;
believed tbe sad shape the accounting,&#13;
department was in until&#13;
recently.&#13;
A few days ago I visited the&#13;
Business Management office to&#13;
declare my specialty package in&#13;
accounting, At this time I also&#13;
requested that I be assigned an&#13;
advisor who was an accounting&#13;
. instructor. I was informed that&#13;
this would be- impossible. A&#13;
secretary told me that there were&#13;
only two accounting instructors,&#13;
Larry Logan and Claude Renshaw,&#13;
who were available to&#13;
counsel accounting students and&#13;
they have their hands' full .&#13;
The number of advisors is soon&#13;
to be reduced to one since Mr.&#13;
Renshaw is leaving Parkside&#13;
nexl semester. Itis impossible to&#13;
. expect Mr. Logan to handle all&#13;
Haiku wanted&#13;
Dear Readers,&#13;
As a special feature during&#13;
December VISAGE would like to&#13;
publish a haiku page. If you are a&#13;
writer of this poetry form, please&#13;
the accounting students at&#13;
ParksideStill,&#13;
many of us need an adl'isor&#13;
who is a specialist in the&#13;
accounting field. While my&#13;
present advisor is quite willing to&#13;
help me, wben it comes to&#13;
specific questions that I have&#13;
about the accounting field he&#13;
can't always provide me with the&#13;
answers I need.&#13;
I am now a junior and these last&#13;
two years of college are the time&#13;
when I most need advice about&#13;
my future career. I feel that&#13;
Parkside does have an obligation&#13;
to provide every student with the&#13;
guidance they need.&#13;
So please, Parks ide administration&#13;
and Chancellor&#13;
Guskin, start tbe wheels in&#13;
motion and do something about'&#13;
this predicament. Somewhere,&#13;
someplace, there must be ~ few&#13;
jobless accounting instructors&#13;
just waiting to be found!&#13;
A Very Concerned Student&#13;
send in your writings. We are still&#13;
located in WLLC-D194.&#13;
Love &amp; Shalom&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
Co-VISAGE Editor&#13;
- •• _ .. ' ...n ..... " 'n~------------------ _&#13;
TIlE PARKSIDE RANGER November a, JJ'lI 3&#13;
Bowden corrects Guskin&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
I would like to correct a&#13;
statement made by Chancellor&#13;
Guskin at the Open Meeting on&#13;
Oct. 21. He said in response to a&#13;
question about the naming of the&#13;
Union that I, Kiyoko Bowden, had&#13;
been consulted about the name&#13;
and that I had agreed to naming&#13;
the Union, the Parkside Union.&#13;
.. This was absolutely wrong.&#13;
It was agreed this summer&#13;
after conversations with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin about the Union&#13;
name that the Union Operating&#13;
Board would review the Union's&#13;
name. I at no time agreed&#13;
unilaterally as. President of&#13;
Student Government to name the&#13;
Union anything. I felt at that lime&#13;
and I still do now, that the Union&#13;
Operating Board was the only&#13;
body which could deal with the&#13;
issue. However, recently the&#13;
Senate voted unamimously to&#13;
name the Union, the Parkside&#13;
Student Union. In thIllght of the&#13;
Senate's action, I am as&#13;
President even more convinced&#13;
that the Union Operating Board&#13;
should convene at once to decide&#13;
among many other things the&#13;
final, official name of the Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
If the Senate perceives student&#13;
. concern over the name to be SOt&#13;
pressing that they would take&#13;
action, then it is urgent that the&#13;
UOB address itself to this&#13;
question.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
President Student Government&#13;
Hermann apologizes&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
1 have wrillen this letter as a&#13;
public apology to Peter Canmejo&#13;
and the Socialist Party. 1 plead&#13;
ignorance to their campaign&#13;
platform and 1have only myselfto&#13;
blame. 1 am sure Mr. Camejo&#13;
and his supporters are working&#13;
very hard against our unjust&#13;
election system and they should&#13;
00- commended. 1 am guilty of&#13;
bias in neglecting candidates&#13;
other than Ford and Carter.&#13;
Hopefully this will change.&#13;
Phil Hermann&#13;
'Valley Forge' sponsored&#13;
The Law Club will sponsor a&#13;
multi-media slide presentajion,&#13;
"Pilgrimage to Valley Forge" on&#13;
Sunday, November 14 at 3 p.m.&#13;
The program depicts a bicentennial&#13;
wagon train as it journeys&#13;
to Pennsylvania.&#13;
The hour and a half presentation&#13;
will be held in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $2 for&#13;
adults, $1 for Parkside Students&#13;
and senior citizens, 50 cents for&#13;
children under 12.&#13;
For ticketinforrnation, call 553-&#13;
2244, or 553-2345.&#13;
Recruiting&#13;
• progressmg&#13;
by Bruce W..... er&#13;
Management ScIence Division&#13;
Chairperson Ron Singer is enthused&#13;
about the response for the&#13;
positions In the various areas of&#13;
business management and also&#13;
with the number of llpplicants for&#13;
the chairperson opening.&#13;
The search and screen commillee&#13;
has received 1~20 applicants,&#13;
and are in the process&#13;
of checking out their references&#13;
through telephone contact.&#13;
However, Singer "was a little&#13;
pessimistic about the recruiting&#13;
process. He felt that although&#13;
they've received several applications,&#13;
the university must&#13;
sell themselves to the candidate&#13;
to the school.&#13;
As for the interviews by&#13;
students, faculty, and administration,&#13;
Singer stated that&#13;
these should take place sometime&#13;
in December, once the top candidates&#13;
have been screened.&#13;
There will be ads placed in&#13;
major journals for each pf the&#13;
specialty areas next week which&#13;
Singer hoped would be bringing&#13;
more applications. He slated that&#13;
the chairperson should be&#13;
selected by the lime the second&#13;
semester starts.&#13;
Singer also stated that the&#13;
accounting positions he had&#13;
hoped to have filled by the second&#13;
semester. will probably not be&#13;
filled. He said that this was due to&#13;
the problem that faculty felt they&#13;
owed something to the school that&#13;
hired them first and most of the&#13;
lime. They will stay with that&#13;
school until the end of the&#13;
semester. "&#13;
\&#13;
Accounting in sad shape&#13;
To the Editor: the accounting students at&#13;
Parkside,&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976 3&#13;
Bowden corrects Guskin&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
I would like to correct a&#13;
statement made by Chancellor&#13;
Guskin at the Open Meeting on&#13;
Oct. 21. He said in response to a&#13;
question about the naming of the&#13;
Union that I, Kiyoko Bowden, had&#13;
been consulted about the name&#13;
and that I had agreed to naming&#13;
the Union, the Parkside Union.&#13;
Recruiting&#13;
• progressmg&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Management Science Division&#13;
Chairperson Ron Singer is enthused&#13;
about the response for the&#13;
positions in the various areas of&#13;
business management and also&#13;
with the number of l'lpplicants for&#13;
the chairperson opening. My purpose in writing this&#13;
letter is to appeal to the administration&#13;
of Parkside to begin&#13;
a serious search for additional&#13;
accounting instructors. I never&#13;
believed the sad shape the accounting_department&#13;
was in until&#13;
recently.&#13;
Still, many of us need an advisor&#13;
who is a specialist in the&#13;
accounting field. While my&#13;
pr1:;sent advisor is quite willing to&#13;
help me, when it comes to&#13;
specific questions that I have&#13;
about the accounting field he&#13;
can't always provide me with the&#13;
answers I need.&#13;
' This was absolutely wrong.&#13;
Operating Board was the only&#13;
body which could deal with the&#13;
issue. However, recently the&#13;
Senate voted unamimously to&#13;
name the Union, the Parkside&#13;
Student Union. In the light of the&#13;
Senate's action, I am as&#13;
President even more convinced&#13;
that the Union Operating Board&#13;
should convene at once to decide&#13;
among many other things the&#13;
final, official name of the Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
The search and screen committee&#13;
has received 13-20 applicants,&#13;
and are in the process&#13;
of checking out their references&#13;
through telephone contact.&#13;
A few days ago I visited the&#13;
Business Management office to&#13;
declare my specialty package in&#13;
accounting. At this time I also&#13;
requested that I be assigned an&#13;
advisor who was an accounting&#13;
· instructor. I was informed that&#13;
this would be· impossible. A&#13;
secretary told me that there were&#13;
only two accounting instructors,&#13;
Larry Logan and Claude Renshaw,&#13;
who were available to&#13;
counsel accounting students and&#13;
they have their hands' full .&#13;
The number of advisors is soon&#13;
to be reduced to one since Mr.&#13;
Renshaw is leaving Parkside&#13;
next semester. It is impossible to&#13;
expect Mr. !.ogan to hanrlle all&#13;
I am now a junior and these last&#13;
two years of college are the time&#13;
when I most need advice about&#13;
my future career. I feel tbat&#13;
Parkside does have an obligation&#13;
to provide every student with the&#13;
guidance they need.&#13;
So please, Parkside administration&#13;
and Chancellor&#13;
Guskin, start the wheels in&#13;
motion and do -something about·&#13;
this predicament. Somewhere,&#13;
someplace, there must be ii few&#13;
jobless accounting instructors&#13;
just waiting to be found!&#13;
A Very Concerned Student&#13;
Haiku wanted&#13;
Dear Readers,&#13;
As a special feature during&#13;
December VISAGE would like to&#13;
publish a haiku page. If you are a&#13;
writer of this poetry form, please&#13;
send in your writings. We are still&#13;
located in WLLC-D194.&#13;
Love &amp; Shalom&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
Co-VISAGE Editor&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
It was agreed this summer&#13;
after conversations with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin about the Union&#13;
name that the Union Operating&#13;
Board would review the Union's&#13;
name. I at no time agreed&#13;
unilaterally as President of&#13;
Student Government to name the&#13;
Union anything. I felt at that time&#13;
~d I still do now, that the Union&#13;
If the Senate perceives student&#13;
concern over the name to be so&#13;
pressing that they would take&#13;
action, then it is urgent that the&#13;
UOB address itself to this&#13;
question.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
President Student Government&#13;
Hermann apologizes&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I have written this letter as a&#13;
public apology to Peter Canmejo&#13;
and the Socialist Party. I plead&#13;
ignorance to their campaign&#13;
platform and I have only myself&#13;
to blame. I am sure.Mr. Camejo&#13;
and his supporters are working&#13;
very hard against our unjust&#13;
election system and they should&#13;
be commended. I am guilty of&#13;
bias in neglecting candidates&#13;
other than Ford and Carter.&#13;
Hopefully this will change.&#13;
PhilHermaM&#13;
'Valley Forge' sponsored&#13;
The Law Club will sponsor a&#13;
multi-media slide presentapon,&#13;
"Pilgrimage to Valley Forge" on&#13;
Sunday, November 14 at 3 p.m.&#13;
The program depicts a bicentennial&#13;
wagon train as it journeys&#13;
to Pennsylvania.&#13;
The hour and a half presentalion&#13;
will be heid in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $2 for&#13;
adults, $1 for Parkside Students&#13;
and senior citizens, 50 cents for&#13;
children under 12.&#13;
For ticket information, call 553-&#13;
2244, or 553-2345.&#13;
However, Slnger •was a little&#13;
pessimistic about the recruiting&#13;
process. He felt that although&#13;
they've received several applications,&#13;
the university must&#13;
sell themselves to the candidate&#13;
to the school.&#13;
As for the interviews by&#13;
students, faculty, and administration,&#13;
Singer stated that&#13;
these should take place sometime&#13;
in December, once the top candidates&#13;
have been screened.&#13;
There will be ads placed in&#13;
major journals for each .of the&#13;
specialty areas next week which&#13;
Singer hoped would be bringing&#13;
more applications. He stated that&#13;
the chairperson should be&#13;
selected by the time the second&#13;
setnester starts.&#13;
Singer also stated that the&#13;
accounting positions he had&#13;
hoped to have filled by the second&#13;
semester will probably not be&#13;
filled. He said that this was due to&#13;
the problem that faculty felt they&#13;
owed something to the school that&#13;
hired them first and most of the&#13;
time. They will stay with that&#13;
school until the end of the&#13;
semester."&#13;
bee'S . -901'&#13;
Monday - Thursday 9 - 5&#13;
Friday 9 - 8&#13;
- Student Discount&#13;
OPTICAL .&#13;
BOUTIQUE&#13;
552-7610&#13;
Saturday 9 -&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
Lorgest Selection&#13;
of Foshionoble&#13;
Fromes in South ·Eastern Wisconsin&#13;
Le rises&#13;
Duplico~ed&#13;
Ph_ysicion&#13;
Prescriptions&#13;
Filled&#13;
4425 · TAYLOR&#13;
Ten minutes&#13;
Kenosho!!&#13;
Onl.Y&#13;
From &#13;
4 THE P ARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976&#13;
David Vogt&#13;
~ tmerMy~~~.p8f1uIide&#13;
Filta&#13;
AcaplIlco&#13;
Semester Break&#13;
January &amp;-13, 1971&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE -&#13;
MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW!&#13;
• For application forms or&#13;
additional information contact:&#13;
Parkside Union Office&#13;
553·2200&#13;
Information Analyst&#13;
studies. adult students&#13;
by Pbilip L. Livingston&#13;
Last August Parkside's Information Analyst,&#13;
David Vogt, released phase one of the three phased&#13;
Adult Student Study. The purpose of the study was&#13;
to find out more about the "non-traditional" or,&#13;
adult student who is over the age of 25.&#13;
This special information, specifically, the class,&#13;
. sex, race, marital status, major, and credit hour&#13;
load of adult students is obtained by writing a&#13;
program to extract these bits of data from the main&#13;
data base in the Computer Center.&#13;
David Vogt is quick to note that it's difficult. to&#13;
draw conclusions or make long term&#13;
generalizations on two years of data. Vogt's&#13;
-g. eighteen statement examination of the report's&#13;
~ tables is brief and direct. There are no big surprises&#13;
~ but we do know for a fact that 31 percent of our&#13;
~ students are over 25, and they are more likely to be&#13;
ii' enrolled in social science, Spanish, education,&#13;
r applied science and technology, business&#13;
~. management, and labor economics. ,.&#13;
lQ The phase one report also shows that the rn.a1.0rity&#13;
~&#13;
of the non-traditional students were majoring in&#13;
psychology, economics, geography, history,&#13;
. political science, sociology, German" Spanish,&#13;
applied science and technology, business&#13;
management, and labor economics:&#13;
Although this study is somewhat of apriority, ,&#13;
Vogt's office also has to complete state forms&#13;
regarding enrollment by semester. The other two&#13;
phases of the adult study will have to be squeezed&#13;
into the periods when demand for computer time is&#13;
low.&#13;
Phase two will dwell on attendance specifically&#13;
time-day patterns and course popularity. Phase&#13;
three is a questionaire that will be drawn up to try to&#13;
get the information not gathered by phases one and&#13;
two and will be designed to try and answer&#13;
questions synthesized from the earlier phases.&#13;
Vogt's office also bas other data pertaining to&#13;
area population curves that generally point to the&#13;
importance of understanding more about the future&#13;
growth of Parkside with regard to the type of&#13;
students most likely to attend classes.&#13;
MONEY&#13;
HUNGRY?-&#13;
Kenosha County Advocates&#13;
For Youth&#13;
Needs Students or Student&#13;
Organizations to Sell&#13;
Raffle Tickets on Campus!&#13;
KEEP 25% OF&#13;
SALES'I&#13;
Call 658-4911 for details&#13;
Last Saturday,. October 30;&#13;
members of the Foreign Student'&#13;
Club toured the Southern Center&#13;
for tbe Developmentally&#13;
Disabled (formerly Sonthern&#13;
Colony).&#13;
Members of tbe Foreign&#13;
Student Club from left to right&#13;
are: Sam Kaman; Natrebi,&#13;
Kenya, Mike Montessantos;&#13;
Athens, Greece, Conststino&#13;
Caloniatis; Panama, Panama&#13;
City, Alsane Hutchings; Tehran,&#13;
Iran, Francis' G.C, Nwokike;&#13;
Nigeria, West Africa, Harry&#13;
Gilbert, Volunteer Coordinator&#13;
for the Center, and Eugenia&#13;
Malaki-Hanseo; Athens, Greece.&#13;
Concerts scheduled&#13;
Parkside will present a series&#13;
of three Young Persons' Concerts&#13;
during the 1976-77academic year"&#13;
University spokesmen said the&#13;
series is designed for young&#13;
persons and their parents and&#13;
music students and their&#13;
teachers,&#13;
The series, nominally priced,&#13;
will begin ·with a program by&#13;
violinist Eugene Fodor, artist-inresidence&#13;
at Parkside, with&#13;
pianist Stephen Swedish,&#13;
associate professor of music, at&#13;
10:30a.m. on Nov. 26 ( the Friday&#13;
during the Thanksgiving school&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mile oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 RICK "BENTSON'&#13;
your AMSIOIL dea/.r 639-4067&#13;
recess).&#13;
Timothy Bell, assistant professor&#13;
of music, will present the second&#13;
concert with the award-winning&#13;
Parkside Jazz Ensemble I, of&#13;
which he is the director, at 2 p.rn.&#13;
on Saturday, Feb. 26, and pianist&#13;
Swedish, a concert artist in his&#13;
own right with performance&#13;
credits throughout the United&#13;
States and in Europe, will present&#13;
the final program at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday, April 16.&#13;
All performances will be in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Tickets are $1 per .eoncert for&#13;
students; $2 per concert for&#13;
adults, tax included, and can be&#13;
obtained by writing Young'&#13;
Persons Concert Series,&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
Kenosha. WI" 53140.&#13;
Tickets can be purchased for the&#13;
entire series or for individual&#13;
programs. Additional concert&#13;
information can be obtained by&#13;
calling 553-2~.&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976&#13;
t/1' l.kwefsily~-~~.pF&#13;
t !ta -Acapnlco&#13;
David Vogt&#13;
Semester Break&#13;
January 6-13, 1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE - MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW! • For application forms or&#13;
additional 1nformat10n contact:&#13;
Parkside Union Office&#13;
553-2200&#13;
MONEY&#13;
HUNGRY?-&#13;
Kenosha County Advocates&#13;
For Youth&#13;
Needs Students or· Student&#13;
Organizations to Sell&#13;
Raffl_e Tickets on Campus!&#13;
KEEP 25% OF&#13;
SALES-I&#13;
Call 658-4911 for details&#13;
Information Analyst&#13;
studies .. adult stu·dent·s&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Last August Parksidf s Information Analyst,&#13;
David Vogt, released phase one of the three phased&#13;
Adult Student Study. The purpose of the study was&#13;
to find out more about the "non-traditional" or,&#13;
adult student who is over the age of 25.&#13;
This special information, specifically, the class,&#13;
· sex; race, marital status, major, and credit hour&#13;
load of adult students is obtained by writing a&#13;
program to extract these bits of data from the main&#13;
data base in the Computer Center.&#13;
of the non-traditional students were majoring in&#13;
psychology, economics, geography, history,&#13;
political science, sociology, German, · Spanish,&#13;
applied science and technology, business&#13;
management, and labor economics:&#13;
Although this study is somewhat of a priority,&#13;
Vogt's office also has to complete state forms '&#13;
regarding enrollment by semester. The other two&#13;
phases of the adult study will have to be squeezed&#13;
into the periods when demand for computer time is&#13;
low.&#13;
David Vogt is quick to note that it's difficult, to&#13;
draw conclusions or make long term&#13;
generalizations on two years of data. Vogt's&#13;
-g. eighteen statement examination of the report's&#13;
~ tables is brief and direct. There are no big surprises&#13;
~ but we do know for a fact that 31 percent of our&#13;
~ students are over 25, and they are more likely to be&#13;
.;· enrolled in social science, Spanish, education,&#13;
,- applied science and technology, business&#13;
~ management, and labor economics. 5·&#13;
Phase two will dwell on attendance specifically&#13;
time-day patterns and course popularity. Phase&#13;
three is a questionaire that will be drawn up to try to&#13;
get the information not gathered by phases one and&#13;
two . and will be designed to try and answer&#13;
questions synthesized from the earlier phases.&#13;
Vogt's office also has other data pertaining to&#13;
area population curves that generally point to the&#13;
importance of understanding more about the future&#13;
growth of Parkside with regard to the type of&#13;
students most likely to attend classes.&#13;
~ TI1e phase onG rcpcrt also sho\vs that the rna1ority&#13;
d&#13;
:,&#13;
Last Saturday, October 30;&#13;
-members of the Foreign Student&#13;
Club toured the Southern Center&#13;
for the Developmentally&#13;
Disabled (formerly Southern&#13;
Colony).&#13;
Members of the Foreign&#13;
Student Club from left to right&#13;
are: Sam Kamau; NairoJ,i,&#13;
Kenya, Mike Montessantos;&#13;
Athens, Greece, Constatino&#13;
Caloniatis; Panama, Panama&#13;
City, Afsane Hutchings; Tehran,&#13;
Iran, Francis· G.C. Nwokike;&#13;
Nigeria, West Africa, Harry&#13;
Gilbert, Volunteer Coordinator&#13;
for the Center, and Eugenia&#13;
Malaki-Hansen; Athens, Greece.&#13;
Concerts scheduled - Parkside will present a series&#13;
of three Young Persons" Concerts&#13;
during the 1976-77 academic year.&#13;
University spokesmen said the&#13;
series is d~signed for young&#13;
persons and their parents and&#13;
music students and their&#13;
teachers.&#13;
The series, nominally priced,&#13;
will begin ·with a program by&#13;
violinist Eugene Fodor, artist-inresidence&#13;
at Parkside, with&#13;
pianist Stephen Swedish,&#13;
associate professor of music, at&#13;
10:30a.m. on Nov. 26 ( the Friday&#13;
during the Thanksgiving school&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. -pour point)&#13;
• saves 011 RICK BENTSON,&#13;
639-4067&#13;
recess).&#13;
Timothy Bell, assistant professor&#13;
of music, will present the second&#13;
concert with the award-winning&#13;
Parkside Jazz Ensemble I, of&#13;
which he is the director, at 2 p.m.&#13;
on Saturday, Feb. 26, and pianist&#13;
Swedish, a concert artist in his&#13;
own right with performance&#13;
credits throughout the United&#13;
States and in Europe, will pre&amp;ent&#13;
the final program at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday~ April 16.&#13;
All performances will be in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Tickets are $1 per .concert for&#13;
students; $2 per concert for&#13;
adults, tax included, and can be&#13;
obtained by writing Young&#13;
Persons Concert Series,&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
Kenosha WI. 53140.&#13;
Tickets can be purchased for the&#13;
entire series or for individual&#13;
programs. Additional concert&#13;
information can be obtained by&#13;
calling 553-2i88. &#13;
0:0"£0:' 0 Ie&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November S, 1171 5&#13;
Dizzy excites crowd&#13;
A Bit of Warmth&#13;
Wendy MlUer-8eptember 23rd&#13;
It&#13;
• Salaried position demanding at least 20~ hours a week&#13;
• Experience in journalism necessary&#13;
• Applic':1nts will be advised of interview time and place&#13;
by Wendy MlUer&#13;
Tuesday night, October 26th, Dizzy Gillespie shared his music and&#13;
himself with the many people who gathered to see him here at&#13;
Parkside. Dizzy, one of the main me.n responsible for Bebop music.&#13;
seems to be a natural comedian. He had the audience laughing many&#13;
times, sometimes -by just rolling his eyes. The person next to me&#13;
remarked, "Sure does have a good.time; doesn't he?" He does. That is&#13;
why it is so easy for the audience to have a good time. He began the&#13;
evening somewhat humorously, but very sincerely, "We're all&#13;
branches of one tree, leaves of one branch, and fruit there of."&#13;
He shared the stage well with his band, which consisted of bassistBenjamin&#13;
Franklin Brown, drummer-Mickey Raker, and guitaristRodney&#13;
Jones. Rodney has only been with the band for five months. He&#13;
IS twenty years old and very impressive. In a piece entiUe Ole' he had&#13;
the audience transfixed. -Dizzyalso seemed to enjoy it but Dizzy seems&#13;
to enjoy everything.&#13;
Dizzy's solos were definitely distinctive. They came from deep&#13;
within himself and reached out to this spellbound audience. WhUe&#13;
packing after the concert he said, "It is up to the artist to penetrate&#13;
and be something to the people out there. It's your duty and if you don't&#13;
get to them, you are derelict in your duty, and I don't want to be&#13;
in my duty." He was speaking in reference to his part in tbe Bahai&#13;
faith.&#13;
Dizzy incorporates Mrican, Cuban, and Oriental styles into his&#13;
music. But that's not all that makes it so unique. He plays an upswept&#13;
trumpet that enables him to hear more of what he is playing. He has&#13;
been playing it that way for about twenty years, since his conventional&#13;
horn was bent at a party. .&#13;
At one point during the conceri he hall the audience singing. During&#13;
another tune he had people clapping alternately to his playing. During&#13;
a fast blues tune, entitled The Champ, he did some scat singing, sort of&#13;
jumbled almost nonsensical words that movewith the music. The&#13;
audience responded favorably to his vocals. When he asked if he&#13;
should do Sail Peanuts, he was greeted with enthusiastic en.&#13;
couragements from the crowd. Salt Peanuts is obviously one of his&#13;
more famous vocal tunes. The audience was also enthused when he&#13;
announced what they were going to do , A Night in Tunesia, which is&#13;
practically a classic. They did a tune, Land of the Living Dead, from&#13;
one of their recent albums, Bahia. He said that the album is, "an&#13;
album destined to become the 'greatest secrets in show business". I&#13;
doubt it. If you were there, you know why. If you weren't there, you&#13;
. can buy the album and hear part of what you missed.&#13;
Dizzy turned fifty-eight on October twenty-first. On October twentysixth,&#13;
he and his band left Parkside and headed for Tuscon. I don't&#13;
know how he stays so young. Maybe it's the way he lives. He does live&#13;
and his music always Will,&#13;
I was a pebble tumbling through&#13;
cloudy darkness,&#13;
You were the sun, warming me&#13;
through the cool waters.&#13;
Leading me with your rays,&#13;
together we danced to the rhythm&#13;
of the waves.&#13;
You've got it now&#13;
She's got it,. he's got it&#13;
We've aU got it&#13;
It's in the music&#13;
Can you feel it?&#13;
Let it take you&#13;
Teach you&#13;
Make you&#13;
Can you feel it?&#13;
Believe it&#13;
And if you loose it&#13;
Find it soon&#13;
Find it, keep it&#13;
Lose itt use it&#13;
It's in the music.&#13;
Call Don Kopriva for further detail. 553.2404&#13;
Every Wednesday, Thursday and Friday during the noon hours in Union Square. and on a TV Monitor in&#13;
Main Placs, the PAS. Video Committee will show the&#13;
.0&#13;
Without a warning, rain drops&#13;
dappled the waters surface&#13;
The rhythm had been broken&#13;
You reached out for me,&#13;
but I could not see,&#13;
I've lost you to the horizon.&#13;
Kathy Andersen&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted for&#13;
Ranger Editor for&#13;
Spring Semester&#13;
RESUMES MUST BE TURNED IN TO&#13;
DON KOPRIVA,&#13;
288 Tallent Hall by Nov. 11th&#13;
"&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
and&#13;
Dizzy excites. crowd&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
Tuesday night, October 26th, Dizzy Gillespie shared his music and&#13;
himself with the many people who gathered to see him here at&#13;
Parkside. Dizzy, one of the main men responsible for 1*bop music,&#13;
see.ms to be a natural comedian. He had the audience laughing many&#13;
times, sometimes ,by just rolling his eyes. The person next to me&#13;
remarked, "Sure does have a good time; doesn't he?" He does. That is&#13;
· why it is so easy for the audience to have a good time. He began the&#13;
evening somewhat humorously, but very sincerely, "We're all&#13;
branches of one tree, leaves of one branch, and fruit there of."&#13;
He shared the stage well with his band, which consisted of bassistBenjamin&#13;
Franklin Brown, drummer-Mickey Roker, and guitaristRodney&#13;
Jones. Rodney has only been with the band for five months. He&#13;
ls twenty years old and very impressive. In a piece entitle Ole' he had&#13;
the audience transfixed. Dizzy also seemed to enjoy it but Dizzy seems&#13;
to enjoy everything.&#13;
Dizzy's solos were definitely distinctive. They came from deep&#13;
within himself and reached out to this spellbound audience. While&#13;
packing after the concert he said, "It is up to the artist to penetrate&#13;
and be something to the people out there. It's your duty and if you don't&#13;
get to them, you are derelict in your duty, and I don't want to be&#13;
in my duty." He was speaking il_l reference to his part in the Bahai&#13;
faith.&#13;
Dizzy incorporates African, Cuban, and Oriental styles into his&#13;
music. But that's not all that makes it so unique. He plays an upswept&#13;
trumpet that enables him to hear more of what he is playing. He has&#13;
been playing it that way for about twenty years, since his conventional&#13;
horn was bent at a party. ·&#13;
At one point during the concert he had the audience singing. During&#13;
another tune he had people clapping alternately to his playing. During&#13;
a fast blues tune, entitled The Chall!P, he did some scat singin_g, sort of&#13;
jumbled almost nonsensical words that move ·with the music. The&#13;
audience responded favorably to his vocals. When he asked if he&#13;
should do Salt Peanuts, he was greeted with enthusiastic encouragements&#13;
from the crowd. Salt Peanuts is obviously one of his&#13;
more famous vocal tunes. The audience was also enthused when he&#13;
announcedwhatthey were going to do , A Night in Tunesia, which is&#13;
practically a classic. They did a tune, Land of the Living Dead, from&#13;
one of their recent albums, Bahia. He said that the album is, "an&#13;
album destined to become the ·greatest secrets in show business". I&#13;
doubt it. If you were there, you know why. if you weren't there, you&#13;
, can buy the album and hear part of what you missed.&#13;
Dizzy turned fifty-eight on October twenty-first. On October twentysixth,&#13;
he and his band left Parkside and headed for Tuscon. I don't&#13;
know how he stays so young. Maybe it's the way he lives. He does live&#13;
and his music always will,&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976 5&#13;
-11'4atje&#13;
A Bit of Warmth&#13;
I was a pebble tumbling through&#13;
cloudy darkness,&#13;
You were the sun, warming me&#13;
through the cool waters.&#13;
Leading me with your rays,&#13;
together we danced to the rhythm&#13;
of the waves.&#13;
Without a warning, rain drops&#13;
dappled the waters surface&#13;
The rhythm had been broken&#13;
You reached out for me,&#13;
but I could not see,&#13;
I've lost you to the horizon.&#13;
Kathy Andersen&#13;
Wendy Miller-8eptember 23rd&#13;
It&#13;
You've got it now&#13;
She's got it, he's got it&#13;
We've all got it&#13;
It's in the music&#13;
Can you feel it?&#13;
Let it take you&#13;
Teach you&#13;
Make you&#13;
Can you feel it?&#13;
Believe it&#13;
And if you loose it&#13;
Find it soon&#13;
Find it, keep it&#13;
Lose it, use it&#13;
It's in the music .&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted for&#13;
Ranger Editor foi&#13;
Spring Semester&#13;
RESUMES MUST BE TURNED IN TO&#13;
DON KOPRIVA,&#13;
288 Tallent Hall by ov. 11th&#13;
• Salaried position demanding at least 20-30 hours a week&#13;
• Experience in journalism necessary&#13;
• Applicants will be advised of interview time and place&#13;
Call Don Kopriva for further details 553-2404&#13;
Thursday and Friday during the noon hours in Union Square. and&#13;
Main Place. the P.A.B. Video Committee will show the&#13;
" .0&#13;
0&#13;
0 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November~3, 1976&#13;
Career------&#13;
-continued from pg. 1&#13;
workers. 11million, professional and teclmical workers· 9 mI11ion,&#13;
operatives - 6million, managers and admimistrators - 5 million, crafts&#13;
and kindred workers - 5 million, salesworkers- 3 million, non-farm&#13;
, laborers -1 million, farm workerll -less than 1million,&#13;
Workers with education will be in greater demand than workers&#13;
without education because in general jobs will 'continue to become&#13;
more complex and employment gr~ in areas. requiring the most&#13;
education will continue to have the higbest growth rate,&#13;
The National Education Association reports that the numher of&#13;
people graduating from college with teaching certification exceeds the&#13;
number of available teaching jobs by 90,950,Of the potential teachers&#13;
graduating in 1974, 47,9 percent are employed 85' teachers: Twelve&#13;
years ago this percentage was 74,4,&#13;
Areas in education where the field is least crowded are&#13;
mathematics, natural and physical sciences, distributive education,&#13;
industrial arts and agriculture, The most competitive areas are :&#13;
social studies, physical and health education, art and foreign&#13;
Ie C!&amp;lbt&#13;
*l&gt;tue et B&gt;b Oppt&#13;
featuring:&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favorties said&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
'Periodicals&#13;
cancelled&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 c.m. - .4 p.m.&#13;
toccred in Union Btzcrre&#13;
language, Labor Market Analysts from Wisconsin Job Service Offices&#13;
in Racine and Kenosha were contacted for information about the local&#13;
job markets, "&#13;
Paul P'\lIshorn from the Racine Job Service stated that presently&#13;
Racine has one of the highest unemployment rates for a major&#13;
manufacturing city, He said that industrial engineers, accountants,&#13;
computer programmers, insurance salespeople and clerical workers&#13;
are in the greatest demand' in Racine County, while liberal arts&#13;
majors, social workers and teachers are the most difficult&#13;
'professionals to place, Penshorn noted that accountants with a great&#13;
deal of experience were having trouble finding jobs because employers&#13;
are seeking accountants with 1 to 2'h years of experience who&#13;
can be hired for less money,&#13;
Ken Neil, the Kenosha Job Service Labor Market Analyst, stated&#13;
that students majoring in generalliheral arts subjects were as likely&#13;
to find a job with one major as with another since employers hiring&#13;
them in trainee positions were looking for personal characteristics&#13;
such as good attitudes, general intelligence, adaptability and evidence&#13;
of initiative rather than a specific major or an exceptionally high'&#13;
grade point average,&#13;
According to Neil, the single most important faelor to a liberal arts&#13;
graduate in finding a job is the selection of an occupational goal, Neil&#13;
finds in Kenosha that business majors are among the easiest college&#13;
graduates to place in jobs especially those with concentrations in&#13;
accounting or computers '&#13;
The information in this article represents only a small proportion of&#13;
material available in employment trends, Projection breakdowns for&#13;
some specific jobs-are given in the bulletin board display on the first&#13;
floor of Classroom Building, The Career Resource Center in 107&#13;
Tallent Hall contains more data on this subject including information&#13;
estimating the employment needs of e~ch state,&#13;
by Unda Knudtson&#13;
Due to the rising cost of&#13;
-periodical subscriptions, a&#13;
limited budget, and plans by&#13;
Library administrators to revise&#13;
their lists of periodicals to meet&#13;
current needs at Parkside ,&#13;
several periodical subscriptions&#13;
are slated to be cancelled from&#13;
Parkside's collection,&#13;
A list of these periodiCll1s is&#13;
being sent to all faculty members&#13;
for final review, Two copies of the&#13;
list will also be available to&#13;
students for review, Once copy&#13;
Why' do some people think&#13;
Bud..is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
When you say Budweiser ..,'you've said it all!&#13;
~ ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC .• ST. LOUIS&#13;
E.F.. Madrigrano&#13;
will be available for inspection at&#13;
the lnfonnation Desk and the&#13;
other copy will be posted on the&#13;
bulletin board just inside the&#13;
Library doors, I&#13;
This list is the result of the&#13;
coordination of previous faculty&#13;
input by the Library. It was&#13;
designed to insure that&#13;
, periodicals supplemental to&#13;
Parkside courses as well as some&#13;
other top periodicals in the&#13;
adademic fields if interest to&#13;
Parkside students would not be&#13;
cancelled,&#13;
Special&#13;
course&#13;
, Y&#13;
offered&#13;
,&#13;
A special course for parents of&#13;
children wi th learning&#13;
disabilities ,will 'be offered&#13;
Parkside on Tuesdays from 7: 30&#13;
to 9:30 p.rn. beginning Nov. 2 and&#13;
continuing through Dec, 7 in&#13;
Classroom Bldg, Room 31L&#13;
Registrations will be taken at&#13;
the first class meeting, Fees are&#13;
$36,25 for those laking the course&#13;
for one credit; $25 for those attentling&#13;
in a no-credit audit basis,&#13;
-, Diane German, director of&#13;
Parkside's learning disabilities&#13;
program said that the course is&#13;
designed to help parents ,of&#13;
children with learning&#13;
disabilities understand and cope&#13;
with the particular problems&#13;
'their children Iaee in trying to&#13;
realize their academic potential.&#13;
Discussions will center arouod&#13;
characteristics, behavior,&#13;
diagnosis and remediation of&#13;
children wi th learning&#13;
disabilities,&#13;
German will be the principal&#13;
instructor for the classes,&#13;
assisted 'by students training for&#13;
learning disabilities certification,&#13;
"June Reinert, instructor in&#13;
learning disabilities, will lead a&#13;
special session on behavioral&#13;
problems of learning tlisabled&#13;
children,&#13;
Additional information on the&#13;
program is available from&#13;
Parkside's Education Division&#13;
.Office,&#13;
Dancers-----&#13;
~ontlnued from pg. 1&#13;
, others from 2 to 3 p.m, They will&#13;
hold a demonstration and improvisational&#13;
session for area&#13;
high school students, Both&#13;
programs will be held in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater,&#13;
Information is available from the&#13;
Parkside Admissions Office,&#13;
The Utah Dance Theater,&#13;
fonned in 1966with a grant from&#13;
the Rockefeller Foundation and&#13;
, the cooperation of the University&#13;
of Utah, is dedic~ted to the&#13;
modern idiom in dance which&#13;
developed as a reaction to the&#13;
more confining movement of&#13;
classical ballet. Along with jazz,&#13;
modern dance is considered one&#13;
of two original American performing&#13;
art forms,&#13;
The company has a repertory&#13;
of 33 works by 17 choreographers&#13;
spanning the entire' range of&#13;
modern dance styles from&#13;
classics of modern dance to&#13;
experimental works including&#13;
jazz. drama, movement and&#13;
humor,&#13;
Their 'Parkside program will&#13;
include three major production&#13;
numbers, separated by two in-,&#13;
termissions: Jose Limon's&#13;
classic "There is a Time," first&#13;
choreographed in 1957for his own&#13;
company, Lynne Wimmer's "My&#13;
Brother's Keeper," a dance&#13;
based on John Steinbeck's Of&#13;
Mice and Men, and contemporary&#13;
choreographer Lar&#13;
Lubovitch's "Session."&#13;
Remaining programs this&#13;
semester in the Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series are Chicago's&#13;
Second City improvisational&#13;
theater company on Nov, 19 and&#13;
coloratura soprano Roberta&#13;
Peters on Dec, 9,&#13;
,Accent on Enrichment&#13;
presents&#13;
UTAH REPERTORY&#13;
DANCE THEATER&#13;
III . mpresSlve ••• one of the best disciplined&#13;
troupes in the country." '&#13;
-- Clive Barnes. New York Times&#13;
Sp.rn. TONIGHT&#13;
COMM ARTS THEA:TER&#13;
Tickets at the door&#13;
$4.50 UW-P students.$5 Others&#13;
•&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November-: 3, 1976&#13;
Career------ continued from pg. 1&#13;
workers - 11 million, professional and technical workers - 9 million,&#13;
operatives - 6 million, managers and admimistrators - 5 million, crafts&#13;
and kindred ~orkers - 5 million, salesworkers- 3 million, non-farm&#13;
laborers -1 million, farm workers -less than 1 million.&#13;
Workers with education will be in greater demand than workers&#13;
without education because in general jobs will ·continue to become&#13;
more complex and employment gro\ith in areas requiring the most&#13;
education will continue to have the highest growth rate.&#13;
The ·National Education Association reports that the number of&#13;
people graduating from college with teaching certification exceeds the&#13;
number of available teaching jobs by 90,950. Of the potential teachers&#13;
graduating in 1974, 47 .9 percent are employed as teachers: Twelve&#13;
years ago this percentage was 74.4.&#13;
Areas in education where the field is least crowded are&#13;
mathematics, natural and physical sciences, distributive education,&#13;
industrial arts and agriculture. The most competitive areas are :&#13;
social studies, physical and health education, art and · foreign&#13;
featuring:_&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut fovorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
OPEN :&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 o.m. - .C p.m.&#13;
Loco.ted in Union Sizo.rre&#13;
language. Labor Market Analysts from Wisconsin Job Service Offices&#13;
in Racine and Kenosha were contacted for information about the local&#13;
job markets. . ·&#13;
Paul P~nshorn from the Racine Job Service stated that presently&#13;
Raci:_ne has one of the highest unemployment rates for a major&#13;
manufacturing city. He said that industrial engineers, accountants,&#13;
computer programmers, insurance salespeople and clerical wo::-kc:rs&#13;
are in the greatest demand· in Racine County, while liberal arts&#13;
majors, social workers and teachers . are the most difficult&#13;
professionals to place. Penshorn noted that accountants with a great&#13;
deal of experience were having trouble finding jobs because employers&#13;
are seeking accountants with 1 to 2½ years of experience who&#13;
can be hired for less money.&#13;
.l{en Neil, the Kenosha Job Service Labor Market Analyst, stated&#13;
that students majoring in general liberal arts subjects were as likely&#13;
to find a job with one major as with another since employers hiring&#13;
them in trainee positions were looking for personal characteristics&#13;
such as good attitudes, general intelligence, adaptability and evidence&#13;
of initiative rather than a specific major or an exceptiqnally high.&#13;
grade point average.&#13;
According to Neil, the single most important factor to a liberal arts&#13;
graduate in finding a job is the selection of an occupational goal. Neil&#13;
finds in Kenosha that business majors are among the easiest college&#13;
graduates to place in jobs especially those with concentrations in&#13;
accounting or computers .&#13;
The information in this article represents orJy a small proportion of&#13;
material available in employment trends. Projection breakdowns for&#13;
some specific jobs are given in the bulletin board display on the first&#13;
floor of Classroom Building. The Career Resource Center in 107&#13;
Tallent Hall contains more data on this subject including information&#13;
estimating the employment needs of each state.&#13;
· Periodicals&#13;
cancelled·&#13;
by Unda Knudtson&#13;
Due to the rising cost of&#13;
-periodical subscriptions, a&#13;
limited budget, and plans by&#13;
Library administrators to revise&#13;
their lists of periodicals to meet&#13;
current needs at Par.kside,&#13;
several periodical subscription,s&#13;
are slated to be cancelled from&#13;
Parkside 's collection.&#13;
A list of these periodicals is&#13;
being sent to all faculty members&#13;
for final review. Two copies of the&#13;
list will also be available to&#13;
students for review. Once copy&#13;
will be available for inspection at&#13;
the Information Desk and the&#13;
other copy wili be posteq on the&#13;
bulletin board just inside the&#13;
Library doors.&#13;
This list is the result of the&#13;
coordination of previous faculty&#13;
input by the Library. It was&#13;
designed to insure that&#13;
. periodicals supplemental to&#13;
Parkside courses as well as some&#13;
other top periodicals in the&#13;
adademic fields if interest to&#13;
Parkside students would not be&#13;
cancelled.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
Special&#13;
course • I&#13;
offered&#13;
A special course for parents of&#13;
children with learning&#13;
disabilities .will 'be offered&#13;
Parkside on Tuesdays from 7: 30&#13;
to 9:30 p.m. beginning Nov. 2 and&#13;
continuing through Dec. 7 in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 311.&#13;
Registrations will be taken at&#13;
the first class meeting. Fee~ are&#13;
$36.25 for those taking the course&#13;
for one credit; $25 for" those attending&#13;
in a no-credit audit basis.&#13;
Diane German, director of&#13;
Parkside's learning disabilities ·&#13;
program said that the course is&#13;
designed to help parents ·of&#13;
children with learning&#13;
disabilities understand and cope&#13;
with the particular problems&#13;
their children face in trying to&#13;
realize their academic potential.&#13;
Discussions will center around&#13;
charact eristics, behavior,&#13;
diagnosis and remediation of&#13;
children with learning&#13;
disabilities.&#13;
German will be the principal&#13;
instructor for the classes,&#13;
assisted 'by students training for&#13;
learning disabilities certification.&#13;
June Reinert, instructor in&#13;
learning disabilities, will lead a&#13;
special session on behavioral&#13;
problems of learning disabled&#13;
children.&#13;
Additional information on the&#13;
program is available from&#13;
Parkside's Education Division&#13;
Office.&#13;
-&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Bude is sort of special?&#13;
Dancers---- cont inued from pg. 1&#13;
others from 2 to 3 p.m. They will&#13;
hold a demonstration and improvisational&#13;
session for area&#13;
high school students. Both&#13;
programs will be held in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Information is available from the&#13;
Parkside Admissions Office.&#13;
modern dance styles from&#13;
classics of modern dance to&#13;
experimental works including&#13;
jazz, drama, movement and&#13;
humor.&#13;
·-&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
~&#13;
When you say Budweiser®, you've said it all. ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS&#13;
E.F '1adrigrano&#13;
The Utah Dance Theater,&#13;
formed in 1966 with a grant from&#13;
the Rockefeller Foundation and&#13;
. the cooperation of the University&#13;
of Utah, is dedic£ted to the&#13;
modern idiom in dance which&#13;
developed as a reaction to the&#13;
more confining movement of&#13;
classical ballet. Along with jazz,&#13;
modern dance is considered one&#13;
of two original American performing&#13;
art forms.&#13;
The company has a repertory&#13;
of 33 works by 17 choreographers&#13;
spanning the entire· range of&#13;
Their ·Parkside program will&#13;
include three major production&#13;
numbers, separated by two in- ·&#13;
termissions: Jose Limon's&#13;
classic "There is a Time," first&#13;
choreographed in 1957 for his own&#13;
company, Lynne Wimmer's "My&#13;
Brother's Keeper," a dance&#13;
based on John Steinbeck's Of&#13;
Mice and Men, and contemporary&#13;
choreographer Lar&#13;
Lubovitch's "Session."&#13;
Rema ining programs this&#13;
semester in the Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Series are Chicago's&#13;
Second City improvisational&#13;
theater company on Nov. 19 and&#13;
coloratura soprano Roberta&#13;
Peters on Dec. 9.&#13;
-Accent on 'Enrichment&#13;
presents&#13;
UTAH REPERTORY&#13;
DANCE TREATER&#13;
11 lmpressive •• • one o f the ·bes~ d i sc i p li ned&#13;
t roupes in t h~ coun t ry.11&#13;
-- Clive Ba rnes , New York T imes&#13;
8p.m. TONIGHT ·&#13;
COMM ARTS THEA:TER&#13;
Tickets at the door&#13;
$4.50 UW-P students,$5 Others &#13;
Worksheets&#13;
available&#13;
C a r e erE x p lor a t ion&#13;
Worksheets are now available in&#13;
the Career Resource Center for&#13;
students who 1wish to examine&#13;
their career interests, values,&#13;
preferred life styles, personality,&#13;
life goals, strengths and&#13;
weaknesses, in order to establish&#13;
career goals.&#13;
No appointment is necessary.&#13;
Interested students can pick up&#13;
Unit-I of the Career Exploration&#13;
Packet at 107 Tallent Hall or at&#13;
the Career Information Table on.&#13;
Tuesdays in the LLC. Concourse&#13;
between 9:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.&#13;
-------- I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I&#13;
E&#13;
I&#13;
t t&#13;
, I&#13;
, I&#13;
t&#13;
V&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I&#13;
E&#13;
I&#13;
I I&#13;
, II&#13;
I&#13;
, t&#13;
, N&#13;
,&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I ~ t&#13;
,&#13;
T&#13;
I&#13;
t I&#13;
t ,&#13;
I t&#13;
I&#13;
S&#13;
,&#13;
I t&#13;
t t&#13;
L ~ t I&#13;
,&#13;
WANTED: A female Siamese kitten between&#13;
S. \I weeks old. Would be assured of having&#13;
an excellent home. with lots of love, care,&#13;
and attention. Please call 6:)7·1521. Wanted&#13;
ee.soce as possible.&#13;
Nt'e(l ride from south side of Milwaukee. Will&#13;
Pay for '12 of gas. Call 762·6231- Ask for Carol.&#13;
'"4 PONTIAC SPRING a-eeeee Metallic&#13;
Blue, red buckets. Rally wheels, AM-FM,&#13;
FM stereo. a-Track 52195. 634·G876.&#13;
WILL 00 any kind of typing at reasonable&#13;
rates. For information. call 652-3373.&#13;
WANTED; Sports writer for RANGER that&#13;
is lalented, gOOd in grammar, and most of all&#13;
~pendable. See Jean Tenuta In the&#13;
RANGER office, WLLC 0194.&#13;
YAN. E. THOMPSON Free Lance&#13;
Photography, Weddings and candid perIralts.&#13;
Phone 652-8862.&#13;
FOR SALE; Portable Stereo with Garrard&#13;
turnf&amp;ble. Asking SSG. Call 634·5305 after&#13;
sa:SJICOlI ""&#13;
11IE PARKSIDE RANGER No... mber S, 1m 7&#13;
Parkside. plllnne~'----------;---&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
gradually there would be an intrusion on this. I wanted to keep it&#13;
always natural because so many campuses look like manicured lawns.&#13;
This is very important. This prairie is a very delicate ecology. You&#13;
know these grasses and weeds that grow here are really very&#13;
beautiful. .&#13;
RANGER: Do you feel your work and program at Lake County&#13;
Community College in Grayslake, lllinois is much more in line with&#13;
what happened here after it became apparent this campus stopped&#13;
growing in student population and new buildings?&#13;
OBATA: No, I think (Parkside) was designed so it couid be a five&#13;
thousand student campus or it could potentially be a 20,000 student&#13;
campus. Lake County was a bit smaller program. Its not as ambitious&#13;
a program. That's more a junior college type of program where&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 3&#13;
Concert, Barry Drake, at 2:30 in Union Square.&#13;
PSGA Senate Meeting 8 p.m, in Union 104.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series: the Utah Repertory Dance Theater at 8&#13;
p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 4&#13;
Society of Physics Students meets at 2: 30p.m. in GR 230.&#13;
Movie, "~ASH," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $l.&#13;
Magic Visage Organization presents its first Poetry-Prose Reading 8 ~ -,&#13;
p.m. in the 2nd floor Overlook Lounge, UW-P Library. No admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 5&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12p.m. in WLLC 295and at&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233. Everybody is welcome. For further information&#13;
contact Harvey Hedden or Diane Carlson, MWF, 10 a.m. to ip.m. in&#13;
WLLC 295.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Women's swimming, UW-P vs. UW- Whitewater, at 4p.m. in the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Concert, Tom Chapin performs at 8 p.m. in the Union Theatre. Admission&#13;
is $2.50 for students, $3 for others.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 6&#13;
Men's cross country meet, the USTFF Mid-America Championships,&#13;
at 10 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. at Parkside.&#13;
Soccer Club Dance begins at9 p.rn. in Union Square.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 7&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1to 6p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "MASH," plays at 7:30p.m. in the Union Theatre. Admission is&#13;
$1.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 9 .&#13;
Movie, "The Passenger," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $l.&#13;
Women's volleyball, UW-P, Chicago State, Lewis College, and Carthage&#13;
College competing at 6 p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Bldg:&#13;
Faculty Recital: Carol Irwin, mezzo soprano, and William Robinson,&#13;
piano at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
All events must be submitted to Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
before publication.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sandllich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 WashingtonAle. 6M-2i7S&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%)' • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,ooo-mlle 011change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60"F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 RACINE&#13;
yo~rAMSIOILdea~r YELLOW 'PAGES&#13;
I&#13;
Parkside could eventually have graduate schools. This • much deeper&#13;
facilities. That comes with supply and demand really, I think we are&#13;
still ill a kind of depressed period as far as construction but that's&#13;
because there has been an over supply of buildings.&#13;
RANGER: Are you so insulated in running such a big firm that you&#13;
cannot achieve artistic satisfaction in architecture and are you content?&#13;
OBATA: I have structured IllY office in such a way that I actually&#13;
design my buildings. That's very important to me or Iwon't have an&#13;
office. You are never content. You always want to improve on what&#13;
you do.&#13;
I&lt; video tape of Obata's address and the WLLC dedication ceremony&#13;
should be in the non-print area of the library this week.&#13;
Opentneeting---&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
could indeed hold an illegal meeting without being penalized. Al, an&#13;
example, each member of a five-member committee could make a&#13;
motion to continue a meeting in open session (a total of five motions).&#13;
and then vote against each of the five notions. In this way each of the&#13;
members has satisfied the requirement that he-she "make a motion to&#13;
prevent the violation from occurring," but now the members could&#13;
vote to go into closed session. They are all open for prosecution, but&#13;
there is no provison for penalizing them.&#13;
This reporter consulted the Attorney General's office for an opinion&#13;
of this interpretation. According to Robert S. Vergeront of the office,&#13;
"I don't think anybody is going to do something like that.,.it is&#13;
assumed that public officials are honest."&#13;
"They (the committee members) could be prosecuted and they&#13;
could raise that defense, but the making of tbe motion and the vote&#13;
would have to be in 'good faith' ." according to Vergeront, who added&#13;
that he thought an article of this type would only serve to show officials&#13;
how to get around the 18w. "I don't think people should be digging&#13;
around looking for possible loopholes," he said. \&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop Inl&#13;
shed e new Life on shoppng I&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
, From GocI's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
•&#13;
Professional Football Games&#13;
Shown On The&#13;
NEW&#13;
7 Foot Advent&#13;
Screen&#13;
Union Square&#13;
Sundays, noon - 6 p.m.&#13;
BEGINS NoY~7th&#13;
BEER, POCORN TOO!&#13;
Worksheets&#13;
available&#13;
Car·eer Exploration&#13;
Worksheets are now available in&#13;
the Career Resource Center for&#13;
students who , wish to examine&#13;
their career interests, values,&#13;
preferred life styles, personality,&#13;
life goals, strengths and&#13;
weaknesses, in order to establish&#13;
career goals,&#13;
No appointment is necessary,&#13;
Interested students can pick up&#13;
Unit -1 of the Career Exploration&#13;
Packet at 107 Tallent Hall or at&#13;
the Career Information Table on,&#13;
Tuesdays in the LLC_ Concourse&#13;
between 9:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.&#13;
.r------7&#13;
t t&#13;
t E t f . t&#13;
t t ·t t&#13;
t t&#13;
, V t : . :&#13;
t t&#13;
, E t t t&#13;
t r&#13;
t ~ t&#13;
, N , t t&#13;
t t&#13;
t t&#13;
, T -&#13;
, t . t&#13;
t t&#13;
t t&#13;
t s t t t&#13;
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t t&#13;
WANTED: A female Siamese kitten betwe'en&#13;
5 • 9 weeks old. Would be assured of having&#13;
an excellent home, with lots of love, care,&#13;
and attention. Please call 637-1521 . Wanted&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
Need ride from south side of Milwaukee. Will&#13;
Pay for 11, of gas. Call 762-6231 . Ask for Carol.&#13;
1974 PONTIAC SPRING 3-speed Metallic&#13;
Blue, red buckets, Rally wheels, AM-FM,&#13;
FM stereo, 8-Track $2195. 634-0876.&#13;
WILL DO any kind of typing at reasonable&#13;
rates. For information. call 652-3373.&#13;
WANTED: Sports writer for RANGER that&#13;
is talented, good in grammar, and most of all&#13;
dependable. See Jean Tenuta in the&#13;
RANGER office, WLLC D194.&#13;
VAN . E. THOMPSON Free Lance&#13;
PhotQQraphy, weddings and candid portraits.&#13;
Phone 652-8862.&#13;
FOR SALE : Portable Stereo with Garrard&#13;
turntable. Asking sso. Cail 634-5305 after&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976 7&#13;
Parkside. planne-P------- continued from pg. 1&#13;
gradually there would be an intrusion on this. I wanted to keep it&#13;
always natural because so many campuses look like manicured lawns.&#13;
This is very important. This prairie is a very delicate ecology. You&#13;
know these grasses and weeds that grow here are really very&#13;
beautiful.&#13;
RANGER: Do you feel your wqrk and program at Lake County&#13;
Community College in Grayslake, Illinois is much more in line with&#13;
what happened here after it became apparent this campus stopped&#13;
growing in student population and new buildings?&#13;
OBATA: No, I think (Parkside) was designed so it could be a five&#13;
thousand student campus or it could potentially be a 20,000 student&#13;
campus. Lake County was a bit smaller program. Its not as ambitious&#13;
a program. That's more a junior college type of program where&#13;
Wednesday,Nov.3&#13;
Concert, Barry Drake, at 2:30 in Union Square.&#13;
PSGA Senate Meeting 8 p.m. in Union 104.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment Series: the Utah Repertory Dance Theater at 8&#13;
p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 4&#13;
Society of Physics Students meets at 2: 30 p.m. in GR 230.&#13;
Movie, "¥ASH," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union ~eatre.&#13;
Admission is $1. ·&#13;
M~ic Visa~~ Organizatio_n presents its first Poetry-Prose Reading 8&#13;
p.m. in the 2nd floor Overlook Lounge, UW-P Library. No admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 5&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12 p.m. in WLLC 295 and at&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233. Everybody is welcome. For further information&#13;
contact Harvey Hedden or Diane Carlson, MWF, 10 a.m. to i p.m. in&#13;
WLLC 295.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Women's swimming, UW-P vs. UW- Whitewater, at 4 p.m. in the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Concert, Tom Chapin performs at 8 p.m. in the Union T~atre. Admission&#13;
is $2.50 for students, $3 for others.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 6&#13;
Men's cross country meet, the USTFF Mid-America Championships,&#13;
at 10 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. at Parkside.&#13;
Soccer Club Dance begins at 9 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 7&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "MASH," plays at 7:30p.m. in the Union Theatre. Admission is&#13;
$1.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 9 .&#13;
Movie, "The Passenger," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
Women's volleyball, UW-P, Chicago State, Lewis College, and Carthage&#13;
College competing at 6 p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Bldg~&#13;
Faculty Recital: Carol Irwin, mezzo soprano, and William Robinson,&#13;
piano at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
All events must be submitted to Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
before publication.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sand11ich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /We. 634-2373&#13;
• saves gas (up to 25%) ' • Saves wear&#13;
• saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60of. pour point)&#13;
• saves oil RACINE&#13;
yo~rAMSIOILdea~er , YELLOW ' PAGES&#13;
•&#13;
Parkside could eventually have graduate schools. This ll much deeper&#13;
facilities. That comes with supply and demand really, I think we are&#13;
still ii'\ a kind of depressed period as far as construction but that's&#13;
because there has been an over supply of buildings.&#13;
RANGER: Are you so insulated in running such a big firm that you&#13;
cannot achieve artistic satisfaction in architecture and are you content?&#13;
&#13;
OBATA: I have structured ll}Y office in such a way that I actually&#13;
design my buildings. That's very important to me or I won't have an&#13;
office. You are never content. You always want to improve on what&#13;
you do.&#13;
Ir. video tape of Obata's address and the WLLC dedication ceremony&#13;
should be in the non-print area of the library this week. ·&#13;
Open tneeting---&#13;
continued from pg 1&#13;
could indeed hold an illegal meeting without being penalized. N. an&#13;
example, each mt.mber of a five-member corrunittee could make a&#13;
motion to continue a meeting in open session (a total of five motions).&#13;
and then vote against each of the five notions. In this way each of the&#13;
members has satisfied the requirement that he-she "make a motion to&#13;
prevent the violation from occurring," but now the members could&#13;
vote to go into closed session. They are all open for prosecution, but&#13;
there is no provison for penalizing them.&#13;
This reporter consulted the Attorney General's office for an opinion&#13;
of this inierpretation. According to Robert S, Vergeront of the office,&#13;
"I don't think anybody is going to do something like that . ..it is&#13;
assumed that public officials are honest."&#13;
"They (the committee members) could be prosecuted and they&#13;
could raise that defense, but the making of the motion and the vote&#13;
would have to be in 'good faith'," according to Vergeront, who added&#13;
that he thought an article of this type would only serve to show officials&#13;
how to get around the law. " I don't think people should be digging&#13;
around looking for possible loopholes," he said.&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SCJUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop 111 I&#13;
shed e new Life on shoppngl&#13;
.,H777~MA °'~/&#13;
• Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
Professional Football Games&#13;
Shown· On The&#13;
NEW&#13;
7 Foot Advent&#13;
Screen&#13;
Union Square&#13;
Sundays, noon - 6 p.m.&#13;
BEGINS Nov.· 7th&#13;
BEER, POCORN TOO! &#13;
8 THE PARKSlDE RANGER November 3, 1976&#13;
One sweet Dream&#13;
~!~~&#13;
·=I!t~~ / ,,'.II&#13;
• I'· ·1: .• .~ ~I• • 1:tt.'I -, • .~-- .&#13;
• •&#13;
• This Coupon is •&#13;
• worth 50c on all •&#13;
• items listed below. •&#13;
• Good thru October •&#13;
• only! One Coupon •&#13;
• per customer per .•&#13;
• purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember, •&#13;
• we never close. •&#13;
~ ••••• IIII!••• '&#13;
Hey, scholars, look at&#13;
these gift selections.&#13;
Everything for Mind BBody&#13;
is right here at&#13;
two stores .. ', your&#13;
stores with atmosphere.&#13;
• Recorda • Tapn. ALL new&#13;
releases stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import albums. We're the&#13;
one store in town the t&#13;
carries foreign releases.&#13;
• Special order •. He rd-to-get&#13;
records and tapes with&#13;
guaranteed one day&#13;
delivery.&#13;
• 'ewelry. Hand crafted &amp;:&#13;
beautiful for style conscious&#13;
guys and gals.&#13;
• Tapntries. Mobiles. Incense&#13;
burners. Stash&#13;
boxes.&#13;
• Jncense. Sticks and cones&#13;
to tickle your nose.&#13;
• Pictures. Decoupage. Wall&#13;
hangings. Artists: Escher.&#13;
Pitre, Roger Dean,&#13;
Rosamond.&#13;
• UplinK to create any&#13;
atmosphere.&#13;
• Leather Goods. WalletsPouches&#13;
- Purses - BeltsHe&#13;
Is &amp;. accessories in&#13;
abundance, Beautifully&#13;
, handcrafted.&#13;
• Paraphernalia - Pipes,&#13;
Papers. Smoking Accessories.&#13;
Party necessities&#13;
from around the world.&#13;
• Waterbeds. We're&#13;
everything in were-beds.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
SOW Seventh Avenue&#13;
654·3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694·2404&#13;
Par~side hosts&#13;
championships&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
Parkside will be the site of the&#13;
USTFF Mid·America Championships&#13;
in which over. 500&#13;
runners will compete in ten&#13;
different races.&#13;
Included in this meet are the&#13;
Women's championships. Kim&#13;
Merritt, who was second in world&#13;
competition last October, place&#13;
third in this meet last year.&#13;
The Ra~er squad finished&#13;
their dual meet season with a :;':1&#13;
recoN! with wins over Marquette&#13;
and Loras over tbe weekend. This&#13;
is the fifth straight season that&#13;
Parkside had had only one dual&#13;
loss in cross country.&#13;
Ray Fredericksen led the&#13;
finishers with a time of 25&#13;
minutes. 44.2 seconds tbe second&#13;
fastest time ever on the Parkside&#13;
course.&#13;
Gary Priem was next with a&#13;
. second place at 26 minutes. 14&#13;
seconds. .&#13;
Parkside totalled 19 over&#13;
Marquette's 42 and 16over Loras'&#13;
46 Marquette's Dan Malloy was&#13;
th~Op Warrior in third and Dave&#13;
Smith was first for the Duhawks&#13;
in sixth place.&#13;
Other Parkside runners&#13;
were Jeff Miller, fourth; Mike&#13;
Rivers, fifth; Lee Allinger,&#13;
eighth; Greg Julien, ninth; Jim&#13;
Heiring, 11th; Bill Werve, 13th .&#13;
and John VanDen Brandt, 16th.&#13;
.On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plaza.&#13;
632-6151&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Soccer team&#13;
hosts meets&#13;
by Jean Tenuta it out of the net. The ball slipped&#13;
from his hands and an opposing&#13;
player was standing there, ready&#13;
to kick the ball in.&#13;
Parkside's lone goal was&#13;
scored by Chris Carter on a cross&#13;
from Mike Boyajian. Carter was&#13;
running full speed. then dove to&#13;
hit the ball "like a shot" into the&#13;
net, according to Henderwon,&#13;
"Western Michigan's goalie&#13;
was unbelieveilble.He-was an AllAmerican&#13;
last year and he showed&#13;
us why," said Henderson. "We&#13;
made 23 shots on goal and he&#13;
made 18 saves."&#13;
Western Michigan's coach was&#13;
impressed with Ranger steve&#13;
Sendelbach, stating: "he's the&#13;
finest I've seen all year."&#13;
"Our defense was super. Last&#13;
year, in a game like this, we&#13;
would have found some way to&#13;
lose, but we at least kept on the&#13;
same level and I think it's&#13;
significant that we can play&#13;
, under a pressure situation this&#13;
way." said Henderson. "I'm very&#13;
optimistic for the remaining&#13;
matches of the season."&#13;
Parkside's soccer squad hosts&#13;
UW-Plateville. Lakeland and Mt.&#13;
Scenario Friday and Saturday.&#13;
Tentative pairings for the&#13;
tourney are the No. 2 seeded&#13;
Rangers and No. 3 Platteville,&#13;
and Lakeland. No. 4 seeded vs.&#13;
NO.1 seeded Mt. Scenario. One of .&#13;
the matches will be at 1 p.m, the&#13;
other at 3 p.m.&#13;
Mt. Scenario has a season&#13;
record of 8-3-1. Parkside 6-5-2.&#13;
Platteville. 3-7and Lakeland, 2-l;.&#13;
Lasttime out, the Rangers tied&#13;
Western Michigan 1-1 Saturday .&#13;
"We played a super game,"&#13;
said Coach Hal Henderson. "It's&#13;
as good as we've played all year.&#13;
We shouldn't have tied."&#13;
Western Michigan got lucky&#13;
and happened to be in the right&#13;
place at the right time in the first&#13;
half. Parkside's goalkeeper,&#13;
Bernie Hefner, who, according to&#13;
Henderson. played just a super&#13;
game, had trouble intne rainwith&#13;
the wet ball when trying to throw&#13;
werbu'b&#13;
'ourt&#13;
_&amp;RISTA\lRA&#13;
After traveling to Whitewater a&#13;
week ago, Parkside's women's&#13;
swim team will host the&#13;
Warhawks this Friday at 4 p.m.&#13;
in their last dual meet.&#13;
Whitewater defeated the&#13;
Rangers 94-18, but there were&#13;
still highlights for the squad to&#13;
enjoy.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch. turning in&#13;
her usual leading performance,&#13;
took two seconds in the 50 free&#13;
and 50back, and a-third in the 100&#13;
back.&#13;
But the Rangers had more than&#13;
that to feel good about as they&#13;
saw their teammate Lili Crnich&#13;
cut 4.2 seconds off of her best&#13;
time in the 100 breast, 4.55&#13;
. seconds off of her part in the 200&#13;
.. free relay and 3.5seconds in the no&#13;
free. She was third in the 100&#13;
breast.&#13;
"I was very pleased and excited&#13;
about her outstanding&#13;
improvement," said Coach Barb&#13;
Lawson.&#13;
_Judy Iverson added to the list&#13;
of good things about the meet,&#13;
taking two seconds in the 200 free&#13;
and 50 breast and a fourth in the&#13;
100 free.&#13;
Gail Olson had three thirds in&#13;
the 50, 100. and 500 free events&#13;
Sally Francis also had a third&#13;
in '.he 200 iree, a fourth in the 50&#13;
Volleyb.all&#13;
team loses&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
travels to Deerfield, Illinois&#13;
Friday to play Trinity College in&#13;
a 7 p.m. match.&#13;
Parkside was originally sup--&#13;
posed to play UW-Stout and uw·&#13;
Eau Claire Friday and Saturday,&#13;
but .it was decided to drop the&#13;
meets since the team will be&#13;
traveling to Menomonee the next&#13;
Friday and Saturday anyway, for&#13;
the WWIAC Tournament.&#13;
The Rangers will also host&#13;
Carthage, Lewis University and&#13;
Chicago State next Tuesday,&#13;
Carthage will play Lewis and&#13;
Parkide will play Chicago State&#13;
at 6 p.m.&#13;
Last Saturday, the' Rangers&#13;
went to Milwaukee to battle&#13;
UWM's Panthers, but lost 15-9,&#13;
15-10. Parkside had defeated&#13;
UWM in their desson opener, 15-&#13;
11; 17-15. •&#13;
On October 26, the squad&#13;
bombed Marquette for the Iirst&#13;
time ever 15-6, 15-4 but then lost&#13;
io a very strong Carroll team 14-&#13;
16,12-15 and 3-15in a double dual&#13;
at Carroll.&#13;
"We've improved as the season&#13;
had moved along," Moss said. "I&#13;
credit this to hustle and desire on&#13;
the part of the team. They believe&#13;
they're capable of playing with&#13;
anyone and though they're short&#13;
and young, they are scrappy&#13;
and quick."&#13;
Season ends&#13;
by Jean Tennta&#13;
SUNDAY mos. &amp; TUES.&#13;
ALL YOU \~&lt;? SPAGHETTI&#13;
WANT \Sy..~ FEAST $1.Q5&#13;
Co,,' ~ \ I'~ INCLUDES Salad. Italian C~\'\' \\.-,0 Bread and a fREE GLASS (,y..'\ \\ '(o.~ ,0 Of WINE....&#13;
WiN ..... The ,&#13;
Album of Your&#13;
Ch'oice.&#13;
Free PIZZI tellve:y'&#13;
Club Hlghview&#13;
5035 60th Street·&#13;
Phone: 652·8737&#13;
AIt,.,0 •.,1". C~I.k,.,S.e.~IfII,lefl,lI, 8,.,&#13;
O'EN 4 •.•. It I •.•.&#13;
liP&#13;
breast and a fifh in the 100 free.&#13;
The Hangers were last out of&#13;
. five teams in a meet at Carthage&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
. Host team Carthage and UW·&#13;
Eau Claire tied for first, Carroll&#13;
was third followed by UW-River&#13;
Falls.&#13;
In addition 19 three individual&#13;
school records set by Leitch. the&#13;
200 free relay also set a team&#13;
record at 2;00.7 with Olson,&#13;
Iverson, Francis and Leitch&#13;
swimming the event.&#13;
"Our second place in the relay&#13;
was a good way to end the meet,"&#13;
said Lawson.&#13;
Leitch crone in fourth in the&#13;
three events she set records for.&#13;
In the 50 free, her time was 29.06,&#13;
in .the 50 back. 35.2 and in the 100&#13;
hack, I: 16.9.&#13;
Olson placed sixth twice in the&#13;
5Qbreast and 100free and tenth in&#13;
the 50 free. Iverson was seventh&#13;
in the 200 free, eighth in the 100&#13;
breast and tenth in the 100 free.&#13;
Francis picked up two eighths in&#13;
the 200 free and 500 free and&#13;
Crnich was ninth in the 50 breast.&#13;
"It was a good meet, generally,&#13;
but the officiating was poor,"&#13;
according to Coach Lawson.&#13;
"Whistles were used instead of&#13;
pistols for starting the races and&#13;
close finishes were decided upon&#13;
. only one officials' judgement."&#13;
r. "'s;,c:s....&#13;
Have You'Turned Us&#13;
on Lately?&#13;
r&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER November 3, 1976&#13;
one sweet Dream&#13;
Hey, scholars, look at&#13;
these gift selections.&#13;
Everything for Mind &amp;&#13;
Body is right here at&#13;
two stores . . ·. your&#13;
stores with atmosphere.&#13;
• Records &amp; Tapes. ALL new&#13;
releases stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import albWD8. We're the one store in town that&#13;
carries foreign releases.&#13;
• Special orders. Hard-to-get&#13;
records and tapes with&#13;
guaranteed one day&#13;
delivery.&#13;
• Jewelry. Hand crafted &amp;&#13;
beautiful for style conscious&#13;
guys and gals.&#13;
• Tapestries. Mobiles. Incense&#13;
burners. Stash&#13;
boxes.&#13;
• Incense. Sticks and cones to tickle your nose.&#13;
•Pictures.Decoupage. Wall&#13;
hangings. Artists: Escher,&#13;
Pitre, Roger Dean,&#13;
Rosamond.&#13;
• Lighting to create any&#13;
atmosphere.&#13;
• Leather Goods. Wallets -&#13;
Pouches - Purses - Belts -&#13;
Ha ts &amp; accessories in&#13;
abundance. Beautifully&#13;
handcrafted.&#13;
• Paraphernalia - Pipes.&#13;
Papers. Smoking Accessories.&#13;
Party necessities&#13;
from around the world.&#13;
• Waterbeds. We're&#13;
everything in Waterbeds.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
50to Seventh Avenue&#13;
654-3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694-2404&#13;
Parkside hosts&#13;
championships·&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
1.&#13;
--, ,,&#13;
j -· ··-___,..&#13;
Volleyh.all&#13;
team loses&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
Parkside will be the site of the&#13;
USTFF Mid-America Championships&#13;
in which over. 500&#13;
runners will compete in ten&#13;
different races.&#13;
Soccer team&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The women's volleyball team&#13;
travels to Deerfield, Illinois&#13;
Friday to play Trinity College in&#13;
a 7 p.m. match.&#13;
Included in this meet are the&#13;
Women's Championships. Kim&#13;
Merritt, who was se·cond in worJd&#13;
competition last October, place&#13;
third in this meet last year.&#13;
hosts meets Parkside was originally sup--&#13;
posed to play UW-Stout apd UWEau&#13;
Claire Friday and Saturday,&#13;
but jt was decided to drop the&#13;
meets since the team will be&#13;
traveling to Menomonee the next&#13;
Friday and Saturday anyway, for&#13;
the WWIAC Tournament.&#13;
The Ranger squad finished&#13;
their dual meet season with a ~l&#13;
record with wins over Marquette&#13;
and Loras over the weekend. This&#13;
is the fifth straight season that&#13;
Parkside had had only one dual&#13;
loss in cross country.&#13;
Ray Fredericksen led the&#13;
finishers with a time of 25&#13;
minutes, 44.2 seconds the second&#13;
fastest time ever on the Parkside&#13;
course.&#13;
Gary Priem was next with a&#13;
· second place at 26 minutes, 14&#13;
seconds. ·&#13;
Parkside totalled 19 over&#13;
Marquette's 42 and 16 over Loras'&#13;
46 Marquette's Dan Malloy was&#13;
the top Warrior in third and Dave&#13;
Smith was first for the Duhawks&#13;
in sixth place.&#13;
Other Park~ic!~ runners&#13;
were Jeff Miller, fourth ; Mike&#13;
Rivers, fifth; Lee Allinger,&#13;
eighth; Greg Julich, ninth; Jim&#13;
Heiring, 11th; Bill Werve, 13th&#13;
and John Van Den Brandt, 15th.&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside's soccer squad hosts&#13;
UW-Plateville, Lakeland and Mt.&#13;
Scenario friday and Saturday.&#13;
Tentative pairings for the&#13;
tourney are the No. 2 seeded&#13;
Rangers and No. 3 Platteville,&#13;
and Lakeland, No. 4 seeded vs.&#13;
No. 1 seeded Mt. Scenario. One of&#13;
the matches will be at 1 p.m. the&#13;
other at 3 p.m.&#13;
Mt. Scenario has a season&#13;
record of 8-3-1, Parkside 6-5-2,&#13;
Platteville, 3-7 and Lakeland, 2-6.&#13;
Last.time out, the Rangers tied&#13;
Western Michigan 1-1 Saturday.&#13;
"We played a super game,"&#13;
said Coach Hal Henderson. "lt's&#13;
as good as we've played all year.&#13;
We shouldn't have tied."&#13;
Western Michi_gan got lucky&#13;
and happened to be in the right&#13;
place at the right time in the first&#13;
half. Parkside's goalkeeper,&#13;
Bernie Hefner, who, according to&#13;
Henderson, played just a super&#13;
game, had trouble in tne rainwith&#13;
the wet ball when trying to throw&#13;
SUNDAY moN. &amp; TUES.&#13;
ALL YOU \~~ SPAGHETTI&#13;
WANT ,':5~~ FEAST Jl.QS&#13;
~~ \ \ Q~ INCLUDES: Salod. Italian&#13;
C&#13;
\'l.\C~\,,;.. .__o \\·'),O Bread and a FREE GLASS&#13;
l' \\ ~,,. OF WINE ....&#13;
On Spring. West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plaza .&#13;
632-6151-&#13;
~erbu's&#13;
,OUTt&#13;
PUa &amp; RIST.AURA&#13;
WIN ..... The \&#13;
Album of Your&#13;
Ch'Oice.&#13;
·95&#13;
IIP I&#13;
Have You ·Turned Us&#13;
on Lately?&#13;
it out of the net. The ball slipped&#13;
from his hands. and an opposing&#13;
player was standing there, ready&#13;
to kick the ball in.&#13;
Parkside's lone goal was&#13;
scored by Chris Carter on a cross&#13;
from Mike Boyajian. Carter was&#13;
running full speed, then dove to&#13;
hit the ball "like a shot" into the&#13;
net, according to Henderwon.&#13;
"Western Michi~an's goalie&#13;
was unbelieveable.He-was an AllAnierican&#13;
last year and he showed&#13;
us why," said Henderson. "We&#13;
made 23 shots on goal and he&#13;
made 18 saves."&#13;
Western Michigan's coach was&#13;
impressed with Ranger Steve&#13;
Sendelbach, stating: "he's the&#13;
finest rve seen all year.,,&#13;
"Our defense was super. Last&#13;
year, in a game like this, we&#13;
would have found some way to&#13;
lose, but we at least kept on the&#13;
same level and I think it;s·&#13;
significant that we can play&#13;
. under a pressure situation this&#13;
way." said Henderson. "I'm very&#13;
optimistic for the remaining&#13;
matches of the season."&#13;
The Rangers will also host&#13;
Carthage, Lewis University and&#13;
Chicago State next Tuesday,&#13;
Carthage will play Lewis and&#13;
Parkide will play Chicago State&#13;
at 6 p.m.&#13;
Last Saturday; the· Rangers&#13;
went to Milwaukee to battle&#13;
UWM's Panthers, but lost 15-9,&#13;
15-10. Parkside had defeated&#13;
UWM in their desson opener, 15-&#13;
11; 17-15. -&#13;
On October 26, the squad&#13;
bombed Marquette for the fi.i·st&#13;
time ever 15-6, 15-4 but ~en lost&#13;
io a very strong Carroll team 14-&#13;
16, 12-15 and 3-15 in a double dual&#13;
at Carroll.&#13;
"We've improved as the season&#13;
had moved along," Moss said. "I&#13;
credit this to hustle and desire on&#13;
the part of the team. They believe&#13;
· they're capable of playing with&#13;
anyone and though they're short&#13;
and young, they are scrappy&#13;
and quick."&#13;
Season ends&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
After traveling to Whitewater a&#13;
week ago, Parkside's women's&#13;
swim team wrn host the&#13;
Warhawks this Friday at 4 p.m.&#13;
in their last dual meet.&#13;
Whitewater defeated the&#13;
Rangers 94-18, but there were&#13;
still highlights for the squad to&#13;
enjoy.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch, turning in&#13;
her usual leading performance,&#13;
took two seconds in the 50 free&#13;
and 50 back, and a-third in the 100&#13;
back.&#13;
But the Rangers had more than&#13;
that to feel good about as they&#13;
saw their teammate Lili Crnich&#13;
cut 4.2 seconds off of her best&#13;
time in the 100 breast, 4.55&#13;
. seconds off of her part in the 200&#13;
free relay and 3.5 seconds in thP. no&#13;
free. She was third in the 100&#13;
breast.&#13;
"I was very pleased and excited&#13;
about her outstanding&#13;
improvement," said Coach Barb&#13;
Lawson.&#13;
Judy Iverson added to the list&#13;
of good things about the meet,&#13;
taking two seconds in the 200 free&#13;
and 50 breast and a fourth in the&#13;
100 free.&#13;
Gail Olson had three thirds in&#13;
the 50, 100, and 500 free events&#13;
Sally Francis also had a third&#13;
int.he 200 free, a foutth in the 50&#13;
breast and a fifh in the 100 free.&#13;
The Hangers were last out of&#13;
· five teams in a meet at Carthage&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
· Host team Carthage and UWE.au&#13;
Claire tied for first, Carroll&#13;
was third followed by UW-River&#13;
Falls.&#13;
In addition t9 three individual&#13;
school records set py Leitch, the&#13;
200 free relay also . set a team&#13;
record at 2:00.7 with Olson,&#13;
Iverson, Francis and Leitch&#13;
swimming the event.&#13;
"Our second place in the relay&#13;
was a good way to end the meet,"&#13;
said Lawson.&#13;
Leitch crone in fourth in the&#13;
three events she set record!; for.&#13;
In the 50 free, her time was 29.06,&#13;
in .the 50 back, 35.2 and in the 100&#13;
back, 1: 16.9.&#13;
Olson placed sixth twice in the&#13;
5Q breast and 100 free and tenth in&#13;
the 50 free. Iverson was seventh&#13;
in the 200 free, eighth in the 100&#13;
breast and tenth in the 100 free.&#13;
Francis picked up two eighths in&#13;
the 200 free and 500 free a.nd&#13;
Crnich was n.i.nU1 in the 50 breast.&#13;
''It was a good meet, generally,&#13;
but the officiating .was poor,"&#13;
according to Coach Lawson.&#13;
"Whistles were used instead of&#13;
pistols for starting the races and&#13;
close finishes were decided upon&#13;
only one officials' judgement."&#13;
Free Pizza D·ellve:yCl&#13;
ub Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street ·&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Altt ••hvttl19 Chlek11, s,11httt1, ~avloll, 8111&#13;
OPEN 4 t-•· to 1 •·•· </text>
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              <text>------~------------------t&#13;
~/f:.e_&amp;e-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
- Vol. V. No. 8 Wednesday. Odober 27, 1976&#13;
Guskin meets, students&#13;
by Mona Maillet.&#13;
On Thursday, October 21,&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin held his&#13;
first open meeting of the year&#13;
with students., He was pleased&#13;
with the turnout of ahout 15&#13;
people, saying that a similar&#13;
meeting during the summer&#13;
attracted only one persori and that&#13;
,anything ahove that was an&#13;
improvement.&#13;
The first question brought up&#13;
was .regarding the communication&#13;
discipline. Guskin&#13;
was asked when' the discipline&#13;
would hire new permanent&#13;
professors. (Dr. Richard&#13;
Carrington is the only one at&#13;
present.) He replied that&#13;
November 15 is the deadline for,&#13;
position allocations for the fall&#13;
1977 semester.&#13;
Most colleges. would do this&#13;
during the spring semester and&#13;
by doing this earlier. Parkside&#13;
would not only get a hetter choice&#13;
of applicants, but would also have&#13;
them well prepared for t!:ie fall&#13;
- semester, he Said.&#13;
Guskin also expressed great&#13;
hopes for the 'business program.&#13;
He stated that the keyto building&#13;
. the program is the hirij'lg ~f a new&#13;
chairman.&#13;
He said that Parkside is&#13;
especially for.tunate in that it is a&#13;
relatively new institution and&#13;
that the chairman will be able to&#13;
build up the program as he sees&#13;
fit without having traditions of&#13;
the university restrict him.&#13;
. He added that Parkside needs a&#13;
first rate business program to&#13;
properly .serve the community&#13;
and a good chairman would be&#13;
able to fulfill this need.&#13;
Kai Nail, a student; asked&#13;
about the naming of the Union.&#13;
Guskin replied that after consulting&#13;
with Kiyoko Bowden,&#13;
president of the PSGA, and a few&#13;
of the people involved with the&#13;
Union, the name Parkside 'Union&#13;
was agreed upon. He said that&#13;
traditionally unions are named&#13;
after the campuses, and added&#13;
that there is no union within the&#13;
UW system named the Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
Guskin was then' asked his&#13;
feelings on student involvement&#13;
in their education.-He replied that&#13;
he strongly feels that students&#13;
'should get involved in the&#13;
university'. Every studentorienled&#13;
committee has at least,&#13;
one student on it. He stated that&#13;
-&#13;
student government assists him&#13;
m making decisions on studentrelated&#13;
matters.&#13;
Regarding having students&#13;
visit him Guskin said, "If a&#13;
student 'A'ants to see me, I won't&#13;
say no to a student."&#13;
He also expressed regrets at&#13;
lack of student participation in&#13;
student government. This is not a&#13;
problem restricted to commuter&#13;
colleges as even non-commuter&#13;
colleges have a voter turnout of&#13;
about 10 percent, he said.&#13;
A student asked Guskin about&#13;
the ability to govern through&#13;
increasing committees. Guskin&#13;
answered that he consults&#13;
committees, not governs through&#13;
them. He feels that as an aftermath&#13;
of Watergate, people&#13;
don't trust one another as much,&#13;
and through committees, they try&#13;
to influence each other.&#13;
In regard to people in administrative&#13;
positions, he said,&#13;
"People assume that people in&#13;
authority are SOB's trying to&#13;
manipulate the hell out of&#13;
everyhody." He feels that this is&#13;
a poor opinion to have and that by&#13;
proper interaction between&#13;
administration and students this&#13;
..I&#13;
:;&#13;
~ ......~&#13;
f&#13;
:&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
Counseling services&#13;
&lt;ontinued on pg. 6 reorganized&#13;
Turnout one of poorest Development will handle the&#13;
student population from 18 to 24&#13;
years old. The office of&#13;
Community Student Services will&#13;
handle tbe 25 year and older&#13;
students.&#13;
. Jolmson pointed out that as the&#13;
groups would have different&#13;
needs and problems, the offices&#13;
will be divided to better flll those&#13;
differing needs. The offices will,&#13;
of course, have some overlapping&#13;
features.&#13;
Johnson hopes the counseling&#13;
services will be totally changed&#13;
within three months. "We are&#13;
going to have to help Parkside&#13;
students get ready for the&#13;
future," said Johnson. "We are&#13;
going to have to help !pe UW-P&#13;
communities, Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, get ready for the&#13;
changes of tbe future. To do this&#13;
successfully, we have to belp the&#13;
students maximize their lives&#13;
through efficient humane&#13;
counseling.'&#13;
by Chris ClauseD&#13;
On OCtober 18 Student Services&#13;
started a reorganization program&#13;
to improve counseling services to&#13;
UW-P students.&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Academic Support and Student&#13;
Services, Clay Johnson explained&#13;
the reorganization, llPreviously&#13;
students had to go lrom box A to&#13;
B to C. With the reorganization,&#13;
students should be able to go to&#13;
one counselor for most of his or&#13;
her counseling needs.&#13;
"The concept is for the counselor&#13;
to get to know the student&#13;
completely and the problems&#13;
faced by the student, thus&#13;
enabling him to help solve their&#13;
problems.&#13;
"The counselors will he able to&#13;
belp in all areas Yel keep active&#13;
in their specialties."&#13;
The reorganization will divide&#13;
the counseling services into two&#13;
parts. The office of Student&#13;
Elections seat •&#13;
SIX&#13;
by Bruce WagDer Joan Fuetterer each receiving 13&#13;
votes. The elections committee&#13;
will decide the fate of the three&#13;
since there are no formal&#13;
procedures regarding such an&#13;
occurance.&#13;
In the business management&#13;
divisfon, Paula Lowecke was the&#13;
only candidate.&#13;
Write-ins will comprise the rest&#13;
of the 'divisional seats with Dan&#13;
Nielsen in labor economics;&#13;
Laura Bruno in humanities, and&#13;
Terrence Zuehlsdorf in .science.&#13;
The social science, applied&#13;
science, and allocations seats had&#13;
no declared candidates, 'and will&#13;
temporaruy remain vacant.&#13;
PSGA also had three amenoments&#13;
to the -eonstitution on the&#13;
election hallot. The first amendment&#13;
providing for a constitutional&#13;
referendum to amend&#13;
the PSGA constitution, or to&#13;
request an advisory referendum&#13;
passed, 65 to 12.&#13;
The' second amendment,&#13;
providing for an appellate court&#13;
within the judical branch of&#13;
. PSGA passed, 57 to 19.&#13;
The third amendment regarding&#13;
the date of elections, also&#13;
passed by a count of 57 to 19.&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association held&#13;
their fall elections this week, with&#13;
. six seats in the Senate and seats&#13;
in the segregated fees allocation&#13;
committee being filled.&#13;
The election turnout was one of&#13;
the Poorest ever at Parkside with&#13;
approximately 2 percent of the&#13;
student bndy voting.&#13;
The only race was for the two&#13;
undeclared divisional seats&#13;
, where Gigi Osborne was the only&#13;
clear winner with a three way tie&#13;
for the other seat between&#13;
Richard Folsom, Carol Bohn, and&#13;
Committees created&#13;
by Jobn McKioskey • committee to handle this."&#13;
How long, then, will It be before&#13;
the committee will bI' able to&#13;
function? According to MIchael&#13;
Marron, a member of the&#13;
University. Committee (which&#13;
now has the responsibility of&#13;
'appointing the Academic Action&#13;
Committee members), the&#13;
University Committee will act&#13;
"very rapidly, I expect ...within a •&#13;
few wceks at the latest."&#13;
Marron said that because of&#13;
the University committee's fixed&#13;
agenda the appointments were&#13;
not made at Its October 20&#13;
meeting, but the matter will be&#13;
taken up at the next meeting.&#13;
"There are students waiting for&#13;
action on waiver requests, 80 we&#13;
want to act as expeditiously as&#13;
possible," he said.&#13;
The new committee replaces ,a&#13;
handful of other committees..ovlth&#13;
similar functions, some of which&#13;
were dissolved wben the College&#13;
of Science and SocIety and the&#13;
School of Modern Industry&#13;
contlnU4icl on PSI. ,&#13;
At its October meeting held on&#13;
Tuesday, October 19, the&#13;
Parkside Faculty Senate gave&#13;
final approval to the creation of&#13;
two new cominittees.&#13;
The first committee created&#13;
was the Academic Actions&#13;
Cominittee, which will receive&#13;
and act on student appeals for&#13;
special academic consideration.·&#13;
At this time there are a number&#13;
of students awaiting. the&#13;
organization of this committee&#13;
because they wish to appeal&#13;
academic actions, and before the&#13;
Senate took action there was no&#13;
committee to receive their appeals.&#13;
•&#13;
According to Leon Applebaum,&#13;
who is the person to whom&#13;
students first take their requests,&#13;
"about half a dozen students are&#13;
waiting right now" appeals of&#13;
actions that Ap1llehaum refused&#13;
to grant. He added: "I don't know&#13;
what will happen when the word&#13;
gets out that there is now a&#13;
Kenosha artist George Pollard peses wltb his por- took place throughout lbe UDiversll)fincluding a plano&#13;
trait of the late Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie whlcb be recital by formal artist-in-residence Carmen VIla wbo&#13;
presented to Parkslde at Sunday's formal dedication of stann,ed the andlence with ber rendltlons of Mozart,&#13;
lbe Wyllie Ubrary-Learulag Center and OpeD HODse. Debussey, Uszt and Gershwin.&#13;
Several performaDces, dlsplnys, .and demonstratioDs l ~.......ii •&#13;
Guskin meets. students&#13;
by Mona Maillet .&#13;
On Thursday, October 21&#13;
· Chancellor Alan Guskin held hi~&#13;
first open meeting of the year&#13;
with students. · He was pleas~&#13;
with the turnout of about 15&#13;
people, saying that a similar&#13;
. meeting during the summer&#13;
attracted only one persori and that&#13;
. anything above that was an&#13;
improvement.&#13;
The first question brought up&#13;
was .regarding the communication&#13;
discipline. Guskin&#13;
was asked when · the discipline&#13;
would hire new permanent&#13;
professors. (Dr. Richard&#13;
Carrington is the only one at&#13;
present.) He replied that&#13;
November 15 is the deadline forposition&#13;
allocations for the fall&#13;
1977 semester.&#13;
Most colleges. would do this&#13;
during the spring semester and&#13;
by doing this earlier. Parkside&#13;
would not only get a better choice&#13;
,of-applicants, but would also have&#13;
them well prepared for the fall&#13;
semester, he said.&#13;
Guskin- also expressed great&#13;
hopes for the ·business program.&#13;
He· stated that the key ·to building&#13;
- the program is the hiriJ'}g (?f a new&#13;
chairman.&#13;
He said that Parkside is&#13;
especially fottunate in that it is a&#13;
relatively new institution and&#13;
that the chairman will be able to&#13;
build up the program as he sees&#13;
fit without having traditions of&#13;
the university restrict him.&#13;
- He added that Parkside needs a&#13;
first rate business program to&#13;
properly ,serve the community&#13;
and a good chairman would be&#13;
able to fulfill this need.&#13;
Kai Nall, a studenG asked&#13;
about the naming of the· Union.&#13;
Guskin replied that after consulting&#13;
with Kiyoko Bowden,&#13;
president of the PSGA, and a few&#13;
of the people involved with the&#13;
Union, the name Parkside Union&#13;
was agreed upon. He said that&#13;
traditionally unions are named&#13;
after the campuses, and added&#13;
that there is no union within the&#13;
UW system named the Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
Guskin was then · asked his&#13;
feelings on student involvement&#13;
in their education. He replied that&#13;
he strongly feels that students&#13;
should get involved in the&#13;
university. Every student-&#13;
~riented committee has at least&#13;
one student on it. He stated that&#13;
Turnout one of poorest&#13;
Elections seai&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association held&#13;
their fall elections this week, with&#13;
-six seats in the Senate and seats&#13;
in the segregated fees allocation&#13;
committee being filled.&#13;
The election turnout was one of&#13;
the poorest ever at Parkside with&#13;
approxim1;1tely 2 percent of the&#13;
student body voting.&#13;
The only race was for the two&#13;
undeclared divisional seats&#13;
. where Gigi Osborne was the only&#13;
clear winner with a three way tie&#13;
for the other seat between&#13;
Richard FoJ:;om, Carol Bohn, and&#13;
Joan Fuetterer each receiving 13&#13;
votes. The elections committee&#13;
will decide the fate of the three&#13;
since there are no formal&#13;
procedures regarding such an&#13;
occurance.&#13;
In the business management&#13;
division, Paula Lowecke was the&#13;
only candidate.&#13;
Write-ins will comprise the rest&#13;
of the divisional seats with Dan&#13;
Nielsen in labor economics;&#13;
Laura Bruno in hwnanities, and&#13;
"Terrence Zuehlsdorf in .science.&#13;
The social science, applied&#13;
science, and allocations seats h,ad&#13;
no declared candidates, and will&#13;
- student government assists him&#13;
in making decisions on studentrelated&#13;
matters.&#13;
Regarding having students&#13;
visit hlnl Guskin said, "If a&#13;
student \\rants to see me-, I won't&#13;
say no to a student."&#13;
He also expressed regrets at&#13;
lack of student participation in&#13;
student government. This is not a&#13;
problem restricted to commuter&#13;
colleges as even non-commuter&#13;
colleges have a voter turnout of&#13;
about 10 percent, he said.&#13;
A student asked Guskin about&#13;
the ability to govj:.!rn through&#13;
increasing committees. Guskin&#13;
answered that he consults&#13;
committees, not governs through&#13;
them. He feels that as an aftermath&#13;
of Watergate, people&#13;
don't trust one another as much,&#13;
and through committees, they try&#13;
to influence each other.&#13;
In regard to people in administrative&#13;
positions, he said,&#13;
"People assume that people in&#13;
authority are SOB's trying to&#13;
manipulate the hell out of&#13;
everybody." He feels that this is&#13;
a poor opinion to have and that by&#13;
proper interaction between&#13;
administration and students this&#13;
continued on pg, 6&#13;
• SIX&#13;
temporaruy remain vacant.&#13;
PSGA also had three amenaments&#13;
to the -constitution on the&#13;
election ballot. The first amendment&#13;
providing for a constitutional&#13;
referendum to amend&#13;
the PSGA constitution, or to&#13;
req\lest an advisory _referendum&#13;
passed, 65 to 12.&#13;
The second amendment,&#13;
providing for an appellate court&#13;
within the judical branch of&#13;
. PSGA passed, 57 to 19.&#13;
The third amendment regarding&#13;
the date of elections, also&#13;
passed by a count of 57 to 19.&#13;
Kenosha artist George Pollard poses with his por- took place throughout the University including a piano&#13;
trait of the late Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie whi_ch he recital by formal artist-in-residence Carmen Vila who&#13;
presented to Parkside at Sunday's formal dedication of stunn_ed the audience with her renditions of Mozart,&#13;
the Wyllie Llbrary-Learning Center and Open House. Debussey, Ll~zt and Gershwin.&#13;
Several performances, displays, .and demonstrations&#13;
ir,: ParksidP----------&#13;
R ANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 8 Wednesday, October 27, 1976&#13;
Chancellor Alon Guskin&#13;
Counseling services&#13;
reorganized&#13;
by Chris Clausen&#13;
On October 18 Student Services&#13;
started a reorganization program&#13;
to improve counseling services to&#13;
UW-P students.&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Academic Support and Student&#13;
Services, Clay Johnson explained&#13;
the reorganization, !'Previously&#13;
students had to go kom box A to&#13;
B to C. With the reorganization,&#13;
students should be able to go to&#13;
one counselor for most of his or&#13;
her counseling needs.&#13;
"The concept is for the counselor&#13;
to get to know the student&#13;
completely and the problems&#13;
faced by the student, thus&#13;
enabling him to help solve their&#13;
problems.&#13;
"The counselors will be able to&#13;
help in all areas yet- keep active&#13;
in their specialties."&#13;
The reorganization will divide&#13;
the counseling services into two&#13;
parts. The office of Student&#13;
Development will handle the&#13;
student population from 18 to 24&#13;
years old. The office of&#13;
Community Student Services will&#13;
handle the 25 year and older&#13;
students.&#13;
. Johnson pointed out that as the&#13;
groups would have different&#13;
needs and problems, the offices&#13;
will be divided to better fill thos~&#13;
differing needs. The offices will,&#13;
of course, have some overlapping&#13;
features.&#13;
Johnson hopes the counseling&#13;
services will be totally changed&#13;
within three months. "We are&#13;
going to have to help Parkside&#13;
students get ready for the&#13;
future," said Johnson. "We are&#13;
going to have to help tpe UW-P&#13;
communities, Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, get ready for the&#13;
changes of the future. To do this&#13;
successfully, we have to help the&#13;
students maximize their lives&#13;
through efficient humane&#13;
counseling."&#13;
Coininittees created&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
At its October meeting held on&#13;
Tuesday, October 19, the&#13;
Parkside Faculty Senate gave&#13;
final approval to the creation of&#13;
two new committees.&#13;
The first committee created&#13;
was the Academic Actions&#13;
Committee, which will receive&#13;
and act on student appeals for&#13;
special academic consideration.&#13;
At this time there are a number&#13;
of students awaiting _ the&#13;
organization of this committee&#13;
because they wish to appeal&#13;
academic actions, and before the&#13;
Senate took action there was no&#13;
committee to receive their appeals.&#13;
'&#13;
According to Leon Applebaum,&#13;
who is the person to whom&#13;
students first take their requests,&#13;
"about half a dozen students are&#13;
waiting right now" appeals of&#13;
actions that Aplllebaum refused&#13;
to grant. He added: "I don't know&#13;
what will happen when the word&#13;
gets out that there is now a&#13;
c."Ommittee to handle this."&#13;
How long, then, will it be before&#13;
the committee will be able to&#13;
function? According to Michael&#13;
Marron, a member of the&#13;
University_ Committee (which&#13;
now has the responsibility of&#13;
appointing the Academic Action&#13;
Committee members), the&#13;
University Committee will act&#13;
"very rapidly, I expect... within a&#13;
few weeks at the latest."&#13;
Marron said that because of&#13;
the University committee's fixed&#13;
agenda the appointments were&#13;
not made at its October 20&#13;
meeting, but the matter will be&#13;
taken up at the next meeting.&#13;
"There are students waiting for&#13;
action on waiver requests, so we&#13;
want to act as expeditiously as&#13;
possible," he said.&#13;
The new committee replaces a&#13;
handful of other committees ..with&#13;
similar functions, some of which&#13;
were dissolved when the College&#13;
of Science and Society and the&#13;
School of Modern Industry&#13;
continued on pg. 6 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27. 1976&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM&#13;
Camejo endorsed&#13;
by Carol Burke&#13;
.Edltor's Note: Ms. Burke is the chalrpersou of the Milwaukee Young&#13;
Socialist AlUance.&#13;
10 the September ~ Political Forum, Phil Hermann critiqued&#13;
presidential candidates Ford, Carter. Maddox, and McCarthy. Her,&#13;
lJUII)II neglected to mention the only campaign that I believe offers a&#13;
real positive alternative to voters in 1976·, the Socialist Workers&#13;
campaign of Peter camejo forpresident and Willie Mae Reid for vicepresident.&#13;
.&#13;
For a start, compare the!e background facts about Camejo and Reid&#13;
with the records of any of the candidates mentioned in Hermann's&#13;
article: Peter Camejo, 35, has been a member of the Socialist Workers&#13;
party since 1959.Active in the student movements of the 1960's, he was,&#13;
leading defender of the Cuban revolution and a 1eader of the massive&#13;
movement against the Vietnam War. Camejo actively supports the&#13;
desegregation struggle and participated in the May 17, 1975march,&#13;
sponsored by the NAACP, against racist attacks on school busing in&#13;
Boston. He has campaigned against layoffs and cutbacks across the'&#13;
country and joined the AFL-CIO march (or jobs in Washington, D.C.,&#13;
on April 26, 1975.He had campaigned for the right of every woman to&#13;
choose abortion and in support of the Equal Rights Amendment.&#13;
•Camejo, fluent in Spanish, is the first U.S. citizen of Latin American&#13;
descent to be a candidate for president of the United states.&#13;
On Willie Mae Reid: When Reid rim for mayor of Chicago on the&#13;
Socialist Workers ticket in early 1975, she was the fir.:;t candidate for&#13;
mayor under any party label other than Democrat or Republican to&#13;
obtain ballot status there since the 1930's. Reid, 36, grew up in Memphis,&#13;
Tennessee,wh~re she participated in civil rights struggles that&#13;
ended the segregated seating of Blacks on city buses. After moving to&#13;
Chicago, she helped organize the Illinois Women's Abortion Coalition,&#13;
a group fighting for women's right to choose abortion. A member of&#13;
the NAACP. Reid is campaigning in support of school desegregation&#13;
and the right of Black students to use busing to achieve equal&#13;
education.&#13;
-&#13;
Vote against Dems&#13;
by Ja~ Grassell&#13;
Myths abound in any electoral campaign, for such is the stuff of&#13;
politics. This year, the most pervasive and hence pathetic is the myth&#13;
that a vote for Carter and the Democrats is a vote for "change."&#13;
Change from what? Fact is that Wisconsin has:&#13;
Democratic State Senate&#13;
Democratic State Assembly&#13;
Democratic Governor&#13;
Democratic Congressional delegation .&#13;
Democratic Senators.&#13;
The Democrats have had control of Congress for 40 of the past 44&#13;
years. Every excess, loophole and inequity instituted in our lifetimes&#13;
has been passed by Democrats.&#13;
A vote fQl'the ruling Democratic majority represents not a vote for&#13;
"change" but a continuation and even an intensification of the present&#13;
trends: an inept foreign policy, a devalued and Inflated currency and&#13;
an ever increasing governmental intrusion into our lives and&#13;
livelihoods.&#13;
When you vote on November 2nd, vote for genuine change.&#13;
WU1IamPetrie for Congress&#13;
Stan York for the Senate&#13;
i IJY TheP~ . ~".. .. RANGER&#13;
necnurlly~""'.'Iv. of tboM tile'"by&#13;
the students. facutty or administration Of&#13;
P.nt.tIIe. Editorla' a"" B.. lnnrsn·U17 J&#13;
Newsroom SD-t2tS.&#13;
TM hrk ........... ls w,m.n ancllcllted&#13;
. by the ttucIetIts of 1M Unlv .... ny Of&#13;
: wl,c ... iln-P.rk,ld. who ar. ,.Ioly&#13;
...... MIM. tor "' MftwI.1 ...llcy .nd&#13;
coo'.n'. Opinion, .xpr .... d or. no'&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIIlF: .... nnlne Sip.....&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: Cotlly BnlOk&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom CooPer&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: .ruce WlIMf'&#13;
DEPARTMENtS:&#13;
.. A...,lnlstrotien-rotic,": Jolin McKloskey&#13;
.. SMI: Dove Brandl&#13;
.. StvdOnt ...... p'. sttNken:&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbi. Bauer&#13;
_ SPORTS EDITOR: Je.n T... u'a&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jeffrey I_ ,wencki. Bill Barke&#13;
COpy IM)ITOR: Jull. Lan ..&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquard' ~&#13;
.. STAFF: Wendy Miller. Terri Gayhart. Robert Hoffman, Chris Clausen. Thomas Nolen,&#13;
Diane Carlson. Douglas Edenhauser. Mary Kay Ohmer, Larry DonneilY. Phil Hermann,&#13;
Ramona Maillel, Bob Jembois, Beverly Pella, Linda Knudtson, Karin LaFourler. JUdy&#13;
'!'rudrUng, scon Reinhar.d. Philip L. Livingston.&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS, Joe Landa, Rick Flasch&#13;
~.If:.The Parkside&#13;
~&#13;
.RANGER&#13;
, .&#13;
Dear Students:&#13;
It seems hard for us to call&#13;
Parkside our alma mater. That&#13;
term is saved for prestigious&#13;
institutions like Princeton, or&#13;
Oxford, or Yale. Yet Parkside is&#13;
or soon will be our alma mater. If&#13;
we are not to be embarrassed by&#13;
our alma mater, what it stands&#13;
for, what it is, and what it will be,&#13;
we, you and I must participate in&#13;
its development.&#13;
Unlike Oxford or Princeton,&#13;
Parkside has no traditions. There&#13;
is no set chatacter that one can&#13;
automatically associate with&#13;
UW-P. We ean and must have&#13;
some idea about what Parkside&#13;
will become. Perhaps pari of the&#13;
problem lies in our lack of&#13;
tradition and our lack of a clear&#13;
picture of what Parkside will be&#13;
ten years from now.&#13;
One possible solution requires&#13;
that ~ryone sit quietly back&#13;
and let the decisions be made for&#13;
. us. You see that everywhere now.&#13;
"I'm onl)' here fot' four years"-&#13;
syndrome. Parkside is no different&#13;
from any place else in the&#13;
country. People are ·sltting&#13;
passively waiting for someone to&#13;
do something, for them or to&#13;
them.&#13;
Get .uP and care.&#13;
It's not enough to react to&#13;
things. Sometimes self-respect or&#13;
self interest require that people&#13;
initiate. If you tolerate rhetoric&#13;
about the evils of passivity, then&#13;
your .right to outrage and indignation&#13;
have already been cOopted.&#13;
The clHlptor and the cooptee&#13;
were one and the same&#13;
--EDITOR IAL/OPINION&#13;
lI&#13;
\&#13;
'--- '&#13;
The ·Socialist Workers Party candidates are calling for "A am of&#13;
Rights for Working People." This campaign platform proposes the&#13;
following basic rights: I.) The right to a job; 2.) The right to an&#13;
adequate income protected against inflation; 3.) Right to a free&#13;
education; 4.) Right to free medical care; 5.) Right to a secure&#13;
retirement; 6.) Right of oppressed national minorities to control their&#13;
own affairs; 7.) Right to know the truth ahout and decide the political&#13;
policies that affect our-lives; 8.) Right to know the truth about and&#13;
decide economic. and-social policies. _&#13;
A society that puts human needs ahove profits could implement this&#13;
program. Neither the Democratic or 'Republican party can advance&#13;
the interests of workingpecpte and the oppressed in American society,&#13;
Both parties serve the interests of the .cqrporate and financial barons&#13;
"who wield the power in America today. We can defeat the serious&#13;
attacks on our rights and living standards only through our own united&#13;
action, independent of the Democrats and Republicans.&#13;
The Socialist Workers Party candidates urge the formation of a&#13;
labor party based on the immense power of the trade unions as a way&#13;
t6 defend and advance the interests of working people and all the&#13;
oppressed in the political arena.&#13;
Camejo and-Reid are campaigning for a new society - a socialist&#13;
society where industry and science will be put at the service of the vast&#13;
majority to improve their lives. Wars, racism, the oppression of&#13;
women, and all other forms of human degradation will no longer exist.&#13;
The Socialist Workers campaign believes this is a realistic goal- and a&#13;
necessary one if humanity is to survive.&#13;
Camejo and Reid will be on the ballot on November 2, along with&#13;
Robert SChwarz, SWP candidate for U,S. Senate from Wisconsin.&#13;
People who support the ideas of the SocialistWorkers campaign can&#13;
get involved, not only by voting November 2, but by working with the&#13;
Socialist Workers Party and the Young Socialist Alliance, a national&#13;
organization based on the high schools and college campuses which&#13;
supports the Camejo, Reid campaign. We can be. and need to beactive&#13;
365days a year to advance the struggle for socialism.'&#13;
Room for everybody&#13;
person. YOU.&#13;
ITyou want to set a tradition at&#13;
Parkside that could easily be&#13;
instituted, why not start with a&#13;
tradition of strong, active student&#13;
government. It couid start with&#13;
your participation. /&#13;
There is room for anyone and&#13;
everyone. People with just a little&#13;
time can· help as well as those&#13;
with a lot. Each of us has been hit&#13;
by Parkside's failings. We can do&#13;
something about them. I'm&#13;
issuing a plea on behalf of those&#13;
students who c""e to Parkside&#13;
after you and I have been long&#13;
gone. Do something now that&#13;
should have been done for you&#13;
• before you came. Set a tradition&#13;
of strong, active student&#13;
government.&#13;
'The old line about involvement&#13;
in politics applies here at&#13;
Parkside as much as in state or&#13;
local government.&#13;
Almost all universitY committees&#13;
have student&#13;
representatives in their structure.&#13;
Not even half have studentrepresentatives&#13;
sitting on them.&#13;
'No one wants the work. One&#13;
student cannot moniter the activities&#13;
of all the committees.&#13;
Even is one student could be&#13;
found who wanted to, h.... he&#13;
wouldn't be a slUdent for long&#13;
(there isa lot of wqrk to be done.)&#13;
And it's fairly obvious that one&#13;
student does not a university&#13;
make. One student cannot&#13;
possibly know about all the pointof-view,&#13;
needs and interests of a&#13;
student population as diverse as&#13;
Parkside's.&#13;
•&#13;
Please help us. Contact your&#13;
student government. There's&#13;
room for everybody.&#13;
-, Sincerely,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
President-Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Donations&#13;
requested&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
.Chi-Rho Center, Campus&#13;
Ministry at Parkside, wishes to&#13;
call to your atiention a special&#13;
need of someone whose work has&#13;
come to mean a lot to many&#13;
people in the Racine area.&#13;
Louise Hunter is the founder&#13;
and director of theLoui.re Hunter&#13;
Love and Charity Club in Racine.&#13;
She has served her conununity&#13;
. wen through the Love and&#13;
Charity Club.&#13;
She serves poor people in the&#13;
RAcine area who for various&#13;
reasons are not able to receive&#13;
assistance from the other social&#13;
agencies. She sells clothes,&#13;
household items, and appliances .&#13;
for a few cents to a few dollars io&#13;
people who couid otherwise not&#13;
afford them. She.Often gives food .&#13;
and used merchandise to people&#13;
wbo have no money.&#13;
Louise Hunter and her husband&#13;
and family of 18 children have a&#13;
special need right now. Last&#13;
February their borne burned and&#13;
one of their children died in the&#13;
fire. The Welfare'Department&#13;
obtained temporary housing for&#13;
the Hunter family, but as of this&#13;
fall the Hunter family has. been&#13;
told that they must secure other&#13;
housing.&#13;
continued on po. 3&#13;
J&#13;
·::,;:_•· ..... _...... . .... - ·-·-&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE R'ANGER October 27, 197.6&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM&#13;
i · Jr.. The Parksid ~&#13;
. RANGER&#13;
--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
Camejo endorsed&#13;
byCarol Burke&#13;
.Editor's Note: Ms. Burke is the chairperson of the Milwaukee Young&#13;
Socialist Alliance.&#13;
The So'cialist Workers Party candidates are calling for "A Bill of&#13;
Rights for Working People." This campaign platform proposes the&#13;
following basic rights: 1.) The right to a job; 2.) The rtght to an&#13;
adequate income protected against inflation; 3.) Right to a free&#13;
education; 4.) Right to free medical care; 5.) Right to a secure&#13;
retirement; 6.) Right of oppressed national minorities to control their&#13;
own affairs; 7.) Right to know the truth about and decide the political&#13;
policies that affect our ,li\'.es; 8.) Right to know the truth about and&#13;
decide economic, anctsocial policies.&#13;
In the September ~ Political Forum, Phil Hermann critiqued&#13;
presidential candidates Ford, Carter, Maddox, and McCarthy. Hermru;m&#13;
neglected to mention the only campaign that I believe offers a&#13;
real positive alternative to voters in 1976 · - the Socialist Workers&#13;
campaign of Peter Camejo for"president and Willie Mae Reid for vicepresident.&#13;
·&#13;
For a start, compare the~e background facts about Camejo and Reid&#13;
with the records of any of the candidates men_tioned in Hermann's&#13;
article: Peter Camejo, 35, has been a member of the Socialist Workers&#13;
party since 1959. Active in the student movements of the 1960's, he was,&#13;
leading defender of the Cuban revolution and a leader of the massive&#13;
movement against the Vietnam War. Camejo actively supports the&#13;
desegregation struggle and participated in the May 17, 1975 march-,&#13;
sponsored by the NAACP, against racist attacks on school busing in&#13;
Boston. He has campaigned against layoffs and cutbacks across the '&#13;
country and joined the AFL-CIO march {or jobs in Washington, D.C.,&#13;
on April 26, 1975. He had campaigned for. the right of every woman to&#13;
choose abortion and in support of the Equal Rights Amendment.&#13;
A society that puts human needs above profits cou!d implement this&#13;
program. Neither the Democratic or Republican party can advance&#13;
the interests of working people and the oppressed in American society.&#13;
Both parties serve the interests of the cqrporate and financial barons&#13;
who wield the power in America today. We can defeat the serious&#13;
attacks on our rights and living standards only through our own united&#13;
action, independent of the Democrats and Republicans.&#13;
The Socialist Workers Party candidates urge the formation of a&#13;
labor party based on the immense power of the trade unions as a way&#13;
to defend and advance the interests of working people and all the&#13;
oppressed in the political arena.&#13;
• Camejo, fluent in Spanish, is the first U.S. citizen of Latin American&#13;
descent to be a candidate for president of the United States.&#13;
Camejo and Eeid are campaigning for a new society- a socialist&#13;
society where industry and science will be put at the service of the vast&#13;
majority to improve their lives. Wars, racism, the oppression of&#13;
women, and all other forms of human degradation will no longer exist.&#13;
The Socialist Workers campaign believes this is a realistic goal - and a&#13;
necessary one if humanity is to survive.&#13;
•&#13;
On Willie Mae Reid: When Reid ran for mayor of Chicago on the&#13;
Socialist Workers ticket in early 1975, she was the fir~t candidate for&#13;
mayor under any party label other than Democrat or Republican to&#13;
obtain ballot status there since the 1930's. Reid, 36, grew up in Memphis,&#13;
Tennessee, wh~re she participated in civil rights struggles that&#13;
ended the segregated seating of Blacks on city buses. After moving to&#13;
Chicago, she helped organize the Illinois Women's Abortion Coalition,&#13;
a group fighting for women's right to choose abortion. A member of&#13;
the NAACP. Reid is campaigning in support of school desegregation&#13;
and the right of Black students to use busing to achieve equal&#13;
education.&#13;
Camejo and Reid will be on the ballot on November 2, along with&#13;
Robert Schwarz, SWP candidate for U.S. Senate from Wisconsin.&#13;
People who support the ideas of the Socialist.Workers campaign can&#13;
get involved, not only by voting November 2, but by working with the&#13;
Socialist Workers Party and the Young Socialist Alliance, a national&#13;
organization based on the high schools and college campuses which&#13;
supports the Camejo - Reid campaign. We can be .- and qeed to beactive&#13;
365 days a year to advance the struggle for socialism.&#13;
Vote against Dents&#13;
by Jay'Grassell&#13;
Myths abound in any electoral campaign, for such is the stuff of&#13;
politics. This year, the most pervasive and hence pathetic is the myth&#13;
that a vote for Carter and the Democrats is a vote for "change."&#13;
Change from what? Fact is that Wisconsin has:&#13;
Democratic State Senate&#13;
Democratic State Assembly&#13;
Democratic Governor&#13;
Democratic Congressional delegation ·&#13;
Democratic Senators.&#13;
The Democrats have had control of Congress for 40 of the past· 44&#13;
years. Every excess, loophole and inequity instituted in our lifetimes&#13;
has been passed by Democrats.&#13;
A vote fQr the ruling Democratic majority represents not a vote for&#13;
"change" but a continuation and even an intensification of the present&#13;
trends: an inept foreign policy, a devalued and inflated currency and&#13;
an ever increasing governmental intrusion into our lives and&#13;
livelihoods.&#13;
When you vote on November 2nd, vote for genuine change.&#13;
William Petrie for Congress&#13;
Stan York for the Senate&#13;
~ If:. The Parkside . ~ ~ ' .&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Th• Parkside Rang..- is written and edited&#13;
· by the students of the Unlvtrslty of&#13;
: Wl1coniln-Park1ide who are solely&#13;
rHponslltl• tor Its editorial policy and&#13;
content. Opinions exprened are not&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: JHnnlne Slpsma&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: Catlly ernak&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Cooper&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wigner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
.. Administration-Policies: John McKloskey .. SMI: Dave Brandt&#13;
.. Student groups &amp; speakers:&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jean Te11uta&#13;
necessarily repreHntatlve of those held by&#13;
the 1tvclenfl, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and 8u1inHr S53-2217;&#13;
Newsroom S53-22'S.&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS : jellrey j. swencki, Bill Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Julie Lange&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquardt - .. STAFF : Wendy Miller, Terri Gayhart. Robert Hollman, Chris Clausen, Thomas Nolen,&#13;
Diane Carlson, Douglas Edenhauser, Mary Kay Ohmer, Larry Donneily, Phil Hermann,&#13;
Ramona Maillet, Bob Jambois, Beverly Pella, Linda Knudtson, Karin LaFourier, Judy&#13;
"!'rudrung, Scott Reinhar.d, Philip L. Livingston.&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS : Joe Landa, Rick Flasch&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
Room for everybody&#13;
Dear Students:&#13;
It seems hard for us to call&#13;
Parkside our alma mater. That&#13;
term is saved for prestigious&#13;
institutions like Princeton, or&#13;
Oxford, or Yale. Yet Parkside is&#13;
or soon will be our alma mater. If&#13;
we are not to be embarrassed by&#13;
our alma mater, what it stands&#13;
for, what it is, arid what it will be,&#13;
we, you and I must participate in&#13;
its development.&#13;
Unlike Oxford or Princeton,&#13;
Parkside has no traditions. There&#13;
is no set character that one can&#13;
autDmatically associate with&#13;
UW-P. We ean and must have&#13;
some idea about what Parkside&#13;
will become. Perhaps part of -the&#13;
problem lies in our lack of&#13;
tradition and our lack of a clear&#13;
picture of what Parkside will be&#13;
ten years from now.&#13;
One possible solution requires&#13;
that ewryone sit quietly back&#13;
and let the decisions be made for&#13;
. us. You see that everywhere now.&#13;
"I'm only here for four years"-&#13;
syndrome. Parkside is no different&#13;
from any place else in the&#13;
country. People are sitting&#13;
passively waiting for someone to&#13;
do something for them or to&#13;
them.&#13;
Get _up and care.&#13;
It's not enough to react to&#13;
things. Sometimes self-respect or&#13;
self interest require that people&#13;
initiate. If you tolerate rhetoric&#13;
about the evils of passivity, then&#13;
your .right to outrage and indignation&#13;
have already been coopted.&#13;
The c~ptor and the cooptee&#13;
were one and the same&#13;
person. YOU.&#13;
If you want to set a tradition at&#13;
Parkside that could easily be&#13;
instituted, why not start with a&#13;
tradition of strong, active student&#13;
government. It could start with&#13;
your participation.&#13;
There is room for anyone and&#13;
everyone. People with just a little&#13;
time can· help as well as those&#13;
with a lot. Each of us has been hit&#13;
by Parkside's failings. We can do&#13;
something about them. I'm&#13;
issuing a plea on behalf of those .&#13;
students who Ciffie to Parkside&#13;
after you and I have been long&#13;
·gone. Do something now that&#13;
should have been done for you&#13;
• before you came. Set a tradition&#13;
of strong, active student&#13;
government.&#13;
The old line about involvement&#13;
in politics applies here at&#13;
Parkside as much as in state or&#13;
local government. ·&#13;
Alrhost all university committees&#13;
have student&#13;
representatives in their structure.&#13;
Not even half have studentrepresentatives&#13;
sitting on them.&#13;
No one wants the work. One&#13;
student cannot moniter the activities&#13;
of all the committees.&#13;
Even is one student could be&#13;
found who wanted to, he-she&#13;
wouldn't be a student for long&#13;
( there is a lot of work to be done.)&#13;
And it's fairly obvious that one&#13;
student does not a university&#13;
make. One student cannot&#13;
possibly know about all the pointof-view,&#13;
needs and interests of a&#13;
student population as diverse as&#13;
Parkside's.&#13;
Please help us. Contact your&#13;
student government. There's&#13;
room for everybody.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
President-Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Donations&#13;
requested&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Chi~Rho Center, Campus·&#13;
Ministry at Parkside, wishes to&#13;
call to your attention a special&#13;
need of someone whose work has&#13;
come to mean a lot to many&#13;
people in the Racine area.&#13;
Louise Hunter is the founder&#13;
and director of the Louise Hunter&#13;
Love and Charity Club in Racine.&#13;
She has served her community&#13;
· wen through the Love and&#13;
Charity Club.&#13;
She serves poor people in the&#13;
Racine area who for various&#13;
reasons are not able to receive&#13;
assistance from the other social&#13;
agencies. She sells clothes,&#13;
household items, and appliances&#13;
for a few cents to a few dollars to&#13;
people who could otherwise not&#13;
afford them. She.often gives food&#13;
and used merchandise to people&#13;
who have no money.&#13;
Louise Hunter and her husband&#13;
and family of 18 children have a&#13;
special need right now. Last&#13;
February their home burned and&#13;
one of their children died in the&#13;
fire. The Welfare Department&#13;
obtained temporary housing for&#13;
the Hunter family, but as of this&#13;
fall the Hunter family has been&#13;
told that they must secure other&#13;
housing.&#13;
continued on pg . 3 &#13;
pastors at Carthage to organize&#13;
and participate in an attempt to&#13;
raise funds through donations, in&#13;
the hope of providing a down&#13;
payment for a home for the&#13;
. Hunter family.&#13;
We have entered into an informal&#13;
agreement with the&#13;
Racine Housing Authority&#13;
whereby if. we can raise approximately&#13;
$2500 for a down&#13;
payment they will guarantee a&#13;
mortgage for the purchase of a&#13;
. home.&#13;
We are' reporting a very&#13;
unusual need in the life of a very&#13;
unusual family. We believe that&#13;
Mrs. Hunter has used her talents&#13;
Livingston's opinion&#13;
illogi~al drivel&#13;
Letters con.'t&#13;
Donations,-------- continued from pg. 7&#13;
'They are not able to secure&#13;
financing for the purchase of&#13;
another home, and the possibility&#13;
of renting a home for that size&#13;
family is out of the question. Mr.&#13;
" Hunter works at American&#13;
Motors and has an income&#13;
adequate for many household&#13;
. needs, but their prospects for&#13;
making their Own arrangements&#13;
to buy a home seem to be nonexistent.&#13;
Louise Hunter called Chi-Rho&#13;
Center in August and asked for&#13;
help. After a series of conversations&#13;
with _ the Racine&#13;
Housing Authority, we have&#13;
decided to join the· campus&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I'll not comment on the bulk of&#13;
Philip Livingston's article other&#13;
than to say it was illogical driveL&#13;
Livingston mis-stated the facts&#13;
every time he referred to Carter&#13;
and I wish to set the record&#13;
straight.&#13;
First, Jimmy Carter is not&#13;
. worth five million dollars. As of&#13;
June 1976Carter's net worth was&#13;
Commentaries&#13;
not significant&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It is our opinion that the glittering&#13;
generalities that plague&#13;
the commentaries on Carter and&#13;
Ford are of too little significance&#13;
to be included in the Ranger.&#13;
'They could, for the most part, be&#13;
the same editorial with the&#13;
names reversed eg., "This man&#13;
eight hundred and ten tIiousand&#13;
dollars. Second, Jimmy Carter&#13;
does not quote God. He quotes the&#13;
Bible. He's a "born again"&#13;
Christian - same as Jerry Ford.&#13;
These are the only' facts&#13;
Livingston relied on on writing&#13;
his rather unfortunate piece, the&#13;
'resi of the article being character&#13;
assassination by innuendo .&#13;
Bob Jambois&#13;
•&#13;
of humble thought is intelligent&#13;
enough to use good advice."&#13;
'There is alreadY enough&#13;
bulIshit around to pretty well&#13;
cover all the great glittering&#13;
generalities. It's too bad all there&#13;
is to offer is Ford &amp; Carter, or&#13;
peanuts and clumsiness.&#13;
John Georgeson&#13;
Ed Randle&#13;
First reading&#13;
Nov.4&#13;
'TheMagic Visage Organization&#13;
will present its first open poetryprose&#13;
reading of the year on&#13;
'Thursday, November 4 in the&#13;
Overlook Lounge ottbe Parkside&#13;
Library. 'The reading will begin&#13;
at 8 p.m. and will 'conclude at&#13;
.approximately 10 p.m.&#13;
The reading will feature&#13;
Parkside students and faculty&#13;
reading their own creative&#13;
writings. Interested writers may&#13;
sign up for the reading with&#13;
. Jeffrey J. Swencki, Magic Visage&#13;
Coordinator, through the Ranger&#13;
Office, WLLC-D194.&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
e Saves maintenance (25,OOO-m1leoil change)&#13;
e Eases su~-zero starts (-60'F. pour point)&#13;
- eSavesoll Mike Villers&#13;
your AidS/OIL deeler 63 7 - 2 7 26&#13;
Magic Visage is also in the&#13;
process of publishing an anthology&#13;
of Parkside student and&#13;
faculty poetry, prose,&#13;
photography, and art work. Many&#13;
of the contributors to the anthology&#13;
have taken part in past&#13;
readings .&#13;
Future.readings are now being&#13;
planned. On November 18 Janet&#13;
Beeler will be the guest poet and&#13;
will conduct an afternoon&#13;
seminar. For more information&#13;
contact Jeffrey in the Ranger&#13;
Office or call 553-2295or 634-5305.&#13;
and resources to the ·best of her&#13;
ability to help the poor people of&#13;
her community. We believe that&#13;
the community should respond to&#13;
this need of the Hunter family,&#13;
and we appeal to you to consider&#13;
making a contribution.&#13;
Contributions can be maile or&#13;
brought to the Chi-Rho Censer,&#13;
382512 St. Checks should be made&#13;
out to the Louise Hunter Housing&#13;
Fund. The deadline for contributions&#13;
is November 7. 'Thank&#13;
you for this consideration and&#13;
your response.&#13;
Fr. Wayne&#13;
Campus Minister&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
appoints&#13;
students&#13;
by Douglas Edeahauser&#13;
Three people were nomina ted&#13;
to committees at last week's&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association's Senate meeting.&#13;
Pat Heckle aOd Tad Ballantine&#13;
were appointed to the Budget&#13;
Priorities Committee and Art&#13;
Pollack was appointed to the&#13;
Vice-Chancellor's Search and&#13;
Screen ·committee.&#13;
'TheHealth Services committee&#13;
reported that there is a project&#13;
underway at getting Parkside to&#13;
record books for blind students.&#13;
'There was also a motion passed&#13;
to relocate the health office to&#13;
provide easier access for the&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER OCtober 27. 1976 3&#13;
students. There was discussion to WisconsIA and diIcuased a state&#13;
star! working with handicapped work-study program in which a&#13;
students to possibly open up the resolution was passed in opbowling&#13;
lanes for wheelchairs. position of the propollel! program.&#13;
A. motion was passed to UW-Stout was unanimously&#13;
examine the air quality in the art approved membership to the&#13;
department. If nothing is done by United Counell. Segregated Fees&#13;
Dec. I, this matter will be Budget Planning Conference will&#13;
discussed with OSHA. be held Nov. 5 in MadIson and a&#13;
A president's resolution was Legal Service Conference will be&#13;
passed that heartily endorses the held in MIlwaukee November 6.&#13;
creation of a veterinary school in In the president's report,&#13;
the U.W. system. President Kiyoko Bowden mentioned that&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden pointed out that Parkside leads the way in&#13;
there presently is no such school establishing an academic&#13;
in a highly agricultural state. grievance procedure and a&#13;
United Council held a meeting humane financial aids appeal&#13;
last weekend in Superior, procedure.&#13;
We're not&#13;
just another&#13;
rocker .&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 p.m. 'til 1 a.m,&#13;
every night on ..&#13;
•&#13;
• • • •&#13;
·WUPPm9S&#13;
WIIPPm9S&#13;
WUPPm9S&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Bud.is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make A difference.)&#13;
.- •. "'••..,.....'.J'&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
I ...&#13;
•&#13;
When you say Budweiser., you've said it all!&#13;
."HEUS("'USClt INC.• st. lOUIS&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976 3&#13;
Letters con.'t&#13;
Donations-·--'--------&#13;
students. There was discussion to&#13;
start working with handicapped&#13;
students to possibly open up the&#13;
bowling lanes for wheelchairs.&#13;
A motion was passed to&#13;
examine the air quality in the art&#13;
department. If nothing is done by&#13;
Dec. 1, this matter will be&#13;
discussed wil~ OSHA .&#13;
Wisconsin and discussed a state&#13;
work-study program in which a&#13;
resolution was passed in opposition&#13;
of the proposed program.&#13;
UW-Stout was unanimously&#13;
approved membership to the&#13;
United Council. Segregated Fees&#13;
Budget Planning Conference will&#13;
be held Nov. 5 in Madison and a&#13;
Legal Service Conference will be&#13;
held in Milwaukee November 6.&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
They are not able to secure&#13;
financing for the .purchase of&#13;
another home, and the possibility&#13;
of renting a home for that size&#13;
family is out of the question. Mr.&#13;
Hunter works at American&#13;
Motors and has an income&#13;
adequate for many household&#13;
· needs, but their prospects for&#13;
making their own arrangements&#13;
to buy a home seem to be nonexistent.&#13;
&#13;
Louise Hunter called. Chi-Rho&#13;
Center in August and asked for&#13;
help. After a series cif conversations&#13;
with the Racine&#13;
Housing Authority, we have&#13;
decided to join the - campus&#13;
pastors at Carthage to organize&#13;
and participate in an attempt to&#13;
raise funds through donations, in&#13;
the hope of providing a down&#13;
payment for a home for the&#13;
Hunter family.&#13;
We have entered into an informal&#13;
agreement with the&#13;
Racine Housing Authority&#13;
whereby if. we can raise approximately&#13;
$2500 for a down&#13;
payment they will guarantee a&#13;
mortgage for the purchase of a&#13;
home.&#13;
We are · reporting a very&#13;
unusual need in the life of a very&#13;
unusual family. We believe that&#13;
Mrs. Hunter has used her talents&#13;
Livingston's o·pinion&#13;
illogical drivel&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I'll not comment on the bulk of&#13;
Philip Livingston's article other&#13;
than to say it was illogical drivel.&#13;
Livingston mis-stated the facts&#13;
everytime he referred to Carter&#13;
and I wish to set the record&#13;
straight.&#13;
First, Jimmy Carter is not&#13;
. worth five million dollars. As of&#13;
June 1976 Carter's net worth was&#13;
eight hundred and ten thousand&#13;
dollars. Second, Jimmy Carter&#13;
does not quote God. He quotes the&#13;
Bible. He's a "born again"&#13;
Christian - same as Jerry Ford.&#13;
These are the only facts&#13;
Livingston relied on on writing&#13;
his rather unfortunate piece, the&#13;
rest of the article being character&#13;
assassination by innuendo.&#13;
Bob Jambois&#13;
Commentaries&#13;
not significant&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It is our opinion that the glittering&#13;
generalities that plague&#13;
the commentaries on C.arter and&#13;
Ford are of too little significance&#13;
to be included in the Ranger.&#13;
They could, for the most part, be&#13;
the same editorial with the&#13;
names reversed eg., "This man&#13;
of humble thought is intelligent&#13;
enough to use good advice."&#13;
There is already enough&#13;
bullshit around to pretty well&#13;
cover all the great glittering&#13;
generalities. It's too bad all there&#13;
is to offer is Ford &amp; (',arter, or&#13;
peanuts and clwnsiness.&#13;
John Georgeson&#13;
Ed Randle&#13;
First reading&#13;
Nov.4&#13;
The Magic Visage Organization&#13;
will present its first open poetryprose&#13;
reading of the year on&#13;
Thursday, November 4 in the&#13;
Overlook Lounge of. the Parkside&#13;
Library. The reading will begin&#13;
at 8 p.m. and will ·conclude at&#13;
approximately 10 p.m.&#13;
The reading will feature&#13;
Parkside students and faculty&#13;
reading their own creative&#13;
writings. Intereste.,d writers may&#13;
sign up for the reading with&#13;
· Jeffrey J. Swencki, Magic Visage&#13;
Coordinator, through the Ranger&#13;
Office, WLLC-D194.&#13;
Magic Visage is also in the&#13;
process of publishing an anthology&#13;
of Parkside student and&#13;
faculty poetry, prose,&#13;
photography, and art work. Many&#13;
of the contributors to the anthology&#13;
have taken part in past&#13;
readings.&#13;
Future.readin~ are now being&#13;
planned. On November 18 Janet&#13;
Beeler will be the guest poet and&#13;
will conduct an afternoon&#13;
seminar. For more information&#13;
contact Jeffrey in the Ranger&#13;
Office or call 553-2295 or 634-5305.&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Sa~es ~ear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mtle oll change)&#13;
• Eases su~-zero starts (-6~°F. pour point)&#13;
. • Saves oil Mike Villers&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer 6 3 7 _ 2 7 2 6&#13;
and resources to the best of her&#13;
ability to help the poor people of&#13;
her community. We believe that&#13;
the community should respond to&#13;
this need of the Hunter family,&#13;
and we appeal to you to consider&#13;
making a contribution.&#13;
Contrihutionc; can be maile or&#13;
brought to the Chi-Rho cemt:r,&#13;
3825 12 St. Checks should be made&#13;
out to the Louise Hunter Housing&#13;
Fund. The deadline for contributions-is&#13;
November 7. Thank&#13;
you for this consideration and&#13;
your response.&#13;
Fr. Wayne&#13;
Campus Minister&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
appoints&#13;
students&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
Three people were nominated&#13;
to committees at last week's&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association's Senate meeting.&#13;
Pat Heckle and Tad Ballantine&#13;
were appointed to the Budget&#13;
Priorities Committee and Art&#13;
Pollack was appointed to the&#13;
Vice-Chancellor's Search and&#13;
Screen-committee.&#13;
The Health Services committee&#13;
reported that there is a project&#13;
qnderway at getting Parkside to&#13;
record books for blind students.&#13;
There was also a motion passed&#13;
to relocate the health office to&#13;
provide easier access for the&#13;
A president's resolution was&#13;
passed that heartily endorses the&#13;
creation of a veterinary school in&#13;
the U.W. system. President&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden pointed out that&#13;
there presently is no such school&#13;
in a highly agricultural state.&#13;
United Council held a meeting&#13;
last weekend in Superior,&#13;
In the president's report,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden mentioned that&#13;
Parkside leads the way in&#13;
establishing an academic&#13;
grievance procedure and a&#13;
humane financial aids appeal&#13;
procedure.&#13;
We're not&#13;
....&#13;
just another&#13;
rocker ...... .&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
every night on . . •&#13;
• • • •&#13;
WUP-ffll95&#13;
WUPffll95&#13;
WUPffll95 -&#13;
Why do sonie people think ·&#13;
Bud. is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
•&#13;
When you say Budweiser., you've said it all!&#13;
ANHEUSEII-IUSCM, INC. • ST. LOUIS &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976&#13;
•&#13;
One sweet Dream&#13;
~.~!~&#13;
=Il~ . ~-n =&#13;
.It!_ ~ '. •&#13;
• This Coupon is • • •&#13;
• worth 50c on all •&#13;
• items listed below. •&#13;
• Good thru October •&#13;
• only! One Coupon .•&#13;
• per customer per' •&#13;
• purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember, •&#13;
• we never close, •&#13;
~ ........•,&#13;
Hey, sohotcrs, look at'&#13;
these gift selections:&#13;
Everything for Mind &amp;&#13;
BodY is right here at&#13;
two stores ... your&#13;
storeswith atmosphere,&#13;
• Recorda a Tapes. ALL new&#13;
releases stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import albums. We're the.&#13;
one store in town that&#13;
carries foreign releases.&#13;
• Spedal orden. Hard-to-get .&#13;
records and tapes with&#13;
guaranteed one day .&#13;
· delivery.&#13;
• Jewelry. Hand crafted lit&#13;
beautiful for style conscious&#13;
guys and gals ..&#13;
• Tapestries. Mobiles. Incense&#13;
burners. Stash&#13;
boxes.&#13;
• Incense. Sticks and cones&#13;
to tickle your nOS8.&#13;
• Pi.cturel. Decoupage. Wall&#13;
hangings. Artists: Escher.&#13;
Pitre. Roger Dean.&#13;
Rosamond.&#13;
• UptiDI to create any&#13;
atmosphere.&#13;
• Leather Gooda. WalletsPouches&#13;
- Purses - BeltsHats&#13;
&amp;; accessories in&#13;
abundance. Beautifully&#13;
handcrafted.&#13;
• Paraphernalia - Pipes.&#13;
Papers. Smoking Accessories.&#13;
Party necessities&#13;
, from around the world ..&#13;
• Waterbeds. We're&#13;
everything in Waterbeds.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
-" 5010 Seventh Avenue'&#13;
654-3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694,2404&#13;
EVENTS .'&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 31&#13;
'Wargamers Club meets from Ito 6 p.m, in CL 140.&#13;
Concert, Midnight Musical Madness, midnight (12 a.m.) in the CAT,&#13;
Group S~Ilport Committee meets at I p.m. in WLLC D174, The&#13;
meeting will be for the purposes or establishing guidelines, priorities&#13;
and preliminary budgets for student organization funding, All student&#13;
organization presidents and students are invited,&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 2 .&#13;
Singer; Barry Drake, performs from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square, .&#13;
Wargamers Club'meets from 6to tnp.m. in CL 140,&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 27&#13;
Movie, "TheBirds," 2:30 and 7:30 p.m, in the- CinemaTheatre.Ad"&#13;
mission is $1. .&#13;
Parkside Art Association meets at 5 p.m, in Main Place,&#13;
/ Thursday, Oct, 28&#13;
Movie, "Psycho," 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre. Admission&#13;
is $1. .&#13;
Accounting cfub meets at 4:30p,m,in CL325.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10p,m. in CL 140, ,&#13;
Faculty Recital: Eden Vaning, violin; Stephen Swedish, piano, at 8&#13;
p.rn. in the CAT.&#13;
..&#13;
Please submit all events to the Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
hefore publication.' .,&#13;
Friday, Oct. 29&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4p,m. in Union 207.&#13;
•&#13;
Saturday, Oct, 30&#13;
Foreign Student Club members meet .at 11:0!1 p.m, in the Union&#13;
Bazaar, This is a picnic and hospitality visit to the residents of&#13;
Southern Wisconsin Colony in Union Grove. The bus returns to the&#13;
campus at about 5 p.m.&#13;
Mens cross country meet, UW-P, Carthage, Loras, and Marquette-at&#13;
12 p.m, at Parkside,&#13;
'Soccer, UW-P vs, Western Michigan, at 2p.m, at the SOCCerfield,&#13;
Women's swimming meet, UW-P, Carthage, UW-River Falls, and UWEau&#13;
Claire, at 11 a.m, at Carthage. .&#13;
Garage sale&#13;
Switchboard is holding its First&#13;
Annual Halloween Garage Sale&#13;
.October 30th, Saturday, 11a.m, to&#13;
4p,m. .&#13;
The)' are asking fot contributions&#13;
of time and articles to&#13;
he sold at the sale, Contributions&#13;
should he brought to the Switchboard&#13;
center by October 28.&#13;
For more information on how&#13;
to make contributions, call&#13;
Switchboard: 65ll-help.&#13;
Join the Ford Bandwagon!&#13;
HELP HIM LEAD US TO A&#13;
REPUBLICAN 'VICTORY&#13;
NOVEMBER 2nd&#13;
· BECAUSE:&#13;
.'&#13;
HE CAN MAKE AMERICA A STRONG,&#13;
PROUD AMERICA&#13;
HE NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT TO FINISH'&#13;
A JOB WELL BEGUN&#13;
HE- WANTS TO KEEP AMERICA&#13;
STRONG AND AT PEACE&#13;
HE WANTS TO BUILD A ~AIRER TAX&#13;
STRUCTURE&#13;
•&#13;
HE WANTS TO INSURE JOBS&#13;
FOR EVERY WORKER •&#13;
HE WANTS TO BEAT INFLATION&#13;
f&#13;
~&#13;
HE WANTS A FREEDOM FOR AMERICA&#13;
THAT WILL ALLOW EQUALITY&#13;
TO ALL AMERICANS&#13;
•&#13;
FORD HAS A REALISTIC&#13;
RESPONSIBLE APPROACH,&#13;
re GOVERNMENT&#13;
GIVE HIM :YOUR VOTE! . .&#13;
~Ht PRESIDENT FORO EOMMmEE. JAMES A BAKER. III. CHAI~MAN, ROYSTON C HUGHES, TREASURER ~~&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976&#13;
one&#13;
sweet&#13;
Dream&#13;
'!!g&#13;
I / . I . --: JI I&#13;
. . -. • ll ~ ,n • llrl . . '-· ·: =&#13;
• •&#13;
• This Coupon is •&#13;
• worth 50c on all •&#13;
• items listed below. •&#13;
• Good thru October •&#13;
• only! One Coupon . •&#13;
• per customer per · •&#13;
• purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember, •&#13;
• we never close. •&#13;
~ ........• ,&#13;
Hey, scho~ars, look at ·&#13;
these gift selections.&#13;
Everything for Mind &amp;&#13;
Body is right here at&#13;
two stores . . . your&#13;
stores ·with atmosphere.&#13;
• Records &amp; Tapes. ALL new releases stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import albums. We're the. one store in town that&#13;
carries foreign releases. • Special orders. Hard-to-get&#13;
records and tapes with ·&#13;
guaranteed one day&#13;
delivery.&#13;
• Jewelry. Hand crafted &amp;&#13;
beautiful for style conscious&#13;
guys and gals . .&#13;
• Tapestries. ~obiles. In- cense burners. Stash&#13;
boxes.&#13;
• Incense. Sticks and cones to tickle your nose.&#13;
• Pictures. Decoupage. Wall&#13;
hangings. Artists: Escher,&#13;
Pitre, Roger Dean,&#13;
Rosamond.&#13;
• lighting to create any&#13;
atmosphere. .&#13;
• Leather Goods. Wallets- Pouches-Purses-BeltsHa&#13;
ts &amp; accessories in&#13;
abundance. Beautifully&#13;
handcrafted.&#13;
• Paraphernalia - Pipes.&#13;
Papers. Smoking Accessories.&#13;
Party necessities&#13;
from around the world.&#13;
• Waterbeds. We're&#13;
everything in Waterbeds.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
' 5010 Seventp Avenue '&#13;
654-357B&#13;
WEST&#13;
391 0 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694 -2404&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. ?7&#13;
Movie, "The 'Birds," 2: 30 and 7: 30 p.m. in the Cinema . 'I:heatre. AdSunday,&#13;
Oct. 31&#13;
'Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL-140.&#13;
mission is $1. • Concert, Midnight Musical Madness, midnight (12 a.m.) in the CAT.&#13;
Group Support Committee meets at 1 p.m: in WLLC D174. The&#13;
meeting will be for the purposes of establishing guidelines, P.riorities&#13;
and preliminary budgets·for student organization funding. NI student&#13;
organization presidents and students are invited.&#13;
Parkside Art Association meets at 5 p.m. in Main Place~&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 28&#13;
Movie, "Psycho," 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre. Admission&#13;
is $1. .&#13;
Accounting Club meets at 4:30 p.m. in CL 325.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CL 140 ..&#13;
Faculty Recital: Eden Vaning, violin; Stephen Swedish, pi~no, at 8&#13;
p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 29&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
. Saturday, Oct. 30&#13;
•&#13;
Foreign Student Club members .meet at 11:00 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Bazaar. This is a picnic ·and hospitality visit to the residents of&#13;
Southern Wisconsin Colony in Union Grove. The bus returns to the&#13;
campus at about 5 p.m. ·&#13;
Mens cross country meet, UW-P, Carthage, Loras, and Marquette,,at&#13;
12 p.m. at Parkside.&#13;
'Soccer,_ UW-P vs. Western Michigan, at 2p.m. at the soccer field.&#13;
Women's swimming meet, UW-P, Carthage, UW-River Falls, and UWEau&#13;
Claire, at 11 a.m. at Carthage.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 2 .&#13;
Singer; Barry Drake, performs from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square.&#13;
Wargamers Club·m~ets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Please submit all events to the Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
before publication. · ·&#13;
•&#13;
Garage sal~ ,_&#13;
Switchboard is holding its First&#13;
Annual Halloween Garage Sale&#13;
October 30th, Saturday, 11 a.m. to&#13;
4 p.m.&#13;
They are asking for contributions&#13;
of time and articles to&#13;
be sold at the sale. Contributions&#13;
should be brought to the Switchboard&#13;
Center by October 28.&#13;
For more information on how&#13;
to make contributions, call&#13;
Switchboard: 651J.help.&#13;
. .&#13;
..&#13;
•&#13;
Jointhe Ford Bandwagon! . .&#13;
HELP HIM LEAD US TO ·A&#13;
REP-UBLICAN ·v1CTORY&#13;
NOVEMBER 2nd 4&#13;
HE&#13;
HE&#13;
HEHE&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
HE.&#13;
HE&#13;
f&#13;
BECAUSE:&#13;
CAN MAKE AMERICA A STRONG,&#13;
PROUD AMERICA&#13;
NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT TO FINISH ·&#13;
A JOB WELL BEGUN&#13;
WANTS TO KEEP AMERICA&#13;
STRONG AND AT PEACE&#13;
WANTS TO BUILD A FAIRER TAX&#13;
STRUCTURE&#13;
WANTS TO INSURE JOBS&#13;
FO~ EVERY WORKER&#13;
WANTS TO BEAT tNFLATION&#13;
·HE ~ WANTS A FREEDOM FOR AMERICA&#13;
THAT WILL ALLOW EQUALITY&#13;
TO ALL AMERICANS&#13;
FORD HAS A REAllSTIC&#13;
RESPONSIBLE APPROACH -&#13;
JO GOVERNMENT&#13;
GIVE .HIM ~YOUR VOTE!&#13;
-&#13;
.-&#13;
~HL PRESIDENT FORD EOMMITTEE. JAMES A BAKER.Ill. CHAIRMAN. ROYSTON C HUGHES. TREASURER&#13;
(&#13;
, &#13;
- .&#13;
Contact&#13;
weekly by. student go.vernment&#13;
by Klyoko Bowden&#13;
Student Appointments&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following students on their&#13;
appointments :&#13;
Tad Ballantyne ...Budget Priorities Conunittee&#13;
Pat Hechel...Budget Priorities Conunittee&#13;
Art Pollock ...Vice-chancellor's Search and Screen Conunittee&#13;
Openings for Interested Students&#13;
Student Court...3 positions as Associate Justices&#13;
Appellate Court...Chief Justice and 2 Associate Appellate Justices&#13;
Senate ...3 At-Large Seats and 3 Divisional Seats&#13;
Senate Ways and Means Commitlee any 'interested student&#13;
Senate Student Services Conunittee any interested student&#13;
Execut1ve Implementation Conunitlee ...any interested student&#13;
Executive Legal Service Committee ...any interested student&#13;
Academic Actions (University) Committee ...2 positions&#13;
Curriculum and Program (University) Conunittee ...2 full-time&#13;
students&#13;
Academic Plarining and Program Review ..;(UIiiversity) Committee&#13;
...2 students .&#13;
Teaching Awards (UIiiversity) Conunittee ...l student&#13;
Bookstore (University) Committee ...2 students&#13;
Anyone who is interested in participating in Student Gov~rnment,&#13;
please contact the P.S.G.A., Inc. office, either by stopping down at&#13;
WLLC0193 or calling 553-2244.There is a place for anyone, and a need&#13;
for everyone.&#13;
~-.-:_----~&#13;
.: Cla~sifieds :'&#13;
I ..,&#13;
t&#13;
HOUSe fl'arents·Coul'tselor Couple . $10,000 I&#13;
annual salarv. paid family health rns.. tree&#13;
rOOm e, board. 2 wks. paid vecencn. 6:3(1&#13;
'&#13;
P.m. -11 p.m. free time. Requlrements:.One I&#13;
Parentmust hllvt! at least Bachelor's d~ree.&#13;
, ~o Childre'l.. Contact: Racine RUnaWay"&#13;
nc.. 1331 Center st.. Racine. WI~ .. 632·0A2A t 8.~daily. , •&#13;
WANTED: Sports writer for RANGER that t&#13;
'&#13;
I'talented. gOOd ingram mar, and most of all'&#13;
dePendllble. 5ee Jean Tenuta in the&#13;
, RANGER offIce, WLLC G194. ,&#13;
~A.N. E .. THOMPSON Free Lance&#13;
, ~tDgraphy. weddings and candid por.'&#13;
trait!!. Phone 652.8862.&#13;
'In .. P~NTI~C SPRING 3·speed Metallic t&#13;
'&#13;
Blue, red buckets. Rally wheels, AM·FM, ,&#13;
FM stereo. 8·Track $2195. 634·0876.&#13;
, WILL DO any kind of typing at reasonable t&#13;
,&#13;
rllll!'S. For information. call 652·3373.&#13;
NEEDED FEMALE COMPANION to Share'&#13;
, el(penses to Denver, Colo. on November 2.,&#13;
Call 632·027 for mor~ information evenings.&#13;
'&#13;
FOR SALE: Portable Stereo wl1h G~rrard I&#13;
turntable. Asking .$50. Call 634-5305 after&#13;
, Runoff eleelion,· between Richard ,&#13;
I&#13;
Folaom' Carol Bohn' and Jpan&#13;
FueUerer Fri. 0e1.29 9:30AM-5:30PM t&#13;
-------- . .&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27. 1976 5&#13;
Musical madness Sunday&#13;
.. "Midnight Musical Madness,"&#13;
a Halloween program promising&#13;
"famous last performances of&#13;
unknown masterpieces in the&#13;
music literature," will be&#13;
presented ~y a group of&#13;
University of Wisconsin·Parkside&#13;
. music faculty members at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, Oct. 31 in the&#13;
Parkside Union Theater.&#13;
The participants explain the&#13;
discrepancy between the&#13;
program title and the time of the&#13;
performance by saying that it is&#13;
scheduled for the conveIiience of&#13;
those who turn into pumpkins at&#13;
midnight. The event is free ·and&#13;
open to the public and costumes&#13;
and-or disguises are encouraged.&#13;
Music faculty members involved&#13;
in the endeavor are Carol&#13;
Bell, pianist, Tim Bell,&#13;
saxophone and clarinet, Rodger&#13;
Daniels, percussion, Carol Irwin,&#13;
soprano, David Schripsema,&#13;
violin, Eden Vaning, violin, and&#13;
August Wegner, piano.&#13;
Model&#13;
U.N.&#13;
planned&#13;
The political science discipline&#13;
will be sponsoring,a delegation of&#13;
students to go to tbe Third Annual&#13;
Regional Model United Nations&#13;
on April 14-15, 1977 at Carleton&#13;
College in Northfield, Minnesota.&#13;
. The model United Nations are&#13;
designed to impart to the particular&#13;
participant. both a greater&#13;
knowledge of the functioning of&#13;
the UIiited Nations and an expanded&#13;
perspective of International&#13;
issues.&#13;
A delegation's first duty is to&#13;
determine which nation it will&#13;
represent and then study that&#13;
nation's foreign policy as well as&#13;
rationale for that policy. At the&#13;
conference i!'self, members of&#13;
the delegation will present and&#13;
defend their nation's position&#13;
before committees convened to&#13;
discuss issues and proposals and&#13;
then take resolutions decided by&#13;
the conunittees to the floor of the&#13;
Model General Assembly.&#13;
Interested students may&#13;
contact Dr. Samuel Pernacciaro&#13;
Greenquist 313 or CL 367.&#13;
Tickets at Info Center&#13;
.. They promise such esoteric&#13;
pr?gram fare as clarinet polkas,&#13;
Flight of the Bumblebee for&#13;
accompanied marimba. The&#13;
Pineapple Rag of Scott. Joplin,&#13;
and other musical ghoulishness.&#13;
'arkside Actiyitie. Board Film Series&#13;
pre.ent •&#13;
TWO HITCHCOCKCLASSICS&#13;
THE " PS)S~P .&#13;
~IR~ ,8j~~&#13;
Wednesday Thursday&#13;
Oct. 27 Oct. 28&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m. 2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
$1.~ $1.~&#13;
Resignations and General Distress&#13;
It was with deep regret that the resignations of Vice-President&#13;
Robe:t Vlach and Senator David Harris were accepted at the Oct. 14,&#13;
meetmg of the P.S.G.A. Senate, Student Government cannot afford to&#13;
'lose two such hard working individuals.&#13;
The resignation of Acting Secretary Linda Knudtson and ~ator&#13;
Rohert Tremonte were also accepted.&#13;
It is partieularily difficult at a commuter campus such as Parkside&#13;
to getstudents to pa.rticipate in Student Government or any student&#13;
'. organ~ti~n. The. benefits are almost exclusively related to having&#13;
pride m doing a thankless job well. Regardless of criticism, which is&#13;
frequent, student government members are demonstrating initiative&#13;
resoursefW:ness. and perserverance, and will con-tinue to do so even&#13;
though their numbers diminish periodically. -'&#13;
Consider joining Student Go~ernment only if you are prepared to&#13;
work hard, spend time you ~a.n.III afford, and receive satisfaction from&#13;
the knowldege that responsibility IS a learned quality, just 8S calculus&#13;
and computer language are learned abilities. Consider joining Student&#13;
Government because it is important to Parksice and strangely enough&#13;
to you. •&#13;
No one will fault y?u: ~or huilding a resume for future job-hunting.&#13;
Ext:~-&lt;;:urrlc~ar activities are Important factors in· an employer's&#13;
decision to hire one prospective employee over another. Those activiti~s&#13;
coupled with ~ respectable grade point average imply that&#13;
here IS someone who WIllpush a little harder, who will take that extra&#13;
step, and perhaps accomplish a little more, Respectable grade point&#13;
averages are a dirne-a dozen; respdnsibility and initiative are far less&#13;
connnaon. •&#13;
No one can afford the time, but some manage to find a few extra&#13;
hours a week to work at something important.&#13;
Consider joining Student Government, not for the compliments and&#13;
prestige you'll gain; because there are damned few compliments and&#13;
less prestige. Consider joining Student Government because it's&#13;
important, and it needs you.&#13;
Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin's&#13;
album station&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
every night on . . . .&#13;
•&#13;
liP&#13;
.The quiet llader in synthetic lubricatilll&#13;
·"':r~~&#13;
~rMike Villers&#13;
Questions· Yau&#13;
Ask .Yourself:&#13;
1 Would You Like To Increase Gas&#13;
Mileage By 10% To 25% * And&#13;
Save $10.00 Every 1000 Miles?&#13;
[ IYES [ J NO&#13;
• overall average % increase&#13;
2 Would you Rather Change 011&#13;
Every 25,000 Miles/Once A Year&#13;
And Increase Engine Life?&#13;
[ IYES [ ) NO&#13;
3 Would you like To Eliminate&#13;
Towing And Service Expense&#13;
This Winter When Your Car&#13;
Won't Start Due To cold, Sluggish&#13;
Oil? . [I YES [ ) NO&#13;
If your answer Is YES to any of the&#13;
above questions, you should be&#13;
using SYNTHETIC AMS/OIL!&#13;
If,,., " ,.""&#13;
637·2726&#13;
Should'&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976 5&#13;
Contact M1lsical madness Sunday&#13;
weekly by.student government&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
Resignations and General Distress&#13;
It was with deep regret that the resignations of Vice-President&#13;
Robert Vlach and Senator David Harris were accepted at the Oct 14&#13;
meeting of the P.S.G.A. Senate, Student Government cannot afford t~&#13;
'lose two such hard working individuals.&#13;
The resignation of Acting Secretary Llnda Knudtson and Se;ator&#13;
Robert Tremonte were also accepted.&#13;
It is particularily difficult at a commuter campus such as Parkside&#13;
to get_ stu?ents to pa:tic~pate in Student Government or any student&#13;
. or?an~ti~n. The. benefits are ahnost exclusively related to having&#13;
pride m doing a thankless job well. Regardless of criticism, which is&#13;
frequent, student government members are dem&lt;?nstrating initiative,&#13;
resoursef'":"ess, and perserverance, and will continue to do so even&#13;
though their numbers diminish periodically. -'&#13;
Consider joining. Student Go~ernment only if you are prepared to&#13;
work hard, spend time you can 111 afford, and receive satisfaction f&#13;
the knowldege that responsibility is a learned quality, just as calcul~~m&#13;
and computer language are learned abilities. Consider joining Student&#13;
Government because it is important to Parksice and strangely enough&#13;
to you. '&#13;
No one~ fault Y?~ !or building a resume for future job-hunting.&#13;
Ext:~-curr1c~ar acnv1t1es are important factors in - an employer's&#13;
dec1S1on to hire one prospective employee over another. Those activiti~s&#13;
coupled with ~ respectable grade point average imply that&#13;
here lS someone who will push a little harder, who will take tbat extra&#13;
step, and perhaps accomplish a little more. Respectable grade point&#13;
averages are a dime-a dozen; responsibility and initiative are far less&#13;
common.&#13;
No one can afford the time, but some manage to find a few extra&#13;
hours a week to work at something important.&#13;
Consider joining Student Government, not for the compliments and&#13;
prestige you'll gain; because there are damned few compliments and&#13;
less prestige. Consider joining Student Government because it's&#13;
important, and it needs you.&#13;
Student Appointments&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following students on their&#13;
appointments:&#13;
Tad Ballantyne ... Budget Priorities Committee&#13;
Pat Hechel...Budget Priorities Committee&#13;
Art Pollock ... Vice-Chancellor's Search and Screen Committee&#13;
Openings for Interested Students&#13;
Student Court ... 3 positions as Associate Justices&#13;
Appellate Court...Chief Justice and 2 Associate Appellate Justices&#13;
Senate ... 3 At-Large Seats and 3 Divisional Seats&#13;
Senate Ways and Means Conunittee ... any interested student&#13;
Senate Student Services Committee ... any interested student&#13;
Execut1ve Implementation Committee ... any interested student&#13;
Executive Legal Service Committee ... any interested student&#13;
Academic Actions (University) Committee ... 2 positions&#13;
Curriculum and Progtam (University) Committee ... 2 full-time&#13;
students ·&#13;
Academic Planning and Program Review .. ;(University) Committee&#13;
... 2 students ·&#13;
Teaching Awards (University) Committee .. .! student&#13;
Bookstore (University) Committee ... 2 students&#13;
Anyone who is interested in participating in Student Government,&#13;
please contact Ute P.S.G.A., Inc. office, either by stopping down at&#13;
WLLC Dl93 or calling 553-2244. There is a place for anyone, and a need&#13;
for everyone.&#13;
' "Midnight Musical Madness,"&#13;
a Halloween program promising&#13;
''famous last performances of&#13;
unknown masterpieces in the&#13;
music literature," will be&#13;
presented t&gt;Y a group of&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
music faculty members at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, Oct. 31 in the&#13;
Parkside Union Theater.&#13;
_ The participants explain the&#13;
discrepancy between the&#13;
program title and the time of the&#13;
performance by saying that it is&#13;
scheduled for the convenience of&#13;
those who turn into pumpkiru; at&#13;
midnight. The event is free and&#13;
open to the public and costumes&#13;
and-or disguises are encouraged.&#13;
Music faculty members involved&#13;
in the endeavor are Carol&#13;
Bell, pianist, Tim Bell,&#13;
saxophone and clarinet, Rodger&#13;
Daniels, percussion, Carol Irwin,&#13;
soprano, David Schripsema,&#13;
violin, Eden Vaning, violin, and&#13;
August Wegner, piano.&#13;
Model&#13;
U.N.&#13;
planned&#13;
The political science discipline&#13;
will be sponsoring a delegation of&#13;
students to go to the Third Annual&#13;
Regional Model United Nations&#13;
on April 14-15, 1977 at Carleton&#13;
College in Northfield, Minnesota.&#13;
The model United Nations are&#13;
designed to impart to the particular&#13;
participant both a greater&#13;
knowledge of the functioning of&#13;
the United Nations and an expanded&#13;
perspective of international&#13;
issues.&#13;
A delegation's first duty is to&#13;
determine which nation it will&#13;
represent ~d then study that&#13;
nation's foreign policy as well as&#13;
rationale for that policy. At the&#13;
conference it-self, members of&#13;
the delegation will present and&#13;
defend their nation's position&#13;
before committees convened to&#13;
discuss issues and proposals and&#13;
then take resolutions decided by&#13;
the committees to the floor of the&#13;
Model General Assembly.&#13;
Interested students may&#13;
contact Dr. Samuel Pernacdaro&#13;
Greenquist 313 or CL 367.&#13;
PA&amp; PREol:NTS ~~~ wmR forfii.6.W'NshON Ml\K.E AMr -&#13;
: Cla~sifieds l&#13;
t . . t - t House Parents-Counselor Couple . $10,000 t annual salary, paid family health ins., free&#13;
room &amp; board. 2 wks. paid vacation, 6:30&#13;
l P-m. · 11 p.m. free time. Requirements c One t ' Parent must hall\! at least Bachelor's degree. t 'lo Childreri. Contact : Rac ine Runaway, t 'nc., 1331 Center St., Racine, Wis .. 632-0424 f 8-5 daily. •&#13;
WANTED: Sports writer for RANGER that t t "talented, good in grammar, and most of all t&#13;
dependable. S-ee Jean Tenuta in the t RANGER office, WLLC 0194. t ~AN. E . . THOMPSON Free Lance t holography, weddings and candid por- t traits. Phone 652-8862.&#13;
t 1974 P~NTl1'C SPRING 3-speed Metallic t&#13;
'&#13;
Blue, red buckets, Rally wheels, AM-FM , t FM stereo, 8-Track S2195. 634-0876.&#13;
t WILL DO any kind of typing al reasonable t t rates. For Information. call 652-3373.&#13;
NEEDED FEMALE COMPANION to share'&#13;
l expenses to Denver, Colo. on November 2. ' f Call 632-4727 for morl information eve~lngs.&#13;
,.. t FOR SALE : Portable Stereo w ith Garrard t turntable. Asking $50. Call 634-5305 after&#13;
t Runoff elections" between Richard t&#13;
l Foloom' Carol Bohn' and Jpan&#13;
TOM CHAPIN&#13;
,&#13;
-Fuetterer ~ ____ Fri. Oci.29 9:30AM~&#13;
-5:30PM&#13;
_&#13;
l '-----------T-ick .. et .. s,.o_,t -'".;.fo~Ce_,n.;.ter ________ _,J&#13;
They promise such esoteric&#13;
pr?gram fare as clarinet polkas,&#13;
F1ight of the Bumblebee for&#13;
accompanied marimba, The&#13;
Pineapple Rag of Scott Joplin,&#13;
and other musical ghoulishness.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board Film Series&#13;
presents&#13;
TWO HITCHCOCK CLASSICS&#13;
THE~ ,llf/8/III/IIJ ... PS-~O .&#13;
~IR!J!~ .aJ;r~()b&#13;
Wednesday Thursday&#13;
Oct. 27 Oct. 28&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m. 2:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
• I&#13;
$1.00 $1.00&#13;
Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin's&#13;
album station&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 ·p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
every night on • • • •&#13;
• IIP&#13;
637-2726&#13;
Should&#13;
1 Would You Like To Increase Gas&#13;
Mileage By 10% To 25%* And&#13;
Save S10.00 Every 1000 Miles?&#13;
[ ] YES [ ] NO • overall average % increase&#13;
2 Would you Rather Change OH&#13;
Every 25,000 Miles/Once A Year&#13;
And lncrea~e Engine life?&#13;
[ ) YES [ ) NO&#13;
3 Would you like To Eliminate&#13;
Towing And Service Expense&#13;
This Winter When Your Car&#13;
Won't Start Due To cold, Sluggish&#13;
Oil? · [ ] YES [ ] NO&#13;
If your answer is YES to any of the&#13;
above questions, you should be&#13;
using SYNTHETIC AMS/OIL !&#13;
If', ,,,,,, lo ,,,,,,,, &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976&#13;
,EarthScience:&#13;
varied,Interests .&#13;
by Debbie Sbarpe'" camping gear and equipment has heen obtained by&#13;
the club,leaving smaller expenses for the sludentto&#13;
The process of' learning may appear rigidly assume. Last year's trip brought students to&#13;
structured and rather impersonal at limes, but that Arkansas and Missouri, and this year they plan a&#13;
is only one dimension. The field of earth science trip to Florida, commencing over the Christmas&#13;
involves several varied learning experiences. .break.&#13;
Earth science 'involves a substantial radious of Speakers from different areas of the country talk&#13;
interests. Geological and environmental sludies frequently withgrciups of earth science students.&#13;
intertwine with the fields of geology, meteorology Also, a yearly "Field Conference," consisting of&#13;
air and water pollution, weather observation, approximately 100 to 200 students from Parkside&#13;
mineralogy, planetary, geology and several more. and surrounding campuse .. gather (this year at&#13;
First-band learning experiences are gained by a Oshkosh) to discuss mutual areas of interest conseries&#13;
of field trips comprising of one major trip cerning the sludy of earth science: ,&#13;
.conducted annually, and sequeled with several The prospect of employment is also validly&#13;
shorter trips throughout the semester. Preparation considered. Many students seek and profitably find&#13;
for these trips naturally requires a background interesting and meaningful employment opknowledge&#13;
supplied from a text, but the field of portunities within the field of earth science,&#13;
earth science depends heavily upon self-observation Professor Shea explains, "I' think many sludents&#13;
and personal involvement just as well as the text. simply don't realize the opportunities that can grow&#13;
The "Earth Science Club," as well as earth out of education. In fact, there are many inscience&#13;
sludents or other interested participants teresting opportunities within the earth science&#13;
finance their trips from activities such as raffles in program. »,&#13;
approaching the administration for grants. Basic&#13;
, .&#13;
Guskin--------&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
feeling can he reduced.&#13;
• Regarding to future meetings&#13;
of this type, he said that he would&#13;
like to have them on a regular&#13;
basis, possibly every other week.&#13;
As long as sludents are interested&#13;
and attend, "nobody and no topic&#13;
is forbidden," said Guskin.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden inquired. about&#13;
policies regarding the tape&#13;
recording of classes by sludents&#13;
She said that at other campuses&#13;
this is an issue of great importance.&#13;
Guskin said that it is up&#13;
to the faculty memher in charge&#13;
of that particular class to decide&#13;
what goes on in their class.&#13;
The Chancellor and sludents&#13;
PARAPHERNALIAsOUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop in!&#13;
shed a new Ufe on shopping!&#13;
~~~MA~-S=-' -,&#13;
! I I . Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
..&#13;
UW-"P.kside Activities Board and WRKR&#13;
present&#13;
HARRY CHAPIN&#13;
in Concert&#13;
Thursday; "ovember 11&#13;
8 p.m.&#13;
Parkside Fieldhouse&#13;
Admission - $3.00 Parkside, Students advance&#13;
$4.00 General Advance&#13;
$5.00 At door&#13;
Tickets Available at Info Center __&#13;
concluded the meeting in a group&#13;
decision after 2% hours. The&#13;
Chancellor mentioned he was late&#13;
for another meeting in progress&#13;
next door. Generally pleased with&#13;
the student turnout Guskin said&#13;
he was looking forward to the&#13;
next Chancellor-sludent meeting.&#13;
Committees&#13;
continued from es. 1&#13;
merged last year.&#13;
The other' committee created&#13;
by the Senate was the Committee&#13;
on Research and Creative Activity&#13;
(CORACO), which replaces&#13;
the old Faculty Fund Board. The&#13;
new committee will dole out&#13;
institutional funds to faculty&#13;
members for research they are&#13;
carrying out, and will also be&#13;
charged with raising some funds&#13;
on its own. The chairman will be&#13;
appointed by the Chancellor, and&#13;
according to Faculty Senate&#13;
chairman Michel Marron, will&#13;
serve in a capacity "like that of&#13;
an assistant to the .p,ancellor."&#13;
The chairman will be&#13;
responsible for handling information&#13;
about funding opportunities&#13;
and for assisting&#13;
faculty in obtaining outside&#13;
financial support for research&#13;
and creative activity.&#13;
Semester Break&#13;
January &amp;-13, -1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE -&#13;
- MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOWI&#13;
• For application forms 011&#13;
additional information contact:&#13;
Pe-kside Union Office'&#13;
553-2200&#13;
Editor's note: "Who Are Vou?" will be a regular column In whleh&#13;
students selected at random will be interviewed to find onl lbelr in-&#13;
,teresls, background; ele. These are tbe people we pass by in the haDs&#13;
every day, sit next to In class, ride with on the shuttle hus, bul&#13;
sometimes never have lhe opportunity to meet.&#13;
.&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
Mary Jo Curty was randomly selected for this week's interview&#13;
from the Parkside student population'. When first approached, she was&#13;
reading, but not engrossed in a book entitled Deviant Behavior for her&#13;
social disorganization class. Sbe willingly put it aside to teD Ranger a&#13;
few things about herself.&#13;
She is an 18 year old freshman here and a Racine St. Catherioes&#13;
graduate. When asked how Parkside compared to her high school, she&#13;
responded. "There is so much more to do and so much more to take&#13;
here; and there are no OWlS running around."&#13;
According to Mary Jo, "Parkside is sort of a self-sufficient place."&#13;
She recalled days at St. Cat's, leaving the school illegally 10 go to the&#13;
nearby bakery or a park. "All that is right here. Parkside is so pretty&#13;
in the fall... it's a school with a view," she said;&#13;
"I'm a person who is thrilled with the idea that someone can come&#13;
here and sleep in the halls. I just woke up from a nap; it w"as great."&#13;
Marv Jo was sitting in the second floor of the union. "I'like the trees&#13;
around here," she said' referring to the trees inside the bUilding.&#13;
Mary Jo is on the Parkside Activity Board's film committee.&#13;
Vesterday she and two other committee memhers dressed up like the&#13;
Marx Brothers lo advertise the movie, Animal Crackers. She still has&#13;
bruises from the escapade. They took bundles of animal crackers and&#13;
"ran around throwing them at people all over the school.&#13;
We even went up to see Guskie, but he wasn't in. Someone must have&#13;
warned. him."&#13;
For' the past week the fibn committee has been making origami&#13;
(folded paper) 'birds to advertise their next presentation, Alfred&#13;
Hilehcock's The Birds. The films are shown in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theatre. "For a dollar it's good. We have to pull publicity stunts&#13;
because not everyone knows about the theatre yet," she said.&#13;
Mary Jo had planned on majoring in communications 'but she was&#13;
told at registration that she would not be able to do that at Parkside, "I&#13;
really wanted to major in it. I heard they dropped some teachers and&#13;
everything." She hopes that she will someday be able to major in&#13;
communications at Parkside. "I'm really upset about it. All the :way&#13;
through my senior year at St. Catherines 1 planned on coming here to&#13;
major in Communications."&#13;
She'also enjoys sewing and does it for extra money. She made the&#13;
coat that she was wearing during the interview, "I'm just starting to&#13;
get together my own business. My sisters are my advertisers because&#13;
they wear ..my things."&#13;
Mary Jo said, "I'm disorganized in everything but sewing. That's&#13;
why nook Social Disorganization; it sounded like my kind of course.&#13;
What 1like aJ&gt;outthis school is that it's not totally organized."&#13;
Editor's note: According to Chancellor Alan Guskln, Parkslde still&#13;
halil.a comm1tnif'atiH~ major, which will also be retained in the future.&#13;
J&#13;
•&#13;
,. ""&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the' Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Wathillgtoll lINe. 6M-2t7J&#13;
•&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976&#13;
. Earth Science:&#13;
varied , interests · _ ~ . ~ . by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
The process of · learning may appear rigidly&#13;
structured and rather impersonal at times, but tha!&#13;
is only one dimension. The field of earth science&#13;
involves several varied learning experiences.&#13;
Earth science ·involves a substa!ltial radious of&#13;
interests. Geological and environmental studies&#13;
intertwine with the fields of geology, meteorologY,&#13;
air and water pollution, weather observation,&#13;
mineralogy, planetary, geology and several more.&#13;
First-hand learning experiences are gained by a&#13;
series of field trips comprising of one major trip&#13;
· conducted annually, and sequeled with several&#13;
shorter trips throughout the semester. Preparation&#13;
for these trips naturally requires a background&#13;
knowledge supplied from a text, but the field of&#13;
earth science depends heavily upon self-observation&#13;
and personal involvement just as well as the text.&#13;
The "Earth Science Club," as well as earth&#13;
science students or other interested participants&#13;
finance their trips from activities such as raffles in&#13;
approaching the admir.istration for grants. Basic&#13;
camping gear and eqmpment has been obtamed by&#13;
the club, leaving smaller expenses for the student to&#13;
assume. Last year's trip brought stu~ents to&#13;
Arkansas and Missouri, and this year they plan a&#13;
trip to Florida, commencing over the Christmas&#13;
·break.&#13;
Speakers from different areas of thE: country talk&#13;
frequently with ·groups of earth science students.&#13;
Also, a yearly "Field Conference," consisting of&#13;
approximately 100 to 200 students from Parkside&#13;
and surrounding campuses- gather (this year at&#13;
Oshkosh) to discuss mutual areas of interest concerning&#13;
the study of earth science:&#13;
The prospect of employment is also validly&#13;
considered. Many students seek and profitably find&#13;
interesting and meaningful emplqyment opportunities&#13;
within the field of earth science,&#13;
Professor Shea explains, "I" think many students&#13;
simply don't realize the opportunities that can gtow&#13;
out of education. In fact, there are many interesting&#13;
opportunities within the earth science&#13;
program. "·&#13;
Gu skin----.------&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
feeling can be reduced.&#13;
· Regarding to future meetings&#13;
of this type, he said that he would&#13;
like to have them on a regular&#13;
basis, possibly every other week.&#13;
As long as students are interested&#13;
and attend, "nobody and no topic&#13;
is forbidden," said Guskin.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden inquired. about&#13;
policies regarding the tape&#13;
recording of classes by students&#13;
She said that at other campuses&#13;
this is an issue of great importance.&#13;
Guskin said that it is up&#13;
to the faculty member in charge&#13;
of that particular class to decide&#13;
what goes on in their class.&#13;
The Chancellor and students&#13;
PARAPHERNALfA -SCJUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop in!&#13;
shed a new Life on shopping!&#13;
~ ~~Mi~-f , '&#13;
1 · Pure Brewed&#13;
From .God's Cou~ry.&#13;
On tap at Union Squijre&#13;
G&#13;
UW.:Parkside Activities Board and WRKR&#13;
present I&#13;
I&#13;
HARRY CHAPIN&#13;
in Concert&#13;
Thursday, ~~vember 11&#13;
8 p.m. _&#13;
Parkside Fieldhouse&#13;
Admission - $3.00 Parkside _ Students advance&#13;
$4.00 General Advance&#13;
$5.00 At door&#13;
Tickets Available at Info Center _.r&#13;
concluded the meeting in a group&#13;
decision after 2½ hours. The&#13;
Chancellor mentioned he was late&#13;
for another meeting in progress&#13;
next door. Generally pleas~d with&#13;
the student turnout Guskin said&#13;
he was looking forward to the&#13;
next Chancellor-student meeting.&#13;
-Committees&#13;
cpntlnued from pg. 1&#13;
merged last year.&#13;
The other· committee created •&#13;
by the Senate was the Committee&#13;
on Research and Creative Activity&#13;
(CORACO), which replaces&#13;
the old Faculty Fund Board. The&#13;
new committee will dole out&#13;
institutional funds to faculty&#13;
members for research they are&#13;
carrying out, and will also be&#13;
charged with raising some funds&#13;
on its own. The chairman will be&#13;
appointed by the Chancellor, and _&#13;
according to Faculty Senate&#13;
chairman Michel Marron, will&#13;
serve in a capacity "like that of&#13;
an assistant to the Chancellor."&#13;
The chairman will be&#13;
responsible for handling information&#13;
about funding opportunities&#13;
and for assisting&#13;
faculty in obtaining outside&#13;
financial support for research&#13;
and creative activity.&#13;
. ~, Universlty_o!, W'.5"onsin-Parkside&#13;
~ -&#13;
Fl~ta&#13;
Acapulco ·&#13;
Semester Break&#13;
January 6-13,-_ 1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE - -· MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW! • For application forms or&#13;
additional information contact:&#13;
Parkside tlnion Office&#13;
553-2200&#13;
photo by Wendy Miller··&#13;
Editor's note: "Who Are You?" will be a regular column in which&#13;
students selected at, random will be interviewed to find out their interests,&#13;
background, etc. These are the people we pass by in the halls&#13;
every day, sit next to in class, ride with on the shuttle bus, but&#13;
sometimes never have the opportunity to meet. . by Wendy Miller&#13;
Mary Jo Curty was randomly selected for this week's interview&#13;
from the Parkside student population·. When first approached, she was&#13;
reading, but not engrossed in a book entitled Deviant Behavior for her&#13;
social disorganization class. She willingly put it aside to tell Ranger a&#13;
few things about herself.&#13;
She is an 18 year old freshman here and a Racine St. Catherines&#13;
graduate. When asked how Parkside compared to her high school, she&#13;
responded. "There is so much more to do and so much more to take&#13;
here; and there are no nuns running around."&#13;
According to Mary Jo, "Parkside is sort of a self-sufficient place."&#13;
She recalled days at St. Cat's, leaving the school illegally t-0 go to the&#13;
nearby bakery or a park. "All that is right here. P~rkside is so pretty&#13;
in the fall ... it's a school with a view," she said;&#13;
"I'm a person who is thrilled with the idea that someone can come&#13;
here and sleep in the halls. I just woke up from a nap; it w"as great."&#13;
Marv Jo was sitting in the second floor of the union. "I"like the trees&#13;
around here," she said ' referring to the trees inside the _ building.&#13;
Mary Jo is on the Parkside Activity Board's film committee.&#13;
Yesterday she and two other committee members dressed up like the&#13;
Marx Brothers to advertise the movie, Animal Crackers. She still has&#13;
bruises from the escapade. They took bundles of animal crackers and&#13;
"ran around throwing them at people all over the school.&#13;
We even went up to see Guskie, but he wasn't in. Someone must have&#13;
warned him.''&#13;
For the past week the film committee has been making origami&#13;
(folded paper) birds to advertise their next presentation, Alfred&#13;
Hitchcock's The Birds. The films are shown in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theatre. "For a dollar it's good. We have to pull publicity stunts&#13;
because not everyone knows about the theatre yet," she said .&#13;
. Mary Jo had planned on majoring in communications but she was&#13;
told at registration that she would not be able to do that at Parkside. "I&#13;
really wanted to major in it. I heard they dropped some teachers and&#13;
everything." She hopes that she will someday be able to major in&#13;
communications at Parkside. "I'm really upset about it. All the way&#13;
thro~gh my senior year at St. Catherines I planned on coming here to&#13;
major in Communications."&#13;
She·also enjoys sewing and does it for extra money. She made the&#13;
coat that she was wearing during the interview, "I'm just starting to&#13;
get together my own business. My sisters are my advertise.rs because&#13;
they wear ,.my things."&#13;
Mary Jo said, "I'm disorganized in everything but sewing. That's&#13;
why r took Social Disorganization; it l'jOUnded like my kind of course.&#13;
What I like about this school is that it's not totally organized."&#13;
Editor's note: According to Chancellor Alan Guskin, Parkside still&#13;
ha-. a comm1tnication major, which will also be retained in the future.&#13;
.. LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
2615 Washington ltle. 634-23·73 &#13;
Vets:a unique group&#13;
by Debbie Bauer . . .&#13;
. , IS also in the planning stage, as is a fund raising pool&#13;
tournament open to all students .&#13;
Schultz and Tom Olson, vice president of the cl~,&#13;
are actively campaigning for veteran's rights.&#13;
Olson IS president of Wisconsin Association of&#13;
Concerned Veteran's Organizations (WACVO) and&#13;
Schultz is secretary. WACVO beld their annual&#13;
conv~tion in Kenosha last spring, hosted by the&#13;
Parkside Vets Club. Schultz is also State Cordinator&#13;
for the National Association of Concerned Veterans&#13;
(NACV).&#13;
Schultz estimates that there are 508 veterans at&#13;
Parkside. Fourty-three are paid members Of the&#13;
.club. "Five percent membership is considered&#13;
g0oc:I,and we are well over that," he explained. "We&#13;
are in a lot better position than we have ever been."&#13;
He hopes to have 100paid members by the end of the&#13;
school year.&#13;
Vet's Club meets every other Sunday in WLLC&#13;
0174, across from the Information Kiosk.&#13;
. Veterans are that unique group of people who&#13;
have endu:ed an experience they often consider&#13;
unbearable. They wait impatiently for it to end&#13;
then when it's finally over, they want to get together&#13;
and talk about the good and riot so good old days&#13;
The Vets are a diverse ,group from varied&#13;
backgrounds, often with little ihCOmmonother than&#13;
their military service. But they usually agree on one&#13;
point: be",~ a Ve~beats being in the military.&#13;
Parkside s Vet s Club is one of the most active&#13;
orgamzanons on campus. According to Ron Schultz&#13;
president, 60 percent of the activities are-of a sociai&#13;
nature and 40 percent are service oriente.d. Last&#13;
spring, they cleaned up Pike's Creek and sponsored&#13;
a walk-run to raise funds for the Special Olympics.&#13;
Beer drinking, informal parties, and foothall&#13;
games form the bulk of the club's social activities.&#13;
They will hold a dance on November 20 in Union&#13;
Square. A pool tournament for Vet's Club members&#13;
Ron Shultz Pholo by Allen Bauer&#13;
by Linda Knudtson and Karin LaFournler&#13;
Dear Complaint DePartment,&#13;
I have a complaint about the math discipline at Parkside. I feel that&#13;
this semester I have been stuck with a professor who I feel is ineompetant&#13;
for a class that I need. There are other math professors&#13;
here who have the background to teach the class, so who decides which&#13;
classes are taught by which professors and how can students have a&#13;
say in this process?&#13;
No Choice (Note: this letter has been edited for content.)&#13;
u&#13;
-0&#13;
m&#13;
p&#13;
I&#13;
a&#13;
•&#13;
1&#13;
n&#13;
t&#13;
ANSWER: We 'Went to discuss this problem with Science Division&#13;
Chairperson, Frank Lowenthal, and with discipline coordinator&#13;
Timothy Fosswn, who is coordinating the teaching schedule for the&#13;
spring semester. According to these men, the math professors put in&#13;
requests for the classes they would like to teach. Using this information,&#13;
all classes are then assigned by the coordinating professor&#13;
(currently Mr. Fossum) as he sees fit.&#13;
The math discipline tries to be as flexible as possible with the&#13;
schedules. U a student feels that he-she has an incompelant professor&#13;
(in any department, not just math),ile-she may file either a formal or&#13;
an informal complaint. An informal complaint is a written statement&#13;
to the divisional chairperson. After talking with the student submitting&#13;
the complaint, the.chairperson tries to straighten out any problems&#13;
with the professor involved. (at no time will the name of the student&#13;
filing the complaint be released to the professor who is the object of&#13;
the complaint.)&#13;
A formal complaint is filed with the Chancellor in writing. We&#13;
suggest that any student who has a valid complaint about one of bisher&#13;
professors file an informal complaint first. (However we feel that&#13;
for most problems, the student should go directly to the professor that&#13;
is involvee anll try to straighten out the problem( s) with him-her.)&#13;
P.S. to No Choice: We have additional information that might be of&#13;
interest to you. Please get in contact with us. - The Editors&#13;
• Note on Spanlsb&#13;
We have received word from Sylvie Debevec Henning, Coordinator&#13;
of the Modern Language Program, that -this fall she has received&#13;
numerous complaints from students that no Spanish conversation and&#13;
composition Course was offered. Ms. Henning would like all students to&#13;
know that this problem has been remedied. Next semester Spanish&#13;
315-Compositlon and Conversation will be taught by Professor Ortega Dept. on Tuesday a!,d Thursday from 3:30-4:45..&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27. 1976 7&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted for&#13;
Ranger Editor for&#13;
Spring Semester&#13;
RESUMESMUST BE TUum IN TO&#13;
DON KOPRIVA,&#13;
288 Tallent Hall by ItoV. 11th&#13;
• Salaried posilion demonding 01 loosl 20-30 hours a WHIt&#13;
• Experience in jOt.mOlism necessary&#13;
• Applicants will be advised of interview time and place&#13;
Call Don Kopriva for further details 553.2404&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
Member Parkstde 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd A venue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention Ihis ad I&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25.00G-mlle 011change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-6O"F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 Mike Villers&#13;
637-2726 your AlIAS/OIL dea/eT&#13;
We're not&#13;
just another&#13;
rocker .&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
every night on .. • • • •&#13;
WUPMl95&#13;
WUPMl95&#13;
WUPMl95 .&#13;
•&#13;
Ve~s: a unique group&#13;
by Debbie Bauer · is also in the planning stage, as is a fund raising pool&#13;
· Veterans are that unique group of people who&#13;
have endured an experience they often consider&#13;
unbearable. They wait impatiently for it t.o end&#13;
then when it's finally over, they want t.o get togethe;&#13;
and talk about the good and riot so good old days.&#13;
The Vets are a diverse _group from varied&#13;
backgrounds, often with little ih common other than&#13;
their military service. But they usually agree on one&#13;
point: being a Vet beats being in the military.&#13;
t.ournament open t.o all students.&#13;
Schultz and Tom Olson, vice president of the club&#13;
are ac~ively 7ampaigning for veteran's rights'.&#13;
Olson is president of Wisconsin Association of&#13;
Concerned Veteran's Organizations·(WACVO) and&#13;
Schultz is secretary. WACVO held their annual&#13;
conve?tion in Kenosha last spring, hosted by the&#13;
Parkside Vets Club. Schultz is also State Cordinator&#13;
for the National Association of Concerned Veterans&#13;
Parkside's Vet's Club is one of the most active&#13;
org~izations on campus. According to Ron Schultz&#13;
president, 60 percent of the activities are-of a sociai&#13;
nature and 40 percent are service oriented. Last&#13;
spring, they cleaned up Pike's Creek and sponsored&#13;
a walk-run t.o raise funds for the Spe"cial Olympics.&#13;
Beer drinking, informal parties, and football&#13;
games form the bulk of the club's social activities.&#13;
They will hold a dance on November 20 in Union&#13;
Square. A pool t.ournruw~nt for Vet's Club members&#13;
(NACV). .&#13;
Schultz estimates that there are 508 veterans at&#13;
Parkside. Fourty-three are paid members of the&#13;
· club. "Five percent membership is considered&#13;
go~, and we are well over that," he explained. "We&#13;
are m a lot better position than we have ever been."&#13;
He hopes t.o have 100 paid members by the end of the&#13;
school year.&#13;
u&#13;
-0&#13;
m&#13;
p&#13;
I&#13;
a&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
D&#13;
t&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Vet's Club meets every other Sunday in WLLC&#13;
D174, across from the lnf&lt;'rmation Kiosk.&#13;
Ron Shultz Photo by Allen Bauer&#13;
by Llnda Knudtson and Karin LaFournier&#13;
Dear Complaint Department,&#13;
I have a complaint about the math discipline at Parkside. I feel that&#13;
this semester I have been stuck with a professor who I feel is incompetant&#13;
for a class that I need. There are other math professors&#13;
here who have the background t.o teach the class, so who decides which&#13;
classes are taught by which prpfessors and how can students have a&#13;
say in this process?&#13;
No Choice (Note: this letter has been edited for content.)&#13;
ANSWER: We went t.o discuss this problem with Science Division&#13;
Chairperson, Frank Lowenthal, and with discipline coordinator&#13;
Timothy Fosswn, who is coordinating the teaching schedule for the&#13;
spring semester. According t.o these men, the math professors put in&#13;
requests for the classes they would like t.o teach. Using this information,&#13;
all classes are then assigned by the coordinating professor&#13;
(currently Mr. Fossum) as he sees fit.&#13;
The math discipline tries to be as flexible as possible with the&#13;
schedules. If a student feels that he-she has an incompetant professor&#13;
(in any department, not just math), ile-she may file either a formal or&#13;
an informal complaint. An informal complaint is a written statement&#13;
to the divisional chairperson. After talking with the student submitting&#13;
the complaint, the chairperson tries t.o straighten out any problems&#13;
with the professor involved. ( at no time will the name of the student&#13;
filing the complaint be released to the professor who is the object of&#13;
the complaint.)&#13;
A formal complaint is filed with the Chancellor in writing. We&#13;
suggest that any student who has a valid complaint about one of hisher&#13;
professors file an informal complaint first. (However we feel that&#13;
for most problems, the student should go directly t.o the professor that&#13;
is involvee and try t.o straighten out the problem( s) with him-her.)&#13;
P.S. t.o No Choice: We have additional information that might be of&#13;
interest t.o you. Please get in contact with us. -The Editors&#13;
• Note on Spanish&#13;
We have received word from Sylvie Debevec Itenning, Coordinator&#13;
of the Modern Language Program, that -this fall she has received&#13;
numerous complaints from students that no Spanish conversation and&#13;
composition course was offered. Ms. Henning would like all students to&#13;
know that this problem has been remedied. Next semester Spanish&#13;
315-Composition and Conversation will be taught by Professor Ortega&#13;
on Tuesday aJld Thursday from 3:30-4:45.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976 7&#13;
Applications now&#13;
being accepted tor&#13;
Ranger Editor for&#13;
Spring Semester&#13;
RESUMES MUST BE TURNED IN TO&#13;
DON KOPRIVA,&#13;
288 Tallent Hall by Nov. 11th&#13;
• Salaried position demanding at least 20-ll hours a week&#13;
• Experience in journalism necessary&#13;
• Applicants will be advised of interview time and place&#13;
Call Don Kopriva for further details 553-2404&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Oub&#13;
•&#13;
443 7 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention this odl&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mlle oll change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 Mike Villers&#13;
your AMS/ OIL dealer&#13;
.637-2726&#13;
~ "II&#13;
We're not&#13;
just another&#13;
•&#13;
rocker ........&#13;
Album rock from&#13;
6 p.m. 'til 1 a.m.&#13;
every night on . . • • • •&#13;
WUP_ffll95&#13;
WUPffll95&#13;
WUPffll95&#13;
Ii,. ~ &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RA"'GER October 27, 1976-) --~&#13;
(&#13;
I&#13;
\ Netiers close season&#13;
•&#13;
round, the No. I doubles pair of'&#13;
Mary Ann Carins .and Jennifer'&#13;
Zuehlke· dropped to a team from&#13;
Oshkosh 7-5, 6-1. In No.2, Kathy&#13;
Feitchner and Pat Munger lost to&#13;
UW-Milwaukee's .Kellough_&#13;
Pataini, 6-2, 6-3, in the quar.&#13;
terfinal consolations. _ .&#13;
In the first consolation match&#13;
an No.3 singles, Jeanine Hunter&#13;
lost to Peg Gruenge of UW·&#13;
Whitewater, 6-0, 6-1. Marge.&#13;
Balasz was defeated in the&#13;
second round of consolation to&#13;
Carthage's Jan Daly; 6-1~6-0.&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Swimmers .Iose two .meets The women's tennis team&#13;
concluded their season with a&#13;
ninth place finish in the WWIAC&#13;
Championships at UW-La Crosse&#13;
Saturday. .&#13;
The host won the meet easily&#13;
with·60 points and UW-El\u Claire&#13;
and UW.stevens Point tied tor&#13;
second with 28. The Rangers&#13;
scored one point.&#13;
The highest finishers for the&#13;
Rangers were the doubles teams.&#13;
After the quarterfinal consolation&#13;
swam in the 200medley relay, the&#13;
first time this event lias been&#13;
swum by the Rangers this&#13;
season.&#13;
UWe're in better spirits and&#13;
have tried our hardest," said&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson. "After a&#13;
couple of weeks of hard work,&#13;
we'll be stronger next week."&#13;
Friday, the team lost ta UWMilwaukee,&#13;
IlJO.11.&#13;
"Nothing went right for us,"&#13;
said Lawson. The highest finishes&#13;
were a second In the'IOO back bY&#13;
Latch and a third in the 100 tree&#13;
bY Gail Olsen.&#13;
by'Jean Tenuta 1:06.73, finishing second against&#13;
Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh. She took a first against&#13;
Oshkosh' and second against&#13;
Carroll in the lOO'back and a first&#13;
against Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh in the 50 b1lfterfly.&#13;
Judy Iverson scored a first&#13;
agalilst Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh in the 50 free, seconds in&#13;
the }DO breast and third In the 50&#13;
back.&#13;
Sally Francis scored thirds in&#13;
the 50 free and the 500 free. Lili&#13;
CrnIch also bad thirds in both. the&#13;
200 free and 50 breast. Four also&#13;
Parkside's women's swimming&#13;
squad will participate in two&#13;
meets this week. This afternoon&#13;
they travel to UW-Whitewater for&#13;
a 6 p.m. meet and will meet .&#13;
Carthage, UW-River Falls and&#13;
UW-Eau Claire in Kenosha&#13;
Saturday, at 10 a.m.&#13;
The Rangers dropped both ends&#13;
of a double dual meet last Saturdar,&#13;
losing to Oshkosh, 112-&#13;
15 and to' Carroll, 85-24.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch set an~ther&#13;
school record In th~ 100 free at.&#13;
Housing workshop&#13;
Church.&#13;
Topics to be discussed include.&#13;
housing purchases, programs' for&#13;
low income famflies and&#13;
'veteran's housing programs.&#13;
The Urban League Operation of&#13;
Kenosha is·sponsoring a housing&#13;
workshop entitled "Housing in&#13;
Kenosha" on October 28 from 7 to&#13;
9:30 p.m, at the Second Baptist Soccer team-play'S W~stern Michigan&#13;
'.. Free Plm Delivery&#13;
C:,I~bHighvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street /.&#13;
Phone: 65~-8737&#13;
All. ~.n••rl•• Chi•••• , S,••hlfli, R.... ,!, 8H'&#13;
. OPEN 4 , ••• to t .....&#13;
Hendl,rson thought that this was&#13;
a record for a Ranger in a season.&#13;
Parkside's soccer team hosts Mike Boyaji;m, who has also&#13;
Western Michigan Saturday at 2 -seored quite well for the Rangers&#13;
p.m, in the soccer bowl, in wbat this season, added two goals -and&#13;
. Coach Hal Henderson expects to two assists to his season total. .&#13;
be a "very even game." Desch Ismsili gained two goals&#13;
"Weslern Michigan has fpced - arid one assist, Andy Gutierrez&#13;
three of the same teams that' we and J:ack Landwelir each had a&#13;
have and have done about the goal, Mihran Ganghinjian scored&#13;
same as we bave against them. one goal and had two assists, and&#13;
We're hoping our having the Chris Carter and Mike Olesen&#13;
home field will be enough of an added one asslst each.&#13;
advantage to put us ahead," said . The squad's record is 6-5-1,&#13;
Henderson. which ties the highest number of&#13;
• The Rangers are hoping, wins for a Parkside team and this&#13;
though, that the Western&#13;
Michigan team will be similar to&#13;
the Eastern Michigan team they&#13;
routed 10-0 at yItSiJanti.&#13;
"We totally dominated the&#13;
game. We out shot them 37-3 and&#13;
it was 6-0 at the half. It was unfortunate&#13;
that we didn't have&#13;
enough substitutes to give others&#13;
a chance to get considerable .&#13;
playing experience. I was just&#13;
shuffling players around, putting&#13;
them in different positions and&#13;
. we were trying not to run up the&#13;
score."&#13;
Earl Campbell, the team's .&#13;
leading scorer increased his&#13;
margin above other Rangers with&#13;
three 'goals lind two assists,&#13;
bringing his season total to eight&#13;
goals and eight assists. Coach&#13;
is also the first time a Parkside&#13;
tesm has had a record over .500&#13;
during a season in over five&#13;
years.&#13;
The team stili expects to win&#13;
· approximately ten games, while&#13;
finishing over break-even mark.&#13;
Henderson is stili cautious and is&#13;
taking Iris season goals one step&#13;
at a time.&#13;
"We've been getting better. ~;::::::::::~==========:::::::::::::. each game," said Henderson.&#13;
"Our strong schedule in the early The quiet leader in synthetic iubrication&#13;
part of the season got us used to&#13;
pressure situations and we're&#13;
better able to handle them now."&#13;
~. Mike Villers&#13;
.Questions You&#13;
Ask Yourself:&#13;
~&#13;
1 Would You Like To Increase Gas&#13;
Mileage By 10% To 25%* And&#13;
Save $10.00 Every 1000 Miles?&#13;
[ IYES [ INO .&#13;
• overall average % increase&#13;
.2 Would you Rather Change Oil&#13;
. Every 25,000 Miles/Once A Year&#13;
And Increase Engine life?&#13;
[ IYES [ INO&#13;
....3·Would· you. like' To Eliminate&#13;
Towing And' Service Expense&#13;
This Winter When Your Car&#13;
Won't Start Due To cold, Sluggish&#13;
. Oil? [ IYES t INO .&#13;
If your answer is YES to any of the&#13;
abOve questions, you should be&#13;
using SYNTHETIC AMS/OIL !&#13;
If,- H"" ItJ ,U."&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Runners finish fifth 637-2726&#13;
Parkside's runners face Should&#13;
Carthage, Loras, and Marquette&#13;
in the first of their last four home&#13;
meets of the season. The meet&#13;
will begin at 12 noon.&#13;
. The Rangers finished fifth in&#13;
the 20 leam Carthage Invitational&#13;
last Saturday, as Ray&#13;
Fredericksen was' second out of&#13;
the 250 plus competitors in the&#13;
.meet.&#13;
Luther of Iowa won overall&#13;
with 76 points. The UW:&#13;
•Milwaukee Track Club was next&#13;
with 100, UW.stevens Point, 115;&#13;
. Carthage,.123; and Parkside had&#13;
141.&#13;
Jim Drews won the meet,&#13;
representing the UWM Track&#13;
Club, with a time of 24minutes, 51&#13;
seconds. Fredericksen was right ~&#13;
on his heels, finishing only three -&#13;
seconds later. The top seven&#13;
· runners came in within 15&#13;
seconds of each other.&#13;
Egyptian history scheduled'&#13;
A personal perspective of 5,000&#13;
years. of Egyptian history,&#13;
culture and arts, will be reviewed&#13;
in a course taught by Omar&#13;
Amin, associate prof~ of life&#13;
science, who lived in Egwt for 25&#13;
years. From the historical&#13;
review, he will lead into modern&#13;
'Egwt, with· its economic and&#13;
political burdens and contributions.&#13;
Amin recommends this short&#13;
non-credit. course for mid-east&#13;
students, prospective visitors, or&#13;
interested individuals. He will&#13;
use his slide collection to&#13;
illustrate the lectures.&#13;
The class, sponsored bY the&#13;
, .&#13;
University of Wisconsin.&#13;
E;idension, will meet .on four&#13;
Tuesdays, beginning November 2&#13;
at 7:30 p.m., at Parkslde in the&#13;
Classroom Building. Contact.&#13;
University Extension for&#13;
registration information, phone&#13;
553-2312. -&#13;
•&#13;
Performing Frido.y &amp; So.tvrdo.y , r&#13;
SUNDAY TRIAD&#13;
WANT&#13;
ALL YOU S~v..\- ' *'~&#13;
c.,"\~'\ ~~.&#13;
Cy\&#13;
\~C~\.': ~o\\.~o FEAST&#13;
,\ ". . INCLUDES. Solod. Ilollon . \\ 9'&#13;
Breod ond 0 FREE CLASS&#13;
OF WiNE....&#13;
~lerbll'b·&#13;
~urt -&#13;
~&amp;.ISTAUR&#13;
mo«. &amp; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
$1.95&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plo.zo. •&#13;
632-6151&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 27, 1976&#13;
(&#13;
I&#13;
"\&#13;
j \ ---~&#13;
Swimmers ·lose twO .meets&#13;
byJean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside's women's swimming&#13;
squad will participate in two&#13;
meets this week. This afternoon&#13;
they travel to UW-Whitewater for&#13;
a 6 p.m. meet and will meet -&#13;
Carthage, UW-River Falls and&#13;
UW-Eau Claire in Kenosha&#13;
Saturday, at 10 a.m.&#13;
The Rangers dropped both ends&#13;
of a double dual meet last Saturdar,&#13;
losing to Oshkosh, 112-&#13;
15 and. to 'Carroll, 85-24.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch set another&#13;
school record in th~ 100 free at .&#13;
1:06.73, finishing second asainsi&#13;
Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh. She took a first against&#13;
Oshkosh · and second against&#13;
Carroll in the l(M&gt;'back and a first&#13;
against Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh in the· 50 butterfly.&#13;
Judy Iver.son scored a first·&#13;
against Carroll and third against&#13;
Oshkosh in the 50 free, seconds in&#13;
the 100 breast and third in the 50&#13;
back.&#13;
Sally Francis scored thirds in&#13;
the 50 free and the 500 free. Lili&#13;
Crnich also had thirds in both. the&#13;
200 free and 50 breast. Four also&#13;
swam in the 200 medley relay, the&#13;
first time this event lias been&#13;
swum by th_e Rangers this&#13;
season.&#13;
"We're in better spirits and&#13;
have tried our hardest," said&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson. "After a&#13;
couple of weeks of hard work,&#13;
we'll be stronger next week."&#13;
Friday, the team lost to UWMilwaukee,&#13;
100-11.&#13;
"Nothing went right for us,"&#13;
said Lawson. The highest finishes&#13;
were a secona in the ·100 back by&#13;
Leitch and a third in the 1()0 free&#13;
by Gail Olsen.&#13;
Soccer team~ playij W ~stern Michigan&#13;
by Jean Tenuta Henderson thought that this was&#13;
a record for a Ranger in a season.&#13;
Parkside's soccer team hosts Mike Boyajian, who has also&#13;
Western Michigan Saturday at 2 scored quite well for the Rangers&#13;
p.m. in the soccer bowl, in what this season, added two goals and&#13;
· Coach Hal Henderson expects to two assists to his season total.&#13;
be a "very even game." Desch Ismaili gained two goals&#13;
"Western Michigan has f,.aced - and one assist, Andy Gutierrez&#13;
three of the same teams thaf we and ~ack 4ndwelir each had a&#13;
have and have done about the goal, Mihran Ganghinjian scored&#13;
same as we have against them. one goal and had two assists, and&#13;
We're hoping our having the Chris Carter and Mike Olesen&#13;
home field will be enough of an added one assist each.&#13;
advantage to put us ahead," said · The squad's record is 6-5-1,&#13;
Henderson. . which ties the highest number of&#13;
The Rangers are hoping, wins for a Parkside team and this&#13;
though, that the Western&#13;
Michigan team will be similar to&#13;
the Eastern Michigan team they&#13;
is also the first tigle a Parkside&#13;
team has had a record over .500&#13;
during a season in over five&#13;
years.&#13;
The team still expects to win&#13;
approximately ten games, while&#13;
finishing over break-even mark.&#13;
Henderson is still cautious and is&#13;
taking his season goals one step&#13;
at a time.&#13;
"We've been getting better&#13;
each game," said Henderson.&#13;
"Our strong schedule in the early&#13;
part of the season got us used to&#13;
pressure situations and we're&#13;
better able to handle them now."&#13;
routed 10-0 at Ypsilanti.&#13;
"We totally dominated the&#13;
game. We out shot them 37-3 and&#13;
it was 6-0 at the half. It was unfortunate&#13;
that we didn't have&#13;
enough substitutes to give others&#13;
Runners finish fifth&#13;
a chance to get considerable .&#13;
playing experience. I was just&#13;
shuffling players around, putting&#13;
them in different positions and&#13;
we were trying not to run up the&#13;
score."&#13;
Earl Campbell, the team's .&#13;
leading scorel' increased his&#13;
margin above other Rangers with&#13;
three goals and two assists,&#13;
bringing his season total to eight&#13;
goals and eight assists. Coach&#13;
Parkside's runners face , Milwaukee Track Club was next&#13;
Carthage, Loras, and Marquette with 100, UW-Stevens Point, 115;&#13;
in the first of their last four home · Carthage,_ 123; and Parkside had&#13;
meets of the season. The meet 141.&#13;
will begin at 12 noon. Jim Drews won the meet,&#13;
. The Rangers finished fifth in representing the UWM Track&#13;
the 20 team Carthage Invitational Club, with a time of 24 minutes, 51&#13;
last Saturday, as Ray seconds. Frederic~n was right&#13;
Fredericksen was second out of on his heels, finishing only three&#13;
the 250 plus competitors in the seconds later. The top seven&#13;
meet. -runners came in within 15&#13;
Luther of Iowa ~on overall seconds of each other.&#13;
with 76 points. The uw.:-&#13;
Egypti_an history ~cheduled&#13;
A personal perspective of 5,000&#13;
years of Egyptian history,&#13;
culture and arts, will be reviewed&#13;
in a course taught by Omar&#13;
Amin, associate professor of life&#13;
science, who lived in Egypt for 25&#13;
years. From the historical&#13;
review, he will lead into modern&#13;
Egypt, with · its economic and&#13;
political - burdens and contributions.&#13;
&#13;
Amin recommends this sho.rt&#13;
non-credit, course for mid-east&#13;
students, prospective visitors, or&#13;
interested individuals. He will&#13;
use his slide collection · to&#13;
illustrate the lectures.&#13;
The class, sponsored by the &gt; •&#13;
University of WisconsinE]dension,&#13;
will meet on four&#13;
Tuesdays, beginning November 2&#13;
at 7:30 p.m., at Parkside in the&#13;
Classroom Building. Contact&#13;
Uni,versity Extension for ·&#13;
registration information, phone&#13;
553-2312. -&#13;
. '&#13;
Netters -close se.ason·&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The women's tennis team&#13;
concluded their season with a&#13;
ninth place finish. in the WWIAC&#13;
Championships at UW-La Crosse&#13;
Saturday. .&#13;
The host won the meet easily&#13;
with'60points and UW-E~u Claire&#13;
and UW-Stevens Point tied ,for&#13;
second with 28. The Rangers&#13;
scored. one point.&#13;
The highest finishers for the&#13;
Rangers were the doubles teams.&#13;
After the quarterfinal consolation&#13;
round, the No. 1 doubles pair of&#13;
Mary Ann Carins .and Jennifer'&#13;
Zuehlke dropped to a team from&#13;
Oshkosh 7-5, 6-1. In No. 2, Kathy&#13;
Feitchner and Pat Munger lost to&#13;
UW-Milwauke~'s . KelloughPataini,&#13;
6-2, 6-3, in the quar_.&#13;
t.erfinal consolations. .&#13;
In the first consolation match&#13;
an No. 3 singles, Jeanine Hunter&#13;
lost to Peg Gruenge of UW-&#13;
- Whitewater, 6-0, 6-1. Marge.&#13;
Balasz was defeated in the&#13;
second round of consolation to&#13;
Carthage's Jan Daly, 6-1,_ 6-0.&#13;
Housing workshop ..&#13;
The Urban League Operation of&#13;
Kenosha is-sponsoring a housing&#13;
workshop entitled "Housing in&#13;
Kenosha" on October 28 from 7 to&#13;
9:30 p.in. at the Second Baptist . .&#13;
Church.&#13;
_ Topics to be discussed include&#13;
housing purchases, programs' for&#13;
low income families and&#13;
Veteran's housing programs.&#13;
• Free Pizza Delivery :.-&#13;
Club Highvi~w&#13;
5035 60th Street . Phone: 65i-8737&#13;
./&#13;
Alt, •,n.,,,., ch11k11, s,11htfll, 11.a,1~, , .. ,&#13;
OPEN 4 •·•· to 1 1.11.&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
1 Mike Villers 637 -2726&#13;
· Questions You Should&#13;
Ask Yourself:&#13;
1 Would You Like To Increase Gas&#13;
Mileage By 10% To 25%·* And&#13;
Save $10.00 Every 1000 Miles?&#13;
[ ] YES f ] NO · • overall average % increase&#13;
2 Would you Rather Change Oil&#13;
- Every 25,000 Miles/Once A Yea-r&#13;
And Increase Engine Life?&#13;
( ] YES [ ) NO&#13;
_ 3·Would. you like· To Eliminate&#13;
Towing And · Service Expense&#13;
This Winter When Your Car&#13;
Won't Start Due To cold, Sluggish&#13;
. Oil? [ ] YES [ · ] NO&#13;
If your answer is YES to any of the&#13;
above questions, you should be&#13;
using SYNTHETIC AMS/OIL!&#13;
/f,- Nm, lo 1/,1ng1 ...&#13;
Performing Fridoy &amp; Sotu-rdoy&#13;
SUNDAY TRIAD· Join the Ford Bandwagon!&#13;
All YOU , '-.l\,~&#13;
WANT c._\\~,,~, - moN. &amp; TUES.&#13;
~ ~-;)~' ~ - SPAGHETTI&#13;
(;'¥.--\_~ ,,1'1 ~I&lt;- FEAST Jl.95 c,'f\'x \\ '?,.~ ..,_o INCLUDES: Salod. _Italian&#13;
Bread and a FREE GLASS&#13;
OF WINE....&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plozo -&#13;
632-6151-&#13;
~erbu's·&#13;
,ourt - PUa &amp; RIST.AUR&#13;
. We All Have Th~ Privi~ege&#13;
To -v·o1EDon't&#13;
Waste-It&#13;
on PEANUTS- ~ THE J?lESttNT FORD C~E£'-.JAMES A BAKER III CHAIRMAN ROVSTON C HUGHES TREASUR€R </text>
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              <text>Veep quits.&#13;
Four....resign Senate&#13;
by Douglas Edenbauser&#13;
Tbe Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, .Inc ,&#13;
will hold its fall elections on \&#13;
October 20and 21from 9 a.m. to 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
There were four resignations&#13;
accepted by the 'Senate at its&#13;
October 14th meeting.&#13;
Resignations were received from&#13;
Senators Bob Tremonte and Dave&#13;
- Harris, Secretary Linda' Knudtson&#13;
and Vice President Bob&#13;
Vlach. Lack of time was given as&#13;
a major reason for these&#13;
resignations.&#13;
There was some discussion as&#13;
to whether the new vice&#13;
president was to be appointed by&#13;
the president or the president pro&#13;
tempore was to take over. This&#13;
"matter will be reviewed by the&#13;
Ways and Means committee.&#13;
A· question' was brought up&#13;
concerning the review of the&#13;
. name of the Parkside Student&#13;
Union. President Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
said that the Union Operating&#13;
Board is in charge of handling&#13;
these matters and that the reason&#13;
the U.O.B. isn't doing anything is&#13;
that the present members aren't&#13;
attending the meetings.&#13;
She said that the Senate should&#13;
bring up a motion to work with&#13;
the U.O.B. and other student&#13;
organizations in a concerted&#13;
effort to solve this matter.&#13;
A motion was passed. Kiyoko&#13;
Bowden mentioned that since the&#13;
students hold rights to the&#13;
building they should have the&#13;
right to name it what they w;nt.&#13;
She also mentioned that this&#13;
'action could possibly be a&#13;
precendent setting manuever.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 7 Wednesday, October 20, 1976&#13;
Program places 29&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action, a&#13;
new program which offers&#13;
students academic credit for an&#13;
intensive year of internship in&#13;
community social service&#13;
agencies, has placed 29 students&#13;
with 11 agencies in Racine,&#13;
Kenosha and Walworth Counties&#13;
during its first semester of&#13;
operation, according to PYA.&#13;
director Joyce Fite Hamlin.&#13;
The project combines concepts&#13;
of volunteerism and experiential&#13;
learning in an effort to best utilize&#13;
the resources of the community&#13;
and the University to solve some&#13;
of the problems of the poor,&#13;
Hamlin said.&#13;
It provides an opportunity for&#13;
students to apply theory and&#13;
methods they learn in the&#13;
Their internships consist of one&#13;
calendar year of community&#13;
service and related training with&#13;
close supervision and directton&#13;
provided by both tbeir on-site&#13;
agency supervisers and faculty&#13;
advisors.&#13;
They will receive 30 academic&#13;
credi ts from Parkside&#13;
satisfactory completion of their&#13;
work assignments and specified&#13;
academic assignments.&#13;
The program is supported by&#13;
an initial grant of $96,500 from&#13;
Action, the federal agency which&#13;
administers domestic volunteer&#13;
service programs, and supplemental&#13;
funds including space&#13;
and equipment from Parkside, as&#13;
well as agency funding and&#13;
federal work-study funds.&#13;
~&#13;
Joyce Fite Hamlin&#13;
classroom to real life problemsolving&#13;
situations, she added.&#13;
PYA students receive subsistence&#13;
living allowances while&#13;
they participate in the program.&#13;
Over 300 people attended a dinner at Parkside last the Educator." Prof. Merrill D. Peterson of the&#13;
Sunday night recreating "An Evening at Mon- University of Virginia, the school which Jefferson&#13;
ticello." This initiated a week-long Bicentennial founded and whose campus he designed, will speak&#13;
. Jefferson Festival which explores the third at 8 p.m. Thursday on "The Revolutionary Mind of&#13;
president's diverse contributions to American life. Thomas Jefferson." The Festival is sponsored by&#13;
In this picture, costumed waitresses wait as carvers the Parkside Bicentennial Committee, the Kenosha&#13;
slice the Virginia ham, one of two entrees and eight County American Revolution Bicentennial Comcourses&#13;
in the dinner. The Festival continues mission, the Hacine County Bicentennial Uasion&#13;
tonight with a free lecture at 8 p.m. by Prof. Mark Committee and the Wisconsin American Revolution&#13;
M. Krug of the University of Chicago on "Jefferson Bicentennial Committee.&#13;
An all-campus open bouse, incorporatiDg lbe lonna! dedlcatJoa 01&#13;
the Irvin G. WyUle Library-Learnfng Center and the flnt pnbllc Ioun&#13;
of Parkside Union, Is planned for Sunday, October 24. AD campus&#13;
buildings wlll be open with a variety of performances, dlsplayo, and&#13;
demonstrations planned.&#13;
Tbe dedication wlll feature unvel1log of a portrait of the late&#13;
cbancellor painted by Kenosba arttst George Pollard and a recital by&#13;
Carmen Vila (pictured above), the Spanlsb pianist who was&#13;
Parkside's first artist-in-residence Open bouse boon are 1%:30 to 5:30&#13;
p.m. with the dedication set for 1:30 p.m. In Main Place.&#13;
Flu shots possible&#13;
at Perkside&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
Edith Isenberg, campus nurse,&#13;
stated that there is a possibility&#13;
that the Swine Flu vaccine will be&#13;
available here at Parkside. She&#13;
stressed the importance of&#13;
staying informed as the vaccines&#13;
are being given on short notice. .&#13;
Students are welcome to stop at&#13;
the health office in WLLC 0.198&#13;
and discuss the vaccine with&#13;
either Dr. Micbael Bode or Mrs.&#13;
Isenberg.&#13;
Swine Flu, the influenza that&#13;
threatens to cause a world-wide&#13;
epidemic this year, is becoming a&#13;
dangerously controversial issue.&#13;
The virus was first isolnted in&#13;
pigs, thus the term Swine Flu.&#13;
Experts believe that Swinc Flu&#13;
might be more dangerous than&#13;
ordinary flu. It caused an out-&#13;
-break of several hundred cases in&#13;
Fort Dix, New Jersey early this&#13;
year. Before that there had not&#13;
been outbreaks of the virus since&#13;
the 1920's.&#13;
With most Americans being&#13;
susceptible to Swine Flu, there is&#13;
a strong possibility of an&#13;
epidemic in the U.S. this winter"&#13;
With this in mind, federal, state,&#13;
and local governments are&#13;
working together on the biggest&#13;
vaccination program in U.S.&#13;
history. Other flue shots will not&#13;
be any protection against Swine&#13;
Flue.&#13;
The vaccine is made from dead&#13;
flu virus; so it is supposedly&#13;
causes antibodies to be produced&#13;
without causing the flu. Side&#13;
effects from the vaccine may be&#13;
fever and soreness during the&#13;
first day or two after vaccination.&#13;
A bad reaction may occur in&#13;
peJ:SODSallergic to eggs as !be&#13;
vaccine is cultured in eggs. These&#13;
people should consult a doctor&#13;
before taking the vaccine.&#13;
There was much hesitation&#13;
about distributing the vaccine.&#13;
Some reasons for the hesitation&#13;
were: doubt by some experts that&#13;
an epidemic would occur, public&#13;
confusion over where the shots&#13;
would be available, and disputes&#13;
between physicians over who&#13;
should or shouldn't be given the&#13;
vaccine and whether it should be&#13;
given at all.&#13;
Last week three elderly people&#13;
died in Allegheny Co., Penn. after&#13;
receiving their flu vaccine, The&#13;
program was halted throughout&#13;
the country when news of the&#13;
~onl nVl!d on pq ~&#13;
Guskin to meet students&#13;
average student's complaints&#13;
are.&#13;
She also feels that Guskln has&#13;
gotten some bad press lately. She&#13;
said that he really is eager to&#13;
respond to student's needs; and&#13;
this in only possible if students&#13;
become interested enough to&#13;
participate in the decisionmaking&#13;
process.&#13;
Bowden strongly encourages a&#13;
strong student turnout at the first&#13;
meeting SO that Guskln will he&#13;
encouraged to hold further&#13;
meetings. Hopefully she says,&#13;
students will drop in if only for a&#13;
half hour.&#13;
by Robert Hoffman&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin will&#13;
hold his first open meeting of this&#13;
year Thursday, October 21, from&#13;
2to 4 p.m.&#13;
According to Kiyoko Bowden,&#13;
president of student government,&#13;
this meeting is open to all&#13;
students and Guskin would like to&#13;
have these meetings conducted in&#13;
a very informal manner. _&#13;
Bowden feels students have&#13;
received an erroneous impression&#13;
of Guskin; the students&#13;
don't know what Guskin is trying&#13;
to do and Guskin does not have a&#13;
general feeling of what the&#13;
There was a judicial amend.&#13;
.mentlo Article 3 section 5 of the&#13;
constitution saying that the court&#13;
of appeals. shall consist of two&#13;
student justices and one chief&#13;
justice. This was a change by&#13;
taking away two administrative&#13;
justices and adding two student&#13;
justices, thus turning the court.&#13;
solely over to the students.&#13;
There was also an - election&#13;
amendment changing the date of&#13;
the 'spring ejections from the&#13;
third week in April to the second&#13;
week in March. I&#13;
The Legal Services Advisory&#13;
Committee proposed the forming&#13;
of four new subcommittees.&#13;
These committees are the&#13;
Legal Services Subcommittee,&#13;
the Disciplinary Guidelines&#13;
Subcommittee, tbe Research and&#13;
Review Sub-committee, and the&#13;
Publicity Subcommittee. The&#13;
student Organizational Council&#13;
brought up the motion that the&#13;
room WLLC 0195 be used by&#13;
The Parkside,-----...-.;.;,·oo;.",;,""".:..:.:."'''::.::.:." pg ,&#13;
/&#13;
Veep quits&#13;
Four_resign Senate&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, Inc.&#13;
will hoJd its fall elections on 1&#13;
October 20 and 21 from 9 a .m. to 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
There were four resignations&#13;
accepted by the Senate at its&#13;
October 14th meeting.&#13;
Resignations were received from&#13;
Senators Bob Tremonte and Dave&#13;
- Harris, Secretary Linda' Knudtson&#13;
and Vice President Bob&#13;
Vlach. Lack of time was given as&#13;
a major reason for these&#13;
resignations.&#13;
There was some discussion as&#13;
to whether the new vice&#13;
president was to be appointed by&#13;
the president or the president pro&#13;
tempore was to take over. This&#13;
·,matter will be-reviewed by the&#13;
Ways and Means committee.&#13;
A question was brought up&#13;
concerning the review of the&#13;
name of the Parkside Student&#13;
Union. President Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
said that the Union Qperating&#13;
Board is in charge of handling&#13;
these matters and that the reason&#13;
the U.O.B. isn't doing anything is&#13;
that the present members aren't&#13;
attending the meetings.&#13;
She said that the Senate should&#13;
bring up a motion to work with&#13;
the U.O.B. and other student&#13;
organizations in a concerted&#13;
effort to solve this matter.&#13;
A motion was passed. Kiyoko&#13;
Bowden mentioned that since the&#13;
students hold rights to the&#13;
building they should have the&#13;
right to name it what they wint.&#13;
She also mentioned that this&#13;
, action could possibly be a&#13;
precendent setting manuever.&#13;
There was a judicial amend-&#13;
-ment to Article 3 section 5 of the&#13;
constitution saying that the court&#13;
of appeals shall consist of two&#13;
student justices and one chief&#13;
justice. This \vas a change by&#13;
taking away two administrative&#13;
justices and adding two student&#13;
justices, thus turning the court.&#13;
solely over to the students.&#13;
There was also an - election&#13;
amendment changing the date of&#13;
the ·spring elections from the&#13;
third week in April to the second&#13;
wee){ in March.&#13;
The. Legal Services Advisory&#13;
Committee proposed the forming&#13;
of four new subcommittees.&#13;
These committees are the&#13;
Legal Services Subcommittee,&#13;
the Disciplinary Guidelines&#13;
Subcommittee, the Research and&#13;
Review Sub-committee, and the&#13;
Publicity Subcommittee. The&#13;
Student Organizational Council&#13;
brought up the motion that the&#13;
room WLLC D195 be used by The Parkside------·con-t,nue-d on-pg. 4&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 7 Wednesday, October 20, 1976&#13;
Program places 29&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action, a&#13;
new program which offers&#13;
students academic credit for an&#13;
intensive year of internship in&#13;
community social service&#13;
agencies, has placeo 29 students&#13;
with 11 agencies in Racine,&#13;
Kenosha and Walworth Counties&#13;
during its first semester of&#13;
operation, according to PY A .&#13;
director Joyce Fite Hamlin.&#13;
The project combines concepts&#13;
of volunteerism and experiei:itial&#13;
learning in an effort to best ~tilize&#13;
the resources of the community&#13;
and the University to solve some&#13;
of the problems of the poor,&#13;
Hamlin said.&#13;
It provides an opportunity for&#13;
students to apply theory and&#13;
methods they learn in the&#13;
Joyce Fite Hamlin&#13;
classroom to real life problemsolving&#13;
situations, she added.&#13;
PYA :students receive subsistence&#13;
living allowances while&#13;
they participate in the program.&#13;
Their internships consist of one&#13;
calendar year of community&#13;
service and related training with&#13;
close supervision and direction&#13;
provided by both their on-site&#13;
agency supervisers and faculty&#13;
advisors.&#13;
They will receive 30 academic&#13;
credits from Parkside&#13;
satisfactory completion of their&#13;
work assignments and specified&#13;
academic assignments.&#13;
The program is supported by&#13;
an initial grant of $96,500 from&#13;
Action, the federal agency which&#13;
administers domestic volunteer&#13;
service programs, and supplemental&#13;
funds including space&#13;
and equipment from Parkside, as&#13;
well as agency funding and&#13;
federal work-study funds.&#13;
Over 300 people attended a dinner at Parkside last the Educator." Prof. Merrill D. Peterson of the&#13;
Sunday night recreating "An Evening at Mon- University of Virginia, the scho_ol which Jefferson&#13;
ticello." !his initiated a week-long Bicentennial founded and whose campus he designed, will speak&#13;
. Jefferson Festival which explores the third at 8 p.m. Thursday on "The Revolutionary Mind of&#13;
president's diverse contributions to American life. Thomas Jefferson." The Festival is sponsored by&#13;
In this picture, costumed waitresses wait as carvers the Parkside Bicentennial Committee, the Kenosha&#13;
slice the Virginia ham, one of two entrees and eight County American Revolution Bicentennial Comcourses&#13;
in the dinner. The Festival continues mission, the Racine County Bicentennial Liasion&#13;
tonight with a free lecture at 8 p.m. by Prof. Mark Corrupittee and the Wisconsin American Revolution&#13;
M. Krug of the University of Chicago on "Jefferson Bicentennial Committee.&#13;
An all-campus open house, incorporating the formal dedication of&#13;
the Irvin G. Wyllie Library-Learning Center and the first public tours&#13;
of Parkside Union, Is planned for Sunday, October 24. All campus&#13;
buildings will be open with a variety of performances, displays, and&#13;
demonstrations planned.&#13;
The dedication will feature unveiling of a portrait of the late&#13;
chancellor painted by Kenosha artist George Pollard and a recital by&#13;
Carmen Vila (pictured above), the Spanish pianist who wa&#13;
Parkside's first artist-in-residence Open house hours are 12:30 to 5:30&#13;
p.m. with the dedication set for 1: 30 p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
Flu shots possible&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
Edith Isenberg, campus nurse,&#13;
stated that there is a possibility&#13;
that the Swine Flu vaccine will be&#13;
available here at Parkside. She&#13;
stressed the importance of&#13;
staying informed as the vaccines&#13;
are being given on short notice.&#13;
Students are welcome to stop at&#13;
the health office in WLLC D-198&#13;
and discuss the vaccine with&#13;
either Dr. Michael Bode or Mrs.&#13;
Isenberg.&#13;
Swine Flu, the influenza that&#13;
threatens to cause a world-wide&#13;
epidemic this year, is becoming a&#13;
dangerously controversial issue.&#13;
The virus was first isolated in&#13;
pigs, thus the term Swine Flu.&#13;
Experts believe that Swine Flu&#13;
might be more dangerous than&#13;
ordinary flu. It caused an out-&#13;
-break of several hundred cases in&#13;
Fort Dix, New Jersey early this&#13;
year. Before that there had not&#13;
been outbreaks of the virus ince&#13;
the 1920' .&#13;
With most Americans bei&#13;
susceptible to Swine Flu, there i&#13;
a strong possibilit ' of an&#13;
epidemic in the U.S. this winter.&#13;
With this in mind, federal , stat ,&#13;
and local governments are&#13;
working together on the biggest&#13;
vaccination program in U.S.&#13;
history. Other flue shots will not&#13;
be any protection against Swine&#13;
Flue.&#13;
The vaccine is made from dead&#13;
flu virus; so it is supposedly&#13;
causes antibodies to be produced&#13;
without causing the flu. Side&#13;
effects from the vaccine may be&#13;
fever and soreness during the&#13;
first day or two after vaccination.&#13;
A bad reaction may occur in&#13;
persons allergic to eggs as the&#13;
vaccine is cultured in egg . These&#13;
people should con ult a doctor&#13;
before taking the vaccine.&#13;
There was much hesitation&#13;
about distributing the vaccine.&#13;
Some reasons for the hesitation&#13;
were: doubt by some experts that&#13;
an epidemic would occur, public&#13;
confusion over where the shots&#13;
would be available, and di put&#13;
between physician over who&#13;
should or houldn't be given the&#13;
vaccm and wheth r it should b&#13;
giv n at all.&#13;
Last w k thre eld rly people&#13;
died m All h ny Co ., Penn. af r&#13;
re 1ving th ir flu vac'"ine. The&#13;
pro ram was halted throu hout&#13;
the countr • wh n n w of the cont nu d on pg 4&#13;
Guskin to meet students&#13;
by Robert Hoffman&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin will&#13;
hold his first open meeting of this&#13;
year Thursday, October 21, from&#13;
2 to 4 p.m.&#13;
According to Kiyoko Bowden,&#13;
pres1dent of student government,&#13;
this meeting is open to all&#13;
students and Guskin would like to&#13;
have these meetings conducted in&#13;
a very informal manner. ,&#13;
Bowden feels students have&#13;
, received an erroneous impressioo&#13;
of Guskin; the students&#13;
don't know what Guskin is trying&#13;
to do and Guskin does not have a&#13;
general feeling of what the&#13;
• I&#13;
average student's complaints&#13;
are .&#13;
She also feels that Guskin has&#13;
gotten some bad press lately. She&#13;
said that he really is eager to&#13;
respond to student's needs; and&#13;
this in only possible if students&#13;
become interested enough to&#13;
participate in the decisionmaking&#13;
process.&#13;
Bowden strongly encourages a&#13;
strong student turnout at the first&#13;
meeting so that Guskin will be&#13;
encouraged to hold further&#13;
meetings. Hopefully she says,&#13;
students will drop in if only for a&#13;
half hour. &#13;
2 THE p'ARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976 I , '&#13;
iIf:.T~ Parkside '&#13;
~&#13;
RANGER&#13;
---EDITOR IAL/OPINION . '&#13;
\&#13;
Senate shows lack 0-£&#13;
\&#13;
support&#13;
The student Senate demonstrated a lack of concern&#13;
and support for their membership in accepting the&#13;
resignation of Vice President Robert Vlach last Thursday&#13;
night. •&#13;
Discussion of the motion to accept the resignation&#13;
consisted of the procedures whereby he would be&#13;
replaced rather than the resignation itself. Though&#13;
discussion of this action' occurred to some extent&#13;
previous to the formal meeting, nollody bothered to&#13;
question why Vlach was resigning of- persuade him to&#13;
reconsider dur lnq the meeting itself.&#13;
No one commended or acknowledged the time and&#13;
effort he had put in as vice president, though this could&#13;
have been done out of simple courtesy. .&#13;
As the Senatemonotonically spokeof the procedure by&#13;
which Vlach would be replaced, one was reminded of a&#13;
deathbed scene where the relatives sat around and&#13;
discussed how they were going to conduct the funeral&#13;
and divide the estate.&#13;
Sincethe resignation of (former) Senator Rusty Smith&#13;
Tutlewski was voted down by the Senate in a previous&#13;
meeting, the quick acceptance of Vlach's resignation&#13;
can only betaken to show a lack of support.&#13;
Before the meeting Vlach stated his reason for&#13;
resigning as being a lackof time to perform the duties of&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
Robert Vlach&#13;
POLITICAL&#13;
America deserves Ford&#13;
by Pbilip L. Livingston&#13;
It is still very cute and fashionable to intelligently discuss how&#13;
stupid President Ford is. The jokes about his clumsiness and the ,&#13;
mistakes he has made with regard to eastern Europe are beginning&#13;
not to offer any new information, We do know that Ford is not a genius,&#13;
Do we deserve a genius? Have we ever had one in the presidency?&#13;
On tbe other hand do we want someone who has had designs on the&#13;
position for three years? Nixon had a great deal of ambition. Carter&#13;
has demonstrated a particularly keen awareness of his media image&#13;
obviously sharpened by the amount of time he has spent working on&#13;
his objective. Imaintain Ford is just about right for America. He is not&#13;
an unemployed college graduate or a factory worker but he never just&#13;
decided to "get" the power. He's got it now and he had it when he&#13;
successfully executed the Mayaguez affair,&#13;
This man of humble tbought is intelligent enough to use good advice.&#13;
He has a serious realistic sober attitude towards his power and&#13;
ascension to the presidency, He has a conscious Christian conviction&#13;
but he does not quote God directly as does the peanut farmer.&#13;
So if you feel Ford does not represent you because of his Republican&#13;
affiliation or his years in Congress bow do feel about a cunning peanut&#13;
farmer who's worth is five million dollars. How humble and&#13;
Iepresentative is a man who is worth that much and who has wanted to&#13;
be president since he left the governor's office in Georgia? '&#13;
Now, if you feel you can accurately reflect "the times" by insisting&#13;
•&#13;
the office. This is the most typical reason for resigning&#13;
or refusing to accept a posf in any student organization.'&#13;
-Most involved students don't really have the time to&#13;
spend working in these groups; but they do it anyway if&#13;
it's something they consider worthwhile and rewarding.&#13;
Mutual support and a sense of accomplishment are a&#13;
must if one is going to devote time to a group like student&#13;
government, and last Thursday's meeting' was&#13;
defiriately not very inspiring. Aside from Vlach's&#13;
resignation', three others were accepted with' little&#13;
qtestion or comment from the Senate.&#13;
How rewarding it must be to break youI' behind for&#13;
student government only to fil)d upon your resignation&#13;
just how little you wel:!1appreciated. If there was any&#13;
opposition or even.concern over Vlach's resignation, it&#13;
was not apparent at the meeting, the one place where it&#13;
might have done some good. This along with the absence&#13;
of recognition for time spent and services rendered&#13;
would tend to strengthen one's contention that indeed&#13;
he-she did not have the time to devote to such an&#13;
organization.&#13;
Ranger would like to take this opportunity to commend&#13;
Vlach and all other students Involved in Parkside&#13;
organizations· for contributing to a needy cause and&#13;
realiZing the benefits of such a worthwhile' experience.&#13;
FORUM&#13;
there 1S not a choice remember the perspective of Rev. Jesse Jackson&#13;
from Chicago. Rev. Jackson says he has never felt he was being&#13;
sufficiently represented. He has seen blacks around him who have&#13;
never been given the responsible positions in the necessary sequence -&#13;
to even be competitive in powerful capital intensive -campaigns. He '&#13;
has sat in a chair at the Democratic National Convention and wanched&#13;
a room full of thousands of people forget Barbara Jordan's&#13;
magnetism and dynamism at nomination time because, "we just&#13;
aren't ready for a black woman president yet."&#13;
Rev. Jackson say; he has always been chosing the less of two evils&#13;
but he votes anyway because if he stays home no one will know what&#13;
he wants. Itis his privilege and he exercises itas a citizen should. He is&#13;
supporting Carter.&#13;
If you can be sold the humble peanut approach to our nation's&#13;
problems you can be sold most anything and we are in trouble. How&#13;
dangerous is each candidate as far as what we know about his&#13;
motivations and beliefs? Are you content enought to vote for Proxmire&#13;
and Aspin like everyone else'pulling dowp the Democratic party lever.&#13;
President Ford is the qnly conservative balance in a sea of Democrats&#13;
spending our money on "Needy" programs. Your taxes will rise no&#13;
matter wbo gets elected but bow much higher will they go with Carter&#13;
fulfilling all his campaign promises.&#13;
President Ford clearly has more practical experience in running&#13;
this country than Carter and until we can convihce people like Jerry&#13;
Brown or Ralph Nader they can win, Iam voting for President Ford.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Junnine Sipsma&#13;
,USINESS MANAGERS: Cathy .ruk. Judy Trudrunt Cassf.!&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Coope.r&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR, Bruce Wainer&#13;
DEPARTMENTS: i&#13;
.. Administration·Policies: John McKloskey&#13;
.. SMI, One Branett&#13;
.. Student groups &amp; speakers:&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS" EDITOR, Jean Tenuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS, jeffrey j. ,wencki, Bill .arke&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Julie Lanle&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION, Sue Marquardt&#13;
STAFF: Wendy Miller. Terri Gayhart, Robert Hoftman, Chris Clausen. Thomas Nolen,&#13;
Diane Carlson, Douglas Edenhauser, Mary Kay Ohmer. Larry Donnelly, Phil Hermann,.&#13;
Ramona Maillet. Bob Jambois. Beverly Pella, Linda Knudtson, Karin La Fourier. Judy&#13;
Trudrung, Scott Reinhard, Philip L. Livingston.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: P.J, Anolina, Ricky Coop.r, R,ck Flasch&#13;
AD SAl:ESPERSONS, Joe Landa, Rick Fla,ch&#13;
\&#13;
The Park'ide Ran",er is written and edited&#13;
by' the stueents of the University at&#13;
Wisconsin.Parkside who are solely&#13;
responsible ter its editorial policy and&#13;
C...t!..... 9 Opinions ell pressed are not&#13;
nece'loSanly rt&gt;presentatlve 01 tho!ioeheld by&#13;
the litudents. facully o,adminiurat,on of&#13;
Parkside. Edilorial and Business 553-2281;&#13;
Newsroc.m 5SJ·l)9S.&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
J •&#13;
2 THE P,ARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976 ,&#13;
I&#13;
i Jr.. T~ Parksid&#13;
..-y RANGER&#13;
---EDITORIAL/OPINION . '&#13;
Senate shows _lack o-f -,support&#13;
Robert Vlach&#13;
I&#13;
.The student Senate demonstrated a lack of concern&#13;
and support for their membership in accepting the&#13;
resignation of Vice President Rob,ert Vlach last Thursday&#13;
night.&#13;
Discussion of the motion to accept the resignation&#13;
consisted of the procedures whereby he would be&#13;
replaced rather than the resignation itself. Though&#13;
discussion of this action occurred to some extent&#13;
previous to the formal meeting, notfody bothered to&#13;
question why Vlach was resigning of- pers.uade him to&#13;
reconsider during the meeting itself.&#13;
No one commended or ac_knowledged the time and&#13;
effort he had put in as vice president, though this could&#13;
have been done out of simple courtesy.&#13;
As the Senate monotonically spoke of the procedure by&#13;
which Vlach would be replaced, one was reminded of a&#13;
deathbed scene where the relatives sat around and&#13;
discussed how they were going to conduct the funeral&#13;
and divide the estate.&#13;
Since the resignation of (former) Senator Rusty Smith&#13;
Tutlewski was voted down by the Senate in a previous&#13;
meeting, the quick acceptance of Vlach's resignation&#13;
can only be taken to show a lack of support.&#13;
Before the meeting Vlach stated his reason for&#13;
resigning as being a lack of time to perform the duties of&#13;
POLITICAL&#13;
the office. This is the most typical r'eason for resigning&#13;
or refusing to accept a posf in any student organization.'&#13;
Most involved students don't really have the time to&#13;
spend working in these groups; but they do it anyway if&#13;
it's something they consider worthwhile and r ewarding.&#13;
Mutual support ctnd a sense of accomplishment are a&#13;
must if one is going to devote time to a group like student&#13;
government, and last Thursday's meeting · was&#13;
definately not very inspirjng. Aside from Vlach's&#13;
resignation, three others were accepted with little&#13;
q"uestion or comment from the Senate.&#13;
How rewarding it must t;&gt;e to break your, behind for&#13;
student government only to fipd upon your resignation&#13;
just how little you werg appreciated. If there was any&#13;
opposition or even concern over Vlach's resignation, it&#13;
was not apparent at the meeting, the one place where it&#13;
might have done some good. This along with the absence&#13;
of recognition for time spent and services rendered&#13;
would tend to strengthen one's contention that indeed&#13;
he-she did not have the time to devote to such an&#13;
organization.&#13;
Ranger would like to take this opportunity to commend&#13;
Vlach and all other students involved in Parkside&#13;
organizations · for contributing to a needy cause and&#13;
realizing the benefits of such a worthwhile experience.&#13;
FORUM&#13;
America deserves Ford&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
It is still very cute and fashionable to intelligently discuss how&#13;
stupid President Ford is. The jokes about his clumsiness and the&#13;
mistakes he has made with regard to eastern Europe are beginning&#13;
not to offer any new information. We do know that Ford is not a genius.&#13;
Do we deserve a genius? Have we ever had one in the presidency?&#13;
On the other hand do we want someone who has had designs on the&#13;
position for three years? Nixon had a grea~ deal of ambition. Carter&#13;
has demonstrated a particularly keen awareness of his media image&#13;
obviously sharpened by the amount of time he has spent working on&#13;
his objective. I maintain Ford is just about right for America. He is not&#13;
an unemployed college graduate or a factory worker but he never just&#13;
decided to "get',. the power. He's got it now and he had it when he&#13;
successfully executed the Mayaguez affair.&#13;
This man of humble thought is intelligent enough to use good advice.&#13;
He has a serious realistic sober attitude towards his power and&#13;
ascension to the presidency. He has a conscious Christian conviction&#13;
but he does not quote God directly as does the peanut farmer.&#13;
So if you feel Ford does not represent you because of his Republican&#13;
affiliation or his years in Congress how do feel about a cunning peanut&#13;
farmer who's worth is five million dollars. How humble and&#13;
representative is a man who is worth that much and who has wanted to&#13;
be president since he left the governor's office in Georgia? ·&#13;
Now, _if you feel you can accurately reflect "the times" by insisting&#13;
1&#13;
there 'is not a choice remember the pe_rspective of Rev. Jesse Jackson&#13;
from Chicago. Rev. Jackson says he has never felt he was being&#13;
sufficiently represented. He has seen blacks around-him who havenever&#13;
been given the responsible positions in the necessary sequence&#13;
to even be comp1;titive in powerful capital intensive -campaigns. He&#13;
has sat in a chair at the Democratic National Convention and wanched&#13;
a room full of thousands of people forget Barbara Jordan's&#13;
magnetism and dynamism at nomination time because, "we just&#13;
aren't ready for a black woman president yet."&#13;
Rev. Jackson says he has always been chosing the less of two evils&#13;
but he votes anyway because if he stays home no one will know what&#13;
he wants. It is his privilege and he exercises it as a citizen should. He is&#13;
supporting Carter.&#13;
If you can be sold the humble peanut approach to our nation's&#13;
problems you can be sold most anything and we are in trouble. How&#13;
dangerous is each candidate as far as what we know about his&#13;
motivations and beliefs? Are you content enought to vote for Proxmire&#13;
and Aspin like everyone else·pulling dowp the Democratic party lever.&#13;
President Ford is the qnly conservative balance in a sea of Democrats&#13;
spending our money on "Needy" programs. Your taxes will rise no&#13;
matter who gets elected but how much higher will they go with Carter&#13;
fulfilling all his campaign promises.&#13;
President Ford clearly has more practical experience in running&#13;
this country than Carter and until we can convince people like Jerry&#13;
Brown or Ralph Nader they can·win, I am voting for President Ford.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF : Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
I&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is written and edited&#13;
by the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin. Parkside who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
Cfl~•·"• Opinions e,cpressed are no1&#13;
necessarily r•presentat,ve of those held by&#13;
the stuclenh, faculty or1 adm imstrat,on of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and Business SSJ-1287 i&#13;
Newsroc,m SSJ-22'15 .&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: Cathy Brnak, Judy Trudrung (asst.)&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER : Tom Cooper&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wagner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
.. Administration-Policies: John McKloskey&#13;
. SMI: Dave Brandt&#13;
.. Student groups &amp; speakers :&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS- EDITOR: Jun Tenuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jeffrey j . swencki, Bill Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR : Julie Lange&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR : Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION : Sue Marquardt&#13;
STAFF : Wendy M i ller, Terri Gayhart, Robert Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Thomas Nolen,&#13;
Diane Carlson, Douglas Edenhauser, Mary Kay Ohmer, Larry Donnelly, Phil Hermann,.&#13;
Ramona Maillet, Bob Jambois, Beverly Pella , Linda Knudtson, Karin LaFourier, Judy&#13;
Trudrung, Scott Reinhard, Phi lip L. Livingston.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS : P.J . Auolina, Ricky Cooper, Rock Flasch&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS : Joe Landa, Rock Flasch&#13;
1&#13;
\&#13;
,, &#13;
,&#13;
Jefferson&#13;
.saluted&#13;
The multiple talents of&#13;
America's third president,&#13;
Thomas Jefferson, will be saluted&#13;
in a series of three Bicentennial&#13;
J~fferson lectures Tuesday&#13;
through Thursday ( Oct. 19&#13;
through 21) at 8 p.m. on the&#13;
Parkside Union Concourse level.&#13;
The lectures are 'free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
The series began Tuesday (Oct.&#13;
19) with a lecture on "Architecture&#13;
of the Jeffersonian&#13;
. Period" by Prof, Norman K.&#13;
Risjord of UW-Madison and&#13;
Spring Green Architect James&#13;
Pfefferkown, who trained in the&#13;
Frank Lloyd Wright School of&#13;
Architecture.&#13;
Risjord is the author of tbree&#13;
books on American History, the \&#13;
most recent entitled "Forging of&#13;
the American Republic, 1766-&#13;
1815."He is the recipient of a&#13;
number of awards including a&#13;
Kiekhofer Distinguished&#13;
Teaching Award, a Fulbright&#13;
Fellowship and a British&#13;
Petroleum Fellowship,&#13;
• On Oct. 20, Prof. Mark M. Krug&#13;
of the University of Chicago will&#13;
lecture on "Jefferson the&#13;
Educator." Krug is professor: of&#13;
education in history and the&#13;
social sciences and director of the&#13;
Charles Schwartz Citizenship&#13;
Project at Chicago. He is&#13;
chairman of the Organization of&#13;
American Historians' committee&#13;
on history in schools and colleges&#13;
On Oct. 21 Merrill D. Peterson,&#13;
Thomas Jefferson Foundation&#13;
Professor at the University of&#13;
Virginia, will, speak on "The&#13;
Revolutionary Mind of Thomas&#13;
Jefferson. Peterson is the author&#13;
of four books on Jefferson,&#13;
. .&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER OCtober 20. 19763&#13;
EVENTS~\&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 23&#13;
Mens cross country meet, the Carthage Invitational at 11 a.m, at&#13;
Carthage College.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 24&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from I to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "Animal Crackers," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
. _ Tuesday, Oct. 26&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment concert featuring Dizzy Gillespie at 8 p.m, in&#13;
the CAT.&#13;
"Please submit all events to the Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
before publication. SPECIAL&#13;
GUESTAPPEARANCE&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 23&#13;
9 PM Union Square ~~~~&#13;
Adm. $2.00 UW·P Students&#13;
$2.50 UW·P Students at Door&#13;
$3.00 General Admission&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 20&#13;
PSGA Fall, Election polls are open from 9 a.m, to 8p.m.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 21&#13;
PSGA Fall Election polls are open from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
Counting of ballots at8:30 p.m. in a room to be announced.&#13;
All students, candidates, and public are welcome.&#13;
. Thursday, Oct. 21&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10p.m. in CL 140.'&#13;
Friday, Oct. 22&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m, in Union 207.&#13;
Women's swimming meet Uw-P v..s.UW- Milwaukee at 4 p.m. in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. !lldg.&#13;
Movie, "Animal Crackers" plays at 7 and 9 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
Th-atre. Admission is $1. " ----------------t :.Classified :&#13;
I&#13;
1914 PONTIAC SPRINT a-sceec Metallic NEEDED FEMALE COMPANION 10 Share'&#13;
Blue, red ovckets. Rally wneets. AM·FM. exoenses 10 Denver. Colo. on November 2. t FM stereo, 8 Track, $2195. 634-0876. (&lt;1116324721for more information evenings t&#13;
SAAB 1970 Front wheel drive, a.sceec. FOR SALE: Portable steree wiltl ceo-ere&#13;
I&#13;
Radials, 8-Track. Air &amp; more,;First $800,632· rcmteete. Asking SSO.cen 63" SJOSafter j&#13;
3476. Racine. pm ,&#13;
t (8'S BRAND NEW. Warranty included. t&#13;
Cobra 21's $oj 17.00 Ray Bougneit 551·7402. "WANT TO LEARN PIANO' (Cheap rail'S' J&#13;
I&#13;
6&gt; WClnlto teach lap dilncmg" ceu (312) 662 I&#13;
WILL DO ilIny kind Of typing at reasonaple 6546" SheIla Jetlr,ese 2501 N Jackson&#13;
I&#13;
rates. For informatio" call 652-3313 W&lt;tvkeg&lt;trl. Ill. 60085 (312) 6616S46 J&#13;
---------------~&#13;
ID'S REQUIRED TICKETS AT INfO KIDSl&lt;&#13;
Planning committee meets&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
Tuesday, October 12, the new&#13;
Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review Committee&#13;
(A.P.P.R.C.) held its first&#13;
meeting. The A.P.P.R.C. has&#13;
been designated with two&#13;
responsibilities. It has the initial&#13;
responsibility carried over from&#13;
the Academic Planning Committee&#13;
of reviewing program&#13;
quality, student demand and&#13;
program costs. In addition, the&#13;
committee will also decide how 24&#13;
faculty posjtions are to be divided&#13;
among the different programs at&#13;
Parkside. '&#13;
, The committee is up against&#13;
several problems though. The&#13;
start of the committee was&#13;
delayed when the Codification&#13;
Committee, an eight member&#13;
committee whose task is to&#13;
review faculty regulations,&#13;
procedures, and committee&#13;
structures, fought with the&#13;
University Committee on how&#13;
and what the A.P.P.R.C. should&#13;
review.&#13;
• The Facufty Senate ended by&#13;
bolding elections for the committee&#13;
in early October. The&#13;
elected members are Teresa&#13;
Peck (assistant professor of&#13;
, education), Peter Hoff (assistant&#13;
professor of Enghsh) and&#13;
William Moy (professor of industrial&#13;
engineering): '&#13;
Vice Cbancellor John Campbell .&#13;
will be representative of administration&#13;
and in his position of&#13;
vice chancellor he· will be&#13;
responsible for implementing&#13;
any program or action deemed&#13;
necessary by the conunittee.&#13;
The first meeting was supposed&#13;
to outline the duties and goals of&#13;
the committee and elect a&#13;
chairman. The election of the&#13;
chairman was postponed due to&#13;
the a bsence of two faculty&#13;
members, Peter Hoff and Larry&#13;
Doetsch, and- the absence of the&#13;
student members. The committee&#13;
was unanimous in the&#13;
opinion that a chairman sbould&#13;
not be elected until the entire&#13;
committee could have their input.&#13;
The committee will have until&#13;
November 2 to finish their report&#13;
and turn it into Vice Chancellor,&#13;
John Campbell. The administration&#13;
will implement the&#13;
committee's suggestions in mid··&#13;
November.&#13;
Chancellor Allan Guskin is also&#13;
on the committee. In cases of his&#13;
absence he will be represented by&#13;
Ben Greenebaum (associate&#13;
professor of physics).&#13;
Greenebaum will also he committee&#13;
coordinator.&#13;
The committee will be&#13;
reviewing art, economics, iife&#13;
sciences, philosophy and&#13;
psychology. :rhey will also&#13;
examine the basic skills and&#13;
breadth programs, division&#13;
objectives and any other&#13;
academic programs the Chancellor&#13;
deems necessary for&#13;
review. The A.P.P.R.C. will, in&#13;
addition, finish reviewing reports&#13;
on the sociology-anthropology&#13;
discipline and the communication&#13;
arts program.&#13;
NOW AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU.&#13;
PG ~.mltO&#13;
............_ _100 .. ..- ..&#13;
~-==r..:=.&#13;
~(C....col.()lIl• F,o", W"I\e' B'ol&#13;
.. w.......' COt"mumell.0ns Com~"y 0&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mlleoil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60"F. pour point);&#13;
• Saves 011 Mike Villers&#13;
yoUf AMSIOIL doa/of 63 7 - 2 7 2 6&#13;
JI........ .......&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
Jefferson&#13;
.saluted&#13;
The multiple talents of&#13;
America's third president,&#13;
Thomas Jefferson, will be saluted&#13;
in a· series of three Bicentennial&#13;
J~fferson lectures Tuesday&#13;
through Thursday ( Oct. 19&#13;
through 21) at 8 p.m. on the&#13;
Parkside Union Concourse level.&#13;
The lectures are 'free and open to&#13;
the ·public.&#13;
The series began Tuesday ( Oct.&#13;
19) with a lecture on "Ar~&#13;
chitecture of the Jeffersonian&#13;
·Period" by Prof. Norman K.&#13;
Risjord of UW-Madison and&#13;
Spring Green Architect James&#13;
Pfefferkown, who trained in the&#13;
Frank Lloyd Wright School of&#13;
Architecture.&#13;
Risjord is the author of three&#13;
books on American History, the \&#13;
most recent entitled " Forging of&#13;
the American Republic, 1760-&#13;
1815." He is the recipient of a&#13;
number of awards including a&#13;
Kiekhofer Distinguished&#13;
Teaching Awarq., a Fulbright&#13;
Fellowship and a British&#13;
Petroleum Fellowship.&#13;
· On Oct. 20, Prof. Mark M. Krug&#13;
of the University of Chicago will&#13;
lecture on "Jefferson the&#13;
Educator." Krug is professor of&#13;
education in history and the&#13;
social sciences and director of the&#13;
Charles Schwartz Citizenship&#13;
Project at Chicago. He is&#13;
chairman of the Organization of&#13;
American Historians' committee&#13;
on history in schools and colleges&#13;
On Oct. 21 Merrill D. Peterson,&#13;
Thomas Jefferson Foundation&#13;
Professor at the University of&#13;
Virginia, will, speak on "The&#13;
Revolutionary Mind of Thomas&#13;
Jefferson. Peterson is the author&#13;
of four books on Jefferson.&#13;
EVENTS7&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 23&#13;
Mens cross country meet, the Carthage Invitational at 11 a.m. at&#13;
Carthage College.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 24&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "Animal Crackers," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
· - Tuesday, Oct. 26&#13;
War gamers Club meets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment concert featuring Dizzy Gillespie at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the CAT. ·&#13;
-Please submit all events to the Ranger before Wednesday of the week&#13;
before publication.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 20&#13;
PSGA Fall-Election polls are open from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 21&#13;
'.PSGA Fall Election polls are open from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
Counting of ballots at8:30 p.m. in a room to be announced.&#13;
All students, candidates, and public are welcome.&#13;
, Thursday, Oct. 21&#13;
Wargamers Club m~ets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 22&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Women's swimming meet UW-P v_s. UW- Milwaukee at 4 p.m. in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. J3ldg.&#13;
Movie, "Animal Crackers" plays at 7 and 9 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
Thi:.af:r~. Admission is $1.&#13;
,----------------,&#13;
: . Classifi~d :&#13;
f 1974 PONTIAC SPRINT 3-speed Metallic&#13;
Blue. red -buckets, Rally wt,,eels, AM-FM, t FM stereo, 8-Track, S219S. 634-0876.&#13;
SAAB 1970 Front wheel drive, 4-Sp~ed, t Rad ials, 8-Track, Air &amp; more F irst S800, 632-&#13;
3476, Racine.&#13;
NEEDED FEMALE COMPANION lo Share t expenses to Denver, Colo. on November 2.&#13;
Call 632·4727 for more information evenings. '&#13;
FOR SALE : Portable Stereo w ith Garrara&#13;
turntable. Asking S50. Call 634 5305 alter j p.m . l&#13;
t CB'S BRAND NEW. Warranty included. t Cobra 21 's $117.00 Ray Bougneil 551 -7402. "'WANT TO LEARN PIANO? (Cheap rates!) t Want to tuch tap danc ing ? Call (312) 662 A WILL DO any kind of typing at reasona!)le 6546." Shei la Jeffroe5t 2S01 N Jackson. I&#13;
A rates . For information call 652-3373. Waukegan. Ill 60085 (312) 662 6546 j ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~&#13;
~l~ing committee meets&#13;
, by Christopher Clausen&#13;
Tuesday, October 12, the new&#13;
Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review Committee&#13;
(A.P.P.R.C.) held its first&#13;
meeting. The A.P.P.R.C. has&#13;
been designated with two&#13;
responsibilities. It has the initial&#13;
responsibility carried over from&#13;
the Academic Planning Committee&#13;
of reviewing program&#13;
quality, student demand and&#13;
program costs. In addition, the&#13;
committee will also decide how 24&#13;
faculty positions are to be divided&#13;
among the different programs at&#13;
Parkside. 1&#13;
The committee is up against&#13;
several problems though. The&#13;
start of the committee was&#13;
delayed when the Codification&#13;
Committee, an eight member&#13;
committee whose task is to&#13;
review faculty regulations,&#13;
procedures, and committee&#13;
structures, fought with the&#13;
University Committee on how&#13;
and what the A.P.P.R.C. should&#13;
review.&#13;
The Facufty Senate -ended by&#13;
holding elections for the committee&#13;
in early October. The&#13;
elected members are Teresa&#13;
Peck ( assistant professor of&#13;
education), Peter Hoff (assistant&#13;
professor of English) and&#13;
William Moy ( professor of industrial&#13;
engineering): ,&#13;
Vice Chancellor John Campbell ·&#13;
will be representative of administration&#13;
and in his position of&#13;
vice chancellor he will be&#13;
responsible for implementing&#13;
any program or action deemed&#13;
necessary by the committee.&#13;
The first meeting was supposed&#13;
to outline the duties and goals of&#13;
the committee and elect a&#13;
chai~n. The election of the&#13;
chairman was postponed due to&#13;
the absence of two faculty&#13;
members, Peter Hoff and Larry&#13;
Duetsch, and- the absence of the&#13;
student members. The committee&#13;
was unanimous in the&#13;
opinion that a chairman should&#13;
not be elected until the entire&#13;
committee could have their input.&#13;
&#13;
The committee will have until&#13;
November 2 to finish their report&#13;
and turn it into Vice Chancellor&#13;
John Campbell. The administration&#13;
will implement the&#13;
committee's suggestions in midNovember.&#13;
&#13;
Chancellor Allan Guskin is also&#13;
on the committee. In cases of his&#13;
absence he will be represented by&#13;
Ben Greenebaum ( associate&#13;
professor of physics).&#13;
Greenebaum will also be committee&#13;
coordinator.&#13;
The committee will be&#13;
reviewing art, economics, iife&#13;
sciences, philosophy and&#13;
psychology. :fhey will also&#13;
examine the basic skills and&#13;
breadth programs, division&#13;
objectives and any other&#13;
academic programs the Chancell&#13;
or deems necessary for&#13;
review. The A.P.P.R.C. will, in&#13;
addition, finish reviewing reports&#13;
on the sociology-anthropology&#13;
discipline and the communication&#13;
arts program.&#13;
• Saves gas ( up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point) ""&#13;
• Saves oil Mike Villers&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer 6 3 7 -2 7 2 6&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976 3&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
GUEST APPEARANCE&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT.23&#13;
9 PM Union Square&#13;
Adm. $2.00 UW-P Students&#13;
., $2.50 UW-P Students at Door&#13;
$3.00 General Admission&#13;
ID'S REQUIRED TICKETS AT INFO KIOSK&#13;
PG.--SIIICISDO&#13;
NOW AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU . &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976&#13;
shows a decline .in the number of&#13;
Wisconsin families who intend to&#13;
get the shots. The poll indicated&#13;
that about 42 percent of the&#13;
-families planned on receiving the&#13;
shots compared with 56 percent&#13;
in July. The number of families&#13;
undecided increased from 30&#13;
percent in July to 41 percent in&#13;
September. Those deciding not to&#13;
get the shots also increased frg,lll&#13;
14 percent in July to 17 percent in&#13;
September. '&#13;
\&#13;
Flu-----&#13;
coot,nued from pg. 1&#13;
deaths was released. Investigators&#13;
have reported that&#13;
the deaths were not related to the&#13;
vaccine. The distribution of the&#13;
vaccine is now resuming&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
A survey taken in September&#13;
--mJmm JUNIOR TALK ·1',&#13;
'&#13;
A jump ahead.&#13;
Tune this in. Jumpsuit ,with colorful serape-jke ;&#13;
acry~c striping. Marching along in pink. green&#13;
or blue cotton/polyester Iinocloth, 5-13 -&#13;
'USE WARDS CHARG.ALL CREblT&#13;
Who suits you?, We do.&#13;
3600 ~2nd Street&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
I ,&#13;
,PSGA meeting-----&#13;
continued Irom pg. 1&#13;
year it is hoped that the Student&#13;
Court will' be hearing petitions&#13;
from the students on academic&#13;
greivances. 4&#13;
She also said that many&#13;
complaints have been received&#13;
about the Bookstore. Efforts are&#13;
being made to help, but are not&#13;
expected to be successful immediately.&#13;
Problems with the&#13;
Bookstore and Financial Aids are&#13;
being mentioned repeatedly as&#13;
near future. By Nov 15 of this&#13;
reasons for students withdrawing&#13;
from Parkside.&#13;
Beginning next semester the&#13;
Library will be open on an ex-:&#13;
perimental basis Sunday Itn'O:Jgh&#13;
Thursday until midnight. This&#13;
was agreed upon by the director&#13;
of the Library on October 14 after&#13;
discussions with Alan Schucard,&#13;
director of the Center for&#13;
Teaching Excellence.&#13;
,There was a motion brought up&#13;
to accept the nomination of&#13;
Harvey Hedden as an associate&#13;
justice. The motion was passed.&#13;
student organizations._ This&#13;
motion was passed.&#13;
The Student Services Committee&#13;
mentioned their toy drive&#13;
next week and that all the drop&#13;
boxes are ready to be moved to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
In the presidents report,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden said that the&#13;
Student Court will be writing the&#13;
rules and standards of evidence&#13;
for academic grievances in the&#13;
Ibsen's Ghosts find freedom&#13;
"Ghosts," a realistic drama by&#13;
the Norwegian playwright&#13;
Henrik Ibsen _w!ll be the .first&#13;
offering of the 1976-77 theater&#13;
season at Parkside, playing at 8&#13;
p.m. on Oct. 22, 23 and 24 ill the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission is $1 for students and&#13;
senior citizens; $2 for others.&#13;
Tickets are available at the door&#13;
or at the Parkside information&#13;
Center in Main Place.&#13;
Rhoda-Gale Pollack, who&#13;
joiped the faculty last month as&#13;
associate professor of dramatic&#13;
arts, said she chose the vehicle as&#13;
a classic drama which still has&#13;
parallels to contemporary&#13;
society. One of the play's themes,&#13;
she noted, is that of a woman&#13;
trying to find and define her&#13;
freedom and to give freedom to&#13;
her son, although her efforts in&#13;
that are doomed.&#13;
Members of the cast are Mary&#13;
Stankus of· Racine as Mrs.&#13;
Alving, the widowed mother; J elf&#13;
Kiehlbauch of Racine as 'Oswald,&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers 637-2726&#13;
~If' lilli' " ,1M."&#13;
Performing Fridoy &amp; So~urdoy&#13;
TRIAD&#13;
mos. &amp; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
FEAST HQ5&#13;
INCLUDES·S"I"d. It"li"n&#13;
6,e"d ond o fREE GLAS&#13;
'Of WiNE.... •&#13;
~.eeTblJ'8&#13;
~UTt&#13;
_ &amp; RISTAURA&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge PloZQ&#13;
632-6151&#13;
her artist son; Nancy Cecilia&#13;
Rivest of Kenosha. as Regina,&#13;
Mrs. Alving's ward; Robert Jilk&#13;
of Kenosha .as Engstrand,&#13;
Regina's father and Charles D.&#13;
Rivest, Kenosha, as- Pastor&#13;
Manders, Mrs. Alving's spiritual&#13;
and business mentor.&#13;
Stankus, a former Miss Racine,&#13;
comes to the dramatic role from&#13;
the female musical comedy lead&#13;
in "How to Succeed in Business&#13;
Without Really Trying,"&#13;
produced at Parkside "Iast&#13;
summer. Jilk also appeared in&#13;
"How to Succeed." Kiehlbauch&#13;
wa last seen on the Parkside&#13;
stage in the spring production,&#13;
"The Time of Your Life," and the&#13;
Rivests -were in last year's&#13;
"Spoon River."&#13;
Thomas Reinert will do scenic&#13;
design, John H. Dickson will do&#13;
lighting design and Deborah Bell&#13;
will design the period costumes:&#13;
Pollack reveived her BFA&#13;
degree in drama from Carnegie--&#13;
Mellon University, the M.A. from&#13;
San Francisco Stale University&#13;
and Ph. D. from Stanford&#13;
University. She has been on the&#13;
theater staffs of the University of&#13;
Calfornia at Berkeley, Mills&#13;
College and San Francisco sfate&#13;
College. Her principal interests&#13;
are direction and costume&#13;
design. Shecurrehtlyis writing a&#13;
book on ten innovative women -,&#13;
playwrights and their plays.&#13;
_Other productions planned for&#13;
the 1976-77 season include a&#13;
Studio B. production yet to be&#13;
selected directed by Norman&#13;
McPhlee of the Racine Theater&#13;
Guild on Dec. 10, 11 and 12, a&#13;
children's production directed by&#13;
Dickson in February -and a&#13;
musical in late April.&#13;
,&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976&#13;
Flu--&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
deaths was released. Investigators&#13;
have reported that&#13;
the deaths were not related to the&#13;
vaccine. The distribution of the&#13;
vaccine is now resuming&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
A survey taken .in September&#13;
shows a decline -in the number of&#13;
Wisconsin families who intend to&#13;
get the shots. The poll indicated&#13;
that about 42 percent of the&#13;
-families planned on receiyin_g the&#13;
shots compared with 56 percent&#13;
in July. The number of families&#13;
undecided increased from 30&#13;
percent in July to 41 percent in&#13;
September. Those deciding not to&#13;
get the shots also increased fr~Ol&#13;
14 percent in July to 17 percent in&#13;
September. '&#13;
-&#13;
~ _________&#13;
JUNIORTALK ~1 · ...___._&#13;
•&#13;
A junip ahead.&#13;
Tune this in. Jumpsuit with colorful serape-like&#13;
acrylic striping. Marching along in pink, green&#13;
or blue cotton/polyester linocloth. 5-13&#13;
I&#13;
USE WARDS CHARG-ALL CREDIT&#13;
Who suits you?, We do.&#13;
3600 ~2nd Street&#13;
KENOSHA .&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
I&#13;
~PSGA meeting------ continued from pg . 1&#13;
student organizations. This&#13;
motion was passed.&#13;
The Student Services Committee&#13;
mentioned their toy drive&#13;
next week and that all the drop&#13;
boxes are ready to be moved to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
In the pr-esidents report,&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden said that the&#13;
Student Court will be writing the&#13;
rules and standards of evidence&#13;
for academic grievances in the&#13;
year it is hoped that the Student&#13;
Court will ' J:&gt;e hearing petitions&#13;
from the students on academic&#13;
greivances.&#13;
She also said that many&#13;
compl~ints have been received&#13;
about the Bookstore. Efforts are&#13;
being made to help, but are not&#13;
expected to be successful immediately.&#13;
Problems with the&#13;
Bookstore and Financial Aids are&#13;
being mentioned repeatedly as&#13;
near future. By Nov 15 of this&#13;
r;asons for stude.nts withdrawing&#13;
from Parkside.&#13;
Beginning next semester the&#13;
Library will be open on an ex-·&#13;
perimental basis Sunday tln·o-agh&#13;
Thursday until midnight. This&#13;
was agreed upon by the director&#13;
of the Library on October 14 after&#13;
discussions with Alan Schucar~,&#13;
director of the Center for&#13;
Teaching Excellence.&#13;
.There was a motion brought up&#13;
to accept the nomination of&#13;
Harvey Hedden as an associate&#13;
justice. The motion was passed.&#13;
Nancy Rivest, Jeff l&lt;iehlbauch, and Mary Stankus in GHOSTS.&#13;
Ibsen's Ghosts find freedolll&#13;
"Ghosts," a realistic drama by&#13;
the Norwegian playwright&#13;
Henrik Ibsen _will be the .first&#13;
offering of the · 1976-77 theater&#13;
season at Parkside, playing a·t 8&#13;
p.m. on Oct. 22, 23 and 24 in, the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission is $1 for students and&#13;
senior citizens; $2 for others.&#13;
Tickets are available at the door&#13;
or at the Parkside information&#13;
Center in Main Place.&#13;
Rhoda-Gale Pollack, who&#13;
joiped the faculty last month as&#13;
associate professor of dramatic&#13;
arts, said she chose the vehicle as&#13;
a classic drama which still has&#13;
parallels to contemporary&#13;
society. One of the play's themes,&#13;
she noted, is that of a woman&#13;
trying to find and define her&#13;
freedom and to give freedom to&#13;
her son, although her efforts in&#13;
that are doomed.&#13;
Members of the cast ar~ Mary&#13;
Stankus of~ Racine as Mrs.&#13;
Alving, the widowed mother; Jeff&#13;
Kiehlbauch of Racine as Oswald,&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
· ~&#13;
Mike Villers 637 -2726 -lf1 lim1 lo 1/,ang,&#13;
.&#13;
Performing Friday &amp; Sa~urday&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge- Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
.TRIAD&#13;
moN. &amp; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
FEAST Sl.Q5&#13;
INCLUDES: Solod. ltolion 1&#13;
B,eod ond o FREE GLASS&#13;
·oF WINE.... ,&#13;
~erbu's&#13;
,ourt&#13;
PUa &amp; REST/AURA&#13;
her artist son; Nancy Cecilia&#13;
Rivest of Kenosha as Regina,&#13;
Mrs. Alving's ward; Robert Jilk&#13;
of Kenosha as Engstrand,&#13;
Regina's father and Charles D.&#13;
Rivest, Kenosha, as Pastor&#13;
Manders, Mrs. Alving's spiritual&#13;
and business mentor.&#13;
Stankus, a former Miss Racine,&#13;
comes to the dramatic role from&#13;
the female musical comedy lead&#13;
in "How to Succeed in Business&#13;
Without Really Trying,"&#13;
produced at Parkside 'last&#13;
summer. Jilk also appeared in&#13;
"How to Succeed." Kiehlbauch&#13;
wa last seen on the Parkside&#13;
stage in the spring production,&#13;
"The Time of Your Life," and the&#13;
Rivests were in last year's&#13;
"Spoon River."&#13;
Thomas Reinert will do scenic&#13;
design, John H. Dickson will do&#13;
lighting design and Deborah Bell&#13;
will design the period costumes:&#13;
Pollack reveived her BF A&#13;
degree in drama from CarnegieMellon&#13;
University, the M.A. from&#13;
San Francisco State University&#13;
and Ph. D. from Stanford&#13;
University. She has been on the&#13;
theater staffs of the University of&#13;
Calfornia at Berkeley, Mills&#13;
College and San Francisco State&#13;
College. Her principal interests&#13;
are direction and costume&#13;
design. Shecurrentlyis writing a&#13;
book on ten innovative women&#13;
playwrights and their plays.&#13;
_Other productions planned for&#13;
the 1976-77 season include a&#13;
Studio B production yet to be&#13;
selected directed by Norman&#13;
McPhfee of the Racine Theater&#13;
Guild on Dec. 10, 11 and 12, a&#13;
children's production directed by&#13;
Dickson in February and a&#13;
musical in late April. &#13;
Barke talks Bizarre&#13;
by Sue Marquardt or William Barke&#13;
Response&#13;
received&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government' Association announced&#13;
that voter registration is ,&#13;
getting a "better than expected"&#13;
response with all the postcards&#13;
for Kenosha gone.&#13;
Dan Nielsen, Ways and Means&#13;
Committee chairperson, is in&#13;
charge 'of the voter registration&#13;
drive, which is an effort to&#13;
achieve a high voter turnout for&#13;
this November's elections.&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
tJovernment Association is&#13;
sponsoring a toy drive for the&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center.&#13;
This toy drive will begin on&#13;
October 18 and continue through&#13;
October 22.&#13;
Semester Break.&#13;
JanuarY 6-13, 1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE -&#13;
MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOWI&#13;
• Foe. application forms or&#13;
additional information contact:&#13;
Parkside Union Office&#13;
553-2200&#13;
measures five by seven feet, installed in Union&#13;
Square. Campus Bizarre would be shown Wed.&#13;
nesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays during the late&#13;
morning and early afternoon hours.&#13;
"This is probably our .biggest project to date,"&#13;
Barke remarked. "That would include the old P.U.&#13;
Revue of a year and a half ago which actually had&#13;
the same comedy format as Bizarre." Seven P.U.&#13;
Revues were produced and have found an occasional&#13;
ouUef on the Video Committee's m~nitor&#13;
which for two years has been a sometime fixture in&#13;
the Main Concourse and now in the Union.&#13;
Barke stated: "The whole concept of producing a&#13;
show like this is basically for the experience of&#13;
working in this kind of creative atmosphere.&#13;
television- which incorporates sight and sound.&#13;
Television production really allows these students&#13;
into a field which has so many possibilities for artistic&#13;
efforts. I hope it will succeed as both art and&#13;
entertainment here at Parkside. Now where's my&#13;
beer?" ...&#13;
Barke then went into a big schpeel about each of&#13;
the Bizarre bits. He told me about such 'bits as&#13;
Death Guar.d, Flute of Doom, American Outdoorsman,&#13;
Public Execution, The Charlie Manson&#13;
Show, and many" many more. Then he put his beer&#13;
and popcorn in a plastic bag) whirled it over his&#13;
head like David against Goliath, and screamed like&#13;
a chicken. Contsary to popular belief, Barke,&#13;
Litrenta, and Tremonte are not insane; they're just&#13;
not playing with a full deck.&#13;
Several hours .after beginning this interview, it&#13;
ended as it had begun: with a few slurred words&#13;
here and tl)er,!!, a half a page of notes. Barke,&#13;
preparing to return to his film-making made one&#13;
last remark: "Well, sure, I'll have another beer.You&#13;
buying?"&#13;
f&#13;
.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20. 19765&#13;
Bruce Wagner, a writer and performer for the campus Bizarre,&#13;
gives his best angle.&#13;
==============================&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers -&#13;
8&#13;
Dealer 637-2726 ~=============================f&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
. Sandwich_&#13;
- OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /We. 614-2371&#13;
"What we hope to accomplish on the Campus&#13;
Bizarre 'is... to.. uh.. to see that.i.uh .. Where was I?&#13;
Oh, yeah. Well, sure, I'll have a beer. You buying?"&#13;
It could have been worse. I could have been&#13;
talking to two or all three 'of the oroducers of the&#13;
Campus Bizarre T.V. Show. Luckily only one was&#13;
available for this interview- Bill Barke. The others&#13;
Jeff Litrenta and Bob Tremonte could not bl! found:&#13;
Barke was noticeably upset at this. "They knew&#13;
about this thing. They just thought it'd be funny to&#13;
leave me holding the bag. No offense," he said.&#13;
Dressed in army fatigues several sizes too large,&#13;
with clusters of foilage stuck conspicuously into&#13;
button holes and zippers, Barke had been relaxing&#13;
when I arrived. I questioned him about the odd&#13;
costume and learned that he and several other video&#13;
members were' in the midst of making a short&#13;
comedy film for the show, which will be aired&#13;
weekly at Parkside beginning in early November. I&#13;
asked about the nature of the comedy film,&#13;
"I guess it's funny, That's all I can say at the&#13;
moment except that I'd like to have some popcorn&#13;
with my beer," said Barke.&#13;
All seriousness aside, Barke talked about Campus&#13;
Bizarre which he helped develop for PAB Video&#13;
with Litrenta and Trenionte, that also involves the&#13;
efforts of a score of students who work as writers,&#13;
crew, and talent each week.&#13;
Barke said, "A preview of Campus Bizarre was&#13;
shown at the beginning of the semester and got a&#13;
pretty good response so we've decided to do a series&#13;
of half-hour shows. Until November we'll be stockpiling&#13;
our taped bits and at that time they will be&#13;
edited into five or six shows."&#13;
When the show is ready to be aired, PAB hopes to&#13;
have the 'Union's Advent T.V. screen, which ~=-~-~_---::========: Dedication, Open House Sunday&#13;
.&#13;
.~ ~he University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
~ , cordially invites you&#13;
to attend the dedication of the&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie Library·Learning Center&#13;
. on Sunday, October 24, 1976,&#13;
from'l:30·2:30 p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
Wyllie. Library·Learning Center&#13;
Unveiling of the Irvin G_ Wyllie portrait&#13;
Racital by Carmen Vila, Spanish pianist&#13;
and Parkside's first artist-in-residence&#13;
Remarks by Gvo Obata, principal&#13;
designer. Hellmuth, Obara &amp; Kassabaum&#13;
of St. Louis, designers of the&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center&#13;
Remarks by and presentation to Merle Curti,&#13;
Emeritus Professor of History,&#13;
UW·Madison -&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin, presiding&#13;
Reception and campus open house following,&#13;
featuring demonstrations and displays by&#13;
facu Ity and students, and tours of all&#13;
campus buildings, including the new&#13;
Parks ide Union, until 5:30 p.rn.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
There will be something }or&#13;
everyone Sunday afternoon,&#13;
Oct. 24, when the public is invited&#13;
to. attend an a1I-Campus&#13;
Open House and formal&#13;
dedication of tbe Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
Library-Learning Center ,&#13;
Planners hope that students and&#13;
staff will use the occasion to&#13;
show the campus to their&#13;
families and friends.&#13;
The dedication of the&#13;
magnificent Wyllie LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, named for&#13;
Parkside's founding chancellor,&#13;
will be the focus of the af·&#13;
ternoon's activities. The&#13;
dedication program will be held&#13;
in the WylHe Library-Learntng&#13;
Center's spectacular Main&#13;
Place beginning at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
The Open House, itself, will be&#13;
held from 12:30 to 5:S0 and will&#13;
feature many displays,&#13;
demonstrations and perIormances&#13;
in all the Parkside&#13;
buildings, including the exciting&#13;
new $3.7 million Parkside Union&#13;
opened just last month.&#13;
The dedication program will&#13;
feature the unveiling of a&#13;
portrait of the late chancellor&#13;
done by Kenosha artist George&#13;
Pollard, as well as: *&#13;
a recital by Carmen Vila,&#13;
Spanish concert pianist who&#13;
was Parkside's first artist-inresidence&#13;
from 1968, when UW·&#13;
P-assumed control of the twoyear&#13;
Centers in Kenosha and&#13;
Racine and acquired its first&#13;
students, IIntil 1973. *&#13;
remarks by Gyo Obata,&#13;
internationally known architect&#13;
and principal in charge of&#13;
design for the St. Louis firm of&#13;
Hellmuth, Obata and&#13;
Kassabaum, architects of the&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center&#13;
and designers' of the campus&#13;
master development plan.&#13;
*&#13;
remarks by Merle Curti,&#13;
distinguished ~merican&#13;
historian and Professor&#13;
Emeritus at UW-Madison, with&#13;
whom Chancellor Wyllie&#13;
studied as a graduate student&#13;
and later worked as a faculty&#13;
colleague at Madison. Prof.&#13;
Curti also will he presented a&#13;
special award for his generous&#13;
contributions to the Parkside&#13;
-library.&#13;
A reception will follow the&#13;
dedication program at approximately&#13;
2:30 p.m.&#13;
Doors will open to all campus&#13;
buildings at 12:30, one hour&#13;
before the dedication program.&#13;
Most activities in all the&#13;
academic buildings will begin&#13;
after the Wyllie dedication&#13;
program, with the exception of&#13;
the new campus Union which is&#13;
expected to be the recipient of&#13;
the majority of the visitors who&#13;
arrive before- the 1:3Gdedication&#13;
program.&#13;
All facilities in the 70,000&#13;
square foot union will be open&#13;
and in operation from 12:30 to&#13;
5: 30, including movies in the&#13;
400-seat cinema theater,&#13;
refreshments in the large dining&#13;
room whose glass walls&#13;
overlook beautiful Petrifying&#13;
Springs park, Union Square, tbe&#13;
entertainment center of tbe&#13;
union, the recreation-game&#13;
area and bowling alleys and the&#13;
Union Bazaar, a spacious mall&#13;
rising three stories to a skylighted&#13;
roof which is the heart of&#13;
the building.&#13;
Visitors may park in the&#13;
Union lot, adjacent to the new&#13;
building on the north end of tbe&#13;
campus, in the Conununication&#13;
Arts lot adjacent to the theater&#13;
on"the west side of the campus,&#13;
or in the Tallent Hall lot on the&#13;
east side of Wood Rd. (30th&#13;
Ave.) from which shuWe buses&#13;
will be running.&#13;
Visitors will receive a map of&#13;
the buildings and a schedule of&#13;
activities as they enter tbe&#13;
buildings. Each building will&#13;
have a television monitor and&#13;
guides to further describe the&#13;
facilities and activiUes.&#13;
Among the other activities at&#13;
Parkside Sunday will be: *&#13;
a special performance by&#13;
the Parkside Baroque Ensemble&#13;
at 3: 15 in Greenquist&#13;
Hall room 103. *&#13;
a "Jefferson Sampler,"&#13;
featuring highlight. from&#13;
Thomas Jefferson's life and&#13;
contributions by costumed&#13;
Parkside students at approximately&#13;
3 p.rn. *&#13;
a series of experiments and&#13;
demonstrations of equipment&#13;
by the science, engineering and&#13;
behavioral science faculty and&#13;
computer center, including&#13;
audience participation in&#13;
computer games and&#13;
psychological experirnents. *&#13;
a number of exhibitions in&#13;
the theater gallery and library,&#13;
including a set display on the&#13;
theater stage. *&#13;
live art and music activities&#13;
in Fine Arts classrooms. *&#13;
movies&#13;
*&#13;
self-guiding tours of the&#13;
physical education building and&#13;
faciltties, . highlighted by the&#13;
first public scrimmage of the&#13;
1976-77 Parkside varsity&#13;
basketball team at 4:30.&#13;
Sunday will mark Parkside's&#13;
fourth Open House since the&#13;
campus opened in Fall of 1969&#13;
with its first two buildings,&#13;
Greenquist and Tallent Halla.&#13;
With a break from the&#13;
weatherman, several thousand&#13;
are expected this time. Those&#13;
with questions should call 55S2233&#13;
for more informaUon.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976 5&#13;
Barke talks Bizarre&#13;
by Sue Marquardt or William Barke&#13;
"What_ we hope to accomplish on f:he Campus&#13;
Bizarre is ... to .. uh .. to see that...uh .. Where was I?&#13;
Oh, yeah. Well, sure, I'll have a beer. You buying?"&#13;
It could have been worse. I could have been&#13;
talking to two or all three -of the oroducers of the&#13;
Campus Bizarre T.V. Show. Luckily only one was&#13;
available for this interview- Bill Barke. The oth~rs,&#13;
Jeff Litrenta and Bob Tremonte could not be found.&#13;
Barke was noticeably upset at this. "They knew&#13;
about this thing. They just thought it'd be funny to&#13;
leave me holding the bag. No offense," he said.&#13;
measures five by seven feet, installed in Union&#13;
Square. Campus Bizarre would be shown Wednesdays,&#13;
Thursdays, and Fridays during the late&#13;
morning and early afternoon hours.&#13;
"This is probably our . biggest project to date,"&#13;
Barke remarked. "That would include the old P.U.&#13;
Revue of a year and a half ago which actually had&#13;
the same comedy format as Bizarre." Seven P.U.&#13;
Revues were produced and have found an occasional&#13;
outlet on the Video Committee's monitor&#13;
which for two years has been a sometime fixture ~&#13;
the Main Concourse and now in the Union.&#13;
Dressed in army fatigues several sizes too large,&#13;
with clusters of foilage stuck conspicuously into&#13;
button holes and zippers, Barke had been relaxing&#13;
when I arrived. I questioned him about the odd&#13;
costume and learned that he and several other video&#13;
members were' in the midst of making a short&#13;
comedy film for the show, which will be aired&#13;
weekly at Parkside beginning in early November. I&#13;
asked about the nature of the comedy film.&#13;
Barke stated: "The whole concept of producing a&#13;
show like this is basically for the experience of&#13;
working in this kind of creative atmospheretelevision-&#13;
which incorporates sight and sound.&#13;
Television production really allows these students&#13;
into a field which has so many possibilities for artistic&#13;
efforts. I hope it will succeed as both art and&#13;
entertainment here at Parkside. Now where's my&#13;
beer?"&#13;
Bruce Wagner, a writer and performer for the Campus Bizarre,&#13;
gives his best angle.&#13;
============================== the quiet l~ader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
"I guess it's funny. That's all I can say at the&#13;
moment except that I'd like to have some popcorn&#13;
with my beer," said Barke.&#13;
Barke then went into a big schpeel about each of&#13;
the Bizarre bits. He told me about such bits as&#13;
Death Guard, Flute of Doom, American Outdoorsman,&#13;
Public Execution, The Charlie Manson&#13;
Show, and many, many more. Then he put his beer&#13;
and popcorn in a plastic bag, whirled it over his&#13;
head like David against Goliath, and screamed like&#13;
a chicken. Cont.ary to popular belief, Barke,&#13;
Litrenta, and Tremonte are not insane; they're just&#13;
not playing with a full deck.&#13;
~&#13;
All seriousness aside, Barke talked about Campu~&#13;
Bizarre which he helped develop for PAB Video&#13;
with Litrenta and Tr-enionte, 'that also involves the&#13;
efforts of a score of students who work as writers,&#13;
crew, and talent each week.&#13;
Mike Villers-Dealer 637-2726&#13;
~============================~&#13;
LEE SAUSACE SHOP&#13;
Barke said, "A preview of Campus Bizarre was&#13;
shown at the beginning of the semester and got a&#13;
pretty good response so we've decided to do a series&#13;
of half-hour ~hows. Until November we'll be stockpiling&#13;
our taped bits and at that time they will be&#13;
edited into five or six shows."&#13;
When the show is ready to be aired, PAB hopes to&#13;
have the Union'!l Advent T.V. screen, which&#13;
Several hours -after beginning this interview, it&#13;
emled as it had begun: with a few slurred words&#13;
here and tqere, a half a page of notes. Barke,&#13;
preparing to return to his film-making made one&#13;
last remark: "Well, sure, I'll have another beer .You&#13;
buying?"&#13;
Home of the Suhmar ne&#13;
. Sandwich_&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
2615 Washington Ave. 634-2373&#13;
Response&#13;
received&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government' Association announced&#13;
that voter registration is&#13;
getting a "better than expected"&#13;
response with all the postcards&#13;
for Kenosha gone.&#13;
Dan Nielsen, Ways and Means&#13;
Committee chairperson, is in&#13;
charge of the voter registration&#13;
drive, which is an effort to&#13;
achieve a high voter turnout for&#13;
this November's elections.&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association is&#13;
sponsoring a toy drive for the&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center.&#13;
This toy drive will begin on&#13;
October 18 and continue through&#13;
October 22.&#13;
i,,/f' University _o:, Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
-~ Ft~·sta&#13;
Acapulc~&#13;
Semester -Break&#13;
January 6-13, 1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE -&#13;
MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW! • For, application forms or&#13;
additional information contact:&#13;
Parkside Union Office&#13;
553-2200&#13;
, f&#13;
Dedication, Open House Sunday&#13;
There will be something for&#13;
everyone Sunday afternoon,&#13;
Oct. 24, when the public is invited&#13;
to attend an all-Campus&#13;
Open House and formal&#13;
dedication of the Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
Library-Learning Center.&#13;
Planners hope that students and&#13;
staff will use the occasion to&#13;
show the campus to their&#13;
families and friends.&#13;
The dedication of the&#13;
rnagnificent Wyllie LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, named for&#13;
Parkside's founding chancellor,&#13;
will be the focus of the afternoon's&#13;
activities. The&#13;
dedication program will be held&#13;
in the Wyllie Llbrary-Learnin~&#13;
Center's spectacular Main&#13;
Place beginning at 1 :30 p.m.&#13;
The Open House, itself, will be&#13;
held from 12:30 to 5:30 and will&#13;
feature many displays,&#13;
demonstrations a11d perform~nces&#13;
in all the Parkside&#13;
building!;, including the exciting&#13;
new $3.7 million Parkside Union&#13;
opened just last month. •&#13;
The dedication program will&#13;
feature the unveiling of a&#13;
portrait of the late chancellor&#13;
done by Kenosha artist George&#13;
Pollard, as well as: * a recital by Carmen Vila,&#13;
Spanish concert pianist who&#13;
was Parkside's first artist-inresidence&#13;
from 19613, when DWP&#13;
- assumed control of the twoyear&#13;
Centers in Kenosha and&#13;
Racine and acquired its first&#13;
students, \jntil 1973. * remarks by Gyo Obata,&#13;
internationally known architect&#13;
and principal in charge of&#13;
design for the St. Louis firm of&#13;
Hellmuth, Obat,? and&#13;
Kassabaum, architects of the&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center&#13;
and designers of the campus&#13;
master development plan. * remarks by Merle Curti,&#13;
distinguished ~merican&#13;
historian and Professor&#13;
Emeritus at UW-Madison, with&#13;
whom Chancellor Wyllie&#13;
studied as a graduate student&#13;
and later worked as a faculty&#13;
colleague at Madison. Prof.&#13;
Curti also will be presented a&#13;
special award for his generous&#13;
contributions to the Parkside&#13;
library.&#13;
A reception will follow the&#13;
dedication program at approximately&#13;
2:30 p.m.&#13;
Doors will open to all campus&#13;
buildings at 12:30, one hour&#13;
before the dedication program.&#13;
Most activities in all the&#13;
academic buildings will begin&#13;
after the Wyllie dedication&#13;
program, with the exception of&#13;
the new campus Union which is&#13;
expected to be the recipient of&#13;
the majority of the visitors who&#13;
arrive before the 1: 30&#13;
I&#13;
dedication program.&#13;
All facilities in the 70,000&#13;
square foot union will be open&#13;
and in operation from 12:30 to&#13;
5:30, including movies in the&#13;
400-seat cinema theater,&#13;
refreshments in the large dining&#13;
room whose glass walls&#13;
overlook beautiful Petrifying&#13;
Springs park, Union Square, the&#13;
entertainment center of the&#13;
union, the recreation-game&#13;
area and bowling alleys and the&#13;
Union Bazaar, a spacious mall&#13;
rising three stories to a skylighted&#13;
roof which is the heart of&#13;
the building.&#13;
Visitors may park in the&#13;
Union lot, adjacent to the new&#13;
building on the north end of the&#13;
campus, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Jot adjacent to the theater&#13;
on the west side of the campus,&#13;
or in the Tallent Hall lot on the&#13;
-!~~he University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
, , . cordially invites you&#13;
to attend the dedication of the&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie Library-Leaming Center&#13;
. on SundayJ October 24, 1976,&#13;
from 1 :30-2:30 p.m. in Main Place,&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center&#13;
Unveiling of the Irvin G. Wyllie portrait&#13;
Recital by Carmen Vila, Spanish pianist&#13;
and Parkside's first artist-in-residence&#13;
Remarks by Gyo Obata, principal&#13;
designer, Hellmuth, Obata &amp; Kassabaum&#13;
of St. Louis, designers of the&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center&#13;
Remarks by and presentation to Merle Curti,&#13;
Emeritus Professor of H isfory,&#13;
UW-Madison&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin, presiding&#13;
Reception and campus open house following,&#13;
featuring demonstrations and displays by&#13;
faculty and students, and tours of all&#13;
campus buildings, including the new&#13;
Parkside Union, until 5:30 p.m.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
east side of Wood Rd. (30th&#13;
Ave.) from which shuttle buses&#13;
will be running.&#13;
Visitors will receive a map of&#13;
the buildings and a schedule of&#13;
activities as they enter th&#13;
buildings. Each building will&#13;
have a television monitor and&#13;
guides to furth r describe th&#13;
facilities and activities.&#13;
Among the other activitie at&#13;
Parkside Sunday will be: * a special performance by&#13;
the Parkside Baroque Ensemble&#13;
at 3:15 in Gr enquist&#13;
Hall room 103. * a "Jefferson Sampler,"&#13;
featurin , highlights from&#13;
Thomas J ffer ·on's life and&#13;
contribution by co turned&#13;
Park ide stude~ts at approximately&#13;
3 p.m. * a series of experiments and&#13;
demonstration of equipment&#13;
b the sci.ence, engineering and&#13;
behavioral cience faculty and&#13;
computer center, including&#13;
audience participation in&#13;
computer games nd&#13;
psychological e,xperiments. * a number of exhibitions in&#13;
the theater gallery and library,&#13;
including a set display on th&#13;
theater stage. * live art and music activities&#13;
in Fine Arts classrooms. * movies * self-guiding tours of the&#13;
physical education building and&#13;
facilities, _ highlighted by the&#13;
first public scrimmage of the&#13;
1976-77 Parkside varsity&#13;
basketball team at 4:30.&#13;
Sunday will mark Parkside's&#13;
fourth Open House since the&#13;
campus opened in Fall of 1969&#13;
with its first two buildings,&#13;
Greenquist and Tallent Halls.&#13;
With a break from the&#13;
weatherman, several thousand&#13;
are expected this time. Those&#13;
with questions should call 553-&#13;
2233 for more information. &#13;
\&#13;
The Fine Arts Division and&#13;
Dramatic Arts Present&#13;
GHOSTS&#13;
by Henrik Ibsen&#13;
-HE P"KKj'O&amp; RANGER October 20,1976 ,&#13;
Contact&#13;
,&#13;
weekly by studen, government&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden the Student Court to hear the complaint. Roughlysthe procedure will&#13;
go as follows.&#13;
1. The student contacts the instructor of the course about the grade&#13;
to make sure that a simple error of grade transfer hasn't occurred.&#13;
2. If the conversation with the instructor proved unsuccessful, the&#13;
student must then, contact the chairperson of the division about the&#13;
grade. '&#13;
3. If that fails the student should see the Vice-Chancellor - Dean of&#13;
Faculty about the grade. ,&#13;
4. If that fails, the student may file a formal petition to the Student&#13;
Court at the P.S.G.A., Inc. offices, WLLC .DI93, and the Court will ~&#13;
.convene within ten days to hear the petition. The instructor Will be&#13;
requested to be present at the hearing to present his-her case, as will&#13;
the student. '- .&#13;
5. The student should 6e prepared to offer evidence and documentation&#13;
to support his-her claim. "&#13;
6. The Student Court will rule on the petition and send a recommendation&#13;
and request to the Chancellor. If the Court rules that the&#13;
student did notreceive the grade earned, the Court will request that&#13;
the Chancellor forward the Retition to the Faculty Riilhts and&#13;
Responsibility Committee. /&#13;
7. The Faculty Rights and Responsibility Committee will be the&#13;
court of last resorts. _ ...&#13;
The academic grievance procedure 'lip to now has been that the&#13;
. student went to the instructor, then the divisional chairperson and&#13;
then to the Dean of the Appropriate school, and then went.home with&#13;
the same grade as he-she walked in to c6mplain about. The new&#13;
procedure may appear to be a bit formidable, but there is atleast a_&#13;
chance that the student complaint will get a formal hearing.&#13;
If any student needs help in filing a petition a member of tbe Legal'&#13;
Service Executive Advisory Coramittee will be available ,to aid them.&#13;
Guidelines on the rules of evidence and standards will be written by&#13;
the Student Court in the near future. When they are completed there&#13;
will be more Information coming to you from P.S.G.A. . ,&#13;
As slight digression, I would like to remind students that there are&#13;
still several positions as associate :i!!stices of the Student Court open. If&#13;
anyone is interested, contact Kiyoko Bowden, president of student&#13;
government or Caroyl Williamson Chief Justice of the Student Court at&#13;
WLLC DI93 or call 553-2244. I&#13;
, Student appointments&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following students on their&#13;
appointments by the Senate:&#13;
Leslie Burns .. , ' , . ' , .. , , 'Financial Aids Committee&#13;
Arline Martin, , , .. , , .. , .Financial Aids Committee&#13;
Chris Meyer .. ' , .. , .. .United Council-Education Comnuttee&#13;
Pat Heckel, , ' ,. , .. , United Council-Director's Committee&#13;
Daniel Nielsen .. ' . ' . , .. United Council-Legislative Affairs Committee&#13;
Openings in Student Government&#13;
Any student interested in serving on the following committees&#13;
please contact Kiyoko Bowden immediately:&#13;
Academic Planning and Program Review , , 2 openings&#13;
Athletic Board, , , , .-:., . ' , &lt;0. ,2 openings&#13;
Curriculum and Program Committee ... 2 openings (full-lime students&#13;
only)&#13;
Teaching Awards Committee .. , , .. , , ..&#13;
Campus Ceremonies Committee .. , .. , .&#13;
Bookstore Committee ~ ~ ' .&#13;
Student services status report&#13;
Student services in all their vast array at Parkside are under review&#13;
by student government. If you have a complaint, please come to us.&#13;
We need to know ww.t if anything is f,,!ling to work properly in serving&#13;
the students. Complain. We are listening. We are prepared to follow&#13;
- through on your complaint.&#13;
The status report on student services is waiting for you to fill in the&#13;
details. ."&#13;
Ar-ademie gr-ievance procedure implementation&#13;
Al'lwdlllg to the P,SJ;,A .. Inc, Constitution, Arti'cle III, The Student&#13;
- Court has the responsibility of hearing petitions from students&#13;
reuardmg an academic grievance. An academic grievance is a&#13;
complamt b~ a student that he-she didn't receive the grade that he-she&#13;
earned. ,&#13;
I[ "iii h.. o,,,,.,hle hv 'l;ov 1•. 1976for s\Udents to file a petition with&#13;
Sp.rn. Oct.22-23-24&#13;
COMM ARTS THEATER&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
Adm. $1 students and senior citizens,&#13;
. $2 others. Tickets at the door&#13;
and the Main Place Info. Kiosk&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
. '..'&#13;
)&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
The,quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
~&#13;
Mike Villers 637-2726&#13;
11', Ii"" hJ ""Rg,&#13;
"ear after year, semester.&#13;
I after semester, the&#13;
CollegeMaster"from&#13;
Fidelity Union Life has,&#13;
been the most accepted,&#13;
most popular plan on&#13;
campuses all over America,&#13;
Find out why.&#13;
Call the Fidelity Union'&#13;
CollegeMaster@&#13;
Field Associate&#13;
•&#13;
II] your area:&#13;
,&#13;
Linda Truax ~52-9131&#13;
Tom Cotner 632-4758&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
, RLM SERIES PRESENTS _&#13;
ANIMAL CRACKERS&#13;
FRI.. OCT.22 7:00 &amp; 9:00 P.M.;&#13;
Adm. $1.00&#13;
, .. lopening&#13;
.. 1 opening&#13;
_... 2 openings&#13;
/&#13;
)&#13;
Interviews&#13;
to 'be held&#13;
)&#13;
CDlleg~Jylaster@&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The Parkside Career Planning&#13;
and Placement Office has announced&#13;
their mterviewing&#13;
schedule for the next few weeks.&#13;
The U.S. Marine Corps Officer&#13;
Selection Program will be in the&#13;
WLLC Alcove near the former&#13;
Sweet Shoppe on October 18to 2L&#13;
Students in computer science&#13;
can.talk to representatives from&#13;
Northwestern 'Mutual Life on&#13;
October 28. . "-&#13;
The UW-Madison School of&#13;
Pharmacy will be in WLLC D-174&#13;
to talk to interested students on&#13;
October 29. '\ '&#13;
Drake University's school of&#13;
business administration will have&#13;
representatives on .campus on&#13;
November 2 from 9 a.m. -12 noon&#13;
in the WLLC Alcove 103.&#13;
Racine will be recruiting on&#13;
November 4 and 9 with Modine&#13;
Manufacturing seeking' ac- • . ,&#13;
countants and design engineers&#13;
on the 4th and J.I. case looking&#13;
fO\' auditors on 9th.&#13;
Xerox will be on campus on the&#13;
17th, seeking sales personnel.&#13;
Also on the 17th, Northwestern&#13;
Mutual 'Life will be- recruiting&#13;
underwriters.&#13;
The Career Planning and&#13;
Placement Office asks that you&#13;
have a complete file with them&#13;
before signing up in their office&#13;
'rallent 107 for these interviews.&#13;
·Stamp Show 'OCl. 23-24&#13;
KECOPE:X '76&#13;
_GATEW~Y nkHNICAL INST.&#13;
3530 30th Ave. Kenosha'&#13;
SATURDAY,OCT. 23 - 10 A.M.te • P.M.&#13;
SUIDAV, OCT. 24 - 10 A.M. te 4 P.M.&#13;
'00 PHILATELIC DISPLAYS&#13;
• 5 . C • 12 Dealers '&#13;
ounmc. a,d .,. USPS Special Cancellation&#13;
• USPS POST OFFICE • Cacheted Envelopes&#13;
FREE ADMISSION&#13;
.Concert&#13;
planned .'&#13;
The Pike River Musicians&#13;
(PRM), the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
chamber music group now&#13;
beginning its third season, will be&#13;
holding their'second fan concert&#13;
featuring Milwaukee soprano,&#13;
Helen Ceci. ;.&#13;
The concert will be held on I&#13;
Sunday, (Oct. 31st) at 3 p.m. at&#13;
the home of Dr. and Mrs. J.N .&#13;
Shanberge &lt;,957East Wye Lane,&#13;
Milwaukee) and will be open to&#13;
the public. Refreshments will be&#13;
{ierved and a donation accepted.&#13;
Reservations are not necessary.&#13;
The Milwaukee concert 'marks&#13;
the first time the group plays&#13;
outside the Kenosha-Racine area.&#13;
The program will include J.S.&#13;
Bach:s Cantata No. 2p9, "Non sa&#13;
che sia dolore," for soprano, solo&#13;
. violin ,and flute, strings and&#13;
continuo. Besides Soprano Ceci,&#13;
the cantata will use Eden Vaning,&#13;
newly-appointed violin II'rofessor&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
.Parkside ; Barbara Suetholz,&#13;
Rat" 'ne teacher of flute; and LoTS ..&#13;
Toeppner, Milwaukee harpsichordist.&#13;
. _&#13;
The major work of the concert&#13;
will be Arnold Schoenberg's&#13;
string sextet, HVerklaerte&#13;
Nacht" (Transfigured Night) .&#13;
(&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre&#13;
SUN." OCT. 24, 7:30 P.M.&#13;
•&#13;
)&#13;
-HE P~RK.,i06- RANGER October 20, 1976&#13;
Contact weekly by student government&#13;
Interviews&#13;
to be held&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
Academic grie,·ance procedure implementation&#13;
An·ordmg to the P.S,G.A., lnc. Constitution, Arti'cle III, The Student&#13;
~ &lt; ·ourt has the responsibility of hearing petitions from students&#13;
re}.!ardmg an aeademic grievance. An a.cademic grievance is a&#13;
, ·ompiaint b~ a student that he-she didn't receive the grade that he-she&#13;
1°arned. ,&#13;
.&#13;
It\\ ill ])P no-.s1hle h,· ",ov 15~ 1976 for s\udents to file a petition with&#13;
Toe Fine Arts Division and&#13;
Dramatic Arts Present&#13;
GHOSTS ·&#13;
by Henrik Ibsen&#13;
8p.m . . Oct.22-23-24&#13;
COMM ARTS THEATER&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
Adm. $1 srudents and senior citizens,&#13;
-$2 others. Tickets at the door&#13;
and the Main Place Info. Kiosk&#13;
"II~,;.,,-,/&#13;
• Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
'&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike&#13;
~ Villers 637 -2726&#13;
, /1'1 lime lo 1/,ang,&#13;
,rear after year, semester&#13;
I after semester, the&#13;
CollegeMaster~ from&#13;
Fidelit)' Union Life has . been the most accept~ most popular plan on ·&#13;
campuses all over America.&#13;
Find out why.&#13;
Call the Fidelity Union,&#13;
CollegeMaster®&#13;
Field Associate&#13;
•&#13;
1~ your area:&#13;
tinda Truax 552-9131&#13;
Tom Cotner 632.-4758&#13;
/&#13;
Colleg~lylaster ·&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
the Student Court to hear the complaint. Roughly ,-the procedure will&#13;
go as follows.&#13;
1. The student contacts the instructor of the course about the grade&#13;
to make sure that a simple error of grade transfer hasn't occurred.&#13;
2. If the conversation with the instructor proved unsuccessful, the&#13;
student must then contact the chairperson of the division about the&#13;
grad~. - , 3. If that fails the student should see the Vice-Chancellor - L&gt;ean of&#13;
Faculty about the grade. , 4. If that fails, the student may file a formal petition to the Student&#13;
Court at the P.S.G.A., Inc. offices, WLLC ,D193, and the Court will .,J.&#13;
,convene within ten day.s to hear the petition. The instructor will be&#13;
requested to be present at the hearing to present his-her case, as will&#13;
the student. ' ,&#13;
5. The student should be prepared to offer evidence and documentation&#13;
to support his-her claim. .&#13;
6. The, Student Court will rule on the petition and send a recommendation&#13;
and request to the Chancellor. If the Court rules that the&#13;
student did not receive the grade earned, the Court will request that&#13;
the Chancellor forward the Retition to the Faculty Rights and&#13;
Responsibility Committee. I&#13;
7. The Faculty Rights and Responsibility Committee will be the&#13;
court of last resorts. _ -.&#13;
The academic grievance procedure up to now has been that the&#13;
· student went to the instructor, then the divisional chairperson and&#13;
then to the Dean of the Appropriate school, and then went home with&#13;
the same grade as he-she walked in to complain about. The new&#13;
procedure may appear to be a bit formidable, but there is at_least a ,&#13;
chance that the student complaint will get a formal hearing.&#13;
If any student needs help in filing a petition a member of tlle Legal '&#13;
Service Executive Advisory Committee will be available ,to aid them.&#13;
Guidelines on the rules of evidence and standards will be written by&#13;
the Student Court in the near future. When they are completed there&#13;
will be more information coming to you from P.S.G.A '&#13;
As slight digression, I would like to remind students that there are&#13;
still several positions as associate justices of the Student Court open. If&#13;
anyone is interested, contact Kiyoko Bowden, president of student&#13;
government or Caroyl Williamson Chief Justice of the Student Court at&#13;
WLLC D193 or call 553-2244.&#13;
Student appointments&#13;
by ijruce Wagner&#13;
The Parkside Career Planning&#13;
and Placement Office has announced&#13;
their interviewing&#13;
schedule for the next few weeks.&#13;
The U.S. Marin.e Corps Officer&#13;
Selection Program will be in the&#13;
WLLC Alcove near ~e former&#13;
Sweet Shoppe on October 18 to 2L&#13;
Students in computer science&#13;
can.talk to representatives from&#13;
Northwestern Mutual Life on&#13;
October 28. ·&#13;
The UW-Madison School of&#13;
Pharmacy will be in WLLC D-174&#13;
to talk to interested students on&#13;
October 29. '&#13;
Drake University's school of&#13;
business administration will have&#13;
represen!3tives on ,campus on&#13;
November 2 from 9 a.m. -12 noon&#13;
in the WLLC Alcove 103.&#13;
Racine will be recruiting on&#13;
November 4 and 9 with Modine&#13;
Manufact~ring seeking · accountants&#13;
and design engineers&#13;
on the 4th and J.I. case looking&#13;
for auditors on 9th.&#13;
Xerox will be on ca:i;npus on the&#13;
17th, seeking sales personnel.&#13;
Also on the 1'7th, Northwestern&#13;
Mutual · Life will be recruiting&#13;
underwriters.&#13;
The Career Planning and&#13;
Placement Office asks that you&#13;
have a complete file with them&#13;
before signing up in their office&#13;
Tallent 107 for these interviews.&#13;
Congratulations are extended to the following students on their&#13;
appointments by the Senate: Concert&#13;
Leslie Burns .. . .. . . ... .. .. . .. ...... . .... . .'Financial Aids Committee , ,)&#13;
Arline Martin ... . . . ... .. . .. ... . . . . . .. ... . . Financial Aids Committee - l d&#13;
Chris Meyer . . . . .. .. . .. .. . . . . . . United Council-Education Comrruttee p 8 n n e&#13;
Pat Heckel . . . ...... . .. . . . . . . .. United Council-Director's Committee&#13;
Daniel Nielsen .. . . . .. .. United Council-Legislative Affairs Committee&#13;
Openings in Student Government&#13;
Any student interested in serving on the following committees&#13;
please contact Kiyoko Bowden immediately:&#13;
Academic Planning and Program Review .. . .. .. . ..... . . 2 openings&#13;
Athletic Board ..... : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 openings&#13;
Curriculum and Program Committee .. . 2 openings ( full-time students&#13;
only)&#13;
Teaching Awards Committee .. . .. . .. . .. ... . . . . . .... .... . .. . 1 opening&#13;
Campus Ceremonies Committee . .. .. . . . .. .. .. .. . ... . .. . .. .. 1 opening&#13;
Bookstore Committee .... ...... ~ .. . . . . .. , . . .. . . ... . . . . . .... 2 openings&#13;
Student services status report&#13;
Student services in all their vast array at Parkside are under review&#13;
by student government. If you have a complaint, please come to us.&#13;
We need to know what if anything is f3!Iing to work properly in serving&#13;
the students. Complain. We are listeI)ing. We are prepared to follow&#13;
- through on your complaint.&#13;
The status report on student services is waiting for you to fill in' the&#13;
details. , ·&#13;
.. -&#13;
-Stamp Show OCT. 23-24&#13;
KECOPEX '76&#13;
GATEW~Y TECHNICAL INST.&#13;
3530 30th Ave. Kenosha&#13;
SATU,RDAY, OCT. 2l - 10 A.M •. 'to 8 P.M.&#13;
SUIDAY, OCT. 24 - 10 A.M. to 4 P.M.&#13;
100 PHILATELIC DISPLAYS&#13;
• S . C d • 1 2 Dealers , ouve,nu. ar . 1 USPS Special Cancellation&#13;
• USPS POST OFFICE • Cacheted Envelopes&#13;
FREE ADMISSION&#13;
The Pike River Musicians&#13;
( PRM ), the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
chamber music group now&#13;
beginning its third season, will be&#13;
holding their'second fall concert&#13;
featuring Milwaukee soprano,&#13;
Helen Ceci.&#13;
The concert will be held on&#13;
Sunday, (Oct. 31st) at 3 p.m. at&#13;
the home of Dr. and Mrs. J .N.&#13;
Shanberge (957 East Wye Lane,&#13;
Milwaukee) and will be open to&#13;
the public. Refreshments will be&#13;
served and a donation accepted.&#13;
Reservations are not necessary.&#13;
The Milwaukee concert ·marks&#13;
the first time the group plays&#13;
outsidE!the Kenosha-Racine area.&#13;
The program will include J.S.&#13;
Bach'.s Cantata No. 2p9, "Non sa&#13;
che s1a dolore,'' for soprano, solo&#13;
. violin and flute, strings and&#13;
continuo. Besides Soprano Ceci,&#13;
the cantata will use Eden Vaning,&#13;
newly-appointed violin 1'fofessor&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
_ Parkside ; Barbara Suethoiz,&#13;
Ra• ;_ne teacher of flute; and LoTs&#13;
Toeppner, Milwaukee harp-&#13;
. sichordist. ·&#13;
The ll}ajor work of the concert&#13;
will be Arnold Schoenberg's&#13;
string sextet, "Verklaerte&#13;
Nacht" (Transfigured Night) .&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD 1 , FILM SERIES PRESENTS -&#13;
.ANIM.AL CRACKERS&#13;
FRI., OCT.22 7:00 &amp; 9:00 P.M.; SUN.,. OCT. 24, 7:30 P.M.&#13;
Adm. $1 .00 Union Cinema Theatre &#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
THE PARKS IDE RANGER OCtober 20. 19767&#13;
Women's volleyball&#13;
goes north&#13;
Parkside's women's volleyball&#13;
team faces two opponents in the&#13;
coming weekend.&#13;
Friday, the team will travel to&#13;
Sheboygan to play Lakeland&#13;
College at 10 a.m. and Saturday,&#13;
they will oppose UW-8tvens Point&#13;
at Stevens Point.&#13;
The team hosted five teams;&#13;
L1W·Oshkosh, Carthage, UW.&#13;
j •&#13;
Whitewater, Ripon and Loyola;&#13;
in the Parkside Invitational last&#13;
Saturday. The Rangers played&#13;
-off for third place against UW·&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
Parkside lost a double match at&#13;
UW·Whitewater October 12,&#13;
losing first to Whitewater 15-11,&#13;
15-7 and then to Carroll College.&#13;
15-3, 1:Hi.&#13;
Marquette forfeits soccer game&#13;
by Fr",d Tenuta&#13;
The Ranger soccer team&#13;
scored a l-ll forfeit victory over&#13;
Marquette University Saturday&#13;
at the soccer bowl.&#13;
The forfeit was taken by&#13;
Marquette Coach Joe }lorn as a&#13;
result of the ejection of two&#13;
Warriors with 17:57 in the&#13;
game. The first was ejected for&#13;
deliberately tripping a Ranger,&#13;
and the second was ejected for&#13;
protesting the call too strongly.&#13;
The question of whether the&#13;
second player had, in fact,&#13;
protested, and a feeling that&#13;
Marquette_was being cheated by&#13;
lbe referees caused Born to pull&#13;
his team off the field.&#13;
At this point, Parkside was&#13;
leading 3-2. Earl Campbell and&#13;
Rafii Kambiz had 'scored first&#13;
!'ralf goals for the Rangers. Mike&#13;
Boyajian added the third early in&#13;
the second half. I •&#13;
Up until that point, the Rangers&#13;
had been in total control, but the ,&#13;
loss of all NAIA player Steve&#13;
Sendelbach, due to a broken nose,&#13;
necessitated a change in the&#13;
defense. The opening a.three&#13;
goal lead also meant to Coach Hal&#13;
Henderson that "we were content&#13;
and tha t the game would take&#13;
care of itself."&#13;
The Warriors then placed&#13;
pressure on the Ranger defense.&#13;
Their first big opportunity was&#13;
missed when a shot rolled past&#13;
Parkside goalkeeper Dan&#13;
Brieschke and hit the goal post.&#13;
No Marquette forwards were in&#13;
position for a rebound and the&#13;
lead was sage.&#13;
Shortly thereafter, Marquette&#13;
.Swim records set . ,&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
I&#13;
e&#13;
,&#13;
e&#13;
t&#13;
Records in the first place&#13;
finishes of the 200free relay team&#13;
and the 100 free fell, put the&#13;
Parkside women's swim team 1st&#13;
to Carthage 87-37 Saturday atternoon.&#13;
In the relay, the record was set&#13;
at 2:03. 109 with Mary Beth&#13;
Leitch, Sally Francis, Gail Olson&#13;
and JUdy Iverson swimming the&#13;
event. Iverson is a new member&#13;
of the team.&#13;
Olson was the record breaker&#13;
in the 100free, with a lime of 1:07.&#13;
302.She was also second in the 500&#13;
free , only two seconds off the&#13;
record and second 'in the 50&#13;
breast.&#13;
Leitch scored a first in the 50&#13;
butterfly and seconds in the 100&#13;
I,&#13;
n&#13;
t&#13;
"o&#13;
e&#13;
I.&#13;
'.&#13;
,&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
s&#13;
s&#13;
,.&#13;
a ,&#13;
o&#13;
d&#13;
i,&#13;
,&#13;
..&#13;
Parkside golfers finished sixth&#13;
in the 10 team NAIA District&#13;
Tournament October 11 and 12 in&#13;
UiCrosse.&#13;
Eau Claire topped the state&#13;
schools with a score of 752 to&#13;
qualify for the National Tournament&#13;
to be held in the spring.&#13;
Eau Claire's Tim Bauer tied with&#13;
Lee Rolquist of Superior for&#13;
medalist, then Bauer won the&#13;
plaYoff.&#13;
Other team scores were&#13;
s&#13;
,.&#13;
1&#13;
S&#13;
e&#13;
I.&#13;
back and 50 free.&#13;
In Iverson's first performance&#13;
for the Rangers, she picked up&#13;
second places in the 200 free and.&#13;
the 50 back and a third in the 100&#13;
breast.&#13;
A second and two fourths were&#13;
gained by Francis iii the IOUfree, ~&#13;
and 50 free and the 500 free,&#13;
respectively.&#13;
Lili Crnich improved a personal&#13;
record in the 200 free, bettering&#13;
her time by 20 seconds in a&#13;
fourth place finish. She also&#13;
scored a fifth in the 100 breast&#13;
and a sixth in the 50 free.&#13;
The squad, coached by Barb&#13;
Lawson, will host Uw-Milwaukee&#13;
Friday at 4 p.m. and will travel to&#13;
UW-Oshkosh to meet the Titans&#13;
and Carroll College Saturday at&#13;
11 a.m,&#13;
Whitewater, 762; La Crosse, 763;&#13;
Oshkosh, 764, Superior, 774;&#13;
Parkside, 7$; Platteville, 798;&#13;
River Falls, 801; Stevens Point,&#13;
822 and Stout, 830.&#13;
Parkside was- in fourth place&#13;
after the first round, with Ray&#13;
Zuzinec leading the team,&#13;
shooting a 75.&#13;
The final individual scores for&#13;
the Rangers were Ri,ck Pedersen,&#13;
155; Tim Rouse, 156; Mark&#13;
Kuyawa, 158; Gary Paskiewicz,&#13;
158and Zuzinec, 159.&#13;
.your AMS/OIL dealer ~&#13;
got on the scoreboard as Werner&#13;
Petrovich scored from out in&#13;
front. Hayden Knight added a&#13;
Warrior goal later. Henderson&#13;
said both goals were&#13;
"Lackadaisical defensive .&#13;
mistakes."&#13;
Though the game was a forfeit,&#13;
all statistics will count. In goal.&#13;
keeping, Brieschke had five&#13;
saves and Marquette's John&#13;
Nelson had 14.&#13;
The win raises the Rangers&#13;
record to 5-5.1. Marquette drops&#13;
to 4-4. This win was important to&#13;
Henderson and the Rangers as&#13;
they want to stay above .500,&#13;
preferably winning four of the&#13;
next six. They will travel to&#13;
Eastern Michigan University in&#13;
Ypsilanti next Saturday.&#13;
tfcLEADER~&#13;
DOWNTOWN IKINOSHA - for men and women&#13;
Bmwood Plaza/Racine • for men&#13;
Season ends&#13;
by Jean Tenuta'&#13;
The women's tennis season will&#13;
come to a close this Saturday,&#13;
after the squad travels to La&#13;
Crosse to play other state schools&#13;
in the Wisconsin Women's Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletic Conference&#13;
Championships.&#13;
In their last dual meet of the&#13;
season, Parkside was shutout by&#13;
Carthage. Friday afternoon.&#13;
In singles, Marge Balszes lost&#13;
to Cindy Waklas 1Hl, 6-3, Janin eHunter&#13;
fell to Jan Dalwyn 1Hl,6-2&#13;
and Judy Kingsfield was beaten&#13;
by. Becky Miller 6-1. 6-3.&#13;
.~---------------~&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
!&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
••&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
:&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
• When •&#13;
you say Budweiser, youve said it all!&#13;
• L------E. F.Madrigrano----------'&#13;
Golfers sixth&#13;
• Saves gas (u~ to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mlle 011c~angtl,)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour POint)&#13;
• Saves 011 Mike Villers&#13;
637-2726&#13;
:&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
e&#13;
e&#13;
t&#13;
',&#13;
0&#13;
s&#13;
0&#13;
s&#13;
e&#13;
' j&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976 7&#13;
Wonien 's volleyball&#13;
goes north&#13;
Parkside's women's volleyball&#13;
team faces two opponents in the&#13;
coming weekend.&#13;
Whitewater, Ripon and Loyola;&#13;
in the Parks1dz Invitational last&#13;
Saturday. The Rangers played&#13;
Marquette forfeits soccer game&#13;
Friday, the team will travel to&#13;
Sheboygan to play Lakeland&#13;
College at 10 a.m. and Saturday,&#13;
they will oppose UW-Stvens Point&#13;
at Stevens Point.&#13;
-off for third place against UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
Parkside lost a double match at&#13;
UW-Wh1tewater October 12,&#13;
losing first to Whitewater 15-11, ,&#13;
15-7 and then to Carroll College,&#13;
15-3, 1~.&#13;
by Fr1:d Tenuta&#13;
The Ranger soccer team&#13;
• scored a 1-0 forfeit victory over&#13;
Marquette University Saturday&#13;
at the soccer bowl.&#13;
The forfeit was taken by&#13;
Marquette Coach Joe )3orn as a&#13;
rPsult of the ejection of two&#13;
Warriors with 17: 57 in the&#13;
game. The first was ejected for&#13;
deliberately tripping a Ranger,&#13;
and the second was ejected for&#13;
protesting the call too strongl~.&#13;
The question of whether the&#13;
second player had, in fact,&#13;
protested, and a feeling that&#13;
Marquette~was being cheated by&#13;
the referees caused Born to pull&#13;
his team off the field.&#13;
. At this point, Parkside was&#13;
leading 3-2. Earl Campbell and&#13;
Rafii Kambiz had scored first&#13;
l'lalf goals for the Rangers. Mike&#13;
Boyajian added the third early in&#13;
the second half. ·&#13;
Up until that point, the Rangers&#13;
had been in total control, but the&#13;
loss of all NAIA player Steve&#13;
Sendelbach, due to_a broken nose,&#13;
necessitated a change in the&#13;
defense. The opening a. three&#13;
goal lead also meant to Coach Hal&#13;
Hende;·son that "we were content&#13;
and that the game would take&#13;
care of itself."&#13;
The Warriors then placed&#13;
pressure on the Ranger defense.&#13;
Their first big opportunity was&#13;
missed when a shot rolled past&#13;
Parkside goalkeeper Dan&#13;
Brieschke and hit the goal post.&#13;
No Marquette forwards were in&#13;
position for a rebound and the&#13;
lead was sage. ·&#13;
Shortly thereafter, Marquette&#13;
· Swint records set I&#13;
by Jean Tenuta back and 50 free.&#13;
In lverson's first performance&#13;
Records in the first place for the Rangers, she picked up&#13;
finishes of the 200 free relay team second places in the 200 free and _&#13;
and the 100 free fell, put the the 50 back and a third in the 100&#13;
Parkside women's swim team 1st breast.&#13;
to Carthage 87-37 Saturday af- A second and two fourths were&#13;
ternoon. gained by Fnrncis iu the 100 free,&#13;
In the relay, the record was set and 50 free and the 500 free,&#13;
at 2:03. 109 with Mary Beth respectively.&#13;
Leitch, Sally Francis, Gail Olson Lili Crnich improved a perand&#13;
Judy Iverson swimming the sonal record in the 200 free, betevent.&#13;
Iverson is a new member tering her time by 20 seconds in a&#13;
of the team. fourth place finish. She also&#13;
Olson was the record breaker scored a fifth in the 100 breast&#13;
in the 100 free, with a time uf 1 : 07. and a sixth in the 50 free.&#13;
302. She was also second in the 500 • The squad, coached by Barb&#13;
freP, or:!y two seconds off the Lawson, will host UW-Milwaukee&#13;
record and second 'in the 50 Friday at 4 p.m. and will travel to&#13;
breast. UW-Oshkosh to meet the Titans&#13;
Leitch scored a first in the 50 and Carroll College Saturday at&#13;
butterfly and seconds in the 100 11 a.m.&#13;
Golfers siXth . -&#13;
V&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside golfers finished sixth&#13;
, in the 10 team NAIA District&#13;
Tournament October 11 and 12 in&#13;
LaCrosse.&#13;
Eau Claire topped the state&#13;
schools with a score of 752 to&#13;
qualify for the National Tournament&#13;
to be held in the spring.&#13;
Eau Claire's Tim Bauer tied with&#13;
Lee Rolquist of Superior for&#13;
medalist, then Bauer won the&#13;
playoff.&#13;
Other team scores were&#13;
Whitewater, 762; La Crosse, 763;&#13;
Oshkosh, 764;- Superior, 774;&#13;
Parkside, 71l?i; Platteville, 798;&#13;
River Falls, 801; Stevens Point,&#13;
822 and Stout, 830.&#13;
Parkside was- in fourth place&#13;
after the first round, with Ray&#13;
Zuzinec leading the team,&#13;
shooting a 75.&#13;
The final individual scores for&#13;
the Rangers were R\ck Pedersen,&#13;
155; Tim Rouse, 156; Mark&#13;
Kuyawa, 158; Gary Paskiewicz,&#13;
158 and Zuzinec, 159.&#13;
• Saves gas (u~ to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mile oil c~angtt)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F- pour point)&#13;
• Saves oil Mike Ville rs&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer . 637-2726&#13;
got on the scoreboard as Werner&#13;
Petrovich scored from out in&#13;
front. Hayden Knight added a&#13;
Warrior goal later. Henderson&#13;
said both goals were&#13;
"Lackadaisical defensive .&#13;
mistakes."&#13;
Though the game was a forfeit,&#13;
all statistics will count. In goalkeeping,&#13;
Brieschke had five&#13;
saves and Marquette's John&#13;
Nelson had 14.&#13;
The win raises the Rangers&#13;
record to 5-5-1. Marquette drops&#13;
to 4-4. This win was important to&#13;
Henderson and the Rangers as&#13;
they want to stay above .500,&#13;
preferably winning four of the&#13;
11ext six. They will travel to&#13;
Eastern Michigan University in&#13;
Ypsilanti next Saturday.&#13;
Season ends&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The women's tennis season will&#13;
come to a close this Saturday,&#13;
after the squad travels to La&#13;
Crosse to play other state schools&#13;
in the Wisconsin Women's Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletic Conference&#13;
Championships.&#13;
In their last dual meet of the&#13;
season, Parkside was shutout by&#13;
Carthage_ Friday afternoon.&#13;
In singles, Marge Bals:ies lost&#13;
to Cindy Waklas 6-0, 6-3, JanineHunter&#13;
fell to Jan Dalwyn 6-0, 6-2&#13;
and Judy Kingsfield was beaten&#13;
by_ Becky Miller 6-1, 6-3.&#13;
The team hosted five teams;&#13;
uW-Oshkosh, Carthage, UWtlfeLEADER~&#13;
&#13;
DOWNTOWN/ KENOSHA - for men and women&#13;
Elmwood Plaza/Racine - for men&#13;
Ric-Center&#13;
Straight Pool&#13;
Tournament&#13;
*4 Eat,y&#13;
Oet. 28th &amp; 29th&#13;
E1ftr 11 ~, Rte-Ctlttr or&#13;
Call SS3-269S for&#13;
l•for•1tio11&#13;
•--------------,----------,&#13;
•&#13;
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•&#13;
•&#13;
t When you say Budweiser.,youve said it all! •&#13;
• L---~---E. F. Madrigrano-------•&#13;
• &#13;
,&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976&#13;
.:&#13;
, , .&#13;
Basketball season opens (&#13;
Parkside Basketball Coach Steve Stephens has 20&#13;
candidates--eight of them returning letterwinnersvying&#13;
for spots on the 1976-77edition of the Rangers as&#13;
practice opened last Friday.' , - .&#13;
stephens expects to cut down to 12 to 15 players by&#13;
the time the season opens Nov. 26 here against UWVV1ritewater.&#13;
.&#13;
Parkside will be gunning for its third straight NAJA&#13;
Distriel 14 title and trip to the NAJA national tournament,&#13;
a feat never before accomplished by a&#13;
Wisconsin college. The Rangers have finished 24-1and&#13;
24-9the last two seasons.&#13;
Th~ biggest hole on the team that Stephens will have&#13;
to fill is Gary Cole's spot. 'l:he two-lime all-American&#13;
led the Rangers in scoring three of four years and is&#13;
Parkside's all-lime top career scorer and rebounder.&#13;
Also gone are two other mainstays, guard Malcolm&#13;
Mahone and center Bill Sobanski.&#13;
Two starters have returned in Leartha Scott and&#13;
Stevie King. Scott, a 6-4 senior forward, is an exciting&#13;
player with a super shot and appears a candidate for&#13;
all-America honors this time. He was the Rangers' No.&#13;
2 scorer last season at 20.7. King, a 6-0 junior gurad, is&#13;
a slick ball handler who will be the Rangers' floor&#13;
general. Quickness is his forte.&#13;
Also back are three others who saw a great, deal .of&#13;
action and a lot of playing time, Marshall Hill, Joe&#13;
Foots and Mike Hanke. Hill, a 6-10 senior center, will&#13;
be secure at the post while Foots, a 6-4sophomore who&#13;
was the third guard last season and started geven '.&#13;
games, will probably join King in the backsourt. &lt;, /~&#13;
Hanke, a G-4 senior, is the Rangers' "garbage" player ""--",,," ~ ~ ..&#13;
and is-a good bet to join Scott and Hill in the frontline - - - - - - - - ---- - - - - -- ---- - - - - -- ------- - - - - --&#13;
.Ot?e~.le~rmen include 6-7 senior forw~rd Rad~ ~;~r:t~;~;~;;&#13;
Dimitrijevic, &amp;-6 sophomore forward Marvm Chones -&#13;
and 5-10 senior guard Laurence Brown. All will be ~&#13;
bidding for starting spots and in any case would be ~&#13;
baluable, and essential, as reserves. . 63 7 2 7I") 6&#13;
Top newcomers are 6-10center Lester Thompson, 6-3 Mike Villers - Dealer - ~&#13;
guard Jim Hanke, 6-8 forward Lonnie Lewis and &amp;-7 ~~..-.rW¥¥¥wtlIV~&#13;
forward Mike Mathews. Only Mathews, a transfer&#13;
eligible at mid-year, is not a freshman.&#13;
. '&#13;
11:30a.m, Parkside placed fourth&#13;
in the meet last year.&#13;
"With our past performances, I&#13;
feel we are good enough," said&#13;
Coach Godfrey, "to finish in the&#13;
top three at Carthage."&#13;
With Parkside hosting several&#13;
of the national championships,&#13;
Kenosha County has been&#13;
proclaimed the "Cross Country&#13;
Capitol of the U.S." by the&#13;
Kenosha County Board of&#13;
Supervisors.&#13;
Cross country finishes' third&#13;
Free Pizza DeliveryClub&#13;
Hlghview&#13;
5035 60ih, Streef&#13;
by Thomas Nolen Phone: 652-8737&#13;
and Jean Tenuta&#13;
The Carthage Invilational on&#13;
Saturday is next for Parkside's&#13;
cross country team, who finished&#13;
third in the Huskie Invitational at&#13;
De Kalb, Illinois last Saturday.&#13;
The favored host team, Northern&#13;
illinois, won the meet with&#13;
31 points, followed by Bradley&#13;
with 58. Parkside had 65, UWOshkosh,&#13;
91; UW-Platleville, 93;&#13;
and Northeastern Illinois had 188,&#13;
e- As usual, Ray Fredericksen&#13;
led the (as Coach Vic Godfrey put&#13;
it) "team effort", finishing sixth&#13;
with a- time of 31:42 011 the six&#13;
mile course. Gary Priem was&#13;
eighth, Mike Rivers, 15th; Jeff&#13;
Miller, 16th; and Lee Allinger,&#13;
21st.&#13;
., Greg Julich and Jim Heiring&#13;
also ran in the meet, finishing&#13;
27th and 31st. respectively.&#13;
The Carthage meet will be run&#13;
at Petrifying Springs Park at&#13;
Fishing &amp; Firing Lines&#13;
hy Scott Reinhard&#13;
Seeing that this is an election year I decided to go out and seek the&#13;
outdoor sportsmen's candidate. With quill and scroll in hand I jotted&#13;
down numerous topics concerning unanswered, controversial issues&#13;
of hunting and fishing. In my opinion these topics were of dire imporlance&#13;
as these sports were part of the basics in our American&#13;
heritage.&#13;
Upon completion of this list I quickly drove down to my .local&#13;
campaign headquarters of both Republican and Democratic candidates&#13;
only to be met with strange looks and shrugged shoulders, It&#13;
seems our men of speeches didn't leave me with much of a guideline as&#13;
far as this article is concerned.&#13;
A ray of hope still shown through though 'as the candidates did lake a&#13;
stand on the anti-gun controversy'. The Democratic stand slates that&#13;
Jimmy Carter is for gun registeration. Carter goes on to say that he is&#13;
going to make the "Saturday night special" ~egal to buy, sell or&#13;
possess.&#13;
As usual the Democratic stand was unelear, Gun registration has'&#13;
been in effeel for a number of years so obviously Carter agrees with&#13;
~ the Ford administration here.&#13;
"Saturday night special" is quite' a label, but by quizzing a&#13;
Democratic represenlative I decoded its meaning in Carter terms.&gt;&#13;
Remember this meaning was given to me by the Democratic rep. A&#13;
"Saturday night special" is a hand gun in the price range of $25,Itis&#13;
usually homemade making it unsafe to fire. Since it is easily acquired&#13;
and cheaply priced it is the cause of many murders thus originated its&#13;
name.&#13;
Well, I hate to break this new to "Carter The Crusader," but&#13;
someone beat him to making this law also. That is of course if this is&#13;
really what Carter means by "Saturday night special'tr but if he&#13;
means handguns in general it's a whole new ball game. Company&#13;
manufactured handguns are legally bartered. ..&#13;
No one before has made a law slating that it is illegal for people who,&#13;
have spent hundreds and sometimes even thousands of dollars on&#13;
handgun collectionsto continue this hobqy, No one before has made a'&#13;
law slating that it is illegal to own a handgun as a means of protection.&#13;
No one before has made it a crime to own guns in America, thus&#13;
allowing only criminals to own guns. In fael no'one before has made a&#13;
law showing that the Constitution of the United Slates of America was&#13;
wrong in the right to bear arms .&#13;
. You may not hunt with handguns but here the "do;;m,o law" goes&#13;
I~\O~ff~t, If handguns are restricted rifles and shotguns are soon to&#13;
follow, When this happens we will be on the same level as the Communist&#13;
nations wher power no longer lies in the people but the people&#13;
lie in the hands of the government. If this is what Carter means he&#13;
should go back to the Georgian sticks and play with his peanuts. I only&#13;
wish Jimmy Carter would once tell us what he means.&#13;
President Ford has gone through assassination attempts in which&#13;
handgul:s were employed, yet he still believes there should be no antigun&#13;
legislation. Itlakes a strong man to do this. President Ford took a&#13;
part in the initiation of National Hunting and Fishiug Day dedicated to&#13;
the outdoor sportsman. President Ford has just recently signed a bill&#13;
that will double the.acreage of America's herilage then President&#13;
Ford is definitely the sportsmen's candidate.&#13;
\&#13;
Alt••• 0•• ,1•• Chl.k•• , S••• hefll, R''''II, 8 •• ,&#13;
OPEN 4 ..... ~ 1 .....&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop in!&#13;
shed a new Ufe on shopping!&#13;
c&#13;
c&#13;
3&#13;
G~t the great new taste&#13;
In mocha, coconut,&#13;
banana or&#13;
strawberry.&#13;
1&#13;
,The Portable Party:&#13;
30 PROOF AND READY ro GO·&#13;
, ,&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 20, 1976&#13;
- I •&#13;
Basketball seas~n opens&#13;
Parkside Basketball Coach Steve Stephens has 20&#13;
candidates-eight of them returning letterwinnersvying&#13;
for spots on the 1976-77 edition of the Rangers as&#13;
practice opened last Friday. · ' -&#13;
Stephens expects to cut down to 12 tQ 15 players by&#13;
the time the season opens Nov. 26 here against UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
all-America honors this time. He was the Rangers' No.&#13;
2 scorer last season at 20.7. King, a 6-0 junior gurad, is&#13;
a slick ball handler who will be the Rangers' floor&#13;
general. Quickness_is his forte.&#13;
Parkside will be gunning for its third straight NAIA&#13;
District 14 title and trip to the NAIA national tournament,&#13;
a feat never before accomplished by a&#13;
Wisconsin college. The Rangers have finished 24-7 and&#13;
24-9 the last two seasons.&#13;
Also back are three others who saw a great deal of&#13;
action and a lot of playing time, Marshall Hill, Joe&#13;
Foots and Mike Hanke. Hill, a 6-10 senior center, will&#13;
be secure at the post while Foots, a 6-4 sophomore who&#13;
was the third guard last season and started geven&#13;
gam~, will probably join King in the backsourt. ' ~ ..... · ~ ~ -&#13;
Hanke, a 6-4 senior, is the Rangers' "garbage" player · ~ --&#13;
Th; biggest hole on the team that Stephens will have&#13;
to fill is Gary Cole's spot. The two-time all-American&#13;
led the Rangers in scoring three of four years and is&#13;
Parkside's all-time top career scorer and reboun~er.&#13;
and&#13;
other&#13;
is-a good&#13;
lettermen&#13;
bet to&#13;
include&#13;
join Scott&#13;
6-7&#13;
and&#13;
senior&#13;
Hill in&#13;
forward&#13;
the frontline&#13;
Rade&#13;
.&#13;
r-the--q~iet&#13;
____ - - - - -~&#13;
leaper in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Dimitrijevit, 6-6 sophomore forward Marvin Cl10nes&#13;
and&#13;
bidding&#13;
5-10&#13;
for&#13;
senior&#13;
starting&#13;
guard&#13;
spots&#13;
Laurence&#13;
and in&#13;
Brown.&#13;
any case&#13;
All&#13;
would&#13;
will be&#13;
be ~&#13;
~&#13;
, Also gone are two other mainstays, guard Malcolm&#13;
Mahone and center Bill Sobanski.&#13;
baluable, and essential, as reserves. 6 3 7 2 7 ".J 6&#13;
Topnewcomersare6-10centerLesterThompson,6-3 Mike Villers - Dealer - ~ Two star~s have returned in Leartha Scott and&#13;
Stevie King. Scott, a 6-4 senior forward, is an exciting&#13;
player with a super shot and appears a candidate for&#13;
guard Jim Hanke, 6-8 forwatd Lonnie Lewis and 6-7&#13;
forward Mike Mathews. Only Mathews, a transfer&#13;
eligible at mid-year, is not a freshman.&#13;
Cross country finishes· third&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
and Jean Tenuta&#13;
The Carthage Invitational on&#13;
Saturday is next for Parkside's ·&#13;
cross country team, who finished&#13;
third in the Huskie Invitational at&#13;
De Kalb, Illinois last Saturday.&#13;
The favored host team, Northern&#13;
Illinois, won the meet with&#13;
31 points, followed by Bradley&#13;
with 58. Parkside had 65, UWOshkosh,&#13;
91; UW-Platteville," 93;&#13;
and Northeastern Illinois had 188.&#13;
As usual, Ray Fredericksen&#13;
led the ( as Coach Vic Godfrey put&#13;
it) "team effort", finishing sixth&#13;
with a time cf 31: 42 on the six&#13;
mile course. Gary Priem was&#13;
eighth, _Mike Rivers, 15th; Jeff&#13;
Miller, 16th; and Lee Allinger,&#13;
21st.&#13;
. , Greg Julich and Jim Heiring&#13;
also ran in the meet, finishing&#13;
27th and 31st. resoectively.&#13;
The Carthage meet will be run&#13;
at Petrifying Springs Park at&#13;
Fishing &amp; Firing Lines ,._ by Scott Reinhard&#13;
Seeing that this is an election year I decided to go out and seek the&#13;
outdoor sportsmen's candidate. With quill and scroll in hand I jotted&#13;
down numerous topics concerning unanswered, controversial issues&#13;
of hunting and fishing. In my opinion these topics were of dire importance&#13;
as these sports were part of the basics in our American&#13;
heritage.&#13;
Upon completion of this list I quickly drove down to my .local&#13;
campaign headquarters of both Republican and Democratic candidates&#13;
only to be met with strange looks and shrugged shoulders. It&#13;
seems our men of speeches didn't leave !Ile with much of a guideline as&#13;
far as this article is concerned.&#13;
A ray of hope still shown through though 'as the candidates did take a&#13;
stand on the anti-gun controversy". The Democratic stand states that&#13;
Jimmy Carter is for gun registeration. Carter goes on to· say that he is&#13;
going to make the "Saturday night special" ~egal to buy, sell or&#13;
possess.&#13;
As usual the Democratic stand was unelear. Gun registration has·&#13;
been · in effect for a number of years so obviously Carter agree-s with&#13;
.,,, the Ford administration here.&#13;
"Saturday night special" is quite · a label, but by quizzing a&#13;
Democratic representative I decoded its meaning in Carter terms. ~&#13;
Remember this meaning was given to me by the Democratic rep. A&#13;
"Saturday night special" is a hand gun in the price range of $25. It is&#13;
usually homemade making it unsafe to fire. Since it is easily acquired&#13;
and cheaply priced it is the cause of many murders thus originated its&#13;
name.&#13;
Well, I hate to break this new to "Carter The Crusader.," but&#13;
someone beat him to making this law also. That is of course if this is&#13;
really what Carter means by "Saturday night special"~ but if he&#13;
means handguns in general it's a whole new ball game. Company&#13;
manufactured handguns are legally bartered.&#13;
.....&#13;
11: 30 a .m. Parkside placed fourth&#13;
in the meet last year.&#13;
"With our past performances, I&#13;
feel we ar~ good enough," said&#13;
Coach Godfrey, " to finish in the&#13;
top three at Carthage."&#13;
With Parkside hosting several&#13;
of the national championships,&#13;
Kenosha County has been&#13;
proclaimed the "Cross Country&#13;
Capitol of the U.S." by the&#13;
Kenosha County Board of&#13;
Supervisors.&#13;
C:&#13;
C:&#13;
0&#13;
u&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
Cl.&#13;
Free Pizza Delivery -&#13;
Club Highvlew&#13;
5035 60th, Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Alto ••Dvttl19 Chlekt1, s,11htffi, R1vi1II, Bttf&#13;
OPEN 4 •·•· ~ 1 •·•·&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6 TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop in!&#13;
shed a new Life on shopping !&#13;
G~t the ~reat new taste&#13;
zn mocna, coconut, ,. . banana or&#13;
·•tt ::::i'.;-:;;J;&amp;-,;;,1 strawberry.&#13;
No one before has made a law stating that it is illegal for people who&#13;
have spent hundreds and sometimes even thousands of dollars on&#13;
handgun collections_to continue this hob~y. No one before has made a -&#13;
law stating that it is illegal to own a handgun as a means of protection.&#13;
No one before has made it a crime to own guns in America, thus&#13;
allowing only criminals to own guns. In fact no-one before has made a&#13;
~aw showing that the Constitution of the United States of America was&#13;
wrong in the right to bear arms .&#13;
-Th'! Portable Party:&#13;
. You may not hunt with handguns but here the "do~ino law" goes&#13;
mto effect, If handguns are restricted rifles and shotguns are soon to&#13;
follow. When this happens we will be on the same ievel as the Com-&#13;
,_ munist nations wher power no longer lies in the people but the people&#13;
lie in the hands of the government. If this is what Carter means he&#13;
should go back to the Georgian sticks and play with his peanuts. I only&#13;
wish Jimmy Carter would once tell us what he means.&#13;
President Ford has gone through assassination attempts in which&#13;
handgufu; were employed, yet he still believes there should be no antigun&#13;
legislation. It takes a strong man to do this. President Ford took a&#13;
part in the initiation of National Hunting and Fishing Day dedicated to&#13;
the outdoor sportsman. President Ford has just recently signed a bill&#13;
that will double the acreage of America's heritage then President&#13;
Ford is definitely the sportsmen's candidate.&#13;
30PROOF AND READY 1V GO ·&#13;
, . </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 5, issue 7, October 20, 1976</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="66089">
                <text>Student publications</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="66090">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers&#13;
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                <text>1976-10-20</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Faculty: Morale low, Guskin unresponsive&#13;
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              <text>TheParkside~--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No.6 Wednesday, October 13, 1976&#13;
Faculty : Morale Iow,&#13;
• Guskin unresponsive&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Faculty at the latter of two&#13;
meetings held with UW System&#13;
senior vice presidents Donald&#13;
Smith and Donald Percy expressed&#13;
a problem with general&#13;
morale and communication with&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin.&#13;
Mter Smith and Percy made a&#13;
few opening statements about&#13;
Parkside's future and how&#13;
pleased they were with "the high&#13;
quality of education and the level&#13;
of achievement at Parkside,"&#13;
faculty at the meeting refuted&#13;
this optimistic viewpoint with&#13;
pessimistic statements.&#13;
Surinder Datta, associate&#13;
professor of life science, said that&#13;
morale at Parkside is as bad as it&#13;
was a few years ago when&#13;
Parkside's budget was seriously&#13;
cut and wholesale layoffs occurred.&#13;
Calling it "an abuse of faculty&#13;
governance," Datta said that&#13;
Guskin has made certain&#13;
decisions regarding the&#13;
University's future and if an&#13;
existing committee gives him&#13;
contrary recommendations, he&#13;
would create another committee,&#13;
hoping it would make the correct .&#13;
decision.&#13;
Having asked for concrete&#13;
examples, Percy and Smith&#13;
received the following: the affirmative&#13;
action committee did&#13;
not receive information&#13;
necessary to fulfill their cbarge,&#13;
and an ad hoc committee was&#13;
established to make recom-&#13;
.mendations concerning the&#13;
Master's program while the task&#13;
force on business management&#13;
was in operation.&#13;
The Chancellor's task force,&#13;
according to Datta, did not come&#13;
up with the right decision on the&#13;
Master's program so he created&#13;
another committee to "come up&#13;
with the right decision."&#13;
Vice President Smith said that&#13;
he could "discern if games are&#13;
being played."&#13;
The faculty attending the&#13;
meeting felt tbat Guskin is easily&#13;
accessible, but that he does not&#13;
respond to their needs. The&#13;
Central Administration vice&#13;
presidents felt tbat the campus&#13;
should "do some fine tuning,"&#13;
regarding attitudes and communication.&#13;
Although the faculty's opinion&#13;
of Guskin's actions seemed&#13;
negative, it was the general&#13;
PSGA: video resources illegal&#13;
Joltnson meets with PSGA&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
New assistant chancellor&#13;
Clayton Johnson was a-guest at&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association PSGA meeting&#13;
last Wednesday.&#13;
He explained that there is a&#13;
need for the faculty to sit down&#13;
with the students and become&#13;
more personal with them. He&#13;
feels that the faculty could help&#13;
the students with some of their&#13;
problems more than the counselors&#13;
can.&#13;
He also emphasized that his&#13;
office is under a reorganization&#13;
and will subsequently take time&#13;
to be in 100 percent working .&#13;
order. He said there may be some&#13;
changes made.&#13;
There is also a new concept&#13;
being discussed of merging offices&#13;
and creating a director of&#13;
student development position.&#13;
Under this new office a student&#13;
would only have to go to one place&#13;
for all of his or her problems.&#13;
In other action it was mentioned&#13;
that the Ways and Means&#13;
committee is, holding a voter&#13;
registration drive at Parkside&#13;
and tbe registrars should be set&#13;
up next week.&#13;
The Student Services Committee&#13;
proposed a motion to&#13;
allocate not more than 25 dollars&#13;
to buy space in the Rangel' to&#13;
advertise their toy drive. The&#13;
)notion was passed.&#13;
Senate secretary Linda&#13;
photo by P.J. Anolina&#13;
Clayton Johnson&#13;
Knutson mentioned that it was&#13;
recently discovered that a&#13;
number of the library's video&#13;
resources are illegal because&#13;
there was no permission given to&#13;
the library to reproduce some of&#13;
the materials they have.&#13;
The Senate voted to work with&#13;
the Center for Teaching Excellence&#13;
in its efforts to increase&#13;
the library'S hours. PSGA&#13;
President Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
stressed this point and said that&#13;
there is no reason why the library&#13;
couldn't hire a couple of work&#13;
study students to cover the&#13;
library at night to prevent ripoffs.&#13;
The Senate also voted \0 send a&#13;
copy of all the minutes of the&#13;
feeling of the group that a change&#13;
in administration would&#13;
irreparably damage Parkside.&#13;
Stella Gray, associate&#13;
professor of English, said that the&#13;
humanities division was con-&#13;
. cerned about the situation in the&#13;
business management discipline.&#13;
She felt that the discipline right&#13;
now has no true, honest direction.&#13;
Datta confirmed this, saying that&#13;
we have not truly implemented&#13;
our mission.&#13;
Gene Gasiorkiewicz, professor&#13;
of life science, echoed this sentiment&#13;
in that he bad worked on&#13;
three committees dealing with&#13;
the mission statement and none&#13;
of them had dealt with the&#13;
mission to the point where it had&#13;
either been changed or implemented.&#13;
Donald Kummings, associate&#13;
professor of English, cited&#13;
another problem with the current&#13;
Parkside admirdstration, that of&#13;
boondoggling, where people who&#13;
are in good with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin receive rewards.&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz and Datta agreed&#13;
with this statement, saying that&#13;
people who were closer to Guskin&#13;
got the best positions within the&#13;
administration.&#13;
PSGA meetings to all of the other&#13;
United Councll member campuses.&#13;
WSA (Madison) voted on Oct. 1&#13;
to increase Parkside's United&#13;
Council payment from 2,500&#13;
dollars to 5,500dollars. They said&#13;
that it was not as much as they&#13;
should pay but it was all that they&#13;
could afford.&#13;
In the president's report,&#13;
pIKlto by v_" Tho"'ltM"&#13;
Mickey Finn wins a welDer al I1ae Pel Pageaal sponsored by Ibe&#13;
Ouling Commiltee last Thursday aflernoon. CoUeeD Doyle bolds&#13;
Mickey, her pel basset bound, aad Ibe prize be WaDfor being Ibe ""tesl&#13;
pel at the Pageaal. Mickey reportedly eDjoyed lbe frank.&#13;
Committee&#13;
discussed&#13;
by John McKloskey as outlined in Parkside's Faculty&#13;
Laws and Regulations, is to&#13;
continually review faculty&#13;
regulations, procedures and&#13;
committee structures.&#13;
But several University Committee&#13;
members said that the&#13;
number of faculty members&#13;
needed to staff committees was&#13;
becoming too great, and&#13;
suggested that the number of&#13;
faculty committees be&#13;
diminished so as to provide broad&#13;
but clear and non-overlapping&#13;
charges.&#13;
Others sided with Harbeson,&#13;
arguing that despite procedures&#13;
to simplify the committee&#13;
structure, a well-defined role still&#13;
exists for the condification&#13;
committee.&#13;
One example cited of a task the&#13;
Codification Committee could do&#13;
was the making of further&#13;
revisions to the Faculty Laws and&#13;
Regulations.&#13;
The University Committee&#13;
agreed to resume consideration&#13;
of the Issue at a later date.&#13;
As part of an effort to reduce&#13;
the number and size of faculty&#13;
committees, the University&#13;
Committee is considering the&#13;
future of the eight-member&#13;
Codification Committee.&#13;
At a recent meeting of the&#13;
University Committee, former&#13;
codification committee chairperson&#13;
John Harbeson, associate&#13;
professor of political science and&#13;
chairperson of social science&#13;
division, argued that it should&#13;
continue to function.&#13;
The purpose of the committee,&#13;
Kiyoko 'Bowden mentioned that&#13;
she has received several cornplaints&#13;
concerning the Bookstore.&#13;
She said that she would keep a&#13;
file of these complaints and bring&#13;
them before the committee that&#13;
will review the renewal of the&#13;
bookstore contract. She also&#13;
called for input from students at&#13;
the time of the contract renewal.&#13;
Workshop to open&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
There are five new businesses opening in the 300&#13;
block of Main street in Racine; a children's&#13;
bookstore, an adult book store, a new restaurant, a&#13;
frame shop, and the Racine Artists Workshop. The&#13;
Racine Arlists Workshop has been in existence for&#13;
nearly a year, located in the second floor of a&#13;
warehouse in the 200 block of Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
The workshop began as a result of an art fair held&#13;
at Memorial Hall in September of 1975. After the&#13;
fair, area artist began looking for a bullding in&#13;
which to have a group studio.&#13;
In October of 1975, they moved in on Wisconsin&#13;
Ave. Most of their income is from art fairs;&#13;
although Gary Rosen, one of the jewelers in the&#13;
worksbop, does wbolesale work Gary once coowned&#13;
Seeds jewelry store on Sixth street with his&#13;
wife, Sherri.&#13;
The workshop consists of two jewelers-Gary&#13;
Rosen and Judy Olsen, two potters-Gordon Mcintosh&#13;
and Roland Bell, a leather worker-Don Kinn,&#13;
and a weaver-Sue Sheldon. Judy graduated from&#13;
Parkside with an art degree and Gordon is&#13;
currently a Parkside student.&#13;
They had planned on opening a store in their&#13;
studio on Wisconsin Ave.; but Craig Colbitz, who&#13;
purchased a couple buildings on Main Street, made·&#13;
them an offer they could not refuse. They are now in&#13;
the process of moving their studio to 322 Main&#13;
Street. The store should be open by Octoher 15. It&#13;
will hopefully bring in enough money in sales to&#13;
keep the studio in operation.&#13;
People coming into the store will be able to watch&#13;
the artists in action. Pottery classes will be offered&#13;
after Christmas. They also bope to provide live&#13;
models in the near future for thos interested in twodimensional&#13;
work.&#13;
Although they are working on a limited budget,&#13;
they are trying to design an attractive store with&#13;
merchanidse at reasonable prices. They are very&#13;
much involved and interested in downtown&#13;
redevelopment at a personal level. Main Street is&#13;
beginning to take shape and the Racine Art1sIs&#13;
Workshop is contributing to this transformation.&#13;
The Parkside--------&#13;
Vol. V. No. 6 Wednesday, October 13, 1976&#13;
Faculty: _Morale low,&#13;
Guskinl Unresponsive&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
Faculty at the latter of two&#13;
meetings held with UW System&#13;
senior vice presidents Donald&#13;
Smith and Donald Percy expressed&#13;
a problem with general&#13;
morale and communication with&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin.&#13;
After Smith and Percy made a&#13;
few opening statements about&#13;
Parkside's future and how&#13;
pleased they were with "the high&#13;
quality of education and the level&#13;
of achievement at Parkside,"&#13;
faculty at the meeting refuted&#13;
this optimistic viewpoint with&#13;
pessimistic statements.&#13;
Surinder Datta, associate&#13;
professor of life science, said that&#13;
morale at Parkside is as bad as it&#13;
was a few years ago when&#13;
Parkside's budget was seriously&#13;
cut and wholesale layoffs occurred.&#13;
&#13;
Calling it "an abuse of faculty&#13;
governance," Datta said that&#13;
Guskin has made certain&#13;
decisions regarding the&#13;
University's future and if an&#13;
existing committee gives him&#13;
contrary recommendations, he&#13;
would create another committee,&#13;
hoping it would make the correct ·&#13;
decision.&#13;
Having asked for concrete&#13;
examples, Percy and Smith&#13;
received the following: the affirmative&#13;
action committee did&#13;
not receive information&#13;
necessary to fulfill their charge,&#13;
and an ad hoc committee was&#13;
established to make recom-&#13;
. mendations concerning the&#13;
Master's program while the task&#13;
force on business management&#13;
was in operation.&#13;
The Chancellor's task force,&#13;
according to Datta, did not come&#13;
up with the right decision on the&#13;
Master's program so he created&#13;
another committee to "come up&#13;
with the right decision."&#13;
Vice President Smith said that&#13;
he could "discern if games are&#13;
being played."&#13;
The faculty attending the&#13;
Il}eeting felt that Guskin is easily&#13;
accessible, but that he does not&#13;
respond to their needs. The&#13;
Central Administration vice&#13;
presidents felt that the campus&#13;
should "do some fine tuning,"&#13;
regarding attitudes and communication.&#13;
&#13;
Although the faculty's opinion&#13;
of Guskin's actions seemed&#13;
negative, it was the general&#13;
PSGA: video resources illegal&#13;
feeling of the group that a change&#13;
in administration would&#13;
irreparably damage Parkside.&#13;
Stella Gray, associate&#13;
professor of English, said that the&#13;
humanities division was con-&#13;
. cerned about the situation in the&#13;
business management discipline.&#13;
She felt that the discipline right&#13;
now has no true, honest direction.&#13;
Datta confirm~ this, saying that&#13;
we have not truly implemented&#13;
our mission.&#13;
· Gene Gasiorkiewicz, professor&#13;
of life science, echoed this sentiment&#13;
in that he had worked on&#13;
three committees dealing with&#13;
the mission statement and none&#13;
of them had dealt with the&#13;
mission ~ the point where it had&#13;
either been changed or implemented.&#13;
&#13;
Donald Kummings, associate&#13;
professor of English, cited&#13;
another problem with the current&#13;
Parkside administration, that of&#13;
boondoggling, where people who&#13;
are in good with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin receive rewards.&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz and Datta agreed&#13;
with this statement, saying that&#13;
people who were closer to Guskin&#13;
got the best positions within the&#13;
administration.&#13;
photo by Van Thompson&#13;
Mickey Finn wins a weiner at the Pet Pageant sponsored by the&#13;
Outing Committee last Thursday afternoon. Colleen Doyle bolds&#13;
Mickey, her pet basset bound, and the prize be won for being the cutest&#13;
pet at the Pageant. Mickey reportedly enjoyed the frank.&#13;
Committee&#13;
discussed&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
As part of an effort to reduce&#13;
the number and size of faculty&#13;
committees, the University&#13;
Committee is considering the&#13;
future of the eight-member&#13;
Codification Committee.&#13;
as outlined in Parkside's Facuity&#13;
Laws and Regulations, is to&#13;
continually review faculty&#13;
regulations, procedures and&#13;
committee structures.&#13;
But several University Committee&#13;
members said that the&#13;
number of faculty members&#13;
needed to staff committees was&#13;
becoming too great, and&#13;
suggested that the number of&#13;
faculty committees be&#13;
diminished so as to provide broad&#13;
but clear and non~&gt;Verlapping&#13;
charges.&#13;
Johnson meets with PSGA&#13;
At a recent meeting of the&#13;
University Committee, former&#13;
codification committee chairperson&#13;
John Harbeson, associate&#13;
professor of political science and&#13;
chairperson of social science&#13;
division, argued that it should&#13;
continue to function.&#13;
The purpose of the committee,&#13;
Others sided with Harbeson,&#13;
arguing that despite procedures&#13;
to simplify the committee&#13;
structure, a well-defined role still&#13;
exists for the condification&#13;
committee.&#13;
by Douglas Edenhauser&#13;
New assistant chancellor&#13;
Clayton Johnson was a guest at&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association PSGA meeting&#13;
last Wednesday.&#13;
He explained that there is a&#13;
need for the faculty to sit down&#13;
with the students and become&#13;
more personal with them. He&#13;
feels that the faculty could help&#13;
the students with some of their&#13;
problems more than the counselors&#13;
can.&#13;
He also emphasized that his&#13;
office is under a reorganization&#13;
and will subsequently take time&#13;
to be in 100 percent working .&#13;
order. He said there may be some&#13;
changes made.&#13;
There is also a new concept&#13;
being discussed of merging offices&#13;
and creating a director of&#13;
student development position.&#13;
Under this new office a student&#13;
would only have to go to one place&#13;
for all of his or her problems.&#13;
In other action it was mentioned&#13;
that the Ways and Means&#13;
committee is , holding a voter&#13;
registration drive at Parkside&#13;
and the registrats should be set&#13;
up next week.&#13;
The Student Services Committee&#13;
proposed a motion to&#13;
allocate not more than 25 dollars&#13;
to buy space in the Ranger to&#13;
advertise their toy drive. The&#13;
'motion was passed.&#13;
Senate secretary Linda&#13;
photo by P.J. Anolina&#13;
Clayton Johnson&#13;
Knutson mentioned that it was&#13;
receptly discovered that a&#13;
number of the library's video&#13;
resources are illegal because&#13;
there was no permission given to&#13;
the library to reproduce some of&#13;
the materials they have.&#13;
The Senate voted to work with&#13;
the Center for Teaching Excellence&#13;
in its efforts to increase&#13;
the library's hours. PSGA&#13;
President Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
stressed this point and said that&#13;
there is no reason why the library&#13;
couldn't hire a couple of work&#13;
study students to cover t!1e&#13;
library at night to prevent ripoffs.&#13;
&#13;
The Senate also voted to send a&#13;
copy of all the minutes of the&#13;
PSGA meetings to all of the other&#13;
United Council member campuses.&#13;
&#13;
WSA (Madison) voted on Oct. 1&#13;
to increase Parkside's United&#13;
Council payment from 2,500&#13;
dollars to 5,500 dollars. They said&#13;
that it was not as much as they&#13;
should pay but it was all that they&#13;
could afford.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden mentioned that&#13;
she has received several complaints&#13;
concerning the Bookstore.&#13;
She said that she would keep a&#13;
file of these complaints and bring&#13;
them before the committee that&#13;
will review the renewal of the&#13;
bookstore contract. She also&#13;
called for input from students at&#13;
the time of the contract renewal.&#13;
One example cited of a task the&#13;
Codification Committee could do&#13;
was the making of further&#13;
revisions to the Faculty Laws and&#13;
Regulations.&#13;
The University Committee&#13;
agreed to re ume consideration&#13;
of the is ue at a later date.&#13;
In the president's report,&#13;
Workshop to open&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
There are five new businesses opening in the 300&#13;
block of Main street in Racine; a children's&#13;
bookstore, an adult book store, a new restaurant, a&#13;
frame shop, and the Racine Artists Workshop. The&#13;
Racine Artists Workshop has been in existence for&#13;
nearly a year, located in the second floor of a&#13;
warehouse in the 200 block of Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
The workshop began as a result of an art fair held&#13;
at Memorial Hall in September of 1975. After the&#13;
fair, area artist began looking for a building in&#13;
which to have a group studio.&#13;
In October of 1975, they moved in on Wisconsin&#13;
Ave. Most of their income is from art fairs;&#13;
although Gary Rosen, one of the jewelers in the&#13;
workshop, does wholesale work Gary once coowned&#13;
Seeds jewelry store on Sixth street with his&#13;
wife, Sherri.&#13;
The workshop consists of two jewelers-Gary&#13;
Rosen and Judy Olsen, two potters-Gordon McIntosh&#13;
and Roland Bell, a leather worker-Don Kinn,&#13;
and a weaver-Sue Sheldon. Judy graduated from&#13;
Parkside with an art l'legree and Gordon is&#13;
currently a Parkside student.&#13;
They had planned on opening a store in their&#13;
studio on Wisconsin Ave.; but Craig Colbitz, who&#13;
purchased a couple buildings on Main Street, made ·&#13;
them an offer they could not refuse. They are now in&#13;
the process of moving their studio to 322 Main&#13;
Street. The store should be open by October 15. It&#13;
will hopefully bring in enough money in sales to&#13;
keep the studio in operation.&#13;
People coming into the store will be able to watch&#13;
the artists in action. Pottery classes will be offered&#13;
after Chrisbnas. They also hope to provide live&#13;
models in the near future for thos mterested in twodimensional&#13;
work.&#13;
Although they are working on a limited budget,&#13;
they are trying to design an attractive store with&#13;
merchanidse at reasonable prices. They are very&#13;
much involved and interested in downtown&#13;
redevelopment at a personal level. Main Street is&#13;
beginning to take shape and the Racine Artists&#13;
Workshop is contributing to this transformation. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976 \&#13;
~~ANGER&#13;
---EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
'Business program threatened?&#13;
Another potential threat to· the develo~~~nt of&#13;
Parkslde's business program is the POSSibility of&#13;
initiating the Master of Adm Inlstrative Science~ degree&#13;
under the "umbrella apprbach" and placing .the&#13;
graduate program under the new office of the Associate&#13;
Dean for Graduate and Professional Programs.&#13;
The umbrella approach would offer dif~erent&#13;
specialities under the MAS deg.ree such es buslnes~,&#13;
education or public administration with a core of baste&#13;
courses taken by all students. , .&#13;
When Parkslde's proposed masters program was&#13;
accepted by Central Administration and the Regent.s,.lts&#13;
Initial area of concentration was to be business •&#13;
management; but now under the first' stages of c~nsideration&#13;
is the possibility of starting the progr~~ with&#13;
more than one concentration. It was also originally&#13;
regarded as part of the School of Modern Industry and&#13;
would probably have been administered almost excluslvely&#13;
by the School.&#13;
Adding additional specialities at its initiation and,&#13;
housing the program under the office of the Associate&#13;
Dean for Graduate. and Professional Programs&#13;
(presently occupied by William Murin, formerly an&#13;
associate professor of political science) would effectively&#13;
take emphasis off of the buslness program.&#13;
Unless additional financial support could be attained,&#13;
the resources which were expected to bolster the&#13;
business program would have to be partially used in&#13;
support of the other speclaltvts).&#13;
It would be great to have a program offering many&#13;
different specialties, but right now the business&#13;
program still requires more assistance if it is to develop&#13;
enough to offer graduate studies. If that consideration is&#13;
ignored and resources are scattered at the beginning of&#13;
the masters program, proper development of the&#13;
business program is going to become increasing less&#13;
likely to occur,&#13;
The advisory task force to the Chancellor on business&#13;
management recommended that "the business&#13;
graduate program be developed on the foundation of an&#13;
excellent undergraduate proqrern and prior to the expenditure&#13;
of resources in areas other than business."&#13;
/ POLITICAL&#13;
Matter of choice . Carter&#13;
•&#13;
by BobJamllois and Robert Hoffman&#13;
•&#13;
Youdo have a choice. Youmay vote for Jimmy Carter, Jerry Ford,&#13;
Eugene McCa~\hY,eight other presidental candidates on the ballot;&#13;
youmay write in your ojVTlpreference, or youmay stay borne. .&#13;
Pollsters predict a record number of eligible voters are going to opt&#13;
forthe easy alternative and not vote onNov.2.&#13;
Editorial pages and syndicated columnists across the country have&#13;
been making excuses for the poor, misbegotten electorate. who are&#13;
disillusionedby Watergate and the recent Congressionalsex scandals.&#13;
Forgive me, I'm not particularly sympathetic tothat line of reasoning.&#13;
I lived through Watergate, Wilbur Mills, Wayne Hays, in 1968my&#13;
candidate was shot, in 1972my choicelost by a landslide, and onNov. 2&#13;
I'm going to vote.&#13;
I'm goingto vote not because it's "my patriotic duty" but because I&#13;
'want to. I want to vote because I know there is a difference between&#13;
the twomajor candidates. I knowthat one of these twomen is going to&#13;
win and I want to dowhat I can to make sure tpe right one gets elected.&#13;
'Jerry Ford is an opposer-not an initiator. During his 28year tenure&#13;
in Congress, Ford opposed medicare, housing subsidies, social&#13;
security benefits, unemployment compensation, veteran's benefits,&#13;
and pension reform. .&#13;
However,)t wouldbe unfair to characterize Ford as being entirely&#13;
devoid of ideas. Mter all it was dependable and trustworthy Jerry'&#13;
J Ford who tried to start inopeachment proceedings against U.S.&#13;
Supreme Court Justice William.O. Douglas-,&#13;
And, don't forget WIN. That was all Jerry's idea too. It was a&#13;
program complete with acronym, buttons, banners, and a flashy&#13;
saying. in short, all the advertising gimmicks normally employed by&#13;
used car dealers. Maybe it moves a lot of used cars, but the inflation&#13;
rate remainedin the double digitrange,and unemployment climbed.&#13;
WhenCarter tookover from Lester Maddox,as Governor of Georgia&#13;
,&#13;
••.. r-&#13;
,&#13;
Consultants to the task. force reinforced their positi.on.&#13;
Kenneth Herrick, former head of collection&#13;
development of the Library-Learning C;:ente~ ~ibra:y,&#13;
indicated that library holdings for adlJ1lnls!rative&#13;
specialiazations other than business may be extremely,&#13;
inadequate. '&#13;
Harold Q: Langenderfer, a ·consultant from the&#13;
Graduate School of Business Administration at the&#13;
University of North Carolina, commented on the umbrella&#13;
approach and administration of the program.&#13;
"One of the problems with this (the UD;Ibrellaapproach) ~s&#13;
tbal'the greatest demand in the school's geographic area IS&#13;
lor those wilh a business administralion emphasis. Unless&#13;
the program is directed by a person trained in business&#13;
administration and unless the major emphasi~ is on caree~s&#13;
in.business administration, it is likely that the program WIll&#13;
get diffused by trying to do too many thtngs and tberefore&#13;
miss its mark.&#13;
"It is my judgmenl that It would be a mistake 10 separate&#13;
the two (undergrad, and grad.) programs administratively&#13;
and-or ia Ibe use 01 faculty resources ... schools that have&#13;
separated their undergraduate and graduate program.s have ""&#13;
paid a severe price in duplicate resources and diffused&#13;
image. In any case, such a masters program should not be&#13;
created until a strong leader is hired ...that leader oughl 10&#13;
have a business administrative orientation."&#13;
/&#13;
As previously mentioned editorially in Ranger,&#13;
Parkside does not have the resources to achieve excellence&#13;
on all fronts; and business related progra ms&#13;
should be given priority in order to fulfill Parkside's&#13;
special mission. Recently it appears that the business&#13;
management program has been hurting; ana with&#13;
tentative consideration being given to initiating the&#13;
masters program under the umbrella approach and&#13;
housing it under the Associate Dean's office, the&#13;
possibility for achieving excellence in this area is not&#13;
looking any more promising.&#13;
Spreading the wealth of the masters program among&#13;
disciplines may be politically advantageous within the&#13;
Parkside community, but extreme caution should be&#13;
taken before in~tiating an approach which might hurt&#13;
the business proqrarn.&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
FORUM&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
he inherited a state with virtually no social service programs, an&#13;
antiquated penal system, an extremely conservative legislature, and&#13;
Lester Maddox as 'Lieutenant Governor. Despite these .odds Carter&#13;
succeeded in many; areas .&#13;
•Carter vastly expanded the number of community centers for the&#13;
mentally ill'and retarded. These community centers were partially&#13;
staffed by former iwelfare recipients-thereby reducing the welfare&#13;
rolls while at the siln!Ietime providing inoproved, compassionate care&#13;
for the handicapped:&#13;
Jimmy Carter reformed Georgia's prison system achieving a major&#13;
step towards turning Georgia's prison system lrom the warehouse&#13;
that it was into a rehabilitation center.&#13;
Carter upgraded education, humanized the Georgia welfare system&#13;
and made hoth responsive to the legitimate needs of the Georgian&#13;
people. \&#13;
Carter pushed through judicial reform creating a new machinery&#13;
for screening prospective judges and removing corrupt, inefficient&#13;
judges. ' .&#13;
Jimmy Carter pushed through the Georgia legislature an anti.&#13;
secrecy sunshine law, which opened up the meetings of all the com.&#13;
mittees of the Georgia/legislature to the public.&#13;
Lets contrast this with 'good ole' team player Jerry Ford. Ford's&#13;
solution to,the prison problem is to build more prisons, (create more&#13;
warehouses). Ford favors a 50 percent cutback in the education&#13;
budget, but after all we've all been "victims of mass education."&#13;
Ford's solution to welfare is to cut benefits by one-third to fifty percent.&#13;
Ford has no.judical reforms planned, nor is he going to inoplement&#13;
sunshine laws. Mterall it was Ford who, according to Sam Ervin,&#13;
blocked the Watergate investigation until well after the 1972election.&#13;
Ford puis tbe.interests of special interests ahead of the interests of&#13;
-' continued on pg. 3&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976 \&#13;
t~ANGER&#13;
•&#13;
---EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
-&#13;
Business program thre.atened?&#13;
Another potential threat to . the develo~~~nt of&#13;
Parkside's business program is the poss1b1llty of&#13;
initiating the Master of Administrative Science~ degree&#13;
under the "umbrella apprbach~' and placing _the&#13;
graduate program under the new office of the Associate&#13;
Dean for Graduate and Professional Programs.&#13;
The umbrella approach would offer different&#13;
specialities under the M"AS deg_ree such as busines~,&#13;
education or public administration with a core of basic&#13;
courses taken by all students. , ·&#13;
When Parkside's proposed masters program was&#13;
accepted by Central Administration and the Regent_s,. its&#13;
initial area of concentration was to be business&#13;
management; but now under the first· stages of c~nsideration&#13;
is the possibility of starting the progr~~ w1fh&#13;
more than one concentration. It was also originally&#13;
regarded as part of the School of Modern Industry and&#13;
would probably have been administered almost exclusively&#13;
by the School.&#13;
Adding additional specialities at its initiation and ·&#13;
housing the program under the office of the Associate&#13;
Dean for Graduate and Professional Programs&#13;
(presently occupied by William Murin, formerly an&#13;
associate professor of political science) would effectively&#13;
take emphasis off of the business program.&#13;
Unless additional financial support could be attained,&#13;
the resources which were expected to bolster the&#13;
business program would have to be partially used in&#13;
support of the other specialty(s).&#13;
It would be great to have a program offering many&#13;
different specialties, but right now the business&#13;
program still requires more assistance if it is to develop&#13;
enough to offer graduate studies. If that consideration is&#13;
ignored and resources are scattered at the beginning of&#13;
the masters program, proper development of the&#13;
business program is going to become increasing less&#13;
likely to occur.&#13;
The advisory task force to the Chancellor on business&#13;
management recommended that "the business&#13;
graduate program be developed on the !oundation of an&#13;
excellent undergraduate program and prior to the expenditure&#13;
of resources in areas other than business."&#13;
consultants to the task force reinforced their positi_on.&#13;
Kenneth Herrick, former head of collection&#13;
development of the Library-Learning &lt;;enter Library,&#13;
indicated that library holdings for adr;ninisjrative&#13;
specialiazations other than business may be extremely&#13;
inadequate.&#13;
Harold Q.· Langenderfer, a consultant from the&#13;
Graduate School of Business Administration at the&#13;
University of North Carolina, commented on the umbrella&#13;
approach and administration of the program.&#13;
"One of the problems with this (the UIJJbrella approach) is&#13;
that the greatest demand in the school's geographic area is&#13;
for those with a business administration emphasis. Unless&#13;
the program is directed by a person trained in business&#13;
administration and unless the major emphasis is on careers&#13;
in. business administration, it is likely that the program will&#13;
get diffused by trying to do too many things and therefore&#13;
miss its mark.&#13;
''It is my judgment that it would be a mistake to separate&#13;
the two (undergrad. and grad.) programs administratively&#13;
and-or in the use of faculty resources... schools that have&#13;
separated their undergraduate and graduate progr~ms have&#13;
paid a severe price in duplicate resources and diffused&#13;
image. In any case, such a masters program should not be&#13;
created witil a strong leader is hired ... that leader ought to&#13;
have a business administrative orientation."&#13;
As previously mentioned editorially in Ranger,&#13;
Parkside does not have the resources to achieve excellence&#13;
on all fronts; and business related programs&#13;
should be given priority in order to fulfill Parkside's&#13;
special mission. Recently it appears that the business&#13;
management program has been hurting; and with&#13;
tentative consideration being given to initiating the&#13;
masters program under the umbrella approach and&#13;
housing it under the Associate Dean's office, the&#13;
possibility for achieving excellence in this area is not&#13;
looking any more promising.&#13;
Spreading the wealth of the masters program among&#13;
disciplines may be politically advantageous within the&#13;
Parkside community, but extreme caution should be&#13;
taken before ini-tiating an approach which might hurt&#13;
the business pr;ogram.&#13;
I&#13;
/ POLITICAL FORUM&#13;
Matter of choice - Carter .. .. by Bob Jambois and Robert Hoffman&#13;
You do have a choice. You may vote for Jimmy Carter, Jerry Ford,&#13;
Eugene McCarthy, eight other presidental candidates on the ballot;&#13;
you may write in your own preference, or you may stay home. •&#13;
Pollsters predict a record nwnber of eligible voters are going to opt&#13;
for the easy alternative and not vote on Nov. 2.&#13;
Editorial pages and syndicated columnists across the country have&#13;
been making excuses for the poor, misbegotten electorate. who are&#13;
disillusioned by Watergate and the recent Congressional sex scandals.&#13;
Forgive me, I'm not particularly sympathetic to that line of reasoning.&#13;
I lived through Watergate, Wilbur Mills, Wayne Hays, in 1968 my&#13;
candidate was shot, in 1972 my choice lost by a landslide, and on Nov. 2&#13;
I'm going to vote.&#13;
I'm going to vote not because it's "my patriotic duty" but because I&#13;
want to. I want to vote because I know there is a difference between&#13;
the two rnajor candidates. I know that one of these two men is going to&#13;
win and I want to do what I can to make sure the right one gets elected.&#13;
Jerry Ford is an opposer-not an initiator. During his 28 year tenure&#13;
in Congress, Ford opposed medicare, housing subsidies, social&#13;
security benefits, unemployment compensation, veteran's benefits,&#13;
and pension reform.&#13;
However, )t would be unfair to characterize Ford° as being entirely&#13;
devoid of ideas. After all it was dependable and trustworthy Jerry&#13;
1 Ford who tried to start impeachment proceedings against U.S.&#13;
Supreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas ..&#13;
And, don't forget WIN. That was all Jerry's idea too. It was a&#13;
program complete with acronym, buttons, banners, and a flashy&#13;
saying. in short, all the advertising gimmicks normally employed by&#13;
used car dealers. Maybe it moves a lot of used cars, but the inflation&#13;
rate remained in the double digit.range and unemployment climbed.&#13;
When Carter -took over from Lester Maddox, as Governor of Georgia&#13;
he inherited a state with virtually no social service programs, an&#13;
antiquated penal system, an extremely conservative legislature, and&#13;
Lester Maddox as Lieutenant Governor. Despite these .odds Carter succeeded in many: areas .&#13;
• Carter vastly exp~nded the number of community centers for the&#13;
mentally ill 'and r¢tarded. These community centers were partially&#13;
staffed by former :welfare recipients-thereby reducing the welfare&#13;
rolls while at the san;ie time providing improved, compassionate care&#13;
for the handicapped!&#13;
Jimmy Carter reformed Georgia's prison system achieving a major&#13;
step towards turning Georgia's prison system from the warehouse&#13;
that it was into a rehabilitation center.&#13;
Carter upgraded education, hwnanized the Georgia welfare system&#13;
and made both responsive to the legitimate needs of the Georgian people. 1 ,&#13;
Carter pushed th;rough judicial reform creating a new machinery&#13;
for screening prospective judges and removing corrupt, inefficient&#13;
judges.&#13;
Jimmy Carter pushed through the Georgia legislature an antisecrecy&#13;
sunshine law, which opened up the meetings of all the committees&#13;
of the Georgia ;legislature to the public.&#13;
Lets contrast this with 'good ole' team player Jerry Ford. Ford's&#13;
solution to ,the prison problem is to build more prisons, ( create more&#13;
warehouses). Ford favors a 50 percent cutback in the education&#13;
budget, but after all we've all been "victims of mass education."&#13;
Ford's solution to welfare is· to cut benefits by one-third to fifty per- cent.&#13;
Ford has no. judical reforms planned, nor is he going to implement&#13;
sunshine laws. After all it was Ford who, according to Sam Ervin,&#13;
blocked the Watergate investigation until well after the 1972 election.&#13;
Ford puts the.interests of special interests ahead of the interests of&#13;
_, continued on pg. 3&#13;
/&#13;
r&#13;
• &#13;
POLITICAL FORUM CON'T&#13;
,&#13;
Certerc-:»:»: __&#13;
continued from pg. 2&#13;
,&#13;
the general public as evidenced by his opposition in Congr to -&#13;
transit and the Clean, Air Act. ' ess mass&#13;
Fo~d supports ..strong marijuana. laws (Garter wants to&#13;
deCrumnalIZe marijuana) no-knock authority for the poli nd th&#13;
covert operations of the CIA.' ce a e&#13;
Ford wants to have a constit\ltional amendment to ban all aborti&#13;
he opposes national health care, he wants to lax increase for the ;::;&#13;
and a tax decrease for the corporations and the wealthy.&#13;
Ford's views are the result of being isolated in the 'ivory" towers f&#13;
Washington. Ford does not understand the values of the 20th century;&#13;
he doe~ not unders.~nd the hardships of the poor and the&#13;
discrumnation minorities feel (even by people in his own dministration).&#13;
In short, Ford is out of step with the values of ~e&#13;
American people.&#13;
In conclusion, if you are thinking of voting for Gerald Ford and his&#13;
limited view of the Presidency you might as well write in a canteloupe.&#13;
After all a canteloupe WIll do the same thing as Ford has done and&#13;
wants to do; a canteloupe can't demand all the frills of the&#13;
Presidency. and a canteloupe will fulfill all the leadership roles the&#13;
Republican's demand of,a President.&#13;
But if YQuwant a President who will end unemployment, stop inflation,&#13;
restore. tr~t and confidence among the people, someone who&#13;
understands Americans, someone unbeholden to special interests&#13;
then Nov. 2 is your chance to eleel someone who can and will fulfill our&#13;
ideals: Jimmy Carter.&#13;
-&#13;
Carter WIns • •&#13;
hy Phil Hermann&#13;
Wednesday night's second debate between the candidates was much&#13;
hetter then the first. Although the two men were still confirmed&#13;
against real debate, both appeared more ready to do comhat than the&#13;
first time when both were more worried about how they would look.&#13;
Jimmy Carter was vasUy improved in both his speaking manner&#13;
iJOdthe way he stood at the podium; and 1his time he sat down when&#13;
Ford was talking. As a whole he came off much better in appearance&#13;
than his first timeout. How,ever he should really do somethU;g about&#13;
that smile; he looks like a walking Pepsodent commercial.&#13;
As far as content goes there were very few surprises; Carter said&#13;
that Ford had turned the word detente into a joke for the Russian side.&#13;
Carter also hit very hard on the Helsinki Agreement in which he said it&#13;
was an American acceptance of Russia's domination of Eastern&#13;
Europe. Ford angrily replied, "There is. no Soviet domination of&#13;
Eastern Europe, an and there never will be under a Ford Administration."&#13;
Mf. Ford must know something we don't because if the&#13;
Soviets don't control the ,satellite countries, who does? Carter then had&#13;
a weapon to use saying, "I'd like to see Mr. Ford try to convince all the&#13;
Czech, Polish and Romanian Americans of that."&#13;
At best Ford came of as the same robot-like administrator he is. He&#13;
continued saying that his administration has been strong and has&#13;
gollen more than even with the Soviets in the lJetente situation. The&#13;
facts say different. Ford used the same charges of "sparking&#13;
generalities" and "vague programs" on Carter that he used in the&#13;
first debate. Ford had better get different ammunition because he is&#13;
'the clear loser of Debate 2.&#13;
Carter also appeared conservative on the Arab and OPEQUE Oil&#13;
Embargo questions. When asked what he would do if the Arabs used&#13;
this blackmail technique on the U.S. again, Carter replied, "I would&#13;
notjust refuse to sell them arms, but everything; if one of the Arab or&#13;
OPEQUE nations placed an embargo on the U.S. of the magnatitude of&#13;
the past, all trade with them would be cut off."-&#13;
Carter came off a clear winner in this second debate saying&#13;
basically, support our allies, be cautious with our enemies. Carter also&#13;
refused to address Ford as Mr. President or President Ford and this&#13;
reminds me of the psyche technique used by ,Joe Frazier or Cassuis&#13;
Clay (Muhammed Ali). I think it might turn into a real boxing match&#13;
at the next debate, which involves the vice-presidential candidates. In&#13;
this corner, weighing one hundred and seventy pounds, from Minnesota.&#13;
Post Franco&#13;
Spain discussed&#13;
"Post Franco Spain" will be&#13;
the tilie of a talk by Parkside&#13;
Spanish Professor Jose Ortega at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 19, iIi&#13;
the Overlook Lounge of Wyllie&#13;
Library-Learning Center. The&#13;
free public talk will precede a&#13;
question and answer session.&#13;
Ortega, the author of a number&#13;
of books and articles on -Spanish&#13;
literature and politics, has been a&#13;
close observer of the artistic,&#13;
social and political changes&#13;
taking place in Spain since&#13;
Franco's death.&#13;
, He received his bachelors and&#13;
masters degrees from Spanish&#13;
institutions and taught in Spain&#13;
before coming to the U.S., where&#13;
he received his Ph.D. degree at&#13;
Ohio state University. He taught&#13;
at Mercer University and Case&#13;
Wes!ern Reserv,e University&#13;
before joining the Parkside&#13;
faculty in 1970.&#13;
PARKSIDE RANGER OCtober 13. 19763&#13;
\'&#13;
Senator resigns&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The following is a copy of a&#13;
letter submitted at the last&#13;
P.S.G.A. Senate meeting held&#13;
Thursday September 30, 1976.&#13;
Dear P .S.G.A. Senate,&#13;
Due to tbe fact lbat I feel my&#13;
lime will be spent in a mucb more&#13;
productive manner by worlting&#13;
on C.S.C. '5 current projects, I&#13;
hereby tender my resIgnation.&#13;
Though my resignation was not&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
rJ&#13;
accepted, I no longer consider&#13;
myself a senate member.&#13;
The C.S.C. (Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition) projects I referred to&#13;
are: a Book Ce&gt;q&gt;,the Food C&lt;&gt;-&#13;
op, a second student newspaper,&#13;
and a C&lt;Hlp Housing Pro~t. I&#13;
feel that these will all be a direct&#13;
benefit to students and will give&#13;
them my full support.&#13;
, Thank you,&#13;
Rusty TuUewski&#13;
'*'**''*'**''*''*''*'&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
**&#13;
are welcome. Contributions&#13;
of up to 250&#13;
worC:s are due by&#13;
Wednesday of each&#13;
week. Names must be&#13;
included on copy, but&#13;
may be withheld upon&#13;
request. The Ranger&#13;
editorial staH shall&#13;
reserve the right to&#13;
edit for length and&#13;
correct spelling.&#13;
The Poirkside Roinger is wrinen 0I1td editltCll&#13;
by. Ihe ~tude",s of Ihe Unhlersily.. of&#13;
Wlsco"sl"-Poirtuide who .Ire sol.ly&#13;
respo"sible for ils edilorioll policy oI"d&#13;
C0tlt ..", Opi"io"s eKpreued .Ire "01&#13;
"ecess.rily repreSe"toilive of those held by&#13;
the sludents, '.culty or i1dml"islroltio" of&#13;
Pilrkside. Editoriill ."d ausi"ess S53·2217;&#13;
Newsroom S5J-229S.&#13;
Woman&#13;
jilted&#13;
(CPS) " Kathy Anderson, a&#13;
Wisconsin student leader, offered&#13;
to drive Senator Proxmire on a&#13;
campaign trip following a&#13;
request· for volunteers from his&#13;
staff. Ms. Anderson was hastily&#13;
jilted and when she wanted to&#13;
know why, she was told by a&#13;
. senatorial aide, "Well, you know·&#13;
-it would look funny."&#13;
Ms. Anderson commented in&#13;
the National On Campus Report:&#13;
"He's just perpetuating the myth&#13;
that a man and a woman couldn't&#13;
he together for p~s of&#13;
business or politics. "&#13;
Fair&#13;
hosted&#13;
Thirty-two organizations from&#13;
Kenosha and Racine are taking&#13;
part in the third annual CarthageCommunity&#13;
Flea Fair in the&#13;
Carthage College Fieldhouse on&#13;
saturday, October 16, from 9 a.m.&#13;
to 4 p.m.&#13;
The groups will oller bargains&#13;
in rummage, baked goods, crafts,&#13;
books, and white elephants. Each&#13;
group will keep its profits for its&#13;
own projects.&#13;
Classified&#13;
CB'S BRAND NEW. Warranty included.&#13;
Cobra 21's $117.00Ray Bougneit 551·7402.&#13;
"WANT TO LEARN PIANO? (Cheap rates!)&#13;
Want 10 teach tap dancing? Call (312) 662·&#13;
6546." Sheila Jeffriese 2501 N. Jackson,&#13;
Waukegan, Ill. 60085 (311) 662-6S46.&#13;
Van l: Thompson FrH lance Photography,&#13;
weddings and candid portraits Phone 6S2&#13;
...,&#13;
WILL DO any ki"d of typ,ng at reasonable&#13;
rat~. For intorma'ion caU 6S2·33JJ&#13;
FOR SALE: Portable S'ereo with Garrar&lt;t&#13;
turntable. ASking SSO Call 6:34SJOS.fter 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
EOITOR-IN-CHIEF: "''''''11M SI~a&#13;
• IUSiNESS MANAGERS: Ca"', I","', J"'y T...... u... (a .. t.)&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGE.: To'" C r&#13;
NEWS COORDINATO.: .ruce W .,&#13;
OEPARTMENTS:&#13;
AtI",iniltrati_POIicift: .,10M McKIM... y&#13;
. SMI: Dave Irandt&#13;
Stud.nl groups &amp; spoe.ken: Mary Kay Oh"'er&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie 100~r&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jean Tenuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: '.... rey I. swencki, lilt •• r....&#13;
COPY IE DITOR: Ju,.e L.... _&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR, Vol" ThompMOl&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue MilrqUoirdt&#13;
STAFF: Wendy Miller, Terro GoIyh.rt, Robert Hotlmoln, Chrtl Cl.uMfI, .fl"''' p_lII_s.kI,&#13;
L.rfY Donnelly, Phil Hermol"", R.mO"oI M.ilIef, Allen Irow", Carol Arent., Johft Overman,&#13;
.ob Jilmboil, aev.rly p.nol, •• tsy Neu, Lind. Knuettl.n, K.rln La Fourl." JUidyTrudf'unt,&#13;
5con R-e,"hard, Philip L L,..i".slon&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS P.J. Allolinol, Ric"'y Cooper, R'Ck Flasch&#13;
AO SALE5PERSONS, Joe Loind., Rick Finch&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Performing Friday 8&lt; Saturday&#13;
TRIAD&#13;
Mike Villers 637-2726&#13;
If,,I., to,IM ,&#13;
Ask how you can earn while&#13;
you learn - as a Northwestern Mutual&#13;
college agent. You work part-time,&#13;
attend classes full-time. A limited&#13;
number of internships are still available.&#13;
The Quiet Company&#13;
NORTHWESTER"l MUTUALLIFE' MILWAUKEE~&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
ALL YOU \\-1'~&#13;
WANT \Sy..v:.&#13;
&lt;.'"\~\ ~~&#13;
C&#13;
~\.\' \\~O&#13;
C&#13;
\..1.'\ \\" ,0&#13;
't"\ \\ I"&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
WANTED· Sports wrote' lor R"nger 'hat '5&#13;
talented,9OOcI in grammar. and most of ail.&#13;
depefldable SH Jean Tenuf. in the RanglPf&#13;
office. WLLC 0194&#13;
632-2731&#13;
mONo 8&lt; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
FEAST SlQ5&#13;
INCLUDES, Salad. Italian&#13;
Bread and a FREE GlAS&#13;
OF WiNE....&#13;
~erbll'8&#13;
~urt _.IUl_&#13;
fug ••• F. So.ns. CLU&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-5316&#13;
EARN&#13;
While you&#13;
LEARN&#13;
Donold J. Brink, ClU&#13;
Racine&#13;
•&#13;
POLITICAL FORUM CON'T&#13;
Carter------&#13;
' continued from pg, 2&#13;
the general public as evidenced by his opposition in Congr to · transit and the Clean , Air Act. ess mass&#13;
Fo:d. s~pports . _strong marijuana . laws ( ~arter wants to&#13;
decrunmal1ze. man Juana) no-knock authority for the police and the&#13;
covert operations of the CIA. ·&#13;
Ford wants to have a constitutional amendment to ban all abo ti&#13;
ti 1 h 1th r ons, he opposes na ona ea care, he wants to tax increase for the&#13;
and a tax d_ecrease for the corporations and the wealthy. poor&#13;
Ford's views are the result of being isolated in the 'ivory" towe f&#13;
Washington. Ford does not understand the values of the 20th cent~-&#13;
he ~oe~ n~t un~ers~nd the hardships of the poor and th~&#13;
discnmmatlon minorities feel ( even by people in his own drninistration).&#13;
In short, Ford is out of step with the values of ~e&#13;
American people.&#13;
In conclusion, if you are thinking of voting for Gerald Ford and his&#13;
limited view of the Presi~ency you might as well write in a canteloupe.&#13;
After all a canteloupe w~ll do the same thing as Ford has done and&#13;
wants to do; a canteloupe can't demand all the frills of the&#13;
Presidency; and a canteloupe will fulfill all the leadership roles the&#13;
Republican's demand of a President.&#13;
But if yqu want a President who will end unemployment, stop inflation,&#13;
restore trust and confidence among the people, someone who&#13;
understands Americans, someone unbeholden to special interests&#13;
then Nov. 2 is your chance to elect someone who can and will fulfill ou;&#13;
ideals: Jimmy Carter.&#13;
Carter wins&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
Wednesday night's second debate between the candidates was much&#13;
better then the first. Although the two men were still confirmed&#13;
against real debate, both appeared more ready to do combat than the&#13;
first time when both were more worried about how they would look.&#13;
Jimmy Carter was vastly improved in both his speaking manner&#13;
;pid the way he stood at the podium; and .this time he sat down when&#13;
Ford was talking. As a whole he came off much better in appearance&#13;
than his first time out. How,ever he should really do something about&#13;
that smile; he looks like a walking Pepsodent commercial.&#13;
As far as content goes there were very few surprises; Carter said&#13;
that Ford had turned the word detente into a joke for the Russian side.&#13;
Carter also hit very hard on the Helsinki Agreement in which he said it&#13;
was an American acceptance of Russia's domination of Eastern&#13;
Europe. Ford angrily replied, "There is no Soviet domination of&#13;
Eastern Europe, an and there never will be under a Ford Administration."&#13;
Mr. Ford must know something we don't because if the&#13;
Soviets don't control the satellite countries, who does? Carter then had&#13;
a weapon to use saying, "I'd like to see Mr. For_d try to convince all the&#13;
Czech, Polish and Romanian Americans of that."&#13;
At best Ford came of as the same robot-like administrator he is. He&#13;
continued saying that his administration has been strong and has&#13;
gotten more than even with the Soviets in the detente situation. The&#13;
facts say different. Ford used the same charges of "sparking&#13;
generalities" and "vague programs" on Carter that he used in the&#13;
first debate. Ford had better get different ammunition because he is&#13;
· the clear loser of Debate 2.&#13;
Carter also appeared conservative on the Arab and OPEQUE Oil&#13;
Embargo questions. When asked what he would do if the Arabs used&#13;
this blackmail technique on the U.S. again, Carter replied, "I would&#13;
not just refuse to sell them arms, but everything; if one of the Arab or&#13;
OPEQUE nations placed an embargo on the U.S. of the magnatitude of&#13;
the past, all trade with them would be cut off."-&#13;
Carter came off a clear winner in this second debate saying&#13;
basically, support our allies, be cautious with our enemies. Carter also&#13;
refused to address Ford as Mr. President or President Ford and this&#13;
reminds me of the psyche technique used by Joe Frazier or Cassuis&#13;
Clay (Muhammed Ali). I think it might turn into a real boxing match&#13;
at the next debate, which involves the vice-presidential candidates. In&#13;
this corner, weighing one hundred and seventy pounds, from Minnesota.&#13;
&#13;
Post Franco&#13;
Spain discussed&#13;
"Post Franco Spain" will be&#13;
the title of a talk by Parkside&#13;
Spanish Professor Jose Ortega at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 19, in&#13;
the Overlook Lounge of Wyllie&#13;
Library-Learning Center. The&#13;
free public talk will precede a&#13;
question and answer session.&#13;
Ortega, the author of a number&#13;
of books and articles on .Spanish&#13;
literature and politics, has been a&#13;
close observer of the artistic,&#13;
social and politic al changes&#13;
taking place in Spain since&#13;
Franco's death.&#13;
, He received his bachelors and&#13;
masters degrees from Spanish&#13;
institutions and taught in Spain&#13;
before coming to the U.S., where&#13;
he received his Ph.D. degree at&#13;
Ohio State University. He taught&#13;
at Mercer University and Case&#13;
Western Reserve University&#13;
before joining the Parkside&#13;
faculty in 1970.&#13;
Senator resigns&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The following is a copy of a&#13;
letter submitted at the last&#13;
P.S.G.A. Senate meeting held&#13;
Thursday September 30, 1976.&#13;
Dear P.S.G.A. Senate,&#13;
Due to the fact that I feel my&#13;
time will be spent in a much more&#13;
productive manner by working&#13;
on C.S.C.'s current projects, I&#13;
hereby tender my resignation.&#13;
Though my resignation was not&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is written and edited&#13;
by the students of the University ._ of&#13;
Wisconsin.Parkside who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
CO(lt•n• Opinions @xpressed are not&#13;
necessanly representative of those held by&#13;
the students. faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and Business SSl-2217 ;&#13;
Newsroom SSJ-229S.&#13;
Woman&#13;
jilted&#13;
(CPS) - Kathy Anderson, a&#13;
Wisconsin student leader, offered&#13;
to drive Senator Proxmire on a&#13;
campaign trip following a&#13;
request for volunteers from his&#13;
staff. Ms. Anderson was hastily&#13;
jilted and when she wanted to&#13;
know why, she was told by a&#13;
senatorial aide, "Well, you know-&#13;
-it would look funny."&#13;
Ms. Anderson commented in&#13;
the National On Campus Report:&#13;
"He's just perpetuating the myth&#13;
that a man and a woman couldn't&#13;
be together for purposes of&#13;
business or politics."&#13;
Fair&#13;
hosted&#13;
Thirty-two organizations from&#13;
Kenosha and Racine are taking&#13;
part in the third annual CarthageCommunity&#13;
Flea Fair in the&#13;
Carthage College Fieldhouse on&#13;
Saturday, October 16, from 9 a.m.&#13;
to 4 p.m.&#13;
The groups will offer bargains&#13;
in rummage, baked goods, crafts,&#13;
books, and white elephants. Each&#13;
group will keep its profits for its&#13;
own projects.&#13;
Classified&#13;
CB'S BRAND NEW, Warranty included&#13;
Cobra 21's $117 00 Ray Bougneil 551 7402 .&#13;
"WANT TO LEARN PIANO? ( Cheap rates •)&#13;
Want to teach tap dancing? Call (312) 662 -&#13;
6546." Sheila Jeffrie5t 2501 N . Jackson,&#13;
Waukegan, Ill . 60085 (312') 662 .6546.&#13;
Van E: Thompson Frtt lance Photography.&#13;
weddings and candid portra,ts Phone 6S2&#13;
8862&#13;
WILL DO any kind of typ,ng al roasonable&#13;
rates For information call 6S2 -3373&#13;
FOR SALE: Portable Stereo with Garrard&#13;
turntable Asking SSO Call 6_3, 5305 afltr ,&#13;
p .m .&#13;
WANTED : Sports wr,ter for Ranger that ,s&#13;
taltt1ted, good ,n Qrammar. and most of ail .&#13;
dependable See Jean Tenuta in the Ranger&#13;
Office, WLLC 019'&#13;
PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976 3&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
)r_)&#13;
accepted, I no longer consider&#13;
myself a senate member.&#13;
The C.S.C. ( Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition) projects I referred to&#13;
are: a Book Co-op, the Food Coop,&#13;
a second student newspaper,&#13;
and a Co-op Housing Project. I&#13;
feel that these will all be a direct&#13;
benefit to students and will give&#13;
them my full support.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
EOITOR-IN -CHIEF : Junn,ne Sipsma&#13;
'*'*'*'*''*'*''*''*''*''*''*'&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
are welcome. Contributions&#13;
of up to 2S0&#13;
wor&lt;.:s are due by&#13;
Wednesday of each&#13;
week. Names must be&#13;
included on copy, but&#13;
may be withheld upon&#13;
request. The Ranger&#13;
editoria I staff sha II&#13;
reserve the right to&#13;
edit for length and ,&#13;
correct spelling.&#13;
• BUSINESS MANAGERS : Catlly Brnall, Judy Trudrunt (HSI.)&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER : Tom C-r&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR : Bruce wa,nar&#13;
DEPARTMENTS,&#13;
Adm,n,strat,on-Polic,es~ John Mcl&lt;loskey&#13;
SMI : D•v• Br•ncff&#13;
Studtnl group• &amp; spaaken , M•ry K1y Ohmar&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR , Dtbb1t B1utr&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR , Joan Ttnuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS 1tffrty j . &gt;wtnck,, 8111 Barke&#13;
COPY EDITOR JuJ1t L1n9e&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR · V•n Thomp,on&#13;
CIRCULATION , Sut Muqu•rdt STAFF Wendy Mllle.r. Tern G•yhart. Robert Hoffman , Chr11 Clausen, Brlcttet Pend1ow11u,&#13;
Larry Donnelly, Phil Herm•nn, R1mon1 Maillet. Allen Brown, Carol Ar1nU, John Overm•n,&#13;
Bob J1mbo,s, Beverly Pella, Betsy Neu. Linda Knudtson, Kar,n La Fourier .. Jl,Jdy Tructrunt,&#13;
Scott R-emhiard. Ph,hp L L1v1ng,ton&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS p J Auohna, Ricky Cooptr, Rtck FIHCh&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS Joe Linda. Rick FIHCh&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers 637 -2726 ,,,, ,,,,,, lo ,,,.,,,,&#13;
Performing Friday &amp; Saturday&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
EARN&#13;
While you&#13;
LEARN&#13;
TRIAD&#13;
moN. &amp; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
FEAST $1.Q5&#13;
INCLUDES: Solod. ltolion&#13;
6reod ond o FREE GLAS&#13;
OF WINE.. ..&#13;
~erbu'B&#13;
~urt&#13;
,ua &amp; RUTAUR&#13;
Ask how you can arn while&#13;
you learn - a a orthwe tern Mutual&#13;
colleg agent. You work part-tim ,&#13;
attend cla ses full -time. A limit d&#13;
number of intern hips are still a atlable.&#13;
Donald J. Brink, CLU&#13;
Racine&#13;
632-2731&#13;
Eugene F. Soens, CLU&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654•5316&#13;
The Quiet Company&#13;
ORTH\\ESTEII &gt;,,t TUAL LIFE · MILWAUKEE ~ &#13;
One&#13;
sweet DreulD&#13;
~~~&#13;
.' &lt; , )1&#13;
1:\, &lt; ,~I .•~~ ~ , .&#13;
• •&#13;
• This Coupon is •&#13;
• worth 50c on all •&#13;
• items listed below &lt; •&#13;
• Good thru October •&#13;
• only! One Coupon •&#13;
• per customer per •&#13;
" purchase. Happy •&#13;
• Holidays. Remember ••&#13;
• we never close. •&#13;
,~ ........•,&#13;
Hey, scholars, look at&#13;
these gift selections.&#13;
Everything for Mind &amp;&#13;
Body is right here at&#13;
two stores ... your&#13;
stores with atmosphere.&#13;
• aecerda a Tapel. ALL newreleases&#13;
stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import alb .... We're" the&#13;
one store in town that&#13;
carries foreign releases.&#13;
• Special orden. Hard-to-get&#13;
records and tapes with&#13;
guaranteed one day&#13;
.delivery.&#13;
• Jewelry. Hand craCtad •&#13;
beautiful for style conscious&#13;
guys and gals.&#13;
• Tape:ltrle.. Mobiles. InceDS8&#13;
burners. Stash&#13;
boxes.&#13;
• IDc..... Sticks and cones&#13;
to tickle your 0088.&#13;
• Picture •. Decoupage. Wall&#13;
hangings. Artists: Escher,&#13;
__ Pitre, Roger 0880.&#13;
Rosamond.&#13;
• Upllnl to create any&#13;
atmosphere.&#13;
• Leather Goods, WalletsPcuehes-c-Purses&#13;
c- 881tsHats&#13;
&amp;: accessories in&#13;
abundance. Beautifully&#13;
handcrafted.&#13;
• PSlBphernaU. - Pipes.&#13;
Papers. Smoking Accessories.&#13;
Party necessities&#13;
from around the world.&#13;
• Waterbeds, We're&#13;
everything in Waterbeds.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
5010 Seventh Avenue&#13;
654·3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694·2404&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
Columbusmythed Orient&#13;
1--------------- cu &amp; SAVEI ~&lt;&#13;
_ PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES &lt; BOARD UPCOMING EVENTS 1&#13;
_ Concerts. Dances - Sat., Oct. 16 MOVIES (All $1.00 in Cinema) --&#13;
_ DISCO featuring WRKR OJ. MARK WINDSOR ''Touch of Evil'! Wed., Oct, 13 2,30 p.m. 7,30 p.m.-&#13;
_ 9 p.m, Adm, 75' UW·P students Thurs Oct 14 2 - -&#13;
I&#13;
U&#13;
' , .,. ,30 p.m. 7·30 pm_&#13;
ruon Square 1.00 others ------------------. ..&#13;
------------~-------&lt;------------ ----------'--&#13;
~ Sat., Oct. 23 ••THE MOVIES "Nashville" Fri., Oct. 15 7,00 p.m. 904S p.m.-!&#13;
= plus RIO 9 p.m. Union Sun., Oct. 17 7,30 p.m. Q&#13;
.. '2.00 UW-P students advance ------.:...------________ ----------- =iii&#13;
!:: '3.00 llthers s- \:: &lt;_----. "Animal Fri., Oct, 22 700, p.m. 9 ~ ,00 ·p.m. _ I,Fri., Nov. 5 ,. TOM. CHAPIN Crackers" Sun~, Oct, ~4 7,30 p.m. i&#13;
_ 8 p.m, (lnema Theatre &lt; --------------------------------_&#13;
_ '2,50 lJW-P students CaMING SOON, "The Birds" "Psycho" "M ASH" ' " ., , , assenger "The P "_&#13;
__________ •__ ~:~_~~~_____________ "Hearts of the West", "Brewster I\'IcCloud". ' _&#13;
_ &lt; SKI TRIP _ COMING HARRY CHAPIN Park Cily, Utah $205. &lt; COFFEEHOUSE -&#13;
__ SOON.. THURSDAY, 'NOV. 11 "01",,.lift tickets; parties, more 0"""" b". C"'.mi,i,m. Barry Drake -_&#13;
r.._. ...... SIGN UP IN PARKSIDEUNIONOFFICE Nov. 2 &amp; 3 Union Square _ --------------Cl" &amp; SAVE----------- ..&#13;
Contact&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
In P.S.G.A .• Inc.'s continuing efforts to improve services to students&#13;
complaints about the financial aids appeal procedure have been&#13;
discussed with Jan Ocker, director of the department. In the past&#13;
Financial Aids appeals have been reviewed by the full staff of the F.A.&#13;
staff counselors. This meant that your appeal was reviewed by the&#13;
same person who heard your initial request and he-she participated in&#13;
the discussion of your appeal and also voted.&#13;
This practice is a violation of the procedural 'due process which&#13;
gurantees that any individual appealing a decision must get a fair,&#13;
jmpartial review of the petition of appeal by unbiased parties. In other&#13;
words, the first jndge, if you'll forgive the analogy, has made a&#13;
decision andruled on your case. That same judge can not and must&#13;
not participate in hearing and-or ruling when you appeal that first&#13;
decision,&#13;
Mr. Ocker assnres me that the appeal process will be dhanged as&#13;
soon as possible. He said that the Financial Aids Department wants to&#13;
help students all,that it reasonably and' legally can, given the small&#13;
staff and limited financial aidS resourses. .. '&#13;
Another complaint discussed with Mr. Oker was the dehwnanizing&#13;
method of the review of the student appeals. Many students want to be&#13;
present when the appeal is being considered in order to plead their&#13;
cause. It would help the appeal is being cpnsidered in order to plead&#13;
their cause. It would help the appeal process if a student could be&#13;
informed as to when their petition of appeal was being heard so that&#13;
thev could become a human being to the people reviewing their case .&#13;
by Martin Brown&#13;
Pacific News Service&#13;
Editors Note: Martin Brown writes regularly for Paelfic News,&#13;
usually on science and the environment.&#13;
The myth of Christopher Columbus' discovery of America has been&#13;
frequently and convincingly puncturad- and yet it survives. But now,&#13;
anew study of Columbus has appeared that adds insult to injury.&#13;
Columbus, when he arrived introduced to these shores all manner&#13;
of mayhem, murder, and greed,&#13;
In Columbus; His Enterprise (monthly Review Press, 1976)&#13;
Kiningsberger, a novelist turned historian, sets out to take "a cold and&#13;
hard look at what Colwnbus was all about." In the process-involving&#13;
examination of historical studies and the writings of Columbus and his&#13;
contemporaries-not even the most treasured scboolroom tradition&#13;
survives: Columbus, says Kiningsberger, was far from alone in&#13;
believing that the earth was round. Most educated people Of his time&#13;
were convinced of the earth's roundness.&#13;
Columbus-a self-educated merchant seaman-~liff;red only in&#13;
11Ie quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
It is all too easy to refuse a piece of paper-confronting the preson is&#13;
much more difficult. There are human beings with human needs and&#13;
human feelings who ought to be teated with human compassion and&#13;
sensitivity.&#13;
Mr. Ocker again assures me that efforts will be made to inform&#13;
students of the time and place of the appeal hearing so that the student&#13;
may be present if he-she wishes. -&#13;
Student government plans to follow-up the informal agreements to&#13;
ensure tha 'these more equitible and humane procedures are implemented.&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER october 13, 1976&#13;
Mike Villers 637-2726&#13;
11'. 11111' " ,III",;&#13;
Toy Drive Next Week&#13;
Just a reminder that P.S.G.A.'s Toy Drive on behalf of the Child&#13;
Care Center is being held this week. Please bring safe, small toys for&#13;
the little folks at the center.&#13;
• Voter Registration at Parkside&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. is conducting a voter registration drive. It was&#13;
decided that the postcard method of registration would be most effective&#13;
at Parkside since we draw students from several counties.&#13;
Look for the posters that show you how to fill out the card. There will&#13;
also be people on campus who have been deputized to register voters&#13;
on the spot at tables for Kenosha residents only. Racine refused to&#13;
deputize anyone from Parkside. It will also be possible for voters to&#13;
register at the polls. '&#13;
Register to vote. Itdoes matter how you feel about a candidate, and&#13;
YOUR VOTE COUNTS.&#13;
,.&#13;
believing that the earth was much smaller than it is. His mistaken&#13;
belief that Asia, rich with spices and exotics, lay just over the western&#13;
horizon prompted his promotional campaign before the royal courts&#13;
of Europe.&#13;
.Spanish monarchs Ferdinand and Isabella, who finally granted&#13;
Columbus funds for his expedition, knew little about sea exploration&#13;
and considered the effort a shot in the dark-worth the risk only&#13;
because it was not very expensive-says Kiningsberger, They even&#13;
agreed to Columbus' terms: 10 percent of all trade with Asia, admiralty&#13;
over the western ocean and governorship of any newly found&#13;
lands. Landing in the New World, Columbus wrote in his log, "here is a&#13;
people to be converted to our.Holy Faith by love and friendship and not&#13;
by force ...' But in the same log he added, "should your Majesties&#13;
command it, all the inhabitants could be taken away to Castile, or&#13;
made slaves on the island. With 50 men we could subjugate them all&#13;
and make them do whatever we want." &lt;&#13;
. In fact, the natives of Haiti-which Columbus tbought was Asiawould&#13;
never be converted to Christianity, but would be subjugated and&#13;
then exterminated by Columbus as he tried to squeeze the riches of the&#13;
Orient out of the impoverished Arawak Indians.&#13;
Reporting to Ferdinand and Isabella on his first voyage, Columbus&#13;
wrote, "Hispaniola is a miracle, Mountains and hills, plains and&#13;
pastures, are both fertile and beautlfuL.the harbors are unbelievably&#13;
good and there are many wide rivers of which the majority contain&#13;
gold ...Tbere are many spices, and great mines of gold and other&#13;
metals ..." AsKinjngsberger comments, "All of this was fantasy."&#13;
Later an agent of Columbus promisad Ferdinand and Isabella, "00&#13;
the next voyage tbe ships will carry away such quantities of gold that&#13;
anyone wbo hears of it will be dumbfotinded."&#13;
Is it worth spoiling Columbus pay by telling the truth about&#13;
Christopher Columbus?&#13;
Koningsberger obviously thinlcs it is. "Shouldn,t we wind up that&#13;
Enterprise of Columbus," he asks, "and start thinking of a truly New&#13;
World?"&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976&#13;
toe&#13;
sweet&#13;
Dream&#13;
Hey, scholars, look at&#13;
these gift selections.&#13;
Everything for Mind &amp;&#13;
Body is right here at&#13;
two stores . . . your&#13;
stores with atmosphere.&#13;
• Records • Tapes. ALL new releases stacked floor to&#13;
ceiling!&#13;
• Import albUtDs, We're the one store in town that&#13;
carries foreign releases.&#13;
• Special orden. Hard-to-get&#13;
records and tapes with&#13;
guaranteed one day&#13;
delivery.&#13;
• Jewelry. Hand crafted a:&#13;
beautiful for style con- scious guys and gals.&#13;
• Tapestries. Mobiles. In- cense burners. Stash&#13;
boxes.&#13;
• Incense. Sticks and cones to ticlcle your nose.&#13;
•Pictures.Decoupage. Wall&#13;
hangings. Artists: Escher,&#13;
Pitre, Roger Dean,&#13;
Rosemond.&#13;
• U11htln11 to create any&#13;
atmosphere.&#13;
• Leather Goods. Wallets - Pou1,hes-Purses-BeltsHa&#13;
ts &amp; accessories in&#13;
abundance. Beautifully&#13;
handcrafted.&#13;
• Paraphernalia - Pipes. Papers. Smoking Accessories.&#13;
Party necessities&#13;
from around the world.&#13;
• Waterbeds. We're&#13;
everything in Waterbeds.&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
5010 Seventh Avenue&#13;
654-3578&#13;
WEST&#13;
3910 Seventy Fifth Street&#13;
694-2404&#13;
Contact weekly by student government&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
In P.S.G.A., Inc.'s continuing efforts to improve services to students&#13;
complaints about the financial aids appeal procedure have been&#13;
discussed with Jan Ocker, director of the department. In the past&#13;
Financial Aids appeals have been reviewed by the full staff of the F .A.&#13;
staff counselors. This meant that your appeal was reviewed by the&#13;
same person who heard your initial request and he-she participated in&#13;
the discussion of your appeal and also voted.&#13;
This practice is a violation of the procedural ·due process which&#13;
gurantees that any individual appealing a decision must. get a fair,&#13;
jmpartial review of the petition of appeal by unbiased parties. In other&#13;
words, the first judge, if you'll forgive the analogy, has made a&#13;
decision and.ruled on your case. That same judge can not and must&#13;
not participate in hearing and-or ruling when you appeal that first&#13;
decision.&#13;
Mr. Ocker assures me that the appeal process will be dhanged as&#13;
soon as possible. He said that the Financial Aids Department wants to&#13;
help students all that it reasonably and legally can, given the small&#13;
staff and limited financial aids resourses.&#13;
Another complaint discussed with Mr. Oker was the dehumanizing&#13;
method of the review of the student appeals. Many students want to be&#13;
present when the appeal is being considered in order to plead their&#13;
cause. It would help the appeal is being c9nsidered in order to plead&#13;
their cause. It would help the appeal process if a student could be&#13;
informed as to when their petition of appeal was being heard so that&#13;
they could become a human being to the people reviewing their case.&#13;
It is all too easy to refuse a piece of paper-confronting the preson is&#13;
much more difficult. There are human beings with human nee'ds and&#13;
human feelings who ought to be teated with human compassion and&#13;
sensitivity.&#13;
Mr. Ocker again assures me that efforts will be made to inform&#13;
students of the time and place of the appeal hearing so that the student&#13;
may be present if he-she wishes. -&#13;
Student government plans to follow-up the informal agreements to&#13;
ensure tha 'these more equitible and humane procedures are implemented.&#13;
Toy Drive Next Week&#13;
Just a reminder that P.S.G.A.'s Toy Drive on behalf of the Child&#13;
Care Center is being held this week. Please bring safe, small toys for&#13;
the little folks at the center. · Voter Registration at Parkside&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. is conducting a voter registration drive. It was&#13;
decided that the postcard method of registration would be most effective&#13;
at Parkside since we draw students from several counties.&#13;
Look for the posters that show you how to fill out the card. There· will&#13;
also be people on campus who have been deputized to register voters&#13;
on the spot at tables for Kenosha residents only. Racine refused to&#13;
deputize anyone from Parkside. It will also be possible for voters to&#13;
register at the polls.&#13;
Register to vote. It does matter how you feel about a candidate, and&#13;
YOUR VOTE COUNTS.&#13;
,_&#13;
Columbus mythed Orient&#13;
by Martin Brown&#13;
Pacific News Service&#13;
Editors Note: Martin Brown writes regularly for Pacific News,&#13;
usually on science and the environment.&#13;
The myth of Christopher Columbus' discovery of America has been&#13;
frequently and convincingly punctured- and yet it survives. But now,&#13;
a new study of Columbus has appeared that adds insult to injury.&#13;
Columbus, when he arrived introduced to these shores all manner&#13;
of mayhem, murder, and greed.&#13;
In Columbus; His Enterprise (monthly Review Press, 1976)&#13;
Kiningsberger, a novelist turned historian, sets out to take "a cold and&#13;
hard look at what Columbus was all about.'' In the process-involving&#13;
examination of historical studies and the writings of Columbus and.his&#13;
contemporaries-not even the most treasured schoolroom tradition&#13;
survives: Columbus, says Kiningsberger, was far from alone in&#13;
believing that the earth was round. Most educated people of his time&#13;
were convinced of the earth's roundness.&#13;
Columbus-a self-educated merchant seaman~;red only in&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers 637 -2726&#13;
11'1 1/1111 lo ,,, •• ,,&#13;
believing that the earth was much smaller than it is. His mistaken&#13;
belief that Asia, rich with spices and exotics, lay just over the western&#13;
horizon prompted his promotional campaign before the royal courts&#13;
of Europe.&#13;
.Spanish monarchs Ferdinand and Isabella, who finally granted&#13;
Columbus funds for his expedition, knew little about sea exploration&#13;
and considered the effort a shot in the dark-worth the risk only&#13;
because it was not very expensive-says Kiningsb~rger. They even&#13;
agreed to Columbus' terms: 10 percent of all trade with Asia, admiralty&#13;
over the western ocean and governorship of any newly found&#13;
lands. Landing in the New World, Columbus wrote in his log, "here is a&#13;
people to be converted to our Holy Faith by love and friendship and not&#13;
by force .. .'' But in the same log he added, "should your Majesties&#13;
command it, all the inhabitants could be taken away to Castile, or&#13;
made slaves on the island. With 50 men we could subjugate them all&#13;
and make them do w.hatever we want."&#13;
In fact, the natives of Haiti-which Columbus thought was Asiawould&#13;
never be converted to Christianity, but would be subjugated and&#13;
then exterminated by Columbus as he tried to squeeze the riches of the&#13;
Orient out of the impoverished Arawak Indians.&#13;
Reporting to Ferdinand and Isabella on his first voyage, Columbus&#13;
wrote, "Hispaniola is a miracle. Mountains and hills, plains and&#13;
pastures, are both fertile and beautiful...the harbors are unbelievably&#13;
good and there are many wide rivers of which the majority contain&#13;
gold ... There are many spices, and great mines of gold and other&#13;
metals .. .'' AsKini,ngsberger comments, "All of this was fantasy."&#13;
Later an agent of Columbus promised Ferdinand and Isabella, "On&#13;
the next voyage the ships will carry away such quantities of gold ·that&#13;
anyone who hears of it will be dumbfounded.''&#13;
Is it worth spoiling Columbus pay by telling the truth about&#13;
Christopher Columbus? _&#13;
Koningsberger obviously thinks it is .. "Shouldn't we wind up that&#13;
Enterprise of Columbus," he asks, "and start thinking of a truly New&#13;
World?"&#13;
,--------------- CLIP &amp; SAVE, ______________ _&#13;
1 PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES · aoARD UPCOMING EVENTS 1&#13;
I Concerts - Dances sat., oct. 16 MOVIES (All $1.00 in Cinema) I&#13;
I DISCO featuring WRKR D.J. MARK WINDSOR "Touch of Ev"il" w d O I&#13;
I e ., ct. 13 2,30 p.m. _ 7,30 p.m. I&#13;
9 p.m., Adm. 75c UW-P students Th o&#13;
I . $ - urs., ct. 14 2,30 pm 7.30 pm I&#13;
Union Square 1.00 others ----------------------- · · · · ·&#13;
.-------------------· ----------- --------. ~ Sat., Oct. 23 ·- THE MOVIES "Nashville" Fri., Oct. 15 7:00p.m. 9:45 p.m. - .&#13;
~ plus RIO 9 · p.m. Union Sun., Oct. 17 7,30 p.m. d&#13;
o,a $2.00 UW-P students advance - -------------------- :;; ----------- !:: $3.00 pthers eo ~-------------- ---------,----- "Animal Fri., Oct. 22 7:00 p.m. 9:00 p.m. t:&#13;
I 'Fri., Nov. 5 - TOM . CHAPIN Crackers" Sun'., Oct. 24 1,3() p.m i&#13;
I 8 p.m. Cinema Theatre · -- --------------- - --- --- ----- - - - 1&#13;
I $2.50 lJW-P students COMIN(, SOON, " The Birds" "Psycho" "MA s H .. "Th p .. I , , . . . . , e ossenger ,&#13;
l---------.--~:~-~~e~s ____________&#13;
"Hearts of the West", "Brewster McCloud" . I&#13;
I SKI TRIP&#13;
I COMING HARRY CHAPIN Park City, Utah $205 - · COFFEEHOUSE I&#13;
1 SOON: THURSDAY, Nov. 11 '""""·:;::,::::· ;~: • .'.':.'::'·'&#13;
·· Barry Drake 1&#13;
L__ s1GN up 1N PARKs1oe uN1ON oFF1cE Nov. 2 &amp; 3 Union Square 1&#13;
1 ------------•CLIP &amp; SAVE _______________ __&#13;
- . - -&#13;
i1&#13;
I &#13;
s&#13;
l&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
l&#13;
-~-&lt;Y~I&#13;
~~~ ~-", I _ ON THE BEACH ~~~~F ~Ston~s r~unded and smooth with time,&#13;
.. Feeling like the smooth insides of almonds.&#13;
The moisture in the air,&#13;
The boats silently sailing by,&#13;
Sand blown softly and tenderly with the-wind .&#13;
...and •&#13;
the&#13;
1&#13;
S&#13;
Al'\DRE THE CANNIBAL INVITES ME FOR LUNCH&#13;
It was an expensive restaurant&#13;
the soft hued lights&#13;
hung from the ceiling&#13;
like glowing oranges&#13;
waves&#13;
roll&#13;
. in...&#13;
Those birds flying solitary over the shore&#13;
Unafraid or unknowing of the power of man&#13;
...still '&#13;
the&#13;
My friend and I&#13;
were nearly ejected&#13;
from the place because of Andre's&#13;
attire He was naked&#13;
but. for the strung bones about&#13;
his waist and a carved ivory pin through his nose&#13;
waves&#13;
roll&#13;
in...&#13;
My mind- set in a trance&#13;
Time is relevant,&#13;
Problems just don't seem so bad,&#13;
When the waves roll in&#13;
And lullabye me with the sweet&#13;
Sweet song of tranquility.&#13;
Reservations confirmed&#13;
we were escorted to a table&#13;
which I could lie comfortably upon&#13;
Iwarned Andre&#13;
for the last time&#13;
"Tell them to baste me&#13;
in olive oil&#13;
or something."&#13;
Isaid.&#13;
"I eat a lot of&#13;
peanut butter sandwiches&#13;
and don't want to stick&#13;
to the roof of your mouth."&#13;
I watch and understand,&#13;
And my world is beautiful&#13;
....as&#13;
the&#13;
waves&#13;
roll&#13;
in... I&#13;
t&#13;
s&#13;
Debbie&#13;
Andre asked the waiter . POLITICS&#13;
if be could have me&#13;
well done,&#13;
and we were stiffly told&#13;
to leave the premises&#13;
which embarrassed Andre&#13;
The power plays&#13;
in life relationships&#13;
are attempts to&#13;
conceal&#13;
the unpolished, undiplomatic self&#13;
'under a disappointingly transparent veneer&#13;
of the strategies of sophisticated (?) ettiquette,&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
r:&#13;
"Wait till my diner's club&#13;
hears of this!"&#13;
he growled,&#13;
. and apologized&#13;
for not&#13;
eating me&#13;
as promised Judith Trudrung&#13;
Escape from the game is only&#13;
to the Truth.&#13;
1&#13;
It&#13;
Mike Villers 637·2726&#13;
If, II"" " 'UII"&#13;
'1&#13;
••I&#13;
••&#13;
1•&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
"&#13;
e&#13;
"II ',.&#13;
1/1&#13;
=...&#13;
I&#13;
-.&#13;
il&#13;
~&#13;
Hungry myself no'!!'&#13;
we went to a local hamburger&#13;
joint&#13;
Ihad a filet-o-fish&#13;
a coffee and a yen&#13;
for olive oil&#13;
The quiet leader in synth~tic lubrieatiOll&#13;
I~ -&#13;
~ "'l' 'j&#13;
"'-. G~l~ &lt;f\\\""" t&#13;
Andre finished off ~"&#13;
~; .,~, .,&#13;
Ronald McDonald&#13;
three pounds of raw ground beef&#13;
and a full bladder to go.&#13;
William Barke&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER OCtober 13, 19765&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
. THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop Ill!&#13;
shed a new life on shopping!&#13;
REMEMBER THE PSGA ..&#13;
TC:&gt;YDR1VE&#13;
TO BENEFIT THE PARKSIOE CHILO CARE CENTER&#13;
C'ct.18-22&#13;
DROP BOXES WILL BE LOCATED ON CAMPUS AT:&#13;
_ MAIN PLA~E&#13;
_ 0 - 1 LEVEL OF CLASSROOM BUILDING&#13;
_ STUDENT UNION&#13;
TOYS MAY BE DROPPED OFF AT THE CHILD CARE CE..NTER BETWEEN 7:30 a.m. s 5:00 p.m.&#13;
HELP US&#13;
MAKE A LelT&#13;
elf&#13;
KIDS&#13;
HAPPY!&#13;
~ EASY LIVING&#13;
If you got the&#13;
GUTS,&#13;
Lee has the&#13;
PANTS I&#13;
I •&#13;
r&#13;
,.,,,\&#13;
-\ ... ,'..,'&#13;
' ....... x&#13;
.\ ,,' .&#13;
For men who ride&#13;
bulls 'n broncs, or just&#13;
like to watci') the action,&#13;
lOO6l; 'Of ttll$ bfonded lee kJbeI&#13;
$14&#13;
Go West with us.&#13;
USE WARDS&#13;
CHARG·ALL •&#13;
CREDIT&#13;
360052nd Street KENOSHA&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
OPEN DAILY: Moatbru Sat. 10:. A.M. 101:. P.M.&#13;
s.•. 1%10 S P.M.&#13;
s&#13;
d&#13;
d&#13;
s&#13;
I.&#13;
I\&#13;
s&#13;
s&#13;
1&#13;
.1&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
·1&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
n&#13;
,..&#13;
:;&#13;
f10&#13;
~&#13;
:&#13;
"' I&#13;
·I&#13;
I&#13;
I - I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
-'----&#13;
.:z.=~~--.&#13;
--- ;, -&#13;
C&#13;
ANDRE THE CANNIBAL INVITES ME FOR LUNCH&#13;
It was an expensive restaurant waves&#13;
roll the soft hued lights&#13;
hung from the ceiling&#13;
like glowing oranges&#13;
My friend and I&#13;
were nearly ejected&#13;
from the place because of Andre's&#13;
attire He was naked&#13;
but for the strung bones about&#13;
in ...&#13;
Those birds flying solitary over the shore&#13;
Unafraid or unknowing of the power of m'an&#13;
... still '&#13;
the&#13;
waves&#13;
roll&#13;
in ... his waist and a carved ivory pin through his nose My i;nind- set in a trance&#13;
Time is relevant,&#13;
Reservations confirmed&#13;
we were escorted to a table&#13;
which I could lie comfortably upon&#13;
I warned Andre&#13;
for the last time&#13;
"Tell them to baste me&#13;
in olive oil&#13;
or something."&#13;
I said.&#13;
"I eat a lot of&#13;
peanut butter sandwiches&#13;
and don't want to stick&#13;
to· the roof of your mouth."&#13;
Andre asked the waiter&#13;
if he could have me&#13;
well done,&#13;
and we were stiffly told&#13;
to leave the premises&#13;
which embarrassed Andre&#13;
"Wait till my diner's club&#13;
hears of this! "&#13;
he growled,&#13;
· and apologized&#13;
for not&#13;
eating me&#13;
as promised&#13;
Hungry myself no':Y&#13;
we went to a local hamburger&#13;
joint&#13;
I had a filet-o-fish&#13;
a coffee and a yen&#13;
for olive oil&#13;
Andre finished off&#13;
Ronald McDonald&#13;
three pounds of raw ground beef&#13;
and a full bladder to go.&#13;
William Barke&#13;
Problems just don't seem so bad,&#13;
When the waves roll in&#13;
And lullabye me with the sweet&#13;
Sweet song of tranquility.&#13;
I watch and understand,&#13;
And my world is beautiful&#13;
.... as&#13;
the&#13;
waves&#13;
roll&#13;
in ...&#13;
Debbie&#13;
. POLITICS&#13;
The power plays&#13;
in life relationships&#13;
are attempts to&#13;
conceal&#13;
the unpolished, undiplomatic self&#13;
under a disappointingly transparent veneer&#13;
of the strategies of sophisticated ( ?) ettiquette.&#13;
Escape from the game is only&#13;
to the Truth.&#13;
Judith Trudrung&#13;
Mike Villers 637 -2726 ,,,, 111111 lo ,,,.,,,,&#13;
REMEMBER THE PSGA&#13;
TC&gt;Y DR-IVE&#13;
TO BENEFIT THE PARKSIDE CHILD CARE CENTER&#13;
Oct. 18-22&#13;
DROP BOXES WILL BE LOCATED ON CAMPUS AT:&#13;
- MAIN PLACE&#13;
_ D - 1 LEVEL OF CLASSROOM BUILDING&#13;
- STUDENT UNION&#13;
TOYS MAY BE DROPPED OFF AT THE CHILD CARE CE,NTER BETWEEN 7 ·30 a.m . &amp; 5 :00 p.m .&#13;
HELP US&#13;
MAKE A L()T&#13;
()f&#13;
KIDS&#13;
HAPPY!&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976 s&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
Stop 111 !&#13;
shed e new Life on shopping I&#13;
EASY LIVING&#13;
If you got the&#13;
GUTS,&#13;
Lee has the&#13;
PANTS!&#13;
'I!: ::c.&#13;
LEE RIDERS&#13;
BOOTOJIS&#13;
For men who ride&#13;
bulls 'n broncs, or just&#13;
like to watch the action.&#13;
look !Of this bronded lee label&#13;
$}4&#13;
Go West with us.&#13;
USE WARDS&#13;
CHARG-ALL&#13;
CREDIT&#13;
3600 52nd Street KENOSHA&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
OPEN DAILY: Mon tbru Sat. 10:00 A.M. to 9: P.M. Sun. 1% to S P.M. &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976&#13;
/&#13;
,&#13;
CA Theater to be,haunted&#13;
You caused me grief&#13;
But since you're gone&#13;
I feel a kind Of relief&#13;
of&#13;
sweaty hands&#13;
and that great bug quarry in&#13;
my stomach!&#13;
,You were a rock,&#13;
\ that drained everything inside me&#13;
. from trying to budge you.&#13;
I didn't have.a batapult to ease !.hestrain&#13;
and now that you're not here&#13;
itseems like I ate a hushel of prunes and&#13;
now the going is free, easy, and&#13;
great!&#13;
I'm off and running a new' race!&#13;
Scollie&#13;
by Rohert JUk&#13;
EditOrs Note: On October 22, 23, &amp; 24 the FjlJe Arts Division and&#13;
Dramatic Arts will present "GhOSts", a play by Henrik Ibsen, In tile&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. We the cast would Uke to present to the&#13;
readers of the Ranger a Ullie background on Henrik Ibsen and tile&#13;
things. that inflnenced his writing Ghosts.&#13;
Norway has a size of 125,000 square miJes which is just about the size&#13;
of the State of New Mexico. It has a terrain which is similar to that of&#13;
the western part of the western part of the State of Wisconsin. Norway&#13;
. is a country of rugged mountains, 'which makes the land poor for&#13;
farming. Although Norway must import some of her foods, she has a&#13;
I8rge export in lumber. Fisheries, and whaling are other chief sources&#13;
of wealth.&#13;
The play Ghosts takes place near the Norwegian city of Bergen .&#13;
. Bergen is a seaport on the western coast of Norway. lill population in&#13;
1900 was 72,179. It has a moist climate with an annual rainfall of approximately&#13;
74 inches. The houses in Bergen are made of wood or&#13;
stucco and are painted in warm reds and yellows. Bergen then, as well&#13;
as today ranks first of the Norwegian ship owning centers. Bergen's&#13;
staple export is fish, but other exports include butter, copper JlCe and&#13;
hides. Bergen has been a tourist center in Norway since the mid 1800s.&#13;
Bergen was founded by King Olaf Kyrre in 1070;1075, and rapidly&#13;
grew to be a trade center. Bergen's port and the surrounding fiords&#13;
have been the scene of many civil wars and sea battles. The town itself&#13;
suffered frequently from fire. Once in 1702 and again in 1855. The city&#13;
now has broad open spaces intended as a safeguard against such&#13;
things happening again.&#13;
Ghosts takes place in a period of Norwegian history that was a time&#13;
of religious puritanism and strict codes of social behavior. When&#13;
Ghosts was first written it was heavily criticized for its attitudes&#13;
WM&#13;
one of us&#13;
(of we ~&#13;
the lonely people&#13;
the one's that cry out in memory&#13;
for no other reason&#13;
than it feels better&#13;
toadrnit&amp;&#13;
i don't know why&#13;
but it doesn't)&#13;
EASYGOIN'&#13;
BANANA&#13;
must remain&#13;
naked &amp; lonely&#13;
in the harsh&#13;
light of Gone&#13;
jeffrey [. swencld&#13;
Are you a guest&#13;
from the heights&#13;
of Partbenon?&#13;
Or&#13;
just another&#13;
Blue eyed devil?&#13;
The dragons know,&#13;
the white rabbit&#13;
told me.&#13;
So&#13;
I sit and wonder •&#13;
about the books&#13;
and whom I&#13;
should ask&#13;
about your&#13;
unforgotten presence.&#13;
HWho are you?" said the caterpillar.&#13;
A.S.M.&#13;
Prunes&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
r\Q .~~ :'f~&#13;
, / Mike Ville~s 637-2726 /(' ,I., " ''''''1'&#13;
toward mo~ality, particularly its treatment of tbe subject of venereal&#13;
disease. I /' J&#13;
Ibsen ~elf wrote of the play Ghosts will norbably cause alrm ip .&#13;
some circles. That can't be helped. And if it didn't, there would have&#13;
been no necessity for me to write it." Ibsen's contemporaries saw the&#13;
.playas primarily dealing with inherited physical i11ness, but this is not&#13;
the theme of the play. Ibsen was talking about social and ethical&#13;
disabilities of his time, not physical disability.&#13;
Towards the end of 1881, Ghosts bad been offered to the Royal&#13;
Theatre in Copenhagen for production. The theatre's censor rejected&#13;
the pla~ saying "The action: ..a- repulsive pathological&#13;
phenomenon ...underrnining the morality wliich forms the foundation&#13;
of our social order." .&#13;
Ghosts did opel! in Chicago in 1882 at the Aurora Theatre, on the&#13;
evening of May 20th. Itwas presented in the original language, Danish&#13;
and later toured other midwestern cities, particularly those with&#13;
Scandinavian Populations. " .&#13;
Ghosts was finally presented in Scandinavia in 1883 . It soon&#13;
travelled at all major cities in Europe, and was quite popular. It was&#13;
still contraversial, and was condemned by most critics. The attitude of&#13;
most of these critics can be summed up in the words of a writer for the&#13;
London Daily Telegraph when he called this play "An open&#13;
drain ...gross... almost putrid in decorum," or as another writer&#13;
in England at the time said," As filthy as concoction ashas ever been&#13;
allowed to disgrace the boards of an English stage." .&#13;
Ghosts was widely read in Europe as well as America, but books&#13;
that contained the script of it did not sell. This was due to the fact that&#13;
people did not want it known that they actually read such "filth". Into&#13;
the twentieth century Ghosts has remained popular. Itis done fairly&#13;
often evennow, because it has a universal appeal. '&#13;
Song For Amott&#13;
Arnott, Why not?&#13;
I've seen' your face before&#13;
On a crowded bus somewhere&#13;
When you couldn't walk&#13;
As all the rest expected.&#13;
Iwondered then why that was,&#13;
But you were so friendly&#13;
I overlooked your non-conformity .&#13;
And noticed the way&#13;
You let the music take you.&#13;
So Arnott, why not&#13;
Walk like all the rest?&#13;
Perhaps you were never meant to.&#13;
Instead you let the music take you&#13;
And take others with your beat.&#13;
Wendy MiIler-8eptemher 23rd&#13;
9-3-76&#13;
Poems are abstract offerings.&#13;
They come to you often&#13;
without any stimulation, except&#13;
the memories of days gone byl.&#13;
They could be fronts for trees,&#13;
. or roots for raindrops&#13;
to discover.&#13;
Daniel 11revlno Ramirez&#13;
s01i10qny305 am.&#13;
/&#13;
quickly- \&#13;
youtel1me&#13;
how Yorick&#13;
krtew me well&#13;
although the world thinks me insane&#13;
it thinks me as an easy-to getalong with&#13;
immediately1:\1epoison-acid&#13;
• BURNS through&#13;
leaving my life underneath&#13;
EXPOSED&#13;
to be attacked&#13;
without defense&#13;
quietly" the voice&#13;
of the co~troller&#13;
has not pushed the off button&#13;
you disdain my past&#13;
ancestor now&#13;
but what of the future&#13;
all now is sadsilent&#13;
and another rocky mountain lullaby&#13;
IS never written to&#13;
soothe the troubled&#13;
shoe.&#13;
, , . Bruce'Wagner&#13;
,&#13;
'l:Iaug. tOcal&#13;
....&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976&#13;
~&#13;
CA Theater·to be haunted&#13;
hy Robert Jilk&#13;
Editors Note: On October 22, 23, &amp; 24 the Fine Arts Division and&#13;
Dramatic Arts will present "Ghosts", a play by Henrik Ibsen, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. We the cast would like to present. to the&#13;
reader~ of the Ranger a little background on Henrik Ibsen and the&#13;
things that influenced his writing Ghosts.&#13;
Norway has a size of 125,000 square miles which is just about the size&#13;
of the State of New Mexico. It has a terrain which is similar to that of&#13;
the western part of the western part of the State of Wisconsin. Norway&#13;
is a country of rugged mountains, which makes the land poor for&#13;
farming. Although Norway must import some of her foods, she has a&#13;
large export in lumber. Fisheries, and whaling are other chief sources&#13;
of wealth.&#13;
The play Ghosts takes place near the Norwegian city of Bergen.&#13;
· Bergen is a seaport on the western coast of Norway. I~ population in&#13;
1900 was 72,179. It has a moist climate with an annual rainfall of approximately&#13;
74 inches. The houses in Bergen are made of wood or&#13;
stucco and are Minted in warm reds and yellows. Bergen then, as well&#13;
as today ranks first of the Norwegian ship pwning centers. Bergen's&#13;
staple export is fish, but other exports include butter, copper _gre and&#13;
hides. Bergen has been a tourist center in Norway since the mid 1800s.&#13;
Bergen was founded by King Olaf Kyrre in 1070,,1075, and rapidly&#13;
grew to be a trade center. Bergen's port and the surrounding fiords&#13;
have been the scene of many civil wars and sea battles. The town itself&#13;
suffered frequently from fire. Once in 1702 and again in 1855. The city&#13;
now has broad open spaces intended as a safeguard against such&#13;
things happening again.&#13;
Ghosts takes place in a period of Norwegian history that was a time&#13;
of religious puritanism and strict codes of social behavior. When&#13;
Ghosts was first written it was heavily criticized for its atµtudes&#13;
EASY GOIN'&#13;
BANANA&#13;
WM&#13;
one of us&#13;
(of we .&#13;
the lonely people&#13;
the one's that cry out in memory&#13;
for no other reason&#13;
must remain&#13;
. than it feels better&#13;
to admit&amp;&#13;
i don't know why&#13;
but it doesn't)&#13;
naked &amp; lonely&#13;
in the harsh&#13;
light of Gone&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
Are you a guest&#13;
from the heights&#13;
of Parthenon?&#13;
Or&#13;
just another&#13;
Blue eyed devil?&#13;
The dragons know,&#13;
the white rabbit&#13;
told me.&#13;
So&#13;
I -sit and wonder /&#13;
about the books&#13;
and whom I&#13;
should ask&#13;
about your&#13;
unforgotten presence.&#13;
"Who are you?" said the caterpillar.&#13;
A.S.M.&#13;
Prunes&#13;
You caused me grief&#13;
But since you're gone&#13;
I feel a kind of relief&#13;
of&#13;
sweaty hands&#13;
- (&#13;
tow{lrd morality, particularly its treatment of the subject of venereal&#13;
disease. ,,.&#13;
Ibsen himself wrote of the play Ghosts will ncrbably cause a1rm iJt&#13;
some circles. That can't be helped. And if it didn't, there would have&#13;
been no necessity for pie to write it." Ibsen's contemporaries saw the&#13;
. play as primarily dealing with inherited physical illness, but this is not&#13;
the theme of the play. Ibsen was talking about social and ethical&#13;
disabilities of his time, not physical disability.&#13;
Towards the end of 1881, Ghosts bad been offered to the Royal&#13;
Theatre in Copenhagen for production. The theatre's censor rejected&#13;
the play saying "The action ... a, repulsiv.e pathological&#13;
phenomerion ... undermining the morality which fonns the foundation&#13;
of our social order."&#13;
Ghosts did open in Chicago in 1882 at the Aurora Theatre, on the&#13;
evening of May 20th. It was presented in the original language, Danish&#13;
and later toured other midwestern cities, particularly those with&#13;
Scandinavian populations. . . · · .&#13;
Ghosts was finally presented in Scandinavia in 1883 . It soon&#13;
travelled at all major cities in Europe, and was quite popular. It was&#13;
still contraversial, and was condemned by most critics. The attitude of&#13;
most of these critics can be summed up in the words of a writer for the&#13;
London Daily Telegraph when he called this play "An open&#13;
drain ... gross ... almost putrid in decorum," or as another writer&#13;
in England at.the time said," As filthy as concoction as 'has ever been&#13;
allowed to disgrace the boards of an English stage." •&#13;
Ghosts was widely read in Europe as well as America, but books&#13;
that contained the script of it did not sell. This was due to the fact that&#13;
people did not want it known that they actually read such "filth". Into&#13;
the twentieth century Ghosts has remained popular. It is done fairly&#13;
often ev~n,.now, because it has a universal appeal.&#13;
;&#13;
Song For Arnott&#13;
Arnott, Why not?&#13;
I've seen your face before&#13;
On a crowded bus somewhere&#13;
When you couldn't walk&#13;
As all the rest expected.&#13;
I wondered then why that was,&#13;
But you were so friendly&#13;
. I overlooked your non-conformity .&#13;
And noticed the way&#13;
You let the music take you.&#13;
So Arnott, why not&#13;
Walk like all the rest?&#13;
Perhaps you were never meant to.&#13;
Instead you let the music take you&#13;
And take others with your beat.&#13;
Wendy Miller-8eptember 23rd&#13;
9-8-76&#13;
Poems are abstract offerings.&#13;
They come to you often&#13;
without any stimulation, except&#13;
the memories of days gone by.&#13;
They could be fronts for trees,&#13;
or roots for raindrops&#13;
to discover.&#13;
quickly- ,&#13;
youtellme&#13;
how Yorick&#13;
knew me well&#13;
Daniel Trevino Ramirez&#13;
soliloquy 305 am.&#13;
although the world thinks me insane&#13;
it thinks me as an easy-to getalong with&#13;
immediatelythe&#13;
poison-acid&#13;
' BURNS through&#13;
and that great bug quarry in&#13;
my stomach!&#13;
leaving my life underneath&#13;
EXPOSED&#13;
to be attacked&#13;
without defense&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
.~t~&#13;
~Q ,,, - ~ '&#13;
~ Mike Villers 637 -2726&#13;
1(1 11., lo ,.,,,,&#13;
You were a rock,&#13;
, qiat drained everything inside me&#13;
from trying to budge you.&#13;
I didn't have a ~atapult to ease the strain&#13;
and now that you're not here&#13;
it s.eems like I ate a bushel of prunes and&#13;
now the going is free, easy, and&#13;
great!&#13;
I'm off and running a new' race!&#13;
Scottie&#13;
,&#13;
quietly,, the voice&#13;
of the controller&#13;
has not pushed the off button&#13;
you disdain my past&#13;
ancestor now&#13;
but what of the future&#13;
all now is sadsilent&#13;
~d another rocky mountain lullaby&#13;
1s never written to&#13;
soothe the troubled&#13;
shoe.&#13;
27 aug. to cal&#13;
Bruce Wagner&#13;
.._ &#13;
~ Petitions for fall elections available at PSGA, Inc. office, WLLC&#13;
IEVENT ~ Wednesday, Oct. 13&#13;
S&#13;
i!Dl93 Chuck Mitchell, artist in residence, holds songwriting workshop&#13;
Ie: from 10a.m. to 12p.m. and a concert at 7 p.m. in Union Square. . i! PSGA, Inc. Executive Council meets with Chancellor Guskin at 1:30 ;tp.m. I&#13;
[! PSGA, Inc. Committee of the Whole and Organizational Council&#13;
~ meets at 2 p.m. in Union 1M. Hearing on the Basic Skills Draft&#13;
~jmembers of the Basic Skills Sul&gt;-Committee will be present to answer, iii questions. Open to all interested students.&#13;
[; Movie, Orson Welles' "Touch of Evil" plays at 2:30 to 7:30 p.m. in'&#13;
~ the Cinema Tbeatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
I.&#13;
'" Physics Club meets at 3:30p.m. in GR 230. All interested faculty and I&#13;
. students welcome.&#13;
TranScendental Meditation lecture at 7:30p.m. in CL 144.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 14 ,&#13;
'I Deadline for applying for Blue Cross-Surgical Care Blue Shield&#13;
Student Health lasurance.' '&#13;
PSGA, Inc. Executive Council meets with Assistant Chancellor O.&#13;
, Clayton Johnson at 10 a.m. '&#13;
;iii Movie, Orson Welles' "Touch of Evil" plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
~jthe Cinema Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
@ Public Relations and, Student Information Committee meets at 3 •&#13;
m p.m. in WLLC Dl93. Plans for the Nov. 6 Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
W Student Government and Leadership Conference will be discussed.&#13;
IT Open to all interested students.&#13;
1'; Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
V Legal Assistance CCHlPmembers meeting at 7 p.m. in CL 325. Tnesday, Oct. 19&#13;
;;8 PSGA, Inc. Senate meets at 4:30 p.m. in Union 104 Open to all in- Christian Leadership training classes each week from 12-1p.m, in&#13;
Ow terested students. Library, 3rd floor. '&#13;
);1 . Friday Oct. 15 ' Wargamers Club meets from 6-10p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
ill Senate Student Services Committee meets at 9:30 a.m. in WLLC Women's volleyball, UW-P, Carthage, North Park at 7:30 p.m. at f; DI174. The Committee is reviewing possible methods of Student Carthage.&#13;
1':Government conducted Faculty and Course Evaluations for students --coming Nov. 11- Harry Chapin in concert, 8 p.m. in the Phy. Ed. ,Ito have access to before selecting courses. Open to all interested :,4";:':~§i;%:.it1&amp;:}"'ttWtw"}@@J&amp;tt.:;iliXiWflliWill%~Hmt.@.LtL ..... ;M"~&#13;
i!1 students. ,w&#13;
M Seante Business and Finance Committee meets at 10:15 a.m. in m El . illWLLC Dl93. Open to all interested students., .. It ections&#13;
b Drawing for fall election ballot positions at 12 p.m. 10 Union Con- IT Student government anmi'&#13;
I I· m course eve I. 't nounced that fall elections will be&#13;
F·:::::t&amp;M'&lt;i'i.:':::::Me::;;tg~{t:rr~wt~:w@tte:.;r=rtt1@:tJrtmtt:ttttiKdMYBWWttW4:tttlmt.&amp;~,:r:n?rn;g?I held Oct. 20 and 21, from 9 a.m.&#13;
till 8 p.m. Students wishing to&#13;
obtain petitions for nomination&#13;
for a Senate Divisional or&#13;
Allocations Committee seat&#13;
should visit the P,.S.G.A. office&#13;
WLLC D193 or contact Mary&#13;
Arnold 553-2244between 11 a.m.&#13;
and 1 p.m.&#13;
Uomplaint Dept.&#13;
hy Linda Knudston and Karin LaFornler&#13;
Complaint Dept:&#13;
I would like to know why Security will not unlock any outside doors on I&#13;
weekends except for those nearest the upper parking lots. I have&#13;
walked up the hill to study in the library and would appreciate an open&#13;
door facing the east in the LLC or Greenquist buildings. T.P.&#13;
Dear T.P.:&#13;
We brought this question to Ronald Brinkman, Director of Security.&#13;
Mr. Brinkman told us that these doors w~re supposed to be open&#13;
during business hours (which are posted at all entrances). He also&#13;
added that not only would the Greenquist Hall door be open but he&#13;
would also have a door' facing south opened so people could enter when&#13;
they come from the Physical Education Building. Mr. Brinkman&#13;
further requested that he be informed if lbese doors were not opened&#13;
during the scheduled hours.&#13;
FOLLOWUP! ,&#13;
1) In regards to D.S.'s complaint about trying to find student interest&#13;
surveys - the information is now in the Student Life Offices in the&#13;
Union. Interested parties should contact the Sjudent Life Offices.&#13;
2) Food Service followup: Mr. Richard Manthy of the saga Food&#13;
Service informed us that some of the equipment ordered was late in&#13;
coming but he expected the new salad bar to be set up by Monday,&#13;
October 11.&#13;
If you have any problems please submit them to tit! Ranger office&#13;
(WLLC Dl94), or drop the~ in Complaint Dept. boxes .&#13;
•&#13;
One of the Mid.est'.&#13;
Moll Complete&#13;
SPORTING GOODS&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
"."" " FIlEE "ttI.,&#13;
TYI1f1~f}1j&#13;
~[FlmJ~i(§ ~~~~~~&#13;
-&#13;
14TH. AVENUE AT 62ND. STREET&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
,-&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER OCtober 13. 19767 , .&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Movie, "Nashville," plays at 7 and 9:45 p.m. in the Union Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1. •&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 16&#13;
Women's volleyball, UW-P invitational at 10 a.m. in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Bldg.&#13;
Women's tennis, UW-p'vs Carroll College at 11 a.m. at the tennis&#13;
courts.&#13;
Women's swinuning, UW-P, Carthage College and 'Lawrence&#13;
College at 1 p.rn. in Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Soccer, UW-P vs Marquette University at 2 p.m. at the soccer field.&#13;
Moonlight Bowling by reservation from 8-11p.m. in the Union.&#13;
Recreation&#13;
semester Break&#13;
January&amp;-13, 1m&#13;
$3!1 CII1PLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
Soccer, UW-P vs Marquette University at 2 p.m. at the soccer field.&#13;
Moonlight Bowting by reservation from 8-11 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Recreation Center. Sign up in Union or phone ~2695.&#13;
Disco featuring WRKR DJ Mark Windsor at 9 p.rn. in Union Square;&#13;
admission is .75for UW-P students, $1for others.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 17&#13;
Movie, "Nashville" plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Theater; admission&#13;
is $1.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1-0p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Monday, Oct. 18&#13;
PSGA toy drive to benefit the Parkside Child Care Center; runs&#13;
from Oct. 18-22.&#13;
LIMITED SPACE -&#13;
MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW!&#13;
• For appboetlOn forms or&#13;
additIOnal nformettOn contact:&#13;
Perkslde UnIOn Office&#13;
lj,53-2200&#13;
The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers 637-2726&#13;
If, H"" ItJ ,I.."&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Bude is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why'&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.:&#13;
-&#13;
E.F. Madrigrano&#13;
•&#13;
M Wednesday, Oct.13&#13;
;I/ Petitions for fall elections available at PSGA, Inc. office, WLLC&#13;
ilil D193 Chuck Mitchell, artist in residence, holds songwriting workshop&#13;
fi from lOa .m. to 12p.m. and a concert at 7p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
If PSGA, Inc. Executive Council meets with Chancellor Guskin at 1 :30&#13;
Mp.m.&#13;
ft PSGA, Inc. Committee of the Whole and Organizational Council&#13;
~ii meets at 2 p.m. in Union 104. Hearing on the Basic Skills Draft&#13;
it! members of the Basic Skills Sub-Committee will be present to answer&#13;
t&amp; questions. Open to all interested students.&#13;
11 Movie, Orson Welles' "Touch of Evil" plays at 2:30 to 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
t} the . Cinema Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
@1- Physics Club meets at 3:30 p.m. in GR 230. All interested faculty and 1&#13;
ti students welcome. ti Transcendental Meditation lecture at 7 :30 p.m. in CL 144. ~ @ Thursday, Oct. 14&#13;
ill Deadline for applying for Blue Cross-Surgical Care Blue Shield &amp;'··· @l Student Health Insurance.&#13;
[1 PSGA, Inc. Executive Council meets with Assistant Chancellor 0.&#13;
mi Clayton Johnson at 10 a.m. , I Movie, Orson Welles' "Touch of Evil" plays at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
b the Cinema Theatre. Admission is $1. :~);.'1,&#13;
m Public Relations and Student Information Committee meets at 3&#13;
&amp;ffi/ p.m. in WLLC D193. Plans for the Nov. 6 Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
rn Student Government and Leadership Conference will be discussed.&#13;
@Open to all interested students.&#13;
' Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
ii Legal Assistance Co-op members meeting at 7 p.m. in CL 325.&#13;
&amp; PSGA, Inc. Senate meets at 4:30 p.m. in Union 104 Open to all in-&#13;
@ terested students.&#13;
. Friday Oct. 15&#13;
§ Senate Student Services Committee meets at 9:30 a.m. in WLLC&#13;
ill D1174. The Committee is reviewing possible methods of Student&#13;
i:I Government conducted Faculty and Course Evaluations for students&#13;
1~ to have access to before selecting courses. Open to all interested&#13;
%students.&#13;
% Seante Business and Finance Committee meets at 10:15 a.m. in&#13;
~j WLLC D193. Open to all interested students. •&#13;
W Drawing for fall election ballot positions at 12 p.m. in Union Con- II course level 1.&#13;
Complaint Dept.&#13;
by Linda Knudston and Karin LaFornier&#13;
Complaint Dept:&#13;
I would like to know why Security will not unlock any outside doors on&#13;
weekends except for those nearest the upper parking lots. I have&#13;
walked up the hill to study in the library and would appreciate an open&#13;
door facing the east in the LLC or Greenquist buildings. T.P.&#13;
Dear T.P. :&#13;
We J;irought this question to Ronald Brinkman, Director of Security.&#13;
Mr. Brinkman told us that these doors were supposed to be open&#13;
during business hours (which are posted at all entrances). He also&#13;
added that not only would the Greenquist Hall door be open but he&#13;
would also have a door facing south opened so people could enter when&#13;
they come from the Physical Education Building. Mr. Brinkman&#13;
further requested that ~e be informed if these doors were not opened&#13;
during the scheduled hours.&#13;
FOLLOWUP!&#13;
1) In regards to D.S.'s complaint about trying to find student interest&#13;
surveys - the information is now in the Student Life Offices in the&#13;
Union. Interested parties should contact the S,tudent Life Offices.&#13;
2) Food Service followup: Mr. Richard Manthy of the Saga F~&#13;
Service informed us that some of the equipment ordered was late m&#13;
coming but he expected the new salad bar to be set up by Monday,&#13;
October 11.&#13;
If you have any problems please submit them to tit! Ranger office&#13;
(WLLC D194), or drop them in Complaint Dept. boxes .&#13;
One of the Midwest's&#13;
Most Complete&#13;
SPORTING GOODS&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
Pll111f ol FREE P1tkln1&#13;
TY~ ffiJ N °11&#13;
~rFJmlFll'§ ~~~~~~&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Movie, "Nashville," plays at 7 and 9:45 p.m. in the Union Theatre. Admission is $1. ~&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 16&#13;
Women's volleyball, UW-P invitational at 10 a.m. in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Bldg.&#13;
Women's tennis, UW-P vs Carroll College at 11 a .m. at the tennis&#13;
courts.&#13;
Women's swimming, UW-P, Carthage College and Lawrence&#13;
College at 1 p.m. in Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Soccer, UW-P vs Marquette University at 2 p.m. at the soccer field.&#13;
Moonlight Bowling by reservation from 8-11 p.m. in the Union.&#13;
Recreation&#13;
Soccer, UW-P vs Marquette University at 2 p.m. at the soccer field.&#13;
Moonlight Bowling by reservation from 8-11 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Recreation Center. Sign up in Union or phone 553-2695.&#13;
Disco featuring WRKR DJ Mark Windsor at 9 p.m. in Union Square;&#13;
admission is .75 for UW-P students, $1 for others.&#13;
Sunday, Oct.17&#13;
Movie, "Nashville" plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Theater; admission&#13;
is $1.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1-6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Monday, Oct.18&#13;
PSGA toy drive to benefit the Parkside Child Care Center; runs&#13;
from Oct. 18-22.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 19&#13;
Christian Leadership training classes each week from 12-1 p.m. in&#13;
Library, 3rd floor.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6-10 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Women's volleyball, UW-P, Carthage, North Park at 7:30 p.m. at&#13;
Carthage.&#13;
Nov. 11- Harry Chapin in concert, 8 p.m. in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
,., ..... ,,, ..&#13;
RANGER October 13, 1976 7&#13;
:tr lnYws,tyol.WIIC---&#13;
€1&#13;
Fiesta&#13;
Acapulco&#13;
Semester Break&#13;
January 6-13, 1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE -&#13;
MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW!&#13;
• For eppllcat10n forms or&#13;
edd1t10nel n formet10n contact :&#13;
Parkside Un10n OfflCe&#13;
53-2200&#13;
Elections The quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Student government announced&#13;
that fall elections will be&#13;
held Oct. 20 and 21, from 9 a.m.&#13;
till 8 p.m. Students wishing to&#13;
obtain petitions for nomination&#13;
for a Senate Divisional or&#13;
Allocations Committee seat&#13;
should visit the P.S.G.A. office&#13;
WLLC D193 or contact Mary&#13;
Arnold 553-2244 between 11 a.m.&#13;
and 1 p.m.&#13;
Mike Villers 637 -2726&#13;
11'1 61111 lo ,,,,.,,&#13;
Why do soine people think&#13;
Bud® is sort of special?&#13;
--&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
E.F. Madrigrano &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANG,ER October 13. 1976&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Soccer squad hosts Marquette&#13;
finishers.&#13;
There is an entry fee of $2 for&#13;
pre_registration'until November&#13;
16. Checks may be made payable&#13;
to Lincoln Federal Road Run and&#13;
mailed to Lincoln Federal&#13;
savings, 1400 N. Gannon Drive,&#13;
Hoffman Estates, illinois 60196,&#13;
Attn.; Bruce Lind .•&#13;
More information is .available&#13;
from Lind at Lincoln Federal,&#13;
312-885-0700 or Jim Swift at&#13;
Hoffman Estates High Scbool,&#13;
312-il82-il000.The high school, at&#13;
llOOW. Higgins Road, is reached&#13;
Road south from the Northwest&#13;
Tollway to Route 72 and go east&#13;
one mile.&#13;
Lincoln Federal Savings and&#13;
Loan Associatiorr of Hoffman&#13;
Estates, lllinois is sponsoring&#13;
their first Annual Road Run&#13;
November 21 at Hoffman' Estates&#13;
High Schooi at 1 p.m.&#13;
Races include 5,000 and 1000&#13;
meters and a Joggers Mile.&#13;
Categories for both races are&#13;
Fresh-Soph High School, Varsity&#13;
High School, Post High School to&#13;
age 26, ages 27-35,ages 36-46, and&#13;
ages 47 and over.&#13;
, A trophy will be awarded to lbe&#13;
first place overall in lbe 10,000&#13;
meter run, plaques to the first&#13;
place in all divisions, medals to&#13;
second and third place in all&#13;
divisions and free T-shirts to all -&#13;
"It was more 'shocking than&#13;
disappointing," said Henderson&#13;
about the loss. "They scored four&#13;
goals in seven minutes; two were&#13;
deflection· off of our defensive&#13;
players. The rest of lbe game was&#13;
pretty much even up for. bolb&#13;
teams."&#13;
Parkside's two goals were&#13;
scored by' Campbell and Bob&#13;
Stoewe on an assist from Kriz&#13;
Seravin.&#13;
"Campbell is ·our leading&#13;
scorer, picking up lbree goals&#13;
and an assist lbis weekend. We&#13;
haven't had anyone like 'him in&#13;
several ,years, and he's just a&#13;
freshman." •&#13;
Campbell, along wilb Ismiali&#13;
and Sendelbach scored three&#13;
goals to beat Minnesota's one&#13;
Goal October 3. Boyajian was lbe&#13;
only scorer for Parkside when lbe&#13;
Rangers lost to Eastern Illinois,&#13;
9-1, October 2.&#13;
game by putting two good halves&#13;
together."&#13;
~'riday, Parkside beat UWPlatteville&#13;
44 to qualify for the&#13;
finals .Saturday. Goals were&#13;
scored by Deech Ismaili, Steve&#13;
Sendelbach, Mike Boyajian and&#13;
Earl Campbell, with assists by&#13;
Mike Olesen and Campbell.&#13;
"That game meant revenge for&#13;
us because Platteville beat us&#13;
last year in lbe District Championship.&#13;
It's lbe first time&#13;
Parkside has ever beaten Platteville&#13;
at Platteville."&#13;
"1 was not overly pleased,&#13;
lbough, with our performance ..&#13;
We were a stronger team, but we&#13;
played their kind of game, not&#13;
ours."&#13;
Earlier, UW-Green Bay&#13;
defeated UW-Milwaukee and lbe&#13;
Rangers played Green 'Bay for&#13;
the championship Saturday.&#13;
They beat Parkside, 6-2, scoring&#13;
five goals in the first half.&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Things are looking better for&#13;
lbe soccer squad, wilb a 4-5-1&#13;
record, as Coach. Hal Henderson&#13;
expects to win five of lbe team's&#13;
last seven meets.&#13;
Parkside hosts Marquette&#13;
saturday afternoon at 2; which&#13;
Henderson expects to be "a&#13;
pretty good game."&#13;
"1 feel strongly lbat we can&#13;
beat Marquette and we are very&#13;
much in range to finish above .500&#13;
for lbe first time in Parkside's'&#13;
history."&#13;
Henderson's goal was to win 10&#13;
games during lbe season and lbe&#13;
team can get wilbin one should&#13;
lbey win .five of lbe remaining&#13;
meets. "Our only' foul up was&#13;
tying Madison in lbe beginning of&#13;
the season, but otherwise, we're&#13;
on schedule." .&#13;
This past weekend, the&#13;
Rangers wound up second in lbe&#13;
Wisconsin's Chancellor's Cup&#13;
Tournament at UW-Platteville.&#13;
"1 was very encouraged with&#13;
, the results of the tournament,"&#13;
said Henderson. "We're playing&#13;
as good as any team around. Our&#13;
problem is lbat we seem to bave&#13;
only one good half a meet. We&#13;
can't seem to play well the whole&#13;
~\ ~&#13;
rJV(Joieph IG~4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
\~ " Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
~m_~ -&#13;
~ Mention this ad!&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parksfde 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
Leitch sets records&#13;
hack.&#13;
Also gaining first places was&#13;
Gail Olson, whose one meter&#13;
dives were on top of bolb competing&#13;
teams. She also swam the&#13;
50free, finishing second with bolb .&#13;
lbe 100 free wilb second place&#13;
points added to lbe score wilb&#13;
Lawrence and lbird place points&#13;
tallied to lbe team score against&#13;
Carroll.&#13;
sally Francis improved her&#13;
time in the 500 free over lbe time&#13;
in the previous meet by 37&#13;
seconds and placed second In lbe&#13;
event. Francis also scored a third&#13;
against both in the 50 free.&#13;
In the 5q breast, Lili Crnich was&#13;
second against Lawrence and&#13;
lbird against Carroll and was&#13;
also third in lbe 100' free wilb&#13;
Lawrence.&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson's women's&#13;
swim team hosts lbe Carthage&#13;
Redmen saturday in a 1 p.m.&#13;
meet, still looking for lbeir first&#13;
win of the season.&#13;
In their last outing, the&#13;
swimmers were defeated by&#13;
Carroll College, 9~20, and by&#13;
Lawrence University. 63-34,&#13;
Friday. Carroll also defeated&#13;
Lawrence, 88-24.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch continued to&#13;
break school records, this week&#13;
in lbe 200 free and 500free. Her&#13;
times of 2:36.21 and 7:13.58,&#13;
respectively, gained her firsts in&#13;
bolb events against Lawrence&#13;
and' seconds in both events&#13;
against Carroll. Leitch also took&#13;
a first against Lawrence and a&#13;
second against Carroll in lbe 50&#13;
')_~~~~i,··~·/&#13;
ii' Pure Brewed&#13;
~ J From God's Country.&#13;
Fredericksen&#13;
leads&#13;
Parkside&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
On tap at Union Square Parkside runners had a full&#13;
weekend, competing in two meets&#13;
in two days. Friday, Parkside&#13;
placed 28th in lbe 40 team Notre&#13;
Dame Invitational at Soulb Bend,&#13;
Indiana and Saturday placed&#13;
fourlb among 12 teams at lbe&#13;
Lakefront Invitational in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Ray Fredericksen came in first&#13;
for Parkside wilb a lime of 24:49.&#13;
He was 76lb of 280 in lbe meet.&#13;
Running behind were Gary&#13;
Priem, l07th; Mike Rivers,&#13;
164lb; Lee Allinger, 1961b; Jeff&#13;
Miller, 203rd; Greg Julich, 219;&#13;
and Jim Heiring, 228lb.&#13;
According to Coach Vic Godfrey,&#13;
"The meet is as tough as lbe&#13;
nationals, with six of the nation's&#13;
top 20 teams competing."&#13;
Godfrey lbought it was a sub&#13;
par performance, allbough eadh&#13;
runner had his best lime of lbe&#13;
year.&#13;
"Parkside runs best on - a&#13;
course with a rougher terrain,&#13;
unlike lbe fast flat golf course we&#13;
ran on at Soulb Bend. Due to lbe&#13;
abundance of runners, team&#13;
unity was harder to come by."&#13;
Saturday, Fredericksen also&#13;
topped Parkside finishers at the&#13;
12 team Lakefront Invitational.&#13;
He was fourth overall.&#13;
The Rangers were fourth wilb&#13;
Priem 13lb,.Rivers 24lb; Miller,&#13;
28th, Julich, 37lb, Allinger, 46lb&#13;
and Heiring, 61st.&#13;
"The Lakefront is a nat course,&#13;
as is the one at Northern Illinois'&#13;
Huskie Invitational which we&#13;
play lbis saturday. The next&#13;
meet at Carthage will be on rough&#13;
·terrain that is familiar to&#13;
Parkside runners." said Godfrey.&#13;
"Five tight runners have&#13;
evolved in previous meets and&#13;
wilb Julich's improvements, we&#13;
now have six."&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sandwi~h&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M. uw-p hosts Carthage 2615 WashingtonAtIe. 634-2513&#13;
I&#13;
Eau Claire gave other Ranger&#13;
opponents difficulty in the second&#13;
round of lbe NO.1 singles and No.&#13;
2 doubles matches. Marge&#13;
Balszes was defeated 6-2, 7-5 and&#13;
Pat Munger-Kalby Feichtner lost&#13;
6-1, 6'2. In NO.2 singles, Janine&#13;
Hunter also lost in lbe second&#13;
round to a Carlbage opponent 6-2,&#13;
6-3.&#13;
Better results occurred in an&#13;
October 2meet as UW-Green Bay&#13;
fell to the Rangers, 4.().&#13;
The Rangers have a 2-6 record&#13;
in dual meets, but have lost Jean&#13;
Covelli, a member of lbe No. 1&#13;
doubles team wilb Carins.&#13;
...---Union--- ..&#13;
Recreation Center&#13;
Enter these Tourncments&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
In preparation for the WWIAC&#13;
Championships in LaCrosse&#13;
October 22-23,lbe women's tennis&#13;
squad will host Carthage College&#13;
Saturday for a meet beginning at&#13;
11 a.m.&#13;
The No. 1 doubles team of&#13;
Jennifer Zuehlke-Mary Ann&#13;
Carins made it to the semifinals,&#13;
leading Parkside at lbe UWWhitewater&#13;
Tournament last&#13;
saturday, where lbe Rangers&#13;
placed sevenlb.-&#13;
Zuehlke-Carins lost to a UWEau&#13;
Claire team 6-4 after beating .&#13;
two other teams.&#13;
•&#13;
Pinball Wizard&#13;
man. thru Fri.. Oct. 18-22&#13;
Entry Fee - $1.00&#13;
Chess Tourny&#13;
FrLthru Sun.. Oct. 22-24&#13;
Free PIZZI Delivery Entry Fee - $2.50&#13;
Club Highvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Alt••• 0."11' Chl.k .. ,· Sp•• h.... , .... ill, 8H'&#13;
OPEN 4 p.•. II t •.•.&#13;
Sorry. The Rec-Center .will be closed&#13;
on Sundays until Further Notice&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 13, 1976&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Soccer squ~d hQsts Marquette&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Things are looking better for&#13;
the soccer squad, with a 4-5-1&#13;
record, as Coach Hal Henderson&#13;
expects to win five of the team's&#13;
last seven meets.&#13;
Parkside hosts Marquette&#13;
Saturday afternoon at 2, which&#13;
Henderson expects to be "a&#13;
pretty good game."&#13;
"I feel strongly that we can&#13;
beat Marquette and we are very&#13;
much in range to finish above .500&#13;
for the first time in Parkside's&#13;
history."&#13;
Henderson's goal was to win 10&#13;
games during the season and the&#13;
team can get within one should&#13;
they win five of the remaining&#13;
meets. "Our only foul up was&#13;
tying Madison in the beginning of&#13;
the season, but otherwise, we're&#13;
on schedule." ·&#13;
This past weekend, the&#13;
Rangers woWld up second in the&#13;
Wisconsin's Chancellor's Cup&#13;
Tournament at UW-Platteville.&#13;
"I was very encouraged with&#13;
the results of the tournament,"&#13;
said Henderson. "We're playing&#13;
as good as any team around. Our&#13;
problem is that we seem to have&#13;
only one good half a meet. We&#13;
can't seem to play well the whole&#13;
Fredericksen&#13;
leads&#13;
Parkside&#13;
by Thomas Nolen&#13;
Parkside runners had a full&#13;
weekend, competing in two meets&#13;
in two days. Friday, Parkside&#13;
placed 28th in the 40 team Notre&#13;
Dame Invitational at South Bend,&#13;
Indiana and Saturday placed&#13;
fourth among 12 teams at the&#13;
Lakefront Invitational in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Ray Fredericksen came in first&#13;
for Parkside with a time of 24:49.&#13;
He was 76th of 280 in the meet.&#13;
Running behind were Gary&#13;
Priem, 107th; Mike Rivers,&#13;
164th; Lee Allinger, 196th; Jeff&#13;
Miller, 203rd; Greg Julich, 219;&#13;
and Jim Heiring, 228th. ·&#13;
According to Coach Vic Godfrey,&#13;
"The meet is as tough as the&#13;
nationals, with six of the nation's&#13;
top 20 teams competing."&#13;
Godfrey thought it was a sub&#13;
par performance, although eadh&#13;
runner had his best time of the&#13;
year.&#13;
"Parkside runs best on a&#13;
course with a rougher terrain,&#13;
unlike the fast flat golf course we&#13;
ran on at South Bend. Due to the&#13;
abundance of runners, team&#13;
unity was harder to come by."&#13;
Saturday, Fredericksen also&#13;
topped Parkside finishers at tht&#13;
12 team Lakefront Invitational.&#13;
He was fourth overall.&#13;
The Rangers were fourth with&#13;
Priem 13th, Rivers 24th; Miller,&#13;
28th, Julich, 37th, Allinger, 46th&#13;
and Heiring, 61st.&#13;
"The Lakefront is a flat course,&#13;
as is the one at Northern Illinois'&#13;
Huskie Invitational which we&#13;
play this Saturday. The next&#13;
meet at Carthage will be on rough&#13;
·terrain that is familiar to&#13;
Parkside runners." said Godfrey.&#13;
"Five tight runners have&#13;
evolved in previous meets and&#13;
with Julich's improvements, we&#13;
now have six."&#13;
game by putting two good halves&#13;
t_ogether."&#13;
.l&lt;'riday, Parkside beat UWPlatteville&#13;
4-1 to qualify for the&#13;
finals .Saturday. Goals were&#13;
scored by Deech Ismaili, Steve&#13;
Sendelbach, Mike Boyajian and&#13;
Earl Campbell, with assists by&#13;
Mike Olesen and Campbell.&#13;
"That game meant revenge for&#13;
us because Platteville beat us&#13;
last year in the District Championship.&#13;
It's the first time&#13;
Parkside ·has ever beaten Platteville&#13;
at Platteville."&#13;
"I was not overly pleased,&#13;
though, with our performance.&#13;
We were a stronger team, but we&#13;
played their kind of game, not&#13;
ours."&#13;
Earlier, UW-Green Bay&#13;
defeated UW-Milwaukee and the&#13;
Rangers played Green Bay for&#13;
the championship Saturday.&#13;
They beat Parkside, 6-2, scoring&#13;
five goals in the first half.&#13;
"It was more shocking than&#13;
disappointing," said Henderson&#13;
about the loss. "They scored four&#13;
goals in seven minutes; two were&#13;
deflection . off of our defensive&#13;
players. The rest of the game was&#13;
pretty much even up_ for both&#13;
teams."&#13;
Parkside's two goals were&#13;
scored by Campbell and Bob&#13;
Stoewe on an assist from Kriz&#13;
Seravin.&#13;
"Campbell is our le-ading&#13;
scorer, picking up three goals&#13;
and an assist this weekend. We&#13;
haven't had anyone like him in&#13;
several _years, and he's just a&#13;
freshman." •&#13;
Campbell, along with Ismiali&#13;
and Sendelbach scored three&#13;
goals to beat Minnesota's one&#13;
Goal October 3. Boyajian was the&#13;
only scorer for Parkside when the&#13;
Rangers lost to Eastern Illinois,&#13;
9-1, October 2.&#13;
Leitch sets records&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson's women's&#13;
swim team hosts the Carthage&#13;
Redmen Saturday in a 1 p.m.&#13;
meet, still looking for their first&#13;
win of the season.&#13;
In their last outing, the&#13;
swimmers were defeated by&#13;
Carroll College, 93-20, and by&#13;
Lawrence University, 63-34,&#13;
Friday. Carroll also defeated&#13;
Lawrence, 88-24.&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch continued to&#13;
break school records, this week&#13;
in the 200 free and 500 free. Her&#13;
times of 2:36.21 and 7:13.58,&#13;
respectively, gained her firsts in&#13;
both events against Lawrence&#13;
and seconds in both events&#13;
against Carroll. Leitch also took&#13;
a first against Lawrence and a&#13;
second against Carroll in the 50&#13;
back.&#13;
Also gaining first places was&#13;
Gail Olson, whose one meter&#13;
dives were on top of both competing&#13;
teams. She also swam the&#13;
50 free, finishing second with both .&#13;
the 100 free with second place&#13;
points added to the score with&#13;
Lawrence and third place points&#13;
tallied to the team score against&#13;
Carroll.&#13;
Sally Francis improved her&#13;
time in the 500 free over the time&#13;
in the previous meet by 37&#13;
seconds and placed second in the&#13;
event. Francis also scored a third&#13;
against both in the 50 free.&#13;
In the 5Q breast, Lili Crnich was&#13;
second against Lawrence and&#13;
third against Carroll and was&#13;
also thil:d in the 100 free with&#13;
Lawrence.&#13;
UW-P hostsCarth_age&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
In preparation for the WWIAC&#13;
Championships in Lacrosse&#13;
October 22-23, the women's tennis&#13;
squad will host Carthage College&#13;
Saturday for a meet beginnil)g at&#13;
11 a.m.&#13;
The No. 1 doubles team of&#13;
Jennifer Zuehlke-Mary Ann&#13;
Carins made it to the semifinals,&#13;
leading Parkside at the UWWhitewater&#13;
Tournament last&#13;
Saturday, where the Rangers&#13;
placed seventh. -&#13;
Zuehlke-Carins lost to a UWEau&#13;
Claire team 6-4 after beating ,&#13;
two other teams.&#13;
Eau Claire gave other Ranger&#13;
opponents difficulty in the second&#13;
round of the No. 1 singles and No.&#13;
2 doubles matches. Marge&#13;
Balszes was defeated 6-2, 7-5 and&#13;
Pat Munger-Kathy Feichtner lost&#13;
6-1, 6-2. In No. 2 singles, Janine&#13;
Hunter also lost in the second&#13;
round to a Carthage opponent 6-2,&#13;
6-3.&#13;
Better results occurred in an&#13;
October 2 meet as UW-Green Bay&#13;
fell to the Rangers, 4-0.&#13;
The Rangers have a 2-6 record&#13;
in dual meets, but have lost Jean&#13;
CoveJli, a member of the No. 1&#13;
doubles team with Carins.&#13;
Free Pizza Delivery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Alt,_ ••h•erl19 Chlek11, St11httt1, R1•loll, 811f&#13;
OPEN 4 t••· to 1 •·•·&#13;
Lincoln Federal Savings and&#13;
Loan Association of Hoffman&#13;
Estates, Illinois is sponsoring&#13;
their first Annual Road Run&#13;
November 21 at Hoffman· Estates&#13;
High School at 1 p.m.&#13;
Races include 5,000 and 1000&#13;
meters and a Joggers Mile.&#13;
Categories f9r both races are&#13;
Fresh-Soph High School, Varsity&#13;
High School, Post High School to&#13;
age 26, ages 27-35, ages 36-46, and&#13;
ages 47 and over.&#13;
A trophy will be awarded to the&#13;
first place overall in the 10,000&#13;
meter- run, plaques to the first&#13;
place iq all divisions, medals to&#13;
second and third place in all&#13;
divisions and free T-shirts to all ·&#13;
finishers.&#13;
There is an entry fee of $2 for&#13;
pre-registration until November&#13;
16. Checks may be made payable&#13;
to Lincoln Federal Road Run and&#13;
mailed to Lincoln Federal&#13;
Savings, 1400 N. Gannon Drive,&#13;
Hoffman Estates, Illinois 60196,&#13;
, Attn.; Bruce Lind.&#13;
More information is available&#13;
from Lind at Lincoln Federal,&#13;
312-885-0700 or Jim Swift at&#13;
Hoffman Estates High School,&#13;
·312-882-8000. The high school, at&#13;
1100 W. Higgins Road, is reached&#13;
Road south from the Northwest&#13;
Tollway to Route 72 and go east&#13;
one mile.&#13;
FREE&#13;
~:;.o::',&#13;
DELIVERY&#13;
pv":'::,':,' d":&#13;
~&#13;
11v ~ojeph ~ -&#13;
- 4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
~'~m'~,,-' Wisco!}sin Phone 654-0774&#13;
§&#13;
~&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
,H~~A~i_/&#13;
: • · Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington Arie. 634-2373&#13;
Union&#13;
Recreation Center&#13;
Enter these T ournoments&#13;
Pinball Wizard&#13;
mon. thru Fri., Oct. 18-22&#13;
Entr_y Fee - i 1.00&#13;
Chess ·1ourny&#13;
Fri. thru Sun., Oct. 22-24&#13;
Entr_y Fee - $2.50&#13;
Sorry. The Rec-Center .will be closed&#13;
on Sundays until Further Notice&#13;
• </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 5, issue 6, October 13, 1976</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66072">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
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                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="66075">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>1976-10-13</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="66078">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
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            <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="66079">
                <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="66080">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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                <text>UW-Parkside</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>English</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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        <name>assistant chancellor clayton johnson</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="963">
        <name>chancellor alan guskin</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1314">
        <name>donald kummings</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="837">
        <name>stella gray</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2178">
        <name>surinder datta</name>
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              <text>Singer speaks to business majors&#13;
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              <text>Singer speaks to business majors&#13;
by BnICe Wagner be too much of an effort to '&#13;
Singer stated that this no&#13;
maximize the effect of such a longer was the state of recruiting&#13;
report, when responses were yet efforts bythe program. He hoped&#13;
to come from the division' and that. it was a lesson that was&#13;
from students. learned, Wecausethe division now&#13;
Singer talked about the current has input on all salary offers&#13;
situation with the management given to possible candidates for&#13;
- science division, which has felt open posts,&#13;
the crunch of some late Singer was optimistic about&#13;
resignations.- This leaves the future recruiting efforts. In&#13;
accounting speciality with one . answering a student's question&#13;
full-time instructor. about what Parkside has to offer&#13;
Singer told the group that he is to prospective candidates, Singer&#13;
currently trying to recruit a responded that new faculty would&#13;
faculty member in accounting ,be able to help make changes in&#13;
but owing to the fact tbat it is he program instead of being met&#13;
hard to find accomplished with too rigid of a structure and&#13;
business instructors and most also would be attracted by the&#13;
schools are looking for them, it ideal location of Parkside.&#13;
may not be possible fOr Parkside He also announced that&#13;
to get a new faculty member in Parkside graduates are now able&#13;
that area by January. to take the CPA exam because ofThe&#13;
administration bad given a new state certifying board&#13;
the business program six ruling which named the courses&#13;
positions to recruit for, but they that one must lake instead of&#13;
failed to get sufficient response. specifying which schools can give&#13;
A Ranger interview brought out courses leading to the certificate.&#13;
the fact that a promising in- Students at the meeting, were&#13;
structor of marketing and per- concerned with the reputation of&#13;
sonnel had been offered one of tl!e Parkside at the lime when they&#13;
open positions in the marketing go out into the job market.&#13;
speciality, but Chancellor Gusliin Student Carl Leonard called for a&#13;
offered that applicant a salary general "cleaning of the house"&#13;
.$4,000 less than recommended by regarding the attitude of faculty&#13;
the business program coer- members, which he found&#13;
dinator and it was refused. generally to be. negative&#13;
regarding the progress of the&#13;
-TheParkside,------""-';""'-d ""-pg.,&#13;
Saying Ranger coverage of the&#13;
.business management situation&#13;
was "designed to make a bad·&#13;
situation worse,"· business&#13;
management coordinator Ronald&#13;
- Singer star ted .a Wednesday&#13;
afternoon meeting with, students&#13;
designed to clear up wha t he&#13;
called "a lot of- misun-·&#13;
derstandings which have been&#13;
generated through what Ifeel is a&#13;
lack of information."&#13;
Singer spent most of the&#13;
meeting. talking about' the&#13;
Chancellor's task force on the&#13;
business program which recently&#13;
put out it's report. .&#13;
This report is in the process of&#13;
being responded to by the&#13;
management science division.&#13;
Singer told the crowd of about 60&#13;
that the report is I 'not carved in&#13;
stone." The t'!lsk force's intention,&#13;
Singer said, was to look&#13;
at the present situation and make&#13;
some suggestions.&#13;
According to.Singer, "it should&#13;
have some impact" on the future&#13;
of business management but 'he&#13;
also stated that there seemed, to&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No.5 Wednesday. October 6. 1976&#13;
Ronald SInger&#13;
.... 11:...""" _ •&#13;
photo by V.n Thompson&#13;
Faculty Senate&#13;
eliminates TFD&#13;
by John McKioskey&#13;
Last Tuesday the Faculty&#13;
Senate voted to elirninate the&#13;
Tenured Faculty Division (TFD)&#13;
and to replace it with a Personnel&#13;
Review Committee (PRC), which&#13;
Bowden ~pposes rules&#13;
by Diane Cal!§on&#13;
Beginning in October, faculty&#13;
and administration will meet in&#13;
committees to begin implementation&#13;
of a number of&#13;
student disciplinary procedures&#13;
passed by the UW Board of&#13;
, Regents for all UW Campuses.&#13;
. This disciplinary guideline sets&#13;
up standards of conduct for all&#13;
students, and outlines&#13;
disciplinary action which can be&#13;
taken against students for infractions.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden, President of&#13;
student government, said she&#13;
'feels very strongly against the&#13;
code, which consists of two&#13;
sections: I) Procedures for nonacademic&#13;
misconduct and 2)&#13;
Procedures for academic&#13;
misconduct.&#13;
Non-academic misconduct can&#13;
be broken down into- two .types:&#13;
serious offenses like vandalism&#13;
and assault which are considered&#13;
illegal in civil courts, and minor&#13;
offenses such as rowdiness and&#13;
breaking of dorm. rules.&#13;
Bowden, who said she will he&#13;
attending th,e implementation&#13;
procedures "under protest, J'&#13;
stated that "The University&#13;
should not be allowed to try a&#13;
student for serious offenses&#13;
because of the possibility of&#13;
double jeopardy; he could also&#13;
have action taken against him in&#13;
a civil court for the same act."&#13;
She pointed out. that these offenses&#13;
are not academic in&#13;
nature,' but the disciplinary&#13;
action taken because of. the offenses&#13;
is purely academic.&#13;
"A student can have his&#13;
transcripts . withheld, be&#13;
suspended or expelled, for an act&#13;
which has nothing to do with his&#13;
academic life. Once again, this is&#13;
a form of double jeopardy," said&#13;
Bowden.&#13;
Although she feels that some&#13;
guidelines are better than none,&#13;
and that the guidelines are at- _&#13;
tempting to arrive at' a guaranty&#13;
of due process of law, Bowden&#13;
stated: "The guidelines are,&#13;
based on the idea of 'In loco&#13;
parentis' and have more bearing&#13;
on a dorm campus than on a&#13;
commuter campus like&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
'In loco parentis' refers to the&#13;
policy of administrations at some&#13;
dorm campuses that they must&#13;
act as parents to students away&#13;
from home.&#13;
She added, "At Parkside 23&#13;
percent of the students are age 25&#13;
or older; we just don't need it."&#13;
The disciplinary code sets up&#13;
an appeals procedure and court&#13;
trial for the accused student. The&#13;
actual methods used in implementation&#13;
of the guidelines,'&#13;
such as who sits on the court, the&#13;
designation of an "investigating&#13;
officer" and establishment of&#13;
regulations for handling of&#13;
grades and transcripts of&#13;
students with charges pending&#13;
against them, are determined by&#13;
each campus. Once determined,&#13;
they are suhmitted to UW system&#13;
administration in Madison for&#13;
approval.&#13;
Students, administration, and&#13;
faculty are involved in the implementation,&#13;
but Bowden said&#13;
that "very litUe interest has been&#13;
shown. •&#13;
"Student government held&#13;
hearings this summer at which •&#13;
no one showed up. Nobody even&#13;
knows about the disciplinary&#13;
procedures.&#13;
"Obviously, there has been a&#13;
minimum of student input. ..&#13;
Bowgen said the disciplinary&#13;
guidelines for academic&#13;
misconduct - cheating and&#13;
plagiarism - seemed to be handled&#13;
properly, but that tbose&#13;
pertaining to non-academic&#13;
misconduct were an example of&#13;
the administration "regulating in&#13;
areas I don't believe we have a&#13;
right to regulate.&#13;
"These areas should be handled&#13;
strictly by tbe civil courts."&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
,&#13;
will consist of one representative&#13;
from each division plus four&#13;
members elected &amp;t large.&#13;
The TFD was a larger committee,&#13;
consisting of three faculty&#13;
members from each academic&#13;
division. The streamlined PRe&#13;
will have only 12 members.&#13;
The PRC proposal must now be&#13;
approved by ChanceDor Gustin&#13;
and sent to the University System&#13;
Regents in Madison for approval.&#13;
The purpose of the PRC will be to&#13;
consider recommendations for&#13;
appointment to professor and&#13;
appointment to tenured statusthe&#13;
same functions as TFD- but&#13;
the procedure is now more&#13;
streamlined.&#13;
Under the new system, a subconunittee&#13;
of four professors will&#13;
consider appointments to&#13;
professor status so that faculty&#13;
members who are not professors&#13;
will not have to consider lbe&#13;
promotion of their peers.&#13;
The reason the Senate decided&#13;
on the subcommittee method is&#13;
that if a non-professor decided&#13;
who is to become a professor, his&#13;
own chances for that status might&#13;
be jeopardized when he comes up&#13;
for review.&#13;
Since provisionally organized&#13;
division!" such as business&#13;
management would not have had&#13;
any representation on the PFC,&#13;
the Senate voted to let their interim&#13;
Executive Committee send&#13;
a member to the PRC.&#13;
In other action. the Senate&#13;
began consideration of the&#13;
creation of an Academic Actjpns&#13;
Committee to handle appeals for&#13;
special academic considerations.&#13;
This would replace two old&#13;
committees which went out of&#13;
action when the SChoolof Modern&#13;
Industry and the College of&#13;
SCience and Society, combined&#13;
some functions.&#13;
One objection to the proposal&#13;
voiced by senators was that&#13;
students should not be on such a&#13;
conunittee. As it reads now, the&#13;
Academic Actions Committee&#13;
legislation would have two&#13;
student members along with five&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
I&#13;
"&#13;
Singer speaks&#13;
by Br~ce Wagner&#13;
to business majors&#13;
Saying Ranger coverage of the&#13;
business management situation&#13;
was "designed to make a bad ·&#13;
situation wo)'se," business&#13;
management coordinator Ronald&#13;
- Singer started a Wednesday&#13;
afternoon meeting with students&#13;
designed to clear up what he&#13;
called "a lot of misuri-•&#13;
derstandings which have been&#13;
generated through what I feel is a&#13;
lack of information."&#13;
Singer spent most of the&#13;
meeting talking about" the&#13;
Chancellor's task force· on the&#13;
business program which recently&#13;
put out it's report.&#13;
This report is in the process of&#13;
being responded to by the&#13;
management science division.&#13;
Singer told the crowd of about 60&#13;
that the report is ''not carved in&#13;
stone." The task force's intention,&#13;
Singer said, was to look&#13;
at the present situation and make&#13;
some suggestions.&#13;
According to Singer, "it should&#13;
have some impact'' on the future&#13;
of business management but he&#13;
also stated that there seemed, to&#13;
be too much of an effort to&#13;
maximize the effect of such a&#13;
report, when responses were yet&#13;
to come from the division and&#13;
from students.&#13;
Singer talked about the current&#13;
situation with the manag'ement&#13;
. science divii,ion, which has felt&#13;
the crunch of some late&#13;
resignations. Th_is leaves the&#13;
accounting speciality with one&#13;
full-time instructor.&#13;
Singer told the group that he is&#13;
currently trying to recruit a&#13;
faculty' member in accounting&#13;
but owing to the fact that it is&#13;
hard to find accomplished&#13;
business instructors and most&#13;
schools are looking for them, it&#13;
may not be possible for Parkside&#13;
to get a new faculty member in&#13;
that area by January.&#13;
The administration had given&#13;
the business program six&#13;
positions to recruit for, but they&#13;
failed to get sufficient response.&#13;
A Ranger interview brought out&#13;
the fact that a promising instructor&#13;
of marketing and personnel&#13;
had been offered one of the&#13;
open positions in the marketing&#13;
speciality, but Chancellor GusKin&#13;
offered that applicant a salary&#13;
$4,000 less than recommended by&#13;
the business program coordinator&#13;
and it was refused.&#13;
Singer stated that this no&#13;
longer was the state of recruiting&#13;
efforts by'the program. He hoped&#13;
that it was a lesson that was&#13;
learned, ilecause the division now&#13;
has input on all salary offers&#13;
given to possible candidates for&#13;
open posts ..&#13;
Singer was optimistic about&#13;
future recruiting efforts. In&#13;
· answering a student's question&#13;
about what Parkside has to offer&#13;
to prospective candidates, Singer&#13;
responded that new faculty would&#13;
. be able to help make changes in&#13;
he program instead of being met&#13;
with too rigid of a structure and&#13;
also would be attracted by the&#13;
ideal location of Parkside.&#13;
He also announced that&#13;
Parkside graduates are now able&#13;
to take the CPA exam because of -&#13;
a new state certifying board&#13;
ruling which named the courses&#13;
that one must take instead of&#13;
specifying which schools can give&#13;
courses leading to the certificate.&#13;
Students at the meeting. were&#13;
concerned with the reputation of&#13;
Parkside at the time when they&#13;
go out into the job market.&#13;
Student Carl Leonard called for a&#13;
general "cleaning of the house"&#13;
regarding the attitude of faculty&#13;
members, which · he found&#13;
generally to be . negative&#13;
regarding the progress of the&#13;
-The Parkside------con-'inue-d on-pg. 5&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 5 Wednesday, October 6, 1976&#13;
Ronald Singer photo by Van Thompson&#13;
Faculty Senate&#13;
eli1ninates TFD&#13;
,&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Last Tuesday the Faculty&#13;
Senate voted to eliminate the&#13;
Tenured Faculty Division (TFD)&#13;
and to replace it with a Personnel&#13;
Review Committee (PRC), which&#13;
will consist of one representative&#13;
from each division plus four&#13;
members elected at large.&#13;
The TFD was a larger committee,&#13;
consisting of three faculty&#13;
members from each academic&#13;
division. The streamlined PRC&#13;
will have only 12 members.&#13;
Bowden opposes rules&#13;
The PRC proposal must now be&#13;
approved by Chancellor Guskin&#13;
and sent to the University System&#13;
Regents in Madison for approval.&#13;
The purpose of the PRC will be to&#13;
consider recommendations for&#13;
appointment to professor and&#13;
appointment to tenured statusthe&#13;
same functions as TFD- but&#13;
the procedure is now more&#13;
streamlined.&#13;
by Diane Ca~on&#13;
Beginning in October, faculty&#13;
and administration will meet in&#13;
committees to begin implementation&#13;
of a number of&#13;
student disciplinary procedures&#13;
passed by the UW Board of&#13;
, Regents for all UW Caml)uses.&#13;
This disciplinary guideline sets&#13;
up standards of conduct for all&#13;
students, and outlines&#13;
disciplinary action which can be&#13;
taken against students for infractions.&#13;
&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden, President of&#13;
_student government, said she&#13;
fee~s very strongly against the&#13;
code, which consists of two&#13;
sections: 1) Procedures for nonacademic&#13;
misconduct and 2)&#13;
Procedures for academic&#13;
misconduct.&#13;
Non-academic misconduct can&#13;
be broken down into-two .types:&#13;
serious offenses like vandalism&#13;
and assault which are considered&#13;
illegal in civil courts, and minor&#13;
offenses such as rowdiness and&#13;
breaking of dorm_ rules.&#13;
Bowden, who said she will be&#13;
attending the implementation&#13;
procedures "under protest,"&#13;
stated that "The University&#13;
should not be allowed to try a&#13;
student for serious offenses&#13;
because of the possibility of&#13;
double jeopardy; he could also&#13;
have action taken against him in&#13;
a civil court for the same act."&#13;
She poiqted out that these' offenses&#13;
are not academic in&#13;
nature, but the disciplinary&#13;
action taken because of the offenses&#13;
is purely academic.&#13;
"A student can have his&#13;
transcripts . withheld, be&#13;
suspended or expelled, for an act&#13;
which has nothing to do with his&#13;
academic life. Once again, this is&#13;
a form of double jeopardy," said&#13;
Bowden.&#13;
Although she feels that some&#13;
guidelines are better than none,&#13;
and that the guidelines are at- _&#13;
tempting to ~rrive at· a guaranty&#13;
of due process of law, Bowden&#13;
stated: "The guidelines are ,&#13;
based on the idea of 'In loco&#13;
parentis' and have more bearing&#13;
on a dorm campus than on ~&#13;
commuter campµs like&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
'In loco parentis' refers to the&#13;
policy of administrations at some&#13;
dorm campuses that they must&#13;
act as parents to students away&#13;
from home.&#13;
She added, "At Parkside 23&#13;
percent of the students are age 25&#13;
or older; we just don't need it."&#13;
The disciplinary code sets up&#13;
an appeals procedure and court&#13;
trial for the accu~ student. The&#13;
actual methods used in implementation&#13;
of the guidelines, 1&#13;
such as who sits on the court, the&#13;
designation of an "investigating&#13;
officer" and establishment of&#13;
regulations for handling of&#13;
grades and transcripts of&#13;
students with charges pending&#13;
against them, are determined by&#13;
each campus. Once determined,&#13;
they are submitted to UW system&#13;
administration in Madison for&#13;
approval.&#13;
Students, administration, and&#13;
faculty are involved in the implementation,&#13;
but Bowden said&#13;
that "very little interest has been&#13;
shown. •&#13;
"Student government held&#13;
hearings this summer at which&#13;
no one showed up. Nobody even&#13;
knows about the disciplinary&#13;
procedures.&#13;
"Obviously, there has been a&#13;
minimum of student input. "&#13;
Bow~en said the disciplinary&#13;
guidelines for academic&#13;
· misconduct - cheating and&#13;
plagiarism - seemed to be handled&#13;
properly, but that those&#13;
pertaining to non-academic&#13;
misconduct were an example of&#13;
the administration "regulating in&#13;
areas I don't believe we have a&#13;
right to regulate.&#13;
"These areas should be handled&#13;
strictly by the civil courts. "&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
Under the new system, a subcommittee&#13;
of four professors will&#13;
consider appointments to&#13;
professor status so that faculty&#13;
members who are not professors&#13;
will not have to consider the&#13;
promotion of their peers.&#13;
The reason the Senate decided&#13;
on the subcommittee method is&#13;
that if a non-professor decided&#13;
who is to become a professor, his&#13;
own chances for that status might&#13;
be jeopardized when he comes up&#13;
for review.&#13;
Since provisionally organized&#13;
divisions such as business&#13;
management would not have had&#13;
any representation on the PFC,&#13;
the Senate voted to let their Interim&#13;
Executive Committee send&#13;
a member to the PRC.&#13;
In other action. the Senate&#13;
began consideration of the&#13;
creation of an Academic Actions&#13;
Committee to handle appeals for&#13;
special academic considerations.&#13;
This would replace two old&#13;
committees which went out of&#13;
action when the School of Modern&#13;
Industry and the College of&#13;
Science and Society combined&#13;
some functions.&#13;
One objection to the proposal&#13;
voiced by senators was that&#13;
students should not be on such a&#13;
committee. As it reads now, the&#13;
Academic Actions Committee&#13;
legislation would have two&#13;
student members along with five&#13;
faculty members. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976&#13;
~ ". The Parkside&#13;
~rrRA'NGER&#13;
---EDITOR IAL/OPINION&#13;
Singer commended~. ".&#13;
, ,for meetrng with studentsmay'&#13;
have in accepting his stat~ments .. So":,e.students&#13;
were also quite frank in expressing their opinions. One&#13;
student felt that faculty should rid themselves. of&#13;
negative attitudes about the proqram b~fore expectl~g&#13;
students to show positive feelings about ItS future while&#13;
another related -his thoughts of transferrrng to another&#13;
school. '..&#13;
It's difficult to publicly discuss problems With one In&#13;
authority as it is difffcult to be in the.posltlon of. answering&#13;
those questions or .complaints. ~oth s~des&#13;
handled the siutation very well in Wednesday s meeting ..&#13;
It was hopefully just the beginning of some real communication.&#13;
, •&#13;
Singer has shown good intentions by opening himse!f&#13;
to student questions and opinions. Students, by their&#13;
appearance at the meeting, have demonstrated concern&#13;
and support for the development of a good business&#13;
management program. It seems the days of apathy at&#13;
Parkside are over.&#13;
Ron Singer, chairman of Management Science, should&#13;
be commended for demonstrating hiS. concern !or&#13;
students and the business progra.m by calling a meeting&#13;
of business management majors last Wednesday.&#13;
Singer explained the recent task force recornmendatlons&#13;
for the, program and answered questions&#13;
from the group of apprOXimately ,60 to 80 students. He&#13;
saIdthat student reaction to the task force report w~s&#13;
ImpOrtant and that the communication taking place In&#13;
the meeting was very constructive. He hllped there&#13;
would be further meetings of that nature.&#13;
Many times students are forgotten in the midst of&#13;
administrative hassles but Singer obl1iously s~w enoug.h&#13;
significance In student opinion to try to cultivate their&#13;
understanding and participation in building the business&#13;
management program. It's critical that st.ude~ts support&#13;
the program slrtce it cannot succeed If disgusted&#13;
business majors transfer to other schools.&#13;
Singer seemed to speak in a rather open manner,&#13;
acknowledging his biases and the reservations students&#13;
-POLITICAL&#13;
)-&#13;
'Jimm y-Jerry Show' discussed&#13;
going to call this a debate, Nosh Webster must have made a mistake in&#13;
defining the word, but Iguess tbat makes two of them: be also dRIri't&#13;
notice the difference between anmesty and pardon.&#13;
The ridiculous format tbat the League of Womel) Voters set for the&#13;
debates, has turned it into a safe TV time for both men. The NixonKennedy&#13;
debates were set up with one moderator, Howard K. Smith,&#13;
and had Nixon firing questions at Kennedy and, 'Kennedy doing the&#13;
same to Nixon. The format of the present debates is enough to make&#13;
anyone bored. Granted the three panelists were excellent but ~th only&#13;
three minutes answering time and two minutes follow-up time, skilled&#13;
politicians can sidestep the issues very well. The big flaw wi'S apparent&#13;
when 'Ford made a statement to the effect that the current&#13;
Governor of Georgia had testified to a Senate' committee that Jimmy&#13;
Carter's Medic-Aid program was, "in a shambles." Ford failed to&#13;
mention however that federal funds for the program have been shut off&#13;
and Carter has little to do with the program since be bas been out of ,&#13;
office. For tbat matter Carter has bad lit\le to do with Georgia's&#13;
policy-making at all. I&#13;
If you have been falling asleep reading this review it is understandable&#13;
since Iam falling asleep wrting it. Our retribution will&#13;
come on Thursday night when the screened audience will rise and&#13;
shout in a clear. consise American voice, "Bring, IiacJ&lt; Harry OrWIlll!"&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
'.&#13;
After Thursday nights spectacle on the national networks, I was&#13;
tempted to put the channel selector on the PBS 10 and kick it off the&#13;
set. Although the last thirty or so minutes were the most enjoyable, •&#13;
the rest of tbe time Icould have better spent reading a newspaper.&#13;
Any resemblance the "Jimmy-Jerry Show" had to a debate was&#13;
strictly coincidental. After the rhetoric and useless predictions were&#13;
over, Icame away wondering where Barney Miller had left off and the&#13;
debate bad begun. There have been predictions and projections in&#13;
presidential elections for as long"as I don't care to remember. and&#13;
everything that the candidates saio, has been said time and time&#13;
again. The fact that they called this massive news conference a debate&#13;
says something to me about-truth in politics.&#13;
Both men appeared nervous and robot-like, which is expected of&#13;
Ford, but Carter cannot afford to come off as anything but the confident&#13;
leader that his campaign image needs so badly. If Carter&#13;
maintains his Ford-like quality of debating, people might begin to'&#13;
wonder if tbere is any difference. '&#13;
'I1lere we""-!'o winners in Thursday's debate except maybe the&#13;
advertisers wbo paid for the commercials. Lester Maddox and Gene&#13;
McQii1hey, who were probably glad that they Were not a part of it,&#13;
and all the paranoids in the world, probably went wild when just as&#13;
• Carter started talking about tbe CIA, the so~went off. If they are&#13;
FORUM&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: Cathy Brnak, JUdy TrUllru", (asst.)&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Tom Coopflr&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wagner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS:&#13;
.. Admlnlstration-Policle,: John McKI~kev&#13;
.. $Ml: Dave Brandt&#13;
.. StUdent groups &amp; speakers: Mary Kay Ohmer&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jean Tenut.&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: ieffrey I. swencki, Bill Barke "&#13;
. COpy EDITOR: Julie Lan",&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION: Sue Marquardt _ ..&#13;
STAFF: Wendy Miller, Terri Gayhart, Robert Hoffman, ChriS Clausen, BrIdget Penlkowlki,.&#13;
Larry Donnelly. Phil Hermann, Ramona Maillet, Allen Brawn. Carol Arentt, John Overman.&#13;
Bob Jambois, Beverly Pella. Betsy Neu, Linda Knudtson. Karin La Fourier, Judy Trudrunll ..&#13;
Scott Reinhard, Philip L. Livingslon.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: P.J. Anolin .., Ricky Cooper, Rick FraSCh&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS: Joe Landa, Rick Flasch&#13;
The Parkside Ranter Is written and edited&#13;
by the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and CO"...... Opinions ell pressed .re nol&#13;
necessarily representalive of those held by&#13;
the students, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkslde. Editorial and Business Ss:J-22'7;&#13;
Newsroom 55J-2295.&#13;
,&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976&#13;
~ Jr.. The Parksid ~&#13;
...&#13;
· RA·NGER&#13;
--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
Singer commended -. .. . · for meeting wit~ students- R~n Singer chairman of Management Science, should&#13;
be commended for demonstrating his. concern tor&#13;
students and the busin~ss progra.m by calling a meeting&#13;
of business management majors last Wednesday·&#13;
Singer explained the recent task force rec?mmendations&#13;
for the program and answered questions&#13;
from the group of approximately .60 to 80 students. He&#13;
said .that student reaction to the task force report w~s&#13;
important and that the communication taking place in&#13;
the meeting was very constructive. He h.oped there&#13;
would be further meetings of that nature.&#13;
Many times students are forgotten in the midst of&#13;
administrative hassles but Singer ob~iously saw enoug_h&#13;
significance in student opini~n t? try_ t~ cultivate their&#13;
understanding and participation in bu tiding the business&#13;
management program. It's critical that st_ude~ts support&#13;
the program since it cannot succeed 1f disgusted&#13;
business majors transfer to other schools.&#13;
Singer seemed to speak in a rather o~en manner,&#13;
acknowledging his biases and the re_servat,ons students&#13;
..&#13;
may · have in accepting his stat~ments .. son:ie. students&#13;
were also quite frank in expressing their opinions. One&#13;
student felt that faculty should rid themselves. of&#13;
negative attitudes about the p~ogram b:fore expectt~g&#13;
students to show positive feelings about ,ts future while&#13;
another related -his thoughts of transferri"ng to another&#13;
school. , . . It's difficult to publicly discuss problems with one in&#13;
authority as it is difficult to be in the _position of. answering&#13;
those questions or . complaints. Both s~des&#13;
handled the siutation very well in Wednesday's meeting_.&#13;
It was hopefully just the beginning of some real com -&#13;
munication. . .,&#13;
Singer has shown good intentions by opening himse_lf&#13;
to student questions and opinions. Stu~ents, by their&#13;
appearance at the meeting, have demonstrated concern&#13;
and support for the development of a good business&#13;
management program . It seems the ~ays of apathy at&#13;
Parkside are O'(er.&#13;
POLITICAL&#13;
FORUM&#13;
•&#13;
' ..&#13;
'Jimmy-Jerry Show' discussed&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
After Thursday nights spectacle on the national networks, I was&#13;
tempted to put the channel selector on the PBS 10 and kick it off the&#13;
set. Although the last thirty or so minutes were the most enjoyable,&#13;
the rest of the time I could have better spent reading a newspaper.&#13;
· Any resemblance the "Jimmy-Jerry Show" had to a debate was&#13;
strictly coincidental. After the rhetoric and useless predictions were&#13;
over, I came away wondering where Barney Miller had left off and the&#13;
debate had begun. There have been predictions and projections in&#13;
presidential elections for as long as I don't care to remember, and&#13;
everything that the candidates said', has been said time and time&#13;
again. The fact that they called this massive news conference a debate&#13;
says something to me about-truth in politics.&#13;
Both men appeared nervous and robot-like, which is expected of&#13;
Ford, but Carter cannot afford to come off as anything but the confident&#13;
leader that his campaign image needs so badly. If Carter&#13;
maintains his Ford-like quality of debating, people might begin to&#13;
wonder if there is any difference. ·&#13;
There wer~o winners in Thursday's debate except maybe the&#13;
advertisers who paid for the commercials. Lester Maddox and Gene&#13;
McCaFthey, who were probably glad that they were not a part of it,&#13;
and all the paranoids in the world, probably went wild when just as&#13;
Carter started talking about the CIA, the sound-went off. If they are&#13;
going to call this a debate, Noah Webster must have made a mistake in&#13;
defining the word, but I guess that makes two of them: he also di-art't&#13;
notice the difference between anmesty and pardon.&#13;
The ridiculous format that the League of Women Voters set for the&#13;
debates, has turned it into a safe TV time for bpth men. The NixonKennedy&#13;
debates were set up with one moderatot, Howard K. Smith,&#13;
and had Nixon firing questions at Kennedy and. :Kennedy doing the&#13;
same to Nixon. The format of the present debates is enough to make&#13;
anyone bored. Granted the three panelists were excellent but ~ith only&#13;
three minutes answering time and two minutes follow-up time, skilled&#13;
politicians can sidestep _the issues very well. The big flaw WpS apparent&#13;
when Ford made a statement to the effe~t that the current&#13;
Governor of Georgia had testified to a Senate· committee th~t Jimmy&#13;
Carter's Medic-Aid· program was, "in a shambles." Ford failed to&#13;
mention however that federal funds for the program have been shut off&#13;
and Carter has little to do with the program since l;le has been out of ,&#13;
office. For that matter Carter has had li~le to do with Georgia's&#13;
policy-making at all. 1&#13;
If you have been falling asleep reading this review it is understandable&#13;
since I am falling asleep wrting it. Our retribution will&#13;
come on Thursday night when the screened audience will rise and&#13;
shout in a clear, consise American voice, "Bring_ tiack Harry Orwell!"&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF : Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is written and edited&#13;
by the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside who are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
coci• 0 "t Opinions expressed are not&#13;
necessarily representative of those held by&#13;
the students, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and Business 553-2217;&#13;
Newsroom S53-2295.&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGERS: Cathy Brnak, Judy Trudrung (asst.)&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER : Tom Cooper&#13;
NEWS COORDINATOR: Bruce Wagner&#13;
DEPARTMENTS :&#13;
. . Administration-Policies : John McKloskey&#13;
.. SMI : Dave Brandt&#13;
.. Student groups &amp; speakers: Mary Kay Ohmer&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debbie Bauer&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Jean Tenuta&#13;
VISAGE EDITORS: jeffrey j. swencki, Bill Barke ' ,&#13;
. COPY EDITOR : Julie Lange&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Van Thompson&#13;
CIRCULATION : Sue Marquardt . . . STAFF: Wendy Miller, T,erri Gayhart, Robert Hoffman, Chros Clausen, Brodget Pen1kowsk1, .&#13;
Larry Donnelly, Phil Hermann, Ramona Maillet, Allen Br3wn, Carol Are~tl, John Overman,&#13;
Bob Jambois, Beverly Pella, Betsy Neu, Linda Knudtson, Karin La Fourier, Judy Trudrung1 Scott Reinhard, Philip L . Livingston.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: P.J. Anolina, Ricky Cooper, Rick Flasch&#13;
AD SALESPERSONS: Joe Landa, Rick Flasch&#13;
.. &#13;
4&#13;
OSHA&#13;
discussed&#13;
J'Occupational Health&#13;
Requirements: How to Comply&#13;
Without Going Out of Business"&#13;
is the theme of a day-long conference&#13;
on occupational health&#13;
Oct. 8 at Parkside featurfng&#13;
specialists from industry, labor,&#13;
government and universities&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
Sponsored by. Parkside,&#13;
University Extension and the&#13;
assoctajicn of Wisconsin Occupational&#13;
Health Professionals,&#13;
the conference will consider 11&#13;
topics related to the Occupational&#13;
continued on pg. S&#13;
Members&#13;
needed&#13;
The Parkside Legal Assistance&#13;
Co-op is still looking for 25&#13;
members so they can. place&#13;
Kenosha attorney Walter Stern&#13;
on retainer.&#13;
More information can be&#13;
received 'from the PSGA offices&#13;
(WLLC 0195) or call 553-2244&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October ~. 19763&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden know who to yell at when we want to complain: P .S.G.A., Inc. will lake&#13;
your complaints to the proper people. We want to Improve STUDENT&#13;
SERVICES. Help us.&#13;
The student government BITCH boxes are located at strategic&#13;
locations around Parkside: the library circulatioll desk, the information&#13;
kiosks, the student lounges in the Burger Shoppe,&#13;
Classroom Bldg., and the Union. Put your complaints there or bring&#13;
them to the 9ffice, WLLC-0193.&#13;
If you have a gripe, for gawd'ssake let us know. One of the functions&#13;
of any government is to protect the interests of its constituency. One of&#13;
the responsibilities of a constituent is to keep her-his SPOkespeople&#13;
informed on the state of service.&#13;
We don't have a bureaucracy at the student government office.&#13;
Unlike, the rest of the University, we don't pass you around from one&#13;
sphere of "responsibility" to another or from one office to another.&#13;
We're students too. We know how it feels. Tell us where it hurts.&#13;
What's wrong at Parkside?&#13;
How have tbe services at Parkside been treating you????&#13;
Do you have any complaints????&#13;
Believe it or not your student government is capable of representing&#13;
you and your problems. Come to us and see. The worst thing that can&#13;
happen to you is that you might get some help.&#13;
How has the Financial Aids Dept. treated you when you've gone&#13;
. down for help??? Do they help???? Do you feelUke a human being&#13;
.when they process you?? Do they explain what and why you're fil\ing&#13;
out what you fill out?? Do you know enough to ask?? Rate the&#13;
Financial Aids personnel. Check one in each column.&#13;
Very helpful Cordial&#13;
Kind of helpful Civil&#13;
What help? Barely polite&#13;
How do you like the new Union??? Did you know your segregated&#13;
fees pay for it?? Do you have any complaints??? Did you know that&#13;
the Union Operating Board has students on it, who are supposed to&#13;
represent your interests?? -,&#13;
Bring your complaints about the food service, financial aids,&#13;
counseling, the union operation, the book store, and any other&#13;
STUDENT SERVICE complaints to the student government office at&#13;
WLLC-0193, and we will try to do something about them. Please write&#13;
your complaint out and sign it if you wish. In order to have attention&#13;
paid to complaints we have to have documentation to present to the&#13;
appropriate administrator, but if you don't wantyour name used, we&#13;
.promise to wfthhold it. All of us feel a little. at a loss when we don't&#13;
)&#13;
rj&#13;
Student teaching&#13;
criticized&#13;
To the Editor: _&#13;
I have meant to write about a&#13;
disturbing subject for a long time&#13;
but it's only been 'until now that&#13;
I've felt free enough of&#13;
Parkside's bonds to mention it.&#13;
I enjoyed Parkside as a school&#13;
until I had student teaching my&#13;
senior year. I heard the lecture&#13;
(as did everybody else in my&#13;
class) about how Parkside's&#13;
administration would do&#13;
everything possible to see to it&#13;
that you received a rewarding&#13;
and stimulating experience with&#13;
an instructor who was interested .&#13;
and compatible. Well, I arrived&#13;
the first dayfull of high hopes and&#13;
plans, only to have them shot&#13;
down when I was met by a&#13;
teacher who Seemed indifferent&#13;
to me and didn't have much idea&#13;
as to what he'd do with me. .&#13;
Ithappened I was in music and&#13;
the first day he told me that&#13;
women dit:!'.ctors tended to&#13;
conduct clumsily and couldn't'&#13;
control the kids as well as men.&#13;
Well, I'm not exactly a women's&#13;
libher but it was plain to see that&#13;
with this teacher I had a strike&#13;
against me from the 'beginning.&#13;
I was put in charge of two of the&#13;
groups and received hardly any&#13;
help) I was hardly ever even&#13;
observed! In the mornings I&#13;
taught my two classes but after&#13;
II I had nothing, to do for the rest&#13;
of the day. I asked if he wanted&#13;
help . but he always had his&#13;
student secretaries do it and he'd&#13;
often leave for 'the afternoon&#13;
leaving me with nothing to do. I&#13;
was bored stiff!&#13;
So, after a week (which I&#13;
thought was enough time to give&#13;
it a fair try and yet early enough&#13;
to change( I went to Dr. Olsen&#13;
and pleaded for a ne'!' experience.&#13;
Igave-him my reasons&#13;
expecting his full cooperation,&#13;
Instead, I got a lot of comeback&#13;
about how switching to other&#13;
student teaching experiences&#13;
gives Parkside a bad reputation&#13;
and how "we must protect the&#13;
welfare of the University and the&#13;
upcoming students."&#13;
I couldn't believe it! After&#13;
paying tuition for four years I&#13;
believed the University would do&#13;
what they could to protect my&#13;
interests. That's what I was&#13;
paying for, a good eduction, and I&#13;
certainly wasn't getting.it in this&#13;
situation.&#13;
I went to my advisor on Dr.&#13;
Olsen's suggestion and he said he&#13;
knew the teacher and wouldn't&#13;
want anybody to have student&#13;
teaching under that man. I had&#13;
him see Dr. Olsen to tell him what&#13;
he had told me. -When he came&#13;
out of his office my advisor was&#13;
suddenly in agreement with Dr.&#13;
Olsen (although he looked&#13;
sheepish about ill.&#13;
I went through the channels&#13;
with no results and would have&#13;
quit school for that semester if it'&#13;
wasn't for the lime ~actor in&#13;
making up the next experience.&#13;
So, I stuck it out, hated every&#13;
minute f of it: learned hardly&#13;
anything and grew bitter about&#13;
my rights as an individual and a&#13;
Parkside student.&#13;
I am presently very happily&#13;
teaching my second year but I&#13;
still have a bad feeling toward&#13;
Parkside after going through&#13;
this. I only hope that the&#13;
University and students wake up&#13;
to the' fael that Parkside is&#13;
supposedly here for the students,&#13;
not the students for Parkside.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Deborah Metke&#13;
Class of '75&#13;
Menu&#13;
good&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
,I was pleased to see that Saga&#13;
Food Service offered two dinners&#13;
last Tuesday; one for meateaters&#13;
and one ior non-meat&#13;
eaters.&#13;
I hope this is-a beginning, of a&#13;
new policy. I'm sure it will he I&#13;
enjoyed by boul vegetarians and&#13;
meat-eaters. It's a refreshing&#13;
change.&#13;
Wendy Miller&#13;
Dinner&#13;
superb&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Bravo! The dinner-theater two&#13;
weeks ago was superb. Excellent&#13;
wine, great dinner, but most of&#13;
all, the stupendous play Heroes&#13;
and Hardcases by the AlphOmega&#13;
Players was entertaining&#13;
and professionally portrayed.&#13;
I hope to see more of this top&#13;
quality entertainment.&#13;
A Parkside Student&#13;
Course&#13;
offered&#13;
Immigration to Racine and&#13;
Kenosha will be the subject of a&#13;
University of WisconsinExtension&#13;
course beginning at&#13;
Parkside on Tuesday, October 5,&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
John Buenker, professor of&#13;
history at Parkside, will survey&#13;
the various immigrant groups&#13;
from the 1830's to the present,&#13;
from Europe, Latin America,&#13;
Mrica and Asia. Primary focus&#13;
will center on reasons for their&#13;
migration, occupations,&#13;
residence patterns, churches,&#13;
fraternal, benefit and cultural&#13;
societies, and contributions to the&#13;
. area.&#13;
Dr. Buenker has specialized in&#13;
the history of immigration, and is&#13;
the author of chapters on&#13;
Bicentennial Histories of Racine&#13;
and Kenosha counties.&#13;
Registration information can&#13;
be had by calling University&#13;
Extension at Parkside, 553-2312.,&#13;
Correction&#13;
L.ast week it was stated in a&#13;
feature about Clayton Johnson,&#13;
assistant chancellor for&#13;
academic support and student&#13;
services, that he ucame to&#13;
Parkside from a small college in&#13;
Binnington, New York." Ranger&#13;
has been informed that "the&#13;
State University of New York at&#13;
Binghampton is not a small&#13;
college. It is the campus of&#13;
, Harper College, one of the finest&#13;
public undergraduate liberal arts&#13;
colleges in the nation, offers&#13;
some nineteen doctoral&#13;
programs, and has a larger&#13;
enrollment' than all but two&#13;
campuses in the Wisconsin&#13;
systenl." •&#13;
Legal Asslslance CIHlP&#13;
The Legal Assistance Co-op still needs members. Faculty and staff&#13;
as well-as students can join. How many of you are foresighlfu1 enough&#13;
to join a pre-paid legal insurance group? Itis the wave of the future.&#13;
No one but the very wealthy can afford all attorney. All of us in the&#13;
middle (or lower) class frequently have to let legal matters slide as&#13;
well as our rights because we can't afford a Iwayer. Unlimited consultation&#13;
for $15to $20 per semester is cheap. Call the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
office today (553-2244) or stop down (WLLC-0193).&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
,~&#13;
Mike Villers - Dealer&#13;
Performing Friday &amp; Saturday&#13;
SUNDAY TRIAD&#13;
f=iLL YOU \~~&#13;
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FEAST&#13;
INCLUDES· Salad. italian&#13;
Breco and a FREE GtAS&#13;
OF WiNE....&#13;
~erbu~&#13;
~urt&#13;
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$339 COMPLETE Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE - MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW!!&#13;
• For application forms or odctnono! informati6n&#13;
contact; Pcrksroe Union Office 553.2200&#13;
. ,&#13;
OSHA THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976 3&#13;
discussed CtJntact weekly by student government&#13;
• 'Occupational Health&#13;
Requirements: How to Comply&#13;
Without Going Out of Business"&#13;
is the theme of a day-long conference&#13;
on occupational health&#13;
Oct. 8 at Parkside featuring&#13;
specialists from industry, labor,&#13;
government and universities&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
by Kiyoko Bowden&#13;
What's wrong at Parkside?&#13;
How have the services at Parkside been treating you????&#13;
Do you have any complaints????&#13;
Believe it or not your student government is capable of representing&#13;
you and your problems. Come to us and see. The worst thing that can&#13;
happen to you is that you might get some help.&#13;
How has the Financial Aids Dept. treated you when you've gone&#13;
know who to yell at when we want to complain. P.S.G.A., Inc. will take&#13;
your complaints to the proper people. We want to improve STUDENT&#13;
SERVICES. Help us.&#13;
The student government BITCH boxes are located at strategic&#13;
locations around Parkside: the library circulation desk, the information&#13;
kiosks, the student lounges in the Burger Shoppe,&#13;
Classroom Bldg., and the Union. Put your complaints there or bring&#13;
them to the 9ffice, WLLC-D193.&#13;
Spom;ored by _ Parkside,&#13;
ff you have a gripe, for gawd's sake let us know. One of the functions&#13;
University Extension and the&#13;
association of Wisconsin Occupational&#13;
Health Professionals,&#13;
the conference will consider 11&#13;
topics related to the Occupational&#13;
. down for help??? Do they help???? Do you feel like a human being&#13;
when they process you?? Do they explain what and why you're filling&#13;
out what you fill out?? Do you know enough to ask?? Rate the&#13;
Financial Aids personnel. Check one in each column.&#13;
· of any government is to protect the interests of its constituency. One of&#13;
the responsibilities of a constituent is to keep her-his spokespeople&#13;
informed on the state of service.&#13;
continued on pg. S&#13;
Menthers&#13;
needed&#13;
The Parkside l.Algal Assistance&#13;
Co-op is still looking for 25&#13;
members so they can. place.&#13;
Kenosha attorney Walter Stern&#13;
on retainer.&#13;
More information can be&#13;
received · from the PSGA offices&#13;
( WLLC D195) or call 553-2244&#13;
Very helpful&#13;
Kind of helpful&#13;
What help?&#13;
Cordial&#13;
Civil&#13;
Barely polite&#13;
How do you like the new Union??? Did you know your segregated&#13;
fees pay for it?? Do you have any complaints??? Did you know that&#13;
the Union Operating Board has students on it, who are supposed to&#13;
represent your interests??&#13;
Bring your complaints about the food service, financial aids,&#13;
counseling, the union operation, the book store, and any other&#13;
STUDENT SERVICE complaints to the student government office at&#13;
WLLC-D193, and we will try to do something about them. Please write&#13;
your complaint out and ·sign it if you wish. In order to have attention&#13;
paid to complaints we have to have docwnentation to present to the&#13;
appropriate administrator, but if you don't want your name used, we&#13;
promise to wfthhold it. All of us feel a little.at a loss when we don't&#13;
~&#13;
irJ Dinner&#13;
superb&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
~tudent teaching&#13;
criticized&#13;
Bravo! The dinner-theater two&#13;
weeks ago was superb. Excellent&#13;
wine, great dinner, but most of&#13;
all, the stupendous play Heroes&#13;
and Hardcases by the AlphOmega&#13;
Players was entertaining&#13;
and professionally portrayed.&#13;
To the Editor: --&#13;
I have meant to write about a&#13;
disturbing subject for a long time&#13;
but it's only been 'until now that&#13;
I've felt free enough of&#13;
Parkside's bonds to mention it.&#13;
I enjoyed Parkside as a school&#13;
until I had student teaching my&#13;
senior year. I heard the lecture&#13;
( as did everybody else in my&#13;
class) about how Parkside's&#13;
administration would do&#13;
everything possible to see to it&#13;
that you received a rewarding&#13;
and stimulating experience with&#13;
an instructor who was interested ·&#13;
and compatible. Well, I arrived&#13;
the first day-full of high hopes and&#13;
plans, only to have them shot&#13;
down when I was met by a&#13;
teacher who seemed indifferent&#13;
to me and didn't have much idea&#13;
as to what he'd do with me. .&#13;
It happened I was in music and&#13;
the first day he told me that&#13;
women dh:~ctors tended to&#13;
conduct clumsily and couldn't'&#13;
control the kids as well as men.&#13;
Well, I'm not exactly a women's&#13;
libber but it was plain to see that&#13;
with this teacher I had a strike&#13;
against me from the 'beginning.&#13;
I was put in charge of two of the&#13;
groups and received hardly any&#13;
help) I was hardly ever even&#13;
observed! In the mornings I&#13;
taught my two classes but after&#13;
11 I had nothing to do for the rest&#13;
of the day. I asked if he wanted&#13;
help . but he always had his&#13;
student secretaries do it and he'd&#13;
often leave for the afternoon&#13;
leaving me with nothing to do. I&#13;
was bored stiff!&#13;
So, after a week (which I&#13;
thought was enough time to give&#13;
it a fair try and yet early enough&#13;
to change( I went to Dr . . Olsen&#13;
and pleaded for a new experience.&#13;
I gave him my reasons&#13;
expecting his full cooperation,&#13;
·instead, I got a lot of comeback&#13;
about how switching to other&#13;
student teaching experiences&#13;
gives Parkside a bad reputation&#13;
and how "we must ·protect the&#13;
welfare of the University and the&#13;
upcoming students."&#13;
I couldn't believe it! After&#13;
paying tuition for four years I&#13;
believed the University would do&#13;
what they could to protect my&#13;
interests. That's what I was&#13;
paying for, a good eduction, and I&#13;
-certainly wasn't getting.it in this&#13;
situation.&#13;
I went to my advisor on Dr.&#13;
Olsen's suggestion and he said he&#13;
knew the teacher and wouldn't&#13;
want anybody to have student&#13;
teaching undE:r that man. I had&#13;
him see Dr. Olsen to tell him what&#13;
he had told me: When he came&#13;
out of his office my advisor was&#13;
suddenly in agreement with Dr.&#13;
Olsen ( although he looked&#13;
sheepish about it).&#13;
I went through the channels&#13;
with no results and would have&#13;
quit school for that semester if it'&#13;
wasn't for the time £.actor in&#13;
making up the next experience.&#13;
I hope to see more of this top&#13;
quality entertainment.&#13;
A Parkside Student&#13;
Course&#13;
offered&#13;
.{mmigration to Racine and&#13;
Kenosha will be the subject of a&#13;
University of WisconsinExtension&#13;
course beginning at&#13;
Parkside on Tuesday, October 5,&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
John Buenker, professor of&#13;
history at Parkside, will survey&#13;
the various immigrant groups&#13;
from the 1830's to the present,&#13;
from Europe, Latin America,&#13;
Africa and Asia. Primary focus&#13;
will center on reasons for their&#13;
migration, occupations,&#13;
residence patterns, churches,&#13;
fraternal, benefit and cultural&#13;
societies, anp contributions to the&#13;
So, I stuck it out, hated every&#13;
minute f of it, learned hardly&#13;
anything and grew bitter about&#13;
my rights as an individual and a&#13;
Parkside student.&#13;
· area.&#13;
I am presently very happily&#13;
teaching my second year but I&#13;
still have a bad feeling toward&#13;
Parkside after going through&#13;
this. I only hope that the&#13;
University and students wake up&#13;
to the' fact that Parkside is&#13;
s~pposedly here for the students,&#13;
• not the students for Parkside.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Deborah Metke&#13;
Class of '75&#13;
Menu&#13;
good&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
.. I waS pleased to see that Saga&#13;
Food Service offered two dinners&#13;
last Tuesday; on~ for meateaters&#13;
and one for non-meat&#13;
eaters.&#13;
I hope this is a beginning_ of a&#13;
new policy. I'm sure it will be 1&#13;
enjoyed by both vegetarians and&#13;
meat-eaters. It's a refreshing&#13;
change. Wendy Miller&#13;
Dr. Buenker has specialized in&#13;
the history of immigration, and is&#13;
the author of chapters on&#13;
Bkentennial Histories of Racine&#13;
and Kenosha counties.&#13;
Registration information can&#13;
be had by calling University&#13;
Extension at Parkside, 553-2312.&#13;
Correction&#13;
Last week it was stated in a&#13;
feature about Clayton Johnson,&#13;
assistant chancellor for&#13;
academic support and student&#13;
services, that he "came to&#13;
Parkside from a small college in&#13;
Birmington, New York." Ranger&#13;
has been informed that "the&#13;
State University of New York at&#13;
Binghampton is not a small&#13;
college. It is the campus of&#13;
. Harper College, one of the finest&#13;
public undergraduate liberal arts&#13;
colleges in the nation, offers&#13;
some nineteen doctoral&#13;
programs, and has a larger&#13;
enrolhnent than all but two&#13;
campuses in the Wisconsin&#13;
system." •&#13;
We don't have a bureaucracy at the student government office.&#13;
Unlike the rest of the University, we don't pass you around from one&#13;
sphere of "responsibility" to another or from one office to another.&#13;
We're students too. We know how it feels. Tell us where it hurts.&#13;
Legal Assistance Co-op&#13;
The l.Algal Assistance Co-op still needs members. Faculty and staff&#13;
as well·as students can join. How many of you are foresightful enough&#13;
to join a pre-paid legal insurance group? It is the wave of the future.&#13;
No one but the very wealthy can afford an attorney. All of us in the&#13;
middle (or lower) class frequently have to let legal matters slide as&#13;
well as our rights because we can't afford a lwayer. Unlimited consultation&#13;
for $15 to $20 per semester is cheap. Call the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
office today (553-2244) or stop down (WLLC-D193 ).&#13;
-&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
- ~&#13;
,.....&#13;
Mike Villers - Dealer 637-2726&#13;
Performing Frida_y &amp; Saturda_y&#13;
TRIAD&#13;
moN. &amp; TUES.&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
FEAST $1.95&#13;
INCLUDES: Salad. Italian&#13;
Bread and a FREE GLASS&#13;
OF WINE ....&#13;
On Spring, West of 31&#13;
In Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~erbu~&#13;
,ourt&#13;
~ If' University of Wisconsin-Parkside ~&#13;
Ft!ta&#13;
Acapulco&#13;
Semester Break January 6-13, 1977&#13;
$339 COMPLETE Triple occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE - MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, NOW!! • For application forms or additional informoti6n&#13;
contact: Parkside Union Office 553-2200 &#13;
Renshaw interviewed "&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER OCtober 6,' 1976&#13;
Basic'skill.s hearing held&#13;
by Jobn McKloskey&#13;
Only a dozen persons attended&#13;
an extensively publicized public&#13;
hearing on the basic skills&#13;
requirement held by the Basic&#13;
Skill. Subcommittee last&#13;
Th~ay.&#13;
The purpose of the hearing was&#13;
to solicit comment from all&#13;
members of the university&#13;
community as to exactly what&#13;
basic skill levels incoming freshmen&#13;
should be required to altain&#13;
in IIU!th, English, speech, and&#13;
library science.&#13;
If the 15-page list of basic skills&#13;
requirements is approved by the&#13;
Faculty Senate around January&#13;
1977, the program will go into&#13;
effect in the fall of 1977 and all&#13;
, incoming freshmen and transferees&#13;
will be required to pass&#13;
competency tests' before&#13;
graduation,&#13;
If a student should fail any of&#13;
the tests, he would have to obtainremedial&#13;
training and take the&#13;
test again, repeating the cycle if&#13;
he should happen to fail on the&#13;
second try,&#13;
, "Just passing one of the&#13;
coursesdoes not mean you have&#13;
satisfied the basic skil1s&#13;
requiremeni_," said sub committee&#13;
member Leo Comerford.&#13;
No student would be requiredor&#13;
allowed - to take a large&#13;
number of remedial courses in&#13;
his first semester at Parkside.&#13;
"We want to make sure that the&#13;
student doesn't take 12 hours of .&#13;
..&#13;
Claude Renshaw'&#13;
featuring:&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
PARKSID E&#13;
UNION&#13;
OPENING&#13;
Mon. thru FrL&#13;
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
Locered in Union Brzorre&#13;
Why do some people think&#13;
Bud, is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
, . When you say Budweisan, you've said it all!&#13;
ANHEUSER·BUSCH, IN"c.•• 1. LOUIS&#13;
Lecture&#13;
slated •&#13;
just remedial courses here," smd&#13;
subcommittee member Carla&#13;
Stoffle. •&#13;
According to subcommittee&#13;
member and hearing moderator&#13;
Beecham Robinson, "Counseling&#13;
is very important during the&#13;
enrollment stages so that a '&#13;
student will have the right&#13;
, balance of remedial courses:"&#13;
The possibility was raised by a&#13;
member of the audience that&#13;
potential students might be&#13;
scared away from Parkside next '&#13;
year by the basic skills&#13;
requirement.&#13;
"People who are frightened off&#13;
by this requirement may end up&#13;
leaving, but the sad fact is that&#13;
many of them come back," .said&#13;
Stoffle,&#13;
When the new requirements go&#13;
into effect, copies will be sent to&#13;
EnglIsh and mathematics&#13;
departments in ..area high&#13;
schools.&#13;
"Africa Counts: Number and&#13;
Pattern in African Culture" will&#13;
be the topic of a tree public&#13;
lecture by Claudia Zaslavsky, an&#13;
authority on mathematical&#13;
contributions of African peoples -.&#13;
'It will be presented at Parkside&#13;
at 4 p.m. on Friday Oct. 8 in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 0113.&#13;
The talk, the first in a series of&#13;
mathematics lectures sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside science division,&#13;
will be preceded by a coffee&#13;
reception honoring Zaslavsky at&#13;
3:30 p.m. in Classroom Bldg.&#13;
Room 111.&#13;
Zaslavsky is the author of a&#13;
recent book, "Africa Counts,".&#13;
described by its publisher as the&#13;
first of its kind and dealing with&#13;
the mathematical contributions&#13;
of peoples from Africa south of&#13;
the Sahara in the context of their&#13;
social and economic development.&#13;
The volume is based on&#13;
extensive research In. Africa.&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
Claude Renshaw is a member -of the business management faculty&#13;
who is leaving Parkside after this year. Following in the footsteps of&#13;
Mahesh Jain (Howard Univ.) , Peter Ellis (Utah St.) and Larry&#13;
Shirland (Univ. .of Vermont), Renshaw is taking a new job at St.&#13;
Mary's College in South Bend, Indiana. Ranger interviewed Renshaw&#13;
in an attempt to find out why he is leaving and what he feels Parkside&#13;
students can expect for the future of the business program.&#13;
RANGER: What were the events that led to your decision to leave&#13;
Parkside?&#13;
RENSHAW: First, let me say that leaving Parkside has been a&#13;
difficult decision for me to make. I've been treated fairly here and&#13;
except for a few incidents I've been happy. My decision to leave is not&#13;
a surprise; I informed the Vice-chancellor in Iate June of 1976that I&#13;
was going to St. .Mary's.&#13;
, Certain things had happened to make me think that I might be&#13;
happier elsewhere. The first thing thatllappened was the Chancellor's&#13;
firing of Bill Moy. (note: William Moy technically resigned as Dean of&#13;
the School of Modern Industry in the spring semester of '76). Up until&#13;
that time we in the department were excited and confident that the&#13;
Parkside business program was on the upswing. When Moy was fired&#13;
we considered it a rejection of everything we had tried to do.&#13;
The second thing that got me was when Mahesh Jain criticized the&#13;
faculty for reasons that were less than professional.&#13;
RANGER: What was the basis of the problem with Jain?&#13;
RENSHAW: When Jain first got here in 197~wewere all excited and&#13;
happy; here was a PhD and an excellent teacher and we were happy to&#13;
get him. (note: Jain was hired in the summer of 1974by the Business&#13;
Committee which included Renshaw). But Jain talked of a lot of&#13;
things, programs and ideas and then forgot about them. Then after;&#13;
Moy was fired and Larry Shirland had decided to leave Jain was&#13;
defeated in the election for the new chairmanship of the division, This&#13;
made him very unhappy and in turn seemed to take out hIS unhappiness&#13;
on us which made morale very low around here.&#13;
RANGER: What do you think of Jain's allegations that professor's.&#13;
wives called him on the phone to criticize him? '&#13;
RENSHAW: I don't really know, I can't think of anyone who might&#13;
have called., .&#13;
RANGER: What are your feelings regarding Chancellor Guskin's&#13;
handling of the business program?&#13;
RENSHAW: I strongly disagreed with his firing of Bill Moy. The&#13;
recently released task force reporj was 'supposed to greatly improve&#13;
the ~ur~i~ulumbut it's basically the same curriculum we set up, so&#13;
May s firing becomes even more questionable in my mind. .&#13;
RANGER: What action 'do you feel should be taken to improve the&#13;
business program?&#13;
RENSHAW: The big problem right now is faculty. There are only&#13;
three full-time teachers in the accounting section of the program and&#13;
I'll be leaving in January. We should hire at least five full-time&#13;
.teachers and require that any part-time teachers that are hired must&#13;
have hours available during the day so that students can talk to them&#13;
and get advice and help. The curriculum is excellent but without good&#13;
teachers, it is useless.&#13;
RANGER: Ho~would you sum up Parkside student's chances right&#13;
now with regard to majors in business?&#13;
• RENSHAW: If the teaching situation is cleared up, excellent.&#13;
Parkside students are graduating during a great time; accounting&#13;
jobs have opened up tmrrrensely in the Racine-Kenosha area and we&#13;
have had students who graduated last year get good jobs at local&#13;
firrrrs.&#13;
RANGER: Are UW-P students now eligible to sit for the CPA exam?&#13;
RENSHAW: Starting in May of 1977 students who have graduated&#13;
from any state university may sit for the exam providing they have&#13;
passed the courses required by the state. These courses are available&#13;
at Parkside and I can give a list oj themto anyconcerned student.&#13;
...&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER OCtober 6,- 1976&#13;
Basic skill_s hearing held Lecture&#13;
slated •&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Only a dozen persons attended '&#13;
an extensively publicized public&#13;
hearing on the basic skills&#13;
requirement held by the Basic&#13;
Skill~ Subcommittee last&#13;
ThurSC:ay.&#13;
The purpose of the hearing was&#13;
to solicit comment from all&#13;
members of the university&#13;
community as to exactly what&#13;
basic skill levels incoming fresh-&#13;
. men should be required to attain&#13;
in math, English, speech, and&#13;
library science.&#13;
~~&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
'.8' ·_ . Mike Villers- Dealer 637-2726&#13;
-&#13;
!)e &lt;!&amp;lbt&#13;
~Wttt &amp;boppt&#13;
featuring:&#13;
If the 15-page list of basic skills&#13;
requirements is approved by the&#13;
Faculty Senate around January&#13;
1977, the program -will go into&#13;
effect in the fall of 1977 and all&#13;
. incoming freshmen and transferees&#13;
will be required to pass&#13;
competency tests · before&#13;
graduation.&#13;
If a ~tudent should fail any of&#13;
the tests,.he would have to obtain--&#13;
remedial training and take the&#13;
·test again, repeating the cycle if&#13;
he should happen to fail on the&#13;
second try. 1 "Just passing one of the&#13;
courses·does not mean you have&#13;
satisfied the basic skills&#13;
requirement," said sub committee&#13;
member Leo Comerford.&#13;
No student would be requiredor&#13;
allowed - to take a large&#13;
number of remedial courses in&#13;
his first semester at Parkside.&#13;
"We want to make sure that the&#13;
student doesn't take 12 hours of .&#13;
just remedial courses here," said&#13;
subcommittee member Carla&#13;
Stoffle.&#13;
According to subcommittee&#13;
member and hearing moderator&#13;
Beecham Robinson, "Counseling&#13;
is very important during the&#13;
enrollment stages so that a ..&#13;
st_udent will have the right&#13;
· balance of remed{al courses.''&#13;
The possibility was raised by a&#13;
· member of the audience that&#13;
potential students might be&#13;
scared away from Parkside next -&#13;
year by the basic skills&#13;
requirement.&#13;
"People who are frightened off&#13;
by this requirement may end op&#13;
leaving, but the sad fact is that&#13;
many of tl)em come back," .said&#13;
Stoffle.&#13;
When the new requirements go&#13;
into effect, copies will be sent to&#13;
English and mathematics&#13;
departments in i,area high&#13;
schools.&#13;
"Africa Counts: Number and&#13;
P&amp;,ttern in African Culture" will&#13;
be the topic of a free public&#13;
lecture by Claudia iaslavsky, an&#13;
authority on mathematical&#13;
contributions of African peoples ..&#13;
'lt will be presented at. Parkside&#13;
at 4 p.m. on Friday Oct. 8 in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room i13.&#13;
The talk, the first in a series of&#13;
mathematics lectures sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside scjence division,&#13;
will be preceded by a coffee&#13;
recE:ption honoring Zaslavsky at&#13;
3:30 p.m. in Classroom Bldg.&#13;
Room 111.&#13;
Zaslavsky is the author of a&#13;
recent book, "Africa Counts,"&#13;
described by its publisher as the&#13;
first of its kind and dealing with&#13;
the mathematical contributions&#13;
of peoples from Africa south of&#13;
the Sahara in the context of their&#13;
social and economic development.&#13;
The volume is based on&#13;
extensive research !n Africa.&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way R ensh1;1.W interviewed&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
UNION&#13;
OPENING&#13;
OPEN :&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 o.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
Locoted in Union Bizorre&#13;
C:&#13;
St&#13;
Q.&#13;
e&#13;
0&#13;
.c:&#13;
...&#13;
C:&#13;
..&#13;
&gt;&#13;
l;&#13;
~ 0&#13;
a&#13;
Claude Renshaw·&#13;
Why ~o sollle people think&#13;
Bud® is sort of special?&#13;
Go ahead and find out why!&#13;
(Brewing beer right does&#13;
make a difference.)&#13;
When ' you say-Budweiser~, you've said it all!&#13;
ANHEUSER-BUSCH, IN,C. • ~T. LOUI S&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
Claude Renshaw is a member of the business f11anagement faculty&#13;
who is leaving Parkside after this year. Following in the footsteps of&#13;
Mahesh Jain (Howard Univ.), Peter Ellis (Utah St.) and Larry&#13;
Shirland (Univ. of Vermont), Renshaw is taking a new job at St.&#13;
Mary's College in Sout~ Bend, Indiana. Ranger interviewed Renshaw&#13;
in an attempt to find out why he is leaving and what he feels Parkside&#13;
students can expect for the future of the business program.&#13;
RANGER: What were the events that led to your decision to leave&#13;
Parkside?&#13;
RENSHAW: First, let me say that leaving Parkside has been a&#13;
difficult decision for me to make. I've been treated fairly here and&#13;
except for a few incidents I've been happy. My decision to leave is not&#13;
a surprise; I informed the Vice-Chancellor in fate June of 1976 that I&#13;
was going to St. Mary½,.&#13;
.. Certain thin&amp;s had happened to make me think that I might be&#13;
happier elsewhere. The first thing that happened was the Chancellor's&#13;
firing of Bill Moy. (note: William Moy technically resigned as ~n of&#13;
the School of Modern Industry in the spring semester of '76). Up until&#13;
that time we in the department were excited and confident that the&#13;
Parkside business program was on the upswing. When Moy was fired&#13;
we considered it a rejection of everything we had tried to do.&#13;
The second thing that got me was when Mahesh Jain criticized the&#13;
faculty for reasons that were less than professional.&#13;
RANGER: What was the basis of the problem with Jain?&#13;
RENSHAW: When Jain first got here in 1974 we·were all excited and&#13;
happy; here was a PhD and an excellent teacher and we were happy to&#13;
get~- (note: Jain was hired in th_e summer of 1974 by the Business&#13;
Committee which included Renshaw). But Jain talked of a lot of&#13;
things, program_s and ideas and then forgot about them. Then ·after&#13;
Moy was fired and Larry Shirland had decided to ieave, Jain wa;&#13;
defeated in the election for the new chairmanship of the division. This&#13;
made him very unhappy and in turn seemed to take out his unhappiness&#13;
on us which made morale very low around here. •&#13;
RANGER: What do you think of Jain's allegations that professor's .&#13;
wives called him on the phone to criticize him?.&#13;
RENSHAW: I don't really know, I can't think of anyone who· might&#13;
have called. ·, ·&#13;
RANGER: What are your feelings regarding Chancellor Guskin's&#13;
handling of the business program? .&#13;
RENSHAW: I strongly disagreed with his firing -0f Bill Moy. The&#13;
recently release~ task force report was·supposed to greatly improve&#13;
the ~~i~ulum but it's basically the same curric~um we set up, so&#13;
Moy s fmng becomes ev~n more questionable in my mind. .&#13;
RANGER: What action ·do you feel should be taken to improve the&#13;
business program?&#13;
RENSH~ W: The big problem right now is faculty. There are only&#13;
three full-tune teachers in the accounting section of the program and&#13;
I'll be leaving in January. We should hire at least five full-time&#13;
. teachers and require that any part-time teachers that are hired must&#13;
have hours available during the day so that students can talk to them&#13;
and get advice and help. The curriculum is excellent but without good&#13;
teachers, it is useless.&#13;
RAN.GER: How would you sum up Parkside student's ch~ces right&#13;
l)OW with regard to majors in business?&#13;
. REI:JSHA_W: If the teaching situation is cleared up, excellent.&#13;
~arks1de students ar~ graduating during a great time; a~counting&#13;
Jobs have opened up unmensely in the Racine-Kenosha area and we&#13;
~ave had stude1!,ts who graduated last year get good jobs at local&#13;
firms.&#13;
RANGER: Are UW-P students now eligible to sit for the CPA exam?&#13;
RENSHAW: Starting in May of 1977 students who have graduated&#13;
from any state university may sit for th~ exam providing they have&#13;
passed the courses required by the state. These courses are available&#13;
at Parkside and I can give a list of them to any concerned student.&#13;
.) &#13;
=&#13;
OSHA.-·~- ,&#13;
continued from pg. 3&#13;
'Token price up&#13;
On Monday, September 27, bus&#13;
token prices far Racine 'and&#13;
Kenosha buses increased from 20&#13;
cents to 25 cents. Regular bus&#13;
fare for both bus lines is 25 cents.&#13;
Since registration the Information&#13;
Kiosk in Main Place&#13;
was sellilJli the tokens 5' for a&#13;
. dollar or 20 cents each.&#13;
The purpose of this bargain&#13;
according to Erwin Zuehlke,&#13;
assistant. chancellor for Administration,&#13;
was, "to encourage&#13;
people to ride the bus."&#13;
The bus tokens are accepted by&#13;
botb bus lines and are&#13;
redeemable at Parkside for 25&#13;
cents each. The bus tokens were&#13;
purchased for Parkside under the.&#13;
direction of James E. Galbraith,&#13;
director of Planning ami Construction,&#13;
as an accounting&#13;
device to help both state and local&#13;
transportation authorities count.&#13;
the number of Parkside students&#13;
using the new route No.9 of the&#13;
Belle Urban System in Racine.&#13;
The Kenosha Transit System&#13;
also agreed to honor the tokens&#13;
making it possible for Parkside to&#13;
market the tokens to students and&#13;
increase mass transit use.&#13;
Presently the'price of a token is&#13;
the same price as a regular fare.&#13;
When asked about recent sales,&#13;
Information Kiosk Clerk,&#13;
Lorraine Kiekhoeler said, "Sales&#13;
were very brisk last week when&#13;
the posters' went up saying the&#13;
o price was going up. It has been&#13;
slow So far this week."&#13;
Zuehlke was asked wbat action&#13;
would be taken if sales dropped&#13;
dramatically after tbe increase.&#13;
Zuehlke said, "We would have to&#13;
go to some marketing device to&#13;
increase sales."&#13;
SingeJ!'---------&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
David Brandt, a student in the&#13;
marketing speciality, found the&#13;
task force report to be a little faro&#13;
sighted, since he felt problems&#13;
facing the program needed&#13;
solving in the immediate future.&#13;
He said, "this degree is going to&#13;
follow us for the rest of our&#13;
lives."&#13;
Singer stated that the&#13;
upheavals of the arrival of&#13;
Chancellor Guskin, and the&#13;
resignation of Dean William Moy&#13;
caused problems that will take a&#13;
long time to resolve.&#13;
He told students that the&#13;
management science division is&#13;
in the process of recruiting a new&#13;
chairman to begin looking into&#13;
FOR SALE: Portable Stereo with Garrard&#13;
turntable. Asking tSO. call 634·5305 after 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
current problems.&#13;
He felt no one in the present&#13;
program has the experience or&#13;
expertise to facilitate major&#13;
changes in the business program.&#13;
The search and screen committee,&#13;
chaired by Singer, is&#13;
hoping to recruit a new chairperson&#13;
by next semester, but&#13;
according to Singer, not many&#13;
topnotcb administrators or&#13;
teachers are willing to leave&#13;
schools at midterm.&#13;
When such an administrator is&#13;
selected, he should be available&#13;
for consultation during the spring&#13;
semester even if be doesn't start&#13;
working full-time until next&#13;
September.&#13;
FOR SALE: CB Radios and Scanne~, t&#13;
lactory new, lowest prices in town. Now In I&#13;
stock: Robyn WV-23, Midland 6628, 883, 886&#13;
aeercet 101. 5$./0-6635after 6 p.m. A.sk for&#13;
John. t&#13;
WILL 00 any kind of typing at reasonable'&#13;
rates, For intOf'"mation call 652·3373. ,&#13;
FOUND: Women's identification bracelet. t&#13;
Call 639·3080. t&#13;
Allention students: CarterMondale&#13;
campaign needs volunteers. Interested I&#13;
parties should call Racine 632107.,&#13;
k enosbe- 652 9976. ,&#13;
, WA'NTED: Sports writer lor Ranger ~hat is Van E. Thompson Free lance Photography, I&#13;
talented, good in grammar, and most of all, weddings and candid portraits. Phone 652·&#13;
'&#13;
dependable. See Jean Tenuta in the Ranger 8862. ,&#13;
office, WLLC 0194. .. -.I&#13;
--------- Center needs toys&#13;
Health and Safety Act (OSHA)&#13;
and its enforcer agency in the&#13;
Department of Labor, as well as&#13;
to the National Institute of Occupational&#13;
Safety and Health&#13;
(NIOSH), which determines&#13;
occupational health standards ..&#13;
Morning sessions will.. Ieature&#13;
the following topics and&#13;
sPeakers:&#13;
OSHA and Industry, Nicholas&#13;
DiArchangel, regional administrator,&#13;
OSHA region V,&#13;
Chicago; Could OSHA Compliance&#13;
be Profitable?, Robert&#13;
Korevec, personnel and safety&#13;
director, Maynard Sleel Co.,&#13;
Milwaukee; OSH~ Health&#13;
Citations, Milan Racic, senior&#13;
industrial hygienist, Department&#13;
of Labor, Washington, D.C.;&#13;
Defining the Problem, Dr.&#13;
Marjorie Lundquist, industrial&#13;
hygiene manager, Globe-Union&#13;
Inc., Milwaukee; Role of the&#13;
Consultant, Dr. Jack E. Peterson,&#13;
civil engineering department,&#13;
Marquette University; and&#13;
Legal Aspects. of Occupational'&#13;
Health •. Lorice Ede, chief of&#13;
information services, National&#13;
Institute forOccupational Safety&#13;
and Health, Cincinnati. _&#13;
A luncheon session will feature&#13;
Women in the Woriwlace, Dr.&#13;
Vilma R.o Hunt, environmental&#13;
health professor, Pennsylvania&#13;
·State University.&#13;
Afternoon sessions are:&#13;
_Elements of a Sound Occupational&#13;
Health Program, Dr.&#13;
Clyde M. Berry, chief, industrial&#13;
hygiene, Department of&#13;
Preventive Medicine, University&#13;
of Iowa; The Role of Toxicology,&#13;
Doris Roettgers, industrial&#13;
toxicologist, Memorial Hospital.&#13;
West Allis; Medical&#13;
Requirements of OSHA, a panel&#13;
on medicine, govermnent and&#13;
insurance by Dr. Anthony A.'&#13;
Hermann, health services director, S.C, Johnson &amp; Son , -,&#13;
Inc., Racine, F'lcrence Ryer, CI .'fi d .&#13;
OSHA. Washington, D.C., and I asslIe' I&#13;
Betty Callow, Employers Mutual I . I&#13;
of Wausau; and OSHA Standards&#13;
Setting Process, a panel of I .&#13;
government, industry and labor , ' ( f ) ,&#13;
representatives· inclUding,&#13;
DiArchangel, Robert Hanna,&#13;
.ree "&#13;
area director of OSHA' in&#13;
Milwaukee, Charles.' A. Hawk, , ,&#13;
safety engineer, S.C. Johnson &amp; I&#13;
Son Inc., and a union panelist to "IMPORTANT' STUDY ABROAD ANbe&#13;
named, ., NOUNCEMENT: Limited openings still&#13;
, remain on'CFS accredited Academjc Year&#13;
Prof. Datta will moderate the , 1976.11Programs for Fall, Winter, Spring, or&#13;
morning sessions and. UW.P Prof. Full Year for qualified applicants. Students&#13;
in good standing - FreShman,. ~oPhomore,&#13;
Eugene C. Gasiorkiewicz the I Junior, Senior Year are euatere. Good&#13;
afternoon sessions. Registration f.aculty references.~ evidence. of sen.&#13;
'&#13;
motivation and sincere lnterest 10 study&#13;
will be held from 9-9:30 a.m, in abroad and internatlonat cultural exchange&#13;
. t count more with CFS than specific grade the Parkside Union, with the tirs I point. For application - Information:&#13;
session beginning at 9:45. The CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUDY: AY&#13;
'&#13;
ADMISSIONS, 216 s. StaN!, Box 606, Ann luncheon session will begin at Arbor, MI 48107 (313) 662-5575. '&#13;
1:15, with the concluding session I&#13;
beginning at 4 p.m. Registration&#13;
and more information can be t&#13;
obtained through University&#13;
Extension at Parkside, (414) 553-&#13;
2312. (A conference fee of $5&#13;
includes lunch).&#13;
by Chris Meyer&#13;
The Parkside Child Care Center is in need of toys for&#13;
its 81 children. The enrollment ther is expected to&#13;
climb' therefore -the Parkside Student Government&#13;
, , . d· th ek Association-has decided to sponsor a toy rIve ewe&#13;
of October 18-22' to benefit the Center. ted&#13;
There will be tbree drop boxes on camp~ (decora _&#13;
by the Child Care Center kids) - one in Mam Place, one&#13;
on the D-llevel of the Classromm building, and one m&#13;
the Union The Center itself will also be a drop pomt.&#13;
" " PSGA is Storage is a problem for the Center so .&#13;
asking that toys donated be relatively small.&#13;
b&#13;
-of " safe" toys had to be In the past a large num er un&#13;
discarded,_which partially accounts f~r t~e need to&#13;
replenish the Center's stock. Toys donated sho~ld meet&#13;
"safe" standards, that is they sbould be m good&#13;
condition and of simple, sturdy construction. Those&#13;
made of plastic or wood are best and any metal parts&#13;
must be rest-free and blunt-edged. .&#13;
Some examples o. useful toys and playthmgs are:&#13;
Manipulative, puzzles of 2-15 pieces, Tinker Toys&#13;
and other multi-fit buildirg toys, clay, beads for&#13;
stringing, and wooden lacmg boards. .&#13;
Role-playing; dolls (ethmc preferred) clothing toy&#13;
tea sets, and aluminum kitchen utensils .&#13;
Other: books, sand and water play eqUIpment,&#13;
tricycles, wagons, push-pull toys, punchmg _bag,&#13;
simple musical instruments, ease\s .&#13;
Larger items are also needed with which to furmsh&#13;
the Center such as rocking chairs, a couch, a reco~d&#13;
player and records, and a filmstrip projector (all m&#13;
good condition-working order).&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6. 1976S&#13;
.....VW"JLit ...¥ATVU .. A •• V/Jk av-... UJ • n ¥iJ1Va1't1taAI N U A¥ 7Js&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
M ike Villers -&#13;
8&#13;
Dealer&#13;
~~~&#13;
637-2726&#13;
II1II_SW...:..-IT_C_H_H_I_T_S_&#13;
Special bu}t&#13;
- ~&#13;
Grey and rust plaid&#13;
plays the coordinated&#13;
game for fall.&#13;
TO&#13;
Mixoble blends or wool and nylon ror&#13;
campus or career. Snappy 8lyling in&#13;
rusr and gray plaid or solids,&#13;
Sizes 5 • 15.&#13;
Plaid blazer, trimly tailored '22&#13;
Rust pants ..'16&#13;
Bow&#13;
Solid&#13;
Plaid&#13;
blo";'e, in beige '13&#13;
veet , in autumn rust 0 ••• 'II&#13;
skirt '12&#13;
Sweater, beige turtle neck '10&#13;
JUNIOR REFLECTION SHOP&#13;
Coordinate. It figures.&#13;
USE WARDS&#13;
CHARG-ALL&#13;
CREDIT&#13;
360052nd Street KENOSHA&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
OPEN DAILY: MOD.\IIroSat. 11:10 A.M. 10':. P,!M,.&#13;
SaD. 12 ID 5 P,M.&#13;
-&#13;
.0 SHA---.-:=-- , continued from pg. 3&#13;
Health and Safety Act (OSHA)&#13;
and its enforcer agency _in ,the&#13;
Department of Labor, as well as&#13;
to the National Institute of Occupational&#13;
Safety and Health&#13;
(NIOSH), which determines&#13;
occupational health standards._&#13;
Morning sessions will f~ature&#13;
he following topics and&#13;
speakers:&#13;
OSHA and Industry, Nicholas&#13;
DiArchangel, regional administrator,&#13;
OSHA region V,&#13;
Chicago; Could OSHA Compliance&#13;
be Profitable?, Robert&#13;
Korevec, personnel and safety&#13;
director, Maynard Steel Co.,&#13;
Milwaukee; OSHA Health&#13;
Citations, Milan Racic, senior&#13;
industrial hygienist, Department&#13;
of Labor, Washington, D.C.;&#13;
Defining the Problem, Dr.&#13;
Marjorie Lundquist, industrial&#13;
hygiene manager, Globe-Union&#13;
Inc., Milwaukee; Role of the&#13;
Consultant, Dr. Jack E. Peterson,&#13;
civil engineering department,&#13;
Marquette University; and&#13;
Legal Aspects, of Occupational '&#13;
Health, · Lorice Ede, chief of&#13;
information services, National&#13;
Institute for -Occupational Safety&#13;
and Health, Cincinnati. _&#13;
A luncheon session will feature&#13;
Women in the Worlg&gt;lace, Dr.&#13;
Vilma R. Hunt, environmental&#13;
health professor, Pennsylvania&#13;
·State University.&#13;
Afternoon sessions are:&#13;
Elements of a Sound Oc-&#13;
;upational Health Program, Dr.&#13;
Clyde M. Berry, chief, industrial&#13;
hygiene, Department of&#13;
Preventive Medicine, University&#13;
of Iowa; The Role of Toxicology,&#13;
Doris Roettgers, industrial&#13;
toxicologist, Memorial Hospital,,&#13;
West Allis; Medical&#13;
Requirements of OSHA, a panel&#13;
on medicine, government and&#13;
insurance by Dr. Anthony A.&#13;
Hei:mann, health services&#13;
director, S.C. Johnson &amp; Son&#13;
Inc,_, Racine, Florence Ryer,&#13;
OSHA, Washington,· D.C., and&#13;
Betty Callow, Employers Mutual&#13;
of Wausau; and OSHA Standards&#13;
Setting Process, a panel of&#13;
government, industry and ~abor&#13;
representatives · including&#13;
DiArchangel, Robert Hanna,&#13;
area director of OSHA·, in&#13;
Milwaukee, Charles · A. Hawk.&#13;
safety engineer, S.C. Johnson &amp;&#13;
Son Inc., and a union panelist to&#13;
be named.&#13;
Prof. Datta will moderate the&#13;
morning sessions and UW-P Prof.&#13;
Eugene C. Gasiorkiewicz the&#13;
afternoon sessions. Registration&#13;
will be held from 9-9:30 a.m. in&#13;
the Parkside Union, with the first&#13;
session beginning at 9:45. The&#13;
luncheon session will begin at&#13;
1: 15, with the concluding session&#13;
beginning at 4 p.m. Registration&#13;
. and more information can be&#13;
obtained through University&#13;
Extension at Parkside, ( 414) 553-&#13;
2312. (A conference fee of $5&#13;
includes lunch).&#13;
~Token price up&#13;
On Mo!}day, September 27, bus&#13;
token prices for Racine and&#13;
Kenosha buses increased from 20&#13;
cents to 25 cents. Regular bus&#13;
fare for both bus lines is 25 cents.&#13;
Since registration the Information&#13;
Kiosk in Main Place&#13;
was sellil)g the tokens 5 for a&#13;
dollar or 20 cents each.&#13;
The purpose of this bargain&#13;
according to Erwin Zuehlke,&#13;
assistant chancellor for Administration,&#13;
was, "to encourage&#13;
people to ride the bus."&#13;
The bus tokens are accepted by&#13;
both bus lines and are&#13;
redeemable at Parkside for 25&#13;
cents each. The bus tokens were&#13;
purchased for Parkside under the&#13;
direction of James E. Galbraith,&#13;
directpr of Planning and Construction,&#13;
as an accounting&#13;
device to help both state and local&#13;
transportat10n authorities count .&#13;
the number of Parkside students&#13;
using the new route No. 9 of the&#13;
Belle Urban System in Racine.&#13;
The Kenosha Transit System&#13;
also agreed to honor the tokens&#13;
making it possible for Parkside to&#13;
market the tokens to students and&#13;
increase mass transit use.&#13;
Presently the"price of a token is&#13;
the same price as a regular fare.&#13;
.When asked about recent sales,&#13;
Information Kiosk Clerk,&#13;
·Lorraine Kiekhoefer said, "Sales&#13;
were very brisk last week when&#13;
the posters went up saying the&#13;
-price was going up. It has been&#13;
slow so far this week."&#13;
Zuehlke was asked what action&#13;
would be taken if sales dropped&#13;
dramatically after the increase.&#13;
Zuehlke said, "We would have to&#13;
go to some marketing device to&#13;
increase sales."&#13;
Singe~--'-----&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
David Brandt, a student in the&#13;
marketing speciality, found the&#13;
task force report to be a little far-&#13;
. sighted, since he felt problems&#13;
facing the program needed&#13;
solving in the immediate future.&#13;
He said, "this degree is going to&#13;
follow us for the rest of our&#13;
lives."&#13;
Singer stated that the&#13;
upheavals of the arrival of&#13;
Chancellor Guskin, and the&#13;
resignation of Dean William Moy&#13;
caused problems that will take a&#13;
long time to resolve.&#13;
He told students that the&#13;
management science division is&#13;
in the process of recruiting a new&#13;
chairman to begin looking into&#13;
current problems.&#13;
He felt no one in the present&#13;
program has the experience or&#13;
expertise to facilitate major&#13;
changes in the business program.&#13;
The search and screen committee,&#13;
chaired by Singer, is&#13;
hoping to recruit a new chairperson&#13;
by next semester, but&#13;
according to Singer, not many&#13;
topnotch administrators i&gt;r&#13;
teachers are willing to leave&#13;
schools at midterm.&#13;
When such an administrator is&#13;
selected, he should be available&#13;
for consultation during the spring&#13;
semester even if he doesn't start&#13;
working full-time until next&#13;
September.&#13;
r----------------l&#13;
!Classified ·: t .&#13;
f (free) !&#13;
t f&#13;
t · 0 0 AN IMPORTANT STUDY ABRA · t NOUNCEMENT: Limited openings still&#13;
remain on CFS accredited AcademJc Year 1976-77 Programs for Fall, Winter. Spring, or t&#13;
f&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
Full Year tor qualified applicants. Students&#13;
in good standing . Freshman, Sophomore,&#13;
Junior, Senior Year are eligible. Good&#13;
faculty references, evidence of selfmotivation&#13;
and sincere 1nterest in study&#13;
abroad and international cultural exchange&#13;
count more with CFS than specific gr_ade&#13;
point. For application · Information:&#13;
CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUOY : AY&#13;
ADMISSIONS, 216 S. Stale, Box 606, Ann&#13;
Arbor. Ml 48107 (313) 662-5575. '&#13;
t FOR SALE: Portable Stereo with Garrard&#13;
t turntable. Asking 550. call 634-5305 after 4&#13;
p.m .&#13;
FOR SALE : CB Radios and Scanners. t&#13;
factory new, lowest prices in town. Now '"f stock : Robyn WV-23, Midland 862B, 883, 886&#13;
Bearcat 101. 554 -6635 after 6 p.m . Ask for&#13;
John. t&#13;
WILL oo any kind of typing at reasonable t rates. For information call 652-3373. t&#13;
FOUND : Women's identification bracelet. f&#13;
C:~t&#13;
6&#13;
:::::o. students : carter Monda l e t&#13;
campaign needs volunteers. Interested t&#13;
parties should call Racine 632 107•,&#13;
Kenosha - 652-9976. t&#13;
t WA.NTED: Sports writer for Ranger that is van E. Thompson Free lance Photography, t talented, good in grammar I and most of alJ, weddings and candid portraits. Phone 652-&#13;
t dependable. See Jean Tenuta in the Ranger 8862 '&#13;
office, WLLC D194 . ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~&#13;
~~~~~~~~~&#13;
Center needs toys · by Chris Meyer&#13;
The Parkside Child Care Center is in need of toys for&#13;
its 81 children. The enrollment ther is expected to&#13;
climb therefore -the Parkside Student Government&#13;
condition and of simple, sturdy construction. Those&#13;
made of plastic or wood are best and any metal parts&#13;
' ' · d' th eek Association-has decided to sponsor a toy rive e w&#13;
of October 18-22 · to benefit the Center. ted&#13;
There will be three drop boxes on c~p~ ( decora .&#13;
by the Child Care Center kids) - one m Mam Place, o~e&#13;
on the D-1 level of the Classromm building, and 0n: m&#13;
the uru·on The Center itself will also be a drop pomt. . ' ' PSGA is Storage is a problem for the Center so _&#13;
asking that toys donated b!;! relatively small.&#13;
In the past a large number of "unsafe" toys had to be&#13;
discarded which partially accounts f~r t~e need tot&#13;
' · · ted ho ldmee replenish the Center's stock. Toys dona s ~-&#13;
"safe" standards, that is they should be m good&#13;
must be rest-free and blunt-edged. . Some examples of useful toys and playthings are:&#13;
Manipulative;. puzzles of 2-15 pieces, Tinker Toys&#13;
and other multi-fit buildipg toys, clay, beads for&#13;
stringing, and wooden lacing boards. . Role-playing; dolls ( ethnic preferred_) clothing toy&#13;
tea sets, and aluminum kitchen utens~ .&#13;
Other: books, sand and water play e~u1pment,&#13;
tricycles, wagons, push-pull toys, punchmg bag,&#13;
simple musical instruments, ease\s . Larger items are also needed with which to furrush&#13;
th Center such as rocking chairs, a couch, a reco~d&#13;
pl:yer and records, and a filmstrip projector (all m&#13;
good condition-working order).&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976 S --~-&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers ~ - Dealer 637-2726 . ... ----. .. . ... ... . .. . . .. . .. . . - - . . . - . . .&#13;
Bn---'sw_IT_C_H_H_IT_s____,&#13;
Special buy.&#13;
Grey and rust plaid&#13;
plays the coordinat d&#13;
game for fall.&#13;
TO&#13;
l\lixable blend or wool and n Ion for&#13;
campus or career. nappy tylin in&#13;
ru t and gray plaid r olid .&#13;
ize 5 - 15.&#13;
Plaid blazer triml tailor d .....•••.• '22&#13;
Rut&#13;
Bo~&#13;
Solid&#13;
Plaid&#13;
pant .•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '1 6&#13;
blo.; e, in beig ••.••••••...•....... '13&#13;
et, in autumn rut ............. '11&#13;
ki rt •••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••• • 12&#13;
Sweater, beige turtle n ck ••••••••••••• • 10&#13;
J "'HOR REFLECTIO ' HOP&#13;
Coordinate. It figures.&#13;
USE WARDS&#13;
CHARG-ALL&#13;
CREDIT&#13;
3600 52nd Street KENOSHA&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
OPEN DAILY : Mon. tbru Sat. 10:00 A.M. to 9:80 P.1\1,, Sun. lZ lo 5 P.M. &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976&#13;
Career Center offers&#13;
•&#13;
serVlcesby&#13;
Barbara Larson&#13;
Career COUDSelor&#13;
looking for jobs after graduation. Standard and Poors Directory lists&#13;
companies according to, their products and services as well as by&#13;
geOgraphic area. For students who want to research companies before&#13;
writing letters or job interviews, there are twenty five file drawers&#13;
with information on specific businesses from AAI Corporation to Zurn&#13;
Industries, Inc; Job openings are posted on a bulletin board or in loose&#13;
leaf binders. Ad Search, a national want-ad newspaper, comes out&#13;
.weekly. It contains want-ads fisted by job catagories from 6il different&#13;
papers allover the country.&#13;
Books on how; tl&gt; write resumes, how to find a job, how to do interviews&#13;
and how to make career decisions are in the Center as well as&#13;
information from the federal government and state governments on&#13;
projected employment trends. . ,&#13;
Counselors are available to help students locate and use material in&#13;
the Resource Center Monday through Friday from 7:45 a.m. to 4:30&#13;
p.rh, Students making career decisions of any type are encouraged to&#13;
make use of this facility. -&#13;
'The Career Resource Center in 107Tallent Hall bas a collection of&#13;
materials on occupations, schoolS, employment trends, industries and&#13;
job seeking techniques.&#13;
Students researching a particular occupation can find information&#13;
on the work performed, training requirements and other&#13;
qualifications, places of employment, employment outlook as well as&#13;
earnings and working conditions.&#13;
'The individual who does not have a specific occupational choice can&#13;
read the 1976-77 edition of the Occupational Outlook Handbook,&#13;
available in the Resource Center, for some ideas. Books on occupations&#13;
from the Richard Rossen Press and Vocational Guidance&#13;
Press series can he checked out by students.&#13;
'There are about 500 files on different jobs which are arranged according&#13;
to general area of interest, such as government, socially&#13;
oriented careers, health careers, business and math careers,&#13;
engineering, science and environmental careers. A student without a&#13;
specific occupation in.mind, but with a general sense of direction can&#13;
hrowse through the files broadening his or her conception of the career&#13;
alternatives possible.&#13;
Information regarding graduate and professional schools include&#13;
books listing schools according to area, (withentrance requirements&#13;
summarized) material on getting into graduate school, booklets on&#13;
preparing for the Graduate RecordExam and other exams pius a&#13;
collection of catalogs from various graduate schools. Catalogs are also&#13;
available from schools in veterinary medicine, law, dentistry, nursing,&#13;
optometry, podiatry and medicine.&#13;
Applications for various exams are in the Resource Center such as&#13;
Graduate Record Exam, Graduate Management Admission Tests,&#13;
Law School Admission Test, Professional and Administrative Career&#13;
Examination for federal employment, and Pharmacy, Dental, Optometry&#13;
Admission Test. ~II.. E V__ -:::-E-:-"""":_N"",,,,:~~T...,.__ S__ · ]&#13;
~ Wednesday, Oct. 6&#13;
M&#13;
ike Viller-s_Dealer 637:..2726 Mini·tournamentsponsored by WargamersClubbegins with Game of Bar-Lev from the Yom-Kippur War of 1973.Register in CL 140.&#13;
"~J\lVtJV!¥ ...u _ Elections Sub-Committee meets at 11a.m. in WLLC-D193. Open to all"&#13;
students interested in helping conduct fall elections for PSGA, Inc.&#13;
Senate and Allocations Committee.&#13;
Executive Council of PSGA, Inc. meets at 2 p.m. in WLLC Dl93.&#13;
- ,&#13;
Pet fageant&#13;
sponsored&#13;
'The Parkside ACtivities Board&#13;
Outing Committee is sponsoring&#13;
a Pet Pageant on 'Thursday afternoon,&#13;
October 7, in the commons&#13;
area located in front of&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Awards of raw hot dogs will be&#13;
given to winners in the following&#13;
categories: prettiest, ugliest,&#13;
most obedient, most congenial, .&#13;
_ strangest, best pet-owner look&#13;
alike, strangest pet-owner&#13;
combination, strangest trick&#13;
performed by pet, owner or both.&#13;
All owners to be on leashes and&#13;
under control. Prizes will be&#13;
awarded between 2 and 3 p.m.&#13;
The pageant is open and free to&#13;
all students.&#13;
'Thursday, Oct. 7&#13;
Movie, "Harold and Maude," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 in the Cinema&#13;
'Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
_ Public Relation.and Student Information Committee meets at 3 p.m. in&#13;
WLLC Dl93. Open III all .interested students.&#13;
Foreign Students Club (on 2nd page)&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6to 10p.m. in CLI4O.&#13;
Ways and M~ans Committee meets at 7 p.m. in WLLC Dl93.&#13;
Dancer, Raymond Johnson, performs at 8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Hom. of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich·&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington #trI.. 6M-2i73&#13;
Friday, Oct. 8&#13;
Senate Student Service Committee Committee meets at 9:30 a.rn. in&#13;
WLLC Dl74. Open to all interested students. -'&#13;
Senate Business and Finance Committee meets at 10:15a.m. in WLLC&#13;
D174. •&#13;
Chess Club holds first meeting from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Lecture entitled "Africa Counts", a history of mathematics and art in&#13;
Africa, by Mrs. Claudia Zaslavsky is at 4 p.m, in CLll3. Preceded by&#13;
coffee and refreshments with the speaker at 3:30 p.m. in CLlll.&#13;
Sponsored by the Mathematics Faculty and the Science Division.&#13;
Women's swimming, UW-P v.s. Carroll College, begins 4 p.m, in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Movie, "Harold and- Maude," plays at 7 and 9 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
'Theatre. Admission is $L .&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
.1&amp;ES1&#13;
q ?&#13;
'SALE&#13;
~I!~Books 10~&#13;
REFERENCEBOOKS&#13;
COLLEGE PAPERBACKS&#13;
Fr.. Pi.zza Deli"ery&#13;
Club Highview'&#13;
5035 6.0th Street&#13;
.Phone: 652·8737&#13;
Alt. 4.11.. '11' Chl.k.l, Stl.h.fII: RI"I.II, 8.. 1&#13;
OPEN- 4 t.M. to t I.M.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 10&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "Harold and Maude," plays at 7:30 p.m,&#13;
'Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
in the Cinema&#13;
'THOUSANDS TO·&#13;
CHOOSE FROm&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 12&#13;
WargamersClub meets from 6 to 10p.m.ln CL 140.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. H&#13;
Legal Assistance Co-op members meet ai 7 p.m. in C~ 325.&#13;
Foreign Students Club meets at 4:30 p.m. in WLLC Dl74. All foreign&#13;
students please attend. • ,&#13;
GIRLS &amp; GUYS 79e&#13;
PRo&#13;
Jeans&#13;
NAmE BRANDS&#13;
•&#13;
Furniture SOFAS. CHAIRS. BEDS. TABLES&#13;
All reduced· up to 50%&#13;
These &amp; more - SALE PRIC~S thru Oct. 13 •&#13;
GOODWILL BUDGET STORE&#13;
Elmwood Plaza • Racine&#13;
- /&#13;
HOUIS Doily 9-9 Sot. 9-6 Sun. 11-5&#13;
Dancer&#13;
to perform&#13;
"Raymond Johnson in Concert,"&#13;
a program of solo dance in&#13;
the modern idiom and the second&#13;
offering in the Accent on Enrjchment&#13;
series at Parkside, will be&#13;
presented at 8 p.m. on Thursday,&#13;
Oct. ~; in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. •&#13;
Johnson, whose work has been&#13;
acclaimed by such respected&#13;
critics as Clive Barnes of the New&#13;
York Times, will present a&#13;
program ranging from ,the&#13;
serious and introspective to the&#13;
surprising and zany in modern&#13;
dance. .&#13;
His touring show includes intricate&#13;
lighting effects designed&#13;
by Edward I. Byers, who has&#13;
designed the lighting for&#13;
numerous dance and theater&#13;
productions in New York City and&#13;
made his Broadway debut in 1974&#13;
with "Tubstrip."&#13;
Johnson is affiliated-with the&#13;
Artists-in-Schools program, and,&#13;
in addition to his performance at&#13;
Parkside, he will be. artist-inresidence&#13;
for the Racine Unified&#13;
School District during the week of&#13;
Oct, 4 through 9. His schedule will&#13;
include a series of classes and&#13;
demonstrations at the Fine Arts&#13;
School, workshops for teachers of&#13;
physical education, dance and&#13;
drama and a children's concert&#13;
at 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 9,&#13;
in Horlick High School&#13;
Auditorium.&#13;
Seminars&#13;
scheduled ,&#13;
"Bioethics and. the Human&#13;
Prospect" will he the topic of Dr.&#13;
Van Potier, professor of oncology&#13;
at,McArdle Laboratory for&#13;
Cancer Research, at Parkside at&#13;
2 p.m, on Friday, Oct. 8. 'The&#13;
McArdle facility at UW·Madison&#13;
is one of the nation's major&#13;
cancer research centers.&#13;
Dr. Potter's lecture is part of a&#13;
series of free public seminars&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Life&#13;
Science faculty for the first&#13;
semester.&#13;
Other seminars are:&#13;
Oct. 15 - "Protein Synthesis in&#13;
Developing Bean Seeds" by Dr.&#13;
T. Hall of the UW-Madison&#13;
Department of Horticulutre&#13;
Oct. 22 - "Pole of Light and the&#13;
Pineal Gland in the Regulation of&#13;
Reproduction" by Dr. F. W.&#13;
Turek of the N ortbwestern&#13;
University Department of&#13;
Biological Sciences&#13;
Oct. 28 ', "'The \,:volutionary&#13;
Ecology of Uni-Sex Fishes" by&#13;
Prof. Jack Schultz' of the&#13;
University of Connecticut&#13;
Nov. 5 - "Reactivity, Structure&#13;
and Behavior of Protoplasm in&#13;
Relation to Age" by Dr. Norman&#13;
Joseph of the University of&#13;
Illinois-Chicago College of&#13;
Pharmacy&#13;
Nov. 12· "Behavior in Cranes"&#13;
by Dr, George Archibald,&#13;
Director of the International&#13;
Crane Foundation.&#13;
Nov. 19 - "Electromagnetism,&#13;
Man and the Environment" by&#13;
Dr. J .H. Battocletti of the&#13;
Medical College of Wisconsin in&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
All seminars will be in&#13;
Greenquist Hall Room 0.127 with&#13;
the exceptions o( thOse on Oct. 8&#13;
and Nov. 12, which will be in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 105. All&#13;
seminars begin at 2 p.m, Further&#13;
information can he obtained from&#13;
Eugene GoOdman~ the series&#13;
coordinator.&#13;
I&#13;
"&#13;
~&#13;
t&#13;
,&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
'"~&#13;
~&#13;
.-&#13;
•&#13;
.-&#13;
~&#13;
..&#13;
«&#13;
II&#13;
1&#13;
--&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976&#13;
Career Center offers services&#13;
by Barbara Larson&#13;
Career Counselor&#13;
The Career Resource Center in 107 Tallent Hall has a collection of&#13;
materials on occupations, schools, employment trends, industries and&#13;
job seeking techniques.&#13;
Students researching a particular occupation can find information&#13;
on the work performed, training requirements and other&#13;
qualifications, places of employment, employment outlook as well as&#13;
earnings and working conditions.&#13;
The individual who does not have a specific occupational choice can&#13;
read the 1976-77 edition of the Occupational Outlook Handbook,&#13;
available in the Resource Center, for some ideas. Books on occupations&#13;
from the Richard Rossen Press and Vocational Guidance&#13;
Press series can be checked out by students.&#13;
There are about 500 files on different jobs which are arranged according&#13;
to general area of interest, such as government, socially&#13;
oriented careers, health careers, business and math careers,&#13;
engineering, science and environmental careers. A student without a&#13;
specific occupation in-mind, but with a general sense of direction can&#13;
browse through the files broadening his or her conception of the career&#13;
alternatives possible.&#13;
Informatiol\ regarding graduate and professional schools include&#13;
books listing schools according to area, (with .entrance requirements&#13;
summarized) material on getting into graduate school, booklets on&#13;
preparing for the Graduate Record _Exam and other exams plus a&#13;
collection of catalogs from various graduate schools. Catalogs are also&#13;
available from schools in veterinary medicine, law, dentistry, nursing,&#13;
optometry, podiatry and medicine.&#13;
looking for jobs after graduation. Standard and Poors Directory lists&#13;
companies according to.,_ their products and services as well as by&#13;
geographic area. For students who want to research companies before&#13;
writing letters or job interviews, there are twenty five file drawers&#13;
with information on specific businesses from AAI Corporation to Zurn&#13;
Industries, Inc; Job openings are posted on a bulletin board or in loose&#13;
leaf binders.Ad Search, a national want-ad newspaper, comes out&#13;
weekly. It contains want-ads fisted by job catagories from 68 different&#13;
papers all .over the country.&#13;
Books on how. to write resumes, how to find a job, how to do interviews&#13;
and how to make career decisions are in the Center as well as&#13;
information from the federal government and state governments on&#13;
projected employment trends.&#13;
Counselors are available {o help students locate and use material in&#13;
the Resource Center Monday through Friday from 7:45 a.m. to 4:30&#13;
p.rh. Students making career decisions of any type are encouraged to&#13;
make use of this facility. -&#13;
Pet fageant&#13;
sponsored&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Outing Committee is sponsoring&#13;
a Pet Pageant on Thursday afternoon,&#13;
October 7, in the commons&#13;
area located in front of&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Awards o(raw hot dogs will be&#13;
given to winners in the following&#13;
categories: prettiest, ugliest,&#13;
most obedient, most congenial,&#13;
strangest, best pet-owner look&#13;
alike, strangest pet,owner&#13;
combination, strangest trick&#13;
performed by pet, owner or both.&#13;
All owners to be on leashes and&#13;
under control. Prizes will be&#13;
awarded between 2 and 3 p.m.&#13;
The pageant is open and free to&#13;
all students.&#13;
Applications for various exams are in the Resource Center such as&#13;
Graduate Record Exam, Graduate Management Admission Tests,&#13;
Law School Admission Test, Professional and Administrative Career&#13;
Examination for federal employment, and Pharmacy, Dental, Optometry&#13;
Admission Test.&#13;
~ ·&#13;
., ... ___ ._E ___ v ___ E ___N ___ T ___ s __&#13;
· ___ J]&gt;&#13;
&lt;e) - - Mike Villers - Dealer 637-2726&#13;
--&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarini&#13;
Sandwich . OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
261S Washington /we. 634-2373&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
l(l(IJIIIRHSI SA LE&#13;
All Books&#13;
FICTION&#13;
REFERENCE BOOKS&#13;
COLLEGE PAPERBACKS&#13;
10~&#13;
THOUSANDS TO •&#13;
CHOOSE FROm&#13;
Jeans&#13;
NAffiE BRANDS&#13;
GIRLS &amp; GUYS 79e&#13;
PR.&#13;
Furniture sorns. CHAIRS. BEDs. TABLES&#13;
All reduced - up to 50%&#13;
These &amp; more - SALE f'RIC~S thru Oct. 13&#13;
GOODWILL BUDGET STORE&#13;
Elmwood Plozo. • Racine&#13;
Hours Doily 9-9 Sot. 9- 6 Sun. 11- 5&#13;
•&#13;
_,&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 6&#13;
Mini-tournament sponsored by Wargamers Club begins with Game of&#13;
Bar•Lev from the Yom-Kippur War of 1973. Register in CL 140.&#13;
Elections Sub-Committee meets at 11 a.m. in WLLC-D193. Open to all&#13;
students interested in helping conduct fall elections for PSGA, Inc.&#13;
Senate and Allocations Committee.&#13;
Executive Council of PSGA, Inc. meets at 2 p.m. in WLLC D193.&#13;
'&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 7&#13;
Movie, "Harold and Maude," plays at 2:30 and 7:30 in the Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
. Public Relation and Student Information Committee meets at 3 p.m. in&#13;
WU..C D193. Open ~ all .interested students.&#13;
Foreign Students Club ( on 2nd page)&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CLl 40.&#13;
Ways and M~ans Committee meets at 7 p.m. in WLLC Dl93.&#13;
Dancer, RaymondJohnson,performsat8p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 8&#13;
Senate Student Service Committee Committee meets at 9:30 a.m. in&#13;
WLLC D174. Open to all interested students. ·&#13;
Senate Business and Finance Committee meets at 10: 15 a.m. in WLLC&#13;
D174. p&#13;
Chess Club holds first meeting from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Lecture entitled "Africa Counts", a history of mathematics and art in&#13;
Africa, by Mrs. Claudia Zaslavsk).'. is at 4 p.m·. in CL113. Preceded by&#13;
coffee and refreshments with the speaker at 3:30 p.m. in CLlll.&#13;
Sponsored by the Mathematics Faculty and the Science Division.&#13;
Women's swimming, UW-P v_s. Carroll College, begins 4 p.m. in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Movie, "Harold and Maude," plays at 7 and 9 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.. .&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 10&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140. ,,-&#13;
Movie, "Harold and Maude," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Admissi..9n is $1.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 12&#13;
Wargamers·club mee~ from 6 to IO p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 14&#13;
Legal Assistance Co-op members meet at 7 p.m. inc½. 325.&#13;
Foreign Students Club meets at 4:30 p.m. in WLLC D174. All foreign&#13;
students please attend'.&#13;
Fre, Pizza , Delivery&#13;
Club Highview ·&#13;
5035 6.0th Street&#13;
. Phone: 652-8737&#13;
Alto ••liierin9 Chiek111, Sp19hetff; Raiioli, Beef&#13;
OPEN· 4 p.M. to 1 .....&#13;
Dancer&#13;
to perform&#13;
"Raymond Johnson in Concert,"&#13;
a program of solo dance in&#13;
the modern idiom and the second&#13;
offering in the Accent on Enrichment&#13;
series at Parkside, will be&#13;
presented at 8 p.m. on Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 1; in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. /;&#13;
Johnson, whose work has been&#13;
acclaimed by such respected&#13;
critics as Clive Barnes of the New&#13;
York Times, will present a&#13;
program ranging from the&#13;
serious and introspective to the&#13;
surprising and zany in modern&#13;
dance. ·&#13;
His touring show includes intricate&#13;
lighting effects designed&#13;
by Edward I. Byers, who has&#13;
designed the lighting for&#13;
numerous dance and theater&#13;
productions in New York City and&#13;
made his Broadway debut in 1974&#13;
with "Tubstrip."&#13;
Johnson is affiliated with the&#13;
Artists-in-Schools program, and,&#13;
in addition to his performance at&#13;
Parkside, he will . be artist-inresidence&#13;
for the Racine Unified&#13;
School District during the week of&#13;
Oct, 4 through 9. His schedule will&#13;
include a series of classes and&#13;
demonstrations at the Fine Arts&#13;
School, workshops for teachers of ·&#13;
physical education, dance and&#13;
drama and a children's concertat&#13;
10:30 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 9,&#13;
in Horlick High School&#13;
Auditorium.&#13;
Seminars&#13;
scheduled&#13;
"Bioethics and the Human&#13;
Prospect" will be the topic of Dr.&#13;
Van Potter, professor of oncology&#13;
at., McArdle Laboratory for&#13;
Cancer Research, at Parkside at&#13;
2 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 8. The&#13;
McArdle facility at UW-Madison&#13;
is one of the nation's major&#13;
cancer research centers.&#13;
DI": Potter's lec_ture is part of a&#13;
series of free public seminars&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Life&#13;
Science faculty for the first&#13;
semester.&#13;
Other seminars are : .&#13;
Oct. 15 - "Protein Synthesis in&#13;
Developing Bean Seeds" by Dr.&#13;
T. Hall of the UW-Madison&#13;
Department of Horticulutre&#13;
Oct. 22 - "Pole of Light and the&#13;
Pineal Gland in the Regulation of&#13;
Reproduction" by Dr. F. W.&#13;
Turek of the Northwestern&#13;
University Department of&#13;
Biological ,Sciences&#13;
Oct. 28 ·_ "The ~volutionary&#13;
Ecology of Uni-Sex Fishes" by&#13;
Prof. Jack Schultz · of the&#13;
University of Connecticut .&#13;
Nov. 5 - "Reactivity, Structure&#13;
and Behavior of Protoplasm in&#13;
Relation to Age" by Dr. Norman&#13;
Joseph of the University of&#13;
Illinois-Chicago College of&#13;
Pharmacy&#13;
Nov. 12 - "Behavior in Cranes"&#13;
by . Dr_. George Archibald·,&#13;
Director of the International&#13;
Crane Foundation.&#13;
Nov. 19 - "Electromagnetism,&#13;
Man and the Environment" by&#13;
Dr. J .H. Battocletti of the&#13;
Medical College of Wisconsin in&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
All seminars will be in&#13;
Greenquist Hall Room D-127 with&#13;
the exceptions o( tho·se on Oct. 8&#13;
and Nov. 12, which will be in&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room 105. All&#13;
seminars begin at 2 p.m. Further&#13;
information can be obtained from&#13;
Eugene Goodman,..J... the series&#13;
coordinator.&#13;
e &#13;
Student government&#13;
elections delayed&#13;
. by Robert Hoffman&#13;
rules to present to the Senate.&#13;
Student government is Bowden said that elections will&#13;
currently trying to get organized definitely be held in October and&#13;
and set up plans for the new year that the election rules will be&#13;
Elections, which were to have available next week.&#13;
been held in tbe beginning of Bowden feels that student&#13;
October, have been delayed go~~rnm~nt h~s a good&#13;
because election rules have n~t reoa ~onts ip ndwlth. the adbeen&#13;
diawn up yet. rrurus ra I~n a With student&#13;
support things can and will be&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden, president, said done.&#13;
that this is the fault of 1) The Two area5Bowden promises to&#13;
Senate: for not being able to' reform are financial aids and the&#13;
achieve a quor~ at its Sep- bookstore, which she says have&#13;
tember 24 meetmg and 2) The been especially insensitive to&#13;
Ways and Means committee's for students' needs.&#13;
their inability to agree on election&#13;
-'&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October •• 1'76 7&#13;
PBC fights corporations&#13;
•&#13;
by Jeff Sorensen&#13;
(CPS) - The year of the U.S. BiCentennial may be&#13;
almost over, but the People's Bicentennial Commission&#13;
(PBC) is not about to allow that fact to&#13;
curtail its activities. In September the group&#13;
changed its name to the People's Business Commission&#13;
and vowed to continue its efforts to&#13;
"declare independence from big business."&#13;
According to PBC Chairman Jeremy Rifkin, the&#13;
PBe is "de-emphasizing its focus on history and is&#13;
now focusing on economics ...rne bicentennial is&#13;
over. But the critical work of challenging the&#13;
economy must go on in the years ahead."&#13;
The PBC advocates employee-owned and&#13;
operated businesses. Thus, Rifkin explained, the&#13;
group differs from both capitalism and socialism as&#13;
they are practiced in most countries, "We don't&#13;
want a bunch of bureaucrats in Washington. To&#13;
replace those on Wall Street. We want the economy&#13;
decentralized," be explained.&#13;
Rifkin plans a number of lectures on college&#13;
campuses this year to promote PBC idea... Supported&#13;
by about 22,000 paid members, Rifkin said&#13;
the group will publish several books on economics&#13;
and history in 1977.&#13;
The group also plans to publish materials for use&#13;
in high school and college classes that will offer "an&#13;
alternative view of economics." Rifkin contended&#13;
that "most schools are now using books that offer a&#13;
one-sided, establishment view of American&#13;
government and business." In the pBs!, more than&#13;
5,000 schools have used PBC pamphlets, books and&#13;
.audio-visual material, he said.&#13;
In the fall elections, the PBC "will be moving in:';&#13;
electoral politics with a series of programs designed&#13;
to elect state legislators who are committed to&#13;
radical ideas." Rifkin said the group will endorse no&#13;
presidential or congressional candidates because&#13;
none have addressed the "democratization of the&#13;
economy."&#13;
"A patriotic movement Is needed to reclaim&#13;
democratic principles, to challenge the subversive&#13;
activities by corporatiOlls," Rifkin said. "We bave&#13;
decided to launch the People's Business Commission&#13;
because we do not believe that America's&#13;
economic future should rest in the very corporate&#13;
and political hands that bave plunged us into the&#13;
crisis in the first place."&#13;
(-&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
-~.&#13;
uw-r edges UW~:M . ,&#13;
by Jean,Tenuta&#13;
After tbeir opening weekend ofcompetition,&#13;
the women's&#13;
volleyball squad has a 1-1.record.&#13;
Saturday afternoon, the team&#13;
beat UW-Milwaukee 15-13 and 17-&#13;
15, but lost to Marquette, 7-15, 15-&#13;
13, 3-15.&#13;
Coach Orby Moss was bappy&#13;
with the performances of all the&#13;
members of his team: "Last&#13;
year, we shouldn't have been on&#13;
the same court with UWM, but&#13;
this year we came from behind&#13;
and heat them."&#13;
Although the team lost, Coach&#13;
Soccer&#13;
scheduled&#13;
The Wisconsin Chancellor's&#13;
Tournament at UW-Platteville is&#13;
next for the Parkside soccer&#13;
team, Friday and Saturday.&#13;
UW-Green Bay will meet UWMilwaukee&#13;
at 1 p.m. and&#13;
Parkside will meet UW-Pla~ville&#13;
at 3 p.m. and the following day,&#13;
the winners will battle it out.&#13;
During the past week, Parkside&#13;
blanked Aurora College last&#13;
Wednesday 1- 0 in a strong&#13;
defensive effort.&#13;
The winning goal was scored&#13;
by sophomore Mike Boyajian at&#13;
the 14:00 meet make of the first&#13;
balf, with an assist by freshman&#13;
Niall Power. Sophomore&#13;
Goalkeeper Bernie Hefner was&#13;
flawless in the goal, according to&#13;
Coach' Hal Henderson, and&#13;
"made a beautiful save on an&#13;
Aurora penalty shot with&#13;
1: 21 left in the game."&#13;
Camping&#13;
planned&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Outing Committee is sponsoring&#13;
a camping trip to Devils Lake,&#13;
October 8, 9 and 10.&#13;
The expeditions activities&#13;
include canoeing, rock climbing&#13;
and advanced campfire building.&#13;
A limited amount of equipment is&#13;
available from the school and is&#13;
included in the price of the trip.&#13;
Howe-ver, students are required&#13;
to bring their own sleeping bag.&#13;
Moss also had good things to say&#13;
about the matches with&#13;
Marquette. "I brought in six&#13;
second string players in the&#13;
second match when we were&#13;
behind and they turned around&#13;
the game and put us ahead Hl-9&#13;
. without Marquette scoring."&#13;
"The Warriors had a 6' 2"&#13;
player whose spiking we couldn't&#13;
return. We were forced to play&#13;
Fishing &amp;&#13;
Firing Lines&#13;
too much of a defensive game and&#13;
it kept us off stride and really&#13;
took a lot out 0.1 us," said Coach&#13;
Moss.&#13;
The Rangers played UWMadison&#13;
arid Milwaukee Tech&#13;
yesterday evening and will play&#13;
UW-Whitewater and Carroll&#13;
College at Whitewater on October&#13;
12.· :&#13;
by SCottReinhard&#13;
Fall has become one of the most difficult times of the year for the&#13;
outdoor sportsman. There is difficulty in figuring out what to do, but&#13;
not from a lack of choices, rather there is an over abundance of them.&#13;
Here in Southeastern Wisconsin much attention has been turned to&#13;
the sport of salmon fishing. The sport comes in a number of variations&#13;
with at least one proving tasteful to the angler. Snagging bas become&#13;
the most popular of inethods, though personally.J find no real sport in&#13;
it.&#13;
The method is achieved through the casting out of a treble hook&#13;
laden down with lead to give it depth and distance while casting.&#13;
Hooks must have a gape size from point to shank of not more tl1an one&#13;
half inch. The hook is retrieved through the water with short, forceful&#13;
jerks of the pole so as to inbed the hook into any part of the fish's body.&#13;
This practice may not b;e employed in the Root River 'of R,acine&#13;
County or the Menominee River of Milwaukee County. In these rivers&#13;
people fish in a civilized manner as opposed to the primitive one of&#13;
snagging. The majority of angling on these rivers Is by. treble hOoks&#13;
baited with eheeseand still fished on the bottom wiih as little weight as&#13;
river current permits.&#13;
Other choices on the fall sports agenda include the classic art of&#13;
hunting. Migratory waterfowl are probably on the most wanted list of&#13;
the Southern Wisconsin hunter.&#13;
At this time of the year, combined with the warm weather, youwIll&#13;
see little of the Northern Docks. Local waterfowl will be found in .semi-&#13;
"abundance thus attributing to the higher point value at the first half of&#13;
the split season. The Wisconsin waterfowl season is based on a point&#13;
system hunt where ducks bave a higher point value according to their&#13;
rarity. Most local ducks, thOse that stick in this area throughout the&#13;
summer, are mallards thus they also have been given a higher' point&#13;
value so as not to burn out the entire Dock easily.&#13;
Plher hunting pressure in the South car. be directed towards the gray&#13;
and fox squirrels along with ruffed grouse. To obtain these quarries&#13;
one must be quite diligent as their scarcity or cunning Is obviously.&#13;
seen through the few nwnbers of them which are taken.&#13;
For those who wish to venture North, the bow season for deer will&#13;
continue to be open in the unrestricted counties until November 14.&#13;
Wisconsin opens up a whole box of Cracker.Jack when fall rolls&#13;
around for the sportsmen who wish to wet a line, dirty a gun harrel, or&#13;
twang a how string. Itis all up to the sportsman if he or she wishes to&#13;
get out of the easy chair to take part in the harvest.&#13;
Ice hockey&#13;
Anyune interested in a Parkside Club Ice Hockey team should&#13;
contact Vic Godfrey in the Athletic Building by phoning 553-2245or his&#13;
offICe, 553-2310.&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers8&#13;
Dealer 637-2726&#13;
~'U"""""2N"UUA'tL'UUUU"A"'UVUAAe&#13;
Series Presents&#13;
They met at the funeral 01 a perfect stranger.&#13;
From then on, things got perfectly stranger and stt1ln9li&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 7 . 2'30 pm &amp; 7:30 pm&#13;
Fri., Oct. B . 7 00 pm &amp; 9 00 pm&#13;
Sun., Oct. 10 • 7:30 pm&#13;
Cineme Theatre Adm. 51.00&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
AUTHENTIC ENGLISH STYLE&#13;
1J1is1} 'n&#13;
&lt;tt1}ips&#13;
Two pieces 01 deep fried Whiting served&#13;
in a basket with golden ~rown potatoes,&#13;
creamy cOle slew, malt vinegar or tartar aeuce.·&#13;
ONLY $100&#13;
(extra fish 35')&#13;
UNION SQUARE GRILL&#13;
/&#13;
Student governntent&#13;
electiOnS delayed · by Robert Hoffman&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976 7&#13;
PBC fights corporations&#13;
Student government is&#13;
currently trying to get organized&#13;
and set up plans for the new year.&#13;
Elections, which were to have&#13;
been held in the beginning of&#13;
October, have been delayed&#13;
because election rules have n;t&#13;
been drawn up yet.&#13;
Kiyoko Bowden, president, said&#13;
that this is the fault of 1) The&#13;
Senate.· for not being able to·&#13;
achieve a quorwn at its September&#13;
24 meeting and 2) The&#13;
Ways and Means committee's for&#13;
their inability to agree on election&#13;
r·&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
rules to present to the Senate.&#13;
Bowden said that elections will&#13;
definitely be held in October and&#13;
that the election rules will be&#13;
available next week.&#13;
Bowden feels that student&#13;
government has a good&#13;
relationship with the administration&#13;
and with student&#13;
support things can and will be&#13;
done. ·&#13;
Two areasBowden promises to&#13;
reform are financial aids and the&#13;
bookstore, which she says have&#13;
been especially insensitive to&#13;
students' needs.&#13;
• by Jeff Sorensen&#13;
( CPS) -The year of the U.S. Bicentennial may be&#13;
almost over, but the People's Bicentennial Commission&#13;
(PBC) is not about to allow that fact to&#13;
curtail its activities. In September the group&#13;
changed its name to the People's Business Commission&#13;
and vowed to continue its efforts to&#13;
"declare independence from big business."&#13;
According to PBC Chairman Jeremy Rifkin, the&#13;
PBC is "de-emphasizing its focus on history and is&#13;
now focusing on economics .. :rne bicentennial is&#13;
over. But the critical work of challenging the&#13;
economy must go on in the years ahead."&#13;
The PBC advoc~tes employee-owned and&#13;
operated businesses. Thus, Rifkin explained, the&#13;
group differs from both capitalism and socialism as&#13;
they are practiced in most countries. "We don't&#13;
want a bunch of bureaucrats in Washington. To&#13;
replace those on Wall Street. We want the economy&#13;
decentralized," he explained.&#13;
Rifkin plans a number of lectures on college&#13;
campuses this year to promote PBC ideas. Supported&#13;
by about 22,000 paid members, Rifkin said&#13;
the group will publish several books on economics&#13;
and history in 1977.&#13;
The group also plans to publish materials for use&#13;
in high school and college classes that will offer "an&#13;
alternative view of economics." Rifkin contended&#13;
that "most schools are now using books that offer a&#13;
one-sided, establishment view of American&#13;
government and business." In the past, more than&#13;
5,000 schools have used PBC pamphlets, books and&#13;
audio-visual material, he said.&#13;
In the fall elections, the PBC "will be moving i;;t.;&#13;
electoral politics with a series of programs designed&#13;
to elect state legislators who are committed to&#13;
radical ideas." Rifkin said the group will endorse no&#13;
presidential or congressional candidates because&#13;
none have addressed the "democratization of the&#13;
economy."&#13;
"A patriotic movement is needed to reclaim&#13;
democratic principles, to challenge the subversive&#13;
activities by corporations," Rifkin said. "We have&#13;
decided to launch the People's Business Commission&#13;
because we do not believe that America's&#13;
economic future should rest in the very corporate&#13;
and political hands that have plunged us into the&#13;
~isis in the first place."&#13;
UW~P edges UW ~&#13;
.M the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
@.)&#13;
by Jean Tenuta Mike Villers-Dealer 637-2726&#13;
After their opening weekend of.&#13;
competition, the women's&#13;
volleyball squad has a 1-1.record.&#13;
' Saturday afternoon, the team&#13;
beat UW-Milwaukee 15-13 and 17-&#13;
15, but lost~ Marquette, 7-15, 15-&#13;
13, 3-15.&#13;
Coach Orby Moss was happy&#13;
with the performances of all the&#13;
members of his team: "Last&#13;
year, we shouldn't have been on&#13;
the same court with UWM, but&#13;
this year we came from behind&#13;
and beat them."&#13;
Although the team lost, Coach&#13;
Soccer&#13;
scheduled&#13;
The Wisconsin Chancellor's&#13;
Tournament at UW-Platteville is&#13;
next for the Parkside soccer&#13;
team, Friday and ~turday.&#13;
UW-Green Bay will meet UWMilwaukee&#13;
at 1 p.m. and&#13;
Parkside will meet UW-Platteville&#13;
at -3 p.m. and the following day,&#13;
the winners will battle it out.&#13;
During the past week, Parkside&#13;
blanked Aurora College last&#13;
Wednesday 1 - 0 in a strong&#13;
defensive effort.&#13;
The winning goal was scor~&#13;
by sophomore Mike Boyajian at&#13;
the 14:00 meet make of the first&#13;
half, with an assist by freshman&#13;
Niall Power. Sophomore&#13;
Goalkeeper Bernie Hefner was&#13;
flawless in the goal, according to&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson, and&#13;
"made a beautiful save on an&#13;
Aurora penalty shot with&#13;
1: 21 left in the game."'&#13;
Camping&#13;
planned&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Outing Committee is sponsoring&#13;
a camping trip to Devils Lake,&#13;
October 8, 9 and 10.&#13;
The expeditions activities&#13;
include canoeing, rock climbing&#13;
and advanced campfire building.&#13;
A limited amount of equipment is&#13;
available from the school and is&#13;
included in the price of the trip.&#13;
Howe..ver, students are required&#13;
to bring their own sleeping bag.&#13;
Moss also had good things to say&#13;
about the matches with&#13;
Marquette. "I brought in six&#13;
second string players in the&#13;
second match when we were&#13;
behind and they turned around&#13;
the game and put us ahead 10-9&#13;
· without Marquette scoring."&#13;
"The Warriors had a 6' · 2"&#13;
player whose spiking we couldn't&#13;
return. We were forced to play&#13;
too much of a defensive' game and&#13;
it kept us off stride and really&#13;
took a lot out of us," said Coach&#13;
Moss.&#13;
The Rangers plaY,ed UWMadison&#13;
and Milwaukee Tech&#13;
yesterday evening and will play&#13;
UW-Whitewater and Carroll&#13;
College at Whitewater ori Octol:&gt;er&#13;
12. ' :&#13;
Fishing &amp;&#13;
Firing Lin~s&#13;
by Scott Reinhard ·&#13;
I&#13;
Fall has become one of the most difficult times of the year for the&#13;
outdoor sportsman. There is difficulty in figuring out what to do, but&#13;
not from a lack of choices, rather there is an over abundance of them.&#13;
Here in Southeastern Wisconsin much attention has been turned to&#13;
the sport of salmon fishing. The sport comes in a nwnber of variations&#13;
with at least one proving tasteful to the angler. Snagging has become&#13;
the most popular of methods, though personally, I find no real sport in&#13;
it.&#13;
The method is achieved through the casting out of a treble hook&#13;
laden down with lead to give it depth and distance while casting.&#13;
Hooks must have a gape size from point to shank of not more than one&#13;
half inch. The hook is retrieved through the water with short, forceful&#13;
jerks of the pole so as to inbed the hook into any part of the fish's-body.&#13;
This practice may not be employed in the Root River of R;acine&#13;
County or the Menominee River of Milwaukee County. In these rivers&#13;
people fish in a civilized manner as opposed to the primitive one of&#13;
snagging, The majority of angling on these rivers is by treble hooks&#13;
baited with cheese ·and still fished on the bottom with as little weight as&#13;
river current permits.&#13;
Other choices on the fall sports agenda include the classic art of&#13;
hunting. Migratory waterfowl are probably on the most wanted list of&#13;
the Southern Wisconsin hunter.&#13;
At this time of the year, combined with the warm weather, you will&#13;
see little of the Northern flocks. Local waterfowl will be found in.semiabundance&#13;
thus attributing to the higher point value at the first half of&#13;
the split season. The Wisconsin waterfowl season is based on a point&#13;
system hunt where ducks have a higher point value according to their&#13;
rarity. Most local ducks, those that stick in this area throughout the&#13;
summer, are mallards thus they also have been given a higher point&#13;
value so as not to burn out the entire flock easily.&#13;
9ther hunting pressure in the South car. be directed towards the gray&#13;
and fox squirrels along with ruffed grouse. To obtain these quarries&#13;
one must be quite diligent as their scarcity or cunning is obviously&#13;
seen through the few numbers of them which are taken.&#13;
For those who wish to venture North, the bow season for deer will&#13;
continue to be open in the unrestricted counties untjl November 14.&#13;
Wisconsin opens up a whole box of Cracker-Jack when fall rolls&#13;
around for the sportsmen who wish to wet a line, dirty a gun barrel, or&#13;
twang a bow string. It is all up to the sportsman if he or she wishes to&#13;
get out of the easy chair to take part in the harvest.&#13;
Ice hockey&#13;
Anyone interested in a Parkside Club Ice Hockey team should&#13;
• contact Vic Godfrey in the Athletic Building by phoning 553-2245 or his&#13;
off~, 553-2310.&#13;
P.A.B. Film Series Pr esents&#13;
Harold &amp;&#13;
Tl,ey met at the funeral of a perfect stranger.&#13;
From then on, things got perfectly stranger and stranger.&#13;
Thurs . Oct . 7 - 2 30 pm &amp; 7 30 pm&#13;
Fri.. Oct 8 - 7 00 pm &amp; 9 0 0 pm&#13;
Sun , Oct. 10 . 7 30 pm&#13;
C1nem a Theatre Adm . $ 1 0 0&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
AUTHENTIC ENGLISH STYLE&#13;
,&#13;
n&#13;
Two pieces at deep fried Whiting served&#13;
in a basket with golden brown potatoes,&#13;
creamy cote slaw, malt vinegar or tartar sauce.&#13;
ONLY $100&#13;
(extra fish 35·]&#13;
UNION SQUARE GRILL&#13;
Introductory Special&#13;
FREE ... orange whip drink with&#13;
Fish ' N Chips purchase.&#13;
Now .thru Oct. 22 &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976&#13;
Leitch breaks&#13;
swim records&#13;
by Jean Tenula&#13;
In their beginning performance&#13;
of the season, the women&#13;
swimmers lost to UW-Milwaukee&#13;
92-36 in the Panther pool last&#13;
. Wednesday.&#13;
. Leading the team place wise&#13;
was Mary Beth Leitch with a first&#13;
in the 50 yd. hutterfly, a second in&#13;
the 200yd. Individual Medley and&#13;
a third in the 100 yd. backstroke,&#13;
But according to Coach Barbara&#13;
Lawson, the real highlight&#13;
from Parkside's point of view&#13;
was the performance of' Sally&#13;
Francis, a newcomer to the&#13;
competitive sport, who captured&#13;
a second in the 100yed. freestyle&#13;
and thirds in the 500 yed.&#13;
freestyle and 50 yed. breaststroke.&#13;
"Sally's performance was&#13;
really a pleasant surprise," said&#13;
lawson. liThe whole team was&#13;
very excited about her fmishes."&#13;
Gail Olson picked up a second&#13;
in the 50 yed. freestyle and third&#13;
in the 50 yd. backstroke and LiIl&#13;
Crnich was third in both the 200&#13;
yd. freestyle and the 100 yd.&#13;
breastroke.&#13;
The four also teamed up for the&#13;
. 200 yd. freestyle relay, but came&#13;
in second. "We' did better than I&#13;
had expected, considering that it&#13;
was hard to see the turns in the '&#13;
pool," said Lawson. "The girls&#13;
iIriproved on most of their times&#13;
since the time trials we had&#13;
"bejore the season started."&#13;
At the UW-Madison Invitational, .&#13;
the swimmers finished last of 11&#13;
teams, as the host team scored a&#13;
deci~ive -victory.' ,&#13;
Leitch broke several school&#13;
records in the meet ihaddition to&#13;
heing ,the highest placer for&#13;
Parkside with a sixth in the 50 yd.&#13;
bulterfly.&#13;
The new records were set in the&#13;
100. LM. at 1:16.673; 50 yd.&#13;
freestyle, 29.6 and in the 100 yd.&#13;
backstroke at 1:17.125, which&#13;
broke a record that has stood&#13;
since 1972. These times gave&#13;
Leitch an eighth and two ninths,&#13;
respectively, in the meet.&#13;
Olson, Francis and Crnich also&#13;
added points to the team score, as&#13;
the tojr 22finishers gained points.&#13;
Olson was 17th'in the 50 free; 18th&#13;
in the 100 free and 19th in the 50&#13;
breast. Francis was 17th in the&#13;
200 free and 21st in the 100 free.&#13;
Crnich was 18th in the 1.00breast&#13;
and 200 free ..&#13;
In the 200 free relay, the squad&#13;
cut six seconds of their time on&#13;
Wednesday and Olson cut 3 .&#13;
seconds off of her time in the 50&#13;
breast: ,&#13;
Friday, the Rangers will host&#13;
Carroll and Lawrence Colleges in&#13;
a 4 p.m. meet.&#13;
Merritt takes second&#13;
runner won the meet with 2&#13;
minutes, 13 seconds ahead of&#13;
Merritt, the women's winner' of&#13;
the Amateur Athletic Union and&#13;
Boston Marathons last year.&#13;
Gail Bebrends, also of the US,&#13;
finished third at 2:47:43.&#13;
Kim Merritt, a senior, finished&#13;
second in the World Marathon&#13;
Championship for Women in&#13;
Duesseldorf, _West Germany&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Merritt finished-the 26 mile, 385&#13;
yard fun in 2 hours, 47 minutes&#13;
and 11 seconds -,A West German&#13;
N4.~¥u'AVA;Q''''', A ANA .~~&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
~.&#13;
Mike VillerS-Dealer 637-2726 Kim Merritt&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
- ,&#13;
10"/game 9 am-· 10:30 am 25"/game4 pm· 7 pm&#13;
Beer and Soda Now On Sale'.&#13;
Tennis team wins&#13;
by Jean Temila&#13;
The women '8 tennis tearn won&#13;
their first meet. of the season,&#13;
conquering Carroll College, 3-2,&#13;
Wednl:sday,&#13;
In the victory, the first and&#13;
second singles players lost to&#13;
their opponents, but in the&#13;
reamining matches, the Rangers&#13;
came out clII top.&#13;
Jennifer Zuehlke' bombed&#13;
Karen Wait; ~, ~ in No. 3&#13;
singles, the No.1 doubles team of&#13;
Jean Covelli-Mary Ann Carins&#13;
beat Sue Wetta-Carol Budde; ~,&#13;
6-1, 6-2; and Pat Munger-Kathy&#13;
Feicthner beat Lynne Dempsey- I&#13;
Sharon MalIbu; 6-4, 6-3.&#13;
Marge Balszez lost to Debbie&#13;
Arps; ~,6-1; and Janine Hunter&#13;
lost to Claudia Lindquist; 6-2, 7-5..&#13;
The team will enter their first&#13;
tournament competition at the&#13;
UW-Whitewater Tournament&#13;
October 9.&#13;
On Sept. 24 and 25, the squad&#13;
faced four teams in two double&#13;
dual meets, in which Zuehlke was&#13;
the only member of the team to&#13;
win a match.&#13;
She defeated Becky Millerof&#13;
Carthage Sept. 24; 6-4, 7~ and&#13;
Kerri Holden of UW-Whitewater&#13;
Sept. 25; 6-1,6-3 in No.3 singles.&#13;
Parkside couldn't score a win&#13;
against either UW-Oshkosh or&#13;
UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
Golfers tee up&#13;
by Jean Tenula&#13;
On Monday and Tuesday of&#13;
next wee'k, Coach Steve Stephens'&#13;
golf squad will participate with&#13;
others in the Wisconsin district at&#13;
_ the 36· hole, two-day NA~&#13;
District 14. tournament at La&#13;
Crosse.&#13;
Favore6 in the meet are UWWhitewater&#13;
and UW-La Crosse.&#13;
The winner will advance to the&#13;
NAIA national tournament in&#13;
spring.&#13;
"I think we have a good chance&#13;
to do well, though," said&#13;
Stephens. "We're playing 'the&#13;
kind of golf we are capable of and&#13;
it will all depend on how well we&#13;
putt and play on the short, tight&#13;
course."&#13;
The Rangers wet:e third-in their&#13;
Parkside Tournament Saturday,&#13;
w!Jl!re UW-Whitewater finished&#13;
on top with 381, followed byUWLa&#13;
Crosse with 385. Parkside had&#13;
391,- as did UW-Madison.&#13;
Marquette was fifth with 394.&#13;
The meet medalist was Scott&#13;
Ludna, of UW-Oshkosh, with a 72.&#13;
Fred Miller of La Crosse totalled&#13;
73at the Brighton Dale Course: A&#13;
third place tie resulted between&#13;
Frank Harast of Carthage and&#13;
Gregg Caltworthy of Whitewater&#13;
at 74. Ranger Ray Zuzinec tied&#13;
with Tom Rajack and Dave&#13;
Young for fifth at 75.&#13;
Also competiling for Parkiiide&#13;
were Steve Christensen, 77; Mark&#13;
Kuyawa and Gary Paskiewicz,&#13;
79; and Tim Rouse, 81.·&#13;
Friday, Whitewater hosted&#13;
eleven teams and also won their&#13;
tournament with 366~ again&#13;
followed by La Crosse with 389.&#13;
Parkside was ninth at 407. Bob&#13;
Clark of Whitewater was meet&#13;
medalist .at 71.&#13;
Rangers included Zizinec, 78;&#13;
Rick Pedersen and Phil Smith, .&#13;
~; Paskiewicz, 81 and Rouse, 88.:&#13;
On Sept. 17, the golfers par-&#13;
. ticipated in the UW-Madison Golf&#13;
Tournament at Cherokee Country&#13;
Club, where they finished seventh&#13;
out of ten teams with a 417 total.&#13;
Northern Illinois came out on&#13;
top With 389strokes, UW-Madison&#13;
was second with 397 and UWMilwaukee&#13;
was third with 400.&#13;
Bob Wiebman of UW-Milwaukee&#13;
was the meet medalist with a 74.&#13;
Parkside participants were&#13;
Zuzinec,81; Rouse, 82; Pedersen,&#13;
82; Smith 82 and Paskiewicz, 90.&#13;
,&#13;
G~t the great new taste&#13;
In mocha, coconut,&#13;
banana or&#13;
.strawberry.&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
The Portable Huty:&#13;
30 PROOF AND REiUJY 10 GO&#13;
Kickers, 30 proof. e. 1976,Kicke~rsuo.. I-i.utford, Conn&#13;
\ "&#13;
,&#13;
~&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
""It&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
'1'&#13;
1&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER October 6, 1976&#13;
Leitch breaks&#13;
swinI records&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
In their beginning performance&#13;
of the season, the women&#13;
swimmers lost to UW-Milwaukee&#13;
92-36 in the Panther pool last&#13;
· Wednesday.&#13;
Leading the team place wise&#13;
was Mary aeth Leitch with a first&#13;
in the 50 yd. butterfly, a second in&#13;
the 200 yd. Individual Medley and&#13;
a third in the 100 yd. backstroke.&#13;
But according to Coach Barbara&#13;
Lawson, the real highlight&#13;
from Parkside's point of view&#13;
was the performance of Sally&#13;
Francis, a newcomer to the&#13;
competitive sport, who captured&#13;
a second in the 100 yed. freestyle&#13;
and thirds in the 500 yed.&#13;
freestyle and 50 yed. breaststroke.&#13;
&#13;
"Sally's performance was&#13;
really a pleasant surprise," said&#13;
Lawson. "The whole team was&#13;
very excited about her finishes."&#13;
Gail Olson picked up a second&#13;
in the 50 yed. freestyle and third&#13;
in the 50 yd. backstroke and Lili&#13;
Crnich was third in both the 200&#13;
yd. freestyle and the 100 yd.&#13;
breastroke.&#13;
The four also teamed up for the&#13;
. 200 yd. freestyle relay, but came&#13;
in second. "We' did better than I&#13;
had expected, considering that it&#13;
was hard to see the turns in the&#13;
pool," said Lawson. "The girls&#13;
improved on most of their times&#13;
since the time trials we had&#13;
before the season started."&#13;
At the UW-Madison Invitational, .&#13;
the swimmers finished last of 11&#13;
teams, as the host team scored a • • f&#13;
decisive -victory. ·&#13;
Leitch broke several school&#13;
records in the meet in addition to&#13;
being , the highest placer for&#13;
Parkside with a sixth in the 50 yd.&#13;
butterfly.&#13;
The new records were set in the&#13;
ioo . I.M. at 1: 16.673; 50 yd.&#13;
freestyle, 29.6 and in the 100 yd.&#13;
backstroke at 1:17.125, which&#13;
broke a record that has stood&#13;
since 1972. These times gave&#13;
Leitch an eighth ~d two ninths,&#13;
respectively, in the meet.&#13;
Olson, Francis and Crnich also&#13;
added points to the team score, as&#13;
the top 22 finishers gained points.&#13;
Olson was 17th-in the 50 free; 18th&#13;
in the 100 free and 19th in the 50&#13;
breast. Francis was 17th in the&#13;
200 free and 21st in the 100 free.&#13;
Crnich was 18th in the 100 breast&#13;
and 200 free . .&#13;
In the 200 free relay, the squad&#13;
cut six seconds of their time on&#13;
Wednesday and Olson cut 3&#13;
seconds off oi her time in the 50&#13;
breast. ,&#13;
Friday, the Rangers will host&#13;
Carroll and Lawrence Colleges in&#13;
a 4 p.m. meet.&#13;
Tennis team wins··&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The women's tennis team won&#13;
their first meet. of the season,&#13;
conquering Carroll College, 3-2,&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
In the victory, the first and&#13;
second singles players lost to&#13;
their opponents, but in the&#13;
reamining matches, the Rangers&#13;
came out on top.&#13;
Jennifer Zuehlke · bombed&#13;
Karen Wait; 6--0, 6--0 in No. 3&#13;
singles, the No. 1 doubles team of&#13;
Jean Covelli-Mary Ann Carins&#13;
beat Sue Wetta-Carol Budde; 4-6,&#13;
6-1, 6-2; and Pat Munger-Kathy&#13;
Feicthner beat Lynne Dempsey- /&#13;
Sharon Manbu; 6-4, 6-3.&#13;
Marge Balszez lost to Debbie&#13;
Arps; 6--0, 6-1; and Janine Hunter&#13;
lost to Claudia Lindquist; 6-2, 7-5.&#13;
The team will enter their first&#13;
tournament competition at the&#13;
UW-Whitewater Tout'natnent&#13;
October 9.&#13;
On Sept. 24 and 25, the squad&#13;
faced four teams in two double&#13;
dual meets, in which Zuehlke was&#13;
the only member of the t~am to&#13;
win a match.&#13;
She defeated Becky Millerof&#13;
Carthage Sept. 24; 6-4, 7-6 and&#13;
Kerri Holden of UW-Whitewater&#13;
Sept. 25; 6-1, 6-3 in No. 3 singles.&#13;
Parkside couldn't score a win&#13;
against either UW-Oshkosh or&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. ·&#13;
G-olf ers tee up&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
On Monday and Tuesday ot&#13;
next week, Coach Steve Stephens'&#13;
golf squad will participate with&#13;
others in the Wisconsin district at&#13;
the 36· hole, two-day NA~&#13;
District 14 tournament at La&#13;
Crosse. .&#13;
Favore8 in the meet are UWWhitewater&#13;
and UW-La Crosse.&#13;
The winner will advance to the&#13;
NAIA national tournament in&#13;
spring.&#13;
"I think we have a good chance&#13;
to do well, tbough," said&#13;
Stephens. "We're playing "the&#13;
kind of golf we are capable of and&#13;
it will all depend on how well we&#13;
putt and play on the short, tight&#13;
course."&#13;
The Rangers wei:e third-in their&#13;
Parkside Tournament Saturday,&#13;
w~re UW-Whitewater finished&#13;
on top with 381, followed byUWLa&#13;
Crosse with 385. Parkside had&#13;
391,- as did UW-Madison.&#13;
Marquette was fifth with 394.&#13;
The meet medalist was Scott&#13;
Ludna, of UW-Oshkosh, with a 72.&#13;
Fred Miller of La Crosse totalled&#13;
73 at the Brighton Dale Course: A&#13;
third pla&lt;;e tie resulted betw~n&#13;
Frank Harast of Carthage and&#13;
Gregg caltworthy of Whitewater&#13;
at 74. Ranger Ray Zuzinec tied&#13;
with Tom Rajack and Dave&#13;
Young for fifth at 75.&#13;
Also competiting for Parkslde&#13;
were Steve Christensen, 77; Mark&#13;
Kuyawa and Gary Paskiewicz,&#13;
79; and Tim Rouse, 81.&#13;
Friday, Whitewater hosted&#13;
eleven teams and also won their&#13;
tournament with 366.._ again&#13;
followed by La Crosse with 389.&#13;
Parkside was ninth at 407. Bob&#13;
Clark of Whitewater was meet&#13;
medalist ;it 71.&#13;
Rangers included Zizinec, 78;&#13;
Rick Pedersen and Phil Smith,&#13;
80; Paskiewicz, 81 and Rouse, 88.&#13;
On Sept. 17, ~e golfers par-&#13;
. ticipated in the UW-Madison Golf&#13;
Tournament at Cherokee Country&#13;
Club, where they finished seventh&#13;
out of ten teams with a 417 total.&#13;
Northern Illinois came out on&#13;
top with 389 strokes, UW-Madison.&#13;
was second with 397 and UWMilwaukee&#13;
was third with 400.&#13;
Bob Wiebman of UW-Milwaukee&#13;
was the meet medalist with a 74.&#13;
Parkside participants were&#13;
Zuzinec, 81; Rouse, 82; Pedersen,&#13;
82; Smith 82 and Paskiewicz, 90.&#13;
Kim Merritt&#13;
Merritt takessecon·d&#13;
Kim Merritt, a senior, finished&#13;
second in the World Marathon&#13;
Championship for Women in&#13;
Duesseldorf, . West Germany&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
, Merritt finished,the 26 mile, 385&#13;
yard run in 2 hours, 47 minutes&#13;
and 11 seconds._ A West German&#13;
runner won the meet with 2&#13;
minutes, 13 seconds ahead of&#13;
Merritt, the women's winner of&#13;
the Amateur Athletic Union and&#13;
Boston Marathons last year.&#13;
Gail Behrends, also of the US,&#13;
finished third at 2:47:43.&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
~ -&#13;
M~ke Villers-Dealer 637-2726&#13;
---&#13;
AT THE&#13;
Monday f hru Friday . I&#13;
1oc/game 9 am - 10:30 am 25c/game 4 pm - 7 pm&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
Be.er and Soda Now On Sale'I&#13;
G~t the great new taste&#13;
in mocna, coconut,&#13;
banana or . strawberry.&#13;
The Portable .Hirty:.&#13;
30 PROOF AND READY 10 GO&#13;
Kickers, 30 proof, is:, 1976, Kicke'rs Ltd., Hartford, Conn .&#13;
'\ </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 5, issue 5, October 6, 1976</text>
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              </elementText>
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              </elementText>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>1976-10-06</text>
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            <name>Coverage</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66064">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="66065">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="66066">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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              <text>Budget to be cut&#13;
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              <text>Staff unaware&#13;
The Parkside------- of rules&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No.4 Wednesday, September 29, 1976&#13;
Enrollment down 400&#13;
Budget to be cut&#13;
by Robert Hoffman&#13;
The segregated fees budget will&#13;
be cut by up to $33,100 if&#13;
enrollment figures stay at their&#13;
present levels.&#13;
Head count enrollment has&#13;
fallen by 600 from projected&#13;
figures and is 400 less than last&#13;
year's enrollment.&#13;
These cuts will hurt the student&#13;
union the most. Tony Totero,&#13;
coordinator of student&#13;
programmiog, said that possible&#13;
cutbacks could mean reductions&#13;
in the coffee house, hours of the&#13;
Union or cutting hack on dances&#13;
and activities.&#13;
Only half of the Union's activities&#13;
budget is from segregated&#13;
fees. The other balf is raised from&#13;
revenues from dances and the&#13;
activities staged. This means&#13;
that as-activities and dances are&#13;
cut back, revenue would fall&#13;
leading to further cutbacks.&#13;
Totero said that if students&#13;
want activities and dances they&#13;
will bave to support them. He was&#13;
encouraged by the response to&#13;
the first dance, saying "revenue&#13;
from tbe dance exceeded our&#13;
projections. If this trend continues&#13;
the Union will be able to&#13;
afford to get good bands."&#13;
He also sounded a note of&#13;
pessimism, saying "its too bad&#13;
that this (budget cutbacks) had&#13;
to occur the first year, but we'll&#13;
just have to play it by ear and see&#13;
how it goes."&#13;
A group from the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board is being set up,&#13;
to determine, as the year goes&#13;
along, what cuts should be made.&#13;
Students are encouraged to&#13;
stop by the Union and make&#13;
suggestions to the committee on&#13;
further activities.&#13;
Other areas that receive&#13;
segregated fees will not be as&#13;
drastically affected by the cutback.&#13;
The athletics, housing, health,&#13;
and transportation departments&#13;
will make up for the deficit by&#13;
drawing on reserve carry-over&#13;
funds. -&#13;
Nurse Edith Isenberg of the&#13;
bealth department said that "the&#13;
doctor will still be in on Fridays&#13;
or by appointment and all&#13;
medical services will continue to&#13;
be free."&#13;
Declines of this nature will not&#13;
affect Parkside yet, according to&#13;
Gary Goetz, director of budgeting&#13;
and planning analysis.&#13;
Goetz said that tbere "will be&#13;
no cutbacks of classes and absolutely&#13;
no cutbacks of staff."&#13;
However, should enrollments&#13;
continue to decline in the next few&#13;
years, Parkside would face the&#13;
unpleasant fact of less state aid&#13;
and cuthacks in classes and staff.&#13;
As to why enrollment "declined,&#13;
David Holle, specialist in&#13;
budgeting and planning analysis,&#13;
said that "committees are being&#13;
formed to look into the matter&#13;
and will, by the end of october,&#13;
have some recommendations."&#13;
Business report finished&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
On July 13, 1976 the Chancellor's&#13;
Task Force on the&#13;
business management program&#13;
issued a report recommending&#13;
seven changes in the program.&#13;
This task force was another in the&#13;
series of committies created by&#13;
Chancellor Guskin's original&#13;
Committee of Principals.&#13;
The changes in the program in&#13;
the opinions of several task force&#13;
members are long overdue. They&#13;
Board disputed&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
At its september meeting on&#13;
Tuesday, sept. 21, the Faculty&#13;
senate voted 12-11 to recommit&#13;
legislation which would abolish&#13;
the Faculty Fund Board,&#13;
established in 1973,and replace it&#13;
with a Research Board.&#13;
The functions of the Research&#13;
Board would 'be to "advise the&#13;
Administration regarding means&#13;
of stimulating and supporting&#13;
academic research and creative&#13;
activity." and to "independently&#13;
generate and administer funds&#13;
for tbe support of academic&#13;
research and creative activity."&#13;
Richard Keehn, associate&#13;
professor of economics and&#13;
chairman of tbe Faculty Fund&#13;
Board which would be&#13;
eliminated, said he objected to&#13;
the proposed legislation on the&#13;
basis that his committee was not&#13;
shown the document before it was&#13;
put on the agenda. "We object to&#13;
the fact that we were not given&#13;
the chance to see the finalized&#13;
document before this afternoon,"&#13;
said Keehn.&#13;
He also objected to the fact that&#13;
the members of the new com-&#13;
.mittee would be appointed rather&#13;
than elected, and that the&#13;
Research Board would be&#13;
"purely advisory to the administration,"&#13;
in debate before&#13;
the legislation was sent back to&#13;
the University Committee for&#13;
overhauling.&#13;
According to University&#13;
Committee chairman Larry&#13;
Deutsch, "We hope to establish a&#13;
group with the authorization to&#13;
advise the administration on&#13;
these matters." Chancellor&#13;
Guskin, who supports the change,&#13;
said that "this new proposal&#13;
would prevent our having to&#13;
appoint an ad-hoc committee&#13;
each year to take care of&#13;
allocating the money for&#13;
research. "&#13;
In other Faculty senate news, a&#13;
new chairman was unanimously&#13;
elected at the sept. 21 meeting.&#13;
He is Michael Marron, associate&#13;
professor of chemistry.&#13;
The senate also voted to permit&#13;
the engineering science division&#13;
to organize officially now that it&#13;
has nine faculty members in its&#13;
discipline .including seven&#13;
associate professors and two full&#13;
professors.&#13;
feel that once tbe changes are&#13;
implemented, Parkside's&#13;
business program will compare&#13;
favorably with any program in&#13;
the state. There are five major&#13;
areas in which the task force&#13;
recommended changes:&#13;
organization, faculty, the undergraduate&#13;
program, the&#13;
graduate program and accreditation&#13;
of the School of&#13;
Modern Industry.&#13;
The recommendations called&#13;
for incorporation of the three&#13;
divisions within the School of&#13;
Modern Industry. The task force&#13;
would also like the various&#13;
personnel courses combined into&#13;
one in order to have continuity in&#13;
the overall business program.&#13;
The third step would be to appoint&#13;
someone over the entire business&#13;
program to handle not only undergraduate&#13;
and graduate&#13;
program development, but also&#13;
faculty development.&#13;
The task force felt that the&#13;
present facully lacks sufficienUy&#13;
qualified instructors. They feel&#13;
that 75 percent of the staff should&#13;
hold a PhD or it's equivalent. The&#13;
task force recommended this&#13;
hiring policy have the highest&#13;
priority to gather permanent&#13;
senior leadership to effectively&#13;
guide the School of Modem industry.&#13;
"'Recommendations were also&#13;
made for the undergraduate pro&#13;
gram with accreditation from&#13;
the American Association of&#13;
Collegiate Schools of Business&#13;
(MCSB), the student would have&#13;
to blend his professional studies&#13;
»00with a liberal arts program.&#13;
continued Oft ,... S&#13;
by John McKl.... ey&#13;
The draft copy of "Rules&#13;
Governing Academic Staff"&#13;
created by the Interim Academic&#13;
Staff Advisory Committee has&#13;
been completed, sent to Olancellor&#13;
Guskin for conunent and&#13;
returned to the committee for&#13;
further action. Committee&#13;
members admit that only a rew of&#13;
the persons affected by tbe new&#13;
rules even know that the draft&#13;
copy exists.&#13;
According to the committee,&#13;
chaired by Carla Stolfie, head of&#13;
the Public services Division of&#13;
the Ubrary-Learning Center, the&#13;
committee's meetings have been&#13;
open and academic staff members&#13;
"are always welcome to&#13;
attend." At its last meeting on&#13;
Mondsy, sept. 20, the Committee&#13;
agn;ed to issue a notice to all&#13;
staff members telling them that&#13;
the draft exists and inviting&#13;
comment.&#13;
The draft of the proposed rules&#13;
will eventually have to be sent to&#13;
Central Administration for a&#13;
committee tbere to review and&#13;
revise the rules.&#13;
Committee members expressed&#13;
feelings that their wor"&#13;
will be changed at Madlson to suit&#13;
smneone else's views. --Whatever&#13;
tbe hell Central wants to do about&#13;
this, they wIlI do, and wbat&#13;
happens in the end will not be&#13;
decided by us." said Walter&#13;
Shirer, Director of Public Information.&#13;
The new rules will apply to all&#13;
academic staff appointments on&#13;
tbe Parkside campus. Faculty&#13;
members such as professors wIlI&#13;
not be affected. The rules define&#13;
an academic staffer as&#13;
''professional and administrative&#13;
personnel, other than faculty,&#13;
with duties andsubject to types of&#13;
appointments that are primarily&#13;
associated with hlgber education&#13;
Institutions or their administration."&#13;
&lt;llairperson StoIDe said that If&#13;
the committee decides that it&#13;
wants most of the Parkside appointments&#13;
to be probationaryindefinite,&#13;
rather than flxedterm,&#13;
the committee will be "in&#13;
for a fight" with Olancellor&#13;
Guskin. She felt he would prefer&#13;
most of the academic staff to be&#13;
contll'lWd 011 ,... S&#13;
Tickets available&#13;
Tickets for the final 11 individual&#13;
events in the Accent on&#13;
Enrichment series are on exclusive&#13;
sale through Friday (Oct.&#13;
1) for UW-Parkside students and&#13;
staff at the Information Center&#13;
kiosk in Main Place.&#13;
Students receive substantial&#13;
price discounts on the three&#13;
events being offered&#13;
cooperatively with tbe Parkside&#13;
Activities Board-Dizzy Gillespie,&#13;
Keith Berger and the Milwaukee&#13;
Repertory theater ....egard1ess of&#13;
wben tbey buy tickets, and will&#13;
receive 50 cent discounts on the&#13;
ether eight events during this&#13;
week only.&#13;
After this week's sale to&#13;
students and staff, remaining&#13;
individual event tickets will be&#13;
available to anyone. During the&#13;
first two days of tbe on-campus&#13;
saie Monday and Tuesday, only&#13;
students were allowed to purchase&#13;
tickets for the three P .A.B.&#13;
co-sponsored events.&#13;
The Accent on Enrichment&#13;
Committee reports that nearly&#13;
450 season subscription sales&#13;
were made during the highly&#13;
successful campaign just concluded.&#13;
The remaining events&#13;
contll'lMel N ,... S&#13;
Inside:&#13;
Johnson interveiw&#13;
page 3&#13;
The F:'arkside--------&#13;
Staff unaware&#13;
of rules&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 4 Wednesday, September 29, 1976&#13;
Enrollment down 400&#13;
_ Budget to he cut&#13;
by Robert Hoffman&#13;
The segregated fees budget will&#13;
be cut by up to $33,100 if&#13;
enrollment figures stay at their&#13;
present levels.&#13;
Head count enrollment has&#13;
fallen by 600 from projected&#13;
figures and is 400 less than last&#13;
year's enrollment.&#13;
These cuts will hurt the student&#13;
union the most. Tony Totero,&#13;
coordinator of student&#13;
programming, said that possible&#13;
cutbacks could mean reductions&#13;
in the coffee house, hours of the&#13;
Union or cutting back on dances&#13;
and activities.&#13;
Only half of the Union's activities&#13;
budget is from segregated&#13;
fees. The other half is raised from&#13;
revenues from dances and the&#13;
activities staged. This means&#13;
that as-activities and dances are&#13;
cut back, revenue would fall&#13;
leading to further cutbacks.&#13;
Totero said that if students&#13;
want activities and dances they&#13;
will have to support them. He was&#13;
encouraged by the response to&#13;
the first dance, saying "revenue&#13;
from the dance exceeded our&#13;
projections. If this trend continues&#13;
the Union will be able to&#13;
afford to get good bands."&#13;
He also sounded a note of&#13;
pessimism, saying "its too bad&#13;
that this ( budget cutbacks) had&#13;
to occur the first year, but we'll&#13;
just have to play it by ear and see&#13;
how it goes."&#13;
A group from the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board is being set up,&#13;
to determine, as the year goes&#13;
along, what cuts should be made.&#13;
Students are encouraged to .&#13;
stop by the Union and make&#13;
suggestions to the committee on&#13;
further activities.&#13;
Other areas that receive&#13;
segregated fees will not be as&#13;
drastically affected by the cutback.&#13;
&#13;
The athletics, housing, health,&#13;
and transportation departments&#13;
will make up for the deficit by&#13;
drawing on reserve carry-over&#13;
funds.&#13;
Nurse Edith Isenberg of the&#13;
health department said that "the&#13;
doctor will still be in on Fridays&#13;
or by appointment and all&#13;
· medical services will continue to&#13;
be free."&#13;
Declines of this nature will not&#13;
affect Parkside yet, according to&#13;
Gary Goetz, director of budgeting&#13;
and planning analysis.&#13;
Goetz said that there "will be&#13;
no cutbacks of classes and absolutely&#13;
no cutbacks of staff."&#13;
However, should enrollments&#13;
continue to decline in the next few&#13;
years, Parkside would face the&#13;
unpleasant fact of less state aid&#13;
and cutbacks in classes and staff.&#13;
As to why enrollment lleclined,&#13;
David Holle, specialist in&#13;
budgeting and planning analysis,&#13;
said that "committees are being&#13;
formed to look into the matter&#13;
and will, by the end of October,&#13;
have some recommendations."&#13;
Business report finished&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
On July 13, 1976 the Chancellor's&#13;
Task Force on the&#13;
business management program&#13;
issued a report recommending&#13;
seven changes in the program.&#13;
This task force was another in the&#13;
series of committies created by&#13;
Chancellor Guskin's original&#13;
Committee of Principals.&#13;
The changes in the program in&#13;
the opinions of several task force&#13;
members are long overdue. They&#13;
Board disputed&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
At its September meeting on"&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 21, the Faculty&#13;
Senate voted 12-11 to recommit&#13;
legislation which would abolish&#13;
the Faculty Fund Board,&#13;
established in 1973, and replace it&#13;
with a Research Board.&#13;
The functions of the Research&#13;
Board would ·be to "advise the&#13;
Administration regarding means&#13;
of stimulating and supporting&#13;
academic research and creative&#13;
activity," and to "independently&#13;
generate and administer funds&#13;
for the support of academic&#13;
research and creative activity."&#13;
Richard Keehn, associate&#13;
professor of economics and&#13;
chairman of the Faculty Fund&#13;
Board which would be&#13;
eliminated, said he objected to&#13;
the proposed legislation on the&#13;
basis that his committee was not&#13;
shown the document before it was&#13;
put on the agenda. "We object to&#13;
the fact that we were not given&#13;
the chance to see the finalized&#13;
document before this afternoon,"&#13;
said Keehn.&#13;
He also objected to the fact that&#13;
the members of the new com-&#13;
. mittee would be appointed rather&#13;
than elected, and that the&#13;
Research Board would be&#13;
"purely advisory to the administration,"&#13;
in debate before&#13;
the legislation was· sent back to&#13;
the University Committee for&#13;
overhauling.&#13;
According to University&#13;
Committee chairman Larry&#13;
Deutsch, "We hope to establish a&#13;
group with the authorization to&#13;
advise the administration on&#13;
these matters." Chancellor&#13;
Guskin, who supports the change,&#13;
said that "this new proposal&#13;
would prevent our having to&#13;
appoint an ad-hoc committee&#13;
each year to take care of&#13;
allocating the money for&#13;
research."&#13;
In other Faculty Senate news, a&#13;
new chairman was unanimously&#13;
elected at the Sept. 21 meeting.&#13;
He is Michael Marron, ass~iate&#13;
professor of chemistry.&#13;
The Senate also voted to permit&#13;
the engineering science division&#13;
to organize officially now that it&#13;
has nine faculty members in its&#13;
discipline including seven&#13;
associate professors and two full&#13;
professors.&#13;
feel that once the changes are&#13;
implemented, Parkside's&#13;
business program will compare&#13;
favorably with any program in&#13;
the state. There are five major&#13;
areas in which the task force&#13;
recommended changes:&#13;
organization, faculty, the undergraduate&#13;
program, the&#13;
graduate program and accreditation&#13;
of the School of&#13;
Modern Industry.&#13;
The recommendations called&#13;
for incorporation of the three&#13;
divisions within the School of&#13;
Modern Industry. The task force&#13;
would also like the various&#13;
personnel courses combined into&#13;
one in order to have continuity in&#13;
the overall business program.&#13;
The third step would be to appoint&#13;
someone over the entire business&#13;
program to handle not only undergraduate&#13;
and graduate&#13;
program development, but also&#13;
faculty development.&#13;
The task force felt that the&#13;
present faculty lacks sufficiently&#13;
qualified instructors. They feel&#13;
that 75 percent of the staff should&#13;
hold a PhD or it's equivalent. The&#13;
task force recommended this&#13;
hiring policy have the hfghest&#13;
priority to gather permanent&#13;
senior leadership to effectively&#13;
guide the School of Modern Industry.&#13;
&#13;
"'Recommendations were also&#13;
made for the undergraduate pro&#13;
gram with accreditation from&#13;
the American Association of&#13;
Collegiate Schools of Business&#13;
(AACSB), the student would have&#13;
to blend his professional studies&#13;
50-50 with a liberal arts program. continued on page s&#13;
by John McKlostey&#13;
The draft copy of "Rules&#13;
Governing Academic Staff"&#13;
created by the Interim Academic&#13;
Staff Advisory Committee has&#13;
been completed, sent to Chancellor&#13;
Guskin for comment and&#13;
returned to the committee for&#13;
further action. Committee&#13;
members admit that only a few of&#13;
the persons affected by the new&#13;
rules even know that the draft&#13;
copy exists.&#13;
According to the committee,&#13;
chaired by Carla Stoffle, head of&#13;
the Public Services Division of&#13;
the Library-Learning Center, the&#13;
committee's meetings have been&#13;
open and academic staff members&#13;
"are always welcome to&#13;
attend." At its last meeting on&#13;
Monday, Sept. 20, the Committee&#13;
agreed to issue a notice to all&#13;
staff members telling them that&#13;
the draft exists and inviting&#13;
comment.&#13;
The draft of the proposed rules&#13;
will eventually have to be sent to&#13;
Central Administration for a&#13;
committee there to r.eview and&#13;
revise the rules.&#13;
Committee members expressed&#13;
feelings that their work&#13;
will be changed at Madison to suit&#13;
someone else's views. "Whatever&#13;
the hell Central wants to do about&#13;
this, they will do, and what&#13;
happens in the end will not be&#13;
decided by us." said Walter&#13;
Shirer, Director of Public Information.&#13;
&#13;
The new rules will apply to all&#13;
academic staff appointments on&#13;
the Parkside campus. Faculty&#13;
members such as professors will&#13;
not be affected. The rules define&#13;
an academic staffer as&#13;
"professional and administrative&#13;
personnel, other than faculty,&#13;
with duties and subject to types of&#13;
· appointments that are primarily&#13;
associated with higher education&#13;
institutions or their administration."&#13;
&#13;
Chairperson Stoffle said that if&#13;
the committee decides that it&#13;
wants most of the Parkside appointments&#13;
to be probationaryindefinite,&#13;
rather than fixedterm,&#13;
the committee will be "in&#13;
for a fight" with Chancellor&#13;
Guskin. She felt he would prefer&#13;
most of the academic staff to be conhnu~d on P«I• 5&#13;
Tickets available&#13;
Tickets for the final 11 individual&#13;
events in the Accent on&#13;
Enrichment series are on exclusive&#13;
sale through Friday (Oct.&#13;
1) for UW-Parkside students and&#13;
staff at the Information Center&#13;
kiosk in Main Place.&#13;
Students receive substantial&#13;
price discounts on the three&#13;
events being offered&#13;
cooperatively with the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board-Dizzy Gillespie,&#13;
Keith Berger and the Milwaukee&#13;
Repertory theater-regardless of&#13;
when they buy tickets, and will&#13;
receive 50 cent discounts on the&#13;
lither eight events during this&#13;
.i!Jnside:&#13;
·week only.&#13;
After this week's sale to&#13;
students and staff, remaining&#13;
individual event tickets 'Yfil be&#13;
available to anyone. During the&#13;
first two days of the on-campus&#13;
sale Monday and Tuesday, only&#13;
students were allowed to purchase&#13;
tickets for the three P.A.B.&#13;
co-sponsored events.&#13;
The Accent on Enrichment&#13;
Committee reports that nearly&#13;
450 season subscription sales&#13;
were made during the highly&#13;
successful campaign just concluded.&#13;
The remaining events continued on P•I• 5&#13;
Johnson interveiw&#13;
page 3 &#13;
PAI.K~IDE IlAtol8E&#13;
•&#13;
hould fulfill&#13;
• • mission&#13;
e&#13;
Paorltsl*'l spec million· to&#13;
ml~l", Industr soc • II ~t1y&#13;
__ 01 university which II most&#13;
rMIllu1tlon and nstrlctlng the scope of&#13;
IOC&#13;
The n_~tot II ngspec 1m ss ons to every schoolin&#13;
-:~~~:.:~ kl concentra ed development ot&#13;
.. spec f c schools The attempt by all&#13;
ClPall programs -..1lI only yield&#13;
POLITICAL&#13;
critiqued&#13;
PMB...... _&#13;
mediocrity whereas emphasis In certain areas may&#13;
produce excellent programs on a system-wide basis.&#13;
For Parkslde to Incorporate' its mlsslon into every&#13;
exlstln malor only insures continuing mediocrity In all&#13;
progra~s and defeats the purpose of having special&#13;
I Ions If resources were pooled to strengthen&#13;
:~ness~relntated disciplines, Parks Ide may be able to&#13;
achieve excellence and recognition In bne area.&#13;
While the emphasis would only be on certain&#13;
disciplines, programs In other areas should stili be&#13;
maintained as much as possible but not be required to&#13;
relate to the modern Industrial society. They should&#13;
keep their broad outlook and not become variations of&#13;
the same theme.&#13;
Also, there should be an administrative position&#13;
aeated to unite and offer direction to business related&#13;
disciplines and divisions.&#13;
Understandably, this proposal may not seem very&#13;
appealing to students and faculty whose interests do not&#13;
lie in business. Ranger itself has always supported&#13;
establishment of a journalism major. But expectations&#13;
must change with the sad realization that financial&#13;
limitations have subverted ParksIde's plan for extensive&#13;
growth. Everyone had hopesthat the University&#13;
would excel In their area of Interest but this is not&#13;
possible.&#13;
It was great watching Parkside grow and expand but&#13;
unlesswe now want to watch it stagnate, concentration&#13;
on the development of one area of study should occur&#13;
while retaining the diversity of experience offered by&#13;
programs. Though personal Interest may blind one to&#13;
that fact, a more detached view shows its benefit. The&#13;
desire for excellence should be put above that of selfgain.&#13;
FORUM&#13;
contributions you can bet your ass the Democrats would have jumped&#13;
alloverhimmtbepress; tbeydidnot. 2. Dole, because of the&#13;
~aterga~Agnew affair was the most investigated man in the country&#13;
SIIICI!. Lee Harvey Oswald. Republicans never would have accepted&#13;
him if thete was any hint of scandal.&#13;
~ Maddox and E~ene McCarthy are two other presidential&#13;
~tes. Maddox ~ a JOkethat tbe American Party figured would&#13;
ge tbem som~ a!lenti?" from the press and give them strength in the&#13;
~nservative faction of the parties; needless to say they have&#13;
~ their chances to become a legitimate third party alternative.&#13;
Carter ~ ~ otber hand might steal liberal vote s from Jimmy&#13;
In tbe IIdministr ore wlll ~~bly be bought off by Carter with a post&#13;
iDthelilito ation. Predictions: Carter wlll beat Ford somewbere&#13;
4$ percent range and remember, you heard it here first ~If:.The Parkside .&#13;
RANGER&#13;
r , f76&#13;
•&#13;
hould fulfill&#13;
• • mission&#13;
ed. ·ty whereas emphasis in certain areas may·&#13;
m ,ocra t 'd b · roduce excellent programs on a sys em-w, e as1s.&#13;
P F Parkside to tncorporatei its mission into every&#13;
exis~~ng major only insures continuing mediocrity In all&#13;
programs and defeats the purpose of having special&#13;
missions. If resources were pooled to strengthen&#13;
buslness-oreintated disciplines, Parkside may be able to&#13;
achieve excellence and recognition in one area.&#13;
While the emphasis would only be on certain&#13;
disciplines, programs in other areas should still be&#13;
maintained as much as possible but not be required to&#13;
relate to the modern industrial society. They should&#13;
eep their broad outlook and not become variations of&#13;
the same theme.&#13;
Also, there should be an administrative position&#13;
created to unite and offer direction to business related&#13;
disciplines and divisions.&#13;
Understandably, this proposal may not seem very&#13;
appealing to students and faculty whose interests do not&#13;
lie in business. Ranger itself has always supported&#13;
establishment of a journalism major. But expectations&#13;
must change with the sad realization that financial&#13;
llmltatlons have subverted Parkside's plan for extensive&#13;
growth. Everyone had hopes that the University&#13;
would excel In their area of interest but this is not&#13;
possible.&#13;
It was great watching Parkside grow and expand but&#13;
unless we now want to watch It stagnate, concentration&#13;
on the development of one area of study shoutd occur&#13;
while retaining the diversity of experience offered by&#13;
programs. Though personal interest may bl ind one to&#13;
that fact, a more detached view shows its benefit. The&#13;
desire for excellence should be put above that of selfgain.&#13;
&#13;
CAL FORUM&#13;
·qued&#13;
contribution~ you can bet your ass the Democrats would have jumped&#13;
all over him m the press; they did not. 2. Dole, because of the&#13;
~alergate-Agnew affair was the most investigated man in the country&#13;
~e. Lee Harvey Oswald. Republicans never would have accepted&#13;
him if there was any hint of scandal.&#13;
~ter Maddox and Eugene McCarthy are two other presidential&#13;
~dates. Maddox ~ a joke that the American Party figured would =~?:'~ ge em som~ attenti?n from the press and give them strength in the&#13;
faction of the parties; needless to say they have&#13;
McCartb eir th ces to become a legitimate third party alternative.&#13;
Carter a~ 0:ere~ othe~ hand might steal liberal votes- from Jimmy&#13;
in the administr ;e will pr?~bly be bought off by Carter with a post&#13;
in the 55 to 45 a on. Predictions: Carter will beat Ford somewhere&#13;
percent range and remember, you heard it here first. i,r._ The Parksid .&#13;
RANGER&#13;
TIie P_s,de Ran I by ,..,._ :' 1 "'rltten •nd edited&#13;
osunsln,P•rhlde !be University of 'flPOlts tor "'ho •re solel&#13;
«•t t Op 1110~~ ::11or1a1 policy an:&#13;
.• Pressed •re not EDITOR,tN-CHIE . IUSINESS MANA~·EJtannlne Slpsrna&#13;
necess,,rlly representative of those held by the ~tudents, faculty or administration of&#13;
Parkside. Editorial and Business SSl-2217;&#13;
Newsroom SSl-229S.&#13;
IIDYEltTISING RS: Catt,y 8rnak, J NEWS COOR01:"NAGER: Torn Coo Udy Trudrung (asst)&#13;
DEPARTMENTs:"TOR : 8ruce Wagn:.er .&#13;
A..,.l tr-ah-P011cie1• SMI • Dave lra1141 • John McKlosby si..s...i FEATIJR ...... p, &amp; 1P .. kers • Ma s- E EDITOR : ......... . ry Kay Ohmer rvRTS EDITOR • ..._. 8auer&#13;
YISIIGE EDITORS•Jun Tenuta&#13;
COPY ED1TO1t , J; lfl,f~ey j , '"'•nckl 8111 8&#13;
P"OTO EDITOit, e ... nge • Arkt&#13;
ClltCULATION• • Vu Thompson&#13;
STAFF• w--,·M~ue Marquardt&#13;
Larry o.-t •lier, Te.-rt Ga&#13;
._Ja ty, Phil H.,rnann Yhart, Robert Hottman&#13;
PHOTOG':;:j. lev.,ly Pella, 8;t:::ona Maillet, Allen 8~=~ls Clausen, 8rldget Penikowskl,&#13;
110 SALl!SPE HERS : P.J. Auor eu, Linda Knudtson K n, Carol Arentz, John Overman,&#13;
RSONS: JO&lt;! Lan~na, Ricky Cooper, Rick F•,rln LaFournler, Judy Trudrung. •· Rick Fluch Heh , &#13;
Johnson:&#13;
key is flexibility&#13;
by Roberta Kofoed&#13;
Adark skinned, friendly man now occupies office 343in WLLC. He is&#13;
Clayton Johnson, Parkside's newest assistant chancellor. Johnson is&#13;
bead of the support systems. Eleven department heads work under&#13;
him including housing and athletics.&#13;
JoMson carne to Parkside from a small college in Binnington, New&#13;
York wbere he was an administrator and on the faculty, teaching&#13;
higher educational systems. Parkside seemed like a-good challenge.&#13;
Johnson and his fourteen year old son are bacheloring it at Parkside&#13;
Village until they decide on a permanent residence. They will be&#13;
joined tben by Mrs. Johnson and their eleven year old daughter.&#13;
Johnson's goals are to make Parkside flexible enough to adapt to&#13;
the upcoming changes in modern society and to keep the best interests&#13;
on view of all students who will be attending Parkside in the future. He&#13;
feels that as society progresses so musttbe degree of education expand.&#13;
Someday, ordinary household tasks will be run by computers&#13;
and the housewife must be educated enough to deal with this.&#13;
"Parkside is not trying to produce the small amount of scholars who&#13;
can develop new advanced changes, instead Parkside is trying to give&#13;
a well-rounded education to what will be the bulk of America's&#13;
middle class," Johnson explained.&#13;
Johnson, as yet, does not feel a strong closeness with the student.&#13;
body because he has only heen working here six weeks. He hopes to get&#13;
in with it as the year progresses.&#13;
Parkside, Johnson believes, being a commuter school, needs an&#13;
especially strong student government. Itis the responsibility of each&#13;
student to know how the administration is run so that he can form a&#13;
stronger, more effective, student government.&#13;
Clayton Johnson hopes to he flexible in his position as Parkside&#13;
changes throughout the years.&#13;
Council to meet&#13;
The Student Organizational&#13;
Council, a Council set up to&#13;
represent all student&#13;
organizations on campus, will&#13;
have its fll"st meeting on Thursday,&#13;
September 30, 1976 at 3:15&#13;
p.m. in WLLC-0174. There are&#13;
several very important mailers&#13;
that this Council will be dealing&#13;
with and all Parkside clubs are&#13;
ur~ed to send a representative to&#13;
the Organizational Council. Any&#13;
,------,&#13;
I I&#13;
I&#13;
E&#13;
I&#13;
f I&#13;
t I&#13;
t I&#13;
t&#13;
V&#13;
I&#13;
t I&#13;
I I&#13;
I t&#13;
I I&#13;
I&#13;
E&#13;
I&#13;
I I&#13;
t I&#13;
I ~&#13;
I&#13;
N&#13;
I&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I&#13;
T&#13;
I&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I --- I&#13;
S&#13;
I I&#13;
I&#13;
• I I&#13;
L__ ~---~&#13;
questions about this council may&#13;
be directed to either Linda&#13;
Knudtson or Bob Foght at the&#13;
Student Government Office&#13;
(WLLC-0193 or 553-2244).&#13;
Drug counseling available&#13;
Jack Albright personally felt Parkside had a&#13;
direct need for this type of service on campus, and&#13;
feels P.O.Q. may be an essential element in offering&#13;
students the support they need in combating a drug&#13;
problem.&#13;
Every case is held in confidence, aod handled&#13;
individually. Jack explains there is no specific way&#13;
to handle every case, rather you must deal with the&#13;
person singularly to determine objective alternatives&#13;
for the student concerned.&#13;
Alcohol, in Jack's estimation, would seem to be&#13;
the most apparent problem he is in contact with. He&#13;
stressed that P .O.Q. doesn't look down on people&#13;
who drink socially and in control, but believes&#13;
limitations must be exercised, eliminating possible&#13;
chances for a problem to develop.&#13;
Self-realization that you think you might have a&#13;
drinking problem is the fll"st step toward rectifying&#13;
it. Jack admits that the only way P .0.Q.'s services&#13;
can be effective is if the student realizes that a&#13;
problem exists, and is ready to view the problem&#13;
constructively.&#13;
"Scare tactics," as Jack terms them, are not&#13;
practiced by members of the P.O.Q. staff. The key&#13;
word is support, and that is P.O.Q.'sprime !unction.&#13;
Viable alternatives are offered for the student to&#13;
study and evaluate.&#13;
Literature is also made available to students at&#13;
P.O.Q. headquarters. If you think you might have a&#13;
drug problem, consider checking your behavior&#13;
pattern. How do you deal with problems - do 100&#13;
depend on drugs to face tense silqation, or to put yoo&#13;
at ease in a social atmosphere? Just askmg yourself&#13;
.a few questions, and answering them honestly can&#13;
determine your possible dependance. "A natural&#13;
high," as Jack refers to, is more rewarding and in&#13;
~ the long-run more se1f-gralifying than any drug&#13;
'2 induced high.&#13;
~ Currently, P .O.Q. is staffed by volunteers ranging&#13;
~ in the ages of 19-40.Their office is located in Ta1Ient&#13;
~ Ha1I, Room 187, and they encourage students&#13;
S requesting belp, or students who are interested in&#13;
t helping staff this pregram to contact their&#13;
beadquarters, or call 553-2623.&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
The Parkside Drug Quarters (P.O.Q.) opens its&#13;
doors once again this. semester to any students&#13;
seeking help with any drug related problem. A&#13;
meelinl! will be held Friday. Seotember 24. to&#13;
determine new hours and policies, with Jack&#13;
Albright acting as President, and Rick Pomazol,&#13;
Assistant professor of psychology, and Cliff&#13;
Johnson, clinical counselor, serving as advisors.&#13;
J&#13;
P.D.Q&gt; AdvOOr&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER september 29, 19763&#13;
Wedaesday" Sept. ZI&#13;
Executive Council of PSGA meets with O. Clayton Johoaon at 2 p.m. In&#13;
WLLC 0193&#13;
Women's tennis, UW-P vs, carroll College at 3 p.m. at the lamia&#13;
coorta.&#13;
Soccer, UW-Pvs. Aurora College,at3:30 p.m. at the IIOCCt!I"fieid.&#13;
Thanday, Sept .•&#13;
Committee of the Whole meets at 1 p.m. in WLLC 0174. All members&#13;
of PSGA, Inc. and student. ep. esenlatives to university COITIII'Itteee&#13;
should attend.&#13;
Society of Physics Students meets at 2:30 p.m. in GR 230. All Interested&#13;
students and faculty welcome.&#13;
Public Relations and Sludentlnformatloo Committee meets at 3 p.m.&#13;
in WLLC 0193&#13;
Organizational Council meets at 3: 15 p.m. in WLLC 0174. All&#13;
presidents of student organizatiOlls shou1d attend.&#13;
PSGA Senate l1!eeling at 4:30 p.m. in Unloo 'JI11&#13;
WargarnersCiubmeets!rom 6-10p.m. inCL 140.&#13;
Senate Ways and Means Committee meets at 7 p.m. in WLLC 01113.&#13;
Open to all interested students.&#13;
FrIday, Oct. I&#13;
Senate Business and Finance Committee meets at 10:15a.m. in WLLC&#13;
0193. Open to aU interested students.&#13;
Life Science Club meets at2 p.m. in GR 0127. All interested students&#13;
welcome to this first meeting.&#13;
Movie, "The Four Musketeers," plays at 7 and 9 p.m. in tbe Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
. Saturday, Oct. 2&#13;
Mens ,golf, UW-Parkside Tournament at Brigbton Dale.&#13;
Women's volleyba1l: UW-P, Marquette, and UW-Milwaukee at I p.m.&#13;
in the Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Edmonds and Curley perform at 8 p.m. in Union Square. Admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
Suday, Oct. 3&#13;
Soccer, UW-P vs. Minnesota at I p.m. at the soccer field.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from I p.m. to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "The Four Musketeers," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 5&#13;
Womens volleyba1l: UW-P, UW-Madison, and Milwaukee Tech. at 6&#13;
p.m. in the Pby. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets !rom 6to 10p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Please submit all events to the RaDger by WedDelldllyof the week&#13;
before publication.&#13;
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Johnson: ,------7&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
f&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
key is flexibility&#13;
by Roberta Kofoed&#13;
A dark skinned, friendly man now occupies office 343 in WLLC. He is&#13;
Clayton Johnson, Parkside's newest assistant chancellor. Johnson is&#13;
head of the support systems. Eleven department heads work under&#13;
him including housing and athletics.&#13;
Johnson came to Parkside from a small college in Birmington, New&#13;
York where he was an administrator and on the faculty, teaching&#13;
higher educational systems. Parkside seemed like a ,good challenge.&#13;
Johnson and his fourteen year old son are bacheloring it at Parkside&#13;
Village until they decide on a permanent residence. They will be&#13;
joined then by Mrs. Johnson and their eleven year old daughter.&#13;
'&#13;
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Johnson's goals are to make Parkside flexible enough to adapt to&#13;
the upcoming changes in modern society and to keep the best interests&#13;
on view of all students who will be attending Parkside in the future. He&#13;
feels that as society progresses so must the degree of education expand.&#13;
Someday, ordinary household tasks will be run by computers&#13;
and the housewife must be educated enough to deal with this.&#13;
"Parkside is not trying to produce the small amount of scholars who&#13;
can deve_lop new advanced changes, instead Parkside is trying to give&#13;
a well-rounded education to what will be the bulk of America's&#13;
middle class," Johnson explained.&#13;
Johnson, as yet, does not feel a strong closeness with the student,&#13;
body because he has only been working here six weeks. He hopes to get&#13;
in with it as the year progresses.&#13;
Parkside, Johnson believes, being a commuter school, needs an&#13;
especially strong student government. It is the responsibility of each&#13;
student to know how the administration is run so that he can form a&#13;
stronger, more effective, student government.&#13;
Clayton Johnson hopes to be flexible in his position as Parkside&#13;
changes throughout the years.&#13;
Council to meet&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
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The Student Organizational&#13;
Council, a Council set up to&#13;
represent all student&#13;
organizations on campus, will&#13;
have its first meeting on Thursday,&#13;
September 30, 1976 at 3:15&#13;
p.m. in WLLC-D174. There are&#13;
several very importafit matters&#13;
that this Council will be dealing&#13;
with and all Parkside clubs are&#13;
urged to send a representative to&#13;
the Organizational Council. Any&#13;
questions about this council may&#13;
be directed to either Linda&#13;
Knudtson or Bob Foght at the&#13;
Student Government Office&#13;
(WLLC-Dl93 or 553-2244).&#13;
Drug counseling available&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
The Parkside Drug Quarters (P.D.Q.) opens its&#13;
doors once again this, semester to any students&#13;
seeking help with any drug related problem. A&#13;
meet~ will be held Friday. Seotember 24. to&#13;
determine new hours and policies, with Jack&#13;
Albright acting as President, and Rick Pomazol,&#13;
Assistant professor of psychology, and Cliff&#13;
Johnson, clinical counselor, serving as advisors.&#13;
Jack Albright personally felt Parkside had a&#13;
direct need for this type of service on campus, and&#13;
feels P .D.Q. may be an essential element in offering&#13;
students the support they need in combating a drug&#13;
problem.&#13;
Every case is held in confidence, and handled&#13;
individually. Jack explains there is no specific way&#13;
to handle every case, rather you must deal with the&#13;
person singularly to determine objective alternatives&#13;
for the student concerned.&#13;
Alcohol, in Jack's estimation, would seem to be&#13;
the most apparent problem he is in contact with. He&#13;
stressed that P.D.Q. doesn't look down on people&#13;
who drink socially and in control, but believes&#13;
limitations must be exercised, eliminating possible&#13;
chances for a problem to develop.&#13;
Self-realization that you think you might have a&#13;
drinking problem is the first step toward rectifying&#13;
it. Jack admits that the only way P.D.Q.'s services&#13;
can be effective is if the student realizes that a&#13;
problem exists, and is ready to view the problem&#13;
constructively.&#13;
"Scare tactics," as Jack terms them, are not&#13;
practiced by members of the P.D.Q. staff. The key&#13;
word is support, and that is P .D.Q. 's prime function.&#13;
Viable alternatives are offered for the student to&#13;
study and evaluate.&#13;
Literature is also made available to students at&#13;
P.D.Q. headquarters. If you think you might have a&#13;
drug problem, consider checking your behavior&#13;
pattern. How do you deal with problems - do jOU&#13;
depend on drugs to face tense situation, &lt;'r to put you&#13;
at ease in a social atmosphere? Just askmg yourself&#13;
, a few questions, and answering them honestly can&#13;
determine your possible dependance. "A natural&#13;
high," as Jack refers to, is more rewarding and in&#13;
~ the long-run more self-gratifying than any drug&#13;
~ induced high.&#13;
~ Currently, P .D.Q. is staffed by volunteers ranging&#13;
~ in the ages of 19-40. Their office is located in Tallent&#13;
Ji Hall, Room 187, and they encourage students&#13;
~ requesting help, or students who are interested in&#13;
a helping staff this pregram to contact their&#13;
headquarters, or call 553-2623.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 29, 1976 3&#13;
Wednesday. Sept. %9&#13;
Executive Council of PSGA meets with 0. Clayton Johnson at 2 p.m. in&#13;
WLLC D193&#13;
Women's tennis, UW-P vs. Carroll College at 3 p.m. at the tennis&#13;
courts.&#13;
Soccer, UW-P vs. Aurora College, at3:30p.m. at the soccer field.&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 30&#13;
Committee of the Whole meets at 1 p.m. in WLLC D174. All members&#13;
of PSGA, Inc. and student representatives to university committees&#13;
should attend.&#13;
Society of Physics Students meets at 2:30 p.m. in GR 230. All interested&#13;
students and faculty welcome.&#13;
Public Relations and Student Information Committee meets at 3 p.m.&#13;
in WLLC D193&#13;
Organizational Council meets at 3:15 p.m. in WLLC D174. All&#13;
presidents of student organizations should attend. . . '1Jfl&#13;
PSGA Senate Il}eeting at 4:30 p.m. m Uruon&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6-10 p.rn. in CL 140.&#13;
Senate Ways and Means Committee meets at 7 p.m. in WLLC D193.&#13;
Open to all interested students.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 1&#13;
Senate Business and Finance Committee meets at 10: 15 a.m. in WLLC&#13;
D193. Open to all interested students.&#13;
Life Science Club meets at 2 p.m. in GR D127. All interested students&#13;
welcome to this first meeting. .&#13;
Movie, "The Four Musketeers, " plays at 7 and 9 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 2&#13;
Mens golf, UW-Parkside Tournament at Brighton Dale.&#13;
Women's volleyball: UW-P, Marquette, and UW-Milwaukee at 1 p.m.&#13;
in the Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Edmonds and Curley perform at 8 p.m. in Union Square. Admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 3&#13;
Soccer, UW-P vs. Minnesota at l p.m. at the soccer field .&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Movie, "The Four Musketeers," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 5&#13;
Womens volleyball: UW-P, UW-Madison, and Milwaukee Tech. at 6&#13;
p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 6 to 10 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Please submit all events to the Ranger by Wednesday of the week&#13;
before publication.&#13;
·-the quiet leader 1n synthetic lubrication&#13;
@D&#13;
Mike Villers- Dealer 637-2726&#13;
Ongoing admissions Monthly tuition&#13;
~ ,IJ&#13;
RACINE MONTESSORI SCHOOL&#13;
OeKoven · Foundation 520-21st St&#13;
Admitting age: 2 yr 6 mo thru 3 yr 9 mo&#13;
PHONE: 637-7892&#13;
The Rac11e Montessori School admits students of any race ,&#13;
creed , color and natlOnal or ethnic orig11 .&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M.&#13;
261S Washi119ton /we. 634--2373&#13;
Mary's Alibi&#13;
83S Wuhlngfon /we.&#13;
Raeine&#13;
Monclay - Friclay 8 - 10 pm&#13;
Tappers -20+ Mixed Drinks-40+&#13;
Pitehers $130&#13;
• &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RA GER ~mber 29. 197'&#13;
the qUiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Senate, administra~ion to meet&#13;
Mike ViUers-Oealer 637-2726 decided and engineering SCienc&#13;
Senate members will a~i&#13;
to have office hours between 10&#13;
and 4 each day.&#13;
Elections for PSGA's divisional&#13;
seats and two at-large seats will&#13;
be lield October 13 and 14 in Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
President Bowden is calling a&#13;
meeting of the Union Operating&#13;
Board for this Thursday in the&#13;
PSGA office, WLLC 0193, at 9&#13;
a.m,&#13;
the Senate and it was found that&#13;
Elsa Carpenter, and Lita&#13;
Wimbley were no longer attending&#13;
Parkside and thus, no&#13;
longer members of the Union .&#13;
Operating Board and senate,&#13;
respecitvely. President&#13;
protempore Foght. also announced&#13;
a need for students to fill&#13;
seats in the science .division spot&#13;
vacated by Wimbley; at large&#13;
spots vacated by Marilyn Phillips&#13;
and Johnson; plus seats in unby&#13;
Bruce wagaer&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, PSGA,&#13;
despite dwindling numbers, is&#13;
meeting with the administration&#13;
on a weekly basis, it was announced&#13;
at last Friday's Senate&#13;
meeting.&#13;
The executive council (composed&#13;
of President Kiyoko&#13;
Bowden, Vice president Robert&#13;
Vlach, President pro tempore&#13;
Robert Foght, and assistant&#13;
President protempore Chris&#13;
Meyer) will be meeting with&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin and&#13;
Assistant Chancellbr Clayton&#13;
Johnson this week.&#13;
The purpose of these meetings,&#13;
according to Vlach, is to halt&#13;
problems that might cause&#13;
friction between the administration&#13;
and student body.&#13;
In other action, Susan Johnson&#13;
submitted her resignation from&#13;
WHAT HE WANTS I&#13;
uper selection&#13;
f weaters.&#13;
GJ ACCENT STRIPED KNITS&#13;
Seft. __ ,.esJI acrylic. _. b..... grey&#13;
...... s.xt '16 Deadline for applications £!J BULKY FISHBlMAN KNITS&#13;
.. "ltc. .......... Fvl foIllionod croWl&#13;
It turtIft '15&#13;
@] WRAP A cozy CARDIGAN&#13;
Y. booIfy Q10ne .."Iic. 5IlawI c_ aIId ......&#13;
MIt s.xt '20&#13;
0 IUCH-TONE SCENIC SWEATER&#13;
Ololca eI po_ In c"'_'" _Ian&#13;
ocryIic 5,M.1Jtt '15&#13;
[!J PULLOVERS IN GREAT PAnE~&#13;
~ ..,.. 10 I''' • • ,brant patfem definition.&#13;
Acrylic s.xt '13.99&#13;
Overseas student teaching in&#13;
Australia, England, Scotland&#13;
Wales or Ireland, is also an op~&#13;
available to UW-P students. For&#13;
further information please&#13;
contact the Clinical Programs&#13;
Office. GR211.&#13;
Education ..tudents who plan to&#13;
student teach Spring Semester&#13;
1977 are reminded that the&#13;
deadline for these applications is&#13;
October 1, 1976. Forms are&#13;
available in the Clinical&#13;
Programs Office, Greenquist 210.&#13;
Petrie:&#13;
politics not a career&#13;
by Terrt Gayhart District.&#13;
uWhile there are many issues that we could&#13;
debate, I think that the first four should definitely be&#13;
. concerned with Congressional reform, the energy&#13;
situation, welfare reform, and national defense"&#13;
Aspin has see~ f[t not to reply to Petrie's chaUeng~.&#13;
Petrie chalks it up to Aspin seeing it politically&#13;
advantageous not to accept.&#13;
"I'm not interested in it as a career," stated&#13;
Professor William Petrie, Republican candidate for&#13;
Congress, but this is not due to lack of enthusiasm.&#13;
Petrie explains~ that "career" congressmen&#13;
became ineffective because they have lost touch&#13;
with their constituents. Petrie would make his&#13;
contribution and then pass the seat on.&#13;
The third year professor at Parkside was asked&#13;
by the Wisconsin Republican Party to run for the&#13;
office. Alter much thought and a belief that he could .&#13;
make a considerable contribution, Petrie accepted&#13;
the challenge.&#13;
Even considering the difficulty in unseating an&#13;
incumbent, Petrie strongly believes that if his&#13;
positions reach the people he has a very good&#13;
possibility of a victory in November.&#13;
Petrie stressed the federal govenunent's poor&#13;
• communication with the public: "Congress has lost&#13;
touch with those of us who work for a living." Petrie&#13;
feels that this is characteristic of his opponent&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin.&#13;
Further, the candidate stated that due to the&#13;
Vietnam War, pollution, and public outcry, several&#13;
fads have arisen in Congress such as attacking the&#13;
budget for national defense, environmenta1ism, and&#13;
consumerism. Petrie has reported that it has been&#13;
very popular for Congressmen to ride such issues&#13;
ignoring constructive work. While these issues are&#13;
important, they bave been abused in recent years.&#13;
The candidate was further convinced that&#13;
Congressman Aspin uses his good rapport with the&#13;
press services to keep his name in circulation.&#13;
Petrie has also continually attempted to convince&#13;
the Congressman that debates before the public&#13;
would be worthwhile. "I'm flexible on the format"&#13;
Petrie said, but stated that he strongly favors at&#13;
least four dehates - one in each county of the First William Petrie&#13;
/&#13;
" Union&#13;
Recreation Center&#13;
Latest looks? Look here .&#13;
_&#13;
•Pirit~,:/P value 0&#13;
...--- USE WAJtOS CHAItC-All CREDIT ---&#13;
3600 SZnd Street KE OSHA&#13;
Phone 658-4331&#13;
DoULY' _...... I.••:. A.... Ie I·. P M&#13;
121e~P .. '"&#13;
HOURS -&#13;
Monday.Frlday&#13;
9 a.m. - 10 p.m•&#13;
Satu.rday Noon. 11 p.m.&#13;
Sunday Noon. 5 p.m.&#13;
BOWLING - 50' /game&#13;
BILLIARDS - $1.25/hour&#13;
TABLE TENNIS - 25' /hour&#13;
FOOSBALL &amp; PINBALL&#13;
PHONE 553-2695 FOR INFORMATION!&#13;
THE P RKSIDE RA GER September 29, 1976&#13;
the qu et leader synthet"c lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers-Oeater 637-2726&#13;
WHAT HE WANTS&#13;
per selection&#13;
of sweaters. ~ ITS&#13;
, Bro , blue, grey $16&#13;
ioned ere&#13;
'15&#13;
co r d sosh&#13;
'20&#13;
Acrilo&#13;
'15&#13;
GREAT PATTERNS • ra t pottem d , i 'on. $13.99&#13;
L te t looks? Look here.&#13;
1pirit,~6&#13;
value&#13;
OSHA&#13;
P . .&#13;
Senate, administration to meet&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, PSGA,&#13;
despite dwindling numbers, is&#13;
meeting with the administration&#13;
on a weekly basis, it was announced&#13;
at last Friday's Senate&#13;
meeting.&#13;
the Senate and it was found that&#13;
Elsa carpenter, and Li ta&#13;
Wimbley were no longer attending&#13;
Parkside and thus, no&#13;
longer members of the Union -&#13;
Operating Board and s_enate,&#13;
respecitvely. President&#13;
protempore Foght . also announced&#13;
a need for students to fill&#13;
seats in the science division spot&#13;
vacated by Wimbley; at large&#13;
spots vacated by Marilyn Phillips&#13;
and Johnson; plus seats in undecided&#13;
and engineering science.&#13;
Senate members will attempt&#13;
to have office hours between 10&#13;
and 4 each day.&#13;
Elections for PSGA's divisional&#13;
seats and two at-large seats will&#13;
be held October 13 and 14 in Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
President Bowden is calling a&#13;
meeting of the Union Operating&#13;
Board for this Thursday in the&#13;
PSGA office, WLLC D193, at 9&#13;
a.m.&#13;
The executive council ( composed&#13;
of President Kiyoko&#13;
Bowden, Vice president Robert&#13;
Vlach, President pro tempore&#13;
Robert Foght, and assistant&#13;
President protempore Chris&#13;
Meyer) will be meeting with&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin and&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Clayton&#13;
John.son this week.&#13;
'Deadline for applications&#13;
The purpose of these meetings,&#13;
ccording to Vlach, is to halt&#13;
problems that might cause&#13;
friction between the administration&#13;
and student body.&#13;
In other action, Susan Johnson&#13;
submitted her resignation from&#13;
Education students who plan to&#13;
student teach Spring Semester&#13;
1977 are reminded that the&#13;
deadline for these applications is&#13;
October 1, 1976. Forms are&#13;
available in the Clinical&#13;
Programs Office, Greenquist 210.&#13;
Overseas student teaching in&#13;
Australia, England, Scotland&#13;
Wales or Ireland, is also an optio~&#13;
available to UW-P students. For&#13;
further infor_mation please&#13;
contact the Clinical Programs&#13;
Office, GR211.&#13;
Petrie:&#13;
politics not a career&#13;
by Terri Gayhart&#13;
" Im not interested in it as a career," stated&#13;
Professor William Petrie, Republican candidate for&#13;
Congress, but this is not due to lack of enthusiasm.&#13;
Petrie explains that "career" congressmen&#13;
became ineffective because they have lost touch&#13;
with their constituents. Petrie would make his&#13;
contribution and then pass the seat on.&#13;
The third year professor at Parkside was asked&#13;
by the Wisconsin Republican Party to run for the&#13;
office. After much thought and a belief that he could .&#13;
make a considerable contribution, Petrie accepted&#13;
the challenge.&#13;
Even considering the difficulty in unseating an&#13;
incwnbent, Petrie strongly believes that if his&#13;
positions reach the people he has a very good&#13;
possibility of a victory in November.&#13;
Petrie stressed the federal government's poor&#13;
communication with the public: "Congress has lost&#13;
touch with those of us who work for a living." Petrie&#13;
feels that this is characteristic of his opponent&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin.&#13;
Further, the candidate stated that due to the&#13;
Vietnam War, pollution, and public outcry, several&#13;
fad&lt;; have arisen in Congress such as attacking the&#13;
rudgetfor national defense, environmentalism and&#13;
consumerism. Petrie has reported that it has been&#13;
very popular for Congressmen to ride such issues&#13;
ignoring constructive work. While these issues ar~&#13;
important, they have been abused in recent years.&#13;
The candidate was further convinced that&#13;
Congressman Aspin uses his good rapport with the&#13;
Ire services to keep his name in circulation.&#13;
Petrie has also continually attempted to convince&#13;
the Congressman that debates before the public&#13;
would be worthwhile. "I'm flexible on the format "&#13;
Petrie said, but stated that he strongly favors ~t&#13;
least four debates - one in each county of the First&#13;
District.&#13;
"While there are many issues that we could&#13;
debate, I think that the first four should definitely be&#13;
concerned with Congressional reform, the energy&#13;
situation, weHare reform, and national defense."&#13;
Aspin has see~ fit not to reply to Petrie's challenge.&#13;
Petrie ch~ it up to Aspin seeing it politically&#13;
advan!ageous not to accept.&#13;
William Petrie&#13;
Union&#13;
Recreation Center&#13;
HOURSBOWLING&#13;
- 50' /game&#13;
BILLIARDS - $1.25/hour&#13;
TABLE TENNIS - 25' /hour&#13;
FOOSBALL &amp; PINBALL&#13;
PHONE 553-2695&#13;
Monday-Friday&#13;
9 a.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
Saturday Noon - 11 p.m.&#13;
Sunday Noon _ 5 p.m.&#13;
FOR INFORMATION! &#13;
Food. co-op&#13;
•&#13;
In operation&#13;
by Mary Kay Ohmer&#13;
The idea behind-a foo~ co-operative is people working together to&#13;
buy good quality food WIthout havmg to pay high profits to a store&#13;
owner. Not only are the members concerned with buying, they are also&#13;
concerned with sharing information about food and nutrition.&#13;
Parkside's food co-operative, now called the Chiwaukee Prairie C&lt;&gt;-&#13;
op provides these opportunities.&#13;
The co-op is now located betWeen Parkside Village and Tallent Hall&#13;
in the old Student Activities Building. '&#13;
The membership fee, five dollars per year for students, seven for&#13;
IlOlHltudents, and .an additional three dollars for 'groups or families&#13;
goes to pay for capital expenditures and development of the C~&#13;
Learning Center.&#13;
In the Learning Center members- can fmd information about food&#13;
nutrition, and co-ops. Workshops are also held on a variety of topics.'&#13;
The CIHlP provides a good selection of quality foods and is always&#13;
expanding. TIle next addition to their list will be frozen foods such as&#13;
orange juice.&#13;
Certain foods (breads, canned goods, and dairy products) must be&#13;
ordered a week in advance, but most foods are kept in stock.&#13;
Meat is not are not available through the co-op. This is due to the&#13;
high cost of handling and transporting. The exclusion of meat helps&#13;
keep co-op prices low.&#13;
In addition to the store and learning center, the co-op also runs a&#13;
recycling center open not only to members, but to th'e rest of the&#13;
campus as well.&#13;
Food is also sold to non-members but at a substantial mark-up.&#13;
Films open&#13;
(1929)&#13;
Oct. 18 - Charlie Chaplin's "The&#13;
Goldrush" (1925). and' Buster&#13;
Keaton's "The Navigator" (1925)&#13;
, Oct. 25 - "IAm a Fugitive From&#13;
a Chain Gang" starring Paul&#13;
Muni&#13;
Nov. 1 - "King Kong" (1933)&#13;
Nov. 8 - "Bride of Frankenstein"&#13;
(1933)&#13;
Nov. 15 - Leni Riefenstahl's&#13;
"Triumph of the Will" (1935) and&#13;
Pare Lorentz' "The River"&#13;
(1935)&#13;
Nov. 22 - Frank Capra's "Mr.&#13;
Deeds Goes to Town" (1936)&#13;
Nov. 29 ~ John Ford's "The&#13;
Informer" (1936)&#13;
Dec. 6 - Orson Welles' "Citizen&#13;
Kane'!&#13;
Fllrn screening sections of a&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
humanities course titled "Introduction&#13;
to Film" will be open&#13;
to tbe public free of charge,&#13;
course instructor Walter Ulbright&#13;
has announced. All screenings&#13;
are at 7 p.m. in Classroom Bldg.&#13;
Room 105.&#13;
Fi\ms to be shown are:&#13;
Sept. 20 - D.W. Griffith's&#13;
"Intolerance" (1916)&#13;
Sept. 27 - Robert Wiene's&#13;
"Cabinet of Doctor Caligara"&#13;
(1919) and "Warning Shadows"&#13;
(1923)&#13;
Oct. 4 - F.W. Murnau's "The&#13;
Last Laugh" (1924)&#13;
Oct. 11 - Serge Eisenstein's&#13;
"Battleship Potemkin" (1925)&#13;
and uMBoWith a Movie Camera"&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER september 29, 1'" 5&#13;
Rules------&#13;
contlfl~ "om Pave 1&#13;
on fixed terms; which would&#13;
make them easier to fire without&#13;
their being able to appeal. A&#13;
person with a Probationary&#13;
appointment has a number of&#13;
procedures to go through if he&#13;
wishes to appeal a dismissal,&#13;
therefore, his job is more secure&#13;
than that of a fixed-term employee.&#13;
In other Staff Advisory Com-'&#13;
millee news, the committee has&#13;
made nominations of four persons&#13;
for two vacancies in the&#13;
Budget Priorities Committee,&#13;
and three persons for one&#13;
vacancy on the Affirmative&#13;
Action Committee. Tbey are:&#13;
Budget Priorities - Jan K.&#13;
Ocker, Oliver Hayward, Murray,&#13;
Tickets&#13;
continued from p... 1&#13;
and their prices are: Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 7, dancer Rayinond Johnson,&#13;
students $2, others $2.50;&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 26, jazz great Dizzy&#13;
Gillespie, $3 and $5; Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 3, Utah Repertory Dance&#13;
,Theater, $4.50 and $5; Friday,&#13;
Nov. 19, Second City, $3.50 and&#13;
$4; Thursday, Dec. 9, Roberta&#13;
Peters, $6.50 and $7; Tuesday,&#13;
Jan. 25. mime Keith Berger, $1.50&#13;
and $3; Sunday, March 6, New&#13;
• Shakespeare Company of San&#13;
Francisco, $4.50 and $5; Sunday,&#13;
March 27, Washington Post editor&#13;
lien Bradlee, $2 and $2.50;&#13;
Wednesday, April 6. The&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony with&#13;
Stepehn Swedish, piano soloist,&#13;
$5.50 and $6; Thursday, April 21,&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theater, $2&#13;
and $4; and Saturday, May 14,&#13;
combined Racine-Kenosha&#13;
Sympbony Orchestras, Antonia&#13;
Brico conducting, violinist&#13;
Eugene Fodor guest artist, $4.50&#13;
and $5.&#13;
Business-----'-----&#13;
confm..-d from ~I. 1&#13;
The student would also have to&#13;
take a quantitative mixture of&#13;
courses in the business program.&#13;
It was recommended that&#13;
students be required to maintain&#13;
a G.P.A. of 2.5 in the general&#13;
program and major, with a S.O&#13;
G.P.A. in tbe specialty area of the&#13;
major. Prerequisites would insure&#13;
strict control of the business&#13;
program to bring about high&#13;
standards.&#13;
The task force recommended&#13;
that the graduate program be&#13;
delayed until well after the undergraduate&#13;
program is&#13;
developed. This would delay&#13;
initiation of the program until&#13;
1980 at the' earliest. The task&#13;
force realized that accreditation&#13;
with MCSB may be impossible&#13;
since MCSB qualifications don't&#13;
allow for delay in starting the&#13;
program if there are plans for&#13;
one. If a delay occurs, the undergraduate&#13;
program would&#13;
have to be accredited on a&#13;
separate basis before a graduate&#13;
program could begin to develop.&#13;
NEED A BREAK FROM CLASSES?&#13;
Try Bowling&#13;
at the&#13;
Union Rec-Center&#13;
Only 50~a game .&#13;
------------- I I&#13;
TOURNAmENT I BOWLING COUPON I&#13;
I Present this slip et the I&#13;
I Rec - Center enytime I&#13;
I durng open bowing I&#13;
I hours end bowl 3 I&#13;
I games for $1 .00 I&#13;
1__ ---------_1&#13;
SCOTCH DOUBLES HANDICAP&#13;
Fridoy, October 1st ot the Rec - Center&#13;
Lones only ~2.50/teom. Prizes include&#13;
trophies, free gomes ond much more. For.&#13;
entry forms, come to the Rec - Center&#13;
or coli 553-26Q5 for reservotions or&#13;
informotion.&#13;
and Judith Hamilton. they objected to the AffIrmative&#13;
Affirmative Action - Victor Action Committee', "butting in"&#13;
Godfrey, Connie Berg, and Susan on their job by a1llO nomJnatlng&#13;
Unsmeier. three staff members at 0IanMembers&#13;
of tbe committee said cellor Guskin's request.&#13;
oJitVu'd He • u nwvt ••• , 'N • u •• 4JIN V GA¥t/\t¥NlN'W Nt&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
~&#13;
Mike VillerS-Dealer 637-2726&#13;
~. Ai ¥ It U NIl YlIN'J .... tV, VW"¥'IiJJIJI¥ • Nt' A¥A u At&#13;
IHE P.A.B. Fil SEIIES&#13;
PIESEIIS&#13;
THE FOUR&#13;
MUSKETEERS&#13;
IIIHE&#13;
UNIOII CINEMA&#13;
FRI., OCT. 1 7:00 p.m.&#13;
9:00 p.m.&#13;
SUN., OCT. 3 7:30 p.m.&#13;
:'''·~I......... ;a..;a.'''I-.o;·o;a,'''·18;a.....---:t:r-:t~*--:t'''''''''''~Ci ~:,.~~"""'''M..•,..,,.....;t~"':r.-: ~.: :M. ;N;; ~..",.".....: I&#13;
~ .&#13;
W A reminder for&#13;
M&#13;
~ UW-P-arkside students,&#13;
.... a faculty and staff -&#13;
~&#13;
a BASIC SKILLS .&#13;
~OPEN HEARINGM&#13;
~ Greenquist 101&#13;
~&#13;
.~&#13;
B Thursdey, Sept 30, 1976&#13;
W¥. 3:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m, I&#13;
ji2I5.. ~ ,. ... :... •• on.... "," ..&#13;
_ .0;";0;..1·..1·_1·":a.~lw",_;o;wl__l~r"'~"''''_IW f; ;t.:r..,.... ~ ...."'-' ... ~...,...... ;H;&#13;
EARN&#13;
While you&#13;
LEARN&#13;
Ask how you can earn while&#13;
you learn - as a Northwestern Mutual&#13;
college agent. You work part-time,&#13;
attend classes full-time. A limited&#13;
number of internships are still available.&#13;
Donald J. Brink, a.u&#13;
Racine&#13;
632·2731&#13;
Evg.... F. Soens, a.u&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-5316&#13;
The QUet Company&#13;
NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE . MilWAUkEE ~&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 29, 1976 5&#13;
Food. co-op&#13;
• 1n operation Rules------&#13;
by Mary Kay Ohmer&#13;
The idea be~ind a foo~ co-operat~ve is people working together to&#13;
buy good quality food without having to pay high profits to a store&#13;
owner. Not o~y are ~e ~embers concerned with buying, they are also&#13;
concerned with sharing information about food and nutrition.&#13;
Parkside's food co-operative, now called the Chiwaukee Prairie Co.&#13;
op provides these opportunities.&#13;
The co-op is now located between Parkside Village and Tallent Hall&#13;
in the old Student Activities Building. '&#13;
The membership fee, five dollars per year for students, seven for&#13;
non-students, and an additional three dollars for groups or families&#13;
goes to pay for capital expenditures and development of the Co-o~&#13;
Learning Center.&#13;
In the Learning Center members can find information about food&#13;
nutrition, and co.ops. Workshops are also held on a variety of topics.'&#13;
The co-op provides a good selection of quality foods and is always&#13;
expanding. The next addition to their list will be frozen !oods such as&#13;
orange juice.&#13;
Certain foods (breads, canned goods, and dairy products) must be&#13;
ordered a week in advance, but most foods are kept in stock.&#13;
Meat is not are not available through the co.op. This is due to the&#13;
high cost of handling and transporting. The exclusion of meat helps&#13;
keep co-op prices low.&#13;
In addition to the store and learning center, the co-op also runs a&#13;
recycling center open not only to members, but to the rest of the&#13;
campus as well.&#13;
Food is also sold to non-members but at a substantial mark-up.&#13;
Films open&#13;
Film screening sections of a&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
humanities course titled "Introduction&#13;
to Film" will be open&#13;
to the public free of charge,&#13;
course instructor Walter Ulbright&#13;
has announced. All screenings&#13;
are at 7 p.m. in Classroom Bldg.&#13;
Room 105.&#13;
Films to be shown are:&#13;
Sept. 20 - D.W. Griffith's&#13;
"Intolerance" ( 1916)&#13;
Sept. 27 - Robert Wiene's&#13;
"Cabinet of Doctor Caligara"&#13;
(1919) and "Warning Shadows"&#13;
(1923)&#13;
Oct. 4 - F.W. Murnau's "The&#13;
Last Laugh" (1924)&#13;
Oct. 11 - Serge Eisenstein's&#13;
"Battleship Potemkin" (1925)&#13;
and "Man With a Movie Camera"&#13;
(1929)&#13;
Oct. 18 - Charlie Chaplin's "The&#13;
Goldrush" (1925) and Buster&#13;
Keaton's "The Navigator" (1925)&#13;
, Oct. 25 - "I Am a Fugitive From&#13;
a Chain Gang" starring Paul&#13;
Muni&#13;
Nov. 1 - "King Kong" (1933)&#13;
Nov. 8 - "Bride of Frankenstein"&#13;
( 1933)&#13;
Nov. 15 - Leni Riefenstahl's&#13;
"Triumph of the Will" (1935) and&#13;
Pare Lorentz' "The River"&#13;
(1935)&#13;
Nov. 22 - Frank Capra's "Mr.&#13;
Deeds Goes to Town" (1936)&#13;
Nov. 29 - John Ford's "The&#13;
Informer" (1936)&#13;
Dec. 6 - Orson Welles' "Citizen&#13;
Kane"&#13;
continued from page I&#13;
on fixed tenns·, which would&#13;
make them easier to fire without&#13;
their being able to appeal. A&#13;
person with a Probationary&#13;
appointment has a number of&#13;
procedures to go through if he&#13;
wishes to appeal a dismissal,&#13;
therefore, his job is more secure&#13;
than that of a fixed-term employee.&#13;
&#13;
In other Staff Advisory Com-'·&#13;
mittee news, the committee has&#13;
made nominations of four persons&#13;
for two vacancies in the&#13;
Budget Priorities Committee,&#13;
and three persons for one&#13;
vacancy on the Affirmative&#13;
Action Committee. They are:&#13;
Budget Priorities - Jan K.&#13;
Ocker, Oliver Hayward, Murray,&#13;
Tickets&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
and their prices are: Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 7, dancer Raymond Johnson,&#13;
students $2, others $2.50;&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 26, jazz great Dizzy&#13;
Gillespie, $3 and $5; Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 3, Utah Repertory Dance&#13;
Theater, $4.50 and $5; Friday,&#13;
Nov. 19, Second City, $3.50 and&#13;
$4; Thursday, Dec. 9, Roberta&#13;
Peters, $6.50 and $7; Tuesday,&#13;
Jan. 25. mime Keith Berger, $1.50&#13;
and $3; Sunday, March 6, New&#13;
• Shakespeare Company of San&#13;
Francisco, $4.50 and $5; Sunday,&#13;
March 27, Washington Post editor&#13;
Ben Bradlee, $2 and $2.50;&#13;
Wednesday, April 6. The&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony with&#13;
Stepehn Swedish, piano soloist,&#13;
$5.50 and $6; Thursday, April 21,&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Theater, $2&#13;
and $4; and Saturday, May 14,&#13;
combined Racine-Kenosha&#13;
Symphony Orchestras, Antonia&#13;
Brico conducting, violinist&#13;
Eugene Fodor guest artist, $4.50&#13;
and $5.&#13;
Business·--------&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
The student would also have to&#13;
take a quantitative mixture of&#13;
courses in the business program.&#13;
It was recommended that&#13;
students be required to maintain&#13;
a G.P.A. of 2.5 in the general&#13;
program and major, with a 8.0&#13;
G.P.A. in the specialty area of the&#13;
major. Prerequisites would insure&#13;
strict control of the business&#13;
program to bring about high&#13;
standards.&#13;
The task force recommended&#13;
that the graduate program be&#13;
delayed until well after llie undergraduate&#13;
program is&#13;
developed. This would delay&#13;
initiation of the program until&#13;
1980 at the· earliest. The task&#13;
force realized that accreditation&#13;
with AACSB may be impossible&#13;
since AACSB qualifications don't&#13;
allow for delay in starting the&#13;
program if there are plans for&#13;
one. If a delay occurs, the undergraduate&#13;
program would&#13;
have to be accredited on a&#13;
separate basis before a graduate&#13;
program could begin to develop.&#13;
NEED A BREAK FROM CLASSES?&#13;
Try Bowling&#13;
at the&#13;
Union Rec-Center&#13;
Only so~ a game .&#13;
------------- ' I&#13;
SCOTCH DOUBLES HANDICAP TOURNAffiENT I BOWLING COUPON I&#13;
1&#13;
1 Present this stip at the I&#13;
I Rec - Center anytime I&#13;
I during open bowing I&#13;
I hours and bowl 3 I&#13;
I games for $1 .00 I&#13;
fridoy. October 1st ot the Rec - Center&#13;
Lones onl_y $2.5O/teom. Prizes include&#13;
trophies. free gomes ond much more. For&#13;
entr_y forms , come to the Rec - Center&#13;
or coll 553-2695 for reservotions o,&#13;
informotion.&#13;
·------------·&#13;
and Judith Hamilton. they objected to the Affirmative&#13;
Affirmative Action • Victor Action Committee's "butting in"&#13;
Godfrey, Connie Berg, and Susan on their job by also nominating&#13;
Linsmeier. three staff members at ChanMembers&#13;
of the committee said cellor Guskin's r~~~~ _ _ _ _ _ ~....-•~wxwwrsv.v.u&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers-~ Dealer 637-2726&#13;
THE P.A.B. FILI SERIES&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
THE FOUR&#13;
MUSKETEERS&#13;
IN THE&#13;
UNION CINEMA&#13;
FRI., OCT. 1 7:00 p.m.&#13;
9:00 p.m.&#13;
SUN., OCT. 3 7:30 p.m.&#13;
i1.••;r;•:a;•;a; .. :a; .. 1~1°1 .. 1 .. 1·1 .. 1·:t··•~1-1"1 .. 1 .. 1-:cct·· ~&#13;
~~~~---~~---~---~-~~~~ .. E' A reminder for ! ~ w. w. a UW-P.arkside students, ~&#13;
~ w + l d ,++ w 1 acu ty an sta11 - i ~&#13;
a BASIC SKILLS ~ ~ :9:-l&#13;
aoPEN HEARINGS&#13;
w g M Greenquist 101 g&#13;
w. ~&#13;
~ Thursday, Sept 30, 1976 6&#13;
w w • • C ~&#13;
~ 3: 30 p.m. - 5: 30 p.m. ~ ~ .&#13;
~-:a; ........... ,;a.••;r,; .. ;r,;••.a.••1· ........... ;a; .. ;a;••.a.•.a.•.a.•1 .. :a:··1"1"1 .. ~ ll~tt~tt!lr.••~o!r.,,!r. .. !l!u!I" .. , .... u!l: .. ~ .. !l"'.-,!P.,,,,_..,,_..~ ...... ;w!P.w ....... ~•- ;,t •&#13;
EARN&#13;
While you&#13;
LEARN&#13;
Ask how you can earn whil&#13;
you learn - a a 'orthwe t rn Mutual&#13;
college agent. You work part-time,&#13;
attend classes full-time. A limited&#13;
number of internship are still available.&#13;
Donald J. Brink, ClU&#13;
Racine&#13;
632-2731&#13;
Eugene F. Soens, CLU&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
6S4-S316&#13;
The Quiet Company&#13;
ORTH\\ESTER "'1.JTU"l LIFE · ~ll\\4UkEE ~&#13;
I &#13;
, THE PARKSIDE RANGER september 29. 197'&#13;
Jeffersonian dinner hosted&#13;
NJ EwJIiaI II P' t! -Po"&#13;
........... ., ....... 8Dd&#13;
7 7' ., .. Cd. 17 .,&#13;
• Wtt III ..&#13;
lie 'd _ F.ah'aL&#13;
". ...-. ...&#13;
lIoD ., • IOd8I ennlII?I ., w::~~n.- JeIf __ '. Y , Iab1.-nlloD&#13;
..., ......... _ will be&#13;
...... I&#13;
1 • "l'nr Iar .-nalianlla&#13;
4 nde.... AUle.dI&#13;
IIIdinc las and If8IlIIt* 8Dd&#13;
.,.., be obWDed from !be Inform.lI...&#13;
Cmter iJI Wyllie&#13;
lJbrwy-Learllln« ceder.&#13;
'l1Ie menu Iar !be eigbkGune&#13;
cliJlner, _bleb Includes two&#13;
"My, 'de -1ree:I" wiD hue •&#13;
deddeIy I"reDc:b flllvor, refIec&gt;.&#13;
tiDI Jeff.m.. •• IeI'"rice as tbe&#13;
~tioa's ImMsspdnr to France&#13;
8Dd his , lnlroducti ...&#13;
of """u-. euiaIne to AmerIca •&#13;
Enlerlllinmeni will be iJI·&#13;
le _ aed l1ftuBbout!be course&#13;
of !be dinner, which will last&#13;
lIboul 2\2 hours. The Parkslde&#13;
Baroque PIllyers will pre...,'&#13;
music from !be period of Jef·&#13;
ferson, bimself a violinist.&#13;
Memben of !be Parkside PIllyers&#13;
will provide a dramatic&#13;
..-.1IIu... 01\ !be Jeffersonian&#13;
.... 8Dd students from Racine's&#13;
J.I. Case High School under the&#13;
direclion of KeviJI Wurtz will&#13;
present • finale of excerpls from&#13;
the musical "1776. n&#13;
en managers studied&#13;
the project 15 a cooperative&#13;
public service venture. It grew&#13;
out of facully contacls with PIRA&#13;
and a luncheon last spring hosted&#13;
by O1ancellor Alan Guakin. At&#13;
that lime, members of the PIRA&#13;
Executive Committee met&#13;
, , students and Faculty from the&#13;
two diVISions.&#13;
Cl efe d I The project bas two main aSSI Ie objectives: (I) To meet a I research need for lbe PIRA&#13;
"eM: SAL. C. RadIo&amp;Md~, membership, and (2) To involve&#13;
'--"_ .... tprk .. fOoooof\~1r'l1 be f lb&#13;
...... lit..,.,." WY n ~!lU1l 113. 1M mem rs 0 e Parkside&#13;
::: .... , sw...us eft« • p rn AS'!; tor I Ccxnmunity (especially students)&#13;
in working wilb Personnel Ad·&#13;
IMf!'OR'ANT nUDY 8.0AO AN , ministrators in Wisconsin&#13;
IltQIUMEMEtf' Lomt openJnos sN:1 r..,..&#13;
~ .. .., C'-S accreGt'-' ~'C v.. r, .....eanizatiom.&#13;
..,. n ~atI"S tar Fall w..".... $IJlo1tlg. Of Interested students are asked "11I' v.., ........NtIM ..... 'cMtI 5tudent1,&#13;
............ F~ Su;If..... to contact Hall in CL 351 or at&#13;
..... .s...w v.,. .. ....... Good extensioo 2552 ex' 2280 before&#13;
.'Mutry ,.. .,.ilftCft ~c. of •• It-,&#13;
~ .. and ~ on '" stucfY October 4. U there is sufficient&#13;
....... and ......... -. cv"""a' bCMnve stude t . terest ls&#13;
C*IM ....,.. .. .., CFS "*' specifiC ~rade' n In ,arrangemen&#13;
,..", FOf' .pOIICilI'on "'orm.lion can be JDade to develop this into a&#13;
celllTER FOR FOItEtGN STUDY AV I&#13;
A~IUIO"'S oJ" S 51.... eo;. tOt.. Ann group independent study project&#13;
• .-,. AnllW MI.'. om Ml IDS (ex' a'edit.&#13;
........... _--------_ .&#13;
.... IIIIW "'911!!!1~-"'''&#13;
_..... y ...&#13;
om n into exempt&#13;
managerial positions since&#13;
1964 According to Fran Hall.&#13;
A islanl Professor of&#13;
~t ScIence, who is&#13;
nlinaling!be projecl with Ben&#13;
Lowenberg of l.abor Economics.&#13;
ROCK&#13;
0&lt;_0-&#13;
C"'~&#13;
Jo.-_ ETc~&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
""- Dog H;ghI Ct_ -_av"""ll&#13;
JAZZ&#13;
v'-LMeef&#13;
Jonmyw~&#13;
lloYe IInJbecl&lt; __ L_&#13;
o-s&#13;
0u0e EIIngIon&#13;
Jollneo.r.,.&#13;
c...._--.&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
a ASSICAL&#13;
-'oce Allrav ..... Uten&#13;
Symphony W...,Steonbefg, P~gh&#13;
S\'ll'lllhony&#13;
MalIce Anae&#13;
A_ll&lt;ondef&#13;
Anc*es SegoV18&#13;
London Symphony OrChestra&#13;
S.... _1owe&#13;
-&#13;
Complaint Dept.&#13;
by LInda Knudlson and KarIn LaFoumler -&#13;
Dear complaint Department,&#13;
The lamps over the salad bar in the Student Union wills the letlu&lt;e&#13;
and ruin the cbeese. Is there something tbat you can do to correct tbia&#13;
situation? E.C. .&#13;
ANSWER: 'This problem should be solved by the lime this BrIlcle is&#13;
in print. According to Richard Manthey, ma~ger of Saga FOOd&#13;
Service, Ike original plans for lbe salad tJm: pr&lt;!Vl~ed for a dee-1IeJI&#13;
arrangement lbat would keep tbe salad mgredienls Olt ice. 'lbia&#13;
equipment did not arrive as scheduled and bas only recently been&#13;
received. Mr. Manlbey assured u~that the instaUalion of tile new&#13;
salad bar will take place as soon as possible.&#13;
Dear Complaint Department,&#13;
I understand lbat las! Spring, the Parkside Stude~t Government ran&#13;
elections for lbe stude~t seals on tbe Uruon Operating Board (UOB).&#13;
But since then, no meeting of the Board has been beld, so I feellhat my&#13;
vote has been wasted. Whom or what, exactly IS responsible for tbia&#13;
adborrable delay? When will the UOB meet?&#13;
ANSWER: The Union Operating aoard has been inactive aUsummer&#13;
but there will be a meeting of the student members of the UOB on&#13;
Tuesday, September 28,1976 at 12:00 in the Union Cafeteria. The non.&#13;
student members (faculty, staff, and alwnni) lbat are supJlOOedto sit&#13;
on lbe Board bave not yet been chosen but according to Wi1liam&#13;
Niebuhr, Director of Student Life, lbey sbould be selected by Oct. I.&#13;
'The Committee will meet during lbe week of Oct. 4-ll and will elect a&#13;
student who will serve as the Board's president and will set future&#13;
meeting limes in collaboration witb Mr. Niebuhr.&#13;
PLEASE ADDRESS ALL COMPLAINTS TO: THE COMPLAINT&#13;
DEPARTMENT COO UW-P RANGER&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
~&#13;
Mike VillerS-Dealer 637-2726&#13;
'u uv ~u , ,.....~ .. ¥iIJA-IrJwA¥¥¥' ~&#13;
*"&#13;
u\11t\u&#13;
../Y-au/: ,q&gt;oe4 W /PoeUy /M&#13;
1/~&#13;
(ftoe4y/ft-06e -~f/ conoinf/)&#13;
•&#13;
BLUES - FOLK&#13;
Brownie McGhee&#13;
Lightnin' Hopktns&#13;
DocWalson&#13;
Butty Sa;nte Marie&#13;
OtosSpann&#13;
Jmmy RUSI'llOg&#13;
Joan Baez&#13;
JOhn Lee Hooker&#13;
LABELS&#13;
SineOua Non&#13;
Westminster Gold&#13;
RCA&#13;
Vanguard&#13;
Columbia&#13;
Elektra&#13;
Philips&#13;
Turnabout&#13;
Allantic&#13;
and many others&#13;
IIu.ay - Thmay 9 u. -7 p.•.&#13;
Fri.ay 9 a.•.• 4 p.•.&#13;
Satlthy 10 a... - 1 p •••&#13;
HE PA KSIOE RA GER September 29, 1976&#13;
j ff er onian dinner hosted&#13;
from the lnyllie&#13;
&#13;
of the dinner, which will last&#13;
about 2½ hours. The Parkside&#13;
Baroque Players will present&#13;
music from the period of Jeff&#13;
er on, himself a violinist.&#13;
embers of the Parkside Players&#13;
ill provide a dramatic&#13;
iresentation on the Jeffersonian&#13;
era and students from Racine's&#13;
J.I. Case High School under the&#13;
direction of Kevin Wurtz will&#13;
present a finale of excerpts from&#13;
th mmical "1776."&#13;
anagers studied&#13;
pro t is a cooperative&#13;
public nice venture. It grew&#13;
out faculty contacts with PIRA&#13;
a luncheon last pring hosted&#13;
by Clumcellor Alan Guskin. At&#13;
th t tim • members of the PIRA&#13;
Executive Committee met&#13;
tu n and Faculty from the&#13;
two dhisions.&#13;
The project has two main&#13;
obj ctives: (l) To meet a&#13;
rch need for the PIRA&#13;
m bership, and (2) To involve&#13;
members of the Parkside&#13;
Community ( e pecially students)&#13;
in rking with Personnel Administrators&#13;
in Wisconsin&#13;
Organizations.&#13;
Interested students are asked&#13;
to conlact Hall in CL 351 or at&#13;
extension 2552 or 2280 before&#13;
October 4. If there is sufficient&#13;
student interest, arrangements&#13;
can be made to develop this into a&#13;
group independent study project&#13;
for credit.&#13;
CLASSICAL&#13;
i,ice At&gt;ravanel, Utah&#13;
Symp00ny&#13;
W Stemberg. Prttsbu-gh&#13;
Symp00ny&#13;
Malsice Andre&#13;
A edBfendel&#13;
Andres 5eQolll8&#13;
London S phony Orchestra&#13;
S Marlowe&#13;
Uomplaint Dept.&#13;
by Linda Knudtson and Karin LaFournier&#13;
Dear Complaint Department,&#13;
The lamps over the salad bar in the Student Union wilts the lettuc&#13;
and ruin the cheese. Is there something that you can do to correct th~&#13;
situation? E.C. · ANSWER: This problem should be solved by the time this article is&#13;
in print. According to Richard Manthey, ma~ger of Saga FOOd&#13;
Service, the original plans for the salad b31: provi~ed for a dee-well&#13;
arrangement that would keep the salad ingredients on ice. This&#13;
equipment did not arrive as scheduled and has only recenUy been&#13;
received. Mr. Manthey assured u~ that the installation of the new&#13;
salad bar will take place as soon as possible.&#13;
Dear Complaint Department,&#13;
I understand that las~ Spring, the Park~ide Stude~t Government ran&#13;
elections for the student seats on the Uruon Operating Board (UOB)&#13;
But since then, no meeting of the Board has been held, so I feel that m;&#13;
vote has been wasted. Whom or what, exactly is responsible for this&#13;
adhorrable delay? When will the UOB meet?&#13;
ANSWER: The Union Operating Board has been inactive all sum. mer but there will be a meeting of the student members of the UOB on&#13;
Tuesday, September 28, 1976 at 12:00 in the Union Cafeteria. The nonstudent&#13;
members (faculty, staff, and alumni) that are supposed to sit&#13;
on the Board have not yet been chosen but according to William&#13;
Niebuhr, Director of Student Life, they should be selected by Oct. l.&#13;
The Committee will meet during the week of Oct. 4-8 and will elect a&#13;
student who will serve as the Board's president and will set future&#13;
meeting times in collaboration with Mr. Niebuhr.&#13;
PLEASE ADDRESS ALL COMPLAINTS TO: THE COMPLAINT&#13;
DEPARTMENT C-0 UW-P RANGER&#13;
~ ~&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
Mike Villers-~ Dealer 637-2726&#13;
.h'eeded: a'oelo ~ a'o~ foa,&#13;
r~ ~/~ ua~fl' com,infl')&#13;
BLUES- FOLK&#13;
Brownie McGhee&#13;
Lightnrn' Hopkins&#13;
Doc Watson&#13;
Buffy Sainte Marie&#13;
Ohs Spann&#13;
Jimmy Rushing&#13;
Joan Baez&#13;
John lee Hooker&#13;
LABELS&#13;
SrneOua Non&#13;
Westminster Gold&#13;
RCA&#13;
Vanguard&#13;
Columbia&#13;
Elektra&#13;
Phillps&#13;
Turnabout&#13;
Atlantrc&#13;
~&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
and many others&#13;
Bookstore Moaday - Thlrsday 9 a.m. _ 7 p.m.&#13;
Friday 9 a.m. _ 4 p.m.&#13;
Sat1rday 10 a.•. _ 1 p.m. &#13;
******************&#13;
: SPORTS:&#13;
* *&#13;
******************&#13;
Swimmers&#13;
compete&#13;
S/J.0rts commentary&#13;
by Jean Tenu!n&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 29, 197' 7&#13;
F'ishing and Firing Lines&#13;
by Scott Reinbard&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
The soccer learn will host two&#13;
Ieams and travel to play another&#13;
In the coming week.&#13;
The Rangers host Aurora&#13;
College this afternoon In a 3: 30&#13;
p.m. match and the University of&#13;
MInnesota Sunday in a. 1 p.m.&#13;
contest. Saturday, the team will&#13;
travel to _Charleston Illinois to&#13;
play Eastern Illinois at 11 a.m.&#13;
Parkslde suffered their third&#13;
defeat of the season to Rockford&#13;
College, 4-1, last Saturday.&#13;
"Although we totally&#13;
dominated Rockford and played&#13;
our best soccer of the season,"&#13;
said Coach Hal Henderson, "we&#13;
were tied I-I at halftime."&#13;
The Rangers' lone goal was&#13;
scored by -Earl Campbell, who&#13;
took a volley out of the air on a&#13;
cross from Jack Landwehr.&#13;
Parkslde out shot Rockford, 13-&#13;
II. _&#13;
"Once we got behind in the&#13;
game, we didn't play our kind of&#13;
game and we can't be successful&#13;
if we don't control the play,"&#13;
Henderson stated.&#13;
Fifty years from now sportsmen and women will be able to bounce&#13;
their grandchildren on their knee and reminice 1976as the year of the&#13;
beginning and the end of some of the most important outdoor sports&#13;
known to us.&#13;
To begin with, bow hunters saw their opening weekend trickle down&#13;
The women's swim team faces a dry drain as the ten most heavily hunted counties in the state were&#13;
UW-Milwaukee in the Panther closed to all forms of hunting, stream fishing, and camping. Itseems&#13;
pool to begin the 1976 season this that Adams, Clark, Green Lake, Jackson, Juneau, Marquette,&#13;
evening at 6:30. • Monroe, Portage, Washara, and Wood counties are closed due to their&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson has three potential fire hazard. The state has become a virtual tinderbox caused&#13;
returnees on her five member by a lack of precipitation. This is the first time such a closure has&#13;
squad, including Mary Beth occurred since 1953when hunting was set aside for a week until the&#13;
Leitch, last year's most valuable hazard was over.&#13;
swimmer, Gail Olson and Lynn There is rumor that bowmen will be given back their subtracted&#13;
Peterson. time after the rifle season, but a lot of good this does after the herd has&#13;
Lawson also has two been substantially reduced and spooked. I would think a refund would&#13;
newcomers to Parkside and to be in order.&#13;
competitive swimming in Sally Don't give up hope though as there is plenty of hunting available in&#13;
Francis and Lilly Crnich. the unclosed counties of Racine and Kenosha. Private lands would be&#13;
"Olson and Leitch swim all the best bet for your quarry but Bong and New Munster pu'llic&#13;
hunting&#13;
strokes and will fill the events grounds should prove mildly fruitful. Deer registration will be in&#13;
according III the strength of the Burlington at the Police station. This must be a first to see bowmen&#13;
opposing team, while Francis praying for rain in order to hunt.&#13;
and Crnich are mostly freestyle The duck hunting this year will he long remembered as the last of its&#13;
participants," said Coach kind. Not that itwill be anymore spectacular than it was last year; and&#13;
Lawson. Peterson will be the only that isn't saying much; but this is the last year lead shot may be used&#13;
diver and may swim in the on waterfowl in Wisconsin waters. When the season opens this Friday&#13;
breaststroke competition. at noon take time in loading your chamber and remember it well.&#13;
"Because of our lack of size in Remember also the Great Horicon Marsh as this is the first year of its&#13;
numbers and our inexperience, it four year goose reduction plan that has already gotten off on a sour&#13;
will be a real challenge to win any note.&#13;
of our meets, although we hope to A first came to Root River fishennen this year on September 16,&#13;
keep the score close if possible." which is opening day of salmon snagging in all bays, harbors, except&#13;
UWM has one of its bigger Racine County's Root River. This was caused by the combined efforts&#13;
teams in the past few years and of the Root River Restoration Council and Salmon Unlimited due to the&#13;
also have a new coach, so fact that there are large numbers of trout in the river at this time right&#13;
Parkside's chances of being a along with the salmon. It is not legal to snag these anadromous&#13;
competitive opponent depends on salmonids because of. their fine qualities and also because they don't&#13;
the lineup, according to Lawson. die after spawning as the salmon do so there is no sense in harvesting&#13;
Overall, Coach Lawson sees a them in this manner.&#13;
possibility to break some of the&#13;
Parkside records, improve their&#13;
point total in the conference&#13;
championships and to qualify&#13;
some of the Mid-West Regional&#13;
meet in March. A faculty, staff and students The team will practice noon&#13;
"The team members are men's volleyball team has been hours on Tuesday and Thursday.&#13;
working very hard and I'm organized, according to Orby Those involved with the learn&#13;
pleased to see how much they're Moss, coordinator. are Bob Lawson, Lucian Rosa,&#13;
putting into this." The team will play ap- Hal Henderson, Hans Nuernberg,&#13;
Coach Lawson is hoping that proximately six games at Racine Jan Ocker, Hank Krause, Vic&#13;
more girls will come out for the Park, Horlick, and Case at 7 p.m. Godfrey, Jack Landwehr and&#13;
team, as many positions are still _ on Sept. 21, 28, and 30and October leRoy Jefferson. Starters will be&#13;
open. 4. 12, and $8. picked from those who show up&#13;
Soccer playedToday&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
Invites !:Iou to experience the&#13;
ZANY COMEDY&#13;
1.0'5 required&#13;
of&#13;
EDMONDS &amp; CURLEY&#13;
As seen on national T.V.&#13;
.&#13;
Also feQturing Folksingers&#13;
CHRIS&#13;
TONY&#13;
INlOES ond&#13;
ROlANDS&#13;
SATURDA Y, OCTOBER 2,&#13;
B:OOP.M. Union Square&#13;
\)R\~Il-S&#13;
. \tI\'J-t.\) n~\.t.&#13;
f\~f\\\.n&#13;
Adm., '150 UW-l' Students&#13;
'2.00 General&#13;
o'\ny intentional foul booIdng, including unsucceasful attempts at&#13;
ripping, can bring a large fine from Racine's new game warden, Tcm&#13;
Edwards. Edwards claims he will even be giving cilaUons for the&#13;
possession of a siver tongued spider, otherwise known 88 a snaulnlI&#13;
hook and Ithink he means business. He packs a .357magnum plstoI.on&#13;
his hip!&#13;
Concluding this history of firsts and lasts is the new pnlpOISl&#13;
brought to rifle deer hunting. It is the controversial spilt .... e deer&#13;
hunting for 1977developed in hopes of easing opening day pressures.&#13;
The proposal calls f&lt;Jr the state to be divided into three zones. The&#13;
hunter has a choice of which zone he wishes to hunt and aIao between&#13;
whether he wishes to hunt the first three days of the 8e88OII or the last&#13;
six. Each zone has a different seBSOlt.&#13;
To introduce this proposal to the DNR set up state wide meetings to&#13;
infonn the public and to obtain public opinion. I have only one question&#13;
as a result of these meetings: "Who did the people who attended these&#13;
meetings think they were?" There actions could only be compared to&#13;
that of a pack of wild apes on a jungle raid. Uncalled for Immature&#13;
actions such as stomping of feet, screaming obscenlUes, and throwing&#13;
questionnaires back at the DNR reps not only made jackasses out of&#13;
these people in the eyes of the public but also cheated themselves out&#13;
of the opportunity to be infonned of tile programs advantages and&#13;
~~~~ta::~At'1k M% Av'MftAM ,AtMPP7t uWUWt _&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
~&#13;
Mike Villers- Dealer 637-2726 ¥-',~~~~". ¥sUV_IWVVV.%tlASAu An&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEl 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington /We. 6J4.2J7J&#13;
YOUR PLACE LOUNGE&#13;
1214 • 60lIl St., 1CtMtIt.&#13;
-WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
IS LADIES' NIGHT&#13;
AU WIES AT1E8II1 WILL RECEIVE&#13;
COCKTAILS AT V2 PRICE!&#13;
THURSDAY'S TIl MIGHT TO DRI. BEER.&#13;
BEER MIGHT SCIIOOBS 35c&#13;
BOmES 50c&#13;
HumlflWN/&#13;
*****************: SP_orts commentary THE PARKSIDE RANGER September 29, 1976 7&#13;
: SPORTS·&#13;
* * ****************** Swimmers Flshing and Firing Lines&#13;
compete&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The women's swim team faces&#13;
UW-Milwaukee in the Panther&#13;
pool to begin the 1976 season this&#13;
evening at 6:30.&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson has three&#13;
returnees on her five member&#13;
squad, including Mary Beth&#13;
Leitch, last year's most valuable&#13;
swimmer, Gail Olson and Lynn&#13;
Peterson.&#13;
Lawson also has two&#13;
newcomers to Parkside and to&#13;
competitive swimming in Sally&#13;
Francis and Lilly Crnich.&#13;
"Olson and Leitch swim all&#13;
strokes and will fill the events&#13;
according oo the strength of the&#13;
opposing team, while Francis&#13;
and Crnich are mostly freestyle&#13;
participants," said Coach&#13;
Lawson. Peterson will be the only&#13;
diver and may swim in the&#13;
breaststroke competition.&#13;
"Because of our lack of size m&#13;
numbers and our inexperience, it&#13;
will be a real challenge to win any&#13;
of our meets, although we hope to&#13;
keep the score close if possible."&#13;
UWM has one of its bigger&#13;
teams in the past few years and&#13;
also have a new coach, so&#13;
Parkside's chances of being a&#13;
competitive opponent depends on&#13;
the lineup, according to Lawson.&#13;
Overall, Coach Lawson sees a&#13;
possibility to break some of the&#13;
Parkside records, improve their&#13;
point total in the conference&#13;
championships and to qualify&#13;
some of the Mid-West Regional&#13;
meet in March.&#13;
"The team members are&#13;
working very hard and I'm&#13;
pleased to see how much they're&#13;
putting into this."&#13;
Coach Lawson is hoping that&#13;
more girls will come out for the&#13;
team, as many positions are still&#13;
open.&#13;
Soccer&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
The soccer team will host two&#13;
teams and travel to play another&#13;
in the coming week.&#13;
The Rangers host Aurora&#13;
College this afternoon in a 3: 30&#13;
p.m. match and the University of&#13;
Minnesota Sunday in a. 1 p.m.&#13;
contest. Saturday, the team will&#13;
by Scott Reinhard&#13;
Fifty years from now sportsmen and women will be able to bounce&#13;
their grandchildren on their knee and reminice 1976 as the year of the&#13;
beginning and the end of some of the most important outdoor sports known to us.&#13;
To begin with, bow hunters saw their opening weekend trickle down&#13;
a dry drain as the ten most heavily hunted COllllties in the state were&#13;
closed to all forms of hunting, stream fishing, and camping. It seems&#13;
that Adams, Clark, Green Lake, Jackson, Juneau, Marquette,&#13;
Monroe, Portage, Washara, and Wood counties are closed due to their&#13;
potential fire hazard. The state has become a virtual tinderbox caused&#13;
by a lack of precipitation. This is the first time such a closure has&#13;
occurred since 1953 when hunting was set aside for a week until the&#13;
hazard was over. 1&#13;
There is rumor that bowmen will be given back their subtracted&#13;
time after the rifle season, but a lot of good this does after the herd has&#13;
been substantially reduced and spooked. I would think a refund would&#13;
be in order.&#13;
Don't give up hope though as there is plenty of hunting available in&#13;
the unclosed counties of Racine and Kenosha. Private lands would be&#13;
the best bet for your quarry but Bong and New Munster public hunting&#13;
grounds should prove mildly fruitful. Deer registration • will be in&#13;
Burlington at the Police station. This must be a first to see bowmen&#13;
praying for rain in order to hunt.&#13;
The duck hunting this year will be long remembered as the last of its&#13;
kind. Not that it will be anymore spectacular than it was last year; and&#13;
that isn't saying much; but this is the last year lead shot may be used&#13;
on waterfowl in Wisconsin waters. When the season opens this Friday&#13;
at noon take time in loading your chamber and remember it well.&#13;
Remember also the Great Horicon Marsh as this is the first year of its&#13;
four year goose reduction plan that has already gotten off on a sour&#13;
note.&#13;
A first came to Root River fishermen this year on September 16,&#13;
which is opening day of salmon snagging in all bays, harbors, except&#13;
Racine County's Root River. This was caused by the combined efforts&#13;
of the Root River Restoration Council and Salmon Unlimited due to the&#13;
fact that there are large numbers of trout in the river at this time right&#13;
along with the salmon. It is not legal to snag these anadromous&#13;
salmonids because of their fine qualities and also because they don't&#13;
die after spawning as the salmon do so there is no sense in harvesting&#13;
them in this manner.&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
A faculty, staff and students The team will practice noon&#13;
men's volleyball team has been hours on Tuesday and Thursday.&#13;
organized, according to Orby Those involved with the team&#13;
Moss, coordinator. are Bob Lawson, Lucian Rosa,&#13;
The team will play ap- Hal Henderson, Hans Nuernberg,&#13;
proximately six games at Racine Jan Ocker, Hank Krause, Vic&#13;
Park, Hor lick, and Case at 7 p.m. Godfrey, Jack Landwehr and&#13;
on Sept. 21, 28, and 30 and October LeRoy Jefferson. Starters will be&#13;
4. 12, and $8. picked from those who show up&#13;
played"'iOday&#13;
travel to Charleston Illinois to&#13;
play Eastern Illinois at 11 a.m.&#13;
Parkside suffered their third&#13;
defeat of the season to Rockford&#13;
College, 4-1, last Saturday.&#13;
"Although we totally&#13;
dominated Rockford and played&#13;
our best soccer of the season,"&#13;
said Coach Hal Henderson, "we&#13;
were tied 1-1 at halftime."&#13;
The Rangers' lone goal was&#13;
scored by -Earl Campbell, who&#13;
took a volley out of the air on a&#13;
cross from Jack Landwehr.&#13;
Parkside out shot Rockford, 13-&#13;
11. .&#13;
"Once we got behind in the&#13;
game, we didn't play our kind of&#13;
game and we can't be successful&#13;
if we don't control the play,"&#13;
Henderson stated.&#13;
The PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
invites you to experience the&#13;
I.D's required&#13;
ZANY COMEDY&#13;
of&#13;
EDMONDS &amp; CURLEY&#13;
As seen on notional T.V . . Riso featuring Folksingers&#13;
CHRIS&#13;
TONY&#13;
INLOES and&#13;
ROLANDS&#13;
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2,&#13;
8:00 P.M. U nlon Square&#13;
~R\~"'$&#13;
(\\ \'1't.~ p.~\.t. p.\JP.\\:&#13;
Adm .: '1.50 UW.f&gt; Students&#13;
'2.00 General&#13;
Any intentional foul hooking, including unsuccessful attempts at&#13;
ripping, can bring a large fme from Racine's new game warden, Tom&#13;
Edwards. Edwards claims he will even be giving citations for the&#13;
possession of a siver tongued spider, otherwise known as a snagging&#13;
hook and I think he means business. He packs a .:357 magnum pistol.on his hip!&#13;
Concluding this history of firsts and lasts is the new proposal&#13;
brought to rifle deer hunting. It is the controversial split zone deer&#13;
hunting for 1977 developed in hopes of easing opening day p~.&#13;
The proposal calls for the state to be divided into three zones. The&#13;
hunter has a choice of which zone he wishes to hunt and also between&#13;
whether he wishes to hunt the first three days of the season or the last&#13;
six. Each zone has a different seasotf.&#13;
To introduce this proposal to the DNR set up state wide meetings to&#13;
inform the public and to obtain public opinion. I have only one question&#13;
as a result of these meetings: "Who· did the people who attended these&#13;
meetings think they were?" There actions could only be compared to&#13;
that of a pack of wild apes on a jungle raid. Uncalled foe immature&#13;
actions such as stomping of feet, screaming obscenities, and throwing&#13;
questionnaires back at the DNR reps not only made jackasses out of&#13;
these people in the eyes of the public but also cheated themselves out&#13;
of the opportunity to be informed of the programs advantages and&#13;
disadvanta~4:s_: _________________ ... __ u,.~ ........................ ¾liJ4?¥&lt;t4¼¾¥$4KV-iA.&amp;!ht4- -iA4!V_. ... ............. -- ....... - ..... -- - -&#13;
the quiet leader in synthetic lubrication&#13;
$9&#13;
Mike Ville rs - Dealer 637-2726&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington "''· 634-2373&#13;
YOUR PLACE LOUNGE&#13;
3214 - 60lh St., ICIIIOOI&#13;
·WEDNESDAY NIGHT&#13;
IS LADIES' NIGHT&#13;
ALL LADIES ATTENDING WILL RECEIVE&#13;
COCKTAILS AT 1/2 PRICE!&#13;
THURSDAY'S THE NIGHT TO DRINK BEER.&#13;
00:Cba&#13;
BEER NIGHT SCHOONERS 35c BOmES 50c&#13;
HU/1/W IIWIIII &#13;
wins two&#13;
"w. raDY needed a team&#13;
eIf«t to beat Lo)'OIa," said&#13;
Godfr01. "Everyon. of tb.&#13;
.-sin the meet ran tbeir beSt&#13;
tImeS ... the five mile course of&#13;
IIle __ U the team keeps&#13;
bt1P o¥iDI at this rate. we shOuld&#13;
~ In good .... pe ."&#13;
1be R8JlIe"S opened lIlell" Q1I8i&#13;
meel _ at boJDO September&#13;
\I,~liIIll UW·Wb!tewater. I&amp;-&#13;
e. bat IoaioIto the UnIversity of&#13;
lJIIDnl ............. o Orcle. ~.&#13;
Chicago Clrcl.·s Fernando&#13;
Re7ea _ the meet in 216: 12.&#13;
beatlnc out Parkald.'s Gary&#13;
PrIem. wbo flniIbed aeeond. by 13&#13;
--&#13;
JuDI« Ray FredoriCkaeo. th.&#13;
. I III8Il In the - opener •&#13;
.. sizth with a llme of 216:41.&#13;
Freshman J.ff MUI.r .. as&#13;
_th; ......_ •• MIk. Riven&#13;
.. eiIbIh and freIIbman Lee&#13;
A1lIapr .... Illth, roundlng out&#13;
IIle 1Illp lift.&#13;
Otber \lip flniIbers for the&#13;
Rang.rs ... re Gary Prl.m.&#13;
1llur1b; Jeff MIII«. flttb; Lee&#13;
A1lInc.... elgbIb; MIk. Rivers.&#13;
ninth;Grec JuIlcb. 12th and John&#13;
Van den Brandl. 13th.&#13;
I opens season&#13;
'" 8lId ~k from COach .. belieVeS the team&#13;
_. ~a. was the state canWIn the doub1e dual ~es&#13;
~ In 1m. Saturday. a1tbougb the team lost&#13;
• Racine Park. to these two tams last year.&#13;
lOIeeted to A1I-Raclne • 'ibis y..... the oquad has built&#13;
fer wlIOJbaII a pbjloaoP"y of intensity and&#13;
:&#13;
'::::.:~ doaire 10play the ball at all costs.&#13;
1bey are leamlng to bit the floor&#13;
wltbout getllng burt and building&#13;
~----.:&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
'.•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
- •&#13;
.•&#13;
• •&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•• •&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
r-----.~----.•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
nue Kenosha ••&#13;
Phone 65 -0774 •&#13;
-I •&#13;
nd&#13;
"the ~U::~deZi-;:;::~~&#13;
.Mi~e"~Yi!~~====~~~~~?~&#13;
Fr.. Pizza D.liv.ry&#13;
Club Hlghview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652·8737&#13;
Alii .~D•.,I.I Chlcke.,S~llhtIH,...... , ....&#13;
OPEII 4 ~.• , ,&#13;
to I I.•.&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD •••&#13;
invites you to •&#13;
PARK CITY .:.&#13;
WINTER 1lF&#13;
FESTIVAL&#13;
Park City, Utah&#13;
JAN. 1-9&#13;
'205 -'"&#13;
Includes: ''',l;-'&amp;''&#13;
~&#13;
• Roundtrip bus fare ,&#13;
•&#13;
• Condominium (4 to a room)&#13;
•. ...• Lift tickets, dances, races...and...mOl'e&#13;
Sign-up in UW-P Union Office&#13;
For more info call 553-2278&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
When you say B d' , • ",: u welser., you ve said It (J •&#13;
E. F. Madrigrano- --&#13;
•&#13;
i&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
r 2t, 76&#13;
t&#13;
wins two&#13;
season&#13;
~;i:'ie'~bi-~~ ·~-,&#13;
Mike 'Villers - ~~?J~:- __ §~?-2726&#13;
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