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              <text>Business Management Masters program hinges on recruiting&#13;
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              <text>..,.&#13;
W.d••• da" S.pt •• ", 7, 1977&#13;
YoU, .1.2&#13;
er &lt;3&lt;3 All good wri'~ i. swimming under ~~&#13;
water and hold"'ll ywr broo!tI.&#13;
F. Scott Fitzgerald&#13;
Business Management&#13;
Masters program&#13;
hinges on recruiting&#13;
Parkstde's new business management division chairman, Arthur&#13;
Dudycha, said the division will probably have serious problems&#13;
recruiting faculty for seven open business teaching positions. He also&#13;
indicated that the Business Master's Program hinges on good&#13;
recruiting.&#13;
In an interview with RANGER, Dudycha said "because of the&#13;
market situation, we have to be flexible and go with whatever good&#13;
people we can get." He cited as an example of the job market for&#13;
business instructors a convention which he attended in which 223&#13;
employers, some with multiple openings, were balanced by only 160&#13;
applicants. Accounting instructors were particularly rare, with an&#13;
applicant/employer ratio of twelve to one.&#13;
Dudycha said that seven positions are now open, and that he will&#13;
try to get back to two positions vacated when Francine Hall and&#13;
Erwin Saniga left after last year. "We will also try to get two more in&#13;
January", despite the problems of midyear recruiting, he said.&#13;
Besides the seven openings, four professors were recently hired to&#13;
Dudycha. They are:&#13;
Leroy Prvor; associate professor of accounting, with a DBA from&#13;
the University of Southern California who comes to Parks ide from the&#13;
University of Illinois, Chicago Circle Campus;&#13;
Earl L. Chrysler, associate professor to teach information systems&#13;
and quantitative methods, with a DBA from USC;&#13;
Suresh Jain, who holds a Ph. D. from Yale, who will be an associate&#13;
professor teaching quantitative methods and comes from the&#13;
Northwestern Graduate School of Business; and&#13;
Michael Sheffey, Assistant Professor of Accounting, who holds an&#13;
MBA with additional doctoral work at Penn State. Sheffey is a&#13;
certified public accountant and comes to Parkside from Wittenburg&#13;
University in Springfield, Illinois.&#13;
In other business news, a master's degree in business management&#13;
will be offered at Parks ide, probably in the fall of 1978. The MAS&#13;
(Master of Administrative Sciences) courses will be offered mostly, if&#13;
not entirely, in the evening to cater to the needs of master candidates&#13;
already emploved.Jn business. Parkside will not offer the .traditional&#13;
master's degree of MBA (Master of Business Administration) degree.&#13;
According to Dudycha, the decision to offer the MAS instead of&#13;
MBA was for "political reasons." The UW campuses at Milwaukee&#13;
and Whitewater, both relatively close to Parkside, both offer the&#13;
MBA, and "they are possibly afraid of losing students to Parkside",&#13;
said Dudycha, who added that there is virtually no difference&#13;
between the courses taken for either degree. "In terms of course&#13;
offerings and graduation requirements, our program could be&#13;
identical to an MBA program, it just carries a different name."&#13;
Parkside's Chancellor Alan E. Guskin told RANGER the key to&#13;
getting the MAS program moving is to "first get a quality&#13;
undergraduate program. You can't build a strong graduate program&#13;
without a strong undergraduate program. Once you have a very good&#13;
undergrad program, it's a relatively simple process," he said. Cuskin&#13;
said that master's accreditation by the North Central Acceditation&#13;
association and others should not delay the inception of the MAS&#13;
offering.&#13;
"I don't think the process of accreditation will hold us back," said&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Guskin added that the current recruiting effort for the bachelor&#13;
business program will be "a hard game which takes time." He said&#13;
that "if Parkside can't get the necessary faculty through the usual&#13;
channels, we might temporarily hire retired professionals or obtain&#13;
loaned executives from area businesses. "&#13;
Guskin proclaims Parkside&#13;
community-based university&#13;
by Philip L LivinllSton&#13;
Editor&#13;
university and the communities&#13;
it serves ... such a university is&#13;
very different from the model of&#13;
the large, research-based university,&#13;
which necessarily focuses&#13;
most of its attention outside its&#13;
local area while serving state and&#13;
national interests."&#13;
Joint plilnni ...&#13;
He pointed out that Parkside&#13;
"serves a geographical area&#13;
which includes two major cities&#13;
of Wisconsin, each with a vitality&#13;
and integrity of its own and&#13;
each, like most cities of similar&#13;
size, having difficulty providing&#13;
its population with all the&#13;
services they desire. Because of&#13;
this there is a growing&#13;
con;ciousness among leadership&#13;
groups of both cities that&#13;
collaboration is essential and&#13;
joint planning should begin on a&#13;
In a convocation address last&#13;
Friday, Chancellor Alan E.&#13;
Guskin marked the end of the&#13;
first phase of administrative&#13;
changes during his first two years&#13;
as Chancellor, and outlined&#13;
plans ·for the second phase in&#13;
which Parks ide will become "a&#13;
commun ity-based un iversitv",&#13;
The "state of the university"&#13;
address was preceded by a&#13;
luncheon for faculty, selected&#13;
staff members, and student&#13;
leaders.&#13;
Community-based univenity&#13;
A community-based university:&#13;
according to Cuskin, is :'one&#13;
which focuses its educational&#13;
attention on mutually beneficial&#13;
relationships between the&#13;
number of fronts.&#13;
The Chancellor pointed out&#13;
how Parkside "can and must play&#13;
a central role in the development&#13;
of the Kenosha-Racine communities."&#13;
"It (UW-Parkside)· is the&#13;
largest public facility in the area;&#13;
it offers the educational, human,&#13;
and social resources so critical to&#13;
the future success of the two&#13;
communities."&#13;
According to Cuskin, there are&#13;
two major functions of a&#13;
community-based university:&#13;
"community development and&#13;
human resource development."&#13;
Community development&#13;
"By community development&#13;
we are referring to the role of&#13;
university as an educational and&#13;
cultural center attempting to&#13;
expand and upgrade th&lt;\ quality&#13;
of ed ucation offered to area&#13;
students and residents of all&#13;
ages, to improve the quality of&#13;
life experienced by community&#13;
members, to increase a sense of&#13;
community pride, to reduce&#13;
community tensions, to provide&#13;
the environment and expertise to&#13;
foster the economic development&#13;
of the area, and to provide&#13;
the resources to assess and solve&#13;
community problem s.&#13;
Human resource cIe.. lopment&#13;
"By human resource development&#13;
I am referring to the role of&#13;
the university in helping all who&#13;
participate in its educational&#13;
programs - on and off campus,&#13;
credit and non-credit - to fulfill&#13;
more completely their desire and&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
..&#13;
' . er&#13;
Wednesday, Septe•lter 7, 1977&#13;
Yol.6, No.2&#13;
()() All good writi~ is_ swimming under~~&#13;
water ond hokhng your bfeoth.&#13;
F. Scott Fitzgerald&#13;
Business Management&#13;
Masters program&#13;
hinges on recruiting&#13;
by John R. McKloskey and Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Parkside's new business management division chairman, Arthur&#13;
Dudycha, said the division will probably have serious problems&#13;
recruiting faculty for seven open business teaching positions. He also&#13;
indicated that the Business Master's Program hinges on good&#13;
recruiting.&#13;
In an interview with RANGER, Dudycha said "because of the&#13;
market situation, we have to be flexible and go with whatever good&#13;
people we can get." He cited as an example of the job market for&#13;
business instructors a convention which he attended in which 223&#13;
employers, some with multiple openings, were balanced by only 160&#13;
applicants. Accounting instructors were particularly rare, with an&#13;
applicant/employer ratio of twelve to one.&#13;
Dudycha said that seven positions are now open, and that he will&#13;
try to get back to two positions vacated when Francine Hall nd&#13;
Erwin Saniga left after last year. "We will also try to get two more in&#13;
January" , despite the problems of midyear recruiting, he said.&#13;
Besides the seven openings, four professors were recently hired to&#13;
Dudycha. They are:&#13;
Leroy Pryor, associate professor of accounting, with a OBA from&#13;
the University of Southern California who comes to Parkside from the&#13;
University of Illinois, Chicago Circle Campus;&#13;
Earl L. Chrysler, associate professor to teach information systems&#13;
and quantitative methods, with a OBA from USC;&#13;
Suresh Jain, who holds a Ph . D. from Yale, who will be an associate&#13;
professor teac;:hing quantitative methods and comes from the&#13;
Northwestern Graduate School of Business; and&#13;
Michael Sheffey, Assistant Professor of Accounting, who holds an&#13;
MBA with additional doctoral work at Penn State. Sheffey is a&#13;
certified public accountant and comes to Parkside from Wittenburg&#13;
University in Springfield, Illinois&#13;
In other business news, a master'.; degree in business management&#13;
will be offered at Parkside, probably in the fall of 1978. The MAS&#13;
(Master of Administrative Sciences) courses will be offered mostly, if&#13;
not entirely, in the evening to cater to the needs of master candidates&#13;
already employed.in business Parkside will not offer the traditional&#13;
master's degree of MBA (Master of Business Administration) degree.&#13;
According to Dudycha, the decision to offer the MAS instead of&#13;
MBA was for " political reasons " The UW campuses at Milwaukee&#13;
and Whitewater, both relatively close to Parkside, both offer the&#13;
MBA, and "they are possibly afraid of losing students to Parkside",&#13;
said Dudycha, who added that there is virtually no difference&#13;
betw&lt;!E!n the courses taken for either degree. "In terms of course&#13;
offerings and graduation requirements, our program could be&#13;
identical to n MBA rogram, it Just drt;es a ditf rent name."&#13;
Parkside's Chancellor Alan E. Guskin told RA GER the key to&#13;
getting the MAS program moving 1s to " first get a quality&#13;
undergraduate program You can't build a strong graduate program&#13;
without a strong undergraduate program. Once you have a very good&#13;
undergrad program, it's a relatively simple process," he said. Guskin&#13;
said that master's accreditation by the orth Central Acceditat1on&#13;
association and others should not delay the inception of the MAS&#13;
offering.&#13;
" I don't think the process of accreditation will hold us back," said&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Guskin added that the current recruiting effort for the bachelor&#13;
business program will be " a hard game which takes time." He said&#13;
that " if Parkside can't get the necessary faculty through the usual&#13;
channels, we might temporarily hire retired professionals or obtam&#13;
loaned executives from area businesses "&#13;
Guskin proclaims Parkside&#13;
community-based university&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
In a convocation address last&#13;
Friday, Chancellor Alan E.&#13;
Guskin marked the end of the&#13;
first phase of administrative&#13;
changes during his first two years&#13;
as Chancellor, and outlined&#13;
plans for the second phase in&#13;
which Parkside will become "a&#13;
community-based university".&#13;
The "state of the university"&#13;
address was preceded by a&#13;
luncheon for faculty, selected&#13;
staff members, and student&#13;
leaders.&#13;
Community-based university&#13;
A community-based university-according&#13;
to Guskin, is "one&#13;
whi~h focuses its educational&#13;
attention on mutually beneficial&#13;
relationships between the&#13;
university and the communities&#13;
it serves . . such a university is&#13;
very different from the model of&#13;
the large, research-based university,&#13;
which necessarily focuses&#13;
most of its attention outside its&#13;
local area while serving state and&#13;
national interests."&#13;
Joint planning&#13;
He pointed out that Parkside&#13;
"serves a geographical area&#13;
which includes two major cities&#13;
of Wisconsin, each with a vitality&#13;
and integrity of its own and&#13;
each, like most cities of similar&#13;
size, having difficulty providing&#13;
its population with all the&#13;
services they desire. Because of&#13;
this there is a growing&#13;
con;ciousness among leadership&#13;
groups of both cities that&#13;
collaboration is essential and&#13;
joint planning should begin on a&#13;
number of fronts.&#13;
The Chancellor pointed out&#13;
how Parkside "can and must play&#13;
a central role in the development&#13;
of the Kenosha-Racine communities."&#13;
&#13;
"It (UW-Parkside) is the&#13;
largest public facility in the area;&#13;
it offers the educational, human,&#13;
and social resources so critical to&#13;
the future success of the two&#13;
communities."&#13;
According to Guskin, there are&#13;
two major functions of a&#13;
community-based university:&#13;
"community development and&#13;
human resource development."&#13;
Community development&#13;
"By community development&#13;
we are referring to tile role of&#13;
university as an educational and&#13;
cultural center attempting to&#13;
expand and upgrade the quality&#13;
of education offered to area&#13;
students and residents of all&#13;
ages, to improve the quality of&#13;
life experienced by community&#13;
members, to increase a sense of&#13;
community pride, to reduce&#13;
community tensions, to provide&#13;
the environment and expertise to&#13;
foster the economic development&#13;
of the area, and to provide&#13;
the resources to assess and solve&#13;
community problems.&#13;
Human resource development&#13;
"By human resource development&#13;
I am referring to the role of&#13;
the university in helping all who&#13;
participate in its educational&#13;
programs - on and off campus,&#13;
credit and non-credit - to fulfill&#13;
more completely their desire and&#13;
continued on page 6 &#13;
editorial&#13;
Guskin' s community·~ased&#13;
• • • university raises some&#13;
important questions&#13;
Chancellor Guskln's state of the university&#13;
address last Friday at convocation, was his most&#13;
important message to date. In the speech he&#13;
outlined his plan for Parkside to become&#13;
"community-based". It was a messageaimed at a&#13;
faculty, for the most part, hired under the promise&#13;
that Parkside would become a traditional 25,000&#13;
student university. The university has redefined&#13;
Itself!&#13;
Judging by the Chancellor's short graduation&#13;
ceremonies of the last two years and the total&#13;
exclusion of student speakers from the format,&#13;
the Chancellor is not a big one for long winded&#13;
speeches.His convocation speech, however, was&#13;
over thirty minutes long.&#13;
His plan for a community-based university&#13;
raises some urgent questions.&#13;
One might hope universities are based in some&#13;
community as not to become too cosmic.&#13;
Physically, Parkside is rather prairie-based or&#13;
park-based. Deceased Chancellor Wyllie might&#13;
have said Parkside was corridor-based (corridor,&#13;
meaning our location in the population corridor&#13;
between Chicago and Milwaukee). Take note&#13;
Guskin did not say community college, a term we&#13;
haveto avoid at all costs. In reality, few decades&#13;
from now with proper planning, we could very&#13;
well become suburban-based or even suburbansurrounded.&#13;
But alas, the Chancellor meant&#13;
community-basedas opposed to research-based!&#13;
This terminology could have caused young&#13;
untenured professors to squirm in their&#13;
convocation seats. Imagine physics or&#13;
philosophy professors fresh out of a graduate&#13;
school that prepared them for a life of teaching&#13;
and research (mostly research), praying dearly&#13;
that their research will be published and&#13;
acknowledged. Now, as they hear the Chancellor&#13;
of their university getting community-based,&#13;
imagine them also trying to relate physics and&#13;
chemistry to Racine and Kenosha, in a&#13;
community-based way.&#13;
If we place our emphasis on the community,&#13;
what about the time honored method of granting&#13;
tenure, for the most part, to professors with&#13;
researchoriented educations. Perhaps a school&#13;
with our mission should be recruiting those with&#13;
teaching doctoral degrees Instead of research&#13;
oriented backgrounds. How do we make research&#13;
careersrelevant to community service?&#13;
What about Parkside's outside funding?&#13;
Parkside's growing research posture has brought&#13;
thousands of extra dollars to lucky and proficient&#13;
professors, who, through success, can earn&#13;
valuable national exposure. What kind of cash&#13;
can community service (often volunteered) bring?&#13;
Clearly, these are issues of prime Importance if&#13;
Parkside continues to attract the best qualified&#13;
scholars as we have in the past and maintain&#13;
some balance in the transition.&#13;
In the Chancellor's speech he described the&#13;
completion of the first phase of administrative&#13;
changes which included, "a considerable number&#13;
of staff changes, including all senior&#13;
administrators. "Obviously, some of the audience&#13;
asked - why? Former acting Chancellor Otto&#13;
Baurer attended the convocation. He sat in the&#13;
back of the theatre. The rest of the deposed&#13;
officials were someplace else. So it goes ....&#13;
Before starting his speech, Guskin introduced&#13;
Vice-Chancellor Lorman Ratner, the new Dean of&#13;
Faculty, and Arthur Dudycha, the new Chairman&#13;
of the Management Science Division. These two&#13;
highly qualified and downright impressive gentlemen,&#13;
without question, occupy the professional&#13;
leadership positions instrumental in guaranteeing&#13;
Parkside will become community-based.&#13;
Also in the audience, although not officially&#13;
introduced, was a man whose performance is&#13;
paramount to achieving the community-based&#13;
goal. Stuart Rubner, the new Director of&#13;
Community services, will be responsible for&#13;
recruiting growing numbers of students over the&#13;
age of twenty-five needed for Parkside's survivaL&#13;
as numbers of high school graduates decline and&#13;
competition for older students increases.&#13;
Rubner's dedication, experience, sense of humor&#13;
and enthusiastic personality, promise success:&#13;
ConSider!ngthat Parkside's physical resources&#13;
are ~trategl?ally located in one of the largest&#13;
growl.ngregIons of Wisconsin, Chancellor Guskin&#13;
hasaimed Parkside in the right direction' towards&#13;
the two cities who will need all the help'they can&#13;
get to stretch westward gracefully. If it works, the&#13;
SChOOl.?ould -get some needed national&#13;
recognition and keep the shopping mall&#13;
developers away forever.&#13;
Ranger endorses the Chancellor'S plan to&#13;
~ome com~unltY-based because It is the best&#13;
og cal and Intelligent solution to Parkside's&#13;
prosperity. Here is '.&#13;
university with id a multi-million dollar&#13;
eas... Now, for the action .....&#13;
Raaau is .fittea &amp;Ad dlted b&#13;
UaIv_,. of Wiacoaala-P~aIde ~":'J.eat. of tbe&#13;
re._alble fo. ita editorial poIIc e,. .....,-lei,.&#13;
,. &amp;Ad Content.&#13;
IEdltor PUip L. LiYlaa&#13;
"hera!III n-. R C .toa 553-2295 -&#13;
Ad-.u.. Ill--. r ...... G&amp;b~'~ 553-2187&#13;
.-. ~~3-21187&#13;
s........... UOa.: $$.00 Fear for U.$&#13;
Raaaer Ne•• p.por. UalYeralty of W~ .A• ....0.'. WLo Lo aala,Parh.lde&#13;
• --11141&#13;
I&#13;
editorial 2&#13;
Guskin' s community-~ased • • • un1vers1ty raises some&#13;
important questions . ,&#13;
Chancellor Guskin's state of the university&#13;
address last Friday at convocation, was his most&#13;
important message to date. In the speech he&#13;
outlined his plan for Parkside to become&#13;
"community-based". It was a message aimed at a&#13;
faculty, for the most part, hired under the promise&#13;
that Parkside would become a traditional 25,000&#13;
student university. The university has redefined&#13;
itself!&#13;
Judging by the Chancellor's short graduation&#13;
ceremonies of the last two years and the total&#13;
exclusion of student speakers from the format,&#13;
the Chancellor is not a big one for long winded&#13;
speeches. His convocation speech, however, was&#13;
over thirty minutes long.&#13;
His plan for a community-based university&#13;
raises some urgent questions.&#13;
One might hope universities are based in some&#13;
community as not to become too cosmic.&#13;
Physically, Parkside is rather prairie-based or&#13;
park-based. Deceased Chancellor Wyllie might&#13;
have said Parkside was corridor-based (corridor,&#13;
meaning our location in the population corridor&#13;
between Chicago and Milwaukee). Take note&#13;
Guskin did not say community college, a term we&#13;
have to avoid at all costs. In reality, few decades&#13;
from now with proper planning, we could very&#13;
well become suburban-based or even suburbansurrounded.&#13;
But alas, the Chancellor meant&#13;
community-based as opposed to research-based!&#13;
This terminology could have caused young&#13;
untenured professors to squirm in their&#13;
convocation seats. Imagine physics or&#13;
philosophy professors fresh out of a graduate&#13;
school that prepared them for a life of teaching&#13;
and research (mostly research), praying dearly&#13;
that their research will be published and&#13;
acknowledged. Now, as they hear the Chancellor&#13;
of their university getting community-based,&#13;
Imagine them also trying to relate physics and&#13;
chemistry to ·Racine and Kenosha, in a&#13;
community-based way.&#13;
If we place our emphasis on the community&#13;
what about the time honored method of granting&#13;
tenure, for the most pa_rt, to professors with&#13;
research oriented educations. Perhaps a school&#13;
with our mission should be recruiting those with&#13;
teaching doctoral degrees instead of research&#13;
oriented backgrounds. How do we make research&#13;
careers relevant to community service?&#13;
What about Parkside's outside ~unding?&#13;
Parkside's growing research posture has brought&#13;
thousands of extra dollars to lucky and proficient&#13;
professors, who, through success, can earn&#13;
valuable national exposure. What kind of cash&#13;
can community service (often volunteered) bring?&#13;
Clearly, these are issues of prime importance If&#13;
Parkside continues to attract the best qualified&#13;
scholars as we have in the past and maintain&#13;
some balance in the transition.&#13;
In the Chancellor's speech he described the&#13;
completion of the first phase of administrative&#13;
changes which included, "a considerable number&#13;
of staff changes, including all senior&#13;
administrators." Obviously, some of the audience&#13;
asked - why? Former acting Chancellor Otto&#13;
Baurer attended the convocation. He sat in. the&#13;
back of the theatre. The rest of the deposed&#13;
officials were someplace else. So it goes ....&#13;
Before starting his speech, Guskin introduced&#13;
Vice-Chancellor Lorman Ratner, the new Dean of&#13;
Faculty, and Arthur Dudycha, the new Chairman&#13;
of the Management Science Division. These two&#13;
highly qualified and downright impressive gentlemen,&#13;
without question, occupy the professional&#13;
leadership positions instrumental in guaranteeing&#13;
Parkside will become community-based.&#13;
Also in the audience, although not officially&#13;
introduced, was a man whose performance is&#13;
paramount to achieving the community-based&#13;
goal. Stuart Rubner, the new Director of&#13;
Community Services, will be responsible for&#13;
recruiting growing numbers of students over the&#13;
age of twenty-five needed for Parkside's survival&#13;
as numbers of high school graduates decline and&#13;
competition for older students increases.&#13;
Rubner's dedication, experience, sense of humor,&#13;
and enthusiastic personality, promise success.&#13;
Consider~ng that Parkside's physical resources&#13;
are ~trateg1~ally located in one of the largest&#13;
grow,_ng regions of Wisconsin, Chancellor Guskin&#13;
has aimed Parkside in the right direction· towards&#13;
the two cities who will need all the help' they can&#13;
get to stretch westward gracefully. If it works, the&#13;
~i:iol. ?0 uld get some needed national&#13;
gn1t1on and keep the shopping mall&#13;
developers away forever.&#13;
Ranger endorses the Chancellor's plan to&#13;
~.ome community-based because it is the best&#13;
• ogical .and intelligent solution to Parkside's&#13;
prosperity. Here is a . .&#13;
university with .d mult1-mllhon dollar 1 eas · · · Now, for the action .....&#13;
Rlt.f\&amp;er ia writtel\ a.nd edited b&#13;
Ul\ivenity of Wiacol\ain·P&amp;rllaide Y • t11denta ol the&#13;
reapoftaible for it• editorial po::d they &amp;re solely · Y At\d conteftt.&#13;
Edit r Philip L Livia&#13;
\a r I &amp;Nt.aer ...._ · 1st01\ 553-2295 - • QOll\&amp;a R. Coope d rti ft Mana r .loka Gabriel 553 r 553-2287&#13;
·2287&#13;
~bacriptiofta: $5.00 year for U.S A&#13;
Raqer Newapaper, Uahrenity of ,._i ·. ·&#13;
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Editor's File ******* Dean Dearborn's&#13;
Farewell Banquet&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
Dean Dearborn helped get the sports&#13;
program off the ground and balled out the&#13;
Vet's Club who had gone mrserablv In debt&#13;
trying to subsidize a Racine bus to ParkSlde&#13;
When he was WIth people at a party, a game,&#13;
or other school funcnon, he would keep hrs&#13;
head raised high and not hesitate to let go w,th&#13;
a strong laugh, always smihng He looked Ioke&#13;
a Dean of Students. He gave people a senseof&#13;
pride and Importance&#13;
He got caught In the middle of the chang,ng&#13;
of the guard in an "adrninistranve reallocation"&#13;
A casualty of a Mac truck or something.&#13;
After all the testimonials were grven and&#13;
after hIS son, Dave Dearborn tned to speak&#13;
through hIStears, the Dean h'mself got up to&#13;
declare himself alive and well, saying, "I have&#13;
been deeply hurt But I want to tell you - I&#13;
stand proud to say I was a part of the WyllIe&#13;
adrnirustration I will never forget that."&#13;
Anyone who doesn't know hIm or remember&#13;
hirn as Dean of Students might not appreciate&#13;
hISefforts in pioneenng areasaround ParksIde&#13;
where no one had trod. One of the few&#13;
traditions this campus has was an idea of hIS.&#13;
Dean Dearborn thought up a year end&#13;
celebration under a CIICUS tent where&#13;
everyone In the school could get plenty of&#13;
beer and laugh It up, The End. How could&#13;
anyone forget!&#13;
There wasa farewell banquet last August for&#13;
a deposed adnoinistrator, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Allen Dearborn, Dean of Students.&#13;
Essentially, it was a very sad banquet, but&#13;
plenty of happy people attended. There was a&#13;
judge, a university president, dozens of&#13;
administrators, and many secretaries, all&#13;
friends.&#13;
Dean Dearborn was here when Parkside was&#13;
a handful of weird buildings, the most&#13;
glamorous being Tallent Hall. I remember as a&#13;
high school student coming to visit him in his&#13;
office in the upper northwest corner of Tallent.&#13;
He looked out his windowed elevated view&#13;
and joked, "This is a fishbowl, so I can watch&#13;
the riots." It was the late sixties and Dearborn&#13;
had not been able to befriend the defiant ones.&#13;
Former editors of Newscope and Ranger&#13;
would mention Dearborn with grit teeth as&#13;
they spoke of destruction.&#13;
He rode the waves and gave more power to&#13;
students than they could handle in the form of&#13;
total control of segregated fees under the&#13;
merger law.&#13;
He also helped college aged people&#13;
recognize Parkside by helping to secure the&#13;
first national name entertainment in local high&#13;
school gymnasiums.&#13;
Chancellor Gusldn Icills housing co-op plan&#13;
D.an D.arborn (left) talb with Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
, '&#13;
•• rtol Scott, Kenosha iud,e and former&#13;
District Attorne,.&#13;
Next weelc:&#13;
fluyw~ere&#13;
Ware... Wherever you go, tell it like it is in an impnnted&#13;
shirt. Whether you're in sports, Greeks. love, or&#13;
trouble, stop down at the bookstore and have ,t&#13;
put on a t-shirt, sweatshirt or Jacket. Let everyone&#13;
know just where you're at, in ware that you can&#13;
wear anywhere ... at the bookstore.&#13;
New Shirts&#13;
And T's&#13;
To Fit&#13;
Your Needs&#13;
UWParkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
"The Campus Outfitters"&#13;
J&#13;
" • • views&#13;
Dean DearlJorn (left) tallcs witll Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Burton Scott, Kenoslla iudge and former&#13;
District Attorney,.&#13;
Next weelc:&#13;
Ed•t I f•I Dean Dearborn's 1 ors I e ******* Farewell Banqu t&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Editor&#13;
There was a farewell banquet last August for&#13;
a deposed adn,inistrator. Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Allen Dearborn, Dean of Students.&#13;
Essentially, it was a very sad banquet, but&#13;
plenty of happy people attended. There wa a&#13;
judge, a university president, dozens of&#13;
administrators, and many secretaries; all&#13;
friends.&#13;
Dean Dearborn was here when Parkside was&#13;
a handful of weird buildings, the most&#13;
glamorous being Tallent Hall. I remember as a&#13;
high school student coming to visit him in his&#13;
office in the upper northwest corner of Tallent.&#13;
He looked out his windowed elevated view&#13;
and joked, "This is a fishbowl, so I can watch&#13;
the riots." It was the late sixties and Dearborn&#13;
had not been able to befriend the defiant ones.&#13;
Former editors of Newscope and Ranger&#13;
would mention Dearborn with grit teeth as&#13;
they spoke of destruction .&#13;
He rode the waves and gave more power to&#13;
students than they could handle in the form of&#13;
total control of segregated fees under the&#13;
merger law.&#13;
He also helped college aged people&#13;
recognize Parkside by helping to secure the&#13;
first national name entertainment in local high&#13;
school gymnasiums.&#13;
Cltancellor Guslcin lcills ltousing co-op plan&#13;
Jlnyw~ere Ware ... Wherever you go, tell it like it is in an imprinted&#13;
shirt. Whether you're in sports, Greeks, love, or&#13;
trouble, stop down at the bookstore and have it&#13;
put on at-shirt, sweatshirt or Jacket. Let everyone&#13;
know just where you're at, in ware that you can&#13;
wear anywhere . .. at the bookstore.&#13;
New Shirts&#13;
And T's&#13;
To Fit&#13;
Your Needs&#13;
UWParksid&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
'The Campus Outfitters' ' &#13;
shows 4&#13;
Neil Diamond touches listener's_ hearts&#13;
and performances anyone&#13;
could bring. "This is~&#13;
beautiful," he said """ lO&#13;
defin.itely ~oming' back.~&#13;
prorruse you. With these ""'lIs&#13;
spoken, the place went intoan&#13;
all out uproar. Even the IIIOlt&#13;
lukewarm Diamond fan w&#13;
taken in by all the exci~&#13;
What more could an\'Onesay&#13;
about Neil Diamond. He isa bue&#13;
performer and magician. A true&#13;
superstar in all respects. A &amp;ItIt&#13;
concert, '3 great time, a &amp;reIt&#13;
man.&#13;
Neil Diamond .. "1 am, I&#13;
said."&#13;
He had many special effects&#13;
during the show which set the&#13;
moods of his songs very well.&#13;
_ The most interesting of which&#13;
was during his portrayal of&#13;
Jonathan livingston Seagull.&#13;
Clouds floating on the backdrop&#13;
with the outline of Jonathan&#13;
among them. The mood and the&#13;
sensitivity of the songs touched&#13;
rnanv a heart. They brought tears&#13;
to some and a great feeling of joy&#13;
and happiness to all.&#13;
To the 20,000 plus crowd&#13;
packed at Alpine Valley, he&#13;
brought one of the best show's&#13;
by John A. Gabriel clear, strong, forceful and&#13;
meaningful. His movements are&#13;
not mechanical but are&#13;
freeflowing and seem to&#13;
generate from the evergy of his&#13;
audience. He sang songs from&#13;
the very beginning of his career&#13;
(Kentucky Women) to his latest&#13;
album 'Magnificent Noise' of&#13;
which he sang the title track.&#13;
Always giving more than the&#13;
audience wanted of him.&#13;
- .&#13;
evolved from performer to&#13;
charismatic personality /superstar.&#13;
And, in doing so, hasproven&#13;
that there isn't an area in the&#13;
show businessworld he can't and&#13;
won-t conquer. This was so very&#13;
evident on Wed. August 24 at&#13;
Alpine Valley.&#13;
Diamond's presence on stage&#13;
brings such a magnetism to his&#13;
audience so strong that you can't&#13;
help but join in. His voice is&#13;
The crowd is restless. People&#13;
are waiting. There is a tenseness&#13;
in the air. A certain magnetism.&#13;
The lights go down. The band&#13;
comes out. They begin to play.&#13;
Suddenly, there, in the center of&#13;
the stage, The Man. Engulfed in&#13;
pure bright light. Neil Diamond.&#13;
Once performing only to get&#13;
his s~gs heard, Diamond has&#13;
$)50 Guests&#13;
er&#13;
is looking for writers, photographers and these&#13;
paid positions for the fall semester:&#13;
• Advertising Manager&#13;
• Feature Editor&#13;
• Sports Editor&#13;
Come to our meeting this FridayI&#13;
Sept. 9. I at 3:00 PM in WLlC D.174&#13;
shows 4&#13;
Neil Diamond touches listener's hearts&#13;
by John A. Gabriel&#13;
The crowd is restless. People&#13;
are waiting. There is a tenseness&#13;
in the air. A certain magnetism.&#13;
The lights go down. The band&#13;
com out. They begin to play.&#13;
uddenly, there, in the center of&#13;
the stage, The Man. Engulfed in&#13;
pure bright light. eil Diamond.&#13;
Once p rforming only to get&#13;
hi~ ong heard, Diamond has&#13;
evolved from performer to&#13;
charismatic personality / superstar.&#13;
And, in doing so, has proven&#13;
that there isn't an area in the&#13;
show business world he can't and&#13;
won't conquer. This was so very&#13;
evident on Wed. August 24 at&#13;
Alpine Valley.&#13;
Diamond's presence on stage&#13;
brings such a magnetism to his&#13;
audience so strong that you can't&#13;
help but join in His voice is&#13;
clear, strong, forceful and&#13;
meaningful. His movements are&#13;
not mechanical but are&#13;
freeflowing and seem to&#13;
generate from the evergy of his&#13;
audience. He sang songs from&#13;
the very beginning of his career&#13;
(Kentucky Women) to his latest&#13;
album 'Magnificent Noise' of&#13;
which he sang the title track.&#13;
Always giving more than the&#13;
audience wanted of him.&#13;
SAT., SEPT. 10 9:00 P.M.&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
$loo UW-P Students $1 50 Guests&#13;
er&#13;
He had many special effects&#13;
during the show which set the&#13;
moods of his songs very well.&#13;
The most interesting of which&#13;
was during his portrayal of&#13;
Jonathan Livingston Seagull.&#13;
Clouds floating on the backdrop&#13;
with the outline of Jonathan&#13;
among them. The mood and the&#13;
sensitivity of the songs touched&#13;
man)( a heart. They brought tears&#13;
to some and a great feeling of joy&#13;
and happiness to all.&#13;
, To the 20,000 plus crowd&#13;
packed at Alpine Valley, he&#13;
brought one of the best show's&#13;
and performances any one&#13;
cou Id bring. "This is rnan&#13;
b eau t.f I " h · so I u , e said "we&#13;
definitely coming' back ar~&#13;
promise you." With these Words&#13;
spoken, the place went into an&#13;
all out uproar. Even the mos&#13;
lukewarm Diamond fan w&#13;
taken in by all the exciternenas&#13;
What more could anyone sa&#13;
about Neil Diamond. He is a tru!&#13;
performer and magician. A true&#13;
superstar in all respects. A great&#13;
concert, a great time, a great&#13;
man .&#13;
Neil Diamond "I am, I&#13;
said."&#13;
is looking for writers, phOtographers and these&#13;
paid positions for the fall semester:&#13;
• Advertising Manager&#13;
• Feature Editor&#13;
• Sports Editor&#13;
Come to our meeting this Friday,.&#13;
Sept. 9. , at 3:00 PNI in WLLC D-174 &#13;
campus&#13;
g§a CONTACT&#13;
weekly. by student government&#13;
PSGAurges students "0 join committees&#13;
I would like to say welcome&#13;
backand briefly explain someof&#13;
the responsibilities designated to&#13;
your student government.&#13;
Student governments in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
can be powerful forces both on&#13;
their respective campuses and&#13;
collectively throughout the&#13;
entire system.&#13;
Students, through their Student&#13;
Governments, have been&#13;
given the opportunity here in&#13;
Wisconsin not only to learn, but&#13;
to be able to put that knowledge&#13;
to work by actively participating&#13;
in all decision making processes&#13;
for the purpose of programming,&#13;
planning, and budgeting in both&#13;
academic and non-academic&#13;
areas.&#13;
As stated in State Merger law&#13;
section36.09(5):&#13;
"The students of each Instltutlon or&#13;
campus subject to the responsibilities&#13;
and powers of the board, the president,&#13;
the chancellor and the faculty shall be&#13;
active participants in 'the Immediate&#13;
governance of and pcucy development&#13;
for such institutions. As such,&#13;
students shall have primary reepcnerbility&#13;
for the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student IHe,&#13;
services and Interests. Students In&#13;
consultation with the chancellor and&#13;
subject to the final confirmation of the&#13;
bOerd shall have the responsibiltty for&#13;
the disposition of those student fees&#13;
which constitute substantial support&#13;
for campus student activities. The&#13;
students of each Institution of campus&#13;
shall have the right to organize themselves&#13;
In a manner they determIne and&#13;
to select their representatives to&#13;
participate in institutional governance."&#13;
The student fees mentioned&#13;
above amount to an annual&#13;
budget of around -$400,000.00&#13;
which is budgeted by the&#13;
SegregatedFee Committee as set&#13;
forth in the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Constitution, It&#13;
supports the Union, Programming,&#13;
the Health Office,&#13;
Transportation, Athletics, Intramurals,&#13;
PSGA, the Child Care&#13;
Center, Student Groups, the&#13;
Student Newspaper, and the&#13;
Housing Office.&#13;
Students also sit on all&#13;
University decision and policy&#13;
making committees. I would like&#13;
to quote again from a Board of&#13;
Regent Policy Statement concerning&#13;
Merger Law.&#13;
"The students ant usured of formal&#13;
representation on all campus ccmmntees&#13;
(or their equivalents) established&#13;
for purposes of prooramming,&#13;
planning, and budgeting In both&#13;
academic and non-academle .......&#13;
Student go.....mments and associations&#13;
shall be the vehicle for such repreeen~&#13;
tatlon. Formal student government&#13;
Input shall be provided Into all areas of&#13;
Institutional governance."&#13;
RustySmith&#13;
President Rusty Tutlewski,&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, changed her name.&#13;
As of September 1, 1977 her&#13;
nameis Rusty Smith.&#13;
There are committees on&#13;
campus dealing with virtually&#13;
every area of Parkside. A fuJI list&#13;
is available in the Student&#13;
Government office WLLC 0-193,&#13;
telephone 553-2244. Selections&#13;
for the coming year will be made&#13;
very shortly. If you are interested&#13;
in serving in any capacity please&#13;
contact me or one of the&#13;
Senators or stop in at the office&#13;
during the next two weeks. This&#13;
is a wonderful opportunity to put&#13;
your knowledge and skills to&#13;
work in a meaningful and&#13;
effective manner. Let us hear&#13;
from you.&#13;
Ranger needs&#13;
more Ite'p'&#13;
5&#13;
John Moses, former S,ecretary of Veterans Affairs Coordinator of the NitionoJ:l AssocioJ:tion of&#13;
[right] discussed the current state of veteran's Concerned Veterans. There will be oJ:meeting of the&#13;
benefits in Wisconsin with Ron Schultz, Parkside Vet's Club Sunday, september 11, at 4:00 p.m. in&#13;
Vet's Club President [left], during registration last Union Square with free beer for members.&#13;
week. Schultz is also the Assistant Wisconsin&#13;
When there's a challenge,&#13;
quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon is the Number 1 beer in Milwaukee,&#13;
beer capital of the world.&#13;
That's why we'd like to offer you another challenge&#13;
-the Pabst challenge. Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll like Pabst&#13;
because Blue Ribbon quality means the best-tasting beer&#13;
you can gel. Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through.&#13;
PABST BREW;NG COMPANY, Milwaukee, Wis., Peoria Heights, 111.,Newark, N.J. Los Angeles, Calif., Pabst, Georgia&#13;
O~laNI v~ &gt;4:1"118C~.131~,V8:1~~~i~18A~~*~1~~~~ ~~31~~~ ~ ~•• suy 3n18 S'3n18 L 1VNIOI::lV:I9 )l:l\l'18 0; &gt;4:1v&#13;
Match the proper colors to the clues shown below.&#13;
L London's Fang _&#13;
2, BeaUes' Field5&#13;
3. Chandler's Dahlia _&#13;
4. School's Board _&#13;
5. Calcutta's Hole _&#13;
6. Pope's Helper· _&#13;
7. Wambaugh's Knight _&#13;
8. High-Class Blood _&#13;
9. Capri's Grotto _&#13;
10. Hugo's Pimpernel _&#13;
11. Gainsborough's Boy _&#13;
12. Robin Hood's WiII _&#13;
13. Kaaba's Stone _&#13;
14. Duke's Mood _&#13;
campus&#13;
g/98 w~~~!~~!&#13;
5&#13;
PSGA urges students ·to join committees&#13;
I would like to say welcome&#13;
back and briefly explain some of&#13;
the responsibilities designated to&#13;
your student government.&#13;
Student .governments in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
can be powerful forces both ori&#13;
their respective campuses and&#13;
collectively throughout the&#13;
entire system .&#13;
Students, through their Student&#13;
Governments, ·have been&#13;
given the opportunity here in&#13;
Wisconsin not only to learn, but&#13;
to be able to put that knowledge&#13;
to work by actively participating&#13;
in all decision making processes&#13;
for the purpose of programming,&#13;
planning, and budgeting in both&#13;
academic and non-academic&#13;
areas.&#13;
As stated in State Merger Law&#13;
section 36.09 (5): "The students of each Institution or&#13;
campus subject to the responsJbllities&#13;
and powers of the board, the president,&#13;
the chancellor and the faculty shall be&#13;
active participants In ' the Immediate&#13;
governance.of and pollcy development&#13;
for such Institutions. As such,&#13;
students shall have primary responsibility&#13;
for the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student life,&#13;
services and interests. Students In&#13;
consultation with the chancellor and&#13;
subject to the final confirmation of the&#13;
board shall have the responslblllty for&#13;
the disposition of those student fees&#13;
which constitute substantial support&#13;
for campus student activities. The&#13;
students of each institution of campus&#13;
shal I have the right to organize themselves&#13;
in a manner they determine and&#13;
to select their representatives to&#13;
participate In I nstltutlonal governance."&#13;
The student fees mentioned&#13;
above amount to an annual&#13;
budget of around -$400,000.00&#13;
which is budgeted by the&#13;
Segregated Fee Committee as set&#13;
forth in the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Constitution, It&#13;
supports the Union, Programming,&#13;
the Health Office,&#13;
Transportation, Athletics, Intramurals,&#13;
PSGA, the Child ·Care&#13;
Center, Student Groups, the&#13;
Student Newspaper, and the&#13;
Housing Office.&#13;
Students also sit on all&#13;
University decision and poli(:y&#13;
making committees. I would like&#13;
to quote again from a Board of&#13;
Regent Policy Statement concerning&#13;
Merger law.&#13;
"The students are assured of formal&#13;
representation on all campus committees&#13;
(or their equivalents) established&#13;
for purposes of programming,&#13;
planning, and budgeting In both&#13;
academic and non-academic areas.&#13;
Student governments and associations&#13;
shall be the vehicle for such representation.&#13;
Formal student government&#13;
Input shall be provided Into all areas of&#13;
Institutional governance."&#13;
Rusty Smith&#13;
President Rusty Tutlewski,&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, changed her name.&#13;
As of September 1, 1977 her&#13;
name is Rusty Smith.&#13;
There are committees on&#13;
campus dealing with virtually&#13;
every area of Parkside. A full list&#13;
is available in the Student&#13;
Government office WLLC D-193,&#13;
telephone 553-2244. Selections&#13;
for the coming year will be made&#13;
very shortly. If you are interested&#13;
in serving in any capacity please&#13;
contact me or one of the&#13;
Senators or stop in at the office&#13;
during the next two weeks. This&#13;
is a wonderful opportunity to put&#13;
your knowledge and skills to&#13;
work in a meaningful and&#13;
effective manner. Let us hear&#13;
from you .&#13;
Ranger needs&#13;
more ltelpl&#13;
John Moses, former S~cretary of Veterans Affairs Coordinator of the National Association of&#13;
[right] discussed the current state of veteran's Concerned Veterans. There will be a meeting of the&#13;
benefits in Wisconsin with Ron Schultz, Parkside Vet's Club Sunday, September 11, at 4:00 p.m. in&#13;
Vet's Club President [left], during registration last Union Square with free beer for members.&#13;
week. Schultz is also the Assistant Wisconsin&#13;
Match the proper colors to the clues shown below.&#13;
1. London's Fang ___ _&#13;
2. Beatles' Field!.&#13;
3 .. Chandler's Dahlia ___ _&#13;
4. School's Board ____ _&#13;
5. Calcutta's Hole ___ _&#13;
6. Pope's Helper ____ _&#13;
7. Wambaugh's Knight ____ _&#13;
8. High-class Blood ___ _&#13;
9. Capri's Grotto ____ _&#13;
10. Hugo's Pimpernel ___ _&#13;
11. Gainsborough's Boy ___ _&#13;
12. Robin Hood's Will ___ _&#13;
13. Kaaba's Stone ____ _&#13;
14. Duke's Mood ____ _&#13;
When there's a challenge, quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge.&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon is the Number 1 beer in Milwaukee.&#13;
beer capital of the world.&#13;
That's why we'd like to offer you another challenge&#13;
-the Pabst challenge.Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any other premium beer. You 'll like Pabst&#13;
because Blue Ribbon quality means the best-tasting beer&#13;
you can get. Since 1844 it always has.&#13;
ea&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through.&#13;
PABST BREW;NG COMPANY-, Milwaukee, Wis., Peoria Heights, Ill., Newark, N.J., Los Angeles, Cahf. , Pabst, Georgia&#13;
0810NI ·i,1 .)(:)"t/78 'f;I 13~~7&#13;
\fJt ~~i~1s;~~5~1tt1i i 131m2. ~ :J8MSUY 3n1s s ·3n1s L ·1vN101:Jv::i 9 &gt;1::iv1s c; &gt;1.,. &#13;
news 6&#13;
Parkside now offering Guskin&#13;
graduate math courses&#13;
cont. from page 1&#13;
potential. The university attempts&#13;
to do this by the quality&#13;
of instruction it offers, the&#13;
variety of its educational&#13;
programs and their availability to&#13;
those seeking to learn."&#13;
Educational leadership&#13;
Guskin also pointed out how&#13;
Parkside can and does provide&#13;
educational leadership for the&#13;
area's other schools.&#13;
.. The standards we set for&#13;
our campus playa central role in&#13;
upgrading educational standards&#13;
for all community educational&#13;
institutions. Through our&#13;
Collegiate Skills Program, we are&#13;
attempting to directly influence&#13;
the achievement levels of&#13;
students in high schools by&#13;
demanding higher standards of&#13;
them at the university ... 1 might&#13;
add the schools have responded&#13;
positivelv to our efforts."&#13;
Library is a leader&#13;
Guskin pointed to the Parks ide&#13;
library as the "symbol of the&#13;
great tradition of university life"&#13;
and "a leader in community&#13;
outreach with more than 5,()X)&#13;
area non-student residents who&#13;
are registered users."&#13;
Call to action&#13;
Guskin concluded his "state of&#13;
he university speech" with a caU&#13;
to action for faculty and staff&#13;
"The University of Wisconsin_&#13;
Parks ide represents a new&#13;
conception of a regional&#13;
university that is being fashioned&#13;
to meet the challenges of the&#13;
late 1970's and 1980's. We are in&#13;
a position to provide the higher&#13;
education community in the&#13;
United States with a model to be&#13;
followed.&#13;
"We, the faculty and staff, can&#13;
together provide this leadership.&#13;
Let us join together in this&#13;
opportunity."&#13;
See editorial.&#13;
Parkside will offer graduate work.Jn mathematics&#13;
beginning this semester under a consortium&#13;
arrangement with UW-Whitewater.&#13;
The initial fall course offering, available for&#13;
Whitewater graduate credit or Parks ide&#13;
undergraduate credit, will be "Elementary Number&#13;
Theory" (Mathematics 367) which will be taught&#13;
from 6:30 to 7:45 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays.&#13;
The tentative spring offering will be "Abstract&#13;
Algebra 1" (Mathematics 411). All courses carrying&#13;
master's degree credit will be taught in the evening.&#13;
Graduate level students in the courses are&#13;
expected to meet higher standards and to complete&#13;
supplementary work not expected of undergraduates.&#13;
Under the consortium arrangement, persons&#13;
seeking the Master of Arts in Teaching or the&#13;
Master of Science in Teaching degrees should be&#13;
able to complete del!ree requirements by taking&#13;
one course in each of four semesters at Parks ide&#13;
and attending three summer sessions at&#13;
Wh itewater.&#13;
The program is expected to attract both certified&#13;
teachers who wish to pursue a master's level&#13;
program in mathematics and education and&#13;
persons in business and industry wishing to upgrade&#13;
mathematics skills. The program also will provide'&#13;
additional opportunity for undergraduate candidates&#13;
for the bachelor's degree to take upper level&#13;
mathematics courses during the evening.&#13;
•••and a math fraternity too&#13;
Parkside has been notified that it will become the&#13;
third university in the state to have a chapter of Pi&#13;
Mu Epsilon, the national honorary mathematics&#13;
fraternity.&#13;
Parkside's Gamma chapter will join a chapter at&#13;
Marquette University chartered in 1933 and one at&#13;
UW-Madison chartered in 1939. Nationwide, the&#13;
fraternity has about 200 chapters.&#13;
Installation of charter members will be held&#13;
during the fall semester, when a national officer of&#13;
the fraternity will be present.&#13;
Student officers of Gamma chapter are Lynn&#13;
Tenuta, Kenosha, president; Jerome Feucht,&#13;
Racine, vice president; and Dianna Kolovos,&#13;
Kenosha, secretary-treasurer. Prof. Samuel&#13;
Filippone is faculty advisor.&#13;
The purpose of the group is to promote scholarly&#13;
activity in mathematics.&#13;
Dudycha asks&#13;
business students&#13;
• •&#13;
to participate WLLC gets improvement grants by John R. McKloskey specialties, amount of education&#13;
and other data on the four are&#13;
elsewhere in this week's&#13;
RANGER.&#13;
Dudycha encouraged all&#13;
business students to see their&#13;
business faculty advisors regular·&#13;
ly, "certainly by their sophomexe&#13;
year." He noted that upper level&#13;
specialty business courses may&#13;
not count toward the student's&#13;
graduation without the enrollment&#13;
permission of the advisor.&#13;
Dudycha stressed also that&#13;
employers often require letters&#13;
of recommendation from faculty&#13;
members who taught or knew&#13;
the prospective employee. "If&#13;
the student's advisor didn't know&#13;
the student well, all he would be&#13;
able to do is look up his grades."&#13;
If, on the other hand, he said, the&#13;
student saw his advisor frequently,&#13;
the advisor would have a solid&#13;
basis on which to recommend&#13;
the student to the employer.&#13;
Dudycha used these reasons to&#13;
help convince the students to&#13;
see their advisors often and get&#13;
to know each other well.&#13;
Oudycha also told the&#13;
students that now the Administrative&#13;
Science Division will be&#13;
planning its courses well in&#13;
advance so that students ready&#13;
to graduate won't find themselves&#13;
short one required course&#13;
not offered during their last&#13;
semester here. "This advance&#13;
planning is particularly critical to&#13;
part-time students whose evening&#13;
courses are offered in a&#13;
particular order," he said.&#13;
This year's two Management&#13;
Days were announced at the&#13;
meeting. On Thursday, October&#13;
27, the J.I. Case Company will&#13;
send its executives to give the&#13;
students another insight into the&#13;
working business world. Unlike&#13;
last year's Management Day,&#13;
evening as well as daytime&#13;
sessions will be offered to let&#13;
part-time students participate.&#13;
last' semester's Management&#13;
Day, sponsored by Weyerhaeuser&#13;
Corporation, was heavily&#13;
attended by business students&#13;
~arkside's new Management&#13;
Science Division chairman&#13;
Arthur Dudycha told a group of&#13;
business majors last Thursday&#13;
night that he would /ike more&#13;
student participation in the&#13;
planning and operation of the&#13;
management science program.&#13;
Dudycha told the meeting,&#13;
attended by only 45 out of 677&#13;
declared business majors, that&#13;
"I would like to see some more&#13;
student involvement in Management&#13;
Sc ience activities such as&#13;
recruiting and program development."&#13;
Dudycha introduced the&#13;
students to two of four new&#13;
professors in Management this&#13;
year: Dr. LeRoy Pryor and Dr.&#13;
Michael Sheffey. The other two&#13;
new faculty, Dr. Suresh Kumar&#13;
Jain and Dr. Earl Chrysler had not&#13;
yet arrived at Parkside. The&#13;
The Council on library&#13;
Resources (CLR) has awarded&#13;
$21,350 to Parkside to enable the&#13;
library staff to carry out a&#13;
self-study directed toward improving&#13;
the services and&#13;
operations of the library system.&#13;
In performing the study, the staff&#13;
will utilize a draft manual&#13;
resulting from procedures developed&#13;
in a 1976 pilot project at&#13;
the University of North Carolina&#13;
at Charlotte (UNCC).&#13;
I&#13;
The UNCC project was the first&#13;
phase of the Council's Academic&#13;
Library Development Program&#13;
(ALDP). In phase 2, several&#13;
institutions including UWParkside&#13;
of various sizes and&#13;
characters will be selected to&#13;
work with the evolving model&#13;
program. It is hoped that&#13;
refinement of the draft manual&#13;
and its suggested procedures&#13;
may result from their further&#13;
applications.&#13;
Commenting on the grant,&#13;
Joseph A. Boisse, Director of the&#13;
Library-learning Center, said:&#13;
'We are delighted to have been&#13;
awarded this grant. We know&#13;
that the library-learning Center&#13;
will benefit from the study; we&#13;
hope that UW-Parkside can&#13;
contribute constructively to the&#13;
refinement of the Academic&#13;
library Development Program."&#13;
CLRinitiated the ALDP in 1975&#13;
in the belief that small and&#13;
mid-sf zed academic libraries&#13;
could benefit from looking&#13;
closely at how they are meeting&#13;
the needs of the campus&#13;
community - students, faculty,&#13;
and administrators - and at&#13;
what could be done to improve&#13;
library services and to increase&#13;
library use.&#13;
WELCOME TO&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
V2 PRICE&#13;
BACK~TO SCHOOL&#13;
SPECIAU&#13;
·BOWLING&#13;
•BILLIARDS&#13;
·FOOS BALL&#13;
·TABLE TENNIS&#13;
COUPON GOOD UNTIL SAT.,SEPT. 17&#13;
Parkside Food Service&#13;
Says WELCOMEI&#13;
O~OJlfJtoJ'f&#13;
PARISI DE UNION&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
V2 PRICE SPECIAL&#13;
(VALIDTHIU '·17.77)&#13;
WATCH FOR ME IN FUTURE WEEKS&#13;
AS WE ANNOUNCE HOW WE ARE&#13;
CHANGING FOR yOU ••••&#13;
YOU ASKED FOR IT&#13;
news&#13;
Parkside now offering&#13;
graduate math courses&#13;
Parkside will otter graduate workJn mathematics&#13;
beginning this semester under a consortium&#13;
arrangement with UW-Whitewater.&#13;
The initial fall course offering, available for&#13;
Whitewater graduate credit or Parkside&#13;
undergraduate credit, will be "Elementary Number&#13;
Theory" (Mathematics 367) which will be taught&#13;
from 6:30 to 7:45 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays.&#13;
The tentative spring ottering will be "Abstract&#13;
Algebra 1" (Mathematics 411). All courses carrying&#13;
master's degree credit will be taught in the evening.&#13;
Graduate level students in the courses are&#13;
expected to meet higher standards and to complete&#13;
supplementary work not expected of undergraduates.&#13;
&#13;
Under the consortium arrangement, persons&#13;
seeking the Master of Arts in Teaching or the&#13;
Master of Science in Teaching degrees should be&#13;
able to complete degtee requirements by taking&#13;
one course in each of four semesters at Parkside&#13;
and attending three summer sessions at&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
The program is expected to attract both certified&#13;
teachers who wish to pursue a master's level&#13;
program in mathematics and education and&#13;
persons in business and industry wishing to upgrade&#13;
mathematics skills. The program also will provide&#13;
additional opportunity for undergraduate candidates&#13;
for the bachelor's degree to take upper level&#13;
mathematics courses during the evening.&#13;
••• and a math fraternity too&#13;
Guskin&#13;
potential. The university attempts&#13;
to do this by the quality&#13;
of instruction it offers, the&#13;
variety of its educational&#13;
programs and their availability to&#13;
those seeking to learn."&#13;
Educational leadership&#13;
Guskin also pointed out how&#13;
Parkside can and does provide&#13;
educational leadership for the&#13;
area's other schools.&#13;
" . . . The standards we set for&#13;
our campus play a central role in&#13;
upgrading educational standards&#13;
for all community educational&#13;
institutions .. . Through our&#13;
Collegiate Skills Program, we are&#13;
attempting to directly influence&#13;
the achievement levels of&#13;
students in high schools by&#13;
demanding higher standards of&#13;
them at the university .. . I might&#13;
add the schools have responded&#13;
positively to our efforts."&#13;
Library is a leader&#13;
Guskin pointed to the Parkside&#13;
8&#13;
cont. from page 1&#13;
library as the "symbol of the&#13;
great tradition of university life"&#13;
and "a leader in community&#13;
outreach with more than 5,000&#13;
area non-student residents who&#13;
are registered users."&#13;
Call to action&#13;
Guskin concluded his "state of&#13;
the university speech" with a call&#13;
to action for faculty and staff&#13;
"The University of Wisconsin:&#13;
Parkside represents a new&#13;
conception of a regional&#13;
university that is being fashioned&#13;
to meet the challenges of the&#13;
late 1970's and 1980's. We are in&#13;
a position to provide the higher&#13;
education community in the&#13;
United States with a model to be&#13;
followed .&#13;
"We, the faculty and staff, can&#13;
together provide this leadership,&#13;
Let us join together in this&#13;
opportunity."&#13;
Parkside See editorial. has been notified that it will become the&#13;
third university in the state to have a chapter of Pi&#13;
Mu Epsilon, the national honorary mathematics&#13;
fraternity.&#13;
Parkside's Gamma chapter will join a chapter at&#13;
Marquette University chartered in 1933 and one at&#13;
UW-Madison chartered in 1939. Nationwide, the&#13;
fraternity has about 200 chapters.&#13;
during the fall semester, when a national officer of&#13;
the fraternity will be present.&#13;
Student officers of Gamma chapter are Lynn&#13;
Tenuta, Kenosha, president; Jerome Feucht,&#13;
Racine, vice president; and Dianna Kolovos,&#13;
Kenosha, secretary-treasurer. Prof . Samuel&#13;
Filippone is faculty advisor.&#13;
The purpose of the group is to promote scholarly&#13;
activity in mathematics.&#13;
Dudycha asks&#13;
business students&#13;
Installation of charter members will be held • •&#13;
WLLC gets improvement grants&#13;
to part1c1pate&#13;
by John R. McKloskey&#13;
Parkside's new Management&#13;
Science Division chairman&#13;
Arthur Dudycha told a group of&#13;
business majors last Thursday&#13;
night that he would like more&#13;
student participation in the&#13;
planning and operation of the&#13;
management science program.&#13;
specialties, amount of education&#13;
and other data on the four are&#13;
elsewhere in this week's&#13;
The Council RANGER. on Library&#13;
Resources (CLR) has awarded&#13;
$21,350 to Parkside to enable the&#13;
library staff to carry out a&#13;
self-study directed toward improving&#13;
the services and&#13;
operations of the library system.&#13;
In performing the study, the statt&#13;
will utilize a draft manual&#13;
resulting from procedures developed&#13;
in a 1976 pilot project at&#13;
the University of North Carolina&#13;
at Charlotte (UNCC).&#13;
The UNCC project was the first&#13;
phase of the Council's Academic&#13;
Library Development Program&#13;
(ALDP). In phase 2, several&#13;
institutions including UWParkside&#13;
of various sizes and&#13;
characters will be selected to&#13;
work with the evolving model&#13;
program . It is hoped that&#13;
refinement of the draft manual&#13;
and its suggested procedures&#13;
may result from their further&#13;
applications.&#13;
WELCOME TO&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
1/2 PRICE&#13;
BACK .. TO SCHOOL&#13;
SPECIALI&#13;
·BOWLING&#13;
·BILLIARDS&#13;
·FOOS BALL ·TABLE TENNIS&#13;
COUPON GOOD UNTIL SAT.,SEPT. 17&#13;
O~QJ(fJJt{tJf f&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
½ PRICE SPECIAL&#13;
(VALID THRU 9-17-77)&#13;
Commenting on the grant,&#13;
Joseph A. Boisse, Director of the&#13;
Library-Learning Center, said:&#13;
'We are delighted to have been&#13;
awarded this grant. We know&#13;
that the Library-Learning Center&#13;
will benefit from the study; we&#13;
hope that UW-Parkside can&#13;
contribute constructively to the&#13;
refinement of the Academic&#13;
Library Development Program."&#13;
CLR initiated the ALDP in 1975&#13;
in the belief that small and&#13;
mid-sized academic libraries&#13;
could benefit from looking&#13;
closely at how they are meeting&#13;
the needs of t he campus&#13;
community - students, faculty,&#13;
and administrators - and at&#13;
what could be done to improve&#13;
library services and to increase&#13;
library use.&#13;
Dudycha told the meeting,&#13;
attended by only 45 out of 677&#13;
declared business majors, that&#13;
"I would like to see some more&#13;
student involvement in Management&#13;
Science activities such as&#13;
recruiting and program development."&#13;
&#13;
Dudycha introduced the&#13;
students to two of four new&#13;
professors in Management this&#13;
year: Dr. LeRoy Pryor and Dr.&#13;
Michael Sheffey. The other two&#13;
new faculty, Dr. Suresh Kumar&#13;
Jain and Dr. Earl Chrysler had not&#13;
yet arrived at Parkside. The&#13;
Parkside Food Senice&#13;
Says WELCOME!&#13;
WATCH FOR ME IN FUTURE WEEKS&#13;
AS WE ANNOUNCE HOW WE ARE&#13;
CHANGING FOR YOU ••••&#13;
YOU ASKED FOR IT&#13;
Dudycha encouraged all&#13;
business students to see their&#13;
business faculty advisors regular·&#13;
ly, "certainly by their sophomore&#13;
year." He noted that upper level&#13;
specialty business courses may&#13;
not count toward the student's&#13;
graduation without the enroll·&#13;
ment permission of the advisor&#13;
Dudycha stressed also that&#13;
employers often require letters&#13;
of recommendation from faculty&#13;
members who taught or knew&#13;
the prospective employee. "If&#13;
the student's advisor didn't know&#13;
the student well, all he would be&#13;
able to do is look up his grades.H&#13;
If, on the other hand, he said, the&#13;
student saw his advisor frequent·&#13;
ly, the advisor would have a solid&#13;
basis on which to recommend&#13;
the student to the employer.&#13;
Dudycha used these reasons to&#13;
help convince the students to&#13;
see their advisors often and get&#13;
to know each other well.&#13;
Dudycha also told the&#13;
students that now the Administrative&#13;
Science Division will be&#13;
planning its courses well in&#13;
advance so that students ready&#13;
to graduate won't find them·&#13;
selves short one required course&#13;
not offered during their last&#13;
semester here. "This advance&#13;
planning is particularly critical to&#13;
part-time students whose even·&#13;
ing courses are offered in a&#13;
particular order," he said&#13;
This year's two Management&#13;
Days were announced at the&#13;
meeting. On Thursday, October&#13;
27, the J.I. Case Company will&#13;
send its executives to give the&#13;
students another insight into the&#13;
working business world. Unlike&#13;
last year's Management Day,&#13;
evening as well as daytime&#13;
session will be offered to let&#13;
part-time students participate&#13;
Last sem ester's Management&#13;
Day, sponsored by Weyer·&#13;
haeuser Corporation, was heav1I&#13;
attended by business student &#13;
news/ Sports I&#13;
• •&#13;
Your Ice cream&#13;
is loaded with&#13;
chemicals&#13;
In the old days, when ice&#13;
ream was made of whole eggs,&#13;
~i1k and sugarI and laboriously&#13;
cranked in the old home freezer,&#13;
a serving of ice cream was an&#13;
occasional family treat, and&#13;
didn't do much harm.&#13;
Today, in this mass-producing,&#13;
synthetic age, it is quite another&#13;
mailer entirely. Today, there is a&#13;
very good possibility that you are&#13;
treating your family to another&#13;
poison if you buy some cheap&#13;
super-market product.&#13;
Ice cream manufacturers are&#13;
not required by law to list the&#13;
additives used in the making of&#13;
ice cream. Consequently, today&#13;
the majority of ice -:reams are&#13;
synthetic from start to finish.&#13;
laboratory analyses have shown&#13;
the following:&#13;
1) Diethyl Glucol: a cheap&#13;
chemical that is used as an&#13;
emulsifier instead of eggs. It is&#13;
identically the 'same chemical&#13;
used in anti-freeze and in paint&#13;
removers.&#13;
2) Piperonal: used as a&#13;
substitute for vanilla. This is a&#13;
chemicalused to kill lice.&#13;
l) Aldehyde C17: used to&#13;
fhwoscherry ice cream. It is an&#13;
inllammable liquid which is used&#13;
in anilene dyes, plastic and&#13;
rubber.&#13;
4) Ethyl Acetate: used to give&#13;
ice cream a pineapple flavor. It is&#13;
used as a cleaner for leather and&#13;
textiles, and its vapors have been&#13;
known to cause chronic lung,&#13;
liver, and heart damage.&#13;
5) Butyraldehyde: used in nut&#13;
flavored ice cream. It is one of&#13;
the commoner ingredients of&#13;
rubber cement.&#13;
6) Amyl Acetate: used for its&#13;
banana flavor. It is used as an oil&#13;
paint solvent.&#13;
7) Benzyl Acetate: used for its&#13;
strawberry flavor. It is a nitrate&#13;
solvent,&#13;
The next time you are tempted&#13;
by a luscious-looking sundae or&#13;
banana split or ice cream soda,&#13;
think of it as a mixture of antifreeze,&#13;
oil paint, paint remover,&#13;
nitrate solvent, leather cleaner,&#13;
and lice killer, and you may not&#13;
find it so appetizing.&#13;
- Courtesy of Friends of the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie Food Coop -&#13;
7&#13;
Appoint new assistant athletics director&#13;
UW-Parkside athletic director Wayne Dannehl volleyball player there, she has sinced coached&#13;
announced the appointment of Linda Draft as a those sports and been especially active in Class B&#13;
lecturer in physical education ':'ld as assistant to women's softball in Michigan&#13;
the athletic director. After graduation, she worked in private industry&#13;
Draft, a native of Grand Haven, Mit..,",.,will also with computerized administration before returning&#13;
coach the women's volleyball team at CW~P this to the classroom for graduate work at Michigan&#13;
fall and the women's softball squad next spring. StateUniversity. Draft received her M.S. this year in&#13;
Draft received a bachelor of science in 1972from athletic administration and coaching&#13;
Hope College in Michigan with majors in physical "We're extremely pleased to find someone of&#13;
education and mathematics and a minor in linda's caliber," Dannehl said. 'We feel that she&#13;
business. An outstanding basketball, softball and has the perfect combination of education and&#13;
. exoertence. iust what we were looking for."&#13;
National fencing tourney slated here&#13;
UW-Parkside has seen selected&#13;
as the host school for the 1976&#13;
National Collegiate Athletic&#13;
Assn. (NCAA) fencing championship.&#13;
The tournament, to be held&#13;
Thursday-Saturday, March 1&amp;-16,&#13;
1978, encompasses schools in all&#13;
three NCAA divisions and is the&#13;
only national collegiate fencing&#13;
championship in the country.&#13;
"It's an extremefv fine tribute&#13;
to UW-Parkside and to our&#13;
coach, Loran Hein, that we have&#13;
been selected to host this&#13;
tournament," said Wayne Dannehl,&#13;
UW-Parkside Athletic&#13;
Director. "The coaches' committee&#13;
made the recommendation&#13;
that Parkside be the site and this&#13;
is due in no small part to&#13;
coaches' awareness of the job&#13;
Loran does here and of his&#13;
success with fencing."&#13;
The NCAA fencing meet has&#13;
long been dominated by schools&#13;
from the East and Midwest, with&#13;
1977 host Notre Dame the latest&#13;
in the string of champions going&#13;
back to the tournament's&#13;
beginnings in 1941.&#13;
It wi II be the second maiO\'&#13;
collegiate championship to be&#13;
hosted by Parks ide during the&#13;
1977-76 academic year. UW-P&#13;
will host the NAIA national&#13;
cross-country meet for the&#13;
second time on November 19.&#13;
TUITION AND SEGREGATED FEES BY UW-CAMPUS&#13;
1977-78 - reprinted from UW-Memo. 15 ....ug. 77&#13;
ACADEMIC FEE + TUITION&#13;
Resident Nonresident&#13;
Undergrad, Grad. Undel'llrad. Grad.&#13;
Madison &amp;31 935 2,561 3,1&amp;9&#13;
Milwaukee &amp;31 935 2,561 3,1&amp;9&#13;
(au Claire 561 726 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Green Bay 561 726 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
La Crosse 561 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Oshkosh 581 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Parkside 581 N/A 2,313 N/A&#13;
Platteville 581 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
River Falls 581 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Stevens Point 581 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Stout 581 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Superior 581 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Whitewater 581 728 2,313 2,42&amp;&#13;
Centers (All) 558 N/A 2,22&amp; N/A&#13;
SEGREGATED FEE TOTAL FEES AND TUITION&#13;
Student Controlled Resident Nonresident&#13;
moneyforactivitiesUncle!Jrad. Grad. Unde'l!"d. Grad.&#13;
Parkside Rangers basketball schedule&#13;
1977-78&#13;
103 734 1,036 2,684 3,272&#13;
117 748 1,052 2,&amp;98 3,28&amp;&#13;
128' 709 85&amp; 2,441 2,554&#13;
120 701 648 2,433 2,54&amp;&#13;
124· 705 852 2,437 2,550&#13;
142 723 870 2,455 2,568&#13;
11&amp; &amp;97 N/A 2,429 N/A&#13;
144' 725 872 2,457 2,570&#13;
153' 734 861 2,4&amp;&amp; 2,579&#13;
127'(a) 708 855 2,440 2,553&#13;
121· 702 849 2,434 2,547&#13;
152 733 880 2,4&amp;5 2,578&#13;
134' 715 8&amp;2 2,447 2,5&amp;0&#13;
4&amp;-86' 604-&amp;46 N/A 2,272-2,314 N/A&#13;
, There is an additional charge of Sl&amp;-30 for Textbook Rental on these campuses;&#13;
on all other campuses books are purchased by students directly. (a) Rounded to nearest dol/ar.&#13;
Fri., Nov. 2S Milton College Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Nov. 26 Wayne Slate University Home Game 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Nov. 30 St. Xavier College Chicago, IL 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Dec. 3 Uw-Wh itewater Whitewater, WI 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Dec. 7 Utah State University Logan, UT 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Dec. 10 University of California-Irvine Irvine, CA 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Mon., Dec. 12 California State Univ.-fullerton Fullerton, CA 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Thun., Dec. 15 UW -Whitewater HomeGune 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Dec. 2B .. Ranger Classic::Toumament Horne Game TBA&#13;
Thurs., Dec:. 29 [Carthage, UW-SuperiO\', Pikeville, KYJ&#13;
Home Game 7:30 p.m. Tues., Jan. 3 Uw-¥Iatteville&#13;
Sat., Jan. 7 lamar University Beaumont, TJ( 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Mon., Jan. 9 McNeese State University Lake Charles, LA 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Jan. 14 UW -Stevens Point Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Mon., Jan. 1&amp; UW-LaCrosse LaCrosse, WI 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Thurs., Jan. 19 tJW-Green Bay Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Mon., Jan. 23 Central Slate University [OH] Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Jan. 25 Lakeland College Sheboygan, WI 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Jan. 2B UW-Milwaukee Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Feb. 1 Eastem Illinois Univenity Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Feb. 4 Western Illinois University Macomb,IL 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Mon" Feb. 6 Indiana UlPunlue U-Indianapolis Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Feb. 8 Sf. NoIbert CoIleBe Home Game 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Tues., Feb 14 UW-Green Bay Green Bay, WI 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Feb •• Northland ColleBe Home came 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Tues., Feb. 28 &amp; W'CA Playoffs TS.... TS....&#13;
Thurs .• Mar. 2&#13;
Mon., Mar. 6 &amp; N....'....District 14 Tournament TM TS....&#13;
Wed .• Mar. 8&#13;
TS....&#13;
Mon. - Sat .• N....'....National Tournament Kansas. City, MO&#13;
Mar. 13-18&#13;
•&#13;
WELCOME TO •••&#13;
BEER&#13;
35· - 12 oz. GLASS&#13;
.., .50 - PITCHER&#13;
WINE&#13;
35· - 5 OZ. GLASS&#13;
"'.00 - J.iI CARAFE&#13;
"'.90 _. RJLL CARAFE&#13;
SODA&#13;
20' - 9 OZ_.GLASS&#13;
30' - 12 OZ. GLASS&#13;
LOCATED ON THE GROUND LEVa OF THE Ut«lN&#13;
JUsT OFF THE MAIN ENmANCE •&#13;
Bews I&#13;
/sports 7 • • Your ice cream&#13;
is loaded with&#13;
chemicals&#13;
In the old days, when ice&#13;
ream was made of whole eggs,&#13;
~ilk and sugar, and laboriously&#13;
cranked in the old home freezer,&#13;
a serving of ice cream was an&#13;
occasional family treat, and&#13;
didn't do much harm.&#13;
Today, in this mass-producing,&#13;
synthetic age, it is quite another&#13;
matter entirely. Today, there is a&#13;
very good possibility that you are&#13;
treating your family to another&#13;
poison if you buy some cheap&#13;
super-market product.&#13;
Ice cream manufacturers are&#13;
not required by law to list the&#13;
additives used in the making of&#13;
ice cream. Consequently, today&#13;
the majority of ic(. -:reams are&#13;
synthetic from start to finish.&#13;
Laboratory analyses have shown&#13;
the following :&#13;
the commoner ingredients of&#13;
rubber cement.&#13;
6) Amyl Acetate: used for its&#13;
banana flavor. It is used as an oil&#13;
paint solvent.&#13;
7) Benzyl Acetate: used for its&#13;
strawberry flavor. It is a nitrate&#13;
solvent,&#13;
The next time you are tempted&#13;
by a luscious-looking sundae or&#13;
banana split or ice cream soda,&#13;
think of it as a mixture of antifreeze,&#13;
oil paint, paint remover,&#13;
nitrate solvent, leather cleaner,&#13;
and lice killer, and you may not&#13;
find it so appetizing.&#13;
- Courtesy of Friends of the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie Food Coop -&#13;
Appoint new assistant athletics director&#13;
UW-Parkside athletic director Wayne Dannehl&#13;
announced the appointment of Linda Draft as a&#13;
lecturer in physical education .. 'Id as assistant to&#13;
the athletic director.&#13;
volleyball player there, she has sinced coached&#13;
those sports and been especially active in Class B&#13;
women's softball in Michigan.&#13;
After graduation , she worked in private industry&#13;
with computerized administration before returning&#13;
to the classroom for graduate work at Michigan&#13;
State University. Draft received her M.S this year in&#13;
athletic administration and coaching.&#13;
Draft, a native of Grand Haven, MiL" ., will also&#13;
coach the women's volleyball team at CW-P this&#13;
fall and the women's softball squad next spring.&#13;
Draft received a bachelor of science in 1972 from&#13;
Hope College in Michigan with majors in physical&#13;
education and mathematics and a minor in&#13;
business. An outstanding basketball, softball and&#13;
"We're extreme( pleased to find someone of&#13;
Linda's caliber," Dannehl said . "We feel that she&#13;
has the perfect combination of education and&#13;
experience, just what we were looking for."&#13;
National fencing tourney slated here&#13;
UW-Parkside has seen selected&#13;
as the host school for the 1978&#13;
National Collegiate Athletic&#13;
Assn . (NCAA) fencing championship.&#13;
&#13;
The tournament, to be held&#13;
Thursday-Saturday, March 16-18,&#13;
1978, encompasses schools in all&#13;
three NCAA divisions and is the&#13;
only national collegiate fencing&#13;
championship in the country.&#13;
"It's an extremery fine tribute&#13;
to UW-Parkside and to our&#13;
coach, Loran Hein, that we have&#13;
been selected to host this&#13;
tournament," said Wayne Danneh&#13;
I, UW-Parkside Athletic&#13;
Director. ''The coaches' committee&#13;
made the recommendation&#13;
that Parkside be the site and this&#13;
is due in no small part to&#13;
coaches' awareness of the job&#13;
Loran does here and of his&#13;
success with fencing."&#13;
The NCAA fencing meet has&#13;
long been dominated by schools&#13;
from the East and Midwest, with&#13;
1977 host Notre Dame the latest&#13;
in the string of champions going&#13;
back to the tournament's&#13;
beginnings in 1941.&#13;
It will be the second major&#13;
collegiate championship to be&#13;
hosted by Parkside during the&#13;
1977-78 academic year. UW-P&#13;
will host the NAIA national&#13;
cross-country meet for the&#13;
second time on November 1~.&#13;
TUITION AND SEGREGATED FEES BY UW-CAMPUS&#13;
1977-78 - reprinted from UW-Memo, 15 Aug. 77&#13;
ACADEMIC FEE + TUITION SEGREGATED FEE TOTAL FEES AND TUITION&#13;
1) Diethyl Glucol: a cheap&#13;
chemical that is used as an&#13;
emulsifier instead of eggs. It is&#13;
identically the ·same chemical&#13;
used in anti-freeze and in paint&#13;
removers.&#13;
Resident Nonresident Student Controlled Resident Nonresident&#13;
2) Piperonal : used as a&#13;
substitute for vanilla. This is a&#13;
chemical used to kill lice.&#13;
3) Aldehyde C17: used to&#13;
flavOf cherry ice cream. It is an&#13;
intlammable liquid which is used&#13;
in anilene dyes, plastic and&#13;
rubber.&#13;
4) Ethyl Acetate: used to give&#13;
ice cream a pineapple flavor. It is&#13;
used as a cleaner for leather and&#13;
textiles, and its vapors have been&#13;
known to cause chronic lung,&#13;
liver, and heart damage.&#13;
Madison&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Eau Claire&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
La Crosse&#13;
Oshkosh&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Platteville&#13;
River Falls&#13;
Stevens Point&#13;
Stout&#13;
Superior&#13;
Whitewater&#13;
Centers (All)&#13;
Undergrad.&#13;
631&#13;
631&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
581&#13;
558&#13;
Grad. Undergrad.&#13;
935 2,581&#13;
935 2,581&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
NIA 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
728 2,313&#13;
NIA 2,226&#13;
Grad. money for activities Undergrad.&#13;
3,169 103 734&#13;
3,169 117 748&#13;
2,426 128* 709&#13;
2,426 120 701&#13;
2,426 124* 705&#13;
2,426 142 723&#13;
NIA 116 697&#13;
2,426 144* 725&#13;
2,426 153* 734&#13;
2,426 127*(a) 708&#13;
2,426 121* 702&#13;
2,426 152 733&#13;
2,426 134* 715&#13;
NIA 46-88* 604-646&#13;
Grad.&#13;
1,038&#13;
1,052&#13;
856&#13;
848&#13;
852&#13;
870&#13;
N/A&#13;
872&#13;
881&#13;
855&#13;
849&#13;
880&#13;
862&#13;
NIA&#13;
Undergrad. Grad.&#13;
2,684&#13;
2,698&#13;
2,441&#13;
2,433&#13;
2,437&#13;
2,455&#13;
2,429&#13;
2,457&#13;
2,466&#13;
2,440&#13;
2,434&#13;
2,465&#13;
2,447&#13;
2,272-2,314&#13;
3,272&#13;
3,286&#13;
2,554&#13;
2,546&#13;
2,550&#13;
2,568&#13;
NA&#13;
2,570&#13;
2,579&#13;
2,553&#13;
2,547&#13;
2,578&#13;
2,560&#13;
NA&#13;
5) Butyraldehyde: used in nut&#13;
flavored ice cream. It is one of * There is an additional charge of $16-30 for Textbook Rental on these campuses;&#13;
on all other campuses books are purchased by students directly. (a) Rounded to nearest dollar.&#13;
Parkside Ra~gers basketball schedule&#13;
1977-78&#13;
Fri., Nov. 25&#13;
~t., Nov. 26&#13;
Wed ., Nov. 30&#13;
Sat., Dec. 3&#13;
Wed., Dec. 7&#13;
Sat., Dec. 10&#13;
Mon., Dec. 12&#13;
Thurs., Dec. 15&#13;
Wed., Dec. 28 &amp;&#13;
Thurs., Dec. 29&#13;
Tues., Jan. 3&#13;
Sat., Jan. 7&#13;
Mon., Jan. 9&#13;
~t., Jan. 14&#13;
Mon ., Jan . 16&#13;
Thurs., Jan. 19&#13;
Mon., Jan. 23&#13;
Wed., Jan. 25&#13;
Sat., Jan. 28&#13;
Wed., Feb.1&#13;
Sat., Feb. 4&#13;
Mon., Feb. 6&#13;
Wed., Feb. 8&#13;
Tues., Feb 14&#13;
Sat., Feb. 8&#13;
Tues., Feb. 28 &amp;&#13;
Thurs., Mar. 2&#13;
Mon., Mar. 6 &amp;&#13;
Wed., Mar. 8&#13;
Mon. - Sat.,&#13;
Mar. 13-18&#13;
Milton College&#13;
Wayne State University&#13;
St. Xavier College&#13;
Uw-Wh itewater&#13;
Utah State University&#13;
University of California-Irvine&#13;
California State Univ .-Fullerton&#13;
UW-Whitewater&#13;
Ranger Classic T oumament&#13;
[Carthage, UW-Superior, Pikeville, KY]&#13;
Uw.Platteville&#13;
Lamar University&#13;
McNeese State University&#13;
UW-Stevens Point&#13;
UW-LaCrosse&#13;
tJW~reen Bay&#13;
Central State University [OH]&#13;
Lakeland College&#13;
UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Eutem Illinois Univenity&#13;
Western Illinois University&#13;
Indiana U/Purdue U-lndianapolis&#13;
St. Norbert College&#13;
UW-Creen Bay&#13;
Northland College&#13;
WICA Playoffs&#13;
NA/A District 14 Tournament&#13;
NA/A N~tional Tournament&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Chicago, IL&#13;
Whitewater, WI&#13;
Logan, UT&#13;
Irvine, CA&#13;
Fullerton, CA&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Beaumont, TX&#13;
Lake Charles, LA&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Lacrosse, WI&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Sheboygan, WI&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Macomb, IL&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Home Game&#13;
Green Bay, WI&#13;
Home Game&#13;
TBA&#13;
TBA&#13;
Kansas, City, MO&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
2:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 pm.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
TBA&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
TBA&#13;
TBA&#13;
TBA&#13;
WELCOME TO •••&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
BEER&#13;
35• - 12 oz. GLASS&#13;
'1.50 - PITCHER&#13;
WINE&#13;
35• - 5 OZ. GLASS&#13;
'1.00 - ½ CARAFE&#13;
'1 .90 -· AJLL CARAFE&#13;
SODA&#13;
20• - 9 OZ. GLASS&#13;
- 12 OZ. GLASS&#13;
LOCATED ON THE GROUND LEVEL OF THE UNON,&#13;
JUST OFF THE MAIN ENTRANCE &#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, 5eptember 7&#13;
First Day of Prosram Changes in Main Place.&#13;
Thursday, september 8&#13;
Constitution Meeting 2:00 p.m. in WllC D-174, P.5.G.A. office.&#13;
Friday, september 9 -&#13;
bnger Meeting for everyone interested in helping the student&#13;
newspaper rise about the heap. 3:00 p.m. in WLLCD-174.&#13;
Last Day for payment of fees without penalty.&#13;
Open Registration Ends.&#13;
Saturday, september 10&#13;
Dance with Fever at 9:00 p.m. in Union Square. Parkside Activities&#13;
Board's first dance of the year. Admission is $1.00 for students and&#13;
$1.50 for guests. •&#13;
Sunday, September 11&#13;
Vet's Club Meeting free beer and Discussion of Current legislation,&#13;
Upcoming Dance, Pool Tournament, and Christmas Party. 4:00 p.rn.&#13;
in Union Square.&#13;
Monday, ~ptember 12&#13;
Late payment penalty of $20.00 in effect forlees and tuition.&#13;
Tuesday, september 13&#13;
Rosh Hashanah - Jewish New Year celebration.&#13;
Full Moon share it with a friend.&#13;
segregated Fees Commillee Meeting 3:00 p.m. in WLLCD-174.&#13;
Pre-med Club Meeting 7:30 p.m. in the Library Faculty-Staff Lounge.&#13;
Elizabeth Steffen, (Ob-gyn.) M.D. will speak about her experiences&#13;
aboard hospital ship HOPE (slide presentation). All interested&#13;
persons welcome.&#13;
Rosh Hashanah - Jewish New Year celebration.&#13;
Full Moon share it with a friend.&#13;
Wednesday, september 14&#13;
Rangers are Out for the latest in fresh and vibrant information, the&#13;
student newspaper with ideas but not enough writers. Available&#13;
throughout the campus in distribution boxes.&#13;
Coffeehouse Louise Dimiceli (Chicago) will sing in Union 104-106&#13;
from 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Admission is Free! Wine will be served.&#13;
Talk- Discussion 7:30 p.m. Chi-Rio Center-campus ministry 3825-12&#13;
Street, across from Parkside's track on Highway "E". Rev. Richard J.&#13;
Schlenker, Ph. D. Topic: "Old-New Church?" "Our-Your Church?"&#13;
Friday, september 16&#13;
Film Fritz the Cat 8:00 p.m. in Union Cinema. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Old fur trader&#13;
trails on display&#13;
An exhibit of color photographs tracing the routes of the 17th and&#13;
18th century fur traders who were the first European explorers of the&#13;
Great Lakes and the Mississippi Valley will be on display in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Communications Arts Callery&#13;
through September 1S.&#13;
The display, titled "The Fur Trade: Northern Border/Rivers South,"&#13;
consists of 28 photographs by Tom Oates of Webster College, St.&#13;
louis, who traced the routes of the traders through still-wild rivers&#13;
and forests to recapture the countryside photographically as the&#13;
traders first saw it.&#13;
Gallery hours for the show are 10:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Aug. 30 and&#13;
31 and Sept. 1; 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sept. 2; noon to 5 and 7 to 10&#13;
p.m. Sept. 6, 7, nand 14; and noon to 5 p.m. Sept. 8,12, and 15.&#13;
The exhibit is sponsored by the State Historical Society's Area&#13;
Research Center at Parkside and the Parkside Librarv-Learning&#13;
Center. After its run at Parkside, the show will go to other state&#13;
campuses with Area Research Centers and to galleries of the&#13;
Wisconsin Federation of Museums. Following -the traveling&#13;
exhibition, the show will be on permanent display at the Historical&#13;
Society's, fur trade complex at Prairie du Chien.&#13;
NEW L1BRARYILEARNINGCENTERHOURS&#13;
(september 6 - December 15, 1977)&#13;
Monday - Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Sunday&#13;
The Library/Learning Center will be&#13;
November 24.&#13;
7:45 a.m. - 12:00p.m.&#13;
7:45 a.m. - 5:00p.m.&#13;
8:30a.m. - 5:00p.m.&#13;
1:3Op.m. -12:00p.m.&#13;
closed on September 5 and&#13;
FEVER,one of the best rock groups in Wisconsin, will play for the first&#13;
dance of the year in Union Square at 9:00 p.m. on Saturday,&#13;
September 10. The dance is sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
Philosophy Society&#13;
seeks members&#13;
The Parkside Philosophical Society is an organization in its second&#13;
year. last year it saw promising turn outs for its many lectures and&#13;
group discussions, they have hopes for an even better second year.&#13;
Chairperson Robert Hansen said that a meeting will be scheduled&#13;
soon to elect new officers and to discuss the coming year's activities.&#13;
Last year the Society offered several of todav's top philosophers&#13;
discussing a variety of topics ranging from the existence of Cod to&#13;
experimentation with children. All of these lectures were free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
When 'asked about the attendance last year Hansen remarked that&#13;
"although it was good it could have been better. Our publicity fell&#13;
through at times, also I feel that for too long the term philosophy has&#13;
been related to the term "high brow." People and students in general,&#13;
are scared off when they fiear the words "philosophical society".&#13;
Tbev think that even if they did attend they wouldn't understand&#13;
what was going on so they don't even try us out." What does on in&#13;
reality are discussions and lectures geared to what the Parks ide&#13;
community will find both interesting and understandable.&#13;
According to Hansen, the Society hopes to continue this kind of&#13;
service to Parkside in an effort to promote philosophical discussion at&#13;
Parkside. He feels that philosophy can play an active role in today's&#13;
society, as. a means to find answers to the many problems that face&#13;
people today. "The biggest problem that faces Parkside is its inability&#13;
to get student support for student groups. This may be a problem that&#13;
the society can solve," said Hansen. Hansen said the Society offers&#13;
only those lecturesor activities that the students show an interest in.&#13;
If you are interested at all, he said, watch the Ranger for the date and&#13;
time of the Parkside Philosophical Society's first meeting.&#13;
't's no secret: AAA WORLD WIDE&#13;
TRAVEL AGENCY&#13;
Ranger needs •&#13;
• • I Full Service&#13;
.' ' Travel .Ali!:eney&#13;
• Airline Tickert • Tours a • Cruue. • Rai{ • Hotel&#13;
• Cor Re.enotiQlu sports editor&#13;
p.o.b. foil film series&#13;
presents&#13;
"FRITZ THE CAT"&#13;
fr L, sept. 16 - 8:00 p.m&#13;
sun.,sept.18-7:3.op.m.&#13;
union cinema&#13;
! $1.00 !&#13;
classified&#13;
WANTED: Person to babysit for one ••&#13;
Monday, Wednesday and Friday 11:4&amp;-11:11,&#13;
Must be willing to use your plecl ..&#13;
at day care center. Cell COllect tor ......&#13;
728-8015.&#13;
0_ On Compu ..... ,_ ....&#13;
or Junior ---: Male or Female On ~&#13;
REPRESENTATIVE. Monthly Ml.". •&#13;
opportunity toeem eddltlonal COl..""' ..nl_ .. ··&#13;
Your activity will be limIted to IhI ,..:&#13;
Campus. Contact Budwelser---,&#13;
F.. lu,. Edllor - Asalgna featurt .....&#13;
and photograph assignment.. __ III&#13;
Editorial Board and makes dIoiIIofta "&#13;
guest editorials and etnel~"' .....&#13;
have both 01 the following ..,.. "-&#13;
Mondays 600 P.M. to 10m P.M.....&#13;
Tuesdays 700 A.M. to 2:00 P.M.&#13;
setectlon: by Editortal Board .......&#13;
letter of Intenllon to Philip L. ~&#13;
Immediately. Prior newspaoer exp ......&#13;
but not required.&#13;
Salary - $15.00 to $35.00 PI'''&#13;
Photog,.phers - Must pfOYtde own&#13;
equipment. Temporary dal1l:room until&#13;
Ranger darkroom is conalructtcl&#13;
planned. Ranger needs phot~&#13;
bad. No salary.&#13;
Selec1lon: by Philip L. Livingston,&#13;
call 553·2295 or come to room 210 In 1&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Cl... llied Ad Chafgea:&#13;
F,.: Stul;,lent $da. 20 wot'da or uncllr&#13;
coe-ume run. (25 centa cI'lIl8I&#13;
every additional 10 WOftIs or&#13;
$ '.50 = For each additional running ...&#13;
first time.&#13;
$1.00: Non-student ads, 20 wordI or4lftll!l.:i&#13;
per issue. (25 cents charge for f!1IfIf'&#13;
additional 10 words or undlf'.'&#13;
To place a classified ad phone 553-2lIIa"&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOUI&#13;
Come Today See 'IJun.&#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, September 7&#13;
First Day of Program Changes in Main Place.&#13;
Thursday, September 8&#13;
Constitution Meeting 2:00 p.m. in WLLC D-174, P.S.C.A. office.&#13;
Friday, September 9&#13;
Ranger Meeting for everyone interested in helping the student&#13;
newspaper rise about the heap. 3:00 p.m. in WLLC D-174.&#13;
Last Day for payment of fees without penalty.&#13;
Open Registration Ends.&#13;
Saturday, September 10&#13;
Dance with fever at 9:00 p.m. in Union Square. Parkside Activities&#13;
Board's first dance of the year. Admission is $1.00 for students and&#13;
$1.50 for guests.&#13;
Sunday, September 11&#13;
Vet's Club Meeting free beer and Discussion of Current Legislation,&#13;
Upcoming Dance, Pool T-ournament, and Christmas Party. 4:00 p.m.&#13;
in Union Square.&#13;
Monday, September 12&#13;
Late payment penalty of $20.00 in effect for fees and tuition.&#13;
Tuesday, September 13&#13;
Rosh Hashanah - Jewish New Year celebration.&#13;
Full Moon share it with a friend.&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee Meeting 3:00 p.m. in WLLC D-174.&#13;
Pre-med Club Meeting 7:30 p.m. in the Library Faculty-Staff Lounge.&#13;
Elizabeth Steffen, (Ob-gyn.) M.0. will speak about her experiences&#13;
aboard hospital ship HOPE (slide presentation). All interested&#13;
persons welcome.&#13;
Rosh Hashanah - Jewish New Year celebration.&#13;
Full Moon share it with a friend.&#13;
Wednesday, September 14&#13;
Rangers are Out for the latest in fresh and vibrant information, the&#13;
student newspaper with ideas but not enough writers. Available&#13;
throughout the campus in distribution boxes.&#13;
Coffeehouse Louise Dimiceli (Chicago) will sing in Union 104-106&#13;
from 2:00 p.m . to 5:00 p.m. Admission is Free! Wine will be served.&#13;
Talk- Discussion 7:30 p.m. Chi-Rio Center-campus ministry 3825-12&#13;
Street, across from Parkside's track on Highway "E". Rev. Richard J.&#13;
Schlenker, Ph. D. Topic: "Old-New Church?" "Our-Your Church?"&#13;
Friday, September 16&#13;
Film Fritz the Cat 8:00 p.m. in Union Cinema. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
Old fur trader&#13;
trails on display&#13;
An exhibit of color photographs tracing the routes of the 17th and&#13;
18th century fur traders who were the first European explorers of the&#13;
Great Lakes and the Mississippi Valley will be on display in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Communications Arts Gallery&#13;
through September 15.&#13;
The display, titled "The Fur Trade: Northern Border/Rivers South,"&#13;
consists of 28 photographs by Tom Oates of Webster College, St.&#13;
Louis, who traced the routes of the traders through still-wild rivers&#13;
and forests to recapture the countryside photographically as the&#13;
traders first saw it.&#13;
Gallery hours for the show are 10:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Aug. 30 and&#13;
31 and Sept. 1; 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sep_t. 2; noon to 5 and 7 to 10&#13;
p.m. Sept. 6, 7, 13 and 14; and noon to 5 p.m. Sept. 8, 12, and 15.&#13;
The exhibit is sponsored by the State Historical Society's Area&#13;
Research Center at Parkside and the Parkside Library-Learning&#13;
Center. After its run at Parkside, the show will go to other state&#13;
campuses with Area Research Centers and to galleries of the&#13;
Wisconsin Federation of Museums. Following -the traveling&#13;
exhibition, the show will be on permanent display at the Historical&#13;
Society's fur trade complex at Prairie du Chien.&#13;
NEW LIBRARY /LEARNING CENTER HOURS&#13;
(September 6 - December 15, 1977)&#13;
Monday - Thursday 7:45 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.&#13;
Friday 7:45 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.&#13;
Saturday 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.&#13;
Sunday 1:30p.m. - 12:00p.m .&#13;
The Library/Learning Center will be closed on September 5 and&#13;
November 24.&#13;
FEVER, o~e of the best rock groups in Wisconsin, will play for the first&#13;
dance of the year in Union Square at 9:00 p.m. on Saturday,&#13;
September 10. The dance is sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
Philosophy Society&#13;
seeks members&#13;
The Parkside Philosophical Society is an organization in its second&#13;
year. Last year it saw promising turn outs for its many lectures and&#13;
group discussions, they have hopes for an even better second year.&#13;
Chairperson Robert Hansen said that a meeting will be scheduled&#13;
soon to elect new officers and to discuss the coming year's activities.&#13;
Last year the Society offered several of today's top philosophers&#13;
discussing a variety of topics ranging from the existence of Cod to&#13;
experimentation with children. All of these lectures were free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
When ·asked about the attendance last year Hansen remarked that&#13;
"although it was good it could have been better. Our publicity fell&#13;
through at times, also I feel that for too long the term philosophy has&#13;
been related to the term "high brow." People and students in general,&#13;
are scared off when they near the words "philosophical society".&#13;
Tbey think that even if they did attend they wouldn't understand&#13;
what was going on so they don't even try us out." What does on in&#13;
reality are discussions and lectures geared to what the Parkside&#13;
community will find both interesting and understandable.&#13;
According to Hansen, the Society hopes to continue this kind of&#13;
service to Parkside in an effort to promote philosophical discussion at&#13;
Parkside. He feels that philosophy can play an active role in today's&#13;
society, as a means to find answers to the many problems that face&#13;
people today. "The biggest problem that faces Parkside is its inability&#13;
to get student support for student groups. This may be a problem that&#13;
the society can solve," said Hansen. Hansen said the Society offers&#13;
only those lectures or activities that the students show an interest in .&#13;
If you are interested at all, he said, watch the Ranger for the date and&#13;
time of the Parkside Philosophical Society's first meeting.&#13;
It's no secret:&#13;
Ranger needs&#13;
a&#13;
sports editor&#13;
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TRAVEI. AGENCY&#13;
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Your activity will be limited to the Pll1llldt&#13;
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FNture Editor - Assigns feature •lorlll&#13;
and photograph assignments. s.r.. on Editorial Board and makes declalone on guest editorials and emergenctee. Mull&#13;
have both of the following 1111111 Ille·&#13;
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Selection: by Editorial Board. Submit 1&#13;
letter of Intention to Phllip L. LMngaton,&#13;
Immediately. Prior newspaper exp, l'lllpM&#13;
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Salary - $15.00 to $35.00 per WIik&#13;
Photographera - Must prOYlde own~ equipment. Temporary darl&lt;room untll ,_&#13;
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Selection: by Philip L. Livingston, l:dllll&#13;
call 553-2295 or come to room 2110 In Tlllell&#13;
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Clu1llled Ad Cha,vee&#13;
Free: Student ads, 20 wotda or under•&#13;
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WEDDING&#13;
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