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              <text>TheParkside,--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 12 Wednesday, December 1, 1976&#13;
Student, Spanish Center head&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
What do Parkside students do besides attend&#13;
classes? Daniel Ramirez, in addition to carrying 12&#13;
credits this semester is the Executive Interim&#13;
Director of The Spanish Center for Racine,&#13;
Kenosha, and Walworth counties plus the director of&#13;
the Drug and Alcohol Abuse program in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha counties. Daniel became the Interim&#13;
Director on October .21, the day after the former&#13;
director was relieved of his responsibilities. He was&#13;
chosen at a board meeting on OCtober 20.&#13;
Daniel said, "I knew about the meeting and that&#13;
the directorship was in question, but I did not know&#13;
that I was being considered. I had classes at that&#13;
time, so I did not attend."&#13;
Daniel's classes include Crime and Juvenile&#13;
Delinquency, Psychology of Personality, General&#13;
Psychology, and an independent study course in&#13;
education. For his independent study course he&#13;
works " ... with Latino kids which were dropouts&#13;
from high school that I plugged into the Walden III&#13;
program and keep tabs on."&#13;
He needs nine more credits to graduate. Daniel&#13;
remarked, "I hope to graduate next semester with a&#13;
degree in Sociology. I've managed to accumulate a&#13;
pretiy decent grade average up to this semester. I&#13;
believe, if I'm not mistaken it's 3.36. I'm a graduate&#13;
of The Union Grove Prison Farm, coming right&#13;
from the prison farm to Parkside." That was on&#13;
June 5, 1972.&#13;
In August of' 1973, The Spanish Center, in conjunction&#13;
with The Mental Health Assn. spent $1,300&#13;
to train Daniel in Drug and Alcohol counseling.&#13;
After five months, he was successfully evaluated.&#13;
That was the beginning of the Spanish Center's&#13;
Drug and Alcohol Abuse program.&#13;
Prior to April of 1975 the program worked out of&#13;
the Mental Health Assn.'s building. Since then the&#13;
office has been at the Spanish Center in Racine.&#13;
"That was a hectic situation," he said in reference&#13;
to the move in April of '75. "Before I had direction&#13;
and supervision from people who were experienced&#13;
in those areas. I then had to assume all the&#13;
responsibility myself."&#13;
In1976, the Drug and Alcohol Abuse program was&#13;
given $41,500 and branched out to Kenosha county.&#13;
Daniel then became the official director. "Before, I&#13;
didn't nave anyone tu direct, except me, ··com.&#13;
mented Daniel. This year the program has a full&#13;
time counselor in Kenosha, Juan Mendiola and a&#13;
counselor working thirty hours a week in Racine,&#13;
Jose Laborda. Daniel is also a part time counselor&#13;
and Ruby Guardiola is the secretary.&#13;
"The reason we have grown, I feel, is because we&#13;
have provided the services that were obviously&#13;
needed in the community." The Spanish Center&#13;
employs about 16 people for the three counties.&#13;
Daniel said; "It also utilizes volunteers in the&#13;
community, students from the Youth Employment&#13;
program, and adults from the Win program. The&#13;
Win program primarily deals with people on&#13;
welfare. They're trying to develop jobs for them,&#13;
trying to get people off the welfare roles. We also&#13;
get people from the Urban League and OJT, on the&#13;
job training. II •&#13;
The main component of the Spanish Center is the&#13;
Man Power program which is funded through&#13;
CETA, &lt;I ••• which is just like the Win program.".&#13;
The second largest component is the Drug and&#13;
Alcohol Abuse program. Another component is the&#13;
Outreach program which provides transportation,&#13;
translations, court interpretation and information,&#13;
and referral for all social necessities, including&#13;
legal needs of clients.&#13;
"We serve as a liason person for people who&#13;
either don't know their rights or those who are&#13;
unfamiliar with the social and welfare systems&#13;
requirement mechanisms," Daniel explained.&#13;
Daniel has been extremely busy since taking the&#13;
directorship in October. It was an unusual situation&#13;
in which to be placed and one that he had thought&#13;
would be temporary, however he said, "There is&#13;
bope that the position will be filled by the beginning&#13;
of next year and I intend to throw my hat into the&#13;
ring."&#13;
Since taking the position as Interim Executive&#13;
Director, he has found that "There are a tremendous&#13;
amount of things that need to be done in the&#13;
community. Agencies and individuals are coming&#13;
up and offering their support and assistance and&#13;
asking for support and assistance. There are a&#13;
tremendous amount of people wbo have ideas on&#13;
what the Spanish Center should be doing and they&#13;
are surprised to see that their ideas are usually in&#13;
tune with my desires."&#13;
Daruel Ramirez&#13;
Art fair slated&#13;
Ninety exhibitors including 19&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
students will display their wares&#13;
at tbe second annual holiday Arts&#13;
and Crafts Fair to be held at&#13;
Parkside from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
on Saturday, Dec. 4.&#13;
The fair, sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board, will&#13;
be located on all three levels of&#13;
Main Place. It will be free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Exhibitors are limited to a&#13;
maximum price of $SO for anyone&#13;
item. Tbe Burger Shoppe adjoining&#13;
lower level Main Place&#13;
will be open throughout the fair.&#13;
llems being offered include&#13;
ceramics, jewelry, enameled&#13;
sterling, candles, needlework,&#13;
dolls, acrylics, macrame, metal&#13;
sculpture, toys, clay crafts, oil&#13;
painting, pottery, handwoven&#13;
rugs, stained glass, stationery,&#13;
coin and spoon jewetry. watercolors,&#13;
decoupage, leathercrafts,&#13;
batik, dough art, dried Dower&#13;
arrangements. lapidary, prints,&#13;
rosemaling, natwa wall plaques,&#13;
fabrics and weaving.&#13;
Flu&#13;
today&#13;
• •&#13;
»sccinetum&#13;
A swine Ou vaccine clinic is&#13;
scheduled at Parkside from 10&#13;
a.m. to 6 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
Dec. I, in the Greenquisl Hall&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
The free clinic is open to&#13;
Parkside studenta, faculty and&#13;
staff and membel1l of their&#13;
families. The vaccine will not be&#13;
administered to anyone under 18.&#13;
The clinic will be spoIlJOI'ed by&#13;
the Campus Health Service in&#13;
cooperation With the Kenosha&#13;
City Health Department.&#13;
Both monovalent and bivalent&#13;
vaccine will be available.&#13;
PYA&#13;
breaks tradition&#13;
by Mary Ohmer&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action, PYA, Is giving&#13;
students practical experlence in the aocIal and&#13;
behavioral sciences. Itis a new internship program&#13;
at Parkside which differs significantly from the&#13;
traditional approaches to academic learning. It&#13;
offers a learning experience for the studenta, and&#13;
while the students are working and learning, the&#13;
Racine, Kenosha, and Walworth counties are&#13;
benefitting from their work.&#13;
Joyce Fite Hamlin, director of the prOtlram, says&#13;
that through this program students are placed with&#13;
a community service agency in either of the three&#13;
counties. The student will work with the agency for&#13;
a full year, receiving 30 academic credit.!.&#13;
"I see this as a great cbance for the student to&#13;
grow," says Ms. Hamlin. "It Is an opportunity to&#13;
actually apply the theories learned in the classroom&#13;
to problems in the community."&#13;
Twenty-nine students and ten agencies take part&#13;
in this project. Now in us first year it will receive&#13;
funding from Action, a federal agency, for three&#13;
years. In the future PYA may include different&#13;
agencies than it does now, and It Is hoped thallt will&#13;
attract more student volunteers.&#13;
The agencies now participating in the program&#13;
are COordinated Oilld Care, Innovative Youth&#13;
Services, Kenosha Partners, Inc., Radne's&#13;
Northside Redevelopment, Racine County Planning&#13;
Council, Racine County Public Defenders OffIce,&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin Housing Corporation in&#13;
Burlington, Tri-County Library Council, and Ibe&#13;
Urban League of Racine.&#13;
The students are full-time workers at these&#13;
agencies and are required to keep journals of their&#13;
(OnI,m"ed on PO 1&#13;
. YA' elude left to&#13;
Students participating m P ~ b 11'Pau11De&#13;
right, standing, Tom Moore, June. c e , Lavin,&#13;
Moffat, Krista Wiles, Carol Dawsod·~"&lt;:~Neu&#13;
Rutb Rudawski, Jim Ortiz, Sue He, MCCoY'&#13;
Ann Switzer, Steve Klinkhammer, :ree':md pai&#13;
Glen Christiansen, Mary Kapre ~ bt ByrOD&#13;
Carravetta and, kneellDg, left to g,&#13;
Merrick, Jean Thomson, Shal'Oll KraDIIeoberg,&#13;
Kent Cairo, Marla Hoffman, Esther Bartscher,&#13;
CbrlsllDe Meyer, and Joyce Fite HamJln, Director.&#13;
Interns not present wben the pboto was laken are&#13;
Uoda Adams, Faye Jackson, David Johnson,&#13;
Marsba Laws, Arlene MartIn, and LInda Mertens.&#13;
The Parkside--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Vol. V. No. 12 Wednesday, December 1, 1976&#13;
Student, Spanish Center head&#13;
by Wendy Miller&#13;
What do Parkside students do besides attend&#13;
classes? Daniel Ramirez, in addition to carrying 12&#13;
credits this semester is the Executive Interim&#13;
Director of The Spanish Center for Racine&#13;
Kenosha, and Walworth counties plus the director of&#13;
the Drug and Alcohol Abuse program in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha counties. Daniel became the Interim&#13;
Director on October .21, the day after the former&#13;
director was relieved of his responsibilities. He was&#13;
chosen at a board meeting on October 20.&#13;
Daniel said, "I knew about the meeting and that&#13;
the directorship was in question, but I did not know&#13;
that I was being considered. I had classes at that&#13;
time, so I did not attend."&#13;
Daniel's classes include Crime and Juvenile&#13;
Delinquency, Psychology of Personality, General&#13;
Psychology, and an independent study course in&#13;
education. For his independent study course he&#13;
works " ... with Latino kids which were dropouts&#13;
from high school that I plugged into the Walden III&#13;
program and keep tabs on."&#13;
He needs nine more credits to graduate. Daniel&#13;
remarked, "I hope to graduate next semester with a&#13;
degree in Sociology. I've managed to accumulate a&#13;
pretty decent grade average up to this semester. I&#13;
believe, if I'm not mistaken it's 3.36. I'm a graduate&#13;
of The Union Grove Prison Farm, coming right&#13;
from the prison farm to Parkside." That was on&#13;
June 5, 1972.&#13;
In August of 1973, The Spanish Center, in conjunction&#13;
with The Mental Health Assn. spent $1,300&#13;
to train Daniel in Drug and Alcohol counseling.&#13;
After five months, he was successfully evaluated.&#13;
That was the beginning of the Spanish Center's&#13;
Drug and Alcohol Abuse program.&#13;
Prior to April of 1975 the program worked out of&#13;
the Mental Health Assn. 's building. Since then the&#13;
office has been at the Spanish Center in Racine.&#13;
"That was a hectic situation," he said in reference&#13;
to the move in April of '75. "Before I had direction&#13;
and supervision from people who were experienced&#13;
in those areas. I then had to assume all the&#13;
responsibility myself.''&#13;
In 1976, the Drug and Alcohol Abuse program was&#13;
given $41,500 and branched out to Kenosha county.&#13;
Daniel then became the official director. "Before, I&#13;
didn t nave anyone to direct, except me, ··commented&#13;
Daniel. This year the program has a full&#13;
time counselor in Kenosha, Juan Mendiola and a&#13;
counselor working thirty hours a week in Racine,&#13;
Jose Laborda. Daniel is also a part time counselor&#13;
and Ruby Guardiola is the secretary.&#13;
"The reason we have grown, I feel, is because we&#13;
have provided the services that were obviously&#13;
needed in the community." The Spanish Center&#13;
employs about 16 people for the three counties.&#13;
Daniel said; "It also utilizes volunteers in the&#13;
community, students from the Youth Employment&#13;
program, and adults from the Win program. The&#13;
Win program primarily deals with people on&#13;
welfare. They're trying to develop jobs for them,&#13;
trying to get people off the welfare roles. We also&#13;
get people from the Urban League a1_1d OJT, on the&#13;
job training."&#13;
The main component of the Spanish Center is the&#13;
Man Power program which is funded through&#13;
CETA, " ... which is just like the Win program.".&#13;
The second largest component is the Drug and&#13;
Alcohol Abuse program. Another component is the&#13;
Outreach program which provides transportation,&#13;
translations, court interpretation and information,&#13;
and referral for all social necessities, including&#13;
legal needs of clients.&#13;
"We serve as a liason person for people who&#13;
either don't know their rights or those who are&#13;
unfamiliar with the social and welfare systems&#13;
requirement mechanisms," Daniel explained.&#13;
Daniel has been extremely busy since taking the&#13;
directorship in October. It was an unusual situation&#13;
in which to be placed and one that he had thought&#13;
would be temporary, however he said, "There is&#13;
hope that the position will be filled by the beginning&#13;
of next year and I intend to throw my hat into the&#13;
ring."&#13;
Since taking the position as Interim Executive&#13;
Director, he has found that "There are a tremendous&#13;
amount of things that need to be done in the&#13;
community. Agencies and individuals are coming&#13;
up and offering their support and assistance and&#13;
asking for support and assistance. There are a&#13;
tremendous amount of people who have ideas on&#13;
what the Spanish Center should be doing and they&#13;
are surprised to see that their ideas are usually in&#13;
~ne with my desires."&#13;
Dan tel Ramirez&#13;
Art fair slated • rinety exhibitors including 19&#13;
University of Wisco~in-Parkside&#13;
students will display their wares&#13;
at the second annual holiday Arts&#13;
and Crafts Fair to be held at&#13;
Parkside from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
on Saturday, Dec. 4.&#13;
arrangem ts, lapidary, p n ,&#13;
rosemallng, na all plaqu •&#13;
The fair, sponsored b} the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board, will&#13;
be located on all three levels of&#13;
Main Place. It will be free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Exhibitors are limited to a&#13;
maximum price of $50 for any ooe&#13;
item. The Burger Shoppe djoining&#13;
lower level Main Place&#13;
will be open throughout the fair.&#13;
Items being offered includ.-&#13;
ceramics, jewelry, enameled&#13;
sterling, candles, needlework,&#13;
dolls, acrylics, macrame, metal&#13;
sculpture, toys, clay crafts, oil&#13;
painting, pottery, hand oven&#13;
rugs, stained glass, stationery,&#13;
coin and spoon jewelry, water·&#13;
colors, decoupage, leathercrafts,&#13;
batik, dough art, dried flo er&#13;
fabric and .,..,.,,..,, ...&#13;
Flu&#13;
today&#13;
• • vaccination&#13;
A me flu vacc&#13;
scheduled nt Par d&#13;
PYA&#13;
breaks tradi ion&#13;
by aryOhmer&#13;
t&#13;
. YA · elude left to&#13;
Students participating m P m ' uline&#13;
right standing Tom Moore, June Mitchell, p~vin&#13;
Moff~t, Krista' Wiles, Carol Danis, _ Mary Neu'&#13;
R th R da ki Jim Ortiz Sue Hodel, Gary ' u u ws , • 0 en McCoy&#13;
Ann Switzer, Steve Klinkhammer, liore and Pat . M ry Kapre an,&#13;
Merrick, Jean Thomson, Sharon Krankenberg,&#13;
Kent Cairo, Marla Hoffman, Esther Burtscher,&#13;
Christine Meyer, and Joyce Fite Hamlin, Director.&#13;
Interns not present when the photo was taken are&#13;
Linda Adams, Faye Jackson, David Johnson,&#13;
Marsha Laws, Arlene Martin, and Linda Mertens.&#13;
Services, Kenosha Partners, Inc., Racine'&#13;
Northside Redevelopment, Raclne County Pl nuig&#13;
Council, Racine County Public Defeoo r Office.&#13;
Southeastern isconsin Housing Corporation in&#13;
Burlington, Tri-County Library Council, and th&#13;
Urban League of Racine.&#13;
The students are full-time wo kers at the&#13;
agencies arid are required to ke"? jow-nals of their&#13;
COIi! nuf'llon PO 1&#13;
Glen Christiansen, a ·ght Byron&#13;
Carravetta and, kneeling, left to n ' &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1. 1976&#13;
---EDITOR IAL/OPINION&#13;
Lucy's basic skills testing commended&#13;
by Mlck Andersen&#13;
areas of curriculum need attention, how to improve classroom instruction&#13;
and how to best allocate the resources at their disposal."&#13;
Lucey is also correct in trying to reestablish the state superintendent's&#13;
office as responsible for overseeing the promotion of uniformity and&#13;
quality of evluation and instruction.&#13;
There is a measure of truth too, to his critics' charge that such&#13;
comparison's between school districts are unfair. It would be unfair&#13;
for basic skills testing to degenerate into a blaming match, where&#13;
school administrators quake when their districts fall below the 50&#13;
percent or "average" mark. Clearly other factors, such as parents'&#13;
educational level, social class, and economic standing, interact withl&#13;
the district educational structure to yield, at best, an indirect measure&#13;
of academic achievement.&#13;
Governor Lucey's recent proposal to implement basic skills testing&#13;
for all 4th, 8th, and 12thgraders should be commended as a major step&#13;
by the state towards reestab1ishing itself as \he most effective&#13;
guarantor of educational excellence. 'lbe proposal could also have the&#13;
eftect 01 warding off increasing federal Intrusion In the operation of&#13;
local school districts.&#13;
However, the Governor's initiative m....t be seen only as a hopeful&#13;
half-&lt;ltep where clearly a full one is needed.&#13;
A Baslc Need&#13;
What ma .... educational sense can also make good politics. In a&#13;
Milwaukee Joumal editortal a few days ago it was noted that,&#13;
"historically and legally (education is) a state responsibility." Lucey&#13;
can claim, with justification, his program reflects a majority opinion&#13;
in the United States, an opinion based on the uneasy feeling that&#13;
decllnlng national test scores over the last ten years are indicative of&#13;
an over...ll decline in the quality of education. A current Gallup poll&#13;
shows fully two-thirds of the American people support the establishment&#13;
of standardt2ed exams as a requisite for receiving a diploma.&#13;
The decline in the national test scores of high school seniors is an&#13;
often cited effect of basic skills deficiency. Universities and colleges&#13;
the nation over have been grappling with ways to improve the quality&#13;
of education in the face of such fundamental deficits. Given a fixed&#13;
amount for expenditure, institutions of higher learning have two&#13;
alternatives to achieve educational quality, either the implementation&#13;
or a compensatory basic skills program, or the raising of admission&#13;
standards.&#13;
These rather bleak options are not without cost to the community&#13;
erther-high admission standards mean fewer having the opportunity&#13;
to receive a college education, while refusal to fund expensive compensatory&#13;
programming denies to others the right to a higher level of&#13;
education.&#13;
Arguements beside poinl&#13;
Both Lucey and his critics miss a crucial point however: tI!~&#13;
question is not whether the comparisons are fair, it goes beyond that,&#13;
to whether or not they are appropriate.&#13;
Evaluation by norm level is a tricky business; witness the overall&#13;
decline in national norms over the past decade and half. Traditionally&#13;
the business of education has not been realistically self-evaluative.&#13;
Content to drift along until public pressure forces change, the&#13;
educational bureaucracy has forgone the structural changes needed to&#13;
bring about consistent efforts at upgrading performance. Mter all,&#13;
norm levels only measure typical, generalized performance; they are&#13;
not reflective of potential nor specific skills.&#13;
A better method&#13;
A far wiser method, I believe, would be for the state to hegin&#13;
developing criterion reference testing (what skills are essential for&#13;
the high school graduate to perform) and targeting the specific&#13;
deficiencies present in every district, to be corrected in say, five&#13;
years.&#13;
Criterion referenced testing differs from norm testing in this fundamental&#13;
respect: norm levels give rank percentile in a generalized&#13;
subject (ie: Johnny scores in the 78th percentile in math). However,&#13;
norm levels do not evaluate specific skills (at what level can Johnny&#13;
calculate fractions, decimals, word problems, etc). Criterion&#13;
reference testing facilitates the pinpointing of skill deficiency.&#13;
Criterion testing, unlike norm levels, are constrained but .liot condemned&#13;
by current state-wide levels of performance. It WOUldallow&#13;
educators and administrators a more indepth analysis of deficiency at&#13;
the district level than is presently proposed, while realizing Lucey's&#13;
basic concern for the biggest educational bang for the taxpayer's&#13;
buck.&#13;
While the possibility of unfair comparison of school districts&#13;
remains; the problem of defensive reaction to testing by insecure&#13;
school authorities can be substantially lessened. Administrators can&#13;
rightly point out that, to date, skill proficiency has been only indirectly&#13;
related to high school graduation. With criterion reference testing the&#13;
Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction would have at its disposal&#13;
the hest information with which to generate consistently higher levels&#13;
of performance.&#13;
Lucey's Proposal&#13;
The Lucey proposal calls for the uniform testing of three grade&#13;
levels in reading, mathematics, science, and social studies. It is&#13;
assumed that these tests would be typical of most basic skills&#13;
examinations. a standardized objective test designed to measure&#13;
mastery of essential skills. From these test results, Lucey believes&#13;
norms would he developed to allow comparisons hetween school&#13;
districts.&#13;
What's the cost? About twice that of current testing programs, for a&#13;
tota1 of $285,000.This is a fraction of the $1.47billion spent each year in&#13;
Wisconsin for elementary and secondary public schooling.&#13;
The gains from such a program are numerous. The uniform composition,&#13;
duplication, administration, and compilation of the test data&#13;
will make comparison and generalization of data across district lines&#13;
more feasible. Currenily this information is not readily available as&#13;
the wide variety of testing programs make standardization difficult.&#13;
Lucey is correct when he stated, "It is a small price to pay to help&#13;
teachers, administrators, and school board members decide what&#13;
~~ANGER&#13;
T1l4 ".rUille ........ 1. ~ ....... 1IIKftU"1., ,......-. •• 1•• of tNM ..... by&#13;
.., ................ U"lventfy .. ... .~. t.e"",, ....... ".b...........&#13;
• "c••,lll.".'."" ~.. ... •• Ial, Par1l.~ ......... 1 ... 1..1... , 'U-2211;&#13;
,................ ltI ....... ...Icy -&#13;
N..-w- W42t$.&#13;
e •••••• 0.1111_. alllH'."" ••• -'&#13;
IOITotI·IN.CMII'. J-'M .....&#13;
IUII.,U MAttAO'.' e.-y .......&#13;
AOV•• TI"". MA.....O.. T_ c....,.&#13;
..1., C~D'''.TotI· erwc. W..-.&#13;
OI .... TM,,,TS&#13;
a-.*"".......~ .. ".... McK...uy&#13;
'IATU.' lOtTO_&#13;
,NItTI IDITO.&#13;
V,IAOI 10ITO.,&#13;
l... ' ......&#13;
........, I. ---,.-eIlI. 111I ..,..&#13;
co ..., IDITOa J..........&#13;
"MOTO • Ot TOa&#13;
elaCU"A""&#13;
IT"" • ..,." Mil.." TefTl ...--&#13;
.ay""".• ..." H... "' .... ChrIS Cia",", 'homn hv.etl",&#13;
0.... C.,..... ~ .............. M.ky Ka, 011",_. Larry ~Y ..... 11H.............&#13;
....... Mall ....... J.M ....... ......,., ~ ... L1.... KJI.cItMft., Karl .. UFCMIIl'iltr. Judy ,"'*....Ie............. 1lttlI..., L. Ll"........ DebIM 5"-,""&#13;
Gruhl: DeRanger vulgar&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Congratulations! The article&#13;
tiiled "Birth Control Balled Up"&#13;
which was printed in the&#13;
November 17 issue of your erotic&#13;
DeRANGER supplement hit an&#13;
all-time low for vulgarity. It was&#13;
the diarrhea of a polluted mind&#13;
wbose owner should be in the&#13;
custody of a psychiatrist and not&#13;
pounding a typewriter. Debasing&#13;
human sexuality is neither satire&#13;
or entertaining.&#13;
What's the big idea? Are you&#13;
trying to find out how much&#13;
pornographic garbage you can&#13;
dish out to your readers? You&#13;
have freedom of the press and&#13;
don't know how to use it. Obviously&#13;
there are some&#13;
sophomoric smart alees running&#13;
RANGER who don't know the&#13;
difference between good taste&#13;
and bad.&#13;
Now that you've provoked me&#13;
into writing, hear this! Why don't&#13;
you campus politicians do less&#13;
bitching and report more about&#13;
the good things that are happening&#13;
at Parkside?&#13;
Suggestions: Profiles about&#13;
some distinguished faculty&#13;
people ... about the projects&#13;
supported by grants which are&#13;
going on ... and about the accomplishments&#13;
of students who&#13;
are doing interesling things inside&#13;
and out of school. Surely&#13;
there must be more going on at&#13;
Parkside than what happens in&#13;
the Phy Ed building.&#13;
Another suggestion: Stop&#13;
harping about "The Ad·&#13;
ministration " and what those&#13;
people do and don't do for you.&#13;
I've seen the facilities in the new&#13;
Union building and realize what a&#13;
rough time you have out there&#13;
and you even have to pay for the&#13;
food and drinks' in the cafeteria.&#13;
continued on IXI· 3&#13;
Fire fighting students thanked&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On Friday, November 19, 1976&#13;
at approximately 3:10 p.m., the&#13;
campus experienced a grass fire&#13;
west of the Union parking lot on&#13;
the outer loop road. The fire&#13;
caused a minimum amount of&#13;
damage only because of the ef•&#13;
forts of the students of this&#13;
campus who assisted in contrulling&#13;
the fire until the Somers&#13;
Fire Department arrived.&#13;
I do not know who these&#13;
students were, however, the&#13;
C~mpus Security Department&#13;
WISheSto thank each and every&#13;
one of them for the assistance&#13;
that they gave and also the&#13;
Physical Plant employees who&#13;
were on the scene.&#13;
I have received nothing but&#13;
compliments from the Somers&#13;
Fire Department and' how surprised&#13;
they were that the fire was&#13;
fairly well under control when&#13;
they arrived at the scene.&#13;
Again, to all of those whO&#13;
assisted, a hearty "Thank You"&#13;
for a job well done.&#13;
SincerelY,&#13;
R.D. Brinkmann, Director&#13;
Campus Security Department&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976 i Jr.. The Parkside&#13;
""'/&#13;
RANGER&#13;
--EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
Lucy's basic skills testing commended&#13;
by Mick Andersen&#13;
Governor Lucey's recent proposal to implement basic skills testing&#13;
for all 4th, 8th, and 12th graders should be commended as a major step&#13;
by th tate towards reestablishing itself as µte most effective&#13;
guarantor of educational excellence. The proposal could also have the&#13;
effect of warding off increasing federal intnwon in the operation of&#13;
l l hool districts.&#13;
However, the Governor's initiative must be seen only as a hopeful&#13;
half~ p wh re clearly a full one is needed.&#13;
A Basic Need&#13;
What makes educational sense can also make good politics. In a&#13;
Milwaukee Journal editorial a few days ago it was noted that,&#13;
• historically and legally {education is) a state responsibility." Lucey&#13;
n claun, with justification, his program reflects a majority opinion&#13;
in the United States, an opinion based on the uneasy feeling that&#13;
declin national test scores over the last ten years are indicative of&#13;
an over-all decline in the quality of education. A current Gallup poll&#13;
fully twerthirds of the American people support the establishm&#13;
nt of tandardized exams as a requisite for receiving a diploma.&#13;
Th d line in the national test cores of high school seniors is an&#13;
t n ·ted ffect of basic skills deficiency. Universities and colleges&#13;
th tion over have been grappling with ways to improve the quality&#13;
u ation in th face of such fundamental deficits. Given a fixed&#13;
run unt for expenditure, institutions of higher learning have two&#13;
tern ti to achieve educational quality, either the implementation&#13;
compensatory ba ic skills program, or the raising of admission&#13;
ndards.&#13;
Th r ther bleak options are not without cost to the community&#13;
th -high admi ion tandards mean fewer having the opportunity&#13;
to re Iv a college education, while refusal to fund expensive commatory&#13;
pr ramming denie to others the right to a higher level of&#13;
u ation.&#13;
Lucey's Proposal&#13;
The Lucey proposal calls for the uniform testing of three grade&#13;
l els in reading, mathematics, science, and social studies. It is&#13;
that th tests would be typical of most basic skills&#13;
aminations - a standardized objective test designed to measure&#13;
mastery of essential kills. From these test results, Lucey believes&#13;
norms would be developed to allow comparisons between school&#13;
di tricts.&#13;
What' the cost? About twice that of current testing programs, for a&#13;
total of 285,000. This is a fraction of the $1.47 billion spent each year in&#13;
W1scon n for elementary and secondary public schooling.&#13;
The galns from such a program are numerous. The uniform compo&#13;
tion, duplication, administration, and compilation of the test data&#13;
ill make comparison and generalization of data across district lines&#13;
m feasible. Currently this information is not readily available as&#13;
th wid variety of testing programs make standardization difficult.&#13;
Lu y is correct when he stated, "It is a small price to pay to help&#13;
ch , administrators. and school board members decide what&#13;
areas of curriculum need attention, how to improve classroom instruction&#13;
and how to best allocate the resources at their disposal."&#13;
Lucey is :Uso correct in trying to ~eestablish the ~tate sup~rinte~dent's&#13;
office as responsible for overseeing the promotion of unifornuty and&#13;
quality of evluation and instruction.&#13;
There is a measure of truth too, to his critics' charge that such&#13;
comparison's between school districts are unfair. It would be unfair&#13;
for basic skills testing to degenerate into a blaming match, where&#13;
school administrators quake when their districts fall below the 50&#13;
percent or "average" mark. Clearly other factors, such as parents'&#13;
educational level, social class, and economic standing, interact with1&#13;
the district educational structure to yield, at best, an indirect measure&#13;
of academic achievement.&#13;
Arguements beside point&#13;
Both Lucey and his critics miss a crucial point however: th~&#13;
question is not whether the comparisons are fair, it goes beyond that,&#13;
to whether or not they are appropriate.&#13;
Evaluation by norm level is a tricky business; witness the overall&#13;
decline in national norms over the past decade and half. Traditionally&#13;
the business of education has not been realistically self-evaluative.&#13;
Content to drift along until public pressure forces change, the&#13;
educational bureaucracy has forgone the structural changes needed to&#13;
bring about consistent efforts at upgrading performance. After all,&#13;
norm levels only measure typical, generalized performance; they are&#13;
not reflective of potential nor specific skills·.&#13;
A better method&#13;
A far wiser method, I believe, would be for the state to begin&#13;
developing criterion reference testing (what skills are essential for&#13;
the high school graduate to perform) and targeting the specific&#13;
deficiencies present in every district, to be corrected in say, five&#13;
years.&#13;
Criterion referenced testing differs from norm testing in this fundamental&#13;
respect: norm levels give rank percentile in a generalized&#13;
subject (ie: Johnny scores in the 78th percentile in math). However,&#13;
norm levels do not evaluate specific skills (at what level can Johnny&#13;
calculate fractions, decimals, word problems, etc). Criterion&#13;
reference testing facilitates the pinpointing of skill deficiency.&#13;
Criterion testing, unlike norm levels, are constrained but uot condemned&#13;
by current state-wide levels of performance. It womd allow&#13;
educators and administrators a more indepth analysis of deficiency at&#13;
the district level than is presently proposed, while realizing Lucey's&#13;
basic concern for the biggest educational bang for the taxpayer's&#13;
buck.&#13;
While the possibility of unfair comparison of school districts&#13;
remains; the problem of defensive reaction to testing by insecure&#13;
school authorities can be substantially lessened. Acimlnistrators can&#13;
rightly point out that, to date, skill proficiency has been only indirectly&#13;
related to high school graduation. With criterion reference testing the&#13;
Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction would have at its disposal&#13;
the best information with which to generate consistently higher levels&#13;
of performance.&#13;
I Gruhl: DeRanger vulgar&#13;
)10 To the Editor: have freedom of the press and&#13;
don't know how to use it. Obviously&#13;
there are some&#13;
sophomoric smart alecs running&#13;
RANGER who don't know the&#13;
difference between good taste&#13;
and bad.&#13;
going on ... and about the accomplishments&#13;
of students who&#13;
are doing interesting things inside&#13;
and out of school. Surely&#13;
there must be more going on at&#13;
Parkside than what happens in&#13;
the PhyEd building.&#13;
-&#13;
~,, w The Parkside&#13;
..&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Congratulations! The article&#13;
titled "Birth Control Balled Up"&#13;
which was printed in the&#13;
November 17 issue of your erotic&#13;
DeRANGER supplement hit an&#13;
all-time low for vulgarity. It was&#13;
the diarrhea of a polluted mind&#13;
whose owner should be in the&#13;
custody of a psychiatrist and not&#13;
pounding a typewriter. Debasing&#13;
human sexuality is neither satire&#13;
or entertaining.&#13;
Now that you've provoked me&#13;
into writing, hear this! Why don't&#13;
you campus politicians do less&#13;
bitching and report more about&#13;
the good things that are happening&#13;
at Parkside?&#13;
Another suggestion: Stop&#13;
harping about "The Ad·&#13;
ministration" and what those&#13;
people do and don't do for you.&#13;
I've seen the facilities in the new&#13;
Union building and realize what a&#13;
rough time you have out there&#13;
and you even have to pay for the&#13;
food and drinks in the cafeteria.&#13;
IDITD• IN CMIEi' J aH • s.-1&#13;
8USIIIIU MJUtAOl•l Caltly 8tM&#13;
A0\/1.TISIIIO MAIIAGI• T-C- Nl!WS coo•otNATO• a,vce w,- 0 PA.T"'IINU&#13;
•- trat--k J- "'lcKIMlley&#13;
l'IATU!III IOITO• a...le ••- Sl•O!IITS IOITO• JM~ T-,a&#13;
M&lt;-.sarity ,...,.. • ....,.tive of tllose held by "'- ,_11. faulty ..- .clmlni1lraliCN1 of&#13;
,.,..,,... Ed,tor,al alld a.,,,,..n SU-22*7;&#13;
N1tW1,_ "34ltS.&#13;
tSAO OITO!IIS -., I ••ffl&lt;ll , BUI Bartie&#13;
COP'Y IOITO• J 1.•-&#13;
"HOTO IEDITO•&#13;
Cl•CUI.ATION s .. IIAl•-rd1&#13;
naFF&#13;
What's the big idea? Are you&#13;
trying to find out how much&#13;
pornographic garbage you can&#13;
dish out to your readers? You&#13;
Suggestions: Profiles about&#13;
some distinguished faculty&#13;
people . . . about the projects&#13;
supported by grants which are continued on pg. 3&#13;
Fire fighting students thanked&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On Friday, November 19, 1976&#13;
at approximately 3:10 p.m., the&#13;
campus experienced a grass fire&#13;
west of the Union parking lot on&#13;
the outer loop road. The fire&#13;
caused a minimum amount of&#13;
damage only because of the efforts&#13;
of the students of this&#13;
campus who assisted in controlling&#13;
the fire until the Somers&#13;
Fire Department arrived.&#13;
I do not know who these&#13;
students were, however, the&#13;
Campus Security Department&#13;
wishes to thank each and every&#13;
one of them for the assistance&#13;
that they gave and also the&#13;
Physical Plant employees who&#13;
were on the scene.&#13;
I have received nothing but&#13;
compliments from the Somers&#13;
Fire Department and· how sur·&#13;
prised they were that the fire was&#13;
fairly well under control when&#13;
they arrived at the scene.&#13;
Again, to all of those who&#13;
assisted, a hearty "Thank You"&#13;
for a job well done.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
R.D. Brinlanann, Director&#13;
Campus Security Department &#13;
Wedoesday, Dec. 1&#13;
Wargamers Club registration for mini-tournament featuring the&#13;
Game of Austerlitz in CL 140.&#13;
Swine Flu Clinic from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Greenquist concourse.&#13;
Both monovalent and bivalent vaccines will be available.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. Z&#13;
Wargamers Club hosts mini-tournament featuring the Game of Austerlitz&#13;
in CL 140.&#13;
Meeting, Society 01 Physics Students at4 p.m. in Gr. 230.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 3&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12 p.m. in WLLC 295 and&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2to 4p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Union Coffeehouse presents Dave Parker from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Movie, "Lucky Lady," plays at 7and 9:15 p.m, in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Concert Band performs at8 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Saturday, Dec .•&#13;
Arts and Crafts Fair from 10a.m.to 4 p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 5&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Chamber Singers present Medieval and&#13;
Renaissance Christmas Music at 3: 30 in the CAT.&#13;
Movie, "Lucky Lady," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 7&#13;
Concert, Parkside Percussion Ensemble performs at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
CAT.&#13;
Wedoesday, Dec. 8&#13;
Business Department Informational Coffee Hour at 2:30 p.m. in CL&#13;
111.&#13;
Mars study gets grant&#13;
The Board of Regents has&#13;
accepted a grant of $7,800 from&#13;
the National Aeronautics and&#13;
Space Administration (NASA) in&#13;
continuing support of a study&#13;
tilled "Mars: Identification,&#13;
Distribution and Signification of&#13;
Volcanic Land Forms" by&#13;
Studentsthankedcontinued&#13;
trom pg. 2&#13;
Who has the water-bed cone&#13;
essions&#13;
Nevertheless, the fact remains&#13;
that those who are inclined to&#13;
gripe the most have yet to serve&#13;
an apprenticeship in a PI'A, In&#13;
my opinion they have a heck of a&#13;
lot to learn before becoming&#13;
eligible to act or talk like a&#13;
Regent.&#13;
It ill behooves you to criticize&#13;
people who have a lot more&#13;
training and experience to draw&#13;
from than you do .... especially if&#13;
you skip classes and-or don't do&#13;
your homework. If the Creator&#13;
intended that students were to&#13;
run the school He would have&#13;
made them first.&#13;
Your time to do so will come&#13;
soon enough. And in the meantime,&#13;
Good luck! ... and keep&#13;
your paper clean!&#13;
ARTHUR GRUHL&#13;
Class of '72&#13;
Eugene 1. Smith, associate&#13;
prolessor of earth science at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The grant brings total NASA&#13;
support of Smith's study,&#13;
initiated in 1973, to $21,171. The&#13;
project is based on analysis of&#13;
photographs from the Mariner 9&#13;
. and 10 space probes and locuses&#13;
on identification of planetary&#13;
surface features.&#13;
Smith said he expects&#13;
photographs from the Viking&#13;
Mars landing to be made&#13;
available to him for study in May.&#13;
Before joining the Parkside&#13;
laculty in 1972, Smith was involved&#13;
in lunar and planetary&#13;
research at the University of New&#13;
Mexico.&#13;
The Regents also accepted $388&#13;
from various donors for the&#13;
Parkside scholarship fund and&#13;
$34.75 lor the Parkside Library.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1. 1976 3&#13;
Classified&#13;
WANTED: P"rl Time Secretary for StUdent&#13;
Group. 10 hours II weft; at $'1 50 lin hOUr&#13;
MUSI be on Work Study. See KIYtlko In WLLC&#13;
0193 or call 5532244&#13;
TYPING DONE elflden,'y .nd&#13;
professionally in my home R:enOf~ble&#13;
rates 651-6061&#13;
WANTED: Part time child care worker&#13;
working with ivveniles aVes lJ·11 in group&#13;
foster home. SJOO per hour. One year exeerreece&#13;
desired In child care work or&#13;
related tleld. Phone 6J6-J.saJ.&#13;
FOR SALE: Grey. wI'Ilte. and orange Per&#13;
sian rug 6·... xJ·.... $350. 552-9J9.1 after Sp_m.&#13;
WILe. 00 any kind of typing at nUoNible&#13;
retes For intMmatJon C." 4523313&#13;
WANTED: Female20years or older to Share&#13;
an apartment. Preferably Jr. Sr. PI\one 694·&#13;
6185 after 6 p.m.&#13;
FOR SALE: Mar.nt, 2015 recer ...er, Jim""&#13;
model" speakers. 1year old S3OO. Phone 63'&#13;
.m&#13;
NEED ride from south side of Milwaukee&#13;
Will pay for '&gt;7 gas. Call 162·6233 162_6231:&#13;
Ask for Carol.&#13;
MEOICAL SCHOOL in MexicO .cceptlng&#13;
Amef"lcan students Pr.ctlce I" .... US. WHO&#13;
listed. HEW approved • .I v.. r COUfM. I~ns&#13;
a.... Il.ble, tM Oecembt't'" ~Intmen' ''I&#13;
yo.tr .re •• calf 219.996-.200.&#13;
WILL do any kind of typing at a r.. sonable&#13;
rete. CaU 65-'·5002 anytime after 5 p.m.&#13;
il8~rr&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action&#13;
A lEW WAY TO LEARI AID SERVE:&#13;
A chance to develop yourself by serving a one-year internship&#13;
in a local community service or action project on a full-time&#13;
basis while receiving intensive in-service training, faculty&#13;
advice and support, 30 units of academic credit, and a subsistence&#13;
living income.&#13;
Several openings lor internships in community agencies will&#13;
be available starling January, 1977.Applications are required,&#13;
and inunediate response is necessary to have applications&#13;
considered.&#13;
In addition to present Parkside students, people who have&#13;
begun but not linished college elsewhere, are over 18, have&#13;
genuine commitment to a year of community improvement&#13;
effort and have above average academic ability or usable&#13;
skills are welcome to apply.&#13;
For further information and applications, write, pbone or visit&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action, University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Room 286, Tallent Hall, Kenosha, WI 53140. Phooe 553-2337,&#13;
from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. weekdays.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. l&#13;
Wargamers Club registration for mini-tournament featuring the&#13;
Game of Austerlitz in CL 140.&#13;
Swine Flu Clinic from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Greenquist concourse.&#13;
Both monovalent and bivalent vaccines will be available.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 2&#13;
Wargamers Club hosts mini-tournament featuring the Game of Austerlitz&#13;
in CL 140.&#13;
Meeting, Society of Physics Students at 4 p.m. in Gr. 230.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 3&#13;
Debate and Forensics Association meets at 12 p.m. in WLLC 295 and&#13;
1:30 p.m. in CA 233.&#13;
Chess Club meets from 2 to 4 p.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Union Coffeehouse presents Dave Parker from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cafeteria.&#13;
Movie, "Lucky Lady," playsat 7 and 9:15 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Concert Band performs at 8 p.ni. in the CAT.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 4&#13;
Arts and Crafts Fair from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 5&#13;
Wargamers Club meets from 1 to 6 p.m. in CL 140.&#13;
Concert, Parkside Chamber Singers present Medieval and&#13;
Renaissance Christmas Music at 3:30 in the CAT.&#13;
Movie, "Lucky Lady," plays at 7:30 p.m. in the Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Admission is $1.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 7&#13;
Concert, Parkside Percussion Ensemble performs at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
CAT.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 8&#13;
Business Department Informational Coffee Hour at 2:30 p.m. in CL&#13;
111.&#13;
Mars study gets grant&#13;
The Board of Regents has&#13;
accepted a grant of $7,800 from&#13;
the National Aeronautics and&#13;
Space Administration (NASA) in&#13;
continuing support of a study&#13;
titled "Mars: Identification,&#13;
Distribution and Signification of&#13;
Volcanic Land Forms" by&#13;
Students thtJ,nkedcontinued&#13;
from pg. 2&#13;
Who has the water-bed cone&#13;
essions&#13;
Nevertheless, the fact remains&#13;
that those who are inclined to&#13;
gripe the most have yet to serve&#13;
an apprenticeship in a PTA, In&#13;
my opinion they have a heck of a&#13;
lot to learn before becoming&#13;
eligible to act or talk like a&#13;
Regent.&#13;
It ill behooves you to criticize&#13;
people who have a lot more&#13;
training and experience to draw&#13;
from than you do .... especially if&#13;
you skip classes and-or don't do&#13;
your homework. If the Creator&#13;
intended that students were to&#13;
run the school He would have&#13;
made them first.&#13;
Your time to do so will come&#13;
soon enough. And in the meantime,&#13;
Good luck! ... and keep&#13;
your paper clean!&#13;
ARTHUR GRUHL&#13;
Class of '72&#13;
Eugene I. Smith, associate&#13;
professor of earth science at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The grant brings total NASA&#13;
support of Smith's study,&#13;
initiated in 1973, to $21,171. The&#13;
project is based on analysis of&#13;
photographs from the Mariner 9&#13;
· and 10 space probes and focuses&#13;
on identification of planetary&#13;
surface features.&#13;
Smith said he expects&#13;
photographs from the Viking&#13;
Mars landing to be made&#13;
available to him for study in May.&#13;
Before joining the Parkside&#13;
faculty in 1972, Smith was involved&#13;
in lunar and planetary&#13;
research at the University of New&#13;
Mexico.&#13;
The Regents also accepted $388&#13;
from various donors for the&#13;
Parkside scholarship fund and&#13;
$34.75 for the Parkside Library.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976 3&#13;
Classified WANTED : Part Time Secretary for Student&#13;
Group. 10 hours a week at S2.50 an hour&#13;
Must be on Work Study See Kiyoko in WLLC&#13;
o 193 or call 553-224'&#13;
WANTED : Part time child care worker&#13;
working w ith jweniles ages 13 17 ,n group&#13;
foster home. SJ 00 per hour One yur ex,&#13;
perience desired in child care work or&#13;
related field Phone 636-358.J&#13;
WANTED : Female20 years or older to share&#13;
an apartment. Preferably Jr. Sr. Phone 694 -&#13;
6185 after 6 p. m.&#13;
NEED ride from south sld~ of Milwaukee.&#13;
Will pay for 'i&gt; gas. Call 762-6233 762-6231 . Ask for Carol.&#13;
WILL do any kind of typing at a reasonable&#13;
rate. Call ~ -5002 anytime after 5 p.m.&#13;
TYPING DONE efllclen1tv enll&#13;
professionally ,n my home. Reasoneble&#13;
rates. 657 6068.&#13;
FOR SALE: Grey, while, end orange Pers,an&#13;
r119 6' 8" x3'4", S350. 552 -939• after Sp m&#13;
WILi: DO any kind 01 typing at reasonable&#13;
rates For ,ntormation. Call 652 3373.&#13;
FOR SALE: Marantz 2015 receiver, Jensen&#13;
model • speakers, 1 year old . ~ Phone 634&#13;
8655 .&#13;
MEDICAL SCHOOL in Mexico ecc1tptir,v&#13;
American students. Proctice In the VS, WHO&#13;
listed, HEW approved, • year course, loans&#13;
availabfe, tor December eppolntme,nt in&#13;
yovr .,, .. , call 219,996-4200.&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action&#13;
A NEW WAY TO LEARN AND SERVE:&#13;
A chance to develop yourself by serving a one-year internship&#13;
in a local community service or action project on a full-time&#13;
basis while receiving intensive in-service training, faculty&#13;
advice and support, 30 units of academic credit, and a subsistence&#13;
living income.&#13;
Several openings for internships in community agencies will&#13;
be available starting January, 1977. Applications are required,&#13;
and immediate response is necessary to have applications&#13;
considered.&#13;
In addition to present Parkside students, people who have&#13;
begun but not finished college elsewhere, are over 18, have&#13;
genuine commitment to a year of community improvement&#13;
effort and have above average academic ability or usable&#13;
skills are welcome to apply.&#13;
For further information and applications, write, phone or visit&#13;
Parkside's Year for Action, University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Room 286, Tallent Hall, Kenosha, WI 53140. Phone 553-2337,&#13;
from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. weekdays. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976&#13;
Dear Yang,&#13;
Well, I heard through the grapevine&#13;
they've locked you up again.&#13;
I tried 10 visit you in that&#13;
psych. ward but they wouldn't let me in.&#13;
Yang, you know you can't go around these days&#13;
Just being yourself!&#13;
Take my advice; if you wanllo get out&#13;
Impersonale somebody else!&#13;
Love,&#13;
Ying&#13;
P.S. I'am sorry you didn't receive&#13;
the gift I sent through the mail.&#13;
[ wrapped It with tender loving care.&#13;
It .... SO Iragile-I wrote on all six&#13;
sides: KIss This End. It got censored.&#13;
So ['II rewrap and send again.&#13;
love,&#13;
Ying&#13;
P.A.B. Film Series&#13;
Presents:&#13;
WClCYLADY&#13;
/..'-=-5-&#13;
Starring: Llza Mlnnelli&#13;
Gene Hackman&#13;
Burt Reynolds&#13;
Friday, Dec. 3 ·7:00 p.m.&#13;
9:45 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 5 . 7:30 p.m.&#13;
PLUS ON FRIDA Y&#13;
A SNEAK PREVIEW OF&#13;
THE ROCKY HORROR&#13;
PICTURE SHOW&#13;
Darkness into light.&#13;
The shadows of dawn at night.&#13;
Walking with tall men, and loving any lady.&#13;
Or trying 10 find one that might.&#13;
Very early in the morning, awaking in&#13;
darkness.&#13;
Alone&#13;
Choose your favorite color. in a wide&#13;
selection of black.&#13;
Are they the colors you lack?&#13;
Or were the colors never there?&#13;
Is it true, the rumor lurking amist&#13;
your friends?&#13;
I wonder who will take amiss,&#13;
or who you may offend.&#13;
I think I was a passing smile.&#13;
The light of the night.&#13;
But with everything I've said and done,&#13;
and know all that I've heard.&#13;
I often sit and wonder about the&#13;
dark side of the twenty-third.&#13;
Dennis John Peylon&#13;
dream No. 2&#13;
crisp old leaves pinned to wall&#13;
crumble dripping to wine tasting of You&#13;
and we walk&#13;
in shadow of sleepless dream&#13;
with running river night&#13;
speaking silence&#13;
snow on wind mind sky&#13;
flakes to silence words of we&#13;
and we laugh&#13;
in spiral memory day&#13;
within imagination love root&#13;
soiling stillness&#13;
jeffrey [. swenck!&#13;
rainy autumn equinox&#13;
pink flamingoes &amp; apple trees&#13;
the green bay packers&#13;
&amp; Your memory&#13;
vampire days &amp; two years&#13;
weeping&#13;
in the sand&#13;
jeffrey j, swencki&#13;
:::::::::::::~:::::~:.;::::.::::;:::~~::~:::;:~~:~:~::~:::~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~~:~:~~~:~~~~~~~:~:~~1:~:~:~:~~~~t~~~:1:~:~:~:~:~~:~:~:~:~:~:~;~:~:;:~:~:~:~:~:~:~!~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:::~:~:~:~:~:~:::~:~~~~~:~:~~::~~~:~~~~~:~~~~~~::~::~~:~:~:~:1:~:;:~:~:1:~:::~:~:~:;:~:;:;~~~&#13;
0'&#13;
SPECIAL RING PROMOTION&#13;
By Josten's&#13;
Date: &lt;VVed.,&#13;
Time: 10-2 5-7&#13;
Place: eNext to the J3ookj.to'te&#13;
in the c4£coue&#13;
* 5 Week Shipment * 5% Discount&#13;
* $1000 Deposit&#13;
Spirit eview&#13;
b,:1B&#13;
......&#13;
The musical g' urilt White (of Earth,&#13;
Wind &amp; FIre) aJMI W-.ler have surfaced&#13;
agam'. In these two~mposers we have&#13;
probably the ndl atill!: spiritual, and&#13;
catalysitic music IiII Ce....inly their rhythm&#13;
and blues success is Y e&lt;:epted.&#13;
Maruice While (iea4""ftiter, composer) of&#13;
Earth, Wind,&amp; FlI&lt;' etIlrt, e~titled SPIRIT&#13;
could be their beSl ' Their last, That's&#13;
THE WAYOF 11IEfI~ Vltna gold record and&#13;
was a Grammy Awa ) SPIRIT features&#13;
their hard driving AM~ .. ay", Like so many&#13;
of E, W, &amp; F songs, are treated or used&#13;
very precussively, .crIg&#13;
"'t slops or beats.&#13;
This is one of th8f ~rs (listen to the&#13;
Emotioos new alblJll, n) . E, W, &amp; F Play,,"&#13;
behind them 10 th\S II .&#13;
E W &amp; F \ntroduo'n01llerhit bound cut .&#13;
, , if g.. In&#13;
"Saturday Nile," re u IDe gOOdgek\own&#13;
guitar and bass work OlDdance to this .. is t er Iunk be one.&#13;
"On Your Fa:=.". as '" Y . at tyPe of'&#13;
song. "Blyou IS{e8tllt~n1Y IDslrumenlal&#13;
on the album. It', a e g, jazzy rock .&#13;
strumental, typically ~ after a somew~~;&#13;
thematic E, W,&amp; F CO features Mauri&#13;
White's virtuoSO~uld on the Kalirnba. ce&#13;
No E, W, &amp; F al ~1l1 ~ COIDpletewitho&#13;
some magical8D~~ lrn~ about lOve u~&#13;
peace, "Burnin' -- I tion" ("Multan&#13;
Y&#13;
OU will fmd peace ilI'e aU the t. lply&#13;
in IIne") Probably the most ;tlti~nd mUsiCal .&#13;
song on the album th "Earth WIsound&#13;
Fire" The lyrics ~ i' ""'temPlat;'; nd, &amp;&#13;
music' is definilely v....~ling. g and the&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976&#13;
Starring: Liza Minnelli&#13;
Gene Hackman&#13;
Burt Reynolds&#13;
rlday, Dec. 3 - 7:00 p.m.&#13;
9:45 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 5 - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
PLUS ON FRIDAY&#13;
A SNEAK PREVIEW OF&#13;
THE OCKY HORROR&#13;
PICTURE SHOW&#13;
Darkness into light.&#13;
The shadows of dawn at night.&#13;
Walking with tall men, and loving any lady.&#13;
Or trying to find one that might.&#13;
Very early in the morning, awaking in&#13;
darkness.&#13;
Alone&#13;
Choose your favorite color, in a wide&#13;
selection of black.&#13;
Are they the colors you lack?&#13;
Or were the colors never there?&#13;
Is it true, the rumor lurking ainist&#13;
your friends?&#13;
I wonder who will take amiss,&#13;
or who you may offend.&#13;
I think I was a passing smile.&#13;
The light of the night.&#13;
But with everything I've said and done,&#13;
and know all that I've heard.&#13;
I often sit and wonder about the&#13;
dark side of the twenty-third.&#13;
Dennis John Peyton&#13;
dreamNo.2&#13;
crisp old leaves pinned to wall&#13;
crumble dripping to wine tasting of You&#13;
and we walk&#13;
in shadow of sleepless dream&#13;
with running river night&#13;
speaking silence&#13;
snow on wind mind sky&#13;
flakes to silence words of we&#13;
and we laugh&#13;
in spiral memory day&#13;
within imagination love root&#13;
softing stillness&#13;
Jeffrey j. swencld&#13;
rainy autumn equinox&#13;
pink flamingoes &amp; apple trees&#13;
the green bay packers&#13;
&amp; Your memory&#13;
vampire days &amp; two years&#13;
weeping&#13;
in the sand&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
SPECIAL RING PROMOTION&#13;
5&#13;
By Josten's&#13;
Date: &lt;Wed.,&#13;
Time: 10-2 5-7&#13;
Place: dVext to the !Book~totte&#13;
in the dffcoue&#13;
eek Shipment * 5% Discount&#13;
$10 Deposit&#13;
Spirit eview &#13;
•&#13;
nneui&#13;
lID&#13;
!White (of Earth,&#13;
ler have surfaced&#13;
~mposerswe have&#13;
e, spiritual, and&#13;
linly their rhythm&#13;
cepted.&#13;
nter, composer) of&#13;
rt, entitled SPIRIT&#13;
Their last, That's&#13;
n • gold record and&#13;
) SPIRIT features&#13;
fay". Like so many&#13;
re treated or used&#13;
..t stops or beats.&#13;
krs (listen to the&#13;
S. E, W, &amp; F plays,&#13;
r hit bound cut in&#13;
ne good get-down&#13;
dance to this one.&#13;
nky beat type of&#13;
, only instrumental&#13;
ng, jazzy rock inafter&#13;
a somewhat&#13;
1 features Maurice&#13;
n the Kalimba,&#13;
complete without&#13;
•ds about love and&#13;
I8tioo" ("Multiply&#13;
, all the time").&#13;
.nd musical sound&#13;
"Earth, Wind, &amp;&#13;
en&gt;plating and the&#13;
ting.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 19765&#13;
haiku&#13;
mind meanders on&#13;
lumberjack logs of rapid&#13;
swirliog&#13;
river Gone&#13;
Must tbe day's journey&#13;
take tbe whole darn day. Must life&#13;
leave life&#13;
jeffrey j. sweockl&#13;
behind,&#13;
Must cancer crush the body, decompose the&#13;
gut,&#13;
deform a woman's breast, and must&#13;
Our Being&#13;
at a moment's notice&#13;
un-Earth its grasping roots ....&#13;
must&#13;
dying never stop?&#13;
Is it foolish trying to hold on to something&#13;
thats not there?&#13;
Daniel Trevino Ramirez&#13;
Like butterflies, somelimes humans attempt&#13;
landings&#13;
on flowers that don't exist yet.&#13;
And we shed tears which crocodiles&#13;
don't understand the meaning of, but&#13;
newborn babies do, and kittens too. No bubble gum&#13;
by Larry Donnelly&#13;
Some record companies seem to be belter than&#13;
others in choosing unique, groundbreaking groups.&#13;
All record companies have to give new talent a try,&#13;
but A&amp;M records sign up more verstile groups and&#13;
has more foresight than most platter producers.&#13;
Just a limited look at their pool of musical genius&#13;
should leave you convinced of this: Peter Frarnpton,&#13;
Cat Stevens, Rick Wakeman, Supertramp, Joan&#13;
Baez, Brothers Johnson, Nils Lofgren, Shawn&#13;
Phillips, Arrnaggedon, East Head and Gray Wright&#13;
when he was with Spooky Tooth. I'll admit that&#13;
A&amp;M also has the kings of bubble gum. The Carpenters&#13;
and Captain &amp; Tennille are under contract&#13;
but the rest of A&amp;M's troup are much more&#13;
sugarless.&#13;
Frampton, Stevens, and Baez are already&#13;
superstars but there are just as many (if not more)&#13;
talented figures who stay in the non-commercial&#13;
background, Lofgren, Phillips, Gallagher, and Lyle&#13;
are these artists, as well as Gino Vannelli.&#13;
GIST OF THE GEMINI, A&amp;M SP-4596&#13;
Vannelli may be even less familiar than Lofgren,&#13;
or Phillips but the talent is there. From the striking&#13;
cover to the striking music you wonder, "Where has&#13;
this man been?" With his brother Joe and his band,&#13;
Gino has come up with some very mellow and&#13;
thought provoking music.&#13;
The vocals from Gino could be coming from the&#13;
likes of Frank Sinatra or any good, male nightclub&#13;
entertainer. Yet, his vocals blend perfectly with the&#13;
music, which reminds me of Gary Wright (little&#13;
guitar, mainly keyboard). The lyrics are moving,&#13;
driving, and meaningful. The arrangement is also&#13;
in good standing while the music escapes nicely&#13;
away from the usual commercial clatter.&#13;
Side one contains alternating light, moving, quick&#13;
tempo songs with a couple of mellow romantic cuts.&#13;
"Love of My Life", "Omens of Love", "Fly into the&#13;
.................................................................... :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
: ArrENT/ON BUSINEU MAJORSI :&#13;
• •&#13;
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• •&#13;
• • • •&#13;
• •&#13;
• • • ••&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
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• •&#13;
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• • • • • •&#13;
• • • •&#13;
• •&#13;
i Sponsored by PI SIGMA EPSILON i&#13;
• •&#13;
~ .&#13;
destruction of no one&#13;
a grain of Gone&#13;
remains&#13;
like voice on&#13;
the wind&#13;
touching lis'ning&#13;
mind song&#13;
singing mutely&#13;
Visage&#13;
passing always&#13;
all ways&#13;
passing always&#13;
through me&#13;
jeffrey j. swenckt&#13;
autumn evening frost&#13;
kaleidoscope darkness in&#13;
a breath of night song&#13;
hare wooded pathway&#13;
leading east of autumn day&#13;
nightly ghost of we&#13;
heavy scent of leaves. .&#13;
autumn carpet laid thick WIth&#13;
lime passing to Gone&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
So when Ispeak of love, don't laugh.&#13;
Be content to know the rain will one day&#13;
wipe out every trace we've left&#13;
upon the sand.&#13;
DaoJeI Trevino Ramirez&#13;
Night" are the personal favorites.&#13;
Side two is a concept side called "The War Suite."&#13;
Instrumentals provide good mood, giving the&#13;
listener the impact of the march, the energy, the&#13;
grief, and the sorrow of baltle. The lyrics are&#13;
slirrring and stay contained in your memory well&#13;
after the rcord is through spinning.&#13;
Gino Vannelli is an artist who will prohably never&#13;
get the recognition he deserves, but iI's always nice&#13;
to know there are the Vannellis and Phillips&#13;
around to provide music that has something more&#13;
to say other than, "Take the money and nul," or,&#13;
"shake your booty"!&#13;
PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
THE MINI-MALL&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
T-SHIRT SHOP ALL TRANSFERS 50% OFF WITH THIS&#13;
COUPON THRU 12/15&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From Goers Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
m~~t. I : ROO·M CL-lll ~&#13;
:r~1~. D&#13;
I&#13;
S '" .1- II . _ . ~ .~ .If Faculty and students Will preview the spring&#13;
• view&#13;
mposers we have&#13;
, spiritual, and&#13;
inly their rhythm&#13;
epted.&#13;
·ter, composer) of&#13;
t, entitled SPIRIT&#13;
Their last, That's&#13;
a gold record and&#13;
SPIRIT features&#13;
ay". Like so many&#13;
e treated or used&#13;
rt stops or beats.&#13;
s (listen to the&#13;
. E, W, &amp; F plays_&#13;
hit bound cut in&#13;
e good get-&lt;lown&#13;
dance to this one.&#13;
Inky beat type of'&#13;
! only instrumental&#13;
ng, jazzy rock inafter&#13;
a somewhat&#13;
1 features Maurice ·&#13;
n the Kalimba.&#13;
complete without&#13;
:1ds about love and&#13;
liation" ( "Multiply&#13;
i all the time").&#13;
ind musical sound&#13;
"Earth, Wind, &amp;&#13;
.emplating and the&#13;
ting.&#13;
THE PARKStDE RANGER December 1, 1976 5&#13;
haiku&#13;
mind meanders on ,&#13;
lumberjack logs of rapid&#13;
swirling&#13;
river Gone&#13;
Must the day's journey&#13;
take the whole darn day. Must life&#13;
jeffrey j. swenckl&#13;
behind,&#13;
leave life&#13;
Must cancer crush the body, decompose the&#13;
gut, 9-3-76&#13;
deform a woman's breast and must&#13;
Our Being '&#13;
must&#13;
at a moment's notice&#13;
un-Earth its grasping roots ....&#13;
Is it foolish trying to hold on to something&#13;
thats not there?&#13;
dying never stop? Like butterflies, sometimes humans attempt&#13;
landings&#13;
Daniel Trevino Ramirez on flowers that don't exist yet.&#13;
No bubble gum&#13;
And we shed tears which crocodiles&#13;
don't understand the meaning of, but&#13;
newborn babies do, and kittens too.&#13;
So when I speak of love, don't laugh.&#13;
Be content to know the rain will one day&#13;
wipe out every trace we've left&#13;
upon the sand.&#13;
by Larry Donnelly Daniel Trevino Ramirez&#13;
Some record companies seem to be better than&#13;
others in choosing unique, groundbreaking groups.&#13;
All record companies have to give new talent a try,&#13;
but A&amp;M records sign up more verstile groups and&#13;
has more foresight than most platter producers. Night" are the personal favorites.&#13;
Side two is a concept side called "The War Suite."&#13;
Just a limited look at their pool of musical genius&#13;
should leave you convinced of this: Peter Frampton,&#13;
Cat Stevens, Rick Wakeman, Supertramp, Joan&#13;
Baez, Brothers Johnson, Nils Lofgren, Shawn&#13;
Phillips, Armaggedon, East Head and Gray Wright&#13;
when he was with Spooky Tooth. I'll admit that&#13;
A&amp;M also has the kings of bubble gum. The Carpenters&#13;
and Captain &amp; Tennille are under contract&#13;
but the rest of A&amp;M's troup are much more&#13;
sugarless.&#13;
Instrumentals provide good mood, giving the&#13;
listener the impact of the march, the energy, the&#13;
grief, and the sorrow of battle. The lyrics are&#13;
stirrring and stay contained in your memory well&#13;
after the rcord is through spinning.&#13;
Gino Vannelli is an artist who will probably never&#13;
get the recognition he deserves. but it's always nice&#13;
to know there are the annellis and Phillips&#13;
around to provide music that has something more&#13;
to say other than, ' 'Take the money and run," or,&#13;
" shake your booty"!&#13;
Frampton, Stevens, and Baez are already&#13;
superstars but there are just as many (if not more )&#13;
talented figures who stay in the non-commercial&#13;
background. Lofgren, Phillips, Gallagher, and Lyle&#13;
are these artists, as well as Gino Vannelli. PARAPHERNALIA SQUARE&#13;
GIST OF THE GEMINI, A&amp;M SP-4596 THE MINI-MALL&#13;
Vannelli may be even less familiar than Lofgren,&#13;
or Phillips but the talent is there. From the striking&#13;
cover to the striking music you wonder, ' 'Where has&#13;
this man been?" With his brother Joe and his band,&#13;
5531 6TH AVENUE&#13;
T-SHIRT SHOP ALL TRANSFERS SO°'o OFF WITH THIS&#13;
COUPON THRU 12/15&#13;
Gino has come up with some very mellow and&#13;
thought provoking music. H~_~IA' ~ / The vocals from Gino could be coming from the&#13;
likes of Frank Sinatra or any good, male nightclub&#13;
entertainer. Yet, his vocals blend perfectly with the&#13;
music, which reminds me of Gary Wright (little&#13;
guitar, mainly keyboard). The lyrics are moving,&#13;
driving, and meaningful. The arrangement is also&#13;
in good standing while the music escapes nicely&#13;
away from the usual commercial clatter.&#13;
Side one contains alternating light, moving, quick&#13;
tempo songs with a couple of mellow romantic cuts.&#13;
"Love of My Life", "Omens of Love " , "Fly into the&#13;
• Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
destruction of no one&#13;
a grain of Gone&#13;
remains&#13;
like voice on&#13;
the wind&#13;
touching lis'ning&#13;
mind song&#13;
singing mutely&#13;
Visage&#13;
passing always&#13;
all ways&#13;
passing always&#13;
through me&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
autumn evening frost&#13;
kaleidoscope darkness in&#13;
a breath of night song&#13;
bare wooded pathway&#13;
leading east of autumn day&#13;
nightly ghost of we&#13;
heavy scent of leaves&#13;
autumn carpet laid thick with&#13;
time passing to Gone&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
• ····································································: • • •&#13;
: ArrENTION BUS/NE$$ MAJOR$/ :&#13;
• • • • • • • ~.,...,.-.,_,,........,._.-==-~'""-=-.:::-..-::~,,..,-;;,,,""7--:;,,~::::"':.:::-s:::-,-.:::.:::=....-; • • • • • • • • • • • • •&#13;
• •••••• • • • • • . • /iiilS. 1111*•• . •• • • • • • • ~W-N~\ • • -~•y •&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • •&#13;
• • liiilllllMMl.111111111. ••- • • • • • 111111.iMIN!I!'-' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • L::,.~;..::::-~:...z::..£..:::::,,.~::.....~::::....~-=~..:;...-.L-.=~___;-..._.,._~ •&#13;
• • • • • • i . Sponsored by Pl SIGMA EPSILON i&#13;
• • ~ ................................................................... . &#13;
, THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1. 1976&#13;
ormone&#13;
•&#13;
contreceptioe&#13;
questioned&#13;
•&#13;
EdlI... •• Dole: MI. PeIJII Is a eoIIIIIe1or al PWmed PareDlbood ID&#13;
........ ller 1ft... 1 serle. Is IDre.po_ '" qD.. tIoDioubmlUed by&#13;
PDrUlcIo ...... 11.&#13;
by Beverly oble PeIJII&#13;
u..: Aboul a y.... and a half ago J readaboul an IUD thai was&#13;
auppoeed to work by releam. a hormone. 'Ibis device was supposed to&#13;
be available IOJtIl!tIme this year. Is this device available? U so. how&#13;
JDfe and elfecllve is II?&#13;
Alao, can a woman ~ an IUD _ a vaginal douche?&#13;
AIlIwer: The IUD you are aakIng about is not tecmically an IUD&#13;
(intr ... lertne device). The Federal Drug AdmlnisIration has ruled&#13;
lhla way beca_ It doe. not work the same .. ay as other IUDs. 'Ibis&#13;
device is etIec1lve bee.... of the hormone in II, and once the honnone&#13;
.... off, the device 1.-.a great deal of IIIetIec1lveness.&#13;
The rwne for lhla new contraceptive is "Progesllaerl". It is in the&#13;
shape of the letter "T" and contalns a tiny amount of bonnone, which&#13;
is a tiny fraction of whal you talte with birth control pills. The device is&#13;
new and hard '" find. DocI«s in other stales are using II more than&#13;
docIon here in WI$C&lt;lnSInarea at this stage in time.&#13;
There is MM concern about the lnaertIon of the device being a little&#13;
mora dlfJIcuIl (for the ""tlenl) than other JUDs. Alao. this device has&#13;
10 be replaced every year, un1IItemost IUDs. The f.... is that many&#13;
""llanta won'l setlheae replaced in time and are more likely 10 set&#13;
prepan!. Ilwlll require apedaI foUow-upby the doctor to malte sure&#13;
the ""tlenl returna every y.....&#13;
Planned Parenthood in WIaconsln is not yetlnserllng the device and&#13;
I know of no local docIon who are using II yel. I would suggest you&#13;
checIt with nearby docten and espedally with the toll free hoUine for&#13;
Iamily plannlng Information, 1ll»-24208822. '&#13;
Women IIIInC JUDs can uoe vaginal douches, but there is a lot 01&#13;
conlroveray about the need lor douching anyway. Douching upoell the&#13;
natural PII balance, which taltea care of infections and cleansing the&#13;
VI ina naturally. Weadvlae ""tlenla who douche to do so infrequently,&#13;
and to not \IDe douchea which are perfumed. Douching with a vinegar&#13;
and water mIzture is Jusl as etIec1lve as store-bought concoclIons and&#13;
it's cheaper. ConauJt with YOID' doctor or give us a call for information&#13;
on douching.&#13;
P. Women using dlsphragms sbould not douch within four hours&#13;
.tter inleTCoune.&#13;
u,sss&#13;
Ft.. PIZZI Delivery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phones 652.. 737&#13;
........... C S, nI•• 8M' 0... 4, t •.•.&#13;
:&#13;
WATCH US!!&#13;
Admiral&#13;
1r (ciao. ....... ) l00"Jr. Sohd s ....&#13;
... ·w.,color TV&#13;
IId.a. •• Itywlh, •&#13;
....,. erwo tuper o.,.nd",,* Pre&lt;&#13;
-. L ttwwBlft;.. zPlc.&#13;
t.n w. ~ ,-tryIed&#13;
MocW llCall.&#13;
SUPER SALE PRICED AT••.&#13;
Opera star to appear&#13;
Metropolitan Opera star&#13;
Roberta Peters will appear in&#13;
concert at Parkside on Thursday,&#13;
Dec. 9, at '8 p.m. in the Comrnunication&#13;
Arts Theater. The&#13;
program is part 01 Parkside's&#13;
Accent in Enrichment series.&#13;
A limited numbers 01 tickets&#13;
($7) are available at the Campus&#13;
Infonnation Center, Sears in&#13;
Kenosha and Cook-Gere and&#13;
Team Electronics in Racine.&#13;
Peters, a coloratura soprano,&#13;
made her Metropolitan Opera&#13;
debut in 1950 and since has&#13;
starred in:rl different roles at the&#13;
Metropolitan and has appeared&#13;
in the great opera houses of the&#13;
world. This season, she again is&#13;
making a tour of North America&#13;
and Europe in addition to her&#13;
appearances with the Met.&#13;
In 1972, lollowing a 15 minute&#13;
standing ovation at the Bolshoi,&#13;
she was awarded the coveted&#13;
Bolshoi Medal, the first&#13;
American-born artist to receive&#13;
the prestigious Russian Award.&#13;
Although associated in the&#13;
public mind principally with the&#13;
great classical and romantic&#13;
heroines of opera, she created the&#13;
leading role in Gi&#13;
Menotti's "The Last Sa~~&#13;
the Metropolitan production&#13;
has had works dedicated to&#13;
by such other contern&#13;
writers as Aram Klta.:'&#13;
Paul Creston and Roy HarTial~&#13;
1973.she sang the world p&#13;
of a new work by Darius&#13;
In Carnegie Hall.&#13;
She has recorded&#13;
complete operas for RCA&#13;
(Deutsche GrammPPhon)&#13;
has made more televialon&#13;
pearances than any other&#13;
star in history.&#13;
Phy. Ed. parking lot approve&#13;
Regents of the University 01&#13;
Wisconsin System approved&#13;
construction of a new 4O()..car&#13;
parking lot near the Physical&#13;
Education Building at Parkside.&#13;
The lot originally was&#13;
reconunended in a 1974 Slate&#13;
Building Commission Study&#13;
which included two other close-in&#13;
parking lots already constructed.&#13;
It is expected to ease traffic&#13;
snarls which have developed&#13;
when major public events such as&#13;
concerts, basketball games and&#13;
similar attractions are held in the&#13;
PIIy. Ed. IDdg. as well as provide&#13;
moe. converJent parking for&#13;
conunutlng students and staff&#13;
members, according to James&#13;
Galbraith, director of planning&#13;
and construction at Parkside .&#13;
Galbraith said addition of the&#13;
,&#13;
new lot also is expected to cut&#13;
over...ll costs 01 operating the&#13;
transportation system on campus&#13;
since fewer shuttle busses are&#13;
expected to be needed to carry&#13;
commuters Irom out-lying&#13;
parking areas.&#13;
Access to the lot will be&#13;
Kenosha County Hwy.&#13;
Construction Is expected to&#13;
during 1977.&#13;
Advising week schedul&#13;
Advising week will be held&#13;
December 8, 9, 10, 13, and 14.&#13;
There will be three information&#13;
stations throughout the main&#13;
campus at which students may&#13;
obtain information concerning&#13;
their faculty advisor, discipline,&#13;
and available office hours.&#13;
These stations will be located&#13;
at: I) Main level Greenquist Hall&#13;
in the conunons area. 2) W1J.C&#13;
Film of Nazi&#13;
occupation to show&#13;
Originally compiled from&#13;
sources ranging from wartime&#13;
newsreel and propaganda films&#13;
to interviews with survivors of&#13;
the occupation, the film was&#13;
intended for showing on French&#13;
television. On its completion,&#13;
however I the government&#13;
decided that the French public&#13;
was "not yet mature enough" to&#13;
see the film on TV.&#13;
When the film eventually was&#13;
shown in French movie theaters&#13;
i~caused ne~r-riots among&#13;
Viewers who sought to preserve&#13;
Smith's work is titled "Conunon&#13;
Barnyard Animals: The Cow."&#13;
SmIth also is represented by a&#13;
color intalio, "A Bend of the&#13;
Bow," in Colorprint U.S.A., a&#13;
national print exhibition sponsored&#13;
by the Texas Tech&#13;
~ ~'-",&#13;
~ccent on Enrichment presents&#13;
ROBERTA PETERS&#13;
coloratura soprano&#13;
8 P.M. DEC.9 ADM. $7'&#13;
COMM ARTS THEATER&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
~ickets at Campus Info. Center&#13;
D-Ievel at the information&#13;
and 3) WILC JIlliin'1evelln&#13;
library.&#13;
Counselors. and acllng&#13;
visors for undecided stWlIiIlal&#13;
will also be available to .&#13;
requiring their assistance.&#13;
will be stationed directly&#13;
the main entrance to the&#13;
The limes of their avau.,*~&#13;
will be posted at their stall.&#13;
the national legend of resislanle&#13;
to the Nazis which the film&#13;
largely rebuts. It subsequently&#13;
has been shown in theaters&#13;
throughout the western world to&#13;
high critical acclaim both as an&#13;
historical and a cultural&#13;
document.&#13;
An English narration voic..&#13;
over translation is provided, but&#13;
is dubbed to finish so that the&#13;
original French can also be&#13;
heard, a technique that has been&#13;
praised as particularly effectlve&#13;
in scenes featuring interviews.&#13;
University Department 01 Art, in&#13;
the Departmental Gallel')'&#13;
through Dec. 17.&#13;
Math&#13;
lecture&#13;
slated&#13;
"The Sorrow arxl the Pity,"&#13;
Marcel Ophuls' documentary&#13;
lilm on France during the Nazi&#13;
occupation, will have a free&#13;
public screening at Parkside at I&#13;
p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 2, in&#13;
Classroom Bldg 105.&#13;
The four·hQUT film, which&#13;
documents the collahoratlon of&#13;
tr- the French with their Gennan&#13;
.. captors and probes the moral&#13;
'&#13;
dilemma of an occupied. nation, is&#13;
. •• sponsored by the campus lecture&#13;
and fine arts conunittee and the&#13;
, history discipline.&#13;
Art prof. displays work&#13;
A print by Parkside art&#13;
professor Moishe SmIth Is included&#13;
in the Brooklyn Musewn's&#13;
current invitational show" "30&#13;
Years of American Printmaking,"&#13;
which incorporates the&#13;
20th National Prlnl Eshibitlon.&#13;
Prof. Walter Gautschi, a staff&#13;
member at both the University 01&#13;
Wisconsin Mathemalics&#13;
Research Center in Madison and&#13;
the Purdue University&#13;
mathematics and computer&#13;
science department, will give 8&#13;
free public lecture at UWParkside&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
Dec. 3 in Classroom Bldg. RoOlll&#13;
107.&#13;
His topic will be "Preventive&#13;
Computation-Avoiding Recursive&#13;
Calculations.' ,&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976&#13;
orrnone&#13;
• contraceptive&#13;
questioned&#13;
A&#13;
bJ Be~ rly. ble Pella&#13;
diaphragms should not douch within four hours&#13;
frH Pim Delwery&#13;
Club Hlghvlew&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652-1737&#13;
,...,.ra,I11 C~l1b1, Sp19~tftl, R1flell, Bttf&#13;
OPEN 4 p.•. let•·•·&#13;
WATCH US!!&#13;
Opera star to appear&#13;
Metropolitan Opera star&#13;
Roberta Peters will appear in&#13;
concert at Parkside on Thursday,&#13;
Dec. 9, at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. The&#13;
program is part of Parkside's&#13;
Accent in Enrichment series.&#13;
A limited mnnbers of tickets&#13;
($7) are available at the Campus&#13;
Information Center, Sears in&#13;
Kenosha and Cook-Gere and&#13;
Team Electronics in Racine.&#13;
Peters, a coloratura soprano,&#13;
made her Metropolitan Opera&#13;
debut in 1950 and since has&#13;
starred in 37 different roles at the&#13;
Metropolitan and has appeared&#13;
in the great opera hou_ses of the&#13;
world. This season, she again is&#13;
making a tour of North America&#13;
and Europe in addition to her&#13;
appearances with the Met.&#13;
In 1972, following a 15 minute&#13;
standing ovation at the Bolshoi,&#13;
she was awarded the coveted&#13;
Bolshoi Medal, the first&#13;
American-born artist to receive&#13;
the prestigious Russian Award.&#13;
Although associated in the&#13;
public mind principally with the&#13;
great classical and romantic&#13;
heroines of opera, she created the&#13;
leading role in Gi&#13;
Menotti's "The Last Saan-ca&#13;
vage•• the Metropolitan production&#13;
has had works dedicated to ~&#13;
by such other contem ~ writers as Aram Khac?~&#13;
Paul Creston and Roy Harns.&#13;
1973, she sang the world prenu Ir&#13;
of a new work by Dariu., Milh~&#13;
in Carnegie Hall. -~&#13;
She has recorded lllla&#13;
complete operas for RCA and Ii&#13;
(Deutsche Grammpphon) Ille&#13;
has made more television&#13;
pearances than any other 0:&#13;
star in history. a&#13;
Phy. Ed. parking lot approved&#13;
Regents of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System approved&#13;
construction of a new 400-&lt;!ar&#13;
parking lot near the Physical&#13;
Education Building at Parkside.&#13;
new lot also is expected to cut&#13;
over-all costs of operating the&#13;
transportation system on campus&#13;
since fewer shuttle busses are&#13;
expected to be needed to carry&#13;
commuters from out-lying&#13;
parking areas.&#13;
Access to the lot will be fl'lln&#13;
Kenosha County Hwy. J.ft&#13;
Construction is expected to ~&#13;
during 1977.&#13;
The lot originally was&#13;
recommended in a 1974 State&#13;
Building Commission Study&#13;
which included two other close-in&#13;
parking lots already constructed. Advising week scheduled&#13;
It is expected to ease traffic&#13;
snarls which have developed&#13;
when major public events such as&#13;
concerts, basketball games and&#13;
similar attractions are held in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. as well as provide&#13;
moce convenient parking for&#13;
commuting students and staff&#13;
members, according to James&#13;
Galbraith, director of planning&#13;
and construction at Parkside.&#13;
Galbraith said addition of the&#13;
Advising week will be held&#13;
December 8, 9, 10, 13, and 14.&#13;
There will be three information&#13;
stations throughout the main&#13;
campus at which students may&#13;
obtain information concerning&#13;
their faculty advisor, discipline,&#13;
and available office hours.&#13;
These stations will be located&#13;
at: 1) Main level Greenquist Hall&#13;
in the commons area, 2) WLLC&#13;
Filin of Nazi&#13;
occupation to show&#13;
"The Sorrow and the Pity,"&#13;
Marcel Ophuls' documentary&#13;
film on France during the Nazi&#13;
occupation, will have a free&#13;
public screening at Parkside at 1&#13;
p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 2, in&#13;
Classroom Bldg 105.&#13;
Originally compiled from&#13;
sources ranging from wartime&#13;
newsreel and propaganda films&#13;
to interviews with survivors of&#13;
the occupation, the film was&#13;
intended for showing on French&#13;
television. On its completion,&#13;
however, the government&#13;
decided that the French public&#13;
was "not yet mature enough" to&#13;
see the film on TV.&#13;
D-level at the Information Kialk&#13;
and 3) WLLC main ·1evel in th;&#13;
library.&#13;
Counselors, and acting ad,&#13;
visors for undecided students,&#13;
will also be available to aiiycme&#13;
requiring their assistance, and&#13;
will be stationed directly west of&#13;
the main entrance to the library.&#13;
The times of their availability&#13;
will be oosted at their statioo.&#13;
the national legend of resistance .,,&#13;
to the Nazis which the film&#13;
largely rebuts. It subsequently&#13;
has been shown in theaters&#13;
throughout the western world to&#13;
high critical acclaim both as an&#13;
historical and a cultural&#13;
document.&#13;
.. ,.&#13;
The four-hour film, which&#13;
documents the collaboration of&#13;
the French with their German&#13;
captors and probes the moral&#13;
dilemma of an occupied nation, is&#13;
sponsored by the campus lecture&#13;
and fine arts committee and the&#13;
When the film eventually was&#13;
shown in French movie theaters&#13;
i~ caused near-riots amon~&#13;
vtewers who sought to preserve&#13;
An English narration voiceover&#13;
translation is provided, but&#13;
is dubbed to finish so that the&#13;
original French can also be&#13;
heard, a technique that has been&#13;
praised as particularly effective I in scenes featuring interviews history discipline.&#13;
Art prof. displays work&#13;
.. Admiral l 9ai111&#13;
$ave&#13;
$5995&#13;
Reg. s399_95&#13;
$340°0&#13;
5 YEA LI ITED WARRANTY!&#13;
SUPER SALE PRICED AT ...&#13;
A print by Parkside art&#13;
professor Moishe Smith is included&#13;
in the Brooklyn Museum's&#13;
" current invitational show. "30&#13;
Years of American Printmaking,"&#13;
which incorporates the&#13;
20th National Print Exhibition.&#13;
Smith's work is titled "Common&#13;
Barnyard Animals: The Cow."&#13;
Smith also is represented by a&#13;
color intalio, "A Bend of the&#13;
Bow," in Colorprint U.S.A., a&#13;
national print exhibition sponsored&#13;
by the Texas Tech&#13;
University Department of Art, in&#13;
the Departmental Gallery&#13;
through Dec. 17.&#13;
Math&#13;
lecture&#13;
slated&#13;
Prof. Walter Gautschi, a staff&#13;
member at both the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Mathematics&#13;
Research Center in Madison and&#13;
the Purdue University&#13;
mathematics and computer&#13;
science department, will give a&#13;
free public lecture at UWParkside&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
Dec. 3 in Classroom Bldg. Room&#13;
107.&#13;
His topic will be "Preventive&#13;
Computation-Avoiding Recursive&#13;
Calculations." &#13;
? PYA&#13;
• continu~ from 1)9. 1&#13;
faculty advisor and the PYA director. In addition,&#13;
they are assigned readings and are given assignments&#13;
that relate to the kind of work they do at their&#13;
agency. 'They also have classroom sesssions during&#13;
which all student involved in the program are&#13;
present.&#13;
I was invited to attend one of the classes this week&#13;
and I enjoyed the experience. After a short&#13;
discussion and an assignment in problem solving,&#13;
one of the students was asked to tell the class about&#13;
an experience she had had within the program.&#13;
Marla Hoffman, who works at Innovative Youth&#13;
Services in Racine, ahd just spent 11 days at a&#13;
therapeutic community for drug addicts. It is a&#13;
place that many addicts consider their "last&#13;
chance," and some are there because the courts&#13;
have ordered them to be there.&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
A senior at Parkside, Mike Fieramosca was randomly selected for&#13;
this week's interview. His major is psychology, and classes this&#13;
semester include a Group Dynamics course and a Social&#13;
Disorganization class.&#13;
Mike is an employee of American Motors, first shift, and therefore&#13;
has to limit his classes to those offered at night. Previous to his employment&#13;
at American Motors, Mike attended Parkside as a full-time&#13;
student. As he says, "I kinda grew up with the school."&#13;
Photography occupies a large percentage of Mike's lime. He has&#13;
established a small studio for himself, and his business appears to be&#13;
growing. Also occupying his time is snowmobiling. As I interviewed&#13;
Mike, he said he was expecting his new snowmobile to arrive the&#13;
f&lt;ilowingday. He plans on joining a snowmobile club and riding the&#13;
. up North.&#13;
Travelis also important to Mike. "I like to travel," he said. "Me and&#13;
friend of mine did our bicentennial salute .... we went out East."&#13;
. visited Washington D.C., Valley Forge, Martha's Vineyards and&#13;
er historical sights.&#13;
Mikehas both likes and dislikes about Parkside. On the positive side&#13;
stated, "I like the commuter aspect. It's convenient and you can&#13;
. carry on an outside job."&#13;
What he doesn't like is the structure of Union Square. As Mike exined,&#13;
"The Union Square could be a really nice area, but the&#13;
acoustics are so bad. It's like being in a basement. The walls are all&#13;
cement and the floor is cement. It don't like cement."&#13;
Mike also commented on the lighting of the Union building by&#13;
saying, "I can't undersland who the hell built this school that didn't&#13;
have any knowledge of lighting. You go in there and it's all florescent&#13;
lights ... it drives me nuts. That's suppose to be a lounge, a place to&#13;
relax. You don't have florescent lights there, they're so cold and&#13;
sterile."&#13;
One-last change Mike would like to see is diversification of leisure&#13;
activities available at Parkside. Mike feels the activities aren't geared&#13;
to what he or a lot of other students would like to do.&#13;
Band presents concert&#13;
The Parkside Concert Band&#13;
conducted by Craig Kirchhoff&#13;
will present its first concert of the&#13;
season at8 p.m, on Friday, Dec.&#13;
3, in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. The program is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Kircn.'off, in his first year&#13;
Parkside, also is assistant&#13;
director of bands at UWMilwaukee.&#13;
He previously taught&#13;
at UW -Madison where he&#13;
received his graduate degrees.&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza$1.50&#13;
EVERY MONDAY &amp;TUESDAY I&#13;
SPAGHETII FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Includes: Salad, Italian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
Wed. _ Thurs. 9:30 - 11:00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks 60'&#13;
~;erbuis&#13;
~ourt&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
On Spring, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 19767&#13;
Classical honors proposed&#13;
by Bruce Wagner added. onto their diploma. "eum&#13;
laude." Translated from Latin,&#13;
this means "with praise."&#13;
A person getting higher than 3.5&#13;
or 3.75 would receive a magna&#13;
cum Jauoe added or a summa&#13;
cum laude depending on what hisher&#13;
final GPA was.&#13;
These are classical only in the&#13;
sense that they use Latin phrases&#13;
upon the diploma.&#13;
Saffioti told the committee that&#13;
such a proposal had come before&#13;
the Faculty Senate in 1970 but&#13;
failed because of its conflict with&#13;
the Parkside catalogue.&#13;
According to the 1975-77&#13;
catalogue, there is no such&#13;
program on the Parkside campus&#13;
currently. The only section that&#13;
comes close, states that excepuonai&#13;
students may lake&#13;
advantage of accelerated&#13;
schedules, thus enabling them to&#13;
graduate earlier than the other&#13;
students.&#13;
There seemed to be a general&#13;
feeling among the few committee&#13;
members presentlhat there was&#13;
a need for more information&#13;
about the general honors&#13;
program and what types of public&#13;
recognition can be given to&#13;
students.&#13;
Once the fact-finding occurs,&#13;
the Academic PoliciesComrnittee&#13;
will take this up at a future&#13;
meeting.&#13;
There is interest in reshaping&#13;
the format of the diploma given&#13;
to graduating seniors, according&#13;
to a report given to the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee at its beief&#13;
meeting last Tuesday.&#13;
This reshaping would include&#13;
adding honors for students&#13;
surpassing a certain grade point&#13;
average (GPA). According to&#13;
Carol-Lee Saffioti, assistant&#13;
professor of English, this might&#13;
include what is now known as&#13;
•'classical tt honors.&#13;
"Classical" honors is where&#13;
students getting above a certain&#13;
GPA, such as 3.25, would have&#13;
Not only did Marla observe, she particlpated in&#13;
the activities there. "You have to get involved," she&#13;
said, and as she told her story it was clear that the&#13;
rest of the class would like to have become involved&#13;
in similar kinds of experiences related to their filed&#13;
placements.&#13;
This program mean a calendar year of full-time&#13;
commitment and the student is not allowed to work&#13;
or lake other classes while participating in PYA.&#13;
However, they receive an allowance to cover their&#13;
living expenses during the year. Many students&#13;
receive financial aid in addition to their small&#13;
allowance.&#13;
One thing that PYA needs is more interested&#13;
students. Those students who are interested in&#13;
becoming a part of the program starting In January&#13;
may contact Ms. Hamlin at Tallent Hall, Room 286.&#13;
What the others are saging.&#13;
~~~we've already&#13;
~~~~\vtCf/ .~ demonstrated.&#13;
~':Ij"'~ o&#13;
·~e fI • Better engine protection. • Increased&#13;
\.~*b~-~. fuel economy .• Better high-temperature&#13;
~~ ftl"1"s$l'"S~&#13;
performance. • Fast sub-zero starts f1;.trf: t~f"·.JP&#13;
HllfOt,-sl '..# .-,''''&#13;
• Less oil consumption. • A cleaner en- ~t...~...~~&#13;
~~; gine. • 25.000-mile oil change&#13;
C....... A .. 1I0IL AMS/OIL VB PETROLEUM LUBRICANT"&#13;
•• 8IOIL ,..... ..... .. 25.000 .....&#13;
p-&#13;
_tID • ..,- (1J tID+3OCJI'F&#13;
or one,....,&#13;
Lubratton Raf'l9tl CMnpF ...... '&#13;
QUdat60n (-I. ....IKOatty Incr .... ln 84 ,- 12.500 ....... hour by API 'eM, ...&#13;
we. (mg. wt. lea 100 Ibe for 1 hr&#13;
Wrn .. ..,.&#13;
.Q~~~&#13;
byf .. x...,) 1 t "'*8''''''&#13;
FMdttyCil ~&#13;
-~&#13;
SoIid_&#13;
voiallMy t-;' 01 ..... por.tlon @ ~&#13;
2ft, '~~7 tor 22 hrs )&#13;
,.,.&#13;
erankc.ue ,-,"petltura (meMUrad&#13;
during ttandaro running NQuencel&#13;
F\eafl point ..&#13;
-~ .-&#13;
-&#13;
Engine&#13;
Engine crank at 250 RPM&#13;
crank a12SO RPM •&#13;
0 ~&#13;
O"f 22""'_ 12 AlM'Ieconda 270 __ 70"-_ ~1[--.&#13;
·SubfeC11O usual tMnUfectunng lOIei.c.&#13;
Too good to be true? No. Because thousands of AMS/OIL users have&#13;
already experienced lhese extraordinary performance features AMS/OIL&#13;
was first to commerCially market an SAE 10W-40 synthetiC engine 011 to&#13;
meet API C1asslficaflon SE. which means AMS/OIL can be used In any&#13;
car. So while the new synthehc lubricants you see today were stili In the&#13;
test lab, AMS/OILwas In the crankcases of cars and trucks lust like yours&#13;
And when you're sahsfled, that's the final test of a lubricant&#13;
Reteil . Wholesale See your AMS/OIL dealer today!&#13;
DEALERS WANTED Mike Villers (414)-637-~&#13;
Direct Dealerships A .....ilable.&#13;
Call For Appointment. 2600 West High ~~&lt;,&#13;
No Territory Restrtctionsl&#13;
No F ranch isesl Racine, Wisc. S3404&#13;
No large Inventory or&#13;
Investment Necessery. lhe qulelleader In sgnlbellc lubrlcalloa&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976 7&#13;
Classical honors proposed&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
There is interest in reshaping&#13;
the format of the diploma given&#13;
to graduating seniors, according&#13;
to a report given to the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee at its brief&#13;
meeting last Tuesday.&#13;
This reshaping would include&#13;
adding honors for students&#13;
surpassing a certain grade point&#13;
average (GPA). According to&#13;
Carol-Lee Saffioti, assistant&#13;
professor of English, this might&#13;
include what is now known as&#13;
"classical" honors.&#13;
"Classical" honors is where&#13;
students getting above a certain&#13;
GPA, such as 3.25, would have&#13;
added onto th£,ir diploma, "cum&#13;
laude." Translated from Latin,&#13;
this means "with praise."&#13;
A person getting higher than 3.5&#13;
or 3.75 would receive a magna&#13;
cum la11ile added or a s1Jmm11&#13;
cwn laude depending on what hisher&#13;
final GPA was.&#13;
These are classical only in the&#13;
sense that they use Latin phrases&#13;
upon the diploma.&#13;
Saffioti told the committee that&#13;
such a proposal had come before&#13;
the Faculty Senate in 1970 but&#13;
failed because of its conflict with&#13;
the Parkside catalogue.&#13;
According to the 1975-77&#13;
catalogue, there is no such&#13;
program on the Parkside campus&#13;
1.:urrenUy. Th onl eel on that&#13;
comes clo , tates tilat exceptional&#13;
tudent ma) take&#13;
advantage of accelerated&#13;
schedule , thus enablin tilem to&#13;
graduate earlier than the otiler&#13;
student .&#13;
There med to a eneral&#13;
feeling among the fe committe&#13;
members pre nt that ther wa&#13;
a need for more information&#13;
about the general honor&#13;
program and what types of public&#13;
recognition can be given to&#13;
students.&#13;
Once tile fact-finding occurs,&#13;
the Academic Policies Committee&#13;
will take this up at a futur&#13;
meeting.&#13;
? PYA&#13;
f continued from pg 1 Not only did Marla observe, she participated in&#13;
the activities there. "You have to get involv d," sh&#13;
said, and as she told her story it cl r that u,&#13;
rest of the class ould like to have become involved&#13;
in similar kinds of experiences related to their filed&#13;
placements.&#13;
by Debbie Sharpe&#13;
A senior at Parkside, Mike Fieramosca was randomly selected for&#13;
this week's interview. His major is psychology, and classes this&#13;
semester include a Group Dynamics course and a Social&#13;
Disorganization class.&#13;
Mike is an employee of American Motors, first shift, and therefore&#13;
has to limit his classes to those offered at night. Previous to his employment&#13;
at American Motors, Mike attended Parkside as a full-time&#13;
student. As he says, "I kinda grew up with the school."&#13;
Photography occupies a large percentage of Mike's time. He has&#13;
established a small studio for himself, and his business appears to be&#13;
growing. Also occupying his time is snowmobiling. As I interviewed&#13;
Mike, he said he was expecting his new snowmobile to arrive the&#13;
following day. He plans on joining a snowmobile club and riding the&#13;
trails up North.&#13;
Travel is also important to Mike. "I like to travel," he said. "Me and&#13;
friend of mine did our bicentennial salute .... we went out East."&#13;
Mike visited Washington D.C., Valley Forge, Martha's Vineyards and&#13;
Uler historical sights.&#13;
Mike has both likes and dislikes about Parkside. On the positive side&#13;
stated, "I like the commuter aspect. It's convenient and you can&#13;
still carry on an outside job."&#13;
What he doesn't like is the structure of Union Square. As Mike explained,&#13;
"The Union Square could be a really nice area, but the&#13;
acoustics are so bad. It's like being in a basement. The walls are all&#13;
cement and the floor is cement. It don't like cement."&#13;
Mike also commented on the lighting of the Union building by&#13;
saying, "I can't understand who the hell built this school that didn't&#13;
have any knowledge of lighting. You go in there and it's all florescent&#13;
lights ... it drives me nuts. That's suppose to be a lounge, a place to&#13;
relax. You don't have florescent lights there, they're so cold and&#13;
sterile.''&#13;
One last change Mike would like to see is diversification of leisure&#13;
activities available at Parkside. Mike feels the activities aren't geared&#13;
to what he or a lot of other students would like to do.&#13;
Band presents concert&#13;
The Parkside Concert Band&#13;
conducted by Craig Kirchhoff&#13;
will present its first concert of the&#13;
season at 8 p.m. on Friday, Dec.&#13;
3, in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. The program is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Kirch1 'Off, in his first year&#13;
Parkside, also is assistam&#13;
director of bands at UWMilwaukee.&#13;
He previously taught&#13;
at UW-Madison where he&#13;
received his graduate degrees.&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
EVERY MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
lndudes: Salad. Italian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
Wed. - Thurs. 9 :30 - 11 :00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks 60*&#13;
On Spring, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~erbu's&#13;
,ourt&#13;
PU1 &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
faculty advisor and the PYA director. In addition,&#13;
they are assigned readings and are given assignments&#13;
that relate to the kind of work they do at their&#13;
agency. They also have classroom sesssions during&#13;
which all student involved in the program are&#13;
present.&#13;
I was invited to attend one of the classes this week&#13;
and I enjoyed the experience. After a short&#13;
discussion and an assignment in problem solving,&#13;
one of the students was asked to tell the class about&#13;
an experience she had had within the program.&#13;
Marla Hoffman, who works at Innovative Youth&#13;
Services in Racine, ahd just spent 11 days at a&#13;
therapeutic community for drug addicts. It is a&#13;
place that many addicts consider their "last&#13;
chance," and some are there because the courts&#13;
have ordered them to be there.&#13;
This program mean a calendar year of full-tim&#13;
commitment and the student is not allo d to work&#13;
or take otiler clas.ses while participat" in PY A.&#13;
However, they receive an allowance to cover th ir&#13;
living expen es during the year. ~any tud ts&#13;
receive financial aid in addition to their small&#13;
allowance.&#13;
One thing that PY A needs is more intere ted&#13;
students. Those students who are inte ted in&#13;
becoming a part of the program tarti in January&#13;
may contact Ms. Hamlin at Tallent Hall, Room&#13;
What the others are saging~&#13;
'f¼ ~we've already&#13;
~ t;iit''~ demonstrated.&#13;
-c...,.,,.c:J\\'-f! ,;{I e Better engine protection. e Increased&#13;
~\.'O ~-- tfl' fuel economy. • Better high-temperature ~- .,,..w"'~~ .. ~ f•'" ,.,,,. . .JiJ .,\tit:-' ~ -,4'&#13;
l ~"\.O"" \ ~ ~ ... ,&#13;
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• Less oil consumption. • A cleaner engine.&#13;
• 25,000-mile oil change&#13;
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Oxidation (~,. vllCOSlty Iner- n &amp;4&#13;
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by Falex tN1)&#13;
Fluldlty@~&#13;
Volat,hty 1•1. of evaporation 300°F&#13;
for 22 hrs l&#13;
CrankcaN temperature (~rad&#13;
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Fluh point&#13;
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12AMP~ TOAMPS--&#13;
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•subfe(:t to usual manufactur no 10le&lt;ancaa&#13;
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at 25,000 mll•&#13;
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Too good to be true? No Because thousands of AMS/OIL users a e&#13;
already experienced these extraordinary performance features AMS/Oil&#13;
was ftrst to commercially market an SAE 10W-40 synt e ,c engine 011 to&#13;
meet API Class1f1cat1on SE. which means AMS/Oil can be used in an&#13;
car So while the new synthetic lubricants you see oday were still in the&#13;
test lab. AMS/OIL was In the crankcases o cars and trucks 1ust h e yours&#13;
And when you're sat1sf1ed, that's the ,nal test of a lubricant&#13;
Retail · Wholesale See your AMS/Oil dealer today!&#13;
~~~~~1~!i:~~Ja~,?. Mike Villers . (414).:t,37-2~726 ·-·-&lt;&#13;
Call For Appointment. 2600 West High • , No Territory Restrictions!&#13;
No Franchises! Racine, Wisc. 53404&#13;
No Large Inventory or&#13;
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• THE PARKSIDE RANGER December I, 1976&#13;
Rangers win two&#13;
Basketball season opens&#13;
byJ .... T.aula points in Saturday's contest.&#13;
Rade Dimitrijevic's outstanding&#13;
aggressive play in the&#13;
forward spot, helped put Larry&#13;
Halverson, laCrosse's second&#13;
highest scorer, out of the game on&#13;
fouls. Halverson totalled four&#13;
fouls by the hall mark.&#13;
In addition to Scott's offensive&#13;
performance, Steve King and&#13;
Marshall Hill added 14 points&#13;
each in the Indian massacre and&#13;
Dimilrijevic had II.&#13;
Stephens also noted King's&#13;
running game on offense and Joe&#13;
Foots' guarding of Mark Murphy&#13;
against the Warhawks.&#13;
The scoring of the remainder of&#13;
the Parkside starting team was&#13;
quite even, as Chones had 15, and&#13;
King and Hill each added 14.&#13;
"I was pleased with our performances&#13;
this weekend. It said&#13;
Coach Stephens. "We played&#13;
beller than Ithought we might in&#13;
the opening of the season. We&#13;
were quite convincing."&#13;
Coach Stephens emphasized&#13;
Parkside's strong team play&#13;
from both the starters and&#13;
reserves, combine1r with the&#13;
shooting of Leartha Scott, led the&#13;
Rangers to victories over UWLaCrosse,&#13;
96-74,Friday and UWWhitewater,&#13;
103-77, Saturday, in&#13;
the season openers here.&#13;
Scott banged in 31 points,&#13;
hitting 15 of 30 shots against&#13;
LaCrosse and, although taking&#13;
fewer shots, making 12 of 23,&#13;
scored 30 points against&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens used his&#13;
bench freely both nights&#13;
without any adverse effects.&#13;
Against LaCrosse, it was&#13;
reserve guard Laurence Brown&#13;
who began Parkside's spurt at 13-&#13;
13 and built up a six point lead.&#13;
Lonnie Lewis, a freshman,&#13;
scored nine Friday and 12&#13;
Saturday on spectacular high&#13;
leaping, left-handed jump shots.&#13;
Lewis sc&lt;red the 100th and 10lst&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,OOO-mlle oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60'F. pour point)&#13;
• Saves 011 RICK BENTSON&#13;
YOU'AMS/OIL dee", 639-4067&#13;
the sense of team spirit the&#13;
Rangers showed. "Our bench&#13;
came in and really did a good job,&#13;
in addition to the play of our&#13;
starters. Ican't single out anyone&#13;
that didn't playa good game for&#13;
us. "&#13;
Each team showed dominating&#13;
spurts, but Whitewater could&#13;
never bring the game with within&#13;
reach, coming within 17 points.&#13;
'The wins increase Parkside's&#13;
home winning streak to 26.&#13;
Whitewater was the last team to&#13;
defeat the Rangers here, winning&#13;
89-82 in the season opener here in&#13;
1974.&#13;
The Rangers left yesterday for&#13;
a three game road trip, playing&#13;
the University of Texas-EI Paso&#13;
last night. The team will play;he&#13;
University of New Mexico&#13;
Saturday and the University of&#13;
Nebraska-Qrnaha Monday. They&#13;
will return home December 8 to&#13;
play St, Norbert.&#13;
photo by P.J. Azzollnll&#13;
__ J&#13;
Ranger relays held&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside hosted the fourth&#13;
annual Ranger Relays November&#13;
19, in which the Rangers placed&#13;
ninth of 10 teams.&#13;
UW-Whitewater won the meet&#13;
with 85 points, followed by UWMilwaukee&#13;
with 78. Carthage was&#13;
third with 75.&#13;
Both men and women competed&#13;
in the meet, which consisted&#13;
of relay events, with men&#13;
and women alternating.&#13;
Parkside was fifth in the 450&#13;
butterfly relay with a time of&#13;
5:33.914 by Judy Iverson, Bob&#13;
·&#13;
+ ,------------------&#13;
AMHEUS[R·8USCH, 11K .. ST lOUIS&#13;
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: When you&#13;
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say Budweiser., youve said it all!&#13;
~-----E. F.Ma*igraoo-----_---J&#13;
Wilburshide, Gail Olson and Rick&#13;
Kwas.&#13;
The Rangers also scored&#13;
several sixth places. Keith&#13;
Krueger, Iverson, Rick Haas and&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch had a lime of&#13;
8:58.859 in the 700 Individual&#13;
Medley. Krueger, Leitch, Dennis&#13;
Sleeves and Sue Von Behren&#13;
swam the 450 back in 5:21.292, a&#13;
lime 50 seconds faster than the&#13;
Parksidc time in last year's&#13;
meet.- Olson and Bryan Spalla&#13;
were sixth in the diving events&#13;
with 331.50 points.&#13;
Krueger, Olson, Jim Ferraro&#13;
and Sally Francis teamed up for&#13;
•&#13;
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a seventh in the 400 medley and&#13;
an eighth in the 200 free was&#13;
swum by Leitch, Kwas, Ferraro&#13;
and Iverson.&#13;
•'There were some super&#13;
performances by the individuals,&#13;
said Coach Barbara Lawson.&#13;
"We had some surprises in some&#13;
of the relays. but generaDy&#13;
placed about where I had figured.&#13;
We were pleased to earn more&#13;
points than we did in last year',&#13;
Meet."&#13;
This was the last meet of !be&#13;
year for the women's team and&#13;
the first meet for the men In !be&#13;
first season as a varsity team.&#13;
Godfrey resigns&#13;
UW-Parkside athletic director&#13;
Wayne Dannehl announced that&#13;
cross-country coach Vic Godfrey&#13;
has resigned, effective Dec. 31.&#13;
Godfrey, 36, has been at&#13;
Parkside since 1969 and has&#13;
served as cross-country coach,&#13;
assistant men's and head&#13;
women's track coach and&#13;
coordinator of club sports.&#13;
He will become Coordinator of&#13;
the School Sports Program and&#13;
coach the national track and field&#13;
team in the Middle Eastern&#13;
nation of Bahrain.&#13;
"I regret losing a man of Vic's&#13;
caliber," Dannehl said. "He's&#13;
been at Parkside almost since the&#13;
beginning of the university and&#13;
has been an integral figure in the&#13;
growth and development of our&#13;
program. We wish him well in his&#13;
new position. H&#13;
Godfrey has been head crosscountry&#13;
coach at Parkside since&#13;
1972.His teams have qualified for&#13;
the NAIA national meet three&#13;
limes, finishing seventh in 1973,&#13;
15th in 1974,and 26th in the meet&#13;
here last week. His dual meet&#13;
'ecord was 36-18-1. With tracll:&#13;
coach Bob Lawson, be developed&#13;
two all-American and eight alldistrict&#13;
runners.&#13;
In track, his distance runners&#13;
have been most successful, with&#13;
Lucian Rosa and Dennis Biel&#13;
earning all-Amertca honors&#13;
among the men and Kim Merrill&#13;
winning a national marathea&#13;
championship and numerous&#13;
other honors for the women.&#13;
Merritt fourth&#13;
Kim Merritt ran fourth in the&#13;
National Collegiate Cross&#13;
Country Championship at,&#13;
Madison November 13.&#13;
She ran the three miles in&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home 01 the Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEtI 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington 1rIe. 634-2373&#13;
16:43, 14 seconds behind winner,&#13;
Julie Brown of California, but&#13;
only two seconds behind the&#13;
second place finisher.&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER December 1, 1976&#13;
Rangers win two&#13;
Basketball season opens&#13;
b · Jean Tenu&amp;a&#13;
1de's trong team play&#13;
from both the tarters and&#13;
re rve , comb ne - with the&#13;
ting of Leartha Scott, led the&#13;
Ran to \ictories over UWLa&#13;
, 96-74, Frida) and UWter,&#13;
103-77, Saturday, in&#13;
a n openers here.&#13;
ott ban ed In 31 points,&#13;
hitting 15 of 30 shots against&#13;
Cr and, although taking&#13;
r shots, making 12 of 23,&#13;
cor d 30 point against&#13;
t ter.&#13;
ch Steve Stephens used his&#13;
b nch fre ly both nights&#13;
ithout any adverse effects.&#13;
A ain t Lacrosse, it was&#13;
r rve rd Laurence Brown&#13;
who began Parkside's purl at 13-&#13;
13 and built up a ix point lead.&#13;
points in Saturday's contest.&#13;
Rade Dimitrijevic's outstanding&#13;
aggressive play in the&#13;
forward spot, helped put Larry&#13;
Halverson, LaCrosse's second&#13;
highest scorer, out of the game on&#13;
fouls. Halverson totalled four&#13;
fouls by the half mark.&#13;
In addition to Scott's offensive&#13;
performance, Steve King and&#13;
Marshall Hill added 14 points&#13;
each in the Indian massacre and&#13;
Dimitrijevic had 11.&#13;
Stephens also noted King's&#13;
running game on offense and Joe&#13;
Foots' guarding of Mark Murphy&#13;
against the Warhawks.&#13;
Toe scoring of the remainder of&#13;
the Parkside starting team was&#13;
quite even, as Chones had 15, and&#13;
King and Hill each added 14.&#13;
the sense of team spirit the&#13;
Rangers showed. "Our bench&#13;
came in and really did a good job,&#13;
in addition to the play of our&#13;
starters. I can't single out anyone&#13;
that didn't play a good game for&#13;
us.',&#13;
Each team showed dominating&#13;
spurts, but Whitewater could&#13;
never bring the game with within&#13;
reach, coming within 17 points.&#13;
The wins increase Parkside's&#13;
home winning streak to 26.&#13;
Whitewater was the last team to&#13;
defeat the Rangers here, winning&#13;
89-82 in the season opener here in&#13;
1974.&#13;
Toe Rangers left yesterday for&#13;
a three game road trip, playing&#13;
the University of Texas-El Paso&#13;
last night. The team will play-the&#13;
University of New Mexico&#13;
Saturday and the University of&#13;
Nebraska-Omaha Monday. They&#13;
will return home December 8 to&#13;
play St. Norbert.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
j&#13;
\&#13;
photo by P.J. Azzollna&#13;
---&#13;
Lonni Le i , a fre.mman,&#13;
scor d nine Friday and 12&#13;
turd y on spec&amp;acular high&#13;
I ping, left-handed jump shots.&#13;
Lewi red the 100th and 101st&#13;
"I was pleased with our performances&#13;
this weekend," said&#13;
Coach Stephens. "We played&#13;
better than I thought we might in&#13;
the opening of the season. We&#13;
were quite convincing."&#13;
Coach Stephens emphasized&#13;
Ranger rel;J_ys held&#13;
• Saves gas (up to 25%) • Saves wear&#13;
• Saves maintenance (25,000-mlle oil change)&#13;
• Eases sub-zero starts (-60°F. pour point)&#13;
• saves 011 RICK BENTSON&#13;
your AMS/OIL dealer 639-4067&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside hosted the fourth&#13;
annual Ranger Relays November&#13;
19, in which the Rangers placed&#13;
ninth of 10 teams.&#13;
UW-Whitewater won the meet&#13;
with 85 points, followed by UWMilwaukee&#13;
with 78. Carthage was&#13;
third with 75.&#13;
Both men and women competed&#13;
in the meet, which consisted&#13;
of relay events, with men&#13;
and women alternating.&#13;
Parkside was fifth in the 450&#13;
butterfly relay with a time of&#13;
5:33.914 by Judy Iverson, Bob&#13;
tr--------------------,&#13;
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• When you say Budweiser,youve said it all! ---------E. F. Madrigrano--------J&#13;
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Wilburshide, G&amp;il Olson and Rick&#13;
Kwas.&#13;
The Rangers also scored&#13;
several sixth places. Keith&#13;
Krueger, Iverson, Rick Haas and&#13;
Mary Beth Leitch had a time of&#13;
8:58.859 in the 700 Individual&#13;
Medley. Krueger, Leitch, Dennis&#13;
steeves and Sue Von Behren&#13;
swam the 450 back in 5:21.292, a&#13;
time 50 seconds faster than the&#13;
Parkside time in last year's&#13;
meet.- Olson and Bryan Spalla&#13;
were sixth in the diving events&#13;
with 331.50 points.&#13;
Krueger, Olson, Jim Ferraro&#13;
and Sally Francis teamed up for&#13;
a seventh in the 400 medley and&#13;
an eighth in U1e 200 free was&#13;
swum by Leitch, Kwas, Ferraro&#13;
f'nd Iverson.&#13;
"There were some super&#13;
performances by the individuals,&#13;
said Coach Barbara Lawson.&#13;
"We had some surprises in some&#13;
of the relays. but generally&#13;
placed about where I had figured.&#13;
We were pleased to earn more&#13;
points than we did in last year's&#13;
Meet."&#13;
This was the last meet of the&#13;
year for the women's team and&#13;
the first meet for the men in the&#13;
first season as a varsity team.&#13;
Godfrey resigns&#13;
UW-Parkside athletic director&#13;
Wayne Dannehl announced that&#13;
cross-country coach Vic Godfrey&#13;
has resigned, effective Dec. 31.&#13;
Godfrey, 36, has been at&#13;
Parkside since 1969 and has&#13;
served as cross-country coach,&#13;
assistant men's and head&#13;
women's track coach and&#13;
coordinator of club sports .&#13;
He will become Coordinator of&#13;
the School Sports Program and&#13;
coach the national track and field&#13;
team in the Middle Eastern&#13;
nation of Bahrain.&#13;
"I regret losing a man of Vic's&#13;
caliber," Dannehl said. "He's&#13;
been at Parkside almost since the&#13;
beginning of the university and&#13;
has been an integral figure in the&#13;
growth and development of our&#13;
program. We wish him well in his&#13;
new position."&#13;
Godfrey has been head crosscountry&#13;
coach at Parkside since&#13;
1972. His teams have qualified for&#13;
the NAIA national meet three&#13;
times, finishing seventh in 1973,&#13;
15th in 1974, and 26th in the meet&#13;
here last week. His dual meet&#13;
-ecord was 36-18-1. With track&#13;
coach Bob Lawson, he developed&#13;
two all-American and eight all·&#13;
district runners .&#13;
In track, his distance runners&#13;
have been most successful, with&#13;
Lucian Rosa and Dennis Biel&#13;
earning all-America honors&#13;
among the men and Kim Merritt&#13;
winning a national marathon&#13;
championship and numerous&#13;
other honors for the women .&#13;
Merritt fourth&#13;
Kim Merritt ran fourth in the&#13;
National Collegiate Cross&#13;
Country Championship at,&#13;
Madison November 13.&#13;
She ran thP. three miles in&#13;
16:43, 14 seconds behind winner,&#13;
Julie Brown of California, but&#13;
only two seconds behind the&#13;
second place finisher .&#13;
LEE s·AUSAOE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Submarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPE11 8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P .M .&#13;
2615 Washington /we. 634-2373 </text>
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