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 Volume 6 Number 16 Wednesday, December 14, 1977 an er ()() Military historians are visually ()() oriented people who are fond ll ll of making romantic land-scapes in which they can deploy forces like any Hollywood producer. Muhammd.Ali escapes from the mobbing during his visit . to Kenosha more photos on page 5 Union budget inay be questioned by John McKloskey Copy Editor Sources near the Segr~gated Fees Committee are hinting the $358,099 Union budget might run into some opposition during committee deliberations. One reason, say sources, is that seg fee money* is being increased for certain Union administrators' salaries. For example, the $17,981 salary of William Niebuhr, Director-Student Life/Union, is proposed to be paid entirely out of seg fees money, instead of the current 60%. In addition, sources said they are affraid that a contract of some type will be signed to fill the new Dean of Student Life position before segregated fees are supplied to pay half the salary. Then, if for some reason Seg Fees wanted to eliminate student funding for the position, it might run iflto trouble due to the contractual obligation. Niebuhr gives explanation Niebuhr explained to the Union Operating Board last Thursday that the increase in seg fees funding for certain positions is made up for by one job position that has been eliminated. $47,000 of unavoidable expense increases, he said, are part of the 1978-79 school year Union budget. These expenses include Legislature-mandated merit pay increases, fringe benefits, utilities, and loan payments. The overall increase in the amount of Union seg fees over last year Is $35,499 Other committee sources complained that "there Is a low I vel of revenues in the Union " "The Rec Center Manager is being paid 11,000 now, and when the salary was $9,000, the revenue was actually higher", they said They also didn't like the fact that last Thursday when the Seg Fee committee met in the Union for a b er, employees closed all food and drink sales in the crowded restaurant due to inclement weather. Slave labor discouraged In other seg fee news, a RA GER budget of $13,500 was approved "It was more than we had hoped for,' said Tom Coop r, soon to become executive editor of the restru tured paper, aI all, in proposing a $13,500 level instead of RA GER's 10,565 reque t, aid, "It's time \&lt;\-e stopped using RA GER editors as slave labor ' all appointed out that currently, editors receive less than minimum wag for the number of hour the work per wee The amount paid I a fixed salary per week. *Segregated fee money is subtracted from paid annual tuition. This year about $116.00 per studen~ was collected from each student and allocated by the Segregated Fee Committee, a student committee. The money 1s used to support student organizations and Union expenses. Goetz gets his guns by Philip L. Livingston Editor Gary Goetz, Assistant Chancellor for Administration and Fiscal Affairs, has ordered that the' four officers of Parkside Security Department cannot carry firearms in the normal course of their duties. "Firearms are not appropriate" In Goetz' first memorandum to Security Chief, Ron Brinkmann, Goetz said firearms are not appropriate in serving the best interests of the campus community. The following is the text of the Novemb~r 30 memorandum to Brinkmann from Geotz: After months of serious thought, consideration, soul searching, and after weighing costs and benefits, I remain convinced the carrying of sidearms or firearms of any type is not appropriate for serving the best interests of the campus community. I, therefore, order that as soon as possible, but no later than Friday, December 9, 1977, firearms be removed from the uniform and shall not be in the possession of any of the department's staff. I am available to discuss this action with you or members of your st-aff. Goetz attended a meeting with the Security Chief and the other officers who normally carry pistols on duty. The subject of wearing the weapons was discussed. After the meeting Goetz issued the following memorandum to Brinkmann December 7: After the meeting with your staff I am still convinced that the carrying of sidearms or firearms of any type is not required for the routine police duties and is not, therefore, appropriate for serving the best interests of the campus community. My original November 30 order to remove firearms from the uniform and possession of the Department's Jtaff by Friday, December 9, 1977 still stands .. However, I am willing to recognize that the possession of firearms _ only those weapons issued by the Department (no personal weapons allowed) -may be reasonable in some well defined circumstances. Therefore, I will support the centralization of f1rearr,1s to be stocked in a well secured location in the Sec.urity Department and ee a rea onable the wearing of the 1d arm in th follm\ in spec1f1c instances ., a) Tran portation of funds to an off-ampu depositor b) Re ponding to a burglar alarm c) Re ponding to a call wh r th re I a reported ob rvanc of · person or persons threaten mg to or in th act-of rend rm, bodily harm or in1ury to member of the campu community I do prefer that you be involved and make th decision to r lea~ firearms certifying that one of the above instance appl , I do not view the list of exceptions as locked m concrete and t for ver, It can be expanded or contracted as cond1t1ons, In my 1udgm nt, warrant Again, It should be mention d, as pointed out b the officers, sidearms 1f available given the three above cond1t1ons hall never be drawn unless grave bodily harm I apparent Th application of firearms Is not permitted merely to protect and preserve mere property The threat of personal harm mu t be present You can be assured, especially with items (b) and ( ). that the wearting and usage of firearms will have to be very tightly and rigidly explained and 1ustif1ed A report of all firearms relea ed with the related 1ustif1cat1on must be maintained I expect that the policy herein prescribed will be implemented and reflected m your departmental policies and procedures for your Department's continual observance Serving the university environment Ranger asked Goetz if the removal of the weapons was tied to some specific incident or 1f the move was a reflection on the level of professionalism of the officers "This m no way is a reflec,t,on of any past incidences or the professionalism of the officers. The issue Is the appropriateness of the weapon in a university setting The intent of the change is to better enable security to serve the university environment " Chancellor A I an E Guskin said he supports the new policy and added, "We will expe.:t the officers will maintain their expertise with regarri to the use of firearms " &#13;
Ranger is written a_nd edite~ by students of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside ~nd they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and ~ontent .. Ranger Newspaper, University of Wiscons1n-Parks1de Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141 Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A. Cooper .I promises dlore ~fficient newspaper This week, Ranger's last issue of the semester, we. inte"'.iewed Thomas R. Cooper, Racine junior and the new Executive Editor of Ranger. Ranger asked Cqoper how he feels about the  criticism that Ranger is not comprehensive enough in its coverage of school events and that Ranger never seems to get enough studelfts to work on the paper. , "We just don't get enough people! I have worked 011 a reorganization that will give some depth to the Ranger Staff and increase our coverage and participation in student oriented events. Ranger will. make a genuine effort to meefthe needs of student O(ganizations." The new offices in Main Place are still under construction. What will the newspaper do if they are not completed before January 18, 1978, the publishing date of the next Ranger. "Ranger has met with members of the Union Operating Board and discussed the possibility of using Union Conference Room 207 temporarily until construction is completed. One of the problems we had this past semester was having our offices in Tallent Hall during construction of new office space. Students just didn't want to take the time to walk all the way down to Tallent Hall between classes to work on the paper. I really want to get people involved in the student newspaper because it has a lot to offer and having an office in the main complex will definitely help." How will your staff be organized next semester? "As I have mentioned before, my reorganization of Ranger will allow ~ the newspaper to be more efficient. Instead of having an Editor-in-Chief, there will be an Executive Editor and two Associate Editors plus sub editors for news, sports and features. The business side of the newspaper will be headed by a Business Manager who will have a Sales Manager and Circulation Manager reporting to her. The new organization, hopefully, will allow the newspaper to have better communication not only within itself but also with the entire university." Who will make up your staff next semester? · 1978 Ranger Executive Editor .               . ......... Myself Associate Editor .             . ... Diane Jalensky Associate Editor.             . .. John McKloskey Business Manager .. Dona Fallico Sales Manager . . . Jon Flanagan Circulation Manager.         . .... Chris Miller News Editor. . . . Bob Hoffman Sports Editor . . . Alane Andresen Feature Editor ... Dan Guidebeck As a junior, majoring in Management Science, what do you think of the reorganization of the Management Science Division and the failure of the division to recruit the six professorial positions it advertised when Mr. Arthur Dudycha assumed the  Chairmanship of the division. "I have spoken with various faculty members from the division who have informed me that an active search for the openings has been going on for some time. There is a definite shortage of qualified business professors in the country, but the division hopes to have as many of those positions filled by Fall of 1978. There is strong competition for qualified  personnel, so who knows?" The next issue of Ranger will be on the stands Wednesday, January 18, 1978. Have a joyous holiday s_eason and please drive carefully. 2 Benefits defined [CPS) -Challenging a recent Supreme Court ruling, the Senate has broadened the definition of sex discrimination to include pregnancy. By a 75-11 margin they declared that using pregnancy to deny a worker adva;icement, employment or full disability benefits is discriminatory. This includes the customary 'leave of absence' forced upon women. Workers will now qualify for sick pay, sick leave an,d full insurance coverage for pregnan-ny. By defining pregnancy as a disability, the bill rejects a 1976 Supreme Court ruling which decreed that General Electric need not provide benefits for pregnant women. The suit was filed by the International Union of Electrical Workers (IUEW). Interestingly enough, some anti-abortion groups support the bill. They feel the bill will give financial support to women who might otherwise opt for abortion. The vote in the house is expected to be tougher. Business and insurance inte interests are expected to lobby intensely. Theirs trategy is to amend the bill to death. The House may vote on its version of the bi 11 by October. but the more realistic date is January. Hopefully, opponents of the bill will not be able to counteract the image of the 'folks back home', who might take a "no" vote from their representative as a vote against motherhood. Miss Kenosha Pageant blasts Ranger To the Editor, The article that follows is a news release from the Miss Kenosha Scholarship Pageant, Inc. It is an article that announces that the entries for the new Miss Kenosha Pageant are now open. This will be held next May 6th. The entries will run from now until a little after the first of the year. paper. Last year your Editor chose to make a mockery of the whole program and wrote one of the worst pieces of journalism that I had ever seen. She used it as a vechile to a&lt;:lvance her own sour feelings toward pageants. I do realize she had some hangups apparently, and excused her for her article because of her very apparent ignorance. Last year I was promised by a member of your staff that it would be made up for the next pageant. Well, this is the beginning of the next pageant ... please announce in your paper that entries are open, and please use the enclosed article as a guideline. It would be appreciated. would like you to give the girls of your school an opportunity to become part of a fine program. paper ever had. Contrary to what you say in this letter, Ms. Sipsma did not have any hangups. She felt the advancement of individualism and of women's rights were not being seryed by your Pageant, Inc. We don't know who you talked to last year. Part of your re/ease appears elsewhere in this paper. -Editor . In the past, you have announced entries for us in your ., It is important to us that you run this article at your school. Tbree Miss Kenoshas attended your school and many contes-tants are students at your school. You have a fine school. We Sincerely, Lou Cristiano General Chairman Thank you for the compliments on our fine school. Part of this fine school is a free press. Last year's Editor, Jeannine Sipsma, brought this paper out of the red and is one of the best Editors this 'Kennedy~ s Childreh' realistic, moving by Wendy Ratner Ranger Staff Diane Johnson directed this short, highly charged dramatic play last week in studio B in the CAT. The play was orginally suppose to be presented three times but tickets sold so wildly that two extra performances were added. Those of you that did not have an opportunity to see Johnson's adaptation of Kennedy's Children, missed a realistic and truly moving play. With John Dickison's unfailing creative talents, studio B was transformed into a New York bar. The seating was limited (thirty people per performance) anc\ helped provide intimate, familar atmosphere between the audience and cast. The audience set the stage and the actresses and actors continually moved us through their astonishing-somewhat shocking self-revelations. remembering each characters' emotions and what they stood for. Kennedy's Children was written by R. Patrick in 1974 with a cast of six, including the bartender. -Johnson's adaptation included two more characters created by two university students. Mark L. Badtke portrayed Jamie as an adolescent adult and softly spoken, Fred Schoepke played,a character named Larry. Both Badtke and Schoepke wrote their own scripts and acted in For example, Sparger (Anthony D. Warren) a complex di~illusioned, homosexual had startling depth. "f/arren and the rest of the cast, captured our attention through satiric, abusive dialogue, sensous gestures and sudden moves. I do not · know if these means are considered to be 'fair' in theatre but I do know that actor believability can either make or break a play. It is not every performance, a cynical theatr~ goer, leaves accord with them. The must be given highly deserved praise, because had I not been familar with Patrick's play I would have mistaken these two as Patrick originals. I would like to give Ron Schneider due credit who as called in four days before the play opened to replace Jean Bourdic who played the bartender. I must also comment further on the cast for the benefit of the students that praised Mrs. Pollack, rather gusliingly in November's issue bf Ranger. The entire Kennedy's Children cast have all had previous acting experience, so my expectations were very high. In conclusion I can only hope that all Parkside Drama personel take advantage of Studio B for further educational Theatre purposes, because it is indeed an exhilarating, experience to be so closely a part of the play. &#13;
HO ••• HO ••• HO ••• HO ••• , I I This Friday! f f YOU'RE INVITED TO ATTEND THE 1st ANNUAL CAMPUS FOOD SERVICE &amp; PARKSIDE UNION ALL CAMPUS ~ CHRISTMAS ---~ PARTY FREE!!! Coffee, Punch, Cookies, Homemade Sweets, Entertainment &amp; Santa 11 :30 a.m. to 1 :30 p.m. . Union Dining Room and Happy , Holidays to All! &#13;
sports Spotts banquet 1977 Fall Sports Most Valuable Pla~rs honors fall MVP' s Back Row: (L to R) Ray Fredricksen (Crou Country), Bob Spiglanin (Golf), Chris Carter (Soccer). Front Row: Debbie Wojnowski (Swimming), Kathy feichtner (Tennis), Tracy Faustino (Volleyball). · by Alane Andresen Sports Editor Sunday, December 4, 1977 Parkside honored all its fall athletes at the annual Fall Sports Banquet. The 1977 fall sports agenda featured three men's varsity sports and three women's varsity sports. They included; Men' Soccer coached by Hal Henderson; Men's Golf coached by Steve Stephens; Men's Cross Country coached by Lucian Rosa; Women's Swimming coached by Barb Lawson; Women's Tennis coached by Sue Tobachnik; and Women's Vol-leyball coached by Linda Draft. Dr. Wayne Dannehl, Parkside's athletic director, introduced each sport, starting with Lucian Rosa and the Men's Cross Country Team. Cross Country MVP: Ray Fredricksen Senior Ray__ Fredricksen, 1977 Cross Country team captain was named by his teammates as Parkside's team's Most .Valuable Player. This will be Ray's last year of running on Parkside's Cross Country team, as he will be graduating this coming May. To continue their winning tradition, next year's team will have to attempt to fill the gap Ray will be leaving. They already have a good start at that, with freshman All-American Bob Langenhol, who along with Ray Fredricksen and sophomore Jeff Miller, were named to the All-District Team while Gary Priem was Honorable Mention. Letter winners includ-ed 3rd year Ray Fredricksen and Gary Priem; 2nd year Jeff Miller, Lee Allinger, Bill Werve, and Al Halbur; .and 1st year Mike Rummelhart, Bob Langenhol, and John Poulokas. Golf MVP: Bob Spiglanin The 1977 Uw-Parkside Golf team had its outstanding as well as its poor moments. The team's highlights included first place finishes in the Green Bay Invita-tional, a triangular meet at Carthage, and a dual meet victory over Marquette Univer-sity. Voted Most Valuable Player by his teammates was freshman Bob Spiglanin and 1977 team captain was Junior Ray Zuzinec. Individual highlights include a first place finish for Bob Spiglanin at the Oshkosh Invitational and a tie for first place between Ray Zuzinec and Milk Volk at the Carthage UW -P takes second as. Rick. Langer named outsta~ding wrestler by Alane Andresen Sports Editor Saturday, December 3, Park-side hosted the Wisconsin Wrestling Championships, and came in a close second place overall finish with 83 points to UW-Whitewater's 90. Outstand-ing performances were shown by Parkside wrestlers, highlighted by championship winners Rick Langer in the 142 pd. class and Dave Wagner in the 167 pd. class. Rick Langer was named 'Outstanding Wrestler' of the meet, as he w~nt on to defeat Joe Stalzman, an All-American from UW-Oshkosh, 4-2. Dave Wagner also performed excellently as he beat Ron Swzet of Uw:Stevens Point, who had been named 'Outstanding Wrestler' in Wis-consin last year. Other Parkside placers includ-ed seconds from Bob Pekarski at 150 pds. and Bill Lynch at 158 pds.; thirds from Mike Nee, 118 pds., Doug Andrewski, 177 pds., and Ron Zmuda (wrestling above his weight to aid the team at 190 pds.; and a fourth place  finish from Steve LaCount in the 134 pd. class. Ten of Wisconsin's better wrestling schools, exclud-ing UW-Madison, competed in the meet. Besides Parkside and Whitewater, competing was Marquette, Uw-Oshkosh, UW-Triangular. Letter winners in-cluded 3rd year Ray Zuzir;iec; and 1st year Dan Drott, Mike Furno, John Spiglanin, Jim Strand, and Mike Volk. Soccer MVP: Chris Carter Highlighting the 1977 season for the soccer team was winning the NAIA District 14 Champion-ship and advancing to the area 3 playoffs. Parkside also landed ten of its players on the All-District 14 team and three players receiving Honorable Mention, with Coach Hal Henderson being named District 14 Coach of the year. This year's team was very young with only one senior, which gives good outlook for the 1978 campaign as ten of eleven starters are expected to return. Letterwinners induded 4th year team captain Mike Olesen; 3rd year Dan Brieschke, Chris Carter, and Jack Landwehr; 2nd year Earl Campbell, Joe Eisen, Niall Power, Kryz Serafin, and Bob stoewe; and 1st year Steve Borggren, Chris Crowell, Jim DeVasquez, Stathi Gianou, Karl Goetz, and Ale Mora. Swimming MVP: Debbie Wojnowski This year's team was. very Lacrosse, Uw-Platteville, Uw-Stevens Point, Carthage College, Carroll College, and Maranatha Bible. Saturday, December 10 the wrestlers traveled to Whitewater to compete again.st seven colleges in the Warhawk Invitational. Parkside had two champions, Ron Zmuda (at .his regular weigh-t class) 177 pd. class, boosting his record to 11-1, and freshman Bob Pekarski at 150 pds. with a current record of 10-1. Other fine performances from Parkside wrestlers were 2nd place finishers Bill Lynch at 167 pd., Rick Langer at 142 pd., and John Walters at 150 pd., behind Uw-P's Bob Pekarski. Th-ird place young with only two returning letter winner's. Yet they were highlighted with fine perform-.ances by team captain Debbie Wojnowski, who became the first Parkside swimmer to place in the WWIAC Championship Meet with a sixth place in the 500 freestyle and the teams top point earner with a total of 143½ points. She was voted Most Valuable Swimmer by her fellow teammates. The team was highlighted with an almost upset of UW-Oshkosh 52-55, on Parents' night, October 22. Letter winners included 2nd year Sally Francis and Lynn Peterson; and 1st year Maureen Graves, Kay Kauffman, Lowrie Melotik, MaryBeth Mogensen, Donna Peterson, and Debbie Wojnow-ski. ·Tennis MVP: Kathy Feichtner The highlight of the 1977 Women's Tennis season come in their final competition at the WWIAC Conference Tourna-ment, where they place eigth out of twelve schools. I ndtvidual highlights of the meet included consolation round championship of '#3 doubles Kathy Feichtner and Marge Balazs, #1 doubles team Jennifer Zuehlke and finishers included Doug Andrew-ski at 177 pd., Greg Nikolopolous at 190 pd., and Steve Lacount at 134 pds.; and in fourth place was Randy Trzebiatowski at 142 pds., and Dave Singer at 12b pds. "I'm very pleased with the team as well as the fine individual performances of this year's squad," replied Parkside Wrestling Coach Jim Koch. "This is a good team with a lot of outstanding wrestlers. I'm espe-cially pleased with the perform-ance of this team, considering we've lost three of our top wrestlers whom we were expecting to be back this year. We've got a fine squad and they're sure to be showing more / MaryAnn Cairns over UW-Milwaukee, and victories of #1 singles Jennifer -Zuehlke over' UW-Milwaukee and UW-Green Bay. Voted by her teammates as Most Valuable Player was Junior Kathy Fiechtner. Letterwinners included 4th year Jennifer Zuehlke; 3rd year Kathy Fiechtner; 2nd year Marge Balazs, Maryann Cairns, and Pat Munger; 1st yea_r Judy Kingsfield and Sue Schenning. Volleyball MVP: Tracy Faustino This year's team was extremely impressive in its teamwork and individual skills. Some of their highlights included taking 1st place at both the Whitewater and Parkside Invitationals, and then a sixth place  finish at the Midwest Regionals. The team members voted Tracy Faustino as the 1977 Volleyball Team's Most Valuable Player. Letter-winners included 3rd year team captain Diana Kolovos and Lynn Sage; 2nd year Eileen Beres, Diann Dorlack, and Tracy Faustino; and 1st year Terri Bieser, Tess Manzano, Liz Venci, Linda Zeihen, and LeRoy Jefferson (Manager). outstanding wrestling as the season progresses." The three wrestlers which were lost, was Junior Dan O'Connell, who's sitting out of school this year, but will be back next year. Junior Bob Gruner, who's a two-time All American and last year's team captain, has to sit out this year after having major knee surgery done over the summer. And also junior, Jo'.-n Gale an All-Ameri-can, transfered to UW-Madison to pursue his major, as Parkside did not carry it. The Wrestlers next competi-tion will come during semester break on Thursday and Friday, December 29-30 at the Midlands Championships in Evanston, Illinois. &#13;
ali Muhammd Ali, Heavyweight Boxing Champion of the World, made a guest appearance at Robinson Chevrolet in Kenosha last Saturday, December 10. Ali spoke about his greatness, of his devotion and dedication to almighty Allah, and told the hundreds that came to see him that they should pray more often. After he was finished talking, he got in the driver's seat of a black Chevy and drove away. He was mobbed every inch he moved during the visit. Traffic clogged the county roads within a mile of the dealership during his short stay. It was the biggest mob scene most Kenoshans could remember occurring for any cele~rity and as Parkside alumni Allen Fredrickson summed it up,  "Every media freak in the area showed up for this one." 5 ~hotographs by Philip L. Livingston &#13;
news Adult scholarship offered • William C. Davis, president of the National Historical Society, has announced the availability of a $1,000 "second chance" scholarship. The purpose of the scholarship is to provide financial aid to a person who has been out of school for at least five years and now wishes to continue his or her education. The National Historical Society will announce the recipient of the scholarship by April 30, 1978. Applicants must meet the following requirements to be eligible for the scholarship: 1.) Must not have attended school full time during the past 5 years.,_ 2.) Must be recommended for participation in the scholarship contest by a member of the National Historical Society. 3.) Must be able to show acceptance at an accredited college or university before the scholarship is a~arded. 4.) Must not now hold a bachelor's degree. The scholarship is available to anyone meeting those requirements, regardless of college major. Application forms are available from the National Historical Society and must be completed and sent in, along with high school transcripts, by December 31, 1977. Applicants must then prepare and submit before March 31 1978, a 6,000-6,500 word essa; on the topic "The Causes of the Civil War". A bibliography and instruc_tions to be used for the Rollin Jansky (left), Director of the Fine Arts Division·, Diane Ward and Suzanne Moe, art students, and Dennis Bayuzick, Art Professor, look over sketches from the Life Drawing class riow on display at the Library /Learning Center. The exhibit area was constructed on the 01 Level of the L 1 LC through the combined efforts of the Office of Educational Services, the Art Discipline and the Library/Learning Center in order to give campus wide exposure to the works of Parkside art students. Each month the area will feature the projects of a different art class. In the future the exhibit area will be expanded to include sculpture and three dimensional art. Judging will be done by the purpose in returning to school. members of the National -The statement should also Historical Society Board of include the school the applicant Advisors. The winner's scholar-plans to attend. ship check will be sent directly To obtain more information to the winner's college or on the scholarship contest or university to be applied to his or membership in the National her needs. Historical Society, write to: essay are available from the Karen Kennedy, Administrative National Historical Society. Assistant, National Historical Applicants should send with the Society, P.O. Box 1831 Harris-completed essay a statement of 2 burg, PA 17105 or ' phone: pages or less of his or her 717-234-5091 ext. 133. CONTACT weekly by student government Buying power card offered by Rusty Smith President, P.S.G.A., Inc. I spoke with Assistant Chancellor Goetz about the white parking sticker selling limit for next semester. He indicated that approximately the same amount of stickers would be sold as this semester, but that the new lot would be "white" allowing more parking room. Definite plans have not been finalized yet, but it does seem that the administration is trying to alleviate the problems we had during this semester. P.S.G.A. will be informed once the final levels are set and I can assure you that we will stay on top of the situation. Next semester, P._S.G.A. will have a new service available to Parkside students; a Student Buying Power Card. The card is absolutely free to any Parkside student and will enable the holder to purchase merchandise at a 10 to 20 percent savings from several local merchants. Cards will be distributed at the P.S.G.A. office, WLLC D-197, after registration for next semester. This is the last issue of Ranger for 1977 and Phil Livingston's last issue as Editor. I know how hard Phil has worked this past year and J think he has done a fine job. After all, the best test of the paper is it's readership and people are reading the Ranger. Best of luck to you Phil in whatever you tackle next! _Finally, I would lik~ to wish you all a happy and healthy holiday season from myself and all the members of the Parkside Student Government Association, Inc. Se ya next year! Out-of-state tuition rates unlawful? A case before the Supreme Court may make out-of-state tuition rates unlawful. The Supreme Court will review two lower court decisions that ruled that the University of Maryland cannot charge the higher, out-~f-state rates to students holding nonimmigrant-alien visas. ~-N\~G\C The University has been allowed to continue charging the rates on the condition that it retroactively reimburse affected students if it ultimately loses the case. -8;11 J&lt;rueger' s 'Jlowers ~ o~O . 5,reet \ ~i)\\\ ~ Afl3 Open 32 . ~\~ 5~n3 The, American Council on Education and four states have filed a "friend-of-the-court" statement that says that the consequences of striking down Maryland's "rational" system of classifying students for in-state tuition may be to "ultimately force publicly-supported col-leges and universities to charge the same rate of tuition to all students, regardless of state residency or domicile. This would deprive state taxpayers  of the direct benefit of their support by raising the cost of education for them and their dependent children." Mon. &amp; Fri. ~ ?\C.\~' 1 "'""'° @J.\.•{)-7" Noon ti/ 9. ~~ '-._.,,._.., Sat. Noon ti/ 5 \'\"'"-MAGIC TRICKS -JOKES -NOVEL TIES 3113 WASHINGTON AVKNUIC RACINE, PHONE 637-!5691 COMPETITION. FOR: CAMPUS QUALIFYING TOURNAMENTS ACUI 1 Foosball I I I I I I Jan. 25,· 6 p.m. Mixed Doubles Billiards . I I I • I • Jan. 26, 6 p.m. Men's &amp; Women's Division Chess I I I • • • Jan. 27, 3 p.m. Mixed • • Bowling. . . . . • • Jan. 27 and 28 Men's &amp; Women's Division Entrants must register at Recre, ation Center Desk 24 hour's prior to each event. Fee information available at Unio~ Recreation Center. I The case will probably be reviewed in early 1978. Commencement scheduled for Dec. 18 Mid-year commencement ceremonies at Parkside will be held for about 100 degree candidates on Sunday, Dec. 18, at 2  p.m. in the Communication Arts Theater. Chancellor Alan E. Guskin will address the graduates and their guests. Following the graduation exercises, the University will host a reception for 'graduates and their guests in Main Place of Wyllie Library-Learning Center. &#13;
Graduate schools: a waste? [i:PS] Grad programs are   inadequately suited to the needs of students and employers. That's the finding of the National Board on Graduate Education (NBGE), which ended a three-year study in 1976, urging universities to place less emphasis on the preparation of re-search scholars and stress advanced training of older women and men who plready have jobs. Institutions shouldn't pattern their programs after Harvard and Berkeley but an "important mission does exist in serving a local clientele with part-time, applied master's and professional doctoral programs," the Board said. The NBGE also predicted as few as ten percent of new Ph.d's will secure faculty employment in the next decade. Allen Carter, while a UCLA economist, wasn't so bearish in a study completed for the Higher Education Research Institute in 1976. Carter found close to 70 percent of the Ph .d's in the last decade involved in teaching. But that figure had slipped to just over one-half in 1974. The doctorate outlook for health-related areas like microbiology and physiology is bullish, but there's a depression in the languages, philosophy and history according to Carter. In 1976, the National Center for Educational Statistics reported increases in master's, doctoral and professional degrees in humanities, social and natural sciences since 1963, increases that will continue to rise steadily through 1983. The_ largest surplus will be in the arts, humanities and education where the ratio of candidates to jobs will be five to one, predicts the Bureau of Labor's Division of Occupational Outlook. In engineering and physical sciences, those finding jobs will outnumber those who don't between now and 1985. Medical school applications decreased in 1975-76 after climbing rapidly for nine years. The Association of American Medical Colleges attributes the drop to malpractice suits, the uncertainty of a national health insurance policy, the fear of soc_ialized medicine, medical school tuition and a negative public attitude toward physicians. Overall, graduate enrollment slipped in 1976-77, according to John Ryan, Assistant to the President of the Council of Graduate Schools in Washington, D.C. While graduate enrollment dropped only 2.3 percent, it marked the first decline in five years at institutions that award 99 percent of the Ph.d's and 84 percent of the master's degrees in the U.S. Government statistics do not exist for the number of grad students who actually earn their degrees. Apparently, more students finish a master's program than those working on a doctoral program. The flunkout rate is very low because of pre-admission scrutiny over transcripts, graduate record exams, and letters of recommendation. The stagnant economy of the 1970's ended the flourishing in graduate enrollment. Prospective grad students should take stock of Caroline Bird's belief that a college education is the "dumbest investment you can make" in The Case Against College, which may have added importance today. Starts Friday, December 23, at a theatre near you Clteclc your local newspapers for listing. Have a Merry Holiday Season gift ideas for you ... -soft goods -shirts -gym shirts -glassware and mugs RINGS MUGS BEER STEINS ~~~ce THE BOOKSTORE &#13;
MORE INFORMATION&#13;
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              <text>Nobel Prize&#13;
winner to speak&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
Dr. Severo Ochoa, winner of&#13;
the 1959 Nobel Prize in physiology&#13;
and medicine, will speak&#13;
on the regulation of protein&#13;
synthesis, including its relationship&#13;
to cancer drug research, at 2&#13;
p.m. on Friday, Oct. 7, in&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Ochoa currently is a distinguished&#13;
member of the Roche&#13;
Institute of Molecular Biology in&#13;
Nutley, New Jersey.&#13;
He won the Nobel laureate for&#13;
the biosynthesis of ribonucieic&#13;
acid (RNA), the substance basic&#13;
to the formation of macromolecules&#13;
including proteins&#13;
and hormones. That study, and&#13;
much of his subsequent work,&#13;
deals with the identification andsynthesis&#13;
of chemical components&#13;
of the genetic code, which&#13;
determines heredity.&#13;
Ochoa is the author of almost&#13;
500 papers published in&#13;
professional and scholarly journals.&#13;
He received his M. D. degree&#13;
from the University of Madrid in&#13;
his native Spain and did postdoctoral&#13;
research at several&#13;
other European institutions.&#13;
Ochoa holds 19 honorary&#13;
doctoral degrees, including the&#13;
doctor of humane letters, from&#13;
institutions in the U.S., Europe&#13;
and South America.&#13;
He is a fellow of the American&#13;
Academy for the Advancement&#13;
of Science and the American&#13;
Academy of Arts and Sciences&#13;
and is a member of a number of&#13;
other scientific societies around&#13;
the world including the&#13;
Academy of Sciences of the&#13;
U.S.S.R. He served for six years&#13;
as president of the international&#13;
Union of Biochemistry.&#13;
His free public lecture is&#13;
sponsored by the Parks ide&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee&#13;
and the Life Science Club.&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday,Oclober5,1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No.6&#13;
17 17 If you stop to think about it ()()&#13;
l)O when you are playing, the V V&#13;
spirit disappears.&#13;
-C.rlos Montoy.&#13;
food contract renewed&#13;
without student input&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
When the Sagafood service contract for the Union was renewed on&#13;
June 1 of this year, the Union Operating Board (UOB) was not&#13;
notified so that it could provide student input for or against the&#13;
renewal.&#13;
. Rick Folsom, who was chairman of the UOB last year, said the&#13;
board decided in February to form a subcommittee to deal with the&#13;
food contract renewal. Folsom said Bill Niebuhr, Director of Student&#13;
Life-Union, neglected to contact the sUbcomm~~te.ewhen the&#13;
administration. decided to renew th~ co~tract. NIebuhr ,~ever&#13;
contacted anyone about participating In, the re~ewa,l: .he&#13;
complained to RANGER, and charged Niebuhr with. . taking&#13;
advantage of the UOB during its weakest _m~~ent - during the&#13;
-summer." The contract was renewed for an additional year on June 1.&#13;
Doug Edenhauser,the current chairman of the UOB, told RANGER&#13;
that Niebuhr didn't notify him, either. "I received I.etters on other&#13;
subjects at my home, including some letters fro~ hl~, so he kn~w&#13;
where to send any notices for me." The PS~A offlc: drd not receive&#13;
ti either according to Rusty Smith, president. (See PSGA any no ICe, ,&#13;
CONTACT in this RANGER for her comments.)&#13;
I&#13;
id th t PSGA took a"'survey last year, and the results Fa som sal a . . f d . h h&#13;
. d· d h t t that time the students were dtssat!s Ie Wit t e&#13;
In reate t a a '&#13;
/&#13;
service. "People were getting dcwnrtght vulgar In their comments&#13;
about the pnces and the quality of the food:' he said Niebuhr&#13;
countered that "several questions were asked in a fashion that&#13;
couldn't be properly interpreted:' and that "we could have&#13;
terminated the Sagacontract this year if there had been good reason&#13;
to."&#13;
Niebuhr did say that he won't renew a contract again Without&#13;
student input. "In the future I'd say this wouldn't be done The Saga&#13;
conuact is eligible for another one-veer extension on next June&#13;
"This year it's my hope to have a food service subcommittee of the&#13;
UOB which would be a standing committee:' Niebuhr said, claiming&#13;
that if the UOB had been organized, this wouldn't have happened&#13;
"I'd say the UOB was kind'Of loose in Its first year of existence They&#13;
spend their time putting out little fires, and a standing food service&#13;
committee was not set up"&#13;
Yet Folsom claims the UOB did just that, appointing John Stewart&#13;
as chairman.&#13;
At any rate, the UOB voted unammouslv at its last meeting to&#13;
create a food service committee Two members were appomted: Rick&#13;
Folsom and Terry Zuehlsdorf&#13;
In other UOB business, the board unanimously re-elected Doug&#13;
Edenhauser as chairman The Saga contract is eligible for another&#13;
one-year extension on next June I&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
Nobel Prize&#13;
winner to speak&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
Dr. Severo Ochoa, winner of&#13;
the 1959 Nobel Prize in physiology&#13;
and medicine, will speak&#13;
on the regulation of protein&#13;
synthesis, including its relat ionship&#13;
to cancer drug research, at 2&#13;
p.m. on Friday, Oct. 7, in&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Ochoa currently is a distinguished&#13;
member of the Roche&#13;
Institute of Molecular Biology in&#13;
Nutley, New Jersey.&#13;
He won the Nobel laureate for&#13;
the biosynthesis of ribonucieic&#13;
acid (RNA), the substance basic&#13;
to the formation of macromol&#13;
ec ul es inc ludi ng proteins&#13;
and hormones. That study, and&#13;
much of his subsequent wor ,&#13;
deals with the identification and&#13;
synthesis of chemical components&#13;
of the genetic code, which&#13;
determines heredity.&#13;
Ochoa is t he author of almost&#13;
500 papers published in&#13;
profession al and scholarly journals.&#13;
&#13;
He received his M .D. degree&#13;
from the University of Madrid in&#13;
his native Spain and did postdoctoral&#13;
research at several&#13;
other European i nstitutions .&#13;
O choa hold s 19 honorary&#13;
doctoral degrees, including the&#13;
doctoT of humane letters, from&#13;
institutions in the U.S., Europe&#13;
and South America.&#13;
He is a fellow of the American&#13;
Academy for the Advancement&#13;
of Science and the American&#13;
Academy of Arts and Sciences&#13;
and is a member of a number of&#13;
other scientific societies around&#13;
the world includ ing the&#13;
Academ y of Sciences of the&#13;
U.S.S.R. He s e for s· rs&#13;
as president of the international&#13;
Union of Biochemistry.&#13;
His free public lecture is&#13;
spo nsored by the Parksi de&#13;
Lecture and Fi ne Arts Committee&#13;
and the Life Science Club.&#13;
er&#13;
Wednesday, October 5, 1977&#13;
Vol. 6, No. 6&#13;
17 17 If you stop to think about 1t ()()&#13;
l)l) when you are playing, the l/ l/&#13;
spirit disappears.&#13;
-Car1os Montoya&#13;
food contract renewed&#13;
without student input&#13;
by John McKloskey&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
When the Saga food service contract for the Union was renewed on&#13;
June 1 of this year, the Union Operating Board (UOB) was not&#13;
notified so that it could provide student input for or against the&#13;
renewal . . Rick Folsom, who was chairman of the UOB last year, said the&#13;
board decided in February to form a subcommittee to deal with the&#13;
food contract renewal. Folsom said Bill Niebuhr, Director of Student&#13;
Life-Union neglected to contact the subcommittee when the&#13;
administration_ decided to renew the contract . " Niebuhr never&#13;
contacted anyone about participating in, the re~ewa!_,'' _he&#13;
complained to RANGER, and charged Niebuhr with . taking&#13;
advantage of the UOB during its weakest .m?ment - during the&#13;
summer." The confract was renewed for an add1t1onal year on June 1.&#13;
Doug Edenhauser, the current chairman of th~ UOB, told RANGER&#13;
that Niebuhr didn't notify him, either. " I received l_etters on other&#13;
subjects at my home, including some letters fron:1 him, so he kn~w&#13;
where to send any notices for me." The PS~A off1c~ did not receive&#13;
any notice, either, accord ing to Rusty Smith, president. (See PSGA&#13;
CONT ACT in thi s RANGER for her comments .)&#13;
I ·d th t PSGA took survey last year, and the results Fo som sa1 a d. . f. d . h th · d . d h t t that time the students were 1ssat 1s 1e wit e in 1cate t a a ,&#13;
service " People were getting downright vulgar in th ir comment&#13;
about the prices and the quality of the food .'' he aid I buhr&#13;
countered that several que t1ons were a k d in a fashion that&#13;
couldn't be properl interpreted," and that " w could hav&#13;
terminated the Saga contract this ear 1f there had b n good r ason&#13;
to "&#13;
iebuhr did say that he won t renew a contract again without&#13;
student input " In the future I'd say this wouldn't be done . The aga&#13;
conuact is eligible for another one-year e tension on next Jun&#13;
"This year it's my hope to have a food service subcommittee of the&#13;
UOB which would be a standing committee," 1ebuhr said, claim in&#13;
that 1f the UO B had been organized, this wouldn't ha e happened&#13;
" I'd sa the UOB was kindof loose in its first ear of existence The&#13;
spend their time putting out little fires, and a standing food erv1ce&#13;
committee was not set up."&#13;
Yet Folsom claims the UOB did Just that, appointing John Stewart&#13;
as chairman .&#13;
At an rate, the UOB voted unanimous! at its last meeting to&#13;
create a food service comm ittee Two members were appointed Rick&#13;
Folsom and Terry Zuehlsdorf&#13;
In other UOB business, the board unai:i1mousl re-elected Doug&#13;
Edenhauser as chairman The Saga contract is eligible for another&#13;
one-year extension on next June I &#13;
. i&#13;
editorial&#13;
/&#13;
Tlte administration&#13;
~andyou&#13;
) After registration, most students rarely have an&#13;
opportunity to do business with administrators.&#13;
This tends to limit a student's understanding of&#13;
how administrative procedures work at Parkside.&#13;
If a student has a problem in class; most likely&#13;
the problem will be resolved with the professor.&#13;
Even a problem with financial- aids or student&#13;
records will be handled by mid-level&#13;
administrators or secretaries. The common&#13;
student rarely meets the folks at the top. Most&#13;
students never meet the Chancellor until&#13;
graduation.&#13;
There are people who receive a good deal of&#13;
money to make decisions students have to live&#13;
with including, but not limited to, parking,&#13;
shuttle buses, and paperwork procedures.&#13;
Administrators of 'any campus as well as&#13;
corporate leaders possess g.reat power to effect&#13;
change in their respective institutions. This&#13;
power is centralized by having special&#13;
information relating to time and circumstances&#13;
that is not available to their constituents. It is the&#13;
business of this newspaper to dig up and decode&#13;
as much of this information as possible and to.&#13;
make it available to everyone.&#13;
Student sentiment and attitudes are&#13;
represented by student government. Views of&#13;
anyone at Parkside can be reproduced in the mass&#13;
media through a letter to the editor of Ranger as&#13;
long as they are typed, double spaced; signed&#13;
and under three pages in length.&#13;
/ Is everybody happy? Remember, just&#13;
complaining and mumbling about shuttle buses&#13;
or parking problems is just as good as having no&#13;
opinion at all. We know there are a lot of unhappy&#13;
people out there. Rang9r. encourages you to&#13;
speak out. Occasionally, an administrator will&#13;
read the newspaper and develop some idea of&#13;
what students are thinking. Ranger knows .the&#13;
Chancellor and his associates read the paper&#13;
because they know it gets sent all over the state&#13;
of Wisconsin. The Board of Regents all get a: copy&#13;
and they are interested in what students think on&#13;
the campuses they govern.. r&#13;
The University of Wisconsin System is known&#13;
for its self governance among faculty. The faculty&#13;
senate will be making a decision on the fate of the&#13;
proposed breadth requirement (required courses&#13;
for graduation) and the academic advising·&#13;
proposal (credit limit for undecided undergraduates&#13;
and the assignment of an area of study as&#13;
well as an assigned faculty advisor earlier in their&#13;
education). The' student gov~rnment will be&#13;
following these proposals by assigning students&#13;
to committees that will formulate upcoming&#13;
policies. . -&#13;
The administration holds up in the "penthouse"&#13;
above Main Place. They arE!'quite content to' do&#13;
what they feel is best for everyone. It is up to you&#13;
to insure they have the right student input. Speak&#13;
up or be lead quietly.&#13;
Parkside's administrators are not a bad bunch.&#13;
A good number of them went to the fine~t schools&#13;
in the east. They have to really mess up to get flak&#13;
from central adrntnlstratton. So, if you have an&#13;
opinion or a problem and can't solve it at your&#13;
level, get in touch with a senator from student&#13;
" .&#13;
government or the editor of Ranger. Those&#13;
administrators might have considerably more&#13;
credentials than we lOWlyundergraduates do, but&#13;
everyone kn.0wsthat they don't know as rtiuch.as&#13;
we do at the front.&#13;
~al\~eris wr!lten &amp;.ndedited by students of the&#13;
Un.lverslty 01 W Isconsu\·Pit.rkside and they are sol I&#13;
respon.sible for its editorial polley and content.e&#13;
y ,&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Han.sen. deft Prostko, Kim. Wun.sch,&#13;
Kat Hermaan, Chris Ratcks, Ma.rc~ Vlach.&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingsto" 55:3.2295&#13;
Genera! Mn"ager Thomas R. Cooper 55:3.2287&#13;
Copy Editor doh" R. McKloskey&#13;
Ne:w$ Editor Diane d'.,len.sky&#13;
Circuta tion Maf\ager Karen Putman&#13;
. Sales Manager doh" Gabriel 553.2287&#13;
Retail Advertising Manager Ke" Larse" 55:3.2287&#13;
Ran.ger Newspaper, University 01 Wisconsin ..Pukside&#13;
K.enosha. Wisconsin 53141&#13;
• Subscriptiol\S: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
•&#13;
editorial I&#13;
\ I&#13;
,'&#13;
. The· administration·&#13;
~and you&#13;
After registration, most students rarely have an&#13;
opportunity to do business with administrators.&#13;
This tends to limit a student's understanding of&#13;
how administrative procedures work at Parkside.&#13;
If a student has a problem in class,- most likely&#13;
,the problem will be resolved with the professor.&#13;
Even a problem with financial~ aids or student&#13;
records will be nandled by mid-level&#13;
administrators or secretaries. The common&#13;
student rarely meets the folks at the top. Most&#13;
students never meet the Chancellor until&#13;
graduation.&#13;
There are people who receive a good deal of&#13;
money to make decisions students have to live&#13;
with including, but nor limited to, parking,&#13;
shuttle buses, and paperwork procedures.&#13;
Administrators of ·any campus as well as&#13;
corporate leaders possess great power to effect&#13;
change in their respective institutions. This&#13;
power is centralized by having special&#13;
information relating to time and circumstances&#13;
that is not available to their constituents. It is the&#13;
business of this newspaper to dig up and decode&#13;
as much of this information as possible and to.&#13;
make it available to everyone.&#13;
Student sentiment and attitudes are&#13;
represented by student government. Views of&#13;
anyone at Parkside can be reproduced in the mass&#13;
media through a letter to the editor of Ranger as&#13;
long as they are typed, double spaced,, signed&#13;
and· under three pages in length.&#13;
Is everybody happy? Remember, just&#13;
complaining and mumbling about shuttle buses&#13;
or parking problems is just as good as having no&#13;
opinion at all. We know there are a lot of unhappy&#13;
people out there. Ranger -encourages you to&#13;
speak out. Occasionally, an administrator will&#13;
read the newspaper and develop some idea of&#13;
what students are thinking. Ranger knows .the&#13;
Chancellor and his associates read the paper&#13;
because they know it gets sent al I over the stat~&#13;
of Wisconsin. The Board of Regents al I get a copy&#13;
arid they are interested in what students think on&#13;
the campuses they govern. ,&#13;
The University of Wisconsin System is known&#13;
for its self governance among faculty. The faculty&#13;
senate will be making a decision on th·e fate of the&#13;
proposed breadth requirement (required courses&#13;
for graduation) and the academic advising ·&#13;
proposal (credit limit for undecided undergraduates&#13;
and the assignment of an area of study as&#13;
.well as an assigned faculty advisor earlier.in their&#13;
education). The· student gov~rnment will be&#13;
following these proposals by assigning students&#13;
to committees that will formulate upcoming&#13;
policies. · -&#13;
The administration holds up in the "penthouse"&#13;
above Main Place. They are' quite content to, do&#13;
what they feel is best for everyone. It is up to you&#13;
to insure they have the right student input. Speak&#13;
up or be lead quietly.&#13;
Parkside's administrators are not a bad bunch.&#13;
A good number of them went to the fine~t schools&#13;
in the east. They h~ve to really mess up to get flak&#13;
from central_ administration. So, if you h~ve an&#13;
opinion or a problem and can't solve it at · your&#13;
l~vel, get in touch with a senator from student&#13;
government or the editor c;&gt;f Ranger. Those&#13;
administrators might have considerably more&#13;
credentials th~n we lowly undergraduates do, but&#13;
everyone knows that they don't know as much. -as&#13;
we do at the front.&#13;
~an~er is wr?tten a_nd edited by students of the&#13;
Un1vers1ty of W 1scons1n-Parkside and they are sol I&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.e Y '&#13;
Our Writers&#13;
Dan Guidebeck, Robert Hansen, Jeff Prostko, Kun Wunsch,&#13;
Kat Hermann, Chris Ratcks, Marcia Vlach.&#13;
Editor Philip L. Livingston 55.3-2295&#13;
Gen.era{ Ml\n.ager Thomas R. Cooper 553-2287&#13;
Co~y Editor John R. McKloskey&#13;
News Editor Diane Jalensky&#13;
Circulation Manager Karen Putman&#13;
Sales Manager John Gabriel 553-2287&#13;
Retail Advertising Manager Ken Larsen 553-2287&#13;
Ranger Newspaper, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141 • Subscriptions: $5.00 year for U.S.A.&#13;
f&#13;
.., . &#13;
news Participants may&#13;
partake in the following physical&#13;
events Fitness improvement&#13;
program begins&#13;
By Diane lillensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Cyclin,&#13;
500 mile club&#13;
1000 mile club&#13;
louin,&#13;
100 mile club&#13;
500 mile club&#13;
1000mile club&#13;
Swimminl&#13;
so mile club&#13;
100 mile club&#13;
500 mile club&#13;
-,&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
The University of wisconstnParks&#13;
ide physical fitness improvement&#13;
program encourages&#13;
students faculty and staff to&#13;
participate in the program's&#13;
aerobic (respiratory fitness)&#13;
activities such as swimming,&#13;
cycling and jogging.&#13;
The program's primary objective&#13;
is to improve the&#13;
cardio-respiratory fitness of the&#13;
individual.&#13;
Requirements for each category&#13;
must be met to qualify in&#13;
these various events. Participants&#13;
active in the jogging club&#13;
must record not less than one&#13;
mile or exceed the limit of ten&#13;
miles each day. Swimmers must&#13;
record at least \4 mile and&#13;
cyclists are required to ride more&#13;
than 2.5 miles but not exceed 50&#13;
miles a day. Students enrolled in&#13;
jogging and swimming physical&#13;
education classes may count&#13;
exercises during class time&#13;
towards the program, provided&#13;
minimum distances are covered.&#13;
Awards will be administered to&#13;
those individuals who have met&#13;
the required standards. Approximately&#13;
50 lettered t-shirts will be&#13;
awarded to the first participants&#13;
qualifying. All qualifiers will&#13;
receive certificates for their&#13;
endeavor in the program.&#13;
In addition, the American Red&#13;
Cross "Swim and Fit" program&#13;
will offer additional awards upon&#13;
logging, 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50&#13;
miles. These swimmers will&#13;
recceive wallet-sized certificates.&#13;
An emblem and pin may&#13;
be purchased for those swimmers&#13;
who complete 50 miles.&#13;
Interested persons may obtain&#13;
an appointment to test their&#13;
body composition, blood pressure&#13;
and resting pulse rate&#13;
through the Human Performance&#13;
Lab with Coordinator Sue&#13;
Tobachnik at extension 2318 or&#13;
2519.&#13;
PARKSIOE&#13;
FOOD&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
weekly by student government&#13;
Committee input&#13;
deliberately avoided&#13;
RANGER&#13;
GLASS&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, PSGA&#13;
"-&#13;
last year, students were directly involved in the decision to extend&#13;
Follett Corporatioji's bookstore contract for only one year and to&#13;
begin investigations as to the possibilities of an alternative book&#13;
service here at Parkside. This right is guaranteed to students by&#13;
Merger law: "Students shall have primary responsibility for the&#13;
formulation and review of policies concerning student life, services&#13;
and interests."&#13;
This was not the case with the Saga food contract renewal. In fact,&#13;
student input was. deliberately avoided. .&#13;
On February 28, 1977 the Union Operating Board informed the&#13;
administration, via Mr. Bill Netbuhr. Director of Student&#13;
Life/Parkside Union, that it would form a committee specifically for&#13;
the purpose of reviewing Saga's contract which was up for renewal&#13;
june 1, 1977. The contract was renewed on May 1, 1977. The student&#13;
committee was never notified of discussions or included in any way;&#13;
a direct violation of student rights.&#13;
last week I spoke to Mr. O. Clayton Johnson, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Academic Support &amp; Student Services about this matter, but was&#13;
told that I would have to await the arrival of a new Dean of Student&#13;
life. This is a newly created position that has not yet been filled, and&#13;
until it is, the responsibility for what takes place in this area still lies&#13;
with Mr. Johnson and ultimately, of course, with the Chancellor.&#13;
More On The Parking Issue:&#13;
J am still receiving a number of complaints concerning this&#13;
semester's parking problems in the white lots. A number of students&#13;
who purchased white stickers are being forced to park in the red lots&#13;
due to the shortage of spaces in the Union and Communication Arts&#13;
lots. Though 'Security has put another bus in operation during the&#13;
busy morning hours, these students feel that they have a refund&#13;
coming and should be reissued the less expensive red stickers.&#13;
These lots were oversold to the tune of about 500 spaces. Ron&#13;
Brinkman, Director of Parks ide Security, has announced anyone&#13;
wanting a refund on their white parking sticker should come to the&#13;
Security offices in Tallent Hall. Red stickers may also be purchased&#13;
there.&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
IS LOOKING FOR A RETAIL ADYERTISING&#13;
MANAGER. PAID COMMISSION. INTERESTING&#13;
WORK FOR AN OUTGOING- PERSON.&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION,&#13;
CONTAO JOHN A. GABRIEL&#13;
AT TALLENT 294 OR CALL 553-2287.&#13;
• I&#13;
There will never be&#13;
enough writersl&#13;
P.A.B. invites you to&#13;
WINTER PARK&#13;
SKI FESTIVAL&#13;
._---_._----------~&#13;
NOW&#13;
OPEN!&#13;
I&#13;
• CONDOMINIUM LODGING&#13;
• 6 DAYS OF LIFT TICKETS&#13;
• PARTIES&#13;
• DANCES&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
$210&#13;
$137&#13;
Bus&#13;
For YOI Sweeiie ...&#13;
103m-4pm&#13;
UIION BAZAAR&#13;
Own Transportation&#13;
SIGN UP IN STUDENT UNION RM. 202&#13;
(DEADLINE NOVEMBER 18)&#13;
~._-._._----_.._--~&#13;
news&#13;
~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~===~~~~~~~·&#13;
g/!JC, w~~~d!~.~!&#13;
Committee input&#13;
deliberately avoided&#13;
by Rusty Smith&#13;
President, PSGA&#13;
Last year, students were directly involved in the decision to extend&#13;
Follett Corporatio_n's bookstore contract for only one year and to&#13;
begin investigations as to the possibilities of an alternative book&#13;
service here at Parkside. This right is guaranteed to students by&#13;
Merger Law: "Students shall have primary responsibility for the&#13;
formulation and review of policies concerning student life, services&#13;
and interests."&#13;
This was not the case with the Saga food contract renewal. In fact,&#13;
student input was. deliberately avoided. ·&#13;
On February 28, 1977 the Union Operating Board informed the&#13;
administration, via Mr. Bill Neibuhr, Director of Student&#13;
Life/Parkside Union, that it would form a committee specifically for&#13;
the purpose of r-eviewing Saga's contract which was up for renewal&#13;
June 1, 1977. The contract was renewed on May 1, 1977 . The student&#13;
committee was never notified of discussions or included in any way;&#13;
a direct violation of student rights.&#13;
Last week I spoke to Mr. 0 . Clayton Johnson, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Academic Support &amp; Student Services about this matter, but was&#13;
told that I would have to await the arrival of a new Dean of Student&#13;
Life. This is a newly created position that has not yet been filled, and&#13;
until it is, the responsibility for what takes place in this area still lies&#13;
with Mr. Johnson and ultimately, of course, with the Chancellor.&#13;
More On The Parking Issue:&#13;
I am still receiving a number of complaints concerning this&#13;
semester's parking problems in the white lots . A number of students&#13;
who purchased white stickers are being forced to park in the red lots&#13;
due to the shortage of spaces in the Unio11 and Communication Arts&#13;
lots . Though ·Security has put another bus in operation during the&#13;
busy morning hours, these students feel that they have a refund&#13;
coming and should be reissued the less expensive red stickers .&#13;
These lots were oversold to the tune of about 500 spaces . Ron&#13;
Brinkman, Director of Parkside Security, has announced anyone&#13;
wanting a refand on their white parking sticker should come to the&#13;
Security offices in Tallent Hall. Red stickers may also be purchased&#13;
there.&#13;
Fitness improvement&#13;
program begins&#13;
By Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
physical fitness improvement&#13;
program encourages&#13;
stvdents, faculty and staff to&#13;
participate in the program's&#13;
aerobic (respi ratory fitness)&#13;
activities such as swimming,&#13;
cycling and jogging.&#13;
The program's primary objecti&#13;
ve is to improve the&#13;
cardio-respiratory fitness of the&#13;
individual.&#13;
Requirements for each category&#13;
must be met to qualify in&#13;
these various events. Participants&#13;
active in the jogging club&#13;
must record not less than one&#13;
mile or exceed the limit of ten&#13;
miles each day. Swimmers must&#13;
record at least ¼ mile and&#13;
cyclists are required to ride more&#13;
than 2.5 miles but not exceed 50&#13;
miles a day. Students enrolled in&#13;
jogging and swimming physical&#13;
education classes may count&#13;
exercises during class time&#13;
towards the program, provided&#13;
minimum distances are covered.&#13;
Awards will be administered to&#13;
those individuals who have met&#13;
the requ ired standards. Approximately&#13;
50 lettered t-shirts will be&#13;
awarded to the first participants&#13;
qualifying. All qualifiers will&#13;
receive certificates for their&#13;
endeavor in the program.&#13;
In addition, the American Red&#13;
Cross " Swim and Fit" program&#13;
will offer additional awards upon&#13;
logging, 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50&#13;
miles. These swimmers will&#13;
recceive wallet-sized certificates.&#13;
An emblem and pin may&#13;
be purchased for those swimmers&#13;
who complete 50 miles.&#13;
Interested persons may obtain&#13;
an appointment to test their&#13;
body composition, blood pressure&#13;
and resting pulse rate&#13;
through the Human Performance&#13;
Lab with Coordinator Sue&#13;
Tobachnik at extension 2318 or&#13;
2519.&#13;
Participants ma&#13;
partake in th following ph ,cal&#13;
e ents&#13;
Jogging&#13;
700 m,le club&#13;
500 mile club&#13;
1000 mile club&#13;
Swimmin&#13;
som,le club&#13;
700 m,/e club&#13;
SOOmtleclub&#13;
C cling&#13;
500 mile club&#13;
7 mile club&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
FOOD&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
RANGER&#13;
GLASS&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
IS LOOKING FOR A RETAIL ADVERTISING&#13;
MANAGER. PAID COMMISSION. INTERESTING&#13;
WORK FOR AN OUTGOING_ PERSON.&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION,&#13;
CONTACT JOHN A. GABRIEL&#13;
AT TALLENT 294 OR CALL 553-2287.&#13;
There ~ril never be&#13;
enough writers!&#13;
p.A.B. invites you to&#13;
------------------~&#13;
NOW&#13;
OPEN!&#13;
For You Sweeiie ...&#13;
10am-4pm&#13;
UNION BAZAAR&#13;
I&#13;
~-----------------·&#13;
¾~.-.~rP"--:&#13;
WINTER PAR·K&#13;
SKI&#13;
-W&#13;
FESTIVAL&#13;
INTER PARK COLORADO&#13;
~&#13;
JANUARY 2-8&#13;
• CONDOMINIUM LODGING&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• 6 DAYS OF LIFT TICKETS&#13;
• PARTIES&#13;
• DANCES&#13;
$210 Bus&#13;
s 137 Own Transportation&#13;
SIGN UP IN STUDENT UNION RM . 202&#13;
(DEADLINE NOVEMBER 18) &#13;
neWs&#13;
No transcripts for&#13;
bankrupt students&#13;
private school.&#13;
The case was brought by&#13;
former students who argued that&#13;
they were covered by the&#13;
Bankruptcy Act, - which "enjoints)&#13;
all creditors whose .debts&#13;
are discharged from, .. employing&#13;
any process to collect such&#13;
debts as personal liabilities of&#13;
the bankrupt." But the court&#13;
found no congressional intent or&#13;
legislative history to indicate the&#13;
act prohibits nonlegal, informal&#13;
ways of prompting the debtor to&#13;
pay up.&#13;
The case was remanded to US&#13;
District Court in Missouri for&#13;
dismissal.&#13;
[HED-CPS) - The Eighth US&#13;
Court of Appeal, has ruied that&#13;
col,leges may wit~hold tranSCripts&#13;
from former students who&#13;
have discharged their student&#13;
loans through bankruptcy.&#13;
The majority opinion in the&#13;
case, Girardier v. Webster&#13;
College (Missouri) said the&#13;
Bankruptcy Act does not bar&#13;
private colleges from refusing to&#13;
issue transcripts to students&#13;
whose loans were discharged in&#13;
bankruptcy. However, the question&#13;
of public-private does not&#13;
enter the case and no college&#13;
should have to furnish records to&#13;
such students be it a public or&#13;
The fastest-growing Premium Beer&#13;
In America;&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
THE&#13;
222&amp;-57th St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-9909&#13;
Adult enrollment&#13;
highest at UW-P the pared to 42 percent last year,&#13;
while the number of minority&#13;
students increased from 295 to&#13;
353 and now make up seven&#13;
percent of the student body.&#13;
The number of students from&#13;
Kenosha and Racine counties&#13;
also increased: 1,986 from&#13;
Kenosha, up from 1,906, and&#13;
2,700 from Racine, up from&#13;
2,6~9. UW-P also showed a&#13;
marked increase in Milwaukee&#13;
County students, as the&#13;
percentage- of the student body&#13;
from Kenosha or Racine counties&#13;
dropped slightly from 91 to 90&#13;
percent.&#13;
Final fall enrollment at Parkside&#13;
is 5,184, an increase of four&#13;
"percent over last fall's figure of&#13;
4,984. /&#13;
New students and transfers to&#13;
Parkside showed the greatest&#13;
increase. A total of 1,163 ~w&#13;
students registered, a nine&#13;
percent gain from the 1,072 in&#13;
1976. Transfer students to UW-P&#13;
increased 13 percent, from 561&#13;
to 636. _ -....&#13;
Continuing students at,UW-P&#13;
number 2,964, up slightly from&#13;
2,952 last year. The remaining&#13;
421 students are those who&#13;
previously attended UW-P but&#13;
did not attend last semester, a&#13;
five percent increase over&#13;
399 of 1976.&#13;
Adult enrollment up'&#13;
The prrce!1tage of part-time&#13;
students "and -those over age 25,&#13;
already the highest in the UW&#13;
System, increased again. Some&#13;
2,528 students-49 percent of&#13;
total enrollment- are attending&#13;
part-time, compared to 2,344 or&#13;
47 percent, I~st year. Those over&#13;
25 increased from 1,555 to 1,734&#13;
and now comprise 33 percent of&#13;
all students.&#13;
Women and minority students&#13;
also increased sign.ificantly.&#13;
Females now comprise 45 percent&#13;
of total enrollment com-&#13;
"Total reserved -&#13;
All 42 -&#13;
The available parking spaces&#13;
are approximately:&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Union lot - 490&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Comm. Arts lot - 440&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Tallent lot - 61&#13;
Total red available&#13;
Tallent lot - 361&#13;
Total red available&#13;
East lot - 910&#13;
Total spaces available&#13;
White - 991, Red - 1)71&#13;
Total - 2,262&#13;
Total Stickers Sold -&#13;
White - 1,506, Red - 1,681&#13;
Total - 3,187&#13;
Total oversell -&#13;
White - 515, Red - 407&#13;
Total - 922&#13;
Some conclusions to be made&#13;
from these statistics are, ,1) that&#13;
the situation is not as bad as it&#13;
has been made out to be. 2) that,&#13;
Parking sticker tally&#13;
- - '&#13;
shC)ws crowding&#13;
by Robert J. Hansen&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Parkside Security released the&#13;
parking sticker tally last week. As&#13;
of September 6, the total parking&#13;
sticker breakdown is as follows:&#13;
Total Annual white -&#13;
Students 606&#13;
Faculty 274&#13;
" Total semester white -&#13;
Students 626&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
Total annual red -&#13;
Students 65&#13;
Faculty 27&#13;
Total semester red -&#13;
Students 1, 589&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
Total annual green -&#13;
Students 55&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
Total semester green -&#13;
Students 830&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
given the fact that at some times&#13;
there are more classes scheduled&#13;
than at others, of course there&#13;
will be problems parking. 3) the,&#13;
institution of green parking&#13;
stickers and the amount of white&#13;
stickers to be used at night could&#13;
lead to a parking problem in the&#13;
early evenings. 4) the fact that&#13;
many red stickered cars use the&#13;
white areas illegally, thus taking&#13;
up many of the spaces that white&#13;
. stickered cars have paid for, also&#13;
adds to the problem.&#13;
To those few who have had to&#13;
park in red areas and feel that&#13;
they have been ripped off by&#13;
Security, Director Ronald Brinkman&#13;
said, "Security will be more&#13;
than happy to help these people&#13;
to gain a refund of their white&#13;
stickers for red ones." Further&#13;
complaints should be directed to&#13;
student government at 553-2244&#13;
or the RANGER at 553-2295.&#13;
!../fUNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PARKSlDE'S CARIBBEAN HOLIDAY&#13;
semester Break '78 - Jan. 6 tbm 13&#13;
includes&#13;
• Round TrIp Jet Via Air Jamaica • 7 Nfghts Lodging at 1st Class "Casa Montego"&#13;
• Ground Transfers • Tour Escort Throughout • Orientation Program&#13;
• All Taxes &amp; Gratatles (Except for $2.00 Jamaican Departure Tax)&#13;
CAREFUL. •• DON'T "JAMAICA" MISTAKE&#13;
(Theirs is $20 less - but why?)&#13;
• 1st Class Hotel in Mo-Bays Main Hotel Dlstrltl&#13;
• S~ort Walk to Shopping, Restaurants, Bars, Disco, Etc.&#13;
• Near M-Bays most popular Beach· "Dr's Cave"&#13;
• Scheduled Flights Via AIr Jamaica&#13;
• Tour Escort Throughout&#13;
• MInimum RequIred Deposit ($50 vs. $100)&#13;
For MorelDformation Contact Parkslde Union, Rm. 209or call: 353-2200&#13;
COMPLETE PRICE BASED&#13;
ON TWIN OCCUPANCY&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
TRIP&#13;
YES&#13;
YE~&#13;
YES&#13;
YES&#13;
YES&#13;
YES&#13;
THEIRS&#13;
NO&#13;
NO&#13;
NO&#13;
YES&#13;
NO&#13;
NO&#13;
news Adult enrollment&#13;
No transcripts for highest· at u·w-P&#13;
bankrupt students Final fall enrollment at Parkside&#13;
is 5,184, an increase of four&#13;
/percent over last fall's figure of&#13;
4,984. ,,&#13;
five percent increase over&#13;
399 of 1976.&#13;
Adult enrollment upthe&#13;
pared to 42 percent last year,&#13;
while the number of minority&#13;
students increased from 295 to&#13;
353 and now make up seven The p~rcentage of rart-time&#13;
students . ancl ·those over age 25,&#13;
already the highest in the UW&#13;
System, increased again. Some&#13;
2,528 students - 49 percent of&#13;
total enrollment- are attending&#13;
part-time, co,mpared to 2,344 or&#13;
47 percent, last year. Those over&#13;
25 increased from 1,555 to 1,734&#13;
and now comprise 33 percent of&#13;
all students.&#13;
[HED-CPS] - The Eighth US&#13;
Court of Appeal; has ruled that&#13;
colleges may wit~hold transcripts&#13;
from former students who&#13;
have discharged their student&#13;
loans through bankruptcy.&#13;
private school.&#13;
The case was brought by&#13;
former students who argued that&#13;
they were covered by the&#13;
Bankruptcy Act, - which "enjoin(s)&#13;
all creditors whose debts&#13;
are discharged . from .. . employing&#13;
any process to c~llect such&#13;
debts as personal liabilities of&#13;
the bankrupt." But the court&#13;
found no congressional intent or&#13;
legislative history to indicate the&#13;
act prohibits nonlegal, informal&#13;
ways of prompting the debtor to&#13;
pay up .&#13;
New students and transfers t9&#13;
Parkside showed the greatest&#13;
increase . A total of 1,163 ~w&#13;
students registered, a nine&#13;
percent gain from the 1,072 in&#13;
1976. Transfer students to UW-P&#13;
increased 13 percent, from 561&#13;
to 636. - ,&#13;
Continuing students at ,UW-P&#13;
number 2,964, up slightly from&#13;
2,952 last year. The remaining&#13;
421 students are those who&#13;
previously attended UW-P but&#13;
did not attend last semester, a&#13;
Women and minority students&#13;
also increased sign..ificantly .&#13;
Females now comprise 45 percent&#13;
of total enrollment com-&#13;
. percent of the student body.&#13;
The number of students from&#13;
Kenosha and Racine counties&#13;
also increased : 1,986 from&#13;
Kenosha, up from 1,906, and&#13;
2,700 from Racine, up from&#13;
2,6:39 . UW-P also showed a&#13;
marked increase in Milwaukee&#13;
County students, as the&#13;
percentage· of the student body&#13;
from Kenosha or Racine counties&#13;
dropped slightly from 91 to 90&#13;
percent.&#13;
The majority opinion in the&#13;
case, Girardier v. Webster&#13;
College (Missouri) said the&#13;
Bankruptcy Act does not bar&#13;
private colleges from refusing to&#13;
issue transcripts to students&#13;
whose loans were discharged in&#13;
bankruptcy. However, the question&#13;
of , public-private does not&#13;
enter the case and no college&#13;
should have to furnish records to&#13;
such students be it a public or&#13;
The case was remanded to US&#13;
District Court in Missouri for&#13;
dismissal. Parking sticker tally&#13;
The fastest-growing Pre~ium Beer&#13;
in America·.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
- - ,&#13;
shc,ws crowding&#13;
by Robert J. Hansen&#13;
Ra.nger Staff&#13;
Parkside Security released the&#13;
parking sticker tally last week. As&#13;
of September 6, the total parking&#13;
sticker breakdown is as follows:&#13;
Total Annual white -&#13;
Students 606&#13;
Faculty 274&#13;
,, Total semester white -&#13;
StudeRts 626&#13;
Faculty0&#13;
Total annual red -&#13;
Students 65&#13;
Faculty 27&#13;
Total semester red -&#13;
Students 1, 589&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
Total annual green -&#13;
Students 55&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
Total semester green -&#13;
Students 830&#13;
Faculty 0&#13;
-Total reserved -&#13;
All 42 -&#13;
The available parking spaces&#13;
are approximately:&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Union lot - 490&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Comm. Arts lot - 440&#13;
Total white available&#13;
Tallent lot - 61&#13;
Total red available&#13;
Tallent lot - 361&#13;
Total red available&#13;
E,ast lot - 910&#13;
_ Total spaces available&#13;
White - 991, Red - 1,271&#13;
Total - 2,262&#13;
Total Stickers Sold -&#13;
White - 1,506, Red - 1,681&#13;
Total - 3,187&#13;
Total oversell -&#13;
White - 515, Red - 407&#13;
Total - 922&#13;
Some conclusions to be made&#13;
from these statistics a·re, 1) that&#13;
the situation is not as bad as it&#13;
has been made out to be. 2) that,&#13;
given the fact that at some times&#13;
there are more classes scheduled&#13;
than at others, of course there&#13;
will be problems parking. 3) thei&#13;
institution of green parking&#13;
stickers and the amount of white&#13;
stickers to be used at night could&#13;
lead to a parking problem in the&#13;
early evenings. 4) the fact that&#13;
many red stickered cars use the&#13;
white areas illegally, thus taking&#13;
up many of the spaces that white&#13;
· stickered cars have pai~ for, also&#13;
adds to the problem.&#13;
To those few who have had to&#13;
park in red areas and feel that&#13;
· they have been ripped off by&#13;
Security, Director Ronald Brinkman&#13;
said, "Security will be more&#13;
than happy to help these people&#13;
to gain a refund of their white&#13;
stickers for red ones." Further&#13;
complaints should be directed to&#13;
student government at 553-2244&#13;
or the RANGER at 553-2295.&#13;
tlfuNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE'S CARIBBEAN HOLIDAY&#13;
I'&#13;
COMPLETE PRICE BASED&#13;
ON TWIN OCCUPANCY&#13;
Semester Break '78 - Jan. 6 thru 13&#13;
includes&#13;
• Round Trip Jet Via Air Jamaica • 7 Nights Lodging at 1st Class "Casa Montego''&#13;
• Ground Transfers • Tour Escort Throughout • Orientation ProgFam&#13;
• All Taxes &amp; Graqitles (Except for $2.00 Jamaican Departure Tax)&#13;
CAREFUL ... DON'T "JAMAICA" MISTAKE&#13;
(Theirs is $20 less - but why?)&#13;
• 1st Class Hotel in Mo-Bays Main Hotel District&#13;
• S!1ort Walle to Shopping, Restaurants, Bars, Disco, Etc.&#13;
• Near M-Bays most popular Beach - "Dr's Cave"&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
TRIP&#13;
YES&#13;
YE&amp;.,&#13;
YES • Scheduled Flights Via Air Jamaica YES&#13;
• Tour Escort Throughout&#13;
• Minimum Required Deposit ($50 vs. $100)&#13;
YES&#13;
YES&#13;
For Morelnformation Contact Parkside Union, Rm. 209 or call: 353-2200&#13;
' -&#13;
THEIRS&#13;
NO&#13;
NO&#13;
NO&#13;
YES&#13;
NO&#13;
NO &#13;
•&#13;
mUSIc&#13;
Carlos Montoya is still amazing&#13;
photographs by Philip L. Livin¥ston&#13;
Reuiew by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
The world's most famous flamenco guitarist&#13;
performed to a sellout audience last Wednesday&#13;
night in Parkside's Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
to open this year's Accent on Enrichment&#13;
program. It was enough to make almost everyone&#13;
forget about Eugene Fodor.&#13;
At 73, Montoya still amazes audiences with his&#13;
speed, agility, and musicality. The neck of his&#13;
handmade Arcangel Fernandez guitar remains&#13;
tender to his total command. Montoya produces a&#13;
wide range of tonal timber and rhythmns at will;&#13;
with transitions ranging iTom subtle to violently&#13;
dramatic.&#13;
After his first two arrangements the audience&#13;
seemed to murmur in disbelief that he was going&#13;
to play that fast and furious all night.&#13;
Music of the Gypsies&#13;
Montoya plays the music of the Spanish&#13;
Gypsies. There is no written music to learn. Until&#13;
Montoya made it popular, no one bothered to&#13;
research its origins. There are few today who can&#13;
play his arrangements as well as he does and it&#13;
makes one wonder if any gypsies played as well as&#13;
he. .&#13;
The guitar is Montoya" life. He believes guitars&#13;
must be played and .irat is why he only owns four&#13;
guitars. When he accumulates too many. he sells&#13;
them. The one he plays currently is his favorite.&#13;
He uses it for recording, practicing, and&#13;
performing. A few years ago Montoya returned to&#13;
his home in Madrid and left his favorite guitar at&#13;
his other home in Vermont. When he returned to&#13;
America, he discovered that his favorite was&#13;
"mad" at him. His guitar is very simple. It has&#13;
traditional wooden tuning pegs. Montoya tunes&#13;
his guitar about three half steps down from&#13;
concert pitch and capos up three frets. He tunes&#13;
the guitar in concert by stretching the strings above&#13;
the capo. The guitar is clean of any decoration but&#13;
the wood is perfectly matched on the top, stdes,&#13;
and back. On the back there is a worn spot where&#13;
Montoya holds the guitar to his torso.&#13;
World renown&#13;
Carlos Montoya was the first gultllJisl In many&#13;
parts of Asia, Stalinist Russia, and O&gt;ina before&#13;
the 30's. He remembers O&gt;ina very well and&#13;
would go back at a moment's notice if It were&#13;
possible. He travels light and he and his wife,&#13;
Sally, only carrying two large suitcases, a small&#13;
bag, and of course his guitar They don't&#13;
immediately appear special in a hotel lobby Or on&#13;
the street. After a few minutes walking with Carlos&#13;
and his wife, one learns Carlos is a very lovable&#13;
man. It is very easy for Carlos to get help carrytng&#13;
his bags. No one else carries his guitar, however&#13;
His fingers are long and narrow. When you shake&#13;
his hand they seem very cool even Immediately&#13;
followinq a concert.&#13;
Rehearsal&#13;
During Montoya's rehearsal he would throw his&#13;
head back and close his eyes as he would listen to&#13;
his guitar. He was much more formal in concert.&#13;
Those few who sat in on his rehearsal will not&#13;
soon forget it. because Montoya played his "hard&#13;
stuff' at the rehearsal. Rarely going back to repeat&#13;
difficult complex passages, he combed them with&#13;
subtle and astoundingly energetic transitions. This&#13;
man does not read one note of music.&#13;
Performance&#13;
At Wednesday night's performance, the same&#13;
crowd that put their cigarettes out, industrial&#13;
fashion, on the lobby carpet roared with approval&#13;
and gave Montoya two encores and a standing&#13;
ovation. The smiling gentleman said thank you&#13;
and Leftthe stage. No one could euer clop enough&#13;
for Carlos. When he ploys, the music and the&#13;
gypsies live!&#13;
music •&#13;
Carlos. Montoya is still amazing&#13;
photographs by Philip L. Livin~ston&#13;
Review by Philip L Livingston&#13;
The world's most famous flamenco guitarist&#13;
performed to a sellout audience last Wednesday&#13;
night in Parkside's Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
to open this year's Accent on Enrichment&#13;
program. It was enough to make almost everyone&#13;
forget about Eugene Fodor.&#13;
At 73, Montoya still amazes audiences with his&#13;
speed, agility, and musicality. The neck of his&#13;
handmade Arcangel Fernandez guitar remains&#13;
tender to his total command. Montoya produces a&#13;
wide range of tonal timber and rhythmns at will;&#13;
with transitions ranging -from subtle to violently&#13;
dramatic.&#13;
After his first two arrangements the audience&#13;
seemed to murmur in disbelief that he was going&#13;
to play that fast and furious all night.&#13;
Music of the Gypsies&#13;
Montoya plays the music of the Spanish&#13;
Gypsies. There is no written music to learn. Until&#13;
Montoya made it popular, no one bothered to&#13;
research its origins. There are few today who can&#13;
play his arrangements as well as he does and it&#13;
makes one wonder if any gypsies played as well as&#13;
he.&#13;
The guitar is Montoya' life. He believes guitars&#13;
must be played and ,i1at is why he only owns four&#13;
guitars. When he accumulates too many, he sells&#13;
them. The one he plays currently is his favorite.&#13;
He uses it for recording, practicing, and&#13;
performing. A few years ago Montoya returned to&#13;
his home in Madrid and left his favorite guitar at&#13;
his other home in Vermont. When he returned to&#13;
America, he discovered that his favorite was&#13;
"mad" at l:iim. His guitar is very simple. It has&#13;
traditional wooden tuning pegs. Montoya tunes&#13;
his guitar about three half steps down from&#13;
concert pitch and capos up three frets. He tunes&#13;
the guitar in concert by stretching the strings above&#13;
the capo. The guitar Is clean of any decoration but&#13;
the wood is perfectly matched on the top, ~s.&#13;
and back. On the back there Is a worn spot where&#13;
Montoya holds the guitar to his torso.&#13;
World renown&#13;
Carlos Montoya was the first guitar! In many&#13;
parts of Asia, Stalinist Russia, and Oilna before&#13;
the 30's. He remembers China very well and&#13;
would go back at a moment's notlc if It w re&#13;
possible He travels light and h and hi wlf ,&#13;
Sally, only carrying two IMge ultca a mall&#13;
bag, and of course his guitar. Th y don't&#13;
immediately appear special In a hot I lobby or on&#13;
the street. After a few minutes walking with Carlo&#13;
and his wife, one learn Carlos is a very lovabl&#13;
man. It Is very easy for Carlos to get h Ip carrying&#13;
his bags. No one el e carrle hi gultnr, how v r.&#13;
His fingers are long and narrow When you shak&#13;
his hand they seem very cool even immediately&#13;
following a concert&#13;
Rehearsal&#13;
During Montoya's rehearsal he would throw h'&#13;
head back and close his eye a he would It en to&#13;
his guitar. He was much more formal in cone rt.&#13;
Those few who sat m on hi rehear al will not&#13;
soon forget it, because Montoya played his "hard&#13;
stuff' at the rehearsal. Rarely going back to r peat&#13;
difficult complex passages, he combed them with&#13;
subtle and astoundingly energetic transitions. This&#13;
man does not read one note of music.&#13;
Performance&#13;
At Wednesday night's performance, the same&#13;
crowd that put their cigarette out, industrial&#13;
fashion, on the lobby carpet roared with approval&#13;
and gave Montoya two encores and a standing&#13;
ovation. The smiling gentleman said thank you&#13;
and left the stage. No one could ever clap enough&#13;
for Carlos. When he plays, the music and the&#13;
gypsies live! &#13;
space&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
FOOD&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
/&#13;
YOU AS~ED&#13;
FOR IT!&#13;
HAMBUGER&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
P.A.B. Coffeehouse presents&#13;
CLAUDIA SCHMIDT&#13;
high energy folk virtuoso&#13;
and&#13;
MARK' HELLER&#13;
as her musical sidekick&#13;
WEDNESDAY I OCT. 5th&#13;
2 5 PM&#13;
UNION CONFERENCE ROOMS 104 - 106&#13;
FREE ADMISSION WINE SERVED&#13;
.. -I&#13;
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0&#13;
0 til !!I CD&#13;
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•&#13;
lACK It POPULARIEMANI&#13;
MOONLIGHT&#13;
BOWUNG&#13;
II/N FREE lOWUNI, lEER I SOIA&#13;
FRIDA1S &amp; SATURDA1S&#13;
Itin -11,.&#13;
UNION RECREATION CENTER ~&#13;
RESERVATIONS RECOMMENIEI&#13;
,&#13;
S10P IN OR CAU: $$1-1696&#13;
Setting sail&#13;
for a 'comet&#13;
by Dan Guidebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
"The first sailors had gone out almost a hundrttd years before. They&#13;
had started with small sails not over two thousand square miles.&#13;
Gradually the' size of the sails increased. The technique of adiabatic&#13;
packing and the carrying of passengers in individual pods reduced&#13;
the damage done to the human cargo. It was great news when a sailor&#13;
returned to\Earth, a man born and reared under the light of another&#13;
star. He was a man who had spent a month of agony and pain,&#13;
bringing a few sleep-frozen settlers, guiding the immense&#13;
tight-pushed sailing craft ... "&#13;
That's from one of the now-numerous romances of science fiction&#13;
in which star-crossed lovers are at the mercy of old age and the speed&#13;
of light. The story is Cordwainer Smith's "The Lady Who Sailed The&#13;
Soul" dating from the late 50's and featuring a wildly speculative&#13;
notion: that high-speed interstellar craft might be propelled by&#13;
means of an unthinkably large sail pushed by sun and starlight. A&#13;
truly incredible idea!&#13;
Began in 1951&#13;
Actually, the first published mention of solar sailing-according to&#13;
researchers at NASA~dates from only a few years prior to Smith's&#13;
story. In May, 1951, an article by Carl A. Wiley-tusing the pen name&#13;
of Russel Saunders) appeared in the Astounding Science Fiction&#13;
Magazine.&#13;
Entitled "Clipper Ships of Space," Wiley's article proposed a&#13;
"light-jammer" sail-spacecraft which would "ob~ain mechanical&#13;
forces from the sun's radiation of great enough magnitude to drive a&#13;
spaceship between the planets."&#13;
Although science and science-fiction readers have heard little&#13;
about light-sailing since (and the general public has heard nothing&#13;
about it at all), the idea was never allowed.to perish. In 1958, Richard&#13;
L. Garwin' of the IBM Watson Scientific laboratory at Columbia&#13;
University wrote a short paper on "Solar Sailing - a Practical Method&#13;
of Propulsion Within the Solar System" for the American Rocket&#13;
Society's Jet Prooulsiot: Journal.&#13;
Numerous technical articles followed during the 60's and into the&#13;
70's. In 1969, the year in which man first set foot on the moon,&#13;
NASA's Office of Advanced Space Technology funded the first&#13;
-studies by Astro Research Corporation and MacNeal Schwendler&#13;
Corporation on solar sail technology.&#13;
These studies, and "a later one done by NASA's lewis Research&#13;
Center, produced interesting but far from exciting results.&#13;
Finally, a 1973 study at Batelle Memorial Institute produced a&#13;
favorable report for NASA. Headed by Jerome L. Wright, the project&#13;
not only established the feasibility of aluminized plastic solar sails up&#13;
to 800 meters square, but discovered the opportunity of a spacecraft&#13;
rendezvous with Halley's Comet in 1986 using such a sail.&#13;
Sailing to be a Reality&#13;
The idea Cordwainer Smith expressed in his story - the idea&#13;
seemed more fantasy than scientific extrapoation two decades ago is&#13;
about to be given concrete realitv." '"&#13;
NASA's official Solar Sailing Development Program, headquartered&#13;
at the Jet Propulsion Laboratorv (JPL) in Pasadena, asked itself: "Why&#13;
not use the Sun's photon energy to propel a large reflective sail on a&#13;
free ride through space? Why not employ the concept for long-term,&#13;
low-thrust space missions in the 1980's-jncluding the proposed&#13;
.... Halley's Comet rendezvous?" I&#13;
Spokesman at JPL explain their mission. "The Solar Sail would&#13;
employ a mirror-like alumi~ized plastic surface to attract the&#13;
.....photons.; which carry momentum. When reflected, the photons&#13;
change momentum and a force is exerted against the reflective&#13;
A surface-much like a wind against a sail.&#13;
"Speed of the Solar Sailcraft depends upon distance from the sun&#13;
and the size, weight and angle of the sail. The greater the sail surface&#13;
and .proximity to the Sun, the greater the reflectivity pressure or&#13;
energy thrust."&#13;
"The sail, its proponents.sav, has the potentjal of vast improvement&#13;
over ballisticJRocket) propulsion. Since it would carry no fuel, it&#13;
would be cheaper than conventional spacecraft systems."&#13;
"By tracking against (or with) the solar photon stream, the Solar&#13;
Sailcraft could fly inward toward the Sun or outward. NASA and JPL&#13;
will, if the plan succeeds, demonstrate the SOlar Sail with a 1981·2&#13;
launch from the Space Shuttle towards the Sun and a flight to&#13;
intercept Halley's Comet in March, 1986. For the first flight, the furled&#13;
sail would be taken to the Shuttle platform and erected by astronauts&#13;
in the space vacuum. .&#13;
"The technology development program, headed by Louis D.&#13;
Friedman, includes design of an 8OO-meter square plastic film sheet&#13;
that's only 2.5 microns thick, plus ultra-lightweight extensible booms&#13;
for the spars and masts of the Solar Sail." _&#13;
\ Starting outsmall&#13;
~he .NASAsail is only about a half mile square; the one Codwainer&#13;
~mlth Imagined was 2(),(X)() miles wide and 80,(X)()miles long-so large&#13;
It could take days or weeks for a fast-moving robot to scurry out&#13;
along the sail to make repairs. -c., , •&#13;
Bu.t if it s~ms that our feeble first photon flight is insignificant,&#13;
consider the Cerman V-2. It once seemed huge and awesome; tWO&#13;
decades later it was tiny- and quaint and thrust out of memory by the&#13;
thunderous lift-off of an Apollo/Saturn skyscraper. If the sail&#13;
succeeds, subsequent models will be larger and faster and more&#13;
complex. Today a comet, tomorrow the stars?&#13;
space&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
FOOD&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
YOU ASKED J&#13;
FOR IT!&#13;
HAMBUGER&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
. ,._&#13;
P.A.B. Coffeehouse presents&#13;
CLAUDIA SCHMIDT&#13;
high energy folk virtuoso&#13;
and&#13;
MARK-HELLER&#13;
as her musical · sidekick&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 5th&#13;
2 5 .PM&#13;
UNION CONFERENCE ROOMS 104 - 106&#13;
FREE ADMISSION WINE SERVED&#13;
BACK BY POPUIAR IEMANI&#13;
MOONLIGHT&#13;
BOWUNO&#13;
WIN FREE IOWl/NIJ, BEER , SOIA&#13;
FRIDA1S &amp; SATURDA1S&#13;
S.m -11pm&#13;
UNION RECREATION CENTER&#13;
RESERVATIONS RECOMMENIEI&#13;
STOP IN OR CALL: 111-1696&#13;
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Setting sail&#13;
· for a · comet&#13;
by Dan Gufdebeck&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
"The first sailors had gone out almost a hundr~d years before. They&#13;
had started with small sails n-ot over two thousand square miles.&#13;
Gradually the size of the sails increased. The technique of adiabatic&#13;
packing and the carrying of passengers in individual pods reduced&#13;
the damage done to the human cargo. It was great news when a sailor&#13;
returned to Earth, a man born and reared under the light of another&#13;
star. He was a man who had spent a month of agony and pain,&#13;
bringing a few sleep-frozen settlers, guiding the immense&#13;
light-pushed sailing craft . . . " ·&#13;
That's from one of the now-numerous romances of science fiction&#13;
in which star-crossed lovers are at the mercy of old age and the speed&#13;
of light. The story is Cordwainer Smith's " The Lady Who Sailed The&#13;
Soul" dating from the late 50's and featuring a wildly speculative&#13;
notion : that high-speed interstellar craft might be propelled by&#13;
means of an unthinkably large sail pushed by sun and starlight. A&#13;
truly incredible idea!&#13;
Began in 1951&#13;
Actually, the first published mention of solar sailing-according to&#13;
researchers at NASA-dates_ from only a few years prior to Smith's&#13;
story . In May, 1951, an article by Carl A. Wiley-tusing the -pen name&#13;
of Russel Saunders) appeared in the Astounding Science Fiction&#13;
Magazine. _&#13;
Entitled "Clipper Ships of Space," Wiley's article proposed a&#13;
" light-jammer" sail-spacecraft which would "ob~ain mechanical&#13;
forces from the sun's radiation of great enough magnitude to drive a&#13;
spaceship between the planets ."&#13;
Although science and science-fiction readers have heard little&#13;
about light-sailing since (and the general public has heard nothing&#13;
about it at all), the idea was never allowed to perish . In 1958, Richard&#13;
L. Garwin of the I BM Watson Scientific Laboratory at Columbia&#13;
University wrote a short paper on "Solar Sailing - a Practical Method&#13;
of Propulsion Within the Solar System" for the American Rocket&#13;
Society's Je( Propulsion Journal.&#13;
Numerous technical articles followed during the 60's and into the&#13;
70's. In 1969, the year in which man first set foot on the moon,&#13;
NASA's Office of Advanced Space Technology funded the first&#13;
studies by Astra Research Corporation and MacNeal Schwendler&#13;
Corporation on solar sail technology.&#13;
These studies, and ·a later one done by NASA's Lewis Research&#13;
Center, produced interesting but far from exciting results .&#13;
Finally, a 1973 study at Batelle Memorial Institute produced a&#13;
favorable report for NASA. Headed by Jerome L. Wright, the project&#13;
not only established the feasibility of aluminized plastic solar sails up&#13;
to 800 meters square, but discovered the opportunity of a sp,acecraft&#13;
rendezvous with Halley's Comet in 1986 using such a sail.&#13;
Sailing to be a Reality&#13;
The idea Cordwainer Smith expressed in his story - the idea&#13;
seemed more fantasy than scientific extrapoation two decades ago is&#13;
about to be given concrete reality: _,&#13;
NASA's official Solar Sailin_g Develop-ment Program, headquartered&#13;
at the Jet Propulsion Laborat ory (JPL) in Pasadena, asked itself: "Why&#13;
not use the Sun's photon energy to propel a large reflective sail on a&#13;
free ride through space? Why not employ the concept for long-term,&#13;
low-thrust space missions in the 1980's-including the proposed&#13;
~ Halley's Comet rendezvous?"&#13;
Spokesman at JPL explain_ their mission . " The Solar Sail would&#13;
employ a mirror-like aluminized plastic surface to attract the&#13;
' photons, which carry momentum . When reflected, the photons&#13;
change momentum and a force is exerted against the reflective&#13;
. surface' much like a wind against a sail.&#13;
"Speed of the Solar Sailcraft depends upon distance from the sun&#13;
and the size, weight and angle of the sail. The greater the sail surface&#13;
and _proximity to the Sun, the greater the reflectivity pressure or&#13;
energy thrust."&#13;
"The sail, its proponents say, has the potential of vast improvement&#13;
over ballistic_ (Rocket) propulsion . Since it would carry no fuel, it&#13;
wou!d be cheaper than conventional spacecraft systems ."&#13;
" By tracking against (or with) the solar photon stream , the Solar&#13;
Sailcraft could fly inward toward the Sun or outward . NASA and JPL&#13;
will , if the plan succeeds, demonstrate the Solar Sail with a 1981-2&#13;
launch from the Space Shuttle towards the Sun and a flight to&#13;
intercept Halley's Comet in March, 1986. For the first flight, the furled&#13;
sail would be taken to the Shuttle platform and erected by astronauts&#13;
in the space vacuum. .&#13;
"The technology development program, headed by Louis D.&#13;
Friedman, includes design of an 800-meter square plastic film sheet&#13;
thafs only 2.5 microns thick, plus ultra-lightweight extensible boom·s&#13;
for the spars and masts of the Solar Sail." -&#13;
Starting out small&#13;
The NASA sail is only about a half mile square· the one Codwainer&#13;
~mith imagined was 2q,ooo miles wide and 80,000 miles long-so large&#13;
it could take days or weeks for a fast-moving robot to scurry out&#13;
along the sail to make repairs. --.... 1 •&#13;
Bu_t if it s~ms that our feeble first photon flight is insignificant,&#13;
consider the Cerman V-2 . It on.ce seemed huge and awesome; two&#13;
decades later it was tiny- and quaint and thrust out of memory by the&#13;
thunderous I ift-off of an 'Apollo/ Saturn skyscraper. If the sail&#13;
succeeds, subsequent models will be larger and faster and more&#13;
complex . Today a comet, tomorrow the stars? &#13;
new~ . Library user survey&#13;
AcademIc ~I(I"spart of national grant&#13;
-moves off'ces by Jeff Prostko&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Morein, a Ph. D. 10 business&#13;
management and a Master in&#13;
library Science. The study does&#13;
involve Dr. Morein's work, and&#13;
he along with the team of&#13;
advisors, will be flying to&#13;
Parkside on several occasions for&#13;
comprehensive evaluations. The&#13;
first such visit will be October 3.&#13;
"We are very excited about&#13;
this opportunity," notes Carla&#13;
Stoffle, Assistant Director of the&#13;
Librafy/Learning Center, "this&#13;
will give us the chance to view&#13;
our library as a whole, not just a&#13;
look at our services and facilities&#13;
offered, but also a look at our&#13;
management, distribution, and&#13;
technology. It will give us a&#13;
chance to know what new&#13;
technology we should Of should&#13;
not adopt."&#13;
This is not the first survey&#13;
taken by the library.&#13;
A survey was taken in 1974&#13;
concerning user views of the&#13;
library and Its facthties and It&#13;
found that over 1,000 people&#13;
thought it was a good library and&#13;
well used last fall, Norman&#13;
Noerper, a lecturer of Applied&#13;
Science and Technology here at&#13;
Parks.de. also did a survey, the&#13;
result of which was the extension&#13;
of library hours.&#13;
So on the whole, the self study&#13;
appears to be very worthwh lie&#13;
and beneficial, not only to the&#13;
library but also Its users&#13;
However, its success is dependent&#13;
on the output. (Those&#13;
people surveyed will be students&#13;
and faculty.) So, as you are&#13;
walking down the hall, and&#13;
someone stops and asks you if&#13;
you've filled out a library survey,&#13;
take a survey and spend a couple&#13;
of minutes filling it in. After all,&#13;
how many times do you help&#13;
spend $21,3501&#13;
The Office of Educational&#13;
Program Support will be moving&#13;
to a new location on October 5,&#13;
1977. Academic skills and the&#13;
Testing Center will be located&#13;
across the hall from our present&#13;
quarters (D175) to the northeast&#13;
section of the D1 level of the&#13;
library in D150-D for the rest of&#13;
this semester. Enter through the&#13;
reserve area of the library.&#13;
The Tutoring Program will be&#13;
Course&#13;
administered at the D150-C&#13;
location. However, tutoring&#13;
sessionswill take place in D 194&#13;
WllC (formerly the Ranger&#13;
Office) beginning on October 5,&#13;
1977.&#13;
Academic Skills classes currently&#13;
held in our present&#13;
quarters will be moved back to&#13;
the room numbers assigned at&#13;
registration. These are:&#13;
last week, the library handed&#13;
out its user surveys. If you filled&#13;
one out, don't throw it away. If&#13;
you do, it would be like throwing&#13;
away $21,350. That's right, the&#13;
surveys are just a small part of a&#13;
large scale self study that deals&#13;
with how efficiently the&#13;
students, faculty and staff here&#13;
at Parkside believe their library is&#13;
run.&#13;
The money ($21,350) is a grant&#13;
from the Council on library&#13;
Resources (ClR), a national&#13;
foundation which granted the&#13;
money to pay for the part time&#13;
secretaries, computer work, and&#13;
duplicating fees involved in&#13;
amassing the information from&#13;
the study.&#13;
The project is to test a manual&#13;
developed by Dr. P. Grady&#13;
Section Room&#13;
09-090 Composition Preparation 1,2 CA 133&#13;
09-090 Composition Preparation 5 CA 128&#13;
09-140 Study Skills 1,2 CA 133&#13;
09-150 Reading Improvement 1,2 CA 133&#13;
09-135 Reading/Study Skills 1,2,3 CA 133&#13;
09-075 English for Foreign Students 1 CA 128&#13;
All changes will begin on ·Academic Skills office telephone&#13;
Wednesday, October 5, 1977 and numbers will remain the same.&#13;
SMI Building&#13;
scheduled&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
A new addition to Parkside's&#13;
classroom building is currently in&#13;
the planning stages, High&#13;
student interest in the academic&#13;
areas of engineering technology,&#13;
management science and labor&#13;
economics has caused the 1,5&#13;
million dollar birth of the&#13;
Modern Industry Building,&#13;
Program's purpose&#13;
The building program's purpose&#13;
is to help meet the local,&#13;
statewide and national needs for&#13;
additional technically trained&#13;
persons.&#13;
According to the Engineer's&#13;
Council for Professional Development,&#13;
"Engineering Technology&#13;
is that part of the&#13;
engineering field which requires&#13;
the application of scientific and&#13;
engineering knowledge and&#13;
methods combined with technical&#13;
skills.&#13;
The program's objective is to&#13;
develop a high-quality Engineering&#13;
Technology major. Three&#13;
basic Technical specialities&#13;
include electrical, industrial&#13;
production and mechanical&#13;
engineering, .&#13;
Program Needs and faCilities&#13;
Parkside requested a facility&#13;
providing 53,0Cl0square feet to&#13;
satisfy the Modern Industry&#13;
Building's needs. The main&#13;
&lt;emphasts in the program's&#13;
development is to provide a&#13;
production laboratory furnished&#13;
with industrial equipment,&#13;
The new classroom building&#13;
and its existing laboratories&#13;
would benefit the Engjneering&#13;
Tech program. Furthermore,&#13;
other academic disciplines will&#13;
be housed in the building and be&#13;
'given suitable space.&#13;
Mr. James F. Galbraith,&#13;
director of the campus construction,&#13;
believes "the campus's&#13;
leaching staff is very enthusiastic&#13;
about the engineering tech&#13;
program." He concluded by&#13;
saying, "Parks ide's students&#13;
should be very proud at the&#13;
building's completions." ,&#13;
This is a cryptogram, a form at code len- "0 TOL~ the "a" always standing tor "A~ the&#13;
guaoo, where letters of the alphtlbet stand "T" for "C:' and the "L" fOt' "T." Your chilifor&#13;
cmer letters of the alphabet. For instance, lengtfis to break the code 01 the cryptogram _&#13;
the words "A CAT" in I cryptogram mighl be below. and discover its hidden message.&#13;
LI DOOWKH&#13;
BHDU ZHtJH&#13;
SODBLQJKROLGDBV&#13;
WRVSRUW&#13;
ZRXOG EH DV&#13;
WHGLRXVDV&#13;
WR ZRUN.&#13;
When there's a challenge,&#13;
quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon IS the Number 1 beer," Milwaukee.&#13;
beer capital of the world. _&#13;
That's why we'd like to offer you another challenge&#13;
-the Pabst challenge Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any other premium beer: vcu'll hke Pabst&#13;
because Blue Ri6bon Quality means the best-tastinq beer&#13;
you can get. Since 1844 It always has&#13;
PABST.Since 1844.The quality has always come through.&#13;
PABST BREWING COMPANY ..... J.allkee W,s. Pea". HeIghts. 111....... rk. N J. los ""ie'''. ClllI, Pabst. Geo,,,,.&#13;
)I~OM OJ. SV snOl031 SV 38 OlnOM reoes OJ.&#13;
SAVQll0H !)NIA'Ild 31::13Mti'f'3A 31-'11'llt:ll AI A.ual-i $;JJ •• Il'$ .."t~S WOli UO'lltlono V .' ••• u.&#13;
.,.,&#13;
new~ . library user survey Academic ~lc,lls part of nationCII grant moves offices&#13;
The Office of Educational&#13;
Program Support will be moving&#13;
to a new location on October 5,&#13;
1977. Academic skills and the&#13;
Testing Center will be located&#13;
across the hall from our present&#13;
quarters (0175) to the northeast&#13;
section of the 01 level of the&#13;
library in O150-D for the rest of&#13;
this semester. Enter through the&#13;
reserve area of the library.&#13;
The Tutoring Program will be&#13;
Course&#13;
09-090 Composition Preparation&#13;
09-090 Composition Preparation&#13;
09-140 Study Skills&#13;
09-150 Reading Improvement&#13;
09-135 Reading/Study Skills&#13;
administered at the O150-C&#13;
location . However. tutoring&#13;
sessions will take place in D 194&#13;
WLLC (formerly the Ranger&#13;
Office) beginning on October 5,&#13;
1977.&#13;
Academic Skills classes currently&#13;
held in our present&#13;
quarters will be moved back to&#13;
the room numbers assigned at&#13;
registration . These are:&#13;
Section Room&#13;
1,2 CA 133&#13;
5 CA 128&#13;
1,2 CA 133&#13;
1,2 CA 133&#13;
1,2,3 CA 133&#13;
09-075 English for Foreign Students 1 CA 128&#13;
All changes will begin on&#13;
Wednesday, October 5, 1977 and&#13;
SMI Building&#13;
scheduled&#13;
by Diane Jalensky&#13;
News Editor&#13;
A new addition to Parkside's&#13;
classroom building is currently in&#13;
the planning stages . High&#13;
student interest in the academic&#13;
areas of engineering technology,&#13;
management science and labor&#13;
economics has caused the 1.5&#13;
million dollar birth of the&#13;
Modern Industry Building.&#13;
Program's purpose&#13;
The building program's purpose&#13;
is to help meet the local,&#13;
statewide and national needs for&#13;
additional technically trained&#13;
persons.&#13;
According to the Engineer's&#13;
Council for Professional Development,&#13;
"Engineering Technology&#13;
is that part of the&#13;
engineering field which requires&#13;
the application of scientific and&#13;
engi neering knowledge and&#13;
methods combined with technical&#13;
skills . .. "&#13;
The program's objective is to&#13;
develop a high-quality Engineering&#13;
Technology major. Three&#13;
basic Tec hn ical special ities&#13;
include electri cal , industrial&#13;
production and mechani cal&#13;
engineering.&#13;
Program Needs and Facilities&#13;
Parkside requested a facil ity&#13;
providing 53,000 square feet to&#13;
satisfy the M odern Industry&#13;
Build ing's needs . The main&#13;
·· emphas is in t he program's&#13;
development is to provide a&#13;
production ~aboratory furnished&#13;
with industrial equipment.&#13;
The new classroom building&#13;
and its existing laboratories&#13;
would benefit the En&amp;!neering&#13;
Tech program . Furt hermore,&#13;
other academic disciplines w ill&#13;
be housed in the bui lding and be&#13;
'given suitable space.&#13;
Mr. James F. Galbraith ,&#13;
director of the campus construction&#13;
believes "the campus's&#13;
teac,hing staff is very enthusiastic&#13;
abo ut t he engineering t ech&#13;
program ." He concluded by&#13;
saying, " Parkside's students&#13;
should be very proud at the&#13;
building's completions."&#13;
-Academic Skills office telephone&#13;
numbers will remain the same.&#13;
by Jeff Prostko&#13;
Ranger Staff&#13;
Last week, the library handed&#13;
out its user surveys . If you filled&#13;
one out, don't throw it away. If&#13;
you do, it w.ould be like throwing&#13;
away $21,350. That's right, the&#13;
surveys are just a small part of a&#13;
large scale self study that deals&#13;
with how efficiently the&#13;
students, faculty and staff here&#13;
at Parkside believe their library is&#13;
run .&#13;
The money ($21,350) is a grant&#13;
from the Council on Library&#13;
Resources (CLR), a national&#13;
foundation which granted the&#13;
money to pay for the part time&#13;
secretaries, computer work, and&#13;
duplicating fees involved in&#13;
amassing the information from&#13;
the study .&#13;
The project is to test a manual&#13;
developed . by Dr. P. Grady&#13;
Morein, a Ph . D in business&#13;
management and a Master m&#13;
Library Science. The study does&#13;
involve Dr. Morem's work, and&#13;
he along with the team of&#13;
advisors, w i ll be flying to&#13;
Parkside on several occasions for&#13;
comprehensive evaluations. The&#13;
first such visit will be October 3.&#13;
"We are very excited abo.ut&#13;
this opportunity," notes Carla&#13;
Stoffle, Assistant Director of the&#13;
Libraty/ Leaming Center, "this&#13;
will give us the chance to view&#13;
our library as a whole, not just a&#13;
look at our services and facilities&#13;
offered, but also a look at our&#13;
management, distribution, and&#13;
technology. It will give us a&#13;
chance to know what new&#13;
technology we should or should&#13;
not adopt."&#13;
This is not the first survey&#13;
taken by the library.&#13;
A survey was taken in 197 4&#13;
concerning u er vi ws of the&#13;
library and ,ts fac,lltie and it&#13;
found that over 1, people&#13;
thought it was a good library and&#13;
well used. Last fall, Norman&#13;
oerper, a lectur r of Applied&#13;
Science and Technology here at&#13;
Parkside, also did a survey, the&#13;
result of which was the extension&#13;
of library hour&#13;
So on the whole, the self study&#13;
appears to be very worthwhile&#13;
and beneficial, not only to the&#13;
library but also ,ts users&#13;
However, ,ts success is dependent&#13;
on the output (Those&#13;
people surveyed w,11 be students&#13;
and faculty.) So, as you are&#13;
walking down the hall, and&#13;
someone stops and asks you ,f&#13;
you've filled out a library survey,&#13;
take a survey and spend a couple&#13;
of minutes filling it in After all,&#13;
how many times do you help&#13;
spend S21,350?&#13;
nge.&#13;
This is a cryptogram, a torm ot code Ian- "Q TQL~ the "0 " always standing tor "A~ the&#13;
guage, where letters ot the alphabet stand "T" tor -c~ and the "L" for "T" Your chal· for other letters ot the alphabet. For instance, lenge"is to break the code of the cryptogram • the words "A CAT" in a cryptogram might be below, and discover its hidden message&#13;
BHDU ZHtJH&#13;
SODBLQJ KROLGDBV&#13;
WRVSRUW&#13;
ZRXOG EH DV&#13;
WHGLRXV DV&#13;
WR ZRUN.&#13;
When there's a challenge, quality makes the difference.&#13;
We hope you have some fun with the challenge&#13;
Pabst Blue Ribbon is the Number 1 beer in Milwaukee.&#13;
beer capital of the world. _&#13;
That's why we·d like to offer you another challenge&#13;
- the Pabst challenge.Taste and compare Pabst Blue&#13;
Ribbon to any other premium beer. You'll like Pabst&#13;
because Blue Ri6bon quality means the best-tasting beer&#13;
you can get. Since 1844 11 always has&#13;
PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through. PABST BREWING COMPANY. Milwaukee Wis . Peo11a Heights. Ill . Newark. N J . Los Angeles. Cahf , Pabst. Georg1a&#13;
)l!j0M OJ. S Y s nOl03J. S Y 38 a,noM J.tjOdS OJ. SA'IOl10H ~ NIA'lld 3tj3M tj'l3A 3 HJ. 11'1 ~, 111 A,uaH sa,eaosa~e~s wo,1 uo11e1on0 y .,.,uuy &#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 5&#13;
Academic Policies Meeting at 2 p.m.&#13;
Film Wisconsin Artists Film Festival presents. The&#13;
Front Page. 7 p.m. No admission charge. Rondelle&#13;
Reservations, 554-2154.&#13;
Film Sahara 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Coffeehouse Claudia Schmidt of the Green Bay area&#13;
plays in Union 104-106. 2-4 p.m. No admission.&#13;
Wine will be served.&#13;
Film The Front Page starring Ben Hecht. Free at the&#13;
Rondefle.&#13;
Relocation of Offices Academic Skills and testing&#13;
will move from WLLC 0-175 to 0-1 level of the&#13;
library in D-150-C. Call 553-2608 for further&#13;
infprmation.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 6&#13;
Golf Men's NAIA District 14 Tournament, at Spring&#13;
Green through October 8.&#13;
Volleyball Women's at Lake Forest College, with&#13;
University of Chicago, 6 p.m.&#13;
Health-Line An unwanted Pregnancy? How to deal&#13;
with the problem. Through October 13. Dial&#13;
553-2588 and- ask to hear the Health-Line Highlight.&#13;
Film Caine Mutiny 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Philosophical Society organizational meeting at&#13;
4:00 p.m.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 7.&#13;
Soccer Men at UW Chancellors' Cup Tournament:&#13;
Parkside vs. UW-Milwaukee at 1 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
finals begin at 1 p.m. Saturday.&#13;
Wisconsin State Assembly votes on decriminalization&#13;
of marijuana at the Capital in Madison.&#13;
Cross Country Men at Notre Dame invitational. 3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film African Queen 8 p.m. in Union Cinema. $1.00&#13;
admission.&#13;
Lecture Dr. Severo Ochoa, Nobel Laureate, will&#13;
speak about Protein Biosynthesis. GR 103 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 8&#13;
Cross Country Men at Lakefr.ont Invitational,&#13;
Chicago, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Milwaukee with UW-Green&#13;
Bay, 10 a.m.&#13;
Swimming Women at UW Green Bay with Lawrence,&#13;
. 1p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 9&#13;
Film African Queen in Union Cinema at 7:3Q p.m.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Cross Country All comers be there at 12:00 noon..&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 12&#13;
Coffeehouse Barry Drake of the Kenosha area plays&#13;
in Union 104-106. Wine will be served. INo&#13;
admission. •&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Waukesha Tech Institute at 4:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film Alexander's Ragtime Band starring Don Ameche&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. For reservations call Rondelle,&#13;
554-2154. Free.&#13;
. Thursday, Oct. 13 .&#13;
Health Line Learn all about aspirin. Call 1383.&#13;
Anthropology Club Fieldtrip to Ethnohistory&#13;
meetings. Must sign up in CL 270. Transportation&#13;
provided by Anthropology Club.&#13;
_ Saturday, Oct. 15&#13;
Volleybal! Invitational at 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Concert featuring Michael Williams in Union Square&#13;
at 9:00 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Oct, 16&#13;
Film Whi!t's up Tiger Lily at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Artist contest&#13;
announced&#13;
Tuesday, ocr. 18&#13;
Coffeehouse Features James Mapes in Union&#13;
104-106 from 1-4 p.m. Admission is free and wine&#13;
will be served. .&#13;
Film The Magnificent Arne/sons starring Orson&#13;
Welles at 7:00 p:m. Call Rondelle for reservations.&#13;
554-2154. Free admission.&#13;
. Wednesday, Oct. 19&#13;
PSGA ELECTION will be held in Main Place.&#13;
Film My Little Chickadee in the Union Cinema at&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
The Fall season is approaching&#13;
and so is "Wisconsin 77", the&#13;
annual exhibit of paintings,&#13;
drawings and graphics sponsored&#13;
by the Art League of Stevens&#13;
Point, in cooperation with the&#13;
UW-SP College of Fine Arts.&#13;
All artists residing in the State&#13;
of Wisconsin are eligible to&#13;
submit two entries. Work and&#13;
entry blanks must be delivered .&#13;
directly to the Edna Carlston&#13;
Gallery, UW-SP, on October 14,&#13;
15 and 16. Entries must be&#13;
suitably framed and wired for&#13;
r hanging and must not exceed 6'&#13;
by 8' in size. No crafts, sculpture&#13;
or photography wi)1 be eligible.&#13;
Artists may obtain the full&#13;
prospectus and entry blanks&#13;
from Mrs. James Delzell, 1124&#13;
Ridge Road, Stevens Point, Wis.,&#13;
. 54481.&#13;
Juror for "Wisconsin 77" is&#13;
Stephen Prokopoff, Director&#13;
Museum of Contemporary Art,&#13;
Chicago, Illinois.&#13;
The public is invited to attend&#13;
the opening reception and&#13;
announcement of awards at the&#13;
Carlsten Gallery, Fine Arts&#13;
Center, from 8:00 p.m. to 10:30&#13;
p.m. on Saturday, October 29.&#13;
Cash and purchase awards of&#13;
over $2,000 will be presented.&#13;
The show will continue _until&#13;
November 18 during regular&#13;
gallery hours.&#13;
Launched in 1972, the&#13;
"Wisconsin" show has gained&#13;
recognition yearly and promises&#13;
to be one of the year's&#13;
outstanding exhibits inthe state."&#13;
"' Thursday, Oct. 20&#13;
PSGA fLECTION held in Main Place.&#13;
,Film The Bank Dick at 7:30 in Union&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
The Chiwaukee Prairie Food Co-op would like to&#13;
thank everyone who attended the Bluegrass concert&#13;
last Wednesday evening featuring Grass Food and&#13;
Lodging. We hope you enjoyed it as much as we did.&#13;
We'll do it again sometime. Next time we'll try for a&#13;
weekend.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU I&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Assistance&#13;
ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library of 7,000 topics.&#13;
All papers have been prepared by our&#13;
staff 61 professional writers to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1.00 (air mail&#13;
postage) for the current edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
r~UCATiONALSYSTEMS----&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916·E.&#13;
I Los Angele~ Calif. 90025&#13;
I Name ---'-_ I Address _&#13;
IC~ I&#13;
I Slate- _ Zip _______________ J . I -&#13;
Come Today See Yours.&#13;
w. allo provide original&#13;
r•••• rch •• all fields.&#13;
Theal •• nd dl ........ tlon&#13;
a •• iltanc •• lao avanable.&#13;
quality c:orrrnercial corres&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990&#13;
UNIOJ CINEMA $1.00&#13;
PAB FALL FILM SERIES PRESENTS&#13;
BOGART WEEK!&#13;
WED. OCT. 5&#13;
SAHARA&#13;
UW-P ID'S REQUIRED&#13;
THURS. OCT. 6&#13;
CAINE MUTINY- FRI. OCT.7 &amp;&#13;
SUN OCT. 9&#13;
I,AFRICAN QUEEN&#13;
FRI. 8,00 PM. SUN. 7,30 PM.&#13;
events&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 5&#13;
Academic Policies Mee~ing at 2 p.m.&#13;
--&#13;
Film Wisconsin Artists Film Festival presents_ The&#13;
Front Page. 7 p.m. No admission charge. Rondelle&#13;
Reservations, 554-2154.&#13;
Film Sahara 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
Coffeehouse Claudia Schmidt of the Green Bay area&#13;
plays in Union 104-1b6. 2-4 p.m. No admission.&#13;
Wine will be served.&#13;
Film The Front Page starring Ben Hecht. Free at the&#13;
Rondefle.&#13;
Relocation of Offices Academic Skills and testing&#13;
will move from WLLC D-175 to D-1 level of the&#13;
library in D-150-C. Call 553-2608 for further&#13;
information.&#13;
'&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 6&#13;
Golf Men's NAIA District 14 Tournament, at Spring&#13;
Green through October 8.&#13;
Volleyball Women's at Lake Forest College, with&#13;
University of Chicago, 6 p.m.&#13;
Health-Line An unwanted Pregnancy? How to deal&#13;
with the problem. Through October 13. Dial&#13;
553-2588 and-- ask to hear the Health-Line Highlight.&#13;
&#13;
Film Caine Mutiny 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Philosophical Society organizational meeting at&#13;
4:00 p.m.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 7&#13;
Soccer Men at UW Chancellors' Cup Tournament:&#13;
Parkside vs. UW-Milwaukee at 1 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
finals begin at 1 p.m. Saturd~y.&#13;
Wisconsin State Assembly votes on decriminalization&#13;
of marijuana at the Capital in Madison .&#13;
Cross Country Men at Notre Dame invitational. 3&#13;
p.m .&#13;
Film African Queen 8 p.m. in Union Cinema. $1.00&#13;
admission.&#13;
Lecture Dr. Severo Ochoa, Nobel Laureate, will&#13;
speak about Protein Biosynthesis. GR 103 at 2 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 8&#13;
Cross Country Men at Lakefr.ont lnvrtational,&#13;
Chicago, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Tennis Women at UW-Milwaukee with UW-Green&#13;
Bay, 10 a.m.&#13;
Swimming Women at UW Green Bay with_ Lawrence,&#13;
· 1 p.m .&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 9&#13;
Film African Queen in Union Cinema at 7:3Q p.m.&#13;
Admission $1 .00.&#13;
Cross Country All comers be there at 12:00 noon. _&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 12&#13;
Coffeehouse Barry Drake of the Kenosha area plays&#13;
in Union 104-106. Wine will be served. l'No&#13;
admission. '&#13;
Soccer Parkside vs. Waukesha Tech Institute at 4:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Film Alexander's Ragtime Band starring Don Ameche&#13;
at 7:00 p.m. For reservations· call Rondelle·,&#13;
554-2154. Free.&#13;
r ~»- N\r,..o\C ~o~O. s,~ a . Open 3Z\ ~~\~\~ 5~3&#13;
Mon. &amp; Fri . ~ ?\C}\\C• A,) 634-&#13;
Noon ti/ 9 ~~ (.A,\ ,&#13;
Sat. Noon ti/ 5 I"..,.-&#13;
- MAGIC TRICKS - JOKES- NOVEL TIES&#13;
...&#13;
· Thursday, Oct. 13 ·&#13;
Health Line· Learn all about aspirin. Call ·1383.&#13;
Anthropology Club Fieldtrip to Ethnohistory .&#13;
meetings. Must sign up in CL 270. Transportation&#13;
provided by Anthropology Club.&#13;
Artist contest&#13;
announced&#13;
The Fall season is approaching&#13;
and so is "Wisconsin '77", the&#13;
annual exhibit of- paintings&#13;
drawings and graphics sponsored&#13;
by the Art League of Stevens&#13;
Point, in cooperation with the&#13;
UW-SP College of Fine Arts.&#13;
- Saturday, Oct. 15&#13;
Volleyball Invitational at 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Concert featuring Michael Williams in Union Square . /&#13;
at 9:00 p.m .&#13;
Sunday, Oct.16&#13;
Film What's up Tiger Lily at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission $1.00.&#13;
Tuesday, Oc.t. 18&#13;
Coffeehouse Features Jarnes Mapes in Union&#13;
104-106 from 2-4 p.m. Admission is free and wine&#13;
wi 11 be served.&#13;
Film The Magnificent Amers,ons starring Orson&#13;
Welles at 7 :00 p:m. Call Rondelle for reservations,&#13;
554-2154. Free admission.&#13;
. Wednesday, Oct. 19&#13;
PSGA ELECTION wirl be held in Main Place.&#13;
Film My Little Chickadee in the Union Cinema at&#13;
7:30 p .m. \.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 20&#13;
PSGA £LECTION held in Main Place.&#13;
, Film The Bank Dick at 7:30 in Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission $1.00.&#13;
The Chiwaukee Prairie Food Co-op would like to&#13;
thank everyone who attended the Bluegrass concert&#13;
last Wednesday evening featuring Grass Food and&#13;
Lodging. We hope you enjoyed it as much as we did.&#13;
We'll do it again sometime. Next time we'll try ·for a&#13;
weekend.&#13;
WEDDING&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
FOR YOU!&#13;
All artists residing in the State&#13;
of Wisconsin are eligible to&#13;
submit two ~ntries. Work and&#13;
entry blanks must be delivered ·&#13;
directly to the Edna Carlsten&#13;
Gallery, UW-SP, on October 14,&#13;
15 and 16. Entries must be&#13;
suitably framed and wired for&#13;
' hanging and must not exceed 6'&#13;
by 8' in size. No crafts, sculpture&#13;
or photography will be eligible.&#13;
Artists may obtain the full&#13;
prospectus and entry blanks&#13;
from Mrs. James Delzell, -1124&#13;
Ridge Road, Stevens Point, Wis .,&#13;
· 54481.&#13;
Juror for "Wisconsin '77" is&#13;
Stephen Prokopoff, Director&#13;
Museum of Contemporary Art,&#13;
Chicago, Illinois.&#13;
The public is invited to attend&#13;
the opening reception and&#13;
announcement of awards at the&#13;
Carlsten Gallery, Fine Arts&#13;
Center, from 8 :00 p.m. to 10:30&#13;
p.m. on Saturday, October 29.&#13;
Cash and purchase awards of&#13;
over $2,000 will be presented.&#13;
The show will continue until&#13;
November 18 during regular&#13;
gallery hours.&#13;
Launched in 1972, the&#13;
"Wisconsin" show has gained&#13;
recognition yearly and promises&#13;
to be one of the year's&#13;
outstanding exhibits in'the state.&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Assistance&#13;
ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
Choose from our library of 7,000 topics.&#13;
All papers have been prepared by our&#13;
staff et professional writers to insure&#13;
excellence. Send $1.00 (air mail&#13;
postage) for the cur.rent edition of our&#13;
mail order catalog.&#13;
Come Today See·Yours.&#13;
qua I ity corrmercial printers&#13;
1417 50th street . 658-8990&#13;
We also provide original&#13;
research -- all fields.&#13;
Thesis and dluerJalion&#13;
assistance also available.&#13;
j EDUCATIONAL SYSTEMS I&#13;
I P.O. Box 25916-E,&#13;
I Los Angeles.,__ Calif. 90025 I&#13;
I N(lme ---------'-- I l Address I&#13;
j City I&#13;
I State:_· __ Zip ____ I •&#13;
'---------l---------- _J&#13;
-PAB FALL FILM SERIES PRESENTS&#13;
.OGART WEEK!&#13;
WED. OCT. 5&#13;
$AHARA&#13;
THURS. 2:30 &amp; 7:30 PM.&#13;
CAINE MUTINYU._P&#13;
ID'S REQUIRED&#13;
FRI. OCT.7 &amp;&#13;
SUN OCT. 9&#13;
2:30 &amp; 7:30 PM&#13;
UNION CINEMA $1.00&#13;
I _AFRICAN QUEEN&#13;
FRI. 8:00 PM. SUN. 7 :30 PM . </text>
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              <text>The Parkside _&#13;
RANGER edne day Januar 17 1973&#13;
01. I, o. 13&#13;
PSGA, PAB skirmish&#13;
overunion hoard,&#13;
programmI•ng&#13;
time to time by questions and&#13;
refutation from the P AB members&#13;
and administrative personnel.&#13;
The main points of Weiss'&#13;
argument were (J) the SUC is by&#13;
nature more representative than&#13;
the PAB because its members&#13;
are elected rather than voluntary,&#13;
(2) the PAB structurally&#13;
has no power against administrative&#13;
veto and anything&#13;
accomplished is on an individual&#13;
basis, whereas student government&#13;
has the whole student body&#13;
behind them and accomplishments&#13;
and precidential&#13;
and (3) student government is&#13;
ineffectual and needs to have&#13;
enough power to accomplish&#13;
something before students will&#13;
have any faith in it.&#13;
The first argument was answered&#13;
by various PAB members,&#13;
saying all who are on the&#13;
board are strongly encouraged to&#13;
be representative of the student&#13;
body, and that it would be foolish&#13;
for them to schedule programs&#13;
the students did not want. They&#13;
also questioned how representative&#13;
the sue would be as so few&#13;
people actually wrote in names&#13;
and voted for its members.&#13;
Sue Wesley responded to th&#13;
second argument by asking for&#13;
an example of the final program&#13;
decision was made by the administration.&#13;
She said. "PAB&#13;
doesn't ask if it's OK to bring in&#13;
Eden Stone for a dance. It's the&#13;
decision of the committee and the&#13;
administration has never vetoed&#13;
any yet."&#13;
Weiss asked why sue wasn't&#13;
granted the power to schedule&#13;
events. Dearborn replied,&#13;
"Because PAB is more&#13;
representative, more qualified&#13;
and doing a better job than you&#13;
and (Joe) Harris."&#13;
ByMarilyn Schubert&#13;
Skirmishing between the&#13;
PSGA,Student Union Committee&#13;
and the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board was brought to a head in a&#13;
meeting called on Dec. 14 by&#13;
PSGApresident Tom Haack. The&#13;
trOUbleresulted from a misunderstanding&#13;
regarding the functionS&#13;
of each body.&#13;
Haack began the meeting by&#13;
reading the PSGA constitution&#13;
regulating the SUC, which gives&#13;
IIduties similar to that of a Union&#13;
Operating Board, plus other&#13;
interests such as the Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee, and the&#13;
book store, He then stated that&#13;
the committee is not authorized&#13;
10 be the Union Operating Board&#13;
since the regents have not approvedthe&#13;
constitution, although&#13;
the students have. .&#13;
According to William Niebuhr,&#13;
director of Student Life, a union&#13;
operating board at other&#13;
universities is made up of&#13;
students, union program staff,&#13;
faculty, some community&#13;
members and some alumni. The&#13;
union has to be self supporting&#13;
Iller its only funds come from&#13;
programming fees. The board&#13;
l:iually deals with policy mat-&#13;
I rs. i.e. the hours of the union&#13;
and who can use it, and&#13;
regulation of the food service.&#13;
otht'f campuses, unless they are&#13;
very small. have two boards, one&#13;
elected and one not. The&#13;
operating board can inform the&#13;
programming board if the&#13;
OOildmgis not serving its pur-&#13;
JlOS&lt;&#13;
Tom Weiss stated he felt that&#13;
tbf:. sue was a better vehicle for&#13;
programming events than the&#13;
PAB. He also stated, "We don't&#13;
"ant to replace anybocy," His&#13;
remarks were interrupted from&#13;
Eight University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside music students are recipients of&#13;
this year's Harmony Foundation&#13;
scholarships_ The foundation is a&#13;
charitable and educational trust created&#13;
by the Society for the Preservation and&#13;
Encouragement of Barber Shop Quarfet&#13;
Sing109 in Amenca (SPEBSQSAl, whIch&#13;
has its national headquarters In Kenbsha.&#13;
The scholarship winners are, back row,&#13;
left to right· Michael Swenson,&#13;
Janesville; Kathy Devine. Union Grove;&#13;
Arline Dahlquist. Racine; Thomas&#13;
Rome, Burlington; Floyd Hanson,&#13;
Kenosha; and Lynn CrOS$, KenO$ha&#13;
Front row· Hugh Ingraham of the&#13;
Harmony Foundation; Jean Ta$hotf.&#13;
Racine. Judy Bandor, Somers, and&#13;
Harry Lantz of the muslc faculty This Is&#13;
the second year the found tlon has m d&#13;
scholarship grants avail bl 10 Par d&#13;
music studen s The a ards w r m d&#13;
at a student honors concert&#13;
P Dc....&#13;
In Burlington&#13;
Learning center estab h d •1&#13;
Parkside announced that II ha&#13;
established a satellite learning&#13;
center in the Burlington public&#13;
llbrarv this smester as part of a&#13;
cooperative four-county "open&#13;
education" project for so-called&#13;
"non-traditional" student&#13;
The Parkside-Burhngton pecject&#13;
consists or 1\\0 and po. "lbl~&#13;
more introductory credit coo&#13;
taught by three autotutors.&#13;
sophisticated electronic teachmg&#13;
machines v. hich were set up 10&#13;
the Burlington library&#13;
We are very plea. ed to offer&#13;
two courses for college credit in&#13;
the Burlington Public Library&#13;
The two courses are'&#13;
English 010 Element or&#13;
English, mcluding program. (Of"&#13;
irnprovmg writing , com+&#13;
munieation skill . oral and&#13;
written, and wriling effecti\'e&#13;
reports. 3 credits&#13;
Education 140: tud," Skill.&#13;
including programs (or&#13;
Reference Skills &lt;library.,&#13;
following directions &lt;tests,&#13;
assignments and exercises~.&#13;
reading to know, and readmg (oc&#13;
meaning. 1 credit&#13;
The cost (or these courses ls&#13;
SI9.50 per credit&#13;
The Four-County Open&#13;
Education project in\'ohes L'"W+&#13;
Parkside. VW-Whitewater.&#13;
l"ni\'ersity Extension and the&#13;
two-year UW-Waukesha center&#13;
and includes programs 10&#13;
Kenosha, Racine, Waukesha and&#13;
Walworth countIes.&#13;
Open education. according to&#13;
Vni\'ersity ExtenSIon Vice&#13;
C'1la lIor Grorgt". trothcr. lS an&#13;
attempt bj the L\\ ) t&lt;'tn 10&#13;
meet on a tat "1d ba lh&#13;
edocanooal n &lt; of hard-I ..&#13;
reach' luden thos,.bo&#13;
don't have ta)o geographIC&#13;
ac to 8 lUll'H'f'Slh or can 'I&#13;
Continued on pag e 4&#13;
t Don L. L&#13;
onday&#13;
Poet-lingui&#13;
speak here&#13;
Blac . ~IngwstDon L ,&#13;
exponent of '-l/le lang e of&#13;
familiar experience' and pact ..n&#13;
residence at \I as hI n. 0 C&#13;
Howard OI\erslty .... 111 ak at&#13;
The l"m\-er.;lt\" ol \\ lsconsln~&#13;
Park ·,de at 8· P m on Jan :!2&#13;
(. tonda) 10 Room 103&#13;
GreenqlDst Hall&#13;
H,s tall&lt;, utI"" "Readin' and&#13;
Rapplll' ," t . pon.:.or"" bj lIle&#13;
Parblde Lecture and Fme&#13;
CommIttee and I open f"'" lollle&#13;
public&#13;
Lee's campus \,~it also 'o\.IU&#13;
include informal meoe 101: "lib&#13;
Parkslde students and&#13;
rcpresentaU"es from area hIgh&#13;
school during the aflemoon&#13;
Bef...., a U&gt;lUng hIS present&#13;
post at Howard Lee,.as a lecturer&#13;
10 Afro-American literature&#13;
at lIle I:ru"er"S,ty of minolS&#13;
C1t1cago Circle Campus, Cornell&#13;
CnherSll)' and • 'ortheastern&#13;
Dhnois t.:ni\'ersity.&#13;
He has publish"" four "olumes&#13;
ofpoeU)','·ThU1k Black," "Black&#13;
Recipient of the first scholarship awarded to a&#13;
Parkside music major by the Dairyland Chapter of the&#13;
American Association of Theafer Organ Enthusiasts is&#13;
Mary Heinisch of Kenosha She is shown above with two&#13;
~:itresentalives of the organ society, Robert D_ Leutner.&#13;
r' ' of Racine. treasurer of the group. and Fred Dove.&#13;
~~ht, of Zion, III.. who presented the $150 award. The&#13;
lai,rYland group previously was instrumental In ob-&#13;
Or n'ng tor Parks ide the gift of a Barton Theater P,pe&#13;
in ~n val~ed at almost $50,000. The largest ~uch organ&#13;
feet 'scons'n With 14 sets of pipes ranging In sIZe from 18&#13;
a ~Othesize of a lead pencil. the organ presently IS In&#13;
hou d,son theater where it will remain until su,table&#13;
C4 $'ng is available for the instrument on the Parkslde ~.&#13;
The Parkside--------&#13;
R ANGER&#13;
pSGA, P AB skirmish&#13;
over union hoard,&#13;
• programming&#13;
BV Marilyn Schubert&#13;
kir mis hi ng between the&#13;
pSGA, Student Union Committee&#13;
and the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board was brought to a head in a&#13;
meeting called on Dec. 14 by&#13;
pSGA president Tom Haack. The&#13;
troUble resulted from a misunderstanding&#13;
regarding the funcbOfl&#13;
of each body.&#13;
Haack began the meeting by&#13;
reading the PSGA constitution&#13;
regulating the sue, which gives&#13;
1tduties similar to that of a Union&#13;
Operating Board, plus other&#13;
interests such as the Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee, and the&#13;
book store. He then stated tha t&#13;
the committee is not authorized&#13;
to be the Union Operating Board&#13;
mce the regents have not approved&#13;
the constitution, although&#13;
the tudents have .&#13;
According to William Niebuhr,&#13;
director of Student Life , a union&#13;
operating board a t other&#13;
universities is made up of&#13;
tudents, union program staff,&#13;
£acuity, some commun ity&#13;
members and some alumni. The&#13;
ion has to be self supporting&#13;
nc its onl y fu nds come from&#13;
programming fees. The board&#13;
ually deals with poli cy matt&#13;
r ,e. the hours of t he union&#13;
d \1ho can use it, and&#13;
ulation of th e food service.&#13;
0t h r campu ·es, unless they are&#13;
rv mall , ha ve two boards, one&#13;
cted and one not. The&#13;
rating board can inform the&#13;
pro ramming board i f t h e&#13;
ldmg is not serving it s pur -&#13;
Torn Wei.s s tated h e felt tha t&#13;
UC was a better vehicl e for&#13;
programming eve nts than the&#13;
P R lie also stated, " We don' t&#13;
nt to replac e anyboc y." His&#13;
remark. were interrupted from&#13;
time to time by questions and&#13;
refutation from the PAB members&#13;
and administrative personnel.&#13;
The main points of Weiss'&#13;
argument were O ) the sue is by&#13;
nature more representative than&#13;
the P AB because its members&#13;
are elected rather than voluntary,&#13;
( 2) the P AB structurally&#13;
has no power against adminis&#13;
trative v eto and anything&#13;
accomplished is on an individual&#13;
basis, whereas student government&#13;
has the whole student body&#13;
b e hind the m and accomplishments&#13;
and precidential&#13;
and (3) s tudent government is&#13;
ineffectua l a nd needs to have&#13;
en ough power to accomplish&#13;
som ethi n g before students will&#13;
ha ve a n y faith in it.&#13;
The first a r gument was answer&#13;
ed by variou s P AB members,&#13;
saying a ll who are on the&#13;
boa rd are s tr ongly encouraged to&#13;
be r epresenta ti ve of the student&#13;
body, a n d that it wo u ld be foolis h&#13;
for them to schedule programs&#13;
th e students did not want. They&#13;
also questioned how repre en tative&#13;
the sue would be as so few&#13;
people actually wrote in names&#13;
and voted for its members.&#13;
Sue \"csley r e s und . to •&#13;
second argument by asking for&#13;
an example of the final program&#13;
decision was made by the administration.&#13;
She said. ''PAB&#13;
doesn' t a k if it's OK to bring in&#13;
Eden Stone for a dance It · the&#13;
decision of the committee and the&#13;
administration has ne\Cr \·etoed&#13;
any yet.··&#13;
Weiss asked why l ' C ,,a. n't&#13;
granted the power to chedule&#13;
events . Dearborn replied ,&#13;
"Because PAB i more&#13;
representa t ive. m ore qualified&#13;
a nd doing a better job than )·ou&#13;
a nd &lt;Joe&gt; Ha rris ."&#13;
Continu ed on page 4&#13;
Recipient of the first scholarship awarded to a&#13;
p rkside music major by the Dairyland Chapter of t~e&#13;
merican Association of Theater Organ EnthusiaSt s i s&#13;
ry Heinisch of Kenosha She is shown above wi th two&#13;
representatives of the organ society, Robert D. Leutner'&#13;
~:ft, of Racine, treasurer of the group, and Fred Dove,&#13;
~Q~t, of Zion, Ill., who presented the $150 awar~ . The&#13;
01 ~Yland group previously was instrumental in ?b·&#13;
~rung for Parkside the gift of a Barton Theat~r Pipe&#13;
n 9~n Valued at almost $50,000 . The larg:st ~uch organ&#13;
e Wisconsin with 14 sets of pipes ranging in size tro,:n ~8&#13;
a et to ~he size of a lead pencil, the organ pres_entl~ is in&#13;
0~dtson theater where it will remain until suita?le&#13;
USing is available for the instrument on the Parkside&#13;
trlPOs.&#13;
Eigh t Un iver ity of isconsin -&#13;
Parkside music studen s are recip en s of&#13;
th i s year's Harmony Foundation&#13;
s cholarships. The foundation Is a&#13;
c har i t able and educa ional trus crea ed&#13;
by the Society for the Preserva I on and&#13;
Encouragement of Barber S op&#13;
mging in menca (SPEBSQS&#13;
has its national headqu r ers in&#13;
The scholarship Inners are,&#13;
left to right: Michael&#13;
Janesville; Kathy D vine, Uni&#13;
In Burlin rton&#13;
nu r~&#13;
I. . 1 ·&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
Editorial/Opi n ion&#13;
The Slow-Slow-Slow&#13;
Shuttle Affair&#13;
There is no doubt about it but that the shuttle buses&#13;
wait too long in the east parking lot. It seems a small&#13;
thing to many people who scorn this type ot editorial, but&#13;
it is a very real Irritant to many students, staff and&#13;
taculty. For proof we ask that disbelievers visit the bus&#13;
stop in the upper lot for about an hour and listen to the&#13;
comments.&#13;
It seems as though the shuttle drivers are trying to&#13;
maintain some type of very strie! schedule. A schedule&#13;
too inflexibie and impractical to serve the needs of the&#13;
passengers.&#13;
We call on ali those associated with the shuttle buses&#13;
to move toward a more practical system which would&#13;
keep waiting to a minimum and most importantly would&#13;
get rid of any type of schedule which would hold the bus&#13;
in one place or another.&#13;
We have buses to use and they are a very great expenditure.&#13;
Let's make them run to serve those who use&#13;
and pay for them.&#13;
A dependent press?&#13;
There has been some talk that the student newspapers&#13;
in the UW system are in danger of losing state funding.&#13;
The Board of Regents will be meeting soon to discuss the&#13;
question of "segregated fees" (those fees, paid by&#13;
students, which are set aside for student programming&#13;
and services) and this will naturally involve the funding&#13;
of campus papers. If UW newspapers do not merit state&#13;
expense, then the student press will be forced to go independent.&#13;
In many cases this means they will be forced&#13;
out of existence.&#13;
Even those newspapers capable of publishing without&#13;
state funding would certainly have to sacrifice some of&#13;
the quality of their publications. The real question here&#13;
is not "independence," but "upon whom will the student&#13;
press be dependent?" Denied state funding, student&#13;
newspapers will be forced to expend most of their&#13;
energy and resources selling themselves to advertisers.&#13;
It is the public interest that would suffer from this new&#13;
orientation.&#13;
Within the University of Wisconsin - which has long&#13;
stood as a symbol of free and open inquiry - the student&#13;
press has held a vital position as the critical student&#13;
voice, supported and maintained by the state. It has&#13;
been able to act in the public interest because it is&#13;
supported by, and owes allegiance to, the public and no&#13;
one else. The state should continue to support such a&#13;
truly free press within the University.&#13;
Maintenance of the student press within the&#13;
University should not in any way imply direct or indirect&#13;
control of it by the administration. That could&#13;
only be interpreted as abridgement of freedom of the&#13;
press, and denies the opportunity to learn and foster the&#13;
growth of a free, responsible press.&#13;
Perhaps this does not reflect the nature of the "real&#13;
world" or provide "valuable experience" if student&#13;
newspapers are supported by the state. But if that is&#13;
used as an argument against continuing state funding, it&#13;
is valid only if the University exists to "train" students&#13;
to live in a world that is not what it ought to be.&#13;
Hopefully, the University has a higher and more&#13;
honorable purpose: To serve the end of critical&#13;
scholarship in a world desperately in need of new ideas.&#13;
That end can only be served if the University strives to&#13;
teach its students what is right with the world, what is&#13;
wrong with it, and how it can be changed. Certainly the&#13;
student pr ss has a v·ta, role in this high purpose. It&#13;
" t supported&#13;
EDITOR'S&#13;
NOTEBOOK&#13;
By Rudy Lienau&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
This column will be a weekly&#13;
feature and in it I hope to comment&#13;
on the people, places and&#13;
things in the area which might&#13;
tend to tintilale our minds. First,&#13;
I'd like to talk a little bit about&#13;
this paper.&#13;
The purpose of the paper is to&#13;
serve the students, faculty and&#13;
staff on campus. We must do this&#13;
by informing, entertaining and&#13;
criticizing when criticism is due.&#13;
We will continue to encourage&#13;
individual expression through&#13;
columns and art. Letters to the&#13;
Editor are always helpful and&#13;
welcome.&#13;
The Ranger will broaden its&#13;
scope in the following weeks to&#13;
cover and comment on local,&#13;
state and national affairs. With&#13;
these new news areas we hope to&#13;
increase our audience and add&#13;
the element of a student's interpretive&#13;
reporting to the news.&#13;
Another set of bleachers is&#13;
supposed to be built across from&#13;
the present set in the P .E.&#13;
Building. Many activities have&#13;
been curtailed because of low&#13;
seating capacity, i.e., a possible&#13;
large concert to be sponsored by&#13;
the PAB in the first semester was&#13;
cancelled before it could be&#13;
started. The reason? Rumor had&#13;
it that there was a wood shortage&#13;
because so many bowling alleys&#13;
were being built in Japan. To&#13;
confirm this story I made a call to&#13;
James Galbraith, director of&#13;
Planning and' Construction.&#13;
There was no confirmation of this&#13;
rumor.&#13;
Galbraith said there is a&#13;
shortage of prime lumber, but the&#13;
supplier hopes to get the pieces&#13;
here by February. Galbraith&#13;
hopes they'll be installed by the&#13;
end of that month.&#13;
Lienau named&#13;
Ranger editor&#13;
The Ranger advisory board has&#13;
selected Rudy Lienau as the&#13;
Editor of the Ranger for the&#13;
spring semester.&#13;
Lienau then named the other&#13;
editors. They are: Geoff&#13;
Blaesing, News Editor; Jane&#13;
Schliesman, Feature Editor;&#13;
Tom Petersen, Managing Editor;&#13;
Kathy Wellner and Kris Koch,&#13;
Sports Co-Editors. Ken Pestka&#13;
and Fred Lawrence will remain&#13;
Business Manager and Ad&#13;
Manager, respectively.&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
We at the Information Center&#13;
have a thorn we'd like to get out&#13;
of our sides: People who lose&#13;
things that don't have their&#13;
names on them.&#13;
We have a semester's worth of&#13;
books, notes, hats and gloves,&#13;
glasses, car keys and&#13;
miscellanea in our lost and found.&#13;
We must clear it out to make&#13;
room for this semester's new&#13;
collection. If articles were&#13;
labelled. we would gladly call the&#13;
owners to let them know we have&#13;
their belongings. As it stands, we&#13;
must rely on them to come to us if&#13;
they've lost something.&#13;
II any of you readers lost&#13;
anything on campus last&#13;
semester, you have _il Jan. 19&#13;
to come and claim it. We're in&#13;
Tallent Hall, 201.&#13;
Parkside Information Center&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
L- -by Gary Huck&#13;
~If:.The~e&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout th.eacadem;&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsm·pa~ksl&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at 0-194 Llbran&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295. .&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. OPIOI&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the oW&#13;
view of The University of wisccnsin-Parkside- . t&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. Ail ietters on any SUb~.&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to ~ \loO&#13;
less, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the nghtl'cl""&#13;
letters for length and good taste. Ail letters must be signed and10•&#13;
address, phone number and student status or faculty rank. Na~es I&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to r USl'&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Geoff Blaesing&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Jane Schiiesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
SPORTS EDITORS: Kathryn Wellner, Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Kathryn Weilner&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva&#13;
'C' REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTlSIN&lt;? BY 10C.&#13;
~ National Educational Advertising ServIces,&#13;
I 360 Lexington Ave., New York. N. y. 10017&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
~~ANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
The Slow-Slow-Slow&#13;
Shuttle Affair&#13;
There is no doubt about it but that the shuttle buses&#13;
wait too long in the east parking lot. It seems a small&#13;
thing to many people who scorn this type of editorial, but&#13;
it is a very real Irritant to many students, staff and&#13;
faculty . For proof we ask that disbelievers visit the bus&#13;
stop in the upper lot for about an hour and listen to the&#13;
comments .&#13;
It seems as though the shuttle drivers are trying to&#13;
maintain some type of very strict schedule. A schedule&#13;
too inflexible and impractical to serve the needs of the&#13;
passengers.&#13;
We call on all those associated with the shuttle buses&#13;
to move toward a more practical system which would&#13;
keep waiting to a minimum and most importantly would&#13;
get rid of any type of schedule which would hold the bus&#13;
in one place or another.&#13;
We have buses to use and they are a very great expenditure.&#13;
Let' s make them run to serve those who use&#13;
and pay for them .&#13;
A dependent press?&#13;
There has been some talk that the student newspapers&#13;
in the UW system are in danger of losing state funding.&#13;
The Board of Regents will be meeting soon to discuss the&#13;
question of "segregated fees" (those fees, paid by&#13;
students, which are set aside for student programming&#13;
and services) and this will naturally involve the funding&#13;
of campus papers. If UW newspapers do not merit state&#13;
expense, then the student press will be forced to go independent.&#13;
In many cases this means they will be forced&#13;
out of existence.&#13;
Even those newspapers capable of publishi ng without&#13;
state fund i ng would certainly have to sacrifice some of&#13;
the quality of their publications. The real question here&#13;
i s not " independence," but "upon whom will the student&#13;
press be dependent? " Denied state funding, student&#13;
newspapers will be forced to expend most of their&#13;
energy and resources selling themselves to advertisers.&#13;
It is the public interest that would suffer from this new&#13;
ori entation .&#13;
W i th i n the Universi ty of Wisconsin - which has long&#13;
stood as a symbol of free and open inquiry - the student&#13;
press has held a vital position as the critical student&#13;
v oi ce , supported and ma intained by the state . It has&#13;
been able to act in the public interest because it is&#13;
su pported by, and owes allegiance to, the public and no&#13;
on e else . The state should continue to support such a&#13;
trul y free press within the University.&#13;
Ma i ntenance of the student press within the&#13;
Uni versi ty shou ld not in any way imply direct or ind&#13;
i r ect control of i t by the administration. That could&#13;
on l y be i nter preted as abridgement of freedom of the&#13;
press, and den ies the opportunity to learn and foster the&#13;
growth of a free, r espons i ble press .&#13;
Perhaps this does not reflect the nature of the "real&#13;
orl d " or pr ovid e "va luabl e experience " if student&#13;
newspapers are supported by the state. But if that is&#13;
used as an argument against co nti nuing sta t e f unding , it&#13;
is valid only i f the University exists t o " t r ain" st udents&#13;
olive in a world that is not what it ou g ht t o be.&#13;
Hopefully, the Un i versity has a higher and more&#13;
honorable purpose : To serve the end of critical&#13;
sch olarship in a worl d desper atel y in need of new ideas.&#13;
Tha end c an only be served if the Un iversi ty stri ves to&#13;
t ch its s ud nts what is right ~ith the world, what is&#13;
rong th I and how i can be changed. Certainly the&#13;
s ud nt pr s has a ital role in this high purpose. It&#13;
pport&#13;
EDITOR'S&#13;
OTEBOOK&#13;
By Rudy Lienau&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Thi column will be a weekly&#13;
feature and in it I hope to com ment&#13;
on the people, places and&#13;
thing in the area which might&#13;
tend to tintilate our minds . First,&#13;
I'd like to talk a little bit about&#13;
this paper.&#13;
The purpo e of the paper is to&#13;
erve the tudents, faculty and&#13;
taff on campus. We must do this&#13;
by informing, entertaining and&#13;
criticizing when criticism is due.&#13;
We will continue to encourage&#13;
individual expression through&#13;
column and art. Letters to the&#13;
Editor are always helpful and&#13;
welcome .&#13;
The Rang r will broaden its&#13;
cope in the following weeks to&#13;
cover and comment on local,&#13;
state and national affairs. With&#13;
these new news areas we hope to&#13;
increase our audience and add&#13;
the element of a student's interpretive&#13;
reporting to the news.&#13;
Another set of bleachers is&#13;
upposed to be built across from&#13;
the present set in the P .E .&#13;
Building . 1any activities have&#13;
been curtailed because of low&#13;
seating capacity, i.e ., a possible&#13;
large concert to be sponsored by&#13;
the PAB in the first semester was&#13;
cancelled before it could be&#13;
started. The reason? Rumor had&#13;
it that there was a wood shortage&#13;
because so many bowling alleys&#13;
were being built in Japan . To&#13;
confirm this story I made a call to&#13;
James Galbraith, director of&#13;
Planning and Construction.&#13;
There was no confirmation of this&#13;
rumor.&#13;
Galbraith said there is a&#13;
shortage of prime lumber, but the&#13;
supplier hopes to get the pieces&#13;
here by February. Galbraith&#13;
hopes they' ll be installed by the&#13;
end of that month .&#13;
Lienau named&#13;
Ranger editor&#13;
The Ranger advisory board has&#13;
selected Rudy Lienau as the&#13;
Editor of the Ranger for the&#13;
spring semester.&#13;
Lienau then named the other&#13;
editor s . They are : Geoff&#13;
Blaesing , ews Editor ; Jane&#13;
Sc hliesman , Feature Editor ;&#13;
Tom Petersen, Managing Editor ;&#13;
Kathy Wellner and Kris Koch ,&#13;
Sports Co-Editors . Ken Pestka&#13;
and Fred Lawrence will remain&#13;
Bus iness Manager and Ad&#13;
Manager, respectively.&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the Editor :&#13;
We at the Information Center&#13;
have a thorn we 'd like to get out&#13;
of our sides : People who lose&#13;
th ings that don 't have their&#13;
names on them .&#13;
We have a semester 's worth of&#13;
books , notes, hats and gloves ,&#13;
glasses car keys and&#13;
miscellanea in our lost and found .&#13;
We must cl ear it out to make&#13;
room for th is semester 's new&#13;
collection. If a r ticles were&#13;
labelled, we woul d gladly call the&#13;
owners to let them kn ow we have&#13;
their belongings. As it stands, we&#13;
must rely on them to come to us if&#13;
they 've lost something.&#13;
If a ny of you readers lost&#13;
any th i ng on ca mpus last&#13;
semester, you ha\'e • ii J an. 19&#13;
to come and claim it. We're in&#13;
Tallent Hall, 201&#13;
Park ide Information Center&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
_______ by Gary Huck&#13;
~ _/F The Parkside .,,,,rr ..&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout ~e acade dt&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin -Par&#13;
Kenosha , Wi sconsin 53140 . Offices are located at D-194 LJbrln&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone ( 414 ) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper . Opm&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the offi&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside. 1&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any ub:&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to~ 110&#13;
less , typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right 10&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and 1&#13;
addr~ss, phone number and student status or faculty ~ank . Na:&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to r&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
'EWS EDITOR : Geoff Blaesing&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Jane Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
SPORTS EDITORS : Ka thryn Wellner , Kris Koch&#13;
BUSI N ESS MANA GER : Ken P estka&#13;
ADVERTI SING MANAG ER : Fred Law re nce&#13;
CIRCU LATIO N MANAGER : Kathryn Wellne r&#13;
ADVISOR : Do n Kopriva&#13;
';.• RE PRESENTED FOR NATION AL ADVERTISINC? BY )OC.&#13;
Q National Educational Ad vertis ing ServJCeS,&#13;
360 Lexingto n Ave., New York, N. Y. 100 17&#13;
Audio-Visual Review&#13;
Sounds of death&#13;
and dissent&#13;
By Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
is a growing numb~r of records, tapes, slides and Hl&#13;
~~:~leforu.sein t~e L~arnm~ Center. This will be a weekly COl~~~&#13;
1l\8&#13;
1&#13;
:ewiD. g these audio-visual aids. .&#13;
re\\ tudents are unaware of the great variety of equipment the&#13;
sam,eg&#13;
s&#13;
Center contains. It would be worth your while to stop in and&#13;
t.earnm&#13;
,.•" around. '.&#13;
KN". .eek two cassette tapes will be reviewed.&#13;
T'dhiS" theheading 0 f Crnime an d Puunmishs men t IiS an excellent cassette t:nc:rled Condemned to ~eath. This deals with the s.ubject of capital&#13;
ta~shment at San ~uentm. . . .&#13;
pin tape begins'.with a witness grvmg a very eerie and detailed&#13;
Th:i tion of an e~ecution. His thought was, "Wait, can't we just talk deSC P . ?" about it first.&#13;
Th rest of the ~pe is about a case where an 18-year-old boy was&#13;
I~ced to death. The boy gives a haunting account of events and&#13;
senr~gSheexperienced from the time he was picked up through the 44&#13;
fee Iths he spent on death row. It was a sensitive and heartbreaking :onription of an unbelievable and terrible event.&#13;
~e boy's sister tells wha.t it's like to know your bro~er is going to&#13;
be killed.The prison chaplain offers a prayer and the assistant warden&#13;
talks of procedure. . '.&#13;
Thistape is really easy to get into b~cause of Its haunting realism.&#13;
It'sa group of individuals telling a tragic story from their own unique&#13;
\iewpoints.&#13;
Thetape was arranged very well as it told the story in its natural&#13;
sequenceof events.&#13;
Condemnedto Death would make worthwhile listening since certain&#13;
governmentofficials want to bring back capital punishment for some&#13;
dfenses.&#13;
Martin Luther King and Integration is a taped press conference with&#13;
Dr Kingwhich was held in 1960. This was during the time in which he&#13;
was lighting to get restaurants and other public places integrated.&#13;
Someof the topics he spoke on were non-violent protest, law, the&#13;
federal government, integration of schools, churches, public places,&#13;
and racial intermarriage.&#13;
When questioned about certain laws that were broken during&#13;
protests, Dr. King responded, "If you're saying, 'Are we breaking&#13;
lawsbecause we feel the end justifies the means,' we feel there are&#13;
morallaws in the universe just as valid and basic as man-made laws.&#13;
Whenevera man-made law is in conflict with what we consider the law&#13;
o(Gocior the moral law of the universe, then we feel we have a moral&#13;
obligationto protest. This is an American tradition from the Boston&#13;
Tea Party on down." . .&#13;
The press asked, "Is it ~orrect to say you don't 0I?Pos~ r~c~al mtermarriage?"&#13;
Dr. King replied, "Properly speaking individuals&#13;
marry not races."&#13;
Even though these words were spoken over 12 years ago, Martin&#13;
LutherKing's ideas are still relevant. Some of his plans ha·ve still not&#13;
been fully carried out, but they're worth rememberin~.&#13;
Last Monday (Jan. 15) was Dr. King's birthday. This would ~ a&#13;
good time to review his ideas and do something toward the completion&#13;
01 his plans.&#13;
Professor plans tutorials&#13;
to aid behavior change&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
William R. Morrow, professor&#13;
II PSychology, has a new idea in&#13;
.tu&lt;k&gt;nstervices: Tutorials to aid&#13;
!&gt;'&lt;&gt;ple in changing their&#13;
behaVior.Specific areas in which&#13;
assistance will be provided this&#13;
Sf&gt;mester are public speaking&#13;
linXiety,losing weight, cessation&#13;
Of Smoking and (for men only)&#13;
O\'ercorningshyness with women.&#13;
Irs all part of Morrow's "Adlanced&#13;
Behavior Modification"&#13;
(CUrse.in which the members of&#13;
tht class will gain practical&#13;
'''Pl'rience as trainers in the&#13;
Individualized sessions. Volunteersare&#13;
needed to participate in&#13;
~ project. They will meet with&#13;
tramel's, Who are advanced&#13;
PIl}chology stUdents one hour a&#13;
l't'k (or an avera'ge of eight ''''''&#13;
C For each program, carefully&#13;
hotltrolJedexperimental research&#13;
f as. demonstrated the efeCh\"&#13;
eness of the training&#13;
:ethods to be used. The&#13;
10O&lt;:eduresare quite structured 11:he trainer has a clear path to&#13;
t~ 0\1,. but they will be tailored to&#13;
\O~ needs of the individual&#13;
thtunteers Who wish to improve&#13;
III rnselves in One of the ways&#13;
prt'nhoned above. These&#13;
ad~edures will be explained in&#13;
k~.nce to the clients so they will&#13;
ho • hat to expect and why and&#13;
• It 'ill help them. Each&#13;
student volunteer will ~ork .on a&#13;
one-to-one basis with hIS tramer.&#13;
The training program foUows&#13;
straightforward learning principles.&#13;
For example, if a person&#13;
feels excessive fear about&#13;
speaking before a g~oup, the&#13;
assumption is that he has b~n&#13;
conditioned by previous learmDg&#13;
experiences to .react to that&#13;
situation with anxiety. Therefore,&#13;
the procedure is designed to help&#13;
recondition him to react m~re&#13;
calmly and comfortably. It I~·&#13;
valves counter-conditioning III&#13;
which the client is exposed ~o&#13;
gradually more difficult public&#13;
speaking stimuli under conditions&#13;
that help him to stay&#13;
re Iaxe d . The trainer wo.uld&#13;
employ relaxation exerCises&#13;
throughout th e cour Se of the&#13;
I'ogram. These procedures, to&#13;
~lIeviate the public speakmg&#13;
anxle. ty prol.lem are related to a u 'Ited&#13;
proposa I Morro\\' has . subml th&#13;
in a grant applicatIOn to e&#13;
National Advisory Men.tal Heal~&#13;
Council. That project IS to star&#13;
this summer if funded.. ar-&#13;
Anyone interested m p .&#13;
ticipatIDg. I.n one . of. thiS&#13;
semester's programs IS t~eg~Lt~&#13;
ick up a flyer from .&#13;
pInforma t'IOn Desk in .1\lalO Plkaceo. r&#13;
the Library CirculatIOn D~ , .&#13;
the Student Counseling OffIce: In&#13;
Tallent Hall 202 or Kenosha 13,. H&#13;
ou have one of these problems;&#13;
~olunteer to help yourself out.&#13;
Wed., Jan, 17, 1973 THE PARKSIOE RANGER 3&#13;
22 graduates&#13;
awarded degrees&#13;
'with distinction'&#13;
Twenty-two of the 113 can.&#13;
didates for mid-year graduation&#13;
at Parkside were awarded their&#13;
degrees "witb distinction."&#13;
Graduates ho maintain an&#13;
academic gradep,lint average of&#13;
at least 3.25 out of a possible 40&#13;
receive degrees with distinction:&#13;
those with averages of at least 3.5&#13;
receive degrees with high&#13;
distinction; and those with&#13;
averages of at least 3.75 with&#13;
highest distinction.&#13;
Highest distinction was&#13;
achieved by Gary L. Bendix.&#13;
Racine, and Alan J. Rarmas,&#13;
Kenosha. both bachelors of arts.&#13;
and Joseph W. Gauchel, Racine.&#13;
and Thomas J. James. Racine.&#13;
both bachelors of science.&#13;
High distinction was attained&#13;
by Marc Howard Eisen.&#13;
Kenosha: Patricia A Koessl&#13;
Counselors assigned high&#13;
school liaison duties&#13;
A sure sign of Parkside's&#13;
growth and maturity is that some&#13;
staff are becoming concerned&#13;
lest the university become 1m·&#13;
personal in its dealing \\ Ith&#13;
outsiders.&#13;
One such group IS the tudent&#13;
Services staff. and they are doulg&#13;
something about it&#13;
A member of the staff has bf"n&#13;
assigned liaison responslbihtles&#13;
With each of eight Keno.ha and&#13;
Racme high school&#13;
Charles Kugel. dIrector of&#13;
School and Campus Relations.&#13;
explains it this way&#13;
"B\" being assigned to a&#13;
specific high school. the Park~ld~&#13;
staffer .hould be able to dr-elop&#13;
a more pentonaJ relation. hip 'nth&#13;
that .chool. be available for&#13;
meetings with It" studenL~ and&#13;
staff and. 10 general sen.e a. the&#13;
contact person for an~ and all&#13;
concerns or que. tlon~ about&#13;
Parkside ..&#13;
Kugel added, "In tum. lhe&#13;
assigned person \Ii 111 serve as the&#13;
counselor \\ hom ~tudents comlO~&#13;
to Parks ide can seek out b)&#13;
name. and \Ii III be 10 a better&#13;
position to help ~~ studenl&#13;
because of pre\"lou::. knov.ledge&#13;
about his high school"&#13;
Student sen'ices slaff ha\"e&#13;
been assIgned to the follo\\ log&#13;
high schools Kenosha B:adford&#13;
Wend\" ;\1u ich. Kenosha&#13;
TremPer. 150m Fearn; Keno~ha&#13;
S1. Joseph and Raci ne&#13;
Washington Park. Cia)' Barnard.&#13;
Radne Horlick and RacIOe 1.&#13;
Catherine. Ste"e Bangert.&#13;
Racine Case, Kenneth Oberbruner;&#13;
Racine Lutheran.&#13;
Barbara Larson&#13;
Kenosha. Catherine Rohutny,&#13;
Kenosha. William Waldvogel.&#13;
Wausau; Ann Schulz wiersum.&#13;
Polson. . teet. and ~Ianl}'n J.&#13;
Wohlers. nion Grove. all&#13;
bachelors of arts: and Thoma&#13;
Charles Gamer. Racine, and&#13;
John E. I... art. Kenoha, boOl&#13;
bachelors of SCience.&#13;
Distinction went to ISler .Iat")&#13;
Dunstan. ~I,Kenosha, Diane&#13;
.1 Hanel. Kenosha; Jerome R&#13;
Kamin. Racine, \'Iolel Kivela,&#13;
Kenosha LOI J .l~en. en.&#13;
Kenosha, and PeggS Ann RW'I e.&#13;
F'renksvrlle, all bachelor or&#13;
ar-ts and Jo. eph T Dron ,&#13;
Racme. J Thoma Knmmel,&#13;
Keno. ha . tar)' B . tarun,&#13;
Burlmgton: and Lots J Rami as.&#13;
Kenosha, all bachelors of&#13;
science&#13;
L srntn T&#13;
Ilt r ...&#13;
Audio-Visual Review&#13;
Sounds of death&#13;
and dissent&#13;
By Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
here is a growing number of records tapes slid .&#13;
: lable for use in the Learning Center. Th,is will be a Wes k~nd fllms&#13;
813&#13;
'. ·ng these audio-visual aids. ee y column&#13;
re1·1c111 f&#13;
sorne students are u_naware o the great variety of equipment the&#13;
·ng Center contams. It would be worth your while to st . 1,e3rni op m and&#13;
1-00k around.&#13;
This week two _cassett~ tapes will ?e reviewed.&#13;
l'nder the headmg of Crime and P~mshmen~ is an excellent cassette&#13;
tape called Condemned to ~eath. This deals with the s.ubject of capital&#13;
·shment at San Quentm. pun1 .th ·t ..&#13;
The tape begins ·. w1 . a w1. ness g1vmg a very eerie and detailed&#13;
description of an eitecubon. His thought was, "Wait, can't we just talk&#13;
about it first?"&#13;
The rest of the ~pe is about a case where an 18-year-old boy was&#13;
·entence d to dea~h. The boy give~ a haunting account of events and&#13;
feelings he expenenced from the time he was picked up through the 44&#13;
months he spent on death row . It was a sensitive and heartbreaking&#13;
&amp;·cri ption of an unbelievable and terrible event.&#13;
The boy's sist~r tells wha_t it's like to know your brother is going to&#13;
be killed. The pnson chaplam offers a prayer and the assistant warden&#13;
talks of procedure .&#13;
This tape is ~ea~!~ easy to ~et into be_cause of its haunting realism.&#13;
It's a group of mdiv1duals tellmg a tragic story from their own unique&#13;
11ew points.&#13;
The tape was arranged very well as it told the story in its natural&#13;
sequence of events.&#13;
Condemned to Death would make worthwhile listening since certain&#13;
overrunent officials want to bring back capital punishment for some&#13;
offenses.&#13;
\lartin Luther King and Integration is a taped press conference with&#13;
Dr King which was held in 1960. This was during the time in which he&#13;
v.as fighting to get restaurants and other public places integrated.&#13;
Some of the topics h~ spoke_ on were non-violent protest, Jaw, the&#13;
federa l government, mtegrat1on of schools, churches, public places&#13;
and racial intermarriage. '&#13;
When questioned about certain laws that were broken during&#13;
protests, Dr. King responded, "If you're saying, 'Are we breaking&#13;
laws because we feel the end justifies the means,' we feel there are&#13;
moral laws in the universe just as valid and basic as man-made laws.&#13;
Whenever a man-made law is in conflict with what we consider the law&#13;
of God or the moral law of the universe, then we feel we have a moral&#13;
obligation to protest . This is an American tradition from the Boston&#13;
Tea Party on down."&#13;
The press asked, "Is it correct to say you don't oppose racial intermarriage?"&#13;
Dr. King replied, "Properly speaking individuals&#13;
marry not races."&#13;
Even though these words were spoken over 12 years ago, Martin&#13;
Luther King's ideas are still relevant. Some of his plans ha·;e still not&#13;
en fully carried out, but they're worth remembering.&#13;
La t Monday (Jan. 15) was Dr. King's birthday. This would be a&#13;
good time to review his ideas and do something toward the completion&#13;
of his plans.&#13;
Professor plans tutorials&#13;
to aid behavior change&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
W11liam R. Morrow, professor&#13;
~ychology, has a new idea in&#13;
dent. ervices: Tutorials to aid&#13;
i&gt;eopl~ in changing their&#13;
nor. pecific areas in which&#13;
lance will be provided this&#13;
m ter are public speaking&#13;
of iety, losing weight, cessation&#13;
moking and (for men only)&#13;
1/rcoming shyness with women.&#13;
all part of Morrow's "Adncect&#13;
Behavior Modification"&#13;
COUr • in which the members of&#13;
cla will gain practical&#13;
ri nee as trainers in the&#13;
il!I\idualizt•d sessions . Volun-&#13;
.rsare needed to participate in&#13;
ProJe&lt;:l. Thev will meet with&#13;
trainers, who are advanced&#13;
llS,chology students one hour a&#13;
' for an avera&#13;
0&#13;
ge of eight&#13;
student volunteer will work on a&#13;
one-to-one basis with his trainer.&#13;
The training program follows&#13;
straightforward learning principles.&#13;
For example. if a person&#13;
feels excessive fear about&#13;
speaking before a g~oup. the&#13;
assumption is that he has b~n&#13;
conditioned by previous learnm&#13;
experiences to react to that&#13;
situation with anxiety Therefore,&#13;
the procedure is designed to help&#13;
recondition him to react more&#13;
calmlv and comfortably. It involves&#13;
counter-conditioning in&#13;
which the client is expo.ed to&#13;
gradually more ~ifficult public&#13;
speaking stimuli under con ditions&#13;
that help him to :ta:,&#13;
relaxed The trainer would&#13;
employ relaxation exercises&#13;
throughout the course of the&#13;
program. These procedure.-_ to&#13;
alleviate the public speaking&#13;
anxiety prol,lem are related . to a&#13;
proposal l\lorrO\\ has submitted&#13;
in a grant application to the&#13;
ational Advisory '.\Iental Health&#13;
Council. That project is to start&#13;
this summer if funded . .&#13;
Anvone interested m pa:ticipating&#13;
in one of. th,&#13;
semester's programs is urged to&#13;
pick up a flyer ~rom ~he LLC&#13;
Information Desk m l\Iam Place,&#13;
the Library Circulation D~ k, ~r&#13;
the Student Counseling Office m&#13;
Tallent Hall 202 or Kenosha 135. ff&#13;
vou have one of these problem.'&#13;
~olunteer to help yourself out!&#13;
22 graduate&#13;
awarded degree&#13;
'with distinction'&#13;
Twenty-two of the 113 candidates&#13;
for mid-year graduation&#13;
at Parkside were awarded their&#13;
degrees "wi di tinction . ..&#13;
Graduates mo maintain an&#13;
academic gradepoint avera e of&#13;
at least 3.25 out of a possible 4.0&#13;
receive degrees with di tinction :&#13;
those with averages of at lea.t 3.5&#13;
receive degree with high&#13;
distinction: and tho. e with&#13;
averages of at lea t 3.T ~·ith&#13;
highest distinction .&#13;
Highe t di tinclion wa.&#13;
achieved bv Gan L . Bendi&#13;
Racine. and Alan J . Ramia :&#13;
Kenosha. both bachelors of arn :&#13;
and Joseph W. Gauche!. Racin •&#13;
and Thoma J. James, Racin&#13;
both bachelor· of .cien&#13;
High di tinction \\a.&#13;
by ~Iarc Howard&#13;
Kenosha, Patricia&#13;
attained&#13;
Ei n,&#13;
K&#13;
Counselor&#13;
school 1·ai on&#13;
PAR SID R G 3&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
Land accepted&#13;
by Regents&#13;
"adl on - A parcel of land&#13;
dJOlnlng the Chiwaukee Prairie&#13;
w among g,fts accepted for The&#13;
Ijmversuy of wrsconsm-Parkstde&#13;
by the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents FrIday&#13;
The lot 15 the flIft ol Adelma&#13;
Rlgah of Oak Park. m.. and is&#13;
valued at $JOO.&#13;
TtIe Chiw ukee Prairie tract,&#13;
on of the Iew remaimng natural&#13;
prauie areas in the Michl. est. is&#13;
ht.ld In tru. t by Park ide for the&#13;
\ I .10 'alure Coo_ ervency&#13;
(Of" .. iennnc, educational and&#13;
th lie purpose: It ,. located in&#13;
th TO\\l1 of Pie sant Prairie in&#13;
K nosha ('mIDt)&#13;
Par ide. orr-campus prame&#13;
holding also includ the Harri&#13;
Tract on K no ha County and&#13;
lang r '0' Fen ne r&#13;
urhn on&#13;
P'G \, P B&#13;
C nhnu d hom pag 1&#13;
Ih q lion concernIng 5.\B&#13;
HOlm nt 01onl) e.lllht date. for&#13;
club w of the 'tudrnt Ac\l\'tties&#13;
BUlldm "as &lt;Ii '" ed. Ken&#13;
Konkol u~~ ted the _. 'C mi~ht&#13;
pia) a part In coordmatlng the&#13;
date aUoted to the P B and&#13;
lhOM" a lIotl'&lt;l to . peclfic Interest&#13;
club&gt; Thl pro po. I wtll be&#13;
dl u: d at a future meeting.&#13;
WeI . U!tll . ted that the C&#13;
\\Quld act a an operations&#13;
committee. keeping v.atch on&#13;
prohlem .and -endmg them to the&#13;
people who could solve them. the&#13;
P.\B or the fond . emce. The&#13;
PAS ,",ould then program Be·&#13;
b\'llles. fie said he ....ouJd be&#13;
satisfied if "" e can have a seat&#13;
on the PAB to Inform them of&#13;
problems and aCbvely work and&#13;
ha, eo funcllon. W. should have&#13;
\ollng po~er. but If we can't&#13;
that's OK We just want an area&#13;
for Input." he continued.&#13;
f1aack toted the PAB had&#13;
granted a seat without \"oling&#13;
power. unless the UC&#13;
representative put in the same&#13;
amount of work as e,,'eryone else&#13;
on the board. in which case he&#13;
","ouldha\'e a vote. Haack asked.&#13;
"Why- hould thIS person have to&#13;
put In double time - time as a&#13;
Senator and lime as a PAS&#13;
member· .. · lstant Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn suggested a non-&#13;
:enstonal member of sue be the&#13;
representative of PAB. This mel&#13;
With general approvaL&#13;
Haack a ked if the representauve"&#13;
ould be able to jump from&#13;
committee to committee so lhe&#13;
PSGA "ould be Informed about&#13;
all a. peet Sue We ley said all&#13;
commlttee meetings were open&#13;
nd this would be fine. Anthony&#13;
Totero. coordmator of tudent&#13;
Ptogrammlng. said. "We would&#13;
be remi i\'e if we didn't accept&#13;
}our grievance."&#13;
YOUllG DRIVERS WUCOM1&#13;
nolSU.AHC( Foa&#13;
AU10S - CYCUS • SCOOTU.S&#13;
An f."...Of InlluolKe ',.fUi""' S-,...e:c&#13;
'w,th TM I.Hcf C.'J&#13;
,,,,. lIft - Ho,p,lo' - 'o~I'&#13;
'.IId094: 'OIKleJ&#13;
r0-;5;:2;",-Al3600] ~. ~_. ---- J • MULICH&#13;
CARL H JUlSft4&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Grossberg Coalition formed to retain youth fare&#13;
authors&#13;
physics book,&#13;
manual&#13;
Alan B Grossberg. professor of&#13;
physIcs and chairman of the&#13;
engineering science division at&#13;
Parkside, is the author of a new&#13;
book. "FORTRA. for&#13;
Engineering Physics: Electricity&#13;
•• lagnetism and Light,"&#13;
and an instructors' manual for&#13;
the new volume and an earlier&#13;
book "FORTRA.· for&#13;
Engineering Physics&#13;
Ml"Charucs Data Analysis and&#13;
Heat." puhli. bed In 1972.&#13;
Both book. and the manual&#13;
Vol'n." I s\J("db\' the :\lcGraw+Hill&#13;
Book Co. The' no" book and the&#13;
manual bear a 1973 cop~Tighl&#13;
llu.- publications ck-al \\ llh the&#13;
u, of FORTRA.· l FORmula&#13;
TRA. ·~Iattng y. tern J, a&#13;
langu3RE' \\ hich expresses&#13;
romputer programs by arithmetic&#13;
formulas. in wtiversityle\&#13;
el ph)~ics clas.c;es. tandard&#13;
general physIcs experiments are&#13;
peciall) desIgned in the texts to&#13;
illustrate computer programming&#13;
techniques and numerical&#13;
analysis of experimental data.&#13;
Grossberg, who received his&#13;
PhD degree at UW·.ladison. was&#13;
a\\ arded an "outstanding&#13;
teaching" award by Parkside&#13;
students in 1969.He has taught at&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and Antioch&#13;
College and was a Fulbright&#13;
lecturer at the ~ational&#13;
Engineering niversity in Lima,&#13;
Peru, prior to joining the UW&#13;
faculty at Racine in 1964.&#13;
Through the sponsorship of the&#13;
ational Student Lobby and&#13;
Continental Marketing Corporation,&#13;
the Coalition to Retain&#13;
Air Discount Fares fCRADF) has&#13;
been formed.&#13;
On Dec. 7, t972, the Civil&#13;
Aeronautics Board announced&#13;
the resul ts of their Domestlc&#13;
Passenger-Fare Investigation:&#13;
"that youth standby. youth&#13;
reservation and family fares are&#13;
unjustly discriminatory and u:at&#13;
family and youth reservauen&#13;
fares are also unreasonabl~."&#13;
The board did defer cancellation&#13;
of these fares pending further&#13;
hearing on the question of an&#13;
adjustment to normal fares.&#13;
The purpose of CRADF, in the&#13;
words of Russell Lehrman,&#13;
president of Continental&#13;
.larketing Corporation, a youth&#13;
fare card sales concern "will be&#13;
to alert e"ery traveler affected.&#13;
ad"ise them that they may lose&#13;
from 25 percent to 33 percent aIr&#13;
fare reductions if they don't act&#13;
now and pro\,ide them with a&#13;
\'ehi~le to express their views so&#13;
that the, will be heard."&#13;
:&gt;latlo~alStudent Ulbby leaders&#13;
will visit the members of the&#13;
House and Senate Commerce&#13;
Committees in an effort to get at&#13;
least one Republican and one&#13;
Democratic sponsor for&#13;
necessary legislation from ea,ch&#13;
committee. They will work WIth&#13;
stans of the committees, airline&#13;
representatives, senior citizens&#13;
and other groups interested in&#13;
preserving the discount fares.&#13;
On Feb. 28, a National Student.&#13;
Ulbby Conference will be held,&#13;
with students from an parts of the&#13;
country in attendance, to consider&#13;
this problem. At that time,&#13;
the delegates will visit with their&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
PIZZA KffCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage Bomhers&#13;
Free Del'-ery to 'e,kslde Villege&#13;
SDn lDf" At'"., ,,,,," 6S7-StfJf&#13;
"pSSt...&#13;
heykid!&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
• beu d molt Ich..IIbtyfrom" p"l. W"ldo Wlnchnter. Who II a ICIlbe fOI I local dally&#13;
Ihut. W.ll W"la up ttle'. art yaldi of opportunltles lor cuys .lind dolls on ra~s III&#13;
o".r tbe nUllify. He says tiler. IS a rul hotluture In the newspaper racket-a chance&#13;
1.- mJ It some detent "fJtCI'l. whllt mJybe pUIllnl the arm on some of tile ills of old&#13;
ttna "",a W,ttl" 1'I'11'I.(;lassmanlclrel hkt Walda yOIl CJ" not help but IIJve the real know.&#13;
own legislators to urge .positive&#13;
and final action to retam these&#13;
important fares. .&#13;
In January 1968CAB examiner&#13;
Arthur S. Ptesent ruled that&#13;
discount fares limited to persons&#13;
12 to 21 years old are "unjustly&#13;
discriminatory" beca.us.e ~ge&#13;
alone isn't a valid disttnctlOn&#13;
between passengers .. Shortlr&#13;
thereafter, Present received mall&#13;
from college students by the sack&#13;
load, Their expression of opinion&#13;
was so overwhelming that the&#13;
CABruled that airline youth fare&#13;
OpportunIt•Ie• S&#13;
The newest edition of Graduate&#13;
and Professional School Opportunities&#13;
for Minority Stu.dents,&#13;
a book describing academic and&#13;
special assistance programs&#13;
offered by graduate and&#13;
professional schools for black&#13;
and other minority group&#13;
students, is noW available to&#13;
college guidance counselors and&#13;
other interested groups.&#13;
Graduate and Professional&#13;
School Opportunities for Minority&#13;
Students is published by&#13;
Educational Testing Service&#13;
(ETS), with the support of a&#13;
grant from the Henry Luce&#13;
Foundation of New York for the&#13;
data collection and&#13;
dissemination. The book is endorsed&#13;
by several organizations&#13;
of graduate and professional&#13;
schools.&#13;
Included in the book is information&#13;
provided by some 700&#13;
discounts don't un)'u I&#13;
di . . ••&#13;
scnmmate against aduJts ~&#13;
board put off any decision'&#13;
petition to abolish the disco'::'a !&#13;
until a study of whether the f nl&gt;&#13;
wer e reasona bl'e m relationar es&#13;
carrier costs was completed le&#13;
Originally youth fares v:.e challenged by Nati J't&#13;
Tr ailways Bus System, a :~~&#13;
assocrauon of bus compani&#13;
and by TCO Industries I'"&#13;
formerly Transcontinent~1 ~&#13;
System, Inc.&#13;
schools and graduate dopa&#13;
ments about their programsrt&#13;
arts and sciences, business bI1J&#13;
and medicine. Each ~nt"&#13;
describes the scho?)'s admiS!;I~&#13;
standards, fee waIver policyal&gt;!&#13;
fi.n~ncia.1aid pr?grams. In ad&#13;
ditlOn, InfOrmatIOn is prOvided&#13;
about the percentage of minorlh&#13;
en.roll~ent, the number o·~&#13;
mmorJty faculty and lb&#13;
existence of active minorn;&#13;
recruitment programs.&#13;
About 20,000copies of the boot&#13;
will be distributed free of charg&#13;
to black, Mexlcan·Americln&#13;
Puerto Rican and AmeriCID&#13;
Indian students and stude l&#13;
organizations, as well as&#13;
libraries, colleges and gradual&#13;
student counselors. CopiestM,&#13;
be obtained by- writing: SPl&lt;t&#13;
Services, Educational Testl&#13;
Service, Princeton, New Jent'y&#13;
MAIN OFFICE, CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
Take a ttp from Hot Horse Herbie ... "do not be one·&#13;
hundred percent a sucker! Check it out."&#13;
n__ "--&gt;o -.., .. _ _..-.. I-Pt,---..--".....''" ,..,------,---.- -e_..u...ln.I.lO_... ..... """__ -...0F__An.o'O -- Damon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not always to the swift&#13;
or the battle always to the strong - but it's a good way to bet."&#13;
JOURNAUSM IS A GOOD WAYTO BET&#13;
~~ANGER&#13;
•&#13;
ONE SWEET DREAM&#13;
5010 ~AVE.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
4 T H E PrARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
l..and a d Gro h rg&#13;
author&#13;
Coalition formed to retain youth fare&#13;
YO 6 DIUVW WllCOME&#13;
phy ic hook&#13;
manual&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
PIZZA KffCHEN&#13;
Chiclce &amp; Italia Sa sa e B hers&#13;
Fret De111ery to Parkside Village&#13;
son J()IJ, At. ,,., 11,,,,, 6S1-St9t&#13;
'' t pss ...&#13;
hey kid!&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
s re J fra a pal. Waldo W,nche-ster. who ts a scribe for a local daily&#13;
• do UJ' ere art yards of opportun,t,es for IUJ' and dolls on ra&amp;s all&#13;
He UJ' trt Is I rul bot future ,n the newspaper rocket - a chance&#13;
e dtct scu ell. w ilt ma be putt,n&amp; the arm on some of the oils of old&#13;
-class mon,c er h e Wahlo you can not help but have the real know.&#13;
Ta e a 1p from Hot Horse Herbie . . . "do not be onehundred&#13;
percent a sucker! Check ,t out."&#13;
D mon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not always to the swift&#13;
or the battle always to the strong- but it's a good way to bet."&#13;
JOURNALISM IS A GOOD WAY TO BET&#13;
t}r..- ... ----RANGER&#13;
•&#13;
own legislators to urge yositive&#13;
and final action to retam these&#13;
important fares. .&#13;
In January 1968 CAB examiner&#13;
Arthur S . Present ruled that&#13;
discount fares limited to persons&#13;
12 to 21 years old are "unjustly&#13;
discriminatory" beca_us_e ~ge&#13;
alone isn't a valid distinction&#13;
between passengers._ Shortlr&#13;
thereafter, Present received mail&#13;
from college students by the _s~ck&#13;
load. Their expression of op1mon&#13;
was so overwhelming that the&#13;
CAB ruled that airline youth fare&#13;
d~sc~u~ts don 't unju 1&#13;
discnmmate against adults. 1&#13;
board put off any decision on&#13;
petition to abolish the discou 1&#13;
until a study of whether th c n&#13;
bl . ar&#13;
were reasona e m relation&#13;
· to earner costs was completed&#13;
Originally youth fares ~&#13;
challenged by ati ere&#13;
Trail~a~s Bus System, a i: assoc1atton of bus compani&#13;
and by TCO Indu trie 1 '&#13;
f I T . , nc&#13;
ormer y ranscontmental 8 '&#13;
System, Inc.&#13;
• • Opportun1t1es&#13;
The newe t edition of Graduate&#13;
and Professional School Opportunities&#13;
for ~tinority Stu_dents,&#13;
a book describing academic and&#13;
special assistance programs&#13;
offered by graduate and&#13;
professional schools for black&#13;
and other minority group&#13;
students, is now available to&#13;
college guidance counselors and&#13;
other interested groups.&#13;
Graduate and Professional&#13;
hoot Opportunities for Minority&#13;
tudent is published by&#13;
Educational Testing Service&#13;
(ETSl, with the support of a&#13;
grant from the Henry Luce&#13;
Foundation of New York for the&#13;
data collection and&#13;
di semination. The book is endorsed&#13;
by several organizations&#13;
of graduate and professional&#13;
schools.&#13;
Included in the book is information&#13;
provided by some 700&#13;
schools and graduat d&#13;
ments about their program&#13;
arts and sciences, busin&#13;
and medicine Each ' n&#13;
describes the school' adm&#13;
standards, fee waiv&lt;'r pohcy&#13;
financial aid pro ram . Jn&#13;
dition, information i pro&#13;
about the percentage of minor;)&#13;
enrollment , the number f&#13;
minority faculty and lb&#13;
existence of active minor&#13;
recruitment program .&#13;
About 20,000 copies of the&#13;
will be distributed free of&#13;
to black, Mexican-Amer, 1&#13;
Puerto Rican and Am nca&#13;
Indian students and tud&#13;
organizations, as well a&#13;
libraries, colleges and grad&#13;
student counselors. Copi&#13;
be obtained by writing:&#13;
Services, Educational T&#13;
Service, Princeton, ew J&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVI NGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE&#13;
ONE SWEET DREAI\tl&#13;
5010 }AVE ..&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
,I&#13;
Wed., Jan. 11, 1913 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
•&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
973 Student-Staff Directories&#13;
I vailable for pickup at the&#13;
ar'beraary circulatIO.n dkes ,Ta IIent&#13;
~l II Information Center and&#13;
K:nosha Campus Main Office.&#13;
There is no. cha~ge for the&#13;
directory which. mcl.ud,es Administrative&#13;
Office listings, a&#13;
mplete roster of faculty and&#13;
c~aff and a listing of students&#13;
:egi~tered during the first&#13;
semester. - The Whiteskellar Coffeehouse&#13;
has its first show of ~he semester&#13;
today at 12:30 until .2:30 p.m.&#13;
Featured is Nancy Pr-ice, a folk&#13;
singer from Milwaukee. She&#13;
playsan acoustic 12-string guitar&#13;
and does folk and folk rock ..&#13;
Nancy is the first of ten shows&#13;
that the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board will he sponsoring in the&#13;
Whiteskellar.- "The Third Man" is the&#13;
Parkside Film Society's offering&#13;
for Wednesday, Jan. 17.&#13;
Screening is at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
Creenquist 103, and admission is&#13;
60cents. The haunting music of a&#13;
zither, Vienna's cobbled streets&#13;
and a ghostly Graham Greene&#13;
story about a man-hunt come&#13;
smoothly and beautifully&#13;
together in this piece of top&#13;
screen artifice. Director Carol&#13;
Reed's mystery·thriller-romance&#13;
concerns a young American&#13;
visitor's attempts to get to the&#13;
bottom of the mystery of a&#13;
friend's dubious "death" in&#13;
Vienna's streets.&#13;
Joseph Cotten is the American&#13;
who blunders upon mystery and&#13;
romance; Italian actress Alida&#13;
Valliplays the girl of the "dead"&#13;
man; Trevor Howard is a British&#13;
police major. Orson Welles&#13;
shapes a drak and treacherous&#13;
shadowas the "third man." The&#13;
zither as the sole musical&#13;
background completes the&#13;
illusionof a swift and intriguing&#13;
romance. -&#13;
The Parkside StUdent&#13;
Government ,",,:ssociation will&#13;
spo~s~r a WInter Carnival&#13;
heglllnlllg Friday, Feb. 16, and&#13;
rUOnlllg through Saturday, Feb.&#13;
24. See future issues of the&#13;
Ranger for more information. - A Course in defensive driving&#13;
. will he held for faculty. staff.&#13;
students and the general public.&#13;
Two sessions of the class will be&#13;
offered - Monday, Jan. 22, and&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 24. Attendance&#13;
will be required for only one of&#13;
the two sessions.&#13;
The course will begin at 5 p.m.&#13;
in room 101 of Greenquist Hall&#13;
and should last no longer than 9&#13;
or 10 p.m. Those who take the&#13;
course will be issued defensive&#13;
driving cards upon completiOn. A&#13;
state car can be driven with this&#13;
card.&#13;
Those who plan to attend are&#13;
urged to pre-register by&#13;
telephone (2455) with Parkside&#13;
Officer William Carter at the&#13;
Department of Safety and&#13;
Security.&#13;
Originated hy the National&#13;
Safety Council, the course covers&#13;
defensive driving techniques to&#13;
avoid the most frequent types of&#13;
automobile accidents. It will&#13;
feature a lecture, slides,&#13;
discussion and eight to-minute&#13;
films. - SIGMA PI is at it again! This&#13;
campus fraternity is again&#13;
volunteering its services to help&#13;
out a needy organization. This&#13;
organization is the Child Day&#13;
Care Center and the members of&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity have offered&#13;
to do some constructional cleanup&#13;
at least once a. ~onth at the&#13;
Center. Maybe thIS Idea of l~nding&#13;
a hand will spark an individual&#13;
interest that some of us&#13;
lack.&#13;
"ACINE:&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553·2150&#13;
PirF c. \&#13;
!J1t:j~. ;nooJJ. tUf, ..,., I&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 551-~~&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING RO •&#13;
Parkside's Ph) ical Plant and&#13;
Department of afetv and&#13;
S~CUri~ will provide emergency&#13;
al~ to ~Istressed motort 18again&#13;
this winter. The a istance '" In&#13;
he primaril)' the startu~ of&#13;
stalled vehicles or providing a&#13;
"call service' to vour own&#13;
garageman. "&#13;
Since the emergenc\ service t&#13;
pro\'ided \4. ubout charge b ..&#13;
Parkside, anv rno Or! "l&#13;
requesting aid "iii be required to&#13;
sign a waiver of Jiabillt)· pnor to&#13;
the sen' ice being performed&#13;
The emergency . tart _ n.,ce&#13;
will extend to 8 p.m., after that&#13;
time Safety and Security will&#13;
provide aid In calling a serviceman&#13;
of the moron I' choice. - The Sigma Pi Fraterrut)' would&#13;
like to thank aU the students woo&#13;
contributed to the To)' Drive last&#13;
semester, for the children at the&#13;
Day Care center II was an&#13;
outstanding success. and again&#13;
we are deeply grateful for your&#13;
cooperation.-&#13;
U. ou are ured of haul lour&#13;
&lt;oa and raund all d.a ,&#13;
the udenl I.fe om ha a&#13;
. UItIl on&#13;
TIus sen Ice I&#13;
(rom ;0·06 am to 9 pm&#13;
Manda, throuith Frtd.a), for )'OU&#13;
to teeve '''OW'' coat and&#13;
TIll' III·be .... trial&#13;
deternune th~ n«d for I&#13;
And b) 1.ht.' a) those til&#13;
''OU '''''I are probI) al 1.ht.' In&#13;
(ormation Center to I and&#13;
round III Tall",,! UBI) I -&#13;
MON. &amp; TUES. EVENING, S,oo.t:OO&#13;
~,~ J ~_&#13;
.(nd~:olIde~r !-ow much 0( our po=. &lt;hoc en. pocaroa cat.thc poce I Onlj SI 75)&#13;
Chi Idrenunder3Fr",,-Q'lldren 3·9.10Cents a Year SB'A.A YP€lIPIUlBrltCwhaoUSEi&#13;
LGlhrop and 2111 (Alm01I)&#13;
-&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT fiRST UtlOUl&#13;
Of RACI E&#13;
• .ili.&#13;
bla ce n lire&#13;
• Iillit to the&#13;
I .ber of chc S&#13;
yo nte&#13;
CHECK I G&#13;
IS ee r,cACHE.R&#13;
r~~~~;];::J':"waShington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Racille&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
AIfiRST ullom&#13;
Of RACINE&#13;
AT fIRST NATlOUl&#13;
Of RACINE&#13;
o y ur free Check&#13;
acc ut SOD at&#13;
--_._-,.&#13;
500 WiscOISi Au. lacin&#13;
ed., J n. 7, 73 TH&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPE&#13;
19 73 Student- Staff Directories&#13;
availab le for pickup at the&#13;
arbe ary circulation desk, Tallent&#13;
L1r . Ct d H II Information en er an&#13;
K:nosha campus Main Office.&#13;
There is no charge for the&#13;
d. ectory which includes Ad-&#13;
If f. 1· t· ministrative Of ice 1s mgs, a&#13;
mplete roster of faculty and&#13;
c~aff and a listing of students&#13;
:egi~tered during the first&#13;
semester. - The Whiteskellar Coffeehouse&#13;
has its first show of ~he semester&#13;
today at 12:30 until _2:30 p.m .&#13;
Featured is Nancy Price, a folk&#13;
singer from Milwaukee. She&#13;
plays an acoustic 12-string guitar&#13;
and does folk and folk rock.&#13;
Nancy is the first of ten shows'&#13;
that the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board will be sponsoring in the&#13;
Whi teskellar. - "T he Third Man" is the&#13;
Parkside Film Society's offering&#13;
for Wednesday, Jan. 17.&#13;
Screening is at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
Gree nquist 103, and admission is&#13;
60 cents. The haunting music of a&#13;
zither, Vienna's cobbled streets&#13;
and a ghostly Graham Greene&#13;
sto ry about a man-hunt come&#13;
smoot hly and beautifully&#13;
together in this piece of top&#13;
scree n artifice. Director Carol&#13;
Reed's mystery-thriller-romance&#13;
con cer ns a young American&#13;
visito r's attempts to get to the&#13;
bottom of the mystery of a&#13;
frie nd 's dubious "death" in&#13;
Vie nn a's streets.&#13;
Joseph Cotten is the American&#13;
wh o blunders upon mystery and&#13;
roma nce; Italian actress Alida&#13;
Va lli plays the girl of the "dead"&#13;
ma n; Trevor Howard is a British&#13;
police maj or. Orson Welles&#13;
ha pes a d rak and treacherous&#13;
.hadow as the "third man." The&#13;
zi th er as the sole musical&#13;
bac kgroun d c ompletes the&#13;
illusi on of a swift and intriguing&#13;
roma nce. -&#13;
The Parksid e Student&#13;
Government Association will&#13;
spo?s~r a Winter Carnival&#13;
begmmng Friday Feb 16 d . , . . an&#13;
runmng through Saturday, Feb.&#13;
24. See future issues of the&#13;
Ranger for more information. -&#13;
A course in defensive driYing&#13;
· will be held for faculty, staff&#13;
students and the general public .&#13;
Two sessions of the class will be&#13;
offered - Monday, Jan. 22, and&#13;
Wednesday, Jan . 24. Attendance&#13;
will be required for only one of&#13;
the two sessions.&#13;
The course will begin at 5 p.m .&#13;
in room 101 of Greenquist Hall&#13;
and should last no longer than 9&#13;
or 10 p.m. Those who take the&#13;
course will be issued defensive&#13;
driving cards upon completion . A&#13;
state car can be driven with this&#13;
card.&#13;
Those who plan to attend are&#13;
urged to pre-register by&#13;
telephone (2455) with Parkside&#13;
Officer William Carter at the&#13;
Department of Safety and&#13;
Security.&#13;
Originated by the National&#13;
Safety Council, the course covers&#13;
defensive driving techniques to&#13;
avoid the most frequent types of&#13;
automobile accidents. It will&#13;
feature a lecture , slides,&#13;
discussion and eight 10-minute&#13;
films. - SIGMA PI is at it again! This&#13;
campus fraternity is again&#13;
volunteering its services to help&#13;
out a needy organization . This&#13;
organization is the Child Day&#13;
Care Center and the member of&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity ~ave offered&#13;
to do some constructional cleanup&#13;
at least once a_ ~onth at the&#13;
Center. Maybe this idea of 1:nding&#13;
a hand will spark an mdividual&#13;
interest that some of u&#13;
lack.&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553-2150&#13;
"Washington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
PHONE : 634-6 6 61&#13;
-&#13;
- -&#13;
G s&#13;
l&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
uw-p historian edits book&#13;
The Raven on McCarthyism&#13;
By Gary Jensen Daniel Bell.&#13;
The first selection in the book&#13;
by Robert Griffiths, describ~&#13;
McCarthy's Wisconsin boyhood&#13;
education and early career as ~&#13;
pohtician.&#13;
Marquette's Theoharis, in his&#13;
contribution, blames Truman for&#13;
the climate that produced Me-&#13;
Carthyism and the "red scare."&#13;
Nixon is identified in several of&#13;
the selections as an avid supporter&#13;
of McCarthyism.&#13;
What of the "new Me.&#13;
Carthyism?" Editor Reeves says&#13;
he isn't sure there is one. Me-&#13;
Carthyism has become an epithet&#13;
for everything and everyone '"&#13;
The movement transcends the&#13;
man, Reeves explains. Selections&#13;
in his new book provide CIa clash&#13;
of learned and unlearned&#13;
opinion" which leave the reader&#13;
to make his own judgments.&#13;
originating as a political vehicle&#13;
of the Republican party and&#13;
nourishing in the GOP disarray&#13;
which followed Truman's upset&#13;
defeat of Thomas E. Dewey in&#13;
1948.&#13;
The book includes three sections&#13;
of readings: "Joseph R.&#13;
McCarthy: The Man and His&#13;
Methods" including contributions&#13;
by conservative columnist&#13;
William F. Buckley Jr.. Mc~&#13;
Carthy investigation committee&#13;
counsel Roy Cohn and Harvard&#13;
scholar athan Glazer; "Me-&#13;
Carthyism and Partisan&#13;
Politics" including contributions&#13;
by political journalist Richard&#13;
Rever-e and Marquette&#13;
University new-left historian&#13;
Athan Theoharis; and "Me-&#13;
Carthyism and Mass&#13;
Movements" which includes a&#13;
selection by Columbia professor&#13;
"::\lcCarthyism." a new&#13;
"reader" on the Wisconsin&#13;
senator and the movement which&#13;
came to bear his name, has just&#13;
been published by Dryden Press.&#13;
The volume is edited by&#13;
Thomas C. Reeves. a Parks ide&#13;
historian (and the leading&#13;
scholar on the life of President&#13;
Chester A. Arthur), whose&#13;
previously published books inelude&#13;
"Foundations Under Fire"&#13;
and "Freedom and the Foundation:&#13;
The Fund for the&#13;
Republic in the Era of Me-&#13;
Carthyism,"&#13;
Reeves, an associate professor,&#13;
contributes a lengthy introduction&#13;
to the new volume.&#13;
He points out that the&#13;
movement ultimately personified&#13;
by McCarthy grew out of social&#13;
and political frustration which&#13;
followed World War II,&#13;
(Big Hits &amp; Fazed Cookies)&#13;
London 2 PS 62&amp;7&#13;
It u:ed to be necessary for any hip youth to listen to the "now sound"&#13;
In order for him to be con idered by whoever as "with it." Currently a&#13;
no~talgia craze is being popularized to its fullest possible extent. Since&#13;
craz . are part of a now-cult, the doors are opened to every past&#13;
mu.. ..ica) era Hence. anyone can listen to any hunk of gold from old and&#13;
sllll feel a.. ured that he i part of what's happening.&#13;
The Rolling tones are still part of today and yesterday so what&#13;
could be more naturally "together" than Stone nostalgia. The Rolling&#13;
Ston . always were (since my awareness of them, sometime prior to&#13;
Aftermath) my personal favorites, for being the heaviest of the most&#13;
creative bands and vice versa. It does seem strange to think of how&#13;
back then it was something special to be a rolling Stone's fan while&#13;
now, of course, everyone is.&#13;
I must express a bias against greatest hits LPs. The usual procedure&#13;
i to put a group of past chart busters on a record along with one or two&#13;
s tecuons unavailable on any other long-playing disc. To set the&#13;
record traight, UleStones now have 13 studio albums containing all of&#13;
the diff rent songs they've done, about 4 assorted greatest hits&#13;
albums, and 2 live albums released officially. There are scores of&#13;
tone's underground live records.&#13;
This individual was lured and trapped into purchasing MORE HOTS&#13;
ROCK by the ad-slogan, "8 Tilles Never Before Available in&#13;
America." But alas, these are not selections from the Stones in their&#13;
prime, and most are on a far from perfectly audible underground disc&#13;
I own. These are "Iazed cookies" and not so neat treats. They are&#13;
probably from right around the time when the band received their first&#13;
recording contract. Now it would be different if the unpreviously&#13;
released cuts were from the time of BETWEE THE BUTTONS or&#13;
LET IT BLEED. Hope is still ahead. If current trends continue, we&#13;
should be able to receive 10 albums of "never before available"&#13;
material after the Stones' demise. These estimated calculations are&#13;
based on the comparison of previously existing stars.&#13;
"What To Do" starts out the side with the great eight, by being one&#13;
of the most desirable of the "fazed cookies." It combines early rocking&#13;
and Beach Boy-like background harmony. The best sample of&#13;
prehistoric Stone is "Fortune Teller," but that was available before&#13;
and equally performed on GOT LIVE IF YOU WANT IT. In one sense&#13;
these songs are worthwhile when presented as what they are. You get&#13;
to hear Mick use the word "stupid," indicating a beginning of the&#13;
rebellious rockers that were yet to come. Mick's singing was dramatic&#13;
even back then. However, the songs on this album from that period&#13;
and the rest of band aren't that impressive. The real reason for this&#13;
record is best expressed in one of these relics, as "Money .'&#13;
The first three sides of this double LP are mostly old singles, good&#13;
ones, but all available prior to this package. They could be said to&#13;
pre ent another side or the Stones differing from the other HOT&#13;
ROCKS. However, even though I consider these selections worthwhile,&#13;
they were not popularly acclaimed as smashing success like the other&#13;
HOT ROCKS were. This makes the MORE HOT ROCKS even more&#13;
pointless. Perhaps the most valuable aspect ofMORE HOT ROCKS, to&#13;
me, is getting "Child of the Moon" and "We Love You" for the first&#13;
time on a stereo LP.&#13;
Motorists warned of winter dangers&#13;
Bridges and overpasses can be&#13;
extremely hazardous in winter.&#13;
They may be icy when the rest of&#13;
the road is clear and dry.&#13;
To stop on snow or ice, pump&#13;
brakes lightly and rapidly. If you&#13;
allow the brakes to lock your&#13;
wheels, you'll almost certainly go&#13;
into a dangerous skid.&#13;
Drive with extra caution on&#13;
loose gravel. Remember -&#13;
traction is reduced in rain, snow,&#13;
on ice or when wet leaves are on&#13;
the road. Any attempt to stop or&#13;
change direction suddenly can&#13;
lead to skidding.&#13;
If you should find your vehicle&#13;
skidding, turn the front wheels in&#13;
the same direction the vehicle is&#13;
skidding. Don't jam on the&#13;
brakes, or the skid will get worse,&#13;
Skidding can be a "heart-in-thethroat"&#13;
proposition, so by all&#13;
means drive carefully to avoid&#13;
ever getting into a skid.&#13;
You may have only occasional&#13;
need for tire chains during the&#13;
winter season, but they can&#13;
significantly reduce the&#13;
possibility of bad skids on ice, or&#13;
dangerous stalls in deep snow.&#13;
They will provide the best stop on&#13;
icy roadways.&#13;
Editor's Note: Joe Ross,&#13;
Parkside's insurance coordinator,&#13;
sent the Ranger this&#13;
extraction from the State of&#13;
Wisconsin Manual for Motorists.&#13;
Reduced visibility. inadequate&#13;
traction and temperature&#13;
changes are triple threats to your&#13;
safety on the road during the&#13;
winter season.&#13;
You can't change the weather,&#13;
but you can keep your windshield&#13;
wiper blades in good, live condition&#13;
and see that your defroster&#13;
is working properly. After a&#13;
storm, clear all snow and ice&#13;
from your windshield and other&#13;
windows, headlights, taillights&#13;
and turn signals.&#13;
Mrerly brushing off a small&#13;
spot on the windshield in order to&#13;
see out is not only dangerous, but&#13;
unlawful.&#13;
On any icy or snow-covered&#13;
road, get the "feel" of the&#13;
roadway by trying your brakes&#13;
lightly while driving slowly and&#13;
while clear of traffic, then adjust&#13;
speed. Follow other vehicles at a&#13;
safe distance.&#13;
Tfir OUR HOME COOKINC/&#13;
The Best in the County&#13;
"COUNTRY&#13;
'"CHEN" H,me-hllted One Mile North&#13;
of Campus on Hwy. 31 WANTED. A ride from 1538 Arthur Ave.,&#13;
R.c,ne,lo lallenl Hall parking lot Arrilll! by&#13;
78od.,...,. .m. and reeve by'3O p.m. For John nd his guide dog To ~;n March 10&#13;
PoI'IrTWnl to be .rranged Call 553·7J03.&#13;
:ollege Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
III 552-8355&#13;
Open 7 Days a Week 8 a.m. to 8 p,m,&#13;
SUNDAY'S SPECIAL: Roast Beef &amp; Turkey&#13;
Hwy. 31 - 'I. Mile North of Petrifying Springs&#13;
We ~Whoareiiloiiey:6iiDirYf~~~l&#13;
)&#13;
1&#13;
STOP BY THE PARKS IDE RANGER OFF1CEJ&#13;
0-194 LLC or telephone 553-2295&#13;
~...-......-......-......-......-......-......-......-.../"- .... ,.---. ~----...-......-....-..~ -~,.--&#13;
/&#13;
ARE YOU A SALESPERSON?&#13;
10% commission&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
Big Hit· · Fazed Coo ·ies)&#13;
London!! P 626-7&#13;
It u to n · ary for ny hip youth to Ii ten to the "now ound"&#13;
m rd r for him to be consid red bv who ver a .. with it." Currentlv a&#13;
no t I I r z i ~ing popularized to it fullest possible extent. ince&#13;
r p r now-cult th doors are opened to every past&#13;
I Henc , ny one can h t n to an) hunk of gold from old and&#13;
1 s ured that h 1 part of ·hat' happening.&#13;
Rollin ton re ·till part of today and yesterday o what&#13;
ould be mort• naturally "tog th r" than tone nostalgia. The Rolling&#13;
n I" ~ " re ( ·inc my awar n of them. ometime prior to&#13;
, ft rm th) my r on I favorit • for being the heaviest of the most&#13;
er ,tfr h nd~ and vice v r a. It do eem trange to think of how&#13;
k th n 1t w . omething pccial to be a rolling tone's fan while "°", of ur:e, v ryone is.&#13;
I must . pr .· a bi again t greate t hit LP . The u ual procedur e&#13;
i to put group of pa t chart busters on a record along with one or two&#13;
I tion un ,.. ii ble on any other long-playing di c. To set the&#13;
r ·ord tra1gh t , the ton now have 13 tudio album containing all of&#13;
the diff r nt on th y'v do ne, about 4 a sorted greatest hits&#13;
lbum , nd 2 live !bum relea ed officially. There are scores of&#13;
. t n · und r round liv r cords.&#13;
Thi: mclividual w lured and trapped into purchasing ilORE HOTS&#13;
H K by th ad- lo an, "8 Title Never Before Available in&#13;
m ri a." But la . th e are not elections from the Stones in their&#13;
prim . nd most are on a far from perfectly audible underground disc&#13;
I own. Th ar "fazed cookies" and not o neat treats. They are&#13;
probably from right around the time when the band received their first&#13;
r ording contract. ow it would be different if the unpreviously&#13;
r 1 ·ed cut were from the time of BETWEE THE BUTIO S or&#13;
LET IT BLEED. Hope i still ahead. If current trends continue, we&#13;
jlOuld e able to receive 10 album of "never before available"&#13;
mat rial aft r the tones' demi e. These estimated calculations are&#13;
ba ·ed on the compari on of previously existing stars.&#13;
"What To Do" tart out the side with the great eight, by being one&#13;
of th mo t desirable of the "fazed cookies. ' It combines early rocking&#13;
and Beach Boy-like background harmony . The best sample of&#13;
prehi toric tone i "Fortune Teller," but that was available before&#13;
and qually performed on GOT LIVE IF YOU WANT IT. In one sense&#13;
th ong are worthwhile when presented as what they are. You get&#13;
to h ar lick u e the word "stupid," indicating a beginning of the&#13;
r lliou rockers that were yet to come. Mick's singing was dramatic&#13;
ev n ba k then. However, the songs on this album from that period&#13;
and the rest of band aren't that impressive. The real reason for this&#13;
r ord i b t ex pres ·ed in one of these relics, a " 1oney ."&#13;
The fir t three sides of thi double LP are mostly old singles, good&#13;
one·. but a]] available prior to this package. They could be said to&#13;
pre ·ent another side of the Stones differing from the other HOT&#13;
R K . However, even though I consider these selections worthwhile,&#13;
they were not popularly acclaimed as smashing success like the other&#13;
HOT RO K were. This makes the lORE HOT ROCKS even more&#13;
point! · Perhaps the mo t valuable aspect of MORE HOT ROCKS, to&#13;
m , i. getting "Child of the 1oon" and "\ e Love You' for the first&#13;
tim on a tereo LP .&#13;
WANTED, A r,de from 1538 Arthur Ave.,&#13;
Racine, lo Tallent Hall par in9 lot Arrive by&#13;
1 A5 m nd leave by 4 · 30 p m. Fo,- John&#13;
Boyer his gu,ae dog, To begin March 10.&#13;
P vm I lo be arrangl!d Call 55J.noJ&#13;
Hege Men&#13;
UW-P historian edits book&#13;
on McCarthyism&#13;
":\IcCarthyism." a new&#13;
"reader·' on the Wisconsin&#13;
enator and the movement which&#13;
came to bear his name. has just&#13;
been published by Dryden Press.&#13;
The volume is edited by&#13;
Thomas C. Reeves. a Parkside&#13;
historian ( and the leading&#13;
cholar on the life of President&#13;
Che ter A. Arthur). whose&#13;
previou ly published books include&#13;
"Foundation Under Fire"&#13;
and "Freedom and the Foundation:&#13;
The Fund for the&#13;
Republic in the Era of l\lc·&#13;
Carthyi m,"&#13;
Reeves, an associate professor.&#13;
contributes a lengthy introduction&#13;
to the new volume.&#13;
He points out that the&#13;
movement ultimately personified&#13;
by lcCarthy grew out of social&#13;
and political frustration which&#13;
followed World War II,&#13;
originating as a political vehicle&#13;
of the Republican party and&#13;
flourishing in the GOP disarray&#13;
which followed Truman's upset&#13;
defeat of Thomas E. Dewey in&#13;
1948.&#13;
The book includes three sections&#13;
of readings: "Joseph R.&#13;
:\1cCarthv: The Man and His&#13;
:\Iethods .~ including contributions&#13;
by conservative columnist&#13;
William F. Buckley Jr., Mc·&#13;
earthy investigation committee&#13;
counsel Roy Cohn and Harvard&#13;
scholar athan Glazer; "McCarthyism&#13;
and Partisan&#13;
Politics" including contributions&#13;
by political journalist Richard&#13;
Rovere and Marquette&#13;
University new-left historian&#13;
Athan Theoharis ; and "Mc·&#13;
Carthyism and Mass&#13;
Movements" which includes a&#13;
selection by Columbia professor&#13;
Daniel Bell.&#13;
The first selection in the book&#13;
by Robert Griffiths, describe~&#13;
McCarthy's Wisconsin boyhood&#13;
education and early career as ~&#13;
politician.&#13;
Marquette's Theoharis, in his&#13;
contribution, blames Truman for&#13;
the climate that produced McCarthyism&#13;
and the "red scare."&#13;
Nixon is identified in several of&#13;
the selections as an avid sup.&#13;
porter of McCarthyism.&#13;
What of the " new McCarthyism?"&#13;
Editor Reeves says&#13;
he isn't sure there is one. McCarthyism&#13;
has become an epithet&#13;
for everything and everyone ...&#13;
The movement transcends the&#13;
man, Reeves explains. Selections&#13;
in his new book provide "a clash&#13;
of learned and unlearned&#13;
opinion" which leave the reader&#13;
to make his own judgments.&#13;
Motorists warned of winter dan~ers&#13;
Editor's Note: Joe Ross,&#13;
Parkside's insurance coordinator,&#13;
sent the Ranger this&#13;
extraction from the State of&#13;
Wisconsin Manual for Motorists.&#13;
Reduced visibility, inadequate&#13;
traction and temperature&#13;
changes are triple threats to your&#13;
safety on the road during the&#13;
winter season .&#13;
You can' t change the weather,&#13;
but you can keep your windshield&#13;
wiper blades in good, live con·&#13;
dition and see that your defroster&#13;
is working properly. After a&#13;
storm, clear all snow and ice&#13;
from your windshield and other&#13;
windows headlights, taillights&#13;
and turn signals.&#13;
Mrerly brushing off a small&#13;
spot on the windshield in order to&#13;
see out is not only dangerous, but&#13;
unlawful.&#13;
On any icy or snow-covered&#13;
road, get the "feel" of the&#13;
roadway by trying your brakes&#13;
lightly while driving slowly and&#13;
while clear of traffic, then adjust&#13;
speed. Follow other vehicles at a&#13;
safe distance.&#13;
Bridges and overpasses can be&#13;
extremely hazardous in winter.&#13;
They may be icy when the rest of&#13;
the road is clear and dry.&#13;
To stop on snow or ice, pump&#13;
brakes lightly and rapidly. If you&#13;
allow the brakes to lock your&#13;
wheels, you'll almost certainly go&#13;
into a dangerous skid.&#13;
Drive with extra caution on&#13;
loose gravel. Remember -&#13;
traction is reduced in rain, snow,&#13;
on ice or when wet leaves are on&#13;
the road. Any attempt to stop or&#13;
change direction suddenly can&#13;
lead to skidding.&#13;
If you should find your vehicle&#13;
skidding, turn the front wheels in&#13;
the same direction the vehicle is&#13;
skidding. Don't jam on the&#13;
brakes, or the skid will get worse.&#13;
Ski:'dding can be a "heart-in-the.&#13;
throat" proposition, so by all&#13;
means drive carefully to avoid&#13;
ever getting into a skid.&#13;
You may have only occasional&#13;
need for tire chains during the&#13;
winter season, but they can&#13;
significantly reduce the&#13;
possibility of bad skids on ice , or&#13;
dangerous stalls in deep snow.&#13;
They will provide the best stop on&#13;
icy roadways.&#13;
TRY OUR HOME COOKINIJI&#13;
The Best in the County&#13;
''COUNTRY&#13;
KffCHEN" Home-halted One Mile North&#13;
BREAD of Campus on Hwy. 31&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
II 552-8 355&#13;
for the super look Open 7 Days a Week 8 a.m . to 8 p.m.&#13;
SUNDA1'S SPECIAL: Roast Beef &amp; Turkey&#13;
Hwy. 31 - ¼ Mile North of Petrifying Springs&#13;
I w ····------------------·~ ~Dare'inonej:bUllgry!~;::__-:=:;:::~1&#13;
ARE YOU A SALESPERSON? )&#13;
10 % commission&#13;
STOP BY THE PARKSIDE RANGER OFFICE&#13;
- D-194 LLC or telephone 553-2295&#13;
~------------..-........-........-.........--.......-.....--.......-..~~~_,...-...._~&#13;
Parkside's Gary Cole goes up for two points in&#13;
a recent game.&#13;
Club Sports&#13;
The Club Sport Office is located&#13;
in tbe Physical Education&#13;
Building. Phone numher 553-2310&#13;
or 2245. Please stop in or call if&#13;
you are interested in participating&#13;
in any of the following&#13;
sports.&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
Contact Ken Oberbruner, ext.&#13;
2225,Tallent 237, for information.&#13;
The team starts practice shortly&#13;
and will be playing colleges from&#13;
this area.&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
Jim Koch, ext. 2267, is the&#13;
contact for Intramural bowling.&#13;
Those interested in extramural&#13;
bowling (Intercollegiate) should&#13;
call or see Vic Godfrey, ext. 2310.&#13;
There will be several opportunities&#13;
to bowl in tournaments&#13;
against other colleges&#13;
during the semester.&#13;
HOCKEY&#13;
Parkside's hockey team has&#13;
already played one-third of its&#13;
schedule. The team practices and&#13;
plays their home games at the&#13;
Wilson Park--Arena in Milwaukee.&#13;
Please call or see the Club Sports&#13;
Coordinator for additional information&#13;
regarding playing or&#13;
tickets.&#13;
JUDO&#13;
The Parks ide Judo Club meets&#13;
two nights per week. They wiII be&#13;
sponsoring the Wisconsin Intercollegiate&#13;
Judo Tournament&#13;
here on Sunday, Feb. 4. Anyone&#13;
from novice through Black Belt is&#13;
encOuraged to join.&#13;
RUGBY&#13;
Parkside enjoyed its most&#13;
successful season ever last fall.&#13;
PARKS IDE&#13;
ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
Feature Film Series&#13;
presents&#13;
"Billy&#13;
Jackrr&#13;
Fri._ Jan.19- 8:00p.m.&#13;
Sun._Jan.21- 7:30p.m.&#13;
StUdent Activities Bldg.&#13;
n -n IDs pquired&#13;
Th.e spring schedule is currenUy&#13;
being drawn up. Sign up to play&#13;
now! !&#13;
SAILING&#13;
Even though there is ice on the&#13;
lake, it won't be long now before&#13;
the sailing season rolls around.&#13;
The sc~~ol has two new Flying&#13;
Jrs. waiting to be tried out. Plans&#13;
will be made for the summer&#13;
season in a month or so. Even if&#13;
you have never sailed before, you&#13;
are invited to be a part of this&#13;
club.&#13;
SKIING&#13;
The Rag Time Rangers are one&#13;
of the most active clubs on&#13;
campus with lots of good&#13;
fellowship and some good trips&#13;
lined up. See or call Bill Jaeck,&#13;
639-1321, or contact this office for&#13;
more info.&#13;
SKI TEAM&#13;
The Midwest Intercollegiate&#13;
Ski Association has many races&#13;
on tap throughout the Midwest.&#13;
Parkside's racing team (men and&#13;
women) will be competing in&#13;
many of these. If you are a racer&#13;
or have intentions of becoming&#13;
one, please get in contact with&#13;
this office immediately.&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
The soccer team, under the&#13;
guidance of Coach Hal Henderson,&#13;
will be playing a club&#13;
schedule this spring. Call Coach&#13;
Henderson at ext. 2311 about&#13;
playing.&#13;
Cagers 2nd&#13;
in holiday me t&#13;
By Kris Koch&#13;
Th.e Parkside cagers tra\'eled&#13;
to l\1lchi~an's Boyne County over&#13;
the Christmas holiday to participate&#13;
in the Bovne County&#13;
CI.assic. and the)' came awav&#13;
With a one-one split. The Range~&#13;
won their first game 87-80 Oyer&#13;
Lake Superior Slate wllh Garv&#13;
Cole and ~Iike Hankeleading th~&#13;
way for ~e Rangers scoring 2..&#13;
and 21 POI015 respectively Chuck&#13;
Chambliss also clupped In 17.&#13;
while the losers' Larry Owens led&#13;
all Scorers with 31 points.&#13;
On Saturday night it wa a&#13;
different story a the Range&#13;
were Upended 93-73 by Ferris&#13;
State. The game was clo e&#13;
throUghout and the lead changed&#13;
hands during the third period. but&#13;
In the fourth quarter the Rangers&#13;
hit a cold spell Crom the Cree&#13;
throw line and Ferris Stale&#13;
started building the margin.&#13;
Coach Steve tephens com.&#13;
mooted that "it coold bave been a&#13;
6 to 10 point ball game. but \\ e&#13;
wer.e cold from the charity tripe&#13;
during the foorth period aod that&#13;
sunk us."&#13;
The Rangers were again led bv&#13;
Gary Cole with 27. Chuck&#13;
Chambliss with 21 and Mike&#13;
Hanke with 15. Cole and&#13;
Chambliss were ooth named to&#13;
the All-Tournament Team for&#13;
their ootstanding play • S\\'IM~I1;\;G&#13;
Barbara Jo ~Iom ha buU1 a&#13;
women's and a men' team&#13;
competing, ee her immediately&#13;
or call 225i&#13;
TABLE TE'''S&#13;
This team competed in Its hrst&#13;
match before Christrna. and&#13;
several matche are being&#13;
arranged (or thiS emeter&#13;
Thursday night are be,ng set up&#13;
for a regular Table Tennl&#13;
League. If ,nterested. call Dr&#13;
Amin on the Kenosha campo&#13;
ext 32.or contact \"IC Godrre~ at&#13;
the PE Budding&#13;
TeJ.phone 6524662&#13;
1315 .52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wi•.&#13;
Wed., Jan. 17, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Baskelba II&#13;
Jan. 20&#13;
Jan 23 \\ .)'n&#13;
Fencing&#13;
Jan 19&#13;
Jan 20&#13;
Gymnaslics&#13;
Jan.2lI&#13;
Swimming&#13;
Jan 20 Lak f I Coil at La&#13;
P.E. Bldg. chedul&#13;
'''-'M"."CT•le •u••••&#13;
,,&#13;
, -~T-y-"..o..\...~~.,, Frooa.,&#13;
~.,t ...... ","",........,.., -, So' y s..-,&#13;
n ._&#13;
11 • I&#13;
II • '.".:1 lID'&#13;
• ID&#13;
It&#13;
lID It&#13;
•&#13;
'... y" "'urIu., • .Ift so • ""&#13;
...... IJ .....,e . I It&#13;
\OLLE\B\LL&#13;
Call Gez.a .Ian,n~," _ •. If&#13;
)00 are mrerested In coli at&#13;
compeUlJon Thursda) em&#13;
peacn v. 111resum thf' 18th at&#13;
7 pm&#13;
\H~I('"TIIFTl'G&#13;
Power or Olvmprc IIftln&#13;
Compel'llon, n ". od&#13;
See \"1(: Godrre} (or In(ormauon&#13;
\\01"00 are n hold&#13;
noon and on Sunda) at ~ p m&#13;
HOFFMA 's&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
Discount Prices!&#13;
5707 - S~ Aft.&#13;
Il••••~.&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
50e OFFO~ZAZ~Y ~~,.ItIalian Food A Specialty&#13;
Spaghetti - Ravioli - Lasagna&#13;
•&#13;
Tenuta'. COUPON&#13;
\\lnf' ( UIItr~ I thl "&#13;
GERMANY&#13;
Ru de heim r&#13;
Openheim r $&#13;
ier tein r&#13;
Ira boUl II.&#13;
Parkside's Gary Cole goes up for two points in&#13;
a recent game.&#13;
Club Sports&#13;
The Club Sport Office is located&#13;
in the Physical Education&#13;
Building. Phone number 553-2310&#13;
or 2245. Please stop in or call if&#13;
you are interested in participating&#13;
in any of the following&#13;
sports.&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
Contact Ken Oberbruner, ext.&#13;
2225, Tallent 237, for information.&#13;
The team starts practice shortly&#13;
and will be playing colleges from&#13;
this area.&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
Jim Koch, ext. 2267, is the&#13;
contact for Intramural bowling.&#13;
Those interested in extramural&#13;
bowling (Intercollegiate) should&#13;
call or see Vic Godfrey, ext. 2310 .&#13;
There will be several opportunities&#13;
to bowl in tournaments&#13;
against other colleges&#13;
during the semester.&#13;
HOCKEY&#13;
Parkside's hockey team has&#13;
already played one-third of its&#13;
schedule . The team practices and&#13;
plays their home games at the&#13;
Wilson Par~Arena in Milwaukee.&#13;
Please call or see the Club Sports&#13;
Coordinator for additional information&#13;
regarding playing or&#13;
tickets.&#13;
Jl'DO&#13;
The Parkside Judo Club meets&#13;
two nights per week . They will be&#13;
·pon oring the Wisconsin In tercollegiate&#13;
Judo Tournament&#13;
here on Sunday, Feb. 4. Anyone&#13;
from novice through Black Belt is&#13;
encouraged to join.&#13;
Hl'GBY&#13;
Parkside enjoyed its most&#13;
:uccessful season ever last fall.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
Feature Film Series&#13;
presents&#13;
11 Billy&#13;
Jack''&#13;
Fri.- Jan.19- 8:00p.m.&#13;
Sun.- Jan.21- 7 :30p.m.&#13;
Adm: 75~&#13;
Stud n t Activities Bldg.&#13;
qu red&#13;
Th_e spring schedule is currently&#13;
bemg drawn up . Sign up to play&#13;
now!!&#13;
SAILING&#13;
Even though there is ice on the&#13;
lake, it won't be long now before&#13;
the sailing season rolls around.&#13;
The sc~~ol has two new Flying&#13;
Jrs. wa1tmg to be tried out. Plans&#13;
will be made for the summer&#13;
season in a month or so. Even if&#13;
you have never sailed before, you&#13;
are invited to be a part of this&#13;
club.&#13;
SKIING&#13;
The Rag Time Rangers are one&#13;
of the most active clubs on&#13;
campus with lots of good&#13;
fellowship and some good trips&#13;
lined up. See or call Bill Jaeck ,&#13;
639-1321, or contact this office for&#13;
more info.&#13;
SKI TEAM&#13;
The Midwest Intercollegiate&#13;
Ski Association has many races&#13;
on tap throughout the Midwe t.&#13;
Parkside's racing team (men and&#13;
women) will be competing in&#13;
many of these. lf you are a racer&#13;
or have intentions of becoming&#13;
one, please get in contact with&#13;
this office immediately.&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
The soccer team , under the&#13;
guidance of Coach Hal Hen derson,&#13;
will be playing a club&#13;
schedule this spring . Call Coach&#13;
Henderson at ext. 2311 about&#13;
playing .&#13;
f&#13;
Cag r 2nd&#13;
in holida in&#13;
By Kris Koch&#13;
-&#13;
Tel4phohe 652-1662&#13;
3315 · 52nd St.&#13;
«enosh•, Wis.&#13;
t&#13;
ed ., J n. 17, H73 THE PARKSIDE RA G R 7&#13;
Basketball&#13;
J n&#13;
J n 23&#13;
Fencing&#13;
J n I&#13;
J n&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
J&#13;
Swimm1n&#13;
P.E.&#13;
-&#13;
D&#13;
l&#13;
Alfredo's estaura&#13;
2827 63rd S ,&#13;
8 THE PARKSIOE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
Cagers snap loss string&#13;
with win over Aquinas&#13;
Parkside snapped their threegame&#13;
10000gstreak last Saturday&#13;
wllb • 70-&amp;6 win over powerful&#13;
AqUlllllS College.&#13;
Th Rangers. now s-s, bad&#13;
some timely long-range gunnery&#13;
from TIm Dolan. Otucl&lt; Cllam-&#13;
Ilh • and short jumpers contributed&#13;
by Cary Cole. However,&#13;
the hero In th waning seconds 01&#13;
th game turned out to be Ken&#13;
pey r, I' ho sacred lour 0/ his SIX&#13;
po,nt in clutch lree throv.rs that&#13;
proved to be the momentum&#13;
Park Ide needed&#13;
Th Ran ers I' re down by as&#13;
m ny ven III the lirst hall.&#13;
but lou htba k to witjun one on a&#13;
TIm Dolan teal and bucket ith&#13;
1 -43to go But AqulO went into&#13;
th I ker room with a 39-35&#13;
Ilalltlm I ad as the r ult 01 a&#13;
t hmcalloulon Otambh and a&#13;
bu kel by the I . Larry&#13;
Ilaler.&#13;
AqulOa came oul hooting hot&#13;
to open the . nd period 01 play&#13;
and quickly jumped to an eightpoint&#13;
lead. Tile Rangers then&#13;
caught ftre and closed 10 within&#13;
one at 51-50behind the shooting 01&#13;
Peyer, Sobanski and Hanke.&#13;
Parkside took tile lead lor the&#13;
lirst time 52-St on two Peyer Iree&#13;
throw -s with 10:55 remaining and&#13;
two minutes later. the Rangers&#13;
were up by five. Aquinas was not&#13;
through yet, as they came&#13;
roaring Ilacl&lt; to within a point&#13;
l'ith only 4:53 remaining and tied&#13;
once under four minutes. Gary&#13;
Cole finally iced the game with&#13;
two lree throwrs with only three&#13;
seconds on tile clock.&#13;
High point man lor Parkside&#13;
was Chuck Otambliss with 19,&#13;
lollowed . by Cary Cole. who&#13;
played with a broken linger. with&#13;
13. and TIm Dolan with 12.&#13;
Top tally getters lor Aquinas&#13;
were Paul Cnepper with 19. Ray&#13;
lcCahill 16. and Larry Schafer&#13;
who chipped in 10.&#13;
The Parkside basketeers were&#13;
defeated by UW-Plalteville on&#13;
Jan. 6 in an overtime game 82-78.&#13;
The Rangers had lorged ahead to&#13;
a seven-point Ilalftime lead, 33·26,&#13;
but Platteville came charging&#13;
back to tie the score at 72 apiece&#13;
at the end 01 regulation time. The&#13;
big gun lor Platteville was Steve&#13;
Kundert who scored a collegiate&#13;
career high 0135 points, including&#13;
4 of Platteville's 10 overtime&#13;
points, while helping to hold&#13;
Parkside to only six exira period&#13;
tallies.&#13;
One of the main factors in the&#13;
outcome of the game was that&#13;
Cary Cole only scored three&#13;
points and was louled out in tile&#13;
early going. Tile Rangers were&#13;
led by Mike Hanke with 24points,&#13;
Chuck Chambliss with 23&#13;
markers and Tim Dolan who&#13;
rimmed 16.&#13;
'The Rangers were also beaten&#13;
by UW-Creen Bay by a roll-over&#13;
score ol 68-36 at Creen Bay. The&#13;
cagers had a hard time fmding&#13;
the hoop, sinking only 21 percent&#13;
01 their shots, while Green Bay&#13;
shot almost 50 percent Irom the&#13;
floor.&#13;
High point man lor Parkside&#13;
was Mike Hanke with 13 points&#13;
while Chuck Chambliss was held&#13;
to only one point and Cary Cole&#13;
sat out the game with a broken&#13;
finger.&#13;
Ranger wrestlers defeated&#13;
twice on Southern trip&#13;
The Parks Ide matmen&#13;
\\,erestled t \10'0 dual meets in&#13;
Loui. lana thi past weekend. In&#13;
the first. at the University of&#13;
uthwe tern Louisiana,the final&#13;
r. was a 22-19 loss lor&#13;
Parkslde Inw\'iduall)'. both Rich&#13;
Ilaumberg and Ken Martin&#13;
plOned their opponents. Also&#13;
...IMmll: were Joe Landers, at 126,&#13;
Ranger fencers&#13;
beat Purdue,&#13;
10 e to Illinois&#13;
Park de's lencers came up&#13;
"'lth one Yrto and one loss&#13;
aturda)' They lost to the&#13;
Uruvel'5lty 01 Illinois l!1·S and&#13;
beat Purdue 21-6&#13;
Don Koser 01 Parkside Ilad live&#13;
Wins and one loss with his sabre.&#13;
while Jolln Tank (oiled his way&#13;
into four \\ins and two losses.&#13;
Be""e \'ash outwd both 01 them&#13;
w,th 10 epee l'ith a perlect six&#13;
WinS Bill chaefer. Peter&#13;
eman ke. lark BoatwTight&#13;
and Jeff Dougla alllinished with&#13;
a . pht three wins and losses.&#13;
The Ranger lencers next see&#13;
tlOn th. Fnda)' at Parkside&#13;
wben the)' h t Lake Superior&#13;
ate&#13;
who had 7 points to his opponent's&#13;
6. and BIll West. 142. who Ilad a&#13;
12·2 advantage over George&#13;
Dodger. At Louisiana Stale&#13;
Uni\'ersity, Parkside lost again&#13;
2'1-12. Ken Martin pinned his&#13;
man, while Joe Landers won over&#13;
Otarles Cusimano H~5. and Rico&#13;
Sa\'aglio beat TrIStan Junius t2·5.&#13;
Season records lor the top&#13;
matmen are Ken Martin s.-o Bill&#13;
West H. Rico Savaglio IH: Joe&#13;
Landers 2.Q and Kyle Barnes 6-2.&#13;
Skiers 2nd in state&#13;
The Ragtime Ranger Ski Team&#13;
took second in the State at Sunburst&#13;
the 13th. Winning were Rick&#13;
Sereno, Bob Wingate, Jerry&#13;
Ruflolo, Mike Pobar and Andy&#13;
Hewitt. The trophy was&#13;
Parkside lor the trophy case.&#13;
1701 . Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thursday 11- 8&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER 15q:&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Parkside Activities Board presents&#13;
TOURNAMENTS&#13;
BILLIAR CHESS&#13;
entry fee enter by&#13;
enter by Jan. 19 Jan. 26&#13;
Register: Student Activities Office&#13;
Room 0 197 LLC&#13;
Jan. 22&#13;
thru&#13;
Feb. 2&#13;
Jan.&#13;
26,27,28&#13;
5 Round Swiss&#13;
entry fee&#13;
Sl°O&#13;
~~flIU~t~~1QCLA.&#13;
SSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
ClassIfied Advertising Rate - 5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion CHECK ENCLCl&gt;EDFOR $&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to: .&#13;
The Parkside Ranger DATES(S) TO RUN -&#13;
Business Office To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
D-I94 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
NAME&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
it to run.&#13;
ADDRESS DATE - CITY&#13;
One word per space&#13;
PHONE NO. - Do not skip spac e b e tween words to show spacing&#13;
- ~ ~ ,. -.-&#13;
•••••&#13;
!,,,-_.&#13;
RANGERSports&#13;
uw-r cyclist 4th in race&#13;
Dan Werve, a cyclist attending&#13;
Parkside, placed fourth in the&#13;
Mid-Eastern Championship&#13;
Bicycle Race at Ohio State&#13;
University, Jan. 7.&#13;
Taking lourth in both the 1500&#13;
meter time trial and match&#13;
sprints, he competed against 38&#13;
riders from allover tile East and&#13;
Mid-west, with a number 01&#13;
national champions in the 1'\11-&#13;
ning.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA ACROSS fROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
Easter Break&#13;
APRil 21-29&#13;
Only $249&#13;
includes: plus S20tax end ~rvlct&#13;
• Round Trip Jet&#13;
• Luxury Apartment&#13;
• Daily Car Rental&#13;
• Sangria Party&#13;
• All Tips &amp; Transfers&#13;
saVED IN THE ATMOSPHERE&#13;
Of THE »e- ~~l~~-;;4'&#13;
..uJ&lt;'::J ""nIL jJ&#13;
_ BOTH UNDER. SAMEOWNUSHrp-&#13;
In Four Sius ". - lr . 14" - 16"&#13;
'''0 • RIBS' Sp.-.CHHTI • CHICKEN&#13;
• GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI' LA SJl.GHA&#13;
• SEA FOOD' SAJ"IDWICHES&#13;
CARlY-OUTS _ DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RING ... WE BR.ING"&#13;
657·9843 or 658·4922 For information and applicatIons conltel&#13;
Travel Center LLC D-197&#13;
5140 6tk AVE. 553-2279&#13;
Next Week: Jan. 24, 1 - 3 p.m.&#13;
NICKElODEON:&#13;
"Gold Rush" - Charlie Chaplin&#13;
"Tit for Tat" - Laurel &amp; Hardy&#13;
"Golf Specia I" - W. C. Fields&#13;
(South lounge - Greenquist Hall)&#13;
WED.- JAN. 17 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.&#13;
.Li&lt;Je ~e4 {eat«"iH.9&#13;
~'Aiu&#13;
...&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Jan. 17, 1973&#13;
t&#13;
rs snap loss string&#13;
win over Aquinas ~,RANGER&#13;
Sports&#13;
r r&#13;
on&#13;
er&#13;
tl rs defeated&#13;
outhern trip&#13;
who d; po nt to hi opponent·_&#13;
• a Bill W t, 142, who had a&#13;
12-2 advantage O\'er George&#13;
Dodger. t Loui iana tate&#13;
niver ·ity, Park ide I ·t a ain&#13;
27-12. Ken fartin pinned hi&#13;
man, v.ilileJoe Lander v.on over&#13;
arl - Cu ·mano 10-5, and Rico&#13;
v lio beat TrUa Jun· 12-5&#13;
• n r ord~ fo the top&#13;
matmen are K n tartin 8-0, Bill&#13;
W t 7-1, Rico avaglio 6-1, Joe&#13;
Lander · 2-0 and Kyle Barnes 6-2.&#13;
The Park ide basketeers were&#13;
defeated by UW-Platteville on&#13;
Jan. 6 in an overtime game 82-78 .&#13;
The Rangers had forged ahead to&#13;
a seven-point halftime lead 33-26,&#13;
but Platteville came charging&#13;
back to tie the score at 72 apiece&#13;
at the end of regulation time. The&#13;
big gun for Platteville was Steve&#13;
Kundert who scored a collegiate&#13;
career high of 35 points, including&#13;
4 of Platteville's 10 overtime&#13;
poin • while helping to bold&#13;
Par ide to only ix extra period&#13;
tallies.&#13;
One of the main factors in the&#13;
outcome of the game wa that&#13;
Gar. Cole only ored three&#13;
point and wa fouled out in the&#13;
early going. The Rangers were&#13;
led by like Hanke with 24 points,&#13;
Chuck Chambli with 23&#13;
markers and Tim Dolan who&#13;
rimmed 16.&#13;
The Ran ers were also beaten&#13;
b) TW-Gr en Ba; by a roll-over&#13;
ore of 68-36 at Green Ba . The&#13;
cag rs had a hard time finding&#13;
the h p, inking only 21 percent&#13;
of their ho , while Green Ba&#13;
hot aJmo t 50 percent from the&#13;
floor .&#13;
Hi¢1 point man for Parkside&#13;
w hke Hanke v.;th 13 poin ,&#13;
·bile Chuck Chambli was held&#13;
to only one point and Gary Cole&#13;
sat out the game with a broken&#13;
finger.&#13;
kier 2nd in state&#13;
The Ragtime Ranger ki Team&#13;
took . econd in the tate at Sunbur&#13;
t the 13th.\ 'inni g ·ere Rick&#13;
ereno, Bob Wingate. Jerry&#13;
Ruffolo, like Pobar and Andv&#13;
Hewitt. The trophv was&#13;
Parkside for the trophy· case.&#13;
1701 lain Racine 633-9421&#13;
Special&#13;
1onday thru&#13;
Thur da 11-&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER 15¢&#13;
Al o Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches&#13;
Foo ball 2 Pool Tables&#13;
ir Conditionin,g Pinball ;\1achine&#13;
Cold Sllc Pack To Go ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••&#13;
UW-P cyclist 4th in race&#13;
Dan \Verve, a cyclist attending&#13;
Parkside, placed fourth in the&#13;
fid-Eastern Championship&#13;
Bicycle Race at Ohio State&#13;
University, Jan. 7.&#13;
Taking fourth in both the 1500&#13;
meter time triaJ and match&#13;
sprints, he competed against 38&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
ACROSS FROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
suvro IN TH£ ATMOSPHERE&#13;
Of THE fiaJJ't~,· J. tcci "1 art&#13;
"a,1&lt;:t;Jc::if ~ 1,1 0~&#13;
- 80TH UNDER SAME OWNERSHIP -&#13;
In four S1&lt;« 9" 12" - 14'" • 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
• GHOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGHA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SA,..DWICHES&#13;
CAUY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU It/NC WE BRING"&#13;
6S7-9843 or 6S8-4922&#13;
Sl40 6th AVE&#13;
riders from aJl over the East and&#13;
Mid-west, with a number or&#13;
national champions in the running.&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Espana&#13;
Special , • • I ,.&#13;
Easter Break&#13;
APRIL 21-29&#13;
Only $249&#13;
includes: plus $20 tax and Hrvlct&#13;
• Round Trip Jet&#13;
· • luxury Apartment&#13;
• Daily Car Rental&#13;
• Sangria Party&#13;
• All Tips &amp; Transfers&#13;
For information and applications cont t&#13;
Travel Center LLC D-197&#13;
553-2279&#13;
{South lounge - Greenquist Hall)&#13;
WED. - JAN. 17 1 :00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.&#13;
~~ ~ea ~1i"'9&#13;
~ ·Aeu&#13;
Next Week: Jon. 24, 1 - 3 p.m.&#13;
NICKELODEON:&#13;
"Gold Rush" - Charlie Chaplin&#13;
"Tit for Tat" - Laurel &amp; Hardy&#13;
"Golf Special" - W. C. Fields&#13;
.4tue ~ad~&#13;
~&amp;w,1"«'&#13;
Activities Board presents CL~_SSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM TOUR&#13;
BILL AR&#13;
J n.22&#13;
thru&#13;
Feb.2&#13;
ntry ee $po&#13;
enter by Jan. 19&#13;
AMENTS&#13;
CHESS&#13;
Jan.&#13;
26,27,28&#13;
5 Round Swiss&#13;
entry fee&#13;
s100&#13;
enter by&#13;
Jan. 26&#13;
Register: Student Activities Office&#13;
Room O 197 LLC&#13;
Class1f1ed Advertising Rate - 5 cents per word up to 25 words for ea h . .&#13;
p b · c insertion CHECK ENCLalED FOR $ aya le m advance by check or cash to: .&#13;
The Parkside Ranger DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
Business Office To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
D-lS4 LLC UW-Pa rkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis_ 53140&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
NAME ~he number of issues you want&#13;
1t to run.&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
DATE&#13;
CITY&#13;
One word per space PHONE NO. -&#13;
Do not skip spac b t e e ween words to show spacing&#13;
-&#13;
- .&#13;
__.....&#13;
__.....&#13;
~ ____.&#13;
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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