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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 7, issue 6</text>
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            <text>UWP 'Founding Father' Dies</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>UWP .IFounding Fatherl Dies&#13;
representative, and "founding&#13;
father" of -the Uw-Parksida&#13;
campus who died .September&#13;
29th. .&#13;
The flags weren't the only&#13;
honor bestowed upon the late&#13;
assemblyman. The same day of&#13;
his death, the University Board&#13;
of Regents in Madison approved&#13;
the naming of one of&#13;
UW-Parkside's major buildings&#13;
for him. -&#13;
The building to be named for&#13;
Molinaro is the "$4.6 million&#13;
classroom building which houses&#13;
UW-Parkside's programs in&#13;
business, labor, and industrial&#13;
relations, engineering science,&#13;
and social sciences. A .$1.2&#13;
million addition to the building&#13;
containing specialized laboratories&#13;
for the business 'and&#13;
engineering programs will be&#13;
completed by September, 1979,&#13;
and the entire complex will be&#13;
called George Molinaro Hall.&#13;
.The building, which opened in&#13;
September, 19~3, has four levels&#13;
above ground, one below&#13;
ground, and -, connects to&#13;
CreenqUist Hall, a science&#13;
building, to the south, and to the&#13;
Parkside Union to the north via a&#13;
glass-enclosedpedestrian bridge.&#13;
It was designed by Shattuck,&#13;
'Slewart and Associates, Inc., of&#13;
Neenah and --constructed by&#13;
Camosy Construction Co. of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The addition, which will&#13;
connect to the west end of the&#13;
building, W_3S designed by.&#13;
Wilso_n-Haney Associates, Inc.,&#13;
of Kenosha and will be&#13;
constructed by Riley Construction&#13;
Co. of Kenosha.&#13;
Molinaro, who passedaway at&#13;
75, was the "dean" of Wisconsin&#13;
eont. on p,.4&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
George Molinaro&#13;
State,city, and University of&#13;
Visconsin-Parksideflags were&#13;
Iownat half mast in tribute to&#13;
;eorge Molinaro,_ the late&#13;
:enosha civic leader, state&#13;
.~-&#13;
MUll.&#13;
«17.&#13;
Wednesday October II, 1978 vol.7 no.6 Flags at half mast in tribute.&#13;
Pholo by tie HolmdoM&#13;
Out of State Tuition&#13;
Regents Discuss Roll-Backs&#13;
by John Stewart costs of Instruction from the&#13;
100% cost of Instruction which&#13;
is about S 1300&#13;
3) Instituting a partial or a fuJI&#13;
remission or reduction at&#13;
universities WIth excess ceoaci&#13;
ties, selecting one or two as the&#13;
site of pilot studies&#13;
planned for the November&#13;
Regent's meeting. The possible&#13;
forms of the proposal include:&#13;
1) Reinstituting the one course&#13;
remission for fully employed&#13;
individuals.&#13;
A proposal that may have an&#13;
important effect on Parkside,&#13;
and other UW border campuses,&#13;
is being discussed by the UW&#13;
Board of Regents. The proposal&#13;
may take one of several different&#13;
forms' but basically involves&#13;
reducing tuition for out-of-state&#13;
students in order to boost&#13;
enrollment at under utilized UW&#13;
schools such as tjw-Parkstdc.&#13;
UW-Whitewater, and UWPlatteville.&#13;
The idea was first suggestedat&#13;
the September 9th meeting of&#13;
the UW Board of Regents by&#13;
Vice-President Lorenz of the UW&#13;
System. A firm proposal is&#13;
2) Basing non-resident fees on&#13;
the variable cost per student&#13;
instead of the total cost per&#13;
student.&#13;
This means that non-resident&#13;
students would pay 62% of the&#13;
instruction costs, instead of the&#13;
100% they now pay. UW-Parkside&#13;
students currently pay&#13;
approximately 28% of the total&#13;
cost of their instruction through&#13;
their tuition fees. The 62% figure&#13;
results from deleting the fixed&#13;
Although there IS a great deal&#13;
of plannmg and study y t to be&#13;
done, especially concerning the&#13;
legal aspects, it 15 posvible that It&#13;
could take effect as early as next&#13;
fall. uw-Parksrde Chancelior&#13;
Cuskin told Rang r that thl~&#13;
proposal could be the brgge t&#13;
single thing to happen to&#13;
Parkside In the next five years&#13;
eont •• ft p,.S&#13;
Vienna Choir Boys-Here B-usiness Maior Reorganized&#13;
The Vienna Choir Boys will&#13;
ifI 1m . ~~ ost 500yearsof musical&#13;
ldltlOn to the stage of the&#13;
1Iri... ,ty of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
lIllmu' . mcatlon Arts Theater in&#13;
~ second of the season's&#13;
-cent on Enrichment Series&#13;
"8rarnsat 8 p.m. on Thursday&#13;
Clober 12. '&#13;
Founded' .&#13;
t In 1498,just six years&#13;
". Columbus discovered&#13;
""nta the h . . . , d ' C orr IS now on Its&#13;
,r US.&#13;
L. '. tour With a program&#13;
"'ch .Includes sacred and&#13;
cular s 1- usic ongs, a ong with folk&#13;
wi and a costumed operetta,&#13;
h&#13;
e&#13;
rry PranKs," by Franz&#13;
ubert "th IOirboy&#13;
:" e most famous&#13;
Althou h h . . 'luall g - t e Accent series IS&#13;
. . Y sold out on a subnptlon&#13;
b . f k aSls,a limited number&#13;
'ai;~~ts at 56 each may be&#13;
teat the door Those&#13;
Z~~ted should con~act. the&#13;
UnIOnInformation Center&#13;
the day of the performance&#13;
(553-2345). Accent subscribers&#13;
who find they will not be able to&#13;
use their tickets, may list ticket&#13;
availability with "the Information&#13;
Center to be "matched" with&#13;
persons who want tickets.&#13;
The Vienna Choir Boys were&#13;
founded by Imperial decree on&#13;
July 7, 1498, by the humanist&#13;
Emperor Maximilian I, to fulfill&#13;
his wish to have choristers in the&#13;
Imperial Chapel.&#13;
From its inceptio.n, this&#13;
organization has attracted the&#13;
finest musicians in the West:&#13;
Christoph Wilibald Gluck" the&#13;
founder of the modern operatic&#13;
form, spent his most creative&#13;
year.s as composer to the&#13;
Hapsburg 'court in Vienna and&#13;
wrote for the Imperial Chapel.&#13;
Mozart did the same on his&#13;
promotion as Composer to theCourt&#13;
in 1787. AI~hough Josef&#13;
COli'. Oil Pfl. S&#13;
acadeouc advising, no one is&#13;
allowed to just float tmough the&#13;
program haphazardly.&#13;
In fact, the BusinessManagement&#13;
Degree ReqUireme~ts an!&#13;
above the University's minimum&#13;
standards for graduation&#13;
Along with stronger requirements&#13;
and improved advising,&#13;
the Business Division plans on&#13;
putting more energy Into placement&#13;
of graduates. In the past,&#13;
many students have been left on&#13;
their own to find jobs In the&#13;
businessworld.&#13;
Although the end goal of the&#13;
new requirements is to Improve&#13;
the standards of the Division of&#13;
Business and Administrative&#13;
Science, the students are the&#13;
main interest of this change. The&#13;
tougher proaram will better&#13;
prepare graduatesfor real market&#13;
situations.&#13;
management prerequisite core&#13;
must be completed.&#13;
The core contains courses&#13;
which the business faculty has&#13;
decided are the minimums for&#13;
admission to the program, a-s&#13;
well as prerequisites for upper&#13;
level management courses.&#13;
With these new requirements,&#13;
the Businessand Admtntstratlve&#13;
Science Division hopes to see&#13;
students go through the program&#13;
in a more orderly fashion by&#13;
honoring prerequisites. In the&#13;
past, Freshmen were taking&#13;
Junior and Senior level classes.&#13;
These students received C's&#13;
when, if they had taken the&#13;
classes in the correct order,&#13;
could have earned A's.&#13;
There has been a decline of a&#13;
total of 1,000 hours in all&#13;
businesscoursesfrom a year ago,&#13;
but this is in part due to advising.&#13;
With the increased, straight-out,&#13;
by Cathy Brownlee&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Catalog has a new and&#13;
quite attractive cover for 1976-&#13;
79 but some of the information&#13;
be~weenthese colorful pageshas&#13;
also been revamped.&#13;
lOne significant change is the&#13;
undergraduate requirements for&#13;
students wishing to major in&#13;
Business Management. These&#13;
new' requirements came into&#13;
effect as of September 1, 1978,&#13;
aria must "be followed by all&#13;
students declaring the Business&#13;
Major after this date.&#13;
There are now three main&#13;
requirements for admission to&#13;
the Business Management&#13;
Degree Program. Students must&#13;
first formally apply after&#13;
completing 54-60 credits.&#13;
Second, they must have a. 2.25&#13;
CPA, and third, the busoness&#13;
I YIII&#13;
-~ ' att«u&#13;
1,y ~&#13;
f&#13;
Oct&#13;
***'&#13;
~ . I '·&#13;
UWP_ 'Foundillg Father' Dies&#13;
State, city, and University of&#13;
Visconsin-Parkside flags were&#13;
lown at.half mast in tribute to&#13;
;eorge Molinaro,. the late&#13;
:enosha civic leader I state&#13;
representative, and "founding&#13;
father" of ,the UW-Pai-kside&#13;
campus who died September&#13;
29th. .&#13;
The flags weren't the only&#13;
honor bestowed upon the late&#13;
assemblyman . The same day of&#13;
his death, the University Board&#13;
of Regents in Madison approved&#13;
the nam ing of one of&#13;
UW-Parkside's major buildings&#13;
for him . -&#13;
The building to be named for&#13;
Molinaro is the ·$4.6 million&#13;
classroom building which houses&#13;
UW-Parkside's programs in&#13;
business, labor, and industri-al&#13;
relations, engineering sciehce&#13;
and social sciences. A $1 .2&#13;
mill ion addition to the building&#13;
containing special ized laboratories&#13;
for the bu siness and&#13;
engineering programs will be&#13;
completed by September, 1979,&#13;
and the entire complex will be&#13;
called George Molinaro Hal l.&#13;
. The building, which opened in&#13;
September, 19;;'3, has four levels&#13;
above ground , one below&#13;
ground , and conn ects to&#13;
Gre enquist Hall, a sc ience&#13;
building, to the south, and to the&#13;
Parkside Union to the north via a&#13;
glass-enclosed pedestrian bridge.&#13;
It was designed by Shattuck,&#13;
·siewart and Associates, Inc., of&#13;
Neenah and - constructed by&#13;
Camosy Construction Co. of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The addition, which will&#13;
connect to the west end of the&#13;
building, was designed by.&#13;
Wilso_n-Haney Associates, Inc.,&#13;
of Kenosha and will be&#13;
constructed by Riley Construction&#13;
Co. of Kenosha .&#13;
Mol inaro, who passed away at&#13;
75, was the " dean" c;&gt;f Wisconsin&#13;
cont. on pg.4&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Wednesday October J J, 1978 vol.7 no.6 Flags at half mast in tribute.&#13;
Vienna Choi! B0ys · Here&#13;
:he Vienna Choir Boys will&#13;
Ing I · . _a most 500 years of musfcal&#13;
~it,on to the stage of the&#13;
niversity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
&gt;mmunication Arts Theater in&#13;
~ second of the season's&#13;
.cent on Enrichment Series&#13;
ograms at 8 p.m . on Thursday ctober 12. ,&#13;
Founded · · t in 1498, just six years&#13;
er _ Columbus discovered&#13;
,'nderrca, the choir is now on its ,r US h· · · tour with a program&#13;
•ch includes sacred and&#13;
U&#13;
cu_lar songs along- with folk SIC d '&#13;
,1 an a costumed operetta,&#13;
erry Prarrks " by Franz&#13;
hubert "th , . , e most famous 101rboy."&#13;
Although h . . rtuall _t e Accent- series Is&#13;
. . Y sold out on a subrtpt1on&#13;
b · 'I t' k asis, a imited number&#13;
·ai!~6f1s at $6 each may be&#13;
t e at the door. Those&#13;
~~;sted_ should contact . the&#13;
Union Information Center&#13;
the day ot the _performance&#13;
(553-2345). Ac&lt;;ent subscribers&#13;
who find they will not be able to&#13;
use their tickets. may list 'ticket&#13;
availability with .the Information&#13;
Center to be " matched" with&#13;
persons who want tickets .&#13;
The Vienna Choir Boys were&#13;
founded by Imperial decree on&#13;
July 7, 1498, by the humani_st&#13;
Emperor Maximilian I, to fulfill&#13;
his wish to have choristers in the&#13;
Imperial Chapel.&#13;
From its inception, this&#13;
organization has attracted the&#13;
finest musicians jn the West:&#13;
Christoph Wilibald Gluck,, the&#13;
founder of the modern operatic&#13;
form spent his most creative&#13;
year~ as composer to the&#13;
Hapsburg ' court in Vienna and&#13;
wrote for the Imperial CIJapel.&#13;
Mozart did the same on his&#13;
promotion as Composer to the.&#13;
Court in . 1787. Al!hough Josef&#13;
cont. on pg. 5&#13;
Photo by M, , Holmdohl&#13;
Out of State Tuition&#13;
Regents Discuss Roll-Backs&#13;
by Jo't,n Stewart&#13;
A proposal that may have an&#13;
important effect on Parkside,&#13;
and other UW border campuses,&#13;
is being discussed by the UW&#13;
Board of Regents. The proposal&#13;
may take one of several different&#13;
forms but basically involves&#13;
reducing tuition for out-of-state&#13;
students in order to boost&#13;
, enrollment at under utilized UW&#13;
schools such as uw:Parkside,&#13;
UW-Whitewater, and UWPlatteville.&#13;
&#13;
The idea was first suggested at&#13;
the September 9th meeting of&#13;
the UW Board of Regents by&#13;
Vice-President Lorenz of the UW&#13;
System . A firm proposal is&#13;
pla nn ed for the November&#13;
Regent's meeting. The possible&#13;
forms of the proposal include·&#13;
1) Reinstituting the one course&#13;
remission for fully employed&#13;
individuals.&#13;
2) Basing non-resident fees on&#13;
the variable cost per student&#13;
instead of the total cost p r&#13;
student.&#13;
This means that non-resident&#13;
students would pay 62% of the&#13;
instruction costs, instead of the&#13;
100% they now pay. UW-Parkside&#13;
students currently pay&#13;
approximately 28% of the total&#13;
cost of their instruction through&#13;
their tuition fees. The 62% figure&#13;
results from deleting the fixed&#13;
costs of instruction from th&#13;
100% co t of in tru tion wh, h&#13;
is about $1300&#13;
cont. on pg.5&#13;
a·us iness Maior Reorganized&#13;
by Cathy Brownlee&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Catalog has a new and&#13;
quite attractive cover for 1978-&#13;
79 but some of the information&#13;
~etween these colorful pages has&#13;
also been revamped .&#13;
l One significant change is the&#13;
undergraduate requirements for&#13;
students wishing to major in&#13;
Business Management . These&#13;
new · requirements - came into&#13;
effect as of September 1, 1978,&#13;
aria must -be followed by all&#13;
students declaring the Business&#13;
Major after this date.&#13;
There are now three main&#13;
requirements for admission to&#13;
the Business Management&#13;
Degree Program . Students must&#13;
first formally apply after&#13;
completing 54-60 credits .&#13;
Second, they must have a 2.25&#13;
GPA, and third, the business&#13;
management prerequisite core f'!Cademic advising, no on is&#13;
must be completed . allowed to just float through th&#13;
The core contains courses program haphazardly.&#13;
which the business faculty has In fact, the Busines Mana&#13;
decided are the m inimums for ment Degr Requirements art!&#13;
admission to the program, a-s above the Urnversity's minimum&#13;
well as prerequisites for upper standards for graduation&#13;
level management courses. Along with stronger requ,reWith&#13;
these new requirements, ments and improved advmng,&#13;
the Business and Adminrstrative the Busine s D,vi ,on plan on&#13;
Science Division hopes to see putting more energy into placestudents&#13;
go through the program ment of graduates In the past,&#13;
in a more orderly fashion by many students have been left on&#13;
honoring prerequisites . In the their own to find 106 in the&#13;
past, Freshmen were taking • business world&#13;
Junior and Senior level classes . Although the end goal of th&#13;
These students received C's new requirements is to tmpro e&#13;
when, if they had taken the the standards of the Dtvis,on of&#13;
classes in the correct order, Business and Administrative&#13;
could have earned A's . Science, the students are the&#13;
There has been a decline of a main interest of this change The&#13;
total of 1,000 hours in all tougher program will bett r&#13;
business courses from a year ago, prepare graduates for real market&#13;
but this is in part due to advising. situations.&#13;
With the increased, straight-out, &#13;
New Faces. On_Campus ..'.&#13;
. ;" sources organlzmg .' I universities re , students in the big-City. Peop e .. sessions for local&#13;
.. -t nd to be training .&#13;
from the big Cities e ntal officials to give . k kf has a governme . d more aggressive. Par SI e h better understandmg an&#13;
here." ) t em a d&#13;
relaxed atmosp ere. ess of community nee 5,&#13;
In his spare time Prof. Brunner aWda~en iding political educat&#13;
h as an provi 1 •&#13;
enjoys outdoor spor 5 S,UC . tion for various community&#13;
bicycling, and backpackme. his and unions.&#13;
favorite being cross _country groups "UW-Parkside is&#13;
., . M Hoover says, ,&#13;
skiing. Also I~ his spare ~fme r. in an ideal position to take new&#13;
Brunner enJoys pl.aYlng&#13;
the initi tives in working closely&#13;
recorder (mUSICal Instrument, m.l_h,ah' nding communi •&#13;
. II ltk to Wit t e surrou not tape) and aspecra y I es . \ h f culty is very&#13;
d&#13;
. h th r tres: tea&#13;
play his recor. er Wit 0 e competent and creative, comrecorder.enthuslasts.&#13;
. Ie are most munitv peop&#13;
receptive, and the students are&#13;
eager to have internships' and&#13;
other forms of practical involvement&#13;
as part of their education." '&#13;
Except for his past ernplovment&#13;
from 1970-1978 at the&#13;
college of Wooster in Wooster, .&#13;
Ohio, a good portion ,f his&#13;
academic life has been in&#13;
Wisconsin.· Most. of his undergraduate&#13;
studying was done- in '&#13;
Beloit, Wisconsin at The College&#13;
of Beloit. He received his PhD at&#13;
UW-Madison in 1970. -While&#13;
working on his PhD, Hoover&#13;
taught political science classes&#13;
at UW-Whitewater from 1964-&#13;
1970.&#13;
Some of his accomplishments&#13;
include two published books. His&#13;
first one" A Politics of Identity"&#13;
was published in 1975. "The&#13;
Elements of Social Scientific&#13;
Thinking", his second book/ -vas&#13;
published in '1976, and has been&#13;
used by political science classes&#13;
all over the country.&#13;
In his spare time Prof. Hoover&#13;
enjoys sailing in his 15 foot sail&#13;
boat. He- also enjoys camping&#13;
and is "looking forward to&#13;
camping all over this beautiful&#13;
f state."&#13;
Wednesday October 11,1978&#13;
Andrew Brunner&#13;
I!y Kim Ruetz&#13;
A new addition to the mathematical&#13;
department at Parkside&#13;
this year is Andrew Brunner. He&#13;
is teaching Calculus 221 and&#13;
Analytic Geometry I classes&#13;
designed as standard courses for&#13;
students who need some&#13;
calculus background.&#13;
Professor Brunner is a native&#13;
Austrailian. He attended Monash&#13;
University in Melbourne Australia&#13;
for his undergraduate studies.&#13;
He later received his PhD from&#13;
Australia National University in&#13;
Canberra.&#13;
Brunner, an avid researcher,&#13;
consistently publishes in international&#13;
mathematic [ournals.&#13;
He presents new materials,&#13;
techniques, and critical works&#13;
dealing with the field of math- .&#13;
ematics.&#13;
When asked about the&#13;
atmosphere at Parkside, Brunner&#13;
said, "I find it very friendly here,&#13;
the environment is very pretty. I&#13;
feel that the students here are&#13;
extremely nice in comparison to&#13;
- Ken Hoover&#13;
pic not available&#13;
by Kim Ruetz&#13;
An ambitious political science&#13;
professor, Ken Hoover, has......&#13;
joined the faculty this y~ar at&#13;
Parkside. He is presently&#13;
teaching two courses in political&#13;
science. One course, "Issues And&#13;
Problems In American Politics:&#13;
Explaining Watergate;" deals&#13;
with the Nixon admtmsttanon.&#13;
big corporations involvement,&#13;
and nuclear age. His other&#13;
course, "Modern Political Philosophy,"&#13;
is oriented toward the&#13;
contemporary use of political&#13;
theories of the past dating back&#13;
to the sixteenth century.&#13;
Mr. Hoover said that his job at&#13;
Parkside is split between teaching&#13;
and working with UW&#13;
extension's department of&#13;
governmental affairs. "My&#13;
appointment is part of an effort&#13;
to expand the outreach program,&#13;
which is designed to relate the&#13;
university to community needs".&#13;
Some of the programs he may&#13;
be involved with are connecting&#13;
community needs with the&#13;
Braun Takes Over&#13;
Roger Braun&#13;
Roger Braun is the new vice&#13;
president of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, replacing&#13;
Harvey Hedden who resigned&#13;
at the beginning of the semester.&#13;
Roger was appointed to the&#13;
position from a host of&#13;
candidates by President Rusty&#13;
Smith. He was approved&#13;
unanimously by the Senate after&#13;
a meeting that lasted nearly two&#13;
hours. He was chosen because&#13;
he has shown an active interest&#13;
in student affairs in the past.&#13;
He served as president of the&#13;
Earth Science Club' and is&#13;
presently on the board of&#13;
directors of the Cooperative&#13;
Services Collective. He has also&#13;
shown active interest in the Book&#13;
Co-op and the Food Co-op.&#13;
Roger is now a senior majoring&#13;
in Earth Science. Having&#13;
attended the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Platteville in the past,&#13;
the former Brodhead, Wis.&#13;
resident came to Parkside in&#13;
1975. ,&#13;
Being new to the PSGA, Roger&#13;
is hoping to incorporate his&#13;
personal experience to chair the&#13;
Senate and serve as President&#13;
Smith's assistant. I&#13;
The association should see&#13;
some improvements with Roger&#13;
as vice president. As he sees it&#13;
the student government and th~&#13;
other school organizations have&#13;
never before pu lied together. "I&#13;
hope to get them to band&#13;
together. There are groups, like&#13;
the SOCfor instance, who could&#13;
be very powerful with the help otthe&#13;
PSGA," Roger stated.&#13;
When asked what issues he&#13;
plans to tackle, Roger answered,&#13;
"I'd like to see the PSGA push to&#13;
get campus problems (such as&#13;
parking' and the Union remodel.&#13;
ing) solved."&#13;
Involvement is one thing&#13;
Roger hopes to see. "Right now , '&#13;
there is about 50% active&#13;
involvement in the Senate. There&#13;
has been some improvement this&#13;
semester and I hope it will keep&#13;
up:r With elections\ coming up&#13;
for nine Senate seats, he&#13;
speculates interest in the PSGA&#13;
will gain momentum.&#13;
Roger believes that the PSGA&#13;
has plenty of clout to help&#13;
students and hopes that the&#13;
student body will take advantage&#13;
of that power to get things done.&#13;
He also added, "Anyone who&#13;
has a problem that they think the&#13;
PSGA .could help with, should&#13;
contact either me or Rusty and&#13;
we'll do our best."&#13;
Ethnic&#13;
Workshop&#13;
Friday&#13;
The Black ,community-of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin will be&#13;
the subject' of an ethnic&#13;
workshop sponsored by the&#13;
University of Wis'consin-Parkside&#13;
Center for Multicultural Studies&#13;
-on Friday, Oct. 13, from .; to, 10&#13;
p.m. and Saturday, Oct. 14, from&#13;
9 .a.rn. to 4 p.m. at Second&#13;
MISSionary Baptist Church, 1327&#13;
Blake Ave., Racine.&#13;
The workshop can be taken for&#13;
one UW-Parkside undergraduate&#13;
credit or on a non-credit basis.&#13;
Credit registration information&#13;
is avail~ble from the UW-P&#13;
Registrar's Office (553-2281) and&#13;
non-credit information from&#13;
Univ.ers!ty Extension (553-2312).&#13;
Principal speakers will be Dr.&#13;
James Pitts and Dr. William&#13;
Sampson, professors of sociology&#13;
at Northwestern University, and&#13;
the Rev. Crawford Brady, pastor&#13;
J of St. Mark's Christian Methodist&#13;
Episcopal Church in Joliet, III.,&#13;
The program also will include&#13;
panel discussions on edutational&#13;
issues i!1 the Black COmmunity,&#13;
employment, criminal justice&#13;
advocacy services and progress~&#13;
ion in the 6CYs-regressionin the&#13;
:O's. Other program features&#13;
Include ethnic foods at both the&#13;
day and evening sessions and&#13;
performances by choral groups&#13;
and soloists.&#13;
Where do you eat on campus and&#13;
- Vince laquinta-&#13;
"I primarily eat in the Union&#13;
. Square. It's my second fa~ori~e&#13;
thing in the world. My forst IS&#13;
putting my mouth over ~he&#13;
exhaust pipe of a bus and getting&#13;
dragged, naked, through a cactus&#13;
field."&#13;
Chris Zeihn - "Mo.t 01&#13;
time I eat in the Union ca&#13;
I like the salads with a lot&#13;
cheese."&#13;
Larry Frederking - "Once in a&#13;
while I eat in the Union Dining&#13;
room. It's all right."&#13;
wished to remain&#13;
anonymous&#13;
eat on campus when I cad&#13;
it."&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of U.w, ParMlde&#13;
and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every IW~dnesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER,is printed by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois. ~&#13;
Written perrnlaalon is required for reprint of any portionof&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranqer; U.W. Parkalde, WLLC 0-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Miko Murphy.. . . , , " " ,Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan .. , , , . , . _. , , , , , , Goneral Man:l/:&#13;
John Stowart : " ~. NoWIE tor&#13;
Sue Stevens Feature Edl&#13;
Doug Edoohlusor _ , . " , , , , Sportl Ed:::&#13;
01.0 Cramor , . _ , Sportl EdI&#13;
Kim Putman " COpyEd;:&#13;
Chrll Miller '.. . .. .. .. .. .. . . Ad Ma" or&#13;
Nancy Szymanski ',' . .. .. Circulation Mlnl9&#13;
REPORTING STAFF. iill&#13;
'l:aura Bianco, Carolyn Braselano, Cathy Brownl", MOl II&#13;
Clarke, Pete Cramer, Tom Fervoy, Rob Gardner, Kr~1I&#13;
Honch, Thomas Jann Nicki Kroll Janene Llecrocl, P ' , L • ter Marry, Kathy Peters, Sue Salituro, Jeff Stevens, 8&#13;
Thompson and Larry Waaver.&#13;
PHOTO In&#13;
Gary Adelson, Susan Caldwell, Denise O'Aequlsto, C8~y&#13;
01.11, JI"1 Elloldor', Rob Gardno" Mlko Holmdohl, Cia"&#13;
Malon, Julio Orth, Tony Raymond and Brian TI99 ,&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig D.orak, Rob Miller and Matthew pollakon,&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Crame, and Dawn Thoma •.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be a~c-;;Ptedfor publication if they&#13;
a~etypewritten, dOUble spaced with one Inch margins a~&#13;
Signed by the author. A telephone number must be I('clud&#13;
for purposes of veriflca1:ion. Names will be withheld frol11&#13;
Pub]' t' . Ica lon, When valid reasons are given.&#13;
RAN.GER reserves the rjght to edit letters and refUse&#13;
Publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All ~aterial must be received by Thursday noon for&#13;
publication on the fOllOWingWedne5day~&#13;
Wednesday October 11, 1978&#13;
,&#13;
New Faces On Campus .. · . . I universities resources, organ~zing&#13;
Andrew Brunner&#13;
~Y Kim Ruetz&#13;
A new addition to the mathematical&#13;
department at Parkside&#13;
this year is Andrew Brunner. He&#13;
is teaching Calculus 221 and&#13;
Analytic Geometry I classe-s&#13;
designed as standard courses for&#13;
students who need some&#13;
calculus background .&#13;
Professor Brunner is a native&#13;
Austrailian . He attended Monash&#13;
University in Melbourne Australia&#13;
for his undergraduate studies.&#13;
He later received his PhD from&#13;
Australia National University in&#13;
Canberra.&#13;
Brunner, an avid researcher,&#13;
consistently publishes in international&#13;
mathematic journals.1&#13;
He presents new materials,&#13;
techniques, and critical works&#13;
dealing with the field of math- .&#13;
ematics .&#13;
When asked about the&#13;
atmosphere at Parkside, Brunner&#13;
said, " I find it very friendly here,&#13;
the environment is very pretty. I&#13;
feel that the students here are&#13;
extremely nice in comparison to&#13;
students in the b1g -~1ty. Peop e . . g sessions for local . . t d to be trainin . from the big c1t1es en ntal officials to give k .d· h s a governme d more aggressive. Pa~, s1 e a i them a better understanding an&#13;
relaxed atmosphere. reness of community needs,&#13;
In his spare time Prof. Bn1nner :;; providing political edu~aenjoys&#13;
outdoor sports s_uch ~s tion for various community&#13;
bicycling, and ba~kpacking, his ps and unions .&#13;
favorite being cross - country grou "UW-Parkside is . . . M Hoover says, skiing. Also'~ his spare ~,me r. in an ideal position to take new&#13;
Brunner en1oys pl_aying the .initiatives in working closely&#13;
recorder (musical inStrument, .-h ,J ndi'ng communi- . II i·k t wit tne surrou not tape) and espec1a _Y I es o . . th faculty is very&#13;
play his recorder with other ties. t et and creative com- . · compe en , recorder enthusiasts . ·t eople are most&#13;
, Ken Hoover&#13;
pie not available&#13;
by Kim Ruetz&#13;
An ambitious political science&#13;
professor, Ken Hoover, has_&#13;
joined the faculty this y~ar at&#13;
Parkside . He is presently&#13;
teaching two courses in political&#13;
science. One course, "Issues And&#13;
Problems In American Politics:&#13;
Explaining Watergate;" deals&#13;
with the Nixon aaminist~ation,&#13;
big corporations involvement,&#13;
and nuclear age. His other&#13;
course, "Modern Political Philosophy,"&#13;
is oriented toward the&#13;
contemporary use of political&#13;
theories of the past dating back&#13;
to the sixteenth century.&#13;
Mr. Hoover said that his job at&#13;
Parkside is split between teaching&#13;
and working with UW&#13;
extension's department of&#13;
governmental affairs. · "My&#13;
appointment is part of an etfort&#13;
to expand the outreach program,&#13;
which is designed to relate the&#13;
university to community needs".&#13;
Some of the programs he may&#13;
be involved with are connecting&#13;
community needs with the&#13;
mun1 y P .&#13;
receptive, and the student_s are&#13;
eager to have internships and&#13;
other forms of practical involvement&#13;
as part of their education." '&#13;
Except for his past emP,loyment&#13;
from 1970-1978 at the&#13;
college of Wooster in Wooster, .&#13;
Ohio a good portion &gt;f his&#13;
acad~mic life has ' been in&#13;
Wisconsin . . Most of his undergradu'ate&#13;
studying was done· in '&#13;
Beloit, Wisconsin at The College&#13;
of Beloit. He received his PhD at&#13;
UW-Madison in 1970. - while&#13;
working on his PhD, Hoover&#13;
taught political science classes&#13;
at UW-Whitewater from 1964-&#13;
1970.&#13;
Some of his accomplishments&#13;
include two published books . His&#13;
first one "A Politics of Identity"&#13;
was published in 1975. "The&#13;
Elements of Social Scientific&#13;
Thinking", his second book, •,vas&#13;
published in 1976, and has been&#13;
used by political science classes&#13;
all over the country .&#13;
In his spare time Prof. Hoover&#13;
enjoys sailing in his 15 foot sail&#13;
boat . .He· also enjoys camping&#13;
and is "looking forward to&#13;
camping all over this beautiful&#13;
I state."&#13;
Braun Takes-Over Ethnic&#13;
Workshop&#13;
Friday&#13;
Roger Braun&#13;
Roger Braun is the new vice&#13;
president of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, replacing&#13;
Harvey Hedden who resfgned&#13;
at the beginning of the semester.&#13;
Roger was appointed to the&#13;
position from a host of&#13;
candidates by President Rusty&#13;
Smith . He was approved&#13;
unanimously by the Senate after&#13;
a meeting that lasted nearly two&#13;
hours. He was chosen because&#13;
he has shown an active interest&#13;
in student affairs in the past.&#13;
He served as president of the&#13;
Earth Science Club - and is&#13;
presently on ·the board of&#13;
directors of the Cooperative&#13;
Services Collective. He has also&#13;
shown active interest in the Book&#13;
Co-op and the Food Co-op.&#13;
Roger is now a senior majoring&#13;
in Earth Science. Having&#13;
attended the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Platteville in the past,&#13;
the former Brodhead, Wis .&#13;
re ident came to Parkside in&#13;
1975 .&#13;
Being n'ew to the PSGA, Roger&#13;
is hoping to incorporate his&#13;
personal experience to chair the&#13;
Senate and serve as President&#13;
Smith's assistant. '&#13;
The association should see&#13;
some improvements with Roger&#13;
as vice presi9ent. As he sees it,&#13;
the student government and the&#13;
other school organizations have&#13;
never before pulled together. "I&#13;
hope to get them to band&#13;
together. There are groups, lfke&#13;
the soc for instance, who could&#13;
be very powerful with the help of'&#13;
the PSGA," Roger stated .&#13;
When asked what issues he&#13;
plans to tackle, Roger answered,&#13;
" I'd like to see the PSGA push to&#13;
get campus problems (such as&#13;
parking and the Union remodeling)&#13;
solved ."&#13;
Involvement is one thing&#13;
Roger h_opes to SEz · "Right now,&#13;
there 1s about 50% active&#13;
involvement in the Senate. There&#13;
has been some improvement this&#13;
semester and I hope it will keep&#13;
up.'r With elections1&#13;
coming up&#13;
for nine Senate seats, he&#13;
speculates interest in the PSGA&#13;
will gain momentum .&#13;
Roger believes that the PSGA&#13;
has plenty of clout to help&#13;
students and hopes that the&#13;
student body will take advantage&#13;
of that power to get things done.&#13;
He also added, "Anyone who&#13;
has a problem that they think the&#13;
PSGA could help with, should&#13;
contact either me or Rusty and&#13;
we'll do our best."&#13;
The Black 5=ommunity - of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin will be&#13;
the subject · of an ~thnic&#13;
workshop sponsored by the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Center for Multicultural Studies&#13;
' on Friday, Oct. 13, from 7 to, 10&#13;
p.m . and Saturday, Oct. 14, from&#13;
9 _a·'.11 · to 4 - p.m . at Secon_d&#13;
M1ss1onary Baptist Church, 1327&#13;
Blake Ave., Racine.&#13;
The workshop can be taken for&#13;
one UW-Parkside undergraduate&#13;
credit or on a non-credit basis.&#13;
Credit registration information&#13;
is availt!ble from the UW-P&#13;
Registrar's Office (553-2281) and&#13;
non-credit information from&#13;
Univ_ers!ty Extension (553-2312).&#13;
Principal speakers will be Dr.&#13;
James Pitts and Dr. William&#13;
Sampson, professors of sociology&#13;
at Northwestern University, and&#13;
the Rev . Crawford Brady, pastor&#13;
·' of ~t. Mark's Christian Methodist&#13;
Episcopal Church in Joliet, Ill. .&#13;
The program also will include&#13;
panel discussions on edu~ational&#13;
issues ip the Black community,&#13;
employment, criminal justice&#13;
~dv~cacy services and progress~&#13;
ion in the 60's-regression in the&#13;
!O's. Other program features&#13;
include ethnic foods at both the&#13;
day and evening sessions and&#13;
performances by choral groups&#13;
and soloists .&#13;
2&#13;
Where do you eat on campus and how ·do you like the fOOdJ&#13;
-Vince laquinta-&#13;
"I primarily eat in the Union&#13;
. Square. It's my second fa~orit_e&#13;
thing in the world . My first 1s&#13;
putting my mouth over ~he&#13;
exhaust pipe of a bus and getting&#13;
dragged, naked, through a cactus&#13;
field ."&#13;
Larry Frederking - "Once in a&#13;
while I eat in the Union Dining&#13;
room . It's all right."&#13;
Chris Zeihn - "Most of the&#13;
time I eat in the Union cafeterit&#13;
I like the salads with a lot of&#13;
cheese."&#13;
wished to remain&#13;
anonymous "I don't&#13;
eat on campus when I can avo~&#13;
it."&#13;
RANG.ER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
, and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every I W~dnesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER1is·pri11ted by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion , Illinois. -&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion&#13;
°1&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger,, U.W. Parkside, WLLC 0-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Mike Murphy . ... ... ......... . . ... .... . . ... . .. . Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan . .. . . .. . . . . . . . ... . .. , . .. Gen~ral Mandal~~&#13;
John Stewart . .. . : .. . ... .. ... .. . . . . .. ·. ·:-:. News E 0&#13;
Sue Stevens . . . .... . .. ..... . ... ... .. .. . Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser ...... . . . . . ...... . . . .. . Sports Editor&#13;
Dave Cramer .... .. . ... . . .. .. . .. .. . . , .... Sports EdltO~&#13;
Kim Putman ....... . ... . . .... . ........ ... Copy Edlto r&#13;
Chris MIiier .... . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. . . . .. . .. . Ad Manage&#13;
Na ncy S zymans kl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cl rcu latlon Manager&#13;
REPORTING STAFF . , Ille&#13;
·t:aura Blanco, Carolyn Bresclano, Cathy Brownlee, M0&#13;
1&#13;
ti&#13;
Clarke, Pete Cramer, Tom Fervoy, Rob, Gardner, Kr ~II&#13;
Honch, Thomas Jenn, Nickl Kroll, Janene Llecrocl, pter&#13;
Marry, Kathy Peters, Sue Sallturo, Jeff Stevens, Les&#13;
Thompson and Larry Weaver.&#13;
' ' PHOTO&#13;
Gary Adelson, Susan Caldwell, Denise D'Acqulsto, carlr&#13;
Davis, Jim Etteldorf, Rob Gardner Mike Holmdohl, Cln l&#13;
Mason, J~lle Orth, Tony Raymo'nd and Brian Tagga ·&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig Dvorak, Rob MIiier and Matthew Pollakon.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Cramer and Dawn Tt)omas ..&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be a~c;pted for publication if the~&#13;
a~e typewritten, double spaced with one inch margins a~&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be toclud rn&#13;
for purposes of veriflca1ion. Names will be withheld fro&#13;
. publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RAN_GE~ reserves the rjght to edit letters and refust&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable conten ·&#13;
All mater· I , n tor . . 1&#13;
a must be received by Thursday noo publication on the following Wednesday: &#13;
w.dn.sday October 11,1978&#13;
To The EditQr ...&#13;
~ -Burning Over Grass&#13;
Wisc. Academy of Sciences,Arts and Letters&#13;
"Drug Abuse Clinic" article down&#13;
have the audacity to cram a A Call For Papers&#13;
in the corner of page eight, bY_3&#13;
hair styling ad!&#13;
Do you "people, you layout&#13;
people, you editors, you people&#13;
who write for the paper, give a&#13;
damn about drug abuse? I doubt&#13;
it like hell.&#13;
And another thing, when will&#13;
you stop violating some cannons&#13;
of journalism by mixing straight&#13;
new~ with editorials? That&#13;
caption under paper is just one&#13;
example. Look at that apparently&#13;
straight news- story about the&#13;
Marijuana Smoke-In you ran two&#13;
issues ago; through the wholething&#13;
you encourage people to&#13;
attend the thing while advertising&#13;
it like a movie. Then to top it&#13;
off- you put it on your sports&#13;
page.&#13;
ag of a newspaper Your r&#13;
furiatesme! .&#13;
e one you print a large&#13;
Oopag .. kl f a Marquana Srno e- n&#13;
hoto 0 . liN t&#13;
h the smug caption 0 a&#13;
it " ht." Then you hcemet' In slg .&#13;
A "call for papers" is being&#13;
issued by the Wisconsin&#13;
Academy of Sciences, Arts and&#13;
letters in association with its&#13;
109th Annual Meeting, to be&#13;
held Friday and Saturday, April&#13;
20-21, at Carthage College,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Papers may be presented on&#13;
any aspect of the sciences, social&#13;
sciences, arts, letters and&#13;
humanities. Selection of papers&#13;
for presentation will be based on&#13;
a screening of 250~word&#13;
abstracts, which should include&#13;
title of paper, outline of purpose,&#13;
methodology, and principal&#13;
findings. Also required are the&#13;
name, address, academic posttion,&#13;
telephone number of the&#13;
author and indication of&#13;
audio-visual equipment that may&#13;
be necessary. Deadline for&#13;
receipt of abstracts is March 1,&#13;
1979.&#13;
Persons need not be members&#13;
of the Academy in order to&#13;
present papers at the meeting,&#13;
and students are also eligible,&#13;
provided their abstracts are&#13;
accompanied by written endorsement&#13;
of an appropriate&#13;
faculty member. Papers submitted&#13;
at the Wisconsin Academy&#13;
Annual Meeting are eligible for&#13;
publication consideration by the&#13;
Academy "Transactions," a&#13;
scholarly journal circulated&#13;
throughout the U.S. and to 600&#13;
institutions in 600 nations.&#13;
Further details, including membership&#13;
information, are available&#13;
by writing: Wisconsin&#13;
Academy of Sciences; Arts and&#13;
Letters, Steen bock Center, 1922&#13;
Universitv Ave, Madison 53705&#13;
(Tel 608-263-1692)&#13;
The Wisconsin Academy 15 a&#13;
nonprofit membership orgamzation&#13;
that was chartered by the&#13;
legislature in 1870 to encourage&#13;
research and promote communication&#13;
on the sciences. arts and&#13;
letters of Wisconsin It IS one of&#13;
only three of 46 slate and&#13;
regional academies in the nation&#13;
to include the arts and letters as&#13;
well as the SCiences In&#13;
membership representation and&#13;
programmtng. The Wisconstn&#13;
Academy is also among the older&#13;
and larger of the 46 academies&#13;
Executive DIrector James R Batt&#13;
is the current president of the&#13;
National Association of Academies&#13;
of Science.&#13;
'Women'&#13;
•&#13;
In&#13;
Sports.&#13;
r Ranger (especially Doug&#13;
nhauserand Dave Cramer)-&#13;
Pleasewatch your references&#13;
gender. In your "Fresh Takes&#13;
ootrol" article you refered to&#13;
freshmenwomen as "girls." I&#13;
rsooaJly don't feel that they&#13;
e anymore "girls" then male&#13;
eshmenare "boys." It's not a&#13;
'g thing, but to some of us it&#13;
matter.&#13;
Thanks,JaneFreeman&#13;
Your friend,&#13;
Larry Zamba&#13;
Wednesday October 11, 1978&#13;
To The EditQr ...&#13;
--&#13;
Burning Over· Grass rag of a newspaper Your&#13;
the Irr. furiates me! ·,10 ge one you print a large On pa .. f a Marijuana Smoke-In hoto o . " N t the smug caption o a 1th · · ht " Then you !iceman in s1g .&#13;
'Women'&#13;
•&#13;
1n&#13;
Sport~ _&#13;
ar Ranger (especially Doug&#13;
Edenhauser and Dave Cramer)-&#13;
Please watch your references&#13;
0 gender. In your "Frosh Takes&#13;
Control" article you refered to&#13;
two freshmen women as "girls." I&#13;
personally don't feel that they&#13;
re anymore "girls" then male&#13;
freshmen are "boys." It's not a&#13;
0st o big thing, but to some of us it&#13;
n call? does matter.&#13;
th a B Thanks, Jane Freeman&#13;
0ol&#13;
s-1&#13;
shl,&#13;
have the audacity to cram a&#13;
" Drug Abuse Clinic" article down&#13;
in the corner of page eight, by ji&#13;
hair styling ad!&#13;
Do you ·people, you layout&#13;
people, you editors, you people&#13;
who write for the paper, give a&#13;
damn about drug abuse? I doubt&#13;
it like hell.&#13;
And another thing, when will&#13;
you stop violating some cannons&#13;
of journalism by mixing straight&#13;
new? with editorials? That&#13;
caption under paper is just one&#13;
example. Look at that apparently&#13;
straight news story about the&#13;
Marijuana Smoke-In you ran two&#13;
issues ago; through the wholething&#13;
you encourage people to&#13;
attend the thing while advertising&#13;
it like a movie. Then to top it&#13;
off you put it on your sports&#13;
page.&#13;
Your friend,&#13;
Larry Zamba&#13;
Wisc. Academy of Sciences,Arts and letters&#13;
A Call For Papers&#13;
A "call for papers" is being&#13;
issued by the Wisconsin&#13;
Academy of Sciences, Arts and&#13;
Letters in association with its&#13;
109th Annual Meeting, to be&#13;
held Friday and Saturday, April&#13;
20-21, at Carthage College,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Papers may be presented on&#13;
any aspect of the sciences, social&#13;
sciences , arts, letters and&#13;
humanities. Selection of papers&#13;
for presentation will be based on&#13;
a screening of 250-word&#13;
abstracts, which should i_nclude&#13;
title of paper, outline of purpose,&#13;
methodology, and principal&#13;
findings . Also required are the&#13;
name, address, academic position,&#13;
telephone number of the&#13;
author and indication of&#13;
audio-visual equipment that may&#13;
be necessary. Dead I ine for&#13;
receipt of abstracts is March 1,&#13;
1979.&#13;
Persons need not be members&#13;
of the Academy in order to&#13;
present papers at the meeting,&#13;
and students are also eligible,&#13;
provided their abstracts are&#13;
accompanied by written endorsement&#13;
of an appropriate&#13;
faculty member. Papers submitted&#13;
at the Wisconsin Academy&#13;
Annual Meeting are eligible for&#13;
publication consiqeration by the&#13;
Academy " Transactions," a&#13;
scholarly journal circulated&#13;
throughout the U.S. and to 600&#13;
institutions in 600 nations.&#13;
Further details, including membership&#13;
information, are available&#13;
by writing: Wisconsin&#13;
Academy of Sciences; Arts and&#13;
Letters, St enbock C nt r, 1922&#13;
Univer Ity Av • Madi on S 7 S&#13;
(Tel : 608-263-1&amp;92) .&#13;
The W1scon in A ad m I a&#13;
nonprofit memb rsh1p or anIzation&#13;
that was hart r d b th&#13;
Legislature in 1870 to en ourag&#13;
research and promote communIcatIon&#13;
on the scIenc , art and&#13;
letters of W1scons1n . It Is on of&#13;
only three of 46 and&#13;
regional academ1e m th nation&#13;
to include the art and I t r a&#13;
well as the cIence In&#13;
membership repre ntation and&#13;
programming The Wisconsin&#13;
Academy Is also among th old r&#13;
and larger of the 46 acad m, .&#13;
Executive Director Jame R Batt&#13;
is the current president of the&#13;
ational AssocIatIon of Acad mies&#13;
of Science &#13;
Wednesday October l1,l978&#13;
Molinaro c:ontinued from page 1&#13;
Signing Senate Bill nO.38. ,George Molinoro on right.&#13;
UW-Parkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
E.Cuskin, who proposed naming&#13;
the ciassroom building in&#13;
Molinaro's name, said that&#13;
"during George Molinaro's long&#13;
years of public service, .he was&#13;
committed to fulfilling his dream&#13;
of providing others with the&#13;
educational 'opportunity he was&#13;
denied. The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside is his&#13;
legacy."&#13;
As the oldest of 10 children of&#13;
immigrant parents, Molinaro was&#13;
forced to drop out of school after&#13;
the seventh grade to go to work&#13;
in a Kenosha garment factory.&#13;
During the next 50 years he&#13;
would become a county board&#13;
supervisor (1939-47), a Wisconsin&#13;
assemblyman (1947-77), vice&#13;
president and \ executive board&#13;
member of autoworkers un ion&#13;
local 72 (1935-49) and first&#13;
president and later board&#13;
chairman of the American State&#13;
Bank in Kenosha (1961-1978).&#13;
Although receiving an education&#13;
only through seventh grade,&#13;
Molinaro attended Kenosha&#13;
Vocational School for two years&#13;
and for two years attended night&#13;
courses at the Kenosha Business&#13;
College. In 1965,- Molinaro&#13;
retired from American Motors&#13;
Corp. after 40 years as a worker&#13;
there.&#13;
assemblymen, representing the&#13;
64th District in Kenosha for 30&#13;
years, from 1947 until his&#13;
retirement in 1977. He introduced&#13;
the bill passed in 1965&#13;
which founded both UW-Parkside&#13;
and UW-Green Bay. Its&#13;
passage culminafed many years&#13;
of effort by Molinaro and others&#13;
to establish a four-year UW&#13;
campus in the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
area.&#13;
He spent his energy wisely in&#13;
co-authoring the bill and its&#13;
amendments. His position included&#13;
freeing the state from&#13;
paying for the land by having the&#13;
local communities provide the&#13;
sites on which to build.&#13;
Having been awarded the&#13;
Grizzly Bear Award by conservationists&#13;
in 1966, Molinaro lived&#13;
up to the title by lighting to keep&#13;
opponents from disraillng the&#13;
UW-Parkside plan. He also&#13;
opposed the delay of the campus&#13;
opening from 1969 to 1970.&#13;
Molinaro's work began to pay&#13;
off at the ground breaking on&#13;
November 27, 1967, At the time,&#13;
he was quoted as saying, "Today&#13;
represents the realization of a&#13;
15 year-old dream of a University&#13;
of south eastern Wisconsin. The&#13;
Kenosha-Racine area could&#13;
become a metropolitan mecca of&#13;
education because of it."&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFF ON ALL&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH,&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICATION.&#13;
TERRACE ROOM&#13;
426 LAKE AVE&#13;
RACINE&#13;
"MONTAGE"&#13;
"OPUS"&#13;
"JIM SCHWALL"&#13;
" entertainment 9 p.m.&#13;
~AZZ SO GOOD"&#13;
.Molinaro'·s first attempt at a&#13;
state Assembly seat came in 1944&#13;
when he ran as a Progressive and&#13;
lost. In 1946 the Progressive&#13;
Party switched to Republican&#13;
and Molinaro ran for the&#13;
Assembly as a Democrat and&#13;
won.&#13;
Molinaro was an active labor&#13;
leader in Kenosha. A charter&#13;
member of local 72 in 1935, he&#13;
served four years 'as vice&#13;
president and 15 years on the&#13;
executive board. He served as a&#13;
delegate to the AFl-CIO council&#13;
and to many state and national&#13;
conferences.&#13;
In 1949, Molinaro gave up&#13;
active participation in union&#13;
work because of increasing&#13;
responsibilities in the Assembly.&#13;
Molinaro was elected assistant&#13;
minority floor le.ader in 1949,&#13;
minority floor leader in 1952 and&#13;
1953, and was named Assembly&#13;
caucus chairman in 1953. In&#13;
1959, he was named Speaker of&#13;
the Assembly. '&#13;
Molinaro was named president&#13;
of the American State Bank&#13;
when it first opened in Kenosha&#13;
in 1961.&#13;
While holding the leadership&#13;
positions as' speaker of the&#13;
Assembly and chairman of the&#13;
Joint Finance Committee, Molinaro&#13;
devoted his major legislative&#13;
efforts to the cause of higher&#13;
education. The University of&#13;
Wisconsin recognized his efforts&#13;
by conferring upon him a&#13;
UW-Parkside degree as an&#13;
honorary alumnus and a&#13;
UW-Madison honorary doctorate&#13;
in May, 1977.&#13;
At the time of his retirement&#13;
many claimed fondly that the~&#13;
never understood a sentence he&#13;
said except for "aye" and "no."&#13;
During the time he was a leading&#13;
D~mocrat in the Assembly, he&#13;
tried to end the bickering within&#13;
the party. When his efforts were&#13;
recognized as futile, he made the&#13;
statement, "I've decided to quit&#13;
pouring cold water on a hot&#13;
dog."&#13;
presents:&#13;
4&#13;
Collegiate Skills&#13;
.Required Skills Lacking&#13;
by John Stewart ... ,.~. ~&#13;
Parkside has a program for all entering, degree-seeking stu&#13;
that makes sure that they have all the skills n.ecessary to cOPe&#13;
their upper level college work. This program IS known as Col&#13;
Skills. The program was initiated one year ago at the beginning&#13;
Fall 1977 semester. Unfortunately many of the students invol&#13;
the program have not yet complied with its requiremen~s.&#13;
The Collegiate Skills Program insists that all students Involved&#13;
meet certain competencies in Reading, Writing, Mathe&#13;
Library Skills. and Research Paper writing. In the case of the R&#13;
Paper requirement, an adequ.ate Research Paper m~st be prod&#13;
However, all that is required, tn the other four areas, IS passinga&#13;
Competence Test. .&#13;
In order that students acquire the necessary skills by the time&#13;
start their upper level college work, every new student mustcom&#13;
the requirements of the Collegiate Skills Program by the tim.t&#13;
have completed 45 credits of work. ThIS IS usually done bytheend&#13;
the student's third semester here. If the requirements are notmet&#13;
this time, the student will be placed on Academic Proba'&#13;
Academic Probation gives the student one semester or another&#13;
credits of work to correct his/her skills deficiencies or he/shew;&#13;
dropped from the university for one semester.&#13;
Students who transfer to Parks ide from another universityare'&#13;
slightly different situation. Those that have transferred with&#13;
than. 30 credits must satisfy all the Collegiate Skills&#13;
requirements by the time they accumulate 45 credits&#13;
graduation or be placed on Academic Probation, Those that&#13;
transferred to Parks ide with more than 30 credits completed&#13;
satisfy the skills requirements by the time they complete an&#13;
credits at Parks ide or also be placed on Academic Probation.&#13;
All students, mainly sophomores, who will complete their&#13;
credits of work by the end of this semester, should pick up&#13;
individual Competence Status Reports at the table on the CI&#13;
Building Concourse, Monday October 16th or Tuesday October&#13;
between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. This report will give the stud&#13;
official record of his or her College Skills Competencies to&#13;
Many people affected by the program have not completed&#13;
competencies.&#13;
Below is a schedule for the Competence Testing this semester;&#13;
Library Skills. . . November1,&#13;
Wednesday -. 10:00-11:00. 2:OQ-3:00GR&#13;
Math. . , . . . . . November2,&#13;
Thursday ..... 11:00-12:30, 2:OQ-3:l9G&#13;
Reading (101). . November20,&#13;
Monday. . . (9 - 50 minute 101 class&#13;
Reading (101) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . November 21, 1&#13;
Tuesday ... (15 - 50 minute 101 classperi&#13;
Reading (non-101). .. November 20,&#13;
12th Week Monday . 10:00-10: 50, 2:00-2:50&#13;
Library Skills (102) .DecemberH&#13;
Monday-Friday, , .. , .. In 102 class&#13;
Library Skills (Non-102). . ,. . .. December&amp;,&#13;
Wednesday .10:00-10:50GR&#13;
Math. . , December7,&#13;
Thursday '.. . . 11:00-12:JOG&#13;
Writing (101 and non-101) ... December9,&#13;
Saturday, ,9:00-11:00GR&#13;
. Of the approximately 15000 students involved, only about&#13;
have taken the Reading Test, only about 700 have taken the Wr&#13;
Test, only about 350 have taken the Math Test, only about 90&#13;
taken the Library Skills Test and only 66 have submitted Rese&#13;
Papers. The pass rates for the Competency Tests are all very high!&#13;
the 90 and 80 percentiles and 100 percent for the Research paper·&#13;
problem seems to be merely PROCRASTINATION. And ifyoUkn&#13;
what that word means vou probably will not have any trouble&#13;
the Competence Tests.&#13;
If you have questions, please pick up your status reports&#13;
Monday or Tuesday and stop in at the Educational Program SU .&#13;
office, WLLC D-197 or call them at 553-2605, They run the Coil&#13;
Skills Program and will be able to answer all your questions a&#13;
or at least direct you to-those who can&#13;
In conclusion, Academic Probation is one&#13;
avoided. /&#13;
WED. &amp; THUR.&#13;
FRI.&#13;
SAT.&#13;
Wednesday October 11, 1-978 \&#13;
Molinaro continued. from page 1&#13;
4&#13;
Colleg~ate Skills&#13;
Required Skills Lackjng&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
l~&#13;
id,&#13;
~, i&#13;
l . .II&#13;
Parks ide has a program for all entering, degree-seeking stu (I'&#13;
that makes sure that they have aU the skill s necessary to COPe ,.&#13;
their upper level college -:vork . This program 1s known as Colleg' ~-&#13;
Skill s. The program was m1t1ated one year ago at the beginning of &gt;",i1&#13;
Fall 1977 semester. Unfortunately many_ of the _students involved ,~&#13;
the program have not yet compl ied_ with its requirements.&#13;
The Collegiate Skills Program msIsts that all students involvedn, ~~ meet certain competencies in Reading, Writing, Mathema· 't&#13;
Library Skill s, and Research Paper writing. In the case of the Rese 'd&#13;
Paper requirement, an adequate Research Paper must be produc ''.&#13;
However, all that is required , tn the other four areas, Is passing ask f'-'-,,&#13;
Competence Test . _ ~~ In order that students acquire the necessary skills by the timet ~if{&#13;
start their upper level college work, every new student must compl&#13;
Signing Senate Bill no.38. , George Molinaro on right.&#13;
the req_uirements of the Collegiate Skil~s Program by the time th :~&#13;
have completed 45 credits of work .fThh1 s 1s us~ally done by the end 1&#13;
~&#13;
the student's third semester here . I t e requirements are not met l'I ~&#13;
this time, the student will be placed on Academic Probati ' 1&#13;
Academic Probation gives the stud~nt on~ _sem_ester or another :lid&#13;
credits of work to correct his/ her skills def1c1enc1es or he/she will ,,~&#13;
assemblymen, representing the UW-Parkside Chancellor A~an&#13;
64th District in Kenosha for 30 E. Guskin, who proposed nammg&#13;
years, from 1947 until_ his _ the . cias~room bu i ld_ing in&#13;
retirement in 1977. He mtro- Molinaro s name, said that&#13;
duced the bill passed in 1965 "during George Molinaro's long&#13;
which founded both UW-Park- years of public service, he was&#13;
side and UW-Green Bay. Its committed to fulfilling his dream&#13;
passage culmina(ed many years of providing others with the&#13;
of effort by Molinaro and others educational opportunity he was&#13;
to establish a four-year UW denied . The University of&#13;
campus in the Kenosha-Racine Wisconsin-Parkside is his&#13;
area.&#13;
He spent his energy wisely in&#13;
co-authoring the · bill and its&#13;
amendments . His position included&#13;
freeing the state from&#13;
paying for the land by having the&#13;
local communities provide the&#13;
sites on which to build.&#13;
Having been awarded the&#13;
Grizzly Bear Award by conservationists&#13;
in 1966, Molinaro lived&#13;
up to the title by fighting to keep&#13;
opponents from disrailing the&#13;
UW-Parks ide plan . He also&#13;
opposed the delay of the campus&#13;
opening from 1969 to 1970.&#13;
Mol inaro's work began to pay&#13;
off at the ground breaking on&#13;
November 27, 1967. At the time,&#13;
he was quoted as saying, "Today&#13;
represents the realization of a&#13;
15 year-old dream of a University&#13;
of south eastern Wisconsin . The&#13;
Kenosha-Racine area could&#13;
become a metropolitan mecca of&#13;
education because of it."&#13;
legacy;"&#13;
As the oldest of 10 children of&#13;
immigrant parer,1ts, Molinaro was&#13;
forced to drop out of school after&#13;
the seventh grade to go to work&#13;
in a Kenosha garment factory.&#13;
During the next 50 years he&#13;
would become a county board&#13;
supervisor (1939-47), a Wisconsin&#13;
assemblyman (1947-77), vice&#13;
president and executive board&#13;
member of autoworkers union&#13;
Local 72 (1935-49) and first&#13;
president and later board&#13;
chairman of the American State&#13;
Bank in Kenosha (1961-1978).&#13;
Although receiving an education&#13;
only through seventh grade,&#13;
Molinaro attended Kenosha&#13;
Vocational School for two years&#13;
and for two years attended night&#13;
courses at the Kenosha Business&#13;
College . In 1965, Molinaro&#13;
ret'ired from American Motors&#13;
Corp. after 40 years as a worker&#13;
there.&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFF ON ALL&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICATION.&#13;
·Molinaro(s first attempt at a&#13;
state Assembly seat can:ie in 1944&#13;
when he ran as a Progressive and&#13;
lost. In 1946 the Progressive&#13;
Party . switched to Republican&#13;
and Molinaro ran for the&#13;
Assembly as a Democrat and&#13;
won .&#13;
Molinaro was an active labor&#13;
leader in Kenosha. A charter&#13;
member of Local 72 in 1935, he&#13;
served four years ' as vice&#13;
president and 15 years on the&#13;
executive board. He served as a&#13;
delegate to the AFL-CIO council&#13;
and to many state and national&#13;
conferences .&#13;
In 1949, Molinaro gave up&#13;
active participation in union&#13;
work because of increasing&#13;
responsibilities in the Assembly.&#13;
Molinaro was elected assistant&#13;
minority floor leader in 1949,&#13;
minority floor leader in 1952 and&#13;
1953, and was named Assembly&#13;
caucus chairman in 1953. In&#13;
1959, he was named Speaker of&#13;
the Assembly . '&#13;
Molinaro was named president&#13;
of the American State Bank&#13;
when it first opened in Kenosha&#13;
in 1961 .&#13;
dropped from the university for one semester. . ,tJI.&#13;
Students who transfer to Parkside from another university are in ' ~&#13;
slightly different situation . Those that have transferred with f -&#13;
than . 30 credits must satisfy all the Collegiate Skills Pro lfl ~ requirements by the time they accumulate 45 credits t&#13;
graduation or be placed on Academic Probation . Those that h&#13;
transferred to Parkside with more than 30 credits completed&#13;
satisfy the skills requirements by the time they complete another&#13;
credits at Parkside or also be placed on Academic Probation.&#13;
All students, mainly sophomores, who will complete their firlt&#13;
credits of work by the end of this semester, should pick up&#13;
individual Competence Status Reports at the table on the Class&#13;
Building Concourse, Monday October 16th or Tuesday October&#13;
between 10 a.m . and 2 p .m . This report will give the student&#13;
official record of his or her College Ski lls Competencies to&#13;
Many people affected by the program have not complr ted all&#13;
competencies .&#13;
Below is a schedule for the Competence Testing this semester:&#13;
Library Skills . . ................ November 1, 1&#13;
Wednesday ... 10:00-11 :00, 2:00-3:00 GR&#13;
Math . November2,1&#13;
Thursday .. 11 :00-12:30, 2:00-3:3p GR&#13;
Reading (101) . . ..... . ....... November 20, 19&#13;
Monday . . . . . (9 - 50 minute 101 class period&#13;
Reading (101) . . . . . November 21, 19&#13;
Tuesday . . .. (15 - 50 minute 101 class peri&#13;
Reading (non-101) . . . November 20, 1&#13;
12th Week Monday . . . 10:00-10:50, 2:00-2: SOGR&#13;
Library Skills (102)&#13;
Monday-Friday .&#13;
Library Skills (Non-102) .&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
Math&#13;
Thursday ..&#13;
Writing (101 and non-101)&#13;
Saturday . .. .. ...... , ".&#13;
While holding the leadership&#13;
positions as speaker of the&#13;
Assembly and chairman of the&#13;
Joint Finance Committee, Molinaro&#13;
devoted his major legislative&#13;
efforts to the cause of higher&#13;
education . The University of&#13;
Wisconsin recognized his efforts&#13;
by conferring upon him a&#13;
UW-Parkside degree as an · Of the approximately 15000 students involved, only about_i&#13;
honorary alumnus and a have taken the Reading Test only about 700 have taken the Wnt&#13;
UW-Madison honorary doctor- Test, only about 350 have t~ken the Math Test, only about 90 ha&#13;
ate in May, 1977. taken the Library Skills Test and only 66 have submitted Rese ~&#13;
At the time of his retirement Papers . The pass rates for the Competency Tests are all very high, , I&#13;
many claimed fondly that the~ the 90 and 80 percentiles and 100 percent for the Research Paper. Ii\&#13;
never understood a sentence he problem seems to be merely PROCRASTINATION . And if you k\ ·&#13;
said except for "aye" and " no." what that word means you probably will not have any trouble wit \&#13;
During the time he was a leading the Competence Tests . '~,&#13;
D~mocrat in the Assembly, he If you have questions, please pick up your status reports n t •&#13;
tried to end the bickering within Monday or Tuesday and stop m at the Educational Program SuP_ ·&#13;
the party. When his efforts were office, WLLC D-197 or call them at 553-2605 They run the Collegia ,.-&#13;
_recognized as futile, he made the Skills Program and will be able to answer ali' your questions about ·&#13;
statement, " I've decided to quit - or at least direct you to-those who can . \&#13;
pouring cold water on a hot In conclusion, Academic Probation&#13;
dog." avoided . 1&#13;
R •=•lCl'ltaxE.a:at1:xxx:ax:.xa&amp;.«rm:«1&#13;
. · TERRACE ROOM&#13;
presents:&#13;
_ ,&#13;
426LAKEAVE&#13;
RACINE&#13;
"MONTAGE"&#13;
_, ''OPUS''&#13;
"JIM scow ALL"&#13;
WED. &amp; THUR.&#13;
FRI.&#13;
SAT.&#13;
" entertainment g p.m.&#13;
~AZZ SO GOOD"&#13;
.. ~ ....... _ks . --&#13;
Wednesday October 11,1978&#13;
Choir Visit&#13;
Haydn was not a member of the&#13;
Imperial Chapel, he experienced&#13;
the life of a choirboy to the full&#13;
and many of his works are to be&#13;
I~ found in their repertoire. The&#13;
o greatest prodigy, and the most&#13;
~ famous choirboy, was Franz&#13;
Schubert, who sang as a -choirI&#13;
boy from 1808 to 1813. Anton&#13;
Bruckner became organist of the&#13;
Imperial Chapel in 1867 and&#13;
added his influence to those of&#13;
his equally illustrious precursors.&#13;
In 1918, however, it seemed&#13;
that the collapse of the Hapsburg&#13;
dynasty and the dissolution of&#13;
It the AustrcrHungarian Empire&#13;
III would mean the end of the world&#13;
t famous institution. But, Josef&#13;
~ Schnitt retained the chaplaincy&#13;
of the Imperial Chapel and in&#13;
1924, encouraged by many&#13;
friends, he decided to re-found&#13;
the boys choir.&#13;
It was felt that the boarding&#13;
l~ school method was the only&#13;
practicable one of insuring the&#13;
musical training necessary for&#13;
the choristers and, despite&#13;
enormous economic difficulties,&#13;
the attempt was made. Schnitt&#13;
spared no personal expense and&#13;
he alone is responsible for the&#13;
salvation of this aspect of&#13;
Austrian musical tradition. What&#13;
he began as an experiment has&#13;
grown to be an enormous&#13;
success and the Vienna Choir&#13;
Boys, as they were now called,&#13;
began to embark on concert&#13;
tours around the world.&#13;
The secret of their fascination?&#13;
Critics say they have managed to&#13;
combine the naivete of childhood&#13;
with artistic maturity,&#13;
something that can only be&#13;
.3 achieved through serious work.&#13;
Ill« Those who wish to be considered&#13;
111$ for entry attend a special&#13;
",eparatory school where they&#13;
Of&#13;
laJ&#13;
Tuition.&#13;
The proposal could bring&#13;
between 250 and 750 new&#13;
stude."ts to Parkside, thereby&#13;
btongongParkside up to its full&#13;
enrollment capacity. Worries&#13;
about decreasing enrollments&#13;
couldbecome a thing of the past&#13;
If such a plan became a reality.&#13;
The new students that would&#13;
iht be attracted to Parkside by&#13;
out reduced tuitions would com-&#13;
~ mute to Parks ide from Lake&#13;
~ County, Illinois, the Illinois&#13;
,P County adjacent to Kenosha&#13;
if County. lake County on Iy has a&#13;
two year college and Parks ide is&#13;
the most accessible four&#13;
Yheearcollege to the people living&#13;
t re. It is hoped that this&#13;
Proposal would thereby attract&#13;
~unlor and senior students to&#13;
f&#13;
arkslde. Since Parks ide suffers&#13;
h~ rom decl' . 'he rrnng enrollments in&#13;
~ S€ years as people drop out or&#13;
ave Parks ide for Madison or&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
receive a thorough education&#13;
with special attention paid to the&#13;
theory and practice of singing as&#13;
well as instruction on one&#13;
musical instrument. At the&#13;
examination, which the candidates&#13;
take at the age of nine&#13;
musical ability is the decisive&#13;
factor, irrespective of creed orsocial&#13;
standing.&#13;
More often than not two&#13;
choirs are away on tour at the&#13;
same time, with each tour lasting&#13;
an average of three months. On&#13;
such a tour the 24 choristers are&#13;
accompanied by a choirmaster a&#13;
tutor and a nurse who are&#13;
entrusted with their care and&#13;
welfare.&#13;
Since their first United States&#13;
tour in 1932, the Vienna Choir&#13;
Boys have visited America no&#13;
fewer than 38 times, have&#13;
completed eight Asian tours&#13;
travelling as far as Japan, and&#13;
have performed an equal&#13;
number of times in Australia.&#13;
They have also appeared&#13;
numerous times in both South&#13;
Africa and South America. They&#13;
have been received by innumerable&#13;
heads of state,&#13;
including audiences with Popes&#13;
Pius XI, Pius XII, and Paul VI.&#13;
The time lost on concert tours&#13;
is compensated for by an&#13;
intensive program of teaching&#13;
and study in classes that seldom&#13;
exceed more than 10 pupils. In&#13;
the private boarding school,&#13;
which conforms to the standards&#13;
set by the Austrian Ministry of&#13;
Education, there is a staff of&#13;
thirty fully-qualified secondary&#13;
school teachers.&#13;
When a boy's voice finally&#13;
breaks, he leaves the choir not&#13;
only a first-rate musician, but&#13;
also a veteran globe-trotter.&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
other schools, this will be a big&#13;
help in letting Parkside fill out its&#13;
upper level programs. In general,&#13;
this proposal would open up an&#13;
untouched service area for&#13;
Parks ide of about 400,000&#13;
people; from Chicago to the&#13;
Wisconsin border.&#13;
It is estimated that the other&#13;
schools involved, like UWWhitewater,&#13;
will add approximately&#13;
another 1500 students to&#13;
their enrollments as a result of a&#13;
reduced tuition plan&#13;
The other schools' have much&#13;
more room .to expand than&#13;
Parks ide and thereby could&#13;
sustain such a great influx.&#13;
Proponents of lowering the out&#13;
of state tuition fees argue that&#13;
these proposals may give a&#13;
tremendous boost to Wisconsin's&#13;
economy by attracting out-ofstate&#13;
dollars.&#13;
R.eo,. ******************************************&#13;
5&#13;
'Who Are You'&#13;
Peter J~ckel&#13;
Following a three year exile&#13;
from the recording studios, "The&#13;
Who" has launched a massive&#13;
comeback campaign highlighted&#13;
by a new masterpiece album that&#13;
has already threatened to&#13;
challenge the phenomenal&#13;
success achieved by earlier&#13;
"Who" classics Tommy (1969)&#13;
and Who's Next (1973).&#13;
With the release of Who Are&#13;
You, the quartet of guitarist/&#13;
writer Pete Townshend, vocalist&#13;
Roger Daltrey, bassist John Entwistle,&#13;
and the late percussionist&#13;
Keith Moon have squelched&#13;
any rumors of an impending split&#13;
that were fueled by the&#13;
intensifying feud between Townshend&#13;
and Daltrey. Their long&#13;
existing diHerences escalated to&#13;
a peak recently when Townshend&#13;
nixed Daltrev's desire to&#13;
resume touring because of the&#13;
severe hearing loss he has&#13;
suffered from the ear-piercing&#13;
rock bashes "The Who" has&#13;
staged for the past decade.&#13;
Daltrey, who has hearing woes of&#13;
his own say, "I've just got a&#13;
feeling if we stop touring now, I&#13;
know I shall regret it and I know&#13;
Pete will."&#13;
Entwistle also is in favor of&#13;
touring but the adamant Townshend&#13;
refuses to budge. "Electric&#13;
guitars hurt my ears," he claims&#13;
in an interview with Rolling&#13;
Stone. "It's bad to the extent that&#13;
if I get subjected to really loud&#13;
noise for a long time, I get a lot&#13;
of pain. And apparently, pain is&#13;
the indication of further&#13;
damage." Daltrey has since&#13;
made significant concessions in&#13;
his standpoint and has decided&#13;
to temporarily remain with his&#13;
band of fifteen years.&#13;
Who Are You marks a&#13;
welcome rebound from the&#13;
blues-orientated Who By Numbers&#13;
(1975) which bewildered&#13;
"Who" fans and strongly insinuated&#13;
the end of the then&#13;
trouble plagued group.&#13;
Townshend, overcoming his&#13;
marital problems and differences&#13;
with Daltrey, dedicates the&#13;
album in part to reaHirming his&#13;
reputation as rock's leading&#13;
philosopher and critic. In The&#13;
Music Must Change, he unleashes&#13;
a barrage of slicing barbs&#13;
at present rock groups whom&#13;
Townshend claims contributed&#13;
to the declining state of rock and&#13;
roll. This cut also features&#13;
Daltrey in his finest moments as&#13;
he churns out the lyrics with the&#13;
exacting precision and magnificent&#13;
voice control that has won&#13;
him acclaim as one of the finest&#13;
vocalists in contemporary rock.&#13;
The title song Who Are You&#13;
represents Townshend's initial&#13;
impression upon meeting the&#13;
much heralded Sex Pistols.&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESENTS&#13;
A FILM/LECTURE&#13;
BY&#13;
STAN WATERMAN&#13;
INTERNATIONALLY KNOWN CINEMATOGRAPHER OF&#13;
"THE DEEP"&#13;
TONIGHT AT CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
ADM: $1.00 UW-P STldDENTS $1.50 GENERAL&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT INFO CENTER&#13;
Townshend was pissed at the&#13;
Pistols claim that sixties bands&#13;
like the Who were the major&#13;
detrimental force behind the fall&#13;
of rock and makes ample&#13;
retaliation with this cut&#13;
Sister Disco takes a lusty pot-·-&#13;
shot at the unfortunate craze&#13;
John Travolta was kind enough&#13;
to popularize.&#13;
90S, penned by Entwistle,&#13;
constitues the finest sonW&gt;f the&#13;
album. Originally intended as&#13;
the title cut to the never&#13;
completed sequel of the movie&#13;
Tommy, 905 laments at the&#13;
seemingly insignificance of life.&#13;
Everything Ido has been done&#13;
belOle&#13;
Every idea in my head someone&#13;
else has said&#13;
The end of my life is an open&#13;
door&#13;
The Who has once again&#13;
arrived at the crossroads of their&#13;
future with the traalC September&#13;
7 death of the oft-crazy&#13;
drummer Keith ""oon ~n&#13;
whose anttcs Included drtvlnC hl~&#13;
car Into a motel sWfmmtnl pool&#13;
and W'lrln&amp; frrecreckers to hot~&#13;
manager's room doors, wA5&#13;
found dead In hiS 4partment&#13;
frcen an apparent drul O'Jerdose.&#13;
Although Towmhend maintarns&#13;
that "The Who" Will&#13;
continue With a .new perCUSSIonrst.&#13;
the vast personal attraction&#13;
Moon took With him cannot be&#13;
replaced With buddln, solo&#13;
careers for the three to turn to&#13;
and the petpelual b,ck."n.&#13;
between Townshend and Daltrey,&#13;
It IS highly unhkely th~t&#13;
"The Who" would bother&#13;
dabbling In the studiO apln&#13;
especially Without the supercharged&#13;
Moon to Inspire them&#13;
But they did pock a wonderful&#13;
album to close out tbetr b"lhant&#13;
band With&#13;
Recipe respectfully submitted to the Ranger from fnends of the tood&#13;
co-op&#13;
CHEDDAR CHEESE SOUP&#13;
2 medium carrots, scraped and minced&#13;
2 sralks celery, minced&#13;
1 Onion, finely chopped&#13;
Y. cup flour&#13;
1,1, teaspoon salt&#13;
1/8 teaspOOn whIte pepper&#13;
r quart chiden brorhOf \&lt;egerablebtorh&#13;
1 pound raw, sharp. cheddar cheese. grated&#13;
T cup heavy cream&#13;
1 cup mIlk&#13;
Saute the vegetables In the butter until ~oft Sprinkle ~Ith Hour and&#13;
mix to smooth paste. Add salt, pepper, and chicken stock oot and&#13;
puree vegetables Add cheese and rehear soup. do not bolt W n&#13;
ready to serve, add the milk and cream Carnl h With minced par I&#13;
and grated carrot&#13;
tHE RING&#13;
YOU WEAR FOREVER&#13;
WILL SAVE YOU S10&#13;
RIGHT NOW.&#13;
JOSTlN'S NA110NAL COUIGE&#13;
RING WEEK. OCTOBER 16-2L&#13;
AVAILABLE AT&#13;
U.W. - PARKSIDE BOOKSTORE&#13;
Wednesday October 11 , 1978 s&#13;
Choir Visit&#13;
Haydn was not a member of the&#13;
lmperral Chapel, he experienced&#13;
th life of a choirboy to the full&#13;
and many of his works are to be&#13;
found in their repertoire . The&#13;
greatest prodigy, and the most&#13;
famous choirboy, was Franz&#13;
Schubert, who sang as a -choir11&#13;
boy from 1808 to 1813 . Anton&#13;
Bruckner became organist of the&#13;
lmperral Chapel in 1867 and&#13;
added his influence to those of&#13;
his equally illustrious precursors.&#13;
In 1918, however, it seemed&#13;
1 that the collapse of the Hapsburg&#13;
d nasty and the dissolution of&#13;
the Austro-Hungarian Empire&#13;
would mean the end of the world&#13;
famous institution . But, Josef&#13;
Schnitt retained the chaplaincy&#13;
of the Imperial Chapel and in&#13;
1924, encouraged by many&#13;
~ friends, he decided to re-found&#13;
the boys choir.&#13;
It was felt that the boarding&#13;
II) school method was the only&#13;
~- practicable one of insuring the&#13;
b · musical training necessary for&#13;
ill the choristers and, despite&#13;
enormous economic difficulties,&#13;
the attempt was made. Schnitt&#13;
spared no personal expense and&#13;
he alone is responsib le for the&#13;
salvation of this aspect of&#13;
Austrian musical tradition . What&#13;
he began as an experiment has&#13;
grown to be an enormous&#13;
success and the Vienna Choir&#13;
Boys, as they were now called,&#13;
began to embark on concert&#13;
tours around the world.&#13;
The secret of their fascination?&#13;
Critics say they have managed to&#13;
combine the naivete of childhood&#13;
with artistic maturity,&#13;
~ething that can only be&#13;
achieved through serious work.&#13;
Those who wish to be considered&#13;
for entry attend a special&#13;
preparatory school where they&#13;
Tuition&#13;
; The proposal could bring&#13;
tween 250 and 750 new&#13;
O:~ stud nts to Parkside, thereby&#13;
be! bringing Parkside up to its full&#13;
:J enrollment capacity . Worries&#13;
be' about decreasing enrollments&#13;
1:0C could become a thing of the past&#13;
~ 11 such a plan became a reality&#13;
a The new students that would&#13;
!ht be attracted to Parkside by&#13;
reduced tuitions would commute&#13;
to Parkside from Lake.&#13;
er!( County, Illinois, the Illinois&#13;
p county adjacent to Kenosha&#13;
if~ County Lake County only has a&#13;
two year college and Parkside is&#13;
th most accessible four&#13;
er/. Y~ar college to the people living&#13;
[a~ t ere It is hoped that this&#13;
jeC proposal would thereby attract&#13;
f&#13;
ns Jpunior and senior students to&#13;
arks1d s· .&#13;
1 e. ince Parkside suffers&#13;
at rom declining enrollments in&#13;
these y&#13;
1 ears as people drop out or&#13;
ave Parkside for Madison or&#13;
••&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL ,,&#13;
PLEASANT PRA IRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBED F.0.1.C.&#13;
Records **************************** ... ************&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
receive a thorough education&#13;
with special attention paid to the&#13;
theory and practice of singing as&#13;
well as instruction on one&#13;
musical instrument . At the&#13;
examination, which the candidates&#13;
take at the age of nine&#13;
musical ability is the decisiv~&#13;
factor, irrespective of creed orsocial&#13;
standing.&#13;
1 Who Are You1&#13;
More often than not two&#13;
choirs are away on tour at the&#13;
same time, with each tour lasting&#13;
an average of three months. On&#13;
such a tour the 24 choristers are&#13;
accompanied by a choirmaster, a&#13;
tutor and a nurse who are&#13;
entrusted with their care and&#13;
welfare.&#13;
Since their first United States&#13;
tour in 1932, the Vienna Choir&#13;
Boys have visited America no&#13;
fewer than 38 times, have&#13;
completed eight Asian tours,&#13;
travelling as far as Japan, and&#13;
have performed an equal&#13;
number of times in Australia.&#13;
They have also appeared&#13;
numerous times in both South&#13;
Africa and South America . They&#13;
have been received by innu&#13;
mer able heads of state,&#13;
including audiences with Popes&#13;
Pius XI, Pius XII, and Paul VI.&#13;
The time lost on concert tours&#13;
is compensated for by an&#13;
intensive program of teaching&#13;
q_nd study in classes that seldom&#13;
exceed more than 10 pupils. In&#13;
the private boarding school,&#13;
which conforms to the standards&#13;
set by the Austrian Ministry of&#13;
Education, there is a staff of&#13;
thirty fully-qualified secondary&#13;
school teachers.&#13;
When a boy's voice finally&#13;
breaks, he leaves the choir not&#13;
only a first-rate musician, but&#13;
also a veteran globe-trotter.&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
other schools, this will be a big&#13;
help in letting Parkside fill out its&#13;
upper level programs. In general,&#13;
this proposal would open up an&#13;
untouch_ed service area for&#13;
Parkside of about 400,000&#13;
people; from Chicago to the&#13;
Wisconsin border.&#13;
It is estimated that the other&#13;
schools involved, like UWWhitewater,&#13;
will add approximately&#13;
another 1500 students to&#13;
their enrollments as a result of a&#13;
reduced tuition plan&#13;
The other schools · have much&#13;
more room . to expand than&#13;
Parkside and thereby could&#13;
sustain such a great influx.&#13;
Proponents of lowering the out&#13;
of state tuition fees argue that&#13;
these proposals may give a&#13;
tremendous boost to Wisconsin's&#13;
economy by attracting out-ofstate&#13;
dollars.&#13;
Peter Jackel&#13;
Following a three year exile&#13;
from the recording studios, "The&#13;
Who" has aunched a massive&#13;
comeback campaign highlighted&#13;
by a new masterpiece album that&#13;
has already threatened to&#13;
cha I lenge the phenomenal&#13;
success achieved by earlier&#13;
"Who" classics Tommy (1969)&#13;
and Who's Next (1973).&#13;
With the release of Who Are&#13;
You, the quartet of guitarist/&#13;
writer Pete Townshend, vocalist&#13;
Roger Daltrey, bassist John Entwistle,&#13;
and the late percussionist&#13;
Keith Moon have squelched&#13;
any rumors of an impending split&#13;
that were fueled by the&#13;
intensifying feud between Townshend&#13;
and Daltrey. Their long&#13;
existing differences escalated to&#13;
a peak recently when Townshend&#13;
nixed Daltrey's desire to&#13;
resume touring because of the&#13;
severe hearing loss he has&#13;
suffered from the ear-piercing&#13;
rock bashes "The Who" has&#13;
staged for the past decade.&#13;
Daltrey, who has hearing woes of&#13;
his own say~ "I've just got a&#13;
feeling if we stop touring now, I&#13;
know I shall regret it and I know&#13;
Pete will."&#13;
Entwistle also is in favor of&#13;
touring but the adamant Townshend&#13;
refuses to budge. "Electric&#13;
guitars hurt my ears," he claims&#13;
in an interview with Rolling&#13;
Stone. "It's bad to the extent that&#13;
if I get subjected to really loud&#13;
noise for a long time, I get a lot&#13;
of pain. And apparently, pain is&#13;
the indication of further&#13;
damage ." Daltrey has since&#13;
made significant concessions in&#13;
his standpoint and has decided&#13;
to temporarily remain with his&#13;
band of fifteen years.&#13;
Who Are You marks a&#13;
welcome rebound from the&#13;
blues-orientated Who By Numbers&#13;
(1975) which bewildered&#13;
"Who" fans and strongly insinuated&#13;
the end of the then&#13;
trouble plagued group .&#13;
Townshend, overcoming his&#13;
marital problems and differences&#13;
with Daltrey, dedicates the&#13;
album in part to reaffirming his&#13;
reputation as rock's leading&#13;
philosopher and critic. In The&#13;
Music Must Change, he unleashes&#13;
a barrage of slicing barbs&#13;
at present rock groups whom&#13;
Townshend claims contributed&#13;
to the declining state of rock and&#13;
roll. This cut also features&#13;
Daltrey in his finest moments as&#13;
he churns out the lyrics with the&#13;
exacting precision and magnificent&#13;
voice control that has won&#13;
him acclaim as one of the finest&#13;
vocalists in contemporary rock.&#13;
The title song Who Are You&#13;
represents Townshend's initial&#13;
impression upon meeting the&#13;
much heralded Sex Pistols.&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESENTS&#13;
A FILM/LECTURE&#13;
BY&#13;
STAN WATERMAN&#13;
INTERNATIONALLY KNOWN CINEMATOGRAPHER OF&#13;
"THE DEEP"&#13;
TONIGHT AT CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
ADM: $1.00 UW-P STldDENTS $1 .50 GENERAL&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT INFO CENTER&#13;
Townshend was pissed at the&#13;
Pistols claim that s1xt1es bands&#13;
like the Who were the ma1or&#13;
detrimental force behind the fall&#13;
of rock and ma es ample&#13;
retaliation with this cut.&#13;
Sister Disco takes a lusty potshot&#13;
at the unfortunate craze&#13;
John Travolta was kmd enough&#13;
to popularize&#13;
905, penned b Entwistle&#13;
const1tues the finest sons,,,pf th~&#13;
album. Originally intended as&#13;
the title cut to the never&#13;
completed sequel of the movie&#13;
Tommy, 905 laments at the&#13;
seemingly insignificance of life&#13;
Everything I do has been done&#13;
before&#13;
Every idea in my head someone&#13;
else has said&#13;
The end of my life is an open&#13;
door&#13;
The Who has once again&#13;
arrived at the crossroads of thetr&#13;
drummer&#13;
tams that&#13;
continue with a n percu ionist,&#13;
the ast personal attr tion&#13;
Moon too with him canno&#13;
replaced. With buddm&#13;
careers for the thr to turn to&#13;
and the perpetual b1c erm&#13;
between Townsh nd and Oaltre&#13;
, 1t is high) unl1 el that&#13;
" The Who" would both r&#13;
dabblin m th tudio&#13;
espec1all without th&#13;
charged Moon to 1n pir th m .&#13;
But the did p1c a wood rful&#13;
album to close out th tr br1lli nt&#13;
band with&#13;
Chiwaukee News&#13;
Recipe respectfull submitted to the Ran r lrom lr1 nd of food&#13;
co-op&#13;
CHEDDAR CHEESE SOUP&#13;
2 medium carrots, scraped and minced&#13;
st I r minced&#13;
1 onion, Imel chopped&#13;
' • cup flour&#13;
½ teaspoon alt&#13;
1/ 8 tea poon ~htte pepper&#13;
1 quart chic en broth ex table broth&#13;
1 pound ra , sharp, ch ddar ch&#13;
1 cup hea er am&#13;
1 cup m,t&#13;
THE RING&#13;
YOU WEAR FORMR&#13;
WILL SAVE YOU $10&#13;
RIGHTNOW.&#13;
JOSIEN'S NATIONAL COWGE&#13;
RING WEEK. OCTOBER 16-21.&#13;
AVAILABLE AT&#13;
U. W. - PARKSIDE BOOKSTORE &#13;
Wednesday October 11,1978&#13;
Informal Alternative To Ho~ors&#13;
by Nicki Kroll&#13;
There is a program in its initial&#13;
stages here at Parkside which is&#13;
designed for students in their&#13;
first two years of college with a&#13;
CPA of 3.5 or higher. It is for&#13;
Academically Talented and&#13;
Specially Skilled Students (ATSS&#13;
as it is called by its creators) and&#13;
it gives such students the&#13;
opportunity to pursue rn honors&#13;
type of format and to accelerate&#13;
their studies to their own&#13;
advantage.&#13;
Working. together with faculty&#13;
advisors, the students can&#13;
organize colloquia involving&#13;
guest speakers to discuss topics&#13;
of special interest and concern.&#13;
The students also have the&#13;
opportunity to- accelerate their&#13;
studies, take on extra work for&#13;
extra credit if they wish, and may&#13;
even make certain substitutions&#13;
for their graduation requirements.&#13;
Because Parkside does&#13;
not have an honors program&#13;
which sometimes puts extra&#13;
stress on students involved, itis&#13;
hoped that the informal format&#13;
of ATSSwill make it that much&#13;
more provocative to qualified&#13;
students.&#13;
The director of ATSS, Alan&#13;
Shucard, Associate Professor of&#13;
English, along with the members&#13;
of the Steering Committee, held&#13;
its first_ get-together with&#13;
students interested in ATSS&#13;
during Registration Week for the&#13;
Fall semester. At this gettogether&#13;
the students and faculty&#13;
were introduced and. discussed&#13;
how they could set up a format&#13;
for colloquia and a Seminar&#13;
Series on a regular basis best&#13;
suited to the majority.&#13;
A questionnaire was given to&#13;
students asking what times they&#13;
are available, their qualification&#13;
for joining the program and their&#13;
own ideas on how ATSS cap&#13;
benefit them. Through th is&#13;
questionnaire, Prof. Shucard was&#13;
able to set up a regular schedule&#13;
for a Seminar Series to be held&#13;
once every three weeks. At these&#13;
seminars students can meet with&#13;
various guests (one each time as&#13;
requested by students) who will&#13;
speak on topics which the&#13;
students want to discuss. They&#13;
will be handled as "seminars"&#13;
giving students the opportunity&#13;
to interact with tile invited guest.&#13;
"The first of these seminars is to&#13;
'be held Tuesday, 10 Octoberfrom&#13;
3:00 to 4:00 p.m. in the&#13;
Faculty Lounge (Classroom 111).&#13;
Subsequent seminars will be held&#13;
in three week intervals following&#13;
the f rst one. -&#13;
ATSS is also offeringJts first&#13;
colloquium in Spring of 1979.&#13;
Prof. Shucard calls it "A&#13;
Thorough Study of the American&#13;
Dream from a number of&#13;
'perspectives." It will be made&#13;
available to ATSS students and&#13;
others with. special permission&#13;
from the Program, From there&#13;
ATSS hopes to offer on~&#13;
"colloquium per semester to be&#13;
handled in the same manner.&#13;
ATSS . is looking for more&#13;
students with a high CPA. It can&#13;
only become better with more&#13;
members, Prof. Shucard stresses&#13;
the fact that ATSSis designed "to&#13;
provide intellectual and social&#13;
(to' some extent) focus in the&#13;
university lives of our best&#13;
students." Prof. Shucard's office&#13;
is located in Communication&#13;
Arts 236. Outside his office is a&#13;
notice board where notices of&#13;
-special interests are posted. He&#13;
welcomes one and all to stop by&#13;
and find out more about ATSS&#13;
because it is there and because it -&#13;
can only be continued with the&#13;
support of Parkside's academically&#13;
talented students.&#13;
Smallpox DiSCUSSion'&#13;
Professor james C. Frauenthal,&#13;
Department of Mathematics&#13;
State Univers-ity of New York at&#13;
Stony Brook, will give a talk&#13;
sponsored by the Mathematics&#13;
discipline, entitled, "Smallpox:&#13;
When Should Routine Vaccination&#13;
Be Discontinuedt" The talk&#13;
will be held this Friday at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in Classroom 107. It will be&#13;
preceded -by a coffee in&#13;
Classroom 111 at 3:00 p.m.&#13;
Professor Frauenthal has' a&#13;
PhD. from Harvard in Applied&#13;
Mathematics and has been a&#13;
Research Assistant in Population&#13;
Studies at Harvard School of&#13;
Public Health, He is an Associate&#13;
Professor of Applied Mathematics.&#13;
--..,&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
Matillll3l Varsity Club&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
~./ \'lAJl&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue KenoSho,Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 6~774 -&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
a Enoug 0&#13;
Political Parties?&#13;
Join the&#13;
o Anti-Political Partyl&#13;
emocrots and Republ' ff •&#13;
ing your life and two 1~:t~S0 er h;o ways of control]-&#13;
sidize. The Liberto' of speclcl interests to subview&#13;
of politiC!&gt;. non party has an entirely different&#13;
To request infonnation&#13;
can 637-9576 - Oct. 11- Nov. 11, 1918&#13;
. THE LIBERTARIAN PARTY . .&#13;
~r wnte, Send your nome &amp; dd .-&#13;
Ion Porty 115 S p. k a ress to: WISe. Libertor-&#13;
, . Inc ney Sf M d'&#13;
Author;zed &amp; Poid for W· rb·' 0 .•son. W;s. 53703&#13;
genburg. Treas. I$C. I ertcrion Party fred RinOne&#13;
of many student works on display at the Library&#13;
photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
.Regents OK Funds Tc» Parksid&#13;
--effe~tive interest rate f~r debt&#13;
service on the structure to 3.0-&#13;
percent; student financial aid&#13;
funds for basic educational&#13;
opportunity grants totalling&#13;
$331,580, an addition to&#13;
$616,766 in federal funds· for&#13;
other student financial aid&#13;
programs accepted by the&#13;
regents In August for UW-P;&#13;
More than $600,000 in federal&#13;
funds for various programs at the&#13;
University of Wiscons.in-Parkside&#13;
was accepted here Friday' (Oct.&#13;
6) by the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Th.e funds included-~n interest&#13;
subsidv for the Parkside Union of&#13;
$1.66,828, part, of a 30-year $3.5&#13;
million grand which reduces the&#13;
10% DISCOUNT&#13;
To Parkside students and faculty&#13;
~embers only, on all merchandise&#13;
lD our store. Parkside I.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
Phone 858-2525 KenOsha, Wisconsin&#13;
-;&#13;
Comprehensiv~ Employmenta&#13;
Training Act (CEl A) moni&#13;
totalling $151,634 for hiri.&#13;
limited term employees; and&#13;
yeteran's cost of" instruction&#13;
assistance funds of $11809.&#13;
The regents also' accepted&#13;
$420 .earmarked for musiC&#13;
scholarships at UW-Parkside.&#13;
'ub,&#13;
nub&#13;
~rub&#13;
ilinto&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
EVERY FRIDAY&#13;
• 4 - 7&#13;
c&#13;
Wednesday October 11, 1978&#13;
Informal Alternative To Honors ,&#13;
by Nicki Kroll&#13;
There is a'program in its initial&#13;
stages here at Parkside which is&#13;
designed for students in their&#13;
first two years of college with a&#13;
GPA of 3.5 or higher. It is for&#13;
Academically Talented and&#13;
Specially Skilled Students (ATSS&#13;
as it is called by its creators) and&#13;
it gives such students the . ~ h opportunity to pursue an onors&#13;
type of format and to accelerate&#13;
their studies to their own&#13;
advantage.&#13;
Working. together with faculty&#13;
advisors, the students can&#13;
organize colloquia involving&#13;
guest speakers to discuss topics&#13;
of special interest and concern.&#13;
The students also have the&#13;
opportunity to- accelerate their&#13;
studies, take on extra work for&#13;
extra credit if they wish, and may&#13;
even make certain substitutions&#13;
for their graduation requirements.&#13;
Because Parkside aoes&#13;
not have an honors program&#13;
which sometimes puts extra&#13;
stress on students involved, it. is&#13;
hoped that the informal format&#13;
of ATSS will make it that much&#13;
more provocative to qualified&#13;
students.&#13;
The director of ATSS, Alan&#13;
Shucard, Associate Professor of&#13;
English, along with the members&#13;
of the Steering Committee, held&#13;
its first get-together with&#13;
students · interested in ATSS&#13;
during Registration Week for the_&#13;
Fall semester. At this gettogether&#13;
the students and faculty&#13;
were introduced and. discussed&#13;
how they could set up a format&#13;
for col1oquia and a Seminar&#13;
Series on a regular basis best&#13;
suited to the majority.&#13;
A questionnaire was given to&#13;
students asking what times they&#13;
are available, their qualification&#13;
- for joining the program and their&#13;
Smallpox DiscuSsfoa&#13;
Professor James C. Frauenthal&#13;
Department of Mathematics'&#13;
State University of New York a~&#13;
Stony Brook, will give a talk&#13;
sponsored by the Mathematics&#13;
discipline, entitled, "Smallpox:&#13;
When Should Routine Vaccination&#13;
Be Discontinued?;' The talk&#13;
will be held this Friday at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in Classroom 107. It will be&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
preceded ·by a coffee in&#13;
Classroom 111 at 3:00 p.m.&#13;
Professor Frauenthal has · a&#13;
Ph.D. from Harvard in Applied&#13;
Mathematics and has been a&#13;
Research Assistant in Population&#13;
Studies at Harvard School of&#13;
Public Health. He is an Associate&#13;
Professor of Applied Mathematics.&#13;
&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-077 4&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
a Enoug o&#13;
Political Parties?&#13;
Join the&#13;
0 Anti-Political Partyt emocrots a nd Republ" ff • ing your life and two i;;,ns o er h~o ways of controllsidize.&#13;
The Libertor" s of special interests to .subview&#13;
of politics. . ion party hos on entirely different&#13;
To request infonnation&#13;
Call 637-9576 Oct. 11- Nov. 11, 1978&#13;
. THE LIBERTARIAN PARTY - · ~r write: Send your name &amp; dd . /&#13;
ion Porty, 115 S. Pinckne ~ ress :o: Wisc. LibertorAuthorized&#13;
&amp; Paid for w· Y L~b-, Mo~ison, Wis. 53703&#13;
genburg, Treas. ,sc. ' ertorion Porty Fred Rinown&#13;
ideas on how ATSS can&#13;
benefit them. Through this -&#13;
questionnaire, Prof. Shucard was&#13;
able to set up a regular schedule&#13;
for a Seminar Series to be held&#13;
once every three weeks . At these&#13;
seminars students can meet with&#13;
various guests (one each time as&#13;
requested by students) who will&#13;
speak on topics which tl)e&#13;
students want to discuss. They&#13;
will be handled as "seminars"&#13;
giving ~tudents th"e opportunity&#13;
to interact with ttie invited guest.&#13;
- The first of these seminars is to&#13;
• be held Tuesday, 10 Oc-toberfrom&#13;
3:00 to 4:00 p.m. in the&#13;
Faculty Lounge (Classroom 111).&#13;
Subsequent seminars will be held&#13;
in three week intervals following&#13;
the first one. ·&#13;
ATSS is also offering, its first&#13;
colloquium in Spring of 1979.&#13;
Prof . Shu card calls it "A&#13;
Thorough Study of the American&#13;
Dream from a number of&#13;
·perspectives." It will be made&#13;
available to ATSS students and&#13;
others With special permission&#13;
from the Program. From there,&#13;
ATSS hopes to offer one&#13;
- colloquium per semester to be&#13;
handled in the same manner.&#13;
ATSS · is looking for more&#13;
students with a high GPA. It can&#13;
only become better with more&#13;
members. Prof. Shucard stresses&#13;
the fact that ATSS is designed "to&#13;
provide intellectual and social&#13;
(to some extent) focus in the&#13;
university lives of our best&#13;
students." Prof. Shucard's office&#13;
is located in Communication&#13;
Arts 236. Outside his office is a&#13;
notice board where notices of&#13;
special interests are posted. He&#13;
welcomes one and all to stop by&#13;
and find out more about ATSS&#13;
because it is there and because i~ -&#13;
can only be continued with the&#13;
support of Parkside's academically&#13;
talented students.&#13;
photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
· Regents OK Funds To Parkside&#13;
More than $600,000 in federal&#13;
funds for various programs at the&#13;
University of Wisconsjn-Parkside&#13;
was accepted here Friday' (Oct&#13;
6) by the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Th_e funds included-ran interest&#13;
subsidy for the Parkside Union of&#13;
$1_66,828, part_ of a "30-year $3.S&#13;
million grand which reduces th . e&#13;
_effe~tive interest rate for debt&#13;
service on the structure to 3.0&#13;
percent; student financial aid&#13;
funds for basic educational&#13;
opportunity grants totalling&#13;
$331,580, an addition to&#13;
$616,766 in federal funds for&#13;
other student financial aid&#13;
programs accepted by the&#13;
regents in August for UW-P·&#13;
I&#13;
10% DISCOUNT&#13;
To Parkside students and f I b . acuty&#13;
~em ers only' on all merchandise&#13;
in our store. Parkside I.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
_ Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
\&#13;
Y~i:_SOnJ&#13;
Kenosha's Diamond Ce te 1 n r&#13;
5617 • 6th Avenue&#13;
Phone 658-2525 Kenosha w· . • _ 1scons1n&#13;
Comprehensiv~ Employment and&#13;
Training Act (CETA) monies&#13;
totalling $151,634 for hiring&#13;
limited term employees; and&#13;
veteran's cost of instruction&#13;
assistance funds of $11,809.&#13;
The regents also accepted&#13;
$420 earmarked for music&#13;
~cholarships at UW-Parkside.&#13;
C&#13;
.. Jub_&#13;
anh&#13;
&lt;&amp;rub&#13;
iisco &#13;
I&#13;
..lIday Octaber 11,1978&#13;
Coming&#13;
Events&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 11&#13;
BagLunch starting at 12 noon in WLLC 0174. Mr. Jack&#13;
of the Kenosha Achievement Center wi II talk on "The&#13;
icapped: A Segregated People." The program is free and&#13;
to the publ ic.&#13;
re Film at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre featuring&#13;
aterman, an underwater cinematographer. Admission is&#13;
for Parkside students and $1.50 for others. Tickets are&#13;
ble at the Union Information Center. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Men's soccer vs. Aurora College. (3:30 p.rn.)&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 12&#13;
at 8 p.m. in Union Square featuring "Wet Behind the&#13;
Admissionwill be charged. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
at 8 p.m. in the CAT with the Vienna Boys Choir. All&#13;
have been sold .. Sponsored by Accent on Enrichment&#13;
ittee.&#13;
Women'svolleyball vs. Northwestern University (6 p.m.)&#13;
Friday, Oct. 13&#13;
rat 2 p.m. in CL 105. Sponsored by Science Division.&#13;
ogramis free and open to the public.&#13;
uium at 4 p.m. in CL 107. The program is free and open&#13;
public.&#13;
"The Omen" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
a Theatre.Admission is $1.00 for a Parkside student and&#13;
for a guest.Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Men's cross-country at Purdue Invitational, West&#13;
e, Ind.&#13;
n's tennis at Carthage. (2 p.m.)&#13;
Senate meeting. Any and all. students, . faculty,&#13;
istrators are welcome.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 14&#13;
starting at 9 p.m. in Union Square. Admission is $1.00 in&#13;
ce and $1.50at the door. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Men's soccer vs. Marquette. (2 p.m.)&#13;
Club Disco-Dance at9 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
Sunday,Oct.1S&#13;
"The Omen" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
a Theatre.&#13;
Monday, Oct. 16&#13;
Table at12:15 p.m. in Union 106. Prof. Lee Thayer will&#13;
n "Communication and Social Science." Admission is&#13;
nd opento interested staff and students .&#13;
Women'sVolleyball at Carroll College with Valparaiso.&#13;
p.m.)&#13;
Wednesday,Oct.18 .•&#13;
Houseatl p.m. in Union 104-106 featuring John Stierna&#13;
singer.Admission is free. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
ogy Readings from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
id ssion is free. Marcella Ruble Rook will also give free&#13;
,0)lIl reon reading auras and mystic powers at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
: I CinemaTheatre. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
111,-&#13;
:~~':-t~QI)~l~be-~!!IIw-e-e-t~1!P1t~ll-p-pe""&#13;
IN THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
•&#13;
['1&#13;
OCTOBER SPECIAL&#13;
b&#13;
CANDY&#13;
CORN&#13;
l~ ' • ALSO FEATURING OVER I' 30 OTHER NUTS s CANOIES&#13;
SOLD THE OLD FASHIONED WAY.&#13;
~I0 8.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
MON - FR.&#13;
tehind The Woodshed&#13;
by ScarfO'toole&#13;
I was awakened this morning&#13;
by a phone ringing in my ears.&#13;
Reaching into the ashtray and&#13;
swallowing the last of my Old&#13;
Gold Filters(love t~e coupons),&#13;
I picked up the receiver and&#13;
mumbled something about&#13;
office hours. It turned out to be&#13;
my editor who informed me that&#13;
I hadn't held regular office&#13;
hours since 1937. He had just&#13;
read my resignation from this&#13;
newspaper and was questioning&#13;
my motivation.&#13;
"Well, it's like this." I told&#13;
him. "It seemsas if someone has&#13;
snuck into my offfice and&#13;
cleaned it. In the process, they&#13;
took my stash of Reese's&#13;
Peanutbutter Cups and replaced&#13;
them with a copy of Self Help&#13;
for the Chronically Depressed by&#13;
Iris Cornfield."&#13;
"Relax," he said. "You're the&#13;
only available writer here who&#13;
could review this hook. It's&#13;
become a very hot seller on this&#13;
campus and we need the review&#13;
by 9:00 a.rn." I looked at the&#13;
clock and noticed it was 8:30.&#13;
"No problem here, Chief," I told&#13;
him. "I'll have it on your desk in&#13;
a half hour," I said as I placed&#13;
the phone back in its cradle. I&#13;
fell back asleepand dreamedof&#13;
a tall cool one but woke up&#13;
twenty minutes later remembering&#13;
my assignment.&#13;
Alas, dear reader, I found the&#13;
book to be thoroughly enjoyable.&#13;
Cornfield has done things&#13;
with the English language that&#13;
would make some of my worst&#13;
offerings look like competent&#13;
excursions into the realm of&#13;
serious journalistic endeavor.&#13;
Her treatment of the danger&#13;
signals of depression were&#13;
particularly insightful, especially&#13;
the part about the young fair&#13;
maiden and the things she did&#13;
with the seven dwarves and the&#13;
black velvet whip.&#13;
Anyway, I recommend that&#13;
you read th is book if you are&#13;
trying to survive the rigors of the&#13;
college syndrome. There are&#13;
chapters on psychological selfhelp&#13;
for those times when you&#13;
feel that the conventional&#13;
thought process has abandoned&#13;
you.&#13;
What is even more important,&#13;
is that the book explained (even&#13;
to me) why when you wake up in&#13;
the morning you have a funny&#13;
taste in your mouth. As&#13;
Cornfield states, "There are&#13;
many things which leave a bad&#13;
taste in Our mouths. Perhaps, a&#13;
study in character assassination&#13;
has left you with a bad taste in&#13;
your mouth. My advice is to go&#13;
back to doing what you were&#13;
doing before you were assassinated.&#13;
Everything will seem just&#13;
like before, except now you will&#13;
have no ego."&#13;
It sounds as if Cornfield has&#13;
struck upon something which is&#13;
bigger.than the both of us.&#13;
Editor's Note: Mr. O'toole was&#13;
last seen exposing himself on a&#13;
bus just outside of Pittsburgh. If&#13;
anyone has any knowledge of&#13;
his whereabouts; please contact&#13;
his landlady. He owes her SIX&#13;
years in back rent.&#13;
7&#13;
Classified&#13;
Ads&#13;
FOR SAlE&#13;
74 Gremlin 3 ~. low InllMge, 000d&#13;
tUM, no rust. 11.3:50 Call S37...J01M&#13;
Drum set, L~ prof .... onat drum Nt&#13;
(whUe pelrl.) Include. Tom •• Tom.,&#13;
cymbOls, stands, acc.uonel and e:atTy1"Q&#13;
cases, C.1I 654--1880&#13;
72 Toyota Corol'- excellent condlttOn, no&#13;
rust, brand new Inttw'tOf. autOfNtic:, 0,..1&#13;
oas mllMge. extfU MUll .. c:rehoe; ukll'lQ&#13;
12,000. Clill Dewn -834-1m&#13;
P£RSONAL&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Join the Gus Fan Club. For &lt;MIlail'S eeu&#13;
634-a209, Ask lor Stan.&#13;
Bass and Iwo vlolinlsttlor KlCOmpanYfT*'lI&#13;
No ~y; for • lew beneftt 0101 al'Id tunt&#13;
Popular I1'MJSICand Of1glnala MUlt be IIb't&#13;
to improvise Caft efter 5:30 - 833-1210&#13;
(Other - types 01 musicians .,. r~ to&#13;
inqUire.)&#13;
Room"""e _WQI1{lng glf1 10 aher'Ii .-:penees&#13;
with female student in K.en0l;~ ...... For&#13;
Information C111lMairy at 564-5486 an. e&#13;
p.m.&#13;
THE HAIR co.&#13;
Styling Salon for Men &amp; Women&#13;
933 Washington Road Kenosha 657-4918&#13;
When it's 6weeks into the semester&#13;
and 34 books have just arrived for a class of S8&#13;
•••it's no tUne to get filled up.&#13;
~~~~ .......&#13;
~ ~&#13;
'I&#13;
I nesday October 11, 1978&#13;
Con1ing&#13;
Events&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 11&#13;
rn Bag Lunch starting at 12 noon in WLLC D174 . Mr. Jack&#13;
an of the Kenosha Achievement Center will talk on "The&#13;
d,capped: A Segregated People." The program is free and&#13;
, to the public .&#13;
ure Film at 8 p .m . in the Union Cinema Theatre featuring&#13;
aterman, an underwater cinematographer. Admission is&#13;
D for Parkside students and $1.50 for others . Tickets are&#13;
lable at the Union Information Center. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
ts Men's soccer vs . Aurora College . (3:30 p .m.)&#13;
Thursday, Oct.12&#13;
cert at 8 p.m . in Union Square featuring " Wet Behind the&#13;
'' Admission will be charged . Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
cert at 8 p.m . in the CAT with t he Vienna Boys Choir. All&#13;
have been sold . . Sponsored by Accent on Enrichment&#13;
ittee.&#13;
tts Women's volleyball vs. Northwestern University (6 p .m .)&#13;
Friday, Oct. 13&#13;
ar at 2 p.m . in CL 105. Sponsored by Science Division .&#13;
program is free and open to the public .&#13;
uium at 4 p.m . in CL 107 . The program is free and open&#13;
public .&#13;
"The Omen" will be shown at 8 p .m . in the Union&#13;
ma Theatre. Admission is $1 .00 for a Parkside student and&#13;
for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Men's cross-country at Purdue Invitational, West&#13;
ette, Ind .&#13;
en's tennis at Carthage. (2 p .m .)&#13;
Senate meeting. Any and all . students, · faculty,&#13;
Istrators are welcome.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 14&#13;
starting at 9 p .m . in Union Square. Admission is $1 .00 in&#13;
ce and $1.50 at the door. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Men's soccer vs . Marquette. (2 p.m .)&#13;
rClub Disco-Dance at 9 p.m . in Union Square.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 15&#13;
"The Omen" wil l be repeated at 7 :30 p.m . in the Union&#13;
a Theatre.&#13;
. Monday, Oct.16&#13;
eo,nrj d Table at 12 :15 p .m . in Union 106. Prof . Lee Thayer will&#13;
n "Communication and Social Science ." Admission is&#13;
and open to interested staff and students .&#13;
SIi s Women's Volleyball at Carroll College with Valparaiso .&#13;
Pm .)&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 18_&#13;
e House at 1 p .m. in Union 104-106 featuring John Stiernloyl!IE"&#13;
a singer. Admission is free . Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
iTA) iitlogy Readings from 11 a.m . tQ 3 p .m. in Union Square .&#13;
fOI iss,on is free . Marcella Ruble Rook will also give free&#13;
loyeel Jre on reading auras and mystic powers at 7 :10 p .m . in the&#13;
in!ll'1&gt;n Cinema Theatre . Sponsored by PA0&#13;
B.&#13;
11,~&#13;
a&#13;
~~11 flt ®lht ~Wttt ~ltnppt&#13;
IN THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
OCTOBER SPECIAL&#13;
CANDY&#13;
CORN&#13;
25c ½ LB.&#13;
110 ,,, - ALSO FEATURING OVER&#13;
UP 30 OTHER NUTS &amp; CANDIES&#13;
SOLD THE OLD FASHIONED WAY.&#13;
~flo a.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
MON - FRI&#13;
'R$nger 7&#13;
Behind The Woodshed&#13;
by Scarf O'toole&#13;
I was awakened this morning&#13;
by a phone ringing in my ears.&#13;
Reaching into the ashtray and&#13;
swallowing the last of my Old&#13;
Gold Filters (love th~e coupons),&#13;
I picked up the receiver and&#13;
mumbled something about&#13;
office hours. It turned out to be&#13;
my editor who informed me that&#13;
I hadn't held regular office&#13;
hours since 1937. He had just&#13;
read my resignation from this&#13;
newspaper and was questioning&#13;
my motivation.&#13;
''Well, it's like this," I told&#13;
him. " It seems as if someone has&#13;
snuck into my offfice and&#13;
cleaned it. In the process, they&#13;
took my stash of Reese's&#13;
Peanutbutter Cups and replaced&#13;
them with a copy of Self Help&#13;
for the Chronically Depressed by&#13;
Iris Cornfield."&#13;
"Relax," he said. "You're the&#13;
only available writer here who&#13;
could review this book. It's&#13;
become a very hot seller on this&#13;
campus and we need the review&#13;
by 9:00 a.m." I looked at the&#13;
clock and noticed it was 8:30.&#13;
"No problem here, Chief," I told&#13;
him. " I'll have it on your desk in&#13;
a half hour," I said as I placed&#13;
the phone back in its cradle. I&#13;
fell back asleep and dreamed of&#13;
a tall cool one but woke up&#13;
twenty minutes later remembering&#13;
my assignment.&#13;
Alas, dear reader, I found the&#13;
book to be thoroughly enjoyable.&#13;
Cornfield has done things&#13;
with the English language that&#13;
would make some of my worst&#13;
offerings look like competent&#13;
excursions into the realm of&#13;
serious journalistic endeavor.&#13;
Her treatment of the danger&#13;
signals of depression were&#13;
particularly insightful, especially&#13;
the part about the young fair&#13;
t&#13;
.r.,-:- . - ,,.,. .. ,-,&#13;
\&#13;
maiden and the things she dtd&#13;
with the seven dwarves and the&#13;
black velvet whip.&#13;
Anyway, I recommend that&#13;
you read this book ,f you are&#13;
trying to survive the rigors of the&#13;
college syndrome. There are&#13;
chapters on psychological selfhelp&#13;
for those times when you&#13;
feel that the conventional&#13;
thought process has abandoned&#13;
you.&#13;
What is even more important,&#13;
is that the book explained (even&#13;
to me) why when you wake up in&#13;
the morning you have a funny&#13;
taste i n your mouth. As&#13;
Cornfield states, ''There are&#13;
many things which leave a bad&#13;
taste in our mouths. Perhaps, a&#13;
study in character assassination&#13;
has left you with a bad taste in&#13;
your mouth. My advice is to go&#13;
back to doing what you were&#13;
doing before you were assassinated.&#13;
Everything will seem just&#13;
like before, except now you will&#13;
have no ego."&#13;
It sounds as if Cornfield has&#13;
struck upon something which is&#13;
bigger than the both of us.&#13;
Editor's Note: Mr. O'toole was&#13;
last seen exposing himself on a&#13;
bus just outside of Pittsburgh. If&#13;
anyone has any knowledge ot&#13;
his whereabouts, please contact&#13;
his landlady. He owes her six&#13;
years in back rent.&#13;
Classified&#13;
Ads&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
• good&#13;
Orum set Ludw,g prol ona drum Mt&#13;
(whole pearl.) Includes Toma-Toma ,&#13;
cymbols, stands, acceno and cany,ng&#13;
cases Catt &amp;54-1880&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
Jom the Gus Fen Club Fo,- de 111 call&#13;
63-C-8209 A forSt.an.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Bass and lwo viohn,ata for l0COffl yment&#13;
No ~y; for a few benefit g,ga and fun!&#13;
Popular mus,c and onglnala, Mu t be Ible&#13;
to Improvise Call attw 5:30 - m-1210&#13;
(Other types of mus,c,ans I to&#13;
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Roommate : WOl1ttng gll1 to ahwe a..pen&#13;
with female student ,n a.ha at Fo,&#13;
onfo,mation call Mary at 55'-5468 f II&#13;
p.m.&#13;
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- -&#13;
When it's 6 weeks into the semester&#13;
and 34 books have just arrived for a class of 35 ... it's no time to get filled up. ""-==--'&#13;
~ &#13;
Wednesday -October 11,1978&#13;
~g.r&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
Ready For State&#13;
Golfers Await River Falls, Tourney&#13;
Coach Steve Stephen's golfers, all have to be considered in the&#13;
getting better as the end of the top five" in the district and you&#13;
season approaches, will vie in can't count out River Falls or&#13;
the NA1ADistrict 14 Tournament Stevens Point either. I'm&#13;
UW-River Falls Monday and expecting a close tournament."&#13;
Tuesday, October 9 &amp; 10, at The individual winner and the&#13;
UW-River Falls. team champions in the two-day,&#13;
Stephens' young golfers, while 36-hole tourney will earn berths&#13;
perhapsnot the favorites in the in the NAIA national tournadistrict&#13;
clash, have to be ment, scheduled for June 5·8,&#13;
considered a -team to reckon 1979, at Guilford, N.C.&#13;
with in light of their second Stephens, whose squad beat&#13;
place finish in last week's Carthage- 399-402 in a dual meet&#13;
Whitewater Invitational and win Monday, will warm' up for the&#13;
in their own meet here Saturday, district with a dual Friday against&#13;
"We're coming on," Stephens Marquette at Tumblebrook&#13;
said. "We have some capable Country Club. The Rangers will&#13;
golfers and they're really playing go through a practice round&#13;
well now. I think there/are three Sunday at the par 72 River Falls&#13;
or four really outstanding golters course before going into&#13;
in the district and we've got one competition Monday morning.&#13;
in jim Webers so he should be The six-man Parkside tournaright&#13;
in their for medalist honors. ment squad will include Webers&#13;
"LaCrosse, Oshkosh, Eau - a junior from Racine (Case);&#13;
Ctaire, p.,kside and Whitewater Todd Schaunske. .a freshman,&#13;
n~fmNQI1&#13;
~~rID@1ir§ ~~~1r~OO&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th AVf!J. in; 62nd St.&#13;
Establishad in 1930&#13;
PAS Rim Comm. -Invites you to&#13;
liTHE OMEN"&#13;
Starring&#13;
Gregory Peek &amp;. ~ee Rentlek&#13;
Fri, Oct. 9- 8:00 PM&#13;
Sun, Oct. -11- 7:30 PM&#13;
81.00 UnionCinema&#13;
brothers Bob, a sophomore, aO(;:I&#13;
John, a junior, all from Racine&#13;
(Horlick); and sophomore Gary&#13;
Paskiewicz trom Kenosha (Bradford):&#13;
Stephens will choose&#13;
between junior Casey Griffin&#13;
(Case) and Brian Graham&#13;
(Horlick) for,his sixth man after a&#13;
playoff between the two&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Women's Volleyball&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
sporls Editor&#13;
Parkside's women's tennis&#13;
team had a tough time of it this&#13;
past week as they won one&#13;
match against Carroll College&#13;
last Tuesday and lost two on&#13;
Saturday against UW-Whitewate~&#13;
and UW-Milwaukee. Their&#13;
overall season record is now 4-5.&#13;
Coach Sue Tobachnik said that&#13;
the team has improved a lot over&#13;
last year and that the potential to&#13;
do well in the state to,urnament&#13;
coming up' next week if&#13;
everybody stays healthy.&#13;
In Tuesdays match at Carroll&#13;
the Rangers had seven victories&#13;
. to just two defeats. The wins&#13;
came from Kathy Thomas,&#13;
Kathie Feichtner, Pam Blair,&#13;
Marge Balazs, Cathy Brownlee&#13;
on the singles side and trom the&#13;
doubles teams of Blair~Balazs ~&#13;
and Brownlee~Feichtner&#13;
Things di,dn't go qUi~&#13;
as Parks ide went to Ca&#13;
lose to UW-Whitewa&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. The&#13;
managed three wins&#13;
Whitewater coming from&#13;
Logic and Pam Blair&#13;
singles column and' fr&#13;
doubles team of Kathy&#13;
i Kathy Thomas.&#13;
They weren't so lucky&#13;
Milwaukee as the Rangen&#13;
to win a match all&#13;
Milwaukee has a former&#13;
player who was able to&#13;
amatuer status. Kathylogic&#13;
three sets with her.&#13;
The women will finish&#13;
regular season at Cart&#13;
Friday and will then&#13;
in the WWIAC ConI&#13;
Tournament at Whitewa&#13;
weekend,&#13;
, -&#13;
Consistency Is Key To Succe&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Parkside's women's volleyball&#13;
team travelled to De Kalb last&#13;
weekend to parttcoate in the&#13;
Nocthern Illinois Invitational&#13;
Tournament and came back with&#13;
three very -impressive wins in&#13;
four matches. last Tuesday the&#13;
team also looked good as they&#13;
defeated UW-Whitewater and&#13;
North Park College. These two&#13;
-gcod outings brought the team's&#13;
overall season record to 9-12-3.&#13;
"The team has finally&#13;
developed consistency and&#13;
confidence," Coach Linda Henderson&#13;
had nothing but good&#13;
words for her team, which is&#13;
preparing for a tough match this&#13;
Tuesday which will feature&#13;
UW-Madison and UW-Oshkosh&#13;
in Madison.&#13;
At the meet at Northern the&#13;
Ranger's started out with a tough&#13;
match with Northern Illinois.&#13;
This was the third year that&#13;
Parkside has gone to De Kalb and&#13;
Niu defeated them the two&#13;
previous years and the team&#13;
reallv wanted to bea'tl them this&#13;
year: As it turned out the&#13;
~&#13;
tJr UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE&#13;
..--,~iNJIl" SEMESTER BREAK IN ,t~~~CAPUI;CO , JANUARY 2·9, 1979 1. TRIP INClUDES· ii'I!!: R:UND TRIP JET AIR VIA BRANIFF 'AIRLINES II 7 NIGHTS LODGING IN LUXURY BEACHFRONT HOLIDAY INN·&#13;
11f1 ... • FUll BREAKFAST BUFFET DAilY&#13;
iii'! , • ii! I ROUND TRIP GROUND TRAN.SFERS .~. . -" ~ TIPS &amp; TAXES ON THE ABOVE&#13;
if!. • GROUP ESCORrTHROUGHOUT&#13;
fl'&#13;
tJ" tl'·~8."··. ~"'l&#13;
~ .~ ~&#13;
~., . &gt;,&#13;
.,)I~"'~ ,i:&#13;
.. -~....", '.&#13;
Ranger's got their way although&#13;
it took five games to do it. NIU&#13;
won the first game 16-14, but&#13;
Parks ide came back in the&#13;
second game 17-15. The teams&#13;
split the next two games, with&#13;
the Rangers winning 15-7 and&#13;
NIU winning 15-4. The Rangers&#13;
took the deciding game 15-10.&#13;
" Parks ide then lost to a much&#13;
improved Northweslern university&#13;
team~ in three straight games&#13;
by scores of 15-9 15-4 and&#13;
15-12. Parkside' will' host&#13;
Northwestern along with&#13;
Milwaukee and KelloggC&#13;
nity College this Thursday.&#13;
UW-Milwaukee was a&#13;
easier as the Rangers beat&#13;
in three straight by sco&#13;
15-8, 15-10and 15-10.&#13;
In their last match of tho&#13;
they squeaked by a very&#13;
Illinois Central team in&#13;
games, Illinois Central, a i&#13;
college, has participated in&#13;
national tournament the I&#13;
years.&#13;
Cross-Country fairs W&#13;
The Parks ide Cross-Country-&#13;
·team had a good outing'&#13;
Saturday, as they had their best&#13;
times 'but they finished 11th out&#13;
of 17 colleges in the lakefront&#13;
Invitational, with 264 points.&#13;
"Coach Rosa said that the team&#13;
had put a good effort into it, with&#13;
the best personal time corning&#13;
from Langenhol who place 4th&#13;
With the time of 24.28.5. From&#13;
there the team went down hill,&#13;
&amp; ADOITIONAl INfORMATION CONTACT, PARKSIDE UNION OffiCE. RM&#13;
Prjena placed 38th witha .&#13;
26.18.4. Karri placed 65&#13;
the time of 26.30.7, and&#13;
placed 96 out of 111 r&#13;
with the time of 21.&#13;
Northern Iowa won the&#13;
with 72· points in the 5&#13;
course.&#13;
Coach Rosa said that with&#13;
meets left ev--erydate is&#13;
better. Friday the team wi~&#13;
the Purdue InvitatiOnal.&#13;
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We offer FREE individual'&#13;
consultations for:&#13;
• Hair Styling&#13;
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9 to 9 Daily&#13;
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Phone: 630-I 507&#13;
4061 N. Main Sf.&#13;
Leaf&#13;
WednesdafOctober 11,1978&#13;
Cjenger&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
Golfers Await River Falls, TOurney&#13;
brothers Bob, a sophomore, and&#13;
John, a junior, all from Racine&#13;
(Horllck); and sophomore Gary&#13;
Paskiewicz from Kenosha (Bradfordf&#13;
Stephens will choose&#13;
between junior Casey Griffin&#13;
(Case) and Brian Graham&#13;
(Horlick) for,his sixth man after a&#13;
playoff between the two&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephen's golfers, all have to be considered in the&#13;
getting better as the end of the top five-- in the •district and you&#13;
season approaches, will vie in can't count out River Falls or&#13;
the NAIA District 14 Tournament Stevens Point either. I'm&#13;
UW-River Falls Monday and expecting a close tournament."&#13;
Tuesday, October 9 &amp; 10, at The individual winner and the&#13;
UW-River Falls. team champions in the two-day,&#13;
Stephens' young golfers, while 36-hole tourney will earn berths&#13;
perhaps not the favorites in the in the NAIA national tournadistrict&#13;
clash , have to be ment, scheduled for June 5-8,&#13;
considered a · team to reckon 1979, at Guilford, N.C.&#13;
with in light of their second Stephens,' whose squad beat&#13;
place finish in last week's Carthage-399-402 in a dual meet&#13;
Whitewater Invitational and win Monday, will warm · up for the&#13;
in their own meet here Saturday. district with a dual Friday against Women's Volleyball&#13;
Women's -Tennis I&#13;
Ready For Staie&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sporfs Editor&#13;
Parkside' s women's tennis&#13;
team had a tough time of it this&#13;
past week as they won one&#13;
match against Carroll College&#13;
last Tuesday and lost two on&#13;
Saturday against UW-\Vhitewate~&#13;
and UW-Milwaukee. Their&#13;
overall season record is now 4-5.&#13;
Coach Sue Tobachnik said that&#13;
the team has improved a lot over&#13;
last year and that the potential to&#13;
do well in the state tournament&#13;
coming up · next week if&#13;
everybody stays healthy.&#13;
and Brownlee-Feichtner&#13;
Things didn't go qui·t· . ' e as&#13;
as Parkside went to Carth&#13;
lose to UW-Whitewat&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. The~&#13;
managed three wins&#13;
Whitewater coming from&#13;
Logic and Pam Blair&#13;
singles column and° fr on&#13;
douqles team of Kathy~&#13;
1 Kathy Thomas.&#13;
They weren't so lucky&#13;
Milwa~kee as the Rangersf&#13;
to win a match all&#13;
Milwaukee has a former&#13;
player who was able to r&#13;
amatuer status. Kathy Logic&#13;
three sets with her. In Tuesdays match at Carroll&#13;
the Rangers had seven victories&#13;
' to just two defeats. The wins&#13;
came from Kathy Thomas,&#13;
Kathie Feichtner, Pam Blair,&#13;
Marge Balazs, Cathy Brownlee&#13;
on the singles side and from the&#13;
doubles teams of Blair-Balazs -&#13;
The women will finish off&#13;
regular season at Carthage&#13;
Friday and will then partic'&#13;
in the WWIAC Confer&#13;
Tournament at Whitewater&#13;
weekend.&#13;
\ '&#13;
"We're coming on," Stephens Marquette at Tumblebrook&#13;
said. "We have some capable Country Club. The Rangers will&#13;
golfers and they're really playing go through a practice round&#13;
well now. I think there ,are three Sunday at the par 72 River Falls&#13;
or four really outstanding golfers- course before going into&#13;
in the district and we've got one competition Monday morning.&#13;
in Jim Webers so he should be The six-man Parkside tournaright&#13;
in their for medalist honors. ment squad will include Webers&#13;
Consistency Is Key To Succes&#13;
"LaCrosse, Oshkosh, Eau · a junior from Racine (Case)'.&#13;
Claire, Parkside and Whitewater Todd Schalinske, a freshman',&#13;
TYiilN911&#13;
!1~1$11'~ ~~~1'~00&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic ·Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. at 62nd St.&#13;
Established in 1930&#13;
PAB Rim Comm .. lnvites you to&#13;
"THE OMEN"&#13;
Starring&#13;
Gregory Peek &amp; Lee Remlek&#13;
Fri, Oct. 9- 8:00 PM&#13;
Sun, Oct. -11- 7:30 PM&#13;
81 -00 Union Cinema&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Parkside's women's volleyball&#13;
team travelled to De Kalb last&#13;
weekend to particpate in the&#13;
Nor.them Illinois Invitational&#13;
Tournament and came back with&#13;
three very impressive wins in&#13;
four matches. Last Tuesday the&#13;
team also looked good as they&#13;
defeated UW-Whitewater and&#13;
North Park College. These two&#13;
-good outings brought the team's&#13;
overall season record to 9-12-3.&#13;
"The team has finally&#13;
developed consistency and&#13;
confidence." Coach Linda Henderson&#13;
had nothing. but good&#13;
words for her team, which is&#13;
preparing for a tough match this&#13;
Tuesday which will feature&#13;
UW-Madison and UW-Oshkosh&#13;
in Madison.&#13;
At the meet at Northern the&#13;
Ranger's started out with a tough&#13;
match with Northern Illinois&#13;
This was the third year that&#13;
Parkside has gone to De Kalb and&#13;
Niu defeated them the two&#13;
previous years and the team&#13;
really wanted to be.{t, them this&#13;
year: As it turned out the /&#13;
~NIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN _ PARKSIDE&#13;
1&#13;
SEMESTER BREA~ IN&#13;
~ -~~-·&#13;
, -~ACAPULCO&#13;
JANUARY 2-9; 1979&#13;
&amp; ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONT ACT: PARKSIDE OFFICE, RM&#13;
/&#13;
Ranger's got their way although&#13;
it took f ive games to do it. NIU&#13;
won the first game 16-14, but&#13;
Parkside came back in the&#13;
second game 17-15. The teams&#13;
split t_he next two games, w ith&#13;
the Rangers winning 15-7 and&#13;
NIU winning 15-4. The Rangers&#13;
took the deciding game 15-10.&#13;
Northwestern along with&#13;
Milwaukee and Kellogg Com&#13;
nity College this Thursday.&#13;
UW-Milwaukee was a 1,.·. r•-.s•&#13;
easier as the Rangers beat&#13;
in three straight by scores&#13;
15-8, 15-10 and 15-10.&#13;
In their last match of the&#13;
1 Parkside then lost to a much&#13;
improved Northwestern university&#13;
team1in three straight games&#13;
by scores of 15-9, 15-4, and&#13;
15-12. Parkside will host&#13;
they squeaked by a very t&#13;
Illinois Central team in f&#13;
games. Illinois Central, a jun·&#13;
college, has participated ir.&#13;
national tournament the last&#13;
years.&#13;
Cross-Country fairs W&#13;
The Parkside Cross-Country&#13;
team had a good outing .&#13;
Saturday, as they had their best&#13;
times ·but they finished 11th out&#13;
of 17 colleges in the Lakefront&#13;
Invitational, with 264 points.&#13;
'Coach Rosa said that ,the team&#13;
had put a good effort into it , with&#13;
the best personal time coming&#13;
fr~m Langenhol who place 4th&#13;
with the time of 24.28.5. From&#13;
there the team went down hill ,&#13;
Pr_iena placed 38th with a ti&#13;
26.18.4. Karri placed 65th&#13;
the time of 26.30.7; and H&#13;
placed 96 out of 111 run&#13;
with the time of 27.&#13;
Northern Iowa won the&#13;
with 72 . points in the 5 1&#13;
course.&#13;
Coach Rosa said that with ~ meets left e~ry date is g ,&#13;
better. Friday the team will&#13;
the Purdue Invitational.&#13;
"MUCH MOR E THAN JUST H A IR"&#13;
con sulta tio n s for:&#13;
• Hai r Sty ling&#13;
• Con d itioning&#13;
• Makeu p Treatment&#13;
H o urs:&#13;
9 to 9 I:&gt;aily&#13;
8 to 4:30 Saturday&#13;
Ph one: 639· 150 7&#13;
4 0 6 I N . Main S t.&#13;
, _,&#13;
L eaf &#13;
dnesday October 11,1978&#13;
ier rile Pin" Pantiler&#13;
The Clouseau Connection&#13;
ter Sellers is a versatile and character was so popular, in fact,&#13;
renown comedic actor. He that it was decided to star him in&#13;
tarred in such fine movies a film of his own.&#13;
the past years 35 The World The film, again in 1964, was&#13;
my Orient, Dr. Strange/ave called A Shot in the Dark based&#13;
w f stopped worrying and on a popu lar stage play of the&#13;
ed to love the bomb and same name. The film, directed&#13;
'II ouse that Roared. But ask 4i,y Blake Edwards, still remains&#13;
~ e what they think of when the best in the "Panther" series'I&#13;
iIto hear the name Peter Sellers with Closeau bumbling his way&#13;
the majority will undoubt- through a murder investigation&#13;
'- say Inspector Clouseau. with the likes of Elke Sommers as&#13;
III'rI useau began his lucrative a suspect. A Shot in the Dark was&#13;
1111, career way back in the a critical and relative popular&#13;
.. eval age of 1964 in a Blake success and, as a result, the&#13;
!II\. rds film called The Pink character of Clouseau emerged&#13;
•• er, As an inept French as a major comedic figure in the&#13;
I e inspector Clouseau was in movies, again due mainly to&#13;
ty on Iy a secondary Sellers wonderful performance.&#13;
cter to the main stars of the It seemed, however, that after&#13;
David Niven, Claudia A Shot in the Dark the character&#13;
nal (whatever happened to of Clouseau would retire from&#13;
and Robert Wagner. the screen. An unsuccessful&#13;
pite the fact that the film attempt was. made to recapture&#13;
was cleverly ~ritten and the characteristic Clouseauian&#13;
t1yfunny. Seller's Clouseau slapstick in 1968 with a film&#13;
lied the film from the "cute called Inspector Clouseau with&#13;
y" categorie to high slap- Alan Arkin as Clouseau. Sellers,&#13;
farce. The Clouseau however, was too closely&#13;
notes Wllitewater Worksllo&#13;
associated with the character of&#13;
Clouseau and the film was a&#13;
dismal failure.&#13;
Sellers went from movie to&#13;
movie and eventually drifted to&#13;
relative obscurity. Blake Edwards&#13;
went on to make a variety of&#13;
movies including The Great Race&#13;
and maintained a successful&#13;
stature as a director. It seemed&#13;
that their partnership would&#13;
remain just a two shot deal.&#13;
In 1976, nearly twelve years&#13;
after the last "Panther" film it&#13;
was decided that the time was&#13;
ripe to re-establish the partnership.&#13;
Though seemingly a great&#13;
idea, especially to Clouseau fans&#13;
the venture would be ~&#13;
considerable gamble. Afterall, it&#13;
had been twelve years since the&#13;
last movie and attitudes and&#13;
tastes have changed; audiences&#13;
today are "more sophisticated".&#13;
The film, The Return of the&#13;
Pink Panther, turned out to be an&#13;
enormous popular success reaffirming&#13;
that Inspector Clouseau&#13;
was a timeless character to&#13;
David frost Sltares Experiences&#13;
by Thomas jenn&#13;
ning to David Frost is like&#13;
through a copy of TIME&#13;
ine - you meet up with&#13;
!fI great ones. When he&#13;
.. iews a celebrity. he takes a&#13;
I that person with him to&#13;
veyed to his audience. ".--"""'"'1"'-- ... "&#13;
e elusive Senatar&#13;
ually said 'Where&#13;
Id the country be&#13;
ithout this great&#13;
land of ours'&#13;
interviewer-writer recently&#13;
ed a journalism seminar at&#13;
W-Whitewater campus.&#13;
chool papers from across&#13;
sin were sent to the&#13;
s to be graded by a group&#13;
spaper professionals.&#13;
journalism classes feean&#13;
array of newspaper&#13;
ing and management&#13;
were free for those who&#13;
to attend. Mr. Frost's&#13;
, "Interviews I'll rarely&#13;
ended the daylong&#13;
ICIANS POSE PROBLEMS&#13;
in most conversations,&#13;
n of pliticians surfaced,&#13;
r. Frost has had his share&#13;
em. "Politicians raise&#13;
lar problems." He spoke&#13;
relaxed British accent,&#13;
al problem is to get them&#13;
something. They're all&#13;
ined to play safe. .the&#13;
earless thing they'll do is&#13;
me out against road&#13;
nts, or attck litter." One&#13;
senator actually said,&#13;
e would this country be&#13;
t this great land of ours."&#13;
government leaders have&#13;
the tanned, bearded Frost&#13;
f his most cherished lines.&#13;
Kennedy, quizzed as to&#13;
he wanted to be&#13;
be red after he died,&#13;
ally just before his death)&#13;
, "This is a world in which&#13;
n suffer, and I'd like to&#13;
have maoe the contribution to&#13;
have lessoned that suffering." He&#13;
finalized with one of David&#13;
Frost's favorite sentences "For if&#13;
we do not do this, then who will&#13;
do this?"&#13;
Asking Moshe Dayan the same&#13;
question provoked a very&#13;
astonished look and the retort,&#13;
"But that's what I'm dead for, not&#13;
to care about what people think&#13;
about me!" Frost was amused at&#13;
the concept that the Israeli&#13;
government official had found&#13;
something to be dead for.&#13;
WILL WE EVER LEARN!&#13;
Many interviews provoke a&#13;
chilling shudder in the Cambridge&#13;
graduate. Two were: A&#13;
talk with Baldur von Schirach,&#13;
head of the nazi youth camps&#13;
responsible for the corruption of&#13;
German minds, and a meeting&#13;
with Reish Fuhrer, one of many&#13;
•to blame the nazi killing during&#13;
the holecaust.&#13;
The latter was interviewed&#13;
after he spent 20 years in&#13;
Spandau prison camp. (He now&#13;
lives in relative luxury.) After&#13;
describing Fuhrer, who has a&#13;
habit of overlooking the war,&#13;
Frost asked the audience,&#13;
frustrated, "Will we ever learn?"&#13;
NIXON INTERVIEW EXAMINED&#13;
Finally the crowd was given a&#13;
chance to interview Mr. Frost.&#13;
Immediately, a subject that had&#13;
lain dormant the entire talk&#13;
emerged - the intense interview&#13;
of former president Nixon. When&#13;
queried on his opinion of the&#13;
37th president, he injected, "Do&#13;
you have a couple of spare&#13;
hours?&#13;
"It's a complicated subject.&#13;
there were so many layers to peel&#13;
off." Frost confessed, "In the&#13;
interviews, he went much further&#13;
in his admissions in Watergate&#13;
than I expected him to go."&#13;
Nixon paused a minute.&#13;
'We got a hell of&#13;
an audience on August&#13;
the 9th'&#13;
Richard Nixon is not reknowned&#13;
for his wit and wisdom, but he&#13;
did possess, in Frost's words, "an&#13;
amazing dramatic irony." In&#13;
arranging the date of the&#13;
televised interviews, promoters&#13;
wanted them to be aired in May&#13;
to pull in a larger audience than&#13;
during the summer months when&#13;
/the TV viewing audience is&#13;
smaller.&#13;
"Nixon paused a minute and&#13;
said, 'We got a hell of an&#13;
audience on August the 9th,&#13;
1974.' ... \ was surprised he&#13;
could joke about the day of his&#13;
resignation "&#13;
When you talk about David&#13;
Frost, it's not him you're&#13;
describing, but others he has&#13;
interviewed: He seems to be a&#13;
medium in himself, like radio or&#13;
TV, that can translate the ideas&#13;
of a few into material that can be.&#13;
enjoyed by all.&#13;
HOWAT 2 LOCATIONS&#13;
6too Washington Ave.&#13;
Pioneer Village&#13;
8B6-5077 • 886·0207&#13;
2615 Washington Ave.&#13;
634·2373 • 634.2374&#13;
9&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From Goers Counby.&#13;
De Tap Al Ueiae S~lIr. ~~&#13;
PA8 Coffeehouse Presents&#13;
John Stiernberg&#13;
Union 104·106&#13;
Oct, 18 At 1:00 PM&#13;
FREE ADMISSION&#13;
WINE SERVED&#13;
P.A.B. Presents&#13;
Some bluegrass music&#13;
from&#13;
Wet Behind&#13;
The Ears&#13;
Tho-s., Oct. 12&#13;
8.00 pm&#13;
Union Square&#13;
1.00- VW-P&#13;
1.50- Guests&#13;
10's Required&#13;
be enjoyed by all generations.&#13;
The fact that the film was well&#13;
written, directed, once again&#13;
contained Sellers wonderful&#13;
performance helped.&#13;
Having Clouseau battle the&#13;
Pink Panther once again so&#13;
enthused audiences that since&#13;
then two sequels have been&#13;
filmed, The Pink Panther Strikes&#13;
Again and Revenge of the Pink&#13;
Panther.&#13;
Although the two later films&#13;
contained the successful SellersBlake&#13;
partnership they were all&#13;
too obvious rip-offs of a&#13;
lucrative formula. Too much&#13;
emphasis was placed on the&#13;
slapstick and not enough on the&#13;
storyline and the films came off&#13;
more silly than funny. But these&#13;
films, also, were financial giants&#13;
probably on the weight of&#13;
Seller's Clouseau character.&#13;
Enough history, lets get&#13;
analytical. What is the appeal of&#13;
a bumbling, psuedo-sophisticated&#13;
French inspector who talks&#13;
in an overdrawn accent and&#13;
continually survives every conceivable&#13;
pitfall and accident "to&#13;
be put on film. He isn't particularly&#13;
attractive, occasionally&#13;
conceited, dimwitted and shortsighted,&#13;
tends to dress in&#13;
outrageous costumes designed&#13;
to confuse opponents but&#13;
usually evoking hysterical laughter,&#13;
has a crazy Japanese man&#13;
servant called Kato who he&#13;
instructed to attack him at any&#13;
unexpected opportunity in order&#13;
to keep his reflexes and&#13;
defensive instinct in keen order,&#13;
literarily drives his boss insane,&#13;
and is often ceremoniously&#13;
decorated for actions he&#13;
accidentalTy produces.&#13;
Clouseau is not lovable like&#13;
Laurel and Hardy. He doesn't&#13;
have the heartwarming appeal of&#13;
Chaplin nor does he exist as a&#13;
near pathetic yet intellectual&#13;
victim of mechanized circumstances&#13;
as were the characters&#13;
Woody Allen has played in the&#13;
past.&#13;
So what is it that gives him&#13;
such box office power?&#13;
The answer can be summed up&#13;
in what can be called "American&#13;
schlub appeal"; the idea that&#13;
Americans love to see someone&#13;
get kicked down, bounced&#13;
around and making a complete&#13;
and utter fool of himself but still&#13;
come ahead in the end. They&#13;
(we) want to feel that we're not&#13;
in the boat alone and sinking,&#13;
and Sellers as Clouseau is&#13;
probably best and only conveyor&#13;
of this concept todav.&#13;
1dnesday October 11, 1978&#13;
fer The Pink Panther&#13;
The Clouseau Connection&#13;
~ter Sellers is a versatile and character was so popular, in fact,&#13;
~d renown comedic actor. He that it was decided to star him in&#13;
lstarred in such fine movies a film of his own.&#13;
· the past years as The World The film, again in 1964, was&#13;
~1enry Orient, Dr. Strange/ave called A Shot in the Dark based&#13;
'tt,ow / stopped worrying and on a popular stage play of the&#13;
·1ed to love the bomb and same name. The film, directed&#13;
·W Mouse that Roared. But ask 'y Blake Edwards, still remains&#13;
l~,ne what they think of when the best in the "Panther" series·&#13;
~, hear the name Peter Sellers with Closeau bumbling his way&#13;
~ the majority will undoubt- through a murder investigation&#13;
P~ say Inspector Clouseau. with the likes of Elke Sommers as&#13;
Jouseau began his lucrative a suspect. A Shot in the Dark was&#13;
~ career way back in the a critical and relative popular&#13;
. lieval a-ge of 1964 in a Blake success and, as a result, the&#13;
'ttards film called The Pink character of Clouseau emerged&#13;
~ther. As an inept French as a major comedic figure in the&#13;
111tCe inspector Clouseau was in movies, again due mainly to&#13;
Oil ity only a secondary Sellers wonderful performance.&#13;
11a1 ·acter to the main stars of the It seemed, however, that after&#13;
-~ David Niven, Claudia A Shot in the Dark the character&#13;
~linal (whatever happened to of Clouseau would retire from&#13;
n~, and Robert Wagner. the screen . An unsuccessful&#13;
1&#13;
espite the fact that the film attempt was. made to recapture&#13;
will~f was cleverly 'tritten and the characteristic Clouseauian&#13;
westly funny, Seller's Clouseau slapstick in 1968 with a film&#13;
iiielled the film from the "cute called Inspector Clouseau with&#13;
edy" categorie to high slap- Alan Arkin as Clouseau. Sellers,&#13;
k farce . The Clouseau however, was too closely&#13;
ynotes Whitewater Worlcsltop&#13;
associated with the character of&#13;
Clouseau and the film was a&#13;
dismal failure.&#13;
Sellers went from movie to&#13;
movie and eventually drifted to&#13;
relative obscurity. Blake Edwards&#13;
went on to make a variety of&#13;
movies including The Great Race&#13;
and maintained a successful&#13;
stature as a director. It seemed&#13;
that their -partnership would&#13;
remain just a two shot deal.&#13;
In 1976, nearly twelve years&#13;
after the last "Panther'' film, it&#13;
was decided that the time was&#13;
ripe to re-establish the partnership.&#13;
Though seemingly a great&#13;
idea, especially to Clouseau fans,&#13;
the venture would be a&#13;
considerable gamble. Afterall, it&#13;
had been twelve years since the&#13;
last movie and attitudes and&#13;
tastes have changed; audiences&#13;
today are "more sophisticated".&#13;
The film, The Return of the&#13;
Pink Panther, turned out to be an&#13;
enormous popular success reaffirming&#13;
that Inspector Clouseau&#13;
was a timeless character to&#13;
David frost Slt'1res Experiences&#13;
by Thomas Jenn&#13;
tening to David Frost is like&#13;
l!l!tg through a copy of TIME&#13;
ine - you meet up with&#13;
thsl e great ones . When he&#13;
tiews a celebrity, he takes a&#13;
~f that person with him to&#13;
veyed to his audience.&#13;
without this great&#13;
land of ours'&#13;
l&#13;
'rl' interviewer-writer recently a )ted a journalism seminar at&#13;
UW-Whitewater campus .&#13;
plaC~hchool papers from across&#13;
Kt"' nsin were sent to the&#13;
~ )Jus to be graded by a group&#13;
~ 1)1:Wspaper professionals .&#13;
he 11~lrt journalism classes feat&#13;
1&#13;
(1111~ an array of newspaper&#13;
~ting and management&#13;
; were free for those who&#13;
~l)!l~ct to attend . Mr. Frost's&#13;
~ h, "I ntervie-.95 I'll rarely&#13;
~~~t," ended the daylong&#13;
fr il&gt;-rence.&#13;
TICIANS POSE PROBLEMS&#13;
in most conversations,&#13;
• /' n of pliticians surfaced,&#13;
· r. Frost has had his share&#13;
fem . "Politicians raise&#13;
ular problems." He spoke&#13;
a relaxed British accent,&#13;
eal problem is to get them&#13;
something. They're all&#13;
ined to play safe ... the&#13;
fearless thing they' ll do is&#13;
me out against road&#13;
nts, or attck litter." One&#13;
senator actually said,&#13;
re would this country be·&#13;
ut this great land of ours."&#13;
government leaders have&#13;
the tanned, bearded Frost&#13;
of his most cherished lines . I t Kennedy, quizzed as to&#13;
.. he wanted to be&#13;
1 mbered after he died ,&#13;
cally just before his death)&#13;
· d, "This is a world in which fin suffer, and I'd like to&#13;
have maae the contribution to&#13;
have lessoned that suffering." He&#13;
finalized with one of David&#13;
Frost's favorite senten&lt;;es "For if&#13;
we do not do this, then who will&#13;
do this?"&#13;
Asking Moshe Dayan the same&#13;
question provoked a very&#13;
astonished look and the retort,&#13;
"But that's what I'm dead for, not&#13;
to care about what people think&#13;
about me!" Frost was amt.:sed at&#13;
the concept that the Israeli&#13;
government official had found&#13;
something to be dead for.&#13;
WILL WE EVER LEARN?&#13;
Many interviews provoke a&#13;
chilling shudder in the Cambridge&#13;
graduate. Two were: A&#13;
talk with Baldur von Schirach,&#13;
head of the nazi youth camps&#13;
responsible for the corruption of&#13;
German minds, and a meeting&#13;
with Reish Fuhrer, one of many&#13;
to blame the nazi killing during&#13;
the holecaust.&#13;
The latter was interviewed&#13;
after he spent 20 years in&#13;
Spandau prison camp. (He now&#13;
lives in relative luxury.) After&#13;
describing Fuhrer, who has a&#13;
habit of overlooking the war,&#13;
Frost asked the audience,&#13;
frustrated, "Will we ever learn?''&#13;
NIXON INTERVIEW EXAMINED&#13;
Finally the crowd was given a&#13;
chance to interview Mr. Frost.&#13;
Immediately, a subject that had&#13;
lain dormant the entire talk&#13;
emerged - the intense interview&#13;
of former president Nixon . When&#13;
queried on his opinion of the&#13;
37th president, he injected, " Do&#13;
you have a couple of spare&#13;
hours?&#13;
"It's a complicated subject ...&#13;
there were so many layers to peel&#13;
off." Frost confessed, "In the&#13;
interviews, he went much further&#13;
in his admissions in Watergate&#13;
than I expected him to go."&#13;
Nixon paused a minute.&#13;
'We got a hell of&#13;
an audience on August&#13;
the 9th'&#13;
Richard Nixon is not reknowned&#13;
for his wit and wisdom, but he&#13;
did possess, in Frost's words, " an&#13;
amazing dramatic irony." In&#13;
arranging the date of the&#13;
televised interviews, promoters&#13;
wanted them to be aired in May&#13;
to pull in a larger audience than&#13;
during the summer months when&#13;
,,,the TV viewing audience is&#13;
smaller.&#13;
"Nixon paused a minute and&#13;
said, 'We got a hell of an&#13;
audience on August the 9th,&#13;
1974.' .. . I was surprised he&#13;
could joke about the day of his&#13;
resignation."&#13;
When you talk about David&#13;
Frost, it's not him you're&#13;
describing, but others he has&#13;
interviewed . He seems to be a&#13;
medium in himself, like radio or&#13;
TV, that can translate the ideas&#13;
of a few into material that can be&#13;
enjoyed by all.&#13;
NOW AT 2 LOCATIONS&#13;
6100 Washington Ave.&#13;
Pioneer Village&#13;
886-5077 • 886-0207&#13;
2615 Washington Ave.&#13;
634-2373 • 634-2374&#13;
be enjoyed by all generations.&#13;
The fact that the film was well&#13;
written, directed, once again&#13;
contained Sellers wonderful&#13;
performance helped.&#13;
Having Clouseau battle the&#13;
Pink Panther once again so&#13;
enthused audiences that since&#13;
then two sequels have been&#13;
filmed, The Pink Panther Strikes&#13;
Again and Revenge of the Pink&#13;
Panther.&#13;
Although the two later films&#13;
contained the successful SellersBlake&#13;
partnership they were all&#13;
too obvious rip-offs of a&#13;
lucrative formula. Too much&#13;
emphasis was placed on the&#13;
slapstick and not enough on the&#13;
storyline and the films came off&#13;
more srny than funny. But these&#13;
films , also, were financial giants&#13;
probably on the weight of&#13;
Seller's Clouseau character.&#13;
Enough history, lets get&#13;
analytical. What is the appeal of&#13;
a bumbling, psuedo-sophisticated&#13;
French inspector who talks&#13;
in an overdrawn accent and&#13;
continually survives every conceivable&#13;
pitfall and accident -to&#13;
be put on film . He isn't particularly&#13;
attractive, occasionally&#13;
conceited, dimwitted and shortsighted,&#13;
tends to dress in&#13;
outrageous costumes designed&#13;
9&#13;
to confuse opponents but&#13;
usually evoking hysterical laughter,&#13;
has a crazy Japanese man&#13;
servant called Kato who he&#13;
instructed to attack him at any&#13;
unexpected opportunity in order&#13;
to keep his reflexes and&#13;
defensive instinct in keen order,&#13;
literarily drives his boss insane,&#13;
and is often ceremoniously&#13;
decorated for actions he&#13;
accidentally produces.&#13;
Clouseau is not lovable like&#13;
Laur~! and Hardy. He doesn't&#13;
have the heartwarming appeal of&#13;
Chaplin nor does he exist as a&#13;
near pathetic yet intellectual&#13;
victim of mechanized circumstances&#13;
as were the characters&#13;
Woody Allen has played in the&#13;
past.&#13;
So what is it that gives him&#13;
such box office power?&#13;
The answer can be summed up&#13;
in what can be called "American&#13;
schlub appeal"; the idea that&#13;
Americans love to see someone&#13;
get kicked down, bounced&#13;
around and making a complete&#13;
and utter fool of himself but still&#13;
come ahead in the end. They&#13;
(we) want to feel that we're not&#13;
in the boat alone and sinking,&#13;
and Sellers as Clouseau is&#13;
probably best and only conveyor&#13;
of this concept tonay.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
01 Tap At U1io1 s,ure ~~&#13;
PAS Coffeehouse Presents&#13;
John Stiernberg&#13;
Union 104-106&#13;
Oct, 18 At 1 :00 PM&#13;
FREE ADMISSION&#13;
WINE SERVED&#13;
P.A.8. Presents&#13;
Some bluegrass music&#13;
from&#13;
Wet Behind&#13;
The Ears&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 12&#13;
8.00pm&#13;
Union Square&#13;
1.00- \/1/v-P&#13;
1.50- Guests&#13;
ID's Required &#13;
vrednesday October 11,1978&#13;
')&lt;!,Dger&#13;
•&#13;
Behind the Scenes at PGrlcside Perspectl1fe&#13;
by Mollie Clarke&#13;
"Ready one, take one. Camera&#13;
two, give me a closeup. Ready&#13;
two take two." Terry Maraccini&#13;
sat 'at the video control panel,&#13;
pushing the button to switch to&#13;
camera 2. Throughout this&#13;
process Terry maintained a&#13;
watchful eye on the T.V.&#13;
monitors (there ~hadto be at least&#13;
ten of them in the room), as well&#13;
as changing the slides of&#13;
Professor John Murphys plastic&#13;
sculptures, talking to .tw-o&#13;
cameramen and pointing to&#13;
various people. On the right side&#13;
of the room Bruce Langenbach&#13;
sat erect with his hands adjusting&#13;
the lighting and color dials on&#13;
the engineering console. Steve&#13;
Bulik sat on the left side of the&#13;
room regulating the microphones&#13;
on the audio panel. They&#13;
had been taping 'one session of&#13;
Professor Robert Canary's Professions,&#13;
a half hour show which&#13;
appears every other Monday on&#13;
Channel 8 in Racine.&#13;
Terry produces Parkside's new&#13;
TV show, Parkside Perspective.&#13;
He is responsible for arranging&#13;
all interviews and coordinating&#13;
the TV crew. During the past&#13;
three seasons,Terry has tried his&#13;
hand at almost every aspect of&#13;
TV production, including camera,&#13;
lighting, and writing, as well&#13;
as directing. However, when&#13;
Parkside Perspective is recorded&#13;
live every Wednesday, Terry can&#13;
relax a little and watch technical&#13;
director Jon Shoen off and&#13;
director Rob Gissel run the show.&#13;
As technical director, Jon is&#13;
responsible for every visual&#13;
detail that is seen on the screen.&#13;
His job includes preparing the&#13;
sets and adjusting the lighting as&#13;
well as operating the video&#13;
control board. Because lighting&#13;
for TV must be extremely bright,&#13;
guests and interviewers cannot&#13;
remain on set for long periods of&#13;
time. The temperature on the set&#13;
sometimes reaches 100 degrees.&#13;
According to Terry, however, Jon&#13;
has managed to "set lights which&#13;
are comfortable." Some of Jon's&#13;
success with/lighting can be&#13;
I&#13;
Lori Gissel, Rob Gissel and Jan&#13;
attributed to his previous&#13;
experiences at Parkside with&#13;
theatrical lighting and his&#13;
understanding of color temperature&#13;
and light intensity.&#13;
Terry explained that one "can't&#13;
just light" a set anymore because&#13;
TV production has "gotten more&#13;
sophisticated" in the past few&#13;
years. However, he commented&#13;
that Parkside has "finally got&#13;
enough creative people together"&#13;
to produce excellent&#13;
shows. Before, they had to wait&#13;
for hours for enough people to&#13;
come.&#13;
Director Rob Gissel is&#13;
presently employed by the&#13;
Kenosha Unified School District&#13;
Instructional Media Center and&#13;
works at Parkside as a volunteer&#13;
director. As director, he "calls&#13;
the shots" which are to be&#13;
recorded on videotape and sent&#13;
to Channel 8. Rob stated that&#13;
because the shov is taped live,&#13;
the director must "force himself&#13;
to continue going" and be&#13;
prepared for coming events.&#13;
Like Rob Gissel, most of the&#13;
students working on Parkside&#13;
Perspective are working during&#13;
their free time or for one Mass&#13;
Media Credit. Terry stated that&#13;
the purpose of producing a live&#13;
show like Parkside Perspective is&#13;
not only to obtain practical&#13;
experience, but to "benefit&#13;
people" by presenting relevant&#13;
subjects that deal with everyday&#13;
problems. Some future topics to&#13;
be presented on Parks ide&#13;
Perspective include TV violence,&#13;
,alcoholism, and consumer problems.&#13;
Last Wednesday, interviewer&#13;
John Stewart talked with&#13;
Professor Karen Skul~t about&#13;
students who fear matematics&#13;
courses or have "Math Anxiety."&#13;
They were sitting in Studio B on&#13;
the right set. The left set was to&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
be used by john Stewart and Jan&#13;
Fetter. the show's commentators,&#13;
during the announcements at the&#13;
end ofthe show. The floor of the&#13;
studio was covered with TV and&#13;
camera cables and there were&#13;
several yeillow pieces of paper&#13;
taped to the floor. These served&#13;
as position markers for the&#13;
cameramen. Mark Cunningham,&#13;
one of the cameramen, was&#13;
placing blue cardboard strips On&#13;
the panels dividing the two sets.&#13;
And jon Shoenoff was climbing a&#13;
ladder to adjust the lights.&#13;
In the control room, lecturer&#13;
Walt Ulbricht was working with&#13;
Rob Gissel, arranging the slides&#13;
of his presentation on Wisconsin&#13;
Artists on Film. Lori Cissel, Rob's&#13;
wife, was typing the label for the&#13;
videotape on a computer called&#13;
th~ character generator. She was&#13;
typing the names of guests&#13;
before the show began and later&#13;
recalled the credits from the&#13;
camera.&#13;
photo by Denise D'AquistD&#13;
photo&#13;
computer memory bank asshow&#13;
was taped.&#13;
Cameras one and two&#13;
focusing on John Stewart&#13;
Professor Skuldt.&#13;
Before long, Rob req&#13;
that the door be closed an&#13;
lights dimmed. Rob began&#13;
directions.&#13;
"Lights .. Tone off.&#13;
off. Camera two move to&#13;
take two."&#13;
Jon Shoenoff began p&#13;
the buttons to select the pict&#13;
being recorded on vid&#13;
according to Rob's comm&#13;
Rob commented, "This ~&#13;
easy part."&#13;
He gave more orders to&#13;
cameramen .and then to Lori&#13;
the character generator:&#13;
"Take two ... Name up&#13;
take one .. Name off."&#13;
When Professor Skuldt&#13;
coming through louden&#13;
Rob turned to Steve Bulik&#13;
audio control and stated,&#13;
her up."&#13;
Though the&#13;
sessions went smoothly,&#13;
blems arose when interv'&#13;
Rick O'Brian closed his talk&#13;
counselor Connie Cummi&#13;
four minutes early by mis,&#13;
Also, john Stewart's introductl&#13;
to that interview was some&#13;
omitted. Terry and Rob ass&#13;
everyone they would find a&#13;
to lengthen the program'.T&#13;
explained how important It&#13;
to schedule events to ,&#13;
second. Completed, Parks&#13;
Perspective ranges from 27:&#13;
129:30. The show ended su~&#13;
fully as John Stewart an&#13;
Feifer completed the anna&#13;
ments and pretended to "ja&#13;
as the credits rolled on&#13;
screen.&#13;
Even though according to , . has&#13;
Shoenoff "directing ,&#13;
, t&#13;
tendency to wipe yo~ Oub~&#13;
production at Parkslde&#13;
much satisfaction to dt&#13;
involved. Cameraman a~&#13;
tinuity writer Mark cunnU1jeS&#13;
remarked that everyone tr&#13;
work together and help&#13;
other through construe&#13;
criticism "when asked&#13;
happens' when something1&#13;
wrong with the equipment,ot&#13;
replied in his usual hu",&#13;
tone "If something goes e&#13;
' he we all lay down facing t&#13;
Wednesday October 11,1978 l(!,Dger&#13;
• Behind the Scenes at Porlcside Perspective&#13;
by Mollie Clarke&#13;
" Ready one, take one. Camera&#13;
two, give me a closeup . Ready&#13;
two, take two." Terry Maraccini&#13;
sat at the video control panel,&#13;
pushing the button to switch to&#13;
camera 2. Throughout th is&#13;
process Terry !_Tlaintained a&#13;
watchful eye on the T .V .&#13;
monitors (there-had to be at least&#13;
ten of them in the room), as well&#13;
as changing the s I ides of&#13;
Professor John Murphy's plastic&#13;
sculptures, talking to .two&#13;
cameramen and pointing to&#13;
various people. On the right side&#13;
of the room Bruce Langenbach&#13;
sat erect with his hands adjusting&#13;
the lighting and color dials on&#13;
the engineering console. Steve&#13;
Bulik sat on the left side of the&#13;
room regulating the microphones&#13;
on the audio panel. They&#13;
had been taping une session of&#13;
Professor Robert Canary's Professions,&#13;
a half hour show which&#13;
appears every other Monday on&#13;
Channel 8 in Racine.&#13;
Terry produces Parkside's new&#13;
TV show, Parkside Perspective.&#13;
He is responsible for arranging&#13;
all interviews and coordinating&#13;
the TV crew. During the past&#13;
three seasons, Terry has tried his&#13;
hand at almost every aspect of&#13;
TV production, including camera,&#13;
lighting, and writing, as well&#13;
as directing. However, when&#13;
Parkside Perspective is recorded&#13;
live every Wednesday, Terry can&#13;
relax a little and watch technical&#13;
director Jon Shoenoff and&#13;
director Rob Gissel run the show.&#13;
As technical director, Jon is&#13;
responsible for every visual&#13;
detail that is seen on the screen.&#13;
His job includes preparing the&#13;
sets and adjusting the lighting as&#13;
well as operating the video&#13;
control board. Because lighting&#13;
for TV must be extremely bright,&#13;
guests and interviewers cannot&#13;
remain on set for long periods of&#13;
time . The temperature on the set&#13;
sometimes reaches 100 degrees.&#13;
According to Terry, however, Jon&#13;
has managed to " set lights which&#13;
are comfortable." Some of Jon's&#13;
success with lighting can be&#13;
I&#13;
Lori Gissel, Rob Gissel and Jon&#13;
attributed to his previous&#13;
experiences at Parkside with&#13;
theatrical lighting and his&#13;
understanding of color temperature&#13;
and light intensity.&#13;
Terry explained that one "can't&#13;
just light" a set anymore because&#13;
TV production has "gotten more&#13;
sophisticated" in the past few&#13;
years. However, he commented&#13;
that Parkside has "finally got&#13;
enough creative people together"&#13;
to produce excellent&#13;
shows. Before, they had to wait&#13;
for hours for enough people to&#13;
come.&#13;
Director Rob Gissel is&#13;
presently employed by the&#13;
Kenosha Unified School District&#13;
Instructional Media Center and&#13;
works at Parkside as a volunteer&#13;
director. As director, he "calls&#13;
the shots" which are to be&#13;
recorded on videotape and sent&#13;
to Channel 8. Rob stated that&#13;
because the shm is taped live,&#13;
the director must "force himself&#13;
to continue going" and be&#13;
prepared for coming events .&#13;
Like Rob Gissel, most of the&#13;
- .students working on Parkside&#13;
Perspective are working during&#13;
their free time or for one Mass&#13;
Media Credit. Terry stated that&#13;
the purpose of producing a live&#13;
show like Parkside Perspective is&#13;
not only to obtain practical&#13;
experience, but to "benefit&#13;
people" by presenting relevant&#13;
subjects that deal with everyday&#13;
problems . Some future topics to&#13;
be presented on Parkside&#13;
Perspective include TV violence,&#13;
,alcoholism, and consumer problems.&#13;
&#13;
Last· Wednesday, interviewer&#13;
John Stewart talked with&#13;
Professor Karen Skul~t about&#13;
students who fear matematics&#13;
courses or have "Math Anxiety."&#13;
They were sitting in Studio Bon&#13;
the right set. The left set was to&#13;
control room .&#13;
be used by John Stewart and Jan&#13;
Feifer, the show's commentators,&#13;
during the announcements at the&#13;
end of the show. The floor of the&#13;
studio was covered with TV and&#13;
camera cables and there were&#13;
several yelllow pieces of paper&#13;
taped to the floor. These served&#13;
as position markers for the&#13;
cameramen . Mark Cunningham,&#13;
one of the cameramen, was&#13;
placing blue cardboard strips on&#13;
the panels dividing the two sets .&#13;
And Jon Shoenoff was climbing a&#13;
ladder to adjust the lights.&#13;
In the control room, lecturer&#13;
Walt Ulbricht was working with&#13;
Rob Gissel, arranging the slides&#13;
of his presentation on Wisconsin&#13;
Artists on Film. Lori Gissel, Rob's&#13;
wife, was typing the label for the&#13;
vi~eotape on a computer called&#13;
the character generator. She was&#13;
typing the names of guests&#13;
before the show began and later&#13;
recalled th~ credits from the&#13;
camera. photo by Denise D'Aqu ist o&#13;
photo&#13;
computer memory bank as&#13;
show was taped .&#13;
Cameras one and two&#13;
focusing on John Stewart&#13;
Professor Skuldt.&#13;
Before I ong, Rob requ&#13;
that the door be closed and&#13;
lights dimmed . Rob began gi ·&#13;
directions.&#13;
" Lights ... Tone off .&#13;
off .. . Camera two move to "l&#13;
take two."&#13;
Jon Shoenoff began pushi&#13;
the buttons to select the picture:&#13;
being recorded on video!&#13;
according to Rob's command.&#13;
Rob commented, "This is&#13;
easy part."&#13;
He gave more orders to&#13;
cameramen and then to Lori Ill&#13;
the character generator:&#13;
" Take two .. . Name up .&#13;
take one ... Name off."&#13;
When Professor Skuldt wasn&#13;
coming through loud .enouiRob&#13;
turned to Steve Bulik a~,tlf ~ 1&#13;
audio control and stated, ~ ~ her up." . ~1&#13;
Though the two previ&#13;
sessions went smoothly,&#13;
blems arose when intervie,&#13;
Rick O'Brian closed his talk VI&#13;
counselor Connie Cummink&#13;
four minutes early by mista_&#13;
Also John Stewart's introducti&#13;
to that interview was someho&#13;
omitted. Terry and Rob assur&#13;
everyone they would find a VI&#13;
to lengthen the program. Te . ·t VI explained how important 1&#13;
to schedule. events to .&#13;
second .. Completed, Par~;&#13;
Perspective ranges from 27-&#13;
129: 30. The show ended su~\,&#13;
fully as John Stewart an ct&#13;
Feifer completed the an~.&#13;
0&#13;
~~·&#13;
ments and pretended to 1&#13;
3 th!&#13;
as the credits rolled on&#13;
screen . . to I~&#13;
Even though according 1 ' . has Shoenoff , " directing ,,j\'&#13;
tendency to wipe yo~ ou~ri&#13;
product ion at Parkside thosl ~&#13;
mu c h sati sfaction to d crl 1 ~~&#13;
involved . Cameraman a~ gh 1&#13;
\&#13;
t inuity writer Mark Cunn~ieS ,~ 1 remarked that everyone ea ~&#13;
work together and helP ctii .:&#13;
other t hroµg h cons~U w Iii.'~&#13;
criticism . When aske g ii'&#13;
happens when something Ter \~&#13;
wrong with the equipment, 01 ~&#13;
repl ied in his usual hu:ron f&#13;
tone, "If something goe~ east- 1 ~&#13;
we all lay down fac ing t e 1&#13;
,, &#13;
;day October 11,1978&#13;
sic Greele Drama&#13;
ctra at Parlcside&#13;
odes' classic Greek&#13;
"Electra" will be presentstudent&#13;
cast directed by&#13;
hoda-Gale Pollack in the&#13;
ity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
unicatian Arts Theater&#13;
,26 and 29 at 6 p.m. and&#13;
at2 p.m.&#13;
tor Pollack calls the&#13;
tion an ambitious underwhich&#13;
has involved&#13;
ive research on the&#13;
en civilization of Greece&#13;
()(X) BC The research has&#13;
information ranging&#13;
insights into religious&#13;
nies of the period to&#13;
ture and fashions of the&#13;
set, by John Dickson, is a&#13;
ng multilevel creation&#13;
by a mountaintop palace&#13;
xtending forward and&#13;
ard to a tom b on the&#13;
thrust stage.&#13;
rmng. designed by Virlater&#13;
who is' new to the&#13;
dramatic arts faculty this&#13;
eludes creation of leather&#13;
and boots and handjewelry&#13;
and daggers&#13;
ented with authentic&#13;
aen designs.&#13;
. Pollack said she selected&#13;
hocles' dramatization of&#13;
tra myth from among the&#13;
plays dealing with the&#13;
as the most dramatic&#13;
mg of the story. The script,&#13;
tes, is a contemporary&#13;
ion by FrancesFergusson.&#13;
odes' drama is based on&#13;
e Ko'llstedt&#13;
the legend of the House of&#13;
Atreus, which ruled the "city of&#13;
Mycenae and as plagued by the&#13;
gods with scandal and bloodshed.&#13;
When King Agamemnon,&#13;
the head of the house, sailed&#13;
with the army to take Troy, his&#13;
fleet was becalmed and he was&#13;
forced on the advice of an oracle&#13;
to sacrifice his eldest daughter,&#13;
Iphianassa, to releas~ the fleet.&#13;
His queen, Clytemnestra,&#13;
remained in Mycenae and in his&#13;
absence took a lover, Aegisthos,&#13;
Agamemnon's cousin. When&#13;
Agamemnon returned victorious&#13;
from the Trojan War, Clytemnestra&#13;
and Aegisthos murdered him&#13;
and seized the throne. Electra,&#13;
daughter of Agamemnon and&#13;
Clytemnestra, -then stole her&#13;
younger brother, Orestes, and&#13;
sent him away with his tutor,&#13;
Paidagogos, to be reared by an&#13;
uncle until he was old enough to&#13;
restore order. Electra stayed at&#13;
Mycenae to bear witness to her&#13;
mother's crimes and wait for&#13;
Orestes' return.&#13;
Mary Stankus plays Electra,&#13;
Gary Eckstein is Orestes, Gail&#13;
Ross is Clytemnestra, and Don&#13;
Luccason is Aegisthos; all are&#13;
from Racine. J.C. Bussard,&#13;
Kenosha plays Paidagogcs, Peter&#13;
Fernandez, Milwaukee, is Pvlades,&#13;
Orestes' cousin and&#13;
companion during his exile; and&#13;
Cathy Casselman, Greenfield, is&#13;
Chrysothemis, sister of Electra&#13;
and Orestes.&#13;
Two maidservants are portravRepresented'&#13;
in&#13;
Chicago Exhibit&#13;
Kohlstedt, a member of&#13;
niversity of Wisconsinde&#13;
art faculty, is reprein&#13;
the 77th Chicago and&#13;
ty exhibition of works on&#13;
at the Art Institute of&#13;
hen go through Dec. "3 by a&#13;
sed~ color painting in ten parts&#13;
~ie "Line Scene I-X."&#13;
II'IY ~ systemic painting consists&#13;
rt',. n 9 x 11 inch paper&#13;
~ v¢ gles in which a geometric&#13;
.od is explored from various&#13;
oU~ ctives, creating an illusion&#13;
in which the viewer keeps&#13;
Artist&#13;
losing and finding the form. Only&#13;
seven other Wisconsin artists,&#13;
including Joseph Rozman Jr. of&#13;
Racine, are included in the show.&#13;
Kohlstedt also has had works&#13;
accepted for two Wisconsin&#13;
shows this fall. He will be&#13;
represented by two painting,&#13;
"Inside I" and "Inside II," in the&#13;
Wisconsin Directions II.show at&#13;
the Milwaukee Art Center Oct.&#13;
20 through Dec. 3 and in the&#13;
UW-Platteville Invitational show&#13;
of work by UW faculty members&#13;
Oct. 14 through Nov, 15.&#13;
Citizen Kane&#13;
.At Ronde"e&#13;
",Ii· .. 'lien, produced, directed&#13;
e ~ tarred in by Orson Welles,&#13;
I en Kane" is considered by&#13;
iOP to be a perfect film,&#13;
,J!1I' Iy the best American film&#13;
~ time.&#13;
film is scheduled at the&#13;
n Rondelle on Wednesday,&#13;
r 18 at 7:00 p.m. arid Jis&#13;
hird film in the Wisconsin&#13;
on Film Series.&#13;
Itizen Kane" traces the life,&#13;
r and eventual withdrawal&#13;
powerful tycoon and&#13;
shine czar Charles Foster&#13;
Kane. Bri~iant camera work and&#13;
a superb soundtrack help make&#13;
Welles' achiev...ementan extraordrnaev,&#13;
one-of-a-kind cinematic&#13;
tour-de-force.&#13;
Welles, born in 1915 in&#13;
Kenosha, also starred and&#13;
directed "Macbeth" (1946), and&#13;
"The Magnificent Ambersons"&#13;
(1942).&#13;
Reservations and inform~tion&#13;
about this free program can be&#13;
obtained by calling the Rondelle&#13;
at 554-2154.&#13;
J.e. Bussard as Poidagogos the tutor,Gail Ross as Clytemnestro,GoryEckestein as Orestes&#13;
and Mary Stankus as Electra in a scene from Sophocles' 'Electro'&#13;
Photo by P J. Allolino&#13;
ed by Donna Bianchi and Kristi&#13;
Houch, both of Kenosha, and a&#13;
chorus of Mycenaen women is&#13;
made up of Colleen Arndt and&#13;
Beth Batassa, both of Kenosha,&#13;
and Kathy Bencriscutto, Lou&#13;
Anne Bauer and Mary Dretzka,&#13;
of Racine.&#13;
Ceoffrey Stanton, Racine, will&#13;
perform original music which. he&#13;
has composed for the production.&#13;
Sandra Puzerewski, Kenosha,&#13;
is student research assistant&#13;
for the drama and Bob jilk, also&#13;
of Kenosha, is stage manager. In&#13;
addition to her acting role, Miss&#13;
Casselman is assistant to the&#13;
director.&#13;
In conjunction with the&#13;
production, a display in the&#13;
theater lobby will include a map&#13;
of ancient Creece, the family&#13;
tree of the House of Atreus, the&#13;
legend of the House of Atreus&#13;
and the Twelve Olympians, the&#13;
major gods and goddesses of&#13;
Greek classical mythology. Prior&#13;
to the production, the display&#13;
also will be shown in the&#13;
UW-Parkside library and Simmons&#13;
Library in Kenosha.&#13;
Admission is 52 for students&#13;
and senior citizens and 53 for the&#13;
general public. Reservations can&#13;
be made by calling the box office&#13;
(Phone 553-2457 or 553-2016)&#13;
and the Parks ide Union&#13;
Information Center (Phone&#13;
553-2345).&#13;
Murder most foul on the minds of mother and dcuqhter&#13;
Gail Ross,left,ploys Clytemnestra and Mary Stankus is her doughter Electro.&#13;
. , photo by P.J. Auohno&#13;
;day October 11, 1978&#13;
sic Greek Drama&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
hocles' classic Greek&#13;
"Electra" will be presenta&#13;
student cast directed by&#13;
hoda-Gale Pollack in the&#13;
sity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
11unication Arts Theater&#13;
7, 28 and 29 at 8 p.m . and&#13;
at 2 p.m.&#13;
tor Pollack ~alls the&#13;
tion an ambitious underwhich&#13;
has involved&#13;
ive research on the&#13;
aen civilization of Greece&#13;
1000 BC. The research has&#13;
d information ranging&#13;
insights into religious&#13;
nies of the period to&#13;
cture and fashions of the&#13;
set, by John Dickson, is a&#13;
ing multilevel creation&#13;
by a mountaintop palace&#13;
xtending forward and&#13;
ard to a tomb on the&#13;
thrust stage.&#13;
urning, designed by VirSlater&#13;
who is new to the&#13;
by Deci dramatic arts faculty this&#13;
ncludes creation of leather&#13;
r&#13;
ry bai and boots and handd&#13;
jewelry and daggers&#13;
and tnented , with authentic&#13;
n StE10aen designs.&#13;
f. Pollack said she selected&#13;
Rob l'&gt;phocles' dramatization of&#13;
close:ectra myth from among the&#13;
ob be; plays dealing with the&#13;
:l as the most dramatic&#13;
ne 01ing of the story. The script,&#13;
o mmfotes, is a contemporary&#13;
•tion by Frances Fergusson.&#13;
beganihocles' drama is based on&#13;
lect t/1&#13;
on 1&#13;
'scooife Kohlstedt ed, '1r&#13;
the legend of the House of&#13;
Atreus, which ruled the ' city of&#13;
Mycenae and as plagued by the&#13;
gods with scandal and bloodshed.&#13;
When King Agamem·non,&#13;
the head of the house, sailed&#13;
with the army to take Troy, his&#13;
fleet was becalmed and he was&#13;
forced on the advice of an oracle&#13;
to sacrifice his eldest daughter,&#13;
lphianassa, to release the fleet.&#13;
His queen, Clytemnestra,&#13;
remained in Mycenae and in his&#13;
absence took a lover, Aegisthos,&#13;
Agamemnon's cousin. When&#13;
Agamemnon returned victorious&#13;
from the Trojan War, Clytemnestra&#13;
and Aegisthos murdered him&#13;
and seized the throne. Electra,&#13;
daughter of Agamemnon . and&#13;
Clytemnestra, ·then stole her&#13;
younger brother, Orestes, and&#13;
sent him away with his tutor,&#13;
Paidagogos, to be reared by an&#13;
uncle until he was old enough to&#13;
restore order. Electra stayed at&#13;
Mycenae to bear witness to her&#13;
mother's crimes and wait for&#13;
Orestes' return.&#13;
Mary Stankus plays Electra,&#13;
Gary Eckstein is Orestes, Gail&#13;
Ross is Clytemnestra, and Don&#13;
Luccason is Aegisthos; all are&#13;
from Racine . J.C. Bussard,&#13;
Kenosha plays Paidagogos, Peter&#13;
Fernandez, Milwaukee, is Pylades,&#13;
Orestes' cousin and&#13;
companion during his exile; and&#13;
Cathy Casselman, Greenfield, is&#13;
Chrysothemis, sister of Electra&#13;
and Orestes.&#13;
Two m~dservants are portray-&#13;
~~ Represented' in&#13;
;,~ Chicago Exhibit&#13;
loudJe Kohlstedt, a member of losing and finding the form . Only&#13;
revei1University of Wisconsin- seven other Wisconsin artists,&#13;
d 511,ide art faculty, is repre- including Joseph Rozman Jr. of&#13;
!d in the 77th Chicago and Racine, are included in the show.&#13;
twO lity exhibition of works on Kohlstedt also has had works&#13;
smQltr at the Art Institute of accepted for two Wisconsin&#13;
en fago through Dec. -3 by a shows this fall. He will be&#13;
edMrcolor painting in ten parts represented by two painting,&#13;
nie Of "Line Scene 1-X." " Inside I" and " Inside 11 ," in the&#13;
rlY ~e systemic painting consists Wisconsin Directions I I ,show at&#13;
'sinr:en 9 x 11 inch paper the Milwaukee Art Center Oct.&#13;
w~lngles in which a geometric 20 through Dec. 3 and in the&#13;
d RI is explored from various UW-Plattev_ille Invitational show&#13;
uld~ ctives, creating an illusion of work by UW faculty members&#13;
proefJx in which the viewer keeps Oct. 14 through Nov .. 15.&#13;
prfo&#13;
ven~&#13;
ted, A 110-Lc. rtists&#13;
enM&#13;
ell'~&#13;
t~e l&#13;
ded1&#13;
1ol~&#13;
cofC&#13;
ctim.&#13;
Citizen Kane . A·t Rondelle&#13;
ritten, produced, directed&#13;
~ starred in by Orson Welles,&#13;
a~·:zen Kane" is considered by&#13;
on Y to be a perfect film&#13;
in·b1 '&#13;
C,~1 Y the best American film ·rl time.&#13;
~ le film is scheduled at the&#13;
nd 1&#13;
ten Rondelle on Wednesday,&#13;
c0:&gt;ber 18 at 7:00 p.m . and 'is&#13;
lthird film in the Wisconsin&#13;
e·its on Film Series.&#13;
/:-itizen Kane" traces the life,&#13;
3~ ~r and eventual withdrawal&#13;
gr _Powerful tycoon and&#13;
ci~lishing czar Charles Foster&#13;
Kane. Brittiant camera work and&#13;
a superb soundtrack help make&#13;
Welles' achievement an extraordi&#13;
nai;y, one-of-a-kfnd cinematic&#13;
tour-de-force.&#13;
Welles, born in 1915 .in&#13;
Kenosha, also starred and&#13;
directed "Macbeth" (1948), and&#13;
"The Magnificent Ambersons"&#13;
(1942).&#13;
Reservations and informftion&#13;
about this free program can be&#13;
obtained by calling the Rondelle&#13;
at 554-2154.&#13;
11&#13;
J.C. Bussard as Poidogogos the tutor,Goil Ross as Clytemnestro,Gory Eckestein as Orestes&#13;
and Mory Stankus as Electro in a scene from Sophocles' 'Electro'&#13;
Ph010 by P. J Auolino&#13;
ed by Donna Bianchi and Kristi&#13;
Houch, both of Kenosha, and a&#13;
choru\ of Mycenaen women is&#13;
made up of Colleen Arndt and&#13;
Beth Batassa, both of Kenosha,&#13;
and Kathy Bencriscutto, Lou&#13;
Anne Bauer and Mary Dretzka,&#13;
of Racine.&#13;
Geoffrey Stanton, Racine, will&#13;
perform original music which. he&#13;
has composed for the production.&#13;
Sandra Puzerewski, Kenosha,&#13;
is student research assistant&#13;
for the drama and Bob Jilk, also&#13;
of Kenosha, is stage manager. In&#13;
addition to her acting role, Miss&#13;
Casselman is assistant to the&#13;
director.&#13;
In conjunction with the&#13;
production, a display in the&#13;
theater lobby will include a map&#13;
of ancient Greece, the family&#13;
tree of the House of Atreus, th.e&#13;
legend of the House of Atreus&#13;
and the Twelve Olympians, the&#13;
major gods and goddesses of&#13;
Greek classical mythology. Prior&#13;
to the production, the display&#13;
also will be shown in the&#13;
UW-Parkside library and Simmons&#13;
Library in Kenosha.&#13;
Admission is S2 for students&#13;
and senior citizens and S3 for the&#13;
general public. Reservations can&#13;
be made by calling the box office&#13;
(Phone 553-2457 or 553-2016)&#13;
and the Parkside Union&#13;
Information Center (Phone&#13;
553-2345).&#13;
Murder most foul on the minds of mother and daughter:&#13;
Gail Ross,left ,ploys Clytemnestra and Mory Stankus is her daughter Electro. .. ph010 by P.J Auohno &#13;
Wednesday October n,1978&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Now comes Millertime.&#13;
©1978 ~iller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis.&#13;
Wednesday October 11, 1978&#13;
Now comes Miller time.&#13;
@1978 Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. </text>
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