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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 7, issue 11</text>
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            <text>Plans To Attack Rising Tuition</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Wednesday November 15,197®&#13;
vol.7 no. 11&#13;
Anticipating Groundbreaking for the Modern industry addition to Molinaro Hall, Mrs. George&#13;
Molinaro and Chancellor Alan E. Guskin tried out the original shovel used by her late husband&#13;
i" breaking ground for the first UW-P building in 1967. Looking on (from left,rear) are&#13;
Charles Riley, Wayne Haney, and Arthur Dudycha.&#13;
Gifts and Grants&#13;
$35,000 For Parkside&#13;
Gifts and grants for the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
totalling almost $35,000 were&#13;
accepted here today (Friday,&#13;
Nov. 10) by the UW System&#13;
Board of Regents.&#13;
Largest single sum in the&#13;
package is a $14,100 matching&#13;
grant from the National Science&#13;
Foundation for purchases of&#13;
instructional scientific equipment&#13;
to improve laboratory&#13;
facilities in modern experimental&#13;
techniques and biology.&#13;
Women And Adults&#13;
On Increase&#13;
by Kim Ruetz&#13;
University enrollment for&#13;
women and adult students has&#13;
been continually increasing in&#13;
recent years here at Parkside.&#13;
Statistics from David Vogt of&#13;
UWP Institutional Analysis and&#13;
Registration show that there are&#13;
2,395 women, and an overall&#13;
2,447 adult students (23 or older)&#13;
attending classes.&#13;
"The convenience and variety&#13;
of night courses offered here&#13;
may have much bearing on the&#13;
fact that more adult students are&#13;
attending classes. Most of these&#13;
students have jobs, families, and&#13;
other commitments that make it&#13;
necessary to go to school on a&#13;
part-time basis." says David&#13;
Vogt.&#13;
including recent high school&#13;
graduates, the proportion of&#13;
female students has been rapidly&#13;
increasing in the past few years,&#13;
and the enrollment of male&#13;
students have been remaining&#13;
constant, or declining. The&#13;
current enrollment of male&#13;
students is 2,846. This figure&#13;
shows a decrease of 8% from last&#13;
year.&#13;
Enrollment on the whole this&#13;
year at Parkside shows an&#13;
increase of 1% over last year,&#13;
with 5,241 students. Nationwide&#13;
there is a continuing increase of&#13;
women and adult students&#13;
attending colleges and universities.&#13;
&#13;
The UW-Parkside library,&#13;
recently named "library of the&#13;
year" by the Wisconsin Library&#13;
Association, received $3,906&#13;
from the federal Office of&#13;
Education college library resources&#13;
program for acquisition&#13;
of library materials under a&#13;
national program supporting&#13;
libraries in higher education.&#13;
The regents also accepted&#13;
$5,000 from the Department of&#13;
Defense in continuing support of&#13;
a study by three UW-P&#13;
researchers — life scientist&#13;
Eugene Goodman, chemist&#13;
Michael Marron and physicist&#13;
Ben Greenebaum — of the&#13;
physiological effects of extremely&#13;
low frequency electromagnetic&#13;
fields. Since its beginning&#13;
in 1971, the investigations have&#13;
received federal support of&#13;
about $210,000. The studies are&#13;
related to the Navy's proposed&#13;
Extremely Low Frequency Antenna&#13;
project (formerly known as&#13;
Project Seafarer and Project&#13;
Sanquine), which is designed as&#13;
a communication system for&#13;
submarines.&#13;
Other sums accepted for&#13;
UW-P are $5,200 from the Law&#13;
Enforcement Assistance Administration&#13;
for the law enforcement&#13;
education program (LEEP) and&#13;
$332 from various donors for the&#13;
Parkside Scholarship Fund.&#13;
Plans To Attack&#13;
Rising Tuition&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
The same old story of rising&#13;
prices and inflation is affecting&#13;
student tuition rates throughout&#13;
the country. As most of us&#13;
realize tuition at UW-Parkside&#13;
has been rising steadily for the&#13;
past few years. Student groups&#13;
like the United Council of&#13;
University of Wisconsin Student&#13;
Governments have been making&#13;
a lot of noise about this issue and&#13;
have suggested several plans of&#13;
action. However, the administration&#13;
of the UW system has&#13;
developed some plans of its own&#13;
to deal with this problem and&#13;
they should be initiated soon.&#13;
The two plans that will be&#13;
initiated by the University&#13;
System, according Mo the&#13;
November UW Memo are: 1) A&#13;
proposal to base student fees on&#13;
the preceding year's costs. For&#13;
example, the 1980-81 tuition&#13;
levels will be based on the lower&#13;
costs experienced by the&#13;
University during the 1979-80&#13;
school year. This plan will save&#13;
students about $70 or 10% from&#13;
the real cost of tuition. 2) The&#13;
second proposal would seek an&#13;
average of 12 hours a week of&#13;
public service employment for&#13;
up to 2400 UW System students&#13;
each year.&#13;
In an interview with Ranger&#13;
last week, Parkside's Chancellor&#13;
Guskin characterized the UW&#13;
system's attitude toward increased&#13;
tuition. He said that the&#13;
University wants to do anything&#13;
it can to make life easier for the&#13;
student and to control inflation&#13;
in some way.&#13;
The effect of the first proposal,&#13;
he said, would be to save the&#13;
students one year in tuition&#13;
increases. The one year lag in&#13;
tuition fees would still involve&#13;
rising tuition but not quite at the&#13;
going rate.&#13;
The second proposal is part of&#13;
a general trend to make work&#13;
study funds more available.&#13;
Currently, eligibility for work&#13;
study employment in on-campus&#13;
or off-campus government&#13;
projects is based on a family&#13;
income of $14,000 a year. Today&#13;
this is barely middle income&#13;
level. Most of the students at&#13;
Parkside come from families that&#13;
make more than this. They need&#13;
financial assistance yet at&#13;
present cannot get it. Chancellor&#13;
Guskin thinks that this situation&#13;
may change.&#13;
The Chancellor feels that these&#13;
two proposals to keep tuition&#13;
increases down will probably not&#13;
bring many new people to&#13;
Parkside. However, it should&#13;
make , life easier for students&#13;
already here. Other advantages&#13;
to be gained by the first proposal&#13;
will be to give students and&#13;
administrators much greater&#13;
warning time concerning what&#13;
the next years tuition will be. The&#13;
fees for the 1980-81 school year&#13;
can now be announced in&#13;
February 1980 instead of in&#13;
September.&#13;
In the 1980's enrollments are&#13;
expected to decrease. As the UW&#13;
system looks ahead to this&#13;
decade, it becomes apparent&#13;
that something must be done to&#13;
control student tuition fees.&#13;
Otherwise, as the number of&#13;
students decrease, the fixed&#13;
costs of running a university will&#13;
have to be absorbed by fewer&#13;
and fewer individuals, and thus&#13;
tuition fees will continue to rise&#13;
and rise.&#13;
Energy Project Bid&#13;
Apparent low bidder on a&#13;
mechanical and electrical monitoring&#13;
system to reduce energy&#13;
use and costs at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside is Johnson&#13;
Controls, Milwaukee, with a bid&#13;
"of $238,632.&#13;
Since the project had been&#13;
budgeted at $313,000, the&#13;
apparent low bid represents a&#13;
saving to the state of $74,368 or&#13;
24 percent under the projected&#13;
cost, according to Gary G.&#13;
Coetz, assistant chancellor for&#13;
administration and fiscal affairs.&#13;
The energy monitoring project,&#13;
expected to be completed&#13;
and operational by fall, 1979,&#13;
will allow reducing the heating,&#13;
ventilation and air conditioning&#13;
costs in all campus buildings&#13;
through constant computer&#13;
monitoring and remote control&#13;
operation. Planners say the&#13;
system will allow energy use to&#13;
each building to be controlled&#13;
separately, reduction of energy&#13;
consumption during low use&#13;
periods, reduction of maintenance&#13;
and longer equipment life&#13;
and reduction of load fluctuation&#13;
for greater efficiency.&#13;
The UW-Parkside project is&#13;
part of a $3 million UW System&#13;
plan to reduce energy use and&#13;
costs. Studies at other UW&#13;
campuses have shown the&#13;
system reduced heating cost by&#13;
17 percent and electrical cost by&#13;
12 percent. Campus planners&#13;
estimate savings at UW-P at&#13;
about $80,000 per year, which&#13;
means that the monitoring&#13;
system would "pay for itself" in&#13;
about three years. &#13;
Wednesday November 75.197A RANGER&#13;
To&#13;
The&#13;
Editor&#13;
Drinking In Cinema&#13;
To the people in charge of the&#13;
union cinema. I had noticed&#13;
some irresponsible rules held by&#13;
the members who run the&#13;
cinema.&#13;
First, the students and&#13;
outsiders who come to see a&#13;
movie bring bottles of wine as&#13;
well as glasses of beer in the&#13;
cinema. I don't think the people&#13;
who manage the union are aware&#13;
of these acts or they are afraid to&#13;
stop the people for bringing&#13;
alcoholic beverages inside the&#13;
cinema.&#13;
I came to see a movie Sunday&#13;
night and I saw someone&#13;
bringing a bottle of wine which,&#13;
incidentally, was broken. After a&#13;
while the smell spread all over&#13;
the area. I also noticed some&#13;
students bringing big glasses of&#13;
beer from the union square. I&#13;
don't think that's fair for&#13;
someone to smell these people&#13;
who are almost in a state of&#13;
drunkness.&#13;
I hope the people in charge in&#13;
the cinema would do something&#13;
about these irresponsible people&#13;
before the cinema becomes&#13;
smelling like a second class&#13;
union cinema.&#13;
A concerned student&#13;
RANGER 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 Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Mike Murphy Edltor&#13;
Jon Flanagan :.;General Manager&#13;
Tom Cooper Student Advisor&#13;
John Stewart News Editor&#13;
Sue Stevens Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Editor&#13;
Kim Putman Copy Editor&#13;
Chris Miller Manager&#13;
Nancy Szymanski .Circulation Manager&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Cathy Brownlee, Millie Clarke, Dave Cramer, Tom&#13;
Fervoy, Pete Jacket, Thomas Jenn, Nlcki Kroll, Terry&#13;
Maraccini, Kim Ruetz, Jeff Stevens.&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
Denise D'Acquisto, Mike Holmdohl, Tony Raymond&#13;
and Brian Taggart.&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig Dvorak, Rob Miller, Mary Mortl and Matthew&#13;
Poliakon.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Cramer and Dawn Thomas.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted for publication if they&#13;
are typewritten, double spaced with one inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be included&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and refuse&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All material must be received by Thursday noon for&#13;
^ubUcatior^onthefol^&#13;
How do you feel about the state elections results?&#13;
"In regard to governor, I wanted&#13;
Dreyfus to win. .. so I'm glad.&#13;
In regards to Vel Phillips, it's&#13;
good to see a minority person&#13;
win. I felt it was time .for a&#13;
change, for the Republicans to&#13;
be in power."&#13;
Marilyn Raduenz&#13;
I was happy. . . Dreyfus won, but&#13;
I felt Schreiber was more&#13;
qualified."&#13;
Craig Vandenberg&#13;
"I'm very happy with the way it&#13;
went. I didn't feel Schreiber was&#13;
doing a good job. He was taking&#13;
credit for things. . .hedidn't do."&#13;
)ohn Gabriel&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Trio Cancelled&#13;
The Oriana Trio concert&#13;
scheduled for Tuesday evening&#13;
(Nov. 14) at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside has been&#13;
cancelled because the trio's&#13;
pianist, Carol Bell, has suffered a&#13;
hand injury.&#13;
Sculptors Here&#13;
An exhibit of clay sculpture by&#13;
Leslie and Patrick Robison will&#13;
be on display in the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery through Nov.&#13;
30. The sculptors will be on&#13;
campus on Nov. 15 to present a&#13;
slide show dealing with their&#13;
work at 7 p.m. in Greenquist Hall&#13;
Room 101.&#13;
Gallery hours are noon to 5&#13;
p.m. Mondays and Thursdays&#13;
and 7 to 10 p.m. Tuesdays and&#13;
Wednesdays", and Friday by&#13;
appointment.&#13;
Both Robisons received masters&#13;
degrees in ceramics from&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and have been&#13;
associated with the Ozaukee Art&#13;
Center, Wisconsin Fine Arts&#13;
Association.&#13;
As an undergraduate at&#13;
Lawrence University, Leslie&#13;
Robison won the Elizabeth&#13;
Richardson Award for the&#13;
outstanding female artist and has&#13;
had several shows at Lawrence&#13;
including an alumnae invitational.&#13;
Her work has been exhibited&#13;
throughout the midwest and she&#13;
is represented in the 1977&#13;
National Cone Box Show, a&#13;
two-year traveling exhibition.&#13;
UT Prof. Speaks&#13;
The Mathematics Colloquium&#13;
program which sponsors many&#13;
speaking programs each year at&#13;
Parkside is bringing Professor&#13;
R.H. Bing from the University of&#13;
Texas, Austin, to speak on&#13;
"Recent Discoveries in Euclidean&#13;
Topology." The talk will be held&#13;
in CL 107, at 3:30 p.m., Thursday,&#13;
November 17. The talk will be&#13;
preceded by a coffee at 3:00&#13;
p.m in CL 111.&#13;
Professor R.H. Bing assures&#13;
Parkside that there will be&#13;
something of interest for all who&#13;
attend the lecture.&#13;
Professor Bing is member of&#13;
the National Academy of&#13;
Science and has taught at the&#13;
University of Texas and at the&#13;
University of WisconsinCOESS&#13;
UHAT H I FIN All Y GOT&#13;
HE A JOS! I START&#13;
TONIGHT AT STUDIO Hi&#13;
/) DISCO.&#13;
FANTASTIC!&#13;
/&#13;
Madison. He was given the&#13;
Distinguished Service Award&#13;
from the Mathematics Association&#13;
of America in 1974.&#13;
Professor Bing will discuss, in&#13;
particular, some results about&#13;
Fixed Point Theorms.&#13;
State Trusts U W&#13;
Communications Profess Otto&#13;
F. Bauer, released an investigation&#13;
measuring State Government&#13;
trust in the university&#13;
syste„ •&gt;. Forty-four legislators and&#13;
sixty members of the staff of the&#13;
Department of Administration&#13;
satisfactorily participated in the&#13;
survey.&#13;
^ Of a possible 70 points a mean&#13;
score of 53.82 was obtained. This&#13;
score, according to the survey,&#13;
indicates a relatively high level&#13;
of trust of legislators to the U.W.&#13;
system.&#13;
In measuring trust, Prof. Bauer&#13;
found significant differences&#13;
among legislators depending&#13;
upon years of service in the&#13;
legislature, and by the subject&#13;
and sources of a persons&#13;
information about the U.W.&#13;
system.&#13;
The survey was conducted, by&#13;
Prof. Bauer, as a baseline figure&#13;
in which to measure trust levels&#13;
in the future.&#13;
' THE DISCOTHEQUE, A&#13;
RECESS OF YOUNG A ND&#13;
BUDO/NG GLO W! ALLUR/N6&#13;
CHAMBER O F N/GHT-L/FE,&#13;
REUEREP SANCTUM O F INNOCENT&#13;
AMUSE ME Nil AVARICIOUS DEN&#13;
OF FANCIFUL TJ /SHINGS AND..,&#13;
EUERLAST/NC RIGHTEOUS&#13;
BRILLIANCE AND FAME/ THE&#13;
ENDURING F OUNDATION OF O UR&#13;
HONORABLE NATION IN UH/CH&#13;
EVERY RED-BLOODED AMFRlcAfO&#13;
YOUTH HAS THE FREE RIGHT&#13;
TO GET POCJK) LOU AND&#13;
&amp;OOG/EH!&#13;
/ | UOU),&#13;
I CAN'T&#13;
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TO&#13;
START/&#13;
£ y&#13;
' y A EtER HEAR THE O NE&#13;
ABouT THE MfiN u/TH THE _&#13;
SPEECH IMPEDIMENT^&#13;
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\£° FAR TO NIGHT J wai&#13;
1/ JL UELL ANYDAf, -&#13;
THERE UAS THIS..&#13;
OH £ MAN...&#13;
- ~r£ &#13;
STUDENT&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Season Opener&#13;
VK. litW&#13;
iuocs tjrnc&#13;
Rangers vs. UW-La Crosse&#13;
730 p.m., Friday, Nov. 24&#13;
Bldg.&#13;
• FREE!!! Miller - "Bleacher Creature" T-shirts to the first 200 UW-P students with valid I.D,&#13;
cards.&#13;
4 V* W* BBS Free-Throw contest, giving you a chance to win pizza at Casa Capri, beer or soda at the&#13;
KH KK?: J Union or a new 1979 Spirit through Nudi AMC, or a new 1979 Horizon through Palmen&#13;
Motors or a new 1979 Chevette through Robinson Chevrolet-Cadillac.&#13;
999 P ° s t "Game Party at Union Square. Turn in your&#13;
l%JC*I!#e • • FREE beers or sodas.&#13;
ticket stub from the game and get two&#13;
FREE!!! Live entertainment after the game in Union Square.&#13;
New cheerleaders! A new 20-piece pep&#13;
1^1 ML WW • • • Rangers!&#13;
band! A new club for the kids--the Junior&#13;
• BETTER THAN EVER!!!&#13;
Parkside basketball! See the Rangers go for an unprecedented fifth straight NAIA&#13;
district title! See.college basketball action at its finest, with 14-home games, including&#13;
the Ranger Classic Holiday Tournament.&#13;
• ADMISSION:&#13;
$1.50 in advance for students; $2 at the door. Season passes $7.50 for students. Individual&#13;
game tickets and season passes may be purchased at the Parkside Union Information&#13;
Center or at the UW-P Physical Education Bldg. &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978 RANGER&#13;
'Stepping' into Print&#13;
by Nicki Kroll phases where each wants to that combining home and family&#13;
show the love that may be life with a career can be even&#13;
A few weeks ago, as they growing and yet there is a more so. "Babies and small&#13;
entered her classes, the students possibility that some resentment children are such pleasurable&#13;
of English ad hoc Nancy Thayer of the stepmother still exists and little creatures," she says. They&#13;
were greeted by an elated vice versa. enjoy being held and cuddled&#13;
instructor. She had just been A stepmother (and Nancy's and the whole experience gives a&#13;
informed by Doubleday that her protagonist is no exception here, sort of sensual satisfaction to&#13;
fiction novel Stepping had been either) feels a greater flexibility both the mother and the child,&#13;
accepted for publication. The with her own children. "There There is a "deliciousness" of&#13;
book will be out in January of are times when your own child children and homelife than can&#13;
1980. The story covers 15 years in may drive you to the point where be extremely rewarding to a&#13;
the life and experience of a you will simply shout at him or woman. When her children are&#13;
stepmother and her relationship her to be quiet and leave you old enough to be in school, she&#13;
with her stepchildren and her alone," Nancy states. "With a can pursue other activities, go&#13;
own children and the problems stepchild you may hesitate to do back to school, and make her life&#13;
which she must rise above. such a thing." There is a sort of even more fulfilling. A woman&#13;
"It is not an autobiography," touchy feeling in the disciplining has built up energy that must be&#13;
emphasizes Nancy, "it is pure of stepchildren. Again, the child used when her children are in&#13;
fiction." The fictional step- may feel resentment toward the school. "Women can do a lot of&#13;
mother's experiences are magni- stepmother. But if these things," Nancy says. "They have&#13;
fied a bit, but only to validly problems can be overcome, to learn how much they have&#13;
illustrate the general problems being a stepmother is just as and what they can do with it."&#13;
that are shared by many rewarding as being a natural Nancy combines her own&#13;
stepmothers. Nancy's protagon- mother, and that's what home and family life with her&#13;
ist goes through the stage of. her motherhood is all about. teaching here and also her career&#13;
stepchildren being afraid of her, Nancy Thayer feels that as a writer. Her oyvn children are She has. had five stories phase of her writing career. And,&#13;
something that many step- motherhood (including step- aged three and five and she publisher!'."on!' this coptinertt; "who knows?, inJanuary of 1980,&#13;
children share universally. She motherhood) can be rewarding enjoys being with them and three in Canada and two in the you miyfiiStf'rev'ibw of&#13;
experiences the love and hate as well as fulfilling, and she feels taking care of them. With her States. One of them was noticed Stepping in thisvery paper.&#13;
The Facts On Tenure&#13;
by Mollie Clarke opinions about the classes they his findings to the President of forms are studied at each level of&#13;
have taken and about how well the University of Wisconsin evaluation, students may write&#13;
Believe it or not, the time for professors are teaching them. School System and the Board of letters to the divisional offices&#13;
taking final exams and filling out According to Mr. John Campbell, Regents. It is not until the Board and to the Chancellor. They may&#13;
course evaluation forms is only Associate Dean of Faculty, of Regents has approved the also state their opinions at&#13;
fiy&amp;JWeeks'aWatyt This' pfo'dfef^ fS' students stidold "fill ouf these proposal'th:at'ai prdfessor'obtains '' reconsiderationCommittees. In:&#13;
-. , especially tedious to people like -evaluation forms with a' serious the rights of tenure. structors Who" haVe' ndV' been b&#13;
Joe Student. attitude. Students can partici- Once a professor receives recommended for tenure can ask&#13;
Picturethefollowingscene.lt pate in the process professors go tenure, he has a permanent for reconsideration. The Faculty&#13;
is the last day of class and Joe through to obtain tenure. position with the university. As Rights and Responsibilities&#13;
Student's eyes are red from Instructors are usually eval- long as he performs his job and Committee can review such&#13;
non-stop studying. He gives a big uated during their sixth year at does not abuse his privileges, a cases and examine new&#13;
sigh when his professor hands Parkside. First, the Divisional professor will maintain tenure evidence. This committee may&#13;
out the computerized evaluation Executive Committee, which is status. also examine misconduct cases&#13;
sheets and thinks, "Not these made up of faculty members Teachers are evaluated on the and cases in which an error in&#13;
again!" As soon as he colors in only, makes recommendations basis of their teaching ability, the evaluation procedure occurthe&#13;
small rectangles, he darts out to the Chancellor. The Personel which is the most important red. Teachers who do not obtain&#13;
of the room yelling, "Free at Review Subcommittee, which consideration; scholarship, tenure are allowed to work one&#13;
last!" consists of elected representa- which involves research and more year.&#13;
Hey, Joe? What are you free tives from each division along publishing activities and partici- Though filling out the course&#13;
from? If you hate school so with four at-large members of pation in community affairs and evaluation forms may be a&#13;
much, why are you here? Is it the faculty, then evaluates these activities which are related to his nuisance to many students, this&#13;
because the classes you are recommendations and presents field; and programatic consider- is&gt; one of; the: ways students can tSafiPnal Children's Book Week,&#13;
taking are boring? their findings to the Chancellor, ations, or the university's need make suggestions and voice their "To Fly," another award-winning&#13;
Each semester students have After reviewing the candi- for teachers in a given program, opinions about the courses being film, will also be shown. This free&#13;
the opportunity to express their dates, the Chancellor presents Although student evaluation taught at Parkside. film program is scheduled to&#13;
begin at 2:00 p.m.&#13;
"The Red Balloon," recently&#13;
acquired by the Racine Public&#13;
Library, was named the 'best film&#13;
of the decade' at the Educational&#13;
Film Library Association's American&#13;
Film Festival. It is a fantasy&#13;
of a boy who makes friends with&#13;
a balloon. He 'tames' it and the&#13;
balloon begins to live a life of its&#13;
own, following the boy through&#13;
the streets of Paris, to school, on&#13;
the bus and into church.&#13;
The boy and balloon play&#13;
together until a gang of jealous&#13;
street urchins destroy the&#13;
balloon. All the other captive&#13;
balloons in Paris come down in&#13;
revolt, lifting the boy up and&#13;
flying him over the rooftops of&#13;
the city. Excellent photography&#13;
and musical background make&#13;
this classic film enjoyable to&#13;
both children and adults.&#13;
"The Red Balloon" also&#13;
received an Academy Award,&#13;
awards at Cannes and Edinburgh&#13;
film festivals, and the French&#13;
Film Critics Award.&#13;
This program is sponsored by&#13;
the Racine Public Library and the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater. Reservations&#13;
for the November 12&#13;
film program can be. made by&#13;
calling the Rondelle at 554-215-&#13;
Nancy Thayer author of 'Stepping' pholo bj ^&#13;
free time, Nancy continues&#13;
writing, which she did not begin&#13;
until just before the birth of her&#13;
first child. It was something that&#13;
_ -I L «J i-Un « m mrl I f&#13;
by a Spanish journal and has&#13;
been translated for publication&#13;
in Spain. Nancy hopes that the&#13;
publication of Stepping is the&#13;
I : :&#13;
Award W inning&#13;
Film I n R acine&#13;
"The Red Balloon" will make&#13;
its premiere showing in Racine at&#13;
the Golden Rondelle on&#13;
November 12 in celebration of&#13;
MILLER NIGHT&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
SEASON OPENER&#13;
RANGERS vs. UW-LaCROSSE&#13;
FBI., NOV. 24 7230 P.M.&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PHYSICAL EDUCATION BLDG.&#13;
STUDENT ADMISSION: $2.00 (AT THE DOOR)&#13;
GENERAL ADMISSION: $2.00&#13;
CHILDREN'S ADMISSION: $1.00&#13;
FREE! "BLEACHER CREATURE" T-SHIRTS TO FIRST&#13;
200 UW-P STUDENTS WITH PARKSIDE I.D. FREE! MILLER REER/SODA TICKETS REDEEMABLE AT&#13;
AN AFTER GAME PARTY IN THE PARKSIDE&#13;
UNION "LIVE ENTERTAINMENT"&#13;
w-SUPPORT YOUR CHAMPIONSHIP RANGER&#13;
TEAM NATL. CHAMPIONSHIPS 197S, 1970. 1Q77. 101a &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978&#13;
R4NGfR&#13;
Papers Requested By State Academy&#13;
lo&#13;
Young&#13;
Student&#13;
Union&#13;
Matures&#13;
by Peter Jackel&#13;
In the very foreseeable future&#13;
the Parkside Union will be&#13;
undergoing a major facelift in an&#13;
effort to upgrade the efficiency&#13;
and safety of its facilities. As&#13;
dean of student life Dave&#13;
Pedersen explains, "We're presently&#13;
accepting bids and the&#13;
work will start&#13;
possible."&#13;
The initial phase of the&#13;
overhaul will be launched this&#13;
Christmas break when the new&#13;
carpeting and tiles for the union&#13;
square are tentatively scheduled&#13;
to be laid. Among other items on&#13;
the rather sizable list include a - ~&#13;
new vyine dispensing unit, new. ,&#13;
Sc&#13;
l&#13;
uare Admission is free. Sponsored by PAB&#13;
•f a^us,tjc#J;vy,alls.fpr«^th.e,!^eat/|e.jniTransportation for W sabledf^:^ pirn'/m k&#13;
•^frjcb vyill enable theprojection- Cify Hall Council Chambers. Improve inadequate&#13;
Undergraduate and graduate&#13;
students of Wisconsin's public&#13;
and independent colleges and&#13;
universities are invited to submit&#13;
abstracts of research or scholarly&#13;
papers for presentation at the&#13;
1979 Annual Meeting of the&#13;
Wisconsin Academy of Sciences,&#13;
Arts and Letters.&#13;
The Annual Meeting will be&#13;
held on the campus of Carthage&#13;
College in Kenosha, Wis. on&#13;
Friday and Saturday, April 20-21.&#13;
Featured will be paper presentations&#13;
on a variety of topics in the&#13;
sciences, social sciences, arts,&#13;
letters and humanities by&#13;
faculty, students and other&#13;
researchers from around Wisconsin.&#13;
Presentations will be 20&#13;
minutes each, with 5 minutes for&#13;
discussion.&#13;
Selection of papers for&#13;
presentation will be based on&#13;
submitted abstracts, which&#13;
should include title of paper;&#13;
outline of purpose, methodology,&#13;
and principal findings or&#13;
conclusions; name, address and&#13;
phone number of the author;&#13;
and indication of any audiovisual&#13;
equipment required for&#13;
presentation.&#13;
Deadline for receipt of&#13;
abstracts is March 1, 1979, and&#13;
they' should be sent to:&#13;
Wisconsin Academy, 1922 University&#13;
Ave., Madison 53705 (Tel:&#13;
608-263-1692). Further information&#13;
is available by writing or&#13;
calling the Academy.&#13;
The Wisconsin Academy of&#13;
Sciences, Arts and Letters is one&#13;
of th e older and larger of th e 46&#13;
state and regional academies in&#13;
the nation, and one of only three&#13;
that includes the arts and letters&#13;
as well as the sciences in&#13;
programming and membership&#13;
representation. The Academy&#13;
was chartered by the Legislature&#13;
in 1870 for the purpose of&#13;
encouraging communication&#13;
on the sciences, arts and letters&#13;
of Wisconsin. Membership&#13;
information is ava ilable also by&#13;
writing or calling the Academy;&#13;
however persons need not be&#13;
members in order to present&#13;
papers at the Annual Meeting.&#13;
as soon as Coming Events&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 15&#13;
Concert by students at 3 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Lecture/Slides by Milwaukee artists Patrick and Leslie Robison&#13;
in GR 101 at 7 p.m. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Coffeehouse featuring Blegen and Sayer at 8 p.m. in Union&#13;
Qni i-ai-n r' L; i i U . -1 -~ -1«*" if,'""&#13;
)o&#13;
ists to monitor excessive noise&#13;
better, lighting on the steps of&#13;
the union square for dances,&#13;
portable ramps for students in&#13;
wheelchairs, mats behind the&#13;
bar, and a new grill. Stolen&#13;
theatre equipment and $3000&#13;
worth of damaged furniture from&#13;
the union will a lso have to be&#13;
replaced. In addition Pedersen is&#13;
also considering a mural for the&#13;
ceiling of Union Square.&#13;
A sound system planned for&#13;
the dining room has already&#13;
arrive^.^pd Pedersen is currently&#13;
aece'ptmg- bids for its installation.&#13;
In an attempt to conserve&#13;
precious funds, Pedersen is&#13;
probing the possibility of hiring&#13;
qualified Parkside students to&#13;
perform the chore for a reduced&#13;
fee.&#13;
Sports enthusists will a lso be&#13;
pleased as Pedersen has&#13;
announced plans of constructing&#13;
basketball and volleyball courts&#13;
on the grounds surrounding the&#13;
Union and running an equipment&#13;
rental service. A cross&#13;
country ski rental service is also&#13;
noltefci, v.: us,OX&#13;
j Although iCjs,not known if the&#13;
Union can afford all these&#13;
projects, Pedersen anticipates&#13;
having sufficient funds. The&#13;
remodelling will be paid for out&#13;
of the remainder of the&#13;
construction budget, from reserves,&#13;
and from the earning/&#13;
operating budget. "The Union, as&#13;
far as the business end goes, is&#13;
progressing well", Pedersen&#13;
points out. "For the first tim e in&#13;
our existence, we are not asking&#13;
for additional segregated fee&#13;
support. Even though the&#13;
operating costs have increased&#13;
with inflation, we will on ly ask&#13;
for 46% of our total operating&#13;
costs next year as opposed to the&#13;
50% we have always asked for in&#13;
the past. All additional costs will&#13;
come from our program&#13;
revenues."&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 18&#13;
Kiddie Flicks "An Evening with Bullwinkle" will be shown at 10&#13;
a.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre for the Parkside Community&#13;
and their families. Admission is $1 for a child, parents&#13;
accompanying the children are admitted free. Sponsored by&#13;
the Student Life Office. &lt; ou •&#13;
&gt;,i1hv.,, u, - Coricert at 8 p'.m. m the Communication Arts Theatre featuring&#13;
"wfor Disabled .7:36 p.m. in Racine's the Racine Symphony, Community Chorus, and the Parkside&#13;
Chorale with Stephen Colburn conducting. Admission will be&#13;
charged at the door.&#13;
Sports Men's cross-country: NAIA National Championship. At&#13;
Parkside. (11a .m.)&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 19&#13;
Concert at 3:30 p.m. in the CA Bldg., the level 1 hallway, with&#13;
Frank Mueller directing and Chorus/Chamber Singers. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Movie "Julia" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Italian Culture Meeting at 2 p.m. in the Kenosha Public&#13;
Museum. A trip to the Museum of Science and Industry in&#13;
Chicago will be planned.&#13;
Monday, Nov. 20&#13;
If cannot attend see John Ceorgeson or. . Round Table at 12 noon in Union, 106, Bonnie.Smith will talk&#13;
...on r.Dome^tipity.Tas:.^...SynjbQli^r^AWui QpeA,.to,, staff and&#13;
transportation for disabled. For more information call Society's&#13;
Assets. (Racine: 637-9128.)&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 16&#13;
Political Science There will be an organizational meeting of&#13;
the Political Science Club at 3:30 p.m. in WLL Center.&#13;
Movie "Reefer Madness" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. (One showing only.) 1937 version — uncut. "One of&#13;
the most influential propaganda movies ever filmed." Free&#13;
admission. Good-will donations accepted.&#13;
Nordic Ski Club 7 p.m. in CL 105. Will have 2 movies on&#13;
X-country skiing; featured speakers on equipment; discuss&#13;
events for the year. Used X-country equipment sale and swap.&#13;
At 7:30 p.m.- Nordic Trail-blazers Club of Kenosha-Racine will&#13;
meet Open to all&#13;
phone 633-7755.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 17&#13;
Earth Science Colloquium 12 noon in GR 113. Dr. Frank Luther&#13;
of UW-Whitewater will give a talk and slide presentation on&#13;
"The Geology and Scenery North of Lake Superior."&#13;
Workshop on Grant Writing in the Union Bldg. starting at 9&#13;
a.m. Call ext. 2316 for more details.&#13;
Seminar Chem/Life Sci.at2p.m. in CL 105. The program is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
Workshop "Sexuality and the Physically Disabled" today and&#13;
tomorrow in the CL Bldg. Call ext. 2032 for more details.&#13;
Colloquium at 3:30 p.m. in CL 107. Prof. Bing of the University&#13;
of Texas in Austin will talk on "Recent Discoveries in Euclidean&#13;
Topology." The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Movie "Julia" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema&#13;
&gt;Theatre. Admitsion at the door is $ 1 for a Parkside student and&#13;
$1fof a guest. Sponsored by PAB. ••-••'•"'•/inu *d t *•&#13;
Sports Men's swimming: sixth annual Ranger relays. At&#13;
Parkside. (3:30 p.m.)&#13;
10% DISCOUNT&#13;
To Parkside students and faculty&#13;
members only, on all merchandise&#13;
in our store. Parkside I.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
Kenosha'* Diamond Center&#13;
5617 - 6th Avenue&#13;
is free. Sponsored by Social interested students. Admission&#13;
Science Division.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 21&#13;
Concert by the Jazz Ensemble directed by Tim Bell at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the CA theatre. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 22&#13;
Brown Bag Lunch at 12 noon in WLLC D174, featuring Patty&#13;
Deihl of Racine who will demonstrate holiday nature-crafts.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public. Sponsored by&#13;
Community Students Services.&#13;
RANGER N EEDS&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Phone 658-2525 Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
m W&#13;
NZABl)R&#13;
$&#13;
fJ&#13;
Ei9&#13;
. v. C i„te ^&#13;
*"79 ?°u GOOD &gt; "nvnke- MON-FRI&#13;
lHC&#13;
cd1* 11 - 2&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACULTY A*D&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFF ON ALL&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICATION. &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978 RANGER 6&#13;
R eviews&#13;
Getaway On&#13;
'Midnight Express'&#13;
by Pete Little&#13;
On the surface, "Midnight&#13;
Express" is not a very pleasant&#13;
film. Its subject matter is often&#13;
violent and degrading to our&#13;
middle class sensibilities. You&#13;
keep asking yourself, "Can things&#13;
really be this bad, this real?"&#13;
They can, and this is precisely&#13;
what director Alan Parker and&#13;
original author Billy Hayes have&#13;
intended. It is a compelling, true&#13;
story of a young American, Billy&#13;
Hayes, who in 1970 tried to&#13;
smuggle a small amount of&#13;
hashish out of Turkey. It is&#13;
unfortunate for Billy that he&#13;
attempts this on the day the&#13;
Turkish police just happen to be&#13;
looking for terrorist highjackers.&#13;
Billy not only looks like a&#13;
highjacker, (with his army coat&#13;
and dark sunglasses), but panics&#13;
under the additional security.&#13;
From there on the movie&#13;
slowly sinks into its main subject&#13;
matter; Billy's alienation from&#13;
the American Dream he grew up&#13;
on. He is caught, prosecuted,&#13;
convicted, and sentenced to five&#13;
years (which three years later&#13;
incfeases&gt;t&lt;2&gt;' thirty . years)'4n&gt; a&#13;
smqjl piece of hell known as a&#13;
Turkish prison. The struggle not&#13;
only to get out and stay alive,&#13;
but to also remain sane, then&#13;
begins for Billy.&#13;
The makers of this film have&#13;
spared no expense, paying&#13;
special attention to even the&#13;
crudest of details. At times it is&#13;
so real that the viewer may be&#13;
shocked or even insulted. I can't&#13;
begin to describe the horrors of&#13;
Billy's stay. You must see it and&#13;
feel it for yourself.&#13;
As the character Billy Hayes,&#13;
Brad Davis turns in a superb role.&#13;
Billy is on the screen at least&#13;
90% of the time, so we get to&#13;
know him inside and out. As the&#13;
story goes on, he becomes a&#13;
identifiable hero. The supporting&#13;
cast also does a fine job. The&#13;
roles are all extremely individualistic&#13;
and well-motivated.&#13;
The film works on nearly all&#13;
levels. The photography is&#13;
almost lyrical, and the lighting,&#13;
along with the intense music, is&#13;
adept in conspiring to tear away&#13;
our sensibilities. We see much&#13;
graphic violence and an&#13;
existence, (I didn't say life) so&#13;
hostile that some weaker viewers&#13;
NA/twiY.np!; eoi9,y it,.r* M&#13;
"Midnight, Express" is .worlds&#13;
away. See it!&#13;
-PA6 Mini Movie Review&#13;
Jane Fonda, Vanessa Redgrave&#13;
and Jason Robards all garner&#13;
award winning performances in a&#13;
beautifully made film.&#13;
The story concerns playwright&#13;
Lillian Hellman and her&#13;
relationship with her childhood&#13;
friend Julia. The basis of the&#13;
movie concerns a particular&#13;
incident in the relationship.&#13;
Lillian (Jane Fonda) is asked by&#13;
Julia (Vanessa Redgrave) to&#13;
smuggle money through Nazi&#13;
Germany to help secure freedom&#13;
for jews and other political&#13;
prisoners.&#13;
Although the majority of the&#13;
film involves this segment of&#13;
Julia's and Lillian's relationship&#13;
the movie also says much about&#13;
the agony of creativity, personal&#13;
and political commitments, and&#13;
enduring relationships in general.&#13;
&#13;
Julia is beautifully directed&#13;
and filmed with Fred Zinneman&#13;
going to extreme lengths to&#13;
create the perfect atmosphere.&#13;
The film, however, often tries to&#13;
present more than 117 minutes&#13;
of screen time will allow often&#13;
resulting in a mishmash.&#13;
Those not familiar with&#13;
Hellman's memoirs, Pentimento,&#13;
or not familiar with Lillian&#13;
Hellman at all might find the&#13;
story .difficult to follow. The film&#13;
jumps back and forth in time in&#13;
examination of Lillian and Julia's&#13;
relationship and this segmented&#13;
nature could tend to confuse.&#13;
What the film does have,&#13;
however, is a gathering of first&#13;
class performances, fantastic&#13;
cinematography, and a sense of&#13;
artistry seldom found in films&#13;
today.&#13;
The Bio Fix&#13;
60's Dectective in the 70's&#13;
by Mike Murphy&#13;
Moses Wine is an industrial&#13;
investigator. He is relatively&#13;
short, carries a contempory&#13;
curled hairstyle and moustache,&#13;
is divorced, lives alone in a small&#13;
alleyway apartment, pays exhorbitant&#13;
alimony and often&#13;
brings his kids with him on his&#13;
investigations. His comic book&#13;
sleuthian name is in total irony&#13;
to his character.&#13;
Moses Wine is a child of the&#13;
sixties. He was radically active&#13;
during his stay at Berkley and&#13;
still maintains a deep affection&#13;
for those days. But now his&#13;
radical days are over and he is&#13;
left facing the responsibility of a&#13;
broken marriage, a family, and a&#13;
job.:&#13;
Centered within the wrappings&#13;
of an intricately weaved&#13;
detective yarn The Big Fix is a&#13;
curious chronicle of those who&#13;
participated in one of the most&#13;
disruptive decades in U.S.&#13;
history. It involves characters&#13;
whose lives were shaped by the&#13;
political and social deterioration&#13;
of the era but who no longer feel&#13;
secure in the complancency of&#13;
the seventies. Although the&#13;
majority of these people have&#13;
conformed to the times, they&#13;
look back at the sixties as older&#13;
people might look to the&#13;
depression. They -were hard days .&#13;
- bu ts.times, filje^..with together^,,,&#13;
ness and unity.&#13;
Moses Wine is forced to&#13;
remember those times when his&#13;
former girlfriend from Berkley,&#13;
Lila Shea (Susan Anspach), seeks&#13;
his help in a case involving a&#13;
middle of the road gubernatorial&#13;
candidate named Hawthorne. It&#13;
seems that a flyer proposing^ a&#13;
fake endorsement for Hawthorne&#13;
by a radical, underground&#13;
fugitive named Howard Eppis,&#13;
had been distributed, seriously&#13;
jeopardizing Hawthorne's election&#13;
chances.&#13;
Moses is not only stunned that&#13;
Lila, a campus protestor&#13;
companion, would work for a&#13;
colorless conservative candidate&#13;
like Hawthorne (as she is at his&#13;
present position in society) but&#13;
finds it equally amazing to have&#13;
another fellow Berkley radical,&#13;
Eppis, ,surface as if . unchanged&#13;
af|ter all these years.&#13;
Wine's search for Eppis and&#13;
the center of the campaign&#13;
smear leads him all around Los&#13;
Angeles into layer upon layer of&#13;
complicated plot which all&#13;
resolves itself in a climatic&#13;
surprise ending.&#13;
The body of The Big Fix is not&#13;
just a social and political&#13;
comment of the sixties era and&#13;
its survivors. It stands alone as a&#13;
wonderfully constructed, old&#13;
fashioned whodunnit in the&#13;
flavor of Ellery Queen or Sam&#13;
Spade. The Big Fix maintains a&#13;
consistent fast pace and is&#13;
liberally bathed with humor and&#13;
clever dialogue.&#13;
Richard Dreyfus' perfomance&#13;
as Moses Wine is superb,&#13;
advancing his position as on e of&#13;
the top American actors on film.&#13;
If another less dynamic actor&#13;
had played Moses Wine the&#13;
audience could hav^g^ily lost&#13;
sight of the character given txT(?'&#13;
complexities of the plot.&#13;
Dreyfus, however, commands&#13;
the center of attention throughout.&#13;
&#13;
The Big Fix is an interesting&#13;
movie during an election year. It&#13;
has a definite attitude toward&#13;
politics and political involvement.&#13;
It says something about&#13;
the lives of people who feel it&#13;
necessary to have an active&#13;
opinion in the American social&#13;
system. It also says worthwhile&#13;
and intelligent entertainment,&#13;
' perhat&amp;atfgfte m ftss&amp;betf;S5! rlJcS&#13;
far.&#13;
Interiors&#13;
Woody Allen Strikes Gold&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
Woody Allen's new film&#13;
"Interiors" should not intimidate&#13;
anyone from seeing it; especially&#13;
not any of Allen's traditional&#13;
fans. All the rumors about the&#13;
seriousness and greatness of&#13;
"Interiors" are true. However,&#13;
while the film is analytical and&#13;
realistic, it is also warm and&#13;
hopeful.&#13;
As the title of the film might&#13;
imply, the subject of "Interiors"&#13;
is the inner workings of the&#13;
human spirit. The plot deals with&#13;
the interrelationships within a&#13;
particular family. The family is&#13;
very well to do, lives in the East,&#13;
and is very cultured. There is a&#13;
father, mother, and their three&#13;
adult daughters. The mother, a&#13;
former fashion designer, has&#13;
been the main influence on the&#13;
family's character and interests.&#13;
The central conflict of the film&#13;
deals with the husband's (E.G.&#13;
Marshall's) effort to leave his&#13;
wife. Finally, he divorces his wife&#13;
and remarries a woman he met&#13;
on a vacation. This process of&#13;
change drives his wife to two&#13;
suicide attempts and finally, on&#13;
her husband's wedding night, she&#13;
walks into the sea and&#13;
disappears.&#13;
The three daughters have&#13;
varying attitudes toward their&#13;
parents' predicament. The oldest&#13;
daughter (Diane Keaton), a&#13;
successful poetess, encourages&#13;
her mother to believe that her&#13;
husband will return to her. The&#13;
middle daughter, married but&#13;
unsure of a career, tries to make&#13;
her mother face the reality of her&#13;
situation. The youngest daughter,&#13;
a starlet in Hollywood,&#13;
constantly flies in and out of the&#13;
picture, yet still demonstrates a&#13;
certain tenderness for her family&#13;
and her mother.&#13;
This description of,the,tpl.ot is ,&#13;
really just a rough outline of the&#13;
action and there are more&#13;
characters as well. Furthermore,&#13;
the many relationships that flow&#13;
and change during the movie&#13;
create a kind of texture.&#13;
Eventually, a certain common&#13;
perspective seems to develop as&#13;
the audience views the film's&#13;
events from many different&#13;
points of view all at once. This&#13;
phenomenon testifies to the&#13;
mastery with which the film has&#13;
been made.&#13;
As I watched "Interiors", the&#13;
first thing that struck me was the&#13;
long silences in the film. There&#13;
was no sound track and there&#13;
were large pauses in the&#13;
dialogue. These silences, however,&#13;
were realistic and the slow,&#13;
quiet pace of "Interiors" led the&#13;
audiences gradually into its&#13;
story. However, many scenes&#13;
were still very tense and thrilling.&#13;
The film concers the lives of a&#13;
certain class of people. They are&#13;
not greatly concerned with&#13;
money. They have plenty of it.&#13;
They have the time to worry long&#13;
and hard about their personal&#13;
futures. As the first hour of the&#13;
film passed, I suddenly began to&#13;
worry that the whole movie&#13;
would concentrate on these&#13;
"deep" and self-indulgent&#13;
people. But this is where&#13;
"Interiors" differs from many&#13;
other serious, heavy films.&#13;
Woody Allen entered a character&#13;
to play in contrast with the other&#13;
types in the film.&#13;
The husband's second wife,&#13;
Pearl, is almost the complete&#13;
opposite of his first wife. She is&#13;
not so concerned with art as she&#13;
is with true emotion. During the&#13;
wedding party, the silent sound&#13;
track springs to life with rag-time&#13;
jazz records, similar to the sound&#13;
track of Allen's "Sleeper." We&#13;
actually begin to laugh, heartily&#13;
with the film. We like Pearl. She&#13;
is honest, warm, and has&#13;
common sense. Furthermore, the&#13;
way she contrasts her new family&#13;
makes a statement about the&#13;
family as it existed then, and&#13;
points out a direction for the&#13;
family to develop in.&#13;
Just before the mother&#13;
commits suicide, her middle&#13;
daughter remarks that her&#13;
mother's character makes her&#13;
too perfect to exist in this world;&#13;
almost like one of her rare and&#13;
precious objects of art. Strangely&#13;
enough, after their mother's&#13;
death, the family seems to be&#13;
relieved of a great burden. Their&#13;
mother was a real human being&#13;
but one out of contact with true&#13;
feelings and people.&#13;
Once again I want to stress&#13;
that this film has a serious&#13;
message for everyone who sees&#13;
it, but it is also hopeful and lively&#13;
like all of Woody Allen's films.&#13;
The man who made a film called&#13;
"Bannannas" is still alive and&#13;
well. He is merely moving onto&#13;
bigger and better things. &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978&#13;
RANGER 7&#13;
Russian Folk Troupe Misses the Mark&#13;
by E. Tribys&#13;
This past Sunday evening, in&#13;
the - Communication Arts&#13;
Theater, the Parkside Accent on&#13;
Enrichment series presented the&#13;
Massenkoff Russian Folk Festival.&#13;
The festival featured the&#13;
bass vocalist Nikolai Massenkoff,&#13;
director and organizer of the&#13;
group, and a folk dance and&#13;
music ensemble comprised of&#13;
seven musicians and eight&#13;
dancers.&#13;
For those of us familiar with&#13;
Russian music and dance, the&#13;
evening began with a feeling of&#13;
excited expectation, but before&#13;
the night was over, a feeling of&#13;
sad disappointment took its&#13;
place. Not only did the promised&#13;
"Balalaika Orchestra" fail to&#13;
materialize (apparently Massen-&#13;
' Y.iftffi rfvfir! bluco&#13;
koff believes two balalaikas, a&#13;
domra, a bayan, a guitar, a flute,&#13;
a a P'ano sufficiently&#13;
comprise an "orchestra"), but&#13;
the fire, the soul, the truly&#13;
awe-inspiring precision of a real&#13;
Russian music and dance troupe&#13;
were missing.&#13;
The musicians played their&#13;
instruments well enough, although&#13;
rather mechanically.&#13;
They failed to bring life into the&#13;
many beautiful melodies on the&#13;
program, such as "Dark Eyes"&#13;
"Meadow Land", and "Kalinka"&#13;
With the exception of a few&#13;
dancers, the timing was off more&#13;
often than not, while the&#13;
execution of those famous leaps&#13;
and kicks left something to be&#13;
desired. But it was the soloist,&#13;
Massenkoff, who proved to be&#13;
the greatest disappointment.&#13;
From the very moment that&#13;
Massenkoff made his appearance,&#13;
he was lifted onto the&#13;
stage by means of a mechanical&#13;
elevation device. The entire&#13;
performance began to take on&#13;
the characteristics of a night&#13;
club act. The singer appeared in&#13;
a massive fur coat and hat,&#13;
armed with a microphone that&#13;
he held close to his lips.&#13;
Throughout the two hour&#13;
program, he managed no less&#13;
than five costume changes.&#13;
And his voice?&#13;
Honestly, one can't really say.&#13;
Yes, his voice was deep, as&#13;
promised; yes, he managed some&#13;
awkwardly high notes, as&#13;
promised — b ut his voice? When&#13;
a voice is projected through a&#13;
microphone into a small theater,&#13;
it is impossible to judge its&#13;
quality accurately; one hears the&#13;
amplification in a ball park&#13;
stadium is understandable, but&#13;
when a serious singer performs in&#13;
a concert hall, particularly one&#13;
with such fine acoustics as our&#13;
own Communication Arts&#13;
Theater, amplification is not&#13;
only unnecessary, but ridiculous.&#13;
I can now understand why the&#13;
Moscow reviewer quoted in the&#13;
evenings program notes observed&#13;
that Massenkoff's voice&#13;
"seemed to push the walls&#13;
aside. .."&#13;
Apparently not many in the&#13;
theater Sunday night agreed with&#13;
me. The Massenkoff Russian Folk&#13;
Festival received a standing&#13;
ovation. The audience loved it.&#13;
They raved when the male&#13;
dancers leapt into the air, they&#13;
raved when Massenkoff suavely&#13;
sauntered across the stage&#13;
clutching his microphone, bidding&#13;
them to clap along, they&#13;
raved when he cracked a couple&#13;
of jokes, and they raved when he&#13;
sang, as an encore, "If I Were a&#13;
Rich Man." Upon leaving the&#13;
performance, I heard one person&#13;
say it was the best performance&#13;
of the series so far; another&#13;
remarked that "Massenkoff is&#13;
quite an actor." He is quite a&#13;
salesman as well. Record albums&#13;
were being sold after the&#13;
performance while Massenkoff&#13;
dutifully signed autographs.&#13;
If you ever really want to take&#13;
in a Russian folk festival, I'd&#13;
suggest you catch the Osipov&#13;
Balalaika Orchestra or the&#13;
Moseyev Folk Dance Company&#13;
next time they pass this way.&#13;
Massenkoff's group is more like a&#13;
Las Vegas imitation of a Russian&#13;
Folk Festival than the real thing.&#13;
*&#13;
! -fnwniwsH bsmsn sMfcfbrl&#13;
and Spills with Second City&#13;
by Mike Murphy&#13;
Have you ever heard a Nichols&#13;
and May album? If you haven't,&#13;
get one at your local library and&#13;
listen to it. Mike Nichols and&#13;
Elaine May were probably the&#13;
finest improvisational duo ever&#13;
to come out of America.&#13;
Their humor is topical,&#13;
intelligent, and often filled with&#13;
social and philosophical satire.&#13;
Both haveedtehed out extremely,&#13;
successful individual careers and&#13;
both got their start with Second&#13;
City.&#13;
This is not to say that everyone&#13;
involved with Second City will&#13;
eventually make it big in films&#13;
and theatre but if last&#13;
Wednesday's performance by&#13;
the Chicago based Second City&#13;
troupe at the Comm. Arts theatre&#13;
is a ny indication of the type of&#13;
talent involved in the organization&#13;
they all should become&#13;
world famous.&#13;
November eight's show invited&#13;
a packed house of eager to be&#13;
entertained people. Most people&#13;
knew that Second City was a&#13;
touring comedy group but didn't&#13;
know quite what to expect. As it&#13;
turned out for most it was one of&#13;
the most enjoyable evenings to&#13;
be had.&#13;
The opening skit had the&#13;
entire cast assembled, as in a&#13;
congregation, on stage, repreI&#13;
sTarTed as&#13;
a Ranger&#13;
w Tiler&#13;
senting the United Church of&#13;
Caucasians singing praise to the&#13;
upper middle class. From there&#13;
the show went off in all&#13;
directions; A news show takeoff&#13;
parody the trite chatter between&#13;
newsman on the air which is&#13;
disrupted when one newscaster&#13;
reads a bulletin declaring the&#13;
end of the world; a taxidermist&#13;
introducing his date to his&#13;
parents who, it turns out, are&#13;
Stuffed themselves; a takeoff of&#13;
the Grand Ole Opry with a trio of&#13;
country and western singers&#13;
singing songs laced with&#13;
masochism and sadism; and a&#13;
shy medical center patient who&#13;
has to explain his afflication of&#13;
VD to a disciplinary nun-nurse.&#13;
Perhaps the most interesting,&#13;
and fun, part of the evening was&#13;
when the group composed a skit&#13;
from suggested statements by&#13;
the audience (for your information&#13;
Kenosha audiences are&#13;
exceptionally perverted). The&#13;
skit turned out to be hilarious,&#13;
with the audience feeling a part&#13;
bf the comedy 6h ^tage.1&#13;
- "&#13;
The group that performed at&#13;
Parkside is the Chicago branch of&#13;
what has now become an&#13;
international company. It is the&#13;
Toronto based group that&#13;
produces the offbeat, but often&#13;
mediocre, SCTV television program&#13;
aired after Saturday Night&#13;
Live.&#13;
Second City boasts, as one of&#13;
the performers stated at the&#13;
beginning of the show, a&#13;
membership that in the past had&#13;
included the likes of John&#13;
Belushi, Alan Arkin, David&#13;
Steinberg, Truman Capote and&#13;
William Shakespeare (the later&#13;
two not for the record).&#13;
The seven members that&#13;
performed at Parkside revealed a&#13;
lot of hours of hard work in&#13;
rehearsal and jjnJimited jpdivifib-.vs&#13;
ual talerit'.''^THbir°'abfllfV'' to"&#13;
conjure an image of such&#13;
settings as a tavern, an airport, or&#13;
a post office out of the minimum&#13;
of props was amazing. And their&#13;
comedic talents were on an&#13;
equal plateau.&#13;
The pace seldom lets up as the&#13;
performers passed through&#13;
uncountable short and not so&#13;
short skits and blackouts.&#13;
Although their material was&#13;
often bawdy and risque, with&#13;
stabs at religious and sexual&#13;
institutions, the audiences seemed&#13;
to except it in the fun of&#13;
which it was offered.&#13;
' Without a doubt the performance&#13;
of Second City last&#13;
Wednesday was the best comedy&#13;
program to be presented at&#13;
Parkside in recent memory.&#13;
Given the large and enthusiastic&#13;
turn out I would like to see more&#13;
of Second City or that type of&#13;
entertainment in future programs.&#13;
&#13;
Living It Up&#13;
Theater &amp; Films&#13;
Nov. 17,18 &amp; 19 - Milwaukee Ballet, "Piano Man" &amp; "Ballet Master"&#13;
8 p.m. at the Pabst Theater.&#13;
Nov. 17 — Film, "Running Fence" at UW-Milwaukee. Union Cinema&#13;
premiere followed by presentation by filmmaker Albert Maysler - 8&#13;
p.m., $2.50. Showing at 10:30 p.m., $1.50.&#13;
Music&#13;
;Nbv. 15 -r- New Arts Trjtt ^tf^sbted'by Wig. Musieat&#13;
8 p.m. in Vogel Hall, PAC.&#13;
Nov. 16 &amp; 18 — "Manon" performed by the Florentine Opera Co. at '/&#13;
p.m. in Uihlein Hall, PAC. Limited tickets available.&#13;
Nov. 17 — R ick Nelson performs in Uihlein Hall, PAC at 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Nov. 21 — Disco Music, "An Evening with Donna Summer" at 7 &amp;&#13;
10:30 p.m. in Uihlein Hall, PAC.&#13;
Exhibits&#13;
Thru Nov. 26 — Watercolors &amp; acrylics by Christa Adres. Sight 225&#13;
Gallery, 225 E. St. Paul Street, Milwaukee. Wed. - Sat. 11 - 5:30 p.m&#13;
Sun. 1 - 5 p.m.&#13;
— Tale of the Whale at Milwaukee Public Museum 800 W. Wells St&#13;
Milwaukee,open daily 9-5.&#13;
Thru Nov. 30 — A rtist of the Month, Mary Carrington. Photography at&#13;
Racine YWCA in Community Room.&#13;
— Watercolors by Richard Jensen. Mt Pleasant Lutheran Church&#13;
Open mornings Tues. - Fri, All day Wed.&#13;
SATURDAY MORNING&#13;
KIDDIE FLICKS&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
BULLWINKLE •%rp IIUkLVV 1 11 1 Ik k&#13;
and his friends&#13;
10:00AM-UNI0N CINEMA&#13;
$1.00&#13;
SPECIAL! AUTOGRAPH it&#13;
SESSION WITH PARKSIDE'S OWN&#13;
RANGER BEAR&#13;
PLUS JR. RANGER ROOTER INFO. X &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978 RANGER&#13;
Reefer Madness A light Tonight&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
Marijuana is a dangerous&#13;
narcotic. It will ruin your life. It&#13;
is a creepling plague in our&#13;
schools and throughout our&#13;
nation. Smoking reefer will make&#13;
you rape and kill!" To discover&#13;
where these ideas about&#13;
marijuana originally came from,&#13;
attend a free showing of the&#13;
movie "Reefer Madness," Thursday&#13;
night, November 16, at 8:00&#13;
p.m. in the Student Union&#13;
Cinema. By the way you don't&#13;
have to come stoned to enjoy&#13;
this one.&#13;
According to Professor&#13;
Pomazal of the Parkside&#13;
Psychology Department, this&#13;
nV n [film is "one of the most&#13;
influential and effective propaganda&#13;
movies ever produced." It&#13;
Be-bop King&#13;
by Terry Marcinni&#13;
Let's be fair, lefs honor&#13;
the good intentions of the&#13;
people who put on Community&#13;
Concerts in Kenosha. In search&#13;
of some variety from the&#13;
otherwise mundane fare of the&#13;
Kenosha Pops Band, these&#13;
people tried to bring a little class&#13;
to the proceedings.&#13;
Enter Dizzy Gillespie.&#13;
First, let me say Diz was&#13;
brilliant. The man and his young&#13;
group performed a variety of&#13;
jazz styles with elegance, grace&#13;
s and fun. . ... . ...&#13;
But, Diz in front of an&#13;
audience such as the one which&#13;
filled the Mary D. Bradford&#13;
auditorium last Tuesday night&#13;
was like watching four hours of&#13;
election news coverage.&#13;
I'm not sure the audience got it.&#13;
Dizzy has always been in the&#13;
vanguard of jazz. He, along with&#13;
Charlie Parker, revolted against&#13;
traditional structures, and produced&#13;
be-bop, a form which&#13;
defied interpretation by any but&#13;
the staunchest jazz followers.&#13;
Dizzy p|ayed some old&#13;
favorites, most notably, "A Night&#13;
in Tunisia" and "Salt Peanuts."&#13;
But in the end it seemed like&#13;
most of the off-the-wall&#13;
performance went over the&#13;
audience's head. A significant&#13;
portion of that audience&#13;
departed at intermission. Too&#13;
bad.&#13;
is Professor Pomazal's own print&#13;
of Reefer Madness that is being&#13;
shown and the program is being&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Boxing Club.&#13;
"This film," Pomazal said, "is&#13;
silly and unbelievable in places&#13;
and yet its effect has been&#13;
great." Formerly entitled, "Tell&#13;
Your Children," "Reefer Madness"&#13;
apparently helped to set&#13;
the whole nation's attitude&#13;
toward marijuana.&#13;
Made in 1937, it probably&#13;
played at a great role in getting&#13;
marijuana outlawed in the&#13;
1940's. This outrageous film&#13;
almost seems to be a parody of&#13;
anti-marijuana propaganda. The&#13;
acting is so trashy it is hard to&#13;
believe that the actors weren't&#13;
purposely trying to ruin the film.&#13;
Pomazal, however, doubts this&#13;
interpretation.&#13;
Another possibility he suggested,&#13;
was that the film was&#13;
supposed to be a serious&#13;
dramatization of the actual&#13;
consequences of smoking marijuana.&#13;
"If this interpretation,"&#13;
says Pomazal, "is in fact true,&#13;
then the film is irresponsible and&#13;
destructive because of its blatant&#13;
inaccuracies."&#13;
Pomazal said that he felt&#13;
motivated to show the movie in&#13;
order to explain basically, where&#13;
former generations of Americans&#13;
received their distorted image of&#13;
marijuana use. This image needs&#13;
to be modified. He also felt that&#13;
the film should be available not&#13;
only to his Psychology students&#13;
but to the entire student body&#13;
and also to faculty and staff as&#13;
well.&#13;
Despite what the film might&#13;
suggest (demand?), drugs don't&#13;
make you do anything. They may&#13;
distort perceptions or lower&#13;
inhibitions but ultimately,&#13;
people determine their own&#13;
behavior.&#13;
Try Sprouting 'Em&#13;
Bean sprouts are a dietary&#13;
staple in some Far Eastern&#13;
countries, and they are becoming&#13;
increasingly popular in the&#13;
Western world — for some very&#13;
good reasons. Sprouted seeds,&#13;
grains, and beans are alive, and&#13;
contain valuable enzymes, as&#13;
well as being an excellent source&#13;
of energy.&#13;
Ordinary seeds, grains and&#13;
legumes are quite wholesome&#13;
because they are full of natural&#13;
fats and starches. Sprouts often&#13;
contain more nutrients thhn the&#13;
parent seed, compared on a&#13;
moisture-free weight basis.&#13;
Bursting with vitamins, simple&#13;
sugars and proteins some of the&#13;
shoots contain remarkable&#13;
amounts of nutrition, taste great,&#13;
and need no soil or elaborate&#13;
techniques to grow.&#13;
At the University of Pennsylvania,&#13;
soybean shoots were&#13;
tested for vitamin C. Although&#13;
the ungerminated seeds have&#13;
none, the shoots, sprouted for&#13;
only 72 hours, contained in&#13;
one-half cup, as much vitamin C&#13;
as in six glasses of orange juice.&#13;
It was discovered that oats&#13;
sprouted for five days had 500%&#13;
more vitamin B6, 600% more&#13;
folic acid, 10% more vitamin B1,&#13;
and 1,350% more B2 than&#13;
ungerminated oats.&#13;
Wheat may also be sprouted&#13;
and the vitamin E in it increases&#13;
Chiwaukee N ews&#13;
300% in only four days.&#13;
Some vitamin increases are&#13;
not always a straight-line thing.&#13;
Vitamin B1, for example, runs up&#13;
and down in soybeans as they&#13;
sprout. The general trend,&#13;
however, is always spectacularly&#13;
up and germinated seeds are an&#13;
excellent source of vitamins A B&#13;
complex, C, D, E, C, K and even&#13;
U. Minerals such a calcium,&#13;
magnesium,; phosphorus', chl6'^&#13;
ine, potassium, and sodium are&#13;
all found in sprouts, all in natural&#13;
forms which the body can&#13;
readily assimilate.&#13;
For most people who enjoy&#13;
eating salads and greens, sprouts&#13;
are probably no adjustment in&#13;
taste or texture, and add new&#13;
variety. But, if you don't like that&#13;
sort of thing there are other&#13;
methods to eat them besides&#13;
sprinkling them on salads. They&#13;
can be steamed, added to soups,&#13;
and yeast and quick breads,&#13;
cookies, added to blender drinks,&#13;
or meat and vegetable dishes.&#13;
For best results, it is important o HMnceqcsifirYu;&#13;
to use good quality seeds arrd/bi rUe^spqon thyme or basH&#13;
beans vvhfen grbwing sprouts at !; 2 cups sprouts&#13;
Heat oil in pan and stir ...&#13;
green pepper and celery. Cook&#13;
for one minute. Add sprouts,&#13;
stirring often for another minute!&#13;
Add herbs and continue cooking&#13;
There are many varieties of&#13;
sprouters on the market and an&#13;
ordinary pint jar is also&#13;
common way to sprout. Just&#13;
make sure that it is convenient to&#13;
rinse the seeds. They will thrive&#13;
best in a warm, dark, moist, but&#13;
not wet environment.&#13;
Almost any seed, grain or&#13;
legume can be successfully&#13;
sprouted, although most devotees&#13;
think that alfalfa, mung&#13;
beans, lentils, peas, and the&#13;
cereal, grasses of- wheat, oats,&#13;
barley and rye give the best&#13;
results. Unhulled sesame seeds,&#13;
radish, mustard, red clover&#13;
fenugreek, corn, lima beans,&#13;
pinto beans, kidney beans, chick&#13;
peas, cress, millet and nearly any&#13;
other seed you can think of will&#13;
work, however, you should never&#13;
eat potato sprouts because the&#13;
plant is a member of the&#13;
poisonous nightshade family&#13;
STIR FRIED SPROUTS&#13;
2 Tablespoons oil&#13;
Vj cup minced green pepper&#13;
Vt cup rpincedjCelery.fi;&#13;
home Preferably, use the&#13;
current years crop for sprouting,&#13;
to insure the maximum yield and&#13;
minimum spoilage — t hose that&#13;
don't unfold, exception of&#13;
sunflower seeds, otherwise the&#13;
chances of germination are low&#13;
in&#13;
until done. Cover and steam if a&#13;
very soft sprout is desired.&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE ANNOUNCES A&#13;
THANKSGIVING SPECIAL&#13;
k WED. NOV. 22 - DINING ROOM&#13;
TURKEY DINNER WITH ALL THE TRIMMINGS&#13;
• ROAST TURKEY&#13;
• SAGE DRESSING&#13;
• WHIPPED POTATOES&#13;
• GREEN PEAS OR KERNEL CORN&#13;
• CRANBERRY SAUCE&#13;
9NItY|lfL75AND&lt;THE&#13;
FREE&#13;
HAPPY THANKSGIVING&#13;
IF THE ALARM SOUNDS WH.LE YOU'RE PA V.4&#13;
UNION DINING RM. -11:00 AM THRU 1:00 PM &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978 RANGER 9&#13;
Vl:&#13;
*&#13;
Parkside Skiers Anticipate Freeze&#13;
by Sue Stevens&#13;
Fall is here, winter is on its&#13;
way, and there are already some&#13;
people waiting for the first flakes&#13;
of snow. The members of&#13;
Parkside's Nordic Ski Club are&#13;
especially anxious to see the&#13;
ground covered by a blanket of&#13;
?1BO IM?1* ybtf walk into&#13;
their faculty adviser, Ed Waller's&#13;
office, you'll see a sign saying,&#13;
"Stamp Out Summer."&#13;
With most people now&#13;
thinking of hybernation, the&#13;
Nordic Ski Club awakens to&#13;
another season of cross-country&#13;
skiing. Plans are now underway&#13;
to make this an eventful third&#13;
year for the club. Included in&#13;
thos plans is a major crosscountry&#13;
tournament to be held&#13;
here at Parkside on January 14,&#13;
1979.&#13;
The tournament, which is the&#13;
only bne bf fiVb fff the Midwest&#13;
to be held in Wisconsin, will be&#13;
hosted and run by the Parkside&#13;
club along with ; the Nordic&#13;
Trailblazers from ithe RacineKenosha&#13;
area. It will be&#13;
co-sponsored by the United&#13;
States Skiing Association (USSA)&#13;
and the Silva Company, a&#13;
division of S C. Johnson Inc.&#13;
The completition will be&#13;
divided into five age groups. 13&#13;
&amp; under, men, women, collegiate,&#13;
and 50 &amp; over. All those&#13;
willing to challenge the 9.3 mile&#13;
trail may enter.&#13;
The collegiate class will be&#13;
sponsored by the Midwest&#13;
Collegiate Skiing Association.&#13;
The Parkside club ppns to enter.a&#13;
team of three men and three&#13;
women, but individuals can also&#13;
enter.&#13;
After the race there will be an&#13;
awards ceremony in the union&#13;
along with a "soup feed". Pins&#13;
will be given to all those&#13;
finishing the race as well as&#13;
medals for those placing.&#13;
John Georgeson, president of&#13;
the Parkside club, said that&#13;
equipment should be available&#13;
for students through the Union.&#13;
Fifty pairs of skis are now in the&#13;
process of being purchased.&#13;
(. Anyone, interested in competing&#13;
in the tournament can&#13;
apply through John. The race&#13;
should be the height of the&#13;
season, but there are also other&#13;
plans for the club.&#13;
Tomorrow night, November&#13;
16, there will be an organizational&#13;
meeting in Classroom 105 at 7&#13;
p.m. for all those ready to try&#13;
cross-country skiing and to be&#13;
involved in the club. A film,&#13;
"Invitation to Skiing," will be&#13;
shown and a presentation will be&#13;
given by John Lindstrom,&#13;
president of the USSA.&#13;
Events calendars will be&#13;
handed out for both the Parkside&#13;
club and the Nordic Trailblazers&#13;
so thatf"ifieml3efs^"carr etijoy&#13;
many ski outings as possible.&#13;
Even if you haven't tried&#13;
cross-country skiing yet, you can&#13;
join the club and learn. On&#13;
December 16, (provided that&#13;
there's snow) the club will tour&#13;
the Petrifying Springs trail. Based&#13;
on the amount of experience&#13;
people have, a division of groups&#13;
will me made. Some of the&#13;
members with the most&#13;
experience will instruct those at&#13;
the beginning levels.&#13;
There will be other things&#13;
besides the touring for members&#13;
too. Several get-togethers after&#13;
tours are being planned, so if&#13;
you'd like to be active during the&#13;
winter months, one good way to&#13;
do so is to join the Parkside&#13;
Nordic Ski Club. If you don't&#13;
know whether or not you can&#13;
join, keep up on the club by&#13;
watching the Ranger. John&#13;
Georgeson and Ed Ealler both&#13;
want to stress that, "Everyone is&#13;
welcome."&#13;
Behind the W oodshed&#13;
Jail Is Too Much&#13;
by Scarf O'toole&#13;
I smuggled last week's poem&#13;
out with a guard who resembled&#13;
my mother. In fact I'm almost&#13;
sure that he was my mother&#13;
because he only agreed to do it&#13;
after I offered him the one bottle&#13;
of Beam which they didn't find&#13;
when they searched me.&#13;
Anyway, as you have probably&#13;
guessed if you read this far, Scarf&#13;
O'toole has been jailed. How was&#13;
I to know that my one excursion&#13;
into the realm of punk rock&#13;
would tarnish my otherwise&#13;
spotless record.&#13;
Jail isn't so bad. They&#13;
remembered to feed me today.&#13;
(I'm not sure what it was, but I've&#13;
had a craving for cheese ever&#13;
since lunch)&#13;
I must tell you about my&#13;
roommate, Pablo. Pablo is about&#13;
eleven feet tall, speaks fluent&#13;
broken English, and once or&#13;
twice has given me indications&#13;
that he is a human being. One&#13;
would not surmise it by his&#13;
presence.&#13;
Anyway, Pablo is a rapist. He's&#13;
not really sure why he does it, or&#13;
for that matter, what he does it&#13;
to. I later found out that what&#13;
Pablo is in for had nothing to do&#13;
with another human being.&#13;
It's not really bad living in the&#13;
same ten square feet with Pablo,&#13;
it's just that I don't like his&#13;
constant gnawing at the cell&#13;
bars.&#13;
This mornine finally got my&#13;
ii eirioi-iJu-"! OK&gt;m mains&#13;
one phone call. (I was tempted&#13;
to order a p izza for the warden,&#13;
but I understand he doesn't like&#13;
Italians) So, I called my editor&#13;
and explained my predicament.&#13;
He disavowed any knowledge of&#13;
my existence.&#13;
Well, at noon they took us to&#13;
our new jobs. You don't know&#13;
what a joy it is learning a skilled&#13;
trade. I know it will be valuable&#13;
to me when I get out of here. I'm&#13;
sure there are a thousand&#13;
companies just looking for&#13;
someone who can stamp license&#13;
plates as well as I can.&#13;
While I was in shop I heard&#13;
some of the other inmates talk&#13;
about breaking out. At first I&#13;
thought that there was some new&#13;
disease going around, so I asked&#13;
if I could join in on their&#13;
discussion. Alas, they wanted&#13;
merely to leave the safe confines&#13;
of this wonderful jail. They must&#13;
be crazy. But I did learn how to&#13;
whittle a bar of soap out of a&#13;
gun. I feel it is a skill I will soon&#13;
need if I'm going to protect&#13;
myself from Pablo.&#13;
Anyway, I've decided that I&#13;
really don't like it here in jail. For&#13;
one thing I miss the wonderful&#13;
group at the office. Reader's, I&#13;
think I'm going a little bit crazy. I&#13;
haven't had a craving for alcohol&#13;
the whole time I've been here.&#13;
For this reason alone I know that&#13;
I'm going off the deep end. I&#13;
think I'm going to see the prison&#13;
shrink before Pablo swallows me&#13;
whole. More later.&#13;
Parkside Chamber Chorus Sings Sunday&#13;
A concert of Lutheran church&#13;
music will be presented by the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
chorus and chamber singers&#13;
under the direction of Prof.&#13;
Frank Mueller at 3:30 p.m. on&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 19, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Building.&#13;
The program will open with&#13;
Dietrich Buxtehude's Herzlich&#13;
lieb hab ich dich, O Herr for&#13;
chorus and orchestra with a solo&#13;
ensemble including Cheri Dowman,&#13;
David Kapralian and&#13;
Timothy Thompson, all of&#13;
Racine, and Kathy Heide, Krista&#13;
Heideand Debra Scheckel, all of&#13;
Kenosha. Miss Scheckel also is&#13;
piano accompanist for the&#13;
program.&#13;
The chamber singers will&#13;
perform the second portion of&#13;
the concert including works by&#13;
Johann Walther, Johann Schein,&#13;
Samuel Scheidt and Johann&#13;
Sebastian Bach accompanied by&#13;
Ronald Bayer, Racine, harpsichordist,&#13;
and Laura Frisk,&#13;
Kenosha, cellist.&#13;
The singers and chorus will&#13;
combine to present the final&#13;
work, Felix Mendelssohn's Der&#13;
Zwe/'te Psalm featuring the&#13;
Buxtehude solo ensemble with&#13;
Mark Badtke, Union Grove, Kim&#13;
Hetland, Sturtevant, and Jeffrey&#13;
Honore, Kenosha.&#13;
The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
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With this coupon and the&#13;
purchase of any new MG&#13;
Midget, Bud's Imports will&#13;
give you a luggage rack,&#13;
an AM-FM radio, and a pin&#13;
stripe.This offer is good till&#13;
Janurary 1, 1979. Bud's&#13;
Imports located 1 mile&#13;
south of Hwy. 38 on Hwy.31&#13;
632-0970 Pam Ybema&#13;
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d33M&#13;
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RESERVATIONS .&amp; ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT; PARKSIDE UNION OFFICE, RM 209-OR-CALL 553-2200' &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978 RANGER 10&#13;
Hosts Argentine Champs&#13;
Ranger Volleyball&#13;
Finishes Fourth&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
"We blew it" was tne first&#13;
comment that was heard from&#13;
women's volleyball coach Linda&#13;
Henderson concerning last&#13;
weekends fourth place finish in&#13;
the WW I AC playoffs held in&#13;
Milwaukee. The Rangers struggled&#13;
in to finish behind Carroll,&#13;
Carthage and UW-Platteville.&#13;
Parkside was seeded third behind&#13;
number one Carthage, who the&#13;
Rangers defeated twice during&#13;
the season, and Carroll, who the&#13;
Rangers also defeated twice&#13;
during the year.&#13;
After a season that had its ups&#13;
and downs, the Rangers ended&#13;
up with a respectable overall&#13;
record of 28-21-5. In the&#13;
conference however they fared&#13;
better with a record of 16-7.&#13;
Parkside started out the&#13;
tournament on the right track by&#13;
easily handling UW-River Falls&#13;
by scores of 11-15,15-2 and 15-2.&#13;
The next match is when disaster&#13;
struck as the Rangers lost to&#13;
champion Carroll in three close&#13;
games with scores of 10-15,&#13;
15-12 and 12-15. This is the&#13;
second straight year that Carroll&#13;
has won the conference&#13;
chatVtproftehtp! and:'qii&amp;lifidd to",&#13;
go on to compete in regional&#13;
action.&#13;
Parkside showed that they&#13;
weren't going to give up yet as&#13;
they defeated UW-Whitewater&#13;
15-11 and 15-9. In the playoffs a&#13;
team is not eliminated until its&#13;
second loss. Henderson's squad&#13;
couldn't get themselves Together&#13;
as they were eliminated at the&#13;
hands of UW-Platteville in two&#13;
games. The scores of the last&#13;
match of the season were 11-15&#13;
and 2-15.&#13;
Coach Henderson feels, along&#13;
with the Ranger, that the team&#13;
deserves a round of applause for&#13;
a good season. When asked who&#13;
the stars of the team were, she&#13;
said that she couldn't .single out&#13;
any one player. This year's team&#13;
was blessed with a lot of young&#13;
tallent which will hopefully carry&#13;
the Rangers even farther next&#13;
year than it did this year.&#13;
Only one player will be lost to&#13;
graduation as senior Diana&#13;
Kolovos will not return next&#13;
season.&#13;
Freshman that will be&#13;
returning include Beth Brever,&#13;
Natalie Pierce and Kiya&#13;
Blanton. Sophomores to be&#13;
included are Terri Beiser, Martha&#13;
Aiello, Linda Zeihen, Julie&#13;
Workman, Liz Venci and&#13;
Roxanne Nelson. Juniors on this&#13;
?year?9u y&lt;wetfe.irfGiflfcly"&#13;
Henschel, Tess Manzano and&#13;
Ruth Statema. •&#13;
UW-Parkside will host the&#13;
Argentine national basketball&#13;
team Wednesday night (Nov. 15)&#13;
in t he Rangers' first appearance&#13;
of the season.&#13;
Game time at the UW-Parkside&#13;
Physical Education Bldg. is&#13;
7:30 p.m. All seats will be&#13;
general admission at $1 each.&#13;
Children 11 and under will be&#13;
admitted at no charge.&#13;
Parkside will open its regular&#13;
season Nov. 24 at home against&#13;
UW-LaCrosse and remain home&#13;
for its second game the following&#13;
night against St. Xavier College.&#13;
The Argentine squad is 0-3&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••"A*********&#13;
PRE-HOLIDAY SALE&#13;
B.&#13;
10% OFF EVERYTHING&#13;
c.&#13;
except records and tapes&#13;
RAINBOW&#13;
upt&#13;
ke&#13;
own&#13;
enosha&#13;
REDKEN'&#13;
933 Washington Road Kenosha 657-4918&#13;
heading into a Friday night game&#13;
against Dakota Wesjeyan University&#13;
at Mitchell, S.D. Coach&#13;
Santiago Benvenuto's team lost&#13;
83-65 to North Dakota, 69-67 to&#13;
South Dakota State and 79-66 to&#13;
South Dakota. The Argentines&#13;
will pl ay at Creighton University&#13;
in Omaha Monday, meet the&#13;
Rangers Wednesday and then&#13;
finish their U.S. Tour against&#13;
Loyola in Chicago Nov. 17.&#13;
The 12-man squad boasts one&#13;
player, Luis gaido, at 6-9,&#13;
another man at 6-7 and three&#13;
more players at 6-5.&#13;
Parkside has eight letterwinners&#13;
back from its 1977-78&#13;
squad that posted a 19-11 record,&#13;
won the NAIA District 14 title for&#13;
the fourth successive year and&#13;
advanced to the second round of&#13;
the NAIA national tournament.&#13;
Marvin Chones, a 6-7 senior&#13;
forward from Racine (St.&#13;
Catherine's), led UW-P with a&#13;
13.5 scoring average last season&#13;
and is the Rangers' top returnee.&#13;
Other starters back include 6-5&#13;
senior guard Joe Foots of Racine&#13;
(St. Catherine's), 6-8 junior&#13;
center Lonnie Lewis of Chicago&#13;
(Simeon) and 6-7 senior forward&#13;
Jerry Luckett of Milwaukee.&#13;
Undermanned Swimmers Fail Again&#13;
by Peter fackd&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson's swimming&#13;
team again suffered a&#13;
crushing defeat in a major&#13;
tournament held at UWM last&#13;
weekend. With only 2 swimmers&#13;
available for competition, the&#13;
handicapped Rangers placed&#13;
dead last out of the 12 teams&#13;
involved.&#13;
Ann Corardy took 10th place&#13;
in the 1 meter diving event while&#13;
Lowrie Melotik participated in&#13;
- the: 50 and 200 meter&#13;
breaststrokes.&#13;
The Rangers will return to&#13;
action this Friday at 3:30 for the&#13;
6th annual Ranger Relays to be&#13;
held at Parkside. In a format&#13;
which is probably unprecidented&#13;
in this country, the relays will&#13;
feature men and women&#13;
competing in the same events.&#13;
One man and one woman from&#13;
each team will compete in the&#13;
diving events scheduled to begin&#13;
at 3:30 while two men and two&#13;
. women w.ill combine their efforts&#13;
for the swimming events at 4:30.&#13;
Lawson enjoys this particular&#13;
format as "they are fun without a&#13;
lot of pressure." The University&#13;
of Illinois Chicago Circle and&#13;
UW-Stevens Point are the&#13;
favored participants and no&#13;
admission will be charged.&#13;
Anyone interested in working as&#13;
a timer or in some other capacity&#13;
is directed to consult Coach&#13;
Lawson in the physical education&#13;
building.&#13;
***********************************&#13;
THE HffR CO&#13;
Styling Salon for Men &amp; Women&#13;
We use and recommend&#13;
Sport Shorts&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
Injuries can end a budding&#13;
athletic career quicker than&#13;
anything else. Different coaches&#13;
take different measures to&#13;
prevent injuries.&#13;
Here at Parkside, women's&#13;
volleyball coach Linda Henderson&#13;
puts her players through a&#13;
rigorous stretching routine&#13;
before each practice and match.&#13;
As coach Henderson puts it&#13;
"stretching gives you more&#13;
flexibility and therefore reduces&#13;
injuries."&#13;
Another means of injury&#13;
prevention is the taping of&#13;
ankles. It is mandatory, in about&#13;
every sport to get your ankles&#13;
taped before you leave the&#13;
locker room. Probably the most&#13;
important means of injury&#13;
prevention is the way that the&#13;
individual takes care of&#13;
himself/herself outside of the&#13;
sport.&#13;
I wen t to the Buck's game the&#13;
other night and I couldn't&#13;
believe the performance of&#13;
second year center Kent Benson.&#13;
One minute he would look like&#13;
an All-star and the next minute&#13;
he looked like he didn't even&#13;
rnco ot&#13;
belong on the court. Here's a guy&#13;
who was Ail-American his junior&#13;
and senior years of college while&#13;
attending the University of&#13;
Indiana and was expected to&#13;
stop in the pros. and&#13;
immediately perform at the&#13;
caliber of a Jabbar or Walton.&#13;
This never materialized. His first&#13;
professional game he was KO'ed&#13;
by Jabbar and was left with a&#13;
traumatic psychological scar for&#13;
the remainder of the year, This&#13;
year, it seems he has overcome&#13;
the punch but not the opposing&#13;
centers.&#13;
Parkside Kickers Advance&#13;
one&#13;
If you will remember, last&#13;
Saturday was a cold windy&#13;
overcast day that looked like it&#13;
was about to spill the winters&#13;
first snow on the frozen ground.&#13;
Parkside's men's soccer team&#13;
warmed up to the weather as&#13;
they defeated Dordt College of&#13;
•ay*aP*aBl^^8K*&#13;
&lt;MB,SKl&#13;
'SawiK^MNaBwMwM,&#13;
'8B&gt;&gt;8P'awMwaiM8Bwg*ta6*'i&#13;
TERRACE ROOM&#13;
426 LAKE AVE RACINE&#13;
Iowa for Parkside's first soccer&#13;
playoff win in four seasons of&#13;
playoff competition.&#13;
Both of Parkside's goals were&#13;
scored in the second half with&#13;
the wind at their backs. Junior&#13;
Earl Campbell from Racine&#13;
scored both the Ranger goals in a&#13;
game in which the wind played a&#13;
major factor, along with the&#13;
Ranger's home team advantage.&#13;
The outcome of the game was&#13;
merely a matter of Parkside&#13;
adjusting better to the wind.&#13;
This win enables the Rangers&#13;
to go on to battle St. Thomas of&#13;
Minneapolis in Minnesota today.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson said that&#13;
the Rangers lack of bench&#13;
strength could cause trouble.&#13;
"St. Thomas is an aggressive&#13;
team and if we want to beat&#13;
them we have to make the ball&#13;
work for us."&#13;
WED. &amp; THUR.&#13;
FRI.&#13;
SAT.&#13;
FOR RESE RVED SE ATING&#13;
CALL 632-4206&#13;
presents:&#13;
Opus&#13;
Bones&#13;
« Thurs&#13;
NEXUS&#13;
entertainment 9 p.m.&#13;
"JAM SO GOOD"&#13;
COMING THANKSGIVING •&#13;
ATTRACTIONS •&#13;
MONTAGE&#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;
Wednesday November 15,1978 RANGi* 11&#13;
NAIA Championship Saturday&#13;
UW-Parkside will host the&#13;
National Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA)&#13;
cross-country championship for&#13;
the third time Saturday, Nov. 18.&#13;
Nearly 400 runners and 50&#13;
teams from nearly every state are&#13;
expected to compete in the five&#13;
mile race, which will start at 11&#13;
a.m. on the UW-Parkside&#13;
campus course on Hwy. JR&#13;
between Hwys. E and 31.&#13;
Parkside also hosted the meet in&#13;
1976 and 1977.&#13;
Admission is $1. Spectators are&#13;
asked to park in the Communication&#13;
Arts parking lot just a short&#13;
walk from the entrance to the&#13;
course and start/finish area.&#13;
Depending champion Garry&#13;
Henry, a junior from Pembroke&#13;
State (N.C.), will be back to&#13;
defend his individual title, which&#13;
he won last year in a record&#13;
24:11. His closest pursuers, Mike&#13;
Rabuse and Bob McCloud of&#13;
Pittsburg State (Kans.), have&#13;
graduated, and only two other&#13;
finishers from last year's top ten&#13;
placers return. And they are&#13;
Robert Fink (eighth) and Andy&#13;
Montanez (tenth), both from&#13;
defending team champion&#13;
Adams State (colo.).&#13;
It's possible that four&#13;
Wisconsin teams could be in the&#13;
field as well as numerous&#13;
individuals. In addition to host&#13;
UW-Parkside, UW-La Crosse,&#13;
UW-Eau Claire and UW-Stevens&#13;
Point may also be running.&#13;
The start of last years NAIA cross country championship ph(&gt;lo by P j A„olinil&#13;
Basketball Games Get Facelift&#13;
500 Attend&#13;
Wrestling Clinic&#13;
UW-Parkside basketball games&#13;
will have a new look in 1978-79.&#13;
Beginning with the Rangers'&#13;
opener at home Friday, Nov. 24,&#13;
against UW-LaCrosse, Parkside&#13;
basketball fans will be treated to&#13;
various attractions to make&#13;
going to the game more&#13;
enjoyable.&#13;
*All Parkside students are&#13;
invited to attend the game Friday&#13;
night and receive a free&#13;
Miller/Bleacher Creature T-shirt.&#13;
Quantities are limited to the first&#13;
200 Students to come TO the&#13;
game. Admission in advance is&#13;
$1 and at the door $2. All&#13;
students must have valid&#13;
Parkside I.D. cards.&#13;
*All Parkside faculty and staff&#13;
are invited to attend the&#13;
LaCrosse game and St. X8vier&#13;
game the following night with&#13;
any number of friends they&#13;
would like to take along. Tickets&#13;
for these special "Host Nights"&#13;
are only $1 each.&#13;
*Each half-time will feature a&#13;
special free-throw shooting&#13;
contest with five "shooters"&#13;
picked at random from the&#13;
crowd (via ticket stubs). The&#13;
winner will receive a free pizza&#13;
at Casa Capri Restaurant in&#13;
Kenosha and will get a chance to&#13;
take the "big free throw", a&#13;
60-foot shot that could win him&#13;
or her a new car from one of&#13;
three local dealers. These cars&#13;
include an AMC Spirit from Nudi&#13;
AMC/Jeep, a Chevy Chevette&#13;
from Robinson Chevrolet-Cadillac,&#13;
a Plymouth Horizon or a&#13;
Dodge Colt from Palmen Motors.&#13;
And each contestant who makes&#13;
one free throw will get a free&#13;
pitcher of beer or soda at Union&#13;
Square.&#13;
*There will be a post-game&#13;
victory party at Union Square&#13;
after the game Friday night with&#13;
live entertainment. All those&#13;
attending the game are welcome&#13;
to attend and turn in their ticket&#13;
stub from the game at the door&#13;
for a free beer or soda.&#13;
*AII kids are invited to join the&#13;
"Junior Ranger Club", which will&#13;
include Trefe T-shirts, membership&#13;
cards, stickers and pictues&#13;
for all members. And all children&#13;
11 and under wearing Junior&#13;
Ranger shirts to subsequent&#13;
games will be admitted free of&#13;
charge. The first 300 attending&#13;
the opening weekend games will&#13;
become members of the club&#13;
when accompanied by an adult&#13;
and buying a game ticket.&#13;
•There will be a new, rousing&#13;
pep band to add to enjoyment&#13;
between halves and at time-outs.&#13;
And working with the band in&#13;
building excitement will be a&#13;
new corps of cheerleaders,&#13;
trained by the Marquette&#13;
University cheerleading advisers.&#13;
More special nights and&#13;
attractions will be scheduled&#13;
throughout the season.&#13;
Of course, the biggest&#13;
attraction, exciting Parkside&#13;
basketball, will be just as big as&#13;
ever this season. Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens' Rangers have won an&#13;
unprecedented four straight&#13;
NAIA District 14 titles and will&#13;
be shooting for a record fifth this&#13;
PROJECT ENGINEER&#13;
UNICO, Inc., a growing and prosperous manufacturer of industrial&#13;
drive and control equipment in Southeastern Wisconsin, is seeking&#13;
a versatile Project Engineer.&#13;
Project design activities include system analysis and integration of&#13;
digital controls, analog circuits, mini-computers, software and&#13;
servo drives to perform a wide variety of industrial control applications.&#13;
Equipment design requires customer contact and interfacing&#13;
between Sales, Purchasing and Manufacturing.&#13;
This position requires a self-starter with strong analytic ability, a&#13;
working knowledge of a nalog and digital circuits, and familiarity&#13;
with real-time computer programming. Candidates must have a,&#13;
BS degree or equivalent and several years experience.&#13;
Send resume and salary history in confidence to:&#13;
James A. Beck UNICO,INC. 3725 Nicholson Road&#13;
Franksville, Wisconsin&#13;
53126&#13;
campaign. Eight lettermen return,&#13;
headed by leading scorer&#13;
Marvin Chones, and numerous&#13;
newcomers dot the 15-man&#13;
roster, with perhaps the most&#13;
highly touted being 6-7, 230 lb.&#13;
freshman Kent Schneider, an&#13;
all-state pick in Masen City, III.,&#13;
who has reminded knowledgeable&#13;
Parkside fans of Bill&#13;
Sobanski.&#13;
Season passes, priced at $7.50&#13;
for students and $12.50 for the&#13;
general public, are still on sale at&#13;
the UW-P Physical Education&#13;
Building. Single game tickets&#13;
may be purchased there, at the&#13;
Union Information Center, at&#13;
LaMacchia Travel in Kenosha or&#13;
at Rehl's Store in Racine.&#13;
Classified Ads&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
To the four craziest guys In the world.&#13;
Thanks for caring and sharing your place.&#13;
Your Friend Always, Roommate&#13;
Dear Debbie A.: I hope you trust me more so&#13;
that we can always be happy people. With&#13;
all my love to you, Charlie.&#13;
Services Offered: Term paper and resumes&#13;
typed by professional secretary. Prompt&#13;
service and reasonable. Call Kathy at&#13;
657-3823 evenings.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
A large office desk and a filing cabinet;&#13;
adding machine, a black leather swivel&#13;
chair. Sell them all together or separate. All&#13;
In good condition. Call 654-2665.&#13;
Pool table:4' by 8' with balls and cue sticks.&#13;
Call 637-4192.&#13;
The 9th Annual Parkside&#13;
wrestling clinic was held this&#13;
past weekend with approximately&#13;
500 area high school wrestlers&#13;
in attendance. Over the past&#13;
nine years it is believed that&#13;
5,000 high school wrestlers have&#13;
attended the clinic. The clinic is&#13;
thought to be one of the best in&#13;
the midwest, and perhaps&#13;
because of this, it attracts such&#13;
guest instructors as Lee Kemp,&#13;
Jim Haines, Joe Landers and&#13;
Parkside's own Bob Gruner.&#13;
The purpose of the clinic is to&#13;
allow the high school coaches&#13;
and wrestlers to keep up on&#13;
modern techniques and acquaint&#13;
the wrestlers with our program.&#13;
On the average, it is figured the&#13;
clinic produces two or three&#13;
Wisconsin state high school&#13;
wrestling champions every year.&#13;
The accomplishments of the&#13;
guest instructors are staggering.&#13;
For example, Lee Kemp is a 1977&#13;
graduate of UW-Madison and&#13;
was an NCAA champion his&#13;
sophomore, junior and senior&#13;
years, and a runner-up as a&#13;
freshman. As Parkside wrestling&#13;
coach Jim Koch puts it, "Kemp is&#13;
probably the greatest wrestler&#13;
since Dan Gable." Kemp not&#13;
only thwarted Gable's comeback,&#13;
which was one highpoint&#13;
in his colorful career, but has&#13;
recently captured the World&#13;
Championship in his weight class&#13;
in brilliant fashion.&#13;
Jim Haines was a member of&#13;
the 1976 Olympic team and a&#13;
NCAA champ his senior year at&#13;
UW-Madison. He is a 1978 World&#13;
Cup Champion. Joe Landers was&#13;
a 1976 NAIA Champion wrestler&#13;
for the Parkside Rangers, and&#13;
Bob Gruner, a junior in terms of&#13;
wrestling eligability is a two-time&#13;
All-American who is returning&#13;
with two years left. With&#13;
instructors like these, it's no&#13;
wonder why the clinic attracts so&#13;
many possible recruits.&#13;
&gt;i&#13;
„ Pure Brewed&#13;
! From God's Country.&#13;
On Tap At U nion Square&#13;
* BRINGS TO TOO *&#13;
CLASSICAL CARTOON MUSIC&#13;
BY&#13;
BLEGEN &amp; SAYER&#13;
WED 15 UNION SQUARE 8PM FREE&#13;
ACADEMY AWARD WINNING&#13;
"JULIA" FRI. NOV. 17 8PM&#13;
SUN. NOV. 19 7:30 PM STARRING&#13;
JANE FONDA, VANESSA REDGRAVE, JASON ROBARDS&#13;
UNION CINEMA $1.00&#13;
ANNUAL TURKEY DANCE&#13;
WITH&#13;
RIO worn* COUNTRY ROCK&#13;
WED, NOV. 22 9PM&#13;
•&gt; ADMISSION VW-P $T.5Q - "GUEST $2.00 ' *&#13;
Q..~&gt;&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
ID'S REQUIRED &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978 RANGER 12&#13;
from home.i&#13;
Now comes Miller time.&#13;
©1978 Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. </text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 7, issue 11, November 15, 1978</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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