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            <text>Photos</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>hh ugh there were blizzards and cold in the area -Par ide I den and taff&#13;
Competency&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
every freshman and&#13;
sophomore at Parkside knows,&#13;
Collegiate Skills Competency&#13;
T ts are something which they&#13;
tall eventually face_. For the&#13;
n,formed, these tests are&#13;
1 ned to insure that students&#13;
e a minimal level (C grade)&#13;
competency in college reading,&#13;
"tiling, math and Ii brary&#13;
r arch. The plan was first&#13;
mr ,ated for all entering students&#13;
September 1977.&#13;
Since that time the plan has&#13;
n generally accepted by&#13;
Par 1de's student body . It is&#13;
1cally just another requirent&#13;
the students must meet&#13;
gh many seem to grasp th~&#13;
n d for such a program .&#13;
However, the greater significance&#13;
of this plan on a national&#13;
I was pointed out only&#13;
ntly in an article in the New&#13;
o, Tunes (12/26/1978).&#13;
Over the past few years there&#13;
been a widely publicized&#13;
concern over the declining&#13;
&lt;ompetencies of high school&#13;
aduates. Some are graduating&#13;
without being able to read at all.&#13;
H ever, no one seems to be&#13;
doing much about this problem&#13;
Oil the college level· that is unti I&#13;
Par ide initiated Its Coll~giate&#13;
ills Competency Tests. While&#13;
there are other institutions&#13;
lllvolved in this type of work&#13;
Pak -d ' r si e does seem to be in the&#13;
~ery front of the movement.&#13;
Chin an interview last Thursday,&#13;
ancellor Guskin pointed out&#13;
t'l'tom · aior reasons why Parkside 1&#13;
in this Position: 1) Parkside's&#13;
Plan IS . de I' ~ery comprehensive,&#13;
a ing with four major skill&#13;
reas 2) Parkside actually went&#13;
a ead With its plan. Universities&#13;
qu,te cumbersome things really: 0 en get· bogged down in such&#13;
tograms for various reasons .&#13;
p k the Chancellor said that 1&#13;
a a~ side's faculty, who designed&#13;
t 0&#13;
1 carried out the plan refused&#13;
o ~t this happen. '&#13;
~e e said that the faculty felt&#13;
bery committed to this program caus · not f e it was their plan. It was&#13;
ther forced upon them. They&#13;
rt e ore gave ,t the high priority&#13;
- --~eded le, &lt;o ,rr,.,,,-l ThP&#13;
Chancellor explained this commitment&#13;
by pointing out not&#13;
only the time given to organizing&#13;
the program but some of the&#13;
profess ional concessions the&#13;
faculty made as well . For&#13;
instance, the research papers&#13;
that students hand in are graded&#13;
by two instructors ormally,&#13;
prof s use II is&#13;
since they feel that to do so&#13;
would compromise their academic&#13;
freedom They feel that&#13;
to do so would compromise their&#13;
academic freedom . The feel&#13;
that it is their right to have the&#13;
say about their students' grades&#13;
The Chancellor also commended&#13;
the library staff for their role in&#13;
this work. Mr. Guskin pointed&#13;
out that Parkside relied on its&#13;
own resources to run this&#13;
program and thus did not have to&#13;
rely on the aid of other -&#13;
institutions. Furthermore, the&#13;
cou Id not then use other&#13;
institutions as an excu e for not&#13;
completing their work .&#13;
Although the ew York Time&#13;
article describes the skill&#13;
program quite accurately it doe&#13;
not seem to capture the attitude&#13;
toward the Competency Te ts at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The author of the article sees&#13;
Parkside as getting tough on the&#13;
question of " Do students&#13;
Pntering Parkside have the&#13;
learning skills they need?" While&#13;
the university is serious about&#13;
demanding that students here&#13;
demonstrate minimal le els of&#13;
basic skills, the spirit of the&#13;
Competency program is predominantly&#13;
positive.&#13;
Some students wish the had&#13;
more time to meet the kill&#13;
requirements and others find the&#13;
program a bit confusing in all its&#13;
details, but there 1s general!&#13;
little:, antagonism toward the&#13;
program among the students&#13;
According to the Chancellor the&#13;
faculty support it wholly and the&#13;
administration has alwa been&#13;
behind it. In ·fact, Mr Guskin&#13;
said that this has been hr&#13;
number one concern mce he&#13;
took office four years ago&#13;
The basic ,dea behind the&#13;
Competency Tests seems irrefutable.&#13;
If a school cannot ask it&#13;
students to show that the have&#13;
Vandalism&#13;
Stude t&#13;
b n &#13;
Student&#13;
Recital&#13;
Thursda,&#13;
!&#13;
~~~~~~~!! ~ ~_~I~A~N~G~fI!-. ~_------ 2 W,d.,.day January 17, 1979 -&#13;
\&#13;
----News Briefs---.....-·&#13;
Grads Have&#13;
Ceremon,&#13;
graduation date, the December&#13;
1978 graduates felt that they had&#13;
not received enough notice of&#13;
this change of plans.&#13;
As a result of their protest the&#13;
administration organized a&#13;
reception for the 120 December&#13;
graduates. The reception was&#13;
held in the Galbraith Confer~nce&#13;
Room in the University adrninistration&#13;
area (Level 3 of the&#13;
library) from 2-4 p.m. on&#13;
December 17th. Approximately&#13;
135 people: graduates, faculty,&#13;
administration, and guests attended&#13;
the reception. Furthermore,&#13;
the·Chancellor addressed&#13;
the students, congratulated them&#13;
for their achievement, and&#13;
invited them to the commenceWhen&#13;
the university announced&#13;
last semester that, as of&#13;
this year, there would be only&#13;
one graduation ceremony at the&#13;
end of the year. there were&#13;
significant Questions raised&#13;
about this procedure some _of&#13;
those students who graduated&#13;
this past December.&#13;
Although these students and&#13;
all loIli graduates in the future&#13;
will be able to participate in the&#13;
May graduation ceremony either&#13;
before or after their real&#13;
RANGER Is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkslde&#13;
and they are solely responsible for Its editorial polley and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breal&lt;send 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 correspondenceshould be addressed&#13;
10 Parkslde Ranger, V.W. Parkslde, WLLC0-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141. .&#13;
MilleMurphy. _ __ Editor&#13;
Jon Ft. n __ General Manager&#13;
T_ e-._ Student Ad.laor&#13;
....... __ N_a Editor&#13;
_._ FMlUraEdltor&#13;
Doug ~_ _.. Sporta Editor&#13;
CIIrte Mil Ad Manager&#13;
REPORnNG STAFF&#13;
_ AeeJe. cath, ........... Moille ClaIlle. oa.e&#13;
e-. T_ F-r. _ J"""'. Thomaa Jann. Nicki&#13;
Kroll. Kim Putman. carolyn Rucki. Donald SCherrer •&#13;
R-...ySh_.&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
MilleHoi_I. MikeMoI_k. Ton, Ra,mond.&#13;
8cotl Wi..... end lany lambe&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig o-ak. MaryMortlend Met_ Pollekon.&#13;
ADSTAFF&#13;
OneDeB_, end Dawn Thoma •.&#13;
letters to the Editor will be acceptedfor publication If they&#13;
are typewritten, double spacedwith one Ir.ch margins and&#13;
signedby the author. A telephonenumbermust 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 defamatoryor unsuitable content.&#13;
All material must be received by Thursday noon for&#13;
~ublicatlon on the following Wednesday.&#13;
ment ceremonies in May 1979.&#13;
r&#13;
Square's infamous "dungeon"&#13;
decor: poor' lighting, bare floors&#13;
etc. has be-en considerably&#13;
improved upon according to&#13;
Dave Pedersen, Dean of Student __&#13;
Life.&#13;
There are additional flood&#13;
'lights and spot. lights in the&#13;
ceiling, carpeting on the walls,&#13;
tiles on- the floors, stair treads,&#13;
and a metal blind for the kitchen&#13;
area to replace the canvas one&#13;
they had before. Mr. Pedersen&#13;
said that most of the I major&#13;
improvements have not been&#13;
completed although more lighting&#13;
on the walls and step lights&#13;
should be installed soon.&#13;
Other improvements will also&#13;
be made as time passes and&#13;
suggestions are made. The&#13;
acoustics of the square are one&#13;
of these areas that will be&#13;
continuously worked on. Although&#13;
the Square was locked up&#13;
tight over the vacation break&#13;
Ranger will try I to get some&#13;
pictures of the new modifications&#13;
as soon aspossible.&#13;
Two University of Wisconsin~&#13;
Parkside piano students will&#13;
present a free public recital at 8&#13;
p.m. on Thursday, January 18 in&#13;
the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. They are Kathryn Heide&#13;
and Debra Scheckel, both&#13;
students of Barbara English&#13;
Maris.&#13;
Their program of piano duets&#13;
and two-p-iano music will&#13;
include Franz Schubert's Military&#13;
March Op. 51, No. 3 in E-f1at&#13;
Major, Johannes Brahms' Variations&#13;
on a Theme by Haydn.&#13;
Op. 566, Francis Poulenc's&#13;
Sonate and Darius Milhaud's&#13;
Scaramouche Op. 1656.&#13;
Late&#13;
Registration&#13;
Registration is going to continue&#13;
thru the second week of classes:'&#13;
Registration for Ian. 15-18 is&#13;
from 8:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Jan.&#13;
19 from 8:30-4:00 p.m. at Main&#13;
Place in WLLC. For Jan. 22-25 it&#13;
will be from 8:30 a.m. to 8:00&#13;
p.m. in D 191 WLLC and from&#13;
Ian. 26 from 8 a.m.to e p.m.&#13;
Square&#13;
Remodeled -,&#13;
Union Square, the D-1 level&#13;
pub in the Student Union,&#13;
received a much needed face-lift&#13;
~)Ver the holidays. Union&#13;
Pe s, G. Ae&#13;
/&#13;
by Senator Tim Zimmer money and then, due to their&#13;
own error, they realized that&#13;
they had over budgeted by $1.4&#13;
million:&#13;
Their solution. was to take $50&#13;
away from each student who&#13;
receives the grant. All 'of these&#13;
decisions were made without&#13;
informing the students involved.&#13;
The students would not have&#13;
learned of the cut until tl\ey&#13;
received their check at registration.&#13;
The students at Parkside were '&#13;
informed before vacation because&#13;
the financial aid office,&#13;
the Ranger, and P.5.G.A. Inc.&#13;
worked together to inform them&#13;
of the cut. Maybe this cut was&#13;
not the end of the world. But,&#13;
what· happens next time when&#13;
they cut a larger amount? What&#13;
if the state had taken away the&#13;
entire grant? ....&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. would 'at this&#13;
time like tothank 'the financial&#13;
aid department for the help they&#13;
gave us and more importantly,&#13;
the help they gave to the&#13;
affected students.&#13;
We would also like to&#13;
congratulate the new bookstore&#13;
manager and his staff for the&#13;
great job they did in supplying&#13;
the books for this" semester. It&#13;
was nice to see some new&#13;
improvements, like the book&#13;
check outside the entrance. In&#13;
the few cases where books for a&#13;
class were not in, it was a great&#13;
idea of the bookstore to stamp&#13;
on the class card why the books&#13;
were not. The cost of books may&#13;
be rising, but so are the services&#13;
rendered by the bookstore.&#13;
Rusty Smith, President of&#13;
P.S.GA Inc., would like to&#13;
announce that she needs eight&#13;
students to sit on. a student&#13;
disciplinary panel. Anyone&#13;
interested should contact our&#13;
office by the end of this week.&#13;
I GJ~~ ALL fAEfAREO TO&#13;
PICK. uP 1$ CREDrr5&#13;
INCLUDING ADVANCED&#13;
CEfIAf'1I(5 AND NOt.) IT&#13;
LOOK S L I"'E I 'u: f,E&#13;
THE MOOEL FoR SNOt.JSC&#13;
IJLPTIJi?c 10(/&#13;
n&#13;
Welcome back! We hope you&#13;
had a pleasant vacation and that&#13;
you are looking forward .to&#13;
spending another semester here&#13;
at Parkside. We would also like&#13;
to express a warm and friendly&#13;
welcome to all the new students&#13;
on campus.&#13;
Our table at registration last&#13;
week was both a success and a&#13;
disappointment. The big push at&#13;
the table was our program to&#13;
help the financial aid ,students&#13;
regain the $50 cut from their&#13;
WHEG grants. We certainly did&#13;
not get the response that we had&#13;
hoped for. Many of you made&#13;
statements like, "It doesn't affect&#13;
me, so I don't care!" or "Big deal,&#13;
what's $50!" Maybe $50 is not so&#13;
much. What we were trying to&#13;
fight was the principle involved.&#13;
The state prom ised these&#13;
students a certain amount of&#13;
I'M !JOT II&#13;
SNOI.Jt1AN,lAOY:&#13;
I JIJ5T GOT&#13;
fl SEVEIIE CASE&#13;
OF F!.OST~ITE&#13;
ON MV /JAY To&#13;
REGIS TEll&#13;
LAST&#13;
U~EK.&#13;
WHAT 1)0 'lOti SIJNOSE:&#13;
THESE COLLEGE ,-----&#13;
/(IPS /.JILL THiNK&#13;
OF NEKT?&#13;
c&#13;
2&#13;
~&#13;
Wednesday ~~~~~~~~~------~~l~A~NG~E~l~ January 17, 1979 ----------~------- \&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Grads Have&#13;
Ceremony&#13;
When the university announced&#13;
last semester that, as of&#13;
this year, there would be only&#13;
one graduation ceremony at the&#13;
end of the year, there were&#13;
signifi cant questions rai sed&#13;
about this procedure some _ of&#13;
those students who graduated&#13;
this past December.&#13;
Although these students and&#13;
all t.}11 graduates in the future&#13;
will be able to participate in the&#13;
May graduation ceremony either&#13;
before or after their real&#13;
graduation date, the December&#13;
1978 graduates felt that they had&#13;
not recelved enough notice of&#13;
this change of p)ans.&#13;
As a result of their protest the&#13;
administration organized a&#13;
reception for the 120 December&#13;
graduates. The reception was&#13;
held in the Galbraith Conference&#13;
Room in the University administration&#13;
area (Level 3 of the&#13;
library) from 2-4 p.m . on&#13;
December 17th. Approximately&#13;
135 people: graduates, faculty,&#13;
administration, and guests attended&#13;
the reception . Furthermore&#13;
the ·chancellor addressed&#13;
the s;udents, congratulated them&#13;
for their achievement, and&#13;
invited them to the commenceRANGER&#13;
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-~39, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141 .&#13;
Mike Murphy . ... . ... . .... . ............ ..... ... Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan . . . ...... . ...... . .. . .. . . General Manager&#13;
Tom Coop« ..................... .... . Student Advisor&#13;
John Stewart . .. ..... . .. . ...... . . . . . . .... Newa Editor&#13;
sue Stevens .......... . ... .. ........ . .. Future Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhaua« . . ................... . . Sports Editor&#13;
Chris MIii• . .......................... .. . Ad Manager&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Shella Asala, Cathy BrownlM, Moille Clarke, Dave&#13;
Cram«, Tom F.voy, Pete Jackel, Thomas Jenn, Nickl&#13;
Kroll, Kim Putman, Carolyn Rudd, Donald Scherrer &amp;&#13;
Rosemary Sh.lark.&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
Mike Holmdohl, Mika Molbeck, Tony Raymond,&#13;
Scott Wlshaw and Larry Zamba&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig Dvorak, Mary Mortl and Mathew Pollakon.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
Dave DeB«g and Dawn Thomas.&#13;
Letters to the Editor wlll be accepted for publication If they&#13;
are typewritten, double spaced with one Ir.ch 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;
publication on the following Wednesday. ~ ~&#13;
ment ceremonies in May 1979.&#13;
I&#13;
Late&#13;
Registration&#13;
Registration is going to continue&#13;
thru the second week of classes :&#13;
Registration for Jan. 15-18 is&#13;
from 8:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m . Jan.&#13;
19 from 8:30-4:00 p.m. at Main&#13;
Place in WLLC. For Jan . 22-25 it&#13;
will be from 8:30 a.m. to 8:00&#13;
p.m. in D 191 WLLC and from&#13;
Jan . 26 from 8 a.m . to 4 p.m .&#13;
Square&#13;
Remodeled&#13;
Union Square, the D-1 level&#13;
pub in the Student Union,&#13;
received a much needed face-lift&#13;
over the holidays . Union&#13;
P. S. G. A.&#13;
/&#13;
by Senator Tim Zimmer&#13;
Welcome back! We hope you&#13;
had a pleasant vacation and that&#13;
you are looking forward to&#13;
spending another semester here&#13;
at Parkside. We would also like&#13;
to express a warm and friendly&#13;
welcome to all the new students&#13;
on campus .&#13;
Our table at registration last&#13;
week was both a success and a&#13;
disappointment. The big push at&#13;
the table was our program to&#13;
help the financial aid ,.students&#13;
regain the $50 cut from their&#13;
WHEG grants. We certainly did&#13;
not get the response that we had&#13;
hoped for. Many of you made&#13;
statements like, " It doesn't affect&#13;
me, so I don't care!" or " Big deal,&#13;
what's $50!" Maybe $50 is not so&#13;
much . What we were trying to&#13;
fight was the principle involved.&#13;
The state promised these&#13;
students a certain amount of&#13;
SN0(,.)/1AN ,LAOY:&#13;
I JUST GOT&#13;
I {,,)fl!:, ALL f!.Fl',4R£D&#13;
PICK UP IS- CR£0/T5&#13;
INCLUDING A01/ANC£0&#13;
R 5E't'El{E CA5£&#13;
OF Ff.05Tl&gt;IT£&#13;
ON HY lJA~ To&#13;
REGt5TF{?&#13;
Li1:IT&#13;
CJEE J(.&#13;
CER.Al'1IC5 AND #()t.) IT&#13;
LOOKS LIKE I'LL f,£&#13;
THE MODEL FoR SNOW·&#13;
S(oLPTul?E" IOI.'&#13;
.n&#13;
Square's infamous "dungeon"&#13;
decor: poor' lighting, bare floors&#13;
etc . has b~en considerably&#13;
improved upon according to&#13;
Dave Pedersen, Dean of Student&#13;
Life.&#13;
There are additional flood&#13;
,~ights and spot lights in the&#13;
ceiling, carpeting on the walls,&#13;
tiles on the floors, stair treads,&#13;
and a metal blind for the kitchen&#13;
area to repIace the canvas one&#13;
they had before. Mr. Pedersen&#13;
said that most of the major&#13;
improvements have not been&#13;
completed although more lighting&#13;
on the walls and step lights&#13;
should be installed soon.&#13;
Other improvements will also&#13;
be made as time passes and&#13;
suggestions are made. The&#13;
acoustics of the square are one&#13;
of these areas that will be&#13;
continuously worked on . Although&#13;
the Square was locked up&#13;
tight over the vacation break&#13;
Ranger will try ' to get some&#13;
pictures of the new modifications&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
money and then, due to their&#13;
own error, they realized that ·&#13;
they had over budgeted by $1.4&#13;
million,&#13;
Their solution was to take $50&#13;
away from each student who&#13;
receives the grant. All ·of these&#13;
decisions were made without&#13;
informing the students involved.&#13;
The students would not have&#13;
learned of the cut until they&#13;
received their check at registration&#13;
.&#13;
The students at Parkside were&#13;
informed before vacation because&#13;
the financial aid office,&#13;
the Ranger, and P.S.G .A. Inc.&#13;
worked together to inform them&#13;
of the cut. Maybe this cut was·&#13;
not the end of the world. But,&#13;
what happens next time when&#13;
they cut a larger amount? What&#13;
if the state had taken away the&#13;
entire grant? '-&#13;
P .S .G .A. Inc. would · at this&#13;
time like tothank -the financial&#13;
Student&#13;
Recital&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Two University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
piano students will&#13;
present a free public recital at 8&#13;
p.m . on Thursday, January 18 in&#13;
the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. They are Kathryn Heide&#13;
and Debra Scheckel, both&#13;
students of Barbara English&#13;
Maris.&#13;
Their program of piano duets&#13;
and two-piano music will&#13;
include Franz Schubert's Military&#13;
March Op. 51, No. 3 in E-flat&#13;
Major, Johannes Brahms' Variations&#13;
on a Theme by Haydn,&#13;
Op. 566, Francis Poulenc's&#13;
Sonate and Darius Milhaud's&#13;
Scaramouche Op. 1656.&#13;
aid department for the help they&#13;
gave us and more importantly,&#13;
the help they gave to the&#13;
affected students.&#13;
We would also like to&#13;
congratulate the new bookstore&#13;
manager and his staff for the&#13;
great job they did in supplying&#13;
the books for this semester. It&#13;
was nice to see some new&#13;
improvements, like the book&#13;
check outside the entrance. In&#13;
the few cases where books for a&#13;
class were not in, it was a great&#13;
idea of the bookstore to stamp&#13;
on the class card why the books&#13;
were not. The cost of books may&#13;
be risin·g, but so are the services&#13;
rendered by the bookstore.&#13;
Rusty Smith, President of&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc., would like to&#13;
announce that she needs eight&#13;
students to sit on . a student&#13;
disciplinary panel. Anyone&#13;
interested should contact our&#13;
office by the end of this week.&#13;
WHAT 00 '/0V SUl'/O5£&#13;
THESE COJ..L£GE&#13;
J&lt;ll)S &lt;-JILL TH IN I(&#13;
OF NEXT?&#13;
+ I&#13;
',' &#13;
•&#13;
dl.S&#13;
•ay January 17,1979&#13;
~~&#13;
IANGfl&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
Snow •&#13;
• •&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
• • •&#13;
Fooling •&#13;
• •&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
by.&#13;
• ---.&#13;
e&#13;
...,&#13;
,&#13;
-&#13;
Matt ~~~~ ~l ,-.., -&#13;
- .&#13;
~&#13;
,.... -&#13;
Poliakson ~&#13;
'/lEY BuD! CAN YOIlGN( Mf: ,.,JUMP?"&#13;
.......-""-....IiT.:i..&#13;
~.----&#13;
---- ~.&#13;
--..-&#13;
"you KNOW) THINGS SdMCD S'.MPLCR WHeN&#13;
WE WERE 1&lt;105.'&#13;
Club Cures lonel, Hearts&#13;
by Don Scherrer U.W. Parkside. as a commuter&#13;
Areyou lonesome tonight, or school, prevented people from&#13;
fearyou will be this weekend? meeting each other. Having&#13;
Haveyou everthought of joining printed up 1,000 forms, and&#13;
Com-Dates Computer Dating unable to set up their booth in&#13;
Service but found it too the Camm Arts until Tuesday&#13;
expensive? Don't despair. The night, thereby missing the&#13;
ParksideComputer Dating Club juniors and seniors as well as the&#13;
maycome to your aid. For\ an people who parked in' the Union&#13;
initiation fee of one dollar and lot, they received about 100&#13;
one dollar per month thereafter, responses out of a total of&#13;
you'll meet at least two new around 350 questionaires taken.&#13;
contactsevery month.. Craig surmises that not only are&#13;
Craig Young, a Parks ide people taking those Questionstudentinterested&#13;
in cornputers, . aires home to think them over,&#13;
. first conceived the idea as a due to the nature of the&#13;
rem~y for the argument that questions a~ked, but also that&#13;
SER\JICES COIIECTI\JE&#13;
a vertj successful and&#13;
semester at Parkside!&#13;
I _&#13;
~ &lt;l&#13;
." ·!~f&#13;
:/j;!-/~~:&#13;
.e. ......... ',!- ~~&#13;
. .&#13;
ITs ~ANTASTICGL.IDING PfActrULLY ThROUGHAl.l nilS NATURE"ANI) fRCSH AI~I&#13;
DIDN T I TElLYOl/ nus C~oSS·COUNTRY S.t.IING WAS GAE"ATI"lA.RY!- .&#13;
"OfCoUIlSE I KNowH- 'n)&#13;
SHo"€l SHOW! wH~"110&#13;
you m,NI(:r ,,"',,-&#13;
some people are waiting to see&#13;
what happens to the club.&#13;
The process is not all that&#13;
complicated. First, the participant&#13;
is asked to fill out the&#13;
general information sheet and&#13;
questionaire, listing age, interests,&#13;
etc., then instructed to rate&#13;
the listed activities as to&#13;
preference. From there the next&#13;
step is to critically rate your own&#13;
personality and appearance.&#13;
Given five choices, allowing&#13;
for extremes in each category,&#13;
you are then requested to list&#13;
your preferences for your date's&#13;
appearance and personality. This&#13;
collected data IS then fed&#13;
through a computer, and the&#13;
resulting program, comparing&#13;
the cumulated points In each&#13;
category lists the best POSSlblh·&#13;
ties for that person So the&#13;
response has exceeded expectstions,&#13;
with an almost equal ratio&#13;
between the sexes.&#13;
The advantage of Parl",de',&#13;
Computer Dating Club over&#13;
other dating services ISthat the&#13;
students are of the same social,&#13;
economic, intellectual, and aa~&#13;
classes, thereby Increasing&#13;
compatibility dffiOllg contacts&#13;
Being in its early stages. th~&#13;
£CO~OP&#13;
Wishes&#13;
healthtj&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
"I wo"D£A. HOW YOo,)&#13;
START TtlIS TIIIN6?-&#13;
process allows 10&lt; ~O&lt;. onablonl&#13;
t~ partICIpant to evaluAte t~&#13;
flnt date, to r.te how _ ur.liP&#13;
t~ dat~ rrspondod to t~&#13;
questtOO •• re&#13;
It also allow, t~ partlC.pant&#13;
to reevaluat hi' own ~ht'f'&#13;
and to adlust that com put on!&#13;
by whIch ~ " m I Iw&lt;I up In&#13;
turn h~lpm&amp; to (rl'lt. t&#13;
system of (om put r d t&#13;
matCh,nl&#13;
So why not 110&gt; t&#13;
[)aM Club a tryl&#13;
can you t thiS t 01&#13;
and at ~uh I r ,uon&#13;
WhJ,t halo&gt; you ot to I&#13;
800080 and&#13;
our FOOD&#13;
nEW/LETTER&#13;
One Year Student MembershipS&#13;
. , .&#13;
-ednesda___:y'...--Ja_n_u_ar_y_1~7~,1--::-9~7_9 __ ~-----..:___::_--.:._:l:_:A~N~G~f~I-----=== ==::~~~~~~~~~ ~&#13;
• ....._-----.../i?.'i.. ~-.. ,..,...--....&#13;
----- --- --.·&#13;
,, you KNOW) THINGS SC[M(l) SIMPLfR WHE"N&#13;
WE v1£RE KIPS.-,,&#13;
' '&#13;
Snow&#13;
• •&#13;
•&#13;
• ..&#13;
Fooling 0&#13;
,&#13;
by •&#13;
,,· Matt r-.&#13;
Poliakson • HEY BuD ! CAN You GNC Mt: A. JUMP? "&#13;
0 . • 0&#13;
•&#13;
• 0&#13;
0 •&#13;
• . 0 0 • .. •&#13;
•&#13;
• • •&#13;
• . ,. •&#13;
• • 0 0&#13;
• • 0 •&#13;
---,....._ -~ --c-.:~~;;,,,--. -~~- --- II /TS FANTASTIC GLIDING Pf/lCETULLY TIIAOUGk ALL TI/IS NATU~f A [) , ~ N fRfSH AIR!&#13;
DtDN T :r TELL YOU THIS C~oss-couNTRY Sir.I ING WAS GRfAT l'IARY '!"&#13;
Of COURSE I l&lt;NC&gt;W J,fow 1b&#13;
SHo'\/£L SNOW! WHA.'f bo&#13;
YOV 'TUINI(, I AMf 11&#13;
u I woHl:&gt;£A. How Yo\J&#13;
ST~Rr THIS THl&gt;JG?"&#13;
Club Cures Lonely Hearts&#13;
by Don Scherrer&#13;
Are you lonesome tonight, or&#13;
fear you will be this weekend?&#13;
Have you ever thought of joining&#13;
Com-Dates Computer Dating&#13;
Service but found it too&#13;
expensive? Don't despair. The&#13;
Parkside Computer Dating Club&#13;
may come to your aid. For an&#13;
initiation f.~e of one dollar and&#13;
one dollar per month thereafter,&#13;
you'll meet at least two new&#13;
contacts every month.&#13;
Craig Young, a Parkside&#13;
student interested in comouters&#13;
. first conceived the id~a- as ~ ·&#13;
remedy for the argument that&#13;
U.W. Parkside, as a commuter&#13;
school, prevented people from&#13;
meeting each other. Having&#13;
printed up 1,000 forms, and&#13;
unable to set up their booth in&#13;
the Comm Arts until Tuesday&#13;
night, thereby missing the&#13;
juniors and seniors as well as the&#13;
people who parked in· the Union&#13;
lot, they received about 100&#13;
responses out of a total of&#13;
around 350 questionaires taken .&#13;
Craig surmises that not only are&#13;
people taking those questionaires&#13;
home to think them over,&#13;
due to the nature of the&#13;
questions asked, but also that&#13;
some people are waiting to see&#13;
what happens to the club.&#13;
The process is not all that&#13;
complicated . First, the participant&#13;
is asked to fill out the&#13;
general information sheet and&#13;
questionaire, listing age, interests,&#13;
etc., then instructed to rate&#13;
the listed activities as to&#13;
preference. From there the next&#13;
step is to critically rate your own&#13;
personality and appearance.&#13;
Given five choices, allowing&#13;
for extremes in each category,&#13;
you are then requested to list&#13;
your preferences for your date's&#13;
appearance and personality. This&#13;
collected data ,s then fed&#13;
through a computer, and the&#13;
resulting program, compann&#13;
the cumulated points in ach&#13;
category lists the best po s1b,t1-&#13;
ties for that per on So th&#13;
response has exceeded e tations,&#13;
with an almost equal ratio&#13;
between the sexes.&#13;
The advantag of Par id •&#13;
Computer Dating Club o r&#13;
other dating service i that th&#13;
students are of th same so ,al,&#13;
economic, intellectual, and&#13;
classes , thereb&#13;
compatibilit&#13;
Being in ,ts&#13;
iCO-OP&#13;
Wishes&#13;
)ER\JICE) COIIECTI\JE&#13;
a vertJ&#13;
semester&#13;
successful and&#13;
heafthtJ at&#13;
WEf f Avlte you to join&#13;
receive tfle ,ervice, of&#13;
CO-OP, BOOK CO-OP &amp;&#13;
One Year Student Memberships&#13;
Parkside, &#13;
,." ·,,----&#13;
w , J r, 17, 1979&#13;
lANGEI' -,&#13;
Trilogy· Incomplete&#13;
The return of Gandalf when he&#13;
IS thought dead by the ?thers is&#13;
the dlsappoi~ting scene. Although&#13;
he gives some explanation&#13;
of his fight with the Balrog&#13;
In the mines of Moria, the others&#13;
accept him as though nothing&#13;
has happened; none of the doubt&#13;
and unsureness which -thev&#13;
experience in the book is evident&#13;
lord of thl linl!&#13;
Tolkien&#13;
by Nicki Kroll&#13;
Th.. lon~ awaited Saul Laenl/&#13;
antmatKl film prrxJur non of&#13;
J R R folku'n'c, Lord of 'he RIn~"&#13;
ha v r'lwrw·d at th/&gt;alrl'\ In thle;&#13;
art-a Ihad the rmportunlty to \f&gt;f'&#13;
t lu- film whllt· In Wae;hlOglon&#13;
IJ ( rf'CI'ntly and made ..orne&#13;
tb ..NVdtIOn .. on the animation&#13;
and thf' IOtNprf'latJon of the&#13;
..tory&#13;
Ralph Bak ..hl, tht, man who&#13;
madt- WI/ardlo, dlrt'&lt;.tf~ the film&#13;
and I., rf'e;ponc;lble for the&#13;
antmallon (a word which he&#13;
pt'r\Onally doee; not like to ue;e In&#13;
df&gt;\(,r1bmg hl~ film style), Chri ..&#13;
Conkhng and Peter S. Bea~le are&#13;
re\ponc,lble fOf tht&gt; s,&lt;:rpcnplay.&#13;
The him "the first part of a two&#13;
part WflfM&gt; of the popular trilOKY·&#13;
Supposedlv, the ,tory will be tied&#13;
together In the fmal film.&#13;
fiaksht (Iaimc, to bt- a Tolkien&#13;
&lt;k.....otee ac, many of us are, and&#13;
tw • .-.aye; that hf' hac, tril.od to be&#13;
trUf' to dw story If thai i~ so,&#13;
ttwn he hac, made-' wm~ honec,t&#13;
mr\!ake., rn rf'lountjn~ the tale.&#13;
And, to be honf:.,t, the vtorv IS&#13;
confu'&gt;lOg enough for these of us&#13;
who have read the trilogy;&#13;
..om(~one who has not will have&#13;
,&gt;oml~ diffic.ulty following the&#13;
trim&#13;
- Well into the film, I reali/cd&#13;
that some impmtant parts of the&#13;
storv had already been omitted,&#13;
and yet was powerless to stop&#13;
the cour'&gt;e of events, had been&#13;
&lt;,ompletely· overlooked. Other&#13;
"c.ene'&gt; were simply wrong or&#13;
dl.-.appointing. : .&#13;
A.fte~ the hobbits meet with&#13;
the mysterious Ar ag or n (~r&#13;
Strider, as they call him), he IS&#13;
suppo"ed to escort them to&#13;
Rivendell where they are to be&#13;
~ fiLM SERIES&#13;
~ Pll!SENTS&#13;
NEIL SIMON'S&#13;
"THE CHEAP&#13;
DETECTIVE"&#13;
STARRING&#13;
PETER FAll(&#13;
FRI. JAN,19-8:00PM&#13;
SUN, JAN.21- 7:30PM&#13;
UNION CINEMA&#13;
$1.00&#13;
PARK SlOE 10 REQUIREO&#13;
-* Review&#13;
MECCA'Winter festival Ticlcets Avai'a"e&#13;
and it wa .. not flowing ~moothly.&#13;
Sf f'nf~&lt;;did not 'leem to be clearly&#13;
df~ftnt~d and, df:~pite a narrator,&#13;
another viewer wa .. overheard to&#13;
c,ay, "WhNe are they now? I&#13;
don't recogni,w thi~ part at all."&#13;
The story was aho well beyond&#13;
the part where hf~ i.e;introduced&#13;
before I rcali/cd that the&#13;
enigmatif. figun! of Tom&#13;
Bombadil, who knew and sawall&#13;
that happt~ned to the company&#13;
Advanc l' "all~ tickets pf $] for&#13;
lhl' Winh~r Il'~tiyal mu~ic f'venh&#13;
cit lh(· M!CCA Convpnlion&#13;
C('nt('( in Milwaukl~e are now&#13;
•wddelhll· al ti&lt; h~1 outlets&#13;
throughout ..()uth(~astern Wis-&#13;
(omin. Rc·gular gate admission&#13;
for Ihl' pVf'nl will he $4, s(!nior&#13;
Ilti/Pm $1, and c'hildren under&#13;
11 frl'(',&#13;
J il xl'l .. (an h(' purchaspd in&#13;
th(' KI·no..hcl ,If('d elt Spars, One&#13;
SWI't't LJ«'iun, Kainhow Records,&#13;
clOd I ilk" Arl'(I Audio, I.ake&#13;
CC'Of·Vrl.&#13;
told whatl·rodo must do With the&#13;
one ring which rules the nine. On&#13;
the road they meet up with&#13;
another rider going in the same&#13;
direction. The character is just as&#13;
much a. surprise to those of us&#13;
who know the story as he is to&#13;
the company. Instead of&#13;
Glorfindel, Aragorn jumps out&#13;
and &lt;:all~, "legolas!" much to the&#13;
dismay of-many others in the&#13;
theatre.&#13;
I ntertainm(~nl al Ml::CCA is&#13;
slated for eight staging areas&#13;
induding a Main Stage, Variety&#13;
Stage, Com(~dy-Cinema Stage,&#13;
Dann~ Hall, Children's Area .&#13;
Disco, Carnes Arcade, and lood&#13;
I est ivaI. A Market Place of arts&#13;
and crafts will also b(~ featurpd&#13;
Admissions 10 all entertainment&#13;
here. But the him&#13;
*IS not all&#13;
mistakes' and there are some&#13;
realiy fine scenes.&#13;
The scene depicting Candalf's&#13;
confrontation with the fiery&#13;
Balrog does justice to the&#13;
description in,the book. For me,&#13;
it was quite the way I had&#13;
imagilled it ,hould be depicted&#13;
and I heard votes of agceement\&#13;
"from dthers around me, too.-The&#13;
'portrayal of the nine Ringwraiths.&#13;
areas is free once the gate&#13;
admission is paid.&#13;
Among the talent already&#13;
announced for MECCA are'&#13;
"boxing champion Muhammad&#13;
Ail, the t\tlanta Rhythm Section,&#13;
-.::the James Cotton Blues Band,&#13;
Dexter Cordon, Jimmy Dorsey&#13;
Band, Tommy Dor~ey Band, the&#13;
IS also splendidlv done, The fil",&#13;
Images of these hOnif&#13;
creatures on horseback s Ylng earth.&#13;
ing out the bearer of the On .&#13;
, d d e~"g&#13;
In or er to eliver it into th - ,&#13;
h d fS eeViI&#13;
h&#13;
anf' 0 Tahur~~&gt;nare just that&#13;
am vmg. err actions and h'&#13;
weird cries which they t e&#13;
1&#13;
_ are&#13;
a ways said' to make&#13;
d d i f are&#13;
repro uce In me form on th&#13;
screen. e&#13;
~&#13;
The slimy, slinky figure of&#13;
Smeagol or Collum is als&#13;
H&#13;
' h 0 a&#13;
treat. IS uge eye~ arb.&#13;
I&#13;
' I &lt; as&#13;
ummous a,s r? ~ie:n describes&#13;
them and hiS hlssmg whines are&#13;
done the way the reader exPects.&#13;
Mo~e approval fro_m the&#13;
~u.d.lence was voiced on his&#13;
IOltlal scene and fOllOWing ones&#13;
_ In all'dthe dfilm is excellentl~&#13;
aOimate an the characten&#13;
seem to be portrayed the way&#13;
rea.de.rs of the trilogy (in&#13;
maJority, at least) have imagined&#13;
them, But the changes and&#13;
mistakes make for a confusing&#13;
film, and the length (all 2 hours&#13;
and 16 minutes of it) makes it a&#13;
bit tedious at times. It could&#13;
almost be boring for one who is'&#13;
not familiar with the story.&#13;
Dukes of Dixieland, and&#13;
rock'n'roll revival with t&#13;
Drifter&gt; and Bo Diddley, Ot&#13;
to appear are comedia&#13;
Edmonds &amp; Curley, blue' artl&#13;
Mighty Joe Young, the Pi&#13;
Road Spring Band, Nexus, Sh&#13;
Stuff, Snopek, The Britin~, and&#13;
the polka band of Eddie&#13;
Blazonclyk ..&#13;
Goldwyn Alive •&#13;
In Milwaukee&#13;
1 he films of Producer Samuel&#13;
Coldwyn will be featured from&#13;
HEYI THINK FASTI&#13;
lAST CHANCE FOR&#13;
MILL~R:ONE-ON-ONE&#13;
WHEN: REGISTRATION ENDS 1-19-79&#13;
COMPETION STARTS 1-22-79&#13;
WHERE: u.w. PARKSIDE FIELDHOUSE&#13;
4:00 pm&#13;
4:00 pm&#13;
WHO: ALL STUDENTS, EXCEPT BASKETBALL LmERMEN&#13;
COST:$2.00 (DONATED TO CHILD CARE CENTER)&#13;
PRiZES: 1ST PLACE $200.00 SCHQLARSHIP &amp; MORE&#13;
ALL PLAYERS GET T-SHIRTS &amp; BEER BASH&#13;
MORE INFO &amp; REGISTRATION AT UNION INFO DESK-&#13;
, 'lfpi :)&#13;
;.;u.~,..vd ')&#13;
\1:; ,III, \' -L,.I&#13;
DONT FOROETI&#13;
SION UP IW-FRIDA11&#13;
Dramatic Arts announce~&#13;
AU1JJ7:JO/VS&#13;
Main Stage Production&#13;
Januar-y through April in the&#13;
Milwaukee Art Center's Film&#13;
Classics Series. films are shown'&#13;
on alternate Thursday, evenings&#13;
at B:(~)pm in the Faye'McBeath&#13;
Learning Center_&#13;
Samuel Goldwyn was noted&#13;
for his prestigious films whichrt~present&#13;
many fine directors,&#13;
cinematographers, set and costump&#13;
oesignprs, and memorable&#13;
pf'rformaoc'es. Golowyn knew&#13;
what he wanted and made sure -&#13;
his films~ reflected what he&#13;
thought was top Quahty. He&#13;
_finann'd all his films him~elf,&#13;
with no directors, officers, or&#13;
stockholders to tell him what to&#13;
do with his productions. A man&#13;
charm was often lost on tne&#13;
people who worked for him.&#13;
Even without list of&#13;
successful films, he would be&#13;
remembered in Hollywood for&#13;
his "Goldwynisms"-"I don't&#13;
care if this film makes -any&#13;
money, lust so everyone In&#13;
America ·~ees it."&#13;
The -Milwaukee Art Center is&#13;
located at 750 North lincoln&#13;
Memorial Drive.&#13;
R.U.R.&#13;
A fantasy about robots&#13;
and the annihilation of mankind&#13;
directed by Kevin Hoggard&#13;
Studio Production&#13;
1. THENEIGHBOORS&#13;
2. THE HAPPY JOURNEY FROM&#13;
CAMDEN TO 'TRENTON&#13;
directed by Rhoda-Gale Pollack&#13;
Communications Arts Theatre&#13;
JAN. 17 and 18 -3 - 5 p.M.&#13;
SCripts on reserve in the library&#13;
under director's name . '#&#13;
--~~~!?-.:~~~~~'.__-- - ~ ---~~R~A!!_N!_Gf~R~·---------;---,~~----------!_ ~ ednHday January 17, 1979&#13;
,o,d o, , •• "j ~lkien Trilogy-Incomplete&#13;
by Nicki .Croll&#13;
ml\!aki=, 1n rN ountmg the tale.&#13;
And tr, hi' hone,t, thP. ,tory is&#13;
, r,nf u,ing ,mo ugh for tho,e of us&#13;
whr, hav1= rP.ad the trilogy;&#13;
,om1•on1= who ha, not will have&#13;
v,mr· d1ffic.ulty following the&#13;
film&#13;
-- Wl!il into the film, I rr=a li/ed&#13;
that ,1&gt;me important parts of the&#13;
,tory had alr£iady been omitted,&#13;
and yet was powerless to stop&#13;
the cour\e of events, had been&#13;
w mpletdy· overlooked . Other&#13;
,c.ene, were simply wrong or&#13;
disappointing. , .&#13;
Aftf:r the hobhits mr:e:t w,th&#13;
the mysteriou s Aragorn (or&#13;
Strider, as they call him), he is&#13;
suppo5ed to escort them to&#13;
Rivendell where they are to be&#13;
The return of Gandalf when he&#13;
is thought dead by the ?thers is&#13;
the disappointing scene. Although&#13;
he gives some explanation&#13;
of his fight w ith the Balrog&#13;
,n the mines of M oria, t he others&#13;
accept him as though nothing&#13;
has happened; none of the doubt&#13;
and unsureness wh ich th ey&#13;
experience in the book is eviden.t&#13;
is also splendidly done Th 1. . f h . e dill images o t ese horrif .&#13;
creatures on horseback se Ying . t h b arch- ing ou t e earer of the on . . . en~ in order to deliver it into th - . h d f S e ev11 an s o auron are just th&#13;
h ·1 . Th · at om ying_. e1r actions and th•&#13;
weird cries which they e&#13;
always said to make are&#13;
d d . t· are repro uce in ine form on th&#13;
screen . e&#13;
l hf' long awa1tt&gt;d Saul Lat&gt;ntl&#13;
c1nimatH'.l film produc twn of&#13;
JR R rolkwn'\ Lord of the R,ng\&#13;
ha, 1&gt;pNtt-&lt;l at thPatr1•, ,n th1\&#13;
arr·a I hc1d th1· opportunity to WI'&#13;
thi· film whilt&gt; 1n Washington&#13;
I) c rN 1•ntly and mad1• ,ome&#13;
ohwrvc1ti1&gt;n\ on thr= an1mat1on&#13;
and thr· ,ntnprr•tation of thri&#13;
,wry&#13;
Ralph 1sak,h1, the· man who&#13;
madt&gt; W1/ard, , d1rf'&lt; tf-&lt;.l th1· film&#13;
and 1, rp,pom1hle for the&#13;
animation (a word which he&#13;
pt'rwnally doe\ not like to uw m&#13;
df&gt;~rihing h1\ film style). Chri,&#13;
* Review *&#13;
The slimy, slinky figure of&#13;
Smeagol or Collum is als&#13;
H. h o a treat . 1s uge eyes are I . _ 1 as ummous as Io kien describe&#13;
them and his hissing whines s are done the way the reader expects.&#13;
More approval from th&#13;
d. e&#13;
·onkhng and Peter S Beagle are&#13;
re,pom1ble for thl' sueenplay .&#13;
The film 1\ th first part of a two&#13;
part w rws of the popular trilogy.&#13;
Supposedly, the \tory will be tied&#13;
tOK ther in the final film .&#13;
lidksh1 &lt;.laim\ to be a Tolkien&#13;
devot • a\ many of us are, and&#13;
hi' ,ays that hi' ha\ tried to b •&#13;
tru1• to th1• \tory If that is o,&#13;
thrn hf' na\ mad&lt;' \Omt' honest&#13;
and it wa, not flowing smoothly.&#13;
Su•nes did not ,eem to he clearly&#13;
defined and, despite a narrator,&#13;
another viewer wa, overheard to&#13;
say, "Where are they now? I&#13;
don't recognize this part at all."&#13;
The story was also well beyond&#13;
the part where hfi i~ introduced&#13;
before I rc ali.1ed that the&#13;
eni gmatic figure of Tom&#13;
Bombadil, who knew and saw all&#13;
that happened to the company&#13;
told what l·rodo must do with the&#13;
one ring which rules the nine. On&#13;
the road they meet up with&#13;
another rider going in the same&#13;
direction. The character is just as&#13;
much a surprise to those of us&#13;
who know the story as he is to&#13;
the company . Instead of&#13;
Glorfindel, Aragorn jumps out&#13;
and calls, "Legolas!" much to the&#13;
dismay of -many others in the&#13;
theatre.&#13;
- here. But the film is not all&#13;
mistakes and there are some&#13;
reaHy fine scenes.&#13;
The scene depicting Gandalf's&#13;
confrontation with the fiery&#13;
Balrog does justice to the&#13;
description in the book . For me,&#13;
it was quite the way I had&#13;
imagined it should be depicted&#13;
and I heard votes of agteement&#13;
'from others around me, too. The&#13;
portrayal of the nine Ringwraiths&#13;
au _1 ence was voiced on his&#13;
m1t1al scene and following ones&#13;
In all, the film 1s excellent! ·&#13;
animated and the character~&#13;
seem to be portrayed the wa&#13;
rea_d e rs of the tfilogy (i~&#13;
ma1onty, at least) have imagined&#13;
them. But the changes and&#13;
mistakes make for a confusing&#13;
film, and the length (all 2 hours&#13;
and 16 minutes of it) makes it a&#13;
bit tedious at times. It could&#13;
almost be boring for one who is·&#13;
not familiar with the story.&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
FILM SERIES&#13;
PRESENTS MECCA 'Winter festival Ticlcets Available&#13;
NEIL SIMON'S&#13;
"THE CHEAP&#13;
DETECTIVE"&#13;
STARRING&#13;
PETER FALK&#13;
Advan&lt;" 5ahi tickt&gt;h of $ .l for&#13;
th1• WintN I !'stiyal music event~&#13;
,1 t t hl' M l CCA C.onv1•ntio n&#13;
C1•ntN in M ilwauk&lt;=e are now&#13;
r1 vdildhll' at ti&lt; ktit o utlets&#13;
throughout ,outhtiastern W is-&#13;
&lt; onsin . RPguldr gate admission&#13;
for thl' !'VPnt will he $4, senior&#13;
&lt; 1t i1&lt;•n, $1, r1 nd children under&#13;
1 I fr&lt;•f'.&#13;
I ntert ainm&lt;!nt at M l::CCA is&#13;
slat&lt;!d for eight staging areas&#13;
including a M ain Stage, Variety&#13;
Stag1\ Com&lt;!dy-Cinema Stage,&#13;
Dann • Hall, Children's Area .&#13;
Disco, Carnes Arcade, and I ood&#13;
I estival. A Market Plan• of arts&#13;
and nafh w ill also h&lt;! featurt&gt;d .&#13;
Adm issions to all entertainment&#13;
areas is free once the gate&#13;
admission is paid.&#13;
Amo ng the talent already&#13;
an nounced for MECCA are&#13;
, boxing champion Muhammad&#13;
Ali, the Atlanta Rhythm Section,&#13;
..._ the James Cotton Blues Band,&#13;
Dexter Gordon, Jimmy Dorsey&#13;
Band, l ommy Dorsey Band, the&#13;
Dukes of Dixieland, and a&#13;
rock'n'roll reviva l with the&#13;
Drifters and Bo D-iddley. Others&#13;
to appear are comedians&#13;
Edmonds &amp; Curley, blues artist&#13;
Mighty Joe Young, the Piper&#13;
Road Spring Band, Nexus, Short&#13;
Stuff, Snopek, The Britins, and&#13;
the pol ka band of Eddie&#13;
FRI. JAN.19-8:00PM Blazonuyk .&#13;
SUN. JAN.21 - 7:30PM&#13;
UNION CINEMA&#13;
$1.00&#13;
I H kPh &lt; an h1• purchawd in&#13;
th&lt;' K&lt;·no,h,1 drl',1 .it S1•ars, On!'&#13;
'iw&lt;'&lt;'t Drf'ctm, R,tinhow Rt&gt;r ords,&#13;
,ind I ,tkl' An•a Audio, Lake&#13;
CPnl'Vtl.&#13;
Goldwyn Alive in Milwaukee&#13;
PARKSIDE IO REQUIRED I hi' films of l'roduu •r Samuel&#13;
Coldwyn will be featured from&#13;
HEY! THINK FAST!&#13;
LAST CHANCE FOR&#13;
MILL~R: ONE-ON-ONE&#13;
WHEN: REGISTRATION ENDS 1-19-79&#13;
COMPETION STARTS 1-22-79&#13;
WHERE: u.w. PARKSIDE FIELDHOUSE&#13;
4:00 pm&#13;
4:00 pm&#13;
WHO: ALL STUDENTS, EXCEPT BASKETBALL LITTERMEN&#13;
COST:$2.00 (DONATED TO CHILD CARE CENTER)&#13;
PRIZES: l ST PLACE $200.00 SCHQLARSHIP &amp; MORE&#13;
DONT FORGET!&#13;
SIGN UP BY ~FRIDAY!&#13;
January through April in the&#13;
Milwaukee Art Center's Fi lm&#13;
Classics Series. lilms are shown&#13;
on alternate Thursday evenings&#13;
at 8 :(~l p .m . in the I aye M cBeath&#13;
[yarning Center.&#13;
Samuel Goldwyn was noted&#13;
for his prestigious f ilms w hichrepresent&#13;
many f ine directors,&#13;
cinematographers, set and costume&#13;
designPrs, and memorable&#13;
pt•rformances. Goldwyn knew&#13;
what hP wanted and made sur,e&#13;
his films reflected what he&#13;
thought was top quah ty . He&#13;
. finann•d all his fi lms himself ,&#13;
with no directors, officers, or&#13;
stockholders to tell him what to&#13;
do with his productions. A man&#13;
charm was often lost on the&#13;
people who worked for him.&#13;
Even w ithou t list of&#13;
successful f ilm s, he would be&#13;
remembered in Ho llywood for&#13;
his " Goldwynisms" - " I don't&#13;
care if th is fi lm makes any&#13;
money, just so everyone in&#13;
America sees it."&#13;
The M ilwaukee Art Center is&#13;
located at 750 North Lincoln&#13;
Memorial Drive .&#13;
Dramatic Arts announce~&#13;
AUVJ~JO/vS&#13;
Main Stage Production&#13;
R.U.R.&#13;
A fa~tasy about robots&#13;
and the annihilation of mankind&#13;
directed by Kevin Hoggard&#13;
Studio Production&#13;
1. THE NEIGHBOURS&#13;
2. THE HAPPY JOURNEY FROM&#13;
CAMDEN TO .TRENTON&#13;
directed by Rhoda-Gale Pollack&#13;
Communications Arts Theatre&#13;
JAN. 17 and 18 3 - 5 P.M.&#13;
Scripts on reserve in the library&#13;
under director's name &#13;
1..~,~J.~n::u:::..:.r~y~. 1_7_,_1_97_9__ ~ ~IA~N'!.'G~f~I~-...:...:.- -,,--- ~5~&#13;
Cinema '78&#13;
by pete Little&#13;
Y&#13;
mud&gt; that 1978&#13;
btver d a&#13;
dO'S remembere as&#13;
be "n cinema. I feel year I . .&#13;
S&#13;
in proclaiming&#13;
tJPnerou id e- It cannot be sal&#13;
iOCre. any shortage of&#13;
e was .&#13;
tiler I of the quality&#13;
asmos f d , d directorS- Dun&#13;
anent somewhere along&#13;
Money seemed no more&#13;
ifIe· lem than in other recent&#13;
~ oed look no further&#13;
one n an" or "The Wiz." "Superm ,&#13;
I&#13;
carcity was most rea 5 ..&#13;
. the screenwrltlng&#13;
t In d&#13;
the industry. Those goo ,&#13;
of. the ones which scrtpts, .;&#13;
both the viewer 5&#13;
aCe and emotions, were fe~&#13;
flrbelWeen.&#13;
,t of the .'films were&#13;
ny passive to contert or&#13;
matter. The themes and&#13;
behindthem took less risks&#13;
jnVeI1tionand imagination&#13;
by the wayside. New&#13;
and new Situations&#13;
in sharf supply, as the&#13;
e is too many films&#13;
off as a bit too controlled,&#13;
times almost contrived.&#13;
producers should not be&#13;
tstied with their regular&#13;
nee,but should venture out&#13;
new audiences, breaking&#13;
IOfamous"new ground" with&#13;
in hand. What distinction&#13;
was to be found, ended up&#13;
temperedto the commerizatien&#13;
of massappeal.&#13;
Old formulas and proven&#13;
ts were called on time&#13;
time again in attempts to&#13;
ion the industry's rising&#13;
inproduction,distribution,&#13;
exhibition. Remakes and&#13;
5 arefine if they are given&#13;
lXOPerattention, which&#13;
lIy doesn't happen. The&#13;
t recentbatch was especially&#13;
tome, adding Iittlp yet&#13;
rgettlngmost. The worst&#13;
oIi&gt;n&lt;ier, were "The Big Sleep"&#13;
~ "Oliver's Story," followed ;"Iy by "Jaws II" and&#13;
amlen:Omen II". Three&#13;
5, "Heaven Can- Wait,"&#13;
Less Risles, Less Results -&#13;
"Revenge Of The Pink Panther,"&#13;
and "Invasion Of The Body&#13;
Snatchers," at least gave it a&#13;
good trw, ending up with a&#13;
decent but uneven product.&#13;
Nearly all the breakthroughs&#13;
of 1978 must be credited to style.&#13;
The visual imagery and camera&#13;
work of many of recent film have&#13;
opened up new horizons to the&#13;
eyes. Much more attention has&#13;
been given to such important&#13;
mood' de~ices as lighting,&#13;
framing, and angle. Products are&#13;
increasingly realizing a slickness&#13;
of detail and composifion,&#13;
creating both a more elegant and&#13;
a more su"Q..duedimage. At the&#13;
top of the list were, "Blue&#13;
Collar," "The Driver," "Halloween,"&#13;
"Days Of Heaven," and&#13;
"Pretty Babv." The visual&#13;
refinement and clarity, combined&#13;
with blends of aural&#13;
magnificence, left room for little&#13;
doubt that cinema is firstmost an&#13;
art, only secondly an entertainment&#13;
medium. This -stylistic&#13;
polish and distinction reinforces&#13;
a certain mystification within the&#13;
subject matter, displaying an&#13;
objective eccentricity that tugs&#13;
at the viewer's emotions. Flaws&#13;
or not, if the film is fascinating to_&#13;
watch, the imagination is that&#13;
much freer to absorb and&#13;
interpret what _the style&#13;
represents&#13;
There were too many films&#13;
that I felt could have turned out&#13;
-much better, considering the ~&#13;
talents involved. "Coma," "Telefon,"&#13;
"Convoy," and many others&#13;
failed to consider the essentials&#13;
of plot and characterization,&#13;
ending up as hallow statements&#13;
as a-result. "Pretty Baby," "An&#13;
Unmarried Woman," "Going&#13;
South," and "Straight Time" all&#13;
came a little closer, but&#13;
similarily lacked the strong&#13;
'inspiration necessary for their&#13;
respective topics.&#13;
1978 could someday be seen&#13;
as the year of the emergence of&#13;
the Vietna.rn film. A more&#13;
authentic view has finally arisen,&#13;
more clearly 'showing what were'&#13;
the problems and just whose&#13;
responsibilities those problems&#13;
were. With such a radical subject&#13;
still so close at our heels, a few&#13;
gifted dire ct or , Me looking&#13;
backward, more honestly and&#13;
openly. The nuances of the war&#13;
morality are transcending both •&#13;
exploitation and fiction, evidenced&#13;
in,' "The Boys In&#13;
Company C," and "Go Tell The&#13;
Spartans." -&#13;
On the home front, both&#13;
"Coming Home;" and "Who'll&#13;
Stop The Rain?" made strong&#13;
attempts to shed some light on&#13;
the effects of the war here,&#13;
giving harsh glimpses of the&#13;
desperate reality of coming to&#13;
terms with just who is the real&#13;
enemy. A new film, "The&#13;
Deerhunter," and the over-due&#13;
"Apocalypse Now" both take&#13;
many of these themes much&#13;
.further, incorporating that moral&#13;
dimension that is the sould of&#13;
, the cinema. -&#13;
The foreign films of 1978 have&#13;
been as steady as ever, the few&#13;
nice surprises equalling the few&#13;
disappointments. ':A Night Full&#13;
Of Rain," and "The -Man Who&#13;
Loved Women" are both to be&#13;
admired for their" comical&#13;
insights into the male-female&#13;
relationship as well as for the&#13;
stylistic eccentricity which both&#13;
amuses and seduces the senses.&#13;
Other intelligent efforts include,&#13;
"A Slave Of love," "Violette,"&#13;
and "A Serpent's Egg."&#13;
The grab for the youth market&#13;
in 78 created an abundancy of&#13;
music films. Some, such as "[he&#13;
Buddy Holly Story," "American&#13;
Hot Wax," and "Stoney Island,"&#13;
were quite good. But others, like&#13;
"Grease," "Sergeant Pepper's&#13;
Lonley Hearts Club Band," and&#13;
"T.G.l.F.," were examples of the&#13;
fast-buck scramble. In between&#13;
these somewhere were "The last&#13;
Waltz," and "Renaldo and&#13;
Clara."&#13;
There was at least a -good&#13;
amount of worthwhile actionthri&#13;
lIers through the year. The&#13;
best of these, "Eyes- Of Laura&#13;
Mars," "The Driver," "Midnight&#13;
Express," and the short-lived&#13;
~ Presents:&#13;
A DANCE WITH&#13;
"THE'BRIT~NS"&#13;
a tr-ib'Uteto the Beatles&#13;
Saturday. January 20&#13;
9 PM UnionSquare&#13;
Admission: $2.00'UWp Students linaddv::c&#13;
C&#13;
:&#13;
$2.50 guest n a ~&#13;
$2.50 all at door&#13;
Id's are required . Center&#13;
Tickets available at th!3 U.niofl.InformatIOn&#13;
"Fingers," all effectively displayed&#13;
that sharp intensity that is&#13;
necessary for the dramatic&#13;
tension. There were others that&#13;
came quite close, including "The&#13;
Fury," "The Medusa Touch," and&#13;
"Magic," each satisfying in both&#13;
restraintive suspenseand plot or&#13;
thematic restrictions.&#13;
The only enjoyable comedies&#13;
worth remembering were "The&#13;
Silver Bears," "The Big Fix," "Up&#13;
In Smoke," and possibly "Animal&#13;
House." Comedy has certainly&#13;
seldom seen slower years,&#13;
although there was no end to the&#13;
list of dismal attempts, such as&#13;
"Death On The Nile," "The One&#13;
and Only," "Foul Play," "The&#13;
End," "Oh Cod," and on and on.&#13;
There were far too few&#13;
pictures during '78 that really&#13;
grabbed my imagination the way&#13;
a good film must, creating a&#13;
memorable impression that stays&#13;
with me long after I've seenit. Of&#13;
the few, "The Driver," with Bruce&#13;
Oern and RvanO'Neal, was the&#13;
most pleasing, due to the&#13;
engaging plot and characters, as&#13;
well asto the most artistic chases&#13;
I've ever seen done with cars.&#13;
Member Partside 211I&#13;
National Varsity CIIb&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
•&#13;
~ .&#13;
• •&#13;
¢&#13;
4433-22nd Ayenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 6S4-0n4&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACqprED&#13;
"Bot Wednesday" also came&#13;
across 10 a concise and&#13;
compelling manner, exploring a&#13;
time and sub-culture With a fresh&#13;
awareness&#13;
As for labor, "Blue Collar" IS to&#13;
be adrrnred as a strong effort&#13;
dealmg With an equally strong&#13;
subject, also found to a lesser&#13;
extent In "F 1ST -, I would hke&#13;
to personally thank Rochard&#13;
Burton for finally plaYinK a&#13;
character on a par With hiS&#13;
abihties , In "The Medusa&#13;
Touch," a strong follow-up to&#13;
"Equus,"&#13;
1978 was by no means a bad&#13;
year in cinema, nor was tt as&#13;
exceptionally good year If you&#13;
don't see it as such, conaratulations&#13;
you're a cnnc, and&#13;
t'm glad to see you've been&#13;
doing some th inkinll. For myself,&#13;
1979 looks to be a ve&lt;y Iood&#13;
vear, with directors Stanley&#13;
Kubrick, Martin Scorce se , John&#13;
Shlesinger, and Franc,s Ford&#13;
Coppala preparinc proJects that&#13;
have kept them busV and out of&#13;
the lights in 1978. But don't hold&#13;
your breath go see a mcvre&#13;
instead.&#13;
1 0'%..\LL2!!n'DE'ITS. HCUrY .'-'D&#13;
ST.UF 'Il1LL RECEln; 10&lt;&gt;OFF 0' u.L&#13;
REGl·L.UlLl'PRICF'IF" ITEVS'-ITH&#13;
PROPERP.~RI\SIDE1DE.,nFlC~nO'.&#13;
.'&#13;
==------&#13;
GOOO&#13;
MaN - FAI&#13;
11 - 2&#13;
RANGER s&#13;
cinema '78 - less lisles, less Result .&#13;
bY pete Little&#13;
ry mucn that 1978&#13;
dOubt ve em be red as a rem f 1 be in cinema. I ee e year 1 . . . on us in proc aiming&#13;
genero b .d st It cannot e sa1&#13;
;ie&lt;JioCr:as any shortage of&#13;
there st of the qua I ity&#13;
as mo f d t, d directors - oun&#13;
rs an t somewhere along&#13;
ovmen Y seemed no more Mone 1ine- than in other recent&#13;
,problem ed look no further&#13;
one ne "or "The Wiz."&#13;
"Superman,&#13;
I Carcity was most&#13;
rea s · · . the screenwrrtmg rent in d f the industry. Those go? ' 0 . ts the ones which t scrip , . , both the viewers&#13;
age demotions, were few hts an&#13;
.J far between.&#13;
"' f the -films were 1101t o . uallY passive in content or&#13;
t matter. The themes and&#13;
;j)jeC behind them _took le_ss ri_sks&#13;
,is_ nti·on and · imagination inve&#13;
by the wayside. New&#13;
~ters and new situations&#13;
. short supply, as the ~ in f"I here is too many I ms =~ff as a bit too controlled,&#13;
metimes almost contrived.&#13;
Im producers should not be&#13;
tisfied with their regular&#13;
ience, but should venture out&#13;
er new audie-~ces, breaking&#13;
infamous "new ground" with&#13;
kin hand. What distinction&#13;
· ewas to be found, ended up&#13;
· ng tempered to the commerld!ization&#13;
of mass appeal.&#13;
Old formulas and proven&#13;
'Kepts were called on time&#13;
!'II time again in attempts to&#13;
,shion the industry's rising&#13;
.DIis in production distribution&#13;
exhibition. Remakes and&#13;
uels are fine if they are given&#13;
proper attention which&#13;
.;()ally doesn't happ~n. The&#13;
~trecent batch was especially&#13;
/esome, adding littlP yet&#13;
orgetting most. The worst&#13;
offenders were "The Big Sleep"&#13;
-~d "Oliver's Story," followed&#13;
~,oiely by "Jaws II" and&#13;
Damien: Omen II". Three&#13;
!hers, "Heaven Can- Wait,"&#13;
" Revenge Of The Pink Panther "&#13;
and " Invasion Of The Body&#13;
Snatchers," at least gave it a&#13;
good try, ending up with a&#13;
decent but uneven product.&#13;
Nearly all the breakthroughs&#13;
of 1978 must be credited to style.&#13;
The visual imagery and camera&#13;
work of many of recent film have&#13;
opened up new horizons to the&#13;
eyes. Much more attention has&#13;
been given to such important&#13;
mood · devices as lighting,&#13;
framing, and angle. Products a;e&#13;
increasingly realizing a slickness&#13;
of detail and composition ,&#13;
creating both a more elegant and&#13;
a more subdued image. At the&#13;
top of the list were, "Blue&#13;
Collar," "The Driver," "Halloween,"&#13;
"Days Of Heaven," and&#13;
"Pretty Baby." The visual&#13;
refinement and clarity, combined&#13;
with blends of aural&#13;
magnificence, left room for little&#13;
doubt that cinema is firstmost an&#13;
art, only secondly an entertainment&#13;
medium. This stylistic&#13;
polish and distinction reinforces&#13;
a certain mystification within the&#13;
subject matter, displaying an&#13;
objective eccentricity that tugs&#13;
at the viewer's emotions. Flaws&#13;
or not if the film is fascinating to&#13;
watch'. the· imagination is thatmuch&#13;
freer to absorb and&#13;
interpret what the style&#13;
represents.&#13;
There were too many films&#13;
that I felt could have turned out&#13;
-much better, considering the&#13;
talents involved. "Coma," "Telefon,"&#13;
"Convoy," and many others&#13;
failed to consider the essentials&#13;
of plot and characterization,&#13;
ending up as hallow statements&#13;
as a result. "Pretty Baby," "An&#13;
Unmarried Woman," "Going&#13;
South " and " Straight Time" all&#13;
came' a little c loser, but&#13;
sim ilari ly lacked the strong&#13;
inspiration necessary for their&#13;
respective topics.&#13;
1978 could someday be seen&#13;
as the year of the emergence of&#13;
the Vietnam film. A more&#13;
authentic view has finally arisen,&#13;
more clearly showing what were&#13;
the problems and just whose&#13;
responsibilities those problems&#13;
were. With such a radical subject&#13;
still so close at our heels a few&#13;
gifted directors are l~oking&#13;
backward- more honestly and&#13;
openly. The nuances of the war&#13;
morality are transcending both _&#13;
exploitation and fiction, evidenced&#13;
in, " The Boys In&#13;
Company C," and "Go Tell The&#13;
Spartans ."&#13;
On the home front, both&#13;
"Coming Home," and "Who'll&#13;
Stop The Rain?" made strong&#13;
attempts to shed some light on&#13;
the effects of the war here,&#13;
giving harsh glimpses of the&#13;
desperate reality of coming to&#13;
terms with just who is the real&#13;
enemy . A new film, " The&#13;
Deerhunter," and the over-due&#13;
" Apocalypse Now" both take&#13;
many of these themes much&#13;
further, incorporating that moral&#13;
dimension that is the sould of&#13;
· the cinema. -&#13;
Th!;! foreign films of 1978 have&#13;
been as steady as ever, the few&#13;
nice surprises equalling the few&#13;
disappointments. " A Night Full&#13;
Of Rain," and "The Man Who&#13;
Loved Women" are both to be&#13;
admired for their comical&#13;
insights into the male-female&#13;
relationship as well as for the&#13;
stylistic eccentricity which both&#13;
amuses and seduces the senses.&#13;
Other intelligent efforts include,&#13;
"A Slave Of Love," "Violette,"&#13;
and "A Serpent's Egg."&#13;
The grab for the youth market&#13;
in '78 created an abundancy of&#13;
music films. Some, such as "1he&#13;
Buddy Holly Story," "American&#13;
Hot Wax," and "Stoney Island,"&#13;
were quite good. But others, lik·e&#13;
" Grease," "Sergeant Pepper's&#13;
Lonley Hearts Club Band," and&#13;
"T.G.I.F.," were examples of the&#13;
fast-buck scramble. In between&#13;
these somewhere were "The Last&#13;
Waltz," and "Rena ldo and&#13;
Clara."&#13;
There was at least a 'good&#13;
amount of worthwhile actionthrillers&#13;
through the year. The&#13;
best of these, " Eyes- Of Laura&#13;
Mars," "The Driver," "Midnight&#13;
Express," and the short-lived&#13;
~ Presents:&#13;
A DANCE WITH&#13;
11THE BRIT~NS"&#13;
a tr--ibute to the Beatles&#13;
Saturday, January 20&#13;
9 PM Union Square&#13;
Admission• $2.00 UWP Students in advance&#13;
. • $2.50 guest in ad~ance&#13;
$2.50 all at door&#13;
Id's are required · Center&#13;
Tickets available at the. Union lr:iforr.nat '°n&#13;
" Fingers," all effectively displayed&#13;
that sharp intensity that is&#13;
necessary for the dramatic&#13;
tension. There were others that&#13;
came quite close, including "The&#13;
Fury," "The Medusa Touch," and&#13;
"Magic," each satisfying in both&#13;
restraintive suspense and plot or&#13;
thematic restrictions.&#13;
The only enjoyable comedies&#13;
worth remembering were "The&#13;
Silver Bears," "The Big Fix," "Up&#13;
In Smoke," and possibly "Animal&#13;
House." Comedy has certainly&#13;
seldom seen slower years,&#13;
although there was no end to the&#13;
list of dismal attempts, such as&#13;
" Death On The Nile," "The One&#13;
and Only," " Foul Play," "The&#13;
End," "Oh Cod," and on and on.&#13;
There were far too few&#13;
pictures during '78 that really&#13;
grabbed my imagination the way&#13;
a good film must, creating a&#13;
memorable impression that stays&#13;
with me long after I've seen it. Of&#13;
the few, "The Driver," with Bruce&#13;
Dern and Ryan O'Neal, was the&#13;
most pleasing, due to the&#13;
engaging plot and characters, as&#13;
well as to the most artistic chases&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
" B,t Wedn da .. al o c&#13;
across 1n a cone, e and&#13;
compellrng mann r, plonn a&#13;
time and sub-cultur with a fr h&#13;
awareness.&#13;
As for labor, " Siu&#13;
be admired as a tron&#13;
dealrng with an equal!&#13;
sub1ect, also found to a I r&#13;
extent rn " F I S T I would 1,k&#13;
to p rsonally thank Richard&#13;
Burton for rnall playm a&#13;
character on a par w,th his&#13;
abil1t1es , rn " The Medu a&#13;
Touch," a strong follow-up to&#13;
"Equus"&#13;
1978 was by no m ans a b d&#13;
year in cm ma, nor was ,t as&#13;
exceptionally good year If ou&#13;
don't see it as such, con ratulations&#13;
you're a critic, and&#13;
I'm glad to see you've n&#13;
doing some thinkrng. For myself,&#13;
1979 looks to be a v ry ood&#13;
year, with directors Stanley&#13;
Kubrick, Martin Scorcese, John&#13;
Shlesinger, and Franc, ord&#13;
Coppala preparing project that&#13;
have kept them bus and out of&#13;
the lights in 1978 But don't hold&#13;
your breath go see a mo 1&#13;
instead.&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-077 4&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACC!f&gt;TED&#13;
•&#13;
GOOD&#13;
MON - FRI&#13;
11 - 2 &#13;
-------------&#13;
IANGEIJ w.t1•.,t1" J,n.,ry 17, 1979 . .&#13;
The Supermarket· IA Cozy Spot&#13;
by the friends of the (o-op Clti.a ..llee lIews&#13;
The overwhelming majority of .&#13;
Americans deal with the&#13;
supermarket on a regular basis &amp;&#13;
consider it in the normal&#13;
functions of everyday living&#13;
without actually considering&#13;
what it represents.&#13;
Current figures from the&#13;
Federal Trade Commission&#13;
America, and the U.S. Chamber&#13;
of Commerce confirm that this&#13;
giant industry is our nation's&#13;
biggest business whose sales&#13;
exceed Sl40 billion annually.&#13;
According to the National&#13;
Consumers league, more&#13;
workers are employed in the&#13;
precessed food business than in&#13;
auto production.&#13;
Data available in 1975&#13;
disclosed some 32,000 American&#13;
firms engaged in food manufacturing&#13;
Of producing, less than&#13;
50 were brand name giants&#13;
collecting 75% of the industries&#13;
p&lt;ofit&gt;.&#13;
Processing, preserving, packaaing,&#13;
and promotion, rather&#13;
o&#13;
the farmer. The corn in a box of&#13;
corn flakes that sells for 35c is 3&lt;:&#13;
to the farmer. The nutritional&#13;
value' is not considered in the&#13;
attractive package and strategic&#13;
shelf location scheme. A .can of&#13;
applesauce costing 26c after&#13;
reaping the awe-inspiring nickel&#13;
to the grower, has the-Z'lc spent&#13;
for promotion, distribution, and&#13;
marketing procedures in general,&#13;
Figures issued by Advertising&#13;
Age and Supermarket News&#13;
disclose that between 80% and&#13;
90% of all newspaper, radio and&#13;
television ads relate to food&#13;
production.&#13;
What generally happens is that'&#13;
80% of these food costs usually&#13;
end up in the garbage can 15&#13;
minutes after you arrive home.&#13;
The fancy package that&#13;
enhanced your purchase rarely&#13;
adds extra nutrition - to your&#13;
body.&#13;
Another problem consumers&#13;
face in the majority of dry goods&#13;
they purchase is called "slack&#13;
fill" by the producer. a 9 oz. box&#13;
of Betty Crocker cake mix is&#13;
than nutritional quality are&#13;
hidden factors that determine&#13;
most supermarket items.&#13;
The US. Dept. of Agriculture&#13;
now confirms that in just 10&#13;
years the difference between&#13;
prices paid to farmers. for&#13;
produce and prices consumers&#13;
paid for processed foods have&#13;
zoomed more than 65%.&#13;
From the 27c that a consumer&#13;
pays for a can of peas, 4c goes to&#13;
NOWAT21OCAT NS&#13;
6100 Wcnhingtoil Ave.&#13;
PIon_ VillaS-&#13;
..... '077 •• 16-0207&#13;
2615 Washington A....&#13;
634-2373 • 634-2374 .&#13;
PS.IPfa"~ Internships Open&#13;
The Public Service Internship ex . ..&#13;
Program (PSIP) at the Universit c~errtJ:nce w?rklng&#13;
. In local coordina~e~ PSI.P, said&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parks ide has fa~ .' telpmg With legal opportunities eXISt for stu&#13;
semester openings for students servl~.~s or th~1 poor, solving _ to gain practical politte:&#13;
_who wish to earn political tors. J u~nt. pro ems for legisla- experience working in&#13;
science credits in local state tors, ~sslstmg. I~cal administra- upcoming political cam .&#13;
national agencies. J , or ors . In providing c~mmunity for local, state, and nat'&#13;
PSIP provides students with an sel&#13;
rVI~es, and .worklng with offices.&#13;
. p anrung agencies Too P . PSI&#13;
~&#13;
!!!~:~!!!!!!~~!!!~!!!:!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!o!!p~P!!o~rt!!u!!n!!'!!ty!!!t!!o!!!g~a!!i~n ~p~ra:c:t~ic:a~1!!!~fe:s:s:o~r~S::~I ~P::' :.:,~:r:o~- - Persons interested In&#13;
amue ernacclaro, who, internships should conta&#13;
Professor Samuel Pernacciaro P k 344 WllC 'or pick up&#13;
ar side Booksto_reRefund Policy :!if~:~~r(:~r~h~~e C;~.20&#13;
Books Must Be Clean &amp; Unm "k d' M Hare.&#13;
ust ave Ca~hRegi!!iter Receipt.&#13;
100% First &amp; . ..' '."'. . . second week of classes&#13;
60% Third week' of classes&#13;
40% Fourth week of'classes&#13;
approximately 36% air. An 18&#13;
oz. box of Kelloggs Corn Flakes is&#13;
about 22% air. Total is 28% air.&#13;
The only advantage is that the air&#13;
may be the only naturally occurring&#13;
element in the product.&#13;
Out of almost 33,000 food&#13;
producers in the US. about'loo&#13;
account for 71% of all&#13;
processing profits. Four companies&#13;
control 90% of the breakfast&#13;
cereal industry. Campbells&#13;
controls 90% of the canned soup&#13;
business. More than 60% of the&#13;
baby food market belongs to&#13;
Gerber.&#13;
ITT now makes Wonder Bread,&#13;
Hostess Twinkies and Gwa~tney&#13;
Ham. Greyhound brings us&#13;
Armour ham. Tanrrac o, of&#13;
petroleum fame, produces fertilizer,&#13;
tractors, pesticides, fresh&#13;
fruits and vegetable s.i, food&#13;
packages, and even operates&#13;
retail grocery stores at its gas&#13;
stations.&#13;
In most big cities 50% to 60%&#13;
of the retail grocery business is&#13;
done by less than four&#13;
supermarket chains. This most&#13;
often prevents competition from&#13;
other small businesses or even&#13;
other chains.&#13;
Corporate. concentration cost&#13;
consumers alot of dollars. In&#13;
1972, the FTC estimated&#13;
overcharges from, monopolies in&#13;
17 food lines cost us S2.6 billion&#13;
out of S65 billion-worth of sales.&#13;
The vast selection and lower&#13;
prices on competitive items&#13;
offered by a supermarket are&#13;
offset by many factors that are&#13;
ultimatelv . absorbed by the&#13;
consumer and theJarmer. If one&#13;
producer dominates a region, the&#13;
farmer has little to say about the&#13;
price. They must sell to . a&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
Malday - TblrSday 9 a.lI. - 7 p.m.&#13;
/" Friday 9 a.m. - 4 p.•.&#13;
Saturday 10 a.m. -, 1 p.l.&#13;
In With Address Required.&#13;
/&#13;
corporation or not t ,&#13;
contract and fixed pa all IVi 'lces&#13;
Large corporations .&#13;
to undercut compet'tean&#13;
a . I on i&#13;
sector by relying on - n&#13;
h&#13;
profits&#13;
anot er. These losses&#13;
absorbl.d by small fcannot&#13;
they are forced to arlner,&#13;
. h h Coo Wit t e corporate st&#13;
I I rueture&#13;
arge cong omerates who •&#13;
ate under the quise of elf' .&#13;
The" 1(1. government's role'&#13;
plight of both the farm'e In&#13;
. rand&#13;
chonsumer IS tainted by the&#13;
t at a majority of&#13;
government agencies de'&#13;
t I . " o rebgua.te&#13;
h&#13;
unfalf practice$&#13;
run y en er former or&#13;
be, private industry big wigs&#13;
Food and Drug Admini'tr·'&#13;
the agency in charge ofa&#13;
safety and labeling is a&#13;
example of this. In&#13;
congressional study in 19W&#13;
was shown that 37 out of 4'1&#13;
top FDA officials who had&#13;
the agency got jobs in the f&#13;
and drug industry.&#13;
The SOCial Irresponsibility&#13;
prices, food selection, dec&#13;
about ingredients and u&#13;
searched additives, to n&#13;
few, have been primary re&#13;
for many consumer&#13;
hea~th, student, reli~ious,&#13;
environmental groups to&#13;
locally and nationally to&#13;
about a responsible naf&#13;
food policy. Unfortunately,&#13;
corporate Interests have&#13;
money to pour into lobbying&#13;
therefore affect legislative&#13;
cess. Alternate shopping pa&#13;
and education about prod&#13;
nutrition, and.our environm&#13;
are a few ways we can begin&#13;
get more from the resour&#13;
available.&#13;
Nnw &lt;tptl1&#13;
.ttttt'S&#13;
3U21 &lt;!!lub&#13;
food and&#13;
reasonable&#13;
prices&#13;
Bring a friend&#13;
Open froll1&#13;
9 a.m .• 1a.lIl•&#13;
3021 60th St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Fish on Friday&#13;
IANGJIJ&#13;
Wednesday January 17, 1979 .. .&#13;
The Supermarket 'A Cozy Spot&#13;
by the friends of the Co-op&#13;
The overwhelming majority of .&#13;
Ameri cans deal with the&#13;
supermarket on a regular basis &amp;&#13;
consider it in the normal&#13;
functions of everyday living&#13;
without actually considering&#13;
what it represents.&#13;
Current figures from the&#13;
Federal Trade Commission&#13;
America, and the U.S. Chamber&#13;
of Commerce confirm that this&#13;
giant industry is our nation's&#13;
biggest business whose sales&#13;
exceed S140 billion annually.&#13;
According to the National&#13;
Consumers League, more&#13;
workers are employed in the&#13;
processed food business than in&#13;
auto production.&#13;
Data available in 1975&#13;
disclosed some 32,000 American&#13;
firms engaged in food manufacturing&#13;
or producing, less than&#13;
50 were brand name giants&#13;
collecting 75% of the industries&#13;
profits. Processing, preserving, packaging,&#13;
and promotion, rather&#13;
6100 Washington Ave.&#13;
Pioneer Village&#13;
'116-5077 • 886-0207&#13;
Clliwa11kee Jlews.&#13;
0&#13;
than nutritional qua I ity are&#13;
hidden factors that determine&#13;
most supermarket items.&#13;
The U.S. Dept. of Agriculture&#13;
now confirms that in just 10&#13;
years the difference bP.tween&#13;
prices paid to farmers . for&#13;
produce and prices consumers&#13;
paid for processed foods have&#13;
zoomed more than 65%.&#13;
From the 27c that a consumer&#13;
pays for a can of peas, 4c goes to&#13;
2615 Washington Ave.&#13;
634-2373 • 634-2374&#13;
the farmer. The corn in a box of&#13;
corn flakes that sells for 35c is 3c&#13;
to the farmer. The nutritional&#13;
value· is not considered in the&#13;
attractive package and strat1?gic&#13;
shelf location scheme. A .can of&#13;
applesauce costing 26c after&#13;
reaping the awe-inspiring nickel&#13;
to the grower, has the,21c spent&#13;
for promotion, distribution, and&#13;
marketing procedures in general.&#13;
Figures issued by Advertising&#13;
Age and Supermarket News&#13;
disclose that between 80% and&#13;
90% of all newspaper, radio and&#13;
television ads relate to food&#13;
production.&#13;
What generally happens is that '&#13;
80% of these food costs usually&#13;
end up in the garbage can 15&#13;
minutes after you arrive home.&#13;
The fancy package that&#13;
enhanced your purchase rarely&#13;
adds extra nutrition to your&#13;
body.&#13;
Another problem consumers&#13;
face in the majority of dry goods&#13;
they purchase is called "slack&#13;
fill" by the producer. a 9 oz. box&#13;
of Betty Crocker cake mix is&#13;
approximately 36% air. An 18&#13;
oz. box of Kelloggs Corn Flakes is&#13;
about 22% air. Total is 28% air.&#13;
The only advantage is that the air&#13;
may be the only naturally occurring&#13;
element in the product.&#13;
Out of almost 33,000 food&#13;
producers in the U.S. about ·100&#13;
account for 71% of all&#13;
processing profits. Four companies&#13;
control 90% of the breakfast&#13;
cereal industry. Cam pbells&#13;
controls 90% of the canned soup&#13;
business. More than 60% of the&#13;
baby food market belongs to&#13;
Gerber.&#13;
ITT now makes Wonder Bread,&#13;
Hostess Twinkies and Gwaltney&#13;
Ham. Greyhound brings us&#13;
Armour ham. Tennaco, of&#13;
petroleum fame, produces fertilizer,&#13;
tractors, pesticides, fresh&#13;
fruits and vegetables,_ food&#13;
packages, and even operates&#13;
retail grocery stores at its gas&#13;
stations.&#13;
In m~t big cities 50% to 60%&#13;
of the retail grocery business is&#13;
done by less than four&#13;
supermarket chains. This most&#13;
often prevents competition from&#13;
other small businesses or even&#13;
other chains.&#13;
Corporate concentration cost&#13;
consumers alot of dollars. In&#13;
1972,_ the FTC estimated&#13;
overcharges from monopolies in&#13;
17 food lines cost us $2.6 billion&#13;
out of $65 billion ·worth of sales.&#13;
The vast selection and lower&#13;
prices on competitive items&#13;
offered by a supermarket are&#13;
offset by many factors that are&#13;
ultimately absorbed by the&#13;
consumer and the farmer. If one&#13;
producer dominates a region, the&#13;
farmer has little to say about the&#13;
price. They must sell to . a&#13;
corporation or not at&#13;
contract and fixed p . all With rices&#13;
Large corporations . d can ff to un ercut competitors .a&#13;
sector by relying on r . I&#13;
n o&#13;
another. These losse~ of1ts fr&#13;
absorbed by small f cannot&#13;
they are forced to arrners&#13;
with the corporate tcoopera I s ructu&#13;
arge conglomerates wh re&#13;
ate under the quise of eff? .&#13;
0&#13;
The ·government's rot ,c.1enc&#13;
plight of both the farm' e in t i . er and ,. consumer Is tainted b h th Y t e f , at a majority f . 0 t ~&#13;
government agencies d . t I esIgn o regu ate unfair pract· b . h i ice~ a run y e1t er former b , . . , orwou&#13;
e, l')nvate industry big wigs T&#13;
Food and Drug Administr~ti&#13;
the agency in charge of f&#13;
safety and labeling ·,s a pert&#13;
example of this. 1 . . n congressional study in 1%9&#13;
was shown that 37 out of 49&#13;
top FDA officials who had 1&#13;
the agency got jobs in the 1&#13;
and drug industry.&#13;
The social irresponsibility .&#13;
prices, food selection, decept~&#13;
about ingredients an&lt;;! un&#13;
searched additives, to name&#13;
few, have been primary reas&#13;
for many consumer, pove&#13;
health, student, religious, a&#13;
environmental groups to w&#13;
locally and nationally to bri&#13;
about a responsible nation&#13;
food polic~. Unfortunately, t&#13;
corporate interests have m&#13;
money to pour into lobbying a&#13;
therefore affect legislative pr&#13;
cess. Alternate shopping patter&#13;
and education about produc&#13;
nutrition, and , our environme&#13;
are a few ways we can begin t&#13;
get more from the resource•&#13;
available.&#13;
PSIP fall· lnternsltips Open Pure Brewed From God's Country.&#13;
The Public Service Internship&#13;
Progr~m (PS_I P) at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside has fall&#13;
semester openings for students&#13;
who wish to earn political&#13;
science credits in local state or&#13;
national agencies. ' '&#13;
PSIP provides students with an&#13;
opportunity to gain practical&#13;
experience working in local&#13;
courts , helping with legal&#13;
serv1c_es for the poor, solving&#13;
constituent problems for legislators,&#13;
assisting local administrators&#13;
_ in providing community&#13;
servi ces, and working with&#13;
planning agencies. Too, Professor&#13;
Samuel Pernacciaro, who&#13;
Parkside Booksto_re Refund Policy&#13;
Books Must Be Clean&#13;
_&#13;
&amp; U nm.ar k e d.&#13;
.&#13;
Must Have Cash Regi~ter Receipt.&#13;
60%&#13;
100% Thi First &amp; second ~~ek of I . .' · .· .. . . c asses rd week of classes&#13;
4o% Fourth week o·· f·, ·1··· • . .. c asses&#13;
ID With Address Required.&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
Moaday - Thursday 9 a.m .. 7 p.m.&#13;
.,,,... Friday 9 a.m .. 4 p.m.&#13;
Saturday 10 a.m. _ 1 p.m.&#13;
coordinates PSIP, said man&#13;
opportunities exist for students&#13;
to gain practical political&#13;
experience working in the&#13;
upcoming political campaigns&#13;
for local, state, and national&#13;
offices.&#13;
Persons interested in PSIP&#13;
internships should contact&#13;
Professor Samuel Pernacciaro at&#13;
344 WLLC ' or pick up an&#13;
apppcation form in Classroom&#13;
Bldg. 367 (or phone 553-2032,&#13;
553-2316).&#13;
Nnw@ptn&#13;
aettti-'s&#13;
3021 Qttub&#13;
food and dfinks&#13;
reasonable . pnces&#13;
Bring a friend&#13;
Open.from&#13;
9 a.m. - 1 a.Ill·&#13;
3021 60th St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Fish on Friday &#13;
J.t.January 17, 1979&#13;
blugh&#13;
to Study&#13;
Energy&#13;
j\IeI'sitV 'of WisconsinIJrl&#13;
physiCS professor,&#13;
VI Firebaugh,is one of 47&#13;
em f.culty who have&#13;
S!"arded sabb.tic.1 leave&#13;
...the 1979-30 academic&#13;
fl recogniti~nof teaching&#13;
e and scholarship.&#13;
augh will use the&#13;
· Ifor • study at the Oak&#13;
(Tenn.) Institute for Energy&#13;
· which assesses national&#13;
'poliCY and energy&#13;
h .nd development&#13;
and analysis alternative&#13;
'supply and'demand&#13;
tions from technical,&#13;
· and social perspech's&#13;
study will aim at&#13;
· ina results of two major&#13;
· projectsof the Institute&#13;
• solar energy and one in&#13;
.nd wil) involve&#13;
'ment of a systems&#13;
· computer model to&#13;
fe.tures of projected&#13;
"""arios for both solar&#13;
""lear power. _Results of&#13;
areto be presented in&#13;
dimensional. computer&#13;
format, a computer&#13;
. s area in which Firehas&#13;
extensive experience.&#13;
informingFirebaugh of the&#13;
UW-Parkside.Chancellor&#13;
Cuskincommented that'the&#13;
illustrates a "commitment&#13;
III\' on the cutting edge of&#13;
dMIopments in the energy&#13;
ltthesame time integrating&#13;
oopertisedirectly into the&#13;
oom" .nd called the&#13;
". good example of how&#13;
researchand teaching are&#13;
ed:'&#13;
fiebaugh's interest in energy&#13;
computergraphics is long&#13;
: He has developed&#13;
courses in related areas&#13;
UW-Parkside and is the&#13;
of • widely-acclaimed&#13;
of readings on energy and&#13;
environment, "Perspectives&#13;
lnerav: Issues, Ideas and&#13;
ental Dilemmas," now&#13;
"second edition. Firebaugh&#13;
has written a number of&#13;
r...III'f,_,.,.,I.tedarticles for pro-&#13;
~journals.&#13;
; 1970, he was one of four&#13;
\vltem staff members cited&#13;
"outstandingyoung faculty&#13;
." A UW-P professor&#13;
1'l69, he holds MS and PhD&#13;
· from the University of&#13;
•&#13;
~I funding for the faculty&#13;
leal program, now in its&#13;
vear, isdrawn from existing&#13;
iations. The program is&#13;
to enhance teaching&#13;
teutse offerings.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAINOFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK .&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
!'hone 658.2331&#13;
, IlEMIE&gt; F.O.I.C.&#13;
lANGEI.&#13;
-Classified Ads1.&#13;
COST Cl.AS8lfIED AD POLICY&#13;
A.) Studem-Staff -Frw(1st20worcIe)&#13;
(Each addltlonat 10 words or lela 25~)&#13;
S.) Non-Student. Staff $1.00 (ls120wonII)&#13;
(Each addltlo,..ll0 wOfda or .... 50 CMtta)&#13;
C.) All addttlonal rul1l $1.00&#13;
2. EY8l')'attempt will be made to publish aU aubn'ltIaIcIM but __&#13;
omit any acl. ..-.... the rtgIW to&#13;
. 3. All categories will reoelWlpref.,.,-a lMW~.&#13;
4. o.dllne Is ThufWiay'. 10a.m. tor pUblication on theloilowtng''VIidii $&#13;
5. All claaaifleds must be submitted on the green lorm ..,..;.. tn the ~&#13;
WlLC 0-138. • omce.&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
Opportunity for Busln... and Finance&#13;
seniors. The Inaul1lnc8 Review Servk:e&#13;
would like to employ the five lhatpest&#13;
eenlcra Part!:alde has to oHer. Within three&#13;
months be earning $30.000 annually. Send&#13;
resume to IRS Box 17. Pleaant PraIrie Wis&#13;
53158. • .&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Female roommate. for two-bedroom houee&#13;
on Hy. K.R. for spring aem.ster.&#13;
1100/mOlll", inCluding IHllti ••. P"one&#13;
858-8lIl54 for info.&#13;
Female roommate, l-ve houM cIoM to&#13;
Par1I.slde. Call 562--8473.&#13;
.....-AL&#13;
C-D-CofIee Club. R and AJ'II ml.. you all, 8.&#13;
It'sspeeled dillaoes not I. s.you stilI owe me&#13;
one pool leason, R. A.Thanks lor Id¥a.&#13;
to come to Stout to _ him. J.W. You .tilt&#13;
owe me that mowle,&#13;
Dance cl..... - Jazz, beliet, Lap. Call&#13;
552-9473. MarIlyn.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Wednesd.y, Jan. 17&#13;
TV SHOW WANTED: Anyone interested in putting on .a TV&#13;
show (acting, directing or writing) leave your name address&#13;
telephone number in Union 202. "&#13;
Thursday, Ian. 18&#13;
RECITAL at 8 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
featuring Kathryn Heide and Debra Scheckel at the piano. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, Ian. 19&#13;
MOVIE "The Cheap Detective" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre. Admission at the door is Sl.00 for a&#13;
Parks ide student and $1.00 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
CLUB Ms. Kathy Davis of Northwestern University and&#13;
UW-Parkside will speak on "Metamorphism of The Biwabik&#13;
Iron Formation During The Keweenawan Drifting Event."&#13;
At 12 noon.&#13;
MEETING Matters to be discussed at SOC meeting for SUFAC&#13;
and WINTER CARNIVAL. Be there! It will be held at Union 207&#13;
at 2 o'clock.&#13;
Saturday, Ian. 20&#13;
DANCE at 9 p.m. in Union Square featuring "The Britins".&#13;
Admission in advance is $2.00 for Parks ide students and S2.5O&#13;
for a guest. Tickets are available at the Union Information&#13;
Center. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Sunday, Ian. 21&#13;
MEETING The Ita·lian Culture Club meeting is Sunday, Jan. 21,&#13;
1979 at 2:00 p.m. at the Kenosha Public Museum. Program for&#13;
1979 will be scheduled.&#13;
MOVIE "The Cheap Detective" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Union Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 23&#13;
MEETING All Student Government Senate meetings will be&#13;
held on Tuesdays, at 12:00 noon in WLLC D174. All students&#13;
are welcome to attend.&#13;
Wednesday, J.n. 24&#13;
BROWN BAG LUNCH at12 noon in WLLC D174. Mike Sheffey&#13;
wi 1,1talk on "Tips on Taxes for 78 Returns". The program is free&#13;
and open to the public. Sponsored by Community Student&#13;
Services. .&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE at 7:30 p.m. in Union Square featullng Bob&#13;
Friday who sings with a slide show. Admission is free for&#13;
Parkside students. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
- Thursday, Ian. 2S&#13;
MEETING for Single Parents at 7:30 p.m. in MOLN 111. The&#13;
program' is free and open to the public. Sponsored by&#13;
Community Student Services.&#13;
Dhoto'&#13;
IGecor&#13;
\&#13;
studio &amp; gallery&#13;
Fult Service Pltotogr8pby Studio ••,&#13;
~Weddin~ I P.,de8&#13;
~ Portrai18 , ....viorDment.1 &amp; Studio)&#13;
• Model Portlol","&#13;
-= Slide p~nl.tiolU&#13;
_ p... porta&#13;
1711 Greenb8y Rd. (Hwy. 31) 552-81685&#13;
7&#13;
Sign&#13;
Language&#13;
A new venture thiS sefMStet" is • CIPWIe eQUfMtin '-an l~ •&#13;
~ useful means of communiCAt.on for .ch 0( UI~ and erue .. fOf&#13;
Interaetoon WIth those who Are ~al Whether o;ww, Wlohn to&#13;
another Within Staht but out of hunna ran ,'1oPe' • With ~ who&#13;
deaf, or even lust talk WIth o;ww,', mouth full (I), AlMflCan&#13;
L.nguage can be Invaluable By c1,ppon tho '" ......&#13;
together, • handy booklet can be crut~ lor quo&lt; hoIp in&#13;
emergencies&#13;
With V.lent"',,'s Day lust one month awov, a ao&lt;&gt;cl &gt;tart" to 18m&#13;
"I love you " It's formed thosway&#13;
See how easy' You're on your.ay W.tch (tin column '" t&#13;
issue, when I'll share tho alphabet&#13;
TV&#13;
r§l1J~F1T~~:s ~&#13;
Sporti1g &amp; Athletic Equpment&#13;
One of The Modw I • Lrgea S I 'Illt'e&#13;
0lSC0UNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave • 62nd 9t&#13;
EN"" rv1 I"l 1930&#13;
LIquor&#13;
W,sconsin ell" •&#13;
SauSall·&#13;
M, td Any. '.&#13;
InTneU A&#13;
Phone 552-8384&#13;
THE&#13;
BACK&#13;
DOOR&#13;
lJPOI DAlY&#13;
.. S&#13;
a.OSED IS&#13;
~E"'Al[~T"""&#13;
Hairstyling.&#13;
Fadal •&#13;
Manicure&#13;
FOR lEI&#13;
C.,1I11 Ii."&#13;
iiiiIiii&#13;
' i..-, January 17, 1979 IANGER..&#13;
-Classified Ads1.&#13;
COST&#13;
CLASSIFIED AO POLICY&#13;
A.) Student-Staff - Free (1 at 20 words)&#13;
(Each additional 1 O words or leas 2:5 cen~)&#13;
B.) Non-Student, Staff S1 .00 (1st 20 words)&#13;
(Each additional 10 words or lesa 50 cents)&#13;
C.) All additional runs S1 .00&#13;
2. Every attempt will be made to publish all aubmisslons but RANGER&#13;
omit any ad. • --ti. right to&#13;
ffrebaugh&#13;
to Study&#13;
Energy - 3. All categories will receive preference o-personals.&#13;
rsity of Wisconsinn1ve&#13;
d physics professor,&#13;
1; Firebaugh, is Qne of 47&#13;
tem faculty who have&#13;
rded sabbatical leave&#13;
awa d . the 1979-80 aca . e~1c&#13;
n recognition of teaching&#13;
ce and scholarship.&#13;
re~augh will use the&#13;
,cal for a study at the Oak&#13;
(Tenn.) Institute for E~ergy&#13;
.. J..ich assesses national&#13;
~SIS, V'I" policy and energy&#13;
rg h and development arc 1 . 1 . and ana ysIs a ternatIve&#13;
s, supply and demand&#13;
:tions from technical, t . I ic and socIa perspec-&#13;
,ebaugh's study will aim at&#13;
izing results of two major&#13;
ng projects of the Institute&#13;
solar energy and one in&#13;
ear, and will involve&#13;
1 opment of a systems&#13;
.imic computer model to&#13;
nt features of projected .&#13;
scenarios for both solar&#13;
nuclear power. _Results of&#13;
.-odel are to be presented in&#13;
dimensional. computer&#13;
Ics format, a computer&#13;
ations area in which Firehas&#13;
extensive experience.&#13;
• informing Firebaugh of the&#13;
, UW-Parkside. Chancellor&#13;
Guskin commented that 'the&#13;
illustrates a "commitment&#13;
my on the cutting edge of&#13;
developments in the energy&#13;
at the same time integrating&#13;
expertise directly into the&#13;
mroom" and called the&#13;
t "a good example of how&#13;
ltyresearch and teaching are&#13;
ated."&#13;
· rebaugh's interest in energy&#13;
, computer graphics is long&#13;
ing: He has developed&#13;
!fa( courses in retated areas&#13;
UW-Parkside and is the&#13;
iU!hor of a widely-acclaimed&#13;
of readings on energy and&#13;
environment, "Perspectives&#13;
Energy: Issues, Ideas and&#13;
,ironmental Dilemmas " now&#13;
ts second edition. Fir~baugh&#13;
ilo has written a number of&#13;
gy-related articles for pro-&#13;
~nal journals.&#13;
In l970, he was one of four&#13;
W System staff members cited&#13;
·outstanding young faculty&#13;
bers." A UW-P professor&#13;
.e 1969, he holds MS and PhD&#13;
ees from the University of&#13;
ll0Is .&#13;
~II f d' . un ing for the faculty&#13;
atical program, now in its&#13;
dyear, is drawn from existing&#13;
opriations. The program is&#13;
nded to enhance teaching&#13;
course offerings.&#13;
\:\t1 ,.,&#13;
j FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
OOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK · .&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
!lhone 658-2331&#13;
t.fEt.4BED F.0.1.C.&#13;
4. Deadline la Thursday, 10 a.m. for publication on the following Wedneeday&#13;
5. All classifieds must be submitted on the green form -liable In ti. .: • ..,.ER H&#13;
WLLC 0-139. ' ,_0:- o lol,&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
Opportunity for Business and Finance&#13;
Seniors. The Insurance Review Service&#13;
would like to employ the five sharpest&#13;
~niors Parkside has to offer. Within three&#13;
months be earning $30,000 annually. Send&#13;
resume to IRS Box 17, Pleasant Prairie Wis&#13;
53158. ' .&#13;
$100/ mo11111, 1nc1ualng 111111iea. Phone&#13;
658-8954 for Info.&#13;
Female roommate, large hPuse close to&#13;
Parkside. Call 552-IM73.&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
C-0-Coffae Club, Rand AJ'II miss you all, B.&#13;
It's spaeled dlllages not f, s.you still owe me&#13;
one pool lesson, R. A. Thanks for advice,&#13;
to come to Stout to - him, J.W. You still&#13;
WANTED owe me that movie .. Female roommate, for two-bedroom house&#13;
on Hy. K.R. for spring semester.&#13;
Dance classes - Jazz ballet, tap. Call&#13;
552-9473. Marilyn. '&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Wednesday, Jan.17&#13;
TV SHOW WANTED: Anyone interested in putting on a TV&#13;
show (acting, directing or writing) leave your name address&#13;
telephone number in Union 202. ' '&#13;
Thursday, Jan.18&#13;
RECITAL at 8 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
featuring Kathryn Heide and Debra Scheckel at the piano. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, Jan. 19&#13;
MOVIE "The Cheap Detective" will be shown at 8 p.m . in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre. Admission at the door is $1 .00 for a&#13;
Parkside student and $1.00 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
CLUB Ms. Kathy Davis of Northwestern University and&#13;
UW-Parkside will speak on " Metamorphism of The Biwabik&#13;
Iron Formation During The Keweenawan Drifting Event."&#13;
At 12 noon.&#13;
MEETING Matters to be discussed at SOC meeting for SUFAC&#13;
and WINTER CARNIVAL. Be there! It will be held at Union '1.07&#13;
at 2 o'clock.&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 20&#13;
DANCE at 9 p.m. in Union Square featuring " The Britins".&#13;
Admission ia advance is $2.00 for Parkside students and S2.50&#13;
for a guest. Tickets are available at the Union Information&#13;
Center. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 21&#13;
MEETING The Italian Culture Club meeting is Sunday, Jan. 21,&#13;
1979 at 2:00 p.m. at the Kenosha Public Museum. Program for&#13;
1979 will be scheduled.&#13;
MOVIE "The Cheap Detective" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m . in&#13;
the Union Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 23&#13;
MEETING All Student Government Senate meetings will be&#13;
held on Tuesdays, at 12:00 noon in WLLC D174. All students&#13;
are welcome to attend.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 24&#13;
BROWN·BAG LUNCH at 12 noon in WLLC D174. Mike Sheffey&#13;
wil,I talk on "Tips on Taxes for '78 Returns". The pro~ram is free&#13;
and open to the public. Sponsored by Community Student&#13;
Services. . COFFEEHOUSE at 7:30 p.m . in Union Square featuring Bob&#13;
Friday who sings with a slide show. Admission is free for&#13;
Parkside students. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 25&#13;
MEETING for Single Parents at 7:30 p.m . in MOL 111 The&#13;
program· is free and open to the public. Sponsored b&#13;
Community Student Services.&#13;
Dhoto'&#13;
IGecor&#13;
studio &amp; gallery&#13;
Fun-Service Photography Studio ...&#13;
• Weddings / Parties&#13;
• Portraita I .,.1viornmental &amp; Studio)&#13;
• Model Portfolim&#13;
: Slide Preeentations&#13;
• Pa811ports&#13;
1711 Greenbay Rd. (Hwy. 31) 552-81685&#13;
Anew&#13;
Sig Language&#13;
Do ou want to sa " I lo ou&#13;
slight alteration&#13;
See ho eas l ou'r&#13;
issue, wh n I'll share&#13;
7 &#13;
W~t1n•• day January 17, 1979&#13;
lANGEI r&#13;
•&#13;
INTRODUCING FIRSTIRACIIE'S 5th TYME 'MACHIIE&#13;
IN THE GREATER RACIIE AREA ••• lOW AVAILABLE&#13;
FOR YOUR USE ON THE UW-PARKSIDE CAMPUS.&#13;
You're invited to deposit or withdraw money, and even make installment loan&#13;
payments, at this new, convenient FIRSTIRACINE TYMEmachine located at the&#13;
north end ofthe Porkside Union building. This new facility is available for use ,&#13;
by students and any TYMEcard holder from 7:00a.m. to 11:00p.m. Monday through&#13;
Friday (shorter hours on weekends). Discover the convenience and time-saving&#13;
advantages of having a TYMEcard. See us for details and an application.&#13;
-&#13;
OTHER FIRST/RACINE TYME MACHINE LOCATIONS&#13;
First National Bank &amp; Trust Company of Racine - corner 5th and College _ 24 hours-a-day,&#13;
7 days-a-week&#13;
Goldblatt Bros, Inc. - Elmwood Plaza - 24 hours-a-day, 7 dcys-o-week&#13;
PDQ Food Store - 3931 North Main Street - 6 a.m. to I c.rn., 7 days-a-week&#13;
Red Cross Drug Company - 2200 Rapids Drive - 24 hours-a-day, 7 days-a-week&#13;
OTHER TYME LOCATIONS&#13;
MO.l American Bank &amp; Trust Co. - 5th &amp; Main - 24 hours-a-day, 7 days-a-week&#13;
MO.l American Bank &amp; Trust Co. - Washington &amp; Ann - 24 hours-a-day, 7 days-a-week&#13;
See a live demonstration of the TYME machine Wednesday and Thursday, January 17 and&#13;
18 9:00 a.m, to 2:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m, to 7:30 p.m, .:&#13;
500 Wisconsin Avenue. Racine. Wisconsin 53403 (414) 633-8201&#13;
IVES GROVE OFFICE -'&#13;
14015 Washington Avenue. Sturtevant. Wisconsin 53177 (414) 835-2925&#13;
(Highway 20 Just West of 1-94)&#13;
Member FDIC -&#13;
~&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
FIRST NATIONAL BA~KOA fCINE ~ . ANDTRUSr I~&#13;
W~dnesday January 17, 1979&#13;
RANGEi&#13;
INTRODUCING FIRST /RACINE'S 5th TYME -MACHINE&#13;
IN THE GREATER RACINE AREA ••• NOW AVAILABLE&#13;
FOR YOUR USE ON THE OW-PARKSIDE CAMPUS.&#13;
You're invited to deposit or withdraw money, and even make installment loan payments, at thfs new, convenient FIRST /RACINE TYME machine located at the north end of the Parksid.e Union building. This new facility is available for use , by students and any TYME card holder from 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. Monday through Friday (shorter hours on weekends). Discover the convenience and time-saving advantages of having a TYME card. See us for details and an application.&#13;
-&#13;
OTHER FIRST /RACINE TYME MACHINE LOCATIONS&#13;
First National Bank &amp; Trust Company of Racine- corner 5th and College -24 hours-a-day, 7 days-a-week&#13;
Goldblatt Bros. Inc. - Elmwood Plaza - 24 hours-a-day, 7 days~a-week&#13;
PDQ Food Store - 3931 North Main Street - 6 a.m. to 1 a.m., 7 days-a-week&#13;
Red Cross Drug Company - ~200 Rapids Drive - 24 hours-a-day, 7 days-a-week&#13;
OTHER TYME LOCATIONS&#13;
M &amp; I American Bank &amp; Trust Co. - 5th &amp; Main - 24 hours-a-day, 7 days-a-week&#13;
M &amp; I American Bank &amp; Trust Co. - Washington &amp; Ann - 24 hours-a-day, 7 days-a-week&#13;
See _a live de~o~stration of th~ TYME machine Wednesday and Thursday, January 17 and 18 9.00 a.m. to 2.00 p.m. and 6.00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. _-&#13;
F l&#13;
n'ST NATIONAL sA~K O .A ·CINE I'\ , . ANDTRUST · I'" ·&#13;
500 Wisconsin Avenue, Racine. Wisconsin 53403 (414) 633-8201&#13;
IVES GROVE OFFICE&#13;
14015 Washington _Avenue. Sturtevant, Wisconsin 53177 (414) 835-2925&#13;
(Highway 20 Just West of 1-94)&#13;
Member FDIC&#13;
.. </text>
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