<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3009" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/3009?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T20:40:51+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="4694">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/43d16f24d15f78d0c4e415d44ff61eed.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b22dec08cb5eb07aa5a920466840564c</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="97">
        <name>Issue</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="69412">
            <text>Volume 7, issue 27</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="96">
        <name>Headline</name>
        <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="69413">
            <text>Summer fun for Parkside kids</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="69423">
            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="90228">
            <text>Wednesday April 11, 1979&#13;
Summer Fun for Parkside Kids&#13;
The Direetcr of the Unhc:nity of&#13;
Wisconsin-l'arksidc\ Child Care&#13;
Center has 11nno1.nced plans for a&#13;
number of expanded sen,iccs to&#13;
children of Parkside studenb.&#13;
Among the nev. program~ i\ an&#13;
eight-week daytime summer&#13;
session for )Odn ten two to en&#13;
)Can old. Beginning next fall. a&#13;
morning kindergarten 11.·ill be&#13;
11v11ilablc for li~e }ear olds. and the&#13;
Ccntcr'li pla) school ill be open In&#13;
the t\cnmg to accommoclote oll&#13;
ages.&#13;
~rs. Maureen Budowlc. director&#13;
ol the Child Care Center,&#13;
commented recently on the ~teady&#13;
gro\\th nf 1hc Center. and noted&#13;
that the nt\\ plans reflect the&#13;
Center's attempt~ to provide Park.•&#13;
side parents 'll'ith reliable child&#13;
care at ~•~onablt' cost, and avail·&#13;
11ble \\henevcr it is needed.&#13;
"We e.xpec1 our houn to coincide:&#13;
with the University'i. chM&#13;
schedule." explained Mr. Rudowlc.&#13;
··1 his will be of cnormou,&#13;
help to those potential &lt;;11mmcr&#13;
and night studenb, for instance.&#13;
11,ho want to return to school to&#13;
111ork on a dc)(rec, or simply take&#13;
one or t~o courses for fun, but&#13;
don't \\lint the has~le of finding a&#13;
baby-sitter."&#13;
lb cm ha.sis of the ummer&#13;
program .... m be on fun. rcluation ..&#13;
outdoor ~ports. and physical&#13;
litnes\. Featured will be weekly&#13;
learning topics - Earth. Space.&#13;
Animals, Community HelpeD -&#13;
and projecb relating to each topic.&#13;
Att'Vrding to Cheryl Sarg, summer&#13;
.. ession coordlnatl)r, "The children&#13;
l'an "Jrk on group OCIIVlllCS such&#13;
11~ building a rockc1 or putting on&#13;
play'i. and we've planned individual&#13;
pro,i«ts - wea\-ing, puppt:1&#13;
making and fem-e painting. We&#13;
(tlso hope to plant a ,·cgetable&#13;
garden, take field trips. and there&#13;
\\ ill probably be surprise \ i~ib&#13;
from ~omc special creatures like&#13;
'Woodsic O'" r ," she rontinuM.&#13;
The staff i~ equally enthusia\tic&#13;
AMC to Staff&#13;
Management Day&#13;
Six c'.\'.ecutlvcs of the American&#13;
Motor.. Corporation will senc as&#13;
facult) for the third annual&#13;
Mana~mcnt Day ~ponsorcd by the&#13;
Busint:$s and Administrative&#13;
Science Division on Wednesday,&#13;
April 18.&#13;
1 he A.M.C. executives will&#13;
conduct r.emmars in live diflcrent&#13;
business areas during the day and&#13;
C'\ening programs. Each seminar&#13;
will be ghen at 2 p.m. and 7 p.rn. so&#13;
that all studenb may participate,&#13;
according to Dr. James Polczynski,&#13;
coordinator of this year's program.&#13;
Werner H. Jean director of&#13;
maoufacturmg will keynote the&#13;
program at I p,m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. with a history of A.M.C.,&#13;
and will \peak aaain at b p.m. to&#13;
lead off the e-,ening s~sions.&#13;
Topics and cxccucivei. participa•&#13;
ting are; human resources, Robert&#13;
J. Fesko. director of Personnel&#13;
Relations and Pr.ictices; finance,&#13;
Kenneth K. Kacimarek. a:,,s~taot&#13;
controller: marketing. Roben C.&#13;
Kc-,·ctter. director of Sales&#13;
Operation§; information management,&#13;
Dan W. Robert. director of&#13;
Manufacturing Information&#13;
Systems: and manufacturing and&#13;
operations. J.G. Austin. gcm:ral&#13;
plant manai!er.&#13;
According to Polczynslci, the&#13;
seminan will be geared to practtcal&#13;
applica1ion,. "Students will benefit&#13;
~ine&lt;: they will have the opportunity&#13;
to mcc1 and interact v.ith ucculive)&#13;
who are responsible for major&#13;
poliC) and administrative deci~ions&#13;
at A.M.C .. " he ~aid.&#13;
about the ne\1- kindergarten&#13;
program. "For some time, we\e&#13;
thought aiX&gt;ut the possibility of a&#13;
kindergarten to be located on&#13;
campus.· said M~. Budowle.&#13;
"We'ye found many students who&#13;
would prefer the con\enieocc of&#13;
• g their y un e nearby&#13;
Thii. will be a Ix-on to those Racine&#13;
and Kenvsha parents who would&#13;
be unJble to attend Parkside if&#13;
they h,1ve to 1ime their own class&#13;
\Chedulc around pu:king up their&#13;
children at an off-campus school.&#13;
Wea will pnw1Jc· a ho· lunch as well&#13;
as have an afternoon play time&#13;
available."&#13;
Information about the Child&#13;
Care Ce-nteT .,nd iti. programs c-an&#13;
be obtained by visiting or calling&#13;
Mn. Budowle or a lstant director&#13;
Bonnie Gris~om, at 553-2227&#13;
d1. ring r,.•glllar working houn&#13;
Monday through Friday.&#13;
UniYer1· of Wi1con1i•-hrlcside&#13;
er&#13;
Vol. 1 No. 27&#13;
PSGA Sees&#13;
New Term&#13;
by MlkeMurplay&#13;
An inauguration ceremony held&#13;
ruesda), April J marked the&#13;
beginning of a new term for the&#13;
Parkside Student Government. The&#13;
ceremony, presided ovet by Chief&#13;
Justice P J . Auolina, was attended&#13;
by old and new members or the&#13;
Senate as well as Chancellor&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Tim Zimmer and Mary Mort!&#13;
were sworn mas ne.,, Pmident and&#13;
Vice-Prei;ident of the PSGA,&#13;
reph1cin1t Ru~ty Smith and Roger&#13;
Braun who are graduating this&#13;
semester.&#13;
Patrick Bohon, Jeffery Myers,&#13;
Chavez Epps, Carole Molini, Elaine&#13;
Birth, and Terry 7..uehlsdorf have&#13;
been elected to fill seven of the 24&#13;
'.\Cnatorial seal\.&#13;
Margaret Stauder was elttted as&#13;
the sole candidate for the&#13;
Segregated Fen Committee u y,ell&#13;
as Heidi Ruilman for the presently&#13;
inactive Union Operating Board.&#13;
In a conversation with the nn,&#13;
President and Vice-Praident, Tim&#13;
Zimmer .and .Mary Mortl a plained&#13;
their future gocals for PSGA.&#13;
Zimmer, 11 lifc science major who&#13;
became inn&gt;lved with PSGA as a&#13;
divisional ~na1or last fall.&#13;
explained that he campalKOed for&#13;
the position-of President because of&#13;
his interest in working with various&#13;
stlldent groups in an ctfort to&#13;
1mpr&lt;Wc the O'lerall campus.&#13;
Both Zimmer and Mortl see the&#13;
role of the PSGA as the voice of the&#13;
\tudent body. "We want to make&#13;
,ure th.it people an: given a say o n&#13;
campus," explained Zimmer, "We&#13;
•·ant the admini~tration and&#13;
faculty to look to the Student&#13;
government fi~t for \tlldent&#13;
uttitudc:s on policy deci$ions."&#13;
Zimmer emphasized the import•&#13;
anee of his being involved in several&#13;
administrative decisions.&#13;
Both Zimmer and Mort.I agreeo on the ideal development of the&#13;
PSGA. "Ide.ally," Zimmer said,&#13;
"PSGA should be the problem&#13;
solving organization on campus.&#13;
Any problem a student has, the&#13;
Student Government is the place to&#13;
go."&#13;
"We're the ao between for the&#13;
student," uid Veep Mortl, "If a&#13;
student needs representation, we&#13;
pn"'1de that." Mortl cited the&#13;
example of when a student aoes to&#13;
the student Disciplinary Committee&#13;
that the Student Government will&#13;
insure, upon the student's request,&#13;
that the procedure is carried out in&#13;
a manner the student understands.&#13;
"Student Government is something&#13;
the administration bu to live&#13;
with," explained Mort!, "lt&#13;
probably would be easlet for them&#13;
if they didn't have to deal with us,&#13;
but it is to their advantage to have&#13;
students in an advisory role. We&#13;
have a greater acccu to the student&#13;
body than thev do.''&#13;
Zimmer explained that through&#13;
the suggestion bo1es, outreach&#13;
tables in the hall.,,.ays, the Contact&#13;
column in the Ranger, and through&#13;
one on one conversations with&#13;
students, the PSGA will be able to&#13;
gauge ~tudent attitudes and&#13;
opinions.&#13;
According to Zimmer and Mort!,&#13;
the past semester has seen a&#13;
trtmendous growth in the Student&#13;
Government. Mort! explained that&#13;
54:naton la~t semester have been&#13;
more Involved and more ., illing to&#13;
take on resporuibility u a 1enator&#13;
"They wanted to $CC things happen&#13;
co11t. on pg. 5&#13;
P•••• h /It. ,,_,,._, &#13;
2 ~-~•~d•~•~•~d•~r~Ap~r~fl~~J~J!.., _!1~97~9~:__.::_~=.._ _ _ ___ _;l~A~N~G~f~I~----- -:-------:---~-:----.__&#13;
- &lt;._ By Matt Polialcon --- ,Z&#13;
- -&#13;
L&#13;
- .... __ _&#13;
11ONE SMALL SUP FOR A MAN , ONE G&#13;
0&#13;
f ANT SLOP FOR MANKIND·&#13;
11&#13;
Editorial&#13;
By MJchael J. Murphy&#13;
Screenplay for major motion picture-lrv.rin Allen•s "The Day of the&#13;
Nukes."&#13;
Final scene. Charlton Heston and Henry Fonda stand before the&#13;
lifeless, grim ridden body of George Kennedy.&#13;
Beaton: You fool, why did you let him crawl into the reactor to&#13;
wrestle that hydrogen bubble. Now he lies before us. nothing but a&#13;
lifeless grim ridden body. All of Los Angeles, New York, and Chicago&#13;
had to evacuate because you decided to cut cost and eliminate all the&#13;
back up units in your Nuclear Power Plants, and Little Rock&#13;
Arkansas has been rendered permanently uninhabitable. And vet&#13;
you want to build 53 new plants. When will you realize that human&#13;
life is too valuable to gamble with.&#13;
Fonda: So we've had a tew mistakes, we'll iron out the problems.&#13;
Farfetched and unfair, perhaps, but for thousands of people&#13;
throughout the country who are protesting the development of&#13;
nuclear power pla nts, it could be an inevitable nightmare.&#13;
Government officials say there are risks in every industry and if&#13;
the United States is to keep up with the demand of energy,&#13;
continued growth of nuclear power and future wrestling with oil&#13;
prices is the one and only answer.&#13;
Bullshit!&#13;
RANGER la written and- edited by students of U. W. Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for lta editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
PubHahed every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER la printed by&#13;
Zion Publlahlng Company, Zion, llllnols.&#13;
Written permlaalon la required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correapondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger. U.W. Parkside, WLLC D-139; Kenoaha,&#13;
Wlaconsln 53141.&#13;
Mike Murphy ..••.• .... ..••. .. ... . •. . . . .. ..•.•• Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan ... .. ........... . . . .• . . . a..,.,.1 Manage,&#13;
Tom Cooper .•• . . ••••... . .• . ..••.• . . . . Student Ad¥1aor&#13;
John st-art .•.. .. ........•... ..... . •..• N-• Editor&#13;
Sue Stevena .. ..•••. ••.••••••. . .••••. •. F .. ture Edttoc&#13;
Doug Edenhau ..... ... . ..... .. . . . .. .... Spo,ta Editor&#13;
REPORTINQ STAFF&#13;
Linda Adams, Shena Aaala, Cathy Brownlee, Moille&#13;
Clartce. o ... t;ram•, a.a-.. E,.. ON Goodwin,&#13;
Pete Jaclle,, lhomaa Jenn, Nlclcl Kroll, Kim Putman,&#13;
Carolyn Rudd, Donald ScherNr, DenlM SoblMkl.&#13;
ORAPtflC&#13;
Mathew Pollakon.&#13;
Lettens to the Editor wlll be aoceptad for publlcatton if they&#13;
are typewritten, double spaced with one Inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be Included&#13;
for purposes of vetlflc&amp;tlon. Names wlll be withheld from&#13;
pubhcatlon, when valld reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit lette~ and l'flluae&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All materlal muat be received by Thuraday noon for&#13;
publlcatlon on the followlng Wednesday.&#13;
~·---------~~~~111111!'~--~~ . . .. -·&#13;
I am not ready to stand by and become the pawn of a nighty oil&#13;
company who boasts a strong lobbying effort to prevent legislation&#13;
contrary to their interests. Neither am I ready ta accept the continued&#13;
growth of a form of energy production that has been shown to have&#13;
an immediate and/or prolonged hazardous effect on human life.&#13;
Whose safety controls have been shown faulty in the worst, most&#13;
embarrasing nuclear power accident in history•&#13;
Run down to Harrisburg P.A. and find out how popular nuclear&#13;
energy is.&#13;
Questions of Jong term radiation effects. disposal of nuclear&#13;
wastes, and efficiency production are posing insurmountable&#13;
problems to engineers and still, plans are readied for the&#13;
construction of future plants.&#13;
President Carter, whose preaching of human rights have brought&#13;
him international controversy (and in some cases contempt) is&#13;
negotiating for oil with a country whose public assassination of&#13;
political supporters of the Shah is quickly approaching 100. ls there&#13;
some hypocrisy here?&#13;
This is not to belittle the President, whose previous "Energy&#13;
Policy" was shredded to pieces and whose present proposal it is&#13;
rumored, will be tom down also. Carter calls for a .. windfall profit&#13;
tax which would pose a tax on the enormous profits generated by the&#13;
oil companies. Carter explained that the tax would go to mass transit&#13;
projects, poor families, and efforts to develop new energy sources.&#13;
Critics in Congress, however, said that such a tax would discourage&#13;
oil companies from continued searching for new oil reserves and that&#13;
repercussions of the tax would affect the consumer directly. Shades&#13;
of strong lobby;ng efforts are visible.&#13;
Both Congress, and the President, it seems, are unwilling to look at&#13;
or support extremely viable and emminently more practical solutions&#13;
to energy alternatives. Although coal is far from an ideal solution,&#13;
U.S. conversion to coal plants would allow self sufficiency for many&#13;
years.&#13;
No longer would the impending threat of radiation or the&#13;
riveting prices of oil cross consumers. Even though air pollution&#13;
could be controlled through increased refinement and expensive&#13;
pollution control measures, scarring of the land. scape and the&#13;
dangers of coal mining make coal a limited alternative energy source.&#13;
How about directing legislation toward solar and wind power.&#13;
Presently only approximately 7% of the total Federal Energy Budget&#13;
has gone to solar energy production. At this rate, it is estimated that&#13;
by the year 2000 only 15% of the total energy produced will be by&#13;
solar energy. However, the benefits of solar energy so outweigh that&#13;
of a!temative sources it is curious that neither Congress, or the&#13;
President, have considered its expansion.&#13;
The fuel is readily available and its consumption poses no danger&#13;
of threat extinction. If comprehensive effort and funding support&#13;
were effected by Congress, solar energy could complete and&#13;
eventually exceed oil and nuclear energy as the main energy source.&#13;
Gi_v~n cunent directions of Congress this assumption is extremely&#13;
a~ bttious • How~~e~. tax credit and relief could be given to those who&#13;
bmld houses utthzmg solar heat or wind power as an incentive to&#13;
others. Rebates could be given to those who purchase solar heating&#13;
units as _opposed to oil bu ring ones. A whole gamit of incentives could&#13;
be provided to get people to use conservation and to lessen U.S.&#13;
dependence on foreign oil.&#13;
These may not be the total alternatives to the problem of energy&#13;
~&gt;Ut you can be damn sure I'll be watching Congress very closely in&#13;
tlie next few years. &#13;
W1da11daJ A,,11 II, 1979&#13;
P·S·G·A·&#13;
By Aoot,tte Sabbath&#13;
Last Tuesday, the winners of the&#13;
PSGA Spring elections were&#13;
officially sworn in. We now have a&#13;
new President and Vice-President,&#13;
Tim Zimmer and Mary Mortl re-&#13;
\pcctively; seven new Senators.&#13;
Hlaine Birch. Pat Bohon. Larry&#13;
Brand, Chavez. Epps, Carol&#13;
Molini, Jeff Mye~. and Terry&#13;
Zuehlsdorf; a new SUFAC&#13;
member. Margaret Stauder; and a&#13;
new UOB member, Heidi Ruihlman.&#13;
&#13;
At the lust rcpon, both incumbents&#13;
and new a rrivals arc doing&#13;
fine. Now that you kn01\' who we&#13;
are. there's no exuse for keeping&#13;
~our problems to yourself.&#13;
and for studenb not yet declaring&#13;
majors.&#13;
We have been told by the&#13;
administration that plans are&#13;
being lina!iLed with the Racine&#13;
Bus Company that would provide&#13;
bus se"lce from Racine to&#13;
Parkside during the summer&#13;
session.&#13;
You can show your support in&#13;
two ways: I) C'all Racine Bus and&#13;
tell them ~hat a good idea you&#13;
think it l\, and 2) If you will be&#13;
going 10 school during the summer&#13;
session, show your support by&#13;
patronii;ing the summer bus&#13;
service. That's the appreciation&#13;
they'll n:ally notice.&#13;
RANGEi&#13;
Kenosha Director to Parkside&#13;
KENOSHA - Jack C. Dudley,&#13;
superintendent of water p roduction&#13;
for the Kenosha Water&#13;
Utility since 1975, has been named&#13;
director of Physical Plant Planning&#13;
and Operations at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Dudley, 43, began his new&#13;
duties April 9 and reports to Gary&#13;
G. Goetz, assistant chancellor for&#13;
Administration and Fiscal Affairs.&#13;
The appointment of Dudley&#13;
ends a national search for a&#13;
SUCCC$SOt to Cushing Phillips, wbo&#13;
left UW-P la.~t July for a position&#13;
at Carnegie-Mellon University in&#13;
Pittsburgh. Robert McGrath.&#13;
UW-P Power Plttnt ~uperintendent,&#13;
ha.~ been acting director&#13;
since then.&#13;
3&#13;
As long as I'm on this topic, I'd&#13;
like to challenge every student on&#13;
this campus who belicvC$ in something.&#13;
If you believe in ) Our..elf. in&#13;
an idea or purpose beyond your-&#13;
~lf. in a "Being" greater than&#13;
yourself maybe you should start&#13;
acting on that belief.&#13;
For the student requesting a&#13;
published response to the copying&#13;
machine inquiry, we contacted the&#13;
library about the possibility of installing&#13;
an additional copying&#13;
machine. They are studylne the&#13;
feasibility of an additional&#13;
machine.&#13;
With -1he Kenosha Water&#13;
Utility. Dudley has been responsible&#13;
for all operation, maintenance,&#13;
and administration of the SO&#13;
million gallon per day dty facility.&#13;
While there he initiated modification&#13;
of chemical treatment leading&#13;
to a $20,000 yearly reduction in&#13;
costs, developed a pumping&#13;
schedule which saved 57,000 yearly&#13;
in electricity costs, and established&#13;
a preventative maintenance schedule&#13;
fot equipment inspection and&#13;
repair.&#13;
Jack Dudley, tbe ... w Dlfff'tor of Pb,_Jt'al Plant Operatlou .&#13;
Engineer Corps (1957..(,()).&#13;
A part-time instructor for the Get invohed in something that&#13;
has the potential to touch every&#13;
student on this campus. directly or&#13;
indirectly. PSGA is only one of the&#13;
places, but there are such a variety&#13;
of ways you can begin to take&#13;
action without even going outside&#13;
or the organi1atlon. We need all&#13;
kinds of people for all kinds of&#13;
action. Here are just a few of the&#13;
immediate openings that need to&#13;
be filled:&#13;
If they find enough of a&#13;
demand, they will make one avaUable.&#13;
The best course of action at&#13;
the present would be to get in&#13;
contact with the director, Joseph&#13;
Boisse. and support the idea.&#13;
Enough support will make the&#13;
difference.&#13;
A professional engineer with&#13;
M.S. and 8.S. degrees in&#13;
mechanical engineering from&#13;
UW-Madi~n. Dudley was selfemployed&#13;
as an enitlneering&#13;
consultant (1974-75), taught&#13;
mechanical and heating-air conditioning&#13;
technology full-time at&#13;
Gateway Tech nical Institute&#13;
(1970-74), was a project engineer&#13;
for Modine Mfg. Corp. {196-4-70)&#13;
and General Motors Corp.&#13;
(1962-64) and was a public works&#13;
officer for the U.S. Navy Civil&#13;
last several years in degree&#13;
programs at Mihraukee School ol&#13;
Engmccrinit and Milwaukee Arca&#13;
TcchnlcaJ College. Dudley is a&#13;
retired Lieutenant Commander in&#13;
the U.S. Naval Resene (1952-78)&#13;
Would )OU like to get paid for&#13;
111:ini u mrmber of the PSGA ! We&#13;
need a recording secretary to keep&#13;
minuto of the Senate meetinw,&#13;
and pe rform variou5 other&#13;
fun.:tiou:.. Mimmum wage, work&#13;
, tudy prcfem:d. The work. is easy,&#13;
job surroundings pleasant, hours&#13;
llexible. See us in the PSGA office&#13;
for more information.&#13;
Live in places tourists only visit.&#13;
There i~ an immediate opening&#13;
for an adult student to serve on a&#13;
search and screen committee.&#13;
Anybody interested? Contact T1m&#13;
Zimmer in the PSGA office hy&#13;
Ap ril IJth.&#13;
1&#13;
Even though we just recently&#13;
had an cle1:lion, there are alwa~&#13;
vacancies 10 be tilled in the PSGA&#13;
Senate. We need rcpresenta th·e~&#13;
from Behavioral Science, Fine&#13;
Arts, Science, and MAS programs.&#13;
as well as representatives at tar~&#13;
Call Army Opportunities 657-5181&#13;
Join the people who've joined the Army.&#13;
Look Wflat&#13;
Sample Food List&#13;
The FOOD CO-OP stocks a $10,000.00 Inventory including: a complete&#13;
line of Borden's dairy products - Maya and Dannon Yogurt, keifer and Ice&#13;
cream, farm fresh eggs, natural Wisconsin cheeses, Catherine Clark&#13;
breads, Kallas Honey products, Pepperrldgl' Farm products, a wide&#13;
selection of fresh nuts, unsulferred dried fruits, grains, flours, oils. whole&#13;
wheat and splruich pastas, fresh natural juices, sodium nitrate and nitrate&#13;
free meats, canned goods, vitamins, soaps and shampoos, teas and spices,&#13;
Haagen-Dazs Ice cream and puffed millet!&#13;
We Are Open:&#13;
Mon. &amp; Fr,.. . 10- 6&#13;
Tu e.· Wed.· Thur. . 10 - 10&#13;
And Sat. . • . 10 - 5&#13;
STOP IN AND&#13;
We&#13;
Sample&#13;
Wheat Germ&#13;
Active Yeast&#13;
Butter&#13;
Large Eggs&#13;
Dannon Yogurt&#13;
Homo Milk&#13;
2 percent Milk&#13;
Have!&#13;
Price List&#13;
.36-lb.&#13;
1.31-lb.&#13;
l.35·lb.&#13;
.76-doz.&#13;
.40-8 oz.&#13;
1.59-gal&#13;
1.50-gal.&#13;
Lettuce&#13;
Colby&#13;
Muenster&#13;
Cheddar Md&#13;
Honey&#13;
Cashews&#13;
Rolled Oats&#13;
.45-ea.&#13;
1.63-lb .&#13;
1.65-lb.&#13;
1.70-lb.&#13;
1.79-lb.&#13;
1.75-lb.&#13;
.25-lb.&#13;
Catherine Clark Breads .. .. 10 percent off list&#13;
All Vitamins &amp; Supplements .... 20 percent off list.&#13;
(Above are member prices for April 1, 1979. Our prices do change, but not&#13;
very often.)&#13;
.. Only $5.00 /yr. ~&#13;
for student&#13;
" memberships &#13;
Wed11earlar April J J.1979 RANGEi 4&#13;
Vitamin 8: Super Vitamin&#13;
If you e11t lar~ quantities of&#13;
n:fint.-d sugars and starches like&#13;
80°/• of the population you could&#13;
have a \itnmin 8 deficiency.&#13;
Especially BJ (thiamine), \I, hkh&#13;
cnn cause fatigue, ncrvousne~s.&#13;
con,tipation and other unpleasant&#13;
&lt;;ymptom!i.&#13;
If }OU are on a high protein&#13;
program you need more vitamin&#13;
B6 and magnci.ium to metabolize&#13;
it. A dcficicnC) m B() can trigger a&#13;
tic, 11 t"-itch or a tremor. h caus.:s&#13;
ten\ion, in~omnia, irritability,&#13;
quarrelsomeness and an inability&#13;
to concentrate. Those itchy scalp&#13;
problems or dry skin around the&#13;
eyebrows, nose or behind the car.,&#13;
arc also caused by a vitamin 86&#13;
deficiency.&#13;
Sources of 86 are \lohole ,wheat&#13;
breads. nutrilional yca,t, blackstrap&#13;
mola-.~cs. wheat germ, bran&#13;
and liver.&#13;
If you get 86 from natural&#13;
sources of the B complex you'll&#13;
alw get panthothenic acid" hich is&#13;
essential to your ability to handle&#13;
~trcssful situation~. Without this&#13;
the usual flight or fight reaction of&#13;
Claiwa111lee lews&#13;
0&#13;
the adrenal !!land won't operatrc&#13;
succcssfull) Pollution in the&#13;
atmosphere and unavoidable&#13;
additive\ in your food, unplea,ant&#13;
noise and otht:r stress situatlom&#13;
deplete this B vitamin.&#13;
l.ook for panthothenic acid in&#13;
the ~nme food that contain the&#13;
other 8 vitamins, brown rice,&#13;
wheat germ, soybeans. ~almon, egg&#13;
yolks, peanuh and ei.pccially&#13;
nutritional )cost.&#13;
Ni~cin, also in the B complex,&#13;
has been attributable to the sense&#13;
ol humor and has been u&lt;;ed by&#13;
m11ny prominent psychiatrists to&#13;
cure schiT.ophrenic pattents.&#13;
Adolcscenh and college Studenture&#13;
sug~~ted 10 t.ike slitihtly&#13;
more because of their commonphH.-c&#13;
~tress ~ituauons. Even the&#13;
mMt cheerful, pleasant, optimistic&#13;
"I've got Pabst Blue Ribbon on 111y 111i11d."&#13;
per..on may become ured. apprehen~he,&#13;
J&gt;1.~s1mistic when niacin is&#13;
lacking in the hody.&#13;
Vitamin Bl (thiamine:) \omctim~&#13;
callt.od the "morale" vitamin&#13;
becau'&gt;e without it your nen-es&#13;
tend to fray. We also need II to&#13;
m,ulatc us from u lack of energy&#13;
and com,tant fatigue. A person&#13;
delicienl in thiamine neither cats&#13;
or sleep!, \\ell. and rends to be&#13;
irritable alot.&#13;
Mood chanRcS are -.ometimes&#13;
the first indtc,ttion that this&#13;
vitamin i-, lacking. If yoar memory&#13;
has bl.-come faulty and your concentration&#13;
poor. start immediately&#13;
to increase your vitamin B intake.&#13;
Emotional instability and overreacting&#13;
to stre:.s i:. a n.'d light&#13;
~ignal.&#13;
Snack on sunllower ~s. and&#13;
try to eat unn:lined foodi. as much&#13;
ns possible. White rice. for&#13;
example. doei.n't have any ol the B&#13;
vi111mins left by the lime you get&#13;
done boiling il Baking sodtl kills B&#13;
vitamins and being water wluble.&#13;
h!gh tempi. and boiling too much&#13;
abo kill'&gt; it.&#13;
Some people~hoeat a balanced&#13;
diet ma) not metabolize ,itamins&#13;
In the co~ manner and 1~&#13;
may _n:qu1~ l~rgcr amount\ of&#13;
certa1n I'\ v1tam10~ than I\ usuall&#13;
necessary to alleviate the ~)m;&#13;
tOlllS of stress.&#13;
Here t\ a short run down on the&#13;
ntamin~ in the B complex:&#13;
'fhiamine (wtamin BJ) Ncetssarv&#13;
for carboh)drate nietabotism'&#13;
help~ maintain healthy nenoU~&#13;
~y\tem. MaMh1.c:. the appetite&#13;
,timulat~ iim\\th and 8ood&#13;
mu~cle tone. l&gt;clicicncy symptom&lt;,:&#13;
Gn,truimcstlnal prob.&#13;
lem-.. fatigue. losi. of appetite,&#13;
nerve disordel"i like ~eakncss&#13;
~hakincss, depre\ston, poo;&#13;
memory and irritabilit,. Also&#13;
hean disorders.&#13;
Riboflavin (i·itamin 8:z) Necessary&#13;
for carbohydrate. fat and pro.&#13;
tein metaholi'lm. Aids in forma.&#13;
tion of antibodi~ and red blood&#13;
cell~ and maintain\ ~ell ~pirauon.&#13;
Deticiency Symptoms: eye&#13;
problem~. cracks and SOt'ts in&#13;
mouth. dermatnis, retarded&#13;
~roMh and digestive problems.&#13;
Vitamin B6 tJ'yridoxi11e) Same job&#13;
as B2, but also hel~ maintain a&#13;
balance of -.odium and phos.&#13;
phorus, Same deficiency symp•&#13;
toms ru. B2.&#13;
Vitamin BJ 1 also has the ume&#13;
function 10 the body II ith the in•&#13;
clusion of its ability to aid in&#13;
nOl"mal formation of blood cells.&#13;
Deficiency ,;ymptoms are&#13;
pern1c1ou~ anemia, brain&#13;
damage, ncr\'omnt'•&gt;\ anct&#13;
neuritis.&#13;
Vitamin BJ 3 is needed to metabolize&#13;
other 8 vitamins.&#13;
Biotin has the same functkms as&#13;
B 13 1nd metabolizes carbos,&#13;
fat~ and protein~. lb dcftcicncy&#13;
symptoms are dermallti\, grav.&#13;
i\h ~kin color :ind muklc pain.&#13;
Choline b important in normal&#13;
nerve tra n:!&gt;m1~slon.&#13;
l'olic acid h Important in red&#13;
b lood cell formation, aids&#13;
metabolil ing protein~ and is&#13;
necessan lor grov. th and di•&#13;
vi~ion of body i:ell~.&#13;
/nQSitol i~ necessan for fomtation&#13;
of lecithtn and is vital for halt&#13;
~o" th. Delic1cncio arc con•&#13;
slipation, eczema. hair lou,&#13;
high blood chol~terol.&#13;
Niacin hl'I~ maintain b&lt;:althy&#13;
,;kin tongue. and digestive sys•&#13;
tem. plus doing the ~ame func•&#13;
tion., a-. ma ny of the other B&#13;
\ itamin~&#13;
PABA. act\ a~ a ~un~crecn, and&#13;
helps ale\ iatc fatigue. irritability,&#13;
deprcssfon, nen'Ol.lsneu.&#13;
a nd graying h•ir.&#13;
Puntothr.111(' 11t'id aid,; in the uuhz.•&#13;
ation ol some ,itamms, and im·&#13;
pro, c,, the bodies rcststan« to&#13;
str·e~, 11,nd lnfC\.1ton.&#13;
·1 he Body rl'qu•rc~ m1m.• of ~ome&#13;
H vitamins than it doc others&#13;
1actn, th1am1ne, panthothen c&#13;
udd a nd choline are required in&#13;
larger amount, than sonic other of&#13;
the B's&#13;
In ummary, B \itamm art&#13;
cs cnttal for 1he ph) &lt;'II and&#13;
mental " ell being of the !xidy and&#13;
,·a11' 1 be 0 1111ttcd.&#13;
lhc ~\t \ OU= a re )"Cast, h,-cr.&#13;
" hole grnlni. 1 cgetablc grte11s,&#13;
tggs. lean pork 3nd I i11min sup·&#13;
plcmcnt~. &#13;
Wed1tesdo, April 11, 1979 IANGEI 5&#13;
Tim Zimmer Mary Mord&#13;
UWP Closes&#13;
Early Friday&#13;
Instructional activities and&#13;
office functions at the University&#13;
of Wi\Con!&gt;in-Parb1de will close ,at&#13;
noon Friday, April 13 (Good&#13;
Friday}.&#13;
Sites to be visited include the&#13;
Kettle Moraine, High chff, Devils&#13;
Lake. Two Creels buried forest&#13;
bed, Valders Quarry, Point Beach,&#13;
1he Brillion ~'ker, Parfrcy's Glen.&#13;
Neda iron ore deposit. southeast&#13;
Wi\consin drumlin field$, Blue&#13;
Mounds, the Driftless Arca and&#13;
other points of geologic significance.&#13;
&#13;
The full-day field trips will be&#13;
held on Mondays, Wednesdays and&#13;
Fridays from June 18 through July&#13;
13. Tri~ will be made in a&#13;
university vehide.&#13;
Earth Science professor A.F.&#13;
Schneider will teach the four credit&#13;
Early&#13;
Registration&#13;
Next Week&#13;
Continued from pg. J .&#13;
The Library.'Lcarning Center&#13;
will observe regular hours on&#13;
Saturday, April 14, and Sunday,&#13;
April IS. and Saturday classes will&#13;
meet as usual. The Physical&#13;
Education Bldg. wil\ be dosed&#13;
from 11:30 a.m. on Friday until&#13;
7:45 a.m. Monday.&#13;
course, being offered for the first&#13;
time this summer. The courw is&#13;
available for undCrJlfaduate or&#13;
graduate credit.&#13;
To assure that they will have the&#13;
best selection of cluses to chOOIC&#13;
from. all conttnuina UW-Parkside&#13;
lludcnb • n: u,-gcd tu ~let u11&#13;
April 17th or 18th for their fall&#13;
semester classes, the fin.t Early&#13;
Registration opportunity under the&#13;
new F.arly Registration pro,ram.&#13;
Complete registration details can&#13;
be found in the Fall '79 Course&#13;
Schedule. Newly admitted students&#13;
will be registering on April 20th so&#13;
continuing students shouJd plan to&#13;
tlke advantaac of the April 17th&#13;
and 18th data.&#13;
PSGA New Term Prof. Schneider said the field&#13;
on this campus.'' Both cited their&#13;
influence on the grade appeals&#13;
decision that went before the&#13;
Faculty Senate as an example.&#13;
Presently, Zimmer explained,&#13;
• they are working on suggestions&#13;
from the suggestion boxes to have&#13;
another copying machine placed in&#13;
the library and to hllVe the floor&#13;
indicators ln the elevator more&#13;
clearly marked.&#13;
During their terms in office.&#13;
Zimmer and Mortl plan on&#13;
addressing the issues presented In&#13;
their campaigns (dual degree&#13;
policy, parking situation, academic&#13;
appeal procedure) and calling for a&#13;
clearer delineation between the&#13;
executive and legislative branches&#13;
of the Student Government. "lf the&#13;
Student Government had the 24&#13;
Senators it's supposed to have,"&#13;
said Zimmer, "then a clear cut&#13;
dilineation would come about and&#13;
things would be more cfficltnt."&#13;
Finally Zimmer explained that&#13;
the highly criticized activities by the&#13;
Madison Student Government has&#13;
reflected badly on the Student&#13;
Governments in general. "Madison&#13;
strives to show the ~t of the&#13;
Student Governments that they're&#13;
different. No one agrees with&#13;
them."&#13;
"Our credibility has gone down&#13;
the tubes," said Mortl, "because of&#13;
some idiots in Madison. They're&#13;
not worried about their student&#13;
body. just their own egos:·&#13;
Geology Course&#13;
This Summer&#13;
The geology of eastern and&#13;
southern Wisconsin wlll be&#13;
explored on-the-spot during a four&#13;
week University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
field course this summer.&#13;
course i" designed especially for&#13;
teachers, adult students and retired&#13;
persons with an interest in geology.&#13;
Prof. Schneider said students&#13;
enrolled for graduate credit will be&#13;
required to submit detailed,. written&#13;
deM:riptions of the sites vulted and&#13;
toad logs in the format of a&#13;
professional field trip guidebook.&#13;
Continuing students are reminded&#13;
that they can make program&#13;
changa by adding and dropping&#13;
classes at subsequent Early&#13;
Registration periods throu1hout&#13;
the summer. Pick up your&#13;
registration materials at the&#13;
Information Kiosk by the Library.&#13;
o-OU9Q_QQQ ,Q_OO_OQg 000 0 00 0 0 Q OQQ QO 00 QV QO 0000 0000 QV vvovov IJIJ t, 1 • • . ' I) '.I l.i::_&#13;
=' -- ~ ~ ~-11111111 Contemporary :;&#13;
g: Entertainment :;&#13;
'="''&#13;
~ Presents := ~ ~&#13;
Pigeon Lalce Opens I ''Arroyo'' ! ~ (formerly Rio) :~ For the first time, the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside will offer&#13;
courses at the university system's&#13;
Pigeon Lake Field Station in&#13;
northern Wisconsin this summer&#13;
I"he course:. are "Edible Wild&#13;
Plants," a one credit undergraduate&#13;
course which will be taught&#13;
June 10 through 16. and ''Field&#13;
Mycology," offered for three&#13;
graduate or undergraduate credits&#13;
July 29 through August 17.&#13;
The wild plants course includes&#13;
discussion of their botany and&#13;
habitat and collection and&#13;
preparation of the plants for eating.&#13;
Field mycology is a survey of fungi&#13;
with emphasis on ecology, form,&#13;
Vet Benefits&#13;
Info Available&#13;
Two laws that drastically&#13;
improve veteran·s housing, pension&#13;
and survivors' benefits an: among&#13;
the new provi,.ions explained in the&#13;
Veterans Administration's: 1979&#13;
revi!&gt;iOn of "Federal Benefits for&#13;
Veterans and Dependant!" (IS-I&#13;
Fact Sheet) now available for St.SO&#13;
through the Superintendent of&#13;
Documents in Wa~hinl{tnn.&#13;
This handy 71-page booklet&#13;
provides an updated summary for&#13;
VA and non-VA benefits and the&#13;
eligibility requirements for veterans&#13;
and dependents. Then: is also a&#13;
complete listing of toll-free and&#13;
local VA phone numbers These&#13;
numbers enable anyone in the SO&#13;
:.Lai.Cl&gt; aud Puerto Rico to call VA.&#13;
\\;thout charge, to consult a&#13;
veterans counselor for complete&#13;
benefits information and assistance.&#13;
&#13;
Veterans and other persons au J&#13;
agencies serving veterans desiring&#13;
the YA's IS-1 Fact Sheet should&#13;
request it from the Superintendent&#13;
ot Oocumcnh, U.S. Government&#13;
Printing Office, Washington. D.C.&#13;
20402.&#13;
structure, development, identification,&#13;
systematics and habitat and&#13;
field study and collection. Both&#13;
courses will be taught by UW .p life&#13;
science professor Eugene Gasiorkiewi.-z.&#13;
&#13;
I Good Friday Night April I3 j ~ 9PID Union Square ·~&#13;
Wisconsin resident student fees = are S26.75 per undergraduate&#13;
credit and $41.75 per graduate&#13;
credit plus S49.75 per week for&#13;
room and board Information on&#13;
scholarship sources for study at the&#13;
station is available from Prof.&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz (Phone 553-2206).&#13;
?\ $I.2S UW-P ID's .~ ~ ~&#13;
~ ~ SI. 75 GUEST Required ~ ~&#13;
~ o oin o-o no oo o 60 (YO 6o6~o-oo oooa~o-o 6oA~ o-o o 6 oo o·o-o-o-o-6 010,ro o o o o ~ o o o~&#13;
Hllllllllt-111111•-HIIIDlltllllllllll&#13;
So you've got a few problems&#13;
with your shape. Don't&#13;
worry about it. do something&#13;
about it. And a&#13;
good way to get&#13;
started 1s by reading&#13;
the next issue&#13;
of "Insider" -the&#13;
free supplement to&#13;
your college newspaper&#13;
from Ford.&#13;
You'll find tips on exercise,&#13;
training and sports. And you'll discover&#13;
a few of the unusual ways some athletes&#13;
stay in shape. It's not all running and&#13;
weight lifting. And you'll also find&#13;
some very interesting information about&#13;
how to shape up your ride with the&#13;
great lineup of '79 Fords.&#13;
Look lor "ln1lder"-&#13;
Ford'• coatlnulna •erlea ol&#13;
coUqe newq,aper •upplementl.&#13;
FORD&#13;
f"ORD DIVISION eD&#13;
L1111111111111111111111111111m111111M111•• .. •• .. mr s: •-•&#13;
600 calonH.&#13;
Tennis elbow.&#13;
Great for resting&#13;
on table tops.&#13;
Belt overhang, make,&#13;
tying ahoea • problem.&#13;
Stiff knee. Used mainly&#13;
to walk to refrigerator&#13;
and back. &#13;
Wed• eada, April I J, 1979 IANGfl 6&#13;
Hunger Hilce Draws Crowd of Wallcers&#13;
The walkerw 1larted out on their ten mile- •~k from do'&gt;ntown Keno.ha.&#13;
,Vallers atoppc-d al cheek poi11c. to haw their &lt;-arda punl'hed.&#13;
-.•atLera appured to ••ill be (l'fth a rter 1h: mika.&#13;
1•11.,,,., b, If. .,.,r,1t,&#13;
· Walli.ln1 a long the '"""front &#13;
w,,. esdoy A, ril I I, J 979&#13;
•••••'• s,,,.,a&#13;
IAIIGEI&#13;
Eight lettermen Returning This Year&#13;
~olle~ate women's sports) has&#13;
tmphcatcd a new rule allowing a&#13;
playe~ to leave the game and come&#13;
back int? the game at a later time.&#13;
by Dave Edenbamer&#13;
It Da,e Cramer&#13;
If coach Linda Henderson gets&#13;
what she wants this year in terms of&#13;
1 win-lost record for the women's&#13;
softball team, ~he will be relying on&#13;
the ability of the people coming off&#13;
tht bench to do an adequate job.&#13;
This year she should have no real&#13;
forseeable problems here because&#13;
the AIA W (the governing body of&#13;
M••'• Bos1b1n&#13;
~e pitcher is the only exception&#13;
to thts rule. "This rule change gives&#13;
me th.e chance to pull a player and&#13;
explain to her what she is doing&#13;
wrong or what I would like her to&#13;
do differently, and then being&#13;
allowed to put her back in the game&#13;
helps her personallv and the team&#13;
overall."&#13;
Coach Henderson hu the&#13;
nucleus of a strong team this year&#13;
with eight returning lettermen&#13;
playing. A great asset to the team is&#13;
the pitching corp. Donna Mann a&#13;
right-handed windmill release, s'ue&#13;
Veselik a right-handed slingshot&#13;
release, and Barb VanWinkle a&#13;
left-handed slingshot pitcher&#13;
should hold the opposition to a&#13;
few runs and let the big bats of&#13;
Parkside win the games.&#13;
The 21 game season starts this&#13;
week if the weather agrees. It's&#13;
because of the weather that&#13;
Henderson doesn't have her&#13;
starting team set. " I have no idea&#13;
what the outfielders look like&#13;
because we haven't been able to&#13;
practice outside, a nd all the&#13;
infielders can play several&#13;
positions ...&#13;
lf things fall into place, people&#13;
can expect the best record that the&#13;
women have ever achieved.&#13;
Pitching Key to Success This Season&#13;
by Due EdenhaUJel'&#13;
&amp; DaTe Cramer&#13;
Last year when the men's&#13;
baseball team travelled down&#13;
south. they were rained out in half&#13;
their gam~. Thil, year they had&#13;
excellent weather but dropped 11 of&#13;
15 games. The record for the trip&#13;
•~ very deceiving and as Coach&#13;
Ken Oberbrunner put it, "It was an&#13;
excellent trip overall. We found out&#13;
what our weaknesses were. As for&#13;
losing the games, the teams we&#13;
played this year had better&#13;
material; they were tough." This is&#13;
evident in the fact that they were&#13;
playing against teams which&#13;
featured several all-Americans on&#13;
their roste~. ''My job is to get those&#13;
guys in the oost physical condition&#13;
possible. Ifwe win games fine, if we&#13;
don't, we're gaining all that&#13;
important experience."&#13;
The men had their last four&#13;
games cancelled because of&#13;
inclement weather as they returned&#13;
to their native state. Because the&#13;
season is so short. these games will&#13;
n~t be made up. rhe team probably&#13;
wishes they were still down south.&#13;
• To make up for the weaknes$ in&#13;
defense that i\ caused by the team&#13;
being inexperienced. the pitching is&#13;
going to ph1y a big part in this&#13;
year's success. Luckily, the pitching&#13;
is the strong suit on this year's&#13;
team. With a team that is not over•&#13;
powering in speed or strength. it&#13;
could be a long season for the&#13;
men.&#13;
t.ueninJ in open rehearsal with tlu• UWP wind e!lffmble&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Accepts&#13;
Gifts&#13;
1&#13;
MILWAUKEE - Gifts from&#13;
three area industries were among&#13;
those accepted for the Univenity&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside by the UW&#13;
System Board of Regents here&#13;
Friday (April 6).&#13;
Modine Manufacturing Co.&#13;
gave SJ.000 and Printing Developments,&#13;
Inc. 52,500 In support of&#13;
instruction and resc&amp;J'Ch usins the&#13;
scanning electron microscope at&#13;
UW-P. Gifts-in-kind of a g-ratina&#13;
~pe&lt;:trophotometer with hydrogen&#13;
lamp power ~upply from Printing&#13;
Developments and of motor equipment&#13;
and associated materials&#13;
from Gettys Manufacturina Co ..&#13;
also were accepted.&#13;
A gift of 58,000 from Kabi Ab of&#13;
Stockholm, a major manufacturer&#13;
of pharmaceutical and medical&#13;
products in Sweden, m support of&#13;
research on ~ynthetic peptide substrates&#13;
by chemistry professor&#13;
Bruce Branchini also was&#13;
accepted.&#13;
Pft&lt;&gt;101 • .,, , . J. Auo/ia•&#13;
Otto Luening: life of Music&#13;
b.) CaroJ A. Btttgenzer&#13;
W1:.consin-born composer Otto&#13;
Luening visited rhc Parkside&#13;
campu, last week. Luening,&#13;
reno"n for his pioneer work in&#13;
electronic music. gave a series of&#13;
lectures and worked with music&#13;
Sludenr~. Ra,rg,.r had an opportunny&#13;
to talk with Luening about&#13;
ht\ "orl(.&#13;
RANGER: Hov. did you get&#13;
invol\'ed "ith electronic mu~ic?&#13;
LUENING: I got interested in it&#13;
when l was a ktd. A book came uut&#13;
talking about "electric'' instrument\&#13;
and it wa, in all the&#13;
t•ga,me~. It was like a passing&#13;
ad, becau!&gt;t: then nobody talked&#13;
about it for awhile.&#13;
1 studicd acoustics for awhile a d . n learned about how sound&#13;
work\, About the only electric m•&#13;
,trurnent instruments around were&#13;
organs, but when the tape recorder&#13;
came along and you could record&#13;
sounds, I got together with my&#13;
colleguc. Ussochevsky, and re•&#13;
corded some sounds with my flute.&#13;
I was always good at improvhmg,&#13;
and I wanted to take my&#13;
flute sounds and do things with it&#13;
\hat I couldn't do by myself.&#13;
RANGER: Why did you decide to&#13;
play the flute?&#13;
LUENING: I wa,; in Madison at&#13;
the time. and my mother \aw a&#13;
French piccolo for eight dollars.&#13;
Someone had to play it. and I wo~&#13;
aroond. so she gave ii to me v.ith&#13;
an imtruction book.&#13;
I alreadv played the piano. and&#13;
she said .. You should learn the&#13;
flute. it's a nice in~trumenr". so 1&#13;
taught myself how to play it. I&#13;
didn't have real flute le,;~ons until&#13;
I got to Munich. where I took&#13;
lesson) from the head tluti.&lt;,t of the&#13;
Royal Court Orchestra. I waf&#13;
about 12 or 13 then, and was "a&#13;
real pro" by the time l was 15.&#13;
when I srarted to play in public.&#13;
RANGER: How did you get into&#13;
composing?&#13;
LUENING: I started when 1 was&#13;
\'ery young.&#13;
J wrote some little pieces when I&#13;
was six years old. My father didn't&#13;
want me to get into music. even&#13;
though he was a musician him"-elf.&#13;
so by the time 1 was 13, my compositions&#13;
were "secret".&#13;
I wrote all of my ~rel feeling:;&#13;
m m)' music, and I didn't !&gt;how ii&#13;
to anyone. Some ol it was quite&#13;
interestint,1. and some of the&#13;
mouves I wrote when I wa41 14 J&#13;
used in my string quartets.&#13;
alv. a,s composed because&#13;
enjo).:d it&#13;
RANGER: Do you prefer writing&#13;
for ani, particular instrument?&#13;
LUENING: I have written a lot of&#13;
music - opera, \ymphony, a~ well&#13;
as \mailer piece\ for ju\t a fev.&#13;
instruments.&#13;
I recently "rote a work called&#13;
"The Wisc.-on!&gt;in Symphony", in&#13;
which I U!&gt;ed theme!&lt; thar 1&#13;
remembered from my childhood. I&#13;
wrote that work for the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony.&#13;
I don't favor writing for any one&#13;
instrument. I also wrote a piece for&#13;
the youth symphony called&#13;
"Wisconsin Suite of Childhood&#13;
Tunes Remembered". and it's&#13;
about Lake Michi~an. the fields&#13;
ana woods and the farm in&#13;
Wauwatosa. It's a good little piece,&#13;
Luening also talked about his&#13;
experiences while growing up. and&#13;
other events throughout his can:er.&#13;
He complimented Parkside on its&#13;
mu~ic program, and commented&#13;
that American musicians can't be&#13;
con,;idered ,ccond to Europeans&#13;
any more.&#13;
He has also written hh memoirs,&#13;
v.·hich will be published later this&#13;
year. Luening's plans include&#13;
visiting more regions of the state&#13;
and working with young l)eople.&#13;
He plan!&gt; on doing a little more&#13;
writing, a little more playing, and&#13;
a lit1le more conducting. He&#13;
coMiders himself a health nut,&#13;
(''At my age you have to be", he&#13;
said). and he expects to be arount'&#13;
for quite awhile. &#13;
Wednesday April 11, 1979 IANGER 8&#13;
Ethnic Communities featured in Workshop&#13;
by Nield KroU&#13;
The Center for Multicultural&#13;
Studies, under the directo"hip of&#13;
Prof. John Boenker, held the&#13;
Spring Semester's first " Ethnic&#13;
Communite~ an the U.S."&#13;
workshop on March J I-April l.&#13;
The workshop. entitled The Jewish&#13;
Community. was held at the Beth&#13;
Isreal Sinai Congregation in&#13;
Racine. The purpose of th~&#13;
workshops is twofold: to bring&#13;
tojlether members of the com•&#13;
munity and university 1tudents.&#13;
thereby acquainting them with the&#13;
ethnic groups which make up the&#13;
community. ln this manner, the&#13;
pcole of the community and&#13;
Parkside ~tudents arc able to&#13;
interact with each other through a&#13;
definite learning experience beneficial&#13;
to both.&#13;
T hroughout the workshop,&#13;
various 5peakers and performers&#13;
shared their experience,; of&#13;
growing up in a particular ethnic&#13;
home or community. A panel&#13;
including Chancellor Guskin.&#13;
Professors Alan Shucard and Carl&#13;
Lindner ancl two w,,men from the&#13;
l&lt;enc:,sha community compared&#13;
notes on "growing up Jewi!.h" in&#13;
such diver~ communities in this&#13;
country as New fork City: Buffalo,&#13;
r-.~ York; and Kenosha.&#13;
Other ,peaker,; spoke generally&#13;
of American Jewil.h history und&#13;
literature. Professor M ichacl&#13;
Ebner or Lake forest College&#13;
lectured on the immigration of&#13;
Jews to this country, the different&#13;
periods and reasons for doing so.&#13;
and assimilation of these pocple&#13;
upon arrival. Profe~sor Ca.role&#13;
Vopat lectured on Jewish litera ture&#13;
In America, citing works such as&#13;
Saul Bellow's HerzoR and Philip&#13;
Roth"s Partnay':r Complain t.&#13;
n:lating the diverse views of Jewish&#13;
writers of themselves, their&#13;
families, and non-Jews.&#13;
On the theological \1de. Rabbi&#13;
Harold Markman gave on enlightening&#13;
lecture on the "Jewish&#13;
Root!; of Christianity" givinii much&#13;
food for thought on the subject.&#13;
Other events included a pcTformanc:e&#13;
by an Israeli folk dance&#13;
Jtroup from Milwaukee who&#13;
performed various types of dances;&#13;
a talk and prei.entation by Dina&#13;
H.1lpenn. former star of Yiddish&#13;
theatt1: who read Yiddish poetry;&#13;
and the screening of the I 97~ film&#13;
Hester Stf'('i:t which depicted experiences&#13;
and problem'i faced by&#13;
Jews se ttling on the lower East&#13;
Side of New York City a t the turn&#13;
or the century. Al~. on the last&#13;
&lt;luy of the workshop, a n ethnic&#13;
luncheon was served to participa_nts.&#13;
&#13;
The nei:t workshop, on the&#13;
Greek community. will be held on&#13;
April 27-28 at the Greek Onhodox&#13;
Church in Racine. Included in the&#13;
program for this workshop wUI be&#13;
At last! Financial aid&#13;
for middle income&#13;
college students. • •&#13;
Financ:lal aid applications for 1979-80 are&#13;
now available In the Financial Aids office In&#13;
Tallent Hall and there's something new this&#13;
year. A new fede ral law Ccilled the Middle&#13;
Income Student Assistance Act has extended&#13;
eligibility for federal educational&#13;
grants to dependent student.I from families&#13;
earning as much as $25,000 a year. Under&#13;
the old law, eltgiblllty was limited to&#13;
dependent students from famUles earning&#13;
no more than $15,000 a year. for example, a&#13;
dependent student from a family of four with&#13;
a $20,000 Income and no unusual assets or&#13;
expenses was not eligible under the old law.&#13;
Now a student from that family could get a&#13;
$700 grant.&#13;
What It all means ls that nearly everyU.W.&#13;
Parkside student who expects to carry at&#13;
least six credit&amp; s hould apply for federal&#13;
financial aid. You may be pleasantly surprised&#13;
about your eligibility. But this is&#13;
Important. Apply as soon as posslblet The&#13;
final priority deadline for the fall semester ls&#13;
May 1. You·can begin the simple application&#13;
process by contacting the Office of Financial&#13;
Aids, Tallent Hall, phone 553-2291.&#13;
University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Profe\,or Charles Moskos ot&#13;
Northwc~tern Univer;ity presentinic&#13;
nn overvie111 of t he&#13;
Greek A.merican experience; Pro•&#13;
fcssor John Koumoulides, an his•&#13;
torian from Ball State lecturin,i on&#13;
modem Greece; Fr. Vaspr~ of the&#13;
Greek Orthodox Church giving an&#13;
historical view: and Fr. Peter&#13;
Pappudemetriou lec:tu rinjt on&#13;
Theology and Liturgy. Also&#13;
Included in the work-lhop will be&#13;
another panel of Greek Americans&#13;
livinJ,l in the community, sharing&#13;
their personal experiences on&#13;
gr6wing up Greek in the U.S. and&#13;
an ethnic luncheon for participants.&#13;
&#13;
During the Fall semester the&#13;
Center tor Multicultural Studies&#13;
will he centt•ring 011 two more&#13;
ethnic groupl&gt; "'hich make up the&#13;
local community; the Ru~~ian&#13;
community and the Welsh&#13;
community. fh~ workshop~ will&#13;
be of a similar nature as th~&#13;
being held this Spring.&#13;
For more infonnation on these&#13;
and other workshops student'!; may&#13;
contact Profe&lt;.sor John Boenlccr in&#13;
Moln 282. Prof. Bl-.:nker states&#13;
t hat he and othen interested in&#13;
promoting the ethnic workshops&#13;
would be clclightcd to see more&#13;
Parkside students b ecoming&#13;
involved HI these worthwhile&#13;
experiences ~hared with members&#13;
of our local community.&#13;
UWP Places at Putnam&#13;
Math Competition&#13;
A group of Parkside students&#13;
made a fine showing in the 39th&#13;
Annunl William Lowell PutnJm&#13;
Mothematicul Competition held in&#13;
Chicugo, Dec. 2. 1978. The Parkside&#13;
tcRm of «ven students placed&#13;
146th of 246 teams. All together&#13;
students from 339 colleges and&#13;
unh·crsltles in the U.S. and&#13;
Canada participated.&#13;
Of the 2019 student, taking the&#13;
c::iam, Marge Stankus and Mike&#13;
Welcome of Park ide p laced&#13;
679th. Kathy Feichtner placed&#13;
954th, and Carol Adamson and&#13;
Jim Young each placed 1167th.&#13;
The test hns been olTcrcd each&#13;
yea r for undergraduates since&#13;
1940. fhe test JS composed of 12&#13;
math problems. To complete Lwo&#13;
o?" three is to make a good ,;ho,,.ing&#13;
in the aJJ dny competition.&#13;
An example of a problem&#13;
reveals the compleJtity of the&#13;
exnminatlon. ''Find the area of a&#13;
convex octagon that IS inscribed in&#13;
a c1n:le and has four con~«utive&#13;
,;ides of length ~ units and the&#13;
remaini, g four sides of length 2&#13;
Uff ts. C ·ve the answer in the form&#13;
"r plus "s" t:mes the square root&#13;
of ' t" "'ith&#13;
integers.&#13;
&amp; Rnd t pmitive&#13;
The team's ~uperv,sor, Profes!.01&#13;
Leo Comerford, said he think~ that&#13;
thi'i h quhe a good ~ho-..ing tor a&#13;
school in its first year of&#13;
c-.&gt;mpctition. He is hopeful that&#13;
Pi-rks1de will do even better in the&#13;
future as we develop teams with&#13;
Putnam Competition t::tpcrientt. &#13;
Wellneaday April 11, 1979&#13;
IAIIGEI 9&#13;
Nuclear Power: Energy We Can't Afford&#13;
by Ralph NadaLately,&#13;
it seems the atomic&#13;
power industry crumbles a little&#13;
more each month.&#13;
On March 28, 1979, what was&#13;
perhaps the wo~t commercial&#13;
nuclear power accident in&#13;
American history occured at the&#13;
lhree Mile Island nuclear plant in&#13;
Harrisburg, Pa., when a cooling&#13;
pump broke and radioactive 11team&#13;
escaped into the atm~-phere.&#13;
Earlier this March, the Nuclear&#13;
Regulatory Commls~lon (NRC)&#13;
ordered that 5 reactors be shut&#13;
down because of faulty designs.&#13;
Last year, the Commission closed 5&#13;
other reactot'l&gt; because important&#13;
safety pipes were cracking.&#13;
In February of this year, the&#13;
NRC withdrew its support for the&#13;
1975 Rasmussen report, which&#13;
estimated the likelihood and&#13;
consequences of a nuclear accident.&#13;
The report, long the bulwark&#13;
of the nuclear power industry's&#13;
defense, largely underestimated&#13;
the risks.&#13;
One manufacturer of nuclear&#13;
reactors, General Atomic, has&#13;
already withdrawn from the&#13;
market. Rumors petSist on Wall&#13;
Street that the nuclear giant.&#13;
General Electric, will soon be&#13;
pulling out.&#13;
And presently. people are&#13;
crowding theatn!s around the&#13;
country to ~ee .. The China&#13;
Syndrome." a new motion p1cture&#13;
about a nuclear reactor accident&#13;
and an attempted cover-up,&#13;
starring Jane Fonda and Jack&#13;
Lemmon. "The China Syndrome"&#13;
is a fictional thriller to be sure, but&#13;
ib technical reality and balanced&#13;
script arc expected to set the&#13;
citvenry thinking about the real&#13;
dangers of nuclear power.&#13;
The movement for safe and&#13;
clean energy is building momelllUm.&#13;
bul ii ha~ no! won yet.&#13;
The building of additional reactor5&#13;
pushe-. on. Howe\ier, more and&#13;
more the public is demanding&#13;
answer.. about th,; safety. cost, and&#13;
reliability of thi!; t&lt;.-chnology. ls it&#13;
dangerous? h it economic'! Js it&#13;
n~ded?&#13;
Now is a good time to review&#13;
briefly ~omc of the important facts&#13;
about this hotly debated topic.&#13;
I. NuC'lur power raelllUea&#13;
produce toxins which pole aerlout&#13;
health problema. About 40 radio.&#13;
active elements arc produced by&#13;
nuclear fission. One trillionth of a&#13;
gram of one of these, plutonium,&#13;
has caused cancer in laboratory&#13;
animals. A millionth of a gram can&#13;
cause massive fibrosis of the lungs,&#13;
leading to death within days of&#13;
exi,osure.&#13;
Originally, scientisti believed&#13;
there were "safe" levels of exposure&#13;
to radiation, but a IJ year&#13;
federally-funded study by Drs.&#13;
Thomas Mancuso and Alice&#13;
Stewart has revealed positive links&#13;
between different strains of cancer&#13;
and even minute amounts of&#13;
radiation. These findings were&#13;
supported by a 1979 HEW study&#13;
and by British studies.&#13;
2. Decomml .. lonln1 reactor,&#13;
and dl1posln1 of radloactln&#13;
w-.ta preeeot lerlo111, umol..-ed&#13;
wety problems. After about JS&#13;
yenrs of operation, whole sections&#13;
of atomic reactor&lt;; are irreversibly&#13;
contaminated with radiation, such&#13;
that routine maintenance cannot&#13;
be performed. At this point. the&#13;
NRC say, the entire facility must&#13;
be decommissioned, or "mothballed"&#13;
for hundreds of years. The&#13;
entire plant itself becomes radio.&#13;
active waste and must be&#13;
contained. The costs of decommissioning&#13;
may be as much as the&#13;
original costs of building the&#13;
reactors.&#13;
Moreover, only time can reduce&#13;
the toxicity of radioactive waste.&#13;
Plutonium 239 has a half-life of&#13;
24,400 years - meaning that in&#13;
that time the material will have&#13;
lost only half of its toxicity.&#13;
Scientists suggest radioactive&#13;
elements should decay through 10&#13;
half-lives before becoming inert.&#13;
Hence, plutonium must be&#13;
securely isolated for over 240,000&#13;
years.&#13;
3. The Insurance Industry and&#13;
the nuclear power Industry have&#13;
tacitly admJtted the mks of&#13;
reactor accldentl by rtfualna to&#13;
accept complete llablllty (or&#13;
M.'Cldenb. Take a look at any&#13;
individual homeowner or auto&#13;
p olicy and note the clause&#13;
excluding protection against&#13;
nuclear or ratliological accident~.&#13;
No protection against nuclear&#13;
tragedie~ is available on the conventional&#13;
insurance market -&#13;
anywhere.&#13;
To entice private compank·-. to&#13;
im•est in nuclear power, the federal&#13;
go,·ernmcnt imposed a ceiling on&#13;
the amount of financial liability&#13;
corporations will face in the event&#13;
of a reactor accident. The gO\emment&#13;
knew the insurance industry&#13;
would never accept any significant&#13;
liability, so they passed the PriceAnder&lt;ion&#13;
Act in 195b which&#13;
limited ils liability to a tiny&#13;
fraction of the damage from an&#13;
1ton1ic plant melt down.&#13;
SILVER FOX&#13;
4~:2-s124 POR.TAGE&#13;
862•6986 EAST OF THE DAM&#13;
HWY.C WILMOT.WIS.&#13;
- :, -·&#13;
' No.' TllfRt IS ABS'OlUifLY No TRUTH TO THI\T RUMOI? AN!&gt; WE&#13;
HAV£ EVER.YTHJIJG UNl&gt;cR C0~T~Ol ! "&#13;
4. Nuclear power b a mupial&#13;
energy 10urce, requiring enormom&#13;
lloa.nclal e~ wtth low n•&#13;
llablllty. After all is said and done,&#13;
it is important to note that nuclear&#13;
power's total contribution to&#13;
energy production is 3 percent.&#13;
Even if the most ambitious nuclear&#13;
program were to be realized, at&#13;
best nuclear power could supply 10&#13;
to 12 percent of our total energy&#13;
needs by the year 2000.&#13;
By contra.st, the President's&#13;
Council on Environmental Quality&#13;
states that "today's fuel consumption&#13;
levels can be reduced by more&#13;
than 40 percent" through conservation&#13;
measures. The Council&#13;
concludes that if we improve our&#13;
energy productivity, the U.S.&#13;
should not need more than 10-15&#13;
percent more energy by the year&#13;
2000. And the government&#13;
By Matt Polialcon&#13;
predicts that renewable energy&#13;
sources - the sun, tides, wind,&#13;
and heat from the earth - could&#13;
contribute a.~ much as 25% of our&#13;
energy needs by 2000.&#13;
What the country needs are&#13;
energy systems that are safe, clean,&#13;
reliable - and affordable. Unfortunately,&#13;
nuclear power doesn't&#13;
meet any of those basic criteria.&#13;
For more information about the&#13;
nuclear issue, and how to get involved&#13;
in your area, contact our&#13;
~fe energy group. Critical Mau,&#13;
P.O. 8 01 1538, Washington, D.C.&#13;
20036.&#13;
CONTINUING STUDENTS&#13;
Early Regtatratlon&#13;
For Fall Semater Will Be Held&#13;
Aprll 17-18, 1979&#13;
See Your AdvfHr Prior To Registration&#13;
Miller&#13;
Eight-Ball&#13;
Classic&#13;
Trop h i es&#13;
(Top 4 Players)&#13;
Best ol 3&#13;
Gam es&#13;
Straight In&#13;
Call Your&#13;
Pocket&#13;
Cue Stiek&#13;
8 Case for&#13;
Every Entrant&#13;
When: April 26th, I979 I:oo-s:oo pm&#13;
Where: Union Recreation Center&#13;
How: Sign Up at Union Ree Center ss.oo&#13;
Why: Beeau1e We Like You! &#13;
10 Wed• esd1J Ap~r!ll~J~J,~ 19~7!_9_"--________ l~.A~N~G~f:!1 ________ --:;~;--=-==--------~ Sign 'Rossum's Universal Robots' Return&#13;
b1 Nlc:kl Kroll&#13;
we cannot reckon with what&#13;
is lost when we set out to transform&#13;
the world." These are the words of&#13;
Hany Domin, General Manager of&#13;
Rossum's Universal Robots. a&#13;
(actory that manufactures robots to&#13;
work and make life easier for&#13;
human beings. But while Rossum's&#13;
robots do this so well that they soon&#13;
outnumber human beings, they&#13;
also begin to revolt and take over&#13;
the world, eliminating the humans&#13;
for which they were originally&#13;
created. And, in case you're&#13;
wondering what this ls ~ll about,it&#13;
is the theme of the Parkside&#13;
Dramatic Arts Department's&#13;
Spring production R. U. R b.r Czech&#13;
playwright Karel Capek under the&#13;
di.rec:tion of K~in Hoggard. The&#13;
play will be performed April 20-22.&#13;
Hogsa.rd states that Roissum's&#13;
robots are the kind th,u anconstructed&#13;
to look and move just&#13;
like human beings, and because of&#13;
this and some slight modifications&#13;
made to them which changes their&#13;
dispositions, they decide that&#13;
robots a.re superior to humans.&#13;
1'herefon: robots must take over the&#13;
world. "Robot Liberation" runs&#13;
rampant throughout the world&#13;
u.ntil a revolt Is formod and they&#13;
begin to attack human beings and&#13;
take their places in ioclety.&#13;
The play centen around&#13;
Rossum's factory and concerns the&#13;
experiences of sixteen "people."&#13;
eight human beings and eight&#13;
Tobots. Helena, one of the humans,&#13;
is the spokesperson for robot rights&#13;
and suggests the modificationi&#13;
which are made in the robots. She&#13;
tJien burns the manuscript which&#13;
contains the blueprints for&#13;
Rocsum's robots, thereby making it&#13;
impossible for anyone to change the&#13;
unrest growing among the robots.&#13;
By the end of the second act, the&#13;
robots are revolting and have&#13;
cornered the humans in the factory.&#13;
Hoggard describes the play as.&#13;
"sort of a dream .. . a combination&#13;
of utire and fantasy and&#13;
melodran1a." not unlike tif .a.nyooe&#13;
watches the reruns) some of Rod&#13;
Serling's early Twilight Zone&#13;
11:ories. Since this particular play&#13;
was written in 1923, perhaps Mr.&#13;
Serling or some of his writers were&#13;
inspirtd by the story.&#13;
•&#13;
The set as Hoggard describes it is&#13;
basically expressionistic. reminiscent&#13;
of the era in which it&#13;
originattd. For those of you who&#13;
know Mf'tropolis. the German&#13;
expressionist film. then: are some&#13;
subtle sight gags for you. Hoggard&#13;
'also says that the play will open&#13;
with a ,ort of light show centcrina&#13;
on wheels and gears hung in the air.&#13;
The basic set itself is a rather sterile&#13;
office in the factory which is&#13;
changed slightly for the second act.&#13;
The pla) opens on April 20 and&#13;
runs through April 22. Performances&#13;
are at 8:00 each evening with&#13;
a 2:00 matinee oo Sunday&#13;
afternoon. Tickets are available at&#13;
the Union Information Desk or at&#13;
the door before each performance.&#13;
In all, the play should be&#13;
fascinatin&amp; to robot and science&#13;
fiction buff's who appreciate the&#13;
root~ of contemporary science&#13;
fiction. It should be more than&#13;
interesting to watch "the last&#13;
human being on earth'. speculate&#13;
on two "young people" who&#13;
confront him in the office in the&#13;
epilogue; the question is, who Is&#13;
who?&#13;
ROSSUM'S UNIVERSAL ROBOTS&#13;
BY KAREL CAPEK&#13;
APRIL 20,21,22 8pm&#13;
Matinee APRIL 22 2pm&#13;
Prnented by DRAMATIC ARTS·FINE ARTS DIVISION&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
COMMUNICATION ARTS THEATRE&#13;
TICKETS: S 2 Parkside students. faculty, staff &amp; senior citizens&#13;
S3 general Union Information Desk 553 2345&#13;
Theatre Box Office 553-2016 or at the door&#13;
information 553-2457&#13;
11 ... UNIDlllll•IIIIWlllWlllltaBUMalllllNlll•lll_tll_lltllllllllllhllllllllfNIIIIIIIIIIRIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII&#13;
OLD STYLE&#13;
AND&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITY&#13;
BOARD&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
ALIVE N' PICKIN&#13;
BLUEGRASS BAND&#13;
APRIL 18TH&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION SQUARE&#13;
7:30 TILL MIDNITE FREE ADMISSION&#13;
Language&#13;
• • • oot-3ti; o(\nua\&#13;
\-\and·tc.a~ ~~ar£&lt;\£..'5S :Dau , /) L)e:ont.sca 7 ~-pr~ l ~5~ 0&#13;
co• mvnitr Outreach&#13;
Faculty Push Poetry&#13;
A new Poetry Outreach Pro11ra&#13;
m aimed at high school&#13;
,;tudcnf\ is being louncbed this&#13;
spring at the University of Wis•&#13;
consin-Parkside. The program ha's&#13;
two facets: The Parkside Poetry&#13;
Rcvie11, a publication ofWisconsln&#13;
high bChool poetry to be i$Sued two&#13;
or three times a year. ood a&#13;
two-week summer poetry workshop&#13;
June 18 through 29.&#13;
Prof. Carl Lindner will edit the&#13;
journal and teach the workshop.&#13;
The flrst issue of the magazine is&#13;
scheduled for publication in May.&#13;
Prof. Lindner said the Park~ide&#13;
English faculty contacted high&#13;
school English teachers throughout&#13;
the state to invite their&#13;
students to submit poetry. The&#13;
magazine will be distributed to all&#13;
state high schoo\5 and students&#13;
whose poems are selected for&#13;
Inclusion will receive contributor&#13;
copies.&#13;
Linder said the purpose of the&#13;
journal is both to provide&#13;
recognition for young poets and to&#13;
give them an opportunity to&#13;
compare their own work to that of&#13;
their Jk!el'S,&#13;
The workshop ha., roughly the&#13;
same goals with the added&#13;
opportunity to study language in&#13;
its special relation)bip t0 poetry.&#13;
The workshop carries one credit&#13;
and is open to students who have&#13;
completed the junior or senior year&#13;
of high school as well as to other&#13;
Pnrk~1de students. The work~hop&#13;
will meet from 9:30 to 11 :.30 a.m.&#13;
Mondays through Fridays during&#13;
the two weeks.&#13;
Lindner said the intensive workshop&#13;
session~ will be devoted to&#13;
reading and discussion of both&#13;
student poems and "ouL~ide ..&#13;
poem~ with special attention&#13;
devoted to the figurative language&#13;
or metaphor and ~imile. imagery&#13;
and denotation and connotation in&#13;
language.&#13;
"We will try lo give students a&#13;
sense of the potential of language&#13;
for precise exptt1&gt;5lon." Lindner&#13;
i;aid ... That will include exploring&#13;
the three parts of a word - the&#13;
dictionary meaning. the implication&#13;
and the ~ound or musical&#13;
quality that is distinctive to poetry.&#13;
We will be eitploring ways in which&#13;
poetry can make more vivid&#13;
connections between experien~-e&#13;
and meaning."&#13;
Another major area of concentration&#13;
will be revising to sharpen&#13;
meaning, Lindner said.&#13;
Lindner brings a broad background&#13;
of experience both as a&#13;
poet and a teacher in innovative&#13;
programs to the Poetry Outreach&#13;
Program.&#13;
His book of poetry, "Vampires;'&#13;
was published simultaneously in&#13;
hard and soft cover in J 977 by&#13;
Spoon River Poetry Press and his&#13;
poetry has appeared in nearly 20&#13;
different literarv publications&#13;
Since joining the UW-Parkslde&#13;
faculty in 1%9. he has helped&#13;
develop several inteTdisciplinary&#13;
coun,e&lt;; and has been activc in&#13;
bringing major poets to the&#13;
campus for readings of their work.&#13;
A nathe of New York, Lindner&#13;
received a B.S. degree in physics&#13;
and an M.A. degree in Engli~h at&#13;
City College of New York (CUNY)&#13;
and a Ph.D. degree in English and&#13;
American lit1:rature at L W&#13;
Madison. He ha.,; publ~hed&#13;
a number of articles on literary&#13;
topics in addition to his poetry. &#13;
Wed11e1d1y _____ April 111111111 II, _______ 1979 1iiiiiiiiiiilllll RAHGEll __________ _ 12&#13;
---. .~, ~&#13;
' ,r&#13;
(~.. '&#13;
· · You were down&#13;
-·-· to half a jar of pea11ut butt&#13;
Then Dad's check arrived.&#13;
.... . - .. -. ..&#13;
Now comes Miller ti&#13;
e -1978 Mdler Brewing Co., Milwaukee. W,s.&#13;
</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69409">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 7, issue 27, April 11, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69410">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69411">
              <text>1979-04-11</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69414">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="69415">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="69416">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69417">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69418">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69419">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69420">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69421">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69422">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="775">
      <name>child care center</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1153">
      <name>maureen budowle</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
