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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 10, issue 26</text>
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            <text>Kreuser sets goals for second term</text>
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            <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
In temporary location&#13;
CSA operates bookstore&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
At present, College Stores&#13;
Associates (CSA) is operating in&#13;
the Rec - Center Ski Room. It&#13;
won't be long until they appear&#13;
where Follett's store was once&#13;
located, across from the library.&#13;
As Follett takes their stock out of&#13;
the store, CSA is making plans for&#13;
their store layout.&#13;
Steven Muhlfelder, Supervisor -&#13;
store operations is presently over -&#13;
seeing CSA's development. He&#13;
said that the basement will be&#13;
used for actual textbook sales and&#13;
that the bookstore will definitely&#13;
be patterned after all of the other&#13;
CSA stores. By having the book&#13;
sales run in the basement, runners&#13;
will be used to get the books for&#13;
students.&#13;
Runners will also be instructed&#13;
to ask if the customer would&#13;
prefer new or used books. The&#13;
availability of used textbooks will&#13;
vary according to the actual book&#13;
and will be based on a first come,&#13;
first served basis.&#13;
CSA will also buy books from&#13;
students that no longer have a use&#13;
for them. If a book is being used at&#13;
Parkside, and if CSA has a&#13;
professor's written order that a&#13;
book will be used next semester,&#13;
they will give a student 50% of t he&#13;
current list price. If the book will&#13;
not be used within the next&#13;
semester, a price guide is used to&#13;
decide what the student will&#13;
receive back for the book. If a&#13;
student gets 30% for a book that&#13;
will no longer be used, the student&#13;
is getting a good price for that&#13;
book.&#13;
Things to consider when selling&#13;
a book back, are that books are&#13;
returned in great quantity. The&#13;
more returns on a particular book,&#13;
the less the customer will receive,&#13;
for the book, simply because&#13;
everyone will be selling the same&#13;
book. It will be fairly easy to get a&#13;
hold of. Used books operate on a&#13;
strict supply and demand basis.&#13;
Another thing to keep in mind is&#13;
that every one who handles a book&#13;
has to get paid. The list of people&#13;
is long, but that's why some books&#13;
get so little in return. Also, the&#13;
books are not always retained at&#13;
Parkside, but are resold to used&#13;
book wholesalers.&#13;
CSA does plan to hire students&#13;
whenever possible; they do employ&#13;
student workers in all of their&#13;
s.o.c.&#13;
New leaders elected&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
SOC is the Student Organization&#13;
Council. Recently they have&#13;
elected a new chairman and vice -&#13;
chairman. Steve Kalmar was&#13;
elected as chairman and Carla&#13;
Thomas as the vice - chair.&#13;
Kalmar said one of the things&#13;
that motivated him to run for the&#13;
position of chairman was, "Last&#13;
year's chairman's apathetic attitude.&#13;
By being the chairman of&#13;
Winter Carnival," said Kalmar,&#13;
"I have learned the ins and outs of&#13;
the administrative bureaucracy."&#13;
One of Kalmar's contentions is&#13;
tha t he would like to see SOC be an&#13;
Committee&#13;
established&#13;
The Sexual Harassment&#13;
Advisory Committee has&#13;
established members to&#13;
represent the faculty,&#13;
academic staff, classified staff&#13;
and students. Representatives&#13;
of the faculty are: Stella Gray&#13;
and Wayne Johnson; academic&#13;
staff: Linda Piele and Stuart&#13;
Rubner; classified staff:&#13;
Karen Lourigan, Carrie Peters&#13;
and Jackie Willems; students:&#13;
Carla Thomas and Pat Hensiak.&#13;
The functions of the committee&#13;
will be to advise the&#13;
Chancellor on all matters&#13;
relating to sexual harassment;&#13;
to advise and assist the&#13;
Chancellor in devising&#13;
programs designed to inform&#13;
employees and students of the&#13;
nature of sexual harassment,&#13;
to increase their sensitivity to&#13;
it, and to publicize the&#13;
procedures, sanctions and&#13;
remedies available against it;&#13;
and to help people who feel that&#13;
they are victims of sexual&#13;
harassment, to bring about an&#13;
informal resolution.&#13;
equal with PSGA. "PSGA is a&#13;
s t u d e n t g o v e r n m e n t&#13;
organization," stated Kalmar.&#13;
"SOC is a social and intellectual&#13;
oriented group. The goals of SOC&#13;
are different from the specific&#13;
goals of PSGA. Having to go&#13;
through them slows us down."&#13;
There are about 40 clubs on&#13;
campus. The membership within&#13;
the clubs ranges from 15 to the&#13;
hundreds. SOC feels that by&#13;
representing that many students,&#13;
they need to define their goals and&#13;
not work as a subcommittee of&#13;
PSGA.&#13;
"Since I've taken office, I have&#13;
had several meetings with Jim&#13;
(Kreuser) and Chuck (Betz) to&#13;
define SOC's responsibilities, and&#13;
my own responsibilities. We have&#13;
a really hard time reaching the&#13;
students. We'll try to combine all&#13;
of the students in an organized&#13;
effort."&#13;
As the chairman, Kalmar would&#13;
like to promote a greater sense of&#13;
student concern. "It's a shame&#13;
that it's so hard to communicate,&#13;
but Carla (Thomas), the new vice&#13;
chairman, Annette, the new&#13;
secretary for SOC, and I will all&#13;
push hard to keep communication&#13;
open."&#13;
Carla Thomas is the new vice -&#13;
chair. Her goal for SOC is to make&#13;
SOC become a place for clubs to&#13;
interact with each other. A place&#13;
to sponsor activities jointly.&#13;
Carla Thomas is also the chair&#13;
of the Budget and Review Committee.&#13;
"I would like to see more&#13;
guidelines and interaction between&#13;
clubs, and make things run&#13;
more efficiently. There is a&#13;
problem with lack of interaction&#13;
between the clubs. Everyone is&#13;
pretty protective of their own.&#13;
Maybe we can break through that&#13;
barrier."&#13;
Thomas isn't sure about the&#13;
separation from PSGA for SOC. "I&#13;
can see it (the separation) further&#13;
down the line, but not until we&#13;
establish procedures. We need&#13;
more membership within SOC."&#13;
Forum to examine&#13;
Central America&#13;
stores. CSA would also like to hear&#13;
from the students, as they are&#13;
anxious to know what is going&#13;
right. They are also interested to&#13;
know if anything seems to be&#13;
going wrong. It is important that&#13;
the students realize what they do&#13;
is legitimate.&#13;
Plans have been made to have&#13;
an extensive supply of books as&#13;
well as supplies. A supply clerk&#13;
will be used to stay aware of the&#13;
stock conditions in the store. If&#13;
something is running low in the&#13;
store, a telex will be used to send&#13;
an order to Waltham, Mass.,&#13;
where the CSA central warehouse&#13;
is located. A stock check will be&#13;
done each week for order and&#13;
reorder.&#13;
A lot of central office control is&#13;
used. "We stay involved with what&#13;
is happening within the store,"&#13;
c omme n t e d Mu h l f e l d e r .&#13;
"Recognizing a need and communicating&#13;
it allows for a&#13;
smoother operation."&#13;
Book&#13;
Exchange&#13;
changes&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
News Editor&#13;
At last week's PSGA meeting a&#13;
decision was made to keep the&#13;
Campus Book Exchange open, but&#13;
to give the accounting responsibility&#13;
for the Exchange to&#13;
Student Life. Kathy Slama,&#13;
coordinator of the Exchange, has&#13;
kept the book work for the life of&#13;
the Exchange, however, as Slama&#13;
graduates this May, someone will&#13;
have to take the responsibility of&#13;
balancing the books.&#13;
Jim Kreuser, PSGA President&#13;
commented, "It would be difficult&#13;
to find someone to replace Kathy.&#13;
She has done a good job, and we'll&#13;
miss her dearly."&#13;
Kreuser also pointed out that&#13;
there were a number of options&#13;
looked into concerning the welfare&#13;
of the Exchange. The first&#13;
alternative considered was&#13;
dropping the service of the Book&#13;
Exchange. There didn't seem to&#13;
be much support for dropping the&#13;
service. Other considerations&#13;
were to keep the exchange running&#13;
under PSGA, or simply&#13;
giving the Exchange over to the&#13;
Student Life. A medium was met&#13;
with the decision to have Student&#13;
Life act as the accountant for the&#13;
Exchange, and to have a contract&#13;
drawn up with Student Life so that&#13;
PSGA can get total responsibility&#13;
of the Book Exchange back, if the&#13;
PSGA Senate would deem it&#13;
necessary.&#13;
The actual date that the contract&#13;
would be drawn up was not&#13;
decided upon, but the Book Exchange&#13;
will definitely remain&#13;
open.&#13;
Photojoumalist Anne Nelson,&#13;
whose work has appeared in&#13;
Newsweek, The New York Times&#13;
and The Nation, will be among&#13;
participants in a Parkside Public&#13;
Forum on "War and Conflict in&#13;
Central America" from 12:30 to&#13;
2:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 20, in&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Nelson, who recently returned&#13;
from El Salvador and Guatemala,&#13;
is the author of a forthcoming&#13;
book, "Little Wars: The United&#13;
States and the Caribbean Basin,"&#13;
and recently was a guest on the&#13;
McNeil - Lehrer Report. A display&#13;
of her photographs from Central&#13;
American will be on display&#13;
during the forum.&#13;
Other panelists will be:&#13;
• Richard Millett, a Southern&#13;
Illinois University historian,&#13;
author of "Guardians of the&#13;
Dynasty" on Nicaraguan politics&#13;
and "The Restless Caribbean"&#13;
and a congressional consultant on&#13;
Central American affairs.&#13;
• Rodolfo Cortina, Cuban - born&#13;
director of the UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Spanish Speaking Outreach&#13;
Center and a specialist in Central&#13;
American and Caribbean politics&#13;
and culture.&#13;
• Gerald Greenfield, UW -&#13;
Parkside historian, Latin&#13;
Amer i c a n s p e c i a l i s t and a&#13;
ANNE NELSON&#13;
Fulbright Fellow in Brazil in 1981.&#13;
• Kenneth Hoover, moderator&#13;
and director of the Public Forum&#13;
series and a UW - Parkside&#13;
political scientist.&#13;
The series is sponsored by UW -&#13;
Parkside and the UW Extension&#13;
Department of Governmental&#13;
Affairs. The program is free and&#13;
open to the public. Persons attending&#13;
should park in the Union&#13;
Parking lot in the north side of t he&#13;
campus.&#13;
Kreuser sets goals&#13;
for second term by Edward Beal&#13;
Recently petitions have been&#13;
circulating to recall PSGA&#13;
President Jim Kreuser for the&#13;
1982-83 academic school year.&#13;
Obviously, there are some&#13;
students who feel Kreuser is incompetent.&#13;
Kreuser, in opposition, raised&#13;
the question, "Are we moving&#13;
forward with student government&#13;
in expressing the students interests&#13;
or not?" He explained&#13;
several proposals that he has in&#13;
consideration and has accomplished&#13;
in his last term. One&#13;
accomplishment that occurred&#13;
during last year's term was the&#13;
establishment of an active United&#13;
Council at Parkside.&#13;
This year's proposals are:&#13;
changes in the Breadth of&#13;
Knowledge requirement of foreign&#13;
language courses. He suggests&#13;
that the proposal considers setting&#13;
up the courses in such a way that&#13;
there isn't a certain pattern that&#13;
students would have to follow&#13;
when taking the courses.&#13;
Kreuser explained that there is&#13;
a need for class availability,&#13;
saying, "Classes have to be&#13;
available if we're going to require&#13;
something like that." Another&#13;
requirement in the proposal is a&#13;
computer course. Understanding&#13;
that computer courses require&#13;
extra time to be spent at the&#13;
computer terminal, Jim said, "If&#13;
we don't have the time now, we&#13;
won't have the time then."&#13;
Taking a broader perspective on&#13;
his plans for the 1982-83 school&#13;
year, Kreuser revealed three&#13;
major long range goals: starting&#13;
voter registration at Parkside for&#13;
students who haven't yet&#13;
registered to vote, giving them an&#13;
opportunity to do so for the&#13;
November elections; making&#13;
changes, where necessary, in the&#13;
PSGA constitution; deterring&#13;
future traditional students from&#13;
taking high school level courses.&#13;
The latter is in progress right now.&#13;
It's hopefully being accomplished&#13;
through Kreuser visiting area&#13;
high schools, stressing the importance&#13;
of getting this foundation&#13;
of education free while they can.&#13;
On the subject of h is availability&#13;
to the students, Kreuser admits to&#13;
not having any office hours. "I&#13;
had office hours and no one&#13;
stopped in, but what my policy has&#13;
been is that if anyone wants to talk&#13;
to me, hang a number on the door,&#13;
and I'll get back to them. Fine, no&#13;
problem. If they require or want&#13;
office hours — I don't know how&#13;
many they want — but, I'll be glad&#13;
to do it. I will have day hours as&#13;
well as night hours."&#13;
As far as appointing students to&#13;
open slots on committees goes, he&#13;
says that he has done so, and when&#13;
it comes for a meeting the appointees&#13;
just don't show up. That&#13;
brings up the complaint of&#13;
Kreuser not supplying the PSGA&#13;
Senate with pertinent information.&#13;
According to Jim,&#13;
information from every faculty -&#13;
student government meeting is&#13;
available in his office. He says&#13;
that his political subordinates just&#13;
don't take the time to inform&#13;
themselves on the information&#13;
available.&#13;
Commenting further, he said,&#13;
"Th e i n f o r m a t i o n is a v a i l a b l e . I'm&#13;
not going to take them by the hand&#13;
and lead them to it." When asked&#13;
what his priorities were, Kreuser&#13;
replied, "Library cutbacks and&#13;
legislative affairs."&#13;
Hopefully, if the recall doesn't&#13;
occur, these and whatever other&#13;
proposals Kreuser has will be&#13;
carried out to their fullest&#13;
potential. On the other hand, if th e&#13;
recall does occur — wi ll the next&#13;
PSGA President please stand up?&#13;
Inside&#13;
Reeves' book&#13;
a big hit&#13;
Ron Cuzner&#13;
jazzes it up&#13;
Tennis season&#13;
starts well&#13;
Cubs, White Sox&#13;
open season&#13;
Thursday, April 15,1982 RANGER&#13;
PSGA should work together&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am currently the Secretary of&#13;
PSGA, Inc. and would like to&#13;
address the students of Parkside&#13;
on the controversy around the&#13;
recall election for the office of&#13;
President. I would like to directly&#13;
point out that I am neither for this&#13;
recall or against it. I am trying&#13;
very hard to maintain a middle&#13;
ground within this matter, since I&#13;
work directly with all the individuals&#13;
involved.&#13;
I have sat back and watched and&#13;
listened to back - stabbing,&#13;
derogatory remarks, and endless&#13;
heated discussions over this entire&#13;
matter. A few people have written&#13;
letters to the editor stating what&#13;
wasn't done and what should be&#13;
done. I respect their opinions and&#13;
hope they respect mine.&#13;
I feel that the controversy is&#13;
that PSGA should be working as&#13;
one organization instead of just as&#13;
individuals. Some individuals&#13;
seem to think that PSGA is run by:&#13;
ONE powerful person, the&#13;
President. This is NOT the case.&#13;
The power does not come from&#13;
just one person, but from ALL the&#13;
Senators, ALL the Justices, and&#13;
BOTH the President and Vice -&#13;
President. This also includes ALL&#13;
the students of Parkside. It is not&#13;
fair to give credit just to one&#13;
person because it takes the joint&#13;
efforts of the ENTIRE Student&#13;
Government Association to get&#13;
things done. I can personally&#13;
vouch for my last remark because&#13;
I take the minutes from the Senate&#13;
meetings and have recorded information&#13;
of these joint efforts.&#13;
PSGA, Inc. is a powerful&#13;
organization that can only function&#13;
correctly with all its members&#13;
working side - by - side, and&#13;
keeping one another informed.&#13;
PSGA does work hard towards&#13;
common goals but needs the help&#13;
of the students of Parkside. The&#13;
students have a very important&#13;
voice in everything PSGA does&#13;
and has done. It is extremely&#13;
imperative to the overall effectiveness&#13;
of PSGA to have&#13;
quality people working&#13;
TOGETHER. It is the responsibility&#13;
of the students of Parkside&#13;
to choose a quality President to&#13;
direct, but not over - power, the&#13;
members of PSGA, Inc. It is the&#13;
decision of you, the students, to&#13;
make PSGA something to work&#13;
TOGETHER with and be proud of.&#13;
Thank you for your time.&#13;
Jenny L. Fink,&#13;
Secretary PSGA, Inc.&#13;
P.S. Allstudents are welcome to&#13;
attend PSGA Senate meetings,&#13;
which are held each week. The&#13;
time and place is posted on the&#13;
PSGA window.&#13;
Punk-a new wave rock § roll&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Last week, RANGER printed a&#13;
letter from Dave Odders and Jack&#13;
Zurawik denouncing punk rock. I&#13;
would like to reply:&#13;
Dear Dave and Jack,&#13;
I realize that one's feelings&#13;
about punk rock (or, as I'll call it,&#13;
new wave) are a matter of personal&#13;
opinion. However, I have&#13;
never met anybody who called the&#13;
genre "intolerable and&#13;
disgusting," and I certainly hope I&#13;
never meet anybody who refers to&#13;
it as "indignant."&#13;
The reasoning that punk rock is,&#13;
as you state, destroying the moral&#13;
fabric of society sounds&#13;
suspiciously like the initial&#13;
reaction to rock and roll about&#13;
twenty - five years ago. People&#13;
back then thought that rock undermined&#13;
the principles of a&#13;
capitalistic, democratic society.&#13;
But take a look at what rock and&#13;
roll is today; a multi - billion&#13;
dollar industry (and worse off for&#13;
it), and just try to convince people&#13;
that this country turned communist&#13;
in 1965, as the critics of&#13;
rock and roll predicted it would.&#13;
This country has changed a lot in&#13;
the last two decades, but not&#13;
because of music. As a matter of&#13;
fact, it is a basic truth that the&#13;
times shape the art, not vice&#13;
versa.&#13;
Campus Security&#13;
Safety is the goal&#13;
by Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
The Parkside Campus Security&#13;
Department is not only on campus&#13;
just to write parking tickets.&#13;
Although maintaining the parking&#13;
lots and enforcement of the&#13;
parking regulations is a&#13;
responsibility of the Security&#13;
Department, it is not its sole&#13;
function. The major objective of&#13;
the department is the protection&#13;
and safety of the campus community.&#13;
The Security Department&#13;
has initiated and is actively involved&#13;
in many programs and&#13;
services to aid those who use&#13;
Parkside's facilities.&#13;
An example of some of the&#13;
services that are available are: a&#13;
reward program for information&#13;
on crimes being committed on&#13;
campus; the development of a&#13;
rape prevention program; continuation&#13;
of the evening bus&#13;
,pab BRAZENLY PRESENTS: -."••"maw&#13;
FANATIC P OLITICAL GOON AND FRUSTRATED&#13;
WOULD-BE MURDERER G. GORDON LIDDY&#13;
AUTHOR. OR SWILL&#13;
o&#13;
Comparing new wave music to a&#13;
mid - thirties fascist movement is&#13;
not only fatuous and unnecessarily&#13;
sarcastic, it is also&#13;
absurd. The Nazi movement&#13;
preached the need for an extreme&#13;
right - wing totalitarian government.&#13;
The message of new wave,&#13;
if there is a message, is in the&#13;
power of the individual (which you&#13;
conveniently disregard in your&#13;
letter), and the superfluousness of&#13;
centralized organization. This is&#13;
called individualism, or as&#13;
detractors would call it, nihilism.&#13;
As far as I know, though, the last&#13;
time new wave music preached&#13;
any form of nihilistic thought was&#13;
about five years ago. Most current&#13;
new wave, in fact, is concerned&#13;
with positive political change, like&#13;
the sixties' flower power, but on a&#13;
more realistic level.&#13;
In short, new wave is just that —&#13;
a new trend in rock and roll. There&#13;
are sound musical and&#13;
philosophical principles to back&#13;
this up. If you don't believe me,&#13;
listen to some alongside an old&#13;
Beatles album. You'll see what I&#13;
mean.&#13;
However, if y ou still want music&#13;
that uses correct etiquette, is&#13;
socially uniform, has highly attractive&#13;
fashions, and is&#13;
capitalistic in nature, I suggest&#13;
you try disco.&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
WHAT CAN PRODUCE:&#13;
LASH YOURSELF TO A SEAT AND HEAR G. Gordon l/iwy&#13;
ASL®&#13;
Columnist rebuts protesting letters&#13;
service and maintaining the&#13;
campus lost and found records.&#13;
The Campus Security Department&#13;
is open from 8 a.m. until&#13;
midnight, Monday through&#13;
Friday. Officers are on duty 24&#13;
hours a day, seven days a week.&#13;
Future articles will appear in&#13;
the Ranger dealing with the different&#13;
services and programs&#13;
available to the campus community.&#13;
Information on how to&#13;
better protect your property from&#13;
theft and safety tips will be included.&#13;
Clarification of the&#13;
parking situation at Parkside will&#13;
be presented along with future&#13;
plans for its improvement.&#13;
Specific questions and problems&#13;
submitted to the Security&#13;
Department will also be dealt&#13;
with.&#13;
The Security Department is&#13;
here to serve you, the campus&#13;
by Chuck Ostrowski&#13;
I have recently received several&#13;
nasty letters in regards to some of&#13;
my recent articles. Why?&#13;
Disagreeing is one thing, but&#13;
being so negative about my&#13;
positions is another. Everybody&#13;
has the same opportunity to express&#13;
their opinions in this paper.&#13;
If you have a particular, radical&#13;
opinion disagreeing with mine you&#13;
are free to enter the office and&#13;
express your ideas the way I am.&#13;
For those who have criticized or&#13;
objected to my "name calling"&#13;
(or "negative comments" as I&#13;
regard them) because they feel&#13;
they are the same unoriginal&#13;
views expressed by hundreds of&#13;
other campus papers across the&#13;
country, you're missing the point.&#13;
I personally don't speak for&#13;
anybody but myself. The&#13;
RANGER'S views are not at all&#13;
represented by mine, but are&#13;
represented in the editorials&#13;
written by the RANGER'S editor.&#13;
His comments are representative&#13;
of the RANGER as a newspaper.&#13;
My comments are my own.&#13;
Anybody writing for the paper in&#13;
any capacity other than editor&#13;
would be expressing their particular&#13;
feelings and stances, not&#13;
the newspapers'.&#13;
It so happens that my views&#13;
generally take a more soft - line&#13;
approach. If that stance is common&#13;
in campus newspapers&#13;
throughout the nation, it is more&#13;
coincidental than purposeful. I do&#13;
not sift through the editorial pages&#13;
of various college papers, as&#13;
someone recently suggested, to&#13;
see how similar our content can&#13;
be. It just so happens that most&#13;
college students today who write&#13;
for their respective newspapers&#13;
are open - minded and fairly&#13;
liberal.&#13;
What I don't understand is how&#13;
students today, or anytime for&#13;
that matter, could be anything but&#13;
liberal. We're just beginning in&#13;
the world and never really had to&#13;
face anything other than flunking&#13;
Intro, to Human Communications,&#13;
so what do we have to be so conservative&#13;
about anyway? I can&#13;
understand (not agree, though)&#13;
why persons older and more&#13;
experienced would have a more&#13;
hard - line, conservative approach,&#13;
as they've lived longer&#13;
and have seen what goes on and so&#13;
therefore tend to be less idealistic.&#13;
community. Protection, safety&#13;
and awareness are the department&#13;
goals. Enforcement of the&#13;
laws and regulations of the State&#13;
of Wisconsin and the University&#13;
are an important and necessary&#13;
part of the Security Department's&#13;
concern.&#13;
That doesn't explain why 19, 20&#13;
and 21 year - old students should&#13;
be expected to act and think like&#13;
them. We have nothing to lose&#13;
from viewing situations and&#13;
problems idealistically.&#13;
So why not go for it? It seems&#13;
more reasonable for us to take a&#13;
softer "utopianish" approach to&#13;
life than to be as conservative and&#13;
somewhat feeble - minded as&#13;
some older adults. This planet&#13;
surely won't get any better if we&#13;
view the world the way Ronald&#13;
Reagan does, will it?&#13;
I'm not saying all my ideas are&#13;
right, or even workable for that&#13;
matter. But unworkable ideas&#13;
never stopped anybody anyway,&#13;
did they? I just believe that it's up&#13;
to us to take the initiative and run&#13;
with it. And our country is certainly&#13;
not taking the initiative by&#13;
electing a 71 year - old man&#13;
president, is it?&#13;
What is our country and today's&#13;
students doing then? It seems to&#13;
me that the prevailing concern is&#13;
being "set" for life by getting a&#13;
degree that ensures them $45,000&#13;
plus benefits yearly. The&#13;
problems won't be solved but at&#13;
least they'll be able to get through&#13;
them more comfortably.&#13;
One of th e things I'm advocating&#13;
is that you settle for half that&#13;
$45,000 and not be "set" for life&#13;
and try and resolve some of our&#13;
problems. Of course, your taking&#13;
fifty percent less than you could&#13;
conceivably earn won't solve, for&#13;
example, the rising censorship&#13;
problems in the United States. But&#13;
maybe you could get a job informing&#13;
people about the subject&#13;
and trigger a movement that&#13;
would end it. Your value to society&#13;
would increase markedly if you&#13;
took that approach rather than&#13;
sitting in a passionless neon - lit&#13;
cubicle pushing buttons all day.&#13;
Which is not to say that all&#13;
humanities courses are a god -&#13;
send either, as many people do&#13;
take advantage of their training&#13;
and go for the money. But if they&#13;
do "go for the money" it is at least&#13;
a direct contradiction of the ideas&#13;
behind a liberal arts education,&#13;
which tries to instill in you the&#13;
value of an education alone, as&#13;
opposed to strict business, administrative,&#13;
engineering, or&#13;
science programs which are&#13;
gotten truthfully, for the purpose&#13;
of making money. As for these&#13;
degrees social contributions, just&#13;
look at nuclear weaponry and&#13;
power; Chase Manhattan Bank&#13;
and Wall Street;, and some&#13;
governmental bureaucracies.&#13;
Each was created and now&#13;
operates because of our beliefs&#13;
that the applied sciences are&#13;
supreme.&#13;
In conclusion, I'm really not&#13;
looking for a policy or set of i deas&#13;
based on my views alone. If the&#13;
current approaches to our&#13;
problems succeeds, that's&#13;
FANTASTIC! I'm not tallying any&#13;
scores. But I don't believe today's&#13;
approaches will be successful,&#13;
which is my reason for advocating&#13;
alternative ways.&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Steve Myers&#13;
Mark Sanders&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Andy Petersen&#13;
Linda Andersen&#13;
Juli Janovicz&#13;
ganger Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Co-Photo Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Linda Adams, Edward Beal, Greg Bonofiglio, Carol Burns,&#13;
Patty DeLuisa, Mary Kaddatz, Joe Kimm, Karla Kobal,&#13;
Lisa Linstroth, Rick Luehr, Dick Oberbruner, Chuck&#13;
Ostrowski, Masood Shafiq, Tammy Shuemate, Jeff Wicks.&#13;
UW-Parkside and .he, are so...,&#13;
-—&#13;
paper with one inch maraTns^ATMMl * ,ypewri,ten' doublespaced on standard size&#13;
eluded for verification. letters must be signed and a telephone number in-&#13;
Narnes Will be with(,elcl {Qr va(id reasQns&#13;
reserves ah edVlwia* phv^eges^in ref?i'«u^ publica,ion on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
^defamatory content. refusing to print letters which contain false or&#13;
McCarthui'sm&#13;
Reeves' book considered real treasure "The Life and Times of Joe&#13;
McCarthy," a major new&#13;
biography of the Wisconsin&#13;
senator who made a career of anti&#13;
- Communism by Parkside&#13;
historian Thomas C. Reeves, has&#13;
just been issued by Stein and Day&#13;
New York.&#13;
The book is a selection of the&#13;
Book of the Month Club, the&#13;
History Book Club and the Quality&#13;
Paperback Book Club. It will be&#13;
republished in London, New&#13;
Zealand and Australia by Blond&#13;
and Briggs of London.&#13;
The Washington Monthly&#13;
Review, in praising the book, said&#13;
that Reeves "has put McCarthy&#13;
permanently in the Hall of Infamy."&#13;
Publishers Weekly, a major&#13;
trade journal, says ''This may be&#13;
as nearly definitive a biography&#13;
as we will ever have . . . Reeves&#13;
portrays America's most&#13;
celebrated demagogue as a brash,&#13;
ruthless political showman who&#13;
learned virtually by accident in&#13;
Wisconsin politics how to play the&#13;
press for headlines — and the&#13;
portrait makes the book throughout&#13;
... a complete page turner."&#13;
The reviewer adds "at awards&#13;
time, this excitingly readable&#13;
biography will be remembered."&#13;
Reeves begins a 10 - day media&#13;
tour on April 30 arranged by his&#13;
publisher and including a guest&#13;
appearance on "Good Morning,&#13;
America," and possibly several&#13;
other network talk shows. The&#13;
tour begins in Washington, D. C.,&#13;
and includes engagements in New&#13;
York, Boston, Dallas, Houston, St.&#13;
Louis, Chicago, Minneapolis, Los&#13;
Angeles and San Francisco.&#13;
Reviews are scheduled to appear&#13;
Sunday, April 11, in book sections&#13;
of major U. S. daily newspapers&#13;
including the New York Times.&#13;
Copies are now available in area&#13;
book stores.&#13;
Throughout the book, Reeves&#13;
portrays McCarthy as an opportunist&#13;
who played politics the&#13;
same way he played poker: there&#13;
was a lot of bluff involved.&#13;
Though McCarthy came to&#13;
national prominence by portraying&#13;
himself as a sort of one -&#13;
man army battling the Communists&#13;
he alleged had infiltrated&#13;
the government, Reeves says&#13;
McCarthy came to the issue&#13;
almost by accident.&#13;
"Joe turned to anti - Communism&#13;
... in large part because&#13;
he had run out of other issues that&#13;
could be used to vault his name&#13;
into headlines and help insure his&#13;
re - election."&#13;
Nor did McCarthy invent the&#13;
anti - Communist issue.&#13;
"The Dies Committee on Un -&#13;
American Activities, created in&#13;
1938, had pioneered virtually all&#13;
the techniques later ascribed to&#13;
'McCarthyism'," Reeves points&#13;
THOMAS REEVES&#13;
out. (The committee even attacked&#13;
the patriotism of child star&#13;
Shirley Temple.)&#13;
The difference, Reeves indicates,&#13;
was that McCarthy&#13;
raised the witch hunt to an art&#13;
form and became a kind of true&#13;
believer in his cause. That the&#13;
general public supported him was&#13;
largely a result of the political and&#13;
social frustration that followed&#13;
World War II.&#13;
The frank cynicism McCarthy&#13;
expressed about his early charges&#13;
of Communists in government&#13;
was replaced by "fanatical interest&#13;
in Reds who lurked in high&#13;
places," Reeves writes. "It was&#13;
ironic that while critics railed at&#13;
McCarthy for being wholly&#13;
cynical, immoral, and even&#13;
amoral, those closest to him knew&#13;
he had become a zealot."&#13;
Reeves comments that the&#13;
image McCarthy presented to the&#13;
public — the tough ex - Marine,&#13;
the super patriot, the martyr&#13;
waging a one - man war against&#13;
Communism — was strikingly&#13;
similar to the stereotypical John&#13;
Wayne movie role. It was also&#13;
good box office: McCarthy was&#13;
one of the GOP's most sought -&#13;
after speakers.&#13;
McCarthy's final fall from&#13;
grace was precipitated by the&#13;
Army - McCarthy hearings, which&#13;
the nation watched on television&#13;
as the senator ranted like a bar -&#13;
room brawler and "Point of order"&#13;
became a national catch -&#13;
phrase.&#13;
"Joe's behavior (at the&#13;
hearings) was a product of many&#13;
complex forces," Reeves writes.&#13;
"His temperment, of course,&#13;
played a vital role . . . ignorance&#13;
was also a factor . . . (he) studied&#13;
little, had no goals . . . thought&#13;
nothing out in advance . . . (his)&#13;
very real belief in the internal&#13;
Communist conspiracy."&#13;
His subsequent censure by the&#13;
Senate "destroyed McCarthy's&#13;
spirit, accelerated his physical&#13;
deterioration, and hastened his&#13;
death ... he was no longer a&#13;
national figure," Reeves says.&#13;
Reeves traces McCarthy's life&#13;
Opportunities in a changing&#13;
economy will be the theme of a&#13;
series of workshops on starting a&#13;
business and investing money at&#13;
Alumni Colloge '82 at Parkside.&#13;
The program is open to the interested&#13;
public as well as to UW -&#13;
P alumni and students.&#13;
An evening session devoted to&#13;
information on starting a small&#13;
business will be held at 7 p. m. on&#13;
Thursday, April 22.&#13;
An all - day program will be held&#13;
on Saturday, April 24, beginning&#13;
with a general session, "It It Time&#13;
to Begin Working for Yourself,"&#13;
presented by Sandra Herre, co -&#13;
owner of the Schoolhouse Gift&#13;
Shop, Racine and including a&#13;
luncheon address, "The Economic&#13;
Forecast for '82 and Beyond" by&#13;
UW - P economics professor&#13;
Richard Keehn.&#13;
Daytime workshop topics include&#13;
considerations when&#13;
starting a business, personal&#13;
finance, starting a service&#13;
Changing economy offers opportunity&#13;
or&#13;
consulting business, opportunities&#13;
in cottage and retail business and&#13;
mini - computers for home and&#13;
business. Instructors will be local&#13;
business people and university&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
The event is sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Alumni Association and&#13;
the Business Outreach and Small&#13;
Business Development Center at&#13;
UW - P. Fee for the evening&#13;
session is $3. The day fee is $10&#13;
including luncheon. Registration&#13;
information is available from the&#13;
Alumni and Placement Office at&#13;
UW - P (Phone 553-2452).&#13;
Speakers for the various&#13;
workshops sessions will be:&#13;
• Starting a Business - Timothy&#13;
P. Crawford, attorney at law,&#13;
Stewart, Peyton, Crawford and&#13;
Crawford, Racine, on legal&#13;
aspects of starting a business;&#13;
Kathy Venturelli, business loan&#13;
specialist, city of Kenosha, and&#13;
staff, Greater Kenosha&#13;
Development Program, on&#13;
developing a business plan; and&#13;
"Petrea Ann Durnan, president,&#13;
New Business Services, Flat Iron&#13;
Mall, Racine, on marketing and&#13;
promotion strategies.&#13;
• Personal Finances - Richard&#13;
Keehn, economics professor, UW -&#13;
P, Michael Poch, assistant vice&#13;
president, First National Bank of&#13;
Kenosha, and James Meyers, vice&#13;
president, Robert W. Baird &amp; Co.,&#13;
Racine, on IRA's, tax - deferred&#13;
annuities and traditional and new&#13;
investment opportunities.&#13;
• Starting a Service or Consulting&#13;
Business - Alan R. Bagg,&#13;
president, Corporate Images,&#13;
Inc., an advertising agency;&#13;
Durnan, whose firm assists clients&#13;
starting new businesses; and Rita&#13;
Nicholas and Pat Ruffolo, partners&#13;
in PR enterprises, a communication&#13;
support service for&#13;
business.&#13;
• Opportunities in Cottage and&#13;
Retail Businesses - Ralph Ruffolo,&#13;
owner, Ruffolo Enterprises, a ski&#13;
equipment manufacturer; Michele&#13;
Serpe, owner, Swiss Village, an&#13;
arts and crafts shop in Kenosha;&#13;
Joy Boatwright, owner Wesver's&#13;
Alley, Racine, which offers&#13;
custom designed weaving, yarns&#13;
and other supplies; Jack Haueter,&#13;
developer of Market Place, a&#13;
group of art, craft and specialty&#13;
shops in Oak Creek; and Richard&#13;
Wilson, president of Wilson&#13;
Variety, Inc., a Kenosha variety&#13;
store including a full - service&#13;
store. Jan Sinclair, UW - P, is&#13;
moderator.&#13;
• Mini - Computers for Home&#13;
and Business - Lance Evans,&#13;
representative of Colortron&#13;
Computer Division, a Racine firm&#13;
concentrating on specific applications&#13;
of small computers.&#13;
The evening session will feature&#13;
a panel of entrepeneurs and allow&#13;
for interaction with the audience. /&#13;
from his immigrant ancestors'&#13;
arrival in Wisconsin to his death&#13;
on May 2, 1957 in Bethesda Naval&#13;
Hospital, the victim of severe&#13;
liver damage caused by drinking.&#13;
Reeves shows vividly how&#13;
McCarthy's early Wisconsin years&#13;
shaped, almost fore - ordained, his&#13;
political career. He traces McCarthy's&#13;
youth: A drop - out, he&#13;
returned to finish four years of&#13;
high school in nine months after&#13;
an unsuccessful stint as a chicken&#13;
farmer. He completed Marquette&#13;
University Law School and&#13;
became, successively, a small -&#13;
town attorney, district attorney&#13;
and judge, perfecting his political&#13;
skills along the way.&#13;
On return from an undistinguished&#13;
tour of d uty with the&#13;
U. S. Marine Corps, he became, at&#13;
38, the youngest member of the&#13;
Senate.&#13;
Reeves has been at pains to&#13;
bring a balanced view of his&#13;
subject, avoiding what he considers&#13;
the biases, pro and con, of&#13;
earlier McCarthy biographers.&#13;
Unlike Richard Rovere, a&#13;
previous writer who believed&#13;
much of McCarthy's behavior was&#13;
rooted in a sense of inferiority,&#13;
Reeves sees McCarthy as a&#13;
creature of supreme self - confidence,&#13;
at least up to the time of&#13;
his censure and dissolution into&#13;
alcoholism.&#13;
The product of six years of&#13;
research, Reeves' book is richly&#13;
peopled both on the Wisconsin and&#13;
national levels. Almost anyone&#13;
with the remotest political&#13;
awareness will find people he&#13;
knows in its pages, a result both of&#13;
McCarthy's wide - ranging&#13;
acquaintances and Reeves'&#13;
tireless interviewing.&#13;
In preparing the volume,&#13;
Reeves talked to about 150 persons&#13;
with personal knowledge of McCarthy&#13;
and his career.&#13;
Among them was McCarthy's&#13;
wife, Jean McCarthy Minetti, who&#13;
granted the only interview she has&#13;
ever given to a McCarthy&#13;
biographer. The meeting took 3-&#13;
1/2 years to arrange.&#13;
Reeves also obtained interviews&#13;
with McCarthy's secret speechwriter,&#13;
his principal investigator&#13;
who was covertly assigned to the&#13;
senator by J. Edgar Hoover,&#13;
McCarthy's two closest personal&#13;
friends (Tom Korb of Milwaukee&#13;
and Judge Urban P. Van Susteren&#13;
of Appleton), and his brother&#13;
Stephen and sister Olive.&#13;
Reeves is a full professor of&#13;
history at Parkside and has been a&#13;
faculty member since 1970. ^LEADER^f&#13;
Downtown/Kenosha&#13;
Elm wood Plaza/Racine&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
Visit Kenosha's&#13;
LARGEST&#13;
Record Department&#13;
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— Records —&#13;
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YOUR REGISTRATION PACKET FOR FALL 1982&#13;
*&#13;
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will be available beginning Monday, April 12, 1982 *&#13;
*&#13;
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at the Informational Kiosk in WLLC Main Pace. *&#13;
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OFFICE OF INSTITUTIONAL&#13;
ANALYSIS AND REGISTRATION&#13;
The employer's side of the interview " I . . „ THAMCAL\RPC&#13;
by Mary Kirton Kaddatz&#13;
"The cost of poor personnel&#13;
selection was estimated in 1976 at&#13;
$1,750 per job vacancy; covering&#13;
newspaper advertising, employment&#13;
agency fees, interviewing&#13;
time, and administrative&#13;
costs," according to&#13;
Erwin S. Stanton (Successful&#13;
Personnel Recruiting and&#13;
Selection). By 1982 this figure has&#13;
doubled.&#13;
"The quality of a company's&#13;
personnel is frequently the single&#13;
factor that determines whether&#13;
the organization is going to be&#13;
successful, whether it will realize&#13;
a satisfactory return on its investment,"&#13;
said Stanton. It's&#13;
important that a sufficient&#13;
number of promotable candidates&#13;
are constantly brought into the&#13;
organization.&#13;
"People are our most important&#13;
asset. As labor costs rise, people&#13;
may very well be the&#13;
organization's prime asset," said&#13;
Stanton. When an employee is&#13;
unsuccessful (terminated), the&#13;
interviewing process begins all&#13;
over again and adds additional&#13;
hidden costs to the selection&#13;
process:&#13;
• The low quality of work&#13;
performed by the unsuccessful&#13;
employee while still on the job.&#13;
• The internal disorganization&#13;
and disruption that employee may&#13;
have caused.&#13;
• The customer ill - will and&#13;
alientation that may have been&#13;
generated, and perhaps&#13;
• The actual loss of a much&#13;
valued account.&#13;
Employers are exceptionally&#13;
wary of marginal employees.&#13;
These employees are not bad&#13;
enough to be grossly incompetent&#13;
or ineffective enough to be fired on&#13;
the spot. But they do lack basic&#13;
motivation, carry bad attitudes,&#13;
or just aren't capable of growing&#13;
with the company goals. The&#13;
marginal employee is tolerated,&#13;
kept on the payroll, never really&#13;
successful, failing completely to&#13;
generate a satisfactory volume of&#13;
business for the company. Some&#13;
danger signals to the employer&#13;
are:&#13;
• Sketchy, erratic job history,&#13;
brief periods of e mployment.&#13;
• Time gaps in employment&#13;
record (not reasonably accounted&#13;
for).&#13;
• Past salary requirements&#13;
higher than the company can&#13;
offer.&#13;
• Frequent moves suggests&#13;
personal instability or lack of&#13;
maturity.&#13;
• Past experience / education&#13;
not related to job specifications.&#13;
• Reasons for leaving are&#13;
undesirable, troublesome, or&#13;
suggest personal incompatibility&#13;
with other workers, superior.&#13;
• Physical disability or health&#13;
problem that would prevent&#13;
performance of the job.&#13;
Employers feel that good people&#13;
are always hard to find. Companies&#13;
are eager to attract, hire,&#13;
and retain a productive, satisfied,&#13;
and well - motivated employee.&#13;
There are four basic types of&#13;
screening interviews:&#13;
VISUAL SCREENING — very&#13;
noticeable in this area are the&#13;
applicants actions anytime near&#13;
or on the premises of the employer's&#13;
property. Sight Screening&#13;
can eliminate you quickly. Hostile&#13;
people who tear up applications,&#13;
under the influence of alcohol,&#13;
suffering from serious emotional&#13;
problems, accompanied by babies&#13;
/ dogs / friends, appearance and&#13;
dress unacceptable (for the&#13;
position a- dirty, slovenly, unshaven).&#13;
CRITICAL "KNOCK - OUT&#13;
QUESTIONS" — job&#13;
specifications are critical,&#13;
generally yes or no questions to&#13;
determine if you have related&#13;
experience or a specific degree&#13;
directly related to the position.&#13;
Motivation, positive attributes,&#13;
and good intentions are wily good&#13;
if you possess the critical&#13;
specifications required to perform&#13;
PREVIEWING APPLICATIONS&#13;
— give some indication whether or&#13;
not a more detailed, comprehensive&#13;
interview is called for.&#13;
Resumes tell what the applicant&#13;
wants the employer to know.&#13;
Applications tell companies what&#13;
they need to know (or what they&#13;
can legally ask on application&#13;
forms). A brief look at an application&#13;
can initiate a stand - up&#13;
interview to verify the information&#13;
/ impression given by&#13;
the applicant. If sent on your way&#13;
quickly, assume your impression&#13;
was not favorably disposed&#13;
toward the vacant position. If an&#13;
appointment is given to further&#13;
discuss your qualifications, some&#13;
interest has been generated. And&#13;
should be followed up on.&#13;
BRIEF JOB DESCRIPTION —&#13;
Job requirements and duties,&#13;
related conditions of employment&#13;
can be deterrants to the applicants&#13;
who are unfamiliar with&#13;
the full job requirements.&#13;
Examples are willingness to&#13;
accept shift assignments as a&#13;
condition of employment, compensation&#13;
may be less, relocation,&#13;
excessive amounts of travel or&#13;
time used to conduct business.&#13;
Enlightenment encourages&#13;
numerous applicants to remove&#13;
'Treshmen wait&#13;
for the weekend&#13;
to have a Michelob.&#13;
Seniors know betterV&#13;
Put a little&#13;
weekend&#13;
in your week.&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MADRIGRANO&#13;
1831 - 55th St.&#13;
Kenosha. Wise.&#13;
658-3553&#13;
themselves voluntarily, over -&#13;
qualified applicants lost interest&#13;
(especially when low salary is&#13;
mentioned).&#13;
Potential applicants may get&#13;
through these initial screening&#13;
processes well, but when it comes&#13;
time for the 2nd, 3rd and&#13;
sometimes 4th interview, the&#13;
applicant falls short unexpectedly.&#13;
Many employers try&#13;
very diligently to put you at ease.&#13;
"Many applicants are so at ease,&#13;
they nonchalantly confide in the&#13;
employer that they really have&#13;
avid interests in other areas — not&#13;
relating to the job that they are&#13;
applying for. And the employer&#13;
says, sorry, we can't use you,"&#13;
says Verna Zimmermann of the&#13;
Alumni and Placement Office.&#13;
"Each interview can make or&#13;
break your chances of being accepted&#13;
for employment," says&#13;
Zimmermann.&#13;
How Reliable Are Interviews?&#13;
William F. Glueck has come up&#13;
with the following generalizations&#13;
about interviews (supported by&#13;
research): "The attitudes of the&#13;
interviewer and and interviewee&#13;
influence the reliability of the&#13;
interview, as does the form of&#13;
questions and answers," says&#13;
Glueck (Personnel, A Diagnostic&#13;
Approach).&#13;
• Unfavorable relevant information&#13;
influences interviewers&#13;
more than favorable information,&#13;
and the earlier in the interview the&#13;
negative information is introduced,&#13;
the greater the negative&#13;
effect is.&#13;
• The interviewer's decision&#13;
may be affected by the characteristics&#13;
erf a previous applicant&#13;
(your competition).&#13;
• Work at listening to what and&#13;
how the interviewer communicates&#13;
to you. Many interviewers&#13;
are planning questions&#13;
when they should be listening. Be&#13;
aware of the nonverbal cues that&#13;
indicate this.&#13;
Remember, it's your interview&#13;
too? Bring up anything the interviewer&#13;
skips over that you feel&#13;
is pertinent to the performance of&#13;
the job you are applying for.&#13;
Pregnancy—&#13;
when unwed,&#13;
the answer&#13;
is never easy&#13;
Continued From Page Nine&#13;
me wrong, there are times when I&#13;
could just, well, there are times&#13;
when I get mad at him, but I&#13;
learned quickly that the 'good'&#13;
outranks the 'bad.' You have to&#13;
look at it that way. It would be&#13;
easy for me to go home at night&#13;
and get mad at David all the time,&#13;
but that's not the way a mother&#13;
behaves. A mother is supposed to&#13;
be patient, and kind, and never let&#13;
her child be unloved. Sometimes it&#13;
turns out to be quite a chore, but&#13;
like I said, the good outweighs the&#13;
bad."&#13;
Cathy didn't want to put David&#13;
up for adoption, because she was&#13;
afraid that she would not be able&#13;
to give him up for good. "I didn't&#13;
think any option would be easy,&#13;
but adoption was out, because I'm&#13;
sure that after I would have given&#13;
him up, I would have wanted him&#13;
back, and things don't work like&#13;
that, so I did things in a way I&#13;
knew they (Vould work out. I h ave&#13;
my son, and I support him&#13;
financially, and emotionally, and&#13;
he gives me more happiness than I&#13;
know what to do with. During the&#13;
day, he stays with the neighbor,&#13;
and my job allows me to spend a&#13;
lot of time with David. When I&#13;
graduate, I'll just have to work&#13;
during the day, and before I kn ow&#13;
it, he'll be starting school. We'll&#13;
stick it out together though, and&#13;
we'll get by."&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 15,1982&#13;
Powerline construction studied ITake a stand ral|v held u_P"kAde. anthropologist. i»rSnn with . . V^MMIVVI I A Parkside anthropologist Black, whit.&#13;
Richard W Stoffle, is conducting&#13;
ethnographic field studies in Utah&#13;
and Nevada to determine the&#13;
potential effects of power line&#13;
construction on Native American&#13;
l!an tnbes in those areas,&#13;
ihe research is supported by&#13;
two grants totalling $118,183 f rom&#13;
Applied Conservation Technology&#13;
Inc., of Fullerton, Cal., which is&#13;
directing the research for the&#13;
Intermountain Power Agency.&#13;
The studies focus on the impact&#13;
ol the power lines on Indian&#13;
religious beliefs, and physical&#13;
sites, plant and animal life important&#13;
to religious and&#13;
ceremonial traditions.&#13;
Stoffle has a staff of 30 persons&#13;
working on the project, including&#13;
12 Native Americans. One of the&#13;
Indians, Dan Bullets, is a major&#13;
religious leader of the Kaibab&#13;
Paiute tribe. Stoffle says he&#13;
believes it is the first time that a&#13;
person with Bullets' background&#13;
and influence with the Indians has&#13;
been involved with such a study&#13;
The Native American staff has&#13;
enabled the research team to&#13;
conduct interviews and meetings&#13;
with tribal councils in the&#13;
language of the people, Stoffle&#13;
said, opening a "new world" of&#13;
ethnographic investigation.&#13;
Stoffle said the group has been'&#13;
taping oral histories with tribal&#13;
old timers" who learned from&#13;
their parents of the Indians' first&#13;
extensive contact with non - native&#13;
civilization and the transitions&#13;
that resulted in tribal life. "It's&#13;
information that won't be around&#13;
m another 10 years," Stoffle said&#13;
The research team also is&#13;
breaking new ground in anthropological&#13;
methodology by&#13;
using three - dimensional raised&#13;
topographical maps in communicating&#13;
with non - English&#13;
speakers.&#13;
Art-addicts to hold show&#13;
The research staff includes Dr.&#13;
Henry Dobyns, a former UW-P&#13;
anthropology faculty member,&#13;
who now is at the Newberry&#13;
Library Center for the Study of the&#13;
American Indian.&#13;
Stoffle expects to complete the&#13;
studies by August 1. They are the&#13;
fifth and sixth major social impact&#13;
projects he has completed in&#13;
their area, where he directed&#13;
Parkside Field Schools in Anthropology&#13;
from 1973 t o 1975.&#13;
Stoffle, who earned his PhD&#13;
degree from the University of&#13;
Kentucky, joined the UW-P&#13;
faculty in 1972 and currently is&#13;
director of its Urban Anthropology&#13;
Field School which&#13;
conducts continuing studies of the&#13;
social and economic impact of&#13;
Lake Michigan recreational&#13;
fishing on the Kenosha - Racine&#13;
area.&#13;
A rally to protest the direction&#13;
and effects of the Reagan Administration,&#13;
and to hear new&#13;
ideas and solutions is planned for&#13;
Milwaukee's MECCA on Saturday&#13;
evening, April 24,1982, in the East&#13;
Hall at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
It is sponsored by the "Take A&#13;
Stand" Rally Committee.&#13;
Sandra Jones, co - ordinator for&#13;
the Rally Committee, charged&#13;
today that "the working people of&#13;
Milwaukee are being backed up&#13;
against the wall by Reaganomics&#13;
and Governor Dreyfus' support&#13;
for the 'new federalism'. It is time&#13;
for the people themselves —&#13;
Black, white, Chicano, men,&#13;
women and youth — to take a&#13;
stand.&#13;
Gus Hall, General Secretary of&#13;
the Communist Party, U.S.A., and&#13;
its 1980 Presidential candidate has&#13;
accepted the Committee's invitation&#13;
to be the main speaker at&#13;
the "Take A Stand" Rally. Angela&#13;
Davis, author of the newly -&#13;
released book, "WOMEN, RACE&#13;
AND CLASS" and co - chairperson&#13;
of the National Alliance Against&#13;
Racist and Political Repression&#13;
will be a featured guest.&#13;
For information about tickets&#13;
for the rally, call 414-931-8&#13;
Job prospects worsen&#13;
On Monday, April 19, the Art&#13;
Addicts and the Art discipline will&#13;
be sponsoring the 1982 Student Art&#13;
Show opening and reception inthe&#13;
Communication Arts Gallery. The&#13;
special guest will be Charles&#13;
Toman, Assistant Curator of&#13;
Education at the Milwaukee Art&#13;
Museum.&#13;
Toman will give a presentation&#13;
on the works in the exhibit, and&#13;
present awards to artists and their&#13;
works. The reception is open to all&#13;
Parkside students and the public.&#13;
The reception begins at 7 p.m. and&#13;
will conclude at 9 p.m. Toman will&#13;
begin his presentation at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Any students desiring to enter&#13;
works of art done here at Parkside&#13;
within the last two years may do&#13;
so today and Friday. The drop off&#13;
area is the Comm. Arts gallery,&#13;
and may be dropped off between&#13;
Conscientious&#13;
objectors&#13;
Young men who want to get&#13;
conscientious objector status&#13;
should act now, says the New Call&#13;
to Peacemaking, a Eugene,&#13;
Oregon, draft counseling group&#13;
affiliated with three churches.&#13;
Whether or not they decide to&#13;
register for the draft, young men&#13;
should put a statement of their&#13;
feelings down on paper and file it&#13;
with a religious group or draft&#13;
counseling service, says the New&#13;
Call. Those who wait until an&#13;
actual draft is imminent before&#13;
expressing their feelings will have&#13;
less credibility.&#13;
Gunderson&#13;
given grant&#13;
A $93,480 grant from the&#13;
National Institutes of Health&#13;
(NIH) has been awarded to a&#13;
Parkside neurobiologist, Ross W.&#13;
Gundersen, to support a three -&#13;
year study of in vitro directional&#13;
growth of motor neurites in chick&#13;
embryos.&#13;
Gundersen's special interest is&#13;
developmental neurobiology,&#13;
particularly the factors which&#13;
help guide nerve cell processes to&#13;
their target tissues.&#13;
Gundersen says that such&#13;
studies are important because&#13;
they may one day have medical&#13;
implications for the treatment of&#13;
injuries to the central nervous&#13;
system which involve the&#13;
guidance of regenerating fibers to&#13;
their correct destinations.&#13;
Gundersen, an assistant&#13;
professor of life science, came to&#13;
UW-Parkside last fall. He&#13;
received his PhD at the University&#13;
of Illinois and spent four years as&#13;
a post - doctoral researcher at the&#13;
medical schools of the University&#13;
of Miami and the University of&#13;
Colorado.&#13;
10 a .m. and 5 p.m. on Thursday,&#13;
and 10 a.m. to3:30 p.m. on Friday.&#13;
See the exhibition prospectus for&#13;
other rules for entering, obtainable&#13;
on the D-l level of the&#13;
Comm. Arts area.&#13;
Job prospects for 1982 graduates&#13;
may not be as good as predicted&#13;
last November. Placement officers&#13;
at schools around the&#13;
country say a significant number&#13;
of companies have cancelled&#13;
spring interviews because of the&#13;
economy. One administrator of&#13;
Northwestern University's Endicott&#13;
Report on campus&#13;
recruiting plans says recent&#13;
economic changes, due to a slump&#13;
in retail sales, metals and the oil&#13;
industry, have made earlier&#13;
hiring predictions seem too optimistic.&#13;
When solitons meet. . .&#13;
Non-credit dance class&#13;
Non - credit dance classes for&#13;
teens and adults will be offered at&#13;
Parkside this summer under&#13;
auspices of the Community&#13;
Educational Programs Office.&#13;
A six - week ballet class for&#13;
junior and senior high school&#13;
students will run from 10 to 11:15&#13;
a.m. Mondays and Wednesdays&#13;
from June 21 to July 28. A jazz&#13;
class for adults will meet at 6:30&#13;
p.m. Tuesdays June 22 to Aug. 10.&#13;
Both classes will be in the Communication&#13;
Arts Building, Room&#13;
140.&#13;
Kathleen Zavada, dance instructor&#13;
at UW-Parkside and UWMilwaukee,&#13;
will teach the courses.&#13;
Cost for the ballet class is $40;&#13;
the jazz class, $30. For further&#13;
information, call 553-2312.&#13;
We are all familiar with waves&#13;
in nature — water waves, sound&#13;
waves, light waves, etc. But there&#13;
are also many phenomena which&#13;
are actually waves, even though&#13;
we may not think of them as&#13;
waves. These are the so-called&#13;
solitary waves, examples of which&#13;
are things like nerve impulses and&#13;
sonic booms. A special class of&#13;
solitary waves, called solitons,&#13;
has the unusual property that&#13;
when solitons meet, they can pass&#13;
through one another unchanged.&#13;
Solitons were first observed as&#13;
solitary water waves in a canal in&#13;
Scotland in the 19th century, but&#13;
their detailed study languished&#13;
until the advent of the modern&#13;
computer. Now the concept of the&#13;
soli ton has found application in&#13;
practically every branch of&#13;
physics from hydrodynamics to&#13;
elementary particles.&#13;
Solitons will be the subject of a&#13;
Physics Colloquium on Wednesday,&#13;
April 21. The speaker will&#13;
be Dr. Alwyn C. Scott, director of&#13;
the Center for Nonlinear Studies&#13;
at Los Alamos National&#13;
Laboratory. Dr. Scott has&#13;
published numerous books and&#13;
papers on the subject of solitons&#13;
and nonlinear wave propagation,&#13;
and is an internationally known&#13;
authority on those subjects. His&#13;
talk, entitled "Solitons," will be&#13;
given at 1:00 p.m., April 21, in 230&#13;
Greenquist Hall. The public is&#13;
invited.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside ^ .&#13;
Public forum&#13;
War and Conflict&#13;
in Central America&#13;
TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 12:50 PM, GREENQUIST H ALL 103&#13;
ANNE N ELSON, PHOTOJOURNALIST, RECENTLY R ETURNED F ROM EL SALVADOR A ND&#13;
GUATEMALA; AUTHOR, LITTLE-WARS: THE U NITED S TATES A ND TH F&#13;
(FORTHCOMING), PHOTOS /ARTICL ES IN NEWSWEEK, NEW YORK TI MES,&#13;
IN THESE TI MES, THE N ATION; GUEST O N M C N EIL-LEHRER REPORT ~&#13;
RICHARD M ILLETT, HISTORIAN, SOUTHERN ILLIN OIS UN IVERSITY, AUTHOR,&#13;
GUARDIANS O F T HE D YNASTY (ON N ICARAGUAN POL ITICS), 1977; THE&#13;
RESTLESS C ARIBBEAN, 1979; CONGRESSIONAL C ONSULTANT O N C ENTRAL&#13;
AMERICAN A FFAIRS&#13;
R0D0LF0 CO RTINA, DIRECTOR, SPANISH S PEAKING O UTREACH C ENTER, UNIVERSITY&#13;
OF W ISCONSIN-MILWAUKEE, SPECIALIST IN CENTRAL A MERICAN A ND C ARIBBEAN&#13;
POLITICS AND C ULTURE&#13;
GERALD G REENFIELD, HISTORIAN, UNIVERSITY OF W ISCONSIN-PARKSIDE, LATIN&#13;
AMERICAN SP ECIALIST, FULBRIGHT F ELLOW IN BRAZIL, 1981&#13;
KENNETH H OOVER, MODERATOR, DIRECTOR, PUBLIC F ORUM, POLITICAL SC IENTIST,&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF W ISCONSIN-PARKSIDE&#13;
FREE A ND O PEN T O T HE P UBLIC&#13;
*N0TE: THERE W ILL B E A D ISPLAY OF&#13;
MS. NELSON'S P HOTOGRAPHS A T T HE&#13;
PUBLIC F ORUM.&#13;
Co- S p o n s o r e d by the Uni v e r s i t y o f&#13;
W i s c o n s i n - P a r k s i d e and UW EX- D e p a r t -&#13;
men t of Gov e r nmen t a l Af f a i r s&#13;
mtiTv or .uromiw E&gt; TENSION ir «ive«|iTy o. »ncomiN p.m.ip.&#13;
6 Thursday, April 15,1982 RANGER&#13;
•• •• Club Events&#13;
S.W.E.A.&#13;
There will be a S.W.E.A.&#13;
meeting Monday, May 3. S.W.E.A.&#13;
received the Outstanding Student&#13;
Wisconsin Education Award for&#13;
1981-82 at the representative&#13;
assembly that was held in&#13;
Oshkosh. The award was given to&#13;
the club with most members,&#13;
participation, and club events.&#13;
Elections were held for 1982-83.&#13;
The officers for the next year are:&#13;
President, Todd Murray; Vice -&#13;
President, Bert Hartnell;&#13;
Secretary, Valerie Olson;&#13;
Treasurer, Sue Flaherty; and&#13;
Publicity, Linda Soukeyasian.&#13;
International&#13;
Student Organization&#13;
The International Students&#13;
Organization is sponsoring a talk&#13;
on "Protecting the World's&#13;
Resources — Is Time Running&#13;
OUT?" The talk will be given by&#13;
Paul Hayes, a science and energy&#13;
reporter for the Milwaukee&#13;
Journal, on April 21, at 1 p.m. in&#13;
MOLN 105. Everyone is welcome&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Computer Club&#13;
Part 3 of Computer Graphics on&#13;
Display will be shown Friday,&#13;
April 23, in Grnq. 103. There will&#13;
be two sessions this week, from 1-&#13;
2:30 p.m., and from 2:304 p.m.&#13;
Some of the topics are the Evans&#13;
• •••&#13;
and Sutherland Flight Simulator,&#13;
Vidsizer; a combination of&#13;
computer graphics and synthesizer&#13;
effects, ZGRASS; a&#13;
graphic system demonstration,&#13;
and Dubner demo tape. The event&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
Geology Colloquium&#13;
The Geology Colloquium for&#13;
Friday, April 16 is "Gideon&#13;
Mantell and the Discovery of&#13;
Dinosaurs." The talk will be given&#13;
by Dr. Dennis R. Dean of the&#13;
Humanities Program - Parkside,&#13;
and begins at 1 p.m.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon's second&#13;
annual LOOP 500 bike race is&#13;
scheduled for Wednesday, April&#13;
28, at 1 p.m. Four - member teams&#13;
can compete in the relay race&#13;
along the inner loop road. Each&#13;
team member receives a LOOP&#13;
500 T-shirt and a beer in the Union.&#13;
Teams can register for the event&#13;
on April 20-21 in the Molinaro&#13;
concourse.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
Women in Business invite all to&#13;
join them for Aerobic dancing in&#13;
the Phy Ed. Wrestling room on&#13;
April 19 and 20. On May 7 and 8,&#13;
Accent on Women will be&#13;
presented here at Parkside.&#13;
Please pick up a brochure and&#13;
register by April 30.&#13;
State budget decisions&#13;
could affect student fees&#13;
Students can expect a larger&#13;
tuition bill next fall, and just how&#13;
high tuition will go partly depends&#13;
on budget decisions state&#13;
Legislators make in the days&#13;
ahead. In the budget deliberations&#13;
scheduled for this Special Session&#13;
of th e Legislature, Legislators will&#13;
decide whether to reduce state&#13;
support of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin and whether to give the&#13;
UW Board of Regents the&#13;
authority to raise tuition to offset&#13;
the cut in state support.&#13;
The budget proposed by&#13;
Governor Dreyfus, SB 783, calls&#13;
fro cutting state support of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
by $25.2 million. That cut is part of&#13;
the Governor's proposal to reduce&#13;
the budgets of state agencies by&#13;
2% for this fiscal year (1981-1982)&#13;
and 4% for next fiscal year (1982-&#13;
19&amp;3). While other state agencies&#13;
in addition to the UW are affected,&#13;
the UW stands to lose the largest&#13;
amount in absolute dollars.&#13;
Action on the budget proposal is&#13;
now due in the state Assembly.&#13;
Speaker of the Assembly,&#13;
Representative Ed Jackamonis&#13;
(D - Waukesha), fielded a&#13;
proposal last month which would&#13;
reduce the proposed cuts to the&#13;
UW System. Instead of a 4% cut&#13;
for 1982 - 1983, the Jackamonis&#13;
plan calls for only a 2% reduction&#13;
in the UW budget for 1982 - 1983.&#13;
That would save the University&#13;
about $8.5 million for next year.&#13;
The Jackamonis proposal also&#13;
stipulates that the UW Board of&#13;
Regents could increase tuition&#13;
next fall to make up for cuts in&#13;
state support to the UW. Under the&#13;
current system, the Regents can&#13;
request a tuition increase but&#13;
must receive approval from the&#13;
Department of Administration&#13;
and the Joint Committee on&#13;
Finance to spend the money&#13;
collected from the fee increase.&#13;
The current system allowed&#13;
students to fight the spring&#13;
semester surcharge in the&#13;
Legislature and forced UW administrators&#13;
to specify how the&#13;
money collected from a surcharge&#13;
would be spent.&#13;
Under the Jackamonis plan, the&#13;
Regents would have the authority&#13;
to raise tuition to offset state cuts&#13;
without having to seek the approval&#13;
of the Department of&#13;
Administration and the Finance&#13;
Committee. Jackamonis is&#13;
suggesting that the cut to the UW&#13;
be reduced from 4% to 2% and&#13;
that the Regents be given the&#13;
authority to raise tuition to make&#13;
up for the 2% cut still in place.&#13;
Compensation for a 2% cut in the&#13;
1982 - 1983 UW budget would&#13;
require about a 15% increase in&#13;
tuition, more than a $100 i ncrease&#13;
in tuition for next year.&#13;
Whether either of Jackamonis'&#13;
proposals have support will&#13;
become clear as members of the&#13;
Assembly begin to debate the&#13;
budget. The state Senate, which&#13;
approved a modified version of&#13;
the Governor's budget proposal&#13;
last month, left the $25.2 million&#13;
cut to the UW intact and did not&#13;
alter the current system for&#13;
establishing" tuition levels.&#13;
The Board of Regents, who are&#13;
scheduled to make recommendations&#13;
on fall tuition at their&#13;
May or June meeting, are likely to&#13;
decide on tuition levels based on&#13;
what comes out.of the Legislature&#13;
this month. Whether the&#13;
Legislature reduces the 4% cut for&#13;
next year and whether the&#13;
Legislature gives the Regents a&#13;
green light on raising tuition will&#13;
show in student fees next fall.&#13;
Folk arts influence explored&#13;
McKeown memorial&#13;
scholarship accepted&#13;
The UW System Board of&#13;
Regents April 9 accepted contributions&#13;
of $1,176 to the James E.&#13;
McKeown Memorial Scholarship&#13;
Fund at Parkside.&#13;
The scholarship memorializes a&#13;
UW-P sociology professor who&#13;
died last December.&#13;
McKeown joined the UW-P&#13;
faculty in 1970 after serving as&#13;
Chair of the Sociology Department&#13;
at DePaul University from&#13;
1962 to 1970. He was the author of a&#13;
number of articles, monographs&#13;
and books dealing with a wide&#13;
range of subjcts including juvenile&#13;
delinquency, criminal justice,&#13;
.aging, urban politics, social&#13;
theory and race relations.&#13;
The scholarship fund is administered&#13;
by the Parkside&#13;
Behavioral Science Division.&#13;
"American Folk Art and Its&#13;
Influence on American Art" will&#13;
be the topic of a slide - lecture by&#13;
Russell Bowman, chief curator at&#13;
the Milwaukee Art Museum, on&#13;
Thursday, April 15, at Parkside at&#13;
3:30 p. m. in Greenquist Hall,&#13;
Room 101.&#13;
Bowman will discuss the influence&#13;
that American folk art, its&#13;
stylizations and iconography,&#13;
have had on the formal artists of&#13;
this century.&#13;
His talk is part of a free public&#13;
art history seminar series titled&#13;
"Art, Style and Society"&#13;
organized by the UW - Parkside&#13;
Art Discipline.&#13;
Last fall, Bowman organized an&#13;
exhibition of American Folk Art&#13;
from the Herbert Hemphill&#13;
Collection at the Milwaukee Art&#13;
Museum. The exhibit is now on&#13;
tour.&#13;
Before coming to the Milwaukee&#13;
Art Museum, Bowman was&#13;
Director of Education at The&#13;
Museum of Contemporary Art in&#13;
Chicago and was a lecturer in art&#13;
history at UW - Parkside. He&#13;
received his MA from the&#13;
University of Chicago, where he is&#13;
presently completing his doctorate.&#13;
He is the author of a&#13;
number of catalog essays and&#13;
articles for "Art in America" and&#13;
"Arts Magazine."&#13;
All of the lectures in the series&#13;
address the issue of h ow art forms&#13;
and styles relate to their social&#13;
contexts. Each lecture is followed&#13;
by a discussion period.&#13;
The final lecture in the series&#13;
will be on May 6, at 3:30 p. m. in&#13;
Greenquist 101. Jack Burnheim of&#13;
Northwestern University will&#13;
discuss "Duchamp's Mysticism:&#13;
Toward a Theory of Modernism&#13;
and Post - Modernism."&#13;
WE'LL PAY YOU 70 GET INTO&#13;
SHAPE THIS SUMMER.&#13;
If you have at least&#13;
two years of college left,&#13;
you can spend six weeks at&#13;
our Army ROTC Basic&#13;
Camp this summer and earn&#13;
approximately $600.&#13;
And if you qualify, you&#13;
can enter the ROTC 2-&#13;
Year Program this fall and&#13;
receive up to $ 1,000 a year.&#13;
But the big payoff&#13;
happens on graduation day.&#13;
That's when you receive&#13;
an officer's commission.&#13;
So get your body in&#13;
shape (not to mention your&#13;
bank account).&#13;
Enroll in Army ROTC.&#13;
For more information,&#13;
contact your Professor of&#13;
Military Science.&#13;
m ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BE ALLYOU CAN BE.&#13;
How to&#13;
do well in&#13;
Economy Class Simple. Fly Capitol Air's Economy Class. Our&#13;
fares are the lowest of any scheduled airline so&#13;
you can use the money you save for lots of&#13;
other things. Like a Eurail pass if you fly us to&#13;
Brussels, Frankfurt or Zurich. More time in the&#13;
sun if you're headed for Miami, San Juan or&#13;
Puerto Plata. Or for even more fun in New York,&#13;
Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago or Boston.&#13;
And, if you are flying to Europe this summer,&#13;
make your reservation and buy your ticket&#13;
now. With our guaranteed fare policy you are&#13;
protected against any fare increases from now&#13;
until departure.&#13;
So if you want to do well in Economy Class,&#13;
fly Capitol's.&#13;
For reservations, call your Travel Agent or&#13;
Capitol at 312-347-0230 in Chicago, 800-572-&#13;
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SCHEDULED AIRLINE SERVICE&#13;
T THE LOWEST FARES&#13;
San Fronctacbi&#13;
Utopia rocks to the right&#13;
by Mark Sanders&#13;
Utopia, a group established in&#13;
the mid - seventies by Todd&#13;
Rundgren, capitalizes on the&#13;
recent trend toward conservatism&#13;
in this country on their latest&#13;
album, "Swing to the Right."&#13;
If you are not already familiar&#13;
with Utopia it is only because&#13;
Utopia songs are rarely played on&#13;
the local rock radio stations. Most&#13;
of the music played on popular&#13;
rock radio stations in recent times&#13;
could be described as mindless,&#13;
repetitive, uninspired (except by&#13;
drugs) and non - creative. Groups&#13;
like Genesis, Journey, Rush and&#13;
Billy Squier (while having&#13;
stylistic differences) insist on&#13;
turning out records that sound&#13;
like homogenized Led Zepplin&#13;
regurgitations. Don't get me&#13;
wrong — Led Zepplin WAS a great&#13;
rock and roll group, but that was&#13;
ten years ago. In case you have&#13;
not checked your calendar lately,&#13;
it is 1982 and you would think some&#13;
creative force would have brought&#13;
more variety and individuality to&#13;
rock and roll since the seventies.&#13;
Those creative forces do exist&#13;
(somewhere out in musicland) but&#13;
they are being stifled by the&#13;
broadcast medium to the point of&#13;
censorship — which is what&#13;
"Swing to the Right" is all about.&#13;
On the cover of this album,&#13;
photographs of a book burning&#13;
that probably took place in the&#13;
fifties by a group of J erry Falwell&#13;
types serves to illustrate the&#13;
lyrical content of this album.&#13;
Superimposed into the hands of a&#13;
child on the front cover picture is&#13;
a copy of the album — a nd it is&#13;
about to be censored at 451&#13;
degrees Fahrenheit. Whoever did&#13;
the artwork here was correct on&#13;
two counts: One — this is a very&#13;
"hot" album, and Two — it is&#13;
being "censored" by local radio&#13;
stations.&#13;
The album is similar to the late&#13;
sixties anti - establishment music&#13;
but with a 1980's flair that makes&#13;
it very interesting — and very&#13;
good. Todd Rundgren, who writes&#13;
computer programs in his spare&#13;
time (Todd made the "Utopia&#13;
Video Graphics Tablet" system&#13;
for Apple) displays much of his&#13;
masterfully refreshing guitar&#13;
work while Roger Powell competently&#13;
plays the synthesizers&#13;
that he builds himself in such a&#13;
way as to not sound like a video&#13;
arcade on a Saturday afternoon.&#13;
The powerful bass line of Kasim&#13;
Sulton is complemented by the&#13;
unique drumming style of Willie&#13;
Wilcox.&#13;
Highlights of this album include&#13;
"Lysistrata," an anti - war song&#13;
based on the Greek comedy made&#13;
relevant for today's pre-World&#13;
War Three society. Also good is&#13;
"For the Love of Money," a&#13;
synthesizer - laden remake of an&#13;
old Gamble and Huff song. This is&#13;
the only non - original cut on the&#13;
album. A parody of today's punk&#13;
rock fad "Junk Rock (Million&#13;
Monkeys)" has a purposely&#13;
monotonous rhythm that exemplifies&#13;
current punk hits. Most of&#13;
the other cuts on the album are&#13;
well done musically while dealing&#13;
lyrically with various attributes of&#13;
today's society. The low point of&#13;
the album, "Fahrenheit 451," is a&#13;
disco - influenced ditty based on&#13;
the Bradbury classic about book&#13;
burnings. This cut is made&#13;
tolerable only by its brevity.&#13;
Despite the cynical nature of the&#13;
music here, the last cut, "One&#13;
World," is a fast moving, optimistically&#13;
flavored tune that&#13;
confesses the idea that even&#13;
though some things in today's&#13;
society are not too good, in&#13;
general, things are still pretty&#13;
good in this country.&#13;
The only intrinsic fault on&#13;
"Swing to the Right" is the&#13;
mathematical precision by which&#13;
each note seems to be played. This&#13;
is a well - engineered album and&#13;
the sound quality is excellent.&#13;
Utopia albums are generally&#13;
unpredictable in content — a ll of&#13;
the past Utopia albums have been&#13;
completely different. A valid&#13;
comparison of these albums is&#13;
hard to make but I would label this&#13;
one an "average" Utopia album.&#13;
However, the average Utopia&#13;
album is twenty times better than&#13;
popular music played on the radio&#13;
so in this context I would give&#13;
"Swing to the Right" an A - minus.&#13;
Definitely a very good album, but&#13;
certainly not Utopia's best.&#13;
soncxxxmy&#13;
Take refuge in this jazz spot&#13;
by Tony Rogers&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
I wrote an article for the&#13;
Christmas issue of the Ranger on&#13;
all the neat, cultured, and fun&#13;
places to go in Milwaukee at night.&#13;
It was a pretty good article (ha,&#13;
ha, ha) and it talked about several&#13;
different nightspots. But little did&#13;
I know that right here in my&#13;
hometown there would be a really&#13;
sharp place to eat, drink, and see&#13;
and hear live jazz. Yes, you heard&#13;
me right, there is a place like that&#13;
in Racine, and it is known as the&#13;
Sanctuary Restaurant.&#13;
I went to the Sanctuary for the&#13;
first time last Saturday night after&#13;
hearing that they were featuring a&#13;
live jazz combo that evening. I&#13;
arrived about nine p.m. or so, and&#13;
although it was crowded my group&#13;
managed to get good seats at a&#13;
large table. I looked around, and&#13;
got my first surprise of the&#13;
evening. It was really nice! I&#13;
mean, itwasn't fancy or anything,&#13;
but it wasn't inundated in&#13;
rusticism either, like a lot of&#13;
places are. The restaurant is&#13;
basically long and rectangular,&#13;
with an extremely high ceiling&#13;
holding large, low - lit lamps. The&#13;
bar is at the back, with tables in&#13;
the large middle space, and a&#13;
small stage for the musicians at&#13;
the front. The decor is understated:&#13;
lots of wood, not too&#13;
many silly paintings or anything,&#13;
very simple, austere, clean. Very&#13;
nice.&#13;
I was served by a very pleasant&#13;
waitress, and had the best grilled&#13;
ham and cheese sandwich I've&#13;
ever had, with a scrumptous piece&#13;
of french silk pie to top it off. The&#13;
menu includes quiche, crepes,&#13;
salads, all kinds of sandwiches,&#13;
and about anything else you can&#13;
think of. There are several different&#13;
kinds of wine, and a fairly,&#13;
large selection of domestic and&#13;
imported beers., I recommend the&#13;
Labatt's Ale.&#13;
The jazz group, a local one, was&#13;
pretty good, and included a drum&#13;
and acoustic bass backup for a&#13;
fine saxophone / clarinetist and an&#13;
excellent pianist. There were even&#13;
a few vocal numbers belted out by&#13;
an enjoyable singer. All in all, not&#13;
bad for a small local combo.&#13;
In sum, the Sanctuary has&#13;
friendly waitresses-serving great&#13;
food and drink at reasonable&#13;
prices in a jovial atmosphere with&#13;
a nice jazz group playing on&#13;
Saturday nights. Sound good? The&#13;
Sanctuary is located in downtown&#13;
Racine at 231 Main St., and is open&#13;
from 11:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.&#13;
Monday through Friday, and from&#13;
11:30 to 1:00 a.m. on Saturdays.&#13;
Burned u p&#13;
A contemplation of college to condo conversion&#13;
by Carol Burns&#13;
What if they gave a university&#13;
and nobody came? There's talk of&#13;
cutting the budget -again. Pretty&#13;
soon no one will be able to afford&#13;
to go on to school. Parkside could&#13;
get cancelled for lack of funds&#13;
rather than lack of interest.&#13;
What would the state of&#13;
Wisconsin do with a vacant set of&#13;
buildings the size o. Parkside?&#13;
Maybe Dreyfus would finally have&#13;
a site for his new prision. No, the&#13;
upstanding Kenosha and Racine&#13;
residents would never go for that.&#13;
Let's try something else. How&#13;
about another shopping center?&#13;
This area could use a Gimbles, but&#13;
everybody knows that the new&#13;
mall in Racine would be hard to&#13;
top. No, that would never go over&#13;
either — not enough parking&#13;
space.&#13;
What should the state do to&#13;
make the most money possible&#13;
from the sale of Parkside? Why,&#13;
that's easy: convert into time -&#13;
share condominiums! There's a&#13;
lot to offer prospective buyers —&#13;
a swimming pool, racquetball&#13;
courts, a gymnasium, tennis&#13;
courts, a weight room, baseball&#13;
diamonds, a well - stocked library,&#13;
a few on - site restaurants...&#13;
They could make tons of money&#13;
through a deal like that. People&#13;
could buy one wonderful week of&#13;
Kenosha residence for a few&#13;
thousand dollars plus a yearly&#13;
maintenance fee.&#13;
The individual condos would be&#13;
completely refurnished every five&#13;
years or so. In keeping with&#13;
tradition, textbooks would be&#13;
replaced annually.&#13;
If every state with budget&#13;
troubles would sell one university&#13;
on the time - share condo plan,&#13;
their monetary problems would&#13;
surely lessen. And people lucky&#13;
enough to own a week at Pakside&#13;
would be able to switch around for&#13;
a week at another defunct&#13;
university.&#13;
Of course, a week of prime time&#13;
at Parkside would be just a little&#13;
more expensive to buy than just&#13;
any old week. Now all we have to&#13;
do is figure out when it's "prime&#13;
time" in Kenosha.&#13;
EAT A BAGEL . . . WEAR A BAGEL&#13;
FREE BAGEL NECKLACE&#13;
WITH ANY BAGEL PURCHASE&#13;
— COURTESY PARKSIDE FOODSERVICE&#13;
Gommi/m«a£!oi\ Arts THeatre&#13;
April23-24, Bum&#13;
Apfil 25, 2pm /&#13;
April 30-7*\ajy 1,&#13;
"5pm /&#13;
HUfiW,&#13;
CARNML lichets: Union info. DcsK. £t at tKc Doo/&#13;
S53-2345 of 553-2042&#13;
$ 2 5 0 Pu k r i d t St s d e n t s .St a fC,&#13;
$3.5© Public&#13;
Citizens&#13;
THIS FRIDAY, APRIL 16 7:30 am - 2:00 pm&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
featuring:&#13;
• EGG AAcBAGEL ( OPEN FACE BREAKFAST PLATE)&#13;
• TOASTED BAGEL WITH CREAM CHEESE &amp; JELLY&#13;
• PIZZA BAGELS • TUNA MELT BAGELS&#13;
• MUSHROOM &amp; CHEESE BAGELS&#13;
• BAGEL BURGER •PASTRAMI /BAGEL REUBEN&#13;
. •SPECIAL BAGEL &amp; SEAFOOD SALAD PLATE&#13;
. . . a n d yse&#13;
• BAGEL ICE CREAM SUNDAES WITH HONEY &amp; RAISIN BAGELS&#13;
"Be t h e f i r s t o n y o u r b l o c k t o j o iinn t h i s l a t e s t f a s h i on c r az e . .w .h i ch we v er y we l l c o ul d&#13;
be st a r t ing . "&#13;
Thursday, April 15,1982 RANGER&#13;
Profile&#13;
Ron Cuzner jazzes it up on "the dark side"&#13;
presented the idea of mixing jazz&#13;
with the classics. The&#13;
management liked the idea, and&#13;
Cuzner has been there ever since.&#13;
With twelve years on the air,&#13;
THE DARK SIDE is the longest&#13;
running show on Milwaukee radio,&#13;
and Cuzner has been there from&#13;
the beginning. He selects the&#13;
music from his own collection of&#13;
15,000 albums, but according to&#13;
Cuzner, he has no particular&#13;
favorites. "On any given night,&#13;
then I will have a favorite," he&#13;
says, "but it's like a person with&#13;
twelve children. I love them all."&#13;
He is completely in charge of the&#13;
show's unique structure.&#13;
Cuzner's announcing style is&#13;
also unique. "At first," he said, "I&#13;
sounded like every other top forty&#13;
d.j. on the radio, giving you all&#13;
kinds of information you don't&#13;
need. My announcing style is kind&#13;
of a de-evolutionary process,&#13;
because now I only state the&#13;
essentials, the things you absolutely&#13;
need to know.&#13;
"If you listen to me," elaborates&#13;
Cuzner, "and you try to&#13;
disassociate my voice from the&#13;
words I'm saying, and just listen&#13;
to the rhythm, and phrasing, and.&#13;
accent of my voice, you'll hear&#13;
music.&#13;
"It's a gimmick. 1 want people&#13;
to know they're listening to Ron&#13;
Cuzner. Of course, there's an&#13;
inherent danger that people won't&#13;
like what I'm doing. So I do what I&#13;
want to do, and hope more people&#13;
like it than dislike it.&#13;
"Last fall, I was interviewing&#13;
professor (Tim) Bell, who had a&#13;
group in Milwaukee at the time,&#13;
on my show. Afterwards he approached&#13;
me and asked if I would&#13;
like to teach a course at Parkside.&#13;
I thought about it for a few&#13;
months, and finally said I would."&#13;
Cuzner enjoys teaching. "I&#13;
would definitely like to do this&#13;
again next semester," he said. "I&#13;
would also like to get more involved&#13;
in other areas of the music&#13;
department, too."&#13;
A couple weeks later, I made a&#13;
three a.m. trek to WFMR's&#13;
Capitol Drive studios to watch&#13;
Cuzner in action. I was met at the&#13;
door of his third floor cubicle,&#13;
studio number one. Wearing a Tshirt&#13;
and slacks and sneakers, he&#13;
talked about his work while I&#13;
snapped pictures. The best part&#13;
was, of course, when he was actually&#13;
talking on the radio. Cuzner&#13;
easily has the most unique announcing&#13;
style in the business,&#13;
backed up with years of experience.&#13;
Imagine an announcer&#13;
who, instead of bombarding his&#13;
listeners with rapid fire information,&#13;
slowly and carefully&#13;
enunciates every word, every&#13;
inflection. The major benefit is&#13;
that instead of making his voice&#13;
an interruption of the music,&#13;
Cuzner is an integral part of the&#13;
show.&#13;
It is common knowledge by now&#13;
CUZNER on the air at WFMR.&#13;
that WFMR is changing owners in&#13;
the near future. The last thing that&#13;
Milwaukee needs is another rock&#13;
station. If that happens, and Ron&#13;
Cuzner decides to leave WFMR,&#13;
the loss to the Milwaukee music&#13;
scene would be incalculable.&#13;
Earl and Wood&#13;
Two Democratic candidates for&#13;
governor have scheduled visits to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
James Wood will speak at 3:30&#13;
p.m. on Wednesday, April 14, in&#13;
the Campus Union, Room 207, and&#13;
Tony Earl will speak at 1 p.m. on&#13;
April 28 in the Union, Room 106.&#13;
Both talks are sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Political Science Club&#13;
and will be followed by discussion&#13;
periods and receptions.&#13;
Wood, who served as chief aide&#13;
Ron Cuzner's television series,&#13;
"It's Called Jazz," appears&#13;
Thursday nights at 9 p.m. on&#13;
Channel 10. WUWM - FM/90&#13;
provides a stereo simulcast.&#13;
to speak here&#13;
to former governor Patrick&#13;
Lucey, has been deputy secretary,&#13;
of the Wisconsin Department of&#13;
Administration and founder and&#13;
president of the Center for Public&#13;
Policy.&#13;
Earl was a member of the&#13;
Wisconsin legislature from 1969 to&#13;
1974, serving as assembly&#13;
majority leader, and was&#13;
secretary of the Department of&#13;
Natural Resources from 1976 to&#13;
1980.&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
Ron Cuzner is a busy man these&#13;
days.&#13;
Best known as Milwaukee's only&#13;
full - time jazz d.j. and the host of&#13;
WFMR's THE DARK SIDE,&#13;
Cuzner is on the air six nights a&#13;
week, from midnight to six a.m.&#13;
Two days a week he teaches the&#13;
Jazz Appreciation course here at&#13;
Parkside, and just lately became&#13;
the host of his own TV series.&#13;
A veteran in the radio business,&#13;
Cuzner got his first radio gig when&#13;
he was fourteen. After graduating&#13;
from Racine Lutheran High, he&#13;
filled, at one time or another, the&#13;
various positions on announcing&#13;
staffs in the area, culminating&#13;
with his job as jazz d.j. at WTOS in&#13;
the late sixties. About 1970 he left&#13;
WTOS because, "We had to sell&#13;
our own ads. I hated that. I don't&#13;
do it anymore." WTOS was in the&#13;
process of being sold, and the&#13;
programming structure was&#13;
becoming too rigid for Cuzner's —&#13;
and another radio vet, Bob&#13;
Reitman's — taste. They left&#13;
WTOS, Reitman to WZMF and&#13;
Cuzner to WFMR, where he&#13;
RON CUZNER&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
FOR&#13;
FALL SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are&#13;
seeking a degree at UW-Parkside) should consult their&#13;
academic advisor prior to registration for Fall Semester.&#13;
A Certification of Advising form, signed by the advisor, is&#13;
required for registration.&#13;
Fall Semester Course Schedules will be available on April&#13;
12. April 12-26 h as been designated as an academic advising&#13;
period, and advisors will make every effort to meet&#13;
with you then.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
CONTACT YOUR ADVISOR FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
If you have any questions, contact the Office of the Dean&#13;
of Faculty, 348 Wyllie Library - Learning Center, 553-2144.&#13;
NOTE: Non - matriculant students (students not seeking&#13;
a degree at UW-Parkside) are exempt from this&#13;
requirement.&#13;
® MOVIE ®&#13;
•Xf iUhl l jM&#13;
Friday,&#13;
April 16 - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Sunday,&#13;
April 18 - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Rated "R'&#13;
$1.50&#13;
UNION CINEAAA&#13;
BREWERY TOUR &amp;&#13;
BREWER CAME TICKET HOLDERS:&#13;
The re-scheduling of opening day hi&#13;
forced the cancellation of the brewer&#13;
tour. The game has been moved to 1::&#13;
p.m., therefore the bus will leave at 11:&#13;
A M. on Friday uth from Union Circl&#13;
our ticket can be used for opening day i&#13;
refunded in full. Those unable to attend tt&#13;
game should contact Neil at 553-2650 &lt;&#13;
soon as possible.&#13;
Because of a potential availability&#13;
openmgs for this trip, interested perso.&#13;
should contact Neil at number above.&#13;
Hurry — tickets going fast!&#13;
Thursday, April 15,1982&#13;
Viewpoint&#13;
Pregnancy—when unwed, the answer is never easy&#13;
bbvy Pat HHeennssiiaakk IOVAH hor Kut -.O&#13;
News Editor&#13;
There is a lot of controversy&#13;
about abortion. When does life&#13;
start? Is abortion murder? For&#13;
some pregnant women, abortion is&#13;
out of the question because of&#13;
religious belief, or because of the&#13;
feelings of guilt that can develop&#13;
with an abortion.&#13;
Abbey was a college sophomore&#13;
when she found herself asking the&#13;
question, 'What should I do?' For&#13;
a number of reasons, Abbey chose&#13;
to have an abortion. "First, I'd&#13;
like to say that this wasn't an easy&#13;
thing for me. People think that&#13;
abortion is quick and easy. It isn't.&#13;
It was one of the most difficult&#13;
decisions I've ever made. Some&#13;
people see it as the simplest thing&#13;
to do. It's terrifying and impersonal.&#13;
I'll never do it again, but&#13;
I don't regret doing it. If there are&#13;
any regrets, they lie in not being&#13;
able to say no to some guy that&#13;
really couldn't have cared less."&#13;
Abbey went up to the Bread and&#13;
Roses Clinic in Milwaukee. A lot&#13;
ran through her mind as the&#13;
elevator started to move. One of&#13;
the things she started to think&#13;
about was the concept that once it&#13;
was over, you couldn't turn it&#13;
around. "If you decide to have the&#13;
baby, you have time to decide&#13;
whether you want to keep it or&#13;
give it up. Once you finally figure&#13;
out that you are pregnant, you&#13;
don't have a lot of time to decide if&#13;
abortion is right. I worried a little&#13;
about that, whether or not I was&#13;
doing the right thing. The one&#13;
thing I worried about more, was&#13;
all of the things that you year&#13;
about the action of abortion. From&#13;
one person you hear that you're&#13;
asleep and from the next you hear&#13;
that you aren't. I was awake.&#13;
Walking into a room with a lot of&#13;
machines, and knowing what you&#13;
are about to do, is earth shattering.&#13;
It was for me. I was&#13;
shaking, all because of what I&#13;
heard. Of course, it can't be expected&#13;
to be a pleasant experience.&#13;
I had the impression&#13;
that the people were cold, and that&#13;
you aren't well - r eceived. I have&#13;
never been given more comfort&#13;
and support than that day at&#13;
Bread and Roses. The people were&#13;
really good to me."&#13;
The staff at the clinic talked to&#13;
Abbey as long as she wanted after&#13;
the abortion. They didn't have to&#13;
convince her that what she did&#13;
was right for her. "I know what I&#13;
had to do. I wasn't ready for a&#13;
baby. Things happened at the&#13;
wrong time for me. I was a&#13;
sophomore, and a Business major.&#13;
There was no possible way for me&#13;
to fit a baby in. I knew it then, and&#13;
I know it now. I also could have&#13;
never afforded a baby, and I&#13;
wouldn't have felt right letting the&#13;
governor pay for my mistake. I&#13;
did it, and I pa id. I'm glad that the&#13;
entire society doesn't look down&#13;
on me for it."&#13;
Abbey said that adoption was&#13;
also out of the question for her,&#13;
because she felt if she would have&#13;
had the baby, she wouldn't have&#13;
been able to give it up. "I weighed&#13;
all of the options, and although I&#13;
did what I thought was best, I also&#13;
did what was the hardest of three.&#13;
The decision was as hard for me&#13;
as anyone else, but there are ways&#13;
that I could have survived with a&#13;
baby, but like I said, it was my&#13;
mistake."&#13;
On a hot summer day, one of the&#13;
families in America that was&#13;
waiting to adopt a child finally got&#13;
their baby. It was a girl, and Barb&#13;
remembers when the doctor told&#13;
her that. "I heard the sound of the&#13;
baby crying, and she just&#13;
screamed. It was quite a hello for&#13;
everyone involved. The doctor&#13;
held the baby up quickly and&#13;
smiled and said, 'Barb, it's a girl.&#13;
She's really big.' I was so glad&#13;
that she was healthy. I often&#13;
thought that if she wouldn't have&#13;
been, I would have kept her. I&#13;
believe in the idea that people love&#13;
their own if they aren't healthy. I&#13;
loved her, but as long as she was&#13;
healthy, I know that there was&#13;
someone else that could make her&#13;
happier. I never regreted my&#13;
decision to give her up, although&#13;
I m sure if the situation came up&#13;
again, I would keep the baby."&#13;
Barb has never regretted what&#13;
she did, but while she was&#13;
pregnant, she had a lot of second&#13;
thoughts about giving the baby up.&#13;
"For a long time, I thought it was&#13;
wrong to give something up that&#13;
was as much a part of you as a&#13;
baby is. It didn't seem fair. To be&#13;
straight, it seemed selfish. After a&#13;
lot of thought, and serious thought&#13;
at that, I realized that if I gave the&#13;
baby up, she would have a better&#13;
life, better than mine, and better&#13;
than what I could offer, that it was&#13;
a good thing. The only part of the&#13;
bargain that I a sked her before I&#13;
gave her away was that she adjust&#13;
to the life around her, no matter&#13;
what it was. I know it sounds&#13;
ridiculous to tell a newborn that,&#13;
but I had to be certain that she&#13;
would do her best. I am."&#13;
Barb is only worried about the&#13;
number of adopted children that&#13;
look for their parents now. It&#13;
seems to get easier and easier&#13;
every day. "I guess my idea is&#13;
that I gave her to someone else to&#13;
love and take care of. Unless she&#13;
feels as if s he has been neglected,&#13;
I have no intention of seeing her&#13;
again. Having two parents that&#13;
love her anough to say, 'Come and&#13;
live in our house, and be one of our&#13;
own' will have to be enough for&#13;
her. I think it will be. I wouldn't&#13;
want her to hurt her parents, and I&#13;
think kids that look for their 'real&#13;
parents' are really telling the&#13;
people that raise them that all&#13;
they have done for them hasn't&#13;
been enough."&#13;
Barb is happy with her life and&#13;
happy with her decision, and she&#13;
thinks about the baby a lot and&#13;
hopes that she is happy too. "I&#13;
gave away a big part of myself,&#13;
and it wasn't easy, but all of it was&#13;
done in the best interests of all&#13;
concerned. I think it worked out&#13;
for the best."&#13;
Cathy has been a mother for two&#13;
years. She has a son, and lives by&#13;
herself with her son. She made the&#13;
decision to keep her baby because&#13;
she didn't want to miss out on&#13;
seeing her son grow up. "I thought&#13;
for a long time that I might opt for&#13;
giving the baby up, but it just isn't&#13;
something that you opt for. By the&#13;
time the fifth month rolled&#13;
around, I knew that I would keep&#13;
the baby. He has been the happiest&#13;
thing that ever happened to me.&#13;
He is so cute, and he always&#13;
laughs, and he's always such a&#13;
gentleman, even at two. Don't get&#13;
Continued On Page Four Miller times^s Miller High life&#13;
10 Thursday, April 15,1982 RANGER&#13;
M New" Sox start new season&#13;
This is the time of year that&#13;
every baseball team talks about&#13;
being a contender, and the&#13;
Chicago White Sox are no exception.&#13;
However, this year just&#13;
may be different than the last few,&#13;
considering . . .&#13;
According to Dan Evans, White&#13;
Sox Public Relations, the Sox&#13;
Organization is very optimistic&#13;
about the upcoming year.&#13;
Two key off - season deals were&#13;
made resulting in the acquisition&#13;
of Steve Kemp from Detroit,&#13;
whom Evans describes as "a left -&#13;
handed hitting slugger and good&#13;
RBI man." The other new addition&#13;
to the team is Tom&#13;
Paciorek, former Seattle first&#13;
baseman who finished second in&#13;
hitting last year with a .326&#13;
average.&#13;
New to the team last year was&#13;
the dynamic Carlton Fisk, who&#13;
was awarded the American&#13;
League Silver Bat and was named&#13;
the most productive catcher. Also,&#13;
Greg Luzinski, the Comeback&#13;
Player of the Year and outstanding&#13;
designated hitter.&#13;
Luzinski's year resulted in 21&#13;
homers, 62 RBI's and a .265&#13;
batting average.&#13;
Another new signing of last&#13;
year was Bill Almon, that&#13;
phenomenal 29 - year - old shortstop&#13;
who had what can only be&#13;
called a fantastic season last year.&#13;
Almon, who had been released by&#13;
the Mets at the conclusion of the&#13;
1980 season, was invited to the Sox&#13;
Spring Training Camp in 1981 as a&#13;
non - roster player. Due to injuries&#13;
of two Sox infielders, Almon&#13;
became the starting shortstop on&#13;
opening day and has had the job&#13;
ever since. He had his best season&#13;
ever last year, attaining the&#13;
highest batting average of any&#13;
American League shortstop with a&#13;
.301.&#13;
The starting line - up for the&#13;
beginning of the season seems as&#13;
though it will be: Ron LeFlore,&#13;
CF, leading off; Tony Bernazard,&#13;
2B; Steve Kemp, LF; Greg&#13;
Luzinski, DH; Tom Paciorek, IB;&#13;
Harold Baines, RF; Carlton Fisk,&#13;
C; Jim Morrison, 3B; and Bill&#13;
Almon, SS.&#13;
Said former White Sox slugger&#13;
and five - decade player Minnie&#13;
Minoso, "This year I think that&#13;
we're going to have a good&#13;
baseball club. I didn't have the&#13;
opportunity to be at Spring&#13;
Training to watch, but I know&#13;
we're going to have power hitting&#13;
and good pitching." Minoso is now&#13;
involved in Public Relations for&#13;
his former team.&#13;
Minoso went on to say, "If we&#13;
give 100%, we have a chance at&#13;
the pennant. We're going to give&#13;
the fans the best of this Chicago&#13;
organization."&#13;
As Minoso said, the Sox do have&#13;
good pitching, but they need to&#13;
really be consistent this year in&#13;
order for it to pay off.&#13;
A most impressive pitcher is 22 ?&#13;
year - old left hander Britt Burns.&#13;
Last year Burns tied for fourth in&#13;
the league with an ERA of 2.64. He&#13;
was second in the league with 108&#13;
strikeouts and was named to the&#13;
American League All - Star team.&#13;
During a period in July and&#13;
August, he maintained 30 consecutive&#13;
scoreless innings.&#13;
Another starting pitcher is 23 -&#13;
year - old Richard Dotson, who&#13;
will be going into his third full&#13;
year for the White Sox. Last year,&#13;
Dotson, a right hander, had a&#13;
record of 9-8 with four shutouts.&#13;
Dennis Lamp, another right&#13;
handed pitcher, was traded to the&#13;
Sox last year from their cross -&#13;
town rivals, the Cubs, and proved&#13;
to be very successful with his new&#13;
Chicago team. He had a record of&#13;
7-6 and a 2.41 ERA. On August 25,&#13;
he pitched a one - hitter against&#13;
the Brewers at County Stadium.&#13;
Southpaw Steve Trout had a yo -&#13;
yo season, but is sure to wind up in&#13;
the starting rotation once again&#13;
this year. He finished the season&#13;
with an 8-7 record and an ERA of&#13;
3.71.&#13;
So there you have four of the&#13;
starting pitchers and, with the&#13;
recent trading away of Ross&#13;
Baumgarten to Pittsburgh, it&#13;
remains to be seen who will take&#13;
his place in the starting rotation.&#13;
So far, the bullpen will consist of&#13;
Kevin Hickey, Lamar Hoyt, Jerry&#13;
Koosman, Lynn McGlothen and,&#13;
perhaps, Salome Barojas.&#13;
Besides Baumgarten, recent&#13;
transactions have done away with&#13;
utilityman Greg Pryor, slugger&#13;
Wayne Nordhagen and Bobby&#13;
Molinaro.&#13;
In addition to the numerous new&#13;
players, the White Sox will begin&#13;
the season showing off their new&#13;
uniforms and their home field,&#13;
Comiskey Park, will boast its new&#13;
five million dollar scoreboard and&#13;
some new box seats as well.&#13;
SPORTS NOTEBOOK t ©&#13;
LAST SUNDAY Parkside held yet another roadrace, watch next&#13;
week's Ranger for results.&#13;
Coach finalists&#13;
Parkside has announced that&#13;
the following seven finalists will&#13;
be interviewed over the next two&#13;
weeks for the vacant head men's&#13;
basketball coaching position:&#13;
Rudy Collum, 35, assistant&#13;
basketball coach, Parkside.&#13;
Wiley Davis, 31, athletic&#13;
director and basketball coach,&#13;
Everett Community College,&#13;
Everett, Wash.&#13;
Frank Diskin, 42, athletic&#13;
director and basketball coach, St.&#13;
Mary of the Plains, Dodge City,&#13;
Kans.&#13;
Rees Johnson, 41, basketball&#13;
coach, Augsburg College, Minneapolis,&#13;
Minn.&#13;
Rod Popp, 32, assistant&#13;
basketball coach, UW - LaCrosse,&#13;
LaCrosse, Wis.&#13;
BfcGlNNER OR ADVANCFD Cost is about the same as a&#13;
semester in a U S college 52,989 Price includes jet round&#13;
tri|) to Seville from Me«v York room board, and tuition&#13;
complete Government grants and loans available for eligible&#13;
students.&#13;
Live with a Spanish family, attend classes tour hours a day&#13;
four days a week four months Earn 16 hrs of credit (equi&#13;
valent to 4 semesters taught in u S colleges over a two&#13;
year time span) Your Spanish studies will be enhanced by&#13;
opportunities not available in a U.S. classroom. Standard&#13;
t/ed tests show our students' language skills superior to&#13;
students completing two year programs in U.S.&#13;
Hurry, it takes a lot of time to make all arrangements.&#13;
FALL SEMESTER SEPT. 10 Dec. 22 SPRING SEMESTER&#13;
Feb. 1 June 1 each year.&#13;
FULLY ACCREDITED A program of Trinity Christian College. SEMESTER IN SPAIN 2442 E Collier S.E. Grand Rapids, Michigan 49506&#13;
(A Program of Trinity Christian College)&#13;
CALL TOLL FREE for full information 1-800-253-9008&#13;
(In Mich., or if toll free line inoperative call 1-616-942-2903 or 942-2541'collect)&#13;
Dale Race, 35, assistant&#13;
basketball coach, UW - Eau&#13;
Claire, Eau Claire, Wis.&#13;
Jeff Spielman, 30, athletic&#13;
director and basketball coach,&#13;
UW Center - Richland, Richland&#13;
Center, Wis.&#13;
Bike for M.D.&#13;
Well, it's time to dig that bicycle&#13;
up and out from the basement and&#13;
get it in working order. Greg&#13;
Scarlato and Chuck Neustifter&#13;
have already done just that, and&#13;
they have even planned their first&#13;
trip of the season.&#13;
The two intend to bike for two&#13;
weeks across Wisconsin for&#13;
Muscular Dystrophy (MD),&#13;
starting on June 1. Although the&#13;
exact route has not yet been&#13;
plotted, they plan to go 60 miles a&#13;
day, traveling on mostly county&#13;
highways through the central part&#13;
of the state.&#13;
Scarlato and Neustifter are&#13;
presently looking for people to join&#13;
their excursion, and they are also&#13;
looking for sponsors. Should they&#13;
raise $500 or more, they will get to&#13;
present a check to Jill Geisler on&#13;
Channel 6 television.&#13;
The trip is not, in the words of I&#13;
Scarlato, "for softies." There will&#13;
be no support vehicle, and each&#13;
particpant is expected to carry his&#13;
or her own equipment. They will&#13;
be camping overnight in state&#13;
parks.&#13;
Anyone interested should call&#13;
Greg Scarlato at 657-5714.&#13;
Intramural B-ball&#13;
The Parkside intramural&#13;
basketball program will be&#13;
hosting their annual basketball&#13;
championship next Sunday,&#13;
starting at 7:00 p.m. with the&#13;
"Super Cocks" taking on "The&#13;
Lords." On the second court, the&#13;
"Five Neat Guys" will meet the&#13;
"Gunners" for a game. At 8:30&#13;
p.m., the two winners will come&#13;
up against each other for the&#13;
"coveted Intramural crown."&#13;
SUPER SPORTS&#13;
FOOTWEAR, ETC.&#13;
TEAM SALES — ALL SPORTS&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR&#13;
FOR ALL SPORTS&#13;
TROPHM AND AWARDS&#13;
f AST. SMIOUSC ENORAVMO SCRVKX&#13;
s&#13;
•BROOKS&#13;
• TIGER&#13;
• NIKE&#13;
• PUMA&#13;
• PONY&#13;
• CONVERSE&#13;
• SPOT-SUIT&#13;
• SAUCOMY&#13;
• SPALDING&#13;
• NSW BALANCI&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
MOR.-PRL IBM AM - *«0 P.M.&#13;
•AT tOMAM -BSOPM&#13;
CLOSED (LMDAYI A HOUDAYt&#13;
FOOTWEAR.&#13;
The Active Athletes One Stop&#13;
694-9206&#13;
THIS ENTIRE PAGE GOOD FOR 10% DISCOUNT ONE&#13;
EXCLUDEDAFTER °ATE 0F ,SSUE' sale ,tems&#13;
/$• $&#13;
TONIGHT!&#13;
THURSDAY, APRIL 15&#13;
UNION SQUARE 57 PAA&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
• THE LIVE MUSIC OF UW-PARKSIDE'S&#13;
AWARD WINNING JAZZ BAND&#13;
• 75&lt;t, $1.0 0 &amp; $1.25 OFF REGULAR PIZZA PRICES&#13;
• SPECIAL $1.99 SPAGHETTI DINNER WITH SALAD &amp; GARLIC BREAD&#13;
• FREE ADMISSION&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
LENDER&#13;
5%% Interest Iff Your Daily&#13;
Balance is $500.00 er Morel&#13;
WE'RE HERE ¥0 HELP YOU GROW!&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 15,1982&#13;
Tennis&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
The Parkside Union&#13;
AND&#13;
WTMJ-TV CHANNEL 4&#13;
PRESENTS FREE&#13;
CHECKING!&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
410 Broad Street&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414-248-9141&#13;
24726 - 75th Street - Rt. 50&#13;
(Paddock Lake) Salem, Wis&#13;
414-843-2388&#13;
A TORNADO SAFETY&#13;
SEMINAR&#13;
WITH METEOROLOGIST &amp; WEATHER FORECASTER JIAA on&#13;
TUESDAY, APRIL20&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATER&#13;
FILM—SLIDES—INFORMATION&#13;
FREE ADMISSION!&#13;
Season off to great start&#13;
Even though the weather has&#13;
stopped the Ranger tennis team&#13;
from practicing and playing their&#13;
meets outside, the team has&#13;
compensated by practicing many&#13;
hours in the gymnasium. The&#13;
team as a whole started their&#13;
season March 2, trying to develop&#13;
their consistency while getting&#13;
into shape. Although Coach Dick&#13;
Frecka was out the first two&#13;
weeks of practice for back&#13;
surgery, his assistant and team&#13;
captain Claude Cielonko ran most&#13;
of the practices. However, Coach&#13;
Frecka recovered very fast and&#13;
came back in plenty of time to&#13;
start the team play - offs.&#13;
In order to play most meets&#13;
against other colleges, the&#13;
Parkside team must have six&#13;
singles players and three double&#13;
teams, with the singles players&#13;
making up the doubles teams.&#13;
After the play - offs, the following&#13;
lineup was announced: Art&#13;
Shannon - one singles, Bob Schmook&#13;
- two singles, Tony Nielson -&#13;
three singles, Claude Cielonko -&#13;
four singles, Chris Truckey - five&#13;
singles, Mike Brinen - six singles.&#13;
The doubles teams proceeding&#13;
from number one to number three&#13;
are: Art Shannon and Bob Schmook,&#13;
Tony Nielson and Claude&#13;
Cielonko, and Chris Truckey and&#13;
Mike Brinen.&#13;
The first meet, played on April&#13;
2, was against Moraine Valley.&#13;
The meet was played indoors and&#13;
the Ranger tennis team won six&#13;
matches to three. The winning&#13;
singles players were: Art Shannon,&#13;
Bob Sehmook, Tony Nielson,&#13;
and Claude Cielonko; and the&#13;
winning doubles teams were:&#13;
Nielson - Cielonko, and Truckey -&#13;
Brinen.&#13;
The second meet, played&#13;
against Lake County College of&#13;
Illinois on April 7, also produced&#13;
another win for the Rangers, in&#13;
which the team won eight matches&#13;
out of nine. The oily loss came&#13;
when Rick Friegang, of Lake&#13;
County, beat Chris Truckey in&#13;
three sets, with the third set ending&#13;
a close tie - breaker.&#13;
The third meet, played against&#13;
Beloit College on April 9, gave the&#13;
Parkside team their third win,&#13;
with all the Ranger players&#13;
winning their matches. And&#13;
finally, on April 10, the Parkside&#13;
Ranger tennis team was able to&#13;
get their fourth straight win. The&#13;
Rangers beat North Eastern&#13;
Illinois six matches to three, with&#13;
the only losses coming from Art&#13;
Shannon and Bob Sehmook in both&#13;
their singles and doubles.&#13;
So far, the Ranger tennis team&#13;
has done very well and hopefully&#13;
will continue to do so. However,&#13;
lack of fan support has probably&#13;
cost the Rangers their lost matches.&#13;
The matches were very&#13;
close and could have been turned&#13;
around with more fan enthusiasm.&#13;
The continued success of the team&#13;
will not only depend on the experience&#13;
of the players and their&#13;
competitiveness, but also on&#13;
whether more Parkside fans take&#13;
more interest in their team.&#13;
lilt PARKSIDE men s tennis team has started their'82 season&#13;
with four straight wins! Go Rangers! ' Photo by Masood Shafjq&#13;
Sunday, April 18&#13;
MOVIE "Excalibur" (R) will be repeated at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Tuesday, April 20&#13;
COURSE "Using the Library" at 7 p. m. Call Ext. 2312 fo r more information.&#13;
Sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414 - 658-4861&#13;
Thursday, April 15&#13;
WORKSHOP "Children of Alcohol &amp; Drug Impaired Parents" at 8 a. m Call ext&#13;
2312 for more information. Sponsored by UW - Extension.&#13;
SHOW "Patrol Dogs" at 12 noon in Main Place. All are welcome. Sponsored by the&#13;
Vet's Club.&#13;
LECTURE at 3:30 p. m. in GR 101. Russell Bowman of the Milwaukee Art Museum&#13;
will talk on "American Folk Art and Its Influence on 20th Century Art" The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
CONCERT "Pizza, Pasta, and All That Jazz" with the Parkside Jazz Band at 5 p.&#13;
m. in Union Square. All are welcome.&#13;
Friday, April 16&#13;
COURSE Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation at 1 p. m. in Union 104 - 106 Call ext&#13;
2366 for details. Sponsored by the Parkside Health Office.&#13;
MOVIE "Excalibur" (R) will be shown at 7:30 p. m. in the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
at the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored&#13;
participanfs^in^h^aerobiexerdses^ SP°nS°red ^ amUa' We" Day' Pidured are som&lt;&#13;
Photo by Masood Shafiq&#13;
Monday, April 19&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12:15 p. m. in Union 106. Prof. Lee Thayer will talk on "The&#13;
Functions of Incompetence".*The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
COURSE Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation at 9 a. m. in Union 104 - 106. Call ext.&#13;
2366 for more details.&#13;
LECTURE "Government: Public Perception vs. Reality" by G. Gordon Liddy at 8&#13;
p. m. in the Union Cinema. Tickets are available at the Union Information&#13;
Center. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
Outside UW-P sports&#13;
Chicago Cubs create new hopes&#13;
by Greg Boilofiglio&#13;
A favorite story of Pete Rose's&#13;
on the Chicago Cubs goes&#13;
something like this:&#13;
"Every year we'd come to&#13;
Wrigley to play the Cubs and&#13;
everyone up there is fired up.&#13;
They'd say 'You just wait, we're&#13;
going to win the Series this year.&#13;
Just you wait!' As usual the Cubs&#13;
have started out playing fairly&#13;
well when we'd meet them again a&#13;
few weeks later. Everyone up&#13;
there is going nuts. 'We'll take it&#13;
all this year, just you wait and&#13;
see!' Then comes July and the&#13;
Cubs go into their annual dive and&#13;
you hear them say 'We're going to&#13;
take the pennant this year, just&#13;
you wait!' The next time we play&#13;
them is in August or something&#13;
like that but this time they're&#13;
saying 'We're going to win today,&#13;
we're going to win today, just you&#13;
wait and see!' "&#13;
That's a great story and one that&#13;
succinctly describes the modern&#13;
day fortunes of those bumblers of&#13;
the NL East. But alas, we are told,&#13;
a new tradition is underway for&#13;
these cubbies.&#13;
The Tribune Company Cubs&#13;
enter their first full season with&#13;
some big plans and a lot of high&#13;
hopes, if nothing else. And while&#13;
the prospects for a better record&#13;
appear rather remote, the 1982&#13;
version of the Chicago Cubs will at&#13;
least look different.&#13;
GM Dallas Green selected ex -&#13;
Phillie coach Lee Elia to be his&#13;
manager for this new venture.&#13;
Elia, in turn, selected ex - Phillies&#13;
Tom Harmon and John Vukovich&#13;
to be his third - base coach and&#13;
bullpen coach respectively.&#13;
Playing in compact Wrigley&#13;
Field has generally meant that&#13;
with a few power hitters in the line&#13;
- up you had a better than average&#13;
chance of winning a close game&#13;
with one decent swing of the bat.&#13;
For all practical purposes,&#13;
Chicago won't enjoy that luxury&#13;
this year.&#13;
The Cub's regular lineup will&#13;
feature second baseman Bump&#13;
Wills in the lead - off spot. Wills hit&#13;
.251 for the Texas Rangers in 1981.&#13;
Larry Bowa, who will play at&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
TYPING - professionally done. Reasonable&#13;
rates. Fast service. South Kenosha. 657&#13;
6068.&#13;
TYPING SERVICES for professionals and&#13;
students. Call mornings. 639 687!.&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
LAWNSKEEPER and gardener for semi -&#13;
large estate. Must have references and own&#13;
transportation. Very north side of Racine.&#13;
If interested contact Karen in the Ranger&#13;
office. Salary negotiable.&#13;
Wanted&#13;
ROOMMATE NEEDED after graduation.&#13;
Wood Creek, 552-9175 - Dick O.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
LASER SAILBOAT w/trailer. 14 ft. Olympic&#13;
class, ex. cond. S1400. 639-6635.&#13;
FILM - T HEATRE - SHAKESPEARE BOOK&#13;
SALE thru May 5. Quality used and out - of -&#13;
print books at The Old Book Corner at&#13;
Martha Merrell's Bookstore, 312 6th St.,&#13;
Racine, Also, to celebrate Shakespeare's&#13;
birthday on April 23, a selection of prints&#13;
and engravings from the 181h and 19th&#13;
centuries. Over 1200 used books in all areas&#13;
for sale.&#13;
Lost&#13;
BLUE BACKPACK with books taken from D&#13;
1 level of library on evening of April 5. If&#13;
found, please call 657-6216.&#13;
Miscellaneous&#13;
DONATIONS Unitarian Universalis! Book&#13;
Sale May 8 — Call McLean 632-8011.&#13;
Personals&#13;
LET'S GET YOUR ADS IN GEAR! We have&#13;
room for more classifieds. Free up to ten&#13;
words!&#13;
LINDA (ABM) — The main rule is keep cool!&#13;
You're the best -• (NE).&#13;
KATHY SLAMA — you are also one of my&#13;
favorite people — thanks for being my&#13;
friend — t he mystery writer.&#13;
WANTED: VIRGIN for ceremonial sacrifice&#13;
to winter storm god. Contact Bob H.&#13;
THE SECOND RULE is to live with your&#13;
mistakes.&#13;
GOT DEM OL' early registration blues agin'&#13;
PUNK ROCK LIVES! I Bring your safety pins&#13;
and leopard skin tights to your favorite&#13;
classroom.&#13;
A PERMANENT honeymoon, Loretta?&#13;
DR. DREW — I h ope that you choke on your&#13;
scarf!!!!!&#13;
BOB — May a vicious punk rock record attack&#13;
you late one evening!&#13;
NE — I thunk that you're preety great!&#13;
SE — I t hunk too much, and broke my brain.&#13;
Thanks for everything!&#13;
ED —You can catch moreflles with honey ...&#13;
People who live In glass offices ...&#13;
GARLIC TOAST — Happy Birthday —&#13;
French Bread&#13;
short and bat second, hit .283 f or&#13;
Philly last year. First baseman&#13;
Bill Buckner (.311 in 1981) and&#13;
right fielder Leon Durham (.290 in&#13;
1981) will remain in the number&#13;
three and four spots respectively.&#13;
Catcher Keith Moreland, who hit&#13;
.255 for Philadelphia last year will&#13;
bat fifth. Steve Henderson (.293 in&#13;
1981) will play left and hit sixth.&#13;
Rookie Ryne Sandberg (.167 for&#13;
Philadelphia in 13 games), who&#13;
knocked Ken Reitz out of baseball,&#13;
will play third and hit seventh.&#13;
And Tye Waller, who hit .268 in 30&#13;
games for the Cubs last year will&#13;
play in center and bat eighth.&#13;
— Team Strengths —&#13;
(What's that? A Cub team&#13;
having a strength?) Believe it or&#13;
not, the Cubs will have a few areas&#13;
of strength this season. Perhaps&#13;
their best asset is team speed.&#13;
Aside from Moreland, every&#13;
member in the starting lineup has&#13;
above average speed. Another&#13;
unique advantage in the Cub&#13;
lineup is the fact that the number&#13;
one and two men, Wills and Bowa,&#13;
are switch hitters. A f inal area of&#13;
strength lies in the bullpen. Dick&#13;
Tidrow, Bill Campbell, and Lee&#13;
Smith will definitely see a lot of&#13;
action in 1982.&#13;
Team Weaknesses —&#13;
The club lacks any serious home&#13;
run threat. To get runs, the Cubs&#13;
will have to scratch and claw their&#13;
way in much the same manner as&#13;
did the '59 White Sox. If anything&#13;
will ensure of northsiders of&#13;
another below .500 finish, it will be&#13;
their starters. Ferguson Jenkins,&#13;
Dickie Noles, and Doug Bird make&#13;
up Chicago's 3 man rotation which&#13;
on pure merit, is perhaps the&#13;
weakest in the major league.&#13;
— Outlook—1&#13;
In his wildest imaginations,&#13;
Dallas Green could not have&#13;
envisioned the situation he was&#13;
entering. But in a few short&#13;
months, Green has done much to&#13;
bring the slumbering Cubs into the&#13;
Twentieth Century. Forget about&#13;
the Bowas, the Buckners, and the&#13;
Jenkins; Green will build the Cubs&#13;
in much the same manner as the&#13;
Phillies were rebuilt: by&#13;
developing a sound farm system.&#13;
Ryne Sandberg represents just&#13;
one example of this. Sandberg&#13;
came from Philadelphia's&#13;
Oklahoma City farm club. The&#13;
Cub farm system however, is&#13;
years away from turning out such&#13;
excellent prospects. Green's other&#13;
acquisitions have at least made&#13;
this year's club a respectable one.&#13;
And while manager Lee Elia's&#13;
contention that the Cubs will be a&#13;
.500 team may be a bit optimistic,&#13;
the team will be competitive. For&#13;
the Cubs, that in itself is&#13;
promising.&#13;
Order now!&#13;
ssssawfe-&#13;
Name&#13;
College.&#13;
Adult sizes only. Specify quantity.&#13;
T-shirt @ $4.95 ea., S— M L XL Amount Enclosed $&#13;
Offer expires December 31.1982 No purchase necessary New York residents add 8 25% sales tax Please allow 4 to 6 weeks fo r shipment 101</text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 10, issue 26, April 15, 1982</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="70186">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
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          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70187">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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            <elementText elementTextId="70188">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70191">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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