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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 11, issue 8</text>
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            <text>Aspin and Jansson debate</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>K¥ University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
and Jansson debate&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The Parkside Political Science&#13;
Club and the League of Women&#13;
Voters sponsored a debate last&#13;
Wednesday between the two&#13;
contenders in the first district&#13;
congressional race, Les Aspin and&#13;
Peter Jansson. Associate Dean of&#13;
Faculty Michael Bassis acted as&#13;
moderator.&#13;
Each candidate was allowed&#13;
five minutes to state their opening&#13;
position. Jansson, winning the&#13;
coin toss, began the debate.&#13;
Jansson opened by stating his&#13;
vision of America today. He&#13;
recounted the tale of his father&#13;
coming here as a poor immigrant&#13;
from Sweden because "he saw&#13;
opportunity that was not available&#13;
anywhere else in the world; opportunity&#13;
to grow and develop and&#13;
earn and make for one's self what&#13;
one can make."&#13;
He said that great progress had&#13;
been made up until the late sixties,&#13;
in America's approach to&#13;
fulfilling human needs. "After this&#13;
change ... in the late sixties,&#13;
things have gotten worse. The new&#13;
approach we had at that time was&#13;
for the government to get involved&#13;
to a far greater extent than it had&#13;
in solving the problems of human&#13;
need. It was a well - meaning&#13;
PAB requests&#13;
budgeting&#13;
change&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
PAB president Chris Hammelev&#13;
appeared before the PSGA Senate&#13;
last Friday and requested that the&#13;
budget of the Performing Arts and&#13;
Lectures committee (PAL) be&#13;
combined with PAB's budget for&#13;
the 1983-84 year. "There is no&#13;
reason," Hammelev said, "that&#13;
PAL can't be a part of PAB's&#13;
budget."&#13;
Senator Mike Scoon said that&#13;
the original purpose of PAB was&#13;
entertainment programming for&#13;
the student body, and PAL for the&#13;
community at large. He requested&#13;
that a motion to combine the&#13;
budgets be tabled until the judicial&#13;
branch of the student government&#13;
can decide whether PSGA is able&#13;
to set budgeting procedures.&#13;
What the student justices must&#13;
decide is whether or not PAB can&#13;
control PAL, even though PAL is a&#13;
standing committee of PAB, as&#13;
outlined in their constitution.&#13;
Hammelev said, "There's no&#13;
reason for them to be separate.&#13;
Outdoor Rec, Tech Crew, and the&#13;
Film committee are all separate&#13;
committees." They are included&#13;
in PAB's budgeting process.&#13;
"Allegedly," Hammelev added,&#13;
"PAL was originally a faculty&#13;
committee using segregated fees.&#13;
It was doing a bad job and so PAL&#13;
became part of PAB."&#13;
It was thought that PSGA must&#13;
approve the change, as the Senate&#13;
does have a say in the SUFAC&#13;
budgeting process. It could not,&#13;
however, determine if a clause in&#13;
PAB's constitution, which named&#13;
PAL as a standing committee,&#13;
was valid.&#13;
The motion to table the ruling,&#13;
which was made by Scoon will&#13;
cause PAB to delay completion of&#13;
their budget until after the Nov. 2&#13;
deadline. Hammelev said Monday&#13;
that she would seek an extension&#13;
from SUFAC.&#13;
change, but it was a change that&#13;
failed." In the 1980's, he said, "we&#13;
face a very real choice between&#13;
despair and opportunity.While my&#13;
opponent is offering nothing but&#13;
despair, I'm offering opportunity."&#13;
"Let's hear it for despair,"&#13;
Aspin began his argument. He&#13;
stated that Reagan's three point&#13;
plan to help the economy failed&#13;
because, "You can't have a big&#13;
tax cut, a big defense increase,&#13;
and balance the budget all at the&#13;
same time.&#13;
"And that's the core of the&#13;
Reagan problem," Aspin added.&#13;
"Somehow we've got to make him&#13;
change his mind." According to&#13;
Aspin, the way to change&#13;
Reagan's mind "is to vote&#13;
Democratic in November."&#13;
The candidates then had three&#13;
minutes each to answer five&#13;
questions from the League of&#13;
Women Voters. The questions&#13;
dealt with the role of Congress in&#13;
the economy and the protection of&#13;
the environment; endorsement of&#13;
the State of Wisconsin's support of&#13;
a nuclear freeze; the candidates'&#13;
views on how to curb unemployment;&#13;
and government&#13;
funding of education.&#13;
Aspin went on record as saying&#13;
that he was not in favor of tuition&#13;
tax credits. He said that it "was&#13;
not an appropriate use of&#13;
government policy" to give tax&#13;
credits for people to send their&#13;
children to private schools.&#13;
On student loans: "That's one&#13;
we ought to increase. There's&#13;
something the federal government&#13;
should do." He said that&#13;
special funding for grants and&#13;
research is highly dependent on&#13;
what the program is, but "there is&#13;
a role for federal government" in&#13;
that area. "Funding in human&#13;
capital," he said, "is essential for&#13;
economic growth."&#13;
Jansson said, "I am in favor, in&#13;
principle, of the idea of tuition tax&#13;
credits. I think that people need a&#13;
range of choices in the education&#13;
of their children." Jansson said he&#13;
would "look very carefully" at the&#13;
tax credit proposals to ensure no&#13;
damage was done to public&#13;
education.&#13;
Jansson cautioned against&#13;
PSGA Election Results&#13;
Senate:&#13;
Al Spallato 137&#13;
Phil Pogreba 134&#13;
Mike Scoon 129&#13;
Ingrid Petrikat |Q&#13;
Jeanne Buenker-Philips J09&#13;
Mark Hagen |@g&#13;
Patrick Ramsdell |Q0&#13;
Earlene Frederick 94&#13;
Stephen Kalmar II 69&#13;
SUFAC:&#13;
Luis Valldejuli ^5&#13;
One of the most emotional&#13;
moments of the debate came when&#13;
the candidates were fielding&#13;
questions from the audience,&#13;
when this question was asked:&#13;
"What is your position on&#13;
do something about&#13;
PETER JANSSON&#13;
abuses in the student loan&#13;
program, even though he spoke&#13;
out in favor of increasing the&#13;
program. He suggested that the&#13;
student, when applying for a loan,&#13;
sign an agreement with the IRS to&#13;
have repayment made as part of&#13;
the student's taxes after&#13;
graduation.&#13;
LES ASPIN&#13;
women's rights to choice in the&#13;
matter of abortion? Do you favor&#13;
government intervention?"&#13;
Jansson answered first, saying:&#13;
"I think it's tragic that an abortion&#13;
is being performed every 24&#13;
seconds. It has cheapened our&#13;
view of life; and it si wrong and we&#13;
w—ill1 p—aJy for it in tvh.iev jyteaaiarsa aiihcecaiud uif 1 1&#13;
Panel discussion to give information&#13;
we don't&#13;
this."&#13;
He said that it would lead to&#13;
liberalized views on infanticide&#13;
and euthanasia, and that in twenty&#13;
years Americans would look at&#13;
abortion the way people look at&#13;
slavery now. He said, "The 1973&#13;
Supreme Court decision was&#13;
wrong, and we'll find a way to&#13;
change it."&#13;
Aspin got much applause by&#13;
initially stating: "I'm not sure&#13;
who he (Jansson) is enslaving;&#13;
sounds to me like he's enslaving&#13;
the women." Hesaid he "would not&#13;
support a constitutional amendment&#13;
to prohibit abortion." He&#13;
does not, however, favor the&#13;
spending of federal funds to pay&#13;
for abortions because, "You&#13;
should not spend public money for&#13;
something that a significant&#13;
portion of the population considers&#13;
murder." He was interrupted&#13;
several times during his&#13;
statement by Jansson, who&#13;
questioned his assertion that&#13;
abortion was, in fact, murder.&#13;
The debate was held in the&#13;
Union Cinema. It is estimated that&#13;
200 - 300 people were in attendance.&#13;
It was also announced&#13;
that Art Jackson, the Libertarian&#13;
candidate for congressman, will&#13;
speak before the Social Science&#13;
round table at 12:15 on Monday,&#13;
Nov. in Union 106.&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
On Wednesday, Nov. 10, from&#13;
12-2 p.m., the Sexual Harassment&#13;
Advisory Committee will sponsor&#13;
a panel discussion in the Union&#13;
Bazaar to explore some of the&#13;
aspects of sexual harassment.&#13;
JoAnne Zowicky, from the&#13;
Women's Resource Center in&#13;
Racine, will speak about sexual&#13;
harassment from an employer's&#13;
point of view, and provide new&#13;
insight about sexual harassment&#13;
particularly relevant to students.&#13;
Walter Stern, a lawyer from&#13;
Kenosha, will discuss the legal&#13;
aspects of sexual harassment.&#13;
Wayne Johnson, a professor at&#13;
Parkside, will talk about the&#13;
socialization of men. After these&#13;
presentations, the audience will&#13;
have the opportunity to ask&#13;
questions.&#13;
The Sexual Harassment Advisory&#13;
Committee was created in&#13;
April 1982 in response to a mandate&#13;
from the Board of Regents.&#13;
Its purpose is to assist the&#13;
Chancellor on all matters relating&#13;
to sexual harassment, to devise&#13;
programs intended to inform the&#13;
entire university community of&#13;
the nature of sexual harassment,&#13;
to increase public sensitivity to it,&#13;
and to publicise the procedures&#13;
and remedies available through&#13;
the committee. Members also&#13;
assist in informal mediation efforts&#13;
when so requested by the&#13;
Chancellor, serving in an "ombudsman"&#13;
role to give advice,&#13;
counsel and assistance to members&#13;
of the university community&#13;
in matters relating to sexual&#13;
harassment.&#13;
The committee identifies the&#13;
faculty, staff and students simply&#13;
as the University community. Any&#13;
members of the university&#13;
community who feel harassed&#13;
may contact any of the members&#13;
of the committee directly for a&#13;
confidential discussion. Or, a&#13;
person who feels harassed can call&#13;
ext. 2368 and request to be contacted&#13;
by a member on the&#13;
committee. Students do not&#13;
necessarily need to speak with a&#13;
student member; all of the&#13;
committee members are&#13;
available.&#13;
At the meeting, no names will be&#13;
used; the caller's name and&#13;
alleged offender's name will be&#13;
known to only one person. The&#13;
entire committee will review the&#13;
situation, and try to devise a&#13;
method to solve the problem informally.&#13;
Before any other action&#13;
is taken, the caller will be notified.&#13;
The committee will seek as&#13;
much information about the&#13;
situation as possible. The more&#13;
information that is offered, the&#13;
simpler and faster the likely&#13;
resolution of the problem. The&#13;
committee will have the opportunity&#13;
to learn from each&#13;
situation, but all of the incidents&#13;
will be handled individually and&#13;
confidentially.&#13;
The committee realizes that&#13;
most people perceive sexual&#13;
harassment as coming from a&#13;
male teacher and directed at a&#13;
female student. However, this is&#13;
only one possible circumstance of&#13;
sexual harassment, and the&#13;
committee hopes to make the&#13;
university community aware that&#13;
sexual harassment can and does&#13;
happen in other situations.&#13;
Recently the committee has&#13;
developed a series of questions&#13;
which a number of university&#13;
community members will be&#13;
asked to answer. Some professors&#13;
will use the questionnaire in class.&#13;
Anyone interested in filling out a&#13;
questionnaire may stop in the&#13;
Ranger office and pick one up.&#13;
Through the questionnaire the&#13;
committee hopes to learn more&#13;
about the degree of awareness of&#13;
sexual harassment on this&#13;
campus.&#13;
The members of the committee&#13;
are Stella Gray, ext. 2260; Wayne&#13;
Johnson, 2532; Karen Lourigan&#13;
2247; Carrie Peters, 2285; Linda&#13;
Piele, 2642; Stu Rubner, 2576;&#13;
Carla Thomas, 2351; Jackie&#13;
Willems, 2228; and Pat Hensiak,&#13;
2295. The main - line number is&#13;
2368. A message can be left there&#13;
during office hours, and a committee&#13;
member will return the&#13;
call. If there is a particular&#13;
committee member that you&#13;
would like to deal with, request&#13;
that member.&#13;
ANDREW BRHEL AND REBECCA JULICH in a romantic&#13;
scene from "Ring Round the Moon," a "charade with music"&#13;
which open the dramatic arts season at the University of&#13;
a+V Parksi&lt;^e-F&gt;erformances are Oct. 29 and 30and Nov.&#13;
Theater 31 at 2 p. m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Thursday, October 28,1982 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Still number one!&#13;
subw'tS "ri.fo8 1116 last month Milwaukee Brewer fans were&#13;
™ S tests °™er Bud Selig aPProPr'ately dubbed&#13;
sti ess tests Twice the Brewers took each playoff series to the edee •&#13;
once to win the Amerian League championship in a three game sweep&#13;
derisive t0 fu tHe St L°uis Cardi™ls l° come frorTbehM ta the dec swe seventh game to win the World Series.&#13;
World Series fever infected people from all over the state- it seemed&#13;
no one was immune. "How 'bout them Brewers" became a preferred&#13;
Sriin?, f3?h0ng ?lends&gt; Audrey Kuenn's Cesar's Inn became the&#13;
2S of Je. natl°nal media, and Wisconsin Ave. celebrations and&#13;
~mParym! Were elevated t0 fine arts- The Milwaukee media,&#13;
ww-nn?en» a ev®n ,the Pollce force joined the team in giving&#13;
Wisconsinites a party they will not soon forget.&#13;
nf tlmn thatr'the series became the focal point for a lot&#13;
fre^v nf k St 38 SUrdy as Brewer fans trenzy of long - denied championship gratification, and aesx psluordeelyd ainst oth ae&#13;
Milwaukee Brewers helped us forget dizzying unemployment and a&#13;
wprllfii? / f16t °f bfd "eYS f0r 3 while'the Milwaukee Brewer fans&#13;
themselves as 8011(1 and cohesive as the Milwaukee Brewers&#13;
, ^nd U18 a tribute to the fans, who maintained a loyal vigil even after a&#13;
decade of s econd place or worse finishes, and who turned out in mass&#13;
numbers for a parade down Wisconsin Ave. and a fan appreciation day&#13;
fthheP hhePrronefs off ^thhe? KhoeuWre,r Sa n1d? wt i5ll® r eSmeraieins- h e11r operso vfoerd a tlhoantg tthime eB rewers are&#13;
Congratulations, American League champion Milwaukee Brewers&#13;
You re still number one to us&#13;
Letters to the editor:&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
and Mr. Kovalic:&#13;
Last week I submitted an article&#13;
to the Ranger in which I criticized&#13;
Mr. Kovalic's humor. Mr. Kovalic&#13;
replied to my letter in the same&#13;
edition of the paper and seemed to&#13;
take as much umbrage at my&#13;
remarks as I had done to his. Mr.&#13;
Kovalic has, in fact, put words&#13;
into my mouth and I assure him&#13;
that I need no help in that area.&#13;
Mr. Kovalic has stated that his&#13;
article was satire and suggested&#13;
that perhaps I am anti - humorist&#13;
because I do not appreciate his&#13;
brand of humor. Mr. Kovalic has&#13;
said it all, "he" has put the label&#13;
satire on his work. This does not&#13;
necessarily make it so. It is an&#13;
absolute truth that I found no&#13;
humor in his remark. Each person&#13;
has his or her own perception of&#13;
humor I agree, however, I fail to&#13;
find humor in statements which&#13;
make fun of, or cast slurs on other&#13;
human beings in the name of&#13;
humor and can not help feeling&#13;
offended when I read it. That Mr.&#13;
Kovalic should find my attitude&#13;
surprising is not surprising to me.&#13;
Egotists can seldom relate to the&#13;
feelings of others since their main&#13;
concern is self - interest. There&#13;
has been too much prejudice&#13;
throughout history which has been&#13;
hidden behind the label of humor.&#13;
It is in books, in films, and on&#13;
television. Humor is the quality of&#13;
inciting laughter and I can laugh&#13;
at and enjoy good humor as much&#13;
as anyone else, but not at the&#13;
expense of someone else's&#13;
feelings. No humor in any form&#13;
which is harmful to others is&#13;
humorous to me. As I stated&#13;
before, I consider it a poisonous&#13;
influence on our society.&#13;
Mr. Kovalic has said that I&#13;
called him a racist. I did not say,&#13;
nor did I intend to infer, that he&#13;
was a racist. If I felt he was a&#13;
racist, I would have said it&#13;
outright. But if Mr. Kovalic's&#13;
mininterpretation of this was&#13;
unintentional and he sincerely&#13;
understood me to call him a&#13;
racist, then I apologize for failing&#13;
to make my point unmistakable. I&#13;
would not put such a label on&#13;
anyone without concrete&#13;
evidence. My observation was&#13;
that the prejudices of sexism and&#13;
racism go together in most cases&#13;
and I wondered if there was the&#13;
possibility of a 'satirical' article&#13;
on this subject also. If, in fact,&#13;
anything can be said in the name&#13;
of satire and considered humor,&#13;
why then should the subject of&#13;
race be excluded? The label satire&#13;
does not give the person writing it&#13;
carte blanche to say whatever that&#13;
person pleases under the guise of&#13;
humor. I could never agree with a&#13;
philosophy of this sort. If this&#13;
makes me anti - humorous, I plead&#13;
guilty as charged.&#13;
When Mr. Kovalic assumed that&#13;
my article was written in the heat&#13;
of the moment he assumed&#13;
correctly. However, the anger and&#13;
offense have lasted much longer&#13;
than a moment. If Mr. Kovalic&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
Kovalic catches it again I Halloween brines superstition form, O I&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Editor&#13;
Halloween is certainly an interesting&#13;
time of th e year. People&#13;
always seem to be full of mischief.&#13;
Those who fall victim to this&#13;
mischief usually become a little&#13;
more paranoid of the people&#13;
around them. They tend to walk&#13;
down the corridors constantly&#13;
looking over their own shoulder,&#13;
only long enough to notice their&#13;
own shadow. Perhaps there is&#13;
some justification for this&#13;
paranoia. Some of us do tend to&#13;
make more trouble than usual.&#13;
Maybe it's the air at this time of&#13;
year. Maybe it's the other people&#13;
around. It's probably the moon.&#13;
Who knows. Any way you look at&#13;
it, people are easily made&#13;
paranoid. Suspicious, paranoid&#13;
people are indeed funny, but some&#13;
of the most amusing people are&#13;
those who are superstitious.&#13;
Superstition, a fear of the&#13;
unknown. Sometimes an excessive&#13;
fear, sometimes just a bit&#13;
of faith in magic. More than likely&#13;
not logically related to an event,&#13;
or that events' outcome. People&#13;
think it does though. They enjoy&#13;
believing that opening an umbrella&#13;
is bad luck. At least if you&#13;
open it in the house it is. Or is it if&#13;
you open while a black cat is&#13;
crossing your path, and you have&#13;
just passed under a ladder???&#13;
We have superstitious people&#13;
right here on this campus. I told&#13;
everyone we had a lot here. These&#13;
two particular people were&#13;
practicing my favorite superstition.&#13;
You know the one where&#13;
you step on a crack and break&#13;
anybody you want to's back. I&#13;
used to love that as a kid. If we&#13;
were mad at my mother, she was&#13;
the one whose back got broken. Or&#13;
at lease we thought it was. Well,&#13;
the other day I was walking back&#13;
to my office after one of my&#13;
classes, and saw two females&#13;
walking down the hall in quite a&#13;
peculiar manner. It took me quite&#13;
some time to figure out just what&#13;
they were doing. Soon I began to&#13;
figure it out. They were trying to&#13;
avoid stepping on the cracks.&#13;
Now, I'm not sure just how&#13;
familiar people are with the floors&#13;
in these halls, but they basically&#13;
are rather brick in style which&#13;
would render it difficult to avoid&#13;
the cracks. Brick is funny that&#13;
way.&#13;
Having been witness to that, I&#13;
thought I had seen just about&#13;
everything. Then, as I was&#13;
walking out of school that night, I&#13;
caught even myself veering away&#13;
from the underside of a large&#13;
ladder. But, it could have fallen&#13;
Madison passes MRF referendum&#13;
Socialists move in unproductive way&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I was interested to read the&#13;
Ranger's front page report of the&#13;
October 16 meeting of the&#13;
Wisconsin Socialists, both as one&#13;
of the six members of the&#13;
audience, and as one of socialist&#13;
sympathies. As a piece of purely&#13;
documentary evidence, as I am&#13;
sure it was intended, your article&#13;
was adequate. However, as is&#13;
often the case, it became subjective&#13;
simply in what it chose to&#13;
include or exclude — the most&#13;
notable case being of course the&#13;
size of the audience.&#13;
This precedent being&#13;
established, I would like to make a&#13;
few points about the meeting.&#13;
From the article that appeared in&#13;
the Ranger, one might be led to&#13;
assume that the meeting was&#13;
something of a success. This is&#13;
untrue in not just the attendance&#13;
of the meeting but in the viability&#13;
of the Wisconsin Socialists'&#13;
policies, however admirable they&#13;
may be, being presented in the&#13;
manner they were on October 16.&#13;
Socialism is a proletarian&#13;
working person's movement, and&#13;
thus if it is to succeed it must be&#13;
presented to the working person in&#13;
working man's language. This&#13;
meeting did neither. Holding the&#13;
meeting at a university campus,&#13;
however convenient for the&#13;
organizers, does nothing but&#13;
reinforce the unfortunate intellectual&#13;
stigma socialism suffers&#13;
from. Nor would the rhetoric&#13;
used have appealed to the working&#13;
person (employed or not), had he&#13;
been there.&#13;
Thus, what the meeting showed&#13;
best was the problems the&#13;
socialist movement is suffering&#13;
from, and it is these problems that&#13;
prevent any chance of the&#13;
socialists worthwhile policies&#13;
being implemented, and that&#13;
prevent men of great caliber like&#13;
Frank Zeidler having more influence&#13;
than they do.&#13;
I write this not as a critic of&#13;
socialism, but of the unproductive&#13;
direction the American socialist&#13;
movement is taking.&#13;
Douglas Rhodes&#13;
by Jeanne Buenker - Phillips&#13;
As I'm sure most of you are&#13;
aware, both UW - Madison and&#13;
UW - Stevens Point voted this&#13;
month on the mandatory refundable&#13;
fee (MRF) issue. Both&#13;
campuses voted to continue to pay&#13;
the MRF and consequently will&#13;
remain in United Council. This is&#13;
very important to the rest of the&#13;
UW - schools in U. C. both for&#13;
fiscal and political reasons. This is&#13;
the case especially for UW -&#13;
Madison. Since they have such a&#13;
large student body, their&#13;
monetary contribution is quite&#13;
substantial. Also, as true in the&#13;
House of Representatives, votes&#13;
are based on population. Obviously,&#13;
Madison has a very large&#13;
number of votes which can be&#13;
quite important to have when a&#13;
smaller campus, like UW -&#13;
Parkside, needs backing on an&#13;
issue.&#13;
In contrast to this, was the very&#13;
controversial discussion of the&#13;
1983 - 85 Biennial Budget&#13;
Projection during the Executive&#13;
(body as a whole) Meeting at the&#13;
U. C. Meeting last weekend at UW&#13;
- Milwaukee. Unfortunately, it&#13;
looks very bad for students&#13;
because it is projected that tuition&#13;
for Spring Semester will increase&#13;
$30 - $35 and that of Fall will increase&#13;
$50 - $60. Also, it should be&#13;
noted that this does not include sur&#13;
- charges. In the past the state of&#13;
Wisconsin payed 75% of tuition&#13;
costs for the resident student&#13;
while he/she payed 25%. However&#13;
this year the state changed the&#13;
funding formula and forced the&#13;
student to pay 27.3% of tuition&#13;
costs. This is supposedly a temporary&#13;
measure until the state can&#13;
return to the 25/75% funding&#13;
program. Most of the U. C.&#13;
Executive Meeting's debate&#13;
revolved around the idea of&#13;
whether U. C. should go on record&#13;
saying that we support and urge&#13;
the Board of Regents to support&#13;
going back to the 25/75% program&#13;
despite the fact we know it is&#13;
unrealistic at the present time&#13;
given the state of the economy.&#13;
After much heated debate, U. C.&#13;
did finally vote to go on record&#13;
supporting the return to the&#13;
25/75% funding program.&#13;
The Legislative Affairs Committee&#13;
began their Friday night&#13;
meeting discussing the Joint&#13;
Committee for the Review of&#13;
Administrative Rules reports that&#13;
each campus is working on. Each&#13;
report includes university policy&#13;
for; 1) classroom tape recordings,&#13;
2) use of university facilities, 3)&#13;
segregated university fees, and 4)&#13;
merger implementation. Once&#13;
these are all submitted to Curt&#13;
Pawlish, the U. C. Legislative&#13;
Affairs Director, he will compile&#13;
them into a detailed report that&#13;
will be given to the Board of&#13;
Regents. L. A. also discussed the&#13;
drinking age issue. It looks like a&#13;
bill in the State Legislature to&#13;
Continued On Page Three&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Norm Couture&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jolene Torkilsen&#13;
ganger&#13;
Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
Distribution Manager&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
^V-»r0^.Aken' Caro' B"*"ns, Pat Cumbie, Dan Dowhower&#13;
^ichaelKailas, Stephen Kalmar II, Carol&#13;
Kortendick, John Kovalic, Rick Luehr, Robb Luehr, Laura&#13;
Petersen, Jennie Tunkieicz.&#13;
TSL? uw •parkside and&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid reasons&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 28,1982&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
«,5?e the drinkin8 age to 19&#13;
would most definitely pass. U. C&#13;
js strongly against this issue&#13;
DecaUse it would negatively affect&#13;
college students' rights and is on&#13;
Spouses' rights&#13;
debate scheduled&#13;
Public Affairs Committee&#13;
ot The Racine Junior League Inc&#13;
is sponsoring a debate on the&#13;
subject of "Marital Property&#13;
Reforms" at the Prairie School&#13;
fining Room, 4050 Lighthouse&#13;
Drive, at 8:15 p.m., November 3,&#13;
1982.&#13;
State Representative Betty Jo&#13;
Nelson and Attorney Judy M.&#13;
Hartig will be the guest debaters.&#13;
Professor Richard Carrington&#13;
from the Communications&#13;
Continued On Page Four&#13;
Letter to the editor:&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
considers my letter immature,&#13;
infantile, and mud - slinging then&#13;
he should have some faint glimmer&#13;
of the way in which I felt&#13;
about his remark. Let me assure&#13;
him also, that I was not alone in&#13;
my evaluation of his remark,&#13;
others were equally offended by it.&#13;
Mr. Kovalic wonders if I am&#13;
biased? Yes, I certainly am! I am&#13;
biased against cruelty and&#13;
inhumanity in any form and I will&#13;
take a stand against anyone who&#13;
supports behavior which reflects&#13;
inequality in the treatment of&#13;
human beings.&#13;
A suggestion was made that the&#13;
next time I read his material 'I&#13;
think about it, get the facts&#13;
straight, and try to appreciate it in&#13;
the light of how it was written'. I&#13;
United Council record stating this.&#13;
Academic Affairs passed a&#13;
unanimous motion during the&#13;
Friday night meeting. It dealt&#13;
with the Byckear Weapons&#13;
Research and stated that U. C. is&#13;
against any research in the UW -&#13;
System for the purpose of&#13;
enhancing the U. S. nuclear or&#13;
chemical war capabilities. This&#13;
motion was also passed in the&#13;
Executive meeting on Saturday.&#13;
Women's Affairs dealt with&#13;
Affirmative Action and the&#13;
practices of it on each campus.&#13;
They also listened to the UW -&#13;
Milwaukee's Women Caucus&#13;
Director and the UW - Stevens&#13;
Point Women's center Director&#13;
speak. In the future they will be&#13;
working on implementing escort&#13;
services and women's centers on&#13;
all campuses.&#13;
One other important thing that&#13;
happened at this U. C. meeting,&#13;
was the meeting between all the&#13;
Tai Chai class to be held&#13;
suggest that the next time he&#13;
writes an article, he think about it&#13;
and consider the way in which&#13;
what he has to say, can hurt and&#13;
anger people, and that merely&#13;
placing the label humor on it&#13;
doesn't necessarily make it funny&#13;
or any less painful to those who&#13;
must bear the brunt of it. As a&#13;
published writer Mr. Kovalic&#13;
should know that good humor does&#13;
not have to play on people's biases&#13;
and I hope that in future articles&#13;
he will remember this.&#13;
(Any error in the spelling of&#13;
your name was unintentional, but&#13;
I'm sure you spelled mine incorrectly&#13;
in an uncontrollable fit&#13;
of satirical inspiration ... You see&#13;
Mr. Kovalic, that I am not entirely&#13;
without a sense of humor.)&#13;
M. E. Marten&#13;
BRC gets six new members&#13;
SOC vice chair Carla Thomas&#13;
announced at the PSGA Senate&#13;
meeting Friday that six new&#13;
members have been appointed to&#13;
the newly revised Budget and&#13;
Review Committee.&#13;
The selections were made at the&#13;
Oct. 21 informational meeting.&#13;
Three of the seats will be elected&#13;
from the SOC membership in the&#13;
Security:&#13;
spring. People now filling the&#13;
spring seats are: George Harris,&#13;
P a r k s i d e W a r g a m e r s&#13;
Association; Terry Tunks,&#13;
Political Science Club; and Dave&#13;
Schroeder, Parkside Players.&#13;
Fall seats have been filled by&#13;
Valerie Olson of SWEA; Eric&#13;
Simonsen, Student Mobilization&#13;
for Survival; and Gina Sheppard -&#13;
Wolthausen, Anthropology Club.&#13;
Seminar on rape scheduled&#13;
by Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Campus Security&#13;
Rape! It doesn't always happen&#13;
to someone else. Every woman is&#13;
a potential victim. Age, race or&#13;
class mean nothing to a rapist.&#13;
Location and time of day also&#13;
mean little to a rapist. It could&#13;
happen any time and anywhere to&#13;
anybody.&#13;
The Campus Security office, in&#13;
its continuing effort to serve the&#13;
campus community, will present&#13;
a "Rape Prevention" seminar.&#13;
The program will be presented on&#13;
November 3, 1982 at 1:00 p.m. in&#13;
rooms 104 - 106 of the Union. All&#13;
women in the campus community&#13;
are urged to attend.&#13;
The program will deal with&#13;
ways you might avoid becoming a&#13;
victim of rape and knowing what&#13;
to do if you are a victim. Most&#13;
rapes are never reported. The not&#13;
reporting of a rape only leaves the&#13;
rapist free to rape again. Just&#13;
because one victim will survive&#13;
does not mean the next victim will&#13;
be as lucky.&#13;
Awareness of your surroundings&#13;
is one of the best means of&#13;
preventing rape. Be alert, avoid&#13;
certain high risk situations.&#13;
Although rape can happen&#13;
anywhere, you may be able to&#13;
take precautions against it by just&#13;
thinking ahead. Walk in well -&#13;
lighted areas, walk with friends,&#13;
keeping your doors locked,&#13;
checking the back seat of your car&#13;
before entering and just being&#13;
alert and aware of your environment&#13;
may keep you free&#13;
from an attack. Avoid any&#13;
situation you feel may make you a&#13;
target for a rapist.&#13;
The program will also deal with&#13;
how you should react if you are&#13;
attacked. The most important&#13;
point, and the hardest to control,&#13;
is not to panic. Get your mind and&#13;
body under control and think! You&#13;
don't have to react immediately —&#13;
wait for the right opportunity.&#13;
Opportunities for escape will&#13;
present themselves, but only if&#13;
you are alert and watching for&#13;
them. Your best defense is to stun&#13;
or surprise your assailant, and&#13;
run away. Run, don't try to defeat&#13;
your attacker.&#13;
Never carry weapons like a&#13;
knife or gun. These can be taken&#13;
away from you by the attacker&#13;
and used against you. The&#13;
program will present articles you&#13;
carry that may serve as a weapon&#13;
to stun someone so you can run&#13;
away.&#13;
The seminar is being presented&#13;
to inform you and make you&#13;
aware of rape situations. All the&#13;
seminars and programs don't help&#13;
unless you attend. The more you&#13;
know and understand, the better&#13;
prepared you will be. Attend the&#13;
seminar Wednesday, November 3,&#13;
1982, 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. in&#13;
Room 104 - 106 of the Student&#13;
Union. Rape can happen to&#13;
anyone, anywhere, at any time.&#13;
Know the scene of rape and avoid&#13;
it. Be informed!&#13;
Segregated University Fees&#13;
Allocations Committees.&#13;
Representatives from Oshkosh,&#13;
Green Bay, Whitewater, Madison,&#13;
Milwaukee, Stout, and Parkside&#13;
attended and discussed their&#13;
systems and the problems with&#13;
them. As a result of this informative&#13;
meeting, all the&#13;
SUFAC's will be exchanging ideas&#13;
and suggestions through the mail&#13;
on a regular basis. They also will&#13;
be meeting again in December.&#13;
U. C. as well as P. S. G. A.&#13;
camiot stress the importance of&#13;
voting in the November 2 election.&#13;
The way it looks now, the state of&#13;
Wisconsin will have a debt in the&#13;
next fiscal year of at least one&#13;
billion dollars. This means cuts to&#13;
agencies throughout the state and&#13;
the University system is very high&#13;
on the list. If students vote for&#13;
legislators that favor higher&#13;
education, we can minimize the&#13;
total dollar cut - backs. Voting&#13;
records of the legislators up for&#13;
election are posted on thQjf. S. G.&#13;
A. window and if you have any&#13;
questions about the election, feel&#13;
free to ask anyone in P. S. G. A.&#13;
Once again, please get out and&#13;
vote on November 2. Your vote&#13;
really does count.&#13;
In a 6 - week noncredit evening&#13;
course offered through the&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Extension,&#13;
UW-Parkside, the art of&#13;
living Taoism and the practice of&#13;
T'ai Chi Ch'uan will be introduced.&#13;
Taoism is an ancient path to&#13;
wisdom in which learning occurs&#13;
and happiness is achieved, not by&#13;
action toward a goal, but simply&#13;
through becoming aware of one's&#13;
place in the universe. 2500 years&#13;
ago the philosopher Chuang Tsu&#13;
encapsulated the essence of Taoist&#13;
thought in these words:&#13;
"From the sage's emptiness,&#13;
stillness arises:&#13;
From stillness, action:&#13;
From action, attainment."&#13;
Thomas Wilke, formerly an&#13;
associate professor of psychology&#13;
at UW - Parkside, and presently&#13;
working as a psychological&#13;
counselor in Kenosha, and the instructor&#13;
for this course, has been&#13;
quoted as saying that "We in&#13;
America move too fast.. . tend to&#13;
be unhappy people . . . hurry up&#13;
and work so hard so we can relax&#13;
and enjoy ourselves ... but have&#13;
become so psychologically conditioned&#13;
to a frantic pace that&#13;
when the time comes to relax, we&#13;
can't." Wilke says, relax while&#13;
you work. He believes it is&#13;
possible, even for those who have&#13;
been conditioned into a Western&#13;
way of thinking, to integrate&#13;
Taoist values into their daily&#13;
activities through the Taoist way&#13;
of using the mind.&#13;
T'ai Chi Ch'uan is an exercise in&#13;
which one moves in a dream - like&#13;
state, a sort of Oriental ballet in&#13;
slow motion, with the mind concentrating&#13;
upon a sequence of&#13;
natural, relaxed movements.&#13;
Wilke claims that the combination&#13;
of living the Taoist philosophy and&#13;
the regular performance of T'ai&#13;
Chi Ch'uan can improve physical&#13;
health and fitness, as well as lead&#13;
to psychological and other&#13;
benefits.&#13;
Wilke has practiced T'ai Chi&#13;
Ch'uan for four years, specializes&#13;
in the study of the psychology of&#13;
the athlete and Taoist philosophy,&#13;
and has taught courses in&#13;
biofeedback, consciousness,&#13;
Chinese medicine, and&#13;
physiology.&#13;
The class will meet on Thursdays,&#13;
beginning October 28, 7-9&#13;
p.m., in room D128, Molinaro Hall&#13;
at UW - Parkside. The fee is $22.&#13;
Register with University Extension&#13;
at UW - Parkside, phone&#13;
553-2312.&#13;
by Bruce R. Preston&#13;
Feathered blond hair frames&#13;
finely chiseled features. Cool eyes&#13;
look outward from a positive,&#13;
secure self - image. Talk is from a&#13;
throaty, almost brusque voice.&#13;
And a pair of sunglasses hang&#13;
from a strap around the neck.&#13;
This is Richard Todd Sorenson,&#13;
who combines the aggressiveness&#13;
and forward motion of a rising&#13;
business executive with the&#13;
carefree, adventurous soul of a&#13;
drifter.&#13;
At just 23, Todd (as he is called)&#13;
has already lived quite a full life.&#13;
After growing up and graduating&#13;
from high school in Las Vegas&#13;
(which is where the sunglasses -&#13;
around - the - neck style came&#13;
from) Todd hit the amateur&#13;
downhill ski racing circuit.&#13;
"Skiing became a religion with&#13;
me," said Todd of t he many hours&#13;
put into the sport turned occupation.&#13;
After two years of&#13;
competition his coaches considered&#13;
him to be an Olympic&#13;
hopeful, but Todd suffered a&#13;
dislocated shoulder as a result of a&#13;
racing accident.&#13;
Because of his inability to&#13;
compete, Todd's family sent him&#13;
to Cuerna Vaca, Mexico to attend&#13;
a language school in order to&#13;
become a translator in the family&#13;
business. This, however, just&#13;
didn't mix with Todd. "I forgot&#13;
almost everything I learned&#13;
almost as soon as I got back."&#13;
UC calls for&#13;
tuition strike&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The United Council passed a&#13;
resolution calling for a Tuition&#13;
Strike at its Oct. 15 meeting in&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
The resolution, which passed&#13;
without opposition, says that the&#13;
council has gone on record in&#13;
stating its opposition to the&#13;
Solomon Amendment, which links&#13;
financial aid with draft&#13;
registration.&#13;
The resolution also states that&#13;
the amendment discriminates&#13;
against the poor and apparently&#13;
violates the concept of due process&#13;
by trying suspected draft evaders&#13;
before they have been found guilty&#13;
in a court of law.&#13;
UC is requesting that the United&#13;
States Student Association make&#13;
repeal of the "heinous amendment"&#13;
the top priority at their&#13;
next session of congress.&#13;
The United Council asked ASA&#13;
to organize a national tuition&#13;
strike and to exert pressure on the&#13;
federal government to repeal the&#13;
amendment.&#13;
People on Campus &gt;stnn TH-Jeo ftUhnenn we—n tL to worki f«u ll t..i me • ...... . .&#13;
and attended the University of Las&#13;
Vegas and the community college,&#13;
studying business management!&#13;
After one year he came to Racine,&#13;
where his father had grown up and&#13;
gone to school.&#13;
Now an Accounting and&#13;
Business major, after graduating&#13;
Todd wants to attend the&#13;
University at Boulder for Law&#13;
school and to be on the ski team&#13;
there.&#13;
Todd, who describes himself as&#13;
a "thrill seeker" who enjoys&#13;
"living on the edge," was a little&#13;
miffed at the area after moving&#13;
here. "It's more depressed (here)&#13;
. . . and the lifestyle's slower," he&#13;
described.&#13;
Yet, he found that the people of&#13;
this area also have misconceptions&#13;
of his native Las Vegas.&#13;
"Yes, there really are houses in&#13;
Vegas," he said in reference to the&#13;
myth many hold about everyone&#13;
in Las Vegas living in a hotel&#13;
suite.&#13;
"And no, not everyone is caught&#13;
up in the gambling scene," he&#13;
added, then also remarked that he&#13;
missed the slot machines of home.&#13;
One of the things in life which&#13;
Todd strives for is being the kind&#13;
of p erson people like to be around.&#13;
"I like to make others happy."&#13;
With his easy - going frame of&#13;
mind, not much bothers Todd.&#13;
"Life is too short to get to serious&#13;
about anything." He added though&#13;
that he does dislike indecision, "in&#13;
myself and others."&#13;
About his future, Todd jokes&#13;
he's "looking forward to an early&#13;
retirement." Getting more&#13;
serious he recounts how his father&#13;
started "dirt poor" in Racine and&#13;
built a law practice into a very&#13;
profitable business. "Everybody&#13;
has the chance," Todd starts,&#13;
almost as if he's reading a script.&#13;
Then, after a pause he adds,&#13;
"Yeah, I think so. You just gotta&#13;
go for it and study," and by doing&#13;
so reaffirms his philosophies and&#13;
beliefs.&#13;
He's not as active now as he has&#13;
been in the past. The emphasis&#13;
now is on the books and grades.&#13;
"Maybe I have mellowed a bit, but&#13;
there will always be a kid in me."&#13;
While so many lives are filled&#13;
with regrets and despair at&#13;
dreams that were never attempted.&#13;
Todd seems genuinely&#13;
happy. i m happy to wake up in&#13;
the morning," he commented,&#13;
then added "unless it was a rough&#13;
night before."&#13;
Todd's philosophy on life seems&#13;
to sum his character quite well. "I&#13;
look well into the future, but&#13;
everything goes day by day."&#13;
••••••••••••••••••-A VOTE&#13;
Nov. 2, State Elections&#13;
Your Education&#13;
Depends On It&#13;
It only takes 60 seconds&#13;
to register at your&#13;
local voting station.&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Student&#13;
Government&#13;
Association&#13;
This Ad Sponsored By 009&#13;
••••••••••••••A-****&#13;
Thursday, October 28, 1982&#13;
Ring Round the Moon"&#13;
premiers semester's drama series&#13;
"Ring Round The Moon," a&#13;
frothy comedy, will be performed&#13;
by the Parkside dramatic arts&#13;
discipline for two successive&#13;
weekends, Oct. 29and 30, and Nov.&#13;
5 and 6, at 8 p. m. and Oct. 31 at 2&#13;
p. m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. It has been called by its&#13;
author, Jean Anouilh, "a charade&#13;
with music." As is common in the&#13;
very best of charades, the play&#13;
contains some wonderful confusions&#13;
of identities. The play's&#13;
central plot, for example, turns&#13;
around identical twin brothers&#13;
who hold totally opposite views of&#13;
love. The heart of the play,&#13;
however, is romance and it&#13;
depends upon the interweaving of&#13;
character with plot.&#13;
Simply identifying the cast&#13;
suggests something of the play's&#13;
masterfully comic plot weavings.&#13;
Frederic (Andrew Brhel,&#13;
Kenosha) is engaged to Diana&#13;
(Lisa Beck a*, Racine) who is&#13;
secretly in love with Frederic's&#13;
twin brother Hugo, (also played&#13;
by Brhel). Hugo employs a&#13;
ballerina named Isabelle&#13;
(Rebecca Julich, Racine), "to&#13;
deflect the stars," and bring&#13;
Frederic to his senses. The&#13;
scheme goes wrong when&#13;
Isabelle's mother (Beth Wells,&#13;
Racine) ends up being recognized&#13;
by her old school chum, Capulet&#13;
(Janet Heflin, Kenosha) , who can&#13;
not help by spilling the beans to&#13;
her employer, Madame&#13;
DesMortes (Mary - Beth Kelleher,&#13;
Kenosha).&#13;
The social class in which "Ring&#13;
Round The Moon" revolves is&#13;
elegant, rich and French, and&#13;
other members of the cast include:&#13;
Rich Smith (Racine) as the&#13;
butler Joshua, Julian Brown&#13;
(Milwaukee) as Patrice, the&#13;
private secretary to J. C.&#13;
Bussard's (Kenosha) Messerchman,&#13;
who is paramour to&#13;
Patricia Casciaro's (Kenosha)&#13;
Lady India, and her ever - vigilant&#13;
Guy Charles Romainvilles, played&#13;
by Scott Reichelsdorf (Kenosha).&#13;
Lighting and setting are being&#13;
— _ Photo by John Kovallc&#13;
SINGER/GUITARIST MICHAEL GULEZIAN performed last&#13;
Friday afternoon in the Union Bazaar.&#13;
Marquette Univ.&#13;
Law School&#13;
A raprtiMlallvi will bt&#13;
•n campus Nov. 2nd, 1982.&#13;
CONTACT&#13;
CAREER PLACEMENT OFF.&#13;
FOR DETAILS&#13;
tff? STRATEGY&#13;
FOR&#13;
EMPLOYMENT&#13;
WORKSHOP&#13;
Sponsored by the&#13;
Office of Placement Services&#13;
Featuring Practical Suggestions on How To:&#13;
U Research Companies&#13;
• Prepare a Cover Letter&#13;
• Follow Up&#13;
• Use Campus Resources&#13;
FRIDAY NOVEMBER 5, 1982&#13;
1:00 - 2:00&#13;
Student Union, Room 104&#13;
Guest Leader&#13;
AAs. Judy Murray&#13;
Manager, Corporate Employee Relations&#13;
&amp; Career Development&#13;
J.I. Case Company&#13;
designed by Jon Schoenoff and&#13;
Charles Ervin, respectively, while&#13;
the costumes are being designed&#13;
by Barbara Thompson. The play's&#13;
director is Leon J. Van Dyke,&#13;
coordinator of UW - Parkside's&#13;
dramatic arts discipline.&#13;
A deft blend of colorful&#13;
characters and intricate plot&#13;
devices combine to make "Ring&#13;
Round The Moon" a comedic&#13;
classic for the whole family. The&#13;
famous American director and&#13;
critic Harold Clurman has said,&#13;
"there is no one in the theatre&#13;
more comprehensively&#13;
representative of contemporary&#13;
France than Jean Anouilh," and&#13;
certainly "Ring Round The&#13;
Moon" has been one of his most&#13;
popular plays in England as well&#13;
as New York.&#13;
Local audiences will be able to&#13;
see the play by arranging tickets&#13;
in advance at $2.50 for students,&#13;
staff and senior citizens, and $3.50&#13;
for the general public by calling&#13;
553-2345 or 553-2042. Tickets will&#13;
also be available at the door, at $3&#13;
and $4.&#13;
Festa Roma&#13;
coming to Union&#13;
"Festa Roma," an evening of&#13;
Italian dining and entertainment,&#13;
will join the roster of the popular&#13;
ethnic programs which have&#13;
become a tradition at Parkside on&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 6, i n the Parkside&#13;
Union.&#13;
The evening will include a five&#13;
course Italian dinner and entertainment&#13;
by the Italian Folk&#13;
Dancers of Milwaukee, in full&#13;
costume, and music by the&#13;
Sicilian Seranaders, who will&#13;
provide strolling musicians&#13;
during dinner and later, music by&#13;
a full band for dancing.&#13;
Previous ethnic evenings,&#13;
usually sell - out events, have&#13;
featured the culture and cuisine of&#13;
Greece, Mexico and Germany.&#13;
The German festival is an annual&#13;
spring event.&#13;
Union Director Bill Niebuhr&#13;
said the events are planned with&#13;
great attention to detail using&#13;
authentic ethnic recipes and&#13;
entertainment by ethnic groups&#13;
dedicated to broadening understanding&#13;
of their culture.&#13;
"Festa Roma" will get un-&#13;
Law Rep&#13;
An admissions counselor from&#13;
Marquette Law School will meet&#13;
with prospective law school&#13;
students Tuesday, Nov. 2 from&#13;
9:30 - 11 a.m. in MOLN 367A to&#13;
discuss the Marquette Law School&#13;
program, admission policies and&#13;
procedures. For further information,&#13;
contact Sue Strickler&#13;
MOLN 263.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
Tickets for the Manager's&#13;
Dinner will be sold in Molinaro&#13;
Hall Monday through Friday from&#13;
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. and Tuesday and&#13;
Thursday evenings from 4 - 7 p.m.&#13;
Tickets are $10, and may also be&#13;
purchased from any Accounting&#13;
Club officer. The dinner will be&#13;
Monday, Nov. 15. The main&#13;
speaker will be Frederick&#13;
Kraegel, a CPA partner from&#13;
Peat, Marwick, Mitchell and Co.&#13;
The club is also sponsoring a&#13;
workshop called "Interviewing:&#13;
the Office Visit," on Friday, Oct.&#13;
29 a t 1 p.m. in MOLN D-137. J.&#13;
Mitchell Szorcsik from the accounting&#13;
firm Deliotte, Haskins&#13;
and Sells will tell what to expect at&#13;
the second interview. Refreshments&#13;
will be served.&#13;
Mobe&#13;
Are you interested in achieving&#13;
social justice in our society? For&#13;
example, do you think it's fair that&#13;
our government thinks that&#13;
building bombs is tantamount to&#13;
providing education for students&#13;
and jobs for the jobless? Do you&#13;
think that a society dedicated to&#13;
life, liberty and the pursuit of&#13;
happiness is consistent with&#13;
supporting despotic governments&#13;
in Central America or persecuting&#13;
conscientious draft registration&#13;
resistors, especially with your&#13;
money?&#13;
If you haven't already turned to&#13;
a more pleasant article you're&#13;
probably asking yourself, "Is&#13;
there anything that can be done&#13;
about all this?" Our answer is:&#13;
absolutely!&#13;
You can do something today by&#13;
joining Parkside's chapter of&#13;
Mobilization for Survival. You&#13;
see, the people at Mobe take these&#13;
questions seriously, and through&#13;
our actions we have attempted to&#13;
take a stand collectively and as&#13;
individuals to influence some of&#13;
the political events which shape&#13;
our daily lives, e.g. draft&#13;
registration, the arms race and&#13;
funding of human needs.&#13;
To illustrate this point more&#13;
clearly, think back to June of this&#13;
year and you may recall that one&#13;
of the largest anti - nuclear&#13;
demonstrations in the world took&#13;
CLUB EVENTS&#13;
derway with a wine punch&#13;
reception at 6 p.m. Seating will&#13;
begin at 7 p.m. for the dinner,&#13;
which will be served at 7:30. That&#13;
will be followed by dancing.&#13;
The dinner menu includes&#13;
cappalletti enbrodo ("Little Hat"&#13;
soup, named for the pasta); an&#13;
antipasto tray including Genoa&#13;
salami, prosciutto e melone and&#13;
provolone cheese; a pasta course&#13;
of spaghettini a la carbonara; and&#13;
a combination entree including&#13;
chicken cacciatora, scaloppine a&#13;
la vitella al Marsala, Italian&#13;
sausage with peppers and onions&#13;
and mixed vegetables. Dessert&#13;
will be gelato (ice cream) and&#13;
biscotti al 'anici (anice cookies),&#13;
accompanied by caffe (coffee)!&#13;
Imported Italian wines will be&#13;
available during dinner.&#13;
The price is $17.50 per person&#13;
and admission is by reservation&#13;
only. Reservations can be made in&#13;
person or by mail with the&#13;
Parkside Union Information&#13;
Center, UW-Parkside, Box No.&#13;
2000, Kenosha, 53141, (Phone 553-&#13;
2345). Master Charge is available.&#13;
place in New York City. This rally&#13;
was partially sponsored by the&#13;
efforts of the local and national&#13;
chapters of Mobe, and by other&#13;
groups with similar interests.&#13;
We feel quite sure that the&#13;
freeze referendum held in&#13;
Wisconsin was passed as a direct&#13;
result of the New York rally and&#13;
from a demand by the people of&#13;
this country to have a voice in&#13;
their own future by calling for an&#13;
end to the insanity of the arms&#13;
race. The point here is that you are&#13;
not powerless unless you choose to&#13;
be powerless.&#13;
In the past, other events&#13;
sponsored by Mobe include:&#13;
Teach - ins on nuclear power and&#13;
its connection to the arms race,&#13;
speakers who have critically&#13;
discussed civil disobedience, films&#13;
on the effects of nuclear wastes&#13;
and much more.&#13;
Right now, the next event on&#13;
campus sponsored by Mobe will&#13;
be a forum given by a local draft&#13;
resistor on campus to tell about&#13;
his experience of being persecuted&#13;
by the U.S. Government. The talk&#13;
will be co - sponsored by Mobe, the&#13;
Political Science Club, the Pre -&#13;
Law Club and the Parkside&#13;
Philosophical Society.&#13;
If you've decided not to decide,&#13;
or if you simply don't agree with&#13;
what's been said, then read no&#13;
further. However, if you want to&#13;
take control of your life, or if you&#13;
have any comments, questions or&#13;
criticisms, then by all means feel&#13;
free to attend the weekly meetings&#13;
of Parkside's Mobilization for&#13;
Survival every Thursday at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in Moln D-128.&#13;
Women in Business&#13;
All members and interested&#13;
persons are invited to attend the&#13;
monthly membership meeting on&#13;
Monday, Nov. 1 at 1:00 p.m. in&#13;
Union 207.&#13;
Data Processing&#13;
The Data Processing Club is&#13;
sponsoring two speakers who&#13;
graduated from Parkside last&#13;
semester. Chuck McMahon and&#13;
John Schmidt were both hired by&#13;
Northwestern Mutual Life and&#13;
have had over 35 interviews&#13;
between them, both on and off&#13;
campus. Chuck and John will&#13;
discuss these interviews and give&#13;
ideas of the role and future of men&#13;
and women in the field.&#13;
The presentation will be&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 28 in Molinaro 213&#13;
at 8 p.m. Refreshments will be&#13;
served during an informal&#13;
question and answer period.&#13;
Cheerleaders&#13;
On Wednesday, Nov. 3 and&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 17, the&#13;
cheerleaders will be sponsoring a&#13;
bake sale. Many delicious items&#13;
will be on sale, so don't miss it.&#13;
Also, we are still looking for&#13;
men who are interested in joining&#13;
the team. Call 553-2320 and ask for&#13;
Shirley if you are interested.&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
Bruce Pepich, the director of&#13;
Wustum Museum in Racine will&#13;
lecture Wednesday, Nov. 3 in&#13;
CART 129. The subject of the talk&#13;
is Artist's Presentations." There&#13;
will be a question and answer&#13;
period afterward.&#13;
SWEA&#13;
The Student Wisconsin&#13;
Educational Association's next&#13;
meeting is on Monday, Nov. l at&#13;
1:00 p.m. in Molinaro D-128 We&#13;
will discuss the teacher's convention&#13;
and coming events.&#13;
Meeting dates for the rest of the&#13;
semester are Nov. 15 and 29 an d&#13;
Dec. 13.&#13;
IVCF&#13;
The inter Varsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship presents Lazaro Uribe&#13;
as our special guest speaker, who&#13;
will be speaking to us on "The&#13;
SUng of Death: Is it Real?" on&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 3 at 1:00 p.m in&#13;
Moln 107. Everyone is welcome to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Spouses' rights&#13;
debate scheduled&#13;
Continued From Page Three&#13;
Se5artment wil1 be Moderator. the&#13;
During this session, the&#13;
Wisconsin legislature will again&#13;
consider what has been termed&#13;
the single most important&#13;
legislation to be before it in 50&#13;
years. That is, it will consider&#13;
whether to make sweeping&#13;
reforms in the laws governing&#13;
ownership of property by married&#13;
people. What it does will potentially&#13;
or passively affect every&#13;
Wisconsin citizen and directly&#13;
affect those contemplating&#13;
divorce, women seeking their own&#13;
fu jt rating, or the survivors of&#13;
the death of a married person.&#13;
Historically, Wisconsin has&#13;
been a separate ownership state&#13;
with legal title to property&#13;
determining ownership. Recent&#13;
divorce statutes have made some&#13;
modification of this situation,&#13;
ohould Wisconsin now become a&#13;
community property state such as&#13;
California?&#13;
We urge you to come hear our&#13;
speakers discuss the alternatives&#13;
so you can judge for yourself and&#13;
become an active participant in&#13;
the legislative process.&#13;
Rats, Vangelis, Plasmatics;&#13;
the good, the good and the uglv&#13;
bbyy JJoohhnn KKoovvaalliicc shame that nonp nf fKom i — ^ *&#13;
Well, after a gap of a week, it's&#13;
back to the grind. First of a ll, let&#13;
me correct a (gulp) mistake from&#13;
the last article. Joe Jackson's&#13;
'Night and Day' should only have&#13;
been rated a seven out of ten. Got&#13;
that down? Good. Remember,&#13;
you'll be tested on Monday.&#13;
Now, you may be wondering&#13;
why my reviews have given such&#13;
high ratings to albums so far.&#13;
Well, that's easy. The only records&#13;
I normally buy are by artists&#13;
whom I know I like. I mean, I'm&#13;
not going to blow hard - earned&#13;
dollars on the Plasmatics' next&#13;
release.&#13;
But, as I always say, variety is&#13;
the spice of life. So if you get bored&#13;
with favorable reviews, I'll throw&#13;
in a bummer every now and then.&#13;
In fact, if you have an album&#13;
which you loathe, just send the&#13;
name of it to me and I'll try to&#13;
gratuitously shred it to pieces.&#13;
Heck, if the band is bad enough, I&#13;
won't even have to listen to any of&#13;
it. I mean, using the Plasmatics as&#13;
an example, it goes without saying&#13;
that anything they put out is going&#13;
shame that none of them were in&#13;
n « r n r a t t i m e ) b u t w h e n We n d y&#13;
O. Williams begins her nauseating&#13;
gyrations and hopeless caterwauling,&#13;
it is enough to drive one&#13;
elvxhh iKb iftiimon •' sWm,h itimf an- I mean, you have the&#13;
bod for it is one thing, but when&#13;
you are built like a paraplegic&#13;
elephant, well, gross city, as you&#13;
imght say. Know what I'm getting&#13;
I can hardly say too little about&#13;
tins vomit - inducing album. Avoid&#13;
it at all costs. It probably causes&#13;
leprosy and should be condemned.&#13;
So should the Plasmatics. Zero out&#13;
of ten.&#13;
And now for something completely&#13;
different:&#13;
The Boomtown Rats&#13;
V Deep (Columbia)&#13;
Since it's only been about eight&#13;
weeks (Not even, Ed.) since I did&#13;
a review of "The Fine Art of&#13;
Surfacing," my mind was all set&#13;
up to make comparisons. "V&#13;
Deep" is, of course, the 'Rats'&#13;
latest release. In many ways it is&#13;
a very strange album, completely&#13;
different from their previous&#13;
Opening with 'Never in a Million&#13;
Years,' the first thought that&#13;
sprang to mind was David Bowie.&#13;
This is one of the more powerful&#13;
songs, and evokes memories of&#13;
Diamond Smiles." The&#13;
production of the whole album is&#13;
very proficient, and nowhere does&#13;
Halloween" is disappointing&#13;
the third time around&#13;
THE BOOMTOWN RATS&#13;
to be pretty awful. Their latest&#13;
album is no exception, so I'll start&#13;
out with them. Be warned though,&#13;
their new effort is fit only to be&#13;
burned by the Reverend Risley.&#13;
So, here we go.&#13;
The Plasmatics&#13;
"Coup d'etat"&#13;
What can I say? It stinks. Full of&#13;
catatonic waitings and ear -&#13;
splitting noises which probably&#13;
sterilize any rabbits under three&#13;
hundred yards away, the best&#13;
thing that can be said about the&#13;
Plasmatics is that they are consistent&#13;
in their abysmal pursuit of&#13;
the fast buck.&#13;
I mean, this really sucks, you&#13;
know what I'm saying? I wouldn't&#13;
give this album to my worst&#13;
enemy on a bad day. Not onl y are&#13;
the Spasmatics, excuse me,&#13;
Plasmatics willing to jump on the&#13;
new wave bandwagon even though&#13;
the nearest any of them get to&#13;
musical proficiency is blowing up&#13;
a car on stage. (It is a great&#13;
offerings. When I first listened to&#13;
it, I was disappointed, to say the&#13;
least, expecting something more&#13;
biting. While it's true that their&#13;
style has mellowed somewhat,&#13;
successive listenings have substantially&#13;
raised my opinion of "V&#13;
Deep," and I quite like this album&#13;
now. (Note that 'mellow' for the&#13;
Boomtown Rats is still pretty&#13;
damn powerful.)&#13;
The album itself has plastered&#13;
over it the logo: "Featuring Bob&#13;
Geldof, star of P ink Floyd's "The&#13;
Wall." (Groan.) In some ways the&#13;
album does contain "Floydisms,"&#13;
but anyone expecting "In the&#13;
Flesh" et. al, will be in for a&#13;
shock.&#13;
JON AND VANGELIS&#13;
it show better than here.&#13;
"To The Bitter End" and&#13;
"Talking in Code" follow, leading&#13;
to "He Watches it All." It is hard&#13;
to block memories of "The Wall"&#13;
here, as many of the same subjects&#13;
are covered. I think,&#13;
however, that "To The Bitter&#13;
End" is fast becoming one of my&#13;
favorite Rats tracks. ("To the&#13;
bitter end / We go all the way / It&#13;
isn't too far / To the bitter end /&#13;
With our wills of iron / Souls of&#13;
coal / Hearts of gold.")&#13;
One thing to keep in mind is that&#13;
the lyric sheet often varies substantially&#13;
from what is sung.&#13;
Geldof was never the most subtle&#13;
songwriter in the world.&#13;
Side two contains the first&#13;
British single from the album,&#13;
"House on Fire." This is the Rats&#13;
at their commercial best. Longer&#13;
than the single version due to a&#13;
rather controversial (to some)&#13;
last third, "House on Fire" is&#13;
excellent. Not dissimilar to the&#13;
pace of "Mondo Bongo," the&#13;
bongos are back, and with&#13;
vengeance.&#13;
"Whitehall 1212," one of the two&#13;
instrumental tracks, is good fun,&#13;
bringing back the fifties spy&#13;
thrillers, and "Skin on Skin" is&#13;
definitely not to be listened to by&#13;
anyone under the age of 18. (If&#13;
that doesn't sell the album,&#13;
nothing will.) I really do like this&#13;
album. It grows on you. (Six out of&#13;
ten.)&#13;
Jon and Vangelis&#13;
The Friends of&#13;
Mr. Cairo (Polydor)&#13;
Did I say and now for something&#13;
completely different? Jon and&#13;
Vangelis can hardly be called new&#13;
wave, but I believe this album&#13;
definitely rates a mention.&#13;
We all know that Jon is Jon&#13;
Anderson of "Yes" and solo fame,&#13;
don't we? And of course, we've all&#13;
heard the theme from 'Chariots of&#13;
Fire' by Vangelis, haven't we?&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
GOING TO&#13;
MEDICAL S CHOOL?&#13;
NOT E NOUGH CASH&#13;
TO PAY FOR If?&#13;
IT'S YOUR JOB TO GET THROUGH MEDICAL SCHOOL.&#13;
IT'S OUR JOB TO PAY FOR IT!&#13;
The U.S. Navy Health Profession Scholarship pays for&#13;
tuition, books, and all clinical fees. Plus $530.00 a month&#13;
stipend. Call for an appointment with our medical program&#13;
office. Call: Toll Free&#13;
271-6559&#13;
YOU WORRY ABOUT THE GRADES&#13;
AND LET US WORRY ABOUT THE MONEY&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Despite the title, "Halloween&#13;
III: The Season of the Witch" is&#13;
not a sequel to the previous two&#13;
Halloween films. Producers John&#13;
Carpenter and Debra Hill have&#13;
explained that they want to make&#13;
a series of films, all grouped&#13;
under the "Halloween" title, not&#13;
unlike "The Twilight Zone." If&#13;
this film is any indication of the&#13;
type of movies they are going to be&#13;
making, they should abandon this&#13;
idea and move on to better things.&#13;
The story begins with a store&#13;
owner being pursued by several&#13;
mysterious men in three - piece&#13;
suits. After killing one of his&#13;
pursuers, the injured store owner&#13;
is taken to a hospital, where he is&#13;
soon given a very inventive nose&#13;
job by another guy in a suit who&#13;
then blows himself up in a car.&#13;
Before dying, however, the&#13;
merchant has told a doctor that&#13;
"they are going to kill us all." The&#13;
doctor then teams up with the&#13;
store owner's daughter, and&#13;
together they try to find out who&#13;
killed her father, and who's going&#13;
to "kill us all."&#13;
If t his plot sounds stupid, that's&#13;
because it is. But wait — it gets&#13;
worse. It seems that there's this&#13;
mask manufacturer who's actually&#13;
3,000 - years - old who is&#13;
trying to bring back the original&#13;
meaning of Halloween —&#13;
whatever the hell THAT is. He is&#13;
attempting to achieve this purpose&#13;
by using his masks, with a&#13;
trademark that's got a wierd&#13;
beam, or something like that, in it,&#13;
and a rock from Stonehenge.&#13;
Needless to say, our hero saves&#13;
the day. Or does he? Who cares?&#13;
"Halloween III: The Season of&#13;
the Witch" has got to be one of the&#13;
dumbest films I've ever seen.&#13;
First, I don't know why it's called&#13;
"The Season of the Witch."&#13;
Nothing in the movie has anything&#13;
to do with witches. Second, the&#13;
screenplay is very derivative and&#13;
predictable. When, near the&#13;
beginning of the film, a TV news&#13;
report describes the strange&#13;
disappearance of a rock from&#13;
Stonehenge, all that's missing is a&#13;
neon sign blinking "IMPORTANT&#13;
PLOT POINT; REMEMBER&#13;
THIS." The ending doesn't contain&#13;
a single original idea, and it&#13;
seems to me that the writer,&#13;
Tommy Lee Wallace, who also&#13;
directed it, wrote himself into a&#13;
corner and just borrowed ideas&#13;
from other films in a vain attempt&#13;
to bail himself out.&#13;
The acting is adequate. The&#13;
female lead, Stacy Nelkin, is one&#13;
of th e few good things in the film.&#13;
I must say that the directing is&#13;
quite good, utilizing light and&#13;
shadow to create a somewhat&#13;
creepy mood. Also on the plus side&#13;
is the restraint used in the gore&#13;
department. There are some&#13;
rather bizarre deaths, but they&#13;
are handled in a way that&#13;
minimizes the blood.&#13;
Overall, "Halloween III: The&#13;
Season of the Witch" is poorly&#13;
written, not scary and leaves you&#13;
with a bad taste in your mouth. If&#13;
you want a good scare this&#13;
Halloween, spend the night in a&#13;
haunted house, walk through a&#13;
graveyard at midnight, check&#13;
your midterm grades, anything,&#13;
but avoid "Halloween III."&#13;
Good. I need say little more about&#13;
the duo themselves then.&#13;
Side one opens with the single&#13;
"I'll Find My Way Home," This&#13;
track is surely one of the most&#13;
moving songs ever recorded. If&#13;
only space permitted printing all&#13;
of the lyrics. But on their own they&#13;
cannot have the impact as when&#13;
they are combined with Vangelis'&#13;
faultless orchestration. A must for&#13;
headphone freaks, this song alone&#13;
justified the price.&#13;
In fact, the production of the&#13;
whole album is amazing. I can't&#13;
really find words to define it:&#13;
Electronic, yes, but not surgical;&#13;
Visionary, but not banal. This is&#13;
much better than anything "Yes"&#13;
ever did, and it is a pleasure&#13;
hearing Jon Anderson's&#13;
remarkable vocals put to such&#13;
good material.&#13;
Don't, however, expect all the&#13;
songs to be "spacey" or&#13;
"futuristic." The title track is a&#13;
good exception. More on that&#13;
later.&#13;
Side one continues with 'State of&#13;
Independence,' which runs almost&#13;
eight minutes long. A fast tempo,&#13;
this is another example where&#13;
lyrics and music mesh masterfully.&#13;
"State of life / May I live /&#13;
May I love / Coming out the sky /1&#13;
name me a name."&#13;
"Beside" slows the pace but is&#13;
still superb, though one of the&#13;
album's weaker tracks. The finale&#13;
of the side, "Mayflower" returns&#13;
to the familiar space themes.&#13;
One of the most remarkable&#13;
songs, if not the most remarkable,&#13;
is "The Friends of Mr. Cairo"&#13;
itself, which opens side two and&#13;
lasts just over 12 minutes.&#13;
Combining drama and music, it&#13;
portrays Hollywood's glamorous&#13;
gangster lands of Sam Spade,&#13;
Cagney, and such. The ominous&#13;
bass provides a great 'mood'&#13;
setting to the whole collage and&#13;
the three different tunes are&#13;
woven into its tapestry with three&#13;
Continued On Page Six&#13;
Thursday, October 28,1982&#13;
Wayne Johnson opens dialogue on death and dying&#13;
bbyy PPaattH Heennssiiaakk that if neonle Hn nnt&#13;
Editor&#13;
Each day is a gift. A statement&#13;
few people would argue, but a&#13;
statement few people live by&#13;
Perhaps the tragedy of the&#13;
statement is that few people&#13;
realize and understand the gift&#13;
until it is too late. Some learn&#13;
young that death has a dramatic&#13;
sting. Others learn later, but&#13;
eventually everyone suffers the&#13;
grief over the death of a loved one.&#13;
And we discover that we also die&#13;
People learn the pain of death and&#13;
dying. It's never easy to talk&#13;
about, but people learn that too.&#13;
Professor Wayne Johnson, who&#13;
teaches a class on death and dying&#13;
here at Parkside, said, "Grief is&#13;
like a wound that needs to be&#13;
healed. For the vast majority of&#13;
persons, the wound heals more&#13;
quickly if t hey can be open, public&#13;
and vocal with their grief. Yet&#13;
persons differ a great deal, and&#13;
some find it very hard to express&#13;
their grief openly. They work it&#13;
out in other ways. Crying is a&#13;
painful experience in its own&#13;
right; but hurting is part of the&#13;
way out, part of the healing. Pain&#13;
is the way in, but it is also the way&#13;
out." Johnson also pointed out&#13;
that if people do not work their&#13;
grief through, that repressed grief&#13;
can produce other consequences&#13;
in their life.&#13;
He became involved in the study&#13;
of death and dying for a number of&#13;
reasons. "I think it came from two&#13;
sources, academically," said&#13;
Johnson. "In the Phaedo Plato&#13;
says, 'Other men seem not to have&#13;
noticed that those who truly&#13;
embrace philosophy concern&#13;
themselves with nothing else but&#13;
death and dying.' That has many&#13;
levels of meaning, but part of the&#13;
meaning is that death is one of t he&#13;
major philosophical issues that&#13;
any person or any culture has to&#13;
face."&#13;
Johnson also has quite a bit of&#13;
training in religious traditions. "If&#13;
you look at any of the world&#13;
religions, it's quite clear that one&#13;
of the universal dilemas they&#13;
struggle with is the dilema of&#13;
death. Every world religion has&#13;
some way of trying to deal with&#13;
that. If it didn't, it wouldn't function&#13;
as a world religion. It is one of&#13;
the basic human needs, to try to&#13;
come to terms with that particular&#13;
problem." Through his academic&#13;
work, Religion and Philosophy,&#13;
Wayne Johnson was a natural.&#13;
Having grown up on an Iowa&#13;
farm, Johnson saw things die with&#13;
some sense of regularity. "It&#13;
probably came to me through&#13;
personal experience too. I grew up&#13;
on a farm, and we slaughtered&#13;
pigs for food, and chopped the&#13;
heads off chickens, and so on.&#13;
"I was personally piched by&#13;
death," continued Johnson, "for&#13;
the first time when I was 13 and&#13;
my father died. Later on, when I&#13;
was finishing my engineering&#13;
undergraduate work, I ended up in&#13;
a tuberculosis hospital. Never&#13;
very sick, but it took a long time&#13;
then, before they let you out.&#13;
While I was there, there were four&#13;
or five people who died around me&#13;
of tuberculosis and related&#13;
diseases."&#13;
Students of all kinds gained&#13;
interest in his class. Some people&#13;
take it out of curiosity. Some are&#13;
there because they recognize&#13;
death is a problem, and although&#13;
they've never been hurt by death,&#13;
they know they will be. Of course&#13;
there are always a number of&#13;
people who have been hurt&#13;
recently by death or anticipate&#13;
being so.&#13;
For the most part, Johnson is&#13;
cautious of the way things are&#13;
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handled in class. "I try fairly hard&#13;
to stay away from inappropriate&#13;
humor. I can laugh even about&#13;
things which I take with deep&#13;
seriousness. I'd be concerned if I&#13;
couldn't laugh about things I take&#13;
seriously. Yet, there are times&#13;
when certain types of humor are&#13;
inappropriate around people who&#13;
are hurting."&#13;
Recently Johnson's new book&#13;
came out. "Each Day a Gift" is&#13;
the story of a little boy who was&#13;
diagnosed as having cancer when&#13;
he was nine. He died when he was&#13;
ten years old, about eleven&#13;
months later. Johnson came to&#13;
write the book in part because the&#13;
boy whom the book is written&#13;
about was the best friend of&#13;
Johnson's youngest son.&#13;
"During the eleven months&#13;
when the boy was sick," said&#13;
Johnson, "when I was in touch&#13;
with the situation, I saw a lot of&#13;
things happening that I thought&#13;
were very wise and appropriate;&#13;
and that there was a book there."&#13;
Because of the nature of the&#13;
child, and the family situation,&#13;
and the context of the community&#13;
when Shaun died, the Associated&#13;
Press picked up on the story, and&#13;
eventually a publishing company&#13;
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did too. That company approached&#13;
the parents with the idea&#13;
of the book. Johnson and the&#13;
family pastor at that time offered&#13;
to write the story.&#13;
"I hope one thing the book will&#13;
do," said Johnson, "is that it can&#13;
be the kind of encounter that helps&#13;
people get in touch with their&#13;
grief. I hope it also functions as a&#13;
teaching tool, enabling people to&#13;
learn about loss and grief."&#13;
Johnson said that there are a lot&#13;
of difficulties that go along with&#13;
death, and part of that difficulty is&#13;
just realizing that we are individually&#13;
mortal. "Frued said&#13;
that in our subconscious mind we&#13;
are unable even to conceive of the&#13;
fact that we will die, we deny that&#13;
we will ever die," said Johnson.&#13;
"It takes a while, but usually as&#13;
you get older, you have to face&#13;
your mortality. Part of mid - life&#13;
crisis is just sheerly this kind of&#13;
consciousness raising, where you&#13;
really know now, not just in your&#13;
mind, but in your guts that you are&#13;
mortal."&#13;
Johnson also commented that&#13;
the generation just ahead of us is&#13;
in some sense always a barrier&#13;
against death. "After all, they're&#13;
going to die first. And as long as&#13;
they are there, you're kind of&#13;
shielded. When they drop away,&#13;
you fall in line. There's something&#13;
about that experience that makes&#13;
you conscious of your mortality."&#13;
"There are a lot of hopes tied up&#13;
in kids. After all, they are our&#13;
future. Our parents are our past,&#13;
but it's hard to lose our children&#13;
because then we lose our future.&#13;
Without that sense of continuity,&#13;
without our future, we really are&#13;
at sea."&#13;
Rats, Vangelis,&#13;
Plasmatics-&#13;
Continued From Page Five&#13;
very different tempos. The&#13;
disjointed, often spasmodic lyrics&#13;
just add to the atmosphere, and&#13;
vocal impersonations of Stewart,&#13;
Lawry, and Bogart provide the&#13;
final touch, setting the whole work&#13;
off.&#13;
"Back to School" is a rock - n -&#13;
roll bash challenging the romantic&#13;
end of 'Cairo,' and the album&#13;
closes with "Outside of This&#13;
(Inside of That)," which returns&#13;
to the quiet, sublime excellence&#13;
that marks much of this pair's&#13;
compositions.&#13;
The album works, and works&#13;
well. It may not be for everyone&#13;
but you should try to give it a&#13;
listen Well produced and performed,&#13;
it makes a nice change of&#13;
pace for those who wish it. (Eieht&#13;
out of Ten.)&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
FESTA ROMA&#13;
"AN EVENING IN OLD ITALY'&#13;
SAT., NOV. 6 — 6:00 PM&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
FEATURING: • A WINE PUNCH RECEPTION&#13;
! ™S?URSE SERVED dinner&#13;
AUTHENTIC ITALIAN CUISTNF&#13;
• COSTUMED FOLK ONCERS&#13;
• STROLUNG MUSICIANS RS&#13;
DANCE BAND&#13;
•17.50 PER&#13;
PERSON&#13;
COCKTAILS &amp; IMPORTED WINES AVATI ART IT&#13;
RESERVATIONS: UNION IN FO.&#13;
Open Daily 2 p.m.&#13;
Mondays 7 p.m.&#13;
Tasty Sandwiches&#13;
Cooked to order&#13;
D J Dancing Wed,&#13;
Fri, Sat, 9:30-Close&#13;
Mon, Wed-Pitchers $1.50&#13;
Tues, Wed-75C9-Il&#13;
Mixed drinks &amp; Beers&#13;
Fri, Sat, Sun 2-6,754&#13;
Domestic beer &amp; liquor&#13;
Have a 1/2 barrel party&#13;
Intramural RpcuIk&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 28, 1982&#13;
Fall IINNTTRR AAM1WUIsTRD AAeLI ason almost o^ v• e^r-r1&#13;
ARCHERY TOURNAMENT&#13;
U.W. Parkside's annual Intramural&#13;
Archery Tournament&#13;
was held on Wednesday, October&#13;
20,1982. Awards were given to the&#13;
top Parkside archers in five&#13;
divisions. Winning the most&#13;
prestigious division was Mick&#13;
Heberling in the Men's Open with&#13;
sight shooting at distances of 25, 30&#13;
and 35 yards. Mick hit 81 out of 90&#13;
bullseyes for a score of 792 out of a&#13;
possible 810. Following him&#13;
closely in the same division was&#13;
Ross Thompson with 782 points.&#13;
The champion of the Men's Open&#13;
Instinctive Division was Mike&#13;
Vanchena with a score of 684. The&#13;
Women's Open Champion was&#13;
Anita Ratsch with a score of 530.&#13;
In the Men's Handicap Division&#13;
with a Compound Bow, Tom&#13;
Kilsdonk was the champion with a&#13;
score of 698, 48 point s above his&#13;
average. In the Men's Handicap&#13;
Division with a Conventional Bow,&#13;
Dave McPherson took top honors&#13;
by shooting a 555 which was 45&#13;
points over his average.&#13;
In the Women's Handicap&#13;
Division with a Conventional Bow,&#13;
Renee Netrefa was the champion&#13;
with a 491, 36 points above her&#13;
average score.&#13;
MIXED DOUBLES TENNIS&#13;
First place was captured in the&#13;
IM doubles tennis tournament on&#13;
10/15/82 by Brian Langenbach and&#13;
Linda Lasko. Second place went to&#13;
Dan Duval and Andrea Larson&#13;
while third place was held by Matt&#13;
Giovanelli&#13;
Reisenauer.&#13;
and Sherry&#13;
I M ROAD RACE&#13;
The IM Road Race on Sunday,&#13;
October 17 featured Jon Goetz&#13;
coming in 12th overall, and in 1st&#13;
place for the Intramural run. He&#13;
was the first student to cross the&#13;
finish line with a time of 11:07.&#13;
Second f or the students and 43rd&#13;
and two by Jack Decker. Running&#13;
for the extra points were Gene&#13;
Decker and Jack Decker.&#13;
For the All Stars, Bob Klofenstine&#13;
scored three TD's, with Andi&#13;
Larson adding two and Paul&#13;
Charapatta, one. Captain Kathy&#13;
Tobin ran the only extra points&#13;
scored by the All Stars.&#13;
Season standings find the All&#13;
Stars and Vikings tied with two&#13;
Men's Soccer&#13;
Record breaking weekend&#13;
by Tori Murray&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside soccer team had a&#13;
record - breaking weekend in their&#13;
game against the University of&#13;
Minnesota on Friday. On Friday&#13;
the team won 2-1 on goa ls scored&#13;
by A1 Gibson, and assisted by Kim&#13;
Jensen, who tied the single -&#13;
season assist record.&#13;
The team defeated Augsburg on&#13;
Sunday by a 3-1 margin, with&#13;
goals by Bob Newstrom (assisted&#13;
by Mike Novak and Jimmy&#13;
Banks), and Jimmy Banks&#13;
assisted by Brad Faust, and by&#13;
Mike Neary assisted by Brad&#13;
Faust. Newstrom moves into&#13;
second place on the all - time&#13;
scoring list.&#13;
The team's record is now 14-1-3,&#13;
which beats the old record of 12&#13;
wins for a season set i n 1981.&#13;
The next game is Oct. 30 against&#13;
the Illinois Institute of Technology&#13;
at IIT.&#13;
Men's cross country:&#13;
Back on their feet&#13;
PLAYER&#13;
j Photo by Masood Shafiq&#13;
intramural football throws a&#13;
overall was Jeff Wambolt with a&#13;
time of 13:52.&#13;
I M FOOTBALL&#13;
The Vikings succumbed to the&#13;
All Star team in the highest&#13;
scoring flag football game played&#13;
so far this fall. The All Stars&#13;
succeeded in scoring the first&#13;
touchdown, and never trailed the&#13;
Vikings, but it was a see - saw&#13;
battle between the two teams.&#13;
Touchdowns for the Vikings were&#13;
scored by Jeff Gentz, Steve Gentz&#13;
Women's tennis ends season&#13;
by Patricia Cumbie&#13;
The Women's Tennis Team&#13;
competed in their conference&#13;
tournament on Friday, October&#13;
22. The meet was held at the&#13;
Moorland Racquet Club in&#13;
Milwaukee. This was an important&#13;
meet for the team. The&#13;
other teams present were&#13;
Marquette University, UW -&#13;
Milwaukee, and UW - Green Bay.&#13;
Marquette won the meet with 54&#13;
points. The Parkside women came&#13;
in third.&#13;
Individually, a few women on the&#13;
team performed well. Nancy Kivi&#13;
was in the number one singles&#13;
position and she placed 2nd. She&#13;
defeated a UW - Milwaukee girl&#13;
with scores of 1-6, 7-5, and 7-6.&#13;
However, a Marquette player beat&#13;
her in the subsequent match 6-1&#13;
and 6-4. Another singles player,&#13;
Lori Bleashka, also placed 2nd.&#13;
She defeated a Green Bay woman&#13;
6-0 and 6-1.&#13;
The doubles team also raked in&#13;
two second places. Jackie Rittmer&#13;
and Linda Masters won over&#13;
Green Bay, but lost to Marquette&#13;
6-0 and 6-1. The 2nd doubles team,&#13;
Char Hall and Ann Althaus participated&#13;
in a crucial match for&#13;
the team. They defeated UW -&#13;
Green Bay. The girls tried hard to&#13;
win it, but they were defeated by&#13;
UW - Milwaukee players.&#13;
Coach Goggin said they could&#13;
have placed second if they would&#13;
have won a couple more matches.&#13;
The women tried hard, and&#13;
became more improved as the&#13;
season progressed. Goggin is not&#13;
displeased with anyone's performance.&#13;
The Women's Tennis&#13;
Team has closed out the season on&#13;
a positive note.&#13;
Volleyball team wins&#13;
The Women's Volleyball Team&#13;
had an outstanding weekend this&#13;
past weekend. Playing a total of 15&#13;
matches, the team won the&#13;
Carthage Invitational. The team's&#13;
record is now 18 wins and 10&#13;
losses. Individual matches in the&#13;
tournament were:&#13;
Saint Xavier 15-4, 15-1 1&#13;
UW - Oshkosh 15 - 8, 1 2 -15, 15 -&#13;
13&#13;
Lake Forest 15 -13,12 -15,15 -10&#13;
Elmhurst 15 - 12, 15 - 2&#13;
Semi-finals:&#13;
Stevens Point 7 -15,15 - 4,15 - 5&#13;
UW-Oshkosh 15-6,15-12&#13;
Two members of Parkside's&#13;
team made the All - Tournament&#13;
Team: Shirley Gunther and Callie&#13;
Lee. Coach Terry Paulson was&#13;
pleased with this weekend results.&#13;
"I feel we're a lot better off than&#13;
we were three weeks ago," he&#13;
commented.&#13;
On Sunday, October 31st, the&#13;
Women's Volleyball team will&#13;
host the NAIA District 14&#13;
Volleyball Championship. Play&#13;
will begin at 1:00 p. m. with the 4th&#13;
seed, UW - Eau Claire matched&#13;
against the 5th seed, Lakeland&#13;
College. At 3:00 p. m., number one&#13;
seed UW - Milwaukee will play the&#13;
winner of the 1:00 p. m. match.&#13;
Also playing at 3:00 p. m. will be&#13;
our own Ranger team versus the&#13;
Marquette Warriors. Parkside&#13;
hopes to again triumph over&#13;
Marquette as they did on October&#13;
19th.&#13;
The winner of this tournament&#13;
will be one ste p away from participation&#13;
in the National Tournament.&#13;
By defeating the winner&#13;
of District 13 (State of Minnesota)&#13;
on Friday, November 12th, the&#13;
District 14 champion will earn the&#13;
right to participate in the NAIA&#13;
National Volleyball Tournament&#13;
November 18th - 20 in Denver,&#13;
Colorado.&#13;
Admission prices are: Adults&#13;
$2.00; Students w/I.D. $1.00;&#13;
Children $1.00.&#13;
COME OUT AND SUPPORT&#13;
THE RANGER TEAM!&#13;
pass&#13;
wins apiece, while the Panzers&#13;
trail with only one win. The last&#13;
game of the season will be played&#13;
Thursday evening, 10/28 at 4:00&#13;
p.m. Should the Vikings lose to&#13;
the Panzer's there will be a three -&#13;
way tie, with all teams having a 2-&#13;
2 record. If a play - off game for&#13;
the league championship is&#13;
necessary, it will be played&#13;
November 4 at 4:00 p.m.&#13;
INTRAMURAL RACQUETBALL&#13;
The Intramural Racquetball&#13;
league concluded this week. In the&#13;
Open Division, Jeff Ursu topped&#13;
all participants by completing&#13;
league play without a defeat,&#13;
finishing 6-0. Second in the league&#13;
was Gary Goetz with a 3-1 record&#13;
followed by Jim Eils with a 2-2&#13;
record.&#13;
In the Beginners Division,&#13;
Howard Kroll took champion&#13;
honors by finishing 4-0, while&#13;
Mark Schall followed with a 3-0&#13;
record. Third place was captured&#13;
by Derek Cook at 2-1.&#13;
by Patricia Cumbie&#13;
Men's Cross Country ran the&#13;
Tenth Annual Carthage Invitational&#13;
October 23 at Petrifying&#13;
Springs Park. Twenty - two&#13;
schools participated in this meet.&#13;
Parkside placed eleventh.&#13;
The next meet is the NCAA&#13;
Regionals that will be held at&#13;
Parkside at 2:00 on Saturday the&#13;
30th. The meet will be hosted by&#13;
the Men's and Women's Cross&#13;
Country teams. This is an important&#13;
meet because this will&#13;
decide which teams go to the&#13;
NCAA Nationals. The Cross&#13;
Country teams that place third or&#13;
above are eligible to participate.&#13;
There are sixteen teams that are&#13;
going to be competing this&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
The team is anxious to participate&#13;
and they hope to do well.&#13;
So far this season has been going&#13;
well despite injuries, and Coach&#13;
Lucian Rosa is not displeased with&#13;
anyone's performance thus far.&#13;
Rich Miller and Jim Miller are&#13;
performing better now that they&#13;
are recovering from their injuries.&#13;
The men are expected to&#13;
run a very good meet this&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
The team ran well this past&#13;
Capitol's low fares&#13;
"What a break!"&#13;
Whe rever we fly, we have the lowest&#13;
unrestricted fares. That means no advance&#13;
purchase, no minimum stay We're always&#13;
glad to see you, even at the last minute.&#13;
Make up your mind today—and by tomorrow,&#13;
you're on your way!&#13;
For reservations and information, call&#13;
your Travel Agent or Capitol Air at 212-&#13;
883-0750 in New York City, 312-347-0230 in&#13;
Chicago, 213-986-8445 in Los Angeles, 415-&#13;
956-8111 in San Francisco or 305-372-8000&#13;
in Miami. Outside these areas, please call&#13;
800-227-4865 (8-O-O-C-A-P-l-T-O-L).&#13;
SERVING THE PUBLIC FOR 36 YEARS&#13;
San Francisco*&#13;
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SCHEDULED AIRLINE SERVICE&#13;
THE LOWEST FARE&#13;
weekend, with Bob Covelli placing&#13;
35th at 25:50, which is shaving&#13;
time off the last meet he ran. Tom&#13;
Barrett also performed well,&#13;
placing 45th with a time of 26:02.&#13;
The other team members did as&#13;
follows:&#13;
64 Ji m Miller — 26:21&#13;
72 Ric h Miller — 26:34&#13;
79 And y Serrano — 26:47&#13;
92 Glenn Schultz — 27:07&#13;
93 A1 Correa — 27.0 7.7&#13;
• * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:00 am - 4.00 pm&#13;
• Jube Jells&#13;
• Licorice Bully&#13;
• Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Milk Carmels&#13;
• Orange Slices&#13;
• Peanut Butter Chip&#13;
• Peanut Clusters&#13;
• Peppermint Kisses&#13;
• Rootbeer Barrels&#13;
• Sour Balls&#13;
• Spearment Leaves&#13;
• Starlite Mints&#13;
• Carmel Targets&#13;
• Cinnamon Discs&#13;
• Candy Pops&#13;
+ Corn Nuts&#13;
• Assorted Perky&#13;
• Assorted Royal&#13;
Assorted Toffee&#13;
Bridge Mix&#13;
Burndt Peanuts&#13;
Butterscotch Discs&#13;
Candy Coffee Discs&#13;
Carmel Bully&#13;
Chocolate Drops&#13;
Chocolate Jots&#13;
Chocolate Peanuts&#13;
Chocolate Raisins&#13;
Chocolate Stars&#13;
Jelly Beans&#13;
California Mix&#13;
Caribbean Delicacy&#13;
Carob Malted Milk Balls&#13;
Carob Raisins&#13;
Carob Peanuts&#13;
Natural Pistachio&#13;
Red Pistachio&#13;
• Spanish Peanuts&#13;
• Sunflower Seeds&#13;
• Student Food Mix&#13;
• Yogurt Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Yogurt Peanuts&#13;
• Yogurt Raisins&#13;
• Yogurt Sesame Brittle&#13;
• Smoked Almonds whole&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
WEEK OF NOV.&#13;
V3 OFF&#13;
SMOKED&#13;
ALMONDS&#13;
lit&#13;
Thursday, October 28, 1982 RANGER&#13;
Greg Eschmann&#13;
Student runs first marathon by Tori Murray&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Recently, Greg Eschmann, a 22&#13;
year - old economics and&#13;
marketing major at Parkside,&#13;
completed his first marathon in 3&#13;
hours, 4 minutes and 57 seconds.&#13;
Talking about running with&#13;
Eschmann, one gets the impression&#13;
that he has been running&#13;
for quite some time, but actually&#13;
he started running on Easter&#13;
Sunday, about eight months ago.&#13;
Before running, he swam a&#13;
great deal. Then to lose weight, he&#13;
supplemented running to his&#13;
swimming program. During the&#13;
summer he trained twice daily. "I&#13;
kinda caught the bug. I thought if I&#13;
could lose 5 pounds training once a&#13;
day, then I could lose 10 pounds&#13;
training twice a day," he commented.&#13;
After 8 months of running,&#13;
Eschmann's weekly mileage&#13;
reached 135 -140 miles. He entered&#13;
many short distance races such as&#13;
the Lighthouse Run and Flatiron&#13;
Run. "I went to Merritt's Running&#13;
Center (a running store in Racine)&#13;
one day to buy a pair of shoes and&#13;
I asked Jeff DeMatthew&#13;
(salesperson and runner) if there&#13;
were any races coming up. He&#13;
said something about the&#13;
Lakefront Marathon in Milwaukee&#13;
that he was running in and he gave&#13;
me an application blank. I took it&#13;
home and every so often I would&#13;
look at it. Four weeks before the&#13;
race, I sent it in."&#13;
Eschmann's training consisted&#13;
Photo by Masood Shafiq&#13;
GREG ESCHMANN&#13;
of distance running; in the&#13;
morning, he would run 10 miles&#13;
and at night, 5 more miles. The&#13;
weekend would include one long&#13;
over - distance run such as running&#13;
to Parkside and back home,&#13;
about 28 mile s.&#13;
Harriers share views&#13;
by Tori Murray&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Cross country has often been&#13;
recognized as a weaker cousin to&#13;
Track and Field, but in the recent&#13;
past it has developed into a major&#13;
sport. The women's race distance&#13;
is usually 5 kilometers. The races&#13;
take place in parks, on golf&#13;
courses or on courses designed&#13;
specifically for cross country.&#13;
Parkside's course is rated&#13;
nationally as a tough course to&#13;
run. This week the Ranger asked&#13;
members of the women's cross&#13;
country team to share their&#13;
feelings of their sport.&#13;
Cross country is a sport that&#13;
requires tremendous discipline&#13;
and dedication. Although some&#13;
team members use cross country&#13;
to build a strong base for track in&#13;
the spring, for most runners it is&#13;
not only a physical challenge as&#13;
well as mental challenge. "Cross&#13;
country isn't a competition&#13;
against another person as much&#13;
as it is a competition against&#13;
yourself. Bettering your time&#13;
every race is the only way I judge&#13;
my performance, not how I place.&#13;
Sometimes I feel like I've won&#13;
when the course is very hard and&#13;
hilly and I don't let it conquer&#13;
me," explained one member.&#13;
"Cross country builds a&#13;
'toughness' that carries over into&#13;
many areas of my life," noted&#13;
Debbie Spino.&#13;
This year's team is Parkside's&#13;
largest and all members agree&#13;
that that is a definite plus. "I think&#13;
that we have a great team this&#13;
year, not only in numbers but in a&#13;
variety of personalities and talent.&#13;
Everyone gets along well and&#13;
supports each other," Lynda&#13;
Pfeilstifter enthusiastically&#13;
replied.&#13;
Karen Jacobson feels that the&#13;
friendships and concern for each&#13;
other that has developed will be a&#13;
prime motivator for the team's&#13;
future success.&#13;
Unanimously, all team members&#13;
agreed that cross country&#13;
training is difficult and tiring, but&#13;
also acknowledge that it pays off&#13;
in the races. "Coach DeWitt runs&#13;
with us everyday and encourages&#13;
everyone. His coaching&#13;
philosophy / training has continued&#13;
to lower my times each&#13;
season," commented Spino.&#13;
With six weeks remaining in the&#13;
season, the team is at midpoint.&#13;
After spending the first part of the&#13;
season building strength, many&#13;
team members are optimistic&#13;
about the second half of the&#13;
season. "I think we can achieve&#13;
our team goals," stated Michelle&#13;
Gross.&#13;
"I'm feeling good. I understand&#13;
the race and the sport better this&#13;
year. I think I've matured as a&#13;
runner," commented Dona&#13;
Driscoll.&#13;
Although the training is difficult,&#13;
the season definitely has&#13;
had some good times. The&#13;
friendships and the road trip to&#13;
Kalamazoo, MI. stand out in most&#13;
of the members minds. "Seeing&#13;
Coach DeWitt covered with mud&#13;
after going out to run a time trial&#13;
in pouring rain and falling three&#13;
times," was a memorable&#13;
moment for Carol Romano.&#13;
Sports Calendar&#13;
MEN'S CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
Oct. 30, Saturday - NCAA&#13;
Regionals, Here, 11 a.m.&#13;
Nov. 6, Saturday - TFA/USA&#13;
Mid America Open, Here, 2:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Nov. 13, Saturday - NCAA&#13;
Nationals, (St. Cloud, MN), 11:00&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Nov. 20, Saturday - NAIA&#13;
Nationals, Here, 11:00 a.m.&#13;
WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
Oct. 30, Saturday - NCAA&#13;
Regionals, Here, 11 a.m.&#13;
Nov. 6, Saturday - TFA/USA&#13;
Open, Here, 11 a.m.&#13;
Nov. 13, Saturday - NCAA&#13;
Nationals, (St. Cloud, MN), TBA&#13;
Nov. 20, Saturday - NAIA&#13;
Nationals, Here, 9:45 a.m.&#13;
MEN'S SOCCER&#13;
Oct. 30, Saturday - 111. Ins titute&#13;
of Technology, Away, 1:00 p.m.&#13;
Nov. 6, Saturday - UWPlatteville,&#13;
Here, 2:00 p.m.&#13;
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL&#13;
Oct. 29-30, Fri., Sat. - Grand&#13;
Valley St. College Tourn., TBA&#13;
Nov. 5-6, Fri., Sat. - Valparaiso&#13;
University Tournament, 5:00 p.m.&#13;
Nov. 12-13, Fri., Sat. - Conference&#13;
Tournament, TBA&#13;
Nov. 18-20, T hurs., Fri., Sat. -&#13;
NAIA Nationals, TBA&#13;
The weather was not the best for&#13;
running a marathon on the day of&#13;
the Lakefront Marathon. There&#13;
was a strong wind — about 24 mph&#13;
off the lake. The temperature was&#13;
52-55 degrees. "At the 23 mile&#13;
mark, there was a 90 - foot drop&#13;
and it got cold and windy, but I&#13;
didn't really notice," commented&#13;
Eschmann.&#13;
At the Lakefront Marathon, the&#13;
starting shoot had subsections&#13;
that were divided by mile splits (6&#13;
minute pace, 7 minute pace and so&#13;
on) Eschmann started in the 8&#13;
minute section. From the start&#13;
and until the 20 mile mark, he ran&#13;
with another runner who introduced&#13;
himself at the starting&#13;
line. Then feeling a little stronger&#13;
than the other runner, he continued&#13;
at a strong pace. "At the&#13;
starting line, I was tense. I was so&#13;
afraid I wouldn't finish and I&#13;
wanted to be able to say that I&#13;
finished a marathon."&#13;
The day after the marathon&#13;
Eschmann did his usual workout.&#13;
"I figured I had to or I would&#13;
stiffen up," he stated.&#13;
Eschmann's future running&#13;
plans include another marathon&#13;
and to improve his time.&#13;
—Classifieds— AA MEETING: Every Wednesday, Moln 211,&#13;
between 1 and 2 p.m.&#13;
TYPING: Neat and accurate. No project is&#13;
too large or little. Will edit if requested&#13;
Donna F. call 633-1794.&#13;
MARKETING COORDINATORS NEEDED:&#13;
Position involves marketing and promoting&#13;
high quality ski and beach trips on campus.&#13;
Earn commission plus FREE TRAVEL.&#13;
Call Summit Tours, 800-325-0439.&#13;
FOR SALE: Downhill skis, Fischer 165cm,&#13;
Munari boots, mens 9-9-1/2. Call ext. 2311.&#13;
TYPING: Professional, speedy service.&#13;
Student rates. Call Debbie at 681-3522&#13;
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: Serious&#13;
student to share upper flat. $65 per month&#13;
plus utilities, 1/2 garage, 1/2 basement.&#13;
Contact Al at 654-3324 or Deb at 657-0142&#13;
PROFESSIONAL TYPING: Term papers,&#13;
resumes, letters. Spelling and grammar&#13;
included. Call Lynn Holtze and leave a&#13;
message on my tape. 552-7512.&#13;
WANTED: Female to share apartment. Call&#13;
Sue afternoons, 553-2245.&#13;
THE OLD BOOK CORNER, upstairs at&#13;
Martha Merrell's Book Store, 312-6th Street&#13;
(Racine), has 2000 used books for sale.&#13;
Come browse and find a treasure!&#13;
FOR SALE: 1978 Le Car, 34 mpg, am/fm&#13;
stereo. 414-843-3055.&#13;
TYPING: $1.25 per page, efficient and accurate&#13;
typist. Papers, resumes,&#13;
manuscripts, etc. Phone. 657-6068,&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
U.C. — Who are you?? G.P.&#13;
GOMER PYLE: Who are you?? U.C.&#13;
WHAT happened to chess club? Rooked&#13;
LUIS - So i t's a date then???&#13;
DR. DREWW Meeting cancelled this week&#13;
for lack of interest. Sorry Doc.&#13;
JULI What did you have to do — kill the&#13;
cow?? HAHAHA&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
Wins Invitational&#13;
by Patricia Cumbie&#13;
The Women's Cross Country&#13;
team competed in the Carthage&#13;
Invitational this past Saturday at&#13;
Petrifying Springs Park. They&#13;
won the meet in a tie with UW -&#13;
Milwaukee. Parkside and&#13;
Milwaukee both had 62 points.&#13;
Parkside's Debbie Spino placed&#13;
first in the meet. Her time was&#13;
16:49. The other outstanding&#13;
runners on the team were Sue&#13;
Mayer placing 3rd at 17:00, Dona&#13;
Driscoll 9th, 17:21; Jane&#13;
Roszkowski finished 19th, 17:55;&#13;
and Karen Jacobsen 36th at 18:17&#13;
Sue Meyer did very well, she ran&#13;
her best race in two years, according&#13;
to Coach Mike DeWitt,&#13;
The women are expecting to run&#13;
well in the NCAA Regionals that&#13;
are going to take place Saturday&#13;
Oct. 30. Coach DeWitt feels Spino&#13;
should be running even faster this&#13;
meet coming up. There are five&#13;
teams entered in the Regionals.&#13;
The coach feels their main&#13;
competition will be Ashland&#13;
College. DeWitt feels the girls will&#13;
perform well and be participating&#13;
in the Nationals.&#13;
Coach profile: Golf&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
Most people from this area have&#13;
heard the name Steve Stephens.&#13;
Up until this past winter, he was&#13;
the head basketball coach for&#13;
Parkside. He is still the head&#13;
coach of the men's golf team, and&#13;
STEVE STEPHENS&#13;
very much a part of the athletic&#13;
scene here, not only as a coach,&#13;
but as an instructor.&#13;
Steve Stephens, 46, lives in&#13;
Kenosha with Connie, his wife&#13;
of 28 years.&#13;
Stephens grew up in Platteville,&#13;
Wisconsin, and graduated from&#13;
Platteville High School. From&#13;
there, he went to the University of&#13;
Wisconsin, receiving both his&#13;
Bachelor's and Master's degrees&#13;
in Physical Education. His&#13;
coaching career began 24 years&#13;
ago at Beaver Dam High School.&#13;
In his five years there, he was the&#13;
assistant football coach, and the&#13;
head coach of both golf and&#13;
basketball. He then joined the&#13;
college coaching ranks, working&#13;
in the UW - Center System for five&#13;
years, against as head coach of&#13;
basketball and golf. Then, in 1969,&#13;
when UW - Parkside opened its&#13;
doors, Steve Stephens was chosen&#13;
as its first head basketball coach;&#13;
and as they say, the rest is history.&#13;
Stephens' coaching philosophy&#13;
may be the major reason why his&#13;
basketball teams were so successful.&#13;
It is the total team concept.&#13;
His teams were taught to&#13;
play a strong, full - court, man - to&#13;
- man defense. He used multiple&#13;
offensive set - ups, and put his best&#13;
players in the positions where&#13;
they played their best.&#13;
On the other side of the coin, this&#13;
coaching of golf is based on the&#13;
individual. Unlike other team&#13;
sports, the team members are on&#13;
their own, rather than relying on&#13;
each other for support. This calls&#13;
for a specialized type of coaching;&#13;
the players are helped separately&#13;
with their golf skills, then are put&#13;
together as a team.&#13;
Stephens is very happy to be a&#13;
part of Parkside. He has high&#13;
praise for the campus and its&#13;
people. He believes that ours is&#13;
one of the best and most beautiful&#13;
campuses in the state, and that it&#13;
holds its own against larger&#13;
schools, in athletics as well as&#13;
academic programs.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKING S'/«% Interest K Year Daily ggg gj&#13;
Balance is *500.00 or Morel ^&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-4861&#13;
7535 Pershing Blvd.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-694-1380&#13;
fl&#13;
4235 - 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-658-0120&#13;
8035 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
414-657-1340&#13;
IE HI ERE&#13;
CALL OR&#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;
JO HELP YOU CROW!</text>
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