<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3093" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/3093?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T20:20:18+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="3579">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/8401fb12cf12d51c22e92e2c0e6e8692.pdf</src>
      <authentication>dc3decb307c9679ea690ef999b5fda03</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="97">
        <name>Issue</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="70661">
            <text>Volume 11, issue 28</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="96">
        <name>Headline</name>
        <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="70662">
            <text>Faculty Senate passes revision in yearly calendar formula</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="70672">
            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="90767">
            <text>Thursday, April 28, 1983&#13;
faculty Senate passes revision&#13;
yearly calendar formula&#13;
llIA11'ilI9,the Faculty Senate&#13;
,PUDide passed a proposed&#13;
__ in the calendar formula,&#13;
.IIepltinto effect either the Fall ,'Il. f1( the fall of '85. Currently&#13;
.. academic calendar at&#13;
fllIaide carries a fall semester&#13;
'14weeo, and a spring semester&#13;
'lIweeO. The proposed revision&#13;
.... for the calendar to be two&#13;
lI1aJI«d 15 week semesters.&#13;
.., divisions have had time&#13;
IiIIled problems in the fall&#13;
..... , as some lose up to 3 or 4&#13;
sessions with the Thanks'" . break . e-Vlng&#13;
, incomparison to the spring&#13;
schedule.&#13;
The proposed calendar is&#13;
balanced in terms of days of the&#13;
week, in that a three credit course&#13;
meeting on either a MWF roster&#13;
or a TR roster would have 45clas~&#13;
hours every Fall and Spring&#13;
semester. WIth the exception of&#13;
Good Friday afternoon. In classes&#13;
that. meet once a week, any&#13;
particular academic division may&#13;
PROPOSED REVISION&#13;
Event&#13;
Instruction begins&#13;
Labor Day recess&#13;
Tbanksgiving recess&#13;
Instruction ends&#13;
Finals begin&#13;
Finals end&#13;
Commencement&#13;
Instruction begins&#13;
Spring recess"&#13;
(after 8 weeks of class)&#13;
Good Friday recess&#13;
Instruction ends"&#13;
Finals begin'&#13;
Finals end"&#13;
commencement"&#13;
Instruction begins&#13;
Independence Day recess&#13;
Instruction ends&#13;
request that the registrar include&#13;
a note in the timetable that either&#13;
adds or deletes a session when&#13;
there are other than 15 meetings.&#13;
The calendar also holds breaks&#13;
of 2-1/2 or 3 weeks hetween&#13;
summer and fall, aDd 3 v.-eets or&#13;
more hetween Fall and Spring .&#13;
The spring semest ... will begin an&#13;
average of two days earlier. and&#13;
end an average of nine days&#13;
earlier thao the present formula&#13;
(see table). .&#13;
IN CALENDAR FORMULA&#13;
Range&#13;
Late Labor Day&#13;
Mon., Aug. 28, 29, 30, 31&#13;
Moo., Sept. 4, 5, 6, 7&#13;
Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Wed., Dec. 13, 14, IS, 16&#13;
Thurs., Dec. 14, IS, 16. 17&#13;
Wed., Dec. 20, 21, 22, 23&#13;
Sun., Dec. 17, 18, 19, 20&#13;
Mon., Jan. 15, 16, 17, 18&#13;
Mon.-&amp;t., March 12·17,&#13;
13-18,14-19,1:'&gt;-20&#13;
Fri. afternoon&#13;
Sat., May 5, 6,7,8&#13;
Mon., May 7, 8, 9, 10&#13;
Sal., May 12, 13, 14, 15&#13;
Sun., May 13, 14, 15, 16&#13;
Early Labor Day&#13;
Wed., Aug. 27, 28, 29&#13;
Mon., sept. 1, 2, 3&#13;
Thurs., Fri., Sal.&#13;
Sal., Dec. 13, 14, 15&#13;
fofon., Dec. 15, 16, 17&#13;
Sal., Dec. :?ll, 21, 22&#13;
Sun., Dec. 21, 22, 23&#13;
Mon., Jan. 12, 13, 14&#13;
. Mon.-&amp;l., March&#13;
9-4, 10-15, 11-16&#13;
Fri. afternoon&#13;
Sal., May 2, 3, 4&#13;
Mon., May 4, 5, 6&#13;
Sat., May 9, 10, 11&#13;
Sun., May 10, 11, 12&#13;
Mon., June 12·18&#13;
July 4 or Mon., July 5&#13;
Sat., Aug. :'&gt;-11&#13;
~ University of Wisconsin· Pari&lt; ide&#13;
0.28&#13;
Union expansion still&#13;
under consideration&#13;
b~J....... 8_ ...·PIoI1lll~&#13;
S&lt;Jme bme ago. the StDdmt Uf&#13;
Office Initiated 0 commIlt to&#13;
loot into the p&lt;8lbili of espa~&#13;
the l:nion buiIdI ..&#13;
committee ed 01 the po1tft1l of&#13;
use as well .. ot the srow1b of the&#13;
Union O\'e" four \..-n lbol&#13;
committee hlI$ .....•.... 'Iw&#13;
p1eted a ud thol&#13;
UlDon .- to be espaDlled If It&#13;
to pI'e\'ent future crowd!&#13;
1"be DU"ector of the l:nI....&#13;
\Ii illiam ,'ieIlulr •&#13;
committee ond cemJIlftl1ed tho&#13;
'"If il Hbi grO'lOth~ four&#13;
j ear period as to """liuo&gt;e&#13;
the no tlour j-ears. ,."OIIId&#13;
big trouble "1'1lia study CllClclutSed&#13;
that oddihoool poce rould&#13;
del Ulltel y be 1IIed&#13;
specifIcally '",be dUll&#13;
needs to be. DlIed ollll ad&#13;
d,tionol meettnl room oDd&#13;
\ouI1Ie ar_ would help olIo"u,l&lt;&#13;
space problems "&#13;
After the commt fi&#13;
proposal, they ~ t to&#13;
Assistant Chancellor earla Stof(Ie&#13;
and her stoff II \bell&#13;
presented 10 Chancellor&#13;
Guskin aod hi Execub&#13;
mittee.&#13;
1"be ............ thot the Ilioa&#13;
\COmposerOtto Luening back 5th year&#13;
lIIwoukee·horn composer Olio&#13;
,-"" a pioneer of electronic _In tile U.S., will be a visiting&#13;
for the fifth consecutive&#13;
IIIf al Parkside from Wed-&#13;
... ,April 27 throulh Sunday,&#13;
-, l.&#13;
11II Ylslt will culminate in a&#13;
COIlCertof his works and&#13;
IItwo Milwaukee friends,&#13;
Burt&#13;
!lowneofy UW • Milwaukee,&#13;
Levy of the Wisconsin&#13;
llay&#13;
tory of Music, on Sun-&#13;
, 1&#13;
llte """;'t, to be performed by&#13;
'P faculty and gradua tes as&#13;
• guest musicians from&#13;
and Kenosha, wlll&#13;
...:t 3:30 p.m. in the Comtim&#13;
Arts Tbeater as part&#13;
1IIe Now Music at Parkside&#13;
~iIolCltl is $1.SOfor students&#13;
• citizens and $3 for tbe&#13;
....!"'b'ic. A public reception til..... the concert.&#13;
i&#13;
le visi~ .UW - Parkside,&#13;
n~ win lDstruct music&#13;
lion atudents, meet with&#13;
Di\aic:ians, composers and&#13;
tors, and present a talk&#13;
to 1he public, at 1 p.m. o~&#13;
~ April 29 .inRoom D·1l8 of&#13;
_... mwucabon Arts Building.&#13;
by Luening to be per·&#13;
.at the concert are Organ&#13;
18, Bass Trio, Fantasia&#13;
~~ Ollte and piano, and&#13;
~ a Delicate Air for&#13;
Otbe quartet.&#13;
. rs performing in the&#13;
ot Otto Luening" concert U:.p facully members&#13;
.I:~eever, piano; Timothy&#13;
, - .... t; Mark Eichner, :ot: Glenda Mossman,&#13;
'n and Daryl Durran,&#13;
1lrJn' UW-P graduates to&#13;
are John Nepper,&#13;
and Marjorie Roth,&#13;
Roger Ruggeri, double bass,&#13;
principle bass of the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony, also wlll perform, as&#13;
will Milwaukee area musicians&#13;
Steven Joyal, baritone and&#13;
William Wielgus, oboe. Kenosha&#13;
Symphony member Cynthia&#13;
Crump, horn, will also perform.&#13;
Luening has just finished a&#13;
commissioned symphony for the&#13;
Sage Community Symphony in&#13;
Bennington, Vermont, which wlll&#13;
be premiered in June. He recently&#13;
completed another commissioned&#13;
work, for the Music SChool at&#13;
Rivers in Weston, Mass., titled&#13;
"Sonority Forms," a piece for solo&#13;
piano. At the work's premiere this&#13;
summer Luening will share the&#13;
stage with John Cage, the well·&#13;
known American composer of&#13;
"chance" music.&#13;
Luening, wbo will be 83 in June,&#13;
has had a distinguished musical&#13;
career. In celebrabon of his upcoming&#13;
birthday, the Manhattan&#13;
School of Music in New York City&#13;
will perform a concert of Luening&#13;
works as a tribute to the composer&#13;
whose musical influence spans&#13;
over five decades.&#13;
Luening studied in the vibrant&#13;
European musical climate of the&#13;
1920's at the Zurich Conservatory&#13;
of Music, the Munich State&#13;
Academy of Music and the&#13;
University of Zurich and was a&#13;
private student of Ferrucclo&#13;
Busoni. A flutist, Luening has&#13;
performed in orchestras con·&#13;
ducted by Busoni, Nikisch and&#13;
Strauss. In the U.S. he has served as&#13;
executive direc10r of the opera&#13;
department at tbe Eastman&#13;
School of Music, chairman of the&#13;
theory department at the&#13;
University of Ariz~na, and&#13;
chairman of the mUSIC departments&#13;
of Bennington and Barnard&#13;
Colleges.&#13;
He hegan teaching compositioo&#13;
at Columbia University in 1944&#13;
and is credited with wide influence&#13;
on the generatioo of&#13;
students he taught until 1968 when&#13;
be was named professor emeritus.&#13;
At Columbia he established his&#13;
reputation as a pioneer in electronic&#13;
music. He collaborated&#13;
with Vladimir Usachevsky on the&#13;
first concert of electronic music in&#13;
America, held at Columbia in&#13;
1952.Luening also served as co .&#13;
director of the Columbia - Prin·&#13;
ceton Electronic Music Center at&#13;
its inception in 1959.&#13;
Luening, who has writtel'l an&#13;
autobiography, cootinues to write&#13;
musical compositions. He hlI$&#13;
received commissions from the&#13;
League of Composers, Louisville&#13;
Philharmonic Society, the&#13;
Chamber Orchestra of the ew&#13;
York Phitharmonic Symphony,&#13;
American Opera Theater and the&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony.&#13;
In 1980 Luening conducted the&#13;
world premiere of a work for&#13;
chamher orchestra commissioned&#13;
by UW - Parkside, "potawatomi&#13;
Legends," based on the lore of the&#13;
potawatomi trihe, the dommant&#13;
Indian people of southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin in the 1830's wben&#13;
Luening's maternal great&#13;
grandfalher established a&#13;
homestead near Franklin.&#13;
Graphics System chnWl at F ir&#13;
In COIIjUDl:Ii&lt;la Wlth the&#13;
puter Fair 00 Saturdoy. Apr •&#13;
Parkside re5eJlrchers will&#13;
demonstrate a newly ..... ind&#13;
Evans .. SUtherland PS 10-&#13;
teractive erophlcs CoInpu~ 0111&#13;
a. m. and 2 p. m. 1ft the moIecuIIt&#13;
graphics lab of the Iloameclical&#13;
Research Institute. G.--.cpabt&#13;
122.&#13;
1"be SISO,OOO computer gropbiCS&#13;
system ,.... a gift ... the un&#13;
from EvollS" SUtherland. 0 lab·&#13;
based compu~ ftrm.&#13;
CbemisttY Prof Keith ani.&#13;
INSIDE • • •&#13;
*&#13;
Honors visitors&#13;
*&#13;
Python review&#13;
*Job&#13;
*&#13;
lett&#13;
2 Thursdll y. Apr iI 28. 1913 RANGER&#13;
I&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Score one for Kasten&#13;
¥!1thho1dt.. em """,,mod Illcome as pusbed by the While House as a&#13;
y 01 cradlllll down on nc:h tax &lt;Maters who allow mlerest revenue to&#13;
10_ ed II a good Idea that would have saved the government&#13;
many mlUJona of cIoIJan .. c:h&gt;'ellr. W,UlholdJng.s also one 01 the most&#13;
elf u • 01 taxi .. the unearned recoroe.&#13;
Bob .... the R"P'bIiean from \II 1SCOfISlD put a stop to that.&#13;
Ilespondlnc 10 pn!IOIUn! from • StXIdenly • powerful banking lobby,&#13;
... pusbed f.... repeal 01the wlthholdtnlllaw againal the dictates 01&#13;
n s-rty. c:hhold&lt; a ma)Only in the same Senate thai passed&#13;
... in t/r first place&#13;
Republicll .. ha aJwa been the party 01 busmess. bul the hankers.&#13;
til .... /rIp eo!' lit too far What IS the thinking in the&#13;
ba'*blI commWllt) thaI allows ... !__ to push f... such an actiCII&#13;
Tbty mull • a~ 01 lboir newly tarnished image. 11le comprom&#13;
bill. II Oland&lt; no.... practically insures that the withholding&#13;
U _ cern 10 s-aa&#13;
Even n&gt;on! ...... OIlhan the actual repeal itsell ..... the way Kasten&#13;
ndIed II He broke a1m0ll ewry ...,ueman's rule in the Senale,&#13;
01 the Senate 10take a 1eS"'" look at sUffening the parliamentary&#13;
....... nd c:ha0lbll the way the Senate operatel from no'" on, It Is&#13;
Ullheanl 01 f.... freohman Sen#t... 10 take thaI kind 01 .COon in an&#13;
..... a1... tiCIIllke the Senate. whic:h has long oper.ted .. Ing many unwrillell&#13;
ruIs and ""Ilemen's ."..,...,enta. 11le Senate will never be&#13;
",lte the me&#13;
• malter 01 f.d .t mnind&lt; one 01 • certain other lresbm.n&#13;
t... from W.consln. no so very long .go.&#13;
J&amp;ners to the editor&#13;
Editor defended&#13;
Editor's notes&#13;
Old law could be big trouble&#13;
opinion about something she's&#13;
witnessed7~ U this is your expectabon,&#13;
that expectation seems&#13;
a little unfair. Could you remove&#13;
yourself 10 those expecl.tions??&#13;
Anolber thing Henslak holds&#13;
the rights to on this camp.- Mr.&#13;
Preston, Is the editorial page of&#13;
the paper. Vou do remember don't&#13;
you, al one point she even had a&#13;
weekly "OPINION COLUMN" by&#13;
the lamous Bruce Presion on that&#13;
page. Were you oot free to express&#13;
your thoughts and opinions,&#13;
regardless of what they were?? It&#13;
seems to me you were. Hensiak's&#13;
policy has always been, "if it&#13;
doesn't carry illegal (slanderous)&#13;
libelous, delamatory content, and&#13;
malt .. deadline, I'll do my best to&#13;
get it on page two." That's the&#13;
opinion page, that's where her&#13;
story or column or thoughts were&#13;
located. Objectivity has very little&#13;
10 do with page two of the Ranger.&#13;
As a "veteran columnist," Iwould&#13;
think you sbould koow that.&#13;
She even printed your letter,&#13;
and she is under NO obligation to&#13;
print any letters. Hensiak is fair&#13;
about freedom of expression,&#13;
wouldn't you say?&#13;
Curiously unintelligent sort 01&#13;
contradicts your description 01&#13;
what you were Mr. Preston. I&#13;
belie'\'e it said innovative and&#13;
unique1~"? Again, perhaps to&#13;
some you were. To Hensiat you&#13;
obviously were oot. "That is an&#13;
Issue of choice." to quote your&#13;
very own closing statement.&#13;
Hensiak has that choice reserved&#13;
too.&#13;
The point is Mr. Preston, belore&#13;
To t/r edi lor'&#13;
Manng wcrked with Pat Hen·&#13;
1000er than Bruce Preston&#13;
It Is hie that I un·&#13;
derIland Irr methodII 01 operali&lt;ln&#13;
ter than /r doos ,I'm not sure. I&#13;
_rn ure- how~vrr, that Mr.&#13;
PresIon has lJeIUn to put his foot&#13;
lnIo hi mouth f... the umpteenth&#13;
lime In Ii leiter last week, Mr&#13;
PresIon objected 10the oporuonthe&#13;
editor of this paper has developed&#13;
aft ... see, .. what she c.Ued "a&#13;
CUtlOIIJlyuruntelligent group" put&#13;
on a sorl 01 demonstration in tbe&#13;
l;Non Bazaar o\'er this X • rated&#13;
film&#13;
OIthal .. e hould, but ror a lew&#13;
mmutn, lei. l..-get about the&#13;
... ODD' cu.IY Let'. forwet&#13;
about the consao.-ness it raised&#13;
on thi c.mp.-. and let's take a&#13;
look at some of Mr. Preston's&#13;
attacks on this paper's editor. The&#13;
criteria one uses to make a&#13;
Judeement .re mOIl likely so deep&#13;
• _ted. that Hensiak probably&#13;
can't defUle exactly wbat criteria&#13;
she Iaed she ...as socialized to&#13;
-..oaate certain actions with&#13;
Cft'Iain thoUllhts as were the rest&#13;
of .. 'Having seen Mr. Preston in&#13;
some of the rarnolls communicali&lt;ln&#13;
classes Ithink it only&#13;
lair he ahouId know that.) What&#13;
HIIIIiak w was somellli .. she&#13;
mllly dic~l't 8pI&gt;I'OVe of. She&#13;
found It curlOU5 that someone&#13;
ouJcI perhapa put on such an act&#13;
r Preston. Is that not Irr right~&#13;
the edilor 01 a S-per have to&#13;
r move her If f{om human&#13;
01I0Il much tJia t she can't&#13;
• jud emenl .nd f... m an&#13;
commercial sexual acts between&#13;
consenting adults in private ... ) I&#13;
requested further explanation.&#13;
The petition carrier explained&#13;
that some thousand years ago, a&#13;
law was passed in the state of&#13;
Wisconsin, which allowed rather&#13;
drastic punishment for noncommercial&#13;
sexual acts of consenting&#13;
adults in private. So, if&#13;
someone asked you about your sex&#13;
. life, or just happened to walk in&#13;
on something, there could be&#13;
serious consequences, {l was in&#13;
shock&gt;. The petitioner continued&#13;
.to tell me that personnel working&#13;
for the justice system had some&#13;
sort of right to question and&#13;
"hassle" the common - folk about&#13;
just exactly what they had been&#13;
doing in bed. (Some of us would be&#13;
embarassed about our response.)&#13;
Nontheless, I decided to do a&#13;
lillie research into this dilemma&#13;
about noncommercial sexual acts,&#13;
which sounds like something&#13;
directly out of a computer or&#13;
perhaps a fortune cookie. The fact&#13;
of the matter is, lhere is indeed a&#13;
law out there in this fine state that&#13;
makes noncommercial sexual&#13;
acts punishable by law. This is a&#13;
law that kind of puts your justice&#13;
system into the sack righl along&#13;
next to you. How pleasant: not to&#13;
mention crowded. Recently the&#13;
state assembly. has passed a bill&#13;
repealing the law, and the state&#13;
senale is likely to pass the bill,&#13;
however, there does seem to be&#13;
some slight opposition to the&#13;
passing of this repeal.&#13;
Apparently some see the repeal&#13;
.. the condoning It sin. II1II It&#13;
encouragement ol_m ...&#13;
sexualacls, SOmeeven feel UIIIf&#13;
encourage homoleXUllltr&#13;
Whatever the "- far&#13;
postion, the chances lIlatdie:&#13;
won't pass are lairly dim, ••&#13;
seems that the churdlea Ia ..&#13;
stale can't even get ... larl&#13;
stand on this issue.&#13;
The bill would oot make ...&#13;
either sexual "Aalt •&#13;
prostitution, or combiDaU.&#13;
thereof, wbat il woulddo Is"&#13;
legal cohabilalilll and leIIlIlIadI&#13;
between single people. "...,&#13;
probably a lot It lIlat .....&#13;
already. There is. One IlIsIIII&#13;
asked me if it was ever II •&#13;
forced law. No ..,. to .,&#13;
knowledge has recenlly ..&#13;
arrested for being In \be ....&#13;
. bed, but I may be wrq •&#13;
probably depends SOlD........&#13;
one's interpretation It NOJl.&#13;
COMMERCIAL. HowimpenIIIl&#13;
No matter, my OIIIyadvIce.1I&#13;
watch out for any IIlIIJ JIIIIIt&#13;
before the stale senate _ •&#13;
way through to passing \be Iill&#13;
would ima~ne thaI if \be II1II&#13;
doesn't pass the law far -&#13;
insane reason, it wouldbe ....&#13;
idea to stop whatever 'f'IIIt&#13;
doing, because oow tblt \be 1st&#13;
has been broughl lD \be ....&#13;
of the law enforcers ...&#13;
==&#13;
II&#13;
do your best to control&#13;
And if anyone has lII1 ......&#13;
accurate" informaliOll,b1':&#13;
means, write in. I'm sa:':'..&#13;
of research I did OIIIy&#13;
.surface. No gossip slarifJ ~&#13;
by Pal Henslak&#13;
Editor&#13;
A few days ago someone approached&#13;
me and asked me to sign&#13;
a petition. I asked for a verbal&#13;
explanation as to what the petition&#13;
was about, and the person&#13;
responded, "Just read it." So I&#13;
did. The petition dealt with an old,&#13;
as a matter of fact a somewhat&#13;
prehistoric act on and against&#13;
noncommercial sexual - acts of&#13;
consenting adults in private. A bit&#13;
bewildered by what I had read,&#13;
(something like: We, the un·&#13;
dersigned do request the state of&#13;
Wisconsin to pass the bill&#13;
repealing the illegality of nonone&#13;
publicly attacks someone else,&#13;
one must question whether or not&#13;
they would he willing to give up&#13;
the rights they are criticizing&#13;
another for. If you aren't Mr,&#13;
Preston, then mayhe you should&#13;
think twice about what you have&#13;
accused HerlSiak of, and realize&#13;
that while she is a good editor she&#13;
is also a person. She has rights&#13;
too. She is very fair about the&#13;
rights of others in this newspaper.&#13;
There's no reason to be ashamed.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
and&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Cootinued On Page Eight&#13;
- E.-r G)an.ger NewS~ -~ F==&#13;
PhOIoE.-r&#13;
eopyE.-r&#13;
BUSine.. ~ MIM&#13;
Distributlon 1M....&#13;
Assistant Business IM=&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Tony Rogers&#13;
Tori Murray&#13;
Masood Shafiq&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Karen Norwood&#13;
Jeff Wicks&#13;
Jo lene Tork iIsen&#13;
Herbert Kubly&#13;
STAFF&#13;
B Sharon Aken, Terry Byrne, Maureen Burke, ~&#13;
Puf~k~r • Phillips, Carra Cariello, Catherine ......~&#13;
a r1Cla Cumbie. Dan Dowbower Michael KellIS.&#13;
Kortendick, John Kovalic Rick Lu'ehr Robb LueIIt', l(ItlIr&#13;
Ra y b "JIf!I/I1I .urn, Napolean Scarbrough Dave Schroedel" Tunkleel. . I&#13;
RANGER· . ttlrr ". JI/III'&#13;
responsibl IS,wr.'tten .and, edited by students of UW . Parkslcle and&#13;
PUbl' h e or ItS edItOrial policy and content .-od""iIIH"&#13;
RAN~E~ ~ver,! ThurSday during Ihe academic ;ear el&lt;cepf during bf'H~&#13;
Written pe s p.f1~ted,by theynion Cooperative Publishing Co" Kenos/'l.,&#13;
All corres~:~SSIOl1 ISrequired for reprint of any porlionof RANGER, Ity of ~&#13;
Park.side Be ~ce shOUld be addressed to: Park.side Rangel", Unlv«'S f/III&#13;
Leiters t~ Ih: E~·t 2000" Kenosha, Wisconsin, 531&lt;41, eel on 'l~ "&#13;
paper with ,lOr Will b,e accepted if typewritten, doubtes~ ~&#13;
cluded for ::"\: In~h margms. All letters must be signed and a teffPhO"'&#13;
Names will ~I Ic.atlon. •&#13;
Deadline' I Wllhh,eld for valid reasons. TM R,lNGI"&#13;
reserves a~~ et,fer~ IS ~day at 3 p,m, for publication on Th~'Cont.II'lI""&#13;
delam.,o editorIal priVileges in refusing to print letters whldl&#13;
ry &lt;nnlent,&#13;
ibefense costs Wisconsin, .McLean, an expert on t e&#13;
Secretary laFollette says Refonnation, hits lecture circuit cinelost an average of $3,200&#13;
~amilY in 1982and the average&#13;
l":ay in Kenosha lost $3,300from&#13;
..... and loss of jobs due to in-&#13;
~ military spending, said&#13;
tary of State Douglas&#13;
~ette. '"&#13;
&amp;Numerous studies indicate&#13;
military spending does not&#13;
IlII ale jobs, but actually&#13;
~ns the unemployment&#13;
:'tion," LaFollette said in a&#13;
_ release.&#13;
~iiicited one study in particular,&#13;
.. Dr James Anderson, called :;...n.pting Our Cities." The&#13;
_ says that Wisconsin would&#13;
especially hard hil, owing 10&#13;
~ state's lack of defense inHonors&#13;
program schedule&#13;
set for Schon visit .&#13;
and business faculty and students&#13;
titled "Reflective Professionals"&#13;
at2:30 p.m. in Molinaro Room 1l0.&#13;
An expert 00 urban planning&#13;
lSI! technical Innovation, Donald&#13;
• , will be an Honors Program&#13;
~uished VISIting Scholar at&#13;
PsrIside on Monday, May 2&#13;
IIroUgh Wednesday, May 4.&#13;
Schona Ford Professor in the&#13;
~ent of Urban Studies and&#13;
Plsnning at the Massachusetts&#13;
Ioslitule of Technology, will&#13;
~r in a series of programs for&#13;
-..ts, faculty, staff and the&#13;
..... al public.&#13;
Sc:bon's visit is being coorIiDsted&#13;
by students in UWhrkside's&#13;
Honors Program,&#13;
IIicb is directed by Prof. Lee&#13;
layer, communication.&#13;
Scbonis an urban planner who&#13;
.. madeimportant contributions&#13;
• understanding how social and&#13;
II:bnological changes affect&#13;
llieIy. He is an authority on&#13;
.. tivityand the development of&#13;
Idmical innovation, educational&#13;
lIform and organizational&#13;
~. He holds a bachelor's&#13;
..... from Yale University and&#13;
_'. and PhD degrees from&#13;
IIrvard.&#13;
Scbon has written more than 50&#13;
U1icles for professional and&#13;
"'iy publications and has&#13;
.a.ared five books.&#13;
1111966,Schon helped establish&#13;
..... - profit Organization. for&#13;
IIdaI and Technical Innova tion,&#13;
Washington, D.C., a group&#13;
tIIcerned with community and&#13;
SIi&amp;Itborhood development, low -&#13;
• bouaing and health and&#13;
..... tion programs. Schon has&#13;
~ numerous posts in govern-&#13;
-, industry and education,&#13;
~ng an appointment as a&#13;
IIIl8rdi associate at the Kennedy&#13;
IIIlooJ 01Government at Harvard.&#13;
Scbon'smajor public address&#13;
till be an Honors Program&#13;
ltIture titled, "Making Things:&#13;
~ective Conversations with&#13;
·lerials," at I p.m. on Monday,&#13;
IIsy 2in Molinaro Hall Room 105.&#13;
The remainder of Schon's public&#13;
lIPoarances are: Monday, May&#13;
A talk on education and&#13;
cal change at 2:15 p.m. in&#13;
Hall Room 161; and a&#13;
;::'ion of technology and&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. in Com-&#13;
~tion Arts Building Room&#13;
!'bosday, May 3: A presentation&#13;
"increaSing Professional&#13;
'veness" at 9 a.m. in the&#13;
1_aitb Room of Wyllie Library&#13;
.... rning Center' a talk on&#13;
:ng and organiting in highlY&#13;
cal teams at 11:30 a.m. m&#13;
Room 113; an Honors'&#13;
rarn Seminar titled&#13;
. lion" at 12:30 p.m. in&#13;
lIJlication Arts Room 132;&#13;
a &amp;eminar with psychology&#13;
Ranger Needs&#13;
Writers!!!&#13;
dustries.&#13;
Other Wisconsin cities to be&#13;
hard hit include Madison, losing&#13;
an average of $2,600 per family'&#13;
Milwaukee, $3,100; La Crosse:&#13;
$2,400; Green Bay, $2,600; Appleton,&#13;
$2,400; and. Eau Claire,&#13;
$1,900.&#13;
Wisconsin voters, he noted do&#13;
not want defense industries in this&#13;
state. "Last September, more&#13;
than 75 percent of Wisconsin's&#13;
voters Supported a referendum&#13;
calling for a nuclear weapons&#13;
freeze," he said .&#13;
"Studies show that tbe $221&#13;
billion military .budget for 1983&#13;
will cost American Workers over 2&#13;
million jobs," he added.&#13;
Parkside English professor&#13;
Andrew McLean is in Weimar,&#13;
West Germany this week to ad •&#13;
dress the German Shakespeare&#13;
Society on the topic of "Reformation&#13;
Themes in Shakespeare."&#13;
The general theme of the meeting,&#13;
which marks both the 500lh anniversary&#13;
year of Martin Luther's&#13;
birth and Shakespeare's birthdate&#13;
on Apr. 23, is "Luther and&#13;
Shakespeare. "&#13;
McLean's invitation to address&#13;
the group resulted from bis&#13;
scholarship in early 16th century&#13;
literature as well as his studies of&#13;
Shakespeare. He has edited the&#13;
first account 01 the continental&#13;
Reformation published in 1531and&#13;
is currently editing the first&#13;
English lives of Marlin Luther,&#13;
Huldrich Zwingli and Johannes&#13;
Oecolampadius, three early&#13;
Reformatioo leaders, published in&#13;
1561.&#13;
Last week, McClean chaired&#13;
two seminars at the annual&#13;
meeling of the Shakespeare&#13;
RANGER n.u ..... y •• 11.191:1 3&#13;
ANDREW McLEAN has been appe_1ng al many She&#13;
and Reformation seminars_&#13;
Association 01 Amenca. lic:ll&#13;
met is Aslland, Ore. n.. ....&#13;
a\\ended by Shakespeare oc:IIoIan&#13;
from througbout the U . &amp;Dd&#13;
Canada, examined the Reformation&#13;
OODtext01 Shakespeare'&#13;
"lIIlill!E~H~P~f Bezhad Samlmlattracted the attenllon A CONTRACT RENEWAL HE.A~I.NG for I ~o:C~~on by the Science Division Executive&#13;
of faculty and sludents. Samlrnl IS appe~I~~ Chancellor Ratner said he would announce his Committee denying renewal of his contrac _ Ice •&#13;
H;~;':;w;t~dentsaysthe classes are habit.,: ~onmng&#13;
got work for honors beca.- the some indication ri what you dif she does oIfers'her a weat deal&#13;
from the class. Perhaps the - Proesel feels she his gotleD ao&#13;
ference between you and your uch that if she didn'l take lbe&#13;
entrance into the course, and y~ ~ again sbr wouJd 1ft&#13;
and your exit from the co.urse. herself d m .&#13;
Proesel went on to explaon that "" .&#13;
the paper was difficult for some ri S· . a rs leatu re&#13;
the sludents, beca~ .it puts the pring semln II burden ri responsIbility on the&#13;
student to he aware 01 the boo&#13;
changes. It ceptioos 01 howis the StudeDts he or she ~.per- computers ,&#13;
rare&#13;
Sometimes that's nol easy to pick&#13;
OO'~Explainlng Things lets the&#13;
studenls have control aver the&#13;
class. They decide whal .will be.&#13;
lt's fun to be able to take 'I where&#13;
you want. That gives the c1a&#13;
re&#13;
SS&#13;
. g Because the classes a&#13;
:ea;;::'ari, the st~ts an get&#13;
actively involved. he&#13;
Proese) also said that 1&#13;
seminars allowed students to feel&#13;
that what they have to offer IS&#13;
worthwhile. Students can express&#13;
nl "1bere's no themselves ope y. have&#13;
right and wrong. It's o.k. to&#13;
an ~inion." run&#13;
The classes make yoo .&#13;
h gh a certain creative&#13;
t rou "A class like&#13;
process.. " 'd Proesel,&#13;
Imagination, Sthinka&#13;
.&#13;
1&#13;
eatively&#13;
"makes a student cr&#13;
and pull oot what ~ ::.x~&#13;
from the matenal. think "&#13;
hard but it makes you. n' ex&#13;
ak'. the classes 15 a -&#13;
T encon:ProeseI wouldn'l ha,'O&#13;
per.:.oo She currently has the&#13;
rru· to graduate edits necessary&#13;
cr . ti "bul ProeseI "with distinc on, taking&#13;
'd that she wouldn't stop&#13;
sal Seminars and wurse the Honors&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Edilor&#13;
To have taken 18 credits within&#13;
the Honors Program, and still&#13;
want to take more course w?rk&#13;
"for hooors" says a good thing&#13;
about the hooors program onks~&#13;
campus. Students at Par I.&#13;
have the option of takmg thel~&#13;
course work for honors, a~.ts&#13;
they so choose to take 15 c I&#13;
"for honors," they can graduate&#13;
''with distinction."&#13;
• Jayne Proesel has taken 18&#13;
edits inhonors course work, and&#13;
~e plans on taking ~ore. class~&#13;
nd the same directIon this&#13;
u er g fall "When I first started&#13;
camm. . ,. said in the Honors 8emmars, .&#13;
P I "1 didn't know anything&#13;
a=f'them. I guess that's why I&#13;
k them The classes sounded&#13;
~:eresting' and for me it was well&#13;
worth the gamble."&#13;
The Honors seminars C?l"re.nt?;&#13;
being dfered are "I~ag~~tio:x_&#13;
nd "Explaining Thilll!s.. '"&#13;
a .. an ll1Slde u. plaining Thmgs I~ tha t lets&#13;
Parkside survey t ":': of what&#13;
students get a th'::' differenl&#13;
happe!1s ID ·nation explores&#13;
disciplines. Imagl ts of creative&#13;
the different face mester Ex.&#13;
thinking. NextII s:nd Technique&#13;
plaonmg Thlngsedunder the Honors will he offer&#13;
Program. both&#13;
Proesel has experienced. .&#13;
. d Explammg Imaginahon ani' . g Things Things "I n Exp allUn&#13;
. de is based on your&#13;
your gra nd a paper In the&#13;
participation, a. the ~truetor paper you must give&#13;
Adull education cla at&#13;
Par ... ide this spring I~':for&#13;
computer d....&#13;
business .-Is,&amp;Dd a short "" ....&#13;
on book collecting. 01&#13;
Andy McLeall, a profEnglish&#13;
here, wiD be teec:IllDl •&#13;
cJass on collecting rare, &amp;Dd DOl..&#13;
rare booIls. McIan his :.lea;..&#13;
eltJlOI:ieoce coIiel:tiDIdaims lbIt pr8JSIng books, &amp;Dd .~ __&#13;
'ng books older ~ -&#13;
='''is beller thaD _oillll&#13;
stoe.... ~......... botll&#13;
The dass wiD be .. -&#13;
Ii... at Parkside &amp;Dd __ the&#13;
SEE &lt;SLItewide EsteulDO&#13;
Educatim Networ!tl oetwarl&lt; DO&#13;
Mmdays and WecI.-da)'S.&#13;
begiming May 9, The ... IS '::&#13;
CooLlcl the UW - Es\eDllall&#13;
further details IS aIIo oIferiDI a&#13;
The ~m... 01 perIIlDII&#13;
class 10 . busioeu apcomputers&#13;
10 level elMs.&#13;
p1ications. An entry hat ooftware&#13;
the """"'" "" ...... w &amp;Dd&#13;
and hardware are avau.: that&#13;
how to - the eqwpmThe ~&#13;
best meets your .-Is&#13;
Thursday. April 28. 1983 RANGER&#13;
Job Hunting&#13;
explored in workshop&#13;
A senes 01 free worUllopo 00&#13;
lOb - hunl1~ ISbei~ IDitiated at&#13;
Parkslde by !be Officer of Career&#13;
PlallDi~ and Placement and !be&#13;
Alum.. Associatioo.&#13;
"., two • hour w_ps. to be&#13;
held 011 !be second Tuesday 01&#13;
ch month begilUUngMay 10at 7&#13;
p m. III U .. on 106. ,,;11 stress jobkIng&#13;
tips and potential&#13;
strategies&#13;
Donald Cashen. actl~ director&#13;
01 UW • Parkslde's Placement&#13;
olfice said speakers at !be first&#13;
011 WIll be MIChael Elliot.&#13;
manager of corporate salary&#13;
administration for Tenneco·s&#13;
Automotive Divisioo in Deerfield,&#13;
m.; Susan Katehadorian, senior&#13;
employment counselor in tbe&#13;
personnel Office at !be First&#13;
Wisconsin ~ ational Bank in&#13;
Iilwaukee ; and Gregg Pfarr,&#13;
loan olficer and assislant cashier&#13;
at !be Pleasant Prairie Branch of&#13;
the First National Bank of&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Cashen. who also will speak at&#13;
!be first sessioe, said !be initial&#13;
workshop will be loosely structured&#13;
and !be agenda will be set by&#13;
participants. Subsequent&#13;
workshops will focus on jobs in&#13;
sales. education. high technology&#13;
and business&#13;
Shrub and tree care topic&#13;
of discussion at the Rondelle&#13;
Properl) maintaining the trees&#13;
nd shrubs around your home is&#13;
an rmportant, though often bafRing&#13;
Iaak&#13;
Kart hroeder, U.W - ExI&#13;
nolon Horticulture and 'alural&#13;
He ource gent for Racine&#13;
County and tar 01 WRJ 's "The&#13;
Garden how:' will discu&#13;
proper tree and shrub care al the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater on&#13;
Wednesday, May 4 "., program&#13;
will beolfered at I p.m. and 7 p.m.&#13;
Included "ill be informalioo&#13;
about tree and shrub .. lecnce,&#13;
placement 00 property, proper&#13;
planting, trimming and pruning&#13;
techniques. ferlilizatioo and pest&#13;
control. Schroeder will also answer&#13;
questicns from the audience.&#13;
Reservatioos for this program&#13;
are requested and can be made by&#13;
calling the Rondelle at 631-2154&#13;
Monday through Friday, beginning&#13;
Apr 20. There is no admission&#13;
charge. The Golden&#13;
Rondelle is located 00 the corner&#13;
ol 14th and Franklin Streets in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Ttis program is a cooperative&#13;
effort with radio station WRJN.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
$100.00 REWARD •&#13;
Information on subslance when waler Is added ils' size&#13;
1ncr_l5lo20ll .... andlumslorock. -&#13;
(.11 In., 652.2173&#13;
---~.zq&#13;
PROFESSOR LEE THAYER'S "Communication and the Modern World" class has _&#13;
sludylng the effecl of graffiti on civilization, and decided 10 have a T-shirt show. The resuliis&#13;
shown above. Thayer Is fifth from Ihe rlghl.&#13;
Disability Council gets award 1&#13;
The Wisconsin Council on presented for the Wisconsin residential facilities and the&#13;
Developmental Disabilities was Council's ability to work ef- Council's efforts to track 8mIIIr&#13;
given the "Outslanding Council fectively on legislation and in legislation in other stats. Also&#13;
Awar~". by the National b~ild.iJ.1g coalitions a~ong menU.oned was the COUllCD"&#13;
ASSOCiation of Developmental disability groups. The Council was establishment, with more thu.&#13;
Disabilities Councils at their also recognized for its efforts in other disability grouPB of till&#13;
annual meeting in Washingtoo, D. documenting the multiplyling Wisconsin Survival GrOOp wbidI&#13;
C. on Mar. 19. effect of Federal developmental works on slate budget iaoueI.&#13;
The Wisconsin Council is a slate disabilities funds. L. J. Ganser, M. D. Caa:O&#13;
and federally mandated body The award noted the Council's Chairperson, and J~y. Wit.&#13;
which represents people. WIth work on development of tenmyer, Council Executl"&#13;
developmental dtsabrltttes. legislation to prohibit Director, accepted !be awardato&#13;
Members are appomted .by the discrimination in zoning for reception in Washingtm Governor and are responsible for .&#13;
overseeing how services are&#13;
provided to people with such&#13;
disabilities as mental retardation,&#13;
cerebral palsy, chronic mental&#13;
illness and o!hers.&#13;
The Outstanding Council&#13;
Award, giyen annually, was 'PAB&#13;
MORE ADVENTU&#13;
A BUMD&#13;
~&#13;
••&#13;
THAN&#13;
•&#13;
. Can you picture yourself&#13;
~ down a cliff? Or&#13;
shooting the rapids? Or&#13;
crossing a river using only&#13;
rope and your own two&#13;
.,...,,,,::&gt;J1lan ds?&#13;
You'll have a chance&#13;
to do all this and more in&#13;
ArmyRarc.&#13;
Adventure training like&#13;
this helps you develop&#13;
many of the qualities you'll&#13;
need as an Army officer.&#13;
Qualities like selfconfidence.&#13;
Stamina. And&#13;
the ability to perfonn&#13;
under pressure.&#13;
lf you'd like to find out&#13;
more, make a date to see&#13;
your Army Rare Professor&#13;
of Military Science.&#13;
ARMY ROTC.&#13;
BEALL lOU CAN BE.&#13;
Cont,l(:t Address:&#13;
Enrollment Officer&#13;
MarqMfte, Uni't.&#13;
.rmy ROTC&#13;
ClllI COned (414) n"7lfS/712'&#13;
Communications&#13;
P AB rocks with "High Rise"&#13;
Friday, Apr. 29 in the Union&#13;
Square. The doors open at9 p. m.&#13;
and !he band is scheduled to begin&#13;
after the Student Awards&#13;
Banquet. Admission is free .&#13;
Parkside and Age lD are&#13;
required. Come ou,t and see&#13;
Kenosha's own High Rise.&#13;
Geology&#13;
. Dr. Peter H. Schultz of the&#13;
Lunar and Planetary Institute in&#13;
Houston, Texas will be giving two&#13;
talks next week which will be co -&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Geology and Physics Clubs and&#13;
!he Racine Geological Society.&#13;
The first talk will be held Thursday,&#13;
May 5 at 7:30 p. m. in Grq&#13;
103. The talk is titled "Target&#13;
Ear!h Effects of Large - Body&#13;
Impacts". The second talk&#13;
"Planetery Catastrophes," will ~&#13;
held Friday, May 6 at 1 p. m. in&#13;
Grq 103.&#13;
Chess&#13;
Sign up now for \he Chess CluQ'S&#13;
SprIng Tournament in the Union&#13;
Rec Center. The tournament will&#13;
be held May 3 and 4, and has a $1&#13;
entry fee for Parkside students.&#13;
For more info, \he Chess Club&#13;
meets Tuesday nights from 6 - 10&#13;
p. m. in Union 207 and Wednesdays&#13;
from 1 to 4 p. m. in Moln&#13;
D - 133.Who says you have to slay&#13;
for four hours? Just pop in for a&#13;
few qUick ones,,0O1&#13;
Our Psychotherapy for Chess&#13;
DIsorders Committee will be&#13;
addressing the topics, "Postal&#13;
~hess:. What are the Costs?" and&#13;
Caslting Queenside: A Freudian&#13;
Interpretation." Be there.&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
Peer Support will he sponsoring&#13;
a lecture titled, "Herpes. 8eUeIt&#13;
It Or Not," on May 3 at 12_11&#13;
Grq 10.1.Speakers will be 0-&#13;
'Jenkins, a counsel... at FIIIIIlJ&#13;
Planning of Racine; Dr. Jolmas.&#13;
midt, a Kenosha physlclaD; ...&#13;
Dan Geshrick, an epldemloll(lsl&#13;
in Racine. There will be a fIiII&#13;
during \he talk.&#13;
All Communications ModIIIt&#13;
students are invited to a 1'Sbll'&#13;
and Tell I Munch and Mi.....&#13;
. night on Mooday, May 2 illMOUI&#13;
D-l01 from 5: 15to 6:05.'I1lere wII&#13;
be a three minute oral pr-:&#13;
tation by the students who'-&#13;
up on Apr. 4, and free JXlII"'I'lL&#13;
Come early to set up yourJrOje&lt;l&#13;
Contact Janet Wells at 553-2SSI.&#13;
further information.&#13;
UWPDT&#13;
The Parkside Dart ream. II&#13;
going to hold the first ParbidI&#13;
Open Dart Tournam ....1OIlFridI1,&#13;
April 29 at I p.m. III !be III&lt; ~&#13;
Center.&#13;
There will be two '"""":&#13;
competitions inVOlved'.~lI\&#13;
the event will be indiVliDdivt..-i&#13;
The other part will be will&#13;
cricket matches. Eacb pori&#13;
require a ooe dollar ...:.: ill&#13;
All entry fees will be flrtI&#13;
the form of prize ~ afdIO&#13;
place will receive 50....,;,;;:;. ....&#13;
entry fees. seeood .-- IIU1&#13;
receive 25 percent.af !be.", 15&#13;
fees. Third place wlU ......fDII1l'&#13;
percent of the ... try f~&#13;
place will receive !be . e/fGl1I10&#13;
percent for her ~r hi':"; .&#13;
All other places wlU t dIO&#13;
hearty hand clasp and a po&#13;
back. IriD be&#13;
The top two 301p1ayerJ ....&#13;
eligible for entry in !be PCridIl&#13;
Challenge. The ~ !0Uf f~ ttl&#13;
players will be e1ig1: r.,Jl!l&#13;
Parkside Challenge a .to .-&#13;
memhers are welcome&#13;
also.&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
... Thurlday. Aj&gt;rll 21,1913&#13;
Performances excellent in 'Balance'&#13;
by DickOberbruner&#13;
'I!Ie parkside Dramatic Arts&#13;
I*dpiiDe has done it again. Their&#13;
;,.,diDOIl of Edward Albee's "A&#13;
peUcate Balance" is expertly&#13;
aer/armed. Directed by Lee Van&#13;
ilI'e. tbis absurd play need not be&#13;
~ understood - all loose&#13;
j,eads do not tie up at tbe end.&#13;
pIis important is realistic&#13;
...... t... portrayal, made diflIlIIlbythe&#13;
fact that all of Albee's&#13;
.. Dons are mad, and a com- ilrflbie setting from which tbe&#13;
.. clneSs projects itself. The&#13;
... without a doubt, meet these&#13;
..-es .&#13;
.... the iead roles of Agnes and&#13;
ftIiIS are Lee Law 1er and An-&#13;
.. Brbel. These two work well&#13;
...... as the husband and wife&#13;
~y close in feeling but far&#13;
.,art spiritually. Lawler&#13;
dllDands quite a bit from her&#13;
ACJlI"l. ThoUgha few monologues&#13;
.Mmded memorized, her strong&#13;
pge presence is just what the&#13;
iii! . alleged "fulcrum" of the&#13;
lIIIlily needs.&#13;
Brheltakes Tobias to the limits&#13;
If steadfastness. Tobias is the&#13;
ieVe through which the bruising&#13;
pISt and the oppressive present&#13;
are strained. In portraying this&#13;
paeid stoic, Brhel releases the&#13;
lIIloti0ll81 side gradually as the&#13;
play progresses - until tbe end&#13;
wbeIl Tobias' much needed out1IIInt&#13;
is subdued by his abnormal&#13;
pty.&#13;
1beir "best friends H who barge&#13;
iIIIO their home for no apparent&#13;
.... n are Ednat and Harry,&#13;
played by Liz Schoenoff and Scott&#13;
Illicheisdorf. A good first time&#13;
perfll1Ilanceis turned in by Miss&#13;
SCboenoff. Despite some&#13;
mechanisticmovement, her dry,&#13;
I1118ttachedapproach is appropriate&#13;
for the hollow Agnes.&#13;
IIer husband, Harry, is equally as&#13;
Ilzarre. Reichelsdorf's on - stage&#13;
Ouidity brings an eeriness to a&#13;
!Iceless character.&#13;
wlUJ Lire.&#13;
PiCTURED, left to right. is Andrew Brhel, Pat Casclaro. and&#13;
Lee Lawler. in a scene from the Parks Ide produdlon of Edward&#13;
Albee's play "A Delicate Balance."&#13;
Pat Casciaro plays Agnes'&#13;
sister, Claire. Aided by ber&#13;
alcoholism, Claire is both boastful&#13;
and sassy. At times, Miss&#13;
Casciaro's voice is louder than&#13;
circumstances deem. However. in&#13;
portraying Claire's flagrant&#13;
demeanor I her abilities come to&#13;
the forefront.&#13;
Rebecca Julich plays Julia, tbe&#13;
emotionally displaced daughter of&#13;
Agnes and Tobias. A four time&#13;
divorcee, Julia seeks identity, but&#13;
her needs are low in priority. Miss&#13;
Julich excels in energy and&#13;
crispness as she fights back&#13;
against impinging forces.&#13;
The living room set is beautiful.&#13;
Crafted by Charles Erven, it's&#13;
strong visual lines and colorful&#13;
interior strikes a fragility in&#13;
combination with Jon SChoenofI's&#13;
lighting. The comfortable setting&#13;
is rounded out by Barbara&#13;
Thompson's costumes. Behind the&#13;
guise of conservative apparel&#13;
hides not so conservative&#13;
characters,&#13;
Delicately handled by Van&#13;
Dyke, "Balance" is fun and&#13;
provacative. Exposing internal&#13;
madness through the creation of&#13;
tension is the drive of this play,&#13;
and the Players do a terrific job in&#13;
doing just this. All involved with&#13;
this production deserve a round of&#13;
applause,&#13;
Write Ranger&#13;
a letter&#13;
Acl\lAll.Y, I ST,LJ.&#13;
Il1IIC PRlOL&lt;N ....llll&#13;
F/.AIOE' Bl'D,uox,. lJ&lt;tSOS&#13;
F~YI&gt;.iT&#13;
15 L.IF~ .,J"usr A NlEf2.(HiPr!'J&#13;
S~vr.&lt;.&lt;E FoR ~ €R. ?&#13;
o~ IS T'lt611t6"50/"'1(" Ft~,&#13;
UL-Tll''O'lAT'E'",RO\l,.IT'l' iltAT&#13;
WE'" F\~ SENTIeNT" 8ENlrS.&#13;
M\Xr SEf'lRc.1-lFoR?&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bll!!k&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24HOURTELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F.O.I.C.&#13;
c ~~ VJe llEt..IE'\.lIi JJ.J&#13;
A- suP£~~ BEINe:,.&#13;
w 1fll&lt;&gt;Jf f~ ~s"'"&#13;
~IEflt(£(;AAfU&gt; 70R 00&#13;
we Sr/ll\f\..&lt;{ t:::l€l'J'l' 1*£.&#13;
EXISfe-r.Jc.£ Or GOO&#13;
A-S E~IL" AS ~E"ot&gt;&#13;
PIP?&#13;
/+--&#13;
7Je{i~6tE&#13;
:8tt.kt ItCf&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Fun with Dick&#13;
Wortd news-with a twist&#13;
Am .... oa.nr&#13;
• • •&#13;
• • •&#13;
American commercialism&#13;
touches everything E 0ppression.&#13;
For example. are&#13;
familiar wlth the Peter ~.lanibaJ&#13;
Law' "You have the ngbl&#13;
remain silent You bal lbe&#13;
to figure ou if the actul£ ...&#13;
ment is gi\1Dg you a correct answer&#13;
or mak~ .... up '!bill.&#13;
ho" you pick out the squares 1be&#13;
first O\-erthrow c:ont1'Olled by&#13;
that ruling 00 I umu a&#13;
OOIllingenl I.U over, In ch&#13;
casea rUlber o~ ill&#13;
played until there IS a d r&#13;
",oner Once a day e play a&#13;
secret coup tn hich you,&#13;
oppressed naln •&#13;
rev·011 against the l'U1i,.;&#13;
tingenl. Your sut.... jUCl.1&#13;
leaves your II\:&#13;
disarray, which is PIl"""",,le for&#13;
the . ibJation Once you are&#13;
and killed you can no er play&#13;
The wourded and the&#13;
play on .. The P. L&#13;
in revoJutionar)" count.n&#13;
terrorist • owned teJn&#13;
stations are ho III&#13;
• • •&#13;
the san&#13;
TAP BEER )0( MON. THRUTHURS&#13;
RAIL DRINKS 75&lt; ,. P 'TIL 12 •&#13;
GAME ROOM PITCHER U"&#13;
Hwy. 32 between ladne • Kenoslta&#13;
.'&#13;
, .'. EVERY DAY ..&#13;
L;-,&#13;
.. /.~ ....I .1~U!!C&#13;
~ ..&#13;
J Sheet Music &amp; Books&#13;
J Instruments &amp; Supplies&#13;
J Soles &amp; Service&#13;
SPfCIAL DISCOUNT&#13;
WITH PAlICSIDf J.D.&#13;
2425 Genevo St., Racine&#13;
Ph. 681·3261&#13;
NORTHSIDE&#13;
MUSIC&#13;
6 Thursday, April 28, 1983 RANGER&#13;
Pythons retain irreverent humor in life'&#13;
I&#13;
b, Rkk Ladlr&#13;
"Mool)' P, than's Meeni'1l of&#13;
W .. IS one of the moot perverse.&#13;
repulsl'1l, aDd cisgusting films I&#13;
have ever In OCherwords I&#13;
loved .. err mll,"te of it,&#13;
'"The I IlIng of Life" ill about&#13;
you mlght the ~n1ng&#13;
of lif But you might also&#13;
poel II b presented U&gt; the&#13;
bWlrte yle the p,1hoos IEric&#13;
Idl, John CI e, Graham&#13;
pman, T rry Jones, M,chael&#13;
Palin, aDd T rry Gilliam have&#13;
perf ed '" er the yea... The&#13;
movie ID the lorm of 3 shcrt&#13;
lr ,ach 01 which provide a&#13;
loot al a difl retII P8rt of hie'&#13;
birtb, ar deall1 etc 1bese&#13;
ete ranlle from the&#13;
ewhat aIJJy (a huge Catholic&#13;
t mily nalng 'Every perm is&#13;
cred') 10 the ridiculous fa&#13;
.. lauranl f.. turing 'authentlc&#13;
fbwaJjan cuaine an a medieval&#13;
du.n,_ atmosphere). to the&#13;
iIdJy llrotesque Can IInmellOe&#13;
ctiner vomlling incetaanlly aDd&#13;
.. Ung until he explodes), The&#13;
Pylbcns have Illven ll1is fiho the&#13;
me wOlldoriuUy weird quality&#13;
which made tbelr T.V. show so&#13;
popular One thing I have always&#13;
admired about the Pythons is&#13;
their ability to alter traditional&#13;
slyles of comedY; cbaracters&#13;
move from sketch to sketch with&#13;
seemingly no 10000c.sketches are&#13;
ended will1 no resolutioo of the&#13;
story, etc. Were someone else to&#13;
try 10 do these, the viewer would&#13;
eDdupfM1Slraled. But the Pythons&#13;
do it with such slyle tbat it all&#13;
seems ahoGSt normal.&#13;
When I reviewed 'Mooty Python&#13;
Task Force on Unemployment&#13;
talk- HEating Well for Less"&#13;
ary Bnnlllall Peterson, a&#13;
Home Economi I lor the&#13;
UNverslty of W_n - ExlonIIon,&#13;
willlalk 011 "Ealing Well&#13;
fer t-" al the """t ..-Iing of&#13;
the Roane In the 801 Task Force&#13;
00 Unemployment Peterson will&#13;
delmbe wa to mainlJlin proper&#13;
nulrilloo at low C06I, and will&#13;
explaan how to save money while&#13;
mop",nll'or aroeeries.&#13;
Peteroon' presentation ",ill last&#13;
bout_. ball hour Inlormalinn&#13;
bout her topc aDd bstings of&#13;
1ofGrma_ about food aardenlng&#13;
will he available.&#13;
The meeting will be held&#13;
Thursday, April 28 at 1:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Crystal Room of the Memorial&#13;
Hall Auditorium, 72-7th Street in&#13;
Racine. The meeting is free and&#13;
open to the ",bhc.&#13;
The Task Force on Unemployment&#13;
is made up of concerned&#13;
agencies and unemployed&#13;
volunteers. Its ""pose is to help&#13;
jobless people tbrough the phase&#13;
c:X unemployment. For more inlormation&#13;
caD the Task Force&#13;
office at 636-3237.&#13;
Student internships available&#13;
College tudents interested in&#13;
warkt"ll III 5UJIlmer jobs in their&#13;
chooen professional fields should&#13;
apply n"", lor the thousands of&#13;
corporate and governmental&#13;
InlemshiP8 and work • study&#13;
opportunili .. available.&#13;
ccordmg to The Scholarship&#13;
Bank. most Internships are&#13;
_nrcI by major corporations&#13;
aDd P8Y 10 the range 01 two to&#13;
lhr lhousa nd lor the summer.&#13;
ny wW pay students N!localioo elq:........ These intemshiP8 are&#13;
good .... rte:a of lrainlJlll aDd may&#13;
d to pennanelll employment as&#13;
well as invaluable contacts in the&#13;
student's chosen field. In addition&#13;
internees can qualify fo;&#13;
scholarships and other financfal&#13;
aid from many of these employers.&#13;
Many deadlines are near for&#13;
these programs. Students interested&#13;
in receiving more in.&#13;
formatiOll aboutlhese internships&#13;
aDd scholarships should send a&#13;
business size stamped sell - addressed&#13;
envelope to The&#13;
Scbolarship Bank, 10100 Santa&#13;
tonica Blvd. Suite 750, Los&#13;
Angeles, CA. 90067.&#13;
In Th. ParbJd. Union&#13;
FEATURING YOUR&#13;
FAVORITE CANOY,&#13;
NUTS AND SNACKS&#13;
SOLO THE OlD&#13;
FASHIONED WAY&#13;
SpecIa17&#13;
California Mix&#13;
Carrlbean Delicacy&#13;
25% OFF&#13;
Wcrtch for BIg&#13;
End 01 Y.ar Sal.&#13;
lAIalW11l1lle UooIen "IN,&#13;
DI..-ctly Aaou from IIle Info. Or.&#13;
Live at the Hollywood Bowl' a few&#13;
months ago, I expressed the hope&#13;
thai "The Meaning of Life" would&#13;
he better. My hopes could not have&#13;
been fullilled any better. II you&#13;
bave a weak stomach, it may be&#13;
better for yoo to avoid this film.&#13;
But if yoo're looking for a wildly&#13;
funny, irreverent, somtimes&#13;
gross. motion picture experie~e,&#13;
go see "Monty Python's Meamng&#13;
of Life".&#13;
Parkside student&#13;
spends semester&#13;
on Golden Pond&#13;
A uw Parkside student is&#13;
spending this semester working&#13;
on Golden Pond.&#13;
But it has nothing to do with the&#13;
movie.&#13;
Andrew Parenteau, of Racine,&#13;
who is a junior majoring in&#13;
communica tion, is working as an&#13;
intern wi th the Tennessee Valley&#13;
Authority (TVA) at the Golden&#13;
Pond Visitors Center of the 170,000&#13;
. acre "Land Between the Lakes"&#13;
wildlife and recreation area in&#13;
western Kentucky.&#13;
Parenteau is working in the&#13;
center's computer - based&#13;
thea ter and planetarium and is&#13;
performing a variety of communication&#13;
- related tasks including&#13;
production of multi -&#13;
media programs geared toward&#13;
enhancing the public's UDderst.anding&#13;
aDd appreciation of&#13;
the environment.&#13;
Parenteau's internship will&#13;
Prizes have been awarded in&#13;
Parkside's Student Art Show, on&#13;
display in the Comm. Arts Gallery&#13;
lhrongh May 6. Sponsored by the&#13;
Art Addicts and the Parkside Art&#13;
Discipline, the show includes over&#13;
50works selected from 180entries.&#13;
First prize of$4ll was awarded&#13;
to William Joseph Greider of&#13;
Racine, for his work "Cracker&#13;
Jacks," an offbeat creation that&#13;
features a cardboard box&#13;
eqUipped with a peephole throngh&#13;
which viewers can see a jungle.&#13;
like environment populated by&#13;
dragons, people, and a toad. A&#13;
mirror placed a t the rear of the&#13;
box creates an illusion of&#13;
spaciousness. Greider fashioned&#13;
the work from paper, clear glass&#13;
marbles, plexiglass aDd watercolor.&#13;
So it goes ..&#13;
Closing cuts, spot qUizzes&#13;
and juicy gossip&#13;
Wustum Art Institute tour&#13;
by John Kovalic&#13;
Well it's that time of the year&#13;
again. 'A few short week~ 'til the&#13;
end of it all. Yep, that s r-ight.&#13;
Summer's just 'round the corner&#13;
and them thar birds is coming&#13;
north again. As the school year&#13;
grinds to a close, I'd like to leave&#13;
you with a few thoughts for the&#13;
future.&#13;
But I won't. Instead, I'll just try&#13;
to insult a few more ci you out&#13;
there. I know there aren't many&#13;
people left whom I haven't insulted&#13;
but heck, what's lire&#13;
without a challenge? So far my list&#13;
of insultees includes wargamers,&#13;
physicists, politicians, preachers,&#13;
feminists, accountants, PSGA,&#13;
dart players, Ranger staffers,&#13;
YMCA residents, and Santa Claus.&#13;
IIthat list isn 't darned impressive&#13;
I don't know what is.&#13;
So let's see ... who really gets&#13;
on my nerves whom I haven't&#13;
already verbally abused?&#13;
How about hard - rock fanatics?&#13;
No, too easy. Anyway, I don't like&#13;
taking advantage of the mentally&#13;
ilL Word has it that there are still&#13;
a few around the place. Why else&#13;
, would AC/DC and Black Sabbath&#13;
hother churning out record after&#13;
monotonous record? But then, I&#13;
suppose some people get off on&#13;
miDdless vocals and bubble gum&#13;
guitar riffs.&#13;
I guess I've a ttacked sports&#13;
writers and basketball players&#13;
enough already. Spot quiz: Why&#13;
did the hasketball player cross the&#13;
road? Answer: To get three&#13;
extra credits. &lt;Only kidding&#13;
guys, you really are pretty brighf&#13;
as well as being horribly&#13;
hemuscled to boot!)&#13;
Speaking of mindless apes,&#13;
continue through May 13. Upon&#13;
complelion of his work at Golden&#13;
Pond, Parenteau will be required&#13;
to prepare a paper relating his&#13;
technically - ociented experience&#13;
to academic aspects of communication&#13;
for Prof. David&#13;
Habhel who is Parenteau's UW _P&#13;
internship supervisor.&#13;
Parenteau is the first uw - P&#13;
student to enter an internship with&#13;
the TVA.&#13;
Cash awards of $25 were&#13;
awarded to Steven E. Pfarr of&#13;
Racine} for "Brothers in Song,"&#13;
an oil painting, to Theresa&#13;
Schiffer, of Wilmot, for "Nudes,"&#13;
an itaglio, and to Susan Schimian&#13;
of Racine, for "Sign of the&#13;
The Racine Art Association of&#13;
the Cbarles A. Wustum Museum&#13;
of Fin~ Arts announces a special&#13;
bus triP 10 the Art Institute of&#13;
Chicago and the Terra Museum of&#13;
American Art in Evanston&#13;
lllinois. '&#13;
The tour will take 'place&#13;
Saturday, May 7, and will begin&#13;
with a tour of the present exhibit&#13;
at the Terra Museum _ "Early&#13;
anybody watch the '&#13;
protestors at "Ernma VinOUS&#13;
O.K., quick hand count. H::.,e1I."?&#13;
people were hored ofllheir ~&#13;
the whole episode? !'robabl '"&#13;
many as who were bored Y ..&#13;
watching the movie. y~&#13;
Rumor has it that YOUCOU1d 1lOdI.&#13;
more skin in "Leave .eatdl&#13;
B t&#13;
ea ver , ot "Bh .,groups'to&#13;
protestors should have llpentu:&#13;
time protesting more obvi&#13;
VIceS. Like r~cism in "8unlIII~&#13;
Whoops. Think I just 0I108ded&#13;
the feminists again.&#13;
PSGA- The Emplr.8lrIkooOat&#13;
I suppose ODe thing thai '*&#13;
become palnlully obvious&#13;
wri ting lhis column over tho ~&#13;
is the total apathy Ii tho a.;:an&#13;
Parkside student I mean, It'l-:&#13;
hard to be sensational hero&#13;
anymore. I'd have to write&#13;
something like "Malturbati,.&#13;
isn't just sex with 1Om_ ,..&#13;
love" to even raise any "YebrOwa.&#13;
Then the mly comp1alnt I'd ..&#13;
would be from a one _ ......&#13;
Afghan .m~ who would k&#13;
as sacrlligaous.&#13;
Hell's teeth! In LondOIl ...&#13;
the~ raised tuition coati we oeCUpled&#13;
the adminiltrati,.&#13;
building for three daya! WbIt&#13;
happened to the campuslil-blIaf&#13;
the sixties? Granted, tho lure af&#13;
free beer aDd an excuse not to ...&#13;
any. work for three daya w. Ille&#13;
maIO reason most of US atteDded&#13;
the occupa tion in the fin! place,&#13;
but that's quite heside tho palalt&#13;
Speaking of professional ....&#13;
radicals, anyone notice wbat 1&#13;
fine job Phil Pogreba is daiIlI.&#13;
head honcho of PSGA? NO,I..... ,&#13;
think so.&#13;
Well, Philip "I'm nat II8I'111111d,&#13;
they are out to get me" ""Cr*&#13;
seems to he into surveys at ...&#13;
moment, and tbe rift ~&#13;
himseir and the Senate is aboIi ..&#13;
wide as the gaps in the ReIpu&#13;
defense strategy. Talk at a paIaao&#13;
coup is rampant, and CIadt&#13;
"String 'em up" Betz aDd "BJa"&#13;
Jim Kreuser could not be readlld&#13;
for comment.&#13;
But somebody has baen buyiJw&#13;
up a lot of small arms 1'llCOIIlIJ.&#13;
Times," a watercolor.&#13;
A lithogr aph by ChriIt&lt;lpIIlr&#13;
Dorf of Racine has been purchased&#13;
by the Parkslde library III&#13;
represent this year's show. Darf'I&#13;
work will be on permanent dlapIJ1&#13;
in the library.&#13;
Prizes awarded in Parkside's Student Art Show.&#13;
Rebels in American Art". nil&#13;
exhibition ref ... s 10the tum .0/.&#13;
the - century American artiaD&#13;
known as "The Eight" who&#13;
protested academic art. At ....&#13;
same time visitors will be ableta&#13;
view the painting Gallery" IIIf&#13;
Louvre by Samuel F. B. ~&#13;
which has received IDterna~'"&#13;
recognition since being ~&#13;
by the Terra recently. . ta&#13;
The tour will then conl\llllO&#13;
the Art Institute 01 ChiClla ta&#13;
view the exhibilion "M~UrJ;&#13;
shuis: 17th Century U&#13;
Painting" which features 4O-or:&#13;
from the Royal Picture Ga11tI1ted Holland. Artisls repros.a aDd&#13;
include Rembrandl, vl!lIIeer&#13;
Frans Hals. ....&#13;
. Tbe tour departs f_ retuJlI&#13;
Wustum at 8 a.m. and : lor tbe&#13;
by 6 p.m. Tickets are ........&#13;
general publiC, $22 for beJ'I 0/&#13;
citizens and $20' for ~l!lIIlI! ""&#13;
the Racine Arl _aU ~&#13;
ticket price includ&lt;:"del~ ..&#13;
coach transportatiOll&#13;
Det&#13;
a",_&#13;
to both museums a. .....,dI iI&#13;
ments on the return lrtp.&#13;
not included. till! or 1/1&#13;
For more inl~nna call tilt&#13;
make reservations&#13;
Wustum at 636-9177.&#13;
-&#13;
7&#13;
Wisconsin's record fishing&#13;
The Lb. -, Oz .• Place and Year way. 1952.&#13;
follow: Perch (yellow),&#13;
Largemouth Bass, 11-3, Lake Winnehago, 1954.&#13;
Ripley, 1940. Sauger, 4-5, Mississippi&#13;
Smallmouth Bass, 9-1, Indian 1971.&#13;
Lake, 1950. Atlantic Salmon, 12,;), Lake I&#13;
Rock Bass, 1-12, Big Green Michigan, 1975.&#13;
Lake, 1971. Coho Salmon, 24-6, Lake&#13;
White Bass, 3-12, Pelican Lake, Michigan, 1975.&#13;
1963. Chinook Salmon,&#13;
YellowBass, 2-2, Lake Monona, Menominee River, 1973.&#13;
1972. Sturgeon, 94-3, Menominee&#13;
Bluegill, 2-4, Squash Lake, 1971. River, 1968.&#13;
Bullhead (black), 2-9, Trappe Sturgeon (lake), 180,;), Lake&#13;
Lake, 1967; Winnehago, 1953.&#13;
Bullhead (brown), 3-12, Nelson Brown Lake Trout, &lt;Great&#13;
Lake, 1972; Lakes - run), 29-9, Lake Superior,&#13;
Bullbead (yellow), 3-3, Nelson 1971.&#13;
Lake, 1972. Brown Lake Trout, (inland), 14-&#13;
Channel catfish, 44,;),Wisconsin 8, Rush River, 1974.&#13;
River, 1962. Rainbow Trout, 24-4, Lake&#13;
Flathead Catfish, 61-0, Fox Michigan, 1973.&#13;
River, 1968. Splake (hybrid), 14-4,Ada Lake,&#13;
White Crappie, 4-8, Gile 1967.&#13;
Flowage, 1967. Tiger Trout, 17*, Lake&#13;
Muskellunge, 69-11, Lake Michigan, 1977.&#13;
Qlippewa Flowage, 1949. Walleye, 18,;), High Lake, 1933.&#13;
Muskellunge (hybrid) 50-4, Lac 'World's Record&#13;
VleIIXDesert, 1951. - Taken from The Bantam&#13;
NorthernPike, 38-0,Lake Puck- Great Outdoors Guide.&#13;
~ ...............&#13;
Fishing in Kenosha&#13;
the winner to airline tickets and&#13;
accomodations for two, 3 . days&#13;
and 2 - nights in Las Vegas. The&#13;
purpose of the contest is to draw&#13;
attention to Sport Fishing 10&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
RANGER Thursday. April 21, 19«1&#13;
Will Preischel and Mark&#13;
, Sporting event result wrapups: looking good!&#13;
Women s Softball pools of four.Parkside will he In the second game ho..... -er, .anI~_Ulledlor, • ana In&#13;
The Womens Softball team playmg agatnst PlatteVille, things went better for the team a the I k,lomeler .Ik I. I&#13;
finished third in the Circle Oshkosh and Northeaslern they "011 &amp;-3. The mIll,. plldler turday.t. m t held In&#13;
Tournament this past weekend. Illinois ..The women have heaten ...as Jack Ruhach ho came In .t .1... 011&#13;
-y defeated: PlattevtlleandOsbkosh,although 'theendolthetlurdllllU,."ith!be ra ee In 48 .nd nnl,.&#13;
,,~ 4-3 the game against Oshkosh was bases loaded and no outs a third 48 39 II...-&#13;
~:~~C~~gne 9-1 close. "Northeastern illinois is a was leadl,. 3-1 at un poinl Ume the .. AI d raced. 1&#13;
UI-Champagne 10.;) eight teams competing. real up and down team. They ...ill Ruhach rettred !be next this&#13;
The game against Chicago was The team played every day last prohably he our toughest eom- batters ...ithout any tits .nd the&#13;
a 10 inning ball game while the week, which resulted in their petition:" said-Draft. team went on to WUl &amp;-3' It,..&#13;
The first weekend in May the just a super job," OherbrunDer second game against Champagne being very tired and worn out. team will have a conference said.&#13;
wascalled in the sixth inning due "We're called to have the days playoff against Superior. Draft On Wednesday. April 27. the&#13;
tothe 10run rule. The team's only off," said Draft. feels they Will he the Iugher seed team traveled to Warner Par to&#13;
I~ was to SI. Xavier (6.;). Coach The team played against SI. team wi.th their 22~ record. The play a doubleheader .. ,tb&#13;
Linda Draft was very disap- Xavier Wednesday, which hoped game Will probably he played at Madison Coach Oberbrunner&#13;
pointed with the organization of to get hack the loss they suffered Petrifying Springs Park. feels the team should take one&#13;
the tournament The tournament at the Circle tournament.&#13;
. game. "Whenever you play a was originally an eight team This weekend the team will M ' Ba doubleheader a.... )· from home.&#13;
tournament but Draft received a compete in the. 8 - team en s seball you look for a split," he &lt;.'0 •&#13;
callwhen the season had already Whitewater tournament. The merited.&#13;
th Id he t· divi dod . by Maureen Burke begunsaying ere WOll not tournamen IS VI mto two The Men's Baseball team split a 'Ibis Saturday, the Rate v.-nJ&#13;
doubleheader with Ill-Chicago on he at home to face Lewis in a&#13;
April 22. In the first game, the doubleheader. Oberbrunner ts&#13;
Rangers lost 10-4. "We had loolti,. to "'ID that one&#13;
several opportunities to win it,"&#13;
3-4, Lake commented Coach Ken Oher- Men's Track&#13;
brunner, "but we just didn't have&#13;
River, out hitting shoes on."&#13;
The Kenosha Charter Fishing&#13;
Association, Michelob and&#13;
LaMacchia Travel Agency are&#13;
p,eased. to announce Kenosha's&#13;
Firsl Annual Michelob Lake&#13;
Michigan Fish - Off. Beginning&#13;
May 1 and continuing through&#13;
Sept. 15, area fishermen will be For information and reserable&#13;
to register all fish caught valions contact (414) 652-9400,or&#13;
1rbileparticipating on a Kenosha write Kenosha Sport Fishing at&#13;
Sport Fishing Charter. The 4927 -. 7th Avenue, Kenosha,&#13;
largest fish by weight will entitle Wisconsm 53140.&#13;
--.................................&#13;
&lt;::::::::;w;it;:::::::R~~:9:;;::::::~::;::;';:tt;;:::::.:.:.;.:.&#13;
~~~;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:::::::::::::::;:::::::;:::;::::::::::;::::::::;:::::::::;::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::=:::=::::;::::::::;:::::&#13;
$50 FIRST&#13;
PRIZE&#13;
CHESS CLUB&#13;
SPRING TOURNAMENT&#13;
May 3-4 - 12:00-6:00 pm&#13;
ENTRY FEE $1.00&#13;
Location • Union Rec Center&#13;
SIGN UP IN REC CENTER&#13;
NOW!&#13;
Last day for registration • May 2nd&#13;
( Other cash prizes determined by&#13;
number of entrants)&#13;
....&#13;
Phy-ed experiences break-ins&#13;
by Tori Murray&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
A large numher of locker break -&#13;
ins have been reported this month&#13;
at the Physical Education&#13;
Building. The first was April 11by&#13;
two tennis players, who among&#13;
other things had their racquets&#13;
stolen prior to a match. Recently,&#13;
a hasehall player had $5 stolen&#13;
while he was at practice. "He&#13;
dented the locker in and took the&#13;
lock. He did leave my wallet. I&#13;
was pretty happy ahout that,"&#13;
added the player.&#13;
Ron Brinkman, Director of&#13;
Security commented that most&#13;
break - ins ...ere reported near the&#13;
da te 0( the first one. Brinkman&#13;
also said the thief used boll cuue-s&#13;
to cut the locks. The broken locks&#13;
were found !ales" in a field near the&#13;
physical buildi,.&#13;
According to Dr. Wayne Dannebl,&#13;
Athletic Director, break -IllS&#13;
are ooe 0( the biggest problems in&#13;
the buildl,.. Because oIlhis, signs&#13;
were placed in both the Men's and&#13;
Women's locker rooms cautiooirc&#13;
people to keep lockers locked even&#13;
while taking a shower and not to&#13;
leave anythi,. si~ out. "It ISa&#13;
recurring problem. We'll go&#13;
through a dry spell for a lime.&#13;
ORCHARD&#13;
COURTS&#13;
STUDENT SPECIALS&#13;
SEPT. 1983APARTMENT RENTALS&#13;
FROM $110 PER MONTH •&#13;
• Appliances&#13;
• Carpeting&#13;
• Drapes&#13;
• Furniture&#13;
MODERN "LOFT" APARTMENTS&#13;
• Heat &amp; Water&#13;
• Electricity&#13;
• Parking&#13;
• Laundry Facilities&#13;
RENTAL OFFICE OPEN&#13;
April 21st - May 21st&#13;
969 wood Rood&#13;
MODEL APARTMENT AND&#13;
RENTAt OFFICE HOURS&#13;
Daily 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.&#13;
PHONE 553-9009&#13;
Professionally leased &amp; managed by&#13;
CERTIFIED PROPERTY&#13;
MANAGEMENT, INC.&#13;
then 11 ha a ,. 01 br&#13;
IllS," comrnenllld 0&#13;
Security t the bu1IcIl"Il not&#13;
been Incrased ...., to • lack DI&#13;
manpower But m r&#13;
bel,. taken to PIJI'- the&#13;
thief Bnokman and (ba,&#13;
a pect iD mind The. ar ,..l&#13;
ceraJn !bal tM lI1lfl not&#13;
scm"""" (rom all the&#13;
"Weha,e. in mind. but&#13;
" lust can't accuse 10m &lt;l&#13;
lI1l",ery We m catctJ them red&#13;
• handed,'· commented Dalme1\1.&#13;
A&gt; 01 Apr" :!IIi. no one bad&#13;
apprehended&#13;
'AI.&#13;
IEIIIALS&#13;
.2 NNl TENTS&#13;
•• NNlTENTS&#13;
• SLEEPING BAGS&#13;
• GROUND PADS&#13;
• GAS HEATERS&#13;
• GAS LANTERNS&#13;
• CXX)KSTOVES&#13;
• CXX)KINGKITS&#13;
• ICE CHESTS&#13;
• WATER JUGS&#13;
• CANTEE&#13;
• VITTlE KITS&#13;
• CJWi&gt; SHOYElS&#13;
• BELT AXES .H ING I&#13;
• POCKET KNI&#13;
• CQW&gt;ASSES • FIRST AID ITS&#13;
• FLASHLIGHTS&#13;
• CJWi&gt; STOOLS&#13;
• FISHING RODS&#13;
• FISHING NETS&#13;
• FISH BAS ETS&#13;
DY_~&#13;
I YA.. n&#13;
... ESSAIY&#13;
CA L:&#13;
553-&#13;
•&#13;
Thursday, April 28, 1983 RANGER&#13;
Letters to Editor Coalinued From Page Two&#13;
Issue of movie embarrasses student&#13;
lhe highest atlendance of Ibis&#13;
semester Maybe if \he people who&#13;
were oojecting would have kept&#13;
their 0..... '11 personal opinions to&#13;
\hemsel ves \he uccess 01 \he film&#13;
wouldnt have been as great,&#13;
maybe. I am astounded at \heir&#13;
achms and reactions to the&#13;
shoVting of Lbis film We're all&#13;
adults and we can each use our&#13;
right to choose whether or not we&#13;
"ant to see a pornographic lilm or&#13;
not. What about \he students who&#13;
"ant to see a pornographic film,&#13;
sbouldn't PAB he able to pick&#13;
films with a wide enough variety&#13;
to salisty aU 01 \he students inchxbng&#13;
those that want to see a&#13;
pornographic movie.&#13;
As for carol Franks' letter&#13;
accursing \he Ranger 01 vicious&#13;
journalism. She was astowxled&#13;
that a university paper would&#13;
..Tite in sum a manner, instead o(&#13;
dealing with it as a valid issue .. l&#13;
agree with \he way \hey handled It&#13;
because itwasn't a valid issue, but&#13;
It was a ridiculous situation. Come&#13;
on let's not embarrass Parkside&#13;
any more and give Parkside a bad&#13;
image that makes us look so&#13;
naive. The group that protested&#13;
behaved naively towards pornography&#13;
and ~ constitution.&#13;
First \hey acted like \he students&#13;
at Parkside had never seen an x .&#13;
rated lilm and thought they were&#13;
protecting us from the evils of it.&#13;
Secondly they suggested censorship&#13;
by asking that the movie&#13;
not be shown. Come on American&#13;
educated adults suggesting such&#13;
an Un- American and unconstitutional&#13;
proposal as censorship,&#13;
it's ridiculous and embarrassing&#13;
to the rest of the&#13;
students here at Parkside.&#13;
Todd Bernhardt&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
I am embarrassed for Parkside&#13;
and its' students because of \he&#13;
acllons of a mUlOril)- 0/ \he&#13;
udenls This group 01 ludenls&#13;
an prolesbng ... eeks before&#13;
the shoWIng of an x • rated film&#13;
they wore suggesbng that It&#13;
sbouldn't shown on campus&#13;
The him became a very cont""&#13;
r I bject and thaI' what&#13;
I think .. completely ndlcu10us&#13;
and embarra ing to our&#13;
umver Ity Why hould the&#13;
Ihowtng 01 an x • rated film at a&#13;
Uri. ity "hieh expr andtea&#13;
" studftlta to have an&#13;
open mind cause ueh an uproar!&#13;
The whol ,dea 01 .1 becomIng&#13;
controv rslal i abaurd ,'obody&#13;
w gOing to he forced to ga see it&#13;
and PAD had a chance to make&#13;
money oil 01 the film. only if&#13;
people paid to it. The film had&#13;
Melvin Calvin gives energy lecture&#13;
He earned his PhD degree at the&#13;
University of Minnesota and did&#13;
post - doctoral work at the&#13;
University of Manchester,&#13;
England, before joining the&#13;
Berkeley faculty.&#13;
Men's tennis team wins over Beloit&#13;
a home meet, 2-7. The two single&#13;
matches the Rangers did win were&#13;
Tony Nielsen defeated Frank&#13;
Niehols (6-3) (1-6) (6-4) and Art&#13;
Shannon defeated Don Klumb (6-&#13;
4) (3-6) (6-4&gt;'&#13;
On Saturday, April 23, the&#13;
Rangers took on Moraine Valley_&#13;
Parkside came out victoriously&#13;
wilb a /inal score of 9.(). Whieh&#13;
brings the Rangers seasonal&#13;
record up to 8-2_ All single and&#13;
double matches were won,&#13;
On Monday, Ibe Rangers took on&#13;
Carthage College in an away&#13;
Frid.y.Apr." meet. Wednesday, they took on&#13;
MOv,. Apoc:~ypw~' (R) .....ill be shown III 1p_m. lind ,,11:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema. Carroll College in an away meet.&#13;
Admh&amp;ton., ft'lltdoor ,,, "tor P.rk:$ioe $fudwtlsand 51 for II gun!. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
UIrIOU.'" Stvolr&gt;lAWi!rds.' Spft'l.1n Main PI.ce. Admwion is $8. Tickets are a....ailable at the Friday, the 29, the Rangers will&#13;
unkIn tnform.'G"l (~I... take C di C II -&#13;
...... 'Y • Delk.'. "~nU"al'p m. in the- Communication Arts Thutre. Tickets are availabte en oncor a 0 ege In an&#13;
et,.. \.Wol"l tntormelocn C....t ... end at I'M FiM Arts Division Office. away meet, and then on Saturday,&#13;
~~~a al t »p." Unklt'l SQuere tNluring "Hi Rise" Admission is free. Sponsored bV the Rangers will take on the&#13;
Alumni in a home meet, which&#13;
starts at 1 p.m_&#13;
abel Prue . wirvung chemist&#13;
MelVInCalVInof \he University 0/&#13;
California Berkeley, will&#13;
I hi ...... rch on artifiCial&#13;
photooynlhesl , a process wilb&#13;
potentill for providing a&#13;
r....... abl tnergy resouree, in a&#13;
f public talk at ParllS,de at 11&#13;
a m on TUesday, Apr 26 in Grnq_&#13;
101&#13;
QlIVln IIuai .. knowledge o/\he&#13;
natural process of photooynthesis&#13;
In areen plants to develop arby&#13;
Cam CarrleUo&#13;
On Monday, April 18 the&#13;
ParllSide Rangers won over Beloit&#13;
College III an away meet 6-3. The&#13;
WInner of \he sillllles matehes&#13;
\liere cal i~leton over Ward&#13;
Krull 1&amp;-2) (6-2&gt;' Tony ielsen&#13;
del_led Clrll80llDer (6-4) (6-Il.&#13;
Art Shannon defeated Gregg&#13;
tilicial photosynthesis systems&#13;
which mimic plant mechanisms of&#13;
converting water into hydrogen -&#13;
a potential replacement for olber&#13;
fuels - and oxygen. Calvin is also&#13;
poneering the concept of uo;ing&#13;
green plants to produce&#13;
hydrocarbon. like materials of&#13;
SUItable molecular weight and&#13;
structure for fuels and materials,&#13;
including the use of genetic&#13;
engineering to impl'ove yield and&#13;
quality.&#13;
Mason (6-3) (6-0. Jim Wynstra&#13;
defeated Mark Gianelto (2-6) (6-4)&#13;
(6-4&gt;' In doubles Iram Cruz -&#13;
Nielsen defeated Bonner - Mason&#13;
(6-3) (6-2). Singletoo - Wynstra&#13;
defeated Krull - Gianetto (6-3) (6-&#13;
3).&#13;
On Wednesday, April 20, the&#13;
Rangers lost to UW-Milwaukee in&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
ThursdllY, Apr. 2.&#13;
CMt.aN'ATIONa' 4p.m for students starting In fall. call ext. 2OOOfOl'more information,&#13;
s.t\lnUiy. Apt'. JO&#13;
COM~T •• "AI. ~ n Pl.a ft'Oft'l t a.m. 104 p.m. Admission is Sl. Call ext. 2231 tor more&#13;
INorftWtkln&#13;
P\..AY A o.IKa'_ "I~' ...., 11MrepNled at Ip,m. onthe Communicallon Arts Theatre.&#13;
Su....,.y.~yl&#13;
K=SHIM ....IIIM ...... rcled at 'lp.1Tt at Main Piece. Students.llKUlty. staff and guests are&#13;
COMCa., at 1]0 p rot In I,. Comm\,WOiQlo(lt'l.NIs Theatl"e with Otto L~ing conductlf'lg. Ad.&#13;
~ SI.Jl) tor 'ltuOln'S""" Mnoor C,liDn$ lind S3for othen&#13;
-::~. ~lfllM ~ w II be r~t.u al 1:30 p.m, In the Union Cinema. Sponsored by&#13;
~y.Mayl&#13;
.OUHOrA.LE 'An ~l4'Wof the N.CiIrll9 ....n RewlUfion" by Father- Dan cabal (Capuchin&#13;
~ lat 11 Up m Ur'toon m Tlw propr.", b fnoeoJOdopen to the public.&#13;
_.ltJHO,. ~ SOlv.,.· a11 p.m. in lJntl:n107 Aflarewelc:ome&#13;
.. ICTURI( Me_,,. T",. R: .. ,KI', ..... c.on",er-wtiOnSW,fh Matef';als" by Dr. Donald SChon of&#13;
MIl' al 1p 1ft Mel.N 105 The pr'OQI""" \.sfr .. endopen lorn_PUblic&#13;
.. ECTURIl 'ECllIc.'1(Jl"land T.dll'lJal ChlI~" by 0l:JN,1dSchon at " 'S p.m. In MOLN 161. The&#13;
""... '" oc-n '0 Itloe puollc a1 no d'large&#13;
.. ICTURI( "TtdlnOlOOy and CNng4" by DcINIICl sctton of MIT .t 3;30 p.m. in CA 132. All are&#13;
"'corne to a",""&#13;
T....... Y.MlyJ&#13;
l.aCTU ••• ' .'J'I\ lI'l"" Galbra"l'1 COnt.~.Room, WLl.C Dr. OooiIld Sd'Ion of MIT will&#13;
I. on na.., "IiJ Prof .. oanal Effecl'......u .. Th_ program is frH anclopen to the public.&#13;
TAl.1t p no and ~ I,ng Sf! HigI'Ily TKhnical Tums··.t 11:30 a.m. in MOLN 113 by&#13;
Olw\eld SCIlOft The lalll. osoptn to .... publ,c al no dwlrg,e&#13;
MMINA. ' ..... 'netlOn· by DonaICl~ at 11 30 P m.n CA tn..11'IeMmlnar Is open to the&#13;
WIllie .., f'IO ,,.&#13;
HMINAR ."1« IW PnJInsoONls' al 2'30 pm. ,n MeLN 110 by Donald Schon. The pt'Clgram&#13;
for .. .-.d ... to !he .,...Ic&#13;
CONCa RT"t I P m Itlie tommlM'ltCalocn Arts 'fhNIlTe f"'uring the Parkslde Jan Ensemble&#13;
....,..1aIorl ,the 000r ,1 for S',*"tS.,.;JM\ior ci',zensancl S2forothen. .&#13;
W~y.MIIy4&#13;
CO'''IIHOUSI from 11 10 1 P m and' to 10 p m. In ~ uniOn &amp;.tzNr .....u featuring Gtoorge&#13;
• All ....... etcon\e ~td by PAS&#13;
" MINA. 'TlW'1l:ote~ 00 una Fa ", Hul •• "tI'Ie Mlntal 1'4 .. '''' ProfessiOn" by Prof Mary&#13;
ROI"Mroatl211GOft" m Tht Pf"09l'''''' 1$ frH erldopen 10tI'Ie PUblic .&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
IARN •• Of' ....,... eolI(j\ 101OO '1''''&#13;
F IbIII I'tOun Motoftly NY"'fll'lI tor&#13;
otac:lng pollen 01'1 (lI&lt;1'ICIUI Bonut bilWCl1 on&#13;
,",,"~ PI' e~ .. -.1 100114-&#13;
..,&#13;
f'f~ING se.VICEl Ca_ aarb654 Ul6alter&#13;
. - ..... "''''NO "L. ...y •• WAHTIE:D 101'rocll. b"'it!o&#13;
INI'ld C. 654 '"-56 or t60I )62'*&#13;
.0000NlA,a WANTI:D ) bl'droom '-'W&#13;
... 'h f~.-.c_ ren' ihartct tltO Pft" "*'th.&#13;
M(I'I Incl,*" '" I .. arodfvm,lu'" 011&#13;
OW tM et uum lOil...,,1 Of Ql91S1&#13;
Caft ... '* Din J&#13;
.... 50"' • ..,&#13;
..... V ....!'IMs.,., Pl. ,. COl"M DKIlIOOn&#13;
.., ""- l1uc'II&#13;
"un GIVI MI al..... • bit ,,*"t C...,.. I&#13;
.... u eDl.&#13;
KOOy.1 Only S....... Oa'n unr • ~y I'",&#13;
r..or' XO. He&#13;
t&#13;
1(.. M. Good luCIt! We',e rtlOting tor you I II&#13;
GOMeR It"$ ~prlng. cheef" up U,C&#13;
KEN ~ you get the ecMorship. O.J.&#13;
GAtL .• cleaMd out YOU' doset5. Brrhl'l9&#13;
&amp;n',ng&#13;
MOLl. y, 8rukfast on May 2'2. 5 pm .• aftH"&#13;
f~ il"fl't'19 C1lfTImeocemenl- Blanche and&#13;
POlly&#13;
EMMANUEl.' It \IIlIlI5lun. O,OA&#13;
HENSlAI( Wondertul lob on the Ranger thiS&#13;
.,... , We II m;u you l'Ib.t year&#13;
WANDERING You're trapped in a world I&#13;
nl'\'tr be~ed in, The Dock&#13;
GOO 0 LUCK 1'0.111 ecMar"!. candidates. You'l .... ,.&#13;
IRUCE Wh., one&lt;~ loot ,s big~ WIsiz •&#13;
IhlI" one'!. mouth, maybe it 's good 10 put it&#13;
n your ~tn. so you c.n't be hUrd&#13;
MOLl. Y: Tl'le cap and 1l0W'l'lIooIU. grUI Pat&#13;
lLANCHE It itloukl be iOme party. And&#13;
iIOI'I1_ post pany, see you lhere I Ed&#13;
FREE&#13;
CHECKINGI&#13;
5%% In...... t H Yo. Dally Ifs'¥j~e&#13;
Balance II 5500.00 or Mo... 1 --_.-.&#13;
5935 - 7th Avenue 4235 • 52nd Street 410 Broad Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin Kenosha, Wisconsin Lake Geneva, Wisconsin&#13;
414·658-4861 414-658.0120 414-241-9141&#13;
~5:~o~~~:c Blv~. 8035 - 22nd Avenue 24726. 75th Street -Rt.:.&#13;
414 _694_1~nSln Kenosha, Wisconsin (Paddock Lake) Salem, .&#13;
414-657-1340 414-843.2388------=-&#13;
WE'RE HERE 10 HELP YOO '-ROWI&#13;
CALL OR STOP IN FOR DETAILS&#13;
Calvin is University Professor&#13;
of Chemistry at Berkeley and&#13;
former Director of the Laboratory&#13;
of Chemical Biodynamics and&#13;
former Associate Director of&#13;
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory.&#13;
1&#13;
16 17 18 19&#13;
56&#13;
59&#13;
C&gt; Edward Julius&#13;
ACROSS 43 Angered&#13;
44 Prefix or suffix&#13;
John Wayne movie, meaning skin&#13;
"In --'s Way" 45 Elegance&#13;
5 Bakery employees 46 Mrs. Kramden&#13;
10 Prefix. meaning 47 Moslem title&#13;
vessel 48 Upper House (Fr.)&#13;
14 Eye part 49 Initials on a&#13;
15 Painter Claude - coin&#13;
16 Fusses 50 Type of firework&#13;
17 Vim (2wds.)&#13;
19 Walk like Amos 53 "_- corny as ... "&#13;
McCoy 55 Knocking sounds&#13;
20 Idol, a la Genesis 56 Apprehends&#13;
(2 wds.) 57 Show scorn&#13;
22 Part of m,p.h. 58 Dill herb&#13;
23 Was human 59 Smal' fly&#13;
24 Army officer (abbr.)60 More peculiar&#13;
25 -- Jane; ro 61 Actor Sparks. et&#13;
27 Ohio team&#13;
28 Part of a diamond&#13;
29 Try&#13;
30 Former campus&#13;
organization&#13;
31 Big name in&#13;
cartoons (2 wds.)&#13;
33 Car feature. for&#13;
short&#13;
34 Asian New Year&#13;
35 Harvey the cocktail&#13;
40 Pre---&#13;
10 Hi ss Harper. for&#13;
short&#13;
11 Fatty&#13;
12 "_- my prince&#13;
.111. .. "&#13;
13 Fish hawk&#13;
18 Prefix meaning foot&#13;
21 Classroom supply&#13;
26 Relative of ain't&#13;
28 Pointed remark&#13;
31 Author of "Our&#13;
Town"&#13;
32 Unit&#13;
33 Pianist Templeton&#13;
35 Side show attrllctfon&#13;
36 Nemesis of I&#13;
certain 40 (2 wds.)&#13;
37 - Eye&#13;
al.38 Invalidated&#13;
39 C&lt;!rtatn recipient&#13;
40 Ordinary&#13;
41 lionized&#13;
1 Affectionate ones 42 Abhors&#13;
2 Stated firmly 43 Word with maniac&#13;
3 Slows down or beauty&#13;
4 Purple shades 45 -- ear (listened)&#13;
5 "- old cowhand." "48 Posed&#13;
6 Tepee-shaped 51 Approximately&#13;
7 last in line (2 wds,)&#13;
8 Feted 52 Actress Darleen _&#13;
9 Stall in mud 54 High-speed plane&#13;
(Answers on JII8I S)&#13;
DOWN&#13;
WANTED&#13;
SIOO.OO REWARD&#13;
Information on substance when water is added its' size&#13;
increases 15 to 20 times and turns to rock.&#13;
C.II Daw., 652·2171</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70658">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 11, issue 28, April 28, 1983</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70659">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70660">
              <text>1983-04-28</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70663">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="70664">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="70665">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70666">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70667">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70668">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70669">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70670">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="70671">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4651">
      <name>academic calendar</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="953">
      <name>faculty senate</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4652">
      <name>honors program</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="223">
      <name>student union</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1735">
      <name>timeline changes</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
