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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 14, issue 4</text>
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            <text>Weakland to speak here</text>
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            <text>Thursday, S6pt6mb6r 19, 1985 University of Wisconsin-Parkside Vol. 14, No. 4&#13;
Weakland to speak here&#13;
Archbishop Rembert G.&#13;
Weakland of Milwaukee will&#13;
give a free public talk on the&#13;
US Catholic bishops' pastoral&#13;
letter on the economy at 7&#13;
p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 15 in the&#13;
Union Cinema.&#13;
Weakland is chairman of&#13;
the committee for drafting&#13;
the letter, the first draft of&#13;
which was issued last November.&#13;
The 120-page document&#13;
stirred national debate when&#13;
some conservative thinkers&#13;
objected to its criticism of&#13;
certain elements of capitalism&#13;
and its support of a&#13;
larger governmental role in&#13;
solving economic problems.&#13;
A second draft of that letter&#13;
is expected to be presented to&#13;
the nation's 280 bishops at&#13;
their annual meeting in&#13;
Washington in November.&#13;
Weakland's talk will be followed&#13;
by a question-and-answer&#13;
period in which the&#13;
audience is encouraged to&#13;
participate.&#13;
The first draft of the letter&#13;
called for sweeping economic&#13;
changes to help the poor, and&#13;
noted that while the United&#13;
States can be proud of its&#13;
acheivements, there have&#13;
been many failures, "some of&#13;
them massive."&#13;
Areas of the economy dealt&#13;
with in the letter included the&#13;
reduction of unemployment;&#13;
an inadequate welfare system&#13;
; cooperation between&#13;
business, goverment and&#13;
labor to help the poor and a&#13;
foreign policy which places&#13;
more emphasis on human&#13;
needs.&#13;
Weakland's appearance is&#13;
being sponsored by Parkside's&#13;
Continuing Education Office,&#13;
which is presenting a&#13;
three-part course on change&#13;
and continuity in American&#13;
Catholicism. The course,&#13;
which costs $18, will meet&#13;
from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Oct. 8,&#13;
15 and 22. Weakland's talk,&#13;
which is free and open to the&#13;
public, represents the middle&#13;
session of the course.&#13;
Micro lab cuts paper service&#13;
by Carol Kortendick&#13;
Students will have to supply&#13;
their own paper when using&#13;
the microcomputers in the Library&#13;
Learning Center.&#13;
Originally, the center was&#13;
funded by former Chancellor&#13;
Alan Guskin, said head of the&#13;
microcomputer center Donna&#13;
Nicholson. When Guskin left&#13;
Parkside, he cut the center's&#13;
funds and the library took on&#13;
its financial responsibilities,&#13;
so students will no longer be&#13;
supplied with paper.&#13;
The center's funds were cut&#13;
in all areas. The center asked&#13;
for $25,000 for supplies and&#13;
maintenance, and was only&#13;
allotted $20,000, with approximately&#13;
$10,000 going for&#13;
paper, ribbon and hardware.&#13;
It also asked for $15,000 for&#13;
software, and only received&#13;
$5,000.&#13;
"When it (microcomputer&#13;
lab) started, people didn't&#13;
know where to get paper,"&#13;
said Nicholson. "We wanted&#13;
to encourage use." Therefore,&#13;
paper was provided. Nicholson&#13;
said that microcomputer&#13;
use increased 150 percent&#13;
from 1983 to 1984. The computer&#13;
center couldn't keep up&#13;
with the demand for paper.&#13;
"Part of the problem was&#13;
we could only order $500&#13;
worth each time. By the end&#13;
of the spring semester, we&#13;
couldn't keep up. About $30&#13;
worth of paper was used,"&#13;
said Nicholson.&#13;
Besides the regular use,&#13;
Nicholson and some of the library&#13;
employees felt there&#13;
was a lot of paper waste.&#13;
"If you use the typewriters,&#13;
you have to pay and supply&#13;
paper," said student employee&#13;
Pat Ramsdell. "But, when&#13;
you use the computers, it's&#13;
free and they supplied the&#13;
paper. There was a lot of&#13;
waste."&#13;
Microlab See Page 3&#13;
photo by ScottCurty Students gather pre-protest support Students protest&#13;
About 20 students picketed&#13;
the Union Cinema last Thursday&#13;
over a public hearing&#13;
which precluded the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board from showing&#13;
their scheduled movie,&#13;
'The Sound of Music."&#13;
The hearing was being held&#13;
by state legislators over&#13;
whether public Utilities should&#13;
be allowed to form holding&#13;
companies. About 60 people&#13;
attended the hearing.&#13;
Five students with banners&#13;
remained in the hearing to&#13;
protest.&#13;
PAB President Keith Harmann&#13;
said the school's decision&#13;
to schedule the hearing&#13;
was made without consulting&#13;
any student group, and violated&#13;
a contract the university&#13;
has with PAB.&#13;
Parkside administrators,&#13;
however, were quoted as saying&#13;
that the film would not&#13;
have attracted many people.&#13;
The school has agreed to&#13;
reimburse the group for lost&#13;
revenue, including one-fourth&#13;
of the film's rental fee, Harmann&#13;
said. The amount the&#13;
group will be reimbursed has&#13;
not been determined.&#13;
J,:.1 ."'."MU 'J&#13;
Campus ambassadors involved with helping students&#13;
JqjH photo by Chris Mayeshiba&#13;
Campus ambassador Patrice Hesse discussed joining organizations,&#13;
like the Hanger, with incoming freshmen at&#13;
the Orientation several weeks ago.&#13;
by Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
and Dave Belotti&#13;
Campus ambassadors want&#13;
to help -that is their credo.&#13;
This summer 15 upper&#13;
classmen were chosen to represent&#13;
Parkside by serving as&#13;
student mentors and helping&#13;
host programs on campus.&#13;
The purpose of the campus&#13;
ambassadors is to assist the&#13;
university faculty and administrators&#13;
with the introduction&#13;
of the total university experience&#13;
to incoming students&#13;
and their families and to assist&#13;
in the introduction, orientation,&#13;
and registration for&#13;
all. As a representative of the&#13;
university community, campus&#13;
ambassadors have an opportunity&#13;
to provide guidance&#13;
in areas of academic advising,&#13;
personal exploration and&#13;
evaluation, and familiarity&#13;
with campus resources and&#13;
facilities.&#13;
"They are really an excellent&#13;
group of people to work&#13;
with. They are 15 different&#13;
personalities but they perform&#13;
like a team," said&#13;
Buddy Couvion, director of&#13;
Student Activities, and campus&#13;
ambassdor advisor.&#13;
The group participated in&#13;
40 hours of training, which&#13;
consisted of leadership skills,&#13;
problem solving, communication&#13;
and listening skills. The&#13;
group debuted their skills on&#13;
Sunday, Aug. 25 at the Freshmen&#13;
Orientation Day. The&#13;
group has been busy since&#13;
their debut, serving as greeters&#13;
for the first meeting of&#13;
the Parkside Foundation,&#13;
helped the library with a national&#13;
conference held on&#13;
campus, helping students at&#13;
the Advising Center, and&#13;
were a dominant force during&#13;
Welcome Week.&#13;
"The campus ambassadors&#13;
are nice to have around for&#13;
special events because they&#13;
are already trained and they&#13;
can handle responsibility&#13;
well," said Tom Krimmel,&#13;
Parkside Foundation representative.&#13;
David Beach, director of&#13;
the Advising Center, hopes to&#13;
have the campus ambassadors&#13;
develop discussion&#13;
groups for all freshmen students.&#13;
"The discussion groups&#13;
will help new students who&#13;
feel they are alone and alienated,&#13;
but never take the necessary&#13;
leap for help. The&#13;
groups will be a mechanism&#13;
for addressing some of those&#13;
needs," said Beach. Beach&#13;
feels the ambassadors are the&#13;
appropriate group to head&#13;
Campus See page 5&#13;
2 Thursday, September 19, 1985 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Rally protects rights&#13;
The protest rally that was held last Thursday did not&#13;
draw overwhelming support, yet it did mark the beginning&#13;
of heightened student awareness about what the role&#13;
of the students and the administration is. It was not a&#13;
demonstration about the "Sound of Music," but rather a&#13;
demonstration about the law, and how the administration&#13;
failed to adhere to it.&#13;
Walt Shirer, Public Information, was quoted in the Racine&#13;
Journal Times as saying, "It was a cause - a&#13;
chance to say 'Hey, you can't push students around.' " He&#13;
is right. That is exactly what the rally was all about, and&#13;
the message was meant to be taken seriously by those&#13;
who were protesting.&#13;
There is nothing humorous about a breach of the law.&#13;
The STUDENT Union was built for students with students'&#13;
funds. Any usage of space in that area should, and&#13;
legally must, have student input under the concept of&#13;
shared governance.&#13;
In the future, let us hope that the administration will be&#13;
more sensitive and receptive to student opinion the next&#13;
time it attempts to use student space. This is what the&#13;
concept of "shared governance" is all about. And, if they&#13;
are not, let us hope that there will be concerned students&#13;
who care enough about the law, their school and their fellow&#13;
students to do something about it. The signs and the&#13;
megaphone can be toted out again, and the message will&#13;
be equally as serious the next time student rights are&#13;
usurped.&#13;
I STARTED&#13;
KEEPING MY&#13;
CHILDREN OUT&#13;
OF SCHOOL,&#13;
BECAUSE&#13;
NO ONE&#13;
COULD&#13;
ASSURE ME&#13;
THAT THEY&#13;
WOULDN'T&#13;
CATCH&#13;
ACQUIRED&#13;
IMMUNE&#13;
DEFICIENCY&#13;
SYNDROME&#13;
THERE.&#13;
I KEEP MV&#13;
CHILDREN&#13;
LOCKED UP&#13;
IN THEIR&#13;
BEDROOMS&#13;
WHERE&#13;
IT'S SAFE&#13;
BECAUSE&#13;
1 LOVE&#13;
THEM.&#13;
I D ON'T TAKE&#13;
MY CH ILDREN&#13;
TO THE DENTIST&#13;
OR OU T TO '&#13;
GET THEIR&#13;
HAIR DONE&#13;
BECAUSE&#13;
NO ONE&#13;
COULD&#13;
ASSURE&#13;
ME THAT&#13;
THEY&#13;
WOULDN'T&#13;
CATCH&#13;
"AIDS"&#13;
THERE.&#13;
MY CHILDREN&#13;
ARE MY /&#13;
THEY'RE&#13;
MY PRIDE&#13;
AND JOY.&#13;
THEY'RE .&#13;
BRIGHT...&#13;
THEY'RE 3&lt;&#13;
I UNOCEtfT.&#13;
THEY'RE .&#13;
50 WELL'&#13;
BEHAVED..]&#13;
1 WO NT LE T&#13;
my CHILDREN&#13;
GO TO THE&#13;
MOVIES&#13;
BECAUSE&#13;
NO ONE&#13;
CAN&#13;
ASSURE ME&#13;
THAT THEY&#13;
CAN'T&#13;
CATCH&#13;
"AIDS"&#13;
THERE,&#13;
THEY'RE SO&#13;
BEAUTIFUL.&#13;
I'LL SHOW&#13;
YOU THEIR.&#13;
PICTURES-*&#13;
1 DON'T A LLOW&#13;
MY CHILDREN&#13;
OUT IN&#13;
PUBLIC&#13;
BECAUSE&#13;
NO ONE&#13;
CAN ASS URE&#13;
ME THAT&#13;
THEY&#13;
WONT&#13;
CATCH&#13;
"AIDS"&#13;
THERE.&#13;
Jf you CAN&#13;
ASSURE ME&#13;
YOU'VE *&#13;
NEVERBEEN&#13;
EXP05ED&#13;
TO ANYONE&#13;
IN AN 'AIDS&#13;
HIGH-RISK,&#13;
GROUP.&#13;
XlN TW E M ANNER OF JULES FEIFFEP.)&#13;
Nobody asked me but...protests deserve respect&#13;
by Kari Dixon&#13;
After a few years of apparent&#13;
apathy, student activism&#13;
on college campuses has&#13;
come back into vogue.&#13;
Demonstrations, albeit peaceful,&#13;
have occurred throughout&#13;
the country, including at&#13;
U.W. Madison. Last week a&#13;
little tremor of enthusiasm&#13;
even shook Parkside. While&#13;
all of this is great, it is important&#13;
to remember what the&#13;
purpose of protesting is.&#13;
The right to peaceably assemble&#13;
is guaranteed under&#13;
the First Amendment of the&#13;
Constitution. It is a right for&#13;
which people have gone to&#13;
jail, and even died. It is not&#13;
likely to be taken lightly or&#13;
considered a neat way to&#13;
spend an afternoon because&#13;
everyone is doing it.&#13;
The protest rally became a&#13;
popular vehicle during the&#13;
social and political unrest of&#13;
the 1960's. It was used as an&#13;
alternative method to working&#13;
within "the system," and&#13;
some gains were made in the&#13;
areas of civil rights and the&#13;
Vietnam war. However, the&#13;
severity of the method comes&#13;
sadly and starkly to mind&#13;
when one remembers the&#13;
deaths of four students at&#13;
Kent State.&#13;
The current trend on college&#13;
campuses, including Parkside,&#13;
is a positive one. The&#13;
vapid generation that was&#13;
spoon-fed disco and Ronald&#13;
Reagan is showing some&#13;
signs of life and social conscience.&#13;
The important thing&#13;
to remember is that the protest,&#13;
as an alternative method&#13;
of electorate expression, lost&#13;
its effectiveness in the 1960's&#13;
because it became trendy and&#13;
superficial.&#13;
The anti-apartheid rally&#13;
that has suddenly become the&#13;
vogue (Amy Carter even got&#13;
arrested) could suffer the&#13;
same fate as the anti-war&#13;
marches if people aren't&#13;
careful. Apartheid is a serious&#13;
issue, and it should be addressed,&#13;
but the fact that it&#13;
gets the neat, "radical" treatment&#13;
doesn't mean that it's&#13;
the only issue worth getting&#13;
excited about. People are discriminated&#13;
against, in subtle&#13;
ways, every day in this country.&#13;
There are people in this&#13;
country who don't have&#13;
enough to eat or a place to&#13;
live. The domestic issues deserve&#13;
attention, too. It's time&#13;
we put our own house in&#13;
order.&#13;
The right to protest or demonstrate&#13;
is a right that has&#13;
survived, in different forms,&#13;
for over 200 years. It is not to&#13;
be taken lightly. It is to be&#13;
used when other methods fail,&#13;
and it will probably always&#13;
be done by people who will be&#13;
labled "radical" by the moderate&#13;
mainstream. If those&#13;
who are protesting are really&#13;
serious and committed to&#13;
what they are protesting&#13;
about, then they have nothing&#13;
to worry about.&#13;
"America's radicals are to&#13;
be found wherever and whenever&#13;
America moves close to&#13;
the fulfillment of its democratic&#13;
dream," wrote sociologist&#13;
and community organizer&#13;
Saul Alinski in his book "Reveille&#13;
for Radicals." "Whenever&#13;
America's hearts are&#13;
breaking, there American&#13;
radicals were and are. America&#13;
was built by its radicals.&#13;
The hope and the future lies&#13;
with its radicals."&#13;
Somebody asked me, so...interviews are for real&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Well, actually somebody&#13;
did ask me. I think the question&#13;
was something like, "Did&#13;
you REALLY talk to Tony&#13;
Randall?" The answer is yes.&#13;
It seems strange, I'm sure,&#13;
to find entertainers of some&#13;
notoriety profiled in a newspaper&#13;
that is limited to small&#13;
campus circulation, but obtaining&#13;
celebrity interviews&#13;
isn't as difficult as one might&#13;
expect. Perhaps if I explain&#13;
the procedure, it will sound a&#13;
bit more feasible that these&#13;
enormous showbiz gods bother&#13;
to speak with li'l ol' me.&#13;
The first step is calling&#13;
either the Screen Actors'&#13;
Guild or American Federation&#13;
of Radio and Television&#13;
Artists (AFTRA) to find out&#13;
the particular star's agency.&#13;
Then you call and speak with&#13;
the agent, who will either&#13;
give you a home phone number&#13;
(as with Tony Randall or&#13;
Morey Amsterdam), or have&#13;
the person call the Ranger office&#13;
collect (as with Justine&#13;
Bateman or Julia Duffy).&#13;
Sometimes the agent will&#13;
refer me to the publicist or&#13;
manager (as with Bob Denver).&#13;
Agents never refuse. It's&#13;
publicity for their client, and&#13;
they always utilize any opportunity,&#13;
however small, to publicize&#13;
anyone from their stable&#13;
of performers. The stars&#13;
themselves are not always&#13;
cooperative, although the&#13;
only refusals I have had&#13;
for the Ranger so far are&#13;
Larry Linville (of M*A*S*H&#13;
fame) and Jerry Lewis (who&#13;
doesn't do phone interviews).&#13;
Sometimes the agents like&#13;
profiles to run when the performer&#13;
has a movie or record&#13;
coming out. Both Molly Ringwald&#13;
and Ozzy Osbourne are&#13;
scheduled to be interviewed&#13;
around December when they&#13;
release new showbiz efforts.&#13;
Dick Cavett is presently in&#13;
the works, commemorating&#13;
his new show on the USA network,&#13;
and Tony Danza of&#13;
TV's "Who's the Boss" and&#13;
"Taxi" will be profiled in an&#13;
upcoming issue.&#13;
The interviews are, of course,&#13;
conducted by phone at all&#13;
times. It'd be great if the&#13;
Ranger could send me to Los&#13;
Angeles or New York each&#13;
week, but I'm afraid that's&#13;
out of the question. All interviews&#13;
are taped, all tapes are&#13;
kept on file (so far no one has&#13;
refused to be taped).&#13;
I try to select performers&#13;
that our readers will be interested&#13;
in reading about, naturally,&#13;
but am always open to&#13;
suggestions.&#13;
*00&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz Editor&#13;
Bob Kiesling Campus News Editor&#13;
Kari Dixon Community News Editor&#13;
Jim Neibaur Feature Editor&#13;
Rich Blay Sports Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy Photo Editor&#13;
Gary Schneeberger Copy Editor&#13;
Andy Buchanan Business Manager&#13;
Ian Jack Advertising Manager&#13;
Michael Firchow Distribution Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan Asst. Business Manager&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Corby Anderson, Gretchen&#13;
Gayhart, Tammy Hannah,&#13;
Kristy Harrington, Kim&#13;
Kranich, Carol Kortendick,&#13;
Rick Luehr, Robb Luehr,&#13;
Ray Novak, Julie Pendleton,&#13;
Bill Serpe, Laureen Wawro,&#13;
Missy Weaver.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
Scott Curty, Darryl Hahn,&#13;
Chris Mayeshiba, Kris&#13;
Odegaard.&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students at UW-Parkside and&#13;
they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
Ranger is published every Thursday during the academic year except&#13;
during breaks and holidays.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger,&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Box No. 2000. Kenosha, WI 53141.&#13;
Telephone (414) 553 2295 or (414) 553-2287.&#13;
Letters to the editor will be accepted if typewritten, double-spaced&#13;
on standard size paper. Letters should be less than 350 words&#13;
and must be signed, with a telephone number included for verification&#13;
purposes. Names will be withheld upon request. Deadline Jor&#13;
letters is Tuesday at 10 a.m. for publication Thursday. Ranger reserves&#13;
the right to edit letters and refuse letters containing false&#13;
and defamatory content.&#13;
Ranger is printed by the Racine Journal Times.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 19, 1985 3&#13;
SOC president plans changes&#13;
by Joyce Rasch&#13;
The Student Organizations&#13;
Council's (SOC) new president,&#13;
Tom Siewert, doesn't&#13;
expect to complete his term,&#13;
but he does plan major&#13;
changes for the organization&#13;
while he is still here.&#13;
Siewert has a new plan for&#13;
the budgeting process. He&#13;
wants to eliminate large general&#13;
meetings, which delegates&#13;
from all the clubs on&#13;
campus attend, in favor of a&#13;
smaller governing body with&#13;
delegates from various disciplines.&#13;
Siewert says the&#13;
change could help SOC run&#13;
more smoothly.&#13;
"It's easier to organize&#13;
seven or eight people rather&#13;
than 44," Siewert said. "By&#13;
reorganizing, we're not trying&#13;
to change the budgeting process,&#13;
just make it an easier&#13;
one."&#13;
But general meetings would&#13;
not be eliminated under the&#13;
plan, Siewert added. "We&#13;
would still have general&#13;
meetings to make sure clubs&#13;
understand the budgeting process,&#13;
and to set up organizational&#13;
networks."&#13;
Siewert is also trying to&#13;
work more closely with the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA). He&#13;
recently moved SOC's offices&#13;
across campus from the second&#13;
floor of the Union to PSGA's&#13;
office near the Coffee&#13;
Shoppe. He said the only way&#13;
SOC can work more closely&#13;
with PSGA is to be physically&#13;
closer to them.&#13;
"There is no reason we&#13;
shouldn't try to work closer&#13;
with PSGA," Siewert says.&#13;
"It may not work out, but&#13;
there's no reason we&#13;
shouldn't try."&#13;
Even though Siewert would&#13;
like to see many of SOC's&#13;
projects, which include Toys&#13;
for Tots and the Food Drive&#13;
Program, improve, he says&#13;
he is stepping down as soon&#13;
as he can find a replacement.&#13;
"I have received a research&#13;
grant from Johnson Wax," he&#13;
said. "I am not going to miss&#13;
out on a chance to do research&#13;
for Johnson Wax."&#13;
The search for a new chairman&#13;
is continuing and Siewert&#13;
is doing his best to see&#13;
that SOC runs smoothly. He&#13;
says plans for the reorganization&#13;
appear hopeful.&#13;
EOC housed on campus&#13;
by Jennie Tunkiecz&#13;
Editor&#13;
Many people who have been&#13;
out of high school for several&#13;
years wish to further their&#13;
educations. Some don't know&#13;
what they really want to do in&#13;
school; some don't have&#13;
enough money to go back;&#13;
some are afraid; and some&#13;
think there is no hope.&#13;
The Educational Opportunity&#13;
Center (EOC) wants to&#13;
help people realize that there&#13;
is hope.&#13;
Parkside received a&#13;
$300,000 federal grant from&#13;
the U.S. Department of Education&#13;
to house and administer&#13;
an EOC program in Racine&#13;
and Kenosha. The purpose&#13;
of the program is to provide&#13;
educational counseling -&#13;
which includes everything&#13;
from . financial aid information&#13;
lo career choice help -to&#13;
first generation college students,&#13;
economically disadvantaged,&#13;
women, handicapped,&#13;
minorities, veterans and&#13;
adult students.&#13;
The EOC will be housed in&#13;
Tallent Hall on the second&#13;
floor in the rear, southeast&#13;
corner.&#13;
Parkside's program is only&#13;
one of seven newly-formed&#13;
EOC's in the country, and&#13;
there are only 37 such programs&#13;
in the nation.&#13;
"Most people in our community&#13;
haven't gone to college&#13;
and when their kids do, it's&#13;
great, but there's no one&#13;
there to tell them how to fill&#13;
out the forms and sort&#13;
through the red tape, so it is&#13;
tough. There are also a lot of&#13;
adults in our community who&#13;
are not in a good situation&#13;
economically - they are either&#13;
laid off or about to be laid&#13;
off. Industry is exiting from&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin and it&#13;
is rapidly becoming a crisis&#13;
situation to retrain people.&#13;
Adults do need a chance, and&#13;
one chance is to go back to&#13;
school and get an education.&#13;
The EOC is here to help&#13;
smooth out people's entry into&#13;
school," said Maureen Budowle.&#13;
Special Assistant for&#13;
Project Development, who&#13;
flk&#13;
Jesse Hargrove&#13;
helped foster the program.&#13;
Other people involved in establishing&#13;
the EOC at Parkside&#13;
are Michael Bassis, Jenny&#13;
Price, Esrold Nurse, Teoby&#13;
Gomez, Gail Zimmerman and&#13;
Jean Fredrick.&#13;
The EOC plans to serve&#13;
1,000 to 1,500 students the first&#13;
year. Students will be encouraged&#13;
to make career&#13;
choices and helped to choose&#13;
two- or four-year institutions&#13;
in the community, state or&#13;
outside the state. If Parkside&#13;
accomplishes with the EOC&#13;
what it proposed to do in its&#13;
grant request, such as serving&#13;
1,000 to 1,500 students in&#13;
its first year, then a grant&#13;
continuation will be requested,&#13;
said Budowle. Parkside&#13;
expects grant renewal&#13;
for at least two more years.&#13;
"I know Parkside, and I&#13;
know especially the Assistant&#13;
Chancellor's office, is very&#13;
committed to having this program&#13;
work well, and it is&#13;
going to serve the population&#13;
it promised it would serve.&#13;
We're going to do everything&#13;
we possibly can to make sure&#13;
of that," said Budowle.&#13;
According to a study conducted&#13;
by The College Board&#13;
News (summer issue 1985),&#13;
EOC's are only one of two&#13;
federal programs that actually&#13;
deliver the services it&#13;
promises in a "cost effective&#13;
and professional manner."&#13;
The study also states that due&#13;
to demographics, EOC programs&#13;
will be "increasingly&#13;
needed" in the next decade.&#13;
Jesse Hargrove, 32, EOC director.&#13;
says there is a definite&#13;
need for such a program in&#13;
this community. "High school&#13;
students can go to their&#13;
school counselors to get information&#13;
about the best schools&#13;
to go to for engineering or&#13;
which schools have the best&#13;
financial aid programs, but&#13;
where does an adult go? We&#13;
would like them to come to&#13;
the EOC," said Hargrove.&#13;
Hargrove came to Parkside&#13;
from UW-Whitewater where&#13;
he was director of the Educational&#13;
Opportunity Program&#13;
and project director of special&#13;
services for a disadvantaged&#13;
students project. He received&#13;
his PhD in 1983 from&#13;
the University of Illinois at&#13;
Champaign-Urbana in Interdisciplinary/&#13;
Bilingual Education.&#13;
As director of the EOC,&#13;
Hargrove is responsible for&#13;
administration and management&#13;
of all functions of the&#13;
program. Responsibilities include&#13;
supervision of a staff;&#13;
control of budget and coordination&#13;
of resources for cost-&#13;
/project effectiveness; supervision&#13;
of data collection; development&#13;
and marketing of&#13;
information services; planning&#13;
for workshop and counseling&#13;
activities; development&#13;
and maintenance of resource&#13;
networks at local, state and&#13;
national levels for program&#13;
visibility and referrals; and&#13;
preparing grants requests for&#13;
continued funding. Hargrove&#13;
will report to Michael Bassis,&#13;
assistant chancellor, as part&#13;
of Educational Services.&#13;
Hargrove said he is currently&#13;
getting acquainted with&#13;
the campus community and&#13;
key individuals who will be&#13;
involved in the program. He&#13;
is also networking in the community&#13;
with organizations&#13;
which will help the EOC find&#13;
people who may need its&#13;
services.&#13;
Hargrove said that the EOC&#13;
will be fully operational and&#13;
will begin seeing clients in&#13;
October.&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Comparable worth defeated&#13;
A federal appeals court overturned a ruling last week&#13;
that could have cost the state of Washington over $1 billion.&#13;
, . ..&#13;
According to the Washington Post, the reversal of the&#13;
nation's first ruling on the concept of comparable worth&#13;
indicates that employers could use prevailing market conditions&#13;
in setting wages, and that they need not follow the&#13;
surveys they commissioned.&#13;
In a related article, the Milwaukee Journal said that advocates&#13;
and critics of comparable worth in Wisconsin said&#13;
that the ruling in Washington could have little effect here.&#13;
"I don't see it as fatal," Roberta Gassman, Gov. Earl's&#13;
adviser on women's affairs, told the Journal. "The ruling&#13;
of one federal appeals court does not make it the law of&#13;
the land. The Supreme Court has not always agreed with&#13;
the lower court."&#13;
Youths riot in England&#13;
Youths in a predominately black section of Birmingham,&#13;
England rioted for two straight days last week, it&#13;
was reported by United Press International.&#13;
The report stated that fires were set and rocks and bottles&#13;
were thrown in what may have been retaliation&#13;
against police harassment that occurred in the high unemployment&#13;
district.&#13;
The damage, the story continued, ran into millions&#13;
when at least fifty buildings and a dozen cars were&#13;
destroyed.&#13;
Earl opposes 21 age limit&#13;
Governor Earl came out against the 21-year-old drinking&#13;
age last week in a speech made before members of&#13;
the Tavern League, in Racine.&#13;
Earl told the Milwaukee Sentinel that Wisconsin should&#13;
make its own decisions and not bow to federal "blackmail"&#13;
to raise the legal age from 19 to 21.&#13;
Wisconsin faces the possible loss of federal highway&#13;
construction funds if it doesn't raise the drinking age by&#13;
1986. Earl urged tavern owners to support legislation that&#13;
could reduce tavern business in many border communities.&#13;
Paper service cut&#13;
Microlab From Page 1&#13;
Nicholson said the microcomputer&#13;
assistants also&#13;
strongly supported this move&#13;
because of the waste.&#13;
While the center is saving&#13;
money on paper, Nicholson is&#13;
concerned with the amount of&#13;
abuse the computers will take&#13;
from students loading their&#13;
own paper. She said there&#13;
will be step by step instructions&#13;
put out, and microcomputer&#13;
assistants will be available.&#13;
"We're hoping people will&#13;
check if they don't know,"&#13;
added Nicholson.&#13;
The center will supply&#13;
scrap paper, and students can&#13;
use typing paper. The bookstore&#13;
will also provide paper&#13;
to purchase.&#13;
Though the students may&#13;
pay for paper, Nicholson feels&#13;
their sacrifice will help them&#13;
and the center in the long&#13;
run.&#13;
"We're hoping the money&#13;
we don't spend on the paper&#13;
can be used to buy more software,"&#13;
concluded Nicholson.&#13;
Mentor program set&#13;
Volunteers are needed to&#13;
act as mentors for area high&#13;
school students on Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 24 and Friday, Oct. 25&#13;
when Parkside will be hosting&#13;
"A Day on Campus."&#13;
All levels of students, from&#13;
freshmen to seniors, are encouraged&#13;
to apply.&#13;
High school juniors and&#13;
seniors will not be attending&#13;
their classes the two days because&#13;
of Teachers' Convention.&#13;
The mentor program allows&#13;
these high school students&#13;
to attend college classes&#13;
accompanied by a Parkside&#13;
student. Volunteers may&#13;
act as mentors one or both&#13;
days, and times will be arranged&#13;
according to their schedules.&#13;
High school students&#13;
may attend just one or several&#13;
classes with their mentor.&#13;
Volunteers are responsible&#13;
for obtaining their professors'&#13;
permission for high&#13;
school students to attend&#13;
class.&#13;
Volunteers must register by&#13;
Thursday. Oct. 10. Contact&#13;
Gail Zimmerman or Barbara&#13;
Larson, WLLC D-175, or call&#13;
553-2370 to register and to receive&#13;
more information about&#13;
the program.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
4 Thursday, September 19. 1985&#13;
Schadeberg papers in archives here&#13;
The papers of Henry C.&#13;
Schadeberg (R-Wis.), a US&#13;
congressman who represented&#13;
Wisconsin's First Congressional&#13;
District in the&#13;
1960's and was widely known&#13;
for his strident opposition to&#13;
pornography and strong support&#13;
of the Vietnam War,&#13;
have been deposited in Parkside's&#13;
Archives and Area Research&#13;
Center by the State&#13;
Historical System of Wisconsin.&#13;
Schadeberg, who served&#13;
four two-year terms, from&#13;
1961-64 and from 1967-70,&#13;
when he was defeated by incumbent&#13;
Les Aspin, was also&#13;
a Congregational minister in&#13;
Burlington. He currently resides&#13;
in Rockbridge, Va.&#13;
The First Congressional&#13;
District includes Racine, Kenosha,&#13;
Walworth and Rock&#13;
counties.&#13;
The papers deposited in&#13;
Parkside's archives include&#13;
constituent correspondence,&#13;
memoranda, reports, press&#13;
releases, newsletters,&#13;
speeches and bills.&#13;
Also included are newspaper&#13;
clippings concerning&#13;
legislative issues in which&#13;
Schadeberg was prominently&#13;
involved, such as pronography,&#13;
US involvement in Vietnam,&#13;
lakeshore erosion in&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin and&#13;
pollution.&#13;
During his four terms Schadeberg&#13;
was rated as one of&#13;
the most conservative members&#13;
of the Wisconsin delegation.&#13;
Project files document his&#13;
work on behalf of the develo-&#13;
Next week&#13;
in news&#13;
Lake County&#13;
College agreement&#13;
UW President&#13;
Katherine Lyall&#13;
Faculty looks at&#13;
academic reorganization&#13;
J§&gt;&#13;
r**f&#13;
As a part of National Hispanic Week&#13;
FIESTA&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
This Friday - September 20&#13;
featuring&#13;
• Enchiladas con Polio&#13;
• Empanadas con Carne&#13;
• Frijoles Refritos &amp; Arr oz&#13;
• Tostadas&#13;
• Bunuelos&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
11:00 am-2:00 pm&#13;
pement of Bong Air Force&#13;
Base (now the Bong Recreation&#13;
Center), retention of the&#13;
Racine Coast Guard Station,&#13;
Wisconsin mink ranchers and&#13;
other district issues.&#13;
The Schadeberg papers add&#13;
to an archival collection of&#13;
other political papers, including&#13;
those of Gerald Flynn,&#13;
whom Schadeberg defeated in&#13;
the first district in 1961, as&#13;
well as state senators including&#13;
George Molinaro, Henry&#13;
Dorman and Michael Farrell.&#13;
Enrichment&#13;
classes set&#13;
Parkside is offering two&#13;
non-credit enrichment classes,&#13;
on water aerobics and&#13;
calligraphy.&#13;
Water aerobics, or "aquacize,"&#13;
is a water fitness activity&#13;
intended to increase cardiovascular&#13;
strength and conditioning.&#13;
It creates a feeling&#13;
of exhilaration and well&#13;
being, says Jeanne Ferraro,&#13;
who is teaching the course.&#13;
Ferraro, who holds a&#13;
bachelor's degree in physical&#13;
education from UW LaCrosse,&#13;
will teach the class Mondays&#13;
and Wednesdays from Oct. 7&#13;
to Nov. 27. Participants have&#13;
the option of attending classes&#13;
from 5-6 p.m. or from&#13;
6: 30-7:30 p.m. Cost of the&#13;
class is S33.&#13;
The calligraphy course is&#13;
an introduction to the tools,&#13;
techniques and hands of the&#13;
calligrapher. Emphasis will&#13;
be on the italic hand as well&#13;
as studies from both the historical&#13;
and constructive&#13;
points of view.&#13;
The course is being taught&#13;
by Jan Sinclair, who has studied&#13;
calligraphy for 12 years&#13;
with nationally-recognized&#13;
calligraphy artists and is a&#13;
member of the Chicago Calligraphy&#13;
Collective. She has&#13;
exhibited her work in galleries&#13;
in Madison and Chicago.&#13;
The course is being held&#13;
Tuesdays and Thursdays&#13;
from 6-9 p.m from Sept. 24 to&#13;
Oct. 10. The class costs $54.&#13;
To register for either class,&#13;
call 553-2312.&#13;
Community briefs&#13;
Kinship members to meet&#13;
Anyone interested in becoming involved in the Kinship&#13;
Program is invited to attend a general.?ernb„^h Zth%&#13;
ing tonight at 7 p.m. in the Kinship Office, 2001 80th St.,&#13;
KeTh°eS program is designed to offer friendship to children&#13;
from single parent families. Anyone desiring information&#13;
may phone 658-0151. Real "Eve" to speak&#13;
Chris Sizemore, the woman on whom the Tlie&#13;
Three Faces of Eve" was based, will speak at the Racine&#13;
Sheraton Hotel at 7 p.m. next Friday.&#13;
Her appearance is sponsored by St. Luke s Hospital and&#13;
is in conjunction with their Mental Health Service. The&#13;
film was also shown this week at the Golden Rondelle theater&#13;
as oart of the presentation. .&#13;
Sizemore suffered from a disorder that resulted in her&#13;
assuming over 20 different personalities. She now travels&#13;
the U S discussing her experience and promoting better&#13;
u n d e r s t a n d i n g of m e n t a l h e a l t h . T i c k e t s a r e S2 a n d a i e&#13;
available at the Union Information Desk.&#13;
Flynn scheduled to speak&#13;
Senate candidate Matt Flynn will be the guest speaker&#13;
at the Kenosha County Democratic Party meeting on&#13;
MFlynmforme/chair of the State Democratic Party, will&#13;
discuss his bid for the senate at Union Local 72. 3615&#13;
Washington Rd., Kenosha. , . ...&#13;
Refreshments will be served, and the public is invited.&#13;
Club Events!&#13;
Marketing&#13;
PSE, the Marketing Club,&#13;
invites everyone to our next&#13;
meeting, Wednesday, Sept. 25&#13;
in MOLN D-105. Issues to be&#13;
discussed include: Manager's&#13;
dinner, new sales projects,&#13;
homecoming activities, plus&#13;
much more. Hope to see you&#13;
there!&#13;
Geology&#13;
Dr. M.J. Mudrey, Jr. of the&#13;
UW-Madison and the Wisconsin&#13;
Geological and Natural&#13;
History Survey will present a&#13;
colloquium titled "Precambrian&#13;
Oil in Wisconsin?" on&#13;
Friday, Sept. 20 at 1 p.m. in&#13;
GRQ 113.&#13;
Dr. Mudrey will discuss the&#13;
potential for oil or natural&#13;
gas in the 1100 million-yearold&#13;
Copper Harbor Conglomerate&#13;
and Nonesuch Shale in&#13;
Bayfield County. Several hundred&#13;
miles of Vibraseis seismic&#13;
survey lines have been&#13;
run, and Amoco has requested&#13;
permission to drill a&#13;
15,000-foot hole to test for petroleum&#13;
production potential.&#13;
The area is a favorable target&#13;
based on its tectonic setting.&#13;
Bayfield County lies in&#13;
the northern portion of the&#13;
midcontinent rift, a structure&#13;
formed 100 million years ago,&#13;
when the crust was fractured&#13;
and started to rift apart.&#13;
Though the rifting event failed,&#13;
the site received Several&#13;
thousand feet of seaVment.&#13;
Younger structures with the&#13;
same origin have proven to&#13;
be effective oil traps and contain&#13;
approximately 10 percent&#13;
of all oil reserves.&#13;
If commercial quantities of&#13;
oil or natural gas can be recovered,&#13;
the area could well&#13;
be one of the oldest rock formations&#13;
to produce oil.&#13;
The colloquium is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
We're looking for talent!&#13;
Stop by the Ranger office^&#13;
WLLC D139C,&#13;
for details.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 19, 1985 5&#13;
Ambassadors help students,&#13;
and promote Parkside Campus From Page 1&#13;
such discussion groups because&#13;
they can share their&#13;
campus experiences.&#13;
Patrice Hesse, campus ambassador,&#13;
discribes the CAs&#13;
as "high energy and high intensity"&#13;
people. "We are all&#13;
very busy people, involved in&#13;
other things on campus, like&#13;
clubs and jobs. But we all&#13;
make time to be campus ambassadors,"&#13;
said Hesse.&#13;
Hesse, senior majoring in&#13;
Business Management with a&#13;
concentration on accounting,&#13;
decided to become an ambassador&#13;
because she felt it&#13;
would be a good learning experience.&#13;
"I like Parkside&#13;
and I thought that by being&#13;
an ambassador I could learn&#13;
more about the campus and I&#13;
could help others learn more.&#13;
Corinthia College&#13;
Parkside has done a lot for&#13;
me and I felt this was a way I&#13;
could put something back into&#13;
it," said Hesse.&#13;
Jenny Carr, campus ambassador&#13;
and sophomore&#13;
English major, defined the&#13;
role of the CA as helpers for&#13;
new students so that they feel&#13;
comfortable in the college environment.&#13;
"I got involved in the program&#13;
because I am interested&#13;
in promoting Parkside which&#13;
will hopefully bring in more&#13;
students and bring more attention&#13;
to the campus," said&#13;
Carr. She hopes that CAs will&#13;
eventually go to area high&#13;
schools and promote the campus.&#13;
Phillip Mercado, campus&#13;
ambassador and pre-med&#13;
major, feels that the program&#13;
is important and has a good&#13;
future on campus. "I hope&#13;
our services are utilized more&#13;
and that we can perform&#13;
more meaningful jobs on&#13;
campus," said Mercado.&#13;
Hesse agreed with Mercado,&#13;
saying, "I don't think our&#13;
full potential as a group has&#13;
been realized yet. We can do&#13;
more than people probably&#13;
think we can. In the next few&#13;
years I think this program&#13;
will really take off."&#13;
Chuck Metz, campus ambassador&#13;
and communication&#13;
major, said he got involved in&#13;
the group because he wanted&#13;
to "promote the image of&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
Carr added, "If any group&#13;
needs hosts and hostesses for&#13;
events, they should call on us.&#13;
We are here to help."&#13;
Welcoming Students by Chris Mayeshiba&#13;
Campus ambassadors are: from top left to right: Beverly&#13;
Lanareman, Adrian Serrano, Cathy Buenker, Chuck Metz&#13;
and Eileen Black. Row 2: Diane Cruz, Carlene Heard,&#13;
Beth Fordham, Jenny Carr, Marcia Rintz and Kathy&#13;
Matranga. Row 1: Patrice Hesse, Phillip Mercado, Lynette&#13;
Enge and Mike Farrell.&#13;
CORINTHIA COLLEGE&#13;
CAMPUS POLICE, f u| fHIS IS&#13;
MAY 1 HELP YOU?/ D|C&lt; 6R0NGAARD,&#13;
THE NEW TRAINEE?]&#13;
I'M SUPPOSED TO&#13;
MEET SERGEANT&#13;
TREGO?&#13;
OK. JUST WAIT OUTSIDE;&#13;
SGT. TREGO S HOULD BE&#13;
THERE IN A COUPLE MINUTES.&#13;
LOOK FO R THE&#13;
RED&amp; WHITE JE EP WITH&#13;
OUR INITIALS ON IT.&#13;
19. IX&#13;
by Paul Berge&#13;
•c.c.c.p.H_r~l&#13;
YOB&#13;
WE USED TO&#13;
BE CALLED THE&#13;
SECURITY SERVICE.&#13;
?r #1&#13;
Scholarships, grants&#13;
available from NEH&#13;
Business workshop set&#13;
The National Endowment&#13;
for the Humanities is accepting&#13;
applications for the&#13;
Young Scholars Program,&#13;
which will award 100 grants&#13;
nationally to students under&#13;
21 for research in history,&#13;
philosophy or literature.&#13;
Applications are available&#13;
from the NEH. The deadline&#13;
is Nov. 1.&#13;
Recipients will receive a&#13;
stipend of $1,800 and be expected&#13;
to work full-time for&#13;
nine weeks during the summer&#13;
of 1986, researching and&#13;
writing a humanities paper&#13;
under the close supervision of&#13;
a humanities scholar.&#13;
Applicants must be 21 years&#13;
old throughout the calendar&#13;
year the application is submitted,&#13;
or if over 21, must be&#13;
a full-time student pursuing&#13;
an undergraduate degree.&#13;
The NEH can be reached at&#13;
1100 Pennsylvania Ave., NW,&#13;
Washington DC 20506.&#13;
A workshop on business&#13;
feasibility analysis, designed&#13;
to improve chances for business&#13;
profit and success, will&#13;
be offered by Parkside's&#13;
Small Business Development&#13;
Center (SBDC) from 6:30 to&#13;
9:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 1, in&#13;
Union 106.&#13;
Cost of the course is $20. To&#13;
register call 553-2047.&#13;
Participants will be alerted&#13;
to potential problems in their&#13;
businesses and will be given&#13;
instruction in various marketing&#13;
strategies. The course&#13;
will help those starting a&#13;
business as well as those already&#13;
in business.&#13;
Instructor will be Greg&#13;
Powers, a financial analyst&#13;
with the Small Business Feasibility&#13;
Center at UW-Extension&#13;
in Green Bay.&#13;
Powers, who holds an MBA,&#13;
has worked as a financial analyst&#13;
for the General Motors&#13;
Acceptance Corp. and has&#13;
held positions in management,&#13;
marketing and production&#13;
with S.S. Kresge, Burroughs,&#13;
and the F. Hurlbut&#13;
Co.&#13;
The SBDC at Parkside is&#13;
coordinated by Bill Hughes.&#13;
*&#13;
¥&#13;
*&#13;
¥&#13;
¥ 7:30 pm&#13;
¥&#13;
¥&#13;
¥&#13;
¥&#13;
¥&#13;
¥&#13;
¥&#13;
NATIONAL HISPANIC HERITAGE WEEK&#13;
Friday, September 20, 1985&#13;
Authentic Hispanic Meal&#13;
2 enchiladas&#13;
rice&#13;
beans&#13;
salsa and chips&#13;
$3.75*&#13;
9:00 pm Free Dance&#13;
Featuring "Los Helcones"&#13;
Milwaukee based band&#13;
Dress in Latin American&#13;
Costumes&#13;
1st and 2nd place prizes&#13;
*Tickets in advance at the Union Information booth and at the door.&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••*&#13;
The world&#13;
is waiting.&#13;
Bean&#13;
student.&#13;
International Youth&#13;
Exchange, a Presidential&#13;
Initiative for peace, sends&#13;
teenagers like you to live&#13;
abroad with host families.&#13;
Go to new schools. Make&#13;
new friends.&#13;
If you're between 15&#13;
and 19 and want to help&#13;
bring our world together,&#13;
send for information.&#13;
Write: YOUTH EXCHANGE&#13;
Pueblo, Colorado 81009&#13;
^The International Youth Exchange.&#13;
Recent on Enrichment 985-86 Season 15 15 %D ^&#13;
Season Tickets Now on Sale!&#13;
handling. And just $25 for UW-Parkside students.&#13;
Subscribe now and assure yourself VIP reserved seats.&#13;
Join the AOE Series for what promises to be another&#13;
outstanding season of music, theater and dance.&#13;
The 9th Accent on Enrichment series, sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Student Activities Board once again is presenting&#13;
a wide variety of entertainment at affordable prices. The&#13;
cost of a season ticket is just $33.50 plus $2.50 tax and&#13;
Season tickets will be held for you at the box office the night&#13;
of the Cyrano performance, Friday, Sept. 27.&#13;
Box Office opens at 6:45 P. M.&#13;
2 TIME TONY&#13;
AWARD WINNER&#13;
JOHN CULLUM Cvrano •de Bergerac&#13;
The&#13;
passionate&#13;
/ tale off&#13;
adventure&#13;
and romance&#13;
FRIDAY, SEPT. 27, 1985&#13;
The national touring company of "Cyrano de&#13;
Bergerac" brings to area audiences the&#13;
passionate tale of adventure and romance,&#13;
starring one of America's finest actors, John&#13;
Cullum, winner of two Tony Awards. Critics&#13;
agree: "Cullum's mellifluous voice is like an&#13;
orchestra...his every movement is&#13;
purposeful...the magical set is&#13;
breathtaking...a bounty of theatrical&#13;
delights."&#13;
$12 General Public&#13;
$8 UW-P Students&#13;
Ar&#13;
t o r n A H N / V E R S A r y&#13;
JOSEPH HOLMES&#13;
THURSDAY, JAN 30, 1986&#13;
This exciting troupe of 16 sensational&#13;
dancers combines the excitement of jazz&#13;
with the virtuosity of ballet. The Chicago&#13;
Tribune describes them as "having the&#13;
energy of Michael Jackson and the flare of a&#13;
Las Vegas chorus line."&#13;
$7 General Public&#13;
$5 UW-P Students&#13;
NOVEMBER, 1985&#13;
(To be announced)&#13;
The celestial strains of duo harps in a&#13;
classical concert of rare beauty and musical&#13;
grace.&#13;
$5 General Public&#13;
$4 UW-P Students&#13;
Make check or money order payable to:&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
.Number of tickets at $36 each&#13;
General Public&#13;
Clip and mail to: Accent on Enrichment&#13;
University of Wisconsin—Parkside&#13;
Box No. 2000&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141&#13;
or, in person at Parkside Union Information Center&#13;
Enclose stamped self-addressed envelope with payment&#13;
UW-P Student sales ($25) only at Information Center -UW-P ID required&#13;
• Charge my Master Charge&#13;
A c c t . N o . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • E x p . D a t e .&#13;
(tax and handling included)&#13;
.Total amount enclosed&#13;
Personal Signature&#13;
Name&#13;
City&#13;
.Date.&#13;
.State -Zip-&#13;
.Street Address.&#13;
Phone&#13;
THEIR ROUSING PERFORMANCE OF&#13;
Hometown Saturday Might&#13;
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 19, 1986&#13;
This rousing performance of "Hometown&#13;
Saturday Night" is a step back into time. The&#13;
year is 1905 and under the band shell, silver&#13;
cornet bands are the cultural hub around&#13;
which America revolves. It's Saturday night&#13;
in Lynchburg, Tenn., and Mr. Jack Daniel's&#13;
band is playing for the fun of it while we sing&#13;
along.&#13;
$7 General Public&#13;
$5 UW-P Students&#13;
MONDAY, MARCH 24, 1986&#13;
Trent Arterberry's internationally acclaimed&#13;
mime solo performance has played to rave&#13;
reviews at colleges, arts centers, and major&#13;
theatres across North America and Europe.&#13;
His 90 minute production of mime, dance,&#13;
comedy and audience participation earned&#13;
him the National Association for Campus&#13;
Activities' first "Performing Artist of the Year"&#13;
award. In concert, Trent's performance is&#13;
enhanced by the use of lighting, sound and&#13;
special effects to create a captivating&#13;
theatrical experience.&#13;
$6 General Public&#13;
$4 UW-P Students&#13;
RANGER&#13;
I&#13;
Thursday, September 19, 1985 7&#13;
Book Review&#13;
Updated guide to British films released&#13;
Offer&#13;
Expires&#13;
10/13/85&#13;
Arby's 21st.&#13;
Anniversary&#13;
and&#13;
Back-to-School&#13;
Special&#13;
A WEEK///DANCE FLOOR \ND LIGHTING SYSTEM///CQMFORTABLE SEATING&#13;
"Responsive to your needs'&#13;
RESTAURANT &amp; COCKTAIL LOUNGE&#13;
2109-2117 - 91st Street . 694-8599&#13;
7 NIGHTS OF FUN, ENTERTAINMENT AND EXCITEMENT FOR&#13;
PEOPLE ON A COLLEGE BUDGET!&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
SPORTS FANS: Monday is Night&#13;
is Your Night!&#13;
* 7:00-1:00 cheese, sausage &amp;&#13;
crackers compliments of Porky's&#13;
* $2.00 pitchers of Old Style or&#13;
Busch!&#13;
* Watch the game on our 64"&#13;
T.V. system!&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
Only on word describes Thursdays:&#13;
UNIQUE!&#13;
* Tap Old Style or Busch all&#13;
night! $1.75 pitchers.&#13;
* BAR STOOL RACES ARE&#13;
BACK &amp; BETTER THAN EVER!&#13;
* All rail drinks are reduced to&#13;
99c all night!&#13;
* 7:00-9:00: LADIES DRINK FOR&#13;
% PRICE!&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
LADIES. Tuesday could be a&#13;
night for fun!&#13;
* Top shelf drinks go for 75c all&#13;
night!&#13;
• Champagne cocktails for only&#13;
$1.00&#13;
• Fresh fruit cocktails are&#13;
reduced to $1.00!&#13;
* Freshly made popcorn all&#13;
night compliments of Porky's!&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT.&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY nights&#13;
come alive!&#13;
* Casual dress code &amp; enforcement!&#13;
* We've done away with the&#13;
cover charge!&#13;
• Better staffing for better service!&#13;
• Service bar and grill to serve&#13;
you better!&#13;
WEDNESDAY&#13;
Wednesday: The best costs less!&#13;
* LADIES: 24 European wines to&#13;
choose from for only $1.00 a&#13;
glass!&#13;
* MEN: 8 outstanding Imported&#13;
beers for only $1.00! Heineken,&#13;
St. Pauli Girl, Becks &amp; MORE!&#13;
* LADIES: Champagne splits (Vfe&#13;
bottles) of Lejon Champagne for&#13;
only $1.25!&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
Sundays don't have to be boring!&#13;
• 55 oz. pitchers of Old Style or&#13;
Busch for only $1.50 per pitcher!&#13;
With no cover charge either!&#13;
Great beer at a good price!&#13;
• Brats between 9:00-1:00 for&#13;
only $1.25!&#13;
• Pretzels all night long at no&#13;
charge!&#13;
• A nice evening to relax before&#13;
the week begins!&#13;
Coming Attractions: Jello-Wrestling &amp; Male Strippers!&#13;
Relax, enjoy the fun, and be a part of the crowd!&#13;
PORKY'S COCKTAIL LOUNGE&#13;
2109-2117 91st Street - Kenosha - (Corner of 22nd Avenue &amp; 91 st St.)&#13;
OFF-STREET PARKING (LIGHTED)///SEPARATE BILLIARD ROOM///VIDEO ARCADE&#13;
IRoast Beef Sandwich with the purchase&#13;
of a roast beef sandwich at&#13;
I re gular price.&#13;
1 offers.&#13;
Not valid with other I • Kenosha&#13;
\ 3907 52nd Street&#13;
Expires 10/13/85&#13;
Racine m&#13;
3048 Douglas J&#13;
Star Wars • • •&#13;
PAB presenting space frolics&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
"The Great British Picture&#13;
Show" is a 1985 re-issue of&#13;
George Perry's 1974 tome&#13;
from Little, Brown and Company,&#13;
which details the start&#13;
and rise of the British film industry.&#13;
British filmmaking has had&#13;
its ups and downs, all of this&#13;
well chronicled in Perry's&#13;
study. While "The Great British&#13;
Picture Show" is a serious&#13;
book, it also provides insights&#13;
into the less analytical&#13;
aspects of British filmmaking.&#13;
Perry tells his story in&#13;
chronological order, the facts&#13;
presented in a good, lively&#13;
fashion so as not to seem stuffy&#13;
or pretentious (a hindrance&#13;
for many serious studies),&#13;
while remaining intelligent&#13;
and informative.&#13;
Perry's project is extremely&#13;
well researched, down to&#13;
the most trivial details. His&#13;
appendix listing important&#13;
stars and filmmakers is intelligently&#13;
selected, and his collection&#13;
of 150 photos is very&#13;
attractive. The only problem&#13;
is that many of the most important&#13;
British films are not&#13;
available for screening in this&#13;
country (especially the older&#13;
movies), so the American&#13;
reader whose appetite is&#13;
whetted by Perry's laudings&#13;
of older British films will be&#13;
disappointed at their lack of&#13;
availability.&#13;
The most noted British&#13;
films (from an American&#13;
viewpoint), such as the Beatle,&#13;
Monty Python "Carry&#13;
On," and early pre-Hollywood&#13;
Hitchcock and David Lean&#13;
films are all represented, as&#13;
are the lesser-known Will&#13;
Hay, Cliff Richards and Cecil&#13;
Hepworth efforts.&#13;
Perry is careful to cover all&#13;
of the various phases of British&#13;
film history: from silents,&#13;
to talkies, to the documentary&#13;
movement, wartime cinema&#13;
and the new wave movement&#13;
which began in France and&#13;
spread throughout Europe&#13;
and, eventually, the United&#13;
States. He relates how television&#13;
and the rise of video cassette&#13;
players at home have&#13;
had an effect on the British&#13;
cinema, as well as public&#13;
funding for British films and&#13;
the heavy competition from&#13;
other companies. He also tells&#13;
how British filmmaking&#13;
reached its zenith recently&#13;
with the worldwide success of&#13;
"Gandhi," "Chariots of Fire"&#13;
and "A Passage to India."&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
"Star Wars" is the popular&#13;
George Lucas-directed bouquet&#13;
to 1930's movie serials&#13;
like "Flash Gordon" and&#13;
"Buck Rogers." The only difference&#13;
is that this later film,&#13;
though not necessarily better&#13;
(and arguably not as good),&#13;
achieved such massive popularity,&#13;
being followed by two&#13;
sequels (both of which will&#13;
run in succession in ensuing&#13;
weeks at the Union Cinema.)&#13;
"Star Wars" has all the&#13;
trappings of a good kiddie&#13;
flick - good guys, bad guys,&#13;
outrageous creatures, cute robots,&#13;
explosive special effects,&#13;
lots of action and general&#13;
audience-rousing excitement.&#13;
Perhaps the most important&#13;
thing about this feature&#13;
(and its sequels) is that it exemplifies&#13;
film's initial purpose:&#13;
to entertain. The complete&#13;
entertainment capabilities&#13;
sans pretension or any&#13;
sort of intellectual jargon&#13;
make them perfect outlets for&#13;
the masses.&#13;
"Star Wars" is a good film.&#13;
Not one of the great classics&#13;
of the American cinema, but&#13;
then "Gilligan's Island" has&#13;
its good points at times, too.&#13;
"The Great British Picture&#13;
Show" is an intelligent, informative,&#13;
easy-to-read look&#13;
at a country whose filmmaking&#13;
output is yet another&#13;
aspect of motion picture studies&#13;
which has been poorly documented.&#13;
It is easily the best&#13;
work on the subject, and&#13;
highly recommended for&#13;
those with even a slightly serious&#13;
interest in motion pictures.&#13;
8 Thursday, September 19, 1985&#13;
Accent on Enrichment series presents "Cyrano&#13;
The national touring company&#13;
of "Cyrano de Bergerac,"&#13;
starring two-time Tonyaward&#13;
winner John Cullum,&#13;
will open the 1985-86 Accent&#13;
on Enrichment series at&#13;
Parkside on Friday, Sept. 27.&#13;
Like all five of this season's&#13;
AOE performances, "Cyrano"&#13;
will be performed at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Both season series tickets&#13;
and single event tickets are&#13;
now on sale in person or by&#13;
mail at the Parkside Information&#13;
Center (Box No. 2000, Kenosha,&#13;
53141, telephone 553-&#13;
2345). Season tickets are $36&#13;
for the public, including tax&#13;
and handling and $25 for&#13;
Parkside students. Master&#13;
Charge is accepted. Student&#13;
sales must be in person at the&#13;
Information Center.&#13;
Individual tickets are $12&#13;
for the general public for&#13;
"Cyrano de Bergerac," $8 for&#13;
Parkside students. All seats&#13;
are reserved.&#13;
The National Touring Company&#13;
of "Cyrano de Bergerac"&#13;
began a ten-week tour in&#13;
Ontario in early September,&#13;
directed by Arthur Storch,&#13;
produced by Columbia Artists&#13;
Theatricals Corp. in association&#13;
with Syracuse Stage.&#13;
Cullum's illustrious career&#13;
encompasses 25 years, two&#13;
Tony Awards and countless&#13;
performances on and off&#13;
Broadway, in television and&#13;
films. Television audiences&#13;
will remember him as Kansas&#13;
farmer Jim Dahlberg in&#13;
the controversial film"The&#13;
Day After," concerning the&#13;
aftermath of a nuclear attack.&#13;
Cullum won the 1975&#13;
Tony Award for Best Actor in&#13;
a Musical for his performance&#13;
of Charlie Anderson in&#13;
"Shenandoah." His second&#13;
Tony, in the same category,&#13;
came in 1978 for his appearance&#13;
as Oscar Jaffee in "On&#13;
the Twentieth Century." He&#13;
has appeared on Broadway&#13;
and toured with Elizabeth&#13;
Taylor and Richard Burton in&#13;
Noel Coward's "Private&#13;
Lives," and most recently,&#13;
opened in the new Broadway&#13;
comedy "Doubles."&#13;
Sharing the spotlight with&#13;
Cullum will be Marcus&#13;
Smythe as Cyrano's friend,&#13;
Christian, and Megan Gallagher&#13;
as the beautiful Roxane,&#13;
loved by both Cyrano and&#13;
Christian. Smythe originated&#13;
the role of Christian at Syracuse&#13;
Stage and repeated his&#13;
performance in Atlanta. Performing&#13;
primarily in regional&#13;
and off-Broadway theaters,&#13;
he has also appeared on television's&#13;
"Guiding Light,"&#13;
"Search for Tomorrow," and&#13;
Puzzler Answers on Page 10&#13;
ACROSS&#13;
1 Moccasin&#13;
4 Evaluates&#13;
9 Paddle&#13;
12 Goddess of&#13;
healing&#13;
13 Musical drama&#13;
14 Consumed&#13;
15 Confidence&#13;
17 Distended&#13;
19 Flesh&#13;
21 Weight of India&#13;
22 Argues&#13;
25 Title of respect&#13;
29 Spanish article&#13;
30 Renovate&#13;
32 Epic sea tale&#13;
33 Gratuity&#13;
35 Lavishes&#13;
fondess on&#13;
37 Fall behind&#13;
38 Short jacket&#13;
40 Harvests&#13;
42 Roman 1001&#13;
43 Repulse&#13;
45 Eccentric&#13;
47 A state: abbr.&#13;
49 Location&#13;
50 Touching&#13;
54 Wants&#13;
57 Veneration&#13;
58 Earn&#13;
60 Cry of cow&#13;
61 Wager&#13;
62 Zodiac sign&#13;
63 Stitch&#13;
DOWN&#13;
1 Fondle&#13;
2 Ventilate&#13;
3 Fragment&#13;
4 Revolved&#13;
5 Newsgathering&#13;
org.&#13;
6 Spread for&#13;
drying&#13;
7 Goddess of&#13;
discord&#13;
8 Capital of&#13;
Oregon&#13;
9 Grain&#13;
10 Devoured&#13;
11 Crimson&#13;
16 Scorch&#13;
18 Macaws&#13;
20 Choir voice&#13;
22 Hinder&#13;
23 Choice part&#13;
24 Mediterranean&#13;
vessel&#13;
26 Pigeon pea&#13;
27 Trumpeter bird&#13;
28 Enchantment&#13;
31 Has on one's&#13;
person&#13;
34 Parent: colloq.&#13;
36 Dashes&#13;
39 Tidy&#13;
41 Surfeit&#13;
44 South American&#13;
animal&#13;
46 Abounds&#13;
48 Genus of&#13;
maples&#13;
50 Engineer's&#13;
compartment&#13;
51 Be in debt&#13;
52 Seine&#13;
53 Prefix: three&#13;
55 Female deer&#13;
56 Seed&#13;
59 That is: abbr.&#13;
ft&#13;
L&#13;
Cyrano de Bergerac (Tonyaward&#13;
winner actor John&#13;
Cullum, left) engages the arrogant&#13;
Valvert (Timothy&#13;
Davis Reed) in a duel in this&#13;
the television film "Summer&#13;
Solstice" with Henry Fonda&#13;
and Myrna Loy.&#13;
Gallagher, a recent graduate&#13;
of the Julliard School, has&#13;
toured with The Acting Company,&#13;
played Juliet in the Genesius&#13;
Theatre production of&#13;
"Romeo and Juliet," and has&#13;
performed at the Colorado&#13;
Shakespeare Festival.&#13;
scene from Emily Francel's&#13;
adaptation of Edmond Rostand's&#13;
romantic classic "Cyrano&#13;
de Bergerac."&#13;
Originally produced by&#13;
Syracuse Stage as part of its&#13;
eleventh anniversary season,&#13;
"Cyrano de Bergerac" broke&#13;
all box office records and was&#13;
proclaimed by the critics as a&#13;
"joyous presentation" and&#13;
"truly magnificent." When&#13;
the production moved to the&#13;
Alliance Theater Company in&#13;
Atlanta, audience reponse&#13;
was again overwhelming, and&#13;
Cullum was praised by Atlanta&#13;
critics who called him&#13;
"one of the finest actors ever&#13;
to tread the Alliance boards."&#13;
Director Arthur Storch has&#13;
been Producing Artistic Director&#13;
at Syracuse Stage&#13;
since 1973, when he was&#13;
recruited from New York&#13;
City to fill that position. On&#13;
Broadway, Storch has directed&#13;
Jack Lemmon in "Tribute"&#13;
and "Twice Around the&#13;
Park," starring Anne Jackson&#13;
and Eli Wallach, which,&#13;
similar to "Cyrano," received&#13;
its premiere at Syracuse&#13;
Stage.&#13;
Other New York credits include&#13;
"The Impossible&#13;
Years," "Golden Rainbow,"&#13;
"The Owl and the Pussycat,"&#13;
"The Chinese," Dr. Fish,"&#13;
"Three by Three," "Promenade&#13;
All!," "The Typists"&#13;
and "The Tiger."&#13;
Season ticket orders will be&#13;
filled and must be picked up&#13;
at the box office the night of&#13;
the performance, sponsors&#13;
say. The box office will open&#13;
at 6:45 p.m. No season tickets&#13;
will be mailed. Individual&#13;
tickets for "Cyrano" or other&#13;
presentations on the series&#13;
may be picked up in person&#13;
at the Information Center or&#13;
purchased at the box office&#13;
the night of the performance.&#13;
Theater&#13;
London and New York trips announced&#13;
by Bill Serpe&#13;
Would you like to lose your&#13;
head in London or take a bite&#13;
of the Big Apple and earn university&#13;
credit at the same&#13;
time? Then perhaps you&#13;
should contact Judith Tucker-&#13;
Snider of the Dramatic Arts&#13;
discipline.&#13;
This year Snider will be&#13;
handling all the arrangements&#13;
for the third New York&#13;
Theater trip, to take place&#13;
during spring break. "We&#13;
want to announce the trip&#13;
Bmttt &amp;t?appE&#13;
© 1985 United Feature Syndicate&#13;
GUMMI&#13;
BEARS&#13;
20% OFF&#13;
We have a full&#13;
selection of&#13;
Candy &amp; Nuts&#13;
Located in the Union Bazaar&#13;
Directly Across from the Info Center&#13;
10 am - 4 pm Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
early," said Snider, "because&#13;
we have had such great success&#13;
with it the past two&#13;
years. However, the trip to&#13;
London at Christmas time is&#13;
a first, and if it proves to be&#13;
as successful as th§ New&#13;
York trip, then we may do it&#13;
again."&#13;
The London/Stratford-&#13;
Upon-Avon 2 credit Lab will&#13;
run from December 27&#13;
through Jan. 11, 1986. Based&#13;
on double occupancy for&#13;
$1200.00 and single occupancy&#13;
for $1350.00, the trip will also&#13;
include roundtrip airfare on&#13;
British Airways. The tour will&#13;
see four shows in London and&#13;
two in Stratford, the tickets&#13;
being part of the package.&#13;
Other arrangements will include&#13;
continental breakfasts&#13;
and theater tours and lectures.&#13;
The lab will be limited&#13;
to 20 people.&#13;
During spring break, Snider&#13;
is scheduling a one credit Lab&#13;
to New York City. Prices set&#13;
at under $500 will be based on&#13;
two, three or four persons to&#13;
a room and will include round&#13;
trip airfare from Milwaukee&#13;
on Republic Airlines. The&#13;
tour will stay at the Edison&#13;
Hotel and will see at least&#13;
four shows with guest speakers&#13;
and theater tours.&#13;
Both trips require a $50.00&#13;
deposit. "I would suggest that&#13;
people get their money in&#13;
soon, said Snider. "These&#13;
labs are filling up fast. After&#13;
all, where else could you go&#13;
to London and get credit for it&#13;
if not in the Theater Department?"&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 19, 1985 9&#13;
Everything you've always wanted&#13;
from a ski trip, for less...&#13;
Jump into the action on the slopes of&#13;
one of Colorado's premier ski resorts —&#13;
STEAMBOAT. Travel Associates, the M g m per&#13;
National Collegiate Ski Association and H M Person&#13;
Lite Beer from Miller have put together&#13;
a program of Wild West skiing, parties and&#13;
fun you won't want to miss. The official&#13;
1986 "NCSA National Collegiate Ski&#13;
Week" ™ package includes:&#13;
• Round-trip transportation&#13;
• 7 nights deluxe lodging at one of Steamboat's&#13;
finest facilities&#13;
• A lift ticket for 5 days of&#13;
unparalleled deep powder skiing&#13;
• A ski film party with DJ&#13;
• "Wild West" party with band&#13;
• A major concert&#13;
• A special "on-mountain" Lite Beer&#13;
&amp; Cheese Party&#13;
• Entry fees to two races with&#13;
prizes and Lite awards for the&#13;
top winners&#13;
• A discount coupon program&#13;
for area bars, restaurants&#13;
and services&#13;
• All applicable taxes&#13;
• Travel Associates' staff and&#13;
NCSA representatives on site&#13;
Contact:&#13;
Marie Aie llo&#13;
553-2650&#13;
Sponsored by Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Tour Date:&#13;
January 2-11&#13;
10 Thursday, September 19, 1985 HANGER&#13;
ANDPaiCATElV&#13;
WIPE TUE.MOFF WTO&#13;
AUNT-R26EO07H.&#13;
FOR A f isial touch&#13;
I USE THIS ANTI-STATIC&#13;
SUN WHICH NEUTF&amp;UZE$&#13;
NEGATIVELY- CHARGED&#13;
particles ON THE n-&#13;
PLAYING SURFACE. \&#13;
GREAT. WOW'S IT WORK&#13;
ON CLAM PIP?&#13;
HEV.SKVLER, THANKS *&#13;
FOR LETTING ME BORROW&#13;
THE ALBUM K&gt;R MY PARTY&#13;
, LAST NIGHT, -&#13;
BUT IP LIKE 1&#13;
.£?!' ! T O ASK VOU ABOUT cum ^ TO CLEAN IT&#13;
THAT'S&#13;
JUST WHAT&#13;
IM mm&#13;
NOW...&#13;
AC/DC&#13;
More hard rocking raw power&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Greg Philliganes&#13;
Success predicted&#13;
by Kristy Harrington&#13;
Subscriptions to the 19 films&#13;
are S17 fo r the general public&#13;
and $15 for senior citizens and&#13;
Parkside faculty, staff and&#13;
students. That amounts to&#13;
less than SI per film. Each&#13;
season ticket holder will be&#13;
allowed to bring a guest to&#13;
three showings free.&#13;
Subscribers have the option&#13;
of attending screenings at&#13;
7: 30 p.m. on Thursdays; 8&#13;
p.m. on Saturdays; or 2 p.m.&#13;
on Sundays. All screenings&#13;
are in the Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
To subscribe, call 553-2345.&#13;
AC/DC is an Australian&#13;
band of hard rockers who,&#13;
since 1976, have carved themselves&#13;
a firm and lofty position&#13;
in the annals of meatand-&#13;
potatoes rock.&#13;
Their latest, "Fly on the&#13;
Wall," on Atlantic, is more of&#13;
the same hard-rocking riffs&#13;
that make it so easy to classify&#13;
the heavy metal act's&#13;
work. The only real flaw with&#13;
this release is that production&#13;
and sound mixing by brothers&#13;
Angus and Malcolm Young&#13;
emphasize the former's lead&#13;
guitar and the latter's rhythm&#13;
guitar so heavily that Brian&#13;
Russell's whiskey-edged,&#13;
screaming vocals are pushed&#13;
so far in the background&#13;
they're barely audible on&#13;
some tracks.&#13;
Perhaps the best, and most&#13;
typical, cut on this LP is&#13;
"Back in Business," which&#13;
deals with the group's hard&#13;
rock sensibilities in the same&#13;
fashion as the earlier "Back&#13;
in Black," "You Shook Me All&#13;
Night Long," "Let's Get It&#13;
Up" and "Highway to Hell,"&#13;
the last song recorded while&#13;
the late Bon Scott was still&#13;
fronting the group.&#13;
AC/DC has gone as far as&#13;
the top in their musical niche.&#13;
with little or no indication of&#13;
ever changing to a less-stylized&#13;
format. While some innovation&#13;
was apparent on&#13;
their earlier works, the&#13;
band's cult following has&#13;
caused them to de-emphasize&#13;
innovation in favor of restricting&#13;
themselves to an established&#13;
formula.&#13;
It may be biologically impossible&#13;
but it sounds as if&#13;
Michael Jackson and Boy&#13;
George mated and the result&#13;
has become the lead singer of&#13;
Scritti Politti (Italian for&#13;
"Political Writings"). This&#13;
may sound a bit far-fetched,&#13;
but one listen to the vocals on&#13;
"Cupid and Psyche '85" on&#13;
Warner Brothers/Virgin Records&#13;
is all that is needed as&#13;
proof.&#13;
The music - a reggae,&#13;
blues, dance-type mix, is fine,&#13;
but Green Strohmeyer-Gartside's&#13;
vocals leave a lot to be&#13;
desired. After three minutes&#13;
of Green's very annoying&#13;
voice, the album is doomed to&#13;
transform into a decorative&#13;
wall plaque. The cassette&#13;
cannot be used as creatively,&#13;
yet contains four extra tracks&#13;
of pure torture.&#13;
Credit must be given, at&#13;
least minutely, to the rest of&#13;
the band. These musicians&#13;
should do themselves a favor&#13;
and fire Green. Green, drummer&#13;
Fred Maher and keyboardist&#13;
David Gamson may&#13;
be good looking (as the album&#13;
sleeve illustrates), but with&#13;
Green's lousy vocals, Scritti&#13;
Politti's days are numbered.&#13;
The Top Forty anxiously&#13;
awaits the sounds of Greg&#13;
Philliganes. Greg's new LP&#13;
"Pulse," on Planet Records,&#13;
fluctuates between slow&#13;
romantic jams and extraordinary&#13;
upbeat dance music.&#13;
The dancing beat is in every&#13;
song whether it is slow or extremely&#13;
fast.&#13;
Michael and Jackie Jackson&#13;
helped arrange "Behind&#13;
the Mask" and "Playin' With&#13;
Fire." James Ingram and son&#13;
Phillip also helped by adding&#13;
the special guest vocals for&#13;
the single, "Playin' With&#13;
Fire." These two songs arranged&#13;
by the Jacksons are&#13;
definitely future hit singles&#13;
for Greg. The Pointer Sisters&#13;
backed up on "Won't Be Long&#13;
Now." Donald Fagen arranged&#13;
"Lazy Nina," a slow&#13;
dance jam. One should know&#13;
that this is a great-sounding&#13;
LP by noticing all the famous&#13;
personalities who have helped&#13;
in arrangements and vocals.&#13;
/A\ • r j&#13;
Greg Philliganes&#13;
Philliganes has done a lot&#13;
of work with other people, but&#13;
he has his own realistic style.&#13;
This style makes all of his&#13;
songs unique but not off the&#13;
wall. The lyrics are pleasing&#13;
to the ears. He sings to you&#13;
and puts the point across&#13;
without screaming. The lyrics&#13;
aren't vulgar, boring or repetitive.&#13;
It won't be long before&#13;
you're hearing Greg&#13;
Philligane's voice every time&#13;
you turn on the radio.&#13;
Foreign film series&#13;
Tickets still available&#13;
NCtyTJjlSRECORPAL0UH&#13;
m AjgVERNKP CLEANING.&#13;
Season tickets are still&#13;
available for this year's popular&#13;
Foreign Film Series,&#13;
which features films from&#13;
France, Italy, Czechoslovakia,&#13;
Spain, England, Japan,&#13;
Germany, Scotland, Australia&#13;
and South Africa.&#13;
Also, as a result of many&#13;
requests, the series this year&#13;
includes three American&#13;
films: "The Return of the Secaucus&#13;
Seven." "Say Amen,&#13;
Somebody" and "Koyaanisqatsi."&#13;
"I think this is the best season&#13;
ever," said Norman&#13;
Cloutier, Parkside economics&#13;
professor who organized and&#13;
directs the series. "We've got&#13;
many more recent films than&#13;
before, and I think subscribers&#13;
will be pleased by the&#13;
nice range of contemporary&#13;
films."&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Doubles team Ann Althaus-Amy Tropin competing against&#13;
Concordia&#13;
Tnursaay, septemper 19, ivzo 11&#13;
Tennis&#13;
Team wins some, loses some&#13;
Last Thursday the women's&#13;
tennis team beat Concordia&#13;
College by a score of 9-0 to&#13;
gain its first shutout of the&#13;
season.&#13;
The five-member Concordia&#13;
team was no contest for the&#13;
Rangers. Concordia had to&#13;
forfeit two matches from the&#13;
start because of the lack of a&#13;
sixth player. The Rangers&#13;
won all their matches in two&#13;
sets, and only lost, at the&#13;
most, three games per set.&#13;
On Saturday, the women&#13;
were at Carthage College to&#13;
play Valparaiso and Northeastern&#13;
University (NEU).&#13;
With only a five-person&#13;
squad, it was Parkside's turn&#13;
to forfeit some matches.&#13;
Against Valparaiso, Parkside's&#13;
Beth Barden defeated&#13;
her opponent 6-3, 6-2, as did&#13;
Amy Tropin, 6-3, 6-1, 6-2 and&#13;
Jackie Rittmer, 7-5, 6-4. Ann&#13;
Althaus and Kim Kranich lost&#13;
their matches in three sets,&#13;
and Valparaiso won the meet&#13;
by a score of 6-3.&#13;
NEU only brought three&#13;
players with them, so the&#13;
Rangers had already won&#13;
without playing. The three&#13;
singles matches and one doubles&#13;
match was played in&#13;
eight game pro sets.&#13;
Last year, NEU humiliated *&#13;
the Rangers by lobbing them&#13;
to death, making it easy for&#13;
them to return most of the&#13;
Rangers' shots.&#13;
This year NEU's strategy&#13;
was much the same, but the&#13;
Rangers managed to win two&#13;
of the four matches played.&#13;
Kranich won her singles&#13;
match 7-1 in the tie breaker,&#13;
as did the doubles team Barden-&#13;
Rittmer, by a score of 8-&#13;
6. The women will face NEU&#13;
later in the season when they&#13;
bring up a full team. The&#13;
women's record is now 2-2.&#13;
KANGEK&#13;
Golf team busy&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
The Parkside men's golf&#13;
team played in two 18-hole&#13;
tournaments last Friday&#13;
through Monday, with mixed&#13;
results.&#13;
On Sept. 13 and 14, the&#13;
Rangers competed in the 17-&#13;
team Pointer Invitational,&#13;
played at the Stevens Point&#13;
and Ridges Country Clubs.&#13;
Led by meet medalist Rick&#13;
Elsen, Parkside finished in a&#13;
tie for fourth place.&#13;
The meet was won by Whitewater&#13;
with a 788 stroke&#13;
total. Eau Claire followed&#13;
with 801; Oshkosh, 812; Parkside&#13;
and Stevens Point Purple,&#13;
819; LaCrosse rounded out&#13;
the top six with 831.&#13;
Elsen shot rounds of 73 and&#13;
80 for a 153 total, one shot&#13;
ahead of Whitewater's Scott&#13;
Hill and Pete Hamilton. The&#13;
second place golfer for Parkside&#13;
was John Rozanas with&#13;
(80-82)-162, followed by Guy&#13;
Leach with (80-90)-170; Scott&#13;
Schellpfeffer, (82-89)-171;&#13;
Dave Messersmith, (78-94)-&#13;
172; Scott Schuit, (88-85)-173.&#13;
On Sept. 15 and 16, the&#13;
Rangers slid a bit, finishing&#13;
in a tie for tenth in the 14-&#13;
team Blugold Invitational at&#13;
the Eau Claire Country Club.&#13;
Bemidji State of Minnesota&#13;
won the meet with a 760 total,&#13;
followed by Eau Claire Blue&#13;
with 772, and Whitewater with&#13;
775. Parkside's total was 821.&#13;
Elsen once again led the&#13;
Rangers with a (78-79)-157,&#13;
Leach was next with (83-80)-&#13;
163; Rozanas, (86-79)-165;&#13;
Schuit, (83-88)-171; Schellpfeffer,&#13;
(85-86)-171; Messersmith,&#13;
(89-82)-171.&#13;
Classified ads1-&#13;
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ACCURATE AND dependable typing&#13;
for the student and professional.&#13;
554-0492&#13;
CLINICAL HYPNOSIS: Lose weight,&#13;
stop smoking, improve study habits&#13;
and test taking, reduce stress and&#13;
anxiety. Call Randall Potter at&#13;
414-652-2727 for more information or&#13;
an appointment.&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
GIRLS WANTED: Free hair salon&#13;
services. The Flair Styling Studio&#13;
needs girls who are willing to have&#13;
their hair cut. permed or colored by&#13;
its staff during salon workshops on&#13;
new fashion releases. If you are interested&#13;
and available on Tues. or Wed.&#13;
mornings, call 694-2011.&#13;
BABYSITTER WANTED from 5 a.m.-&#13;
8:30 a.m. Mon. thru Fri. Must have&#13;
car. Call 634-9152.&#13;
WANTED: A very energetic individual,&#13;
fraternity, sorority or campus organization&#13;
to act as our annual Spring&#13;
Break Trips to Ft. Lauderdale and&#13;
Daytona Beach-earn commissions&#13;
and/or free trip. Call or write Coastal&#13;
Tours. P.O. Box 1258, Lisle, IL 60532.&#13;
1-800-545-6479.&#13;
Tost and Found&#13;
HELP! BRACELET lost Fri. night in&#13;
Union at 21st Ave. Party. Silver, linked-&#13;
leaf pattern. Monetarily worthless,&#13;
but has a sentimental value. Reward!&#13;
Please leave message at&#13;
Ranger office: 553-2295.&#13;
Personals&#13;
"SALUTE YOU in Style," Thurs.,&#13;
Sept. 26. 7:30 p.m.. Eagles Club. 302&#13;
58th St.. Kenosha. Fashions by Barden's&#13;
and Bjorn's. Refreshments, raffle&#13;
and door prizes! A S3 donation. All&#13;
of the monies raised are returned to&#13;
our community to help the visually&#13;
and hearing impaired, or others who&#13;
need our aid. For tickets, please contact&#13;
Lioness Marion Corlener, at&#13;
859-2495.&#13;
DIANE: HOW is R and S? What am I&#13;
to do?&#13;
LOOKING FOR a racquetball game?&#13;
Call Alan. 657-7474.&#13;
HEY, JIM, I dunno what'a write.&#13;
Wanna go swimmin'?&#13;
COMING SOON for Enquiring Minds:&#13;
"A Kiss is Still a Kiss, but I Sighed&#13;
When You Stole That Ring: The Untold&#13;
Story of Harry Chapin," by Jim&#13;
Neibaur and Jennie Tunkieicz.&#13;
BRENDA BUCHANAN has another&#13;
bun in the oven.&#13;
PAULA: HAPPY Mother's Day! I&#13;
never received the photo, but I'll take&#13;
drinks anytime! I'm just down the&#13;
road. The Foot Fiend.&#13;
UNION MEMBERS: Mind your own&#13;
business! Let the supervisors do their&#13;
jobs!&#13;
DI: GET well soon so you can come&#13;
home. I love you! Jim. 1•• ••• ••• ••• ••&#13;
t&#13;
• ANDERSON T RANSCRIPTION &amp;&#13;
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Letters - Resumes&#13;
Term Papers&#13;
Student Rates&#13;
PHONE 637-3600&#13;
CALL AFTER 4 P.M.&#13;
Jackie Anderson&#13;
1441 Park Avenue&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
Cross-Countrv Both teams successful by Robb Luehr&#13;
The men's and women's&#13;
cross country teams both&#13;
made impressive showings&#13;
last weekend at the Hillsdale&#13;
(Mich.) Invitational, finishing&#13;
fourth and second, respectively-&#13;
On the men's side, Malone&#13;
College won the meet with 37&#13;
points, followed by Western&#13;
Michigan with 66; Loyola, 93;&#13;
Parkside, 101; host Hillsdale,&#13;
109; University of Detroit,&#13;
150; Siena Heights, 159;&#13;
Wayne State, 211; Spring&#13;
Harbor (Mich.), 213; Finley,&#13;
310.&#13;
The top finisher for Parkside&#13;
was Rich Miller, who finished&#13;
11th in a time of 26&#13;
minutes, 1 second. Mark Hunt&#13;
was 16th with 26:06; Joe&#13;
Eichner, 17th, 26:08; Anthony&#13;
Braccio, 25th, 26:19; John&#13;
Hunt, 44th, 27:13.&#13;
"We ran well for that course,"&#13;
said coach Lucian Rosa,&#13;
"but we could have done a little&#13;
better." The team was at&#13;
less than full strength due to&#13;
the illness of Andy Serrano.&#13;
Rosa was pleased that his&#13;
top four runners were within&#13;
18 seconds of each other.&#13;
In the women's first meet&#13;
of the year, they scored 65&#13;
points, second only to the host&#13;
Hillsdale team's 54. Other&#13;
team scores were Loyola, 66;&#13;
University of Akron, 73; Detroit,&#13;
140; Malone, 164; Notre&#13;
Dame, 164; Grand Valley&#13;
(Mich.) State, 224; Siena&#13;
Heights, 252.&#13;
The top finisher for Parkside&#13;
was Jill Fobair, who was&#13;
sixth in 17:53, Michelle Marter,&#13;
eighth, 17:59; Nancy&#13;
Marter, 13th, 18:13; Sarah&#13;
Hiett, 15th, 18:16; Julie&#13;
McReynolds, 23rd, 18:45; Colleen&#13;
Wismer, 24th, 18:46;&#13;
Karen Jacobsen, 25th, 18:48.&#13;
Soccer team extends record by Richard Blay&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The men's soccer team&#13;
made its first road trip this&#13;
season a successful one. The&#13;
team traveled to Ashland&#13;
Wis. to play District 14 rival&#13;
Northland College.&#13;
They came home with a&#13;
convincing 6-1 win to stretch&#13;
their record to 3-0.&#13;
Coach Rick Kilps stated following&#13;
the game, "The statistics&#13;
are very deceiving. The&#13;
game was much closer than&#13;
the score indicated. We only&#13;
led 1-0 at halftime. They had&#13;
the wind in the first half,&#13;
which helped, but goalie&#13;
Mark LaCombe played very&#13;
well. Northland was much&#13;
improved over last year."&#13;
The Rangers had three&#13;
players with two goals each -&#13;
Greg Peters, Ian Jack and&#13;
Mike Robertson.&#13;
With the wind in the second&#13;
half the Rangers exploded&#13;
with five goals. They scored&#13;
three in the first 15 minutes'&#13;
of the second half.&#13;
The team's next home&#13;
game is this Saturday against&#13;
Purdue-Calumet University&#13;
The game will be held in the&#13;
bowl at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
Soccer Results&#13;
Parkside (P) vs. Northland (N)&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 14&#13;
First Half Scoring: 1. Peters (Jack) 10:44.&#13;
Second Half Scoring: 2. Jack (penalty kick) 40:10.&#13;
3. Peters (Rodriguez) 36:12. 4. Robertson (Adema)&#13;
33: 13. 1. Northland 16:44. 5. Jack (Paprocki) 9:53.6.&#13;
Roberton (Gil, Whipple) 2:25.&#13;
Shots: P-26, N-6; Saves: P-5, N-5; Corner Kicks:&#13;
P-ll, N-l.&#13;
FALL FIESTA In The&#13;
REC&#13;
CENTER&#13;
September 20&#13;
6 pm-Midnight&#13;
TABLE TENNIS&#13;
FOOSBALL&#13;
25 POOL (1/2 HOUR)&#13;
VIDEO GAMES&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
(6-7 pm, 10-midnight)&#13;
12 Thursday, September 19, 1985 RANGER&#13;
Team belts Concordia PARKSIDE&#13;
OUTDOOR&#13;
RENTAL CENTER&#13;
• 2 MAN TENTS&#13;
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FALL RENTAL HOURS&#13;
Mon. 9 a.m.-1 p.m.&#13;
Fri. 9 a.m.-1 p.m.&#13;
FOR MORE&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
CALL 553-2408&#13;
Baseball&#13;
All-Star Boog Powell hits Racine&#13;
By Dave McEvoy and&#13;
Rob Eichhorn&#13;
Special to the Ranger&#13;
Last Wednesday, Sept. 11,&#13;
three Racine area establishments,&#13;
the Sheraton, Oh!&#13;
Flannery's. and the Gallery&#13;
Pub and Restaurant were visited&#13;
by former All-Star major&#13;
league baseball player Boog&#13;
Powell. These appearances&#13;
were made through Miller&#13;
Lite Beer and were arranged&#13;
by Chuftk Merritt, Miller's&#13;
local representatives.&#13;
"Yeah, I think baseball was&#13;
at its greatest back when I&#13;
played in the sixties and&#13;
early seventies. But then,&#13;
every generation of baseball&#13;
players thinks that." So it is&#13;
in the words of All-Star John&#13;
Wesley "Boog" Powell. Immortalized&#13;
from both a long&#13;
and successful career with&#13;
the Baltimore Orioles and a&#13;
long and successful series of&#13;
Lite Beer commercials. "I&#13;
never really had any big heroes&#13;
or dreams as a kid; I&#13;
was just never into that.&#13;
Somehow I just always knew&#13;
for a fact that someday I'd be&#13;
a major-leaguer. Hell, when I&#13;
was a kid I would go to the&#13;
Detroit Tigers' spring training&#13;
camp in Florida near&#13;
where I lived, just to steal&#13;
baseballs."&#13;
At 6-4 and nearly 290&#13;
pounds, this 45-year-old's&#13;
career life didn't end with a&#13;
major league baseball career.&#13;
Afterwards, he planned to&#13;
just manage his marina in&#13;
Key West, Florida until the&#13;
opportunity to do TV commercials&#13;
for Miller's Lite&#13;
Beer, with many other sports&#13;
celebrities. Up to now, this&#13;
has resulted in 15 commercials&#13;
for Boog, as well as&#13;
many close friendships with&#13;
most of the men who starred&#13;
in the commercials.&#13;
Powell's major league&#13;
career was devoted exclusively&#13;
to the Baltimore Orioles,&#13;
where he played a variety of&#13;
positions.&#13;
But before that he was a natural&#13;
athlete throughout his&#13;
years at Key West High&#13;
School, excelling in basketball&#13;
and football as well as&#13;
baseball (.489 in his senior&#13;
year). Afterwards, he turned&#13;
down five football scholarships&#13;
and entered D-league&#13;
baseball. He quickly jumped&#13;
from D-league to Triple A&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Chuck Merritt and Boog Powell. Merritt arranged Powell's&#13;
visit to Racine.&#13;
and then signed with the&#13;
Orioles with a $35,000 b onus -&#13;
a large sum at the time.&#13;
Today he feels that "baseball&#13;
has become much too commercialized&#13;
and has lost the&#13;
camaraderie it used to have.&#13;
Free agency has ruined baseball&#13;
- no baseball player is&#13;
worth $2 million."&#13;
Probably the question most&#13;
often asked of Powell is how&#13;
he received his nickname. "]&#13;
came from my father whc&#13;
when I was a boy alway&#13;
called me 'little booger' b£&#13;
cause of my mischievous die&#13;
position." In high school, thi&#13;
was shortened to "Boog" as i&#13;
remains today. But today h&#13;
says he doesn't miss basebal&#13;
so much and if he could, hi&#13;
would just keep doing th«&#13;
commercials for a while.&#13;
photo by Chris Mayeshiba&#13;
Pitcher Tim Sorenson delivers a pitch in the game against&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
After opening the season&#13;
with a doubleheader victory&#13;
over Milwaukee on Saturday,&#13;
the Ranger baseball team&#13;
traveled to Milwaukee and&#13;
clobbered Concordia College&#13;
in another doubleheader, 11-0&#13;
and 11-3.&#13;
The first game went only&#13;
five innings, with pitcher&#13;
Kyle Backus getting the win,&#13;
and Mike Herrick the save in&#13;
the 11-0 victory. Backus&#13;
struck out five batters in his&#13;
first start of the season. The&#13;
Rangers outhit Concordia 12-&#13;
3.&#13;
In the second game, Mark&#13;
Beyer pitched the first three&#13;
innings and Darren Oxley&#13;
came in and finished the&#13;
game. In the 11-3 rout, the&#13;
Rangers got 11 hits compared&#13;
to five for Concordia.&#13;
The team is now 4-0. The&#13;
next home game is this Saturday&#13;
against Marquette at 1&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Rangers take two from Milwaukee in&#13;
by Richard Blay&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Ranger baseball team&#13;
opened their regular season&#13;
on Saturday, sweeping UWMilwaukee&#13;
in a doubleheader.&#13;
In the first game, right hander&#13;
Chris Rozell shutout the&#13;
visiting Panthers 5-0. Rozell&#13;
went the distance, giving up&#13;
four hits and fanning 10 over&#13;
seven innings. The 10 strikeouts&#13;
tied Rozell's career&#13;
high.&#13;
The Rangers opened up the&#13;
scoring in the bottom of the&#13;
first when catcher Scott&#13;
Brooks doubled home second&#13;
baseman Chad Miller. Miller&#13;
had reached base on a walk&#13;
and then stole second before&#13;
scoring the first run.&#13;
The score remained 1-0&#13;
until the bottom of the fourth&#13;
inning. Pinch hitter Mitch&#13;
Ruben led off the inning with&#13;
a single up the middle. Shortstop&#13;
John Fisher followed&#13;
with another single up the&#13;
middle. The Panther pitcher&#13;
then walked third baseman&#13;
Jeff Zgorzelski to load the&#13;
bases. Centerfielder Bruce&#13;
Mergener came to the plate&#13;
and laced a single into left&#13;
field to score Ruben and Fisher.&#13;
The team added two more&#13;
runs in the bottom of the fifth&#13;
to make the score 5-0.&#13;
Brooks and Zgorzelski each&#13;
had a double and single in the&#13;
game. Miller had two singles&#13;
and a stolen base, while Mergener&#13;
had one hit and two&#13;
runs batted in. The Rangers&#13;
outhit the Panthers 10-4.&#13;
Coach Red Oberbruneer&#13;
was extremely pleased following&#13;
the first game.&#13;
"I really enjoyed the first&#13;
game. Rozell pitched good&#13;
ball but the team looked solid&#13;
behind him. Beating UW-M is&#13;
always a good win especially&#13;
on opening day. This was our&#13;
most consistent opener in a&#13;
long time."&#13;
In the second game, the&#13;
Rangers jumped all over the&#13;
Panthers in the bottom of the&#13;
first. They scored four runs&#13;
on four hits to put Milwaukee&#13;
down 4-0. Left-handed pitcher&#13;
Tim Sorenson started the&#13;
game for the Rangers and&#13;
struckout five batters in the&#13;
first two innings.&#13;
The team stretched the lead&#13;
to 6-0, scoring twice in the&#13;
bottom of the second. The&#13;
Panthers closed the gap to 6-4&#13;
in the top of the sixth. With&#13;
two gone in the bottom of the&#13;
sixth, left-fielder Mike Stolnack&#13;
laced a double to center.&#13;
Pinch hitter Dave Lasak then&#13;
opener&#13;
doubled to center scoring&#13;
Stolnack, making the score 7-&#13;
4.&#13;
Parkside brought in reliever&#13;
Mike Herrick in the top of&#13;
the seventh. Milwaukee scored&#13;
once on two errors to&#13;
make the final score 7-5.&#13;
Coach Oberbrunner, following&#13;
the second game, stated&#13;
that, "our baserunning caused&#13;
problems for Milwaukee.&#13;
We stretched singles into doubles&#13;
all day. Stolnack's double&#13;
in the sixth shut the door&#13;
on them."&#13;
Sorenson got the win, striking&#13;
out nine batters and giving&#13;
up four runs while reliever&#13;
Mike Herrick recorded his&#13;
first save of the season. First&#13;
baseman Barry Freitag and&#13;
Mike Stolnack both had a&#13;
double, a single and a run&#13;
batted in. Miller added two&#13;
more singles and another&#13;
stolen base. The Rangers outhit&#13;
the Panthers 8-7 and 18-11&#13;
overall.</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 14, issue 4, September 19, 1985</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="71609">
              <text>1985-09-19</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="71612">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="71613">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="71614">
              <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="71615">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="71617">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>Text</text>
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        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="71620">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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      <name>unemployment</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2210">
      <name>US catholic bishop's letter</name>
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