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            <text>Volume 14, issue 12</text>
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            <text>Child care funds in jeopardy</text>
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            <text>Saffioti Dick Cavett Basketball - ^ ^ ^&#13;
goes cable interview preview&#13;
Page 6 Page 7 Page 12&#13;
~&#13;
ip-&#13;
Thursday, November 14, 1985 University of Wisconsin-Parkside Volume 14, No. 12&#13;
Here comes&#13;
the sun&#13;
photo by Jack Bornhuetter&#13;
The Library Learning Center building was caught at the&#13;
crack of dawn before the sun could break the dark.&#13;
Child care funds&#13;
in jeopardy&#13;
By Kari Dixon&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Part One&#13;
Of a Two-Part Series&#13;
Forty-seven children currently&#13;
cared for by the campus&#13;
Child Care Center will be&#13;
affected by a state program&#13;
that has run out of funds for&#13;
this fiscal year.&#13;
The program, Title 20, is a&#13;
Federal grant program allocating&#13;
federal funds to state&#13;
governments for child care&#13;
purposes, including hospitalization&#13;
and day-care.&#13;
The money received by the&#13;
state governments is allocated&#13;
to the counties by the&#13;
states.&#13;
"Each county gets a certain&#13;
amount of money based&#13;
on past usage," said Sherry&#13;
Thomas, Child Care Center&#13;
assistant coordinator. "The&#13;
counties are better off using&#13;
the money, otherwise their&#13;
successive funding will be&#13;
lower for the following year."&#13;
In other words, she said, if&#13;
a county is assigned $90,000&#13;
and only uses $70,000, it will&#13;
lose the $20,000 for the following&#13;
year.&#13;
Each individual county can&#13;
decide how much of the child&#13;
care it will pay, and what criteria&#13;
the applicants must&#13;
meet. "We have several children&#13;
served by this program&#13;
in two counties (Racine and&#13;
Kenosha)," Thomas said.&#13;
"One county goes very indepth&#13;
in reference to the information&#13;
that is requested,&#13;
and the other does not.&#13;
For the months of November&#13;
and December, the Racine&#13;
County program has run&#13;
out of funds^and individuals&#13;
Child Care see page 2&#13;
SUFA C seeks opinions on seg. fee increases&#13;
by Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
Segregated fees may increase&#13;
by $5.75 per student&#13;
per semester next year.&#13;
SUFAC (Segregated Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee) wants to&#13;
know what students think&#13;
about the possible increase.&#13;
Three student organizations&#13;
are requesting substantial&#13;
budget increases which would&#13;
raise the amount Parkside&#13;
students pay in fees. Fulltime&#13;
students would pay&#13;
$93.50 in segregated fees each&#13;
semester with these increases.&#13;
Last year the segregated&#13;
fee charge was $82 per&#13;
student.&#13;
Tuition costs are mandated&#13;
by the state. Segregated fees,&#13;
however, are determined by&#13;
each individual campus. At&#13;
Parkside segregated fees are&#13;
set by an eight-member student&#13;
committee which&#13;
reviews the budget requests&#13;
submitted by student groups&#13;
and campus service organizations.&#13;
Segregated fees support&#13;
services for students, such as&#13;
athletics, Child Care Center,&#13;
Health Center, Union building,&#13;
Housing, student clubs,&#13;
organizations, and others.&#13;
After SUFAC accepts or rejects&#13;
each individual budget,&#13;
they then submit an overall&#13;
budget to the student Senate&#13;
for approval. The budget is&#13;
then submitted to the chancellor&#13;
and, if approved, sent&#13;
to the Board of Regents for&#13;
final approval or disapproval.&#13;
Adrian Serrano, SUFAC&#13;
chair, said Parkside is below&#13;
the average for segregated&#13;
fee charges compared with&#13;
other UW System campuses.&#13;
He is concerned, though, that&#13;
students may not want their&#13;
segregated fees to rise, or&#13;
that the Board of Regents&#13;
may not accept a substantial&#13;
fee increase.&#13;
"SUFAC has a difficult task&#13;
in front of them. On one hand&#13;
some organizations want big&#13;
increases. With these increases,&#13;
the groups feel they&#13;
can serve the student body&#13;
better. On the other hand, by&#13;
increasing their budgets we&#13;
would have to increase student&#13;
fees," said Serrano.&#13;
Serrano said student fees&#13;
may increase despite the requests&#13;
by groups to raise&#13;
their budgets. "Enrollment at&#13;
Parkside has been declining,&#13;
so even if all the budgets&#13;
stayed the same the student&#13;
fees may increase to make up&#13;
the decline in students," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Student input is being&#13;
sought by SUFAC to see if&#13;
students want fees to&#13;
increase.&#13;
"I'm asking for student&#13;
opinion. Student leaders say&#13;
that students are willing to&#13;
pay a few more dollars a&#13;
semester for more student activities&#13;
or better service. I&#13;
want to find out if that is&#13;
true," said Serrano.&#13;
Serrano wants students to&#13;
drop a note for or against the&#13;
increases in the PSGA office,&#13;
WLLC D139A. The notes do&#13;
not have to be signed but&#13;
should include the student's&#13;
ID number. Serrano said student&#13;
input will become part of&#13;
the rationale which will be&#13;
sent to the Board of Regents.&#13;
The three student-run&#13;
groups requesting substantial&#13;
budget increases are PAB&#13;
(Parkside Activities Board),&#13;
Peer Support and PSGA&#13;
(Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association).&#13;
PAB is the organization&#13;
which programs films,&#13;
dances and many other activities&#13;
on campus. PAB is&#13;
asking for a $32,339 in additional&#13;
funding, which is a 60.9&#13;
percent increase over their&#13;
budget from last year. This&#13;
budget increase would increase&#13;
segregated fees by&#13;
aproximately $4 per student.&#13;
PAB's budget increases include&#13;
a $8,000 for films, $5,000&#13;
for lectures and $10,000 for a&#13;
major concert.&#13;
Keith Harmann, PAB president,&#13;
said, "Our goal is to&#13;
provide better quality entertainment&#13;
which is not necessarily&#13;
available on campus.&#13;
This will in turn create a better&#13;
feeling of community here&#13;
and help to make Parkside&#13;
more of a 'real' university."&#13;
Harmann said the increase&#13;
in film funding would help to&#13;
bring back the free Tuesday&#13;
films sponsored by PAB last&#13;
year. He said that quality&#13;
films are expensive, and it is&#13;
also necessary to pay a&#13;
projectionist.&#13;
PAB is requesting money to&#13;
sponsor a major concert,&#13;
which would feature a national&#13;
touring act, for the next&#13;
school year. Harmann said&#13;
that up until a few years ago,&#13;
PAB sponsored a major concert&#13;
every year. The last&#13;
major concert presentation&#13;
was Donny Iris in 1984 at The&#13;
End.&#13;
In addition to major concerts,&#13;
PAB would also like to&#13;
revive their Perfoming Arts&#13;
and Lecture series which&#13;
would feature nationally&#13;
known lecturers.&#13;
"We have in the past&#13;
presented many interesting&#13;
lecturers and sucessful concerts.&#13;
But what was quality&#13;
entertainment in the past&#13;
costs more now and, our&#13;
budget hasn't increased to&#13;
reflect that in years," said&#13;
Harmann.&#13;
Harmann is also seeking&#13;
student input about the increases,&#13;
for his and the other&#13;
groups, by gathering student&#13;
signatures on petitions.&#13;
Peer Support, the organization&#13;
for non-traditional students,&#13;
is requesting $12,015 in&#13;
additional funds, which is a&#13;
269.1 percent increase over&#13;
their last budget. This&#13;
increase would raise segregated&#13;
fees by $1 per student.&#13;
Some of the bigger in-&#13;
Fees see page 2&#13;
2 Thursday, November 14, 1985 RANGER&#13;
^ I THINK 1 MUST WARN YOU V&#13;
THAT WE MAY BE DANGEROUSLY&#13;
CLOSE TO AN ARMS AGREEMENT&#13;
WITH THE SOVIETS... j&#13;
Fees may rise&#13;
if budgets increase&#13;
Fees from page 1&#13;
creases requested by Peer&#13;
Support include $1,533 for&#13;
secretary salary, $1,419 in&#13;
supplies/services, $600 in&#13;
travel and $7,500 in meetings&#13;
and programs.&#13;
Beverly Landreman, Peer&#13;
Support president, said the&#13;
group's past budget of $4,840&#13;
was not enough money to&#13;
have effect programs.&#13;
Peer Support is planning to&#13;
sponsor a state-wide conference&#13;
for all UW-System Peer&#13;
Support members and their&#13;
advisors. The additional funding&#13;
which the organization is&#13;
requesting for meetings&#13;
would offset the cost for future&#13;
conferences and help improve&#13;
the conferences, said&#13;
Landreman.&#13;
"We are proud of Parkside&#13;
and the opportunities to be&#13;
found here. We feel the conference&#13;
will further the image&#13;
of Parkside,'' she said.&#13;
Although Peer Support was&#13;
able to plan a conference for&#13;
March without a budget increase,&#13;
Landreman said, "We&#13;
can't play the pauper role for&#13;
too long. We won't be able to&#13;
provide a better quality conference&#13;
without the funding."&#13;
The request for an increase in&#13;
a secretary's salary would&#13;
enable Peer Support to hire&#13;
two secretaries, one in the&#13;
day and one for the evening,&#13;
which they feel would better&#13;
meet the needs of the nontraditional&#13;
students.&#13;
"Currently we are not able&#13;
to reach evening students and&#13;
that is when many nontraditional&#13;
come to school," said&#13;
Landreman. "Our previous&#13;
budget did not allow for growth&#13;
in Peer Support."&#13;
PSGA is requesting $4,139&#13;
in additional funding, which&#13;
is a 32.6 percent increase&#13;
over last year. This request&#13;
would raise segregated fees&#13;
by aproximately 50 cents.&#13;
. Some of the bigger increases&#13;
in the PSGA budget&#13;
include $1,500 in travel, $1,500&#13;
in office equipment, $500 in&#13;
community outreach and $650&#13;
for committees.&#13;
"I think this is an extremely&#13;
appropriate budget. It is&#13;
not padded and it is not elaborate;&#13;
it is practical," said Pat&#13;
Ramsdell, president.&#13;
Ramsdell said the additional&#13;
funding is necessary in&#13;
order to better meet the&#13;
needs of the students and help&#13;
the PSGA office function&#13;
more efficiently.&#13;
Serrano said some of the increases&#13;
could be paid out of&#13;
the reserve accounts of these&#13;
organizations. He warned&#13;
that this is not the best solution.&#13;
"That would be taking&#13;
money out of the pot.&#13;
"I feel that all three of&#13;
these organizations could do&#13;
great things with more&#13;
money. However, enrollment&#13;
is declining and we can't increase&#13;
the budget too much&#13;
because the Board of Regents&#13;
might not accept it.&#13;
Serrano urged students to&#13;
come to the PSGA office and&#13;
express their opinions&#13;
these increases.&#13;
on&#13;
Child care funds&#13;
endangered by cuts&#13;
Child Care from page 1&#13;
in the program will have to&#13;
pay additional child care&#13;
expenses.&#13;
"For the month of November,&#13;
we have to pay twentyfive&#13;
percent of the cost, and&#13;
for December we have to pay&#13;
fifty-percent," said Mary-&#13;
Etta Bublitz, a Title 20 member&#13;
who uses the Child Care&#13;
Center. "That's an unexpected&#13;
additional expense."&#13;
Thomas said Kenosha&#13;
County expects a decrease in&#13;
its funds for next year, and&#13;
Racine County may switch to&#13;
a waiting list because it&#13;
cannot fill the demand.&#13;
"The program is available&#13;
to people who are employed,&#13;
but who earn below a certain&#13;
wage level," Thomas said.&#13;
"That includes quite a few&#13;
people."&#13;
Anyone interested in the&#13;
program should contact Susie&#13;
Ramirez at the Racine&#13;
Human Services Offices, or&#13;
Phil Hendricks at the Kenosha&#13;
Social Services Office.&#13;
Interested applicants can&#13;
receive more information at&#13;
the Financial Aid Office in&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
The ".Fridge99 leaves me cold&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Before I even begin, I'll answer&#13;
both complaints this&#13;
piece is going to prompt.&#13;
First, I assure you all that I&#13;
realize the issue I'm about to&#13;
address isn't earth-shatteringly&#13;
important. Nevertheless.&#13;
it does suggest something&#13;
about the social climate&#13;
of this country, and in that&#13;
light it warrants the space&#13;
it's being given.&#13;
Second, I confess to being a&#13;
Green Bay Packer fan. However,&#13;
before you assume this&#13;
article represents the ravings&#13;
of a savagely sore loser, I&#13;
fully acknowledge that the&#13;
Chicago Bears are a much&#13;
better football team than&#13;
Forrest Gregg's Gaffers.&#13;
There. Now I can start.&#13;
Over the past month, the&#13;
American media and the&#13;
American public has fallen&#13;
prey to "Refrigerator&#13;
Mania." No, this doesn't&#13;
mean everyone else is overeating&#13;
as ravenously as Nell&#13;
Carter. It means something&#13;
worse. It means supposedly&#13;
conscious, upright organisms&#13;
are becoming mesmerized by&#13;
a 308-lb. blob of blubber&#13;
whose only athletic prowess&#13;
has thus far been manifest in&#13;
his ability to run over someone&#13;
weighing 80 lbs. less than&#13;
he does.&#13;
His name is William Perry.&#13;
Fanatics lovingly call him&#13;
The Fridge. I loathingly call&#13;
him The Fraud.&#13;
My remarks are not meant&#13;
as a personal affront to Mr.&#13;
Perry; I've never met him ,&#13;
and he's probably a very genial&#13;
chap, although I don't&#13;
think I'd invite him over for&#13;
dinner. Instead, my vehemence&#13;
is directed at that&#13;
incredibly narrow-minded&#13;
section of the populace that is&#13;
heralding The Fridge's exploits&#13;
as the Second Coming.&#13;
If they're right, I'm glad I&#13;
missed him the first time&#13;
around.&#13;
Those who bleat about The&#13;
Fridge's latest foray onto the&#13;
field are mistaking his status&#13;
as a sideshow attraction for&#13;
true superstardom. When&#13;
Bears' coach Mike Ditka&#13;
forklifts him into the backfield&#13;
for a goal-line situation,&#13;
he isn't doing so because&#13;
Perry is as good an athlete as&#13;
Walter Pay ton. He's doing it&#13;
because Perry's waistline and&#13;
his jersey number are nearly&#13;
identical - 72. He's a blockade,&#13;
not a blocker. He's fat,&#13;
not fantastic.&#13;
CBS Sports commentator&#13;
Brent Musburger said Sunday&#13;
that The Fridge is bringing&#13;
fun back into the NFL. As&#13;
usual, Brent's wrong. What&#13;
Perry is really doing is unwarrantedly&#13;
copping media&#13;
attention during a season in&#13;
which teammates like Payton&#13;
and Jim McMahon are having&#13;
MVP-caliber years. And without&#13;
the performances of these&#13;
real talents, all 300-plus&#13;
pounds of William Perry&#13;
wouldn't tip the scales to the&#13;
tune of a 10-0 Bear record.&#13;
So wake up, sports fans.&#13;
Stop singing songs about an&#13;
overweight underachiever&#13;
and reserve the kudos for&#13;
those whove earned them.&#13;
You'll appear much less&#13;
assinine for your efforts.&#13;
Nobody asked me, but...&#13;
*00&#13;
Jennie Tunldeicz Editor&#13;
Kari Dixon News Editor&#13;
Bob Kiesling Asst. 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;
Bill Serpe, Laureen Wawro.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
Scott Curty, Jack&#13;
Bornhuetter, Kris Odegaard.&#13;
Ranger is written ami edited, by students at UW-Parkside and&#13;
they are solely responsible for its editorial policy ami 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-Parksidc. Box No. 2000, Kenosha W1 531 il.&#13;
Telephone (1,1/,) 553-2295 or (!,1!,) 553-2287.&#13;
Letters to the editor will be accepted if typewritten, doublespaced&#13;
on standard size paper. Letters should be less than 350&#13;
words and must be signed, with a telephone number included for&#13;
verification purposes. Names will be.withheld upon request. Deadline&#13;
for letters is Tuesday at 10 a.m. for publication Thursday.&#13;
Ranger reserves the right to edit letters and refuse letters containing&#13;
false and defamatory content.&#13;
Ranger is printed by the Racine Journal Times.&#13;
&lt;90 0*&#13;
HANGER&#13;
BSO denied paper funds&#13;
Thursday, November 14, 1985 3&#13;
The Budget and Review&#13;
Committee Monday turned&#13;
down a request from the&#13;
Black Student Organization to&#13;
start a minority student newpaper.&#13;
BSO submitted a request&#13;
for $622.95 to start a monthly,&#13;
minority-oriented student&#13;
newspaper for the campus&#13;
and community because&#13;
members said there is a need&#13;
to present a minority viewpoint&#13;
at Parkside and in the&#13;
area.&#13;
The committee rejected the&#13;
request, BSO member Greg&#13;
Holcomb said, because the&#13;
minority group did not seek&#13;
to have stories published in&#13;
the Ranger, and that granting&#13;
the request would set a precedent&#13;
for other groups to&#13;
receive funding for similar&#13;
purposes.&#13;
"They kind of attacked us&#13;
with the Ranger to show us&#13;
we didn't need (a newspaper),"&#13;
Holcomb said.&#13;
BSO member Ernestine&#13;
Weisinger said the group will&#13;
seek other funding for the&#13;
paper, but would not say&#13;
what the funding is.&#13;
Members of the Budget and&#13;
Review Committee could not&#13;
be reached for comment&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
All other campuses in the&#13;
UW System have minority&#13;
student newspapers, Holcomb&#13;
said. The group was offered&#13;
technical and editorial help&#13;
from UW-Milwaukee's student&#13;
newspaper, Invictus, to&#13;
start the first issue, he said.&#13;
Holcomb said that while the&#13;
group has six writers who&#13;
will volunteer to write for the&#13;
newspaper, they have been&#13;
reluctant to approach the&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
Black writers who have&#13;
written for the Ranger believe&#13;
stories they have written&#13;
for the paper have been&#13;
unfairly edited, Holcomb&#13;
said.&#13;
Ranger Editor Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
said, however, that all&#13;
stories written for the paper&#13;
are edited for grammar,&#13;
readability and libelous content.&#13;
Holcomb acknowledged&#13;
that while BSO has had differences&#13;
with the Ranger in&#13;
the past, the group holds no&#13;
grudges against the paper.&#13;
Tunkieicz also said the&#13;
Ranger is not in an adversarial&#13;
position with the BSO,&#13;
even though BRC asked her&#13;
to answer questions while the&#13;
committee considered BSO's&#13;
request.&#13;
She said the Ranger doesn't&#13;
cover minority issues as well&#13;
as BSO would like because of&#13;
the lack of writers.&#13;
"I think they should have&#13;
their paper if they feel there's&#13;
a need for it,'"Tunkieicz said.&#13;
"However, I would like to see&#13;
their writers on the Ranger."&#13;
Choral concert to be held&#13;
The fall concert of the&#13;
Parkside Chorale and Chamber&#13;
Singers, directed by visiting&#13;
assistant professor Robert&#13;
Campbell, will be performed&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov.&#13;
19, in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Admission is $1 for senior&#13;
citizens and Parkside faculty,&#13;
students and staff, $2 for&#13;
others.&#13;
The concert will feature the&#13;
most important opera of the&#13;
British Restoration period,&#13;
"Dido and Aeneas," by Henry&#13;
Purcell. The work was written&#13;
in 1689 for Josia Priest's&#13;
School in the Chelsea district&#13;
of London, with a libretto by&#13;
Nahume Tate.&#13;
The opera tells the story of&#13;
Dido, queen of Carthage, who&#13;
falls in love with the Trojan&#13;
prince, Aeneas. Afer a brief&#13;
courtship, Aeneas is deceived&#13;
by a wicked sorceress and&#13;
called away to continue his&#13;
travels. Dido, stricken with a&#13;
broken heart, dies a tragic&#13;
death.&#13;
"Dido and Aeneas" contains&#13;
some of the most beautiful&#13;
dramatic music written in&#13;
17th century England.&#13;
The second half of the program&#13;
will consist of a series&#13;
of more modern British&#13;
works, all performed in English.&#13;
Ralph Vaughan Williams&#13;
will be represented by a set&#13;
of three folk song arrangements,&#13;
"Linden Lea," "The&#13;
Dark-Eyed Sailor" and "The&#13;
Springtime of the Year."&#13;
John Blow's "Sing, Sing Ye&#13;
Muses" and Benjamin Britten's&#13;
"Old Joe Has Gone&#13;
Fishing," from the opera&#13;
"Peter Grimes," complete&#13;
the Chorale portion of the&#13;
program.&#13;
The Chamber Singers also&#13;
will sing two sets, the first a&#13;
series of Britten choruses, the&#13;
second a mixed selection of&#13;
works by Mendelssohn,&#13;
Gibbons and Seiber.&#13;
Campbell holds a bachelor's&#13;
degree from Yale University,&#13;
a master's degree&#13;
from the University of Illinois&#13;
and a PhD degree in choral&#13;
conducting from Stanford&#13;
University.&#13;
He has taught music at a&#13;
preparatory high school in&#13;
Providence, Rhode Island,&#13;
and has directed a variety of&#13;
vocal ensembles on both the&#13;
east and west coasts. He has&#13;
published choral editions for&#13;
Harold Flammer, Inc., and&#13;
has written an article on&#13;
Mendelssohn's "Te Deum"&#13;
that will soon be published by&#13;
"Choral Review," a publication&#13;
of the American Choral&#13;
Foundation.&#13;
YOU ARE DAN BILLET, TICKET&#13;
ATTENDANT AT THE GRAND THEATRE;&#13;
DID YOU S EE TOBY JONES BRING&#13;
MONA KROTER TO THE THEATRE - J vS&#13;
ON THE SEVENTEENTH? "&#13;
LADIES AND GENT LEMEN&#13;
BOYS AND G lRS...HAVlNG&#13;
REVIEVJEO THE TESTIMONY&#13;
AND E VIDENCE IN THIS CASE.&#13;
V I AM APPALLED BY THE CONDUCT OF&#13;
A«*Q\S LEADERSHIP. THE DEMEANIN6,&#13;
SEXUALLY DEGRADING PRACTICE OF&#13;
DARiNG ITS PLED6ES TO DATE GIRLS&#13;
|\ OF ZAT MUST BE STOPPED.&#13;
(MAKE NO MISTAKE: THIS&#13;
JUDICIAL BOARD CONSIDERS&#13;
THIS MATTER A SERIOUS CONCERN—&#13;
VERY SERIOUS INDEED.&#13;
Guards punished&#13;
for incident&#13;
Two border patrol agents&#13;
who forcibly returned a Uk&#13;
rainian sailor to his ship are&#13;
expected to face disciplinary&#13;
action, the New York Times&#13;
reported.&#13;
Immigration and naturali&#13;
zation Service commissioner&#13;
Alan C. Nelson conceded&#13;
"There obviously were mis&#13;
takes made" when Miroslav&#13;
Medvid was returned to&#13;
Soviet grain ship in the New&#13;
Orleans harbor.&#13;
A 100-page report submitted&#13;
to the Justice Department&#13;
says the two agents, who&#13;
have not been identified, did&#13;
not follow INS guidelines and&#13;
acted hastily without consulting&#13;
their supervisors.&#13;
Country needs more teachers&#13;
The country's current baby boom will create a demand&#13;
for about 1.7 million new teachers in the next eight years,&#13;
USA Today reported.&#13;
E. Emily Feistritzer, director of the National Center for&#13;
Education said teaching has become a low-paying, lowstatus&#13;
job that doesn't attract enough qualified applicants.&#13;
Feistritzer said the public education system needs higher&#13;
pay, better working conditions and a broader range of&#13;
people coming into the profession.&#13;
Painless attacks indicate trouble&#13;
As many as three million people may have heart attacks&#13;
and not even know it, a doctor told members of the&#13;
American Heart Association.&#13;
USA Today said a study completed by Dr. Leon Resnekov&#13;
of the University of Chicago indicates that Americans&#13;
suffer "silent heart attacks" at least four times times&#13;
more often than heart attacks involving pain.&#13;
Even though victims don't have symptoms, silent heart&#13;
attacks damage heart muscle and leave victims with a&#13;
higher risk of having a second attack or irregular rhythms&#13;
that could lead to death.&#13;
Women harassed by men&#13;
Low-income women seeking affordable housing for their&#13;
families in Milwaukee are often subject to sexual harassment.&#13;
a study by the Metropolitan Milwaukee Fair Housing&#13;
Council says.&#13;
Associated Press reported that Carla Wertheim, the&#13;
council's director of program services, said it receives&#13;
about one sexual harassment complaint a month, a figure&#13;
which does not include many inquiries from women who&#13;
don't want to give their names.&#13;
Executive Director William Tisdale said the typical&#13;
complaint was that of a landlord who offers a discount or&#13;
extension on rent or security deposit for sex.&#13;
Epilepsy clinic to be held&#13;
A workshop for individuals,&#13;
suffering from epilepsy or&#13;
seizures, and their relatives,&#13;
will be held from 7 to 9 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 20 at St.&#13;
Mary's Medical Center in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
The guest speaker for the&#13;
workshop will be Carolyn Mc«&#13;
Cabe, senior electro-encephalogram&#13;
(EEG) technician at&#13;
St. Luke's Hospital and St.&#13;
Mary's Medical Center, who&#13;
will discuss the topic of&#13;
neurodiagnostic studies and&#13;
clinical EEGs. The correlation&#13;
between EEGs and clinical&#13;
findings will be presented&#13;
with slides and discussion.&#13;
The support group at St.&#13;
Mary's is for the person with&#13;
epilepsy or seizures, the family&#13;
and the professional or&#13;
educator interested In learning&#13;
more about the disorder.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Smoke-out ignites interest&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Do you feel as breathless as&#13;
Jean-Paul Belmondo when&#13;
you take a casual stroll from&#13;
Greenquist Hall to the Union?&#13;
Do your friends hum "On Top&#13;
of Old Smoky" everytime you&#13;
enter a room?&#13;
If so, Phi Gamma Nu business&#13;
fraternity and the office&#13;
of Student Health Services&#13;
have something in store for&#13;
you.&#13;
You might even say it's a&#13;
GAS.&#13;
All next week, these cooperating&#13;
organizations will coordinate&#13;
Parkside's version of&#13;
the American Cancer Society's&#13;
Great American Smokeout&#13;
(GAS) program, designed&#13;
to make smokers nonsmokers&#13;
for at least a day.&#13;
Now in its ninth year, the&#13;
Smokeout ignites Monday in&#13;
Molinaro Hall, where a table&#13;
will be set up to distribute&#13;
adoption papers and pledge&#13;
sheets for the Adopt-a-Smoker&#13;
portion of the program.&#13;
Sheets can be obtained there&#13;
through Wednesday.&#13;
The Adopt-a-Smoker event&#13;
works like this: For a 24-hour&#13;
period, a non-smoker agrees&#13;
to oversee the activity of a&#13;
smoker willing to accept the&#13;
Society's "burning" challenge.&#13;
The adoptee - who receives&#13;
monetary amounts&#13;
from all his pledges if he&#13;
stays smokeless for the duration&#13;
- must abide by the following&#13;
rules:&#13;
1. Hide cigarettes, ashtrays,&#13;
lighters and matches.&#13;
2. Tell friends he has been&#13;
adopted and will not smoke&#13;
on the day of the Smokeout itself&#13;
(Thursday).&#13;
3. Call on his foster nonsmoker&#13;
in times of weakness.&#13;
4. Refrain from frequenting&#13;
smoke-filled rooms.&#13;
5. Repeat to himself over&#13;
and over, "Not smoking is a&#13;
GAS."&#13;
If that sounds smokelessly&#13;
smashing, you'll be really intrigued&#13;
by the goings-on&#13;
scheduled for Thursday.&#13;
On that day, a large bowl&#13;
will be placed in Molinaro&#13;
Hall where all who wish to&#13;
punt their passion for Pall&#13;
Malls can discard their packs&#13;
(which must be at least half&#13;
full) and receive a raffle ticket&#13;
in exchange.&#13;
Participants can earn&#13;
prizes either via the raffle or&#13;
by collecting the most money&#13;
from their pledges or from&#13;
local and campus businesses&#13;
and organizations.&#13;
All monies collected will be&#13;
donated to the campus Child&#13;
Care Center for use in&#13;
purchasing equipment and&#13;
supplies.&#13;
Club Events:&#13;
Geology&#13;
The UW-Parkside Geology&#13;
Club and the Racine Geological&#13;
Society are sponsoring the&#13;
annual Rock and Gem Show&#13;
through Friday. The show&#13;
will take place 9 a.m. to 4:30&#13;
p.m. on the Union bridge and&#13;
will feature jewelry, clocks,&#13;
mobiles and other great&#13;
Christmas gifts.&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
The Art Addicts will hold&#13;
their next meeting Wednesday&#13;
at 1 p.m. in CA D142. All&#13;
are welcome to attend.&#13;
SNAP&#13;
The Student Nurses Association&#13;
of Parkside is proud&#13;
to present a program on&#13;
Home Health Nursing. The&#13;
speaker will be Judy Kaplan.&#13;
The program will be held&#13;
Monday from 11:30 a.m. to&#13;
12:30 p.m. in Union 106. All&#13;
interested are more than welcome&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
Peer Support will have a&#13;
workshop for new, nontraditional&#13;
students Thursday. On&#13;
Wednesday Peer Support will&#13;
have a bake sale from 9 a.m.&#13;
to 1 p.m. in the WLLC Concourse.&#13;
After the bake sale,&#13;
the group will have its regular&#13;
meeting in Union 202. All&#13;
interested students are&#13;
invited to attend.&#13;
PAC&#13;
There will be a meeting&#13;
Wednesday at 1 p.m. to discuss&#13;
a field trip to WITI-TV&#13;
(Channel 6) in Milwaukee, as&#13;
well as membership in the International&#13;
Association of&#13;
Business Communicators&#13;
(IABC). All interested are invited&#13;
to attend in Comm Arts&#13;
135.&#13;
Biological Sciences&#13;
Donna Peterson will talk&#13;
about Chiwaukee Prairie&#13;
Monday at noon in GRQ D115.&#13;
She will cover preservation&#13;
and funding for the prairie.&#13;
Slides will be shown, and&#13;
everyone is welcome.&#13;
IEHA&#13;
The Industrial and Environmental&#13;
Hygiene Association&#13;
will hold a meeting in Union&#13;
Square Thursday at 6:30 p.m.&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
ALL STUDENTS!!&#13;
1. YOUR REGISTRATION PACKET FOR&#13;
SPRING 1986 will be available&#13;
beginning Monday, November 18, in&#13;
Lower Main Place.&#13;
2. COURSE SCHEDULES FOR SPRING 1986&#13;
will also be available.&#13;
OFFICE OF INSTITUTIONAL&#13;
ANALYSIS &amp; REGISTRATION&#13;
Whitman display in the library&#13;
Whitman display&#13;
graces library&#13;
A collection of materials related&#13;
to the American poet&#13;
Walt Whitman that recently&#13;
was donated to Parkside Library-&#13;
Learning Center is on&#13;
display through Friday, Dec.&#13;
6, on the L-l level of the&#13;
library.&#13;
The material, given to the&#13;
library by Charles E. Feinberg,&#13;
editor emeritus of the&#13;
Walt Whitman Quarterly&#13;
Review, is valued at about&#13;
$1,000. It includes an original&#13;
William J. Linton woodcut of&#13;
Whitman done in 1871 and&#13;
framed with a title-page proof&#13;
of the 1876 edition of "Leaves&#13;
of Grass," the poet's masterpiece.&#13;
Also included are an original&#13;
1860 engraving of an illustration&#13;
from the third edition&#13;
of "Leaves of Grass" and&#13;
64 original issues of the "Walt&#13;
Whitman Fellowship Papers"&#13;
from 1894 to 1918.&#13;
The material will be housed&#13;
in Parkside's Archives and&#13;
Area Research Center.&#13;
English professor Donald&#13;
Kummings, a widely reconized&#13;
Whitman scholar who two&#13;
years ago was invited to&#13;
UNITARIAN&#13;
UNIVERSAUSTS&#13;
have always&#13;
been known to&#13;
question handme-&#13;
down&#13;
religious&#13;
doctrines.&#13;
Have you ever felt disenchanted&#13;
with an orthodox religion&#13;
because it hands you a&#13;
predigested faith? If so, our&#13;
church may be for you. For&#13;
hundreds of years, this vital denomination&#13;
has been encouraging&#13;
individuals to question and to&#13;
grow.&#13;
ISN'T THIS THE CHURCH&#13;
YOU HOPED TO FIND?&#13;
BRADFORD&#13;
COMMUNITY CHURCH&#13;
Woman's Club • 6028 8tti Ave.&#13;
Rev. Dr. Tony Larsen, Pastor *30 am. SwwtoM ft Sunday School&#13;
speak on the poet at the&#13;
famed Gorky Institute in&#13;
Moscow, said, "The university&#13;
is grateful indeed for Mr.&#13;
Feinberg's gift. It represents&#13;
a significant addition to the&#13;
fine collection of literary materials&#13;
now in the Parkside&#13;
Archives."&#13;
Also donated are a copy of&#13;
"Whitman at Auction," published&#13;
in 1978; copies of "The&#13;
Correspondence of Walt Whitman,"&#13;
from 1886-1899 and&#13;
from 1890-1892; copies of&#13;
"With Walt Whitman in Camden,"&#13;
volumes five and six;&#13;
and a book titled "Pages,"&#13;
which is about the world of&#13;
books and features an interview&#13;
with Feinberg, a&#13;
renowned bibliophile and collector.&#13;
The Walt Whitman Quarterly&#13;
Review is observing its&#13;
30th anniversary this year.&#13;
Miss Racine&#13;
contest here&#13;
The Miss Racine Pageant&#13;
will be held on Saturday,&#13;
Nov. 23 in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theater at 8 p.m. Tickets are&#13;
$5 and will be available from&#13;
all contestants, the Journal&#13;
Times, from Miss Racine 1985&#13;
Cherie Gotthardt, with inserts&#13;
in 7-Up products and will also&#13;
be available at the door. A r eception&#13;
will follow immediately&#13;
afterward in Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
Learn interview&#13;
techniques&#13;
Jonathan R. Kolb, manager&#13;
of Progessional Recruiting&#13;
and Training at In-Sink-Erator,&#13;
a division of Emerson&#13;
Electric, will present a workshop&#13;
entitled "Effective Job&#13;
Interviewing" on Tuesday,&#13;
Nov. 19 in Moln. 105 from&#13;
5:30 -6:30 p.m.&#13;
Kolb will make a short presentation&#13;
and will then answer&#13;
questions.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, November 14, 1985 5&#13;
Week at the Park&#13;
Rock show, concert&#13;
Allen film to be shown&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 14&#13;
Rock and Gem Show: from 8&#13;
a.m. to 5 p.m. on the Union&#13;
Bridge. All are welcome.&#13;
Sponsored by the Geology&#13;
Club.&#13;
Movie: "A Soldier's Story"&#13;
(PG) will be shown at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission at the door is $1&#13;
for a Parkside student and $1&#13;
for a guest. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
Movie: "The Return of Martin&#13;
Guerre" will be shown at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. All seats are sold for&#13;
the Thursday Foreign Film&#13;
Series.&#13;
Friday, Nov 15&#13;
Rock and Gem Show: continues&#13;
through 5 p.m. today&#13;
on the Union Bridge.&#13;
Movie: "A Soldier's Story"&#13;
will be repeated at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
and at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
Workshop: "Intro to the IBM&#13;
PC" starts at 1 p.m. and&#13;
"Appleworks: Spread Sheet"&#13;
starts at 2 pm. in WLLC Dl.&#13;
Call ext. 2356 for reservations&#13;
and information.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 16&#13;
Movie: "The Return of Martin&#13;
Guerre" will be repeated&#13;
at 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. All seats are sold for&#13;
the Saturday Foreign Film&#13;
Series.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 17&#13;
Movie: "The Return of Martin&#13;
Guerre" will be repeated&#13;
at 2 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Tickets for the Sunday&#13;
Foreign Film Series will&#13;
be available at the door.&#13;
Movie: "A Soldier's Story"&#13;
will be repeated at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 19&#13;
Breakfast/Seminar: "The&#13;
Forecast' by Donald Ratajcazk,&#13;
Professor of Economics&#13;
at Georgia State University,&#13;
at 7:30 a.m. in Union 104-106.&#13;
Call ext. 2259 for reservations.&#13;
Workshop: "Your Worst&#13;
Enemy: Improving Negative&#13;
Self-Image"starts at 6 p.m. in&#13;
Tallent 281. Call ext. 2312 for&#13;
details. Sponsored by UWExtension.&#13;
Concert: featuring the Parkside&#13;
Chorale and Chamber&#13;
Singers at 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission at the&#13;
door is $1 for senior citizens&#13;
and Parkside faculty, staff&#13;
and students and $2 for others.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 21&#13;
Movie: "Never Cry Wolf"&#13;
will be shown at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Union Cinema. The movie&#13;
is rated PG and runs 105&#13;
minutes. Admission at the&#13;
door is $1 for a Parkside student&#13;
and $1 for a guest. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
Movie: "The Last Tango in&#13;
Paris" will be shown at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema. All&#13;
seats are sold.&#13;
MACINEMAS 57th AVE &amp; 75th St.&#13;
694 7301&#13;
BAJNBGW BRITE&#13;
BJGMOVE.&#13;
Gmznacm&#13;
STARTS FRI., NOV. 15. EVENTS:&#13;
First 50 children Fri., Nov. 15 will receive a free meal&#13;
courtesy of McDonald's®.&#13;
Special 11 am Sat. showing. Children bringing toy donations&#13;
for "Toys for Tots" will receive 1 free admission for&#13;
every paid admission.&#13;
Individuals bringing non-perishable food donations will&#13;
receive a free gift (while supplies last).&#13;
The second film in the St.&#13;
Luke's Hospital Mental Health&#13;
Film Series, "Annie Hall,"&#13;
will be shown at the Golden&#13;
Rondelle Theater on Tuesday,&#13;
Nov. 19. The program begins&#13;
at 7 p.m.&#13;
"Annie Hall" is a comic,&#13;
believable story about two&#13;
people (Alvy Singer/Woody&#13;
Allen and Annie Hall/Diane&#13;
Keaton) who are just right&#13;
for each other on a certain&#13;
level, but unable to resolve&#13;
their conflicts well enough to&#13;
stay together. Alvy and Annie&#13;
meet, fall in love, live together,&#13;
split up, get back together&#13;
again, then split up for good.&#13;
The circumstances eventually&#13;
separating them are seen intheir&#13;
arguments about sex,&#13;
about meeting othei- people&#13;
and about Annie's mind.&#13;
By allowing us to glimpse a&#13;
portion of his personal life,&#13;
Allen has given us a polished&#13;
look at a "nervous romance"&#13;
in these modern times.&#13;
"Annie Hall" won four Academy&#13;
Awards in 1977, including&#13;
Best Picture and Best&#13;
Actress for Keaton.&#13;
Immediately following the&#13;
film, the audience is invited&#13;
to participate in a discussion&#13;
of the film led by Gregg Sargent,&#13;
M.A. Sargent earned his&#13;
master's degree in counseling&#13;
psychology from Antioch University&#13;
with a concentration&#13;
in individual and family therapy.&#13;
His experience is as a&#13;
psychotherapist for community&#13;
mental health clinics and&#13;
crises intervention centers.&#13;
Currently, he is with the psychology&#13;
department at St.&#13;
Luke's Mental Health Seiwices,&#13;
utilizing his skills in individual&#13;
counseling, group&#13;
therapy and psychological&#13;
testing.&#13;
Reservations for this program&#13;
are requested and can&#13;
be made by calling the&#13;
Golden Rondelle at 631-2154&#13;
Monday through Friday.&#13;
There is no admisson charge.&#13;
The Golden Rondelle Theater&#13;
is located on the corner of&#13;
Fourteenth and Franklin&#13;
Streets in Racine.&#13;
This program is a cooperative&#13;
effort with St. Luke's&#13;
Hospital Mental Health Services.&#13;
-Next week in the Ranger:&#13;
Housing bids results&#13;
Chancellor search continues&#13;
Censoring books&#13;
Miss Racine looks back&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
FOR&#13;
SPRING 1986 SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are&#13;
seeking a degree at Parkside) must consult their&#13;
academic adviser PRIOR TO REGISTRATION FOR&#13;
SPRING SEMESTER. A certification of advising form,&#13;
signed by the adviser, is required for registration.&#13;
Nov. 18-Dec. 2 has been designated as academic advising&#13;
period, and advisers will make every effort to meet&#13;
with you.&#13;
ADVISING WILL NOT BE AVAILABLE IN THE&#13;
REGISTRATION AREA&#13;
CONTACT YOUR ADVISER FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
If you have any questions, contact the Advising Center&#13;
D-174 WLLC&#13;
553-2040&#13;
NOTE: Non-matriculant students (students not seeking&#13;
a degree at Parkside) are exempt from this&#13;
requirement.&#13;
6 Thursday, November 14, 1985 RANGER&#13;
Prof's new cable show with scientific topics&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
When one hears the words&#13;
"Space, the Final Frontier,"&#13;
he probably conjures images&#13;
of Mr. Spock and Bones&#13;
McCoy bickering aboard the&#13;
Starship Enterprise. All&#13;
that's going to change, however,&#13;
if Parkside's Carol Lee&#13;
Saffioti has her way.&#13;
Saffioti, an associate professor&#13;
of English, serves as&#13;
one of the four co-producers&#13;
of "Space, the Final Frontier,"&#13;
a cable TV documentary&#13;
program offered on&#13;
Jones Intercable's public access&#13;
channel in Kenosha.&#13;
"We're a group of people&#13;
with a lot of scientific interest&#13;
and knowledge," Saffioti explains,&#13;
"but we're not scientists.&#13;
And I'm glad we're not,&#13;
because what we're doing is&#13;
trying to present topics usually&#13;
considered very scientific&#13;
in a manner everyone can understand&#13;
and appreciate."&#13;
For more than a year now,&#13;
Saffioti and her associates (to&#13;
whom she refers as fellow&#13;
"space buffs") have transformed&#13;
their extra-curricular&#13;
interest in out-of-this-atmosphere&#13;
concerns into&#13;
programming with high takeaway&#13;
value. Integrating&#13;
news, interviews, educational&#13;
films and NASA coverage of&#13;
everything from Halley's&#13;
comet to the space shuttle&#13;
program, "Space, the Final&#13;
Frontier" conveys science&#13;
facts rather than science&#13;
fiction.&#13;
In addition to educating the&#13;
public about spacely matters,&#13;
however, the monthly sixtyminute&#13;
program also provides&#13;
excellent learning opportunities,&#13;
not only for its&#13;
creators but also for Parkside&#13;
students and other members&#13;
of the community.&#13;
October's installment of&#13;
"Space," for example, was&#13;
bolstered by an original&#13;
music score courtesy of Parkside&#13;
music major John&#13;
Costigan. For Saffioti, that&#13;
situation represents her ideal&#13;
conception of the program.&#13;
"Parkside still has production&#13;
facilities," she said, "but&#13;
they aren't being taken advantage&#13;
of. What we'd like to&#13;
do with our show is integrate&#13;
student and community input,&#13;
allowing an opportunity for&#13;
people other than us to gain&#13;
production experience.&#13;
"Ideally, I like to look at&#13;
the show as a chance to&#13;
bridge the gap between technical&#13;
knowledge and experiential&#13;
knowledge. The production&#13;
facilities (provided by&#13;
Jones Intercable) are there to&#13;
use, and there are unlimited&#13;
educational possibilities for&#13;
those who are interested&#13;
enough to use them."&#13;
For parties interested in&#13;
working with Jones, Saffioti&#13;
offers the following advice.&#13;
"Come up with a proposal&#13;
for a program first and then&#13;
contact the proper people.&#13;
Our show has worked so well&#13;
because the idea came long&#13;
before the filming. And it&#13;
helps that we're doing it for&#13;
no money at all; it's just because&#13;
we love what we're&#13;
doing.'' Carol Saffioti&#13;
A Soldier's Storv • • • •&#13;
PAB to show powerful story of bigotry&#13;
yd*""*:&#13;
Howard Rollins, Jr.&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
In 1967, director Norman&#13;
Jewison helmed "In the Heat&#13;
of the Night," one of the most&#13;
searing indictments of prejudice&#13;
in American film history.&#13;
Last year, Jewison did himself&#13;
one better, bringing&#13;
Charles Fuller's award-winning&#13;
"A Soldier's Play" to the&#13;
screen as "A Soldier's&#13;
Story." Equally as riveting as&#13;
its director's earlier film, "A&#13;
Soldier's Story" makes an&#13;
even stronger humanistic&#13;
statement, dealing as it does&#13;
with bigotry among - not&#13;
against - blacks. The movie&#13;
will be shown by PAB this&#13;
week in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Set at an all-black army&#13;
base during WWII, the picture&#13;
stars Academy Award&#13;
nominee Howard Rollins&#13;
("Ragtime") as a sharp&#13;
army lawyer investigating&#13;
the murder of a fiery, universally&#13;
disliked sergeant&#13;
(Adolph Caesar, reprising his&#13;
stage role). The narrative is&#13;
told in flashback, as each soldier's&#13;
alleged motive for the&#13;
crime is explored after the&#13;
grisly fact.&#13;
En route to separating facts&#13;
from fictions, Rollins, like&#13;
Sidney Poitier's Virgil Tibbs&#13;
in "Heat," must confront the&#13;
myopic narrow-mindedness of&#13;
a white authority figure (Dennis&#13;
Lipscomb), who questions&#13;
a negro's effectiveness in conducting&#13;
an investigation involving&#13;
"his own kind."&#13;
The message advanced by&#13;
"A Soldier's Story" is forthright&#13;
and poignant. It clearly&#13;
shows that the most biting&#13;
prejudice comes from within&#13;
one's own race, when miscommunication&#13;
among kindreds&#13;
becomes so pronounced&#13;
as to incite violence. Although&#13;
Caesar is billed as a supporting&#13;
actor, the film spotlights&#13;
his character as the vortex&#13;
which sucks all others into&#13;
the vicissitudes of tragedy.&#13;
The real poignancy of that&#13;
tragedy is transmitted&#13;
through the remarkable performance&#13;
of all concerned.&#13;
Rollins, as usual, is superlative,&#13;
spending most of his&#13;
screen time in sunglasses and&#13;
still conveying a cornucopia&#13;
of emotion without the benefit&#13;
of eye expression. Also good&#13;
are minor supporting players&#13;
like Denzel Washington and&#13;
Larry Riley, whose performances&#13;
as soldier/suspects do&#13;
much to create the aura of intrigue&#13;
permeating this film.&#13;
Stealing the show, however,&#13;
is Caesar, who earned an&#13;
Oscar nomination as the man&#13;
so confused by his own and&#13;
his race's identity that his&#13;
death seems a foregone conclusion.&#13;
No matter how vicious&#13;
and forceful he is with&#13;
his battalion, he never loses&#13;
his humanity in the eyes of&#13;
the audience, which recognizes&#13;
the root of his brutality&#13;
- even if it doesn't understand&#13;
it.&#13;
' A Soldier's Story" is an&#13;
important film. Don't miss it.&#13;
WANTED: STUDENTS I NTERESTED IN:&#13;
MINORITY AFFAIRS: Next meeting Monday, Nov. 25, 1&#13;
p.m. Moln D107 Civil Rights Restoration, minority issues on&#13;
campus.&#13;
WOMEN'S AFFAIRS: Next meeting Monday, Nov. 25, 1&#13;
p.m. WLLC D137A. Wanted: Politically motivated women who&#13;
want to see changes at UW-Parkside.&#13;
LEGISLATIVE AFFAIRS: Next meeting Wednesday, Nov.&#13;
20, 12 noon WLLC D137A. Protect YOUR f inancial aid at the&#13;
Legislative Level. Lobby legislators on YOUR issues.&#13;
STUDENT SERVICES: Next meeting Friday, Nov. 22,11 a.m.&#13;
WLLC D173A . S.A.F.E. Project - Student Acquired Faculty&#13;
Evaluations. Formation of a food co-op for students.&#13;
For More Information, Contact:&#13;
PSGA, INC.&#13;
553-2036&#13;
Kier to play&#13;
This week's Performer Showcase entertainer is Kier.&#13;
Having recorded one LP in 1982, Kier is now working on&#13;
his second album. A highly polished performer, Kier&#13;
plays guitar, piano and harmonica, sings and uses a health&#13;
dose of humor. He will perform on Wednesday, Nov. 20&#13;
in the Union Bazaar. Admission and popcorn are free, as&#13;
always.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, November 14, 1985 7&#13;
Dick Cavett&#13;
A talk with a veteran of the TV talk show by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Dick Cavett has been involved&#13;
in show business for&#13;
many years as a comedy&#13;
writer, interviewer and actor.&#13;
During a recent phone interview&#13;
from his New York&#13;
home, Cavett recalled his&#13;
start as America's least&#13;
pretentious talk show host.&#13;
"My only ambition was to&#13;
be a guest on programs like&#13;
the Carson Show," he said.&#13;
"It never occurred to me that&#13;
I'd be a host. I was seen as a&#13;
guest host for Carson and was&#13;
subsequently given my own&#13;
show."&#13;
Cavett has interviewed&#13;
such diverse talents as Tennessee&#13;
Williams, Woody Allen&#13;
(whom Cavett "discovered"),&#13;
jazz pianist Oscar Peterson&#13;
and, one of Cavett's favorite&#13;
interview subject, Groucho&#13;
Marx.&#13;
"I interviewed Groucho&#13;
several times over the years,&#13;
Tar gel • • •&#13;
the best interview being a one&#13;
hour show I did him him as&#13;
the only guest. He was truly&#13;
at his best.&#13;
"When we first met, I told&#13;
him that there were lines&#13;
around the block to see his&#13;
films at New York revival&#13;
theaters and such, and he&#13;
found that hard to believe. Of&#13;
course he realized, very suddenly&#13;
after that, how true it&#13;
was. I almost lost him in a&#13;
mob in New York once!"&#13;
In Cavett's latest book,&#13;
"Eye on Cavett," he recounts&#13;
an incident concerning&#13;
Groucho's appearance at Carnegie&#13;
Hall in New York.&#13;
Groucho was feeble and near&#13;
death at the time of these appearances.&#13;
Cavett recalled&#13;
that things looked rather&#13;
bleak just before the legendary&#13;
comic was to appear before&#13;
the massive throngs of&#13;
admirers in the audience.&#13;
Fortunately, his worry was&#13;
for naught.&#13;
"When Groucho died,"&#13;
"My only ambition was to be a guest on&#13;
programs like the Carson show. It never&#13;
occurred to me that I'd be a host."&#13;
-Dick Cavett&#13;
Cavett continued, "they did&#13;
an obituary show hosted by&#13;
Harry Reasoner and took&#13;
clips from various shows I&#13;
had done with him. Viewing&#13;
them all together, you could&#13;
see a slight but steady decline&#13;
in Grouch's health in each&#13;
one."&#13;
One of the things that characterizes&#13;
Cavett's interviews&#13;
from others is his total lack&#13;
of stuffy pretension. Often&#13;
having showbiz friends as&#13;
guests, Cavett will go off on&#13;
amusing tangents about what&#13;
he and the guest did at one&#13;
time or another. "Some people&#13;
find that nauseating," said&#13;
Cavett.&#13;
Perhaps the most undesirable&#13;
incident ever to befall&#13;
Cavett was having a guest acNewPenn&#13;
film offers action&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Director Arthur Penn can&#13;
be credited for helping to&#13;
spawn the seventies generation&#13;
of serious film enthusiasts&#13;
with his classic "Bonnie&#13;
and Clyde." These directorial&#13;
talents are asserted&#13;
once again in his latest film,&#13;
"Target."&#13;
Featured are Gene Hackman&#13;
and Matt Dillon, two of&#13;
the screen's strongest character&#13;
personalities. The fatherson&#13;
dissension between their&#13;
characters is the axis of the&#13;
film, which deals with the&#13;
kidnapping of wife and mother&#13;
Gayle Hunnicut, forcing&#13;
Hackman to reveal that he&#13;
was once a CIA undercover&#13;
agent, a secret he has always&#13;
kept from his son.&#13;
The basic story is rather&#13;
far-fetched, but seems plausible&#13;
due to the excellence of&#13;
its presentation. The acting is&#13;
top drawer, Hackman and&#13;
Dillon utilizing their abilities&#13;
for all they're worth. Hackman's&#13;
scenes often fondly recall&#13;
that actor's unforgettable&#13;
performance in William&#13;
Friedkin's "The French&#13;
Connection."&#13;
The film manages to be intriguing&#13;
and exciting, with&#13;
several well-staged action sequences,&#13;
while adding&#13;
touches of humor. These elements&#13;
could easily clash within&#13;
the film's narrative, but&#13;
here they blend cohesively to&#13;
form a well-paced, tightly&#13;
structured entertainment&#13;
package.&#13;
While "Target" is not essentially&#13;
one of the great&#13;
films of contemporary American&#13;
cinema as are "Bonnie&#13;
and Clyde" and "The French&#13;
Connection," it still deserves&#13;
strong merit as an enjoyable&#13;
feature, with two of the&#13;
screen's most important performers&#13;
and one of its finest&#13;
directors. It also manages to&#13;
feature action sequences&#13;
which eschew the repugnant&#13;
gore found in so many recent&#13;
movie shoot-em-ups.&#13;
In the midst of this terrifically&#13;
bad year for movies,&#13;
"Target" stands out as an exceptional&#13;
effort. In the entire&#13;
realm of motion pictures, it&#13;
at least holds its own as a&#13;
competent little actioner&#13;
enhanced by the acting and&#13;
direction.&#13;
Christmas events at PA C&#13;
A variety of holiday events&#13;
make up the Nights Before&#13;
Christmas program at the&#13;
Performing Arts Center this&#13;
year, according to PAC&#13;
Managing Director Archie A.&#13;
Sarazin.&#13;
The Carroll College music&#13;
department will present a&#13;
free Christmas Music Pageant&#13;
on Friday, Dec. 6 in Uihlein&#13;
Hall at noon. The concert&#13;
will include the Carroll College&#13;
concert, chapel and bell&#13;
choirs and the concert band.&#13;
A choir processional and&#13;
audience sing-along will be&#13;
part of the holiday pageant.&#13;
Harvey Phillips' "Tuba&#13;
Christmas" returns to the&#13;
PAC for the fifth consecutive&#13;
year. Twenty tubists dressed&#13;
as Santa Claus will perform&#13;
traditional and contemporary&#13;
holiday music in Uihlein Hall&#13;
on Saturday, Dec. 7 at 10 a.m.&#13;
and noon. Reserved seat tickets&#13;
for "Tuba Christmas"&#13;
cost $2.50 and are available at&#13;
the PAC Box Office from&#13;
noon to 9 p.m. daily, or by&#13;
calling Phonecharge, 273-7206,&#13;
and charging tickets to Mastercard,&#13;
VISA or American&#13;
Express accounts. There is a&#13;
two dollar handling free for&#13;
all Phonecharge orders.&#13;
Visitors and auidiences of&#13;
the PAC can conduct their&#13;
holiday shopping at the&#13;
Nights Before Christmas Art&#13;
Boutique in Magin Gallery,&#13;
Nov. 7-Dec. 26. The boutique&#13;
will display and sell the&#13;
works of more than 50 artists.&#13;
Jewelry, pottery, blown and&#13;
stained glass, photography,&#13;
weavings, basketry and&#13;
works of wood, paper, leather&#13;
and fabric will be sold.&#13;
The Boutique will be open&#13;
weekdays from noon until 2&#13;
p.m. and one hour before,&#13;
during intermission and for 30&#13;
minutes following all Uihlein&#13;
Hall performances and Milwaukee&#13;
Repertory Theater&#13;
matinees.&#13;
tually drop dead on his program&#13;
during the interview.&#13;
"It was a stunning, awful&#13;
event at the time," he said.&#13;
"This person had been on&#13;
other talk shows, stating that&#13;
he was going to live to be 100,&#13;
so the black comedy in the&#13;
situation was just unbelievable."&#13;
While it seems Cavett has&#13;
interviewed virtually everyone&#13;
in show business, there is&#13;
still at least one performer he&#13;
longs to have on his show, but&#13;
alas, never has.&#13;
"Cary Grant," said Cavett.&#13;
"The last time I was in California,&#13;
I talked to him and he&#13;
assured me he wouldn't be&#13;
any good, while I tried convincing&#13;
him he would be at&#13;
least passable.&#13;
"It's so wonderful talking&#13;
to him on the phone; my&#13;
mouth waters and I think, 'O&#13;
God, if I could only get this&#13;
on the air.' "&#13;
As an actor, Cavett played&#13;
the lead in the Broadway&#13;
show "Otherwise Engaged,"&#13;
after having performed in&#13;
many other stage productions.&#13;
His Broadway experience&#13;
was a total delight, and&#13;
he wishes to do more. However,&#13;
he states, "There are so&#13;
few shows on Broadway you'd&#13;
want to see, let alone be in. I&#13;
missed the golden age of&#13;
everything!"&#13;
Dick Cavett can presently&#13;
be seen on the USA Cable&#13;
Network with his thoroughly&#13;
enjoyable interview sessions&#13;
featuring some of the most&#13;
fascinating people in or out of&#13;
the entertainment field. He&#13;
remains one of the most&#13;
charming, witty, perspicacious&#13;
interviewers and personalities&#13;
in all of contemporary&#13;
show business.&#13;
Gene Hackman and Matt Dillon in "Target."&#13;
Tan Before You Travel Don't burn on your vacation. The Midnight Sun can help&#13;
your skin so you can enjoy your holiday vacations...or&#13;
just treat yourself to 30 minutes of r elaxation and come&#13;
out looking great!&#13;
College Student Special&#13;
10 sessions for $40.00&#13;
(Bring your I.D.)&#13;
Featuring Wolff and Solana Beds&#13;
Gift Certificates&#13;
Free 15 min. for new customers&#13;
icfnight Sun&#13;
Tanning Salon&#13;
609 Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
Downtown Racine&#13;
633-3022&#13;
Open Mon.-fri. 10-8&#13;
Sat. 8-1&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Brine on the Nieht • •&#13;
Good music, boring narrative&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Death Wish 3&#13;
Zero stars is still&#13;
too good a rating&#13;
Most musical documentaries&#13;
detail the final days of a&#13;
group, capturing either nostalgia&#13;
(as in The Band's&#13;
"Last Waltz") or dissolution&#13;
(as in the Beatles "Let It&#13;
Be"). With "Bring on the&#13;
Night," however, Sting seeks&#13;
to chronicle the beginnings of&#13;
a band.&#13;
Directed by Michael Apted&#13;
("Coal Miner's Daughter"),&#13;
"Bring on the Night" is an innocuous&#13;
rockumentary which&#13;
nonetheless fails to execute&#13;
its intentions. Instead of conveying&#13;
the gradual coalescence&#13;
of the six jazz musicians&#13;
Sting recruited for his&#13;
"Dream of the Blue Turtles"&#13;
LP, the picture plays as little&#13;
more than a "Sting Variety&#13;
Hour."&#13;
Of and by itself, this is no&#13;
tragedy. An introspective,&#13;
pensive intellectual, Sting -&#13;
both as lead singer of the&#13;
Police and on his own - has&#13;
written some of the most lyrically&#13;
beautiful music of the&#13;
'80's. His talent is in abundant&#13;
evidence here, as he&#13;
sweats through stirring performances&#13;
of such numbers&#13;
as "Shadows in the Rain,"-&#13;
"Fortress Around Your&#13;
Heart" and "We Work the&#13;
Black Seam," all from "Turtles,"&#13;
his first solo album.&#13;
En route, he continually&#13;
boasts that his new band&#13;
(which includes Miles Davis'&#13;
bassist Branford Marsalis&#13;
and Weather Report's drummer&#13;
-Omar Hakim) adds a&#13;
Sting sings through latest documentary&#13;
new. more exciting dimension&#13;
to his music. And yet, "Bring&#13;
on the Night's" most moving&#13;
moments come when Sting&#13;
assumes center stage alone&#13;
and offers soulful renditions&#13;
of "Roxanne" and "Message&#13;
in a Bottle" - both big Police&#13;
hits.&#13;
Filmed entirely in Paris,&#13;
the movie is visually striking,&#13;
using historical wonders as a&#13;
metaphor for what Sting is&#13;
trying to create: a stable, interrelated&#13;
structure strong&#13;
enough to weather the advancement&#13;
of years. These&#13;
sights, along with a fantastic&#13;
scene of Der Stingle belting&#13;
out "Meet the Flintstones,"&#13;
somewhat manage to pick up&#13;
the slack during long&#13;
stretches of inane interviews&#13;
with group members, roadies&#13;
and managers.&#13;
In the last analysis, then,&#13;
"Bring on the Night" is a fine&#13;
diversion for Sting's fans, as&#13;
long as they don't attend expecting&#13;
to see anything but a&#13;
very talented man steal a&#13;
very misleading show.&#13;
Starshio&#13;
Latest album a big comedown&#13;
by Kristy Harrington&#13;
The album cover of the new&#13;
Starship LP reminds one of&#13;
the extravagant spring fashion&#13;
clothing at "Merry-Go-&#13;
Round." Starship's "Knee&#13;
Deep in the Hoopla," on RCA&#13;
Records, is the unedited&#13;
understatement for their&#13;
latest-sounding LP.&#13;
Band members Mick and&#13;
Slick have everything it takes&#13;
to produce a great sounding&#13;
single like "We Built This&#13;
City," but the band contributed&#13;
nothing but the background&#13;
noise. The groove is&#13;
there, it's just not enthusiastic&#13;
enough.&#13;
Being too competitive with&#13;
the younger-sounding English&#13;
pop bands, the new sound is&#13;
not very appealing compared&#13;
to what we're used to hearing.&#13;
The lyrics are redundant&#13;
and boisterous. This miscellaneous&#13;
collection of words was&#13;
rhapsodically stitched together.&#13;
Believe it or not, this is&#13;
the same duo responsible for&#13;
the vocals of last year's hit&#13;
singles, "Laying it on the&#13;
Line" and "No Way Out,"&#13;
from the "Nuclear Furniture"&#13;
album.&#13;
For a band that once held it&#13;
all, Starship now holds nothing&#13;
other than a different&#13;
name. Starship is travelling&#13;
toward a very rickety future.&#13;
20 Off&#13;
Chocolate&#13;
Mints Week of Nov. 18-22&#13;
We have a full&#13;
selection of&#13;
Candy &amp; N uts&#13;
Union Bazaar&#13;
Directly Across from the info Center&#13;
10 am - 4 pm Mon. thru. Fri.&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
There is only one thing&#13;
worst than a bad movie: an&#13;
inhumane bad movie. "Death&#13;
Wish 3" defines the latter&#13;
category.&#13;
The absolute worst film this&#13;
writer has ever seen, "Death&#13;
Wish 3" isn't merely inept at&#13;
all levels of production; it is&#13;
also the most morally repugnant&#13;
motion picture Hollywood&#13;
has ever had the nerve&#13;
to vomit into a movie theater.&#13;
Once again, Charles Bronson&#13;
stars as steely-eyed Paul&#13;
Kersey, whose solution to&#13;
crime in the streets is the&#13;
eradication of criminals. In&#13;
the original "Death Wish," he&#13;
opened his one-man vigilante&#13;
roadshow after his wife and&#13;
daughter were attacked -&#13;
resulting in the former's&#13;
death and the latter's catatonia.&#13;
He picked up where he&#13;
left off in the first sequel,&#13;
with slightly hazy motivation&#13;
that still seemed perversely&#13;
justified.&#13;
In "Death Wish 3," however,&#13;
Kersey's antics are just&#13;
as mindlessly brutal as the&#13;
antics of those he's snuffing&#13;
out. Actually bonded by a&#13;
New York City police investigator&#13;
(Ed Lauter) to blow&#13;
away a batallion of bad-guy&#13;
punks. Kersey has lost any&#13;
trace of humanity. While his&#13;
earlier exploits seemed more&#13;
the desperate actions of a&#13;
man with nowhere else to&#13;
turn, his attitude in this film&#13;
is grotesquely flippant. He&#13;
The very fact that he has&#13;
fellow vigilantes is also quite&#13;
revolting. Given all the brouhaha&#13;
over the Bernard Goetz&#13;
incident of last year, this film&#13;
exhibits no inkling of responsibility,&#13;
delighting in showing&#13;
old women and young children&#13;
brandishing firearms&#13;
(including machine guns) in&#13;
the name of "making the&#13;
streets safe."&#13;
But the streets aren't made&#13;
safer by Bronson's indiscriminate&#13;
blasting - they're&#13;
made even more dangerous.&#13;
All things considered,&#13;
"Death Wish 3" makes one&#13;
wish there were a lower rating&#13;
to give a film than zero&#13;
stars.&#13;
murders at least 40 "creeps"&#13;
here, smirking and joking&#13;
with his fellow vigilantes&#13;
through at least half of them.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, November 14, 1985 9&#13;
Joe His&#13;
Reggae LP asserts soulful style&#13;
by Jim Nelbaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Reggae is music that is&#13;
very heartfelt, political and&#13;
religious. These elements are&#13;
exemplified in the best of this&#13;
musical genre, one of the&#13;
more skilled exhibitors of this&#13;
style being Joe Higgs.&#13;
On his new Alligator LP&#13;
"Triumph," Higgs shows us&#13;
just why he is known as the&#13;
father of reggae. The songs&#13;
all endow the listener with a&#13;
soulful exhuberance that separates&#13;
Jamaican music from&#13;
the emptiness of standard&#13;
Top Forty pop.&#13;
"Sound of the City," a&#13;
remake of a track Higgs once&#13;
performed with Jimmy Cliff,&#13;
is a searing indictment of the&#13;
hazards of the Babylon&#13;
slums. "Step by Step" is an&#13;
emotional song about the&#13;
black man's standing his&#13;
ground. Virtually every cut&#13;
on the LP has some significance&#13;
in that it assists in defining&#13;
the quality of this&#13;
musical style.&#13;
Music has often been a&#13;
form of artistic expression&#13;
when the artist chooses to utilize&#13;
more depth in his or her&#13;
compositions than what is&#13;
found in the forgettable,&#13;
throwaway electronic meanderings&#13;
that have invaded&#13;
most commercial recordings.&#13;
Higgs gives the listener that&#13;
sorely-needed depth, making&#13;
him one of the most important&#13;
"serious" musicians in&#13;
reggae since the death of Bob&#13;
Marley.&#13;
Joni Mitchell&#13;
Comeback released&#13;
TV review&#13;
a Highway to Heaven" is no paradise&#13;
by Nick Toper&#13;
Not many artists can get&#13;
away playing an angel on network&#13;
television. Michael Landon&#13;
can, although I've no idea&#13;
why.&#13;
As executive producer, director,&#13;
scriptwriter, star and&#13;
principal swelled head of&#13;
NBC's sophomore series&#13;
"Highway to Heaven," the&#13;
small screen's favorite pillar&#13;
of sensitivity has enjoyed angelic&#13;
ratings success. As&#13;
earthbound angel Jonathan&#13;
Smith (get it?), Landon -just&#13;
as he did on "Little House on&#13;
the Prairie" -makes the&#13;
world perpetually safe for&#13;
schmaltz.&#13;
"Highway to Heaven"&#13;
(Wednesdays at 7 p.m. on&#13;
Channels 4 and 5) could more&#13;
aptly be titled "Sidewalk to&#13;
Soapbox," since it serves as&#13;
little more than an arena in&#13;
which Landon can be preachy&#13;
and pretentious and shed a&#13;
few phony tears in the process.&#13;
Along with "Little&#13;
House" crony Vic French, he&#13;
seeks out souls whose religious&#13;
pursuits have hit detours&#13;
(e.g., citizens who refuse&#13;
to concern themselves&#13;
with toxic waste dumping in&#13;
their community) and guides&#13;
them back onto the pathway&#13;
of piousness.&#13;
But it just doesn't wash. Illustrating&#13;
his proclivity for&#13;
moronic sentimentality in&#13;
ever facet of production, Landon&#13;
beats his sappiness home&#13;
with all the subtlety of a lovestaved&#13;
hippopotamus charging&#13;
toward Shelley Winters.&#13;
As his little heart play drones&#13;
on, viewers actually feel as if&#13;
they're being strangled by his&#13;
unrelenting heavy-handedness&#13;
- which he tries to&#13;
mask as real live emotion.&#13;
Don't let yourself be fooled.&#13;
"Highway to Heaven" is television&#13;
at its most ungodly.&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Joni Mitchell's latest release,&#13;
"Dog Eat Dog" on&#13;
Warner Bros., has a front&#13;
cover showing the singer&#13;
being attacked by a pack of&#13;
vicous canines. The listener is&#13;
forgiven for hoping she loses.&#13;
The sixties folk purist has&#13;
incorporated the likes of Michael&#13;
McDonald, Thomas&#13;
Dolby and James Taylor for&#13;
this so-called comback effort,&#13;
the results being two sides of&#13;
electronic vapidity. Mitchell&#13;
has been commended for&#13;
years as a classic folk-to-rock&#13;
artist who speaks with her&#13;
heart and her mind. The&#13;
songs on this comeback record&#13;
exhibit none of these&#13;
qualities.&#13;
None of the passion that&#13;
colors Mitchell's earlier work&#13;
is evident on this slow, dull,&#13;
ponderous effort. It presents&#13;
the listener with a series of&#13;
throwaway tracks that belie&#13;
any of the prowess Mitchell&#13;
has shown in the past as a&#13;
singer-songwriter.&#13;
One of the more depressing&#13;
things about comebacks is&#13;
that a once-gifted artist from&#13;
the past does no more than to&#13;
display an incapability of retaining&#13;
those fondly-remember&#13;
talents the listener is expecting.&#13;
Critically, folks like&#13;
Mick Jagger and Paul McCartney&#13;
have hung around&#13;
too long, while performers&#13;
the likes of Mitchell and John&#13;
Joni Mitchell&#13;
Fogerty should never have&#13;
come back. The ugly truth&#13;
about it, though, is that these&#13;
feeble attempts at recapturing&#13;
a once-glorious past are&#13;
bigger sellers than the original&#13;
works. There's no accounting&#13;
for taste... or the&#13;
lack of it.&#13;
Stop in at the Ranger&#13;
Office, WLLC D-139C&#13;
(next to the Coffee&#13;
Shoppe)&#13;
10 Thursday, November 14, 1985 RANGER&#13;
ICROSSWORP PUZZLER&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
Men's team primed for Nationals&#13;
by Mike Rohl&#13;
The men's cross country&#13;
team will be competing in the&#13;
NAIA National Championship&#13;
meet this weekend held here&#13;
at Parkside. The team was&#13;
ranked sixth in last week's&#13;
poll. The seven who will be&#13;
running are Rich Miller,:&#13;
Mark Hunt, Joe Eichner,&#13;
John Hunt, Anthony Braccio,&#13;
Scott Rench and Andy Serrano.&#13;
The team is young and&#13;
has good depth; only two of&#13;
the top seven will not be returning&#13;
next year. Here is a&#13;
brief profile of each of the&#13;
athletes:&#13;
Rich Miller is one of the&#13;
two seniors on the team. He&#13;
has been the team's number&#13;
one runner and has beaten&#13;
over 95% of his competitin.&#13;
He has been with the program&#13;
for four years and has&#13;
competed in this meet the&#13;
past three years.&#13;
Mark Hunt, a junior who&#13;
was injured all last year, has&#13;
come back to have a very&#13;
strong season. He has run&#13;
this meet before, competing&#13;
in indoor and outdoor track&#13;
nationals.&#13;
Joe Eichner, a junior college&#13;
transfer, is the team's&#13;
third runner. He is a junior&#13;
college Ail-American in cross&#13;
country and track.&#13;
John Hunt is also in his&#13;
third year. A one-year layoff&#13;
from the team hasn't hurt&#13;
him at all.&#13;
Anthony Braccio is a freshman&#13;
from Boston. He was&#13;
third in the Massachusetts&#13;
state meet in the mile. He&#13;
had some trouble in the middle&#13;
of the year but seems to&#13;
have come back strong.&#13;
Sophomore Scott Rench&#13;
broke into the top seven in&#13;
the middle of the season. In&#13;
his first season he was a&#13;
bright hopeful but was&#13;
stopped by illness. This year&#13;
he has stayed healthy.&#13;
Andy Serrano is the seventh&#13;
man and the team's second&#13;
senior. He has also run in this&#13;
meet three times. Probably&#13;
the strongest hill runner, he&#13;
can bring the team in well.&#13;
The course is wet and slow,&#13;
which will be to the home&#13;
team's advantage. The course&#13;
is also one of the hardest and&#13;
the best in the country.&#13;
Freshmen wrestlers impressive in season's first match&#13;
The Ranger wrestlers opened&#13;
their season in Stevens&#13;
Point, and three freshmen&#13;
captured gold medals in the&#13;
freshmen-only division.&#13;
The meet was open for the&#13;
20 teams that competed in the&#13;
tournament. There were no&#13;
team scores kept.&#13;
Karl Price, Ted Price and&#13;
Arthur Demerath each placed&#13;
first in their weight class.&#13;
• 177-pound Karl Price outpointed&#13;
Bill Garron of Superior,&#13;
6-2, in his third victory&#13;
of the day.&#13;
167-pound Ted Price pinned&#13;
his first two opponents and&#13;
beat Paul Thein of Mankato&#13;
State, 13-6, in the championship.&#13;
118-pound Demerath also&#13;
pinned two opponents before&#13;
beating Paul Perez of Mankato&#13;
State, 9-5, i n the championship.&#13;
Three other wrestlers also&#13;
finished high in the freshmen&#13;
division. 158-pound Kevin Yde&#13;
placed second. 134-pound&#13;
Troy Miller placed third, and&#13;
150-pound Gavin Langen placed&#13;
fourth.&#13;
Two other Ranger wrestlers&#13;
placed high in the open division.&#13;
190-pound Sean Yde&#13;
placed third, winning the consolation&#13;
final 8-2 over Mike&#13;
Gabrin of Northern Michigan.&#13;
142-pound Jack Danner lost&#13;
the consolation final 4-2 to&#13;
Eric Swiggens of Platteville,&#13;
placing fourth.&#13;
The team travels to Northern&#13;
Michigan on Saturday to&#13;
compete in another open&#13;
meet.&#13;
Puzzler Answers on page&#13;
DOWN&#13;
1 Limb&#13;
2 Note of scale&#13;
3 High caFd&#13;
4 Flesh&#13;
5 Bar legally&#13;
6 Symbol for iron&#13;
7 Teutonic deity&#13;
8 Metric measure&#13;
9 North American&#13;
rail&#13;
10 Three-base hit&#13;
11 Metal&#13;
13 Surfeits&#13;
16 Walk&#13;
19 Arrows&#13;
21 Periods of time&#13;
22 Farm structures&#13;
25 Animal&#13;
27 Burdened&#13;
30 Take from&#13;
32 Prance&#13;
34 Group of three&#13;
36 Lavishes&#13;
fondness&#13;
on&#13;
37 Newspaper&#13;
executive&#13;
38 Spreads for&#13;
drying&#13;
40 Gotten up&#13;
41 Ran easily&#13;
44 Pertaining to&#13;
birth&#13;
47 Game played on&#13;
horseback&#13;
49 Ivy League&#13;
university&#13;
52 Man's nickname&#13;
54 Edge&#13;
57 Myself&#13;
58 Japanese&#13;
drama&#13;
Italy&#13;
Wrist-wrestling set for Sunday&#13;
The Parkside Baseball Club&#13;
will present its first annual&#13;
Wrist-Wrestling competition&#13;
at 1 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 17&#13;
• ANDERSON TRANSCRIPTION •&#13;
• AND TYPING •&#13;
• Letters - Resumes 4&#13;
• Term Papers •&#13;
Student Rates J&#13;
4 PHONE 637-3600 6&#13;
6 CALL AFTER 4 P.M. 4&#13;
6 6&#13;
• Jackie Anderson •&#13;
6 1441 Park Avenue 4&#13;
4 Racine, Wisconsin 4&#13;
in the campus Union Dining&#13;
Room.&#13;
Admission to the fund-raising&#13;
event, open to the public,&#13;
is $1 for students and $2 for&#13;
others. Entries are also being&#13;
accepted into the competition,&#13;
and are $4 i n advance and $5&#13;
at the door.&#13;
For complete information&#13;
on the event, call Dale Phillips&#13;
in the Parkside Athletic&#13;
Department at 553-2245.&#13;
The competition will feature&#13;
Parkside baseball player&#13;
Darin Gardner, who is a national&#13;
wrist-wrestling champion.&#13;
Phillips said, adding&#13;
that it was Gardner's involvement&#13;
with the sport that led&#13;
to this event.&#13;
Wrist-wrestling has six&#13;
weight divisions for men and&#13;
four for women. There is both&#13;
right- and left-handed competition&#13;
for men and women&#13;
in all weight classes. Weighin&#13;
for the competition is set&#13;
for noon the day of the event.&#13;
Proceeds from the event,&#13;
which is being sponsored by&#13;
CJW, Inc., distributors of&#13;
Miller Beer in Kenosha, will&#13;
go to support the baseball&#13;
team's spring program.&#13;
The competition is sanctioned&#13;
by the U.S. Wrist-Wrestling&#13;
Association and winners&#13;
are eligible to advance to the&#13;
World Olympic Wrist-Wrestling&#13;
Tournament to be held in&#13;
Milwaukee on Dec. 1.&#13;
ACROSS&#13;
1 Reproach&#13;
6 Sumptuous&#13;
meal&#13;
11 Fastens tightly&#13;
12 Mistakes&#13;
14 Sun god&#13;
15 Bores into&#13;
17 Silkworm&#13;
18 In addition&#13;
20 Carries&#13;
23 Likely&#13;
24 Strikebreaker&#13;
26 Danger&#13;
28 French article&#13;
29 Termagant&#13;
31 Pretentious&#13;
homes&#13;
33 Fruit cake&#13;
35 Soft drink&#13;
36 Dinner course&#13;
39 Part of flower&#13;
42 Hypothetical&#13;
force&#13;
43 Unit of Chinese&#13;
currency&#13;
45 Roman tyrant&#13;
46 Gratuity&#13;
48 At present&#13;
50 Tear&#13;
51 Short jacket&#13;
53 Asterisk&#13;
55 Compass point&#13;
56 Somber&#13;
59 Wing-footed&#13;
61 Cowboy&#13;
competition&#13;
62 Citrus fruit&#13;
1985-86 Wrestling Team&#13;
RANGER Thursday, November 14, 1985 11&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Rangers handed District, beat Northwestern&#13;
by Richard Blay&#13;
The Ranger soccer team&#13;
finished the regular season on&#13;
a high note defeating the&#13;
Wildcats of Northwestern 1-0&#13;
on Sunday.&#13;
The game was played in&#13;
Evanston, Illinois.&#13;
The score was tied with less&#13;
than ten minutes left in the&#13;
contest when Ail-American&#13;
sweeper Andy Buchanan&#13;
scored frmo 35 yards out to&#13;
put the Rangers up 1-0.&#13;
Buchanan's shot hit the crossbar&#13;
and deflected off the&#13;
Wildcat keeper and bounced&#13;
into the net.&#13;
Coach Rick Kilps was&#13;
pleased with the outcome as&#13;
well as the performance of&#13;
the defense.&#13;
"The defense looked very&#13;
good the whole game. They&#13;
played tough, not allowing&#13;
Northwestern any real&#13;
chances at our net. Northwestern&#13;
was a little flat coming&#13;
off a tie with Northern&#13;
Illinois University on Saturday.&#13;
We caught them at the&#13;
right time."&#13;
Now the team is looking towards&#13;
Spartansburg, South&#13;
Carolina, the home of this&#13;
year's NAIA National Soccer&#13;
Championship. The Rangers&#13;
must beat Grandview, Iowa&#13;
here. (The game was played,&#13;
yesterday, Nov. 13, too late&#13;
for publication in this week's&#13;
issue of Ranger.)&#13;
They would then travel to&#13;
Sangamon State University in&#13;
Springfield, 111. The Rangers&#13;
beat Sangamon last year 2-1&#13;
to gain a berth in the 1984 National&#13;
Tournament held in&#13;
Fresno, California.&#13;
Coach Kilps believes the&#13;
team must "play better if&#13;
they want to go to Nationals.&#13;
Tactially, we are still not&#13;
doing what we should be&#13;
doing. We still have not made&#13;
good of our scoring opportunities,&#13;
and we are not going to&#13;
get many chances against&#13;
Sangamon, if we beat Grandview."&#13;
Soccer Results&#13;
Parkside (P) - 1&#13;
vs. Northwestern(N) -&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 10&#13;
0&#13;
First Half Scoring: None.&#13;
Second Half Scoring: 1. Buchanan (unassisted) 9:40.&#13;
Shots: P-13, N-7; Fouls: P-27, N-22; Corner Kicks:&#13;
P-7, N-9; Saves: P-6, N-5.&#13;
Women runners&#13;
headed for&#13;
Pennsylvania&#13;
by Mike Rohl&#13;
The women's cross-country&#13;
team finished second at the&#13;
NCAA division II regional&#13;
meet. They were second to&#13;
Ashland 44-49.&#13;
The girls gained a large bid&#13;
and will be traveling to East&#13;
Strouseburg, Pennsylvania&#13;
for the national meet. The&#13;
course in Ashland was muddy&#13;
and slow but that didn't slow&#13;
the Parkside runners down.&#13;
Michelle Marter placed third&#13;
in a time of 18:50. Jill Fobair&#13;
was fourth in 18:58. Sarah&#13;
Hiett was sixth in 19:10.&#13;
Karen Jacobson finished 17th&#13;
in 19:44. Julie McReynolds&#13;
placed 25th in 20:01. Nancy&#13;
Marter and Colleen Weismer&#13;
were 36th and 49th times of&#13;
20:25 and 20:56.&#13;
The women's team has four&#13;
All-Americans and six have&#13;
run this meet before. Coach&#13;
Mike DeWitt said, "The&#13;
course will be muddier and&#13;
harder than the one in Ashland."&#13;
This, however, should&#13;
not affect the women since&#13;
they seem to run well under&#13;
the worst conditions. When&#13;
asked about the team chances&#13;
he said, "The girls feel that&#13;
they could come away with a&#13;
trophy." There will be over&#13;
300 competitors in the NAIA&#13;
meet.&#13;
The NCAA meet, on the&#13;
other hand, wil have a little&#13;
over 100 runners entered.&#13;
There are as many schools in&#13;
both but the NCAA invites 11&#13;
teams and the NAIA, 33. The&#13;
top three women seem to&#13;
have the same chances to be&#13;
All-American in both.&#13;
Get your&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Coupon&#13;
Book!&#13;
Buy a season ticket to UW-P BASKETBALL&#13;
and be eligible for the RANGER RAFFLE...&#13;
ALL FOR ONLY $5!&#13;
• A season pass to 14 UW-Parkside home&#13;
games, including the Ranger Classic,&#13;
which opens the season Nov. 22-23&#13;
• A chance to win prizes totalling&#13;
$2,000 at the end of the season&#13;
• A chance to win $100 by sinking the&#13;
"Long Ranger" shot from half court&#13;
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS:&#13;
YOUR $5 SEASON TICKET IS ALSO A&#13;
RAFFLE TICKET! YOU COULD WIN:&#13;
1st PRIZE: $500 Cash&#13;
2nd PRIZE: $500 Color TV&#13;
3rd PRIZE: $500 Savings Bond&#13;
4th thru 8th PRIZES: $100 Cash&#13;
Drawing will be held on February 15,1986,&#13;
during half-time of the home basketball game&#13;
against Northern Michigan University. Winner&#13;
need not be present to win.&#13;
UW-Parkside wishes to thank our sponsors for providing pri zes.&#13;
PLEASE PA TRONIZE OUR SPONSORS. AMERICAN STATE&#13;
BANK, CASA CAPRI RESTAURANT,CJW, INC.. GENES&#13;
CONSTRUCTION. JAMES CAPE &amp; SONS. LANDA LAW&#13;
OFFICES, LAWN MAGIC, 7-UP BOTTLING, SPARKS&#13;
INSURANCE. VIGANSKY TV &amp; APPLIANCE&#13;
Raffle license #R5433-R-286.&#13;
Season tickets&#13;
are available NOW&#13;
at the Phy Ed Center&#13;
Individual game tickets are $2.50&#13;
($1 age 12 and under)&#13;
1985-86 HOME SCHEDULE&#13;
$5 SEASON TICKET FOR 14 HOME GAMES (INCLUDES&#13;
RANGER CLASSIC TOURNEY):&#13;
DAY DATE OPPONENT TIME&#13;
Fri.&#13;
AND&#13;
11/22/85 RANGER CLASSIC&#13;
TOURNE Y 7&amp;9PM&#13;
LAKELAND COLLEGE&#13;
INDIANA U-SOUTH BEND&#13;
ROSARY COLLEGE&#13;
Sat. 11/23/85 RANGER CLASSIC 7&amp;9PM&#13;
Wed. 11/27/85 CARTHAGE COLLEGE 7:30 PM&#13;
Sat. 11/30/85 UW-PLATTEVILLE 7:30 PM&#13;
Wed. 12/4/85 NORTH CENTRAL 7:30 PM&#13;
Fri. n 12/6/85 WINONA STATE 7:30 PM&#13;
Sat. 1/4/86 MINN-DULUTH 2:30 PM&#13;
Fri. 1/10/86 CONCORDIA 7:30 PM&#13;
Mon. 1/13/86 UW-MILWAUKEE 7:30 PM&#13;
Mon. 1/20/86 CARDINAL STRITCH 7:30 PM&#13;
Wed. 2/5/86 LEWIS UNIVERSITY 7:30 PM&#13;
Sat. 2/8/86 KENTUCKY STATE 7:30 PM&#13;
Thur. 2/13/86 NE ILLINOIS 7:30 PM&#13;
Sat. 2/15/86 NORTHERN MICHIGAN 7:30 PM&#13;
12 Thursday, November 14, 1985 RANGER&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Ranger women place second in District&#13;
by Tom Siewart&#13;
Last Saturday Parkside's&#13;
women's volleyball team&#13;
played in the NAIA District&#13;
14 Championship tournament&#13;
at the Klotsche Center at UWMilwaukee.&#13;
The Milwaukee Panthers,&#13;
ranked second in the nation,&#13;
were the favored team. When&#13;
the final whistle blew, they&#13;
captured the district title, but&#13;
not without a whale of a fight&#13;
from a very tough Parkside&#13;
team.&#13;
The Rangers were involved&#13;
in two best-of-three matches&#13;
and then two best-of-five&#13;
matches. The first match was&#13;
against Lakeland College.&#13;
Parkside won 4-15, 15-4 and&#13;
15-1.&#13;
At noon the team played its&#13;
first of three matches against&#13;
UW-M and won 9-15, 15-12,&#13;
15-10. The Rangers got off to&#13;
a slow start in the match, but&#13;
fired up after two of Rebbeca&#13;
Scott's spikes. They played&#13;
heads-up ball and Parkside&#13;
coach Terry Paulson said&#13;
they received "good offense&#13;
from the middle" which froze&#13;
the Panther blockers and allowed&#13;
their spikes to get&#13;
through. Having played the&#13;
Panthers a number of times&#13;
during the season, Paulson&#13;
stated, "We beat them because&#13;
we know them."&#13;
With the other four teams&#13;
in the tournament eliminated.&#13;
Parkside played Milwaukee&#13;
again. The team started out&#13;
slow and lost the first game&#13;
6-15. In the second game they&#13;
got on track and held a 9-6&#13;
lead before the Panthers&#13;
inched back to win 12-15 in a&#13;
hard-fought battle. The third&#13;
game saw the Rangers open&#13;
up a 9-0 lead before going on&#13;
to win 15-8. The Panthers took&#13;
a quick 4-0 lead in the fourth&#13;
game. Parkside tied it at 4,&#13;
but lost 8-15 to give Milwaukee&#13;
the match.&#13;
The outcome of the second&#13;
match produced a 1-1 record&#13;
between Parkside and Milwaukee&#13;
on the day, and another&#13;
best-of-five match was&#13;
needed to determine the district&#13;
champion.&#13;
The Rangers took an early&#13;
3-0 lead in the first game, but&#13;
the Panthers stormed back to&#13;
win 6-15. The second game&#13;
was a tough back-and-forth&#13;
battle that Parkside won 15-8.&#13;
The Rangers lost 4-15 in a&#13;
third game that was much&#13;
closer than the score would&#13;
indicate. What turned out to&#13;
be the fourth and final game&#13;
of the match started out with&#13;
an early tie at 4-4. Parkside&#13;
pulled away to lead 9-5 before&#13;
Milwaukee again tied it at 11.&#13;
Milwaukee then took the lead&#13;
and won a heartbreaker 11-15.&#13;
Regarding the two final&#13;
matches, Coach Paulson commented&#13;
his team's major&#13;
problem was that they did not&#13;
pass-serve well. Parkside's&#13;
offense relies heavily on the&#13;
initial pass, and if it isn't executed&#13;
well, their attack is&#13;
much less effective.&#13;
Paulson also stated that he&#13;
was pleased with the way the&#13;
team played overall and particularly&#13;
noted the performances&#13;
of Sarah Laue, Karen&#13;
Greene, Kay Wolferstetter&#13;
and Janet Koenig. Milwaukee&#13;
Coach Tom Pleyte also complimented&#13;
Parkside on their&#13;
outstanding play and hopes&#13;
that they can get an "at&#13;
large" bid for the Nationals,&#13;
saying that they are better&#13;
than most of the teams that&#13;
will be there. The NAIA Nationals&#13;
will be held in Milwaukee&#13;
Nov. 21-23.&#13;
Men 9s basketball squad prepared for new season&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
Last year, the Parkside&#13;
Ranger men's basketball&#13;
team had a record of 22-7, a&#13;
great season by most standards.&#13;
However, this coming&#13;
season, the standard according&#13;
to the players is 32-0.&#13;
Coach Rees Johnson, on the&#13;
other hand, won't exactly&#13;
commit to that.&#13;
"This team has the potential&#13;
to be good enough to go to&#13;
the NAIA (National Association&#13;
of Intercollegiate Athletics)&#13;
national tournament,&#13;
and win the title, and the&#13;
team feels that they can go&#13;
undefeated. But after being in&#13;
the game for 21 years, I feel&#13;
that to go undefeated, you&#13;
have to be not only good but&#13;
lucky. You can't have any&#13;
bad nights."&#13;
With the record the&#13;
Rangers had last year, the&#13;
untrained observer wouldn't&#13;
think the team needed improvement.&#13;
However, the&#13;
team has shown a "continuation&#13;
of improvement" in practice,&#13;
which is a carryover&#13;
from last year. "We've improved&#13;
our execution, our attitude,&#13;
our caliber of play and&#13;
our talent has improved&#13;
again," said Johnson.&#13;
This year marks the first&#13;
season since Johnson has&#13;
been here that he doesn't&#13;
have Eric Womeldorf in the&#13;
center position. Womeldorf&#13;
had an uncharacteristic offseason&#13;
college career, which&#13;
Johnson attributes to a combination&#13;
of factors. "We&#13;
didn't get the ball inside as&#13;
well as we should have," said&#13;
Johnson. "A big factor was&#13;
that the other teams knew he&#13;
was a good player, and they&#13;
clamped down on him a little&#13;
harder.''&#13;
Despite the loss of Womeldorf,&#13;
Johnson has a fine core&#13;
of players returning from last&#13;
year's team, including starting&#13;
guard Dennis Davis, forwards&#13;
Arthur (Jay) Rundles&#13;
and Cornell Saddler, and junior&#13;
center Mark Zukley.&#13;
Davis was last year's scoring&#13;
leader with 19.6 points per&#13;
game. Anyone who watched&#13;
him play last season will no&#13;
doubt believe he is a legitimate&#13;
All-American candidate.&#13;
Rundles was the secondleading&#13;
scorer with 12.1&#13;
points per game, and Saddler&#13;
was third with 11.6. Other returning&#13;
players are forward&#13;
Dan Carrera, guard-forward&#13;
Vince Hall, guard Michael&#13;
Henderson and forward-center&#13;
Mike Zukley. Rundles,&#13;
Davis, Saddler, Carrera and&#13;
Hall are seniors.&#13;
The center position is in&#13;
good hands. Junior Mark Zukley&#13;
is the heir-apparent to&#13;
Womeldorf, and he more than&#13;
fits the bill. He started a few&#13;
games later last season, often&#13;
playing with total abandon,&#13;
always with enthusiasm. "I&#13;
think Mark will do a more&#13;
than adequate job taking over&#13;
Eric's spot," Johnson said.&#13;
"He has improved tremendously,&#13;
and I look for him to&#13;
have better stats than Eric&#13;
had. "Johnson also expects a&#13;
major contribution from&#13;
Henderson. "Mike has improved&#13;
his overall game and&#13;
his ballhandling from last&#13;
year. He's stronger and more&#13;
aggressive. He's a complete&#13;
player."&#13;
Breaking into the lineup&#13;
this season won't be easy, but&#13;
there is a fine crop of recruits&#13;
waiting to fill in. They&#13;
include:&#13;
Jim Wall, 5-9, 1 60 lb. freshman&#13;
from Green Bay Preble,&#13;
was an All-State selection as&#13;
a senior and played well in&#13;
the State Tournament. His&#13;
role will be as backup at&#13;
point guard.&#13;
Richard Delk is a 6-8,&#13;
195-lb. forward/center from&#13;
Wirth High School in Gary,&#13;
Ind. "He has had a harder&#13;
time adjusting to college life&#13;
than the rest of the team."&#13;
said Johnson. "But he has&#13;
long arms, excellent talent&#13;
and a lot of ability. He has to&#13;
get his academics and goals&#13;
in order and he has to mature&#13;
physically and get stronger.&#13;
When he does, he's going to&#13;
be a fine player." There is a&#13;
slight possibility that he will&#13;
be red-shirted this year.&#13;
(Red-shirting means that a&#13;
player is kept out of intercollegiate&#13;
play for a year. He&#13;
may continue in school and&#13;
practice without losing any of&#13;
his athletic eligibility.)&#13;
Greg Sipla is a 6-8, 220-lb.&#13;
freshman from Racine Case.&#13;
"I saw him play as a junior,&#13;
and I was unimpressed," said&#13;
Johnson. "I saw him again&#13;
near the end of his senior&#13;
year, and I saw a tremendous&#13;
improvement, and we got interested.&#13;
We had a chance to&#13;
see him again when he came&#13;
down here to play this summer&#13;
when the courts were&#13;
open. He's a real banger, he's&#13;
smart, very coachable and he&#13;
doesn't make a lot of mistakes.&#13;
He reminds me of Eric&#13;
(Womeldorf) - he's the same&#13;
kind of player." Sipla also&#13;
has a slight chance of being&#13;
red-shirted.&#13;
Mark Livingston, a 6-3,&#13;
194-lb. transfer student, is&#13;
originally from Wilson, North&#13;
Carolina. He is a walk-on who&#13;
came to Parkside to high&#13;
jump for the track team and&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
SKI TUNING: -Quality, sharpening,&#13;
waxing. Only $15 for complete job!&#13;
Call Scott. 639-8645.&#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;
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY to type&#13;
reports, resumes, speeches, etc.&#13;
75Vpage; numerical tables lOVpage&#13;
additional. Fast, professional service.&#13;
Science and business my specialty.&#13;
554-0321 after 5 p.m.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
SKIS-DYN'ASTAR Omeglass Equipe.&#13;
195 cm. In very good shape. Only $40.&#13;
Scott. 639-8645.&#13;
TYPEWRITER: SILVER Reed Elecdecided&#13;
to try out for basketall.&#13;
"He's giving a good effort&#13;
and is working hard, but&#13;
he has a lot to learn," said&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
Clay Mitchell, a 6-1, 172-lb.&#13;
guard, is another walk-on. He&#13;
graduated from Mather High&#13;
School in Chicago four years&#13;
ago and has been living in&#13;
Kenosha. He decided to come&#13;
back to school this year. "He&#13;
is a physical player with a lot&#13;
of moves; he just has to learn&#13;
the system," Johnson&#13;
commented.&#13;
Brian Mallory, a 5-10 150-lb.&#13;
guard from Waterbury,&#13;
Conn., played here two years&#13;
ago, but "but mutual consent"&#13;
he didn't play last year,&#13;
although he stayed in school.&#13;
He lived at the YMCA and&#13;
practiced there. "He's a good&#13;
person to have on the team,"&#13;
said Johnson. "He works&#13;
hard for the team. He doesn't&#13;
expect to be a starter or&#13;
superstar, but he's willing to&#13;
give 100 percent in practice&#13;
everyday and push somebody&#13;
else to make him better. Consequently,&#13;
Brian's improved&#13;
a lot."&#13;
One new player becomes eligible&#13;
for the second semester.&#13;
He is Greg Nash, a 6-2,&#13;
170-lb. guard who transferred&#13;
from Texas Tech. He is origi-&#13;
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trie Correcting. Seldom used. $150 o r&#13;
best offer. 637-6259 after 7 p.m.&#13;
74 GREMLIN, $400. 53.000 miles. Good&#13;
condition. 681-1389.&#13;
HANG UP your bike for winter! 1973&#13;
Audi Fox for sale-loves to go in snow.&#13;
$400. 74,000 mi les. 633-8455.&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
TRAVEL FIELD opportunity. Gain&#13;
valuable marketing experience while&#13;
earning money. Campus representative&#13;
needed immediately for spring&#13;
trip to Florida. Call Bill Ryan at&#13;
1-800-282-6221.&#13;
$60.00 PER hundred paid for remailing&#13;
letters from home! Send self-addressed,&#13;
stamped envelope for information/&#13;
application. Associates. Box&#13;
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PART-TIME secretary. $4/hour.&#13;
Apply in PSGA Office. WLLC D193A.&#13;
553-2244.&#13;
nally from Whitefish Bay Dominican.&#13;
He didn't play at&#13;
Texas Tech, but "he's improved&#13;
a lot since high&#13;
school," said Johnson. "He's&#13;
going to be a really fine player&#13;
for us. He's in the mold of&#13;
Rundles. He doesn't score as&#13;
well, but he handles the ball&#13;
better."&#13;
Two new recruits will definitely&#13;
be red-shirted this&#13;
year: Aaron Womack, a 6-7,&#13;
195-lb. forward/center from&#13;
Brown Deer High School and&#13;
Robert Gloss, a 6-3, 210-lb.&#13;
guard who transferred here&#13;
from Gogebic Community&#13;
College in Ironwood, Mich.&#13;
Womack is what Johnson&#13;
calls "a project." "He has a&#13;
lot of potential. He's not a&#13;
real leaper, but he's smart&#13;
and does a lot of things well.&#13;
He just needs to mature."&#13;
Gloss was the fifth-leading&#13;
junior college rebounder in&#13;
the nation last year, and at 24&#13;
is physically and mentally&#13;
mature, according to Johnson.&#13;
"We're red-shirting him&#13;
because he's similar to Saddler&#13;
or Carrera, and it's not&#13;
fair to him to push him so he&#13;
can just sit on the sideline&#13;
this year. He's a good enough&#13;
player to red-shirt him, so he&#13;
can have two good years for&#13;
us."&#13;
Housing&#13;
ROOM FOR rent. 1545 Flett. 633-6297.&#13;
Master bedroom for l or 2. $120/&#13;
month. Yard, 3 floors, washer/dryer-&#13;
/micro.&#13;
Personals&#13;
JIM, LET'S go smurfin' sometime.&#13;
Shabba-Doo.&#13;
BRIAN, I'M not dead, just a little&#13;
crazy. That okay?&#13;
JEANNIE B: J'm thinking of you.&#13;
Deannie Z.&#13;
PAUL, YOU'RE a real sweetheart.&#13;
Don't change! Lisa Piza.&#13;
JEFFREY: YOU better still be my&#13;
friend or else!&#13;
QUESTION: WHERE do soccer players&#13;
go during the off season?&#13;
Bilingual.&#13;
JOHN: WE the jury want you to go to&#13;
Minn, with your girlfriend. She misses you.</text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 14, issue 12, November 14, 1985</text>
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            </elementText>
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              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="71722">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <name>Rights</name>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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