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            <text>Housing not included in Campus Police jurisdiction</text>
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            <text>Page 5 mmmmmmwmm ••••••HIM&#13;
Student researches&#13;
gravity&#13;
Page 7&#13;
What exactly is day care?&#13;
Page 11 mmsmammmmmmmmmmmmammmmmmm&#13;
Parkside's All Americans&#13;
A r Sept. 25, 1 986 University of Wisconsin-Parkside Vol. 1 5, No. 4&#13;
Keep on truckin'&#13;
: v. is : , •«&#13;
1 —:&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Construction on County Highway E is a major ject, begun in July, won't be completed until&#13;
inconvenience to Parkside commuters, and it at least November 1, according to the Wiswill&#13;
continue to be one for a while. The pro — consin Highway Department.&#13;
Housing not included in&#13;
Campus Police jurisdiction&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
If a crime is committed in&#13;
or around the residence halls,&#13;
Parkside's Campus Police&#13;
won't be doing the investigating.&#13;
But that's no cause for concern,&#13;
according to Gary&#13;
Goetz, assistant chancellor&#13;
for administrative and fiscal&#13;
affairs.&#13;
"We would love to provide&#13;
our security force the authority&#13;
to investigate crimes in&#13;
the halls," Goetz explained.&#13;
"The problem is that the&#13;
piece of property upon which&#13;
the residence complex sits is&#13;
privately held by the Parkside&#13;
Foundation. It's really, in&#13;
effect, an island completely&#13;
surrounded by campus&#13;
troops."&#13;
In the event of criminal activity,&#13;
then, jurisdiction falls&#13;
to the Kenosha County Sheriff's&#13;
Department. Captain&#13;
Roger Zeihen, the department's&#13;
director of operations,&#13;
does not feel any expediency&#13;
is being sacrificed under such&#13;
a set-up.&#13;
"If you have any type of&#13;
felony or accident going on,"&#13;
Zeihen said, "it would only be&#13;
a matter of minutes before&#13;
we responded, depending on&#13;
where the squad is located in&#13;
that area.&#13;
"So I don't see where it&#13;
would create any different&#13;
type of situation than we have&#13;
anywhere else in the county,"&#13;
he continued. "We've been&#13;
policing Woodcreek (now Orchard&#13;
Courts) apartments for&#13;
years, and anytime there's&#13;
any activity there, it's ours to&#13;
investigate. And I'd say we're&#13;
there within two or three&#13;
minutes."&#13;
Just what role the Campus&#13;
Police has in maintaining&#13;
order around the residence&#13;
halls is clear to its director,&#13;
Ron Brinkman.&#13;
"By the Foundation and&#13;
through the chancellor,"&#13;
Brinkman explains, "we've&#13;
been directed to police that&#13;
property. If a crime is going&#13;
down, we'll take into custody&#13;
who is responsible for it and&#13;
turn him over to the sheriff's&#13;
department. We can apprehend&#13;
and detain; but the&#13;
sheriff does the investigating."&#13;
That scenario could change&#13;
if campus security personnel&#13;
were deputized by Sherrif&#13;
Fred Ekornaas. Such an option&#13;
has been studied, but to&#13;
no avail.&#13;
"It is the strong policy of&#13;
our country sherrif that he&#13;
will not get into the deputation&#13;
program," Goetz said.&#13;
"He does not want to entertain&#13;
the liability of having a&#13;
bunch of deputized people&#13;
running around who he has no&#13;
control over; and yet he&#13;
would be responsible for any&#13;
liability that is incurred."&#13;
Still, Goetz is looking into&#13;
increasing the Campus&#13;
Police's role in serving the&#13;
residence halls.&#13;
"We will be trying to purchase&#13;
radios that will allow&#13;
us to get in immediate contact&#13;
with the sheriff's department&#13;
as soon as possible,"&#13;
Goetz said. "And, if it's necessary,&#13;
we'll seek on-the-spot&#13;
deputization in emergency&#13;
situations which rapidly develop."&#13;
New security&#13;
staffing planned&#13;
by Julie Pendleton&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
With the advent of residence&#13;
halls at Parkside, increased&#13;
concern about campus&#13;
security has developed.&#13;
Parkside Campus Police&#13;
currently maintains three&#13;
levels of security, the lowest&#13;
which is student security officers.&#13;
Their duties include&#13;
patrolling the art gallery,&#13;
parking lots, dances and athletic&#13;
events.&#13;
The second level consists of&#13;
Buildings and Grounds Patrol&#13;
Officers (B&amp;Gs). A prerequisite&#13;
for becoming a B&amp;G is&#13;
approximately one year of experience&#13;
as a student security&#13;
officer. When there is an&#13;
opening they then may apply&#13;
for a B&amp;G position.&#13;
. Once employed as B&amp;Gs,&#13;
students then begin schooling&#13;
to become certified police officers.&#13;
They attend recruiting&#13;
school twice a week and within&#13;
four years may receive&#13;
state certification as police&#13;
officers.&#13;
Parkside currently employs&#13;
four part-time B&amp;Gs. These&#13;
B&amp;Gs are either already certified&#13;
or in the process of becoming&#13;
certified as police officers.&#13;
The highest level of security&#13;
at Parkside consists of&#13;
six full-trained and certified&#13;
police officers. "Security is&#13;
like insurance-you can never&#13;
get enough" said Gary Goetz&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Administration&#13;
and Fiscal Affairs.&#13;
However, when working&#13;
within budget constraints,&#13;
there are limits, even in security.&#13;
As a result of the new housing&#13;
on campus, Campus&#13;
Police have been forced to reconsider&#13;
and redeploy its security.&#13;
"We're doing our best&#13;
with the resources that we&#13;
have" said Goetz.&#13;
The most change in the&#13;
redeployment of security include&#13;
having full-time police&#13;
officer on duty over the weekend&#13;
for a total of 20 hours and&#13;
having a B&amp;G covering part&#13;
of third shift from 2 a.m. until&#13;
6 a.m. alone without a dispatcher.&#13;
In the past Parkside had&#13;
maintained only student security&#13;
over the weekend. However,&#13;
it is the opinion of Ron&#13;
Brinkman, Director of Campus&#13;
Policy and Public Safety,&#13;
that weekends have become a&#13;
"peak" period — "peak"&#13;
meaning that there are more&#13;
people on campus at that&#13;
time. Therefore, that justifies&#13;
a need for a full-time police&#13;
officer to be on duty.&#13;
As for a B&amp;G being alone&#13;
from 2 a.m. until 6 a.m.,&#13;
Brinkman feels that this is essentially&#13;
a "non-peak" period,&#13;
and that there is not&#13;
much activity occuring.&#13;
"Working within the budget&#13;
constraints, we've have to utilize&#13;
our person power, look at&#13;
where would be the best place&#13;
to deploy them" said Brinkman.&#13;
In the past, Parkside&#13;
had maintained a full-time&#13;
certified police officer on&#13;
third shift.&#13;
According to PSGA president,&#13;
Adrian Serrano this&#13;
redeployment of security is&#13;
questionable. "About a year&#13;
and a half ago we began to&#13;
look at security and safety on&#13;
campus," said Serrano. "We&#13;
started looking at such things&#13;
as emergency call boxes,&#13;
lighting, pathways-basically&#13;
all aspects of safety. To me,&#13;
this (redeployment) is a step&#13;
backwards."&#13;
Serrano went on to say&#13;
"Hopefully this system will&#13;
never be tested, and everything&#13;
will run smoothly; but&#13;
if the system is ever tested&#13;
and it is shown that things&#13;
might have worked out better&#13;
had there been a a third shift&#13;
professional officer on duty&#13;
instead of a student, the university&#13;
is going to get so&#13;
much bad flack. And that's&#13;
going to hurt everyone-the&#13;
people involved, the security&#13;
department, and it can also&#13;
hurt Parkside's image."&#13;
In response to this, Goetz&#13;
maintained that it is the opinion&#13;
of the campus police that&#13;
they provide a capable and&#13;
ample level of service.&#13;
2 Thursday, September 25, 1986 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Paper's responsibility&#13;
to report all the facts&#13;
While gathering information for this week's front-page&#13;
stories on campus security, the Ranger also discovered&#13;
that some people don't understand this paper's role in the&#13;
university environment.&#13;
When asked about the early morning security staff situation,&#13;
one administrator said that the Ranger would not&#13;
be serving the best interests of the campus community if&#13;
it reported that only student security personnel are on&#13;
duty from 2 til 6 a.m. By publicizing this staffing change,&#13;
the administrator said, the Ranger would in effect be advertising&#13;
the best "strike" time to potential lawbreakers.&#13;
Such an intimation is dangerously absurd. The mission&#13;
of this newspaper is now, and has always been, to inform&#13;
the community it serves of issues and events relevant to&#13;
it. When something occurs that is important to the students,&#13;
staff and administration of this university, it is our&#13;
duty to identify, report and occasionally interpret those&#13;
concerns in our newspaper.&#13;
What we're talking about, essentially, is responsibility.&#13;
We characterize our responsibility in the above terms. At&#13;
least one administrator thinks our responsibility should&#13;
instead be that we don't tell people what they may not&#13;
want to hear.&#13;
But bad news, if indeed this week's security story can&#13;
be called bad news, needs to be reported just as much, if&#13;
not more, than good news. For it is only by knowing all&#13;
the facts that responsible adults can take action to correct&#13;
what they might perceive to be wrongs.&#13;
After all, no one really believes that Bob Woodward and&#13;
Carl Bernstein were overjoyed to find a cancer infesting&#13;
the White House. But all of us, we're sure, are glad that&#13;
they told us what they did.&#13;
THE REAGAN TASK FORCE MEETS TO DISCUSS OPTIONS&#13;
FOR FREEING THE HOSTAGES STILL HELD IN LEBANON:&#13;
Former librarian dies&#13;
David B. Knowles, 39, formerly&#13;
of Kenosha, late of Lincoln,&#13;
Neb., passed away suddenly&#13;
at his home on Sept. 11,&#13;
1986.&#13;
The son of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Leo A. Knowles, he was born&#13;
Nov. 3, 1946, in Elkhart, Ind.&#13;
He received a bachelor's&#13;
degree in library science in&#13;
1973 from the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Milwaukee.&#13;
Knowles lived in Kenosha&#13;
for about 18 years before&#13;
moving to Lincoln six years&#13;
ago to head the catalog department&#13;
at the University of&#13;
Nebraska library. He had&#13;
been employed as a librarian&#13;
at Parkside from 1968-1979, as&#13;
head of the catalog and circulation&#13;
departments.&#13;
Knowles was involved in&#13;
the planning, installation and&#13;
implementation of the OCLC&#13;
on-line cataloging system in&#13;
February 1976. His most notable&#13;
and unique contribution&#13;
was the design of the shelving&#13;
for the Library of Congress&#13;
National Union Catalog. Commercial&#13;
shelving was not&#13;
available in 1972 to house the&#13;
large, irregular-sized volumes.&#13;
Letter&#13;
David Knowles&#13;
On July 7, 1979, at the'Carthage&#13;
College Chapel, he&#13;
married Ruth Lillian Pauschert.&#13;
Survivors include his wife,&#13;
of Lincoln, and his parents, of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Accessibility update in the works&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
When I see a one-sided article,&#13;
such as the one on&#13;
wheelchair access by Mr.&#13;
Luehr, I first question why&#13;
the author would not take the&#13;
little extra effort required to&#13;
learn from us what is happening&#13;
with that project.&#13;
Then I answer my own&#13;
question to myself and realize&#13;
that, although we are one of&#13;
the largest single departments&#13;
on campus, by virtue&#13;
of our role and location we&#13;
are, like icebergs, largely invisible.&#13;
Therefore, to better&#13;
acquaint you with us, I am attaching&#13;
a copy of our service&#13;
guide and will get on with&#13;
"the rest of the story."&#13;
We have estimated the cost&#13;
of providing interior access to&#13;
mid-main place at $40,000;&#13;
too costly for the campus&#13;
alone to support. That project,&#13;
along with a $75,000 project&#13;
to access the second floor&#13;
in Tallent Hall, were submitted&#13;
in the Campus Capital&#13;
Budget Request for funding&#13;
by the State Building Commission&#13;
in the 1985/87 biennium.&#13;
Although there is a special&#13;
"pot" of money created by&#13;
the State Legislature for projects&#13;
of this nature, neither&#13;
project was funded. The reasoning&#13;
was, that access in&#13;
both cases does exist although&#13;
it is inconvenient. We&#13;
do not agree with the conclusion&#13;
and have resubmitted&#13;
the projects in our 1987/89&#13;
Capital Budget Request.&#13;
What can be helpful for Parkside&#13;
is for local legislators to&#13;
be made aware from more&#13;
sources of the need for the&#13;
work and pressure brought on&#13;
the State Building Commission&#13;
to get funding for the&#13;
projects.&#13;
In July of this year, our Engineering&#13;
Section completed a&#13;
very comprehensive survey&#13;
of the campus to identify all&#13;
areas which do not meet current&#13;
access standards. One&#13;
result of this survey has been&#13;
to release a $140,000 Building&#13;
Commission access project&#13;
which has been under design&#13;
for over a year. This project&#13;
will accomplish things such&#13;
as relocating elevator controls,&#13;
changing certain entry&#13;
points to various rooms,&#13;
lower mirrors and washstands,&#13;
etc. Construction will&#13;
probably begin early in 1987.&#13;
Additionally the campus&#13;
has, from its own resources,&#13;
spent $10,000 to provide automatic&#13;
openers for entrance&#13;
doors in the Student Union,&#13;
Physical Education Building&#13;
and Comm Arts Building. We&#13;
anticipate this installation&#13;
will be complete this month.&#13;
All documents relating to&#13;
the project work I've discussed&#13;
are available at the Facilities&#13;
Management Center for&#13;
review. Please contact us if&#13;
you are interested in seeing&#13;
any of them.&#13;
Jack Dudley,&#13;
Director of&#13;
Facilities Management&#13;
Gary L. Schneeberger Editor&#13;
Jenny Carr News Editor&#13;
Kimberiie Kranich ..News Editor&#13;
Julie Pendleton Asst. News Editor&#13;
Kay Murach Feature Editor&#13;
Jim Neibaur Entertainment Editor&#13;
gobb Luehr.. Sports Editor&#13;
Michael Rohl Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy Photo Editor&#13;
Jack Bornhuetter Photo Editor&#13;
Andy Buchanan Business Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan Asst. Business Manager&#13;
*??'ve goback Advertising Manager&#13;
Steve Picazo Distribution Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Leo Bose, Jason Caspers, Mary&#13;
DeFazio, Erikk Dingman, Ronda&#13;
Ditter, Gretchen Gayhart, Carol&#13;
Kortendick, Randy LeCount, Rick&#13;
Leonard, Rick Luehr, Vahan&#13;
Mahdasian, Suzanne Mantuano,&#13;
Kelly McKissick, Scott Osimitz,&#13;
Nicole Pacione, Michelle Petersen,&#13;
Bill Serpe, Mike Stephens, Andy&#13;
Tschumper, Jennie Tunkieicz,&#13;
Tyson Wilda.&#13;
nnii!?er ls,wn!*fn and edited by students at UW-Parkside and they are solely responsible for its editorial&#13;
and'holidays0' 'S publ,shed every Thursday durin9 the academic year except during breaks&#13;
m orw«e^P0nd^nce S^0u'd be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parked? Rnx&#13;
No 2000, Kenosha Wl 53141. Telephone (414)553-2295 or (414 553-2287 '&#13;
pubSion Thursday^ $4 ** 'nCh °r 'eSSbulk' Adver1isin9 deadline is Tuesday at 9 a.m. for&#13;
cbflf/Ll0 WM be accepted in typewritten, double-spaced on standard&#13;
size paper. Letters should be less than 350 words and must be signed with a tele-&#13;
552? npTiifnJ r?Ui h vesication purposes. Names will be withheld upon re-&#13;
ESllnil H®[S. 'ETuesday at 10 a m- tor publication Thursday. Ranger&#13;
content S se ,etters containin9 false and defamatory&#13;
Ranger is printed by the Racine Journal Times.&#13;
Wtntbf of rhi?&#13;
roiior.inio&#13;
TROSSI a3&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 25,1986&#13;
I 11.11 ... I ======&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Scientific research soars&#13;
Federal sponsorship of basic scientific research at&#13;
universities has soared in the first six years of the&#13;
Reagan adminstration - a revival that appears unmatched&#13;
since the post-Sputnik era of the early&#13;
1960s, reported the New York Times News Service.&#13;
This dramatic increase, 61 percent since 1981, has&#13;
surprised many university officials who had predicted&#13;
just a few years ago that fundamental research&#13;
would be an early casualty of the federal budget&#13;
cuts.&#13;
Futhermore, statistics and interviews with&#13;
researchers across the country indicate that the administration&#13;
has concentrated much of its research&#13;
funding in unusually large projects. Consequently,&#13;
many feel that the funds for individual scientists&#13;
may be more scarce than ever.&#13;
Earl against tuition hike&#13;
Governor Earl will oppose the large tuition hike&#13;
proposed by University of Wisconsin System President&#13;
Kenneth Shaw and a special committee study -&#13;
ing the future of the UW System, reported Oshkosh&#13;
Northwestern.&#13;
It is Earl's opinion that using high tuition to control&#13;
enrollment is unacceptable. Instead of concentrating&#13;
on tuition increases, Earl said the UW System&#13;
should try to control and contain costs through&#13;
stiffer admission requirements and higher academic&#13;
standards.&#13;
Education Dept. fights drugs&#13;
The U.S. Education Department joined President&#13;
Reagan's war on drugs with a handbook on how to&#13;
drive the drug problem out of the nation's schools,&#13;
reported the Milwaukee Sentinel.&#13;
The 78-page booklet is aimed at educators, parents&#13;
and students themselves laying out basic facts about&#13;
drugs. Furthermore, it provides a detailed explanation&#13;
of educators' rights to search students for drugs&#13;
and to suspend or expel offenders.&#13;
Club Events Homecoming&#13;
Anthropology Club&#13;
Dr. Florence Shipek will&#13;
speak at a roundtable discussion&#13;
on Tuesday, Sept. 30 at&#13;
11:00 a.m. in Molinaro 324.&#13;
Topics of discussion will include&#13;
how national policy and&#13;
minority cultures deal with&#13;
the nations of Asia and the&#13;
Pacific, including Red China.&#13;
International Studies&#13;
Club&#13;
A "Get Acquainted Party"&#13;
will be held on Saturday,&#13;
Sept. 27, at 6:30 p.m. at Dr.&#13;
Manogaran's home, 2114&#13;
Grand Prix Dr., Raicne.&#13;
Bring a snack to pass, a new&#13;
member and ideas. (R.S.V.P.&#13;
553-2701 or 553-2316).&#13;
PASO&#13;
Parkside Asian Student Organization&#13;
(PASO) will be&#13;
meeting on Friday, Sept. 26&#13;
at 1:00 p.m. in Union 207. Information&#13;
on upcoming club&#13;
events will be discussed.&#13;
Geology&#13;
Dr. Steve Leavitt of the Department&#13;
of Geology will&#13;
speak on Friday, Sept. 26 in&#13;
Greenquist 113. The discussion,&#13;
"Isotope Dendrochronology&#13;
and the Dating of Historic&#13;
and Precolumbian&#13;
Buildings in the Southwest,"&#13;
will cover a new method of&#13;
dating growth rings of trees,&#13;
including pilot studies on&#13;
wood from the Hubbell Trading&#13;
Post in northern Arizona&#13;
and wood from Casa Grande&#13;
Ruins in southern Arizona.&#13;
Everyone is welcome.&#13;
Voter drive Recruitment Fair&#13;
by Jenny Carr&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The legislative affairs committee&#13;
is holding a voter registration&#13;
drive this week on&#13;
campus. Registration will be&#13;
held on the main concourse&#13;
today, Sept. 25 and Monday,&#13;
Sept. 29.&#13;
Chris Baierl, committee&#13;
chair, states that voter participation&#13;
among 18-24 yearolds&#13;
has been notoriously low.&#13;
His committee has contacted&#13;
the Kenosha League of&#13;
Women Voters to assist them&#13;
in the registration drive.&#13;
"Students are quick to complain&#13;
about high tuition, but if&#13;
they would vote, their complaints&#13;
would be heard,"&#13;
Baierl asserts.&#13;
A selection of condidates&#13;
will be on campus during the&#13;
week of Sept. 22 to talk about&#13;
the issues in the upcoming&#13;
election. Students are encouraged&#13;
to listen to the candidates,&#13;
ask questions and,&#13;
most importantly, to register&#13;
to vote.&#13;
mfA-M*W..&#13;
Involvement stressed&#13;
"On Monday, September 29,&#13;
we're going to change the&#13;
main concourse of Parkside&#13;
into a circus," said Bill&#13;
Serpe, Chair of the Student&#13;
Organizations Council.&#13;
"Every club and organization&#13;
will have a table set up&#13;
and will be selling themselves&#13;
to recruit new members.&#13;
There are over forty different&#13;
opportunities at this school&#13;
for people to get involved and&#13;
this event will give everyone&#13;
a chance to find out about all&#13;
of them on one day in one&#13;
place."&#13;
Every group that will be on&#13;
hand that day has been encouraged&#13;
to do anything and&#13;
everything they can to get&#13;
students' attention. 'I've suggested&#13;
that social clubs like&#13;
the Dart Team set up a dart&#13;
game. I'd even like to see the&#13;
Bowling Club try to demonstrate&#13;
on the main concourse,&#13;
"Serpe said.&#13;
Some clubs don't have the&#13;
advantage of drawing attention&#13;
in this way. Serpe had&#13;
some suggestions for them&#13;
too.&#13;
Helium balloons are a very&#13;
obvious attraction, not to&#13;
mention giveaways. Clubs&#13;
could hold a drawing at the&#13;
end of the day and give a free&#13;
prize. Food will always get&#13;
people's attention too, expecially&#13;
if it's free.&#13;
"Our slogan this year,"&#13;
Serpe continued, is "Drop in&#13;
and Sign Up." We have already&#13;
recognized two new clubs&#13;
this year and are looking at&#13;
several more.'&#13;
When asked what the new&#13;
clubs were Serpe said, "Come&#13;
to Recruitment Fair 86 and&#13;
see for yourself. We'll be&#13;
going from 9 a.m. untill 1&#13;
p.m. in the Main/concourse&#13;
from the Union all the way to&#13;
Upper Main Place. Get involved&#13;
this year."&#13;
New look, new feel&#13;
is this year's goal&#13;
by Bill Serpe&#13;
"There will be more things&#13;
happening this year for 'Horncoming&#13;
86', " said Chuck&#13;
Christoffersen, chair of this&#13;
year's committee, "and we&#13;
think what we have planned&#13;
will encourage more student&#13;
involvement."&#13;
Among the changes slated&#13;
for this year's big event are a&#13;
picnic on the pad on Friday&#13;
afternoon featuring The Surf&#13;
Boys (aka the Class of 62)&#13;
and a dance on Friday evening&#13;
with Pat McCurdy and&#13;
the Confidentials.&#13;
Between these two events&#13;
there will be a bonfire.&#13;
"We're trying to have more&#13;
things going on that are traditionally&#13;
related to Homecoming,"&#13;
said Diane Welsh, activities&#13;
advisor. "And we're&#13;
also trying to schedule things&#13;
back-to-back so that people&#13;
will stay involved."&#13;
A "derder" decorating&#13;
party is also scheduled for&#13;
Friday. This will coincide&#13;
with the "World's Largest&#13;
University Derder Band" record-&#13;
setting attempt to be&#13;
held during half-time at Saturday's&#13;
soccer game.&#13;
"First let me explain what&#13;
a Derder is," said Christoffersen.&#13;
"It's the cardboard&#13;
core in the middle of the roll&#13;
of toilet paper. When you take&#13;
it off, the holder it becomes a&#13;
musical instrument, in a&#13;
way."&#13;
This idea, according to&#13;
Christoffersen, came from&#13;
another member of the committee,&#13;
who sees it as a fun&#13;
way to get people to the soccer&#13;
game and to put Parkside&#13;
on the map. "We will be inviting&#13;
newspapers from Milwaukee,&#13;
Racine and Kenosha,&#13;
as well as television and&#13;
radio stations," commented&#13;
Christofferson. "We're also&#13;
going to try to get a national&#13;
reporting service like USA&#13;
Today or People Magazine,&#13;
and then we want to have this&#13;
recorded with the Guinness&#13;
"We wanted to&#13;
give this event the&#13;
same kind of&#13;
excitement Winter&#13;
Carnival&#13;
generates."&#13;
-- Sandy Saladis&#13;
Book of World Records."&#13;
Sandy Saladis, a senior music&#13;
major on the committee,&#13;
talked about club involvement&#13;
for Homecoming.&#13;
"We wanted to give this&#13;
event the same kind of excitement&#13;
that Winter Carnival&#13;
generates. We are encouraging&#13;
more clubs to sponsor&#13;
candidates for King and&#13;
Queen. The winning people&#13;
will score points for the club&#13;
they represent."&#13;
Other events, like the Tugof-&#13;
War Tournament, and attendance&#13;
at the soccer game&#13;
and dances will win the&#13;
Homecoming Spirit award&#13;
which will be a cash prize&#13;
and a trophy.&#13;
"More than anything, "-&#13;
Saladis said, "we want to&#13;
change the image of the&#13;
penny voting for the King and&#13;
Queen. The money that is&#13;
raised during this election&#13;
goes to the Child Care Center&#13;
here at Parkside, but by making&#13;
it a club contest with a&#13;
prize we hope to make it&#13;
more competitve for the clubs&#13;
and less of a popularity contest."&#13;
Clubs and other organizations&#13;
sponsoring King and&#13;
Queen candidates are reminded&#13;
that they must turn in&#13;
names for this contest to the&#13;
Ranger office by Friday Sept&#13;
26, so that candidates' pictures&#13;
can be taken for the&#13;
voting and next week's paper.&#13;
Entry forms are available&#13;
at the Ranger Office, PSGA&#13;
office and the Student Activities&#13;
Office, Union 209.&#13;
Apply to study in Innsbruck&#13;
The University of New Orleans&#13;
will sponsor its 12th annual&#13;
session of UNO-INNSBRUCK,&#13;
an International&#13;
Summer School program in&#13;
Innsbruck, Austria. This educational/&#13;
travel experience&#13;
will involve over 250 s tudents&#13;
and some 30 faculty and staff&#13;
for the summer of 1987.&#13;
"UNO's popular Alpine&#13;
summer school atracted students&#13;
from 35 different American&#13;
universities and colleges&#13;
and several foreign countries&#13;
for the summer of '86," says&#13;
Carl Wagner, Associate Director&#13;
of the Office of International&#13;
Study Programs at&#13;
UNO. "As a result, UNO-INNSBRUCK&#13;
is now one of the&#13;
largest overseas summer&#13;
schools offered by an American&#13;
university."&#13;
Applicants are already lining&#13;
up for the 1987 session.&#13;
Part of the secret may be&#13;
that more than 70 courses in&#13;
many different academic subject&#13;
areas are offered in this&#13;
magnificent and scenic Alpin&#13;
Innsbruck setting in the&#13;
"heart of Central Europe".&#13;
While participants can earn&#13;
up to ten semester hours of&#13;
credit, their classrooms are&#13;
surrounded by the towering&#13;
Tyrolean Alps, whose peaks&#13;
are always snow-capped.&#13;
Stephanie Rondenell, a student&#13;
participant in the 1986&#13;
UNO-INNSBRUCK program,&#13;
had this to say about her&#13;
European experience. "If&#13;
someone were to ask me to&#13;
name the most memorable&#13;
experience of my life all I&#13;
would have to say is 'Innsbruck'.&#13;
When I think of my&#13;
summer in Insbruck, I think&#13;
of the mountains that were&#13;
outside my dorm window and&#13;
how wonderful it was to wake&#13;
up to them every morning."&#13;
Registration for UNO-INNSBRUCK&#13;
is already underway.&#13;
Enrollment in the program&#13;
is limited, so interested&#13;
applicants should apply as&#13;
soon as possible. Information&#13;
and a full color brochure describing&#13;
the program in detail&#13;
can be had by writing to UNO-&#13;
INN SBRUCK-1987, c/o International&#13;
Study Program,&#13;
Box 1315-UNO, New Orleans,&#13;
LA 70148. Or, you can call&#13;
(504) 286-7116.&#13;
4 Thursday, September 25, 1986 RANGER&#13;
Petersen&#13;
Fine Arts degree pays&#13;
PSGA approves&#13;
nominations&#13;
Book sale&#13;
by Ronda Ditter&#13;
Each year, students graduate&#13;
from Parkside with degrees&#13;
in various fields of expertise.&#13;
Sometimes, these graduates&#13;
enjoy great success, thanks to&#13;
the education they received&#13;
here.&#13;
Such is the case of Gary&#13;
Study in&#13;
&amp; Sp&#13;
evittej&#13;
oitt&#13;
Emphases in&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
International Business&#13;
Equestrian Studies&#13;
Courses available in Spanish&#13;
and in English&#13;
Fluency in Spanish not required&#13;
All courses approved by UW-Platteville&#13;
and validated on an official&#13;
UW-Platteville transcript&#13;
$2495 per semester for Wisconsin &amp;&#13;
Minnesota residents&#13;
$2795 per semester for non-residents&#13;
Costs include&#13;
Tuition and Fees&#13;
Room and Board with Spanish families&#13;
Fieldtrips&#13;
All financial aids apply&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
Study Abroad Programs&#13;
308 Warner Hall&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Platteville&#13;
I University Plaza&#13;
Platteville. Wl 53818-3099&#13;
(608) 342-1726&#13;
Petersen, a Parkside alumnus&#13;
working as the promotion&#13;
manager for The Milwaukee&#13;
Journal and Milwaukee Sentinel.&#13;
Petersen, who majored in&#13;
fine arts and minored in English,&#13;
says that Parkside&#13;
"provided me with an excellent&#13;
broad-based background.&#13;
Getting out of college, I&#13;
wasn't at the disadvantage of&#13;
being restricted in what I'd&#13;
learned."&#13;
Petersen enjoys his job,&#13;
which consists of overseeing&#13;
a staff of writers and artists&#13;
who devise marketing ads&#13;
and presentations that promote&#13;
the Journal and Sentinel.&#13;
"We also take on 'extra'&#13;
jobs, like community affairs&#13;
events,"he says.&#13;
There isn't much time for&#13;
relaxation in all this, Petersen&#13;
admits. "A few more&#13;
hours in the day would help,"&#13;
he explains, "because deadlines&#13;
usually mean extra&#13;
hours. I'm usually busy, and&#13;
but I like it that way."&#13;
A successful graduate of&#13;
Parkside, Petersen does have&#13;
some parting words of encouragement&#13;
for those still&#13;
enrolled.&#13;
"Try to learn everything&#13;
you can in a broad, rather&#13;
than narrow perspective," he&#13;
says. "You never know when&#13;
your career direction could&#13;
change."&#13;
By Jenny Carr&#13;
News Editor&#13;
i&#13;
At last week's PSGA meeting,&#13;
President Adrian Serrano&#13;
recommended and the Senate&#13;
approved the appointment of&#13;
Kay Rouse and Scott Peterson&#13;
as justices for the student&#13;
government association.&#13;
The judicial branch of the&#13;
student government intervenes&#13;
whenever a situation arises&#13;
that requires an official&#13;
interpretation of the PSGA&#13;
constitution.&#13;
Peterson is a former PSGA&#13;
president. Rouse is a Campus&#13;
Ambassador and is involved&#13;
in the Honors program and&#13;
International Studies Club.&#13;
The Senate also approved&#13;
the nominations of Bev Landreman&#13;
and Dan Nicholson to&#13;
the search and screen committee&#13;
to select the director&#13;
of Student Enrollment Services.&#13;
Nicholson worked in enrollment&#13;
services during the&#13;
summer and Landreman,&#13;
president of Peer Support,&#13;
brings a keen interest in&#13;
building enrollment to the&#13;
committee.&#13;
The Library/Learning Center&#13;
will hold its annual book&#13;
sale Tuesday through Thursday,&#13;
Sept. 30 and Oct. 1 and 2,&#13;
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. outside&#13;
the entrance of the Library&#13;
on Level 1.&#13;
Approximately 1500 books&#13;
covering a variety of subjects&#13;
will be included. Most hardcover&#13;
books will sell for $1&#13;
and paperbacks for 25®. There&#13;
also will be a silent auction&#13;
for several special sets of&#13;
books.&#13;
These books have accumulated&#13;
over a period of time&#13;
and consist of duplicates, discards,&#13;
and gift items which&#13;
are not needed for the Library&#13;
collection.&#13;
Credit card tips given Free music&#13;
This year, 83 percent of all&#13;
college students have joined&#13;
the 90 million credit card&#13;
holders in the United States.&#13;
To educate consumers on&#13;
how to select and use these&#13;
cards, the United States Office&#13;
of Consumer Affairs and&#13;
the American Institute of Certified&#13;
Public Accountants&#13;
(AICPA) have published a&#13;
new brochure, "Choosing a&#13;
Credit Card. These 25 Tips&#13;
May Save You Money."&#13;
The brochure suggests that&#13;
consumers look for hidden&#13;
credit card costs and shop for&#13;
the best finance charge before&#13;
acquiring credit cards.&#13;
Credit card fraud may&#13;
reach $1.13 billion by 1990. To&#13;
The most&#13;
demanding,&#13;
challenging,&#13;
enlightening,&#13;
rigorous,&#13;
satisfying,&#13;
difficult,&#13;
rewarding,&#13;
motivating and&#13;
exciting course&#13;
you can take&#13;
in college.&#13;
ARMY RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS&#13;
For more information contact Captain Ed Recke&#13;
(collect) 414-224-7195&#13;
avoid credit card fraud, keep&#13;
a running list of credit card&#13;
numbers and issuer's phone&#13;
numbers in case of loss or&#13;
theft.&#13;
Before acquiring a credit&#13;
card, be aware of finance&#13;
charges that will be imposed&#13;
if the balance is not paid in&#13;
full. Students may not be&#13;
aware that it is illegal to send&#13;
an unsolicited credit card in&#13;
the mail. If a student receives&#13;
a card and doesn't want to&#13;
use it, the card should be&#13;
destroyed.&#13;
Any student wishing a free&#13;
copy of this useful brochure&#13;
may write to: "Choosing a&#13;
Credit Card," Consumer Information&#13;
Center, Pueblo, CO&#13;
81009.&#13;
Three free public concerts&#13;
are scheduled at Parkside for&#13;
1 p.m. in Communication Arts&#13;
Room D118 on Wednesdays&#13;
Sept. 24, Oct. 15 and Oct. 29.&#13;
The series will open with a&#13;
performance by Parkside&#13;
music professor and Fine&#13;
Arts Division chair James&#13;
McKeever, piano; the next&#13;
concert will be by Madison&#13;
classical guitarist George&#13;
Lindquist; and the third by&#13;
the Bliss-Goldberg piano duo&#13;
from Milwaukee.&#13;
Music professor Robert&#13;
Campbell will host the series,&#13;
presented by Parkside's&#13;
music discipline.&#13;
For more information call&#13;
553-2581.&#13;
Here It&#13;
Comes Again&#13;
Quality Men's and&#13;
Women's clothing at&#13;
affordable prices and&#13;
antique jewelry&#13;
Mon. 12-5&#13;
Tues.-Sat. 10-5&#13;
5817 6th Ave.&#13;
Kenosha 652-0430&#13;
Happy Birthday,&#13;
Lori!&#13;
CLUB DEADLINE!!&#13;
The deadline for clubs to&#13;
register for the 1986-87 year&#13;
is Wed., Oct 1st.&#13;
Forms are available in the&#13;
Student Activities Office,&#13;
Union 209&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 25, 1986 5&#13;
Tom Pedersen&#13;
Student breaks ground with study&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
Words such as gravimeter&#13;
and batholith may ribt often&#13;
come into everyday conversation&#13;
but are far from alien for&#13;
Geology student Tom Pedersen.&#13;
A senior at Parkside, Pedersen&#13;
has selected an interesting&#13;
and very important&#13;
senior thesis. By using Geophysics&#13;
and a process called&#13;
a gravity survey, he is determining&#13;
the gravitational geology&#13;
of an area in northern&#13;
Wisconsin. The importance of&#13;
Pedersen's work is that it is&#13;
the first gravity survey done&#13;
in this area of Wisconsin, an&#13;
astounding feat for a professor,&#13;
let alone a student.&#13;
Pedersen is studying an&#13;
area in northern Wisconsin&#13;
called the Wolf River&#13;
batholith. A batholith is basicallly&#13;
a magnetic intrusion&#13;
that occurred under the Earth's&#13;
surface approximately&#13;
1500 million years ago. In&#13;
other words, rocks that became&#13;
magnetic rose to just&#13;
under the Earth's surface.&#13;
Pedersen has so far covered&#13;
175 miles in his studies. He&#13;
measures differences in the&#13;
intensity of the Wolf river&#13;
batholith gravity field in two&#13;
lines across northern Wisconsin.&#13;
He picked his starting&#13;
and end points in towns. One&#13;
line runs from Wild Rose to&#13;
Amberg; the other from&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Geology student Tom Pedersen displays his gravimeter on&#13;
loan from UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
Gleason to Nichols.&#13;
Pedersen takes his readings&#13;
with an instrument called a&#13;
gravimeter (on loan from&#13;
UW-Milwaukee). This instrument&#13;
measures gravity beneath&#13;
the Earth's surface. All&#13;
of his readings have to be&#13;
taken using topographic maps&#13;
at road intersections. He&#13;
must measure in places&#13;
where exact elevations can be&#13;
recorded.&#13;
Pedersen began working on&#13;
his thesis in August of this&#13;
year. Nearly all of his data&#13;
has been collected and he will&#13;
complete his readings this&#13;
October. "That's the easy&#13;
part," he adds. His next project&#13;
will be to take all of the&#13;
data he has been collecting&#13;
and feed it into a computer&#13;
where it will be transferred&#13;
into truly usable data. As of&#13;
now, Pedersen has only raw&#13;
data with which to measure&#13;
his success. "Right now, I&#13;
can't tell too much (whether&#13;
the data is good or not), because&#13;
it isn't processed. Once&#13;
I get it out of the computer, it&#13;
will be well worthwhile," he&#13;
commented.&#13;
The computer will also correct&#13;
drifts (errors) in the&#13;
gravimeter and account for&#13;
elevation differences. Geographical&#13;
factors such as&#13;
large hills must be accounted&#13;
for, since they can cause errors&#13;
in the gravimeter readings.&#13;
The finished product will&#13;
provide data to allow a map&#13;
similar to a topographic map&#13;
to be created. However, instead&#13;
of changes in elevation,&#13;
this map will show changes in&#13;
gravitation. This map will be&#13;
called a Bouguer (pronounced&#13;
boo-gay) Anomaly Map. Bouguer&#13;
is the man who invented&#13;
it and anomaly means an outof-&#13;
the-ordinary clash between&#13;
two things. The map will&#13;
show anomalies, or changes,&#13;
in the gravitational field in&#13;
the Wolf River batholith.&#13;
Pedersen expects the process&#13;
to be finished next&#13;
spring. He may then give a&#13;
talk on his findings in May&#13;
1987 at the Institute on Lake&#13;
Superior Geology, and perhaps&#13;
even have a paper published&#13;
to be used in the institute's&#13;
guide. He points out&#13;
that this project is "a very&#13;
general type of survey; later&#13;
on there will be more studies&#13;
done in smaller areas to determine&#13;
exact geology."&#13;
. Pedersen see page 6&#13;
Math support group meets&#13;
A math support group is&#13;
being offered by the Academic&#13;
Resource Center and&#13;
the Student Counseling and&#13;
Development Office on Wednesdays&#13;
from 3 to 4 p.m. beginning&#13;
Oct. 1.&#13;
The group will meet weekly&#13;
for the first four Wednesdays,&#13;
and after that meetings will&#13;
be scheduled based on the&#13;
needs of the group.&#13;
If you are enrolled in Math&#13;
09-010, 66-015 or 66-016 and believe&#13;
that a math support&#13;
group would be helpful to&#13;
you, then call 553-2605 or stop&#13;
by WLLC D175 to register.&#13;
This group is designed to offeryou&#13;
emotional support and&#13;
is not a substitute for math&#13;
tutoring, which is available in&#13;
the Academic Resource Center.&#13;
Enrollment is limited; so&#13;
call immediately.&#13;
If you have any questions,&#13;
contact Doris Nice at 553-2395&#13;
or Barbara Larson at&#13;
553-2122.&#13;
If l i f e i s a ma t t e r of&#13;
choice, would you&#13;
want someone&#13;
choosing for you?&#13;
Protect your life by&#13;
Protecting the preborn..&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin ProLife&#13;
Coalition&#13;
DROP IN-JOIN UP&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
September 29&#13;
9:00 a.m. -1:00 p.m.&#13;
MAIN CONCOURSE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
SPONSORED BY S.O.C.&#13;
Energy talk&#13;
Energy is essential to the&#13;
survival of any population of&#13;
organisms. This energy is&#13;
generally available in many&#13;
forms-food, sunlight, minerals,&#13;
etc., but the total&#13;
amount is always finite. The&#13;
fact that energy is limited&#13;
means that any population&#13;
must learn to live within its&#13;
"energy budget" or face&#13;
ecological disaster.&#13;
Energy and energy consumption&#13;
have long been a&#13;
concern of physicists. The use&#13;
of energy by populations will&#13;
be the subject of a Physics&#13;
Colloquium to be presented&#13;
by Dale Snider of the UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Physics Department.&#13;
The talk is titled "Population&#13;
and Energy" and is based on&#13;
a set of articles Snider wrote&#13;
for the Milwaukee Journal.&#13;
"Population and Energy" will&#13;
be given at 1 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 1, in 230 Greenquist.&#13;
The talk is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
Total&#13;
Service&#13;
for&#13;
U. W. Parkside&#13;
Employees&#13;
and&#13;
Students&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
Room 286&#13;
Mon. • FrI. 10 - 3&#13;
Serving four other locations&#13;
Racine Waukesha&#13;
Burlington Milwaukee&#13;
6 Thursday, September 25, 1986 RANGER&#13;
Week at the Park&#13;
Folk music, films on tap&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 25&#13;
Movie: "Back to the Future"&#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 $2&#13;
for others. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
Workshop: "Interview Techniques"&#13;
starts at 5:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union 104. Call ext. 2452 for&#13;
reservations.&#13;
Movie: "Slave of Love" will&#13;
be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Tickets for the&#13;
Thursday Foreign Film Series&#13;
will be available at the&#13;
door.&#13;
Friday, Sept. 26&#13;
Movie: "Back to the Future"&#13;
will be repeated at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
and at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
live Entertainment: featuring&#13;
"Gypsy" starts at 8:30&#13;
p.m. in Union Square. Admission&#13;
will be charged at the&#13;
door. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 27&#13;
Short Courses: "The Gifted&#13;
Child" starts at 9:30 a.m. and&#13;
"Ballet for Children" starts&#13;
at 12:30 p.m. Call ext. 2312 for&#13;
details. Sponsored by the Continuing&#13;
Education Office.&#13;
Concert: starting at 7 p.m. in&#13;
the Physical Education Building&#13;
featuring Pete Seeger,&#13;
Bobby McGee, Larry Penn,&#13;
Mud River Lee and more.&#13;
Tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center;&#13;
admission is $10.00.&#13;
Movie: "Slave of Love" will&#13;
be repeated at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. All seats are&#13;
sold for the Saturday Foreign&#13;
Film Series.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 28&#13;
Movie: "Slave of Love" will&#13;
be repeated at 2 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Tickets for the&#13;
Sunday Foreign Film Series&#13;
will be available at the door.&#13;
Movie: "Back to the Future"&#13;
will be repeated at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Sept. 29&#13;
Round Table: "Problems of&#13;
Health Policy" by Dr. John&#13;
Surry of the Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin Family Practice&#13;
Center starts at 12 noon in&#13;
Union 106. The event is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 30&#13;
Short Courses: "Adult Children&#13;
of Alcoholics" starts at 7&#13;
p.m. in T182 and "Investing&#13;
Those Hard Earned Dollars"&#13;
starts at 7 p.m. in T281. Spon-&#13;
1,000,000 Customers&#13;
Can't Be Wrong!&#13;
Now on Sale!&#13;
$59each&#13;
3fors159&#13;
Choice of finishes:&#13;
• Oak&#13;
. • While&#13;
\ • Walnut&#13;
Each bookcase corses with A&#13;
shelves (3 ate adjustable). Eoch&#13;
unit measues 3CTW « 72"H « 12"D&#13;
Oefcveiy not included&#13;
That's how many bookcases&#13;
Scandinavian Design has&#13;
sold over the last 10 years.&#13;
That's because people come&#13;
back for quality., it's&#13;
something we've been&#13;
selling for a long time.&#13;
Now you can enjoy our bestselling&#13;
bcokcase at a terrific&#13;
price! . which makes it an&#13;
even better value&#13;
Our sturdy bookcases are in&#13;
stock, so you can take them&#13;
home today But. don't&#13;
delay, this special pricing&#13;
doesn't last long!&#13;
Sale ends September 28.&#13;
All accessories also on sale!&#13;
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3127 Roosevelt Road, Kenosha • 652-0034&#13;
Daily 10-6 (Friday 'til 9) • Saturday 10-5 • Sunday 1 -5&#13;
sored by the Continuing Education&#13;
Office.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 1&#13;
Coffeehouse: featuring "Moulin&#13;
Rouge" from noon to 2&#13;
p.m. and from 6 p.m. to 8&#13;
p.m. in the Union Bazaar&#13;
Area. All are welcome. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
Workshops: "Estate Planning&#13;
starts at 7 p.m. in T281 and&#13;
"Beginning Guitar" starts at&#13;
8 p.m. in CA D118. Call ext.&#13;
2312 for reservations.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 2&#13;
Workshop: "Grantsmanship"&#13;
starts at 8:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
104. Sponsored by the Continuing&#13;
Education Office.&#13;
Movies: "Romancing the&#13;
Stone" and "Jewel of the&#13;
Nile," both rated PG, will be&#13;
shown at 3:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission at&#13;
the door is $1 for a Parkside&#13;
student and $2 for others.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Workshop: "Pricing Strategy:&#13;
How Much To Charge"&#13;
starts at 6 p.m. Call ext. 2312&#13;
for details.&#13;
Movie: "They Don't Wear&#13;
Black Ties" will be shown at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Tickets are available&#13;
for the Thursday Foreign&#13;
Film Series.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Looks Good&#13;
On A&#13;
Resume&#13;
Geology student&#13;
Pedersen from page 5&#13;
Peter Nielsen, a member of&#13;
the geology faculty, has&#13;
helped Pedersen with his&#13;
studies. Nielsen will be coauthor&#13;
of the paper, and Pedersen&#13;
expressed that "he&#13;
has been an extreme help.&#13;
Most of the project was laid&#13;
out by him, and I carried it&#13;
out. Without him this&#13;
wouldn't be happening." He&#13;
also added that "when I&#13;
started this survey, I knew&#13;
nothing about gravitational&#13;
measure. This experience&#13;
was to teach me about gravitational&#13;
survey.''&#13;
One of Pedersen's main&#13;
reasons for picking such an&#13;
unusual, unexplored thesis&#13;
was "to better my chances of&#13;
getting into a graduate school&#13;
with some sort of assistantship.&#13;
Learning the geophysical&#13;
techniques of gravitational&#13;
surveying will hopefully&#13;
impress some of the larger&#13;
graduate schools." He adds&#13;
with a hopeful joke, "Maybe&#13;
they will let me go for free."&#13;
Day care&#13;
Day care from page 7&#13;
staff of Parkside is lower&#13;
than that of the general public.&#13;
According to Thomas,&#13;
there are no foreseen cuts in&#13;
funding.&#13;
One improvement Madson&#13;
says the center would like to&#13;
make is renovation and new&#13;
equipment for the playground.&#13;
"The nutritional balance of&#13;
childrens' lunches is a concern,"&#13;
Thomas states, as the&#13;
center does not serve hot lunches.&#13;
Of course, at first, both parents&#13;
and children feel a little&#13;
apprehensive aobut a day&#13;
care center. The reservations&#13;
they have, though, are usually&#13;
short-lived. Parents receive&#13;
the assurances of the&#13;
staff, and adjacent to Preschool&#13;
Program Coordinator,&#13;
Janet Robbins' office is a resource&#13;
center which contains&#13;
literature parents can read to&#13;
learn about various characteristics&#13;
of their children's&#13;
ages.&#13;
BSO sets agenda&#13;
The Black Student Organization&#13;
(BSO) is in the process&#13;
of re-establishing its foundation&#13;
after a series of unfortunate&#13;
developments during the&#13;
85-86 school year.&#13;
The organization was sanctioned&#13;
by the Parkside Office&#13;
of Student Life for an infraction&#13;
of procedure; its elections&#13;
were contested, a controversial&#13;
"Miss BSO" pageant&#13;
was conducted and there&#13;
have been difficulties concerning&#13;
the operation of the&#13;
Minority Student Resource&#13;
Center.&#13;
In an effort to reaffirm its&#13;
credibility, Pamela Smith,&#13;
president, conducted meetings&#13;
over the summer with&#13;
elected BSO officers who&#13;
agreed to serve in a temporary&#13;
capacity and to hold new&#13;
elections. A revised constitution&#13;
has also been drafted and&#13;
will be ratified after installation&#13;
of officers. In addition, at&#13;
CH1PM&#13;
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DELICIOUS CANTONESE &amp; AMERICAN FOODS - FAMILY DINNERS&#13;
DINE IN OR CARRY OUT - LE AVE THE COOKING TO US&#13;
least three BSO members will&#13;
attend the Student Leadership&#13;
Workshop at Camp Juniper&#13;
Knolls, and a 1986-87 Work&#13;
Plan will be developed for&#13;
submission to the Student&#13;
Life office. These steps are&#13;
being taken to insure a productive&#13;
and successful operation&#13;
of BSO during the coming&#13;
year.&#13;
The BSO is starting ANEW!&#13;
Membership is open to all&#13;
students who support the&#13;
goals, objectives and programs&#13;
of the organization.&#13;
Your ideas and input are&#13;
needed! The success and effectiveness&#13;
of the organization&#13;
will depend solely on the&#13;
participation of its members.&#13;
Memberships are available&#13;
during hours posted in the&#13;
Minority Student Resource&#13;
Center, MOLN Dill. JOIN&#13;
TODAY!&#13;
A Candidates' Forum will&#13;
be held during the general&#13;
meeting of the BSO on Wednesday,&#13;
September 24, 1986 at&#13;
1 PM in Molinaro D107. Nominees&#13;
for 1986-87 school year&#13;
will be introduced. Vote on&#13;
Thursday and Friday, Sept.,&#13;
26-27! Voting opened to members&#13;
ohly!&#13;
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Ranger&#13;
Needs&#13;
Writers&#13;
How do Parkside's facilities compare to others? by Ronda Ditter&#13;
Today, more mother than&#13;
ever are joining the work&#13;
force. In fact, two-thirds of&#13;
America's moms have decided,&#13;
for various reasons, to&#13;
work outside the home.&#13;
However, because full-time&#13;
'baby sitters' are costly and&#13;
often hard to find, many&#13;
mothers have opted for private&#13;
child care outside the&#13;
home. These day care centers&#13;
aim toward giving the child a&#13;
'more-fun-than-home' experience.&#13;
Day care flourished in the&#13;
late 70's, as an increasing&#13;
number of women began&#13;
working. Since then, the cen-&#13;
THE FAR SIDE&#13;
ters have been criticized for&#13;
using child care services as a&#13;
means for quick cash.&#13;
The cost of child care&#13;
ranges widely from center to&#13;
center, largely depending&#13;
upon the number of hours the&#13;
child remains there and&#13;
whether or not he or she is&#13;
fed a snack or a meal.&#13;
In the east, the cost per&#13;
eight-hour day is, on the average,&#13;
$26. The same can be&#13;
said for the west, although&#13;
the northern, southern and&#13;
midwestern regions are&#13;
slightly cheaper, charging an&#13;
average price of $22 per&#13;
eight-hour day.&#13;
Most childcare agencies&#13;
have lengthy rules and regu-&#13;
By GARY LARSON&#13;
lations that are established&#13;
largely by the state. Most&#13;
deal with maintaining the&#13;
building, safety approval of&#13;
all recreational apparati (including&#13;
everything from a&#13;
ball to a swingset) and the&#13;
type of food served (snacks&#13;
must be nutritional and meals&#13;
must contain all four food&#13;
groups).&#13;
Finally, each 'social counselor,'&#13;
or day care attendant,&#13;
must report any signs of&#13;
abuse to authorities or risk&#13;
losing his required permit. In&#13;
addition, it is also possible&#13;
that these attendants can face&#13;
conviction as an accomplice&#13;
if the child is later found to&#13;
be the victim of abuse. or playing in a maze of tires. photo by Dave McEv°y&#13;
Pignottl's&#13;
Liquor&#13;
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Open Mon. thru Sat.&#13;
9-9&#13;
Open Sunday&#13;
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Christina Sibilsky&#13;
This Week's Prize&#13;
A Dr. McGillicuddy Mirror&#13;
Bay Cere&#13;
What exactly is it all about, anyway?&#13;
"Wawa!"&#13;
by Chris Lojeski&#13;
The Budlowe Day Care&#13;
Center, housed on 30th&#13;
Avenue, between Tallent Hall&#13;
and Orchard Court Apartments,&#13;
serves the students&#13;
and staff of Parkside, in addition&#13;
to the general public.&#13;
The center, with halls lined&#13;
with apples laminated with&#13;
each child's name, and&#13;
murals painted by the children,&#13;
cares for children ranging&#13;
in age from newborn infants&#13;
up to 4-year-olds.&#13;
They are divided by age&#13;
into classrooms, according to&#13;
the Infant/Toddler Program&#13;
Coordinator, Terrie Madson.&#13;
The Classrooms have names&#13;
such as "Flower Garden,"&#13;
"Pumpkin Patch" and&#13;
"Apple Tree Room."&#13;
Each classroom is staffed&#13;
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by two teachers, possessing&#13;
at least an Associate or&#13;
Bachelor's Degree, and they&#13;
make up lesson plans for&#13;
each day, which are posted&#13;
right next to the sign-in sheet&#13;
so parents can easily see&#13;
what their children will spend&#13;
the day doing. According to&#13;
Sherry Thomas, the Day Care&#13;
Center's Coordinator, the children's&#13;
classes entail "structured&#13;
play" geared to the&#13;
various age groups. Says&#13;
Thomas, "We believe that&#13;
children learn through play."&#13;
Each month at the day care&#13;
center brings a new theme.&#13;
For instance one month was&#13;
the "Self-concept" theme,&#13;
which focused on how the&#13;
children see themselves.&#13;
Next, is the "Fall" theme,&#13;
which focuses on the changes&#13;
Autumn brings, such as the&#13;
changes in nature, animals,&#13;
and harvesting.&#13;
According to laws of licensing,&#13;
the children are required&#13;
to take a nap each afternoon&#13;
for a couple hours, and students&#13;
are employed as nap&#13;
aides. Trish Arentz, a student&#13;
working at the center, states,&#13;
"The four-year-olds use less&#13;
nap time, so for them the&#13;
time between noon and 2 is&#13;
usually used mainly as quiet&#13;
time."&#13;
"The day care center is&#13;
supported by funding from&#13;
the University and by income&#13;
the center generates," says&#13;
Madson. The charge is higher&#13;
for infants, and although parents&#13;
sometimes run into a&#13;
problem with financial aid,&#13;
the charge for students and&#13;
Day care see page 6&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
For kids in day care, fun can mean peeking&#13;
through a fence ...&#13;
Exclusive interview&#13;
Timbuk 3 an up-and-coming music act&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
A man, a woman, and a&#13;
boom box.&#13;
Not what you would consider&#13;
the basis for a strong and&#13;
innovative new band. However,&#13;
that's just what Timbuk&#13;
3 is.&#13;
He is Pat McDonald,&#13;
founder of the popular and influential&#13;
early eighties Madison&#13;
band, Pat McDonald and&#13;
the Essentials, and Timbuk&#13;
3's main songwriter.&#13;
She is Barbara K. McDonald,&#13;
guitar, violin and mandolin&#13;
player, and Pat's wife&#13;
and partner in the Austin,&#13;
Texas-based duo.&#13;
And the boom box is just&#13;
that, a tape player which, in&#13;
concert, plays the rhythm&#13;
tracks recorded by Pat.&#13;
These rhythm tracks, however,&#13;
are not the electronic&#13;
banging which these days&#13;
passes for "rhythm," rather,&#13;
these tracks consist of honestto-&#13;
god bass guitar and drums.&#13;
The band's first album, on&#13;
I.R.S. records, entitled&#13;
"Greetings from Timbuk 3,"&#13;
is an eclectic set of songs reflecting&#13;
a wide variety of influences.&#13;
"I think I have hundreds&#13;
of them," said Pat,&#13;
during a recent phone interview.&#13;
"I'm always listening&#13;
to different kinds of things. I&#13;
turn on the radio now and&#13;
then, and something will&#13;
manage to catch my interest."&#13;
This diverse group of influence&#13;
ranges from country&#13;
to funk to straight ahead rock&#13;
and roll.&#13;
Timbuk 3 first gained attention&#13;
when they appeared on&#13;
the MTV music series "The&#13;
Cutting Edge." A recording&#13;
contract with I.R.S. followed&#13;
closely, and it was off to Hollywood&#13;
to record the album.&#13;
Said Pat, "The record is&#13;
probably the loest-budget&#13;
I.R.S. record in the history of&#13;
the company. The whole thing&#13;
Book review&#13;
IN l evV&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
"Cinema of Paradox" by&#13;
Evelyn Ehrilich (Columbia&#13;
University Press) is sub-titled&#13;
"French filmmaking during&#13;
the German Occupation" and&#13;
is a scholarly study of the&#13;
era.&#13;
What characterizes this&#13;
book over the standard scholarly&#13;
cinema tome is that is&#13;
combines its perception on&#13;
film with a thorough knowledge&#13;
of the era. Interviews&#13;
with performers and filmmakers&#13;
help to enhance the&#13;
careful study, while listings&#13;
of film production during the&#13;
era (1940-1944) make it a&#13;
valuable reference as well.&#13;
This portion of French filmmaking&#13;
is a pre-New Wave&#13;
look at how films during that&#13;
time and under those conditions&#13;
were created under&#13;
strict jurisdiction of dictatorial&#13;
leadership, suppressing&#13;
Ron's Place&#13;
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was done for about $15,000."&#13;
"And," added Barbara,&#13;
"that included everything, including&#13;
putting us up in L.A.&#13;
The actual money spent on&#13;
the recording of the album&#13;
was about eight or nine thousand."&#13;
The stripped-down&#13;
sound resulting from this low&#13;
budget suits the band. The album's&#13;
sound is crisp and&#13;
clear and the minimum of&#13;
studio tricks allows every element&#13;
of the music to shine&#13;
through.&#13;
Many of Pat's songs can be&#13;
seen as somewhat cynical,&#13;
but this cynicism is almost always&#13;
backed up with a sense&#13;
of humor. The subjects of&#13;
these songs range from political&#13;
comment ("Just Another&#13;
Movie") to society's stereotyping&#13;
of people by the way&#13;
they wear their hair ("Haircuts&#13;
and Attitudes.") In spite&#13;
of his often biting jabs at society&#13;
and the world, Pat describes&#13;
himself as "basically&#13;
Barbara K (I) and Pat McDonald&#13;
a happy person. It's just that&#13;
it would be hard to write&#13;
songs all the time about sitting&#13;
on the porch and watching&#13;
the lawn grow."&#13;
The McDonalds are quite&#13;
happy with the band's line-up&#13;
at the present time. They feel&#13;
that the "jambox" is an ideal&#13;
third band member. It allows&#13;
them the freedom to play&#13;
anywhere.&#13;
French cinema released&#13;
much of the imagination and&#13;
yet still leaving room for&#13;
some important works. One&#13;
can also see how the French&#13;
filmmakers eventually evolved&#13;
into a fascination with&#13;
American film noir from this&#13;
very period (which culminated&#13;
in the New Wave of French&#13;
filmmaking that gave us&#13;
artists like Truffeau, Cocteau,&#13;
and Renoir).&#13;
That this is an intelligent,&#13;
scholarly study makes it important&#13;
for serious students of&#13;
the cinema (especially since&#13;
it deals with an aspect of the&#13;
French cinema that is often&#13;
overlooked in favor of the&#13;
more chic New Wave). Its&#13;
cerebral presentation is combined&#13;
with straight factual&#13;
data for reference purposes&#13;
which makes it a library imperative.&#13;
"Cinema of Paradox" is yet&#13;
another important study on&#13;
French cinema and one which&#13;
is complete and insightful.&#13;
That it covers much untouched&#13;
territory in a comprehensive&#13;
manner adds immeasurably&#13;
to its value.&#13;
Vopat to give reading&#13;
On Sunday, Sept. 28 at 5&#13;
p.m. the Humanities Symposium&#13;
will kick off its 1986-87&#13;
season by sponsoring a reading&#13;
by Professor Carole&#13;
Vopat of excerpts from her&#13;
award-winning novel-in-progress,&#13;
"The Cookie Stories."&#13;
The gathering will take&#13;
place at the home of Professor&#13;
James Dean, 1642 Park&#13;
Avenue, Racine, and will feature&#13;
food and drink as sell as&#13;
Professor Vopat. Everyone is&#13;
invited, and urged to bring&#13;
refreshments to share.&#13;
Carole Vopat has been&#13;
working on a novel, "The&#13;
Cookie Stories," since July&#13;
1980. In 1983 she received an&#13;
Honorable Mention Award in&#13;
the Wisconsin Arts Board's&#13;
Fellowship Program. That&#13;
same year the Board awarded&#13;
her a grant of $3000 to&#13;
continue work on her novel.&#13;
SWATCH THIS SPACE - NEXT WEEK ^&#13;
£YOU - MAY BE A WINNER 5&#13;
% 10 free movie passes (1 student and&#13;
^ guest) will be awarded in next&#13;
J week's Ranger.&#13;
^ (Each student winner will be chosen&#13;
^ at random and will also receive&#13;
^ refreshments.)&#13;
J Winners sponsored by&#13;
•, U.A. CINEMA AND&#13;
* RANGER STAFF&#13;
%&#13;
%&#13;
%&#13;
%&#13;
The Board described her&#13;
work as "luminous" and&#13;
"riveting," especially praising&#13;
the character development.&#13;
"Panelists found themselves&#13;
so drawn into the story&#13;
that they wanted to know&#13;
more about Cookie at the&#13;
chapter's end. The narrative&#13;
development is deft and the&#13;
content important."&#13;
Ms. Vopat received a second&#13;
grant from the Arts&#13;
Board in 1984, and a third this&#13;
past summer. She has also&#13;
been awarded a sabbatical&#13;
leave to work on her novel for&#13;
the Spring semester, 1987,&#13;
from Parkside. Vopat lives in&#13;
Milwaukee and has two cats.&#13;
THE OLD BOOK CORNER&#13;
312 — 6th St. Racine&#13;
Gently Used Books&#13;
on all subjects.&#13;
Racine's only&#13;
used Bookstore.&#13;
MARTHA MERRELLS&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
HANGER Thursday, September 25,1986 9&#13;
Record review&#13;
Paul hits the bottom after long fall&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Since 1970, people have&#13;
been saying that Paul McCartney's&#13;
music is feeble&#13;
when compred to his work&#13;
with the Beatles.&#13;
Today, some 12 albums&#13;
after the break-up of the Fab&#13;
Four, that complaint is no&#13;
longer justified.&#13;
That's because "Press to&#13;
Play," Paul's latest, is feeble&#13;
even by today's undemanding&#13;
standards.&#13;
The most successful songwriter&#13;
in the history of recorded&#13;
sound, McCartney has,&#13;
plainly and simply, run out of&#13;
worthwhile ideas. The selections&#13;
on "Press to Play" (six&#13;
written in collaboration with&#13;
lOcc's Eric Stewart) are&#13;
dumb, drab throwaways with&#13;
repetitious rhythms and pseudo-&#13;
surrealistic lyrics that are&#13;
as laughable as they are impenetrable.&#13;
From McCartney's point of&#13;
view, such cuts, like "However&#13;
Absurd," "Pretty Little&#13;
Head" and "Press" (which&#13;
may very well be the worst&#13;
single of the year) represent&#13;
an attempt to shake the cutesy&#13;
balladeer tag his post-Beatles&#13;
work has earned him.&#13;
For listeners, however,&#13;
these songs merely reinforce&#13;
why that stereotype was developed&#13;
to begin with--because&#13;
Pauly (unlike John&#13;
Lennon) never was too good&#13;
with words and thereby had&#13;
to rely on catchy melodies&#13;
and his admittedly sweet&#13;
voice to succeed.&#13;
But even the pipes are corroding&#13;
these days. Although&#13;
in the past his singing could&#13;
make worthless efforts like&#13;
"No More Lonely Nights"&#13;
palatable, that option is no&#13;
longer open. Tracks like&#13;
"Footprints" and "Angry" illustrate&#13;
just how thin the&#13;
voice has gotten when it&#13;
reaches for those upper octaves.&#13;
And "Only Love&#13;
Remains," a more McCartneyesque&#13;
weeper, is tightly&#13;
miked and overdubbed, an&#13;
obvious response to rickety&#13;
vocal cords.&#13;
If there is a bright spot surrounding&#13;
the release of this&#13;
woeful record, it is that it finally&#13;
frees Beatlemaniacs&#13;
from the burden of shaking&#13;
their heads and muttering,&#13;
"Is this the same guy who&#13;
wrote 'Eleanor Rigby' and&#13;
'We Can Work It Out'? "&#13;
"Press to Play," once and&#13;
for all, proves that it isn't. Paul McCartney&#13;
Short Cuts&#13;
RETURNED TO THE&#13;
SCENE OF THE CRIME&#13;
by Rossington (Atlantic)&#13;
Once known as the Rossington-&#13;
Collins has since departed),&#13;
Rossington now not&#13;
only stands for guitarist-songwriter&#13;
Gary Rossington, but&#13;
also lead vocalist Dale Krantz-&#13;
Rossington.&#13;
This latest release presents&#13;
the listener with a diverse&#13;
style of straight-ahead rock&#13;
and roll that is too gritty for&#13;
power pop and yet too tame&#13;
to be classified heavy metal.&#13;
Dale Krantz-Rossington's&#13;
vocals still have the smooth&#13;
flow that characterized earlier&#13;
Rossington-Collins works&#13;
and enhance the better tracks&#13;
on this album. The most successsful&#13;
cuts are those that&#13;
employ a rock ballad style as&#13;
opposed to the more formulaic&#13;
upbeat numbers. The lyrics&#13;
are a welcome generic&#13;
relief from all of the pretentious&#13;
attempts at "meaningful"&#13;
words that usually do no&#13;
more than appear heavy handed&#13;
and sanctimonious.&#13;
"Returned to the Scene of&#13;
the Crime" has a 1970's rock&#13;
and roll reel, something that&#13;
could be dismissed as dated.&#13;
However in the wake of so&#13;
many groups that fall under&#13;
the category of "New music"&#13;
giving us no more than redundant&#13;
electronics and depressed&#13;
moaning for vocals,&#13;
the purity of hearing genuine&#13;
instruments rather than machines&#13;
is a welcome step&#13;
backwards. At least before&#13;
we forget how rock and roll&#13;
with true feeling sounds.&#13;
•Jim Neibaur-&#13;
BOOMERANG&#13;
by Boomerang (Atlantic)&#13;
This new female rock act&#13;
consists of three vocalists-Adriana&#13;
Kaegi, Cheryl Poirier&#13;
and Perri Lister. As you have&#13;
probably already guessed,&#13;
they sound a great deal like&#13;
The Go-Go's and Bananarama.&#13;
This, their debut album,&#13;
contains ten tracks, most of&#13;
which are fast-paced and upbeat.&#13;
The title cut, "When the&#13;
Phone Stops Ringing," "Baby&#13;
I'm Back in Love Again,"&#13;
and "In the Darkness" are&#13;
amoung the dancable songs&#13;
that seem destined for Top&#13;
Forty popularity, as the trio&#13;
presents this dance pop style&#13;
quite effectively.&#13;
While helping Kaegi with&#13;
artistic direction, Poirier also&#13;
accomplishes the task of&#13;
vocal arrangements. Kaegi is&#13;
the artistic talent responsible&#13;
for the album cover as well.&#13;
If you're a fan of the contemporary&#13;
girl group pop formula&#13;
that characterizes the&#13;
work of The Go-Go's and Bananarama,&#13;
"Boomerang" is&#13;
an effort that's well worth&#13;
picking up.&#13;
•Karen Wiegert-&#13;
FIRST DOWN AND TEN&#13;
by Keep It Dark (Elektra)&#13;
Yet another group from&#13;
England trying to make it big&#13;
with the same old pop formulas-&#13;
Keep It Dark.&#13;
Using the mellow sort of&#13;
tones of the Dream Academy&#13;
and the jazzlike style of the&#13;
Blow Monkeys, Keep It Dark&#13;
has managed to create an unobtusive&#13;
collection of tunes&#13;
that are sure to be accepted&#13;
by the same Top 40 charts&#13;
that made A-hA, Wham!, and&#13;
Whitney Houston big.&#13;
Although it is quiet talented,&#13;
the instrumentation is&#13;
not innovative. The saxaphone&#13;
solo on "Better Than Me"&#13;
is an excellent piece of jazz&#13;
work and the horns throughout&#13;
the album are superbly&#13;
used. The use of keyboards in&#13;
the style of Howard Jones is&#13;
pervasive in this work. Very&#13;
unusual is the incredible similarity&#13;
between the background&#13;
of "Fish Out Of&#13;
Water" and Steely Dan's 1972&#13;
(3H2VCINEMAS 5 57th AVE &amp; 75th St.&#13;
694 7301&#13;
ti Playing For Keeps"&#13;
Danny has a dream of turning a wreck into&#13;
a rock and roll hotel. But the town, the&#13;
cops and the odds are against him. So,&#13;
he's getting some help from the oddest&#13;
team he can find his friends.&#13;
This youth-oriented, rags-to-riches story&#13;
features music by Phil Collins, Pete&#13;
Townshend, Julian Lennon, OMD,&#13;
Arcadia, Sister Sledge, Eugene Wilde,&#13;
Loose Ends, Peter Frampton and Chris&#13;
Thompson.&#13;
"Playing for Keeps," starring Daniel&#13;
Jordano, Matthew Penn and Leon W.&#13;
Grant, opens Oct. 3 at the UA Cinema 5&#13;
Theater located at 7310 57th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
hit "Reelin in the Years."&#13;
Do not, however, expect too&#13;
much in the way of lyrical intellectuality.&#13;
They range&#13;
from sappy love songs ("If&#13;
you'll be mine tonight then&#13;
I'll be yours") to more sappy&#13;
love songs ("Love lost forever-&#13;
makes me cry").&#13;
The vocals of Jimmy Barret&#13;
are very soothing, something&#13;
on the order of a heavy&#13;
overdose of either. He seems&#13;
to be in severe emotional pain&#13;
with each note sung. An emotional,&#13;
tear jerking, crystal&#13;
clear voice with these lyrics&#13;
make for such deep love&#13;
songs. Such emotion! Such&#13;
pain! Such standard, trendy&#13;
music.&#13;
Keep It Dark is a good&#13;
standard pop group, a new&#13;
version of the old fare. If you&#13;
search for daring, creative&#13;
music, you have gone to the&#13;
wrong group. However, this is&#13;
just the thing for any pop&#13;
music fan!&#13;
•Tyson Wilda-&#13;
EAT YOUR PAISLEY!&#13;
by The Dead Milkmen&#13;
(Restless)&#13;
Unusual even for a punk&#13;
group, this is the Milkmen's&#13;
second attack on society&#13;
through comic music. Shockabilly&#13;
tunes, whines, screams,&#13;
and terribly strange lyrics&#13;
are the trend here.&#13;
The Milkmen use their own&#13;
style in combination with established&#13;
musical trends to&#13;
satirize both the music of&#13;
today and the world in general.&#13;
Rodney Anonymous Melloncamp&#13;
moans out his insane&#13;
lyrics with a "spoiled rich&#13;
kid" whine.&#13;
•Tyson Wilda-&#13;
[!2£\CINEMAS 5&#13;
H&#13;
57th AVE. &amp; 75th St.&#13;
694 7301&#13;
Jumpin' Jack Flash&#13;
Whoopi Goldberg (The Color Purple) plays&#13;
her first comedy role in "Jumpin' Jack&#13;
Flash." Terry Doolittle (Whoopi Goldberg)&#13;
is a bright young woman in a dull job who&#13;
finds excitement and romance when she&#13;
comes upon a plea on a computer screen,&#13;
sent by a CIA operative trapped in an&#13;
Eastern Bloc country.&#13;
This comedy-thriller, directed by&#13;
Penny Marshall, also stars Stephen&#13;
Collins, Carol Kane, John Wood, Roscoe&#13;
Lee Browne and Annie Potts, as well as&#13;
several surprise cameo players.&#13;
Coming Oct. 10 to the UA Cinema 5&#13;
Theater, 7310 57th Ave., Kenosha.&#13;
T&#13;
10 Thursday, September 25,1986 RANGER&#13;
WALK BETWEEN&#13;
CAMPUS AND&#13;
'ORCHARD HOME - COURTS&#13;
Studio Furnished, 1 or 2 students&#13;
$240 Single Occupancy&#13;
$280 Double Occupancy&#13;
Phone: 553-9009&#13;
Earn $10 per month for referring&#13;
someone to Orchard Court.&#13;
(Subject to signing lease contract.)&#13;
Soccer extends&#13;
winning streak&#13;
by Vahan Mahdasian&#13;
The Parkside men's soccer&#13;
team won two games last&#13;
week to extend its unbeaten&#13;
streak to seven games and&#13;
improve its record to 6-1-1.&#13;
Two major feats were accomplished&#13;
in the Rangers' 6-&#13;
4 victory over the NCAA Division&#13;
I DePaul Blue Demons.&#13;
First, the win was a milestone&#13;
for Coach Rick Kilps,&#13;
as he recorded his 100th victory&#13;
as a coach. He currently is&#13;
33-12-5 in two-plus years at&#13;
Parkside. Previously, he&#13;
complied a 67-39-10 r ecord at&#13;
Aurora College, Illinois.&#13;
The second feat accomplished&#13;
came from freshman&#13;
Sam Kongla who led the&#13;
Rangers to victory with a&#13;
school record five goals and&#13;
one assist. The five goals ties&#13;
the record set by Wayne&#13;
Adema last year, and&#13;
Kongla's 11 points set a new&#13;
school record for most points&#13;
in a game.&#13;
The Ranger's other victory&#13;
came last Saturday at home&#13;
as Parkside beat Lawrence&#13;
University 6-1.&#13;
Freshman Jim Chomko&#13;
scored three goals, Adema&#13;
scored two and Kongla added&#13;
one as the Rangers easily&#13;
handled Lawrence.&#13;
Though the Rangers face a&#13;
tough schedule ahead, Coach&#13;
Kilps continues to see improvement&#13;
in his team and&#13;
knows that his team can continue&#13;
to build confidence and&#13;
momentum as the season&#13;
wears on.&#13;
"We're getting a good blend&#13;
of play. Our seniors (Jeff Fischer,&#13;
Patrick Gayle, Carlos&#13;
Gil, Adema), are taking charge,&#13;
our freshmen (Brian&#13;
Maher, Mike Lee, Chomko,&#13;
Kongla) are showing great&#13;
improvement and giving solid&#13;
efforts and our bench is coming&#13;
through for us."&#13;
The Ranger's now have the&#13;
undesirable task of facing Alderson-&#13;
Broaddus (U-Va) in&#13;
the opening round of a&#13;
tournament this weekend in&#13;
Wilmington, Ohio.&#13;
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to your home. 551-9024.&#13;
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for the student and professional. 553-&#13;
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UW-PARKSIDE STUDENTS for ride&#13;
sharing information contact Union Information&#13;
to be put on the "Ride Sharing"&#13;
List for all surrounding communities.&#13;
TYPING MY home, fast and professional.&#13;
student rates and free estimates.&#13;
Call Debbie at 681-3522.&#13;
LEARN HOW to better cope with&#13;
daily pressure - Learn how to use&#13;
simple relaxation techniques at St.&#13;
Catherine's Hospital WORKSHOP on&#13;
Well Day. Wednesday, October 8th.&#13;
Sign up in Student Health Services&#13;
Molinaro D115 or Call 553-2366 for&#13;
ONE OF TWO sessions. 11 a.m.-11:45&#13;
a.m. OR 1 p.m.-1:45 p.m.&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
PART-TIME Jobs. $6.85 to start. Flexible&#13;
hours available. 18 or older with&#13;
car, for appointment call (312)249-&#13;
3444.&#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;
95-B, Roselle, NJ 07203&#13;
For Sale&#13;
HOUSE-GREAT location! New offering,&#13;
completely remodled 3 bedroom&#13;
home at 613 Ohio St., Racine. Spacious&#13;
panelled family room with wood burning&#13;
fireplace overlooking private&#13;
patio. 2 car garage many extras.&#13;
$59,900. Phone 886-1143 or 637-3287.&#13;
DODGE CORONET-1976. New tires,&#13;
brakes. V-6. Dependable. $500.00. 634-&#13;
0988.&#13;
BEETHOVEN: BICENTENNIAL Edition&#13;
1770-1970 "Records" (17 volumes)&#13;
$75.00&#13;
654-7396.&#13;
1980 DODGE Omni 4 dr., 4 speed stereo&#13;
cassette $2000. 681-1402.&#13;
Personals&#13;
RUDY DARNKOT, nice race, the&#13;
team.&#13;
JEN: THINKIN' about you, drivin'&#13;
me crazy, love always, Scotty.&#13;
FRAULEIN GUNDLACH, Gratulieren&#13;
auf das ende de Arbeit um Fashion&#13;
rack.&#13;
CHADDIE, MAKE plans to party this&#13;
weekend! Di and Orson.&#13;
CHEECH, HERE'S what you've been&#13;
waiting for! The dizzy blonde!&#13;
I WANT to know what kind of slime&#13;
steals a guys fuzzy dice and his favorite&#13;
Who/Clapton tape at the same&#13;
time.&#13;
JIP, WHERE'S the thigh meat?&#13;
DREAMS CAN come true&#13;
Tarn...Thank you!&#13;
JOHN BEACH-contrary to popular belief,&#13;
a lot of your students think you&#13;
are a good teacher. Work never hurt&#13;
anyone.&#13;
VAHAN, NURKIE nurk nurk, Furm.&#13;
MICHELLE, TAKE any wrong turns&#13;
lately?&#13;
MAUREEN M., how about another&#13;
BEER. Tim&#13;
MMM MEATHEAD. How'a Tara.&#13;
She's looking Hot!!! Cheese D.&#13;
THANK YOU for turning in my wallet!&#13;
JJM&#13;
MOMMY AND Daddy. It takes us&#13;
some time to get used to all the fun&#13;
we have at the cay care, so we're not&#13;
crying any more.&#13;
J.J.M.-I came. I saw, I will conquer-&#13;
Secret Admirer.&#13;
ANDY B. dido onlast weeks classifieds.&#13;
MR. JOHNSON I still love you even&#13;
when you yell at me. Mrs. J.&#13;
B.C. GOT a new office.&#13;
SK-1111-P-P-P.&#13;
photo by Jack Bornhuetter&#13;
Mike Sliwa matches&#13;
strides with an Eastern&#13;
Illinois runner duri&#13;
n g t h e M i d w e s t&#13;
C o l l e g i a t e C r o s s c&#13;
o u n t r y C h a m p i onships,&#13;
held last Saturday&#13;
on the Parkside&#13;
National Course.&#13;
£) 1986 United Feature Syndicate&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
Women 9th, men 15th&#13;
team. She placed 18th and her&#13;
time was a school record 18:&#13;
13. Marter said after the race&#13;
"The competition was tougher&#13;
then I thought it would be.&#13;
I was happy with my place&#13;
and time, but I realize I have&#13;
a lot of work to do to accomplish&#13;
my goals."&#13;
The men's team placed 15th&#13;
with 424 points. Two of the&#13;
team's top runners, John&#13;
Hunt and Mike Stauch, droped&#13;
out because of the humidity.&#13;
Coach Rosa said "As a&#13;
team we had a poor showing,&#13;
but the season is still young&#13;
yet." The women's team&#13;
placed ninth scoring 264&#13;
points.&#13;
Varsity men: Randy Damkot,&#13;
26th, 25:51; Mike Lunow,&#13;
63rd, 26:38; Derek Brown,&#13;
92nd, 27:00; Dan Peterson,&#13;
146th, 27:49; Scott Rench,&#13;
154th, 27:56; Andy Kaestner,&#13;
164th, 28:03; Mike Nelson,&#13;
167th, 28:04.&#13;
Varsity women: Michelle&#13;
Marter, 18th, 18:13; Jilleen&#13;
Fobair, 54th, 19:16; Sarah&#13;
Hiett, 69th, 19:28; Julie Wunrow,&#13;
71st, 19:32; Kristin Alioto,&#13;
83rd, 19:42; Nancy Marter,&#13;
84th, 19:43; Colleen&#13;
Wismer, 88th, 19:48.&#13;
by Michael Rohl&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
The Midwest Collegiate&#13;
Cross-Country Championships&#13;
were held this past weekend&#13;
on the Parkside National&#13;
Cross-Country course. There&#13;
were 25 men's and 21&#13;
women's teams in attendance.&#13;
The UW-Madison men's and&#13;
women's teams thoroughly&#13;
dominated the competition,&#13;
winning both the team and individual&#13;
titles. The overall&#13;
men's winner was Rusty Korhonen&#13;
who completed the&#13;
course in 24 minutes, 14 seconds.&#13;
The women's champion&#13;
Stephanie Herbst, along with&#13;
freshman Suzie Favor, broke&#13;
the previous course record&#13;
with a time of 16:43.&#13;
The Madison team easily&#13;
outdistanced second place&#13;
Hillsdale scoring a mere 27&#13;
points to Hillsdale's 100. All&#13;
five of Madison's scoring runners&#13;
were in the top ten. The&#13;
women, not to be outdone,&#13;
scored a meet record low of&#13;
21 points. The next nearest&#13;
team was Ohio State with 91&#13;
points. The Madison women&#13;
also placed all five of their&#13;
scoring runners in the top&#13;
ten.&#13;
For the Parkside men&#13;
Randy Damkot was the first&#13;
to cross the finish line. He&#13;
placed 26th with a personal&#13;
best of 25:51. Coach Lucian&#13;
Rosa said "He had a good&#13;
race. I couldn't ask any more&#13;
of one of my runners."&#13;
Michelle Marter was the&#13;
first finisher for the women's&#13;
CROSSWORD PUZZLER&#13;
28 Spanish&#13;
article&#13;
29 Singing voice&#13;
30 Worship&#13;
32 Yellow ocher&#13;
33 Evil&#13;
35 Talk&#13;
39 Myself&#13;
40 A young child&#13;
41 Note of scale&#13;
44 Encountered&#13;
46 Wagers&#13;
48 Rumple&#13;
49 Overturn&#13;
50 Top player&#13;
51 Unused&#13;
52 Soak, as flax&#13;
54 Meadow&#13;
55 Breakfast&#13;
item&#13;
56 Fish eggs&#13;
59 Lithium&#13;
symbol&#13;
34 Article&#13;
35 Convene&#13;
36 Spring month&#13;
37 Japanese&#13;
drama&#13;
38 Finished&#13;
41 On behalf of&#13;
42 Cedar or elm&#13;
43 Decimal point&#13;
44 Female horse&#13;
45 Hebrew&#13;
month&#13;
47 Subdued&#13;
49 Oil-carrying&#13;
ship&#13;
53 Manservant&#13;
57 Refrigerate&#13;
58 Narrates&#13;
60 The self&#13;
61 Church&#13;
bench&#13;
62 Pigpens&#13;
63 Mature&#13;
DOWN&#13;
1 Ordinance&#13;
2 Japanese&#13;
sash&#13;
3 Prohibit&#13;
4 Region&#13;
5 Made&#13;
flawless&#13;
6 Running&#13;
7 Blushing&#13;
8 Taunt&#13;
9 Pallor&#13;
10 Bind&#13;
11 Wander&#13;
16 Attempt&#13;
18 Domestic cat&#13;
20 Paving&#13;
substance&#13;
22 Pamphlet&#13;
23 Award&#13;
24 Latin&#13;
conjunction&#13;
26 Train&#13;
schedule&#13;
ACROSS&#13;
1 Tennis stroke&#13;
4 To the left&#13;
-9 Devoured&#13;
12 Arabian&#13;
garment&#13;
13 Renovate&#13;
14 Title of&#13;
respect&#13;
15 Season of&#13;
year&#13;
17 Confused&#13;
condition&#13;
19 Float&#13;
21 Tantalum&#13;
symbol&#13;
22 Pronoun&#13;
25 Dine&#13;
27 Second of a&#13;
series&#13;
31 Decay&#13;
32 Scrawled&#13;
RANGER&#13;
1&#13;
Thursday, September 25, 1986 11 *&#13;
Parkside All -Americans 1985-86&#13;
Jackie Cotton-Track&#13;
1986: NAIA Indoor Distance&#13;
Medley-3rd&#13;
Jack Danner-Wrestling&#13;
1986: NAIA, NCAA Academic Ail-&#13;
American&#13;
Doug Fournier-Track&#13;
1986: NAIA 10K Walk-3rd&#13;
Andy Buchanan-Soccer&#13;
1985: NAIA First Team Sweeper&#13;
NAIA Academic All American&#13;
Dan Hall-Wrestling&#13;
1966: NAIA, NCAA Academic All-&#13;
American&#13;
Karen Greene-Volleyball&#13;
1986: NAIA All American Outside&#13;
Hitter&#13;
Sarah Hiett-Track Andy Kaestner-Track&#13;
1985: NAIA Mile Run-Indoor 1985: NAIA National Champion&#13;
4x80 Relay-2nd 10K Walk&#13;
1986: NAIA 1000 yd. lndoor-5th 1986: NAIA 10K Walk Outdoor-&#13;
NAIA 800 Outdoor-6th 2nd&#13;
Tim Renzelman-Track&#13;
1985: NAIA 10K Outdoor Run-2nd&#13;
NAIA 5K Outdoor&#13;
1986: NAIA 3 Mile lndoor-2nd&#13;
NAIA 3 Mile Outdoor-3rd&#13;
Mike Stauch-Track&#13;
1986: NAIA National Champion&#13;
Outdoor 10K Walk&#13;
Don VerBruggen-Wrestling&#13;
1986: All-American Heavyweight&#13;
£r~&#13;
Pat Neder-Softball&#13;
1986: All-American Outfield&#13;
Wendy Sackman-Softball&#13;
1986: All-American Second Base&#13;
Jackie Rittmer-Softball&#13;
1983-86: All-American Outfield&#13;
Mike Robertson-Soccer&#13;
1986: All-American Midfielder&#13;
Mike Rohl-Track&#13;
1985: NAIA 10K Walk Outdoor&#13;
1986: NAIA 10K Walk Outdoor&#13;
Janet Koenig-Softball&#13;
1984,1986: All-American Utility&#13;
Player&#13;
Michelle Marter-Track&#13;
1985: NAIA 4x800 Relay-2nd&#13;
NAIA Cross Country-15th&#13;
1986: NAIA Indoor Mile Run-3rd&#13;
NAIA Indoor Dist. Medley-3rd&#13;
NAIA Outdoor 3000m Run-4th&#13;
12 Thursday, September 25, 1986 HANGER&#13;
Tennis&#13;
Team struggles to 3-5 mark&#13;
by Jason Gaspers&#13;
The Parkside women's tennis&#13;
team kept busy last week&#13;
by playing four home meets,&#13;
winning one against Ripon.&#13;
However, they didn't fare as&#13;
well in their other meets.&#13;
On Tuesday, Sept. 16, the&#13;
team lost to Carthage 1-8. The&#13;
only winner for Parkside was&#13;
the number one doubles team&#13;
4$ Amy Tropin and Kim Kranich&#13;
6-2, 6-3.&#13;
On Saturday the team played&#13;
quite well in defeating&#13;
Ripon 6-3. The Ranger winners&#13;
were Kranich at number&#13;
three singles 6-2, 6-1, JoJo&#13;
Bramhill at number five singles&#13;
7-6, 6-1, Nancy O'Connell&#13;
at number six singles 6-3, 6-4&#13;
and all three doubles teams:&#13;
Tropin/Kranich 6-4, 6-3, Elizabeth&#13;
Spala/Lori Henry 6-1, 6-&#13;
3 and Bramhill/O'Connell 6-0,&#13;
6-0. The three losses were all&#13;
extremely close. Tropin lost&#13;
•; 4-6, 3-6, Spalla lost 5-7, 7-6, 6-7&#13;
and Henry lost 2-6, 6-7 in a&#13;
match that took four hours to&#13;
complete.&#13;
On Sunday they had a doubleheader,&#13;
dropping meets to&#13;
both St. Francis and Stevens&#13;
Point 1-8, which lowered their&#13;
record to 3-5. The only winners&#13;
for the Rangers in both&#13;
meets were Tropin and Kranich&#13;
at number one doubles.&#13;
They won 8-2 (in a pro-set format)&#13;
against St. Francis and&#13;
6-0, 6-3 against Stevens Point.&#13;
The team of Tropin and&#13;
Kranich has been a bright&#13;
_spot this year. They are undefeated&#13;
so far and coach&#13;
Wendy Miller thinks they are&#13;
as good as any other team in&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Rained out&#13;
by Randy LeCount&#13;
The Rangers fell victim not&#13;
to their opponents this week,&#13;
but to the rain.&#13;
Rain halted the Rangers&#13;
scheduled doubleheader&#13;
against MATC on Wednesday,&#13;
Sept. 17 in the third inning&#13;
with Parkside leading 8-5.&#13;
Sunday's (Sept.21) scheduled&#13;
home doubleheader against&#13;
M.S.O.E. never even got&#13;
started because of the wet&#13;
playing field from the recent&#13;
rain.&#13;
Head Coach Ken "Red"&#13;
Oberbruner was pleased with&#13;
his team's effort in the three&#13;
innnings played against&#13;
MATC. He noted that it was&#13;
raining hard throughout the&#13;
innings played, and that the&#13;
umpires had no choice but to&#13;
call the game to avoid injuries&#13;
to players.&#13;
With Sunday's games&#13;
cancelled, Parkside has a&#13;
weekend tournament in Illinois&#13;
to look forward to. The&#13;
Rangers will travel to Chicago&#13;
to play in the University of&#13;
Illinois Circle Tournament&#13;
this Friday and Saturday&#13;
(Sept. 26-27).&#13;
a;&#13;
photo by Jack Bornhuetter&#13;
Elizabeth Spalla shows concentration on a shot during a recent&#13;
women's tennis match.&#13;
the state. "They are very&#13;
scrappy at the net and are finally&#13;
understanding the workings&#13;
of doubles," Miller said.&#13;
Tropin, Kranich and the&#13;
rest of the team will get the&#13;
biggest test of the year this&#13;
weekend when the team&#13;
travels to Whitewater for the&#13;
11-team UW-Whitewater Invitational.&#13;
Miller has high expectations&#13;
for her team,&#13;
which finished eighth last&#13;
year.&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
Sat. and Sun., Sept. 27-28 - At the Kiwanis Classic&#13;
in Wilmington, Ohio.&#13;
Mon., Sept. 29 - Reserve team home vs. Waukesha&#13;
Technical College, 4 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Oct. 1 - Reserve team at College of Lake&#13;
County, 4 p.m.&#13;
VOLLEYBALL&#13;
Fri., Sept. 26 - Parkside hosts the Ranger Invitational;&#13;
teams in the tournament are&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, St. Ambrose and the&#13;
National College of Education; 1:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Tues., Sept. 30 - At Illinois-Chicago, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
Sat., Sept. 27 - At the UW-Whitewater Invitational,&#13;
10:45 a.m.&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
Fri. and Sat., Sept. 26-27 - At the Illinois-Chicago&#13;
tournament in Chicago,&#13;
time to be announced.&#13;
GOLF&#13;
Fri. and Sat., Sept. 26-27 -Parkside hosts the Ranger&#13;
Invitational; Friday at the Kenosha&#13;
Country Club, Sat. at Maplecrest; 9&#13;
a.m. both days&#13;
WOMEN'S TENNIS&#13;
Thurs., Sept. 25 - Home vs. Beloit College, 3 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Sept, 27 - at the Whitewater Invitational, 8:30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Mon., Sept. 29 - At Northeastern Illinois in Chicago,&#13;
3 p.m.&#13;
•ffldluuj Qwa/&#13;
¥&#13;
EA/cqy THCIPSDAY&#13;
starting Sept. 25, /98£ at 8:30p.™.&#13;
Glister to be a Contestant- and&#13;
gou could a_ "DREAM DATE"&#13;
Come to coatch the -fun /&#13;
•SINGLES MlXECS&#13;
» • BEDUCED D filNK PR ICES&#13;
•DANCING D.3?&#13;
(olOO ( uASHlN6r£)/V R ACiNE&#13;
&amp;h' ZFlanneru*s w TTAAVwErrRokNi ^ call 866-15^.3&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
IN THESQUARE&#13;
8' SCREEN&#13;
• GRILL OPEN&#13;
• BEER • SODA • WINE&#13;
• POPCORN&#13;
THE PARKSIDE UNION</text>
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