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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 15, issue 8</text>
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            <text>Segregated fee increase might be necessary in fall</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>e4&#13;
Governor'srace&#13;
comesto campus&#13;
page 5&#13;
Expert says&#13;
terrorism inevitable&#13;
page 12&#13;
Soccer star&#13;
breaks record&#13;
Segregated fee increase&#13;
might be necessary in fall&#13;
by K1mberlie Kranich&#13;
News Etptor&#13;
The current $92 segregated&#13;
.fee that full-time students pay&#13;
per year may increase as&#13;
much as $26 per semester due&#13;
to budget crunches, according&#13;
to Andy Buchanan, chairman&#13;
of the Segregated Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee (SUFAC).&#13;
•'This is an unacceptable&#13;
amount, t. said Buchanan. The&#13;
administration agrees and,&#13;
according to Buchanan, beHeves&#13;
that an increase is not&#13;
llkely to exceed $10 per&#13;
semester. .&#13;
Parkslde has recently had&#13;
to come up with money to pay&#13;
a debt of $335,900 that was removed&#13;
from its cash reserves&#13;
last December. An additional&#13;
annual $25,756 will have to be&#13;
paid over the next ten years&#13;
to replenish reserves in sister&#13;
institutions.&#13;
Parkside incurred the preceding&#13;
debt when It received&#13;
an "excess" of about $600,00'&#13;
from Its share of $22.5 million&#13;
that was collected from the&#13;
budget surpluses of all university&#13;
instituitions to help&#13;
reduce tuition increases and&#13;
provide funds for libraries,&#13;
computers and faculty cathup&#13;
pay.&#13;
According to Buchanan,&#13;
segregated fees funds a&#13;
budget of about $700,000 per&#13;
year. "Last year," said Buchanan,&#13;
"there was a shortfall&#13;
In the budget of $30,000&#13;
which was funded from Parkside's&#13;
reserves (fund 128)."&#13;
Hence, not only is money&#13;
needed to pay for Parkslde's&#13;
annual ten year debt of&#13;
$25,756 but also tor: the&#13;
$30,000.&#13;
lOin addition," continued&#13;
Buchanan, •'the administration&#13;
has been Instructed by&#13;
the system to pass certain&#13;
nonacademic support expenses&#13;
that they have paid for In&#13;
the past to segregated fees.&#13;
This amounts to about&#13;
$18,000."&#13;
Taking Into account the&#13;
above expenses and the addttional&#13;
expense of academic&#13;
staff catch-up pay, which w11l&#13;
be effective Jan. 1, 1987, an&#13;
additional increase of about&#13;
$100,00 would have to be Ineluded&#13;
In the 1987-88 budget.&#13;
"There are three places&#13;
from which these funds can&#13;
be raised," said Buchanan.&#13;
"From an acceptable segregated&#13;
fee Increase, drawing&#13;
money from the reserves&#13;
again, or by boosting campus&#13;
revenues. The final result will&#13;
probably be a combination of&#13;
all three."&#13;
With all of the pressures on&#13;
the budget for the 1987-88 academic&#13;
year, campus organizations&#13;
w11l also be affected.&#13;
"It's going to be extremely&#13;
dtfftcult to grant Increases to&#13;
present year budgets for&#13;
campus organizations," Buchanan&#13;
explained .• 'There are&#13;
obvious pressures to cut back&#13;
on . current levels of services.&#13;
"&#13;
. . photo by Jack Bornhuetter&#13;
omecoming comedy&#13;
tiC Sid Youngers entertained at last Thursday's Home-&#13;
., ~9 VarietyShow, pointing out traditional college come- mea.&#13;
Enrollment Services steps&#13;
up plans for recruitment&#13;
responsibilities. She will also life that they may have on a&#13;
be In charge of all open one to one basis with that fachouses.&#13;
ulty member. "I think It will&#13;
Open houses are another be meaningful for sutdents to&#13;
change. Instead of having know that we really do care&#13;
just one open house in April about them, and about having&#13;
there will now be several. them here," said Budowle.&#13;
The purpose of this is to allow Further developments inthe&#13;
students to come to cam- elude attending nearly every&#13;
pus and learn more about national and Wisconsin colleParkslde&#13;
while they are In ge fair. At college fairs many&#13;
the decision-making process. schools are represented and&#13;
By April, most students have students, parents and counsealready&#13;
decided which college lors are Invited to attend.&#13;
to attend. In that respect, Publications about Parkside&#13;
having just one open house in are made available, and staff&#13;
April is more or less just an is on hand to answer any&#13;
orientation for those students questions that may arise. Any&#13;
who have already decided to student who is interested may&#13;
come to Parkside. instead of fill out a contact card with&#13;
It being the time to recruit their name, address and&#13;
more students to Parkside. phone so that Student EnrollOther&#13;
developments include ment Services can maintain&#13;
the start of the faculty-eon, that contact by calling and&#13;
tact system. The Idea behind sending Information.&#13;
this is that a letter would be "We have developed a very&#13;
sent out by faculty members complex follow-up system, "_&#13;
to individual students inviting said Budowle, "that Involves&#13;
them to campus to discuss a series of contacts and retheir&#13;
area o~ major or any&#13;
other concerns about college&#13;
Julie Pendleton&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
Because of the new admissions&#13;
requirements that went :&#13;
Into effect at the start of this&#13;
semester, Student Enrollment&#13;
Services predicted that freshman&#13;
enrollment would be&#13;
down. However, much to&#13;
their surprise freshman. enrollment&#13;
increased by 68 students&#13;
over enrollments in the&#13;
fall of 1985.&#13;
Maureen Budowle, acting&#13;
director of student enrollment,&#13;
attributes this increase&#13;
to several new developments&#13;
within Student Enrollment&#13;
Services.&#13;
"One really exciting development&#13;
that has come up,"&#13;
said Budowle, "is that we've&#13;
hired Jeanne Betz." This is to&#13;
compensate for the loss of&#13;
two of the counselors in Student&#13;
Enrollemt Services ea.rlier&#13;
this semester. Betz Will&#13;
be actively Involved In&#13;
recruiting students to Parkside,&#13;
primarily in the northern&#13;
Illinois area, with some local Enrollment see page 6&#13;
....&#13;
2 Thursd8Y. OCtotiel' 23. 1986&#13;
~&#13;
Classified ads not&#13;
libelous or "dirty"&#13;
LaBt year, the Ranger was charged with printing pornographic&#13;
classlfjed ads.&#13;
Last week, we were told those same ads were libelouS.&#13;
This week, we defend ourselves.&#13;
The pornography charge surrounded some personal advertisements&#13;
last fall which used what at least one student&#13;
deemed sexually suggestive, and thereby offensive.&#13;
language, That charge was expressed In the "Voice of the&#13;
People" section of the Kenosha News,&#13;
It was countered In that same forum Ranger editor-Inchief&#13;
Jennie Tunkielcz, who explained that "The Ranger&#13;
haa never printed ads that were illegal or libelous, and&#13;
the newspaper will not begin the practice of censorship. ~t&#13;
Is every individual'. right to Interpret what they feel is&#13;
morally acceptable: it 15 not their right, however, to for.ce&#13;
that detlnltJon on others."&#13;
1l\e libel charge was leveled in response to a section of&#13;
the Classl!led Ad. labeled the "MIke Rohl Personals."&#13;
Several students expressed shock that the paper would&#13;
print such ads as "Rohl, you are gonna DIE!!!" EditorIn-chlef&#13;
Gary Schneeberger responded to the complainants&#13;
that, to his mlnd, the ads In question were meant as&#13;
joke. and that, Indeed, Mr. Rohl (Ranger assistant sports&#13;
editor) had taken them as such.&#13;
At Issue In both of these Instances are two separate, yet&#13;
interwoven, princ1ples--princlpleS obviously blurry to the&#13;
individual. who expressed their displeasure.&#13;
One Is the principle of tree speech. as outllned by the&#13;
First Amendment to the Constitution, which insures every&#13;
citizen the right to express his or her oplnlons. It was&#13;
upon this foundation that newspapwers were born, and&#13;
without this same foundation Americans may never have&#13;
dlSCovered the facts of watergate or the horrors of Vietnam.&#13;
The Ranger respects and upholds this fundamental&#13;
human right. Members of the university community-teeulty.&#13;
staff and student allke·-are always free to express&#13;
themeelves throUgh this newspaper. Our classified adverlislng&#13;
Is just one of many means available to those who&#13;
wIah to make their views known.&#13;
The second principle at work In this controversy, the&#13;
principle of editorial judgement. Is less easily defined.&#13;
Roughly atated, editorial judgement Is the value system&#13;
by which an editor or editors decide what submitted information&#13;
does, In fact. appear In the paper. It Is, by defln!·&#13;
non. a aubjecttve process. varying sometimes widely&#13;
from editor to editor, depending upon how one interprets&#13;
the responslbillty he or she has to the readership of his or&#13;
her paper.&#13;
Considerations that come Into ptay under this principle&#13;
Include how timely an article Is (Can It be postponed until&#13;
next week and .un be relevant?); how Important It Is to&#13;
the community served by the paper (Are students at&#13;
Parkslde more likely to be Interested In Story A or Story&#13;
B?); and f1nally, whether or not the material In question&#13;
Is Ubelous or likely to offend readers. It Is this conslderatlon&#13;
that applies to the instances cited.&#13;
Taken in tandem, then, the principles of freedom of&#13;
speech and editorial judgement reaponatble for the alleded\y&#13;
pornographic and Ubelous classiried that have appeared&#13;
In the Ranger. The guarantee of free speech allowed&#13;
those who wrote the ads to speak their minds, and the&#13;
principle of editorial jUdgement--based upon individual&#13;
dec1s1ons that the ads were in no way offensive or illegal··&#13;
secured their ptacement In the paper.&#13;
The Ranger .tands behind Its decisions to publish those&#13;
advertisements and wtll continue to serve the campus&#13;
under the principles explained above.&#13;
.on: COULD Hl\VE BEEN DIS~~~ .. ~ ElIIOUS SL6STANTIVE ,....... L&#13;
~NG -ri-lIS)'EAR:'S SENATORIA&#13;
CAMPAIGN ......~ ~&#13;
... BUOCEI' CUTS, NUCLEAA&#13;
sUPPOR:!" 1"0 EDUCATIONMEo~ 1&#13;
SOCIAL SECURITY, UN' ~&#13;
COMPENSolmON.CHEMlCAL~~&#13;
coKTAA AID, 11IE PUGIfr OFI':&#13;
...., C\II1L R1ro::l&#13;
~"""W&#13;
.I&amp;WUi eso not just tor blacks&#13;
Editor needs some social sensitivity&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Black Student organi·&#13;
zation will be holding Its second&#13;
party of the year. Our&#13;
first party was real success,&#13;
but one Important part of the&#13;
dance was missing - nonblacks.&#13;
Contrary to popular belief.&#13;
BSO events are not just for&#13;
black people.&#13;
One of the major objectives&#13;
of the BSO Is to promote actlvtttes&#13;
(educational and&#13;
recreational) that support&#13;
and display the black culture.&#13;
These events can be enjoyed&#13;
by all students: black s, whltea,&#13;
hispanlcs, and Asians.&#13;
I trled to advertise our first&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Journalistic style aside. I&#13;
would expect a man of the&#13;
SO"s and a newspaper editor&#13;
with a command of the Iandance&#13;
by handing out flyers&#13;
through the halls. The number&#13;
one response of the white&#13;
students was "Will I be the&#13;
only white person there?"&#13;
Now what if you are the&#13;
only white person there? Are&#13;
you afraid of getting jumped?&#13;
Are you afraid of being unwelcome?&#13;
Do you visualize&#13;
the music stopping and everyone&#13;
turning around and IookIng&#13;
at you? These fears can&#13;
be related to something that&#13;
blacks go through every day.&#13;
being the minority.&#13;
Let me assure you that you&#13;
are more than welcome to attend&#13;
a BSO dance, speaker&#13;
series or workshop. It Is true&#13;
guage to come up with a&#13;
more socially sensitive&#13;
phrase than "knocked up"&#13;
(Oct. 16. Madonna review).&#13;
ThIs has to be one of the&#13;
more tasteless phrases about&#13;
that you can hivt I&#13;
time. but also 11 will&#13;
Important on anothtr&#13;
blacks do a lot more&#13;
side that play b&#13;
ron track. Thereare&#13;
In most majors lIId&#13;
clubs.&#13;
Just as we arep....&#13;
Black Athlete. we&#13;
just as proud ofour&#13;
achievers, who IIl8II/&#13;
are one in the same,&#13;
Take this as a&#13;
vltation to attend&#13;
dance , Friday, OCl..&#13;
p.m. In the UnloD&#13;
This dance couldbe&#13;
our interaction danee.&#13;
BynIDE,&#13;
Soccer coach thanks fans for support&#13;
To the Editor: Homecoming 'S6. it was a us on to victor1,&#13;
great feeling to play in front YOU!&#13;
of a vocal and enthusiastic&#13;
crowd on Saturday.&#13;
To the loo-plus who cheered&#13;
My sincere thanks to the&#13;
students and their organizations&#13;
for the support given to&#13;
GaIy L. Schneeberger Edltor&#13;
Klmberlle Kranich News Editor&#13;
Julie Pendleton Asst. New. Editor&#13;
Jenny carr Feature Editor&#13;
Jim Nelbaur Entertalnment Editor&#13;
Robb Luehr Sport. Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy ..•....•......•.•••••••••••.•• Photo Editor&#13;
Jack Bomhueller Photo Editor&#13;
Andy Buchanan .•........•.......• 8uslness Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan A.. t. Bu.lness Manager&#13;
Dave Roback Advertlslng Manager&#13;
Steve Picazo : Dlstrlbutlon Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
LeoBose, Jason Caspers Mary&#13;
DeFazio, ErikkDingman, Ronda&#13;
Ditter.Gretchen Gayhart,&#13;
Rcah~dVLeCount, RickLeonard&#13;
rlB LOJeski. Rick Luehr '&#13;
Vahan Mahdaslan, Suza~ne&#13;
Mantuano, Kelly McKissick&#13;
Nicole Pacione, Michelle •&#13;
Petersen, BillSerpe, MikeStevens&#13;
Kal,eThomey, AndyTschumper '&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz, Ty""n Wilda. '&#13;
Range. . ••• "",W olic r IS wntten and edited by students at UW-Parkside and they are solely res",~&#13;
~nd fio~~~ content. Ranger is pubiished every Thursday during the academicyear&#13;
ys.&#13;
N~"28ooes~ondence should be addressed to: Parl&lt;side Ranger; UniversitYof WistO '&#13;
Advertisin enosha WI 53141. Telephone (414) 553-2295 or (414) 553-2287.. . ,..daY/!&#13;
publication~h~~~~:;~ $4 per column Inch or less in bulk. Advertising deadlineIST&#13;
s~:npe;ge~~~~ge~~i10~0~~I bbeIaccepted if typewritten. double-sp.acedon.standta~&#13;
phone number i u e e.s~th.an 350 words and must be Signed,with a e&#13;
Quest. Deadline~~~uld'iffo~ verifIcatIOn purposes. Names will be withheld UpORa" ~&#13;
reserves the ri ht e ~rs ISTuesday at 10 a.m. for publication Thursday. ng&#13;
content. g to edit letters and refuse letters containing false and defamatOfY&#13;
Ranger is printed by the Racine Journal Times.&#13;
RANGER ... ;&#13;
, '&#13;
Thursday, October 23, 1986 3&#13;
hard Hunt&#13;
rtists' murets, models and drawings displayed&#13;
nowof photo murals,&#13;
eSmodelsand dra wings of&#13;
largemetal sculptures of&#13;
d Hunt, whose works&#13;
be seen in public places&#13;
citles across the country.&#13;
be ondIsplay In the CorncationArts&#13;
Gallery from&#13;
day, Oct. 30 through&#13;
ay Nov.25.&#13;
Runt~Illspeak on his art&#13;
a freepublic session at 3&#13;
.onOct.30 In the Gallery.&#13;
gular gallery hours are&#13;
I to 6 p.m. Monday&#13;
ghThursday; also from&#13;
to 10 p.m, Wednesday and&#13;
day,&#13;
Theshow Is organized by&#13;
sideart professor Rollin&#13;
kyand sponsored by the&#13;
rerstty'a Fine Arts Divi-&#13;
, The photo murals are of&#13;
, permanently Installed&#13;
tures.&#13;
mmt.of Chicago, has been&#13;
I g on his sculptures for&#13;
several years at Bert Jensen&#13;
and Sons, Inc., a metal fabricating&#13;
firm in Racine. At that&#13;
facility, as well as In his Chicago&#13;
studio, Hunt fashions&#13;
large commissioned sculptures&#13;
that ultimately grace&#13;
many publlc landscapes.&#13;
At 51, Hunt is one of America's&#13;
foremost liVing seulptors.&#13;
In his 1973 book "The&#13;
Age of the Avant-Garde," Hilton&#13;
Kramer called him j 'one&#13;
of the most gifted and assured&#13;
artists -working in the direct-metal,&#13;
open-forum medIum&#13;
...anywhere in the&#13;
world,"&#13;
Hunt transforms rigid bran.&#13;
ze, brass, copper, aluminum&#13;
and stainless steel Into angular&#13;
and curved volumes that&#13;
rival the mystery and wonder&#13;
of nature's energy. Although&#13;
his polished and welded&#13;
sculptures have no specific&#13;
representational references,&#13;
the Iinear- spatial configura.&#13;
tions and enclosed, solid masses&#13;
often expressionistically&#13;
refer to natural forms, organic&#13;
and evolutionary.&#13;
Hunt once said, "In some of&#13;
my works-It is my intention to&#13;
develop the kind of forms nature&#13;
might create if only heat&#13;
and steel were available to&#13;
her."&#13;
Since 1966 Hunt has completed&#13;
more than 55 publlc&#13;
commissions, including those&#13;
in Illinois, California, Indlana,&#13;
Michigan, Missouri, New&#13;
York, Ohio, South Carolina&#13;
and Washington, D.C.&#13;
He holds a bachelor of art&#13;
education degree from the&#13;
School of the Art Institute of&#13;
Chicago, and was awarded a&#13;
foreign travel fellowship upon&#13;
graduation, studying in England,&#13;
France, Spain and Italy.&#13;
His work, ••Arachne" was&#13;
purchased by the New York&#13;
Museum of Modern Art in&#13;
1957, when Hunt was just 22.&#13;
The next year Hunt held his&#13;
first one-man show in New&#13;
York.&#13;
Since then he has received&#13;
numerous national and local&#13;
honors, teaching posts and&#13;
commissions, and participated&#13;
in many one-man exhibitions.&#13;
He 'Is founder of the Chica·&#13;
go Sculpture Society, a member&#13;
of the Board of Direcotrs&#13;
at the International SCUlpture&#13;
Center In Washington. D.C.,&#13;
and an organizer of the First&#13;
World Congress of SCUlpture&#13;
Organizations held in Chicago&#13;
last year.&#13;
In .addltion to his many&#13;
public sculptures. his works&#13;
are Included In the collection&#13;
of the Art Institute of Chicago;&#13;
the Museum of Modern&#13;
Art, Metropolitan Museum of&#13;
Art, and WhIiney Museum of&#13;
Art, all In New York: the Hlrshorn&#13;
Museum and Sculpture&#13;
Garden in Washington, D.C -. :&#13;
t==Club .Events==&#13;
emistry Club&#13;
'IlleChemistryClub will be&#13;
oring a used textbook&#13;
onTuesday, Oct. 27 and&#13;
esday,Oct. 28. This will&#13;
heldIn Greenquist's main&#13;
I, and books wl1l Include&#13;
in Chemistry, life setandmathematics.&#13;
chology Club&#13;
d Psi Chi Psychology Club&#13;
lit meelWednesday, Oct. 29&#13;
1·2p.m. In Molinaro 311.&#13;
e Goodyear from the&#13;
g and Placement offi·&#13;
""I speak on careers in&#13;
hology.All are welcome.&#13;
logy Club&#13;
TheParkslde Geology Club&#13;
~ boldIts next meeting on&#13;
-,e'day, Oct. 29. Items on&#13;
week's agenda include&#13;
upcomingrock and gem&#13;
W, Possible club fundrs,&#13;
the Christmas Craft&#13;
. and the upcoming club&#13;
Ail I. .&#13;
jo nps are open to non. :8 as well as majors.&#13;
I I and get the full scoop&#13;
OU'!b·mIn. Greenquist 118.&#13;
e glad yOUdid.&#13;
eer SuPPOrt&#13;
Pee .&#13;
r SUPPOrtIs proUd to&#13;
nilis seml.annual schol.&#13;
P award of $100 to Rem&#13;
~~Ier. Rebecca plans&#13;
In elementary educa-&#13;
. Ii addition to her own&#13;
on, she also has two&#13;
chUdren attending&#13;
. ,making It a family&#13;
t, ASPA&#13;
COuntin ' I'l\fA g ClUb,&#13;
PSt&#13;
b ~d ~~ A, Accounting&#13;
Park MA are sponsorsIde's&#13;
eighth annual&#13;
~rs dinner. It will be&#13;
Y&#13;
~e cafeteria on&#13;
, nOV. 12 from 6-10&#13;
The event is a sit-down dinner&#13;
where students have the&#13;
opportunity to make contact&#13;
with managers of businesses&#13;
of all scales in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
The special gust speaker&#13;
for the evening is Jack MeMahon,&#13;
director of worldwide&#13;
management for Johnson&#13;
Wax. All students are welcome&#13;
to attend. For more information&#13;
on cost or reservation,&#13;
contact the business department.&#13;
Physics Club&#13;
Nov. 7: Julian Mack lecture&#13;
at UW·Madison. Each year&#13;
the physiCS department at&#13;
Madison invites a prominel?-t&#13;
physicist to give a talk. This&#13;
year's talk Is being gtven by&#13;
A.M. Weinberg from the Institute&#13;
for Energy Analysis.&#13;
The title of the talk Is "A Second&#13;
Nuclear ear: prospect&#13;
and Perspectives!' The Phys~&#13;
Ics Club wiJI provide transportation.&#13;
We wiJI meet at the&#13;
Union Bazaar. at noon. Signup&#13;
for this event on the door&#13;
of Greenquist 233.&#13;
Nov. 15: Annual Adler&#13;
Planetarium and Museum of&#13;
Science and Industry trip.&#13;
The Physics Club will provide&#13;
transportation. There Is a&#13;
small admission fee ($2-3).&#13;
We will meet at the Union Ba~&#13;
zaar at 8 a.m. Sign up on the&#13;
door of Greenqulst 233.&#13;
Finally, there wll1 be a&#13;
Physics Club meeting at 1&#13;
p.m. Oct. 29 in Greenqulst&#13;
230. Topics wiJI include the&#13;
wave tank. .&#13;
All students and faculty are&#13;
welcome to club events.&#13;
PAC .&#13;
The Parkside AssociatIon of&#13;
Communicators (PAC) ~ill&#13;
hold an Informal dlscuSSlOn,&#13;
"The Marketing of political&#13;
Candidates," on Friday, Oct.&#13;
24 at 12 noon in the Union. All&#13;
interested people are en·&#13;
couraged to have a beer and&#13;
join the discussion. LOOk for&#13;
the PAC sign.&#13;
Wing~ gram&#13;
Students represent Parkside&#13;
•.!'.y;Kelly McKissick&#13;
Last Thursday, Oct. 16,&#13;
eight women broke ground&#13;
for Parkside by becoming the&#13;
first members of the Johnson&#13;
Foundation Wingspread Fellows&#13;
Program. These students&#13;
will represent Parkside&#13;
until May 1987.&#13;
Their names and major&#13;
fields are: Bonnie Davis, education;&#13;
Nancy Dietmeyer,&#13;
polltical science and psychology:&#13;
CIndy Hoffman, international&#13;
studies; Nancy Marla·&#13;
to, economics; Tamara Pierce,&#13;
education; Marti Schiele.&#13;
education; Lynette Selkurt,&#13;
education; and Robin White,&#13;
education.&#13;
The Fellows program was&#13;
established in 1970 to allow&#13;
students the chance to observe&#13;
polley makers and world&#13;
leaders and to enhance their&#13;
profession through exposure.&#13;
Students attended an tndoctrination&#13;
session at the Wingspread&#13;
Conference Center aecompanied&#13;
by faculty adviser&#13;
Willie Curtis. They received a&#13;
tour of the various conference&#13;
rooms, the radio station and&#13;
board rooms. It was explained&#13;
to them that all of the&#13;
radio programs and discussions&#13;
held in the radio room&#13;
are kept on tape and are&#13;
available to students at their&#13;
request.&#13;
Students also got the opportunlty&#13;
to speak with two of&#13;
the three vtce.prestdents of&#13;
the program, Rita Goodman&#13;
and Henry Halstead. Background&#13;
about the center and&#13;
conferences was given, and&#13;
students were able to ask&#13;
questions about their concerns.&#13;
Mary Ellen Demming,&#13;
coordinator of Fellows attendance&#13;
at Wingspread confer.&#13;
ences, was also present to answer&#13;
questions.&#13;
One of the unfortunate penalties&#13;
Parkside faced in joinIng&#13;
the program so late In the&#13;
semeter was very limited&#13;
openings for conferen~es.&#13;
Conferences allow an average&#13;
of three Fellows to attend.&#13;
Most of these spaces were already&#13;
filled by other institutions&#13;
who have been in the&#13;
program for years. There&#13;
may be up to four openings in&#13;
three conferences for some of&#13;
the Fellows from Parkslde to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Also, Goodman was able to&#13;
reserve two openings for a&#13;
one day conference on Latin&#13;
America scheduled to be held&#13;
on October 27. The rest of the&#13;
new Fellows will not be able&#13;
to attend a conference until&#13;
next semester.&#13;
The process by which Fel·&#13;
lows are allowed to attend&#13;
conferences begins with an&#13;
application letter sent to&#13;
Demming. After constderation,&#13;
a letter of approval Is&#13;
sent to some of the Fellows.&#13;
An attendance from must be&#13;
filled out, and finally a welcome&#13;
letter is sent out with&#13;
an invitation and Information&#13;
about the conference.&#13;
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t.======~AlR=;&gt;:..&#13;
- ..&#13;
~ "&#13;
"Tony is a good man, good governor&#13;
anger many groups have felt university system when&#13;
toward Governor Earl during other agencies had to be all&#13;
his term, Ms. Earl is quick to Now that's a commitmen~%&#13;
point out that her husband's the university."&#13;
record easily bests that of It's a commitment that to&#13;
Tommy Thompson, his Re- her mind, is not shared' b&#13;
publican challenger. . Thompson. "He's proposin Y&#13;
"Tony himself has said that flve percent across.the'b~&#13;
he's most proud of his accom- cut out of all state agencies&#13;
plishments in three areaa-the What IS that going to do~&#13;
three E's: education, environ- students? What is that going&#13;
ment and economic develop. to mean to facilittes, in the&#13;
ment" she said. "He has university? It win mean d&#13;
done a lot on all those ron ' f t tti" ev. 5, as a on.&#13;
and when he came in, it was In closing, Ms. Earl relter .&#13;
not all that easy. ated that while not everyO~:&#13;
"When he was running, he may always agree With&#13;
said he would have to raise Governor Earl, he is cleanI&#13;
taxes and cut some pro- the better choice on elecu~&#13;
grams, and he did. But he did day. I&#13;
It in such a way that no one "You're probably thinking ~&#13;
group was unjustly affected, 'I don't like this about Earl i I&#13;
and then he eliminated his don't like that about Ea.1.'&#13;
tax increase one year before Well, hell, I don't llke evely&#13;
he had planned to. thing about Earl, either,bui ~&#13;
"With regard to educa- I'm going to vote for him ~ ~&#13;
tton," Ms. Earl continued, cause he's not just an or&#13;
"he has pushed successfully dinarily good governor, he' ~&#13;
for a faculty pay increase. He an extraordinarily ~1Ii&#13;
has increased money for the governor. "&#13;
4 Thun:d:y,CkrtOber23,1986&#13;
by Gary L, Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
The unexpected closeness&#13;
of the upcoming Wisconsin&#13;
gubernatorial election prompted&#13;
Sheila Earl's visit to&#13;
Parkslde last Friday (Oct.&#13;
17).&#13;
Her respect for the man&#13;
who Is both the state's governor&#13;
and her husband prompted&#13;
her praising, prideful&#13;
comments on behalf of Tony&#13;
Earl in his campaign for reelection.&#13;
"I can say things to you&#13;
that Tony would not or cannot&#13;
say," Ms. Earl, an assistant&#13;
to the director of the LaFol·&#13;
lette Institute in Madison,&#13;
said to a roomful of listeners&#13;
gathered for her speech,&#13;
sponsored by the Political&#13;
Science Club.&#13;
"I am not going to be able&#13;
to discuss his record as extensively&#13;
as you might Uke, because&#13;
I don't know a lot of&#13;
specifics about It. But I do&#13;
'Scott McCallum&#13;
Sheila Earl&#13;
know what kind of person he&#13;
Is; I know his style and I&#13;
know that he's been a good&#13;
governor.&#13;
"He cares deeply about the&#13;
state," Ms. Earl continued.&#13;
"He cares about the people in&#13;
the state ..the students, senior&#13;
citizens, the disadvantaged,&#13;
the working men and women&#13;
and the faculty. And he also&#13;
cares about this beautiful&#13;
land of ours and its great natural&#13;
resources."&#13;
Caring can only go so far in&#13;
contributing to a politician's&#13;
effectiveness, Ms. Earl admits.&#13;
"More than his caring, OJ&#13;
she explains, "what drives&#13;
his administration and what&#13;
drives him as a public official,&#13;
is his very deep, strong&#13;
commitment to fairness and&#13;
justice. When you view his&#13;
administration, you see that&#13;
at every turn.&#13;
"He does not respond to the&#13;
quick fix or political advantage,"&#13;
Ms. Earl went on.&#13;
"Sometimes, his people wish&#13;
that he would ..but he has&#13;
never considered doing that.&#13;
The evidence? Tony has managed&#13;
to get everyone in the&#13;
state, for one thing or another,&#13;
mad at him at some&#13;
time."&#13;
While acknowledging the&#13;
"We won't close Parkside"&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
When Scott McCallum, the&#13;
Republican candidate for&#13;
lieutenant governor. came to&#13;
Parkslde, he probably knew&#13;
he'd have to field questions&#13;
about his and running mate&#13;
Tommy Thompson's budget,&#13;
cutting plan.&#13;
But he probably didn't ex.&#13;
pect someone in the minimart&#13;
to ask him Why he&#13;
wanted to close the campus&#13;
down.&#13;
"He (Thompson) Is going to&#13;
ask every state agency to&#13;
come in (to budgeting proceedings)&#13;
with 95% of their&#13;
present budget," McCallum&#13;
conceded while here to speak&#13;
to students about the Republican&#13;
stand on educational issues.&#13;
IIAnd I support that because&#13;
time and again agencies&#13;
come in with 110% proposals,&#13;
and then we're looking&#13;
at large increases right&#13;
off the bat.&#13;
•'There are some agencies,"&#13;
he continued, "with excesses&#13;
that need to be cut, but&#13;
Thompson has said that although&#13;
he's asking the Un!-&#13;
McCallum see page 7&#13;
p u B L I c H E A R I N G&#13;
On the Preliminary Report of the Regents Study Group on&#13;
The Future of The University&#13;
of Wisconsin System&#13;
TuitionLevels - Changesin CreditTransfer• ManagementFlexibility&#13;
Role in Swe EconomicDevelopment - AdmissionRequirements_ Improved&#13;
Opportunities for Women and Minorities - Services for Disabled Students _and other issues&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 5,1986&#13;
10 a.m, - Noon and 12:45 p.m, - 5 p.m, •&#13;
AUditorium, State Historical Society&#13;
Library Mall, 816 State Street, Madison Wisconsin&#13;
ORAL AND WRITTEN TESTIMONY INVITED'&#13;
. .Speakers should register ~ advance. Registrationforms and specific&#13;
infOtmabOO on Ibe bearing are availablein the Office of Ibe Oumcellor or write or call&#13;
The University of Wisconsin System&#13;
Secretary or the Board of Regents&#13;
1860 Van Rise Hall, 1220 Linden Drive - Madison, Wisconsin 53706&#13;
Telephone:608/262·2324 or 608/263-3961&#13;
. .Copies or Ibe Pre1iminary Report of the Regents Study Group&#13;
are available m Ibe Cbancellor'soffice and at the campus and COIDII1unitypublic libraries.&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
SADD is sad&#13;
According to Herbert Grover, superintendent of public&#13;
instruction, Students Against Drunk Driving (SADD) In.&#13;
correctly urges parents and children to condone teenage&#13;
drinking, the Wisconsin State Journal reported.&#13;
One of the major activities of SADD chapers is getting&#13;
the students and their parents to sign an agreement reo&#13;
garding drinking and driving.&#13;
The SAnD programs operate so that students haveto&#13;
pledge that they'll let someone else or their parents drive&#13;
them home if they've been drinking. Their parents,in&#13;
turn, pledge that they'll respond to a call and not argueor&#13;
quiz a student who calls for a ride home.&#13;
In Grover's opinion, state officials should push tor&#13;
changes within the student-run programs that now appear&#13;
in forty schools statewide.&#13;
"Hey," Grover said, "there's a state law setttng the&#13;
legal drinking age at 21 and it needs to be enforced!"&#13;
rio&#13;
S&#13;
~I, ex in dorms okay tm'&#13;
Abbe&#13;
A University of Colorado student panel has concludedBen,'&#13;
that sex in dormitories is okay as long as it doesn't violate The&#13;
a student's right to privacy, according to the Eau Clair! '" M&#13;
Leader-Telegram. "It'&#13;
The dormitory representative Council voted 16-0 in k'Le&#13;
favor of recommending that the wording in the camPUS 'fun&#13;
handbook be changed to reflect that sex in the dormltorl~tho'v&#13;
Is okay; 1IPe~&#13;
!real ....----------------"111'1&#13;
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BUSINESS IlEII'S LUNClfEOHS&#13;
COCKTAlI. LOUlIGE&#13;
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CLOSEO MONOAY&#13;
TUlI. TMRUSUN. 11:.10A.M .. ':JOp M&#13;
flU·.vet"T 11.1O'\.M. 1':3OP.M.·&#13;
~fGarY L 8elmeeberger&#13;
EdItor&#13;
A1tJWUghinternational terrorfSIII&#13;
bas been a hot media&#13;
~c lhe last few years, one&#13;
IJII'OI'l on the SUbject doesn't&#13;
IbInk It threstens the -safety&#13;
of JIIOSl Americans.&#13;
. ''TerrorISmIs not-In any&#13;
'WI'!, shape or form ..a threat&#13;
~ IIIe vital interest of this&#13;
"""!rl'," explained Unlted&#13;
51a\OS MarIne Corps Colon~1&#13;
Henrl' Buse, who spoke at a&#13;
ISOOisl Science Roundtable&#13;
~ to various political sci-&#13;
_ classes on Oct. 20.&#13;
"I considerthe vital inter.&#13;
.. of the country really as&#13;
our survival," he continued.&#13;
''l'errorlstactivity does not&#13;
Ibreaten us that way, but It&#13;
~ Impactupon other inter.&#13;
..ts lIlatwe have, particular.&#13;
~ In lhe MiddleEast."&#13;
Buse, an Instructor with the&#13;
Departmentof MIlitary strat-&#13;
!If In the National War Oollipin&#13;
Washington,D.C., met&#13;
llliatsntprofessor of political&#13;
;ancs WUlIe Curtis this&#13;
IlllUner.Curtis, in light of reo&#13;
""I developmentsin InternaIoos1&#13;
terrorism such as the&#13;
Idled States' bombing of&#13;
Ubya,was instrumental in&#13;
liltingBusehere.&#13;
''Theeasy part, when you&#13;
~ sboutterrorism, Is to de.&#13;
IiWlceIt, to decry It, to be.&#13;
....e upeetby It," Buse said.&#13;
"l1levery hard part when&#13;
"Terrorism tries&#13;
to weaken values&#13;
and contidenceina&#13;
government by&#13;
indicating that a&#13;
country can't secure&#13;
its citizens.&#13;
"&#13;
Col. Henry Buse&#13;
.' " ..,.&#13;
.,,,w.~~~:.A~h··"'.~'.;;.w,_.~:..•__ ._=v _'.m,~.&#13;
,~»:·_~...".~"'.~=hW'":.:.;..;v"nff.~:..."W.""v.w . '_.~.....,v.&gt;:.,.,~~_.v.·.:.,,__.'~'~'A»~..:._._,~~~._.&#13;
.-_'~'h.,.:._~V,Y...,.:N·;&lt;·,:...:,~,"' ...,"'wma&#13;
you discuss terrorism Is try.&#13;
ing to figure out what deerslons&#13;
should be made and&#13;
what solutions we should&#13;
come up with to combat It."&#13;
Although there are fifty.&#13;
seven definitions of terrorism&#13;
presently employed by groups&#13;
in America alone, Buse indio&#13;
cates that four salient characteristics&#13;
are evident in most.&#13;
Those are threat or use of&#13;
violence, a desire to achieve&#13;
a political end, the intent to&#13;
reach an audience beyond the&#13;
Immediate victim and the&#13;
transcendence of national&#13;
boundaries .&#13;
"Terrorism tries to weaken&#13;
values and confidence in a&#13;
government by indicating&#13;
that a country can't secure its&#13;
citizens. ,. Buse added. "It&#13;
doesn't have any geographtcalor&#13;
moral boundaries, no&#13;
code of conduct. And that&#13;
makes It extremely difficult&#13;
to combat."&#13;
The U.S. polley regarding&#13;
terrorism, however, takes on&#13;
the difficult task of attemptlng&#13;
to combat international&#13;
terrorist activities. The tactics&#13;
available to the government&#13;
include those of a polttical&#13;
nature (public eondemnation&#13;
of those nations, like&#13;
Libya, who sponsor and aid&#13;
terrorist organizations);&#13;
those of an economic nature&#13;
London trip is guaranteed to be a jOlly-good time&#13;
If DaytonsBeach Isn't your&#13;
alp of sand, then maybe a&#13;
b1rof London's countryside&#13;
~ theatreswould be a jolly.&#13;
~ change of pace this&#13;
"ring.&#13;
~dY MCLean,professor of&#13;
~1lsh, has put together a&#13;
Y package of the 1987&#13;
Itring recess Which includes&#13;
least three theatre per. tmances,In addtion to guld·&#13;
Ib lours of Westminster&#13;
Be bey, Parliament and Big&#13;
n.&#13;
lren:~.trip's scheduled dates&#13;
-reh 13.22&#13;
,;'!t's not a c'redited trip,"&#13;
I~an explained. "It's just&#13;
'bo' Urnethat allows those&#13;
IXpeve never seen London to&#13;
.... rience one of the truly If:Citiesof the world."&#13;
~an has been trying to&#13;
SUch an excursion&#13;
many years now. never&#13;
to surmount what wound&#13;
31~lD BOOKCORNER&#13;
- 6tII St. Racine&#13;
GentlyUsed Books&#13;
°Ran~IISubjects.&#13;
cme'sonly&#13;
USedBookstore.&#13;
MARTHA MERRELLS&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
up being exhorbitant costs.&#13;
Those problems have been&#13;
eliminated with this London&#13;
and the Theatre tour, McLean&#13;
says.&#13;
Cost for the trip, which Includes&#13;
hotel accomodatlons,&#13;
some complimentary meals&#13;
and guided tours, Is $895 for&#13;
students under 21 with triple&#13;
or quadruple occupancy; and&#13;
$995 for double occupancy or&#13;
anyone over 21.&#13;
., "These aren't.youth hotels,&#13;
either, " McLean emphasizes.&#13;
"They're reputable, quality&#13;
establishments. ,.&#13;
Deadline for payment is&#13;
Dec. I, 1986. For further in·&#13;
formation, contact McLean,&#13;
CA 271, ext. 2019.&#13;
MANAGER'S.&#13;
DINNER&#13;
THURSDAY,&#13;
NOVEMBER 13TH&#13;
5:30 - 6:00 Tours of Campus &amp; Housing&#13;
6:00·7:00 Social Hour with Managers/Cash Bar&#13;
7:00 - 8:00 Dinner - Prime Rib&#13;
8:00 - 9:00 SPEAKER&#13;
9:00 -10:00 Social Hour/Cash Bar&#13;
Keynote Speaker -&#13;
Jack McMahon&#13;
Director - World Wide&#13;
Management Development For&#13;
Johnson Wax.&#13;
. ". &gt; '. ,., •&#13;
'....&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
(placement of sanctions or&#13;
embargoes or the severing of&#13;
diplomatic ties); and, finally,&#13;
military deterrents.&#13;
"It Is important that everyone&#13;
understand that any mill.&#13;
tary action Is going to require&#13;
two things which are absolutely&#13;
critical,' Buse Is quick&#13;
to point out. 'One Is good tntelligence,&#13;
and good Intellfgence&#13;
in the arena of International&#13;
terrorism is sometimes&#13;
very, very hard to come by.&#13;
'The second thing that Is reo&#13;
-qulred Is risk, and an accept.&#13;
ance of that risk. There will&#13;
be cases-Itke when we tried&#13;
to retrieve our hostages from&#13;
Iran or when we retaliated&#13;
against L1bya··that Innocent&#13;
people will be killed. It's extremely&#13;
regrettable, but It's a&#13;
risk that has to be accepted."&#13;
According to Buse, terrorism&#13;
has become more pro ..&#13;
nounced recently' for a vartety&#13;
of factors, ali interrelated.&#13;
"It's war on the cheap, for&#13;
one thing," he explained. "It&#13;
doesn't cost much to train&#13;
terrorists when you compare&#13;
It to the cost of developing&#13;
conventional forces. It can&#13;
also be used as a weapon to&#13;
tnfiuence the behavior of&#13;
much more powerful nations&#13;
by folks that are far weaker&#13;
than these nations. It helps&#13;
military organizations with&#13;
little power get worldwide&#13;
recognition for their causes.··&#13;
One controversial way in&#13;
which that recognition Is gar.&#13;
nered 18_via the _ne~$ media ...&#13;
Critics of America's news or.&#13;
ganizations have said that&#13;
media saturation of terrorist&#13;
acts only contributes to the&#13;
problem. Buse also recognizes&#13;
a relationship between&#13;
terrorist activities and media&#13;
coverage.&#13;
uThe world's a stage when&#13;
there is no ongoing war," he&#13;
said. "That's why terrorism&#13;
Is at a peak in peacetime.&#13;
There's nothing to really conflIct&#13;
With the act when there&#13;
Isn't any other really news.&#13;
worthy headline happening.&#13;
"Terrorists want a lot of&#13;
people to watch," Bose con..&#13;
tlnued. 'But they don't necessartly&#13;
want a lot of people to&#13;
die. What they really want,&#13;
Ultimately, Is to create a&#13;
news spectacle. fI&#13;
For the future, Buse doesn't&#13;
expect terrortsm to be ellmtnated,&#13;
regardless of President&#13;
Reagan's hardlJne stand&#13;
against It and Its sponsors.&#13;
"It's inevitable that terrorism&#13;
Is going to occur as world&#13;
peace continues," he conclud- .&#13;
ed. 'And God knows we aU&#13;
want world peace to continue."&#13;
Come and meet representatives from accredited&#13;
graduate schools throughout the United States at&#13;
the GRE/CGS FOrUm on Graduate Education.&#13;
PALMER HOUSE&#13;
State and Monroe st. eets&#13;
saturday. october 25&#13;
9 a.m.-4 p.m.&#13;
WORKSHOPS&#13;
9:00·10:00 PRE·FORUMWorkshop on Admissions and&#13;
Financial Aid&#13;
11 :00-12:00 Graduate Study in Biological. Health, and&#13;
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12:30- 1:30 GREGeneral Test and Subject Test&#13;
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JOintly spOnsored by the Craduate Record Examinations Board and&#13;
the Council Of Craduate SChools In the Untted states&#13;
6 Thursday, October 23, 1986&#13;
~&#13;
PAB candidates honored&#13;
"Parkside needs me as&#13;
Its Homecoming King," said&#13;
candidate Keith Harmann to&#13;
the assembled at last week's&#13;
King and Queen Coronation.&#13;
U the election results are&#13;
any indication, he was right,&#13;
Harmann, along with ronning&#13;
male Sue Stec, w1lI preside&#13;
over Parkslde tor the&#13;
next year as Homecoming&#13;
royally. Both members of&#13;
PAB, Keith and Sue were definitely&#13;
excited and honored&#13;
by their election.&#13;
"We want to thank everyone&#13;
who voted for us," Har·&#13;
mann said. "It's really an&#13;
honor."&#13;
Harmann and Stee were&#13;
Just two of an unprecedented&#13;
22 candidates vying for the&#13;
King and Queen lilies this&#13;
year. Each candidate was allowed&#13;
to say a few words on&#13;
his or her behalf before&#13;
Chuck Christofferson, Hornecomlng&#13;
Commltttee chair,&#13;
and Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Gary Grace announced the&#13;
winners.&#13;
Harmann and Stec were&#13;
presented their crowns by&#13;
last year's royally, Bill Serpe&#13;
and Janet Doering,&#13;
photo by Jack BornhueUer&#13;
Janet Doering and Bill Serpe congratulate Sue Stec and Keith&#13;
Harmann at the coronation cere-monies.&#13;
Followng the coronation,&#13;
the crowd of about 50 watched&#13;
a Variety Show that, in&#13;
reality, wasn't much of either.&#13;
Only four acts partlclpated-vsome&#13;
with more success&#13;
than others-but all were&#13;
singing acts and two were&#13;
barbershop quartets.&#13;
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5&#13;
between acts was comedian&#13;
Sid Youngers, who trod familiar&#13;
college ground like sex,&#13;
sports and family. Often&#13;
fighting hissing from the&#13;
small-but-dlscernlng crowd,&#13;
Youngers netted fewer laughs&#13;
than Assistant .Chancellor&#13;
Grace, whose deft ad-libbing&#13;
kept the coronation portion of&#13;
the night moving along.&#13;
Homecoming lau~&#13;
by Bill Serpe&#13;
Congratulations are In&#13;
order for Chuck onrtstorrerson&#13;
and Sandy Saladls and&#13;
other students on the Hornecoming&#13;
committee. Along&#13;
with ·Diane Welsh of the Activities&#13;
Office, their efforts&#13;
gave Parkslde the most successful&#13;
homecoming ever In&#13;
this event's history.&#13;
There are, of course, those&#13;
who will complain that one&#13;
function or another over the&#13;
weekend was less than wondertul;&#13;
however, those of us&#13;
who have been at Hornecoming&#13;
in the past can easily attest&#13;
to how much better&#13;
things were In 1986.&#13;
The standard at Parkslde&#13;
for measuring the success of&#13;
an event is not in the number&#13;
of people attending, but&#13;
whether or not those people&#13;
genuinely enjoy themelves, If&#13;
the picture on the front page&#13;
of last Sunday'S Kenosha&#13;
News is any indication, those&#13;
smiling faces (including&#13;
members of the soccer team)&#13;
definitely represent Parkslde&#13;
poeple having a good time&#13;
during the Derder band at Saturday'S&#13;
game. Last year's&#13;
attendance of 20 people at the&#13;
game was easily increased&#13;
this year to what lOok&#13;
over 200. ed iii,&#13;
Compliments on that&#13;
of the weekend were e&gt;ctPoJtI&#13;
to the Homecoming c end&lt;;&#13;
tee from top level ad~mii&#13;
lion as well as PhYSicalIra&#13;
cation people. Perhaps eo.&#13;
was the largest croWde \ti,&#13;
a Parkside home ver~&#13;
game. Considering th:"'"&#13;
level of promotion that I~.&#13;
Involved, think what a w~&#13;
posters and honest en f~&#13;
agement could do on a ~1I\ir&#13;
lar basis for next y ill&#13;
Homecoming game, earl&#13;
All of the other events0&#13;
the weekend were very l\'~&#13;
attended. Over 400 attend~&#13;
Friday nighl's dance, an~&#13;
attended Saturday eve&#13;
festivities. Part 01 this&#13;
volvement should be attrlb~&#13;
ed to the "Spirit Award"tIw&#13;
was added this year.&#13;
Homecoming '86 m~&#13;
many positive steps forward;&#13;
New things were added~&#13;
involvement was up. "~&#13;
off" to all who workedon&#13;
were Involved in this aU.&#13;
pus event. The green Ught&#13;
on for student involvement&#13;
Parkslde this school y&#13;
Let's all make sure it doesn&#13;
have a chance to turn red.&#13;
Business outreach programs set&#13;
These programs are being&#13;
offered by the Office 01 Business&#13;
Outreach, directed by&#13;
Dan Hancock:&#13;
• •'Investments : A Primer&#13;
for Business Owners and&#13;
Managers," from 6:30 to 9:30&#13;
p.m, on Tuesdays, Oct. 28 and&#13;
Nov. 11 in Molinaro 109. Cost&#13;
Is $60. Covered will be In Investment&#13;
return and risk,&#13;
capital formation, stocks,&#13;
bonds, government securities,&#13;
income versus growth objectives,&#13;
IRA's and' municipal&#13;
bonds, among other topics.&#13;
• "Estate Planning for&#13;
Business Owners and Professionals,"&#13;
from 6: 30 to 9: 30&#13;
p.m. on Tuesdays, Nov. 18&#13;
Ron's PCace&#13;
. Sandwiches and Cocktails&#13;
Sundays:&#13;
BlOody Marys&#13;
2forl,&#13;
12-4 p.m,&#13;
TueSdays:&#13;
"South of the&#13;
Border Day"&#13;
Margarltas&#13;
Pina COladas&#13;
Dreamslcles $1.50&#13;
Opens Mon-Sat 11 am&#13;
Sundays 12 noon&#13;
330152nd&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
.. 657-4455 -&#13;
-=:'J&#13;
and Dec. 2 in Molinaro&#13;
Cost Is $60. Covered wlllbe&#13;
nanclal plans, WUls,~e&#13;
.plans, working with y&#13;
legal counsel, living&#13;
and providing for be&#13;
among other topics.&#13;
To register for the co&#13;
call 553-2047.&#13;
EnrollmentEnrollment~m&#13;
'pagel I&#13;
contacts, boih by -;';,ail and1&#13;
telephone." The purpose&#13;
this system is to continuOllS!&#13;
provide information to an,&#13;
one who shows any interosl&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Alumni are also beco~1&#13;
Involved In racruttlng effo~&#13;
"We've discovered that pE(t&#13;
Ie who graduated fromP~&#13;
side are real excited 81J(l'&#13;
the education they got ~:~&#13;
and sometimes several y~&#13;
later are beginning to un ,&#13;
stand the quality of edU"~&#13;
Ihey received, so theY~&#13;
real anxious to help US&#13;
others," said Budowie.,&#13;
also invites any staff. fa&#13;
or student who Is int~ •&#13;
to become involved 111"1&#13;
recruiting effort.&#13;
With the advent of~&#13;
dence halls on camp~:&#13;
semester Budowle fee to&#13;
students are beginningII&#13;
Parkside as .'A real cfer&#13;
'&#13;
and not just a cammu r&#13;
lege. Therefore, In ~~""&#13;
ion, the time has C a&#13;
make a rea.! effort to&#13;
sudents 10 Parkslde.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 23, 1986 7&#13;
'"&#13;
~ver&#13;
political thoughts analyzed&#13;
by Doug McEvoy&#13;
KennethR.Hoover, a Parksideprofessor&#13;
of political setenee&#13;
and published author ,&#13;
/I8S just released his fourth&#13;
bOOk, "Ideology and Political&#13;
Life."&#13;
The bOOkpresents the key&#13;
ideOlogiesIn today's world.&#13;
In esch chapter, Hoover&#13;
dIScussesa political Ideology.&#13;
He begins by explaining&#13;
polilicallife under that Ideology.&#13;
He explains how it atfectsthe&#13;
lives of those under&#13;
It. and the political and economicpolicies&#13;
of it.&#13;
He then provides a themalichistory&#13;
of the Ideology&#13;
andanalyzes the Idea behind&#13;
it.&#13;
Theeight major ideologies&#13;
explained In the book are:&#13;
classicalliberalism, traditional&#13;
conservatism, libertarian&#13;
conservatism and anarchism,&#13;
reformliberalism, Marxism,&#13;
socialism, liberation ideologies&#13;
and fascism. Finally,&#13;
Hooverpredicts the future of&#13;
Ideology.&#13;
Ken Hoover&#13;
"It Is a useful source to&#13;
anyone wanting to understand&#13;
political Ideology.vcommented&#13;
Hoover.&#13;
The book is currently available&#13;
In the Parkslde library&#13;
as well as Martha Merrell's&#13;
Bookstore in Racine. All local&#13;
royalties go to the Parkslde&#13;
Scholarship Fund.&#13;
Hoover's other books are&#13;
currently In use In over two&#13;
hundred colleges across the&#13;
nation. He hopes his new book&#13;
will enjoy the same success.&#13;
So far. it has received a great&#13;
deal of praise by others In his&#13;
field.&#13;
"Hoover's 'Ideology and&#13;
Political LIfe' presents an In.&#13;
telllgent and intelligible portrait&#13;
of. the Ideologies that&#13;
have shaped and reshaped&#13;
the political landscape of the&#13;
twentieth century." commented&#13;
Terence Ball of the UnI·&#13;
versity of Minnesota. "No&#13;
other text accomplishes so&#13;
much in so short a compass."&#13;
The book Is particularly designed&#13;
for American students&#13;
since we are often ignorant of&#13;
other ideologies. They are&#13;
presented In an unbiased and&#13;
factual manner and give a&#13;
true picture of the life they&#13;
create.&#13;
"Ideology is about the most&#13;
controversial subject you can&#13;
write a text on," explained&#13;
Hoover. "It has been a struggle&#13;
to contend with the variety&#13;
of points of view which the&#13;
book discusses but I have enjoyed&#13;
It, and it was clearly&#13;
worth the effort."&#13;
Candidatespeaks-------------------------&#13;
McCallumfrom page 4&#13;
veraily of Wisconsin System&#13;
to come In with 95%, they'll&#13;
probably get more than&#13;
that."&#13;
In fact, says McCallum. the&#13;
Republicans are seeking to&#13;
strengthenthe university system&#13;
In the state. something&#13;
whichtheir Democratic challengersaren't&#13;
doing.&#13;
"If you're looking at the&#13;
ProPOsals being made, we&#13;
won't close Parkslde down&#13;
we'llmake it even stronger,':&#13;
he said. Both parties are lookIng&#13;
to place caps on enrollments.&#13;
The difference is that&#13;
the Thompson-McCallum approach&#13;
Is based on grades&#13;
coming out of high school to&#13;
raise the standard for new&#13;
students and those transferring&#13;
Into the system.&#13;
"The Earl·Metz approach,&#13;
however, Is to have a lottery.&#13;
So even if you have&#13;
astralght-A average, you'd be&#13;
thrown Into a pool with others&#13;
who only have a C·average.&#13;
To me, that is destroying the&#13;
university system, because&#13;
you're only basing admission&#13;
on. academic excellence."&#13;
This propsal, McCallum believes,&#13;
will benefit. not harm,&#13;
. schools such as Parkslde.&#13;
HI would expect that our&#13;
policies would encourage&#13;
people to go to two-year campuses&#13;
and campuses which&#13;
have not been meeting their&#13;
enrollment .projections, like&#13;
Parkalde," he said.&#13;
Week at the Park&#13;
"Learned Ladies" begins&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 23&#13;
Movie: "Bonnie and Clyde"&#13;
(PG13) will be shown at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission at the door is $1.00&#13;
for Parkslde and Carthage&#13;
students and $2.00 for others.&#13;
Sponsored by P AB.&#13;
Worksbop: "How to Use Fi·&#13;
nancial Statements for Forecasting&#13;
and Budgeting" starts&#13;
at 6 p.m. Call ext. 2047 for details,&#13;
Sponsored by the Small&#13;
Business Development Center.&#13;
Movies: "The Gold Rush"&#13;
and "City Lights" will be&#13;
shown at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Tickets for the&#13;
Thursday Foreign FUm Series&#13;
will be avaUable at the&#13;
door.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 24&#13;
Movie: "Bonnie and Clyde"&#13;
will be repeated at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
and at 7: 30 p.m. In the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
Play: "The Learned Ladies"&#13;
starts at 8 p.m. In the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Call&#13;
ext. 2564 for ticket information.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 25&#13;
Play: "The Learned Ladies"&#13;
will be repeated at 8 p.m. In&#13;
the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. Tickets will be available&#13;
at the door.&#13;
Movies: •'The Gold Rush"&#13;
and "City Lights" will be reo&#13;
peated at 8 p.m. In the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. All&#13;
seats are sold for the Saturday&#13;
Foreign Film Series.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 26&#13;
Movies: liThe Gold Rush"&#13;
and "City Lights" wlll be repeated&#13;
at 2 p.m. In the Union&#13;
Cinema. Tickets for the Sunday&#13;
Foreign FUm Series will&#13;
be available at the door.&#13;
Movie: "Bonnie and Clyde"&#13;
will be repeated at 7: 30 p.m.&#13;
In the Union CInema.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 28&#13;
Worksbop: "How to Find&#13;
Jobs and Contact Employers" '~&#13;
starts at 5:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
104. Call ext. 2452 for reservations.&#13;
Workshop: "Investments and&#13;
Estate Planning" starts at 6:&#13;
30 p.m. In MOLN 109. Call&#13;
ext. 2047 for reservations.&#13;
Sponsored by the Small Business&#13;
Development Center.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 29&#13;
Workshop: "Resume Preparation"&#13;
starts at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Union 104. Sponsored by the&#13;
Career Planning and Placement&#13;
Center.&#13;
Concert: Featuring pianists&#13;
Bllss and Goldberg starting&#13;
at 1 p.m. In CA DU8. The&#13;
concert is free and open to&#13;
the publlc.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 30&#13;
Open House: For area high&#13;
schoolers starting at 8 a.m.&#13;
Call ext. 2355 for details.&#13;
Movie: "The Exorcist" (R)&#13;
will be shown at 3:30 p.m. In&#13;
the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
at the door Is $1.00 for Parkslde&#13;
and Carthage students and&#13;
$2.00 for others. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
Workshop: "Resume Preparation"&#13;
starts at 5:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union 104. Call ext. 2452 for&#13;
reservations.&#13;
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Hours:&#13;
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Frl., Oct. 24·5 to 9 pm&#13;
sat., Oct. 25·1 to 9 pm&#13;
sun, Oct. 26·1 to 5 prn&#13;
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estgate&#13;
all&#13;
4901 Washington Ave. (Washington &amp; Ohio)&#13;
(next to Shopko) 634-8090 ' '&#13;
Mon., Oct. 27·CLOSED&#13;
Tues., Oct. 28-5 to 9 pm&#13;
wed., Oct. 29-5 to 9 pm&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 30-5 to 9 pm&#13;
[FRIDAY, OCT. 31·1 to 9 pml&#13;
sat., Nov.'·, to 5pm&#13;
SATISI=ACTION&#13;
GUARANTEED!&#13;
LISTEN TO WRKR FM RADIO&#13;
FOR MORE DETAILSSMALL&#13;
CHILDREN MUST BE&#13;
ACCOMPANIED s·y PARENTS&#13;
�ER Thursday, October 23,1986 9&#13;
by Jim Nelbaur&#13;
EntertaillmentEditor&#13;
peoplejust won't watch. silentmovies&#13;
nowadays, givmg&#13;
the feeble axcuse that a film&#13;
~emptysands dialogue.&#13;
"Chlldrenof a Lesser God"&#13;
~ a potent drama almost&#13;
,trtcUyon the basis that actress&#13;
MarleeMatlin performs&#13;
IhroUghpantomIme.&#13;
Thedeaf mute theme was&#13;
better presented in Joseph&#13;
Pevney's"Man of a 'I'housandFaces'"&#13;
(1957) In which&#13;
JamesCagney played Lon&#13;
OWley,a silent movie actor&#13;
whosepantomimIc skills were&#13;
enhanced by the fact that- his&#13;
parents were stone deaf But&#13;
"Children of a Lesser God"&#13;
merely uses this theme as a&#13;
backdrop to present a love&#13;
story for all time and generations.&#13;
William Hurt perfectly en.&#13;
acts the glib·yet.commpas_&#13;
sionate teacher of the deaf&#13;
whose bizarre, innovative&#13;
methods cause genuine&#13;
breakthroughs in several&#13;
areas. His passion for the&#13;
young clea~-up girl who refuses&#13;
to use her voice is the&#13;
motivation for a very warm,&#13;
offbeat screen romance that&#13;
sets the pace for the remainis&#13;
der of the film.&#13;
The story does tend to drag&#13;
a great deal and actually is&#13;
more interesting durtng the&#13;
schoolroom sub-plot sequences&#13;
than. during the romance&#13;
that is the main thrust&#13;
of the narraative. The Hurt&#13;
character can even be considerect&#13;
unsuccessful in the&#13;
film's denouement since his&#13;
attempts to teach speech to&#13;
the Mallin character and his&#13;
desperate attempts at breakIng&#13;
through to a quiet rebel in&#13;
his classroom both fail In the&#13;
end.&#13;
What causes' 'Children of a&#13;
Lesser God" to succeed in&#13;
spite of the narrative's shortvisually&#13;
effective&#13;
comings is director Randa&#13;
Haines' fascinating use of visual&#13;
images to emphasize the&#13;
fact that we're dealing with&#13;
the hearing imparied (sequences&#13;
with the Matlin cnaracter&#13;
swimming alone are ron&#13;
without sound).&#13;
Another plus is the acting.&#13;
Hurt is very comfortable in&#13;
his role, one that seems tatlor-made&#13;
for his particular&#13;
style. Matlin is a stunning&#13;
presence whose facial expressions&#13;
say more than any of&#13;
the discursive modern-day&#13;
talking film actors. The lost&#13;
art of pantomime in motion&#13;
pictures is recaptured in all&#13;
its silent screen glory.&#13;
film&#13;
In the final analysis. "Children&#13;
of a Lesser God" is a&#13;
sad film - sad in that it emphasizes&#13;
how little modem&#13;
day filmmaking utilizes&#13;
something as obvious as visuals.&#13;
That it takes a film&#13;
where the central character&#13;
Is deaf to present a fair&#13;
amount of visuals L1 both&#13;
style and acting Is mors than&#13;
a little ridiculous.&#13;
The film is recommended&#13;
. even if only to show today's&#13;
mass audiences how movies&#13;
would be made if more filmmakers&#13;
were fortified with&#13;
the understanding that In motion&#13;
pictures. visual should&#13;
come before audJai.&#13;
by Jim Nelbaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
---------Selected Shorls:---------&#13;
PEGGYSUE GOT&#13;
MARRIED&#13;
Francis Ford Coppola's&#13;
filmsalways have some sort&#13;
of esoteric style and theme&#13;
under the narrative surface.&#13;
WIththis one. Coppola carefullymanipulates&#13;
the ernotions&#13;
of views from their late&#13;
twenUesto early forties by&#13;
presenUngnostalgic images&#13;
o!theInnocentpast.&#13;
KathieenTurner plays the&#13;
llUecharacter that is whisked&#13;
awayfrom her 25 year high&#13;
schoolreunion to her senior&#13;
year circa 1960,What follows&#13;
Ia a compelling character&#13;
studythat presents an era in&#13;
retrospect.&#13;
Themajority ,X-1960 teenagerscling&#13;
to dreams of suburbta,&#13;
Dion and Fabian, and&#13;
other idyllic images all of&#13;
which became anachronisms&#13;
very quickly as the sixlies&#13;
wore on. The one outcast, a&#13;
rebellious literary student&#13;
name Fitzsimmons, embodJes&#13;
the very type that came Into&#13;
vogue as the innocent "Ozzie&#13;
and Harriet" era came to a&#13;
crashing halt amid the Asian&#13;
wars and outdoor rock festivals&#13;
that defined the coming&#13;
decade.&#13;
"Peggy Sue. Got Married"&#13;
will easily be considered another&#13;
"Citizen Kane" by&#13;
many sentimental folks In&#13;
their thirties. This 28-year old&#13;
sees it as a very expertly&#13;
crafted example of audience&#13;
manipulation that will be&#13;
anachronism itself in about&#13;
five years.&#13;
The Files&#13;
Ten Years Ago&#13;
Oct. 2Q, 1976&#13;
Dedication, open house set&#13;
On Oct. 24, an all campus open house and the official&#13;
dedicationof Irvin G, Wyllie Library-Learning Center.will&#13;
beheld.The dedication program will feature the unveiling&#13;
01 a POrtrait of the late Chancellor Wyllie done by Kenoshaartist&#13;
George Pollard.&#13;
Also featured in the open house will be the recently&#13;
completed$3.7mtllion Union building.&#13;
Five Years Ago&#13;
Oct. 22, 1981&#13;
Senate takes stand on&#13;
teaching awards&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Associaton. Inc. took&#13;
a stand against a decision made by Chancellor Alan Gus·&#13;
kin and the awards committee on this year's Teaching&#13;
ExcellenceAwards.&#13;
The awards, which are usually presented at the beginningof&#13;
each school year, are delayed this year because&#13;
ShirleyKersey, one of the recipients, is no longer teach-&#13;
~g here. She will not receive it. Two awards are tradiODallygiven&#13;
each year.&#13;
One Year Ago&#13;
oct. 24, 1985&#13;
New programs added . r&#13;
A number of new programs have been added this yea&#13;
at ParkSlde to help orient students both academiCally and&#13;
aoClallyto college life. In&#13;
Amongthe new programs this year the advising desk&#13;
!datn Place, the Academic Resource Center In the library,&#13;
~Ority Student Services, orientation for new students~&#13;
I e Campus Ambassador program and planned program&#13;
~r a rolling registration and studJes intended to measure&#13;
e Impact of education at Parkside. .&#13;
.....&#13;
SID AND NANCY&#13;
Unquestionably the most&#13;
heartbreaking film in recent&#13;
memory as well as one of the&#13;
most thoroughly dJsgustlng.&#13;
Fascinating In that It&#13;
presents Sid Vicious and&#13;
Nancy Spungen's llves In all&#13;
their tragic glory. Compeliing&#13;
In its vivid look at the British&#13;
punk scene of the last seventies.&#13;
Disgusting in its realistic&#13;
portrayal of the ugliness of&#13;
this entire lifestyle.&#13;
But to totally dismiss this&#13;
film is to state that you have&#13;
no compassion for troubled&#13;
young people. Boiher Sid and&#13;
Nancy are repugnant, but&#13;
their rebelliousness stems&#13;
from an existence that cries&#13;
for a type of love that neither&#13;
of them seemed to have experienced.&#13;
Though not a very good&#13;
movie in the proper sense, its&#13;
realism is undeniable. You'll&#13;
either be utterly revolted or&#13;
TRADiWiND~ I VILLAGE ~&#13;
I&#13;
1518 Washington Ave. '1&#13;
(Hwy. 20) • 633-3161&#13;
I We'.,egot 1&#13;
I BANDS I&#13;
I Friday, Oct. 24th I&#13;
I&#13;
Clmmeron (50's &amp; 60's) I&#13;
Band Starts at 9:00 p.m.&#13;
I&#13;
Join us Fri. 10/31 for our I&#13;
Halloween Partyl&#13;
1&#13;
Largest Facilities In Raclnel 1&#13;
Ample Parking in Rear 1&#13;
1 C?~9~~~8t~~~~~.:J&#13;
L.:---~-&#13;
thoroughly depressed., Either&#13;
way you're sure to be&#13;
awestruck.&#13;
REFORM SCHOOL GIRLS&#13;
Cheap trash a'ia poverty&#13;
row of the 1940's featuring&#13;
Wendy O. Williams, who&#13;
achieved local fame by being&#13;
busted in Milwaukee for "Assimilating&#13;
fornication on&#13;
stage ...&#13;
Ready-made drive-in/video&#13;
fodder, "Reform School&#13;
Girls" sinks in its own swaggering,&#13;
pathetic subject matter.&#13;
It relies totally on visceral&#13;
images, using the fast&#13;
pace that is the center of anylow-budget&#13;
actioner. No attempt&#13;
is made within the narrative&#13;
to address the problems&#13;
of reform schools.&#13;
That there are enough demented&#13;
people out there to&#13;
make it worth filming a turkey&#13;
like this is more than a&#13;
little scary.&#13;
DEADLY FRIEND&#13;
Elizabeth Shue goes from&#13;
"Karate Kid" innocence to&#13;
this shocky teen horror epic&#13;
in one fell swoop.&#13;
The ideas in "Deadly&#13;
Friend" are all the ususal&#13;
ones, with no real good. new&#13;
ideas. The scares are manufactured&#13;
rather than built up&#13;
to a'ta Hitchcock. The whole&#13;
Idea, In fact, is sold to us In&#13;
the coming attraction trailer.&#13;
But, then. selilng is what&#13;
some filmmakers seem to&#13;
think making movies is all&#13;
about.&#13;
FILM ON CAMPUS&#13;
Arthur Penn's "Bonnie and&#13;
Clyde" Is generally regarded&#13;
as one of the films that&#13;
spawned the seventies generation&#13;
of serious film students&#13;
of which this writer is a product.&#13;
The fUm featurs several innovative&#13;
technical treats to&#13;
enhance the cnaractertsations.&#13;
Faye Dunaway and&#13;
Warren Beatty In the title&#13;
roles, give us more than historionic&#13;
dramatics as was per&#13;
usual for bad guys In films of&#13;
the late sixties.&#13;
A trend setter In that it utilizes&#13;
elements of comedy,&#13;
melodrama and socLal cornmentary.&#13;
Michelle Neal&#13;
John Poehls&#13;
Stephanie Hynes&#13;
ONCE AGAIN WE HAVE LUCKY&#13;
WINNERS OF MOVIE PASSES FOR&#13;
UA CINEMAS, 7370 57TH AVE.&#13;
Essie Bennett&#13;
Tracee Demoe&#13;
Suzanne Harris&#13;
Dan Cunningham&#13;
THE WINNERS OF&#13;
THE WHooPI GOLDBERG WATCH ARE:&#13;
Diane Perkins Gary Goslinski&#13;
SEE JUMPIN' JACK FLASH&#13;
SHOWING ALL THIS WEEK&#13;
TO CLAIM YOUR PASS, PLEASE COME TO THE RANGER&#13;
OFFICE, WLLC 0139C. NEXT TO THE COFFEE SHOPPE.&#13;
c&#13;
Huey hollers "Fore!"&#13;
I&gt; T) 1.. lM'r r a New Drug" and "Working&#13;
For a Llvtng."&#13;
Granted, the underlying&#13;
theme of these numbers is&#13;
sUll "have a good time.&#13;
party, etc.," but most are&#13;
aurprtsingly serious, Intended&#13;
to be taken at face value as&#13;
comments upon SO's llfe chan.&#13;
neled vte a 60's musIcaJ style.&#13;
The' sore excepUon Is "Hlp&#13;
pIHt to Be Square." which, with&#13;
sense of humor intact. Illus-&#13;
!rates how UghUy the group's&#13;
approach fils wtth more Ilghthearted&#13;
material. BoasUng&#13;
lyrics Uke "T used to be a renpde.&#13;
I used to run around...&#13;
I 'ow I'm playing It real&#13;
slraJght and yes I cut my&#13;
halt ." the song Is Innocuously&#13;
Lotta pteaeant.&#13;
That fewer consumers&#13;
oeem disposed to digest&#13;
Huey's brand of dOO-WOpsuggeato&#13;
that he and the boys&#13;
were a passing fad.&#13;
Ciassified A dS'o;;;..;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;_;;;;;;o;;;_o;;;;..;;;;;;o;;;.. o;;;;_;;;;;;o;;;&#13;
K'OTT Rt:'OI Break a freshman's&#13;
head ..-.n wUb )' r num (hucks.&#13;
"COTT R '(1:1 You and your frtemls&#13;
are .ror&amp;nc La die U )'OU ever pull an.&#13;
Otber mml Uk. that -.pin&#13;
"lTkf; ROKL hal had h1I rev~!!&#13;
8OCCL.R y,,-, ; "Il1an.k )"OU for your&#13;
.-upport lI\J.I; homecomiri,g weekend.&#13;
You made II • memorable and enjoya.b~&#13;
"" .lr.e--.nd. 'Th&amp;n.k$-the Soccer&#13;
....,......&#13;
CROSSWORD PUZZLER&#13;
ACIlO ..&#13;
35_&#13;
31long._ ,.."&#13;
39_. Print.".&#13;
"O~&#13;
• 2 ObKure&#13;
.. o.nn.&#13;
O&amp;~01 """""&#13;
doocord&#13;
48T.,.,. stro*.&#13;
50 Youngol ..&#13;
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:2 Anglo-Saxon 27 In front o'&#13;
money 28 Cares tor&#13;
3 Squonde,ocl 30 ee-&#13;
• lJber.te 32 Existed&#13;
5 Mote unusual 36 No'hIng&#13;
6 A. home 38 Badgenike&#13;
7 The self -&#13;
e Of ,he same ~ ~or&#13;
mat..,., 45 Pantry&#13;
I~&#13;
=&#13;
41 Drunkard&#13;
II F • ~ 4. Swiss ClItl'on&#13;
00 e "-' 52 Tableland&#13;
16 Walt on S4 rrilll&#13;
188ectnfied 55 Ordinance&#13;
partICle 56 Greek letter&#13;
20 P&gt;geon pea ~1 Informer&#13;
22 Enter1a&amp;n 59 Be in debt&#13;
23 Suffer-: from 60 Encounl.ed&#13;
d........ -. 63_51&#13;
RANGal&#13;
Q&#13;
------Short Cuts---- __&#13;
SOMEWHERE IN TIllIE&#13;
by Iron Maiden (Capitol)&#13;
Considered by many to be&#13;
the consummate heavy metal&#13;
band Iron Maiden also keeps&#13;
up with their heavily detailed&#13;
album cover graphics (this&#13;
latest one may be the best of&#13;
all).&#13;
The music within retains&#13;
the same technical competence&#13;
and emotional power as&#13;
can be expected from the&#13;
popular headbangers, the title&#13;
cut being an extended shouter&#13;
in the tradition of songs like&#13;
"Flight of Icarus" from&#13;
1983's "Piece of Mind."&#13;
Other cuts getUng airplay&#13;
on the metal radio stations include&#13;
the scorching IIAlexander&#13;
the Great ... "Heaven Can&#13;
watt" and perhaps the best&#13;
track. "The Loneliness of the&#13;
Long DIstance Runner."&#13;
which is saId to be based on&#13;
the brUllant 1962 Tony Richardson&#13;
British film of the&#13;
same name.&#13;
With lhJs, their ninth LP&#13;
(including the 1981 EP&#13;
l&lt;Ma1den Japan"). Iron&#13;
Malden retain their firm and&#13;
lofty position in the annals of&#13;
meat and potatoes rock.&#13;
Jim Neibaur&#13;
SHOT IN THE DARK by&#13;
Great WhIte (Capitol)&#13;
Hard, meaty rock music&#13;
from yet another group out of&#13;
the Los Angeles club scene.&#13;
Great WhIte achieved&#13;
strong noteriety with the independently&#13;
released EP:&#13;
"Out of the Night" Which was&#13;
soon followed by a self-titled&#13;
debut LP. With this. another&#13;
independent effort just recenUy&#13;
pIcked up for dlstrlbuttion&#13;
by Capitol. Great White&#13;
has cl&gt;anged very llttle .&#13;
The group's work is a bit&#13;
subtler than many metal&#13;
acts, and closer to bard rock&#13;
(that Is, tamer In Its fundamental&#13;
approach).&#13;
The LP's best !lOngby far Is&#13;
"Face the Day," while it includes&#13;
yet another cover of&#13;
Iron Maiden's latest is on Capitol Records&#13;
the old Spencer Davis Group&#13;
oldie "Gimme Some Lovin."&#13;
Although Great White's cover&#13;
of the sixties gem is far better&#13;
than the bombastic Blues&#13;
Brothers bastardization, Jack&#13;
Russell's powerful vocals are&#13;
still no match for Steve Winwood's&#13;
on the original.&#13;
Six other original tracks&#13;
balance out the package with&#13;
frequent emphasis on Mark&#13;
Kendall's guitar llcks.&#13;
"Shot in the Dark" is acceptable&#13;
on its own terms&#13;
even if it still lacks the unllm-&#13;
!ted passion found In the better&#13;
metal attempts. That !t&#13;
retains rock and roll purity&#13;
by straying from technologt.&#13;
cal intrusions Is its major&#13;
strong point.&#13;
-Jim Neibaur&#13;
PRIVATE REVOLUTION&#13;
World Party (Chrysalis)&#13;
This is Waterboy's bassist&#13;
Karl Wallinger's solo effort&#13;
displaying even more varied&#13;
musical abilities than that of&#13;
the Innovative Waterboys.&#13;
While the Waterboys stick&#13;
to a basic. stripped down tradlUonal&#13;
sound. World Party&#13;
try different musical styles.&#13;
The title track and "Mak.&#13;
Ing Love (To The World)"&#13;
have the lyrical effervescense&#13;
of Waterboys frontman Mike&#13;
Scott. but the music could be&#13;
mistaken for another Prince&#13;
proto. type from Minneapolis.&#13;
These two songs seem to&#13;
have been placed In sequence&#13;
deliberately to filter out those&#13;
listeners who do not have the&#13;
open mind to continue Ilaten.&#13;
Ing. Obvtously detectable.&#13;
and wonderfully so, Water.&#13;
boys' saxaphonlst Anthony&#13;
ThisUethwaile gives his band.&#13;
mate a hand on "Ship Of&#13;
Fools."&#13;
A traditional Chleflanesque&#13;
Interlude, "Dance Of The&#13;
Hoppy Lads," is a unique sur.&#13;
prise. and Waliinger's croon.&#13;
ing voice and the soothing&#13;
music of "It Can Be Beautiful&#13;
(Sometimes) to are merely&#13;
preparations for continued&#13;
brilliance on side two.&#13;
Although WalUnger may&#13;
have stood in the shadow 01&#13;
Mike Scott, he no longer&#13;
needs to. His prominent abW.&#13;
ties, which were once abrevl.&#13;
ated. are now overwhelming&#13;
and diverse.&#13;
··Gretchen Gayhart&#13;
Immunization.&#13;
UNICEF, the United Na.&#13;
tions' Chlldren's Fund. Is&#13;
ploneerlng a Child SUrviVal&#13;
------------&#13;
UNICEF'charity dance to be held&#13;
Every minute fourteen children&#13;
In the developing world&#13;
die either from malnutritIon&#13;
and hunger or from lack of&#13;
Just When you thought it was safe&#13;
to stay in your room and stUdy&#13;
'TRETURNS&#13;
8.S.0. JAM Part II&#13;
Friday Oct. 24th&#13;
Union Square&#13;
9:00·Until ?&#13;
$1 Entry for all StUdents&#13;
11&#13;
A Black StUdent Org.&#13;
and&#13;
Big"B"&#13;
PrOduction&#13;
CampaJgn which provides&#13;
low-cost health care to the&#13;
most vulnerable children in&#13;
the world. _.&#13;
For only a few dol1.al'l,&#13;
UNICEF can protect a child&#13;
from death by disease or&#13;
famine.&#13;
On Oct. 31, tens of thOUi&#13;
sands of people througJ!OU&#13;
the United States and can::&#13;
Will participate in the&#13;
Annual "TrIck or Treat tor&#13;
UNICEF" program. SinceIII&#13;
Inception. lhJs program /l&amp;I&#13;
raised over $80 million tor&#13;
UNICEF actIvlUes worldwl·&#13;
de. take&#13;
A dance.a·thon will&#13;
place at Parkslde on Oct. SI&#13;
at the P AB.spon!lOred daII'"&#13;
featuring "Signs." PledP&#13;
sheets Will be available ~&#13;
week at the slgn·up boOlII COl"&#13;
cated In the Mollnal'O&#13;
Course. . ....wI&#13;
All students are enCOUJ1l6-&#13;
to partIcipate in lhJs effort.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
CrosS-COY ntry&#13;
- Marter outruns field at Carthage Invitational&#13;
.~:~~ ~:or ~:r ~in~re~ouf:e. Her ~me of could not overcome the Osh-. placed 11th with 271 points. tenUy," said Rosa. "I have&#13;
. th' secon 5 was kosh Titans, who placed first The team title was claimed three of my top seven hurt&#13;
e second fastest time ever With 46 points, three better by North central easily out. and I may not be able to have&#13;
by a Parkside runner. She than Parkside. However, the distancing Luther' College 42 a team at nationals this&#13;
now has the top two times for Rangers finished well ahead to 74. year."&#13;
Parkslde women on the cour- of Mllwaukee This is the first&#13;
se, tI th . The top fInlsher for the&#13;
me ey have beaten the Rangers was once again&#13;
Panthers. Randy Darnkot, who finished&#13;
The overall men's winner 22nd In 25: 53.&#13;
was Keith Hanson, a Mar.&#13;
quette graduate, who covered&#13;
the course in 23 minutes, 42&#13;
seconds.&#13;
Thursday, October 23, 1986&#13;
The Parkslde National&#13;
cross-Country course was the&#13;
site of the Carthage Invtta,&#13;
uanaI this past weekend. 22&#13;
men's teams and 12 women's&#13;
teamS participated. There&#13;
were 279 men and 150 women&#13;
entered.&#13;
The overall women's' winner&#13;
was MIchelle Marter.&#13;
'llIiS was the first time Mar·&#13;
ter has won an Invtatlonal on&#13;
Top tMlvea womeD.:&#13;
Sarah Hiett was second In&#13;
the collegiate division with a&#13;
time of 18: 26. The rest of the&#13;
team showed excellent depth&#13;
by placing fQur of their team&#13;
members in the top 15. Despite&#13;
these finishes. the Rangers&#13;
Marter; Hiett; Jilleen Fobalr, 1, 18:&#13;
46; Colleen WIsmer, 18, 18:157; Nancy&#13;
:Marter, 26, 19:M: KrtaUn AlIoto, 31,&#13;
Head coach Lucian Rosa 19:1J3; Jackie :MeloUk, Sf, 19:56.&#13;
said that injuries have been&#13;
hurting the team. "They are&#13;
better than they show. they&#13;
just aren't nmnlng constsTop&#13;
ab: men:&#13;
Darnkot: John Hunt, 23. 26:D:i; Mike&#13;
Lunow, 79. 26:1:11i Mike Sllwa, 87, 267&#13;
57: Robb White, 1M, 27:67; Andy Ka- The Parkside men's team estner, 156,28:02.&#13;
Bowling club off to a rolling start Sports Briefs_&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
The season ended Saturday for the women's tennis team&#13;
when the doubles team of Amy Tropin and Kim Kranich&#13;
was defeated by UW-Stout's number one doubles team at&#13;
the NAIA District 14 tournament In Oshkosh.&#13;
The Rangers finished the season with a dual meet record&#13;
of 3-10, but coach Wendy M1ller pointed out that "we&#13;
had a lot of close meets including two 4-5 losses right near&#13;
the end of the season.&#13;
"They all played well." she added. "They were inexperienced&#13;
and not used to as high a caliber of competition as&#13;
they met. They showed a lot of Improvment which Is the&#13;
main thing. I commend them for their efforts."&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
On Oct. is, the Parkside women's volleyball team lost a&#13;
close meet to Lewis University on the Flyers' home court .&#13;
The scores were 13·15,14-16.15-13,6-15.&#13;
Statlatlcal leaders for the Rangers were Karen Green&#13;
with four k1lls and 12 digs, Laurie Jacusz with four blocks,&#13;
Kay Wolferstetter with 12 digs and Amy Henderson with&#13;
27 assists.&#13;
Their current record Is now 25-11.&#13;
by Katie Thomey&#13;
The Parkslde bowling club&#13;
has now had two "meets and&#13;
Ute men's and women's&#13;
teamshave each lost only one&#13;
match.&#13;
won by the same score, but&#13;
the men fell 5-21.&#13;
Last Saturday, the teams of&#13;
the Big 6 Conference were at&#13;
Parkside for a meet. The&#13;
Rangers bowled against PlattevlIle&#13;
and Oshkosh this time.&#13;
Both teams pounded the Pioneers,&#13;
the men by a 23-3&#13;
count and the women by a 23-&#13;
o whitewash. In the match&#13;
with Oshkosh, the men won&#13;
20%-5%. but the women lost&#13;
7%-15%.&#13;
Glen Malkmus had the high&#13;
single game on Saturday with&#13;
a 236. Mike Torosian leads&#13;
the team with a 206 average.&#13;
Club president Jeff Floyd&#13;
said "during the match with&#13;
Oshkosh, It was the first time&#13;
the team had come together&#13;
and bowled well. Other times&#13;
we had been somewhat lackadaisical,&#13;
so that was encouraging.&#13;
Overall, it was a&#13;
good day."&#13;
OnOct. 11, the club was in&#13;
Mllwaukee and competed&#13;
againstMIlwaukee and Madison.&#13;
'!be men and women&#13;
beat the Panthers by scores&#13;
of 19-7and 19-4. respectively.&#13;
AgaInstMadison, the women&#13;
.iII"J7UJT...cr..o'I''''''''Classified Ads ,""""",1&#13;
GRETCHEN OAYHART is STILL an&#13;
LPS!&#13;
KENNEDY'S VICTORY over Nixon&#13;
was less crooked than this year's&#13;
Homecoming election.&#13;
STEVE NELSEN: Did you have a&#13;
nice swim in the Mighty Root? You&#13;
big dummy. From your fellow root&#13;
buddies.&#13;
MAD AUSTRIAN: Attention, Commander&#13;
Salamander: Prepare for fuklfledged&#13;
attack. Mary! wnet a weekend!&#13;
She's Gotta Have It!&#13;
A RIDDLE: The best ones are always&#13;
taken. \Vhy don't they ever take me?&#13;
BONI: I have a recipe book for you-·&#13;
101 ways to cook com. DMC.&#13;
OARY: PLEASE wear those, I~ower&#13;
shorts and my wool sweater ... Mr.&#13;
GQ (Gary Quarterly).&#13;
F.F: HAVE you checked for grass&#13;
staIns lately?&#13;
SANDY: 11IANK you for a great&#13;
·Homecoming. CA·s.&#13;
DAVE McEVOY: Even If you are a&#13;
Homecoming dud. to us you're still&#13;
The Stud. The staff.&#13;
G.O: HOW 'bout a .,two-man tug o'&#13;
war just me and you. G.S.&#13;
SUzANNE: WELCOME ~ the real&#13;
world of journalism. That s a case of&#13;
Schaeffer, right?&#13;
DIANA NEIBAUR: you'lI be home for&#13;
your birthda!&#13;
SCOTT RENCH: Got another spee·&#13;
ding ticket? .&#13;
Classllieds see page 10&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
AOOllBATE AND dependable typing&#13;
:..: sbJdent and professional.&#13;
RUB-A·DUB, Hot Tub Rentals. Delivered&#13;
to your home. 551.9023.&#13;
TYPING; MY home. Fast and de-&#13;
)lendabJe, Student rates. Free eetrmate!.&#13;
Call Debbie. 681.3fi22.&#13;
PElLA·GRAM when the bare essentIa18&#13;
are the best credentials. eatl us&#13;
~ that stagttte party, birthday, etc.&#13;
1lII~~ SInging Telegram,&#13;
HelpWanted&#13;
..... PER hundred for remailing let- ::nfromhome! Send selr-addressed, Plieal:: envelope for tntcrmanon/apIe&#13;
1(J 0720aAssociates, Box 95-B, Rosel·&#13;
:OMEWORKERS WANTED. top pay.&#13;
tOri~~~e. Call Cottage Industries&#13;
~VEL FIELD position Immedtval&#13;
avatlable. Good commission,&#13;
otheuab~ WOrkexperience, travel and&#13;
taa. r nents. Call Bm Ryan 1.800-&#13;
..~~r complete Information.&#13;
re : STUDENT spring break&#13;
~reBentauve for Collegiate Tours&#13;
and Travel. Earn complimentary trips&#13;
I12I7~or more information, call&#13;
N E Mlnn • or wrIte 9434 Naples,&#13;
NEED capoUs MN 55434.&#13;
""h.1o EDITING services for my&#13;
r theSis. Call 886.0477.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
::o:~DESK; $40. Tables. cur·&#13;
It'l5 'Po . 633-24~, Mike.&#13;
"M:fF1.t: RD, 4-door. Very utUe rust.&#13;
hIrh bl~dIO, automatic, will sell to POira ... !'.: 414/857-5202.&#13;
Ile'{er 1l-;;;Ca1stools,high back, brown,&#13;
&amp;rU8IC • I 639-3690.&#13;
ClaruietL INSTRUMENTS. B-flat&#13;
at tl37'll82~te~tosaxophone. Call Kim&#13;
p·m. durlo, .. ore 8:30 a.m. or after 8&#13;
camPus -.;;~ school hours. Call on&#13;
'~-~ .&#13;
Personals·&#13;
1.01'1: BU havethe DDHAS, (Hope, Leah): I&#13;
l"OUtlovebaby011 if you have the time.&#13;
It '~MN god. ~ and Y Carr ever got mad at Leo&#13;
It -OUld bealledhim by his last name,&#13;
~ger Off~Grand March Time In the&#13;
"C.\ClA' Sce. I:a Y Uam ETH y tu son personas bel- '!CJ&lt;sO o.&#13;
~s~: YOU'RE a sweetheart.&#13;
~l1stlna r all the papers. Luv ya,&#13;
'''''ZQ::&#13;
Plnttielj'l!E Want to get in your&#13;
PAIl IS -th/economIcs)&#13;
to Homecoming elections&#13;
what Ferdinand Marcos is to Philli·&#13;
pine elections.&#13;
ANTHROPOLOGY CLUB meeting&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 28 at 11 a.m. in Molina·&#13;
ro 321. Everyone welcome.&#13;
NO, YOU go to hell!!&#13;
WHO WOULDN'T get dnmk with me .&#13;
a year ago? Just wondering, Gary.&#13;
TYSON: MY spam of love weighs&#13;
more than you do.&#13;
PUDGIE'BUNNY: You are god!&#13;
DAVE: I'M sure that poster would've&#13;
given you the edge. Jen.&#13;
GREETINGS: FROM Parkside to&#13;
AUC'&#13;
WHAT'S UP, doc!! Happy Birthday.&#13;
DUTCH LIVESl Dutch l1ves!&#13;
A BIRO in the hand is better than a&#13;
bird in MIchigan. "Big Guns."&#13;
HOW COME no one's writing about&#13;
John Beach anymore?&#13;
TO -THE administrator who ehallenged&#13;
the Ranger to a tug o'war: we&#13;
dIdn't want to drag you or your name&#13;
through the mud. ,&#13;
NO..LAST week's front page wasn t&#13;
supposed to look as damned ridiculous&#13;
as it did. Red-faced Ed. RRRRRRRR.&#13;
FURM: FUUUHHR&#13;
RRRRRRRRNT!&#13;
TO SWELL: Boy. you need a woman&#13;
in your Hfe! P.S. Nice car. Eddie.&#13;
TIA TlA Tia' I hope Tom the&#13;
chicken will ask you out. Maybe we&#13;
could double sometime. R d Tyson&#13;
Y SCHNEEBERGE an&#13;
~:a starring in the new vl(lrsion of&#13;
"The Odd Couple."&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Intheir last doubleheader of the fall season. the Parkstde&#13;
baseball team split with Mllwaukee Area Technical&#13;
College, losing the first game 8-7 but w1nnIng the nightcap&#13;
13-2.&#13;
Compiled by Robb LIte"r and Jas ... Caspers&#13;
SOUP/SALAD &amp;&#13;
BUILD-VOUR-OWN DELI&#13;
BUFFET&#13;
Monday,&#13;
Oct;. 27&#13;
11 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
IfUfe is a matter of&#13;
choice, would gou&#13;
want someone&#13;
choosing for gou? UNION&#13;
BAZAAR&#13;
•&#13;
i&#13;
!!i~~NDTE: Union dining&#13;
rOD", cla •• d frDm&#13;
10:00 8.m. to 4:30&#13;
p.m. an this dllte to&#13;
IIccomodllte the&#13;
specllli chllncellor&#13;
Inaugural luncheon.&#13;
. Protect your life by&#13;
Protecting the prebom ...&#13;
S&#13;
fheastern Wisconsin ProLife&#13;
ou 10 • Coa ltwn&#13;
-&#13;
12 T y. October 23. 1986&#13;
Adema&#13;
Hard work brings rewards for soccer star&#13;
. phere. It "I'm seriously thinking a&#13;
Adema's high school had a ending my playing c';:t&#13;
soccer team, but he didn't but not by choice, I lOvePiar&#13;
,&#13;
play for them, "The players lng, but lf I can't play at y.&#13;
weren't very talented. I just level at which I want. I&lt;bn~&#13;
didn't feel I fit In there very think I'll play. I think I't&#13;
well. 1 wanted tougher corn- going to move on to nm",.~&#13;
petition for myself. I liked it. biking and SWimming-:~&#13;
I thrived on it." He found that athlon sports. II&#13;
level of play in the Wisconsin Adema believes that 8J)Orta&#13;
major leagues. "1 usually are a necessary part of&#13;
played with older players be- ge life. "There's a lot of:n'.&#13;
cause I felt their competition tive things being said a~&#13;
was moving along quicker. ,. athletes these days and I f 1&#13;
It was In Milwaukee that athletics do more gOOd ttl&#13;
Adema was noticed. He was harm. I think sports In g than&#13;
attending UW·Sheboygan and al is a great thing fo:n&#13;
".&#13;
playing for the Croattan Eag- dents· II helps put lh·tu&#13;
.&#13;
les when former Parkside through school, " he said fill&#13;
soccer coach Hal Henderson He also feels that ath! u&#13;
saw him play and offered him can put a strain on a stu~CI&#13;
a scholarship. He had recetv- academically. "When ou,nl&#13;
ed offers from NCAA Division into sports so much, yO~ 1&amp;"&#13;
I schools, but he could only and it's all that's on P J&#13;
play two years for any of mind; it takes a lot ofun?~&#13;
them. He chose NAlA-affHat- really takes over your Uf . t&#13;
ed Parkside because he could you're serious about it ,~.~&#13;
have four years of ellgibillty. said. "Some guys can' pia&#13;
Adema plans to graduate and when they walk off ~&#13;
this year with a degree in filed, it's over; but SOme&#13;
on to get a physical education to&#13;
geography, then he will stay live for their sport.&#13;
study and do well aca.demlIt'.&#13;
=&#13;
degree ~d to get his coach- cally for those people.&#13;
trig certification. He would "I know for me it taktI&#13;
Ilke to coach soccer at the lot of my lime thinking •&#13;
high school or college level. it. Soccer's always on&#13;
Despite his success, Adema mind - it's actually n&#13;
may have to hang up his cleo one. To be the' best It baa&#13;
ats after this season is over, be. It can't be second to&#13;
due to nagging Injuries, such thing. But I'm glad I DWII&#13;
as a chronically bad left through. It was a lot of&#13;
ankle. "It's been giving me a and I'm happy with IIle&#13;
hard time this year," he said. come." factor&#13;
.-&#13;
~to by Rickleonerd&#13;
Wayne Adema In ectlon. He received much of his training In&#13;
1M Nelherillnds. He worl&lt;ed out with Ihe Dulch National&#13;
' .... In 1985.&#13;
in Adema's soccer career was&#13;
his family'. devotion to the&#13;
gam . Hla father was a player&#13;
and his uncle also played&#13;
and now is a coach at a&#13;
Wisconsin college..' 'Being&#13;
from a European background&#13;
and having a family that's&#13;
into soccer, that helped. 1 was&#13;
always around that atmos,&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Rangers topple outclassed Titans&#13;
b \ alIaa _ ......... '"&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
tnemserves down 1.() with&#13;
only 35 seconds gone, the&#13;
RangeMi rattled au four goals&#13;
In a 10 minute span. Goals&#13;
were scored by Gil, Peters&#13;
(2) and Mike Lee.&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
wed., OCt. 29 -Hcme vs. Concordia College, 2 p.rn.&#13;
CROSS OOUNTRY&#13;
Sat., Oct. 2:\. At the lliwaukee Invitational'&#13;
women at 10:30 a.m .• men at il:15 a.m.&#13;
VOLLEYBALL&#13;
FrL and sat .. Oct. 24·2:\. At Mlnnesota.Duluth,&#13;
1 p.m./9 a.m.&#13;
Wed., Oct. 29 -Home vs. Marquette, 7 p.m.&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
IN TI:iE SQUARE&#13;
S'SCREEN&#13;
OMING&#13;
MONDAY, OCTOBER 27&#13;
WASHINGTON vs.&#13;
NEW YORK I NTS&#13;
*&#13;
GRILL OPEN * BEER * SODA * WINE *&#13;
POPCORN&#13;
THE PARKSIDE UNION</text>
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