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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 8, issue 12</text>
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            <text>Wind ensemble in concert Nov. 29</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>r&#13;
-"IP University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
THANKSGIVING!&#13;
Wednesday November 21, 1979&#13;
S c o ff Ma t h e r d ir e c ts&#13;
anger&#13;
Vol. 8 No. 12&#13;
Wind Ensemble in concert No v. 29&#13;
To entertain and educate" is&#13;
the wind ensemble's goal". While&#13;
listening with awesome enjoyment,&#13;
one can also obtain much&#13;
information about the styles of&#13;
music written by some very&#13;
well-known composers: Beethoven,&#13;
Bach, Mozart, and Heyden&#13;
among others.&#13;
One question raised would be,&#13;
How can a wind ensemble play&#13;
those types of songs? This is not&#13;
just any wind ensemble. This is an&#13;
extremely talented wind ensemble&#13;
with a director of the same stature.&#13;
Scott Mather is the new director&#13;
this year. He says that the&#13;
ensemble will be very active&#13;
throughout the whole year. Mather&#13;
has a philosophy; "The more we&#13;
perform before an audience, the&#13;
better. A performance is entirely&#13;
different from a rehearsal. There's&#13;
a certain tension that's always&#13;
there when you perform. For&#13;
better adjustment to this tension,&#13;
more performing is necessary.The&#13;
adrenalin flow is there in a&#13;
performance also."&#13;
Next Thursday, November 29 in&#13;
the Union Cinema Theater, the&#13;
wind ensemble will present a free&#13;
concert. The program will include&#13;
Henry Purcell's Symphony from&#13;
"The Fairy Queen, Act IV,&#13;
Richard Wagner's Tranversinfonie,&#13;
Karel Husa's Al Fresco,&#13;
Ludwig V,on&gt; Beethoven's Five&#13;
Short Pieces, and Felix&#13;
Mendelssohn's Overture for.&#13;
Winds, Opus 24.&#13;
The concert will be only one of&#13;
many. The ensemble plans to pull&#13;
Scott Mather directs ensemble in Main Place during the lunch hour.&#13;
more surprises in Main Place and&#13;
during the spring they'll be doing&#13;
the same thing outside. There'll be&#13;
two more concerts next semester in&#13;
the Union Cinema.&#13;
Besides the wind ensemble,&#13;
there are also small groups&#13;
branching off from it and&#13;
performing. There is a flute trio,&#13;
the leuttner, and more.&#13;
photo by M. Anderson&#13;
Mather will get Parkside into&#13;
the Christmas spirit at the end of&#13;
the semester. There'll be an&#13;
ensemble playing Christmas songs^&#13;
•&gt;n t he campus. There'll also be a&#13;
brass choir that'll be performing at&#13;
Kemper Center on December 16th&#13;
for a "Twilight Musical."&#13;
Another program will be&#13;
attempted again next semester&#13;
according to Mather. A concert&#13;
band will be initiated once again.&#13;
Last year the program didn't really&#13;
get off the ground.&#13;
. Unlike the wind ensemble,&#13;
there'll be no auditions necessary.&#13;
Anybody and everybody that&#13;
knows how to play an instrument&#13;
can join.&#13;
Mather hopes to have at least&#13;
two concerts next semester with&#13;
this program. Anyone that feels&#13;
like playing again, even if he or&#13;
she hasn't played for a while is&#13;
urged to join.&#13;
In addition to all of these other&#13;
activities, Mather will conducf the&#13;
Parkside Pep Band at Ranger&#13;
home basketball games this year.&#13;
Mather received his undergraduate&#13;
and graduate degrees at&#13;
Washington State University. His&#13;
conducting experience includes&#13;
work with WSU'S wind ensemble,&#13;
orchestra, and symphonic band.&#13;
He was associate principal&#13;
trumpet with the Spokane Chamber&#13;
Orchestra and also performed&#13;
with a number of brass ensembles&#13;
in the Pacific Northwest.&#13;
He studied under Craig Kirchhoff,&#13;
director of bands at Ohio&#13;
State, Frederick Fennell, "dean of&#13;
all wind ensembles" (according to&#13;
Mather and many other wind&#13;
ensemble people), and Guy Fraser&#13;
Harrison.&#13;
SALT II discussed Mon.&#13;
r&#13;
"SALT II and the Nuclear Arms&#13;
Race" will be the topic of a&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Public Forum featuring a panel of&#13;
nationally-known experts on U.S.&#13;
military policy and armaments at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 26, in&#13;
the Union Cinema Theater. The&#13;
U.S. Senate is scheduled to begin&#13;
debate on the treaty the day after&#13;
the forum.&#13;
Panelists will be Retired&#13;
Admiral Elmo Zumwalt, Jr., chief&#13;
of U.S. Naval Operations from&#13;
1970 to 1974; Sidney Lens,&#13;
director of an AFL-CIO employees&#13;
union from 1941 to 1966 and&#13;
author of a number of books and&#13;
articles on the arms race; Robert&#13;
Sherman, a Congressional National&#13;
Security Staff Aide since 1968&#13;
who attended the SALT II talks&#13;
and treaty signing in Vienna last&#13;
June; and Daniel McGovern, a&#13;
visiting member of the UW-Parkside&#13;
political science faculty, who&#13;
will explain basic issues involved in&#13;
the treaty. Kenneth Hoover of the&#13;
UW-P political science faculty will&#13;
moderate.&#13;
Zumwalt was a Democratic&#13;
candidate for the U.S. Senate from&#13;
Virginia in 1976 and since 1977'&#13;
has been president and chief&#13;
executive officer of American&#13;
Medical Buildings, Inc., of&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Lens, a contributing editor of&#13;
The Progressive magazine and&#13;
columnist for the National&#13;
Catholic Reporter, is the author of&#13;
18 books on the American labor&#13;
movement, politics and the arms&#13;
race including a widely-read 1977&#13;
volume, "The Day Before Doomsday."&#13;
&#13;
Sherman currently is serving as&#13;
chief legislative assistant to Cong.&#13;
Robert Carr of Michigan's 6th&#13;
District, who is a member of the&#13;
House Armed Services Committee&#13;
and its subcommittee on Intelligence&#13;
and Military Application&#13;
of Nuclear Energy and Seapower&#13;
and Strategic and Critical Materials.&#13;
(Carr was a candidate for&#13;
Racine County District Attorney in&#13;
the 1968 Democratic primary.&#13;
After losing that race, he moved to&#13;
Michigan, where he served as&#13;
Assistant Attorney General before&#13;
being elected to Congress in 1974.)&#13;
Sherman has authored articles on&#13;
SALT for a number of publications&#13;
including Air Force Mag-&#13;
.azine^ Foreign.- Policy.,- Armed.&#13;
Forces Review. The Progressive&#13;
and Nation.&#13;
The public will have an&#13;
opportunity for comments after&#13;
the panelists' presentations.&#13;
Recent polls have shown public&#13;
opinion divided evenly for and&#13;
against SALT ratification.&#13;
The program formally inaugurates&#13;
the Parkside Public Forum&#13;
series, which was initiated last&#13;
spring shortly after the crisis at&#13;
Three Mile Island. The very&#13;
favorable response to that forum&#13;
has encouraged the university to&#13;
establish public forums as a&#13;
continuing part of campus&#13;
outreach activities, according to&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin.&#13;
Parking for the forum will be in&#13;
the Tallent Hall lot east of Wood&#13;
Road and free shuttle bus service&#13;
will be available between the&#13;
parking lot and the Union Cinema&#13;
1 heater. Because of heavy evening&#13;
student use of the Union Parking&#13;
lot. very limited parking space is&#13;
expected to be available there.&#13;
The forum is co-sponsored by&#13;
UW-Parkside, University Extension&#13;
Department of Governmental&#13;
Affairs and UW-P Political&#13;
• Science Club, . - v , •„&#13;
INSIDE...&#13;
• From the Parking Lot: 'Nice'&#13;
• Editorial: Don't bail out on bail&#13;
• A hunter's nightmare come true&#13;
• Review. . . And Justice For All&#13;
Arts &amp; Cr afts Fair Dec. 1&#13;
The fifth annual Arts and Crafts&#13;
Fair at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside will be held&#13;
Saturday. Dec. l.from 10 a.m. to4&#13;
p.m. with 130 exhibitors who will&#13;
display their wares in the Campus&#13;
Union and Molinaro Hall, both at&#13;
the north end of the academic&#13;
complex. There is no admission&#13;
charge for the event, which is&#13;
sponsored by the student Parkside&#13;
Activities Board.&#13;
A new feature of this year's fair&#13;
is a Kiddie Korner, in Union&#13;
Rooms 104-106. where children&#13;
can make gift items under&#13;
direction of the staff&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center&#13;
service will be available in Union&#13;
Square from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.&#13;
Fair items offered by exhibitors&#13;
•will- include,Christmas' ornaments&#13;
of the&#13;
Food&#13;
and decorations, leaded stained&#13;
glass, silk flowers, wreaths, toys,&#13;
puppets, pine cone art, candles,&#13;
afghans, ceramics, jewelry,&#13;
macrame, paintings, lapidary,&#13;
wooden jewelry boxes, mirrors,&#13;
woodcrafts, hand-painted china,&#13;
sewing and crocheting, holiday&#13;
dough art, doll beds, quilts,&#13;
stoneware, leather work, baby&#13;
blankets, copper sculpture, clocks,&#13;
decoupage, drawings, log lamps,&#13;
charcoal sketches and lead crystc.l&#13;
mobiles.&#13;
Exhibitors will come from&#13;
Racine, Kenosha, Bailey's Harbor,&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wauwatosa, Milwaukee,&#13;
Oxford, Greenfield,&#13;
Whitewater, Princeton and Chicago.&#13;
Mt. Prospect and Arlington&#13;
Heights,, 111. &#13;
. W^nesday fjoyember 21, ,1979 . Ranger&#13;
Editorial Comment&#13;
Please give!&#13;
Ranger is still collecting money to send to Oxfam-America in order to&#13;
help teed the Cambodian people. If you'd like to make a contribution,&#13;
bring your money or check down to the RANGER office (WLLC D139&#13;
next to the Coffee Shoppe) by noon next Friday, November 30th, and&#13;
deposit it in the black box just inside the office door.&#13;
Celebrate this holiday by giving thanks that we don't have to deal with&#13;
hunger day to day on a life and death basis. Share what you're lucky to&#13;
have.&#13;
The Ayatollah Khomeini has said, "America is the great Satan." As&#13;
American citizens, we owe it to ourselves to stand up and show the world&#13;
that we are not inhumane.&#13;
This being the International Year of the Child, we must think of the&#13;
millions of Cambodian children who are suffering and need our help.&#13;
Think ot those hungry children as you sit down to eat your turkey and&#13;
stuffing tomorrow.&#13;
RANGER is also challenging all campus groups to give a contribution.&#13;
The RANGER will be contributing $25. We welcome any effort to match&#13;
that amount, or exceed it for that matter. This is one time RANGER&#13;
considers losing a competition a great victory!&#13;
All groups who contribute will be listed in an article in the RANGER&#13;
after all the money is collected. For this reason it's important that group&#13;
contributions be given directly to me (Sue Stevens) or Brian Felland in&#13;
the RANGER office so that they may be recorded.&#13;
To everyone who has already contributed, Thank you!&#13;
Have a Happy Thanksgiving!&#13;
Editorial&#13;
fyiewfa&amp;ittt&#13;
How well do you think Jimmy&#13;
Carter is dealing with the Iranian&#13;
situation?&#13;
Paul Lukawskl - Sophomore&#13;
He's handling it very well by&#13;
using time, patience, and quiet&#13;
diplpmacy on his side. By not&#13;
making any rash statements he's&#13;
preventing a volitile situation from&#13;
becoming more so.&#13;
Rhonda Baker - Senior&#13;
I don't think he's doing very&#13;
well. I think he should take more&#13;
affirmative action. Freezing banks&#13;
in the U.S. has helped, but if he&#13;
doesn't do anything he'll lose those&#13;
Americans over there.&#13;
Chuck Stringer - Junior&#13;
Considering the circumstances,&#13;
there's not much more he could&#13;
do. He's being tough without&#13;
riskingjjyes needlessly.&#13;
Photos by B. Passino&#13;
Don't bail out on bail&#13;
by&#13;
Steve M. Dankcrt&#13;
Opinion Writer «&#13;
There are apparently some questions arising as to the effectiveness of&#13;
the bail law in the Wisconsin Statutes. These arise from crimes being&#13;
committed by persons out on bail when charged with alleged crimes.&#13;
One case dealt with the charge of commission of murder while the&#13;
defendant was out on bail from a previous multiple felony count.&#13;
Apparently the defendant had a high bond set, but on appeal before a&#13;
judge which did not set the original bond, obtained a lower bond and was&#13;
allowed release pending trial with the stipulation that the defendant not&#13;
bother the victims of the alleged multiple felony.&#13;
With the above incident in mind, and the current questioning of the&#13;
bail law of Wisconsin, a look at the provisions of the bail law is in order.&#13;
The bail law of Wisconsin is contained in the Wisconsin Statutes&#13;
under Chapter 969 and in the Wisconsin State Constitution under Article&#13;
One, section eight. The determination of bail is based on the following&#13;
concerns, as outlined in Chapter 969.01(4).&#13;
Bail is determined in reference to the purpose of bail, which is to&#13;
assure the appearance of a defendant or witness to answer criminal&#13;
prosecution. The proper considerations for fixing bail are: a( the ability&#13;
ganger&#13;
Sue Stevens Editor&#13;
Brian Felland Business Manager&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Editor&#13;
Ken Meyer Feature Editor&#13;
Jeff Stevens News Editor&#13;
Kevin Padula Photo Editor&#13;
Tom Cooper Chairman of the Board&#13;
Reporters&#13;
Charles Clifton, Dave Cramer, Pete Cramer, Ginger Helgeson, Renee Jones, Mira&#13;
Lochanski, Reed McMillan, Wait Remondini, Don Scherrer, Denise Sobieski&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Peggy Colston. Curtis Moldenauer, Brian Passino&#13;
Mary Arnold&#13;
Layout&#13;
Graphic Artists&#13;
Bill Stougaard, Michael Williams&#13;
Ad Representatives&#13;
Linda Andersen, Dan Galbraith&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content. Published every Wednesday during the&#13;
•academic year except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by the Zion&#13;
Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER content. All&#13;
correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC&#13;
D139, Kenosha, WI 53141.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard size&#13;
paper with one-inch margins. All letters must be signed and a telephone number&#13;
included for verification. Names will be withheld for valid reasons. Maximum length&#13;
accepted is 500 words. Deadline for letters is Friday at 10 a.m. for publication the&#13;
following Wednesday. The RANGER reserves all editorial priviliges in refusing to&#13;
print letters which contain false or defamatory content.&#13;
__&#13;
of the arrested to pay b( the nature anu gravity of the offense, and the&#13;
potential penalty for that offense c(the defendant's prior criminal record&#13;
d(Character, residence, and reputation of the arrested e( defendants&#13;
health f( character and strength of the evidence presented to the judge&#13;
g( whether the defendant was already on bail pending other charges h(&#13;
whether previous bail was forfeited i( whether the defendant was a&#13;
fugitive from justice at the time of arrest j( with regard to the policy of&#13;
unnecessary detention pending trial.&#13;
The release and review of bail for misdemeanors and felonies is&#13;
determined in accordance with Chapter 969.08(1) - (3). A change in bail&#13;
may be achieved in the following manner: a( the defendant may petition&#13;
a change b( the judge may amend the bail On accordance with 969.02 and&#13;
.03) c( the defendant is entitled to review of bond after 72 hours of&#13;
detention if not able to meet bond; reason shall be given for change of&#13;
bail, or defendant's release.&#13;
The law allows release on bond in regard to the following&#13;
considerations of Chapter 969.02 (1), and (2) ( a) and (b), or 969.03.&#13;
A judge may release a defendant charged with a misdemeanor without&#13;
nail or permit him to execute unsecured appearance bond. In place of&#13;
bond the judge may permit the defendant to: deposit with the bond clerk,&#13;
in cash, a sum not to exede 10% of the amount of bond, but no less than&#13;
$25; to be paid by sufficient solvent sureties, or in cash.&#13;
For a defendant charged with a felony, the judge may in place of bond&#13;
a( place the defendant in custody of a designated person or group&#13;
agreeing to supervise him b( place restrictions on travel, association, or&#13;
place of abode during release c( require not more than 10% deposit of the&#13;
amount of the bond, to be paid by sureties, or cash, or d( impose any&#13;
other conditions deemed reasonably necessary to ensure appearance.&#13;
A review of these statutory bail requirements indicates, I believe, that&#13;
there are sufficient safeguards for the defendant, who is to be considered&#13;
innocent until proven guilty, and for the victim(s); when the law is used&#13;
properly. The failing would appear to be in the realm of the failing of&#13;
most endeavors: human limitations.&#13;
Rather than revise the law, why not review the people in the courts?&#13;
The bond is ultimately conditioned by the judge, and it is tbe judges who&#13;
appear to be at fault in cases such as stated at the beginning of this&#13;
article. In all disputes there are three sides: the victims, the defendants,&#13;
and the facts. Let's look at the facts in determininc bail.&#13;
22222222222222222222222222222^&#13;
MANAGEMENT&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES&#13;
FOR COLLEGE GRADS&#13;
A lot of companies will give you an importantsounding&#13;
title.&#13;
The Navy will give you a really important job.&#13;
As a Navy Officer, you'll have command over&#13;
men, responsibility for multi-million-dollar equipment,&#13;
and the chance to prove yourself as a leader.&#13;
You'll also get top pay, travel opportunities, and&#13;
a wide range of benefits. For complete information&#13;
about becoming a Navy Officer, contact:&#13;
Navy Recruiting District Milwaukee&#13;
611 N. Broadway&#13;
Milwaukee. WI 53202 (414) 271-6559&#13;
&lt;22222222222222 &gt;222222222222$&#13;
% fl(e Sdcfot,&#13;
Outrage!&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Outrage! This is the only&#13;
emotion I could have had after&#13;
reading Steve Dankert's pea-brain&#13;
editorial in the Nov. 14th issue of&#13;
the Ranger. It is outrage that all&#13;
those attending an institution of&#13;
higher learning should feel.&#13;
Obviously Mr. Dankert does&#13;
not. HE WANTS US TO&#13;
FORGET the lessons of the last&#13;
war. He must miss the smell of&#13;
nanalm, or the odor of babies&#13;
burning. He must enjoy the sight&#13;
of maimed veterans, or national&#13;
grave yards. Such are the things of&#13;
war Mr. Dankert. Maybe we could&#13;
take on the Soviets, Cubans, and&#13;
the Iranians all at once. We would&#13;
have a million dead bodies laying&#13;
around, but we would sure feel&#13;
good. Hey, give him a M-16, he&#13;
can lead the first wave. He most&#13;
likely already has one. Mr.&#13;
Dankert, you've been watching too&#13;
many army movies. John Wayne is&#13;
DEAD! There is a song and it&#13;
goes; "Those days are gone for&#13;
ever,, over a long time ago"&#13;
With regard to the Iranian&#13;
crisis, which led to the donkey&#13;
brained editorial, many believe&#13;
that the students that seized the&#13;
American compound are nothing&#13;
more than out of work trouble&#13;
makers. This may be true, but&#13;
does this kind of sword rattling&#13;
gibber, in a student newspaper,&#13;
any more enlightened than what&#13;
we hear from Tehran. I think not.&#13;
How many Iranian lives does&#13;
Mr. Dankert want to show "a good&#13;
swift kick", 60, 100, 100,000?&#13;
The Iranian people did make a&#13;
tactical error in seizing the&#13;
compound. But only that. They are&#13;
now in the throws of a legitimate&#13;
revolution. It is an attempt to rid&#13;
themselves completely (sic) of a&#13;
repressive and murderous regime&#13;
of which the US had no small part&#13;
in establishing. A little humility,&#13;
patients, (sic) and understanding&#13;
of the Iranian point of view will go&#13;
much further than millions of&#13;
marines.&#13;
Let us grow up America! Our&#13;
power lies in our human energy to&#13;
help our neighbors, and to settle&#13;
our difference in a spirit of peace.&#13;
Once we realize this, the world will&#13;
also know. Let's not waste this&#13;
power with dreams of Teddy&#13;
Roosevelt or useless warfare.&#13;
Tony Leto &#13;
Ranger Wednesday November 21, 1,97.9 3&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Wendy Burman&#13;
finishes 13th&#13;
in championship&#13;
Wendy Burman, a UWParkside&#13;
freshman from Fond du&#13;
Lac (Goodrich), finished 13th in&#13;
the Association tor Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics for Women (AIAW)&#13;
Division II cross-country&#13;
championship Saturday at Tallahassee,&#13;
Fla.&#13;
Burman, who was clocked in&#13;
18:02.4 for the 5,000 meter course&#13;
at Florida State University,&#13;
becomes Parkside's second distaff&#13;
all-American in the sport. Kim&#13;
Merritt earned similar honors in&#13;
1975.&#13;
Parkside's other entry in the&#13;
meet, Kenosha (Bradford) sophomore&#13;
Barb Osborne, finished&#13;
119th in 20:12 in the field of over&#13;
200 runners.&#13;
Moral issues&#13;
on death &amp; dyi ng&#13;
discussed Tuesday&#13;
"Death by Choice: Moral Issues&#13;
in Death and Dying" will be the&#13;
topic of a free public lecture by&#13;
Daniel Maguire, professor of&#13;
theology and Christian ethics at&#13;
Marquette University, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
on Tuesday, November 27, at&#13;
Starburk Junior High School, 1516&#13;
Ohio St., Racine.&#13;
Maguire is the author of two&#13;
books on death and dying, "Death&#13;
by Choice" and "The Moral&#13;
Choice" and lectures nationally on&#13;
the topic. He is a member of the&#13;
American Academy of Religion,&#13;
the College Theological Society,&#13;
American Society for Christian&#13;
Ethics and Theological Society of&#13;
America. Before joining the&#13;
Marquette faculty, he taught at&#13;
Villanova University, St. Mary's&#13;
Seminary and University and&#13;
Catholic University of America.&#13;
Preceeding his public talk, Prof.&#13;
Maguire will talk on his theory of&#13;
ethics before the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society at 2 p.m. that&#13;
afternoon on the campus.&#13;
Women's Horizons&#13;
begins training&#13;
Women's Horizons, Inc., providing&#13;
shelter and advocacy for&#13;
violent families, will hold a series&#13;
of training sessions for people&#13;
interested in volunteering. Opportunities&#13;
exist for volunteers in the&#13;
areas of public speaking, newsletter&#13;
publication, shelter support,&#13;
special events and fundraising.&#13;
The training will be held at U.W.&#13;
Parkside, Tallent Hall, Room&#13;
181-A, on November 28, December&#13;
5, and 12, 1979C The sessions&#13;
will start at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
A panel headed by Joanne&#13;
Ratten will discuss the history and&#13;
struggle of establishing Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin's first shelter&#13;
for battered women at the first&#13;
session. For more information call&#13;
553-2414.&#13;
Women's studies&#13;
minor focuses&#13;
on contribution&#13;
Women's studies comprises an&#13;
intense examination ot works,&#13;
experiences,, and artifacts created&#13;
by, or pertaining to women. In&#13;
particular, it focuses on the&#13;
contribution of women in the fields&#13;
of arts, letters, and sciences; the&#13;
images of women in art and&#13;
society; and the attitudes towards&#13;
women held by all of us.&#13;
Required for the minor are a&#13;
total of 18 credits, including&#13;
Introduction to Women's Studies,&#13;
a two semester survey course. In&#13;
addition to the survey, students&#13;
may choose four courses from the&#13;
list of courses available among&#13;
divisional offerings, or from the&#13;
special topics courses available as&#13;
290, 490, or 499. With the consent&#13;
of the co-ordinator a student may&#13;
substitute other course work with&#13;
specific, sound relevance to&#13;
women's studies. No more than&#13;
two courses may be taken in any&#13;
one dicipline. Since courses are&#13;
offered on a rotating basis,&#13;
students are advised to consult&#13;
with faculty from the Women's&#13;
studies minor to assist them in the&#13;
selection of courses.&#13;
Magician to&#13;
appear here&#13;
November 29th&#13;
Kramer &amp; Co., featuring the&#13;
magician/illusionist Bob Kramer&#13;
and a collection of out-size&#13;
magical effects and props valued&#13;
at over $75,000, will perform at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 29, in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater&#13;
under sponsorship of the student&#13;
Activities Board.&#13;
Tickets are $3 for the general&#13;
public and are available at Sears in&#13;
Kenosha, "For the Record" in&#13;
Racine and at the Campus Union&#13;
information Center. (UW-P&#13;
student tickets are $2 and are&#13;
available at the Information&#13;
Center only.)&#13;
Kramer's magic includes such&#13;
classic illusions as "penetration,"&#13;
in which his assistant is placed in a&#13;
cabinet which is then closed and&#13;
pierced by 24 evenly-spaced razor&#13;
sharp swords, and "separation,"&#13;
in which the assistant enters a tall&#13;
box and has her mid-section&#13;
tri-sected by two-foot long steel&#13;
blades. Kramer claims a "world&#13;
exclusive" in a trick called&#13;
"cremation" in which the assistant&#13;
is placed in a coffin which is then&#13;
set ablaze and 90 second later&#13;
extinguished to reveal only a&#13;
smoldering skeleton.&#13;
Kramer's repertoire also includes&#13;
a variety of illusions&#13;
involving animals and birds, which&#13;
appear, disappear and change&#13;
forms at his bidding along with&#13;
such inanimate objects as hats,&#13;
gloves, flower pots and balloons.&#13;
A member of the Society of&#13;
American Magicians and the&#13;
International Brotherhood of&#13;
Magicians, Kramer began his&#13;
magic career as a hobby in his&#13;
teens. He now does about 200&#13;
shows each year and has shared&#13;
the stage with Frank Sinatra,&#13;
Robert Klein, George Carlin and&#13;
other stars.&#13;
Antbro Club&#13;
sponsors forum&#13;
During the week of November&#13;
19-21 &amp; 26-30 from noon to 2:00&#13;
pm, the Anthropology club will be&#13;
conducting an informational&#13;
forum concerned with the protection&#13;
and survival of the Yanomomamo&#13;
Indians in Brazil. Recently,&#13;
business interests have encroached&#13;
upon traditional Indian territory;&#13;
in the forms of major highways,&#13;
intensive mineral mining and&#13;
agricultural extension projects.&#13;
Within a year of these projects, 50&#13;
per cent of the Indian populations&#13;
in some areas have perished due to&#13;
diseases such as smallpox, tuberculosis,&#13;
measles, and onchoceriasis&#13;
("river blindness"). Simultaneously&#13;
the rich Amazon rainforest is&#13;
being destroyed in huge sections&#13;
daily. This process if continued&#13;
would undoubtedly turn the&#13;
rainforest into desert wastelands.&#13;
In response to this threatening&#13;
situation, Brazilian Anthropologists&#13;
and national organizations&#13;
concerned with Indian&#13;
survival have launched a nation&#13;
wide campaign in support of a 16&#13;
million acre Yanomamo Park&#13;
which would allow Indian people&#13;
to move about freely in a protected&#13;
environment, off limits to outside&#13;
intrusion, for carrying on their&#13;
traditional subsistence and social/&#13;
cultural activities undisturbed.&#13;
The table has been set up since&#13;
November 12. The club is&#13;
extending the forum because we&#13;
are highly concerned with human&#13;
survival and cultural freedom.&#13;
We hope you will stop by. read&#13;
through some of the information,&#13;
and sign the petition in support of&#13;
the Indian Park. Petitions will be&#13;
mailed to Brazilian Officials and&#13;
Indian Protection Agencies. We&#13;
need your support in order to help&#13;
save the Yanomamo and their&#13;
Amazon forest home.&#13;
Red's Rosier Rink&#13;
7220 67th Street&#13;
ADULTS ONLY&#13;
SKATING SESSION&#13;
SUNDAY EVENINGS&#13;
7:30—10:30 PM&#13;
Must be 18 or older&#13;
Admission $2.00&#13;
Skate Rental .75&#13;
CO-OP I M F O&#13;
U P D A TE.&#13;
I n f o r m a t i o n A b o u t C.S .C.' s F o o d&#13;
Book Co-ops &amp; L e a r nin g C e n t er&#13;
The Food Co-op is now open on Sundays from 12 to 5 in addition to the&#13;
regular hours of Monday 10 to 6, Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday 10 to 10 and&#13;
Friday, Saturday 9 to 6.&#13;
Special Sales during November and December will disc ount our already&#13;
low prices on Nuts. Dried Fruit. Cheese. Grains. Vitamins. Hardware, and&#13;
Shampoos. Stop in a i the co-op to get a schedule of sale dates and items.&#13;
New items are now in pl entiful stock such as: Merkt's cheese, many canned&#13;
goods, laundry soaps, cat and dog food, bulk tofu. organic produce, pita breads&#13;
and a whole lot m ore.&#13;
Do you Christmas shopping at the co-op - you'll he lp us out and&#13;
we have many non-food gift-type items in s tock.&#13;
The Book Co-op needs your used albums and paperbacks. You set the&#13;
price and members are not charged and you get the price you set when it is sold.&#13;
And don't forget to bring your textbooks to the Book Co-op at the end of this&#13;
semester!&#13;
A Newsletter will soon be ready and all members should be getting one of&#13;
these fact fill ed informa tion letters in t he mail in a couple of w eeks.&#13;
Check this ad next week for more C.S.C. member&#13;
information! &#13;
4 Wednesday November 21, 1979&#13;
A hunter's nightmare come true&#13;
bv by Do Donanalld d Sche &amp;&gt;hrrer »mr 4.. J_ T J . . . —-matihvumlMM, . "J3^iln irk n n in no-man's land.&#13;
It was a cold, gloomy, and gray&#13;
Friday afternoon when we pulled&#13;
into Tomahawk, Wisconsin. We&#13;
enjoyed the town's chamber of&#13;
commerce's free venison barbeque&#13;
had our cake, and ah, well, you&#13;
know how the old saying goes, and&#13;
drove on. We had driven miles out&#13;
of our way for the barbeque, and&#13;
later set up camp somewhere far&#13;
east of town.&#13;
Camp consisted of an old rusted&#13;
red cubicle with bleached chrome&#13;
letters: FORD on the nose of the&#13;
pickup. The camper slept three&#13;
miserably. The gas heater had a&#13;
nervous breakdown in the night,&#13;
and the Coleman stove sputtered&#13;
futilely till dawn.&#13;
A steaming cup of Folger's&#13;
liquid earth vanished down the&#13;
throats of my comrades. I declined&#13;
the offer, satisfied with two golden&#13;
globes of cholesterol and strips of&#13;
pork tat. And then we set out,&#13;
determined to have our limit&#13;
bagged, gutted, and registered,&#13;
and in the Amana by 3 P.M.&#13;
It was a long, long Saturday. We&#13;
undoubtedly resembled blazeorange&#13;
penguins waddling across&#13;
the frozen tundra. It would have&#13;
added spice to any family photo&#13;
album.&#13;
As we choked down some vittles&#13;
(if that's whaj you call canned&#13;
hash) and they choked on some&#13;
more mud (I preferred snow), we&#13;
warmed ourselves with a campfire&#13;
of matchsticks in the midst of an&#13;
ice hell.&#13;
The hunters trudged on as&#13;
steady as sailors fresh out of a pub.&#13;
Night fell furiously fast. The cold&#13;
became intoxicating. I secured the&#13;
compass, ready to stand out like a&#13;
lighthouse among leaders. Unfortunately,&#13;
the aurora borealis&#13;
had burned out that night; it had&#13;
done its dance. And the liquid&#13;
compass was froze, and the needle&#13;
pointed south.&#13;
This particular breed of man,&#13;
the hunter, is never known to&#13;
panic, but since the ace of spades&#13;
eventually is pulled from the deck,&#13;
I told my friends I had lost the&#13;
compass. They took it rather&#13;
mildly as I reached unnervingly&#13;
around to secure a cloth to wipe&#13;
the grease off the blue steel barrels&#13;
which picked at my nasal&#13;
passages. "Just — just kidding." I&#13;
said, and sneezed; and the rifles&#13;
almost backfired and the blue steel&#13;
lit up from the heat and the&#13;
gunpowder far back in the&#13;
chamber peppered my nose and&#13;
thus repeated the whole performance.&#13;
I handed the "5 &amp; 10&#13;
Ben Franklin" compass to Nasty&#13;
Nick Nipper, a lanky giant of a&#13;
figure, and he passed it to Whippy&#13;
Walter Wicki who resembled a&#13;
bearded ox, and he in turn passed&#13;
it back to me and commanded that&#13;
I lead the way. I gazed up at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
fflCE&#13;
Monday, November 26, 7:30 P.M.&#13;
Union Cinema Theater&#13;
Panelists:&#13;
ELMO ZUMVMALT, Admiral U.S. Navy (Ret.), Chief of&#13;
Naval Operations, 1971-74&#13;
SIDNEY LENS, Author, "The Day Before Doomsday,"&#13;
Contributing Editor, The Progressive, former Union Director&#13;
ROBERT SHERMAN, Congressional National Security Staff&#13;
Aide, observer at Salt II T reaty negotiations&#13;
DANIEL McGOVERN, Political Scientist, International&#13;
Relations, UW-Parkside&#13;
KENNETH HOOVER, Director, UW-Parkside Public Forum,&#13;
moderator&#13;
Co-Sponsors: University of Wisconsin-Parkside Public Forum, University of Wisconsin&#13;
Extension Department of Governmental Affairs, Political&#13;
Science Club&#13;
Free and Open to the Public&#13;
constellations dotting the heavens&#13;
and prayed to all of the divinities I&#13;
could think of.&#13;
It was sometime around&#13;
midnight when they answered my&#13;
plea. Two Indy 500 snowmobiles&#13;
careened almost too late to avoid&#13;
pancaking us; slugs sounded all&#13;
around us as if we were on an&#13;
artillery-testing battlefield, and a&#13;
volley of them came as crossfire.&#13;
And snow never tasted so good nor&#13;
felt so comfortable. I felt like I was&#13;
hugging the belly of a pregnant&#13;
glacier.&#13;
While the three of us were&#13;
spread-eagled in passionate embrace&#13;
with the snow, spot lights&#13;
and flood lights and car lights and&#13;
flash lights were upon us. The&#13;
g^rne warden ordered us up on our&#13;
feet, asked a few questions, then&#13;
chewed us out for incompetency in&#13;
hunting. We thanked him then&#13;
cursed him, then would have shot&#13;
him in the.. .had he not hopped&#13;
quickly back into his jeep and&#13;
drove off, leaving us on an&#13;
unmarked road in the heart&#13;
Antarctica.&#13;
South led us to a gin (and tonic)&#13;
mill where we warmed every part&#13;
which we could think of, since we&#13;
now could no longer feel any. I&#13;
thawed out the compass on the&#13;
hissing water heaters in the old&#13;
mill, and noted mentally that I had&#13;
better not forget it.&#13;
The time came, as indeed it&#13;
must, and the lights dimmed, as&#13;
did our eyes, and we found&#13;
ourselves eyeing up three very odd&#13;
and ugly and what appeared to be&#13;
green-haired women in fake fur&#13;
coats. We aimed to seduce them,&#13;
at the squaks and bawks and ughs&#13;
of the tavern folk, and succeeded&#13;
admirably and to the delight of the&#13;
now purple-haired women. We&#13;
pleaded our case to these candy&#13;
cane-haired women, and must&#13;
have come off so strong as being&#13;
unfortunate and badly in need of&#13;
something or another, so much so,&#13;
that we found ourselves in the&#13;
morning tucked merrily away in&#13;
fake fur coats and on dog-haired&#13;
mattresses in the back of the old&#13;
of&#13;
pickup in no-man's land.&#13;
AfteFwe rose, we had the same&#13;
old muddied drink, which I no&#13;
longer declined, and suffered our&#13;
stomachs to endure with those&#13;
golden globes of cholesterol and&#13;
strips of sow fat reeking of brine.&#13;
This salted our appetites for the&#13;
time being, and we drove and&#13;
boasted of our cunning acquisition&#13;
of those warm, fake fur coats, and&#13;
sought out the town of the previous&#13;
night's delights. They either&#13;
packed up or were snowed under.&#13;
We found neither floorboard nor&#13;
shingle of the place.&#13;
Somehow, somewhere, we got&#13;
back into the fields and woods and&#13;
stumps and bogs and anything else&#13;
which had a preference for&#13;
tripping sore-headed hunters, and&#13;
stumbled upon a rabbit. I would&#13;
have had the damn little impudent&#13;
thing had it not run between&#13;
W—W—W's legs and disappeared&#13;
into a hollow in the marsh.&#13;
I about sent W—W—W heavenward&#13;
when he saw my finger crush&#13;
the trigger and heard the echo of&#13;
the hammer as it struck the firing&#13;
pin.&#13;
He laid every word in the book&#13;
on me, with some reruns, and then&#13;
laughed with such a great roar of&#13;
pleasure that he had no energy left&#13;
after this enterprise to reproach&#13;
me. It then dawned on me that my&#13;
gun had not fired, and checking&#13;
the chamber, and pockets of my&#13;
vest, I realized that I hadn't any&#13;
shells.&#13;
I pleaded with W—W—W to&#13;
loan me a few but he denied my&#13;
request with as much pleasure as&#13;
he had displayed earlier. So I spent&#13;
the afternoon marching through&#13;
fields and forests and marshes&#13;
much in the manner of a&#13;
bewitched scarecrow, to flush out&#13;
any worthwhile game, that is,&#13;
anything from an English sparrow&#13;
on up.&#13;
By 3 P.M. I had flushed&#13;
nothing. Around 5 I flushed a&#13;
mole.-At 5:15 we decided to head&#13;
back. At 5:16 we discovered we&#13;
were without a compass. At 5:16&#13;
and ten seconds I was again paying&#13;
homage to the gods winking at us&#13;
from behind the constellations.&#13;
My ears provided gun racks for&#13;
the blue steel barrels of my&#13;
partners' rifles, and I could hear&#13;
the slow, cold grating of the&#13;
hammers as they were being pulled&#13;
back. Had not a white-talked buck&#13;
bounded through a clearing in&#13;
front of us at that moment I might&#13;
have joined the gods upstairs. Both&#13;
comrades aimed and fired. Click!&#13;
Click! They reached in their&#13;
pockets for shells. "I haven't any!"&#13;
one exclaimed to the other. "Have&#13;
you?"&#13;
"Hell no. I thought you packed&#13;
them."&#13;
I thought the grease and&#13;
cont. on pg. 7&#13;
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Ranger Wednesday November 21, 1979 5&#13;
Hi ATS&#13;
Mil&#13;
it!&amp;&#13;
From the Parkins Ut&#13;
'Nice'&#13;
% G. Helgeson&#13;
The Unicorn Hunters at Lake&#13;
Superior State College in Michigan&#13;
are looking tor nominations&#13;
to their annual "New Year's&#13;
Dishonour List of Words Banished&#13;
From the Queen's English." The&#13;
better part of last year's&#13;
nominations are enough to give a&#13;
few uneasy twinges to most people,&#13;
especially counselors, devotees of&#13;
Ann Landers and self-help books,&#13;
and members of support groups of&#13;
any kind.&#13;
The Unicorn Hunters, for&#13;
example, would like to banish&#13;
from the Queen's English (and&#13;
there's a phrase that is* at best,&#13;
meaningless, but not to quibble&#13;
with self-appointed purists) such&#13;
phrases as "I feel" and "What are&#13;
you into?" "Beautiful" is one of&#13;
their favorite hatreds. Granted,&#13;
these two phrases and one word&#13;
are over-used, but how can you&#13;
conduct group sessions without&#13;
them? That would be like asking&#13;
Bob Newhart to conduct a T.V.&#13;
session without interjecting "Go&#13;
with that."&#13;
The Unicorn Hunters would&#13;
also prefer that Parkside find a&#13;
new name for the building where&#13;
all books, periodicals, microfilms,&#13;
and other "learning tools" are&#13;
stored. You know, the "Learning&#13;
Resource Center."&#13;
The Unicorn Hunters don't like&#13;
our Center at all. Perhaps they'd&#13;
prefer we call it a plain old, no&#13;
fringes inferred "Library."&#13;
None of the words the Unicorn&#13;
Hunters knash their teeth at seem&#13;
too harmful. There is a word,&#13;
though, that actually is dangerous&#13;
to both people who use it and those&#13;
that have to listen to people use it.&#13;
And one the Unicorn Hunters&#13;
missed. As you've no doubt&#13;
guessed, it just happens to be a&#13;
four-letter word.&#13;
A four-letter word the Unicorn&#13;
Hunters have either heard so often&#13;
they have blocked out all sound of&#13;
and memory about, or it is so&#13;
eminently dangerous they fear to&#13;
even publicly banish it, for it&#13;
would only become more terribly&#13;
powerful because of the publicity.&#13;
The word is "nice."&#13;
The word is dangerous because&#13;
it embodies within those four&#13;
simple letters less communication,&#13;
more inanity, and more repressed&#13;
hostility than any "shit" or "fuck"&#13;
. or "damn" could ever contain.&#13;
"Nice" is what you say to your&#13;
wife when you are trying to&#13;
concentrate on Buck Rodgers in&#13;
the 25th Century, and she is trying&#13;
to tell you that your youngest son&#13;
has been picked up for possession&#13;
with intent to distribute heroin at&#13;
the junior high school.&#13;
"Nice" is what you say when&#13;
your best friend has gotten the job&#13;
you applied for first, even though&#13;
you suspect she had to take off her&#13;
pantyhose to get it.&#13;
"Nice" is what you say to your&#13;
parents when you come home for&#13;
the weekend after your first two&#13;
weeks away at college to find your&#13;
mother has replaced your bed and&#13;
dresser, redecorated your whole&#13;
room in pink and gold French&#13;
Provincial, and moved your&#13;
7-year-old sister in.&#13;
"Nice" is what you say to&#13;
describe your opinion of the work&#13;
of any and all artists your new&#13;
man, who is an art instructor,&#13;
mentions. "Very nice" is what you&#13;
say to describe your opinion of the&#13;
work of any and all artists your&#13;
new man seems to like.&#13;
"Nice" is what you hear about&#13;
people you invite through mutual&#13;
friends to your first party in your&#13;
new apartment. These kind of&#13;
people usually turn out to be loud,&#13;
boring, heavy drinkers who&#13;
^onsume as much of your booze&#13;
and munchies as fast as they can&#13;
— and then vomit it all upon the&#13;
way to your bathroom.&#13;
"Nice" is what you say when&#13;
your best buddy tells you he is&#13;
marryng the girl you paid $25 to&#13;
spend time with last night.&#13;
"Nice" can mean anything or&#13;
nothing. So, finally, "Nice" is what&#13;
you reply to people who describe&#13;
their mission in life as the forceful&#13;
restriction of language that&#13;
encourages uncommunicative,&#13;
inane, repressed human relationships.&#13;
&#13;
• Don't tell the Unicorn Hunters,&#13;
but they're not going to get&#13;
anywhere unless they buy some&#13;
guns, take some literary hostages,&#13;
and threaten world peace. Or get&#13;
themselves a half-hour sit-com on&#13;
a major network.&#13;
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The Quiet Company&#13;
NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE • MIL WAUKEE&#13;
by Hz Lusk&#13;
That beast sexuality&#13;
Note: This week's column is&#13;
written by a guest writer, Liz Lusk,&#13;
MSW, Social Services Coordinator&#13;
for Family Planning of Racine.&#13;
We hear a lot about sexuality&#13;
lately. New books appear in the&#13;
market almost daily and every talk&#13;
show guest has become an expert&#13;
on the topic, seemingly overnight.&#13;
Family Planning of Racine&#13;
hopes to help bridge the gap&#13;
between factual information and&#13;
personal integration and value&#13;
clarification. (How do 1 f eel about&#13;
my sexuality? How do I communicate&#13;
my likes and dislikes to&#13;
another? Do I want to be sexually&#13;
active with another?)&#13;
So, what's the fuss? Much of&#13;
today's commotion grew out, of a&#13;
previous total silence on the&#13;
cont. on pg. 7&#13;
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One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. at 62nd St.&#13;
Established in 1930&#13;
ANNUAL TURKEY DANCE&#13;
with&#13;
the Rockin Roll of&#13;
Union&#13;
Square&#13;
Gobble&#13;
SYNOD&#13;
9:00 pm&#13;
$1.00 UW-P Students&#13;
$1.50 Guest&#13;
Parkside &amp; State ID's&#13;
required at door&#13;
TONITE&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Nov. 21&#13;
Gobble&#13;
I've got Pabst Blue Ribbon on my mind'.' &#13;
6 Wednesday November ?1 1979 Ranger&#13;
Coming Events Review&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 21&#13;
MS?n&#13;
Hr.'f&#13;
Mnd&#13;
'" a&#13;
"&#13;
d&#13;
"&#13;
NeiS&#13;
hb&#13;
°"" be »!&gt;»»" at 7 pm i„ the&#13;
sor d he th ^ '&#13;
S 51&#13;
-&#13;
50&#13;
' The pr0Sram is&#13;
"P" 10 ,he P&#13;
ublic&#13;
- SP°°-&#13;
sored by the Kinesis Film Series.&#13;
9 n&#13;
m in Uni0n Square featurin« "Synod". Admission at the door is&#13;
51.00 tor a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SESSION Speakers from&#13;
surrounding area businesses will talk about different business management&#13;
degrees and relate them to job positions in their company. Informal question&#13;
and answer session following. Open to all campus. Sponsored by Women in&#13;
Business Club.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 24&#13;
MOVIES "The Adventures of Robin Hood" and "Robin and Marian" will be&#13;
shown at 7 pm in the Union Cinema. Admission is $1.50. The program is open&#13;
to the public. ,&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 25&#13;
MOVIES "The Adventures of Robin Hood" and "Robin and Marian" will be repeated&#13;
at 1:30 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
\&#13;
Monday, Nov. 26&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in MOLN 111. Sidney Lens will talk on "Should&#13;
Labor Support the Arms Race?" The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 27&#13;
SEMINAR "Finding and Keeping Good Employees" starts today in Union 104-&#13;
106 at 8:30 am. Call ext. 2312 for more information.&#13;
A/E SERIES presents Estelle Parsons in "Miss Margarida's Way" at 8 pm in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. Admission is $8.50. Tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center.&#13;
MEETING Minority Student Union will meet in Union 207 at 12 noon.&#13;
'... And Justice For All'&#13;
ACADEMY OF BATON &amp; DANCE&#13;
Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits, 1&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes —&#13;
All Dancing Supplies&#13;
p.2Q4,22nd Avertue&#13;
, Kenosha 658-24981&#13;
HEAR YE,&#13;
HEAR YE!&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
"... And Justice For AH" does a&#13;
magnificent job of showing the&#13;
many faults in our legal system's&#13;
foundation. The film is a slight&#13;
exaggeration, but that is necessary&#13;
to show the affluence of faults&#13;
within a period of two hours.&#13;
One judge in the film is an&#13;
accused rapist; another is a&#13;
suicidal maniac. The lawyers in&#13;
the film are uncaring, power&#13;
hungry, dishonest and slightly or&#13;
completely crazy in some way.&#13;
A1 Pacino portrays Arthur&#13;
Kirkland, a lawyer who finally gets&#13;
fed up with what is happening&#13;
around him. The film opens with&#13;
Pacino in jail for contempt of court&#13;
after throwing a punch at Judge&#13;
Fleming, played by John Forsythe.&#13;
Fleming is a judge who religiously&#13;
follows the written law. By doing&#13;
this, he sends Pacino's client to jail&#13;
for five years. What was the man's&#13;
crime? His car's tail light wasn't&#13;
working. The man was sent to&#13;
prison and subsequently cracked&#13;
after being beaten and raped many&#13;
times.&#13;
"...And Justice For All"&#13;
doesn't,paint a very pretty picture&#13;
of the judicial system, but it's a&#13;
very realistic picture. The main&#13;
.point of the film is that lawyers&#13;
must defend their clients whether&#13;
or not they are innocent.&#13;
One lawyer in the film goes&#13;
crazy after defending a client on a&#13;
murder charge. His client was&#13;
gui'ty- but the lawyer got him off&#13;
on a technicality. So what&#13;
happens? Upon his release, the&#13;
client returns to society and&#13;
murders two children.&#13;
Pacino once was supposed to&#13;
defend a guilty, and insane, client&#13;
but instead he informed the police&#13;
of his crime. The DA blackmails&#13;
Pacino into being Fleming's&#13;
defense lawyer because Pacino&#13;
violated the lawyer's code of ethics&#13;
by not trying to put his crazy client&#13;
back on the streets.&#13;
Another atrocity of the legal&#13;
system is shown when a lawyer&#13;
filing in for Pacino at sentencing&#13;
allows a man to go to prison when&#13;
he could have received probation.&#13;
It turns out that the lawyer doesn't&#13;
care about "them" (the clients)&#13;
anyway.&#13;
".. A. nd Justice For AH" may&#13;
have a strong comment on the&#13;
system of "justice" but the movie's&#13;
tone changes abruptly from scene&#13;
to scene. The movie is also a very&#13;
funny black comedy with funny&#13;
characters.&#13;
Jack Warden portrays Judge&#13;
Rayford, a slightly-crazed judge&#13;
who eats his lunch while sitting on&#13;
the ledge outside his fourth-floor&#13;
chambers. He is never without his&#13;
gun and shoulder holster.&#13;
("There's law and order, and&#13;
that's order," he says patting his&#13;
gun.)&#13;
Lee Strasberg plays Pacino's&#13;
grandfather who loses his false&#13;
teeth and brags that his grandson&#13;
will soon become a lawyer&#13;
although Pacino has been a lawyer&#13;
for 12 years.&#13;
The entire cast is superb.&#13;
Pacino's compelling performance&#13;
again proves that he is one of the&#13;
finest actors in film today.&#13;
The single fault of the movie is&#13;
the love interest between Pacino&#13;
and a lawyers' ethics committee&#13;
member played by Christine Lahti.&#13;
The development of their relationship&#13;
is poorly done and their affair&#13;
is too silly to be believeable. Other&#13;
than the love interest, however, the&#13;
script retains its punch throughout&#13;
the film without becoming bogged&#13;
down or preachy.&#13;
".. A. nd Justice For All" only&#13;
focuses on the faults of the judicial&#13;
system in order to make their&#13;
presence known. The movie is&#13;
about the problemed court and not&#13;
the average court.. .1 hope.&#13;
Ye Olde Parkside&#13;
Union will be closed&#13;
from Thursday,&#13;
November 22 thru&#13;
Sunday, November&#13;
25. See you turkeys&#13;
back on the 26th!&#13;
HEAR YE,&#13;
HEAR YE!&#13;
WIB promotes awareness&#13;
club welcomes new members. ne^iQ ,..u„ •„ . . .&#13;
by Mira Lochansid&#13;
Women In Business (WIB) is a&#13;
fairly new club designed for the&#13;
Parkside Woman in mind who&#13;
would like to get involved, meet&#13;
new people, and learn more about&#13;
today's woman in business.&#13;
What are WIB's objectives?&#13;
President Patricia Nurse commented&#13;
that "the club's current&#13;
objectives are to help promote&#13;
professionalism, better awareness&#13;
of jobs in the job market, obtain&#13;
job contacts, develop strategies to&#13;
achieve objectives and also to&#13;
provide events we would like to&#13;
have."&#13;
Patty also commented that the&#13;
$********************************&#13;
PARKSIDE *&#13;
prepare yourselves...&#13;
THE NCSA SKI WEEK&#13;
„ - V v . , Jan. 1-9 , 1 9 8 0 t o&#13;
£ $50 Deposit ^ Big Sky Montana&#13;
# Come Join Us&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
Only 8 Spaces&#13;
"it Sign up in Union 809&#13;
$250 includes"&#13;
bus transportation&#13;
lodging&#13;
lift tickets&#13;
parties &amp;. races&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
club welcomes new members.&#13;
"Students who would like to join&#13;
should preferably be female and&#13;
have career goals in mind, but the&#13;
club does not restrict its&#13;
membership solely to women," she&#13;
said. "The club's activities are&#13;
basically geared towards women's&#13;
interests. There are some activities&#13;
which are non-sexist. We are glad&#13;
to have males part of the club.&#13;
Membership is not only open to&#13;
women, but activities are geared&#13;
towards women."&#13;
It's not too late to join WIB. The&#13;
next WIB meeting is scheduled for&#13;
November 28th at 7:00 pm in&#13;
Union 207 in which Personnel&#13;
Speakers will come from four&#13;
different industries and also a&#13;
woman from Job Service will also&#13;
come to speak on different jobs&#13;
available with a business degree as&#13;
well as the responsibility of these&#13;
positions.&#13;
Patty listed many good reasons&#13;
to join WIB. "First of all, it is good&#13;
to have a social environment with&#13;
the people who are going to be&#13;
your equals and peers out in the&#13;
job market. Secondly, a good&#13;
reason to join is that it will help&#13;
you develop good job contacts with&#13;
women. Women presently in the&#13;
business world like to help other&#13;
women interested in business get&#13;
ahead too. And lastly, it will help&#13;
introduce ways in which women&#13;
seeking a business-oriented career&#13;
handle problems that may occur&#13;
on or off the job in a very direct&#13;
manner."&#13;
WIB can do more than provide&#13;
a social gathering of women who&#13;
share the same career goals in the&#13;
business world. It does much&#13;
more. It helps guide the future&#13;
woman in business develop a&#13;
business image in attitude, dress,&#13;
manner, and appearance. Care to&#13;
join? Knock on the door at the&#13;
next meeting on November 28th in&#13;
Union 207 at 7:00 pm and start&#13;
your career goal early by learning&#13;
how to become a today's woman in&#13;
business.&#13;
7* bign up in u nion c;uy #&#13;
1*&gt; -T" T* fv* *17 "T* ^ ^&#13;
The fastest-growing Premium Beer&#13;
m America.&#13;
On Tap&#13;
at&#13;
Union&#13;
Square &#13;
Hunter's&#13;
nightmare&#13;
cont. from pg. 4&#13;
gunpowder which had earlier&#13;
cleared up my sinuses seemed at&#13;
the time rather stale.&#13;
And these two debaters turned&#13;
t™ fl thC &amp;Uck sPr&#13;
'&#13;
n8'&#13;
ng towards them with its mighty rack&#13;
Poised. I was still-rolling around in&#13;
he snow in fits of laughter when&#13;
the two abruptly decided to take&#13;
UP Jogging. As it passed, the deer&#13;
looked at ihe as if I were crazy, and&#13;
continued its pursuit. It ran the&#13;
two Sunday afternoon joggers up a&#13;
tree and disappeared into the&#13;
forest.&#13;
Finally, we all took to hiking&#13;
after the heater fell ill again and&#13;
the Coleman died a premature&#13;
death. And I began to learn how to&#13;
read an official compass.&#13;
The rust bucket of a pickup was&#13;
in a deplorable state when found,&#13;
without its battery and camper&#13;
top, and after a county plow had&#13;
made it a flatbed with suicide&#13;
doors. We caught the Burlington&#13;
special to Milwaukee that day, and&#13;
ate and drank and vomitted&#13;
martinis and tortillas on the&#13;
changeover train to K-town.&#13;
I awoke the next morning with&#13;
an empty bottle of scotch at&#13;
bedside, and a backlog of reading&#13;
and nightmares piled elsewhere&#13;
about the room. The rifle was still&#13;
in the rack. I felt the gun, its cold,&#13;
hard blue steel, stuffed its barrel&#13;
up my nose to make sure the&#13;
gunpowder and grease were r eally&#13;
stale, and concluded it was all a&#13;
bad dream.&#13;
Oddly enough, my friends&#13;
related having similar nightmares.&#13;
cont. from pg. 5&#13;
matter. We didn't (and still don't)&#13;
have a satisfactory way to talk&#13;
about sex. Our vocabularies are&#13;
either highly medical, euphemistic,&#13;
or obscene. We continue to&#13;
struggle to find words for&#13;
comfortable communication.&#13;
When we have been able to find&#13;
words for our questions, the&#13;
questions often meet with another&#13;
disturbing silence. Our parents,&#13;
educators, clinicians and friends,&#13;
raised in the same culture of&#13;
silence, feel uncomfortable and&#13;
inadequate with the topic. This&#13;
silence keeps everyone feeling&#13;
exceptional and unsure.&#13;
Coming out of this silence, the&#13;
research and talk sounds like a&#13;
roar. Yet, even having facts isn't&#13;
enough. We need to take time to&#13;
listen to ourselves and one&#13;
another. Without this step, real&#13;
integration of our sexuality won't&#13;
be complete.&#13;
For more information and&#13;
discussion attend the Human&#13;
Sexuality, discussion/presentation&#13;
in Molinaro Hall, Room 111, on&#13;
Monday, November 26 from 10&#13;
AM to 12 Noon, or on Thursday,&#13;
November 29. from 12 Noon to 2&#13;
PM, in the same location.&#13;
PEPSI&#13;
Racine&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Ranger Wednesday . NQYS#er, 21« }979 7&#13;
classifieds&#13;
Lost on Monday, November&#13;
12, pair of ladies brown leather&#13;
gloves. Call 694-6814. Reward.&#13;
Recreational Counselor&#13;
wanted to work in a residential&#13;
setting. Must be eligible for&#13;
work Study. Apply at Financial&#13;
Aids Office.&#13;
Needed-Part-time help. Mon.&#13;
thru Fri. 7 a.m. to 12 p.m.&#13;
mornings. Apply North Shore&#13;
Vault - 4009 57th St. Kenosha.&#13;
Typing- done in my home.&#13;
Term papers, reports, and&#13;
others. Reasonable rates&#13;
Phone 658-4523 (anytime) ask&#13;
for Sherry.&#13;
Will do student typing - IBM&#13;
equipment. Phone 554-8667.&#13;
Entertainment, Prizes,&#13;
Clowns, SANTA!! Dec. 8&#13;
morning. Join the Fun. Phone&#13;
553-2227. -&#13;
Breakfast with Santa! Fun for&#13;
kids, families, friends! Phone&#13;
553-2227.&#13;
personals&#13;
John, Thanks again for the&#13;
flowers. You're a sweetheart.&#13;
Animals, Do you think you can&#13;
handle a half barrel?&#13;
Animals score only in tiddlywinks&#13;
and hopscotch, I&#13;
PHELTA THI.&#13;
MUGWUMP: True friendship&#13;
endures as honesty&#13;
transcends one's self!&#13;
Always! JLR.&#13;
Insane irate Iranians take the&#13;
dante special down, deep&#13;
down!&#13;
Stevie Krat, ask Cupid for&#13;
instructions on T.T.T. cpt.&#13;
To Mr. Kinky Werble I: from&#13;
Onchkena Monchkona's.&#13;
Guess who!&#13;
Dennis M., afraid to spend&#13;
another night in jail.&#13;
Amy, meet many guys lately?&#13;
Who's next? Andy.&#13;
Pat (Cub), when can we wake&#13;
you up again. Pampers&#13;
Woody.&#13;
Barb, one more time? Chuck.&#13;
Johnny J., talk about kink,&#13;
how about booster cables?&#13;
Chuck.&#13;
Eric JM Fords BA! Buy a&#13;
Dodge for speed. Dodge&#13;
Racing Team.&#13;
Moldy- Nice try but its due in&#13;
April. Goldy.&#13;
stud, you&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Ronny, put that Revel model&#13;
on the shelf. ANIMALS.&#13;
Dennis M., why won't you&#13;
welder let you go?&#13;
I phelta Thi is a minor league&#13;
organization. The Animals.&#13;
Dolphinettes - May someone&#13;
fill your blowhole with trust.&#13;
Dennis M., are you afraid of&#13;
foul pucks? GO BLACKHAWKS!!&#13;
&#13;
Riddle: Who is gruesome and&#13;
wears stapled-together bed&#13;
sheets?&#13;
Jazz: If you're a&#13;
didn't prove it&#13;
Nature Girl.&#13;
Magenta- Your fund has&#13;
reached 53c. The Horror&#13;
Gang.&#13;
Check V-ala, You were good, if&#13;
you know what I mean.&#13;
Please donate to the Russian&#13;
Rendezvous Fund. See Riff&#13;
Raff.&#13;
World, backwards things&#13;
writing of habit terrible this&#13;
have I but me excuse to have&#13;
You'll.&#13;
Dolphin Sisters: I have a dog&#13;
smarter than any dolphin. J.&#13;
Cousteau. &lt;&#13;
Magenta; why do people call&#13;
you Beth? Riff and Frank.&#13;
Botting; be grateful you're not&#13;
whipped-by The BEST.&#13;
Dennis M., Saturday afternoon&#13;
matinees are safe entertainment;&#13;
You chicken!&#13;
Mondo; Self-seclusion and&#13;
paranoia are no fun! Party Up!&#13;
Baz, beg the cribbage queen,&#13;
you might get her nobs.&#13;
'67 Chevelie SS396 rules, ban&#13;
all foreign cars.&#13;
Doctor D. Our cars are better,&#13;
THEY WORK!&#13;
Ron H., Our cars don't need&#13;
fire extinguishers.&#13;
Radar: Back of the tent at&#13;
7:00. Hawkeye.&#13;
Greg D. (Mr. Hyde), When&#13;
does Jekyll return. DazedConfused.&#13;
&#13;
Candle Wick, return my&#13;
leather schott, or pay the&#13;
consequences.&#13;
Jo, let the vegetables COME&#13;
later, you should COME now.&#13;
Oleo.&#13;
P.H.D., I'll poke holes in&#13;
them. Red Cross or Bust!"&#13;
Armenian, Wop, and Greek,&#13;
what's the matter with Krauts.&#13;
Help Wanted:&#13;
Two positions open with Central Baptist Family Services located&#13;
at 3412 Washington Road, Kenosha (in the area of the Brookside&#13;
Nursing Home).&#13;
First Position: Live-in couple or individual. Offering room and&#13;
board in exchange for presence in group home after 10:00 P.M.,&#13;
five nights a week. Must be at least 18 years old.&#13;
Second Position: Live-in relief couple or individual. Would act&#13;
as a Relief Parent in group foster home every Monday and&#13;
Tuesday evening, one weekend a month, and one weekend day a&#13;
month. Offering room and board, plus $30.00 a day when acting&#13;
as Relief Parent. Must be at least 21 years old.&#13;
If interested, please call 652-4825.&#13;
Hey Ryan! How can you mend&#13;
a broken heart, anyway?&#13;
Rush- getting high stunts your&#13;
growth. Everywhere! Broken&#13;
Breadstick.&#13;
The Cretaceous was not the&#13;
end, we're still around&#13;
Bronto.&#13;
In Dolphins we trust. The&#13;
CABBIES.&#13;
Moldy- Meet me at the same&#13;
place, signed Gaylord Gay.&#13;
Andy, Your body has nothing&#13;
to write home about. Amy.&#13;
The Ayatollah sucks oil pipes.&#13;
Let him eat his oil.&#13;
Khomeini-pump the oil up&#13;
yours. The U.S.A.&#13;
B.H.-Thanks for the greatest&#13;
10 months! Love, M.Y.&#13;
The Animals aren't Animals&#13;
unless they can slam a&#13;
RONDO! The Rondo Kid.&#13;
Yarnes, You're just a sweet&#13;
transvestite.&#13;
We like your socks, Dondo.&#13;
The Rondo Kid and his pal&#13;
Joey.&#13;
R.R. next time the tissue goes&#13;
in your chest. Magenta.&#13;
Hey Rick - Rumor has it that&#13;
you have a devilish bod!&#13;
Abstract I: The woods was&#13;
fun! Signed, Abstract II.&#13;
Dave S. It's been a long&#13;
time!!! A friend of "ME."&#13;
Animal Lover: Raincheck available.&#13;
Check my locker. J.&#13;
O'C.&#13;
Pat W. What's the matter,&#13;
can't you stand on a chair and&#13;
drop your pants at the same&#13;
time? The girls behind you.&#13;
Gary, Maybe, someday? The&#13;
listener.&#13;
Ron- Remember, 5, with 16&#13;
gets you 20.&#13;
KING ARTHUR- This rebuttal&#13;
is directed to you because of&#13;
the sneaky, underhanded,&#13;
falsified, and vermin ad you&#13;
and some of the knights&#13;
entered in this column. I hope&#13;
Dorothy takes you down to the&#13;
lake and wants to bust open&#13;
YOUR C-section. May the&#13;
great Strohshaus fire-brew&#13;
your tree roses and put the&#13;
residue into your Ford's gas&#13;
tank. THE NOT-SOFORGIVING&#13;
KNIGHT MOLDY.&#13;
Rick H. A great bod and a race&#13;
car, who could ask for more&#13;
TJ.&#13;
for sale&#13;
Wood clarinet - asking&#13;
$175-cal I 857-7784.&#13;
Car: '73 Chevy 3A ton, new&#13;
tires and snows, 68,000 miles,&#13;
very clean, $1,800. 1615&#13;
Cleveland Avenue - 632-7858.&#13;
WANTED-.&#13;
TUTORS in chemistry, labor&#13;
relations, life science, mathematics,&#13;
and Spanish&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
Flexible&#13;
• QUALIFICATIONS:&#13;
Recommendation of major&#13;
professor&#13;
GPA in major: 3.0 or above&#13;
Overall GPA: 2.5&#13;
SEE:&#13;
Carol J. Cashen, Director&#13;
Educational Program Support&#13;
WLLC D197&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
deadline: every thursday at 10 am&#13;
STUDENT-STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE&#13;
Any registered U.W.P. student or student organization is qualified to insert a classified line ad&#13;
in the Ranger at no cost if under or equilavent to 10 words.&#13;
1. AIJ paid classifieds must be initialed by a staff member.&#13;
2. All classifieds must include social security number and signature of advertiser.&#13;
3. Limit three free classifieds per person.&#13;
name,&#13;
ss no.. RANGER&#13;
WLLCDI39 &#13;
8 Wednesday November 21, 1979 Ranger&#13;
Ranger&#13;
basketball&#13;
gearing up&#13;
Area basketball fans will get&#13;
their first look at the 1979-80&#13;
UW-Parkside Rangers when the&#13;
squad plays an intra-squad game&#13;
at 8:30 p.m. Saturday (Nov. 24) at&#13;
the UW-P Physical Education&#13;
Building.&#13;
The game will follow a 7 p.m.&#13;
contest between former college&#13;
stars now working in business and&#13;
industry in Kenosha and Racine&#13;
counties.&#13;
Admission for both games is $2&#13;
per adult, $1 for students with I.D. .&#13;
cards. There is no admission&#13;
charge for children 12 and under.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens' 11th&#13;
Parkside squad has been working&#13;
out since Oct. 15 and is ready for&#13;
some game action, according to&#13;
the veteran coach.&#13;
"I'm looking forward to seeing&#13;
all our players in action,"&#13;
Stephens said. "Since four of them&#13;
won't be eligible until the Ranger&#13;
Classic, we'll have a chance to use&#13;
them now and see how our lineup&#13;
could look after the early season&#13;
games."&#13;
Six lettermen return for Parkside,&#13;
headed by 6-8 senior&#13;
All-American Lonnie Lewis, a&#13;
forward from Chicago (Simeon)&#13;
who led the Rangers in scoring&#13;
(13.3) and rebounding (10.9) last&#13;
season. Also back for Parkside-are&#13;
6-5 junior forward Reggie Anderson&#13;
of Chicago (Gage Park), 7-0 .&#13;
senior center Lester Thompson of&#13;
Rockford, 111. (Auburn), 6-2 junior&#13;
guard Walter Greene of Chicago&#13;
(Crane Tech), 6-8 sophomore&#13;
center Kent Schneider of Mason&#13;
City, 111., and 5-11 soph guard&#13;
Dave McLeish of Stoughton, Wis.&#13;
Seeing action for the first time&#13;
as Rangers will be ten newcomers&#13;
to Stephens' 16-man team. They&#13;
include four transfers, 5-10 guard&#13;
Howard Avery of Portland, Ore.,&#13;
6-7 forward Arthur Bright of&#13;
Chicago (Parker), 6-7 forward&#13;
Ronnie Giles of Chicago (King)&#13;
and 6-4 sophomore forward Kevin&#13;
Wiksten of Chicago (Morgan&#13;
Park). All will gain eligibility with&#13;
the Dec. 28-29 Ranger Classic.&#13;
Also on the team this year are&#13;
two seniors, 6-0 guard James&#13;
Fleming of Chicago (University)&#13;
and 6-2 guard Ernest Williams of&#13;
Chicago (Crane Tech/.&#13;
Others new to the squad are 6-3&#13;
freshmen swing man Don Blythe&#13;
of Evanston, 111., 6-8 freshman&#13;
forward Curtis Green of Chicago&#13;
(Englewood), 6-0 frosh guard Tom&#13;
Trotter of Chicago (Gage Park)&#13;
and 6-3 freshman guard Sylvester&#13;
Williams of Chicago (DeSales).&#13;
All will see heavy action in the&#13;
intra-squad game as Stephens and&#13;
assistant Rudy Collum search for&#13;
the combination that clicks... and&#13;
prepare for the season opener a&#13;
week later (Dec. 1) at Oregon&#13;
State.&#13;
The first game will feature&#13;
former college players now&#13;
working in the area in a "Kenosha&#13;
vs Racine" game.&#13;
Playing for the Kenosha team —&#13;
to be coached by former Tremper&#13;
coach Joe Britelli — will be former&#13;
Parkside players Joe Foots, Marvin&#13;
Chones, Malcolm Mahone, Rade&#13;
Dimitrijevic and Roscoe Chambers.&#13;
Others on the squad will&#13;
include Chip Claussen (Luther&#13;
College), Jack Lutz (Carthage), Ed&#13;
Nowell (UW-Whitewater), Cerci&#13;
Mahone (South Dakota State),&#13;
Tom Heller (Carthage), and&#13;
Kenosha Chamber of Commerce&#13;
director Roger Caron.&#13;
NAIA Na tionals&#13;
Top Ranger runner, 115th&#13;
by Walt Remondlni&#13;
This past Saturday saw the&#13;
culmination of a years' work for&#13;
the 1979 Ranger cross country&#13;
team as thirty three teams from all&#13;
over the country joined.host school&#13;
Parkside in the NAIA National&#13;
Meet here on our course.&#13;
Sam Monto.va of Adams State crosses&#13;
tinish line first.&#13;
Photo by B.Passmo&#13;
In the end, one team, Adams&#13;
State College of Alamosa, Colorado&#13;
emerged head and shoulders&#13;
above the rest. Placing four&#13;
runners in the top twenty five,&#13;
Adams State cruised to &lt;the&#13;
championship finishing with a&#13;
total of 63 points; that easily&#13;
outdistanced runner-up UWLaCrosse&#13;
who finished with 123&#13;
points.&#13;
Sam Montoya, a freshman, was&#13;
the individual champion. Running&#13;
for Adams State, he finished in the&#13;
time of 24:53. Although forty two&#13;
seconds slower than the course&#13;
record, his time was good enough&#13;
to easily top second place finisher&#13;
Gordon Sanders of Hillsdale&#13;
(Mich.) College who finished&#13;
25:08. Adams State also had the&#13;
eighth and tenth place finishers in&#13;
their impressive victory.&#13;
Besides LaCrosse, the only other&#13;
state college to finish enough&#13;
runners for a team scoi;e was&#13;
UW-Eau Claire which finished&#13;
13th with 399 points.&#13;
As far as Parkside was&#13;
concerned it was not a particularly&#13;
eventful day. Only three Ranger&#13;
runners finished led by Senior Bill&#13;
Werve who finished 115th in a&#13;
time of 26:53. The other finishers&#13;
for the Ranger team were&#13;
Sophomore Dave Mueller who&#13;
placed 213th, and Freshman Rick&#13;
Sowlles, in 230th.&#13;
Coach Lueian Rosa was hoping&#13;
for some better times out of his&#13;
runners. With the loss of top&#13;
runner Bill Werve through&#13;
graduation much of the fate of&#13;
next years squad will depend upon&#13;
the improvement of his current&#13;
runners and the strength of next&#13;
years' new comers, he said.&#13;
SOME OF THE SMARTEST&#13;
YOUNG EXECUTIVES&#13;
DON'T WORK FOR BUSINESS.&#13;
In the Navy, a twenty-two-year-old ensign can run a division&#13;
of thirty men. By the time he makes lieutenantage&#13;
24 or 25 - he can have more managerial experience&#13;
than most civilians do at thirty.&#13;
Ask your recruiter about Navy officer programs, or&#13;
send your resume to:&#13;
Navy Recruiting District Milwaukee&#13;
611 North Broadway&#13;
Milwaukee, Wl 53202 (414) 271-6559&#13;
NAVY OFFICER. IT'S NOT JUST A JOB, IT'S AN ADVENTURE.&#13;
Mini&#13;
vacation?&#13;
Weekends&#13;
were made&#13;
forMicheloh&#13;
By AN HEUSER-BUSCH. INC. • ST. lOUlS • SINCE 1896&#13;
Distributed by E.F. MADRIGRAN0&#13;
1831 -55th St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wise. 658-3553&#13;
Michelob&#13;
NOW AVAILABLE "ON TAP" AT UNION SQUARE </text>
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              <text>The Ranger, Volume 8, issue 12, November 21, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text>1979-11-21</text>
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              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>English</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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      <name>anthropology club</name>
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      <name>women's studies</name>
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