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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 8, issue 16</text>
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            <text>Hale elected 'Veep'</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>W University of Wisconsin - Porkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Thursday, January 17, 1980&#13;
Vol. 8 No. 16&#13;
P^GAjhonging&#13;
Hale elected 'Veep'&#13;
by Sue Stevens&#13;
nn December 18, 1979 Dave&#13;
1 was sworn in as the new&#13;
^.pre Jlsident of the Parkside&#13;
Ident Government Association&#13;
lib the Senate looked on. Hale&#13;
Succeeds Mary Arnold who&#13;
Signed fro m her post to attend&#13;
3 in Montana. Arnold was&#13;
Jected to the position in April of&#13;
jtfQ&#13;
Tim Zimmer, President of&#13;
pSG.A., appointed Hale to the&#13;
Veep position, "because he has&#13;
experience with student government&#13;
and knows what problems&#13;
are and how to correct&#13;
them."&#13;
ITiis is Hale's second year of&#13;
involvement with P.S.G.A. He is a&#13;
senior majoring in Business&#13;
Management and Labor&#13;
Economics. He was also the&#13;
president an d founding member&#13;
ii th e Accounting Club here on&#13;
campus.&#13;
When asked what major&#13;
changes, if any, he would try to&#13;
initiate, Hale responded,&#13;
"Generally we're trying to&#13;
s t i m u l a t e i n t e r g r o u p&#13;
cohesiveness. I'd also like to build&#13;
iipcontinuity in the Senate so that&#13;
M don' t h ave to start over year&#13;
| after yea r."&#13;
I Hale believes that Parkside is a&#13;
good school with a reputable&#13;
faculty and staff. "I've seen the&#13;
university change during the&#13;
years I've been here. The business&#13;
department has turned around.&#13;
It's now a very viable,* well&#13;
received organization throughout&#13;
the community," he stated.&#13;
The climate at Parkside has&#13;
changed also according to Hale.&#13;
"Students have become more&#13;
aware of activities and are more&#13;
concerned with academic standing.&#13;
The university is no longer&#13;
just an extension of high school."&#13;
The Vice-president isn't the only&#13;
new thing around the P.S.G.A.&#13;
"We've been revising the constitution&#13;
for over a year," stated&#13;
President Zimmer.&#13;
The main changes in the&#13;
document will go up for a&#13;
referendum vote this spring.&#13;
Two major revisions were&#13;
made. The first is in the make-up&#13;
of the Senate itself. Presently,&#13;
there are 24 senatorial seats — 12&#13;
divisional and 12 at-large. Nine of&#13;
the 24 are now filled. The revision&#13;
would call for a cut in the total&#13;
number of S enate seats to 18 and&#13;
make all positions at-large.&#13;
"In the past, there has been too&#13;
much confusion at • the voting&#13;
booths when divisional senators&#13;
were being elected," Zimmer&#13;
said. "Students didn't know who&#13;
voted for who and why they&#13;
couldn't vote when no one was&#13;
running for their divisions."&#13;
The second major change will&#13;
be made in the Segregated&#13;
University Fees Allocations&#13;
Committee (SUFAC). This&#13;
committtee is now elected by the&#13;
student body separate from the&#13;
Senate to allocate money to&#13;
Parkside student groups&#13;
Histroically, there've been many&#13;
problems with this process.&#13;
"This year went pretty weil with&#13;
SUFAC," Zimmer stated, "but it&#13;
could easily go back to the way it&#13;
was (arguing, stacking the&#13;
committee, etc.)."&#13;
The revision would list the&#13;
SUFAC as a committee of eight&#13;
members instead of the 13 now&#13;
stated. Six of these members&#13;
would be senators. The remaining&#13;
two positions would be at-large.&#13;
"State law says that we're (the&#13;
student government) responsible&#13;
to allocate the segregated fees&#13;
money," Zimmer added. "We're&#13;
just trying to make sure that we&#13;
fulfill that responsibility."&#13;
Other than these changes,&#13;
P.S.G.A. doesn't expect to make&#13;
any major turn-arounds. When&#13;
asked to comment on new trends&#13;
in student government, both Hale&#13;
and Zimmer replied that they&#13;
don't think this campus would&#13;
want the Pail and Shovel here.&#13;
"People who are involved know&#13;
the importance of working&#13;
together," Zimmer stated.&#13;
Hale and Zimmer believe they&#13;
can work together. As President&#13;
Zimmer concluded, "We're a good&#13;
team to finish out the end of our&#13;
term." DAVE HALE, new student government veep.&#13;
photo by Sue Stevens&#13;
What is life? A carnival, of course!&#13;
by Sue Stevens&#13;
What is life? Parkside students&#13;
wye been asking this question&#13;
™ find an answer as the 1980&#13;
student O rganizations Council&#13;
Water Carnival begins on&#13;
anuary 28th, running through&#13;
February 2nd.&#13;
Life is a Carnival," the theme&#13;
s year, will seem more than&#13;
appropriate to students participating&#13;
in this year's week of&#13;
winter activity and excietment.&#13;
According to Mary Braun,&#13;
President of S.O.C., "This is the&#13;
first year that we've had the&#13;
money and interest to have a fullfledged&#13;
Winter Carnival at&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
As many students may&#13;
Schedule of Events&#13;
w painting&#13;
PRE-CARNIVAL, Jan. 23-28&#13;
|y Monday, Jan. 28th&#13;
J - L OO pm Indoor Parade&#13;
- 3 :00 pm Union Square rally&#13;
Tuesday, Jan 29&#13;
Hitting) "Snowthing" snow sculpture contest (weather perJp®',1&#13;
-&#13;
00 Pm Tug-of-War Contest Part 1 in Union Square sponsored&#13;
3 on &lt; 1 ience Club&#13;
"*:00 pm Uncle Vinty Mini-Concert sponsored by PAB&#13;
12 (v, Wednesday, Jan. 30&#13;
," ii&#13;
00 pm Cream Pie Eating Contest in Union Cafeteria sponTjty&#13;
RANGER&#13;
^sored b* p^C^^house featuring Bill Hinkley &amp; Judy Larson,&#13;
'&#13;
1&#13;
:&#13;
00 Pm Pabst night featuring Woodsong in Union Square&#13;
' ,red by the Union&#13;
'1:00-o.aa Thursday, Jan. 31 ~ A,&#13;
Poods P&#13;
m Indoor Picnic in Union Cafeteria sponsored by SAGA&#13;
C^ss-country 'ski relay race sponsored by the Parksdie&#13;
7.Q0 q ^&#13;
:0&#13;
° Pm Winter Carnival Variety Show in Union Square&#13;
H:Oo o ^ Friday, February 1 .&#13;
•'oods pm Indoor Picnic in Union Cafeteria sponsored by SAGA&#13;
remember, plans for past winter&#13;
carnivals here have not&#13;
materialized. This year seems&#13;
different. With help from the&#13;
Student Life Office and the Union,&#13;
S.O.C. is looking forward to an&#13;
exciting week of color, competition,&#13;
and fun.&#13;
Parkside students can look for a&#13;
range of indoor activities from&#13;
dances, to a parade, to pie eating.&#13;
For those more anxious to take&#13;
part in outdoor fun, there'll be&#13;
snow sculpting and cross-country&#13;
skiing (with Mother Nature's&#13;
consent) as well as Tug-of-War&#13;
contests.&#13;
For members of Parkside&#13;
student organizations, the incentive&#13;
is even greater as groups&#13;
compete for a grand prize to be&#13;
announced at the Parkside vs.&#13;
Milton College basketball game on&#13;
Saturday, February 2nd. This&#13;
prize, a party in the Union Rec&#13;
Center, will go to the group accumulating&#13;
the most points during&#13;
the week's competitions.&#13;
The groups will be kept busy&#13;
preparing for an indoor parade on&#13;
Monday, designing floats as well&#13;
as snow sculptures to be created&#13;
on Tuesday. Their strength as a&#13;
group will be put to the test in the&#13;
Tug-of-War Contest on Tuesday&#13;
afternoon. Group personalities&#13;
will show through during Thursday&#13;
night's Variety Show.&#13;
Finally, their creativity will once&#13;
again be tried as they compete in&#13;
the "Most Original Cheer Contest"&#13;
on Friday afternoon. (The&#13;
winning cheer will be heard at the&#13;
basketball game Saturday night.)&#13;
Groups interested in competing&#13;
in carnival activities should signup&#13;
in the Student Life Office&#13;
(Union 209) before January 21st,&#13;
or contact Mary Braun in the&#13;
S.O.C. office (next door to the&#13;
RANGER office).&#13;
Individual students will also get&#13;
into the act as the infectious&#13;
opening parade passes through&#13;
the main concourse, leading all&#13;
students to the Union Square on&#13;
Monday afternoon to enjoy music&#13;
and get into the mood for a&#13;
"crazy" week.&#13;
Throughout the week, students&#13;
may enjoy beer (a quart at a time&#13;
for 751 when you buy a special&#13;
Winter Carnival mug for $1.50 a t&#13;
the beginning of the week) and&#13;
entertainment. Included on the&#13;
list of bands and entertainment&#13;
are Uncle Vinty, Woodsong,&#13;
Arroyo, and Bill Hinkley &amp; Judy&#13;
Larson.&#13;
Students may also participate in&#13;
the "Snowthing" sculpting contest&#13;
along with other activities such as&#13;
cream-pie eating, dancing, crosscountry&#13;
relay races, the variety&#13;
show, and beer tasting. Students&#13;
wielding cameras may register to&#13;
compete in a photo contest&#13;
sponsored by, yours truly, the&#13;
RANGER. (For information on&#13;
sign-ups, rules, and categories,&#13;
watch these pages.)&#13;
To top off the week, the&#13;
Parkside Rangers will take over&#13;
on the court, looking for a victory&#13;
over Milton College on Saturday&#13;
night at 7:30 p.m. Students&#13;
wishing to attend the game as&#13;
"Masked Ranger Rooters" can&#13;
pick up a Mardi Gras mask at the&#13;
Student Life Office before 4:30&#13;
p.m. on Friday by showing their&#13;
basketball tickets.&#13;
After the game is over, all will&#13;
be celebrating Parkside's victory&#13;
(right?) as the Mardi Gras theme&#13;
is carried over into a Masked Ball&#13;
in the Union Dining Room. The&#13;
dance will feature the Charlie Aul&#13;
Band along with plenty of refreshments.&#13;
(Those not wearing a&#13;
carnival button will pay $3 to enter&#13;
this one.)&#13;
In order to get even more into&#13;
the mood for the carnival,&#13;
students will be able to check out&#13;
tempera paints and brushes from&#13;
the Art Club next week to paint an&#13;
assigned area of windows.&#13;
Painting will begin Wednesday,&#13;
January 23rd and end at the&#13;
beginning of the carnival.&#13;
With all the events in mind.&#13;
S.O.C. is optimistic that this&#13;
year's carnival will be a success.&#13;
As Mary Braun stated. "If it goes&#13;
over well, it may be an annual&#13;
event. We've done out work. Now&#13;
it's up to the students."&#13;
r INSIDE...&#13;
• 'Kramer vs Kramer' review&#13;
• Rangers claim classic&#13;
• Ranger changing &#13;
2 Thursday, January 17, 1980 Ranger&#13;
Ranger changing&#13;
by Mira Lochanski&#13;
Welcome back UW-P students,&#13;
faculty, staff, and other oncampus&#13;
personnel. The start of&#13;
the New Year means out with the&#13;
old and in with the new. That&#13;
means changes and the newest&#13;
change for our RANGER student&#13;
newspaper is a change of printers&#13;
due to previous problems with our&#13;
old printer, the Zion Publishing&#13;
Co. This change was deemed&#13;
necessary in order to eliminate&#13;
further problems from occurring&#13;
remarked Sue Stevens, editor of&#13;
the RANGER.&#13;
Sue also commented that this&#13;
change will help to improve news&#13;
coverage in the RANGER since&#13;
the new publisher, Union&#13;
Cooperative Publishing Co. in&#13;
Kenosha, who also prints the&#13;
Kenosha Labor and various other&#13;
publications will also take on the&#13;
responsibility of d oing the pasteups&#13;
for our student newspaper.&#13;
This will give more time for our&#13;
staff members to improve the&#13;
news section by having a&#13;
publisher closer to our campus as&#13;
well as economizing on gas&#13;
remarked Sue.&#13;
The second change for RANGER&#13;
is the change in deadline dates for&#13;
ads, events, and all week's copy.&#13;
RANGER has changed the&#13;
deadline date from Thursday&#13;
10:00 am. to Monday 9:00 am. Sue&#13;
mentioned that this change will&#13;
allow RANGER staffers to effectively&#13;
and efficiently meet&#13;
deadlines dates will more ease,&#13;
especially for those student staff&#13;
members with heavy schedules.&#13;
A t hird change for RANGER is&#13;
the availability of receiving course&#13;
credit in becoming a RANGER&#13;
photographer and reporter. "To&#13;
find out more information about&#13;
this new course credit, stop by the&#13;
RANGER Office and either talk to&#13;
myself or one of our staff members&#13;
to let you in on all the&#13;
details," said Sue.&#13;
RANGER looks forward to the&#13;
new changes that have recently&#13;
occurred and hopes that these&#13;
changes will improve the quality&#13;
and readership of our school newspaper.&#13;
RANGER also encourages&#13;
to hear your viewpoint on the&#13;
recent changes that have been&#13;
made and any comments and/or&#13;
criticisms can be directed to Sue&#13;
Stevens, editor of the RANGER.&#13;
J y&#13;
V&#13;
f.&#13;
" is BUT LITTLE new y£:ar joke*, why BOES NO iAuo^ ?*&#13;
f&#13;
t&#13;
M&#13;
Letters to the Editor •&#13;
Cambodian article&#13;
found appalling&#13;
Dear Ranger Editor,&#13;
I was utterly appalled when I&#13;
read your article Cambodians For&#13;
Sale. I cannot understand how&#13;
anyone in their right mind could&#13;
allow such sick, sadistiacal (sic)&#13;
inhumane writing to appear in the&#13;
newspaper.&#13;
This article had absolutely&#13;
nothing constructive to offer. If&#13;
this article was supposed to say&#13;
anything, I completely fail to see&#13;
the point. I was told that this was a&#13;
satirical attempt speaking out&#13;
against the plight the Cambodians&#13;
are in. However, one would think&#13;
that a college student working on&#13;
a newspaper would have enough&#13;
command of the English language&#13;
to address this situation in a&#13;
mature enough manner.&#13;
The Cambodians have already&#13;
been striped (sic) of a lmost all of&#13;
their human dignity. Comments&#13;
such as, "... it's house-trained"&#13;
and "rice is so much cheaper than&#13;
Alpo" are one hundred percent&#13;
SICK!!! I was more than angry&#13;
and frustrated when I read them, I&#13;
was also greived (sic).&#13;
I cannot understand how this&#13;
article was allowed in the paper. I&#13;
would think that the paper would&#13;
have a better screening policy. To&#13;
allow something like this to be&#13;
printed does not only reflect the&#13;
author's sick debased mind, but&#13;
could also marr (sic) the entire&#13;
Ranger staff. I was extremely&#13;
(sic) pleased with the positive&#13;
program you ran for the Cambodians,&#13;
and therefore simply&#13;
don't understand this article&#13;
appearing in your paper. I am also&#13;
fully aware of freedom of the&#13;
press; but, like any gift, freedom&#13;
too can be misused. I have faith&#13;
that you'll be more sensitive to&#13;
reader's opinions in the future.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Carolyn Bresciano&#13;
Spirits crushed&#13;
by article&#13;
Dear Editor of the Ranger,&#13;
My spirits were crushed when I&#13;
read your article, Cambodians&#13;
For Sale, by G. Helgeson. Based&#13;
on the integrity of the Ranger&#13;
Staff, and present performance, I&#13;
was devastated. I find it hard to&#13;
believe that the article would have&#13;
been printed if it were screened by&#13;
several Ranger staff members.&#13;
I can't believe you would intensionaly&#13;
(sic) compromise to an&#13;
article which strips a people of&#13;
human dignity. The Cambodians&#13;
have already slipped far from&#13;
human dignity, and continue to die&#13;
by the thousands in a rapidly&#13;
increasing poverty.&#13;
We fail to realize that this type&#13;
of thought is only one step away&#13;
from the thinking that brought the&#13;
demented mind of Adolf H itler to&#13;
committ such atrocities. It seems&#13;
very ironic that the Ranger staff&#13;
just ran a drive to send aid to&#13;
these suffering people. Think&#13;
about it! The idea of selling&#13;
Cambodians for Christmas&#13;
presents is sick, below any level of&#13;
human dignity. The comments&#13;
like, "rice is so much cheaper&#13;
than Alpo," and "registered by&#13;
the Human Breeders&#13;
Association," are sick, sick,&#13;
sick!!!&#13;
Come on, we as the people of the&#13;
United States need now to&#13;
preserve human dignity more&#13;
than ever, expecially with people&#13;
like Ayatollah Khomeni (sic)&#13;
running around. If this article had&#13;
a purpose or was trying to make a&#13;
constructive point, it failed to&#13;
come through.&#13;
Joel Gummeson&#13;
I.V.C.F. President&#13;
Blatant racial&#13;
commentary&#13;
Dear Ms. Stevens:&#13;
Enclosed is a copy of a n article&#13;
by Ginger Helgeson that appeared&#13;
in the last issue of the Ranger&#13;
which you either overlooked,&#13;
lacked the brain matter to perceive&#13;
as offensive, or are in&#13;
agreement with the author's&#13;
sentiment.&#13;
Initially I tried to find some&#13;
evidence of satirical reason for&#13;
the article or a message to indicate&#13;
that it was not meant to say&#13;
exactly what is written. Needless&#13;
to say, I could find none. I feel&#13;
obligated to disassociate myself&#13;
with any inference that as a&#13;
reader I found humor in such&#13;
blatant racial commentary. I feel&#13;
the article smacks of the most&#13;
heinous of racial degradation&#13;
imaginable that has been heaped&#13;
upon an unfortunate group of&#13;
people who have neither asked for&#13;
nor deserve the situation they are&#13;
in.&#13;
I trust that this article is not&#13;
reflective of the intellectual level&#13;
or the capacity of human understanding&#13;
of the Ranger staff;&#13;
and more important, of the&#13;
student body of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. I hope that&#13;
your office is flooded with&#13;
correspondence denouncing this&#13;
type of "journalistic trash." I am&#13;
aware of the disclaimer written on&#13;
the inside of your paper which&#13;
states:&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by&#13;
students of U W-Parkside and they&#13;
are solely responsible for its&#13;
editorial policy and content.&#13;
I hope you will not remove your&#13;
personal name from the top of this&#13;
letter and will indicate your&#13;
willingness to accept some&#13;
responsibility for allowing the&#13;
article to be printed.&#13;
I am also aware of the&#13;
statement that indicates that the&#13;
Ranger reserves all editorial&#13;
privileges in refusing to print&#13;
letters which contain false or&#13;
defamatory content, and I would&#13;
think this policy would apply to&#13;
your own articles.&#13;
I believe that the Ranger should&#13;
offer a public apology to the&#13;
Cambodian people who have&#13;
suffered enough without the ridicule&#13;
thatyour newspaper has found&#13;
appropriate during this holiday&#13;
Parkside in this sport,&#13;
deserved notice just as much&#13;
the ones that were mentioned,&#13;
I think it is time that both!.&#13;
Ranger and Parkside realize ho&#13;
important swimming is to th&#13;
campus and the surrounding citii&#13;
of Kenosha and Racine.&#13;
Let's get with i&#13;
A Swimming Ft&#13;
Article insensitiv&lt;&#13;
and insulting&#13;
season.&#13;
ganger&#13;
Editor Sue Stevens&#13;
Business Manager '.Brian Fellarid&#13;
Feature Editor. Ken Meyer&#13;
Sports Editor .Jeff Stevens&#13;
Ad Manager. Dan Galbraith&#13;
Ad Representative. Linda Andersen&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Mark Anderson, Charles Clifton, Dave Cramer, Pete Cramer, Steve Dankert, Phillip&#13;
DeLuisa, Ginger Helgeson, Renee Jones, Mira Lochanski, Paul Lukawski, Reed McMillan,&#13;
Curt Moldenauer, Kevin Padula, Brian Passino, Walt Remondini, Don Scherrer,&#13;
Denise Sobieski, Bill Stougaard, Michael Williams&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of UW-Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
Published every Thursday during the academic year except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
RANGER is printed byJtje Union Cooperative Publishing Co., Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
• Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER.&#13;
"5" All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, WLLC D139, UWParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wl 53141.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, doublespaced on standard size&#13;
paper with one-inch margins. All letters must be signed and a telephone number included&#13;
for verification.&#13;
I Names will be withheld for valid reasons. Maximum length accepted Is 500 words.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Monday at 12 noon for publication on Thursday. The RANGER&#13;
1 reserves all editorial privileges in refusing to print letters which contain false or&#13;
defamatory content.&#13;
Editor's Note: Yes, Mr.&#13;
Villarreal, I am willing to accept&#13;
some responsibility for allowing&#13;
this article to be printed.&#13;
However, my only apology is&#13;
extended to those who misinterpreted&#13;
this column which&#13;
appeared in the December 12th&#13;
issue of the Ranger. The Ranger&#13;
realizes that the plight of the&#13;
Cambodians is very real and ugly.&#13;
I only hope that the article affected&#13;
most of our readers the way&#13;
it has those who responded. After&#13;
the meager response to our&#13;
Cambodian fund campaign during&#13;
Thanksgiving, Ms. Helgeson&#13;
chose to stir the emotions of our&#13;
readers through ridiculing the&#13;
way many Americans reduce the&#13;
Cambodians to something less&#13;
than human beings. I believe she&#13;
succeeded.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Guadalupe G. Villarreal&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As Editor of the Ranger r&#13;
have many privileges. You als&#13;
however, bear certain resf&#13;
sibilities.&#13;
I read your paper regute&#13;
finding it a source of informatio&#13;
entertainment, insight, con&#13;
munity spirit, and stimulation,&#13;
am distressed and dismayei&#13;
however, that you chose to incluc&#13;
in your holiday issue the article t&#13;
G. Helgeson, "Cambodians f&lt;&#13;
sale." I find Helgeson's attempt;&#13;
"humor" both insensitive ar&#13;
insulting to Cambodians, |&#13;
refugees throughout history, to a&#13;
who have suffered, to all who hav&#13;
sought to find means to minimis&#13;
suffering, and to all for whom th&#13;
holiday season symbolizes lovi&#13;
joy, and regeneration.&#13;
Helgeson obviously has a knac&#13;
with words. I look forward 1&#13;
reading other articles by him/hf&#13;
that are entertaining and creativ&#13;
rather than down - grading an&#13;
destructive. J&#13;
Barbara Mari!&#13;
Music Facult y&#13;
Swimmers left out&#13;
Dear Editorial Dept.,&#13;
I am writing in reply to the&#13;
article on Athletics - Ten Years of&#13;
Tradition that appeared in the&#13;
November'28 issue of t he Ranger.&#13;
Mr. Edenhauser wrote a good&#13;
article on the material he had. But&#13;
there is one major flaw. That was&#13;
the absence of the sport of&#13;
swimming the article. No matter,&#13;
how small the sport may be in the&#13;
eyes of some people, swimming is&#13;
a very important and rewarding&#13;
sport to the past and present&#13;
swimmers of Parkside. All -&#13;
Americans come from swimming,&#13;
too. And Parkside's only All -&#13;
American is still here from this&#13;
sport. His name is Jim Ferraro.&#13;
He has brought much attention to&#13;
Give&#13;
till it&#13;
helps&#13;
•¥&#13;
Red Cross&#13;
is counting&#13;
on you. &#13;
Ranger Thursday, January 1 7, 1 9 80&#13;
Itudents go into&#13;
ending business&#13;
Students at the State U. of New&#13;
ork at Stony Brook own and&#13;
-grate most of the vending and&#13;
;nball machines in campus&#13;
mitories. While some are the&#13;
perty of dorm governing&#13;
ies, most belong to individual&#13;
lents, according to an ad-&#13;
....istra'tor&#13;
The pr actice developed several&#13;
ears ago when dorm legislatures&#13;
eeded money, says Emile&#13;
dams, assistant vice president&#13;
jr student affairs. The legislators&#13;
)Und that operating pinball&#13;
aehines was a good way of&#13;
jsing needed funds. Over the&#13;
ars, many of the machines were&#13;
quired by individual students,&#13;
says.&#13;
This year, for the first time,&#13;
snding machine operators were&#13;
&gt;quired to license their machines&#13;
ith the Student Business&#13;
operative (SCOOP), a non-&#13;
•ofit organization founded by the&#13;
udent government. Some&#13;
lachine owners objected to the&#13;
igulation, w hich required them&#13;
i pay a $25 fee and to report their&#13;
•ofits to SCOOP. But Adams says&#13;
censing was necessary for&#13;
veral reasons.&#13;
'Technically, you can't use&#13;
te property to make a profit,"&#13;
xplains. "Whatwe're trying to&#13;
now is establish some stans.&#13;
For one thing, the students&#13;
own the machines don't have&#13;
ly insu rance, and if a student&#13;
ire to be injured, the institution&#13;
)uld be in a difficult position in&#13;
;rms of li ability."&#13;
The fee will cover insurance, as&#13;
311 as the cost of licensing and&#13;
intaining revenue records,&#13;
ose who didn't license their&#13;
chines f aced impoundment of&#13;
(equipment and a $50 fine.&#13;
irth shoes gone&#13;
What e ver happened to Earth&#13;
oes, those backward-slanted&#13;
oes so popular with young&#13;
ople a few years ago? The&#13;
mpany went out of b usiness, not&#13;
om lack of the shoe's&#13;
Hilarity, but from financial&#13;
smanagement, says Richard&#13;
mey, a Milwaukee&#13;
sinessman who has acquired&#13;
(rights to Earth Shoes and&#13;
&gt;es to revive their popularity.&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Fear counseling&#13;
to be offered&#13;
Do you want help in trying to&#13;
lose weight? to overcome public&#13;
speaking anxiety? to overcome&#13;
fear of heights, snakes, getting in&#13;
the water to learn to swim, or&#13;
some other specific nonsocial&#13;
fear? Special group counseling&#13;
programs are being offered this&#13;
semester (Spring 1980) to&#13;
Parkside students concerned with&#13;
any of these problems.&#13;
The programs are sponsored by&#13;
professor of psychology William&#13;
Morrow and students in his class&#13;
in Behavioral Counseling; the&#13;
weight control program is cosponsored&#13;
by the Student Health&#13;
Service. Professor Morrow's&#13;
students will conduct the counseling&#13;
under his supervision as&#13;
part of the course requirements.&#13;
In the weight control groups,&#13;
campus nurse Edith Isenburg will&#13;
team up with those students as a&#13;
co-counselor.&#13;
Each program will employ&#13;
semi-structured counseling&#13;
procedures which have been found&#13;
in controlled outcome studies to be&#13;
relatively effective for the particular&#13;
problem. Each program&#13;
will involve six to eight scheduled&#13;
counseling sessions, plus&#13;
homework activities.&#13;
Parkside students who wish to&#13;
participate are expected to meet&#13;
the following criteria, depending&#13;
on the program: (l) Weight&#13;
control: overweight at least 20&#13;
pounds. (2) Public speaking&#13;
anxiety: currently enrolled in a&#13;
course, or in a job or volunteer&#13;
activity, which requires repeated&#13;
public speaking, and anxiety&#13;
seriously interferes with effectiveness&#13;
in giving speeches&#13;
even when well-prepared. (3)&#13;
Specific nonsocial fear:&#13;
exaggerated fear of a specific&#13;
type of n on-interpersonal stimulus&#13;
or situation such as (nonpoisonous)&#13;
snakes, heights, being&#13;
in the water for swimming or&#13;
other water sports, or etc. The&#13;
fear goes beyond realistic fear of&#13;
objective danger, and leads to&#13;
avoidance of situations or activities&#13;
the individual would&#13;
otherwise enter into. For this third&#13;
program, the individual also&#13;
needs to involve a friend or&#13;
relative who is unafraid in those&#13;
situations and is willing to help.&#13;
Sign-up cards to register for any&#13;
sd's Roller Rink&#13;
7220 67th Street n r /&#13;
'&#13;
M ^&#13;
ULTSONIY&#13;
iting session&#13;
DAY EVENINGS&#13;
30-10:30 PM&#13;
Admission $2.00&#13;
Skate Rental .75&#13;
Must be 18 or older&#13;
of th ese programs are available at&#13;
the following locations:&#13;
Behavioral Science Division&#13;
Office, Moln-275; Student Health&#13;
Service, WLLC-D198; Main Place&#13;
Information Kiosk; Union Information&#13;
desk (D-l level). Those&#13;
interested are asked to sign up by&#13;
not later than Friday, January 25.&#13;
Building replica&#13;
A replica of the Chappaquiddick&#13;
bridge may appear on the ice of&#13;
Lake Mendota in front of the U. of&#13;
Wisconsin - Madison Union this&#13;
winter. The Wisconsin Student&#13;
Association, best known for&#13;
building a paper mache replica of&#13;
the Statue of Liberty on the ice&#13;
last year, voted to build a model of&#13;
the bridge, complete with an&#13;
upside down automobile sticking&#13;
up from beneath the ice.&#13;
Rumor spreads&#13;
The Jeanne Dixon rumor has&#13;
surfaced this year at the U. of&#13;
Wisconsin - Eau Claire. The&#13;
rumor, which is just that, involves&#13;
a prediction supposedly made by&#13;
the psychic Jeanne Dixon that a&#13;
mass murder is going to occur in a&#13;
campus building with certain&#13;
features. It's been making the&#13;
rounds of the nation's campuses in&#13;
one form or another for over six&#13;
years.&#13;
Course offered&#13;
Gustav Mahler is immensely&#13;
popular with orchestral performers&#13;
and conductors, but&#13;
audience reaction to the long,&#13;
complex and. often confusing&#13;
works by the 19th century&#13;
Bohemian composer is frequently&#13;
considerably less enthusiastic.&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
music professor Frank&#13;
Mueller, a specialist in 19th&#13;
century music, thinks audience&#13;
apathy is caused by unfamiliarity&#13;
and will offer a course, "Music of&#13;
Mahler," next semester to foster&#13;
appreciation of his work through&#13;
listening and discussion. The class&#13;
will meet from 5 to 6:50 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesdays.&#13;
Modern audiences are not alone&#13;
in being baffled by Mahler's&#13;
work; his contemporaries reacted&#13;
the same way. But Mahler,&#13;
himself, predicted "My time will&#13;
come." It has, says Mueller.&#13;
Famous director&#13;
here In s pring&#13;
Stage and television director&#13;
Robert H. Livingston will be&#13;
visiting artist-in-residence in&#13;
dramatic arts at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside, where he&#13;
will direct the spring mainstage&#13;
production, during the second&#13;
semester.&#13;
Livingston, whose directing&#13;
credits include Broadway and offBroadway&#13;
productions as well as&#13;
network TV series shows, will be&#13;
on campus today and tomorrow,&#13;
Jan. 17 and 18, to conduct&#13;
auditions. He then will return to&#13;
New York to honor theater&#13;
commitments there and will open&#13;
rehersals at UW-Parkside in midMarch&#13;
for performances April 24&#13;
through 27 of a new play-withmusic,&#13;
Jeffrey Kindley's "St.&#13;
Hugo of Central Park," recently&#13;
produced in London by BBC.&#13;
The show has a cast of about 15;&#13;
about half the roles are male and&#13;
half female.&#13;
(Simultaneous auditions will be&#13;
held for the spring studio&#13;
production of Moliere's "A Doctor&#13;
in Spite of Himself" under the&#13;
direction of Prof. Rhoda-Gale&#13;
Pollack, which will be staged Feb.&#13;
Livingston won the 1970 offBroadway&#13;
Obie Award for "The&#13;
Me Nobody Knows," for which he&#13;
wrote the book and directed, and,&#13;
after the show's move to&#13;
Broadway, he was nominated for&#13;
the 1970 A ntoinette Perry (Tony)&#13;
award in the best director of a&#13;
musical and best musical book.&#13;
He has directed numerous offBroadway,&#13;
summer stock and&#13;
touring productions including&#13;
"The Solid Gold Cadillac" and "A&#13;
Girl Could Get Lucky" with&#13;
Imogene Coca, "The Miracle&#13;
Worker" and "The Private Ear&#13;
and the Public Eye" with Dick&#13;
Shawn, "Two for the Seesaw"&#13;
with Shelly Winters and "Anniversary&#13;
Waltz" with Lloyd&#13;
Bridges. He also has worked with&#13;
Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and&#13;
Richard Kiley.&#13;
For television, Livingston has&#13;
directed episodes of "All in the&#13;
Family" and "Maude" and the&#13;
award-winning NET special "It's&#13;
A Nice Place to Visit." He has&#13;
served as producer-director of&#13;
news and special events for NBC,&#13;
ABC and CBS.&#13;
Students will study abroad&#13;
Living and traveling abroad will&#13;
be the topic of a new anthropology&#13;
course being offered second&#13;
semester at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. The course is&#13;
designed for persons planning on&#13;
living in or traveling in other&#13;
countries including businessmen&#13;
and their families, students interested&#13;
in foreign exchange&#13;
programs, teachers of foreign&#13;
exchange students and persons&#13;
traveling for pleasure.&#13;
The course will be offered&#13;
Thursday evenings beginning&#13;
tonight from 6:30 to 9:10 p.m. and&#13;
can be taken for three undergraduate&#13;
credits or on a noncredit,&#13;
audit basis.&#13;
The instructor will be Prof.&#13;
Lillian Trager, who has traveled&#13;
extensively in Europe, West&#13;
Africa, Southeast Asia and&#13;
Australia and has lived and done&#13;
research in Nigeria and the&#13;
Phillipines.&#13;
Brochures containing additional&#13;
course and registration material&#13;
are available at the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha Libraries, Kenosha&#13;
Museum and at UW-Parkside.&#13;
MODELS WANTED&#13;
Any faculty or students&#13;
interested in being a&#13;
model for the MSU&#13;
Fashion Show, sign up at&#13;
the MSU desk in t he&#13;
Student Organization ' \&#13;
Group Office, located in&#13;
WLLC, D Level, near the&#13;
Coffee Shoppe.&#13;
A graduate of Carnegie Institute&#13;
of Technology where he received&#13;
the BFA degree, Livingston&#13;
currently is working on another&#13;
musical, which he views as a&#13;
sequel to "The Me Nobody&#13;
Knows."&#13;
Vet re-elected&#13;
Kenneth L. (Red) Oberbruner,&#13;
coordinator of veterans' services&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside, was re - elected to the&#13;
board of the National Association&#13;
of Veterans' Program Administrators&#13;
at the group's annual&#13;
national meeting.&#13;
Oberbruner also was awarded a&#13;
plaque for "faithful and dedicated&#13;
service to veterans' programs and&#13;
to NAVPA as a distinguished&#13;
member of its Board of Directors".&#13;
&#13;
Oberbruner joined the UWParkside&#13;
staff in 1970 and has&#13;
directed its veterans' programs&#13;
since. He is a member of the&#13;
Community Student Services staff&#13;
and also is UW-P's baseball&#13;
coach.&#13;
Live-ins grow&#13;
Living together before&#13;
marriage "will be almost&#13;
universal in another generation,"&#13;
says Pennsylvania State U.&#13;
sociologist Dr. Graham Spanier.&#13;
He terms "phenomenal" the increase&#13;
— 19% in a recent one-year&#13;
period — i n cohabitation.&#13;
Students studied&#13;
Students watch television less&#13;
than one hour daily, on the&#13;
average, reports a survey done for&#13;
CASS Student Advertising, a&#13;
company selling college&#13;
newspaper advertising to national&#13;
firms. Eights of ten students,&#13;
however, read their college paper&#13;
regularly. The survey of the&#13;
college market found that 95% of&#13;
students own or have access to a&#13;
refrigerator and 70% own a&#13;
stereo.&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selection&#13;
PARKSIDE U NION&#13;
10:00 a.m. -4:00 p.m.&#13;
BUTTERSCOT CH DISCS&#13;
STARLIG HT MINTS&#13;
ROOT B EER BARRE LS&#13;
CINNAMON DISCS&#13;
COF FEE CANDY&#13;
SOUR BALLS&#13;
JEL LY BEANS&#13;
CANDY CORN&#13;
GUM DRO PS&#13;
SALT ED CASHEWS&#13;
SPANISH PEAN UTS&#13;
NATURAL PIST ACHIOS&#13;
CHOC. COVER ED PEANUTS&#13;
MAL TED MILK BALLS&#13;
CHOCOLATE ST ARS&#13;
CHOC. COVE RED RAISINS&#13;
CHOC PEA NUT C LUSTERS&#13;
ASSORTE D TOFFEE&#13;
BRIDGE MIX&#13;
W 1 M (typ «&gt; CANDIES&#13;
SPEA RMIN T LEAVES&#13;
ORAN GE SLICES&#13;
NATURE NUT MIX&#13;
BLANCHE D PEANUTS&#13;
R E D PISTACHIOS&#13;
PEP PER MIN T KISSES&#13;
TOOTS IE POP S&#13;
COCONUT TOASTIES&#13;
VANILLA CARAMELS&#13;
BUT TER RUM DISCS&#13;
COUGH D ROP S&#13;
SUGAR F R EE GUM&#13;
BREATH M INTS&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
of the fr'.cnth&#13;
Butterscotch&#13;
Discs&#13;
Reg. 65c 1/2 lb.&#13;
THRU FEB. ONLY45c &#13;
Thursday, January 17, 198 0 Ranger&#13;
1941' not bomb&#13;
just dud&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Of the dozen movies being&#13;
released this Christmas rush,&#13;
"1941" has the distinction of being&#13;
labeled the biggest bomb of t hem&#13;
all - not only in moneymaking&#13;
figures but also in content.&#13;
houses and ferris wheels. All the&#13;
crashes and explosions get boring&#13;
by the end of the first reel.&#13;
The main reason for this is&#13;
because everybody is looking at&#13;
the film's $40 million dollar budget&#13;
(including promotion). True, it is&#13;
very much a waste of money, but&#13;
forgetting about the money and&#13;
concentrating on the film, labeling&#13;
it a "bomb" is too extreme. A&#13;
"dud" is more like it.&#13;
The film's "What if ... ?"&#13;
premise deals withe a Japanese&#13;
invasion of the California coast six&#13;
days after Pearl Harbor because&#13;
mostpeoplethought California was&#13;
the next Japanese target.&#13;
The cast keeps the film from&#13;
going under. Not the big names in&#13;
the cast but the unknown actors:&#13;
Bobby DiCicco as a jitterbug&#13;
dancer who is after the same girl&#13;
as a horny soldier; Treat Williams&#13;
as the horny soldier; Wendie Jo&#13;
Sperber as an even hornier female&#13;
after the soldier; and Eddie&#13;
Deezen as a ventriloquist civilian&#13;
acting as lookout atop a ferris&#13;
wheel. These four young actors&#13;
give the film as much as they can,&#13;
but no matter how excepional they&#13;
are the props overshadow them.&#13;
The creative genius behind the&#13;
film, Steven Spielberg, is the one&#13;
who brought us "Jaws" and&#13;
"Close Encounters of the Third&#13;
Kind." After these two monstrous&#13;
hits, Spielberg could do anything&#13;
he wanted. He chose to do a&#13;
comedy and "1941" is it. The ad&#13;
labels it a comedy spectacular,&#13;
which it definitely is.&#13;
The rest of the cast is adequate.&#13;
John Belushi is uneven as Wild&#13;
Bill Kelso, a very crazy soldier;&#13;
he alters between hilarious and&#13;
tedious. Dan Aykroyd does his&#13;
usual "Saturday Night Live"&#13;
schtick.&#13;
The main reason the film is&#13;
unsuccessful if because the&#13;
spectacular gets in the way of th e&#13;
comedy. The entire film is slapstick,&#13;
which can be hilarious. It is&#13;
very funny when the cast is given&#13;
the chance to perform, but many&#13;
times the gigantic props take&#13;
The special effects dealing with&#13;
the big props are very well done,&#13;
but no matter how well they're&#13;
done, there is too much reliance&#13;
on the slapstick of the big&#13;
inanimate objects and the&#13;
characters get lost. The miniature&#13;
sets used in the "air raid" are&#13;
among the best ever used. A job&#13;
well done, but done too much.&#13;
he cast should perform&#13;
an the tanks, airplanes,&#13;
"1941" has to make $100 million&#13;
to recoup the studios' investment,&#13;
but that seems to be a surmountable&#13;
figure. People just&#13;
have to pay attention to the film's&#13;
few good points instead of the&#13;
film's price tag. "1941" is, overall,&#13;
only mediocre — not a bomb.&#13;
'jf*University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
IYT0NA BEACH&#13;
SPRING BREAK&#13;
'80&#13;
MARCH&#13;
7-16&#13;
OM&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• GREYHOUNDTYPE BUS&#13;
• 7 NIGHTS LODGINGOCEANSIDE HOTEL&#13;
• OPTIONAL POPULAR SIDETRIPS&#13;
R APPLICATION AND FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION, ROOM 209* 553-2200&#13;
V&#13;
JUK&#13;
DIVORCED PARENTS Dustin Hoffman and Meryl Streep confront each other over custody of&#13;
their young son in the movie "Kramer vs. Kramer' .&#13;
'Kramer' examines divorce&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
"Kramer vs Kramer" is a&#13;
bright, incisive examination of the&#13;
end of relationships and the&#13;
beginning of new ones when a&#13;
divorce occurs between the&#13;
parents of a young child.&#13;
The movie avoids most of the&#13;
triteness of the end of relationships&#13;
usually presented in movies.&#13;
There is no clear cut "bad guy" in&#13;
the divorce. The marriage just&#13;
ends because of both partners.&#13;
Every aspect of the film is&#13;
flawless. Dustin Hoffman turns in&#13;
a superb performance that will&#13;
definitely get him a Best Actor&#13;
nomination and most likely cop&#13;
him an Oscar. Hoffman does a&#13;
magnificient job throughout the&#13;
film's 105 minutes.&#13;
Hoffman portrays Ted Kramer,&#13;
an up-and-coming ad executive&#13;
who brags to his boss that he&#13;
never lets his home life enter the&#13;
office with him. The problem is&#13;
that the opposite isn't true — his&#13;
home life consists of one thing, his&#13;
work. He's so wrapped up in his&#13;
work that he doesn't see his&#13;
marriage crumbling until it's too&#13;
late.&#13;
His wife leaves him, but she&#13;
doesn't take Billy, their five year&#13;
old son with her. Hoffman is&#13;
forced to raise the son he doesn't&#13;
know because of his overinvolvement&#13;
in his work. The film&#13;
centers on the touching and&#13;
realistic growing relationship&#13;
between father and son.&#13;
After 18 months the errant wife&#13;
returns after "learning about&#13;
herself" and figures that she is&#13;
capable of raising her little boy,&#13;
although she thought she was no&#13;
good for the child when she left.&#13;
The title of the film refers to the&#13;
court case that ensues over the&#13;
custody of the Kramer child.&#13;
Meryl Streep excels in the&#13;
supporting role of Joanna&#13;
Kramer. She is only on screen at&#13;
the film's immediate beginning&#13;
and the final half hour. The rest of&#13;
the film deals with Hoffman and&#13;
his son, played by Justin Henry.&#13;
The young actor does a very&#13;
professional job and doesn't resort&#13;
to the usual embarrassing sentimentality&#13;
of most child actors.&#13;
Hoffman's&#13;
fathering a&#13;
marvelous&#13;
humorous&#13;
moments.&#13;
"Kramer&#13;
new experience of&#13;
son. The script is&#13;
with both theand&#13;
the touching:&#13;
Director-screenwriter Robert&#13;
Benton's warm and passionate&#13;
script takes a refreshing look at&#13;
vs Kramer" doesn't&#13;
have a million and one crashe&#13;
and explosions like "1941." And it&#13;
doesn't have unoriginal, althoujj&#13;
sporadically funny, humor like&#13;
"The Jerk." What it does have, is&#13;
a superb story, talent and class. It&#13;
is one of the most beautiful ex-j&#13;
periences of the year's films.&#13;
Single study surprising&#13;
Single people are neither as&#13;
unhappy nor as sexually oriented&#13;
as recent polls have indicated,&#13;
according to a study by an&#13;
associate sociology professor at&#13;
Wright State U.&#13;
I&#13;
Leonard Cargan, who criticizes&#13;
the Kinsey and Hite reports for&#13;
choosing to narrow a sample, said&#13;
only one of his sample groups —&#13;
divorced persons who haven't&#13;
remarried — came close to the&#13;
popular stereotype of the swinging&#13;
single.&#13;
Cargan says the survey shows&#13;
the so-called sexual revolution&#13;
consists mainly of more open&#13;
discussions of sex and more&#13;
tolerance of pornography, not&#13;
increased sexual activity.&#13;
Twenty-five percent of the nevermarried&#13;
singles in the survey&#13;
reported no sexual experien&#13;
while most singles said they have&#13;
had fewer than four sex partners&#13;
Only among the divorced does the&#13;
pattern of high sexual activi&#13;
emerge.&#13;
The trend toward delaying&#13;
marriage and an increasing&#13;
divorce rate have created a much'&#13;
larger population of single adults&#13;
now numbering 53 million, Cargan&#13;
says. As a result, singlehood is no&#13;
longer viewed as "abnormal" and&#13;
more studies of sing le lifestyle are;&#13;
being conducted.&#13;
The Cargan study used 400&#13;
randomly selected subjects from&#13;
southwestern Ohio and is based on&#13;
face-to-face interviews.&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
9&#13;
pve&#13;
s SECOND CITY&#13;
IMPROVISATIONAL COMEDY&#13;
WED., JAN. 23 8:00 p. m&#13;
COMMUNICATIONS ARTS THEATER&#13;
Adm.&#13;
$3.50 UW-P Stu's.-&#13;
S5.00 General&#13;
TICKETS AT UNION INFO CENTER&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. at 62nd St.&#13;
Established in 1930&#13;
The fastest - growing Premium Beer&#13;
in America.&#13;
On Tap&#13;
at&#13;
Union&#13;
Square&#13;
G. HEILEM AN B RE W I N G CO., INC. LA CROSSE, WISCONSIN &#13;
Ranger Thursday, January 17, 1980&#13;
frmjhe Parking Lot&#13;
"Adult" games&#13;
entice all ages&#13;
Healthy semester planned&#13;
hv RHUK TrA»k .&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
«riran consumers are&#13;
A fascinated to let loose of&#13;
S inflationary dollars to&#13;
Jhase toys advertised as&#13;
PS games."Proof .of this is the&#13;
dpvitv and profitability of&#13;
Ster (kids can get in on this&#13;
2 once they untangle their older&#13;
hi'ines and parents' dinner&#13;
51&#13;
iits) Risk (conglomerates&#13;
Ce de-merged over Irkutsk),&#13;
vahtzee (marriages have been&#13;
Inciled when spouses realize&#13;
St no other man/woman on&#13;
earth will play past 2 a.m.) and&#13;
Z bookshelf games (which&#13;
romise and grant temporary&#13;
riches and power to players that&#13;
Ire sure that, if given the chance,&#13;
5,ev could make the game's&#13;
profits more permanent).&#13;
The most fascinating adult&#13;
^me (so far) is last Christmas'&#13;
electronic cr aze. Though a long&#13;
way from a pack of cards, a game&#13;
board, a cup o f dice, and a score&#13;
pad, eletronic toys are taking over&#13;
the adult ga me market. The ads&#13;
for these assertive calculators,&#13;
which take the form of any&#13;
number of adult recreations as&#13;
performed by kids, are usually&#13;
aimed at kids. But only to protect&#13;
their parent s' egos.&#13;
After all, what 45-year-old&#13;
breadwinner i s going to admit to&#13;
the guys a t the office (or plant)&#13;
that he got what he wanted for&#13;
Christmas — an Electronic&#13;
Frisbee Game? But he can tell his&#13;
buddies about th e neat toy he got&#13;
for his son. He doesn't need to&#13;
mention that he himself, wore out&#13;
the first set of batteries in seven&#13;
hours of continuous Christmas&#13;
Day play. He needn't mention that&#13;
his son, who he commanded to be&#13;
his opponent, pleaded with him for&#13;
six and then some hours to be&#13;
allowed to quit and take out the&#13;
garbage.&#13;
Once adults get over the initial&#13;
embarrassment of playing with&#13;
toys, and learn to switch the&#13;
games to "auto" to avoid&#13;
oarent-child conflicts, it is easy&#13;
or them to become obsessed with&#13;
electronic ga mes.&#13;
The games are, in fact, a nearoerfect&#13;
pa stime. They are more&#13;
iun than b ridge and easier than&#13;
-hess. When set at "auto," no&#13;
ather huma n being can beat you&#13;
and gloat, and if by some chance&#13;
you do occasionally win, you've&#13;
proven the innate superiority of&#13;
the human mind over the&#13;
mechanical brain. It is impossible&#13;
to cheat, since the game keeps&#13;
score. With a flick of the thumb&#13;
you can erase an unflattering&#13;
score and your electonic opponent&#13;
will have no memory of&#13;
your embarrassing weaknesses&#13;
the next time you play. No&#13;
analytical thought is necessary,&#13;
since pushing the correct button at&#13;
the correct time is all that is&#13;
demanded of you. And, when the&#13;
batteries start to run down,&#13;
there's a bonus — the game goes&#13;
wild, complete with mechanical&#13;
"blips" and "bloops" and a light&#13;
show of red flashes. During these&#13;
episodes, human scores tend to go&#13;
up, too.&#13;
The only failing of the electronic&#13;
game is its ability to addict the&#13;
human player. Once you start&#13;
playing — and scoring maddeningly&#13;
lower with each consecutive&#13;
game — you begin to feel&#13;
the gambling creed take hold of&#13;
you. Your heart pounds harder&#13;
with each "blip" and flashing red,&#13;
you face flishes, your hands and&#13;
feet get icy, and your eyes glow.&#13;
You repeat to yourself: "Next&#13;
time I'll win big." And you play,&#13;
and you play, and you play, and&#13;
you play ....&#13;
And one day you find yourself&#13;
playing in the shower, or during&#13;
an x-rated movie, or at your greataunt&#13;
Beverly's funeral.&#13;
r UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
Spring Break&#13;
DAYTONA&#13;
BEACH&#13;
MARCH 7-16&#13;
RESERVATIONS BEING&#13;
ACCEPTED NOW...&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
RM. 209 Coll: 553-2200&#13;
MOO*********"''&#13;
1&#13;
•'&#13;
JUNIORS AND SENIORS:&#13;
Looking for a part-time job with&#13;
good income, flexible hours&#13;
and real experience in the&#13;
business world?&#13;
Donald J. Brink CLU&#13;
Northwestern Mutual - Racine 632-2731&#13;
Eugene F. Soens CLU&#13;
Northwestern Mutual - Kenosha 654-5316&#13;
by Edith Isenberg&#13;
Welcome back to Parkside and&#13;
the Spring Semester. I'm glad to&#13;
be writing this column again and&#13;
look forward to sharing with you&#13;
interesting and informative health&#13;
information.&#13;
There are many programs&#13;
planned for this semester and I&#13;
would like to describe them for&#13;
you in this week's article. The first&#13;
program is a three hour Red Cross&#13;
CPR course to be held on January&#13;
29 and 30. Then on February 5 and&#13;
12, an eight hour Red Cross Multimedia&#13;
First Aid Course will be&#13;
offered. February 13 is the day for&#13;
our annual Valentine's Day Blood&#13;
Drive held in cooperation with the&#13;
Milwaukee Blood Center. The&#13;
third annual "Well Day", 1980,&#13;
will be held on March 26, and in&#13;
April, a Handicapped Awareness&#13;
Day is being planned. At the end of&#13;
January, we will be offering a&#13;
weight reduction program in&#13;
conjunction with Doctor William&#13;
Morrow and students in his class&#13;
in Behavioral Counseling. Check&#13;
bulletin boards for further information&#13;
on programs coming up&#13;
this semester.&#13;
Individuals interested in helping&#13;
the Health Office staff with these&#13;
programs are invited to stop at&#13;
WLLC D 198, or call Extension&#13;
2366. E ven a few hours of your&#13;
time will be appreciated.&#13;
Student health insurance is now&#13;
available. The deadline for&#13;
enrollment is February 14, 1980.&#13;
Information and application&#13;
blanks are available at the Personnel&#13;
Office in Tallent Hall, both&#13;
Information Desks, and at the&#13;
Campus Health Office.&#13;
Best wishes for the second&#13;
semester.&#13;
PCP gains campus popularity&#13;
WW&#13;
kiln — .... * hile the "mystery drug" PCP&#13;
appears to be growing in campus&#13;
popularity, officials in some areas&#13;
are warning that LSD, a popular&#13;
drug in the 60's, is now making a&#13;
comeback.&#13;
Use of PCP is a growing&#13;
problem for college officials, not&#13;
only because statistics show its&#13;
use is rising but also because it is&#13;
potentially lethal and difficult to&#13;
trace, according to the College&#13;
Press Service. It is often mixed&#13;
with other drugs, like LSD,&#13;
cocaine and marijuana, say&#13;
narcotics officials, although spot&#13;
shortages of these drugs have&#13;
caused an increase in usage of&#13;
straight PCP. The drug is also&#13;
popular because laws regulating&#13;
its uses are vague and because it&#13;
is easy to manufacture, says the&#13;
Drug Enforcement Agency.&#13;
In at least two areas, however,&#13;
officials report heavier usage of&#13;
LSD, a drug thought to have died&#13;
in popularity after the 60's. In San&#13;
Francisco and the U. of Michigan,&#13;
narcotics officers have seen a&#13;
heavy increase in LSD cases.&#13;
Northern California law enforcement&#13;
officials say LSD use&#13;
there is up 1400% since 1977.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
FOOD SERVICE&#13;
Invites You To&#13;
&amp;eCQ4M&#13;
Cji^ted £twde*it&#13;
Your campus food servic ould like to welcome you wrtl&#13;
BuV $1.50 worth of food at participating locations and gel. ig it&#13;
1&#13;
food purchases of $1.25 or more. Stop by soon to get mc aeta&#13;
VALID NOW THRU JAN. 31, 1980&#13;
11—: rvininn Rnnm &amp; WLL Coffee Shoppe&#13;
J &#13;
CONTACT&#13;
P.S.G.A. makes resolution&#13;
by Tim Zimmer&#13;
Welcome to the 1980's at&#13;
Parkside! The beginning of each&#13;
new year finds many people&#13;
making their annual New Year's&#13;
resolutions. P.S.G.A. also made a&#13;
resolution for 1980. We realize that&#13;
the number one complaint about&#13;
our organization is that no one&#13;
knows who we are or what we do.&#13;
Our resolution is to try and change&#13;
that.&#13;
P.S.G.A. is a service&#13;
organization for the students of&#13;
Parkside. We are here to help you&#13;
with your problems. Our problem&#13;
is that we don't know what your&#13;
problems are. We need your input.&#13;
If you have a complaint or&#13;
suggestion that you feel will help&#13;
Parkside, contact us. There are&#13;
three ways in which you can&#13;
contact us. First, you can stop in&#13;
our office next to the Coffee&#13;
Shoppe. Second, you can give us a&#13;
call at 553-2244. Third, you can&#13;
leave a note in one of our&#13;
suggestion boxes. The boxes are&#13;
located on the main concourse in&#13;
Main Place and in Molinaro Hall.&#13;
If your name and number are on&#13;
the note, we will get back to you.&#13;
The P.S.G.A. Senate is&#13;
currently working with&#13;
S.U. F.A. C. (Se gre gat ed&#13;
University Fees Allocations&#13;
Committee) to prepare the&#13;
segregated fees budget for the&#13;
1980-81 school year. Segregated&#13;
university fees are a portion of&#13;
your tuition which is used to fund a&#13;
number of things, such as student&#13;
organizations, the Union,&#13;
athletics, housing and health. As&#13;
was reported in the last issue of&#13;
the RANGER, if the current&#13;
budget goes through, tuition will&#13;
go up by about $23 next year. We&#13;
would like to know what you think&#13;
of this increase.&#13;
Next week, we will explain&#13;
segregated fees in more detail and&#13;
show you just where the money&#13;
goes to. Until then, have fun!&#13;
ACU-I R EGIONAL GAMES IOIIRNAMENT&#13;
QUALIFYING WEEK OF JANUARY 21&#13;
IN REC CENTER&#13;
BOWLING: To select a 5 member men's team &amp; a 5 member&#13;
women's team.&#13;
BILLIARDS: Toselect 1 man and 1 woman 8-ball player. .&#13;
FOOSBALL: To select a doubles foosball team. Event is open to&#13;
men and women.&#13;
WINNERS ADVANCE&#13;
TO REGIONAL TOURNEY I N&#13;
LA CROSSE, WISCONSIN FEBRUARY 16-18&#13;
ONLY FULL TIME STUDENTS ELIGIBLE TO COAAPETE&#13;
TO SIGN UPOR FOR MORE INFORMATION&#13;
CONTACTMIKE MENZHUBER INTHE RECCENTER&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Friday, Jan 18&#13;
SEMINAR at 12 noon in Union 106. Atty. S. Michael Wilk will talk on "Law and the&#13;
Health-related Professional." The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
BASKETBALL Women's basketball team hosts a tournament vs. Ripon, Madison&#13;
and Chicago State at 5 and 7 pm. The game is free and open to the public.&#13;
MOVIE "Oh, God" will be shown at 8 pm. in the Union Cinema Theatre. Admission&#13;
at the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
DANCE/CONCERT at 9 pm in Union Square featuring "Headstone". Admission at&#13;
the door is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $2.00 for a guest. Sponsored by PAb&#13;
Saturday,Jan.19&#13;
SWIM MEET at 1:30 pm with Carroll College, Loras and 111. InsUtute of&#13;
Technology. The event is free and open to the public.&#13;
BASKETBALL vs. UW-Green Bay at 7:30 pm in the gym. Tickets are available at&#13;
the Union Information Center and will be available at the door. Advance tickets&#13;
are $1.00 for Parkside students and $1.50 for others.&#13;
DANCE/CONCERT at 9:15 pm in Union Square featuring Dixieland music. Admission&#13;
is free with your basketball ticket or $2.00. Sponsored by Student Life.&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 20&#13;
MOVIE "Oh God" will be repeated at 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23&#13;
BASKETBALL vs. St. Norbert's College at 7:30 pm. Tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center.&#13;
COMEDY "Second City" at 8 pm in the Communication Arts Theatre. Tickets are&#13;
available at the Union Information Center. Admission is $3.00 for Parkside&#13;
students and $5.00 for others. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
DANCE at 9:15 pm in Union Square with Jazz music. Admission is free with your&#13;
basketball ticket or $2.00. Sponsored by Student Life.&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 24&#13;
WORKSHOP at 7 pm in T181. "Starting Your Own Small Business" is the title.&#13;
Please call ext. 2312 for more details. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Most&#13;
Complete Record Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
• Rock •Jazz • Pop&#13;
• Folk • Classical&#13;
LOWEST PRICES ALWAYS&#13;
The Place to buy records&#13;
JOIN&#13;
THE&#13;
RANGER!&#13;
(Get A Credit)&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
NEW DEADLINE;&#13;
Friday, 10:30 am!&#13;
STUDENT/STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE&#13;
Any registered UW-P student or student organization is qualified&#13;
to insert a classified line ad in the Ranger at no cost if under or&#13;
equivalent to 10 words. (Phone numbers equal 1 word )&#13;
CLASSIFICATION&#13;
SS N O.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
WLLC D139&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
policy&#13;
1. All classifieds must be initialed by a&#13;
staff member.&#13;
2. All classifieds must include social&#13;
security number and advertiser's&#13;
signature.&#13;
3. Limit 3 free classifieds per person.&#13;
personals&#13;
Pat B., is it true Librarians do it&#13;
on D-2?&#13;
DOWN WITH Parkside Security . .&#13;
. U.L. RULES . . . R.B.&#13;
Bounce . . . Bounce . . . was an&#13;
understatement . . . WOW!! . . .&#13;
U.L.&#13;
Attn. Parkside Security: you'd&#13;
like that wouldn't you?? U.L.&#13;
Even the Ranger knows . . . OAW .&#13;
. .U.L.&#13;
I like the nice fellas in Parkside&#13;
Security . . . Flower Lover&#13;
Spiney, Germ, Bean, etc.: The&#13;
First P'shaw at the decode. Incredoman&#13;
&#13;
King Arthur - Sir Cancelot says,&#13;
"Vacuum cleaner trucks are&#13;
really wound up!!"&#13;
Well KAM, here we go again!&#13;
Let's make it great. Okay? Good!&#13;
LLA&#13;
You know what, Cisseroozle,&#13;
Mommy is home. Ain't that nice!&#13;
It sure enough is! We love ya'&#13;
Mor!!&#13;
Cream pies are part of life. Enter&#13;
Ranger's pie eating contest during&#13;
Winter Carnival '80!! For more&#13;
information come to the Ranger&#13;
office, WLLC D139, next to the&#13;
Coffee Shoppe.&#13;
Attention Photographers!! Get&#13;
your cameras ready to enter&#13;
Ranger's photo contest during&#13;
Winter Carnival '80. For more&#13;
information come down to the&#13;
Ranger office, WLLC D139.&#13;
Attention - Residents of Greenfield,&#13;
Franklin, Oak Creek, Hales&#13;
Corners of Northern RaCI&#13;
"&#13;
County; student residing in ;&#13;
vicinity of Southridge Shopp'hy&#13;
Center is looking for riders&#13;
second semester Monday' &gt; Wednesdays and Fridays. Pho&#13;
1-327-0353 eves. Ask for Walt. &#13;
Rangers claim classic&#13;
Ranger Thursday, January 17, 1980&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
*he people who claim that the&#13;
D n&lt;ferClassicneeds better talent&#13;
j keener competition can go&#13;
an&#13;
f„h a bus. With the Rangers&#13;
fostog Carthage. River Falls,&#13;
S UW-LaCrosse, Ranger fans&#13;
Aren't expecting any trouble ^Turing their third consecutive&#13;
C The&#13;
Ppre&#13;
1^&#13;
nary games pitted&#13;
„ Aha ge against LaCrosse and&#13;
R^ver Falls against Parkside.&#13;
LaCrosse had little difficulty&#13;
^nosing of Carthage, beatmg&#13;
em 92 80. The Rangers followed&#13;
Xnt game with an 89-53 yawner&#13;
iver River Falls. Things were&#13;
leading to another runaway&#13;
victory for Parkside in their own&#13;
ournament because no one&#13;
Ured that the shorter Indians of&#13;
LaCrosse could handle the height&#13;
advantage that the Rangers enjoyed.&#13;
&#13;
Anyone who missed the RangeIndian&#13;
championship game&#13;
missed the most exciting Ranger&#13;
home game in the last three years.&#13;
The Rangers jumped to a quick&#13;
lead but were eventually tied and&#13;
then battled to a 30-30 halftime tie.&#13;
The second half was every bit as&#13;
exciting as the first, if not more.&#13;
With 25 seconds remaining in&#13;
regulation time the Rangers&#13;
trailed 52-50 and sent the Indians&#13;
to the free throw line in a one and&#13;
one bonus situation. LaCrosse's&#13;
Steve Mathey's stepped to the line&#13;
and missed the first shot.&#13;
Parkside rebounded, and the&#13;
tournament's MVP Reggie Anderson's&#13;
shot bounced off the rim&#13;
and in the ensuring scramble,&#13;
Parkside's Howard Avery (a&#13;
senior transfer from San Diego&#13;
State) fouled LaCrosse's Todd&#13;
Herreid.&#13;
Herreid missed his front-end&#13;
snot of a one and one bonus&#13;
situation, the Rangers rebounded&#13;
and called timeout with only five&#13;
seconds left. The scene was set&#13;
and the Rangers were not to be&#13;
denied as Avery hit a 15-foot turnaround&#13;
jumper to tie the score at&#13;
the end of regulation time 52-52.&#13;
In the first overtime period,&#13;
Parkside jumped out to a fivepoint&#13;
lead, but saw that dissipate&#13;
and LaCrosse's John Mielke hit&#13;
two free throws with three&#13;
seconds left to knot the score at 60-&#13;
60.&#13;
In the second overtime, the&#13;
Rangers melted two minutes&#13;
away, and the best shot they could&#13;
come up with at the buzzer was a&#13;
30-foot desperation shot by Walter&#13;
Green that was far off the mark.&#13;
In the third and what proved to&#13;
be the final overtime period, both&#13;
teams traded free throws until the&#13;
score was tied 69-69. The Rangers&#13;
again worked the ball around and&#13;
with :04 seconds showing on the&#13;
clock, Green hit a 12-foot fadeaway&#13;
jump shot to give the&#13;
Rangers a 71-69 victory and&#13;
another Classic championship.&#13;
Hiis game squelched all talk of&#13;
the mismatches the Rangers&#13;
schedule in their tournament. This&#13;
game was, as A1 McGuire would&#13;
say, "a white knuckler."&#13;
Joining the tournament's most&#13;
valuable player in Reggie Anderson&#13;
were teammates Curtis&#13;
Green and Avery along with&#13;
LaCrosse's Herreid and Mielke.&#13;
Carthage's Gordy Zestrow&#13;
rounded out the tournament team.&#13;
Parkside greats win honors&#13;
Doug Anderson, Dolton, 111.,&#13;
gymnastics, 1971&#13;
Grant Anderson, Kenosha, Wis.,&#13;
fencing, 1970&#13;
Dennis Biel, Wausaw, Wis., track,&#13;
1973-74&#13;
Wendy Burman, Fond du Lac,&#13;
Wis., cross-country, 1979&#13;
Pat Burns, South Milwaukee,&#13;
Wis., track, 1975&#13;
Mike DeWitt, Kenosha, Wis.,&#13;
track, 1972&#13;
Jim Ferraro, Kenosha, Wis.,&#13;
swimming, 1978&#13;
Ray Fredericksen, Kenosha, Wis.,&#13;
track, 1978&#13;
Bob Gruner, Genoa City, Wis.,&#13;
wrestling, 1977&#13;
John Gale, Kenosha, Wis.,&#13;
wrestling, 1977&#13;
Al Halbur, Racine, Wis., track,&#13;
1978-79&#13;
Chris Hansen, Racine, Wis.,&#13;
track, 1976-77-78&#13;
Jim Herring, Park Ridge, 111.,&#13;
fencing, 1975&#13;
Stevie King, Chicago, 111.,&#13;
basketball, 1978&#13;
Joe Landers, Kenosha, Wis.,&#13;
wrestling, 1975-76&#13;
Bob Langenohl, Franklin, Wis.,&#13;
cross-country, 1977&#13;
Rick Langer, Ellsworth, Wis.,&#13;
wrestling, 1979&#13;
Lonnie Lewis, Chicago, 111.,&#13;
basketball, 1979&#13;
George Nikolopoulos, Greefield,&#13;
Wis., wrestling, 1979&#13;
Mike Rummelhart, Iowa City, la.,&#13;
track, 1979&#13;
Steve Sendelbach, Milwaukee,&#13;
Wis., soccer, 1975-76&#13;
Leartha Scott, Chicago, 111.,&#13;
basketball, 1977&#13;
Randy Skarda, Crivitz, Wis.,&#13;
wrestling, 1974&#13;
John Van Den Brandt, Appleton,&#13;
Wis., track, 1978-79&#13;
Sue Von Behren, Madison, Wis.,&#13;
track, 1975&#13;
Dan Winter, Franklin, Wis.,&#13;
wrestling, 1979&#13;
Ron Zmuda, Sturtevant, Wis.,&#13;
wrestling, 1979&#13;
*********************************&#13;
CROSS I«&#13;
COUNTRY "&#13;
SKI R ENTAL&#13;
* i *&#13;
*&#13;
I j&#13;
PARKSIDE U NION R EC CENTER * 4&#13;
OPEN; J d&#13;
M W F 9 a .m. - 11 a.m., 1:30 p.m. - 3:30 p.m., 5 p.m. - 8 p.m. ^ ^&#13;
* TR8 :30a. m .-9a.m .,lla.m.-2p .m.,5p.m .-8p .m. •* j&#13;
* Sat. 10:30 a.m. - 2:00 p .m. # J&#13;
H Sun. 5 p.m. - 8 p.m. * ^&#13;
P.A.B. Presents The County-Rock Music of&#13;
HEADSTONE BAND&#13;
Fri., Jan. - M. 18&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
s1.50 -U.W.- P. Students&#13;
s2.00 Guest&#13;
id's R equired&#13;
Parkside in 1971 and began setting&#13;
records left and right —&#13;
barefooted. He won three Drake&#13;
Relays marathon crowns, a NAIA&#13;
10,000 meters championship and&#13;
two NAIA marathon titles while&#13;
achieving all-America honors&#13;
many times in cross-country and&#13;
track. A native of Kandy, Sri&#13;
Lanka, he now lives in Kenosha&#13;
with his wife Wimala and is head&#13;
cross-country and assistant men's&#13;
track coach at UW-P.&#13;
BILL WEST, who followed in Ken&#13;
Martin's footsteps to achieve&#13;
wrestling greatness. He was three&#13;
times an ail-American and won&#13;
two successive NAIA 134-lb.&#13;
championships while winning 58&#13;
consecutive bouts. A native of&#13;
Kenosha who attended Tremper&#13;
High School, he now lives in Tulsa,&#13;
Okla., with his wife Carol and&#13;
daughter Heather Ann, and&#13;
coaches wrestling at Tulsa Union&#13;
High School.&#13;
"We'll be inducting six splendid&#13;
athletes as we begin our Hall of&#13;
Fame," Dannehl said. "It's only&#13;
fitting that after ten years of&#13;
excellence in athletics — a period&#13;
in which we've had 33 allAmericans&#13;
— that we begin this&#13;
athletic Hall of Fame.&#13;
"We think that the selection&#13;
committee has found the very best&#13;
of the best for this initial group,&#13;
these charter members who will&#13;
represent the best kinds of athletic&#13;
models for future UW-P athletes."&#13;
The six Hall of Fame inductees&#13;
will be honored Saturday afternoon,&#13;
Jan. 19, at a special&#13;
banquet in the Parkside Union and&#13;
then at Halftime of the UWParkside-UW-Green&#13;
Bay&#13;
basketball game.&#13;
In addition to the Hall of&#13;
Famers, UW-Pakside ailAmericans&#13;
to be honored at the&#13;
banquet and game include the&#13;
following:&#13;
Rudy Alvarez, Racine, Wis., cross&#13;
country, 1971&#13;
Intramural&#13;
The in terest in recent years in tms country in the sport of soccer&#13;
has brought about competition on&#13;
ah levels. The same is true here at&#13;
parkside with the beginning of an&#13;
'Moor intramural soccer league&#13;
"hs semester.&#13;
a J&#13;
6 league is open to both men's&#13;
aM women's teams. Nonvarsity&#13;
termen are eligible. The league&#13;
Photos by B. Passino&#13;
soccer&#13;
will start later this month with the&#13;
games being played on Sunday&#13;
afternoons from 4 to 6 pm.&#13;
Teams will consist of either 5 or&#13;
6 persons. Any teams or individuals&#13;
interested should&#13;
contact coach Hal Henderson in&#13;
the P.E. building or by calling 553-&#13;
2311 as soon as possible.&#13;
Six athletes who achieved&#13;
greatness in athletics at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
will become charter members of&#13;
the school's Hall of Fame at induction&#13;
ceremonies Saturday,&#13;
Jan. 19, Athletic Director Wayne&#13;
Dannehl has announced.&#13;
Named to the newly-founded&#13;
"Hall" at Parkside will be:&#13;
JIMHEIRING, a race walking star&#13;
who won six NAIA national&#13;
walking titles for UW-P and&#13;
finished fifth in the 1976 U.S.&#13;
Olympic Trials in his event. He's a&#13;
native of Kenosha who attended&#13;
Bradford High School. He now&#13;
lives in San Bernardino, Cal., and&#13;
works while training for the 1980&#13;
Olympics.&#13;
ABDUL JEELANI, who played&#13;
basketball at UW-Parkside as&#13;
Gary Cole and became the&#13;
Ranger's first all-American in the&#13;
sport. He's UW-P's all-time&#13;
scoring and rebounding leader&#13;
and is now a member of the&#13;
Portland Trailblazers of the&#13;
National Basketball Association.&#13;
He's a native of Racine who attended&#13;
Park High School.&#13;
KEN MARTIN, who was&#13;
Parkside's first — and only —&#13;
four-time ail-American in&#13;
wrestling. He set numerous UW-P&#13;
records and set the tone for&#13;
wrestling excellence at Parkside.&#13;
He's a native of Coleman, Wis.,&#13;
who attended Coleman High&#13;
School. He now lives in Cody,&#13;
Wyo., and coaches wrestling at&#13;
Cody High School.&#13;
KIM MERRITT, who was&#13;
Parkside's first woman ailAmerican&#13;
in distance running and&#13;
has achieved notable success&#13;
internationally and in the U.S. A&#13;
Racine native, she attended Case&#13;
High School and still lives in&#13;
Racine, where she and husband&#13;
Keith, also a former Parkside&#13;
track star, operate Merritt's&#13;
Running Center.&#13;
LUCIAN ROSA, who came to &#13;
GREEN BAY&#13;
January 19th • 7:30 pm&#13;
ST. NORBERT&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
January 23rd - 7:30 pm&#13;
at the LWP phv ed building • tickets available&#13;
at the Lnion Information center of Phy Ed Building&#13;
After the game&#13;
in Union Square&#13;
Turn in your&#13;
ticket stub for...&#13;
o one 20-oz&#13;
BEER OR SODA&#13;
o entertainment by&#13;
a dixieland band&#13;
Enjoy the fun.&#13;
plan to attend!!&#13;
free beer and soda sponsored by&#13;
ganger </text>
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              <text>The Ranger, Volume 8, issue 16, January 17, 1980</text>
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