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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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&#13;
1&#13;
 iL University of Wisconsin-Parkside anger --k Ox rC- • Wednesday, December 12, 1979 iiiyn i tx i Happy Holiday^ Vol. 8 No. 15 ; x SUFAC completes preliminary budget In the spirit photo by C  - Mo ,denaueF The Christmas tree in the Union Bazaar stands to bring the Christmas spirit to all UW-Parkside students. Last Ranger of semester ATTENTION! This is the last noon on January 11 in order to be Ranger for the semester. The next printed. issue will be coming out on Reservations for ad space will be January 16. 1980. All copy and accepted on the usual deadlines letters to the Editor for that issue for an upcoming issue, must be in the Ranger office by by Sue Stevens The Segregated University Fees Allocations Committee has completed the preliminary budget­ing for the 1980-81 academic year. The final figure, as it now stands, for SUFAC is $551,650. This figure shows a 5.4% increase over last year's final allocations — •&gt; $23 incr C.'ist&gt; in tuition pfr student per year. According to Tim Zimnier. President of the parkside Student Government Association, the final budget will either remain the same as the preliminary or be cut. depending upon the feelings of the student body on the tuition rise. The SUFAC hopes to have the final budgeting done before the winter break, something that hasn't been done at Parkside for years. Last year the SUFAC met during the winter break in order to complete the preliminaries before the second semester began. Speed has been a major difference in the committee so far this year, with several budgets being approved in less than ten minutes. This could well be attributed to the fact that most of the budget requests the committee received were kept at the same level or a minimum increase. The major budget hikes this year are seen in Student Health, and the P.S.G.A. budget itself. The Student Health office has added to its budget request a classified typist at $5,127. a nurse at $8,580. and a psychologist at $6.(XX). The total budget for Student Health increased bv $14,129. I he P.S.G.A. budget increase is due to the added amount of United Council dues which haven't been paid in past years. The increase for the P.S.G.A. budget is S2.400. the amount of dues per vear. • Basketball: Home opener exciting • Surviving the bitter cold • From the Parking Lot : Cambodians for sale • Wrestlers: Strong showing SUFAC me mbers in meeting last Friday Most of the other preliminary budgets passed by SUFAC this year reflected an approximate 7% increase over last vear's final photo by B. Passino figure. I he following is a listing of the budgets reviewed by SUFAC this vear: BUDGET AREA FINAL 79-80 REQUEST 80-81 PRELIMINARY Union Operations $194,857 194.85" 194.857 Union Debt 105.500 105.500 105.500 Athletics 4 7.080 48."90 48.790 Intramurals 34.5(X) 35. "05 35.(XX) Student Health 33.(XX) 55.904 47.129 P.A.B. 30.725 34.302 33.460 S.O.C. 20 .(XX) 25.655 22.320 Union Programming 13.697 15.064 14.793 RANGER 13.5(X) 14.286 14.286 Housing 9.486 10.666 10.666 C.S.C. ' 8.3(H) 8.823 8.823 Child Care Center 6.000 6.931 6.931 P.S.G.A. 1 ivw /V/W 6.300 6.300 SAB Building Costs -2.250 2.250 2.250 SUFAC 5(H) 0&lt;!M 545 S523.295 S551.650 There are still problems with this budget according to Zimmcr. The SAB budget is still up in the air. This budget, which serves as a building maintenance reserve for the building which houses the C.S.C.. and the Child Care Center, may increase due to problems with the existing reserve. The SUFAC w ill find out just where this reserve stands as soon as the figures are in from the finance office. Dec, graduates Reception planned Last year at this time there were many prospective December graduates enraged at the ad­ministrations decision to abolish ilie December commencement ceremonies. It was decided, because qf poor attendance, and huge expenses to invite December graduates to attend May commencement, either before or after they graduate. Because graduates last year had already planned to have familv celebrations, they resented not being notified in time about the new commencement ceremony policy. Hie Ranger had numerous students coming into the office voicing,their complaints. In order to correct the problem. ( hancellor Alan Gusktn decider to have a s mall reception honoring those graduates at the end of theit final term. It was a success, anc everyone was satisfied. Hits year the reception fo December graduates will again b&lt; held. I he C han cellor's office hat already mailed out invitations ti prospective December graduate to attend the reception to be helt on Sunday. December 16 from 2-pm in the Galbraith Conterene Room tV\ LLC 3ti3). It seems that UW-Parkside ha es-nhlishe.! another tradition t continue throughout its years. IT onlv problem now ts. "What if ti Max graduates want a receptic , also'.'" &#13;
MORE INFORMATION&#13;
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&#13;
1&#13;
 University of Wisconsin - Parkside anger Wednesday November 28, 1979 Vol. 8 No. 13 Parkside celebrates ten years Master plan held plenty of promise by Steve Dankert The "master plan" called for the opening of Parkside by fall of 1969, or 1970 at the latest. Originally Parkside was to be only an upp«?r division campus, something which has obviously been changed. After a two year battle over the location and funding of Parkside. the majority of allocation monies for construction were   finally passed ih December 1968. The 23.8 million dollar package included funding for the Library Learning Center, Physical Plant Building, Communications Arts. Classroom Building. Physical Education Building, and addition­al equipment and space con­version. Later it was planned that there should be a $3.5 million Student Union, and a $3.1 million School of Modern Industry Building. Later estimates for the Modern Industry building were revised to 4-4.25 million dollars. Parkside Village was to be built at a projected "cost of slightly-more than one million dollars by Abendroth and Associates, Inc. Original plans had called for a 750 bed dorm facility at a cost of $4.1 million, however these plans ran into trouble in 1971 because the Madison campus had to close some of its dorms due to a lack of applications for student use. Ground breaking for the campus occured on November 21. 1967. and the campus was subsequently dedicated on May 4. 1970. The master plan for UW Parkside included phased con­struction mindful of varying student enrollment levels; from a level of about 700 to about 25.000 or more. The foregoing information can be found in more depth in the Parkside Archives located on level D2 in the Library Learning Center. For any information you may need help with concerning research or history and the like please stop in and visit Luella Vines, the Archives' secretary, or Sue Yugo. the Archivist Assistant. • Interview with Chancellor Guskin • Athletics—Ten years of tradition • Review—'The Onion Field' • 1969: the year of UW-Parkside's birth • Healthfully yours—Sexuality: the ironic truths photo by Mark Anderson Ranger looks into Parkside's past history Due to the celebration of Parkside's tenth birthday this year an historical series of articles will be initiated. Did you know? There was streaking at Parkside. There were sleep-ins and rallies here. Parkside brought Ralph Nad r, Gloria Steinem, Edmund Muskie, Stewart Udall. F. Lee Bailey, Ex-Governor Pat Lucey, Odetta, Jose Greco, John Denver, and many more celebrities to the Kenosha-Racine area. Would you like to find o ut about Itvin Wyllie, Rita Tallent, or George Molinaro?; know what past students are doing now?; or find out how Parkside began and its opposition? With all of this Parkside history will be national and world history at its parallel. The series will start next week. &#13;
2 Wednesday November 28, 1979 Ranger Editorial AASCU Argentina abuser of basic human rights by Steve M. Dankert Opinion Writer You may recall, a few issues back, an editorial in the RANGER about the United States allowing some peoples or governments to just abuse their authority and power. There is another example, clpser to home, in Argentina. The New York Times Magazine reported in its 21 October 1979 issue that Argentina is also another large abuser of basic human values. The current strongman is Jorge Rafael Videla. He took power in a bloodless coup in March of 1976, after two years of a condition of a state of siege which was declared by the nominal head of Argentina, Eva Peron. The Argentina military was battling the Leftist Peronist Montenaro guerrillas and the Marxist Peoples Revolutionary Army (E.R.P.). Due to raids on military units by these guerilla groups there had been harsh crackdowns by the Junta on civil disturbances. Now, however, the army has announced that the guerrilla groups had been effectively smashed; but, the terror goes on. The Times' magazine goes on to say that both the U.S. government and the Argintine government agree in private with the Amnesty International estimate of 15,000 disappearances of people in Argentina. These may be attributed to both the guerrilla groups and the military regime which has controlled state power since 1974. One of the reasons for continued disappearances appears to be an intra-military struggle between ,hard liners and moderates, with Argentine civilians and government officials used as pawns. It is believed that more detained persons will be executed by the military in preparation for an investigation by the Organization of American States' Inter-American Committee on Human rights. Why all the attention to foreign affairs? It's in our own best interest as human beings. All people must be concerned about what happens to others around Jhe world. The attitude that those countries are sovereign states and therefore we shouldn't interfere is baloney. That is an attitude of self-centeredness; indifference. Just because those other governments are termed "sovereign" powers does not mean that they are a power unto themselves. The organization and structure of a government is for direction and control of mass economic and social actions. They are granted authority not only by men, but by the God which created the universe; but they are not to abuse the power granted. Everyone else in the world should be — «* We are our brothers' keeper; like it or not. Sitting back and doing nothing, waiting-for the Other"guysto do it all, will accomplish little. Taken to its extreme, this type of action is probably what has lead throughout history to all manner of tyrants. They all hold out the shining apple of security and people grab  hold, not realizing until they have already eaten of the fruit that it has a worm within. I would urge our readers to write their representatives in Congress expressing their concern that these things are allowed to happen in the world community. Finally, in all fairness it should be pointed out that it has been brought to my attention that the hostage situation in Iran is alleged to be a result of such things  as have just been discussed; more on that in a later article. Guskin elected to National Board r ganger Sue Stevens Editor Brian Felland Business Manager Doug Edenhauser .Sports Editor Ken Meyer Feature Editor leff Stevens News Editor Kevin Padula Photo Editor Tom Cooper. Chairman of the Board Reporters Charles Clifton, Dave Cramer, Pete Cramer, Ginger Helgeson, Renee Jones, Mira Lochanski, Reed McMillan, Walt Remondini, Don Scherrer, Denise Sobieski Photographers PCJIO' C olston, Curtis Moldenauer, Brian Passino Mary Arnold Layout Graphic Artists Bill Stougaard, Michael Williams Ad Representatives Linda Andersen, Dan Galbraith RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and content. Published every Wednesday during the academic year except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by the Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois. Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D139, Kenosha, WI 53141. Letters to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard size paper with one-inch margins. All letters must be signed and a telephone number included for verification. Names will be withheld for valid reasons. Maximum length accepted is 500 words. Deadline for letters is Friday at 10 a.m. for publication the following Wednesday. The RANGER reserves all editorial priviliges in refusing to orint letters which contain false or defamatory content. Chancellor Alan E. Guskin of the University of Wisconsin-parkside has been elected to the national board of directors of the American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU), it was announced Tuesday (Nov. 20) at the organization's annual meeting in San Antonio. Guskin is one of 10 directors elected to the AASCU board, which represents the interests of 333 four-year  public colleges and universities. The UW-P chancellor was one of three directors elected to thrge-year terms; the others received terms of one or two years. Roland Dille, president of Moor-head State University (Minn.), was voted president-elect of AASCU and Clark Ahlberg, president of Wichita State University, treasurer. Earlier this year, Guskin was elected chairman of AASCU's national advisory committee for its Resource Center for Planned Change. In that capacity, he conducted a workshop on leader-Reminder The Ranger appreciates hearing from you! If you'd like to write a letter to the Editor, just follow these guidelines: All letters must be in the Ranger office by 10 am on the Friday before publication.   The Ranger office is located at WLLC D139 (next to the Coffee Shoppe). The maximum length for letters accepted is 500 words. They must be typewritten, double-spaced with one-inch margins on standard typing paper. All letters must be signed. Names will be withheld for valid reasons. Include a phone number for verification. All letters will be printed without editing. Remember to check for typing errors, mis­spellings, and grammatical errors. The Ranger has editorial priviliges and may refuse to publish letters    found to be defamatory in content. ship styles in higher education for the Center's summer institute in August in Vail, Colo. He also conducted a workshop in universi­ty leadership in September at California State University at Chico. Guskin is the author of a chapter on university decision­making in a book on administra­tion in education to be published soon by Jossey-Bass of San Francisco. Guskin also has published and spoken nationally in recent months on UW-Parkside's Editorial Comment achievements in the areas of "the teaching library" and student competency in college-level aca­demic skills. UW-P has become one of the country's collegiate pacesetters in requiring students to demonstrate competency in English, mathematics and library use in order to remain in school, and its skill programs have been the subject of features on NBC's "Today" show, National Public Radio and through New York Times syndicated articles. Parkside tradition change by Sue Stevens Editor Is a period of ten years long enough to establish a tradition? (It's hard to say, but that question can be answered by looking at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside.) When this university first opened its doors in September of 1969, it was only the beginning of the realization of a dream. That dream was the establishment of a community-based four year campus in Southeastern Wisconsin. It wasn't to be considered a small university extension as many people believed. Kenosha already had an extension campus (now the site of the new Bradford High School in  Kenosha). It has taken ten years of hard work for Parkside to be recognized as an educational leader. Programs have been initiated here that have stood, and still stand, as models for universities across the nation. Our basic skills program here, which has received national attention during the past year is just one example. The students have   also established themselves on the Parkside campus. Going to a commuter campus for a college education is not as easy as some think. The students here are of a different breed from those you'll find on other university campuses. One third of our students are classified as "non-traditional," meaning that they are 25 years old or older. These older students have sacrificed much to either return to or begin school. They have contributed to the education of others by helping younger students realize that there's a whole other world outside a college campus. The traditional students have worked hard to make the most of the education offered here. Changes are continually being made in the campus atmosphere. This year alone has seen more student activity than any other. Some students have finally realized that coming here for classes and then going home is not the only way to learn. Yes, Parkside has established a tradition. That tradition is one of changing with the times. By the time Parkside's twentieth anniversary rolls around, there will be many more changes — in the administration, in the school's reputation (even better), in the buildings, in the student body, and even in the student newspaper. Energy seminar held Dec. 4 Tuesday the and A seminar on "Energy: Prob­lems and Prospects" will feature an energy expert from the U.S. Department of Commerce and two University of Wisconsin econo­mists as speakers on Tuesday, Dec. 4, from 1 to 5 p.m. at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside Campus Union. Joseph Gustaferro, senior energy policy analyst at Department of Commerce former director of its energy analysis division, will discuss the torecast for energy fuels including oil, natural gas, coal, nuclear, solar, geothermal and biomass through the year 2000, linking production with resourcs available and consumption rates. He also will discuss specific impacts of the forecasts for Wisconsin. His talk is at 1 p.m. Dunkin Harkin, professor of agricultural economics at UW-Madison and Extension specialist in natural resource economics and a member of several State Division of Energy committees, will present alternatives for national eneigy policy and discuss state impacts of each option on Wisconsin at 3:30. Richard Rosenberg, associate professor of economics at UW-Parkside and a specialist in energy economics, will discuss effects of price control on the petroleum and natural gas markets, economic consequences of decontrol and other policies and impacts of environmental regulations on energy supplies at 4:15. The speakers' presentations will be followed by informal discus­sion. Registration can be made by calling Prof. Richard Keehn, director of UW-Parkside's Economic Education and Re­search Institute at 553-2259. The fee per individual attending is $10 for corporations and $5 for small business (under 50 employees), non-profit organizations and individuals. The seminar is sponsored by the UW-P institute and the University Extension Department of Economics. &#13;
MORE INFORMATION&#13;
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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;
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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;
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% 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;
ISN'T IT ABOUT TIME&#13;
TO CHECK OUT&#13;
A LIFE INSURANCE SALES CAREER?&#13;
Northwe ste rn Mu tua l Life is th e 7t h largest life ins ura nce&#13;
company in the coun try . We sell peop le one at a time,&#13;
on the ir individ ual merits. It's a care er that offers unlimited&#13;
in come pote nti al. You ch oose th e pe op le yo u wo rk with.&#13;
An d, you're do ing somet hing wo rthwh ile , if yo u're&#13;
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• ne ck out on e of the best. No obliga tion .&#13;
Mak e an ap poin tmen t. Come see us!&#13;
Donald J. Bri nk, CLU District Agent - Racine 632-2731&#13;
Gene F. So ens, CLU District Agent — Kenosha 654-5316&#13;
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;
Sporting &amp;. Athletic Equipment&#13;
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;
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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;
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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>American contributions needed</text>
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              <text>&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
 University of Wisconsin - Parkside Wednesday November 14, 1979 Cambodians starving American contributions needed Oxfam-America is a non-profit, international development agency which funds self-help programs in Asia, Africa and Latin America, emphasizing economic and food self-reliance. Oxfam began in England in 1942 as the Oxford Committee for Famine Relief, and has gained a global reputation for innovative yet realistic aid to the poorest people of the world. Oxfam-America was formed in 1970 as an independent U.S associate of the British agency. Working through an inter­national field system shared by Oxfam agencies in five western countries, Oxfam-America sup­ports coordinated efforts working towards long-term change, as well as responding to disaster situa­tions such as drought in the Sahel, earthquake in Guatamale,  famine in Bangladesh, boat people and road people of Indo-China. Oxfam-America does not accept funding from any government source, and depends entirely upon private contributions for support of its programs. twenty international voluntary agencies to coordinate, channel assistance into the country. Based on an agreement reached between Oxfam and the Phnom Penh government, free access has been given to the western relief agencies. Oxfam and the govern­ment will cooperate in the extensive distribution and monitoring of food and supplies throughout the country. No aid ft to be given to the military. In describing the current effort, Howard said the Oxfam program has two chief goals: "The first pressing need is to feed the people and pull them back from the brink. The second is to restore the country's capacity to produce food and become self-sufficient again." Included in the aid program over the next six months will be 70,0(X) tons of rice, maize, sugar, oil, and milkpowder for immediate consumption, and 19,000 tons of grain and vegetable seeds for an early planting program. Also being provided by Oxfam and the consortium of international agencies will be diesel trucks and landrovers for food distribution throughout the country, as well as such items as irrigation pumps, hoes, fish nets, pesticides, soaps, and blankets. Those declaring support for the Oxfam effort include Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D.-Mass.), Ramsey Clark, Rep. Steve Solarz (D. N.Y.), Rep. John B. Anderson (R.-111.), Rabbi Marc Tannenbaum, William Sloan Coffin, and others. X'TO;::.5"- I: , . Jg give money to this worthy cause for , *1 l h 315 ^ ^ .^llllflil 18|f|I'' J a Thanksgiving contribution, just bring your money down to the Ranger office located at WLLC D j* HHKBhHH 139 (next to the Coffee Shoppe \ JJB ^HjjjjB In Main Place) and deposit it in the box right inside the door. The Ranger will be happy to send a check for the amount collected  to Oxfam-America as Parkside's Photo taken by an Oxfam field worker in Phnom Penh last week shows celebration of Thanksgiving. Ran- extent of damage to the city caused by Pol Pot and the Khmer ger knows that Parkside students Rou9e when they forcibly evacuated 2 million people in April, 1975. care. INSIDE MBB# JQZZ tnsempies in concert Tuesday, Nov. 20 g %&gt; v* J 1 Caffeine Substitutes plentiful P Soccer, district champions Parsons here Nov. 27 Photo taken by an Oxfam field worker in Phnom Penh last week shows the extent of malnutrition evident among children in the country. The child lying on the mat died soon after this photo was t aken. &#13;
OPINION fbvight Turner - Stealer J do n't know. I don't think he'd be much better than Carter as far as unemployment and inflation goes. Dona DriscoU  - Freshman I think it's good; if he's like the other Kennedys it'll be O.K. I like his smile, I like his socks, too. decided that he is going to run so peo^-can .stop ibolrng around;; whether he's running or not so 2 Wednesday November 14, 1979 Ranger Editorial U.S. stand up &amp; f ight! by Steve M. Dankert Opinion Writer What ever happened to Teddy Roosevelt? You know, the old charge up the San Juan Hill and the rough riders? Theodore Roosevelt is now just a part of history; like so many other public figures. That being the case, one could ask, why are you beating the dead? Well, that is not quite what I had ~ in mind, but beatings and Teddy Roosevelt do have some con­nection to this discussion. Whether Mr. R. was in any way a sadist or masochist, however, is not the topic. Rather it is the psychological use to which a whipping might be put, such as discipline. Where does Teddy Roosevelt fit in? Simple: in the area of carrot and stick diplomacy. Theodore Roosevelt had a saying, "speak softly and carry a big stick." This seems to be a rather appropriate saying in these times. In the event there is anyone who doesn't follow the reasoning, let's digress just a bit on the world scene. In the past six years or so since the U.S. has been out of Vietnam, a number of disturbing trends have ocCured. It started with the sham called «£''peace with honor" which was used to get America out of Southeast Asia. The U.S. sponsored this knowing very well that the ink on the peace agreement would scarcely be dry before it would be violated by the North. Later followed things such as North Korean soldiers hacking up American troops along the DMZ because they wanted to trim a tree on the truce line. And of course we sho wed them — we cut the tree down. Let that be a lesson Kim II Sung! The Cubans running all over Africa didn't seem to bother Washington either. So Africa is a little unstable, what are 20,000 Cuban troops going to do anyway? Well, nothing if causing trouble in Angola, Zaire, Namibia, Zimbawe-Rhodesia, and Mozambique is considered nothing. Of course, there is always Latin America if.. the boredom gets to be too much to bear. Everyone knows the U.S. must not get involved in the least way. After all, what right do we h ave to push people around just because we have the muscle to do it? None at all, that's the point: neither does Moscow or Cuba. In our Vietnam paranoia we h ave simply let some people walk all over others while - XTT. THE HOLOCAUST ? WHictf OA/ST " we just sit and wring our hands ala the "what's a mother to do?" commercial seen on TV. It is generally known lately that we've had trouble getting the North Vietnam backed govern­ment of Heng Samrin and the Pol Pot guerillas to let us give aid to the remaining four million, of what used to be a country of seven million Cambodians. Now the illustrious wolf in sheep's clothing, Ayatottah Khomeini, is busy sticking it to the Americans again. Some "stud­ents" are holding sixty-five U.S. citizens hostage, and the Ayatollah has announced his full support of the venture. He must have run out of reasons to execute Iranians and would now like to execute someone else. Come on United States! What are we going to do, roll over and play dead for every two-bit dictator that threatens us with "involve­ment?" Who cares if the Heng Samrins and Pol Pots think we've no business in their little fight? If they were so concerned about anyone, save themselves, they would not have directly or indirectly killed thirty-three percent of their own people. The Kim II Sungs, Khomeinies, and Fidel Castros of the world  are just rolling on the ground and splitting a gut. It's time to quit apologizing for being alive. It's time to quit playing politics with starving people and trembling over oil cutoffs from Iran. The world isn't going to go away just because we wish it would. If  some nations in the world don't give a damn about men's lives, it is about time they receive a little inspiration in the form of a "Good Swift Kick". ganger % Sue Stevens.. Brian Feliand Editor Business Manager Doug Edenhauser mtor Ken Meyer Feature Ed itor Jeff  Stevens Editor Kevin Padula Editor Mike Murphy Advertising M anager Tom Cooper Chairman of the Board Reporters Chartes Clifton, Dave Cramer, Pete Cramer, Ginger Helgeson, Renee Jones, Mira Lochanskl, Lori Merfen, Reed McMillan. Terry Peterson, Walt Remondini, Don Scherrer, Denlse Sobieski, Becky Waller, Karen Walters Photographers Mark Anderson, Curtis Moldenauer, Brian Passino Layout Mary Arnold, Nancy Hernandez, Nancy Mikaelian Bill Stougaard, Michael Williams Graphic Artists Ad Representatives Linda Andersen, Dan Galbraith. Margarita Schonenberg RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and content. Published every Wednesday during the academic year except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by the Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois. Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D139, Kenosha, WI 53141. Letters to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard size paper with one-inch margins. All letters must be signed and a telephone number included for verification. Names will be withheld for valid reasons. Maximum length accepted is 500 words. Deadline for letters is Friday at 10 a.m. for publication the o owing Wednesday. The RANGER reserves all editorial priviliges in refusing to pnnt letters which contain false or defamatory content. - A*1 &#13;
MORE INFORMATION&#13;
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              <text>Parkside to celebrate Einstein</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin -Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Wednesday November 7, 1979 Vol. 8 No. 10&#13;
Parkside to celebrate Einstein&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
is joining a score of other&#13;
institutions throughout the United&#13;
States and the world to celebrate&#13;
the centenary of Einstein's birth. A&#13;
major exhibit will be on display&#13;
during the week of November&#13;
12 - 17, 1979, in the Parkside&#13;
Library, and several public&#13;
lectures and films are planned&#13;
concurrently. (See schedul of&#13;
events.)&#13;
The Exhibit, describing the life&#13;
of Albert Enistein, is a freestanding&#13;
framework nearly seven&#13;
feet high, holding eighteen panels.&#13;
The growth of Einstein's scientific&#13;
work, presented in layman's terms,&#13;
is a main feature, but the oxhibit&#13;
devotes even more spa.-e to&#13;
explaining his extensive public and&#13;
political work, his role in world&#13;
culture, his philosophy, and his&#13;
human qualities. Each panel is&#13;
accompanied by an authoritative&#13;
text prepared in consultation with&#13;
leading historians, and there is a&#13;
rich selection of quotations of&#13;
Einstein's own words. Illustrations&#13;
including photographs, drawings,&#13;
and reproductions of manuscripts,&#13;
drawn from a wide variety of&#13;
sources are included. This exhibit&#13;
was prepared by the American&#13;
institute of Physics and the&#13;
Institute for Advanced Study at&#13;
Princeton, where Einstein worked&#13;
during his stay in the United&#13;
States.&#13;
Four public lectures and two&#13;
special films are also featured. The&#13;
speakers, two physicists, one&#13;
astronomer, and one philosopher,&#13;
all well known, will share some of&#13;
Einstein's thoughts and discoveries&#13;
with the general public.&#13;
These talks are not technical and&#13;
are addressed to the layman.&#13;
Two films, especially prepared&#13;
for showing during the centennial,&#13;
will be featured. One, "Albert&#13;
Einstein: Education of a Genius",&#13;
was specially prepared by the&#13;
American Institute of Physics to&#13;
complement the contents of the&#13;
exhibit; the other, "Einstein's&#13;
Universe", is created by BBC/&#13;
&gt; WGBH Television based on Nigel&#13;
Calder's book of the same title and&#13;
is narrated by Peter Ustinov. Both&#13;
films have received excellent&#13;
reviews.&#13;
The Einstein Centennial Week&#13;
at Parkside is sponsored by the&#13;
Science Division, Social Science&#13;
Division, and the UniversityExtension&#13;
under a grant from the&#13;
Wisconsin Humanities Committee.&#13;
The exhibit, lectures, and film&#13;
shows are free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
The week's schedule&#13;
MONDAY. NOVEMBER 12&#13;
3:00 P.M.&#13;
Chancellor Guskin opens the&#13;
exhibit. A reception follows the&#13;
formal opening.&#13;
3:30 -4:30 P.M.&#13;
Film, "Albert Einstein: Education&#13;
of a Genius", Greenquist' 103.&#13;
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13&#13;
3:30 -4:30 P.M.&#13;
Lecture: "A New Look at the&#13;
Sky", Professor Robert Greenler,&#13;
Physics Department, University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Greenquist&#13;
103.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14&#13;
3:30-4:30 P.M.&#13;
Lecture: "The Big Bang, Einstein's&#13;
Legacy", Professor Michael&#13;
Turner, Department of Astronomy&#13;
cont. on pg. 2&#13;
Albert Einstein&#13;
Task Force reports deficiencies&#13;
"The issue is not national test&#13;
score averages and how well&#13;
Wisconsin places. It is the&#13;
capability of college students to do&#13;
college level work."&#13;
That statement by keynote&#13;
speaker Alan E. Guskin, chancellor&#13;
of UW-Parkside, set the tone&#13;
for the two-day statewide conference&#13;
on basic skills Thursday&#13;
and Friday attended by 125&#13;
educators, primarily from colleges&#13;
and universities, at UW-P.&#13;
Participants attended 24 different&#13;
workshops and heard a&#13;
report from the 11-member Basic&#13;
Skills Task Force established by&#13;
the University of Wisconsin&#13;
System in 1977 and which issued&#13;
its findings earlier this year.&#13;
Guskin, whose university is the&#13;
only one in the UW System to&#13;
require students to pass competency&#13;
tests in writing, reading,&#13;
mathematics, library use and&#13;
research papers before they can&#13;
begin their junior years, said:&#13;
"There is a difference in what&#13;
are appropriate basic skill levels&#13;
for students who do not go on to&#13;
college and those who do. We're&#13;
talking about students having the&#13;
minimum skills to do C or C-plus&#13;
work in college.&#13;
"If colleges can't stand up for&#13;
C-Ievel work, I ask you what we&#13;
can stand up for," Guskin saia.&#13;
"We also have an etnical&#13;
obligation to protect students from&#13;
getting caught in a revolving door.&#13;
By that I mean that since we&#13;
permit most high school graduates&#13;
to enter our colleges, we have a&#13;
responsibility to do all we can to&#13;
help those who have the&#13;
motivation and potential to&#13;
acquire the academic skills needed&#13;
for success."&#13;
New manager for sweet shop&#13;
by Denise Sobieski&#13;
People at UW-Parkside with a&#13;
definite sweet tooth should surely&#13;
be acquainted with the "Ye Oldc&#13;
Barb Lukawski&#13;
Photo by M. Anderson&#13;
Sweet Shoppe" in the Union right&#13;
across from the information desk.&#13;
Just a look inside will make your&#13;
mouth water as your eyes gaze&#13;
across the jars and jars of candies,&#13;
nuts, and other delectables. The&#13;
Sweet Shoppe has a variety of&#13;
goodies ranging from imported&#13;
French candies to old fashioned&#13;
candy sticks, plus a few aliment&#13;
remedies, like cough drops (they&#13;
come in handy at this time of&#13;
year).&#13;
As of this month, there have&#13;
been additions to the Sweet&#13;
Shoppe. One of those is the new&#13;
supervisor Barb Lukawski. She's&#13;
the one who does the purchasing&#13;
and manages the operations of the&#13;
shop.&#13;
There have been thoughts of&#13;
other 'changes., too. Ice creamlovers&#13;
rejoice! In the future the&#13;
Sweet Shoppe may expand the&#13;
present counter area and sell ice&#13;
cream. The possible purchase of a&#13;
fudge-apple maker machine will&#13;
delight chocolate and apple&#13;
lovers. Such improvements will&#13;
make "Ye Oldc Sweet Shoppe"&#13;
even more worthy of its name.&#13;
"Ye Oldc Sweet Shoppe" in the&#13;
Union is an old fashioned candy&#13;
store loaded with all kinds of&#13;
goodies — chocolates, hard&#13;
candies, licorice, nuts, etc. If you&#13;
can't find what you're looking&#13;
for, mention it to the cashier.&#13;
They'll sec what they can do to&#13;
satisfy your sweet tooth.&#13;
Stop by "Ye Olde Sweet&#13;
Shoppe" — take a look inside&#13;
Your cravings for sweets will be&#13;
s a t i s f i e d . ...&#13;
Members of the Task Force and&#13;
participants agreed that simply&#13;
raising entrance standards was not&#13;
the answer. The Task Force report&#13;
states raising admission requirements&#13;
"offers the temptation of&#13;
simplicity," but would "exclude&#13;
students with potential success in&#13;
college. . .who are disadvantaged&#13;
by basic skills deficiencies." It was&#13;
pointed out that even many public&#13;
universities with rigorous admission&#13;
standards, such as many&#13;
in California, including Berkeley,&#13;
and the University of Michigan,&#13;
have decided they need intensive&#13;
basic skill programs for their&#13;
students.&#13;
1 he Task Force also reported&#13;
that their most conservative&#13;
estimate is that 25 percent of&#13;
freshmen entering UW campuses&#13;
are deficient in "basic skill&#13;
competencies needed for success in&#13;
traditional entry-level courses." It&#13;
urged that all freshmen complete&#13;
placement tests in writing, reading&#13;
and mathematics prior to enrollment.&#13;
a procedure that only&#13;
UW-Parkside currently practices,&#13;
and that those who need help be&#13;
required to take appropriate&#13;
courses.&#13;
The Task Force said that a&#13;
major hurdle in implementing&#13;
skills programs is the cost. "In&#13;
many (UW) System units the&#13;
extent of such opportunity is&#13;
determined less by identified levels&#13;
of student need than by&#13;
institutional ability to divert funds&#13;
from other activities during a&#13;
period of fixed budgets."&#13;
The Task Force concluded its&#13;
recommendations with the statement:&#13;
&#13;
"Today's call to return to the&#13;
basics could die away without an&#13;
echo. And indeed yesterday's&#13;
basics — the rigid application ot&#13;
three R's to a select clientele — are&#13;
insufficient for future needs. But&#13;
the call carries an ideal to build&#13;
upon — the ideal that public&#13;
education provides fundamental&#13;
preparation for an educated&#13;
citizenry.&#13;
INSIDE. • •&#13;
* Ott says almanac inaccurate&#13;
• From the Parking Lot: Drug Etiquette&#13;
• 'Fefu' very well done&#13;
* Volleyball team places second in state &#13;
2 Wednesday November 7, 1^79 Ranger&#13;
Violin virtuoso at UWP&#13;
Pinchas Zukerman, a classical&#13;
triple threat who has won&#13;
international fame as a violin&#13;
virtuoso, an equally distinguished&#13;
violist and a brilliant conductor,&#13;
will present the next Accent on&#13;
Enrichment Program at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Zukerman will perform in&#13;
concert with pianist Marc Neikrug&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 15, in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
The program will include works&#13;
for violin by Beethoven and Bartok&#13;
and a Brahms sonata for viola.&#13;
A limited number of tickets is&#13;
available through the Parkside&#13;
Union Information (553 - 2345).&#13;
Admission is $8.50.&#13;
Although he is only 31, he is&#13;
already ranked with the world's&#13;
greatest classical artists.&#13;
Praised by the London Times as&#13;
"absolutely without peer among&#13;
violinists" and by the British&#13;
journal Gramophone as "probably&#13;
the best living viola player,"&#13;
Zukerman regularly appears with&#13;
major international and American&#13;
orchestras as well as in recital. He&#13;
often shares recitals with Issac&#13;
Stern, Itzhak Perlman, Leonard&#13;
Rose, the Chamber Music Society&#13;
of Lincoln Center and his wife,&#13;
flutist Eugenia Zukerman.&#13;
In addition to his post as music&#13;
director of London's South Bank&#13;
Festival, he is in his first season as&#13;
musical director of the Saint Paul&#13;
Chamber Orchestra, succeeding&#13;
Dennis Russell Davies. The Saint&#13;
Paul Chamber Orchestra performed&#13;
in an AOE concert at&#13;
UW-P last season.&#13;
Other orchestras he has conducted&#13;
include the New York&#13;
Philharmonic, the Philadelphia&#13;
Orchestra, the Boston Symphony,&#13;
the Los Angeles Philharmonic and&#13;
the English Chamber Orchestra.&#13;
Born in Tel Aviv in 1948,&#13;
Zukerman began his musical&#13;
studies with his father and, at the&#13;
age of 8, entered the Israel&#13;
Conservatory in Tel Aviv, where he&#13;
studied with Ilona Feher. In 1961&#13;
What the hell is that?&#13;
f&#13;
ganger&#13;
Sue Stevens&#13;
Brian Felland&#13;
DOUR Kdenhauser&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Jeff Stevens&#13;
Kevin Padula&#13;
Mike Murphy&#13;
Kditor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Sports Kditor&#13;
Feature Kditor&#13;
News Kditor&#13;
Photo F^dilor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
om ( ooper Chairman of the Board&#13;
Vv&#13;
Repor'ers&#13;
Charles Clifton. Dave Cramer, Pete Cramer, Ginger Helgeson. Renee Jones. Mira&#13;
I nchanski. t ori Merten. Reed McMillan. Terry Peterson. Walt Remondini. Don&#13;
Scherrer, Denise Sobieski, Becky Waller, Karen Walters&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Mark Anderson, Curtis Moldenauer, Brian Passino&#13;
Layout&#13;
Mary Arnold. Nancy Hernandez, Nancy Mikaelian&#13;
Graphic Artists&#13;
Bill Stougaard. Michael Williams&#13;
Ad Representatives&#13;
I &lt;nda \ndcrsen. Dan Galbraith. Margarita Schonenberg&#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;
-sadcnuc year except during breaks and holidays. RANGER is printed by the Zion&#13;
Publishing Company, Zion. Illinois.&#13;
,^.luis.ion is Required for reprint of any portion of RANGER content. All&#13;
- rr.",p&gt; ndence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside WLLC&#13;
! , W! r"U 1!&#13;
l e tt ers to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard size&#13;
!&gt;"Pu a Mi r. 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 btiu 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;
— with the encouragement of&#13;
Isaac Stern and Pablo Casals, the&#13;
support of the ^merica-Israel&#13;
Cultural Foundation and scholarships&#13;
from the Juilliard and&#13;
Helena Rubinstein Foundation —&#13;
he came to the U.S. to study with&#13;
Ivan Galamian at The Juilliard&#13;
School.&#13;
In 1967, he won first prize in the&#13;
25th Leventritt Foundation International&#13;
Competition and received&#13;
instant world-wide acclaim.&#13;
His exuberant music-making&#13;
has been captured in a series of&#13;
four television specials titled&#13;
"Here to Make Music" currently&#13;
being shown on PBS. The series&#13;
documents Zukerman's life and&#13;
musical collaborations with Daniel&#13;
Barenboim, Jacqueline DuPre,&#13;
Zubin Mehta and Perlman. He has&#13;
been seen on numerous other TV&#13;
specials, including the recently&#13;
broadcast "Alexander's Bachtime&#13;
Band", where he performed with&#13;
Stern and Alexander Schneider.&#13;
continued from pa. 1&#13;
Einstein week&#13;
and (he Enrico Fermi Institute,&#13;
University of Chicago. Greenquist&#13;
103.&#13;
THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 15&#13;
3:30-4:30 P.M.&#13;
Lecture: "Einstein - He Walked a&#13;
Lonely Mile", Professor Robert&#13;
March, Department of Physics,&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Madison.&#13;
Greenquist 103.&#13;
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16&#13;
3:30-4:30 P.M.&#13;
Lecture: "Einstein's Dissent: The&#13;
Troublesome Quanta", Professor&#13;
Arthur Fine, Department of&#13;
Philosophy, University of Illinois,&#13;
Chicago Circle. Greenquist 103.&#13;
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17&#13;
Einstein Film Festival, Sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Physics Club.&#13;
9:00- 10:00 A.M.&#13;
"Albert Einstein: Education of a&#13;
Genius" Greenquist 103.&#13;
10:15- 12:15 A.M.&#13;
"Einstein's Universe." Greenquist&#13;
103. ,&#13;
Two films, especially prepared&#13;
for showing during The Einstein&#13;
Centennial are featured. The first,&#13;
"Albert Einstein: Education of a&#13;
Genius", is prepared by the&#13;
American Institute of Physics to&#13;
complement the contents of the&#13;
Exhibit. The second, "Einstein's&#13;
Universe", is a very successful&#13;
attempt by BBC/WGBH Television&#13;
to make Einstein's contributions&#13;
intelligible to the layman.&#13;
"Einstein's Universe" is based on&#13;
a book of the same title by Nigel&#13;
Calder and is narrated by Peter&#13;
Ustinov. The film festival is&#13;
sponsored byjhe Parkside Physics&#13;
Club.&#13;
'Skinny Skiers' organizing now&#13;
Parkside Nordic Ski Club&#13;
(PNSC) will be holding their first&#13;
meeting of the year on&#13;
Wednesday, November 7th at 7:45&#13;
p.m. in Molinaro 105. At this&#13;
meeting members will be&#13;
discussing upcoming events&#13;
planned for this year. All of the&#13;
events are open to the beginner as&#13;
well as the advanced skier.&#13;
The people currently involved&#13;
in the club are willing and capable&#13;
of helping anyone interested in&#13;
improving their cross-country&#13;
skiing techniques and to give&#13;
advice on some of the alternatives&#13;
to the beginner as to how to take&#13;
the first step toward cross-country&#13;
skiing.&#13;
There will be a movie shown&#13;
which depicts most of the&#13;
different types and styles of crosscountry&#13;
skiing called "skinny&#13;
skiing".&#13;
This year Parkside's Union will&#13;
be starting a rental program here&#13;
on campus. Mike Menzhuber, the&#13;
new Rec Center Manager will be&#13;
at the meeting to give an idea of&#13;
cost and hours which this service&#13;
will be available.&#13;
After all general business in&#13;
concluded, the meeting will&#13;
adjourn to Union 207 for a swap&#13;
and sell. Everyone is invited to&#13;
bring any used equipment to&#13;
Union 207 and barter away their&#13;
equipment over a couple of beers&#13;
provided free by the club.&#13;
This year the club is also going&#13;
to be charging two dollars for a&#13;
membership. This membership&#13;
will get you into all PNSC&#13;
activities at reduced rates, will&#13;
provide for more free beer at&#13;
meetings, and will be good for&#13;
reduced rates on rentals and more.&#13;
PNSC has been at Parkside now&#13;
for five seasons. Some of the&#13;
members have been skiing for&#13;
seven years.&#13;
The Farmers' Almanac is&#13;
predicting 200 inches of snow.&#13;
What better time to take that first&#13;
step toward cross-country skiing&#13;
and come to the meeting to find&#13;
out how to do it!&#13;
How do you feel about the 19 year&#13;
old drinking age in Wisconsin?&#13;
Scott Vankerkvoorde—Freshman&#13;
I think it's a good idea. 1 don't&#13;
think kids in high school should&#13;
drink.&#13;
Vince Anevicius—Freshman&#13;
I think it should be raised&#13;
higher. Personally I don't drink.&#13;
Chelle Phelps—Junior&#13;
I think it's a good idea. A lot of&#13;
kids in high school are still 18. But&#13;
if I was 18, I'd disagree.&#13;
Jim Wynstra—Sophomore&#13;
I don't think it would make any&#13;
difference. Kids'!! drink whether&#13;
they are 18. !Q, or 21.&#13;
Cindy lurco—Freshman&#13;
I think it's unfair in a way. If&#13;
you re considered an adult ai IS&#13;
there-will alwavs be someone who&#13;
wants io raise it higher and&#13;
Pam Carey — Freshman&#13;
v fi doesn't affect me one wav &lt;&#13;
the other. I don't think ii won&#13;
"'on m&lt;* if I wanted drink &#13;
Ranger Wednesday November 7, 1979 3&#13;
Macki speaks&#13;
on math theory&#13;
Prof. Jack Macki of the&#13;
University of Alberta (Edmonton.&#13;
Alberta, Canada) will present a&#13;
tree public lecture at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
on The Utility and Elegance of&#13;
Optimal Control Theory" at 2:30&#13;
p.m. on Friday. Nov. 9. His talk, at&#13;
the undergraduate level, deals with&#13;
the mathematics of self-corrective&#13;
systems such as animal muscle&#13;
control, movements of robots,&#13;
aircraft landing and missile&#13;
guidance systems.&#13;
UAW topic&#13;
for roundtable&#13;
"The UAW and the Auto&#13;
Industry Negotiations' will be the&#13;
topic of a talk in the Social&#13;
Science Roundtable series at UWParkside&#13;
by Jack Rice, international&#13;
representative of UAW&#13;
Region 10, at noon on Monday,&#13;
November 12, in the Campus&#13;
Union, room 106.. Roundtable&#13;
talks are free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
History students&#13;
meet on Tuesday&#13;
History students will meet&#13;
Tuesday, November 13 at 12:30&#13;
p.m. in Molinaro 111 to prepare a&#13;
petition for a Parkside chapter of&#13;
Phi Alpha Theta (the international&#13;
honor society in history)&#13;
and to discuss the presentation of&#13;
"The Informer," a film about&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Irish history to be shown Monday.&#13;
November 19 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
Molinaro 103. A discussion in&#13;
Molinaro 111 will follow the film.&#13;
Officers of Phi Alpha Thcta are&#13;
Maureen Funk, president; Gus&#13;
Sorenson, vice president; Kim&#13;
Campbell, secretary; Gary Lea,&#13;
treasurer; and Ray Fay, historian.&#13;
Anyone interested in history is&#13;
encouraged to attend the meeting&#13;
and the film as a history club is&#13;
also being formed. If unable to&#13;
attend or if additional information&#13;
concerning the history&#13;
club or the honorary is requested,&#13;
contact advisors Dr. Oliver&#13;
Hayward, Dr. John Buenker or&#13;
Dr. Angela Howard Zophy in the&#13;
Social Science office, ext. 2316.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
sponsors dinner&#13;
The Parkside Accounting Club&#13;
and the Division of Business and&#13;
Administrative Science are cosponsoring&#13;
the Annual Management&#13;
Accounting Dinner on&#13;
Ihursdav. November 15. at&#13;
Kilbourn Gardens.&#13;
Approximately 15 of Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin's major corporations&#13;
will be represented by their&#13;
presidents, vice-presidents, or&#13;
controllers. All attending students&#13;
will have an excellent opportunity&#13;
to meet and talk with industry&#13;
leaders in an informal setting.&#13;
Following cocktails at 6:00 p.m..&#13;
the agenda includes dinner, a&#13;
welcome by Jim Kettinger. Club&#13;
President, and also bv Chancellor&#13;
Guskin. Division Chairman Art&#13;
Dudycha will conclude with a brief&#13;
presentation on the current&#13;
developments in the business&#13;
program at U.W. Parkside.&#13;
Attendance will be limited to&#13;
business majors specializing in&#13;
accounting or finance and their&#13;
dates. Students may sign up in&#13;
MOLN 380. or with Jim Kettinger.&#13;
Darryl Heyden, Susie Crockett, or&#13;
Dr. Pryor. The $5 fee covering the&#13;
buffet dinner must be submitted to&#13;
any of the above mentioned Club&#13;
officers or Dr. Pryor by Nov. 10.&#13;
Attire appropriate tor a business&#13;
meeting is required at the dinner.&#13;
Child&#13;
Care Center&#13;
sponsors lectures&#13;
In observance of the International&#13;
Year of the Child, the&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center is&#13;
sponsoring a series of Guest&#13;
Lecturers. The first in the series is&#13;
Dr. Gregory Young, a Kenosha&#13;
pediatrician who will be speaking&#13;
to interested parents on Children's&#13;
Health. The lecture will be held on&#13;
Tuesday. November 6 from 7:00 -&#13;
8:00 pm in Tallent Hall, room 181..&#13;
There is no charge, but seating is&#13;
limited. Reservations may be made&#13;
by phone (553 - 2 227) or mail to&#13;
the Parkside Child Care Center.&#13;
Campus/Community Film Series&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
The fastest-growing Premium Beer&#13;
in America.&#13;
EIL E M AN S&#13;
rm On Tap&#13;
at&#13;
Union&#13;
Square&#13;
C MEIliMAN BREWING CO INC IA CROSSE WISCONSIN&#13;
The ShooTisT ANd STAqecoAch&#13;
Union Square Theater&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 11 7 pm&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 12 1:30 pm&#13;
Si .50 Single Admission&#13;
WISCONSIN CHFFSFS&#13;
FRFSH NUTS &amp; PRODUCE&#13;
DRICD FRUIT GRAINS&#13;
THF FOOD&#13;
CO-OP k&#13;
*ir&#13;
iffX&#13;
&#13;
/.&#13;
!/ ft* i U&#13;
^ . iuVU,.&#13;
%#£»&#13;
pib&gt;!-r&#13;
» .rv&#13;
U U H H ,&#13;
IS THC&#13;
PL^«&#13;
i.i,; .&#13;
VO i&#13;
;ifr J:M;&#13;
f&#13;
*!:. " ! • i&#13;
«' • ' \&#13;
k&#13;
; \ V&#13;
i :&#13;
'k \&#13;
It.-. ' '&#13;
1 : &lt;&#13;
&gt;' Hoi&#13;
( i f&#13;
FVV If V ~y"'A •&#13;
-&#13;
"-A-V&#13;
.0&#13;
/'&#13;
r " • x&#13;
Tis th e seoson to buy a membership in C.S.C. The&#13;
food co-op has great quality and excellent prices&#13;
on many ^ of the foods you'll need for the&#13;
upcoming holidays. And if ydur looking for ways&#13;
to cut your food bill and still provide your family&#13;
with nutritional meals, you can't beat the co-op&#13;
for it s selection of natural and organic foods. Stop&#13;
in and give a look around. We're located on the„&#13;
East side of Wood Rood between Tallent Hall and&#13;
Parkside Village.&#13;
One year student Hours: Mon 10 -6&#13;
memberships — S3.00 Tue., Wed., Thur. 10-10&#13;
Fri., Sat. 9-6 Sun. 12-5 &#13;
4 Wednesday November 7, 1979 Ranger&#13;
Off sa vs&#13;
Almanac inaccurate&#13;
by Mira Lochanski&#13;
Rumors have it that southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin is supposed to&#13;
receive 200 inches of snowfall this&#13;
winter. But how accurate is this&#13;
prediction? Armin J. Ott (Jim Ott),&#13;
full-time instructor at UW-Parkside&#13;
and part-time weatherman for&#13;
Channel 4, responded negatively.&#13;
"It is similar to me predicting a&#13;
sunny 102 degree day in&#13;
south-eastern Wisconsin in the&#13;
dead of winter," said Ott. "If you&#13;
take a look at the monthly weather&#13;
predictions such as in the Farmer's&#13;
Almanac, it is not always accurate.&#13;
Some of their answers are not&#13;
definite^ and fit only broad&#13;
categories."&#13;
Ott has been the week-end&#13;
weatherman for Channel 4 for four&#13;
years after schooling at UWMilwaukee&#13;
and a similar job at&#13;
Channel 18.&#13;
Most of Ott's weather predictions&#13;
are dependent on whether&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. at 62nd St.&#13;
Established in 1930&#13;
Jim Ott shows class just how much&#13;
snow we'll get this winter.&#13;
Photo by M. Anderson&#13;
such predictions are short or longterm.&#13;
When Ott makes a&#13;
short-term prediction (up to 24&#13;
hours), he mainly uses surface&#13;
maps and prior knowledge of&#13;
weather conditions. If a long-term&#13;
prediction is made, Ott relies on&#13;
the use of the computer. But Ott&#13;
did mention that computers do not&#13;
necessarily make correct predictions&#13;
either. "The monthly&#13;
computer outlook predicted above&#13;
normal precipitation in Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin, but in fact, we&#13;
had a dry September on record."&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
for&#13;
SPRING SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are seeking a degree&#13;
at UW-Parkside) should consult their academic adviser prior to&#13;
registration for Spring Semester. A Certification of Advising form,&#13;
signed by the adviser, is required for registration.&#13;
Spring Semester Course Schedules will be available on November 9.&#13;
November 12-21 has been designated as an academic advising&#13;
period, and advisers will make every effort to meet with you then.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
CONTACT YOUR ADVISER&#13;
FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
If you have any questions,&#13;
contact the Office of the Dean of Faculty,&#13;
348 Wyllie Library-Learning Center, 553-2144.&#13;
NOTE: Non-matriculant students (students not seeking a degree at UW-Parkside)&#13;
are exempt from this requirement.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Wednesday, November 7&#13;
MOVIE "Womanhouse" will be shown at 12 noon in MOLN 103 and at 7:30&#13;
pm in MOLN 144. Carol Lee Saffioti is the discussion moderator. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE at 1 p m in Union 104-106 featuring the lively music of George&#13;
Russell. Admission is free. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
SEMINAR '-'Post Partum Depression" by L. Kruckman, J. Craig, S. Svendsen&#13;
at 7:30 pm in Union 106. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
MEETING The Parkside Nordic Ski Club will meet at 7:45 pm in MOLN 105&#13;
to discuss upcoming events, show a movie, and info on Parkside's ski rental&#13;
program. A sell and swap session in Union 207 will immediately follow the&#13;
meeting. Free beer.&#13;
Thursday, November 8&#13;
PRACTICE The Volleyball Club will hold practice from 6 to 8 pm in the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Building. Ext. 5359.&#13;
LECTURE The Inter-Varsity Fellowship will hold a lecture lunch at noon in&#13;
Union 207. Speaker Paul Herbert will talk on "Faith Tested by Fire."&#13;
Friday, November 9&#13;
MUSIC at 2 pm in Union Square featuring "Xanadu". Admission is free.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
MOVIE "The Gauntlet" will be shown at 8 pm in the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
is $1.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, November 10&#13;
MEXIFEST starts at 6 pm in the Union Bazaar area. All seats have been sold.&#13;
MOVIES "Stagecoach" and "The Shootist" will be shown at 7 pm in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $1.50. The program is open to the public.&#13;
Sponsored by the Kinesis Film Series.&#13;
Sunday, November 11&#13;
MOVIES "Stagecoach" and "The Shootist" will be repeated at 1:30 pm in the&#13;
Union Cinema. The program is open to the public.&#13;
CONCERT at 3:30 pm in the Communication Arts Theatre featuring New&#13;
Music at Parkside with Harry Sturm and August Wegner. The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Monday, November 12&#13;
ROUNDTABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. Jack Rice, International Representative&#13;
of U.A.W. Region 10, will talk on "The UAW and the Auto&#13;
Industry Negotiations". The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
EXHIBIT on Einstein starts today through Saturday. The hours are 3:30 pm&#13;
until 5 pm in GR 103. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Tuesday, November 13&#13;
SEMINAR "Surviving Divorce" at 7 pm in MOLN 107. Please call ext. 2312&#13;
for more information. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
Rape aftermath&#13;
attack is to remain calm.&#13;
Memorize as much as possible&#13;
about the rapist—hair and eye&#13;
color, height, weight, facial&#13;
features, speech patterns,&#13;
clothes—and the surroundings,&#13;
time of day, an address, a car's&#13;
year, model, color, etc. As soon&#13;
as the rapist leaves, summon&#13;
help. Call the police. If at all&#13;
possible, jot down details about&#13;
the rapist and the attack or tell&#13;
someone else to make notes. Do&#13;
not alter the scene or your&#13;
person; don't straighten things,&#13;
change clothes, bath, douche, or&#13;
clean up at all. Doing so can&#13;
destroy valuable evidence. Get&#13;
to a hospital, either by yourself&#13;
or with a friend or the police.&#13;
Take a complete change of&#13;
clothes along. Clothes worn at&#13;
the time of the rape will be kept&#13;
as evidence.&#13;
Call Kenoshans Against Sexual&#13;
Assault, Inc., (658-1717) or&#13;
have a friend, the hospital, or&#13;
cont. on pg. 6&#13;
by Linda Marcussen&#13;
Note: The guest writer this&#13;
week is Linda Marcussen, cofounder&#13;
and Secretary of the&#13;
Board of Directors of KASA.&#13;
Any woman can be raped,&#13;
anytime, anywhere. She can&#13;
make herself less vulnerable by&#13;
taking precautions, but even&#13;
the best safety tactics can be&#13;
too little or too late.&#13;
The best way to survive an&#13;
NEED CREDIT?&#13;
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New in town/no references?&#13;
Erase bad debt records&#13;
Skip bills without ruining credit&#13;
Receive loans within weeks of beginning this program&#13;
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Mon-Sat&#13;
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BRUNCH&#13;
10:20 - 2&#13;
DINNER&#13;
Thurs-Sat&#13;
5-9&#13;
From the Parking Lot&#13;
Drug Etiquette&#13;
Ranger Wednesday November 7, . .1979 5&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Ivegot Pabst Blue Ribbon on my mind"&#13;
For every human activity, there&#13;
seems to be a code of conduct.&#13;
People are continuously being&#13;
labelled "acceptable" or "unacceptable,&#13;
based on their most&#13;
recent actions while under the&#13;
influence of drugs.&#13;
For instance, it is usually&#13;
acceptable tO~grind a cigarette out&#13;
in a n ashtray and it is usually unacceptable&#13;
to grind a cigarette out&#13;
in the palm of your host's hand.&#13;
The reason for this almost&#13;
universal policy is obvious.&#13;
There are even some subcultures&#13;
who proclaim abhorrence of&#13;
traditional WASP etiquette, that&#13;
label behavior of peers acceptable&#13;
or un; some of the most antietiquette&#13;
concepts, when conceived&#13;
by the human social mind, develop&#13;
an etiquette all their own.&#13;
Like every other human activity&#13;
that begins with a small congregation&#13;
of followers, and grows&#13;
slowly into an accepted practice,&#13;
the activities of the drug subculture&#13;
have evolved into conventions.&#13;
&#13;
Drug use and abuse is&#13;
supposedly the symbol of the&#13;
liberated 70's. Come on now.&#13;
We re all just as hung up now as&#13;
we ever were. We've just applied&#13;
old rules to a new game. We just&#13;
have to be loaded, high, or&#13;
tripping to exhibit our civilized&#13;
behavior.&#13;
The conventions of drug abuse&#13;
are simple enough, once you are&#13;
acquainted with them. It's not&#13;
some complicated Dear Miss&#13;
Manners: I have been cordially&#13;
invited to a Charity Ball for the&#13;
nephews of the grandfathers of the&#13;
veterans of the War. Can I wear&#13;
my leisure suit with my toupee?&#13;
No, the rules are much simpler.&#13;
First, never suggest usage of&#13;
certain substances unless you are&#13;
willing and prepared to offer&#13;
contribution of the substancefs) or&#13;
you are absolutely sure your&#13;
charismatic personality will carry&#13;
you through the rest of the&#13;
evening. Nobody likes a leech.&#13;
Certain substances cannot be&#13;
mixed politely, so don't do it. Most&#13;
druggies overlook the obvious&#13;
health hazards, so etiquette does&#13;
too. When you mix anisette and&#13;
angel dust, you will become a real&#13;
menace to polite society. You will&#13;
become what is known to liqueur&#13;
lovers as a Devil Diluter, and what&#13;
is known to dust lovers as a&#13;
Liqueur Licker. Either of these two&#13;
labels, once you've got them&#13;
hanging around your neck like a&#13;
price tag on a Christmas gift, can&#13;
sure make it tough to be&#13;
acceptable by anyone's standards.&#13;
It you want to do any unpopular&#13;
— i.e. unacceptable — drug, keep&#13;
it quiet. Don't blab that you've just&#13;
done a whole bottle of cellulite diet&#13;
pills, or that you know where you&#13;
can get together with a crate of&#13;
Sinu-Tab. You will b e laughed at.&#13;
It you a re male, it is acceptable&#13;
while under the influence, to talk a&#13;
lot, become philosophical, get&#13;
depressed, smile continuously, or&#13;
attempt seductions with classic&#13;
lines like "Did you ever listen to&#13;
Barry Manilow on a waterbed?"&#13;
If you are female, you may&#13;
giggle a lot, discuss personal&#13;
matters with strangers, become&#13;
enlightened religiously or get&#13;
horny enough to talk to men who&#13;
listen to Barry Manilow anywhere.&#13;
So, don't feel as if you've fallen&#13;
into a time warp that dropped you&#13;
right into the middle of a 1950's&#13;
cocktail party the next time you&#13;
share a joint with a few friends. It's&#13;
nothing to be ashamed of. After&#13;
all, you're only human.&#13;
'Fefu' very well done&#13;
by Steve M. Dankert&#13;
This 1977 winner of the&#13;
OBIE for distinguished&#13;
playwriting and direction&#13;
appeared at the Parkside&#13;
Theatre October 25th through&#13;
29th. On the whole the audience&#13;
seemed to enjoy the production.&#13;
The play, set in the 1930's,&#13;
evolves around the character&#13;
Fefu (played by Donna&#13;
Dutchings) and various friends&#13;
of hers. Their coming together&#13;
is a result of organizing for a&#13;
fund drive.&#13;
As the play progresses one&#13;
comes to see more of each of&#13;
Fefu's friends' background and&#13;
personality. Each of her friends&#13;
may be a portrayal of one of&#13;
eight facets of personality&#13;
contained within every woman,&#13;
any one of which may surface at&#13;
some time. (This could certainly&#13;
account for the stereotypical&#13;
unpredictability of women by&#13;
men or by themselves). Two&#13;
aspects of the character Fefu's&#13;
actions in the play is her&#13;
intelligence and her wish to&#13;
avoid being molded into a life&#13;
portrayed by her friend&#13;
Christina (played by Mary-Beth&#13;
Kelleher). Christina, a&#13;
conventional, low-keyed,&#13;
matronly type, is an apparent&#13;
antithesis of Fefu.&#13;
The whole thrust of the play&#13;
seems to be this fight against&#13;
the conventional social molds&#13;
put on women, and the&#13;
consequences of going against&#13;
the flow are brought out in the&#13;
character Julia (played by&#13;
Sarah Spencer). Julia, who is&#13;
now confined to a wheelchair as&#13;
a result of a strange hunting&#13;
accident, was found to be,&#13;
before the accident, of the same&#13;
personality and outlook as&#13;
Fefu. Julia maintains that she&#13;
would have died, ekcept that&#13;
she recanted her wish to go&#13;
against the grain of society. She&#13;
was therefore allowed by the&#13;
"Judges" to live, though in&#13;
other than perfect health. These&#13;
Judges keep very strict control&#13;
over her thoughts and&#13;
attitudes, and threaten death if&#13;
Julia ever strays from the&#13;
beaten path again. These&#13;
Judges represent the whole&#13;
social environment : rules,&#13;
customs, and norms by which&#13;
society is supposed to reward&#13;
and punish women.&#13;
Julia helps Fefu a little in&#13;
finally realizes that she too is&#13;
travelling the same rough road.&#13;
Fefu's cognizance of the&#13;
Judges' identity is fatal. The&#13;
Judges impute this knowledge&#13;
to Julia and, as a result of&#13;
breaking the "rules" Julia is&#13;
fatally wounded by another&#13;
accident of the same bizarre&#13;
nature, as the first one.&#13;
A very well done play. Mood&#13;
was set well, and facial&#13;
expression and poise fit the&#13;
sense of the various situations.&#13;
The other actors deserve to be&#13;
acknowledged for the fine job of&#13;
acting. These are: Mary Ann&#13;
Lulewicz, who played Cindy;&#13;
Patricia B. Casciaro, who&#13;
played Emma; Mary Stankus,&#13;
who portrayed Paula; Gail G.&#13;
Ross, who portrayed Sue; and&#13;
Rita R. Bislew, who played&#13;
unde Cecilia. rstanding this, and Fefu ^ecina.&#13;
I;*******************************^^&#13;
PARKSIDE PREPARE YOURSELVES.&#13;
THE NCSA SKI WEEK&#13;
Jan. 1-9, 1980 to&#13;
Big Sky Montana&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
* (only 11 spaces left]&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
$50&#13;
due date:&#13;
Nov. 9&#13;
$250 includes:&#13;
bus transportation&#13;
lodging&#13;
lift tickets&#13;
parties &amp;. races&#13;
f\ sig " &gt; yn n up y in HI Union c20u 9 u&#13;
***************************^^^,1^ &#13;
6 Wednesday November 7, 1979 Ranger&#13;
classifieds&#13;
policy&#13;
1. All 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;
for sale&#13;
Diamond Ring: 1/3 ct. Marquise;&#13;
$950 appraisal, sell for $400/best&#13;
offer. Phone 637-1598.&#13;
Ampeg V-2 amplifier. Excellent&#13;
condition. Best offer. Call Jim at&#13;
632-7853.&#13;
Ford Rims 15". NewCall&#13;
657-9435.&#13;
-$10 each.&#13;
Car: 1971 Ambassador Wagon.&#13;
Power, sharp, NO RUST. Must&#13;
sell. Phone 694-6693.&#13;
personals&#13;
Denise Sobieski—Happy 20th&#13;
Birthday! Your favorite fan.&#13;
CORRECTION. Son ot tne&#13;
| Welder — Rebel! Protect your&#13;
home!&#13;
Jani Kreh — What's this Gary&#13;
got that I don't? Little John.&#13;
Steve K., I think you're cute!&#13;
Introduce yourself. Jani.&#13;
Hope Halloween was a big bang&#13;
-signed the Parkside Bomber.&#13;
Jani Kre, Super Destroyer needs&#13;
to be blown away. Ax.&#13;
Roger, Your Miller's gone. Now&#13;
you owe me a dance.&#13;
Borchard T Speed, would like to&#13;
race with you. Doctor Dodge.&#13;
Animal Lover: Sat., 11-10-79,&#13;
7:30 p.m. J.O.C.&#13;
Bunny Love is actually KRATACHI-CHI-VIL,&#13;
in drag.&#13;
I PHELTA THI challenges the&#13;
Animals.&#13;
Jerry B. listens to Shaun Cassidy&#13;
„ ._reoords incoqnito&#13;
Truck and Sad Jack-O-Lantern;&#13;
Mark Pleads — Totally Wasted!&#13;
OUR BOOKSTORE — Not unlike&#13;
tourist trap with bankers hours&#13;
USELESS.&#13;
Reed, let's do it (Mad City) again&#13;
sometime. Mary.&#13;
Who and what are the Animals?&#13;
I PHELTA THI.&#13;
Jani K., the animals are trying to&#13;
frame us — Steve Krat.&#13;
The Animals don't know what&#13;
partying is. I PHELTA THI.&#13;
Joe, it's time for animal sandwich,&#13;
be the meat! Oleo.&#13;
Ryan, sometimes I hate your&#13;
guts. Phantom from above.&#13;
snaron Hopkins, you can dance&#13;
at my house anytime. Classifiedcreeper.&#13;
&#13;
Hey Armin, How's the weather?&#13;
It OTT be snowing now!&#13;
Goldie—I wish you an early&#13;
transmission failure about 3:30&#13;
p.m. on tne 894 Interchange from&#13;
I-94 to Madison — Moldy.&#13;
Yes it was. Hot Pammy.&#13;
THE ROUND TABLE-May a&#13;
'62 Rambler roll oyer and desert&#13;
you Mike! C.J., J.S., J.S., AT &amp;&#13;
M.K.&#13;
Ron H., go for it, you'll only lose&#13;
your virginity.&#13;
J- Lev — Surprise! In 9 months&#13;
you'll be a...!!? Pub &amp; Grub.&#13;
Ron, everyone knows Dodge? will&#13;
DIE. Your car's a DREAM. r'FC.&#13;
Thanks Army — in three months&#13;
I'll be scrubbing toilets —&#13;
guaranteed!&#13;
miscellaneous&#13;
Part-time assistant to attorney&#13;
in general practice. Long term.&#13;
Must be intelligent, aggressive,&#13;
eneryetic, and independent.&#13;
Hours flexible, 8 to 16 per week.&#13;
°refer person with law office,&#13;
business background or college&#13;
degree. Typing skills not&#13;
necessary, but preferred. Submit&#13;
resume to Robert Michelson, 834&#13;
Main, Racine, Wl 53403.&#13;
Typing wanted in home bysecretary.&#13;
Reports, term papers,&#13;
etc. Reasonable rates. Phone&#13;
654-1688.&#13;
Female wanted to share apartment.&#13;
South Kenosha. Rent $130&#13;
each. 1 utility. Occupancy Nov. 1.&#13;
Call 694-3219 after 2:30.&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads&#13;
to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
deadline: every thursday at 10 am&#13;
STUDENT-STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE&#13;
name,&#13;
ssno.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
WLLC D139&#13;
LP Review&#13;
'Restless Nights'&#13;
by Charles Clifton&#13;
Karla Bonoff — RESTLESS&#13;
NIGHTS, produced by Kenny&#13;
Edwards.&#13;
This being only her second&#13;
recording to date, Karla Bonoff&#13;
has developed into a sensitive&#13;
writer and singer. She allows her&#13;
voice to gently blend in with the&#13;
lyrics — not over power them. On&#13;
many of the songs she sounds like&#13;
a younger Carly Simon.&#13;
"Restless Nights," the title track&#13;
on side one, contains words&#13;
conveying feelings many of us have&#13;
felt before. She sings of a woman&#13;
who has tried to be faithful to an&#13;
old love, but to her new lover she&#13;
confesses:&#13;
Those restless nights&#13;
So warm and wild&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selection&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIO N&#13;
10:00 a.m. -4:00 p.m.&#13;
BUTTERSCOTCH DISCS&#13;
STARLIGHT MINTS&#13;
ROOT BEER BARRELS&#13;
CINNAMON DISCS&#13;
COFFEE CANDY&#13;
SOUR BALLS&#13;
JELLY BEANS&#13;
CANDY CORN&#13;
GUM DROPS&#13;
SALTED CASHEWS&#13;
SPANISH PEANUTS&#13;
NATURAL PISTACHIOS&#13;
CHOC. COVERED PEANUTS&#13;
MALTED MILK BALLS&#13;
CHOCOLATE STARS&#13;
CHOC. COVERED RAISINS&#13;
CHOC. PEANUT CLUSTERS&#13;
ASSORTED TOFFEE&#13;
BRIDGE MIX&#13;
M &amp; M (type) CANDIES&#13;
SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
ORANGE SLICES&#13;
NATURE NUT MIX&#13;
BLANCHED PEANUTS&#13;
RED PISTACHIOS&#13;
PEPPERMINT KISSES&#13;
TOOTSIE POPS&#13;
COCONUT TOASTIES&#13;
VANILLA CARAMELS&#13;
BUTTER RUM DISCS&#13;
COUGH DROPS&#13;
SUGAR FREE GUM&#13;
BREATH MINTS&#13;
JAW BREAKERS&#13;
CHERRY WHIPS&#13;
IMPORTED FRENCH CANDIES&#13;
GIANT LOLLYPOPS&#13;
CARMEL CORN&#13;
And More&#13;
SPECIALS OF&#13;
THE MONTH&#13;
25%&#13;
OFF&#13;
BLANCHED PEANUTS &amp;&#13;
BUTTERSCOTCH DISCS&#13;
Carlo Bonoff&#13;
His touch was ice&#13;
Your love was fire.&#13;
From there she moves into a real&#13;
tear-jerker, in which a woman&#13;
finds out she has lost her love the&#13;
hard way, "The Letter."&#13;
She wrote that you said&#13;
You needed her to face the&#13;
world&#13;
I wish that it could all just be&#13;
. erased&#13;
I can't believe shccould take my&#13;
place.&#13;
The LP doesn't contain any&#13;
blaring arrangements that would&#13;
overshadow Bonoff s magic touch&#13;
with the words — just an extra&#13;
attraction that adds to the beauty&#13;
of this album. Karla Bonoff&#13;
RESTLESS NIGHTS certainly&#13;
won't cause any restless nights.&#13;
Best Cuts: "Restless Nights,"&#13;
"The Letter," "Baby Don't Go,"&#13;
"Loving You," and "The Water Is&#13;
Wide."&#13;
'tyacvu&#13;
Cont. from pg. 4&#13;
the police do so for you.&#13;
Advocates are on duty 24-hours&#13;
a day. The advocate can be with&#13;
you at the hospital to explain&#13;
the various tests and&#13;
procedures involved in the&#13;
exam and, if necessary, defend&#13;
your right to kind and sensitive&#13;
treatment.&#13;
The decision to talk to police&#13;
is entirely the victims'. While&#13;
KASA wants to see every&#13;
attack reported, they do not&#13;
insist nor do they withhold&#13;
their services from someone&#13;
who decides not to report. If&#13;
police are involved, the&#13;
advocate can usually be present&#13;
during the interrogation and&#13;
any subsequent questioning. If&#13;
a rape case goes to court,&#13;
KASA continues to provide&#13;
companionship, moral support,&#13;
and information regarding the&#13;
DA's office and the often confusing&#13;
and intimidating judicial&#13;
process.&#13;
KASA's services arc available&#13;
at no cost. They are&#13;
committed to alleviating the&#13;
suffering of sexual assault&#13;
victims and helping them once&#13;
again gain control of their lives.&#13;
Red's Roller Rink&#13;
7220 67th Stree '"~r&#13;
" *~"r&#13;
ADULTS ONLY&#13;
SKATING SESSION&#13;
SUNDAY EVENINGS&#13;
7:30-10:30 PM&#13;
MtiNi be 18 or older&#13;
Admission $2.00&#13;
Skate Rental .75 &#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Ranger ' Wednesday November 7, 1979 7&#13;
Women second in state&#13;
Photo by D. Edenhauser&#13;
Tess Manzano serves the ball for Parkside during Parkside's victory&#13;
game against Carthage. The UW-Parkside team lost to Carthage later in&#13;
the tournament.&#13;
by Donald Scherrer&#13;
The Parkside women's volleyball&#13;
team gave a superb&#13;
performance Saturday, losing the&#13;
final and vital match of the Ranger&#13;
hosted Division II volleyball&#13;
tournament of the Wisconsin&#13;
Women's Intercollegiate Athletic&#13;
Conference (WWIAC) to&#13;
Carthage.&#13;
Parkside, in the first match.&#13;
Cross-country&#13;
took two in a row from Marquette,&#13;
winning 15 - 10 and 17 - 15.&#13;
Northland then fell to Carroll&#13;
College in two out of three&#13;
matches, and next loss two straight&#13;
to Marquette.&#13;
Carthage then defeated Carroll&#13;
in two straight, and while still hot,&#13;
took two away from Parkside,&#13;
15 - 16, 15 - 11.&#13;
Next it was Marquette over&#13;
Carroll in two straight, and&#13;
Parkside over Marquette 15 - 10&#13;
and 15 - 12. Parkside then&#13;
marched over Carthage in three&#13;
straight games. 15 - 10. 15 - 4.&#13;
15 - 13. but lost the final and vital,&#13;
hotly contested match to Carthage&#13;
in five games: 15 - 8. 2 - 15. 6 - 15,&#13;
17 - 15. and 15 - 10..&#13;
Overall. Parkside's women's&#13;
volleyball team put in a strong&#13;
showing in a long and grueling&#13;
day. and most likely lost the final&#13;
match to Carthage because of&#13;
mass fatigue, since Carthage had&#13;
played only three matches before&#13;
this final challenge, whereas&#13;
Parkside played five.&#13;
Carthage now goes to the&#13;
regional competition of the&#13;
Association for Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics for Women (AIAW)&#13;
November 16-17 in Dayton. Ohio.&#13;
Had Parkside won, they would&#13;
now have a place in the&#13;
competition. Currently there arc&#13;
six state champs, one host school,&#13;
and one bid. Coach Linda&#13;
Henderson has put in for that bid&#13;
but will not know the results of her&#13;
request until Sunday.&#13;
I his leaves Parkside with a&#13;
29-22- 1 record for the season.&#13;
Henderson remains optimistic for&#13;
her team s chance of getting the&#13;
bid. and cited the superior&#13;
performance of her athletes and&#13;
the great attendance and support&#13;
of the tans for the team's par&#13;
excellence.&#13;
Team gears up for nationals&#13;
by Walt Remondini&#13;
After a season abounding in&#13;
grueling practices and tough races,&#13;
the Parkside men's cross country&#13;
team is now gearing up for the&#13;
culmination of the years work, the&#13;
NAIA Nationals to be held here at&#13;
Parkside this Saturday. November&#13;
10.&#13;
A good warmup for the Ranger&#13;
team came on Saturday, October&#13;
27th when they participated in the&#13;
NCAA Division II meet at Eastern&#13;
Illinois University. The meet&#13;
carried added importance because&#13;
the top five individuals and top&#13;
four teams in the meet wbuld&#13;
qualify for the Division II National&#13;
meet to be held this year in&#13;
Riverside, California.&#13;
Parkside, however, was able to&#13;
do no better than eleventh, a very&#13;
respectable finish in a competitive&#13;
field that included a total of&#13;
thirty-three teams.&#13;
The top finishers for the&#13;
Rangers,were Bill Werve who was&#13;
31st overall and Dave Mueller,&#13;
who finished 49th.&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa's primary&#13;
objective now is for his team to run&#13;
well in their final meet with the&#13;
hopes of improving upon last&#13;
year's 19th place finish.&#13;
It would be a fitting conclusion&#13;
to what, overall, was a verv&#13;
promising year for a young but&#13;
rapidly improving Ranger team.&#13;
~l&#13;
^ fj! : - i *-; &gt; v Jt&#13;
Presents&#13;
OLD STYLE ^&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
Featuring&#13;
Wood Song&#13;
Union Sauare&#13;
November 14, 8pm&#13;
Free Admission&#13;
A&#13;
Photo by B. Possino&#13;
Steve Jacob (Music Dept.) reaches for the pass as Ranger players&#13;
take the chase during Saturday's touch football game between the&#13;
Ranger and the Music Department. Ranger won.. .of course.&#13;
isn't it about&#13;
(nne.&#13;
-i i i l 'l i l i!!&#13;
you got your card?&#13;
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT YOUR&#13;
BANK OR THE UNION INFO CENTER&#13;
V&#13;
ISN'T IT ABOUT TIME&#13;
TO CHECK OUT&#13;
A LIFE INSURANCE SALES CAREER?&#13;
Ami, lon tp siinu'lhifu; while|&#13;
Merest, d,„ ah',, i „su, „ K , s,lhnK ,&#13;
&lt; h „ L mil on , , „ Ht c Ixm. „|,|ii;ali„n&#13;
Make ,,n appointment ( omo S(&gt;(&lt; (js,&#13;
Donald J. Brink, CLU District Agent - Racine 632-2731&#13;
Gene F. Soens, CLU District Agent - Kenosha 654-5316&#13;
The Quiet Company&#13;
NOK I HWI S 11 K\ \U IP\| HI) MIIWAlIkH \ML&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Puerto&#13;
Vallarta&#13;
Mexico&#13;
* A; * 'V&#13;
PAN AM&#13;
Semester Break January 3-10, 1980&#13;
$339 COMPLETE&#13;
LIMITED SPACE - SIGN-UP&#13;
DEADLINE NOV. 30&#13;
&lt;150 DEPOSIT R EQUIRED)&#13;
- For application lorms or additio nal intonation&#13;
contact: Parkside Union Office 553-2200 &#13;
8 Wednesday November 7, 1979 Ranger&#13;
W. Burman sets&#13;
new course record&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
With the growing success of&#13;
Parkside's cross-country program&#13;
on the men's side, a tradition of&#13;
good athletes being produced by&#13;
the coaches is on the rise. The&#13;
women are also establishing a&#13;
tradition of their own that started&#13;
with Kim Merritt a few years ago.&#13;
Although the quantity of&#13;
runners on the distaff side is&#13;
lacking, certainly the quality is&#13;
excellent. Freshman sensation&#13;
Wendy Burman is the main reason&#13;
for success this season.&#13;
Last weekend Miss^ Burman,&#13;
along with teammate Barb&#13;
Osborne took part in the&#13;
Schalinske named&#13;
1979-80 golf MVP&#13;
Todd Schalinske, a sophomore&#13;
from Racine (Horlick), has been&#13;
named most valuable player on&#13;
the 1979-80 UW-Parkside golf&#13;
team, Coach Steve Stephens&#13;
announced.&#13;
Schalinske, who was Parkside's&#13;
top golfer in ten rounds this year,&#13;
averaged 79.4 strokes per round in&#13;
leading UW-P to a fifth place&#13;
finish in the NA1A District 14&#13;
Tournament.&#13;
He was also awarded his second&#13;
letter as was Brian Graham, also a&#13;
sophomore from Horlick.&#13;
Graham was picked by his teammates&#13;
as captain of the squad.&#13;
Other letterwinners, all winning&#13;
awards for the first time, are Oak&#13;
Creek freshman Mark Peterson;&#13;
Racine (Green Bay West) junior&#13;
Mike Redfearn; Perrysburg&#13;
(Genoa), Ohio, freshman Tim&#13;
Rudey; and Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
freshman Bob Sobol.&#13;
Without&#13;
adequate&#13;
sportswriters&#13;
our athletes&#13;
don't get the&#13;
recognition&#13;
they greatly&#13;
deserve.&#13;
Contribute to&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
athletic c&lt;&#13;
| tradition&#13;
md join _&#13;
I m r team.&#13;
needs&#13;
_ sportswriters.&#13;
I&#13;
Association for Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics for Women (AIAW)&#13;
midwest regional cross-country&#13;
meet at Michigan State University&#13;
in East Lansing, Michigan. The&#13;
5,000 meter race attracted the top&#13;
runners and teams from Wisconsin,&#13;
Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,&#13;
Ohio and West Virginia.&#13;
Although only 28 girls competed&#13;
in her division, Burman finished&#13;
ahead of some of the best runners&#13;
in the midwest. Each runner had&#13;
to qualify in regional competition&#13;
to enter the race.&#13;
Burman, a freshman from Fon&#13;
du Lac (Goodrich) won the event&#13;
while setting a- new course record&#13;
with a time of 18:19. Coach Bob&#13;
Lawson called this race 'probably&#13;
the best race of her life.'&#13;
Sophomore Barb Osborne from&#13;
Kenosha finished the race in 14th&#13;
place. Both girls qualified for the&#13;
AIAW national meet to be held&#13;
November 17 at Florida State&#13;
University in Tallahassee.&#13;
"Wendy is such a great&#13;
competitor that she is a pleasure to&#13;
coach." added Lawson.&#13;
Coaches rounding&#13;
up tracksters now&#13;
With the coming of winter just&#13;
around the corner, coaches are&#13;
scurring around readying their&#13;
teams for the upcoming men's and&#13;
women's track seasons.&#13;
Official practice begins on the&#13;
26th of November, but all those&#13;
interested should get in touch with&#13;
the coach as soon as possible.&#13;
Barb Lawson is the women's&#13;
track coach and she can be&#13;
reached at 553-2257 or her office&#13;
in room 131 in the P.E. Building.&#13;
Bob Lawson and Lucian Rosa are&#13;
the men's coaches. Lawson can be&#13;
reached at 553-2153 or in P.E.&#13;
139. Rosa's number is 553-2310.&#13;
Wendv Burman&#13;
Photo by B. Passino&#13;
Exceptional&#13;
Opportunity&#13;
for learning experience.&#13;
Humanity student, English&#13;
major preferred, to&#13;
take on walks and read&#13;
to retired college professor.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 694-2251.&#13;
presents&#13;
cfint Eastwood&#13;
in&#13;
GAUNTLET&#13;
Union&#13;
Cinema&#13;
Fri. Nov. 9 8:00 pm&#13;
Sun. Nov. 11 7:30 pm&#13;
Admission $1.50&#13;
Mini&#13;
vacation?&#13;
Weekends&#13;
were made&#13;
forMicheloh&#13;
By A NHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. IOUIS • SINCE 1896&#13;
Distributed by E.F. MAORI GRAND&#13;
1831 -55th St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wise.&#13;
658-3553&#13;
Michelob&#13;
NOW AVAILABLE "ON TAP" AT UNION SQUARE </text>
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              <text>Parkside Village up for grabs</text>
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              <text>Wednesday October 31, 1979&#13;
tfW-P bids low&#13;
"IP University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Vol. 8 No.&#13;
Parkside Village up for grabs&#13;
by Denise Sobieski&#13;
The question of university&#13;
owned housing has been in the air&#13;
for several years here at U.W.-&#13;
Parkside. One place to look for&#13;
available housing for the future is&#13;
Parkside Village, right across the&#13;
street from the university.&#13;
When Parkside was constructed&#13;
an agreement was made between&#13;
the university and the owner of&#13;
Parkside Village, Emil Abendroth.&#13;
The agreement was that the&#13;
campus couldn't have any housing&#13;
developments for seven years.&#13;
More than seven years has passed&#13;
and the university has been&#13;
approached by the owner to make&#13;
bids on the Parkside Village.&#13;
Although Parkside Village is not&#13;
officially for sale, as Mr.&#13;
Abendroth stated, the University&#13;
has been asked to place a bid. The&#13;
starting price of $4 million dollars,&#13;
based on the cost of new&#13;
construction, is too steep for the&#13;
University. Since the University&#13;
has no revenue, any housing would&#13;
have to be purchased using federal&#13;
funds or by working out a land&#13;
contract.&#13;
A H.U.D. loan is hard to get as&#13;
Chancellor Guskin explained. As&#13;
of yet the University has not gone&#13;
in and looked into the matter, but&#13;
is keeping an eye on U.W.-Green&#13;
Bay, who is in a similar situation.&#13;
The University of Green Bay is&#13;
purchasing a housing facility&#13;
under a government loan with 3%&#13;
interest. U.W .-Parkside is waiting&#13;
to see how the Green Bay situation&#13;
turns out. At the present time,&#13;
U.W.-Parkside is not proceeding&#13;
to make a decision.&#13;
There are several factors to&#13;
consider before purchasing Parkside&#13;
Village. Is there a need to&#13;
purchase a facility such as&#13;
Parkside Village for University&#13;
housing? "We don't know, quite&#13;
frankly, how many students want&#13;
housing," said Chancellor A1&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Presently the occupancy in&#13;
Parkside Village is low. Maybe&#13;
students who have lived in the&#13;
Village previously have moved to&#13;
apartments of better quality and&#13;
relatively lower rental costs.&#13;
Construction in many of the&#13;
buildings is poor, especially in the&#13;
wooden buildings appropriately&#13;
labeled "cracker boxes." The little&#13;
time and effort spent in&#13;
construction of the apartments is&#13;
evident. The buildings seem to&#13;
have little insulation. Apartments&#13;
without individual adjustable&#13;
heaters for each room too often&#13;
have to generate their own heat,&#13;
which can be fun for a few hours,&#13;
but it doesn't comply with housing&#13;
health standards. The wooden&#13;
apartments have attractive wooden&#13;
beams, but aren't the same boards&#13;
that are supported by the beams&#13;
the same ones that are the upstairs&#13;
neighbor's floor?&#13;
The maintenance is poor. Last&#13;
winter in one apartmentr leaks in&#13;
the ceiling did not get fixed.Jhey&#13;
were discovered while one of the&#13;
occupants felt drops of water&#13;
falling on his face while in bed.&#13;
An old woter heoter s.ts in the middle of the lawn at Parks.de V.lloge&#13;
There are problems in winter&#13;
because the parking lot isn't&#13;
cleared of snow often enough.&#13;
Stairs and sidewalks are not&#13;
adequately shoveled; thick ice&#13;
develops V&gt;n the wooden stairs.&#13;
There is sufficient maintenance to&#13;
cut the lawn in spring and&#13;
summer. More could be done to&#13;
take care of the nice outer&#13;
landscaping, but that.no doubtjis&#13;
the result of neglect by the&#13;
students.&#13;
Another question is whether or&#13;
not purchasing Parkside Village is&#13;
a worthwhile investment. The&#13;
University hasn't assessed the&#13;
Village. In its present state&#13;
Parkside Village wouldn't meet&#13;
University state code. Reconstruction&#13;
and repair costs may be too&#13;
high to feasibly manage the&#13;
purchase.&#13;
The nature of the facility would&#13;
have to be altered. One of the&#13;
possibilitie s is to change the&#13;
apartment complex to a dorm-like&#13;
facility. Food could be purchased&#13;
with tickets at the Union? or&#13;
Tallent Hall could be used; or a&#13;
cafeteria could be constructed&#13;
inside one of the apartment&#13;
buildings. The possibilities are&#13;
numerous.&#13;
Other considerations are additional&#13;
expenses that would have to&#13;
be included, such as staff advisors,&#13;
security, and physical plant.&#13;
Would it be fair to get Segregated&#13;
Fees for so few? Plus,consider all&#13;
photo by C. Moldenauer&#13;
the extra maintenance needed to&#13;
keep the standards high.&#13;
There's little doubt that a&#13;
housing complex would advocate&#13;
more campus activities. "As a&#13;
whole. It wouM Ko jjnnA Foe&#13;
campus." Carla Stoffle also added&#13;
that money and the quality of the&#13;
buildings were the major considerations.&#13;
&#13;
Chancellor A1 Guskin is willing&#13;
to explore the possibilities of&#13;
Parkside Village. But there is no&#13;
hurry. If it is bought,all the good&#13;
for the campus, but the problems&#13;
involved — is there a real need for&#13;
housing, lack of funds, meeting&#13;
building standards, naming only a&#13;
few — are a definite slow down to&#13;
the purchase of a housing complex&#13;
for U.W.-Parkside.&#13;
Internationally known philosopher.&#13;
Max Black speaks here 31st &amp; 1st&#13;
Internationally-known philosopher&#13;
Max Black will give two&#13;
public lectures during a visit to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
campus next week. Black is an&#13;
emeritus professor of Cornell&#13;
University where for many years he&#13;
was Susan Linn Sage Professor of&#13;
Philosophy and Director of its&#13;
Program on Humanities, Science .&#13;
and Technology and Andrew D.&#13;
White Professors-at-Large&#13;
Program.&#13;
Black will speak on "The&#13;
Elusiveness of Rationality" at 7:30&#13;
p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 31, in&#13;
the parkside Union Theater and&#13;
on "A New Look at the Prisoner's&#13;
Dilemma" at 6:30 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 1, in Communication&#13;
Arts Bldg. Room 129. The&#13;
Wednesday program will be&#13;
followed by a reception in the&#13;
Union Bazaar. The talks are&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
In his long career as a teacher&#13;
and scholar, Black has won a wide&#13;
reputation for his studies on&#13;
philosophy of language, philosophy&#13;
of science and mathematics,&#13;
philosophical logic, theory of&#13;
knowledge and metaphysics. His&#13;
penchant for applying philosophy&#13;
to general intellectual issues in&#13;
contemporary society has attracted&#13;
a broad general audience to his&#13;
work.&#13;
A past president of the&#13;
American Philosophical Society,&#13;
Black has been a visiting professor&#13;
at Oxford and Cambridge Universities&#13;
in Great Britain, Princeton&#13;
University, Stanford. University's&#13;
Center for Advanced Study in the&#13;
Behavioral Sciences, Hebrew&#13;
University in Israel and Kyoto&#13;
University in Japan. He also has&#13;
chaired All-India and All-Japan&#13;
Philosophical Conferences.&#13;
His books include "Language&#13;
and Philosophy," "The Nature of&#13;
Mathematics," "Critical Thinking,"&#13;
"Models and Metaphors,"&#13;
"A Cdmpanian to Wittgenstein's&#13;
Tractatus," "Caveats and&#13;
Critiques," 'Margins of Precision"&#13;
and "The Labyrinth of&#13;
Language." His articles have&#13;
appeared in such prestigious&#13;
journals as Philosophical Review,&#13;
MIND, Bulletin of the Atomic&#13;
Scientists and many others.&#13;
He is a member of the American&#13;
Academy of Arts and Sciences,&#13;
Aristotlean Society, International&#13;
Institute of Philosophy and the&#13;
Association of Symbolic Logic.&#13;
IT %&#13;
INSIDE. . .&#13;
• Spook story&#13;
• Rape misgivings&#13;
• Back to the land&#13;
• Tennis team&#13;
second &#13;
2 Wednesday October 31, 1979 Ranger&#13;
To the Editor.&#13;
Editorial&#13;
needs&#13;
examining&#13;
On October 17 an editorial was&#13;
written that should be examined.&#13;
The article was about the violence&#13;
that occured at Seabrook during&#13;
an antinuclear demonstration. The&#13;
message went on, saying in the&#13;
past "ralliers pushed their&#13;
message to whoever would&#13;
listen... no longer are the demonstrations&#13;
peaceful.. .no longer is&#13;
the public looking at the issue at&#13;
hand... no one believes that the&#13;
issue is emotional enough to fight&#13;
about..." I challenge those&#13;
statements.&#13;
The violence that occured at&#13;
Seabrook began from acts of civil&#13;
disobedience. (Civil disobedience&#13;
is the right to nonviolently but&#13;
deliberately violate the law). As the&#13;
protestors scaled the fences that&#13;
surround the power plant, they&#13;
were forcibly removed by police&#13;
with the aid of billyclubs and&#13;
teargas. The demonstrators fought&#13;
back.&#13;
It is unfortunate that the&#13;
incident happened. But isn't it&#13;
interesting that those who stand on&#13;
the sidelines and wait for peace&#13;
and justice pontificate the moment&#13;
an incident such as this occurs?&#13;
They seem not so concerned about&#13;
the weightier matters which&#13;
motivate the protestors in the first&#13;
place.&#13;
At the start, the antinuke&#13;
protestors did spread- their&#13;
message to whomever would listen.&#13;
Yet, people did not listen back in&#13;
the 1950's when nuclear power&#13;
made its debut. Time is running&#13;
short. We don't have the time to&#13;
wait for the corporate owner and&#13;
operator, or the government to&#13;
decide the will sit down and&#13;
discuss "things". We must make&#13;
them stop and listen now. It has&#13;
been estimated that there will be&#13;
500 nuclear plants in existence by&#13;
the 1990's. The new ones are being&#13;
built faster and the old ones are&#13;
wearing down, both of which gives&#13;
great potential to the worst&#13;
oossible nuclear accidents.&#13;
The issue we are faced with now&#13;
is a life and death matter. It may&#13;
be outwardly violent, or insidiously&#13;
silent. The people are questioning&#13;
the violence. We must make sure&#13;
that when we ask these questions&#13;
we are not changing the focal point&#13;
of the issue. The focus is the dire&#13;
effect of nuclear power and its&#13;
wastes. Will any of us be alive to&#13;
see the last of these violent&#13;
outrages? Will we forget to look at&#13;
what is causing the anger? Will we&#13;
continue to write about the&#13;
problem of problems, rather than&#13;
writing about the reasons for&#13;
incidents like the one at Seabrook?&#13;
And will we get into the arena and&#13;
face our opponents squarely, or&#13;
will we support them with&#13;
complaints about our brothers and&#13;
sisters who are fighting our battles&#13;
without us? Let's get some&#13;
perspective.&#13;
We do question violence. The&#13;
violence that is breathed into our&#13;
lungs, eaten and drunk every day.&#13;
The violence that rearranges our&#13;
gene structures. We do believe the&#13;
issue is emotional enough to fight;&#13;
we expect to be alive 'til we're&#13;
ninety...so we're shutting those&#13;
power plants down!&#13;
Jeanna K. LeSuer&#13;
Thanks to&#13;
the voters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I'd like to thank the students&#13;
that took a few minutes to vote at&#13;
last's week's elections — especially&#13;
those voting me onto the Business&#13;
Division Senate Seat. A special&#13;
thanks to my bus riding&#13;
companions.&#13;
I'll be in the PSGA office on&#13;
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday&#13;
from 1:00 to 5:00 and Thursdays&#13;
from 3:30 to 5:00. Senate meetings&#13;
will be held on Tuesdays, starting&#13;
at 3:30.&#13;
Stop in anytime.&#13;
Gary Ledger&#13;
&lt;Ra»ger&#13;
Sue Stevens&#13;
Brian Felland&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Man»«&#13;
er&#13;
Ken Meyer ... Sports Editor&#13;
Jeff Stevens Fea,ure Ed,tor&#13;
Kevin Padula Ed,,or&#13;
Mike Murphy Edllor&#13;
Tom Cooper. Advertising Manager&#13;
Chairman of the Board&#13;
Reporters&#13;
^"h.«W Tori M h CT.!L' ^ Cr"&#13;
mer&#13;
' G'&#13;
nger He,geson&#13;
' Ren&#13;
« Jones, Mira&#13;
Loekanskl Lori Merte, Iteed McMillan, Terry Peterson, Walt Remond.ni, Don&#13;
scherrer, Denise Sobieski, Becky Waller, Karen Walters&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Mark Anderson, Curtis Moldenauer, Brian Passino&#13;
Layout&#13;
Mary Arnold, Nancy Hernandez, Nancy Mikaelian&#13;
Graphic Artists&#13;
Bill Stougaard, Michael Williams&#13;
Ad Representatives&#13;
Linda Andersen, Dan Galbralth, Margarita Schonenberg&#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;
acadonic 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;
CD&#13;
0uTCZtl1d31^.&#13;
addreSSed t&lt;&gt;: RangCr&#13;
' U W" Parkside&#13;
' WLLC&#13;
™TrJffh&#13;
he Wi&#13;
" bC aCCCPted if typCWritten&#13;
' double-spaced on standard size&#13;
f .'nC maTS&#13;
" ICtterS mUSt * signed and a te&#13;
'&#13;
ephone number&#13;
acceoted T ? ^ * Withheld for Valid reasons&#13;
" Maximum length&#13;
accepted ,s 500 words. Deadline for letters is Friday at 10 a.m. for publication the&#13;
orimTtter h^h ay&#13;
'tThe&#13;
f&#13;
R,&#13;
ANGER reSmeS a&#13;
" edit&#13;
°&#13;
riaI privlHges in refus&#13;
'&#13;
n8 to print letters which contain false or defamatory content.&#13;
Demonstration&#13;
defended&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Your Editorial of Oct. 17&#13;
focused on the actions of a&#13;
frustrated segment of the Clamshell&#13;
alliance. I was at the June '79&#13;
Seabrook demonstration when&#13;
dissension began to grow in the&#13;
alliance. The group which opted&#13;
for agression was the Boston Clam.&#13;
While not defending the actions of&#13;
the group; I do think they are&#13;
justifiable. I do not advocate&#13;
aggressive actions because they&#13;
alienate the masses. But, the&#13;
violence being perpetrated against&#13;
the public by the nuclear power&#13;
industry is far greater than the&#13;
ripping of fences by frustrated&#13;
environmentalists.&#13;
I did appreciate your editorial. I&#13;
just wanted to point out that the&#13;
police had the clubs. The members&#13;
of the Boston Clam are tired of&#13;
being ignored and denied their&#13;
rights to fair trials by the state of&#13;
New Hampshire.&#13;
Wendy Miller&#13;
Reminder&#13;
The Ranger appreciates hearing&#13;
from you! If you'd like to write a&#13;
letter to the Editor, just follow&#13;
these guidelines:&#13;
All letters must be in the Ranger&#13;
office by 10 am on the Friday&#13;
before publication. The Ranger&#13;
office is located at WLLC D139&#13;
(next to the Coffee Shoppe).&#13;
The maximum length for letters&#13;
accepted is 500 words. They must&#13;
be typewritten, double-spaced with&#13;
one-inch margins on standard&#13;
typing paper.&#13;
Ail letters must be signed.&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid&#13;
reasons. Include a phone number&#13;
for verification.&#13;
All letters will be printed&#13;
without editing. Remember to&#13;
check for typing errors, misspellings,&#13;
and grammatical errors.&#13;
The Ranger has editorial&#13;
priviliges and may refuse to&#13;
publish letters found to be&#13;
defamatory in content.&#13;
....&#13;
Photos by Itft.&#13;
What the hell&#13;
was that?&#13;
photo by M. And&#13;
than, , ,&#13;
US r&#13;
ni"&#13;
S ,0 Parkside? M""&gt; students may have tho&#13;
Theate, I I"!' '&#13;
en&#13;
' aPPeared behind ,hc Communication&#13;
o f " e u a t r i t . T " f °&#13;
r " "&#13;
S P a s t w e e k e n d&#13;
'&#13;
s&#13;
me^nT,, "&#13;
er ,f -v«u missed some , &#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Breakfast with&#13;
Santa Dec. 8&#13;
The North Pole News Service&#13;
and UW-Parkside Child Care&#13;
Center this week announced that a&#13;
Breakfast With Santa will be held&#13;
in the Union Dining Room&#13;
Saturday, December 8, at 9:00&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Santa Claus will eat a merry&#13;
meal of pancakes and sausage,&#13;
juice, milk and coffee with the&#13;
families of Parkside students,&#13;
faculty, staff and alumni. Santa&#13;
promises to visit with the children,&#13;
to hear Christmas lists, and to&#13;
have a bag of Christmas goodies&#13;
for each child.&#13;
A variety of entertaining&#13;
features will be provided that&#13;
morning: beautiful music performed&#13;
by area choral groups; a&#13;
lively "Family Sing" led by&#13;
children and staff from the Child&#13;
Care Center; and special fun&#13;
planned by elves, a magician and a&#13;
juggler. Activity tables staffed by&#13;
teachers will have supplies for&#13;
children tc make Christmas cards&#13;
and decorations. Door prizes for&#13;
some lucky adults will also be&#13;
given.&#13;
Admission is by advance&#13;
reservation only. Tickets are&#13;
available at the Child Care Center&#13;
until November 30, and cost $3.00&#13;
per person, adult and child. The&#13;
proceeds from Breakfast With&#13;
Santa will go to the Child Care&#13;
Center to support its new extended&#13;
hours program.&#13;
Overseas&#13;
studies offered&#13;
in Scandinavia&#13;
Scandinavian Seminar is now&#13;
accepting applications for its 1980-&#13;
81 academic year abroad in&#13;
Denmark, Finland, Norway or&#13;
Sweden. This unique learning&#13;
experience is designed for college&#13;
students, graduates and other&#13;
adults who want to study in a&#13;
Scandinavian country, becoming&#13;
part of another culture and&#13;
learning its language.&#13;
After orientation and a 3-week&#13;
intensive language course, often&#13;
followed by a family stay, students&#13;
are placed individually at Scandinavian&#13;
folk schools (small residential&#13;
liberal arts schools) Or other&#13;
specialized institutions. There they&#13;
live and study with Scandinavians&#13;
of diverse backgrounds. At the&#13;
Seminar's Midyear and Final&#13;
Courses, students and staff meet to&#13;
discuss the year's studies and&#13;
experiences and to review individFIRST&#13;
&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
AAAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F .D.I.C.&#13;
ual progress and language ability.&#13;
An independent study project&#13;
provides a focus for an in-depth&#13;
study in each participant's own&#13;
field of interest. On the basis of a&#13;
detailed written evaluation of their&#13;
work, most college students receive&#13;
full or partial academic credit for&#13;
their year.&#13;
The fee, covering tuition, room,&#13;
board, and all course-connected&#13;
travels in Scandinavia, is $4,900.&#13;
Interest-free loans are granted on&#13;
the basis of need, as are a few&#13;
partial scholarships.&#13;
For further information, please&#13;
write to: Scandinavian seminar,&#13;
100 East 85th Street, New York,&#13;
N.Y. 10028.&#13;
Basic Skills&#13;
implementors meet&#13;
November 1 &amp; 2&#13;
Basic skills educators from&#13;
University of Wisconsin campuses&#13;
around the state will meet to&#13;
explore ideas for implementation&#13;
of recommendations of a US&#13;
System Basic Skills Task Force&#13;
Nov. 1 and 2 here at University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
The task force, which issued its&#13;
final report last spring after two&#13;
years of study, was formed to&#13;
examine "the issue of basic skills&#13;
expected of university graduates,&#13;
examine areas of basic skills&#13;
deficiencies among UW students&#13;
which might require compensatory&#13;
instruction, determine the need for&#13;
work on basic skills and&#13;
recommend approaches for&#13;
System support of basic skills&#13;
improvement."&#13;
Members of the task force,&#13;
chaired by Prof. William T.&#13;
Lenehan of UW-Madison, will&#13;
report on their findings and give&#13;
basic skills educators from the&#13;
various campuses an opportunity&#13;
to respond and share ideas on&#13;
implementing recommendations&#13;
of the task force report, which calls&#13;
for active involvement of higher&#13;
education in basic skills.&#13;
Conference participants also&#13;
will attend a series of workshops&#13;
on teaching strategies for basic&#13;
skills in mathematics, writing,&#13;
reading, English, verbal competency&#13;
and study skills. Other&#13;
sessions will deal with computer&#13;
assisted instruction, pre-'college&#13;
programs, testing and tutorial&#13;
programs.&#13;
The agenda also includes a&#13;
presentation on UW-Parkside's&#13;
Collegiate Skills program, which&#13;
requires students to demonstrate&#13;
competency in reading, writing,&#13;
mathematics and library use by&#13;
the end of the student's first 45&#13;
credits of work (about three&#13;
semesters). The program has&#13;
attracted national attention both&#13;
for its scope and for its focus on&#13;
requiring students to demonstrate&#13;
• ski lls early in their university&#13;
careers while they still can be&#13;
applied to completion of their&#13;
studies.&#13;
The conference is sponsored by&#13;
UW-P's Office of Educational&#13;
Program Support and coordinated&#13;
by Carol J. Cashen, OEPS&#13;
director.&#13;
Piano duo&#13;
performs Friday&#13;
The newly-formed Parkside&#13;
Piano Duo of Carol Bell and&#13;
August Wegner will present its&#13;
first campus concert at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Friday, Nov. 2, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
The program will consist of&#13;
Three Romantic Waltzes by&#13;
Emmanuel Chabrier, the Concerto&#13;
for two solo pianos by Igor&#13;
Stravinsky, Adagio Lyrico by&#13;
Milwaukee composer John&#13;
Downey and Fantasy on George&#13;
Gershwin's "Porgy and Bess" by&#13;
Percy Grainger.&#13;
Downey is a composer at UW&#13;
Milwaukee with an extensive list of&#13;
credits including a residence at the&#13;
MacDowell Colony and several&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra&#13;
premieres of his work. He holds&#13;
degrees from DePaul and Roosevelt&#13;
Universities and studied in&#13;
Paris with Nadia Boulanger,&#13;
Darius Milhaud and Arthur&#13;
Honnegger from 1952 to 1958, the&#13;
period in which he wrote Adagio&#13;
Lyrico.&#13;
Nursing students&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
to meet Nov. 2&#13;
All UW-M Nursing Students at&#13;
Parkside are asked to attend an&#13;
urgent meeting on Nov. 2nd,&#13;
Union 207 from 1:30 to 3:30 pm.&#13;
Assoc. Dean Krueger, from&#13;
UW-M School of Nursing, will be&#13;
discussing important changes and&#13;
will provide supplementary information&#13;
nursing students will&#13;
need to be aware of. Dean Krueger&#13;
will also answer any questions you&#13;
may have concerning the Nursing&#13;
Program at Parkside.&#13;
The R.N. Advisor from UWMilwaukee&#13;
will discuss Challenge&#13;
exams this sem. for those R.N.'s&#13;
who are eligible.&#13;
The fastest-growing Premium Beer&#13;
in America.&#13;
On Tap&#13;
at&#13;
Union&#13;
Square&#13;
HIILIMAN M1WINC CO INC LA CHOSSI WISCONSI&#13;
JOIN&#13;
BOOK:&#13;
C.S.C.'s Book Co-op is operated by&#13;
students and depends on people to drop&#13;
off their used textbooks, paperbacks and&#13;
albums, to sell to other students. In a sense&#13;
we act as an exchange center for students&#13;
and our system allows you to either make&#13;
or save the maximum amount of money&#13;
you can on your textbooks. Want to get rid&#13;
of your old albums? C.S.C.'s Book Co-op&#13;
is the best place. — You set your own&#13;
price! On all of the Book Co-op's services,&#13;
members are not charged, non-members&#13;
pay 15% over member price. Help us out&#13;
this year and you'll see the benefits of cooperation.&#13;
&#13;
FALL&#13;
M ON&#13;
TUE - 1 to 3&#13;
H O U R S&#13;
W ED - 1 to 7&#13;
THUR - 2 to 5&#13;
CO-OP&#13;
fOOD:&#13;
The Food Co-op offers hundreds of items&#13;
of food including: milk, bread, yogurt,&#13;
fresh produce, natural cheeses, grains,&#13;
nuts, dried fruit, vitamins, juices, frozen&#13;
foods and many canned and packaged&#13;
goods. Stop in and look around. We are&#13;
proud of the pleasant atmosphere and we&#13;
have convenient hours for all students,&#13;
including night students. Parking is available&#13;
right in front. Support this co-op, it is&#13;
one of the most unique services at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
FALL H OU R S&#13;
M O N 10 to 6&#13;
TUE - W E D . - T H U R .. . JO to 10&#13;
F R I. &amp; SAT 9 to 6&#13;
"~r-* - • Easr 5«Je Cf Wood Road a &#13;
4 Wednesday October 31, 1979 Ranger&#13;
Strange black-robed phantoms at Parkside&#13;
by Donald Scherrer&#13;
Specter!&#13;
The cry rings of TERROR, of&#13;
unappeased abominations! And&#13;
Parkside, to sociable spirits, looks&#13;
remarkably like a castle, with its&#13;
towers, autonomous slave quarters,&#13;
(the PE building/Tallent&#13;
Hall), and its moat (the inner loop&#13;
road). The drawbridge, leading&#13;
from the Union, is unquestionably&#13;
attractive to ghostly passersby.&#13;
There have been reports of&#13;
strange, black-robed monks&#13;
slithering through Parkside's corridors&#13;
in the late eve. One student,&#13;
having never regained her composure&#13;
after a sighting, remains in&#13;
critical condition. Her last words&#13;
were: "It hadn't a face!"&#13;
Security is currently conducting&#13;
an investigation into the matter,&#13;
while an anonymous student&#13;
officer who goes by the name of&#13;
DC intimated, "I watched on once&#13;
as it went around a corner and&#13;
through a wall. At about the same&#13;
time a fellow officer tapped my&#13;
shoulder, and I nearly joined it!"&#13;
Others have seen, or heard the&#13;
dreaded cries of, a headless&#13;
horseman on the D-2 level of the&#13;
school. The black horse with&#13;
&gt;» imstone eyes is reported to snort&#13;
fire and belch smoke out of its&#13;
hideous nostrils. And its rider —&#13;
oh what a fiend he is! He twirls his&#13;
head round and round on his&#13;
index finger like a Harlem Globetrotter&#13;
fingering a basketball; and&#13;
the head, all the while, with its&#13;
gleammg- sernentinp evrs, .laughs.,&#13;
CconntlVvul IIICIimhr A PfOfC* sively. A colleage of Professor&#13;
X—y is alleged to have beenovertaken&#13;
by this demon on his&#13;
hellish Pegasus, and is now the&#13;
saddle upon which this specter&#13;
sits.&#13;
Voracious vampires (of both&#13;
sexes) have long been known to&#13;
inhabit the theaters, lunching on&#13;
hearty necks; and low-flying&#13;
witches have been sighted by star&#13;
gazers atop Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Likewise, there have been sightings&#13;
of greenish, grotesque&#13;
gargoyles in flight and perched&#13;
atop our castle's towers. And&#13;
witches' chants echo nightly from&#13;
the depths of the Music&#13;
department.&#13;
Oh! But the most dreaded spot&#13;
of habitation by these preternatural&#13;
demons — beings — is, of&#13;
all places, the library!!! They are&#13;
known to steal just completed&#13;
Library Skills notebooks before a&#13;
librarian has had time to correct&#13;
the; x, instruction librarian Judith&#13;
Flyer reported recently.&#13;
They also have a bold habit, in&#13;
the daytime, of setting off the&#13;
alarms in the library by opening&#13;
the emergency doors in helter&#13;
skelter fashion, Luellen Breed,&#13;
Head of Circulation commented&#13;
last week. She also noted that the&#13;
LLC has had a hard time finding&#13;
shelvers because "once a student&#13;
sees books foating around&#13;
between shelves and pages being&#13;
turned as if being read, they've&#13;
had it. I mean they've only worked&#13;
for forty-five minutes and then&#13;
shoot straight out the door —&#13;
without signing their time sheets!"&#13;
Thomas Quirk, acting director&#13;
of the LLC confided that he too&#13;
has seen very strange things. "Last&#13;
week I was riding in one of the&#13;
front elevators and it halted,&#13;
dropped rapidly, rose up again, as&#13;
if on a string, like a yoyo, and&#13;
continued for a period of about&#13;
five minutes. Just between you and&#13;
me, how do you think my hair&#13;
became so curled. It scared the&#13;
out of me!"&#13;
JQorman Doe. Spec.ial .. I Col V-Ul--&#13;
lections Development Officer,&#13;
recently confided that he, too, has&#13;
been the victim of some ghostly&#13;
pranks. There have been times&#13;
when he has felt a hand rest&#13;
gracefully on his shoulder. "It&#13;
looked like a beautiful woman's&#13;
hand, pale, with long nails. Not&#13;
bad I say. But hell, I'm married."&#13;
Yet there have been other times&#13;
when he has seen a bobbing head&#13;
staring through his outer office&#13;
windows. (Perhaps it is a jealous&#13;
ex-husband.) "It was just dreadful&#13;
Rec Center&#13;
Weekly Specials!&#13;
Ladies Nite&#13;
1&#13;
/2 price bowling, billiards,&#13;
foosball, table tennis&#13;
Lucky 13&#13;
13 frame bowling games —&#13;
special prizes each night for&#13;
high games&#13;
Mondays, -&#13;
6pm - 10pm&#13;
Tuesdays,&#13;
7pm - 10pm&#13;
No Tap Bowling&#13;
Thursdays,&#13;
9 P'&#13;
ns d&#13;
°wn count as strike —&#13;
7 in special prizes each niqht for&#13;
/pm - 10pm high games&#13;
Moonlight Bowline&#13;
Saturdays, I T : ~&#13;
o -i 1 Cash prizes if you can leave red&#13;
opm - lipm pin standing alone on 1st ball&#13;
Red Pin Bowline&#13;
A/r tj • " "—— Q.&#13;
on n, Special prizes if you can strike&#13;
hours posted on red head pin&#13;
For more info Call 553-2695 or&#13;
stop down at the Union Rec Center.&#13;
Specials run through the semester.&#13;
D6mrVJ&#13;
— this piratical head with a&#13;
patched eye and scarlet kerchief&#13;
wound tightly around it. It&#13;
followed me once when I left the&#13;
office, bouncing along merrily as I&#13;
ran down the stairs. But I'm&#13;
prepared now" he said with an air&#13;
of confidence, pointing to his new&#13;
blufe suede Trax.&#13;
Among other precautions being&#13;
taken by the library staff include:&#13;
running — a considerable distance;&#13;
swimming; or — get this —&#13;
lifting weights! Some have resorted&#13;
to carrying very hot coffee pots&#13;
Jffien using the back elevator or&#13;
stairs. (Little good it will do them.&#13;
The more sociable spirits are&#13;
certain to prefer something with&#13;
more potency to raise their spirits.)&#13;
Still others prefer unabridged&#13;
Oxford dictionaries as lethal&#13;
weapons; and still there are those,&#13;
a rash of them, suddenly taking to&#13;
high heels. They aren't especially&#13;
good for running in, but to&#13;
another, given the boot, they are&#13;
very much to the point. (Some&#13;
people have put their foot through&#13;
the wall, but through a ghost?)&#13;
And some have resorted to hiding&#13;
behind great white sheets, occasionally&#13;
bumping into each&#13;
other going around corners, and&#13;
thereafter letting out the loudest&#13;
screams yet heard in the library.&#13;
John Bison, reference librarian,&#13;
has been seen sporting boxing&#13;
gloves while on duty at the&#13;
reference desk. "I can't be sure&#13;
they'll fight fair and square," he&#13;
said with a crackle in his voice.&#13;
r0!/£^«&#13;
"But the way some of those guys or&#13;
things dance, Ali would have been&#13;
quite at home with them. Some&#13;
student employees have even worn&#13;
shoulder pads to look threatening&#13;
in case of a sudden confrontation.&#13;
A petite student who works in&#13;
the LLC, Lori Higher, complained&#13;
recently that she has also been the&#13;
victim of these ghosts. Too shy to&#13;
give it with gusto, a friend, Denise&#13;
Soverighastly, explained. 'T have&#13;
had the same sort of trouble. They&#13;
pat you and when you turn around&#13;
there's no one there." When asked&#13;
^?&#13;
re tf&#13;
l&#13;
ey Patted her, she refused&#13;
to comment further.&#13;
There have been other&#13;
STRANGE doings reported there.&#13;
Among them: Satanic chants&#13;
rising up from the Archival area&#13;
very late at night; some ghostly&#13;
stuntman who gets his kicks by&#13;
giving nightly performances, falling&#13;
from the uppermost floor of&#13;
the library to its lowest, landing&#13;
perfectly within his chalk outline&#13;
on the D-2 level.&#13;
The hovering monks have also&#13;
been reported here, as have eerie&#13;
elevator passengers. On occasion,&#13;
some contented person, feeling&#13;
quite secure, will jump into an&#13;
elevator full of people, only to&#13;
discover between floors that they&#13;
are no longer with him. And chairs&#13;
have been known to pull&#13;
themselves out for ladies so that&#13;
they can sit down; tables seen&#13;
scratching their legs; and even&#13;
pieces of chalk as if controlled by&#13;
some invisible hand scrawling&#13;
DOWNTOWN /KENOSHA&#13;
ELMW00D PLAZA RACINE&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha tor women s wear&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
n r&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
1,4th Ave. at 62nd St.&#13;
Established in 1930&#13;
grafitti on the bulletin boards.&#13;
Movies have been seen with new&#13;
faces in the film, records with&#13;
nothing on them but heavy&#13;
breathing, and calculators which&#13;
suddenly take to playing PONG by&#13;
slapping the decimal point&#13;
around.&#13;
As if this weren't enough,&#13;
newspapers and periodicals are&#13;
known to change their titles and&#13;
headlines at will: The Chicago&#13;
Tribune has become, on occasion,&#13;
the Windy City Whistler, whereas&#13;
CLIO became OLEO, and Money&#13;
Magazine has been known to read&#13;
Master Charge.&#13;
It has become so appalling&#13;
around here that Ronald Shrinkmann,.&#13;
Head of Campus Security,&#13;
told me the other eve that "all of&#13;
this is definitely aiming towards a&#13;
climax — on All Hallows Eve. He&#13;
said this with the force of a&#13;
soothsayer, then promptly&#13;
vanished. One source revealed that&#13;
Mr. Shrinkmann was home that&#13;
night, in bed with the flu.&#13;
Even the staff can no longer&#13;
trust each other. Yesterday&#13;
Dorman Smith's new shoes were&#13;
stolen. "I had a hell of a time&#13;
chasing them down. And when I&#13;
finally had them cornered, they&#13;
walked all over me." If anyone&#13;
spies them walking the halls,&#13;
please notify the lost and found.&#13;
And the ladies who have taken&#13;
to exercising have incurred similar&#13;
problems. On a good day there&#13;
may be someone alongside them&#13;
(The Invisible Man, who else.)&#13;
making waves in the pool, or&#13;
lifting incredible huge weights&#13;
with not so much strain as raising&#13;
a visible finger. On the worst days,&#13;
the showers give forth snowflakes,&#13;
the Irish Spring becomes ice, the&#13;
their clothes simply straighten&#13;
themselves up and walk off. (Tall&#13;
tales or high heels?)&#13;
And in handing this story to my&#13;
editor, she gladly thanked me, and&#13;
as I turned to leave, I glanced&#13;
back. Shades of Scorpio!!!! The&#13;
typewriters clickety-clacked away&#13;
with no one at the keys! I turned&#13;
back to pat my editor on the... (as&#13;
was my old habit of contact), and&#13;
the story goes that her dress that&#13;
day was most certainly a&#13;
see-through, as was the rest of her!&#13;
And when I left her office, since&#13;
the door was still locked, I&#13;
departed via the same way I had&#13;
entered. Walls aren't really all that&#13;
bad at heart, once you get to know&#13;
them, on the inside, where it&#13;
counts.&#13;
It Karl Kochak could see me&#13;
now! &#13;
Back to the land&#13;
Wednesday October 31, 1979 5&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Everybody in southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
seems to be pipe-dreaming&#13;
a better way of life in northern&#13;
Wisconsin, northern Michigan,&#13;
.Alaska, Canada, or Tibet. There&#13;
are simpler, better ways to live, all&#13;
these adventurous pioneers&#13;
philosophize as they cruise along&#13;
94 in their Cadillac dreams. Cries&#13;
of "Get back to the land," and&#13;
"Grow your own," and "Become&#13;
self-sufficient" are tugging at the&#13;
diamond cuff-links of all those&#13;
who like to follow the latest trends&#13;
in Beautiful Living.&#13;
When you do get "back to the&#13;
land" wouldn't you like to be one&#13;
step ahead of the rest? Wouldn't&#13;
you like to be able to conquer such&#13;
problems as: What do you do&#13;
when you get hungry for a&#13;
Quarter Pounder in Canada? Or,&#13;
what do you do when you are in&#13;
labor, and the jeep is out of gas,&#13;
and the nearest Clark station,&#13;
along with the nearest incorporated&#13;
town and the hospital, is 45&#13;
miles due south of your cabin?&#13;
And remember, there are no&#13;
shopping malls in the wilderness.&#13;
As a matter of fact, there aren't&#13;
even any Park 'n' Shops north of&#13;
the Twin Cities.&#13;
The following quiz is designed&#13;
to make you think a little clearer&#13;
about your move — before you&#13;
make it. If you get even one&#13;
question wrong, you will probably&#13;
become a screaming maniac,&#13;
crying out for the familiar strains&#13;
of car horns and Pepsi commercials&#13;
before the end of your first&#13;
fiscal year in the wilderness of your&#13;
choice. But, cheer up! If you get all&#13;
the questions correct, you have a&#13;
50/50 chance of surviving the first&#13;
winter. Which is better odds than&#13;
most city people who pipe-dream&#13;
about getting "back to the land"&#13;
have while driving to work in the&#13;
morning.&#13;
BE CAREFUL NOW. SOME OF&#13;
THESE ARE TRICKY.&#13;
1. What is the best thing to do&#13;
when you wake up shivering on a&#13;
Sunday morning and you discover&#13;
your power is out because of a&#13;
blizzard? (Assume your firewood&#13;
upply is diminished because your&#13;
chain saw ate itself last time yon&#13;
used it to cut your homemade&#13;
bread.)&#13;
A. Plug in the electric blanket&#13;
and go back to sleep.&#13;
B. Pay your utility bills before&#13;
your pipes freeze.&#13;
C. Load up the jeep with all your&#13;
bottled goods and your credit&#13;
cards and drive south until you see&#13;
a Best Western motel.&#13;
2. What do you do when you get&#13;
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever&#13;
from tick bites?&#13;
A. Shoot your dog.&#13;
B. Using tweezers and lighted&#13;
matches, depilate yourself.&#13;
C. Load up the jeep with all your&#13;
bottled goods and your credit&#13;
cards and drive south until you see&#13;
a Best Western motel.&#13;
3. What do you do when you&#13;
have rats in your little log cabin?&#13;
1. Burn your cabin, and while it&#13;
is burning, surround it with&#13;
friends armed with pitchforks.&#13;
B. Buy a kitten and hope it will&#13;
grow up mean.&#13;
C. Load up the jeep with all your&#13;
bottled goods and your credit&#13;
cards and drive south until you see&#13;
a Best Western motel.&#13;
4. What do you do when you&#13;
discover you owe $5,000 back taxes&#13;
on your back 40?&#13;
A. Sit in the open doorway to&#13;
your cabin with a loaded rifle by&#13;
your side.&#13;
B. Marry the tax assessor's&#13;
old-maid daughter.&#13;
C. Load up the jeep with all your&#13;
bottled goods and your credit&#13;
cards and drive south until you see&#13;
a Best Western motel.&#13;
5. What do you do when you run&#13;
out of Dry Idea in January and you&#13;
can't get to town until spring&#13;
thaw?&#13;
A. Do nothing and think clean,&#13;
pine-scented thoughts.&#13;
B. Never take your long-johns&#13;
off.&#13;
C. Load up the jeep with all your&#13;
bottled goods and your credit&#13;
cards and drive south until you see&#13;
a Best Western motel.&#13;
ANSWERS&#13;
If you picked C for any or all&#13;
questions, congratulations!. You&#13;
may live to send your mother a&#13;
postcard next spring. Best of luck&#13;
to the rest of you.&#13;
WE&#13;
SUPPORT&#13;
PUBLIC RADIO&#13;
%&#13;
•I' 5 •&#13;
i'l&#13;
HOW ABOUT YOU&#13;
WCTD&#13;
Fm 91&#13;
STEREO&#13;
0&#13;
6AM-11PM Daily&#13;
FM/91 Has What&#13;
Your Listening For&#13;
Chinese culture workshop offered&#13;
The Chinese Community and&#13;
Chinese culture will be the topic of&#13;
a one-day workshop sponsored by&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Center for Multicultural&#13;
Studies on Saturday, Nov. 3, at the&#13;
Kenosha Public Museum.&#13;
The program will include a&#13;
panel on "China: A View From&#13;
Two Perspectives" by UW-Parkside&#13;
Chinese-American faculty&#13;
members and recent American&#13;
visitors to China, and lectures on&#13;
the politics of modern China by&#13;
Prof. Li Hong-yung of Marquette&#13;
University and on US-China&#13;
relations by Prof. Edward Friedman&#13;
of UW-Madison.&#13;
The program also will include&#13;
music of China performed by&#13;
musicians from Northern Illinois&#13;
University, a tour of the Kenosha&#13;
Museum's Chinese Art collection&#13;
conducted by Dr. Janice Kuhn, a&#13;
demonstration of Chinese calligraphy&#13;
and films on the Chinese&#13;
people and their culture.&#13;
A Chinese luncheon will be&#13;
catered by the Whey Chai&#13;
Restaurant of Zion, 111.&#13;
The workshop may be taken for&#13;
one of UW-P undergraduate credit&#13;
or on a non-credit, audit basis.&#13;
Registration information is available&#13;
from the UW-P Office of&#13;
Institutional Analysis and Registration&#13;
(Phone 553 - 2281).&#13;
Persons planning to attend the&#13;
luncheon must make reservations&#13;
by Oct. 29 with the UW-P Center&#13;
for Multicultural Studies or the&#13;
Kenosha Museum.&#13;
Rape.. misgivings&#13;
by Linda Marcussen&#13;
Note: This week's column is&#13;
written by a guest writer, Linda&#13;
Marcussen, co-founder and secretary&#13;
of the Board of Directors of&#13;
KASA [Kenoshans Against Sexual&#13;
Assault, Inc.],&#13;
Rape is the most frequently&#13;
committed violent crime in this&#13;
country and it is increasing. In&#13;
Wisconsin, the State Department&#13;
of Jusice reports that rape has&#13;
increased 14% during the first six&#13;
months of 1979. That figure&#13;
represents only reported attacks&#13;
and the FBI estimates that only&#13;
one rape in ten is reported.&#13;
There are many myths about&#13;
rape, myths that increase the&#13;
suffering of the victims and&#13;
wrongly shift blame away from the&#13;
attackers. Three of the most&#13;
dangerous myths are:&#13;
1. Rape is a spontaneous act of&#13;
passion. Seventy per cent of all&#13;
rapes are totally planned. The&#13;
rapist makes a conscious decision&#13;
to rape. His victim may be selected&#13;
at random, but usually she has&#13;
been purposely singled out.&#13;
Passion or sexual gratification&#13;
have little or nothing to do with&#13;
rape. The rapist's motivation is to&#13;
dominate, brutalize and humiliate.&#13;
Rape is a deliberate act of hostility&#13;
and violence.&#13;
2. Victims are usually young&#13;
attractive, "loose" women. Young&#13;
pretty women of "questionnable"&#13;
reputation do sometimes get&#13;
raped, but so do older "respectable"&#13;
women, pretty or not, and&#13;
handicapped women, institutionalized&#13;
women, wives, and children.&#13;
Girls as young as 2&gt;Vi months have&#13;
been treated for rape in&#13;
Wisconsin. Since rape is a crime&#13;
committed by men against women,&#13;
every women is a potential rape&#13;
victim simply because she is,&#13;
female. All women are vulnerable&#13;
regardless of their dress, behavior,&#13;
residence, social standing, age, or&#13;
attractiveness. Joggers have become&#13;
a prime target of rapists, but&#13;
Member Partside 200&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
any woman can be raped, anytime,&#13;
anywhere.&#13;
3. Rapists are psychotic&#13;
perverts. Three out of five rapists&#13;
are married and/or have access to&#13;
normal sex. They are not insane.&#13;
More often than not, the rapist&#13;
turns out to be your neighbor or&#13;
brother-in-law, the garage mechanic&#13;
or delivery man, a teacher,&#13;
your boss, or your date. Rapists&#13;
are simply not easily identifiable&#13;
until it is too late.&#13;
Next week's column will deal&#13;
with how to survive a rape and'how&#13;
KASA helps victims and their&#13;
families. Information on Wisconsin's&#13;
sexual assault law, KASA,&#13;
and protection and prevention&#13;
tactics is available at the&#13;
University Health Office.&#13;
My Joseph&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone. 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTH)&#13;
Presents&#13;
w OLD STYLE ^&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
Featuring&#13;
Wood Song&#13;
Union Square&#13;
November 14, 8pm&#13;
Free Admission&#13;
Urn &#13;
6 Wednesday October 31, 1979 Ranger&#13;
classifieds&#13;
policy&#13;
1. All 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;
for sale&#13;
Car: 1979 Chevy Van: 350-V8;&#13;
Loaded; 11,500 miles; excellent&#13;
condition. Phone 762-&#13;
1063.&#13;
Car: '73 Volkswagon Beatle 30&#13;
mpg - best offer - call 553-&#13;
2441 or 679-2862.&#13;
Parts! 1968 Ambassador and&#13;
Rebel, 2-door and 4-door&#13;
models. Phone 551-7589.&#13;
Stereo: Panasonic component.&#13;
Excellent condition&#13;
for $50. Call 551-7693 after 6&#13;
pm.&#13;
8-Track Pioneer super tuner&#13;
w/31 tapes, Scorpions, Judas&#13;
Priest, UFO...$175 with&#13;
under dash mount. Call Tom&#13;
after 5:30-658-8807.&#13;
Amplifier- Pioneer 7500 II 45&#13;
wt. per channel. 1 year left on&#13;
pts. labor. Call Al at 657-0142.&#13;
Guitar- 1972 Les Paul Custom,&#13;
black, good condition, must&#13;
sell. Best offer over $250.&#13;
Phone 654-5230 or 551-8110&#13;
evenings.&#13;
Electric oven- and girl's 3-&#13;
speed bike. Call 639-0152.&#13;
personals&#13;
The Round Table - may Mr.&#13;
Spock take personal interest&#13;
in Torque's Illogical Flowcharts.&#13;
&#13;
Where the hell did the Ranger&#13;
dig up this Curtis (Moldy&#13;
Sucker) for the photo team -&#13;
'The Ranger must be hard up'.&#13;
From the Round Table.&#13;
How Is the Ranger's team like&#13;
a vacuum cleaner?&#13;
To Music Dept. We devour&#13;
crumbs like music dept.&#13;
peons. See you on your backs&#13;
one way or another November&#13;
3.&#13;
The Animals can out party I&#13;
PHELTA THI.&#13;
The wind section really blows&#13;
- and good too.&#13;
Jani Kre- I'm the guy who&#13;
stares at you, Steve.&#13;
Dick, you hit a homerun in my&#13;
park. Ella Fitzgerald.&#13;
Happy Birthday Harry Hart!&#13;
From: Bird.&#13;
Happy Birthday to Parkside's&#13;
favorite "Strawberry Blonde"&#13;
DK, KK, TH, BM, DP.&#13;
Lir Pumpkin - Happy eleventh,&#13;
Trick or Treat, Jack-O-Lantern.&#13;
Donna, Let's all do Nitrus&#13;
Oxide in Class. Booze Fairy.&#13;
Moldy- I told you it wouldn't&#13;
work! The rabbit died and the&#13;
date is set. Goldy.&#13;
Jani Kre, I love you; Steve, in&#13;
Union at noon.&#13;
Don Juan, who says the party&#13;
is over?&#13;
Donna Mills, Acting is fun! I&#13;
think we're learning too!&#13;
Roger and Michael, Rollie&#13;
wants to go out with you.&#13;
I'm sick of torturing the&#13;
welder.. .let's kill him.&#13;
Dick, you two-faced moron.&#13;
Signed Robby, Chip and&#13;
Ernie.&#13;
Dear SYKE-Oh, I th ought I w as&#13;
the only one. Signed Fred&#13;
MacMurrey.&#13;
Dickey, I'm cutting you off!&#13;
Signed "Jaws"&#13;
To Judas Priest - Thanks for&#13;
burning our stage; Uptown&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Son of the weider - REBEL!&#13;
Protect your home!&#13;
Pammy, Weekends hot in Eau&#13;
Claire this time of year.&#13;
Understanding the whirlpool&#13;
and underpull. Boys bathroom&#13;
137 Comm Arts.&#13;
Beware, the super destroyer is&#13;
looking to perform a face&#13;
splitter. KRA CHI CHI VIL.&#13;
Depressing D.: A g ood tall tale&#13;
will cure your sadness. A&#13;
victim.&#13;
Dennis M.: When I have been&#13;
partying you don't tell me I&#13;
can't have popcorn. Mondo.&#13;
Dennis M. You should be&#13;
barred from animal heaven.&#13;
Mondo and gang.&#13;
Animal Lovers, forget the zoo.&#13;
Visit the WLLC. Ask librarian&#13;
for details.&#13;
WLLC second floor glassroom&#13;
declared animal room;&#13;
entrants beware!&#13;
Just because the animals lost&#13;
loesn't mean they can't score!&#13;
miscellaneous&#13;
Work-Study Position Open.&#13;
The Communication Dept. is&#13;
looking for a work-study&#13;
person to help with departmental&#13;
paperwork. Nature of&#13;
position indicates other than&#13;
student in Comm 102 preferred&#13;
Apply at Communication&#13;
department office, third floor,&#13;
Comm Arts Bldg. Please&#13;
mention this ad.&#13;
Production Control Trainee.&#13;
Preferably junior or senior&#13;
status in Operation Management&#13;
Curriculum. We will train&#13;
student on input reporting to&#13;
3ur MRP (Material Requirement&#13;
Planning System). This&#13;
opportunity will afford student&#13;
to see shop floor control in a&#13;
major corporation which may&#13;
coincide with classroom&#13;
studies. Part-time 2nd or 3rd&#13;
shift - 20 hours a week. For&#13;
interview, contact Bev&#13;
Fountas, personnel coordinator&#13;
J.I. Case, 636-7001.&#13;
Lifeguard- swimming pool -&#13;
Phy Ed. Building. 11:30 to 1:00&#13;
MWF. Contact Loran Hein.&#13;
Ride Needed to Madison or&#13;
Portage area, weekend of&#13;
November 2. Call 553-5575.&#13;
r M&#13;
K&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads&#13;
to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
deadline: every thursday at 10 am&#13;
STUDENT-STUDENT ORGANIZATION R ATE&#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;
name RANGER&#13;
WLLC D139 ssno.&#13;
Cramer's Corner&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
"Winning isn't everything, it's&#13;
the only thing", is a quote from the&#13;
late, great football coach, Vince&#13;
Lombardi. It's meaning is obvious.&#13;
To a professional, this may hold&#13;
true but to amateurs, I don't&#13;
believe it should. The focus of this&#13;
column will be on the amateur&#13;
scene.&#13;
On major campuses such as&#13;
Madison or UCLA, a college coach&#13;
of a major sport is hired to turn a&#13;
loser into a winner and once that is&#13;
established, continue with the&#13;
winning seasons. John Cotta and&#13;
John Jardine, former head coaches&#13;
of the Madison campus football&#13;
team were two coaches who&#13;
couldn't produce a winner. They&#13;
were fired. Madison's new head&#13;
coach, Dave McClain, a very&#13;
successful coach at Ball State, was&#13;
hired to rejuvinate the football&#13;
program. Last year was the&#13;
Badger's first winning season since&#13;
1974. This year the Badgers are&#13;
doing poorly and already you hear&#13;
mumbles of releasing McClain. A&#13;
school that is used to not only&#13;
winning but being either perennial&#13;
champions or challengers are&#13;
usually quicker to release a coach&#13;
than a school that's rebuilding. An&#13;
example of this is Gary Cunningham,&#13;
who as head basketball&#13;
coach at UCLA lost but four&#13;
games in his first year there and&#13;
resigned. His reason being that&#13;
there was too much pressure on&#13;
him.&#13;
Here at Parkside, coaches are&#13;
not hired strictly for coaching a&#13;
sport. They are hired as teachers&#13;
first, and as coach Barb Lawson&#13;
puts it "coaching is another&#13;
responsibility. Our coaches don't&#13;
shirk this responsibility, it's just&#13;
that they are hired as teachers&#13;
first." When posed with the&#13;
question of the importance of&#13;
winning, Lawson replied "Your&#13;
goal is to win, but a coach must&#13;
face reality. If we have a small&#13;
team and aren't going to win the&#13;
meet, we just try to concentrate on&#13;
winning a certain event or placing&#13;
in an event or upsetting the other&#13;
team with our line-up." This is a&#13;
far cry from the attitude a major&#13;
college coach would have.&#13;
The "must win" attitude also&#13;
applies to everyday life, but&#13;
Lawson has an answer to this, "I&#13;
think it's declining and that&#13;
jogging has helped change that&#13;
philosophy. People are now&#13;
participating and getting satisfaction&#13;
out of it."&#13;
Films explore female roles&#13;
Four films exploring the role of&#13;
work in women's lives will be&#13;
shown at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside this fall. This&#13;
film series, sponsored by the&#13;
Women's Studies Colloquium, sets&#13;
the stage for a Spring Lecture&#13;
Series on the challenges, achievements,&#13;
and frustrations faced by&#13;
women in their working lives.&#13;
Exceptional&#13;
Opportunity&#13;
for learning experience.&#13;
Humanity student, English&#13;
major preferred, to&#13;
take on walks and read&#13;
to retired college professor.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 694-2251.&#13;
"Womanhouse," a film based&#13;
on the pioneering women's art&#13;
programs of Judy Chicago, will be&#13;
shown on Wednesday, Nov. 7&#13;
"Crystal Lee Jordan," a documentary&#13;
scheduled for presentation&#13;
on Wednesday, Nov. 14&#13;
"Norma Rae," the popular film&#13;
about a young woman who defies&#13;
community censure and family&#13;
difficulties to help achieve union&#13;
representation for her fellow&#13;
workers, will have a special&#13;
showing on Friday, Nov. 30&#13;
"Union Maids" will be featured&#13;
on Wednesday, Dec. 5 in Molinaro&#13;
Hall at noon in Room 103 and at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in Room 144.&#13;
Lee Stepina, Professor of Business&#13;
Management and a specialist in&#13;
industrial relations, will moderate&#13;
a discussion following the film.&#13;
LUNCH&#13;
Mon-Sat&#13;
11-2&#13;
BRUNCH&#13;
10:20 - 2&#13;
DINNER&#13;
Thurs-Sat.&#13;
5-9 &#13;
Ranger Wednesday October 31, 1979 7&#13;
Coming Events Kherdian to speak here&#13;
'"•"."'"wwAftun, • W T~\nii&lt;i4 1/ t. . _ J! . 1. . _ x H ! _ r 1 1 I&#13;
-* • 1. . if. i ( r» • .&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31&#13;
LECTURE at 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema. Max Black will talk on "The&#13;
Elusiveness of Rationality". The program is free and open to the public&#13;
FILM "Night of the Living Dead" will be shown at 8 pm in Union Square&#13;
Admission is 50c. Sponsored by PAB. square.&#13;
Thursday,Nov.T&#13;
WOexf 2W f " ?T" fr&#13;
°&#13;
m 9 am &lt;° 3 "&gt;* in U™" ' W6. Phone&#13;
ext. 2312 for information. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
LECTURE at 6:30 pm in CA 129. Max Black will talk on "A New Look at the&#13;
Prisoners Dilemma . The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
SEMINAR "How Vitamins Affect You" at 7 pm in T 181. Call ext. 2312 for registration&#13;
information.&#13;
WORKSHOP "Math Anxiety" at 7 pm in T 121. The program is open to the&#13;
public. Sponsored by UW-Extension. Call ext. 2312 for reservations.&#13;
BROWN BAG LUNCH Intervarsity Christian Fellowship presents speaker Kent&#13;
Carlson talking on "God's ideal love relationship with the opposite sex"&#13;
Union 207 at noon.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 2&#13;
SEMINAR at 12 noon in MOLN 114. Dr. R.D. Stewart will talk on "Unusual&#13;
Exposure to Carbon Monoxide". The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
CONCERT at 8 pm in the Communication Arts Theatre featuring Carol Bell and&#13;
August Wegner at the piano. The program is free and Open to the public.&#13;
MOVIE "Blazing Saddles" will be shown at 8 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission is SI.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 3&#13;
MOVIES "Two Women" and "A Bird's Life" will be shown at 7 pm in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $1.50. The program is open to the public. Spor-^'id&#13;
by the Kinesis Film Series.&#13;
FIELD TRIP Art field trip to Chicago Art Institute to see Toulouse-Lautrec&#13;
exhibition. Cost: $2.00 round-trip for transportation; Sign up in CA 285&#13;
today. Meet at Chicago &amp; Northwestern station at 8:30 am on 3rd.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 4&#13;
MOVIES "Two Women" and "A Bird's Life" will be repeated at 1:30 pm in the&#13;
Union Cinema. The program is open to the public&#13;
MOVIE "Blazing Saddles" will be repeated at 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
MEETING I Phelta Thi will hold a meeting in the Union Square at 7 pm to&#13;
discuss coming events. Please be there and have a beer with us.&#13;
Monday, Nov. 5 \&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. Teresa Peck will talk on "Stages in&#13;
Adult Development". The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 6&#13;
MATH TALK Talk is entitled "How fast is the Euclidean Algorith?" 3 pm in GR&#13;
101. Free refreshments.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 7&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE at 1 pm in Union 104 - 106 featuring the lively music of George&#13;
Russell. Admission is free to Parkside students. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
SEMINAR at 7:30 pm in Union 106. Larry Kruckman, J. Craig, and S. Svendsen&#13;
will talk on "Post Partum Depression". The program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Campus/Community Film Series&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
TWO WOMEN&#13;
Union Square Theater&#13;
Saturday Nov. 3 7pm&#13;
Sunday Nov. 4 1:30pm&#13;
^SIJjOSingh^Admissior^^&#13;
Writer David Kherdian, whose&#13;
work reflects both his Armenian&#13;
heritage and his youth in Racine,&#13;
will be involved in a number of&#13;
civic and cultural events in the&#13;
community and on the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside campus&#13;
during a two-week visit to his&#13;
home state beginning today,&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31.&#13;
Xherdian, who--now lives in&#13;
Oregon, is a poet, essayist,&#13;
translater and novelist. His latest&#13;
book, "The Road From Home," is&#13;
the fictionalized story of his&#13;
mother's girlhood, her family's&#13;
persecution by the Turkish&#13;
government, which had decided to&#13;
rid Turkey of its Armenian&#13;
population, and her acceptance at&#13;
16 of a mail-order proposal of&#13;
marriage from an Armenian living&#13;
in Racine. The book has won both&#13;
the Lewis Carroll Prize and the&#13;
Boston Globe-Horn Book Award.&#13;
A complete collection of&#13;
Kherdian's work is housed-in the&#13;
Special Collections section of the&#13;
UW-Parkside Library.&#13;
Kherdian and his wife, two-time&#13;
Caldecott Medal winning illustrator&#13;
and author of children's books&#13;
Nonny Hogrogian, will arrive in&#13;
Wisconsin in time to participate in&#13;
the Midwest Federation of Library&#13;
Associations' annual conference,&#13;
which is expected to attract about&#13;
3,000 librarians to Milwaukee's&#13;
MECCA Oct. 31 through Nov. 3.&#13;
Kherdian and Hogrogian will be&#13;
the speakers for the MFLA&#13;
Children's Author's luncheon on&#13;
Friday, Nov. 2 at the Marc Plaza.&#13;
About 500 will attend the session,&#13;
co-chaired by Nancy Elsmo of the&#13;
Racine Public Library.&#13;
On Saturday, Nov. 3, Kherdian&#13;
will be one of two principal&#13;
speakers at a reception and dinner&#13;
sponsored by the Armenian&#13;
General Benevolent Union and the&#13;
UW-Parkside Center for Multicultural&#13;
Studies, beginning at 6:30&#13;
p.m. at Prairie School, Racine.&#13;
Tickets are $12.50 and are&#13;
available from Mary Akgulain and&#13;
Mary Mahdasian, both^of Racine.&#13;
The other major speaker for the&#13;
event will be another Racine&#13;
native, vDr. Dickran Kouymjian,&#13;
director of Armenian Studies at&#13;
California State UniversityFresno,&#13;
who is an authority on&#13;
Armenian art, architecture and&#13;
manuscripts.&#13;
On Sunday, Nov. 4, Kherdian&#13;
will be the guest of honor at a&#13;
public reception sponsored by the&#13;
Racine Public Library and the&#13;
UW-P Library from 2:30 to 4:30&#13;
p.m. at the Racine Library.&#13;
In connection with the visit,&#13;
both the Racine and UW-P&#13;
libraries will display books by&#13;
Kherdian and Hagrogian as well&#13;
as examples of Armeniana and&#13;
bibliographies of Kherdian's work&#13;
will be available. Individually and&#13;
as collaborators, the couple has&#13;
published more than 60 books,&#13;
about a dozen of them dealing&#13;
with aspects of Armenian life both&#13;
in the U.S. and in the Old World.&#13;
Kherdian plans to remain in&#13;
Racine until about mid-November.&#13;
During that period he plans to do&#13;
research for a forthfoming book&#13;
and will read from his poems and&#13;
discuss his work at UW-Parkside&#13;
(time and date to be announced).&#13;
ALL NEW&#13;
0* LMTEftN&#13;
Tuesday, Friday, Saturday&#13;
* DISCO *&#13;
Wednesday, Thursday, Sunday&#13;
• 50'i and BO's&#13;
ROCK and ROLL •&#13;
Monday&#13;
• 51 "E R E O NIGHT •&#13;
HALLOW! CM 3 IN PARTY&#13;
Prizes for best costume (Wed. Oct. 31)&#13;
x Mon-Sat 3:30-2 am&#13;
Sun 12 -2 am&#13;
Come watch Sunday Football with us!&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
for&#13;
SPRING SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are seeking a degree&#13;
at UW-Parkside) should consult their academic adviser prior to&#13;
registration for Spring Semester. A Certification of Advising form,&#13;
signed by the adviser, is required for registration.&#13;
Spring Semester Course Schedules will be available on November 9.&#13;
November 12-21 has been designated as an academic advising&#13;
period, and advisers will make every effort to meet with you then.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
CONTACT YOUR ADVISER&#13;
FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
If you have any questions,&#13;
contact the Office of the Dean of Faculty,&#13;
348 Wyllie Library-Learning Center, 553-2144.&#13;
NOTE: Non-matriculant students (students not seeking a degree af UW-Parkside)&#13;
are exempt from this requiremeni. &#13;
8 Wednesday October 31, 1979 Ranger&#13;
IPO,BUT i LOVE N&#13;
WHAT we GET WITH IT. )&#13;
WAIT A MiWUTE,&#13;
YOU HATE PIZZA f WHAT'6 THAT?&#13;
* MUSPCOCM.&#13;
WHAT TASTES BETTER&#13;
WITH PIZZA THAN MAYBE&#13;
ANYTHING ELSE IN THE&#13;
ENTIRE, ISAID,&#13;
BNTike W ORLD? J I PU NNO.&#13;
ALL ,&#13;
RI6HP&#13;
b,&#13;
HOW STUPlP OF ME&#13;
WHY DO YOU THINK.&#13;
THEV GALL 'E M&#13;
TASTE BUDS ANYWAY?&#13;
Don't Fiddle&#13;
Around!&#13;
Join&#13;
the Ranger&#13;
Soccer team splits another pair&#13;
As is (he habit with coach Hal&#13;
Henderson's men's soccer team&#13;
they split another pair of games&#13;
last week by defeating PurdueCalumet&#13;
and then losing to&#13;
Western Michigan.&#13;
Last Wednesday the Rangers&#13;
destroyed a weak Purdue-Calumet&#13;
team by a score of 7-1. The&#13;
Rangers outshot their opponents&#13;
in this game 45 - 6.&#13;
Purdue scored first four minutes&#13;
into the game. That was all they&#13;
were allowed as.Earl Campbell&#13;
tied the game on a penalty kick.&#13;
Alan Gibson got the game winner&#13;
off an assist from Ale Mora. Mora&#13;
then went on a scoring binge of his&#13;
own as he scored the next three&#13;
Racine&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
goals for the Rangers. The first&#13;
one came off an assist from Beejan&#13;
Beheshti. The second assist went&#13;
to Niall Power and Mora's last&#13;
goal was assisted by John&#13;
Momoima.&#13;
Momoima scored the sixth goal&#13;
with the assist going to Carlos&#13;
Duchicela. The lasi goal of the&#13;
game went to Duchicela unassisted.&#13;
&#13;
Saturday the Rangers weren't so&#13;
lucky as they traveled to Western&#13;
Michigan to get involved in a&#13;
defensive battle and eventually lost&#13;
1 - 0 .&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson was&#13;
pleased with the play of his team.&#13;
"We played with more intensity&#13;
last Saturday than at anytime in&#13;
the eight years I've been here."&#13;
said Henderson. He also mentioned&#13;
that senior Carl Goetz&#13;
'played the best I've seen him play&#13;
in his three years here at Parkside.'&#13;
Coach Henderson also announced&#13;
that senior Lee Cielonko&#13;
had quit the team and sophomore&#13;
Claude Cielonko had been kickedoff&#13;
the team.&#13;
The Rangers record is now 7 - 7 ,&#13;
thus equalling Parkside's best ever&#13;
record of 7-7-2 two years ago.&#13;
Parkside will play out the rest of&#13;
their regular season schedule this&#13;
week hosting Roosevelt University&#13;
Wednesday and traveling to&#13;
Platteville on Saturday.&#13;
Red's Roller 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;
Parkside places second&#13;
in tennis tournament&#13;
As co-host of the WWIAC&#13;
tennis tournament this past&#13;
weekend first year coach Noreen&#13;
Goggin's women coasted into a&#13;
second place finish behind a&#13;
strong Marquette team. Marquette&#13;
ended the competition with&#13;
78 points, easily out-distancing the&#13;
Rangers who had 40 points.&#13;
Co-host Carthage was third with&#13;
22 points followed by Carrol&#13;
College with 18 and UW-Green&#13;
Bay with 14.&#13;
In taking the crown the&#13;
Warriors won 8 of the'9 separate&#13;
championships with parkside&#13;
taking the only other one. The&#13;
Rangers were defeated by Marquette&#13;
in five of the championships&#13;
with the no. 1 doubles team of&#13;
Kathy Logic-Kathy Thomas&#13;
winning that crown.&#13;
Kathy Logic won her first match&#13;
at no. 1 singles but lost the finals&#13;
to Robin Barksdale of Marquette.&#13;
At no. 2 singles Kathy Thomas&#13;
also lost in the finals to her&#13;
Warrior opponent Andrea Foeller.&#13;
At no. 3 singles senior Maryann&#13;
Cairns made it to the finals but&#13;
was forced to forfeit the match to&#13;
her Marquette opponent because&#13;
of an injury to her foot.&#13;
Parkside's Nancy Kivi and Lori&#13;
Bleashka at no. 4 and 5 singles&#13;
also won their first matches and&#13;
were defeated by their Marquette&#13;
foes in the finals. Laura Bianco at&#13;
no. 6 singles wasn't as lucky as the&#13;
rest of her teammates as she lost to&#13;
Maryann Gerisbach of Marquette&#13;
in the first round.&#13;
At first doubles the champion&#13;
Logic-Thomas team easily defeated&#13;
their Marquette opponents&#13;
by scores of 6 - 1 and 6 - 2.&#13;
Maryann Cairns and Nancy Kivi&#13;
were forced to forfeit their match&#13;
in the finals because of the foot&#13;
injury to Cairns. At third doubles&#13;
the Parkside team of Laura&#13;
Bianco-Lori Bleashka lost in^their&#13;
first round.&#13;
Coach Goggin said she was&#13;
pleased with the improvement the&#13;
team showed over the season and&#13;
is looking forward to next year.&#13;
Only one member of the team,&#13;
Maryann Cairns, will be lost to&#13;
graduation.&#13;
Try Michelob now on tap at the Union!!&#13;
Women give in&#13;
to Carthage&#13;
at invitational&#13;
Parkside's women's volleyball&#13;
team took- part in the Carthage&#13;
Invitational tournament over the&#13;
weekend and did well up until&#13;
their last match of the tourney&#13;
against champion Carthage.&#13;
"We played consistently up&#13;
until the Carthage match,"&#13;
commented coach Linda Henderon.&#13;
"We did not play well in the&#13;
finals."&#13;
She also mentioned that she was&#13;
happy about the group of fans that&#13;
showed over at Carthage to cheer&#13;
for the Rangers.&#13;
Parkside started off by defeating&#13;
UW-Platteville, 15-8, 7-15 and&#13;
15-4. They went on to defeat&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, UW-Whitewater,&#13;
Elmhurst College and UWOshkosh&#13;
before their loss to&#13;
Carthage.&#13;
The Ranger's record now stands&#13;
at 19 - 15 - 1 as they will host their&#13;
own tournament this Saturday.&#13;
Other entries in the tourney are&#13;
Carthage, Carrol, Marquette and&#13;
Northland. The tournament will&#13;
begin at 9 am with the finals being&#13;
held at 4 pm. </text>
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