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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Hargrove contract not renewed</text>
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              <text>&#13;
UniverSity of WisconSin-Parks Ide&#13;
photo  by Dave McEvoy&#13;
FlIIhmanDickieCoshun is assisted  by Doug Wlelgat, as-&#13;
!.!!:!nt&#13;
director&#13;
01&#13;
campus police  Iroman  elevator shalt.&#13;
-.un  and twelve other stude~ts  were trapped  in the&#13;
.~    Inthe library between floors lor&#13;
a&#13;
hall hour Tues-&#13;
-JlVening.&#13;
.&#13;
NewSUFAC chair&#13;
elected&#13;
by&#13;
Amy&#13;
H. Ritter&#13;
News&#13;
Editor&#13;
~te&#13;
controversy  sur-&#13;
..    g&#13;
her Involvement In&#13;
'110&#13;
committee,Jenny  Carr,&#13;
~  also&#13;
holdsthe position of&#13;
lbair&#13;
r Editor, was elected&#13;
ltIattyO/&#13;
the Segregated Uni-&#13;
IlIItee&#13;
Fees Allocation Com.&#13;
lIIilI'.11(SUF&#13;
AC) Wednesday.&#13;
Carr'&#13;
~   reluted accusations of&#13;
lraani&#13;
Ofinterest with four&#13;
llId.&#13;
:ts.&#13;
First of all, she&#13;
IllIlIe ~&#13;
bUdget decisions&#13;
llIIjo&#13;
next&#13;
year will affect&#13;
IlIIiIl&#13;
Sh&#13;
year's&#13;
budgets,&#13;
til.&#13;
SoC:&#13;
n&#13;
:"  have graduat.&#13;
.... 7.&#13;
y, she said  she&#13;
~elds&#13;
the chair when&#13;
II,&#13;
llIdag tta&#13;
he&#13;
Ranger&#13;
budg-&#13;
!II&#13;
R•• :&#13;
s&#13;
Ins from voting&#13;
";;;"'l!er  iSsues. Thirdly,&#13;
to&#13;
:tte&#13;
e&#13;
meetings  are&#13;
lrtlcon\&#13;
public and anyone&#13;
~A ~to attend. Finally,&#13;
enate aPProves all&#13;
I!lSde&#13;
by SUFAC.&#13;
~ely   that anything&#13;
done&#13;
to&#13;
undermine&#13;
Hargrove contract not renewed&#13;
by Steven R. Picazo&#13;
.Jesse  Hargrove  was&#13;
in.&#13;
formed by mall (Oct&#13;
30)&#13;
that&#13;
his contact was not going&#13;
to&#13;
be renewed after this year.&#13;
This news came as a surprise&#13;
to&#13;
him especially since he had&#13;
just&#13;
reentry&#13;
been reassigned&#13;
from Parkside's Educational&#13;
OPPOrtunity  Center  (EOC) ,&#13;
where  he  was  director,&#13;
to&#13;
what he believed was a high-&#13;
er position In administration,&#13;
as a special assistant to the&#13;
Vice Chancellor and&#13;
a&#13;
Span-&#13;
ish instructor.&#13;
Under Parkside's  academic&#13;
staff rules, all its employees&#13;
are given one year's notice-of&#13;
termination.  His position on&#13;
campus&#13;
will&#13;
end October,&#13;
1988.&#13;
Hargrove   was  originally&#13;
hired as the director of the&#13;
EOC&#13;
1n·1985.&#13;
It&#13;
is a federally&#13;
funded  program,   which  Is&#13;
currently&#13;
in&#13;
the process  of&#13;
being rewritten  and&#13;
submit-&#13;
ted  for&#13;
its&#13;
next  three-year&#13;
funded  cycle. Hargrove  has&#13;
been active in recruiting low-&#13;
income&#13;
and&#13;
minority&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents.&#13;
When the new position was&#13;
outlined for him In&#13;
Septem-&#13;
ber,&#13;
he saw it as a move in a&#13;
positive direction and&#13;
a&#13;
way&#13;
for him to better  serve  the&#13;
campus&#13;
in&#13;
a wider capacity.&#13;
G. Gary  Grace,  assistant&#13;
chancellor for student affairs,&#13;
described the new position as&#13;
being a vehicle which could&#13;
break Hargrove out of the rut&#13;
of only working with minority&#13;
programs.&#13;
"The new position was de-&#13;
signed to be a combination of&#13;
teaching  duties&#13;
and&#13;
some&#13;
general  staff&#13;
duties."&#13;
Grace&#13;
said.&#13;
"It&#13;
was not a&#13;
promo-&#13;
tion; it was a lateral move of&#13;
ances.&#13;
"The committee  is so mis-&#13;
understood  by the campus,"&#13;
Carr said. "Peopie&#13;
think&#13;
the&#13;
committee  makes  decisions,&#13;
when In fact, all Its decisions&#13;
are approved by the Senate."&#13;
Carr said she pursued  the&#13;
SUFAC chair to repay a per-&#13;
sonal debt&#13;
to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"I&#13;
feel that the University&#13;
has&#13;
done&#13;
a&#13;
lot for me,"  she&#13;
said. "I'm  taking on&#13;
thl&#13;
it&#13;
,s rei&#13;
sponsiblllty,  although   s no&#13;
.a&#13;
pleasant  one,  because}&#13;
hope it wlll benefit students.&#13;
Carr said the job is difficult&#13;
when "people&#13;
1&#13;
know and reo&#13;
spect"&#13;
request  funds  that&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
cannot be approved.&#13;
"You  have  to say  no&#13;
to&#13;
the Integrity  of the budgeilng    everyone&#13;
In&#13;
one way or an-&#13;
process,"  said Carr, "least of   other,"  she  explained,  ~e-&#13;
all by me."&#13;
I&#13;
f&#13;
cause the committee  is. quite&#13;
She said Senate approva  0   limited on the f?oney It can&#13;
all SUFAC actions provides a  'dole out to.or,gamzations.&#13;
system  of checks  and, bal- , . , , , .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
,"&#13;
,&#13;
...&#13;
Jesse Hargrove&#13;
a&#13;
reassignment nature ...&#13;
Hargrove  felt he was&#13;
mis-&#13;
lead about the permanance  of&#13;
his new position.&#13;
"They&#13;
had&#13;
me&#13;
sold on the&#13;
move,&#13;
so&#13;
I&#13;
saw no&#13;
reason&#13;
not&#13;
to take it. But they got me&#13;
over there and a month later,&#13;
they  dropped&#13;
this&#13;
bomb on&#13;
me,&#13;
PI&#13;
Hargrove  told the Ke-&#13;
nosh News.&#13;
The  letter  of termination&#13;
came from Grace and&#13;
it&#13;
gave&#13;
it no reasons for Hargrove's&#13;
dismissal. Hargrove has&#13;
since&#13;
submitted  a formal  request&#13;
for the reasons of&#13;
his&#13;
termi-&#13;
nation.&#13;
Hargrove  went on&#13;
to corn-&#13;
ment that he saw&#13;
his&#13;
firing as&#13;
being&#13;
in&#13;
direct conflict with&#13;
OW&#13;
System  President  Ken-&#13;
neth Shaw's commitment&#13;
to&#13;
10creasing&#13;
mtnortty&#13;
faculty&#13;
and staff.&#13;
In&#13;
a Racine Journal Times&#13;
article  on Saturday,  Novem-&#13;
ber&#13;
7,&#13;
Shaw was asked&#13;
if&#13;
the&#13;
recent  dismissal  of&#13;
Park.&#13;
side's&#13;
only&#13;
black In the upper&#13;
admlnistration  ran 10 confllct&#13;
to&#13;
UW&#13;
commitment&#13;
to&#13;
retain-&#13;
Ing minorities.  He said  he&#13;
was not In a poslUon to tully&#13;
access the situation .&#13;
Shaw dld defend the chan-&#13;
cellor's right&#13;
to&#13;
"rigorously"&#13;
evaluate employees.&#13;
I'We&#13;
rigorously recruit.&#13;
we&#13;
evaluate people," Shaw said.&#13;
"The one&#13;
thing&#13;
we won't&#13;
do&#13;
Is&#13;
patronize&#13;
one group."&#13;
Grace feit that the issue of&#13;
Harirove's   termination  and&#13;
UW's  commitment&#13;
to&#13;
In.&#13;
crease  minority  faculty&#13;
are&#13;
two different topics.&#13;
"This  Institution  has  not&#13;
backed off on Its commitment&#13;
of  actively   searching   for&#13;
qUallfted minority faculty and&#13;
staff. We&#13;
are&#13;
stlll deeply In.&#13;
volved&#13;
In&#13;
this  effort  even&#13;
though we&#13;
felt&#13;
it&#13;
was neces-&#13;
sary&#13;
to&#13;
make&#13;
this particular&#13;
personnel change."&#13;
In&#13;
an interview with Racine&#13;
Journal    Times,   Corinne&#13;
Owens, Racine  president  of&#13;
the National  Associalon&#13;
tor&#13;
the Advancement  of Colored&#13;
People (NAACP) saw the ac-&#13;
tion&#13;
as "an&#13;
earthquake&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
minority community.  We had&#13;
so&#13;
much  confidence&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
work&#13;
he's&#13;
doing."&#13;
Thomas  Loftus,  State  As-&#13;
sembly  Speaker  and an ac-&#13;
quaintance   of  Hargrove's&#13;
through the Wisconsin&#13;
ASSOCi_&#13;
ation  of Equal  Opportuntty&#13;
Program  Personnel,  Bald it&#13;
Hargrove was let go because&#13;
of a lack  ot&#13;
runds,&#13;
it sWI&#13;
doesn't show very much&#13;
unt-&#13;
verslty commitment.&#13;
Loftus&#13;
has&#13;
offered his serv-&#13;
ices to lOOk&#13;
into&#13;
the&#13;
matter&#13;
11&#13;
asked. He said that Hargrove,&#13;
as of yet,&#13;
has&#13;
not asked him&#13;
to do so.&#13;
Hargrove  said  he will be&#13;
asking&#13;
for&#13;
a&#13;
reconsideration&#13;
on the decision  and.  or at&#13;
least, a&#13;
full&#13;
explanation&#13;
into&#13;
the rationale behind&#13;
his&#13;
being&#13;
let&#13;
go.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Jarvis road block&#13;
page 3&#13;
..&#13;
Campus radio station&#13;
page 5&#13;
Twins, twins, twins&#13;
pages 6,7&#13;
Basketball preview&#13;
page 12&#13;
_,....-L;.!   -------&#13;
2 Thursday, November&#13;
12,1987&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Newly elected V.P. and&#13;
Senate take office&#13;
by Kelly McKlsll1ck&#13;
....d&#13;
Amy&#13;
H.&#13;
Ritter&#13;
Ne_EdIlors&#13;
In&#13;
ceremonial  fashion. vice&#13;
prell1denl Scott Peterson  and&#13;
nine&#13;
senators&#13;
took the oath of&#13;
office Friday at the Parkside&#13;
Student Government&#13;
Assocta-&#13;
lion (PSGA) meellng.&#13;
senators  Steve Picazo, Dan&#13;
Vogi, Stephanle Tatem,  Debl&#13;
FrItchow, Julie Wunrow, Jim&#13;
Cole,  Susan  Walborn,  Dan&#13;
Perrault  and Gary Heggeland&#13;
were  sworn  In.  (Heggeland&#13;
replaced  Tyson  Wilda  who&#13;
won the election but resigned&#13;
before entering offlce.)&#13;
Addressing the new Senate,&#13;
PSGA president  Alex Pettit&#13;
reported  that  to  meet  last&#13;
year"  deficit of&#13;
$2,1311,&#13;
budg·&#13;
eted  eecretary  wages  were&#13;
eut&#13;
by&#13;
1801.87&#13;
and the&#13;
prest-&#13;
dent'.&#13;
8&amp;lary&#13;
was reduced&#13;
by&#13;
n,lIII.1I&#13;
PelUI&#13;
abo&#13;
expressed hopes&#13;
of forming&#13;
a&#13;
sister&#13;
relation-&#13;
sIIIp with UW·MIIwaukee. He&#13;
has&#13;
been&#13;
earnJng&#13;
money&#13;
there as a&#13;
computer  consult-&#13;
ant.&#13;
The  8egreated  Unlverstty&#13;
Fees  Allocallon  Committee&#13;
(SUFAC) report&#13;
abo&#13;
brought&#13;
news of a solution to deficit&#13;
problems .&#13;
..After a number of months&#13;
of debate and discussion,  we&#13;
have  finally   resolved   the&#13;
$63,000&#13;
budget shortfall  from&#13;
1986-87."   said    Peterson,&#13;
SUFAC chair&#13;
througt;&#13;
Novem-&#13;
ber •.&#13;
In&#13;
a later interview,  Peter-&#13;
son said the money was taken&#13;
from   uncommitted&#13;
equity&#13;
funds and audited  from nor-&#13;
mal operations reserves.&#13;
SUFAC had considered tak-&#13;
ing&#13;
15 percent  from each or-&#13;
ganlzatlon's  operating  budg-&#13;
et  he said, but decided that&#13;
w~u1dbe too damaging.&#13;
"We  felt  this  way  would&#13;
hurt  people the least&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
current year,"  said Peterson.&#13;
The  uncommitted   equity&#13;
funds dipped into&#13;
will&#13;
not be&#13;
repaid. "There shouldn't be a&#13;
big build-up In that fund any-&#13;
way,"  he  said,  explaining&#13;
that  the slate  can and  does&#13;
often  take  those  types  of&#13;
funds away from the univer-&#13;
sity.&#13;
The reserve  funds will be&#13;
repaid next year,  Peterson.&#13;
ThIrty-six percent of each or-&#13;
ganIzaton's   reserves   were&#13;
taken.  8eg fees&#13;
will&#13;
have to&#13;
be raised to replenish&#13;
thlB.&#13;
Ghostbuster slated for&#13;
campus presentation&#13;
Have  you  ever  wondered&#13;
Jusl what really goes on when&#13;
someone sees a ghost? Have&#13;
you been curtous&#13;
to&#13;
learn the&#13;
eonnection  ESP  and  other&#13;
peychlc  abilities  have  w1th&#13;
slghllngs  of apparitions.  or&#13;
when someone&#13;
ls&#13;
involved&#13;
In&#13;
a  poltergeist   disturbance?&#13;
Are&#13;
you ever questioning the&#13;
way the movles portrsy  the&#13;
experiences  people have with&#13;
ghosts and ESP  or how the&#13;
researchers  and lnvestiators&#13;
are seen?  Ever. wonder  "who&#13;
ya gonna&#13;
caD"&#13;
If&#13;
thlB&#13;
happens&#13;
to you?&#13;
Parkslde  Actlvltles  Board&#13;
presents  "ESP. HAUNTINGS&#13;
AND&#13;
POLTERGEISTS,"&#13;
which&#13;
will&#13;
present  you w1th&#13;
answers  to  the  above  and&#13;
other   questions.   Real-life&#13;
"ghost-buster"&#13;
Lloyd   Auer-,&#13;
back&#13;
wtll&#13;
cover the way para-&#13;
psychology,   the   scientific&#13;
study of psychic phenomena,&#13;
looks at these and other expe-&#13;
riences. He&#13;
will&#13;
discuss what&#13;
parspsychologists&#13;
have&#13;
learned about the way we all&#13;
seem to be psychic, and&#13;
will&#13;
center&#13;
in&#13;
on encounters&#13;
peo-&#13;
ple have w1th happenings that&#13;
moat  people  associate  with&#13;
horror films: apparitions,  pol-&#13;
tergeists, and hauntlngs.&#13;
He&#13;
will&#13;
closely  examine&#13;
some of the theories parapsy-&#13;
chologists have put forward.&#13;
But moat of all, learn how a&#13;
parapsychologist  really inves-&#13;
tigates   such   cases   of&#13;
"ghostly"  occurrences,   and&#13;
how they help people not only&#13;
stop the exprlence  (In effect,&#13;
"bust the ghost"),&#13;
If&#13;
that  Is&#13;
what  Is asked  of them,  but&#13;
also  how  people  Can learn&#13;
from such experiences.&#13;
Auerbach  will speak  Tues-&#13;
day, November  17, at 8 p.m,&#13;
In  the  Union  CInema.  the&#13;
event&#13;
Is&#13;
FREE  and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
As  a  special  promotion,&#13;
PAB&#13;
will&#13;
present  the movle&#13;
"Ghostbusters"  on Monday.&#13;
November 16, at 7 p.m. and&#13;
9:30 p.m. In the CInema.&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
Editor&#13;
Kelty&#13;
Mct&lt;i&#13;
ct&lt;..&#13;
News  Editor&#13;
Amy H. Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Jim&#13;
Neibaur .. FealUfeSlEntertalnment   Editor&#13;
Terri&#13;
DeRosier&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Features Editor&#13;
Bernie  Doll&#13;
Asst.&#13;
EntOl18inment  Ed"or&#13;
Iyour views&#13;
Student responds&#13;
to&#13;
Alum's views&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I  am  responding&#13;
to&#13;
Phil&#13;
Tohl's editorial in the October&#13;
29 issue.  I am&#13;
a-&#13;
sophomore&#13;
transfer student who uses the&#13;
library  a  lot.  I  have  often&#13;
used the services of the refer-&#13;
ence staff and the librarians&#13;
there have been great at help-&#13;
Ing me. Tohl's remark  about&#13;
them being there  doing noth-&#13;
ing hit me as extremely  inac-&#13;
curate.&#13;
The  librarians   there  have&#13;
taken  time  to  help  me  in&#13;
doing research  for my papers&#13;
as well as help me find infor-&#13;
mation  on  companies   with&#13;
which I have had interviews.&#13;
In either instance,  they spent&#13;
a LOT of time in helping me.&#13;
I  feel  their  assistance   has&#13;
been very valuable  and I feel&#13;
Tohl's derogatory  statements&#13;
against  them  are  unwar-&#13;
ranted.&#13;
I just&#13;
think&#13;
It's time ......&#13;
one  said  something GOOD&#13;
about the library. I'm&#13;
Ured,"&#13;
rel\dIng all these cynicalll1l-&#13;
cies in the paper. Rather&#13;
!bID&#13;
argue about somethlng!lupld&#13;
like   library   doors,&#13;
wIIJ&#13;
doesn't  anyone attack REAL&#13;
problems  that  really&#13;
aIIocI&#13;
us.  like  DECREASING...&#13;
dent  financial  aid and&#13;
IN·&#13;
CREASING TUITION?&#13;
carol&#13;
JIlIlIiI&#13;
Trani said in letters&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
flip&#13;
administrators   of 34&#13;
inde-&#13;
pendent  colleges and unlver·&#13;
sities, 16 vocational, technic!l&#13;
and adult educatlon &lt;listric..&#13;
and the UW System's&#13;
13&#13;
unl-&#13;
versities.&#13;
System V.P. to head trade committee&#13;
MADISON--Eugene&#13;
P.&#13;
Trani,&#13;
the  academic  affairs&#13;
vlce president  of the Univer-&#13;
sity of "wIsconsin System, has&#13;
been  appointed  to head  the&#13;
Education  Committee  of the&#13;
Wisconsin World Trade  Cen-&#13;
ter.&#13;
The center  was established&#13;
In June through the efforts of&#13;
a state task force and Charles&#13;
Mulcahy, a MIlwaukee attor-&#13;
ney who now serves  as the&#13;
center's president.&#13;
It&#13;
is head-&#13;
quartered&#13;
in&#13;
Milwaukee  and&#13;
operates  to  help  Wisconsin&#13;
businesses  succeed&#13;
in&#13;
interna-&#13;
tional trade.&#13;
In&#13;
his capacity  as chair  of&#13;
the center's education&#13;
com-&#13;
mittee,  Trani  has  called  on&#13;
all  of  the   state's   higher&#13;
education  institutions  for in-&#13;
formation  on services  they&#13;
provide or are able&#13;
to&#13;
provide&#13;
to the business  community  in&#13;
the  area  of international   af-&#13;
fairs.&#13;
"We have  an  opportunity,&#13;
by&#13;
organizing  ourselves  and&#13;
working with this (trade  cen-&#13;
ter)  group,  to make  a state-&#13;
wide  academic  contribution&#13;
to&#13;
the  international   business&#13;
community   in  Wisconsin,"&#13;
RANGER&#13;
.&#13;
The   trade   center ...&#13;
planned  and established;::&#13;
funds  from  the city of ~&#13;
waukee,  Milwaukee&#13;
eoun&#13;
I&#13;
and the slate. Mulcahy&#13;
sald.,d&#13;
will&#13;
operate   on  fees,&#13;
"thus  ensure  that the ~&#13;
'ees ~&#13;
center,  provides  servi&#13;
uonaJ&#13;
value&#13;
to&#13;
interna&#13;
traders,"&#13;
Ra_ngeris written and&#13;
edited&#13;
by students of UW-Parkside.  who are solely responsible for its&#13;
e:~~&#13;
cy&#13;
and&#13;
content. It&#13;
IS&#13;
published every Thursday duling the academic year except over orea&#13;
days.&#13;
.'&#13;
~1eSS'~&#13;
~  letters  to the e~itor&#13;
will&#13;
be accepted only&#13;
if&#13;
they are typed. double-spaced and&#13;
350&#13;
words&#13;
will&#13;
be'"&#13;
letters must be sIgned. with a telephone number included for verification purposes. Names&#13;
tletd upon fequest.&#13;
Ranger reserves the right to edit letters&#13;
and&#13;
refuse those which are false and/or de- •...&#13;
:.,....,,0/,.,&#13;
famatory.&#13;
..&#13;
Oead~ne for all letters. and classified ads.&#13;
is&#13;
Monday at 10 a.m. for publication&#13;
d'sbc~&#13;
ThurSday.&#13;
-&#13;
~~.&#13;
All correspondence  should be addressed 10: Ranger. UW.Parl&lt;side.&#13;
Sox&#13;
2000.&#13;
K..&#13;
••  nos~a.y!i&#13;
.53~4l·.&#13;
T.el~J!hone&#13;
4141553,2287&#13;
(Editonal)  or&#13;
414/553.2295&#13;
(Advertis·&#13;
.hgl.&#13;
• .••   , •••  ' ••  ~.  . • • • • ••    . •••••.••&#13;
Randy LeCount&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy ..··&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Ken McCray&#13;
Ass!. Photo Editor&#13;
~   Hearron ··..··   ·•·&#13;
Ad&#13;
Manager&#13;
MtChaei&#13;
J.&#13;
RohI&#13;
Oistribution  Manager&#13;
Robb  L"""r&#13;
Copy&#13;
Editor&#13;
------&#13;
GENERAL  STAFF    .&#13;
Jason&#13;
Caspers.&#13;
Dan&#13;
Chiipeua.  John&#13;
l&lt;etIOe.&#13;
George&#13;
I&lt;oenig&#13;
Ooc&#13;
Jeff&#13;
lel1)lT'llll'~.  fUny.l~.&#13;
Rick&#13;
lllehL&#13;
DaWn&#13;
Mailall(i&#13;
MaIkl&lt;v.&#13;
_McE",.&#13;
lie""&#13;
Midma.P  ""'&#13;
'"&#13;
Pacione.&#13;
Steven&#13;
l'icuo.&#13;
Maria&#13;
RiAtz.&#13;
Mark Shilhavy.  Wendy&#13;
Sorenson.  Jeff StaAictl.  Tyson WiIIla.&#13;
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Senate questions conflict of interest on SUFAC</text>
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              <text>&#13;
•&#13;
November5,  1987&#13;
Unlvers~  OfWlsconSln-Parkslde&#13;
Vol.&#13;
1.,&#13;
No. 10&#13;
senate&#13;
questions  conflict&#13;
of&#13;
interest&#13;
on&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
by&#13;
AmYH. Ritter&#13;
News EdItor&#13;
p:oposalby PSGA&#13;
sena-&#13;
Masterson to restrict&#13;
.  p on the Segregat-&#13;
verslty Fee Allocation&#13;
ttee&#13;
(SUFACI   trig.&#13;
fierY debate  Friday&#13;
the Parkslde  Student&#13;
ent&#13;
Association&#13;
JIpIe;...n&#13;
presented a res-&#13;
thatsaid since SUF AC&#13;
bers&#13;
allocate   student&#13;
y.&#13;
which Includes&#13;
sala-&#13;
_  of&#13;
students&#13;
In  some&#13;
pus&#13;
organizations.  that&#13;
tents&#13;
of these  salaries&#13;
sitonthe committee.&#13;
1lle&#13;
resolutionwlJl be voted&#13;
In&#13;
two&#13;
Iveeks.&#13;
.&#13;
!I\e&#13;
sourceof the conflict Is&#13;
funding,'~&#13;
the account&#13;
providessaIar1es.for sev-&#13;
student  organization,&#13;
jlalillons.&#13;
"Ibis&#13;
Is&#13;
to&#13;
prevent a can-&#13;
lilt&#13;
of&#13;
interest," Masterson&#13;
W&#13;
the Senate. "It's  not  a&#13;
attack against Jenny&#13;
Carr,&#13;
just re-elected to her&#13;
~C&#13;
seat&#13;
In the Oct. 21.22&#13;
, Is the' committee's&#13;
dseniormember. She Is&#13;
edltorof the Ranger, and&#13;
paid&#13;
with&#13;
128&#13;
funds.&#13;
"My&#13;
constituents   were&#13;
d,"  Masterson   said,&#13;
theylearned that&#13;
rectpt.&#13;
ofthese salaries  sat  on&#13;
committeethat  decided&#13;
Ia1arles.&#13;
ever, Scott&#13;
Peterson,&#13;
~C&#13;
chairand PSGA vice-&#13;
dent·elect,   disagreed&#13;
1&#13;
Masterson'sarguments.&#13;
am adamantiy opposed&#13;
J.J.&#13;
Masterson&#13;
i&#13;
to&#13;
this resolution."  Peterson&#13;
firmly  told the Senate;  "You&#13;
have  to stop and  think  about&#13;
the consequences  of this."&#13;
Six  of  the  eight  SUF AC&#13;
seats,   Peterson    explained,&#13;
are  held by PSGA members.&#13;
Four  PSGA  members:   presi-&#13;
dent,  vice  president,   presi-&#13;
dent  pro-tempore   and  assist.&#13;
ant   president    pro-tempore,&#13;
are  paid  with  128 funds.  So&#13;
those  four would be excluded&#13;
from the committee.&#13;
Senators   who  hold   paid&#13;
positions  In other  clubs,  such&#13;
as Parkslde   Activities  Board&#13;
(PAB) Dr Parkslde  Adult&#13;
Stu-&#13;
dent  Alliance  (P ASAI would&#13;
also be refused  SUF AC seats ..&#13;
"You  would  be cutting  the&#13;
Senate's  throat,"   said  Peter-&#13;
son.&#13;
photo by Amy&#13;
H.&#13;
Ritter&#13;
~prOblenl8?&#13;
Dawn  Malland  didn't  have  to&#13;
hei&#13;
Iolln9 her parking space  on a recent rainy day&#13;
'tlot-fQr&#13;
:r:::.&#13;
~~a Marie ,MoriShita, ~as  W~!lingto hold&#13;
He added  that  the  resolu,&#13;
tion Is clearly  discriminatory&#13;
"AlSo, checks and balance~&#13;
against  What Masterson  calls&#13;
·a conflict of Interest  are butit&#13;
Into the system,"  he said.&#13;
SUF AC Is  constrained   by&#13;
the  Senate,  by  the  (PSGA)&#13;
coneututron,«  Peterson said.&#13;
He&#13;
.began&#13;
clUng examples&#13;
of SUF AC members  Who held&#13;
other  positions  funded by&#13;
128&#13;
money  whose  performances&#13;
were  not affected  by a con-&#13;
flict of Interest.&#13;
"Andy  Buchanan  was  the&#13;
best chair  SUF AC ever had,"&#13;
said    Peterson.&#13;
"If&#13;
this&#13;
amendment   had  been  In&#13;
ef-&#13;
'fect,  he  wouldn't  have  been&#13;
able to-serve."&#13;
Buchanan   served  as&#13;
SUF AC chair&#13;
durtng&#13;
the 1986.&#13;
87 school year  while stmulta-&#13;
neously  holding  the  position&#13;
of Ranger  Business  Manager.&#13;
He held the latter  position for&#13;
six years.  Buchanan  had also&#13;
served   on  SUFAC&#13;
durtng&#13;
1983·84 and  1985·86 while  a&#13;
PSGA senator.&#13;
Peterson   pointed  out  that&#13;
the   Ranger&#13;
budget&#13;
was&#13;
$19,500&#13;
durtng&#13;
1986-87,and reo&#13;
mains  at $19,500. during  1987-&#13;
88.&#13;
fJ-1&#13;
library doors are reopened&#13;
by Amy&#13;
H. Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Friday'S&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Student&#13;
Government&#13;
Association&#13;
meeting featured  discussion&#13;
on the' 0·1  library  doors,  a&#13;
sister  relationship   with&#13;
uw-&#13;
Milwaukee,   new  guidelines&#13;
tor  appointing   sllidents   to&#13;
committees,  and opposition to&#13;
the annexation  of Parkside  by&#13;
the city of Kenosha.&#13;
f&gt;.&#13;
sit-In was held Oct. 19-20&#13;
to protest  the  closing  of the&#13;
D-l doors which allow access&#13;
to the IIbrllry from the coffee&#13;
shop. After that, the Academ-&#13;
ic Resource  Center&#13;
offered&#13;
to&#13;
contribute  services,  and Mon·&#13;
day  the  doors  were  open  8&#13;
am.  to2p.m.&#13;
."It's  a good deal,"  Alex&#13;
Pettit,  PSGA  president,   told&#13;
the   Senate.   "I'm   pleased&#13;
about&#13;
It.&#13;
You  should   be&#13;
pleased about&#13;
It&#13;
too."&#13;
Whether the PSGA·led sit-in&#13;
or  the  Academic  Resource&#13;
·Center were the cause of the&#13;
·action  Is of no concern,  said&#13;
Pettit.&#13;
"It&#13;
doesn't  matter  who gets&#13;
credlt--just  that the doors are&#13;
'"&#13;
open.&#13;
_&#13;
Pettit's   request  for  ~ mo-&#13;
lion  to form  a  sisler-school&#13;
relationship  with UW-MiIwau·&#13;
kee  was  postponed.  Senator&#13;
Dan&#13;
Vogl  said  he  had&#13;
jUS~&#13;
come  acros,$ some  inf~rma&#13;
SCott Peterson&#13;
"So where's  the conflict  of&#13;
Interest?"   Peterson&#13;
demand.&#13;
ed.&#13;
.&#13;
"Andy    abstained&#13;
when&#13;
Ranger  votes  come  up,"  he&#13;
explatned.  "They  (committee&#13;
members)   should  abstain  on&#13;
their own budgets.&#13;
"But&#13;
If&#13;
you're  keeping&#13;
peo-&#13;
tion that he Intends to investi-&#13;
gate  before   discussing   the&#13;
issue.  He would not  reveal&#13;
what that information  Is.&#13;
A  resolution   was  passed&#13;
outlining appointments  of stu-&#13;
dents  to university  and  fac-&#13;
ulty 'commlttees  by the presi-&#13;
dent. Students&#13;
wlJl&#13;
now be&#13;
ap-&#13;
pointed on the basis of&#13;
expert-&#13;
ence&#13;
in&#13;
a tiered  system  of&#13;
representation.&#13;
The tiered  system  consists&#13;
of three levels. The first level&#13;
appolnfmenjs&#13;
wlll  be  fresh-&#13;
men or some new senators.&#13;
Level 1 faculty committees&#13;
are  Academic  Actions, Aca-&#13;
demic Planning  and Program&#13;
Review,  Academic   policies,&#13;
Admission,  Records   "  Stu-&#13;
dent   Information,    Campus&#13;
Environment  and COurse and&#13;
Curriculum.   L.evel 1 untver-&#13;
pIe off the committee  for this&#13;
reason,&#13;
you  might&#13;
as&#13;
well&#13;
have eight&#13;
at-large&#13;
seats."&#13;
Members  of the U.S. 'Con.&#13;
gress  determine   their  own&#13;
salaries  and  determine   how&#13;
much  money  each  of  their&#13;
own districts  receive,  Peter-&#13;
son reminded   his audience.&#13;
Senator   Kevin  ZIrkelbach&#13;
agreed with Peterson.&#13;
"We  have   a  system   of&#13;
check and balances," he said.&#13;
"If&#13;
there's  a&#13;
hint&#13;
of some-&#13;
thing  questionable,   we don't&#13;
have&#13;
to&#13;
pass It.&#13;
"There  lire&#13;
SO&#13;
few people&#13;
Involved  (In campus  organi-&#13;
zations).  You would be limit-&#13;
Ing those few people so much&#13;
more  (by passing  this&#13;
resolu-&#13;
tion).&#13;
to&#13;
"we're&#13;
U11hking&#13;
about our.&#13;
selves,"  Masterson  objected.&#13;
"We should be thinking about&#13;
the student body."&#13;
PSGA president&#13;
Alex&#13;
Pettit&#13;
threatened  to veto the&#13;
reeolu-&#13;
tlon&#13;
if&#13;
passed  by the Senate,&#13;
and  suggested   the  vote  be&#13;
postponed  for two weeks.  A&#13;
veto  override  would  require&#13;
two-thtrds of the Senate vote.&#13;
The Senate foliowed Pettit's&#13;
advice  and&#13;
will&#13;
vote on the&#13;
matter  In two weeks.&#13;
slty committees  are  Teacher&#13;
Excellence,  University&#13;
Budg-&#13;
et  and  Student  Disciplinary&#13;
Panel.&#13;
Second  level  appointments&#13;
are considered&#13;
to&#13;
be more ex-&#13;
perienced   than  level  1 ap-&#13;
pointees,  but  not&#13;
as&#13;
experi-&#13;
enced  as  those  at  level  3.&#13;
Level  2 faculty  committees&#13;
are  Athletic  Board,  Awards&#13;
and   Ceremonies,   Teaching&#13;
and  Faculty  Senate.  Univer-&#13;
sity committees  are Academ-&#13;
Ic  Calendar,    All  Campus&#13;
Events,  MInority Affairs, Sex-&#13;
ual&#13;
Harassment.  and  Park-&#13;
side Union Advisory Board.&#13;
"Students   would  be  ap-&#13;
pointed  to level three  on the&#13;
basis  of  previous  record  of&#13;
serving  on committees  with&#13;
a&#13;
PSGA see page 2&#13;
21llun1dey,  NlNM.1bel 5, '987 R8ngef&#13;
our view&#13;
Cooperation solves problem,&#13;
creates good communication&#13;
J...t _&#13;
you had&#13;
yauT&#13;
route to the library&#13;
llgured&#13;
out&#13;
to&#13;
avoid&#13;
the&#13;
locked doors of the 0·1 level. they were re-&#13;
_ned&#13;
ne  -..&#13;
_roe  opened&#13;
OIl&#13;
Monday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
26&#13;
and&#13;
..uJ&#13;
lUly _&#13;
Monday&#13;
tIu'ouch&#13;
Frtd&amp;y&#13;
from&#13;
8&#13;
a.m. to&#13;
2&#13;
pm,  thanka to th  Academic Reaouree center&#13;
(ARCl&#13;
and&#13;
Ita a~t&#13;
employ ....&#13;
ne&#13;
doo....&#13;
re&#13;
cIoeed&#13;
In the&#13;
fIret&#13;
place _   to a&#13;
etafftng&#13;
ahon&amp;ae.IM  reault of bUdget cuta. Now.&#13;
Sandy&#13;
Bunnelll-&#13;
Ier&#13;
and&#13;
r&#13;
atUdent emplo~a   at&#13;
ARC&#13;
are&#13;
accepting&#13;
more&#13;
reepollalbillU   to allow&#13;
lheae&#13;
doo..&#13;
to&#13;
remain  ~.&#13;
Aa&#13;
_Ie,&#13;
w  thank them for puttln&amp;&#13;
torlh&#13;
the extra effort&#13;
to&#13;
TV....&#13;
_~&#13;
'The&#13;
Urn ..&#13;
at   tlIch the&#13;
doo"  are ~    _re&#13;
ln1Iuen~&#13;
by  hetpful ob  rvallon by&#13;
lhOee&#13;
_Ie&#13;
who parUclpat·&#13;
ed In&#13;
the&#13;
all·1na two weeka ago. According to Parkslde&#13;
tudent&#13;
mment  A'_IIUOII   PresIdent  Alex PetUt,&#13;
who&#13;
patUclpant  In the all·w.&#13;
the&#13;
doors&#13;
were&#13;
used&#13;
m   frequenUy&#13;
between&#13;
8&#13;
a.m&#13;
and&#13;
2&#13;
p.m. It's&#13;
good&#13;
to&#13;
see&#13;
that&#13;
tile&#13;
Ubrary&#13;
tool&lt;&#13;
thJa&#13;
obaervallon  Into account when&#13;
they&#13;
tabllahe&lt;l&#13;
the&#13;
new&#13;
hOUrs&#13;
for the&#13;
0-1&#13;
level&#13;
doors.&#13;
b~ thank.you&#13;
aI80 ..-&#13;
to the&#13;
Jrtudenltt&#13;
who parUcI·&#13;
pated In&#13;
tile&#13;
a1t·w&#13;
and&#13;
kept the&#13;
0-1&#13;
level&#13;
doo&#13;
rs&#13;
open&#13;
two&#13;
ka&#13;
aao '"'"&#13;
"campua  leade.....&#13;
as&#13;
Chancellor SheUa&#13;
JtapIan&#13;
called them. obvloualy helped make a dlfterence&#13;
.... ~&#13;
atudenta,&#13;
10&#13;
enjoy your next stroU through the&#13;
0·1&#13;
level doors •&#13;
.-.I ..&#13;
mem&#13;
r&#13;
that&#13;
It&#13;
was the efforts of students. faculty&#13;
_   admlnlotrallon.&#13;
worltJng&#13;
together  and communlcat·&#13;
....  that&#13;
~ned&#13;
IMm for you.&#13;
lQ&#13;
AND If&#13;
1l£&#13;
SENATE REFUSES&#13;
"10&#13;
CONfiRM  JUDGE  CINSBURU.&#13;
I'Ll.JUST NOMINATElVEMfJ~1:&#13;
AACH'CONSERVAT&#13;
,&#13;
TWEN71ES&#13;
L::..-__&#13;
Wl&#13;
1&#13;
Reference librarian angered by letter from alum&#13;
TO&#13;
no:&#13;
1I:DrIO&amp;:&#13;
In&#13;
reepect to the Ietier Wl'It.&#13;
len&#13;
by&#13;
PIIII&#13;
ToII1.&#13;
I&#13;
feel com.&#13;
peUed to reply to ..&#13;
vera!&#13;
of&#13;
bla&#13;
atatementa.  He ltated that&#13;
be&#13;
_Uy&#13;
aw&#13;
two&#13;
reference&#13;
lIbrvioAo&#13;
at&#13;
the  _&#13;
and&#13;
_&#13;
"Wby _&#13;
It&#13;
take two&#13;
people&#13;
to&#13;
accompUah&#13;
noUI.&#13;
....!..&#13;
I&#13;
cerlalDly&#13;
don't&#13;
feel&#13;
Uka&#13;
I'".&#13;
accom~&#13;
noUI.&#13;
....:-ben&#13;
I ...&#13;
bome&#13;
at&#13;
nlIbL&#13;
8ece ...   '"&#13;
Itatt&#13;
cuta   ...&#13;
are -..&#13;
to .......&#13;
cove....&#13;
at&#13;
tbe&#13;
ret .. aw::e&#13;
deN&#13;
«onty&#13;
ODe&#13;
librarian&#13;
OIl&#13;
duty  at  a&#13;
lime.&#13;
and&#13;
no .............&#13;
at&#13;
all&#13;
011&#13;
8unda,ya1&#13;
aDd&#13;
durtq&#13;
prUne&#13;
lime&#13;
(.-t&#13;
10 Lm.&#13;
to&#13;
2&#13;
p.m.,&#13;
when&#13;
we&#13;
aIwaya&#13;
uaed&#13;
to&#13;
ba&#13;
ve&#13;
two&#13;
lIbrvioAo&#13;
011&#13;
the&#13;
deal.&#13;
It&#13;
can  be  extremely&#13;
busy.&#13;
with&#13;
people&#13;
wallin,  In&#13;
line&#13;
to baft  their  ref..... ee&#13;
q_ ........&#13;
red.&#13;
Do&#13;
we&#13;
accompUah&#13;
nothln&amp;&#13;
In&#13;
an·&#13;
awerInI&#13;
referenee&#13;
queallona!&#13;
I&#13;
aullleat that&#13;
Tohl&#13;
talk&#13;
to&#13;
all&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
people&#13;
whom  ...&#13;
help&#13;
to&#13;
get&#13;
Il&amp;rted&#13;
011&#13;
Iem&gt;&#13;
papers&#13;
(,·_t _&#13;
do&#13;
I&#13;
use&#13;
tor&#13;
-&#13;
.&#13;
..... ) or  with&#13;
their&#13;
Ubrary&#13;
SkIIIa  WOrkbooka  (non·stop&#13;
queallona   on&#13;
thatl.  or  with&#13;
ftndln«&#13;
a apeclfJc fact. Or to&#13;
the&#13;
people for whom we&#13;
do&#13;
online&#13;
searehlng.&#13;
or get Inter·&#13;
library&#13;
loan&#13;
requests.&#13;
He may well have aeen&#13;
two&#13;
Ubrarlana  at  the  reference&#13;
_    at&#13;
one&#13;
time; occasional.&#13;
ly we&#13;
do&#13;
go out and confer&#13;
with&#13;
another&#13;
Ubrartan  about&#13;
......lhInc -&#13;
are&#13;
worktng on&#13;
together.&#13;
And&#13;
we  recenUy&#13;
tlIred&#13;
a temporary  reference&#13;
librarian.  Ubrarlana&#13;
do&#13;
not&#13;
come  to  Parkalde&#13;
knowing&#13;
tt'IV)'tbln«&#13;
.-t&#13;
our library&#13;
or&#13;
about&#13;
refereaee  sources,&#13;
and&#13;
eo ...&#13;
bave&#13;
a&#13;
twO-week&#13;
lJ'aInID«&#13;
period.&#13;
during&#13;
which&#13;
time&#13;
we&#13;
encourace&#13;
the new&#13;
11.&#13;
brarlan&#13;
to&#13;
lit at the reference&#13;
-&#13;
aDd _.".,&#13;
the&#13;
types&#13;
of&#13;
q-&#13;
we get&#13;
aDd&#13;
answers&#13;
we&#13;
gtve,&#13;
all&#13;
of&#13;
which&#13;
are&#13;
de.&#13;
aIped&#13;
to&#13;
gtve&#13;
you  better&#13;
.. rvlee.&#13;
Mr.&#13;
ToII1.&#13;
And durtna&#13;
Julio&#13;
In&#13;
the ac.&#13;
llon at the ref......,.   _.&#13;
we&#13;
work  on collection  develop-&#13;
ment.  Books do not just  ap-&#13;
pear on the shelves  -  some·&#13;
one&#13;
has&#13;
to decide  to order&#13;
them.  which  means  reading&#13;
hundreds of book reviews and&#13;
publishers'  nOUcesand decid.&#13;
Ing  which  books&#13;
can&#13;
best&#13;
meet  Parkside's  needs.  We&#13;
also  read  professional  jour.&#13;
nals  willie  at  the  deal&lt;, or&#13;
Wl'Ite lectures  for the many&#13;
classes  we&#13;
are&#13;
requested  to&#13;
leach.&#13;
Yes.&#13;
the&#13;
card&#13;
catalogs were&#13;
moved&#13;
to&#13;
make room for the&#13;
new online  catalog  terminals.&#13;
And since they had&#13;
to&#13;
be fit&#13;
into&#13;
a much smaller  space,&#13;
we had  to rearrange   them.&#13;
The indexes were also moved&#13;
for the same reason. Current&#13;
periodicals  were  moved  up-&#13;
stairs&#13;
10&#13;
make&#13;
1t&#13;
eaaier for&#13;
patrons  who uoed to have to&#13;
look&#13;
on&#13;
both&#13;
levels for period.&#13;
lcals.&#13;
We.&#13;
too.&#13;
hope we don·t&#13;
have&#13;
to&#13;
move anything&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
future&#13;
again.&#13;
but&#13;
all&#13;
of the&#13;
moves&#13;
th1a&#13;
year  were logical&#13;
and necessary.&#13;
As for the&#13;
0·1&#13;
door.&#13;
I&#13;
have&#13;
never  worked&#13;
In&#13;
or  vlstted&#13;
any  other  Ubrary  that  had&#13;
more  than  one  entrance.&#13;
ThInk&#13;
about&#13;
fl.&#13;
does Kenosha&#13;
or Racine or MIlwaukee Pub-&#13;
lic.   UW·Mllwaukee.&#13;
UW.&#13;
MadJson or any other Ubrary&#13;
that  you  know  have  more&#13;
than&#13;
one entrance?  Parkside&#13;
was definitely unusual&#13;
In&#13;
hav.&#13;
Ing two entrances  for so long.&#13;
The  L/LC  staff  has  also&#13;
been hurt  by bUdget cuts  _&#13;
we  have  lost  3~  poSitions,&#13;
which is 140 hours per week&#13;
of work  that  the  remaining&#13;
staff&#13;
has&#13;
had to absorb,  and&#13;
all&#13;
of us have taken on more&#13;
work,  from  the  staff  who&#13;
order  the books and&#13;
serials,&#13;
catalog,  process.  shelve  and&#13;
circulate  them. to the library&#13;
administrators  -  we are all&#13;
working very hard  to conlin.&#13;
ue to provide qUality service.&#13;
BI&#13;
Nletaen&#13;
Coordtoator    of   Reference&#13;
Servl"""  (L/LCl&#13;
Tiered system&#13;
proposed&#13;
PSGA from paga I&#13;
good   record   of  altelldlll&#13;
meetings  and&#13;
observed  _&#13;
science of forethought&#13;
tOWIIlII&#13;
voting:  In other wordll....&#13;
erans."  said a sheet&#13;
IWIdIII&#13;
out during discussion.&#13;
Level&#13;
3&#13;
faculty com.......&#13;
are  Graduate  Studies, ..&#13;
mation  Resources,  :;&#13;
&amp;&#13;
FIne&#13;
Arts&#13;
and&#13;
F&#13;
Seminar.  Level&#13;
3 un!&#13;
committees   are&#13;
F~&#13;
Seminar.   Parking   A......&#13;
and Affirmative Action.&#13;
A re80luUon In oppoaltlollil&#13;
the  annexaUon  of&#13;
P""-&#13;
was   also   passed&#13;
dUrIII&#13;
Frlday's&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Jan&#13;
Kratochvil,  who ..&#13;
duced the resolution.&#13;
said"&#13;
negaUves  Involved&#13;
w1~.~&#13;
nexaUon  would be a ~&#13;
tuition  Increase  an&#13;
lUlJlOClI'&#13;
sary shift In services.&#13;
30lIIIII&#13;
provides   adequate  .. ~&#13;
now.  he  said.  and&#13;
K_&#13;
would need new dump ~&#13;
sewer tines. and ano~~&#13;
station   to  serve  ~&#13;
should  It be annexed&#13;
tAl ..&#13;
city.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
is&#13;
written and&#13;
edited&#13;
by&#13;
students&#13;
of&#13;
UW-Parkside.&#13;
who&#13;
are&#13;
solely&#13;
responsible&#13;
for&#13;
,ts&#13;
ed1l()(lli&#13;
I:&#13;
cy&#13;
and&#13;
cootent.&#13;
n ~&#13;
PtJbIisIled&#13;
every&#13;
Thursday&#13;
during&#13;
the&#13;
academic&#13;
year&#13;
except _&#13;
breaks&#13;
and&#13;
~&#13;
.&#13;
Len ....&#13;
to the&#13;
editor&#13;
witI&#13;
be&#13;
accepted&#13;
only ~&#13;
they&#13;
are&#13;
typed.&#13;
double-spaced&#13;
and&#13;
350&#13;
words or ......&#13;
letters  must&#13;
be&#13;
signed.&#13;
with&#13;
a t8tephone  number&#13;
inctuded&#13;
for verification&#13;
purposes.&#13;
Names WlM&#13;
be&#13;
held&#13;
upon request.&#13;
Ranoer reserves the right to&#13;
edille1ter.;&#13;
and refuse those&#13;
whicf1&#13;
are false and/or de· .,.--,&#13;
famatory.&#13;
=&#13;
lor&#13;
a1lleder,.  and _&#13;
ads.&#13;
is&#13;
Monday at 10 a.m.&#13;
lor&#13;
publication&#13;
All correspondence should&#13;
be&#13;
aOdressed to: Ranger. UW-Parl&lt;side. Box 2000. Ke-&#13;
nosha&#13;
W153141.  Telephone 414/553.2287  (Editorial) or 414/553-2295&#13;
(AdvertiS-&#13;
L,,_--::&#13;
lng).&#13;
-&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Elections closer than expected</text>
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              <text>ooto&#13;
ber&#13;
29, 1987&#13;
----~&#13;
-&#13;
~&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkslde&#13;
Vol.&#13;
18,&#13;
No.&#13;
e&#13;
ections closer&#13;
than&#13;
expec,ted&#13;
",KellY&#13;
McKissick&#13;
Organizations&#13;
Council's    P&#13;
NewsEdItor&#13;
(SOC) achievement   of major&#13;
p~~i":&#13;
explained&#13;
that&#13;
status   declared   SOC  to  no&#13;
so needs a vlce·presl.&#13;
IlJlfIl&#13;
votes had  been    longer be a standing  commit.    de.~ who&#13;
Will&#13;
respect Pettit.&#13;
on&#13;
Thursday  night,    tee  of PSGA,  yes-219,&#13;
no-n&#13;
respect  Alex.  He  has&#13;
Ail&#13;
the&#13;
"unofficial reo   Part   two  confirmed   SOC'~   ~":~J,0ng    way, and&#13;
I&#13;
think&#13;
were&#13;
read&#13;
off,  the   title as a major  status&#13;
orgaru.&#13;
a,&#13;
my background  and&#13;
01&#13;
applause&#13;
and  pop.   zatlon,  yes-195, not-45. What   :te;.;:,Jd~&#13;
w~, can do a I~t&#13;
-.npagne   corks  told   this means  Is that SOC Is now   see a&#13;
gr&#13;
t  gSt  ;;.e said.&#13;
I&#13;
wbUlerswere.&#13;
offi~lally  a  major  status  or-   there."  ea  nex&#13;
B&#13;
months&#13;
in&#13;
lIle&#13;
race&#13;
for&#13;
Vice&#13;
Prest-&#13;
garnzatlon.&#13;
Peterso&#13;
has&#13;
f   I&#13;
1/1&#13;
the&#13;
parkslde Student&#13;
Scott Peterson;  PSGA's new&#13;
.mind&#13;
for ~SGA~ H:~e~~a~&#13;
t&#13;
AsSOciation&#13;
vtce-prestdant,&#13;
thought  that    the present  Senate  meetln&#13;
J,&#13;
scott&#13;
Peterson&#13;
de-&#13;
the  election .race  was  very    are&#13;
too&#13;
long, and would&#13;
ur&#13;
victory&#13;
with&#13;
89&#13;
votes.    close.  However,  he expected    to see them  run one hour a~&#13;
beI1lDdwere ~didates&#13;
lt to be that  way because  he   the most.  "A lot of the busl-&#13;
Io1'P"&#13;
with&#13;
84&#13;
votes and    dld not, ,dOmuch for his&#13;
cam-&#13;
ness  and  discussion  should&#13;
Tran&#13;
with81votes.&#13;
palgn.&#13;
I&#13;
basically&#13;
ran&#13;
on my   not be held dUring a Senate&#13;
""   taU&#13;
student·at·large    na!Y'e and my reputation,"  he   meeting,&#13;
It&#13;
should be done In&#13;
01\&#13;
the&#13;
Segregated&#13;
Uni-    satd,&#13;
Peterson  explained  that    the  office.  That's  why  we&#13;
Fee-Allocatlon&#13;
oom-&#13;
with only five votes  between    have people put In their office&#13;
(SUFAC) went   to   himself  and  Bill  Serpe,  the   hours (three per week are reo&#13;
Carr&#13;
with 153 votes,    next   runner-up,&#13;
"It&#13;
could   ,qulred   for  Senators)"    he&#13;
James Voss, who had   have gone either way."&#13;
said.&#13;
'&#13;
The&#13;
taU&#13;
student-at-large&#13;
He joked that he ran for the&#13;
He suggested  that&#13;
If&#13;
sena-&#13;
lor&#13;
\he&#13;
Parkslde  Union&#13;
vtce-presldent&#13;
position&#13;
be-&#13;
tors have Issues to discuss or&#13;
ry&#13;
Bosrd&#13;
(PUAB) went   cause&#13;
It&#13;
was  just  about  the    materials   to  pass  out,  lt&#13;
d&#13;
to&#13;
TIm&#13;
Grygera    only position he hasn't  held&#13;
in&#13;
should  be done In the office&#13;
118&#13;
votes.&#13;
PSGA.  On  a'  more  serious    prior to the meeting.  He&#13;
also&#13;
nlne&#13;
fall seats for the   note,  he  added,  "The  main    stressed  that  he&#13;
Will&#13;
make&#13;
Senate went  to Dan    reason was that&#13;
I&#13;
felt that no-   sure  that  meetings  are  run&#13;
1M&#13;
votes; Steven Plca-    body  at  this  university   has    strictly  by parliamentary  pro-&#13;
llIl;&#13;
Stephanie Tatem,'    the qualifications  for that job    cedure.&#13;
; Debl FrItschow,  116;   that&#13;
I&#13;
have.&#13;
However,    Peterson&#13;
ex-&#13;
WUnrow.&#13;
113; James&#13;
"I  felt  that   we  needed&#13;
pressed  that  .he  wanted  to&#13;
107;&#13;
Susan  Walborn,    someone who was going to be    "bring  a little&#13;
fun&#13;
back Into&#13;
*;&#13;
Tyson&#13;
Wilda, 101; and   able to work with Alex (Pett·&#13;
PSGA," meaning  that he still&#13;
IlInPerrauit,&#13;
100&#13;
votes. They   'tit,  PSGA  President),&#13;
some-&#13;
wants  business  to get  done,&#13;
lIJIed&#13;
out Gary Heggeland,    one that  Alex will listen  to.    but he would like a friendly&#13;
11th&#13;
88&#13;
votes; Andrew&#13;
Hola-&#13;
He will listen to me;  I'm not    atmosphere  as well.&#13;
"If&#13;
peo-&#13;
....  76;&#13;
and&#13;
Greg Swan,73&#13;
saying  he's  going  to  agree&#13;
pie start  seeing  that  we can&#13;
with me on everything,  but he    get  work  done&#13;
and&#13;
have  a&#13;
will at least  listen  to what&#13;
I&#13;
good time. possibly we&#13;
Will&#13;
be&#13;
have to say,"  he commented.&#13;
able to get more people Inter-&#13;
Part&#13;
one&#13;
of a fall&#13;
rereren-&#13;
concerningthe Student&#13;
~1987  Fall PSGA  __&#13;
election results&#13;
Vice&#13;
President&#13;
Scott&#13;
Peterson&#13;
Bill&#13;
serpe&#13;
Hung Tran&#13;
S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
Jenny&#13;
carr&#13;
James&#13;
Voss&#13;
P.U.A.B.&#13;
Tim&#13;
Grygera&#13;
senata&#13;
1.&#13;
Dan&#13;
Vogt&#13;
2.&#13;
Steve Picazo&#13;
3.&#13;
Stephanie Tatem&#13;
4.&#13;
Debt&#13;
Frllschow&#13;
5. Julie Wunrow&#13;
6.&#13;
James&#13;
Cole&#13;
7.&#13;
Susan Walborn&#13;
6. Tyson Wilda&#13;
9. Dan Perrault&#13;
Heggeland&#13;
Horahan&#13;
Swan&#13;
Referendum&#13;
1/1&#13;
Referendum&#13;
1/2&#13;
89&#13;
84&#13;
11&#13;
ested In PSGA."&#13;
His final point, which was&#13;
stressed  the  most,  was  that&#13;
he wanted  to work on&#13;
rela-&#13;
tlons  with the other  campus&#13;
organizations.   "On  the  day&#13;
we held the library  open, we&#13;
had  three  of  the  big  five&#13;
major  status  organIzations&#13;
out there supporting&#13;
It.&#13;
It&#13;
was&#13;
great .'•  Peterson  said.  "I&#13;
think&#13;
we all have common&#13;
In-&#13;
terests even though we're&#13;
in&#13;
153&#13;
115&#13;
179&#13;
155&#13;
145&#13;
117&#13;
116&#13;
113&#13;
107&#13;
106&#13;
101&#13;
100&#13;
69&#13;
76&#13;
73&#13;
Yes&#13;
219&#13;
No&#13;
41&#13;
Yes 195 No 45&#13;
dltferent  areas."&#13;
.&#13;
Jenny&#13;
Carr,&#13;
a  returning&#13;
member  of SUFAC who was&#13;
filling  the  seat  vacated  by&#13;
Andy  Buchanan,  was  very&#13;
happy  about  her victory.&#13;
"I&#13;
couldn't  be  more  pleased,"&#13;
she commented.&#13;
"I&#13;
felt that&#13;
with  the  budgeting  getting&#13;
tighter and tighter,  it&#13;
Ia&#13;
vllaI&#13;
that&#13;
we have experience on&#13;
•&#13;
Electlona  page2&#13;
abor&#13;
.leader urges end to&#13;
US&#13;
support in -Guatemala&#13;
by&#13;
Amy&#13;
H. Ritter&#13;
NewsEdltor&#13;
A&#13;
auatemalan labor leader&#13;
lIIIted Parkslde,  Monday&#13;
Illera speakingstint at Mar.&#13;
tbe&#13;
tie&#13;
to&#13;
bring to this campus&#13;
messagehe has brought&#13;
=':lor  clUesIn the United&#13;
"::IfO&#13;
Polanco.  general&#13;
1I1abo&#13;
tory&#13;
of a confederation&#13;
IIld r UII10ns&#13;
In&#13;
Guatemala,&#13;
."   be&#13;
came seeking support&#13;
~ar&#13;
causes against  a&#13;
"f&#13;
lvegovernment.&#13;
bI&#13;
'Ita.s&#13;
invited by an office&#13;
AIne&#13;
O8hIngtonto Inform  an&#13;
~can   aUdience about the&#13;
Ilua~&#13;
POPu,J;armovement&#13;
in&#13;
IIpanj&#13;
mala.&#13;
Polanco said In&#13;
Prote:; Parkslde  Spanish&#13;
Iafed&#13;
r Jose Ortega trans-&#13;
II p&#13;
\:Stlo&#13;
ns&#13;
and responses&#13;
a.n ~&#13;
co&#13;
spoke with  the&#13;
""'~ r.  Polanco  said   he&#13;
lite.&#13;
a.s&#13;
a lI1\lonrepresenta-&#13;
tie~&#13;
his&#13;
speaking tour of&#13;
~,&#13;
he has  visited&#13;
... , I   • Michigan.  IllI·&#13;
"an::':'&#13;
Ohio, pennsylva.&#13;
COUrS'eiWisconsin.&#13;
Adolfo Polanco&#13;
Polanco  supports  the  Cen-&#13;
tral  American Peace  Plan,&#13;
signed August  7. He said the&#13;
plan Is a "great  step for the&#13;
democratization   of  Central&#13;
America."  One thing standing&#13;
In the way,  however,  Is U.S.&#13;
support  of the current  Guate·&#13;
malan government. "Unless&#13;
this type of help is stopped,"&#13;
said  Polanco.&#13;
"this&#13;
peace&#13;
plan Is not going&#13;
to&#13;
work.&#13;
"I  caPle&#13;
,11&gt;.&#13;
explain  to. tile&#13;
American  people&#13;
the&#13;
real sit·&#13;
uatlon&#13;
in&#13;
Guatemala,  how the&#13;
democracy  has been manipu-&#13;
lated  by the  government  of&#13;
Guatemala.&#13;
OJ&#13;
The peace  plan,  originated&#13;
by  the  president   of  Costa&#13;
Rica. calls for a cease-fire&#13;
and  dialogue  between   the&#13;
Guatemalan  government  and&#13;
the guerl1las (URNG). Polan-&#13;
co said both parties agreed,&#13;
but  soon  the  government&#13;
began sending secondary&#13;
gOY·&#13;
emment   figures&#13;
with&#13;
no&#13;
power to the talks.&#13;
"And  as  for  the  second&#13;
aspect,  the  cease  fire,  they&#13;
didn't  do It,"  said  Polanco.&#13;
"They kept fighting the guer-&#13;
illas.&#13;
.  "The guerl1las did go along&#13;
.with&#13;
the plan for cease  fire&#13;
and dialogue, but the govern-&#13;
ment  hasn't  done  anything&#13;
about  those  two  points.  So&#13;
that is the real nature  of the&#13;
government  of Guatemala."&#13;
Human  rights  do not exist&#13;
In  Guatemala,   Polanco  ex·&#13;
plalned.  Saturday.   two  stu-&#13;
dents  were  kidnapped  from&#13;
the UnI'{~r~!ty o( San. Carlos&#13;
by the government,  accused&#13;
of subversive behavior.&#13;
"Model villages"  have been&#13;
created  to house  the&#13;
Indian&#13;
popUlation,  "so  they  don't&#13;
give any support to the guer·&#13;
illas&#13;
t&#13;
"&#13;
Polanco  said.&#13;
I'They&#13;
are&#13;
in&#13;
a&#13;
type of jail. "&#13;
Guatemala  has a population&#13;
of 8 million. Between 1976and&#13;
1983, said  Polanco.  100.000.&#13;
people  were  killed,&#13;
60,000&#13;
were  kidnapped&#13;
t&#13;
and&#13;
500,000&#13;
were exiled .&#13;
These figures may be&#13;
mul-&#13;
tiplied,  because&#13;
if&#13;
an entire&#13;
Indian  town  Is  wiped  out,&#13;
there are no survivors&#13;
to&#13;
re-&#13;
port the number of dead.&#13;
A CIA coup In 1954 began&#13;
this&#13;
repressive  era of govern-&#13;
ment&#13;
in&#13;
Guatemala.&#13;
Polanco  explained  that  a&#13;
revolution  before  that  time&#13;
put&#13;
in&#13;
power&#13;
a&#13;
government&#13;
that went against the Interest&#13;
of the United Fruit Company.&#13;
a  major&#13;
U.S.&#13;
corporation.&#13;
"And  that  was untouchable,&#13;
so&#13;
the&#13;
U.S.&#13;
government&#13;
eng!-&#13;
Polanco&#13;
see&#13;
page 3&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Parkslde gets&#13;
$50,000&#13;
Kirk breaks barrier&#13;
Rocktober  ends In style&#13;
Soccer team remains hot&#13;
page&#13;
4&#13;
page&#13;
5&#13;
page&#13;
12&#13;
page&#13;
16&#13;
2&#13;
'TIlIncMy,&#13;
Qc:Iober&#13;
29. 11187&#13;
Rangef&#13;
.&#13;
our view&#13;
on.&#13;
take&#13;
lila&#13;
plclure,&#13;
1M&#13;
Rancer  responded  10 a lei.·&#13;
p/Ione&#13;
from a cone&#13;
me&lt;!&#13;
student  who&#13;
wondered&#13;
If&#13;
It&#13;
waa&#13;
In&#13;
IUIe  10&#13;
hav  an open&#13;
cocktail&#13;
party&#13;
In Upper&#13;
PIa&#13;
c1urtnc·&#13;
tIonaI O&gt;U glate&#13;
Alcohol&#13;
Awarenea&#13;
W&#13;
",.   cocktail&#13;
party&#13;
orlJlnally&#13;
10&#13;
be hold In the lac·&#13;
uIt7...........&#13;
ollnaro&#13;
111,&#13;
bol the&#13;
sign&#13;
on&#13;
1M&#13;
door&#13;
re-&#13;
t.rftCI ~&#13;
10&#13;
the&#13;
open&#13;
&amp;reA&#13;
near&#13;
the Ubrary.&#13;
",.   ~&#13;
attend.lnlr&#13;
1M&#13;
e&#13;
lebration  were&#13;
lhoae&#13;
who&#13;
_   al~&#13;
a&#13;
coni&#13;
renee&#13;
on&#13;
atu&lt;lent retention  held on&#13;
campwo&#13;
taaI   k&#13;
ICYUyOIM!&#13;
IooIuI&#13;
at IUb tanee&#13;
abu.oe&#13;
In&#13;
a dlflerent  way.&#13;
on. """'.&#13;
thIo&#13;
event&#13;
nothing&#13;
olfenalve, bot 10 the&#13;
stu-&#13;
_t&#13;
who&#13;
called and&#13;
10 1M&#13;
IOveral oIMr recovering&#13;
areo-&#13;
boIIca&#13;
who lound&#13;
lila&#13;
open&#13;
UIO&#13;
of alcohol a&#13;
paJnluI&#13;
reo&#13;
mlnder&#13;
of&#13;
tr&#13;
dJIO&amp;oo.&#13;
II&#13;
IlOna&#13;
lila&#13;
was&#13;
lnapproprlale,&#13;
10&#13;
oay&#13;
the&#13;
1._,&#13;
-Elections .....&#13;
DecIlO".  "...", _&#13;
,&#13;
tho&#13;
commlltee.&#13;
1&#13;
feel croat 10&#13;
have  th   conlldonce  of  the&#13;
campwo behind m  ..&#13;
With&#13;
P&#13;
roan&#13;
vacating  the&#13;
8UP'AC&#13;
chair&#13;
10&#13;
taIle the vlce&#13;
pruldeney.&#13;
Carr&#13;
wW&#13;
be th.&#13;
only _&#13;
need member&#13;
on&#13;
th  ""mml&#13;
·"f_..&#13;
1Rgfrom oaperleneo.&#13;
I II&#13;
bI&#13;
dlfllcull&#13;
10&#13;
leO&#13;
_1&#13;
hom&#13;
you&#13;
know&#13;
and&#13;
~cl&#13;
com  before&#13;
1M&#13;
commlll&#13;
d have&#13;
10&#13;
say&#13;
no.&#13;
bol 80m tim&#13;
It&#13;
jUft&#13;
ha.a&#13;
10&#13;
be&#13;
I&#13;
Y&#13;
In&#13;
order&#13;
10&#13;
bo   t reaponolbly,"&#13;
LooItInc&#13;
ad   at&#13;
thJ.s&#13;
year"&#13;
ting   proc:_,&#13;
Carr&#13;
thaI&#13;
It&#13;
_'1&#13;
eet&#13;
b1,&#13;
however.&#13;
contldenl thaI&#13;
wW&#13;
be able&#13;
10&#13;
CO&#13;
10 P  toraon&#13;
for advlce,&#13;
If&#13;
n«aoaary&#13;
•.  ott"&#13;
U&#13;
respected  on&#13;
eampwo and&#13;
I&#13;
know&#13;
h&#13;
's&#13;
been&#13;
throuch&#13;
tho&#13;
COmmlltee&#13;
belo .....&#13;
8O&#13;
I&#13;
know&#13;
l'&#13;
U&#13;
be&#13;
able&#13;
10 tum&#13;
10&#13;
him&#13;
for&#13;
advice.  I&#13;
jUllI hope  everyone&#13;
realizes&#13;
thai&#13;
thia&#13;
(the SUP'AC&#13;
commit-&#13;
tee)&#13;
I.s&#13;
nol&#13;
a&#13;
popularity  con.&#13;
test.&#13;
In...&#13;
me money matters.&#13;
nobody&#13;
Is&#13;
a&#13;
winner.&#13;
"It&#13;
la&#13;
footiah 10&#13;
lhlnk&#13;
of&#13;
tho&#13;
commltlee  as a speclal Inler.&#13;
est group commltlee&#13;
becaWle&#13;
II&#13;
a1mply&#13;
Lon'I. II&#13;
doesn'l mal.&#13;
ter&#13;
how&#13;
much&#13;
you personally&#13;
belleve  tn&#13;
a&#13;
project,&#13;
If&#13;
the&#13;
re t of&#13;
1M&#13;
commJtlee doesn'l&#13;
concur.&#13;
It&#13;
won'l&#13;
ny."&#13;
Jim&#13;
Voas,&#13;
Carr's  opponent&#13;
In the election,&#13;
has&#13;
mel with&#13;
C&amp;rT&#13;
since the ballots were&#13;
counted.&#13;
The&#13;
two&#13;
have&#13;
shared&#13;
Ideas&#13;
and&#13;
thoughts&#13;
for  the&#13;
comtng bUdgeting process.&#13;
"Jim&#13;
has ...&#13;
me&#13;
good&#13;
ldeaa&#13;
and&#13;
I&#13;
think&#13;
he would  have&#13;
been&#13;
a&#13;
good&#13;
addlUon 10 the&#13;
committee.&#13;
U&#13;
he&#13;
wants&#13;
10 al.&#13;
tend the meetings and camer&#13;
a 1Il0e expertence,&#13;
I&#13;
think&#13;
he&#13;
"'ouId dennJtely have a futuro&#13;
with&#13;
It,"&#13;
Carr concluded.&#13;
-&#13;
.&#13;
1987:   THE GREATCORRECTION&#13;
lL.:..&#13;
yo&#13;
_&#13;
u_r_vi_ew_s&#13;
l&#13;
Acting director&#13;
of&#13;
L/LC responds&#13;
TO:  Alex Z.&#13;
Petul,  PSGA&#13;
Presldenl&#13;
Thank&#13;
you for  letting  me&#13;
know the views of the library&#13;
patrons  you  surveyed   eon-&#13;
cemlng the clostng of our D·l&#13;
entrance.  We&#13;
are sorry&#13;
that&#13;
cuts   tn   Llbrary!LearnJng&#13;
Center staffing  made  this&#13;
In-&#13;
convenience  necessary.   As&#13;
you know.&#13;
this&#13;
1sonly one of&#13;
the service cuts&#13;
Utat&#13;
was&#13;
dls-&#13;
cussed and reviewed at some&#13;
length last Spring by the&#13;
LI·&#13;
brary  SubcommIttee   of  the&#13;
Information  Resources  Com~&#13;
mlttee.&#13;
With&#13;
its&#13;
provisions for&#13;
student  representation,   this&#13;
commlttee&#13;
Is&#13;
the approprlate&#13;
forum&#13;
10&#13;
which&#13;
to&#13;
raise your&#13;
concerns,  and&#13;
I&#13;
suggest  that&#13;
you&#13;
do&#13;
so.&#13;
Of&#13;
course,&#13;
I&#13;
am&#13;
always  avaUable&#13;
to&#13;
discuss&#13;
your  perceptions  of student&#13;
needs  and&#13;
to&#13;
answer   any&#13;
questions   you   may   have&#13;
about our services.&#13;
In&#13;
your  memo  you  ex-&#13;
pressed some contusion about&#13;
the relationship of the closing&#13;
of the&#13;
D-1&#13;
entrance&#13;
to&#13;
the se-&#13;
curtty  of  llbrary  materials.&#13;
I'll&#13;
try&#13;
10&#13;
clarify  this matter&#13;
for you. To secure&#13;
its&#13;
mate-&#13;
rlaJs,&#13;
the&#13;
LlLC&#13;
uses  the&#13;
3M&#13;
security  gate  system.  These&#13;
gates are designed  to be used&#13;
In conjunction  with a&#13;
monitor-&#13;
tng stations  staffed by llbrary&#13;
employees who challenge pa-&#13;
trons   attempting    to.  pass&#13;
through  the gates  with mate-&#13;
rtals   that   have   not  been&#13;
checked out: unfortunately,   a&#13;
routine occurrence&#13;
in&#13;
this and&#13;
other  llbrartes.  Accordtng  to&#13;
the&#13;
3M&#13;
company,  the effecti-&#13;
veness of the security gates&#13;
tn reducing  theft  Is directly&#13;
related&#13;
10&#13;
their  proximity&#13;
10&#13;
the staff  who monilor  them,&#13;
and   the   company   recom.&#13;
mends  that  such staff be Im-&#13;
mediately   adjacent&#13;
10&#13;
the&#13;
gates.&#13;
Before&#13;
this&#13;
year,  desk  at-&#13;
tendants   at  both  check-out&#13;
desks monitored  their respec-&#13;
tive entrance  gates,  and  the&#13;
Level-1 gate  continues&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
monllored  by  attendants   on&#13;
that&#13;
level. However, as are.&#13;
suit  of  the  consolidation  of&#13;
most circulation  functions on&#13;
Levell  (an efficiency meas-&#13;
ure&#13;
that&#13;
saved  a  Significant&#13;
sum of money),  the D.l Desk&#13;
has&#13;
been lett without  enough&#13;
staff&#13;
to&#13;
monitor  the&#13;
0-1&#13;
secu-&#13;
rity gate.&#13;
Although  we  have  asked&#13;
our microcomputer  assistants&#13;
10 add software  check·out  to&#13;
their  previous  duties, wefool&#13;
It Is  essential  that  they&#13;
lie&#13;
able  to leave  the _&#13;
IN&#13;
whenever  necessary&#13;
to&#13;
help&#13;
patrons  use mlcrocomputerL&#13;
Thus, they cannot serve _&#13;
tively as gate monitors.&#13;
and&#13;
It&#13;
became  necessary&#13;
to&#13;
d.&#13;
that entrance.&#13;
I&#13;
hope that&#13;
this&#13;
explanatllll&#13;
clears  up your confusion.&#13;
this potnt. Please let me_&#13;
If you  would  like addJtloIIII&#13;
information   on  any of&#13;
lU&#13;
services.&#13;
Linda Plele&#13;
Acting Dlreclor&#13;
LIbrary /Leamlng  Center&#13;
To the Edilor:&#13;
I&#13;
would like to Ihank every·&#13;
one who voted  tn the&#13;
PSG.l&#13;
Election  last week&#13;
and alllbl&#13;
candidates  who&#13;
ran&#13;
for offtet-&#13;
This election&#13;
Was'OKtrernell'&#13;
successful  tn the&#13;
sense&#13;
tlW1&#13;
almost&#13;
300&#13;
people voted'"&#13;
13&#13;
candidates&#13;
ran&#13;
lor&#13;
nIIt&#13;
Senate seats. For&#13;
the ~&#13;
time&#13;
in&#13;
many  semesters, '"&#13;
will&#13;
have a full senate.&#13;
M1"&#13;
these  numbers  reflect ~&#13;
the  student   govemment&#13;
Parkside  Is allve, heslthy'"&#13;
growtng.&#13;
Letters see&#13;
twJe&#13;
3&#13;
Ranger&#13;
is&#13;
written a~&#13;
edit~&#13;
by students of UW-Parkslde. who are solely responsible for its edllO~&#13;
t:&#13;
cy ana content.&#13;
It&#13;
IS&#13;
published&#13;
every Thursday during the academiC year except over breakS a&#13;
days.&#13;
'.&#13;
II&#13;
letters  to&#13;
the&#13;
editor WIll.&#13;
be&#13;
accepted omy&#13;
if&#13;
they are&#13;
typed.&#13;
double.spaced  and 350 words&#13;
Of&#13;
leSS..&#13;
)etters must&#13;
be&#13;
SIgned.&#13;
with&#13;
a telephone number Included for verificatIOn purposes. Names will&#13;
be&#13;
held&#13;
upon&#13;
request&#13;
Ranger reserves&#13;
the&#13;
right&#13;
to&#13;
edit&#13;
letters and refuse those which are false and/or de- .,.---,&#13;
fanlitory&#13;
",...,&#13;
of.&#13;
Deadlinefor au Ieners, and classified ads&#13;
is&#13;
Monday at 10 a m for publicalion  ..&#13;
,;,c.....&#13;
ThurS4:Jay_&#13;
'.&#13;
.&#13;
c:o,,~ •&#13;
All&#13;
correspOlldence&#13;
shoutd&#13;
be&#13;
addressed to: Ranger, UW-Parkside.  Box 2000. Ke-   .... '"&#13;
nosha&#13;
WI 53141. Te_ne   414/553-2287 (Edttorial) or 414/553.2295 (AdvertlS'&#13;
'"lll.&#13;
'-  __&#13;
RoncIy&#13;
l.eCounl&#13;
Spo&lt;tsE""",&#13;
Owe&#13;
-..cEvoy -&#13;
__._&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Ken&#13;
McCray .. _..  ··&#13;
Aast.&#13;
Photo  EdItor&#13;
Jon&#13;
Hom&gt;n _  ._.......&#13;
Ad Manager&#13;
IoIo&lt;:l.-&#13;
J&#13;
RohI ...._ ..&#13;
Ooslribubon&#13;
Manage&lt;&#13;
-   Luohr .&#13;
, ..&#13;
Copy&#13;
E~I'"&#13;
GE'ERAl STAFF&#13;
.-e-s ..&#13;
__&#13;
JrIf_....,'-&#13;
~&#13;
""'---&#13;
...&#13;
-_&#13;
-&#13;
--_.&#13;
__&#13;
.--..-&#13;
s.:..on.&#13;
Jett&#13;
SWIdl   TJ$Oft&#13;
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              <text>&#13;
oot&#13;
0be&#13;
"&#13;
22,&#13;
Univeralty of Wlaconaln-Pai-kalde&#13;
#&#13;
tudentsprotest  locked  library doors with sit-in&#13;
.,   IIIe\'eD&#13;
R,&#13;
Picazo&#13;
.&#13;
pared   to  discuss   them.   It&#13;
Is&#13;
imperative&#13;
that&#13;
Important&#13;
parties    Involved  be   on  hand&#13;
at   library&#13;
committee&#13;
meet.&#13;
ings&#13;
to&#13;
voice the concerns of&#13;
the  students.&#13;
"There&#13;
Is&#13;
one&#13;
thing&#13;
to keep&#13;
It  (the  library)   open  to  meet&#13;
legitimate   needs  and  there   Is&#13;
another&#13;
thing&#13;
to  keep&#13;
It&#13;
open&#13;
for  the  very  sake  of doing It,"&#13;
Kaplan  continued.  "We Intend&#13;
to  address   It.  our  problem   Is&#13;
money.&#13;
We do hope we can&#13;
find  some   way  to  juggle   the&#13;
resources.&#13;
And I&#13;
hope within&#13;
a week  we  can have  some&#13;
sort of resolution to&#13;
this&#13;
prob-&#13;
lem."&#13;
An&#13;
Important&#13;
point   made&#13;
by  Kaplan&#13;
Is&#13;
that   the  library&#13;
situtanon&#13;
must   also   be  seen&#13;
as trade-off between service&#13;
and  access.&#13;
If&#13;
you  keep  both&#13;
the service and the access&#13;
then you have&#13;
to&#13;
cut some-&#13;
where else.&#13;
"Every'tlme&#13;
you  look  at  a&#13;
zero   sum   budget,    and&#13;
this&#13;
Urne you are, you cut some&#13;
here and give 1t over there&#13;
and  that's   just  the  way  It&#13;
Is",&#13;
Kaplan  said.&#13;
Kaplan   finished  addressing&#13;
the ·students  by&#13;
stating,&#13;
"I&#13;
ap-&#13;
preciate&#13;
your    concem&#13;
and&#13;
your  Interest.   It's   nlce  to  Bee&#13;
people  wanting  the  library.   It&#13;
Is&#13;
a  very  positive  lhtog."&#13;
PSGA  president   Alex  Pettit&#13;
said  that  random  protests&#13;
will&#13;
continue throughout the next&#13;
weeks  until  the  situation&#13;
Is&#13;
reo&#13;
solved.&#13;
photo&#13;
by&#13;
Steven Picazo&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Students   staged  sit-In to force&#13;
0·1&#13;
level library doors  open&#13;
COalition"&#13;
(LLC)&#13;
had&#13;
the&#13;
convenience   and  an  Incorrect&#13;
came    down   to   address&#13;
the&#13;
crowd   using   the   doorway    In&#13;
move   on  the   part   of  the   ad.&#13;
group&#13;
and    see    for    herself&#13;
no   time.    As   these    first    few&#13;
ministration.&#13;
what  the   concerns   of  the&#13;
stu-&#13;
brave&#13;
students&#13;
made&#13;
thetr&#13;
Elizabeth&#13;
Perry,&#13;
a&#13;
handl-&#13;
dents  were.&#13;
way   through    the   doors   they&#13;
capped&#13;
student,&#13;
approached&#13;
She Informed  the  group  that&#13;
were    applauded&#13;
for&#13;
partict-&#13;
the  gathering   and  asked  them&#13;
a  library   committee   had  met&#13;
patlng   In the  demonstration.&#13;
how  they   managed   to  get  the&#13;
and  would  be  meeting   again.&#13;
At&#13;
10:30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Professor&#13;
doors  open.  She was  led  to be.&#13;
One  of  thetr   topics  would  be&#13;
Omar&#13;
Amln,&#13;
Professor of&#13;
Lif~&#13;
Heve that the&#13;
D~l&#13;
doors would   the D-1 level doors.&#13;
Science,&#13;
joined&#13;
the&#13;
group&#13;
only   be   locked   on  weekends&#13;
"Our  desire&#13;
Is&#13;
to  make  the&#13;
stating   he  believed   what   they&#13;
so  she  hadn't   made   the  effort&#13;
library&#13;
as   accessible&#13;
as&#13;
we&#13;
were    doing   was   the   correct&#13;
to get  a  key  for herself.&#13;
possibly  can  wilhto  the  flnan·  .&#13;
thing.   He  saw   the   closing   of"'&#13;
After   another   hour   passed,&#13;
clal&#13;
limitations",&#13;
Kaplan&#13;
the&#13;
D·l&#13;
doors   as   both   an   In.&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Sheila&#13;
Kaplan&#13;
said.   "Obviously   we  are&#13;
pre-&#13;
Reduced&#13;
annual&#13;
budget  forces  locks on library doors&#13;
by Corby",&#13;
AJlderson&#13;
I&#13;
Ub&#13;
On&#13;
Monday,October&#13;
12,&#13;
the&#13;
Do&#13;
rary&#13;
closedIts doors  to  the&#13;
u/&#13;
level&#13;
In&#13;
another   effort&#13;
to&#13;
*'t&#13;
expenditures  Into   are·&#13;
P!o~d&#13;
annual&#13;
budget,&#13;
LInda&#13;
Db&#13;
,acting   dtrector   of  the&#13;
rary,&#13;
said   the   move    be.&#13;
;;;&#13;
necessry  When  the   11-&#13;
Ita&#13;
consolJdsted  some    of&#13;
...;"l'VIcesat  the&#13;
L·l&#13;
and&#13;
D.l&#13;
Ierv!"&#13;
The  recent&#13;
cuts&#13;
In&#13;
18&#13;
co. are&#13;
expected  to  save&#13;
~t~f&#13;
a  $1,106,4081987.88&#13;
l:a&#13;
r&#13;
to&#13;
this   SUmmer,   at&#13;
D'l&#13;
~=&#13;
student  staffed   the&#13;
IlIter&#13;
and  one  mlcrocom-&#13;
"'Iltpu~t&#13;
worked   with&#13;
0Ile&#13;
stu&#13;
r   users.&#13;
CurrenUy,&#13;
desk&#13;
:t&#13;
serves  as  both  a&#13;
IOtnpu~&#13;
ndant   and&#13;
mtcro.&#13;
9Ueli1ly&#13;
r&#13;
assistant:&#13;
Fre.&#13;
lie&#13;
lVlibthat student  is  work-&#13;
!rOm&#13;
the&#13;
patrons    far·   away&#13;
to&#13;
Piel&#13;
e&#13;
P'1&#13;
exit.  According&#13;
~'&#13;
·..the  exit   security&#13;
~&#13;
lJJ&#13;
desigped   to   have&#13;
anlbn ...  ~&#13;
(at  the  exit)  at&#13;
Acknowledging&#13;
that&#13;
the&#13;
locked  doors are an&#13;
Inconven-&#13;
lence,   but   having   .them  open&#13;
"not&#13;
a  necessity."  Piele&#13;
maintains    that  tlie  current&#13;
op-&#13;
tion   was   the   least   objection.&#13;
able   among    those   offered   to&#13;
the committee  which  made&#13;
the  :&#13;
decision&#13;
to&#13;
restrict&#13;
access. The 0·1 doors are&#13;
available&#13;
for   use   by&#13;
handt-&#13;
capped   persons   and  a  limited&#13;
.number   of staff:&#13;
While.  the   library&#13;
adrnlnis-&#13;
tratlon    saw   closing   the   doors&#13;
as   Its   only   option   given   Its&#13;
budget    constraints&#13;
and   secu-&#13;
rity&#13;
problems,&#13;
others&#13;
on&#13;
campus are less than&#13;
empa-&#13;
thetlc.   Faculty    and   staff   who&#13;
work   In  the   area    of  the   Ll-&#13;
. brary/Leamlng&#13;
Center,&#13;
which  Is  separata    from  the  11·&#13;
brary   Itself,  have   complained&#13;
about&#13;
the&#13;
added&#13;
Inconven·&#13;
lence  of  getting   to  such  areas&#13;
as  the  duplicating    center   and&#13;
malJ  services,&#13;
(which   are   on&#13;
the&#13;
D·2&#13;
level    inside    the   li-&#13;
brary)    and  back,   one  must&#13;
go&#13;
a  total   of  up  three   and   down&#13;
three levels. According to&#13;
ern-&#13;
ployees.  not  only Is lhls  an&#13;
In-&#13;
convenience. but&#13;
it&#13;
wastes&#13;
considerable    amounts   of  time&#13;
as&#13;
weu,&#13;
especially    when  the&#13;
same&#13;
path&#13;
is travelled sev-&#13;
eral  time"  each  day.  While no&#13;
Gtflclal  plans  are   being  made&#13;
to   remedy&#13;
lhls,    Piele    said&#13;
that  employees  from other&#13;
areas  may  eventually be&#13;
given   keys   to   access   the   11·&#13;
brary   through  the&#13;
D·l&#13;
doors .&#13;
Alex    Pettit,&#13;
president&#13;
of&#13;
Parkslde&#13;
Student&#13;
Oovern-&#13;
ment   Association   (PSGA)  reo&#13;
sponded  to  the  closing  by  set-&#13;
tlng  up  a  table   outside  of  the&#13;
D.l&#13;
doors   the   momlng    they&#13;
were"-locked.&#13;
By&#13;
the  end of&#13;
the   first   day,   549 slgoatures&#13;
protesting   the  permanent    clo-&#13;
sure were  collected.&#13;
By&#13;
the&#13;
end of the second day. over&#13;
1,000 were  collected.   Students&#13;
and  staff  who  discovered   that&#13;
the  doors  were  locked  seemed&#13;
eager&#13;
to   slgo    the    petition.&#13;
However,   Pettit   does  not  ex·&#13;
pect    the   effort    to   payoff.&#13;
"ApparenUy&#13;
It   (the   petition&#13;
drive)&#13;
has&#13;
fallen&#13;
on    deaf&#13;
ears," he stated.&#13;
Pettit    also   commented&#13;
on&#13;
the  method  by  which  lhls  and&#13;
other   decisions   affecting   the&#13;
library services  have  been&#13;
made.&#13;
"The    library&#13;
doesn't&#13;
make a case for what they&#13;
do. They  make  a  decision  and&#13;
then come up with excuses."&#13;
Mary&#13;
Elizabeth&#13;
ShuUer,&#13;
vice  chancellor,  said&#13;
that&#13;
if&#13;
students    don't   ilke   the&#13;
decl-&#13;
slons   that    are    being   made,&#13;
then&#13;
" ...they    should&#13;
go&#13;
to&#13;
their  representative    on the&#13;
In-&#13;
fonnatton Resources Commit.&#13;
tee.   The   student   representa-&#13;
tlve  for  the  IRC&#13;
Is&#13;
Alex  Pet-&#13;
tit.&#13;
"If&#13;
they&#13;
are&#13;
not   satisfied&#13;
after    that,   then   they   should&#13;
voice    thetr    opinions   at    the&#13;
meetings  themselves."&#13;
The  Library    Subcommittee&#13;
of  the  information    Resources&#13;
COmmittee&#13;
(lRC)&#13;
Is&#13;
the  body&#13;
responsible&#13;
for&#13;
making&#13;
the&#13;
recent decisions. The&#13;
subcom-&#13;
mlttee   Is  chaired   by&#13;
Protes-&#13;
sor  James   Shea.&#13;
perspectives&#13;
:=2T11u:=rsda&#13;
y&#13;
.=0ct0be=r22=.1987:.:.-Ran&#13;
9&#13;
_er&#13;
------..::&#13;
our view&#13;
Campus leaders take&#13;
time to make changes&#13;
1'tle&#13;
1.1nIn th   Ub   ry  to prol&#13;
the lo&lt;:k1ngof the 0-1&#13;
cIoon&#13;
W&#13;
I&#13;
I the   Iud  n\.l who care  aboul  what  Is&#13;
In&#13;
on&#13;
lhtn&#13;
unlvenlly&#13;
can&#13;
make  a dIlference.&#13;
t ..&#13;
not an  hoUr&#13;
atter&#13;
the protest  began  thai  security&#13;
e&#13;
d&#13;
eel&#13;
lIlat  the  group  disband&#13;
It&#13;
was  less&#13;
than&#13;
an&#13;
hour&#13;
after  thai  lIlal Chancellor  Kaplan  came&#13;
down&#13;
and&#13;
m&#13;
group  to&#13;
r th&#13;
conce",..&#13;
not&#13;
Me&#13;
th&#13;
request   an  unreasonable    one,&#13;
\.I&#13;
til&#13;
8tuden\.l  to&#13;
be&#13;
ware  of the  budgetary&#13;
con-&#13;
\.I&#13;
that&#13;
BIle&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
other  admtntstrators    face.&#13;
t&#13;
parttcul&amp;r1y&#13;
tnwresl!ng.&#13;
however.   was   the&#13;
plu'UO&#13;
BIle&#13;
..-ed&#13;
to&#13;
describe&#13;
U-&#13;
8tuden\.l  who  took  the&#13;
to&#13;
mak&#13;
a  point  and  hopetully  a&#13;
change&#13;
that  would&#13;
pall&#13;
llIe&#13;
udenla-lhe&#13;
campus&#13;
leaders.  '!bat·s  a  lag&#13;
stu&#13;
nl&#13;
who&#13;
parUclpated&#13;
In&#13;
the  Blt·1n&#13;
can&#13;
wear  with&#13;
pride&#13;
um&#13;
II boa posIuve&#13;
thtng&#13;
to&#13;
be IdenUfied&#13;
as&#13;
a&#13;
I&#13;
r,&#13;
d 10m  Um&#13;
not;  however.&#13;
it&#13;
is&#13;
never  negative&#13;
the&#13;
nd&#13;
t.I&#13;
crea&#13;
a better  Parkslde   for  all&#13;
stu-&#13;
dent.l&#13;
",.  war&#13;
18&#13;
not ov  r&#13;
I:  atudents.  ataff  and  faculty  are&#13;
UIUlappy&#13;
aboul&#13;
locked  Ilbrary.   Keep  It  up.  students.&#13;
a&#13;
muo&#13;
lu    •&#13;
staff&#13;
and  faculty&#13;
will&#13;
join  and  together&#13;
aha1I&#13;
ov  ~,..&#13;
Iyour vews&#13;
Response to vet's views, other issues raised&#13;
TolMEdI_:&#13;
In&#13;
regard   to  Uoyd   Trom-&#13;
m&#13;
\'a   artIcl&#13;
In&#13;
wt&#13;
week'a&#13;
Ranger,&#13;
I&#13;
have  been  told  that&#13;
wh&#13;
n   poopl&#13;
are    d  pressed&#13;
and  when events&#13;
don't&#13;
look as&#13;
11&#13;
as&#13;
they   could.   people&#13;
nd&#13;
to&#13;
look&#13;
to  the  pasl   for&#13;
their&#13;
harmony.&#13;
They&#13;
equate&#13;
harmony   and   the   put&#13;
with&#13;
thetr&#13;
depreaBIon&#13;
I&#13;
feel&#13;
lhl.s&#13;
has&#13;
happened  to  Uoyd  Trom·&#13;
ml&#13;
When&#13;
peopl&#13;
base&#13;
their&#13;
f&#13;
l8&#13;
on&#13;
auumpUolla.&#13;
they&#13;
tend&#13;
to  create    ter\.lion,  unnec-&#13;
ry   t.ena1on  neither&#13;
Trem-&#13;
mel&#13;
nor  any_y&#13;
_&#13;
n__&#13;
God&#13;
ImoWs&#13;
we  have   enough&#13;
tension&#13;
to&#13;
go&#13;
around.   I&#13;
be·&#13;
Ilev   h&#13;
has&#13;
wrongly  put&#13;
the&#13;
bl&amp;m  on  ParkBIde&#13;
dult  Stu-&#13;
dent  Alllanc  • and  that  he&#13;
has&#13;
replaced  und  ....tandtng.&#13;
com·&#13;
paaBlon&#13;
and  dedlcaUon.  wlllch&#13;
18&#13;
what  PA&#13;
Is&#13;
about.   with&#13;
lnnuedo.   antmOlllty  and&#13;
con·&#13;
tradl   Uon.&#13;
){any&#13;
people.&#13;
especla1ly  the  presldenl.   Debl&#13;
Frll8choW&#13;
and  h  r  vlce  pre&#13;
1-&#13;
denl.&#13;
Gary&#13;
Heggeland.&#13;
worked long hoUrs over the&#13;
summer&#13;
to&#13;
atta.ln  the  reapect&#13;
of   their    peers    and   to   put&#13;
P ASA on  the  move  In a  posi-&#13;
tive&#13;
direction  for&#13;
once.  Trem-&#13;
mel's  article   lalnted   the&#13;
con-&#13;
fidence  people  had  In  P ASA.&#13;
It&#13;
mayor&#13;
may&#13;
not&#13;
be&#13;
re-&#13;
gained.&#13;
nus&#13;
remains&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
seen.&#13;
I&#13;
am&#13;
sorry&#13;
that  he feels&#13;
lhl.s&#13;
v..ay  about  PASA.  Instead   of&#13;
condemntng  the  organlz.aUon.&#13;
Trommel  should  seek  ways&#13;
to&#13;
work  with  It_ He  should  put&#13;
ilia&#13;
energy  and  Input  to&#13;
good&#13;
use,  and  use  PASA as  an  out·&#13;
let  for&#13;
!lis&#13;
Ideas.&#13;
Trommel   should  put   aside&#13;
ilia&#13;
feeUngs  of  animosity&#13;
be-&#13;
cause  In  reallty   It's  the  vets.&#13;
all&#13;
the  vets,  who  are  hurt  by&#13;
Ills&#13;
loes.&#13;
Isn·t  that  what's&#13;
im-&#13;
portant  here~&#13;
Nevertheless,    I  believe.  as  I&#13;
thtnk&#13;
he&#13;
doea  too.  that   there&#13;
is&#13;
a  common   ground   for&#13;
all&#13;
people   to  stand   on.  but   the&#13;
problem&#13;
ta&#13;
the  appllcaUon  of&#13;
such  vast  ideas.  When he&#13;
has&#13;
discovered&#13;
his&#13;
"common&#13;
ground_"&#13;
I&#13;
am&#13;
sure&#13;
the  door&#13;
wUl&#13;
be&#13;
open&#13;
tor&#13;
any&#13;
sugges-&#13;
tion he may  have  to offer.&#13;
Be-&#13;
cause   that's    what   P ASA  ts&#13;
really  about.&#13;
finding&#13;
common&#13;
ground  on  which  all  students&#13;
can&#13;
stand.&#13;
Respectully   submitted,&#13;
Ralpb&#13;
Abaglan&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
WIly&#13;
Is&#13;
Parkslde   looking  for&#13;
new&#13;
students&#13;
while&#13;
other&#13;
UW&#13;
centers   are&#13;
capping    enroll-&#13;
ment?&#13;
WhIle&#13;
I&#13;
don·t   pretend&#13;
to&#13;
have&#13;
done  any&#13;
empirical&#13;
re-&#13;
search&#13;
on    this&#13;
matter.&#13;
I&#13;
would like&#13;
to&#13;
offer  a  few  per-&#13;
sonal  observations   which&#13;
may&#13;
have  an  impact   on&#13;
this&#13;
ques-&#13;
Uon.&#13;
I&#13;
am   a   transfer&#13;
student&#13;
from  out  of state.  This&#13;
is&#13;
my&#13;
second  semester   at  Parkside.&#13;
my first&#13;
in&#13;
the  dorms.&#13;
Food  service&#13;
is&#13;
a  problem.&#13;
1 can  eat  at  many  restaurants&#13;
cheaper&#13;
Ulan&#13;
this&#13;
cafeteria.   I&#13;
talked   to  a  few  people  about&#13;
food   service&#13;
at    other&#13;
UW&#13;
campuses.&#13;
I&#13;
understand&#13;
a&#13;
couple of campuses   offer  food&#13;
programs&#13;
where    a   student&#13;
can  actually   live  off  the  food&#13;
tickets.  At UW-Oshkosh.  for  a&#13;
lltue  over  S300per  semester   a&#13;
student  can  eat  2 meals  a  day&#13;
five days  a week.&#13;
I&#13;
am  also  told  that   at&#13;
sev-&#13;
era!   of&#13;
the&#13;
campuses,&#13;
once&#13;
one   goes   through    the&#13;
head-&#13;
count.   a  student   may   select&#13;
any  type  of  meal.   A la  carte&#13;
here  Is  simply&#13;
too&#13;
expensive.&#13;
Most  people&#13;
I&#13;
have  talked   to&#13;
spend  between&#13;
$4&#13;
and&#13;
$5&#13;
{or a&#13;
full&#13;
meal.  When you  pay&#13;
$1.69&#13;
for  a  sandwich.   you  are   bet-&#13;
ter  off  buying  out  of  a  vend-&#13;
Ing&#13;
maclting.   Additionally.&#13;
If&#13;
you  do happen  to  stay  around&#13;
on a weekend.   food is  at  least&#13;
available   at  other   campuses.&#13;
Here.  good  luck.  I  would  love&#13;
to   see   a   survey   of   student&#13;
satisfaction&#13;
with    this&#13;
food&#13;
service  program.&#13;
The  dorms  are  nice.  A Uttle&#13;
noisy  at  times.   but  nice.   For&#13;
$1100   per&#13;
semester&#13;
they&#13;
should   be.   Compare    that&#13;
to&#13;
UW·MIlwaukee&#13;
at&#13;
$88&#13;
per&#13;
month  or  $450per  semester   at&#13;
Oshkosh.  Why  is  Parkside    so&#13;
much  more   expensive?   They&#13;
must  want  to  payoff   the  loan&#13;
for    the&#13;
construction&#13;
in&#13;
a&#13;
hurry.&#13;
This&#13;
weekend&#13;
my&#13;
dorm&#13;
room   and   three   others   were&#13;
burglarized.&#13;
I&#13;
lost   my&#13;
19"&#13;
color   remote   TV,  my   room-&#13;
mate&#13;
lost&#13;
his&#13;
miCrowatl.&#13;
Others   lost  stereos&#13;
and TV..&#13;
Our   apartment&#13;
was&#13;
loclDlil&#13;
the   thief   pried   open&#13;
a  ..&#13;
dow.&#13;
I&#13;
realize&#13;
this&#13;
could....&#13;
pen  anywhere.   but&#13;
It&#13;
didn't;&#13;
happened   here.&#13;
I&#13;
could&#13;
go&#13;
on   about •&#13;
more  hot  topics.  such&#13;
as ....,&#13;
the   library    Is  closing&#13;
earIIIf&#13;
and  why  the&#13;
D-l&#13;
It,vel&#13;
door&#13;
locked.  both  of wllleh&#13;
furtlllr&#13;
aggravate    me,  but  others&#13;
art&#13;
voicing&#13;
their&#13;
opinions&#13;
01-&#13;
ready.   I  won't   even  mentlll&#13;
the  really  hot topic of the...&#13;
slstent    heat   wave&#13;
In&#13;
the ..&#13;
brary.&#13;
The  POint Is  that  these&#13;
aaI&#13;
other    issues    concern&#13;
IJlIIlJ'&#13;
students.&#13;
So   far   they&#13;
JlI'&#13;
don·t  appear   to  be  being...&#13;
dressed.    Up  to  now  geilenl&#13;
student   apathy   has  pennltllt&#13;
this.  As&#13;
I&#13;
type  tills. there&#13;
lit&#13;
students&#13;
demonsirldIC&#13;
against    the&#13;
D-l&#13;
door&#13;
cl""'"&#13;
to the  library.&#13;
What  does  it take&#13;
to&#13;
ac_&#13;
pUsh  change   around  here.&#13;
a&#13;
few  hundred    activists?&#13;
11IIl&#13;
probably    won·t  happen.&#13;
Leonard&#13;
W.&#13;
Ubbey.  Jr.&#13;
-&#13;
.&#13;
Ranger is Wfllten and edited by students of UW·Parl&lt;side. who are solely responsible tor its e&lt;litorial....&#13;
cy&#13;
and&#13;
content. tt&#13;
IS&#13;
publIShed every Thursday during the academic year except over breaks&#13;
and&#13;
ill'&#13;
days.&#13;
letters  to&#13;
the&#13;
~itor&#13;
Will.&#13;
be&#13;
accepted only if they are typed, double-spaced  and 350 words&#13;
l?f&#13;
leSS-&#13;
II&#13;
letters must&#13;
be&#13;
Slgned.&#13;
WIth&#13;
a telephone number Included for verification  purposes. Names&#13;
WIll&#13;
be'"&#13;
held upon request.&#13;
f Ranger re5eIVBS&#13;
the&#13;
right to edit letters and refuse those which are false and/or de·  ---""'\&#13;
amatory.&#13;
. .u-w"'"&#13;
Th~~.&#13;
for&#13;
an&#13;
\etters. and&#13;
classified&#13;
ads, is Monday at 10 a.m. for publication&#13;
.1500'111"&#13;
AI1correspondence should&#13;
be&#13;
addressed to: Ranger, UW-Parkside, 80x 2000, Ke·   ~~.""&#13;
nosha&#13;
WI 53141. Telephone 4141553-2287 (Editon~)  or 414/553·2295  (Advert~·&#13;
mol·&#13;
EDITORIAL   STAFF&#13;
Jonny&#13;
C4lrr&#13;
Edotor&#13;
Randy&#13;
LeCounI.&#13;
•&#13;
SponsEd.tor&#13;
KtIy&#13;
McKlasiCl&lt;&#13;
.. __&#13;
Ed&lt;or  DaveMcEvoy....__ .._......... ...PholoEditor&#13;
Amy&#13;
H&#13;
A&#13;
lUI&lt;&#13;
_&#13;
Ed&gt;tor&#13;
Ken&#13;
McCray   .&#13;
_-&#13;
.Ass1.&#13;
PhotoEditor&#13;
Jim&#13;
ur .,&#13;
FeatureelE~nrnent&#13;
Edltof&#13;
Jon&#13;
Hearron&#13;
__.._   ~&#13;
_Ad&#13;
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T....  ~.&#13;
_&#13;
~ures&#13;
E""'"&#13;
Mo::tuool&#13;
J.&#13;
AohI    __&#13;
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_&#13;
ooa&#13;
Em&#13;
Edrtor&#13;
Aobb&#13;
lueht_._&#13;
__.. .__..&#13;
COpy&#13;
Ed&lt;tor&#13;
BU  ll'IESS STAFF&#13;
Don&#13;
Harmeyer.&#13;
.&#13;
aus.ness Manager&#13;
Kathy Ciapp-Hsrmey8f    AssI. -&#13;
Manager&#13;
s&#13;
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              <text>students miffed about res. Hall conditions</text>
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              <text>&#13;
-&#13;
•&#13;
october 15,  1987&#13;
University 01 Wisconsln-Pa~side&#13;
VOl. 18,  No. 8&#13;
Students miffed about res. hall conditions&#13;
byStevenR. Picazo&#13;
Kelly&#13;
~cKlsslck&#13;
•'{ think&#13;
the main concern&#13;
that there  shouldn't  be&#13;
t people living in here;&#13;
room was  designed  for&#13;
Wegot lucky that we all&#13;
along,but it could have&#13;
bad.&#13;
H&#13;
junior   Greg&#13;
lers&#13;
said,  when  asked&#13;
IIllout&#13;
feelingson living in the&#13;
)\lsldencehalls for his second&#13;
year.&#13;
&lt;&#13;
Theresidence halls are be-&#13;
pming their second year and&#13;
manystudents are  dissatls-&#13;
liedabout how they are run&#13;
ind&#13;
how&#13;
quickly&#13;
their  reo&#13;
~sts  are acted upon.&#13;
Many students  paid  for&#13;
l"damages&#13;
to&#13;
the rooms that&#13;
Ibeywere responsible for at&#13;
Ibeendoflast year, Payment&#13;
tordamageswas taken out of&#13;
.. securitydeposit paid at the&#13;
beglnntng&#13;
of the year. When&#13;
Ibestudents came back this&#13;
fall,&#13;
the repairs and mainte-&#13;
nance were  not  done,  and&#13;
damagedarticles weren't reo&#13;
1lIaced.&#13;
Peters commented that he&#13;
and&#13;
hts&#13;
roommates were reo&#13;
quired&#13;
to&#13;
pay&#13;
$185,&#13;
divided six&#13;
ways,&#13;
for a new table at the&#13;
end of last year,  When he&#13;
cameback there was no new&#13;
table,and the old one hadn't&#13;
evenbeenfixed.&#13;
In&#13;
his apartment alone, the&#13;
\ table, a&#13;
few&#13;
chairs, a door, a&#13;
short in the stove arid a faulty&#13;
smoke detector were paid to&#13;
be replaced,  but the  condl.&#13;
tions remained the same as of&#13;
last week.&#13;
Peters  and his roommates&#13;
fixed the table by themselves.&#13;
They are promised a new one&#13;
••any day now." They also re-&#13;
painted  the  walls  of  their&#13;
rooms, on their own, but were&#13;
still charged for repainting of&#13;
their rooms.&#13;
Bojdan  Szafraniec,  a soph-&#13;
more&#13;
living&#13;
his second year.&#13;
in&#13;
the halls, pointed out that&#13;
he couldn't see it being fair&#13;
that they charge the same for&#13;
two people&#13;
in&#13;
a single room&#13;
that they do for two people in&#13;
a  double  room.  They have&#13;
half the space and only one&#13;
closet.&#13;
"They're  not  really  that&#13;
bad,&#13;
I&#13;
mean  the dorms are&#13;
, halfway decent, but some of&#13;
the  things  they  do to you&#13;
make   you _mad."    he   ex-&#13;
plained.  "What's  the use of&#13;
having a security  deposit if&#13;
things don't get fixed?"&#13;
Peters  responded  to  the&#13;
Issue of parties  in the&#13;
halls&#13;
with the fOllowing, "The&#13;
ad-&#13;
ministration  has  to  realize&#13;
that  this  Isn't  a  normal&#13;
campus where you can walk&#13;
to house parties or bars. This&#13;
is the main center of social&#13;
activity,  and the people that&#13;
This chair was not intended to be a recliner.&#13;
are of age should be allowed&#13;
to&#13;
drink&#13;
in their rooms if they&#13;
want to without fear of being&#13;
fined  because   they  have&#13;
minors   who   room&#13;
with&#13;
them."&#13;
"If&#13;
they  want  to  control&#13;
parties,  they should control&#13;
off-campus people coming to&#13;
the halls to party," he&#13;
sald.&#13;
Another major problem felt&#13;
by many students in the halls&#13;
are  the  limited  hours  that&#13;
they cal! get food on campus.&#13;
The few hours on the week.&#13;
ends and the lack of&#13;
substan-&#13;
tial nutritious food were seen&#13;
as the two areas that could be&#13;
Improved the most.&#13;
Two sophomores and a jun.&#13;
lor living&#13;
in&#13;
the halls com-&#13;
mented on the situation, ask.&#13;
Ing  to  remain  anonymous.&#13;
They&#13;
wtll&#13;
be called Smith,&#13;
Brown and Jones.&#13;
"The main problem Is the&#13;
food, everyone Is upset about&#13;
that,"  Smith,&#13;
a&#13;
sophomore,&#13;
said.&#13;
III&#13;
went&#13;
to&#13;
a different&#13;
university last year, and the&#13;
food&#13;
service was open on the&#13;
weekends. Besides, the&#13;
MInI&#13;
Mart is only open for three&#13;
hours on Saturday  and Sun.&#13;
day,&#13;
so&#13;
you have to walt to&#13;
buy your food. The food in&#13;
there  isn't  really  substan-&#13;
tial."&#13;
He  explained  that  Food&#13;
Service prices were high as&#13;
well.  He  said  that  almost&#13;
every meal costs close&#13;
to&#13;
$4.&#13;
He has only eight meal cards&#13;
left for the rest of the semes-&#13;
ter,&#13;
and thinks that he&#13;
wtll&#13;
ron&#13;
out before&#13;
the&#13;
semester is&#13;
finished.&#13;
Jones,  a sophomore,  goes&#13;
home&#13;
to&#13;
Milwaukee  every&#13;
weekend, but "feels sorry for&#13;
these guys. The food&#13;
Is&#13;
kind&#13;
of expensive here.&#13;
I&#13;
mean,&#13;
70&#13;
cents for a glass of pop?"&#13;
"Food&#13;
Serivce&#13;
is&#13;
set&#13;
up&#13;
for&#13;
commuters,  not for us.&#13;
It's&#13;
set up for people who eat one&#13;
meal&#13;
a&#13;
day.  at&#13;
Iunch, "&#13;
Brown, a junior, said.&#13;
Smith also explained that In&#13;
instances  when  there&#13;
Is&#13;
a&#13;
function being held in the&#13;
din-&#13;
Ing&#13;
room, they (the students)&#13;
- must eat In the Unlon&#13;
Square.&#13;
"A bunch of us come back&#13;
from practice, and you have&#13;
a   huge   line   downststrs,&#13;
There's ony one person work..&#13;
Ing the cash register, and you&#13;
have&#13;
to&#13;
walt In line for almost&#13;
Halls&#13;
see&#13;
page&#13;
5&#13;
Residence hall's director answers complaints&#13;
bySteven R. Picazo&#13;
Since&#13;
he was  hired  last&#13;
BUmmer,Steve&#13;
Erwin,&#13;
dtrec-&#13;
tor&#13;
of residence  life,&#13;
has&#13;
fae&#13;
ba&#13;
Cd&#13;
many&#13;
challenges  and&#13;
s had&#13;
to&#13;
deal with many&#13;
problems.&#13;
When Erwin  arrived,  he&#13;
recognizedthis as a commut-&#13;
~ campusthat was attempt.&#13;
g&#13;
to&#13;
get a f1ediing,housing&#13;
Programmoving into Its sec. _&#13;
°llla&#13;
nd&#13;
year. There was much&#13;
t needed to  be  aceom-&#13;
Plishedin a short period of&#13;
::;ne,and he was anxious to&#13;
~k1ethe task.&#13;
My expectattons of what&#13;
~e campUsWOUldbe like are&#13;
I Ing&#13;
liVed&#13;
up to In the cnai-&#13;
~&#13;
that&#13;
I have faced so&#13;
r,  Erwin said, "And&#13;
I-&#13;
see&#13;
the futUre of  housing  on&#13;
~1~~'uSas being very post-&#13;
UThesecUritysystem that Is&#13;
sed for the  housing&#13;
Is&#13;
a&#13;
:que  situation because the&#13;
Un.~lng'&#13;
ComplexIs an Island&#13;
'" ItseU that  doesn't  fall&#13;
:der  the direct jurisdiction&#13;
rtty~e.&#13;
campus and Its secu-&#13;
b&#13;
"The nature of the&#13;
relation-&#13;
ship between the security sys-&#13;
tem and the housing complex&#13;
Is interesting,  and  there  Is&#13;
sllll  some  definition  that ,&#13;
'needs to take place," he said,&#13;
•'The  campus  security  has&#13;
been  .very  cooperative   in&#13;
helping us deal with problems&#13;
that we have had up to this&#13;
point "&#13;
Th~   Resldellt   Advisers&#13;
(RA's) on campus are to deal&#13;
with  any  problem  first,&#13;
If&#13;
they are unable to reclify the&#13;
situation  then  campus  secu-&#13;
rlty  Is called.  The last  ele-&#13;
ment to be tapped into Is the&#13;
Kenosha County Sheriff's De-&#13;
partment.&#13;
,  "Off-campus underage  stu-&#13;
dents  are  a  large  problem&#13;
that&#13;
has&#13;
come to the forefront&#13;
as of late,"  he commented.&#13;
"The   reputation   of   this&#13;
campus was one that was not&#13;
particularly  very&#13;
good&#13;
when&#13;
It came to partying.&#13;
It&#13;
wasn't&#13;
always  invited  guests  who&#13;
were  coining  out here,  but&#13;
they would come out and mill&#13;
around  looking for a party.&#13;
Many  times  It wasn't  ~:,ry&#13;
hard for them to flpd,'1,\e.&#13;
Inside•.,&#13;
Pettit  cusses  regent ••••&#13;
n •••••••••••&#13;
page 3&#13;
Truman Scholarship •••••••••••••••••page 5&#13;
As&#13;
Doc&#13;
sees&#13;
It·&#13;
,&#13;
'w  •••&#13;
~  ••&#13;
page&#13;
9&#13;
Communication  barriers ••••••••••page 11&#13;
&lt;,&#13;
The student life handbook&#13;
outlines the rules and regula.&#13;
tlons when It comes to&#13;
rest-&#13;
dence  hall  parties.&#13;
It&#13;
de-&#13;
scribes that there should not&#13;
be more&#13;
than&#13;
20&#13;
people In a&#13;
room  but these  regulations&#13;
are flexible and subject to&#13;
In-&#13;
terpretatlon.&#13;
Recent events have helped&#13;
re-define the policy and pro-&#13;
cedure  concerning   campus&#13;
parties. Over two weeks ago&#13;
a party apparently got out of&#13;
band, so the Kenosha pollee&#13;
were  called.  When they ar-&#13;
rived, they broke up the&#13;
gath-&#13;
erlng and sternly told&#13;
all&#13;
in-&#13;
volved that  for each minor&#13;
found at the next party they&#13;
had&#13;
til&#13;
break up, there could&#13;
be a fine of over $600levied.&#13;
Erwin&#13;
said, "This type of&#13;
occurence  is an extreme  ex-&#13;
ample of what could happen.&#13;
Overall,  the  students  have&#13;
been a good bunch and have&#13;
been decent about the types&#13;
of gatherings they have. Once&#13;
the county&#13;
Is&#13;
called, responsi-&#13;
bility&#13;
Is&#13;
taken  out  of&#13;
my&#13;
bands and&#13;
If&#13;
they decide&#13;
to&#13;
Issue  tickets.  they'll  Issue&#13;
tickets.&#13;
'&#13;
"We don't want a spy-pollee&#13;
situation to develop between&#13;
the R.A.'s and the students.&#13;
The R.A.'s primary  role&#13;
Is&#13;
one&#13;
of counselor&#13;
and&#13;
program&#13;
director, and we would hope&#13;
that they can maintain these&#13;
qualities Instead of just being&#13;
an element  of law enforce.&#13;
ment," Erwin explained.&#13;
The condition of the apart·&#13;
ments at the beginning of the&#13;
semester was not acceptable&#13;
to&#13;
many of the students.&#13;
Btu-&#13;
dents had paid for damages&#13;
out of their security deposits&#13;
and the repairs weren't done.&#13;
"The large majority of the&#13;
charges  were  assessed  to&#13;
clean&#13;
the  apartments.  The&#13;
rest. of them  (the charges)&#13;
were Inflated by damaged&#13;
ar-&#13;
tleles In the apartments.  The&#13;
money collected&#13;
Is&#13;
being held&#13;
In&#13;
a  special  account,"  he&#13;
said.&#13;
Erwin admitted that there&#13;
were  certain   things  that&#13;
should have been fixed that&#13;
weren't.&#13;
HIs&#13;
justification for&#13;
this&#13;
was that&#13;
his&#13;
department&#13;
was terribly understsffed and&#13;
the&#13;
summer conference pro-&#13;
ErwIn _&#13;
page&#13;
4&#13;
october &#13;
15, &#13;
1987 &#13;
University &#13;
01 &#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside &#13;
Vol. &#13;
1 &#13;
a, &#13;
No. &#13;
a &#13;
Students &#13;
miffed &#13;
about &#13;
res. &#13;
hall &#13;
conditions &#13;
by &#13;
Steven &#13;
R. &#13;
Picazo &#13;
Kelly &#13;
McKissick &#13;
''I &#13;
think &#13;
the &#13;
main &#13;
concern &#13;
IS &#13;
that &#13;
there &#13;
shouldn&#13;
't &#13;
be &#13;
dght &#13;
people &#13;
living &#13;
in &#13;
here; &#13;
room &#13;
was &#13;
designed &#13;
for &#13;
We &#13;
got &#13;
lucky &#13;
that &#13;
we &#13;
all &#13;
jet &#13;
along, &#13;
but &#13;
it &#13;
could &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
bad." &#13;
junior &#13;
Greg &#13;
,eters &#13;
said, &#13;
when &#13;
asked &#13;
at,out &#13;
feelings &#13;
on &#13;
living &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
residence &#13;
halls &#13;
for &#13;
his &#13;
second &#13;
year. &#13;
flle &#13;
residence &#13;
halls &#13;
are &#13;
be-&#13;
ginning &#13;
their &#13;
second &#13;
year &#13;
and &#13;
many &#13;
students &#13;
are &#13;
dissatis-&#13;
fied &#13;
about &#13;
how &#13;
they &#13;
are &#13;
run &#13;
and &#13;
how &#13;
quickly &#13;
their &#13;
re-&#13;
-quests &#13;
are &#13;
acted upon. &#13;
Many &#13;
students &#13;
paid &#13;
for &#13;
damages &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
rooms &#13;
that &#13;
they &#13;
were &#13;
responsible &#13;
for &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
end &#13;
of &#13;
last &#13;
year. &#13;
Payment &#13;
for &#13;
damages &#13;
was &#13;
taken &#13;
out &#13;
of &#13;
a &#13;
security &#13;
deposit &#13;
paid &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
begiMing &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
year. &#13;
When &#13;
the &#13;
students &#13;
came &#13;
back &#13;
this &#13;
fall, &#13;
the &#13;
repairs &#13;
and &#13;
mainte-&#13;
nance &#13;
were &#13;
not &#13;
done, &#13;
and &#13;
damaged &#13;
articles &#13;
weren't &#13;
re-&#13;
placed. &#13;
Peters &#13;
commented &#13;
that &#13;
he &#13;
and &#13;
his &#13;
roommates &#13;
were &#13;
re-&#13;
quired &#13;
to &#13;
pay &#13;
$185, &#13;
divided &#13;
six &#13;
ways, &#13;
for &#13;
a  new &#13;
table &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
end &#13;
of &#13;
last &#13;
year. &#13;
When &#13;
he &#13;
came &#13;
back &#13;
there &#13;
was &#13;
no &#13;
new &#13;
table, &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
old &#13;
one &#13;
hadn&#13;
't &#13;
even &#13;
been &#13;
fixed. &#13;
In &#13;
his &#13;
apartment &#13;
alone, &#13;
the &#13;
table, &#13;
a  few &#13;
chairs, &#13;
a  door, &#13;
a &#13;
short &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
stove &#13;
and &#13;
a &#13;
faulty &#13;
smoke &#13;
detector &#13;
were &#13;
paid &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
replaced, &#13;
but &#13;
the &#13;
condi-&#13;
tions &#13;
remained &#13;
the &#13;
same &#13;
as &#13;
of &#13;
last &#13;
week. &#13;
Peters &#13;
and &#13;
his &#13;
roommates &#13;
fixed &#13;
the &#13;
table &#13;
by &#13;
themselves. &#13;
They &#13;
are &#13;
promised &#13;
a &#13;
new &#13;
one &#13;
"any &#13;
day &#13;
now." &#13;
They &#13;
also &#13;
re-&#13;
painted &#13;
the &#13;
walls &#13;
of &#13;
their &#13;
rooms, &#13;
on &#13;
their &#13;
own, &#13;
but &#13;
were &#13;
stlli &#13;
charged &#13;
for &#13;
repainting &#13;
of &#13;
their &#13;
rooms. &#13;
Bojdan &#13;
Szafraniec, &#13;
a &#13;
soph-&#13;
more &#13;
living &#13;
his &#13;
second &#13;
year &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
halls, &#13;
pointed &#13;
out &#13;
that &#13;
he &#13;
couldn't &#13;
see &#13;
it &#13;
being &#13;
fair &#13;
that &#13;
they &#13;
charge &#13;
the &#13;
same &#13;
for &#13;
two &#13;
people &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
single &#13;
room &#13;
that &#13;
they &#13;
do &#13;
for &#13;
two &#13;
people &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
double &#13;
room. &#13;
They &#13;
have&#13;
· &#13;
half &#13;
the &#13;
space &#13;
and &#13;
only &#13;
one &#13;
closet. &#13;
"They're &#13;
not &#13;
really &#13;
that &#13;
bad, &#13;
I &#13;
mean &#13;
the &#13;
dorms &#13;
are &#13;
halfway &#13;
decent, &#13;
but &#13;
some &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
things &#13;
they &#13;
do &#13;
to &#13;
you &#13;
make &#13;
you &#13;
mad," &#13;
he &#13;
ex-&#13;
plained. &#13;
"What's &#13;
the &#13;
use &#13;
of &#13;
having &#13;
a &#13;
security &#13;
deposit &#13;
if &#13;
things &#13;
don't &#13;
get &#13;
fixed?" &#13;
Peters &#13;
responded &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
issue &#13;
of &#13;
parties &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
halls &#13;
with &#13;
the &#13;
following, &#13;
"The &#13;
ad-&#13;
ministration &#13;
has &#13;
to &#13;
realize &#13;
that &#13;
this &#13;
isn't &#13;
a &#13;
normal &#13;
campus &#13;
where &#13;
you &#13;
can &#13;
walk &#13;
to &#13;
house &#13;
parties &#13;
or &#13;
bars. &#13;
This &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
main &#13;
center &#13;
of &#13;
social &#13;
activity. &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
people &#13;
that &#13;
This &#13;
chair &#13;
was &#13;
not &#13;
Intended &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
a  recliner. &#13;
are &#13;
of &#13;
age &#13;
should &#13;
be &#13;
allowed &#13;
to &#13;
drtnk &#13;
in &#13;
their &#13;
rooms &#13;
if &#13;
they &#13;
want &#13;
to &#13;
without &#13;
fear &#13;
of &#13;
being &#13;
fined &#13;
because &#13;
they &#13;
have &#13;
minors &#13;
who &#13;
room &#13;
with &#13;
them." &#13;
"If &#13;
they &#13;
want &#13;
to &#13;
control &#13;
parties, &#13;
they &#13;
should &#13;
control &#13;
off-campus &#13;
people &#13;
coming &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
halls &#13;
to &#13;
party," &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
Another &#13;
major &#13;
problem &#13;
felt &#13;
by &#13;
many &#13;
students &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
halls &#13;
are &#13;
the &#13;
limited &#13;
hours &#13;
that &#13;
they &#13;
caq &#13;
get &#13;
food &#13;
on &#13;
campus. &#13;
The &#13;
few &#13;
hours &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
week-&#13;
ends &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
lack &#13;
of &#13;
substan-&#13;
tial &#13;
nutritious &#13;
food &#13;
were &#13;
seen &#13;
as &#13;
the &#13;
two &#13;
areas &#13;
that &#13;
could &#13;
be &#13;
improved &#13;
the &#13;
most. &#13;
Two &#13;
sophomores &#13;
and &#13;
a &#13;
jun-&#13;
ior &#13;
living &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
halls &#13;
com-&#13;
mented &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
situation, &#13;
ask-&#13;
ing &#13;
to &#13;
remain &#13;
anonymous. &#13;
They &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
called &#13;
Smith, &#13;
Brown &#13;
and &#13;
Jones. &#13;
"The &#13;
main &#13;
problem &#13;
ts &#13;
the &#13;
food, &#13;
everyone &#13;
is &#13;
upset &#13;
about &#13;
that," &#13;
Smith, &#13;
a &#13;
sophomore, &#13;
said. &#13;
"I &#13;
went &#13;
to &#13;
a &#13;
different &#13;
university &#13;
last &#13;
year, &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
food &#13;
service &#13;
was &#13;
open &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
weekends. &#13;
Besides, &#13;
the &#13;
Mini &#13;
Marl &#13;
is &#13;
only &#13;
open &#13;
for &#13;
three &#13;
hours &#13;
on &#13;
Saturday &#13;
and &#13;
Sun-&#13;
day, &#13;
so &#13;
you &#13;
have &#13;
to &#13;
wait &#13;
to &#13;
buy &#13;
your &#13;
food. &#13;
The &#13;
food &#13;
in &#13;
there &#13;
isn't &#13;
really &#13;
substan-&#13;
tial." &#13;
He &#13;
explained &#13;
that &#13;
Food &#13;
Service &#13;
prices &#13;
were &#13;
high &#13;
as &#13;
well. &#13;
He &#13;
said &#13;
that &#13;
almost &#13;
every &#13;
meal &#13;
costs &#13;
close &#13;
to &#13;
$4. &#13;
He &#13;
has &#13;
only &#13;
eight &#13;
meal &#13;
cards &#13;
left &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
rest &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
semes-&#13;
ter, &#13;
and &#13;
thinks &#13;
that &#13;
he &#13;
will &#13;
run &#13;
out &#13;
before &#13;
the &#13;
semester &#13;
is &#13;
finished. &#13;
Jones, &#13;
a &#13;
sophomore, &#13;
goes &#13;
home &#13;
to &#13;
Milwaukee &#13;
every &#13;
weekend, &#13;
but &#13;
"feels &#13;
sorry &#13;
for &#13;
these &#13;
guys. &#13;
The &#13;
food &#13;
is &#13;
kind &#13;
of &#13;
expensive &#13;
here. &#13;
I &#13;
mean, &#13;
70 &#13;
cents &#13;
for &#13;
a &#13;
glass &#13;
of &#13;
pop?" &#13;
"Food &#13;
Serivce &#13;
is &#13;
set &#13;
up &#13;
for &#13;
commuters, &#13;
not &#13;
for &#13;
us. &#13;
It's &#13;
set &#13;
up &#13;
for &#13;
people &#13;
who &#13;
eat &#13;
one &#13;
meal &#13;
a &#13;
day, &#13;
at &#13;
lunch," &#13;
Brown, &#13;
a  junior, &#13;
said. &#13;
Smith &#13;
also &#13;
explained &#13;
that &#13;
in &#13;
instances &#13;
when &#13;
there &#13;
ts &#13;
a &#13;
function &#13;
being &#13;
held &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
din-&#13;
ing &#13;
room, &#13;
they &#13;
(the &#13;
students) &#13;
must &#13;
eat &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Union &#13;
Square. &#13;
"A &#13;
bunch &#13;
of &#13;
us &#13;
come &#13;
back &#13;
from &#13;
practice, &#13;
and &#13;
you &#13;
have &#13;
a &#13;
huge &#13;
line &#13;
downstairs. &#13;
There's &#13;
ony &#13;
one &#13;
person &#13;
work-&#13;
ing &#13;
the &#13;
cash &#13;
register, &#13;
and &#13;
you &#13;
have &#13;
to &#13;
wait &#13;
in &#13;
line &#13;
for &#13;
almost &#13;
Hallsuepage5 &#13;
Residence &#13;
hall's &#13;
director &#13;
answers &#13;
complaints &#13;
by &#13;
Steven &#13;
R. &#13;
Picazo &#13;
Since &#13;
he &#13;
was &#13;
hired &#13;
last &#13;
BUmmer, &#13;
Steve &#13;
Erwin, &#13;
direc-&#13;
tor &#13;
of &#13;
residence &#13;
life, &#13;
has &#13;
baa&#13;
faced &#13;
many &#13;
challenges &#13;
and &#13;
had &#13;
to &#13;
deal &#13;
with &#13;
many &#13;
Problems. &#13;
When &#13;
Erwin &#13;
arrived, &#13;
he &#13;
recognized &#13;
this &#13;
as &#13;
a &#13;
commut-&#13;
er &#13;
campus &#13;
that &#13;
was &#13;
attempt-&#13;
Ing &#13;
to &#13;
get &#13;
a &#13;
fiedling &#13;
housing &#13;
Program &#13;
moving &#13;
into &#13;
Its &#13;
see-&#13;
d &#13;
Year. &#13;
There &#13;
was &#13;
much &#13;
that &#13;
needed &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
aceom-&#13;
Plished &#13;
ln &#13;
a &#13;
short &#13;
period &#13;
of &#13;
lhnta &#13;
e, &#13;
and &#13;
he &#13;
was &#13;
anxious &#13;
to &#13;
ckle &#13;
the &#13;
task &#13;
"My &#13;
expec~tions &#13;
of &#13;
what &#13;
:«:ncamll &#13;
pus &#13;
WOUid &#13;
be &#13;
like &#13;
are &#13;
1 &#13;
g &#13;
Ved &#13;
up &#13;
to &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
chal-&#13;
enges &#13;
that &#13;
I &#13;
have &#13;
faced &#13;
so &#13;
th &#13;
'" &#13;
Erwtn &#13;
said. &#13;
"And &#13;
I &#13;
see &#13;
e &#13;
future &#13;
of &#13;
housing &#13;
on &#13;
~t~p,us &#13;
as &#13;
being &#13;
very &#13;
posi-&#13;
The &#13;
security &#13;
system &#13;
that &#13;
is &#13;
UBed &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
housing &#13;
ls &#13;
a &#13;
:!"lque &#13;
situation &#13;
because &#13;
the &#13;
U:lng &#13;
complex &#13;
is &#13;
an &#13;
island &#13;
\Ul &#13;
itself &#13;
that &#13;
doesn't &#13;
fall &#13;
f &#13;
tt &#13;
the &#13;
direct &#13;
jurisdiction &#13;
ty. &#13;
e  campus &#13;
and &#13;
its &#13;
secu-&#13;
"The &#13;
nature &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
relation-&#13;
ship &#13;
between &#13;
the &#13;
security &#13;
sys-&#13;
tem &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
housing &#13;
complex &#13;
ts &#13;
interesting, &#13;
and &#13;
there &#13;
is &#13;
still &#13;
some &#13;
definition &#13;
that &#13;
·&#13;
needs &#13;
to &#13;
take &#13;
place," &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
• &#13;
'The &#13;
campus &#13;
security &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
very &#13;
cooperative &#13;
in &#13;
helping &#13;
us &#13;
deal &#13;
with &#13;
problems &#13;
that &#13;
we &#13;
have &#13;
had &#13;
up &#13;
to &#13;
this &#13;
point." &#13;
The &#13;
Resident &#13;
Advisers &#13;
(RA's) &#13;
on &#13;
campus &#13;
are &#13;
to &#13;
deal &#13;
with &#13;
any &#13;
problem &#13;
first, &#13;
if &#13;
they &#13;
are &#13;
unable &#13;
to &#13;
rectify &#13;
the &#13;
situation &#13;
then &#13;
campus &#13;
secu-&#13;
rity &#13;
is &#13;
called. &#13;
The &#13;
last &#13;
ele-&#13;
ment &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
tapped &#13;
into &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
Kenosha &#13;
County &#13;
Sheriff's &#13;
De-&#13;
partment. &#13;
"Off-campus &#13;
underage &#13;
stu-&#13;
dents &#13;
are &#13;
a &#13;
large &#13;
problem &#13;
that &#13;
has &#13;
come &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
forefront &#13;
as &#13;
of &#13;
late," &#13;
he &#13;
commented. &#13;
• &#13;
'The &#13;
reputation &#13;
of &#13;
this &#13;
campus &#13;
was &#13;
one &#13;
that &#13;
was &#13;
not &#13;
particularly &#13;
very &#13;
good &#13;
when &#13;
tt &#13;
came &#13;
to &#13;
partying. &#13;
It &#13;
wasn't &#13;
always &#13;
invited &#13;
guests &#13;
who &#13;
were &#13;
coming &#13;
out &#13;
here, &#13;
but &#13;
they &#13;
would &#13;
come &#13;
out &#13;
and &#13;
mill &#13;
around &#13;
looking &#13;
for &#13;
a &#13;
party· &#13;
Many &#13;
times &#13;
it &#13;
wasn't &#13;
~.ery &#13;
hard &#13;
for &#13;
them &#13;
to &#13;
find &#13;
one. &#13;
The &#13;
student &#13;
life &#13;
handbook &#13;
outlines &#13;
the &#13;
rules &#13;
and &#13;
regula-&#13;
tions &#13;
when &#13;
it &#13;
comes &#13;
to &#13;
resi-&#13;
dence &#13;
hall &#13;
parties. &#13;
It &#13;
de-&#13;
scribes &#13;
that &#13;
there &#13;
should &#13;
not &#13;
be &#13;
more &#13;
than &#13;
20 &#13;
people &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
room, &#13;
but &#13;
these &#13;
regulations &#13;
are &#13;
flexible &#13;
and &#13;
subject &#13;
to &#13;
in• &#13;
terpretation. &#13;
Recent &#13;
events &#13;
have &#13;
helped &#13;
re-define &#13;
the &#13;
policy &#13;
and &#13;
pro-&#13;
cedure &#13;
concerning &#13;
campus &#13;
parties. &#13;
Over &#13;
two &#13;
weeks &#13;
ago &#13;
a &#13;
party &#13;
apparently &#13;
got &#13;
out &#13;
of &#13;
hand, &#13;
so &#13;
the &#13;
Kenosha &#13;
police &#13;
were &#13;
called. &#13;
When &#13;
they &#13;
ar-&#13;
rived, &#13;
they &#13;
broke &#13;
up &#13;
the &#13;
gath-&#13;
ering &#13;
and &#13;
sternly &#13;
told &#13;
all &#13;
in-&#13;
volved &#13;
that &#13;
for &#13;
each &#13;
minor &#13;
found &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
next &#13;
party &#13;
they &#13;
had &#13;
to &#13;
break &#13;
up, &#13;
there &#13;
could &#13;
be &#13;
a  fine &#13;
of &#13;
over &#13;
$600 &#13;
levied. &#13;
Erwin &#13;
said, &#13;
"This &#13;
type &#13;
of &#13;
occurence &#13;
ls &#13;
an &#13;
extreme &#13;
ex-&#13;
ample &#13;
of &#13;
what &#13;
could &#13;
happen. &#13;
Overall, &#13;
the &#13;
students &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
a &#13;
good &#13;
bunch &#13;
and &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
decent &#13;
about &#13;
the &#13;
types &#13;
of &#13;
gatherings &#13;
they &#13;
have. &#13;
Once &#13;
the &#13;
county &#13;
ts &#13;
called, &#13;
responsi-&#13;
bility &#13;
ts &#13;
taken &#13;
out &#13;
of &#13;
my &#13;
hands &#13;
and &#13;
1f &#13;
they &#13;
decide &#13;
to &#13;
issue &#13;
tickets, &#13;
they'll &#13;
Issue &#13;
tlckets. &#13;
"We &#13;
don't &#13;
want &#13;
a  spy-police &#13;
situation &#13;
to &#13;
develop &#13;
between &#13;
the &#13;
R.A. &#13;
's &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
students. &#13;
The &#13;
R.A. &#13;
's &#13;
primary &#13;
role &#13;
is &#13;
one &#13;
of &#13;
counselor &#13;
and &#13;
program &#13;
director. &#13;
and &#13;
we &#13;
would &#13;
hope &#13;
that &#13;
they &#13;
can &#13;
maintain &#13;
these &#13;
qualities &#13;
instead &#13;
of &#13;
just &#13;
being &#13;
an &#13;
element &#13;
of &#13;
law &#13;
enforce-&#13;
ment,'' &#13;
Erwin &#13;
explained. &#13;
The &#13;
condition &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
apart-&#13;
ments &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
beginning &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
semester &#13;
was &#13;
not &#13;
acceptable &#13;
to &#13;
many &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
students. &#13;
Stu-&#13;
dents &#13;
had &#13;
paid &#13;
for &#13;
damages &#13;
out &#13;
of &#13;
their &#13;
security &#13;
deposits &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
repairs &#13;
weren't &#13;
done. &#13;
Inside &#13;
.•. &#13;
"The &#13;
large &#13;
majority &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
charges &#13;
were &#13;
assessed &#13;
to &#13;
clean &#13;
the &#13;
apartments. &#13;
The &#13;
rest. &#13;
of &#13;
them &#13;
(the &#13;
charges) &#13;
were &#13;
lnfiated &#13;
by &#13;
damaged &#13;
ar-&#13;
ticles &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
apartments. &#13;
The &#13;
money &#13;
collected &#13;
1s &#13;
being &#13;
held &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
special &#13;
account," &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
Erwin &#13;
admitted &#13;
that &#13;
there &#13;
were &#13;
certain &#13;
things &#13;
that &#13;
should &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
fixed &#13;
that &#13;
weren't. &#13;
Hts &#13;
jusWtcation &#13;
tor &#13;
this &#13;
was &#13;
that &#13;
his &#13;
department &#13;
was &#13;
terribly &#13;
understaffed &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
summer &#13;
conference &#13;
pro-&#13;
Erwin &#13;
... &#13;
page &#13;
4 &#13;
Pettit &#13;
cusses &#13;
regent &#13;
•...•....••...... &#13;
page &#13;
3 &#13;
Truman &#13;
scholarship &#13;
•....•••••••••••• &#13;
page &#13;
5 &#13;
As &#13;
Doc &#13;
sees &#13;
it &#13;
.......................... &#13;
page &#13;
9 &#13;
Communication &#13;
barrlers &#13;
.......... &#13;
page &#13;
11 &#13;
•&#13;
2&#13;
Thl/r8d8y,&#13;
October15,1987Ranger'--------====---~&#13;
erspectlves&#13;
~&#13;
ef£/~17&#13;
,our view&#13;
Apathy is not just&#13;
a student's&#13;
disease&#13;
:&#13;
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Hanwc:omIn&amp;&#13;
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whom&#13;
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a tew faculty and staff&#13;
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pIa)'tIlC&#13;
and  elleertng.&#13;
Then they lett.&#13;
no ""'"'&#13;
than&#13;
live /aculty  or .tafl  members&#13;
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team&#13;
Thla  Is&#13;
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Some .tu·&#13;
ly&#13;
cold&#13;
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bolh&#13;
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fa.n.s&#13;
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planned&#13;
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and lor people&#13;
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Chan-&#13;
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take Urn&#13;
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WHICHE.VER&#13;
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YO(J&#13;
GUYS LIKE&#13;
15 FINE WITH&#13;
j!E.!&#13;
I&#13;
your views&#13;
]&#13;
Nobody. asked me, but&#13;
Vets get nowhere with&#13;
Kaplan&#13;
~&#13;
ts&#13;
Written and edit~d by students  of UW-Parkside.  who are solely responsible  for&#13;
its ~.;&#13;
cy&#13;
content.&#13;
It&#13;
IS&#13;
publIshed  every  Thursday  during  the academic  year except  over&#13;
breakS  ......&#13;
days&#13;
Leners  to the editor&#13;
will.be&#13;
accepted  only&#13;
jf&#13;
they are typed,  double-spaced   and&#13;
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telephone  number  mcluded  for verification   purposes.  Names&#13;
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upon request.&#13;
.&#13;
faRant90erreserves  the right to edit letters and refuse  those which  are false an410f de-&#13;
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lor all ~"ers.   and clas~lied  ads,  is Monday  al  10 a.m,  lor pubiication&#13;
~~SpondenCfl&#13;
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be&#13;
addressed&#13;
to:&#13;
Ranger. UW-Parkside.&#13;
Box 2000.  Ke-&#13;
ing).&#13;
I 53141.  Te~pt&gt;one 4141553·2287  (Editorial) or&#13;
4141553.2295&#13;
(AdvertlS-&#13;
paper   work  required&#13;
to •&#13;
cure  those  benetlla.&#13;
TIle&#13;
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requires&#13;
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requires    that   the  vetmn&#13;
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language&#13;
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the veterans.III&#13;
it reqUires  some&#13;
sensltllr1l1&#13;
the problems  o( the ve_&#13;
None of tltese quallficatlllll&#13;
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AJOI.Feature Edlto~.&#13;
unfair to the Turkish people."&#13;
Uniled Stales 1bllched&#13;
about,&#13;
"I didn't sa  an&#13;
!ll&lt;aulb&#13;
or&#13;
ofthe book MId·   tHayeS, who was a student&#13;
and everything that was&#13;
good&#13;
that"  Hayes :lale~knUke&#13;
JlilblExpress."&#13;
Billy Hayes,   a   ~arquette   University&#13;
1&#13;
took for granted."&#13;
no ';'atter what I"';"'d&#13;
1&#13;
w&#13;
ew&#13;
...  at&#13;
parkside last Tues-&#13;
majoring&#13;
In Engllsh  before&#13;
Hayes told the audience to  getting&#13;
80&#13;
years&#13;
All'&#13;
I  :&#13;
., nJgI1l&#13;
In&#13;
the Union otne-  going to Turkey, only has one&#13;
stop and&#13;
think&#13;
about the Iittle  was 'I can't do&#13;
~ythIn   :.&#13;
I&#13;
11II&#13;
to&#13;
a&#13;
crowd of about&#13;
100&#13;
comment about his reason for&#13;
things Uke showers and Ice  can do is forgive you ' g.&#13;
__   lAo&#13;
what he had done.&#13;
for  your  water.  He  drew&#13;
"The onI&#13;
thin&#13;
j~&#13;
d&#13;
n&#13;
";.Yes.whowas arresled In   "~y  motivation  was&#13;
stm- '&#13;
moans when he told them he  Hayes sail  "is g&#13;
teU&#13;
o,::,s24&#13;
lJlO&#13;
In&#13;
Istanbul. Turkey and  pie, Hayes said. "Greed.&#13;
went five years  Without a  hours a d~y that   y.&#13;
ebSJiedwith smuggling two    "Of course I knew I was&#13;
shower. and that he got hot  loser&#13;
you re a&#13;
lIIDSofhaSh!sh.gave a very  smar~ enough to get away&#13;
water ones a week and had to  arow:.dsom~~e~~:d~:h~~&#13;
JDOVing&#13;
accountof what&#13;
hap-&#13;
With It," Hayes joked, "which&#13;
pour&#13;
II&#13;
over his head.&#13;
wasn't  oU; to let an  of&#13;
II&#13;
pened.&#13;
the&#13;
lessons he learned   show,~you how stupid I really&#13;
Hayes praised his father for  affect ';e." g&#13;
y&#13;
IIId&#13;
what has happened to  was.&#13;
giving him the strength he   Afler  his  sentence  was&#13;
blm&#13;
sinceheescaped.,&#13;
Hayes  told 'the  audience&#13;
needed to survive.&#13;
changed  Hayes was&#13;
trans-&#13;
Hayesstarted his lecture   about his capture at the air.&#13;
'.'MY,~atherwas a rock," he  ferred&#13;
t.:,&#13;
an island prison In&#13;
by&#13;
asking the crowd how  port by the Turkish soldiers&#13;
satd,  wtthout&#13;
his strength   the Sea of Marmara  The is&#13;
manyof them&#13;
had&#13;
seen the   who&#13;
~ere&#13;
there  lo?king  for&#13;
and&#13;
lo~e&#13;
I wouldn't have&#13;
sur-&#13;
land Is located about·20&#13;
ml1e~&#13;
movieor read the book. He   terrorists.  Hayes&#13;
safd&#13;
the 501-&#13;
vived.&#13;
from the mainland  He was&#13;
IIS1d&#13;
there&#13;
were some dlffer-  diers were relleved to find out&#13;
Billy Hayes&#13;
Although Hayes wrole the  the oniy foreigne;  at&#13;
this&#13;
OlC"&#13;
between the fllm and  that it was hash and not&#13;
plas-&#13;
book  "Midnight  Express."   prison. He decided the oniy&#13;
Ihe&#13;
movie.&#13;
tic explosives  that he had   official there," Hayes stated.  Oliver  Stone  wrote  the  way he would survive&#13;
is&#13;
to&#13;
es-&#13;
"My&#13;
hookwas my own&#13;
lit.&#13;
taped to his body.&#13;
"I called him Tex because of  screenplay  for the  movie.  cape, so he decided to work&#13;
Ue&#13;
story."&#13;
Hayes said.  "I    Afler being questioned by  his accent. but&#13;
1&#13;
never knew  Stone rec~ntiy won aC~!aim  hard. and get Into shape. so&#13;
orote&#13;
aboutwhat happened to  the   Turkish   authorities.   his real name. 1 thought he  :::; ~s Vietnam film.  Pla-  he would survive any atlempt&#13;
mewhDe&#13;
I was&#13;
in&#13;
prison.&#13;
Hayes was asked to identify    was from the Drug Enforce-&#13;
.~ .&#13;
he would make.&#13;
''The&#13;
fUm-makers took my  the man who sold him the   ment Agency.&#13;
Ollver put his o~,feellngs&#13;
In&#13;
order to keep&#13;
hlmaelf&#13;
IIl&gt;ry&#13;
and used it to make a  hash.  Hayes  was taken  to    "The scene&#13;
in&#13;
the movie is  In\~ ~,~creenPI~&#13;
:ayes   mentally ready, he kept&#13;
tell-&#13;
statement,"&#13;
Hayes&#13;
empha-&#13;
'The Pudding House'. which    correct."  Hayes  said.  "Tex&#13;
sa.&#13;
en&#13;
we&#13;
e&#13;
one-&#13;
ing&#13;
himself&#13;
that he&#13;
was&#13;
only&#13;
IIzed&#13;
"I&#13;
thlnk&#13;
it's a very  was a hippie hang out In Is   put a&#13;
gun&#13;
to my head and told  on-one about my experiences.   on&#13;
this&#13;
island for a short time&#13;
,...rlw&#13;
and a very effective   lanbul.  and, afte;  reallzlng   me that&#13;
if&#13;
I&#13;
tried to escape he  :::;ge~~dth~~~e~';;;:fs&#13;
oJ  and that he way going home&#13;
Ilalement,but at the same   that Hayes wasn·t about to  would blow my brains out."&#13;
ut them on the screen"  an   soon.&#13;
ume&#13;
I bave&#13;
a lot of major   identify  anyone,  the pollce    Hayes said that being&#13;
in&#13;
p One point where&#13;
WS&#13;
Is&#13;
The island prison served as&#13;
problemswithit.&#13;
took 'him to prison.&#13;
prison was probably the best  clearl  evident is In the final  a port of call for ships deallng&#13;
''Themajor problem is that    "The  attempted   escape   thing that ever happened to  cou~m   scene when HI' es'  In frutts and vegelables. and&#13;
lite..&#13;
Is&#13;
an&#13;
overall attitude In  chase  through  the  chicken   him. He also said that he  sentence is being Changel At  he realized&#13;
his&#13;
way of escap·&#13;
lite&#13;
rum&#13;
that was not In my  house didn't happen." Hayes   thought that everyone should  this point Hayes had oniy&#13;
53&#13;
Ing was tied to the back on&#13;
book.&#13;
The film created  an  said referring  to the movie.   spend a year In prison. be-  days ieft' on his original&#13;
4%&#13;
one of the large ships • In&#13;
overall&#13;
lOIpressionof a 'bad   "They had me very closely   cause it teaches you to ap·   ear  sentence  The&#13;
Hi&#13;
h  the form of a rowboat.&#13;
'!l1rk....&#13;
Hayes  said.&#13;
"It&#13;
guarded. and they were going  preciate the lltlle things.&#13;
bourt In Turk~y decided gto   Hayes  waited  unW one&#13;
leaves&#13;
the impression  that  to make sure&#13;
1&#13;
didn·t go any·    "I  was  a child  of the  use Hayes as an example to  night In October of&#13;
1974,&#13;
when&#13;
lite..&#13;
are&#13;
nothing but bad  where.&#13;
sixties." Hayes said. "Every·"  other smugglers and reversed   a large storm blew In. and he&#13;
'11Irks&#13;
in&#13;
Turkey, which of   "There  was an American   thing that was bad about the"  the original sentence.&#13;
Hayes see&#13;
page&#13;
4&#13;
Parksidecomputer hacker caught and convicted&#13;
by&#13;
Steven&#13;
R.&#13;
Picazo&#13;
Fonner Parkside  student&#13;
ThomasF. Hansen was con.&#13;
Vlctedlast month of three&#13;
IIlisdemeanorcounts of com.&#13;
PlIlercrime. He had raided&#13;
~ Parkslde computer sys-&#13;
.... In&#13;
1985and had been&#13;
~YIng and modifying&#13;
.u&#13;
at&#13;
lWI&#13;
convenience.&#13;
DUringthe time that Han.&#13;
: was&#13;
In&#13;
the system. he had&#13;
He~  every account on it.&#13;
tha  broken Into an area&#13;
~h served the function of&#13;
eo er and data bank for&#13;
~rlghted Information.&#13;
stu aslcauy. we want our&#13;
PI!&#13;
dents here to know this&#13;
he~~&#13;
~as PUnished for what&#13;
dents  cause they (the stu·&#13;
lured)were actually the In·&#13;
ry&#13;
P3rly," Lee Goldesber.&#13;
cOmaSsociatedirector of the&#13;
he&#13;
JUler Center said. "What&#13;
was&#13;
d was harassment.  He&#13;
that.~"1.~tg onto accounts&#13;
""'" belong to him; he&#13;
b&#13;
_&#13;
was changing passwords  on&#13;
other   students.   changing&#13;
quotas on their accounts and&#13;
proceeded to make life very&#13;
difficult for students as they&#13;
tried to do their work."&#13;
Hansen  also  Intercepted&#13;
messages  that  were  being&#13;
sent to the Computer Center.&#13;
The Center was never able to&#13;
act on these messages&#13;
to&#13;
as-&#13;
sist   students   because   we&#13;
never  saw  them.&#13;
In&#13;
some&#13;
cases,  he would answer  the&#13;
students' questions or just de·&#13;
lete them off the system.&#13;
Hansen was sentenced  to&#13;
three year's probation. fined&#13;
$7.236and ordered to perform&#13;
500 hours of community serv·&#13;
Ice work. The doliar figure&#13;
was  determined   by  the&#13;
amount of time it took Gol-&#13;
desberry  to track down and&#13;
help  pollce  officials  deter·&#13;
mine who had been invading&#13;
the Parkslde syslem.&#13;
In&#13;
addi-&#13;
tion. Goldesberry  helped un·&#13;
cover how much the suspect&#13;
knew about the system.  The&#13;
dollar amount will be paid In&#13;
restitution  to the university.&#13;
I&#13;
Goldesberry  said the funds&#13;
will&#13;
be used to purchase more&#13;
terminals for the students.&#13;
Under court direction Han·&#13;
sen was enjoined from having&#13;
conlact during his three year&#13;
probationary  period with a&#13;
now graduated Parkside stu-&#13;
dent who a1legediy assisted&#13;
him In getting Into the sys-&#13;
tem. No legal proof has been&#13;
established to iink the other&#13;
former  Parkside  student to&#13;
Hansen's actions.&#13;
Hansen was caught by trac·&#13;
Ing the phone lines. All com·&#13;
puter related materials were&#13;
then confiscated with the use&#13;
of a search warrant. Goldes-&#13;
berry and campus  Security&#13;
spent  the next  few  months&#13;
going through over SOOdis·&#13;
kettes to figure out what Han·&#13;
sen had been doing.&#13;
Officials commented that it ,&#13;
was ·Kenosha's first  convic-&#13;
tion of this nature and that&#13;
it&#13;
will&#13;
hopefully set a precedent&#13;
to deter further crimes of&#13;
this&#13;
.kind.&#13;
Since the break-In. the com·&#13;
puter center has tightened its&#13;
security. They have created&#13;
"captive accounts" that only&#13;
perform  certain  functions.&#13;
then   automatically   shut&#13;
down. Also,  the system  no&#13;
longer has a llst of pass·&#13;
words.&#13;
Phillip G. Charest, director&#13;
of the Computer Cenler said,&#13;
"The Inlerference caused by&#13;
this  student  could  have&#13;
caused the students academic&#13;
problems and prevenled them&#13;
from completing their work&#13;
on time.&#13;
This&#13;
is&#13;
something&#13;
.that can·t be accepted In an&#13;
academic environment.&#13;
tt&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Wingspread conference&#13;
,&#13;
page 3&#13;
Computerized elections&#13;
page&#13;
5&#13;
Cartoonist from Parkslde   ,..,&#13;
,..page 7&#13;
Intramural update&#13;
page 10&#13;
�&#13;
perspectives&#13;
our view&#13;
'&#13;
•&#13;
Homecoming is an opportunity&#13;
to become&#13;
a&#13;
part of Parkside&#13;
~...&#13;
k&#13;
Is&#13;
upon&#13;
How&#13;
did II ..,t  here ..&#13;
quIcILIy'&#13;
II&#13;
-.u&#13;
like ~   week&#13;
!be&#13;
ftnrt ...&#13;
eek&#13;
of&#13;
!be&#13;
meater.&#13;
11&#13;
Is&#13;
lhe r_poullbWly&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
prIvUege&#13;
of&#13;
ry&#13;
one&#13;
of&#13;
to&#13;
partlclpe.1e In lhe eventa ..  much&#13;
as&#13;
~b   •&#13;
nit.&#13;
)'Mr'"&#13;
Homecom~   "cUYltiel&#13;
wW&#13;
haft  " Winter&#13;
Oamlval  ~&#13;
to&#13;
them,&#13;
TIlere&#13;
wW&#13;
be&#13;
points&#13;
"warded&#13;
to&#13;
ch&#13;
cJu&#13;
or&#13;
orp.nlaallon&#13;
In lhe&#13;
foIIowtIl&amp;&#13;
caleCO&#13;
riea&#13;
:&#13;
K.Inc&#13;
or&#13;
or&#13;
: 211&#13;
poIIlla per&#13;
en1raIIt&#13;
K.Inc&#13;
01'&#13;
211&#13;
poIIlla per&#13;
_r&#13;
Prince&#13;
or ~:&#13;
10&#13;
poInta&#13;
1_&#13;
rwu&gt;en&#13;
upl&#13;
V&#13;
lallle&#13;
duly.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
poIIlla&#13;
,...hour&#13;
•  poIala&#13;
fDr&#13;
u.a&#13;
orpAIaa&#13;
_   wtUl&#13;
u.a _&#13;
poIIlta&#13;
lor&#13;
.....nmc&#13;
al&#13;
u.a&#13;
vot1IIC&#13;
l&amp;bIe,&#13;
Vartely&#13;
8I&gt;ow •&#13;
•  poIala&#13;
per&#13;
act&#13;
•  poIIlta  .....&#13;
u.a&#13;
~act&#13;
10&#13;
poInta .....&#13;
two&#13;
hour&#13;
ahttt&#13;
at&#13;
u.a&#13;
Varialy&#13;
lIbow&#13;
0.-:&#13;
10 ,...&#13;
team&#13;
eatry&#13;
per&#13;
pm&#13;
•  poInta&#13;
lor&#13;
wtru&gt;u&#13;
of&#13;
-&#13;
10&#13;
for&#13;
aeC&lt;lnd&#13;
place&#13;
&amp;&#13;
poInta for&#13;
U1Ird&#13;
~e&#13;
Soccer&#13;
O&amp;me:&#13;
&amp;&#13;
poInta&#13;
per&#13;
apectalor&#13;
10&#13;
poIllla per VOIWltaerat&#13;
lab&#13;
per&#13;
hour&#13;
Some&#13;
people&#13;
may  lIy  that&#13;
the&#13;
poIllt&#13;
ayatem&#13;
doean't&#13;
matter&#13;
becaua&#13;
tI&gt;ey&#13;
don't&#13;
be10rlg&#13;
to a club&#13;
or&#13;
orga.nUa.&#13;
lion.&#13;
nit.&#13;
Is&#13;
a croat Urne to join. There&#13;
was&#13;
a recruitment&#13;
fatr&#13;
this&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
concourse&#13;
to Involve&#13;
those&#13;
who have&#13;
the&#13;
ume&#13;
and&#13;
-ro&#13;
to&#13;
t&gt;ecome&#13;
Involved.&#13;
n-&#13;
who&#13;
.....n&#13;
of1&#13;
campua&#13;
and&#13;
have a d1tlIcult Urne&#13;
commtltln&amp;&#13;
themlle1v   to&#13;
the&#13;
ruponsIbWtiea  of a club&#13;
ehouJd&#13;
mali:e every&#13;
effort&#13;
to &lt;:ometo lhe game and&#13;
cheer&#13;
lor&#13;
the _eer&#13;
team.&#13;
U&#13;
the&#13;
atudenta&#13;
are&#13;
not&#13;
able to do&#13;
lbat,&#13;
perhapo lhey&#13;
can&#13;
attend&#13;
the&#13;
dance and&#13;
caaIno&#13;
night&#13;
-y.....unc.&#13;
Tbe&#13;
tmpar1ant&#13;
cttmenalon&#13;
to&#13;
all&#13;
of the hoopla&#13;
this&#13;
week&#13;
Is&#13;
not&#13;
u.a&#13;
potnla&#13;
or&#13;
lhe prtz.ea.&#13;
It&#13;
_'t&#13;
really  matter&#13;
Wblch&#13;
club&#13;
or&#13;
even ...hlch&#13;
Jdng&#13;
or&#13;
queen candidate,&#13;
bat&#13;
t really&#13;
mak&#13;
a dlUerence&#13;
1.1&#13;
the element  of&#13;
lradl-.   eventa Uli:eHomecoming lend to&#13;
this&#13;
campus.&#13;
are&#13;
t/V  _&#13;
years  of our IIv  .&#13;
There&#13;
are&#13;
the&#13;
J'8&amp;l'I&#13;
wW&#13;
ant to&#13;
recall&#13;
and brag about. Let's make&#13;
an effori to mali: them memorable.  Partlclpe.te  In Home.&#13;
0llm1II&amp;.&#13;
2&#13;
ThurSdaY,&#13;
OCtober&#13;
8, ll1llt&#13;
"'"''II'"&#13;
~&#13;
NO!&#13;
/fAll;&#13;
F«!J1!&#13;
PONCHA&#13;
WANNA  SEE.  WHAT I&#13;
I'tU&#13;
OUTOF THE HAT? IT&#13;
COIifJ)&#13;
BE&#13;
A&#13;
JUSTICE 80M!&#13;
GIl&#13;
$270 MIUION  IN CONTRA&#13;
AID!   JUST&#13;
WAIT!&#13;
1HEfU,~&#13;
GOOD&#13;
STUFF&#13;
IN  HERE&#13;
SOMEWHEREI&#13;
MAY.&amp;:&#13;
A  BALANCED 8lJDCET!&#13;
A  MIDDLE  EAST  POLICY.'&#13;
COMEBACK!&#13;
Nobody' asked me, but&#13;
Condom dispensers are a great idea&#13;
by George&#13;
Koenig&#13;
Let's face It, sex lan't any-&#13;
thing&#13;
out of the ordinary  In&#13;
college life. Students&#13;
are nav-&#13;
Ing sex.&#13;
It&#13;
may  not&#13;
be&#13;
con·&#13;
doned, but It's&#13;
laking&#13;
place.&#13;
It's&#13;
taldng&#13;
place whether  the&#13;
proper protection&#13;
Is&#13;
avallable&#13;
or not. The questions  here&#13;
are:&#13;
Is&#13;
the proper  protectton&#13;
readily  avallable?   Does  the&#13;
schoot have a direct responsI·&#13;
bWty to&#13;
make&#13;
condoms&#13;
avall·&#13;
able?&#13;
And,&#13;
should  ParkBlde&#13;
adopt a program  to distribute&#13;
condoma  more  discreeUy?&#13;
A&#13;
contraception  program&#13;
was&#13;
developed here In the fall&#13;
aemeater  of last year  at&#13;
the&#13;
Student  Health  Services  of·&#13;
flee.   They   distribute   ten&#13;
"Prime"   condoms  for  one&#13;
dollar&#13;
along with other forms&#13;
of contraception  at  reason.&#13;
able prices.&#13;
sandy&#13;
Mlkolaa, a&#13;
nurse  from  Kenosha  Memo-&#13;
r1al&#13;
HospItal who works as a&#13;
l1mIted  term  employee   at&#13;
Health  Services,   said  she&#13;
wishes more students would&#13;
reallu   that  the  program&#13;
Is&#13;
there,  but  she  realizes  that&#13;
most people&#13;
are&#13;
too&#13;
embar.&#13;
rassed to&#13;
ask&#13;
for such&#13;
things&#13;
as condoms.&#13;
This&#13;
Is true;  not&#13;
many people want  to go Into&#13;
an office which seems so for-&#13;
mal&#13;
and&#13;
ask&#13;
for a contracep-&#13;
tive. We can't  take  the  stu-&#13;
dents'  so-called.  •&#13;
'good&#13;
sense&#13;
of responsibility"  for granted.&#13;
We need&#13;
to&#13;
make  condoms&#13;
more readlly avaUable.&#13;
After  a  random  survey&#13;
taken by Parkside  freshman,&#13;
I&#13;
learned  that&#13;
96&#13;
percent  of&#13;
them  feel It&#13;
is&#13;
necessary  to&#13;
set  up  condom  dispensers,&#13;
and out of lhoae&#13;
96&#13;
percent,&#13;
over&#13;
half&#13;
would&#13;
like&#13;
to&#13;
see&#13;
them  Installed&#13;
in&#13;
the  men's&#13;
and women's  bathrooms.   This&#13;
would make condoms more&#13;
accessable, and you wouldn't&#13;
have to feel "stupId"  bUying&#13;
them.&#13;
Other  universIties&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
Wisconsin system  have  al.&#13;
ready  Installed  dispensers  or&#13;
are In the planning  stages for&#13;
something  of&#13;
thta&#13;
sort.  For&#13;
example,   UW-Milwaukee   is&#13;
plannlng&#13;
on a very non-tradi-&#13;
tional  approach&#13;
to&#13;
promote&#13;
condom use. Their student as.&#13;
SOClation president,   Harold&#13;
Annen,  wants&#13;
to&#13;
instaU con.&#13;
dom dispensers  In their union&#13;
bathrooms  with condoms that&#13;
have  Utelr school  colors  and&#13;
logo  on  them  saying,&#13;
'GO&#13;
PANTHERS  GO',&#13;
This&#13;
is&#13;
a  very&#13;
creathr&#13;
Idea; It tenda to mock&#13;
the&#13;
IJI.&#13;
porlance  of being protected,&#13;
which  makes&#13;
U1Inga   .....&#13;
more  comfortable.&#13;
I _.&#13;
Is a good way to help&#13;
the ..&#13;
dent's  realize  the&#13;
lmpol1ull&#13;
of protection  against&#13;
ae"""&#13;
transmitted   diseasea&#13;
wlt!llll&#13;
the  seriousness   that&#13;
bon!&#13;
everyone.   Annen  __  1&#13;
know  when  or  even&#13;
if&#13;
tber&#13;
wlll&#13;
go through  with&#13;
thls.&#13;
III&#13;
said.&#13;
"It&#13;
will&#13;
take awhile&#13;
to&#13;
Implement  them  (the&#13;
Ideall;&#13;
we're just waltlng to&#13;
see&#13;
willi&#13;
the  cost  Is before  we b""&#13;
down the hammer".&#13;
The student  govemmenll1&#13;
Parkslde  talked briefly sbed&#13;
a stmUar  Idea. Sue&#13;
WalbollL&#13;
PSGA senator,  saId that&#13;
!heft&#13;
are&#13;
no definite plans, but&#13;
sbe&#13;
thinks&#13;
It&#13;
would be grest&#13;
to&#13;
gel&#13;
a  committee   together&#13;
lroIII&#13;
several  different school..&#13;
ganlzations  and  get woridDI&#13;
on the project  to&#13;
Install  ....&#13;
pensers.&#13;
Installlng  condom dispens-&#13;
ers  would  be  convenient IS&#13;
weU as  beneflcial  lrom&#13;
all&#13;
standpoints  because  sex&#13;
lsI1'&#13;
some  rudimentary&#13;
part&#13;
01&#13;
life, It Is life.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
A.&gt;1oer ~ wntton  and edrted&#13;
by&#13;
students  of&#13;
UW·Part&lt;side,&#13;
wt10&#13;
are solely respon~ble  for&#13;
its&#13;
edrtonO&#13;
pol-&#13;
ct&#13;
and&#13;
content.&#13;
It&#13;
tS&#13;
pubhshed&#13;
every Thursday  during&#13;
the&#13;
academic  )'tar  except  over bfeaks and ,...&#13;
days.&#13;
Letters  to&#13;
the&#13;
edrt",&#13;
w~be  accepfed  only&#13;
rt&#13;
they are&#13;
typed.&#13;
double.spaced   and&#13;
350&#13;
words or&#13;
less '"&#13;
Ieners must&#13;
be&#13;
Signed.&#13;
WIth&#13;
a telephone  number  Included  for verffication  purposes.  Names&#13;
win&#13;
be.,,;tho&#13;
heW:!&#13;
upon&#13;
request.&#13;
Ranger reservos&#13;
the&#13;
right to edit letters&#13;
and&#13;
refuse those WhiCh are false an&lt;llor de.&#13;
famafory.&#13;
Deadllne for&#13;
all&#13;
tetters.&#13;
and&#13;
classified  ads.&#13;
is&#13;
Monday  at 10 a m&#13;
fOf&#13;
pubHcation&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
.  .&#13;
AI&#13;
correspondence&#13;
should&#13;
be&#13;
addressed  to: Ra£1ger. UW-Pal1&lt;side,  Box 2000.  Ke.&#13;
oosh&#13;
l&#13;
a WI 53141.  Telephone  4141553-2287  (Ed"onal)  or 4141553.2295  (Ad'ett~.&#13;
IIllI·&#13;
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              <text>Library hours extended for the D-1 level only</text>
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              <text>October 1, 1987 University of Wisconsin-Parkside Vol. 16, No. 5&#13;
Library hours extended for the D-f level only&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Shortened library hours cause some students to be left out&#13;
in the cold&#13;
by Doug McEvoy&#13;
and Amy H. Hitter&#13;
In response to student dissatisfaction&#13;
with the Library/&#13;
Learning Center's recently&#13;
reduced hours, the D-l level,&#13;
but not the three upper levels,&#13;
will extend its hours to 11:45&#13;
p.m. Monday through Thursday&#13;
within the next few&#13;
weeks, said acting director&#13;
Linda Piele, Thursday.&#13;
The amount of money originally&#13;
saved by reducing the&#13;
hours for the summer 1987&#13;
and 1987-88 school year was&#13;
$4,355, according to figures&#13;
provided by Chuck Madsen,&#13;
budget assistant to the vice&#13;
chancellor. The library's 1987-&#13;
88 budget is $1,106,480, including&#13;
salaries, down from a&#13;
1986-87 budget of $1,118,094.&#13;
Student objections began to&#13;
arise when library hours&#13;
were cut from 7:45 a.m. to&#13;
midnight (Monday through&#13;
Thursday) during the 1986-87&#13;
school year to 7:45 a.m. to&#13;
10:30 p.m during the 1987-88&#13;
school year.&#13;
"Many people who use the&#13;
library late at night are using&#13;
it for a study hall or to use&#13;
the microcomputers," said&#13;
Piele.&#13;
"Most students use the second&#13;
and third levels to&#13;
study," objected Corby Anderson,&#13;
a microcomputer assistant.&#13;
"With so many people&#13;
working on microcomputers,&#13;
it's pretty noisy down here.&#13;
We joke that it (the D-l level)&#13;
is almost not a part of the library&#13;
anymore.&#13;
"It's better than nothing,"&#13;
he said of Piele's decision,&#13;
"but if the whole thing was&#13;
open, people could have&#13;
access to books."&#13;
Piele said that the budget&#13;
cuts have affected many&#13;
areas of the LLC. Three and&#13;
one-half full-time equivalent&#13;
library positions have been&#13;
cut, so some library employees&#13;
now have increased&#13;
duties to compensate, and&#13;
some desk personnel hours&#13;
have been cut. No Reference&#13;
Desk employees are available&#13;
on Sunday this year.&#13;
Additionally, the D-l level&#13;
doors will soon be closed permanently&#13;
to save security&#13;
costs. Some instruction has&#13;
been cut back as well.&#13;
"We've had to basically reduce&#13;
our services," she said.&#13;
"We have to look at and&#13;
prioritize our instruction." Instruction&#13;
that has been cut includes&#13;
English 100 and microcomputer&#13;
workshops.&#13;
"One thing I feel is very,&#13;
very important, and am really&#13;
trying to hang on to is instruction&#13;
(orientation) for&#13;
high school groups," said&#13;
Piele. "I hope that will not be&#13;
cut."&#13;
Last year, library hours&#13;
were: 7:45 a.m.-midnight,&#13;
Monday through Thursday;&#13;
7:45 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Friday;&#13;
8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Saturday;&#13;
and noon-10:30 p.m. Sunday.&#13;
This year, library hours&#13;
are: 7:45 a.m.-10:30 p.m.,&#13;
(and D-l level until 11:45&#13;
p.m.) Monday through Thursday;&#13;
7:45 a.m.-4:30 p.m.,&#13;
Friday; 11 a.m.-4:30 p.m.,&#13;
Saturday; and 1 p.m.-lO p.m.,&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Of the $4,355 saved by&#13;
reducing hours, $2,081 was&#13;
saved by the Monday-Thursday&#13;
cuts; $1,428 was saved by&#13;
the Saturday cuts; $520 was&#13;
saved by the Sunday cuts;&#13;
and $326 was saved during&#13;
summer session by closing at&#13;
9 p.m. instead of 10 p.m.&#13;
Piele said the extended D-l&#13;
hours will cost under $1,000.&#13;
She expressed concern because&#13;
the cost must be balanced&#13;
by reducing hours for&#13;
personnel who shelve books.&#13;
Piele said she is afraid this&#13;
may become inconvenient for&#13;
library patrons searching for&#13;
materials that are not&#13;
shelved as often.&#13;
"One of the problems,"&#13;
Piele recognized about the&#13;
cuts, "is that while most students&#13;
can find time to use the&#13;
library with little or no inconvenience,&#13;
it is important to&#13;
realize that there are certain&#13;
groups of students more severely&#13;
affected. Many students&#13;
have job or family obligations&#13;
that interfere with&#13;
their ability to get to the library.&#13;
Students with night&#13;
classes are often in this situation."&#13;
Students have voiced these&#13;
types of objections to the library's&#13;
cut hours.&#13;
"It's inconvenient," said&#13;
Alan Pelishek, a freshman&#13;
majoring in engineering technology.&#13;
"I like to study late.&#13;
Other college libraries close&#13;
at midnight."&#13;
Jim Neibaur, a senior&#13;
majoring in English and a&#13;
secondary education certification&#13;
candidate, also finds&#13;
the library hours inconvenient&#13;
as he gets out of class at&#13;
9:15 p.m.&#13;
"That gives me roughly one&#13;
hour to study," he said.&#13;
"That isn't nearly enough&#13;
time to finish anything. So&#13;
I'm simply going home, and&#13;
getting nothing done. If the library&#13;
was open until midnight,&#13;
I could have gotten&#13;
something accomplished."&#13;
"I think it sucks," said&#13;
Library see page 9&#13;
Regent nominee feels he's being unfairly treated&#13;
by Amy H. Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
John Jarvis, Gov. Tommy&#13;
Thompson's student Regent&#13;
nominee, thinks that the UWSystem&#13;
student governments&#13;
that oppose him, including&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, are acting&#13;
unfairly.&#13;
"One of the main problems&#13;
I'm facing is that I really&#13;
don't think the student governments&#13;
are being fair to&#13;
me," Jarvis said in an interview&#13;
Monday.&#13;
When Jarvis appeared* before&#13;
the PSGA Senate September&#13;
18, he said that although&#13;
questions were asked,&#13;
the negative feelings PSGA&#13;
President Alex Pettit and&#13;
others were harboring were&#13;
not discussed.&#13;
Pettit joined several other&#13;
schools in opposing Jarvis'&#13;
confirmation September 21&#13;
before the State Senate&#13;
Education Committee in Milwaukee.&#13;
"I got the feeling that they&#13;
had made up their minds be-&#13;
John Jarvis&#13;
fore I got there," Jarvis said&#13;
of PSGA, "and that's unfair.&#13;
They're supposed to be representing&#13;
the students as I am,&#13;
and they're misleading people.&#13;
"Instead of really wanting&#13;
to know what I think, I've&#13;
gotten the feeling that I've&#13;
been invited to campuses to&#13;
see if they can try to find&#13;
something "to report". They&#13;
want me to say something&#13;
wrong, which I really think is&#13;
unfair.&#13;
"I just wish the student&#13;
governments would not try to&#13;
create controversy for the&#13;
sake of controversy," Jarvis&#13;
emphasized.&#13;
Jarvis also said he had&#13;
been misquoted in the Madison&#13;
newspaper, the Capital&#13;
Times, and this information&#13;
was reprinted in student&#13;
newspapers all over the state,&#13;
including the Ranger.&#13;
To clarify his stand on minority&#13;
issues, Jarvis said, "I&#13;
think that one of the major&#13;
problems facing the Regents&#13;
is minority retention, at both&#13;
the student level, and at the&#13;
administrative and faculty&#13;
levels. I think most Regents&#13;
realize that, and as a student&#13;
Regent, that would be on the&#13;
top of my priorities."&#13;
To clarify his position regarding&#13;
homosexuals being&#13;
admitted in the ROTC, he&#13;
said, "Any citizen has a right&#13;
to get in to any public institution&#13;
whatever the case may&#13;
be. I was asked if I would&#13;
recommend closing the&#13;
ROTC, (because they will not&#13;
allow gays) and I thought&#13;
that was going from one extreme&#13;
to the other. Closing&#13;
the ROTC would deny access&#13;
to even more people. There&#13;
was a resolution passed by&#13;
the Board of Regents condemning&#13;
the Army's actions&#13;
and I would have supported&#13;
that resolution."&#13;
Regarding tuition, Jarvis&#13;
said, "I would never support&#13;
tuition increases for the sake&#13;
of supporting it. At the same&#13;
time, I think you have to look&#13;
at all the circumstances facing&#13;
tuition increases. If it&#13;
came down to the quality of&#13;
education, if the funds aren't&#13;
coming from somewhere,&#13;
maybe tuition increases are&#13;
an alternative. I'm not saying&#13;
that's the only way to increase&#13;
revenue, but I was&#13;
asked the question, would you&#13;
support tuition increases?&#13;
And I said yes, if it's for the&#13;
Jarvis see page 70&#13;
Inside...&#13;
AIDS prevention page3&#13;
MRI comes to Parkside page 4&#13;
Homecoming update page 5&#13;
Ratios good here page 7&#13;
PA8 ski trip ..page *13&#13;
Wrestler goes to Russia page 16&#13;
perspectives 2 Thursday, October 1,1987 Ranger&#13;
our view&#13;
Library hours a step,&#13;
but not large enough&#13;
Although it is a step in the right direction that the library&#13;
will offer students the D-l level from 10:80 p.m. to&#13;
11:45 p.m. for studying purposes, it is not enough.&#13;
Many students who are upset by the recent reduction in&#13;
library hours need the library's vast reference section to&#13;
complete research for papers and other class assignments.&#13;
The D-l level does offer the students the opportunity&#13;
to use the microcomputers and a well-lighted studying&#13;
area; however, many students need the materials&#13;
housed on the L-l reference area in order to make use of&#13;
these other areas.&#13;
While Linda Piele, acting director of the Library/Learning&#13;
Center, recognizes that the D-l level will be needed&#13;
for studying for some students, she also states that the D-&#13;
1 level doors will be permanently locked due to a lack of&#13;
staffing in the area. How will the D-l late night studying&#13;
students be able to get to the D-l level?&#13;
One thing that makes the budgetary constraints an implausible&#13;
reason for the hour cut is that the total amount&#13;
of money saved by this measure for the school year 1987-&#13;
88 is $4,355 out of a $1,106,480 budget. That is like saving&#13;
$4 out of $1100. I t hardly seems worth the hard feelings&#13;
and bad publicity that such a cut will cause the university.&#13;
The entire issue needs to be reexamined. There must be&#13;
a more mutually beneficial way to handle the need for&#13;
students to utilize the fine reference area of the library&#13;
while containing the cost. As the semester progresses,&#13;
more students are becoming aware of the hours that have&#13;
been cut by the library, and this, unfortunately, may be&#13;
the issue that will bring the local media attention to the&#13;
campus that the public information office has been striving&#13;
for.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
repents&#13;
for Grace&#13;
Dr. Stuart Rubner and Ms.&#13;
Barbara Larson were described&#13;
by Asst. Chancellor&#13;
Gary Grace as licensed psychologists&#13;
in last week's&#13;
Ranger. While Rubner has recieved&#13;
his Ph.D. in guidance&#13;
and counseling from the UWMadison&#13;
and Larson is a nationally&#13;
certified counselor, it&#13;
would be inaccurate to describe&#13;
either one of them as&#13;
licensed psychologists. The&#13;
Ranger regrets any confusion&#13;
this error may have caused.&#13;
ITS BEEN QUITE A CAMPAIGN!&#13;
FIRST, WE IN THE MEDIA&#13;
SNARED GARY HART IN AN&#13;
EXTRAMARITAL AFFAIR...&#13;
WE CAUGHT JOE BIDEN&#13;
PLAGIARIZING AND&#13;
LYING ABOUT HIS LAW&#13;
SCHOOL GRADES...&#13;
WE WAITED PATIENTLY&#13;
FOR. JESSE JACKSON TO&#13;
DEFEND THE INEVITABLE&#13;
ANTI-SEMITIC REMARK BY&#13;
A SUPPORTER...&#13;
Pastoral care&#13;
Minister from page 8&#13;
"My future plans are to&#13;
have a well established club,&#13;
develop fundraisers so we can&#13;
get a budget established,&#13;
have success in many activities&#13;
and to accomplish more.&#13;
I would like to get to know&#13;
more administrators, staff&#13;
members, faculty and students.&#13;
Possibly in two or&#13;
three years get closer to a&#13;
counseling position," he said.&#13;
If you would like to talk to&#13;
Father Schwartz or join the&#13;
Catholic Student Club you can&#13;
contact Father Schwartz&#13;
through the Student Life Office,&#13;
Union 209.&#13;
Student regent appointment&#13;
parking ills yield mail&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
On Friday, September 14,&#13;
John Jarvls visited Parkside.&#13;
Mr. Jarvis is the Governor's&#13;
appointee for the student regent&#13;
seat on the Board of Regents.&#13;
At this meeting Jarvis&#13;
was available to answer student&#13;
questions regarding his&#13;
position on different issues&#13;
that affect the UW-system.&#13;
I found Mr. Jarvis to be&#13;
amiable and personable. I believe&#13;
I would be able to work&#13;
with him if he would be appointed&#13;
to this position; however,&#13;
I oppose his appointment&#13;
on three major points.&#13;
Through our meeting, it&#13;
was apparent that Mr. Jarvis&#13;
is hindered due to his lack of&#13;
involvement in student government.&#13;
His unfamiliarity&#13;
with budgetary procedures&#13;
could be a serious problem&#13;
because this is a primary&#13;
area of conflict between students&#13;
and administration.&#13;
I believe that Mr. Jarvis&#13;
would be ineffective in a leadership&#13;
position because of his&#13;
inability and unwillingness to&#13;
take a firm stand on the issue&#13;
of Segregated University Fee&#13;
Funds, which is one major&#13;
concern of the student population.&#13;
I have another problem&#13;
with his appointment in the&#13;
fact that several times he&#13;
said he would use Regent&#13;
Shaw's office as his primary&#13;
source of information. If he is&#13;
a student representative on&#13;
the Board of Regents, I would&#13;
think that he would first consider&#13;
the opinions of student&#13;
government officers and then&#13;
later consider any information&#13;
that would be offered by&#13;
Shaw's office.&#13;
The above major points of&#13;
concern should make all students&#13;
question whether Mr.&#13;
Jarvis is a wise choice for&#13;
such an important position.&#13;
He did not satisfy my perceived&#13;
image of a suitable&#13;
student regent candidate.&#13;
Alex Pettit&#13;
PSGA President&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Campus and community&#13;
newspapers have, in recent&#13;
weeks, described the efforts&#13;
of the university to increase&#13;
enrollment. Additional students&#13;
will no doubt bring&#13;
additional vehicles. Unfortunately,&#13;
there are no additional&#13;
parking spaces available&#13;
for these vehicles.&#13;
When one purchases a&#13;
white parking permit, the&#13;
user should have the priviledge&#13;
of parking conveniently&#13;
near the campus buildings.&#13;
The only way anyone can&#13;
park within comfortable&#13;
walking distance of the buildings&#13;
is to arrive at school by&#13;
9:00 a.m. This is pure nonsense!&#13;
The mini lot fills first,&#13;
Letter see page 10&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jenny Carr Editor&#13;
Kelly McKissick News Editor&#13;
Amy H. Ritter News Editor&#13;
Jim NeibaurFeatures/Entertainment Editor&#13;
Terri DeRosier Asst. Features Editor&#13;
Bernie Doll Asst. Entertainment Editor&#13;
Randy LeCount Sports Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy Photo Editor&#13;
Ken McCray Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
Jon Hearron Ad Manager&#13;
Michael J. Rohl ...Distribution Manager&#13;
Robb Luehr Copy Editor&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Don Harmeyer Business Manager&#13;
Kathy Clapp-Harmeyer... Asst. Business Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
Jason Caspers. Dan Chiapetta. John Kehoe. George Koenig.&#13;
Jeff lemmermann. Christina lojeski, Amy Ludwig, Rick Luehr,&#13;
Dawn Mainland. Doug McEvoy. Debbie Michna. Patti Nitz.&#13;
Nicole Pacione. Steven Picazo. Maria Rintz, Mark Shilhavy.&#13;
Wendy Sorenson. Jeft Stanich. Jenny Walter. Tyson Wilda.&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of UW-Parkside. who are solely responsible for its editorial polidays&#13;
c ' ,s Polished every Thursday during the academic year except over breaks and ho liiJnilcml.&#13;
c/ho !i!!L°LWil1 H? a?c,epLed only if they are typed, double-spaced and 350 words or less. All&#13;
letters must be signed, with a telephone number included for ve rification purposes. Names will be withneio&#13;
upon request.&#13;
f amatoryr6SerVeS ^ l° Cdit letterS and retuse those which are ,a,se and/or de"&#13;
'Thursday ^ a" ^ C,aSS',ied 3dS' 'S Monday at 10 am ,or Publication&#13;
AILC0^nSRS?^?ncTe ?bould be addressed to: Ranger. UW-Parkside Box 2000 Kenosha&#13;
Wl 53141. Telephone 414/553-2287 (Editorial) or 414/553-2295 (Advertis-&#13;
Mrmb*' of'he&#13;
attocd'eo&#13;
coueoare&#13;
Ntfiil TP&#13;
Ranger Thursday, October 1, 1987 3&#13;
Safe sex or no sex best defense against AIDS&#13;
by Amy H. Hitter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Suppose you're in the student&#13;
union having drinks with&#13;
an attractive member of the&#13;
opposite sex, whom you've&#13;
just met. The conversation&#13;
becomes suggestive, a little&#13;
romantic. Eventually, you&#13;
wind up at your place, in bed.&#13;
You may have just exposed&#13;
yourself to an AIDS carrier.&#13;
This scenario was presented&#13;
by Brother Benjamin&#13;
Johnson, of the Milwaukee&#13;
AIDS Project, Wednesday&#13;
(Sept. 23) during an afternoon&#13;
presentation titled "AIDS&#13;
101"&#13;
Johnson, a Capuchin monk&#13;
and licensed practical nurse,&#13;
emphasized that contrary to&#13;
popular belief, AIDS is not&#13;
limited to homosexuals,&#13;
bisexuals and intravenous&#13;
drug users.&#13;
"The virus doesn't care&#13;
who you are," he said. "The&#13;
virus doesn't discriminate."&#13;
"I think it's very important&#13;
that you be concerned about&#13;
AIDS, because I think that&#13;
every single one of you is sexually&#13;
active," he told the&#13;
audience of over 50 students&#13;
and faculty members. "Now I&#13;
know I'm being real bold&#13;
about this, but I think if&#13;
you're not sexually active,&#13;
then you're thinking about engaging&#13;
in sexual activity&#13;
very, very soon."&#13;
The AIDS virus is present&#13;
in Wisconsin, he said.&#13;
"It's here," said Johnson.&#13;
"In Kenosha County, there&#13;
are diagnosed AIDS cases."&#13;
Johnson said that of Wisconsin's&#13;
209 documented cases of&#13;
AIDS, fewer than 6 were in&#13;
Kenosha County, and 8 were&#13;
in Racine County.&#13;
Johnson explained how casual&#13;
sex can expose a heterosexual&#13;
person to an AIDS carrier.&#13;
When choosing to have&#13;
sex, he said, the partner may&#13;
not tell the individual that he&#13;
or she is a member of a high&#13;
risk group, or has had sex&#13;
with a member of a high risk&#13;
group. Or perhaps they don't&#13;
realize it.&#13;
It is estimated that 7,500&#13;
persons in the state of Wisconsin&#13;
may be carrying the&#13;
virus, and many are not&#13;
aware of it.&#13;
"I say to young women, if&#13;
you're going to be sexually&#13;
active with some young man,&#13;
you make sure he's got a condom&#13;
on." Johnson advised.&#13;
"And some men will say,&#13;
Well, I don't like to use condoms,&#13;
because it takes away&#13;
the feeling, Ladies, you know&#13;
what I tell you to tell those&#13;
suckers? If you don't wear&#13;
this condom, you ain't feeling&#13;
nothing!"&#13;
If a women becomes pregnant&#13;
and is exposed to AIDS,&#13;
Johnson said, there is a 50 to&#13;
60 percent chance the baby&#13;
will be born infected with the&#13;
AIDS virus and die within 2&#13;
years.&#13;
AIDS is transmitted by&#13;
sperm, blood, and vaginal&#13;
secretions.&#13;
"Once you are infected and&#13;
move into a diagnosis of&#13;
AIDS, you will die," Johnson&#13;
said. Research has shown&#13;
that hard-core drug users will&#13;
die within 3 months of their&#13;
diagnosis. All others will die&#13;
within 6-18 months of their&#13;
diagnosis. "There is no&#13;
cure."&#13;
The AIDS virus itself does&#13;
not kill. Acquired Immune&#13;
Deficiency Syndrom breaks&#13;
down the human body's defense&#13;
system and exposes its&#13;
victim to various diseases&#13;
that do kill. AIDS was discovered&#13;
in California in the 1970s&#13;
when an abnormal number of&#13;
people died of a formerly&#13;
rare type of pneumonia.&#13;
Johnson described the spectrum&#13;
of infection of the AIDS&#13;
virus. Twenty to thirty percent&#13;
of persons who are infected&#13;
with the HIV virus (the&#13;
virus that carries AIDS) will&#13;
develop AIDS and die.&#13;
Twenty-five percent of HIVinfected&#13;
persons will develop&#13;
AIDS-related complex (ARC),&#13;
which is not life-threatening,&#13;
but can just be physically debilitating.&#13;
Forty-five percent&#13;
of HIV carriers will remain a&#13;
symptomatic carriers, and&#13;
can transmit the disease to&#13;
others.&#13;
"You are at risk," Johnson&#13;
told the audience. He said the&#13;
ages of AIDS-diagnosed cases&#13;
in Wisconsin range from 18 to&#13;
75. The 18-year-old victim, he&#13;
said, possibly was exposed to&#13;
the virus when he was 16. He&#13;
was not gay-identified.&#13;
"AIDS is in our community,"&#13;
he emphasized. Because&#13;
of the dormancy period,&#13;
those AIDS carriers that&#13;
have been diagnosed could&#13;
have been transmitting the&#13;
disease without knowledge&#13;
before their diagnosis.&#13;
AIDS cannot be transmitted&#13;
through a handshake, a hug,&#13;
or by using the same telephone,&#13;
drinking glass, doorknob,&#13;
or toilet seat as an&#13;
AIDS-carrier.&#13;
Benjamin Johnson&#13;
Mosquitoes cannot transmit&#13;
it.&#13;
"It's a very fragile virus,"&#13;
said Johnson. "It doesn't live&#13;
very long outside the human&#13;
body."&#13;
Johnson offered guidelines&#13;
for safe sex for those that&#13;
Aids see page&#13;
Union modernization plan emerging&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
News Editor&#13;
It all began over two years&#13;
ago when "a group of students&#13;
were sitting in the&#13;
Union, looked around and&#13;
decided that it needed some&#13;
work," recalled Andy Buchanan,&#13;
part of the first&#13;
group of students concerned&#13;
with the appearance of the&#13;
Union.&#13;
Out of that first informal&#13;
meeting emerged the Students&#13;
Concerned for Union&#13;
Mode rnization (SCUM). The&#13;
group's main concern was to&#13;
"fix" Union Square. They&#13;
wanted the room to have a&#13;
modern look with warmer,&#13;
brighter colors and better&#13;
lighting; to better utilize the&#13;
multi-level setup of the room,&#13;
changing booth placements,&#13;
improving the sound system&#13;
and the atmosphere of the&#13;
room; and to repair or treat&#13;
the ceiling.&#13;
They also decided, that if&#13;
possible, the Union Square&#13;
should undergo construction&#13;
to have accessibility for- the&#13;
handicapped; improved room&#13;
acoustics, a built-in technical&#13;
(lighting and sound) booth for&#13;
stage events, and redo the&#13;
doorway to the patio, including&#13;
installation of windows.&#13;
All of this in addition to the&#13;
construction involved in the&#13;
"top priority" adjustments.&#13;
Approximately one year&#13;
ago, the Parkside Union Advisory&#13;
Board (PUAB) picked&#13;
up the concerns of the students&#13;
to formally present&#13;
them to the UW System FaOuidctf&#13;
po*,0&#13;
exit&#13;
GrvbftviTe)&#13;
(pabl&lt;)&#13;
• Entry&#13;
Services - •foor'f-bteovielentig3e s&#13;
Proposed update of the Union Square&#13;
cilities Management (out of&#13;
Central Administration) and&#13;
the State Building Commission.&#13;
PUAB contracted a professional&#13;
engineering group,&#13;
The Lake Group, Inc. of Racine,&#13;
to provide estimates on&#13;
the goals of SCUM and additional&#13;
remodeling and maintenance&#13;
projects.&#13;
Bill Niebuhr, director of the&#13;
Union, said that SCUM's interest&#13;
in the Union Square led&#13;
to other realizations of needs&#13;
in the Union building. The&#13;
dining room needs to be updated,&#13;
and a removable divider&#13;
system has been suggested,&#13;
in order to give students a&#13;
greater sense of privacy during&#13;
regular hours, yet make&#13;
the room adequate for banquet&#13;
occasions when needed.&#13;
The lighting in the dining&#13;
room could also be improved,&#13;
he explained.&#13;
He continued to cite examples&#13;
of remodeling needs. The&#13;
meeting rooms and hallways&#13;
need recarpeting and repaint-&#13;
(Graphic by Kathy Harmeyer)&#13;
ing; the cinema needs a better&#13;
lighting system as it is&#13;
being used more often for&#13;
speakers and events; and the&#13;
recreation center could use&#13;
new carpeting and ceiling replacement.&#13;
This summer The Lake&#13;
Group, Inc. prepared an estimate&#13;
of total costs to do all&#13;
the requested work to the&#13;
Union building. Their total&#13;
estimated project cost was&#13;
$545,584. The estimated cost&#13;
of the Union Square renovation&#13;
and remodeling was&#13;
$178,724.&#13;
Neibuhr said of the total&#13;
project cost, "We do not have&#13;
the funding to do that -- it&#13;
just doesn't exist. We're&#13;
trying to identify things that&#13;
we need to get done right&#13;
away."&#13;
Niebuhr pointed out one significant&#13;
problem with the&#13;
project » there is approximately&#13;
$100,000 in reserve&#13;
monies to be used for the&#13;
Union building. All additional&#13;
money will have to be obtained&#13;
in some other way.&#13;
Buchanan, a former student&#13;
at Parkside, agreed with Neibuhr&#13;
in that some things need&#13;
to be done right away. The&#13;
first projects being tackled&#13;
have to do with the cosmetics&#13;
of the buildling. A requisition&#13;
has already been signed to replace&#13;
some bathroom stalls,&#13;
and a crew came out to&#13;
campus last Friday to test a&#13;
process of cleaning ceiling&#13;
tiles, thus avoiding costly replacements.&#13;
Additional projects to be&#13;
tackled first include chemically&#13;
cleaning the plumbing&#13;
lines to avoid water damage&#13;
to the building, replacement&#13;
of outdated or vandalized furniture,&#13;
replacement of carpeting&#13;
and repainting.&#13;
Niebuhr said that he hopes&#13;
to have the primary projects&#13;
either completed or precisely&#13;
planned out by the end of this&#13;
school year. His concern is&#13;
"how can we spend in such a&#13;
way so that we get the best&#13;
look of doing something new?&#13;
I want us to get the best deal&#13;
for our money."&#13;
Any money left over after&#13;
these initial projects have&#13;
been completed will be used&#13;
for all other considered projects.&#13;
Niebuhr seemed apprehensive&#13;
about using the&#13;
money for the Union Square&#13;
remodeling, because "my&#13;
personal feeling is that these&#13;
monies were put aside to do&#13;
some of these things, and legitimately&#13;
some of the things&#13;
Union see page 9&#13;
Total&#13;
Service&#13;
for&#13;
U. W. Parkside&#13;
Employees&#13;
and&#13;
Students&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
Room 286&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 10-3&#13;
Serving four other locations&#13;
Racine&#13;
Burlington&#13;
Waukesha&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
4 Thursday, October 1, 1987 Ranger&#13;
ssaaaaaa&#13;
Groundbreaking ceremony welcomes MRI facility&#13;
Poised to plunge the shovel are, from left; Raymond Dilulio,&#13;
St. Luke's Hospital; Richard 0. Schmidt, Jr., Kenosha Hos- gital and Medical Center; Chancellor Sheila Kaplan; Richard&#13;
tensrud, St. Catherine's Hospital; Edward DeMeulenaere,&#13;
St. Mary's Medical Center.&#13;
cine and Kenoha for cooperating&#13;
to establish the MRI scanner&#13;
at Parkside. ''Racine and&#13;
Kenosha counties will be able&#13;
to maintain state-of-the-art&#13;
health care because of the&#13;
cooperation of four hospitals&#13;
in the two counties. These&#13;
hospitals are to be commended&#13;
for their commitments to&#13;
the future of sound health&#13;
care in Southeastern Wisconsin."&#13;
Edward DeMeulenaere,&#13;
president of KR Imaging,&#13;
agreed. "This cooperative&#13;
venture makes it possible for&#13;
Kenosha and Racine residents&#13;
to have access to medical&#13;
technology in the most&#13;
cost-effective manner, possible.&#13;
It is highly unlikely any&#13;
of the individual hospitals&#13;
acting alone could afford, or&#13;
justify economically, the purchase&#13;
of such equipment."&#13;
Senator Joseph Andrea (DKenosha)&#13;
hailed the new MRI&#13;
center as a commendable effort&#13;
on the part of the four&#13;
Kenosha-Racine hospitals.&#13;
Senator Andrea stated, "The&#13;
project demonstrates the&#13;
commitment of these hospitals&#13;
to bring the latest advancements&#13;
in medical technology&#13;
to the citizens of the&#13;
two counties, while at the&#13;
same time holding down&#13;
health care costs."&#13;
Only about 600 MRI units&#13;
have been installed nationally.&#13;
In the state of Wisconsin,&#13;
presently five MRI units are&#13;
in operation. Currently, patients&#13;
requireing this diagnostic&#13;
test must travel to the Milwaukee&#13;
County Medical Complex,&#13;
frequently having to&#13;
wait weeks to receive the"&#13;
diagnostic test.&#13;
PSGA elections slated&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association will be holding&#13;
elections October 21 and&#13;
22. The election committee&#13;
has released the list of rules&#13;
governing the elections, and&#13;
they are as follows:&#13;
Requirements:&#13;
For the position of Senator,&#13;
Parkside Union Advisory&#13;
Board member (PUAB), Segregated&#13;
University Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee member&#13;
(SUFAC) the following must&#13;
be met:&#13;
1. You are a student at&#13;
Parkside&#13;
2. You have a minimum&#13;
cumulative grade point average&#13;
of 2.0&#13;
3. You are carrying at least&#13;
six (6) credits&#13;
4. You are not on final academic&#13;
probation&#13;
Petitions:&#13;
Petitions for election must&#13;
be completed in a specific&#13;
manner. In order for your&#13;
name to appear on the ballot,&#13;
a nomination petition must be&#13;
completed with the election&#13;
committee. Petitions must be&#13;
completed in the following&#13;
manner:&#13;
1. Petitions must be signed&#13;
by Parkside students only.&#13;
2. Social security numbers&#13;
(student ID numbers) must&#13;
accompany signatures.&#13;
3. You must collect twentyfive&#13;
(25) signatures for Senator,&#13;
SUFAC seat, PUAB seat.&#13;
4. Petitions are due and&#13;
must be filed with an election&#13;
committee member by October&#13;
16 at 1 p.m.&#13;
5. Petitioners will be required&#13;
to file a release form&#13;
before taking out their initial&#13;
petition form and will receive&#13;
a receipt for each completed&#13;
petition received by the election&#13;
committee.&#13;
Write-in Candidacy:&#13;
All write-in candidates&#13;
must fulfill the same requirements&#13;
as those declared candidates&#13;
for the same positions.&#13;
1. You must declare your&#13;
candidacy in writing and file&#13;
it with an election committee&#13;
member by one half hour before&#13;
the polls open.&#13;
2. You must file a release&#13;
form with an election com-&#13;
PSGA see page 6&#13;
A groundbreaking ceremony&#13;
was held Monday, Sept. 28&#13;
at Parkside for a free-standing&#13;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging&#13;
(MRI) facility which&#13;
will be located on the&#13;
campus.&#13;
The venture is a culmination&#13;
of nearly four years of&#13;
careful planning by area hospitals&#13;
including St. Luke's&#13;
Hospital and Saint Mary's&#13;
Medical Center in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha Hospital and Medical&#13;
Center and St. Catherine's&#13;
Hospital in Kenosha, which&#13;
joined together to form a corporation&#13;
known as KR Imaging,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
The corporation's purpose N&#13;
is to collaboratively bring the&#13;
MRI technology to Racine&#13;
and Kenosha counties. In&#13;
February, 1987, the state of&#13;
Wisconsin under the Certificate&#13;
of Need Law authorized&#13;
KR Imaging to be the provider&#13;
of MRI services in the two&#13;
county area.&#13;
MRI will be used to diagnose&#13;
both inpatients and outpatients&#13;
at the Parkside facility.&#13;
This new scanner technology&#13;
utilizes magnetic&#13;
fields and radio frequency&#13;
waves to produce detailed&#13;
pictures of the structures&#13;
within the body. Its most&#13;
talked about feature is the&#13;
high quality tissue differentiation,&#13;
even when the desired&#13;
view is obscured by bone. No&#13;
radiation is used during an&#13;
examination, allowing physicians&#13;
more freedom to regularly&#13;
monitor a patient's&#13;
condition without concerns&#13;
about excessive exposure to&#13;
radiation.&#13;
"The Magnetifc Resonance&#13;
Imaging unit will put medical&#13;
care in Kenosha and Racine&#13;
on the leading edge of diagnostic&#13;
imaging," said Dr. Lee&#13;
Huberty, Kenosha radiologist.&#13;
"The MRI facility will have&#13;
immediate as well as longterm&#13;
impact on the quality of&#13;
care in our communities as&#13;
new medical and diagnostic&#13;
applications of this technology&#13;
are being identified&#13;
daily."&#13;
MRI has successfully been&#13;
used to identify disease or&#13;
tumor within the brain or&#13;
spinal cord as well as heart&#13;
and joint disease, often uncovering&#13;
a problem in its&#13;
early stages. Although MRI&#13;
provides superior quality soft&#13;
tissue pictures, it cannot&#13;
create images within the hard&#13;
part of bones. Conventional xrays,&#13;
therefore, will still be&#13;
needed to find fractures and&#13;
bone malformations.&#13;
The 1.5 Tesla MRI scanner&#13;
is expected to be operational&#13;
in early 1988 and will serve&#13;
approximately 2400 patients&#13;
per year. The total cost for&#13;
the building and equipment is&#13;
estimated at $3 million. The&#13;
effort was enhanced by the&#13;
cooperation and support of&#13;
Parkside. This included the&#13;
campus' willingness to make&#13;
available to KR Imaging an&#13;
attractive site that is convenient&#13;
and accessible to area&#13;
residents.&#13;
"The University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside is delighted to&#13;
be a partner with the Kenosha&#13;
and Racine hospitals in&#13;
the enhancement of medical&#13;
services available to residents&#13;
of Southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
The siting of this state-ofthe-&#13;
art facility at UW-Parkside&#13;
is another example of&#13;
what is possible when universities&#13;
and other institutions&#13;
pool their resources and creativity&#13;
and address community&#13;
needs," Chancellor Sheila Kaplan&#13;
said.&#13;
Senate majority leader Joe&#13;
Strohl (D-Racine) praised the&#13;
consortium of h ospitals in RaThen&#13;
get in on the ground floor in our undergraduate officer&#13;
commissioning program. You could start planning on a career&#13;
like the men in this ad have. And also have some great&#13;
advantages like:&#13;
• Earning $100 a month during the school year&#13;
• As a freshman or sophomore,&#13;
you could complete your basic training&#13;
during two six-week summer&#13;
sessions and earn more than $1100&#13;
during each session&#13;
mnti&#13;
tm&#13;
• Juniors earn more than $1900 during one ten-week&#13;
summer session&#13;
• You can take free civilian flying lessons&#13;
• You're commissioned upon graduation&#13;
If you're looking to move up quickly, loo k into the Marine Corps&#13;
undergraduate officer commissioning&#13;
program. You could&#13;
start off making more&#13;
than $19,000 a year.&#13;
WVn looking tor a to* good men.&#13;
For more information call 1-800-242-3488&#13;
Ranger Thursday, October 1,1987 5&#13;
Homecoming features "La Fete des Fetes&#13;
by Jenny Carr&#13;
Editor&#13;
"La Fete des Fetes"--the&#13;
festival of festivals-is the&#13;
theme of this year's Homecoming&#13;
celebration. The celebration&#13;
will take place October&#13;
8-10, and it will be kicked&#13;
off by the crowning of the&#13;
Homecoming queen and king&#13;
in the Union cinema at 7 p.m.&#13;
on Thursday.&#13;
For the first time, queen&#13;
and king candidates may be&#13;
nominated from the student&#13;
body at large, as well as from&#13;
individual clubs and organizations.&#13;
Elections of the queen&#13;
and king will take place from&#13;
Monday, October 5 through&#13;
Thursday, October 8 on the&#13;
Molinaro concourse. Students&#13;
will have to show identification&#13;
and there will be a one&#13;
student-one vote policy enforced.&#13;
For the coronation ceremony,&#13;
Gary Grace, assistant&#13;
chancellor for student affairs,&#13;
will be the emcee. Following&#13;
the coronation. Grace will be&#13;
replaced by professional comedian&#13;
David Naster, who&#13;
will emcee the variety show.&#13;
Naster has appeared at the&#13;
Comedy Store and the Improv&#13;
in Los Angeles and promises&#13;
Homecoming 1987 University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
to upstage the usually hilarious&#13;
Grace. Students, faculty&#13;
and staff are encouraged to&#13;
participate in the variety&#13;
show. The winning act will receive&#13;
a cash prize of $25. In&#13;
addition, all qualifying entrants&#13;
in the show will receive&#13;
a pair of tickets to Saturday&#13;
night's Mardi Gras&#13;
Casino dance.&#13;
On Friday, October 9, there&#13;
will be a party in the Union&#13;
Square. In keeping with the&#13;
New Orleans flavor of the&#13;
celebration, Cajun food will&#13;
be available. Music will be&#13;
provided from 11 a.m. to 2&#13;
p.m. by China Blue. Admission&#13;
is free.&#13;
At 1 p.m. on Friday, the&#13;
Mardi Gras games will begin.&#13;
This year's games offer excitement&#13;
for spectators as&#13;
well as participants. There&#13;
will be sack races, a tug-ofwar&#13;
(complete with mud pit),&#13;
a pyramid-buildling contest&#13;
and an intriguing game involving&#13;
a wet sweatshirt,&#13;
four-person teams and the&#13;
Phy Ed swimming pool.&#13;
Later that evening, the&#13;
Kenosha Trolley will provide&#13;
free rides through Petrifying&#13;
Springs Park. The rides will&#13;
start at the Union building&#13;
loading dock. After a ride in&#13;
the park, students will enjoy&#13;
attending the "best ever"&#13;
bonfire. The Parkside Alumni&#13;
Association is presenting this&#13;
second annual event. The&#13;
Parkside soccer team will be&#13;
introduced during this event.&#13;
The physical plant people&#13;
have promised a good sized&#13;
heap of burning material, but&#13;
students who have a paper or&#13;
book from semesters past are&#13;
welcome to bring it to roast.&#13;
No aerosol cans or chemicals&#13;
please. The bonfire will be&#13;
held outside the Union Pad.&#13;
Again, admission is free.&#13;
Friday evening's dance will&#13;
offer contemporary music&#13;
from Fun With Atoms, an upbeat,&#13;
danceable group. The&#13;
dance will be held in the&#13;
Union Square and admission&#13;
is $2 for Parkside students,&#13;
faculty, alumni and staff and&#13;
$3 for guests.&#13;
Saturday brings the annual&#13;
Faculty/Staff vs. Junior Varsity&#13;
soccer game. This promises&#13;
to be a real grudge&#13;
match. Game rules were&#13;
being passed out to the faculty/&#13;
staff team by the JV team&#13;
last week. The faculty/staff&#13;
would like to hear from anyone&#13;
who can translate Latin&#13;
as soon as possible, and hopefully&#13;
before game time. This&#13;
laughter is scheduled for high&#13;
noon on the Soccer Field and&#13;
admission is free.&#13;
After the JV's pulverize the&#13;
faculty/staff team, the varsity&#13;
soccer team will take on&#13;
Illinois Institute of Technology.&#13;
Admission for this game&#13;
is $2.50, or free with an athletic&#13;
season pass or with a&#13;
derder.&#13;
If you've never heard of a&#13;
derder, then you were not on&#13;
hand last Homecoming when&#13;
Parkside attempted to create&#13;
the World's Largest Derder&#13;
Band. A derder is that cardboard&#13;
roll over which your&#13;
toilet paper, paper toweling&#13;
or other various paper paraphernalia&#13;
is wrapped. Save&#13;
your derders; give a derder&#13;
to a friend, but don't miss out&#13;
on this chance to set a record.&#13;
During halftime, the record&#13;
will once again be attempted.&#13;
The final festivity of this&#13;
festival of festivals week is&#13;
the Mardi Gras Casino&#13;
Dance. Parkside will again&#13;
make the Main Place area of&#13;
campus a gambling casino&#13;
where blackjack, craps and&#13;
roulette will abound. Although&#13;
the stakes are fake,&#13;
the gambling is done in earnest.&#13;
While the students, alumni,&#13;
faculty, staff and their guests&#13;
are gambling away millions&#13;
of dollars, music will be&#13;
provided by the Basin Street&#13;
Saloon Band alternating with&#13;
a yet unnamed dance band.&#13;
Admission to the dance is $3.&#13;
Free appetizers will be&#13;
served.&#13;
The Homecoming celebration&#13;
for 1987 is planned with a&#13;
lot of excitement in mind.&#13;
Freshman Seminar yields valuable information&#13;
by Tyson Wilda&#13;
On Friday, September 25, a&#13;
special group of students had&#13;
a banquet. These students are&#13;
the participants in Parkside's&#13;
second Freshman Seminar&#13;
program.&#13;
The program, directed by&#13;
Professor Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz&#13;
of the Communication&#13;
department, gives incoming&#13;
freshmen a chance to become&#13;
acquainted with Parkside and&#13;
to meet other new students&#13;
through events like the banquet.&#13;
In the words of Judy&#13;
Pugh, "everyone goes&#13;
through their freshman year,&#13;
we hope that this makes it a&#13;
little easier."&#13;
The banquet is one of six&#13;
events planned for the seminar&#13;
students that is designed&#13;
to bring them into a larger&#13;
social field. Freshman Annette&#13;
Kidwell felt that these&#13;
events "let people know each&#13;
other a little better."&#13;
Although attendance was a&#13;
little lower than expected,&#13;
this should improve because&#13;
participation at the banquet&#13;
was an option. Students must&#13;
attend three of the next five&#13;
events in order to pass the&#13;
class.&#13;
Students also learn about&#13;
their fields of study in the&#13;
classes. Matt Chamberlain&#13;
enrolled because "it's the&#13;
only way I felt I could release&#13;
myself to the world of communication.&#13;
I feel that this&#13;
course will enable me to&#13;
grasp the ooportunities of a&#13;
communications career." It&#13;
seems the seminar has taught&#13;
them something.&#13;
Speakers from major organizations&#13;
addressed the students&#13;
on the importance of&#13;
being involved. SOC president&#13;
Marie Bayer advised them&#13;
that "it's best to get involved,&#13;
otherwise it won't seem like a&#13;
college life."&#13;
Also speaking was Vice&#13;
Chancellor Mary Elizabeth&#13;
Shutler, who said "you are&#13;
the kind of people who are&#13;
going to succeed in life. You&#13;
were not chosen to be in this&#13;
program, you chose to be&#13;
here, you want the best and&#13;
you deserve it."&#13;
Those students in attendance&#13;
felt that the seminars&#13;
are a worthwile experience.&#13;
"It gives us a better idea of&#13;
what college is like," explained&#13;
Blaine Schultz.&#13;
Cory Anton felt that he had&#13;
been given a chance to "establish&#13;
good student—faculty&#13;
relationships that are so important."&#13;
Most important of all, according&#13;
to Christina Radatz,&#13;
was that the banquet "has&#13;
provided an atmosphere for&#13;
students and a time and place&#13;
for us to meet everyone involved."&#13;
Grapes may be a hazard&#13;
by Steven Picazo&#13;
How many grapes have you&#13;
eaten this past year? Have&#13;
you ever considered that you&#13;
are getting more than grapes&#13;
with each mouthful? Of the 1&#13;
BILLION POUNDS of pesticides&#13;
used in the United&#13;
States each year, 79 percent&#13;
are used in agriculture.&#13;
One out of ten produce&#13;
items that have been recently&#13;
sampled were found to either&#13;
have high levels of pesticides&#13;
or traces of an illegal pesticide.&#13;
In Kern County, California,&#13;
the center of the table grape&#13;
industry, 20 bunches (approximately&#13;
10 pounds) of fresh&#13;
grapes are tested out of 443.5&#13;
million pounds produced in&#13;
one season. That ends up&#13;
being only 1 pound for every&#13;
44 million pounds produced.&#13;
The United Farm Workers&#13;
Union is coming out against&#13;
these kind of scandelous situations.&#13;
They approached the&#13;
California agribusiness to join&#13;
them in their efforts to help&#13;
educate, test, and prevent&#13;
this situation from continuing&#13;
and they were flatly refused.&#13;
Under the direction of Dr.&#13;
Marion Moses, one of the nation's&#13;
foremost experts on the&#13;
effects of pesticides, the&#13;
Union is undergoing the task&#13;
of setting up testing facilities&#13;
to more extensively check the&#13;
levels of pesticides being used&#13;
on American produce.&#13;
When these facilities are&#13;
completed they hope that&#13;
they can provide up-to-date&#13;
data on chemical contamination&#13;
of fruits and vegetables,&#13;
results of testing on environmental&#13;
samples such as&#13;
water, soil, and air, and current&#13;
data on deadly preservative&#13;
sulfites, which have been&#13;
banned by the government&#13;
but are still being used on&#13;
table grapes. From all of this&#13;
information it is hoped that&#13;
an effective network of informing&#13;
the public can be set&#13;
up so that people are aware&#13;
of the dangerous contaminates&#13;
in a lot of their fresh&#13;
produce.&#13;
Grapes see page 7&#13;
FIRST&#13;
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6 Thursday, October 1,1987 Ranger&#13;
University Roundtable series&#13;
Prof discusses labor/management relations&#13;
by Doug McEvoy&#13;
In the past decade, labor/&#13;
management relations have&#13;
changed drastically. These&#13;
new industrial relations were&#13;
the topic of discussion at this&#13;
week's University Roundtable&#13;
meeting on Monday. Steve&#13;
Meyer, associate professor of&#13;
history/labor studies, and&#13;
coordinator of the labor&#13;
studies program discussed&#13;
the meaning, cause, background&#13;
and effects of our na-&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Platteville&#13;
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Costs include&#13;
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All Fi nancial aids apply&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
Study Abroad Programs&#13;
308 Warner Hall&#13;
University of Wisco nsin-Platteville&#13;
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Platteville, Wl 53818-3099&#13;
(608) 342-1726&#13;
tion's new industrial relations.&#13;
"I think we need only to&#13;
look at the recent Patrick&#13;
Cudahy strike, the International&#13;
Paper Co. strike, and a&#13;
number of smaller strikes&#13;
around the state," explained&#13;
Meyer, "which I think reveal&#13;
a strategy, a very different&#13;
strategy from what we've&#13;
seen in recent years, to see&#13;
the new attitude towards&#13;
labor."&#13;
This attitude is that management&#13;
has become more&#13;
willing to tolerate strikes&#13;
than in the past. Because of&#13;
this, labor" has begun to realize&#13;
that one of their key&#13;
powers or safety nets has a&#13;
large hole in it and does not&#13;
carry the weight it once did.&#13;
Jack Barbash, an economist&#13;
from Madison first used&#13;
the term "new industrial&#13;
relations" as the only accurate&#13;
description of the changing&#13;
environment between&#13;
labor and management.&#13;
"I think the most indicative&#13;
or perhaps the most symbolic&#13;
of new labor relations was the&#13;
strike in 1981 by the professional&#13;
air traffic controllers,"&#13;
said Meyer. He explained&#13;
that during that strike, the&#13;
U.S. President fired and replaced&#13;
some 11,000 workers&#13;
on strike. "This shifted management&#13;
thinking to say that&#13;
if the government of the U.S.&#13;
can do it so can everyone&#13;
else."&#13;
The new way of thinking&#13;
brought on by this event&#13;
created a new, superior attitude&#13;
on the part of management&#13;
towards labor. In the&#13;
past, beginning after World&#13;
War II, there was an accordance&#13;
or harmony between&#13;
labor and management. Both&#13;
THE FAR SIDE&#13;
Steve Meyer&#13;
respected and realized the&#13;
need for the other. They were&#13;
not out to threaten the survival&#13;
of the other.&#13;
When strikes did occur, certain&#13;
rules were followed&#13;
regardless of how bitterly&#13;
issues were fought. One of&#13;
these rules was that management&#13;
and labor would eventually&#13;
come to a compromise&#13;
and jobs remained intact&#13;
until that time. Strike breakers&#13;
or "scabs" were not generally&#13;
in use and had not been&#13;
since the thirties. However,&#13;
their employment was reinstated&#13;
beginning with the air&#13;
traffic controllers strike.&#13;
According to Meyer, much&#13;
of the new attitude towards&#13;
unions is due to their tremendous&#13;
success in the past.&#13;
Management can no longer&#13;
afford to cater to the demands&#13;
of what they see as an&#13;
entirely self-interest group. In&#13;
this respect, unions are somewhat&#13;
self-destructive. They&#13;
are forcing industrial companies&#13;
to move to where labor is&#13;
cheaper. Businesses have to&#13;
move to an area where there&#13;
is not only a great deal of&#13;
competition for jobs, but also&#13;
By GARY LARSON&#13;
a lack of union activity.&#13;
Areas like Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, which have unemployment&#13;
rates nearing 20&#13;
percent, do have healthy job&#13;
competition, Meyer said. The&#13;
problem arises when one considers&#13;
that striking workers&#13;
are not often released and replaced&#13;
as it would show lack&#13;
of concern for the labor force&#13;
and be bad public relations.&#13;
The only alternatives remaining,&#13;
he said, are relocation&#13;
or meeting union demands.&#13;
The latter has proven&#13;
too costly, and relocation&#13;
would be hard on all concerned.&#13;
Management is left&#13;
with bringing in new workers&#13;
who accept what they have to&#13;
offer.&#13;
Management feels that increasing&#13;
wages and benefits,&#13;
which increases production&#13;
cost and retail cost, will remove&#13;
them from the global&#13;
and home markets. Since foreign&#13;
labor is cheaper, foreign&#13;
goods are cheaper and&#13;
American companies cannot&#13;
compete, labor costs must be&#13;
reduced.&#13;
"Management, for the first&#13;
time since the 1930's, feels&#13;
they can live without unions,"&#13;
explained Meyer. "They believe&#13;
that they can create a&#13;
union-free environment."&#13;
Use of labor consultants is&#13;
one way of achieving this, he&#13;
said. They have managed to&#13;
infiltrate the labor force and&#13;
manipulate and violate labor&#13;
laws as well as use modern&#13;
social scientific and psychological&#13;
methods to inhibit development&#13;
of unionism.&#13;
There are three main factors&#13;
that brought about the&#13;
new industrial relations. The&#13;
first of these is the recent recession&#13;
of the U.S. economy&#13;
caused largely by the oil&#13;
crisis of the 1970's. Secondly,&#13;
market instabilities have&#13;
made it difficult for companies&#13;
to know just where they&#13;
stand. Finally, along with the&#13;
new political order of Reaganomics&#13;
has come a new way&#13;
of thinking.&#13;
These three factors together&#13;
have shifted the thrust of&#13;
power from the unions to the&#13;
management.&#13;
"Another proposition of&#13;
new industrial relations is&#13;
that unions have too much&#13;
power in management affairs,"&#13;
Meyer said. "It limits&#13;
managment discretion."&#13;
One of Meyer's main points&#13;
was that workers tend to&#13;
claim their jobs are their own&#13;
property. When scabs take&#13;
their jobs they are stealing,&#13;
they say, yet the use of&#13;
strike-breakers has and will&#13;
increase. Global competition&#13;
has greatly reduced the&#13;
power of unions and will&#13;
likely continue to do so.&#13;
Unions are not the only&#13;
thing undermining industry,&#13;
Meyer said. Failure of industry&#13;
to reinvest in its plants,&#13;
and update them, also insures&#13;
decline. They can not afford&#13;
to compete with technically&#13;
and economically more modern&#13;
and advanced plants.&#13;
One of the effects of the&#13;
growth recession of the middle&#13;
class in the U.S. is a reduction&#13;
in the standard of living.&#13;
Even though employment&#13;
has increased, the jobs are&#13;
more menial and far less&#13;
stable than jobs have been in&#13;
the past.&#13;
"One of the consequences,"&#13;
explained Meyer, "is that it is&#13;
posing risks to what has been&#13;
Labor see page 12&#13;
Elections ahead&#13;
With their parents away, the young dragons&#13;
would stay up late lighting their sneezes.&#13;
PSGA from page 4&#13;
mittee member.&#13;
3. A list of write-in candidates&#13;
names and offices they&#13;
are seeking shall be available&#13;
at the polling places.&#13;
4. They will be posted&#13;
where all voters have visible&#13;
access.&#13;
Ballot Positions:&#13;
On October 16, a random&#13;
drawing will be held to determine&#13;
the ballot positions of&#13;
the candidates. This drawing&#13;
will be conducted by the election&#13;
committee and the judicial&#13;
branch of the PSGA. The&#13;
drawing will be held at 2:30&#13;
p.m. in the PSGA office&#13;
WLLC D-139A.&#13;
Absentee Ballots:&#13;
Absentee ballots shall be&#13;
available one (l) week prior&#13;
to the election. They must be&#13;
picked up in person and must&#13;
be returned and postmarked&#13;
by noon the day before the&#13;
election.&#13;
Elections:&#13;
The elections will be held&#13;
on October 21 and 22, from 9&#13;
a.m. to 7 p.m. The elections&#13;
committee and the judicial&#13;
branch of PSGA will conduct&#13;
elections. No candidate for office,&#13;
or any member of any&#13;
organization which endorses&#13;
a candidate are permitted to&#13;
do any electioneering within&#13;
fifty (50) feet of the polls.&#13;
Results:&#13;
The counting of the ballots&#13;
will be conducted by the election&#13;
committee and the judicial&#13;
branch of PSGA. The ballots&#13;
will be counted directly&#13;
after the closing of the polls&#13;
at 7 p.m. on October 22. Any&#13;
interested person is welcome&#13;
to witness the ballot count.&#13;
Any contesting, complaining&#13;
or commenting on the&#13;
conduct or the results of the&#13;
elections must be filed in&#13;
writing with any member of&#13;
the election committee, by&#13;
November 5 at 1 p.m. The decision&#13;
pf the PSGA Senate&#13;
shall be final and binding&#13;
when dealing with contestation&#13;
or complaints.&#13;
Ranger Thursday, October 1,1987 7&#13;
Parkside has good student- teacher ratio&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
News Editor&#13;
According to the September&#13;
issue of "Academe" magazine,&#13;
Wisconsin schools have&#13;
the second highest studentteacher&#13;
ratios in the nation.&#13;
Not so at Parkside, said G.&#13;
Gary Grace, assistant chancellor&#13;
of student affairs.&#13;
"Academe", the journal of&#13;
the American Association of&#13;
University Professors, said&#13;
that Wisconsin's public colleges&#13;
have a 22.4 student per&#13;
teacher ratio, second only to&#13;
Washington with 23.2 students&#13;
per teacher.&#13;
Grace said, "I think that if&#13;
you lined up all of the Wisconsin&#13;
schools, you would find&#13;
that Parkside has one of the&#13;
lowest ratios." Parkside's&#13;
ratio is 18 students per teacher.&#13;
He said that the one to 18&#13;
ratio is the highest number&#13;
when the campus is broken&#13;
down into classes of upper&#13;
and lower undergraduates&#13;
and graduates. An overall&#13;
average class size is about 16&#13;
students. 98 percent of classes&#13;
have 30 students or less In&#13;
them.&#13;
The higher ratio is obtained&#13;
when lecture classes containing&#13;
80 or 90 students are averaged&#13;
in with the rest of the&#13;
classes.&#13;
"If you compare our numbers&#13;
against those of Madison,&#13;
Milwaukee or Whitewater,&#13;
it's startling what the differences&#13;
are," Grace explained.&#13;
He commented that&#13;
when the class size grows,&#13;
some of the opportunities to&#13;
express individuality can be&#13;
lost. "It's almost a lecture,&#13;
multiple choice test format.&#13;
There's not very rriuch individual&#13;
instruction or room for&#13;
creative assignments."&#13;
However, he pointed out,&#13;
some students like that kind&#13;
of environment, where they&#13;
can get "lost" in the class,&#13;
and won't have to participate&#13;
in discussions.&#13;
Grace said that the ideal&#13;
enrollment figures for Parkside&#13;
is about 6,000. This figure&#13;
will still keep the studentteacher&#13;
ratio at approximately&#13;
18 to one. He explained&#13;
that our original size&#13;
and, more recently, enrollment&#13;
declines, have led to the&#13;
lower figures than our sister&#13;
schools.&#13;
Grapes yield wrath&#13;
Grapes from page 5&#13;
It is the feeling of the Union&#13;
that the federal, state, and&#13;
local governments should be&#13;
taking more effective action&#13;
on this issue. They apparently&#13;
are not, based on the general&#13;
accounting report released&#13;
last year that concluded the&#13;
government does not test for&#13;
a large number of dangerous&#13;
pesticides, does not prevent&#13;
"contaminated food from going&#13;
to market, and does not&#13;
penalize growers who have&#13;
used illegal pesticide on their&#13;
crops.&#13;
In the mean time, 300,000&#13;
farm workers are poisoned in&#13;
the fields by pesticides every&#13;
year and deformed children,&#13;
stillborn babies, and child&#13;
cancers are turning up in all&#13;
too large amounts in regions&#13;
of heavy spraying.&#13;
Moses stated, "We can no&#13;
longer pretend that the government&#13;
will protect us. Its&#13;
system of regulation is built&#13;
on bad science, irresponsible&#13;
assumptions and deceptive&#13;
practices.&#13;
"After the testing of grapes&#13;
we will move on to deal with&#13;
the other 14 fruits and veg'etables&#13;
on the recently released&#13;
"most contaminated" list-&#13;
...those revealed in a National&#13;
Academy of Sciences report&#13;
as containing residues of 28&#13;
pesticides, which if not restricted,&#13;
will cause up to&#13;
1,460,000 cases of cancer in&#13;
the course of our children's&#13;
lifetimes.&#13;
The recent general accounting&#13;
office study reported that&#13;
44 percent of the pesticides&#13;
used in grape production can0&#13;
One conscious effort on&#13;
campus that maintains the&#13;
ratio is "the expectation that&#13;
our faculty be engaged in&#13;
scholarly activities or research.&#13;
So you're looking at&#13;
an average faculty load of&#13;
nine credit hours per semester,"&#13;
Grace stated.&#13;
"I think you can say honestly&#13;
that it is a conscious attempt&#13;
to set a priority upon&#13;
scholarly activities that contributes&#13;
to the philosophy of&#13;
the institution, 'good teaching&#13;
and good scholarships go&#13;
hand in hand.' It's an added&#13;
benefit to the campus, scholarly&#13;
activities are essential to&#13;
the teaching process," he&#13;
continued.&#13;
Mary Elizabeth Shutter,&#13;
vice chancellor, agreed that a&#13;
conscious effort was being&#13;
made to keep ratios relatively&#13;
low. "Most classes have enrollment&#13;
limits on them. We&#13;
open another section rather&#13;
than cram the classes," she&#13;
said. She added that some&#13;
classes, such as math and&#13;
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crowded than others.&#13;
Grace said that if you&#13;
asked a majority of the faculty&#13;
and students if they&#13;
thought class size affected&#13;
learning processes, you would&#13;
find that a lot of them think&#13;
that smaller class sizes aid in&#13;
participation and discussion&#13;
within the class.&#13;
"When I talk to people on&#13;
campus, I don't hear anybody&#13;
advocating that we become a&#13;
campus of 10,000. I think that&#13;
most people think that the&#13;
small ratio is an asset to our&#13;
institution." he said. "I think&#13;
that's a very positive attraction&#13;
to our campus."&#13;
Shutter said that if enrollment&#13;
did rise so much as to&#13;
jeopardize the ratio, the UW&#13;
system would deide what&#13;
would be done about it. "It all&#13;
depends on the system. If&#13;
they gave us more money, we&#13;
would hire more faculty. If&#13;
they didn't, we'd have to cap&#13;
enrollment. It's not our decision."&#13;
Grace explained that there&#13;
is a balance involved in most&#13;
campuses. We need to be&#13;
large enough to provide activities,&#13;
comprehensive programs&#13;
and resources to support&#13;
the education of the students,&#13;
but we also would like&#13;
to be small enough to feel&#13;
that there is a caring attitude&#13;
on campus, that students are&#13;
treated as individuals instead&#13;
•of numbers.&#13;
Grace pointed out that even&#13;
though many students feel we&#13;
are a small campus, when&#13;
based on a national standard&#13;
we are more in the middle&#13;
range of enrollment figures.&#13;
The majority of institutions in&#13;
the nation have less than&#13;
3,000 students.&#13;
"I think that we're at a perfect&#13;
size," he said. We're&#13;
large enough to be active&#13;
with other institutions and be&#13;
noticed, but we're not so&#13;
large that you get lost, we're&#13;
small enough so that you can&#13;
be an individual and be&#13;
known."&#13;
University Roundtable series&#13;
Nicaraguan stability is evaluated&#13;
not be detected by current&#13;
methods used. The testing lab&#13;
set for production will have&#13;
the means to detect these&#13;
harmful chemicals.&#13;
The Farm Workers Union&#13;
will be presenting a film and&#13;
presentation on this subject&#13;
on a yet to be determined&#13;
date. Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA)&#13;
is hoping to bring in Cesar&#13;
Chavez, president of the&#13;
Union, to give the presentation.&#13;
Anyone interested in learning&#13;
more about this topic is&#13;
urged to let their feelings be&#13;
known by either coming down&#13;
to the PSGA office, WLLC&#13;
D139A, or coming into the&#13;
Ranger office, WLLC D139C.&#13;
Watch the Ranger for the&#13;
date and time of when this&#13;
presentation will be given.&#13;
by Christina Lojeski&#13;
Peggy James, an instructor&#13;
of world politics at Parkside&#13;
was the speaker at a Univer- .&#13;
sity Roundtable held here&#13;
dealing with the stability of&#13;
the Nicaraguan Government&#13;
since its revolution in 1979.&#13;
James, who was in Nicaragua&#13;
last May and June and&#13;
also once in 1982, has developed&#13;
a model to determine&#13;
whether the government of a&#13;
given country is stable, or if&#13;
it is prone to failure.&#13;
The Nicaraguan Revolution,&#13;
which took place in July&#13;
of 1979, by many apparent indications&#13;
should have taken&#13;
place in 1978, said James.&#13;
It did not, James explained,&#13;
because although there were&#13;
"massive uprisings that were&#13;
national in scope," the conditions&#13;
in the country at that&#13;
time were not ideal for a&#13;
revolution.&#13;
The Sandinista government&#13;
was at that time divided into&#13;
three subgroups fighting&#13;
amongst themselves. With an&#13;
inability to have a united oppositions&#13;
front, the attempt to&#13;
overthrow the government&#13;
would be unsuccessful.&#13;
Additionally, after the editor&#13;
of the newspaper "La&#13;
Prensa," was assasinated,&#13;
the country was thrown into a&#13;
state of upheaval, and people&#13;
had become accustomed to&#13;
constant fighting. Any uprisings,&#13;
then, were crushed by&#13;
the government, and Anastasio&#13;
Somoza was able to maintain&#13;
some amount of political&#13;
stability.&#13;
Political stability, according&#13;
to James, can be defined&#13;
as "the degree of uncertainty&#13;
in the environment." The&#13;
more stability there is in an&#13;
environment, the more predictability&#13;
there is.&#13;
Peggy James&#13;
In 1978, the people of Nicaragua&#13;
had become used to unrest,&#13;
and "uprisings were&#13;
merely something in a&#13;
chasm," stated James.&#13;
By 1979, the Sandinistas&#13;
had united into one group,&#13;
and although Somoza's government&#13;
had survived the&#13;
events of 1978, it had been&#13;
weakened, making It more&#13;
susceptible to the effects of a&#13;
surprise attack.&#13;
The Sandinistas, then, in&#13;
the apparent calm of 1979,&#13;
were able to march successfully&#13;
on Managua.&#13;
As event occurences in a&#13;
country are random, it should&#13;
be noted, James stated, that&#13;
"the dynamic may reoccur,&#13;
but not the actual events. Secondly,&#13;
we must look at regime&#13;
threshold. An event can&#13;
occur that may be very unstable,&#13;
but if the regime is&#13;
strong enough to withstand it,&#13;
the same government will&#13;
continue. The threshold can&#13;
be lower or higher, and depending&#13;
upon how low or high&#13;
it is, the event occurences&#13;
can either destroy the government,&#13;
weaken it, or in some&#13;
Nicaragua see page 8&#13;
s C A P A' P E R F D A D A&#13;
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P R 0 s T R E p A r,&#13;
M A It A \T M A E N E S&#13;
A L 0 T I P E C A C T A P&#13;
S L u E T H A T S u R S A&#13;
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P I E R I1' E F I C I T&#13;
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8 Thursday, October 1, 1987 Ranger&#13;
Rising illiteracy affects corporate America&#13;
by George Koenig&#13;
Concern about the United&#13;
States' illiterate work force&#13;
has increased throughout the&#13;
nation during the past few&#13;
years. Many people are unaware&#13;
of the hazardous facts&#13;
about illiteracy in our nation,&#13;
including the possibility that&#13;
illiteracy could lead to the&#13;
downfall of corporate America.&#13;
According to a national&#13;
poll, 23 million adult Americans&#13;
are functionally illiterate,&#13;
with basic skills at the&#13;
fourth grade level. Thirteen&#13;
percent of the U.S. work force&#13;
is completely illiterate. Under&#13;
present conditions, the number&#13;
of i lliterates is growing at&#13;
a rate of 1.5 million per year,&#13;
mostly due to school dropouts.&#13;
A recent survey of employers&#13;
indicates that over 50&#13;
percent of their employees&#13;
have problems in grammar,&#13;
spelling, punctuation, and&#13;
mathematics.&#13;
Adult illiteracy costs U.S.&#13;
society an estimated $225 b illion&#13;
a year in lost industrial&#13;
productivity, unrealized tax&#13;
revenues, welfare, . crime,&#13;
poverty, and other social ills.&#13;
If we as a nation expect to&#13;
continue to rise and have a&#13;
healthy and productive economy,&#13;
we need to stamp out illiteracy-&#13;
we have to acquire&#13;
the basic skills to lead productive&#13;
and fulfulling lives,&#13;
says the Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
Literacy Alliance.&#13;
The Alliance is part of a national&#13;
program called Project&#13;
Literacy U.S. and hopes to&#13;
improve the literacy of the&#13;
nation for living in the new&#13;
"The purpose is to&#13;
acquaint local business&#13;
people and employers with&#13;
basic skills training and&#13;
other adult education&#13;
programs which can help&#13;
them build a more skilled&#13;
work force."&#13;
-Janet Tidwell&#13;
age of communication and&#13;
technology.&#13;
The Alliance held an informational&#13;
meeting on Wednesday,&#13;
September 23, at Gateway&#13;
Technical College in&#13;
Kenosha. This gave the different&#13;
coalitions from Kenosha,&#13;
Racine and Walworth&#13;
counties an opportunity to&#13;
discuss future plans. The&#13;
meeting's main purpose was&#13;
to gather and disseminate information,&#13;
research the need&#13;
for services, and to confirm&#13;
previous plans of a Business&#13;
Breakfast.&#13;
During the Alliance's first&#13;
year its main goal was to&#13;
create an awareness of the&#13;
problem of illiteracy among&#13;
the business community. During&#13;
this their second year,&#13;
they are hoping to create a&#13;
link with businesses, by acquainting&#13;
business people and&#13;
employees with the Alliance's&#13;
basic skills training and other&#13;
adult education programs&#13;
that will help build a stronger&#13;
foundation for a more skilled&#13;
work force, said Ann Timm, a&#13;
member of the Alliance's&#13;
steering committee. To get&#13;
businesses involved, the Alliance&#13;
is in the process of s etting&#13;
up a business breakfast.&#13;
"The purpose is to acquaint&#13;
local business people and employers&#13;
with basic skills&#13;
training and other adult&#13;
education programs which&#13;
can help them build a more&#13;
skilled work force," said&#13;
Janet Tidwell, a community&#13;
relations coordinator for the&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin Private&#13;
Industry Council, Racine,&#13;
and coordinator of the&#13;
breakfast.&#13;
The breakfast is planned&#13;
for October 21 at the new festival&#13;
site in Racine. Tidwell&#13;
said she is currently looking&#13;
for a prominent speaker on&#13;
the issue, as Governor&#13;
Tommy Thompson had&#13;
agreed to speak but has since&#13;
declined.&#13;
Persons interested in learning&#13;
more about the Alliance&#13;
may contact Janet Tidwell at&#13;
552-8286.&#13;
collegiate crossword Campus minister anxious to help&#13;
by Dan Chiappetta&#13;
On August 1, 1987 the Archdiocese&#13;
of Milwaukee appointed&#13;
Father Norman&#13;
Schwartz as the new campus&#13;
minister of b oth Parkside and&#13;
Carthage College.&#13;
"My responsibilities are to&#13;
give services to the student&#13;
body, meet with administrators,&#13;
faculty, and staff members.&#13;
You don't have to be&#13;
Catholic," Father Schwartz&#13;
said.&#13;
Father Schwartz is in the&#13;
process of forming and organizing&#13;
the Catholic Student&#13;
Club, where students can&#13;
work activities under Father&#13;
Schwartz's guidance. The&#13;
club is not only open to students&#13;
but also to administrators,&#13;
staff members and the&#13;
faculty. He is also available&#13;
for counseling, . and gives&#13;
speeches on issues of values&#13;
and human relations, gives&#13;
presentations in classrooms&#13;
and provides prayer services&#13;
at Carthage College in the&#13;
Siebert Chapel.&#13;
"One of my goals is to try&#13;
to get Parkside students to attends&#13;
the prayer services at&#13;
the Siebert Chapel," Father&#13;
Schwartz said.&#13;
Father Schwartz briefly&#13;
served as a member of the&#13;
faculty at St. Catherine's&#13;
High School in Racine from&#13;
1972-74. He was the instructor&#13;
in Theology and Communication.&#13;
He also spent fifteen&#13;
years in a parish.&#13;
Minister see page 2&#13;
Father Schwartz&#13;
Sandinistan stability questioned&#13;
©Edward Julius Collegiate CW/9-18&#13;
ACROSS&#13;
1 Flow, Orkney&#13;
Islands area&#13;
6 Abbreviation in a&#13;
theatre ad&#13;
10 Baby's early word&#13;
14 Painter Winslow&#13;
15 State assuredly&#13;
16 Old song, " a&#13;
Seesaw"&#13;
17 See 37-Across&#13;
18 Change the decor&#13;
19 Twixt and tween&#13;
20 Long-legged bird&#13;
21 Natives of Flagstaff&#13;
23 Golf club employees&#13;
25 Sea cucumber&#13;
26 Mohandas Gandhi,&#13;
for one&#13;
29 Chemical suffixes&#13;
30 "Thanks !"&#13;
31 Medicinal plant&#13;
33 Dance like Eleanor&#13;
Powell&#13;
36 Swing around &gt;&#13;
37 Dean Martin song,&#13;
with 17-Across&#13;
38 Word w ith Major or&#13;
Minor&#13;
39 Cobb and Hardin&#13;
40 Bell inventory&#13;
41 Crazy&#13;
42 Miss Angeli&#13;
43 spending&#13;
45 U.S. missile&#13;
48 Garment for Margot&#13;
Fonteyn&#13;
49 Shows plainly&#13;
51 Cards left over&#13;
after dealing&#13;
54 "I cannot tell&#13;
55 Catchall abbreviation&#13;
56 " Kick Out of&#13;
You"&#13;
57 Love,"* in Valencia&#13;
58 Actress Naldi&#13;
59 Slow, in music&#13;
60 souci&#13;
61 Flat-bottomed&#13;
vessel&#13;
62 These: Sp.&#13;
DOWN&#13;
1 Teheran sovereign&#13;
2 Attend&#13;
3 Shapeless&#13;
4 Bring a speech to&#13;
a close&#13;
5 "We alone"&#13;
Solution see page 7&#13;
6 Prefix for medic&#13;
7 1976 Wimbledon champ&#13;
8 Questioned after&#13;
cross-examination&#13;
9 Money i n escrow,&#13;
e.g. (2 wds.)&#13;
10 Rigg and Ross&#13;
11 Capital of Jordan&#13;
12 Event&#13;
13 Relatives of ifs&#13;
22 13-nation cartel&#13;
24 Result of a&#13;
blast&#13;
26 Before the&#13;
27 Friend&#13;
28 Like a saying&#13;
32 Suffix for Euclid&#13;
33 Brutally, harsh&#13;
34 spumante&#13;
35 Certain tense&#13;
38 Basic quantities&#13;
40 Singer Edith&#13;
42 Toolbox standby&#13;
44 Ineffective&#13;
45 Majorca seaport&#13;
46 Tear producer&#13;
47 Prefix: at rest&#13;
49 Pasture sounds&#13;
50 Shredded cabbage&#13;
52 Maestro Klemperer&#13;
53 Inner portion of a&#13;
Greek temple&#13;
cases, even strengthen it."&#13;
Political instability, then,&#13;
behaves dynamically, according&#13;
to James. "It can increase&#13;
or decrease throughout&#13;
any regime, and it's my&#13;
contention that it does, and it&#13;
only becomes fatal to a regime&#13;
when it actually goes&#13;
over the threshold," she said.&#13;
"To say that a government&#13;
is stable until it is overthrown,&#13;
I believe is erroneous,"&#13;
James continued. "Further,&#13;
as far as the success of&#13;
the revolution, they (the Sandinistas)&#13;
did win. They are&#13;
still in power, but to say that,&#13;
because they've been in&#13;
power since 1979, to say that&#13;
the Ortega Junta has enjoyed&#13;
complete stability, I think&#13;
would be wrong. People have&#13;
become more involved in&#13;
what's happening in Nicaragua&#13;
since 1979 and they've&#13;
certainly had their problems.&#13;
Things change., constantly -&#13;
..they may not be so detrimental&#13;
to regime as to destroy&#13;
it, but it doesn't mean&#13;
that everything is rosy just&#13;
because they've won the revolution."&#13;
James explained.&#13;
Now, James said, the daily&#13;
event pattern from 1981 to the&#13;
time of the Contras should be&#13;
analyzed.&#13;
"I think most likely, in the&#13;
short run, the Sandinistas are&#13;
going to be able to withstand&#13;
the Contra invasion., but I&#13;
think that in the long run,&#13;
that they are hurting the&#13;
threshold of the governemnt.&#13;
If something were to happen,&#13;
something catastrophic, it&#13;
may be enough, in the next&#13;
two years, to weaken the&#13;
threshold of the Sandinistas&#13;
to such an extent that something&#13;
that may not be that&#13;
catastrphic will indeed bring&#13;
it down. I think that actually&#13;
what the strategy of the Contras&#13;
is, is not necessarily to&#13;
win, it's to make the Sandinistas&#13;
lose.&#13;
''So, you have a situation&#13;
where you're economically&#13;
hurting the country in terms&#13;
of crop reduction, in terms of&#13;
people being too afraid to&#13;
plant, internationalists being&#13;
afraid to go visit because&#13;
they will be shot-as Benjamin&#13;
Linder was earlier this&#13;
year-and so therefore, you&#13;
have a revolutionary government&#13;
that came to power on&#13;
the basis of economic promises.&#13;
Ideology often helps to get&#13;
you in, but to maintain a&#13;
revolutionary government,&#13;
you have to perform economically."&#13;
James said.&#13;
She said the people of Nicaragua&#13;
are not as happy with&#13;
the Sandinistas as they were&#13;
the first time she was there.&#13;
"I saw a reduction of the&#13;
enthusiasm I saw in 1982.&#13;
Then, the people where proeverything&#13;
that was Sandinista.&#13;
In 1987, they are not exactly&#13;
negative. It is more like&#13;
acquienscence-giving up."&#13;
Under these conditions,&#13;
James concluded that the&#13;
Sandinistas are weakening&#13;
their threshold, and an event&#13;
that may not be overwhelming,&#13;
could end up being the&#13;
downfall of their government.&#13;
Ranger Thursday, October 1, 1987 9&#13;
Motivational speaker slated&#13;
by Steven R. Picazo&#13;
Dr. Denis Waitley will be&#13;
presenting a program on selfmanagement&#13;
and positive&#13;
self-projection at Carthage&#13;
College on Oct. 7.&#13;
The program is co-sponsored&#13;
by the Kenosha Area&#13;
Chamber of Commerce-Retail&#13;
Council and the Bradford&#13;
Education/DECA program.&#13;
Tickets are $20 each and&#13;
the program begins at 7 p.m.&#13;
Waitley is in huge demand&#13;
around the country and has&#13;
had the honor of sharing the&#13;
stage with President Ronald&#13;
Reagan, Lee Iacocca, Barbara&#13;
Walters, and Norman Vincent&#13;
Peale.&#13;
Waitley has used his approach&#13;
of positive self-management&#13;
to help counsel and&#13;
treat many different people.&#13;
These include executives of&#13;
Fortune 500 companies, Super&#13;
Bowl champions, astronauts,&#13;
and returning POW's.&#13;
He was a member of the&#13;
United States Olympic Committee's&#13;
Sports Medicine&#13;
Council from 1980 through&#13;
Denis Waitley&#13;
1984. It is dedicated to performance&#13;
enhancement of our&#13;
Olympic athletes. Waitley&#13;
was also named "Outstanding&#13;
Speaker of the Year" by the&#13;
Sales and Marketing Executives&#13;
Association and placed&#13;
into the International Speakers&#13;
Hall of Fame in St. Louis.&#13;
He is a graduate of the&#13;
United States Naval Academy&#13;
at Annapolis and holds a degree&#13;
in human behavior.&#13;
Subjects that he covers on&#13;
his lecture tours include selfesteem&#13;
: positive leadership,&#13;
internal values, self-talk, risk&#13;
taking; creativity: imagineering,&#13;
left-brain, rightbrain,&#13;
and whole-brain thinking;&#13;
responsibility: making it&#13;
happen, cause and effect,&#13;
controlling your time and&#13;
life; wisdom: foresight, integrity,&#13;
aptitudes plus attitudes,&#13;
the way to make decisions;&#13;
purpose: long-range, shortrange,&#13;
daily priorities, specificity,&#13;
stair-stepping goals;&#13;
and perspective: team spirit,&#13;
fitting in while standing out,&#13;
purpose beyond self, the&#13;
whole person.&#13;
Waitley hopes that people&#13;
come away from his lectures&#13;
with an understanding that&#13;
there is no difference between&#13;
outstanding leaders and&#13;
everyone else except for the&#13;
fact that they have been able&#13;
to apply their positive self-esteem&#13;
and self-discipline in a&#13;
direction that allows them to&#13;
succeed.&#13;
Club Events&#13;
Modernization plan moves forward&#13;
Union from page 3&#13;
I said we could do right away&#13;
can be done with these reserves.&#13;
"But when we start to get&#13;
into construction and remodeling&#13;
projects, that is not&#13;
what the money is there for.&#13;
Therefore new money should&#13;
be identified to do these&#13;
things."&#13;
- The SCUM committee will&#13;
be aided by Steve McLaughlin,&#13;
director of Student Life,&#13;
to look for long range goals&#13;
as to how to obtain these&#13;
additional funds. One everpresent&#13;
possibility is raising&#13;
segregated fees, but if that is&#13;
done, students will not see the&#13;
results of their labor for quite&#13;
some time.&#13;
Buchanan felt that after the&#13;
initial projects were completed,&#13;
most of the excess&#13;
money, perhaps $50,000,&#13;
should go towards the Union&#13;
Square remodeling project.&#13;
The remaining money could&#13;
then be distributed to the&#13;
other projects. He said it&#13;
should be done that way because&#13;
the Union Square is one&#13;
of the most-used facilities by&#13;
students.&#13;
The other obstacle SCUM&#13;
and PUAB have to hurdle is&#13;
the fact that the drinking law&#13;
has changed, and the time on&#13;
the grandfather clause is running&#13;
out. "Soon we will have&#13;
a campus that is largely consisted&#13;
of underage students,"&#13;
Niebuhr explained.&#13;
The remodeling of Union&#13;
Square needs to be implemented&#13;
to accomodate the&#13;
need to separate drinking and&#13;
non-drinking students, he&#13;
said. The problem may possibly&#13;
be unsolvable, stated Buchanan&#13;
as he cited unsuccessful&#13;
attempts of "island bars"&#13;
at various dances and The&#13;
End last year. The ultimate&#13;
goal is to minimize potential&#13;
liability while ke.eping the&#13;
students happy.&#13;
Overall, the initial plan of&#13;
SCUM has been added on to,&#13;
and will have to wait a while&#13;
to see its finish. Niebuhr understands&#13;
the feeling some&#13;
students may have about&#13;
their needs being lost in the&#13;
pile of "things to do" in the&#13;
Union building.&#13;
"I've been real frustrated&#13;
about the length of time it has&#13;
taken us to get to this point,&#13;
and consequently we haven't&#13;
been doing some of the things&#13;
that we normally would do&#13;
over the past two years," he&#13;
explained.&#13;
"But I'm glad that we're&#13;
finally starting and will get&#13;
some things accomplished. I&#13;
think that all of the things&#13;
that have been proposed are&#13;
valid," he said. "It just may&#13;
take a longer time to do them&#13;
than anyone wants."&#13;
Insist on condoms speaker adivses&#13;
AIDS from page 3&#13;
choose to be sexually active:&#13;
-use latex (not natural skin)&#13;
condoms&#13;
-use spermicidal gel or&#13;
cream containing nonoxyl-9,&#13;
which will kill the virus in 30&#13;
seconds&#13;
-massaging, hugging, masturbation,&#13;
dry kissing and&#13;
fantasy are safe&#13;
-mutual masturbation and&#13;
rubbing bodies clothed are&#13;
safe unless open sores or&#13;
abrasions are exposed to&#13;
sperm or vaginal secretions&#13;
-beware of sores, cuts, and&#13;
other points of entry into the&#13;
bloodstream&#13;
-possibly safe activities are&#13;
French kissing, anal or vaginal&#13;
intercourse with a condom,&#13;
oral sex (when swallowing&#13;
semen is not involved),&#13;
water sports (if external, and&#13;
urine does not come in contact&#13;
with any cuts)&#13;
-minimize number of sexual&#13;
partners&#13;
-absolute "no-nos" are rimming&#13;
(oral stimulation to&#13;
anus), sharing sex toys nad&#13;
needles, allowing urine or&#13;
semen to enter mouth, anal&#13;
or vaginal intercourse without&#13;
a condom.&#13;
"Speaking from a religious&#13;
point of view," the monk&#13;
said, "I would love to see that&#13;
you're not going to have sex&#13;
until you are in a committed&#13;
relationship as an adult person-&#13;
married.&#13;
"If you're in committed&#13;
relationships," Johnson advised,&#13;
"stay working at them&#13;
to make them work. Because&#13;
it's going to be kind of difficult&#13;
trying to find some new&#13;
person out there. Try to make&#13;
it work."&#13;
In conclusion, Johnson said,&#13;
"I-f you're going to have sex,&#13;
play it safe!"&#13;
Philosophical Society&#13;
The Philosophical Society&#13;
will be presenting a lecture&#13;
by Dr. Wayne Johnson on&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 1 at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
in Comm Arts 129. The talk is&#13;
titled "Making Sense Out of&#13;
Ethics: A Theory", and the&#13;
commentator will be Professor&#13;
John Longeway. Students,&#13;
faculty and public are welcome.&#13;
ASPA&#13;
The American Society for&#13;
Personal Administration&#13;
(ASPA) will hold its informational&#13;
meeting on Tuesday,&#13;
October 6 at 5:30 p.m. in&#13;
Molinaro 165. New members&#13;
are welcome!&#13;
PSO/ISO&#13;
A joint meeting of the Parkside&#13;
Asian Students Organization&#13;
and Parkside International&#13;
Students Organization&#13;
will be held on Friday, October&#13;
2 at 1 p.m. in Union 202.&#13;
Everyone is welcome.&#13;
POLITICAL SCIENCE CLUB&#13;
The Political Science Club&#13;
held its first meeting on Sep- •&#13;
tember 21. At the first meeting,&#13;
the club elected officers:&#13;
Brian Chike, president; Fred&#13;
Monardi, vice-president; and&#13;
Dan Prozanski, treasure r-&#13;
/secretary.&#13;
ENGLISH CLUB&#13;
An organizational meeting&#13;
will be held on Friday, October&#13;
2 at 1 p.m. in Comm Arts&#13;
233 for the English Club.&#13;
Election of officers and plans&#13;
. for activities will be discussed.&#13;
If you can't make this&#13;
meeting, call Professor&#13;
McLean at 553-2019.&#13;
Students react to hours&#13;
Library fron page 1&#13;
Todd Benson, a sophomore&#13;
majoring in communication.&#13;
Benson said his classes do not&#13;
end until 9:30 p.m., not leaving&#13;
him enough time to study&#13;
afterwards, as was his practice&#13;
last year.&#13;
"If you have night classes&#13;
or are working, there isn't&#13;
enough time to use the library,"&#13;
said Lisa Minors, a&#13;
freshman psychology major.&#13;
Piele said a survey was&#13;
taken the weeks of Oct. 28,&#13;
Nov. 17, and Dec. 1, 1986 to&#13;
determine the magnitude of&#13;
library use. Every half hour&#13;
throughout the day, the&#13;
amount of material being&#13;
checked out and number of&#13;
questions asked were monitored.&#13;
At 9 p.m., 10 p.m., 11&#13;
p.m., 11:30 p.m. and midnight,&#13;
a head count on each&#13;
floor was taken.&#13;
"Anytime the library is&#13;
open, it is in use," Piele said.&#13;
"It was difficult to decide&#13;
THE FAR SIDE&#13;
where to cut hours, but common&#13;
sense tells you as the&#13;
surveys did. Late night is the&#13;
least popular time to use the&#13;
library. There is a dramatic&#13;
drop after 10 p.m.&#13;
"Many night students find&#13;
this hard to believe," she continued,&#13;
"but the library is actually&#13;
very busy in the mornings.&#13;
We have people lined up&#13;
at 7:45 to get in. People may&#13;
want to photocopy a paper before&#13;
class, or check last&#13;
minute details for an assignment,&#13;
or study for a test that&#13;
day."&#13;
"I think the library is using&#13;
the budget cuts as an excuse&#13;
not to try harder to improve,"&#13;
said Anderson, who&#13;
formerly worked in the library's&#13;
circulation department.&#13;
"There is so much invested&#13;
in the library, why cut&#13;
back the availability?&#13;
"It seems like the decisions&#13;
being made aren't saving&#13;
much money."&#13;
By GARY LARSON&#13;
7hanK heavensyou'^home • %/ly&#13;
the Sbav have cut a -fi'shiny hole in the&#13;
middle of the'&lt;r bedroom 1&#13;
If the Cleavers had been Eskimos&#13;
7&#13;
10 Thursday, October 1,1987 Ranger&#13;
Spec. Services head named&#13;
by Terri DeRosier&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Starting today, Pam Smith&#13;
will be the new director of&#13;
Special Services.&#13;
Special Services is one of&#13;
five programs sponsored by&#13;
the U.S. Department of&#13;
Education. This particular&#13;
program is offered only to institutions&#13;
through their academic&#13;
departments, and its&#13;
focus is to retain and graduate&#13;
students that are considered&#13;
"at risk."&#13;
"First of all," Smith said,&#13;
"this program is geared toward&#13;
low income, first generation&#13;
college students and&#13;
physically handicapped students.&#13;
"First generation," Smith&#13;
explained, "are students&#13;
whose parents did not graduate&#13;
from a college. They&#13;
could have gone to college but&#13;
they could not have graduated.&#13;
"Special Services was designed&#13;
to provide academic&#13;
support," Smith said. "Therefore&#13;
the components of the&#13;
program are reading, writing,&#13;
study skills and math."&#13;
The program will be staffed&#13;
by Smith as the director.&#13;
There will also be an advisor-&#13;
/mentor, clerical support,&#13;
program assistants and student&#13;
tutors that will also work&#13;
with program participants to&#13;
provide necessary services.&#13;
"I see this as fitting into&#13;
Parkside's emphasis on retention&#13;
and graduation,"&#13;
Smith said.&#13;
"The program is not desig-&#13;
Pam Smith&#13;
nated necessarily for minority&#13;
students," Smith explained.&#13;
"It is supposed to attempt&#13;
to get from the eligible&#13;
participants, representatives&#13;
from groups which have&#13;
traditionally been under-represented.&#13;
Those three groups&#13;
are minorities, women and&#13;
physically disabled.'&#13;
There will also be 60 students&#13;
chosen from the freshman&#13;
class. A selection committee&#13;
consists of Smith; Sandra&#13;
Burmeister, Coordinator&#13;
of Academic Resource Center;&#13;
Jan Ocker, Director of&#13;
Financial Aids; and Deborah&#13;
Henricks, Director of Pre-Cob&#13;
lege Programs/Champ.&#13;
The students selected will&#13;
sign a contractual agreement&#13;
consisting of a determinations&#13;
of their personal academic&#13;
and financial needs. They will&#13;
be expected to follow a prescribed&#13;
plan of action, a program&#13;
that will enhance their&#13;
graduation probability.&#13;
Another aim of this program&#13;
is to provide exposure&#13;
to advance degree programs.&#13;
"One of the goals is to get&#13;
these students into graduate&#13;
and pre-professional programs,"&#13;
Smith said. "We'll&#13;
do this by attending college&#13;
fairs and state sponsored activities."&#13;
"Our goal is that 3% of our&#13;
graduates will go on to graduate&#13;
or pre-professional programs."&#13;
Because of the late start in&#13;
getting the program underway,&#13;
the decision was made&#13;
to get the first 60 applicants&#13;
from this year's freshman&#13;
class.&#13;
Smith said that applications&#13;
will be accepted from upperclassmen&#13;
for next year, but&#13;
as of yet no guidelines had&#13;
been set up.&#13;
Smith said she will remain&#13;
as advisor for the Black Student&#13;
Organization (BSO) until&#13;
her transition is complete.&#13;
She feels that BSO needs&#13;
stronger ties with Minority&#13;
Student Services.&#13;
"It's important that BSO be&#13;
tied to an office that can give&#13;
them assistance," Smith said.&#13;
"I feel it is incumbent upon&#13;
the students of BSO that they&#13;
assume leadership responsibility,"&#13;
Smith emphasized,&#13;
"responsibility for the student&#13;
activities and their programming.&#13;
That way the adviser&#13;
can be more effective in assisting&#13;
the organization to&#13;
achieve its goals."&#13;
Jarvis wants fair shake&#13;
from all students&#13;
Jarvis from page 1&#13;
quality of education—if it&#13;
benefits students directly.&#13;
"Once people realize what I&#13;
believe in," he said, "I think&#13;
they will support me. There&#13;
have been a number of people&#13;
who just don't want to listen."&#13;
Jarvis has also faced criticism&#13;
of his student status, because&#13;
he worked as an assistant&#13;
controller for Super Steel&#13;
Products Corp. from April&#13;
1984 through May 1987.&#13;
Jarvis said he feels he is in&#13;
touch with both undergraduate&#13;
and graduate students,&#13;
because he received his undergraduate&#13;
degree from&#13;
UW-Madison in 1983, and has&#13;
been a part-time graduate&#13;
student at UW-Milwaukee&#13;
since the summer of 1986, and&#13;
now is a full-time student.&#13;
His experience as a Teaching&#13;
Assistant, he said, also&#13;
qualifies him to represent students.&#13;
"I think my broad perspective&#13;
and my broad experience&#13;
will be beneficial," Jarvis asserted.&#13;
Jarvis said he originally&#13;
Parking ills&#13;
Letter from page 2&#13;
so the late comers spill into&#13;
the regular lot. When we&#13;
regulars arrive, the only open&#13;
places are in the Physical&#13;
Education lot. I would hardly&#13;
call walking from Phy Ed to&#13;
Molinaro a comfortable walk!&#13;
There are vacant lots available&#13;
which could easily be&#13;
was interested in the position&#13;
of student Regent because, "I&#13;
felt that I could give something&#13;
back to the University.&#13;
The main reason, I think, is&#13;
that I represent the students&#13;
and I can voice their concerns."&#13;
The public hearings before&#13;
the Senate Education Committee,&#13;
which allowed student&#13;
leaders opposing Jarvis to be&#13;
heard, including representatives&#13;
from his home school,&#13;
have ended. After the committee&#13;
discusses and votes on&#13;
the nomination, it will make a&#13;
recommendation for or&#13;
against to the full Senate. It&#13;
is here that Jarvis must receive&#13;
a majority vote to be&#13;
confirmed.&#13;
"Most likely I will withdraw&#13;
my name if I'm not confirmed,"&#13;
Jarvis said.&#13;
The committee made its decision&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
"I am confident that I will&#13;
be confirmed," Jarvis said.&#13;
"I think once I am confirmed,&#13;
people will realize that I am&#13;
the student voice, and I will&#13;
be a good representative."&#13;
Here from Wales&#13;
Communication prof adjusting well to Americans' stvle&#13;
by Chris Rode •!•••• mm ^ .. '&#13;
made into close parking lots.&#13;
If the university is successful&#13;
in its recruitment efforts, new&#13;
lots will be essential. It is important&#13;
that you and your&#13;
staff give this issue the attention&#13;
that it deserves.&#13;
Respectfully,&#13;
Jolynn Gross,&#13;
Commuter Student&#13;
Skilled in the communication&#13;
aspect of listening, Professor&#13;
Joseph Gemin, Parkside's&#13;
newest communication&#13;
instructor, didn't take too&#13;
long to figure out that "Sup?"&#13;
means "What's up?"&#13;
In 1983, Gemin came to the&#13;
United States from Wales,&#13;
where he was raised and received&#13;
his early education.&#13;
Up until six weeks ago, he&#13;
pursued his graduate studies&#13;
while teaching at Southern Illinois&#13;
University in the field&#13;
of organizational communication.&#13;
Fortunately for the Parkside's&#13;
communication department,&#13;
Gemin chose to be a&#13;
part of its faculty because of&#13;
its unique program in critical&#13;
studies of organizations and&#13;
communication theory.&#13;
Gemin went on to emphasize&#13;
that in the field of communication&#13;
"you won't find a program&#13;
like Parkside's anywhere&#13;
in the States." Most&#13;
programs, according to&#13;
Gemin, concentrate on mainstream&#13;
communication. He&#13;
believes the program here is&#13;
Communication professor Joesph Gemin&#13;
unique because it concencultures&#13;
of Britain&#13;
trates on critical studies of&#13;
communication which is unheard&#13;
of at most universities.&#13;
Gemin's emphasis is on organizations-&#13;
what they are,&#13;
what they do, and how they&#13;
operate. In his dissertation,&#13;
he proposed to redefine organizations&#13;
and their function&#13;
in our life.&#13;
Although his studies are extremely&#13;
interesting and valuable,&#13;
he has encountered&#13;
many differences between the&#13;
and the&#13;
United States, especially on&#13;
the interpersonal level. The&#13;
transition to a different culture&#13;
has been both a frustrating&#13;
and humorcus experience&#13;
for the new communication&#13;
professor.&#13;
One of the main problems&#13;
Gemin found was the difference&#13;
in the senses of humor&#13;
between Europeans and&#13;
Americans. Stressing that&#13;
this is not a criticism, Gemin&#13;
observed that Americans&#13;
seem to take themselves very&#13;
seriously and issues and&#13;
events less seriously. In Europe,&#13;
for example, issues are&#13;
important, but a person's ego&#13;
is not too significant. "I think&#13;
people get very defensive in&#13;
this country when they think&#13;
you're making fun of them&#13;
without looking at the context&#13;
in which the poking fun is&#13;
being made," he said. "Often&#13;
it's meant to say, 'hey, you're&#13;
my friend and I feel comfortable&#13;
with you, so I can say&#13;
this about you." This mixed&#13;
interpretation of humor has&#13;
not been a major dilemma for&#13;
Gemin.&#13;
One principal aspect of&#13;
American culture Gemin is&#13;
thrilled about is our greetings&#13;
to one another. He enjoys th&lt;&#13;
"hello's" of passersby an&lt;&#13;
the "how are you's" of ac&#13;
quaintanees, friends and stu&#13;
dents. He emphasized his ap&#13;
proval of the warm feelinj&#13;
Americans show by acknow]&#13;
edging the presence of an&#13;
other as a human being&#13;
Gemin feels it's really nice t&#13;
say and hear "hi" or "excus&#13;
me. ' Britain, he says coul&#13;
use more of this America'&#13;
friendliness and hospitality.&#13;
Although the everyday mis&#13;
interpretations and ways o&#13;
being and thinking in a differ&#13;
ent culture than Gemin's owi&#13;
have been and continue to bi&#13;
challenge, he has obvioush&#13;
made a positive adjustment.&#13;
1810 Sheridan Road&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. North Side&#13;
SUPERETTE GROCERIES . BEER » HQUQR . SELF.RFm;,r^._S^" R-.&#13;
uw&#13;
H&#13;
W&#13;
Y&#13;
"E"&#13;
Ranger Thursday, October 1, 1987 11&#13;
BREAKING THE&#13;
SILENCE&#13;
by Heathen (Combat)&#13;
Attention, rivet heads,&#13;
there is a band on the block&#13;
that is going to rock you to&#13;
like an avalanche. Heathen's&#13;
debut release "Breaking the&#13;
Silence" is a scorcher!&#13;
Heathen are a little hard to&#13;
place in the* metal spectrum&#13;
(a sure sign that this band is&#13;
on to something), but if they&#13;
have to be given a classification&#13;
it would probably be&#13;
somewhere between Queensryehe&#13;
(the first E.P.) and&#13;
Metallica. In other words,&#13;
they have a great deal of&#13;
technical competence as well&#13;
as the ability to mosh hard.&#13;
Produced by guitar great&#13;
Ronnie Montrose, (who shows&#13;
no signs of mellowing with&#13;
age), the album has a burning&#13;
upfront guitar mix over a&#13;
tight and driving low end.&#13;
The only place where Heathen&#13;
has some maturing to do&#13;
is in the lyrical department&#13;
(let's face it, fellows, the&#13;
doom and gloom school is&#13;
overcrowded), but this is&#13;
easily overlooked when you&#13;
have tracks as strong as "Set&#13;
Me Free" and "Death by&#13;
Hanging."&#13;
So find your nearest wall,&#13;
crank up listening apparatus&#13;
and bash along with one of&#13;
metal's most promising&#13;
bands, Heathen.&#13;
Bernie Doll&#13;
TRUE(NORTH)STRONG&#13;
AND FREE&#13;
by D.O.A. (Profile)&#13;
Hardcore punk with an aggressive&#13;
sense of humor permeates&#13;
this exhilarating release&#13;
from Canada's D.O.A.&#13;
"Nasty Training Camp" is&#13;
perhaps the most typical as&#13;
well as the most pulsating&#13;
track on the album, while&#13;
their cover of fellow Canadians'&#13;
Bachman Turner Overdrive's&#13;
"Taking Care of Business"&#13;
is redefined from the&#13;
perspective of the unemployed&#13;
rather than the selfemployed.&#13;
For listeners who enjoy&#13;
stepping far outside the mainstream&#13;
of things, D.O.A. is&#13;
adept at the punk sensibilities&#13;
and melodic structure without&#13;
stumbling into offensive territory.&#13;
Their stance does not&#13;
come against all that exists&#13;
(eschewing any philosophies&#13;
that everything sucks), while&#13;
their music is at once aggressive&#13;
if a bit lacking in diversity.&#13;
This album is best described&#13;
as alternative rock&#13;
and roll that does not become&#13;
at all wimpy or mellow. Recommended!&#13;
Jim Neibaur&#13;
HAGAR&#13;
by Sammy Hagar (Warner&#13;
Bros.)&#13;
Both as a soloist and as the&#13;
major force behind Van&#13;
Halen's new sound, Sammy&#13;
Hagar has established himself&#13;
as a true American rockand-&#13;
roller.&#13;
His latest release, a selftitled&#13;
album produced by&#13;
Eddie Van Halen, picks up&#13;
where Sammy's solo career&#13;
left off.&#13;
The LP's single, "Give to&#13;
Live," is atypical of the rocker's&#13;
usual style. The balladlike&#13;
melody and meaningful&#13;
lyrics make it likeable for&#13;
even the mellow music enthusiasts,&#13;
while Sammy's raspy&#13;
vocals and biting guitar licks&#13;
keep the rockers happy.&#13;
Another unique track is&#13;
"Standin' at the Same Ol'&#13;
Crossroads," in which the&#13;
only instrumental backup to&#13;
the vocals is a guitar playing&#13;
a series of randomly selected&#13;
chords and notes.&#13;
As for the rest of the&#13;
tracks, Sammy's style of old&#13;
dominates. If "I Can't Drive&#13;
55" could make it to the top&#13;
of the charts, it's obvious that&#13;
Hagar's standard lack of&#13;
deep meaningful lyrics&#13;
doesn't hinder the success of&#13;
his songs. The main point of&#13;
this music is to promote a&#13;
good time, and this album&#13;
does just that.&#13;
Patti Nitz&#13;
BRIGHTER THAN A&#13;
THOUSAND SUNS&#13;
by Killing Joke (Virgin)&#13;
Killing Joke is by far one of&#13;
the better groups to emerge&#13;
out of the wreckage left by&#13;
the punk movement, combining&#13;
biting lyrics with devastating&#13;
musical arrangements&#13;
to create such underground&#13;
classics as "Complications"&#13;
and "Eighties."&#13;
However, their approach&#13;
has somewhat changed on&#13;
this, their first American release.&#13;
The arrangements here&#13;
are more orchestral in nature&#13;
as opposed to the more simplistic&#13;
and harsh tone of their&#13;
earlier work.&#13;
The album is rather gothic&#13;
in its style, but this is not to&#13;
say that Killing Joke has lost&#13;
its street sensibilities. The&#13;
energy and punch that this&#13;
band carries is not diminished&#13;
by a more prominent&#13;
keyboard sound and few midtempo&#13;
tracks. Standout numbers&#13;
on the album are&#13;
"Chessboards," "Twilight of&#13;
the Mortal" and the final cut,&#13;
"Rubicon."&#13;
All of Killing Joke's talents&#13;
are visible on "Brighter than&#13;
a Thousand Suns,"--their wit,&#13;
their power, their depth, and&#13;
their musical prowess. If you&#13;
have yet to discover one of&#13;
Britain's finest imports this&#13;
record provides one hell of an&#13;
introduction.&#13;
Bernie Doll&#13;
MAD AT THE WORLD&#13;
by Mad At The World&#13;
(Frontline)&#13;
Seeing the somewhat&#13;
pretentious title of this band&#13;
and LP, I expected to hear an&#13;
incoherent psycho-babble on&#13;
the social injustices of this&#13;
world. Fortunately, I got an&#13;
Short Cuts&#13;
entertaining crossbreed of&#13;
Oingo Boingo and Depeche&#13;
Mode.&#13;
This three man band has&#13;
taken the new music technology&#13;
available and used it&#13;
to create the next generation&#13;
of industrial New Wave. Vocalist&#13;
Roger Rose warbles&#13;
across this collection of dance&#13;
poetry in a soothing soprano&#13;
while computerized drums&#13;
and synthesizer pound out an&#13;
energetic background.&#13;
Mad At The World is a&#13;
band of contrast. In "No&#13;
More Innocence," they open&#13;
with an orchestral movement&#13;
that is completely forgotten&#13;
once the first drum beat of&#13;
the main song opens. They&#13;
use the unrhymed poetry and&#13;
lamentation of groups like&#13;
The Smiths or the Cure and&#13;
weave it into a funky dance&#13;
beat to produce a new style.&#13;
It may seem a bit redundant&#13;
for a band to release a&#13;
self-titled single on a selftitled&#13;
LP, but even this&#13;
works. The song "Mad At The&#13;
World" is a beat-rocker&#13;
straight from the early days&#13;
of New Wave.&#13;
Mad At The World is a&#13;
band that redefines the&#13;
cliches to create new ones.&#13;
It's simple dance music with&#13;
a complex formula.&#13;
Tyson Wilda&#13;
FEARFUL SYMMETRY&#13;
by DA (Frontline)&#13;
My first impression of what&#13;
DA sounds like, is what The&#13;
Monkees would sound like&#13;
with a twist of Christianity.&#13;
I really don't know how to&#13;
classify this quartet of Christian&#13;
rockers because of their&#13;
unique sound and lyrical contents&#13;
that praise the body,&#13;
God, and nature.&#13;
Although this album was&#13;
quite painful to listen to, I did&#13;
find one track called "A Sigh&#13;
for You," that reminded me&#13;
of the song "Sleepwalk," by&#13;
Ultravox. That was impressive.&#13;
For the most part I think&#13;
that DA are concentrating too&#13;
much on their lyrics, and not&#13;
putting enough emphasis on&#13;
their melodies.&#13;
George Koenig&#13;
Earn Money&#13;
$&#13;
While -&#13;
Selling&#13;
Ads&#13;
Stop In&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
ESQUIRE&#13;
by Esquire (Warner Bros.)&#13;
What happens when wellwritten&#13;
lyrics are combined&#13;
with three musically incompetent&#13;
people? Either a&#13;
best-selling book of poetry or&#13;
an album which puts to waste&#13;
a perfectly good piece of&#13;
vinyl. Unfortunately, Esquire&#13;
has decided to take the album&#13;
route.&#13;
This self-titled release&#13;
starts off bad and gets gradually&#13;
worse. Throughout the&#13;
album, the vocalist maintains&#13;
notes that seem to be at the&#13;
maximum level audible to the&#13;
human ear (unfortunately).&#13;
Halfway through side A, this&#13;
pitch becomes so annoying&#13;
that a defenseless listener&#13;
begins to wish that the microphone&#13;
would be handed to the&#13;
drummer. This in itself wouldn't&#13;
be so bad if the singer&#13;
hit notes that formed some&#13;
kind of melody instead of selecting&#13;
vocal attacks at random.&#13;
It's hard to describe individual&#13;
songs, since they all&#13;
sound the same. If the spaces&#13;
between them were removed,&#13;
the listener would be left with&#13;
one extremely long annoying&#13;
song. Maybe the spaces&#13;
should be left and the songs&#13;
removed.&#13;
In short, Esquire is a musical&#13;
project that shouldn't&#13;
have been allowed to happen.&#13;
Do yourself a favor and wait&#13;
for the best-selling book of&#13;
poetry!&#13;
Jim Neibaur&#13;
CONTAGIOUS&#13;
by Y&amp;T (Warner Brothers)&#13;
A* Yesterday and Today,&#13;
they were considered too raw.&#13;
Y&amp;T, they mellowed a&#13;
bit too much.&#13;
And now, with a change of&#13;
attitude and record labels,&#13;
Y&amp;T has found a niche that&#13;
rests between their early raw&#13;
sound and a more synthesized&#13;
power pop style. The results&#13;
are great.&#13;
The album's title cut is&#13;
typical of its entire structure:&#13;
fast, clean riffs backed by&#13;
strong hard rock beats. Taking&#13;
position in the nether&#13;
world of power pop, but remaining&#13;
above the true heavy&#13;
metal area, Y&amp;T have basically&#13;
discovered where their&#13;
sound belongs.&#13;
Never successful as a&#13;
heavy metal act (the aggressive&#13;
passion just wasn't&#13;
there), Y&amp;T instead opted for&#13;
a much lighter approach.&#13;
While already reaching that&#13;
extreme, they now have doubled&#13;
back and found . th e&#13;
sound that best suits the&#13;
band's abilities.&#13;
Jim Neibaur SEUmNG&#13;
I-OI ovvr 100 years I leileman's ()ld Style Beer and baseball have made quite&#13;
a team. Enjoy the same.&#13;
12 Thursday, October 1, 1987 Ranger&#13;
Int'l studies offers trip&#13;
A 19-day study tour of Australia&#13;
and New Zealand will&#13;
be offered by the International&#13;
Studies Program and the&#13;
University's Continuing&#13;
Education Office next July 6-&#13;
24.&#13;
- Estimated cost of the tour&#13;
is $2,275. (That amount is&#13;
subject to change due to inflation.)&#13;
It includes all air and&#13;
ground transportation, hotels,&#13;
breakfasts and dinners.&#13;
For complete information&#13;
call 553-2312.&#13;
The itinerary includes visits&#13;
to Melbourne, Canberra, Sydney,&#13;
Armidale, The Gold&#13;
Coast, Brisbane, Cairns and&#13;
Auckland. Persons have the&#13;
option of participating in a&#13;
Sydney Opera House dinnertour&#13;
and a tour of the Brisbane&#13;
World Exposition for an&#13;
additional $100.&#13;
Study tour leader Chelvadurai&#13;
Manogaran, a Parkside&#13;
geography and international&#13;
—Selected Shorts&#13;
studies professor who is a native&#13;
of Sri Lanka, will teach&#13;
an orientation course required&#13;
for participants who&#13;
want to take the study tour&#13;
for academic credit.&#13;
The 10-day course will be&#13;
held two weeks prior to the&#13;
trip.&#13;
Among points of interest&#13;
visited during the tour will be&#13;
the Victorian Arts Center in&#13;
Melbourne, -the Australian&#13;
Parliament in Canberra, the&#13;
Balli in Sydney, Surfer's Paradise&#13;
on the Gold Coast, The&#13;
Great Barrier Reef off&#13;
Cairns, and the Maori Caves&#13;
in Auckland.&#13;
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One o'clock&#13;
concert set&#13;
Duo pianists James and&#13;
Susan McKeever will present&#13;
the opening concert next&#13;
Wednesday in the One&#13;
O'Clock Concert Series, sponsored&#13;
by the Music Department.&#13;
Their performance, which&#13;
will be in the Communication&#13;
Arts Room D-118, will include&#13;
works by Robert Cundick, Camllle&#13;
Saint-Saens, and Darius&#13;
Milhaud.&#13;
The McKeevers were both&#13;
students of the noted Russian&#13;
pedagogue, Madame Olga&#13;
Conus, at the University of&#13;
Cincinnati College-Conservatory&#13;
of Music. James is the&#13;
author of a book, Fundamentals&#13;
of Piano Technique, putting&#13;
forth the Conus method&#13;
of instruction based on his&#13;
years of study with Madame&#13;
Conus.&#13;
Labor mgmt.&#13;
discussed&#13;
Labor from page 6&#13;
a social equilibrium and the&#13;
risks are tied, I think, to&#13;
some subtle and not so subtle&#13;
anti-union feelings." This&#13;
could cause a new era of&#13;
social bitterness and management&#13;
may find the consequences&#13;
of new industrial reltions&#13;
very costly.&#13;
"In the end it seems it may&#13;
be least costly for management&#13;
to simply deal with&#13;
unions. Management does not&#13;
have to give the store away,&#13;
but both sides must have a&#13;
mutual respect for each&#13;
other," commented Meyer.&#13;
Umitpd drthwy ireu Drtvv» carry laaa than $20. ©1987 Oomtntf a Pint. Inc.&#13;
APARTMENT HOTEL ROOMS&#13;
Available. Full maid service.&#13;
Telephone, furnished. Weekly&#13;
rates from $120. Monthly, rates&#13;
from $400. APPLE VALLEY&#13;
LODGE, Racine. 637-7911.&#13;
DISORDERLIES&#13;
The Fat Boys, an obese rap&#13;
group, have made a comedy&#13;
movie that the ads are comparing&#13;
to the Three Stooges.&#13;
Unfortunately it doesn't&#13;
even reach those minimal&#13;
standards.&#13;
"Disorderlies" has the&#13;
Boys in the title role as inept&#13;
workers of the medical profession,&#13;
something the&#13;
Stooges themselves did in&#13;
"Men in Black," Dizzy Doctors,"&#13;
and "From Nurse to&#13;
Worse." And the Boys engage&#13;
in the same sloppy slapstick&#13;
and unmotivated petty violence&#13;
to bring their point&#13;
across.&#13;
Ralph Bellamy stars as the&#13;
hapless old gentleman whom&#13;
the boys rehabilitate, while&#13;
Anthony Geary (who left TV&#13;
soap fame to achieve big&#13;
screen status) portrays the&#13;
evil nephew out to kill Bellamy&#13;
for his inheritance (has&#13;
this been done?).&#13;
Cameos by Helen Reddy&#13;
and Rick Neilson of Cheap&#13;
Trick assist in giving the film&#13;
a "Love Boat" look.&#13;
HELLRAISER&#13;
If you're looking for a&#13;
movie that uses all the tired&#13;
old boring conventions of its&#13;
genre, that is offensively sick&#13;
and violent, and that is so&#13;
predictable that you know&#13;
what is going to occur a week&#13;
in advance the "Hellraiser"&#13;
is the film for you.&#13;
The storyline is as original&#13;
as a Joe Biden speech. Husband&#13;
and second wife move&#13;
back to the suburbs after living&#13;
in the city. The wife,&#13;
frigid and bitchy, is constantly&#13;
reminded of an obsessive&#13;
affair she had with her&#13;
husband's brother (the black&#13;
sheep of the family heavily&#13;
into occult practices), who&#13;
now is brought back from his&#13;
exile in the sadist Hilton after&#13;
his brother's blood seeps&#13;
through the floor of the ominous&#13;
attic room.&#13;
One cannot forget the loving&#13;
independent daughter who&#13;
also moves in to be close to&#13;
Daddy. She at least is a&#13;
strong female character, but&#13;
if you haven't seen this before,&#13;
you have been in a coma&#13;
during the eighties.&#13;
Director and writer Clive&#13;
Barker gives us so much used&#13;
material, a foreboding heartbeat,&#13;
whispering spiritlike&#13;
voices, bizare dream sequences,&#13;
a mysterious&#13;
nomad, a talking corpse, and,&#13;
to top it off, a house that falls&#13;
apart at the end, (do you&#13;
think this clown knows who&#13;
Poe is?). Even the monsters&#13;
here look like a combination&#13;
of rejects from the bar scenes&#13;
in Star Wars and strays left&#13;
over from Aliens.&#13;
Barker presents nothing&#13;
scary, it is all triteness and&#13;
sickness (at least Wes Craven&#13;
has a sense of humor).&#13;
If you're in the mood for a&#13;
movie that not only insults&#13;
your intelligence but also&#13;
your stomach, "Hellraiser" is&#13;
for you.&#13;
Bernie Doll&#13;
Art display slated&#13;
"The Industrial Landscape,"&#13;
a show of paintings&#13;
and drawings by Chicago&#13;
free-lance artist and illustrator&#13;
Thomas James, whose&#13;
work has appeared in Playboy&#13;
magazine, will be on display&#13;
in the Parkside Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery from&#13;
Monday, Oct. 5 through&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 29.&#13;
James will give a free public&#13;
talk on his art at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 29 in the gallery.&#13;
Gallery hours are from 1 to&#13;
6 p.m. Monday through&#13;
Thursday and from 7 to 10&#13;
p.m. Wednesday and Thursday.&#13;
Admission is free and&#13;
the public is encouraged to&#13;
visit.&#13;
James' highly structured&#13;
and colorful work has appeared&#13;
in numerous shows&#13;
and won many awards. He&#13;
has created paintings, illustrations,&#13;
logos and posters for&#13;
dozens of clients including&#13;
Playboy, Video Action magazine,&#13;
the Chicago Board of&#13;
Education, Beltone Hearing&#13;
Aids, the Greater Chicago&#13;
Mental Health Association,&#13;
and Gitanes Restaurant in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Doc says problems remain&#13;
Doc from page 13&#13;
desegregetion in 1987-1&#13;
thought that was all settled in&#13;
1964.&#13;
The Los Angeles Dodgers&#13;
fired a man named A1 Campanis,&#13;
a front office worker in&#13;
the organization. He was&#13;
fired because he said that&#13;
blacks didn't have what it&#13;
takes to hold a managerial&#13;
position in a baseball franchise.&#13;
The Reverend Jesse&#13;
Jackson said of Campanis&#13;
that he engaged in locker&#13;
room talk and gossip to the&#13;
public.&#13;
As if there aren't enough&#13;
problems, there are white&#13;
supremist groups plotting and&#13;
scheming to overthrow this&#13;
country! But that is still not&#13;
the icing on the cake. The&#13;
icing comes from the Soviet&#13;
Union's so-n-&gt;so Gorbechev.&#13;
Mr. Gorbechev suggested to&#13;
our very own president-you&#13;
know, the cowboy who was&#13;
against the Civil Rights Actthat&#13;
this country would not&#13;
have its racial problems if&#13;
they gave blacks their own&#13;
state. By the way, are there&#13;
any black Russians?&#13;
Ranger Thursday, October 1,1987 13&#13;
Annual ski trip a real deal&#13;
by Terri DeRosier&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
(PAB) is planning "Ski Week&#13;
*88" to Telluride, Colorado.&#13;
Ski Week will be held from&#13;
January 2 - 11, 1988. Tom&#13;
Yull, recreation chairman for&#13;
PAB is coordinating the trip&#13;
along with Diane Welsh, director&#13;
of student activities.&#13;
Telluride has been described&#13;
as one of the most&#13;
beautiful ski resorts in the&#13;
Rockies. Not only does Telluride&#13;
offer some of the best&#13;
skiing with three levels of ski&#13;
runs, private instructions and&#13;
NASTAR competitions, Telluride&#13;
also has ice skating,&#13;
sleigh rides and snowmobiling.&#13;
Also available are shops&#13;
and boutiques, art galleries&#13;
and lots of tantalizing restaurants.&#13;
The trip includes deluxe&#13;
motor coach transportation&#13;
from Parkside to Telluride.&#13;
Upon arrival, lodging will be&#13;
in condominiums with accommodations&#13;
for six students in&#13;
each. The condos are 300 feet&#13;
from the Coonskin Lift. They&#13;
have 3 bedrooms, kitchen, a&#13;
fireplace, an outdoor heated&#13;
pool and some of the condos&#13;
have hot tubs in them. Also&#13;
PAB member&#13;
Tom Yull&#13;
included in the price of the&#13;
trip is a five day lift ticket,&#13;
with the option to buy a sixth&#13;
day.&#13;
Yull said that this trip is&#13;
held in association with the&#13;
National Collegiate Ski Association&#13;
(NCSA). As part of&#13;
the trip, NCSA is sponsoring&#13;
two parties at night that will&#13;
have live bands, and a barbecue&#13;
on the hill.&#13;
NCSA will also sponsor two&#13;
ski races. "One will be a fun&#13;
race, where you might have&#13;
to go through the gates backwards,&#13;
do somersaults and all&#13;
kinds of crazy things," Yull&#13;
said. They will also have a&#13;
professionally run NASTAR&#13;
race.&#13;
PAB will also be offering&#13;
prizes to those students who&#13;
go on the trip. Those prizes&#13;
will be given away on the bus&#13;
on the way to Colorado.&#13;
"Last year we had 90 people,"&#13;
Yull stated, "but this&#13;
year we are only taking 47«so&#13;
students who are interested&#13;
should sign up early."&#13;
Anyone interested should&#13;
sign up in the Student Life Office&#13;
in Union 209 with Diane&#13;
Welsh. Not only are students&#13;
encouraged to go, but also&#13;
faculty and alumni.&#13;
-The cost of the trip is&#13;
$310.00 for 10 days. A deposit&#13;
of $75.00 is due October 15.&#13;
The balance of $235.00 i s due&#13;
on November 25. Included in&#13;
the price is a $25.00 refundable&#13;
deposit for the condo.&#13;
"This trip is going to be a&#13;
lot of fun," Yull said, "and&#13;
you'll lose money by not&#13;
going!"&#13;
Book Review&#13;
As Doc sees it&#13;
Social problems revisited&#13;
by Doc Mallory&#13;
"They say America is the&#13;
land of plenty,&#13;
A little have a lot, a lot don't&#13;
have any."&#13;
I remember writing this in&#13;
my social stratification class&#13;
a couple of years ago. It was&#13;
right after I read that five&#13;
percent of the population controls&#13;
most of this country's&#13;
wealth. I have never been&#13;
ashamed of being black-not&#13;
ever! In a classroom of all&#13;
whites, I get along quite fine,&#13;
but I have always hated when&#13;
people equate being black&#13;
with being poor. Am I prejudiced?&#13;
This was a question I&#13;
would always get back to because&#13;
the soul searching and&#13;
constant thinking would get&#13;
me so frustrated that it would&#13;
come to that question. Then&#13;
when I think about how the&#13;
system is trying to keep the&#13;
lower middle class and lower&#13;
classes out of college, it just&#13;
pisses me off!&#13;
Reagan doesn't know how&#13;
much he is going to mess up&#13;
my final year of college. I&#13;
mean let's look back at it. We&#13;
are able to vote at age 18;&#13;
drive at age 16; drink at age&#13;
21, but, for financial aid, we&#13;
are not looked at as independent&#13;
people unless we are 23 or&#13;
24. This makes perfect sense..&#13;
The educational grants have&#13;
been cut, but what else is&#13;
new? My money for school is&#13;
being cut, but meanwhile my&#13;
brother who is in the Air&#13;
Force is getting a raise.&#13;
Hummm, makes you think,&#13;
don't it?&#13;
We're living in a world no&#13;
one can predict, but I've noticed&#13;
that race consciousness&#13;
is becoming a must, as if it&#13;
hasn't always been! My ears&#13;
have been listening and my&#13;
eyes have been open checking&#13;
out the whole scene. This&#13;
year in Milwaukee, they are&#13;
having a trial concerning desegregation&#13;
in the suburbs.&#13;
Imagine that! A trial on&#13;
Doc see page 12&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
SHOOTING STARS:&#13;
HEROES AND HEROINES&#13;
OF WESTERN FILM&#13;
Edited by&#13;
Archie P. McDonald&#13;
(Indiana University Press)&#13;
While there have been&#13;
countless books on the western&#13;
film, this study is nevertheless&#13;
a very welcome and&#13;
significant contribution.&#13;
McDonald compiles a dozen&#13;
different essays on important&#13;
western players by various&#13;
writers who are particularly&#13;
well-versed and interested in&#13;
this important film genre. As&#13;
westerns are central to the&#13;
development of film, McDonald&#13;
has carefully chosen&#13;
essays which detail the western&#13;
cinema from its earliest&#13;
stars to its television inception.&#13;
Along with chapters on the&#13;
usual cowboy luminaries like&#13;
William S. Hart. John Wayne,&#13;
Gary Cooper, Randolph Scott,&#13;
and Clint Eastwood, McDonald&#13;
also offers essays on Ken&#13;
Maynard, Gene Autry, Audie&#13;
Murphy, and such interesting&#13;
related topics as "Western&#13;
Film, Ronald Reagan, and&#13;
the Western Metaphor" by&#13;
Michael E. Welsh, "Women&#13;
in Western Films: The Civilizer,&#13;
The Saloon Singer, and&#13;
Their Modern Sister" by Sandra&#13;
Kay Schakel, and "When&#13;
Television Wore Six-Guns:&#13;
Cowboy Heroes on TV" by&#13;
Gary Yoggy.&#13;
Through these essays the&#13;
reader can adequately understand&#13;
the various stages western&#13;
cinema underwent from&#13;
the silents to television. The&#13;
distinct differences between&#13;
the authentic silent features,&#13;
the Saturday Matinee "B"&#13;
Westerns, the Cold War west-,&#13;
ems of the fifties, the spa-*&#13;
ghetti westerns bf the seventies,&#13;
and the apparent demise&#13;
of the western film by the&#13;
eighties, are as diverse as the&#13;
differences between each&#13;
actor's presentation of his&#13;
ideal western character.&#13;
And within the chapters is a&#13;
wealth of information on the&#13;
essay topic as well as an&#13;
analysis on how this particular&#13;
ingredient was significant&#13;
to the genre of the western&#13;
cinema. The chapter on television,&#13;
for instance, covers&#13;
the cowboy heroics of The&#13;
Lone Ranger as well as the&#13;
superficial gimmickery and&#13;
style without-substance methods&#13;
of later shows like "The&#13;
Wild Wild West."&#13;
Attempting to unerstand&#13;
the diversity and complexities&#13;
of the western in the&#13;
American cinema according&#13;
to its more predominant&#13;
players is a fascinating concept.&#13;
Thus this collection of&#13;
essays very boldly celebrates&#13;
the genre while attempting to&#13;
understand it through the&#13;
work of its most significant&#13;
on-screen contributors.&#13;
The book is enhanced by&#13;
some 40-odd photos, annotations&#13;
at the end of each chapter,&#13;
and an appendix following&#13;
the chapter on TV westems&#13;
which lists all, of the&#13;
western and western-related&#13;
programs to hit the tube.&#13;
"Shooting Stars" is not a&#13;
heavy scholarly study of the&#13;
western any more than it is a&#13;
photo-laden coffee table book.&#13;
It is an informative, critical,&#13;
easy-to-read collection of&#13;
essays.&#13;
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14 Thursday, October 1, 1987 Ranger&#13;
Football underway&#13;
by Wendy Sorenson&#13;
Intramural football finally&#13;
got underway last week after&#13;
a week of rain. LA Dream&#13;
picked up their first win over&#13;
the Party Animals by a score&#13;
of 45-0. Jeff Lemmerman led&#13;
the team in TD passes, throwing&#13;
four. Lemmerman also&#13;
scored a touchdown on a ten&#13;
yard run to open the second&#13;
half. Jack Klebesadel contributed&#13;
by running an interception&#13;
back for 30 yards for a&#13;
touchdown. LA Dream's final&#13;
^score came on the last play of&#13;
the game when Doug Londo&#13;
threw a 50 yard pass to Louie&#13;
Lewis.&#13;
Grapplers II started off&#13;
their season by chalking up a&#13;
win over the Party Animals&#13;
19-13 in a close game. Scott&#13;
Stephenson led the Grapplers&#13;
with two TD passes, the first&#13;
being a 25 yard pass to Mark&#13;
Hemauer. Party Animals answered&#13;
with a TD from Jim&#13;
Barret to brother Joe. Half&#13;
time score was 7-6 with the&#13;
Grapplers ahead. Grapplers&#13;
II added two TD's in the second&#13;
half on a Stephenson to&#13;
Dale Hall pass, and a 10 yard&#13;
run by Mark Hemauer. Jim&#13;
and Joe Barrett teamed up&#13;
again in the second half for&#13;
the PA's second TD.&#13;
Grapplers I opened with a&#13;
win over the FMC Dough&#13;
Boys by a score of 25-0. Ted&#13;
Price ran the first two TD's&#13;
in, one from 10 yards out and&#13;
the second from 50. Price&#13;
scored again on a 40 yard&#13;
pass from Shawn Yde. The&#13;
final TD came on a pass from&#13;
Jack Danner to Mark Dubey,&#13;
Dubey's first TD of this three&#13;
year flag football career at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Soccer is the next Sunday&#13;
intramural event taking place&#13;
on October 11 at 2 p.m. Entries&#13;
are in the PE office. Get&#13;
a team together!&#13;
Ranger teams ranked nationally&#13;
In the latest National Association&#13;
of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA) ratings,&#13;
three Parkside sports teams&#13;
are included.&#13;
The women's cross country&#13;
team, the defending NAIA&#13;
champions, are rated fourth&#13;
in the initial poll of the season,&#13;
behind perenially strong&#13;
teams Emporia State (KS),&#13;
Hillsdale (MI) and Adams&#13;
State (CO). The Ranger runners&#13;
garnered three first&#13;
place votes. Other state&#13;
schools in the poll are Milwaukee&#13;
(ninth) Oshkosh&#13;
(13th), LaCrosse (15th) and&#13;
Eau Claire (19th).&#13;
The men's cross country&#13;
team is ranked 15th in the&#13;
first poll. Adams State, Wetern&#13;
State (CO) and North&#13;
Florida are the top three&#13;
teams. Eau Claire (sixth) and&#13;
Milwaukee (13th) are also&#13;
rated.&#13;
In soccer, the Parkside&#13;
team jumped into the top 20&#13;
in the second poll. They are&#13;
ranked 19th with a 7-1-0 record,&#13;
the lone loss coming in&#13;
against Wisconsin, an NCAA&#13;
Division,I school. They were&#13;
not rated last week.&#13;
Two other teams from&#13;
NAIA Area 5, both from Illinois,&#13;
are ranked ahead of the&#13;
Rangers; McKendree is fifth&#13;
with a 5-0-0 record and last&#13;
year's national champion,&#13;
Sangamon State, is currently&#13;
ranked 10th with a 4-2-1 record.&#13;
dHiie&#13;
£&amp;uieet Featuring a&#13;
Full Selection&#13;
of Candy and&#13;
Nuts&#13;
• Cashews&#13;
• Pistachios&#13;
• Chocolate Covered&#13;
Peanuts&#13;
• Malted Milk Balls&#13;
• Peanut Clusters&#13;
• Gummy Bears&#13;
• Jelly Beans&#13;
• Caramels&#13;
• Assorted Hard Candies&#13;
and more&#13;
OPEN 10AM TO 2PM&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
thru&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
Located on the Main Concourse in the WLLC&#13;
Ironman contest examines&#13;
strength and endurance&#13;
by Ted Price&#13;
The Parkside wrestling&#13;
team completed its fourth annual&#13;
Ironman Contest last&#13;
week. Mark Dubey, winner of&#13;
the 1985 Ironman Contest,&#13;
was the overall champion for&#13;
the second time in three&#13;
years.&#13;
The Ironman Contest, devised&#13;
by wrestling coach Jim&#13;
Koch, is an eight-event contest&#13;
designed to see which&#13;
wrestlers have spent time in&#13;
an off-season training program.&#13;
The eight events include&#13;
a 100 yard dash, a 40&#13;
yard dash, a rope climb, and&#13;
the number of sit-ups one can&#13;
do in two minutes. The&#13;
strength events are a bench&#13;
press for repetitions at each&#13;
wrestler's own body weight,&#13;
leg press for repetitions at&#13;
twice each wrestler's body&#13;
weight, and a bench press&#13;
and leg press for max which&#13;
is divided by each wrestler's&#13;
own body weight.&#13;
Dividing the bench press&#13;
and leg press for max by a&#13;
wrestler's body weight is a&#13;
way to determine a strength&#13;
equivalent between large and&#13;
small people. Obviously, a 200&#13;
lb. person should be able to&#13;
bench press more than a 150&#13;
lb. person. However, if a 150&#13;
lb. person bench presses 225&#13;
lbs. and a 200 lb. person&#13;
bench presses 250 lbs., the&#13;
smaller person has pressed&#13;
1.5 times his own weight&#13;
while the larger person has&#13;
pressed only 1.25 times his&#13;
own weight. Thus, it can be&#13;
said that, regardless of size,&#13;
the 150 lb. person is stronger&#13;
than the 200 lb. person even&#13;
though the 200 lb. person has&#13;
pressed more actual weight.&#13;
In the Ironman Contest,&#13;
points are awarded depending&#13;
on the number of people entered&#13;
in the contest. This year,&#13;
with nineteen wrestlers competing,&#13;
each first place was&#13;
worth 19 pts., second place&#13;
was worth 18 pts., etc. on&#13;
down to two pts. for eighteenth&#13;
place and one pt. for&#13;
last place.&#13;
In the eight events, two new&#13;
records were set. In the leg&#13;
press for max, Doug Parker&#13;
and Todd Stephenson each&#13;
pressed 525 lbs. Since they&#13;
each weighed 157 lbs., their&#13;
max at 3.344 times their body&#13;
weight placed them in a tie&#13;
for the new record. Arthur&#13;
Demerath set the other record&#13;
by doing 115 sit-ups in&#13;
two minutes, eclipsing his&#13;
1985 record of 106 sit-ups.&#13;
Parker also won the bench&#13;
press for max with a lift 1.847&#13;
times his own body weight,&#13;
bench pressing 290 lbs. Mark&#13;
Hemauer sprinted to a time&#13;
of 11.20 seconds to win the 100&#13;
yard dash. Nick Manriquez&#13;
won the 40 yard dash with a&#13;
time of 4.85 seconds while&#13;
Ted Price climbed the rope in&#13;
the wrestling gym in 6.28 seconds&#13;
to win that event. Tim&#13;
Whiting leg pressed twice his&#13;
body weight (305 lbs.) 156&#13;
times to win the leg press for&#13;
repetitions while Mark Dubey&#13;
won the bench press for repetitions&#13;
by bench pressing his&#13;
body weight (165 lbs.) 30&#13;
times.&#13;
Dubey also set an all-time&#13;
record for the highest percentage&#13;
of the maximum&#13;
points possible. With eight&#13;
events at nineteen points&#13;
each, the maximum number&#13;
of points possible was 152.&#13;
Dubey's 132 points meant he&#13;
scored .907 percent of the&#13;
maximum. This is roughly an&#13;
equivalent to placing third in&#13;
each event, a remarkable&#13;
feat based on the diversity of&#13;
the events.&#13;
The top ten placers for the&#13;
1987 Ironman Contest are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
CHAMPION - Mark Dubey&#13;
132 pts.&#13;
2nd place - Scott Stephenson&#13;
116 pts.&#13;
3rd place - Todd Stephenson&#13;
114.5 pts.&#13;
4th place - Doug Parker&#13;
113.5 pts.&#13;
5th place - Tim Whiting&#13;
106 pts.&#13;
6th place - Ted Price&#13;
100.5 pts.&#13;
7th place - Jack Danner&#13;
89 pts.&#13;
8th place- Dale Hall&#13;
87.5 pts.&#13;
9th place - Dean John&#13;
87.5 pts.&#13;
10th place - Mark Hemauer&#13;
84.5 pts.&#13;
Rangers 6-0 to start season convincingly&#13;
Baseball from page 16&#13;
the third when the Ranger&#13;
hitters finally found their&#13;
bats, scoring four times in a&#13;
rally capped off by a two run&#13;
double by Reikowski. The&#13;
Rangers then sent twelve&#13;
men to the plate in a seven&#13;
run fourth inning. Peiffer&#13;
went three innings for the victory,&#13;
striking out five and giving&#13;
up three hits. Sophomore&#13;
Darrin Pluscota struck out&#13;
the side in the fourth and jun-&#13;
REMEMBER&#13;
SUPPORT&#13;
OUR&#13;
ADVERTISERS&#13;
ior Doug Londo, despite giving&#13;
up a solo home run, also&#13;
struck out the side in giving&#13;
Parkside its fifth consecutive&#13;
victory at 12-2.&#13;
In game two it was all&#13;
Parkside. In the first inning,&#13;
Parkside sent 17 batters to&#13;
the plate, scoring 13 runs with&#13;
extra base hits by Armond&#13;
Bonofiglio, Wes Root, pitcher&#13;
Joel Bumgarner, and pitcher&#13;
Rob Peiffer, who hit a three&#13;
run home run in his first collegiate&#13;
at-bat. In the second it&#13;
was more of the same as 15&#13;
Rangers batted in' an 11 run&#13;
second. Ken Neese hit a&#13;
three-run shot, his second&#13;
homer of the season and&#13;
freshman Andy Hansen had a&#13;
two-run blast to go with extra&#13;
base hits by Tony Bonofiglio&#13;
and Tim Moore. While the&#13;
Ranger bats were stuck on&#13;
automatic, pitchers Steve&#13;
Leonhard and Jeff Lemmermann&#13;
were combining on a&#13;
four-hitter, with Lemmermann&#13;
striking out seven in&#13;
three innings to notch the victory&#13;
in the 26-2 trouncing.&#13;
On the season, the Rangers&#13;
are hitting .374 as a team&#13;
with 80 runs scored in six&#13;
games. Shortstop Ken Neese&#13;
leads in home runs (2), hits&#13;
(11), and batting average&#13;
(.500), third baseman Brian&#13;
Gauthier leads in RBI's with&#13;
10, and catcher Gary Fritsch&#13;
in on-base percentage (.789).&#13;
Joel Bumgdrner and Jeff&#13;
Lemmermann have nine&#13;
strikeouts each through five&#13;
and six innings respectively,&#13;
Rob Peiffer and Lemmermann&#13;
are both 1-0 with ERA'S&#13;
of 1.50, Bumgarner has an&#13;
ERA of 1.80, and Joe Rick did&#13;
not give up a run in three innings&#13;
of work in going 1-0.&#13;
The staff as a whole has&#13;
struck out 44 and walked only&#13;
19 in holding opponents to a&#13;
.245 batting average.&#13;
Tennis team 'pleasing'&#13;
TTAennnnSifsk from pag- e 1^ 5mm&#13;
sey-Kim Vanderbush lost to&#13;
Eau Claire, 2-6, 4-6, and defeated&#13;
Carroll, 6-1, 2-6, 6-4&#13;
while losing to St. Norbert, 2-&#13;
6, 4-6. Coach Miller commented,&#13;
"Kathy and Kim got better&#13;
as the day went on, and&#13;
they got a lot of experience."&#13;
Overall, Coach Miller was&#13;
very pleased with the way&#13;
her team played in the invitational,&#13;
and in the way they&#13;
have played up to this point&#13;
in the season.&#13;
=&#13;
a = Ranger Thursday, October 1,1987 1 5^&#13;
Lady netters sixth in Invit'l&#13;
photo by Ken McCray&#13;
Number four singles player Elizabeth Spalla strokes a&#13;
forehand&#13;
by Randy LeCount&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The women's tennis team&#13;
had a relatively good showing&#13;
this past week, losing to Cornell&#13;
6-3, defeating Beloit 5-4,&#13;
while tying for sixth place in&#13;
the extremely tough Whitewater&#13;
Invitational, raising their&#13;
dual record to 5-3.&#13;
On Sept. 24 the lady&#13;
Rangers traveled to Beloit to&#13;
take on first Cornell, and then&#13;
Beloit in a three-team meet.&#13;
As it turned out, the early&#13;
start in the morning and the&#13;
long trip to Beloit didn't exactly&#13;
help the Rangers.&#13;
Head coach Wendy Miller&#13;
definitely noticed this against&#13;
Cornell. "We didn't play very&#13;
well at all. I don't know if we&#13;
were asleep or what, but we&#13;
didn't play our best," she&#13;
commented.&#13;
As it turned out, the three&#13;
winners for the netters were&#13;
Amy Tropin at number three&#13;
singles, as she won 10-8 in a&#13;
nine game pro set; Kathy&#13;
Livesey at number six, 9-3;&#13;
and Ann Althoff-Tropin at&#13;
number one doubles, 10-8.&#13;
Things definitely got better&#13;
against Beloit as the Rangers&#13;
woke up to defeat them for&#13;
the first time ever. The awakening&#13;
suited Miller just fine.&#13;
"It was like a night and day&#13;
difference between the two&#13;
matches. We played muchmore&#13;
aggressive, and I was&#13;
very pleased with the win."&#13;
Winning for the Rangers in&#13;
pro sets were Stacey Stanich&#13;
9-5; Tropin 10-9, 7-0 in the tiebreaker;&#13;
Elizabeth Spalla 9-&#13;
4; and Livesey 9-7. In doubles,&#13;
the number one team of&#13;
Althoff-Tropin were the only&#13;
winners by a 9-2 score.&#13;
The lady Rangers spent a&#13;
beautiful Sept. 26 Saturday in&#13;
Whitewater in the 12-team invitational,&#13;
and finished very&#13;
respectably.&#13;
The doubles team of Althoff-&#13;
Tropin went all the way to&#13;
the semi-finals before losing&#13;
to the number one seed from&#13;
Whitewater, 3-6, 3-6. Earlier&#13;
in the day, the duo defeated&#13;
the number three seed from&#13;
Oshkosh, 5-7, 6-3, 6-3, and a&#13;
UW-Milwaukee team, 6-1, 6-0.&#13;
Coach Miller noted that&#13;
"Ann and Amy played very&#13;
well against one of the best&#13;
doubles teams in the state. I&#13;
feel that Ann and Amy can&#13;
hold their own in the state&#13;
playoffs."&#13;
The doubles team of Stanich-&#13;
Spalla lost to Oshkosh, 6-&#13;
7, 2-6, and beat Carthage, 6-2,&#13;
6-1, before bowing to St. Norbert,&#13;
4-6, 4-6. Coach Miller&#13;
stated, "Stacey and Beth lack&#13;
experience playing together,&#13;
but are starting to get smarter&#13;
together, too."&#13;
The doubles team of Live-&#13;
Tennis see page 14&#13;
Golfers stay consistent&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
The Parkside golf team has&#13;
been a model of consistency&#13;
so far this year.&#13;
On Sunday and Monday,&#13;
Sept. 20-21, the Rangers captured&#13;
their third straight top&#13;
five finish, this time at the&#13;
Mascountin Collegiate meet&#13;
in Berlin, WI.&#13;
Parkside took fifth place in&#13;
the meet, which Oshkosh won&#13;
by one stroke over Stout, with&#13;
Stevens Point third, Eau&#13;
Claire fourth and Whitewater&#13;
sixth. Fourteen teams competed&#13;
in the meet.&#13;
Scott Schuit led the Ranger&#13;
charge with a (77-79 )-l56,&#13;
good for a top ten finish individually,&#13;
with Dave Wente&#13;
second with (79-80)-159. The&#13;
other four team members&#13;
were bunched together as two&#13;
shot 165 and two shot 166.&#13;
Scott Brandt had 84-81, Jeff&#13;
Lewis has 87-78, Steve Gerber&#13;
had 84-82 and Steve Jerrick&#13;
has 86-80.&#13;
Team scores were Oshkosh&#13;
781, Stout 782, Stevens Point&#13;
792, Eau Claire 802, Parkside&#13;
808, Whitewater 812.&#13;
Dan Thomas (75-75) and&#13;
Craig Geerts (75-75) of Oshkosh&#13;
and Jason Zahradka (76-&#13;
74) of Stevens Point shared&#13;
medalist honors with 150&#13;
totals.&#13;
Kickers boot record&#13;
Help Wanted:&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
by Jason Caspers&#13;
After a convincing 3-1 victory&#13;
at Lawrence University on&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 23, the&#13;
Parkside soccer team traveled&#13;
to UW-Green Bay on&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 27, and dropped&#13;
a heartbreaker 4-2.&#13;
The Rangers powered their&#13;
way to a 3-1 win over Lawrence&#13;
to improve their record&#13;
to 8-1. They were led by Brian&#13;
O'Malley. Jim Chomko, and&#13;
Mike Riley who scored one&#13;
goal each.&#13;
Their record was dropped&#13;
to 8-2 after dropping a 4-2 decision&#13;
to Green Bay, despite&#13;
two Ranger goals by Jens&#13;
Hansen. Ranger coach Rick&#13;
Kilps was somewhat critical&#13;
of the way Green Bay scored&#13;
their four goals, coming on&#13;
two penalty kicks and two&#13;
INK FAR SIDE&#13;
free kicks.&#13;
"It's hard to handle when&#13;
all their goals were scored on&#13;
dead balls," Kilps stated in a&#13;
phone interview last Monday.&#13;
He then added, "It makes you&#13;
wonder how they've gone 74&#13;
and 20 at home. I'll have to&#13;
see how we come back after&#13;
this one."&#13;
Kilps also talked about a&#13;
tough game coming up for the&#13;
soccer team on Wed., Sept. 30&#13;
at home against the University&#13;
of Illinois-Chicago, which&#13;
will be televised. Results of&#13;
Wednesday's game will be In&#13;
the Ranger next week.&#13;
Other upcoming games include&#13;
an away game at Beloit&#13;
College, Oct. 3, and a home&#13;
game against Illinois Institute&#13;
of Technology, Sat., Oct. 10 at&#13;
1:30 p.m. which will be&#13;
Homecoming.&#13;
By GARY LARSON&#13;
$&#13;
lously low dream deal. Frank&#13;
7533.&#13;
(852-&#13;
WANTED FOR beverage delivery -aggressive&#13;
students looking for part-&#13;
Ume work. Full days only. You pick&#13;
the days. Must have good driving record.&#13;
Applications available from Student&#13;
Employment Office. C.J.W., Inc.&#13;
21l7-81st Street, Kenosha.&#13;
HOMEWORKERS WANTED! Top&#13;
pay! For more information write to:&#13;
G.I. 121 24th Ave., N.W. Suite 222, Norman.&#13;
Oklahoma 73069.&#13;
STUDENT8-EARN money part time&#13;
in your own home, up to $20 per hour.&#13;
Flexible hours, local company. Top&#13;
lending brand name pantyhose -all&#13;
sizes, styles, and colors. Call 694-6604.&#13;
GUITARIST OR keyboardist who&#13;
sings R&amp;B, blues, rock. Call Frank-&#13;
652-7533.&#13;
Work Wanted:&#13;
WORD PROCESSING - resumes,&#13;
papers, reports; student rates; Call&#13;
Debbie, 764-4641.&#13;
For Sale:&#13;
CHEMISTRY WARE. Will make&#13;
package deal. Ask for J.R. 694-4864.&#13;
GUITARS, LOTS of 'em. Kramers,&#13;
Gibsons, Guilds, Fenders, Epiphone,&#13;
&amp; etc. Call today to make your ridicu-&#13;
Personals:&#13;
OVERHEARD IN the Ranger office:&#13;
"Don't touch my sex."&#13;
L.P. ... THINKING of those things I&#13;
miss whenever you're not here! Sigh.&#13;
RYE • T here's no way out of the&#13;
shower. Contract!&#13;
I MISS Dianne, Michelle, Shawn, and&#13;
Tami! Help. I'm still alive mommy!&#13;
From Heather.&#13;
CHILD MOLESTING leaves permanent,&#13;
emotional scars. Thanks a lot -&#13;
Holly.&#13;
I'M ALIVE and I want my revenge -&#13;
From Heather Hobbie.&#13;
TO THE mafia (and you know who&#13;
you are), it's not just a game anymore.&#13;
This is war.&#13;
TO OFFICER Bupray - expect it&#13;
when you least expect it!&#13;
WHY DOES everyone want something?&#13;
Can't we just have Holly back?&#13;
I WOULDN'T even give a case and a&#13;
half for my own mother.&#13;
SKIP THAT. Mars needs new chicks!&#13;
RICK LUEHR is a hippy.&#13;
SEXUAL IDENTITY is a matter of&#13;
perception. Or at least good taste.&#13;
DEAR JIM, is it true that "good fencers&#13;
make good Neibaurs?"&#13;
UMAR, DON'T drink any alcohol. It&#13;
can be hazardous to your health.&#13;
SARAH, I love you. Saed.&#13;
USA, YOU are a very beautiful and&#13;
extremely nice person. I'm glad we&#13;
met. Nick.&#13;
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prices with Jason's&#13;
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• Free Taco Bar 9-11&#13;
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Free drinks for anyone&#13;
wearing a skirt from 9-&#13;
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FREE LIMO RIDES&#13;
Courtesy of KRM&#13;
Arend grapples with Russian lifestyle&#13;
by Terri DeRosier&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Parkside senior Ken Arend&#13;
recently went to Moscow to&#13;
^participate in Mockba '87.&#13;
(Mockba is Russian for Moscow.)&#13;
Arend went with a team of&#13;
hearing-impaired athletes&#13;
from all over the United&#13;
States. This same team went&#13;
to Mexico in 1985 for the Deaf&#13;
Olympic Games.&#13;
The team flew nine hours&#13;
from New York to Yugoslavia,&#13;
and when they arrived,&#13;
the team was informed they&#13;
had lost their seats on the&#13;
plane to Moscow.&#13;
After waiting a day and a&#13;
&gt;half, the team finally got on a&#13;
""plane and headed down the&#13;
runway. Before the plane&#13;
could get off the ground, it&#13;
turned around, and everyone&#13;
' on the plane had to go&#13;
through customs again, and&#13;
then they were allowed to&#13;
take off. Arend says he is still&#13;
not sure why the plane was&#13;
stopped, whether it was because&#13;
of all the Americans on&#13;
board, or if it was just mechanical&#13;
difficulties with the&#13;
plane.&#13;
When they finally arrived&#13;
in Moscow, they were a day&#13;
and a half late and there was&#13;
no one at the airport to meet&#13;
r them.&#13;
"Because we got there&#13;
after 8 at night," Arend said,&#13;
"we had to wait until morning&#13;
to get a ride. All through&#13;
out Russia there is no phone&#13;
communication after 8 p.m."&#13;
The team had to wait eight&#13;
hours in the Moscow airport&#13;
before the coach could make&#13;
arrangements to get them&#13;
picked up. "We really&#13;
couldn't sleep," Arend said.&#13;
Parkside wrestler Ken Arend showing his gold in Russia&#13;
"There were KGB agents&#13;
everywhere, particularly&#13;
around us."&#13;
The team was finally&#13;
picked up at the airport, and&#13;
they were taken directly to&#13;
the arena to wrestle.&#13;
"We were to weigh in right&#13;
away," Arend stated. "We&#13;
had nothing to eat, no sleep&#13;
for quite some time, and we&#13;
were just supposed to weigh&#13;
in and wrestle. A lot of us&#13;
were pretty upset."&#13;
"We had to open the ceremonies,"&#13;
Arend continued.&#13;
"The ceremony was really&#13;
nice. All the countries went&#13;
out with their flags, and stood&#13;
under their larger flag hanging&#13;
from the ceiling."&#13;
According to Arend the six&#13;
countries that took part in the&#13;
tournament were Russia, Bulgaria,&#13;
Romania, Yugoslavia,&#13;
Canada and the United&#13;
States.&#13;
After the flag ceremony,&#13;
three ladies came out dressed&#13;
in traditional Russian dress&#13;
and one of them carried&#13;
bread that tasted like a salted&#13;
pretzel. She went to every&#13;
country's flag carrier and&#13;
each one took a piece of the&#13;
bread and ate it.&#13;
"This was supposed to be a&#13;
symbol of unity and sharing,"&#13;
Arend said.&#13;
Arend wrestled both Greco-&#13;
Roman and Freestyle and reThe&#13;
opening week for the&#13;
Parkside Ranger baseball&#13;
team turned out to be very&#13;
successful as they swept&#13;
three doubleheaders from&#13;
Milwaukee teams.&#13;
After opening the season&#13;
with 7-3 and 12-7 victories&#13;
over Marquette, the Rangers&#13;
went up against MATC at&#13;
Milwaukee's Rainbow Field.&#13;
In game one, Joel Bumgarner&#13;
started on the mound and,&#13;
after giving up one run in the&#13;
first inning, was untouchable.&#13;
He struck out nine and&#13;
talked none in five innings,&#13;
giving up only four hits. He&#13;
was provided with all the offense&#13;
he needed in the fourth&#13;
when Parkside scored three&#13;
times. The rally was keyed&#13;
by a two run single from DH&#13;
Tim Moore. After scoring&#13;
once in the fifth, the Rangers&#13;
put the game away by scoring&#13;
seven times in the sixth.&#13;
In the inning, Brian Gauthier&#13;
lined a two run double and&#13;
Gary Fritsch followed with an&#13;
RBI triple to break the game&#13;
wide open. Final score: UWP&#13;
11, MATC 1.&#13;
In game two, the Rangers&#13;
struck early with first baseman&#13;
Jeff Reikowski's two run&#13;
triple, giving Parkside a two&#13;
run lead. It was short-lived,&#13;
however, because MATC&#13;
came up with two runs in&#13;
their half of the first to tie the&#13;
score. After answering MATC&#13;
with one run in the top of the&#13;
second, Parkside found themselves&#13;
trailing 5-3 when&#13;
MATC scored three times in&#13;
the second. The Ranger hitters&#13;
responded quickly&#13;
though, scoring three times in&#13;
the third with Gary Fritsch&#13;
singling in what turned out to&#13;
be the game winner with two&#13;
out. They then broke the&#13;
game open in the fourth,&#13;
sending ten men to the plate&#13;
and scoring five times. Freshman&#13;
Joe Rick recorded the&#13;
victory for the Rangers with&#13;
three strong innings of one-hit&#13;
ball. MATC did mount a rally&#13;
in the sixth against John&#13;
Hagen, another freshman&#13;
pitcher, but he settled down&#13;
to close the door on MATC.&#13;
The final score in the night&#13;
cap was 13-9.&#13;
Sunday, the Rangers played&#13;
at home for the first time,&#13;
taking on MSOE. Again,&#13;
Parkside fell behind early&#13;
when starter Rob Peiffer was&#13;
reached for one run in the&#13;
first. That run held up until&#13;
Baseball see page 16&#13;
ceived gold medals in-each&#13;
event.&#13;
Although the Americans did&#13;
very well in their individual&#13;
events, the team itself finished&#13;
with a silver medal,&#13;
coming in behind the Russian&#13;
team.&#13;
Before leaving Moscow,&#13;
Arend said the team spent&#13;
one day touring the city.&#13;
"We saw the Kremlin,&#13;
statues of Lenin, the Red&#13;
Square and the tomb of their&#13;
unknown soldier. We also saw&#13;
the point where Hitler was&#13;
stopped and Russia lost 20&#13;
million people.&#13;
"We were taken every -&#13;
vhere by KGB agents,"&#13;
Arend said. "We were not allowed&#13;
to go anywhere by ourselves.&#13;
We were told to stay&#13;
in the hotel, so we did."&#13;
"If you left the hotel you&#13;
were on your own," Arend recalled.&#13;
Arend said that once one of&#13;
the American athletes left the&#13;
hotel, and when he tried to&#13;
get back in he realized that&#13;
he had not taken his U.S.&#13;
identification with him.&#13;
"The guard at the door&#13;
wasn't going to let him in,"&#13;
Arend said. "She kept pushing&#13;
him back outside. Luckily&#13;
one of the KGB agents who&#13;
had been with us since we&#13;
had gotten there recognized&#13;
him, went over to the guard,&#13;
showed his badge and the athlete&#13;
was allowed back in.&#13;
"No one questions the actions&#13;
of the KGB over there,"&#13;
Arend stated. "While we were&#13;
shopping, the lines were so&#13;
long; and we only had a certain&#13;
amount of time, so the&#13;
KGB agent went to the front&#13;
of the line, showed his badge&#13;
and the clerk took care of us&#13;
right away."&#13;
Although Arend said he&#13;
thought the trip was very&#13;
educational, giving him a&#13;
chance to learn first-hand the&#13;
history of Russia, he has no&#13;
desire to go back.&#13;
"I really noticed my loss of&#13;
freedom over there," Arend&#13;
said. "We had people come&#13;
up to us to help them get out&#13;
of Russia. Our coach warned&#13;
us that things like that might&#13;
happen. He told us that we&#13;
just had to walk away because&#13;
if we interfered, we&#13;
might not come home ourselves.&#13;
"It was really scary,"&#13;
Arend said. "I just never&#13;
want to go back. I was so&#13;
happy to be back in the&#13;
United States. When I flew&#13;
into Milwaukee, it was really&#13;
good to see Lake Michigan&#13;
again!''&#13;
Arend is now trying to raise&#13;
money to sponsor another trip&#13;
with the same team. He will&#13;
be going to New Zealand in&#13;
December of 1989. He needs&#13;
to raise four thousand dollars,&#13;
and he will go to major companies&#13;
in the area, but he will&#13;
also rely on the support of&#13;
family and friends.&#13;
He feels that with his experience&#13;
in these competitions,&#13;
and with his winning record&#13;
he stands a good chance in&#13;
raising the money he needs.&#13;
"Right now I'm the best in&#13;
the United States of the hearing-&#13;
impaired athletes," Arend&#13;
said, "and I hope to carry&#13;
that over to New Zealand."&#13;
Arend is not wrestling with&#13;
the Parkside team this&#13;
semester.&#13;
"I hope to wrestle in open&#13;
tournaments through Parkside,"&#13;
Arend said, "and I&#13;
want to help out Coach Koch&#13;
in any way I can."&#13;
Rangers sweep doubleheaders&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
Sat., Oct. 3 - At Beloit College, 5 p.m.&#13;
VOLLEYBALL&#13;
Fri. and Sat., Oct. 2-3 - At the UW-Milwaukee Tournament;&#13;
play begins at 5 p.m. Fri., resumes at 9 a.m. Sat.&#13;
Mon., Oct. 5 - At UW-Madison, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
WOMEN'S TENNIS&#13;
Sat., Oct. 3 - At UW-Oshkosh, 10 a.m.&#13;
Tues., Oct. 6 - Home vs. Carroll College, 3 p.m.&#13;
At Wed., Oct. 7 - Concordia (111.) College, Lake Forest, 3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
Sat., Oct. 3 - At the Golden Gopher Invitational, Minneapolis,&#13;
11 a.m.&#13;
GOLF&#13;
Fri. and Sat., Oct. 2-3 - Parkside hosts the Ranger Invitational;&#13;
play begins at 9 a.m.&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
men?"13 S&amp;t' °Ct" 2 3 " At the UI"Chicag° Circle Tourna-&#13;
Sun., Oct. 4 - Home vs. Marquette, noon.</text>
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              <text>September 24f 1987 University off Wisconsin-Parkside Vol.&#13;
Freedom of the press vital to unveiling the truth&#13;
by Steven R. Picazo&#13;
The ringing of a ceremonial&#13;
bell began the "Freedom of&#13;
the Press: Are There Limits?&#13;
" program Thursday, Sept. 17&#13;
in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre at 3 p.m. This was to&#13;
signify the exact moment, 200&#13;
years ago, that the signing of&#13;
the Constitution took place.&#13;
Dwayne G. Olsen, chairperson&#13;
of the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
Bicentennial Committee and&#13;
chair of the teacher education&#13;
department at Parkside,&#13;
opened the program with that&#13;
ringing and then turned the&#13;
floor over to Chancellor&#13;
Sheila Kaplan, who was the&#13;
moderator.&#13;
The four panelists were&#13;
Thomas Reeves, professor of&#13;
history, Charles Sykes, former&#13;
editor, Milwaukee Magazine;&#13;
Dwight Teeter Jr., professor&#13;
of journalism, UW-Milwaukee;&#13;
and Robert Wills,&#13;
editor, Milwaukee Sentinel.&#13;
Kaplan, in her opening&#13;
comments, stated that the&#13;
purpose of the program was&#13;
to take one aspect of the Constitution&#13;
and focus on what it&#13;
means in everyday life. She&#13;
also stated that the exercise&#13;
of freedom of the press has&#13;
never been more robust in&#13;
this country, which is both&#13;
thrilling and threatening.&#13;
A greater concentration of&#13;
ownership of the media was&#13;
also cited by Kaplan, as being&#13;
one of the contributing factors&#13;
to why it is being pulled&#13;
away from its primary goal&#13;
of informing and educating&#13;
the public. Kaplan introduced&#13;
the panelists and invited&#13;
them to make their opening&#13;
comments after which she&#13;
moderated an exchange between&#13;
them and the audience.&#13;
Teeter spoke first and commented&#13;
on his dealings with&#13;
other journalists. He said a&#13;
Polish journalist pointed out&#13;
to him that not only did we&#13;
have freedom of speech but&#13;
freedom after speech. This is&#13;
an important distinction he&#13;
feels we too often take for&#13;
granted.&#13;
He pointed out that most&#13;
media organizations in this&#13;
country do their best to be&#13;
fair, but part of the price that&#13;
we pay for living in such a&#13;
free society is the risk that&#13;
we take in stepping into the&#13;
public's eye and perhaps getting&#13;
"exposed". Teeter gave&#13;
Gary Hart's situation as an&#13;
example. And although the&#13;
press has been known to go&#13;
too far, what would our society&#13;
be like if we had nobody&#13;
there to watch over the actions&#13;
of our national leaders?&#13;
Teeter answered his own&#13;
question by stating, "there&#13;
are numerous countries, in&#13;
the world, where the politicians&#13;
have seized absolute&#13;
power and muzzled the press,&#13;
while there is no country in&#13;
the world where the press has&#13;
seized absolute power and&#13;
muzzled the politicians."&#13;
The next speaker was&#13;
Reeves. The main emphasis&#13;
of his presentation was politics&#13;
and the press. He also&#13;
touched upon the Gary Hart&#13;
issue and how many journalists&#13;
were degraded by the&#13;
4 4 sensationalist" way the&#13;
whole issue was handled.&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Jewish New Year page 3&#13;
"Well Day" Scheduled page 5&#13;
"Bad" evaluation page 6&#13;
Learning Assistance page 8&#13;
Danish soccer players page 15&#13;
Prof. Tom Reeves&#13;
Reeves contrasted this view&#13;
with the view that the character&#13;
of the politician was paramount,&#13;
because, if his wife&#13;
can't trust him, why should&#13;
the public be expected to&#13;
trust him with the security of&#13;
the nation?&#13;
Reeves went on to examine&#13;
the image of the late President&#13;
John F. Kennedy. He&#13;
had nothing but praise for the&#13;
journalists who were the first&#13;
group of people to begin to&#13;
examine the true Kennedy&#13;
life. "They (journalists) are&#13;
responsible for much valuable&#13;
research that we now depend&#13;
upon when looking into&#13;
the life of Kennedy," he said.&#13;
It wasn't just the area of&#13;
sexual activity that was exposed&#13;
by these journalists,&#13;
but physical stature, mental&#13;
capabilities, and book production&#13;
were all found to be&#13;
credits or abilities he did not&#13;
have or were fabricated in his&#13;
name.&#13;
Reeves tied his comments&#13;
together by asking the'question:&#13;
How far should the&#13;
press be allowed to go? It&#13;
was his belief that there&#13;
should be no limit to the&#13;
press, that the truth should be&#13;
told, and if people don't want&#13;
to know the truth, they won't&#13;
buy the books. If there isn't&#13;
the truth being uncovered,&#13;
then we have somebody's fiction&#13;
being taken as truth.&#13;
To conclude his remarks,&#13;
Reeves stated, "The quality&#13;
of the evidence is all important&#13;
and it is always the duty&#13;
of the press to bring forth&#13;
that truth unaffected by fear&#13;
or ideology.&#13;
The third, and most passionate&#13;
of the speakers,&#13;
Sykes, opened by commenting&#13;
on his dismissal from Milwaukee&#13;
Magazine by saying&#13;
that he entered the job the&#13;
way he left it, "fired with enthusiasm."&#13;
The direction that Sykes&#13;
took his presentation was toward&#13;
an attack against the&#13;
organized media coverage&#13;
machine. He feels that the&#13;
newspapers of America are&#13;
fast moving out of the hands&#13;
of professional journalists&#13;
and into the hands of men&#13;
who are something else.&#13;
4'Too often the personal&#13;
feelings of a publisher or&#13;
board member dictate what&#13;
does or doesn't appear in&#13;
print or on the air." Sykes&#13;
said. "And the existence of a&#13;
factual newspaperman filled&#13;
with professional integrity is&#13;
Homecoming queen&#13;
and king sought&#13;
Homecoming at Parkside&#13;
will be held Oct. 8-11. The&#13;
Homecoming Committee is&#13;
planning a variety of events,&#13;
but the most important to&#13;
most students is the selection&#13;
of the Homecoming king and&#13;
queen.&#13;
Nominations for the king&#13;
and queen will be accepted in&#13;
the Student Life office, Union&#13;
209, beginning immediately.&#13;
Any student may be nominated&#13;
for these positions. In&#13;
the past, candidates were&#13;
nominated by clubs and organizations,&#13;
but this year the&#13;
committee has opened the&#13;
nominations up to the entire&#13;
campus. -&#13;
ro concourse from Monday,&#13;
Oct. 5 until Thursday, Oct. 8&#13;
at 5 p.m. The king and queen&#13;
will be crowned in a ceremony&#13;
on Thursday evening at 7&#13;
p.m. in the Union cinema.&#13;
Voting will be done by having&#13;
each student show a current&#13;
ID card and the name will be&#13;
crossed off a master list. This&#13;
way each student will have&#13;
only one vote in each category.&#13;
Voting for the candidates&#13;
will take place on the Molina-&#13;
The Ranger will take photographs&#13;
of each candidate&#13;
which will be on display at&#13;
the voting place.&#13;
Any questions concerning&#13;
Homecoming should be directed&#13;
to Diane Welsh, coordinator&#13;
of student activities,&#13;
Union 209.&#13;
being replaced by a central&#13;
figure in the background, ignorant&#13;
to newspaper traditions,&#13;
and heavily engaged in&#13;
enterprises that have a way&#13;
of colliding partially with&#13;
what remain in the newspaper&#13;
ideals.&#13;
Sykes went over to the Milwaukee&#13;
Magazine, in 1981,&#13;
after being a reporter for the&#13;
Milwaukee Journal. This was&#13;
to be an experiment to see if&#13;
the usual image of a magazine,&#13;
lighter than a newspaper,&#13;
could be broken. Sykes&#13;
wanted a tough, independent,&#13;
hardhitting product that was&#13;
still entertaining.&#13;
In 1983 the Milwaukee Magazine&#13;
was purchased by&#13;
Quadgraphics (a printing&#13;
company). At that time he&#13;
and the magazine were guaranteed&#13;
their independence.&#13;
A story was put together&#13;
last year tMt looked Into the&#13;
Medical College of Wisconsin.&#13;
It was a long and very detailed&#13;
piece that looked into&#13;
whether we needed a second&#13;
medical college in Wisconsin.&#13;
As it turned out, a board of&#13;
directors member, who was&#13;
involved in fund raising for&#13;
the new medical college, was&#13;
the president of the parent&#13;
company who owned the&#13;
magazine.&#13;
Sykes was fired for wanting&#13;
to run the story and then it&#13;
was pulled. He was told during&#13;
his final minutes as editor&#13;
that editorial independence is&#13;
what the owner says it is, and&#13;
that freedom of the press belongs&#13;
to the man who owns&#13;
the press.&#13;
He felt that the limits that&#13;
exist in American journalism&#13;
are not affected from the outside&#13;
but from within. This&#13;
pressure is coming from the&#13;
business departments and it&#13;
is all too real a reminder that&#13;
these bodies not only inform&#13;
but must make money to stay&#13;
alive.&#13;
Wills was the last speaker&#13;
of the program. Wills, editor&#13;
of the Milwaukee Sentinel,&#13;
sees the essence of American&#13;
democracy as being wrapped&#13;
up in the ability of the press&#13;
to remain free and unaffected&#13;
by big business. "In the end,&#13;
freedom of the press is everybody's&#13;
freedom," Wills said.&#13;
"We have no rights greater&#13;
than the rights of the public,"&#13;
he said, "and if the press&#13;
didn't tell us, who would?"&#13;
Wills has more confidence&#13;
in the business end of producing&#13;
a newspaper and that&#13;
men and women of high professional&#13;
standards will&#13;
always be on the lookout for&#13;
outside influences that could&#13;
Bicentennial see page 5&#13;
perspectives&#13;
Political science helps&#13;
in drawing cartoons&#13;
by Jenny Can-&#13;
Editor&#13;
The doodling of a child can&#13;
sometimes become the career&#13;
of an adult. As a child, Paul&#13;
Berge drew cartoons, and&#13;
since Sept. 22, 1976, Berge, 28,&#13;
has been drawing cartoons&#13;
for publication in the Ranger.&#13;
Surprisingly, Berge did not&#13;
receive his Bachelors degree&#13;
in art but political science.&#13;
"I attended college at St.&#13;
Olaf in Minnesota and began&#13;
as an English major, but&#13;
after a few classes, I discovered&#13;
that English was not&#13;
meant to be my major,"&#13;
Berge recalled. He changed&#13;
his major to political science&#13;
and feels that knowing a lot&#13;
about political history has&#13;
helped with the ideas for his&#13;
work.&#13;
Berge has taken a few art&#13;
classes, but claims that his&#13;
ideas of what was considered&#13;
good art work and the ideas&#13;
of the professors he studies&#13;
with were often far apart.&#13;
Berge recalled a logo contest&#13;
he entered while a student at&#13;
St. Olaf. He entered the&#13;
competition in conjunction&#13;
with an art class he was taking&#13;
at the time. He designed&#13;
the logo for the Feminist&#13;
Awareness Caucus on the St.&#13;
Olaf campus. His logo was&#13;
chosen; he received the $10&#13;
prize money, but netted a&#13;
"C" in the class. He is quick&#13;
to point out that Bill Mauldin,&#13;
cartoonist for the Chicago&#13;
Sun-Times, has never had an&#13;
art class.&#13;
Currently working at a&#13;
graphic arts company in Racine,&#13;
Berge would like to be a&#13;
world famous cartoonist some&#13;
day. "I don't know how&#13;
realistic that is," he chuckled,&#13;
"but I would like to get&#13;
into a larger market." His&#13;
work is also published by the&#13;
Racine Journal Times and a&#13;
monthly environmental publication&#13;
located In northern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
youp views&#13;
2 Thursday, September 24, 1987 RANGER&#13;
STOP ME IF YOU'VE HEARD THIS..."&#13;
Concern, corrections and gratitude offered&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On behalf of the Kenosha-&#13;
Racine Bicentennial Committee,&#13;
I would like to take this&#13;
means of thanking the UWParkside&#13;
students, faculty&#13;
and staff who attended the&#13;
Thursday, September 17,&#13;
1987, forum on "Freedom of&#13;
the Press: Are There Limits?&#13;
" The major issues and the&#13;
variety of views on this important&#13;
constitutional question&#13;
were quite apparent&#13;
through the presentations of&#13;
Tom Reeves, professor of history,&#13;
UW-Parkside; Dwight&#13;
Teeter, professor of journalism,&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, Charles&#13;
Sykes, former editor of Milwaukee&#13;
Magazine, and Robert&#13;
Wills, editor of the Milwaukee&#13;
Sentinel.&#13;
Thanks are also due to&#13;
Chancellor Kaplan for moderating&#13;
the discussion and hosting&#13;
our speakers and the&#13;
Bicentennial Committee after&#13;
the program. In addition,&#13;
many other UW-Parkside faculty&#13;
and staff contributed to&#13;
the success of the program.&#13;
The display in the library, together&#13;
with the opportunity to&#13;
"sign" the Constitution, is&#13;
only one example of that support.&#13;
This celebration and&#13;
program could not have taken&#13;
place without your cooperation.&#13;
Please be aware that the&#13;
Bicentennial celebration extends&#13;
through 1991 with the&#13;
addition of the Bill of Rights&#13;
to the U.S. Constitution. I&#13;
would urge all campus groups&#13;
to consider sponsoring programs&#13;
celebrating various&#13;
aspects of the Constitution in&#13;
these coming four years.&#13;
There was on omission&#13;
from our printed program.&#13;
Mrs. Gwen Wortock, president&#13;
of the Friends of the&#13;
UW-Parkside Library, most&#13;
ably represented that organization&#13;
and contributed significantly&#13;
to the activities of the&#13;
Bicentennial Committee. I&#13;
apologize to her and the&#13;
Friends that their important&#13;
contribution was overlooked&#13;
in that way.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Dwayne G. Olsen, Chair&#13;
Kenosha-Racine Bicentennial&#13;
Committee and Associate&#13;
Professor of Education&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This letter is in regard to&#13;
the recently celebrated National&#13;
Hispanic Heritage&#13;
Week. As chairman, I would&#13;
like to take this opportunity&#13;
to thank all the members of&#13;
the planning committee. I&#13;
would like to thank committee&#13;
members from the Racine&#13;
and Kenosha communities:&#13;
Armando Bras, Rafe Gonzales,&#13;
Vanda Kinderman, Arturo&#13;
Martinez and Gary&#13;
Vargas.&#13;
I would like to thank members&#13;
of Parkside faculty for&#13;
their support. Faculty members&#13;
and supporters of committee&#13;
activities were: Gerald&#13;
Greenfield and Kenneth&#13;
Hoover. Also, a special&#13;
thanks should go to Gerald&#13;
Greenfield and The International&#13;
Studies Department for&#13;
their co-sponsering and involvement&#13;
in Hispanic Heritage&#13;
Week activities.&#13;
I would like to thank the&#13;
many Parkside staff who&#13;
helped in the planning of the&#13;
activities. Staff members on&#13;
the committee were: Walter&#13;
Gutierrez, Lloyd Mueller,&#13;
Pam Smith and Diane Welsh.&#13;
I would like to thank Bill&#13;
Robbins of Parkside Public&#13;
Information for again assisting&#13;
the committee in publicizing&#13;
events in local media and&#13;
for his help in getting media&#13;
coverage of our events. I&#13;
would also like to thank the&#13;
Parkside Ranger for their&#13;
publicity of the events and&#13;
the fine articles on the visit&#13;
by Ness Flores and the business&#13;
panel.&#13;
I would like to thank all of&#13;
the presenters for .their participation&#13;
and contribution to&#13;
making this year's event one&#13;
of the finest yet. I would like&#13;
to thank Parkside's Food&#13;
Services for their cooperation&#13;
with our events and for their&#13;
support of National Hispanic&#13;
Heritage Week by providing&#13;
Hispanic entrees in our cafeteria.&#13;
Jesus R. Alvarado&#13;
Chairman, national&#13;
Hispanic Heritage Week&#13;
Planning Committee, 1987&#13;
To Ranger Editor&#13;
In your September 17 edition&#13;
of "Our View," you bemoaned&#13;
the fact that the library&#13;
was closing at 9 p.m.&#13;
In a separate story, we&#13;
learned about the new and&#13;
improved rec center.&#13;
It appears that the library&#13;
hours are reduced due to&#13;
budget constraints, yet there&#13;
is enough money to redecorate&#13;
the rec center into Wis-&#13;
Letters&#13;
Jenny Carr Editor&#13;
Kelly McKissick News Editor&#13;
Amy H. Ritter News Editor&#13;
Jim Neibaur.. Features/Entertainment Editor&#13;
Terri DeRosier Asst. Features Editor&#13;
Bernie Doll Asst. Entertainment Editor&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Randy LeCount Sports Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy Photo Editor&#13;
Ken McCray Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
Jon Hearron Ad Manager&#13;
Michael J. Rohl Distribution Manager&#13;
Robb Luehr Copy Editor&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Don Harmeyer Business Manager&#13;
Kathy Clapp-Harmeyer... Asst. Business Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
cy and content.Vis published eve^Thursrtal^arkside:wt)0 Me solely responsible for its editorial polidays.&#13;
Muunsnea every Thursday during the academic year except over breaks and holi-&#13;
I ettprc tn tha oH...:u L._&#13;
— — J V U I U I V U I W&#13;
letters must*be signedT'wittfa^le^one^umh?^ Wff double-spaced and 350 words or less . Mil&#13;
held upon request number included for verification purposes Names will be withf&#13;
a t t r ™ 5 , h e " 8 h t wr e f u s e t h o s e w h i c h a r e f a l s e a n d f o , d e -&#13;
Jason Caspers, Dan Chiapetta, John Kehoe, George Koenig.&#13;
Jeff Lemmermann, Christina Lojeski. Amy Ludwig. Rick Luehr.&#13;
Dawn Mainland, Doug McEvoy, Debbie Michna, Patti Nitz.&#13;
Nicole Pacione, Steven Picazo, Maria Rintz. Mark Shilhavy,&#13;
Wendy Sorenson. Jeff Sta nich, Jenny Walter, Tyson Wilda.&#13;
Thursday. f°f 3" 'etterS' and classif|ed ads, is Monday at 10 a.m. for publication&#13;
nosha W?§l^?eleph^^ Box 2000, Ke-&#13;
•ng). 2287 (Editorial) or 414/553-2295 (Advertis-&#13;
Mtmb*' of ikt&#13;
associareo&#13;
coiiecare&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 24, 1987 3&#13;
Ye O/de Sweet Tooth&#13;
The sweet shop reopened on Monday in the old Campus Ambassadors office to tempt&#13;
passing students.&#13;
Happy New Year&#13;
Jews celebrate holy holiday by Amy H. Hitter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
A large group of people&#13;
across the world are celebrating&#13;
a New Year today.&#13;
Members of the Jewish&#13;
faith Thursday began obser&#13;
vance of a ten-day period of&#13;
repentance and resolutions,&#13;
starting with Ftosh Hashanah,&#13;
the Jewish New Year.&#13;
Rosh Hashanah, also known&#13;
as the Day of Judgment and&#13;
the Day of Remembrance,&#13;
has been regarded as a day of&#13;
reflection and repentance&#13;
since early times, according&#13;
to A Book of Jewish Concepts,&#13;
printed by the Hebrew Publishing&#13;
Company, New York.&#13;
Solemnity characterizes&#13;
Rosh Hashanah and Yom&#13;
Kippur, the tenth day of the&#13;
new year (Oct. 3), and the&#13;
two days are called Days of&#13;
Awe, as men and women&#13;
stand in divine judgement.&#13;
Rosh Hashanah traditionally&#13;
marks the creation of the&#13;
world, and coincides with several&#13;
important events in Israel's&#13;
history.&#13;
All members of the human&#13;
race on this day, according to&#13;
Jewish faith, must give strict&#13;
account of the deeds committed&#13;
during the year. Mercy is&#13;
received through the kind&#13;
acts of ancestors remembered.&#13;
A call for repentance is&#13;
symbolized through the blowing&#13;
of a special animal horn&#13;
called a shofar.&#13;
The symbolic casting of&#13;
sins into running water is&#13;
symbolized by tossing bread&#13;
crumbs into a stream.&#13;
Petitions for a sweet year&#13;
are symbolically made&#13;
through the use of honey in&#13;
foods and the avoidance of&#13;
sour and pickled food.&#13;
Custom dictates that Jews&#13;
should not appear somber&#13;
during these holy days, buy&#13;
joyous, wearing cheerful&#13;
white clothes.&#13;
Yom Kippur, the Day of&#13;
Atonement, is the climax of&#13;
the 10-day period of repentance.&#13;
Emphasis is on reflection,&#13;
inspiration, and the optimistic&#13;
view that is possible for people&#13;
to improve their characters.&#13;
During this time, Jews&#13;
focus on ethical conscience,&#13;
moral responsibility, self-examination&#13;
and spiritual regeneration.&#13;
Cheerful confidence that&#13;
they have been forgiven is the&#13;
result of repentance and&#13;
atonement.&#13;
On Yom Kippur, confessions&#13;
of sin are recited. Forgiveness&#13;
is offered, but only if&#13;
attempts are made to repair&#13;
injuries inflicted on others.&#13;
Also, those who ask for forgiveness&#13;
are to be forgiven&#13;
wholeheartedly.&#13;
Fasting serves as self-denial&#13;
and a day of rest. Atonement&#13;
prayers recited through&#13;
the day start with an emphasis&#13;
on guilt and gradually&#13;
move to confidence in God's&#13;
love and mercy.&#13;
Yom Kippur also coincides&#13;
with important events in Jewish&#13;
history. It is the day&#13;
Moses descended from Mount&#13;
Sinai with the second set of&#13;
tablets of the Ten Commandments&#13;
and proclaimed God's&#13;
forgiveness of the sin of the&#13;
golden calf.&#13;
"These are the highest holy&#13;
days for observant Jews,"&#13;
said Leon Applebaum, a&#13;
Parkside economics professor&#13;
and member of Beth Israel&#13;
Sinai Congregation, Racine.&#13;
Some Jewish professors cancel&#13;
classes on these days, but&#13;
Applebaum, on sabbatical&#13;
this semester, has none to&#13;
cancel. He has cancelled&#13;
classes in observance of these&#13;
holidays in previous years.&#13;
This year, he said, "I know&#13;
where I'll be, I'll be in temple."&#13;
Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz, assistant&#13;
professor in communication,&#13;
describes herself as a&#13;
reform Jew. Reform Jews,&#13;
she said, do not keep many&#13;
traditions, viewing them as&#13;
outdated. Many traditions regarding&#13;
food were beneficial&#13;
for health reasons, but are no&#13;
longer applicable.&#13;
The other two classifications&#13;
are orthodox, who follow&#13;
all traditions completely, and&#13;
conservative, who follow&#13;
many but not all. she said.&#13;
see Holiday page 10&#13;
REMEMBER&#13;
SUPPORT&#13;
OUR&#13;
ADVERTISERS&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Report urges child care changes&#13;
A group of corporate leaders called for increased public&#13;
investment in the health and education of kids after seeing&#13;
a report. "Children in Need: Investment Strategies&#13;
for the Educationally Disabled," reported the Wisconsin&#13;
State Journal.&#13;
The 87-page report was read by the Committee for Ecomonic&#13;
Development, based in New York. They recommend&#13;
increased investment in prenatal care for pregnant&#13;
teenagers, instruction in parenthood, better child care&#13;
programs and quality pre-school programs for disadvantaged&#13;
youngsters.&#13;
The report stated that the U.S. is creating "a permanent&#13;
underclass of young people" who, because they lack&#13;
basic literary skills and work habits, can't hold jobs.&#13;
It warns that the poverty and ignorance could threaten&#13;
the U.S.'s competitive global stance in the future by&#13;
creating a shortage of qualified workers.&#13;
The report suggested that the business community become&#13;
a "driving force" for implementing these programs,&#13;
but also said that the federal government "needs to re-affirm&#13;
its longstanding commitment to ensuring the disadvantaged&#13;
access to quality education."&#13;
Center school enrollment up&#13;
As four-year universities implement enrolled restrictions,&#13;
an enrollment boom is hitting two-year campuses.&#13;
If this continues, the two-year centers could be forced to&#13;
cap enrollments as well, reported the Oshkosh Northwestern.&#13;
UW system Chancellor Steven Portch said a UW System&#13;
enrollment management plan directed by the Board of&#13;
Regents will allow some campuses to increase in size as&#13;
others need to limit enrollment.&#13;
He explained that as more four-year institutions such as&#13;
Oshkosh and Green Bay cap their enrollments, students&#13;
are looking to the centers for their freshman and sophomore&#13;
education. If enrollment caps are eventually needed&#13;
at the centers as well, Portch said they would be based on&#13;
academic qualifications.&#13;
Minority figures up in Madision&#13;
Minority freshman enrollment has increased at Madison&#13;
this year, reported the Wisconsin State Journal.&#13;
Black enrollment is up 65 percent, American Indian is&#13;
up 82 percent, and Hispanic enrollment has increased 27&#13;
percent from last year.&#13;
School officials hope that this will end a seven-year decline&#13;
of minority enrollment, especially among black students&#13;
that has occured over the last seven years.&#13;
Associate admissions directors couldn't say for sure&#13;
why the numbers have increased, but it could be due in&#13;
part to the increased use of minority alumni as informal&#13;
recruiters and Madison personally contacting minority&#13;
students who apply for admission.&#13;
20° DISCOUNT&#13;
Clip &amp; Save This Ad&#13;
To all Parkside students and faculty&#13;
members only, on all merchandise in&#13;
our store. This ad is valid for as long&#13;
as you attend Parkside. I.D. required.&#13;
Wisconsin's Largest Jeweler&#13;
Misson Village (across from Pershing Plaza on Hwy. 50)&#13;
4017-75th St.&#13;
697-0884&#13;
Open Daily 9:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m.&#13;
Sundays 12:00-4:30 p.m.&#13;
4 Thursday, September 24, 1987&#13;
Craft to speak at Accent on Women program&#13;
wh° made Ur£e To Merge"; presentaranger&#13;
Christine Craft, who made&#13;
national headlines when she&#13;
filed a sex-discrimination suit&#13;
against the owners of a television&#13;
station who removed her&#13;
from her news anchor job because&#13;
she was "too old, too&#13;
unattractive, and not sufficiently&#13;
deferential to men,"&#13;
will be a keynote speaker at&#13;
this year's Accent on Women&#13;
program at Parkside.&#13;
The other keynote speaker&#13;
will be Lynn Cutler, vice&#13;
chairperson of the National&#13;
Democratic Committee.&#13;
For the first time, Accent&#13;
on Women will be held during&#13;
the fall semester, not the&#13;
spring semester. It will be&#13;
from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday, October 24. Cost is&#13;
$25 for the general public, $20&#13;
for all students with appropriate&#13;
identification.&#13;
To register or obtain more&#13;
information call 553-2312.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
the keynote addresses&#13;
(Craft's is at 9:30 a.m., Cutler's&#13;
is at 1:30 p.m., both in&#13;
the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater), each followed by a&#13;
discussion; a presentation&#13;
titled "Women in Song: The&#13;
Urge presentation&#13;
of the Accent on Women&#13;
Awards in six areas of&#13;
achievement; and breakfast&#13;
and lunch.&#13;
In 1981, Craft, 42, who is&#13;
currently news director and&#13;
co-anchor at KRBK-TV in&#13;
Sacramento, California, was&#13;
removed from her position as&#13;
news anchor at TV station&#13;
KMBC in Kansas City, Mo.,&#13;
she said. At that time the station&#13;
was owned by Metromedia,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Metromedia, executives&#13;
cited research that claimed&#13;
"t?0 old' too unattractive&#13;
and not sufficiently&#13;
deferential to men" as reasons&#13;
for pulling her from the&#13;
anchor job, Craft said.&#13;
Ironically, Craft said, four&#13;
days later the station's ratings&#13;
showed it had moved&#13;
from number two in local&#13;
news to number one for the&#13;
first time in three years.&#13;
Craft left the station and&#13;
filed a $500,000 lawsuit&#13;
against Metromedia, charging&#13;
the company with sex disUniversity&#13;
of Wisconsin&#13;
Platteviile&#13;
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And learn your way around the world&#13;
"If you have built castles in the air, now put the&#13;
foundations under them." „cnry David Thore.u&#13;
Study in London for $3675 per semester. Includes air fare,&#13;
resident tuition, field trips, family stay with meals.&#13;
Study in Seville, Spain, for $2725 per semester. Includes resident&#13;
tuition, field trips, family stay with meals. No foreign language&#13;
profiency required.&#13;
Semester programs also in France and Mexico.&#13;
For further information, write or call:&#13;
Institute for Study Abroad Programs&#13;
308 Warner Hall&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Platteville&#13;
1 University Plaza&#13;
Platteviile, Wisconsin 53818-3099&#13;
608-342-1726&#13;
crimination, fraud and violation&#13;
of the Equal Pay Act.&#13;
Craft said she won a jury&#13;
trial in the federal district&#13;
court of Kansas City in 1983.&#13;
But she said the judge who&#13;
presided at the trial threw out&#13;
the jury's decision, saying&#13;
there had been to much publicity&#13;
during the trial and the&#13;
jurors had not been sequestered.&#13;
A second trial, in 1984 in Joplin,&#13;
Mo., featured a sequestered&#13;
jury and the same&#13;
judge, Craft said. That jury&#13;
also decided in Craft's favor.&#13;
But federal appeals court&#13;
overturned that jury's decision,&#13;
saying the jurors were&#13;
"unreasonable" in arriving at&#13;
their decision.&#13;
Craft then filed her case&#13;
with the U.S. Supreme Court,&#13;
which in 1986 re fused to hear&#13;
it. (Justice Sandra Day&#13;
O'Connor was the lone member&#13;
of the court voting in&#13;
favor of hearing Craft's&#13;
case.)&#13;
Craft said that although she&#13;
technicality had lost the case,&#13;
she achieved moral victories&#13;
in the two jury trials. She&#13;
said her case transcended the&#13;
issue of sex discrimination&#13;
and illustrated an erosion of&#13;
the right of citizens to trial by&#13;
jury, which is guaranteed by&#13;
the Seventh Amendment of&#13;
the Constitution.&#13;
Craft said research by a&#13;
team of Yale University law&#13;
students showed that in 1984&#13;
nearly 50 percent of jury decisions&#13;
in the U.S. were overturned&#13;
by federal judges, and&#13;
of that figure, 70 percent&#13;
were decided in favor of corporate&#13;
interests.&#13;
Craft's paperback book,&#13;
"An Anchorwoman's Story,"&#13;
was awarded the Rhodora&#13;
Book Prize by the Center for&#13;
Research on Women at Stanford&#13;
University. Craft has updated&#13;
the book and it will be&#13;
re-issued in hardback under&#13;
_ - § the title, "Too Old, TA ouuo Uuunaavt*- miicx lud.&#13;
Education students mourn friend&#13;
tractive and Not Sufficiently&#13;
Deferential to Men.' •&#13;
Lynn Cutler holds bachelor's&#13;
and master's degrees&#13;
from Northern Iowa University.&#13;
As vice chairperson of&#13;
the National Democratic&#13;
Committee she is the chief&#13;
liaison between the party and&#13;
Democratic elected officials&#13;
at the city and county levels&#13;
throughout the nation.&#13;
Her career began in 1974&#13;
when she was elected the first&#13;
woman supervisor of Black&#13;
Hawk County, Iowa. Since&#13;
then Cutler has been active&#13;
on local, state and national&#13;
levels in the Democratic&#13;
Party, particularly on issues&#13;
of concern to women.&#13;
In 1977 President Jimmy&#13;
Carter appointed Cutler to the&#13;
U.S. Advisory Commission on&#13;
Intergovernmental Relations&#13;
and as its vice chair in 1978.&#13;
The commission was created&#13;
to study ways the federal government&#13;
could operate more&#13;
effectively.&#13;
In 1984 she was named one&#13;
of the Outstanding Women in&#13;
America.&#13;
"Pete" Jansta, a tall,&#13;
somewhat stocky Parkside&#13;
student who wore wirerimmed&#13;
glasses, died unexpectedly&#13;
last Wednesday of a&#13;
heart attack. He was only 46.&#13;
A main figure in most education&#13;
classes, he would gently&#13;
joke with everyone he encountered.&#13;
He was a quiet&#13;
and gentle man, too, and&#13;
most people felt right at&#13;
home with him. Jansta was&#13;
looking forward to being a&#13;
teacher and was close to&#13;
being certified at the time of&#13;
his death.&#13;
A resident of Racine, Jansta&#13;
was a member and past&#13;
financial secretary of the Racine&#13;
Council 697 Knights of&#13;
Columbus. He was in the first&#13;
class of permanent Deacons&#13;
in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee.&#13;
He was also the official&#13;
scorekeeper of St. Catherine's&#13;
High School basketball for 13&#13;
years.&#13;
The Parkside education department&#13;
and all of the&#13;
education students who knew&#13;
this sweet and wonderful man&#13;
would like to express their&#13;
deepest sympathy to Jansta's&#13;
wife, Linda, and daughter,&#13;
Michelle, and to say that his&#13;
spirit will be ever present&#13;
here, and he is, and will&#13;
always be sadly missed.&#13;
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Wednesday, Sent. 30&#13;
and Thursday, Oct. 1&#13;
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necessary. Apply in person at&#13;
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Kenosha.&#13;
BARTENDERS; COCKTAIL,&#13;
Waitresses: Flexible hours,&#13;
part-time, apply in person at&#13;
Jason's Grill - 2010 Douglas&#13;
Avenue, Racine.&#13;
BARTENDERS WANTED&#13;
weekends, evenings, parttime&#13;
and full-time. Elegant&#13;
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Experience preferred. Call&#13;
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DRIVERS, ENTERTAINERS,&#13;
and women dancers.&#13;
Make great money with flexible&#13;
hours. Call Wam-Bam&#13;
Singing Telegram - 551-9024.&#13;
GUITARIST OR keyboardist&#13;
who sings R&amp;B, blues, rock.&#13;
Call Frank - 652-7533.&#13;
FOR SALE:&#13;
GUITARS. LOTS of 'em.&#13;
Kramers, Guilds, Gibson,&#13;
Fenders, Ephiphone, &amp; etc.&#13;
Call today to make your ridiculously&#13;
low dream deal.&#13;
Frank - 652-7533.&#13;
FULL FLOTATION waterbed&#13;
mattress - $40. Call 554-9618.&#13;
1979 TOYOTA Corolla - $1200&#13;
firm. Call 537-2351 (Burlington)&#13;
after 7 p.m.&#13;
PERSONALS:&#13;
TUFFY - MISS you very&#13;
much - love ya big time -&#13;
Buns.&#13;
LP, RICK-tick, rickety-dick,&#13;
umpa-umpa - oh boy! Thinking&#13;
of y ou, thinking of me...&#13;
EVERYONE IN House 2 -&#13;
You are the best! Thanks&#13;
for making my job alot of&#13;
fun! Terri.&#13;
CHELLE • THE campus is&#13;
free of worms!&#13;
MARS NEEDS tall chicks!&#13;
JENNY - THANKS for having&#13;
confidence - you are the&#13;
best! - Terri.&#13;
TO ALL smooth sailors:&#13;
Thanks for a wonderful weekend&#13;
- you are all great leaders!&#13;
CAN YOU afford to miss&#13;
Moxy Roxx this weekend?&#13;
STEVE M. - "Who the hell&#13;
thought of that!"&#13;
BANANA: I'M saving myself&#13;
for you - awright? - 10/3/87&#13;
Cuevo or bust!&#13;
WANTED: ONE real woman&#13;
for meaningful relationship&#13;
with Fla.&#13;
continued on page 13&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 24,1987 5&#13;
i i Well Day" to be held Oct. 7&#13;
"Well Day," a familyoriented&#13;
health fair featuring&#13;
a variety of free health services&#13;
and information, will be&#13;
held at Parkside from&#13;
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 7, in the Union&#13;
building and on the bridge&#13;
connecting the Union with&#13;
Molinaro Hall.&#13;
Sandra Leicht, director of&#13;
Student Health Services, said&#13;
more than 30 community&#13;
health agencies will participate&#13;
in Well Day activities,&#13;
which are open to area residents&#13;
as well as to Parkside&#13;
students, faculty and staff.&#13;
Leicht said people are invited&#13;
to stop in for single health&#13;
screening services or go&#13;
through the entire range of&#13;
health fair offerings.&#13;
About 1,500 people participated&#13;
in Well Day last year.&#13;
Being held for the 9th year&#13;
on campus, Well Day will feature&#13;
a broad range of screen-&#13;
Veterans' office&#13;
moved&#13;
by Dan Chiapette&#13;
The Veterans office is no&#13;
longer located in the Parkside&#13;
Adult Student Alliance&#13;
(PASA) office, D139F WLLC.&#13;
It has been moved to the Student&#13;
Records lobby, outside&#13;
D191 WLLC.&#13;
"They did not like the&#13;
move, but they are not a&#13;
club," said Registrar Sue&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
PASA needed a private office,&#13;
and the Veteran's office&#13;
got in the way of their operations,&#13;
she said, so the Veteran's&#13;
office was moved to&#13;
the Student Records lobby.&#13;
Lloyd Tremmell was in&#13;
charge of the Veteran's office&#13;
until the move occurred.&#13;
"I asked for a private office,&#13;
but they were not able to&#13;
provide me one," Tremmell&#13;
said. "I can't function in a&#13;
lobby of an office with ten&#13;
other people that work for&#13;
Parkside."&#13;
The Student Records office&#13;
will assume the same duties&#13;
that the old Veteran's office&#13;
took care of in the PASA location.&#13;
That includes certifying&#13;
veteran enrollment so veterans&#13;
can receive benefits.&#13;
Susan Lueck and Joe Jucha&#13;
are the new heads.&#13;
"Neither Susan Lueck or&#13;
Joe Jucha are veterans and&#13;
they both are working with&#13;
veterans on the signing of important&#13;
documents," said&#13;
Tremmell.&#13;
Temmell has a meeting&#13;
with Chancellor Sheila Kaplan&#13;
on Sept. 28 to discuss the&#13;
matter.&#13;
Business workshops slated&#13;
These programs will be offered&#13;
by Parkside's Business&#13;
Outreach/Small Business Development&#13;
Center, directed&#13;
by Dan Hancock. To register&#13;
call 553-2312.&#13;
"Deciding Whether to Expand&#13;
your Business," will be&#13;
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
Sept. 30 in Union&#13;
Room 104. Covered will be&#13;
prioritizing opportunities,&#13;
meeting market demands,&#13;
and planning for growth,&#13;
among other topics. Instructor&#13;
will be Yezdi Godiwalla, a&#13;
UW-Whitewater business professor.&#13;
Fee is $64.&#13;
"How to Start a Homebased&#13;
Business," will be from&#13;
6 to 9 p.m. on Thursday, Oct.&#13;
1 in Union Room 207. Covered&#13;
will be picking the right product,&#13;
sources of help and marketing,&#13;
among other topics.&#13;
Instructor will be Colleen&#13;
Perri, author of "Entrepreneurial&#13;
Women," which describes&#13;
the success of 23&#13;
women business owners. Fee&#13;
is $30.&#13;
"Do-it-Yourself Employee&#13;
Training," will be from 6:30&#13;
to 9:30 p.m. on Mondays, Oct.&#13;
5 and 19 in Union Room 207.&#13;
Instructor will be Walt Brey,&#13;
supervisor of management at&#13;
the Wisconsin Electric Power&#13;
Co. Fee is $77.&#13;
"Business Feasibility Workshop,"&#13;
will be from 6 to&#13;
9 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 8 in&#13;
Union Room 207. Covered will&#13;
be refining one's business&#13;
ideas, analyzing feasibility&#13;
and meeting essential requirements.&#13;
Instructor will be&#13;
Hancock. Fee is $30.&#13;
"Smarter Purchasing in&#13;
Your Business," will be from&#13;
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 12 in Union Room 104.&#13;
Covered will be how to reduce&#13;
crash ordering, setting objectives,&#13;
and using price-cost&#13;
analysis to keep costs down.&#13;
Instuctor will be Godiwalla.&#13;
Fee is $64.&#13;
Bicentennial from page 1 1&#13;
jeopardize the credibility of&#13;
journalism.&#13;
The consensus of the pane!&#13;
was that big business must&#13;
not be allowed to step in and&#13;
ruin one of the most valuable&#13;
rights we have as citizens.&#13;
The program was sponing&#13;
services including sickle&#13;
cell anemia, hypertension,&#13;
hearing, pulmonary function,&#13;
hematocrit, foot pathology,&#13;
glaucoma, body composition&#13;
analysis, colon-rectal cancer,&#13;
physical fitness and nutrition.&#13;
Displays and exhibits will&#13;
offer information on cancer,&#13;
heart disease, family planning,&#13;
arthritis, alcohol and&#13;
drug abuse, developmental&#13;
disabilities, diabetes, mental&#13;
health, physical fitness, and&#13;
specific agency services.&#13;
In addition, there will be a&#13;
display of art work on&#13;
wellness topics by children at&#13;
Parkside's Child Care Center&#13;
and the Union Cafeteria will&#13;
feature a special "wellness&#13;
menu" during the noon hour.&#13;
First Aid demonstrations also&#13;
will be presented.&#13;
For more information call&#13;
Student Health Services at&#13;
553-2366.&#13;
New experience&#13;
for Catholic students&#13;
New look-new experience is&#13;
the title and new image for&#13;
the newly established Catholic&#13;
Student Club, according to&#13;
Father Norm, the recently&#13;
appointed campus minister&#13;
here at Parkside. The first&#13;
get-acquainted meeting of the&#13;
Catholic Student Club is&#13;
scheduled for Wednesday,&#13;
Sept. 30, during the club activity&#13;
hour from 1 to 2 p.m.&#13;
in Room 109 of Molinaro Hall.&#13;
The Catholic Student Club&#13;
is open to all students, faculty,&#13;
administration and staff.&#13;
The club will have social&#13;
events, fund raisers, bible&#13;
study, prayer services, discussions&#13;
on social justice,&#13;
ethical and moral issues, etc.&#13;
Currently Father Norm is&#13;
contacting university administrators,&#13;
faculty, staff and&#13;
students in seeking their support&#13;
and possible involvement&#13;
in the Catholic Student Club.&#13;
Father Norm believes that&#13;
many members of the university&#13;
can be served by the&#13;
Catholic Student Club as well&#13;
as contribute to its effectiveness.&#13;
From Father Norm's 18&#13;
years of pastoral experience,&#13;
he know that it is very common&#13;
for college students to&#13;
question their faith and value&#13;
system. The Catholic Students&#13;
Club is an opportunity&#13;
for students to sort out their&#13;
questioning and searching&#13;
process during their formative&#13;
college years. Above all,&#13;
the Catholic Student Club can&#13;
provide a support system for&#13;
university students who cherish&#13;
similar human and spiritual&#13;
values while pursuing&#13;
their university studies.&#13;
sored by the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
Bicentennial Committee; the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater; the&#13;
Friends of the UW-Parkside&#13;
Library; the Kenosha and&#13;
Racine Leagues of Women&#13;
Voters; the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Unified School Districts.&#13;
ON THE AVE.&#13;
5701 22ND AVE. Q%\s&#13;
C ^G o o d T i m e&#13;
for A Good Deal&#13;
MON Wine Coolers, Import Beer&#13;
Top Shelf&#13;
TUE. Quarter Tapper Nite&#13;
Old Style, Miller, Lite&#13;
WED. Long Neck Bottle Beer Nite&#13;
THUR. Thirsty Thursday —&#13;
All the top beer you can driqf&lt; 8-11 $3*00&#13;
SAT. Corona Nite —&#13;
Corona AND Shots of Cuervo&#13;
SUN. Funday .Sunday —&#13;
Bloody Marys&#13;
$1.00&#13;
$1.00&#13;
Oerolmo's On The Ay. — A Whole New Concept&#13;
Proper I.D. Required Open Daily 10:00&#13;
Library holds&#13;
book sale&#13;
The Library /Learning Center&#13;
will hold a book sale on&#13;
October 6, 7 and 8 from 10 to&#13;
3 near the entrance of the Library&#13;
on Level 1.&#13;
Several thousand books&#13;
covering a variety of subjects&#13;
will be included. Most hardcover&#13;
books will sell for $1&#13;
and paperbacks for $.25. Selected&#13;
books will be offered in&#13;
a silent auction or with a special&#13;
price.&#13;
The books have accumulated&#13;
over a period of time and&#13;
consist of duplicates, discards&#13;
and gift items which are not&#13;
needed for the library collection,&#13;
according to Linda&#13;
Piele, acting director of the&#13;
Library/Learning Center.&#13;
Piele added that many of the&#13;
books are duplicates from the&#13;
Racine and Kenosha campuses&#13;
(previously part of the&#13;
UW Center System) whose&#13;
collections were merged with&#13;
the main collection in the&#13;
mid-1970's.&#13;
Total&#13;
Service&#13;
for&#13;
U. W. Parkside&#13;
Employees&#13;
and&#13;
Students&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
Room 286&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 10-3&#13;
Serving four other locations&#13;
Racine&#13;
Burlington&#13;
Waukesha&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
6 Thursday, September 24, 1987 * ' RANGER&#13;
Club Events&#13;
brilliant on new album&#13;
One year Ago&#13;
September 25, 1986&#13;
Housing not included in&#13;
Campus Police jurisdiction&#13;
If a crime is committed in or around the&#13;
residence halls, Parkside's Campus Police&#13;
won't be doing the investigating.&#13;
In the event of criminal Activity, jurisdiction&#13;
falls to the Kenosha County Sheriff's Department.&#13;
Captain Roger Zeihen, the department's&#13;
director of operations, does not feel&#13;
any expediency is being sacrificed under such&#13;
a set-up.&#13;
"If you have any type of felony or accident&#13;
going on," Zeihen said, "It would only be a&#13;
matter of minutes before we responded."&#13;
Just what role the Campus Police has in&#13;
maintaining order around the residence halls&#13;
is clear to its director, Ron Brinkmann.&#13;
"We can apprehend and detain; but the&#13;
sheriff does the investigating."&#13;
That scenario could change if campus security&#13;
personnel were deputized by Sheriff Fred&#13;
Ekornaas. Such an option has been studied,&#13;
but to no avail.&#13;
Five Years Ago&#13;
September 23, 1982&#13;
New legal service coming to Parkside&#13;
A new legal service is being designed at&#13;
Parkside to inform students of their rights&#13;
and responsibilities under the law and to aid&#13;
them in the resolution of individual legal problems&#13;
which may arise while in school&#13;
Among the specific problems this service&#13;
will address will be prosperity matters, contract&#13;
and consumer matters, domestic relations&#13;
and family law matters, tort defense,&#13;
administrative agency matters, employment&#13;
grievences, small claims and traffic court&#13;
matters, and criminal legal matters.&#13;
Those matters excluded from the list of possible&#13;
services include suits against Parkside,&#13;
anti-trust proceedings, income, felony, probate,&#13;
tax matters, service to student organizations,&#13;
and pre-existing legal problems.&#13;
By advising and educating students about&#13;
legal problems, it is the goal of the Student&#13;
Legal Service to create a more congenial&#13;
learning environment on the Parkside&#13;
campus.&#13;
Ten Years Ago&#13;
September 21, 1977&#13;
Petrie runs for congress&#13;
William Petrie, Assistant Professor of&#13;
Labor Economics, has announced his candidacy&#13;
for the seat of Congressman for Wisconsin's&#13;
first Congressional District. He is a&#13;
member of the Republican Party.&#13;
Les Aspin now hold the seat, but many speculate&#13;
that Aspin will run for the governorship.&#13;
Petrie feels that unemployment is one of the&#13;
major issues of the First Congressional District.&#13;
He believes a tax incentive plan for&#13;
small businesses would better serve both long&#13;
and short term unemployment.&#13;
Another major issue in this election, according&#13;
to Petrie, is energy. The industry in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin depends heavily on natural&#13;
gas and oil. These fossil fuels are the subject&#13;
of much debate and discussion with regard to&#13;
future use and consumption.&#13;
Petrie said, "If we don't do something to increase&#13;
the supply of fossil fuels in the short&#13;
term, we are going to come up with a major&#13;
shortfall in meeting the energy needs of not&#13;
only southeastern Wisconsin, but the entire&#13;
country."&#13;
Sociology Club&#13;
The Sociology Club meeting&#13;
and elections will be held on&#13;
Monday, Sept. 28 at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Molinaro 214. All interested&#13;
parties are invited.&#13;
Philosophical Society&#13;
The Philosophical Society&#13;
will be presenting a lecture&#13;
by Dr. Wayne Johnson on&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 1 at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
in Comm Arts 129. The talk is&#13;
titled "Making Sense Out of&#13;
Ethics: A Theory", and the&#13;
commentator will be Professor&#13;
John Longeway. Students,&#13;
faculty and public are welcome.&#13;
Catholic Student Club&#13;
The first organizational&#13;
meeting of the Catholic Student&#13;
Club is scheduled for&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 30 from 1-2&#13;
Who's bad?&#13;
Jackson&#13;
by Doc Mallory&#13;
How many people remember&#13;
August 31? It was the day&#13;
all traffic led to the local record&#13;
shop. It was definitely&#13;
the musical event of the year.&#13;
Oh, sure, there are the&#13;
Grammys and the other&#13;
musical award equivalents&#13;
that are too many to mention.&#13;
The event was the long-awaited&#13;
release of Michael Jackson's&#13;
album, "Bad".&#13;
When I decided to review&#13;
this album, I thought of many&#13;
ways to try to look at such a&#13;
phenomenon as Michael Jackson.&#13;
There was, first of all,&#13;
the easy way out-and that&#13;
was to simply compare it to&#13;
"Thriller". You remember&#13;
"Thriller"? IT be brief: 38.5&#13;
million copies, eight&#13;
Grammys, seven hit songs,&#13;
three unforgettable videos&#13;
and we can't forget-the&#13;
glove. But, as you see,&#13;
"Thriller" as an album, is a&#13;
musical masterpiece. A comparison&#13;
between "Thriller"&#13;
and "Bad" is unfair to the&#13;
artist, thp music and to the&#13;
reader who may become the&#13;
listener. I decided to look at&#13;
this album for what it's worth&#13;
and forget about the brilliant&#13;
p.m. in Molinaro 109. All students,&#13;
faculty, administrators&#13;
and staff are invited. Food&#13;
and refreshments will be&#13;
provided.&#13;
Winning in the 80's&#13;
Dr. Denis Waitley appears&#13;
at Carthage College on Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 7 at 7 p.m. Waitley&#13;
is a graduate of the U.S.&#13;
Naval Academy with a degree&#13;
in human behavior, has&#13;
been named "Outstanding&#13;
Speaker of the Year", is a&#13;
former chairman of Psychology&#13;
of the U.S. Olympic Committee's&#13;
Sports Medicine&#13;
Council, and is author of several&#13;
books; including The&#13;
Psychology of Winning, Seeds&#13;
of Greatness, and Being the&#13;
Best. His talk, "Winning in&#13;
the 80's", is about self-management&#13;
and positive self-&#13;
A comparison&#13;
between&#13;
"Thriller" and&#13;
"'Bad" is&#13;
unfair to the&#13;
artist, the&#13;
reader who&#13;
may become&#13;
the listener.&#13;
—The way Doc&#13;
sees it.&#13;
eccentric whose name is on&#13;
the cover.&#13;
Pop music fans are going to&#13;
love this new album. The first&#13;
side opens with the title song,&#13;
and it promises to be a Top&#13;
Ten hit-what else is new?&#13;
Jackson sets up the song with&#13;
a "Get Ready, Get Set and&#13;
Go!" style. He gets you ready&#13;
with his smoothly paced&#13;
lyrics in "Your Butt is Mine",&#13;
sets you up with the bridge,&#13;
and finally lets it go in the&#13;
chorus when he proclaims,&#13;
"I'm Bad". Jackson capitalizes&#13;
on strong melodies anc&#13;
his ability to ad lib to the&#13;
music that always seems tc&#13;
autograph the record as his&#13;
Record advertisers have triec&#13;
to give each song equal bill&#13;
ing with the promo: "The&#13;
Thrill is Back! Ten brant&#13;
new hits!" I don't know i:&#13;
they are all going to be hits&#13;
APARTMENT HOTEL ROOMS&#13;
Available. Full maid service.&#13;
Telephone, furnished. Weekly&#13;
rates from $120. Monthly, rates&#13;
from $400. APPLE VALLEY&#13;
LODGE, Racine. 637-7911.&#13;
projection. For more information,&#13;
call 654-2165 or 656-&#13;
6128.&#13;
English Club&#13;
The English Club will meet&#13;
to elect officers on Friday,&#13;
Oct. 1 at 1 p.m. in CA 233.&#13;
Any student interested in&#13;
joining an English Club&#13;
should attend. Activities will&#13;
include guest speakers&#13;
'ferities and writers), theater&#13;
trips, poetry readings and&#13;
other literary experiences.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
The Accounting Club will be&#13;
holding a general membership&#13;
meeting Sept. 30 at 1&#13;
p.m. in Molinaro D-105. Mr.&#13;
John LeRose, A CPA from&#13;
the Racine firm of Gordon J.&#13;
Meier and Co. will be the&#13;
guest speaker.&#13;
but fans should appreciate&#13;
that they are brand new.&#13;
Jackson is going to promote&#13;
each song with a certain&#13;
strategy. First, he has collaborated,&#13;
once again, with&#13;
Quincy Jones. Jones, as we&#13;
all know, can produce music&#13;
with the best of them. Besides&#13;
Jackson, Jones has worked&#13;
with Frank Sinatra, Lena&#13;
Home and James Ingram.&#13;
Secondly, Jackson is going&#13;
with a style that not only attracts&#13;
R&amp;B fans, but rock&#13;
fans as well. The songs&#13;
"Speed Demon" and "Dirty&#13;
Diana" are two examples of&#13;
songs with a more hard rock&#13;
edge.&#13;
Next we hear the side of&#13;
Jackson that likes to share&#13;
the spotlight with his musical&#13;
peers. An example of this is&#13;
the first release, "I Just&#13;
Can't Stop Loving You" with&#13;
Siedah Garret. Garret also&#13;
co-wrote a song on "Bad"&#13;
called "Man in the Mirror"&#13;
where Jackson gets to sing&#13;
with such gospel singers as&#13;
Andre Crouch, Sandra&#13;
Crouch, and the Winans, just&#13;
to name a few. Jackson also&#13;
hooks up with long-time pal,&#13;
Stevie Wonder, who is no&#13;
newcomer to platinum records,&#13;
not to mention&#13;
Grammys. Wonder helps belt&#13;
out the tune "Just Good&#13;
Friends".&#13;
The final ingredient is&#13;
Jackson himself. The singer&#13;
uses his smooth vocals to passively&#13;
call out his "Liberian&#13;
Girl". Then there is this&#13;
writer's favorite, and probably&#13;
the best R&amp;B cut on the&#13;
album, "Another Part of&#13;
Me". The album concludes&#13;
with a driving performance&#13;
on a song called "Smooth&#13;
Criminal". Fans will be&#13;
happy to hear that an hourlong&#13;
video to this song is expected&#13;
to be nationally televised&#13;
in early 1988.&#13;
The new Michael Jackson&#13;
album won't shake off his&#13;
true fans, but it may have&#13;
some people fall off the bandwagon.&#13;
That's something to&#13;
think about when you realize&#13;
that "Off the Wall" sold nine&#13;
million copies and "Thriller"&#13;
sold 30 million more that that.&#13;
What it says is that middle&#13;
ground for Michael Jackson&#13;
is still a good paycheck...and&#13;
that's not bad at all.&#13;
URBER-STYL/STS&#13;
:RS0NALIZED STYLING FOR&#13;
MEN, WOMEN &amp; CHILDREN&#13;
WE USE AND RECOMMEND THE&#13;
PAUL MITCHELL SYSTEM&#13;
PROFESSIONAL SALON PRODUCTS&#13;
• RAZOR CUTTING&#13;
• PERMS &amp; BODYWAVES&#13;
• HAIR COLORING&#13;
• BLOW DRYING&#13;
• HAIR PIECES&#13;
• BEARD TRIMS&#13;
E1K&#13;
554-1430&#13;
2901 DURAND AVE.&#13;
4 HOW I MADE $18,000 |&#13;
FOR COLLEGE&#13;
BY WORKING WEEKENDS&#13;
Thursday, September 24, 1987 7&#13;
When my friends and I graduated&#13;
from high school, we all took part-time&#13;
jobs to pay for college.&#13;
They ended up in car washes and&#13;
hamburger joints, putting in long hours&#13;
for little pay.&#13;
Not me. My job takes just one&#13;
weekend a month and two weeks a year.&#13;
Yet, I'm earning $18,000 for college.&#13;
Because I joined my local Army&#13;
National Guard.&#13;
They're the people who help our&#13;
state during emergencies like hurricanes&#13;
and floods. They're also an&#13;
important part of our country's military&#13;
defense.&#13;
So, since I'm helping them do such&#13;
an important job, they're helping me&#13;
make it through school.&#13;
As soon as I finished Advanced&#13;
Training, the Guard gave me a cash&#13;
bonus of $2,000. Then, under the New&#13;
GI Bill, I'm getting another $5,000 for&#13;
tuition and books.&#13;
Not to mention my monthly Army&#13;
Guard paychecks. They'll add up to&#13;
more than $11,000 over the six years&#13;
I'm in the Guard.&#13;
And if I take out a college loan, the&#13;
Guard will help me pay it back—up to&#13;
$1,500 a year, plus interest.&#13;
It all adds up to $18,000—or more&#13;
—for college for just a little of my time.&#13;
And that's a heck of a better deal than&#13;
any car wash will give you.&#13;
THE GUARD CAN HELP PUT&#13;
YOU THROUGH COLLEGE, TOO.&#13;
SEE YOUR LOCAL RECRUITER&#13;
FOR DETAILS, CALL TOLL-FREE&#13;
800-638-7600? OR MAIL THIS&#13;
COUPON.&#13;
*In Hawaii: 737-5255; Puerto Rico: 721-4550; Guam: 477-9957; Virgin Islands&#13;
(St. Croix): 773-6438; New Jersey: 800-452-5794. In Alaska, consult your local&#13;
phone directory.&#13;
c 1985 United States Government as represented by the Secretary of Defense.&#13;
All rights reserved.&#13;
J" MAIL TO: Army National Guard, P.O. Box 6000, Clifton, NJ 07015&#13;
NAME I&#13;
I&#13;
| ADDRESS I&#13;
.•M DF&#13;
SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER&#13;
| CITY/STATE/ZIP&#13;
| AREACODE PHONE I&#13;
I&#13;
| OCCUPATION&#13;
' STUDENT • HIGH SCHOOL O COLLEGE&#13;
I PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE • YES • NO&#13;
' BRANCH RANK AFM/MOS&#13;
I THE INFORMATION YOU VOIUNTARH.Y PROVIDE M OLDING &gt;OUO SOCUH SECURITY NUMBER&#13;
• BAEl 8€ USED FOR RECRUITING PURPOSES ONIV YOUR SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER&#13;
| WK.L BE USED 'O ANALYZE RESFYDNSE TO THIS AO AUTHO RITY lOU SC-SOl&#13;
US CITIZEN. DYES • NO&#13;
BIRTH DATE&#13;
National Guard&#13;
A1CUC21097NP Army National Guard * Americans At Their Best.&#13;
8 Thursday, September 24, 1987 RANGE&#13;
Assistance f&#13;
Director encourages usage&#13;
by Terri DeRosier&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Learning Assistance and&#13;
Counseling Office-it s name&#13;
alone tells students what they&#13;
are all about.&#13;
Headed up by Carol Cashen&#13;
who was once acting Chancellor&#13;
for Student Affairs, the&#13;
Learning Assistance office is&#13;
staffed by a lot of caring people.&#13;
"The areas that report to&#13;
me are Testing and Counseling,&#13;
Career Planning and&#13;
Placement, Learning Assistance&#13;
and a new area called&#13;
Special Services," said Cashen.&#13;
Special Services is a federally&#13;
funded program designed&#13;
to assist students who are&#13;
first-generation college students&#13;
in need of special help.&#13;
This is a three year grant&#13;
which provides a total pack-&#13;
Carol J. Cashen&#13;
age for students which will include&#13;
financial aid, special&#13;
educational advantages&#13;
through workshops and counseling.&#13;
This program is also&#13;
designed to take them not&#13;
only through undergraduate&#13;
school, but also through graduate&#13;
school.&#13;
"The whole aim of this program,"&#13;
Cashen said,' "is to&#13;
make certain that the students&#13;
graduate."&#13;
"I feel that our whole area&#13;
is there to help students learn&#13;
more efficiently," Cashen&#13;
stated. "But, at the same&#13;
time, we don't want students&#13;
to think of us as a remedial&#13;
service."&#13;
Cashen herself handles students&#13;
who are on collegiate&#13;
skills probation, and whatever&#13;
decisions she can't make,&#13;
she refers to the Academic&#13;
Actions Committee.&#13;
"We would like the students&#13;
to know that our office is designed&#13;
to do just what our&#13;
title says," Cashen said in&#13;
closing, "and that is to be&#13;
here to help assist the students&#13;
in any way we can."&#13;
Career office not just for seniors&#13;
by Terri DeRosier&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
If you're a senior getting&#13;
ready for that all important&#13;
job search, or if you're a&#13;
freshman wondering just&#13;
what it is you are going to do&#13;
with that English degree&#13;
when you graduate, Career&#13;
Planning and Placement is&#13;
the office you need to visit.&#13;
JoAnn Goodyear, director&#13;
of Career Planning and&#13;
Placement and Bev Burnell,&#13;
career counselor, staff this&#13;
area and both will guide any&#13;
student through an exploration&#13;
of opportunities to make&#13;
sure that students make the&#13;
appropriate career choice.&#13;
"We encourage students to&#13;
explore career options,"&#13;
Goodyear said, "and then to&#13;
focus on that choice so they&#13;
can choose a course at Parkside&#13;
that will make a difference&#13;
when they get out into&#13;
the job market.&#13;
"There is nothing more&#13;
frustrating for us than to&#13;
have an English major, for&#13;
example, to come in and say&#13;
'okay here I am, what are&#13;
you going to do with&#13;
me? ' Many students don't&#13;
know what they want to do&#13;
and have no way of finding&#13;
out," Goodyear pointed out,&#13;
"so we use a lot of printed&#13;
materials to help them explore&#13;
all career options.&#13;
"As a student you do not&#13;
n'eed an appointment to use&#13;
these materials," Goodyear&#13;
stated. "These materials may&#13;
be checked out overnight.&#13;
"This office feels that&#13;
career ideas need to be discussed&#13;
while choosing a&#13;
major," Goodyear said. "The&#13;
major should be in the direction&#13;
of the career choice. Depending&#13;
on the career choice,&#13;
the major may or may not&#13;
matter as much," Goodyear&#13;
remarked. "The student&#13;
needs to think about what&#13;
else he might do to compliment&#13;
the career choice —&#13;
which might not be limited to&#13;
course work.&#13;
"We want to help the student&#13;
build a resume," Goodyear&#13;
said, "which might include&#13;
the choice of a parttime&#13;
job, on-campus opportunities,&#13;
papers written in&#13;
class — basically anything&#13;
that will test skills.&#13;
"Some students who come&#13;
to Parkside already have a&#13;
clear idea of what they want&#13;
when they get here," Goodyear&#13;
explained, "and they&#13;
have already made their&#13;
career choice. Usually the&#13;
choice of a major forces the&#13;
career choice, and it starts&#13;
the student thinking about&#13;
it."&#13;
For a student investigating&#13;
career choices, there are a&#13;
series of steps to follow.&#13;
"The first step is to find out&#13;
what the student's interests&#13;
are, what he likes and what&#13;
he has already rejected,"&#13;
Goodyear said.&#13;
"We try to find out what&#13;
work experience he has had,&#13;
what his strengths are academically,&#13;
and what his skills&#13;
and abilities are. We can&#13;
build on those skills," Goodyear&#13;
continued, "and we can&#13;
also eliminate certain areas&#13;
based on those skills.&#13;
"A lot of students have interests,"&#13;
Goodyear pointed&#13;
out. "They just don't know&#13;
how those interests relate to a.&#13;
career."&#13;
What a student considers to&#13;
be important in a very personal&#13;
way is another area&#13;
considered when choosing a&#13;
career, Goodyear said. "We&#13;
need to know what is important&#13;
to him. His values play&#13;
an important role in the&#13;
career choice he will make.&#13;
"An important thing students&#13;
need to be cautioned&#13;
on," Goodyear pointed out,&#13;
"is man-power projections. A&#13;
student needs to now if there&#13;
will be growth in his career&#13;
choice and to make sure that&#13;
the area will not close down&#13;
before he gets there.&#13;
"A student should want to&#13;
make sure that after working&#13;
so hard to get his degree,"&#13;
Goodyear emphasized, "he&#13;
wants to make sure it's going&#13;
to pay off."&#13;
To help assure the payoff,&#13;
one of the new resources&#13;
Career Planning and Placement&#13;
has is a new computer&#13;
named "Sigi."&#13;
"Sigi Plus is a software&#13;
program for career guidance&#13;
and information," Goodyear&#13;
explained.&#13;
"There are nine sections&#13;
with a lot of information on&#13;
occupations as well as helping&#13;
the student to explore&#13;
what they need to be successful."&#13;
Sigi's programs help the&#13;
student see what types of&#13;
skills are needed for certain&#13;
occupations, asks him to answer&#13;
questions related to&#13;
those areas and, in this way,&#13;
helps the student get on the&#13;
right course.&#13;
"It's easy to use, and it's a&#13;
way to do something that&#13;
would take awhile in a conversation&#13;
to come to," Goodyear&#13;
said.&#13;
"Students can get what&#13;
they need and they can move&#13;
on," Goodyear said, "or they&#13;
can make an appointment&#13;
with a counselor to discuss&#13;
the things that they found out.&#13;
Counseling center ol&#13;
by Terri DeRosier&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
If you're feeling lost or confused,&#13;
if you need to take a&#13;
placement test or you have to&#13;
sign up for one of your collegiate&#13;
skills tests - if you're&#13;
just a student with a need to&#13;
talk to someone who understands,&#13;
the place you need to&#13;
go is the Counseling Center.&#13;
The center is staffed by Dr.&#13;
Stuart Rubner and his associates&#13;
Barbra Larson and Mary&#13;
Power, and is located in the&#13;
Learning Assistance and&#13;
Counseling Office in WLLCD175.&#13;
The Counseling Center offers&#13;
three major services to&#13;
students at Parkside.&#13;
The first is prescriptive advising.&#13;
All students who are&#13;
admitted to Parkside on a&#13;
conditional basis are required&#13;
to be seen by one of the&#13;
counselors.&#13;
A conditional student is&#13;
someone who did not graduate&#13;
in the top half of his class&#13;
and/or someone who did not&#13;
take the traditional college&#13;
prep courses in high school.&#13;
"I feel it's better to be admitted&#13;
conditionally," Rubner&#13;
confided, "you get more personal&#13;
attention than someone&#13;
who is a standard admit.&#13;
"We meet with the student&#13;
Counselor Barbara Larson liste&#13;
Counseling Center&#13;
at least three times during&#13;
the semester," Rubner said.&#13;
"The first time is to help&#13;
the student make out his&#13;
schedule. Once the student is&#13;
registered he cannot make&#13;
any changes without the&#13;
counselor's approval.&#13;
"The second meeting&#13;
comes at the six to eight&#13;
week period in the semester,"&#13;
Rubner continued. "By then,&#13;
we have gotten feedback&#13;
from the professors - we call&#13;
it our early warning system •&#13;
Career seepage 15&#13;
r ... . KenMcCray&#13;
Student looking into career options with help of Sigi&#13;
NGER Thursday, September 24, 1987 9 for students&#13;
)ffers many services&#13;
photo by Ken McCray&#13;
listening to a student in the&#13;
that way the student knows&#13;
exactly how things are going&#13;
at that point.&#13;
"Finally," Rubner said,&#13;
"we meet in the middle of&#13;
November during advising&#13;
time to work out a spring&#13;
schedule.&#13;
"We establish a fairly close&#13;
relationship with these students,"&#13;
Rubner concluded.&#13;
"We are actually writing out&#13;
their prescription for success&#13;
here, and they stay with us&#13;
until they complete 15 Parkside&#13;
degree credits, have&#13;
maintained a C-average or&#13;
better, and have made reasonable&#13;
progress toward fulfilling&#13;
collegiate skills and&#13;
breadth of knowledge requirements."&#13;
The second major service&#13;
offered is personal counseling.&#13;
This area is open to all&#13;
students here at Parkside.&#13;
At one time Parkside had a&#13;
clinical psychologist on staff.&#13;
The administration at that&#13;
time felt that with so many&#13;
community resources in that&#13;
direction Parkside's service&#13;
was unnecessary, so they&#13;
eliminated that position.&#13;
In those days students were&#13;
referred to outside counselors&#13;
in both Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
"That worked pretty well,"&#13;
Rubner said. "In fact we're&#13;
still doing that kind of referral.&#13;
"When Gary Grace came to&#13;
Parkside as Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Student Affairs,"&#13;
Rubner continued, "he saw a&#13;
need for more personal counseling&#13;
occurring on campus.&#13;
"I think with the housing&#13;
complex being developed and&#13;
the potential for four hundred&#13;
students living on campus,"&#13;
Rubner said, "we just&#13;
couldn't be referring them off&#13;
campus all the time."&#13;
Counseling see page 10&#13;
Campus needs center&#13;
by Terri DeRosier&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Student Affairs Gary Grace&#13;
feels that personal counseling&#13;
has always been going on between&#13;
students and faculty&#13;
and staff, but he feels that&#13;
what was missing when he&#13;
came to this campus was an&#13;
identifiable referral unit on&#13;
campus.&#13;
"What was missing was the&#13;
university saying, 'here is a&#13;
support service for students,&#13;
faculty and staff to use in a&#13;
supportive kind of way.' "&#13;
Grace said.&#13;
"We are trying to develop&#13;
our personal counseling unit&#13;
into three major areas,"&#13;
Grace said.&#13;
"First we want to create a&#13;
liaison relationship with the&#13;
major student organizations,&#13;
the major departments and&#13;
the major faculty divisions so&#13;
that they know there is a&#13;
service to refer students to.&#13;
"It's reassuring to know the&#13;
service is there," Grace&#13;
pointed out. "Our staff and&#13;
faculty have a caring attitude&#13;
about students and they need&#13;
some place to discuss any&#13;
problems they might encounter&#13;
in a professional manner."&#13;
Visibility and awareness&#13;
are what we are trying to&#13;
create," Grace said.&#13;
"Another area we are developing&#13;
is a diagnostic resource&#13;
where there is some&#13;
testing of students who want&#13;
assistance from a professionally&#13;
trained counselor,"&#13;
Grace stated. "These tests&#13;
could range from a battery of&#13;
need assessments to personality&#13;
testing."&#13;
The third area in the unit&#13;
would be a therapeutic resource.&#13;
"If a student needs someone&#13;
to talk to we have staff&#13;
qualified to help them,"&#13;
Grace pointed out.&#13;
"Dr. Stuart Rubner and&#13;
Barbara Larson are certified&#13;
and licensed psychologists,"&#13;
Grace said. "They will help&#13;
the students themselves or&#13;
refer them to an outside&#13;
source if necessary.&#13;
"The rationale that I took&#13;
exception to in the old organizational&#13;
structure," Grace&#13;
said, "was that Parkside was&#13;
a commuter institution and&#13;
that our students were eighteen&#13;
years of age and therefore&#13;
adults. And because&#13;
these students were primarily&#13;
Grace see page 10&#13;
ARC offers more than tutoring&#13;
by Terri DeRosier&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
You're sitting in your algebra&#13;
class watching the professor&#13;
put numbers on the board&#13;
and you realize you don't understand&#13;
anything that's&#13;
going on. You need this class&#13;
for your major so you really&#13;
can't drop it. And to make&#13;
things worse, you're going to&#13;
have a test next week and&#13;
you know that you won't pass.&#13;
Your first instinct is to&#13;
panic, but before you do that,&#13;
you should know that there is&#13;
a place on campus that you&#13;
should investigate.&#13;
The Academic Resource&#13;
Center (ARC) helps approximately&#13;
500 students per&#13;
semester with tutoring in&#13;
math, English, writing skills,&#13;
and a variety of other subjects.&#13;
Senior Instructional Program&#13;
Director Sandra Burmeister,&#13;
coordinates the professional&#13;
and peer-professional&#13;
support groups (tutors).&#13;
"I'm really enthusiastic&#13;
about the services the ARC&#13;
offers," Burmeister said,&#13;
"primarily because of my&#13;
idealism regarding assistance&#13;
to students.&#13;
I feel that the tutors are&#13;
very well trained and very&#13;
capable," Burmeister stated,&#13;
"and data shows that students&#13;
who come to the ARC&#13;
for assistance do quite well in&#13;
the courses in which they are&#13;
tutored.&#13;
Most of the students we&#13;
tutor are freshmen and sophomores,"&#13;
Burmeister said,&#13;
"but we will tutor higher&#13;
level classes if the tutor feels&#13;
capable of assisting someone&#13;
in a difficult class.&#13;
It's on a supply and demand&#13;
basis," Burmeister&#13;
pointed out, "if I can't find a&#13;
tutor for a particular subject,&#13;
I'm left short-handed."&#13;
Most of the tutors are juniors&#13;
or seniors, and all with a&#13;
photo by Ken McCray&#13;
S°iLutat0-r»-°f Aca?emic Resource Center Sandra Burmeister&#13;
with writing assistant John Francois&#13;
3.0 grade point average or&#13;
better in their majors. These&#13;
students tutor in the area of&#13;
their majors or a closely related&#13;
area. There are approximately&#13;
60 tutors counting all&#13;
of the peer-assistance workers.&#13;
All the tutors have faculty&#13;
endorsements for the&#13;
subjects they tutor.&#13;
Another one of the groups&#13;
that Burmeister oversees is&#13;
the Supplemental Instruction&#13;
leaders (SI leaders.) The&#13;
classes covered by SI leaders&#13;
are high-risk courses. These&#13;
courses are difficult, but they&#13;
have good college requirements.&#13;
"These classes have the&#13;
kind of requirements," Burmeister&#13;
said, "that we would&#13;
like all freshmen and sophomores&#13;
to be able to handle, so&#13;
that they can progress to&#13;
higher level courses that are&#13;
similar."&#13;
The courses covered by SI&#13;
leaders at the present time&#13;
are Intro to Literature, Intro&#13;
to Humanities, Earth and&#13;
Man and History 101.&#13;
"The SI leader attends all&#13;
_ , u , . Photo by Ken McCray&#13;
Tutor Helen Lena assists student Lu-Ping Jiang in the Writing&#13;
Center.&#13;
the classes," Burmeister&#13;
said, "along with doing all&#13;
the readings and assignments,&#13;
and then leads a discussion&#13;
group with those students."&#13;
All SI leaders are students&#13;
who have already had the&#13;
course hopefully with the&#13;
same instructor and have had&#13;
an A in the course. Also the&#13;
students are very capable in&#13;
that particular discipline.&#13;
Most are upperclassmen, and&#13;
all are recommended by faculty.&#13;
"Currently we are the only&#13;
UW system school that offers&#13;
supplemental instruction,"&#13;
Burmeister pointed out.&#13;
I am one of the eight national&#13;
SI certified trainers,"&#13;
Burmeister said, "and I've&#13;
already begun to train some&#13;
people for the rest of the UW&#13;
system.&#13;
Hopefully we'll be able to&#13;
expand this program," Burmeister&#13;
said, "there are probably&#13;
as many as 40 classes&#13;
here that could use an SI&#13;
leader.&#13;
I'm in the process of writing&#13;
a system grant," Burmeister&#13;
explained, "so that&#13;
we can possibly get the funding&#13;
needed.&#13;
"It not only takes a lot of&#13;
money," Burmeister said, "it&#13;
takes a lot of people, and&#13;
right now I'm short on both."&#13;
Burmeister also oversees&#13;
the Writing Center. The center&#13;
is run on a drop-in basis.&#13;
Students can bring in any&#13;
papers from any class for assistance.&#13;
"Essentially what a student&#13;
gets when he goes to the writing&#13;
center," Burmeister explained,&#13;
"is a person who is a&#13;
good writer who has been&#13;
especially trained in the techniques&#13;
of writing.&#13;
"All of the writing assistants&#13;
are good listeners,"&#13;
Burmeister said, "and they&#13;
will try to help the student&#13;
ARC for students see page 10&#13;
10 Thursday, September 24, 1987&#13;
Help offered free&#13;
RANGER&#13;
ARC for students from page 9&#13;
change the paper according&#13;
to the student's needs.&#13;
"The writing assistants will&#13;
respond to the students&#13;
ideas." Burmeister emphasized,&#13;
"they will also offer&#13;
suggestions and help the student&#13;
at all stages of the&#13;
paper, from brainstorming&#13;
for the idea up to the finished&#13;
product."&#13;
The ARC also offers some&#13;
diagnostic tests that students&#13;
can take on their own and follow&#13;
up self-improvement materials&#13;
that they can use.&#13;
Students can take a paper&#13;
diagnostic test in math to decide&#13;
if there is any area in&#13;
math from basic computations&#13;
up to skills that are necessary&#13;
to enter college algebra.&#13;
There is a computer program&#13;
that gives the student&#13;
practice in those areas that&#13;
he is weak in.&#13;
"We feel that the computer&#13;
system is particularly useful&#13;
in math," Burmeister said,&#13;
"because often the student&#13;
needs to do the problem over&#13;
and over and needs to receive&#13;
immediate feedback on&#13;
whether the answer is right&#13;
or wrong."&#13;
"I think it's&#13;
important that&#13;
these services&#13;
remain free to&#13;
Parkside&#13;
students, and I&#13;
hope to keep it&#13;
this way."&#13;
-Sandra&#13;
Burmeister&#13;
Not only does the ARC handle&#13;
the tutoring, supplemental&#13;
instruction and the Writing&#13;
Center, but they also handle&#13;
self-improvement workshops&#13;
for students.&#13;
"I think it's important that&#13;
these services remain free to&#13;
Parkside students, "Burmeister&#13;
concluded, "and I hope to&#13;
keep it this way.&#13;
"We are here for the students&#13;
and we encourage them&#13;
to take advantage of all we&#13;
have to offer."&#13;
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THE OUAUTY GOES IN BEFORE THE NAME GOES ON"&#13;
photo by Ken McCray&#13;
page 10&#13;
Math Specialist Doris Nice helping student in self-paced&#13;
math class&#13;
Center wants to help&#13;
«&gt;•' r**t, oca Smarm&#13;
Counseling from page 9&#13;
As far as the responsibilities&#13;
that the new housing&#13;
staff has, Rubner said he&#13;
would like to get more involved&#13;
with training the Resident&#13;
Advisors.&#13;
"We would like to serve as&#13;
a resource base for the&#13;
RA's," Rubner said.&#13;
"It's a tough living environment&#13;
over there," Rubner&#13;
continued. "I understand the&#13;
kind of stress the RA's are&#13;
under and the rsponsibilities&#13;
they have. So I want to be&#13;
there as a support person for&#13;
them.&#13;
"I have some clear objectives&#13;
relating to counseling&#13;
and student development,"&#13;
Rubner stated.&#13;
"We want to work with faculty&#13;
a lot," Rubner emphasized.&#13;
"We want to help them&#13;
identify, in their classes, students&#13;
who may need professional&#13;
help.&#13;
"We would eventually like&#13;
to get feedback directly from&#13;
the students that would give&#13;
them and us a better idea of&#13;
where they are psychologically&#13;
- just so we know what&#13;
they're thinking and what&#13;
their values are."&#13;
The third service offered by&#13;
the Counseling Center is testing.&#13;
This area is responsible&#13;
for administering all collegiate&#13;
skills testing, and doing&#13;
all record keeping associated&#13;
with testing.&#13;
"Actually all three areas&#13;
are very busy, counseling a&#13;
little less so because we're&#13;
just starting that up again,"&#13;
Rubner stated. "The testing&#13;
and advising really keep us&#13;
hopping. There are very few&#13;
slack times in this office."&#13;
So whether it's a personal&#13;
or school-related problem&#13;
that's getting you down, the&#13;
Counseling Center is the&#13;
place to go on campus to receive&#13;
the help you need.&#13;
Crossword solution from page 12&#13;
G A S P E D T R A P P 1&#13;
I N H A L E H A G G A D A H&#13;
S T A R I S I D E A L I Z E&#13;
H E D D 0 T R I E S A I L&#13;
A H 0 0 L 0 T 0 S 0 L D E&#13;
L A W N D R Y S A D M E N&#13;
F L 0 M 0 A N A S I F&#13;
A L F R E D H I T C H C 0 C K HBA U T 0 IN A T E R 0 E&#13;
S A D I E lv E R A Is M U G&#13;
I T 0 N B I S T E L U R S&#13;
L I U P A R T S r E R F"&#13;
A M B U L A T E F E E D E R&#13;
S E T T L E U P I N V E S T A E D E S B E E R Y S&#13;
Walk set&#13;
The CROP Walk is an annual&#13;
event which raises money&#13;
across the nation for hunger&#13;
and disaster relief programs&#13;
here in Racine and around&#13;
the world.&#13;
25% of the funds raised&#13;
from the walk here in Racine&#13;
stay in the community for the&#13;
benefit of local food programs,&#13;
helping those in need.&#13;
The money is distributed&#13;
through Racine County Project&#13;
Emergency, a non-profit,&#13;
federally funded agency&#13;
which provides food and shelter&#13;
to people in the Racine&#13;
County area.&#13;
In 1986, that 25% portion of&#13;
the money from the CROP&#13;
walk amounted to $3,500. All&#13;
of it was used for the purchase&#13;
of emergency food here&#13;
in Racine. This food was then&#13;
distributed to food banks and&#13;
free meal programs here. A&#13;
total of about 1,750 meals&#13;
were provided at such places&#13;
as St. Patrick's Church on&#13;
Erie St. or the Cristo Rey&#13;
Parish on Wisconsin Avenue,&#13;
Harvest Outreach Food Bank&#13;
in downtown Racine or the&#13;
food bank at Rochester&#13;
United Church in Rochester,&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
The CROP walk has been,&#13;
for several years, a successful&#13;
fund raising endeavor.&#13;
Let's hope for another great&#13;
effort this year -a CROP&#13;
walk for 1987 which will help&#13;
serve more of our neighbors&#13;
here and around the globe.&#13;
Support&#13;
for students&#13;
Grace from page 9&#13;
from the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
area they should be responsible&#13;
for their own personal&#13;
mental health."&#13;
"I felt that rationale no&#13;
longer fit this university's&#13;
new policies," Grace said.&#13;
"This university is serious&#13;
about providing the necessary&#13;
support for students who&#13;
want to achieve an educational&#13;
goal.&#13;
4 T here are so many&#13;
stresses on students," Grace&#13;
said, "we have got to recognize&#13;
that there are problems&#13;
unique to the college experience&#13;
that might get in the&#13;
way of that goal.&#13;
4'This university has to support&#13;
both the academic and&#13;
personal needs of our stumiSS"&#13;
. Grace concluded.&#13;
With all the roles that students&#13;
have to play, they need&#13;
help in coping with and managing&#13;
the stresses that are a&#13;
result of being a student."&#13;
Holiday from page 3&#13;
"Yom Kippur is the singl&#13;
holiest day," said Leeds-Hui&#13;
witz. "You think about th&#13;
awful things you did through&#13;
out the year and feel guilt\&#13;
You promise not to do ther&#13;
again, and apologize to pec&#13;
pie, and to God.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Jesse Hartjmu*&#13;
Teen community newspaper organized Hbyir TJiimm Neibaur . &gt;"•-n — i u_u . — . ——i ,,&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Jessie Hargrove, Director&#13;
of Parkside's Educational Opportunities&#13;
Center, has been&#13;
appointed to head the Board&#13;
of Directors for the newly&#13;
formed Racine periodical The&#13;
Teen News.&#13;
Said Hargrove: "The Martin&#13;
Luther King building complex&#13;
has a Youth Achievement&#13;
program. In this program&#13;
we're interested in&#13;
learning the needs of the&#13;
teens in the community. So&#13;
the idea was to set up a program&#13;
where we could train&#13;
these youths to be positive&#13;
role models for other youths&#13;
in the community.&#13;
"The newspaper idea was a&#13;
good one because it fosters&#13;
creative skills, business&#13;
skills, social skills, and gives&#13;
the youths an opportunity to&#13;
take an active role in something&#13;
that they put together&#13;
themselves.&#13;
"While the Teen News does&#13;
have adult coordinators, the&#13;
adults are simply veritable&#13;
traffic cops, where the youths&#13;
take full charge of the writing,&#13;
photography, ad sales,&#13;
distribution, and all other&#13;
aspects of putting out a newspaper.&#13;
The original concept materialized&#13;
when Mr. Kenneth&#13;
Lumpkin, adult coordinator of&#13;
the Racine Youth Achievement&#13;
Program, requested&#13;
$32,000 from the Private industry&#13;
Council in an effort to&#13;
get the newspaper started.&#13;
Lumpkin stated in his letter&#13;
to the council that this concept&#13;
was an effort to "train&#13;
youths in the skills of business&#13;
operational management&#13;
through the journalism profession."&#13;
"We're trying to set up an&#13;
incentive to keep the students&#13;
in the program," Hargrove&#13;
continued. "For example,&#13;
every hour of work they do is&#13;
multiplied by two dollars. We&#13;
Jesse Hargrove&#13;
want to put that in a kitty&#13;
somewhere so that if one of&#13;
the students decides to go on&#13;
to college, the money will be&#13;
there.&#13;
"They can earn up to 1400&#13;
hours over a three year peBook&#13;
reviews&#13;
riod. So if they work with the&#13;
paper throughout their high&#13;
school years, and do decide to&#13;
attend college, they will have&#13;
that money put away toward&#13;
their continued education."&#13;
Besides the creative skills&#13;
of writing and photography&#13;
that a paper calls for, Hargrove&#13;
feels the business&#13;
skills, artistic skills (layout&#13;
and design), and social skills&#13;
learned are also important.&#13;
The students, when selling&#13;
ads for the paper, learn how&#13;
to effectively deal with various&#13;
local businesses.&#13;
"Often students will run up&#13;
to me and shout 'Hey Doctor&#13;
Hargrove, you want to put an&#13;
ad in the paper?' Then I'll&#13;
say to them, 'Now how are&#13;
you supposed to ask me?'&#13;
That way these youths will&#13;
learn the right way to ask&#13;
people if they want to advertise,&#13;
and get the best results.."&#13;
The Teen News covers a diverse&#13;
spectrum of events that&#13;
are of interest to teenagers of&#13;
the community. This includes&#13;
political events, human interest&#13;
features, opinion articles,&#13;
entertainment essays, and&#13;
fashion.&#13;
"Often you hear about the&#13;
teenage gang problem and&#13;
other negative things," said&#13;
Hargrove. "The Teen News&#13;
allows members of the community&#13;
to see the positive&#13;
things that area youths are&#13;
involved in."&#13;
Along with Kenneth Lumpkin,&#13;
Hargrove also credits&#13;
Program Coordinator Millicent&#13;
Copeland with a great&#13;
assist in seeing this project&#13;
come to fruition.&#13;
Hargrove concluded by saying&#13;
that he hopes continued&#13;
success of The Teen News&#13;
will interest its young contributors&#13;
in entering the field of&#13;
journalism. "It'd be nice," he&#13;
said, "if eventually Racine&#13;
became known as a starting&#13;
place for several important&#13;
minority journalists."&#13;
New studies on adolescence released by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
KIDS, DRUGS, AND THE&#13;
LAW&#13;
by David G. Evans, Esq.&#13;
(Hazelden)&#13;
Like this author's study on&#13;
alcoholism and the law, the&#13;
major point of this booklet is&#13;
written from the illegality&#13;
perspective.&#13;
That this study centers on&#13;
young people is to state that&#13;
the major drug problem&#13;
occurs within adolescents. No&#13;
evidence of this theory is&#13;
presented in the text.&#13;
On its own terms, however,&#13;
Evans does successfully explain&#13;
the rights and responsibilities&#13;
of families, liability of&#13;
parents and other adults,&#13;
treatment, confidentiality,&#13;
etc. Perhaps the most interesting&#13;
chapters deal with&#13;
schools (concentrating on&#13;
rights and responsibilities of&#13;
the system, the students, parents,&#13;
et al and a chapter discussing&#13;
the children of alcoholics&#13;
and other drug addicts.&#13;
All of this information is&#13;
very useful for those who&#13;
have children or work closely&#13;
with them. The book is short,&#13;
but includes much information&#13;
and is very well annotated.&#13;
GROWING UP FEMALE;&#13;
ADOLESCENT GIRLHOOD&#13;
IN AMERICAN FICTION&#13;
by Barbara A. White&#13;
Green wood Press)&#13;
While literature has been&#13;
studied from a variety of different&#13;
perspectives, little attention&#13;
has been given to literature&#13;
dealing with adolescents.&#13;
And even less attention has&#13;
been given to girlhood than to&#13;
women in fiction.&#13;
"Growing Up Female" is a&#13;
complete, well-written study&#13;
on adolescent girlhood, understanding&#13;
the various ways in&#13;
which this aspect of humanity&#13;
was presented from pre-1920&#13;
works to the present day.&#13;
Some of White's topics include&#13;
"Nice Girls and their&#13;
Folks," "Loss of Self," "The&#13;
Adolescent Heroine," and&#13;
"The New Girls." Her attention,&#13;
then, is on various&#13;
American books that deal&#13;
with these topics.&#13;
This study does an excellent&#13;
job of assessing the way&#13;
in which girlhood has been&#13;
presented in American fiction.&#13;
It not only helps us to&#13;
better understand the stories&#13;
it analyzes, but also the era&#13;
in which these stories were&#13;
written, and how each era regarded&#13;
the adolescent female&#13;
experience.&#13;
Billy Hayes to appear&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The film "Midnight Express"&#13;
was based on a book&#13;
by Billy Hayes, who recounted&#13;
his five-year ordeal in a&#13;
Turkish prison after being&#13;
Convicted for attempting to&#13;
smuggle hashish out of the&#13;
country.&#13;
Hayes has since joined the&#13;
lecture circuit and will be appearing&#13;
at Parkside this&#13;
Tuesday at 8 p.m.&#13;
The story Hayes has to tell&#13;
is an ugly one, a brutal account&#13;
of serving five years&#13;
out of a 30 year sentence. It&#13;
was a dozen years ago that&#13;
Hayes escaped to the beach,&#13;
took off in a rowboat amidst a&#13;
violent thunderstorm, and&#13;
paddled to eventual freedom.&#13;
Hayes has stated that his&#13;
escape from prison, as described&#13;
in his book, was quite&#13;
different than the one&#13;
presented in the film.&#13;
This fascinating, dynamic&#13;
personality has been one of&#13;
the most successful and popular&#13;
speakers on the campus&#13;
circuit. Admission to this&#13;
event is free and will be held&#13;
in the Union Cinema. The&#13;
film "Midnight Express" will&#13;
be shown in the cinema Monday&#13;
at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.&#13;
GEOFF&#13;
GAJEWSKI&#13;
IS&#13;
STILL GONE&#13;
North Side 1810 Sheridan Road&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
SUPERETTE&#13;
UWP&#13;
H&#13;
Sheridan Rd.&#13;
GROCERIES • BEER &amp; LIQUO R • SELF-SERVICE GASOLINE&#13;
W&#13;
Y&#13;
" E "&#13;
Ron's Place Sandwiches and Cocktails&#13;
Sundays:&#13;
Bloody Marys 2forl,&#13;
12-4 p.m.&#13;
Tuesdays:&#13;
"South of the&#13;
Border Day"&#13;
Margaritas&#13;
Pina coladas&#13;
Dreamsicles $1.50&#13;
Opens Mon-Sat 11 am&#13;
Sundays 12 noon&#13;
3301 52nd&#13;
Kenosha, Wl&#13;
657-4455&#13;
v&#13;
12 Thursday, September 24, 1987&#13;
Moxv Roxx&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Area rockers to front Rocky Horror dance&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Local heavy metal act&#13;
Moxy Roxx is slated to play&#13;
the Rocky Horror dance&#13;
Friday at 8:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Square.&#13;
During an interview for the&#13;
Ranger last year, the members&#13;
of Moxy Roxx discussed&#13;
their interest in hard rock&#13;
music as well as their heavy&#13;
metal image.&#13;
"We're a guitar-oriented&#13;
band," said lead guitarist&#13;
Joey LaVie. "We'll use a keyboard&#13;
and guitar combination&#13;
or just two guitars, but we&#13;
don't let the keyboards dominate&#13;
because it tends to lighten&#13;
the sound."&#13;
"We're more raw rock and&#13;
roll like the early Rolling&#13;
Stones."&#13;
Moxy Roxx is also equipped&#13;
with all the aggressive stage&#13;
moves and energies that&#13;
make for a most listenable&#13;
hard rock-to-heavy metal outfit.&#13;
"We're pretty free on&#13;
stage," said guitarist Brooke&#13;
Lynne, "Our choreography is&#13;
limited to simply being at&#13;
certain places during certain&#13;
times. Basically, we know&#13;
where everybody's going to&#13;
be, so we just use our movements&#13;
as we see fit according&#13;
collegiate crossword&#13;
©Edward Julius Collegiate CW79-15&#13;
ACROSS&#13;
1 Struggled for air&#13;
7 "Sound o f Music"&#13;
family name&#13;
12 Instruction from&#13;
Jack LaLanne&#13;
13 Passover book&#13;
17 "A Born"&#13;
18 Build castles in&#13;
the air&#13;
19 Taro root&#13;
20 Efforts&#13;
21 Hurt&#13;
22 G ive (care)&#13;
23 Nebraska Indians&#13;
24 Kind of shoppe&#13;
25 —— tennis&#13;
26 Prohibitionists&#13;
27 Madison Avenue&#13;
employees&#13;
28 Andy Capp's missis&#13;
29 Disappointed&#13;
expression&#13;
30 Like or that&#13;
(2 wds.)&#13;
31 Familiar TV p rofile&#13;
(2 wds.)&#13;
36 Car&#13;
37 Ho opster Archibald&#13;
38 Deer&#13;
39 Thompson o r Hawkins&#13;
41 — Hruba Ralston&#13;
42 Cocksure&#13;
43 Lay the line&#13;
44 "Bei M1r du&#13;
Schoen"&#13;
45 Sheet music&#13;
notations&#13;
46 New York campus&#13;
initials&#13;
47 Trading centers&#13;
48 P art of CPA ( abbr.)&#13;
49 Walk&#13;
51 Part of a printing&#13;
press&#13;
53 Even a score&#13;
(2 wds.)&#13;
54 P lay the market&#13;
55 Relative of&#13;
Anopheles&#13;
56 Noah and Wallace&#13;
DOWN&#13;
1 U.S.O. frequenters&#13;
2 Waiting room&#13;
3 31-Across film&#13;
(4 wds.)&#13;
4 Absolve&#13;
5 Thomas S tearns&#13;
6 French preposition&#13;
7 31-Across film,&#13;
"The "&#13;
8 Car accessories&#13;
9 James and Tommie&#13;
10 Annual links&#13;
tourneys&#13;
11 " Joey"&#13;
14 31-Across film&#13;
(4 wds.)&#13;
15 N itrogen compound&#13;
16 The face that&#13;
launched 1,000 ships&#13;
20 Pentateuch&#13;
22 Romeo&#13;
24 L ike "To a Skylark"&#13;
26 Dumbbell&#13;
27 "...exclaim&#13;
drove out of sight"&#13;
29 Ration&#13;
30 Official proceedings&#13;
32 D evastate&#13;
33 Que en o f Hearts'&#13;
specialty&#13;
34 Bit of politeness&#13;
35 Tavern inventory&#13;
39 "The Rise of ——&#13;
Lapham"&#13;
40 "Once upon ..."&#13;
41 Its own reward&#13;
42 Record protector&#13;
44 B leated&#13;
45 P art of a play&#13;
47 F rench miss (abbr.)&#13;
50 M1ss Hagen&#13;
51 Lie&#13;
52 Football positions&#13;
(abbr.)&#13;
to which song we're playing."&#13;
Moxy Roxx did release a&#13;
successful five-song EP last&#13;
year which band members&#13;
label "a glorified demo."&#13;
Said Lynne; "Getting a&#13;
deal with a major label is our&#13;
project right now. Our manager&#13;
Ken Adamany (Cheap&#13;
Trick) is very good so that's&#13;
our present goal. We really&#13;
haven't tried to see beyond&#13;
that point."&#13;
Added LaVie; "We're a&#13;
touring band, that's what&#13;
we've always done. As far as&#13;
the record is concerned, we'll&#13;
just follow a logical progression&#13;
of events in hopes of&#13;
achieving a deal with a major&#13;
label."&#13;
Admission for Moxy Roxx's&#13;
performance is $2 for students&#13;
with an I.D., and $3 for&#13;
guests. Students attending in&#13;
a Rocky Horror costume are&#13;
allowed in for $1.&#13;
A Week at the park&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 24&#13;
Workshops: ' 'Revitalizing&#13;
Your Board of Directors"&#13;
starts at 6:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
104 and "Conversational&#13;
Spanish" starts at 7 p.m. in&#13;
MOLN 217. Sponsored by the&#13;
Continuing Education Office.&#13;
Movie: "My Beautiful Laundrette"&#13;
will be shown at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Tickets for the Thursday Foreign&#13;
Film Series will be available&#13;
at the door.&#13;
Accent on Enrichment:&#13;
presents "The Dallas Brass"&#13;
at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission&#13;
is $2.50 for Parkside students&#13;
and $7 for others. Tickets will&#13;
be available at the door.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Movie: "Rocky Horror Picture&#13;
Show" will be shown at 9&#13;
p.m. on the Union Square&#13;
Patio. Admission is free.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Earn Money&#13;
$&#13;
While -&#13;
Selling&#13;
Ads&#13;
Stop In&#13;
The&#13;
Ranger Office&#13;
Friday, Sept. 25&#13;
Movie: "Rocky Horror Picture&#13;
Show" will be shown at 7&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission at the door is $1&#13;
for Parkside students, faculty,&#13;
staff and $2 for others.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Dance: featuring "Moxy&#13;
Roxx" starting at 8:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square. Admission will&#13;
be charged at the door. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 26&#13;
Workshop: "Children's Theatre"&#13;
starts at 9:30 a.m. in&#13;
T281. Call ext. 2312 for reservations.&#13;
Movie: "Rocky Horror Picture&#13;
Show" will be repeated&#13;
at 4 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Movie: "My Beautiful Laundrette"&#13;
will be repeated at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 27&#13;
Movie: "My Beautiful Laundrette"&#13;
will be repeated at 2&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Tickets for the Sunday Foreign&#13;
Film Series will be available&#13;
at the door.&#13;
Movie: "Rocky Horror Picture&#13;
Show" will be repeated&#13;
at 7 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Sept. 28&#13;
Workshop: "Publicity Techniques"&#13;
starts at 9 a.m. in&#13;
Union 207. Call ext. 2312 for&#13;
reservations.&#13;
Round Table: "The New Industrial&#13;
Relations" by Prof.&#13;
Steve Meyer starts at 12 noon&#13;
in Union 106. The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Workshop: "Intermediate&#13;
35mm Photography" starts at&#13;
7 p.m. in T281. Sponsored by&#13;
the Continuing Education Office.&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 29&#13;
Computer Workshop: "Orientation&#13;
to Unix, vi, ex" starts&#13;
at 2 p.m. in WLLC D117. Call&#13;
ext. 2235 for reservations.&#13;
Lecture: "My Midnight Express&#13;
Experience" by Billy&#13;
Hayes at 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. The program is free&#13;
and open to the public. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 30&#13;
Workshop: "To Grow or Not&#13;
to Grow" starts at 9 a.m. in&#13;
Union 202. Sponsored by the&#13;
Small Business Development&#13;
Center.&#13;
Workshops: "Wives of Presidents"&#13;
and "WordPerfect&#13;
Word Proc: Intro" both start&#13;
at 9 a.m. Call ext. 2312 for&#13;
reservations.&#13;
Workshop: "The Networking&#13;
Game" starts at 6:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union 207. Sponsored by the&#13;
Conmtinmuiinngg Erjaduuccaatuio n Office. Buy books at&#13;
library sale&#13;
GEOFF GAJEWSKI&#13;
IS&#13;
STILL GONE&#13;
'lasernil&#13;
Q AMERICAN GRILL&#13;
i/uUJUj - + J/, y&#13;
RANGER !&#13;
^ Thursday, September 24, 1987 13&#13;
Movie review&#13;
"Principal" succeeds as brutal school drama&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Taking the sensibilities as&#13;
originally presented in the&#13;
1955 feature "The Blackboard&#13;
Jungle," "Principal" makes&#13;
a commendable attempt at&#13;
attacking the prevailing&#13;
education system through interesting&#13;
character studies,&#13;
Jim Belushi stars as an aggressive&#13;
administrator who&#13;
upsets the bureaucracy and is&#13;
transferred from his comfortable&#13;
position at an upperclass&#13;
school to an institution&#13;
that rests in the very bowels&#13;
of the inner city.&#13;
The film then plunges into&#13;
the character studies that are&#13;
the focal point of the narrative.&#13;
Teachers are presented&#13;
as preferring to take the passive&#13;
role and teach only those&#13;
who attend class, while the&#13;
Belushi character prefers to&#13;
corral the students and place&#13;
them where they're supposed&#13;
to be. The students are&#13;
presented as a diverse group&#13;
of bad examples, the leading&#13;
member (played wonderfully&#13;
by newcomer Michael&#13;
Wright) being Belushi's&#13;
strongest opposition.&#13;
It would be easy for "Principal"&#13;
to cascade into a sea&#13;
of phony dramatics by&#13;
presenting several stereotypes&#13;
within a series of perfunctory&#13;
scenes. Instead the&#13;
film is careful to show as&#13;
realistic a picture as possible,&#13;
detailing the characters as&#13;
something more that mere&#13;
cartoons, making strong&#13;
points about educators too intimidated&#13;
to teach students&#13;
like these.&#13;
Lou Gossett does nicely as&#13;
a burly security person whose&#13;
status as a veteran of this institution&#13;
allows him to know&#13;
what not to do and when not&#13;
to do it. Rae Dawn Chong is&#13;
wasted in the thankless role&#13;
of a passive teacher who is&#13;
involved in an attempted rape&#13;
(a sequence lifted from "Up&#13;
The Down Staircase").&#13;
Belushi does an exceptional »&#13;
job in the title role. His character&#13;
is idealistic and at the&#13;
same time authoritative&#13;
enough in order to fulfill his&#13;
ideals. The culminating battle&#13;
between he and the Michael&#13;
Wright character wraps&#13;
things up a bit too handily,&#13;
despite the fact that the scene&#13;
is very well edited.&#13;
"Principal" is an emotional&#13;
film, quite brutal and pro- '&#13;
fane, but with an underlying&#13;
realism that can't be easily&#13;
dismissed. One nagging question:&#13;
Why are low-income students&#13;
in American movies&#13;
always presented as troubled?&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
BIRTHDAY BASH&#13;
Win a FREE birthday&#13;
bash for you and your&#13;
friends. Just fill out an&#13;
entry form.&#13;
"THANK GOD IT'S&#13;
WEDNESDAY"&#13;
• Reduced drink&#13;
prices with Jason's&#13;
Button&#13;
• Free Taco Bar 9-11&#13;
Dance on Racine's&#13;
Hottest Dance Floor&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
SKIRT NITE&#13;
Free drinks for anyone&#13;
wearing a skirt from 9-&#13;
11 p.m.&#13;
FREE LIMO RIDES&#13;
Courtesy of KRM&#13;
Jim Belushi Selected Shorts&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
STAKEOUT&#13;
This film's stance as the&#13;
most financially successful&#13;
summer release in several&#13;
years belies its rather formulaic&#13;
construction.&#13;
Richard Dreyfus and Emilo&#13;
Estevez star as two detectives&#13;
assigned to keep watch&#13;
on a beautiful young woman's&#13;
home in the event that her&#13;
boyfriend, a notorious prison&#13;
escapee, should show up.&#13;
Dreyfus falls for the girl, becomes&#13;
acquainted with her&#13;
via an alias, the boyfriend&#13;
DOES show up, and goodness&#13;
there are just so many complications.&#13;
Director John Badham&#13;
keeps things light and entertaining&#13;
like he did with "Wargames."&#13;
The stars are shown&#13;
as possessing the cute wit&#13;
that goes from amusing to annoying.&#13;
Dreyfus turns in a&#13;
characteristically warm performance,&#13;
but is not believable&#13;
in the fight sequences.&#13;
He is far too pudgy and&#13;
unathletic looking to be accepted&#13;
as a formidable opponent&#13;
for any one of a number&#13;
of brawny street fighters.&#13;
Badham shoots on dark,&#13;
overcast days. He keeps&#13;
things gritty in an apparent&#13;
attempt to display the ugly&#13;
realism of the job. One fight&#13;
takes place in a vat of raw&#13;
fish.&#13;
The general entertainment&#13;
capabilities of "Stakeout"&#13;
don't seem enough to warrant&#13;
its massive box office appeal.&#13;
There seems to be something&#13;
essential missing that causes&#13;
it to look no better than&#13;
standard cinema fare.&#13;
SNOW WHITE AND THE&#13;
SEVEN DWARFS&#13;
Classic Disney animation&#13;
highlights this milestone&#13;
which achieved legendary&#13;
status as the first animated&#13;
full-length feature.&#13;
The animation is, of course,&#13;
breathtaking. The attention to&#13;
detail is still imjpressive a&#13;
half-century after the film's&#13;
initial release.&#13;
, But that is not enough.&#13;
That plot is known by&#13;
everyone, of course, but the&#13;
antics of the "heroes" in this&#13;
one are so painfully wholesome&#13;
that it causes any discriminating&#13;
viewer to cheer&#13;
for the evil witch.&#13;
The dwarfs cavort about&#13;
like playful prehistoric Pillsbury&#13;
doughboys, all suppressing&#13;
apparent sexual feelings&#13;
toward the leading character&#13;
Snow White. And Snow White&#13;
is so sickeningly saccharine&#13;
she's probably carcinogenic.&#13;
How about that name, Snow&#13;
White? Well—let's not go into&#13;
THAT.&#13;
Oh it's o-k for kids, but par-&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
THE PAB apologizes for any&#13;
poster which may have had a&#13;
word spelled incorrectly on it.&#13;
DEAR JIM N, don't resign.&#13;
They won't let you write the&#13;
Feature story.&#13;
HEY JOHN! How about that&#13;
internal smokescreen?&#13;
BELINDA • I give up. I'm&#13;
moving to another planet.&#13;
Bio-buddy.&#13;
I WANT my fifteen minutes!&#13;
RACCOONS AND mosquitoes&#13;
are alive and well in all our&#13;
hearts!&#13;
STEVE NELSON: Can you&#13;
walk like a Mexican? John.&#13;
RANDY, HAPPY 23rd! You&#13;
are my true spat! Mumbles,&#13;
mumbles, mumbles, cruiter.&#13;
STEVE - GOOD luck on&#13;
making glasses for 9 eyed&#13;
space creatures.&#13;
PAUL - THERE is no better&#13;
way to "spoil" me. Love you!&#13;
Michelle.&#13;
BELINDA - HAPPY Anniversary.&#13;
Love, Ed.&#13;
MARS NEEDS tall chicks!&#13;
ANYONE FINDING a pair of&#13;
pantyhose in the bathroom,&#13;
please return to Judie H. I&#13;
can be found in the cafeteria&#13;
daily.&#13;
SMOOTH SAILORS: Draw it&#13;
or die!&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
Singing Machine&#13;
with&#13;
REX RIZZ&#13;
75* Tappers-Prizes&#13;
ents are cautioned to explain&#13;
to their youngsters that despite&#13;
the pretty colors, too&#13;
many sweets are still bad for&#13;
you.&#13;
FILM ON CAMPUS&#13;
"The Rocky Horror Picture&#13;
Show" is perhaps the first&#13;
film to require audience participation.&#13;
Most of its detractors are&#13;
persons who fail to get caught&#13;
up in the celebration of movie&#13;
badness that its true followers&#13;
glorify in their obsessive&#13;
quests to attend and participate&#13;
in the on and off screen&#13;
shenanigans.&#13;
THE FAR SIDE&#13;
Some of its more pretentious&#13;
defenders have attempted&#13;
to find actual meaning in&#13;
the film, believing it to be a&#13;
statement against sexual suppression.&#13;
Actually, the very&#13;
essence of "Rocky Horror" is&#13;
that it is such a bad film, it&#13;
has garnered a cult following&#13;
that began with gay activists&#13;
on U.S. coasts, and soon&#13;
spread to college campuses.&#13;
Attending a screening at&#13;
least once is recommended.&#13;
Then at least you can say&#13;
that you've seen it. You won't&#13;
have to return unless you become&#13;
caught up in the trendy&#13;
spirit of the off-screen proceedings.&#13;
By GARY LARSON&#13;
Nerds in hell&#13;
14 Thursday, September 24, 1987 RANGER&#13;
Record review&#13;
Neil Young on trisa ck bwaicthk new album&#13;
Neil Young&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
You've really got to hand it&#13;
to Neil Young.&#13;
After years of f ailed experiments&#13;
from techno-pop to&#13;
hard rock to rockabilly, he&#13;
has finally realized that, like&#13;
former bandmates David&#13;
Crosby, Stephen Stills, and&#13;
Graham Nash, it's best for&#13;
him to stick to his sixties&#13;
roots.&#13;
Hence we have the album&#13;
"Life" (Geffen), Young's la-&#13;
NO PROTECTION&#13;
by Starship&#13;
Anyone care for a bit of&#13;
Top 40 dance music by an&#13;
over-the-hill band?&#13;
"No Protection," the latest&#13;
from Starship reaffirms the&#13;
statement that this band&#13;
should have retired in the&#13;
'60's. Instead, they changed&#13;
their name and roster a few&#13;
times and continue to put out&#13;
annoying music.&#13;
This LP combines empty&#13;
lyrics with techno-pop tunes,&#13;
creating a sound that is a&#13;
cross between the Village&#13;
People and the Chipmunks.&#13;
The album picks up where its&#13;
predecessor, "Knee Deep in&#13;
the Hoopla," left off. Who can&#13;
forget such wonderful chartbusters&#13;
as "We Built This&#13;
City" and "Sara?" At least&#13;
the band is consistent. Even&#13;
at their best, as Jefferson&#13;
Airplane, their music wasn't&#13;
very good.&#13;
This first hit off the album,&#13;
"Nothing's Gonna Stop Us&#13;
Now," has a level of intelligence&#13;
matching that of the&#13;
movie it was written for,&#13;
"Mannequin." Next on the&#13;
album is the band's latest release&#13;
"It's Not Over," causing&#13;
the listener to wish it was.&#13;
But there are still eight more&#13;
songs to sit through.&#13;
The remaining tracks continue&#13;
with the same style. It&#13;
may not be much to listen to,&#13;
but can provide an outstanding&#13;
cure for insomnia.&#13;
Patti Nitz&#13;
WETTON/MANZANERA&#13;
by John Wetton and Phil&#13;
Manzanera (Geffen Records)&#13;
In considering the Wetton/&#13;
Manzanera album, the word&#13;
"unexciting" is an understatement.&#13;
The album includes the col-&#13;
Sweet Sbomte&#13;
"GRAND OPENING&#13;
Monday,&#13;
September 21st"&#13;
OPEN 10AM TO 2PM&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
thru&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
Featuring a&#13;
Full Selection&#13;
of Candy and&#13;
Nuts&#13;
Located on the Main Concourse in the WLLG&#13;
f I11 "I" . i , ,1 . I&#13;
test attempt at salvaging&#13;
what's left of his diminishing&#13;
audience. Generally he succeeds,&#13;
at least to the point&#13;
where older fans like this&#13;
writer will be pleased to hear&#13;
the Neil Young they know and&#13;
love.&#13;
But then this isn't always&#13;
the case. It is important for&#13;
old artists to exhibit some&#13;
sort of resiliance rather than&#13;
just simply stagnate with old&#13;
material. But then some artists'&#13;
work is timeless enough&#13;
not to need alteration in spite&#13;
Short Cuts&#13;
laboration of Phil Manzanera,&#13;
who is a foremer member of&#13;
Roxy Music, and John Wetton,&#13;
who previously sang lead&#13;
for Asia (which may account&#13;
for the sappy vocals on this&#13;
LP).&#13;
While there might have&#13;
been some potential for the&#13;
music, it is snuffed out by the&#13;
annoyingly wimpy choruses&#13;
which resemble top 40 pop.&#13;
This listener would be unable&#13;
to distinguish the songs on the&#13;
LP if the titles were changed.&#13;
The repetition of the music&#13;
combined with the lameness&#13;
of the lyrics bogs the whole&#13;
project down. Recommended&#13;
only for those of you who&#13;
have not already heard&#13;
enough outside chorus lines&#13;
and whiny vocals.&#13;
Debbie Michna&#13;
METALIZED&#13;
by Sword (Combat)&#13;
An explosive and aggressive&#13;
heavy metal record,&#13;
"Metalized" also manages to&#13;
exhibit the instrumental talents&#13;
of the band, Sword.&#13;
Perhaps the fatal flaw with&#13;
this effort is its lyrical content&#13;
(the Satan bit is getting&#13;
really tiresome, fellas).&#13;
In the context of heavy&#13;
metal rock, this music can&#13;
best be described as biker&#13;
metal which owes its existance&#13;
to such sixties relics as&#13;
Steppenwolf. Sword's method&#13;
of using this style places&#13;
them neatly above the mainstream&#13;
metal of Motley Crue&#13;
or Poison, but just beneath&#13;
the fierceness of punk-derived&#13;
speed metal as incorporated&#13;
by Motorhead or Anthrax. It's&#13;
a comfortable niche which&#13;
can attract listeners from either&#13;
side of the metal fence.&#13;
Perhaps the best cut here is&#13;
of changing trends.&#13;
The most Young-esque&#13;
track on "Life" is entitled&#13;
"When Your Lonely Heart&#13;
Breaks," reminiscent of the&#13;
similar "Only Love Can&#13;
Break a Heart" from his classic&#13;
LP "After the Gold&#13;
Rush." And the political slant&#13;
on many of t he songs reminds&#13;
us how much we again need&#13;
sixties sensibilities in order to&#13;
obliterate the fifties sensibilities&#13;
now permeating the&#13;
country.&#13;
But then Neil Young, despite&#13;
his significance, is still&#13;
an acquired taste. And admittedly&#13;
"Life" does not include&#13;
another groundbreaking&#13;
Young effort in the same&#13;
class as "Ohio," "The Needle&#13;
and the Damage Done,"&#13;
"Cinnamon Girl," or "Old&#13;
Man." However it is still im&#13;
portant to applaud the singer&#13;
songwriter for not only sur&#13;
viving a wealth of failed ex&#13;
perimental LPs, but for man&#13;
aging to prove that he can&#13;
still put out good material if&#13;
he chooses to do so.&#13;
Meat puppets are on SST records&#13;
the first one, "F.T.W. (Follow&#13;
The Wheel)," which obliterates&#13;
the tritenes of such&#13;
tracks as "Stoned Again" and&#13;
"Evil Spell." None of the&#13;
songs are truly wretched, but&#13;
many of the themes Sword&#13;
chooses have become standardized&#13;
within heavy metal&#13;
rock. The group uses these&#13;
formulas with no apparent attempt&#13;
to challenge or redefine&#13;
them.&#13;
As hard rock goes, the&#13;
music is good: fast, upbeat,&#13;
and pulsating. The instrumentation&#13;
shows strong competence&#13;
within this context,&#13;
while Rick Hughes' vocals&#13;
are far superior to his lyrics.&#13;
Jim Neibaur&#13;
MIRAGE&#13;
Meat Puppets (SST Records)&#13;
The musical arrangement&#13;
on the Meat Puppets "Mirage"&#13;
album has a pleasant&#13;
unpredictability about it&#13;
though at times tends to ramble.&#13;
However this is what the&#13;
band may be striving for as&#13;
expressed in the lyrics of&#13;
their song "The Wind and the&#13;
Rain" which states "Can't be&#13;
controlled, can't be contained."&#13;
In regards to the&#13;
lyrics, the whimsical verses&#13;
are a nice change from the&#13;
processed and packaged word&#13;
phrases that are too often&#13;
heard in popular music.&#13;
What pervades this LP is&#13;
the strong folk influence combined&#13;
with a substantial&#13;
amount of country twang.&#13;
Songs like "Get on Down"&#13;
and "Leaves" truly reveal&#13;
this band's workable capabilties.&#13;
The Meat Puppets have definite&#13;
gaps to fill in their&#13;
music but their willingness to&#13;
explore is refreshing. Possibly&#13;
part of the album's&#13;
success depends on the listener's&#13;
openmindedness.&#13;
Debbie Michna&#13;
RANGER&#13;
-&#13;
Thursday, September 24, 1987 15 ^&#13;
Athlete profile&#13;
Danish soccer duo adjusting&#13;
Golfers faring well&#13;
by Karen Wegerbauer&#13;
New to Parkside this year&#13;
are two students from Denmark.&#13;
Jens (pronounced&#13;
Yens) Hansen, 20, and Morten&#13;
Larsen, 19, are members&#13;
of the soccer team through&#13;
scholarships.&#13;
They found out about&#13;
Parkside because Jens lived&#13;
with relatives in Racine several&#13;
years ago. He attended&#13;
Prairie School, and through&#13;
his soccer coach there, he&#13;
and Morten came to the attention&#13;
of Parkside's coach,&#13;
Rick Kilps.&#13;
After a year-long process of&#13;
filling out applications and&#13;
undergoing a series of tests,&#13;
Hansen and Larsen were accepted&#13;
to Parkside two weeks&#13;
before they had to leave for&#13;
America. They are grateful to&#13;
Coach Kilps for his efforts in&#13;
bringing them here.&#13;
Now they share a room in&#13;
the student housing (which&#13;
they find too small), work&#13;
hard on the soccer field, and&#13;
attend classes. Their favorite&#13;
class is German 303 with Professor&#13;
Christoph. They enjoy&#13;
his sense of humor which&#13;
they find to be similar to&#13;
their own and to that of the&#13;
Danish people in general.&#13;
Larsen and Hansen feel&#13;
that Danes joke among them-&#13;
Danish soccer players Jens Hansen and Morten Larsen&#13;
selves more than Americans&#13;
do. They also find that their&#13;
type of humor sometimes&#13;
causes misunderstandings&#13;
with their fellow students.&#13;
When they pull a joke, it is&#13;
not always taken as such.&#13;
They believe that this occurs&#13;
because Americans are "too&#13;
serious." They feel it is important&#13;
to take it easy, relax,&#13;
and "just cool back and think&#13;
about it," as Hansen phrases&#13;
it.&#13;
The Danes' laid-back attitude&#13;
is also reflected in their&#13;
dating customs, which they&#13;
describe as being "more&#13;
loose" than American customs.&#13;
Usually, in America, a&#13;
guy asks a girl out, and he&#13;
pays her expenses for the&#13;
evening. While in Denmark,&#13;
the couple usually arranges a&#13;
casual meeting.&#13;
Since the Danes appear to&#13;
be easy-going in nature, it is&#13;
not surprising to find that&#13;
Hansen and Larsen are not in&#13;
a hurry to make future plans.&#13;
They haven't decided which&#13;
majors to pursue or if they&#13;
wish to graduate from Parkside.&#13;
Larsen sums up their attitude&#13;
by saying, VWe'll take&#13;
it one year at a time."&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
The Parkside golf team,&#13;
with a week of practice under&#13;
its belt, began its season the&#13;
weekend of Sept. 11-12 with a&#13;
strong showing in its first&#13;
tournament.&#13;
The Rangers finished fifth&#13;
out of 15 teams in the Pointer&#13;
Invitational with a team&#13;
score of 816.&#13;
Dave Wente led the&#13;
Rangers by shooting (76-81)-&#13;
157, which placed him among&#13;
the top 10 individuals. Also&#13;
scoring well were Scott Schuit&#13;
with (80-82)-162, Steve Jerrick&#13;
with (83-81)-164 and Steve&#13;
Gerber with (81-85)-166.&#13;
Rounding out the Ranger&#13;
scoring was Scott Brandt with&#13;
(85-85)-170 and Jeff Lewis&#13;
with (93-82)-175.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens was&#13;
quite pleased with his team's&#13;
effort, but admitted there's&#13;
some work to do. "The guys&#13;
played reasonably well, but&#13;
we can do better," Stephens&#13;
said. "We have the potential&#13;
to do really well."&#13;
UW-Stout, one of the preseason&#13;
favorites to win the&#13;
NAIA District 14 title, won&#13;
the meet with a 774, eight&#13;
shots better than UW-Whitewater&#13;
and host UW-Stevens&#13;
Point, who tied at 782. UWOshkosh&#13;
was fourth with 785,&#13;
defending district champ UWEau&#13;
Claire was sixth with 819&#13;
and Marquette was seventh&#13;
with 823.&#13;
Co-medalists for the meet&#13;
were Craig Geerts of Oshkosh&#13;
(74-74) and Jason Zahradka&#13;
of Stevens Point (76-72) with&#13;
148 each.&#13;
Last Thursday, the Parkside&#13;
golfers participated in&#13;
the 18-hole Tuscumbia Collegiate&#13;
meet in Green Lake.&#13;
This time, the Rangers fared&#13;
much better, finishing fourth&#13;
out ot 18 teams with a 386&#13;
total.&#13;
Brandt and Lewis finished -*•&#13;
in the top 10 individuals, each&#13;
shooting 76 to pace Parkside.&#13;
The rest of the team also&#13;
broke 80. Wente had a 77,&#13;
Gerber a 78 and Schuit a 79.&#13;
Stephens was very pleased&#13;
with his teams' consistent&#13;
scoring. "We're making some&#13;
progress," Stephens said.&#13;
"We played better than the&#13;
last time. We played in the&#13;
rain and the course was in&#13;
bad shape, but we played&#13;
very well."&#13;
Oshkosh shot a 372 to take&#13;
team honors. The second ^&#13;
through fourth place finishers&#13;
-Marquette, Stevens Point&#13;
and Parkside-were within&#13;
four strokes of each other&#13;
with scores of 382, 383 and&#13;
386, respectively. MSOE and&#13;
Platteville rounded out the&#13;
top six teams.&#13;
Meet medalists were Dan&#13;
Thomas of Oshkosh and Mark&#13;
Pukall of Stevens Point, each&#13;
with 72's.&#13;
Letters from page 2&#13;
consin Disneyland.&#13;
This is absurd.&#13;
If the library is open 8-midnight,&#13;
7 days a week, every&#13;
student on campus, as well as&#13;
the faculty and community,&#13;
would be well served. I am&#13;
less sure of the benefit of a&#13;
paneled billiard room.&#13;
An excellent, accessible library&#13;
is critical.&#13;
Char Mano&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I hope this will help to clarify&#13;
the atmosphere surrounding&#13;
the Mission Review Statement.&#13;
When it was reported&#13;
that I had conveyed to the&#13;
PSGA Senate that a particular&#13;
draft of the statement had&#13;
been rejected by Shelia Kaplan&#13;
and Betty Shutler, I am&#13;
afraid that the word "reject"&#13;
may not have been appropriate.&#13;
The entire process that we&#13;
have been involved in has&#13;
been a very tedious one.&#13;
Everyone on campus, from&#13;
the administration, and faculty,&#13;
to .students have concerns&#13;
and needs which are&#13;
expressed in the statement.&#13;
Realizing this, I think we can&#13;
appreciate the concerns of all&#13;
involved instead of only seeing&#13;
conflict.&#13;
Respectfully&#13;
J.J. Masterson&#13;
Senator, PSGA&#13;
Career from page 8 ——1&#13;
"It (the program) ends up&#13;
with short-term goals and&#13;
asks what they student is&#13;
going to do to get there.&#13;
"At this point, anyone can&#13;
sign up to use Sigi," Goodyear&#13;
said. "It's a way to do&#13;
some exploring without committing&#13;
an hour to one of the&#13;
counselors.&#13;
"We are open in the evenings,"&#13;
Goodyear concluded,&#13;
"so we can be available for&#13;
the evening students, and all&#13;
the services are available.-*"&#13;
The evening hours are Monday&#13;
and Thursday until 7&#13;
p.m."&#13;
September 25th&#13;
8:30 p.m.&#13;
Union Square&#13;
Besure and enter&#13;
the Rocky Horror&#13;
Costume contest..&#13;
.Prizes awarded to&#13;
All Entrants and&#13;
costumed students get in&#13;
for a buck!&#13;
Rocky Horor The Movie&#13;
7 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
Students with ID&#13;
$2&#13;
Guests at least 18&#13;
years old&#13;
$3&#13;
"THE ROCKY HORROR DANCE"&#13;
Plgnotti's HOURS&#13;
Open Mon. thur Sat.&#13;
9-9&#13;
Open Sunday&#13;
10-9&#13;
Please use our products in moderation.&#13;
Liquor&#13;
YOUR ONE STOP PARTY SHOP&#13;
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS&#13;
1585 - North 22nd&#13;
Avenue&#13;
Ph. 551-8020&#13;
PAPERBACKiK&#13;
+ * EXCHMfi^i&#13;
OLD STYLE&#13;
$449&#13;
12 PACK MR BOTTLES&#13;
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CALIFORNIA COOLERS&#13;
Peach • Citrus • Tropical&#13;
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$359&#13;
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THE&#13;
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STUFF&#13;
PAPERBACK EXCHANGE&#13;
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$10" • Tax&#13;
Less Expensive than 1/4 Barrel&#13;
HAMMS&#13;
$399&#13;
24-12oz RETURNABLE&#13;
RETURNABLE CASES&#13;
BOTTLES * DEPOSIT * TAX&#13;
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$539&#13;
1/4 BARREL SPECIAL&#13;
Hamms $129%troh's $17"&#13;
Busch $16" Schlitz $14"&#13;
Hfe have tappers and ice.&#13;
We hold drivers licenses for deposit.&#13;
4&#13;
r-&#13;
Kickers win&#13;
in double OT&#13;
by Jason Caspers&#13;
After two easy victories&#13;
during the past week over&#13;
The Milwaukee School of Engineering&#13;
on Thursday Sept.&#13;
17 and Harris Stowe College&#13;
on Saturday, Sept. 19, the&#13;
Ranger Soccer Squad was&#13;
pushed to the limits last Sunday&#13;
against Lindenwood College&#13;
before finally winning 2-1&#13;
in double overtime, and improving&#13;
their record to 7-1.&#13;
Against M.S.O.E. at home&#13;
last Thursday, the Rangers&#13;
dominated the game from&#13;
start to finish, behind two&#13;
goals by Mike Riley, and one&#13;
each by Greg Peters, Jeff&#13;
Livonian, and Hung Ly. Parkside&#13;
had 27 shots on goal&#13;
against zero for their opponents&#13;
in powering their way&#13;
to a convincing 5-0 victory.&#13;
On Saturday the Rangers&#13;
won 6-2 behind two goals by&#13;
Peters, plus scores from Morton&#13;
Larsen, Mike Lee, Claudio&#13;
Aranguiz, and Jens Hansen.&#13;
The game was close&#13;
early, but the Rangers ultimately&#13;
pulled away in what&#13;
proved to be a very physical&#13;
game which resulted in Mike&#13;
Baldwin receiving six stitches&#13;
in his head.&#13;
On Sunday, a tired Ranger&#13;
team traveled to Lindenwood&#13;
College to play on artificial&#13;
turf for the first time ever.&#13;
The result was a lengthy double&#13;
overtime win for the&#13;
drained Ranger Squad.&#13;
"Early in the game we&#13;
couldn't get a call," said&#13;
Coach Rick Kilps, whose&#13;
team was handed 35 fouls to&#13;
Lindenwood's 19. He then&#13;
added, "Greg Peters was redcarded&#13;
with over 30 minutes&#13;
to go, so we had to play the&#13;
rest of the game short one&#13;
man."&#13;
After Riley scored a goal&#13;
early in the game, the score&#13;
was tied at 1-1 at the end of&#13;
regulation. The score remained&#13;
that way until there&#13;
was one minute left in the&#13;
game, when Morton Larsen&#13;
received a penalty kick and&#13;
sunk it through. The excitement&#13;
continued as Lindenwood&#13;
then got a chance to set&#13;
up for a free kick with time&#13;
running out, But, fortunately,&#13;
the Rangers were saved as&#13;
the gun sounded before they&#13;
could get it off.&#13;
Coach Kilps said that he&#13;
was happy with the fact that&#13;
v his team has pulled out some&#13;
real close games this year,&#13;
but is ultimately convinced&#13;
that they can still play better.&#13;
The Rangers have an upcoming&#13;
game at Lawrence&#13;
University on Sept. 23, and a&#13;
big road game. Sept. 27 at&#13;
rival UW-Green Bay.&#13;
Men, Women runners do respectably&#13;
by Michael J. Rohl&#13;
UW-Parkside hosted two&#13;
cross country meets Saturday&#13;
— the Midwest Collegiate&#13;
Championships and a lesserknown&#13;
event, dubbed "The&#13;
Meeting of the Minds."&#13;
The Midwest Collegiate&#13;
Championships, a prestigious&#13;
meet, featured 26 teams and&#13;
250 runners competing in the&#13;
women's five-kilometer and&#13;
28 teams and 299 men in the&#13;
eight-kilometer race.&#13;
The University of Wisconsin,&#13;
led by former Stevens&#13;
Point High School standout&#13;
Suzy Favor, who finished second,&#13;
easily won the women's&#13;
meet, outdistancing secondplace&#13;
Hillsdale by 80 points.&#13;
Parkside's NAIA national&#13;
champions placed ninth with&#13;
219 points.&#13;
The women's individual&#13;
winner was Vivian Sinou of&#13;
Southern Illinois-Carbon dale.&#13;
Her time of 17 minutes, 35&#13;
seconds was nearly a minute&#13;
off last year's course record&#13;
of 16:43, set by Favor.&#13;
Michelle Marter-Rohl was&#13;
Parkside's top runner, placing&#13;
10th.&#13;
Mike DeWitt, the Parkside&#13;
women's coach, was pleased&#13;
with his team's effort.&#13;
"We ran better than we expected,"&#13;
DeWitt said. "We&#13;
finished in the top 10 because&#13;
our top people ran better.&#13;
"The top three are setting a&#13;
consistent pattern. Last year&#13;
we ran terrible here, but we&#13;
ran much better this year.&#13;
We might even be a little&#13;
ahead of where we were last&#13;
year."&#13;
Loyola of Chicago won a&#13;
much closer men's division,&#13;
75-101 over UW-Oshkosh. The&#13;
Parkside men finished a disappointing&#13;
19th with 618&#13;
points.&#13;
The top individual was&#13;
Chris Borsa of Wisconsin. He&#13;
covered the course in 25:00.&#13;
Parkside's top finisher was&#13;
sophomore Mike Nelson, a St.&#13;
Catherine's graduate.&#13;
In the past, "The Meeting&#13;
of the Minds" has included&#13;
Rice, Stanford, Harvard and&#13;
Northwestern. This year,&#13;
Rice and Harvard had to cancel&#13;
due to a lack of funds, and&#13;
the meet featured only Northwestern,&#13;
Stanford and Drake.&#13;
Stanford's men and women&#13;
easily won, with the men&#13;
shutting out both Drake and&#13;
Northwestern and the women&#13;
winning 21-34 over Northwestern&#13;
and 15-41 over Drake.&#13;
The purpose of the meet,&#13;
according to Northwestern&#13;
women's coach and meet director&#13;
Mike Shea, was "to&#13;
provide private schools with&#13;
meets and promote goodwill."&#13;
Brooks Johnson, the U.S.&#13;
women's Olympic coach and&#13;
Stanford's head coach, had&#13;
praise for Parkside's facilities.&#13;
"It's a very attractive&#13;
course," said Johnson. "It's&#13;
obvious the people take pride&#13;
in it. I can't think of a better&#13;
course in the U.S."&#13;
Michelle Marter-Rohl shows her kick in her 10th place showing&#13;
Lady Rangers hanging tough at 4-2&#13;
"The ladies played really&#13;
well. It was a really&#13;
convincing win for us. We&#13;
won four three-set matches&#13;
over some tough players."&#13;
-Coach Wendy Miller&#13;
by Jeffrey L. Stanich, Jr.&#13;
On Tuesday, Sept. 15, the&#13;
women's tennis team defeated&#13;
Carthage for its first&#13;
victory in four years over its&#13;
cross-town rival. The&#13;
Rangers defeated Carthage 8-&#13;
1, pushing the team's record&#13;
to 4-1.&#13;
"The ladies played really&#13;
well," commented Coach&#13;
Wendy Miller. "It was a really&#13;
convincing win for us. We&#13;
won four three-set matches&#13;
over some tough players,"&#13;
Miller said.&#13;
The women won five of six&#13;
matches in singles, and then&#13;
swept all of the doubles&#13;
matches. Number two singles&#13;
player, Stacey Stanich, came&#13;
on strong to win her match 1-&#13;
6, 6-4, 6-3, after losing the&#13;
first set.&#13;
"Stacey really played well.&#13;
She struggled early, but came&#13;
back strong, playing a lot&#13;
smarter to win the match,"&#13;
said Miller.&#13;
Number three singles&#13;
player Amy Tropin soundly&#13;
defeated her opponent 6-0, 6-1,&#13;
while number four and number&#13;
five players Elizabeth&#13;
Spalla and Dorothy Dorow&#13;
each won in three sets.&#13;
Miller said, "Elizabeth outlasted&#13;
her opponent. She&#13;
came back hard to win her&#13;
match 6-2, 0-6, 7-5. Dorothy&#13;
has really played well for us.&#13;
She rebounded to win 5-7, 6-1,&#13;
6-3."&#13;
Number six Kathy Livesey&#13;
won convincingly 6-4, 6-2. She&#13;
then teamed with Kim Vanderbush&#13;
to win in three doubles&#13;
sets 6-2, 2-6, 6-4. Number&#13;
one doubles of Ann Althoff-&#13;
Tropin won 6-3, 6-2, and number&#13;
two Spalla-Sjtanich also&#13;
won 6-0, 6-4.&#13;
On Sunday, Sept. 20, UWStevens&#13;
Point came into town&#13;
and defeated Parkside 5-4 in&#13;
an extremely hard-fought&#13;
match.&#13;
Coach Miller stated, "We&#13;
did not play our strongest,&#13;
but we still pushed them to&#13;
the last match. Ann really&#13;
played well winning 6-2, 6-2.&#13;
It was a very good win for&#13;
her. Amy and Dorothy also&#13;
played well again pushing&#13;
both of their personal records&#13;
to 5-1." Amy won 6-2, 6-2&#13;
while Dorothy won 2-6, 6-4, 6-&#13;
2.&#13;
The team's other win came&#13;
when number two doubles&#13;
team of Spalla-Stanich finished&#13;
with a 1-6, 6-0, 6-4 victory.&#13;
"They struggled in the beginning,&#13;
but they played really&#13;
well in the second and&#13;
third sets," added Miller.&#13;
The women's record is now&#13;
4-2, and they will resume action&#13;
today in Beloit against&#13;
Beloit and Cornell. On Saturday,&#13;
the women travel to&#13;
Whitewater for tjie always&#13;
competitive Whitewater Invitational.</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 16, issue 4, September 24, 1987</text>
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              <text>Controversial canidate to visit campus</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90167">
              <text>=&#13;
JohnJarvis, the controver-&#13;
sialnomineeto the UWBoard&#13;
of&#13;
Regenls,wUl be available&#13;
to&#13;
field quesllons at&#13;
1&#13;
p.m,&#13;
FrIdayin&#13;
D137&#13;
Molinaro Hall.&#13;
Gov.TommyThompson ap-&#13;
pointedJarvis as the student&#13;
memberof the Board of&#13;
Re-&#13;
gents May&#13;
28,&#13;
and   said,&#13;
"JohnIs a  very  intelligent&#13;
studentand&#13;
1&#13;
know that  he&#13;
will&#13;
do an excellent .job&#13;
dur-&#13;
Ing his  two  year   term."&#13;
Jarvis was selected  among  16&#13;
candidatesto serve on the&#13;
17-&#13;
member board.&#13;
Thepositionof student  re-&#13;
gentwascreated In 1985,and&#13;
Jarviswouldbe the second to&#13;
bold  It,   replacing    John&#13;
SChenlan.Other regents serve&#13;
seven-year&#13;
terms.&#13;
TheUnited Council of UW&#13;
StudentGovernments,  Inc.,&#13;
hss&#13;
opposedJarvis'  nomina-&#13;
Uon&#13;
and gone as far  as&#13;
de-&#13;
clarlngSeptember14-18"§ltop&#13;
Jarvis&#13;
Week". UC does  not&#13;
believeJarvis  is  representa-&#13;
Uveofstudentinterests.&#13;
UChas described the quail.&#13;
flcatlonsfor Student Regent,&#13;
whlehsets polley for the UW&#13;
System's&#13;
26&#13;
campuses  and&#13;
180,000students,  as:&#13;
'experience In  representing&#13;
studentswithin the UW&#13;
sys-&#13;
tern&#13;
'experiencein  dealing  with&#13;
publicpolicyissues, especial-&#13;
ly&#13;
with&#13;
educallonal and  UW&#13;
University of Wlsconsln-Parkslde&#13;
system issues&#13;
*experlence as a&#13;
student,&#13;
i.e.&#13;
have   you   been   on  a  UW&#13;
campus  for most  of the last&#13;
few years&#13;
*Identlfy  with  the  average&#13;
student&#13;
*believe&#13;
in&#13;
accessible   educa-&#13;
tion for all citizens of wiscon-&#13;
sin&#13;
A June article  In the&#13;
Capi-&#13;
tal&#13;
Times,&#13;
Madison,   de-&#13;
scribed  Jarvis  as&#13;
&lt;Is&#13;
26-year-&#13;
old,    balding,&#13;
dark-suited&#13;
graduate  student  In taxallon&#13;
from Whitefish Bay attending&#13;
UW-MJlwaukee,when he Isn't&#13;
working  as  a  tax  account-&#13;
}less&#13;
Flores&#13;
Regent seeks&#13;
to&#13;
graduate  minorities&#13;
byKellyMcKissick&#13;
NewsEditor&#13;
University of   Wisconsin&#13;
Boardof Regent Ness Flores&#13;
VisitedParkslde on Monday&#13;
SePtember14 to  talk  about&#13;
thefutureof the minority stu-&#13;
gent&#13;
In&#13;
education.He Is ana.&#13;
F1":of Rio Hondo,  Texas.&#13;
no&#13;
r~s, 44,&#13;
has&#13;
a BS in eco-&#13;
de&#13;
IIlicsfrom Madison, a law&#13;
Sltf""&#13;
frOm Baylor Unlver-&#13;
tic" and has a private prac-&#13;
aha.as an attorney in Wauke-&#13;
tI~loresstressed that mtnort-&#13;
lea&#13;
(mainly blacks,  hispan-&#13;
a~ and native  Americans)&#13;
uw&#13;
Under.represented in the&#13;
the ?ste&#13;
m&#13;
.  He said that  at&#13;
Ille.~st ,~oard  of  Regents&#13;
ar;reed&#13;
g&#13;
,&#13;
It&#13;
was universally&#13;
faUed  .&#13;
upon that  we  have&#13;
taInul&#13;
In&#13;
recruiting  and  reo&#13;
AeroJ&#13;
th&#13;
minOrity  students.&#13;
b&lt;!ensla e country, we have&#13;
Of&#13;
no  goant in the number&#13;
~l'UI'llit&#13;
stUdents we've  been&#13;
tIon," g into higher educa-&#13;
-&#13;
Ness Flores&#13;
One  national.  statistic   he&#13;
quoted was that  national  en-&#13;
rollment  figures  for  blacks&#13;
have decreased  from 8.4 to 8&#13;
percent,  hispanic  rates  have&#13;
risen  from  2.9 to 3 percent,&#13;
and native  American  figures&#13;
have remained  at one-hair of&#13;
one percent.&#13;
His  concern was  that&#13;
"if&#13;
this   trend   continues,   we'll&#13;
have  a  permanent  class  of&#13;
undereducated   people,   We&#13;
have got to turn this around."&#13;
Flores  said  that  the  UW&#13;
system  has tried  to Increase&#13;
recruitment  and retention fig.&#13;
ures,  but  hasn't  succeeded.&#13;
"We've  got  to change,"  he&#13;
stated.&#13;
He  reported   on  a   1986&#13;
Board of Regents study group&#13;
conducted on the future of the&#13;
UWsystem, which throughout&#13;
the year dealt with a number&#13;
of issues.  The  report,  •'Plan-&#13;
nlng and Future",  contained&#13;
about&#13;
26&#13;
different   policy&#13;
statements.   including  recruit-&#13;
ment  and  retention  of minori-&#13;
ty&#13;
students, minority faculty,&#13;
women,  and   disabled   stu-&#13;
dents.&#13;
"I  would venture  to say."&#13;
Flores  commented,  "that the&#13;
great majority of you haven't&#13;
even heard  of this report  or&#13;
the  Implications  that  these&#13;
policies will have."&#13;
Flores&#13;
see page 11&#13;
Vol. 18, No. 3&#13;
ant."&#13;
The article  quotes  Jarvis'&#13;
stand  on raising  tuition:&#13;
"I&#13;
would have  supported&#13;
It.&#13;
It&#13;
was about time  the students&#13;
were asked&#13;
to&#13;
pay  an extra&#13;
proportion ...We  can't   subsi-&#13;
dize the whole university be-&#13;
cause  of hardships."&#13;
When asked  whether  gays&#13;
should be allowed to enter the&#13;
ROTC, Jarvis  said, "I'd  like&#13;
to hear  the other  sides. It's&#13;
hard  to comment.&#13;
to&#13;
Jarvis  said he does not see&#13;
any racism  on campus.&#13;
According  to  his  resume,&#13;
Jarvis  is seeking  a Master  of&#13;
Science&#13;
in&#13;
Taxation  from  the&#13;
UW-Mi!waukee,  and  received&#13;
a  Bachelor  of Business  Ad-&#13;
ministration  In 1983.He was&#13;
employed  as  assistant   con.&#13;
troller  at  Super  Steel Prod.&#13;
ucts Corp., MJlwaukee, from&#13;
AprJI&#13;
1984&#13;
through May&#13;
1987.&#13;
UC President Adrian Serra-&#13;
no  said,  "The  selection  of&#13;
John  Jarvis  is  designed&#13;
to&#13;
torpedo  the  Integrity  of the&#13;
student Regent posilion. Gov-&#13;
ernor    Thompson&#13;
has&#13;
ap-&#13;
pointed a businessman to rep.&#13;
resent the Students.&#13;
"The Governor can appoint&#13;
other  Regents  with business&#13;
experience.  The  students  of&#13;
Wisconsin  deserve  a  student&#13;
with&#13;
more  experience.&#13;
The&#13;
Issues affecting  students  have&#13;
changed  a  great  deal  since&#13;
1983.&#13;
We do not believe that&#13;
Jarvis Identifies with the stu-&#13;
dents. His public statements&#13;
regarding tuition and mtnort-&#13;
ty recruitment  and retention&#13;
sound  more  like  the opinions&#13;
of big business that students.&#13;
"Jarvis  says he's&#13;
going&#13;
to&#13;
represent  the  students  that&#13;
are not involved on campus,"&#13;
said  serrano.  That's  ridlcu.&#13;
lous.&#13;
That's&#13;
like the Governor&#13;
saying he was elected by the&#13;
non-voting&#13;
public.&#13;
n&#13;
Steve  Marmel   and   Rob&#13;
McGinnis,  co-presidents   of&#13;
'Madison's&#13;
student&#13;
govern-&#13;
ment,   Issued  a   statement&#13;
against  Jarvis.&#13;
"It&#13;
Is WSA's&#13;
poslllon that  the  student  reo&#13;
gent  should  vote,  stralght-&#13;
line,  for  the  students  and&#13;
should  voice  student  needs&#13;
and  concerns.  This  was  the&#13;
Intenllon when the student re-&#13;
gent bUl was passed.  Gover-&#13;
nor  Thompson,   who&#13;
nomi-&#13;
nated Jarvis  for the position,&#13;
voted three limes against the&#13;
student  regent  bUl. It's  not&#13;
too difficult to see&#13;
this&#13;
as&#13;
an&#13;
attempt   to   strip   student&#13;
power away from the student&#13;
regent and In the end, totally&#13;
discredit the position,"&#13;
Marmel and McGinnis have&#13;
released a song criticizing the&#13;
nomlnallon and distributed It&#13;
to UWSystem radio stallons.&#13;
The Capital Times&#13;
has&#13;
also&#13;
reported that Jarvis  enrolled&#13;
full lime at  the UW·MUwau·&#13;
kee&#13;
in&#13;
time&#13;
for the semester&#13;
that began May&#13;
26,&#13;
according&#13;
the school's registrar.  In two&#13;
previous  semesters,&#13;
he had&#13;
Rellent see page 2&#13;
Ranger receives award&#13;
for taking a stand&#13;
The Ranger has received a  our   commitment    to   tha&#13;
First  Class  rating  from  the. campus."&#13;
Associated  Collegiate  Press-&#13;
In  addition&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
FIrst&#13;
INational   Scholastic   Press  Class  citation,  the  Ranger&#13;
Association for Its Spring 1987 also received a special mark&#13;
Issues.&#13;
of distinction for the areas of&#13;
ACPINSPA  Is  the  oldest  photography, art  and  graph.&#13;
and  largest  collegiate  press  Ics.&#13;
organization and rating serv-&#13;
"That's   really  important,&#13;
Ice In the country.&#13;
because&#13;
If&#13;
a  paper  Isn't  at-&#13;
A First Class rating, which  tractive  to look at,  no one's&#13;
signifies very&#13;
good&#13;
to excel.&#13;
going&#13;
to be interested  enough&#13;
lent status, places the Ranger  to read&#13;
It,"&#13;
Schneeberger ex-&#13;
in the top 40 percent  of col.  plained.&#13;
lege newspapers nationwide.&#13;
In&#13;
summarizing&#13;
the&#13;
"These  ratings  are  impor-  Ranger's    second   semester,&#13;
tant because they reaffirm  to  ACP officials said: "You&#13;
do&#13;
a&#13;
us and our readers  that  the  good  job  of  covering  the&#13;
Ranger  Is  a  top-line  news.  campus  and  don't  shy away&#13;
paper,"  said Gary Schneeber.  from controversy.&#13;
ger, former Ranger editor.&#13;
"Not everybody&#13;
will&#13;
always&#13;
"Last  year  was  a  pretty  agree, but it's better to take a&#13;
wild one, we took a lot of con.  stand  strongly  that&#13;
to&#13;
wimp&#13;
troverslal  stands  on a lot of  along."&#13;
Important  issues,"  Schneeb·    "That's  a fitting postscript&#13;
erger  .added.   "ACP  reeog-  to the whole year,"  Schneeb.&#13;
nlzed how vital  that  was  to  erger said.&#13;
e spectives&#13;
our view&#13;
Early library closing&#13;
inconvenient to students&#13;
__   sur  many students are&#13;
just&#13;
~l&#13;
be&#13;
open&#13;
unW midnight&#13;
_to&#13;
bave&#13;
ru.oon&#13;
to&#13;
e Ranger repents&#13;
-&#13;
•&#13;
RANGER  2&#13;
yaup views&#13;
Senator seeks student input&#13;
consln's&#13;
state schools, a seat&#13;
was designed to accomodate&#13;
a voice of the  students.  No&#13;
other state allows students to&#13;
have  such  input  into  their&#13;
own futures.  Yet,  as  impor-&#13;
tant as this position  is&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
students  of  Wisconsin,   our&#13;
Governor,&#13;
in&#13;
his fininte  wis-&#13;
dom, has appointed  a person&#13;
to&#13;
be our voice who feels&#13;
that&#13;
he must not be swayed  solely&#13;
by students,  but by everyone&#13;
in the state.&#13;
_ Unfortunately,    I  do  not&#13;
Jarvis appointment contested&#13;
Regent&#13;
from&#13;
page&#13;
f&#13;
taken less&#13;
than&#13;
a&#13;
full&#13;
load of&#13;
8&#13;
credits, records state.&#13;
Parkslde  Student  Govern-&#13;
ment  Association  President&#13;
Alex Pettit  sald  PSGA&#13;
wW&#13;
not  take  a  stand  for  or&#13;
against&#13;
Jarvia&#13;
until&#13;
after  he&#13;
speaks&#13;
on Friday.&#13;
"We'll&#13;
ask&#13;
him for a reiter-&#13;
ation&#13;
of statements  given&#13;
to&#13;
~.tress    previously,"  Pettit&#13;
One example, sald Pettit&#13;
is&#13;
.Jarvta'&#13;
statement   that  'he&#13;
To&#13;
the&#13;
edIlor:&#13;
Throughout the&#13;
Bummer,&#13;
a&#13;
great  deal  of  controversy&#13;
arose over the appointment  of&#13;
John  Jarvls  to the  Student&#13;
Regent's seat on the Board of&#13;
Regents by Governor Thomp-&#13;
son. The Board  of Regents&#13;
concerns  itself&#13;
with&#13;
every-&#13;
Uting&#13;
from class selection&#13;
to&#13;
tuition hikes for every one of&#13;
our&#13;
26&#13;
campuses and 160,000&#13;
students. Since this body is so&#13;
Involved  wtth  students  who&#13;
seek higher education In Wls-&#13;
woulifliOt oppose raising&#13;
tui-&#13;
tion.&#13;
"Jarvis  said he would sup-&#13;
port&#13;
a  tuition&#13;
Increase&#13;
be-&#13;
cause we cannot support the&#13;
university system on a few&#13;
hardship  cases,"   Pettit   ex-&#13;
plained.   "Not  only  is  that&#13;
statement  ludicrous,  it's non-&#13;
explanatory.&#13;
Does&#13;
he  mean&#13;
an&#13;
Increase  in the cost with-&#13;
out an increase  in the quality&#13;
of education?"&#13;
Other   statements&#13;
Pettit&#13;
plans  to  Challenge  include&#13;
Jarvis'  Interpretation~&#13;
dent representation.&#13;
"He  doesn't feel&#13;
IIlI1&#13;
dent  governments&#13;
the general opInJon&#13;
0/:&#13;
dents,"  Pettit&#13;
said, "&#13;
feels he represents .....&#13;
of silent majority&#13;
of  IIlI1&#13;
I'll&#13;
ask&#13;
him&#13;
to&#13;
cJarlfY&#13;
uIf there is a&#13;
silent&#13;
ty of students,&#13;
why&#13;
dOII&#13;
1&#13;
vote?  If he's statill~&#13;
apathetic,   you&#13;
can&#13;
t&#13;
represent  apsthY·&#13;
Ranger is written and&#13;
ed't&#13;
db&#13;
'b!e&#13;
for&#13;
itS&#13;
cy&#13;
and&#13;
content&#13;
It&#13;
is&#13;
bile&#13;
h&#13;
Y&#13;
students of UW·Parkside,  who are solely respollS!&#13;
breakS&#13;
dayS.&#13;
.u&#13;
e  pu&#13;
IS&#13;
ed every  Thursday  during  the&#13;
acaoemic&#13;
year&#13;
excePl&#13;
over&#13;
Letters  to&#13;
lhe&#13;
edito&#13;
'II&#13;
b&#13;
esn&#13;
WQIdS'&#13;
letters&#13;
must  be'&#13;
r&#13;
WI ,  e accepted  only  il  Ihey  are typed,  double-spaced  and .....&#13;
is&#13;
wi'&#13;
held upon reQues'1&#13;
ned&#13;
, With a telephone  number  Included  for  verification  purposes,&#13;
Nam&#13;
Ranger reserves the  .&#13;
h&#13;
.&#13;
-~&#13;
•&#13;
famatory.&#13;
rig&#13;
t&#13;
to edltletters  and refuse those which are false arn1/crde·&#13;
Deadline lor  alileners&#13;
d&#13;
..&#13;
,    '&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
,an   claSSIfIedads. is Monday at 10 a.m.&#13;
tor&#13;
pub/iCatiOn&#13;
All&#13;
conespondenc&#13;
sh&#13;
Id&#13;
-&#13;
ncsha  WI 531&#13;
e&#13;
ou&#13;
be&#13;
addressed  10: Ranger,  UW-Parkside.  Box 2000. Ke-&#13;
ing).&#13;
41.  Telephone&#13;
414/553-2287&#13;
(Edilorial)   or  4141553-2295  (AdveJ1JS'&#13;
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              <text>Marmeyer steps down from SOC chair</text>
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              <text>10, 1987&#13;
University OfWlsconsln-Parkslde&#13;
armeyer steps down from&#13;
byKelly McKissick&#13;
News Editor&#13;
WhenDon Harmeyer  took&#13;
er&#13;
the Chalrmanship of the&#13;
entOrganizations Council&#13;
) after  Bill  Serpe  re-&#13;
ed&#13;
Isst spring, he didn't&#13;
his&#13;
term would end so&#13;
eyer tendered his res-&#13;
lion on Friday  to Diane&#13;
h,&#13;
coordinator of student&#13;
viII&#13;
es.&#13;
SOC&#13;
presently  has&#13;
one&#13;
to&#13;
fill the positions of&#13;
, Vice Chair and&#13;
secre-&#13;
e explains that "It's&#13;
noth-&#13;
reallymajor." He had an&#13;
hlp&#13;
In&#13;
the accounting&#13;
ent at Cherry  Elec-&#13;
Company this  summer.&#13;
was&#13;
only supposed to be&#13;
the summer,  but  they&#13;
me back and asked me&#13;
rk there." he said.&#13;
e said he wouldn't  have&#13;
Urne to hold  down&#13;
job,&#13;
go&#13;
to school  and&#13;
e  both  SOC  and  the&#13;
Ranger.  "So, something  had&#13;
to go. It was&#13;
an&#13;
easy decision&#13;
to  make  In  knOwing  that&#13;
something  had  to go, but  It&#13;
was  hard  deciding  what  I&#13;
wanted  to give  up,"  he  ex-&#13;
plained.&#13;
"SOC  Is  entering   a  new&#13;
phase of Its evolution. We just&#13;
wrote a new constitution  and&#13;
just gained  major  status  last&#13;
semester. There are a lot of&#13;
big plans that&#13;
I&#13;
had for It this&#13;
year,  but I'm  sure they'll  be&#13;
able to pick up the pieces and&#13;
go on. Someone just a.  good&#13;
or better  than me will step In&#13;
and  take   over,"   Harmeyer&#13;
continued.&#13;
He sald thai Scott Peterson,&#13;
chairman  of the  Segregated&#13;
University    Fee   Allocation&#13;
Committee    (SUFAC),   will&#13;
step&#13;
In&#13;
temporarily   to help&#13;
SOC.  They   are   currently&#13;
working  on ftIl1ng the  Vice&#13;
Chair  position,  but  will  not&#13;
say who that person&#13;
will&#13;
be.&#13;
Harmeyer    realizes   that&#13;
SOC Is In a transitional  period&#13;
Don Harmeyer&#13;
right now, but he knows that&#13;
they have a lot of concerned&#13;
members.   HThey're  just  not&#13;
going to sit and let SOC fall&#13;
by the wayside. Someone&#13;
will&#13;
step  up and  say,  'Let's  get&#13;
things  rolling.'  The new  con-&#13;
stitution outlines the duties of&#13;
the officers really well, so It's&#13;
SOC chair&#13;
not going to be difficult for&#13;
someone to step In and take&#13;
.over."&#13;
He said that when he told&#13;
Welsh of his resignation,  "She&#13;
was happy that&#13;
I&#13;
got the&#13;
op-&#13;
portunlty  to get some&#13;
expert-&#13;
ence, but also a little sad&#13;
to&#13;
see that&#13;
1&#13;
had to give up SOC.&#13;
She underslands  my position.&#13;
I've  always  felt  that  I'm  a&#13;
student  first,  and&#13;
1&#13;
wouldn't&#13;
. be at Parkslde&#13;
If&#13;
1&#13;
wasn't get.&#13;
ting&#13;
an education."&#13;
He  explalned·that    Welsh&#13;
hired an Intern, due' to an in-&#13;
crease  In the Student&#13;
Actrvt,&#13;
ties&#13;
budget,&#13;
approved   by&#13;
SUFAC.&#13;
THIs&#13;
may  give the&#13;
intern, Tim Lorman, an op-&#13;
portunity  to get  further  in-&#13;
volved In SOC.&#13;
-&#13;
"The consolation Is that be-&#13;
cause of  the new constitu-&#13;
tions,  there  Is no one around&#13;
to&#13;
say,&#13;
'ThIs&#13;
Is&#13;
the way It's&#13;
been done,' so no matter  who&#13;
steps  In,  It's  going  to  be&#13;
brand new,&#13;
to&#13;
Harmeyer  saId.&#13;
"Alex Pettit  (Parkslde&#13;
stu.&#13;
dent Government  Association&#13;
President)&#13;
has&#13;
been super&#13;
Ir,&#13;
offering to help with SOC. He&#13;
aa1dthathewouldbe~&#13;
to&#13;
guide the new SOC prest-&#13;
dent along and help him out&#13;
with any questions  he might&#13;
have. Scott Peterson&#13;
has&#13;
also&#13;
been super In helping out," he&#13;
continued.&#13;
Harmeyer  added  that  the&#13;
best advice he&#13;
can&#13;
give SOC&#13;
Is&#13;
to be patient.  "You  just&#13;
don't  leam  everything  over-&#13;
night. It's going to take a lit-&#13;
tle bit of time, a lot of effort&#13;
and a lot of help from each&#13;
club. My advice  to the new&#13;
ChaIrman&#13;
would be to really&#13;
use those two (Pettit and Pe-&#13;
terson)  and use their&#13;
knowl-&#13;
edge to SOC's advanlage."&#13;
Harmeyer  added  that&#13;
sOC&#13;
will&#13;
accept  nominations  for&#13;
all&#13;
three  officers'  positions  at&#13;
the  first  meeting  Monday,&#13;
Sept.&#13;
14&#13;
at&#13;
1&#13;
p.m. In Molinaro&#13;
0-137.&#13;
Anyone Interersted  In&#13;
the positions should attend or&#13;
contact Welsh, Union&#13;
209.&#13;
overnorissues encouragement&#13;
for  businesses&#13;
Gov. Tommy&#13;
Thompson&#13;
Inside&#13;
ConstitutionBicentennial&#13;
I.tacIershlpseminar set&#13;
~t&#13;
scholar here&#13;
.......  team Wins first game&#13;
page&#13;
3&#13;
page&#13;
4&#13;
page&#13;
10&#13;
page 12&#13;
by Amy H.&#13;
Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Governor Tommy Thompson&#13;
appeared  briefly at Parkslde&#13;
to speak  at the beginning  of&#13;
an all-day Governor's  Confer-&#13;
ence on Small Business  held&#13;
In&#13;
Molinaro Hall, Sept.&#13;
1.&#13;
The  conference   was  one  of&#13;
17&#13;
regional meetings that&#13;
will .&#13;
culminate&#13;
In&#13;
a statewide  na-&#13;
tional conference.  '&#13;
"What you say here today&#13;
will&#13;
be heard by the decision&#13;
makers&#13;
in&#13;
Madison,"  Thomp-&#13;
son told about&#13;
150&#13;
business-&#13;
persons  present,  "and&#13;
1&#13;
am&#13;
optimistic  that many of your&#13;
ideas&#13;
will&#13;
become  law."&#13;
Thomp.on  said that priori-&#13;
ties  listed  In a&#13;
1981&#13;
Gover-&#13;
nor's   Conference   have&#13;
re-&#13;
. celved  the  attention  of law-&#13;
makers.  He emphasized  that&#13;
results  are due to&#13;
bt-parttsan&#13;
efforls.&#13;
Changes&#13;
In&#13;
unemployment&#13;
compensation  laws,  he said,&#13;
was rated  top on the list of&#13;
priorities  at that  conference.&#13;
In&#13;
response,  significant  reo&#13;
form  has  been  achieved.&#13;
"The new law allows differ-&#13;
ential  rates  for  small  busi-&#13;
nesses,  which was asked for&#13;
out  of  that  conference,  reo&#13;
duced rates  for those compa-&#13;
nies  with&#13;
good&#13;
records,  and&#13;
the opportunity for some bust-&#13;
nesses  to opt out of the sys-&#13;
"What you say&#13;
here today will&#13;
be heard by the&#13;
decision makers&#13;
in Madison, and&#13;
I am optimistic&#13;
that many of&#13;
your wishes will&#13;
become law."&#13;
Gov. Thompson&#13;
tem" the governor said.&#13;
Participants  In the&#13;
1981&#13;
con-&#13;
ference&#13;
also&#13;
requested&#13;
changes&#13;
In&#13;
the  inherilance&#13;
tax,  which  also  has  been&#13;
achieved.&#13;
In&#13;
five years,  the&#13;
tax&#13;
wII&#13;
be phased out.&#13;
"I&#13;
could  go  around  this&#13;
room  and&#13;
1&#13;
bet  each  and&#13;
every one of you could tell me&#13;
of a relative, of a friend, of&#13;
somebody  who's  been&#13;
assoet-&#13;
ated  'Yith you  In business,&#13;
that's left the slate of Wiscon-&#13;
sin because of a high inherit-&#13;
ance  tax,"  aa1d Thompson.&#13;
UNo more,"&#13;
Another request met was In&#13;
regards  to Income tax.  'Our&#13;
Income  taxes  now  are  com-&#13;
petitive with other states."&#13;
Thompson  aa1d&#13;
his&#13;
recent&#13;
veto  which  saved  60 percent&#13;
exemption  on  capital  gains&#13;
met  needs  expressed  at the&#13;
1981&#13;
conference as well.&#13;
Thompson&#13;
has&#13;
received&#13;
600&#13;
responses to a&#13;
state-wtde&#13;
sur-&#13;
vey&#13;
In&#13;
association  with  the&#13;
1987&#13;
conference.&#13;
The survey showed that the&#13;
- top&#13;
concern  of the  manufac-&#13;
turing   Industry   Is  Income&#13;
taxes; and In agriculture,  It Is&#13;
property taxes.&#13;
Omer  Issues raised&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
survey  were  liability  insur-&#13;
ance, unemployment  compen-&#13;
sation,  capital  gains,  payroll&#13;
taxes, tax credits, inherilance&#13;
taxes  and health  care insur-&#13;
ance.&#13;
"Your&#13;
recommendations&#13;
will&#13;
receive  my  immediate&#13;
attention,"  Thompson told the&#13;
participants,   "and  hopefully&#13;
also the Immediate  attention&#13;
of the legislature."&#13;
•&#13;
Thompson   said  that   in-&#13;
creased  services&#13;
require&#13;
In-&#13;
creased funds, and expanding&#13;
the tax base&#13;
Ie&#13;
a better  ap-&#13;
proach&#13;
than&#13;
raising taxes.&#13;
"I&#13;
want Wisconsin not only&#13;
to be  the  etar  of the  snow&#13;
belt, " he concluded,  .'I want&#13;
Wisconsin to be the best. eco-&#13;
nomic  state&#13;
In&#13;
the nation.&#13;
1&#13;
think&#13;
It&#13;
can&#13;
be."&#13;
</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 16, issue 2, September 10, 1987</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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