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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>MISAA Closes Gap For Funds</text>
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              <text>¥ University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Wednesday November 22.1978 vol.7 no.12&#13;
MISAA Closes Gop For Funds&#13;
by Mike Murphy&#13;
The Middle Income Student&#13;
Assistance Act (MISAA), allowing&#13;
for an increase and&#13;
expansion of current Basic Grant&#13;
awards was signed by President&#13;
Carter November 1st. The new&#13;
legislation, as passed by the 95th&#13;
Congress, was praised by&#13;
President Carter as an effort to&#13;
e.'Dand educational opportunities&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
Jan Ocker, director of&#13;
Financial Aids at U.W. Parkside,&#13;
felt that the newly -signed&#13;
Assistance Act will go down as&#13;
landmark legislation. MISAA, he&#13;
said, will help students secure a&#13;
college education who may not&#13;
have been able to do so under&#13;
current rises in tuition and living.&#13;
Current Basic Grant Awards&#13;
are generally restricted to&#13;
students whose parents are&#13;
within an income bracket of&#13;
$5,000 a year or less. Under&#13;
MISAA, not only would current&#13;
Basic Grant Awards increase but&#13;
the current program would also&#13;
expand to include students from&#13;
families whose incomes are&#13;
between $5,000 and $25,000.&#13;
For instance: in a general case,&#13;
a student from a family of four&#13;
with a $14,000 annual income&#13;
with no unusual assets or&#13;
expenses presently receives a&#13;
$462 Basic Grant. Under MISAA&#13;
the grant award would be&#13;
increased to $1,158. A student&#13;
from a family of four with a&#13;
$20,000 annual income is&#13;
presently ineligible to receive a&#13;
Basic Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grant, but could get a $700.00&#13;
grant under the new bill.&#13;
The awards cpuld range&#13;
anywhere from 0 to $1,800 with&#13;
higher income levels receiving&#13;
smaller grants.&#13;
The Assistance Act will affect&#13;
quite a few students in the&#13;
Kenosha/Racine area. Upwards&#13;
of 65 to 75 percent of present&#13;
Wisconsin students, it is&#13;
estimated, will be made eligible&#13;
for a Basic Grant under this&#13;
program.&#13;
MISAA is actually one of two&#13;
proposals submitted to Congress&#13;
to relieve middle income&#13;
families from college costs. The&#13;
alternate proposal, the Tuition&#13;
Tax Credit, would give families&#13;
credit on income tax for those&#13;
attending college. The credit&#13;
could take the form of a tax&#13;
deduction, direct credit, or an&#13;
actual rebate.&#13;
The Tuition Tax Credit&#13;
proposal however, would benefit&#13;
those in a higher income bracket&#13;
more than middle class families.&#13;
Those families who could afford&#13;
a higher costing institution&#13;
would receive a higher income&#13;
tax credit since it is based tuition&#13;
levels.&#13;
The passing of MISAA was&#13;
regarded as a major victory for&#13;
the Carter administration.&#13;
Besides aiding students of&#13;
middle class families, MISAA&#13;
will also affect single independent&#13;
students, the Guaranteed&#13;
Student Loan Program, and the&#13;
current program of work study&#13;
funds.&#13;
Presently single independent&#13;
students are not eligible for Basic&#13;
Grant awards if they generate an&#13;
incomes over $3,600. Under&#13;
MISAA the income parameters&#13;
should increase but the level is&#13;
not known at this time.&#13;
According to Ocker, a single&#13;
independent student was expected&#13;
to contribute more assets&#13;
than a dependent student. Under&#13;
the new MISAA program the&#13;
assets of a single independent&#13;
student will be assessed on an&#13;
equal basis with that of a&#13;
dependent student.&#13;
MISAA also redefines the&#13;
qualifications for the Guaranteed&#13;
Student Loan Program.&#13;
Presently the federal government&#13;
will pay the interest on a&#13;
Guaranteed Student Loan to a&#13;
student with a family income of&#13;
under $25,000. Under MISAA the&#13;
$25,000 ceiling will be removed&#13;
and no ceiling will be enforced.&#13;
This will mean that any&#13;
student carrying six credits or&#13;
more can be eligible for a loan&#13;
regardless of family income and&#13;
the federal government will pay&#13;
interest to the lending agency as&#13;
long as the student is in school.&#13;
The Financial Aids Office,&#13;
which now handles approximately&#13;
150 loans a year, expects a&#13;
tripling in loan applications as a&#13;
result of this provision.&#13;
The last important aspect of&#13;
the MISAA bill will provide an&#13;
increase in Supplemental Education&#13;
Opportunity Grants and&#13;
Federal College Work Study&#13;
Program funds. The funds,&#13;
according to Ocker, should&#13;
increase funds available under&#13;
the Federal Work Study Program,&#13;
approximately 30% on a&#13;
Chamber Symphony&#13;
national and statewide basis&#13;
although the eligibility criteria&#13;
will remain the same.&#13;
Presently, Congress has not&#13;
appropriated enough money to&#13;
fulfill the grant proposal for the&#13;
1979-80 academic year, but&#13;
Ocker feels confident that&#13;
supplemental funds will be&#13;
allocated.&#13;
Applications under the MISAA&#13;
proposal will not be available&#13;
until January 1, 1979, although&#13;
the program will not take effect&#13;
until Fall of '79. Because of the&#13;
16 weeks it takes to process&#13;
applications, it is important for&#13;
students to apply early, ideally&#13;
between January and March.&#13;
Fall Concert Dec.4&#13;
PSGA Questions SUFAC Procedures&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Chamber Symphony&#13;
will present its fall concert at 8&#13;
p.m. on Monday, Dec. 4, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
under the direction of Harry&#13;
Sturm. The program was&#13;
originally scheduled for Dec. 5.&#13;
The symphony will present&#13;
Corelli's Theme and Variations,&#13;
Mozart's Bin Musikalischer Spass&#13;
(a musical joke in which the&#13;
composer intentionally included&#13;
wrong notes to "keep the&#13;
audience on its toes"), Hindemith's&#13;
Concertino Acht Stucke&#13;
and Hoist's St. Paul's Suite. The&#13;
program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Teresa Naidicz (1717 27th St.),&#13;
Kenosha, will be concertmistress&#13;
and Debra Lanzen&#13;
(S66W13415 Sarcyan Rd ), Hales&#13;
Corners, will be co-concertmistress.&#13;
&#13;
Sturm, who also teaches&#13;
applied cello students at&#13;
UW-Parkside, conducted a&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony concert&#13;
during the past summer and was&#13;
conductor and director of the&#13;
Parksd Promenade Symphony of&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
by Mike Murphy&#13;
the Segregated Fees Committee&#13;
(S.U.F.A.C.), which completed&#13;
its fourth meeting last&#13;
Friday, is undergoind procedural&#13;
scrutiny by the P.S.G.A. Senate.&#13;
At the November 2nd meeting of&#13;
the Segregated Fees committee,&#13;
called by acting Chairman Rusty&#13;
Smith, it was agreed to set&#13;
preliminary budgets by a&#13;
high/low averaging method. In&#13;
the high/low averging method&#13;
committee members are asked to&#13;
submit individual budget levels.&#13;
The high and the low budget&#13;
levels are then eliminated and an&#13;
average is taken of the remaining&#13;
budgets. This number will then&#13;
constitute the set Preliminary&#13;
budget.&#13;
At the November 9th meeting&#13;
of S.U.F.A.C., however a move&#13;
was made to abolish the&#13;
high/low averaging method and&#13;
have budgets set by motion.&#13;
Under this procedure a budget&#13;
level would be entered to the&#13;
committee through a motion, by&#13;
an individual member. The&#13;
motion would then have to be&#13;
seconded and voted on by the&#13;
committee after a fifteen minute&#13;
discussion. This method, as&#13;
explained by Terry Zuehlsdorf,&#13;
would help insure discussion on&#13;
dividual budget proposals.&#13;
The arguments made against&#13;
the high low averaging method&#13;
was that it could be easily&#13;
subverted by, for example,&#13;
having two committee members&#13;
enter a zero which would affect&#13;
the final averaging. Overall the&#13;
method, by committee concensus,&#13;
is not an accurate method of&#13;
setting preliminary budgets.&#13;
The motion method passed&#13;
the committee, 5-4-0.&#13;
On a November 13 meeting of&#13;
the PSGA, however, a movement&#13;
was passed not to accept the&#13;
preliminary budgets set by the&#13;
segregated fees committee under&#13;
the motion method. Citing&#13;
constitutional ruling, the Senate&#13;
refused to accept budgets set&#13;
under the motion procedure&#13;
because the change in procedure&#13;
was not approved by the Senate&#13;
prior to the November 9th&#13;
S.U.F.A.C. meeting. As a result,&#13;
all budgets, not set by the&#13;
high/low averaging method, will&#13;
be have to be reset.&#13;
The Senate actions met with&#13;
considerable opposition. Jeff&#13;
Prosko and Terry Zuehlsdorf&#13;
questioned Rusty Smith's appointment&#13;
stating that her&#13;
position as president of the&#13;
P.S.G.A. might tend to influence&#13;
S.U.F.A.C. committee members.&#13;
Zuehlsdorf made a motion to&#13;
appeal Smith's appointment to&#13;
the P.S.G.A. judiciary board but&#13;
the motion was voted down.&#13;
After 45 minutes of deliberSUFAC&#13;
Committee at November 17 meeting&#13;
ations a motion was finally made&#13;
to request of the senate that they&#13;
accept the budgets already set&#13;
under the motion system with a&#13;
friendly amendment to address&#13;
all future preliminary budgets&#13;
under the high/low ruling. As of&#13;
this writing the motion still has&#13;
to be presented for Senate&#13;
approval and their reactions to&#13;
the proposal is difficult to&#13;
determine. If the Senate were&#13;
not to accept the proposal the&#13;
S.U.F.A.C. committee would be&#13;
forced to reset preliminary&#13;
budgets, perhaps setting them&#13;
back a week.&#13;
The preliminary budgets that&#13;
have been set and excepted&#13;
under the high/low procedure&#13;
are P.S.G.A. at $3,720 (proposed&#13;
$3,800), Union Debt Service at&#13;
$105,500 (proposed $105,500),&#13;
Student Activities Office at&#13;
$13,697.50 (proposed $14,310),&#13;
Student Health at $33,000&#13;
(proposed $34,246), Student&#13;
Organizations Committee at&#13;
$20,000 (proposed $22,000),&#13;
Union Operations at $187,285&#13;
(proposed $194,400) Segregated&#13;
Fees Committee at $500&#13;
(proposed $500.), Community&#13;
Student Services at $6,060&#13;
(proposed $9,049) and Student&#13;
Activities Building costs at&#13;
$2,250 (proposed $2,850). &#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Dvorak Guests&#13;
Thomas Dvorak, Director of&#13;
the UW-Parkside bands, served&#13;
as guest conductor and lecturer&#13;
for the High School Honors Wind&#13;
Ensemble in Sioux Falls, South&#13;
Dakota, this past weekend.&#13;
The wind ensemble was&#13;
composed of 42 of the best high&#13;
school musicians from four&#13;
states; Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska,&#13;
and South Dakota. This is the&#13;
first year that a wind ensemble&#13;
has been formed in the festival's&#13;
23 year existence.&#13;
"I consider it a great honor to&#13;
have been chosen as the first&#13;
conductor of the wind ensemble,"&#13;
Dvorak said. "It's nice to be&#13;
able to break the ice."&#13;
Dvorak left Thursday afternoon&#13;
in order to rehearse with&#13;
the group Friday morning at&#13;
Augustana College. He also had&#13;
to prepare for a lecture entitled&#13;
"High School Wind Ensembles"&#13;
that he gave to the high school&#13;
directors.&#13;
But the highlight of his&#13;
weekend was the wind ensemble's&#13;
concert on Saturday. The&#13;
ensemble performed Kurt Weill's&#13;
Little Three Penny Music which&#13;
the Parkside ensemble played&#13;
during their last concert. They&#13;
also played a series of fanfares&#13;
and various other pieces.&#13;
TAUWF Meets&#13;
Last Thursday, November&#13;
16th, a meeting was held for&#13;
Parkside faculty members to&#13;
discuss their right to collective&#13;
bargaining. The meeting, held in&#13;
Union 104, was directed by&#13;
delegates of the Association of&#13;
University of Wisconsin Faculties&#13;
(TAUWF) along with jim&#13;
Shea, the Earth Science program&#13;
coordinator here at Parkside.&#13;
With only a slim turnout,&#13;
those attending discussed the&#13;
purpose of TAUWF, its current&#13;
status within the UW system,&#13;
and the effect of the recent&#13;
election results. The main trust&#13;
of the meeting, though, was to&#13;
increase the number of Parkside&#13;
faculty and staff members&#13;
involved in the movement for&#13;
the right to collective bargaining.&#13;
&#13;
It was also noted that&#13;
Governor-elect Lee Dreyfus did&#13;
not condemn the movement as&#13;
previously announced by the&#13;
Wisconsin Education Association&#13;
Council/Political Action&#13;
Committee (WEAC-PAC). Instead,&#13;
he stated that the UW&#13;
system faculty should have the&#13;
right to decide whether or not&#13;
they should be able to bargain&#13;
collectively.&#13;
GEM Cut&#13;
Parkside has not been&#13;
accepted in the nation wide&#13;
project on General Education&#13;
Models established by the&#13;
Society for Values in higher&#13;
Education. Chancellor Guskin&#13;
submitted an application to&#13;
participation in this project early&#13;
this October. However, since&#13;
only 12 to 16 schools were&#13;
chosen from the whole nation&#13;
any one school's chances of&#13;
being accepted were not high.&#13;
The project is aimed at&#13;
examining and then attempting&#13;
to improve the curriculum and&#13;
educational goals of each&#13;
member campus.&#13;
Although being involved in&#13;
the GEM project would have&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141. \&#13;
Mike Murphy Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan General Manager&#13;
Tom Cooper Student Advisor&#13;
John Stewart News Editor&#13;
Sue Stevens Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Editor&#13;
Kim Putman Copy Editor&#13;
Chris Miller Ad Manager&#13;
Nancy Szymanski Circulation Manager&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Cathy Brownlee, Millie Clarke, Dave Cramer, Tom&#13;
Fervoy, Pete Jacket, Thomas Jenn, Nicki Kroll, Terry&#13;
Maraccini, Kim Ruetz, Jeff Stevens.&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
Denise D'Acquisto, Mike Holmdohl, Tony Raymond&#13;
and Brian Taggart.&#13;
• GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig Dvorak, Rob Miller, Mary Mortl and Matthew&#13;
Pollakon.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Cramer and Dawn Thomas.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted for publication if they&#13;
are typewritten, double spaced with one inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be included&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and refuse&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All material must be received by Thursday noon for&#13;
been beneficial to everyone at&#13;
Parkside, an individual task force&#13;
made up of students and faculty&#13;
may be initiated here at Parkside&#13;
anyway. This would not be&#13;
affiliated with any outside&#13;
organization but would do the&#13;
same work that the GEM project&#13;
would have done.&#13;
Vith Thanksgiving right around the corner, what's your favor&#13;
part of the turkey?&#13;
Pressure Check&#13;
The Campus Health Office will&#13;
sponsor its annual Blood&#13;
Pressure Screening Clinic on the&#13;
following dates and places:&#13;
Monday, November 27, Union&#13;
Bazaar, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.;&#13;
Tuesday, November 28, WLLC,&#13;
Middle Main, 10 a.mv. to 2 p.m.;&#13;
Tuesday, November 28, Greenquist,&#13;
Concourse, 5 p.m. to 8&#13;
p.m.; Wednesday, November 29,&#13;
Greenquist, Concourse 5 p.m. to&#13;
8 p.m.&#13;
The program is open to&#13;
faculty, staff and students.&#13;
High blood pressure is&#13;
common, affecting 15 to 20&#13;
percent of adult Americans, or&#13;
some 23 million people, and is a&#13;
leading cause of stroke, heart&#13;
disease and kidney disease.&#13;
Treatment of high blood&#13;
pressure reduces its dangers and&#13;
in most people, it can be lowered&#13;
and kept under control, which&#13;
greatly reduces the risk of serious&#13;
complications. High blood&#13;
pressure usually causes no&#13;
symptoms, so a pressure check is&#13;
the only way to determine&#13;
whether you have it.&#13;
Meeting Time Set&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, the people&#13;
who represent the students at&#13;
Parkside to the University on&#13;
such business as students rights&#13;
on academic matters, allocating&#13;
funds for student activities such&#13;
as running the Union, and&#13;
discuss tuition increases with the&#13;
administration, have set up a&#13;
regular meeting time on&#13;
Monday's at 3:15 p.m. in WLLC&#13;
D-173. They meet every week at&#13;
this time Without fail.&#13;
Any student(s) with complaints&#13;
or problems at Parkside&#13;
concerning just about any issue&#13;
dealing with their activities here&#13;
should attend one of their&#13;
meetings in order to have the&#13;
matter looked into. This group is&#13;
here to help the students, is&#13;
composed of students and is&#13;
supported by student funds. Use&#13;
it.&#13;
Jim Yanny — The legs.&#13;
Ann Conrardy — The&#13;
meat.&#13;
Harlon D. Bennett — The&#13;
drumstick.&#13;
Karen Platek — I don't kno&#13;
white meat.&#13;
le&#13;
Jonathon Hilson — The stuffing&#13;
in between.&#13;
Out of State Tuition Reduced&#13;
The October 11th issue of&#13;
Ranger featured a story on a plan&#13;
to reduce tuition for out-of-state&#13;
students attending the University&#13;
of Wisconsin. The reduction&#13;
would bring their tuition down to&#13;
about 60% of the full price of&#13;
instruction they now pay. The&#13;
University has initiated a test&#13;
period to examine the practicality&#13;
of these plans.&#13;
UW-Platteville has been&#13;
selected as the test campus.&#13;
Although Parkside was&#13;
thought to be in the running for&#13;
chosen because it is an under&#13;
used campus. It has&#13;
enough for about 1500&#13;
students. The test period will last&#13;
two years before a go ahead will&#13;
be given for other campuses to&#13;
offer the tuition reduction.&#13;
Parkside is thought to be in a&#13;
perfect situation for this type of&#13;
plan because of its nearness to&#13;
N.W. Illinois. Parkside is the&#13;
most available 4 year college to&#13;
the 400,00 people living in this&#13;
area but the approximately&#13;
$2,700 in tuition that they&#13;
currently must pav each year to&#13;
°««&#13;
nancf full from enrollfrig"He?^; &amp;'•&#13;
room&#13;
more&#13;
the out-of-state reduction plan&#13;
goes through the tuition here&#13;
would be reduced to about&#13;
$1,600 a year.&#13;
The administration expects&#13;
that this change would attract&#13;
enough students to bring&#13;
Parkside up to its full capacity&#13;
(about 6,000). Also the influx of&#13;
tuition would make more&#13;
segregated fees monies available&#13;
for student activities. Basically&#13;
this plan would be a very healthy&#13;
shot in the arm for the Parkside&#13;
community. &#13;
22,1978 RANGER 3&#13;
To The Editor&#13;
Concern&#13;
Over&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As a student concerned with&#13;
the way my tuition monies are&#13;
spent, I wish to raise a point to&#13;
those students unable or&#13;
uninterested in attending the&#13;
meetings of the Segregated&#13;
University Fees Allocations&#13;
Committee. This student committee&#13;
allocates each year&#13;
$120.00 of your tuition (for a full&#13;
time student from yearly tuition)&#13;
to all non-academic student&#13;
areas (Health Office, Athletics,&#13;
P.A.B., Student Organizations,&#13;
etc.). Each year budgets are&#13;
submitted these areas for the&#13;
amount of Seg. Fee support they&#13;
feel they will need for the next&#13;
fiscal year. For example, Student&#13;
Organization Council requested&#13;
an allocation of $20,000.00 for&#13;
the fiscal year 1978-79 and was&#13;
allocated $18,250.00. This year&#13;
they are requesting $22,000.00,&#13;
without any idea how much&#13;
money remains in the S.O.C.'s&#13;
budget as a whole or in the&#13;
budgets of the individual student&#13;
organizations. The proposed&#13;
allocation is based on no solid&#13;
background. Fewer than half of&#13;
the thirty-six clubs, we were told,&#13;
submitted briefs on the amount&#13;
of money they need for the&#13;
1979-80 fiscal year. With this&#13;
number of clubs reporting,&#13;
despite the S.O.C. chairman's&#13;
lightly veiled threats of nonfunding&#13;
if a brief was not&#13;
presented, S.O.C. increased it's&#13;
request by $3,750.00, more than&#13;
a 20% increase of what they&#13;
received in funds last year.&#13;
It appears that few clubs even&#13;
attempt to generate revenue. In&#13;
the budget proposal submitted&#13;
to the S.U.F.A.C., S.O.C.&#13;
proposed that all together the&#13;
organizations intend to raise&#13;
(hopefully) three thousand&#13;
dollars this year or almost&#13;
$150.00 per club. This sounds&#13;
great, until you realize that the&#13;
remaining portion of their&#13;
budgets come from your pocket&#13;
and that non-members pay the&#13;
same amount that members do.&#13;
Only one student club requires&#13;
it's members to pay dues&#13;
(Wargamers) (Co-operative Services&#13;
Collective charges a&#13;
membership fee annually producing&#13;
approximately $6,000.00.&#13;
Those who use C.S.C. pay for&#13;
C.S.C.).&#13;
Why is there no major fund&#13;
raising effort oh th^ part of these&#13;
clubs? Possibly every member&#13;
has too many classes, too much&#13;
home work, has a job or two,&#13;
works at home and is just to&#13;
strapped for cash to put a dollar&#13;
or two toward dues in a club that&#13;
interests him. I just do not&#13;
believe that! It seems that as&#13;
long as a free ride is available,&#13;
why not take it? 1&#13;
I'm not saying that student&#13;
organizations should not be&#13;
supported by segregated fee&#13;
monies, but rather that a limit&#13;
should be put on that support. If&#13;
50 or 100 dollars were set aside&#13;
for each club as initial support to&#13;
contact potential members and&#13;
as seed money, to invest, to raise&#13;
money toward group activities.&#13;
At best, this could bring tuition&#13;
down four dollars a year, but it&#13;
also would produce an enormous&#13;
quantity of on campus student&#13;
activities. Clubs, for the first&#13;
time, would be forced to make&#13;
themselves known on campus&#13;
and in the community, increasing&#13;
interest not only their club&#13;
and projects but in Parkside as a&#13;
whole. Crants are available from&#13;
area manufacturers and businesses,&#13;
if they are approached.&#13;
But, students avoid going to the&#13;
community for funds so, as more&#13;
money is needed by Student&#13;
Groups, tuition rises for us all.&#13;
The case is raised that with out&#13;
the level of support available to&#13;
student groups, student involvement&#13;
would fall into oblivion. I&#13;
can not and do not believe that&#13;
the student body on this campus&#13;
is that uninvolved, but if their&#13;
hand must be forced by&#13;
removing a dole then let the&#13;
S.U.F.A.C. make that move and&#13;
bring our student costs down if&#13;
only a little. It would be well&#13;
worth the result.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Mary A. Mortl&#13;
Clones&#13;
Take Over&#13;
by Larry Weaver&#13;
The lack of individuality here&#13;
is so apparent that I see what I&#13;
call the Parkside Clones running&#13;
all over the school by the&#13;
thousands. I wonder why they all&#13;
try that way of life? I see it more&#13;
in the women than the men. I&#13;
have nothing against them&#13;
following styles or self-pride but&#13;
they really over do it. There is a&#13;
tacky look about them, like they&#13;
just came out of a disco. The&#13;
guys don't act much better.&#13;
Many of them try to be a cross&#13;
between John Travolta and&#13;
Bruce Jenner. The clones are in&#13;
C &lt; in m c n&#13;
£ j&amp;^Sccnts^J&#13;
boafib * bAamfioob * * lotion*&#13;
&lt;jVatuitillfy C^uie!&#13;
PRODUCTS FROM MADISON'S&#13;
SOAP QPEJZA&#13;
tisn I s is TIII: sawouim sh: snon-Es :ir,n&gt; R inns &lt; r.&#13;
such force here that it makes the&#13;
usual freak on all campus's a real&#13;
FREAK. This school is so bland&#13;
compared to the other colleges&#13;
I've seen. That's what is so&#13;
interesting about college, doing&#13;
your own thing. Here everyone is&#13;
trying to outdress each other. I&#13;
think the problem is too many&#13;
teeny-boppers never left mom&#13;
and dad long enough to see&#13;
what's on the other side of the&#13;
disco.&#13;
It seems that the only&#13;
difference between Parkside and&#13;
a high school is that you can&#13;
smoke in the halls. The living&#13;
end was when I heard that my&#13;
teacher required a seating chart&#13;
(in college?). All this plus the&#13;
Parkside Clones is too much!&#13;
I was surprised to read an&#13;
outrageous story in the Ranger&#13;
about people bringing beer and&#13;
other substances into the Union&#13;
Cinema. A real student would&#13;
either mind ones business or&#13;
don't go. A better student would&#13;
have enough stelthsic not to get&#13;
caught or use non-breakable&#13;
bottles. I find spiking cokes is the&#13;
best technique.&#13;
Back to my point. If Parkside&#13;
had dorms etc. that would give&#13;
this institution of higher learning&#13;
a permanant lifeblood. Instead&#13;
it's a big high school with many&#13;
of the students still tied to&#13;
mothers apron strings (don't&#13;
forget to be in by 10. ..).&#13;
Maybe I'm wrong? Maybe I&#13;
should get into the jive and&#13;
practice my bump in front of the&#13;
mirror. So the next time you'see&#13;
one of the Parkside Clones it&#13;
might be me. See you at the&#13;
disco, snap, snap, snap.&#13;
PSGA Answers&#13;
Your Suggestions&#13;
P.S.G.A. answers your suggestions&#13;
&#13;
We have not yet found a&#13;
professor interested in teaching&#13;
classes on oral sex. However, if&#13;
anyone is interested please&#13;
contact us. . . any guys or gals&#13;
interested in doing stripteases in&#13;
lecture halls, please come&#13;
forward. Here are several&#13;
immediate openings. . We have&#13;
contacted the man in charge of&#13;
caring for the plants. He assures&#13;
us that the plants would feel&#13;
much better if people would stop&#13;
throwing garbage at them&#13;
The P.S.G.A. has had several&#13;
complaints concerning betterlooking&#13;
wrestlers, professors,&#13;
cheerleaders, and men in&#13;
general. Anyone fitting this&#13;
description please apply. . To&#13;
the Parkside Janitorial Service,&#13;
please clean the bird poo-poo off&#13;
the skylights. . Rest assured&#13;
students, we are now in the&#13;
process of adding another tier to&#13;
the pyramid in main place. Soon&#13;
a 1 foot by 1 foot tier will adorn&#13;
the top for your seating pleasure.&#13;
If it meets approval, we will add&#13;
another tier.&#13;
Personal to John Murphy: Would&#13;
you be interested in having part&#13;
of your sculpture painted&#13;
yellow?&#13;
Now on a more serious note.&#13;
Concerning the students&#13;
suggestions about activities here&#13;
at Parkside. dances, homecoming,&#13;
etc. These have been'tried in&#13;
the past with limited student&#13;
input or interest. However, if the&#13;
Parkside students really have a&#13;
strong desire for any of these&#13;
activities, please come down to&#13;
the PSGA office and we'll try&#13;
again.&#13;
For those students interested&#13;
in better us service, I will bring&#13;
your complaint/inquiry before&#13;
the senate on Monday, November&#13;
20, at 315 in WLLC D174.&#13;
The dorm issue here at&#13;
Parkside. I will find out. Personal&#13;
to Peter T. Rome. We will&#13;
forward your letter to Dave&#13;
Peterson, Dean of Student Life. If&#13;
you can find others in your&#13;
predicament, you would have a&#13;
more powerful case.&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
FOR&#13;
SPRING SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are seeking a degree at&#13;
UW-Parkside) should consult their academic adviser prior to registration&#13;
for Spring Semester. A Certification of Advising form, signed by the&#13;
adviser, is required for registration.&#13;
Spring Semester Course Schedules will be available on December 1.&#13;
December 4-15 has been designated as an academic advising period, and&#13;
advisers will make every effort to meet with you then. However, you&#13;
should work out a mutually convenient time to meet with your adviser,&#13;
which could be later in December or early in January.&#13;
Contact&#13;
Your Adviser&#13;
For An Appointment&#13;
If you have any questions, contact the Office of the Dean of Faculty, 348&#13;
Wyllie Library-learning Center, 553-2144.&#13;
Note: Non-matriculant students (students not seeking a degree at UWParkside)&#13;
are exempt from this requirement. &#13;
Wednesday November 22,1978 RANGIR&#13;
Gary Ophala&#13;
Lectures Industrial Psych.&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
When a student selects an area&#13;
of study to major in, his next&#13;
decision concerns what he&#13;
should do with his degree and&#13;
what career he should pursue:&#13;
Everyone, of course, has to&#13;
answer these questions for&#13;
themselves but some aid can be&#13;
offered. And this is the purpose&#13;
of the Industrial Psychology&#13;
Croup. Composed of Psychology&#13;
students from the Industrial&#13;
Psychology concentration and&#13;
Business students double majoring&#13;
in Psychology, it is&#13;
academically and career oriented&#13;
toward aiding the student.&#13;
The coordinator is Professor&#13;
Geula Lowenberg, Greenquist&#13;
314.&#13;
According to an American&#13;
Psychological Association Pamphlet,&#13;
Industrial Psychology&#13;
focuses on the problems that&#13;
people encounter at work.&#13;
Solving these problems aids the&#13;
individual employee and therefore&#13;
the company as a whole.&#13;
The various roles of an&#13;
Industrial Psychologist in an&#13;
organization, include: 1) making&#13;
adjustments in the way work is&#13;
organized to improve productivity.&#13;
2) working with management&#13;
and employees on training&#13;
programs to develop employee&#13;
potential. 3) or use scientific&#13;
techniques to measure employee&#13;
morale. The results of such a&#13;
study could have implications&#13;
for the entire structure of an&#13;
organization in the pursuit of&#13;
better morale.&#13;
Another major sub-field within&#13;
_JT&#13;
Industrial Psychology is Personnel&#13;
Psychology which focuses&#13;
more specifically on the&#13;
selection and assignment of&#13;
personnel to enhance job&#13;
satisfaction and productivity.&#13;
The program at Parkside is one&#13;
of four concentrations within the&#13;
Psychology discipline and features&#13;
a "hands on" externship&#13;
with area companies. However,&#13;
to aid Industrial Psychology&#13;
(I.P.) students with their career&#13;
decisions the I.P. Group has&#13;
begun a series of gatherings to&#13;
inform students about their&#13;
prospective job markets and the&#13;
types of jobs available to them.&#13;
Last Wednesday, Gary Opahla,&#13;
the Personnel- Manager of&#13;
General Thermal Dynamics, a&#13;
fast growing company in&#13;
Milwaukee, and a graduate of&#13;
the I.P. program (75) came to&#13;
speak at an I.P C meeting. Gary&#13;
described how he had worked&#13;
with two other organizations&#13;
before coming to General&#13;
Thermal Dynamics. He said that&#13;
HEILt MAN'S&#13;
m Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On Tap At U nion Square&#13;
fljVurpbY ft&#13;
he' left these organizations&#13;
because of little room for&#13;
promotion in each. However, he&#13;
said that he feels that these two&#13;
jobs game him valuable&#13;
background and experience.&#13;
Hired on the advice of a&#13;
consultant that his company had&#13;
brought in to examine a&#13;
management/employee dispute,&#13;
Gary had to develop the&#13;
Personnel program at General&#13;
Thermal Dynamics from scratch.&#13;
Gary stressed that the I.P.&#13;
program, and especially the&#13;
Externship training he had&#13;
received at Johnson's Wax in&#13;
Racine, through the IP.&#13;
program, had prepared him very&#13;
well for his work. He also&#13;
stressed that it is this type of&#13;
experience that employers look&#13;
for.&#13;
Gary explained that the&#13;
unique mixture of skills that the&#13;
I.P. graduate has to offer gives&#13;
him or her an edge over straight&#13;
Business Administration or&#13;
Communication graduates, that&#13;
Gary has usually had to compete&#13;
with in his particular field of&#13;
Personnel work. This work would&#13;
seem to follow since Gary&#13;
characterized his work as very&#13;
delicate: "getting close enough&#13;
to the employee to discuss issues&#13;
but still remain a representative&#13;
of management."&#13;
The meeting also went on to&#13;
discuss the interests of the I.P.&#13;
students there and the individual&#13;
student's career goals. Furthermore,&#13;
the group plans to join a&#13;
professional organization in their&#13;
field called PIRA or Personnel&#13;
and Industrial Relations Associations&#13;
of Wisconsin.&#13;
It would appear that the&#13;
Industrial Psychology Group is&#13;
making important efforts to help&#13;
its members with their futures.&#13;
I.P. is a relatively new field with&#13;
only four schools in the U.S.&#13;
offering Ph.D.'s in it. However, it&#13;
has a bright future. Likewise, the&#13;
students in the Industrial&#13;
Psychology Group have a&#13;
promising future as they take the&#13;
first steps toward planning and&#13;
achieving what they want from&#13;
their careers.&#13;
Dear Sirs,&#13;
Your recent issues h.&#13;
brought me great delight W&#13;
article on Minoan art trea J •&#13;
was a treasure ,n itself I&#13;
the one where Dr. Rioh^!&#13;
Leakey uncovers his ow |&#13;
fathers grave - a classic 0rl&#13;
nnu/ QKAI• • iU.i •&#13;
where! how about that one&#13;
they're teaching the chim 5&#13;
panzee to read Sanskrit -J&#13;
stunning. Yes, you the editors *&#13;
of National Geographic magj&#13;
azine perform a tremendous!&#13;
a kc\ m Anl.! i .. •&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
Years ago I used to read a&#13;
column in the San Francisco&#13;
Herald-Examiner or Saturday&#13;
Review or somewhere, entitled&#13;
"Thoughts While Shaving." It&#13;
was full of these philosophical&#13;
little quips this guy thought up&#13;
while he was shaving, such as:&#13;
"The man who looks back&#13;
knows where he's been, while&#13;
the man who looks forward&#13;
knows where he's going.&#13;
Or,&#13;
"Life isn't always funny, service to mankind. Keep Uo:&#13;
especially if you're a come- the good work!&#13;
dian." Sincerely yours !&#13;
You know, some very power- Barnseet Strillow !&#13;
fUWell, I was shaving the other PSH°w&#13;
about an article on j&#13;
day and I have some thoughts ® beauties of j&#13;
I'd like to share with you: p&#13;
1. Boy, is that water hot!&#13;
2. Oops, almost out of razor&#13;
blades, better buy some.&#13;
3. Yech, got shaving cream&#13;
in my mouth.&#13;
4. Might as well get shaving&#13;
cream when I buy razor&#13;
blades.&#13;
5. Look out for that pimple&#13;
on my neck.&#13;
6. Ouch, got it.&#13;
7. Oh no, I got blood on the&#13;
towel.&#13;
8. Better buy some bandaides&#13;
too.&#13;
It was a pleasure sharing my&#13;
profoundest thoughts with&#13;
you. And remember, let no&#13;
man who is wiser than you get&#13;
on the bus first.&#13;
A. Shaver&#13;
:&#13;
\ v&#13;
Dear Mr. Murphy,&#13;
I notice in your newspaper&#13;
I how you refer to yourself as&#13;
j "Ed." This leads me to believe&#13;
j that the kids in your neighborhood&#13;
must call you Mister Ed&#13;
I — which leads me to believe&#13;
j that you are a talking horse,&#13;
j Well, I can believe in a talking&#13;
j horse, but a talking newspaper&#13;
j editor? Never!&#13;
Yours till the&#13;
hay comes in,&#13;
Trigger&#13;
E P.S. I must confess to this uni&#13;
controllable leather fetish.&#13;
BOO ALE&#13;
Juvenile&#13;
*1.39&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
Dear Mr. Big-League,&#13;
High-Powered Executive,&#13;
You know how it is when a&#13;
group of your subordinates!&#13;
gets together and starts!&#13;
bitching about-the boss —!&#13;
namely you.&#13;
In order to prove to them-j&#13;
selves that they're no better!&#13;
than you, they use that famous !&#13;
"equalizer" expression — "Aw, j&#13;
he takes his pants off one leg j&#13;
at a time just like the rest of!&#13;
us."&#13;
Well, now for a limited time !&#13;
only, we are offering a new j&#13;
design pant for the top-flight [&#13;
executive. This remarkable!&#13;
new design features cleverly \&#13;
concealed snaps that run from !&#13;
ankle to ankle along the pant j&#13;
inseam. To remove the pants, j&#13;
•:just unsnap the snaps and pull!&#13;
[them off of both of your legs at j&#13;
[the same time,&#13;
j Yes, never again let it be j&#13;
[said that you're just like the j&#13;
[rest of them, that you takes&#13;
[your pants off one leg at aj&#13;
[time.&#13;
! Order the new Snap-o pants j&#13;
|now. Hurry, before it's tool&#13;
[late!&#13;
! In $500-bi 11 green, balance:&#13;
jsheet black and shit-on your |&#13;
[competitor brown.&#13;
Paperbacks&#13;
.49&#13;
Monday-Thursday 9 a.m.-7 p .m.&#13;
Friday 9 a .m.-4 p.m.&#13;
Saturday 10 a.m.-l p».&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS (&#13;
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MEM BE" F.D.I.C. &#13;
22,1978 HANGER&#13;
Operation Crossroads&#13;
Builds Communication&#13;
Operation Crossroads Africa&#13;
(OCA) is now accepting&#13;
applications from college students&#13;
who wish to participate in&#13;
the summer work camps it&#13;
operates in many of the English&#13;
and French speaking countries of&#13;
Africa. Deadline for applications&#13;
for next summer's camps is Feb&#13;
15,1979.&#13;
OCA is a non-profit, nongovernmental&#13;
community&#13;
development organization. The&#13;
area representative for OCA is&#13;
Chris Saudek, a University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside faculty&#13;
member who served two years in&#13;
the Peace torps in Zaire, Central&#13;
Africa, and has since returned as&#13;
the leader of an Operations&#13;
Crossroads group to Togo, West&#13;
Africa.&#13;
The OCA subsidizes the&#13;
people who are interested in&#13;
participating to the tune of&#13;
$1100. However, the individual&#13;
must come up with $1700 to&#13;
cover the remainder of the&#13;
expensives, which include travel&#13;
costs to Africa from New York&#13;
and back, and living expenses&#13;
while in Africa. The task of&#13;
raising this amount is an integral&#13;
part of the Crossroads program.&#13;
Crossroads succeeds in helping&#13;
90% of the accepted applicants&#13;
raise the necessary money&#13;
through fund raising&#13;
activities and the like.&#13;
During the past 21 years OCA&#13;
has sent more than 5,000&#13;
American students to 34 African&#13;
countries to spend two months&#13;
living with, working with and&#13;
sharing the daily lives of village&#13;
communities. The experience is&#13;
unique for every participant but&#13;
for most the process will create a&#13;
fuller awareness of one's values,&#13;
goals and abilities. The organization&#13;
is dedicated to human&#13;
growth; the growth of persons,&#13;
communications and nations.&#13;
A participant is generally&#13;
involved in some kind of&#13;
development program usually&#13;
involving physical work four to&#13;
six hours a day. Volunteers work&#13;
with 8 to 10 other Americans and&#13;
an equal number of Africans&#13;
toward building a school,&#13;
medical dispensary, health clinic&#13;
or community center. Chris's&#13;
group helped to build a water&#13;
storage facility for a youth center&#13;
between two villages in southern&#13;
Togo.&#13;
Crossroads is'. interested in&#13;
increasing communications between&#13;
persons of different&#13;
nationalities, races, religions,&#13;
and cultures.* The personal&#13;
contact is riot* only with&#13;
traditional and modern African&#13;
life but also with a diverse group&#13;
of Americans. The Americans in&#13;
each group come for different&#13;
regional, racial cultural and&#13;
intellectual backgrounds. The&#13;
diversity among the American&#13;
members as well as the&#13;
experience in communal living&#13;
provides a good opportunity for&#13;
learning and personal growth.&#13;
Crossroads also sponsors some&#13;
specialized programs in Africa,&#13;
in agriculture, ethno-musicology,&#13;
archaeology, health education,&#13;
journalism and media.&#13;
There are also summer workcamps&#13;
in the West Indies open to&#13;
high school students.&#13;
Persons wishing additional&#13;
information on the programs can&#13;
contact Chris at 1440 Main St.,&#13;
Racine (632-5477) or write to&#13;
Operation Crossroads Africa,&#13;
Inc., 150 Fifth Avenue, New&#13;
York, N Y. 10011.&#13;
PLATO Teaches Again&#13;
PRINCETON, N.J. - College&#13;
teachers maintain essential roles&#13;
in educating students even when&#13;
computers are used in classroom&#13;
instruction, studies by Educational&#13;
Testing Service (ETS) have&#13;
found.&#13;
Two evaluations conducted by&#13;
ETS at the community college&#13;
level also demonstrated that&#13;
while computer systems designed&#13;
to teach students that have&#13;
not reached the stature often&#13;
claimed for them, the potential&#13;
remains for their continued&#13;
development and application.&#13;
Both evaluations were sponsored&#13;
by the National Science&#13;
Foundation.&#13;
One of the computer-assisted&#13;
instruction systems examined,&#13;
TICCIT (Time-Shared, Interactive,&#13;
Computer-Controlled Information&#13;
Television), was devised&#13;
to provide a complete and&#13;
independent alternative to entire&#13;
college courses in selected&#13;
subjects, allowing students to&#13;
exercise control over the pace&#13;
and sequence of their lessons.&#13;
The PLATO (Programmed&#13;
Logic for Automatic Teaching&#13;
Operations) systems was created&#13;
to fit into a regular teachermanaged&#13;
study program and&#13;
supplement college course work.&#13;
In the demonstration of PLATO&#13;
evaluated, the system accounted&#13;
for less than one-third of total&#13;
class instruction.&#13;
In an evaluation directed by&#13;
Donald L. Alderman of ETS,&#13;
TICCIT was found to have had a&#13;
positive impact on student&#13;
achievement. Students able to&#13;
complete a course using TICCIT&#13;
generally attained higher posttest&#13;
scores, particularly in&#13;
mathematics, than those reached&#13;
by similar students using&#13;
common teaching practices.&#13;
Higher achievement in courses&#13;
given on the TICCIT system was&#13;
especially evident among students&#13;
with a strong initial grasp&#13;
of the subject.&#13;
The study also found that&#13;
TICCIT had a negative effect on&#13;
the likelihood that a student&#13;
would complete all requirements&#13;
for course credit during a single&#13;
academic term. For example, in&#13;
mathematics courses at one of&#13;
the colleges only 16 of every 100&#13;
pupils enrolled received a grade&#13;
with credit during an academic&#13;
term, compared to an average of&#13;
50 percent for lecture classes.&#13;
When the subject matter lent&#13;
itself to active teacher participation,&#13;
such as in reviewing essays&#13;
or discussing themes, the gap in&#13;
completion rates between&#13;
TICCIT and lecture classes&#13;
closed.&#13;
TERRACE ROOM&#13;
486 LAKE AVE&#13;
presents:&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
and&#13;
Thursday&#13;
RACINE&#13;
MONTAGE&#13;
better than three in five believed&#13;
PLATO was beneficial to&#13;
student-student and studentinstructor&#13;
interactions.&#13;
A critical factor that accounted&#13;
for PLATO'S high acceptance&#13;
and usage was the control the&#13;
teachers had over the system.&#13;
Each instructor determined how&#13;
much his students would use it&#13;
and for what lessons it would be&#13;
available.&#13;
PLATO is a large educational&#13;
computing network developed at&#13;
the Computer-based Educational&#13;
Research Laboratory in Urbana,&#13;
III. The display screen for a&#13;
PLATO terminal is a panel that&#13;
can provide simple repetitive&#13;
skills to give students practice in&#13;
basic concepts, or relay graphics&#13;
to illustrate principales in the&#13;
physical sciences and simulate&#13;
laboratory experiments. Input is&#13;
channeled through a typewriterlike&#13;
keyboard.&#13;
Developed by the MITRE&#13;
Corporation, TICCIT combines&#13;
minicomputers and television&#13;
receivers in its instructional&#13;
system. The terminal is a color&#13;
television set modified to accept&#13;
digital computer signals and&#13;
translate them into display&#13;
frames. Students use an&#13;
electronic keyboard that accompanies&#13;
the television receivers to&#13;
communicate with the computer&#13;
system.&#13;
In the Plato evaluation,&#13;
lessons were computerized and&#13;
integrated into some accounting,&#13;
biology, chemistry, English and&#13;
mathematics courses at five&#13;
Illinois community colleges.&#13;
More than 8,000 students,&#13;
participated in this study.&#13;
The TICCIT evaluation involved&#13;
over 5,000 students in&#13;
nearly 200 sections of certain&#13;
algebra and English composition&#13;
courses at two community&#13;
colleges, one each in Arizona&#13;
and Virginia.&#13;
Student attitudes toward&#13;
TICCIT were more often less&#13;
favorable than toward conventional&#13;
teaching methods, but&#13;
when English classes taught on&#13;
the TICCIT system were&#13;
supplemented by small group&#13;
discussion with an instructor,&#13;
attitudes improved over those&#13;
expressed for lecture-discussion&#13;
classes.&#13;
ET's Richard T. Murphy, who&#13;
directed the PLATO evaluation,&#13;
and Lola Rhea Appel found no&#13;
consistent positive or negative&#13;
effects on student achievement&#13;
or attrition — the drop-out rate&#13;
— that could be linked to&#13;
PLATO's use. The study&#13;
determined, however, that&#13;
PLATO provided a medium of&#13;
instruction with broad appeal to&#13;
both students and teachers. In&#13;
fact, PLATO students showed&#13;
more favorable attitudes toward&#13;
computers and computer-assisted&#13;
instruction than non-PLATO&#13;
students.&#13;
About half the students&#13;
thought that course material&#13;
presented by PLATO helped&#13;
them learn better than course&#13;
material presented in class&#13;
lectures. Large majorities (70&#13;
percent to 90 percent) said they&#13;
continued their instruction on&#13;
PLATO beyond the end of class,&#13;
felt PLATO made good use of&#13;
examples and illustrations,&#13;
believed they could make&#13;
mistakes without embarrassment&#13;
and could take part in their&#13;
instruction at each step in the&#13;
lessons, and expressed a desire to&#13;
take other PLATO courses.&#13;
Observers found that students&#13;
were attentive to their work,&#13;
relaxed and enthusiastic, neither&#13;
confused nor frustrated, and able&#13;
to use PLATO terminals easily.&#13;
More than 80 percent of the&#13;
teachers surveyed said PLATO&#13;
had a positive effect on student&#13;
attitudes and achievement, and&#13;
FOR R ESERVED S EATING&#13;
CALL 632-4206&#13;
entertainment 9 p.m.&#13;
"JAZZ SO GOOD"&#13;
lb&#13;
«t 19 1°" GOOD&#13;
.. .he 8 I.» KAOM r-t „vak&lt;" MON-FRI&#13;
CO* 11-2&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACULTY A*D |&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFF ON ALL&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICATION. &#13;
Wednesday N ovember 22,1978 RANGER 6&#13;
Wisconsin S ingers T o Perform&#13;
The widely acclaimed Wisconsin&#13;
Singers, known as the&#13;
"Smiling Ambassadors of Song"&#13;
for the University of Wisconsin&#13;
for the past 12 years, will&#13;
perform in a benefit concert&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 29, at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in UW-Parkside's Communication&#13;
Arts theater.&#13;
All proceeds will go to the&#13;
scholarship funds of the Kenosha&#13;
and Racine UW-Madison Alumni&#13;
Clubs, which are co-sponsoring&#13;
the Singers concert.&#13;
Tickets are available at the&#13;
door or in advance from&#13;
members of either club or at the&#13;
UW-Parkside Union Information&#13;
Center ($3.50 general", $1.50 all&#13;
students).&#13;
This year's edition of the&#13;
Singers' 90-minute show features&#13;
a complete theatrical presentation,&#13;
with striking costumes and&#13;
elaborate choreography. The&#13;
talents of performance director&#13;
John Jacobson and musical&#13;
director Scott Foss have been&#13;
complemented by nationally&#13;
known choreographer Jim Bates.&#13;
Bates' television credits include&#13;
"The Lucy Show," "The&#13;
Flip Wilson Series," "The Kraft&#13;
Music Hall," "The Mac Davis&#13;
Series," "The Mitzi Gaynor&#13;
Special," "The Paul Lynde&#13;
Christmas Special" and "The&#13;
New Mickey Mouse Club" for&#13;
Walt Disney Productions. Also&#13;
active in the theatre, Bates has&#13;
directed national companies of&#13;
"Oklahoma," "West Side Story"&#13;
and "The Music Man." He is&#13;
currently preparing a production&#13;
of "Guys and Dolls" starring Ken&#13;
Berry to open in Chicago in&#13;
September. During the last three&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. at 62nd St.&#13;
Established in 1930&#13;
years he has also staged the&#13;
shows for "Marriott's Great&#13;
America" both in Illinois and in&#13;
California.&#13;
Special musical arrangements&#13;
for the 1978-79 show include&#13;
favorites for young and old: "It's&#13;
a Miracle" and "Dancin' in the&#13;
Streets" by Barry Manilow, and&#13;
Duke Ellington's "It Don't Mean&#13;
a Thing." Dramatic production&#13;
numbers such as "The Collegiate&#13;
Medley," "Television Theme&#13;
Songs" and "Can't Stop Dancin'"&#13;
are also featured in the show.&#13;
The group of 24 performers,&#13;
backed by an instrumental&#13;
combo, was selected from nearly&#13;
200 on-campus auditions representing&#13;
the finest student talent&#13;
at UW-Madison. Three of the&#13;
Singers are from Kenosha: Dave&#13;
Chase, Teri Sorenson and Trez&#13;
Tianen.&#13;
As in former years, the&#13;
Wisconsin Singers are affiliated&#13;
with the Wisconsin Alumni&#13;
Association. Their primary purpose&#13;
is helping local alumni&#13;
clubs and interested groups raise&#13;
money for UW-Madison scholarships.&#13;
They have performed&#13;
throughout the United States,&#13;
including special appearances at&#13;
Disney World in 1978 and the&#13;
White House in 1976 and 1977,&#13;
and were recognized as the&#13;
outstanding college student&#13;
relations program in 1976.&#13;
Living It Up&#13;
Theater &amp; Films&#13;
Nov. 22 - Jan. 1 — Comic Opera "Ruddigore" presented by the&#13;
Skylight Theater in Vogel Hall, PAC. Call box office for times.&#13;
Thru Nov. 26 - Play, "The Freeway" at Todd Wehr Theatre of the&#13;
PAC.&#13;
Thru Dec. 23 - Play "Guys and Dolls," with Ken Barry at the&#13;
Marriotts Lincolnshire Resort. Dinner theater packages available.&#13;
Dec. 8 - 20 - Play, "A Christmas Carol" presented by the Milwaukee&#13;
Repertory Theater. Tickets available at the Pabst Theatre box office.&#13;
Music&#13;
Nov. 22 — Ja zz vocalist Al Jarreau in Uihlein Hall, PAC, 8 p.m.&#13;
Nov. 24 — N eil Sedaka at 8 p.m. in Uihlein Hall, PAC.&#13;
Nov. 25 &amp; 26 — Violinist Erick Friedman &amp; guest conductor Neville&#13;
Mariner with the Milwaukee Symphony, 8:30 p.m. in Uihlein Hall,&#13;
PAC.&#13;
Nov. 26 — R obin Trower at 7:30 p.m. in the Milwaukee Auditorium.&#13;
Nov 27 — The Return of Bruce-Springstein at 7 30 p.m. in the&#13;
Milwaukee Arena.&#13;
Exhibits&#13;
Thru Nov. 30 — Watercolors by Carolyn Gagliardi. Unitarian&#13;
Universalist Church, 6th St. and College Ave., Racine.&#13;
Solo show by Racine artist Marj Lacock. Mother Courage Bookstore&#13;
and Art Gallery, 224 State St.&#13;
Thru Nov. 26 — Tale of the Whale at Milwaukee Public Museum, 800&#13;
W. Wells St. Open daily 9-5.&#13;
If you'd like to see more events in the Kenosha-Racine county area&#13;
listed in Living it Up, contact Sue Stevens in the Ranger office (WLLC&#13;
D139, ext. 2295 &amp; 2287). Any public events, festivals, exhibits,&#13;
programs, or sources to regular schedules of happenings will gladly&#13;
J^e accepted.&#13;
Kenonham. appearing with the Wineoiwin Singers are&#13;
Trez Tianen. Teri Sorenson and Dave Chase.&#13;
MILLER NIGHT&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
SEASON OPENER&#13;
RANGERS vs. UW-LaCROSSE&#13;
FBI., NOV. 24 7:30 P.M.&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PHYSICAL EDUCATION BLDG.&#13;
STUDENT ADMISSION: $2.00 (AT THE DOOR)&#13;
GENERAL ADMISSION: $2.00&#13;
CHILDREN'S ADMISSION: Si.oo&#13;
FREE! "BLEACHER CREATURE" T-SHIRTS TO FIRST&#13;
MO UW P STUDENTS WITH PARKSIDE I.D. FREE! MILLER BEER/SODA TICKETS REDEEMABLE AT&#13;
AN AFTER GAME PARTY IN THE PARKSIDE&#13;
^ iW UNION "LIVE ENTERTAINMENT" r. SUPPORT YOUR CHAMPIONSHIP RANGER&#13;
TEAM NATL. CHAMPIONSHIPS 1975, 1976. IQ77 . i978&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Needs&#13;
Reporters&#13;
Sfaui ©pen&#13;
UUpcr'a&#13;
3D21 (Eluh&#13;
food and drinks&#13;
reasonable&#13;
prices&#13;
Bring a friend&#13;
3021 60th St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Fish on Friday &#13;
Wednesday November 22,1978 RANGER 7&#13;
LAST CHANCE&#13;
TO SIGN UP&#13;
DEC. 1&#13;
Since 1926&#13;
If you can drink itWe&#13;
have It&#13;
or&#13;
We can get it&#13;
or&#13;
We can tell you why not!&#13;
Timers Wine Shop has been&#13;
privileged to procur some of the&#13;
finest domestic &amp; imported&#13;
wines now available. We&#13;
therefore would like to pass&#13;
some of these fine wines on to&#13;
you at a substantial savings.&#13;
The featured wine this month&#13;
will be one of California's most&#13;
notable. Fetzer 1976 Mattern&#13;
Mendocino Zinfandal • the&#13;
Motter Vineyard is located In&#13;
the eastern foothills above the&#13;
Russian River, in the Talmage&#13;
district of the Ukiah Valley,&#13;
Caofornia. We find this wine to&#13;
be full bodied in style,&#13;
- p ossessing intense spicy flavor,&#13;
with good bouquet, and finish&#13;
reminiscent of berrys as all true&#13;
Zinfandel should.&#13;
Normally priced&#13;
at $5.19 fifth,&#13;
we now offer&#13;
this wine for&#13;
only $4.67 fifth&#13;
a savings of 10&#13;
percent - special&#13;
case price also.&#13;
PilGRIM and&#13;
Turkey Jokes&#13;
YoO kNoW, THis'THANkS&amp;IVlMG" v/ouLD MAKE ONF HFCR OF A&#13;
Holiday if it wasn't for that damn TURkfy/&#13;
Qwet; 1 think r hear a nest oF em'. "&#13;
I hate these cheap Cetcxway packages&#13;
• ••'I&#13;
Yes, I knoiv ils bounfiFuLt but I tbink&#13;
we'll stick to turkey s."&#13;
TO Production Control&#13;
Coordinator&#13;
* The J I Case Company has immediate full-time 2nd &amp; 3rd shift openings&#13;
in Production Control.&#13;
H5 Two to four years of college in Business Management or Operations&#13;
Management field preferred.&#13;
He Candidates will be trained to plan and schedule work requirements,&#13;
analyze computer documents and perform labor and inventory reporting&#13;
functions.&#13;
He T hese positions offer qualified applicants an excellent employee salary&#13;
and benefit program including dental, vision care and a tuition reimbursement&#13;
program.&#13;
Interested candidates should send resume and salary requirements in&#13;
confidence to:&#13;
Jean Ayers, Personnel Coordinator&#13;
Salaried Employee Relations&#13;
J I Case Company&#13;
A Tenneco Company&#13;
25th &amp; Mead Streets&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
JENNECO&#13;
An Equal Opportunity Employer&#13;
JAN 2-9, 1979&#13;
"&#13;
omS359&#13;
ROUND TRIP AIR&#13;
DELUXE LODGING&#13;
BREAKFAST DAILY&#13;
GROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
GROUP E SCORT&#13;
TIPS &amp; TAXES&#13;
CONTACT: P ARKSIDE UNION&#13;
RM. 209 CALL 553-2200 &#13;
FffpW";&#13;
% &gt; '&#13;
T&#13;
UWP 39th in NAIA Championship&#13;
The 23rd annual running of the&#13;
NAIA cross country championships&#13;
was held here at Parkside&#13;
this past weekend. Tenth ranked&#13;
Adams State College of Alamosa,&#13;
Colorado, l^st years runner up,&#13;
took the title away from two&#13;
time defending champ Edinboro&#13;
State.&#13;
Kelly Jensen of Southern&#13;
Oregon State won the individual&#13;
title with a time of 25 minutes 7&#13;
seconds over the 5-mile course.&#13;
His time was 8 seconds better&#13;
than that of last years winner&#13;
Carry Henry of Pembroke State,&#13;
forty-six teams and 384&#13;
individual runners took part in&#13;
the race.&#13;
Parkside finished in 39th place&#13;
with freshman Dave Mueller&#13;
being the top Ranger finisher in&#13;
148th place. Senior Gary Priem&#13;
came in 263rd, freshman Paul&#13;
Cannestra would up 294th,&#13;
freshman Chris Ohm was 297th&#13;
and junior Mike Rummel&#13;
was 335th.&#13;
Lots For UWP B-Boll Fans&#13;
If you miss the Rangers in&#13;
action this year you will be&#13;
missing more than just exciting&#13;
basketball. At the opening game&#13;
of the season Miller Brewing&#13;
Company will help support the&#13;
Rangers by awarding T-shirts to&#13;
the first 200 students. Another&#13;
part of this promotion will&#13;
feature One-on-One Basketball&#13;
half time contests.&#13;
College students, who usually&#13;
sit in the stands and dream of&#13;
being Kareem Abdul-Jabbar or&#13;
Pete Maravich, will get a chance&#13;
to bring their factasies to life&#13;
when Miller Brewing Company&#13;
and C.J.W. distributor bring their&#13;
One-on-One Basketball Tournament&#13;
to the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Participants&#13;
will engage in a four minute&#13;
. basketball game, with the player&#13;
scoring ten points first and&#13;
leading by at least two points,&#13;
declared the winner. A championship&#13;
tournament will be held&#13;
at the final home game of the&#13;
season.&#13;
To be eligible, all participants&#13;
must be currently enrolled at&#13;
UW-Parkside as a graduate or&#13;
undergraduate student. Since the&#13;
finals will be conducted next&#13;
semester, only students returning&#13;
in the spring should register.&#13;
Students having lettered in&#13;
collegiate basketball are ineligible.&#13;
&#13;
Finals will be held at the&#13;
following home games: Tuesday,&#13;
January 30 - UW-Whitewater;&#13;
Saturday, February 10 - IllinoisChicago&#13;
Circle; Saturday, February&#13;
17 - Indiana-Purdue;&#13;
CHAMPIONSHIP - Saturday,&#13;
February 24 - Quincy College.&#13;
All participants must be able&#13;
to compete at these times.&#13;
Preliminaries will be held on&#13;
January 16, 17 and 19.&#13;
Ranger Relays&#13;
Registration forms may be&#13;
obtained at the Information desk&#13;
between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.&#13;
on Monday thru Friday beginning&#13;
on December 5. No entries&#13;
will be excepted after December&#13;
22. There will be a two dollar&#13;
entry fee with all proceeds going&#13;
to the Child Care Center.&#13;
UWM Takes First&#13;
by Peter Jacket&#13;
UW-Milwaukee won the 12&#13;
team Ranger Relays hosted by&#13;
Parkside last November 17&#13;
basically on the strength of their&#13;
diving performances while the&#13;
Rangers finished in 12th place.&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson anticipated&#13;
UWM to be a strong challenger&#13;
in the Relays but figured last&#13;
years winner, Illinois-Chicago&#13;
Circle for the top position. Circle&#13;
could do no better than a 3rd&#13;
place finish however, behind&#13;
UWM and UW-Stevens Point.&#13;
Parkside managed an 8th&#13;
place finish in the 450 yard&#13;
breaststroke relay featuring the&#13;
combined talents of Debbie&#13;
Erickson, who swam 50 yards in&#13;
the relay, Jim Walker (100 yards),&#13;
Lowrie Melotik (100 yards), and&#13;
Chris Wtipil (200 yards).&#13;
In the diving relay, the Ranger&#13;
posted a 9th place finish on the&#13;
efforts of Ann Corardy and Mark&#13;
Rosandich while the 400 y,&#13;
medley relay team of /&#13;
American Jim Ferraro, Meloi&#13;
Rick Lopes, and Lili Crnich tc&#13;
11th place.&#13;
Other events the Rang&#13;
competed in along with te&#13;
participants and placings incli&#13;
the 400 yard freestyle relay te,&#13;
of Walker, Erickson, Lope, a&#13;
Crnich (12th), the 200 y;&#13;
medley relay team of Meloi&#13;
Wtipil, Corardy, and Ferri&#13;
(12th) and the 200 yard freest&#13;
team of Corardy, Ferraro, Lop&#13;
and Crnich.&#13;
Lawson described the ReL&#13;
as "fun" and explained that th&#13;
gave the coaches a chance to •&#13;
their teams compete in "I&#13;
pressure situations."&#13;
The Relays marked the fi&#13;
action for the women's te.&#13;
until January while the men v&#13;
be back in action this Noveml&#13;
28 against Rockford.&#13;
Wednesday BANGER November 22,1978&#13;
Here s the scene early in the 23rd annual NAIA championship race at&#13;
UW-Parkside Saturday&#13;
Photos by P.J.Azasolina&#13;
Kickers Miss Goal&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
To cap off a frustrating season,&#13;
Goach Hal Henderson's men's&#13;
soccer team lost a frustrating&#13;
game to the College of St.&#13;
Thomas of St. Paul, Minnesota,&#13;
by a score of 4-0.&#13;
St. Thomas, who improved&#13;
their record to 16-1-2, dependeJ&#13;
on the scoring of senior Rueben&#13;
Pedro' of Brazil for the first two&#13;
deceive goals. The first half was&#13;
very evenly played as it ended&#13;
with St. Thomas leading 1-0.&#13;
Henderson mentioned that two&#13;
missed chances by Parkside in&#13;
the first half could have turned&#13;
things around in favor of the&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
Pedrosa'^ second goal of the&#13;
game came just seven minutes&#13;
into the second half and left the&#13;
Rangers stunned.&#13;
"After the second goal our&#13;
kid s just gave up. We wanted to&#13;
keep the ball on the outside and&#13;
away from Rueben but most of&#13;
the game was played in the&#13;
middle of the field."&#13;
A statistic that showed the&#13;
actual evenness of the game was&#13;
the number of shots in the&#13;
second half. St. Thomas got only&#13;
five shots off in the half&#13;
although two of the first three&#13;
shots went into the net. It was at&#13;
that point that the Rangers just&#13;
quit running and seemed like&#13;
they wanted to go home. In that&#13;
perilous second half the Rangers&#13;
only managed to get off one shot&#13;
on goal.&#13;
Henderson is encouraged for&#13;
next year as he hopes to correct&#13;
this years problem of having no&#13;
depth. A few breaks here and&#13;
there and the Rangers could&#13;
have improved on their dismal&#13;
record of 4-9-4.&#13;
The 1978 NAIA District 14&#13;
soccer team was announced last&#13;
week with the Rangers placing&#13;
five men on the eleven man first&#13;
team and two on honorable&#13;
mention. Senior Dan Brieschke&#13;
was selected as goalkeeper.&#13;
Junior Lee Cielonko and&#13;
Freshman John Momoima of&#13;
Kenya made the team as&#13;
forwards and Freshman Walt&#13;
Tyshynsky and junior Niall&#13;
Power of Waterford, Ireland,&#13;
made the team as backs.&#13;
Freshman Claude Cielonko and&#13;
junior Earl Campbell were&#13;
awarded with honorable mention.&#13;
&#13;
Coach Henderson was also&#13;
awarded as this years District 14&#13;
Soccer Coach of the Year as h is&#13;
Rangers won the district&#13;
championship enabling them to&#13;
advance in post season play.&#13;
course was eight seconds better than that of&#13;
Pembroke State (N.C.) junior Garry Henry, who&#13;
failed to defend his title. &#13;
Wednesday November 22,1978&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Basketball Season Opens Soon&#13;
by DV DoiIC Doug Edenhauser FriAnKaucA* I..UU -r- r ®&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
After four straight NA1A&#13;
district 14 championships you&#13;
may ask the question 'When are&#13;
the Rangers going to win it all?'&#13;
Well folks this may be the year&#13;
that Parkside goes on to win the&#13;
NAIA National Championship&#13;
that takes place in Kansas City&#13;
next year.&#13;
In an exhibition match against&#13;
the Argentine National team the&#13;
Rangers showed their awesome&#13;
height and the power they have&#13;
by easily defeating the visitors by&#13;
a score of 81-63. Coach Steve&#13;
Stevens was free to get each one&#13;
of his players into the lineup and&#13;
get a little playing experience in&#13;
before the season starts.&#13;
The Argentines were no match&#13;
for the tall Ranger Lineup as&#13;
three top competitors for the&#13;
visitors were out of the lineup&#13;
with injuries. Top scorer for both&#13;
teams was Aigentine's 6 foot 1&#13;
inch Horacio Desavado who had&#13;
34 points. Nobody else on the&#13;
squad had more than 8 points.&#13;
The leading rebounder for the&#13;
Argentines was little 5 foot 8&#13;
inch Alejandro Dilenque who&#13;
had 8 rebounds, as the Rangers&#13;
out rebounded their opponents&#13;
59 to 41. Seven foot junior Lester&#13;
Thompson led the Rangers with&#13;
15 boards.&#13;
This years team has four of last&#13;
years starters returning, although&#13;
Steven says that at the moment&#13;
he has eight starters. The four&#13;
returning starters are 6-7 forward&#13;
Marvin Chones, 6-4 guard Joe&#13;
Foots, 6-7 forward Jerry Luckett&#13;
and 6-8 center-forward Lonnie&#13;
Lewis. Lewis started at the center&#13;
position last year but with Lester&#13;
Thompson ripening into form&#13;
Lewis will start at the forward&#13;
position.&#13;
Chones, a senior this year from&#13;
Racine St. Catherines, led the&#13;
Rangers in scoring last year with&#13;
an average of 13.5 points per&#13;
game and also pulled down 6.3&#13;
rebounds a game.&#13;
Foots, also a senior from St.&#13;
Catherines, will have to take over&#13;
the leadership role for the&#13;
Rangers that was previously held&#13;
by the departed Stevie King. Joe&#13;
averaged 10.4 points a game last&#13;
season.&#13;
Letterwinners back from last&#13;
years squad are expected to fill&#13;
in well when needed. Reggie&#13;
Anderson, a 6-5 sophomore from&#13;
Gage Park High School in&#13;
Chicago averaging 9.6 points last&#13;
year as a forward, will move to&#13;
the guard spot this year with a&#13;
good possibility of making the&#13;
starting lineup. Senior Alex&#13;
Jennings from Case, sophomore&#13;
Walter Greene from Chicago and&#13;
sophomore Michael Watley, all&#13;
guards, complete the list of&#13;
returning men.&#13;
By the looks of the list of&#13;
newcomers to this years team&#13;
coach Stevens is obviously trying&#13;
to recruit new talent , into the&#13;
lineup for the years to come.&#13;
Heading that list is Kent&#13;
Schneider, a husky 230 pound&#13;
6-7 forward-center from Mason&#13;
City Illinois. He is expected to&#13;
add muscle to strengthen the&#13;
Rangers inside game.&#13;
Other rookies include 5-10&#13;
Dave McLeish a play making&#13;
guard from Stoughton, Wisconsin;&#13;
James Fleming, a 6-2 guard&#13;
who is a junior college transfer&#13;
from Lincoln College; 6-2&#13;
freshman guard Tony Clark from&#13;
Case; 6-5 frosh forward Lanzy&#13;
Meeks, also from Case, and 6-2&#13;
junior guard Ernest Williams&#13;
from Chicago. Meeks and&#13;
Williams will gain eligibility at&#13;
the start of the spring semester.&#13;
The Rangers will start the&#13;
season this Friday against a&#13;
tough UW-LaCrosse team that&#13;
beat the Rangers at LaCrosse last&#13;
season.&#13;
Parkside hopes to improve on&#13;
last years record of 19-11&#13;
although the schedule they have&#13;
to face is no piece of cake. After&#13;
two home games to open the&#13;
season this weekend the Rangers&#13;
will travel to California for a&#13;
gruesome three game series&#13;
opening with a match against Cal&#13;
State-Fullerton, a team that&#13;
made it to the final eight in the&#13;
NCAA national tournament last&#13;
year. That trip will include stops&#13;
at San Diego State and Fresno&#13;
State.&#13;
Exciting basketball is on hand&#13;
for all those who come out to the&#13;
games. With a little more fan&#13;
support our team might make it&#13;
all the way this year so come on&#13;
out and have some fun.&#13;
;f#»e farkside Racers ^front row, Iteft rigfct) Manager; ban Dagnef, Jaml* $eming, Michael efeley, Walter Gqeene,&#13;
Alex J&amp;inings, Tody Clark, Dave McLeish, manager Paul Charapata (Back row, left to right) HfaM coach Steve Stephens,&#13;
Assistant Coach Rudy Collum, Ernest Williams, Reginald Anderson, Jerry Luckett, Lester Thompson, Kent Schneider&#13;
Marvin Chones, Lanzy Meeks, Joe Foots, Trainer Hal Henderson. &#13;
Wednesday November 22,1978 RANGER 10&#13;
Scarf Is Coming Home&#13;
Scajif&#13;
by Scarf O'toole&#13;
As you may remember, I have&#13;
been incarcerated and am&#13;
feeling the severity of prison life.&#13;
(I wish I was a blues singer; then&#13;
I could at least make a few bucks&#13;
off of my own troubles).&#13;
So, I decided that before I&#13;
became Pablo's supper, my&#13;
overly-friendly cellmate, I&#13;
would, in the words of the&#13;
famous song, "Hit the trail and&#13;
I'm gone for good."&#13;
The plan was given to me by&#13;
an old jailbird by the name of&#13;
Murphy. It was so diabolical,&#13;
that I suggested when he gets out&#13;
of prison to get a job working&#13;
with a newspaper.&#13;
Anyway, I got a large carton&#13;
from the prison laundry,&#13;
wrapped myself up and mailed&#13;
myself out. I addressed the&#13;
package to my editor.&#13;
Well, I arrived this morning,&#13;
disguised as some literature from&#13;
Peep Show Publications; I&#13;
figured it would be the only way&#13;
I could get my editor to spring&#13;
for the postage. He was a little&#13;
disappointed, however, when he&#13;
opened up the package&#13;
expecting The Whip Lady Meets&#13;
King Kong and getting me&#13;
instead.&#13;
So, anyway, I'm in hiding&#13;
somewhere at old P.V. and I&#13;
need help. I'm asking you&#13;
readers to write to me c/o the&#13;
Ranger, so that I can get myself a&#13;
good lawyer and beat this rap.&#13;
Since I've been gone my mail&#13;
has been piling up on other&#13;
people's desks, two and three&#13;
feet deep. Apparently, after my&#13;
arrest and subsequent sentence,&#13;
the Ranger gave up on me. The&#13;
fact that I didn't miss a single&#13;
deadline during all the weeks&#13;
that I was gone was apparently&#13;
ignored by the editorial staff&#13;
completely. For my part I think&#13;
that the future of this paper is&#13;
dark and foreboding. When a&#13;
column dealing with important&#13;
issues and real people (like this&#13;
one) is blatantly suppressed in&#13;
this fashion, one can only shake&#13;
one's head sadly. How can a few&#13;
charges of assault and disturbing&#13;
the peace stand in the way of&#13;
freedom of thought and the&#13;
pursuit of happiness?&#13;
After my prison stay I think&#13;
this column will be better than&#13;
ever. It should improve&#13;
significantly if only for the&#13;
reason that no one knows how&#13;
long I shall be out of the joint to&#13;
write it. (The suspense is killing&#13;
me.)&#13;
As for insights on Parkside, I&#13;
would like to draw your&#13;
attention to the letter to the&#13;
editor this week by one Larry&#13;
Weaver concerning the clones&#13;
here. Larry criticizes certain&#13;
people at Parkside for their lack&#13;
of gray matter and their crass&#13;
taste in apparel. Larry, all I have&#13;
to say is that even if you are right&#13;
and you are one of the few sane&#13;
people on this campus,&#13;
surrounded by idiots, think of all&#13;
the pigeons this group constitutes&#13;
for any money-making&#13;
scams that you can come up&#13;
with.&#13;
Cutting mobiles out of&#13;
double-knit material for people's&#13;
bedrooms is just one suggestion.)&#13;
In the immortal words of W.C.&#13;
Fields, "Never give a sucker an&#13;
even break." In the cob-web&#13;
covered words of the Flim-Flam&#13;
Man, "You can't cheat an honest&#13;
man." And if you do, buy him a&#13;
drink. By the way, this leads me&#13;
back to opening my mail and&#13;
tasting the free sample bottles&#13;
I've received from the distilleries.&#13;
Until next week or when I&#13;
run out of mixer: "Please release&#13;
me let me go, For I don't need&#13;
another lover!"&#13;
•••••••••• •••*•*••••••*•••••••••••••*•******* ••***•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••*••••&#13;
Grateful Dead Alive in Chicago&#13;
by Terry A. Maraccini&#13;
If is not often one gets to step&#13;
inside a cultural time machine&#13;
and get transported back to a&#13;
time when the label The Rock&#13;
And Roll Concert As Cultural&#13;
Milestone still applied. November&#13;
16th's Grateful Dead concert&#13;
Member P arkside 200&#13;
National V arsity Club&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
seemed to do just about that.&#13;
The Grateful Dead have long&#13;
been the thorn in the side of the&#13;
music industry, their particular&#13;
definition of what the rock&#13;
business is supposed to be like,&#13;
anarchic, non-profit oriented,&#13;
and responsive only to their&#13;
^Joseph.&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CAR DS AC CEPTED&#13;
Dramatic Arts UW Parkside Presents&#13;
an improvisational comedy&#13;
DRAMATICUS INTERRUPTUS&#13;
DECEMBER 1.2.&amp; 3-8PM&#13;
MATINEE: DECEMBER 3, 2 PM&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre-Studio B&#13;
NO AOMISSION IIMITEO SEATING RESERVATIONS 553-2457 553-2016&#13;
weekends&#13;
particular audience defies seventies&#13;
rock capitalism.&#13;
The Chicago concert was no&#13;
exception. As soon as t he Dead&#13;
arrived in town, things began to&#13;
get strange. When one goes to a&#13;
Dead concert he is tempted to&#13;
pay attention to the audience&#13;
rather than the band. Dead&#13;
audiences tend to staunchly&#13;
remain tied to the obsolete&#13;
sensibilities of the late sixties.&#13;
There is much denim, lots of&#13;
"good-vibes", lots of starry-eyed&#13;
women with frizzed out hair and&#13;
peasant dresses, and most&#13;
important, lots of herbal&#13;
medication wafting through the&#13;
auditorium. The crowd is loose&#13;
and friendly, spontaneous and&#13;
irreverent, in the sense that they&#13;
tend to disregard the conventions&#13;
which we seem to have&#13;
slipped into in these perma-press&#13;
seventies.&#13;
The Grateful Dead have no&#13;
real visual show. In fact,&#13;
sometimes they seem oblivious&#13;
to their audience. They play to&#13;
them but at the same time&#13;
manage not to be cognizant of&#13;
their presence. At the same time&#13;
no band can take command of&#13;
an audience and control its&#13;
moods like the Dead. The Dead&#13;
in the last couple of years have&#13;
taken to playing small auditoriums&#13;
on multiple nights.&#13;
Therefore it is often useful to see&#13;
how on any given night of a&#13;
Dead stand the music assumes a&#13;
unique character.&#13;
The Thursday show illustrated&#13;
this. The Dead played a set of&#13;
fast rockers which captured the&#13;
boogie instincts of the crowd.&#13;
But, when the band came back&#13;
for its second set of the evening,&#13;
the space-jam stance of the&#13;
group emerged. The Dead have&#13;
been known to play marathon&#13;
sets where the musical selections&#13;
are woven into a mesh of stylistic&#13;
changes and inventive free form&#13;
structures that make each jam&#13;
unique in its own right.&#13;
Sometimes this can turn into a&#13;
self-indulgent exercise of the&#13;
COMING SOON...&#13;
TO THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
FIRSTNArT&#13;
A&#13;
R&#13;
Lu&#13;
B&#13;
sr RACINE time.&#13;
3Ws OHTb linn&#13;
annp&#13;
OHlb 1100 0130 -&#13;
SUSAN CUSTOMER EXP. DATE&#13;
'TAKE YOUR MONEY EVERYWHERE'&#13;
&gt;( AUTOMATIC BANKING&#13;
possibilities of tuning. Other&#13;
times it can be very exciting.&#13;
Thursday, fortunately was a&#13;
night of magic. The Dead are&#13;
America's longest sustaining&#13;
major act. They've been&#13;
perfecting this show for thirteen&#13;
years. But to do something that&#13;
extended means peaks and&#13;
valleys in the performance. Four&#13;
years ago they took time off to&#13;
re-evaluate their performance as&#13;
a musical attraction. They&#13;
emerged three years ago charged&#13;
with enough fuel to take them&#13;
this far. Their recent performances&#13;
by the pyramids in Egypt&#13;
seems to have recharge them&#13;
again. The jam Thursday night&#13;
settled into a long Eastern&#13;
influenced piece highlighted by&#13;
the evocative percussion antics&#13;
of Dead drummers Mickey Hart&#13;
and Bill Kruetzman.&#13;
However, the Dead did engage&#13;
in some inspired boogie. After&#13;
the long, spacey Egyptian&#13;
excurrsion, the jam sequed into&#13;
"Black Peter", a blues piece from&#13;
Workingman's Dead. Then into&#13;
the anthem of sixties freedom,&#13;
"Truckin'." On this last track&#13;
bassist Phil Lesh joined in on&#13;
vocal harmony; something he&#13;
has rarely done since the&#13;
addition of Donna Godcheaux as&#13;
vocalist in 1972.&#13;
All told, the Dead performed&#13;
for about three hours, offering&#13;
much music representative of&#13;
their long career.&#13;
The Grateful Dead may seem&#13;
to be a bit of an anachronism in&#13;
the seventies: They do not typify&#13;
the kinds of behavior one&#13;
expects from other bands who&#13;
have emerged from the same&#13;
school of music. They are&#13;
anarchic, loose, experimental,&#13;
daring. They challenge the&#13;
borders of their music. Blending&#13;
old sources with new and&#13;
coming up with a sound that is&#13;
engaging and spontaneous is the&#13;
magic or the Grateful Dead. See&#13;
them sometime and do yourself&#13;
a favor. &#13;
Wednesday November 22,1978&#13;
Record&#13;
RANGER 11&#13;
Capt. Beefheart&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
"With twinkling lights 'n green&#13;
sashes drawn by rubber&#13;
dolphins&#13;
With Gold yawning mouths that&#13;
blister 'n break in agony"&#13;
-from "Bat Chain Puller"&#13;
If this sounds interesting to&#13;
you then somehow get a listen to&#13;
Captain Beefheart and his Magic&#13;
Band's new release, Shiny Beast.&#13;
I read a description of his&#13;
music recently which referred to&#13;
it as furturistic blues rock. This is&#13;
an appropriate term except that&#13;
his music is futuristic only in&#13;
terms of its effect and not in&#13;
terms of instruments or theatrics.&#13;
Its basis is in the blues first and&#13;
foremost.&#13;
The Captain (real name Don&#13;
Van Vliet) is from California and&#13;
started making rock and roll&#13;
albums in the early 1%0's. In a&#13;
Rolling Stone interview with him&#13;
I remember reading a few years&#13;
ago, he was said to be one of the&#13;
greatest potential blues singers&#13;
that ever lived. But in the 60's&#13;
and 70's it seems that Captain&#13;
Beefheart wants to offer us the&#13;
"ultra-violet" rather than "de&#13;
blues."&#13;
In his time, the Captain and&#13;
the various Magic Bands he has&#13;
formed, have dressed in rags,&#13;
women's rags, tin pans and even&#13;
tuxedos. Today the stress does&#13;
not seem to be on appearance.&#13;
Captain Beefheart is content to&#13;
write, sing, make music and&#13;
make magic pictures with his&#13;
Magic Markers.&#13;
The last two albums that&#13;
Captain Beefheart released (in&#13;
'75 and '76) were trashy&#13;
imitations of his former glory.&#13;
Shiny Beast, however, is back on&#13;
the right track with fresh songs&#13;
and very professional performances.&#13;
The band is made up of&#13;
six musicians featuring slide&#13;
guitar, spell guitar, air bass,&#13;
piano, drums and marimba. The&#13;
songs include two instrumentals,&#13;
one poem, two Latin flavored&#13;
songs and 6 futurisitic blues-rock&#13;
numbers and a slow twenties&#13;
type ballad called "Harry Irene."&#13;
Although some may classify&#13;
Captain Beefheart with Frank&#13;
Zappa, and they certainly have&#13;
associated in the past, the&#13;
Captain marches to the beat of a&#13;
different drummer. In fact, his&#13;
drummer plays with his feet&#13;
The point of Captain Beefheart's&#13;
music, (if I may get&#13;
obtuse for a second) swings&#13;
around in back of itself and&#13;
creates a never ending cycle of&#13;
syncopation: "Bat Chain Puller,&#13;
Puller, Puller, Bat Chain Puller!"&#13;
He means to disorient and yet to&#13;
instruct. My own first impressions&#13;
of his music was "Oh my&#13;
God, turn it off, let me out of&#13;
here!" However, I eventually&#13;
came to understand that his&#13;
music is directly related, to the.&#13;
roots of rhythm and blues. His&#13;
Spot Light Kid record is a&#13;
fantastic blues recording.&#13;
However I think that Captain&#13;
Beefheart's message is meant to&#13;
appeal to our sense of "Now!"&#13;
and not to our sense of nostalgia&#13;
or history. In his own words, "I&#13;
think people have had too&#13;
much time to think and out to&#13;
flex their magic muscles."&#13;
For those interested, Captain&#13;
Beefheart may be on tour in this&#13;
area as he is currently playing at&#13;
the Bottom Line Club in New&#13;
York City. Keep your eyes and&#13;
mind open!&#13;
Hispanic Issues Discussed&#13;
A series of roundtable&#13;
discussions on Hispanic issues,&#13;
coordinated by University of&#13;
Wisconsin Professor Of Spanish&#13;
Jose Onega, will be held&#13;
monthly beginning Sunday,&#13;
November 26 at the Upstairs/&#13;
Downstairs Gallery at Kemper&#13;
Center, 124 66th St., Kenosha.&#13;
Professor Ortega said the&#13;
sessions will be conducted in the&#13;
English language and are open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
"Spain, Neo-Franquism or&#13;
Democracy?" will be the topic of&#13;
the opening roundtable, from 4&#13;
to 6 p.m. "Picasso's 'Guernica'"&#13;
will be the topic on December 17&#13;
from 4 to 6 p.m.&#13;
Other topics are "Garcia&#13;
Lorca" in January, "Latin&#13;
American Letters (Reading and&#13;
comments)" in February,&#13;
"Ernesto Che Guevara" in March,&#13;
"Spain and Latin America. Their&#13;
Singers" in April and "Chicano:&#13;
The Large Majority" in May."&#13;
Specific dates are to be&#13;
announced.&#13;
A native of Spain, Prof. Ortega&#13;
is the author of a number of&#13;
books and articles on Spanish&#13;
language literature and on Latin&#13;
American culture. Educated in&#13;
Spain and the U.S., he holds the&#13;
Ph.D. degree from Ohio State&#13;
University. He came to UWParkside&#13;
in 1970 after teaching at&#13;
Smith College and Case Western&#13;
Reserve University.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 22&#13;
Brown Bag Lunch at 12 noon in WLLC D174. Patty Dei hi of&#13;
Racine will demonstrate holiday nature crafts. The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Dance Turkey dance at 9 p.m. in Union Square featuring "Rio."&#13;
Admission at the door is $1.50 for Parkside students and $2 for&#13;
a guest. The dance is sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 26&#13;
Concert New Music at Parkside at 3:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Communications Arts Theatre, with Harry Sturm and August&#13;
Wegner directing. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Monday, Nov. 27&#13;
Blood Pressure Have your blood pressure taken anytime from&#13;
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Union Bazaar area. Free to students,&#13;
faculty and staff.&#13;
Round Table at 12 noon in Union 106. Prof. Angie Zophy&#13;
(Coordinator of Kenosha NOW) will talk on "Feminism is Alive&#13;
and Well in Kenosha." The program is free for staff and&#13;
interested students.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 28&#13;
Blood Pressure will be repeated from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in WLLC&#13;
Middle Main Place and from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. on the&#13;
Creenquist Concourse. Sponsored by the Parkside Health&#13;
Office.&#13;
Concert The Parkside Percussion Ensemble will play at 8 p.m.&#13;
in the Communications Arts Theatre with Roger Daniels&#13;
directing. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 29&#13;
Concert by students at 3 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Blood Pressure from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. on the Creenquist&#13;
Concourse. Free and open to Parkside students, faculty and&#13;
staff.&#13;
Scholarship Concert at 7:30 p.m. in the Communications Arts&#13;
Theatre, featuring the Wisconsin Singers. Admission is $1.50&#13;
for students and $3.50 for others. Tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center. Sponsored by Kenosha/Racine UW&#13;
Alumni Clubs.&#13;
Recital by students James and Jane Schatzman at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre. The program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Coffeehouse at 8 p.m. in Union Square featuring "Kiwi" folk&#13;
trio. Admission is free for Parkside students. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 30&#13;
Film The Modern Language Club is sponsoring a trip to the&#13;
Oriental on Nov. 30 to see the French comedy "The Tall Blond&#13;
Man With One Black Shoe." Anyone welcome. Details anc'&#13;
sign-up sheet posted across from CA 271.&#13;
I&#13;
studio&#13;
Full Service Photography Studio ...&#13;
- Weddings / Parties&#13;
- Portraits (Enviornnieiital &amp; Studio)&#13;
- Model Portfolios&#13;
- Slide Presentations&#13;
- Passports&#13;
1711 Greenbay Rd. (HWy. 31) 552-81685&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
'72 Toyota Corolla. No rust. Excellent&#13;
condition, great gas mileage. 60,000&#13;
original miles. Extras. Call Mr. Thomas at&#13;
636-9185; 8-5 during the day and 634-1792&#13;
after 5.&#13;
LP's: disco, rock, sole, jazz. 8 albums $10.&#13;
Post paid. All deferant or send dollar for&#13;
catalog. Raymond A. Bougneit 2008 21st.&#13;
Kenosha, Wl 53140.&#13;
35 mm SLR Camera: Fujica ST 705 with&#13;
1:1.8 55 mm lens and 1:4.5 200 mm lens and&#13;
case. Call 639-5971.&#13;
Two children's desks, $15 each; Organ,&#13;
older-style, blond wood, $250; Violin — 3/4&#13;
size, $30. Call 633-9141 after 6.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
Lost: Small brown wooden pipe of high&#13;
sentimental value in Union Square or&#13;
Classroom Building on Nov. 2. Roward.&#13;
Contact Rick Roper thru Ranger classifieds.&#13;
Lost: Red folder held together by many&#13;
staples. Also lost maroon print umbrella In&#13;
Union Dining Room at beginning of&#13;
semester. If found call 633-0001.&#13;
Sublease: 2 bedroom Apt. Furnished&#13;
including utilities and parking. $80/mo.&#13;
Parkside Village. Ph. 552-9312 ask for Chris.&#13;
Leave your number if I'm not In.&#13;
Furnished Apt. to Sublet: V« of two&#13;
bedroom apt. available Dec. 15. $81.50 per&#13;
month, utillt.es included. Two blocks from&#13;
U.W. Parkside. Call 552-7219. 7 30 - 9:30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Needed: perpetually short senators. Anyone&#13;
over 5 foot 7 inches need not apply.&#13;
F»ersons t o be on seg. fees. Apply PSGA&#13;
office.&#13;
GEORGE'6 BAR&#13;
THE BEST IN LIVE ENTERTAINMENT'&#13;
happy hour*&#13;
fflon-fri 3-6pm&#13;
Also serving Italian Beef Sandwiches and&#13;
Italian Sausage Bombers&#13;
231 &lt;) 63rd Street 652-8988&#13;
jlDanteb IRn1u3l.cs .&#13;
Shipped prepaid amjwhere in the continental U. S.&#13;
FIT".YEN FLAVORS AVAILABLE:&#13;
P ecciti&#13;
Pineapple&#13;
Bluoberrvj&#13;
Almond&#13;
Pineapple-Pecan&#13;
Date&#13;
Apricot&#13;
Raspberni&#13;
Prune Chorrij&#13;
Almond Macaroon 25c each extra&#13;
Parked: 1 Krin^le per box $-4.10&#13;
2 Krin^les per box 6.75&#13;
S1 00 Extra to the West Coast&#13;
O&amp;H 1841 Douglas Avenue&#13;
DANISH BAKERY Racine, Wis. 53402&#13;
637-8895 I &#13;
Wednesday November 22,1978 RANGfR&#13;
Now comes Miller time.&#13;
c 1978 Miller Brewing Co.. Milwaukee. Wis.&#13;
ii i i 'I II .1 riiwniinipiiirBpfi </text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Wednesday November 15,197®&#13;
vol.7 no. 11&#13;
Anticipating Groundbreaking for the Modern industry addition to Molinaro Hall, Mrs. George&#13;
Molinaro and Chancellor Alan E. Guskin tried out the original shovel used by her late husband&#13;
i" breaking ground for the first UW-P building in 1967. Looking on (from left,rear) are&#13;
Charles Riley, Wayne Haney, and Arthur Dudycha.&#13;
Gifts and Grants&#13;
$35,000 For Parkside&#13;
Gifts and grants for the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
totalling almost $35,000 were&#13;
accepted here today (Friday,&#13;
Nov. 10) by the UW System&#13;
Board of Regents.&#13;
Largest single sum in the&#13;
package is a $14,100 matching&#13;
grant from the National Science&#13;
Foundation for purchases of&#13;
instructional scientific equipment&#13;
to improve laboratory&#13;
facilities in modern experimental&#13;
techniques and biology.&#13;
Women And Adults&#13;
On Increase&#13;
by Kim Ruetz&#13;
University enrollment for&#13;
women and adult students has&#13;
been continually increasing in&#13;
recent years here at Parkside.&#13;
Statistics from David Vogt of&#13;
UWP Institutional Analysis and&#13;
Registration show that there are&#13;
2,395 women, and an overall&#13;
2,447 adult students (23 or older)&#13;
attending classes.&#13;
"The convenience and variety&#13;
of night courses offered here&#13;
may have much bearing on the&#13;
fact that more adult students are&#13;
attending classes. Most of these&#13;
students have jobs, families, and&#13;
other commitments that make it&#13;
necessary to go to school on a&#13;
part-time basis." says David&#13;
Vogt.&#13;
including recent high school&#13;
graduates, the proportion of&#13;
female students has been rapidly&#13;
increasing in the past few years,&#13;
and the enrollment of male&#13;
students have been remaining&#13;
constant, or declining. The&#13;
current enrollment of male&#13;
students is 2,846. This figure&#13;
shows a decrease of 8% from last&#13;
year.&#13;
Enrollment on the whole this&#13;
year at Parkside shows an&#13;
increase of 1% over last year,&#13;
with 5,241 students. Nationwide&#13;
there is a continuing increase of&#13;
women and adult students&#13;
attending colleges and universities.&#13;
&#13;
The UW-Parkside library,&#13;
recently named "library of the&#13;
year" by the Wisconsin Library&#13;
Association, received $3,906&#13;
from the federal Office of&#13;
Education college library resources&#13;
program for acquisition&#13;
of library materials under a&#13;
national program supporting&#13;
libraries in higher education.&#13;
The regents also accepted&#13;
$5,000 from the Department of&#13;
Defense in continuing support of&#13;
a study by three UW-P&#13;
researchers — life scientist&#13;
Eugene Goodman, chemist&#13;
Michael Marron and physicist&#13;
Ben Greenebaum — of the&#13;
physiological effects of extremely&#13;
low frequency electromagnetic&#13;
fields. Since its beginning&#13;
in 1971, the investigations have&#13;
received federal support of&#13;
about $210,000. The studies are&#13;
related to the Navy's proposed&#13;
Extremely Low Frequency Antenna&#13;
project (formerly known as&#13;
Project Seafarer and Project&#13;
Sanquine), which is designed as&#13;
a communication system for&#13;
submarines.&#13;
Other sums accepted for&#13;
UW-P are $5,200 from the Law&#13;
Enforcement Assistance Administration&#13;
for the law enforcement&#13;
education program (LEEP) and&#13;
$332 from various donors for the&#13;
Parkside Scholarship Fund.&#13;
Plans To Attack&#13;
Rising Tuition&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
The same old story of rising&#13;
prices and inflation is affecting&#13;
student tuition rates throughout&#13;
the country. As most of us&#13;
realize tuition at UW-Parkside&#13;
has been rising steadily for the&#13;
past few years. Student groups&#13;
like the United Council of&#13;
University of Wisconsin Student&#13;
Governments have been making&#13;
a lot of noise about this issue and&#13;
have suggested several plans of&#13;
action. However, the administration&#13;
of the UW system has&#13;
developed some plans of its own&#13;
to deal with this problem and&#13;
they should be initiated soon.&#13;
The two plans that will be&#13;
initiated by the University&#13;
System, according Mo the&#13;
November UW Memo are: 1) A&#13;
proposal to base student fees on&#13;
the preceding year's costs. For&#13;
example, the 1980-81 tuition&#13;
levels will be based on the lower&#13;
costs experienced by the&#13;
University during the 1979-80&#13;
school year. This plan will save&#13;
students about $70 or 10% from&#13;
the real cost of tuition. 2) The&#13;
second proposal would seek an&#13;
average of 12 hours a week of&#13;
public service employment for&#13;
up to 2400 UW System students&#13;
each year.&#13;
In an interview with Ranger&#13;
last week, Parkside's Chancellor&#13;
Guskin characterized the UW&#13;
system's attitude toward increased&#13;
tuition. He said that the&#13;
University wants to do anything&#13;
it can to make life easier for the&#13;
student and to control inflation&#13;
in some way.&#13;
The effect of the first proposal,&#13;
he said, would be to save the&#13;
students one year in tuition&#13;
increases. The one year lag in&#13;
tuition fees would still involve&#13;
rising tuition but not quite at the&#13;
going rate.&#13;
The second proposal is part of&#13;
a general trend to make work&#13;
study funds more available.&#13;
Currently, eligibility for work&#13;
study employment in on-campus&#13;
or off-campus government&#13;
projects is based on a family&#13;
income of $14,000 a year. Today&#13;
this is barely middle income&#13;
level. Most of the students at&#13;
Parkside come from families that&#13;
make more than this. They need&#13;
financial assistance yet at&#13;
present cannot get it. Chancellor&#13;
Guskin thinks that this situation&#13;
may change.&#13;
The Chancellor feels that these&#13;
two proposals to keep tuition&#13;
increases down will probably not&#13;
bring many new people to&#13;
Parkside. However, it should&#13;
make , life easier for students&#13;
already here. Other advantages&#13;
to be gained by the first proposal&#13;
will be to give students and&#13;
administrators much greater&#13;
warning time concerning what&#13;
the next years tuition will be. The&#13;
fees for the 1980-81 school year&#13;
can now be announced in&#13;
February 1980 instead of in&#13;
September.&#13;
In the 1980's enrollments are&#13;
expected to decrease. As the UW&#13;
system looks ahead to this&#13;
decade, it becomes apparent&#13;
that something must be done to&#13;
control student tuition fees.&#13;
Otherwise, as the number of&#13;
students decrease, the fixed&#13;
costs of running a university will&#13;
have to be absorbed by fewer&#13;
and fewer individuals, and thus&#13;
tuition fees will continue to rise&#13;
and rise.&#13;
Energy Project Bid&#13;
Apparent low bidder on a&#13;
mechanical and electrical monitoring&#13;
system to reduce energy&#13;
use and costs at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside is Johnson&#13;
Controls, Milwaukee, with a bid&#13;
"of $238,632.&#13;
Since the project had been&#13;
budgeted at $313,000, the&#13;
apparent low bid represents a&#13;
saving to the state of $74,368 or&#13;
24 percent under the projected&#13;
cost, according to Gary G.&#13;
Coetz, assistant chancellor for&#13;
administration and fiscal affairs.&#13;
The energy monitoring project,&#13;
expected to be completed&#13;
and operational by fall, 1979,&#13;
will allow reducing the heating,&#13;
ventilation and air conditioning&#13;
costs in all campus buildings&#13;
through constant computer&#13;
monitoring and remote control&#13;
operation. Planners say the&#13;
system will allow energy use to&#13;
each building to be controlled&#13;
separately, reduction of energy&#13;
consumption during low use&#13;
periods, reduction of maintenance&#13;
and longer equipment life&#13;
and reduction of load fluctuation&#13;
for greater efficiency.&#13;
The UW-Parkside project is&#13;
part of a $3 million UW System&#13;
plan to reduce energy use and&#13;
costs. Studies at other UW&#13;
campuses have shown the&#13;
system reduced heating cost by&#13;
17 percent and electrical cost by&#13;
12 percent. Campus planners&#13;
estimate savings at UW-P at&#13;
about $80,000 per year, which&#13;
means that the monitoring&#13;
system would "pay for itself" in&#13;
about three years. &#13;
Wednesday November 75.197A RANGER&#13;
To&#13;
The&#13;
Editor&#13;
Drinking In Cinema&#13;
To the people in charge of the&#13;
union cinema. I had noticed&#13;
some irresponsible rules held by&#13;
the members who run the&#13;
cinema.&#13;
First, the students and&#13;
outsiders who come to see a&#13;
movie bring bottles of wine as&#13;
well as glasses of beer in the&#13;
cinema. I don't think the people&#13;
who manage the union are aware&#13;
of these acts or they are afraid to&#13;
stop the people for bringing&#13;
alcoholic beverages inside the&#13;
cinema.&#13;
I came to see a movie Sunday&#13;
night and I saw someone&#13;
bringing a bottle of wine which,&#13;
incidentally, was broken. After a&#13;
while the smell spread all over&#13;
the area. I also noticed some&#13;
students bringing big glasses of&#13;
beer from the union square. I&#13;
don't think that's fair for&#13;
someone to smell these people&#13;
who are almost in a state of&#13;
drunkness.&#13;
I hope the people in charge in&#13;
the cinema would do something&#13;
about these irresponsible people&#13;
before the cinema becomes&#13;
smelling like a second class&#13;
union cinema.&#13;
A concerned student&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Mike Murphy Edltor&#13;
Jon Flanagan :.;General Manager&#13;
Tom Cooper Student Advisor&#13;
John Stewart News Editor&#13;
Sue Stevens Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Editor&#13;
Kim Putman Copy Editor&#13;
Chris Miller Manager&#13;
Nancy Szymanski .Circulation Manager&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Cathy Brownlee, Millie Clarke, Dave Cramer, Tom&#13;
Fervoy, Pete Jacket, Thomas Jenn, Nlcki Kroll, Terry&#13;
Maraccini, Kim Ruetz, Jeff Stevens.&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
Denise D'Acquisto, Mike Holmdohl, Tony Raymond&#13;
and Brian Taggart.&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig Dvorak, Rob Miller, Mary Mortl and Matthew&#13;
Poliakon.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Cramer and Dawn Thomas.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted for publication if they&#13;
are typewritten, double spaced with one inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be included&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and refuse&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All material must be received by Thursday noon for&#13;
^ubUcatior^onthefol^&#13;
How do you feel about the state elections results?&#13;
"In regard to governor, I wanted&#13;
Dreyfus to win. .. so I'm glad.&#13;
In regards to Vel Phillips, it's&#13;
good to see a minority person&#13;
win. I felt it was time .for a&#13;
change, for the Republicans to&#13;
be in power."&#13;
Marilyn Raduenz&#13;
I was happy. . . Dreyfus won, but&#13;
I felt Schreiber was more&#13;
qualified."&#13;
Craig Vandenberg&#13;
"I'm very happy with the way it&#13;
went. I didn't feel Schreiber was&#13;
doing a good job. He was taking&#13;
credit for things. . .hedidn't do."&#13;
)ohn Gabriel&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Trio Cancelled&#13;
The Oriana Trio concert&#13;
scheduled for Tuesday evening&#13;
(Nov. 14) at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside has been&#13;
cancelled because the trio's&#13;
pianist, Carol Bell, has suffered a&#13;
hand injury.&#13;
Sculptors Here&#13;
An exhibit of clay sculpture by&#13;
Leslie and Patrick Robison will&#13;
be on display in the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery through Nov.&#13;
30. The sculptors will be on&#13;
campus on Nov. 15 to present a&#13;
slide show dealing with their&#13;
work at 7 p.m. in Greenquist Hall&#13;
Room 101.&#13;
Gallery hours are noon to 5&#13;
p.m. Mondays and Thursdays&#13;
and 7 to 10 p.m. Tuesdays and&#13;
Wednesdays", and Friday by&#13;
appointment.&#13;
Both Robisons received masters&#13;
degrees in ceramics from&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and have been&#13;
associated with the Ozaukee Art&#13;
Center, Wisconsin Fine Arts&#13;
Association.&#13;
As an undergraduate at&#13;
Lawrence University, Leslie&#13;
Robison won the Elizabeth&#13;
Richardson Award for the&#13;
outstanding female artist and has&#13;
had several shows at Lawrence&#13;
including an alumnae invitational.&#13;
Her work has been exhibited&#13;
throughout the midwest and she&#13;
is represented in the 1977&#13;
National Cone Box Show, a&#13;
two-year traveling exhibition.&#13;
UT Prof. Speaks&#13;
The Mathematics Colloquium&#13;
program which sponsors many&#13;
speaking programs each year at&#13;
Parkside is bringing Professor&#13;
R.H. Bing from the University of&#13;
Texas, Austin, to speak on&#13;
"Recent Discoveries in Euclidean&#13;
Topology." The talk will be held&#13;
in CL 107, at 3:30 p.m., Thursday,&#13;
November 17. The talk will be&#13;
preceded by a coffee at 3:00&#13;
p.m in CL 111.&#13;
Professor R.H. Bing assures&#13;
Parkside that there will be&#13;
something of interest for all who&#13;
attend the lecture.&#13;
Professor Bing is member of&#13;
the National Academy of&#13;
Science and has taught at the&#13;
University of Texas and at the&#13;
University of WisconsinCOESS&#13;
UHAT H I FIN All Y GOT&#13;
HE A JOS! I START&#13;
TONIGHT AT STUDIO Hi&#13;
/) DISCO.&#13;
FANTASTIC!&#13;
/&#13;
Madison. He was given the&#13;
Distinguished Service Award&#13;
from the Mathematics Association&#13;
of America in 1974.&#13;
Professor Bing will discuss, in&#13;
particular, some results about&#13;
Fixed Point Theorms.&#13;
State Trusts U W&#13;
Communications Profess Otto&#13;
F. Bauer, released an investigation&#13;
measuring State Government&#13;
trust in the university&#13;
syste„ •&gt;. Forty-four legislators and&#13;
sixty members of the staff of the&#13;
Department of Administration&#13;
satisfactorily participated in the&#13;
survey.&#13;
^ Of a possible 70 points a mean&#13;
score of 53.82 was obtained. This&#13;
score, according to the survey,&#13;
indicates a relatively high level&#13;
of trust of legislators to the U.W.&#13;
system.&#13;
In measuring trust, Prof. Bauer&#13;
found significant differences&#13;
among legislators depending&#13;
upon years of service in the&#13;
legislature, and by the subject&#13;
and sources of a persons&#13;
information about the U.W.&#13;
system.&#13;
The survey was conducted, by&#13;
Prof. Bauer, as a baseline figure&#13;
in which to measure trust levels&#13;
in the future.&#13;
' THE DISCOTHEQUE, A&#13;
RECESS OF YOUNG A ND&#13;
BUDO/NG GLO W! ALLUR/N6&#13;
CHAMBER O F N/GHT-L/FE,&#13;
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AMUSE ME Nil AVARICIOUS DEN&#13;
OF FANCIFUL TJ /SHINGS AND..,&#13;
EUERLAST/NC RIGHTEOUS&#13;
BRILLIANCE AND FAME/ THE&#13;
ENDURING F OUNDATION OF O UR&#13;
HONORABLE NATION IN UH/CH&#13;
EVERY RED-BLOODED AMFRlcAfO&#13;
YOUTH HAS THE FREE RIGHT&#13;
TO GET POCJK) LOU AND&#13;
&amp;OOG/EH!&#13;
/ | UOU),&#13;
I CAN'T&#13;
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TO&#13;
START/&#13;
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ABouT THE MfiN u/TH THE _&#13;
SPEECH IMPEDIMENT^&#13;
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\£° FAR TO NIGHT J wai&#13;
1/ JL UELL ANYDAf, -&#13;
THERE UAS THIS..&#13;
OH £ MAN...&#13;
- ~r£ &#13;
STUDENT&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Season Opener&#13;
VK. litW&#13;
iuocs tjrnc&#13;
Rangers vs. UW-La Crosse&#13;
730 p.m., Friday, Nov. 24&#13;
Bldg.&#13;
• FREE!!! Miller - "Bleacher Creature" T-shirts to the first 200 UW-P students with valid I.D,&#13;
cards.&#13;
4 V* W* BBS Free-Throw contest, giving you a chance to win pizza at Casa Capri, beer or soda at the&#13;
KH KK?: J Union or a new 1979 Spirit through Nudi AMC, or a new 1979 Horizon through Palmen&#13;
Motors or a new 1979 Chevette through Robinson Chevrolet-Cadillac.&#13;
999 P ° s t "Game Party at Union Square. Turn in your&#13;
l%JC*I!#e • • FREE beers or sodas.&#13;
ticket stub from the game and get two&#13;
FREE!!! Live entertainment after the game in Union Square.&#13;
New cheerleaders! A new 20-piece pep&#13;
1^1 ML WW • • • Rangers!&#13;
band! A new club for the kids--the Junior&#13;
• BETTER THAN EVER!!!&#13;
Parkside basketball! See the Rangers go for an unprecedented fifth straight NAIA&#13;
district title! See.college basketball action at its finest, with 14-home games, including&#13;
the Ranger Classic Holiday Tournament.&#13;
• ADMISSION:&#13;
$1.50 in advance for students; $2 at the door. Season passes $7.50 for students. Individual&#13;
game tickets and season passes may be purchased at the Parkside Union Information&#13;
Center or at the UW-P Physical Education Bldg. &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978 RANGER&#13;
'Stepping' into Print&#13;
by Nicki Kroll phases where each wants to that combining home and family&#13;
show the love that may be life with a career can be even&#13;
A few weeks ago, as they growing and yet there is a more so. "Babies and small&#13;
entered her classes, the students possibility that some resentment children are such pleasurable&#13;
of English ad hoc Nancy Thayer of the stepmother still exists and little creatures," she says. They&#13;
were greeted by an elated vice versa. enjoy being held and cuddled&#13;
instructor. She had just been A stepmother (and Nancy's and the whole experience gives a&#13;
informed by Doubleday that her protagonist is no exception here, sort of sensual satisfaction to&#13;
fiction novel Stepping had been either) feels a greater flexibility both the mother and the child,&#13;
accepted for publication. The with her own children. "There There is a "deliciousness" of&#13;
book will be out in January of are times when your own child children and homelife than can&#13;
1980. The story covers 15 years in may drive you to the point where be extremely rewarding to a&#13;
the life and experience of a you will simply shout at him or woman. When her children are&#13;
stepmother and her relationship her to be quiet and leave you old enough to be in school, she&#13;
with her stepchildren and her alone," Nancy states. "With a can pursue other activities, go&#13;
own children and the problems stepchild you may hesitate to do back to school, and make her life&#13;
which she must rise above. such a thing." There is a sort of even more fulfilling. A woman&#13;
"It is not an autobiography," touchy feeling in the disciplining has built up energy that must be&#13;
emphasizes Nancy, "it is pure of stepchildren. Again, the child used when her children are in&#13;
fiction." The fictional step- may feel resentment toward the school. "Women can do a lot of&#13;
mother's experiences are magni- stepmother. But if these things," Nancy says. "They have&#13;
fied a bit, but only to validly problems can be overcome, to learn how much they have&#13;
illustrate the general problems being a stepmother is just as and what they can do with it."&#13;
that are shared by many rewarding as being a natural Nancy combines her own&#13;
stepmothers. Nancy's protagon- mother, and that's what home and family life with her&#13;
ist goes through the stage of. her motherhood is all about. teaching here and also her career&#13;
stepchildren being afraid of her, Nancy Thayer feels that as a writer. Her oyvn children are She has. had five stories phase of her writing career. And,&#13;
something that many step- motherhood (including step- aged three and five and she publisher!'."on!' this coptinertt; "who knows?, inJanuary of 1980,&#13;
children share universally. She motherhood) can be rewarding enjoys being with them and three in Canada and two in the you miyfiiStf'rev'ibw of&#13;
experiences the love and hate as well as fulfilling, and she feels taking care of them. With her States. One of them was noticed Stepping in thisvery paper.&#13;
The Facts On Tenure&#13;
by Mollie Clarke opinions about the classes they his findings to the President of forms are studied at each level of&#13;
have taken and about how well the University of Wisconsin evaluation, students may write&#13;
Believe it or not, the time for professors are teaching them. School System and the Board of letters to the divisional offices&#13;
taking final exams and filling out According to Mr. John Campbell, Regents. It is not until the Board and to the Chancellor. They may&#13;
course evaluation forms is only Associate Dean of Faculty, of Regents has approved the also state their opinions at&#13;
fiy&amp;JWeeks'aWatyt This' pfo'dfef^ fS' students stidold "fill ouf these proposal'th:at'ai prdfessor'obtains '' reconsiderationCommittees. In:&#13;
-. , especially tedious to people like -evaluation forms with a' serious the rights of tenure. structors Who" haVe' ndV' been b&#13;
Joe Student. attitude. Students can partici- Once a professor receives recommended for tenure can ask&#13;
Picturethefollowingscene.lt pate in the process professors go tenure, he has a permanent for reconsideration. The Faculty&#13;
is the last day of class and Joe through to obtain tenure. position with the university. As Rights and Responsibilities&#13;
Student's eyes are red from Instructors are usually eval- long as he performs his job and Committee can review such&#13;
non-stop studying. He gives a big uated during their sixth year at does not abuse his privileges, a cases and examine new&#13;
sigh when his professor hands Parkside. First, the Divisional professor will maintain tenure evidence. This committee may&#13;
out the computerized evaluation Executive Committee, which is status. also examine misconduct cases&#13;
sheets and thinks, "Not these made up of faculty members Teachers are evaluated on the and cases in which an error in&#13;
again!" As soon as he colors in only, makes recommendations basis of their teaching ability, the evaluation procedure occurthe&#13;
small rectangles, he darts out to the Chancellor. The Personel which is the most important red. Teachers who do not obtain&#13;
of the room yelling, "Free at Review Subcommittee, which consideration; scholarship, tenure are allowed to work one&#13;
last!" consists of elected representa- which involves research and more year.&#13;
Hey, Joe? What are you free tives from each division along publishing activities and partici- Though filling out the course&#13;
from? If you hate school so with four at-large members of pation in community affairs and evaluation forms may be a&#13;
much, why are you here? Is it the faculty, then evaluates these activities which are related to his nuisance to many students, this&#13;
because the classes you are recommendations and presents field; and programatic consider- is&gt; one of; the: ways students can tSafiPnal Children's Book Week,&#13;
taking are boring? their findings to the Chancellor, ations, or the university's need make suggestions and voice their "To Fly," another award-winning&#13;
Each semester students have After reviewing the candi- for teachers in a given program, opinions about the courses being film, will also be shown. This free&#13;
the opportunity to express their dates, the Chancellor presents Although student evaluation taught at Parkside. film program is scheduled to&#13;
begin at 2:00 p.m.&#13;
"The Red Balloon," recently&#13;
acquired by the Racine Public&#13;
Library, was named the 'best film&#13;
of the decade' at the Educational&#13;
Film Library Association's American&#13;
Film Festival. It is a fantasy&#13;
of a boy who makes friends with&#13;
a balloon. He 'tames' it and the&#13;
balloon begins to live a life of its&#13;
own, following the boy through&#13;
the streets of Paris, to school, on&#13;
the bus and into church.&#13;
The boy and balloon play&#13;
together until a gang of jealous&#13;
street urchins destroy the&#13;
balloon. All the other captive&#13;
balloons in Paris come down in&#13;
revolt, lifting the boy up and&#13;
flying him over the rooftops of&#13;
the city. Excellent photography&#13;
and musical background make&#13;
this classic film enjoyable to&#13;
both children and adults.&#13;
"The Red Balloon" also&#13;
received an Academy Award,&#13;
awards at Cannes and Edinburgh&#13;
film festivals, and the French&#13;
Film Critics Award.&#13;
This program is sponsored by&#13;
the Racine Public Library and the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater. Reservations&#13;
for the November 12&#13;
film program can be. made by&#13;
calling the Rondelle at 554-215-&#13;
Nancy Thayer author of 'Stepping' pholo bj ^&#13;
free time, Nancy continues&#13;
writing, which she did not begin&#13;
until just before the birth of her&#13;
first child. It was something that&#13;
_ -I L «J i-Un « m mrl I f&#13;
by a Spanish journal and has&#13;
been translated for publication&#13;
in Spain. Nancy hopes that the&#13;
publication of Stepping is the&#13;
I : :&#13;
Award W inning&#13;
Film I n R acine&#13;
"The Red Balloon" will make&#13;
its premiere showing in Racine at&#13;
the Golden Rondelle on&#13;
November 12 in celebration of&#13;
MILLER NIGHT&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
SEASON OPENER&#13;
RANGERS vs. UW-LaCROSSE&#13;
FBI., NOV. 24 7230 P.M.&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PHYSICAL EDUCATION BLDG.&#13;
STUDENT ADMISSION: $2.00 (AT THE DOOR)&#13;
GENERAL ADMISSION: $2.00&#13;
CHILDREN'S ADMISSION: $1.00&#13;
FREE! "BLEACHER CREATURE" T-SHIRTS TO FIRST&#13;
200 UW-P STUDENTS WITH PARKSIDE I.D. FREE! MILLER REER/SODA TICKETS REDEEMABLE AT&#13;
AN AFTER GAME PARTY IN THE PARKSIDE&#13;
UNION "LIVE ENTERTAINMENT"&#13;
w-SUPPORT YOUR CHAMPIONSHIP RANGER&#13;
TEAM NATL. CHAMPIONSHIPS 197S, 1970. 1Q77. 101a &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978&#13;
R4NGfR&#13;
Papers Requested By State Academy&#13;
lo&#13;
Young&#13;
Student&#13;
Union&#13;
Matures&#13;
by Peter Jackel&#13;
In the very foreseeable future&#13;
the Parkside Union will be&#13;
undergoing a major facelift in an&#13;
effort to upgrade the efficiency&#13;
and safety of its facilities. As&#13;
dean of student life Dave&#13;
Pedersen explains, "We're presently&#13;
accepting bids and the&#13;
work will start&#13;
possible."&#13;
The initial phase of the&#13;
overhaul will be launched this&#13;
Christmas break when the new&#13;
carpeting and tiles for the union&#13;
square are tentatively scheduled&#13;
to be laid. Among other items on&#13;
the rather sizable list include a - ~&#13;
new vyine dispensing unit, new. ,&#13;
Sc&#13;
l&#13;
uare Admission is free. Sponsored by PAB&#13;
•f a^us,tjc#J;vy,alls.fpr«^th.e,!^eat/|e.jniTransportation for W sabledf^:^ pirn'/m k&#13;
•^frjcb vyill enable theprojection- Cify Hall Council Chambers. Improve inadequate&#13;
Undergraduate and graduate&#13;
students of Wisconsin's public&#13;
and independent colleges and&#13;
universities are invited to submit&#13;
abstracts of research or scholarly&#13;
papers for presentation at the&#13;
1979 Annual Meeting of the&#13;
Wisconsin Academy of Sciences,&#13;
Arts and Letters.&#13;
The Annual Meeting will be&#13;
held on the campus of Carthage&#13;
College in Kenosha, Wis. on&#13;
Friday and Saturday, April 20-21.&#13;
Featured will be paper presentations&#13;
on a variety of topics in the&#13;
sciences, social sciences, arts,&#13;
letters and humanities by&#13;
faculty, students and other&#13;
researchers from around Wisconsin.&#13;
Presentations will be 20&#13;
minutes each, with 5 minutes for&#13;
discussion.&#13;
Selection of papers for&#13;
presentation will be based on&#13;
submitted abstracts, which&#13;
should include title of paper;&#13;
outline of purpose, methodology,&#13;
and principal findings or&#13;
conclusions; name, address and&#13;
phone number of the author;&#13;
and indication of any audiovisual&#13;
equipment required for&#13;
presentation.&#13;
Deadline for receipt of&#13;
abstracts is March 1, 1979, and&#13;
they' should be sent to:&#13;
Wisconsin Academy, 1922 University&#13;
Ave., Madison 53705 (Tel:&#13;
608-263-1692). Further information&#13;
is available by writing or&#13;
calling the Academy.&#13;
The Wisconsin Academy of&#13;
Sciences, Arts and Letters is one&#13;
of th e older and larger of th e 46&#13;
state and regional academies in&#13;
the nation, and one of only three&#13;
that includes the arts and letters&#13;
as well as the sciences in&#13;
programming and membership&#13;
representation. The Academy&#13;
was chartered by the Legislature&#13;
in 1870 for the purpose of&#13;
encouraging communication&#13;
on the sciences, arts and letters&#13;
of Wisconsin. Membership&#13;
information is ava ilable also by&#13;
writing or calling the Academy;&#13;
however persons need not be&#13;
members in order to present&#13;
papers at the Annual Meeting.&#13;
as soon as Coming Events&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 15&#13;
Concert by students at 3 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Lecture/Slides by Milwaukee artists Patrick and Leslie Robison&#13;
in GR 101 at 7 p.m. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Coffeehouse featuring Blegen and Sayer at 8 p.m. in Union&#13;
Qni i-ai-n r' L; i i U . -1 -~ -1«*" if,'""&#13;
)o&#13;
ists to monitor excessive noise&#13;
better, lighting on the steps of&#13;
the union square for dances,&#13;
portable ramps for students in&#13;
wheelchairs, mats behind the&#13;
bar, and a new grill. Stolen&#13;
theatre equipment and $3000&#13;
worth of damaged furniture from&#13;
the union will a lso have to be&#13;
replaced. In addition Pedersen is&#13;
also considering a mural for the&#13;
ceiling of Union Square.&#13;
A sound system planned for&#13;
the dining room has already&#13;
arrive^.^pd Pedersen is currently&#13;
aece'ptmg- bids for its installation.&#13;
In an attempt to conserve&#13;
precious funds, Pedersen is&#13;
probing the possibility of hiring&#13;
qualified Parkside students to&#13;
perform the chore for a reduced&#13;
fee.&#13;
Sports enthusists will a lso be&#13;
pleased as Pedersen has&#13;
announced plans of constructing&#13;
basketball and volleyball courts&#13;
on the grounds surrounding the&#13;
Union and running an equipment&#13;
rental service. A cross&#13;
country ski rental service is also&#13;
noltefci, v.: us,OX&#13;
j Although iCjs,not known if the&#13;
Union can afford all these&#13;
projects, Pedersen anticipates&#13;
having sufficient funds. The&#13;
remodelling will be paid for out&#13;
of the remainder of the&#13;
construction budget, from reserves,&#13;
and from the earning/&#13;
operating budget. "The Union, as&#13;
far as the business end goes, is&#13;
progressing well", Pedersen&#13;
points out. "For the first tim e in&#13;
our existence, we are not asking&#13;
for additional segregated fee&#13;
support. Even though the&#13;
operating costs have increased&#13;
with inflation, we will on ly ask&#13;
for 46% of our total operating&#13;
costs next year as opposed to the&#13;
50% we have always asked for in&#13;
the past. All additional costs will&#13;
come from our program&#13;
revenues."&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 18&#13;
Kiddie Flicks "An Evening with Bullwinkle" will be shown at 10&#13;
a.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre for the Parkside Community&#13;
and their families. Admission is $1 for a child, parents&#13;
accompanying the children are admitted free. Sponsored by&#13;
the Student Life Office. &lt; ou •&#13;
&gt;,i1hv.,, u, - Coricert at 8 p'.m. m the Communication Arts Theatre featuring&#13;
"wfor Disabled .7:36 p.m. in Racine's the Racine Symphony, Community Chorus, and the Parkside&#13;
Chorale with Stephen Colburn conducting. Admission will be&#13;
charged at the door.&#13;
Sports Men's cross-country: NAIA National Championship. At&#13;
Parkside. (11a .m.)&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 19&#13;
Concert at 3:30 p.m. in the CA Bldg., the level 1 hallway, with&#13;
Frank Mueller directing and Chorus/Chamber Singers. The&#13;
program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Movie "Julia" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Italian Culture Meeting at 2 p.m. in the Kenosha Public&#13;
Museum. A trip to the Museum of Science and Industry in&#13;
Chicago will be planned.&#13;
Monday, Nov. 20&#13;
If cannot attend see John Ceorgeson or. . Round Table at 12 noon in Union, 106, Bonnie.Smith will talk&#13;
...on r.Dome^tipity.Tas:.^...SynjbQli^r^AWui QpeA,.to,, staff and&#13;
transportation for disabled. For more information call Society's&#13;
Assets. (Racine: 637-9128.)&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 16&#13;
Political Science There will be an organizational meeting of&#13;
the Political Science Club at 3:30 p.m. in WLL Center.&#13;
Movie "Reefer Madness" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. (One showing only.) 1937 version — uncut. "One of&#13;
the most influential propaganda movies ever filmed." Free&#13;
admission. Good-will donations accepted.&#13;
Nordic Ski Club 7 p.m. in CL 105. Will have 2 movies on&#13;
X-country skiing; featured speakers on equipment; discuss&#13;
events for the year. Used X-country equipment sale and swap.&#13;
At 7:30 p.m.- Nordic Trail-blazers Club of Kenosha-Racine will&#13;
meet Open to all&#13;
phone 633-7755.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 17&#13;
Earth Science Colloquium 12 noon in GR 113. Dr. Frank Luther&#13;
of UW-Whitewater will give a talk and slide presentation on&#13;
"The Geology and Scenery North of Lake Superior."&#13;
Workshop on Grant Writing in the Union Bldg. starting at 9&#13;
a.m. Call ext. 2316 for more details.&#13;
Seminar Chem/Life Sci.at2p.m. in CL 105. The program is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
Workshop "Sexuality and the Physically Disabled" today and&#13;
tomorrow in the CL Bldg. Call ext. 2032 for more details.&#13;
Colloquium at 3:30 p.m. in CL 107. Prof. Bing of the University&#13;
of Texas in Austin will talk on "Recent Discoveries in Euclidean&#13;
Topology." The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Movie "Julia" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema&#13;
&gt;Theatre. Admitsion at the door is $ 1 for a Parkside student and&#13;
$1fof a guest. Sponsored by PAB. ••-••'•"'•/inu *d t *•&#13;
Sports Men's swimming: sixth annual Ranger relays. At&#13;
Parkside. (3:30 p.m.)&#13;
10% DISCOUNT&#13;
To Parkside students and faculty&#13;
members only, on all merchandise&#13;
in our store. Parkside I.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
Kenosha'* Diamond Center&#13;
5617 - 6th Avenue&#13;
is free. Sponsored by Social interested students. Admission&#13;
Science Division.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 21&#13;
Concert by the Jazz Ensemble directed by Tim Bell at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the CA theatre. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 22&#13;
Brown Bag Lunch at 12 noon in WLLC D174, featuring Patty&#13;
Deihl of Racine who will demonstrate holiday nature-crafts.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public. Sponsored by&#13;
Community Students Services.&#13;
RANGER N EEDS&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Phone 658-2525 Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
m W&#13;
NZABl)R&#13;
$&#13;
fJ&#13;
Ei9&#13;
. v. C i„te ^&#13;
*"79 ?°u GOOD &gt; "nvnke- MON-FRI&#13;
lHC&#13;
cd1* 11 - 2&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACULTY A*D&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFF ON ALL&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICATION. &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978 RANGER 6&#13;
R eviews&#13;
Getaway On&#13;
'Midnight Express'&#13;
by Pete Little&#13;
On the surface, "Midnight&#13;
Express" is not a very pleasant&#13;
film. Its subject matter is often&#13;
violent and degrading to our&#13;
middle class sensibilities. You&#13;
keep asking yourself, "Can things&#13;
really be this bad, this real?"&#13;
They can, and this is precisely&#13;
what director Alan Parker and&#13;
original author Billy Hayes have&#13;
intended. It is a compelling, true&#13;
story of a young American, Billy&#13;
Hayes, who in 1970 tried to&#13;
smuggle a small amount of&#13;
hashish out of Turkey. It is&#13;
unfortunate for Billy that he&#13;
attempts this on the day the&#13;
Turkish police just happen to be&#13;
looking for terrorist highjackers.&#13;
Billy not only looks like a&#13;
highjacker, (with his army coat&#13;
and dark sunglasses), but panics&#13;
under the additional security.&#13;
From there on the movie&#13;
slowly sinks into its main subject&#13;
matter; Billy's alienation from&#13;
the American Dream he grew up&#13;
on. He is caught, prosecuted,&#13;
convicted, and sentenced to five&#13;
years (which three years later&#13;
incfeases&gt;t&lt;2&gt;' thirty . years)'4n&gt; a&#13;
smqjl piece of hell known as a&#13;
Turkish prison. The struggle not&#13;
only to get out and stay alive,&#13;
but to also remain sane, then&#13;
begins for Billy.&#13;
The makers of this film have&#13;
spared no expense, paying&#13;
special attention to even the&#13;
crudest of details. At times it is&#13;
so real that the viewer may be&#13;
shocked or even insulted. I can't&#13;
begin to describe the horrors of&#13;
Billy's stay. You must see it and&#13;
feel it for yourself.&#13;
As the character Billy Hayes,&#13;
Brad Davis turns in a superb role.&#13;
Billy is on the screen at least&#13;
90% of the time, so we get to&#13;
know him inside and out. As the&#13;
story goes on, he becomes a&#13;
identifiable hero. The supporting&#13;
cast also does a fine job. The&#13;
roles are all extremely individualistic&#13;
and well-motivated.&#13;
The film works on nearly all&#13;
levels. The photography is&#13;
almost lyrical, and the lighting,&#13;
along with the intense music, is&#13;
adept in conspiring to tear away&#13;
our sensibilities. We see much&#13;
graphic violence and an&#13;
existence, (I didn't say life) so&#13;
hostile that some weaker viewers&#13;
NA/twiY.np!; eoi9,y it,.r* M&#13;
"Midnight, Express" is .worlds&#13;
away. See it!&#13;
-PA6 Mini Movie Review&#13;
Jane Fonda, Vanessa Redgrave&#13;
and Jason Robards all garner&#13;
award winning performances in a&#13;
beautifully made film.&#13;
The story concerns playwright&#13;
Lillian Hellman and her&#13;
relationship with her childhood&#13;
friend Julia. The basis of the&#13;
movie concerns a particular&#13;
incident in the relationship.&#13;
Lillian (Jane Fonda) is asked by&#13;
Julia (Vanessa Redgrave) to&#13;
smuggle money through Nazi&#13;
Germany to help secure freedom&#13;
for jews and other political&#13;
prisoners.&#13;
Although the majority of the&#13;
film involves this segment of&#13;
Julia's and Lillian's relationship&#13;
the movie also says much about&#13;
the agony of creativity, personal&#13;
and political commitments, and&#13;
enduring relationships in general.&#13;
&#13;
Julia is beautifully directed&#13;
and filmed with Fred Zinneman&#13;
going to extreme lengths to&#13;
create the perfect atmosphere.&#13;
The film, however, often tries to&#13;
present more than 117 minutes&#13;
of screen time will allow often&#13;
resulting in a mishmash.&#13;
Those not familiar with&#13;
Hellman's memoirs, Pentimento,&#13;
or not familiar with Lillian&#13;
Hellman at all might find the&#13;
story .difficult to follow. The film&#13;
jumps back and forth in time in&#13;
examination of Lillian and Julia's&#13;
relationship and this segmented&#13;
nature could tend to confuse.&#13;
What the film does have,&#13;
however, is a gathering of first&#13;
class performances, fantastic&#13;
cinematography, and a sense of&#13;
artistry seldom found in films&#13;
today.&#13;
The Bio Fix&#13;
60's Dectective in the 70's&#13;
by Mike Murphy&#13;
Moses Wine is an industrial&#13;
investigator. He is relatively&#13;
short, carries a contempory&#13;
curled hairstyle and moustache,&#13;
is divorced, lives alone in a small&#13;
alleyway apartment, pays exhorbitant&#13;
alimony and often&#13;
brings his kids with him on his&#13;
investigations. His comic book&#13;
sleuthian name is in total irony&#13;
to his character.&#13;
Moses Wine is a child of the&#13;
sixties. He was radically active&#13;
during his stay at Berkley and&#13;
still maintains a deep affection&#13;
for those days. But now his&#13;
radical days are over and he is&#13;
left facing the responsibility of a&#13;
broken marriage, a family, and a&#13;
job.:&#13;
Centered within the wrappings&#13;
of an intricately weaved&#13;
detective yarn The Big Fix is a&#13;
curious chronicle of those who&#13;
participated in one of the most&#13;
disruptive decades in U.S.&#13;
history. It involves characters&#13;
whose lives were shaped by the&#13;
political and social deterioration&#13;
of the era but who no longer feel&#13;
secure in the complancency of&#13;
the seventies. Although the&#13;
majority of these people have&#13;
conformed to the times, they&#13;
look back at the sixties as older&#13;
people might look to the&#13;
depression. They -were hard days .&#13;
- bu ts.times, filje^..with together^,,,&#13;
ness and unity.&#13;
Moses Wine is forced to&#13;
remember those times when his&#13;
former girlfriend from Berkley,&#13;
Lila Shea (Susan Anspach), seeks&#13;
his help in a case involving a&#13;
middle of the road gubernatorial&#13;
candidate named Hawthorne. It&#13;
seems that a flyer proposing^ a&#13;
fake endorsement for Hawthorne&#13;
by a radical, underground&#13;
fugitive named Howard Eppis,&#13;
had been distributed, seriously&#13;
jeopardizing Hawthorne's election&#13;
chances.&#13;
Moses is not only stunned that&#13;
Lila, a campus protestor&#13;
companion, would work for a&#13;
colorless conservative candidate&#13;
like Hawthorne (as she is at his&#13;
present position in society) but&#13;
finds it equally amazing to have&#13;
another fellow Berkley radical,&#13;
Eppis, ,surface as if . unchanged&#13;
af|ter all these years.&#13;
Wine's search for Eppis and&#13;
the center of the campaign&#13;
smear leads him all around Los&#13;
Angeles into layer upon layer of&#13;
complicated plot which all&#13;
resolves itself in a climatic&#13;
surprise ending.&#13;
The body of The Big Fix is not&#13;
just a social and political&#13;
comment of the sixties era and&#13;
its survivors. It stands alone as a&#13;
wonderfully constructed, old&#13;
fashioned whodunnit in the&#13;
flavor of Ellery Queen or Sam&#13;
Spade. The Big Fix maintains a&#13;
consistent fast pace and is&#13;
liberally bathed with humor and&#13;
clever dialogue.&#13;
Richard Dreyfus' perfomance&#13;
as Moses Wine is superb,&#13;
advancing his position as on e of&#13;
the top American actors on film.&#13;
If another less dynamic actor&#13;
had played Moses Wine the&#13;
audience could hav^g^ily lost&#13;
sight of the character given txT(?'&#13;
complexities of the plot.&#13;
Dreyfus, however, commands&#13;
the center of attention throughout.&#13;
&#13;
The Big Fix is an interesting&#13;
movie during an election year. It&#13;
has a definite attitude toward&#13;
politics and political involvement.&#13;
It says something about&#13;
the lives of people who feel it&#13;
necessary to have an active&#13;
opinion in the American social&#13;
system. It also says worthwhile&#13;
and intelligent entertainment,&#13;
' perhat&amp;atfgfte m ftss&amp;betf;S5! rlJcS&#13;
far.&#13;
Interiors&#13;
Woody Allen Strikes Gold&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
Woody Allen's new film&#13;
"Interiors" should not intimidate&#13;
anyone from seeing it; especially&#13;
not any of Allen's traditional&#13;
fans. All the rumors about the&#13;
seriousness and greatness of&#13;
"Interiors" are true. However,&#13;
while the film is analytical and&#13;
realistic, it is also warm and&#13;
hopeful.&#13;
As the title of the film might&#13;
imply, the subject of "Interiors"&#13;
is the inner workings of the&#13;
human spirit. The plot deals with&#13;
the interrelationships within a&#13;
particular family. The family is&#13;
very well to do, lives in the East,&#13;
and is very cultured. There is a&#13;
father, mother, and their three&#13;
adult daughters. The mother, a&#13;
former fashion designer, has&#13;
been the main influence on the&#13;
family's character and interests.&#13;
The central conflict of the film&#13;
deals with the husband's (E.G.&#13;
Marshall's) effort to leave his&#13;
wife. Finally, he divorces his wife&#13;
and remarries a woman he met&#13;
on a vacation. This process of&#13;
change drives his wife to two&#13;
suicide attempts and finally, on&#13;
her husband's wedding night, she&#13;
walks into the sea and&#13;
disappears.&#13;
The three daughters have&#13;
varying attitudes toward their&#13;
parents' predicament. The oldest&#13;
daughter (Diane Keaton), a&#13;
successful poetess, encourages&#13;
her mother to believe that her&#13;
husband will return to her. The&#13;
middle daughter, married but&#13;
unsure of a career, tries to make&#13;
her mother face the reality of her&#13;
situation. The youngest daughter,&#13;
a starlet in Hollywood,&#13;
constantly flies in and out of the&#13;
picture, yet still demonstrates a&#13;
certain tenderness for her family&#13;
and her mother.&#13;
This description of,the,tpl.ot is ,&#13;
really just a rough outline of the&#13;
action and there are more&#13;
characters as well. Furthermore,&#13;
the many relationships that flow&#13;
and change during the movie&#13;
create a kind of texture.&#13;
Eventually, a certain common&#13;
perspective seems to develop as&#13;
the audience views the film's&#13;
events from many different&#13;
points of view all at once. This&#13;
phenomenon testifies to the&#13;
mastery with which the film has&#13;
been made.&#13;
As I watched "Interiors", the&#13;
first thing that struck me was the&#13;
long silences in the film. There&#13;
was no sound track and there&#13;
were large pauses in the&#13;
dialogue. These silences, however,&#13;
were realistic and the slow,&#13;
quiet pace of "Interiors" led the&#13;
audiences gradually into its&#13;
story. However, many scenes&#13;
were still very tense and thrilling.&#13;
The film concers the lives of a&#13;
certain class of people. They are&#13;
not greatly concerned with&#13;
money. They have plenty of it.&#13;
They have the time to worry long&#13;
and hard about their personal&#13;
futures. As the first hour of the&#13;
film passed, I suddenly began to&#13;
worry that the whole movie&#13;
would concentrate on these&#13;
"deep" and self-indulgent&#13;
people. But this is where&#13;
"Interiors" differs from many&#13;
other serious, heavy films.&#13;
Woody Allen entered a character&#13;
to play in contrast with the other&#13;
types in the film.&#13;
The husband's second wife,&#13;
Pearl, is almost the complete&#13;
opposite of his first wife. She is&#13;
not so concerned with art as she&#13;
is with true emotion. During the&#13;
wedding party, the silent sound&#13;
track springs to life with rag-time&#13;
jazz records, similar to the sound&#13;
track of Allen's "Sleeper." We&#13;
actually begin to laugh, heartily&#13;
with the film. We like Pearl. She&#13;
is honest, warm, and has&#13;
common sense. Furthermore, the&#13;
way she contrasts her new family&#13;
makes a statement about the&#13;
family as it existed then, and&#13;
points out a direction for the&#13;
family to develop in.&#13;
Just before the mother&#13;
commits suicide, her middle&#13;
daughter remarks that her&#13;
mother's character makes her&#13;
too perfect to exist in this world;&#13;
almost like one of her rare and&#13;
precious objects of art. Strangely&#13;
enough, after their mother's&#13;
death, the family seems to be&#13;
relieved of a great burden. Their&#13;
mother was a real human being&#13;
but one out of contact with true&#13;
feelings and people.&#13;
Once again I want to stress&#13;
that this film has a serious&#13;
message for everyone who sees&#13;
it, but it is also hopeful and lively&#13;
like all of Woody Allen's films.&#13;
The man who made a film called&#13;
"Bannannas" is still alive and&#13;
well. He is merely moving onto&#13;
bigger and better things. &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978&#13;
RANGER 7&#13;
Russian Folk Troupe Misses the Mark&#13;
by E. Tribys&#13;
This past Sunday evening, in&#13;
the - Communication Arts&#13;
Theater, the Parkside Accent on&#13;
Enrichment series presented the&#13;
Massenkoff Russian Folk Festival.&#13;
The festival featured the&#13;
bass vocalist Nikolai Massenkoff,&#13;
director and organizer of the&#13;
group, and a folk dance and&#13;
music ensemble comprised of&#13;
seven musicians and eight&#13;
dancers.&#13;
For those of us familiar with&#13;
Russian music and dance, the&#13;
evening began with a feeling of&#13;
excited expectation, but before&#13;
the night was over, a feeling of&#13;
sad disappointment took its&#13;
place. Not only did the promised&#13;
"Balalaika Orchestra" fail to&#13;
materialize (apparently Massen-&#13;
' Y.iftffi rfvfir! bluco&#13;
koff believes two balalaikas, a&#13;
domra, a bayan, a guitar, a flute,&#13;
a a P'ano sufficiently&#13;
comprise an "orchestra"), but&#13;
the fire, the soul, the truly&#13;
awe-inspiring precision of a real&#13;
Russian music and dance troupe&#13;
were missing.&#13;
The musicians played their&#13;
instruments well enough, although&#13;
rather mechanically.&#13;
They failed to bring life into the&#13;
many beautiful melodies on the&#13;
program, such as "Dark Eyes"&#13;
"Meadow Land", and "Kalinka"&#13;
With the exception of a few&#13;
dancers, the timing was off more&#13;
often than not, while the&#13;
execution of those famous leaps&#13;
and kicks left something to be&#13;
desired. But it was the soloist,&#13;
Massenkoff, who proved to be&#13;
the greatest disappointment.&#13;
From the very moment that&#13;
Massenkoff made his appearance,&#13;
he was lifted onto the&#13;
stage by means of a mechanical&#13;
elevation device. The entire&#13;
performance began to take on&#13;
the characteristics of a night&#13;
club act. The singer appeared in&#13;
a massive fur coat and hat,&#13;
armed with a microphone that&#13;
he held close to his lips.&#13;
Throughout the two hour&#13;
program, he managed no less&#13;
than five costume changes.&#13;
And his voice?&#13;
Honestly, one can't really say.&#13;
Yes, his voice was deep, as&#13;
promised; yes, he managed some&#13;
awkwardly high notes, as&#13;
promised — b ut his voice? When&#13;
a voice is projected through a&#13;
microphone into a small theater,&#13;
it is impossible to judge its&#13;
quality accurately; one hears the&#13;
amplification in a ball park&#13;
stadium is understandable, but&#13;
when a serious singer performs in&#13;
a concert hall, particularly one&#13;
with such fine acoustics as our&#13;
own Communication Arts&#13;
Theater, amplification is not&#13;
only unnecessary, but ridiculous.&#13;
I can now understand why the&#13;
Moscow reviewer quoted in the&#13;
evenings program notes observed&#13;
that Massenkoff's voice&#13;
"seemed to push the walls&#13;
aside. .."&#13;
Apparently not many in the&#13;
theater Sunday night agreed with&#13;
me. The Massenkoff Russian Folk&#13;
Festival received a standing&#13;
ovation. The audience loved it.&#13;
They raved when the male&#13;
dancers leapt into the air, they&#13;
raved when Massenkoff suavely&#13;
sauntered across the stage&#13;
clutching his microphone, bidding&#13;
them to clap along, they&#13;
raved when he cracked a couple&#13;
of jokes, and they raved when he&#13;
sang, as an encore, "If I Were a&#13;
Rich Man." Upon leaving the&#13;
performance, I heard one person&#13;
say it was the best performance&#13;
of the series so far; another&#13;
remarked that "Massenkoff is&#13;
quite an actor." He is quite a&#13;
salesman as well. Record albums&#13;
were being sold after the&#13;
performance while Massenkoff&#13;
dutifully signed autographs.&#13;
If you ever really want to take&#13;
in a Russian folk festival, I'd&#13;
suggest you catch the Osipov&#13;
Balalaika Orchestra or the&#13;
Moseyev Folk Dance Company&#13;
next time they pass this way.&#13;
Massenkoff's group is more like a&#13;
Las Vegas imitation of a Russian&#13;
Folk Festival than the real thing.&#13;
*&#13;
! -fnwniwsH bsmsn sMfcfbrl&#13;
and Spills with Second City&#13;
by Mike Murphy&#13;
Have you ever heard a Nichols&#13;
and May album? If you haven't,&#13;
get one at your local library and&#13;
listen to it. Mike Nichols and&#13;
Elaine May were probably the&#13;
finest improvisational duo ever&#13;
to come out of America.&#13;
Their humor is topical,&#13;
intelligent, and often filled with&#13;
social and philosophical satire.&#13;
Both haveedtehed out extremely,&#13;
successful individual careers and&#13;
both got their start with Second&#13;
City.&#13;
This is not to say that everyone&#13;
involved with Second City will&#13;
eventually make it big in films&#13;
and theatre but if last&#13;
Wednesday's performance by&#13;
the Chicago based Second City&#13;
troupe at the Comm. Arts theatre&#13;
is a ny indication of the type of&#13;
talent involved in the organization&#13;
they all should become&#13;
world famous.&#13;
November eight's show invited&#13;
a packed house of eager to be&#13;
entertained people. Most people&#13;
knew that Second City was a&#13;
touring comedy group but didn't&#13;
know quite what to expect. As it&#13;
turned out for most it was one of&#13;
the most enjoyable evenings to&#13;
be had.&#13;
The opening skit had the&#13;
entire cast assembled, as in a&#13;
congregation, on stage, repreI&#13;
sTarTed as&#13;
a Ranger&#13;
w Tiler&#13;
senting the United Church of&#13;
Caucasians singing praise to the&#13;
upper middle class. From there&#13;
the show went off in all&#13;
directions; A news show takeoff&#13;
parody the trite chatter between&#13;
newsman on the air which is&#13;
disrupted when one newscaster&#13;
reads a bulletin declaring the&#13;
end of the world; a taxidermist&#13;
introducing his date to his&#13;
parents who, it turns out, are&#13;
Stuffed themselves; a takeoff of&#13;
the Grand Ole Opry with a trio of&#13;
country and western singers&#13;
singing songs laced with&#13;
masochism and sadism; and a&#13;
shy medical center patient who&#13;
has to explain his afflication of&#13;
VD to a disciplinary nun-nurse.&#13;
Perhaps the most interesting,&#13;
and fun, part of the evening was&#13;
when the group composed a skit&#13;
from suggested statements by&#13;
the audience (for your information&#13;
Kenosha audiences are&#13;
exceptionally perverted). The&#13;
skit turned out to be hilarious,&#13;
with the audience feeling a part&#13;
bf the comedy 6h ^tage.1&#13;
- "&#13;
The group that performed at&#13;
Parkside is the Chicago branch of&#13;
what has now become an&#13;
international company. It is the&#13;
Toronto based group that&#13;
produces the offbeat, but often&#13;
mediocre, SCTV television program&#13;
aired after Saturday Night&#13;
Live.&#13;
Second City boasts, as one of&#13;
the performers stated at the&#13;
beginning of the show, a&#13;
membership that in the past had&#13;
included the likes of John&#13;
Belushi, Alan Arkin, David&#13;
Steinberg, Truman Capote and&#13;
William Shakespeare (the later&#13;
two not for the record).&#13;
The seven members that&#13;
performed at Parkside revealed a&#13;
lot of hours of hard work in&#13;
rehearsal and jjnJimited jpdivifib-.vs&#13;
ual talerit'.''^THbir°'abfllfV'' to"&#13;
conjure an image of such&#13;
settings as a tavern, an airport, or&#13;
a post office out of the minimum&#13;
of props was amazing. And their&#13;
comedic talents were on an&#13;
equal plateau.&#13;
The pace seldom lets up as the&#13;
performers passed through&#13;
uncountable short and not so&#13;
short skits and blackouts.&#13;
Although their material was&#13;
often bawdy and risque, with&#13;
stabs at religious and sexual&#13;
institutions, the audiences seemed&#13;
to except it in the fun of&#13;
which it was offered.&#13;
' Without a doubt the performance&#13;
of Second City last&#13;
Wednesday was the best comedy&#13;
program to be presented at&#13;
Parkside in recent memory.&#13;
Given the large and enthusiastic&#13;
turn out I would like to see more&#13;
of Second City or that type of&#13;
entertainment in future programs.&#13;
&#13;
Living It Up&#13;
Theater &amp; Films&#13;
Nov. 17,18 &amp; 19 - Milwaukee Ballet, "Piano Man" &amp; "Ballet Master"&#13;
8 p.m. at the Pabst Theater.&#13;
Nov. 17 — Film, "Running Fence" at UW-Milwaukee. Union Cinema&#13;
premiere followed by presentation by filmmaker Albert Maysler - 8&#13;
p.m., $2.50. Showing at 10:30 p.m., $1.50.&#13;
Music&#13;
;Nbv. 15 -r- New Arts Trjtt ^tf^sbted'by Wig. Musieat&#13;
8 p.m. in Vogel Hall, PAC.&#13;
Nov. 16 &amp; 18 — "Manon" performed by the Florentine Opera Co. at '/&#13;
p.m. in Uihlein Hall, PAC. Limited tickets available.&#13;
Nov. 17 — R ick Nelson performs in Uihlein Hall, PAC at 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Nov. 21 — Disco Music, "An Evening with Donna Summer" at 7 &amp;&#13;
10:30 p.m. in Uihlein Hall, PAC.&#13;
Exhibits&#13;
Thru Nov. 26 — Watercolors &amp; acrylics by Christa Adres. Sight 225&#13;
Gallery, 225 E. St. Paul Street, Milwaukee. Wed. - Sat. 11 - 5:30 p.m&#13;
Sun. 1 - 5 p.m.&#13;
— Tale of the Whale at Milwaukee Public Museum 800 W. Wells St&#13;
Milwaukee,open daily 9-5.&#13;
Thru Nov. 30 — A rtist of the Month, Mary Carrington. Photography at&#13;
Racine YWCA in Community Room.&#13;
— Watercolors by Richard Jensen. Mt Pleasant Lutheran Church&#13;
Open mornings Tues. - Fri, All day Wed.&#13;
SATURDAY MORNING&#13;
KIDDIE FLICKS&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
BULLWINKLE •%rp IIUkLVV 1 11 1 Ik k&#13;
and his friends&#13;
10:00AM-UNI0N CINEMA&#13;
$1.00&#13;
SPECIAL! AUTOGRAPH it&#13;
SESSION WITH PARKSIDE'S OWN&#13;
RANGER BEAR&#13;
PLUS JR. RANGER ROOTER INFO. X &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978 RANGER&#13;
Reefer Madness A light Tonight&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
Marijuana is a dangerous&#13;
narcotic. It will ruin your life. It&#13;
is a creepling plague in our&#13;
schools and throughout our&#13;
nation. Smoking reefer will make&#13;
you rape and kill!" To discover&#13;
where these ideas about&#13;
marijuana originally came from,&#13;
attend a free showing of the&#13;
movie "Reefer Madness," Thursday&#13;
night, November 16, at 8:00&#13;
p.m. in the Student Union&#13;
Cinema. By the way you don't&#13;
have to come stoned to enjoy&#13;
this one.&#13;
According to Professor&#13;
Pomazal of the Parkside&#13;
Psychology Department, this&#13;
nV n [film is "one of the most&#13;
influential and effective propaganda&#13;
movies ever produced." It&#13;
Be-bop King&#13;
by Terry Marcinni&#13;
Let's be fair, lefs honor&#13;
the good intentions of the&#13;
people who put on Community&#13;
Concerts in Kenosha. In search&#13;
of some variety from the&#13;
otherwise mundane fare of the&#13;
Kenosha Pops Band, these&#13;
people tried to bring a little class&#13;
to the proceedings.&#13;
Enter Dizzy Gillespie.&#13;
First, let me say Diz was&#13;
brilliant. The man and his young&#13;
group performed a variety of&#13;
jazz styles with elegance, grace&#13;
s and fun. . ... . ...&#13;
But, Diz in front of an&#13;
audience such as the one which&#13;
filled the Mary D. Bradford&#13;
auditorium last Tuesday night&#13;
was like watching four hours of&#13;
election news coverage.&#13;
I'm not sure the audience got it.&#13;
Dizzy has always been in the&#13;
vanguard of jazz. He, along with&#13;
Charlie Parker, revolted against&#13;
traditional structures, and produced&#13;
be-bop, a form which&#13;
defied interpretation by any but&#13;
the staunchest jazz followers.&#13;
Dizzy p|ayed some old&#13;
favorites, most notably, "A Night&#13;
in Tunisia" and "Salt Peanuts."&#13;
But in the end it seemed like&#13;
most of the off-the-wall&#13;
performance went over the&#13;
audience's head. A significant&#13;
portion of that audience&#13;
departed at intermission. Too&#13;
bad.&#13;
is Professor Pomazal's own print&#13;
of Reefer Madness that is being&#13;
shown and the program is being&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Boxing Club.&#13;
"This film," Pomazal said, "is&#13;
silly and unbelievable in places&#13;
and yet its effect has been&#13;
great." Formerly entitled, "Tell&#13;
Your Children," "Reefer Madness"&#13;
apparently helped to set&#13;
the whole nation's attitude&#13;
toward marijuana.&#13;
Made in 1937, it probably&#13;
played at a great role in getting&#13;
marijuana outlawed in the&#13;
1940's. This outrageous film&#13;
almost seems to be a parody of&#13;
anti-marijuana propaganda. The&#13;
acting is so trashy it is hard to&#13;
believe that the actors weren't&#13;
purposely trying to ruin the film.&#13;
Pomazal, however, doubts this&#13;
interpretation.&#13;
Another possibility he suggested,&#13;
was that the film was&#13;
supposed to be a serious&#13;
dramatization of the actual&#13;
consequences of smoking marijuana.&#13;
"If this interpretation,"&#13;
says Pomazal, "is in fact true,&#13;
then the film is irresponsible and&#13;
destructive because of its blatant&#13;
inaccuracies."&#13;
Pomazal said that he felt&#13;
motivated to show the movie in&#13;
order to explain basically, where&#13;
former generations of Americans&#13;
received their distorted image of&#13;
marijuana use. This image needs&#13;
to be modified. He also felt that&#13;
the film should be available not&#13;
only to his Psychology students&#13;
but to the entire student body&#13;
and also to faculty and staff as&#13;
well.&#13;
Despite what the film might&#13;
suggest (demand?), drugs don't&#13;
make you do anything. They may&#13;
distort perceptions or lower&#13;
inhibitions but ultimately,&#13;
people determine their own&#13;
behavior.&#13;
Try Sprouting 'Em&#13;
Bean sprouts are a dietary&#13;
staple in some Far Eastern&#13;
countries, and they are becoming&#13;
increasingly popular in the&#13;
Western world — for some very&#13;
good reasons. Sprouted seeds,&#13;
grains, and beans are alive, and&#13;
contain valuable enzymes, as&#13;
well as being an excellent source&#13;
of energy.&#13;
Ordinary seeds, grains and&#13;
legumes are quite wholesome&#13;
because they are full of natural&#13;
fats and starches. Sprouts often&#13;
contain more nutrients thhn the&#13;
parent seed, compared on a&#13;
moisture-free weight basis.&#13;
Bursting with vitamins, simple&#13;
sugars and proteins some of the&#13;
shoots contain remarkable&#13;
amounts of nutrition, taste great,&#13;
and need no soil or elaborate&#13;
techniques to grow.&#13;
At the University of Pennsylvania,&#13;
soybean shoots were&#13;
tested for vitamin C. Although&#13;
the ungerminated seeds have&#13;
none, the shoots, sprouted for&#13;
only 72 hours, contained in&#13;
one-half cup, as much vitamin C&#13;
as in six glasses of orange juice.&#13;
It was discovered that oats&#13;
sprouted for five days had 500%&#13;
more vitamin B6, 600% more&#13;
folic acid, 10% more vitamin B1,&#13;
and 1,350% more B2 than&#13;
ungerminated oats.&#13;
Wheat may also be sprouted&#13;
and the vitamin E in it increases&#13;
Chiwaukee N ews&#13;
300% in only four days.&#13;
Some vitamin increases are&#13;
not always a straight-line thing.&#13;
Vitamin B1, for example, runs up&#13;
and down in soybeans as they&#13;
sprout. The general trend,&#13;
however, is always spectacularly&#13;
up and germinated seeds are an&#13;
excellent source of vitamins A B&#13;
complex, C, D, E, C, K and even&#13;
U. Minerals such a calcium,&#13;
magnesium,; phosphorus', chl6'^&#13;
ine, potassium, and sodium are&#13;
all found in sprouts, all in natural&#13;
forms which the body can&#13;
readily assimilate.&#13;
For most people who enjoy&#13;
eating salads and greens, sprouts&#13;
are probably no adjustment in&#13;
taste or texture, and add new&#13;
variety. But, if you don't like that&#13;
sort of thing there are other&#13;
methods to eat them besides&#13;
sprinkling them on salads. They&#13;
can be steamed, added to soups,&#13;
and yeast and quick breads,&#13;
cookies, added to blender drinks,&#13;
or meat and vegetable dishes.&#13;
For best results, it is important o HMnceqcsifirYu;&#13;
to use good quality seeds arrd/bi rUe^spqon thyme or basH&#13;
beans vvhfen grbwing sprouts at !; 2 cups sprouts&#13;
Heat oil in pan and stir ...&#13;
green pepper and celery. Cook&#13;
for one minute. Add sprouts,&#13;
stirring often for another minute!&#13;
Add herbs and continue cooking&#13;
There are many varieties of&#13;
sprouters on the market and an&#13;
ordinary pint jar is also&#13;
common way to sprout. Just&#13;
make sure that it is convenient to&#13;
rinse the seeds. They will thrive&#13;
best in a warm, dark, moist, but&#13;
not wet environment.&#13;
Almost any seed, grain or&#13;
legume can be successfully&#13;
sprouted, although most devotees&#13;
think that alfalfa, mung&#13;
beans, lentils, peas, and the&#13;
cereal, grasses of- wheat, oats,&#13;
barley and rye give the best&#13;
results. Unhulled sesame seeds,&#13;
radish, mustard, red clover&#13;
fenugreek, corn, lima beans,&#13;
pinto beans, kidney beans, chick&#13;
peas, cress, millet and nearly any&#13;
other seed you can think of will&#13;
work, however, you should never&#13;
eat potato sprouts because the&#13;
plant is a member of the&#13;
poisonous nightshade family&#13;
STIR FRIED SPROUTS&#13;
2 Tablespoons oil&#13;
Vj cup minced green pepper&#13;
Vt cup rpincedjCelery.fi;&#13;
home Preferably, use the&#13;
current years crop for sprouting,&#13;
to insure the maximum yield and&#13;
minimum spoilage — t hose that&#13;
don't unfold, exception of&#13;
sunflower seeds, otherwise the&#13;
chances of germination are low&#13;
in&#13;
until done. Cover and steam if a&#13;
very soft sprout is desired.&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE ANNOUNCES A&#13;
THANKSGIVING SPECIAL&#13;
k WED. NOV. 22 - DINING ROOM&#13;
TURKEY DINNER WITH ALL THE TRIMMINGS&#13;
• ROAST TURKEY&#13;
• SAGE DRESSING&#13;
• WHIPPED POTATOES&#13;
• GREEN PEAS OR KERNEL CORN&#13;
• CRANBERRY SAUCE&#13;
9NItY|lfL75AND&lt;THE&#13;
FREE&#13;
HAPPY THANKSGIVING&#13;
IF THE ALARM SOUNDS WH.LE YOU'RE PA V.4&#13;
UNION DINING RM. -11:00 AM THRU 1:00 PM &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978 RANGER 9&#13;
Vl:&#13;
*&#13;
Parkside Skiers Anticipate Freeze&#13;
by Sue Stevens&#13;
Fall is here, winter is on its&#13;
way, and there are already some&#13;
people waiting for the first flakes&#13;
of snow. The members of&#13;
Parkside's Nordic Ski Club are&#13;
especially anxious to see the&#13;
ground covered by a blanket of&#13;
?1BO IM?1* ybtf walk into&#13;
their faculty adviser, Ed Waller's&#13;
office, you'll see a sign saying,&#13;
"Stamp Out Summer."&#13;
With most people now&#13;
thinking of hybernation, the&#13;
Nordic Ski Club awakens to&#13;
another season of cross-country&#13;
skiing. Plans are now underway&#13;
to make this an eventful third&#13;
year for the club. Included in&#13;
thos plans is a major crosscountry&#13;
tournament to be held&#13;
here at Parkside on January 14,&#13;
1979.&#13;
The tournament, which is the&#13;
only bne bf fiVb fff the Midwest&#13;
to be held in Wisconsin, will be&#13;
hosted and run by the Parkside&#13;
club along with ; the Nordic&#13;
Trailblazers from ithe RacineKenosha&#13;
area. It will be&#13;
co-sponsored by the United&#13;
States Skiing Association (USSA)&#13;
and the Silva Company, a&#13;
division of S C. Johnson Inc.&#13;
The completition will be&#13;
divided into five age groups. 13&#13;
&amp; under, men, women, collegiate,&#13;
and 50 &amp; over. All those&#13;
willing to challenge the 9.3 mile&#13;
trail may enter.&#13;
The collegiate class will be&#13;
sponsored by the Midwest&#13;
Collegiate Skiing Association.&#13;
The Parkside club ppns to enter.a&#13;
team of three men and three&#13;
women, but individuals can also&#13;
enter.&#13;
After the race there will be an&#13;
awards ceremony in the union&#13;
along with a "soup feed". Pins&#13;
will be given to all those&#13;
finishing the race as well as&#13;
medals for those placing.&#13;
John Georgeson, president of&#13;
the Parkside club, said that&#13;
equipment should be available&#13;
for students through the Union.&#13;
Fifty pairs of skis are now in the&#13;
process of being purchased.&#13;
(. Anyone, interested in competing&#13;
in the tournament can&#13;
apply through John. The race&#13;
should be the height of the&#13;
season, but there are also other&#13;
plans for the club.&#13;
Tomorrow night, November&#13;
16, there will be an organizational&#13;
meeting in Classroom 105 at 7&#13;
p.m. for all those ready to try&#13;
cross-country skiing and to be&#13;
involved in the club. A film,&#13;
"Invitation to Skiing," will be&#13;
shown and a presentation will be&#13;
given by John Lindstrom,&#13;
president of the USSA.&#13;
Events calendars will be&#13;
handed out for both the Parkside&#13;
club and the Nordic Trailblazers&#13;
so thatf"ifieml3efs^"carr etijoy&#13;
many ski outings as possible.&#13;
Even if you haven't tried&#13;
cross-country skiing yet, you can&#13;
join the club and learn. On&#13;
December 16, (provided that&#13;
there's snow) the club will tour&#13;
the Petrifying Springs trail. Based&#13;
on the amount of experience&#13;
people have, a division of groups&#13;
will me made. Some of the&#13;
members with the most&#13;
experience will instruct those at&#13;
the beginning levels.&#13;
There will be other things&#13;
besides the touring for members&#13;
too. Several get-togethers after&#13;
tours are being planned, so if&#13;
you'd like to be active during the&#13;
winter months, one good way to&#13;
do so is to join the Parkside&#13;
Nordic Ski Club. If you don't&#13;
know whether or not you can&#13;
join, keep up on the club by&#13;
watching the Ranger. John&#13;
Georgeson and Ed Ealler both&#13;
want to stress that, "Everyone is&#13;
welcome."&#13;
Behind the W oodshed&#13;
Jail Is Too Much&#13;
by Scarf O'toole&#13;
I smuggled last week's poem&#13;
out with a guard who resembled&#13;
my mother. In fact I'm almost&#13;
sure that he was my mother&#13;
because he only agreed to do it&#13;
after I offered him the one bottle&#13;
of Beam which they didn't find&#13;
when they searched me.&#13;
Anyway, as you have probably&#13;
guessed if you read this far, Scarf&#13;
O'toole has been jailed. How was&#13;
I to know that my one excursion&#13;
into the realm of punk rock&#13;
would tarnish my otherwise&#13;
spotless record.&#13;
Jail isn't so bad. They&#13;
remembered to feed me today.&#13;
(I'm not sure what it was, but I've&#13;
had a craving for cheese ever&#13;
since lunch)&#13;
I must tell you about my&#13;
roommate, Pablo. Pablo is about&#13;
eleven feet tall, speaks fluent&#13;
broken English, and once or&#13;
twice has given me indications&#13;
that he is a human being. One&#13;
would not surmise it by his&#13;
presence.&#13;
Anyway, Pablo is a rapist. He's&#13;
not really sure why he does it, or&#13;
for that matter, what he does it&#13;
to. I later found out that what&#13;
Pablo is in for had nothing to do&#13;
with another human being.&#13;
It's not really bad living in the&#13;
same ten square feet with Pablo,&#13;
it's just that I don't like his&#13;
constant gnawing at the cell&#13;
bars.&#13;
This mornine finally got my&#13;
ii eirioi-iJu-"! OK&gt;m mains&#13;
one phone call. (I was tempted&#13;
to order a p izza for the warden,&#13;
but I understand he doesn't like&#13;
Italians) So, I called my editor&#13;
and explained my predicament.&#13;
He disavowed any knowledge of&#13;
my existence.&#13;
Well, at noon they took us to&#13;
our new jobs. You don't know&#13;
what a joy it is learning a skilled&#13;
trade. I know it will be valuable&#13;
to me when I get out of here. I'm&#13;
sure there are a thousand&#13;
companies just looking for&#13;
someone who can stamp license&#13;
plates as well as I can.&#13;
While I was in shop I heard&#13;
some of the other inmates talk&#13;
about breaking out. At first I&#13;
thought that there was some new&#13;
disease going around, so I asked&#13;
if I could join in on their&#13;
discussion. Alas, they wanted&#13;
merely to leave the safe confines&#13;
of this wonderful jail. They must&#13;
be crazy. But I did learn how to&#13;
whittle a bar of soap out of a&#13;
gun. I feel it is a skill I will soon&#13;
need if I'm going to protect&#13;
myself from Pablo.&#13;
Anyway, I've decided that I&#13;
really don't like it here in jail. For&#13;
one thing I miss the wonderful&#13;
group at the office. Reader's, I&#13;
think I'm going a little bit crazy. I&#13;
haven't had a craving for alcohol&#13;
the whole time I've been here.&#13;
For this reason alone I know that&#13;
I'm going off the deep end. I&#13;
think I'm going to see the prison&#13;
shrink before Pablo swallows me&#13;
whole. More later.&#13;
Parkside Chamber Chorus Sings Sunday&#13;
A concert of Lutheran church&#13;
music will be presented by the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
chorus and chamber singers&#13;
under the direction of Prof.&#13;
Frank Mueller at 3:30 p.m. on&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 19, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Building.&#13;
The program will open with&#13;
Dietrich Buxtehude's Herzlich&#13;
lieb hab ich dich, O Herr for&#13;
chorus and orchestra with a solo&#13;
ensemble including Cheri Dowman,&#13;
David Kapralian and&#13;
Timothy Thompson, all of&#13;
Racine, and Kathy Heide, Krista&#13;
Heideand Debra Scheckel, all of&#13;
Kenosha. Miss Scheckel also is&#13;
piano accompanist for the&#13;
program.&#13;
The chamber singers will&#13;
perform the second portion of&#13;
the concert including works by&#13;
Johann Walther, Johann Schein,&#13;
Samuel Scheidt and Johann&#13;
Sebastian Bach accompanied by&#13;
Ronald Bayer, Racine, harpsichordist,&#13;
and Laura Frisk,&#13;
Kenosha, cellist.&#13;
The singers and chorus will&#13;
combine to present the final&#13;
work, Felix Mendelssohn's Der&#13;
Zwe/'te Psalm featuring the&#13;
Buxtehude solo ensemble with&#13;
Mark Badtke, Union Grove, Kim&#13;
Hetland, Sturtevant, and Jeffrey&#13;
Honore, Kenosha.&#13;
The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
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With this coupon and the&#13;
purchase of any new MG&#13;
Midget, Bud's Imports will&#13;
give you a luggage rack,&#13;
an AM-FM radio, and a pin&#13;
stripe.This offer is good till&#13;
Janurary 1, 1979. Bud's&#13;
Imports located 1 mile&#13;
south of Hwy. 38 on Hwy.31&#13;
632-0970 Pam Ybema&#13;
sales&#13;
manager&#13;
d33M&#13;
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RESERVATIONS .&amp; ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT; PARKSIDE UNION OFFICE, RM 209-OR-CALL 553-2200' &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978 RANGER 10&#13;
Hosts Argentine Champs&#13;
Ranger Volleyball&#13;
Finishes Fourth&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
"We blew it" was tne first&#13;
comment that was heard from&#13;
women's volleyball coach Linda&#13;
Henderson concerning last&#13;
weekends fourth place finish in&#13;
the WW I AC playoffs held in&#13;
Milwaukee. The Rangers struggled&#13;
in to finish behind Carroll,&#13;
Carthage and UW-Platteville.&#13;
Parkside was seeded third behind&#13;
number one Carthage, who the&#13;
Rangers defeated twice during&#13;
the season, and Carroll, who the&#13;
Rangers also defeated twice&#13;
during the year.&#13;
After a season that had its ups&#13;
and downs, the Rangers ended&#13;
up with a respectable overall&#13;
record of 28-21-5. In the&#13;
conference however they fared&#13;
better with a record of 16-7.&#13;
Parkside started out the&#13;
tournament on the right track by&#13;
easily handling UW-River Falls&#13;
by scores of 11-15,15-2 and 15-2.&#13;
The next match is when disaster&#13;
struck as the Rangers lost to&#13;
champion Carroll in three close&#13;
games with scores of 10-15,&#13;
15-12 and 12-15. This is the&#13;
second straight year that Carroll&#13;
has won the conference&#13;
chatVtproftehtp! and:'qii&amp;lifidd to",&#13;
go on to compete in regional&#13;
action.&#13;
Parkside showed that they&#13;
weren't going to give up yet as&#13;
they defeated UW-Whitewater&#13;
15-11 and 15-9. In the playoffs a&#13;
team is not eliminated until its&#13;
second loss. Henderson's squad&#13;
couldn't get themselves Together&#13;
as they were eliminated at the&#13;
hands of UW-Platteville in two&#13;
games. The scores of the last&#13;
match of the season were 11-15&#13;
and 2-15.&#13;
Coach Henderson feels, along&#13;
with the Ranger, that the team&#13;
deserves a round of applause for&#13;
a good season. When asked who&#13;
the stars of the team were, she&#13;
said that she couldn't .single out&#13;
any one player. This year's team&#13;
was blessed with a lot of young&#13;
tallent which will hopefully carry&#13;
the Rangers even farther next&#13;
year than it did this year.&#13;
Only one player will be lost to&#13;
graduation as senior Diana&#13;
Kolovos will not return next&#13;
season.&#13;
Freshman that will be&#13;
returning include Beth Brever,&#13;
Natalie Pierce and Kiya&#13;
Blanton. Sophomores to be&#13;
included are Terri Beiser, Martha&#13;
Aiello, Linda Zeihen, Julie&#13;
Workman, Liz Venci and&#13;
Roxanne Nelson. Juniors on this&#13;
?year?9u y&lt;wetfe.irfGiflfcly"&#13;
Henschel, Tess Manzano and&#13;
Ruth Statema. •&#13;
UW-Parkside will host the&#13;
Argentine national basketball&#13;
team Wednesday night (Nov. 15)&#13;
in t he Rangers' first appearance&#13;
of the season.&#13;
Game time at the UW-Parkside&#13;
Physical Education Bldg. is&#13;
7:30 p.m. All seats will be&#13;
general admission at $1 each.&#13;
Children 11 and under will be&#13;
admitted at no charge.&#13;
Parkside will open its regular&#13;
season Nov. 24 at home against&#13;
UW-LaCrosse and remain home&#13;
for its second game the following&#13;
night against St. Xavier College.&#13;
The Argentine squad is 0-3&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••"A*********&#13;
PRE-HOLIDAY SALE&#13;
B.&#13;
10% OFF EVERYTHING&#13;
c.&#13;
except records and tapes&#13;
RAINBOW&#13;
upt&#13;
ke&#13;
own&#13;
enosha&#13;
REDKEN'&#13;
933 Washington Road Kenosha 657-4918&#13;
heading into a Friday night game&#13;
against Dakota Wesjeyan University&#13;
at Mitchell, S.D. Coach&#13;
Santiago Benvenuto's team lost&#13;
83-65 to North Dakota, 69-67 to&#13;
South Dakota State and 79-66 to&#13;
South Dakota. The Argentines&#13;
will pl ay at Creighton University&#13;
in Omaha Monday, meet the&#13;
Rangers Wednesday and then&#13;
finish their U.S. Tour against&#13;
Loyola in Chicago Nov. 17.&#13;
The 12-man squad boasts one&#13;
player, Luis gaido, at 6-9,&#13;
another man at 6-7 and three&#13;
more players at 6-5.&#13;
Parkside has eight letterwinners&#13;
back from its 1977-78&#13;
squad that posted a 19-11 record,&#13;
won the NAIA District 14 title for&#13;
the fourth successive year and&#13;
advanced to the second round of&#13;
the NAIA national tournament.&#13;
Marvin Chones, a 6-7 senior&#13;
forward from Racine (St.&#13;
Catherine's), led UW-P with a&#13;
13.5 scoring average last season&#13;
and is the Rangers' top returnee.&#13;
Other starters back include 6-5&#13;
senior guard Joe Foots of Racine&#13;
(St. Catherine's), 6-8 junior&#13;
center Lonnie Lewis of Chicago&#13;
(Simeon) and 6-7 senior forward&#13;
Jerry Luckett of Milwaukee.&#13;
Undermanned Swimmers Fail Again&#13;
by Peter fackd&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson's swimming&#13;
team again suffered a&#13;
crushing defeat in a major&#13;
tournament held at UWM last&#13;
weekend. With only 2 swimmers&#13;
available for competition, the&#13;
handicapped Rangers placed&#13;
dead last out of the 12 teams&#13;
involved.&#13;
Ann Corardy took 10th place&#13;
in the 1 meter diving event while&#13;
Lowrie Melotik participated in&#13;
- the: 50 and 200 meter&#13;
breaststrokes.&#13;
The Rangers will return to&#13;
action this Friday at 3:30 for the&#13;
6th annual Ranger Relays to be&#13;
held at Parkside. In a format&#13;
which is probably unprecidented&#13;
in this country, the relays will&#13;
feature men and women&#13;
competing in the same events.&#13;
One man and one woman from&#13;
each team will compete in the&#13;
diving events scheduled to begin&#13;
at 3:30 while two men and two&#13;
. women w.ill combine their efforts&#13;
for the swimming events at 4:30.&#13;
Lawson enjoys this particular&#13;
format as "they are fun without a&#13;
lot of pressure." The University&#13;
of Illinois Chicago Circle and&#13;
UW-Stevens Point are the&#13;
favored participants and no&#13;
admission will be charged.&#13;
Anyone interested in working as&#13;
a timer or in some other capacity&#13;
is directed to consult Coach&#13;
Lawson in the physical education&#13;
building.&#13;
***********************************&#13;
THE HffR CO&#13;
Styling Salon for Men &amp; Women&#13;
We use and recommend&#13;
Sport Shorts&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
Injuries can end a budding&#13;
athletic career quicker than&#13;
anything else. Different coaches&#13;
take different measures to&#13;
prevent injuries.&#13;
Here at Parkside, women's&#13;
volleyball coach Linda Henderson&#13;
puts her players through a&#13;
rigorous stretching routine&#13;
before each practice and match.&#13;
As coach Henderson puts it&#13;
"stretching gives you more&#13;
flexibility and therefore reduces&#13;
injuries."&#13;
Another means of injury&#13;
prevention is the taping of&#13;
ankles. It is mandatory, in about&#13;
every sport to get your ankles&#13;
taped before you leave the&#13;
locker room. Probably the most&#13;
important means of injury&#13;
prevention is the way that the&#13;
individual takes care of&#13;
himself/herself outside of the&#13;
sport.&#13;
I wen t to the Buck's game the&#13;
other night and I couldn't&#13;
believe the performance of&#13;
second year center Kent Benson.&#13;
One minute he would look like&#13;
an All-star and the next minute&#13;
he looked like he didn't even&#13;
rnco ot&#13;
belong on the court. Here's a guy&#13;
who was Ail-American his junior&#13;
and senior years of college while&#13;
attending the University of&#13;
Indiana and was expected to&#13;
stop in the pros. and&#13;
immediately perform at the&#13;
caliber of a Jabbar or Walton.&#13;
This never materialized. His first&#13;
professional game he was KO'ed&#13;
by Jabbar and was left with a&#13;
traumatic psychological scar for&#13;
the remainder of the year, This&#13;
year, it seems he has overcome&#13;
the punch but not the opposing&#13;
centers.&#13;
Parkside Kickers Advance&#13;
one&#13;
If you will remember, last&#13;
Saturday was a cold windy&#13;
overcast day that looked like it&#13;
was about to spill the winters&#13;
first snow on the frozen ground.&#13;
Parkside's men's soccer team&#13;
warmed up to the weather as&#13;
they defeated Dordt College of&#13;
•ay*aP*aBl^^8K*&#13;
&lt;MB,SKl&#13;
'SawiK^MNaBwMwM,&#13;
'8B&gt;&gt;8P'awMwaiM8Bwg*ta6*'i&#13;
TERRACE ROOM&#13;
426 LAKE AVE RACINE&#13;
Iowa for Parkside's first soccer&#13;
playoff win in four seasons of&#13;
playoff competition.&#13;
Both of Parkside's goals were&#13;
scored in the second half with&#13;
the wind at their backs. Junior&#13;
Earl Campbell from Racine&#13;
scored both the Ranger goals in a&#13;
game in which the wind played a&#13;
major factor, along with the&#13;
Ranger's home team advantage.&#13;
The outcome of the game was&#13;
merely a matter of Parkside&#13;
adjusting better to the wind.&#13;
This win enables the Rangers&#13;
to go on to battle St. Thomas of&#13;
Minneapolis in Minnesota today.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson said that&#13;
the Rangers lack of bench&#13;
strength could cause trouble.&#13;
"St. Thomas is an aggressive&#13;
team and if we want to beat&#13;
them we have to make the ball&#13;
work for us."&#13;
WED. &amp; THUR.&#13;
FRI.&#13;
SAT.&#13;
FOR RESE RVED SE ATING&#13;
CALL 632-4206&#13;
presents:&#13;
Opus&#13;
Bones&#13;
« Thurs&#13;
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entertainment 9 p.m.&#13;
"JAM SO GOOD"&#13;
COMING THANKSGIVING •&#13;
ATTRACTIONS •&#13;
MONTAGE&#13;
NOW AT 2 LOCATIONS&#13;
6100 Washington Ave.&#13;
Pioneer Village&#13;
886-5077 • 886-0207&#13;
2615 Washington Ave.&#13;
634-2373 • 634-2374 &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978 RANGi* 11&#13;
NAIA Championship Saturday&#13;
UW-Parkside will host the&#13;
National Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA)&#13;
cross-country championship for&#13;
the third time Saturday, Nov. 18.&#13;
Nearly 400 runners and 50&#13;
teams from nearly every state are&#13;
expected to compete in the five&#13;
mile race, which will start at 11&#13;
a.m. on the UW-Parkside&#13;
campus course on Hwy. JR&#13;
between Hwys. E and 31.&#13;
Parkside also hosted the meet in&#13;
1976 and 1977.&#13;
Admission is $1. Spectators are&#13;
asked to park in the Communication&#13;
Arts parking lot just a short&#13;
walk from the entrance to the&#13;
course and start/finish area.&#13;
Depending champion Garry&#13;
Henry, a junior from Pembroke&#13;
State (N.C.), will be back to&#13;
defend his individual title, which&#13;
he won last year in a record&#13;
24:11. His closest pursuers, Mike&#13;
Rabuse and Bob McCloud of&#13;
Pittsburg State (Kans.), have&#13;
graduated, and only two other&#13;
finishers from last year's top ten&#13;
placers return. And they are&#13;
Robert Fink (eighth) and Andy&#13;
Montanez (tenth), both from&#13;
defending team champion&#13;
Adams State (colo.).&#13;
It's possible that four&#13;
Wisconsin teams could be in the&#13;
field as well as numerous&#13;
individuals. In addition to host&#13;
UW-Parkside, UW-La Crosse,&#13;
UW-Eau Claire and UW-Stevens&#13;
Point may also be running.&#13;
The start of last years NAIA cross country championship ph(&gt;lo by P j A„olinil&#13;
Basketball Games Get Facelift&#13;
500 Attend&#13;
Wrestling Clinic&#13;
UW-Parkside basketball games&#13;
will have a new look in 1978-79.&#13;
Beginning with the Rangers'&#13;
opener at home Friday, Nov. 24,&#13;
against UW-LaCrosse, Parkside&#13;
basketball fans will be treated to&#13;
various attractions to make&#13;
going to the game more&#13;
enjoyable.&#13;
*All Parkside students are&#13;
invited to attend the game Friday&#13;
night and receive a free&#13;
Miller/Bleacher Creature T-shirt.&#13;
Quantities are limited to the first&#13;
200 Students to come TO the&#13;
game. Admission in advance is&#13;
$1 and at the door $2. All&#13;
students must have valid&#13;
Parkside I.D. cards.&#13;
*All Parkside faculty and staff&#13;
are invited to attend the&#13;
LaCrosse game and St. X8vier&#13;
game the following night with&#13;
any number of friends they&#13;
would like to take along. Tickets&#13;
for these special "Host Nights"&#13;
are only $1 each.&#13;
*Each half-time will feature a&#13;
special free-throw shooting&#13;
contest with five "shooters"&#13;
picked at random from the&#13;
crowd (via ticket stubs). The&#13;
winner will receive a free pizza&#13;
at Casa Capri Restaurant in&#13;
Kenosha and will get a chance to&#13;
take the "big free throw", a&#13;
60-foot shot that could win him&#13;
or her a new car from one of&#13;
three local dealers. These cars&#13;
include an AMC Spirit from Nudi&#13;
AMC/Jeep, a Chevy Chevette&#13;
from Robinson Chevrolet-Cadillac,&#13;
a Plymouth Horizon or a&#13;
Dodge Colt from Palmen Motors.&#13;
And each contestant who makes&#13;
one free throw will get a free&#13;
pitcher of beer or soda at Union&#13;
Square.&#13;
*There will be a post-game&#13;
victory party at Union Square&#13;
after the game Friday night with&#13;
live entertainment. All those&#13;
attending the game are welcome&#13;
to attend and turn in their ticket&#13;
stub from the game at the door&#13;
for a free beer or soda.&#13;
*AII kids are invited to join the&#13;
"Junior Ranger Club", which will&#13;
include Trefe T-shirts, membership&#13;
cards, stickers and pictues&#13;
for all members. And all children&#13;
11 and under wearing Junior&#13;
Ranger shirts to subsequent&#13;
games will be admitted free of&#13;
charge. The first 300 attending&#13;
the opening weekend games will&#13;
become members of the club&#13;
when accompanied by an adult&#13;
and buying a game ticket.&#13;
•There will be a new, rousing&#13;
pep band to add to enjoyment&#13;
between halves and at time-outs.&#13;
And working with the band in&#13;
building excitement will be a&#13;
new corps of cheerleaders,&#13;
trained by the Marquette&#13;
University cheerleading advisers.&#13;
More special nights and&#13;
attractions will be scheduled&#13;
throughout the season.&#13;
Of course, the biggest&#13;
attraction, exciting Parkside&#13;
basketball, will be just as big as&#13;
ever this season. Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens' Rangers have won an&#13;
unprecedented four straight&#13;
NAIA District 14 titles and will&#13;
be shooting for a record fifth this&#13;
PROJECT ENGINEER&#13;
UNICO, Inc., a growing and prosperous manufacturer of industrial&#13;
drive and control equipment in Southeastern Wisconsin, is seeking&#13;
a versatile Project Engineer.&#13;
Project design activities include system analysis and integration of&#13;
digital controls, analog circuits, mini-computers, software and&#13;
servo drives to perform a wide variety of industrial control applications.&#13;
Equipment design requires customer contact and interfacing&#13;
between Sales, Purchasing and Manufacturing.&#13;
This position requires a self-starter with strong analytic ability, a&#13;
working knowledge of a nalog and digital circuits, and familiarity&#13;
with real-time computer programming. Candidates must have a,&#13;
BS degree or equivalent and several years experience.&#13;
Send resume and salary history in confidence to:&#13;
James A. Beck UNICO,INC. 3725 Nicholson Road&#13;
Franksville, Wisconsin&#13;
53126&#13;
campaign. Eight lettermen return,&#13;
headed by leading scorer&#13;
Marvin Chones, and numerous&#13;
newcomers dot the 15-man&#13;
roster, with perhaps the most&#13;
highly touted being 6-7, 230 lb.&#13;
freshman Kent Schneider, an&#13;
all-state pick in Masen City, III.,&#13;
who has reminded knowledgeable&#13;
Parkside fans of Bill&#13;
Sobanski.&#13;
Season passes, priced at $7.50&#13;
for students and $12.50 for the&#13;
general public, are still on sale at&#13;
the UW-P Physical Education&#13;
Building. Single game tickets&#13;
may be purchased there, at the&#13;
Union Information Center, at&#13;
LaMacchia Travel in Kenosha or&#13;
at Rehl's Store in Racine.&#13;
Classified Ads&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
To the four craziest guys In the world.&#13;
Thanks for caring and sharing your place.&#13;
Your Friend Always, Roommate&#13;
Dear Debbie A.: I hope you trust me more so&#13;
that we can always be happy people. With&#13;
all my love to you, Charlie.&#13;
Services Offered: Term paper and resumes&#13;
typed by professional secretary. Prompt&#13;
service and reasonable. Call Kathy at&#13;
657-3823 evenings.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
A large office desk and a filing cabinet;&#13;
adding machine, a black leather swivel&#13;
chair. Sell them all together or separate. All&#13;
In good condition. Call 654-2665.&#13;
Pool table:4' by 8' with balls and cue sticks.&#13;
Call 637-4192.&#13;
The 9th Annual Parkside&#13;
wrestling clinic was held this&#13;
past weekend with approximately&#13;
500 area high school wrestlers&#13;
in attendance. Over the past&#13;
nine years it is believed that&#13;
5,000 high school wrestlers have&#13;
attended the clinic. The clinic is&#13;
thought to be one of the best in&#13;
the midwest, and perhaps&#13;
because of this, it attracts such&#13;
guest instructors as Lee Kemp,&#13;
Jim Haines, Joe Landers and&#13;
Parkside's own Bob Gruner.&#13;
The purpose of the clinic is to&#13;
allow the high school coaches&#13;
and wrestlers to keep up on&#13;
modern techniques and acquaint&#13;
the wrestlers with our program.&#13;
On the average, it is figured the&#13;
clinic produces two or three&#13;
Wisconsin state high school&#13;
wrestling champions every year.&#13;
The accomplishments of the&#13;
guest instructors are staggering.&#13;
For example, Lee Kemp is a 1977&#13;
graduate of UW-Madison and&#13;
was an NCAA champion his&#13;
sophomore, junior and senior&#13;
years, and a runner-up as a&#13;
freshman. As Parkside wrestling&#13;
coach Jim Koch puts it, "Kemp is&#13;
probably the greatest wrestler&#13;
since Dan Gable." Kemp not&#13;
only thwarted Gable's comeback,&#13;
which was one highpoint&#13;
in his colorful career, but has&#13;
recently captured the World&#13;
Championship in his weight class&#13;
in brilliant fashion.&#13;
Jim Haines was a member of&#13;
the 1976 Olympic team and a&#13;
NCAA champ his senior year at&#13;
UW-Madison. He is a 1978 World&#13;
Cup Champion. Joe Landers was&#13;
a 1976 NAIA Champion wrestler&#13;
for the Parkside Rangers, and&#13;
Bob Gruner, a junior in terms of&#13;
wrestling eligability is a two-time&#13;
All-American who is returning&#13;
with two years left. With&#13;
instructors like these, it's no&#13;
wonder why the clinic attracts so&#13;
many possible recruits.&#13;
&gt;i&#13;
„ Pure Brewed&#13;
! From God's Country.&#13;
On Tap At U nion Square&#13;
* BRINGS TO TOO *&#13;
CLASSICAL CARTOON MUSIC&#13;
BY&#13;
BLEGEN &amp; SAYER&#13;
WED 15 UNION SQUARE 8PM FREE&#13;
ACADEMY AWARD WINNING&#13;
"JULIA" FRI. NOV. 17 8PM&#13;
SUN. NOV. 19 7:30 PM STARRING&#13;
JANE FONDA, VANESSA REDGRAVE, JASON ROBARDS&#13;
UNION CINEMA $1.00&#13;
ANNUAL TURKEY DANCE&#13;
WITH&#13;
RIO worn* COUNTRY ROCK&#13;
WED, NOV. 22 9PM&#13;
•&gt; ADMISSION VW-P $T.5Q - "GUEST $2.00 ' *&#13;
Q..~&gt;&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
ID'S REQUIRED &#13;
Wednesday November 15,1978 RANGER 12&#13;
from home.i&#13;
Now comes Miller time.&#13;
©1978 Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. </text>
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              <text>Massenkoff Festival Arrives Nov. 12</text>
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              <text>Wednesday Noveml,er 8, 1978 vol 1 no.10&#13;
Massenkoff Festival Arrives Nov. 12&#13;
The Massenkoff Russian Folk&#13;
~Pstival, an 18,memoor company&#13;
ol sing.-r~. dancer&gt; and mus.,&#13;
uan~ in vari-huud nat1onc;1I&#13;
co~tumt:~ wh~ repertory spans&#13;
1,000 years of Russian hi~tory,&#13;
will appt&gt;ar in the Univef\1ty ot&#13;
W1scon~in Parkside Acwnt on&#13;
E nnchment ~erie~ at 8 p m on&#13;
Sunday Nov. 11, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
lhc tPst1val ,tar., Nikola,&#13;
Mas-.cnkoff, a singer who~e&#13;
voe.ii range mes lrom drt&gt;p ba.,~&#13;
to high trnor and who also ,~ the&#13;
&lt; ompany's organ1zpr and direc&#13;
tor The show features ,1&#13;
Balalaika Orthe\tra and ~oloim&#13;
and Ruman folk ballet l&gt;':f~Or'T·&#13;
cd by prec1s1on, high. leaping&#13;
dancers&#13;
Although •ht&gt; Ac,;.ent wries "&#13;
v irtually old out on a&#13;
~ubsc.ript1on ba~h. a limited&#13;
number of tickets. ,lt S6 each are&#13;
available at the Parkside Union&#13;
Information Center (Phone&#13;
553-2345) Accent subscribers&#13;
who find they will not bf, able to&#13;
use thm tickets may list ticket&#13;
availability tor th&lt; Information&#13;
Center to be ' matched· with&#13;
per-.ons who want tickets&#13;
Currently on a US tour, the&#13;
company was recently seen on&#13;
national telev1~1on dunng the&#13;
Jerry Lewis mu~c.ul&lt;1r dystrophy&#13;
tel« .. thon Las.t s.ummer tht•y&#13;
l)\'rlormt.&gt;d in the Soviet Union.&#13;
In January, they will perform&#13;
with the Baltimore 'iymphony&#13;
Orchestra&#13;
Ma~-.cnkoffs voice ha~ pro&#13;
voked unanimous raves from&#13;
cntin ~.11d one typical review·&#13;
"a remarkable voice that&#13;
plumbed the very depths of the&#13;
ba~s reg ster ,ind yet could oar&#13;
into a falsetto that was mu\ical&#13;
and uns.trained. And he&#13;
(Ma~senkoff) went smoothly&#13;
from one to the other without a&#13;
bre,1k in the voice at all. I he&#13;
nc..ircs.t I could compare this&#13;
votCe to 1s that of Chal1ap1n.&#13;
The d,mcers have won similar&#13;
prai~e. Said another reporter&#13;
" l he d,mcers provoked gasps as&#13;
they bounded and leaped on the&#13;
stage ThP men m the troupe&#13;
seemed pulled up by string,s as&#13;
tlwv ~oared above the staRe to&#13;
May Commencement&#13;
For December Grads . The racultv Scnilte appro\t&gt;d Walter f Pldt, ~rt•lal) of the&#13;
a rt&gt;,olut1on that would fa&lt;ultv, ~aid ' at havin~ one&#13;
el,m,natc December ,mnual ,omml ,cem •nt m May&#13;
commenc t•mcnt t "" r1on1 ~ ,hould make th,,t on•· cere'l'lony&#13;
1 hl• Awards and C'N&lt;&gt;monies much mort' of a meaningtul&#13;
comm1tte1? recommend, , I r the , xp •rn nl l' for tho,, m,ol,ed.&#13;
raculty SP-nate that in view of lJnle~, ,1 ~igniikant increaw in&#13;
che l11111tcd number of t&gt;l1i;:1blc Dt'&lt;-emf, r ~r,1duatt&gt;~ 1s shov.n&#13;
graduates and the poor att&lt;'n- or t thl• I acully Senate b a,ked&#13;
danc.e at tlw Dccembpr to recon•,1der their c1ppro1;dl by&#13;
commenn·mell' ~ that thNt&gt; P~GA. t•xplain1•d I cldt, d ~m~le&#13;
~hould be only on&lt;' commence- May commc•n&lt;.ement CPremon~•&#13;
ment per year t &gt; be held n v.ili continut.&#13;
May. Students graduating 1n&#13;
Th~ h,uc wa) pre t•nted 10 lA.'Ceml:&gt;N haH tlw option of&#13;
the PSCA for student re-action att£&gt;nd1ng thl' pr£&gt;vious or&#13;
and "'as approved ~ub~equcnt May proceedings.&#13;
Vincellf Price Goes Wildt&#13;
do high kick~."&#13;
Thnir rt:µertoire includt&gt;s a&#13;
variety of Russian folk dances&#13;
including the tamtl1ar and&#13;
\uper-strenuous. "cossack"&#13;
dances.&#13;
\\.On accolades for their&#13;
interpretation of the rich&#13;
t·.1dit1on of Russian mu~1c&#13;
ranging from the melancholy to&#13;
mercurial tempos.&#13;
Orthodox Church Later, he&#13;
~tud1ed variou~ m,Hical mstru•&#13;
mem\ including piano, viol n,&#13;
truml)\'t and f rench horn ,md&#13;
ma1orecl 1n voice ind drama as a&#13;
university student His vocal&#13;
teather~ have included the&#13;
llal1an baritone Tito Cobb,, the&#13;
Russian basso Alexander Kipnis&#13;
and the American ba\S George&#13;
London.&#13;
The orchestra which&#13;
includes such unusual mstru&#13;
menb as a "x-foot balalaika and&#13;
a mandolin-like \lringed instru&#13;
ment called a corma - have&#13;
The originator of the touring&#13;
l!•\tival, Nikolai lvanovich Mas•&#13;
:-f'nkoff wa~ born m northern&#13;
Chma of a Russian mother and&#13;
Mongolian lather At seven, he&#13;
was singing solos in the Russian&#13;
Extension Reaches Out&#13;
by Cathy Brownlee&#13;
A new in1tia1ive at Park,1de 1s&#13;
to make tht un1H r\1lv more&#13;
rt•ll•vant to the community 1 hi'&#13;
1s being done through tht work&#13;
of As~oc ,atE" Profe-;sor ot&#13;
Pol1t1cal Science, Ken Hoo\ler&#13;
and the University ol Wisconsin·&#13;
lxtt&gt;nsion.&#13;
The Exten,1on bases. 1h&#13;
purpose on the "Wi~comin Idea"&#13;
thdt the bot.ndaril!S of the&#13;
univer~1ty are the boundaries of&#13;
the stal l' The UW Sy\tem works&#13;
at getting involvt-d with th£&gt;&#13;
pt•ople and their needs Each&#13;
county has an ext('OSton agent&#13;
that offers a variety of course~ .&#13;
...,orkshops, and con~ultanh&#13;
Mr tt oover head~ tht'&#13;
Extem,on's Dt•partml•nt of Cov1:rnmt-ntal&#13;
Affairs He cor,cen&#13;
lriltes on workshops for&#13;
government off1ci.th and t1tizen&#13;
groups in Kenosha, Racine, and&#13;
Walworth Counties&#13;
ror government officials, tht'&#13;
\\.Orkshops reveal new p..rspec&#13;
tives 1n local government&#13;
problems. Official\ arc made&#13;
more aware oi ava1lablf'&#13;
resourci&gt;, and acquirp knowlt·d~e&#13;
they nl-1.'&lt;l to b&lt;·tter handl,•&#13;
~uc h "'ue~ .i~ pollution control&#13;
andweliare&#13;
cant retorm) have come about,&#13;
most people remain very&#13;
unhapp\ .,nd fed up with the&#13;
pol1t1cal sy~tPm&#13;
Thu), the ht('ns1on·.., Depart•&#13;
ml'nt of Co1.ernmcntal Aita11s 1s&#13;
gcarnd toward~ helping people&#13;
gain knowledge and i;et mvclved&#13;
in govPrnmcnt Mr Hoover (('els&#13;
that 'democracy 1s open" but&#13;
that it's ''not being taken&#13;
advantage of by the people.'&#13;
The prospect of Parkside&#13;
the university and the surround&#13;
mg cities and town,. Parkside 1~&#13;
big enough lor d1vers1tv but&#13;
doesn t loo,;e the ab1l1ty to&#13;
coordinate the variou~ htens1on&#13;
aCtl\ 11l&lt;?S.&#13;
Mr. ~toover &lt;½l~·fePb that th1)&#13;
htens1un program 1s an&#13;
'' interesting l'~per1encc" that&#13;
dllow~ h,m to rel.ite theory to&#13;
practice He hope) that in a few&#13;
years. Park)1de and the fx.&#13;
tension's Workshops will be•&#13;
helping in spreading dPmocracy come parts&#13;
awart&gt;ness fit~ the size ot both relat1on~h1p&#13;
nity.&#13;
of a much bigger&#13;
with the commu·&#13;
r News Briefs 1&#13;
Chairman Elected will avoid havmg to close the&#13;
-The ~t unent AllocatioM&#13;
Comm1lll'e elected Joe Powers&#13;
chairm.in l,ht wt•ek and Y.111&#13;
hold 1b mPetm~ m Union 10&amp;,&#13;
Thursd,iy and h1days at J:00&#13;
pm All meetings will be open&#13;
to the r&gt;ubltc Thi\ committee&#13;
allola't \ all fund\ to the&#13;
, tudent i.roup\ on t..impu,.&#13;
Squ,ire durin~ thi~ s.emester&#13;
Health For••&#13;
All new students are asked to&#13;
plt&gt;ase return thpir health fo,ms&#13;
to the Health Office, WLLC&#13;
0198&#13;
Halloween Arrests&#13;
Through thC)f UW-l ~·en\lon&#13;
Work~hops, citi1en woups also&#13;
bt.&gt;come politically c-ducatec.J.&#13;
I he m,1in points th.)t arc stressed&#13;
are group involveml'nt in pol1ttn&#13;
and their impact on thP&#13;
democratic system.&#13;
Union Remodeling&#13;
Dean Ped&lt;'l,en Oirettor ot&#13;
tht' Student Union told Rang('r&#13;
I v.1•1&gt;k th,tt the floor tiles&#13;
that are to be in'&gt;tdlled m thl•&#13;
Union Squ.ire have finally&#13;
arrived However. the Illes and&#13;
other remodeling will not be&#13;
done until thl' Christmas break&#13;
since the vacation period ,s not&#13;
very far off and doing it then&#13;
- The Halloween wt:&gt;ekend in&#13;
ME'nomonie, W1~onsm. turned&#13;
out to be more 5cc1rv than wac;&#13;
e•pccted bghty people about&#13;
hall UW-Stout studl·nts, were&#13;
arrested for obmuctmg traffic&#13;
Saturday n1aht, October 28th.&#13;
Approximately 30 resenie police&#13;
officer~ from surrounding com&#13;
mun,tie~ had to be brought in&#13;
to deal with the mob&#13;
As Mr HoovE'r point~ out, a&#13;
''bad situation" resulted from&#13;
crise~ such as Watergate and&#13;
Vietnam. Lven though signifi &#13;
Wednesday llove1116er 8, 1971 IAIIGfl&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Working Toward 'General' Education&#13;
On October 10, 1978,&#13;
Chancellor Cuskin, on behalf of&#13;
the faculty of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, submitted&#13;
an application for participation&#13;
in the project on General&#13;
Education Models. The project&#13;
was established in the summer of&#13;
1978 by the Society for Value~ in&#13;
Higher Education. The project&#13;
will create a nationwide&#13;
consortium of 12 to 16 diverse&#13;
collt'ges and universilit::) to&#13;
mteract toward the improvement&#13;
of general education curriwla&#13;
and related programs.&#13;
Parkside's involvement in the&#13;
program could lead to a direct&#13;
improvement 1n directing the&#13;
current general education goals&#13;
to Parkside's unique student&#13;
enrollment. Professor Robert&#13;
Canary, Chairperson of the&#13;
by Michael J. Morphy&#13;
Humanities Division stated in his&#13;
application for the CfM project&#13;
that there is currently a strong&#13;
feeling on campus that Parkside&#13;
has not yet arrived at a&#13;
satisfactory manner of adapting&#13;
present general education goals&#13;
to the 5tudents. (half part-time&#13;
and over a third over 25 years&#13;
old)&#13;
So far the proposal has met&#13;
considerable enthusiasm by the&#13;
fd&lt;.Ulty A task force designed to&#13;
assess the quality and needs of&#13;
the current general education&#13;
models and several other&#13;
committees to be involved with&#13;
the program were qu ickl y&#13;
arranged, including a student&#13;
representative group of which I&#13;
volunteered to be a member.&#13;
Though it is still too early to&#13;
find out whether Parkside was&#13;
RANGER Is written and edited by studBnts of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and may are solely responsible for Its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by&#13;
Zion Publlshlng Company, Zion, Illinois&#13;
Written permission Is required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Pari&lt;slde Ranger, U.W. Pari&lt;slde, WLLC D-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Mike Murphy . ........... ..... ..... ........... . Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan . .... . ... .. .... .•. ... _ .. Genenil Manager&#13;
Tom Cooper . . . ........... -... ... . .... Stu~nt Advlaor&#13;
John Stewart .........•.•. ............... News Editor&#13;
Sue Stevena ......... ............... . .. F .. ture Editor&#13;
Doug EdenhauHr ...................... . Spona Editor&#13;
Kim Putman .... .. .... ... ............ .... Copy Editor&#13;
Chrla MIiier . ....... .............. , ....... Ad Manager&#13;
Nancy Szymanakl ..... _ ........... Circulation Manager&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Carolyn BrHclano, Cathy Brownlee, Bob Bruno, Mollie&#13;
Clarke, Dave Cramer, Tom Fervoy, Rob Gardner, Pete&#13;
Jacket, Thomas Jenn, Nickl Kroll, Kim Ruetz, Jeff&#13;
Stevena, Lester Thompsor,.&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
Suaan Caldwell, Oenln D'Acqulato, Mike Holmdohl, Julle&#13;
Orth, Tony Raymond and Brlan Taggart.&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig Dvorak, Rob MIiier and Matthew Pollakon.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Cramer and Dawn Thomaa.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted for publication If they&#13;
are typewritten, double spaced with one Inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be Included&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names wlll be withheld from&#13;
publlcatlon, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and refuse&#13;
publication to lettera with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All material must be received by Thursday noon for&#13;
publlcatlon on the following Wedneooay. ~ ~&#13;
chosen as one of the 13 schools&#13;
to be involved in the program.&#13;
(though tfle GEM representative&#13;
said that the people she met with&#13;
at Parkside showed more&#13;
enthusiasm than other schools&#13;
she had encountered) merely&#13;
dpplying to the program shows&#13;
that the majority of the&#13;
admmrstrat1on and faculty at&#13;
Parkside reveal a concern for&#13;
students' education.&#13;
Dr. Canary's statement in his&#13;
dppli(.c1tion for the project that&#13;
the faculty and administration&#13;
wanl students to have some&#13;
understanding of a variety of&#13;
intellectual dbciplines and an&#13;
awareness of the range of man•~&#13;
knowledge and cultural achieve·&#13;
ments, is an idea that many who&#13;
attend college and universities&#13;
lose sight of. The CEM project&#13;
would allow the students of a&#13;
participating college or university&#13;
to achieve well versed&#13;
education, better able to understand&#13;
and adapt to the present&#13;
society.&#13;
Given that Parkside is&#13;
accepted, the GEM project will&#13;
only be effective with student&#13;
support. A Student represent·&#13;
ative group is required in the&#13;
stipulations of the project, but&#13;
an active student interest in the&#13;
project would insure that the&#13;
results are directly meeting&#13;
student needs. Just what form&#13;
this support is to take, as of&#13;
pre~ent, I can't say, but the&#13;
general purpose of this editorial&#13;
is to familiari1e you with the&#13;
specifics and goals of the&#13;
project.&#13;
I agree with Dr. Canary who&#13;
suggested that even it we are not&#13;
accepted into the project, a task&#13;
force should still be initiated on&#13;
campus to accomplish the same&#13;
goals. Su('h a task force, in&#13;
coordination with an academic&#13;
advising program should assure&#13;
that the general education goals&#13;
of Parkside students arc met.&#13;
Correction&#13;
In the October 25th issue of&#13;
the Ranger, on page 9 in the&#13;
CESA Employment for Youth&#13;
article the phone number and&#13;
address were inadvertedly missing.&#13;
You can contact the Youth&#13;
Employment Agency at b56-0174,&#13;
812-SOth Street, Kenosha.&#13;
2&#13;
rt I I I• It ft t I I I I I tt I I I I I I I . I&#13;
.........................................&#13;
I I I II I&#13;
~&#13;
llt1 1111,,,,,&#13;
. .&#13;
. . . . r···· · ······ ... · ... -~;,:;·d~·;~~·;~i. ~~~i-;i~~~ ...................... ~&#13;
· 5qregation betwe@n smokeB :&#13;
: and non-smokers in public areul : . . '··················· .. ············ ........................................... , : : ·····: .&#13;
Mark Houdek - Considering&#13;
what the Cancer Society recently&#13;
came up with about breathin&amp; in&#13;
smoke in the room Yeah I&#13;
\&#13;
• ~rlc Niel~n - I'm all for it. I&#13;
don't smoke so I can see that&#13;
lk:cky Kelly - Very strongly. I&#13;
think there should definitely be&#13;
segregated areas for smokers.&#13;
Lynn Mirecki - I think it's good&#13;
because it's bothering more and&#13;
more people now, especially&#13;
when they're eating.&#13;
Larry Johansen - Yes, I think 11 :&#13;
should be. If you don't smoi(e, :&#13;
you probably don't want 1t :&#13;
around you either. :&#13;
: ....................................................................................... :&#13;
Tl/ER/; 1.JEt~ C.VSIJMNS U'IAJ(;&#13;
f,(Jull{.~I) Do/JN :srAl~:S, T/6H TlO/'E&#13;
Col/TX'ST~ vi' TJIE HIUJI)&#13;
/AILS, AN/J so~8dl&gt;r 1:/HAJ&#13;
IJ()IJ. I 4/0IJ#E/&#13;
'-lll~T U HAPPEN&#13;
N.eXT/?&#13;
OJI, AJo'THWl,&#13;
fK06A&amp;1.~. /JE&#13;
.Sf£11 ~ HAIIE&#13;
CD7T~IJ &amp;~!&lt; ll)&#13;
L..,_,1 l, ... I •I• o,,&#13;
DiDI/£ ~ IIOJ.(SIJ/160/f IIJT?&gt; I TNF HAINPJ.AcF I'-\ I A\ 7··1 &#13;
Wednesday November a, 1978&#13;
Sex and Society's Assets&#13;
"Sexuality and the Physically&#13;
Disabled'' will ~ the topic of a&#13;
two-day program conducted by&#13;
two members of the American&#13;
Association of Sex [ducators&#13;
Counselors and Therapists at th~&#13;
University of Wisconsin•Parkside&#13;
on Friday, Nov. 17, from 2 to 10&#13;
p.m and Saturday, Nov. 18, from&#13;
10 a.m. to 1 p .m. rhe program is&#13;
designed for persons with&#13;
physic.i.l disabilities, their&#13;
parents health service and&#13;
medical personnel, rehabilitation&#13;
and recreational workers&#13;
dnd educators.&#13;
The ses"lions are sponsored by&#13;
Society's Assets, Inc., Developmental&#13;
Disabilities Information&#13;
Service, Inc. and UW-Parkside&#13;
The sponsoring organizations&#13;
said the program will deal with&#13;
"the subject of sexuality and&#13;
special expression by and with&#13;
people with phy~ical disabilities&#13;
(which has) often been shrouded&#13;
with fallacies and incorrect&#13;
information, heavily loaded with&#13;
auilt, shame, impotency and&#13;
deviancy. . We hope to examine&#13;
our feelings and explore&#13;
distorted facts and breathe some&#13;
fresh air into this often hushed&#13;
up area of human need and&#13;
expression."&#13;
Principal presentors will be Dr.&#13;
Matthew Trippe, professor of&#13;
education at the University of&#13;
Michigan, who holds a Ph. D.&#13;
degree m clinical psycholoKy&#13;
cind 1s certified as a sex educator&#13;
by the American As$0c1ation of&#13;
Sex Education, CounselOl's and&#13;
Therapists. and Barbara A&#13;
Figley, a registered physical&#13;
therapist and PT program leader&#13;
at the Arthr1t1s Center of the&#13;
University of Michigan Ho~pital,&#13;
who holds the MA degree in&#13;
guidance and counseling and&#13;
also is a member of the&#13;
American Association of Sex&#13;
Counselors.&#13;
Society's Assets will make&#13;
transportation arrangements for&#13;
persons with physical disabilities&#13;
who wish to attend. UW-P&#13;
Coordinator of Educational&#13;
Outreach Programs Samuel J. Pernacciaro said the campus was&#13;
selected as the site for the&#13;
meetings because of wheelchair&#13;
access to the facility. Fee for the&#13;
sessions is $15 and registration&#13;
information is available from&#13;
Developmental Disabilities Information&#13;
Service, P.O. Box 987,&#13;
Racine (Phone 637-2707).&#13;
Earth Science Club&#13;
Real Rock Group&#13;
by Kim Ruetz&#13;
If you think that there may be making rock kits. They hope to&#13;
some truth to the statement t hat complete these kits with&#13;
l!:eolog1~ts have "rocks rn their literature describing Pach rock.&#13;
heads," vou may reconsider Althouah these kits are not&#13;
when you check out our local finished yet, members hope thdt&#13;
group of geology enthusiasts. upon completion thev can be&#13;
These people are known around marketed nationwide.&#13;
campus as the Earth Science Elections for the dub were&#13;
Club. held a few weeks ago, the results&#13;
RANGEi 3&#13;
Blegen and Sayer To Appear&#13;
The Earth Science Club were: Pres. Dale Schlinsog, Vice&#13;
consists of students who enjoy Pres. Mark Osten, Secretary&#13;
the field of geology and like to Cheryl Wildman, and Treasurer&#13;
share their interests with other Kathy Jorgen!&gt;en. These incompeople.&#13;
They participate in ing officers are eager to promote&#13;
several geology related pro- student interest in their club.&#13;
grams. They welcome anyone who&#13;
This year the club has already would l ike to know more about&#13;
been involved in two weekend the Earth Science Club to come&#13;
field trips. Their latest trip took to the next meeting. The club&#13;
them to River Falls for a WSU meets on Tuesdays at 4:00 p.m.&#13;
Geology Field Conference. in Greenquist 113. Everyone is&#13;
Geology students from UW-River welcome, bring a friend!&#13;
Blegen &amp; Sayer, a different&#13;
type of musical comedy team&#13;
will be performing at Parkside&#13;
on Wednesday, November 15 at&#13;
8 p .m. in the Union Square.&#13;
titles is to get some insight into&#13;
their type of humor. Included&#13;
in their repertoire are such&#13;
greats as Did You Ever Bite&#13;
Your Toenaifs With A Friend, 60&#13;
Second Jane and Ostrich Leggs.&#13;
and no musk, they have a&#13;
reputation of being good&#13;
musicians&#13;
Falls gave presentations about&#13;
rock formations around their&#13;
area. Earth science student~ ;1nri&#13;
professors from UW school~&#13;
came from all over the state to&#13;
participate.&#13;
Last year during spring break&#13;
the club traveled to Wyoming.&#13;
Throughout the trip the group&#13;
was guided through many areas&#13;
bearing interesting geological&#13;
formations. Generally the field&#13;
trip s taken are not only&#13;
informative but also a whole lot&#13;
of fun as well. The students are&#13;
given a chance to stomp around&#13;
gravel pits and t he like to collect&#13;
all kinds of exciting rock&#13;
specimens.&#13;
This year the c lub is&#13;
considering visiting either the&#13;
southeastern portion of the&#13;
United States, for environmental&#13;
studies; Of touring the Grand&#13;
canyon. Other plans on the&#13;
agenda for the year include:&#13;
films at club meetings; continued&#13;
participation in suJ.Jporting&#13;
the colloquim program; and of&#13;
course, fund raising projects.&#13;
Currently the group is involved&#13;
with a rather unique project.&#13;
They have been collecting a&#13;
series of ten rocks common to&#13;
our area classifyins them , and&#13;
The duo plays their own type&#13;
of musical vignettes that they&#13;
call "Classical Cartoon Music."&#13;
To look at some of their song&#13;
Although outward appearances&#13;
tend to give the&#13;
impression that they are all fun&#13;
MILLER NIGHT&#13;
The performance Wednesday&#13;
night is sponsored by Coffeehouse&#13;
and should prove to be&#13;
entertaining for anyone looking&#13;
for something different.&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
SEASON OPENER&#13;
RANGERS vs. UW-LaCROSSE&#13;
FRI., NOV. 24 7:3o·P.M.&#13;
UW-PABKSIDE PHYSICAL EDUCATION BLDG.&#13;
STUDENT ADMISSION: s2.oo (AT THE DOOR)&#13;
GENERAL ADMISSION: s2.oo&#13;
CHILDREN'S ADMISSION: 1.00&#13;
FREE' "BLEACHER. CREATURE" T-SHIRTS TO FIR.ST&#13;
• 2oo·uw-P STUDENTS WJTB PARKSIDE I.D. REE! MILLER. BEER/SODA TICKETS REDEEMABLE AT&#13;
AN AFTER GAME PARTY IN THE PARKSIDE&#13;
UNION "LIVE ENTERTAINMENT"&#13;
SUPPORT YOUR CHAMPIONSHIP R.ANGEll&#13;
~'?,(¥,'r ~ ~ -J&#13;
TEAM NATL. CHAMPIONSHIPS 1975 197• 1977, 1978 &#13;
Wednesda, November 8, 1978 RANGER 4&#13;
Mommy's Little Boys&#13;
A Taste of Vaudeville&#13;
by Thomas Jenn&#13;
About the only taste of&#13;
vaudeville comedy most of us&#13;
experience is the Sunday&#13;
morning reruns of Laurel and&#13;
Hardy. One of the rare comedy&#13;
teams that still performs&#13;
vaudeville humor local trio&#13;
entitled Mommy's Little Boys.&#13;
Two members, Jame!&gt; Ne1baur&#13;
and Kaiser Kazarian, attend&#13;
UW-Parkside; the third, Brian&#13;
Weiher, resides In Milwaukee.&#13;
"The Boys" emulate the earl-y:&#13;
actors Abbott and Co~tello,&#13;
Laurel and Hardy, and the three&#13;
Stooges. Emphasis is on&#13;
slapstick. Most routines are&#13;
refined work of early comedians.&#13;
Jim, with lasts of help from Kai&#13;
and Brian, also writes c,ome&#13;
original material.&#13;
"We're more knockabout, hit&#13;
'em in the gut (humor)," explains&#13;
Jim. the group's unofficial&#13;
!POkesman. "You can sustain&#13;
more (laughter} with a pie in the&#13;
face than with a puppy on your&#13;
lap, then with the easy brand of&#13;
humor. People want to laugh and&#13;
they want to laugh. right away."&#13;
And that's just what the&#13;
audience does. Of the team's 16&#13;
shows, '4 managed standing&#13;
'&gt;Vations. A favorite stetch that&#13;
always assurses a hysterical&#13;
crowd. is Abbott and Costello's&#13;
classic "Who's on First?" Here's a&#13;
section of that skit:&#13;
Jim: Look, all I'm trying to find&#13;
out is what's the guy's name on&#13;
second base.&#13;
Brain: No, no. What's the guy's&#13;
name on second base.&#13;
Jim: I'm not asking you who's on&#13;
second.&#13;
Brian: Who's on first!&#13;
Jim: I don't know&#13;
Brian- He's on third. We're not&#13;
talking about him.&#13;
Jim: How'd I get on third base?&#13;
Brian You mentioned the man's&#13;
name.&#13;
Jim: If I mentioned the third&#13;
baseman'!&gt; name, who did I say&#13;
was playing first?&#13;
Brian: No! Who's on first.&#13;
Jim: ST A Y off of first base!&#13;
In this expertly acted routine,&#13;
Jim really never figures out who's&#13;
on f ir,;t. In case you're&#13;
wonderina, Who's on first,&#13;
What's on second, I Don't Know&#13;
is on third, Tomorrow pitches,&#13;
Today catches, Why is 1n left&#13;
field and Because is out in center&#13;
field&#13;
"Whenever we do Who's on&#13;
First?', there's always some&#13;
sucker that saw us that says&#13;
'That's better than Abbott and&#13;
Costello did'." A b,t of irritation&#13;
tinted Jim's voice ''I can't see&#13;
how that can be, because they&#13;
did it first - we're emulating&#13;
them. So how can we do better&#13;
than the person we're copyingf It&#13;
might be close to as good as they&#13;
did it, but it couldn't be better."&#13;
They come awfully close,&#13;
indeed&#13;
Since their beginnings in a&#13;
1975 Horlick High School talent&#13;
show, Mommy's Little Boys have&#13;
entertained crowds at Marquette,&#13;
Carthage and Parkside&#13;
colleges (PU showing was on&#13;
Parkside TV). They've been&#13;
invited to partake in the Jacks of&#13;
Better restaurant weekly amateur&#13;
comedy night whenever they&#13;
wish.&#13;
By far, t he most memorable&#13;
undertaking was a trip to&#13;
Hollywood this past summer to&#13;
act atop the stage of the&#13;
Hollywood Comedy Club. While&#13;
in Carl,fornia, they were lucky&#13;
enough to meet up with,&#13;
sometimes work with, talented,&#13;
IP&lt;;S(&gt;r-known vatidevillian&lt;; &lt;;11,h&#13;
as Fmil Sitka, a character actor&#13;
for many a 3 Stooges film, and&#13;
Kid chissell, an original member&#13;
of the Keystone Cops. The trip&#13;
proved very productive and&#13;
ego-inflating&#13;
In the upcoming school year,&#13;
the team hopes to entertain&#13;
students at Parkside, maybe, as&#13;
Jim wishes, to ''help people&#13;
forget about their problems,&#13;
even if only for a short time, and&#13;
~ ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS~7 .&#13;
• - !~~!!O~-~ ~!~~~~.. II,,_&#13;
,.-..... you into responsib1l1ty Immediately 16 wl'eks of&#13;
1ntentlve leader•hip trdinmg &lt;it OCS pn,p,n e~ I A;1;1;;m'""" ,,.~,.•d m•"~" .&#13;
\! t:.-...::!~~:::!.li All Majors CPt your ear?er off lhc 1round Wtlh our pilot or fliaht offict"r train in&amp; proaram Ask&#13;
about the 1ntf'lll1ence and eeronaut~al ma,n•&#13;
two thirds of the trio--Kal and Jim&#13;
laugh and have a good time."&#13;
Jim also looks forward to&#13;
returning to Hollywood. This&#13;
t ime the cOniedians will carry&#13;
along with them 2 f ilm scripts&#13;
which they have written, in an&#13;
attempt to break into the movie&#13;
business. "That's just a little&#13;
dream we have . .. If the dream&#13;
comes true, terrific, if not - life&#13;
goes on."&#13;
Huge amounts of money and&#13;
massive thrc,ngs of fans are not&#13;
the incentives for the team to&#13;
excel as comics. Kai summs it up&#13;
in one simple sentence: 'We like&#13;
to hear them laugh." Jim sees&#13;
rewards deeply rooted in "the&#13;
memories of the shows we have&#13;
done; every show has a little&#13;
something to tell our kids about&#13;
'Hey I used to do shows and&#13;
people used to laugh.&#13;
" I don't think we'll ever bf&#13;
superstars or millionaires. I don't&#13;
think any of u~ really care to be:&#13;
The comedy team wants only&#13;
one thing . "Just so the peopl.&#13;
keep laughing.''&#13;
tt'nence proarams Sophomores may apply tor in perfo man t H II k&#13;
the Aviation Reserve Officer Candidate r ce a or C Higll (AVROC) Pro11ram&#13;
Business Management&#13;
Bus Admin, Math, Economics Mojors Males&#13;
and females. Six months advanced business&#13;
manaaement course starts you as a Na-.,y&#13;
Management Oificer&#13;
Medical Students&#13;
Receive the cost of your tuition, books, fees, W&#13;
equipment, and• $400 1 month stipend from the M&#13;
Amie&lt;! Forces Health Professions Scholarship R i ~~ram Awards b••:.-d on ablliLV, not financial -&#13;
IDtHr o,,oru1tttes llcl1u: Cry,ttlefy, React1rlaaa1•11t,j&#13;
- lastnctor, E11i1eer.&#13;
i latmiews COldlcted ia Placeant&#13;
L on 8 -9 llavelllller 1918&#13;
- AN fOOAL !!I! EMPWYER&#13;
TERRACE ROOM&#13;
426 LAKE AVE RACINE&#13;
WED. &amp; THUR.&#13;
FIi.&#13;
SAT.&#13;
presents:&#13;
Opas&#13;
Bones&#13;
SHORT STUFF&#13;
entertai1111ent 9 p.m.&#13;
"JAZZ SO GOOD'' &#13;
Wed• esdo, Nove• l»er 8, 1978 RANGEi&#13;
Oriana Trio To Perform&#13;
The Oriana Trio, now m its 3rd Miss V ,ming, who teaches&#13;
year as a performina group violin at UW-Parks1de and i~&#13;
sponsored by U .W Parkside, will concPrtmistress of thE' Kenosh,1&#13;
perform at U .W. Parkside on Symphony Orchestra, recently&#13;
November 14, 1978 at 8:00 p m returned from a seven wet!k tour&#13;
in the Communication Arts of 11 Europt&gt;an countries&#13;
Theatre. Works by ~thoven, Harry Sturm, who conducts&#13;
Copland, and Ravel will be the Parkside Symphony Orchc~•&#13;
performed. Th&lt;: concert 1s free tram addition to teaching 'cello&#13;
and ope~ to the public. students, returns to the campus&#13;
The tno opened its fall season from a summer in v.h1ch he&#13;
of performances with a concert conducted the Milwaukee&#13;
at tht! Kenosha Public Museum Symphony, servE'd as a coach ,it&#13;
and followed with a return&#13;
engagement before the Burling&#13;
ton Lyceum Club of Burlington&#13;
on October 25th In addition to&#13;
these public ix, formances the&#13;
trio is also performing at high&#13;
schooh and junior high schools&#13;
in southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
The U.W.•ParksideOriana Trio&#13;
composition competition is&#13;
receiving world wide response.&#13;
Inquiries have been received&#13;
from Korea, Ireland, Poland,&#13;
Switzerland, Norway, and the&#13;
United States. In February the&#13;
trio will judge the submitted&#13;
composition~ which must be&#13;
unpublished and unperformed. A&#13;
S1SOO 00 pnze will be awarded&#13;
the winner and thP work will be&#13;
premiered c1t the Oriana Trio&#13;
sprin&amp; conct&gt;rt on May 3, 1979&#13;
The Onana Trio is made up of&#13;
Eden Vaning on violin, Harry&#13;
Sturm on Cello and Carol Bell on&#13;
01ano I he selKt1ons tor their&#13;
November 14th program consist&#13;
of Ten v.1riarions on the theme&#13;
"lch bin der SchneidN I\JkaduH&#13;
from the opera Die Schwestern&#13;
von Prag, followed by Vitebsk ·&#13;
Study on " /c-w,sh Theme by&#13;
Aaron Copland r ollowin&amp; the&#13;
intermission the Trio will&#13;
complete the program the&#13;
performance at Trio in A-Minor photo by p .J.Aizolina&#13;
by Maurice Ravel.&#13;
the Chamber Mu~,c Conference&#13;
of the East and Composer:.&#13;
Forum at Erennington College,&#13;
Vt and was conductor and&#13;
director of the Parks Promenade&#13;
Symphony of Milwaukee&#13;
Mrs Carol Bell. who recently&#13;
developed a n«•w piano trammg&#13;
progr.i.m for Pra1r1e $(hool, 1s&#13;
teaching privately as well as at&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Their prOlilram 1s free and open&#13;
to the pubh&lt;&#13;
Grant Worlcsltop Nov.17&#13;
A workshop on grant writing&#13;
designed for persons in local&#13;
government social service&#13;
agencies and voluntt:er and&#13;
community 1VOups will be held&#13;
on Friday, Nov. 17, at the&#13;
Univenity of Wi~consin-Park•&#13;
side&#13;
Boris Frank, manager of&#13;
administrative services for WHA•&#13;
TV, UW-Extension, Madison, will&#13;
give the opemng talk, "An&#13;
Overview of Resources, Strat•&#13;
egies and Proposal Develop&#13;
ment'' and will conduct a session&#13;
in "Initiating a Propo~I." Other&#13;
YE OLD TOWN INN&#13;
3747 Grand Ave.&#13;
Gurnee, m.&#13;
1/2 Block Ea•t of U.S. 41&#13;
?!!~&#13;
N~ Pub Opening&#13;
Bartender•, Wattree-..&#13;
Kitchen Help&#13;
Interview• Thur•. &amp; Fri.&#13;
Noon• 8:00 P .M.&#13;
&lt;,essions include " Preparing the&#13;
Budaet Document" by rred&#13;
Patrie of the Southeastern&#13;
Wi.,consin Re&amp;1onal Planning&#13;
Comm1ss1on and "The Evaluation&#13;
Component" by Prof David&#13;
Barone of the UW-Parkside&#13;
behavioral sciences d1v1sion&#13;
The workshop Is sponsored by&#13;
the UW-P Institute for Local&#13;
Government and Social Services&#13;
and the UWEX Department of&#13;
Governmental Affairs. Sponsors&#13;
say the sessions will focus on&#13;
finding public and prtvate grant&#13;
sources, contacts with foundation)&#13;
and ager1cies, proposal&#13;
writing, budaetary requiremt!nls&#13;
and developina an evaluation&#13;
component.&#13;
Registration information is&#13;
c1vd1lable from the conference&#13;
coordinators, Prof. Kenneth&#13;
Hoover of UW-P and UWEX&#13;
(phone 553-2518) and Prof&#13;
William Murin, director of the&#13;
UW-P institute, (phone 553·&#13;
2316). The fee, which includes&#13;
luncheon, is S15 in advance S20&#13;
on the day of the workshop.&#13;
Come and be with us&#13;
You're invited to worship, study, serve and&#13;
fellowship with us as we meet together at the&#13;
First United Methodist Church&#13;
60th St. &amp; Sheridon Rd&#13;
Kenosha Phone 658-3213&#13;
Here's your chance:&#13;
h~ 9:15-10:lSa.m.&#13;
~,:..,;_¼a: 10: 15-10:45 o~m.&#13;
fJ ~ ~~ :. 10:45-11 :45 a.m.&#13;
Sunday's&#13;
Church School&#13;
Coffee Time&#13;
Worship I.W ,f Wed. 7 Choir Rehearsal :00-8:30 p.m.&#13;
~f'..l~ .. We love you here&#13;
5&#13;
Living it Up&#13;
ThHtre &amp; Films&#13;
Nov. 8 - film, 'Woman of the Yuar" 9 30 a m., 1 &amp; 7 p m Colden&#13;
Rond&lt;'lle Theater 1525 How«'! St Racine&#13;
Thru Nov 12 - Play, ''Aladdin" by Edgewood Agency at the Pab\t&#13;
Theater, Milw.i.ukee, Mon • frt 10 a rn. &amp; 12 !O pm Sat., 10 JO&#13;
a m &amp; 1 30 &amp; 4 p m Sun • 1 30 &amp; 4 p m&#13;
Nov. 10 - Film,· Cunga Otn"' with Cary Grant VogPI Hall, PAC 8 pm&#13;
Nov 11 - Film, "l ht• Chargt• of the l 1ght Brigade" w,th Lrrol flynn,&#13;
David Niven, &amp; Olivia dl' Hav,lland Vogel Hall PAC 8 pm&#13;
Thru "ov 2b - Play, "lhe Freeway· pre~ented by \11lwaukee&#13;
Repertory Theater Co at PAC Todd \.\ehr lhcater Call box otf1ce&#13;
tor tm1e:.&#13;
Music&#13;
Nov 8 - Young People's Concert, Milwaukee Symphony 10 30 a m&#13;
U1hl«·m Hall I' \l&#13;
NOV 8 - Jesse Collin, easy-h,tening roe k U1hlPin Hall PAC&#13;
Nov CJ - Pail lard Chamber Orchestra 8 pm at the Pabst Theater&#13;
Noli. 10 - Milw.iukee Symphony, open reht-ar\al• prcv1c" of Sub·&#13;
~crir&gt;tion Seri{•~ 1,erformance 7 30 at U1hle1n Hall PAC&#13;
Nov. 11 &amp; 12 - Sopr.mo Loma Haywood &amp; th,• W15 Con'&gt;ervatory&#13;
Symphonv Chotu'&gt; v.1th the Milwaukee Symphony - A Sc,1&#13;
S1,,mphon, 'Uihlein Hall, PAC 11th· 8 '30 pm 12th - 7 30 pm&#13;
:s;o-,, 12 - UWM Wind Symphony &amp; Symphony 8.llnd at the Pab,t&#13;
The.itt•r 7 30 p rn&#13;
Exhibit,&#13;
ihru Nov 12 - Watercolor Wis. - 78, by Dennis Doonan at Wu~turn&#13;
\1u\l'um Photo.:raphy Gallery 2519 Northwc~tcrn A1,,e Racine&#13;
Pompeii AD 79: Traveling exh1b1t1on of more than 300 works IC·&#13;
covl'l't'd trom 1,900 1,,ear old rums of l'ompe11 in Morton \,\ mg of&#13;
Chicago Art lmt1tute, M1ch1gan AH! &amp; Adams St&#13;
Painting by ludy Arnold, Upstairs DowMt,rns Galll'rl(•S 124 both St&#13;
Kenu'&gt;hJ Sunday, onl\' l•'i pm&#13;
Holiday Craft Program&#13;
Makt&gt; your own holiday&#13;
decorations thi, •,ear and add &lt;1&#13;
per\0n, I touch to your home&#13;
that can be u~ed vear•after-~ear&#13;
The C.ulcf Pn Rnnni&gt;IIP. •~ olf Prmg&#13;
a lret Holiday Craft Program on&#13;
Nov1&gt;mber 1t, at 7.00 p.m.&#13;
Mary Kelly, instructor at&#13;
Gateway Te&lt;.hnical Institute•&#13;
Racm&lt;&gt;, will d&lt;'monstrate how to&#13;
handcraft pine cone and candy&#13;
wreaths, unique table arrangemt-nb&#13;
Jnd macramt'd items to&#13;
rellect the restwP ~ea~on. She&#13;
\\tit offer unique money savmi'&#13;
tips b1,, u~ing remnant pieces of&#13;
tloth, contain&lt;:r5 .-ind other para•&#13;
phcrnalta that ,., &lt;ommon to&#13;
('\ ery hou:.chold.&#13;
Reservations and further&#13;
information are available by&#13;
callmg the Colden Rondelle at&#13;
554-2154&#13;
GOOD&#13;
MON - FRI&#13;
11 - 2&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
UL PARK'-IOE STU0E~TS. FAC:ULTl' A~D&#13;
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rROPEK PARKSIDE IDE.!IITtnCATION. &#13;
Wed11e.sdar lorember 8, 1978&#13;
#1!)h ,,.. a. forb,dJ 11\9 Tow,zr II\ o for Jf&#13;
ccv111r;1,a. mo.J sc,~r,stcornmenc~~ a.&#13;
de-,lisi, Sche,.,, todcsfr~oH l,fe or. ea,r/.i .&#13;
..., ... ., ... , . ..., .... ~ ........ j&#13;
1 IANGfl&#13;
ehind the Woodshe---&#13;
by Scarf O'Toole&#13;
The Ballad of Cook County Jail&#13;
Jail's not straight,&#13;
Jail's another country.&#13;
The mail's always late&#13;
And the writing on deez walls, daie funky.&#13;
To beat the band, that's what we planned&#13;
(l ost Queenie in the shuffle),&#13;
ror each one that gets caught,&#13;
Twenty loose their third eye to the jungle.&#13;
Argh, ,ugh, ar~h. arghl&#13;
Argh, argh, argh, argh!&#13;
Argh, argh, argh, arghl&#13;
Argh argh, argh, ar&amp;h !&#13;
Argh, argh, argh, argh1&#13;
Argh, argh, argh, argh!&#13;
Argh, argh, argh, arghl&#13;
Argh, argh, c1rgh, argh!&#13;
I got caught'&#13;
I will never work ag.iin!&#13;
And I will never $el a po~t card&#13;
From anyone who doesn't need ten dollars.&#13;
Sec-ands ar1- ~lowly dispensed here&#13;
like huge pil Is&#13;
L uvc1boriOU', ~trip mining equipment&#13;
Drop them ("Belch'") like rocks onto your head&#13;
I s~m to get up&#13;
(Up, up, up, up, up, up!)&#13;
And keep making and remaking&#13;
Mv bed.&#13;
Editors note· Reason is not the faculty to v.hich poetry appea_ls."&#13;
-O~r;ir Wilde&#13;
e f ULl BREAKFl&gt;.ST BUFJET llAllY&#13;
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~&#13;
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I 'J. ---- ~ sales I&#13;
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-----NOdOO:&gt; SIH.J. d3:l}I •----.1 &#13;
Wednesday Nove•ber 8, J978 RANGER&#13;
Robison&#13;
Sculptures&#13;
on&#13;
Display&#13;
A series ol clay sculptures by&#13;
Le~lie and Patrick Robison are&#13;
currently on display at the U.W.&#13;
Parkside Fine Arts Callery in the&#13;
Commun1cat1on Arts building.&#13;
The exhibit will remain on&#13;
display thru November 30th&#13;
Tht Rob15ons will present a&#13;
slide presentation on Wednesday,&#13;
November 15th, in&#13;
Creenquist 101 at 7 p.m.&#13;
The Gallery hours are&#13;
Monday and Thursday 12-5&#13;
pm • Tuesday and Wednesday&#13;
7·10 pm., and hiday by&#13;
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anh&#13;
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C ~&#13;
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M. Murphy&#13;
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Wednesday Nowe• ber I, 1978&#13;
Reviews&#13;
by lohl'I Stew~rt&#13;
Jack Nicholson stars in and&#13;
directs this movie. While Goin'&#13;
South is a familiar type of movie&#13;
- a romantic comedy set in the&#13;
very fresh and very well made.&#13;
Although most of the&#13;
characters in the movie are all&#13;
pretty r1d1culous (i.e. John&#13;
Belu$hi as the Mexican deputy,&#13;
'"Hello, M -eeeeee-ster") the&#13;
relationship between the outlaw&#13;
Jack Nicholson and Julia, the&#13;
heroine. 1s not only amusing but&#13;
touching and meaningful as well.&#13;
The plot of the movie is&#13;
basically about a condemned&#13;
outlaw, Nicholson, who is saved&#13;
from the gallows by a young&#13;
woman who takes him as her,&#13;
husband, as according to an old&#13;
city ordinance. Julia's gold mine&#13;
is being taken by the railroad and&#13;
she needs Nicholson's muscle to&#13;
get the gold out of the mine&#13;
before the takeover date.&#13;
However, the marriage that was&#13;
originally Just a business deal&#13;
eventually blooms into true love.&#13;
The leading lady does a very&#13;
good job at fending off&#13;
Nicholson's wild and wooly&#13;
lovemaking but finally gives in to&#13;
his arguments about the&#13;
unnaturalnes~ of her celibate&#13;
life (Apparently virginity leads&#13;
to blood shot eyes according to&#13;
"Dr. Nicholson.") ;ohn Belushi's&#13;
part is mainly non-verbal again,&#13;
as in Animal House but he has a&#13;
much smaller role in Goin'&#13;
South.&#13;
Jack Nicholson·s performance&#13;
(and directing) is the best. As the&#13;
sly but awkward outlaw he Is&#13;
funny. charming, a bit bad&#13;
bawdy and very entertaining My&#13;
only fear about this film is that&#13;
Nicholson will get arrested for&#13;
some of the truly "dirty looks" he&#13;
gives in this film . He can say&#13;
more with a look than most&#13;
actors can with a whole speech.&#13;
PAI Mini Movie Review&#13;
The Seven Percent Solution&#13;
IAIIGEI 8&#13;
Try A Little 'April Wine'&#13;
by G.I. Steimle&#13;
Looking for some new music&#13;
to turn yourself and friends onto?&#13;
lake a chance and buy "FIRST&#13;
GLANCE." It's your basic rock 'n'&#13;
roll record by a restructured rock&#13;
'n' roll band. APRIL WINE'S first&#13;
record was a limited distribution&#13;
on BIG TREE records with a title&#13;
of the same name. Released in&#13;
1972, some of you might recall a&#13;
tune from that album titled&#13;
"YOU COULD HAVE BEEN A&#13;
LADY ,. The band wa~ comp0sed&#13;
of Myles Goodwyn, David&#13;
Henman, Jim Clenchy and&#13;
Ritchie Henman. The band has&#13;
changed completely since then&#13;
with the exception of Myles&#13;
Goodwyn. The present line-up is&#13;
as follows: Steve Lange, vocals&#13;
and bass; Brian Greenway,&#13;
guitar, vocals and harmonica;&#13;
Jerry Mercer, drums; Cary&#13;
Moffet, guitar; and Myles,&#13;
singing, playing quitar and&#13;
keyboards.&#13;
The first side blazes open with&#13;
two rockers CIT READY FOR&#13;
LOVE (not to be confused with&#13;
READY fOR LOVE by Mick&#13;
Ralphs but equally impressive in&#13;
arrangement and vocal crispness)&#13;
and HOT ON THE WHEELS&#13;
OF LOVE. The next tune slows to&#13;
a bluesy ballad with Brian&#13;
Greenway's harmonica blending&#13;
superbly with Myles' vocals. This&#13;
song reminds me of the GUESS&#13;
WHO. (I wonder if it has&#13;
anything to do with the group's&#13;
Van Morrison&#13;
origin.) Side A closes with plenty&#13;
of energy starting with RIGHT&#13;
DOWN TO IT. The vocals are&#13;
extremely fluid with the musical&#13;
makeup of this cut. Steve Lang's&#13;
driving bass and the dualing&#13;
guitar work k~p the beat&#13;
moving through ROLLER.&#13;
After ingesting this material I&#13;
was more than eager to find out&#13;
1f and how side B would&#13;
compare. It seems a lot of&#13;
records lack something on one&#13;
side or the other. This indeed&#13;
was not the case. COMING&#13;
RIGHT DOWN ON TOP OF ME is&#13;
another slower, more mellow&#13;
tune with some nice harmonies&#13;
and backup vocals Next, is my&#13;
second favorite tune on the&#13;
entire disc, l'M ALIVE. The&#13;
tempo picks up again and I&#13;
found the music and lyrics spark&#13;
images of a fresh new breed of&#13;
rock 'n' rollers.&#13;
'Tve learned to cope with the&#13;
crap and jive&#13;
Remember boy Just to stay&#13;
alive&#13;
Only the strong survive&#13;
Only the strong survive and&#13;
I'm alive."&#13;
LET YOURSELF GO was a&#13;
slight disappointment but only&#13;
because it follows and precedes&#13;
my favorite songs. SIL VER&#13;
DOLLAR is an excellent song&#13;
that succeeds in bringing a finish&#13;
to an exceptional piece of vinyl&#13;
production. This tune has aB of&#13;
what it takes to make it a classic&#13;
- great vocal leads and&#13;
backups, original musical composition&#13;
that mixes with the&#13;
drifting, whining guitar work,&#13;
and strong support from bass and&#13;
percussion. This, flavored with a&#13;
little steel guitar and organ&#13;
keyboards, gave me the feeling&#13;
this band is going places.&#13;
I won't rave too much more&#13;
about a group's first national&#13;
release. (I seem to remember a&#13;
few bands with dynamite first&#13;
releases.) But whether this band&#13;
power poops out ( or is that&#13;
power pop?) is yet to be seen. So&#13;
if you're tired of the usual and&#13;
don't dig the popular new&#13;
releases, try a taste of April&#13;
Wine. It may just have that sweet&#13;
and warming quality you're&#13;
looking for&#13;
This writer is not a member of&#13;
the Ranger staff and is no&#13;
authority on music, but I do have&#13;
opinions on what I like. I will&#13;
from time to time write record&#13;
reviews. These reviews will&#13;
probably be about albums you&#13;
wouldn't expect to read or see&#13;
too much adv.ertising about. The&#13;
same music most radio stations&#13;
DON'T PLAY,&#13;
I encourage others with musical&#13;
opinions and varied interest to&#13;
make contributions. I mean-what&#13;
the heff-this is a student&#13;
newspaper and the input is ours.&#13;
If you're interested or know&#13;
someone who is, stop down to&#13;
the RANGER office for suggestions&#13;
or ideas.&#13;
Tuning On 'Wavelength'&#13;
by Terry A. Maracclni&#13;
The word passed quickly&#13;
through the town. Women&#13;
rejoiced and men wept openly&#13;
on the streets. But the tears were&#13;
tears of joy. Young children&#13;
danced in the streets, and young&#13;
women waited as if their loves&#13;
were returning from the sea. Yes,&#13;
there was finally a new Van&#13;
Morrison album in town.&#13;
of dynamic tension can stretch a&#13;
single syllable mto an incomparable&#13;
emotional statement.&#13;
But yet there is a subtle use of&#13;
poetry within his lyrics which&#13;
reveals one of the few sen!&gt;itive&#13;
and perceptive writers in music.&#13;
Sherlock On Film&#13;
Van Morrison has been&#13;
responsible for two or three of&#13;
the five best events to ever&#13;
happen in rock and roll . 1968's&#13;
Astral Weeks was perhaps the&#13;
major artistic statement to come&#13;
out of the renaissance of music&#13;
which occured in the late sixties.&#13;
That album was rich in textures&#13;
and surely was the most mystical&#13;
wedding of the popular form to&#13;
date. Today it is still one of the&#13;
classic rock albums of all time.&#13;
Many times in a review such as&#13;
this I could probably point out&#13;
many tracks and give summaries&#13;
of each. But I choose not to do&#13;
so here. There are many pleasing&#13;
tracks here. The t itle cut, as wells&#13;
as "Checking It Out" , "Natalia",&#13;
and ''Kingdom Hall" all stand out&#13;
as classic Morrison tracks. But&#13;
the two things I would like to say&#13;
deal primarily with Van's stance&#13;
in the world of popular song.&#13;
When you get the album, play&#13;
the very last track,, "Take It&#13;
Where You Find It'' first. For here&#13;
is the essence of Van Morrimn.&#13;
Van has retained the searching&#13;
quality of the man who first&#13;
immigrated here from Ireland in&#13;
1967. Again, the foreigner&#13;
coming here seeking the&#13;
American Dream seems to&#13;
reaffirm some of the things that&#13;
we all seem to be seeking in this&#13;
day and age. And now he seems&#13;
to be saying it for us all· "Lost&#13;
dreams and found dre;ms in&#13;
Amenica."&#13;
by Michael J. Murphy&#13;
In the late 1800's, an author&#13;
named Sir Arthur Conan Doyle&#13;
invented a pair of characters that&#13;
have survived modern time -&#13;
still emerging as the source of&#13;
popular entertainment. They&#13;
have been joyously represented&#13;
on stage and screen as well as in&#13;
volumes of short stories and&#13;
novels.&#13;
The companionship of Sherlock&#13;
Holmes and Dr. Watson&#13;
provided exciting, often thoughtprovoking&#13;
adventurl:!S that translated&#13;
well on the screen&#13;
Throughout the annals of film&#13;
Holme5 and Watson have been&#13;
successfully, often brilliantly represented&#13;
by many great&#13;
performers. Surviving through&#13;
several silent adaptations and&#13;
personified by actors such as&#13;
John Barrymore and Raymond&#13;
Massey, Sir Arthur's characters&#13;
found their stride in the&#13;
performances of Basil Rathbone&#13;
and Nigel Bruce (Holmes and&#13;
Watson respectively).&#13;
Rathbone and Bruce so&#13;
emersed themselves in their roles&#13;
that many today (at least myself)&#13;
find it difficult to read a Holmes&#13;
novel or short story without&#13;
picturing Rathbones highly&#13;
sophisticated, intellectual portray!&#13;
of Holmes or Bruce's&#13;
bumbling, often confused&#13;
Watson.&#13;
Later films saw some equally&#13;
interesting, though not as&#13;
indelible, imprints of Holmes&#13;
and Watson. Peter Cushing&#13;
portrayed a memorable Holmes&#13;
in the 1959 version of The Hound&#13;
of Baskervifles. Billy Wilder&#13;
directed a highly personal and&#13;
unusual adaptation of the&#13;
Holmes-Watson relationship in&#13;
his 1970 film, The Private Lite of&#13;
Sherlock Holmes, one of the first&#13;
to deal directly with Holme's&#13;
alleged cocaine addiction.&#13;
Though many might have felt&#13;
it was treading on sacred ground&#13;
for an author other than Doyle to&#13;
write a new chapter in Holmes'&#13;
career, I think it was a blessing&#13;
that Nicholas Meyer decided to&#13;
write The Seven Percent&#13;
Solution. Meyer wonderfully&#13;
maintains an affectionate and&#13;
determined conviction for&#13;
Holmes, pitting hi5 wits in a&#13;
unique and intriguing story.&#13;
Meyers even goes as tar as to pair&#13;
Holmes with the brilliant (and&#13;
nonfictious) Sigmund Freud.&#13;
Nicholas Meyer in superb&#13;
companionship with Herbert&#13;
Ross brilliantly translated his&#13;
novel to the screen. The result&#13;
was perhaps one of the most&#13;
interesting screen presentations&#13;
of the Holmesian myth.&#13;
Aided by a great cast (Nicol&#13;
Williamson as Holmes, Robert&#13;
Duvall as Dr. Watson, Alan Arkin&#13;
as Sigmund Freud) The Seven&#13;
Percent Solution emerges as&#13;
prime film entertainment A&#13;
clever, witty, old fashioned&#13;
exercise back to a state where&#13;
movies once existed - plain ole&#13;
fun.&#13;
But here in 1978 w_e were a&#13;
little disturbed. Not much has&#13;
been heard from this entrancing&#13;
Irish poet in the la,t three years.&#13;
Last year's A Period of Transition&#13;
seemed to be just that· a&#13;
cautious and bew1 ldered se~rch&#13;
for direction from an artist who&#13;
had always been in the artistic&#13;
vanguard. But today I eagerly&#13;
cracked the seal on his newest&#13;
release, Wave length (Warner&#13;
Brm), and I was greeted by the&#13;
most engaging work of the year.&#13;
Wavelength is remarkable in&#13;
its simplicity and depth. Yan has&#13;
always written about the special&#13;
re_lationship between people&#13;
with such craftsmanship that it is&#13;
hard to believe he can create&#13;
sue~ powerful messages with so&#13;
few items.&#13;
Morrison's music has always&#13;
hung losely and precariously&#13;
between urban jaz:z and uptown&#13;
R &amp; B: Possessed with the finest&#13;
voice in rock music, Van's sense&#13;
What is most important about&#13;
this a!bum is that it is accessible&#13;
to just about everybody. It is&#13;
danceable, singable, laughable,&#13;
lovable. It is a warm tapestry of&#13;
emotion, judgement, and love.&#13;
Co get the new Van Morrison&#13;
album. It'll make you feel good&#13;
again. &#13;
W•dn•aday ••••• .. •r a, 1978&#13;
Vincent Price&#13;
Goes Wilde&#13;
'Twenty years of ro•ance lea••• a •o•an&#13;
lilce a ruin. T•••tr rears of marriafe&#13;
leave, lier lilce a public buildin9.'&#13;
"C1ve me the luxuries of life&#13;
and I can d1spt&gt;ny, with the&#13;
nece~sit1~ · With that and a sip&#13;
of U6 proof ab~mthe, Oscar&#13;
Wilde said goodniaht and&#13;
Vinc-ent Price walked off stage at&#13;
the end of his 2b0lh performance&#13;
ot his Oscar Wilde one-man&#13;
~how Called "Diversions and&#13;
Delights," both of his per&#13;
formance~ here last Sunday&#13;
packl-d the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater&#13;
When asked why he chose to&#13;
do th1\ play about Oscar Wilde,&#13;
Mr Price said that he wanted to&#13;
do a one man show but thouRht&#13;
that the ~ubiect of the play must&#13;
be humorous. 1 wo hours of&#13;
i.erious " breast bt-aling" would&#13;
have t&gt;M!n deadly&#13;
fhe show, which consists of&#13;
two one-hour seiiments and an&#13;
intermission, was made up of a&#13;
lecture/dialog\.le to and with the&#13;
audience. At an interview&#13;
session on Sunday afternoon,&#13;
Mr Price said that the play is&#13;
90% the famous lric;h writer's&#13;
own material and 10% stories&#13;
about him by others and&#13;
transitional devices. Mr. Price&#13;
said that the show· is a play&#13;
because it fits his definition of a&#13;
play-it reveals character.&#13;
The scenery was mac.le up of a&#13;
huge proscenium arch under&#13;
which Price stood or sat at a&#13;
lecturn or a plush chair at either&#13;
side of the stage On the floor&#13;
was a wonderful Persian rua. The&#13;
time and plact• of the pldy wa!I&#13;
~t in Paris in 16lJCJ, in a concert&#13;
hall, where Wilde was deli..,ering&#13;
.i lecture. This would have ju~t&#13;
lollowt•d h,s relea~e from jail on&#13;
charges of immoral conduct&#13;
(homosei.ual,tv)&#13;
The play wa, tilled with&#13;
w1tt1&lt;:1sms but aho revealeci thC'&#13;
~ad ~•de ot Wilde's l ife as&#13;
e)pec,ally seen m his works. As&#13;
Wilde got more drunk on the&#13;
absinthe, he becdme more and&#13;
more melancholy and whimsical.&#13;
Mr Price 1s above middle aae&#13;
and although he 1s playing a man&#13;
of 42, he convmcmg:ly portrayed&#13;
the weary and overweight Wilde&#13;
a~ hP looked in the latter year5 of&#13;
his life&#13;
In thP intPl'\/IPW, Mr Prire&#13;
congratulated his audience for&#13;
being very cooperative and&#13;
prai~ our theater Apparently&#13;
on thP current tour he has played&#13;
in a few " barn~.' Mr Price said&#13;
that he has usually been in at&#13;
lea.st one play per year during his&#13;
professional career and his&#13;
current tour with this show&#13;
started one year ago in S.in&#13;
Fr,mc1~1.0 He has 37 more performances&#13;
left of "Diversions&#13;
and Delights."&#13;
In reply to a question about&#13;
why a talented actor like him~lf&#13;
should make the kind of films&#13;
Mr PrirP is famous for (Mr&#13;
Phibes, etc.), he replied that they&#13;
are " pure hokum" and that there&#13;
is a need for hokum in America&#13;
today. People love them and a&#13;
week hardly goes by that one 1\&#13;
not on TV. FurthPrmore, they arc&#13;
not really terrifying. He said that&#13;
movies l ike Taxi Driver and&#13;
Marathon Man are the real&#13;
"horror movit&gt;s " He said. that his&#13;
films are simply based on supernatural&#13;
fun.&#13;
He said that he learned all the&#13;
lines for this production in four&#13;
w~ks, getting up at 4 a.m. so he&#13;
could wander the strt"Pts&#13;
muttering the lines to himself&#13;
alone. Mr. Price commented that&#13;
he lovt-d this play and felt deeply&#13;
at leJst some part of it each&#13;
performance. However. he does&#13;
not ft'f'I like Oscar Wildt- In&#13;
anyway. In fact, he says that he.!&#13;
is an enormously disc1plint.&gt;d&#13;
per~on or el~ he could not be&#13;
doin11 this play every night.&#13;
'His (ltorror)&#13;
films are&#13;
simply&#13;
ho,ecf on&#13;
supernatural fun.'&#13;
IANGfl&#13;
Oscar Wilde was the complete&#13;
opposite of a disciplined&#13;
personality The play rev~alcd&#13;
him to be a marvellous wit and c1&#13;
h ighly educated man. He&#13;
commented on America&#13;
(Americc1ns are abnormally&#13;
serious), morality (the original&#13;
sin was taking ourselves too&#13;
seriously), art, art critics, and&#13;
women (twenty years of&#13;
romance leaves a woman like a&#13;
rum; twenty years of marriage&#13;
leaves hl'r like a public building).&#13;
Towards the end of the pl,w&#13;
Wilde became very person.ii&#13;
relating the events of his trial&#13;
and 1a1l sentence, and the lund&#13;
affair ~urroundin~ 1t He broke&#13;
out in anger at thest? memories&#13;
and fell into a drunken&#13;
depression over hi~ terrible&#13;
publ1&lt; c1nd personal m1sfortunPs.&#13;
His wit, linally, appl"ared to be a&#13;
kind of defense mechc1ni§m to&#13;
ea~e hi, inner pain.&#13;
Reeling with ab\inthe hl&#13;
commPnted that this potent&#13;
liquor took one to the land&#13;
where unicorns made love with&#13;
hedgt'-ho~. Mr Price took us to&#13;
an equally fantastic world with&#13;
his rendition of Oscar Wilde and&#13;
alon~ with Saturday night'~&#13;
mt&gt;teor shower made th1\&#13;
weekend quite spectacular It is&#13;
rare to be so thoroughly&#13;
entertained.&#13;
BACKGAMMON&#13;
IAIOEI NEEDS&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Where: at the SPAGHETII STATION&#13;
2703 • 63rd STREET • KENOSHA&#13;
When: £int and third Monday• of each month&#13;
ENT.RY FEE: 13.00&#13;
REGISTRATION: 6 - 7 p.m.&#13;
PRIZES: 40% • 25% - 15% - Champagne -&#13;
consolation round&#13;
ABPA Sanctioned&#13;
~FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
2.4 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMIE• F.0.1.C.&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
9&#13;
Confounding!&#13;
Sherlock Holmn meets&#13;
Siemund F,tud&#13;
I&#13;
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Fr.,Nu11 10 Bp.m&#13;
S..-. • Nov 1~ 7·:30 pm&#13;
UNION CINEMA 11.00&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-077 4&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACqPTED&#13;
It @l11t @,weet @)llnppt&#13;
IN THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
NOVEMBER SPECIAL ..&#13;
BUTTERSCOTCH&#13;
DISCS&#13;
35c ½ LB.&#13;
ALSO FEATURING OVER&#13;
30 OTHER NUTS &amp; CANDIES&#13;
SOLO THE OLD FASHIONED WAY.&#13;
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
MON - FRI &#13;
Wednesday Nowefflbtr I, 1978&#13;
iiiiii&#13;
Cheerleaders Chosen&#13;
The 1978-79 Varsity Cheer• up a fine squad.&#13;
leaders for the basketball squad Those picked for the 1978 79&#13;
were chosen Sunday, November Varsity Cheerleaning Basketball&#13;
5. _A panel of five judges Squad are Aina lamir (Burlingdec1ded&#13;
upon eight of the ton), Celeste W1dman1ch (Kenthirteen&#13;
$!iris who tried out to osha), Jan Oechler (Kenosha),&#13;
make u~ the squad judging Rita Odvis (Milwaukee), Pam&#13;
from a criteria of individual and Meisner (Racine), Cindy John1i1roup&#13;
,heers a~ we,I as voice, son {Milwaukee), Nore&lt;.'fl Myers&#13;
pep, and overall appearance (Chicago) and Sheila faylor&#13;
Shirley Smerling advisor to the (Chicago) Pamela Mitc hell&#13;
cheerleaders, ~a•d that all the (Chicago) and Anna Marie&#13;
r-tirls 5howed hiah enthusiasm MeyNhofPr (Burlington) were&#13;
and thc1t the e11(ht chosf'n make (hosen ~ alternates.&#13;
Women's Volleyball&#13;
IA#Gfl&#13;
photos by&#13;
Tom Cooper&#13;
Near Tournament Time&#13;
by Dou1 Edenhauser&#13;
5Ports Editor&#13;
lhe Parkside women's volleyball&#13;
team has ended its regular&#13;
season on the upbeat this past&#13;
weekend as they came away&#13;
from the Carthage Invitational&#13;
with five victories against no&#13;
defeats. Of the five matches only&#13;
one team, Carthage, was able to&#13;
win a game from the fiesty&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
The first match for Parkside&#13;
had them winninR another one&#13;
from UW-Milwaukee ,n two&#13;
games by scores of 15-2 and&#13;
15-8. This marked the third time&#13;
the Rangers have defeated&#13;
UW-M this season against one&#13;
loss.&#13;
Whitewater was even easier&#13;
for the women as they lost to the&#13;
Rangers for the third time this&#13;
year in three tries. Scores of&#13;
those games were 15-1 and 15-o.&#13;
The team that coach Linda&#13;
Henderson said her squad had to&#13;
beat came next. Carthage, who&#13;
had split two matches with&#13;
Parkside this year gave the&#13;
Rangers a little trouble as they&#13;
took the first game 15-7. Parkside&#13;
proved they could come back as&#13;
they won the remaining two&#13;
games by scores of 16-14 and&#13;
15-12.&#13;
The Rangers went on to win&#13;
the Remaining two matches over&#13;
Marquette and UW-Platteville lo&#13;
take first place i n the&#13;
tournament, while buildins up&#13;
momentum for this weekends&#13;
\NWIAC Tournament in Milwau•&#13;
kee&#13;
Wrestling Clinic Nov 11&#13;
UW-Parks1de will \ponsor its&#13;
ninth annual wrestling clinic&#13;
Saturday (Nov. 11) from 8'.30&#13;
am 4 p.m. at the UW-P&#13;
Physical Education Bldg.&#13;
Registration begins at 8:30&#13;
a.m with the clinic sessions&#13;
beginning at 10 a.m. and&#13;
continuing until 4 p.m. A $1 25&#13;
fee will be charged each&#13;
participant&#13;
Si)( vital areas of wrestling&#13;
technique will be covered and&#13;
each participant wall be able to&#13;
spend an hour on each of four&#13;
areas of his choice. Each&#13;
seuion will consist of appro)(imately&#13;
50 per cent instruction&#13;
and 50 per cent application.&#13;
Heading the staff aaain is&#13;
clinic director and UW Parkside&#13;
wrestling coach Jim Koch,&#13;
who's developed four national&#13;
champions and six all-Americans&#13;
in his eight years 4tt&#13;
Parkside. Joining him as guest&#13;
instructors will be Lee Kemp,&#13;
the current 163 lb. would&#13;
champion who won three&#13;
NCAA titles and had a 143-6-1&#13;
record at UW-Madison; Jim&#13;
Hames, another Badger who&#13;
was a 1976 Olympian and this&#13;
past yea.- won the World Cup&#13;
champior.shi p, Ken Martin,&#13;
four-time all-American and&#13;
twice national champion for&#13;
UW-Parks1de who's now head&#13;
coach at Cody, Wyo., High&#13;
School; and current Parkside&#13;
squad members Bob Cruner, an&#13;
NAIA fourth ptacer and&#13;
all-American in his first two&#13;
seasons, and Steve LaCount,&#13;
co-captain of the Ranger squad&#13;
and 1977-78 Parkside MVP who&#13;
was an undefeated state champ&#13;
as a senior at Pulaski High&#13;
School.&#13;
The six wrestling areas and&#13;
their mstructOl's are as follows:&#13;
Area 1 - Takedowns (Kemp&#13;
and Haines); Area ½ - Pins&#13;
and Breakdowns (Gruner and&#13;
LaCount); Area % - Escapes&#13;
and Reversals (Martin); Area 4&#13;
- T akedowns Set-ups (Haines);&#13;
Area 5 - Takedown Counters&#13;
(Kemp); Area 6 - Let Wrestling&#13;
(Martin).&#13;
The clinic time schedule:&#13;
8.30-9:45 a.m. - registration&#13;
and dressing, 9:45 10 a.m. -&#13;
welcome and introductions,&#13;
10-11 a.m. and 11 a.m.-12 noon&#13;
- areas 1, 2 and 3; noon-1.30&#13;
pm - lunch break; 1:30-2 30&#13;
pm and 2:30-3:30 p.m&#13;
areas 4, 5 and 6; 3:30--4 p.m. - ·&#13;
individual help from clinic staff.&#13;
All participants area asked to&#13;
bring lock~, towels and other&#13;
necessary equipment. Lunch&#13;
will be available at a nominal&#13;
fee.&#13;
For more information, contact&#13;
the clinic director, Jim&#13;
Koch, at UW Paricside, 414/553-&#13;
2245&#13;
10&#13;
Osborne Lone Runner&#13;
by Peter Jackel&#13;
Freshman Barb Osborne, the&#13;
sole member of the Parkside&#13;
women's cross country team,&#13;
placed 25th out of a field of 60 at&#13;
the AIAW state championship&#13;
last week Coach Bob Lawson&#13;
feels that with proper training,&#13;
the Bradford graduate has the&#13;
potential to become "one of the&#13;
ten bet runners in the state."&#13;
However, Osborne's impressi'{e&#13;
performances was of little&#13;
consolation to Lawson as he is&#13;
deeply discouraged over lack of&#13;
interest for his team. Although&#13;
he recruited heavily and had 8&#13;
commitments prior to this&#13;
season, Osborne proved to be&#13;
the only runner donning Ranger&#13;
garb by the conclusion of th~&#13;
season. Similiar plights are also&#13;
being suffered by teams from&#13;
Stevens Point and Marquette&#13;
who were able to field 1ust 3 and&#13;
2 runners respectively. "Women&#13;
just don't understand what it&#13;
takes to compete, explains&#13;
Lawson. "Their attitudes are so&#13;
much different that men's. There&#13;
are even more men coache&gt; that&#13;
women coaches for women's&#13;
athletics because women simply&#13;
don't want to become involved.&#13;
It'll be another 10 years before&#13;
women can achieve parity with&#13;
men in athletics."&#13;
Despite Lawson's bleak out·&#13;
look, he refuses to throw in the&#13;
towel as he promises to once&#13;
again be very active in his&#13;
recruiting efforts.&#13;
Swimmers Fail To Finish&#13;
by Peter Jackel&#13;
Barb Lawson's swimming team&#13;
failed to finish in the sixteen&#13;
team Lacrosse invitational last&#13;
October 28 but Lawson&#13;
continued to lay the found~tion&#13;
f°' the future by having her girls&#13;
experiment with unfamiliar&#13;
swimmin&amp; events&#13;
Ann Corardy placed sixteenth&#13;
in the 1 meter diving event while&#13;
attempting a series of new dives&#13;
in competition. Lowrie Melotik&#13;
and Debbie Erickson showed&#13;
vast improvement in the 1()()&#13;
yard breaststroke while achievma&#13;
encouraaina results ir the&#13;
never before attempted so yard&#13;
breaststroke&#13;
In preparation tor this&#13;
Saturday's clash with Lawrence&#13;
at Appleton, Lawson is emphasizing&#13;
conditioning to complement&#13;
her squads already&#13;
satisfactory speed.&#13;
Lawsons team will be staging a&#13;
swim a thon November 5 to raise&#13;
money for a between semester&#13;
trip to Florida where they will&#13;
w°'k on further conditioning at&#13;
the International Hall of Fame in&#13;
Fort Lauderdale. Anyone interested&#13;
in pledaing money are&#13;
directed to consult Barbara&#13;
Lawson in her office at the&#13;
Physical Education building&#13;
Lawson is also seeking volunteers&#13;
to announce and score at&#13;
the Ranger Relays to be held&#13;
November 17. &#13;
W•d•••d•r No, •••• , I, 1971 IANGfl 11&#13;
Women&#13;
Swimmers&#13;
Improving&#13;
by Peter Jaclcel&#13;
_, Sport Shorts - be1t1 r me by a lt&gt;w pm\) with&#13;
Pete Cramer and Jeff Cooper&#13;
rounding out the team. If you&#13;
come, we'll be the te,un that's&#13;
lo\mg but still having fun&#13;
Some network sports announcome&#13;
down to the Student Union cer~ are trying to make "fan&#13;
Recreullon Centl-r on Sunday violence" a b1e ,~;ut: ,n the&#13;
night\ between 7-10 pm and ~porting world I disagree with&#13;
watch me and some of my fellow thl•\e peoplt! Nredless to \ay,&#13;
sports writers compete in the there are some troublesome fans&#13;
Sunday evening bowling leaaue. out there, but then, they h,we&#13;
I have the second best average .ilwa~'5 been there and w,11&#13;
on our tec1m (naturally my sports alwc1ys be there. One can't blame&#13;
by D.tve Cr.tmer&#13;
come to th,nk of ,t, we don't&#13;
even get much fan support&#13;
That's a shame because we have&#13;
a fme athletic proaram and&#13;
exceptional tt&gt;a,m,&#13;
-Qu1ck1es&#13;
-Why aren't Sunday afternoon&#13;
Packer gamt-\ ~hown on the giant&#13;
screen m the Un,onl&#13;
-Watching the World Series&#13;
was about as much fun as&#13;
watching paint dry&#13;
-Will the Chicago 8ears win&#13;
another game this wason?&#13;
The Parkside's women's swimming&#13;
team continued to '&gt;lruggle&#13;
through their infant season as&#13;
they succombed to Lawrence&#13;
99.13 The Rangers were led by&#13;
the improving Ann Corardy who&#13;
won thE' 1 meter diving event as&#13;
well a~ placing 2nd in the 50&#13;
meter butterfly and 3rd in the&#13;
100 m(..&gt;ter ind1v1dual medley.&#13;
Other 5trong finishers were&#13;
Lowrie Melotik and Debbie&#13;
Erickson who placed 3rd and 4th&#13;
in the 50 and 100 meter&#13;
bredSl~trok~ respectively Lily&#13;
Crnich also contributed to the&#13;
Rangt·(s cause by taking 3rd m&#13;
the 50 and 100 meter free5tyle.&#13;
The quartet concluded the&#13;
afternoon by combining their&#13;
effort\ in the 200 meter fr~tyle&#13;
relay&#13;
t'ditor Doug Edenhauser has to an entire crowd for the actions of r------------------------1. a very few who attually do&#13;
m~t,gate the trouble I 1u~l fet-1&#13;
I've been gettina a lot of&#13;
comments on how I like to&#13;
criticize athletic teams or&#13;
individuals for not excelling m&#13;
thPir respected sports Well, 1f&#13;
you want to see this writer&#13;
•&gt;articipatina in a sporting event, -Wilt Mohammad Ali knock out&#13;
1he 87 year old blind, decrepit&#13;
&amp;randmother in the 13th round&#13;
as he prom1~es,&#13;
Coach Barb Lawson reports&#13;
that her team is "work.mg hard"&#13;
1n preparation for a conference&#13;
meet to the held al UWM&#13;
November 17. Anyone who is&#13;
1nter...,tPcl in working at the meet&#13;
in ~e capacity is asked to&#13;
please consult Coach Lawson.&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
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v.a.a.t for Rock Banet Mull be ..,10111.&#13;
COnlct Biil .t ll&amp;4370 WMknlghta altar 9&#13;
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RANGER&#13;
Needs&#13;
Reporters&#13;
that the announcers are blowma&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
the entire 1Hue out of&#13;
pr~r,ortinn w,. don't ha"e fan&#13;
v1ol .. nr1&gt; m this 1mt1t11t1~n&#13;
-w,n l write thn column next&#13;
.,.,ttk1&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 8&#13;
Brown Bag lunch at 12 noon in WLLC D174. Carol Vopat will&#13;
talk on "Heroes &amp; I lc-roine~ in Literature." rhe program is free&#13;
and open to the public&#13;
Concert by '&gt;ludents at 3 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Film/lecture "SomP Women of Marrakcch" at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre Dr Elizabeth Fernea of Austin, Texas ,s&#13;
the speaker The program 1s free and open to the public&#13;
Sponsored by the [xtension Division.&#13;
Comedy Group "Second City" will perform at 6 p.m. in the&#13;
Communications Arts Theatre Admission is $3 for Parks,de&#13;
students, S4 for others and will be $5 at the door. Tickets&#13;
available at the Union Information Center. Sponsored by PAO.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 9&#13;
Video Tape featuring "Meat Loaf" at 11 a.m and 12 noon m&#13;
Union Square. Admi5sion i!&gt; free. Spon~ored by PAB.&#13;
lecture at 4 p .m. and 7 p .m in CA 134 Prof. Robert Laden~on&#13;
of Chicago's Kent law School 1s the !&gt;peaker l he program is&#13;
free and open to the public .&#13;
language Table The language table of the Modern Language&#13;
Club will be Cdncelled this week for lack of a room, but will&#13;
resume 11 2 on Nov. 16.&#13;
Sports Women's Swimming at WWIAC Championships,&#13;
Milwaukee. (Thru Saturday)&#13;
Friday, Nov. 10&#13;
Seminar Chem/ Life Science at 2 p.m. in Cl 105. The program is&#13;
free and open to the public&#13;
Movie ·•1 he 7% Solution' will be shown at 8 pm. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre Admission at the door 1s S 1 tor a Parkside&#13;
5tudent and S1 for a guest Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Sports Women's Volleyball at WWIAC Tournament ,&#13;
M1lwauk~.- ( Thru Saturday)&#13;
Saturday, Nov.11&#13;
Workshop "Ob:.tacles Growing up Female" starting at 9 a .m. in&#13;
the Clawoom Bldg&#13;
Tour of MCOW The new Mechcal College of Wisconsin 1s&#13;
having open house this weekend. Pre-Med Club 1\ organizing a&#13;
trip up. for information contact Mark DeCheck. 639-7927.&#13;
Sport!&gt; Men's Cros, Country NAIA u,strict 14 Lhamp1onsh1pr,&#13;
.it Parkside 11 a.m&#13;
Women's Cross-Country at Northwestern Invitational.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 12&#13;
Movie 'The 7% Solution· will be repeated at 7 :)0 pm. in the&#13;
Union Cinema.&#13;
A/E Series presents Nikolai Massenkoff'c; Rus~ian folk festival&#13;
at 8 p.m 1n the Communication Arts Theatre. All seats have&#13;
been sold.&#13;
Tour of MCOW Same as Saturday, Nov. 11.&#13;
Monday, Nov. 13&#13;
Round Table at 12 noon in Union 106 Social Science faculty&#13;
will talk on "An Election Post Mortem (with rigor) " The&#13;
program is open to staff and interested students.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov.14&#13;
Concert featuring the Oriana Trio at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. lhe program is free and open to&#13;
the public&#13;
Wednesday, Nov.15&#13;
Concert at 3 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre by students.&#13;
The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Coffeehouse fec1turing Blegen and Sayer at 8 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square. Admission 1s free Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
--------------------------1&#13;
GEOR.GE'~ BM&#13;
THE BEST IN Ll'VE ENTERTAINMEl'cT1&#13;
-4,);&#13;
AIIO •••!'IV !Uhtn 8"f S~ lltld&#13;
1111 ,en SIUM!II !lombtrs&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
-------------------------~&#13;
Soccer Ends Season&#13;
by Doug Edenh•user&#13;
By talkin&amp; to Coach Hal&#13;
Hender~n you wouldn't believf'&#13;
that his men·~ soccer team had&#13;
1u~t won thP NAIA D1str1ct 14&#13;
c.hampionsh1p Parkside v.ent&#13;
mto the game needing a tie with&#13;
UW-Plattev1lle in order to be at&#13;
the top of the three t('am district&#13;
at the end of season play The&#13;
Ranger's style oi play during the&#13;
g,i.me showed that all the guys on&#13;
tht! team knev. the situation.&#13;
··we knt&gt;W we v.ere a better&#13;
team that Plauev1lle, but the&#13;
guys got a little selfish They&#13;
were loo i.:autious because they&#13;
knew all th&lt;•y had to do wa~ tie."&#13;
"We had numerous opportuni•&#13;
ties but w~ 1ust couldn't get the&#13;
ball mto the net •· Parkside&#13;
bas1tallv dominated the game as&#13;
they ouhhot Pluttevrlle. 28-10,&#13;
but a, the coath said they&#13;
couldn't cap1tal11e&#13;
The Rangers have t'nded their&#13;
reiular ~ason with a record of&#13;
3·8·• m \\hich Hender~n say~&#13;
three of the ties could have&#13;
easily been wins Smee the&#13;
d1~asterous tnp to I ~s late m&#13;
Scptemb1!r, the Ranger) ha"lle&#13;
only allowed an average of 1 2&#13;
goals a game, which could be&#13;
tr an\lated to say that they are&#13;
the be,t 3-8·4 team in the&#13;
country&#13;
VY~~~u~&#13;
~~~:F11s r:~~~[Fl&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwe1,1;s Lsygest Select10ns&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. et 62nd St. Eatabldled in 1930&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
01 Tap At U1ioa S.•are M.;i&#13;
~ll~ - .,&#13;
Tour Guide Position&#13;
This part-time position on the staff of the Johnson&#13;
Wax Golden Rondelle, offers between 10 • 15 hours a&#13;
week Including some evening and weekend work.&#13;
This position 1s respons '-lie for conducting guided&#13;
tours of the Frank Lloyd Wright buildings and other&#13;
facilities, and assisting with theater activities as&#13;
related to Rondelle events&#13;
Applicants should have experience In public contact&#13;
work, be able to communicate effectively and be&#13;
comfottable In speaking before groups.&#13;
Send resume or letter Including past work experience&#13;
and wages to:&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater&#13;
M.A. Davis&#13;
1525 Howe Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
An equal opportunity employer&#13;
'&#13;
.. &#13;
Wed11e1daJ Now••b•r 8, 1978 IANGfl 12&#13;
I'&#13;
Now comes Miller time.&#13;
)&#13;
c 19i 8 MIiier 8rowmg Co. M11wauKee W -.s </text>
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              <text>Library Receives Statewide Recognition</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
ri Univi&#13;
waxiget&#13;
vol.7 no.9 Wednesday November 1,1978&#13;
association, acknowledges "outstanding&#13;
service to the library&#13;
profession in the state."&#13;
According to Mr. Boisse, the&#13;
WLA seldom gives more than&#13;
five awards each vear, and this&#13;
year Parkside has received two.&#13;
In the past, the Library/Learning&#13;
Center has received the&#13;
Library Public Relations Award&#13;
(1976) for its "effective use of&#13;
graphics and displays in&#13;
communicating library services&#13;
and resources."&#13;
The library of the year award&#13;
will be on display on the first&#13;
floor of the Wyllie Library&#13;
Learning Center.&#13;
special, and academic — were&#13;
evaluated. Libraries nominated&#13;
for the award were not compared&#13;
to one another but were judged&#13;
individually, according to the&#13;
services usually provided by&#13;
libraries.&#13;
Mr. Boisse commented that&#13;
the Library/Learning Center&#13;
received the award because of its&#13;
"outreach efforts." He stated&#13;
that the Library has one of the&#13;
"most open policies for use of&#13;
the library by community&#13;
residents." Local school districts&#13;
are able to check out films free&#13;
of cost. Almost anyone can&#13;
obtain a special borrowers card&#13;
and check out materials. The&#13;
Library/Learning Center also&#13;
serves as the "first recourse" for&#13;
area libraries. Through WILS&#13;
(Wisconsin Interlibrary Loan&#13;
Service) the library is able to&#13;
borrow materials from other&#13;
libraries including UW-Madison.&#13;
Mr. Boisse pointed out that it is&#13;
"the second time in history that&#13;
an academic library has received&#13;
the Library of the Year award."&#13;
When asked what this means to&#13;
Parkside students and faculty,&#13;
Boisse stated that the award was&#13;
a "recognition of dedication by&#13;
the entire staff of the&#13;
Library/Learning Center." He&#13;
also emphasized the fact that the&#13;
award has helped Parkside&#13;
achieve state and nationwide&#13;
recognition. Mr. Boisse mentioned&#13;
that the library was also&#13;
visited by people from England&#13;
and South Africa.&#13;
Mr. Boisse, himself, received&#13;
the WLA Distinguished Service&#13;
Award for planning the WLA&#13;
annual conferences during four&#13;
out of the past five years. This&#13;
award, rarely given to an&#13;
individual member of the&#13;
by Mollie Clarke&#13;
Joe Boisse'&#13;
Thursday (Oct. 26), Chancellor&#13;
Guskin accepted the Library of&#13;
the Year award on behalf of the&#13;
Library/Learning Center.&#13;
Director of the library, Joseph&#13;
Boisse, explained that all types&#13;
of libraries — public, school,&#13;
Though most Parkside students&#13;
at one time or another&#13;
have had to struggle through&#13;
those green library workbooks&#13;
while taking English composition&#13;
classes, this kind of bibliographic&#13;
instruction has helped U.W.&#13;
Parkside's Library/Learning Center&#13;
receive statewide recognition.&#13;
During the Wisconsin&#13;
Library Association annual&#13;
banquet held at Lake Geneva last&#13;
Good Showing For Elections&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
Every fall half of the Student&#13;
Government Senate seats and&#13;
half of the Student Allocations&#13;
Committee seats are up for&#13;
election.&#13;
The Fall student government&#13;
elections were held last&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday and&#13;
the count was made Thursday&#13;
night. Two constitutional Referendums&#13;
were also on the ballot&#13;
Both passed.&#13;
Approximately 22b votes were&#13;
cast in the election; a decent&#13;
turnout for the fall semester.&#13;
The Senate Seats that were&#13;
open were those representing&#13;
students with majors. No one ran&#13;
for the social Science, Humanities&#13;
or Behavioral Science seats&#13;
but anyone interested in them&#13;
should contact the Student&#13;
Government Office down by the&#13;
Library cafeteria. The Engineering&#13;
Science Divisional seat was&#13;
won by a write-in candidate,&#13;
Doug Shubert with five votes.&#13;
Tim Zimmer won out over Shaun&#13;
Helgesen, 49 votes to 9, for the&#13;
Science Division Seat. The Fine&#13;
Arts Division seat was taken by&#13;
Pat O'Dell with just one vote and&#13;
Dave Hall won the Business&#13;
Administration seat.&#13;
The unfilled positions will&#13;
remain open till s omeone shows&#13;
interest in them. These senators&#13;
most appointed to the senate by&#13;
Rusty Smith, the Student&#13;
Government President.&#13;
Besides the divisional seats&#13;
there are also eight other&#13;
non-aligned senators seats. They&#13;
are elected each spring along&#13;
with the President, Vice-President&#13;
and the other half of the&#13;
Allocations Committee.&#13;
The five Allocations Committee&#13;
seats that were open this Fall&#13;
were filled by Mark DeCheck&#13;
with 111 votes, President of the&#13;
Pre-Med and Modern Language&#13;
Clubs; Tom Marschner with 98&#13;
votes, President of the Chemistry&#13;
Club; Doug Edenhauser with 90&#13;
votes, Sports Editor of the&#13;
Ranger; Terry Zuehlsdorf with 80&#13;
votes, co-chairman of the&#13;
Student Organization Council&#13;
(S.O.C.) and Freddie Barclay&#13;
with 76 votes.&#13;
The five new Allocations&#13;
Committee members will soon&#13;
start work with the cither five&#13;
members already on the&#13;
committee. They will begin the&#13;
job of allocating the half a&#13;
million dollars that is segregated&#13;
from the total tuition monies&#13;
that the University takes in each&#13;
semester. The budget for these&#13;
allocations is due on the&#13;
Chancellor s desk in February.&#13;
However, before that happens all&#13;
of the various groups that&#13;
receive funding must present&#13;
their requests. The requests must&#13;
then be examined, decided upon&#13;
and passed by the student senate&#13;
and the Student Government&#13;
President.&#13;
Survival Workshop&#13;
Nov 11&amp; 12&#13;
Glen Haven, Wis. — Suppose&#13;
you were lost in the woods or&#13;
stranded on a lonely highway&#13;
during a howling winter storm?&#13;
Suppose you fell down a cliffside&#13;
and broke a leg and had to .wait&#13;
for help to come? Would you be&#13;
able to survive?&#13;
You can learn techniques to&#13;
survive in emergency situations&#13;
like these at the annual Survival&#13;
Workshop, sponsored by Eagle&#13;
Valley Environmentalists, to be&#13;
held November 11 &amp; 12 at EVE's&#13;
Nature Center south of Glen&#13;
Haven.&#13;
Topics at the Workshop will&#13;
include requirements for survival,&#13;
emergency first aid,&#13;
preparing your car for survival in&#13;
a blizzard, direction finding with&#13;
or without a compass, telling&#13;
time and direction by the stars,&#13;
finding and preparing shelter,&#13;
learning to read a topographic&#13;
map, treatment for stress and&#13;
shock, and preparing for a winter&#13;
wilderness journey. EVE's E xecutive&#13;
Director, Terry Ingram, will&#13;
iead group instruction in survival&#13;
techniques. The Workshop will&#13;
culminate with a mock rescue&#13;
operation in which participants&#13;
put into practice the survival&#13;
lessons they have learned.&#13;
For information and reservations&#13;
contact EVE, Box 155,&#13;
Apple River, Illinois 61001 or&#13;
phone 815-594-2259. &#13;
Lili Crnich: Dorms.&#13;
How do you think the half million dollars of segregated fee&#13;
tudent life monies should be spent?&#13;
Lawrence Herndon: More money&#13;
should be spent to bring in at&#13;
least one first rate entertainment&#13;
act to Parkside each year.&#13;
Something like the Commodores&#13;
or Bootsy.&#13;
Shaun Helgeson: I think mo&#13;
money should be distributed&#13;
the student groups.&#13;
Wednesday November 1,1978 ganger&#13;
JSHOCE you ToPiUED&#13;
CM ! I ST I AN H ARK, f j ny&#13;
OOA/T Yo&lt;j AAJSUER&#13;
HE THIS?&#13;
^ o n!&#13;
Sssmss §## mm&#13;
S3 thus msr&#13;
§m m Mill&#13;
J UOULO'VE mo&#13;
JT IF&#13;
HAO.ClUEH ME&#13;
^fiAX)THE*&gt;\ A&#13;
MINUTE, 6h&gt;1\\&#13;
THANKS A UY-*&#13;
uay!!&#13;
Pamela Mitchell: More money&#13;
should be spent on the&#13;
Cheerleading program: more&#13;
road trips and a trip to Kansas&#13;
City.&#13;
Roundtable Worth It&#13;
iELiEVE&#13;
THIS&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
The Social Science Division&#13;
has begun a speaking program&#13;
that runs every Monday at noon&#13;
in the Student Union. They call it&#13;
the Social Science Roundtable.&#13;
Faculty, students and offcampus&#13;
persons are given this&#13;
forum to lead discussions on&#13;
Follow-up On Clocks&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
Ranger has done a follow-up&#13;
concerning the confusing state&#13;
of Parkside's time pieces. As the&#13;
photo essay on the cover of our&#13;
October 4th issue implies, many&#13;
of Parkside's clocks are out of&#13;
sync.&#13;
A conversation with the&#13;
Physical Plant Department last&#13;
week, revealed that the main&#13;
control circuitry in the Greenquist&#13;
Building, for the 100 or so&#13;
clocks on campus are working&#13;
fine. However the clocks in the&#13;
extreme portions of the campus,&#13;
like those in the Communication&#13;
Arts Building and the Student&#13;
Union, seem to slow down&#13;
mysteriously. Clocks that work&#13;
fine in Greenquist are taken to&#13;
these places installed in place of&#13;
faulty clocks and then they too&#13;
begin to run slow. It is as if the&#13;
current or impulse from the&#13;
central control unit peters out by&#13;
the time it reaches the CA or&#13;
Union clocks.&#13;
Physical, plant works on the&#13;
clocks from these two places&#13;
continually, although the clocks&#13;
that are faulty in the Union must&#13;
first be reported to Physical Plant&#13;
by the Union Staff before&#13;
Physical Plant can work on them.&#13;
Tallent Hall also has problems.&#13;
Its clocks are on a different&#13;
system which has also recently&#13;
broken down.&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Mike Murphy Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan General Manager&#13;
Tom Cooper. Student Advisor&#13;
John Stewart News Editor&#13;
Sue Stevens Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Editor&#13;
Kim Putman Copy Editor&#13;
Chris Miller Ad Manager&#13;
Nancy Szymanski Circulation Manager&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Carolyn Bresciano, Cathy Brownlee, Bob Bruno, Mollie&#13;
Clarke, Dave Cramer, Tom Fervoy, Rob Gardner, Pete&#13;
Jacket, Thomas Jenn, Nick! Kroll, Kim Ruetz, Jeff&#13;
Stevens, Lester Thompson.&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
Susan Caldwell, Denise D'Acquisto, Mike Holmdohl, Julie&#13;
Orth, Tony Raymond and Brian Taggart.&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig Dvorak, Rob Miller and Matthew Poliakon.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Cramer and Dawn Thomas.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted for publication if they&#13;
are typewritten, double spaced with one inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be included&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and refuse&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All material must be received by Thursday noon for&#13;
publication on the following Wednesday.&#13;
important and interesting topics&#13;
relating to the Social Sciences.&#13;
Discussions of this type are&#13;
much more enjoyable learning&#13;
experiences for everyone involved&#13;
than the standard lecture&#13;
situation. Hopefully this innovation&#13;
can be implemented by&#13;
other disciplines as well.&#13;
Although most of the people&#13;
attending and participating in&#13;
these discussions . have been&#13;
faculty, the Roundtable concept&#13;
does seem to be a feasible and&#13;
imaginative way to make&#13;
communication between students&#13;
and faculty more productive.&#13;
It would give students a&#13;
better insight into important&#13;
issues and at least in this case,&#13;
would give History, Political&#13;
Science, Sociology and other&#13;
Social Science students the&#13;
chance to learn more about their&#13;
own fields in a very interesting&#13;
and worthwhile fashion.&#13;
It seems that the Social&#13;
Science Division has defined the&#13;
range of the Social Sciences as&#13;
being very wide, encompassing&#13;
many subjects in order to&#13;
interest as many people as&#13;
possible without crossing any&#13;
interdisciplinary borders. Thus&#13;
we may never see such a&#13;
program devoted solely to some&#13;
very specific area of study but I&#13;
should think that there is enough&#13;
interest on campus to keep at&#13;
least a few programs of this sort&#13;
going. The Social Sciences is one&#13;
subject area. Another might be&#13;
the general area of Communication,&#13;
dealing with the arts,&#13;
literature and Communication&#13;
theory. The Sciences and&#13;
Finances might be others.&#13;
There are many speaking and&#13;
discussion events held at&#13;
Parkside each year, Sponsored&#13;
by many different academic&#13;
groups. Perhaps permanent&#13;
programs like the Social Science&#13;
Roundtable could co-sponsor&#13;
certain events with the particular&#13;
university or student group&#13;
concerned. This would make&#13;
such activities much more&#13;
successful and much more&#13;
popular on campus. Advertising&#13;
for the events would become&#13;
more efficient and the various&#13;
groups would find a focus for&#13;
their interests. Furthermore,&#13;
communication would improve&#13;
between people interested in the&#13;
various subject areas and who&#13;
knows what interesting work&#13;
could issue from this tossing&#13;
back and forth of ideas.&#13;
Any comments about this&#13;
issue are encouraged and all&#13;
letters will be published in an&#13;
effort to develop the idea's put&#13;
forth here.&#13;
UITH A LL THE S UFFELIAJC IV&#13;
THE O o*LD toPAY THtoooH&#13;
uM ANO POVERTY CKEED&#13;
AMD OECEfT/ON A MD H 4TeED&#13;
A/OP ALL T HAT S TUFF, ...&#13;
' WE AL L THE S/M NEES ADO&#13;
SHIP TH EM O FF S OMEPLACE&#13;
-SO HE COULD CI\}£ US&#13;
PEACE ?!?&#13;
. HMH.&#13;
' / &#13;
Wednesday November 1,1978&#13;
Blood Drive Draws 93 Pints&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
Last Wednesday, the University&#13;
sponsored its 3rd Annual Fall&#13;
Blood Drive between 11:00 a.m.&#13;
and 3:00 p.m. in the Student&#13;
Union. The Milwaukee County&#13;
Blood Center, the Parkside&#13;
Health Center and the Pre-Med&#13;
Club from Parkside provided all&#13;
the man-power and equipment&#13;
necessary for the event.&#13;
This Fall's drive collected 93&#13;
pints; an improvement over last&#13;
Spring's total of 79 pints.&#13;
Forty-three of the donors were&#13;
first-time blood donors. This is&#13;
encouraging since according to&#13;
Professor Pomozal, Parkside's&#13;
coordinator for the drive, one&#13;
major purpose of the drive is to&#13;
make it easier for people to give&#13;
blood and to learn that is is an&#13;
easy thing to do. However, there&#13;
was a noticeable lack of faculty&#13;
and staff participation in the&#13;
event. All parties involved,&#13;
including the Milwaukee Blood&#13;
Center were pleased with the&#13;
turn out and plans are already&#13;
being made for the February 14th&#13;
(Valentine's Day) Blood Drive&#13;
this Spring.&#13;
Donors reported no discomfort,&#13;
although the blood Center&#13;
Instruction pamphlet mentions&#13;
occasional discoloration on the&#13;
arm when a little blood gets out&#13;
under the skin. This disappears&#13;
like a regular bruise in a short&#13;
while. It is advised that strenous&#13;
or unusual physical exertion be&#13;
avoided for the remainder of the&#13;
day after giving blood.&#13;
The process of donating blood&#13;
takes at the most about forty&#13;
minutes. Recording your medical&#13;
history, taking your blood&#13;
pressure and testing a single drop&#13;
of blood from your earlobe takes&#13;
about 15 minutes. The actual&#13;
drawing of blood from your arm&#13;
only takes about 10 minutes. It is&#13;
recommended you allow 10 to 15&#13;
minutes after you donate to&#13;
relax.&#13;
It is important to note that the&#13;
most common blood types are&#13;
the most widely needed and so&#13;
no one should feel that their&#13;
blood types are not needed.&#13;
Furthermore, the ratio of male to&#13;
female donors is about one to&#13;
one. This dispells another myth&#13;
about the macho image of giving&#13;
blood. It is and should be a&#13;
familiar and frequent event.&#13;
The purpose of the Blood&#13;
Drive is two-fold: to make&#13;
people aware of the constant&#13;
need for blood that exists in our&#13;
area and to get people in the&#13;
habit of giving blood on a regular&#13;
basis. The Milwaukee County&#13;
Blood Center supplies blood for&#13;
Milwaukee, Ozaukee, Racine,&#13;
Washington, Kenosha, and&#13;
Waukesha counties. Two thousand&#13;
pints of blood are needed&#13;
each week to run the 34 hospitals&#13;
in this area.&#13;
The reason that there is a&#13;
constant need for blood is also&#13;
twofold: a constant flow of new&#13;
patients and the natural&#13;
depomposition of blood over&#13;
time. Red blood cells can only be&#13;
kept for 21 days and thus, new&#13;
The Consumer Cooperative Bank Bill&#13;
by friends of the food&#13;
and book co-ops&#13;
The National Consumer Cooperative&#13;
Bank Bill was&#13;
developed to finance self-help&#13;
consumer enterprises and to&#13;
enhance already existing co-ops&#13;
so they could provide better&#13;
quality goods and services at&#13;
lower prices.&#13;
On July 13th the Senate passed&#13;
it by a margin of 60-33. (It only&#13;
passed by 199-198 in the House.)&#13;
The Cooperative League of the&#13;
USA, the main lobbiest, spent&#13;
nearly one-half million dollars&#13;
since 1975 to pass this bill.&#13;
Consumer co-ops are formed&#13;
by member-consumers who feel&#13;
the need to have something to&#13;
say about the goods and services&#13;
they buy and use. Housing,&#13;
health and dental care, optical&#13;
services, consumer goods, legal&#13;
services, television repair, auto&#13;
repair and insurance are all&#13;
potential areas for consumer&#13;
co-ops.&#13;
There has never been&#13;
significant legislation to give&#13;
cooperative groups financial or&#13;
technical assistance. Many&#13;
people who have tried to get a&#13;
co-op going found that usual&#13;
lenders — banks and mortgage&#13;
firms — d idn't even know what a&#13;
co-op was or how to lend money&#13;
to one. And, they mistrusted&#13;
them because they weren't trying&#13;
to operate for profit.&#13;
The Cooperative Bank Bill&#13;
creatively should provide the&#13;
technical help and supplemental&#13;
financing co-ops need to form,&#13;
develop and expand in the same&#13;
Chiwaukee Naurs&#13;
manner that farm cooperatives&#13;
have with the Farm Credit&#13;
System that began ten years ago.&#13;
The law authorizes up to $300&#13;
million in federal seed money&#13;
over the next five years, which&#13;
can be leveraged into $3 billion&#13;
worth of loans.&#13;
Successful cooperatives will&#13;
have the funds to expand,&#13;
faltering ones can put themselves&#13;
on a sounder operating&#13;
basis. Seed money and low&#13;
interest loans will be available to&#13;
new co-ops, especially those in&#13;
rural areas and the inner city.&#13;
This new Bank Bill would&#13;
attempt to create more co-ops in&#13;
low income areas with .money&#13;
and expertise that would shift&#13;
the emphasis to communities&#13;
with real need and not just stable&#13;
businesses that could get&#13;
financing.&#13;
TITLE I: National Consumer&#13;
Cooperative Bank&#13;
—Creates a National Consumer&#13;
Cooperative Bank with an option&#13;
for establishing regional banks at&#13;
the end of the first seven years,&#13;
— Provides for Federal Goverrir&#13;
ment control over the bank until&#13;
66 2/3 percent of Class A stock is&#13;
held by private stockholders.&#13;
— Provides for initial capitalization&#13;
of $100 million and such&#13;
sums as many be appropriated&#13;
for the next four fiscal years,&#13;
subject to a total limit of $500&#13;
million.&#13;
— Excludes credit unions, mutual&#13;
savings banks and mutual&#13;
savings and loan banks from&#13;
eligibility for loans.&#13;
— Provides a restriction on&#13;
housing cooperatives' eligibility&#13;
for loans by adding the&#13;
Department of Housing and&#13;
Urban Development (HUD) and&#13;
Farmers' Home Administration&#13;
(FMHA) to the list of agencies&#13;
which have to consider&#13;
applications for assistance prior&#13;
to the bank's consideration of an&#13;
application.&#13;
—Makes interest rates on bank&#13;
loans competitive with market&#13;
rates.&#13;
TITLE II: Office of&#13;
Consumer Cooperatives&#13;
, —Creates in an existing&#13;
governmental agency—ACTION&#13;
—an office to administer the&#13;
Self-Help Development Fund&#13;
and Technical Assistance Program&#13;
authorized by Titles III and&#13;
IV. ACTION was chosen because&#13;
many of its functions include&#13;
self-help programs in inner-city&#13;
neighborhoods and rural areas&#13;
expected to utilize the benefits&#13;
of consumer cooperatives.&#13;
TITLE III: Self-Help&#13;
Development Fund&#13;
—The Self-Help Development&#13;
Fund provides needed financial&#13;
assistance —in the form of&#13;
interest subsidies or capital&#13;
contributions—to fledgling cooperatives,&#13;
expecially for the&#13;
poor, inner-city residents and the&#13;
elderly, and is funded initially&#13;
with an authorization of $10&#13;
million and such sums as may be&#13;
appropriated for the next four&#13;
years, not to exceed $240&#13;
million.&#13;
TITLE IV: Cooperative&#13;
Technical Assistance&#13;
— The technical assistance&#13;
program provides information&#13;
and assistance to developing&#13;
cooperatives and is a cener for&#13;
expanding information on the&#13;
organization and services of&#13;
consumer cooperatives.&#13;
This bill is not only a giant step&#13;
for the development of cooperatives,&#13;
but is also a chance for&#13;
the development of people. Ten&#13;
or twenty years from now we&#13;
may all be members of co-ops,&#13;
where we may get our food,&#13;
drugs, and other large volume&#13;
consumer goods in a cooperative&#13;
atmosphere with our friends,&#13;
family and neighbors, in a close&#13;
community attitude.&#13;
Parkside and it is hoped that the&#13;
old faces as well as the new will&#13;
turn up again; consistent&#13;
donations are the goal.&#13;
A special program designed to&#13;
help heart patients is also&#13;
available. "On-Call Donors" is&#13;
the name of the program and it&#13;
involves being called in by the&#13;
Blood Center to donate when&#13;
your blood type is needed for&#13;
heart surgery. Milwaukee is a&#13;
major heart surgery center in the&#13;
U.S. and an average of ten heart&#13;
operations are performed each&#13;
day. Each operation requires 5 to&#13;
10 pints a piece.&#13;
donations are needed daily to&#13;
maintain an adequate community&#13;
supply of blood.&#13;
The blood drive is an&#13;
important part of a new&#13;
"community responsibility"&#13;
approach to recruiting blood&#13;
donations. In June 1977, the&#13;
regional blood system changed&#13;
from an "individual responsibility"&#13;
approach, wherein patients&#13;
were obligated to replace the&#13;
blood they used and needed, to&#13;
the present approach wherein&#13;
donations are solicited from the&#13;
whole South Eastern Wisconsin&#13;
community.&#13;
Once a person has gone&#13;
through the experience of giving&#13;
blood it is no longer such a&#13;
frightening thing. There are&#13;
blood drives every semester at&#13;
Collective&#13;
Bargaining&#13;
and the&#13;
Governor's&#13;
Race&#13;
An.&#13;
by John W. Co*&#13;
WEAC Higher Education Consultant&#13;
The right of the faculty and academic ataff&#13;
in the UW system to decide whether or not&#13;
they wish to participate in collective&#13;
bargaining has been debated for some time.&#13;
A number of studies all indicate that a&#13;
significant majority of the faculty and&#13;
academic staff on the old WSU campuses&#13;
want to bargain collectively over a range of&#13;
issues. Just as significantly, an even larger&#13;
percentage indicate that they feel the faculty&#13;
and academic staff ought to at least have the&#13;
right to make this choice. This year's&#13;
gubernatorial election has some significant&#13;
ramifications relevant to the faculty and&#13;
academic staffs right to participate in&#13;
bargaining or, indeed, to even be afforded&#13;
the opportunity to make a choice.&#13;
Faculty and academic staff in the UW&#13;
system ought to look long and hard at the&#13;
two candidates for governor and what it will&#13;
mean to their right to have a choice whether&#13;
or not to bargain. Earlier this year, each of&#13;
the two gubernatorial candidates appeared&#13;
before the Wisconsin Education Association&#13;
Council's Political Action Committee to&#13;
respond to a series of questions. The results&#13;
of the interviews, coupled with a&#13;
demonstrated track record on educational&#13;
isauee, led to the overwhelming endorsement&#13;
of Acting-Governor Martin Schreiber.&#13;
For our purposes, it will be useful to compare&#13;
Martin Schreiber and Lee Dreyfus' position&#13;
on collective bargaining for higher education&#13;
faculty and academic staff.&#13;
Martin Schreiber indicated during his&#13;
interview that he would support a higher&#13;
education collective bargaining bill. Further,&#13;
Acting-Governor Schreiber's support of third&#13;
party binding arbitration in municipal&#13;
employee contract disputes afforded us&#13;
another barometer of Schreiber's attitude&#13;
toward the rights of faculty members in&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
During the interview of Lee Dreyfus, he&#13;
stated that "as a faculty member, I am&#13;
opposed to bargaining at the university&#13;
level". In addition to the negative attitude&#13;
toward collective bargaining, we were&#13;
further puzzled by his reference to himself as&#13;
a "faculty member", thereby purporting to&#13;
speak for the faculty.&#13;
As governor, Mr. Dreyfus would have the&#13;
power of veto. Given his background as an&#13;
administrator, it seems reasonable to assume&#13;
that Mr. Dreyfus may veto any collective&#13;
bargaining bill for higher education that&#13;
reaches his desk. To date, Lee Dreyfus has&#13;
been silent on whether or not he will, indeed,&#13;
veto a collective bargaining bill for higher&#13;
education. I believe that this question has to&#13;
be answered to the satisfaction of the some&#13;
86% of the faculty who wish to bargain&#13;
coHectivety, or, at the very least, have a law&#13;
which would provide them the opportunity&#13;
to make a choice.&#13;
The future security of the faculty and&#13;
academic staff in the UW system may&#13;
depend to a great extent on collective&#13;
bargaining. Where does Lee Dreyfus actually&#13;
stand on this issue? We know Martin&#13;
Schreiber's position very well.&#13;
ft&#13;
WEAC-PAC Is the sols source of this ad&#13;
and It Is mads without the&#13;
encouragement direction or control of&#13;
the candidate.&#13;
Authorized and paid for by the&#13;
Wisconsin Education Asaociation Council/Political&#13;
Action Committee. Paul du&#13;
Valr, President. &#13;
Wednesday November 1,1978&#13;
Bellind The Woodshed&#13;
Scarf: Broke&#13;
Iand&#13;
Busted&#13;
by Scarf O'Toole&#13;
Down on my luck, with only a The hot spot that week around&#13;
handful of credit cards to my Loyola was a punk rock bar&#13;
name, I stumbled back to my called Anthrax Black Leprosy. It&#13;
motel room and poured myself a will featured a vibrating dance&#13;
stiff glass of water. It was stiff floor. The house punk band&#13;
because of all the iron in it. It Open Chain Lube, churned out a&#13;
was a "cheap" place. reggae version of "P.S. I Love&#13;
I w as back in the Midwest at You," for the first twenty minutes&#13;
last. I h ad just returned from my I was there. I can't say that I&#13;
last speaking engagement at recognized any of the beautiful&#13;
Loyola University and while I coeds jiggiling and bouncing&#13;
had been allowed to finish my around but I could sense that&#13;
talk they had struck me with a white existential screaming&#13;
huge bill for dry cleaning and everywhere: "Take me; take me;&#13;
damages. Oh, well the Ranger use me; use me!" So I did&#13;
would pick up the bill. And if The sheriff wouldn't let me&#13;
they didn't I had been thinking call my editor but he did let me&#13;
of checking out New Orleans this use his typewriter and so I've&#13;
winter anyway. sent in this story. I h ope it makes&#13;
I gave Chico, my personal the deadline. The food here is&#13;
cabby and critic when I'm in very good and if I keep saying&#13;
Chicago, a quick call. "Pick me that Mayor Daley was the&#13;
up Chico. I wa nt to see the bright greatest man who ever lived&#13;
lights tonight. Chico didn't say maybe they will let me out of jail&#13;
anything. He was still mad at by Christmas. My speaking tour&#13;
me for the last blind date I h ad is over. My prison life has just&#13;
gotten him. begun.&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED&#13;
ganger&#13;
PAB Mini Movie R eview&#13;
"Flesh Gordon — not to be&#13;
confused with the original "Flash&#13;
Gordon" is the interesting phrase&#13;
that appears on any and all&#13;
advertising of this movie. One&#13;
can't be sure whether this&#13;
statement is used as a teaser by&#13;
advertisers toward hard core (no&#13;
pun intended) Flash Gordon fans&#13;
or whether the producers of the&#13;
film are honestly fearful of&#13;
people mistaking it for the&#13;
original classic serial.&#13;
Whatever the motive, the&#13;
makers of Flesh Gordon go all&#13;
out to authentically recreate the&#13;
atmosphere and campness of the&#13;
original serial in a broad and&#13;
boistoiuious parody. The silver&#13;
coated plywood sets have been&#13;
faithfully erected and the shoddy&#13;
special effects have been&#13;
admirably recreated. Even the&#13;
characters are the same (well,&#13;
sort of) although the names have&#13;
been changed to protect the&#13;
innocent. (Although in his&#13;
seventies Buster Crabbe is still a&#13;
model of health, pushing his own&#13;
brand of exercise and eating&#13;
habits, and could probably beat&#13;
the bootstraps off any extraterrestrial&#13;
being.)&#13;
Most parodies of classic film&#13;
genres are fun but forgettable&#13;
and Flesh Gordon falls happily&#13;
into this categorie. But what the&#13;
hell; if they can take childrens&#13;
stories like Cinderella and Snow&#13;
White and the Seven Dwarfs and&#13;
turn them into "adult" sexploitation&#13;
box office then why not&#13;
ripoff good ole Flash Gordon.&#13;
What's next Huey, Deuy and&#13;
Louie in Denmark?&#13;
'Flesh Gordon'&#13;
Second City First In Comedy&#13;
Chicago's Second City, whose&#13;
alumni roster reads like a who's&#13;
who of comedy, will bring its&#13;
unique blend of s atirical comedy&#13;
and improvisational theater to&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Communication Arts&#13;
Theater at 8 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 8 under sponsorship of the&#13;
student Parkside Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
In the nearly 20 years since its&#13;
founding/Chicago's home-grown&#13;
satirical troupe has been the&#13;
front-runner in its field. Its e arly&#13;
graduates included such talents&#13;
as Mike Nichols, Elaine May and&#13;
Shelley Berman. Recently, it has&#13;
spawned most of the wild bunch&#13;
from "Saturday Night Live,"&#13;
including John (Animal House)&#13;
Belushi, Gilda Ratner, Billy&#13;
Murray and Dan Aykroyd.&#13;
Others who have walked the&#13;
Second City stage include Joan&#13;
Rivers, David Steinberg, Valerie&#13;
Harper, Jerry Stiller and Ann&#13;
Meara, Avery Schreiber and Jack&#13;
Burns, Alan Arkin, Robert Klein,&#13;
Linda Lavin, Peter Boyle and&#13;
Barbara Harris.&#13;
Advance admission is $3 for&#13;
UW-P students and $4 for the&#13;
general public; all tickets at the&#13;
door are $5. Tickets are available&#13;
at the Parkside Union Information&#13;
Center (the only outlet for&#13;
student tickets), Sears in&#13;
Kenosha and Team Electronics in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
From its beginning, the&#13;
company has stayed with its&#13;
"magic formula" of letting six or&#13;
so actors with very few props —&#13;
primarily cane back chairs, the&#13;
company fixtures - poke fun at&#13;
manners and mores and&#13;
individual and institutional&#13;
pomposities,&#13;
Its style is essentially&#13;
•burlesque — a series of short,&#13;
unrelated scenes whose subjects&#13;
range from pplitics to movies,&#13;
from great books to puppy love.&#13;
The basis of the material is&#13;
improvisational, developed from&#13;
suggestions by the audience, the&#13;
director or the actors themselves.&#13;
&#13;
After winning instant success&#13;
in Chicago, Second City has built&#13;
an international reputation with&#13;
three revues in London since&#13;
1963. It added permanent&#13;
companies in Toronto in 1973&#13;
and in Los Angeles in 1975.&#13;
Annual Broadway and off-Broadway&#13;
appearances and tours of&#13;
major U.S. cities have added to&#13;
its reputation.&#13;
Second City's Toronto-based&#13;
company is featured in a&#13;
television series, SCTV, which&#13;
began airing in 5 0 U.S. cities last&#13;
season.&#13;
The company takes its name&#13;
from the title of the late A. J.&#13;
Liebling's derisive profile of&#13;
Chicago in a 1959 issue of New&#13;
Yorker magazine. In the words of&#13;
New York Times critic Clive&#13;
Barnes, "The entire recent&#13;
tradition of satire in the&#13;
American theater can be&#13;
summed up in three words —&#13;
The Second City."&#13;
The irreverence of some of the&#13;
company's satirical revues&#13;
doesn't appeal to everyone. It is&#13;
inevitable on tours that a few&#13;
members of the audience, who&#13;
have not heard or understood&#13;
Second City's self-description as&#13;
"America's single-finger salute to&#13;
society," will walk out during the&#13;
performance.&#13;
That has happened during&#13;
each of Second City's several&#13;
appearances in Kenosha, but&#13;
without the flair exhibited by a&#13;
customer in Chicago who&#13;
became outraged at the troupe's&#13;
depiction of the nativity. He&#13;
began thrdwing glasses at the&#13;
actors, who quickly fled the&#13;
stage, but failed to unnerve the&#13;
piano player, who kept pounding&#13;
the keys with one hand while&#13;
opening an umbrella with the&#13;
other to hold off the shower of&#13;
glass.&#13;
c sa'&#13;
jAI&gt;&#13;
V&gt;*&#13;
6&#13;
°&#13;
{r°&#13;
GOOD&#13;
MON - FRI&#13;
11 - 2&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFF ON ALL&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICATION.&#13;
TERRACE ROOM&#13;
436 LAKE AVE RACIAE&#13;
presents:&#13;
JaM for Sale&#13;
(Parkside's own Musicians)&#13;
Opus&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. Snopek&#13;
entertainment 9 p.m.&#13;
JAZZ SO GOOD"&#13;
COMING&#13;
I ATTRACTION&#13;
| SAT., NOVEMBER 1&#13;
: Short stuf&#13;
FOR RESERV ED SEATING&#13;
CALL 632-4206 &#13;
Wind Ensemble In Concert&#13;
by Sue Stevens&#13;
The Parkside Symphonic Wind&#13;
Ensemble will take to the stage&#13;
for the second time this year on&#13;
Tuesday, November 7 at 8 p.m.&#13;
in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Thomas Dvorak, conductor of&#13;
the ensemble, calls this concert&#13;
"unique" in the fact that it will&#13;
consist of a series of small&#13;
ensemble pieces. The music to&#13;
be played is special because&#13;
each piece varies the number of&#13;
Theatre Review&#13;
instrumentalists — from 8 to 50&#13;
with one player to a part.&#13;
One feature of the concert will&#13;
be Joseph Haydn's English&#13;
Military Marches. According to&#13;
Dvorak, this piece should be a&#13;
highlight with its "light, tasty,&#13;
and aesthetic" qualities.&#13;
Jan Sweelinck's Variations on&#13;
"Mein junges Leben hat ein End.&#13;
(My young life has an end) is an&#13;
arrangement for an ensemble&#13;
transformed from Harpsichord&#13;
and organ music.&#13;
Little Three Penny Music by&#13;
Kurt Weill will be performed by&#13;
13 musicians. Also to be&#13;
presented will be carlos&#13;
surinach's Ritmo Jondo.&#13;
If the wind ensemble's first&#13;
concert is any indication,&#13;
Tuesday night's performance&#13;
should be a treat for all concert&#13;
goers. Parkside students and&#13;
faculty should take advantage of&#13;
this opportunity to listen to this&#13;
first rate musical group.&#13;
Admission for the Tuesday&#13;
night concert is complimentary.&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Electro Scores High&#13;
by Nicki Kroll&#13;
The Parkside Dramatic Arts&#13;
Discipline presented their production&#13;
of Electra by Sophocles&#13;
over the weekend, and the few&#13;
who viewed it (if Saturday night&#13;
was any indication of other&#13;
performances) were treated to a&#13;
professional performance. Everything,&#13;
from the set design to the&#13;
costuming, to the music, took&#13;
the production beyond the&#13;
classification of "just a college&#13;
production."&#13;
As the lights went up slowly on&#13;
the sparsely but well made set&#13;
the audience was struck by its&#13;
stark sophistication. From comEgyptian&#13;
History&#13;
Course Offered&#13;
5,000 years of Egyptian&#13;
history, including a special&#13;
segment on King Tut, will be&#13;
reviewed in a slide-lecture series&#13;
offered through the University of *&#13;
Wisconsin-Extension.&#13;
Omar Amin, associate professor&#13;
at UW-Parkside, lived in&#13;
Egypt for 25 years and is an&#13;
amateur Egyptologist. His lectures&#13;
and slides will cover Egypt&#13;
in history, art and culture leading&#13;
to modern Egypt with its&#13;
economic and political burdens&#13;
and contributions.&#13;
The course will meet on four&#13;
Thursdays, beginning November&#13;
2, 7:15 p.m. at UW-Parkside. Fee&#13;
is $12.00. Register with University&#13;
Extension at (414) 553-2312&#13;
by October 30.&#13;
ments heard after the performance,&#13;
it ranked with any&#13;
professional production of&#13;
Electra that has been or will be&#13;
done. The basically colorless&#13;
gray stone scenery and the&#13;
unobtrusive blue backlighting&#13;
heightened the dramatic tone of&#13;
the dialogue that followed.&#13;
The dialogue of the play began&#13;
and ended with a chorus of city&#13;
women who served as advisors&#13;
and the voiceof conscience for&#13;
the tormented Electra who was&#13;
played well by Mary Stankus.&#13;
Clearly, the play was her vehicle&#13;
and she steered the rest of the&#13;
cast along on a sometimes&#13;
bumpy path. Despite a competent&#13;
performance of Orestes,&#13;
Electra's brother and saviour,&#13;
Gary Eckstein seemed, a few&#13;
times, to be a bit confused by the&#13;
action going on around him.&#13;
Catherine Casselman as Chrysothemis,&#13;
the younger, better&#13;
favored sister, proved an&#13;
interesting contrast to Ms.&#13;
Stankus. Her lack of concern at&#13;
Elpctra's unrelenting campaign&#13;
to seek revenge upon her mother&#13;
and stepfather for the murder of&#13;
her father was convincingly&#13;
done.&#13;
Lastly, but certainly not&#13;
leastly, Gail G. Ross as the&#13;
queen, Clytemnestra, gave a fine&#13;
performance. Although she was&#13;
not long on stage, her tremulous&#13;
tones related the anguish of a&#13;
tortured woman torn between&#13;
the love for her husband, gained&#13;
by the murder of her children's&#13;
father, and the accusations by&#13;
her children of revenge for their&#13;
father's death.&#13;
In the background of the&#13;
dialogue, Geoffrey Stanton's&#13;
music wound eerie webs around&#13;
the spoken words. Again,&#13;
comments overheard indicated&#13;
the professional quality of the&#13;
score. It made a perfect&#13;
complement to the play. Truly,&#13;
the Greeks couldn't have done&#13;
better.&#13;
The Parkside Dramatic Arts&#13;
Discipline is progressively showing&#13;
its ability to present good,&#13;
competent performances. Parkside&#13;
has succeeded in making&#13;
this ancient work accessible to a&#13;
modern audience.&#13;
SECURITY OFFICERS&#13;
FEMALE - MALE&#13;
FULL &amp; PART - TIME PERSONNEL NEEDED&#13;
MINIMUM AGE 19 YEARS&#13;
GOOD PHYSICAL CONDITION&#13;
CLEAR POLICE RECORD&#13;
MUST HAVE PHONE AND TRANSPORTATION&#13;
IN-SERVICE TRAINING PROVIDED&#13;
APPLY IN PERSON&#13;
SCHMITT SECURITY POLICE&#13;
625 - 57th St. SUITE 600&#13;
KENOSHA, Wl 53140&#13;
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F&#13;
Last semester saw the first&#13;
official public screening of The&#13;
Smith here at Parkside. Written&#13;
by and starring Bill Barke The&#13;
Smith remains the most&#13;
ambitious undertaking to come&#13;
out of Parkside's video Studio.&#13;
Now, thanks to the miracle of&#13;
cable TV channel eight in Raine,&#13;
The Smith is coming to the home&#13;
screens Of Racine.&#13;
The Smith, an introspective&#13;
thought provoking video production&#13;
set in the future, was several&#13;
years in the making. Bill Barke&#13;
along with The Smith's director&#13;
Jack Murray maintained a long&#13;
and lucrative association in&#13;
video before embarking on this&#13;
major project. Barke, in 1976,&#13;
work on a program called&#13;
Campus Bizzare, a series of half&#13;
hour comedy sketches shown on&#13;
TV sets through the campus.&#13;
Both Barke and Murray a string&#13;
of individual half hour programs&#13;
under the auspicious title of&#13;
Bizzare Bizzare. The series&#13;
included such classics as Killer&#13;
Bologna and Blood at Blarney&#13;
Stone Manor.&#13;
The production of The Smith&#13;
was originally to be shot and&#13;
edited in three weeks but Barke&#13;
is still working on refining his&#13;
product. Its been over two years.&#13;
The SMith concerns a gigantic,&#13;
single manned space freighter&#13;
which, by some freak accident,&#13;
collides with what is thought to&#13;
be a meteor. Mission control,&#13;
alerted to the pressence of the&#13;
foreign object through a&#13;
computer malfunction later&#13;
discovers that the meteor is in&#13;
reality an entity from another&#13;
world. The remainder of the plot&#13;
has mission control supressing&#13;
the reality of the "object" that&#13;
collided with the space freighter&#13;
from its pilot.&#13;
The production, which Barke&#13;
describes as an exercises into the&#13;
phenomenon of the Fear of the&#13;
unknown and man's relationship&#13;
to his own nature, contains&#13;
original special effects and a&#13;
musical score created specifically&#13;
for the production.&#13;
The Smith will be shown on&#13;
cable television, channel eight,&#13;
Friday, November 3rd at 7:00&#13;
p.m. and again on Tuesday,&#13;
November 7th at 9:00 p.m.&#13;
'Woman of the Year'&#13;
at Rondelle&#13;
The classic T942 version of&#13;
"Woman of the Year" starring&#13;
Spencer Tracy and Katherine&#13;
Hepburn will be shown at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater on&#13;
November 8. Three showings&#13;
have been scheduled at 9:30&#13;
a.m., 1:00 and 7:00 p.m. The&#13;
program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
"Woman of the Year" is part of&#13;
the Wisconsin Artists on Film&#13;
Series. The film is described as a&#13;
wonderfully relevant, marvelously&#13;
perceptive comedy. The story&#13;
tells of Hepburn, a distinguished&#13;
and charming international&#13;
reporter who speaks a wide range&#13;
of foreign languages, and Tracy,&#13;
a nonchalant sports writer who&#13;
woos and wins Hepburn as his&#13;
wife and then tries to introduce&#13;
domesticity into their homelife.&#13;
Evenly matched, Hepburn and&#13;
Tracy battle until they reach an&#13;
acceptable compromise. The&#13;
delightful scenes between the&#13;
two distinguished stars make the&#13;
film especially entertaining.&#13;
For reservations, contact the&#13;
Rondelle at 554-2154. This&#13;
program is sponsored by the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Humanities Division, Kenosha&#13;
Evening News, Racine&#13;
Journal Times and the Golden&#13;
Rondelle Theater.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On Tap A t U nion S quare&#13;
'The Smith' Returns&#13;
Wednesday November 1,1978 &#13;
ganger 6&#13;
Tennis&#13;
6th Place At State&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Coming off of a bad week of&#13;
play, Coach Linda Henderson's&#13;
women's volleyball team proved&#13;
they could come back with the&#13;
best of them as they won three of&#13;
four matches last week.&#13;
With only one regular season&#13;
match left on the schedule the&#13;
Rangers concluded their home&#13;
season last Thursday night with a&#13;
19-19-3 record overall. The final&#13;
match of the season will be this&#13;
weekend at the Carthage&#13;
Invitational.&#13;
Last Tuesday the women split&#13;
a pair of matches, losing the first&#13;
one to Lewis College and&#13;
defeating Carroll College in the&#13;
final Match. Lewis took&#13;
advantage of a slow start by the&#13;
Rangers to defeat them for the&#13;
second time this season by&#13;
scores of 10-15 and 12-15.&#13;
Carroll presented no real&#13;
threat as Parkside easily defeated&#13;
them for the second time this&#13;
year. Scores of that match were&#13;
15-9 and 15-8.&#13;
Thursday against Marquette&#13;
the girls got their chance to&#13;
avenge an earlier loss this&#13;
season. The Rangers won in two&#13;
straight games by scores of 15-5&#13;
and 15-3. Coach Henderson&#13;
mentioned that this past week&#13;
was the best we've played this&#13;
year." Later that night Parkside&#13;
humiliated a very weak North&#13;
Central College team by scores&#13;
of 15-4 and 15-11.&#13;
"We must concentrate on&#13;
Carthage right now." This match&#13;
which will have taken place at&#13;
the time of publication by the&#13;
time you read this will pit the&#13;
Rangers against Northeastern&#13;
Illinois and Carthage, the&#13;
possible number one ranked&#13;
team in the state.&#13;
The rankings will be made&#13;
before the result of the matches&#13;
with Carthage. As a result of this&#13;
method of ranking Henderson&#13;
expects the Rangers to be ranked&#13;
number 2 right behind Carthage&#13;
at the end of the season.&#13;
This weekends Carthage Invitational&#13;
give the team another&#13;
chance to beat Marquette. Past&#13;
this weekend Henderson is&#13;
looking for her team to peak at&#13;
the WWIAC Tournament in&#13;
Milwaukee next weekend.&#13;
by Peter Jacket&#13;
The women's tennis team&#13;
concluded their successful&#13;
season on a happy note* by&#13;
posting a 6th place finish out of&#13;
12 teams at state. Freshmen&#13;
Kathy Logic, the Rangers top&#13;
seeded singles player, was&#13;
among the strong finishers at&#13;
state along with Parkside's top&#13;
seeded doubles team consisting&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
"From our standpoint we&#13;
consider this game a mild upset.&#13;
However they considered it a&#13;
total upset." Those were the&#13;
comments of coach Hal&#13;
Henderson after his team battled&#13;
an outstanding Western Michigan&#13;
team to a 0-0 tie after a&#13;
period of overtime.&#13;
Western Michigan was ranked&#13;
ninth in the Mideast before their&#13;
trip to Parkside, but. faced a&#13;
Ranger team that "played the&#13;
best game we've played in four&#13;
years", as Henderson put it.&#13;
Statistically, Parkside was&#13;
outshot 19-14 but the saves by&#13;
each goaltender was about even&#13;
with The Rangers have six saves&#13;
and the Western Michigan goalie&#13;
of Logic and sophomore Kathy&#13;
Thomas. Coach Sue Tobachnik&#13;
was pleased with her young&#13;
squad's performance proclaiming&#13;
that "it was good for our&#13;
team. We did very well overall."&#13;
Logic and Thomas will now set&#13;
their sites on this Saturdays&#13;
tournament which could qualify&#13;
them to compete in the small&#13;
schools championship to be held&#13;
later in the year.&#13;
saving five. The game was&#13;
continually up for grabs with the&#13;
Rangers hitting the crossbar a&#13;
total of three times throughout&#13;
the game.&#13;
This game left the Rangers&#13;
with an overall season record of&#13;
3 wins 8 losses and 3 ties.&#13;
Western Michigan came out of&#13;
the game with a record of 5-2-2.&#13;
Parkside has one game left on&#13;
the schedule before the playoffs&#13;
begin. That will be against&#13;
UW-Platteville this Saturday If&#13;
the Rangers beat or tie Platteville&#13;
then they will have won The&#13;
NAIA District 14 championship.&#13;
NAIA District 14 consists of&#13;
three teams; Parkside, Platteville&#13;
and Whitewater. The championship&#13;
of the district is decided&#13;
through play between the three&#13;
teams during the regular season.&#13;
The Rangers have beaten&#13;
Looking ahead to next years&#13;
prospects, Tobachnik says&#13;
"things don't look as good as&#13;
they could." High seeded Marge&#13;
Balazs and Kathie Feichtner will&#13;
be swept away by graduation&#13;
while junior transfer Pamela&#13;
Blair has exhausted her remaining&#13;
eligibility. Tobachnik looks&#13;
upon Logic Thomas, and&#13;
freshman Laura Bianco as her&#13;
leading returnees.&#13;
Whitewater already and Whitewater&#13;
has been kind enough to&#13;
beat Platteville once. Sounds&#13;
kind of confusing, but what it&#13;
boils down to is that all Parkside&#13;
has to do is come away with a&#13;
win or tie against Platteville then&#13;
they wiH have won the district&#13;
championship. If the Rangers b/&#13;
some fluke should lose to&#13;
Platteville that would force a&#13;
playoff between the three teams&#13;
for the honor of advancing to the&#13;
area playoffs which will be&#13;
against teams yet unknown from&#13;
Minnesota and Illinois.&#13;
Parkside definitely has the&#13;
edge going into this weekends&#13;
game as they haven't lost to&#13;
Platteville in four years.&#13;
Platteville has a season record of&#13;
2-8-2 although their competition&#13;
hasn't come close to matching&#13;
that of the Ranger's In an earlier&#13;
match this year during the&#13;
chancellors Cup Tournament&#13;
held at Parkside the two teams&#13;
played to a 1-1 tie. That Game,&#13;
because it was held during a&#13;
tournament does not count&#13;
towards district standings.&#13;
Coach Henderson does not&#13;
expect any of his team to be&#13;
missing from the lineup this&#13;
weekend but said that earl&#13;
Campbell is nursing a groin&#13;
injury and Niall Powers, who has&#13;
been playing in pain all season,&#13;
is still suffering from a thigh&#13;
injury.&#13;
Wednesday November 1,1978&#13;
Volleyball Looks Good&#13;
With One Game Left&#13;
— BACKGAMMON&#13;
Where: at the SPAGHETTI STATION&#13;
2703 - 63rd STREET - KENOSHA&#13;
When: first and third Mondays of each month&#13;
ENTRY FEE: $3.00&#13;
REGISTRATION: 6 - 7 p.m.&#13;
PRIZES: 40% - 25% - 15% - Champagne -&#13;
consolation round&#13;
ABPA Sanctioned&#13;
KEEP THIS COUPON ••"••••••&#13;
With this coupon and the&#13;
purchase of any new TR7 you&#13;
will receive an AM-FM cassette&#13;
or 8 track. Come in and test&#13;
drive our exciting new TR7's.&#13;
Buds Imports also carries the&#13;
Jaguar, Volvo, MG and of&#13;
course, TRIUMPH. Buds&#13;
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NOdflOD SIHl d33M •••••J&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
— The college basketball&#13;
season is just underway. The&#13;
men's team started practicing&#13;
several weeks ago and the&#13;
women's team started last&#13;
Monday. I'm sure that both&#13;
teams will generate the action&#13;
and excitement of two high&#13;
caliber teams. The men have a 27&#13;
regular game season with 14&#13;
home games, while the women&#13;
have 20 games with 10 at home.&#13;
Six of the women's home games&#13;
will proceed the men's games.&#13;
— I went to the WisconsinMichigan&#13;
football game a couple&#13;
of weeks ago and believe me, the&#13;
Badger fans are the most&#13;
dedicated fans in the country.&#13;
Even with the tendency of the&#13;
Badger team to make their&#13;
opponent look good, the fans&#13;
turn out in an average of 70,000&#13;
per game. Speaking of the game,&#13;
it was a pathetic example of big&#13;
time college football by the&#13;
Badgers. They couldn't run, pass,&#13;
block or tackle. The sad part was&#13;
that Michigan wasn't really&#13;
trying to run the score up (final&#13;
score Michigan 42, Wisconsin 0),&#13;
it was just sheer ineptitude on&#13;
the part of Bucky Badger. But I&#13;
have to keep this in mind, the&#13;
Badgers probably have the&#13;
youngest starting team in the Big&#13;
10 so they should be pretty tough&#13;
in the following years.&#13;
— I just sat through the&#13;
Packer-Tampa Bay game and the&#13;
punchless Pack (7-2) have just&#13;
proven to me that they are not&#13;
play-off material at this time. I&#13;
won't argue the point that the&#13;
Pack haven't improved over last&#13;
year because they have. They&#13;
just haven't improved enough to&#13;
be qualified play-off contenders.&#13;
I'd hate to see them get to the&#13;
play-offs just to be outclassed&#13;
and get blown out like the Bears&#13;
did last year. Don't get me&#13;
wrong, I'm a die hard Packer fan&#13;
but I'd hate to see the team be&#13;
em harassed.&#13;
— In the women's state tennis&#13;
tournament held on the October&#13;
20th weekend, one individual&#13;
accomplished something for the&#13;
team that hadn't been accomplished&#13;
for at least four years.&#13;
Senior Marge Balazs competed&#13;
in the winner's bracket and&#13;
captured Six points in the team&#13;
effort. This was the first time in&#13;
at least four years that a Ranger&#13;
played advanced and placed&#13;
inthe winners bracket. I&#13;
personally salute Coach Sue&#13;
Tobachnik, Kathy Logic, Kathy&#13;
Thomas, Pam Blair, Kathie&#13;
Feichtner, Marge Balazs, Cathy&#13;
Brownlee, Laura Bianco and&#13;
Celeste Widmanich on their fine&#13;
season. Congratulations Ladies.&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Rangers Nearing Championship&#13;
NOW AT 2 LOCATIONS&#13;
6100 Washington Ave.&#13;
Pioneer Village&#13;
886-5077 • 886-0207&#13;
2615 Washington Ave.&#13;
634-2373 • 634-2374 &#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
A J AZZ C ONCERT W ITH&#13;
MONTAGE&#13;
Film Series Presents&#13;
FLESH GORDON&#13;
Fri, Nov. 3 - 8:00 PM&#13;
Sun, Nov. 5-7:30 PM&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
$1.00&#13;
PAB Outdoor recreation Presents&#13;
Miller Brewery Tour&#13;
Fri, Nov. 3&#13;
Leave Union Lot 1:30 PM&#13;
Return 5:30 PM&#13;
SAT. NOV. 4 9:00 PM&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
$1.00 U.W.-P. STUDENTS&#13;
$1.50 GUEST&#13;
MIXED DRINKS AVAILABLE ID'S REQUIRED&#13;
_7&#13;
Women's Basketball&#13;
Now Recruiting&#13;
All women interested in&#13;
participating in women's varsity&#13;
basketball forx this upcoming&#13;
season are urged to contact&#13;
coach Sue Tobachnik at&#13;
553-2318 or stop up in her office&#13;
in PE 127 as soon as possible.&#13;
Practices are starting this week at&#13;
3:30 in the gym. The season will&#13;
be starting the last week of&#13;
November.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 1&#13;
Coffeehouse starting at 1 p.m. in Union 104-106 featuring&#13;
Betty Kastke, a blues folksinger. Admission is free. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 2&#13;
Workshop "Me, for a Change" at 9 a.m. in Union 104. Call ext.&#13;
2312 for more details.&#13;
Slide Lectures "Egypt in Perspective" starts at 7:15 p.m. in CL D&#13;
128. Registration information available at ext. 2312.&#13;
Recital at 8 p.m. in the CAT. Featuring Brian Skowronski on&#13;
tuba and Tim Urness on sax. The program is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
Concerts 11-1:00. See in Concert, Meatloaf, Genesis and&#13;
Journey on the Advent Screen in Union Square.&#13;
Debate Lee Dreyfus vs. Martin Schrieber. 8-9 p.m. TV&#13;
broadcasted Milwaukee channels 4 &amp; 6. Sponsored by the&#13;
League of Women Voters and United Council of UW Student&#13;
Governments.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 3&#13;
Seminar Chem/Life Sci. at 2 p.m. in CL 105. The program is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
Movie "Flesh Gordon" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre. Admission at the door is $1 for a Parkside&#13;
student and $1 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Sports Swimming (Women's): at Lawrence University,&#13;
Appleton( 4 p.m.)&#13;
Volleyball (Women's): at Carthage Invitational.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 4&#13;
Kiddie Flicks "The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes" at 10 a.m. in&#13;
the Union Cinema Theatre for the Parkside community and&#13;
their families. Admission for children is $1 and parents&#13;
accompanying children are admitted free.&#13;
Dance at 9 p.m. in Union Sqare featuring "Montage," a jazz&#13;
band. Admission is $1 for Parkside students and $1.50 for&#13;
guests. ID cards will be required at the door. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
Sports Volleyball (Women's): at Carthage Invitational&#13;
Cross-Country (Women's): Midwest AIAW Championship,&#13;
Macomb, III.&#13;
Soccer (Men's): UW-Platteville.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 5&#13;
A/E Series Vincent Price as Oscar Wilde in "Diversions and&#13;
Delights" at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. Tickets are available at the Union Information Center.&#13;
Admission is $7.&#13;
Movie "Flesh Gordon" will be repeated at 7,30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Monday, Nov. 6&#13;
Round Table at 12 noon in Union 106. Prof. John FJarbeson will&#13;
talk on "The Middle East After Camp David." The program is&#13;
free and open to interested students and staff.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 7&#13;
Concert at 8 p.m. in the CAT. Tom Dvorak will be conducting&#13;
the band. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Classified Ads&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
BSR 2620W Turntable $45. See Prof.&#13;
Williams GR 315,553-2488.&#13;
To Theresa F.: I hope you had a good trip&#13;
and you thought about me when It was cool,&#13;
next time I'll keep you warmer than the&#13;
sleeping bag. Chucky&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Beginning (or very patient) Bluegrass banjo&#13;
player to play with beginning guitar player&#13;
and mandolin player. Serious novices.&#13;
878-4024.&#13;
Lee Dreyfus enthusiates. Anyone wanting to&#13;
donate a couple hours for literature drops,&#13;
call Frank Miller633-4273.&#13;
Woman for retail sales position in small,&#13;
unique northslde gift shop. (Racine)&#13;
Part-time evenings and weekends thru the&#13;
Christmas Season. For more Information&#13;
call Rita at 639-8893.&#13;
1972 Toyota Corolla — Excellent condition,&#13;
no rust, great gas mileage. Only 60,000&#13;
miles. Starting price $1800. Call 634-1792 at&#13;
night or Mr. Thomas 8-5 at 636-9185.&#13;
1969 Chevy Mallbu. Needs a new battery.&#13;
$300. Call 633-3444. Racine.&#13;
Skis and poles: Frltzmelr 195 cm downhill&#13;
skis. Brand new. $240 value. Asking $200.&#13;
Call 633-3767 after6 p.m.&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
important message: Mike of apt. 205. Why&#13;
haven't I seen you lately, try coming to&#13;
class. Your Secret Admirer.&#13;
Thanks Mary Braun and Bruce Weaver for all&#13;
your work on the tournament. UW-Parkslde&#13;
Debate and Forensic Club.&#13;
Lost: A pair of prescription glasses. Lost In&#13;
one of three places: third floor CLRM,&#13;
reference section of library or Union Square.&#13;
If you find a pair please call ext. 2219 on&#13;
campus and leave the message. Need them&#13;
back desperately, I can't see! 11&#13;
To Theo In Wyo, So you called the office and&#13;
I wasn't there — sorry, but Dawn wanted to&#13;
talk to you. Chris &amp; me, Dawn.&#13;
A contributive&#13;
work of art&#13;
to Parksides&#13;
mainplace was&#13;
unfortunately ticketed&#13;
for lack of a&#13;
parking permit&#13;
last Sunday&#13;
I sTarTed as&#13;
a Ranker&#13;
'-p o&#13;
ujriler &#13;
Wednesday November 1,1978 *Ranger&#13;
(5)1978 Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 7, issue 9, November 1, 1978</text>
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                <text> Student publications</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="69134">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Candidates Debate</text>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text>...&#13;
Candidates Debate&#13;
by lohn St... "&#13;
With the overnb r 7,&#13;
elections for governor gellmg&#13;
closer evervdev, the two !llde..&#13;
have agreed to a ..ene of&#13;
debates&#13;
The United Couned of&#13;
Umveouv of \-Vlscons," Student&#13;
Go ernmerus In cooper arron&#13;
with the league of \lomen&#13;
Voter&gt; of Wisconsin Yo-lll sponsor&#13;
a debate between R publocan&#13;
Russell Olson and Democrat&#13;
Douglas La Follette, candid ..&#13;
for Lieutenant Covernor Hm&#13;
debate Will be held at Parks Ide&#13;
October 31, 1976 at 7 pm rn&#13;
Creenqurst 103 The tOPIC for the&#13;
debate will be Environmental&#13;
and Energy Issues, It IS not&#13;
Wednesday October. 25,1978 , 7 8 vo. no.&#13;
Some Women of Marrakech&#13;
Film Program Nov. 8&#13;
"Some Women of Marrakech,"&#13;
a film discussion program has&#13;
bee" po,tponed to wednesdev,&#13;
November 6th (from October 4)&#13;
at 730 p.m. at tjw-Parkstde,&#13;
~e"",ha.&#13;
The film, which was made by&#13;
JR all-woman team of cinemato-&#13;
.aphe&lt;s, goes behind the wall,&#13;
01 Moslem home' to show the&#13;
aetrviti es and life-styles of the&#13;
women, their roles in the&#13;
religiouS life of Islam, their&#13;
danCes and parties.&#13;
Elizabeth W. Fernea, co-director&#13;
of the film, will lead the&#13;
discussion. She is the author of&#13;
"A Street in Marrakech" an&#13;
account of the year she' lived&#13;
among the women of Marrakech&#13;
and learned to know them well.&#13;
She is Research Associate and&#13;
Lecturer with the Center for&#13;
Middle Eastern Stud ies at the&#13;
University of Texas, Austin, and&#13;
author of "Guests of the Sheik"&#13;
the ethnography of an Ira~i&#13;
village; "A View on the Nile;"&#13;
and co-editor of '}'Some Middle&#13;
Eastern Muslim Women Speak,"&#13;
translations 'of the writings of&#13;
women of middle&#13;
- Iran, Iraq, Turkey. etc&#13;
This program is sponsored by&#13;
the University of WisconsinExtension,&#13;
the Uw-Parkstde's&#13;
Center for Multicultural Studies&#13;
the Racine Public Library, and&#13;
the Adventures of the Mind&#13;
group of the UniversalistUnitarian&#13;
Church of RacineKenosha.&#13;
The program is free to the&#13;
public. Since seating is limited&#13;
reservations should be made b;&#13;
calling University Extension at&#13;
Uw-Parkstde.&#13;
•&#13;
Wargamers: Battle Of Wits&#13;
,&#13;
by Peter Jackel&#13;
•&#13;
The club, patterned after a&#13;
nationally recognized wargamers&#13;
organization, was founded In&#13;
197-2 by then Parks ide student&#13;
Harvey Heddin. After avid chess&#13;
players from around the campus&#13;
grew disenchanted with the&#13;
never varying strategy of the&#13;
ancient game. Through funding,&#13;
Heddin introduced to Parkside&#13;
an array of little known but&#13;
highly strategic games from the&#13;
pages of the National Wargamers&#13;
catalog that ranged from&#13;
complex role plavmg contests to&#13;
history inclined- games that&#13;
challenge the players to match&#13;
wits with the likes of apoleon&#13;
and Hitler In games of thIS&#13;
nature the Individual can&#13;
determine for himself how&#13;
history would have been&#13;
effected had for example&#13;
Napoleon decided against gomg&#13;
to waterloo or If German" had&#13;
managed to secure Great Bntam&#13;
as an ally&#13;
At the Wargamer's base&#13;
(Cl-140), you will discover a&#13;
series of boardgames assembled&#13;
for your immediate use Gamer&#13;
member Terry Rasmussen e~-&#13;
plains that specific games&#13;
remain assembled for however&#13;
long they retain their populaoty&#13;
When their use diminishes. they&#13;
are shelved and replaced by&#13;
newer games. Rasmussen stresses&#13;
that any outsider IS always&#13;
welcome to partiCipate and&#13;
points out that regular members&#13;
vary from Ph.Os to assembly line&#13;
workers. If you are in search of a&#13;
partner to join you in a game&#13;
that is your personal property,&#13;
you are encouraged to dial&#13;
553-2013. The garners hours&#13;
flucuate daily but they are&#13;
usually open, Rasmussen ~-&#13;
sures.&#13;
The universal Impact the&#13;
Wargamers hold IS best&#13;
illustrated by the tremendous&#13;
successes the garners conventions&#13;
enjoy. Held se\ieral times&#13;
annually throughout the country&#13;
to promote new games. the&#13;
conventlons attract followers&#13;
from as far av.'ay as England and&#13;
Australia One ot the orgaOlzacontinued&#13;
on page 11&#13;
father Time's babbling brooks&#13;
sweeps yet another precious&#13;
weekend downstream and once&#13;
again the "five day drag" is&#13;
recycled back to the ever&#13;
unpopular Monday. Your repitittous&#13;
weary wind, craved for&#13;
thrill and adventure, dutifully&#13;
stands by for yet another&#13;
onslaught of tutelage as you peer&#13;
outside as a small Cessna&#13;
emerging from a c1oudbank.&#13;
Suddenly you picture yourself&#13;
ftylng a crucial. mission over&#13;
industrial Germany as enemy&#13;
gunfire dances about the&#13;
cockpit. As your potent arsenage&#13;
pommels factories below, you&#13;
contemplate the sizable promotion&#13;
you undoubtedly will&#13;
receive upon your return to the&#13;
Slates, Then, as quickly as it&#13;
came, your moment of triumph&#13;
IS shattered by your professors&#13;
announcement of an approach109&#13;
exam&#13;
Since the beginning of&#13;
mankind, we have sought refuge&#13;
from the sometimes overpowering&#13;
monotony of everyday life&#13;
while at the same time satisfying&#13;
our natural zeal for adventure by&#13;
partaking in wild fantasies. And&#13;
as daring and triumphant feats&#13;
from around the world are&#13;
perpetually being relayed to us&#13;
via the media, thes-e fantasies,&#13;
which always appear light years&#13;
away from our limited grasp,&#13;
infilerates throughout our minds&#13;
on an increasingly augmented&#13;
pace,&#13;
For the past 6 years, the&#13;
Parks ide Wargamers have offered&#13;
individuals of all factions an&#13;
opportunity to at least partially&#13;
satisfy-these fa-ntasies while at&#13;
the same time tapping the&#13;
strategic capabilities they may&#13;
not have known they ever&#13;
possessed by encouraging participation&#13;
in the garners vast&#13;
conglomeration of thought&#13;
provoking games.&#13;
plctwr.. 011 ,.t...&#13;
Snagging Catcltes On&#13;
by Mi~. Murphy&#13;
The almon runnm and&#13;
men and women bo and S"I&#13;
al-ke brave the inti m 1'1t&#13;
weather In the pint of tr&#13;
fl"hermen (or ft\herPftKWlI) t&#13;
almost any time of day any da&#13;
of the week from now until lhlt&#13;
season ends larse roup of&#13;
people can be found tmed up&#13;
along the beacbes of Alton! pork&#13;
and Horltck dam In Racme try1na&#13;
to snag spawning salmon&#13;
The actiVity IS not ~tncttd to&#13;
lu't the Racl~ .nd K....,ma&#13;
lakeshore area&gt; People In ~&#13;
lincoln Park IaIOO" In ChiC.&#13;
as well as across the' lake Into the&#13;
stase of Michigan are .11 tryonl&#13;
theor best to br,nl home •&#13;
,tronSe&lt; full&#13;
Each year around thiS t~&#13;
salmon can be found spawn,",&#13;
the shores of lake Mtchl .. n.&#13;
several valoantly follhlonl t'"&#13;
upstream currents of Pikes&#13;
Creek, a ~ fow found&#13;
floundering In the narrow&#13;
streams In Petnf\!lng Spongs&#13;
People take advantage of thiS&#13;
seasonal abundance of \almon.&#13;
trying to snag as man 11sh a~&#13;
they can&#13;
The act of 'lnagglng should not&#13;
be confused With fishing as such&#13;
Instead ot attracting the IIsh to a&#13;
...hook by h",e bait or an artifiCial .- -....&#13;
Wednesday October 25, 1978 vol 7 8 . . no.&#13;
some Women of Marralcech&#13;
Film Program Nov. 8&#13;
·Some Women of Marrakech,"&#13;
a film discussion program has&#13;
t,een postponed to Wednesday,&#13;
·ovember 8th (from October 4)&#13;
at 7 30 p.m. at UW-Parkside,&#13;
enosha.&#13;
The film, which was made by&#13;
an all-woman team of cinematographers,&#13;
goes behind t he walls&#13;
of Moslem homes to show the&#13;
activities and I ife-styles of the&#13;
omen, their roles in the&#13;
religious life of Islam, their&#13;
dances and parties.&#13;
Elizabeth W. Fernea, co-directOI'&#13;
of the film, will lead the&#13;
discussion. She is the author of&#13;
"A Street in Marrakech," an&#13;
acEount of the year she lived&#13;
among the women of Marrakech&#13;
and learned to know them well.&#13;
She is Research Associate and&#13;
Lecturer with the Center for&#13;
Middle Eastern Studies at the&#13;
University of Texas, Austin, and&#13;
author of "Guests of the Sheik,"&#13;
the ethnography of an Iraqi&#13;
village; "A View on the Nile;"&#13;
and co-editor of "Some Middle&#13;
Eastern Muslim Women Speak,"&#13;
translations of the writinRs of&#13;
women of middle&#13;
- Iran, Iraq, Turkey, etc&#13;
This program is sponsored b&#13;
the University of WisconsinExtension,&#13;
the U -Parks1de's&#13;
Center for Multicultural Studies&#13;
the Racine Public Library, and&#13;
the Adventures of the Mind&#13;
group of the UniversalistUnitarian&#13;
Church of RacineKenosha.&#13;
&#13;
The program is free to the&#13;
public . Since seating is limited,&#13;
reservations should be made b&#13;
calling University Extension at&#13;
UW-Parkside.&#13;
Wargamers: Battle Of Wits&#13;
Father Time's babbling brooks&#13;
weeps yet another precious&#13;
l'&lt;eekend downstream and once&#13;
again the "five day drag" is&#13;
recycled back to the ever&#13;
unpopular Monday. Your repititious&#13;
weary wind, craved for&#13;
thrall and adventure, dutifully&#13;
stands by for yet another&#13;
onslaught of tutelage as you peer&#13;
outside as a small Cessna&#13;
emerging from a cloudbank.&#13;
uddenly you picture yourself&#13;
flying a crucial. mission over&#13;
industrial Germany as enemy&#13;
unf1re dances about the&#13;
cockpit. As your potent arsenage&#13;
pommels factories below, you&#13;
contemplate the sizable promotion&#13;
you undoubtedly will&#13;
receive upon your return to the&#13;
tates Then, as quickly as it&#13;
came, your moment of triumph&#13;
1 hattered by your professors&#13;
announcement of an approach-&#13;
'" e~am.&#13;
1nce the beginning of&#13;
by Peter Jackel&#13;
mankind, we have sought refuge&#13;
from the sometimes overpowering&#13;
monotony of everyday life&#13;
while at the same time satisfying&#13;
our natural zeal for adventure by&#13;
partaking in wild fantasies . And&#13;
as daring and triumphant feats&#13;
from around the world are&#13;
perpetually being relayed to us&#13;
via the media, these fantasies,&#13;
which always appear light years&#13;
away from our limited grasp,&#13;
infilerates throughout our minds&#13;
on an increasingly augmented&#13;
pace.&#13;
For the past 6 years, the&#13;
Parkside Wargamers have offered&#13;
individuals of all factions an&#13;
opportunity to at least partially&#13;
satisfy these fantasies while at&#13;
the same time tapping the&#13;
strategic capabilities they may&#13;
not have known they ever&#13;
possessed by encouraging participation&#13;
in the gamers vast&#13;
conglomeration of thought&#13;
provoking games.&#13;
... _. __&#13;
The club, patterned after a&#13;
nationally recognized Wargamers&#13;
organization, was founded in&#13;
197-2 by then Parkside student&#13;
Harvey Heddin. After avid ches&#13;
players from around the campus&#13;
grew disenchanted with the&#13;
never va m ra e o&#13;
ancient game. Through funding,&#13;
Heddin introduced to Parkside&#13;
an array of little known but&#13;
highly strategic game from the&#13;
pages of the at1onal argamer&#13;
catalog that ranged trom&#13;
comple role pla ing cont t to&#13;
histor inclined game that&#13;
challenge the player to match&#13;
wits with the l1k s of apol on&#13;
and Hitler In game ot th,&#13;
nature, the 1nd1\ idual can&#13;
determine for himself ho\&#13;
h1 tor~ \\Ould ha e b en&#13;
effected had for ampl&#13;
apoleon decided gain t om&#13;
to \'\'aterloo or 1f German had&#13;
managed to ecure Great Bnt in&#13;
as an all&#13;
At the \\argamer ba&#13;
(CL-140), ou will d1 co"er a&#13;
,senes of boardgames as embled&#13;
for your immediate u Gamer&#13;
member Terry Ra mu en e -&#13;
plains that pec1fic game&#13;
remain assembled for ho -.e er&#13;
long they retain their populant&#13;
When their use diminish s, the&#13;
are shelved and replaced b&#13;
newer game Rasmu sen tre -&#13;
es that any outsider is alwa&#13;
welcome to part1c1pate and&#13;
points out that regular members&#13;
vary from Ph .Os to assembl line&#13;
workers. If you are in search of a&#13;
partner to Join you in a game&#13;
that is your personal propert ,&#13;
you are encouraged to dial&#13;
553-2013. The gamers hours&#13;
flucuate datl but the are&#13;
usually open, Rasmus en a -&#13;
stifes.&#13;
The universal impact the&#13;
Wargamers hold Is be t&#13;
illustrated by the tremendous&#13;
successes the gamer coni;entions&#13;
enjo . Held e-.eral times&#13;
annuall throughout the countf\&#13;
to promote new games, the&#13;
conventions attract rollo .. er&#13;
from as tar awa a England and&#13;
Australia. One ot the organizacontinved&#13;
on page 11&#13;
Candidates D b&#13;
0&#13;
Snagging Cate On &#13;
.,&#13;
Wednesday October 25,1978&#13;
Editorial&#13;
~. ....&#13;
Access To Studio 8&#13;
. by John Stewart&#13;
The term. Studio B. may not&#13;
bring instant recognition to most&#13;
Parkside readers but at the&#13;
moment it is the bone of&#13;
contention in a controversy to&#13;
-decide how this area should be&#13;
used. Some want it for theatrical&#13;
productions, others for television&#13;
productions. According to the&#13;
minutes of the October 18,&#13;
library/learning Center Cornrnittee&#13;
meeting, the University&#13;
Administrative Committee has&#13;
decided to allocate the space on&#13;
a pro-rated or need basis. Mr.&#13;
Boisset Director of the Library,&#13;
however, stated that conflicting&#13;
needs still exist.&#13;
Studio B is one of two studios&#13;
at Parkside, built next to the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
The studios are fitted out with&#13;
lighting grids hanging from-the&#13;
ceilings. Studios A and B were&#13;
r&#13;
RANGERIs written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for Its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER Is printed by&#13;
Zlon\P'ubllshlng Company, Zion, illinois. -&#13;
Written permission Is required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGERcontent. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkslde, WLLC 0-139, Kenosha.&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Mike Murphy Editor&#13;
Jon FI..... n ...........•............ General Manager&#13;
TomC_ Student_l.or&#13;
John Stewart News Editor&#13;
Sue Stevena Feature Editor&#13;
Doug EdenheuHl Sport. Editor&#13;
Kim Putman Copy Editor&#13;
Chrl. Miller Ad Manager&#13;
Nancy Szymanski Circulation Manager&#13;
. REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Carolyn SreKlano, Cathy Brownlee, Bob Bruno, Mollie&#13;
Clartc.., Oa.. Cramer, Tom Fervoy, Rob Gardner, Pete&#13;
Jackel, Thoma. Jenn, Nicki Kroll, Kim Ruet~, Jell&#13;
Steven., Le.t. Thompaon.&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
SUNn Caldwell, Denl•• D'Acqulsto, Mike Holmdohl, Jull.&#13;
Orth, Tony Raymond and Brian Taggart.&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig D,orak, Rob Miller .nd Matthew Pollakori.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Cramer and Dawn Thoma ••&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted for publication if they&#13;
are typewritten, double spaced with one inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be included&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and Irefuse&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content&#13;
All material must be received by Thursday noon fo~&#13;
~ubliCatiOn on the following Wednesday.&#13;
DuE ,TIl THE SCAJl.CrrY of&#13;
7"/H£ n FINO £HP/..O'r'HENT&#13;
RciuJ.TING Fl.fJH ~)(CE.sSIVE&#13;
JlOI'I£~()(K I TIt F I1AJ ()t J T'I 0 P&#13;
tOU&lt;:GE sTUDFNT5 FIND&#13;
TN£f1SEJ.lJF~ LIVI1ve:. IN A~&#13;
&lt;:XT~IfI1' STAT£,&#13;
of POVER,TY.&#13;
f&#13;
r~&#13;
~&lt;?-~&#13;
•&#13;
characters in a bar, a tavern&#13;
environment" was constructed,&#13;
complete with a juke box and&#13;
beer on tap. The audience sat at&#13;
tables in the bar, inside Studio B.&#13;
According to Professor Pollack&#13;
of the drama Department, these&#13;
productions-cost much less than&#13;
full scale' producti?'J.s like the&#13;
upcoming Electra at the end of&#13;
this month. Studio B is right next&#13;
to the theatre and there are -no&#13;
problems, therefore, with transporting&#13;
equipment in and out.&#13;
Professor Pollack' said that the&#13;
use of the studio also lends a lot&#13;
of flexability to teaching and&#13;
production.' Furthermore, this&#13;
studio is about the only available&#13;
space for experimental productions&#13;
of this kind. Experimental&#13;
theatre demands a stage area&#13;
that allows the audience to sit in,&#13;
around, or by the playas it&#13;
progresses,such as in a room like"&#13;
Studio B. Intimacy is important&#13;
but so are the necessary lighting&#13;
fixtures.&#13;
The facility is, of course, also&#13;
. used to make television&#13;
programs, including the University&#13;
Outreach projects like&#13;
Parkside Perspective - a news&#13;
show distributed to cable TV-8 in&#13;
Racine - as well as instructional&#13;
materials for in-class use. While&#13;
the original architectural purI&#13;
pose of this area was to produce&#13;
TV, it does seem that interdepartmental&#13;
projects, like the&#13;
Production Workshop plays are&#13;
possible. There will be a meeting&#13;
of the Library/Learning Center&#13;
Committee to discuss how this&#13;
area should be used, Thursday,&#13;
November 2,1978 at 3:30 p.rn. in&#13;
WllC D115C (near the library's&#13;
D-1 level periodical areal.&#13;
Vice-Chancellor Ratner and&#13;
Interim Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Stoffle have also been asked to&#13;
attend this important meeting.&#13;
It is' hoped that whatever&#13;
decision is made will still leave&#13;
Studio B open to all groups&#13;
Involved and will not result in&#13;
the elimination of any worthwhile&#13;
programs. Over the past&#13;
few years much good has come&#13;
out of Studio B.' May the&#13;
cooperative atmosphere that&#13;
allowed this interdepartmental&#13;
work to be done continue and&#13;
lead to bigger and better&#13;
accomplishments. Parksicfe's facilities,&#13;
fatuity, staff and student&#13;
body have .a lot to offer'&#13;
providing opportunities for thes~&#13;
two elements to interact&#13;
productively is the vital but&#13;
difficult part. I&#13;
a •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• J ••• 1,•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
, .~".&#13;
Jim Schowalter - "I don't&#13;
watch much TV, but when I do I&#13;
watch Star Trek and' Battlestar&#13;
Calactica.&#13;
What TV programs-do you watch the mostoftenl&#13;
Linda Zeihen&#13;
~indy"&#13;
"Mork-ndesigned&#13;
-originally as TV studios&#13;
to be used by faculty to make&#13;
audio-visual presentations for&#13;
their classes. However, since the&#13;
fall of 1976. Studio B has been&#13;
shared by the Media .services&#13;
Department, that actually runs&#13;
the studios, and the Parkside&#13;
Dramatic Arts Department, for&#13;
the purpose of producing&#13;
experimental theatre at Parkside.&#13;
Each semester, the Production&#13;
Workshop course (Dramatic Arts&#13;
420) produce a theatrical piece&#13;
in Studio B. The studio. about 31'&#13;
by 38', is especially conducive to&#13;
serious exper iment al theatre&#13;
because of its small size (whicf&#13;
leads to greater actor/audience&#13;
intimacy) and its excellent&#13;
lighting facilities.&#13;
Recent productions include&#13;
the Measure's Taken and&#13;
Kennedy's Children. Eor Kennedy's&#13;
Children, which is-a series&#13;
of Imonologues made by&#13;
Karen Dupuis "Ph II&#13;
Donahue, 60 Minutes, and&#13;
Mork-n-Mlndy."&#13;
,&#13;
~.,&#13;
......'" ;,"ijr,£" ~~:&#13;
"....,...__ ,,,;~.~~ .., "·"_'b"~k. '.' - ...,.: ;i'...}:f:E:~1&#13;
!&#13;
Kelli Eh,ick&#13;
Mindy"&#13;
"Mork-nJon&#13;
DeGroot _ "I watch just&#13;
about anything, but I'd say&#13;
Happy Days, love Boat, and&#13;
Fantasy Island."&#13;
" ~ ~ ,;&#13;
(,0'0 ~VE!JIAI(,. OELCOHE TIl&#13;
• (,Lo5E or: To N"HT Of J.OD~ IN&#13;
OIJ THE fLIGHT Of THE AMU ICMJ&#13;
COLl.E6E &gt;TVDEIIT. IN TilE&#13;
l.JAI&lt;E OF ELEVt4TiNG CoST.S of&#13;
/lOUSIIIG HNO&#13;
C~VCAT'ON ~ liND H/.SO.. .&#13;
I ".,..&#13;
"..' •&#13;
. . . . . . .&#13;
HEY, 7HfRES&#13;
o&#13;
FREE&#13;
SI/Al1foo B""&#13;
lIN TIllS ~'"&#13;
PAPER!!&#13;
. . . , ~.&#13;
... AIJD TNAT ENDS&#13;
ToIJ/6HT'S suoc». PLEASE&#13;
. TuNE III NfXTWHK uHEN&#13;
OU~ To PIG WILL 8£".&#13;
.. STAMPEDES _ o/'50J.ETE ot&#13;
THIf cOUEGE AIJSLJER&#13;
TO TO Gil PART 1£ 5? ..&#13;
_~Q_""i8'.&#13;
Wednesday October 25, 1978&#13;
Editorial /&#13;
Access -To Studio 8 . by John Stewart designep originally as TV studios&#13;
to be used by faculty to make&#13;
The term, Studio B, may not audio-visual presentations for&#13;
bring instant recognition to most their classes. However, since the&#13;
Parkside readers but at the fall of 1976, Studio B has been&#13;
moment it is the bone of shared by the Media ,Services&#13;
contention in a controversy to Department, that actually runs&#13;
decide how this area should be the studios, and the Parkside&#13;
used. Some want it for theatrical Dramatic Arts Department, for&#13;
productions, others for television the purpose of producing&#13;
productions. According to the _ experimental theatre at Parkside.&#13;
minutes of the October 18, Each semester, the Production&#13;
Library/Learning Center Com- Workshop course (Dramatic Arts&#13;
mittee meeting, the University 420) produce a theatrical piece&#13;
Administrative Committee has in Studio B. The studio, about 31'&#13;
decided to allocate the space on by 38', is especially conducive to&#13;
a pro-rated or need basis . Mr. serious experimental theatre&#13;
Boisse, Director of the Library, because of its small I size (whicn&#13;
however, stated that conflicting leads to great~r actor/audience&#13;
needs still exist. intimacy) and its excellent&#13;
Studio B is one of two studios lighting facilities.&#13;
at Parkside, built next to the Recent productions include&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. the Measure 's Taken and&#13;
The studios are fitted out with Kennedy's Children. For Kenlighting&#13;
grids hanging from the nedy's Children, which is a series&#13;
ceilings. Studios A and B were of monologues made by&#13;
,.&#13;
RANGER Is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER Is printed by&#13;
ZloO\Publlshlng Company, Zion, Illinois. -&#13;
Written permission Is required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141 .&#13;
Mike Murphy . .. .. .... ......................... Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan ........................ General Manager&#13;
Tom Cooper ........ . . . . ......... . .... Student Advisor&#13;
John Stewart ................... . ........ News Editor&#13;
Sue Stevens · · · ............ ... ...... . .. Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser . . .. ............ ...... . Sports Editor&#13;
Kim Putman ............................. Copy Editor&#13;
Chris MIiier . .. . . .......................... Ad Manager&#13;
Nancy Szymanski . ... ..... ........ Circulation Manager&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Carolyn Bresclano, Cathy Brownlee, Bob Bruno, Mollle&#13;
Clarke, Dave Cramer, Tom Fervoy, Rob Gardner, Pete&#13;
Jackel, Thomas Jenn, Nickl Kroll, Kim Ruetz, Jeff&#13;
Stevens, Lester Thompson. ·&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
Susan Caldwell, Denise D'Acqulsto, Mike Holmdohl, Julle&#13;
Orth, Tony Raymond and Brian Taggart.&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig Dvorak, Rob MIiier and Matthew Pollakon.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Cramer and Dawn Thomas.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted for publication If the&#13;
are typewritten, double spaced with one Inch margins an~&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be included&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and 'refuse&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content&#13;
All material must be received by Thursday noon fo~&#13;
~ubllcatlon on the following Wednesday.&#13;
(,ool) IWDJWC, . OEJ.COHE' Tl&gt;&#13;
"(,t.OSE-Uf ''. To NIGHT t.Jf J..OOJ{ IN&#13;
ON THE PJ.IGHT oF THE AHU ICMJ&#13;
COI.J..EGE STUOElolT, IN TUE&#13;
t.JAl&lt;E OF FLEV,H/NG C.OST.S OF&#13;
characters in a bar, a tavern&#13;
environmenf was constructed,&#13;
complete with a juke box and&#13;
beer on tap. The audience sat at&#13;
tables in the bar, inside Studio B.&#13;
According to Professor Pollack&#13;
of the drama Department, these&#13;
productions'cost much less than&#13;
full scale· productions like the r " upcoming Electra at the end of&#13;
this month. Studio B is right next&#13;
to the theatre and there aie -no&#13;
problems, therefore, with transporting&#13;
equipment in and out.&#13;
Professor Pollack · said that the&#13;
use of the studio also lends a lot&#13;
of flexability to teaching and&#13;
production .' Furthermore, this&#13;
studio is about the only available&#13;
space for expe~imental productions&#13;
of this kind . Experimental&#13;
theatre demands a stage area&#13;
that allows the audience to sit in,&#13;
around, or by the play as it&#13;
progresses, such as in a r:oom like&#13;
Studio B. Intimacy is important&#13;
but so are the necessary lighting&#13;
fixtures .&#13;
The facility is, of course, also&#13;
used to make television&#13;
programs, including the University&#13;
Outreach projects like&#13;
Parkside Perspective - a news&#13;
show distributed to cable TV-8 in&#13;
, Racine - as well as instructional&#13;
materials for in-class use. While&#13;
the original architectural purpose&#13;
of this area was to produce&#13;
TV, it does seem that interdepartmental&#13;
projects, like the&#13;
Production Workshop plays are&#13;
possible. There will be a meeting&#13;
of the Library/Learning ·center&#13;
Con,,mittee to discuss how this&#13;
area should be used, Thursday,&#13;
November 2, 1978 at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
WLLC D115C (near the Library's&#13;
D-1 level periodical area) .&#13;
Vice-Chancellor Ratner and&#13;
Interim Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Stoffle have also been asked to&#13;
attend this important meeting.&#13;
It is hoped that whatever&#13;
decision is made will still leave&#13;
~tudio B open to all groups&#13;
involved and will not result in&#13;
the elimination of any worthwhile&#13;
programs . Over the past&#13;
few years much good has come&#13;
out of Studio B. , May the _&#13;
cooperative atmosphere that&#13;
allowed this interdepartmental&#13;
work to be done continue and&#13;
l1;ad to bigger and better&#13;
accomplishments. Parkside's facilities,&#13;
fatuity, staff and student&#13;
body have ,a lot to offer·&#13;
providing opportunities for thes~&#13;
two elements to interact&#13;
productively is the vital but&#13;
difficult part. '&#13;
:································J ... 1.: ........................................ ~.,&#13;
What TV programs~do you watch the most oftenl&#13;
Linda Zeihen&#13;
Mindy"&#13;
"&#13;
"Mork-nJim&#13;
Schowalter - "I don't&#13;
watch much TV, but when I do 1&#13;
watch Star Trek and· Battlest~r&#13;
Galactica.&#13;
Kelli Ehrick&#13;
Mindy"&#13;
"Mork-nKaren&#13;
Dupuis "Phi I&#13;
Donahue, 60 Minutes, and&#13;
Mork-n-Mindy .".&#13;
Ion DeGroot - "I watch just&#13;
about anything, but I'd say&#13;
Happy Days, Love Boat, and&#13;
Fantasy Island."&#13;
'a••• I I I I~ I I I I•_•• I I.••.• I••• I• I I• I I I I I••• .,.,;&#13;
······································&#13;
. -.AND THAT £ND5&#13;
Toµ/6HT'S Sllot.J. PLEAS£&#13;
, TUNE" IA! NEXT WE.E.K u/lEN&#13;
&gt;JOU.SING IINO&#13;
~ D,UC.ATION&#13;
A~D Al.SO ....&#13;
Du£ I TO T&gt;lE .SCAR.CIT',/ OF&#13;
1111,£ TO FINO £H/JLo'r'HFNT&#13;
/?l:SUJ.TiNG FR.OH OC,E~SIVE&#13;
llor'l~~Of&lt;K, TH Ff MAJ O,: I T't' o I=&#13;
lOU.l:~E S.TUDEAJT.S FIND&#13;
TIIHtSEJ.VE".5 t.lVIAJ(;, IN AN&#13;
iaXT~JfHc .STATE'&#13;
oF Pov£,.TY. ~&#13;
G1~er1£&#13;
.So1'1£.'&#13;
O1..JR TOP I(. WILL ,Sf ...&#13;
.'' S TIU1P£DE5 - ol,,SOJ..FTE' ot&#13;
I&#13;
,~ •&#13;
I HEY, 7HERE's&#13;
t&#13;
~~I 1,,... - s FREE NRnPoo ~ .,.,.,&#13;
~·(?-~~ I'" THIS ,... .... ,&#13;
'\:' ,;:i PAPER!!&#13;
•&#13;
-\ f1E'TOO.&#13;
/&#13;
. .. . '&#13;
Tflf:&#13;
TO&#13;
COLL£(;£ IIAJSI.J£[&#13;
TO GA PA~T 1£ .s? "&#13;
1 &#13;
II Y Octo"" 25,1978 .. 'S"&#13;
To The Editor&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• •&#13;
all the new students at&#13;
Toide as well as to the rest of&#13;
~ seen garbage at main&#13;
I ve 'tl'ng on walls, chairs&#13;
e wn hild ~ at library_and c I&#13;
, r at the cinema. To all avlO . h&#13;
people who commit suc&#13;
I SUggest making an s&#13;
alive,&#13;
firstto be clean in the school&#13;
mat... people, Some of the&#13;
dents are also throwing&#13;
after lunch, because of&#13;
Students Too Messy&#13;
other groups behavior, I believe&#13;
that the students should be more&#13;
concerned· about being clean&#13;
before Parks ide becomes.a&#13;
garbage disposal.&#13;
Secondly the writing- on walls.&#13;
People should not write back to&#13;
the questions some ignorants&#13;
write in the bathrooms. For the&#13;
destroyed chairs, One should be&#13;
or act more mature, instead of&#13;
destroying things which the&#13;
students pay from their tuition. I&#13;
believe nobody wants to pay no&#13;
more for repairs. So lets be clean&#13;
people aswell as a clean thinker.&#13;
Lets not destroy this place&#13;
because of some immature&#13;
people. Lets cooperate and make&#13;
Parkside one of the cleanest&#13;
. schools in the state. Forget about&#13;
the childish people around and&#13;
be a clean student so that next&#13;
year people can follow your&#13;
example. Let's make good use of&#13;
Parks-de.&#13;
A concerned student&#13;
Charles D. Corona&#13;
3&#13;
Allocations Candidate&#13;
Talles Seriously&#13;
The number of students over&#13;
the age of twenty-five attending&#13;
U.W. Parkside increases every&#13;
year. These students not only&#13;
facethe difficultv of returning to&#13;
the school scene after having&#13;
been away for a great number of&#13;
years, but often have added&#13;
responsibilities of full time jobs&#13;
and families. I feel that these&#13;
students have a great deal to&#13;
offer this University, and that it&#13;
is important that they take an&#13;
active part in Student Government&#13;
and related committees&#13;
and organizations. Therefore, I&#13;
am announcing my candidacy&#13;
(as Write-In) for one of the five&#13;
positions on the University&#13;
Segregated Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee.&#13;
Having attended Segregated&#13;
Feesmeetings in the past, I have&#13;
noted a need for adequate&#13;
representation on the part of the&#13;
older adult student. As a~woman&#13;
returning to school after an&#13;
absence of eight years I am also&#13;
aware of many of the difficulties&#13;
students in my pes.tion face. I&#13;
am a second semester sophomore&#13;
and a business major. I&#13;
would consider any position as a&#13;
member of the Segregated Fees&#13;
Allocation Committee a very&#13;
serious responsibility and would&#13;
devote the time and effort&#13;
needed to complete the work of&#13;
that committee.&#13;
Nancy L Hoffman&#13;
",.,&#13;
d , October 25, 1978 ,,,.,s a 'R!,nger&#13;
To_ The Editor&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• •&#13;
Students Too Messy&#13;
all the new students at&#13;
To .d well as to the rest of if)(si e as&#13;
rn . I h·ave seen garbage at mam&#13;
writing on walls, chairs&#13;
ace, d at library and child trove - 11&#13;
h .&#13;
01 at the cinema. To a av1 . h ople who commit sue&#13;
sepe k ' ·ts, I suggest ma ing an&#13;
ternative.&#13;
first to be clean in the school&#13;
as mature people. Some of the&#13;
students are also throwing&#13;
garbage after lunch, because of&#13;
---&#13;
other groups behavior. I believe&#13;
that the students should be more&#13;
concerned · about being clean&#13;
before Parkside becomes _a&#13;
garbage disposal.&#13;
Secondly the writing on walls.&#13;
People should not write back to&#13;
the questions some ignorants&#13;
write in the bathrooms . For the&#13;
destroyed chairs. One should be&#13;
or act more mature, instead of&#13;
destroying things which the&#13;
students pay from their tuition. I&#13;
believe nobody wants to pay no&#13;
more for repairs. So lets be clean&#13;
people as well as a clean thinker.&#13;
Lets not destroy this place&#13;
because of some immature&#13;
people. Lets cooperate and make&#13;
Parkside one of the cleanest&#13;
. schools in the state. Forget about&#13;
the childish people around and&#13;
be a clean student so that next&#13;
year people can follow your&#13;
example. Let's make good use of&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
A concerned student&#13;
Charl~s D. Corona&#13;
(&#13;
. ,._. -..&#13;
3&#13;
Allocations Candidate&#13;
Tallcs Seriously&#13;
The number of students over&#13;
the age of twenty-five attending&#13;
U.W. Parkside increases every&#13;
year. These students not only&#13;
face the difficulty of returning to&#13;
the school scene after having&#13;
been away for a great number of&#13;
years, but often have added&#13;
responsibilities of full time jobs&#13;
and families . I feel that these&#13;
students have a great deal to&#13;
ofter this University, and that it&#13;
is important that they take an&#13;
active part in Student Government&#13;
and related committees&#13;
and organizations . Therefore, I&#13;
am announcing my candidacy&#13;
(as Write-In) for one of the five&#13;
positions on the University&#13;
Segregated Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee.&#13;
Having attended Segregated&#13;
Fees meetings in the past, I have&#13;
noted a need for adequate&#13;
representation on the part of the&#13;
older adult student. As a woman&#13;
returning to school after an&#13;
absence of eight years I am also&#13;
aware of many of the ditfrcult1es&#13;
students in my po! .tion face. I&#13;
am a second semester sophomore&#13;
and a business maior. I&#13;
would consider any position as a&#13;
member of the Segregated Fees&#13;
Allocation Committee a very&#13;
serious responsibility and would&#13;
devote the time and effort&#13;
needed to complete the work of&#13;
that committee&#13;
Nancy L. Hottman &#13;
. Wednesd~'f October 25; 1978&#13;
Snagging continued from page 1&#13;
Fisherpeople lined up along the beach at Alford Park&#13;
photos by Mike Murphy&#13;
Snagging a rainbow trout&#13;
10% 'OFF j ~~p&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACUL N ~~&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFF 0 1fI'lll&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS n"&#13;
~iiii;i;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-:-;o;;i;iiiiiiiiiiii~:~ 'fill''' PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFIO '.. -- __ liiiiiiiii__ ~&#13;
Young Americans of Italian Descent&#13;
present&#13;
RICK SAUCEDO&#13;
"The Prince of Rock 'n Roll"&#13;
.&#13;
In&#13;
ELVIS, THE&#13;
LEGEND LlVESI&#13;
featwring the Jordanaires&#13;
and D.J. Fontana&#13;
A Benefit Show for the Poerio Park Handicap&#13;
Equipment and Senior Citizens Prpject&#13;
FRIDAY,· NOVEMBER 3· 8 P.M.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside. Physical Education BUilding .&#13;
$ 7.50 General Admission&#13;
Tickets available at: Sears.Pershing Plaza, Di(ello Agency Ruffolo Barber&#13;
Studio, Joerndt &amp; Ventura •..Qr. Santarell['s office. 7·Up Bottling (Racine) or at th d .&#13;
" eoor.&#13;
For general ticket Information call 654-1285 or 654-3559&#13;
Adoertfslng cooperaffoely funded by ,&#13;
\&#13;
eESA&#13;
Employment For You&#13;
~&#13;
The Cooperative Educational youths' jobsites. Thiscon'&#13;
Service Agency 18 (CESA 18) going to work sites talking&#13;
Youth Employment Program in youth worker to determi&#13;
Kenosha has a number of part work progress, speaking to&#13;
time jobs open to college supervisors about theyo&#13;
students at thistime. their work attitude,&#13;
The Youth Employment Pro- ance, etc. The Coordinat«&#13;
gram hires and trains youth in also collects time sheets&#13;
the community in cooperation delivers paychecks on&#13;
with the Kenosha Unified School bi-weekly basis. Those.&#13;
System. Youth workers gain in the· Communication&#13;
meaningful work experience and Social-Behavior Scient&#13;
are paid the federal minimum Business Field areencour&#13;
wage on a bi-weekly basis In ~pply. . .&#13;
addition, they earn job-seeking If you have a Driver. L&#13;
skills in-a classroom setting. access to an auto, areun&#13;
The Youth Coordinator Aide years of age and are in&#13;
assists. the full time YEP extra income, call or stOll&#13;
Coordinator in monitoring the see us.&#13;
'&#13;
. Wednesd~r October 25, 1978&#13;
Snagging continued from page 1&#13;
Fisherpeople lined up along the beach at Alford Park&#13;
photos by Mike Murphy&#13;
Young Americans of Italian Descent&#13;
present&#13;
RICK SAUCEDO&#13;
"The Prince of Rock 'n Roll"&#13;
' 1n&#13;
ELVIS, THE&#13;
LEGEND -LIVESI&#13;
featwring the Jordanaires&#13;
and D. J. Fontana&#13;
A Benefit Show for the Poerio Park Handicap&#13;
Equi~ment and Senior Citizens Prpject&#13;
-------·.~~-&#13;
_....-·&#13;
FRIDAY,• NOVEMBER 3 • 8 P.M.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Physical Education Building ·&#13;
S 7.50 General Admission&#13;
Tic~ets available at: Sears-Pershing Plaza, Di(ello Agenc Ruffo!&#13;
Studio, Joerndt &amp; Ventura,-.Qr. Santarelli's office 7-Up Botti· (YR, . ) o Barber . · ' mg acme , or at the door. For general ticket Information call 654-1285 or 654-3559&#13;
Advertising cooperatively /und~d by '&#13;
CESA&#13;
Employment For You•&#13;
The Cooperative Educational - youths' jobsites. This consistl&#13;
Service Agency 18 (CESA 18) going to work sites, talkingto&#13;
Youth Employment Program in youth worker to determine&#13;
Kenosha has a number of part work progress, speakingto&#13;
time jobs open to college supervisors about the youth&#13;
students at this time. their work attitude, pe&#13;
The Youth Employment Pro- ance, etc . The CoordinatOI' ·&#13;
gram hires and trains youth in also collects tirrie sheets&#13;
the community in cooperation delivers paychecks on&#13;
with the Kenosha Unified School bi~weekly basis. Those stu&#13;
System. Youth workers gain in the . Communication&#13;
meaningful work experience and Social-Behavior Sciencei&#13;
are paid the federal minimum Business Field are encourage1&#13;
wage on a bi-weekly basis . In .9pply. - , .&#13;
addition, they earn job-seeking If you have a Drivers Lie&#13;
skills in a classroom setting. access to an auto, are unde!&#13;
The Youth Coordinator Aide years of age and are in neeG&#13;
assists . the full time YEP extra income, call or stop~&#13;
Coordinator in monitoring the see us.&#13;
t/4 lb&#13;
10% ·OFF 1 ,,..,&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACUL N ,41,l,&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFF O rra&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS :O~·&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICAT&#13;
,,, &#13;
wednesda, October 25,1978&#13;
pompeii Relics Shown&#13;
The field Museum of. Natural farming villa located one and&#13;
HistOry in Chicago has com': one-half miles north of Pompeii.&#13;
pleted the four-month task of Resting 0"1 the slopes of Mount&#13;
refurbishing its Roman-Etruscan Vesuvius, it flourished along'&#13;
Hall(Halll on the ground level), with Pompeii; shared a similar&#13;
a permanentcollection contain- cultural iife; and suffered an&#13;
jog more than 25 cas~s of the identical fate from the eruption&#13;
Museum's finest spectmens , In of Vesuvius in 79 A.D. Genuine&#13;
addition to making basic frescoes of the same period are&#13;
structural [mproveme nts , the mounted on the surrounding&#13;
Museum has installed a new walls of the Roman-Etruscan&#13;
lighting system. It has also Hall.&#13;
repainted the floor and walls a A visit to the newly renovated&#13;
deep blue to accentuate the Roman-Etruscan Hall gives a&#13;
artifacts, and to provide a glimpse into lives that vanished&#13;
Mediterranean flavor to the almost' 2,000 years ago at the&#13;
exhibit hall. The renovation was foot of Vesuvius. No additional&#13;
planned to coincide with the Art charge is necessary tor a visit to&#13;
Institute's~present exhibition, Hall L. There is only the usual&#13;
"pompeii:A.D. 79." entrance fee to the Museum of&#13;
One of the glass exhibit cases $1.50; families, $3.50; vouths (;&#13;
contains valuable Sabatini repro- to 17, SOc; sen-jars, 35c;&#13;
ductions of .artifacts from members, military, teachers,&#13;
Pompeii. In addition to the children under 6, free. October&#13;
enormous earthenware storage hours at Field Museum are 9 a.m.&#13;
jarspOsitioned just inside Hall L, to 5 p.m. daily; 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
replicas of Pompeiian surgical Fridavs, throughout the year.&#13;
instruments,brass weights, and Beginning November 1, the&#13;
household necessities are on Museum will be open from 9&#13;
display. - a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through&#13;
Manyof the items in Hall L were Thursday; weekends 9 a.m. to 5&#13;
unearthed at Boscoreale, Italy, a p.m. ADMISSION IS ,FREE TO&#13;
ALLON FRIDAYS.&#13;
Industrial Psych&#13;
Group Formed&#13;
"The seeds of today are the&#13;
forests of tomorrow. Start&#13;
makingplans now for' a more&#13;
enrichededucation and career&#13;
potential."&#13;
These words are the sound&#13;
advice of the newly formed&#13;
Industrial Psychology Group&#13;
(I.P.G.l' here at Parks ide. The&#13;
groupisacademically and career&#13;
oriented,consisting of students&#13;
withinthe Industrial Psychology&#13;
Concentration and Business&#13;
majors double majoring in&#13;
Psychologyor similar indu~trial--&#13;
basedareas of study. .&#13;
In a recent informal gathering&#13;
of interested students and&#13;
faculty coordinators including&#13;
Dr. Geula Lowenberg and Dr.·&#13;
David Beach, the purpose and&#13;
functionsof the program were&#13;
outlined and. discussed. The&#13;
program, under the Psychology&#13;
major, consists of 6 specific&#13;
COursesand the completion of a&#13;
semester-long Externship with an&#13;
area company. The program not&#13;
only provides credit and&#13;
knowledgeable benefits, but&#13;
actual 'hands on' employment&#13;
experience that may substantially/aid&#13;
a student in obtaining a&#13;
career_aftergraduation.&#13;
There will be future meetings&#13;
of this sort; in addition, guest&#13;
speakers such as previous&#13;
graduates within the Concentration,&#13;
Industrial Psychologists,&#13;
and Industrial Relation experts&#13;
will be invited to share the&#13;
experiences of their professions.&#13;
"The importance. of these&#13;
jnformational gatherings for&#13;
students involved or interested&#13;
in the Industrial Psychology&#13;
Concentration cannot be stressed&#13;
enough," states Dr. Lowenberg.&#13;
"Students can express their&#13;
interest by contacting my office&#13;
in Greenquist 314." Newcomers&#13;
are welcome.&#13;
Cranberry loaf&#13;
Pumpkin loaf&#13;
Minc'erneat Pies&#13;
Taffy Apples&#13;
UECORATED&#13;
CAKES&#13;
Delicious&#13;
Pumpkin Pies&#13;
and&#13;
P~mpkin Slices&#13;
Decorated&#13;
Cookies,&#13;
Cupcakes&#13;
&amp; Donuts&#13;
~'" ~~&#13;
, \&#13;
('all and orde-r parl,:t'&#13;
5&#13;
(1~~1ftPt1~§?08&#13;
J£ ~&#13;
High G-top the JG-.9ged peo.ks '&lt;r'-. ,r-"-'&#13;
of//'e dark Que x movnTo.ins of I1OrTl.ern Zed,&#13;
\)enzor the wClrlock of Govn, waits With&#13;
his deMon stoff, A Lk-theTrustJ. 'Wen;z.or&#13;
seG-rches Th. cliff fo.ce for The approo.chin9&#13;
('!Jure rrom below.&#13;
·Ok. bvd~, tJ., .. Hl b. !!/ .. hucks&#13;
for th'pIZZo.,-&#13;
IIlMI"OIlT I'!CMB PWfJm iiiUV I'll/1 ~1!T1OIt&#13;
~ JOI1N ~ /lII) IOCl1A1lD&lt;;()(X)VIlN mJlllJCTlON ~ JOI1N ~ nlJ1&#13;
I'mK IlSTlNOY ..¥IN[ D«KIN LOO CMIlf.\ eem ~ I1IA rIIlJDI&#13;
JOI1 F1NCM 0lJIJ1~ tlImfT ~OIM WiNtlll ~N&lt;lflAU1~ SInoN nAC ~&#13;
'[)AVID NIVEN nIKNIf.\l1fTl1 JACK 'lIlKIlfN IN 1KlI!T"~CMRl5T1D&#13;
"IlfJlTI1ONTl1r Nlll"&#13;
WIT" t1IlUT ~ I.5. JOt1II\ I"1\L\IC ,CX'II'mf[) III NI/() It:)T~&#13;
nwt'lAT III ~NTl1ONT~ f'IOlIJW) III JOI1N IlMIlO\JIINl: miD RJCMa) l"O:XlIIl&#13;
IlIUCITD III JOIIt ~ K~~~~.~~~n.1lOQI;A~, ~.~ "&#13;
PO 0Ul.11I. QJIlMl/] SlJlll;(STl.I-a-&#13;
,--..-_ ....,. ......-,.... _......&#13;
DAIL-Y, 5:30 A.M. "6:00 P.M.&#13;
CLOSED ~UNDAY ,~&#13;
,. _.1841 ,DOUGUSIVE. 837-8885-&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
LAKE!&#13;
654-0633 NOW PLAYING&#13;
, ,&#13;
'.&#13;
.. t' ,&#13;
..&#13;
Wednesday October 25, 1978&#13;
Pompeii ·Relics Sho.wn&#13;
The Field Museum of. Natural&#13;
History in Chicago has completed&#13;
the four-month task of&#13;
refurbishing its Roman-Etruscan&#13;
H II (Hall Lon the ground level),&#13;
a ~ermanent collection contain-&#13;
. g more than 25 cases of the in .&#13;
Museum's finest specimens. In&#13;
addition to making basic&#13;
structural improve_ments, the&#13;
Museum has installed a new&#13;
lighting system. It has also&#13;
repainted the floor and walls a&#13;
deep blue to accentuate the&#13;
artifacts, and to provide a&#13;
Mediterranean flavor to the&#13;
exhibit hall. The renovation was&#13;
planned to coincide '.Nith ~h_e_ Art&#13;
lnstitute's present exh1b1t1on,&#13;
"Pompeii: A.O. 79."&#13;
One of the glass exhibit cases&#13;
contains valuable Sabatini reproductfons&#13;
of artifacts from&#13;
Pompeii. In addition to the&#13;
enormous earthenware storage&#13;
jars positioned just inside Hall L,&#13;
replicas of Pompeiian surgical&#13;
instruments, brass weights, and&#13;
household necessities are on&#13;
display.&#13;
Many of the items in Hall L were&#13;
unearthed at Boscoreale, Italy, a&#13;
....&#13;
farming villa located one and&#13;
one-half miles north of Pompeii.&#13;
Resting on, the slopes of Mount&#13;
Vesuvius, it flourished along ·&#13;
with Pompeii; shared a similar&#13;
cultural iife; and suffered an&#13;
identical fate from the eruption&#13;
of Vesuvius in 79 A.O. Genuine&#13;
frescoes of the same period are&#13;
mounted on the surround_in'g&#13;
walls of the Roman-Etruscan&#13;
Hali.&#13;
A visit to the newly renovated&#13;
Roman-Etruscan Hall gives a&#13;
glimpse into lives that vanished&#13;
almost · 2,000 years ago at the&#13;
foot of Vesuvius. No additional&#13;
charge is necessary for a visit to&#13;
Hall L. There is only the usual&#13;
entrance fee to the Museum of&#13;
$1.50; families, $3.50; youths 6&#13;
to 17, 50c; seniors, 35c;&#13;
members, military, teachers,&#13;
children under 6, free. October&#13;
hours at Field Museum are 9 a.m.&#13;
to 5 p.m . daily; 9 a.m. to 9 p,.m.&#13;
Fridays.,. throughout the year.&#13;
Beginning November 1, the&#13;
Museum will be open from 9&#13;
a.m. to 4 p .m. Monday through&#13;
Thursday; weekends 9 a.m. to 5&#13;
p.m. ADMISSION 15 ,FREE TO&#13;
ALL ON FRIDAYS.&#13;
Industrial P~ych&#13;
Group Formed&#13;
"The seeds of today are the&#13;
forests of tomorrow. Start&#13;
making plans now for . a more&#13;
enriched education and career&#13;
potential."&#13;
These words are the sound&#13;
advice of the newly formed&#13;
Industrial Psychology Group&#13;
(1.P.G.) here at Parkside. The&#13;
group is academically and career&#13;
oriented, consisting of students&#13;
within the Industrial Psychology&#13;
Concentration and Business&#13;
majors double majoring in&#13;
Psychology or similar indu~trialbased&#13;
areas of study. .&#13;
In a recent informal gathering&#13;
of interested stude..nts and&#13;
faculty coordinators including&#13;
Dr. Geula Lowenberg and Dr.·&#13;
David Beach, the purpose and&#13;
functions of the program were&#13;
outlined and discussed. The&#13;
program, under the Psychology&#13;
major, consists of 6 specific&#13;
courses and the completion of a&#13;
semester-long Externship wiih an&#13;
area company. The program not&#13;
only provides credit and&#13;
knowledgeable benefits, but&#13;
actual 'hands on' employment&#13;
experience that may substantially&#13;
aid a student in obtaining a&#13;
career_after graduation.&#13;
There will be future meetings&#13;
of this sort; in addition, guest&#13;
speakers such as previous&#13;
graduates within the Concentration,&#13;
Industrial Psychologists,&#13;
and Industrial Relation experts&#13;
will be invited to share the&#13;
experiences of their professions.&#13;
"The importance. of these&#13;
jnformational gatherings for&#13;
students involved or interested&#13;
in the Industrial Psychology&#13;
-Concentration cannot be stressed&#13;
enough," states Dr. Lowenberg.&#13;
"Students can express their&#13;
interest by contacting rny office&#13;
in Greenquist 314." Newcomers&#13;
are welcome.&#13;
D-ECORATED&#13;
CAKES&#13;
Cranberry loaf&#13;
Pumpkin loaf&#13;
Minc·emeat Pies&#13;
Taffy Apples '&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
~~&#13;
~&#13;
Delicious&#13;
Pumpkin Pies&#13;
and '&#13;
Pu,mpkin Slices&#13;
Decorated&#13;
Cookies,&#13;
Cupcakes&#13;
&amp; Donuts&#13;
c.-all and order t&gt;arl~·&#13;
DAILY, 5:30 A.M. - 6:00 P.M.&#13;
CLOSED SUNDAY - ~&#13;
1841.DOUGixs IVI. 631-8~9? - ~ ·~ . .- . ~ ·,&#13;
'R!,nger s&#13;
H19h ~iop fl,e J~.99ecl pea.ks&#13;
oft lie dark Ou&lt;t x mounfo.iris of MrThern Zed 1&#13;
'vl,u,zor the warlock of Goun I wa.ifs w;tl,.&#13;
"o.k. bvd~, i~n.i·ll he ~, ~ hucks&#13;
for fJ...e p1 z 20.. •&#13;
his clernof\ sTQ.ff, ALk-fhe1rustJ. 'vlenzor&#13;
seo.rches fhe cliff fQ.Ce for 1he o.pproo.d"in9&#13;
f,!Jure frorn below.&#13;
l'FIIA/"VlfT l'ICT\IID ~ Iii mi fll/1 P'Rf5flfTATD1&#13;
A JOMN C&gt;MIX)(JRNf lffm RICMRD~ rn:xM:nON A flL/1&#13;
PITfR ~NOY Jlf f C)IUIN LOl5 CMJl.fj DETTf Mm r'\IA f'IM:1f&#13;
JON flNCM Ol.NIA tN5.5fT (jf~f WiNfDT A~flA LA~KT 51noN M COOl'M.!&#13;
MVID NIVEN nA&lt;Nlf S/"\ITl1 )AC,; ~ROEN I IKl1rrt1A U1RI.STIO&#13;
-DUITT1 ON TI1f llf-&#13;
\VIT11 MRKT AN~ l.i JOOAR ~ (0/"\Pmf.D l)T IOTA&#13;
5(KffNPI.AT i,J ArmotiT .WITTK ~ l'T JOt1 DMIX)(J f A D ~ ((XUl1&#13;
DIRKrn) i,y JOl1N ~ mt&gt; TMf DIINTAn r,oo,; A J,;AAl'"OJNT I mi PICT\l!tf ~&#13;
~&#13;
NOW PLAYING &#13;
Wednesday October 25,1978&#13;
Chillauket Neils&#13;
by friends of the food co-op&#13;
The key to buying fresh fruit is&#13;
the season. Remember that most&#13;
fruits are sprayed and that the&#13;
thicker the outer skin the more&#13;
protection it provides for thefruit.&#13;
Always scrub fruits and&#13;
vegetables, and when possible&#13;
remove peelings to avoid&#13;
ingesting the chemicals:&#13;
APPLES Peak October through&#13;
March&#13;
Peel when possible to avoid&#13;
indigestible waxing and pesticide&#13;
residue.&#13;
BANANAS Year round&#13;
Buy green to make sure they&#13;
aren't gassed into ripeness or&#13;
apply a slight amount of pressure&#13;
to the meaty area to make sure&#13;
they are not hard. They can be&#13;
refrigerated after they are&#13;
completely_ ripe and although&#13;
skin gets dark, the fruit remains&#13;
unchanged.&#13;
COCONUTS October through&#13;
December&#13;
Fresh coconut can be stored in&#13;
the refrigerator for about a week.&#13;
For longer storage submerge in&#13;
coconut milk and freeze.'&#13;
CRANBERRIES October through&#13;
December '&#13;
, 6&#13;
Fruitful~ . - Facts&#13;
. . . . . ~,.~.....&#13;
If sweetened with honey and&#13;
oranges it makes a good raw&#13;
relish.&#13;
GRAPEFRUIT Septe",ber&#13;
through April&#13;
Thin skinned ones are juiciest.&#13;
GRAPES July through November&#13;
Always wash thoroughly&#13;
because they are usually subject&#13;
to high chemical treatments. Pop&#13;
a bunch in the freezer for 30&#13;
minutes and eat, frozen for a&#13;
treat.&#13;
LEMONS Year ROU9d&#13;
To get more juice, bring to&#13;
room temperature or roll before&#13;
cutting.&#13;
ORANGES December through&#13;
June&#13;
If using the skins to grate upin&#13;
salads, try to find uncolored and&#13;
sprayed ones. \&#13;
PEARS September through Nov-&#13;
'ember&#13;
Pears are rarely waxed so you&#13;
need only scrub them carefully,&#13;
and not peel their skins.&#13;
TANGERINES November through&#13;
January&#13;
Avoid very pale ~varieties _ and to inhibit the growth of&#13;
because they may mean poor bacteria.&#13;
flavor. Bisulfite (a powder) and sulf&#13;
For those fruits not in season, dioxide (a gas) is used ur . In&#13;
or for baking, dried fruits provide carbonated drinks, wine, gra&#13;
about the&gt;' same amount of juice, 'sliced fruits and vege:&#13;
nutrition with half the water bles , de hvdr ated potatoes&#13;
rem9ved. Naturally sweet, they powdered soup mixes, etc.&#13;
offer a concentrated source of Marashino cherries are bleach~&#13;
energy. For diets lacking in iron, with this additive before theyare&#13;
a vital mineral for healthy blood, dyed red or green. Sulfur dioxide&#13;
dried fruit supplies it while has a ~trong, pungent odor which&#13;
serving as an excellent snack and would warn consumers of food&#13;
substitute fo_r candy. (You still containing excessive .amOunts.l:&#13;
have to brush carefully, also tends to make ones nose&#13;
however.) -- itch and leaves a distinctive tast&#13;
The two major 'means to dry in your mouth the detracts fr~&#13;
fruit are sun-drying and artificial the natural flavor of the fruit&#13;
. dehydration by heat evapora- Without bisulfite, sugars in the&#13;
tion. In the latter the fruit is -- fruit tend to react with other&#13;
dipped into a sulfur dioxide bath chemicals. Refrigeration allevi·&#13;
to keep it from darkening. The ates this problem while&#13;
term sun-dried usually applies to ~protecting the flavor. Bisulfite&#13;
unsulfurred fruit, but this doesn't destroys vitamin 8,1 (thiamine)&#13;
always hold true. Golden raisins and therefore is banned by law&#13;
or any fruit that is quite light in from foods rich in this vitamin.&#13;
color has been sulfurred. can also restore a "freshSulfur&#13;
dioxide or bisulfite is color to old or spoiled meaf&#13;
used to prevent discoloration deceptive use is specific&#13;
prohibited by law .&#13;
Dry fruits not treated w&#13;
sulfur and kept refrigerated&#13;
- better for all around nutntl&#13;
and tlavor .&#13;
Dares.iespeciallv the dome&#13;
kind, as found in supermar&#13;
are usually pasturized and&#13;
syrup is frequently added to k&#13;
them from drvirrg out. This&#13;
ridiculous because they&#13;
already very high in naturalsu&#13;
and making them sweeter&#13;
unnecessary.&#13;
Preservatives are not ne&#13;
sary in these products, nor&#13;
corn syrup or sulfur-and sho&#13;
be avoided.&#13;
............ ·······f&#13;
...... .,. _., .&#13;
......... .&#13;
................&#13;
............... , .&#13;
.... ~ .&#13;
......... ~.&#13;
::.::&#13;
.........&#13;
: : : : .: : : : : : : : .. : :: :: - : - - - ... r. ' : :¥-:&#13;
*: - . - , - - - - : - - ""' .. .:::JIIJ":: :&#13;
.:*:&#13;
,.:.'..*~.:...:..&#13;
.................... . ~&#13;
. . ....~ :::::: ::::: : :::: .&#13;
::Jf. . . . . . \ .&#13;
:~: .. ,..... .. .&#13;
............. ~.&#13;
:::~: _. _.,. - -:::::::.,&#13;
.&#13;
-.. :,:~::,,:::. _. - - - - - _. -. - - - - -- _. ,- - - -, _.-&#13;
.~.. • ..•••.••...•••.•...••• ,.4 .••&#13;
..........................&#13;
:~::w .~.*'~"'G.:•••••_:::;:::.::::•..••'-:_:;.., '&#13;
T:~:"f""::::: . .&#13;
. . . ·l·I-:·==: :J:::I::: 'J::::I::: J:.::AN[H:EuIsfEJR~BUiStCH~,j'NiCtB~R~Ew:EI_RJ_sJOF=AI:~=HJ~~~SIER~_- .~BU~S~CH:'~B~U~DW~E:.I~:E:R_.~B~.E~~R~.~:~. ~:S.;T:~lO~U~.I~~,_;M~~.~.~~S~.A~c~I~~~~~~~~J&#13;
........... :~: : : : : : : : : : :.: : .&#13;
....... .&#13;
...... ....&#13;
.... ......&#13;
WIN A FREE&#13;
TRIP TO FLORIDA&#13;
TO COMPETE IN THE COLLE~E S~PER SPORTS FINALS&#13;
,=-:ALSOA FREETRIP TO THE STATE RNALS&#13;
COED TEAMS: 4 MEN, 4 WOMEN EACH&#13;
TO COMPETE IN - VOLLEYBALL, 880 RELAy&#13;
RACE, OBSTACLE· COURSE, TEAM FRISBEE&#13;
TUG-OF-WAR AND 6 PACK PITCH-IN.'&#13;
LOTS OF FUN- PRIZ~S-TROPHIES'&#13;
NO CO~TTO ENTER&#13;
CAMPUS COMPETITION TO BEGIN IN _APPROXIMATELY 2 WEEKS&#13;
SIGN YO~~ TEAM UP TODAY-UNION REC. CTR. DESK&#13;
OR 1. HEIN'S OFFICE, PHYSICAL EDUCAtiON BUILDING&#13;
........ ;-.: .&#13;
: : ::::::: ::::: ::;:.:..&#13;
• • • • r •••••••••••••••••&#13;
. .&#13;
.... :.: ::::::::: .&#13;
.. ···t····&#13;
::::...: .&#13;
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . :...&#13;
-WOW!&#13;
'--'--' . PARKSIDE UNiON&#13;
10:00 a.m. ·4:00 a.m.&#13;
BUTTERSCOTCH DISCS&#13;
STARLIGHT MINTS&#13;
ROOT BEER BARRELS&#13;
CINNAMON DISCS&#13;
COFFEE CANDY&#13;
SOUR BALLS&#13;
JELLY BEANS&#13;
CANDY CORN&#13;
GUM DROPS&#13;
SALTED CASHEWS&#13;
SPANISH PEANUTS&#13;
NATURAL PISTACHIOS&#13;
CHOC. COVERED PEANUTS&#13;
MALTED MILK BALLS&#13;
CHOCOLATE STARS&#13;
CHOC. COVERED RAISINS&#13;
CHOC. PEANUT 'CLUSTERS&#13;
ASSORTED TOFFEE&#13;
BRIDGE MIX&#13;
M &amp;. M (type) CANDIES&#13;
SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
ORANGE SLICES'&#13;
NATURE NUT MIX&#13;
BLANCHED PEANUTS&#13;
'RED PISTACHIOS '&#13;
PEPPERMINT KISSES&#13;
TOOTSIE POPS&#13;
COCONUT TOASTlES&#13;
VANILLA CARAMELS&#13;
BUTTER RUM DISCS&#13;
COUGH DROPS&#13;
SUGAR FREE GUM&#13;
BREATH 'MINTS&#13;
Ii&#13;
I&#13;
... 1.&#13;
••• c, -SPECIAL&#13;
of the Month&#13;
Butterscotch DiscS&#13;
Reg. 50' V2 lb.&#13;
All Nov. 35~&#13;
- 6&#13;
Wednesday October 25, 1918&#13;
Chiwaukll _ News Fruitful-Facts&#13;
I ,&#13;
v(t} • /&#13;
by friends of the food co-op&#13;
The key to buying fresh fruit is&#13;
the season. Remember that most&#13;
fruits are sprayed and that the&#13;
thicker the outer skin the more&#13;
protection it provides for the·&#13;
fruit. Always scrub fruits and&#13;
vegetables, and when possible&#13;
remove peelings to avoid&#13;
ingesting the chemicals .&#13;
APPLES Peak October through&#13;
March&#13;
Peel when possible to avoid&#13;
indigestible waxing and pesticide&#13;
residue .&#13;
BANANAS Year round&#13;
Buy green to make sure they&#13;
aren't gassed into ripeness or&#13;
apply a slight amount pf pressure&#13;
to the meaty area to make sure&#13;
they are not hard . They can be&#13;
refrigerated after they are&#13;
completely ripe and although&#13;
skin gets dark, the fruit remains&#13;
unchanged .&#13;
COCONUTS October through&#13;
December&#13;
Fresh coconut can be stored in&#13;
the refrigerator for about a week'.&#13;
For longer storage submerge in&#13;
coconut milk and freeze .' ·&#13;
CRANBERRIES October through&#13;
December -&#13;
If sweetened with honey and&#13;
orang;s it makes a good raw&#13;
relish.&#13;
GRAPEFRUIT Septen:iber&#13;
through ApriJ&#13;
Thin skinned ones are juiciest .&#13;
GRAPES July through November&#13;
Always wash thoroughly&#13;
because they are usually subject&#13;
to high chemical treatments. Pop&#13;
a bunch in the freezer for 30&#13;
minutes and eat, frozen for a&#13;
treat .&#13;
LEMONS Year Round&#13;
To get more juice, bring to&#13;
room tempe~ature or roll before&#13;
cutting.&#13;
ORANGES December through&#13;
June&#13;
If using the skins to grate up_in&#13;
salads, try to find uncolored and&#13;
sprayed ones .&#13;
PEARS Sepfember through Nov-&#13;
'ember&#13;
Pears are Farely waxed so you&#13;
need only scrub them carefully,&#13;
and not peel their skins.&#13;
TANGERINES November through&#13;
January&#13;
Avoid very pale varieties _&#13;
because they may mean poor&#13;
flavor.&#13;
For those fruits not in season,&#13;
or for baking, dried fruits provide&#13;
about the · same amount of&#13;
nutrition with half the water&#13;
removed . Naturally sweet, they&#13;
offer a concentrated sourc;:e of ·&#13;
energy . For diets lacking in iron,&#13;
a vital mineral for healthy blood,&#13;
dried fruit supplies it while&#13;
serving as an excellent snack and&#13;
substitute for candy. (You still&#13;
nave to brush carei ully ,&#13;
however.)&#13;
The two major ·means to dry&#13;
fruit are sun-drying and artificial&#13;
. dehydration by heat evaporation.&#13;
In the latter the fruit is -&#13;
dipped into a sulfur dioxide bath&#13;
to keep it from darkening. The&#13;
term sun-dried usually applies to&#13;
unsulfurred fruit, but this doesn't&#13;
always hold true. Golden raisins&#13;
or any fruit that is quite light in&#13;
color has been sulfurred .&#13;
Sulfur dioxide or bisu lfite is&#13;
used to prevent discoloration&#13;
and to inhibit the growth f&#13;
bacteria.&#13;
0&#13;
Bisulfite (a powder) and sulf&#13;
dioxide (a gas) is used ur&#13;
carbonated drinks, wine, grain&#13;
· · ' 1· d f · ~ 1u1ce, s ice ru1ts and vegetables,&#13;
_l'.lehydrated potatoes&#13;
powdered soup mixes, et '&#13;
Marashino cherries are bleach~&#13;
with this additive before they are&#13;
dyed red or green . Sulfur dioxide&#13;
has a strong, pungent odor which&#13;
would warn consumer,s of food . . s containing excessive.amounts. It&#13;
also tends to make ones nose&#13;
itch and leaves a distinctive taste&#13;
in your mouth the detracts from&#13;
the natural flavor of the fruit.&#13;
Without bisulfite·, sugars in the&#13;
fruit tend to react with other&#13;
chemicals . Refrigeration alleviates&#13;
this problem while&#13;
· protecting the flavor. Bisulfite&#13;
destroys vitamin 8-1 (thiamine)&#13;
and therefore is banned by law&#13;
from foods rich in this vitamin. It&#13;
can also restore a "fresh-red"&#13;
color to old or spoiled meaf this&#13;
deceptive use is specifically&#13;
prohibited by law. ~&#13;
Dry fruits not treated with&#13;
sulfur and kept refrigerated are&#13;
• better for all around nutrition&#13;
and flavor.&#13;
............... . ..... . .... . ..... ... .......... ' . ...... . . . .. : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :---: .......... . ... . ........... : : : : : : : : : : : : : :-: : : : : : : : : : : -: . .... . ........ . . . . . ....... .&#13;
i~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::::&#13;
: : : : :.: : : : : : : : :: : : :: : : : : : : : : : : . ..... . . : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : . .... . .&#13;
WIN A FREE&#13;
TRIP TO FLORIDA&#13;
TO COMPETE IN THE COLLE~E-S~PER ~~ORTS FINALS&#13;
. ;-;ALSO A FREE TRIP TO THE STATE FINALS&#13;
- COED TEAMS: 4 MEN, 4 WOMEN EACH&#13;
TO COMPETE IN -VOLLEYBALL, 880 RELA y&#13;
RACE, OBSTACLE -COURSE, TEAM FRISBEE&#13;
TUG-OF-WAR AND · 6 PACK PITCH:.IN. I&#13;
'LOTS OF FUN- PRIZl;:S-TROPHIES'&#13;
NQ CO~T TO l;:NTER&#13;
CAMPUS COMPETIT~ON TO BEGIN IN APPROXIMATEL y 2 WEEKS&#13;
SIGN YOU~ TEAM UP TODAY- UNION REC. CTR. DESK&#13;
OR l. HEIN'S OFFICE, PHYSICAL -EDUCATION BUILmNG , - ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC., BREWERS OF ANHEUSER-BUSCH•&#13;
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ST. LOUIS, MO . U.S.A. 1&#13;
........ . . . : : : . . . : : : : : ~ . . . : : : ' . .. ......... : : : : ~ ... : : : : : : : : : : .. : : : : : •: : : : .&#13;
Dates, especially the domestic&#13;
kind, as found in · supermarkets,&#13;
are usually pasturized and corn&#13;
syrup is frequently added to keep&#13;
them from dryin-&amp; out. This is&#13;
ridiculous because they are&#13;
already very high in natural sugar&#13;
and making them&#13;
unnecessary.&#13;
Preservatives are not necessary&#13;
in these products, nor is&#13;
corn syrup or sulfur ...-and should&#13;
be avoided.&#13;
WOW!&#13;
What A Selection&#13;
Ii: (l}l~i:&#13;
~wi:i:t ~~oppi:&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
10:00 a.in. -4:00 a.m. ·&#13;
BUTTERSCOTCH DISCS&#13;
STARLIGHT MINTS&#13;
ROOT BEER BARRELS&#13;
CINNAMON DISCS&#13;
COFFEE CANOY&#13;
SOUR BALLS&#13;
JELLY BEANS&#13;
CANOY CORNGUM&#13;
DROPS&#13;
SALTED CASHEWS&#13;
SPANISH PEANUTS&#13;
NATURAL PISTACHIOS&#13;
CHOC. COVERED PEANUTS&#13;
MAL TEO MILK BALLS&#13;
CHOCOLATE STARS&#13;
CHOC. COVERED RAISINS&#13;
CHOC. PEANUT -CLUSTERS&#13;
ASSORTED TOFFEE&#13;
BRIDGE MIX&#13;
M &amp; M (type) CANDIES&#13;
SPEARMINT LEAVES&#13;
ORANGE SLICES '&#13;
NATURE NUT MIX&#13;
BLANCHED PEANUTS&#13;
RED PISTACHIOS '&#13;
PEPPERMINT KISSES&#13;
TOOTSIE POPS&#13;
COCONUT TOASTIES&#13;
VANILLA CARAMELS&#13;
BUTTER RUM DISCS&#13;
COUGH DROPS&#13;
SUGAR FREE GUM&#13;
BREATH MINTS&#13;
·sPECIAL&#13;
of the Month&#13;
Butterscotch Discs&#13;
Reg. so• f2 lb .&#13;
All-Nov. 35• &#13;
,s~., october25,1978&#13;
flectra&#13;
~-&#13;
Greek Music Synthe~ized&#13;
st Wegner learnecf&#13;
AUgu .&#13;
~a pollack was trYing to&#13;
R/I. sting style of muSIC&#13;
,ntere .&#13;
.. uc Arts production&#13;
[)ramahe SUggested an&#13;
fled'" I· interesting a tarnatrve. .&#13;
t enlist the talents of&#13;
1\0 sic major Geoffrey&#13;
~:score the music? The&#13;
f&#13;
that SUggestion wi II be&#13;
o od· , duringthe pr uctron 5&#13;
IJdOber 27,28 and 29&#13;
. 2 synthesizers/ an·&#13;
109 d&#13;
rc clavichord, ~apes an&#13;
subtlelittle I1)USlC makers,&#13;
asday wind chimes, Geoff&#13;
posinga half scored, half&#13;
isedpiece that will adapt&#13;
to each performance. The&#13;
willbe set up to portray&#13;
acters as they develop&#13;
t the action of the&#13;
'1here are leit motifs that&#13;
and change as the&#13;
do," Geoff .savs. "If a&#13;
does nol'develoD, then&#13;
by Nicki Kroll&#13;
the music will not either"&#13;
. The synthesizers and ~IectronlC-e9u'Pm..ent&#13;
suggest an atonal&#13;
sounlfd which Geoif feels "lends&#13;
rtse very well" to the tone of&#13;
the play. Although the Greeks&#13;
did nave set rhvthrmc patterns&#13;
Geoff feels that they probablv&#13;
utilized a good deal of sound&#13;
that fit into the pattern o~/&#13;
con~emporary music. "I have a&#13;
feeling that Greek musicians&#13;
improvised as well," he added&#13;
"and Sophocles himself said that&#13;
the music is important to th&#13;
play:" That is why J he- feel~&#13;
comfortable using a 'half&#13;
improvised score.&#13;
This is not Geoff'sJirst endeavor&#13;
at composing music. He plays&#13;
the org~n at St. Luke's Episcopal&#13;
Church In Racine and has written&#13;
music for' it which is used at&#13;
various times throughout the&#13;
year. He enjoys playing the&#13;
organ because he feels that it&#13;
on synthesizers&#13;
I SI'arTed as&#13;
a Ranger&#13;
wriTer&#13;
lends itself to all kinds of . A d h musrc&#13;
hn e feels that his training o~&#13;
t e organ has been an aid to his&#13;
approach to the synthesizer. "1&#13;
approach-the synthesizer as I d&#13;
an organ," he says and finds that&#13;
he can utilize the layers and&#13;
organ stops on it to create the&#13;
sounds. that he wants.&#13;
Ceoff will be graduating from&#13;
Parks Ide in December and hopes&#13;
to g~o .H~nover, Germany to&#13;
study. with organist-composer&#13;
MatthIas Kern in March. If all&#13;
g~es as he plans, he and his wife&#13;
will be staying there for a year&#13;
But, . for now, Geoff is here&#13;
w~rkl~g on a project that, to this&#13;
wrlte.r s knowledge, is probably&#13;
the first student composed score&#13;
for a Parkside production.&#13;
Please, don't wait for my review&#13;
of the play in the Rangers&#13;
October 31 issue. Get out and&#13;
see and hear it for yourself.&#13;
Instant Ancient Jewe',y&#13;
Suppose you need some&#13;
authentic looking Greek Jewelry&#13;
about 3,000 years old. Unless&#13;
you have access to a museum's&#13;
treasures or a Mycenaen&#13;
archeological dig, it can prove a&#13;
problem; exactly the one faced&#13;
by University of WisconsinParks&#13;
ide costume designer&#13;
Virginia Slater and her student&#13;
assistants in providing decorative&#13;
accents for the production&#13;
of Sophocles' "Electra" next&#13;
weekend. Their solution. make&#13;
them and provide "instant aging"&#13;
with paints and glazes&#13;
Designs were adapted from&#13;
pictures of articles dating from&#13;
that era and executed In venous&#13;
metals including poured pewter,&#13;
NEXT IS5UEwhich&#13;
the studenLS ca t 10&#13;
handmade mold, " parr of&#13;
18-lOch swords also was cratted&#13;
for the production uSing hea&#13;
metal blades and wrapped&#13;
decorative hilts AU 01 the&#13;
designs. Including the serpent on&#13;
the hilt of one of the sword)&#13;
reflect the orBanlC shape'&#13;
favored by early Creek clrtl\anS&#13;
Slater POinted out Ele&lt;tra ~11l&#13;
be presented r"day. Saturday&#13;
and Sunday (Oct 27·28·29~at 8&#13;
pm with a matinee at 2 p m on&#13;
Sunday rn the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater at UW·Park Ide&#13;
Admusron IS S2 for stud n1 and&#13;
senior CItizens, S3 for the en ral&#13;
pubbc&#13;
Will You Have&#13;
A Job When You&#13;
Graduate?&#13;
You like catching, mounting&#13;
and cataloging butterfl~s. Is&#13;
there any reason for you to&#13;
believe your career will-take off&#13;
- after you graduate? In the next&#13;
. issue of Insider-the free'&#13;
supplement to your college&#13;
newpaper from Ford---&lt;:ollege&#13;
degrees.and careers they prepare&#13;
you for will be discussed&#13;
And while you're enjoying&#13;
your Insider, check out he&#13;
sharp new Fords for '79 Like&#13;
the New Breed of Mustang&#13;
with dramatic new sports&#13;
car styling. And FlestdWundercar&#13;
Ford's fun little&#13;
Import You can bet Ford&#13;
has Justabout everything&#13;
you'd want to dnve .&#13;
See If your college education&#13;
and career hopes are working&#13;
together, read the next Insider.&#13;
And check out the new lineup&#13;
of '79 Fords. They'll both put&#13;
you on the nght road.&#13;
So you're -going to college to be&#13;
a lepidopterist.&#13;
Lookfor InsiderFord's&#13;
continuing series of&#13;
college nev'JSPc3persu~ments.&#13;
Socan you,&#13;
s&#13;
J3JJL&#13;
Th' 5"'&#13;
~ endorsement. was&#13;
t and paid for by&#13;
~ foundation for the&#13;
"'&#13;
l1erm ent of school&#13;
newspapers&#13;
,&#13;
""","""it organization&#13;
FORD&#13;
FORO DIVISION&#13;
J , october 25, J 978&#13;
,J11esuO 'R!,nger&#13;
Electra&#13;
~ -&#13;
Greek Music SJnthe~ized&#13;
ust Wegner learnea&#13;
,~e~u~ollack was trying to&#13;
of . Rh. ;eresting style of m~sic&#13;
afl in atic Arts production ~r orarn d '.,e he suggeste an in f'ectra, 1 t· · . teresting a terna 1ve . .&#13;
Pe J IY in nlist the talents of&#13;
a- not e ff ' sic major Geo rey&#13;
,i1 rnu · 1 Th on to score the ".1us1c .· 11 be&#13;
of that suggestion w1_ ,e&#13;
during the production s&#13;
october 27, 28 and_ 29 .&#13;
2 synthesizers, an ,sing - d trrC clavichord, t_apes an .&#13;
btle little music makers,&#13;
. ~\lay wind chimes, Geoff&#13;
pasing a half scored, half ·&#13;
om ·sed piece that will adapt OVI ,&#13;
1 to each performance. The&#13;
,ic will be set up to portray&#13;
;racters as they develop&#13;
ghout the action of the&#13;
, ·There are leit motifs that&#13;
el0P and change as the&#13;
acters do," Geoff ·says. "If a&#13;
acter does not 'develop, then&#13;
by Nicki Kroll&#13;
the music will not either ,,&#13;
. The synthesi zers and ~lectron1c&#13;
equipment suggest an aton I&#13;
sou~fd which Geoff feels "len;s&#13;
itse very well" to the tone of&#13;
the play . Although the Greeks&#13;
did nave set rf;iythmic patteii&#13;
G~off feels that they proba~i5;&#13;
utilized a good deal of s d . oun s that fit into the pattern o t&#13;
con~emporary music. "I have a&#13;
feeling· that Greek music· . . 1ans&#13;
improvised as well," he added&#13;
"and Sophocles himself said that&#13;
the music is important to the&#13;
play ." That is why ; he- feels&#13;
comfortable using a ·half&#13;
improvised score .&#13;
This is not Geoff's first endeavqr&#13;
at composing music . He plays&#13;
the organ at St. Luke's Episcopal&#13;
Church in Racine and has written&#13;
music fo r it which is used at&#13;
various times throughout the&#13;
year. He enjoys playing the&#13;
organ be cause he feels that it&#13;
synthesizers&#13;
lends itself t o all kinds of . A d h music hn e feels that his training o~&#13;
t e organ has been an aid to his&#13;
approach to the synthesizer. " I&#13;
approach the synthesizer as I d&#13;
an organ," he says and finds tha~&#13;
he can utilize the layers and&#13;
organ stops on it to create the&#13;
sounds_ that he wants.&#13;
Geoff will be graduating from&#13;
Parkside in December at1d hopes&#13;
to go_ to . H?nover, Germany to&#13;
study . with organist-_composer&#13;
Matthias Kern in March . If all&#13;
goes as he plans, he and his wife&#13;
will be staying there for a year&#13;
But, . for now, Geoff is her~&#13;
w~rki~g on a project that, to this&#13;
writer s knowledge, is probably&#13;
the first student composed score&#13;
for a Parkside production&#13;
Please, don't wait for my revie~&#13;
of th~ play in the Rangers&#13;
October 31 issue . Get out and&#13;
see and hear it for yourself.&#13;
Instant Ancient Jewelry&#13;
Suppose you need some&#13;
authentic looking Greek 1ewelr&#13;
about 3,000 years old Unless&#13;
you have access to a museum's&#13;
treasures or a Mycenaen&#13;
archeological dig, it can prove a&#13;
problem: exactly the one faced&#13;
by University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
costume designer&#13;
Virginia Slater and her student&#13;
assistants in providing decorative&#13;
accents for the production&#13;
of Sophocles' "Electra" next&#13;
weekend . Their solution. make&#13;
them and provide "instant aging"&#13;
with paints and glazes.&#13;
Designs were adapted from&#13;
pictures of articles dating from&#13;
that era and executed in variou&#13;
meta!s including poured p wtt!I ,&#13;
n1or&#13;
public&#13;
I sTarTed as&#13;
a Ranger&#13;
wriler '&#13;
NEXT ISSUEs&#13;
&#13;
so can you . .&#13;
33f&#13;
This '&#13;
bo endorsement . was&#13;
UQht and , th paid for by&#13;
e fou d b n ation for the&#13;
etterment&#13;
Q&#13;
of school&#13;
newspapers&#13;
non.Prophit organization&#13;
• ..&#13;
So you're going to college to be -a lepidopterist&#13;
Will You Have&#13;
A Job When You&#13;
Graduate?&#13;
You like catching, mounting&#13;
and cataloging butterfl~s. Is&#13;
there any reason for you to&#13;
believe your career will-take off&#13;
- after you graduate? In the next&#13;
issue of Insider-the free ·&#13;
supplement to your college&#13;
newpaper from Ford-eollege&#13;
degrees-and careers they prepare&#13;
you for will be discussed.&#13;
And while you're enjoying&#13;
Look for InsiderFord's&#13;
continuing series of&#13;
college~per supplements.&#13;
your Insider, ch c ou&#13;
sharp new Fords for '79. Lt&#13;
he ew Breed of Mus ng&#13;
with drama ic ew s&#13;
car styling. And Ft&#13;
Wundercar. Ford's n It I&#13;
import. You can be F d&#13;
has Just about everything&#13;
you'd want o n e.&#13;
See 1f your college e uca ,on&#13;
and career hopes re 1n9&#13;
together, read the next Ins, er.&#13;
And chec out the new lineup&#13;
of '79 Fords. They'll bo pu&#13;
you on the right road.&#13;
FORD&#13;
FORD DIVISIO &#13;
- t;)aDg~r'&#13;
Wednesday Octo.er 25, J978 -~&#13;
ConcertRefie. **-*******************************&#13;
Little ,Feat,-Big Sound&#13;
was given plenty of room to&#13;
stretch out as th~ band "showed&#13;
Where have all the good times its stuff" in songs like "Time&#13;
gone? This article attempts to Loves a Hero" and "Dixie&#13;
answer this question. at least in Chicken.",&#13;
Sometimes the instrumental part, by pointing out that some&#13;
good times are still .to be had; experiments would brea~ down&#13;
one just has to know where to slowly into a random playing of a&#13;
few notes, like a car idling, only look for them f&#13;
Little Feat, America's greatest, to take off suddenly in a burst 0&#13;
unknown, dixie-flavored rock drumming or a- lightning slide&#13;
~nd roll band, played to about guitar solo. Other times the&#13;
S,OOOpeople last Wednesday melody would jold in upon itself&#13;
night in the UW-Madison Field until only the rhythm section of&#13;
House. Playing very much in the bass, drums and congas was left,&#13;
style of their recent, twin, live belting out a frenzied cardb bean&#13;
release,"Waiting for Columbus," type beat. .&#13;
the band played frofn 8:00 till ,No time was lost between&#13;
10:30 p.m. Little Feat, which songs; In .fact time ~as barely&#13;
consists of two quitar players,-,taken to Introduce Little Feat.sfeaturing&#13;
band leader lowell three surprise. guests. leslie&#13;
George on bottle-neck slide West, r?Ck guitar play:r from&#13;
guitar a drummer a percussion- Mountam, known for his hard,&#13;
ist, and a keyboard player (by far bluesy playing, joined in on two&#13;
the most clean-cut member of songs: one about half-way&#13;
the group), were at no loss for through the show a~d one in&#13;
energy asthey jumped, boogied, their last encore. Craig Fuller of&#13;
ran and punched Itheir way Pure Prairie League, a. cou~try&#13;
through a set of their more well rock group, accompanied LIttle&#13;
known numbers. Feat on rhythm guitar for&#13;
However, the concert proved another song and John Call,&#13;
to be much more than just a formerly of Pure Prairie League,&#13;
repeat of "Waiting for Colum-' accompanied the band for i'&#13;
bus." Their own individual blend moving version of "wdlin'," a&#13;
of blues, latin, dixje. and jazz song also recorded by linda&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
Rondstadt a few years ago.&#13;
lowell George, who writes&#13;
many of the group's songs.and&#13;
sings a good deal of them too,&#13;
complained of a bad case of&#13;
laryngitis but still had the&#13;
strength to keel? his growling,&#13;
cowboy voice on the beam.&#13;
Little Feat is a very eclectic&#13;
band. Their instrumental sound&#13;
sometimes reminds one of the&#13;
Allman Brothers and at other&#13;
times of Santana. ATheir ballads&#13;
have a great western feeling but&#13;
.their rock background always&#13;
shines through. Their synthesis&#13;
of styles, their talents as&#13;
songwriters, musicians, and&#13;
singers (the band has three&#13;
'excellent vocalists) should make&#13;
Little Feat a popu lar band for&#13;
many yearsto come despite their&#13;
current lack of nation-wide&#13;
/&#13;
exposure.&#13;
They have made about a half&#13;
a dozen records so far, and seem&#13;
to grow and develop with each&#13;
one, but have never come off&#13;
with a, really successful tour.&#13;
Who knows, perhaps they should&#13;
stay away from the big time&#13;
success for the sake of their&#13;
music. their sanity and their&#13;
audiences.&#13;
Neil Young in Mad City&#13;
by G. J. Steimle -the show was strictly Neil Young&#13;
solo. He sang, played harp and&#13;
alternated between acoustic and&#13;
twelve string guitars and piano.&#13;
The music changed to electric&#13;
with the addition of his back up&#13;
band Crazy Horse. Crazy Horse&#13;
has been Neil's back up&#13;
musicians for a very long time,&#13;
and they play extremely well&#13;
together. As Neil said, "Let's play&#13;
sornerock and roll," and that's&#13;
what went down the rest of the&#13;
evening.&#13;
The set finished off with&#13;
Cortez the Killer, Cinnamon Girl&#13;
and Like a Hurricane, but the&#13;
audience would not let him go.&#13;
The coliseum shook with&#13;
applausethree separatetimes to&#13;
bring him' back. Their final&#13;
encore was the title track from&#13;
his worst selling lP, "Tonight's&#13;
the Night." .&#13;
This concert was one of the&#13;
best I have ever· ~een. Very&#13;
seldom doesone see a performer&#13;
of Neil's caliber' play over two&#13;
TONIGHT'S THENIGHT.&#13;
't was definitely the audience'snight,&#13;
October 16,for Neil&#13;
Young's concert at Madison's&#13;
DaneCounty Coliseum.&#13;
The show started with some&#13;
taped music. First was [imi&#13;
Hendrix's version of "The Star&#13;
Spangled Banner" followed by&#13;
the Beatie classic' A Day in the&#13;
life." During this bit, roadies,&#13;
who were dressed in [awas&#13;
costumes, (those hooded junk&#13;
collecting people with glowing&#13;
eyes from Star Wars) scurried&#13;
around the stage setting up&#13;
equipment, props and atmosphere&#13;
for what was to be a very&#13;
interesting and excellent evening&#13;
of music.&#13;
Neil's .first song was "Sugar&#13;
Mountain" and he continued&#13;
with a combination of new songs&#13;
from his ,latest album titled&#13;
Comes A Time (Warner Bros.)&#13;
and old tunes. The first half of&#13;
hours with such talent ~nd&#13;
intensity.&#13;
There are two things that&#13;
made Neil Young's concert great.&#13;
Number one was the way Neil is&#13;
able to vocalize his thoughts and&#13;
emotion to the audience with&#13;
songs like "The Loner" and "The&#13;
Needle and the Damage Done."&#13;
The lyrics are more than just&#13;
words. There is feeling and&#13;
substance 'in his presentation.&#13;
The second and equally&#13;
important thing was-Neil's and&#13;
the band's ability to reproduce&#13;
their sound. -Neil sang in his&#13;
unique and usual shaky voice&#13;
and wasonly occasionally joined&#13;
in backups in his bassplayer and&#13;
guitarist. On quite a few of the&#13;
rockers,the crowd wastreated to&#13;
some,heavyduty jamming which&#13;
brought them whistling and&#13;
cheering to their f~et. Throughout&#13;
the performance the people&#13;
attending proved that Mad City&#13;
can rock n' roll witho_utbeing too&#13;
rowdy.&#13;
(Living It Up&#13;
Theatre &amp; Films&#13;
Oct. 25 - Nov. 1 - Play; "The Freeway" Milw. PAC, Todd'll&#13;
Theatre 25th &amp; 21st - 2 &amp; 7 :30 p.m., 26th &amp; 27th, 8:30 p.rn., 28th,7:&#13;
o.m .. &amp;29th,7:30o.m. . "&#13;
Oct. 26 &amp; 27 - Play, "The Mousetrap 8:1S p.m. at Malt It&#13;
Theatre Burlington. Presented by The Haylofters.&#13;
Oct. 26' - Film, "lost &amp; Found: Search for Our Ethnic heri&#13;
Racine Main l.ibrarv Meeting Room, also "Reflecti?ns in Space."&#13;
Oct. 27 - Film, "Beau Geste" 8 p.m. Vogel Hall Mdw. PAC.&#13;
Oct. 27-29 - Milwaukee Ballet, "Swan Lake" 27th &amp; 28th, 8 p&#13;
29th,2 p.m. PAC.&#13;
Oct. 27-29 - Play, "The Guardsmen" by the Milwaukee Players&#13;
&amp; 28th, 8 p.m., 29th, 2 &amp; 7 p.m. at Pabst ~heatre.&#13;
Oct. 28 - Film, "The Corsican Brothers" 8 p.m. Vogel Hall PAC.&#13;
Oct. 31 &amp; Nov. 1 - "Aladdin" by Edgewood Agency, 10 a.m. &amp; 12:&#13;
p.m. at the Pabst l'heatre.&#13;
Nov. 1 - Comic Opera, "The Italian Straw Hat" bv.the Skylig&#13;
Theatre, Uihlein Hall Pac at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Music&#13;
Nov. 1 - Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, Young People's Con&#13;
Uihlein Hall, PAC 10:30a.m. &amp;-1 p.m. .&#13;
Nov. 1 - Cellist, Steve Doane of the Wis. Conservatory of M&#13;
works of Bach, Beethoven, Prokofiev, &amp; Janacek. Accompanied&#13;
Rebecca Penneys. Vogel Hall, PAC 8 p.m.&#13;
"-&#13;
Exhibits&#13;
Thru Oct. 29 - Art, "The Spirit of Texas" an exhibit b'y 16Texas&#13;
at John Michael Kohler Arts Center, 608 New York Ave. She&#13;
Thru Nov. 12 - Watercolor Wis - 78 by Dennis Doonan at W&#13;
Museum, 2519 Northwestern, Racine, Photography Gallery.&#13;
Thru Oct. 31 - Weavings &amp; wall hangings at Mt. Pleasant L&#13;
Church (Racine) mornings Tues. &amp; Fri., all day Wed.&#13;
Thru Oct. 31 - Art, Allen Gallery exhibit of paintings &amp; dra&#13;
Magin Lounge PAC.&#13;
,&#13;
SST in Racine&#13;
The "1901 Club" of Racine will, guaranteed in every minute&#13;
present a single performance by this play which BroomStreet&#13;
the nationally famous Brror-i developed over the past&#13;
Street Theater from Madisor, years. ,&#13;
Wisconsin on Saturday Novem- THE NEW YORK TIMESc&#13;
ber 4, 8 p.m. at the Racine Broom Street Theater'splays&#13;
Theater Guild, 2519 Northwest- funny as anything by the&#13;
ern Avenue in Racine. Brothers." Tickets to seethis&#13;
Broom Street Theater, the only time only showing by&#13;
original theater of Its kind in the touring experimental theater&#13;
midwest, will perform its new available at the RacineTh&#13;
ninety minute comedy play Guild Box office. Call 633-42&#13;
ACTION COMICS, written and tor information and reservati&#13;
directed by Broom Street Artistic 'Tickets are $4.)5 in advance&#13;
Director Joel Cersmann. AC- \$4.75 at the door.&#13;
TION COMICS is a series of Broom Street Theater has&#13;
- amazing tales torn~ fro';; the funded by the Rockefell&#13;
. Rages of the great adventure Foundation, The National&#13;
comic books of our time. dowment for the Arts, andt&#13;
Superheroes, wild humor and Wisconsin Arts Board.&#13;
action .r packed thrills are ~&#13;
tJf' UW-PARKSIOE&#13;
MEN-WOMEN _&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK IN ,&#13;
Youcan go a long way in a few shQrt years.&#13;
~~ 1 _&#13;
',; .&#13;
I&#13;
When you sign Jp for the Army today you can als' f E&#13;
see the w9r!d. but it could be !he mos~ rewar'ding. a sign up or urope. It may not "be the easiest way to .. Call \&#13;
You II be thereto do a lob. You'lI soldier. Bivouac in tho m d f G f '" A&#13;
an early August sun in the valley of the Rhine and fight the Chili uJ 0 ra enwoehr 5 rainy season. squint into' rmy Opportu-nl"tl"es&#13;
And just about the time you wish yOU'had never 'left thl Sanuary Winds of Ho~enfels.&#13;
10Munich. e.ating bfatwurst In Frankfurt. or learning the slope f ~tes ..you II be celebrating the Oktoberfest 657-61 ft:1&#13;
. been..'"Y0r:!~It. so armlsch ..And all the tough Work Will, have '7&#13;
Join the people who've joined the A '. CONTACT&#13;
~__ :_":..;.-~:,',_", ._._.....~~.~........""~....... ~.......~.... ~.......~~y., ,AllftlIlJ'I()pporhll1ltYfIllPlilVlil, .,,~' RM.209CAlLSS3-&#13;
1I•••••••••••••••••••••••• ..; "f_·_·_'_'_"_~'~...".-'"..!o. ... ',«;',,.. '&lt;.': 1 .&lt;;&lt;',,,,-) ~;) .,,'::.'.$' ......'"'., '"'d' ~ ••&#13;
ACAPUU&#13;
JAN 2-9, 1979&#13;
homS359&#13;
• ROUND TRIP AIR&#13;
• DELUXE lODGING&#13;
• BREAKFAST DAilY&#13;
• GROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
• GROUP ESCORT&#13;
TIPS &amp; TAXES&#13;
Wednesday October 25, 1978 .&#13;
Concert Rwiews **-*******************************&#13;
Little feat;-Big Sound&#13;
was given plenty of room to&#13;
stretch out as th~ band "showed&#13;
Where have all the good times its stuff" in songs like "Time&#13;
Loves a Hero" and "Dixie gone? This article attempts ~o ,&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
answer this quertion, at least m Chicken."&#13;
Sometimes the instrumental part, by pointing out that some d&#13;
good times are still _to be had; experiments woµld break own&#13;
one just has to know where to slowly into a random playing of a&#13;
few notes, like a car idling, only look for them f&#13;
Little Feat, America's greatest, to take off suddenly in a burst o&#13;
unknown, dixie-flavored rock drumming or a lightning slide&#13;
•-and roll band, played to about guitar solo. Other times the&#13;
5,000 people last Wednesday melody would _fold in upon itself&#13;
night in the UW-Madison Field until only the rhythm section of&#13;
House. Playing very much in the bass drums and congas was left,&#13;
style of their recent, twin, live belt;'ng out a frenzied carr:ibbean&#13;
release, "Waiting for Columbus," type beat. ·&#13;
the band played froln 8:00 till No time was lost between&#13;
10:30 p.m. Little Feat, which songs; in fact time ~as barel,y&#13;
consists of two quitar players, · taken to introduce Little Feats -&#13;
featuring band leader Lowell three surprise guests. Leslie&#13;
George on bottle-neck slide West, rock guitar player from&#13;
guitar, a drummer, a percussion- Mountain, known for his hard,&#13;
ist, and a keyboard player (by far bluesy playing, joined in on two&#13;
the most clean-cut member of songs : one about half-way&#13;
the group), were at no loss for through the show and one in&#13;
energy as they jumped, boogied, their last encore. Craig Fuller of&#13;
ran and punched !their way Pure Prairie League, a country&#13;
through a set of their more well rock group, accompanied Little&#13;
known numbers. . Feat on rhythm .guitar for&#13;
However, the concert proved another song and John Call,&#13;
to be much more than just a formerly of Pure Prairie League,&#13;
repeat of "Waiting for Colum- ~ccompanied the band for ,a&#13;
bus." Their own individual blend moving version of "Willin'," a&#13;
of b!ues, Latin, dixie, and jazz song also recorded by Linda&#13;
Rondstadt a few years ago.&#13;
Lowell George, who writes&#13;
many of the group's songs and&#13;
sings a good deal of them too,&#13;
complained of a bad case of&#13;
laryngitis but still had the&#13;
strength to keep his growling,&#13;
cowboy voice on the beam .&#13;
Little Feat is a very eclectic&#13;
band. Their instrumental sound&#13;
sometimes reminds one of the&#13;
Allman Brothers and at other&#13;
times of Santana. Their ballads&#13;
have a great weste'fn feeling but&#13;
their rock background always&#13;
shines through . Their ·synthesis&#13;
of styles, their talents as&#13;
songwriters, musicians, and&#13;
singers (the band has three&#13;
·excellent vocalists) should make&#13;
Little Feat a popular band for&#13;
many years to come despite their&#13;
current lack of nation-wide /&#13;
exposure.&#13;
They have made about a half&#13;
a dozen records so far, and seem&#13;
to grow and develop with each&#13;
one, but have never come off&#13;
with a . really successful tour.&#13;
Who knows, perhaps they should&#13;
stay away from the big time&#13;
success for the sake of their&#13;
music; their sanity and their&#13;
audiences.&#13;
Neil Young in MIid City&#13;
by G. J. Steimle&#13;
TONIGHT'S TH E NIGHT ..&#13;
't was definitely the audience's&#13;
night, October 16, for Nei l&#13;
Young's concert at M ad ison's&#13;
Dane County Coliseum.&#13;
The show started with some&#13;
taped music . First was Jimi&#13;
Hendrix's version of "The Star&#13;
Spangled Banner" followed by&#13;
the Beatie classic 'A Day in the&#13;
Life." During this bit, roadies,&#13;
who were dressed in Jawas&#13;
costumes, (those hooded junk&#13;
collecting people with glowing&#13;
eyes from Star Wars) scurried&#13;
around the stage setting up&#13;
equipment, props and atmosphere&#13;
for what was to be a very&#13;
interesting and excellent evening&#13;
of music .&#13;
Neil's first song was "Sugar&#13;
Mountain" and he continued&#13;
with a combination of new songs&#13;
from his latest album titled&#13;
Comes A Time (Warner Bros .)&#13;
and old tunes. The first half of&#13;
-the show was strictly Neil Young&#13;
solo. He sang, played harp and&#13;
alternated between acoustic and&#13;
twelve string guitars and piano.&#13;
The music changed to electric&#13;
with the addition of his back up ·&#13;
band Crazy Horse. Crazy Horse&#13;
has been Neil' s back up&#13;
musicians for a very long time,&#13;
and they play extremely well&#13;
together. As Neil said, " Let's play&#13;
some.rock and roll," and that's&#13;
what went down the rest of the&#13;
evening.&#13;
The set finished off with&#13;
Cortez the Killer, Cinnamon Girl&#13;
and Like a Hurricane, but the&#13;
audience would not let him go.&#13;
The coliseum shook with&#13;
applause three separate times to&#13;
bring him · back . Their final&#13;
encore was the title track from&#13;
his worst selling LP, "Tonight's&#13;
the Night." .&#13;
This concert was one of the&#13;
best I have ever . seen . Very&#13;
seldom does one see a performer&#13;
of Neil's caliber' play over two&#13;
hours with such talent and&#13;
intensity.&#13;
There are two things that&#13;
made Neil Young's concert great.&#13;
Number one was the way Neil is&#13;
able to vocal ize his thoughts and&#13;
emotion to the audience w ith&#13;
songs like " The Loner" and " The&#13;
Needle and the Damage Done."&#13;
The lyrics are more than just&#13;
words . There is feeling and&#13;
substance in his presentation .&#13;
The second and equally&#13;
important thing was -Neil's and&#13;
the band's ability to reproduce&#13;
their sound. Neil sang in his&#13;
unique and usual shaky voice&#13;
and was only occasionally joined&#13;
in backups in his bass player and&#13;
guitarist. On quite a few of the&#13;
rockers, the crowd was treated to&#13;
some_heavy duty jamming which&#13;
brought them whistling and&#13;
cheering to their teet. Throughout&#13;
the performance the people&#13;
attending proved that Mad City&#13;
can rock n' roll without being too&#13;
rowdy.&#13;
'Living It&#13;
Theatre &amp; Films&#13;
Oct . 25 _ Nov. 1 - Play; " The Freeway" Milw. PAC, Todd W&#13;
Theatre 25th &amp; 21st - 2 &amp; 7:30 p.m ., 26th &amp; 27th, 8:30 p.m., 28th,l:&#13;
o.m .. &amp;29th,7 :30p .m . ,, .&#13;
Oct. 26 &amp; 27 - Ptay, "The Mousetrap 8:15 p.m. at Malt Hou 1,-&#13;
Theatre Burlington . Presented by The Haylofters. t,,&#13;
Oct. 26, - Film, "Lost &amp;_ Found: Searc~ for O~r E~hnic heritage' 1 •&#13;
Racine Main Library Meeting Room, also Reflections m Space."&#13;
Oct. 27 - Film, ,;Beau Geste" 8 p.m. Vogel Hall Milw. PAC. 11&#13;
Oct. 27-29 - Milwaukee Ballet, "Swan Lake" 27th &amp; 28th, 8 Prn&#13;
29th 2p.m . PAC.&#13;
Oct .• 27-29 - Play, "The Guardsmen" by the Milwaukee Players2l&#13;
&amp;28th,8 p.m ., 29th, 2 &amp; 7 p.m . at PabstTheatre.&#13;
, Oct. 28 - Film, "The Corsican Brotners" 8 p.m. Vogel Hall PAC.&#13;
Oct. 31 &amp; Nov . 1 - "Aladdin" by Edgewood Agency, 10 a.m. &amp; 12:&#13;
p.m. at the Pabst l'heatre .&#13;
Nov. 1 - Comic Opera, "The Italian Straw Hat"&#13;
Theatre, Uihlein Hall Pac at 7 :30 p.m .&#13;
Music&#13;
Nov. 1 - Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, Young People's Cone&#13;
Uihlein Hall, PAC 10:30a.m . &amp; 1 p.m . .&#13;
Nov . 1 - Cellist, Steve Doane of the Wis . Conservatory of Music&#13;
' works of Bach, Beethoven, Prokofiev, &amp; Janacek. Accompanied b&#13;
Rebecca Penneys . Vogel Hall, PAC 8 p.m.&#13;
Exhibits&#13;
Thru Oct. 29 - Art, "The Spirit of Texas" an exhibit by 16 Texasarti&#13;
at John Michael Kohler Arts Center, 608 New York Ave. Sheboyg&#13;
Thru Nov . 12 - Watercolor Wis - 78 by Dennis Doonan at Wust&#13;
Museum , 2519 Northwestern, Racine, Photography Gallery.&#13;
Thru Oct. 31 - Weavings &amp; wall hangings at Mt. Pleasant Luther&#13;
Church (Racine) mornings Tues . &amp; Fri ., all day Wed .&#13;
Thru Oct. 31 - Art, Allen Gallery exhibit of paintings &amp; drawi&#13;
Magin Lounge PAC.&#13;
8$1 in Racine&#13;
The " 1901 Club" of Racine will&#13;
present a single performance by&#13;
the nationally famous Brror1&#13;
Street Theater from Madisor,&#13;
Wi sconsin on Saturday November&#13;
4, 8 p .m. at the Racine&#13;
Theater Guild, 2519 Northwestern&#13;
Avenue in Racine .&#13;
Broom Street Theater, the only&#13;
original theater of its kind in the&#13;
mi'dwest, will perform its new&#13;
ninety minute comedy play&#13;
ACTION COMICS, written and&#13;
directed by Broom Street Artistic&#13;
Director Joel Gersmann . ACTION&#13;
COMICS is a series of&#13;
amazing tales tornr- fro.:i, the&#13;
pages of the great adventure&#13;
comic books of our time.&#13;
Superheroes, wild humor and&#13;
action I packed thrills are&#13;
guaranteed in every minute&#13;
this play which Broom Street&#13;
developed over the past f&#13;
years. ,&#13;
THE NEW YORK TIMES call&#13;
Broom Street Theater's plays ''&#13;
funny as anything by the&#13;
Brothers." Tickets to see this&#13;
time onlv showing by thi&#13;
touring experimental theater&#13;
available at the Racine Theat&#13;
Guild Box office. Call 633-421&#13;
for information and reservations&#13;
Tickets are $4.25 in advance and ,,&#13;
$4.75 c\t the door. !\',,&#13;
Broom Street Theater has&#13;
funded by the Rockefeile&#13;
Foundation The National E&#13;
dowment f~r the Arts, and th&#13;
Wisconsin Arts Board.&#13;
MEN - WOMEN .&#13;
You can go a loog way in_ a few short years. ~ !&#13;
•,; II&#13;
/ /.',: 111 ;wv ,, , /.,..&#13;
When you sign Jp for the Army today you canals · f see the w9r_ld, but it could be the most rewa~ding. 0 sign up or Europe It may not be the eas iest way t o&#13;
You 11 be there to do a Job. You 'll soldier. Bivouac in t ho m d f G f · · an early August sun in the valley of the Rhine. and fight the ch ill u Jao ra en~oehr s rainy season. squint int o , And Just about the t ime you wish you had never left th Y S nuary win s of Hohenfels.&#13;
in Munich. eating bratwurst in Frankfurt. or learning t he slopeseof git es .. youh IAlbe celebrat ing t he Oktoberfest&#13;
been ~or;~ 1t. . armisc .· nd all the tough work wil\ have&#13;
Jom the people who've joined the Army.&#13;
_ Call&#13;
Army Opportunities&#13;
657-6191&#13;
An I Q11al Oppor111n,ty r mplnv,,&#13;
• ROUND TRIP AIR&#13;
• DELUXE LODGING&#13;
• BREAKFAST DAILY&#13;
• GROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
• GROUP ESCORT &#13;
Wednesday October 25,1978&#13;
9&#13;
) Volleyball Has ·Rough Week Sport Shorts&#13;
in three games, 15-1, 11-15, 15-4.&#13;
That night, unfortunately, was&#13;
the highlight of the week. The&#13;
coach linda Hender~on's Rangers were anticipating an&#13;
en's volleyball team will be easy time as they went to&#13;
worn. g to rebound hi k t IS wee rom f Whitewater for rematches&#13;
trvln&#13;
an off week last wee. avrng k H' against UW-Whitewater and&#13;
hieved a .500 record on UW~Milwaukee. Whitewater&#13;
~onday and retaining it through succumbed to Parkside for the&#13;
h week they slipped to an second straight'time this season&#13;
~v:rall-16-18-3 record with a in two games, 15-10 and 15-8.&#13;
poor showin.g .at the ~eorge. Coach Henderson's players&#13;
Williams Invitattona .I 'failed, however, to come up with&#13;
Monday saw the team travel to their third consecutive victory&#13;
Carroll for matches against over Milwaukee by losing in&#13;
Valparaiso· and Carroll. Val- three games 14-16, 15-8, 12-15.&#13;
araiso didn't stand a chance Henderson said that her team&#13;
~ainst the Rangers ~s Parkside is back to the problem of making&#13;
beatthem in two straight games stupid errors. 'We thought we&#13;
by scores of 15-13 and 15-0 for had conquered that .problern."&#13;
h The bad week carried on to the&#13;
the first shutout ,of t e year. weekend ar thp George Williams Carroll was a little tougher but&#13;
the Rangersstill \yon the match Invitational last Saturday. In the&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
first match against louis College&#13;
the Rangers failed- to play up to&#13;
their level as they lost the match&#13;
in two games by scores of 10-15&#13;
and 5-15. Concordia College of&#13;
Illinois gave Parkside their only&#13;
win that day in four matches.&#13;
The Rangers won that one in&#13;
three games by scores of 15-6,&#13;
7-15, and 15-11.&#13;
The last two matches of the:&#13;
day w~re ones that Henderson&#13;
would rather forget as Parkside&#13;
lost to George Williams College&#13;
and the Illinois State University&#13;
"B" team.&#13;
The Rangers hope to rebound&#13;
with home matches this week on&#13;
Tuesday against Carroll College&#13;
and lewis College and on&#13;
Thursday against Marquette and&#13;
North Central College.&#13;
-It has been called to our&#13;
attention that the women sports&#13;
teams wish to have the term&#13;
"girl" omitted from our vocabulary&#13;
when reporting on theIr&#13;
sporting events. That's fine with&#13;
me. If they don't want to be&#13;
"girl's" anymore, I'm sure the&#13;
sports department can come up&#13;
with a few other names. Such as&#13;
ladies or gals. OK?&#13;
- As long as we're on the&#13;
subject of women's sports, we&#13;
may as well expose a secret _&#13;
Milwaukee is going to have an all&#13;
female professional basketball&#13;
team aptly entitled (with the&#13;
Bucks in mind?) the Milwaukee&#13;
Does. As of the last report, the&#13;
Does have seven players and&#13;
none of their contracts exceed&#13;
$100,000. I don't mean to come&#13;
across in a demeaning way, I&#13;
think it's "great to see a&#13;
professional game for less than&#13;
$3.50.&#13;
Dave Cramer&#13;
-Part of my job as a sports&#13;
writer is to write on the past&#13;
week's sporting events. Granted,&#13;
it's not all that difficult to call up&#13;
the coaches on Sunday afternoon,&#13;
talk to them for a while&#13;
and get a story from the&#13;
conversation. We do a good job&#13;
for the amount of time we can&#13;
give to our job. But if you, the&#13;
reader, want even better&#13;
coverage of sporting events, a&#13;
sports-writer has to be on the&#13;
scene personally covering the&#13;
event. 1 suppose what this is&#13;
heading to is a plea, a plea for&#13;
people interested in cover! ng&#13;
sports events and writing about&#13;
them. All any interested person&#13;
has to do is stop down by the&#13;
Ranger office and talk to&#13;
somebody there.&#13;
h,&#13;
Ie's&#13;
I~&#13;
n Soccer· Kiclcs .Losing Habit&#13;
when Cielonko re-injured the thing went right" for his locked horns with some of the Henderson has reason to be&#13;
kneecap he cracked last season. undermanned squad, Henderson toughest teams in the midwest. optimistic as his team has&#13;
Cielonko's injury was particularly was still disappointed that his To capture the title, the Rangers already posted a victory agamst&#13;
devastating as a number of team team failed to win by a wider need only to knock off Platteville Whitewater which in turn bested&#13;
members have quit the squad margin. "We should have scored in an approaching contest and Platteville this season.&#13;
this season forcing Henderson to at least 10" he said following the&#13;
field a mere 13 players compared victory. "They (Tech) scored on a&#13;
to a more normal roster of 20. dumb play and of course, the&#13;
Cielonko returned to action penalty kick they got late in the&#13;
October 21 against the Illinois game is always 99% successful."&#13;
Inslitute of Technology and Jack Landwehr added a goal in&#13;
played a .major role in the the effect which gave Parkside&#13;
Ranger's 5-2 conquest. Playing new hope in capturing the&#13;
the 'balance of the game, district title despite a less than&#13;
Cielonko re-kindeled the Rangers impressive 3-8-2 record. But&#13;
flickering fire by contributing a Henderson counters that the&#13;
pair of goals and playing an bulk of these losses were&#13;
excellent overall match. endured during the early stages&#13;
While proclaiming that every- of the season when the Rangers&#13;
by Peter Jackel&#13;
T The Ranger soccer team,&#13;
minus the services of ace&#13;
midfielder Lee Cienkonko, managed&#13;
to salvage a 1-1 tie with&#13;
LakeForest last October 18 in a&#13;
contest which coach Hal&#13;
Henderson described as "a&#13;
sloppygame which either team&#13;
could have won." Although&#13;
Hendersonfelt his Rangers were&#13;
the superiorteam, it took a late&#13;
penalty kick from junior left'&#13;
winger Earl Campbell to snatch&#13;
Parksidefrom the jaws of defeat&#13;
for the ninth time this season.&#13;
The Rangers were severely&#13;
handicapped four weeks ago&#13;
at&#13;
v·&#13;
nt lennis&#13;
Season Finale &amp;&#13;
champion as was teammate Pam&#13;
Blair in the fourth seed slot. In&#13;
the fifth seed position Marge&#13;
Balasz placed fourth.&#13;
All three of the Rangers&#13;
doubles teams won their fIrst&#13;
round matches but were&#13;
eliminated in later rounds&#13;
FuJI results of the tournament&#13;
will be gwen in next weeks issue&#13;
Parkside's women's tennis&#13;
team had a good showing in their&#13;
season finale last weekend as&#13;
they competed in the WWIAC&#13;
tournament in Whitewater .. Of&#13;
the twelve teams competing in&#13;
the tournament Parksidefinished&#13;
a respectable 6th.&#13;
Parkside's first&#13;
logic was the&#13;
seed Kathy&#13;
consolation&#13;
Swimmers Go Under&#13;
• •&#13;
I er Ime&#13;
by Peter Jackel some hope for the future by&#13;
winning the 1 meter diving&#13;
event. Other strong finishers&#13;
were lili Crnich who took third&#13;
in the 50 and 100 meter&#13;
freestyles while Lowrie Melotik&#13;
finished third in the 200 meter&#13;
Individual medley and in the&#13;
hundred meter breaststroke.&#13;
The Ranger's next encounter&#13;
will be at LaCrosse October 28&#13;
that will involve teams from&#13;
Illinois and Minnesota.&#13;
The Parkside girl's swimming&#13;
team, crippled by lack of&#13;
participants, were crushed 75-10&#13;
in their season opener October&#13;
18 at Whitewater. Coach Barb&#13;
Lawsonfelt her team performed&#13;
"as well as can be expected"&#13;
whileextending a plea to all girls&#13;
interested in joining the&#13;
swimming team' to' please&#13;
contacther.&#13;
Ann. Corrardy gave lawson&#13;
If&#13;
YOu'lBt&#13;
t&#13;
·tHe ane,&#13;
~&#13;
-tb! neer,&#13;
Sports continued on page 11&#13;
r-----K'!'EP THISCOUPON-----1&#13;
I With this coupon and the I&#13;
I purchase of any new MG I&#13;
I Midg~t, Bud's Imports will I&#13;
.. give you a luggage rack, -&#13;
~ an AM-FM radio, and a pin ~&#13;
~ stripe. This offer is good till :i!&#13;
!!l Janurary 1, 1979. Bud's ~&#13;
~ Imports located 1 mile g&#13;
~ south of Hwy. 38 0(1 Hwy. 31~&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
manager I&#13;
lUI d"l;l)l • .. I-----------------:r------:------------ ......&#13;
I,III'''', ,- I .... .I&#13;
(632-0970&#13;
1f~-,.Pam Ybe~a&#13;
'I~ . r ,..".- sales&#13;
I -'&#13;
i&#13;
Distributed by C.J.W., Inc.&#13;
65~91 • Kenosha&#13;
·, 2&amp;,&#13;
lay&#13;
PA(&#13;
.rn1&#13;
ex!&#13;
Sh&#13;
at~&#13;
tlu&#13;
&amp;dr&#13;
Wednesday Octobe~ 25, 1978&#13;
Volleyball Has ·Rough Week I&#13;
in three games, 15-1, 11-15, 15-4.&#13;
That night, unfortunately, was&#13;
the highlight of the week. The&#13;
C ach Linda Henderson's Rangers were anticipating an 0en's volleyball team will be easy time as they went to&#13;
worn d h' k f Whitewater for rematches&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
. g to reboun t Is wee rom&#13;
an&#13;
tryin off week k H · against UW-Whitewater and last wee . aving&#13;
hieved a .500 record on UW-Milwaukee. Whitewater&#13;
~ nday and retaining it through succumbed to Parkside for the&#13;
h~ week, they slipped to an second straight' time this season&#13;
t all - 16_18-3 record with a in two games, 15-10 and 15-8.&#13;
over&#13;
poor showing a e&#13;
t th t;eorge. Coach Henderson's players&#13;
Williams Invitational. 'failed, however, to come up with&#13;
Monday saw the team travel to their third consecutive victory&#13;
Carroll for matches against over Milwaukee by losing in&#13;
Valparaiso· and Carroll. Val- three games 14-16, 15-8, 12-15.&#13;
araiso didn't stand a chance Henderson said that her team&#13;
P&#13;
gainst the Rangers as p ar k sI 'd e is back to the problem of making&#13;
a&#13;
beat them in two straIg · ht games stupid errors . "We thought we&#13;
by scores of 15-13 and 15-0 for had conquered that .problem."&#13;
f h The bad week carried on to the the first shutout ,o t e year. _&#13;
Carroll was a h b weekencl ;it th~ George Williams little toug er ut&#13;
the Rangers still ~on the match Invitational last Saturday. In the&#13;
first match against Louis College&#13;
the Rangers failed to play up to&#13;
their level as they lost the match&#13;
in two games by scores of 10-15&#13;
and 5-15. Concordia College of&#13;
Illinois gave Parkside their only&#13;
win that day in four matches.&#13;
The Rangers won that one in&#13;
three games by scores of 15-6,&#13;
7-15, and 15-11 .&#13;
The last two matches of the&#13;
day were ones that Henderson&#13;
would rather forget as Parkside&#13;
lost to George Williams College&#13;
and the Illinois State University&#13;
"B" team.&#13;
The Rangers hope to rebound&#13;
with home matches this week on&#13;
Tuesday against Carroll College&#13;
and Lewis College ana on&#13;
Thursday against Marquette and&#13;
North Central College.&#13;
9&#13;
Sport Shorts&#13;
Dave Cramer&#13;
- Part of my job as a sports&#13;
writer is to write on the past&#13;
week's sporting events . Granted,&#13;
it's not all that difficult to call up&#13;
the coaches on Sunday afternoon,&#13;
talk to them for a while&#13;
and get a .story from the&#13;
conversation . We do a good job&#13;
for the amount of time we can&#13;
give to our job. But if you, the&#13;
reader, want even better&#13;
coverage of sporting events, a&#13;
sports-writer has to be on the&#13;
scene personally covering the&#13;
event. I suppose what this is&#13;
heading to is a plea, a plea for&#13;
people interested in covering&#13;
sports events and writing about&#13;
them. All any interested person&#13;
has to do is stop down by the&#13;
Ranger office and talk to&#13;
somebody there .&#13;
- It has been called to our&#13;
attention that the worn n sµorts&#13;
teams wish to have the t rm&#13;
"girl" omitted from our vocabulary&#13;
when reporting on their&#13;
sporting events. That's fin with&#13;
me If they don't want to be&#13;
"girl's" anymore, I'm sure th&#13;
sports department can com up&#13;
with a few other names Such as&#13;
ladies or gals OK?&#13;
-As long as we're on the&#13;
subject of women's sports, we&#13;
may as well expose a secret -&#13;
Milwaukee Is going to have an all&#13;
female professional basketball&#13;
team aptly entitled (with the&#13;
Bucks in mind?) the M ilwaukee&#13;
Does. As of the last report, the&#13;
Does have seven players and&#13;
none of their contracts exceed&#13;
$100,000. I don't mean to come&#13;
across in a demeaning way, I&#13;
th i nk it' s ,great to see a&#13;
professional game for less than&#13;
$3.50.&#13;
Soccer Kicks . losing Habit&#13;
by Peter Jackel when&#13;
kneecap&#13;
Cielonko re-injured the thing went right" for his locked horns with some of the Henderson has reason to be&#13;
The Ranger soccer&#13;
he cracked last season. undermanneel squad, Henderson toughest teams in the midwest. optimistic as his team has&#13;
team,&#13;
minus the services of ace&#13;
midfielder Lee Cienkonko, managed&#13;
to salvage a 1-1 tie with&#13;
Lake Forest last October 18 in a&#13;
contest which coach Hal&#13;
Henderson described as "a&#13;
sloppy game which either team&#13;
could have won ." Although&#13;
Henderson felt his Rangers were&#13;
the superior team, it took a late&#13;
penalty kick from junior left'&#13;
winger Earl Campbell to snatch&#13;
Parkside from the jaws of defeat&#13;
for the ninth time this season.&#13;
devastating&#13;
Cielonko's injury was particularly was still disappointed that his To capture the title, the Rangers already posted a victory against&#13;
members&#13;
as a number of team team failed to win by a wider ·need only to knock off Platteville Whitewater which in turn bested&#13;
have quit the squad margin. "We should have scored in an approaching contest and Platteville this season&#13;
this season forcing Henderson to at least 10" he said following the&#13;
field a mere 13 players compared victory. "They (Tech) scored on a&#13;
to a more normal roster of 20. dumb play and of course, the&#13;
Cielonko returned to action penalty kick they got late in the&#13;
October 21 against the Illinois game is always 99% successful."&#13;
Institute of Technology and Jack Landwehr added a goal in&#13;
played a major role in the the effect which gave Parkside&#13;
Ranger's 5-2 conquest. Playing new hope in capturing the&#13;
the balance of the game, district title despite a less than&#13;
Cielonko re-kindeled the Rangers impressive 3-8-2 record. But&#13;
flickering fire by contributing a Henderson counters that the&#13;
pair of goals and playing an bulk of these lo· ses were&#13;
excellent overall match. endured during the early stages The Rangers were severely&#13;
handicapped four weeks ago While proclaiming that every- of the season when the Rangers&#13;
Swimmers Go Under&#13;
by Pet~r Jackel&#13;
The Parkside girl's swimming&#13;
team, crippled by lack of&#13;
participants, were crushed 75-10&#13;
in their season opener October&#13;
18 at Whitewater. Coach Barb&#13;
Lawson felt her team performed&#13;
"as well as can be expected"&#13;
while extending a plea to all girls&#13;
interested in 1oinIng the&#13;
swimming team · to ' please&#13;
contact her.&#13;
Ann . Corrardy gave Lawson&#13;
some hope for the future by&#13;
winning the 1 meter diving&#13;
event. Other strong finishers&#13;
were Lili Crnich who took third&#13;
in the 50 and 100 meter&#13;
freestyles whil~ Lowrie Melotik&#13;
finished third in the -200 meter&#13;
Individual medley and in the&#13;
hundred meter breaststroke.&#13;
The Ranger's next encounter&#13;
will be at Lacrosse October 28 ·&#13;
that will involve teams from&#13;
Illinois and Minnesota.&#13;
Sports continued on page 11&#13;
r-----K~EP THIS COUPON•----,&#13;
I With this coupon and the I I purchase of any new M~ · I I Midget, Bud's Imports wtll I&#13;
• give you a luggage rack, ;&#13;
~ an AM-FM radio, and a pin ~&#13;
8 stripe. This offer is good till ;!&#13;
~ Janurary 1, 1979. Bud's . ~&#13;
~ Imports located 1 mile g ~ south of Hwy~. 38 Oll Hwy. 31 ~ lC&#13;
( 632-0970 I ·-/ ~ --·, Pam Ybema I t~ ·-~ sales I ... ' I&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
.. If&#13;
you'vet . go&#13;
t.tHe&#13;
1me,&#13;
we~ve&#13;
gOL .&#13;
Uthe&#13;
eer.&#13;
•&#13;
Tennis&#13;
Season Finale&#13;
Parkside' s women's tennis&#13;
tec!m had a good showing in their&#13;
season finale last weekend as&#13;
they competed in the WWIAC&#13;
tournament in Whitewater. Of&#13;
the twelve teams competing in&#13;
the tournament Parkside finished&#13;
a respectable 6th.&#13;
Parkside's first seed Kathy&#13;
Logic was the consolation&#13;
champion as was teammate Pam&#13;
Blair in the fourth seed slot. In&#13;
the fifth seed position Marge&#13;
Balasz placed fourth&#13;
All three of the Ranger's&#13;
doubles teams won their first&#13;
round matches but were&#13;
eliminated in later rounds.&#13;
Full results of the tournam nt&#13;
will be given in n xt w k I u&#13;
Distributed by C.J.W., Int.&#13;
654-8691 • Kenosha &#13;
Wednesda, Oetolle, 25,1978&#13;
*****************&#13;
Halloween Graphics&#13;
by Matt Poliakon&#13;
*****************&#13;
----_.&#13;
J&#13;
~. I&#13;
.. '.&#13;
..&#13;
:IJf •&#13;
~ ••! •.&#13;
"Yov clon·t get o, trea.t. So&#13;
whl1t's your fric. k? "&#13;
,&#13;
_L&#13;
-&amp;if!J:'&#13;
. - .....•&#13;
• Let's skip this house, O.k.?'&#13;
10&#13;
"Here's 'jour treG-f."&#13;
--+I&#13;
:-&#13;
n Ha.lLoween jus t isrd the same a.l'\yrnore, It&#13;
Editor's Note: Scarf couldn't&#13;
make it to the Parkside Union&#13;
last Friday since he was in&#13;
Madison with the Whip-Lady,&#13;
recovering from last Wednesday's&#13;
Little Feat concert.&#13;
This week's column continues&#13;
from last week's. The scene is a&#13;
TW~m1N91i&#13;
~r;afIDiF111§ f:!:~'V~r?l&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. at 62nd St.&#13;
Established in 1930&#13;
great bell, at a great eastern&#13;
university, where - Scarf is&#13;
addressing a capacity crowd&#13;
about: "Jim Beam: An Ethic for&#13;
the 80's." In the back of the hall&#13;
are two washer-women, Liz and&#13;
Bett, who scrub floors at the&#13;
great eastern university. And it&#13;
seems as though Scarf's speech&#13;
has given them food for thought:&#13;
Liz: Oh. Mr. O'Toole looks&#13;
dashing in that aviator's outfit,&#13;
doesn't ~e Bett?&#13;
Bett: Isn't it, "aviatrix," liz?&#13;
-Liz: Oh, no Bett, that's what&#13;
Mable- is" who works in the&#13;
Library.&#13;
Bett: Hee, hee, Liz you're such a&#13;
wit!&#13;
Liz: Bett. when you've been&#13;
Behind The Woodshed&#13;
by Sc.rf O'Toole&#13;
Scarf On The Road&#13;
AY CARUMBA! ... NEW·&#13;
IN UNION SQUARE&#13;
CHILI&#13;
MEX&#13;
95c&#13;
UNION SQUARE GRILL&#13;
around a university as long as I&#13;
have, you just begin to pick up&#13;
certain ... OJ,, look, Mr. O'Toole&#13;
. is ~ipping from his muse!&#13;
Bett: What a swig, eh. H is wife&#13;
must be a troubled woman.&#13;
- Think of putting up with such a&#13;
drinker.&#13;
Liz: Yes, yes, Moderation; that's&#13;
what I always say. By the way&#13;
would you like a sip?&#13;
Bett: Only if you will! _&#13;
Liz: Mmmm! I think I know what&#13;
he means when he says "You've&#13;
got to feel the time pass."&#13;
Bett: Ye-e-e-s! Mmmm!&#13;
Liz: I wonder what the 80's will&#13;
be like? Bigger bill; and smaller&#13;
cars. Hee-hee. 1 wonder what the&#13;
men will be like? Bigger?&#13;
Smaller? Wider? More sinful?&#13;
Bett: Oh, I hope you're not&#13;
getting melancholy over Herb,&#13;
bless his soul. I'm sure he's up in&#13;
heaven by now, eating sherbert.&#13;
Liz: Yes, I hope so. Though 'he&#13;
was a devil and a gambler. and&#13;
an Irishman on top of it all. H.&#13;
could never hold a job. He drove&#13;
me to my wits end! If he so much&#13;
as looks at another woman&#13;
before Iget up there, I'll ..&#13;
Bett: But Liz, remember: "till&#13;
death do us part." He's not really&#13;
under any obligation, l njean.&#13;
Liz: Oh, let's not talk about such&#13;
things Bett. I just get upset And&#13;
look Mr O'Toole is bemg&#13;
drag~ed off stage by security.&#13;
Bett: It's a pity that men like him&#13;
are always so m is.understood.&#13;
Liz: Yes. That's the price that&#13;
people who are ahead of thell&#13;
times must pay. But we best~et&#13;
back" to work before were&#13;
missed. Let's have another sip&#13;
though before we go, eh? rf&#13;
8ett: Yes. Here's to you Sea&#13;
O'Toole. May you're glassnever&#13;
run dry!&#13;
Liz: Hee, hee. Ye-e-e-s.&#13;
(To be continued)&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's c.ountry.&#13;
On Tap At Union Square r1d~ ~l..~&#13;
A 12 OZ. bowlof "SpicedUp", homemodechili, toppedoff with&#13;
shredded cheese &amp; chopped onion and garnished with a strip of&#13;
jolepenopeper.EES G·O.O-o.O.D'!!&#13;
10&#13;
Wednesday October 25, 1978 I&#13;
j&#13;
*****************&#13;
Halloween Graphics&#13;
_L .&#13;
:-llt 1 0&#13;
by Matt Poliakon&#13;
***************** -----· ---&#13;
p lef·s skip th;s hovse, o.k.?"&#13;
1rP;·---·-&#13;
1 w-+ I - --,....&#13;
/ :&#13;
''yov don't 9et a. 1rea.1. So&#13;
whot·s your trick?''&#13;
ti Here·s 'jOV( trflo.. r. IJ&#13;
(I Ha.llowcz.en jus j iSr; i t&gt;-.e same a.r\ymore. II&#13;
Behind The Woodshed&#13;
Scarf On The Road&#13;
by Scarf O'T oole&#13;
Editor's Note: Scarf couldn't&#13;
make it to the Parkside Union&#13;
last Friday since he was in&#13;
Madison with the Whip-Lady,&#13;
recovering from last Wednesday's&#13;
Little Feat concert.&#13;
This week's column continues&#13;
from last week's. The scene is a&#13;
TVfllN91J&#13;
great hall, at a great eastern&#13;
university, where - Scarf is&#13;
addressing a capacity crowd&#13;
about: "Jim Beam: An Ethic for&#13;
the BO's." In the back of the hall&#13;
are two washer-women, Liz and&#13;
Bett, who scrub floors at the&#13;
great eastern university. And it&#13;
seems as though Scarf's speech&#13;
has given them food for thought:&#13;
Liz: Oh, Mr. O'Toole looks&#13;
dashing in that aviator's outfit,&#13;
~~fili~ir§ ~~~,t~~ doesn't he Bett?&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. at 62nd · St.&#13;
Established in 1930&#13;
Bett: Isn't it, " aviatrix," Liz?&#13;
·Liz: Oh, no Bett, that's what&#13;
Mable- is,, who works in the&#13;
Library .&#13;
Bett: Hee, hee, Liz you're such a&#13;
wit!&#13;
Liz: Bett, when you've been&#13;
AY CARUMBA! ... NEW ·&#13;
IN UNION SQUARE&#13;
CHILI&#13;
MEX&#13;
A 12 OZ. bowl of "Spiced Up", homemade chili, topped off with&#13;
shredded cheese &amp; chopped onion· and garnished with a strip of&#13;
jalepeno peper. EES G-0-0-0-0-0 ! ! !&#13;
UNION SQUARE GRILL&#13;
around a university as long as I&#13;
have, you just begin to pick up&#13;
certain ... Oh, look, Mr. O'Toole&#13;
. is iipping from his muse!&#13;
Bett: What a swig, eh_. His wife&#13;
must be a troubled woman.&#13;
- Think of putting up wjth such a&#13;
drinker.&#13;
· Liz : Yes, yes. Moderation; that's&#13;
what I always say. By the way&#13;
would you like a sip?&#13;
Bett: Only if you will! _&#13;
Liz: Mmmm! I think I know what&#13;
he means when he says "You've&#13;
got to feel the time pass ."&#13;
Bett: Ye-e-e-s! Mmmm!&#13;
Liz: I wonder what_the 80's will&#13;
_be like? Bigger bills and smaller&#13;
cars. Hee-hee. I wonder what the&#13;
men will be like? Bigger?&#13;
Smaller? Wider? More sinful?&#13;
Bett: Oh, I hope you're not&#13;
getting melancholy over Herb,&#13;
bless his soul. I'm sure he's up in&#13;
heaven by now, eating sherbert.&#13;
Liz: Yes, I hope so. Though he&#13;
was a devil a~d a gambler, and&#13;
an Irishman on top of it all. He&#13;
could never hold a job. He drove&#13;
me to my wits end! If he so much&#13;
as looks at another woman&#13;
before I get up there, I'll .. -&#13;
Bett· But Liz remember: "till&#13;
death do us pa~t." He's not really&#13;
under any obligation, I niean.&#13;
Liz: Oh, let's not talk about such&#13;
things Bett. I just get upset. ~nd&#13;
look, Mr. O'Toole is being&#13;
dragged off stage by securi'.Y·&#13;
Bett: It's a pity that men like him&#13;
are always so misunderstood.&#13;
Liz: Yes. That's the price th3t&#13;
people who are ahead of the1r&#13;
times must pay . But we best get&#13;
- back' to work before we're&#13;
missed . Let's have another sip&#13;
though before we go, eh? f&#13;
Bett: Yes . Here's to you Scar&#13;
O'Toole. May you're glass never&#13;
run dry!&#13;
Liz: Hee, hee. Ye-e-e-s.&#13;
(To be continued)&#13;
Pure Brewed From God's Country,&#13;
On Tap At Union Square &#13;
erritt 1st in Marathon&#13;
by DougEdenhauser&#13;
SportsEditor .&#13;
,&#13;
1500 runners with a time of 2&#13;
h~urs 25 minutes. He was three&#13;
minutes behind the winner&#13;
former Lacrosse AII-America~&#13;
Jim Drews.&#13;
. ?ther Ranger runners who all&#13;
finished were assistant professor"&#13;
of life Science Ed Wallen who&#13;
had a,tityle of 3 hours 21 minutes&#13;
Ron" Singer, an assistan~&#13;
professor of business management.finished&#13;
with a time of 4&#13;
hours and 3 minutes.&#13;
The surprise of the day&#13;
however came from Parkside's&#13;
athletic director Wa.yne Dannehl&#13;
whose goal was to break the four&#13;
hour mark if he was to finish at&#13;
all. He came in with Coach&#13;
Lucian Rosa pushing him to&#13;
finish with a time of 3 hours and&#13;
33 minutes.&#13;
rmer Parkside All-American&#13;
Merritt was among a&#13;
ful of runners from Parks ide&#13;
ravel to the New Glarus&#13;
athon in New Glarus,&#13;
cnsin. Forthose who are not&#13;
graphically. inclined New&#13;
us is about 30 miles' west of&#13;
isonrritt,&#13;
who was the 1975&#13;
nal AAU women's marachampion&#13;
proved that she&#13;
't lost anything as she came&#13;
jrst in the women's division&#13;
atime of 2 hours' 58 minutes&#13;
the 26 mile course.&#13;
e best finisher out of the&#13;
h wasRay Frederickson who&#13;
hed 2nd out of a total of&#13;
1&#13;
COIning&#13;
Events&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 25&#13;
Drive from 9 a.m , to 3 p.rn. in .Union 104-100. No&#13;
intment is necessary. Open to everyone. Sponsored by&#13;
sideHealth Office. . .&#13;
n Bag Lunch at 12 noon in WLLC 0174. Dr. James&#13;
lenback will talk on "Cloning, Nuclear Transplants, and&#13;
itro Fertilization." The program is free and open to the&#13;
lie.&#13;
_rt at 3 p.rn. in the Union Cinema Theatre by music&#13;
ents.The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
le "Casablanca" will be shown at 7:30 p.m , in the Union&#13;
a Theatre. Admission at the door is $1 for a Palkside&#13;
ent and $1 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 26 ~&#13;
ure at 7 p.m. in GR 101. Prof. John Longeway of U.W.&#13;
kSldewill speak about St. Augustine on Faith and Reason.&#13;
Women's VOlleyball vs. Marquette &amp; North Central at&#13;
sioe (6:30 p.m) ,&#13;
. Friday, Oct. 27&#13;
shop."Human Sexuality" starting at 9 a.m.in Union 106.&#13;
I. ext. 2312 for more detailS. Sponsored by the Extension&#13;
ISlon.&#13;
inarChem/Life Sci. at 2 p.m. in CL 105. The program is free&#13;
opento the publ ic.&#13;
"Electra" by the Parkside Players at 8 p.m. in the Comm.&#13;
i Theatre. Admission is $2 for Parkside students, sta(f &amp;&#13;
or CitIZenSat the Union INformation Center.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 28&#13;
Ya"Electra"win be repeated at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts&#13;
tre. Tickets will be available at the door&#13;
Id T' .&#13;
d np to Milwaukee Art Center and Bradley Sculpture&#13;
lOt r ~ns:Sponsored by Art Discipline. Price is $3. Contact Fine&#13;
rts'VISIO~Office, CA 285, #2581.&#13;
. Men s Cross-Country: USTFF Mid-America ChampionI~psat&#13;
ParkSide(2: 30 p.m.) .&#13;
ome' C '1 n s ross-Country:&#13;
i~ waukee.&#13;
~ omen'S· . n' Ss Wlmmmg: LaCrosse Invitationa _t LaCrosse.&#13;
s occer: vs:We~tern Michigan at Parkside. (12:30 p.m.)&#13;
y"EI Sunday, Oct. 29 - .&#13;
ectra" will be repeated at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m.&#13;
~YfuS &amp; Rag-Tag Band 2:30-3:30 at Racine's Zayre's&#13;
i~' s Drive) Come hear Lee Dreyfus and his band in Racire.&#13;
e~~our camera and get Y9ur picture taken with Lee. To see&#13;
ere' In Kenosha, call John Allen, 652-2845 for when .&amp;&#13;
WWIAe- Champi.onsbips at&#13;
I&#13;
MeRier Parkside 200 . ~/ ~&#13;
National Varsity Club ~ ~~&#13;
1 Mention this ad! ·;BV dOjeph - ,e, 4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
',' Phone 654-&lt;l774&#13;
J'." .... ' ALLMAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACllPTED&#13;
Round Table at 12 nOOl~onday, Oct. 30&#13;
Sociology Dept. will t~~kUnlo~, 106. Prof. Sam Wright of the&#13;
program is fr on Who Rules Amenca?" The&#13;
. ee and open to staff and interested students&#13;
H 11&#13;
Tuesday,Oct.}1 .&#13;
, . a oween Party 6-7·30 P ksi . young children of .P td ar Side Child Care Center. For&#13;
Costumes, games a ar SI e students , faculty and staff.&#13;
-lntormanon 0 k nd prizes. Pick-up reservation form at&#13;
'd d es or atthe Child Care Center. Party is free but&#13;
you 0 nee a reservation. '&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 1&#13;
Coffeehouse starting at 1 p.rn. in Union&#13;
Betty Kastke, a blues folksinger. Admission&#13;
by PAR&#13;
104·106 featuring&#13;
is free. Sponsored&#13;
/ Thursday, Nov. 2&#13;
Workshop "Me for a Ch " . , ange starting at 9 a.rn. in Union 104&#13;
Call. ext. 2312 for more details. Sponsored by the Ext ..&#13;
Division, ens Ion&#13;
1- Classified Ads&#13;
1. COST CLASSIFIED AD POUCY&#13;
A.) Student-S~aff - Free Itet 20 w"ordS)&#13;
(Each additional 10 words or less 25 cenla)&#13;
B.) Non-Student, Staff $1.00 (1at 20 WOrds)&#13;
(EaCh additional 10 words or less 50 cents)&#13;
C.) All additional runs $1.00&#13;
2. ~:i7a~~::t wilt bemadetop~1I8h all submlsalona, but RANGER reserves the right to&#13;
3. All categories will receive preference over personals.&#13;
4. Deadline Is Thursday, 10a.m. for publication on the following Wedneaes.&#13;
5. ~~~6~~f:S must be submitted on the green form, available In the YRA,NGERoffice,&#13;
FORSALE&#13;
Mobile Home: Kenwood, 14x70 ft., 2 bedroom,&#13;
1'/2 baths, den, sunken living room&#13;
beamed ceiling, fireplace, double patl~&#13;
doors, double patio cover. Shady Nook&#13;
Parle 553-2220 betcre 5 P.M., 878-2'1" after&#13;
5 P.m.&#13;
1970 Hornet.Q!'een wi power steering. Few&#13;
minor repairs. Excellent gas mileage.&#13;
Perfect for commuting, Asking $375. Call&#13;
Nand at 652~7065 after 4.&#13;
1~ Rambler Classic: 4 door, automatic,&#13;
slx-cyllnder, runs great, body very nice. Call&#13;
Jeff 552~9228.&#13;
Need.ed urgently- linancial, moral or&#13;
physical support for Par1l:side Medical TechnOlogy&#13;
student hopefully interning in July&#13;
1979. Those interested in helping make a&#13;
ueer goal become a reality, dial 282~0564&#13;
1(1 ask for Jim.&#13;
LOST AND FOUND&#13;
FCHlnd: Three legged Aluminum easel In&#13;
Comm Arts hall. Pick it up in Media services&#13;
0153.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Need a peP6r typed? Call a professional -&#13;
15 years experience as a typist. Reasonable.&#13;
652~1041.&#13;
1976 Pontiac Astnt Station Wagon: 25,000&#13;
mttee, 4 cylinder. Excellent condition. Fernala Interested In fun athletic com-&#13;
$2100. 654-7662. petition. ("Almost anything goes" - type&#13;
events.) cannot be var~Ity athlete. The&#13;
F~~,r 8,',otled .aluml,num mag whee;s: teams are made up of 5 guys and 5 girls. If&#13;
5 ~ x13 . Will lit all Flats 1968 and up. $75. this sounds like you, call SCott: 859-2015 Of&#13;
633-4103. Rob: 654-6448.&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
To stump- Hope you had a good time in St.&#13;
Louis. (Well - a reasonably good time al&#13;
'~st1) - Pre-money -&#13;
Wanted: All girls Interested In meeting large&#13;
mob of wild and crazy guys. Friday Oct. 21,&#13;
12:30 P.M. In GR 0127.&#13;
(&#13;
Wanted: Large mob of wild {lnd crazy guys&#13;
to attend Me science club meeting, Friday&#13;
Oct. 27, 12:30 P.M. In GR 0127.&#13;
Lee Dreyfus entb&amp;Jsiuts. If services can be&#13;
offered, please contact Frattk Miller:'&#13;
633-4273.&#13;
Fema" slngM'/lftUIllclan. Call Joe at&#13;
639-5512, Racine. Leave message.&#13;
Part time help; 10-15 houri per week at&#13;
$3.30 per hour. To dO sweeplrlg In&#13;
manufllCtunng plant. P..... apply In person&#13;
between 7 a.m, and 5 p.m. at AIDE Inc.,&#13;
1833 Oakdale Ave, Racine. (SOuthside of&#13;
Racine)&#13;
Wargamers&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
TERRACE ROOM&#13;
4:!6 LAKE AVE RACINE&#13;
presents:&#13;
MONT1~GE&#13;
tions primary conventions, the&#13;
Geneva Conference, was held&#13;
annually at the Playboy club&#13;
throughout it's infant years but&#13;
has been re-Iocated to Parkside&#13;
to meet the gamers tremendous&#13;
expansion, Rasmussen described&#13;
Parkside's initial convention as&#13;
"somewhat disappointing" citing&#13;
the publishers failure to print&#13;
maps to the campus's location.&#13;
Also, another major convention&#13;
WED: &amp; THUR.&#13;
FR!.&#13;
SAT.&#13;
was held at the same time in Ann&#13;
Arbor, Michigan which greatly&#13;
reduced the would be participants&#13;
at Parkside. But Pa'rkside is&#13;
considered an ideal site for the&#13;
fOUl day convention because of&#13;
its central location and easy&#13;
accessability and Rasmussen&#13;
says he anticipates far better&#13;
results next year while adding&#13;
that plans for a mini-convention&#13;
this winter are in the works.&#13;
11&#13;
Parkside&#13;
7th at&#13;
Carthage&#13;
by Doug Edenha_&#13;
With iunior Bill Werve and All·&#13;
American Bob langenhol out of&#13;
the lineup last weekend Parkside&#13;
had to struggle to finish seventh&#13;
out of 13teams in the 6th annual&#13;
Carthage Invitational.&#13;
The top performer for Parkside&#13;
was senior Gary Priem who&#13;
finished seventh in a field of 131&#13;
runners. You had to look a tittle&#13;
farther down the tine to find the&#13;
remainder of the team. Freshman&#13;
Dave Mueller finished in 38th&#13;
place, Chris Ohm came in 52nd&#13;
with teammate Paul Cannestra&#13;
four seconds behind in 56th&#13;
place. AI Halbur was the fifth&#13;
Ranger finisher in 76th place.&#13;
Langenhol, a sure repeat for&#13;
All-American honors this season&#13;
wasordered by his doctor to take&#13;
the week off and to rest up after&#13;
a bout with the flu for this&#13;
weekends Men's Mid America&#13;
meetto be held at Parkside.&#13;
Werve a junior from St.&#13;
Joseph'sof Kenoshawill not be&#13;
able to participate for the&#13;
Rangers the remainder of the&#13;
season due to a muscle problem&#13;
in his calf and ankle. Coach&#13;
lucian Rosa pointed out that&#13;
with a couple months of rest he&#13;
will be ready to compete for&#13;
Parkside next season.&#13;
Both the men's and women's&#13;
track teams will be in action here&#13;
at Parkside this weekend. The&#13;
women, coached by Bob lawson&#13;
will compete in the u.s. Track&#13;
and Field Federation's women's&#13;
nationals, The men will run in&#13;
the Mid America Tournament.&#13;
In&#13;
Memoriam&#13;
Marty&#13;
"'EM IE" f.D.I.C.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658·2331&#13;
SWEET BOTTOM&#13;
entertainment 9 p.m.&#13;
FOR RESERYED SEAliNG ··JAZZ SO GOOD··&#13;
CALL 632-4206&#13;
dnesdaJ October 25, 1978&#13;
lerritt 1st in Marathon&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sports Editor .&#13;
tormer Parkside All-American&#13;
I&#13;
1500 runners with a time of 2&#13;
h~urs 25 minutes. He was three&#13;
minutes behind the winner&#13;
fo1mer Lacrosse All-America~&#13;
Jim Drews. ·&#13;
Round Table at 12 noo~~nda~, Oct. 30&#13;
Sociology Dept . will talk Unto~, 106 - Prof. Sam Wright of the&#13;
program is free and on Who Rules America?" The - open to staff and interested students .&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. ~1&#13;
..! l:falloween Party 6-7 . 30 at p k . . young childten of .p k .d ar side Child Care Center. For&#13;
Costumes, games a ~r ~1 e students, faculty and staff.&#13;
-Information Desk nd :rize~. Pick-up reservation form at&#13;
You do need or at_t e Child Care Center. Party is free but a reservation. '&#13;
- Wednesday, Nov. 1&#13;
Coffeehouse starting at 1 P m in U . 104 1 . B tt K k · · nion - 06 featuring&#13;
b~ P~B~st e'. a blues folksinger. Admission is free . Sponsored&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 2&#13;
11&#13;
Parkside&#13;
7th at&#13;
Carthage&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser Merritt was among a&#13;
~ful of runners from Parkside&#13;
travel to the New Glarus&#13;
irathon in New Glarus,&#13;
sconsin. For thos.e w~o are not&#13;
geographically in~lmed New&#13;
,us is about 30 miles west of&#13;
. ?ther Ranger runners who all&#13;
finished were assistant professor'&#13;
of Life Science Ed Wallen who&#13;
had a til"!)e of 3 hours 21 minutes&#13;
Ron ' Singer, an assistant&#13;
professor of business management&#13;
, finished with a time of 4&#13;
hours and 3 minutes .&#13;
Workshop "Me for a Ch 11 • . C II , ange starting at 9 a.m . in Union 104&#13;
. 0~ . ~xt. 2312 for more details. Sponsored by the Extensio~&#13;
1v1s1on .&#13;
With junior Bill Werve and AllAmerican&#13;
Bob Langenhol out of&#13;
the lineup last weekend Parkside&#13;
had to struggle to finish sev nth&#13;
out of 13 teams in the 6th annual&#13;
Carthage Invitational&#13;
,!ison. . ~erritt, who was the 1975&#13;
·onal AAU women's marajn&#13;
champion proved that she&#13;
"1't lost anything as she came&#13;
first in the women's division&#13;
t, a time of 2 hours 58 minutes&#13;
tr the 26 mile course.&#13;
the best finisher out of the&#13;
~ch was Ray Frederickson who&#13;
jshed 2nd out of a total of&#13;
The surprise of the day&#13;
however came from Parkside's&#13;
athletic director Wayne Dannehl&#13;
whose goal was to break the four&#13;
hour mark if he was to finish at&#13;
all. He came in with Coach&#13;
Lucian Rosa pushing him to&#13;
finish with a time of 3 hours and&#13;
33 minu·tes .&#13;
Coming&#13;
Events&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 25&#13;
Drive from 9 a.m . to 3 p .m. in ,Union 104-106. No&#13;
intment is necessary. Open to. everyone. Sponsored by&#13;
side Health Office. '&#13;
wn Bag Lunch ,at 12 noon in WLLC D174. Dr. Ja~es&#13;
llenback will talk on "Clbning, Nuclear Transplants, and&#13;
Fertilization." The program is free and open to the&#13;
cert at 3 p.m . in the Union Cinema Theatre by music&#13;
ents . The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
, vie "Casablanca" will be shown at 7:3Q ::&gt;.m. in the Union&#13;
ema Theatre. Admission at the door is $1 for a Paikside&#13;
ent and $1 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 26 '&#13;
u.re at _7 p.m. in GR 101. Prof. John Longeway of U .W .&#13;
ks1~e will speak about St. Augustine on Faith and Reason.&#13;
rts Women's \iolleyball vs . Marquette &amp; North Central at&#13;
kside. (6:30 p.m .)&#13;
Friday, Oct. 27&#13;
i'kshop. "Human Sexuality" starting at 9 a.m .in Union 106.&#13;
. ~xt. 2312 for more details. Sponsored by the Extension&#13;
1s1on .&#13;
inarChem/Life Sci. at 2 p .m . in CL 105. The program is free&#13;
~ open to the public.&#13;
Y "Electra" by the Parkside Players at 8 p .m . in the Comm&#13;
~ Theatre. Admission is $2 for Parkside students staff &amp;&#13;
IQ 't' I \&#13;
r ct 1zens at the Union I Nformation Center. '&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 2~&#13;
Y "Electra" will be repeated at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts&#13;
eat r· k · re. ic ets will be available at the door&#13;
Id T · . d rip to Milwaukee Art Center and Bradley Sculpture&#13;
. r ;~s_- Sponsored by Art Discipline. Price is $3. Contact Fine&#13;
srt tVtSion Office, CA 285, #2581. '&#13;
. 5 Men's Cross-Courtry: USTFF Mid-America Championte&#13;
tpsatParkside(2:30p .m.) , -&#13;
~lrnenk's Cross-Country : WWIAC Cha~pi.onsbips at&#13;
, wau ee .&#13;
ornen' s · . , - n' S 5 wimming: Lacrosse lnv1tationa ~t LaCrosse.&#13;
5 occer: vs : western Michigan at Parkside. (12:30 p .m .)&#13;
h&amp; Y "Ele ,, . Sunday, Oct. 29 ·- · e O ctra will be repeated at 2 p.m. and 8 p.m.&#13;
a .dreyfus &amp; .Rag-Tag Band 2:30-3:30 at Racine's Zayre's&#13;
i~1 s Drive) Come hear Lee Dreyfus and his band in Racine.&#13;
g Your came d · · ' k · h L T 1&#13;
h-eyfu . ra an get y_our picture ta en wit ee. o see&#13;
rhere.s tn Kenosha, call John All_en, 652-2845 for w.hen -&amp;&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
4433,-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-077 4 . ,&#13;
ALL MA IOR rRi;DtT CARDS ~PTED&#13;
'&#13;
Classified Ads 1. COST CLASSIFIED AD POLICY&#13;
A.) Student-Staff - Free(1st 20 w~rds)&#13;
(Each additional 1 O words or less 25 cents)&#13;
B.) Non-Student, Staff $1.00 (1st 20 words)&#13;
(Each additional 10 words or less 50 cents)&#13;
C.) All additional runs $1.00&#13;
2. Every attempt will be made to p;';bllsh all submissions but RANGER he&#13;
omit any ad. • reserves t right to&#13;
!· All categories will receive preference over personals.&#13;
5- ~di"ne1&#13;
:~~hursday, 10 a.m. for publication on the following Wednesday . WL~Cas;.139. s must be submitted on the green form, available In the RANGER office,&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Mobile Home: Kenwood, 14x70 ft., 2 bedroom,&#13;
1 ½- b.a.ths, den, sunken living room,&#13;
beamed ceiling, fireplace, double patio&#13;
doors, do'uble patio cover. Shady Nook&#13;
Parle 553-2220before5 P.M., 878-2111 after&#13;
5 P.m.&#13;
Needed urgently- financial, moral or physical support for Parkside Medical Technology&#13;
stude~t hopefully interning in July&#13;
1979. Those interested in helping make a .reer goal become a reality, dial 282-0564&#13;
19 ask for Jim.&#13;
LOST AND FOUND&#13;
1970 Hornet: Green w/ power steering. Few Found : Three legged Aluminum easel In&#13;
minor repairs. Excellent gas mileage. Comm Arts hall. Pick it up in Media Services&#13;
Perfect for commuting. Asking· $375. Call D153.&#13;
Nanci at 652-7065 after 4.&#13;
1~ Rambler Classic: 4 door, automatic, ,1x-cyllnder, runs great, body very nice. Call&#13;
Jeff 552-9228.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Need a pap&amp;r typed? Call a professional - 15 years experience as a typist. Reasonable. 652-1041.&#13;
1976 Pontiac Ast111 Station Wagon: 25,000&#13;
miles, 4 cylinder. Excellent condition. Female Interested in fun athletic com-&#13;
$2100. 654-7662. petition. ("Almost anything goes" - type&#13;
events.) Cannot be varsity athlete. The&#13;
F~~.r s.(0•1ed .aluminum mag whee;s: teams are made up of 5 guys and 5 girts. If&#13;
51/2 x13 . WIii flt all Flats 1968 and up. $75. this sounds like you, call Scott : 859-2015 or 633-4103. Rob : 654-6446.&#13;
PERSONAL Lee Dreyfus entl)Jl1uiat1. If services can be&#13;
offered, please contact Frank Miller:·&#13;
To stump- Hope you had a good time-in St. 633-4273.&#13;
Louis. (Well - a reasonably good time at&#13;
least!) - Pre-money -&#13;
Wanted : All girts interested in meeting large&#13;
mob of wild and crazy guys. Friday Oct. 27, 12:30 P.M. in GR D127. (&#13;
Wanted: Large mob of wild i'nd crazy guys&#13;
to attend Jife science club meeting, Friday&#13;
Oct. 27, 12:30 P.M. in GR D127.&#13;
Female alnger/mur.lclan. Call Joe at&#13;
639-5512, Racine. Leave message.&#13;
Part time help; 10-15 hours per week at&#13;
$3.30 per hour. To do sweeping In&#13;
manufacturing plant. Please apply In person&#13;
between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m. at AIDE Inc., 1833 Oakdale Ave, Racine. (Southside of&#13;
Racine)&#13;
Wargamers&#13;
con~inued from page 1&#13;
tions primary conventions, the&#13;
Geneva Conference, was held&#13;
annually at the Playboy club&#13;
throughout it's infant years but&#13;
has been re-located to Parkside&#13;
to meet the gamers tremendous&#13;
expansion. Rasmussen described&#13;
Parkside's initial convention as&#13;
"somewhat disappointing" citing&#13;
the publishers failure to print&#13;
maps to the campus's location .&#13;
Also, another major convention&#13;
was held at the same time in Ann&#13;
Arbor, Michigan which greatly&#13;
reduced the would be participants&#13;
at Parkside. But Pa'rkside is&#13;
considered an ideal site for the&#13;
four day convention because of&#13;
its central location and easy&#13;
accessability and Rasmussen&#13;
says he anticipates far better&#13;
results next year while adding&#13;
that plans for a mini-convention&#13;
this winter are in the works.&#13;
The top performer for Parkside&#13;
was senior Gary Priem who&#13;
finished seventh tn a fteld of 131&#13;
runners . You had to look a little&#13;
farther down the line to find the&#13;
remainder of the team . Freshman&#13;
Dave Mueller finished in 38th&#13;
place, Chris Ohm came in 52nd&#13;
with teammate Paul Cannestra&#13;
four seconds behind in 56th&#13;
place. Al Halbur was the fifth&#13;
Ranger finisher in 76th place&#13;
Langenhol, a sure repeat for&#13;
All-American honors this season&#13;
was ordered by his doctor to take&#13;
the week off and to rest up after&#13;
a bout with the flu for this&#13;
weekends Men's Mid America&#13;
meet to be held at Parkside,&#13;
Werve a junior from St.&#13;
Joseph's of Kenosha will not be&#13;
able to participate for the&#13;
Rangers the remainder of the&#13;
season due to a muscle problem&#13;
in his calf and ankle. Coach&#13;
Lucian Rosa pointed out that&#13;
with a couple months of rest he&#13;
will be ready to compete for&#13;
Parkside next season .&#13;
Both the men's and women's&#13;
track teams will be in action here&#13;
at Parkside this weekend . The&#13;
women, coached by Bob Lawson&#13;
will compete in the U .S. Track&#13;
and Field Federation's women's&#13;
nationals. The men will run in&#13;
the Mid America Tournament.&#13;
In&#13;
Memoriam&#13;
Marty&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
ofKeno ha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMIE• F.0.1.C.&#13;
TERRACE ROOM&#13;
4~6 LAKE AVE RACINE&#13;
presents:&#13;
WED: &amp; THUR. MONTl&amp;.GE&#13;
FRI.&#13;
SAT. SWEET BOTTOM&#13;
FOR RESERVED SEATING&#13;
CALL 632-4206&#13;
entertainment&#13;
''JAZZ SO&#13;
9 p.m.&#13;
GOOD'' &#13;
• W.d".sd~YOctob.r 25,1978&#13;
12&#13;
/&#13;
,1&#13;
Now comes Miller ti~e.&#13;
• c 1978 Miller Brewing Co .. Milwaukee WIS&#13;
\&#13;
I Wednesday October 25, 1978&#13;
/&#13;
Now comes Mil~er tirt-e .&#13;
• c 1978 Miller Brewing Co. Milwaukee. Wis </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 7, issue 8, October 25, 1978</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="41">
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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              <elementText elementTextId="69111">
                <text>1978-10-25</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="69115">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="69116">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>Diversions and Delights' Nov 5</text>
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              <text>^&#13;
M££amg£-J3j&gt;iC&lt;ir Wilde&#13;
'Diversions and Delights' Nov 5&#13;
Vincent Price, whose acting&#13;
credits include more than 100&#13;
films and a long series of&#13;
distinguished stage roles, will&#13;
appear as Oscar Wilde in last&#13;
spring's Broadway smash success&#13;
"Diversions and Delights" in a&#13;
special 2 p.m. matinee on&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 5, in the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. An&#13;
evening performance, part of the&#13;
university's Accent on Enrichment&#13;
subscription series, is sold&#13;
out.&#13;
Tickets ($7 each) are available&#13;
at the UW-Parkside Union&#13;
Information Center, Sears in&#13;
Kenosha and Team Electronics&#13;
and Cook-Cere Records in&#13;
Racine. Mail orders are available&#13;
through UW-P. They should&#13;
include checks payable to&#13;
UW-Parkside and a stamped,&#13;
self-addressed envelope and be&#13;
mailed to UW-Parkside Information&#13;
Center, Kenosha, Wl 53141.&#13;
The play was such a hit with&#13;
critics and audiences alike last&#13;
season in a tour which'included&#13;
San Francisco, Denver, Boston,&#13;
Chicago, New York and&#13;
Washington (including a special&#13;
performance in Ford's Theater)&#13;
that is was held over for an&#13;
extended Broadway run.&#13;
Many shared the opinion of&#13;
Elliot Norton, dean of American&#13;
drama critics, who wrote after&#13;
the Boston opening, "Vincent&#13;
Price gives the best performance&#13;
of his long career." In his&#13;
syndicated column, Sydney'&#13;
Harris admitted he entered the&#13;
theater skeptical of Price's ability&#13;
to successfully capture the wit&#13;
and wisdom of the late "master&#13;
of the art of conversation" but&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
PSGAElections&#13;
Next Wednesday&#13;
by Tom Fervoy student-oriented programs.&#13;
Guaranteed the right by state&#13;
The Parkside Student Govern- law, all decisions on spending&#13;
ment Association, P.S.G.A., are governed by elected&#13;
holds an election each semester, members of the association only,&#13;
Next Wednesday and Thursday, facing the final approval of the&#13;
we, the student body, will Chancellor and Board of&#13;
choose fellow students to fill Regents. The association alone&#13;
vacancies in nine Senate will decide upon the existence of&#13;
Divisional seats and five entertainment, athletic teams,&#13;
University Segregated Fees student organizations, adequate&#13;
Allocation Committee seats, health care, and the like. As&#13;
Few, however, are aware of paying members of the Parkside&#13;
exactly what it is those elected community, voters can insure&#13;
willbedoing. the continuation of sucf\&#13;
The P.S.G.A. has the responsi- facilities by electing those&#13;
bility for the formulation and reliable in the representation of&#13;
review of policies concerning best student interests,&#13;
student life, services, and Currently running for Senate&#13;
interests. Though it may sound Divisional seats are Doug&#13;
somewhat unimpressive, the Shubert in the Engineering&#13;
chosen candidates have under Science Division, and Tim&#13;
their solitary control, all non- Zimmer and Stephen Colangelo&#13;
academic funding. Through the in the Science division. Up for&#13;
Segregated Fees Fund, every Segregated Fees Allocation&#13;
student "donates" $58 from Committee seats are Doug&#13;
tuition per semester towards a Edenhauser, Alfred Wermter,&#13;
total budget of over half a Terry Zielsdorf, Mark DeCheck,&#13;
million dollars. Our appointees Tom Marschner, and Freddy&#13;
then divide or allocate this Barclay. Due to the possibility of&#13;
money amongst the many late candidacies, this is not&#13;
functions and organizations on necessarily a finalized list. Polls&#13;
campus such as Union activities, are open from 9:00 a.m. to 8:00&#13;
Athletic team funding, Student p.m. October 25, and 26, and will&#13;
groups, the P.A.B., the Health be located on the concourse&#13;
Office, the RANGER, and other level of the Classroom Building.&#13;
Wednesday October 18,1978 vol.7 no.7&#13;
Engineering Science&#13;
Co-op Program&#13;
by Cathy Brownlee competent to be approved by&#13;
the co-op council. A student&#13;
Since 1975, the Division of must have completed 45-60&#13;
Engineering Science has offered credits and have a GPA of 2.75.&#13;
two majors — Applied Science The student must then declare&#13;
and Engineering Technology. A an area of concentration and&#13;
new edition to the Division's obtain an endorsement from an&#13;
studies this year is a cooperative Engineering Science Division&#13;
education (co-op) program. The faculty member,&#13;
program's design looks ahead to Twelve to fifteen students are&#13;
the opening of the new Modern now in the process of being&#13;
Industry Buiding. placed in this new program.&#13;
The co-op program gives the The co-op program involved&#13;
student a chance to work with alternating a semester of work&#13;
industry while still in school. The with a semester of classroom&#13;
program is open to students in instruction. While in industry,&#13;
both of the Division's majors but the student works full time and&#13;
is not a requirement. In fact, the reports back to the school. This&#13;
Division is selective in choosing allows the student to gain actual&#13;
the students that will participate, work experience while still in&#13;
Requirements for the co-op school. In this way, the industrial&#13;
program allow only the environment becomes an extenOffered&#13;
&#13;
sion of the lab facilities.&#13;
Kenosha and Racine industries&#13;
such as AMC, Anaconda&#13;
American Brass, and Western&#13;
Publishing are participating in&#13;
the co-op program. Students&#13;
work in Engineering, Field&#13;
Service, and Laboratory Departments.&#13;
&#13;
The response of industry to the&#13;
new program is tremendous. The&#13;
co-op is advantageous to&#13;
industry as well as to the&#13;
students. With this program,&#13;
industry can look at student&#13;
quality before employing.&#13;
In the past, placing of students&#13;
in industry was small and&#13;
informal. With the new&#13;
cooperative education program,&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
On From The 70's&#13;
Symposium at Madison&#13;
Moving&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
The UW-Madison student&#13;
government, WSA, has been&#13;
criticized by many for seemingly&#13;
irresponsible approach to student&#13;
affairs. Last spring, two&#13;
"full-time clowns," as they refer&#13;
to themselves, were elected&#13;
President and Vice-President of&#13;
WSA by the UW-Madison&#13;
student body. Their political&#13;
rallies and WSA meetings have&#13;
been more memorable for the&#13;
ice cream and watermelon that&#13;
they give away, than for any&#13;
serious work that they have&#13;
accomplished there.&#13;
However, on the subject of&#13;
sponsoring cultural (or perhaps&#13;
counter-cultural) events, WSA&#13;
has excelled this year. Most&#13;
notably has been the Toga&#13;
Party/Smoke-In held September&#13;
30th and October 1st, in&#13;
Madison. This week, however,&#13;
WSA is sponsoring two programs:&#13;
the Little Feat concert, to&#13;
be held tonight in the Madison&#13;
Field House, and "Moving On&#13;
from the '70's: A Symposium on&#13;
the Future" that started&#13;
yesterday and will continue&#13;
tomorrow and Friday. The&#13;
program includes Allen Ginsberg,&#13;
Ed Sanders, Tuli Kupferberg,&#13;
Anita Hoffman, Paul&#13;
Krassner and Wavy Gravy. WSA&#13;
reports that, "These cultural&#13;
luminaries of the past will&#13;
discuss the coming decade" and&#13;
that "this event is certain to be a&#13;
major one of the fall and is the&#13;
nation's first look ahead into the&#13;
1980's.&#13;
The schedule for the remainder&#13;
of the program is: Thursday&#13;
October 19, 8 p.m., Memorial&#13;
Union Great Hall:&#13;
Anita Hoffman — social&#13;
philosopher and mother of&#13;
America.&#13;
Tuli Kupferberg — ex-Fug&#13;
from New York's Lower East Side,&#13;
lie-down tragedian, author of&#13;
"1001 Ways to Beat the Draft"&#13;
(1967).&#13;
Friday, October 20, 8 p.m.&#13;
Memorial Union Great Hall:&#13;
Allen Ginsberg — Beat poet&#13;
and cosmic chronicler.&#13;
Ed Sanders — author of The&#13;
Family and Tales of Beatnik&#13;
Glory, ex-Fug. last Wednesday with his 37 piece orchestra. photo by&#13;
Brian Taggart &#13;
Wednesday October 18,1978 %»ger 2&#13;
New Faces&#13;
On Campus&#13;
Kim Haas — "I usually study on&#13;
the second floor of the library&#13;
near the windows."&#13;
Where do you find is the easiest place to study?&#13;
Kathy Davis&#13;
John Stewart&#13;
Kathy Davis, new to Parkside&#13;
this semester, is a full-time&#13;
lecturer in the Earth Science&#13;
Department. She i s teaching the&#13;
Crystallography (203) and Environmental&#13;
Earth Science (103)&#13;
courses. She says that Parkside's&#13;
facilities here are excellent.&#13;
Miss Davis is originally from&#13;
up-state New York and received&#13;
her BA from the University of&#13;
Rochester-NY. However, she has&#13;
most recently been living in the&#13;
Chicago area where she is&#13;
completing her Ph.D. work at&#13;
Northwestern University.&#13;
Her particular field of interest&#13;
involves the study of rocks and&#13;
minerals that undergo crystallization&#13;
due to intense temperatures&#13;
and pressures. Although&#13;
this is very theoretical work,&#13;
theory always precedes any&#13;
material benefits to be derived&#13;
from a particular field of inquiry.&#13;
Miss Davis has also worked as&#13;
a Teacher's Assistant at&#13;
Northwestern before coming to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Mike Murphy ....Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan General Manager&#13;
Tom Cooper Student Advisor&#13;
John Stewart News Editor&#13;
Sue Stevens Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Editor&#13;
Kim Putman Copy Editor&#13;
Chris Miller Ad Manager&#13;
Nancy Szymanski Circulation Manager&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Carolyn Bresciano, Cathy Brownlee, Bob Bruno, Mollie&#13;
Clarke, Dave Cramer, Tom Fervoy, Rob Gardner, Pete&#13;
Jackel, Thomas Jenn, Nicki Kroll, Kim Ruetz, Jeff&#13;
Stevens, Lester Thompson.&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
Susan Caldwell, Denise D'Acquisto, Mike Holmdohl, Julie&#13;
Orth, Tony Raymond and Brian Taggart.&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig Dvorak, Rob Miller and Matthew Poliakon.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Cramer and Dawn Thomas.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted for publication if they&#13;
are typewritten, double spaced with one inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be included&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and refuse&#13;
publication to leters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All material must be received by Thursday noon for&#13;
publication on the following Wednesday.&#13;
Her hobbies and interests,&#13;
besides keeping her two cats out&#13;
of trouble, are cross-country&#13;
skiing and bike riding.&#13;
Ron Sardessai&#13;
by Mollie Clarke&#13;
Professor Ron Sardessai came&#13;
from Portuguese India to the&#13;
United States in 1966 to pursue&#13;
his masters in Business Management.&#13;
He received both his MBA&#13;
and PHD from North Texas State&#13;
University. Professor Sardessai&#13;
has traveled to many countries&#13;
serving on different committees.&#13;
As a member of the Management&#13;
Consulting team to the Agency&#13;
for International Development&#13;
(U.S. Government) he has helped&#13;
develop business program curriculums&#13;
for universities in Brazil&#13;
and Venezuela. He also has&#13;
served on a seven-member&#13;
commission to develop management&#13;
institutes (centers to train&#13;
people in business management)&#13;
in Mexico, Chile and Columbia.&#13;
Professor Sardessai comes to&#13;
Parkside with nine years of&#13;
teaching experience. He has&#13;
taught management courses at&#13;
the University of Tennessee at&#13;
Nashville and at North Texas&#13;
State University. Business teachers,&#13;
according to Professor&#13;
Sardessai, should "not only&#13;
provide information but develop&#13;
an all-around individual" and&#13;
"create an inquiring mind." He&#13;
advises students to acquire as&#13;
many applicable skills and get as&#13;
much exposure to the business&#13;
world through internships and&#13;
work experiences as well as&#13;
studies.&#13;
Some of his outside interests&#13;
include tennis, writing poetry,&#13;
and traveling. This year he plans&#13;
on traveling to Europe and doing&#13;
more research in the area of&#13;
multinational management.&#13;
Becky Duschak — "Here in&#13;
mainplace."&#13;
Dale Danke — "My girlfriend's&#13;
apartment."&#13;
Annie McWilliams — "In the&#13;
Union dining room... There's&#13;
not much talking in there,&#13;
everyone's too busy eating."&#13;
Charlie King — "At home&#13;
There isn't any music out here&#13;
and I study best to music."&#13;
TITUO. TH M* FT*HOLY&#13;
REPUBL KAN/DEHOCTA Tic&#13;
CANDIDATE for GOVERNOR&#13;
and I rron/se TO LOUJER&#13;
Ycvg TAKFS ! THANK YOO.&#13;
SIRS, DM... UOULD YOU&#13;
TIAWFN TO HAVE AN/ OTHET&#13;
ZSS, -:S to DEBATE, OR ANYTHING&#13;
ELSE THAT COULD HELP US&#13;
DECIDE UHO TO&#13;
VOTE FOR?&#13;
PSSTf HEYj DO YOU HAVE&#13;
SOMETHING ELSE UE CouiD TALK&#13;
ABOUT *&#13;
NO, I NEVE# THOUGHT&#13;
\ THAT WE'D NEED&#13;
\ ANYTHING ELSE.&#13;
* /&#13;
V&#13;
OEU, LFT15 FUP&#13;
oN IT. HEADS, jr'M&#13;
GOVERNOR, TAILS, YOU'RF&#13;
NOT !&#13;
I&#13;
OKAY, r&#13;
THINK I&#13;
HAVE A&#13;
NICKEL HERE&#13;
SOME P LACE. &#13;
Wednesday October 18,1978&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
ganger&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
Oscar Wilde&#13;
as&#13;
left praising the performance&#13;
a triumph "&#13;
Oscar Wilde was considered&#13;
one of the greatest and most&#13;
controversial fi8ures ^&#13;
literary world. Author of prose&#13;
Poems, novels and plays&#13;
* "&#13;
The Picture of Dorian&#13;
j /, V Wlndermere's Fan"&#13;
and "The Importance of Being&#13;
Earnest" (the latter the opening&#13;
production of the current Racine&#13;
Theater Guild season) — Wilde&#13;
died at an early age. Price&#13;
portrays Wilde toward the end of&#13;
his life as he earned a sporadic&#13;
living giving lectures, this one set&#13;
in an old concert hall in Paris.&#13;
The play is by Academy Award&#13;
nominee John Gay and the&#13;
director is Tony Award winner&#13;
Joseph Hardy.&#13;
Price began his career on the&#13;
stage in "Victoria Regina,"&#13;
appearing with the famous&#13;
Mercury Theatre and in&#13;
numerous other theatre presentations&#13;
including the celebrated&#13;
"Don Juan in Hell." Currently&#13;
one of the country's most&#13;
sought-after lecturers, Price has&#13;
also appeared on all major&#13;
television shows arid is the&#13;
author of several best-selling&#13;
books. Between films, concerts&#13;
and radio and recording work&#13;
contribute to the actor's busy&#13;
schedule.&#13;
Among Price's many stage&#13;
appearances are "Outward&#13;
Bound," "Angel Street," "The&#13;
Cocktail Party," "The Lady's Not&#13;
For Burning," "Peter Pan,"&#13;
"Oliver" and "Charley's Aunt."&#13;
His film performances have&#13;
included "The Song of Bernadette,"&#13;
"House of the Seven&#13;
Gables," "His Kind of Woman,"&#13;
"The Three Musketeers," "Champagne&#13;
for Caesar," "House of&#13;
Wax," "The Ten Commandments"&#13;
and "Theatre of Blood."&#13;
Price has appeared on a&#13;
number of television programs as&#13;
well, including "It These Walls&#13;
Could Speak," "Cooking PriceWise,"&#13;
and on the BBC. He has&#13;
served as narrator for performances&#13;
of "Biblical Opera,"&#13;
"Moses" with the Roger Wagner&#13;
Chorale; "Peter and the Wolf"&#13;
and Copeland's "Abraham&#13;
Lincoln," with the El Paso&#13;
Symphony; "Peter and the Wolf"&#13;
and "Survivor from Warsaw"&#13;
^CAPULC&#13;
JAN 2-9, 1979&#13;
from i 359&#13;
• ROUND TRIP A IR&#13;
• DELUXE L ODGING&#13;
• BREAKFAST DAILY&#13;
• GROUND T RANSFERS&#13;
• GROUP ESCORT&#13;
• TIPS &amp; TAX ES&#13;
LIMITED SPACES AVAILABLE&#13;
CONTACT: PAR KSIDE UNION&#13;
RM. 209 CALL 553-2200&#13;
with the St. Louis Symphony;&#13;
"Oedipus Rex," with the Roger&#13;
Wagner Chorale; and the "Song&#13;
of Moses" at San Diegp State&#13;
College. His most celebrated&#13;
concert piece is "The Raven," an&#13;
original composition by Leonard&#13;
Slatken written especially for&#13;
Price.&#13;
Price has made recordings of&#13;
"America the Beautiful," "Poems&#13;
of Shelley," and WitchcraftMagic,&#13;
as well as lecturing on&#13;
such topics as Primitive Art,&#13;
Modern Art, Letters of Van&#13;
Gogh, Three American Voices&#13;
(Walt Whitman, Whistler, and&#13;
Tennessee Williams), The Enjoyment&#13;
of Great Art and The&#13;
Villain Still Pursues Me. . A&#13;
History of Villainy.&#13;
Books he has authored include&#13;
"I Like What I Know (1958),"&#13;
"Book of Joe (1960)," "A&#13;
Treasury of Great Recipes&#13;
(1965)" and "The Treasury of&#13;
American Art (1966)." Price is&#13;
also the author of a syndicated&#13;
newspaper column on art. He is&#13;
presently at work on a book for&#13;
Grosset and Dunlap entitled&#13;
"Man and the Monster Image."&#13;
it will be more systematic and&#13;
organized.&#13;
Industry is also involved in&#13;
other aspects of the Division's&#13;
program.&#13;
People from industry help&#13;
teach some of the courses by&#13;
working along with the professor.&#13;
This results in a unique&#13;
training program.&#13;
The faculty also has consulting&#13;
connections with local industry.&#13;
Professors are involved in&#13;
outreach activities that bring&#13;
back valuable information to the&#13;
University. Without this contact&#13;
the Engineering Program could&#13;
not function properly.&#13;
Parkside also has an Advisory&#13;
Kenosha Area&#13;
Co-op Program&#13;
Committee that includes industry&#13;
leadrs such as vice-presidents&#13;
and chief engineers. The&#13;
committee consists of eight&#13;
members from industries such as&#13;
Modine, AMC, Johnson's Wax,&#13;
and J.I. Case. The committee&#13;
advises the Engineering division&#13;
and receives feedback in return.&#13;
The plans for the New Modern&#13;
Industrial Building add to the&#13;
Division's expansion of studies.&#13;
The Division is quite excited&#13;
about the new building because&#13;
the. present facilities- are&#13;
inappropriate for the over-all&#13;
program. The new building will&#13;
become an integral part of the&#13;
University's Engineering Department&#13;
by allowing students to put&#13;
into practice what they learn in&#13;
class.&#13;
The building's basic design is&#13;
important because it will&#13;
resemble real-industrial set-ups.&#13;
Production labs, assembly lines,&#13;
and graphic design 'rooms will&#13;
replace the present labs by&#13;
producing an industrial environment.&#13;
&#13;
With the new Modern&#13;
Industrial Buiding, the cooperative&#13;
education program, and&#13;
more industrial involvement, the&#13;
Division of Engineering Science&#13;
will improve its training methods&#13;
by combining theory with&#13;
practical application.&#13;
Gubernatorial Debate Oct.22&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin. October&#13;
11, 1978. Venry Aiello, President&#13;
of the Kenosha Taxpayers&#13;
announced today that Les Aspin&#13;
and Bill Petrie, candidates for&#13;
Congress in the November&#13;
election, will appear in a debate&#13;
sponsored by the Kenosha&#13;
Taxpayers.&#13;
The topic of the debate will be&#13;
"Federal Taxes." It will be held&#13;
Sunday, October 22 in the&#13;
Marina Room of the Kenosha&#13;
Holiday Inn. The debate will&#13;
commence at 12:00 noon after a&#13;
"Gourmet Breakfast Brunch" at&#13;
11:00 a.m. Audience questions&#13;
wil l be answered by the&#13;
candidates.&#13;
This is the only scheduled&#13;
debate between the candidates&#13;
in Kenosha during the election&#13;
campaign. Tickets for the brunch&#13;
can be obtained by calling&#13;
Charles Lebanowsky at 654-0738.&#13;
WIN A FREE&#13;
TRIP TO FLORIDA&#13;
TO COMPETE IN THE COLLEGE SUPER SPORTS FINALS&#13;
...ALSO A FREE TRIP TO THE STATE FINALS&#13;
COED TEAMS: 4 MEN, 4 WOMEN EACH&#13;
TO COMPETE IN - VOLLEYBALL, 880 RELAY&#13;
RACE, OBSTACLE COURSE, TEAM FRISBEE,&#13;
TUG-OF-WAR AND 6 PACK PITCH-IN.&#13;
LOTS OF FUIM- PRIZES-TROPHIES&#13;
NO COST TO ENTER&#13;
CAMPUS COMPETITION TO BEGIN IN APPROXIMATELY 2 WEEKS&#13;
SIGN YOUR TEAM UP TODAY- U NION REC. C TR. D ESK&#13;
OR L. H EIN'S OFFICE, PHYSICAL EDUCATION BUILDING&#13;
ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC., BREWERS OF ANHEUS ER-BUSCH® BUDWEISER®BEER • ST. LOUIS, M0. U S A &#13;
Wednesday October 18,1978 ganger&#13;
A-&#13;
. .. but fortunately the Farkside Student U nion escaped the vandalism&#13;
Concert R eview ** **•*****••*••*•••••••••••••**••••••••&#13;
Vienna Choir Boys&#13;
Last Thursday the ringing ot&#13;
young voices resounded&#13;
throughout the Communication&#13;
Arts theatre. The Vienna Choir&#13;
Boys joyously marked the&#13;
second program in the Accent&#13;
On Enrichment Series.&#13;
The 22 boys that performed&#13;
that evening ranged in ages from&#13;
9 to 14. Two boys were unable to&#13;
perform due to illness.&#13;
The evening began with the&#13;
boys singing Guillaume Dufay's&#13;
Recordare Virgo written in the&#13;
early 1400s. This Was followed by&#13;
Una Mora and Duo Seraphim,&#13;
both works by Thomas L. de&#13;
Victoria. Selections from A&#13;
Ceremony Of Carols by&#13;
Benjamin Britten (1913-1975),&#13;
and 3 movements from the&#13;
German Mass by Franz Schubert&#13;
(1797-1828) ended the first&#13;
section of the program.&#13;
Following the intermission the&#13;
boys performed Franz Schubert's&#13;
Merry Pranks an operetta based&#13;
on the melodies of Franz&#13;
Schubert, The operatta told of&#13;
pranks played by a group of&#13;
choir boys on their director.&#13;
Based on Franz Schuberts own&#13;
experiences the operetta was the&#13;
most enjoyable segment of the&#13;
evenings performance.&#13;
After the second intermission&#13;
the boys ended the evening with&#13;
Franz Schubert's The Little&#13;
Village, Canzonetta by Matthia&#13;
Ferrabosco (1550-1616), Hunter&#13;
Chorus from W.A. Mozart's&#13;
Ascanio In Alba, and Evening&#13;
Song and The Gypsy both by&#13;
Zoltan Kodalv.&#13;
Wolfgang Powischer, the&#13;
musical director, said that the&#13;
boys practice a minimum of two&#13;
hours a day, beginning their&#13;
vocal training as early as&#13;
years old.&#13;
The Vienna Choir boys&#13;
performance at Parkside came&#13;
after only one week in America.&#13;
Although four of the boys have&#13;
been to the U.S. before the&#13;
majority have never seen the&#13;
states. Director Powischer said&#13;
that, as normal with young&#13;
children, the boys are not&#13;
overwhelmed by the new sites&#13;
and experiences in America but&#13;
they do tackle the whole tour as&#13;
a large adventure.&#13;
The choir boys who performed&#13;
here are one of four touring&#13;
groups, the other groups are&#13;
primarily based in Europe.&#13;
X 9 9&#13;
Lcrcng Ot ^llfi&#13;
Theatre &amp; Films&#13;
Oct. 18 — Film "Citizen Kane" 7 p.m. Golden Rondelle, 1525 Howe&#13;
St., Racine.&#13;
Oct. 19, 20, &amp; 21 — Play "The Mousetrap" presented by the&#13;
Haylofters 8:15 p.m. at the Malt House Theatre, Burlington.&#13;
Oct. 20, 21, 22 &amp; 24 - Play "The Freeway" present by the Milwaukee&#13;
Repertory Theatre at Milwaukee PAC Todd Wehr Theatre 20th - 8&#13;
p.m., 21st - 5 &amp; 9 p.m., 22nd - 2 &amp; 7:30 p.m., and 24th - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 20 &amp; 21 — Play " The Importance of Being Earnest" presented by&#13;
Racine Theatre Guild 2519 Northwestern Ave. Call box office for&#13;
times.&#13;
Oct. 21 — F ilm "The Years Before the Mast" 8 p.m. Milw. PAC Vogel&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Oct. 22 — Fi lm Star Trek "City on the Edge of Forever" 8 p.m. Vogel&#13;
Hall PAC.&#13;
Music&#13;
Oct. 18 — Bob Dylan at Chicago Stadium.&#13;
Oct. 23 — Al Stewart at Milw. PAC 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 23 &amp; 24&#13;
11 p.m.&#13;
Todd Rundgren Milwaukee Electric Ballroom 7:30 &amp;&#13;
Exhibits&#13;
Thru October. . .&#13;
String Art — Racine Main Library meeting room, Symmography by&#13;
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Joseph Woodmansee.&#13;
Beer Cans — Racine Main Library children's dept. collection of Chris&#13;
McConville.&#13;
Wustum Museum 2519 Northwestern Ave. Watercolor Wis. — 78 by&#13;
Dennis Doman in photography gallery.&#13;
Exhibit — Mathis Gallery: Over 300 years of Print Making, Rembrandt&#13;
to Rauschenberg. Tues. - Sat. 12-5 p.m. 735 Center St. Racine.&#13;
Art — Solo show by Racine artist Nancy Greenbaum at Mother&#13;
Courgae Bookstore and Gallery 229 State St. Racine Weekdays 10-6,&#13;
Sunday 12-5 p.m.&#13;
Exhibit — P ainting and drawings, Allen Gallery Magin Lounge PAC&#13;
Behind The W oodshed&#13;
SIX 0'toole Goes On The Road&#13;
Common&#13;
Scents&#13;
% bAam/toob sjc&#13;
jVattiUzXly,&#13;
PRODUCTS FROM MADISON'S&#13;
-TME SOAP OPERA&#13;
FlND US IN THE SCHOOLHOUSE SHOPPES 3', 16 RAPIDS CT.&#13;
•RACINE• 634-8223 BEHIND THE SOUND GALLERY&#13;
by Scarf O'toole&#13;
"MUCH MORF. THAN JUST HAIR"&#13;
cXMurhp Leaf&#13;
We offer FREE individual&#13;
consultations for:&#13;
• Hair Styling&#13;
• Conditioning&#13;
• Makeup Treatment&#13;
Hours:&#13;
9 to 9 Daily&#13;
8 to 4:30 Saturday&#13;
Phone: 639 1507&#13;
4061 N. Main St.&#13;
(i/luptfffiQLeaf&#13;
I decided the other night that&#13;
journalism was a waste of my&#13;
time. So, I called my editor and&#13;
told him I was going to resign.&#13;
"Scarf, you can't do this to us.&#13;
Think of your fans, those loyal&#13;
readers who, like eager urchins&#13;
in a Dickens novel, wait to read&#13;
your weekly column as if it were&#13;
the only sustenance they knew.&#13;
And if that doesn't convince you,&#13;
think of the twenty-four column&#13;
inches we fill every week with&#13;
that drivel you call journalism,"&#13;
my editor chortled.&#13;
"That's just the point," I&#13;
countered. "I have very little&#13;
desire to think anymore. I need&#13;
something new to arouse my&#13;
interests."&#13;
My editor gave me a sidelong&#13;
glance. Something was brewing&#13;
in the old head. "Scarf, why&#13;
don't you go out on a lecture&#13;
tour. You could get the diversion&#13;
you need, and at the same time,&#13;
make a lot of money," my editor&#13;
said.&#13;
Dollar signs began to flash in&#13;
my eyes. A lot of money. That&#13;
sounded like a reasonable idea.&#13;
I went home and called my&#13;
agent. "Line me up a nice tour&#13;
where I can speak my mind.&#13;
"Somewhere where I can make a&#13;
lot of money," I commanded&#13;
him.&#13;
"Scarf, what you need to do is&#13;
go on a college lecture tour.&#13;
Those saps will eat up anything,"&#13;
he replied.&#13;
So, I packed my valise and hit&#13;
the road. I found out that it&#13;
doesn't matter what you talk&#13;
about, as long as you make it&#13;
seem intellectual and important.&#13;
That was the easy part. The&#13;
difficult part was trying to&#13;
collect my fees after each&#13;
engagement.&#13;
continued next week&#13;
Editor's Note: Scarf will make&#13;
a rare appearance in the Student&#13;
Union, Friday, from 1 to 3 p:m.&#13;
His topic will be on how a poor&#13;
schizophrenic like Scarf, could&#13;
raise himself up to the gutter&#13;
level in just three short lifetimes.&#13;
Scarf's other two persons will&#13;
also be appearing with him; just&#13;
look for a small crowd yelling,&#13;
"We want our money back!"&#13;
aoo: &gt;' *: :&lt; xxvTERRACE&#13;
ROOM&#13;
LAKE AVE RACIAE&#13;
ff*&#13;
presents:&#13;
WED. &amp; THUR. "OPUS"&#13;
FRI. "BRIAA BALESTRIERI&#13;
SAT. "MATTESOA'S ALL STAR BAAD"&#13;
entertainment 9 p.m.&#13;
"JAM SO GOOD" FOR RESERVED SEATING&#13;
CALL 632-4206 &#13;
Wednesday October 18,1978&#13;
ganger&#13;
Quiet If You Please&#13;
The signs now cheerfully hang&#13;
from the ceiling at both ends of&#13;
the corridor, occasionally bouncing&#13;
off of a gust of internal wind&#13;
on their taut wires. They read&#13;
quite differently from the old&#13;
signs that hung there characterized&#13;
by the demanding phrase&#13;
"Quiet Please". The old sings&#13;
were replaced by more congenial&#13;
and hopefully more effective&#13;
signs that read, "Thank You For&#13;
Keeping This Floor A Quiet&#13;
Area."&#13;
The signs in question presently&#13;
reside on the second floor of the&#13;
Wyllie Library Learning Center&#13;
where they serve to maintain a&#13;
designated quiet area. This arose&#13;
as a result of an image survey&#13;
conducted by the library last&#13;
year.&#13;
The survey was made in an&#13;
effort to gauge student ideas&#13;
about improvements in the&#13;
library. Distributed to approximately&#13;
2,000 students and 600&#13;
staff and faculty on campus and&#13;
mailed to 5,000 members of the&#13;
Racine and Kenosha communities&#13;
who make regular use of the&#13;
library, the survey generated an&#13;
estimated 1000 responses, 400 of&#13;
which came specifically from&#13;
students.&#13;
The responses, in general,&#13;
were favorable toward the&#13;
library. Most respondents registered&#13;
an overall satisfaction with&#13;
library facilities and operations.&#13;
From the written responses at the&#13;
end of the survey, however, most&#13;
people expressed a need for an&#13;
assigned "quiet area" in which to&#13;
study. An idea exchange meeting&#13;
between library personnel and&#13;
student staff produced the same&#13;
results. Staff members were&#13;
asked to bring ideas for three&#13;
improvements they would like to&#13;
see in the library. The need for a&#13;
designated quiet area registered&#13;
highest.&#13;
So the second floor of the&#13;
library was officially designated&#13;
the "quiet area of the library."&#13;
Quiet signs were erected on&#13;
walls throughout the floor. Long&#13;
rows,of tables were separated&#13;
and scattered to dissuade&#13;
socializing. Occasional patrols&#13;
of the floor by library personnel&#13;
were initiated to establish&#13;
discipline. Such actions seemed&#13;
sufficient enough to establish a&#13;
study area.&#13;
The movement met with some&#13;
negative reactions, however,&#13;
Club Talks It Up&#13;
by Sue Stevens&#13;
If yo u've ever taken a foreign&#13;
language course, you know that&#13;
it's easy to forget what you've&#13;
learned unless you practice. Of&#13;
course, it's not always easy to&#13;
find someone to converse in a&#13;
foreign language with — a t least&#13;
it wasn't until now.&#13;
The Modern Language Club&#13;
here at Parkside hopes to help&#13;
students keep up with their&#13;
languages while interacting in a&#13;
social group.&#13;
Beginning tomorrow, October&#13;
19th, those interested can bring&#13;
their lunches to Union room 207&#13;
anytime between 11 a.m. and 2&#13;
p.m. on Thursdays and converse&#13;
in their favorite languages —&#13;
that is, if t he favorite language is&#13;
German, French, or Spanish;&#13;
those languages offered at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Mark DeCheck, president of&#13;
the club, said that it doesn't&#13;
matter what level each individual&#13;
is at. "Everyone will be trying&#13;
to learn from each other. There&#13;
will also be a few foreign&#13;
language teachers around."&#13;
So far, the club has a list of 50&#13;
interested people with about 25&#13;
as active members. Mark wants&#13;
to stress that everyone is&#13;
welcome. The lunch time&#13;
activities will be open to all&#13;
students.&#13;
The group isn't only interested&#13;
in the weekly get-togethers.&#13;
Plans are now being made for a&#13;
trip to the Chicago Art Institute&#13;
to view the "Pompeii AD 79"&#13;
exhibit on Saturday, November&#13;
4th.&#13;
The exhibit consists of over&#13;
"T^r300&#13;
treasures that bring to life&#13;
the styles, traditions, and&#13;
character of the ancient Romans.&#13;
These items were preserved by&#13;
volcanic cover from a devastating&#13;
eruption of Mount Vesuvius&#13;
on the morning of August 24,&#13;
A.D. 79 that silenced the city of&#13;
Pompeii to be forgotten for&#13;
centuries.&#13;
Anyone interested in t aking in&#13;
the exhibit and a meal at an&#13;
ethnic restaurant (The exact&#13;
restaurant is yet to be decided&#13;
upon.) should sign up on the&#13;
bulletin board across from&#13;
Communication Arts 271 by&#13;
October 27.&#13;
This trip is only one activity&#13;
planned by the club. Many&#13;
others will be added to the&#13;
agenda as the year goes along,&#13;
including Christmas caroling.&#13;
Any questions regarding the trip&#13;
and/or the other club plans&#13;
should be directed to Mark&#13;
DeCheck, 639-7927.&#13;
Thanh you for&#13;
keeping this floor&#13;
QUIET AREA&#13;
a&#13;
photos by&#13;
Julie Orth&#13;
according to Maria Soule,&#13;
librarian, and Dorman Smith&#13;
head of Technical Services.&#13;
Quiet signs were mutilated or&#13;
stolen and disruptive noise&#13;
continued.&#13;
Because of the lack of&#13;
personnel to conduct constant&#13;
patrols of the second floor a rea,&#13;
alternative action will be taken.&#13;
More staff will be moved into the&#13;
second floor offices. Mr. Smith&#13;
feels that their presence will&#13;
affect the behavior of those in&#13;
the immediate area. Special&#13;
enclosed study areas on the&#13;
second floor will also be set&#13;
aside.&#13;
Dorman Smith announced&#13;
that coin operated electric&#13;
typewriters will soon be made&#13;
available to the student body,&#13;
another offspring of the surveys.&#13;
The typewriters in the old&#13;
typerwriter rooms will be&#13;
removed and the rooms made&#13;
available for group study.&#13;
Electric typewriters will be&#13;
rented, by the library, from an&#13;
independent agency. The new&#13;
typewriters will then be housed&#13;
in an area on the D1 level of the&#13;
library. Smith said that UWWhitewater&#13;
had a similiar s et up&#13;
which was very successful.&#13;
The two other library activities&#13;
suggested by the survey were the&#13;
Paperback Exchange and the&#13;
Recreational Reading collections&#13;
on the D-1 level of the library.&#13;
Both seem to be quite popular&#13;
although Smith admits its&#13;
difficult to rate success yet. The&#13;
Paperback Exchange can be seen&#13;
as one enters the D-1 level&#13;
entrance of the library. It is a&#13;
"leave one-take one" set up&#13;
wherein if yo u wish to take one&#13;
of the paperbacks you must&#13;
leave one of your own at the D-1&#13;
level desk. The Recreational&#13;
Reading collection is made up of&#13;
popular novels that have been&#13;
published in the last year or so&#13;
and area acquired from local&#13;
libraries. These are checked out&#13;
in the normal fashion that all&#13;
other library materials are. This&#13;
collection can be found in the&#13;
D-1 audio-visual equipment&#13;
area, where all the record players&#13;
and the like are set up.&#13;
Dickens&#13;
At&#13;
Pabst&#13;
The Milwaukee Repertory&#13;
Theater is now taking public mail&#13;
ticket orders for their 1978&#13;
production of Milwaukee's most&#13;
popular Christmastime event, A&#13;
CHRISTMAS CAROL, by Charles&#13;
Dickens&#13;
A CHRISTMAS CAROL will&#13;
perform at the Pabst Theater&#13;
from December 8 through 30,&#13;
1978. This will be the third year&#13;
which the Company has offered&#13;
the holiday masterpiece. Nearly&#13;
75,000 people have seen the&#13;
show over the past two years.&#13;
Mail-order forms a re available&#13;
in the Milwaukee Journal and the&#13;
Milwaukee Sentinel. All mailorders&#13;
will end on October 22.&#13;
Tickets not sold through&#13;
mail-order will be made&#13;
available at the Pabst box office&#13;
beginning November 6.&#13;
A CHRISTMAS CAROL is&#13;
sponsored by the Metropolitan&#13;
Milwaukee Association of Commerce.&#13;
&#13;
Ranger Needs Writers&#13;
GEORGE'S BAR&#13;
THE BEST IN LIVE ENTERTAINMENT!&#13;
hoppy hows 0&#13;
mon-fri 3 -6pm R&#13;
Also serving It alian Beef S andwiches and&#13;
Italian Sausage Bombers&#13;
2319 63rd Street 652-8988&#13;
NOW AT 2 LOCATIONS&#13;
6100 Washington Ave.&#13;
Pioneer Village&#13;
886-5077 • 886-0207&#13;
2615 Washington Ave.&#13;
634-2373 • 634-2374&#13;
THIS WEEK FROM [DObl&#13;
MARCELA RUBLE - ROOK&#13;
Today 11 am - 3 pm Aura &amp; Horoscope&#13;
Readings in Union Square 7:30 pm FREE&#13;
Lecture on psychic power Union&#13;
Cinema&#13;
Today: Folk singer &amp; Guitarist&#13;
JOHN STIERNBERG 1 pm - 4 pm&#13;
Free Admission Wine Served Union 104 -106&#13;
"SEMI-TOUGH " Starring&#13;
Fri. Oct. 20 - 8 pm Burt Reynolds&#13;
Sun. Oct. 22 - 7:30 pm&#13;
Coming Oct. 24&amp;25 Humphrey Bogart in&#13;
Casablanca&#13;
7:30 pm Union Cinema $1.00 &#13;
Wednesday October 18,1978 ganger&#13;
Women's Volleyball&#13;
Pushing the The .500 Mark&#13;
photo by Brian Taggsrt&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside women's volleyball&#13;
team is edging its way closer&#13;
to a .500 record with every week&#13;
that passes. With seven dates left&#13;
on their schedule, Coach Linda&#13;
Henderson is hoping to go ahead&#13;
of the league very soon.&#13;
The Rangers concluded last&#13;
weeks play with an overall&#13;
record of 12 wins 14 losses and 3&#13;
ties. This past week saw Parkside&#13;
winning three matches and&#13;
losing two tough matches.&#13;
On last Tuesday the Rangers&#13;
travelled to Madison for contests&#13;
against UW-Oshkosh and UWMadison.&#13;
The first match of the&#13;
night against Oshkosh was a&#13;
rematch of an earlier fight that&#13;
Oshkosh won. This time the&#13;
Rangers fared much better as&#13;
they wiped out Oshkosh by&#13;
/&#13;
scores of 15-5 and 15-8.&#13;
The second match was played&#13;
much more closely, a little to&#13;
close as far as Parkside was&#13;
concerned. Madison beat the&#13;
Rangers in two straight by scores&#13;
of 9-15 and 11-15.&#13;
On Thursday Parkside hosted&#13;
Northwesterfi University, Kellogg&#13;
Community College and UWMilwaukee.&#13;
The match against&#13;
Milwaukee was a replay of the&#13;
previous weekend for the&#13;
Rangers as they handily defeated&#13;
them for the second time of the&#13;
season with scores of 16-14 and&#13;
15-6.&#13;
Northwestern proved to be a&#13;
tougher match for the Rangers as&#13;
Northwestern came out on top&#13;
for the second time this season&#13;
with scores of 9-15 and 13-15.&#13;
Kellogg Community College&#13;
was to be the real test of the&#13;
night for the Rangers. Kellogg&#13;
has battled its way to the&#13;
national tournament in each of&#13;
the last five years. Coach&#13;
Henderson pointed out that her&#13;
team was really up for this match&#13;
and they really wanted to beat&#13;
Kellogg. As it turned out Parkside&#13;
got its own way as they won two&#13;
out of three games, 5-15, 15-8,&#13;
and 15-10, to win the match.&#13;
Monday the Rangers travelled&#13;
to Carroll to battle last years&#13;
state champions in a rematch of&#13;
the 1977 championship game.&#13;
Parkside will also participate in&#13;
matches this week against&#13;
UW-Whitewater, UW-Milwaukee&#13;
(again) and Valporaiso&#13;
University. They will then finish&#13;
out the week on Saturday at the&#13;
George Williams Invitational&#13;
Tournament in Downers Grove,&#13;
Illinois.&#13;
OOCKEY&#13;
Menswear Outlet Store&#13;
The NEW Jockey Menswear&#13;
Outlet Store Now is Open Daily&#13;
First Quality Mens Sportswear&#13;
at 50% off Regular Retail.&#13;
Tenniswear - Shirts and Shorts&#13;
Active Sportswear - Shirts and Shorts&#13;
Sweaters&#13;
Jackets&#13;
Warm-up Suits&#13;
Sportshirts&#13;
Hosiery&#13;
New Selection Of&#13;
Yard Goods&#13;
Irregulars up to 70% off&#13;
Conditions of Sale:&#13;
Cash only-No Checks-All Sales Final-No Returns&#13;
or Exchanges-No Exchanges at any Retail Store&#13;
Jockey Outlet Store&#13;
4200 39th Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53142&#13;
(North Side of Distribution Center)&#13;
Daily Hours&#13;
Monday - Friday&#13;
12 noon to 5 p.m.&#13;
Saturday&#13;
10 a.m. to 5 p.m.&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
Not&#13;
Jinxed&#13;
by Pete Jackel&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa's young&#13;
Cross Country team disregarded&#13;
the Friday the 13th jinx and&#13;
turned in an 11th place finish out&#13;
of a field of 23 at the Purdue&#13;
Invitational last Thursday.&#13;
Led by senior Gary Priem's&#13;
13th place finish out of a field of&#13;
145, the Ranger's generated a&#13;
total of 271 points in one of their&#13;
finest efforts of the season.&#13;
Other Ranger finishers were&#13;
sophomore Bob Langenhol who&#13;
finished 14th, Dave Mueller&#13;
66th, Joe Carey 87th, Chris Ohm&#13;
91 st, Al Halbur 110th and&#13;
freshman Glenn Schultz 115th.&#13;
Rosa was greatly encouraged&#13;
by the Ranger's performance and&#13;
feels they will continue to&#13;
improve with additional seasoning.&#13;
The trio of freshman Ohm,&#13;
Mueller, and Schultz was&#13;
particularly impressive to Rosa&#13;
and he feels they will become&#13;
even more effective when they&#13;
adjust to the standard five mile&#13;
collegiate course.&#13;
iOOCCOSCOCCOCCC cccccoc^&#13;
THIS SAT.&#13;
KIDDIE F UCKS&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
"HEY THERE,&#13;
ITS YOGI BEAR"&#13;
A8M. *1 .&#13;
M&#13;
10,00 A.M.&#13;
L&#13;
UNION CINEMA&#13;
scoocoooccoooccco ooc^ &#13;
Wednesday October 18,1978&#13;
Outdoor Leadership&#13;
ganger&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
Roughing It Easy? Injuries Plague Team&#13;
Last Friday the Outdoor&#13;
Leadership course held class&#13;
above water. The course&#13;
provides experience and training&#13;
in backpacking, rockclimbing&#13;
and orienteering.&#13;
Students spent the afternoon&#13;
learning the basics of rockclimbing&#13;
as taught by Art Bloxdorf.&#13;
Next week the class will travel to&#13;
•evil's Lake to put their&#13;
knowledge into practice.&#13;
Photos by Mike Murphy&#13;
Golfers Look Good For Next Year&#13;
by Pete jacket&#13;
The Parkside golfers concluded&#13;
their rebuilding season&#13;
last October 9 and 10 with a&#13;
creditable eighth place finish in&#13;
the District 14 Tournament at&#13;
River Falls. Providing the spark&#13;
was sophomore Gary Paskiewicz&#13;
who sported a flashy two game&#13;
total score of 155 to achieve&#13;
medalist status and induce&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens to classify&#13;
him as "one of the three best&#13;
golfers in the district." Stephens&#13;
added that Paskiewicz and&#13;
senior Jim Webers are sure bets&#13;
I sTarTed as&#13;
d Ranker&#13;
"P O&#13;
uu Tiler&#13;
to make the soon to be released&#13;
all district team while senior&#13;
Casey Griffin is a prime&#13;
contender to gain membership&#13;
on the prestigious squad.&#13;
After a slow start this year, the&#13;
Rangers steadily gained momentum&#13;
before eventually climaxing&#13;
the regular season by locking&#13;
horns with the more experienced&#13;
Marquette and Carroll teams in a&#13;
triangular meet. Parkside ended&#13;
a grueling contest by beating&#13;
Carroll and finishing in a&#13;
deadlock victory with Marquette.&#13;
&#13;
Glancing ahead to next years&#13;
prospects, Stephens is greatly&#13;
encouraged by what he terms as&#13;
"a very promising group" despite&#13;
the loss of both Webers and&#13;
Griffin who have exhausted their&#13;
remaining eligibility by being&#13;
former "redshirts."&#13;
Stephens will rely on Paskiewicz&#13;
and junior John Spiglanin&#13;
for leadership and spiritual&#13;
backbone while Spiglanin's&#13;
brother Bob along with freshmen&#13;
Scott Lehmann, Todd Schalinske,&#13;
and Brian Graham will&#13;
round out a squad that could&#13;
produce some major surprises in&#13;
'79.&#13;
so c an you&#13;
UW-P Dramatic Arts presents -&#13;
SOPHOCLES'&#13;
ELE&#13;
Translated&#13;
C&#13;
by Francis&#13;
T&#13;
Fergusso&#13;
Rn A&#13;
8 pm OCT. 27-28-29&#13;
2 pm OCT. 29&#13;
Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre&#13;
Adm. $2 students &amp; senior citizens,&#13;
$3 general public&#13;
For reservations call&#13;
Box Office (553-2457 8i 553-2016)&#13;
or Information Center (553-2345)&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
Women's tennis coach Sue&#13;
Tobachnik was expecting her&#13;
team to improve over last years&#13;
record if they got a few breaks&#13;
and if they stayed healthy. They&#13;
received their share of breaks,&#13;
but they haven't stayed healthy.&#13;
Number two singles player Kathy&#13;
Thomas has once again reinjured&#13;
her shoulder and elbow and was&#13;
forced to miss both matches last&#13;
week.&#13;
Against Beloit, the ladies were&#13;
victorious as they crushed their&#13;
opponents 9-0. Due to inclement&#13;
weather conditions the match&#13;
was played indoors and instead&#13;
of playing the best two out of&#13;
three sets, the women played a&#13;
ten point game pro set. The&#13;
winner of a 10 game pro set is&#13;
determined by whichever player&#13;
is the first to win 10 games. None&#13;
of the ladies were seriously&#13;
threatened with defeat as Laura&#13;
Bienco filled in admirably for the&#13;
injured Thomas.&#13;
Things weren't quite so rosy&#13;
against Carthage on Friday as the&#13;
Rangers went down in defeat 6-3.&#13;
The score could easily have been&#13;
reversed in Parkside's favor if the&#13;
ladies could have won some of&#13;
the marathon three set matches..&#13;
The doubles teams of Kathy&#13;
Logic-Laura Bienco and Pam&#13;
Blair-Marge Balazs pushed their&#13;
opponents to three sets but came&#13;
up empty handed. In an&#13;
exhibition singles match, Celeste&#13;
Wiedmanich was also defeated.&#13;
The loss to the cross-town rival&#13;
Carthage dropped the Ranger's&#13;
overall season record to 5-6. The&#13;
individual records have Logic&#13;
7-4, Thomas 5-3, Kathie&#13;
Feichtner 6-5, Blair 8-6, Balazs,&#13;
Cathy Brownlee 6-5, Bienco 2-5,&#13;
Widmanich 1-3 with the doubles&#13;
records of Logic-Thomas 11-2,&#13;
Blair-Balazs 5-6, FeichtnerBrownlee&#13;
9-4 and Bienco-Logic&#13;
1-1.&#13;
The Rangers will now travel to&#13;
Whitewater to participate in the&#13;
WWIAC Tournament this weekend.&#13;
&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. at 62nd St.&#13;
Established in 1930&#13;
. Pure Brewed&#13;
) From God's Country.&#13;
On Tap At U nion Square&#13;
1/4 lb U&#13;
, fr?&#13;
11&#13;
, ,P&#13;
— ^ G 0 0 D&#13;
aUlhC\n«&#13;
ke&#13;
- MON-FRI&#13;
c a b 1 1 - 2&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFF ON ALL&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICATION. &#13;
Wednesday October 18,7978&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 18&#13;
Coffeehouse starting at 1 p.m. in Union 104-106 featuring John&#13;
Stiernberg, a singer and a stringer. Admission is free.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Horoscope Readings from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Union Square by&#13;
Marcella Ruble Rook. At 7:30 p.m. Ms. Rook will give a lecture&#13;
on Psychic power, in the Union Cinema Theatre. Admission to&#13;
both events is free. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Graduate School Day The Behavioral Science Division will&#13;
hold a Graduate School Day at 1:00 in CL 111. Graduate&#13;
students and Parkside faculty will speak on how to get into&#13;
grad. school and various problems students will encounter.&#13;
SportsMen's Soccer at Lake Forest College.&#13;
Women's Swimming at UW-Whitewater.&#13;
Women's Volleyball at UW-Whitewater with UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 19&#13;
Sports Women's Tennis at WWIAC Tournament.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 20&#13;
Seminar Life Sci/Chem at 2 p.m. in CL 105. The program is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
Colloquium Math at 4 p.m. in CL 107. The program is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Movie "Semi Tough" will be^shown at 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre. Admission is $1.00 for Parkside students and&#13;
$1.00 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
SOC Meeting 3:00 in Union 106. This is a very important&#13;
meeting, as we are preparing our budget for seg. fees.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 21&#13;
Kiddie Flicks for the Parkside Community and their families.&#13;
"Hey There, It's Yogi Bear" will be shown at 10 a.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre. Admission for children is $1.00.&#13;
Sponsored by the Student Life Office.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 22&#13;
Movie "Semi Tough" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Monday, Oct. 23&#13;
Round Table at 12:15 p.m. in Union 106. John Harbeson will&#13;
talk on 'The Middle East: After Camp David." Admission is&#13;
free and the program is open to staff and interested students.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 24&#13;
Movie "Casablanca" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Brown Bag Lunch at 12 noon in CL 324. Students wishing to&#13;
participate in the 2 summer of 1979 field schools "are invited to&#13;
come and join in discussions about the field schools. Anyone&#13;
who is interested is welcome to join us every Tuesday.&#13;
Sports Women's Volleyball vs. Carroll &amp; Lewis at Parkside.&#13;
(6:30 p.m.)&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 25&#13;
Blood Drive from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Union 104-106. The&#13;
program is open to the public and no appointment is&#13;
necessary. Sponsored by campus Health Office.&#13;
Brown Bag Lunch at 12 noon in WLLC D174. The program is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Concert by music students at 3 p.m. in the Union Cinema&#13;
Theatre. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Movie "Casablanca" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre.&#13;
ganger 8&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 26&#13;
Seminar 3:30 in CL 111 Faculty lounge. On the Columbian&#13;
Exchange a book by Dr. Alfred Crosby concerning the&#13;
biological and cultural consequences of 1492. Everyone is&#13;
welcome to come.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 27&#13;
Lecture at 10:00 in GR 103. Dr. Alfred W. Crosby will present a&#13;
lecture titled "Epidemics and Human History," it deals with the&#13;
effects of epidemics on the history of civilizations.&#13;
Car Clinic&#13;
Classified Ads&#13;
CLASSIFIED AD POLICY&#13;
1. COST&#13;
A.) Student-Staff — Free (1 st 20 words)&#13;
(Each additional 10 words or less 25 cents)&#13;
B.) Non-Student, Staff $1.00 (1 st 20 words)&#13;
(Each additional 10 words or less 50 cents)&#13;
C.) All additional runs $1.00&#13;
2. Every attempt will be made to publish all submissions, but RANGER reserves the right to&#13;
omit any ad.&#13;
3. All categories will receive preference over personals.&#13;
4. Deadline is Thursday, 10 a.m. for publication on the following Wednesday.&#13;
5. All classifieds must be submitted on the green form, available In the RANGER office,&#13;
WLLCD-139.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1973 Pontiac Safari Wagon: air conditioning,&#13;
stereo, tape deck, radial tires, lifetime&#13;
battery, one-owner, recent tune-up. $1100.&#13;
Call 886-4504.&#13;
1972 Toyota Corolla. Excellent condition, no&#13;
rust, brand new interior, automatic, great&#13;
gas mileage, extras. Must sacrafice; asking&#13;
$1800. Call Dawn — 634-1792.&#13;
1974 Gremlin 3 speed. Low mileage, good&#13;
tires, no rust. $1,350. Call 637-3094.&#13;
1971 Hornet Sportabout: 6 cyl., auto.,&#13;
59,000 miles. Recent brakes and tune-up,&#13;
good tires. $800.00. Call 634-7942 after 3:30&#13;
Mon.-Fri.&#13;
1965 Olds — $75. Good running&#13;
transportation. Interior is in bad shape. If&#13;
interested call 859-2917 after 1 p.m.&#13;
Drum Set: Ludwig professional drum set&#13;
(white pearl). Includes Tom-Toms, cymbols,&#13;
stands, accessories and carrying case. Call&#13;
654-1860.&#13;
Free Kittens to a good home. 8 wks old —&#13;
Call 554-9248 anytime or stop at 4535&#13;
Maryland Ave. Racine.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Old bicycle tire tubes. Bring to coach Barb&#13;
Lawson (PE Building) or call 553-2257.&#13;
If anyone knows where one can get a pair of&#13;
Stacy's (pointed shoes) or has a pair to sell&#13;
call Tom 632-5982.&#13;
I will babysit in my home in the afternoon or&#13;
evenings. Call 859-2917. (Somers)&#13;
Need a paper typed? Call a professional —&#13;
15 years experience as a typist. Reasonable.&#13;
652-1041.&#13;
People interested in seeing Lee Dreyfus as&#13;
next governor and can offer services,&#13;
contact Frank Miller 633-4273 Racine.&#13;
Bartenders. Apply Brat Stop, ask for Bob&#13;
Tremonte.&#13;
Actors, actresses, directors, TV crew and all&#13;
purpose people. A bimonthly TV show is&#13;
being formed on campus. Go to Union 202&#13;
for details.&#13;
Female singer/player. Contact Joe —&#13;
639-5512 Racine. Leave message.&#13;
Volunteers to teach swimming at Wadewltz&#13;
School, Racine, Saturdays at 1:30. Call the&#13;
Red Cross — 552-7797.&#13;
W.S.I, to help at Jane Vernon School,&#13;
Kenosha, on Wednesday morning or Friday&#13;
12:30 to 1:30. Call Mrs. Millholland&#13;
658-4338.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
Issy — Be careful! Hockey players use big&#13;
sticks. —Hockey Fanatic—&#13;
To Jane: Does the word "gals" offend you?&#13;
Bring your response to the Ranger office.&#13;
Dave.&#13;
Cherle L. Thanks for helping me out. I wish I&#13;
can help you out some other way. Your Truly&#13;
Friend, Chuck.&#13;
To everyone who showed up at the Parkside&#13;
Soccer Club Dance — Thanks for your&#13;
support. Parkside Soccer Club.&#13;
Lost: Business Law text with important&#13;
papers: REWARD. Call 554-6635.&#13;
At Rondelle&#13;
Knowing how your car runs&#13;
and how to keep it in top running&#13;
condition is as important as&#13;
being a safe driver. But the&#13;
average car owner has virtually&#13;
no idea on how a car operates or&#13;
what to do when he has car&#13;
trouble.&#13;
A free program on safe,&#13;
economical and trouble-free&#13;
driving will be held at the&#13;
Golden Rondelle on September&#13;
27 at 7:00 p.m. Keynote speaker,&#13;
Ronald Weiner, President, Automotive&#13;
Information Council,&#13;
Michigan will discuss how to&#13;
become a smart car buyer and&#13;
describe the basic car maintenance&#13;
procedures in simple terms,&#13;
showing why they are necessary.&#13;
When you know the reasons why&#13;
work has to be done on your car&#13;
and approximately when to keep&#13;
it mechanically efficient/ you'll&#13;
be more likely to avoid delays&#13;
which could be both costly and&#13;
dangerous. And Weiner will offer&#13;
some valuable suggestions that&#13;
will help the car owner explain&#13;
what is wrong with his car when&#13;
it goes into the garage for&#13;
repairs.&#13;
On Saturday morning, October&#13;
28, a free Car Safety Check&#13;
will be held in the parking lot&#13;
directly south of the Golden&#13;
Rondelle. From 9:00 a.m. to&#13;
12:00 noon, representatives from&#13;
Walker Manufacturing Public&#13;
Affairs Action Committee and&#13;
the Racine Police Department&#13;
Traffic Safety Division will be on&#13;
hand to perform safety checks&#13;
for interested persons. Gateway&#13;
Technical Institute will also have&#13;
two persons on hand to&#13;
demonstrate several basic maintenance&#13;
techniques.&#13;
For reservations contact the&#13;
Rondelle at 554-2154. This&#13;
program is sponsored by Walker&#13;
Manufacturing, the Racine&#13;
Police Department and the&#13;
Golden Rondelle.&#13;
Miller time&#13;
Distributed by C.J.W., Inc.&#13;
654-8691 • Kenosha&#13;
Parkside Union Rec. Center&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
RED PIN&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
During The Day&#13;
Mon. &amp; Wed. Mornings&#13;
9:OOam-noon&#13;
Friday Afternoons&#13;
2:00-6:00pm&#13;
Introductory&#13;
Special!&#13;
Strike when&#13;
the head pin&#13;
is red...&#13;
Win a Free&#13;
pitcher of beer&#13;
or soda&#13;
One per customer per day </text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>UWP 'Founding Father' Dies</text>
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              <text>UWP .IFounding Fatherl Dies&#13;
representative, and "founding&#13;
father" of -the Uw-Parksida&#13;
campus who died .September&#13;
29th. .&#13;
The flags weren't the only&#13;
honor bestowed upon the late&#13;
assemblyman. The same day of&#13;
his death, the University Board&#13;
of Regents in Madison approved&#13;
the naming of one of&#13;
UW-Parkside's major buildings&#13;
for him. -&#13;
The building to be named for&#13;
Molinaro is the "$4.6 million&#13;
classroom building which houses&#13;
UW-Parkside's programs in&#13;
business, labor, and industrial&#13;
relations, engineering science,&#13;
and social sciences. A .$1.2&#13;
million addition to the building&#13;
containing specialized laboratories&#13;
for the business 'and&#13;
engineering programs will be&#13;
completed by September, 1979,&#13;
and the entire complex will be&#13;
called George Molinaro Hall.&#13;
.The building, which opened in&#13;
September, 19~3, has four levels&#13;
above ground, one below&#13;
ground, and -, connects to&#13;
CreenqUist Hall, a science&#13;
building, to the south, and to the&#13;
Parkside Union to the north via a&#13;
glass-enclosedpedestrian bridge.&#13;
It was designed by Shattuck,&#13;
'Slewart and Associates, Inc., of&#13;
Neenah and --constructed by&#13;
Camosy Construction Co. of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The addition, which will&#13;
connect to the west end of the&#13;
building, W_3S designed by.&#13;
Wilso_n-Haney Associates, Inc.,&#13;
of Kenosha and will be&#13;
constructed by Riley Construction&#13;
Co. of Kenosha.&#13;
Molinaro, who passedaway at&#13;
75, was the "dean" of Wisconsin&#13;
eont. on p,.4&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
George Molinaro&#13;
State,city, and University of&#13;
Visconsin-Parksideflags were&#13;
Iownat half mast in tribute to&#13;
;eorge Molinaro,_ the late&#13;
:enosha civic leader, state&#13;
.~-&#13;
MUll.&#13;
«17.&#13;
Wednesday October II, 1978 vol.7 no.6 Flags at half mast in tribute.&#13;
Pholo by tie HolmdoM&#13;
Out of State Tuition&#13;
Regents Discuss Roll-Backs&#13;
by John Stewart costs of Instruction from the&#13;
100% cost of Instruction which&#13;
is about S 1300&#13;
3) Instituting a partial or a fuJI&#13;
remission or reduction at&#13;
universities WIth excess ceoaci&#13;
ties, selecting one or two as the&#13;
site of pilot studies&#13;
planned for the November&#13;
Regent's meeting. The possible&#13;
forms of the proposal include:&#13;
1) Reinstituting the one course&#13;
remission for fully employed&#13;
individuals.&#13;
A proposal that may have an&#13;
important effect on Parkside,&#13;
and other UW border campuses,&#13;
is being discussed by the UW&#13;
Board of Regents. The proposal&#13;
may take one of several different&#13;
forms' but basically involves&#13;
reducing tuition for out-of-state&#13;
students in order to boost&#13;
enrollment at under utilized UW&#13;
schools such as tjw-Parkstdc.&#13;
UW-Whitewater, and UWPlatteville.&#13;
The idea was first suggestedat&#13;
the September 9th meeting of&#13;
the UW Board of Regents by&#13;
Vice-President Lorenz of the UW&#13;
System. A firm proposal is&#13;
2) Basing non-resident fees on&#13;
the variable cost per student&#13;
instead of the total cost per&#13;
student.&#13;
This means that non-resident&#13;
students would pay 62% of the&#13;
instruction costs, instead of the&#13;
100% they now pay. UW-Parkside&#13;
students currently pay&#13;
approximately 28% of the total&#13;
cost of their instruction through&#13;
their tuition fees. The 62% figure&#13;
results from deleting the fixed&#13;
Although there IS a great deal&#13;
of plannmg and study y t to be&#13;
done, especially concerning the&#13;
legal aspects, it 15 posvible that It&#13;
could take effect as early as next&#13;
fall. uw-Parksrde Chancelior&#13;
Cuskin told Rang r that thl~&#13;
proposal could be the brgge t&#13;
single thing to happen to&#13;
Parkside In the next five years&#13;
eont •• ft p,.S&#13;
Vienna Choir Boys-Here B-usiness Maior Reorganized&#13;
The Vienna Choir Boys will&#13;
ifI 1m . ~~ ost 500yearsof musical&#13;
ldltlOn to the stage of the&#13;
1Iri... ,ty of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
lIllmu' . mcatlon Arts Theater in&#13;
~ second of the season's&#13;
-cent on Enrichment Series&#13;
"8rarnsat 8 p.m. on Thursday&#13;
Clober 12. '&#13;
Founded' .&#13;
t In 1498,just six years&#13;
". Columbus discovered&#13;
""nta the h . . . , d ' C orr IS now on Its&#13;
,r US.&#13;
L. '. tour With a program&#13;
"'ch .Includes sacred and&#13;
cular s 1- usic ongs, a ong with folk&#13;
wi and a costumed operetta,&#13;
h&#13;
e&#13;
rry PranKs," by Franz&#13;
ubert "th IOirboy&#13;
:" e most famous&#13;
Althou h h . . 'luall g - t e Accent series IS&#13;
. . Y sold out on a subnptlon&#13;
b . f k aSls,a limited number&#13;
'ai;~~ts at 56 each may be&#13;
teat the door Those&#13;
Z~~ted should con~act. the&#13;
UnIOnInformation Center&#13;
the day of the performance&#13;
(553-2345). Accent subscribers&#13;
who find they will not be able to&#13;
use their tickets, may list ticket&#13;
availability with "the Information&#13;
Center to be "matched" with&#13;
persons who want tickets.&#13;
The Vienna Choir Boys were&#13;
founded by Imperial decree on&#13;
July 7, 1498, by the humanist&#13;
Emperor Maximilian I, to fulfill&#13;
his wish to have choristers in the&#13;
Imperial Chapel.&#13;
From its inceptio.n, this&#13;
organization has attracted the&#13;
finest musicians in the West:&#13;
Christoph Wilibald Gluck" the&#13;
founder of the modern operatic&#13;
form, spent his most creative&#13;
year.s as composer to the&#13;
Hapsburg 'court in Vienna and&#13;
wrote for the Imperial Chapel.&#13;
Mozart did the same on his&#13;
promotion as Composer to theCourt&#13;
in 1787. AI~hough Josef&#13;
COli'. Oil Pfl. S&#13;
acadeouc advising, no one is&#13;
allowed to just float tmough the&#13;
program haphazardly.&#13;
In fact, the BusinessManagement&#13;
Degree ReqUireme~ts an!&#13;
above the University's minimum&#13;
standards for graduation&#13;
Along with stronger requirements&#13;
and improved advising,&#13;
the Business Division plans on&#13;
putting more energy Into placement&#13;
of graduates. In the past,&#13;
many students have been left on&#13;
their own to find jobs In the&#13;
businessworld.&#13;
Although the end goal of the&#13;
new requirements is to Improve&#13;
the standards of the Division of&#13;
Business and Administrative&#13;
Science, the students are the&#13;
main interest of this change. The&#13;
tougher proaram will better&#13;
prepare graduatesfor real market&#13;
situations.&#13;
management prerequisite core&#13;
must be completed.&#13;
The core contains courses&#13;
which the business faculty has&#13;
decided are the minimums for&#13;
admission to the program, a-s&#13;
well as prerequisites for upper&#13;
level management courses.&#13;
With these new requirements,&#13;
the Businessand Admtntstratlve&#13;
Science Division hopes to see&#13;
students go through the program&#13;
in a more orderly fashion by&#13;
honoring prerequisites. In the&#13;
past, Freshmen were taking&#13;
Junior and Senior level classes.&#13;
These students received C's&#13;
when, if they had taken the&#13;
classes in the correct order,&#13;
could have earned A's.&#13;
There has been a decline of a&#13;
total of 1,000 hours in all&#13;
businesscoursesfrom a year ago,&#13;
but this is in part due to advising.&#13;
With the increased, straight-out,&#13;
by Cathy Brownlee&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Catalog has a new and&#13;
quite attractive cover for 1976-&#13;
79 but some of the information&#13;
be~weenthese colorful pageshas&#13;
also been revamped.&#13;
lOne significant change is the&#13;
undergraduate requirements for&#13;
students wishing to major in&#13;
Business Management. These&#13;
new' requirements came into&#13;
effect as of September 1, 1978,&#13;
aria must "be followed by all&#13;
students declaring the Business&#13;
Major after this date.&#13;
There are now three main&#13;
requirements for admission to&#13;
the Business Management&#13;
Degree Program. Students must&#13;
first formally apply after&#13;
completing 54-60 credits.&#13;
Second, they must have a. 2.25&#13;
CPA, and third, the busoness&#13;
I YIII&#13;
-~ ' att«u&#13;
1,y ~&#13;
f&#13;
Oct&#13;
***'&#13;
~ . I '·&#13;
UWP_ 'Foundillg Father' Dies&#13;
State, city, and University of&#13;
Visconsin-Parkside flags were&#13;
lown at.half mast in tribute to&#13;
;eorge Molinaro,. the late&#13;
:enosha civic leader I state&#13;
representative, and "founding&#13;
father" of ,the UW-Pai-kside&#13;
campus who died September&#13;
29th. .&#13;
The flags weren't the only&#13;
honor bestowed upon the late&#13;
assemblyman . The same day of&#13;
his death, the University Board&#13;
of Regents in Madison approved&#13;
the nam ing of one of&#13;
UW-Parkside's major buildings&#13;
for him . -&#13;
The building to be named for&#13;
Molinaro is the ·$4.6 million&#13;
classroom building which houses&#13;
UW-Parkside's programs in&#13;
business, labor, and industri-al&#13;
relations, engineering sciehce&#13;
and social sciences. A $1 .2&#13;
mill ion addition to the building&#13;
containing special ized laboratories&#13;
for the bu siness and&#13;
engineering programs will be&#13;
completed by September, 1979,&#13;
and the entire complex will be&#13;
called George Molinaro Hal l.&#13;
. The building, which opened in&#13;
September, 19;;'3, has four levels&#13;
above ground , one below&#13;
ground , and conn ects to&#13;
Gre enquist Hall, a sc ience&#13;
building, to the south, and to the&#13;
Parkside Union to the north via a&#13;
glass-enclosed pedestrian bridge.&#13;
It was designed by Shattuck,&#13;
·siewart and Associates, Inc., of&#13;
Neenah and - constructed by&#13;
Camosy Construction Co. of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The addition, which will&#13;
connect to the west end of the&#13;
building, was designed by.&#13;
Wilso_n-Haney Associates, Inc.,&#13;
of Kenosha and will be&#13;
constructed by Riley Construction&#13;
Co. of Kenosha .&#13;
Mol inaro, who passed away at&#13;
75, was the " dean" c;&gt;f Wisconsin&#13;
cont. on pg.4&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Wednesday October J J, 1978 vol.7 no.6 Flags at half mast in tribute.&#13;
Vienna Choi! B0ys · Here&#13;
:he Vienna Choir Boys will&#13;
Ing I · . _a most 500 years of musfcal&#13;
~it,on to the stage of the&#13;
niversity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
&gt;mmunication Arts Theater in&#13;
~ second of the season's&#13;
.cent on Enrichment Series&#13;
ograms at 8 p.m . on Thursday ctober 12. ,&#13;
Founded · · t in 1498, just six years&#13;
er _ Columbus discovered&#13;
,'nderrca, the choir is now on its ,r US h· · · tour with a program&#13;
•ch includes sacred and&#13;
U&#13;
cu_lar songs along- with folk SIC d '&#13;
,1 an a costumed operetta,&#13;
erry Prarrks " by Franz&#13;
hubert "th , . , e most famous 101rboy."&#13;
Although h . . rtuall _t e Accent- series Is&#13;
. . Y sold out on a subrtpt1on&#13;
b · 'I t' k asis, a imited number&#13;
·ai!~6f1s at $6 each may be&#13;
t e at the door. Those&#13;
~~;sted_ should contact . the&#13;
Union Information Center&#13;
the day ot the _performance&#13;
(553-2345). Ac&lt;;ent subscribers&#13;
who find they will not be able to&#13;
use their tickets. may list 'ticket&#13;
availability with .the Information&#13;
Center to be " matched" with&#13;
persons who want tickets .&#13;
The Vienna Choir Boys were&#13;
founded by Imperial decree on&#13;
July 7, 1498, by the humani_st&#13;
Emperor Maximilian I, to fulfill&#13;
his wish to have choristers in the&#13;
Imperial Chapel.&#13;
From its inception, this&#13;
organization has attracted the&#13;
finest musicians jn the West:&#13;
Christoph Wilibald Gluck,, the&#13;
founder of the modern operatic&#13;
form spent his most creative&#13;
year~ as composer to the&#13;
Hapsburg ' court in Vienna and&#13;
wrote for the Imperial CIJapel.&#13;
Mozart did the same on his&#13;
promotion as Composer to the.&#13;
Court in . 1787. Al!hough Josef&#13;
cont. on pg. 5&#13;
Photo by M, , Holmdohl&#13;
Out of State Tuition&#13;
Regents Discuss Roll-Backs&#13;
by Jo't,n Stewart&#13;
A proposal that may have an&#13;
important effect on Parkside,&#13;
and other UW border campuses,&#13;
is being discussed by the UW&#13;
Board of Regents. The proposal&#13;
may take one of several different&#13;
forms but basically involves&#13;
reducing tuition for out-of-state&#13;
students in order to boost&#13;
, enrollment at under utilized UW&#13;
schools such as uw:Parkside,&#13;
UW-Whitewater, and UWPlatteville.&#13;
&#13;
The idea was first suggested at&#13;
the September 9th meeting of&#13;
the UW Board of Regents by&#13;
Vice-President Lorenz of the UW&#13;
System . A firm proposal is&#13;
pla nn ed for the November&#13;
Regent's meeting. The possible&#13;
forms of the proposal include·&#13;
1) Reinstituting the one course&#13;
remission for fully employed&#13;
individuals.&#13;
2) Basing non-resident fees on&#13;
the variable cost per student&#13;
instead of the total cost p r&#13;
student.&#13;
This means that non-resident&#13;
students would pay 62% of the&#13;
instruction costs, instead of the&#13;
100% they now pay. UW-Parkside&#13;
students currently pay&#13;
approximately 28% of the total&#13;
cost of their instruction through&#13;
their tuition fees. The 62% figure&#13;
results from deleting the fixed&#13;
costs of instruction from th&#13;
100% co t of in tru tion wh, h&#13;
is about $1300&#13;
cont. on pg.5&#13;
a·us iness Maior Reorganized&#13;
by Cathy Brownlee&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Catalog has a new and&#13;
quite attractive cover for 1978-&#13;
79 but some of the information&#13;
~etween these colorful pages has&#13;
also been revamped .&#13;
l One significant change is the&#13;
undergraduate requirements for&#13;
students wishing to major in&#13;
Business Management . These&#13;
new · requirements - came into&#13;
effect as of September 1, 1978,&#13;
aria must -be followed by all&#13;
students declaring the Business&#13;
Major after this date.&#13;
There are now three main&#13;
requirements for admission to&#13;
the Business Management&#13;
Degree Program . Students must&#13;
first formally apply after&#13;
completing 54-60 credits .&#13;
Second, they must have a 2.25&#13;
GPA, and third, the business&#13;
management prerequisite core f'!Cademic advising, no on is&#13;
must be completed . allowed to just float through th&#13;
The core contains courses program haphazardly.&#13;
which the business faculty has In fact, the Busines Mana&#13;
decided are the m inimums for ment Degr Requirements art!&#13;
admission to the program, a-s above the Urnversity's minimum&#13;
well as prerequisites for upper standards for graduation&#13;
level management courses. Along with stronger requ,reWith&#13;
these new requirements, ments and improved advmng,&#13;
the Business and Adminrstrative the Busine s D,vi ,on plan on&#13;
Science Division hopes to see putting more energy into placestudents&#13;
go through the program ment of graduates In the past,&#13;
in a more orderly fashion by many students have been left on&#13;
honoring prerequisites . In the their own to find 106 in the&#13;
past, Freshmen were taking • business world&#13;
Junior and Senior level classes . Although the end goal of th&#13;
These students received C's new requirements is to tmpro e&#13;
when, if they had taken the the standards of the Dtvis,on of&#13;
classes in the correct order, Business and Administrative&#13;
could have earned A's . Science, the students are the&#13;
There has been a decline of a main interest of this change The&#13;
total of 1,000 hours in all tougher program will bett r&#13;
business courses from a year ago, prepare graduates for real market&#13;
but this is in part due to advising. situations.&#13;
With the increased, straight-out, &#13;
New Faces. On_Campus ..'.&#13;
. ;" sources organlzmg .' I universities re , students in the big-City. Peop e .. sessions for local&#13;
.. -t nd to be training .&#13;
from the big Cities e ntal officials to give . k kf has a governme . d more aggressive. Par SI e h better understandmg an&#13;
here." ) t em a d&#13;
relaxed atmosp ere. ess of community nee 5,&#13;
In his spare time Prof. Brunner aWda~en iding political educat&#13;
h as an provi 1 •&#13;
enjoys outdoor spor 5 S,UC . tion for various community&#13;
bicycling, and backpackme. his and unions.&#13;
favorite being cross _country groups "UW-Parkside is&#13;
., . M Hoover says, ,&#13;
skiing. Also I~ his spare ~fme r. in an ideal position to take new&#13;
Brunner enJoys pl.aYlng&#13;
the initi tives in working closely&#13;
recorder (mUSICal Instrument, m.l_h,ah' nding communi •&#13;
. II ltk to Wit t e surrou not tape) and aspecra y I es . \ h f culty is very&#13;
d&#13;
. h th r tres: tea&#13;
play his recor. er Wit 0 e competent and creative, comrecorder.enthuslasts.&#13;
. Ie are most munitv peop&#13;
receptive, and the students are&#13;
eager to have internships' and&#13;
other forms of practical involvement&#13;
as part of their education." '&#13;
Except for his past ernplovment&#13;
from 1970-1978 at the&#13;
college of Wooster in Wooster, .&#13;
Ohio, a good portion ,f his&#13;
academic life has been in&#13;
Wisconsin.· Most. of his undergraduate&#13;
studying was done- in '&#13;
Beloit, Wisconsin at The College&#13;
of Beloit. He received his PhD at&#13;
UW-Madison in 1970. -While&#13;
working on his PhD, Hoover&#13;
taught political science classes&#13;
at UW-Whitewater from 1964-&#13;
1970.&#13;
Some of his accomplishments&#13;
include two published books. His&#13;
first one" A Politics of Identity"&#13;
was published in 1975. "The&#13;
Elements of Social Scientific&#13;
Thinking", his second book/ -vas&#13;
published in '1976, and has been&#13;
used by political science classes&#13;
all over the country.&#13;
In his spare time Prof. Hoover&#13;
enjoys sailing in his 15 foot sail&#13;
boat. He- also enjoys camping&#13;
and is "looking forward to&#13;
camping all over this beautiful&#13;
f state."&#13;
Wednesday October 11,1978&#13;
Andrew Brunner&#13;
I!y Kim Ruetz&#13;
A new addition to the mathematical&#13;
department at Parkside&#13;
this year is Andrew Brunner. He&#13;
is teaching Calculus 221 and&#13;
Analytic Geometry I classes&#13;
designed as standard courses for&#13;
students who need some&#13;
calculus background.&#13;
Professor Brunner is a native&#13;
Austrailian. He attended Monash&#13;
University in Melbourne Australia&#13;
for his undergraduate studies.&#13;
He later received his PhD from&#13;
Australia National University in&#13;
Canberra.&#13;
Brunner, an avid researcher,&#13;
consistently publishes in international&#13;
mathematic [ournals.&#13;
He presents new materials,&#13;
techniques, and critical works&#13;
dealing with the field of math- .&#13;
ematics.&#13;
When asked about the&#13;
atmosphere at Parkside, Brunner&#13;
said, "I find it very friendly here,&#13;
the environment is very pretty. I&#13;
feel that the students here are&#13;
extremely nice in comparison to&#13;
- Ken Hoover&#13;
pic not available&#13;
by Kim Ruetz&#13;
An ambitious political science&#13;
professor, Ken Hoover, has......&#13;
joined the faculty this y~ar at&#13;
Parkside. He is presently&#13;
teaching two courses in political&#13;
science. One course, "Issues And&#13;
Problems In American Politics:&#13;
Explaining Watergate;" deals&#13;
with the Nixon admtmsttanon.&#13;
big corporations involvement,&#13;
and nuclear age. His other&#13;
course, "Modern Political Philosophy,"&#13;
is oriented toward the&#13;
contemporary use of political&#13;
theories of the past dating back&#13;
to the sixteenth century.&#13;
Mr. Hoover said that his job at&#13;
Parkside is split between teaching&#13;
and working with UW&#13;
extension's department of&#13;
governmental affairs. "My&#13;
appointment is part of an effort&#13;
to expand the outreach program,&#13;
which is designed to relate the&#13;
university to community needs".&#13;
Some of the programs he may&#13;
be involved with are connecting&#13;
community needs with the&#13;
Braun Takes Over&#13;
Roger Braun&#13;
Roger Braun is the new vice&#13;
president of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, replacing&#13;
Harvey Hedden who resigned&#13;
at the beginning of the semester.&#13;
Roger was appointed to the&#13;
position from a host of&#13;
candidates by President Rusty&#13;
Smith. He was approved&#13;
unanimously by the Senate after&#13;
a meeting that lasted nearly two&#13;
hours. He was chosen because&#13;
he has shown an active interest&#13;
in student affairs in the past.&#13;
He served as president of the&#13;
Earth Science Club' and is&#13;
presently on the board of&#13;
directors of the Cooperative&#13;
Services Collective. He has also&#13;
shown active interest in the Book&#13;
Co-op and the Food Co-op.&#13;
Roger is now a senior majoring&#13;
in Earth Science. Having&#13;
attended the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Platteville in the past,&#13;
the former Brodhead, Wis.&#13;
resident came to Parkside in&#13;
1975. ,&#13;
Being new to the PSGA, Roger&#13;
is hoping to incorporate his&#13;
personal experience to chair the&#13;
Senate and serve as President&#13;
Smith's assistant. I&#13;
The association should see&#13;
some improvements with Roger&#13;
as vice president. As he sees it&#13;
the student government and th~&#13;
other school organizations have&#13;
never before pu lied together. "I&#13;
hope to get them to band&#13;
together. There are groups, like&#13;
the SOCfor instance, who could&#13;
be very powerful with the help otthe&#13;
PSGA," Roger stated.&#13;
When asked what issues he&#13;
plans to tackle, Roger answered,&#13;
"I'd like to see the PSGA push to&#13;
get campus problems (such as&#13;
parking' and the Union remodel.&#13;
ing) solved."&#13;
Involvement is one thing&#13;
Roger hopes to see. "Right now , '&#13;
there is about 50% active&#13;
involvement in the Senate. There&#13;
has been some improvement this&#13;
semester and I hope it will keep&#13;
up:r With elections\ coming up&#13;
for nine Senate seats, he&#13;
speculates interest in the PSGA&#13;
will gain momentum.&#13;
Roger believes that the PSGA&#13;
has plenty of clout to help&#13;
students and hopes that the&#13;
student body will take advantage&#13;
of that power to get things done.&#13;
He also added, "Anyone who&#13;
has a problem that they think the&#13;
PSGA .could help with, should&#13;
contact either me or Rusty and&#13;
we'll do our best."&#13;
Ethnic&#13;
Workshop&#13;
Friday&#13;
The Black ,community-of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin will be&#13;
the subject' of an ethnic&#13;
workshop sponsored by the&#13;
University of Wis'consin-Parkside&#13;
Center for Multicultural Studies&#13;
-on Friday, Oct. 13, from .; to, 10&#13;
p.m. and Saturday, Oct. 14, from&#13;
9 .a.rn. to 4 p.m. at Second&#13;
MISSionary Baptist Church, 1327&#13;
Blake Ave., Racine.&#13;
The workshop can be taken for&#13;
one UW-Parkside undergraduate&#13;
credit or on a non-credit basis.&#13;
Credit registration information&#13;
is avail~ble from the UW-P&#13;
Registrar's Office (553-2281) and&#13;
non-credit information from&#13;
Univ.ers!ty Extension (553-2312).&#13;
Principal speakers will be Dr.&#13;
James Pitts and Dr. William&#13;
Sampson, professors of sociology&#13;
at Northwestern University, and&#13;
the Rev. Crawford Brady, pastor&#13;
J of St. Mark's Christian Methodist&#13;
Episcopal Church in Joliet, III.,&#13;
The program also will include&#13;
panel discussions on edutational&#13;
issues i!1 the Black COmmunity,&#13;
employment, criminal justice&#13;
advocacy services and progress~&#13;
ion in the 6CYs-regressionin the&#13;
:O's. Other program features&#13;
Include ethnic foods at both the&#13;
day and evening sessions and&#13;
performances by choral groups&#13;
and soloists.&#13;
Where do you eat on campus and&#13;
- Vince laquinta-&#13;
"I primarily eat in the Union&#13;
. Square. It's my second fa~ori~e&#13;
thing in the world. My forst IS&#13;
putting my mouth over ~he&#13;
exhaust pipe of a bus and getting&#13;
dragged, naked, through a cactus&#13;
field."&#13;
Chris Zeihn - "Mo.t 01&#13;
time I eat in the Union ca&#13;
I like the salads with a lot&#13;
cheese."&#13;
Larry Frederking - "Once in a&#13;
while I eat in the Union Dining&#13;
room. It's all right."&#13;
wished to remain&#13;
anonymous&#13;
eat on campus when I cad&#13;
it."&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of U.w, ParMlde&#13;
and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every IW~dnesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER,is printed by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois. ~&#13;
Written perrnlaalon is required for reprint of any portionof&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranqer; U.W. Parkalde, WLLC 0-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Miko Murphy.. . . , , " " ,Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan .. , , , . , . _. , , , , , , Goneral Man:l/:&#13;
John Stowart : " ~. NoWIE tor&#13;
Sue Stevens Feature Edl&#13;
Doug Edoohlusor _ , . " , , , , Sportl Ed:::&#13;
01.0 Cramor , . _ , Sportl EdI&#13;
Kim Putman " COpyEd;:&#13;
Chrll Miller '.. . .. .. .. .. .. . . Ad Ma" or&#13;
Nancy Szymanski ',' . .. .. Circulation Mlnl9&#13;
REPORTING STAFF. iill&#13;
'l:aura Bianco, Carolyn Braselano, Cathy Brownl", MOl II&#13;
Clarke, Pete Cramer, Tom Fervoy, Rob Gardner, Kr~1I&#13;
Honch, Thomas Jann Nicki Kroll Janene Llecrocl, P ' , L • ter Marry, Kathy Peters, Sue Salituro, Jeff Stevens, 8&#13;
Thompson and Larry Waaver.&#13;
PHOTO In&#13;
Gary Adelson, Susan Caldwell, Denise O'Aequlsto, C8~y&#13;
01.11, JI"1 Elloldor', Rob Gardno" Mlko Holmdohl, Cia"&#13;
Malon, Julio Orth, Tony Raymond and Brian TI99 ,&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig D.orak, Rob Miller and Matthew pollakon,&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Crame, and Dawn Thoma •.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be a~c-;;Ptedfor publication if they&#13;
a~etypewritten, dOUble spaced with one Inch margins a~&#13;
Signed by the author. A telephone number must be I('clud&#13;
for purposes of veriflca1:ion. Names will be withheld frol11&#13;
Pub]' t' . Ica lon, When valid reasons are given.&#13;
RAN.GER reserves the rjght to edit letters and refUse&#13;
Publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All ~aterial must be received by Thursday noon for&#13;
publication on the fOllOWingWedne5day~&#13;
Wednesday October 11, 1978&#13;
,&#13;
New Faces On Campus .. · . . I universities resources, organ~zing&#13;
Andrew Brunner&#13;
~Y Kim Ruetz&#13;
A new addition to the mathematical&#13;
department at Parkside&#13;
this year is Andrew Brunner. He&#13;
is teaching Calculus 221 and&#13;
Analytic Geometry I classe-s&#13;
designed as standard courses for&#13;
students who need some&#13;
calculus background .&#13;
Professor Brunner is a native&#13;
Austrailian . He attended Monash&#13;
University in Melbourne Australia&#13;
for his undergraduate studies.&#13;
He later received his PhD from&#13;
Australia National University in&#13;
Canberra.&#13;
Brunner, an avid researcher,&#13;
consistently publishes in international&#13;
mathematic journals.1&#13;
He presents new materials,&#13;
techniques, and critical works&#13;
dealing with the field of math- .&#13;
ematics .&#13;
When asked about the&#13;
atmosphere at Parkside, Brunner&#13;
said, " I find it very friendly here,&#13;
the environment is very pretty. I&#13;
feel that the students here are&#13;
extremely nice in comparison to&#13;
students in the b1g -~1ty. Peop e . . g sessions for local . . t d to be trainin . from the big c1t1es en ntal officials to give k .d· h s a governme d more aggressive. Pa~, s1 e a i them a better understanding an&#13;
relaxed atmosphere. reness of community needs,&#13;
In his spare time Prof. Bn1nner :;; providing political edu~aenjoys&#13;
outdoor sports s_uch ~s tion for various community&#13;
bicycling, and ba~kpacking, his ps and unions .&#13;
favorite being cross - country grou "UW-Parkside is . . . M Hoover says, skiing. Also'~ his spare ~,me r. in an ideal position to take new&#13;
Brunner en1oys pl_aying the .initiatives in working closely&#13;
recorder (musical inStrument, .-h ,J ndi'ng communi- . II i·k t wit tne surrou not tape) and espec1a _Y I es o . . th faculty is very&#13;
play his recorder with other ties. t et and creative com- . · compe en , recorder enthusiasts . ·t eople are most&#13;
, Ken Hoover&#13;
pie not available&#13;
by Kim Ruetz&#13;
An ambitious political science&#13;
professor, Ken Hoover, has_&#13;
joined the faculty this y~ar at&#13;
Parkside . He is presently&#13;
teaching two courses in political&#13;
science. One course, "Issues And&#13;
Problems In American Politics:&#13;
Explaining Watergate;" deals&#13;
with the Nixon aaminist~ation,&#13;
big corporations involvement,&#13;
and nuclear age. His other&#13;
course, "Modern Political Philosophy,"&#13;
is oriented toward the&#13;
contemporary use of political&#13;
theories of the past dating back&#13;
to the sixteenth century.&#13;
Mr. Hoover said that his job at&#13;
Parkside is split between teaching&#13;
and working with UW&#13;
extension's department of&#13;
governmental affairs. · "My&#13;
appointment is part of an etfort&#13;
to expand the outreach program,&#13;
which is designed to relate the&#13;
university to community needs".&#13;
Some of the programs he may&#13;
be involved with are connecting&#13;
community needs with the&#13;
mun1 y P .&#13;
receptive, and the student_s are&#13;
eager to have internships and&#13;
other forms of practical involvement&#13;
as part of their education." '&#13;
Except for his past emP,loyment&#13;
from 1970-1978 at the&#13;
college of Wooster in Wooster, .&#13;
Ohio a good portion &gt;f his&#13;
acad~mic life has ' been in&#13;
Wisconsin . . Most of his undergradu'ate&#13;
studying was done· in '&#13;
Beloit, Wisconsin at The College&#13;
of Beloit. He received his PhD at&#13;
UW-Madison in 1970. - while&#13;
working on his PhD, Hoover&#13;
taught political science classes&#13;
at UW-Whitewater from 1964-&#13;
1970.&#13;
Some of his accomplishments&#13;
include two published books . His&#13;
first one "A Politics of Identity"&#13;
was published in 1975. "The&#13;
Elements of Social Scientific&#13;
Thinking", his second book, •,vas&#13;
published in 1976, and has been&#13;
used by political science classes&#13;
all over the country .&#13;
In his spare time Prof. Hoover&#13;
enjoys sailing in his 15 foot sail&#13;
boat . .He· also enjoys camping&#13;
and is "looking forward to&#13;
camping all over this beautiful&#13;
I state."&#13;
Braun Takes-Over Ethnic&#13;
Workshop&#13;
Friday&#13;
Roger Braun&#13;
Roger Braun is the new vice&#13;
president of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, replacing&#13;
Harvey Hedden who resfgned&#13;
at the beginning of the semester.&#13;
Roger was appointed to the&#13;
position from a host of&#13;
candidates by President Rusty&#13;
Smith . He was approved&#13;
unanimously by the Senate after&#13;
a meeting that lasted nearly two&#13;
hours. He was chosen because&#13;
he has shown an active interest&#13;
in student affairs in the past.&#13;
He served as president of the&#13;
Earth Science Club - and is&#13;
presently on ·the board of&#13;
directors of the Cooperative&#13;
Services Collective. He has also&#13;
shown active interest in the Book&#13;
Co-op and the Food Co-op.&#13;
Roger is now a senior majoring&#13;
in Earth Science. Having&#13;
attended the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Platteville in the past,&#13;
the former Brodhead, Wis .&#13;
re ident came to Parkside in&#13;
1975 .&#13;
Being n'ew to the PSGA, Roger&#13;
is hoping to incorporate his&#13;
personal experience to chair the&#13;
Senate and serve as President&#13;
Smith's assistant. '&#13;
The association should see&#13;
some improvements with Roger&#13;
as vice presi9ent. As he sees it,&#13;
the student government and the&#13;
other school organizations have&#13;
never before pulled together. "I&#13;
hope to get them to band&#13;
together. There are groups, lfke&#13;
the soc for instance, who could&#13;
be very powerful with the help of'&#13;
the PSGA," Roger stated .&#13;
When asked what issues he&#13;
plans to tackle, Roger answered,&#13;
" I'd like to see the PSGA push to&#13;
get campus problems (such as&#13;
parking and the Union remodeling)&#13;
solved ."&#13;
Involvement is one thing&#13;
Roger h_opes to SEz · "Right now,&#13;
there 1s about 50% active&#13;
involvement in the Senate. There&#13;
has been some improvement this&#13;
semester and I hope it will keep&#13;
up.'r With elections1&#13;
coming up&#13;
for nine Senate seats, he&#13;
speculates interest in the PSGA&#13;
will gain momentum .&#13;
Roger believes that the PSGA&#13;
has plenty of clout to help&#13;
students and hopes that the&#13;
student body will take advantage&#13;
of that power to get things done.&#13;
He also added, "Anyone who&#13;
has a problem that they think the&#13;
PSGA could help with, should&#13;
contact either me or Rusty and&#13;
we'll do our best."&#13;
The Black 5=ommunity - of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin will be&#13;
the subject · of an ~thnic&#13;
workshop sponsored by the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Center for Multicultural Studies&#13;
' on Friday, Oct. 13, from 7 to, 10&#13;
p.m . and Saturday, Oct. 14, from&#13;
9 _a·'.11 · to 4 - p.m . at Secon_d&#13;
M1ss1onary Baptist Church, 1327&#13;
Blake Ave., Racine.&#13;
The workshop can be taken for&#13;
one UW-Parkside undergraduate&#13;
credit or on a non-credit basis.&#13;
Credit registration information&#13;
is availt!ble from the UW-P&#13;
Registrar's Office (553-2281) and&#13;
non-credit information from&#13;
Univ_ers!ty Extension (553-2312).&#13;
Principal speakers will be Dr.&#13;
James Pitts and Dr. William&#13;
Sampson, professors of sociology&#13;
at Northwestern University, and&#13;
the Rev . Crawford Brady, pastor&#13;
·' of ~t. Mark's Christian Methodist&#13;
Episcopal Church in Joliet, Ill. .&#13;
The program also will include&#13;
panel discussions on edu~ational&#13;
issues ip the Black community,&#13;
employment, criminal justice&#13;
~dv~cacy services and progress~&#13;
ion in the 60's-regression in the&#13;
!O's. Other program features&#13;
include ethnic foods at both the&#13;
day and evening sessions and&#13;
performances by choral groups&#13;
and soloists .&#13;
2&#13;
Where do you eat on campus and how ·do you like the fOOdJ&#13;
-Vince laquinta-&#13;
"I primarily eat in the Union&#13;
. Square. It's my second fa~orit_e&#13;
thing in the world . My first 1s&#13;
putting my mouth over ~he&#13;
exhaust pipe of a bus and getting&#13;
dragged, naked, through a cactus&#13;
field ."&#13;
Larry Frederking - "Once in a&#13;
while I eat in the Union Dining&#13;
room . It's all right."&#13;
Chris Zeihn - "Most of the&#13;
time I eat in the Union cafeterit&#13;
I like the salads with a lot of&#13;
cheese."&#13;
wished to remain&#13;
anonymous "I don't&#13;
eat on campus when I can avo~&#13;
it."&#13;
RANG.ER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
, and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every I W~dnesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER1is·pri11ted by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion , Illinois. -&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion&#13;
°1&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger,, U.W. Parkside, WLLC 0-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Mike Murphy . ... ... ......... . . ... .... . . ... . .. . Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan . .. . . .. . . . . . . . ... . .. , . .. Gen~ral Mandal~~&#13;
John Stewart . .. . : .. . ... .. ... .. . . . . .. ·. ·:-:. News E 0&#13;
Sue Stevens . . . .... . .. ..... . ... ... .. .. . Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser ...... . . . . . ...... . . . .. . Sports Editor&#13;
Dave Cramer .... .. . ... . . .. .. . .. .. . . , .... Sports EdltO~&#13;
Kim Putman ....... . ... . . .... . ........ ... Copy Edlto r&#13;
Chris MIiier .... . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. . . . .. . .. . Ad Manage&#13;
Na ncy S zymans kl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cl rcu latlon Manager&#13;
REPORTING STAFF . , Ille&#13;
·t:aura Blanco, Carolyn Bresclano, Cathy Brownlee, M0&#13;
1&#13;
ti&#13;
Clarke, Pete Cramer, Tom Fervoy, Rob, Gardner, Kr ~II&#13;
Honch, Thomas Jenn, Nickl Kroll, Janene Llecrocl, pter&#13;
Marry, Kathy Peters, Sue Sallturo, Jeff Stevens, Les&#13;
Thompson and Larry Weaver.&#13;
' ' PHOTO&#13;
Gary Adelson, Susan Caldwell, Denise D'Acqulsto, carlr&#13;
Davis, Jim Etteldorf, Rob Gardner Mike Holmdohl, Cln l&#13;
Mason, J~lle Orth, Tony Raymo'nd and Brian Tagga ·&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig Dvorak, Rob MIiier and Matthew Pollakon.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Cramer and Dawn Tt)omas ..&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be a~c;pted for publication if the~&#13;
a~e typewritten, double spaced with one inch margins a~&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be toclud rn&#13;
for purposes of veriflca1ion. Names will be withheld fro&#13;
. publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RAN_GE~ reserves the rjght to edit letters and refust&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable conten ·&#13;
All mater· I , n tor . . 1&#13;
a must be received by Thursday noo publication on the following Wednesday: &#13;
w.dn.sday October 11,1978&#13;
To The EditQr ...&#13;
~ -Burning Over Grass&#13;
Wisc. Academy of Sciences,Arts and Letters&#13;
"Drug Abuse Clinic" article down&#13;
have the audacity to cram a A Call For Papers&#13;
in the corner of page eight, bY_3&#13;
hair styling ad!&#13;
Do you "people, you layout&#13;
people, you editors, you people&#13;
who write for the paper, give a&#13;
damn about drug abuse? I doubt&#13;
it like hell.&#13;
And another thing, when will&#13;
you stop violating some cannons&#13;
of journalism by mixing straight&#13;
new~ with editorials? That&#13;
caption under paper is just one&#13;
example. Look at that apparently&#13;
straight news- story about the&#13;
Marijuana Smoke-In you ran two&#13;
issues ago; through the wholething&#13;
you encourage people to&#13;
attend the thing while advertising&#13;
it like a movie. Then to top it&#13;
off- you put it on your sports&#13;
page.&#13;
ag of a newspaper Your r&#13;
furiatesme! .&#13;
e one you print a large&#13;
Oopag .. kl f a Marquana Srno e- n&#13;
hoto 0 . liN t&#13;
h the smug caption 0 a&#13;
it " ht." Then you hcemet' In slg .&#13;
A "call for papers" is being&#13;
issued by the Wisconsin&#13;
Academy of Sciences, Arts and&#13;
letters in association with its&#13;
109th Annual Meeting, to be&#13;
held Friday and Saturday, April&#13;
20-21, at Carthage College,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Papers may be presented on&#13;
any aspect of the sciences, social&#13;
sciences, arts, letters and&#13;
humanities. Selection of papers&#13;
for presentation will be based on&#13;
a screening of 250~word&#13;
abstracts, which should include&#13;
title of paper, outline of purpose,&#13;
methodology, and principal&#13;
findings. Also required are the&#13;
name, address, academic posttion,&#13;
telephone number of the&#13;
author and indication of&#13;
audio-visual equipment that may&#13;
be necessary. Deadline for&#13;
receipt of abstracts is March 1,&#13;
1979.&#13;
Persons need not be members&#13;
of the Academy in order to&#13;
present papers at the meeting,&#13;
and students are also eligible,&#13;
provided their abstracts are&#13;
accompanied by written endorsement&#13;
of an appropriate&#13;
faculty member. Papers submitted&#13;
at the Wisconsin Academy&#13;
Annual Meeting are eligible for&#13;
publication consideration by the&#13;
Academy "Transactions," a&#13;
scholarly journal circulated&#13;
throughout the U.S. and to 600&#13;
institutions in 600 nations.&#13;
Further details, including membership&#13;
information, are available&#13;
by writing: Wisconsin&#13;
Academy of Sciences; Arts and&#13;
Letters, Steen bock Center, 1922&#13;
Universitv Ave, Madison 53705&#13;
(Tel 608-263-1692)&#13;
The Wisconsin Academy 15 a&#13;
nonprofit membership orgamzation&#13;
that was chartered by the&#13;
legislature in 1870 to encourage&#13;
research and promote communication&#13;
on the sciences. arts and&#13;
letters of Wisconsin It IS one of&#13;
only three of 46 slate and&#13;
regional academies in the nation&#13;
to include the arts and letters as&#13;
well as the SCiences In&#13;
membership representation and&#13;
programmtng. The Wisconstn&#13;
Academy is also among the older&#13;
and larger of the 46 academies&#13;
Executive DIrector James R Batt&#13;
is the current president of the&#13;
National Association of Academies&#13;
of Science.&#13;
'Women'&#13;
•&#13;
In&#13;
Sports.&#13;
r Ranger (especially Doug&#13;
nhauserand Dave Cramer)-&#13;
Pleasewatch your references&#13;
gender. In your "Fresh Takes&#13;
ootrol" article you refered to&#13;
freshmenwomen as "girls." I&#13;
rsooaJly don't feel that they&#13;
e anymore "girls" then male&#13;
eshmenare "boys." It's not a&#13;
'g thing, but to some of us it&#13;
matter.&#13;
Thanks,JaneFreeman&#13;
Your friend,&#13;
Larry Zamba&#13;
Wednesday October 11, 1978&#13;
To The EditQr ...&#13;
--&#13;
Burning Over· Grass rag of a newspaper Your&#13;
the Irr. furiates me! ·,10 ge one you print a large On pa .. f a Marijuana Smoke-In hoto o . " N t the smug caption o a 1th · · ht " Then you !iceman in s1g .&#13;
'Women'&#13;
•&#13;
1n&#13;
Sport~ _&#13;
ar Ranger (especially Doug&#13;
Edenhauser and Dave Cramer)-&#13;
Please watch your references&#13;
0 gender. In your "Frosh Takes&#13;
Control" article you refered to&#13;
two freshmen women as "girls." I&#13;
personally don't feel that they&#13;
re anymore "girls" then male&#13;
freshmen are "boys." It's not a&#13;
0st o big thing, but to some of us it&#13;
n call? does matter.&#13;
th a B Thanks, Jane Freeman&#13;
0ol&#13;
s-1&#13;
shl,&#13;
have the audacity to cram a&#13;
" Drug Abuse Clinic" article down&#13;
in the corner of page eight, by ji&#13;
hair styling ad!&#13;
Do you ·people, you layout&#13;
people, you editors, you people&#13;
who write for the paper, give a&#13;
damn about drug abuse? I doubt&#13;
it like hell.&#13;
And another thing, when will&#13;
you stop violating some cannons&#13;
of journalism by mixing straight&#13;
new? with editorials? That&#13;
caption under paper is just one&#13;
example. Look at that apparently&#13;
straight news story about the&#13;
Marijuana Smoke-In you ran two&#13;
issues ago; through the wholething&#13;
you encourage people to&#13;
attend the thing while advertising&#13;
it like a movie. Then to top it&#13;
off you put it on your sports&#13;
page.&#13;
Your friend,&#13;
Larry Zamba&#13;
Wisc. Academy of Sciences,Arts and letters&#13;
A Call For Papers&#13;
A "call for papers" is being&#13;
issued by the Wisconsin&#13;
Academy of Sciences, Arts and&#13;
Letters in association with its&#13;
109th Annual Meeting, to be&#13;
held Friday and Saturday, April&#13;
20-21, at Carthage College,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Papers may be presented on&#13;
any aspect of the sciences, social&#13;
sciences , arts, letters and&#13;
humanities. Selection of papers&#13;
for presentation will be based on&#13;
a screening of 250-word&#13;
abstracts, which should i_nclude&#13;
title of paper, outline of purpose,&#13;
methodology, and principal&#13;
findings . Also required are the&#13;
name, address, academic position,&#13;
telephone number of the&#13;
author and indication of&#13;
audio-visual equipment that may&#13;
be necessary. Dead I ine for&#13;
receipt of abstracts is March 1,&#13;
1979.&#13;
Persons need not be members&#13;
of the Academy in order to&#13;
present papers at the meeting,&#13;
and students are also eligible,&#13;
provided their abstracts are&#13;
accompanied by written endorsement&#13;
of an appropriate&#13;
faculty member. Papers submitted&#13;
at the Wisconsin Academy&#13;
Annual Meeting are eligible for&#13;
publication consiqeration by the&#13;
Academy " Transactions," a&#13;
scholarly journal circulated&#13;
throughout the U.S. and to 600&#13;
institutions in 600 nations.&#13;
Further details, including membership&#13;
information, are available&#13;
by writing: Wisconsin&#13;
Academy of Sciences; Arts and&#13;
Letters, St enbock C nt r, 1922&#13;
Univer Ity Av • Madi on S 7 S&#13;
(Tel : 608-263-1&amp;92) .&#13;
The W1scon in A ad m I a&#13;
nonprofit memb rsh1p or anIzation&#13;
that was hart r d b th&#13;
Legislature in 1870 to en ourag&#13;
research and promote communIcatIon&#13;
on the scIenc , art and&#13;
letters of W1scons1n . It Is on of&#13;
only three of 46 and&#13;
regional academ1e m th nation&#13;
to include the art and I t r a&#13;
well as the cIence In&#13;
membership repre ntation and&#13;
programming The Wisconsin&#13;
Academy Is also among th old r&#13;
and larger of the 46 acad m, .&#13;
Executive Director Jame R Batt&#13;
is the current president of the&#13;
ational AssocIatIon of Acad mies&#13;
of Science &#13;
Wednesday October l1,l978&#13;
Molinaro c:ontinued from page 1&#13;
Signing Senate Bill nO.38. ,George Molinoro on right.&#13;
UW-Parkside Chancellor Alan&#13;
E.Cuskin, who proposed naming&#13;
the ciassroom building in&#13;
Molinaro's name, said that&#13;
"during George Molinaro's long&#13;
years of public service, .he was&#13;
committed to fulfilling his dream&#13;
of providing others with the&#13;
educational 'opportunity he was&#13;
denied. The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside is his&#13;
legacy."&#13;
As the oldest of 10 children of&#13;
immigrant parents, Molinaro was&#13;
forced to drop out of school after&#13;
the seventh grade to go to work&#13;
in a Kenosha garment factory.&#13;
During the next 50 years he&#13;
would become a county board&#13;
supervisor (1939-47), a Wisconsin&#13;
assemblyman (1947-77), vice&#13;
president and \ executive board&#13;
member of autoworkers un ion&#13;
local 72 (1935-49) and first&#13;
president and later board&#13;
chairman of the American State&#13;
Bank in Kenosha (1961-1978).&#13;
Although receiving an education&#13;
only through seventh grade,&#13;
Molinaro attended Kenosha&#13;
Vocational School for two years&#13;
and for two years attended night&#13;
courses at the Kenosha Business&#13;
College. In 1965,- Molinaro&#13;
retired from American Motors&#13;
Corp. after 40 years as a worker&#13;
there.&#13;
assemblymen, representing the&#13;
64th District in Kenosha for 30&#13;
years, from 1947 until his&#13;
retirement in 1977. He introduced&#13;
the bill passed in 1965&#13;
which founded both UW-Parkside&#13;
and UW-Green Bay. Its&#13;
passage culminafed many years&#13;
of effort by Molinaro and others&#13;
to establish a four-year UW&#13;
campus in the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
area.&#13;
He spent his energy wisely in&#13;
co-authoring the bill and its&#13;
amendments. His position included&#13;
freeing the state from&#13;
paying for the land by having the&#13;
local communities provide the&#13;
sites on which to build.&#13;
Having been awarded the&#13;
Grizzly Bear Award by conservationists&#13;
in 1966, Molinaro lived&#13;
up to the title by lighting to keep&#13;
opponents from disraillng the&#13;
UW-Parkside plan. He also&#13;
opposed the delay of the campus&#13;
opening from 1969 to 1970.&#13;
Molinaro's work began to pay&#13;
off at the ground breaking on&#13;
November 27, 1967, At the time,&#13;
he was quoted as saying, "Today&#13;
represents the realization of a&#13;
15 year-old dream of a University&#13;
of south eastern Wisconsin. The&#13;
Kenosha-Racine area could&#13;
become a metropolitan mecca of&#13;
education because of it."&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFF ON ALL&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH,&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICATION.&#13;
TERRACE ROOM&#13;
426 LAKE AVE&#13;
RACINE&#13;
"MONTAGE"&#13;
"OPUS"&#13;
"JIM SCHWALL"&#13;
" entertainment 9 p.m.&#13;
~AZZ SO GOOD"&#13;
.Molinaro'·s first attempt at a&#13;
state Assembly seat came in 1944&#13;
when he ran as a Progressive and&#13;
lost. In 1946 the Progressive&#13;
Party switched to Republican&#13;
and Molinaro ran for the&#13;
Assembly as a Democrat and&#13;
won.&#13;
Molinaro was an active labor&#13;
leader in Kenosha. A charter&#13;
member of local 72 in 1935, he&#13;
served four years 'as vice&#13;
president and 15 years on the&#13;
executive board. He served as a&#13;
delegate to the AFl-CIO council&#13;
and to many state and national&#13;
conferences.&#13;
In 1949, Molinaro gave up&#13;
active participation in union&#13;
work because of increasing&#13;
responsibilities in the Assembly.&#13;
Molinaro was elected assistant&#13;
minority floor le.ader in 1949,&#13;
minority floor leader in 1952 and&#13;
1953, and was named Assembly&#13;
caucus chairman in 1953. In&#13;
1959, he was named Speaker of&#13;
the Assembly. '&#13;
Molinaro was named president&#13;
of the American State Bank&#13;
when it first opened in Kenosha&#13;
in 1961.&#13;
While holding the leadership&#13;
positions as' speaker of the&#13;
Assembly and chairman of the&#13;
Joint Finance Committee, Molinaro&#13;
devoted his major legislative&#13;
efforts to the cause of higher&#13;
education. The University of&#13;
Wisconsin recognized his efforts&#13;
by conferring upon him a&#13;
UW-Parkside degree as an&#13;
honorary alumnus and a&#13;
UW-Madison honorary doctorate&#13;
in May, 1977.&#13;
At the time of his retirement&#13;
many claimed fondly that the~&#13;
never understood a sentence he&#13;
said except for "aye" and "no."&#13;
During the time he was a leading&#13;
D~mocrat in the Assembly, he&#13;
tried to end the bickering within&#13;
the party. When his efforts were&#13;
recognized as futile, he made the&#13;
statement, "I've decided to quit&#13;
pouring cold water on a hot&#13;
dog."&#13;
presents:&#13;
4&#13;
Collegiate Skills&#13;
.Required Skills Lacking&#13;
by John Stewart ... ,.~. ~&#13;
Parkside has a program for all entering, degree-seeking stu&#13;
that makes sure that they have all the skills n.ecessary to cOPe&#13;
their upper level college work. This program IS known as Col&#13;
Skills. The program was initiated one year ago at the beginning&#13;
Fall 1977 semester. Unfortunately many of the students invol&#13;
the program have not yet complied with its requiremen~s.&#13;
The Collegiate Skills Program insists that all students Involved&#13;
meet certain competencies in Reading, Writing, Mathe&#13;
Library Skills. and Research Paper writing. In the case of the R&#13;
Paper requirement, an adequ.ate Research Paper m~st be prod&#13;
However, all that is required, tn the other four areas, IS passinga&#13;
Competence Test. .&#13;
In order that students acquire the necessary skills by the time&#13;
start their upper level college work, every new student mustcom&#13;
the requirements of the Collegiate Skills Program by the tim.t&#13;
have completed 45 credits of work. ThIS IS usually done bytheend&#13;
the student's third semester here. If the requirements are notmet&#13;
this time, the student will be placed on Academic Proba'&#13;
Academic Probation gives the student one semester or another&#13;
credits of work to correct his/her skills deficiencies or he/shew;&#13;
dropped from the university for one semester.&#13;
Students who transfer to Parks ide from another universityare'&#13;
slightly different situation. Those that have transferred with&#13;
than. 30 credits must satisfy all the Collegiate Skills&#13;
requirements by the time they accumulate 45 credits&#13;
graduation or be placed on Academic Probation, Those that&#13;
transferred to Parks ide with more than 30 credits completed&#13;
satisfy the skills requirements by the time they complete an&#13;
credits at Parks ide or also be placed on Academic Probation.&#13;
All students, mainly sophomores, who will complete their&#13;
credits of work by the end of this semester, should pick up&#13;
individual Competence Status Reports at the table on the CI&#13;
Building Concourse, Monday October 16th or Tuesday October&#13;
between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. This report will give the stud&#13;
official record of his or her College Skills Competencies to&#13;
Many people affected by the program have not completed&#13;
competencies.&#13;
Below is a schedule for the Competence Testing this semester;&#13;
Library Skills. . . November1,&#13;
Wednesday -. 10:00-11:00. 2:OQ-3:00GR&#13;
Math. . , . . . . . November2,&#13;
Thursday ..... 11:00-12:30, 2:OQ-3:l9G&#13;
Reading (101). . November20,&#13;
Monday. . . (9 - 50 minute 101 class&#13;
Reading (101) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . November 21, 1&#13;
Tuesday ... (15 - 50 minute 101 classperi&#13;
Reading (non-101). .. November 20,&#13;
12th Week Monday . 10:00-10: 50, 2:00-2:50&#13;
Library Skills (102) .DecemberH&#13;
Monday-Friday, , .. , .. In 102 class&#13;
Library Skills (Non-102). . ,. . .. December&amp;,&#13;
Wednesday .10:00-10:50GR&#13;
Math. . , December7,&#13;
Thursday '.. . . 11:00-12:JOG&#13;
Writing (101 and non-101) ... December9,&#13;
Saturday, ,9:00-11:00GR&#13;
. Of the approximately 15000 students involved, only about&#13;
have taken the Reading Test, only about 700 have taken the Wr&#13;
Test, only about 350 have taken the Math Test, only about 90&#13;
taken the Library Skills Test and only 66 have submitted Rese&#13;
Papers. The pass rates for the Competency Tests are all very high!&#13;
the 90 and 80 percentiles and 100 percent for the Research paper·&#13;
problem seems to be merely PROCRASTINATION. And ifyoUkn&#13;
what that word means vou probably will not have any trouble&#13;
the Competence Tests.&#13;
If you have questions, please pick up your status reports&#13;
Monday or Tuesday and stop in at the Educational Program SU .&#13;
office, WLLC D-197 or call them at 553-2605, They run the Coil&#13;
Skills Program and will be able to answer all your questions a&#13;
or at least direct you to-those who can&#13;
In conclusion, Academic Probation is one&#13;
avoided. /&#13;
WED. &amp; THUR.&#13;
FRI.&#13;
SAT.&#13;
Wednesday October 11, 1-978 \&#13;
Molinaro continued. from page 1&#13;
4&#13;
Colleg~ate Skills&#13;
Required Skills Lackjng&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
l~&#13;
id,&#13;
~, i&#13;
l . .II&#13;
Parks ide has a program for all entering, degree-seeking stu (I'&#13;
that makes sure that they have aU the skill s necessary to COPe ,.&#13;
their upper level college -:vork . This program 1s known as Colleg' ~-&#13;
Skill s. The program was m1t1ated one year ago at the beginning of &gt;",i1&#13;
Fall 1977 semester. Unfortunately many_ of the _students involved ,~&#13;
the program have not yet compl ied_ with its requirements.&#13;
The Collegiate Skills Program msIsts that all students involvedn, ~~ meet certain competencies in Reading, Writing, Mathema· 't&#13;
Library Skill s, and Research Paper writing. In the case of the Rese 'd&#13;
Paper requirement, an adequate Research Paper must be produc ''.&#13;
However, all that is required , tn the other four areas, Is passing ask f'-'-,,&#13;
Competence Test . _ ~~ In order that students acquire the necessary skills by the timet ~if{&#13;
start their upper level college work, every new student must compl&#13;
Signing Senate Bill no.38. , George Molinaro on right.&#13;
the req_uirements of the Collegiate Skil~s Program by the time th :~&#13;
have completed 45 credits of work .fThh1 s 1s us~ally done by the end 1&#13;
~&#13;
the student's third semester here . I t e requirements are not met l'I ~&#13;
this time, the student will be placed on Academic Probati ' 1&#13;
Academic Probation gives the stud~nt on~ _sem_ester or another :lid&#13;
credits of work to correct his/ her skills def1c1enc1es or he/she will ,,~&#13;
assemblymen, representing the UW-Parkside Chancellor A~an&#13;
64th District in Kenosha for 30 E. Guskin, who proposed nammg&#13;
years, from 1947 until_ his _ the . cias~room bu i ld_ing in&#13;
retirement in 1977. He mtro- Molinaro s name, said that&#13;
duced the bill passed in 1965 "during George Molinaro's long&#13;
which founded both UW-Park- years of public service, he was&#13;
side and UW-Green Bay. Its committed to fulfilling his dream&#13;
passage culmina(ed many years of providing others with the&#13;
of effort by Molinaro and others educational opportunity he was&#13;
to establish a four-year UW denied . The University of&#13;
campus in the Kenosha-Racine Wisconsin-Parkside is his&#13;
area.&#13;
He spent his energy wisely in&#13;
co-authoring the · bill and its&#13;
amendments . His position included&#13;
freeing the state from&#13;
paying for the land by having the&#13;
local communities provide the&#13;
sites on which to build.&#13;
Having been awarded the&#13;
Grizzly Bear Award by conservationists&#13;
in 1966, Molinaro lived&#13;
up to the title by fighting to keep&#13;
opponents from disrailing the&#13;
UW-Parks ide plan . He also&#13;
opposed the delay of the campus&#13;
opening from 1969 to 1970.&#13;
Mol inaro's work began to pay&#13;
off at the ground breaking on&#13;
November 27, 1967. At the time,&#13;
he was quoted as saying, "Today&#13;
represents the realization of a&#13;
15 year-old dream of a University&#13;
of south eastern Wisconsin . The&#13;
Kenosha-Racine area could&#13;
become a metropolitan mecca of&#13;
education because of it."&#13;
legacy;"&#13;
As the oldest of 10 children of&#13;
immigrant parer,1ts, Molinaro was&#13;
forced to drop out of school after&#13;
the seventh grade to go to work&#13;
in a Kenosha garment factory.&#13;
During the next 50 years he&#13;
would become a county board&#13;
supervisor (1939-47), a Wisconsin&#13;
assemblyman (1947-77), vice&#13;
president and executive board&#13;
member of autoworkers union&#13;
Local 72 (1935-49) and first&#13;
president and later board&#13;
chairman of the American State&#13;
Bank in Kenosha (1961-1978).&#13;
Although receiving an education&#13;
only through seventh grade,&#13;
Molinaro attended Kenosha&#13;
Vocational School for two years&#13;
and for two years attended night&#13;
courses at the Kenosha Business&#13;
College . In 1965, Molinaro&#13;
ret'ired from American Motors&#13;
Corp. after 40 years as a worker&#13;
there.&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFF ON ALL&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICATION.&#13;
·Molinaro(s first attempt at a&#13;
state Assembly seat can:ie in 1944&#13;
when he ran as a Progressive and&#13;
lost. In 1946 the Progressive&#13;
Party . switched to Republican&#13;
and Molinaro ran for the&#13;
Assembly as a Democrat and&#13;
won .&#13;
Molinaro was an active labor&#13;
leader in Kenosha. A charter&#13;
member of Local 72 in 1935, he&#13;
served four years ' as vice&#13;
president and 15 years on the&#13;
executive board. He served as a&#13;
delegate to the AFL-CIO council&#13;
and to many state and national&#13;
conferences .&#13;
In 1949, Molinaro gave up&#13;
active participation in union&#13;
work because of increasing&#13;
responsibilities in the Assembly.&#13;
Molinaro was elected assistant&#13;
minority floor leader in 1949,&#13;
minority floor leader in 1952 and&#13;
1953, and was named Assembly&#13;
caucus chairman in 1953. In&#13;
1959, he was named Speaker of&#13;
the Assembly . '&#13;
Molinaro was named president&#13;
of the American State Bank&#13;
when it first opened in Kenosha&#13;
in 1961 .&#13;
dropped from the university for one semester. . ,tJI.&#13;
Students who transfer to Parkside from another university are in ' ~&#13;
slightly different situation . Those that have transferred with f -&#13;
than . 30 credits must satisfy all the Collegiate Skills Pro lfl ~ requirements by the time they accumulate 45 credits t&#13;
graduation or be placed on Academic Probation . Those that h&#13;
transferred to Parkside with more than 30 credits completed&#13;
satisfy the skills requirements by the time they complete another&#13;
credits at Parkside or also be placed on Academic Probation.&#13;
All students, mainly sophomores, who will complete their firlt&#13;
credits of work by the end of this semester, should pick up&#13;
individual Competence Status Reports at the table on the Class&#13;
Building Concourse, Monday October 16th or Tuesday October&#13;
between 10 a.m . and 2 p .m . This report will give the student&#13;
official record of his or her College Ski lls Competencies to&#13;
Many people affected by the program have not complr ted all&#13;
competencies .&#13;
Below is a schedule for the Competence Testing this semester:&#13;
Library Skills . . ................ November 1, 1&#13;
Wednesday ... 10:00-11 :00, 2:00-3:00 GR&#13;
Math . November2,1&#13;
Thursday .. 11 :00-12:30, 2:00-3:3p GR&#13;
Reading (101) . . ..... . ....... November 20, 19&#13;
Monday . . . . . (9 - 50 minute 101 class period&#13;
Reading (101) . . . . . November 21, 19&#13;
Tuesday . . .. (15 - 50 minute 101 class peri&#13;
Reading (non-101) . . . November 20, 1&#13;
12th Week Monday . . . 10:00-10:50, 2:00-2: SOGR&#13;
Library Skills (102)&#13;
Monday-Friday .&#13;
Library Skills (Non-102) .&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
Math&#13;
Thursday ..&#13;
Writing (101 and non-101)&#13;
Saturday . .. .. ...... , ".&#13;
While holding the leadership&#13;
positions as speaker of the&#13;
Assembly and chairman of the&#13;
Joint Finance Committee, Molinaro&#13;
devoted his major legislative&#13;
efforts to the cause of higher&#13;
education . The University of&#13;
Wisconsin recognized his efforts&#13;
by conferring upon him a&#13;
UW-Parkside degree as an · Of the approximately 15000 students involved, only about_i&#13;
honorary alumnus and a have taken the Reading Test only about 700 have taken the Wnt&#13;
UW-Madison honorary doctor- Test, only about 350 have t~ken the Math Test, only about 90 ha&#13;
ate in May, 1977. taken the Library Skills Test and only 66 have submitted Rese ~&#13;
At the time of his retirement Papers . The pass rates for the Competency Tests are all very high, , I&#13;
many claimed fondly that the~ the 90 and 80 percentiles and 100 percent for the Research Paper. Ii\&#13;
never understood a sentence he problem seems to be merely PROCRASTINATION . And if you k\ ·&#13;
said except for "aye" and " no." what that word means you probably will not have any trouble wit \&#13;
During the time he was a leading the Competence Tests . '~,&#13;
D~mocrat in the Assembly, he If you have questions, please pick up your status reports n t •&#13;
tried to end the bickering within Monday or Tuesday and stop m at the Educational Program SuP_ ·&#13;
the party. When his efforts were office, WLLC D-197 or call them at 553-2605 They run the Collegia ,.-&#13;
_recognized as futile, he made the Skills Program and will be able to answer ali' your questions about ·&#13;
statement, " I've decided to quit - or at least direct you to-those who can . \&#13;
pouring cold water on a hot In conclusion, Academic Probation&#13;
dog." avoided . 1&#13;
R •=•lCl'ltaxE.a:at1:xxx:ax:.xa&amp;.«rm:«1&#13;
. · TERRACE ROOM&#13;
presents:&#13;
_ ,&#13;
426LAKEAVE&#13;
RACINE&#13;
"MONTAGE"&#13;
_, ''OPUS''&#13;
"JIM scow ALL"&#13;
WED. &amp; THUR.&#13;
FRI.&#13;
SAT.&#13;
" entertainment g p.m.&#13;
~AZZ SO GOOD"&#13;
.. ~ ....... _ks . --&#13;
Wednesday October 11,1978&#13;
Choir Visit&#13;
Haydn was not a member of the&#13;
Imperial Chapel, he experienced&#13;
the life of a choirboy to the full&#13;
and many of his works are to be&#13;
I~ found in their repertoire. The&#13;
o greatest prodigy, and the most&#13;
~ famous choirboy, was Franz&#13;
Schubert, who sang as a -choirI&#13;
boy from 1808 to 1813. Anton&#13;
Bruckner became organist of the&#13;
Imperial Chapel in 1867 and&#13;
added his influence to those of&#13;
his equally illustrious precursors.&#13;
In 1918, however, it seemed&#13;
that the collapse of the Hapsburg&#13;
dynasty and the dissolution of&#13;
It the AustrcrHungarian Empire&#13;
III would mean the end of the world&#13;
t famous institution. But, Josef&#13;
~ Schnitt retained the chaplaincy&#13;
of the Imperial Chapel and in&#13;
1924, encouraged by many&#13;
friends, he decided to re-found&#13;
the boys choir.&#13;
It was felt that the boarding&#13;
l~ school method was the only&#13;
practicable one of insuring the&#13;
musical training necessary for&#13;
the choristers and, despite&#13;
enormous economic difficulties,&#13;
the attempt was made. Schnitt&#13;
spared no personal expense and&#13;
he alone is responsible for the&#13;
salvation of this aspect of&#13;
Austrian musical tradition. What&#13;
he began as an experiment has&#13;
grown to be an enormous&#13;
success and the Vienna Choir&#13;
Boys, as they were now called,&#13;
began to embark on concert&#13;
tours around the world.&#13;
The secret of their fascination?&#13;
Critics say they have managed to&#13;
combine the naivete of childhood&#13;
with artistic maturity,&#13;
something that can only be&#13;
.3 achieved through serious work.&#13;
Ill« Those who wish to be considered&#13;
111$ for entry attend a special&#13;
",eparatory school where they&#13;
Of&#13;
laJ&#13;
Tuition.&#13;
The proposal could bring&#13;
between 250 and 750 new&#13;
stude."ts to Parkside, thereby&#13;
btongongParkside up to its full&#13;
enrollment capacity. Worries&#13;
about decreasing enrollments&#13;
couldbecome a thing of the past&#13;
If such a plan became a reality.&#13;
The new students that would&#13;
iht be attracted to Parkside by&#13;
out reduced tuitions would com-&#13;
~ mute to Parks ide from Lake&#13;
~ County, Illinois, the Illinois&#13;
,P County adjacent to Kenosha&#13;
if County. lake County on Iy has a&#13;
two year college and Parks ide is&#13;
the most accessible four&#13;
Yheearcollege to the people living&#13;
t re. It is hoped that this&#13;
Proposal would thereby attract&#13;
~unlor and senior students to&#13;
f&#13;
arkslde. Since Parks ide suffers&#13;
h~ rom decl' . 'he rrnng enrollments in&#13;
~ S€ years as people drop out or&#13;
ave Parks ide for Madison or&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
receive a thorough education&#13;
with special attention paid to the&#13;
theory and practice of singing as&#13;
well as instruction on one&#13;
musical instrument. At the&#13;
examination, which the candidates&#13;
take at the age of nine&#13;
musical ability is the decisive&#13;
factor, irrespective of creed orsocial&#13;
standing.&#13;
More often than not two&#13;
choirs are away on tour at the&#13;
same time, with each tour lasting&#13;
an average of three months. On&#13;
such a tour the 24 choristers are&#13;
accompanied by a choirmaster a&#13;
tutor and a nurse who are&#13;
entrusted with their care and&#13;
welfare.&#13;
Since their first United States&#13;
tour in 1932, the Vienna Choir&#13;
Boys have visited America no&#13;
fewer than 38 times, have&#13;
completed eight Asian tours&#13;
travelling as far as Japan, and&#13;
have performed an equal&#13;
number of times in Australia.&#13;
They have also appeared&#13;
numerous times in both South&#13;
Africa and South America. They&#13;
have been received by innumerable&#13;
heads of state,&#13;
including audiences with Popes&#13;
Pius XI, Pius XII, and Paul VI.&#13;
The time lost on concert tours&#13;
is compensated for by an&#13;
intensive program of teaching&#13;
and study in classes that seldom&#13;
exceed more than 10 pupils. In&#13;
the private boarding school,&#13;
which conforms to the standards&#13;
set by the Austrian Ministry of&#13;
Education, there is a staff of&#13;
thirty fully-qualified secondary&#13;
school teachers.&#13;
When a boy's voice finally&#13;
breaks, he leaves the choir not&#13;
only a first-rate musician, but&#13;
also a veteran globe-trotter.&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
other schools, this will be a big&#13;
help in letting Parkside fill out its&#13;
upper level programs. In general,&#13;
this proposal would open up an&#13;
untouched service area for&#13;
Parks ide of about 400,000&#13;
people; from Chicago to the&#13;
Wisconsin border.&#13;
It is estimated that the other&#13;
schools involved, like UWWhitewater,&#13;
will add approximately&#13;
another 1500 students to&#13;
their enrollments as a result of a&#13;
reduced tuition plan&#13;
The other schools' have much&#13;
more room .to expand than&#13;
Parks ide and thereby could&#13;
sustain such a great influx.&#13;
Proponents of lowering the out&#13;
of state tuition fees argue that&#13;
these proposals may give a&#13;
tremendous boost to Wisconsin's&#13;
economy by attracting out-ofstate&#13;
dollars.&#13;
R.eo,. ******************************************&#13;
5&#13;
'Who Are You'&#13;
Peter J~ckel&#13;
Following a three year exile&#13;
from the recording studios, "The&#13;
Who" has launched a massive&#13;
comeback campaign highlighted&#13;
by a new masterpiece album that&#13;
has already threatened to&#13;
challenge the phenomenal&#13;
success achieved by earlier&#13;
"Who" classics Tommy (1969)&#13;
and Who's Next (1973).&#13;
With the release of Who Are&#13;
You, the quartet of guitarist/&#13;
writer Pete Townshend, vocalist&#13;
Roger Daltrey, bassist John Entwistle,&#13;
and the late percussionist&#13;
Keith Moon have squelched&#13;
any rumors of an impending split&#13;
that were fueled by the&#13;
intensifying feud between Townshend&#13;
and Daltrey. Their long&#13;
existing diHerences escalated to&#13;
a peak recently when Townshend&#13;
nixed Daltrev's desire to&#13;
resume touring because of the&#13;
severe hearing loss he has&#13;
suffered from the ear-piercing&#13;
rock bashes "The Who" has&#13;
staged for the past decade.&#13;
Daltrey, who has hearing woes of&#13;
his own say, "I've just got a&#13;
feeling if we stop touring now, I&#13;
know I shall regret it and I know&#13;
Pete will."&#13;
Entwistle also is in favor of&#13;
touring but the adamant Townshend&#13;
refuses to budge. "Electric&#13;
guitars hurt my ears," he claims&#13;
in an interview with Rolling&#13;
Stone. "It's bad to the extent that&#13;
if I get subjected to really loud&#13;
noise for a long time, I get a lot&#13;
of pain. And apparently, pain is&#13;
the indication of further&#13;
damage." Daltrey has since&#13;
made significant concessions in&#13;
his standpoint and has decided&#13;
to temporarily remain with his&#13;
band of fifteen years.&#13;
Who Are You marks a&#13;
welcome rebound from the&#13;
blues-orientated Who By Numbers&#13;
(1975) which bewildered&#13;
"Who" fans and strongly insinuated&#13;
the end of the then&#13;
trouble plagued group.&#13;
Townshend, overcoming his&#13;
marital problems and differences&#13;
with Daltrey, dedicates the&#13;
album in part to reaHirming his&#13;
reputation as rock's leading&#13;
philosopher and critic. In The&#13;
Music Must Change, he unleashes&#13;
a barrage of slicing barbs&#13;
at present rock groups whom&#13;
Townshend claims contributed&#13;
to the declining state of rock and&#13;
roll. This cut also features&#13;
Daltrey in his finest moments as&#13;
he churns out the lyrics with the&#13;
exacting precision and magnificent&#13;
voice control that has won&#13;
him acclaim as one of the finest&#13;
vocalists in contemporary rock.&#13;
The title song Who Are You&#13;
represents Townshend's initial&#13;
impression upon meeting the&#13;
much heralded Sex Pistols.&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESENTS&#13;
A FILM/LECTURE&#13;
BY&#13;
STAN WATERMAN&#13;
INTERNATIONALLY KNOWN CINEMATOGRAPHER OF&#13;
"THE DEEP"&#13;
TONIGHT AT CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
ADM: $1.00 UW-P STldDENTS $1.50 GENERAL&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT INFO CENTER&#13;
Townshend was pissed at the&#13;
Pistols claim that sixties bands&#13;
like the Who were the major&#13;
detrimental force behind the fall&#13;
of rock and makes ample&#13;
retaliation with this cut&#13;
Sister Disco takes a lusty pot-·-&#13;
shot at the unfortunate craze&#13;
John Travolta was kind enough&#13;
to popularize.&#13;
90S, penned by Entwistle,&#13;
constitues the finest sonW&gt;f the&#13;
album. Originally intended as&#13;
the title cut to the never&#13;
completed sequel of the movie&#13;
Tommy, 905 laments at the&#13;
seemingly insignificance of life.&#13;
Everything Ido has been done&#13;
belOle&#13;
Every idea in my head someone&#13;
else has said&#13;
The end of my life is an open&#13;
door&#13;
The Who has once again&#13;
arrived at the crossroads of their&#13;
future with the traalC September&#13;
7 death of the oft-crazy&#13;
drummer Keith ""oon ~n&#13;
whose anttcs Included drtvlnC hl~&#13;
car Into a motel sWfmmtnl pool&#13;
and W'lrln&amp; frrecreckers to hot~&#13;
manager's room doors, wA5&#13;
found dead In hiS 4partment&#13;
frcen an apparent drul O'Jerdose.&#13;
Although Towmhend maintarns&#13;
that "The Who" Will&#13;
continue With a .new perCUSSIonrst.&#13;
the vast personal attraction&#13;
Moon took With him cannot be&#13;
replaced With buddln, solo&#13;
careers for the three to turn to&#13;
and the petpelual b,ck."n.&#13;
between Townshend and Daltrey,&#13;
It IS highly unhkely th~t&#13;
"The Who" would bother&#13;
dabbling In the studiO apln&#13;
especially Without the supercharged&#13;
Moon to Inspire them&#13;
But they did pock a wonderful&#13;
album to close out tbetr b"lhant&#13;
band With&#13;
Recipe respectfully submitted to the Ranger from fnends of the tood&#13;
co-op&#13;
CHEDDAR CHEESE SOUP&#13;
2 medium carrots, scraped and minced&#13;
2 sralks celery, minced&#13;
1 Onion, finely chopped&#13;
Y. cup flour&#13;
1,1, teaspoon salt&#13;
1/8 teaspOOn whIte pepper&#13;
r quart chiden brorhOf \&lt;egerablebtorh&#13;
1 pound raw, sharp. cheddar cheese. grated&#13;
T cup heavy cream&#13;
1 cup mIlk&#13;
Saute the vegetables In the butter until ~oft Sprinkle ~Ith Hour and&#13;
mix to smooth paste. Add salt, pepper, and chicken stock oot and&#13;
puree vegetables Add cheese and rehear soup. do not bolt W n&#13;
ready to serve, add the milk and cream Carnl h With minced par I&#13;
and grated carrot&#13;
tHE RING&#13;
YOU WEAR FOREVER&#13;
WILL SAVE YOU S10&#13;
RIGHT NOW.&#13;
JOSTlN'S NA110NAL COUIGE&#13;
RING WEEK. OCTOBER 16-2L&#13;
AVAILABLE AT&#13;
U.W. - PARKSIDE BOOKSTORE&#13;
Wednesday October 11 , 1978 s&#13;
Choir Visit&#13;
Haydn was not a member of the&#13;
lmperral Chapel, he experienced&#13;
th life of a choirboy to the full&#13;
and many of his works are to be&#13;
found in their repertoire . The&#13;
greatest prodigy, and the most&#13;
famous choirboy, was Franz&#13;
Schubert, who sang as a -choir11&#13;
boy from 1808 to 1813 . Anton&#13;
Bruckner became organist of the&#13;
lmperral Chapel in 1867 and&#13;
added his influence to those of&#13;
his equally illustrious precursors.&#13;
In 1918, however, it seemed&#13;
1 that the collapse of the Hapsburg&#13;
d nasty and the dissolution of&#13;
the Austro-Hungarian Empire&#13;
would mean the end of the world&#13;
famous institution . But, Josef&#13;
Schnitt retained the chaplaincy&#13;
of the Imperial Chapel and in&#13;
1924, encouraged by many&#13;
~ friends, he decided to re-found&#13;
the boys choir.&#13;
It was felt that the boarding&#13;
II) school method was the only&#13;
~- practicable one of insuring the&#13;
b · musical training necessary for&#13;
ill the choristers and, despite&#13;
enormous economic difficulties,&#13;
the attempt was made. Schnitt&#13;
spared no personal expense and&#13;
he alone is responsib le for the&#13;
salvation of this aspect of&#13;
Austrian musical tradition . What&#13;
he began as an experiment has&#13;
grown to be an enormous&#13;
success and the Vienna Choir&#13;
Boys, as they were now called,&#13;
began to embark on concert&#13;
tours around the world.&#13;
The secret of their fascination?&#13;
Critics say they have managed to&#13;
combine the naivete of childhood&#13;
with artistic maturity,&#13;
~ething that can only be&#13;
achieved through serious work.&#13;
Those who wish to be considered&#13;
for entry attend a special&#13;
preparatory school where they&#13;
Tuition&#13;
; The proposal could bring&#13;
tween 250 and 750 new&#13;
O:~ stud nts to Parkside, thereby&#13;
be! bringing Parkside up to its full&#13;
:J enrollment capacity . Worries&#13;
be' about decreasing enrollments&#13;
1:0C could become a thing of the past&#13;
~ 11 such a plan became a reality&#13;
a The new students that would&#13;
!ht be attracted to Parkside by&#13;
reduced tuitions would commute&#13;
to Parkside from Lake.&#13;
er!( County, Illinois, the Illinois&#13;
p county adjacent to Kenosha&#13;
if~ County Lake County only has a&#13;
two year college and Parkside is&#13;
th most accessible four&#13;
er/. Y~ar college to the people living&#13;
[a~ t ere It is hoped that this&#13;
jeC proposal would thereby attract&#13;
f&#13;
ns Jpunior and senior students to&#13;
arks1d s· .&#13;
1 e. ince Parkside suffers&#13;
at rom declining enrollments in&#13;
these y&#13;
1 ears as people drop out or&#13;
ave Parkside for Madison or&#13;
••&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL ,,&#13;
PLEASANT PRA IRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBED F.0.1.C.&#13;
Records **************************** ... ************&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
receive a thorough education&#13;
with special attention paid to the&#13;
theory and practice of singing as&#13;
well as instruction on one&#13;
musical instrument . At the&#13;
examination, which the candidates&#13;
take at the age of nine&#13;
musical ability is the decisiv~&#13;
factor, irrespective of creed orsocial&#13;
standing.&#13;
1 Who Are You1&#13;
More often than not two&#13;
choirs are away on tour at the&#13;
same time, with each tour lasting&#13;
an average of three months. On&#13;
such a tour the 24 choristers are&#13;
accompanied by a choirmaster, a&#13;
tutor and a nurse who are&#13;
entrusted with their care and&#13;
welfare.&#13;
Since their first United States&#13;
tour in 1932, the Vienna Choir&#13;
Boys have visited America no&#13;
fewer than 38 times, have&#13;
completed eight Asian tours,&#13;
travelling as far as Japan, and&#13;
have performed an equal&#13;
number of times in Australia.&#13;
They have also appeared&#13;
numerous times in both South&#13;
Africa and South America . They&#13;
have been received by innu&#13;
mer able heads of state,&#13;
including audiences with Popes&#13;
Pius XI, Pius XII, and Paul VI.&#13;
The time lost on concert tours&#13;
is compensated for by an&#13;
intensive program of teaching&#13;
q_nd study in classes that seldom&#13;
exceed more than 10 pupils. In&#13;
the private boarding school,&#13;
which conforms to the standards&#13;
set by the Austrian Ministry of&#13;
Education, there is a staff of&#13;
thirty fully-qualified secondary&#13;
school teachers.&#13;
When a boy's voice finally&#13;
breaks, he leaves the choir not&#13;
only a first-rate musician, but&#13;
also a veteran globe-trotter.&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
other schools, this will be a big&#13;
help in letting Parkside fill out its&#13;
upper level programs. In general,&#13;
this proposal would open up an&#13;
untouch_ed service area for&#13;
Parkside of about 400,000&#13;
people; from Chicago to the&#13;
Wisconsin border.&#13;
It is estimated that the other&#13;
schools involved, like UWWhitewater,&#13;
will add approximately&#13;
another 1500 students to&#13;
their enrollments as a result of a&#13;
reduced tuition plan&#13;
The other schools · have much&#13;
more room . to expand than&#13;
Parkside and thereby could&#13;
sustain such a great influx.&#13;
Proponents of lowering the out&#13;
of state tuition fees argue that&#13;
these proposals may give a&#13;
tremendous boost to Wisconsin's&#13;
economy by attracting out-ofstate&#13;
dollars.&#13;
Peter Jackel&#13;
Following a three year exile&#13;
from the recording studios, "The&#13;
Who" has aunched a massive&#13;
comeback campaign highlighted&#13;
by a new masterpiece album that&#13;
has already threatened to&#13;
cha I lenge the phenomenal&#13;
success achieved by earlier&#13;
"Who" classics Tommy (1969)&#13;
and Who's Next (1973).&#13;
With the release of Who Are&#13;
You, the quartet of guitarist/&#13;
writer Pete Townshend, vocalist&#13;
Roger Daltrey, bassist John Entwistle,&#13;
and the late percussionist&#13;
Keith Moon have squelched&#13;
any rumors of an impending split&#13;
that were fueled by the&#13;
intensifying feud between Townshend&#13;
and Daltrey. Their long&#13;
existing differences escalated to&#13;
a peak recently when Townshend&#13;
nixed Daltrey's desire to&#13;
resume touring because of the&#13;
severe hearing loss he has&#13;
suffered from the ear-piercing&#13;
rock bashes "The Who" has&#13;
staged for the past decade.&#13;
Daltrey, who has hearing woes of&#13;
his own say~ "I've just got a&#13;
feeling if we stop touring now, I&#13;
know I shall regret it and I know&#13;
Pete will."&#13;
Entwistle also is in favor of&#13;
touring but the adamant Townshend&#13;
refuses to budge. "Electric&#13;
guitars hurt my ears," he claims&#13;
in an interview with Rolling&#13;
Stone. "It's bad to the extent that&#13;
if I get subjected to really loud&#13;
noise for a long time, I get a lot&#13;
of pain. And apparently, pain is&#13;
the indication of further&#13;
damage ." Daltrey has since&#13;
made significant concessions in&#13;
his standpoint and has decided&#13;
to temporarily remain with his&#13;
band of fifteen years.&#13;
Who Are You marks a&#13;
welcome rebound from the&#13;
blues-orientated Who By Numbers&#13;
(1975) which bewildered&#13;
"Who" fans and strongly insinuated&#13;
the end of the then&#13;
trouble plagued group .&#13;
Townshend, overcoming his&#13;
marital problems and differences&#13;
with Daltrey, dedicates the&#13;
album in part to reaffirming his&#13;
reputation as rock's leading&#13;
philosopher and critic. In The&#13;
Music Must Change, he unleashes&#13;
a barrage of slicing barbs&#13;
at present rock groups whom&#13;
Townshend claims contributed&#13;
to the declining state of rock and&#13;
roll. This cut also features&#13;
Daltrey in his finest moments as&#13;
he churns out the lyrics with the&#13;
exacting precision and magnificent&#13;
voice control that has won&#13;
him acclaim as one of the finest&#13;
vocalists in contemporary rock.&#13;
The title song Who Are You&#13;
represents Townshend's initial&#13;
impression upon meeting the&#13;
much heralded Sex Pistols.&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESENTS&#13;
A FILM/LECTURE&#13;
BY&#13;
STAN WATERMAN&#13;
INTERNATIONALLY KNOWN CINEMATOGRAPHER OF&#13;
"THE DEEP"&#13;
TONIGHT AT CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
ADM: $1.00 UW-P STldDENTS $1 .50 GENERAL&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT INFO CENTER&#13;
Townshend was pissed at the&#13;
Pistols claim that s1xt1es bands&#13;
like the Who were the ma1or&#13;
detrimental force behind the fall&#13;
of rock and ma es ample&#13;
retaliation with this cut.&#13;
Sister Disco takes a lusty potshot&#13;
at the unfortunate craze&#13;
John Travolta was kmd enough&#13;
to popularize&#13;
905, penned b Entwistle&#13;
const1tues the finest sons,,,pf th~&#13;
album. Originally intended as&#13;
the title cut to the never&#13;
completed sequel of the movie&#13;
Tommy, 905 laments at the&#13;
seemingly insignificance of life&#13;
Everything I do has been done&#13;
before&#13;
Every idea in my head someone&#13;
else has said&#13;
The end of my life is an open&#13;
door&#13;
The Who has once again&#13;
arrived at the crossroads of thetr&#13;
drummer&#13;
tams that&#13;
continue with a n percu ionist,&#13;
the ast personal attr tion&#13;
Moon too with him canno&#13;
replaced. With buddm&#13;
careers for the thr to turn to&#13;
and the perpetual b1c erm&#13;
between Townsh nd and Oaltre&#13;
, 1t is high) unl1 el that&#13;
" The Who" would both r&#13;
dabblin m th tudio&#13;
espec1all without th&#13;
charged Moon to 1n pir th m .&#13;
But the did p1c a wood rful&#13;
album to close out th tr br1lli nt&#13;
band with&#13;
Chiwaukee News&#13;
Recipe respectfull submitted to the Ran r lrom lr1 nd of food&#13;
co-op&#13;
CHEDDAR CHEESE SOUP&#13;
2 medium carrots, scraped and minced&#13;
st I r minced&#13;
1 onion, Imel chopped&#13;
' • cup flour&#13;
½ teaspoon alt&#13;
1/ 8 tea poon ~htte pepper&#13;
1 quart chic en broth ex table broth&#13;
1 pound ra , sharp, ch ddar ch&#13;
1 cup hea er am&#13;
1 cup m,t&#13;
THE RING&#13;
YOU WEAR FORMR&#13;
WILL SAVE YOU $10&#13;
RIGHTNOW.&#13;
JOSIEN'S NATIONAL COWGE&#13;
RING WEEK. OCTOBER 16-21.&#13;
AVAILABLE AT&#13;
U. W. - PARKSIDE BOOKSTORE &#13;
Wednesday October 11,1978&#13;
Informal Alternative To Ho~ors&#13;
by Nicki Kroll&#13;
There is a program in its initial&#13;
stages here at Parkside which is&#13;
designed for students in their&#13;
first two years of college with a&#13;
CPA of 3.5 or higher. It is for&#13;
Academically Talented and&#13;
Specially Skilled Students (ATSS&#13;
as it is called by its creators) and&#13;
it gives such students the&#13;
opportunity to pursue rn honors&#13;
type of format and to accelerate&#13;
their studies to their own&#13;
advantage.&#13;
Working. together with faculty&#13;
advisors, the students can&#13;
organize colloquia involving&#13;
guest speakers to discuss topics&#13;
of special interest and concern.&#13;
The students also have the&#13;
opportunity to- accelerate their&#13;
studies, take on extra work for&#13;
extra credit if they wish, and may&#13;
even make certain substitutions&#13;
for their graduation requirements.&#13;
Because Parkside does&#13;
not have an honors program&#13;
which sometimes puts extra&#13;
stress on students involved, itis&#13;
hoped that the informal format&#13;
of ATSSwill make it that much&#13;
more provocative to qualified&#13;
students.&#13;
The director of ATSS, Alan&#13;
Shucard, Associate Professor of&#13;
English, along with the members&#13;
of the Steering Committee, held&#13;
its first_ get-together with&#13;
students interested in ATSS&#13;
during Registration Week for the&#13;
Fall semester. At this gettogether&#13;
the students and faculty&#13;
were introduced and. discussed&#13;
how they could set up a format&#13;
for colloquia and a Seminar&#13;
Series on a regular basis best&#13;
suited to the majority.&#13;
A questionnaire was given to&#13;
students asking what times they&#13;
are available, their qualification&#13;
for joining the program and their&#13;
own ideas on how ATSS cap&#13;
benefit them. Through th is&#13;
questionnaire, Prof. Shucard was&#13;
able to set up a regular schedule&#13;
for a Seminar Series to be held&#13;
once every three weeks. At these&#13;
seminars students can meet with&#13;
various guests (one each time as&#13;
requested by students) who will&#13;
speak on topics which the&#13;
students want to discuss. They&#13;
will be handled as "seminars"&#13;
giving students the opportunity&#13;
to interact with tile invited guest.&#13;
"The first of these seminars is to&#13;
'be held Tuesday, 10 Octoberfrom&#13;
3:00 to 4:00 p.m. in the&#13;
Faculty Lounge (Classroom 111).&#13;
Subsequent seminars will be held&#13;
in three week intervals following&#13;
the f rst one. -&#13;
ATSS is also offeringJts first&#13;
colloquium in Spring of 1979.&#13;
Prof. Shucard calls it "A&#13;
Thorough Study of the American&#13;
Dream from a number of&#13;
'perspectives." It will be made&#13;
available to ATSS students and&#13;
others with. special permission&#13;
from the Program, From there&#13;
ATSS hopes to offer on~&#13;
"colloquium per semester to be&#13;
handled in the same manner.&#13;
ATSS . is looking for more&#13;
students with a high CPA. It can&#13;
only become better with more&#13;
members, Prof. Shucard stresses&#13;
the fact that ATSSis designed "to&#13;
provide intellectual and social&#13;
(to' some extent) focus in the&#13;
university lives of our best&#13;
students." Prof. Shucard's office&#13;
is located in Communication&#13;
Arts 236. Outside his office is a&#13;
notice board where notices of&#13;
-special interests are posted. He&#13;
welcomes one and all to stop by&#13;
and find out more about ATSS&#13;
because it is there and because it -&#13;
can only be continued with the&#13;
support of Parkside's academically&#13;
talented students.&#13;
Smallpox DiSCUSSion'&#13;
Professor james C. Frauenthal,&#13;
Department of Mathematics&#13;
State Univers-ity of New York at&#13;
Stony Brook, will give a talk&#13;
sponsored by the Mathematics&#13;
discipline, entitled, "Smallpox:&#13;
When Should Routine Vaccination&#13;
Be Discontinuedt" The talk&#13;
will be held this Friday at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in Classroom 107. It will be&#13;
preceded -by a coffee in&#13;
Classroom 111 at 3:00 p.m.&#13;
Professor Frauenthal has' a&#13;
PhD. from Harvard in Applied&#13;
Mathematics and has been a&#13;
Research Assistant in Population&#13;
Studies at Harvard School of&#13;
Public Health, He is an Associate&#13;
Professor of Applied Mathematics.&#13;
--..,&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
Matillll3l Varsity Club&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
~./ \'lAJl&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue KenoSho,Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 6~774 -&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
a Enoug 0&#13;
Political Parties?&#13;
Join the&#13;
o Anti-Political Partyl&#13;
emocrots and Republ' ff •&#13;
ing your life and two 1~:t~S0 er h;o ways of control]-&#13;
sidize. The Liberto' of speclcl interests to subview&#13;
of politiC!&gt;. non party has an entirely different&#13;
To request infonnation&#13;
can 637-9576 - Oct. 11- Nov. 11, 1918&#13;
. THE LIBERTARIAN PARTY . .&#13;
~r wnte, Send your nome &amp; dd .-&#13;
Ion Porty 115 S p. k a ress to: WISe. Libertor-&#13;
, . Inc ney Sf M d'&#13;
Author;zed &amp; Poid for W· rb·' 0 .•son. W;s. 53703&#13;
genburg. Treas. I$C. I ertcrion Party fred RinOne&#13;
of many student works on display at the Library&#13;
photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
.Regents OK Funds Tc» Parksid&#13;
--effe~tive interest rate f~r debt&#13;
service on the structure to 3.0-&#13;
percent; student financial aid&#13;
funds for basic educational&#13;
opportunity grants totalling&#13;
$331,580, an addition to&#13;
$616,766 in federal funds· for&#13;
other student financial aid&#13;
programs accepted by the&#13;
regents In August for UW-P;&#13;
More than $600,000 in federal&#13;
funds for various programs at the&#13;
University of Wiscons.in-Parkside&#13;
was accepted here Friday' (Oct.&#13;
6) by the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Th.e funds included-~n interest&#13;
subsidv for the Parkside Union of&#13;
$1.66,828, part, of a 30-year $3.5&#13;
million grand which reduces the&#13;
10% DISCOUNT&#13;
To Parkside students and faculty&#13;
~embers only, on all merchandise&#13;
lD our store. Parkside I.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
Phone 858-2525 KenOsha, Wisconsin&#13;
-;&#13;
Comprehensiv~ Employmenta&#13;
Training Act (CEl A) moni&#13;
totalling $151,634 for hiri.&#13;
limited term employees; and&#13;
yeteran's cost of" instruction&#13;
assistance funds of $11809.&#13;
The regents also' accepted&#13;
$420 .earmarked for musiC&#13;
scholarships at UW-Parkside.&#13;
'ub,&#13;
nub&#13;
~rub&#13;
ilinto&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
EVERY FRIDAY&#13;
• 4 - 7&#13;
c&#13;
Wednesday October 11, 1978&#13;
Informal Alternative To Honors ,&#13;
by Nicki Kroll&#13;
There is a'program in its initial&#13;
stages here at Parkside which is&#13;
designed for students in their&#13;
first two years of college with a&#13;
GPA of 3.5 or higher. It is for&#13;
Academically Talented and&#13;
Specially Skilled Students (ATSS&#13;
as it is called by its creators) and&#13;
it gives such students the . ~ h opportunity to pursue an onors&#13;
type of format and to accelerate&#13;
their studies to their own&#13;
advantage.&#13;
Working. together with faculty&#13;
advisors, the students can&#13;
organize colloquia involving&#13;
guest speakers to discuss topics&#13;
of special interest and concern.&#13;
The students also have the&#13;
opportunity to- accelerate their&#13;
studies, take on extra work for&#13;
extra credit if they wish, and may&#13;
even make certain substitutions&#13;
for their graduation requirements.&#13;
Because Parkside aoes&#13;
not have an honors program&#13;
which sometimes puts extra&#13;
stress on students involved, it. is&#13;
hoped that the informal format&#13;
of ATSS will make it that much&#13;
more provocative to qualified&#13;
students.&#13;
The director of ATSS, Alan&#13;
Shucard, Associate Professor of&#13;
English, along with the members&#13;
of the Steering Committee, held&#13;
its first get-together with&#13;
students · interested in ATSS&#13;
during Registration Week for the_&#13;
Fall semester. At this gettogether&#13;
the students and faculty&#13;
were introduced and. discussed&#13;
how they could set up a format&#13;
for col1oquia and a Seminar&#13;
Series on a regular basis best&#13;
suited to the majority.&#13;
A questionnaire was given to&#13;
students asking what times they&#13;
are available, their qualification&#13;
- for joining the program and their&#13;
Smallpox DiscuSsfoa&#13;
Professor James C. Frauenthal&#13;
Department of Mathematics'&#13;
State University of New York a~&#13;
Stony Brook, will give a talk&#13;
sponsored by the Mathematics&#13;
discipline, entitled, "Smallpox:&#13;
When Should Routine Vaccination&#13;
Be Discontinued?;' The talk&#13;
will be held this Friday at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in Classroom 107. It will be&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
preceded ·by a coffee in&#13;
Classroom 111 at 3:00 p.m.&#13;
Professor Frauenthal has · a&#13;
Ph.D. from Harvard in Applied&#13;
Mathematics and has been a&#13;
Research Assistant in Population&#13;
Studies at Harvard School of&#13;
Public Health. He is an Associate&#13;
Professor of Applied Mathematics.&#13;
&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-077 4&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
a Enoug o&#13;
Political Parties?&#13;
Join the&#13;
0 Anti-Political Partyt emocrots a nd Republ" ff • ing your life and two i;;,ns o er h~o ways of controllsidize.&#13;
The Libertor" s of special interests to .subview&#13;
of politics. . ion party hos on entirely different&#13;
To request infonnation&#13;
Call 637-9576 Oct. 11- Nov. 11, 1978&#13;
. THE LIBERTARIAN PARTY - · ~r write: Send your name &amp; dd . /&#13;
ion Porty, 115 S. Pinckne ~ ress :o: Wisc. LibertorAuthorized&#13;
&amp; Paid for w· Y L~b-, Mo~ison, Wis. 53703&#13;
genburg, Treas. ,sc. ' ertorion Porty Fred Rinown&#13;
ideas on how ATSS can&#13;
benefit them. Through this -&#13;
questionnaire, Prof. Shucard was&#13;
able to set up a regular schedule&#13;
for a Seminar Series to be held&#13;
once every three weeks . At these&#13;
seminars students can meet with&#13;
various guests (one each time as&#13;
requested by students) who will&#13;
speak on topics which tl)e&#13;
students want to discuss. They&#13;
will be handled as "seminars"&#13;
giving ~tudents th"e opportunity&#13;
to interact with ttie invited guest.&#13;
- The first of these seminars is to&#13;
• be held Tuesday, 10 Oc-toberfrom&#13;
3:00 to 4:00 p.m. in the&#13;
Faculty Lounge (Classroom 111).&#13;
Subsequent seminars will be held&#13;
in three week intervals following&#13;
the first one. ·&#13;
ATSS is also offering, its first&#13;
colloquium in Spring of 1979.&#13;
Prof . Shu card calls it "A&#13;
Thorough Study of the American&#13;
Dream from a number of&#13;
·perspectives." It will be made&#13;
available to ATSS students and&#13;
others With special permission&#13;
from the Program. From there,&#13;
ATSS hopes to offer one&#13;
- colloquium per semester to be&#13;
handled in the same manner.&#13;
ATSS · is looking for more&#13;
students with a high GPA. It can&#13;
only become better with more&#13;
members. Prof. Shucard stresses&#13;
the fact that ATSS is designed "to&#13;
provide intellectual and social&#13;
(to some extent) focus in the&#13;
university lives of our best&#13;
students." Prof. Shucard's office&#13;
is located in Communication&#13;
Arts 236. Outside his office is a&#13;
notice board where notices of&#13;
special interests are posted. He&#13;
welcomes one and all to stop by&#13;
and find out more about ATSS&#13;
because it is there and because i~ -&#13;
can only be continued with the&#13;
support of Parkside's academically&#13;
talented students.&#13;
photo by Mike Holmdohl&#13;
· Regents OK Funds To Parkside&#13;
More than $600,000 in federal&#13;
funds for various programs at the&#13;
University of Wisconsjn-Parkside&#13;
was accepted here Friday' (Oct&#13;
6) by the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Th_e funds included-ran interest&#13;
subsidy for the Parkside Union of&#13;
$1_66,828, part_ of a "30-year $3.S&#13;
million grand which reduces th . e&#13;
_effe~tive interest rate for debt&#13;
service on the structure to 3.0&#13;
percent; student financial aid&#13;
funds for basic educational&#13;
opportunity grants totalling&#13;
$331,580, an addition to&#13;
$616,766 in federal funds for&#13;
other student financial aid&#13;
programs accepted by the&#13;
regents in August for UW-P·&#13;
I&#13;
10% DISCOUNT&#13;
To Parkside students and f I b . acuty&#13;
~em ers only' on all merchandise&#13;
in our store. Parkside I.D. required&#13;
Graduate Gemologist&#13;
_ Graduate Diamontologist&#13;
\&#13;
Y~i:_SOnJ&#13;
Kenosha's Diamond Ce te 1 n r&#13;
5617 • 6th Avenue&#13;
Phone 658-2525 Kenosha w· . • _ 1scons1n&#13;
Comprehensiv~ Employment and&#13;
Training Act (CETA) monies&#13;
totalling $151,634 for hiring&#13;
limited term employees; and&#13;
veteran's cost of instruction&#13;
assistance funds of $11,809.&#13;
The regents also accepted&#13;
$420 earmarked for music&#13;
~cholarships at UW-Parkside.&#13;
C&#13;
.. Jub_&#13;
anh&#13;
&lt;&amp;rub&#13;
iisco &#13;
I&#13;
..lIday Octaber 11,1978&#13;
Coming&#13;
Events&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 11&#13;
BagLunch starting at 12 noon in WLLC 0174. Mr. Jack&#13;
of the Kenosha Achievement Center wi II talk on "The&#13;
icapped: A Segregated People." The program is free and&#13;
to the publ ic.&#13;
re Film at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre featuring&#13;
aterman, an underwater cinematographer. Admission is&#13;
for Parkside students and $1.50 for others. Tickets are&#13;
ble at the Union Information Center. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Men's soccer vs. Aurora College. (3:30 p.rn.)&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 12&#13;
at 8 p.m. in Union Square featuring "Wet Behind the&#13;
Admissionwill be charged. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
at 8 p.m. in the CAT with the Vienna Boys Choir. All&#13;
have been sold .. Sponsored by Accent on Enrichment&#13;
ittee.&#13;
Women'svolleyball vs. Northwestern University (6 p.m.)&#13;
Friday, Oct. 13&#13;
rat 2 p.m. in CL 105. Sponsored by Science Division.&#13;
ogramis free and open to the public.&#13;
uium at 4 p.m. in CL 107. The program is free and open&#13;
public.&#13;
"The Omen" will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
a Theatre.Admission is $1.00 for a Parkside student and&#13;
for a guest.Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Men's cross-country at Purdue Invitational, West&#13;
e, Ind.&#13;
n's tennis at Carthage. (2 p.m.)&#13;
Senate meeting. Any and all. students, . faculty,&#13;
istrators are welcome.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 14&#13;
starting at 9 p.m. in Union Square. Admission is $1.00 in&#13;
ce and $1.50at the door. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Men's soccer vs. Marquette. (2 p.m.)&#13;
Club Disco-Dance at9 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
Sunday,Oct.1S&#13;
"The Omen" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
a Theatre.&#13;
Monday, Oct. 16&#13;
Table at12:15 p.m. in Union 106. Prof. Lee Thayer will&#13;
n "Communication and Social Science." Admission is&#13;
nd opento interested staff and students .&#13;
Women'sVolleyball at Carroll College with Valparaiso.&#13;
p.m.)&#13;
Wednesday,Oct.18 .•&#13;
Houseatl p.m. in Union 104-106 featuring John Stierna&#13;
singer.Admission is free. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
ogy Readings from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
id ssion is free. Marcella Ruble Rook will also give free&#13;
,0)lIl reon reading auras and mystic powers at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
: I CinemaTheatre. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
111,-&#13;
:~~':-t~QI)~l~be-~!!IIw-e-e-t~1!P1t~ll-p-pe""&#13;
IN THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
•&#13;
['1&#13;
OCTOBER SPECIAL&#13;
b&#13;
CANDY&#13;
CORN&#13;
l~ ' • ALSO FEATURING OVER I' 30 OTHER NUTS s CANOIES&#13;
SOLD THE OLD FASHIONED WAY.&#13;
~I0 8.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
MON - FR.&#13;
tehind The Woodshed&#13;
by ScarfO'toole&#13;
I was awakened this morning&#13;
by a phone ringing in my ears.&#13;
Reaching into the ashtray and&#13;
swallowing the last of my Old&#13;
Gold Filters(love t~e coupons),&#13;
I picked up the receiver and&#13;
mumbled something about&#13;
office hours. It turned out to be&#13;
my editor who informed me that&#13;
I hadn't held regular office&#13;
hours since 1937. He had just&#13;
read my resignation from this&#13;
newspaper and was questioning&#13;
my motivation.&#13;
"Well, it's like this." I told&#13;
him. "It seemsas if someone has&#13;
snuck into my offfice and&#13;
cleaned it. In the process, they&#13;
took my stash of Reese's&#13;
Peanutbutter Cups and replaced&#13;
them with a copy of Self Help&#13;
for the Chronically Depressed by&#13;
Iris Cornfield."&#13;
"Relax," he said. "You're the&#13;
only available writer here who&#13;
could review this hook. It's&#13;
become a very hot seller on this&#13;
campus and we need the review&#13;
by 9:00 a.rn." I looked at the&#13;
clock and noticed it was 8:30.&#13;
"No problem here, Chief," I told&#13;
him. "I'll have it on your desk in&#13;
a half hour," I said as I placed&#13;
the phone back in its cradle. I&#13;
fell back asleepand dreamedof&#13;
a tall cool one but woke up&#13;
twenty minutes later remembering&#13;
my assignment.&#13;
Alas, dear reader, I found the&#13;
book to be thoroughly enjoyable.&#13;
Cornfield has done things&#13;
with the English language that&#13;
would make some of my worst&#13;
offerings look like competent&#13;
excursions into the realm of&#13;
serious journalistic endeavor.&#13;
Her treatment of the danger&#13;
signals of depression were&#13;
particularly insightful, especially&#13;
the part about the young fair&#13;
maiden and the things she did&#13;
with the seven dwarves and the&#13;
black velvet whip.&#13;
Anyway, I recommend that&#13;
you read th is book if you are&#13;
trying to survive the rigors of the&#13;
college syndrome. There are&#13;
chapters on psychological selfhelp&#13;
for those times when you&#13;
feel that the conventional&#13;
thought process has abandoned&#13;
you.&#13;
What is even more important,&#13;
is that the book explained (even&#13;
to me) why when you wake up in&#13;
the morning you have a funny&#13;
taste in your mouth. As&#13;
Cornfield states, "There are&#13;
many things which leave a bad&#13;
taste in Our mouths. Perhaps, a&#13;
study in character assassination&#13;
has left you with a bad taste in&#13;
your mouth. My advice is to go&#13;
back to doing what you were&#13;
doing before you were assassinated.&#13;
Everything will seem just&#13;
like before, except now you will&#13;
have no ego."&#13;
It sounds as if Cornfield has&#13;
struck upon something which is&#13;
bigger.than the both of us.&#13;
Editor's Note: Mr. O'toole was&#13;
last seen exposing himself on a&#13;
bus just outside of Pittsburgh. If&#13;
anyone has any knowledge of&#13;
his whereabouts; please contact&#13;
his landlady. He owes her SIX&#13;
years in back rent.&#13;
7&#13;
Classified&#13;
Ads&#13;
FOR SAlE&#13;
74 Gremlin 3 ~. low InllMge, 000d&#13;
tUM, no rust. 11.3:50 Call S37...J01M&#13;
Drum set, L~ prof .... onat drum Nt&#13;
(whUe pelrl.) Include. Tom •• Tom.,&#13;
cymbOls, stands, acc.uonel and e:atTy1"Q&#13;
cases, C.1I 654--1880&#13;
72 Toyota Corol'- excellent condlttOn, no&#13;
rust, brand new Inttw'tOf. autOfNtic:, 0,..1&#13;
oas mllMge. extfU MUll .. c:rehoe; ukll'lQ&#13;
12,000. Clill Dewn -834-1m&#13;
P£RSONAL&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Join the Gus Fan Club. For &lt;MIlail'S eeu&#13;
634-a209, Ask lor Stan.&#13;
Bass and Iwo vlolinlsttlor KlCOmpanYfT*'lI&#13;
No ~y; for • lew beneftt 0101 al'Id tunt&#13;
Popular I1'MJSICand Of1glnala MUlt be IIb't&#13;
to improvise Caft efter 5:30 - 833-1210&#13;
(Other - types 01 musicians .,. r~ to&#13;
inqUire.)&#13;
Room"""e _WQI1{lng glf1 10 aher'Ii .-:penees&#13;
with female student in K.en0l;~ ...... For&#13;
Information C111lMairy at 564-5486 an. e&#13;
p.m.&#13;
THE HAIR co.&#13;
Styling Salon for Men &amp; Women&#13;
933 Washington Road Kenosha 657-4918&#13;
When it's 6weeks into the semester&#13;
and 34 books have just arrived for a class of S8&#13;
•••it's no tUne to get filled up.&#13;
~~~~ .......&#13;
~ ~&#13;
'I&#13;
I nesday October 11, 1978&#13;
Con1ing&#13;
Events&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 11&#13;
rn Bag Lunch starting at 12 noon in WLLC D174 . Mr. Jack&#13;
an of the Kenosha Achievement Center will talk on "The&#13;
d,capped: A Segregated People." The program is free and&#13;
, to the public .&#13;
ure Film at 8 p .m . in the Union Cinema Theatre featuring&#13;
aterman, an underwater cinematographer. Admission is&#13;
D for Parkside students and $1.50 for others . Tickets are&#13;
lable at the Union Information Center. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
ts Men's soccer vs . Aurora College . (3:30 p .m.)&#13;
Thursday, Oct.12&#13;
cert at 8 p.m . in Union Square featuring " Wet Behind the&#13;
'' Admission will be charged . Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
cert at 8 p.m . in the CAT with t he Vienna Boys Choir. All&#13;
have been sold . . Sponsored by Accent on Enrichment&#13;
ittee.&#13;
tts Women's volleyball vs. Northwestern University (6 p .m .)&#13;
Friday, Oct. 13&#13;
ar at 2 p.m . in CL 105. Sponsored by Science Division .&#13;
program is free and open to the public .&#13;
uium at 4 p.m . in CL 107 . The program is free and open&#13;
public .&#13;
"The Omen" will be shown at 8 p .m . in the Union&#13;
ma Theatre. Admission is $1 .00 for a Parkside student and&#13;
for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Men's cross-country at Purdue Invitational, West&#13;
ette, Ind .&#13;
en's tennis at Carthage. (2 p .m .)&#13;
Senate meeting. Any and all . students, · faculty,&#13;
Istrators are welcome.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 14&#13;
starting at 9 p .m . in Union Square. Admission is $1 .00 in&#13;
ce and $1.50 at the door. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Men's soccer vs . Marquette. (2 p.m .)&#13;
rClub Disco-Dance at 9 p.m . in Union Square.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 15&#13;
"The Omen" wil l be repeated at 7 :30 p.m . in the Union&#13;
a Theatre.&#13;
. Monday, Oct.16&#13;
eo,nrj d Table at 12 :15 p .m . in Union 106. Prof . Lee Thayer will&#13;
n "Communication and Social Science ." Admission is&#13;
and open to interested staff and students .&#13;
SIi s Women's Volleyball at Carroll College with Valparaiso .&#13;
Pm .)&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 18_&#13;
e House at 1 p .m. in Union 104-106 featuring John Stiernloyl!IE"&#13;
a singer. Admission is free . Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
iTA) iitlogy Readings from 11 a.m . tQ 3 p .m. in Union Square .&#13;
fOI iss,on is free . Marcella Ruble Rook will also give free&#13;
loyeel Jre on reading auras and mystic powers at 7 :10 p .m . in the&#13;
in!ll'1&gt;n Cinema Theatre . Sponsored by PA0&#13;
B.&#13;
11,~&#13;
a&#13;
~~11 flt ®lht ~Wttt ~ltnppt&#13;
IN THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
OCTOBER SPECIAL&#13;
CANDY&#13;
CORN&#13;
25c ½ LB.&#13;
110 ,,, - ALSO FEATURING OVER&#13;
UP 30 OTHER NUTS &amp; CANDIES&#13;
SOLD THE OLD FASHIONED WAY.&#13;
~flo a.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
MON - FRI&#13;
'R$nger 7&#13;
Behind The Woodshed&#13;
by Scarf O'toole&#13;
I was awakened this morning&#13;
by a phone ringing in my ears.&#13;
Reaching into the ashtray and&#13;
swallowing the last of my Old&#13;
Gold Filters (love th~e coupons),&#13;
I picked up the receiver and&#13;
mumbled something about&#13;
office hours. It turned out to be&#13;
my editor who informed me that&#13;
I hadn't held regular office&#13;
hours since 1937. He had just&#13;
read my resignation from this&#13;
newspaper and was questioning&#13;
my motivation.&#13;
''Well, it's like this," I told&#13;
him. " It seems as if someone has&#13;
snuck into my offfice and&#13;
cleaned it. In the process, they&#13;
took my stash of Reese's&#13;
Peanutbutter Cups and replaced&#13;
them with a copy of Self Help&#13;
for the Chronically Depressed by&#13;
Iris Cornfield."&#13;
"Relax," he said. "You're the&#13;
only available writer here who&#13;
could review this book. It's&#13;
become a very hot seller on this&#13;
campus and we need the review&#13;
by 9:00 a.m." I looked at the&#13;
clock and noticed it was 8:30.&#13;
"No problem here, Chief," I told&#13;
him. " I'll have it on your desk in&#13;
a half hour," I said as I placed&#13;
the phone back in its cradle. I&#13;
fell back asleep and dreamed of&#13;
a tall cool one but woke up&#13;
twenty minutes later remembering&#13;
my assignment.&#13;
Alas, dear reader, I found the&#13;
book to be thoroughly enjoyable.&#13;
Cornfield has done things&#13;
with the English language that&#13;
would make some of my worst&#13;
offerings look like competent&#13;
excursions into the realm of&#13;
serious journalistic endeavor.&#13;
Her treatment of the danger&#13;
signals of depression were&#13;
particularly insightful, especially&#13;
the part about the young fair&#13;
t&#13;
.r.,-:- . - ,,.,. .. ,-,&#13;
\&#13;
maiden and the things she dtd&#13;
with the seven dwarves and the&#13;
black velvet whip.&#13;
Anyway, I recommend that&#13;
you read this book ,f you are&#13;
trying to survive the rigors of the&#13;
college syndrome. There are&#13;
chapters on psychological selfhelp&#13;
for those times when you&#13;
feel that the conventional&#13;
thought process has abandoned&#13;
you.&#13;
What is even more important,&#13;
is that the book explained (even&#13;
to me) why when you wake up in&#13;
the morning you have a funny&#13;
taste i n your mouth. As&#13;
Cornfield states, ''There are&#13;
many things which leave a bad&#13;
taste in our mouths. Perhaps, a&#13;
study in character assassination&#13;
has left you with a bad taste in&#13;
your mouth. My advice is to go&#13;
back to doing what you were&#13;
doing before you were assassinated.&#13;
Everything will seem just&#13;
like before, except now you will&#13;
have no ego."&#13;
It sounds as if Cornfield has&#13;
struck upon something which is&#13;
bigger than the both of us.&#13;
Editor's Note: Mr. O'toole was&#13;
last seen exposing himself on a&#13;
bus just outside of Pittsburgh. If&#13;
anyone has any knowledge ot&#13;
his whereabouts, please contact&#13;
his landlady. He owes her six&#13;
years in back rent.&#13;
Classified&#13;
Ads&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
• good&#13;
Orum set Ludw,g prol ona drum Mt&#13;
(whole pearl.) Includes Toma-Toma ,&#13;
cymbols, stands, acceno and cany,ng&#13;
cases Catt &amp;54-1880&#13;
PERSONAL&#13;
Jom the Gus Fen Club Fo,- de 111 call&#13;
63-C-8209 A forSt.an.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Bass and lwo viohn,ata for l0COffl yment&#13;
No ~y; for a few benefit g,ga and fun!&#13;
Popular mus,c and onglnala, Mu t be Ible&#13;
to Improvise Call attw 5:30 - m-1210&#13;
(Other types of mus,c,ans I to&#13;
inquire.)&#13;
Roommate : WOl1ttng gll1 to ahwe a..pen&#13;
with female student ,n a.ha at Fo,&#13;
onfo,mation call Mary at 55'-5468 f II&#13;
p.m.&#13;
THE HAIR CO.&#13;
Styling Salon for Men &amp; Women , ..&#13;
933 Washington Road Kenosha 657- 491&#13;
- -&#13;
When it's 6 weeks into the semester&#13;
and 34 books have just arrived for a class of 35 ... it's no time to get filled up. ""-==--'&#13;
~ &#13;
Wednesday -October 11,1978&#13;
~g.r&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
Ready For State&#13;
Golfers Await River Falls, Tourney&#13;
Coach Steve Stephen's golfers, all have to be considered in the&#13;
getting better as the end of the top five" in the district and you&#13;
season approaches, will vie in can't count out River Falls or&#13;
the NA1ADistrict 14 Tournament Stevens Point either. I'm&#13;
UW-River Falls Monday and expecting a close tournament."&#13;
Tuesday, October 9 &amp; 10, at The individual winner and the&#13;
UW-River Falls. team champions in the two-day,&#13;
Stephens' young golfers, while 36-hole tourney will earn berths&#13;
perhapsnot the favorites in the in the NAIA national tournadistrict&#13;
clash, have to be ment, scheduled for June 5·8,&#13;
considered a -team to reckon 1979, at Guilford, N.C.&#13;
with in light of their second Stephens, whose squad beat&#13;
place finish in last week's Carthage- 399-402 in a dual meet&#13;
Whitewater Invitational and win Monday, will warm' up for the&#13;
in their own meet here Saturday, district with a dual Friday against&#13;
"We're coming on," Stephens Marquette at Tumblebrook&#13;
said. "We have some capable Country Club. The Rangers will&#13;
golfers and they're really playing go through a practice round&#13;
well now. I think there/are three Sunday at the par 72 River Falls&#13;
or four really outstanding golters course before going into&#13;
in the district and we've got one competition Monday morning.&#13;
in jim Webers so he should be The six-man Parkside tournaright&#13;
in their for medalist honors. ment squad will include Webers&#13;
"LaCrosse, Oshkosh, Eau - a junior from Racine (Case);&#13;
Ctaire, p.,kside and Whitewater Todd Schaunske. .a freshman,&#13;
n~fmNQI1&#13;
~~rID@1ir§ ~~~1r~OO&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th AVf!J. in; 62nd St.&#13;
Establishad in 1930&#13;
PAS Rim Comm. -Invites you to&#13;
liTHE OMEN"&#13;
Starring&#13;
Gregory Peek &amp;. ~ee Rentlek&#13;
Fri, Oct. 9- 8:00 PM&#13;
Sun, Oct. -11- 7:30 PM&#13;
81.00 UnionCinema&#13;
brothers Bob, a sophomore, aO(;:I&#13;
John, a junior, all from Racine&#13;
(Horlick); and sophomore Gary&#13;
Paskiewicz trom Kenosha (Bradford):&#13;
Stephens will choose&#13;
between junior Casey Griffin&#13;
(Case) and Brian Graham&#13;
(Horlick) for,his sixth man after a&#13;
playoff between the two&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Women's Volleyball&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
sporls Editor&#13;
Parkside's women's tennis&#13;
team had a tough time of it this&#13;
past week as they won one&#13;
match against Carroll College&#13;
last Tuesday and lost two on&#13;
Saturday against UW-Whitewate~&#13;
and UW-Milwaukee. Their&#13;
overall season record is now 4-5.&#13;
Coach Sue Tobachnik said that&#13;
the team has improved a lot over&#13;
last year and that the potential to&#13;
do well in the state to,urnament&#13;
coming up' next week if&#13;
everybody stays healthy.&#13;
In Tuesdays match at Carroll&#13;
the Rangers had seven victories&#13;
. to just two defeats. The wins&#13;
came from Kathy Thomas,&#13;
Kathie Feichtner, Pam Blair,&#13;
Marge Balazs, Cathy Brownlee&#13;
on the singles side and trom the&#13;
doubles teams of Blair~Balazs ~&#13;
and Brownlee~Feichtner&#13;
Things di,dn't go qUi~&#13;
as Parks ide went to Ca&#13;
lose to UW-Whitewa&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. The&#13;
managed three wins&#13;
Whitewater coming from&#13;
Logic and Pam Blair&#13;
singles column and' fr&#13;
doubles team of Kathy&#13;
i Kathy Thomas.&#13;
They weren't so lucky&#13;
Milwaukee as the Rangen&#13;
to win a match all&#13;
Milwaukee has a former&#13;
player who was able to&#13;
amatuer status. Kathylogic&#13;
three sets with her.&#13;
The women will finish&#13;
regular season at Cart&#13;
Friday and will then&#13;
in the WWIAC ConI&#13;
Tournament at Whitewa&#13;
weekend,&#13;
, -&#13;
Consistency Is Key To Succe&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Parkside's women's volleyball&#13;
team travelled to De Kalb last&#13;
weekend to parttcoate in the&#13;
Nocthern Illinois Invitational&#13;
Tournament and came back with&#13;
three very -impressive wins in&#13;
four matches. last Tuesday the&#13;
team also looked good as they&#13;
defeated UW-Whitewater and&#13;
North Park College. These two&#13;
-gcod outings brought the team's&#13;
overall season record to 9-12-3.&#13;
"The team has finally&#13;
developed consistency and&#13;
confidence," Coach Linda Henderson&#13;
had nothing but good&#13;
words for her team, which is&#13;
preparing for a tough match this&#13;
Tuesday which will feature&#13;
UW-Madison and UW-Oshkosh&#13;
in Madison.&#13;
At the meet at Northern the&#13;
Ranger's started out with a tough&#13;
match with Northern Illinois.&#13;
This was the third year that&#13;
Parkside has gone to De Kalb and&#13;
Niu defeated them the two&#13;
previous years and the team&#13;
reallv wanted to bea'tl them this&#13;
year: As it turned out the&#13;
~&#13;
tJr UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE&#13;
..--,~iNJIl" SEMESTER BREAK IN ,t~~~CAPUI;CO , JANUARY 2·9, 1979 1. TRIP INClUDES· ii'I!!: R:UND TRIP JET AIR VIA BRANIFF 'AIRLINES II 7 NIGHTS LODGING IN LUXURY BEACHFRONT HOLIDAY INN·&#13;
11f1 ... • FUll BREAKFAST BUFFET DAilY&#13;
iii'! , • ii! I ROUND TRIP GROUND TRAN.SFERS .~. . -" ~ TIPS &amp; TAXES ON THE ABOVE&#13;
if!. • GROUP ESCORrTHROUGHOUT&#13;
fl'&#13;
tJ" tl'·~8."··. ~"'l&#13;
~ .~ ~&#13;
~., . &gt;,&#13;
.,)I~"'~ ,i:&#13;
.. -~....", '.&#13;
Ranger's got their way although&#13;
it took five games to do it. NIU&#13;
won the first game 16-14, but&#13;
Parks ide came back in the&#13;
second game 17-15. The teams&#13;
split the next two games, with&#13;
the Rangers winning 15-7 and&#13;
NIU winning 15-4. The Rangers&#13;
took the deciding game 15-10.&#13;
" Parks ide then lost to a much&#13;
improved Northweslern university&#13;
team~ in three straight games&#13;
by scores of 15-9 15-4 and&#13;
15-12. Parkside' will' host&#13;
Northwestern along with&#13;
Milwaukee and KelloggC&#13;
nity College this Thursday.&#13;
UW-Milwaukee was a&#13;
easier as the Rangers beat&#13;
in three straight by sco&#13;
15-8, 15-10and 15-10.&#13;
In their last match of tho&#13;
they squeaked by a very&#13;
Illinois Central team in&#13;
games, Illinois Central, a i&#13;
college, has participated in&#13;
national tournament the I&#13;
years.&#13;
Cross-Country fairs W&#13;
The Parks ide Cross-Country-&#13;
·team had a good outing'&#13;
Saturday, as they had their best&#13;
times 'but they finished 11th out&#13;
of 17 colleges in the lakefront&#13;
Invitational, with 264 points.&#13;
"Coach Rosa said that the team&#13;
had put a good effort into it, with&#13;
the best personal time corning&#13;
from Langenhol who place 4th&#13;
With the time of 24.28.5. From&#13;
there the team went down hill,&#13;
&amp; ADOITIONAl INfORMATION CONTACT, PARKSIDE UNION OffiCE. RM&#13;
Prjena placed 38th witha .&#13;
26.18.4. Karri placed 65&#13;
the time of 26.30.7, and&#13;
placed 96 out of 111 r&#13;
with the time of 21.&#13;
Northern Iowa won the&#13;
with 72· points in the 5&#13;
course.&#13;
Coach Rosa said that with&#13;
meets left ev--erydate is&#13;
better. Friday the team wi~&#13;
the Purdue InvitatiOnal.&#13;
"MUCH MORE THAN )UST HAIR"&#13;
We offer FREE individual'&#13;
consultations for:&#13;
• Hair Styling&#13;
• Conditioning&#13;
• Makeup Treatment&#13;
Hours:&#13;
9 to 9 Daily&#13;
8 to 4:30 Saturday&#13;
Phone: 630-I 507&#13;
4061 N. Main Sf.&#13;
Leaf&#13;
WednesdafOctober 11,1978&#13;
Cjenger&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
Golfers Await River Falls, TOurney&#13;
brothers Bob, a sophomore, and&#13;
John, a junior, all from Racine&#13;
(Horllck); and sophomore Gary&#13;
Paskiewicz from Kenosha (Bradfordf&#13;
Stephens will choose&#13;
between junior Casey Griffin&#13;
(Case) and Brian Graham&#13;
(Horlick) for,his sixth man after a&#13;
playoff between the two&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephen's golfers, all have to be considered in the&#13;
getting better as the end of the top five-- in the •district and you&#13;
season approaches, will vie in can't count out River Falls or&#13;
the NAIA District 14 Tournament Stevens Point either. I'm&#13;
UW-River Falls Monday and expecting a close tournament."&#13;
Tuesday, October 9 &amp; 10, at The individual winner and the&#13;
UW-River Falls. team champions in the two-day,&#13;
Stephens' young golfers, while 36-hole tourney will earn berths&#13;
perhaps not the favorites in the in the NAIA national tournadistrict&#13;
clash , have to be ment, scheduled for June 5-8,&#13;
considered a · team to reckon 1979, at Guilford, N.C.&#13;
with in light of their second Stephens,' whose squad beat&#13;
place finish in last week's Carthage-399-402 in a dual meet&#13;
Whitewater Invitational and win Monday, will warm · up for the&#13;
in their own meet here Saturday. district with a dual Friday against Women's Volleyball&#13;
Women's -Tennis I&#13;
Ready For Staie&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sporfs Editor&#13;
Parkside' s women's tennis&#13;
team had a tough time of it this&#13;
past week as they won one&#13;
match against Carroll College&#13;
last Tuesday and lost two on&#13;
Saturday against UW-\Vhitewate~&#13;
and UW-Milwaukee. Their&#13;
overall season record is now 4-5.&#13;
Coach Sue Tobachnik said that&#13;
the team has improved a lot over&#13;
last year and that the potential to&#13;
do well in the state tournament&#13;
coming up · next week if&#13;
everybody stays healthy.&#13;
and Brownlee-Feichtner&#13;
Things didn't go qui·t· . ' e as&#13;
as Parkside went to Carth&#13;
lose to UW-Whitewat&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. The~&#13;
managed three wins&#13;
Whitewater coming from&#13;
Logic and Pam Blair&#13;
singles column and° fr on&#13;
douqles team of Kathy~&#13;
1 Kathy Thomas.&#13;
They weren't so lucky&#13;
Milwa~kee as the Rangersf&#13;
to win a match all&#13;
Milwaukee has a former&#13;
player who was able to r&#13;
amatuer status. Kathy Logic&#13;
three sets with her. In Tuesdays match at Carroll&#13;
the Rangers had seven victories&#13;
' to just two defeats. The wins&#13;
came from Kathy Thomas,&#13;
Kathie Feichtner, Pam Blair,&#13;
Marge Balazs, Cathy Brownlee&#13;
on the singles side and from the&#13;
doubles teams of Blair-Balazs -&#13;
The women will finish off&#13;
regular season at Carthage&#13;
Friday and will then partic'&#13;
in the WWIAC Confer&#13;
Tournament at Whitewater&#13;
weekend.&#13;
\ '&#13;
"We're coming on," Stephens Marquette at Tumblebrook&#13;
said. "We have some capable Country Club. The Rangers will&#13;
golfers and they're really playing go through a practice round&#13;
well now. I think there ,are three Sunday at the par 72 River Falls&#13;
or four really outstanding golfers- course before going into&#13;
in the district and we've got one competition Monday morning.&#13;
in Jim Webers so he should be The six-man Parkside tournaright&#13;
in their for medalist honors. ment squad will include Webers&#13;
Consistency Is Key To Succes&#13;
"LaCrosse, Oshkosh, Eau · a junior from Racine (Case)'.&#13;
Claire, Parkside and Whitewater Todd Schalinske, a freshman',&#13;
TYiilN911&#13;
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Sporting &amp; Athletic ·Equipment&#13;
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Established in 1930&#13;
PAB Rim Comm .. lnvites you to&#13;
"THE OMEN"&#13;
Starring&#13;
Gregory Peek &amp; Lee Remlek&#13;
Fri, Oct. 9- 8:00 PM&#13;
Sun, Oct. -11- 7:30 PM&#13;
81 -00 Union Cinema&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Parkside's women's volleyball&#13;
team travelled to De Kalb last&#13;
weekend to particpate in the&#13;
Nor.them Illinois Invitational&#13;
Tournament and came back with&#13;
three very impressive wins in&#13;
four matches. Last Tuesday the&#13;
team also looked good as they&#13;
defeated UW-Whitewater and&#13;
North Park College. These two&#13;
-good outings brought the team's&#13;
overall season record to 9-12-3.&#13;
"The team has finally&#13;
developed consistency and&#13;
confidence." Coach Linda Henderson&#13;
had nothing. but good&#13;
words for her team, which is&#13;
preparing for a tough match this&#13;
Tuesday which will feature&#13;
UW-Madison and UW-Oshkosh&#13;
in Madison.&#13;
At the meet at Northern the&#13;
Ranger's started out with a tough&#13;
match with Northern Illinois&#13;
This was the third year that&#13;
Parkside has gone to De Kalb and&#13;
Niu defeated them the two&#13;
previous years and the team&#13;
really wanted to be.{t, them this&#13;
year: As it turned out the /&#13;
~NIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN _ PARKSIDE&#13;
1&#13;
SEMESTER BREA~ IN&#13;
~ -~~-·&#13;
, -~ACAPULCO&#13;
JANUARY 2-9; 1979&#13;
&amp; ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONT ACT: PARKSIDE OFFICE, RM&#13;
/&#13;
Ranger's got their way although&#13;
it took f ive games to do it. NIU&#13;
won the first game 16-14, but&#13;
Parkside came back in the&#13;
second game 17-15. The teams&#13;
split t_he next two games, w ith&#13;
the Rangers winning 15-7 and&#13;
NIU winning 15-4. The Rangers&#13;
took the deciding game 15-10.&#13;
Northwestern along with&#13;
Milwaukee and Kellogg Com&#13;
nity College this Thursday.&#13;
UW-Milwaukee was a 1,.·. r•-.s•&#13;
easier as the Rangers beat&#13;
in three straight by scores&#13;
15-8, 15-10 and 15-10.&#13;
In their last match of the&#13;
1 Parkside then lost to a much&#13;
improved Northwestern university&#13;
team1in three straight games&#13;
by scores of 15-9, 15-4, and&#13;
15-12. Parkside will host&#13;
they squeaked by a very t&#13;
Illinois Central team in f&#13;
games. Illinois Central, a jun·&#13;
college, has participated ir.&#13;
national tournament the last&#13;
years.&#13;
Cross-Country fairs W&#13;
The Parkside Cross-Country&#13;
team had a good outing .&#13;
Saturday, as they had their best&#13;
times ·but they finished 11th out&#13;
of 17 colleges in the Lakefront&#13;
Invitational, with 264 points.&#13;
'Coach Rosa said that ,the team&#13;
had put a good effort into it , with&#13;
the best personal time coming&#13;
fr~m Langenhol who place 4th&#13;
with the time of 24.28.5. From&#13;
there the team went down hill ,&#13;
Pr_iena placed 38th with a ti&#13;
26.18.4. Karri placed 65th&#13;
the time of 26.30.7; and H&#13;
placed 96 out of 111 run&#13;
with the time of 27.&#13;
Northern Iowa won the&#13;
with 72 . points in the 5 1&#13;
course.&#13;
Coach Rosa said that with ~ meets left e~ry date is g ,&#13;
better. Friday the team will&#13;
the Purdue Invitational.&#13;
"MUCH MOR E THAN JUST H A IR"&#13;
con sulta tio n s for:&#13;
• Hai r Sty ling&#13;
• Con d itioning&#13;
• Makeu p Treatment&#13;
H o urs:&#13;
9 to 9 I:&gt;aily&#13;
8 to 4:30 Saturday&#13;
Ph one: 639· 150 7&#13;
4 0 6 I N . Main S t.&#13;
, _,&#13;
L eaf &#13;
dnesday October 11,1978&#13;
ier rile Pin" Pantiler&#13;
The Clouseau Connection&#13;
ter Sellers is a versatile and character was so popular, in fact,&#13;
renown comedic actor. He that it was decided to star him in&#13;
tarred in such fine movies a film of his own.&#13;
the past years 35 The World The film, again in 1964, was&#13;
my Orient, Dr. Strange/ave called A Shot in the Dark based&#13;
w f stopped worrying and on a popu lar stage play of the&#13;
ed to love the bomb and same name. The film, directed&#13;
'II ouse that Roared. But ask 4i,y Blake Edwards, still remains&#13;
~ e what they think of when the best in the "Panther" series'I&#13;
iIto hear the name Peter Sellers with Closeau bumbling his way&#13;
the majority will undoubt- through a murder investigation&#13;
'- say Inspector Clouseau. with the likes of Elke Sommers as&#13;
III'rI useau began his lucrative a suspect. A Shot in the Dark was&#13;
1111, career way back in the a critical and relative popular&#13;
.. eval age of 1964 in a Blake success and, as a result, the&#13;
!II\. rds film called The Pink character of Clouseau emerged&#13;
•• er, As an inept French as a major comedic figure in the&#13;
I e inspector Clouseau was in movies, again due mainly to&#13;
ty on Iy a secondary Sellers wonderful performance.&#13;
cter to the main stars of the It seemed, however, that after&#13;
David Niven, Claudia A Shot in the Dark the character&#13;
nal (whatever happened to of Clouseau would retire from&#13;
and Robert Wagner. the screen. An unsuccessful&#13;
pite the fact that the film attempt was. made to recapture&#13;
was cleverly ~ritten and the characteristic Clouseauian&#13;
t1yfunny. Seller's Clouseau slapstick in 1968 with a film&#13;
lied the film from the "cute called Inspector Clouseau with&#13;
y" categorie to high slap- Alan Arkin as Clouseau. Sellers,&#13;
farce. The Clouseau however, was too closely&#13;
notes Wllitewater Worksllo&#13;
associated with the character of&#13;
Clouseau and the film was a&#13;
dismal failure.&#13;
Sellers went from movie to&#13;
movie and eventually drifted to&#13;
relative obscurity. Blake Edwards&#13;
went on to make a variety of&#13;
movies including The Great Race&#13;
and maintained a successful&#13;
stature as a director. It seemed&#13;
that their partnership would&#13;
remain just a two shot deal.&#13;
In 1976, nearly twelve years&#13;
after the last "Panther" film it&#13;
was decided that the time was&#13;
ripe to re-establish the partnership.&#13;
Though seemingly a great&#13;
idea, especially to Clouseau fans&#13;
the venture would be ~&#13;
considerable gamble. Afterall, it&#13;
had been twelve years since the&#13;
last movie and attitudes and&#13;
tastes have changed; audiences&#13;
today are "more sophisticated".&#13;
The film, The Return of the&#13;
Pink Panther, turned out to be an&#13;
enormous popular success reaffirming&#13;
that Inspector Clouseau&#13;
was a timeless character to&#13;
David frost Sltares Experiences&#13;
by Thomas jenn&#13;
ning to David Frost is like&#13;
through a copy of TIME&#13;
ine - you meet up with&#13;
!fI great ones. When he&#13;
.. iews a celebrity. he takes a&#13;
I that person with him to&#13;
veyed to his audience. ".--"""'"'1"'-- ... "&#13;
e elusive Senatar&#13;
ually said 'Where&#13;
Id the country be&#13;
ithout this great&#13;
land of ours'&#13;
interviewer-writer recently&#13;
ed a journalism seminar at&#13;
W-Whitewater campus.&#13;
chool papers from across&#13;
sin were sent to the&#13;
s to be graded by a group&#13;
spaper professionals.&#13;
journalism classes feean&#13;
array of newspaper&#13;
ing and management&#13;
were free for those who&#13;
to attend. Mr. Frost's&#13;
, "Interviews I'll rarely&#13;
ended the daylong&#13;
ICIANS POSE PROBLEMS&#13;
in most conversations,&#13;
n of pliticians surfaced,&#13;
r. Frost has had his share&#13;
em. "Politicians raise&#13;
lar problems." He spoke&#13;
relaxed British accent,&#13;
al problem is to get them&#13;
something. They're all&#13;
ined to play safe. .the&#13;
earless thing they'll do is&#13;
me out against road&#13;
nts, or attck litter." One&#13;
senator actually said,&#13;
e would this country be&#13;
t this great land of ours."&#13;
government leaders have&#13;
the tanned, bearded Frost&#13;
f his most cherished lines.&#13;
Kennedy, quizzed as to&#13;
he wanted to be&#13;
be red after he died,&#13;
ally just before his death)&#13;
, "This is a world in which&#13;
n suffer, and I'd like to&#13;
have maoe the contribution to&#13;
have lessoned that suffering." He&#13;
finalized with one of David&#13;
Frost's favorite sentences "For if&#13;
we do not do this, then who will&#13;
do this?"&#13;
Asking Moshe Dayan the same&#13;
question provoked a very&#13;
astonished look and the retort,&#13;
"But that's what I'm dead for, not&#13;
to care about what people think&#13;
about me!" Frost was amused at&#13;
the concept that the Israeli&#13;
government official had found&#13;
something to be dead for.&#13;
WILL WE EVER LEARN!&#13;
Many interviews provoke a&#13;
chilling shudder in the Cambridge&#13;
graduate. Two were: A&#13;
talk with Baldur von Schirach,&#13;
head of the nazi youth camps&#13;
responsible for the corruption of&#13;
German minds, and a meeting&#13;
with Reish Fuhrer, one of many&#13;
•to blame the nazi killing during&#13;
the holecaust.&#13;
The latter was interviewed&#13;
after he spent 20 years in&#13;
Spandau prison camp. (He now&#13;
lives in relative luxury.) After&#13;
describing Fuhrer, who has a&#13;
habit of overlooking the war,&#13;
Frost asked the audience,&#13;
frustrated, "Will we ever learn?"&#13;
NIXON INTERVIEW EXAMINED&#13;
Finally the crowd was given a&#13;
chance to interview Mr. Frost.&#13;
Immediately, a subject that had&#13;
lain dormant the entire talk&#13;
emerged - the intense interview&#13;
of former president Nixon. When&#13;
queried on his opinion of the&#13;
37th president, he injected, "Do&#13;
you have a couple of spare&#13;
hours?&#13;
"It's a complicated subject.&#13;
there were so many layers to peel&#13;
off." Frost confessed, "In the&#13;
interviews, he went much further&#13;
in his admissions in Watergate&#13;
than I expected him to go."&#13;
Nixon paused a minute.&#13;
'We got a hell of&#13;
an audience on August&#13;
the 9th'&#13;
Richard Nixon is not reknowned&#13;
for his wit and wisdom, but he&#13;
did possess, in Frost's words, "an&#13;
amazing dramatic irony." In&#13;
arranging the date of the&#13;
televised interviews, promoters&#13;
wanted them to be aired in May&#13;
to pull in a larger audience than&#13;
during the summer months when&#13;
/the TV viewing audience is&#13;
smaller.&#13;
"Nixon paused a minute and&#13;
said, 'We got a hell of an&#13;
audience on August the 9th,&#13;
1974.' ... \ was surprised he&#13;
could joke about the day of his&#13;
resignation "&#13;
When you talk about David&#13;
Frost, it's not him you're&#13;
describing, but others he has&#13;
interviewed: He seems to be a&#13;
medium in himself, like radio or&#13;
TV, that can translate the ideas&#13;
of a few into material that can be.&#13;
enjoyed by all.&#13;
HOWAT 2 LOCATIONS&#13;
6too Washington Ave.&#13;
Pioneer Village&#13;
8B6-5077 • 886·0207&#13;
2615 Washington Ave.&#13;
634·2373 • 634.2374&#13;
9&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From Goers Counby.&#13;
De Tap Al Ueiae S~lIr. ~~&#13;
PA8 Coffeehouse Presents&#13;
John Stiernberg&#13;
Union 104·106&#13;
Oct, 18 At 1:00 PM&#13;
FREE ADMISSION&#13;
WINE SERVED&#13;
P.A.B. Presents&#13;
Some bluegrass music&#13;
from&#13;
Wet Behind&#13;
The Ears&#13;
Tho-s., Oct. 12&#13;
8.00 pm&#13;
Union Square&#13;
1.00- VW-P&#13;
1.50- Guests&#13;
10's Required&#13;
be enjoyed by all generations.&#13;
The fact that the film was well&#13;
written, directed, once again&#13;
contained Sellers wonderful&#13;
performance helped.&#13;
Having Clouseau battle the&#13;
Pink Panther once again so&#13;
enthused audiences that since&#13;
then two sequels have been&#13;
filmed, The Pink Panther Strikes&#13;
Again and Revenge of the Pink&#13;
Panther.&#13;
Although the two later films&#13;
contained the successful SellersBlake&#13;
partnership they were all&#13;
too obvious rip-offs of a&#13;
lucrative formula. Too much&#13;
emphasis was placed on the&#13;
slapstick and not enough on the&#13;
storyline and the films came off&#13;
more silly than funny. But these&#13;
films, also, were financial giants&#13;
probably on the weight of&#13;
Seller's Clouseau character.&#13;
Enough history, lets get&#13;
analytical. What is the appeal of&#13;
a bumbling, psuedo-sophisticated&#13;
French inspector who talks&#13;
in an overdrawn accent and&#13;
continually survives every conceivable&#13;
pitfall and accident "to&#13;
be put on film. He isn't particularly&#13;
attractive, occasionally&#13;
conceited, dimwitted and shortsighted,&#13;
tends to dress in&#13;
outrageous costumes designed&#13;
to confuse opponents but&#13;
usually evoking hysterical laughter,&#13;
has a crazy Japanese man&#13;
servant called Kato who he&#13;
instructed to attack him at any&#13;
unexpected opportunity in order&#13;
to keep his reflexes and&#13;
defensive instinct in keen order,&#13;
literarily drives his boss insane,&#13;
and is often ceremoniously&#13;
decorated for actions he&#13;
accidentalTy produces.&#13;
Clouseau is not lovable like&#13;
Laurel and Hardy. He doesn't&#13;
have the heartwarming appeal of&#13;
Chaplin nor does he exist as a&#13;
near pathetic yet intellectual&#13;
victim of mechanized circumstances&#13;
as were the characters&#13;
Woody Allen has played in the&#13;
past.&#13;
So what is it that gives him&#13;
such box office power?&#13;
The answer can be summed up&#13;
in what can be called "American&#13;
schlub appeal"; the idea that&#13;
Americans love to see someone&#13;
get kicked down, bounced&#13;
around and making a complete&#13;
and utter fool of himself but still&#13;
come ahead in the end. They&#13;
(we) want to feel that we're not&#13;
in the boat alone and sinking,&#13;
and Sellers as Clouseau is&#13;
probably best and only conveyor&#13;
of this concept todav.&#13;
1dnesday October 11, 1978&#13;
fer The Pink Panther&#13;
The Clouseau Connection&#13;
~ter Sellers is a versatile and character was so popular, in fact,&#13;
~d renown comedic actor. He that it was decided to star him in&#13;
lstarred in such fine movies a film of his own.&#13;
· the past years as The World The film, again in 1964, was&#13;
~1enry Orient, Dr. Strange/ave called A Shot in the Dark based&#13;
'tt,ow / stopped worrying and on a popular stage play of the&#13;
·1ed to love the bomb and same name. The film, directed&#13;
·W Mouse that Roared. But ask 'y Blake Edwards, still remains&#13;
l~,ne what they think of when the best in the "Panther" series·&#13;
~, hear the name Peter Sellers with Closeau bumbling his way&#13;
~ the majority will undoubt- through a murder investigation&#13;
P~ say Inspector Clouseau. with the likes of Elke Sommers as&#13;
Jouseau began his lucrative a suspect. A Shot in the Dark was&#13;
~ career way back in the a critical and relative popular&#13;
. lieval a-ge of 1964 in a Blake success and, as a result, the&#13;
'ttards film called The Pink character of Clouseau emerged&#13;
~ther. As an inept French as a major comedic figure in the&#13;
111tCe inspector Clouseau was in movies, again due mainly to&#13;
Oil ity only a secondary Sellers wonderful performance.&#13;
11a1 ·acter to the main stars of the It seemed, however, that after&#13;
-~ David Niven, Claudia A Shot in the Dark the character&#13;
~linal (whatever happened to of Clouseau would retire from&#13;
n~, and Robert Wagner. the screen . An unsuccessful&#13;
1&#13;
espite the fact that the film attempt was. made to recapture&#13;
will~f was cleverly 'tritten and the characteristic Clouseauian&#13;
westly funny, Seller's Clouseau slapstick in 1968 with a film&#13;
iiielled the film from the "cute called Inspector Clouseau with&#13;
edy" categorie to high slap- Alan Arkin as Clouseau. Sellers,&#13;
k farce . The Clouseau however, was too closely&#13;
ynotes Whitewater Worlcsltop&#13;
associated with the character of&#13;
Clouseau and the film was a&#13;
dismal failure.&#13;
Sellers went from movie to&#13;
movie and eventually drifted to&#13;
relative obscurity. Blake Edwards&#13;
went on to make a variety of&#13;
movies including The Great Race&#13;
and maintained a successful&#13;
stature as a director. It seemed&#13;
that their -partnership would&#13;
remain just a two shot deal.&#13;
In 1976, nearly twelve years&#13;
after the last "Panther'' film, it&#13;
was decided that the time was&#13;
ripe to re-establish the partnership.&#13;
Though seemingly a great&#13;
idea, especially to Clouseau fans,&#13;
the venture would be a&#13;
considerable gamble. Afterall, it&#13;
had been twelve years since the&#13;
last movie and attitudes and&#13;
tastes have changed; audiences&#13;
today are "more sophisticated".&#13;
The film, The Return of the&#13;
Pink Panther, turned out to be an&#13;
enormous popular success reaffirming&#13;
that Inspector Clouseau&#13;
was a timeless character to&#13;
David frost Slt'1res Experiences&#13;
by Thomas Jenn&#13;
tening to David Frost is like&#13;
l!l!tg through a copy of TIME&#13;
ine - you meet up with&#13;
thsl e great ones . When he&#13;
tiews a celebrity, he takes a&#13;
~f that person with him to&#13;
veyed to his audience.&#13;
without this great&#13;
land of ours'&#13;
l&#13;
'rl' interviewer-writer recently a )ted a journalism seminar at&#13;
UW-Whitewater campus .&#13;
plaC~hchool papers from across&#13;
Kt"' nsin were sent to the&#13;
~ )Jus to be graded by a group&#13;
~ 1)1:Wspaper professionals .&#13;
he 11~lrt journalism classes feat&#13;
1&#13;
(1111~ an array of newspaper&#13;
~ting and management&#13;
; were free for those who&#13;
~l)!l~ct to attend . Mr. Frost's&#13;
~ h, "I ntervie-.95 I'll rarely&#13;
~~~t," ended the daylong&#13;
fr il&gt;-rence.&#13;
TICIANS POSE PROBLEMS&#13;
in most conversations,&#13;
• /' n of pliticians surfaced,&#13;
· r. Frost has had his share&#13;
fem . "Politicians raise&#13;
ular problems." He spoke&#13;
a relaxed British accent,&#13;
eal problem is to get them&#13;
something. They're all&#13;
ined to play safe ... the&#13;
fearless thing they' ll do is&#13;
me out against road&#13;
nts, or attck litter." One&#13;
senator actually said,&#13;
re would this country be·&#13;
ut this great land of ours."&#13;
government leaders have&#13;
the tanned, bearded Frost&#13;
of his most cherished lines . I t Kennedy, quizzed as to&#13;
.. he wanted to be&#13;
1 mbered after he died ,&#13;
cally just before his death)&#13;
· d, "This is a world in which fin suffer, and I'd like to&#13;
have maae the contribution to&#13;
have lessoned that suffering." He&#13;
finalized with one of David&#13;
Frost's favorite senten&lt;;es "For if&#13;
we do not do this, then who will&#13;
do this?"&#13;
Asking Moshe Dayan the same&#13;
question provoked a very&#13;
astonished look and the retort,&#13;
"But that's what I'm dead for, not&#13;
to care about what people think&#13;
about me!" Frost was amt.:sed at&#13;
the concept that the Israeli&#13;
government official had found&#13;
something to be dead for.&#13;
WILL WE EVER LEARN?&#13;
Many interviews provoke a&#13;
chilling shudder in the Cambridge&#13;
graduate. Two were: A&#13;
talk with Baldur von Schirach,&#13;
head of the nazi youth camps&#13;
responsible for the corruption of&#13;
German minds, and a meeting&#13;
with Reish Fuhrer, one of many&#13;
to blame the nazi killing during&#13;
the holecaust.&#13;
The latter was interviewed&#13;
after he spent 20 years in&#13;
Spandau prison camp. (He now&#13;
lives in relative luxury.) After&#13;
describing Fuhrer, who has a&#13;
habit of overlooking the war,&#13;
Frost asked the audience,&#13;
frustrated, "Will we ever learn?''&#13;
NIXON INTERVIEW EXAMINED&#13;
Finally the crowd was given a&#13;
chance to interview Mr. Frost.&#13;
Immediately, a subject that had&#13;
lain dormant the entire talk&#13;
emerged - the intense interview&#13;
of former president Nixon . When&#13;
queried on his opinion of the&#13;
37th president, he injected, " Do&#13;
you have a couple of spare&#13;
hours?&#13;
"It's a complicated subject ...&#13;
there were so many layers to peel&#13;
off." Frost confessed, "In the&#13;
interviews, he went much further&#13;
in his admissions in Watergate&#13;
than I expected him to go."&#13;
Nixon paused a minute.&#13;
'We got a hell of&#13;
an audience on August&#13;
the 9th'&#13;
Richard Nixon is not reknowned&#13;
for his wit and wisdom, but he&#13;
did possess, in Frost's words, " an&#13;
amazing dramatic irony." In&#13;
arranging the date of the&#13;
televised interviews, promoters&#13;
wanted them to be aired in May&#13;
to pull in a larger audience than&#13;
during the summer months when&#13;
,,,the TV viewing audience is&#13;
smaller.&#13;
"Nixon paused a minute and&#13;
said, 'We got a hell of an&#13;
audience on August the 9th,&#13;
1974.' .. . I was surprised he&#13;
could joke about the day of his&#13;
resignation."&#13;
When you talk about David&#13;
Frost, it's not him you're&#13;
describing, but others he has&#13;
interviewed . He seems to be a&#13;
medium in himself, like radio or&#13;
TV, that can translate the ideas&#13;
of a few into material that can be&#13;
enjoyed by all.&#13;
NOW AT 2 LOCATIONS&#13;
6100 Washington Ave.&#13;
Pioneer Village&#13;
886-5077 • 886-0207&#13;
2615 Washington Ave.&#13;
634-2373 • 634-2374&#13;
be enjoyed by all generations.&#13;
The fact that the film was well&#13;
written, directed, once again&#13;
contained Sellers wonderful&#13;
performance helped.&#13;
Having Clouseau battle the&#13;
Pink Panther once again so&#13;
enthused audiences that since&#13;
then two sequels have been&#13;
filmed, The Pink Panther Strikes&#13;
Again and Revenge of the Pink&#13;
Panther.&#13;
Although the two later films&#13;
contained the successful SellersBlake&#13;
partnership they were all&#13;
too obvious rip-offs of a&#13;
lucrative formula. Too much&#13;
emphasis was placed on the&#13;
slapstick and not enough on the&#13;
storyline and the films came off&#13;
more srny than funny. But these&#13;
films , also, were financial giants&#13;
probably on the weight of&#13;
Seller's Clouseau character.&#13;
Enough history, lets get&#13;
analytical. What is the appeal of&#13;
a bumbling, psuedo-sophisticated&#13;
French inspector who talks&#13;
in an overdrawn accent and&#13;
continually survives every conceivable&#13;
pitfall and accident -to&#13;
be put on film . He isn't particularly&#13;
attractive, occasionally&#13;
conceited, dimwitted and shortsighted,&#13;
tends to dress in&#13;
outrageous costumes designed&#13;
9&#13;
to confuse opponents but&#13;
usually evoking hysterical laughter,&#13;
has a crazy Japanese man&#13;
servant called Kato who he&#13;
instructed to attack him at any&#13;
unexpected opportunity in order&#13;
to keep his reflexes and&#13;
defensive instinct in keen order,&#13;
literarily drives his boss insane,&#13;
and is often ceremoniously&#13;
decorated for actions he&#13;
accidentally produces.&#13;
Clouseau is not lovable like&#13;
Laur~! and Hardy. He doesn't&#13;
have the heartwarming appeal of&#13;
Chaplin nor does he exist as a&#13;
near pathetic yet intellectual&#13;
victim of mechanized circumstances&#13;
as were the characters&#13;
Woody Allen has played in the&#13;
past.&#13;
So what is it that gives him&#13;
such box office power?&#13;
The answer can be summed up&#13;
in what can be called "American&#13;
schlub appeal"; the idea that&#13;
Americans love to see someone&#13;
get kicked down, bounced&#13;
around and making a complete&#13;
and utter fool of himself but still&#13;
come ahead in the end. They&#13;
(we) want to feel that we're not&#13;
in the boat alone and sinking,&#13;
and Sellers as Clouseau is&#13;
probably best and only conveyor&#13;
of this concept tonay.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
01 Tap At U1io1 s,ure ~~&#13;
PAS Coffeehouse Presents&#13;
John Stiernberg&#13;
Union 104-106&#13;
Oct, 18 At 1 :00 PM&#13;
FREE ADMISSION&#13;
WINE SERVED&#13;
P.A.8. Presents&#13;
Some bluegrass music&#13;
from&#13;
Wet Behind&#13;
The Ears&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 12&#13;
8.00pm&#13;
Union Square&#13;
1.00- \/1/v-P&#13;
1.50- Guests&#13;
ID's Required &#13;
vrednesday October 11,1978&#13;
')&lt;!,Dger&#13;
•&#13;
Behind the Scenes at PGrlcside Perspectl1fe&#13;
by Mollie Clarke&#13;
"Ready one, take one. Camera&#13;
two, give me a closeup. Ready&#13;
two take two." Terry Maraccini&#13;
sat 'at the video control panel,&#13;
pushing the button to switch to&#13;
camera 2. Throughout this&#13;
process Terry maintained a&#13;
watchful eye on the T.V.&#13;
monitors (there ~hadto be at least&#13;
ten of them in the room), as well&#13;
as changing the slides of&#13;
Professor John Murphys plastic&#13;
sculptures, talking to .tw-o&#13;
cameramen and pointing to&#13;
various people. On the right side&#13;
of the room Bruce Langenbach&#13;
sat erect with his hands adjusting&#13;
the lighting and color dials on&#13;
the engineering console. Steve&#13;
Bulik sat on the left side of the&#13;
room regulating the microphones&#13;
on the audio panel. They&#13;
had been taping 'one session of&#13;
Professor Robert Canary's Professions,&#13;
a half hour show which&#13;
appears every other Monday on&#13;
Channel 8 in Racine.&#13;
Terry produces Parkside's new&#13;
TV show, Parkside Perspective.&#13;
He is responsible for arranging&#13;
all interviews and coordinating&#13;
the TV crew. During the past&#13;
three seasons,Terry has tried his&#13;
hand at almost every aspect of&#13;
TV production, including camera,&#13;
lighting, and writing, as well&#13;
as directing. However, when&#13;
Parkside Perspective is recorded&#13;
live every Wednesday, Terry can&#13;
relax a little and watch technical&#13;
director Jon Shoen off and&#13;
director Rob Gissel run the show.&#13;
As technical director, Jon is&#13;
responsible for every visual&#13;
detail that is seen on the screen.&#13;
His job includes preparing the&#13;
sets and adjusting the lighting as&#13;
well as operating the video&#13;
control board. Because lighting&#13;
for TV must be extremely bright,&#13;
guests and interviewers cannot&#13;
remain on set for long periods of&#13;
time. The temperature on the set&#13;
sometimes reaches 100 degrees.&#13;
According to Terry, however, Jon&#13;
has managed to "set lights which&#13;
are comfortable." Some of Jon's&#13;
success with/lighting can be&#13;
I&#13;
Lori Gissel, Rob Gissel and Jan&#13;
attributed to his previous&#13;
experiences at Parkside with&#13;
theatrical lighting and his&#13;
understanding of color temperature&#13;
and light intensity.&#13;
Terry explained that one "can't&#13;
just light" a set anymore because&#13;
TV production has "gotten more&#13;
sophisticated" in the past few&#13;
years. However, he commented&#13;
that Parkside has "finally got&#13;
enough creative people together"&#13;
to produce excellent&#13;
shows. Before, they had to wait&#13;
for hours for enough people to&#13;
come.&#13;
Director Rob Gissel is&#13;
presently employed by the&#13;
Kenosha Unified School District&#13;
Instructional Media Center and&#13;
works at Parkside as a volunteer&#13;
director. As director, he "calls&#13;
the shots" which are to be&#13;
recorded on videotape and sent&#13;
to Channel 8. Rob stated that&#13;
because the shov is taped live,&#13;
the director must "force himself&#13;
to continue going" and be&#13;
prepared for coming events.&#13;
Like Rob Gissel, most of the&#13;
students working on Parkside&#13;
Perspective are working during&#13;
their free time or for one Mass&#13;
Media Credit. Terry stated that&#13;
the purpose of producing a live&#13;
show like Parkside Perspective is&#13;
not only to obtain practical&#13;
experience, but to "benefit&#13;
people" by presenting relevant&#13;
subjects that deal with everyday&#13;
problems. Some future topics to&#13;
be presented on Parks ide&#13;
Perspective include TV violence,&#13;
,alcoholism, and consumer problems.&#13;
Last Wednesday, interviewer&#13;
John Stewart talked with&#13;
Professor Karen Skul~t about&#13;
students who fear matematics&#13;
courses or have "Math Anxiety."&#13;
They were sitting in Studio B on&#13;
the right set. The left set was to&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
be used by john Stewart and Jan&#13;
Fetter. the show's commentators,&#13;
during the announcements at the&#13;
end ofthe show. The floor of the&#13;
studio was covered with TV and&#13;
camera cables and there were&#13;
several yeillow pieces of paper&#13;
taped to the floor. These served&#13;
as position markers for the&#13;
cameramen. Mark Cunningham,&#13;
one of the cameramen, was&#13;
placing blue cardboard strips On&#13;
the panels dividing the two sets.&#13;
And jon Shoenoff was climbing a&#13;
ladder to adjust the lights.&#13;
In the control room, lecturer&#13;
Walt Ulbricht was working with&#13;
Rob Gissel, arranging the slides&#13;
of his presentation on Wisconsin&#13;
Artists on Film. Lori Cissel, Rob's&#13;
wife, was typing the label for the&#13;
videotape on a computer called&#13;
th~ character generator. She was&#13;
typing the names of guests&#13;
before the show began and later&#13;
recalled the credits from the&#13;
camera.&#13;
photo by Denise D'AquistD&#13;
photo&#13;
computer memory bank asshow&#13;
was taped.&#13;
Cameras one and two&#13;
focusing on John Stewart&#13;
Professor Skuldt.&#13;
Before long, Rob req&#13;
that the door be closed an&#13;
lights dimmed. Rob began&#13;
directions.&#13;
"Lights .. Tone off.&#13;
off. Camera two move to&#13;
take two."&#13;
Jon Shoenoff began p&#13;
the buttons to select the pict&#13;
being recorded on vid&#13;
according to Rob's comm&#13;
Rob commented, "This ~&#13;
easy part."&#13;
He gave more orders to&#13;
cameramen .and then to Lori&#13;
the character generator:&#13;
"Take two ... Name up&#13;
take one .. Name off."&#13;
When Professor Skuldt&#13;
coming through louden&#13;
Rob turned to Steve Bulik&#13;
audio control and stated,&#13;
her up."&#13;
Though the&#13;
sessions went smoothly,&#13;
blems arose when interv'&#13;
Rick O'Brian closed his talk&#13;
counselor Connie Cummi&#13;
four minutes early by mis,&#13;
Also, john Stewart's introductl&#13;
to that interview was some&#13;
omitted. Terry and Rob ass&#13;
everyone they would find a&#13;
to lengthen the program'.T&#13;
explained how important It&#13;
to schedule events to ,&#13;
second. Completed, Parks&#13;
Perspective ranges from 27:&#13;
129:30. The show ended su~&#13;
fully as John Stewart an&#13;
Feifer completed the anna&#13;
ments and pretended to "ja&#13;
as the credits rolled on&#13;
screen.&#13;
Even though according to , . has&#13;
Shoenoff "directing ,&#13;
, t&#13;
tendency to wipe yo~ Oub~&#13;
production at Parkslde&#13;
much satisfaction to dt&#13;
involved. Cameraman a~&#13;
tinuity writer Mark cunnU1jeS&#13;
remarked that everyone tr&#13;
work together and help&#13;
other through construe&#13;
criticism "when asked&#13;
happens' when something1&#13;
wrong with the equipment,ot&#13;
replied in his usual hu",&#13;
tone "If something goes e&#13;
' he we all lay down facing t&#13;
Wednesday October 11,1978 l(!,Dger&#13;
• Behind the Scenes at Porlcside Perspective&#13;
by Mollie Clarke&#13;
" Ready one, take one. Camera&#13;
two, give me a closeup . Ready&#13;
two, take two." Terry Maraccini&#13;
sat at the video control panel,&#13;
pushing the button to switch to&#13;
camera 2. Throughout th is&#13;
process Terry !_Tlaintained a&#13;
watchful eye on the T .V .&#13;
monitors (there-had to be at least&#13;
ten of them in the room), as well&#13;
as changing the s I ides of&#13;
Professor John Murphy's plastic&#13;
sculptures, talking to .two&#13;
cameramen and pointing to&#13;
various people. On the right side&#13;
of the room Bruce Langenbach&#13;
sat erect with his hands adjusting&#13;
the lighting and color dials on&#13;
the engineering console. Steve&#13;
Bulik sat on the left side of the&#13;
room regulating the microphones&#13;
on the audio panel. They&#13;
had been taping une session of&#13;
Professor Robert Canary's Professions,&#13;
a half hour show which&#13;
appears every other Monday on&#13;
Channel 8 in Racine.&#13;
Terry produces Parkside's new&#13;
TV show, Parkside Perspective.&#13;
He is responsible for arranging&#13;
all interviews and coordinating&#13;
the TV crew. During the past&#13;
three seasons, Terry has tried his&#13;
hand at almost every aspect of&#13;
TV production, including camera,&#13;
lighting, and writing, as well&#13;
as directing. However, when&#13;
Parkside Perspective is recorded&#13;
live every Wednesday, Terry can&#13;
relax a little and watch technical&#13;
director Jon Shoenoff and&#13;
director Rob Gissel run the show.&#13;
As technical director, Jon is&#13;
responsible for every visual&#13;
detail that is seen on the screen.&#13;
His job includes preparing the&#13;
sets and adjusting the lighting as&#13;
well as operating the video&#13;
control board. Because lighting&#13;
for TV must be extremely bright,&#13;
guests and interviewers cannot&#13;
remain on set for long periods of&#13;
time . The temperature on the set&#13;
sometimes reaches 100 degrees.&#13;
According to Terry, however, Jon&#13;
has managed to " set lights which&#13;
are comfortable." Some of Jon's&#13;
success with lighting can be&#13;
I&#13;
Lori Gissel, Rob Gissel and Jon&#13;
attributed to his previous&#13;
experiences at Parkside with&#13;
theatrical lighting and his&#13;
understanding of color temperature&#13;
and light intensity.&#13;
Terry explained that one "can't&#13;
just light" a set anymore because&#13;
TV production has "gotten more&#13;
sophisticated" in the past few&#13;
years. However, he commented&#13;
that Parkside has "finally got&#13;
enough creative people together"&#13;
to produce excellent&#13;
shows. Before, they had to wait&#13;
for hours for enough people to&#13;
come.&#13;
Director Rob Gissel is&#13;
presently employed by the&#13;
Kenosha Unified School District&#13;
Instructional Media Center and&#13;
works at Parkside as a volunteer&#13;
director. As director, he "calls&#13;
the shots" which are to be&#13;
recorded on videotape and sent&#13;
to Channel 8. Rob stated that&#13;
because the shm is taped live,&#13;
the director must "force himself&#13;
to continue going" and be&#13;
prepared for coming events .&#13;
Like Rob Gissel, most of the&#13;
- .students working on Parkside&#13;
Perspective are working during&#13;
their free time or for one Mass&#13;
Media Credit. Terry stated that&#13;
the purpose of producing a live&#13;
show like Parkside Perspective is&#13;
not only to obtain practical&#13;
experience, but to "benefit&#13;
people" by presenting relevant&#13;
subjects that deal with everyday&#13;
problems . Some future topics to&#13;
be presented on Parkside&#13;
Perspective include TV violence,&#13;
,alcoholism, and consumer problems.&#13;
&#13;
Last· Wednesday, interviewer&#13;
John Stewart talked with&#13;
Professor Karen Skul~t about&#13;
students who fear matematics&#13;
courses or have "Math Anxiety."&#13;
They were sitting in Studio Bon&#13;
the right set. The left set was to&#13;
control room .&#13;
be used by John Stewart and Jan&#13;
Feifer, the show's commentators,&#13;
during the announcements at the&#13;
end of the show. The floor of the&#13;
studio was covered with TV and&#13;
camera cables and there were&#13;
several yelllow pieces of paper&#13;
taped to the floor. These served&#13;
as position markers for the&#13;
cameramen . Mark Cunningham,&#13;
one of the cameramen, was&#13;
placing blue cardboard strips on&#13;
the panels dividing the two sets .&#13;
And Jon Shoenoff was climbing a&#13;
ladder to adjust the lights.&#13;
In the control room, lecturer&#13;
Walt Ulbricht was working with&#13;
Rob Gissel, arranging the slides&#13;
of his presentation on Wisconsin&#13;
Artists on Film. Lori Gissel, Rob's&#13;
wife, was typing the label for the&#13;
vi~eotape on a computer called&#13;
the character generator. She was&#13;
typing the names of guests&#13;
before the show began and later&#13;
recalled th~ credits from the&#13;
camera. photo by Denise D'Aqu ist o&#13;
photo&#13;
computer memory bank as&#13;
show was taped .&#13;
Cameras one and two&#13;
focusing on John Stewart&#13;
Professor Skuldt.&#13;
Before I ong, Rob requ&#13;
that the door be closed and&#13;
lights dimmed . Rob began gi ·&#13;
directions.&#13;
" Lights ... Tone off .&#13;
off .. . Camera two move to "l&#13;
take two."&#13;
Jon Shoenoff began pushi&#13;
the buttons to select the picture:&#13;
being recorded on video!&#13;
according to Rob's command.&#13;
Rob commented, "This is&#13;
easy part."&#13;
He gave more orders to&#13;
cameramen and then to Lori Ill&#13;
the character generator:&#13;
" Take two .. . Name up .&#13;
take one ... Name off."&#13;
When Professor Skuldt wasn&#13;
coming through loud .enouiRob&#13;
turned to Steve Bulik a~,tlf ~ 1&#13;
audio control and stated, ~ ~ her up." . ~1&#13;
Though the two previ&#13;
sessions went smoothly,&#13;
blems arose when intervie,&#13;
Rick O'Brian closed his talk VI&#13;
counselor Connie Cummink&#13;
four minutes early by mista_&#13;
Also John Stewart's introducti&#13;
to that interview was someho&#13;
omitted. Terry and Rob assur&#13;
everyone they would find a VI&#13;
to lengthen the program. Te . ·t VI explained how important 1&#13;
to schedule. events to .&#13;
second .. Completed, Par~;&#13;
Perspective ranges from 27-&#13;
129: 30. The show ended su~\,&#13;
fully as John Stewart an ct&#13;
Feifer completed the an~.&#13;
0&#13;
~~·&#13;
ments and pretended to 1&#13;
3 th!&#13;
as the credits rolled on&#13;
screen . . to I~&#13;
Even though according 1 ' . has Shoenoff , " directing ,,j\'&#13;
tendency to wipe yo~ ou~ri&#13;
product ion at Parkside thosl ~&#13;
mu c h sati sfaction to d crl 1 ~~&#13;
involved . Cameraman a~ gh 1&#13;
\&#13;
t inuity writer Mark Cunn~ieS ,~ 1 remarked that everyone ea ~&#13;
work together and helP ctii .:&#13;
other t hroµg h cons~U w Iii.'~&#13;
criticism . When aske g ii'&#13;
happens when something Ter \~&#13;
wrong with the equipment, 01 ~&#13;
repl ied in his usual hu:ron f&#13;
tone, "If something goe~ east- 1 ~&#13;
we all lay down fac ing t e 1&#13;
,, &#13;
;day October 11,1978&#13;
sic Greele Drama&#13;
ctra at Parlcside&#13;
odes' classic Greek&#13;
"Electra" will be presentstudent&#13;
cast directed by&#13;
hoda-Gale Pollack in the&#13;
ity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
unicatian Arts Theater&#13;
,26 and 29 at 6 p.m. and&#13;
at2 p.m.&#13;
tor Pollack calls the&#13;
tion an ambitious underwhich&#13;
has involved&#13;
ive research on the&#13;
en civilization of Greece&#13;
()(X) BC The research has&#13;
information ranging&#13;
insights into religious&#13;
nies of the period to&#13;
ture and fashions of the&#13;
set, by John Dickson, is a&#13;
ng multilevel creation&#13;
by a mountaintop palace&#13;
xtending forward and&#13;
ard to a tom b on the&#13;
thrust stage.&#13;
rmng. designed by Virlater&#13;
who is' new to the&#13;
dramatic arts faculty this&#13;
eludes creation of leather&#13;
and boots and handjewelry&#13;
and daggers&#13;
ented with authentic&#13;
aen designs.&#13;
. Pollack said she selected&#13;
hocles' dramatization of&#13;
tra myth from among the&#13;
plays dealing with the&#13;
as the most dramatic&#13;
mg of the story. The script,&#13;
tes, is a contemporary&#13;
ion by FrancesFergusson.&#13;
odes' drama is based on&#13;
e Ko'llstedt&#13;
the legend of the House of&#13;
Atreus, which ruled the "city of&#13;
Mycenae and as plagued by the&#13;
gods with scandal and bloodshed.&#13;
When King Agamemnon,&#13;
the head of the house, sailed&#13;
with the army to take Troy, his&#13;
fleet was becalmed and he was&#13;
forced on the advice of an oracle&#13;
to sacrifice his eldest daughter,&#13;
Iphianassa, to releas~ the fleet.&#13;
His queen, Clytemnestra,&#13;
remained in Mycenae and in his&#13;
absence took a lover, Aegisthos,&#13;
Agamemnon's cousin. When&#13;
Agamemnon returned victorious&#13;
from the Trojan War, Clytemnestra&#13;
and Aegisthos murdered him&#13;
and seized the throne. Electra,&#13;
daughter of Agamemnon and&#13;
Clytemnestra, -then stole her&#13;
younger brother, Orestes, and&#13;
sent him away with his tutor,&#13;
Paidagogos, to be reared by an&#13;
uncle until he was old enough to&#13;
restore order. Electra stayed at&#13;
Mycenae to bear witness to her&#13;
mother's crimes and wait for&#13;
Orestes' return.&#13;
Mary Stankus plays Electra,&#13;
Gary Eckstein is Orestes, Gail&#13;
Ross is Clytemnestra, and Don&#13;
Luccason is Aegisthos; all are&#13;
from Racine. J.C. Bussard,&#13;
Kenosha plays Paidagogcs, Peter&#13;
Fernandez, Milwaukee, is Pvlades,&#13;
Orestes' cousin and&#13;
companion during his exile; and&#13;
Cathy Casselman, Greenfield, is&#13;
Chrysothemis, sister of Electra&#13;
and Orestes.&#13;
Two maidservants are portravRepresented'&#13;
in&#13;
Chicago Exhibit&#13;
Kohlstedt, a member of&#13;
niversity of Wisconsinde&#13;
art faculty, is reprein&#13;
the 77th Chicago and&#13;
ty exhibition of works on&#13;
at the Art Institute of&#13;
hen go through Dec. "3 by a&#13;
sed~ color painting in ten parts&#13;
~ie "Line Scene I-X."&#13;
II'IY ~ systemic painting consists&#13;
rt',. n 9 x 11 inch paper&#13;
~ v¢ gles in which a geometric&#13;
.od is explored from various&#13;
oU~ ctives, creating an illusion&#13;
in which the viewer keeps&#13;
Artist&#13;
losing and finding the form. Only&#13;
seven other Wisconsin artists,&#13;
including Joseph Rozman Jr. of&#13;
Racine, are included in the show.&#13;
Kohlstedt also has had works&#13;
accepted for two Wisconsin&#13;
shows this fall. He will be&#13;
represented by two painting,&#13;
"Inside I" and "Inside II," in the&#13;
Wisconsin Directions II.show at&#13;
the Milwaukee Art Center Oct.&#13;
20 through Dec. 3 and in the&#13;
UW-Platteville Invitational show&#13;
of work by UW faculty members&#13;
Oct. 14 through Nov, 15.&#13;
Citizen Kane&#13;
.At Ronde"e&#13;
",Ii· .. 'lien, produced, directed&#13;
e ~ tarred in by Orson Welles,&#13;
I en Kane" is considered by&#13;
iOP to be a perfect film,&#13;
,J!1I' Iy the best American film&#13;
~ time.&#13;
film is scheduled at the&#13;
n Rondelle on Wednesday,&#13;
r 18 at 7:00 p.m. arid Jis&#13;
hird film in the Wisconsin&#13;
on Film Series.&#13;
Itizen Kane" traces the life,&#13;
r and eventual withdrawal&#13;
powerful tycoon and&#13;
shine czar Charles Foster&#13;
Kane. Bri~iant camera work and&#13;
a superb soundtrack help make&#13;
Welles' achiev...ementan extraordrnaev,&#13;
one-of-a-kind cinematic&#13;
tour-de-force.&#13;
Welles, born in 1915 in&#13;
Kenosha, also starred and&#13;
directed "Macbeth" (1946), and&#13;
"The Magnificent Ambersons"&#13;
(1942).&#13;
Reservations and inform~tion&#13;
about this free program can be&#13;
obtained by calling the Rondelle&#13;
at 554-2154.&#13;
J.e. Bussard as Poidagogos the tutor,Gail Ross as Clytemnestro,GoryEckestein as Orestes&#13;
and Mary Stankus as Electra in a scene from Sophocles' 'Electro'&#13;
Photo by P J. Allolino&#13;
ed by Donna Bianchi and Kristi&#13;
Houch, both of Kenosha, and a&#13;
chorus of Mycenaen women is&#13;
made up of Colleen Arndt and&#13;
Beth Batassa, both of Kenosha,&#13;
and Kathy Bencriscutto, Lou&#13;
Anne Bauer and Mary Dretzka,&#13;
of Racine.&#13;
Ceoffrey Stanton, Racine, will&#13;
perform original music which. he&#13;
has composed for the production.&#13;
Sandra Puzerewski, Kenosha,&#13;
is student research assistant&#13;
for the drama and Bob jilk, also&#13;
of Kenosha, is stage manager. In&#13;
addition to her acting role, Miss&#13;
Casselman is assistant to the&#13;
director.&#13;
In conjunction with the&#13;
production, a display in the&#13;
theater lobby will include a map&#13;
of ancient Creece, the family&#13;
tree of the House of Atreus, the&#13;
legend of the House of Atreus&#13;
and the Twelve Olympians, the&#13;
major gods and goddesses of&#13;
Greek classical mythology. Prior&#13;
to the production, the display&#13;
also will be shown in the&#13;
UW-Parkside library and Simmons&#13;
Library in Kenosha.&#13;
Admission is 52 for students&#13;
and senior citizens and 53 for the&#13;
general public. Reservations can&#13;
be made by calling the box office&#13;
(Phone 553-2457 or 553-2016)&#13;
and the Parks ide Union&#13;
Information Center (Phone&#13;
553-2345).&#13;
Murder most foul on the minds of mother and dcuqhter&#13;
Gail Ross,left,ploys Clytemnestra and Mary Stankus is her doughter Electro.&#13;
. , photo by P.J. Auohno&#13;
;day October 11, 1978&#13;
sic Greek Drama&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
hocles' classic Greek&#13;
"Electra" will be presenta&#13;
student cast directed by&#13;
hoda-Gale Pollack in the&#13;
sity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
11unication Arts Theater&#13;
7, 28 and 29 at 8 p.m . and&#13;
at 2 p.m.&#13;
tor Pollack ~alls the&#13;
tion an ambitious underwhich&#13;
has involved&#13;
ive research on the&#13;
aen civilization of Greece&#13;
1000 BC. The research has&#13;
d information ranging&#13;
insights into religious&#13;
nies of the period to&#13;
cture and fashions of the&#13;
set, by John Dickson, is a&#13;
ing multilevel creation&#13;
by a mountaintop palace&#13;
xtending forward and&#13;
ard to a tomb on the&#13;
thrust stage.&#13;
urning, designed by VirSlater&#13;
who is new to the&#13;
by Deci dramatic arts faculty this&#13;
ncludes creation of leather&#13;
r&#13;
ry bai and boots and handd&#13;
jewelry and daggers&#13;
and tnented , with authentic&#13;
n StE10aen designs.&#13;
f. Pollack said she selected&#13;
Rob l'&gt;phocles' dramatization of&#13;
close:ectra myth from among the&#13;
ob be; plays dealing with the&#13;
:l as the most dramatic&#13;
ne 01ing of the story. The script,&#13;
o mmfotes, is a contemporary&#13;
•tion by Frances Fergusson.&#13;
beganihocles' drama is based on&#13;
lect t/1&#13;
on 1&#13;
'scooife Kohlstedt ed, '1r&#13;
the legend of the House of&#13;
Atreus, which ruled the ' city of&#13;
Mycenae and as plagued by the&#13;
gods with scandal and bloodshed.&#13;
When King Agamem·non,&#13;
the head of the house, sailed&#13;
with the army to take Troy, his&#13;
fleet was becalmed and he was&#13;
forced on the advice of an oracle&#13;
to sacrifice his eldest daughter,&#13;
lphianassa, to release the fleet.&#13;
His queen, Clytemnestra,&#13;
remained in Mycenae and in his&#13;
absence took a lover, Aegisthos,&#13;
Agamemnon's cousin. When&#13;
Agamemnon returned victorious&#13;
from the Trojan War, Clytemnestra&#13;
and Aegisthos murdered him&#13;
and seized the throne. Electra,&#13;
daughter of Agamemnon . and&#13;
Clytemnestra, ·then stole her&#13;
younger brother, Orestes, and&#13;
sent him away with his tutor,&#13;
Paidagogos, to be reared by an&#13;
uncle until he was old enough to&#13;
restore order. Electra stayed at&#13;
Mycenae to bear witness to her&#13;
mother's crimes and wait for&#13;
Orestes' return.&#13;
Mary Stankus plays Electra,&#13;
Gary Eckstein is Orestes, Gail&#13;
Ross is Clytemnestra, and Don&#13;
Luccason is Aegisthos; all are&#13;
from Racine . J.C. Bussard,&#13;
Kenosha plays Paidagogos, Peter&#13;
Fernandez, Milwaukee, is Pylades,&#13;
Orestes' cousin and&#13;
companion during his exile; and&#13;
Cathy Casselman, Greenfield, is&#13;
Chrysothemis, sister of Electra&#13;
and Orestes.&#13;
Two m~dservants are portray-&#13;
~~ Represented' in&#13;
;,~ Chicago Exhibit&#13;
loudJe Kohlstedt, a member of losing and finding the form . Only&#13;
revei1University of Wisconsin- seven other Wisconsin artists,&#13;
d 511,ide art faculty, is repre- including Joseph Rozman Jr. of&#13;
!d in the 77th Chicago and Racine, are included in the show.&#13;
twO lity exhibition of works on Kohlstedt also has had works&#13;
smQltr at the Art Institute of accepted for two Wisconsin&#13;
en fago through Dec. -3 by a shows this fall. He will be&#13;
edMrcolor painting in ten parts represented by two painting,&#13;
nie Of "Line Scene 1-X." " Inside I" and " Inside 11 ," in the&#13;
rlY ~e systemic painting consists Wisconsin Directions I I ,show at&#13;
'sinr:en 9 x 11 inch paper the Milwaukee Art Center Oct.&#13;
w~lngles in which a geometric 20 through Dec. 3 and in the&#13;
d RI is explored from various UW-Plattev_ille Invitational show&#13;
uld~ ctives, creating an illusion of work by UW faculty members&#13;
proefJx in which the viewer keeps Oct. 14 through Nov .. 15.&#13;
prfo&#13;
ven~&#13;
ted, A 110-Lc. rtists&#13;
enM&#13;
ell'~&#13;
t~e l&#13;
ded1&#13;
1ol~&#13;
cofC&#13;
ctim.&#13;
Citizen Kane . A·t Rondelle&#13;
ritten, produced, directed&#13;
~ starred in by Orson Welles,&#13;
a~·:zen Kane" is considered by&#13;
on Y to be a perfect film&#13;
in·b1 '&#13;
C,~1 Y the best American film ·rl time.&#13;
~ le film is scheduled at the&#13;
nd 1&#13;
ten Rondelle on Wednesday,&#13;
c0:&gt;ber 18 at 7:00 p.m . and 'is&#13;
lthird film in the Wisconsin&#13;
e·its on Film Series.&#13;
/:-itizen Kane" traces the life,&#13;
3~ ~r and eventual withdrawal&#13;
gr _Powerful tycoon and&#13;
ci~lishing czar Charles Foster&#13;
Kane. Brittiant camera work and&#13;
a superb soundtrack help make&#13;
Welles' achievement an extraordi&#13;
nai;y, one-of-a-kfnd cinematic&#13;
tour-de-force.&#13;
Welles, born in 1915 .in&#13;
Kenosha, also starred and&#13;
directed "Macbeth" (1948), and&#13;
"The Magnificent Ambersons"&#13;
(1942).&#13;
Reservations and informftion&#13;
about this free program can be&#13;
obtained by calling the Rondelle&#13;
at 554-2154.&#13;
11&#13;
J.C. Bussard as Poidogogos the tutor,Goil Ross as Clytemnestro,Gory Eckestein as Orestes&#13;
and Mory Stankus as Electro in a scene from Sophocles' 'Electro'&#13;
Ph010 by P. J Auolino&#13;
ed by Donna Bianchi and Kristi&#13;
Houch, both of Kenosha, and a&#13;
choru\ of Mycenaen women is&#13;
made up of Colleen Arndt and&#13;
Beth Batassa, both of Kenosha,&#13;
and Kathy Bencriscutto, Lou&#13;
Anne Bauer and Mary Dretzka,&#13;
of Racine.&#13;
Geoffrey Stanton, Racine, will&#13;
perform original music which. he&#13;
has composed for the production.&#13;
Sandra Puzerewski, Kenosha,&#13;
is student research assistant&#13;
for the drama and Bob Jilk, also&#13;
of Kenosha, is stage manager. In&#13;
addition to her acting role, Miss&#13;
Casselman is assistant to the&#13;
director.&#13;
In conjunction with the&#13;
production, a display in the&#13;
theater lobby will include a map&#13;
of ancient Greece, the family&#13;
tree of the House of Atreus, th.e&#13;
legend of the House of Atreus&#13;
and the Twelve Olympians, the&#13;
major gods and goddesses of&#13;
Greek classical mythology. Prior&#13;
to the production, the display&#13;
also will be shown in the&#13;
UW-Parkside library and Simmons&#13;
Library in Kenosha.&#13;
Admission is S2 for students&#13;
and senior citizens and S3 for the&#13;
general public. Reservations can&#13;
be made by calling the box office&#13;
(Phone 553-2457 or 553-2016)&#13;
and the Parkside Union&#13;
Information Center (Phone&#13;
553-2345).&#13;
Murder most foul on the minds of mother and daughter:&#13;
Gail Ross,left ,ploys Clytemnestra and Mory Stankus is her daughter Electro. .. ph010 by P.J Auohno &#13;
Wednesday October n,1978&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Now comes Millertime.&#13;
©1978 ~iller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis.&#13;
Wednesday October 11, 1978&#13;
Now comes Miller time.&#13;
@1978 Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. </text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>Modern Industry Building Planned</text>
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              <text>Mainplace Classroom Comm. Arts&#13;
'* s 2:30 in Wisconsin. Do you know where your watch is?&#13;
Monday, Oct. 2 William Petrie,&#13;
"Jobs, Inflation, and Taxes:&#13;
Policitical and Economic&#13;
Trade-offs"&#13;
Monday, Oct. 9 Tom Reeves,&#13;
"Researching Joe McCarthy"&#13;
Monday, Oct. 16 Lee Thayer,&#13;
"Communication and Social&#13;
Sciences"&#13;
Monday, Oct. 23 John Harbeson,&#13;
"The Middle-East: After Camp&#13;
David"&#13;
Monday, Oct. 30 Rep. Les Aspin,&#13;
"What the Congressional&#13;
Oversight Committee Thinks&#13;
About What the Russians Are&#13;
Thinking" (date tentative)&#13;
Suggestions for Social Science&#13;
Roundtable speakers should be&#13;
given to the Co-Chairpersons,&#13;
Oliver Hayward (CL 377, Ext.&#13;
2697) or Ken Hoover (GR 302&#13;
Ext. 2518).&#13;
The Ranger will print the&#13;
schedule of future programs as&#13;
soon as we get them. We have&#13;
proposed discussions on the&#13;
Mideast situation and the&#13;
relationship between Russia and&#13;
China.&#13;
ganger&#13;
Wednesday October 4,1978 vol, 7 no. 5&#13;
Roundtable Features Social Sciences&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
The Social Science Division is&#13;
sponsoring a Social Science&#13;
Roundtable: a program of&#13;
informal luncheon discussions&#13;
held every Monday beginning in&#13;
Union room 106 at 12:15 p.m.&#13;
The first meeting was this past&#13;
Monday. The programs will&#13;
begin with a 10-15 minute&#13;
discussion by the speaker&#13;
followed by questions and&#13;
informal exchange.&#13;
The purpose of the Roundtable&#13;
is to engage faculty and&#13;
students in informal discussions&#13;
of current events, research,&#13;
politics, and curricular issues.&#13;
Social Science is defined broadly&#13;
for these purposes to include a&#13;
wide range of related topics and&#13;
concerns from all parts of the&#13;
University,&#13;
In addition to faculty and&#13;
students, those presenting programs&#13;
will include local public&#13;
service personnel, visiting speakers,&#13;
politicians, scholars from&#13;
other universities, administrators,&#13;
representatives of community&#13;
groups, and just about&#13;
anyone else who has something&#13;
relevant to say to those at&#13;
Parkside who share an interest in&#13;
the study of society.&#13;
The first five speakers are:&#13;
Theft and Vandalism&#13;
Tops $14,000&#13;
by Jeff Stevens&#13;
It costs a pretty penny to make&#13;
up for theft and vandalism at&#13;
Parkside. Last year, the amount&#13;
cleared $14,000 according to&#13;
Ron Brinkman, head of security,&#13;
and Bill Niebuhr, director of the&#13;
Union. Brinkman said, "The total&#13;
cost of all offenses on the&#13;
campus last year, excluding any&#13;
committed in the Union, was&#13;
about $9,500. This is according&#13;
to our August report. Theft made&#13;
up 95% of these offenses. Most&#13;
of this theft was of personal&#13;
properties such as purses,&#13;
wallets, and clothing. Vandalism&#13;
isn't really a problem on the&#13;
campus. I think the students&#13;
respect each others things&#13;
enough to leave them alone."&#13;
Vandalism, as well as theft, is&#13;
a problem in the Union,&#13;
however. Bill Niebuhr said, "The&#13;
cost of theft and vandalism&#13;
experienced by the Union alone&#13;
in the last year and a half was&#13;
about $5,300. The problem isn't&#13;
really bad in comparison to other&#13;
Universities, but its cost is still&#13;
quite significant."&#13;
The following is an approximated&#13;
list of stolen items and&#13;
their costs, on the campus,&#13;
according to the Security's report&#13;
of last year:&#13;
Office Equipment $1,200&#13;
(calculators, typewriters, etc.)&#13;
Cameras, TVs, Radios 700&#13;
Cash money 500&#13;
Consumables 450&#13;
Clothing 100&#13;
Household goods 850&#13;
(chairs, furniture, etc.)&#13;
Miscellaneous 5,700&#13;
All of this comes out to about&#13;
$8,300 in theft and then $1,200&#13;
for two burglaries committed.&#13;
Other offenses include a&#13;
strong-arm robbery, parking&#13;
meters ripped off and stolen, and&#13;
a vending machine theft.&#13;
The parking meters were&#13;
returned and so were some of the&#13;
offenders. The vending machines&#13;
thieves were caught red-handed.&#13;
About $1,000 worth of the $9,500&#13;
items stolen were recovered but&#13;
the loss was still substantial.&#13;
Brinkman added, "If the&#13;
people would mark their&#13;
properties in some way it would&#13;
make things much easier. We&#13;
have a engraving tool, so anyone&#13;
that wants anything marked can&#13;
bring it to the security office and&#13;
we'll mark it for them."&#13;
The Ranger also received a&#13;
copy of the Union's most recent&#13;
report from Bill Niebuhr. The&#13;
following is a list of all damaged&#13;
and stolen items with their&#13;
estimated costs of repair and/or&#13;
replacement, in the Union:&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
Modern Industry&#13;
Building Planned&#13;
Apparent low bids for&#13;
construction of a $1.2 million&#13;
Modern Industry Building at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
were revealed Thursday (Sept.&#13;
28) when sealed bids were&#13;
opened by the state Bureau of&#13;
Facilities Management in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Apparent low bidders are:&#13;
General Construction — Riley&#13;
Construction of Kenosha with a&#13;
base bid of $636,155;&#13;
Plumbing - Kaelber Plumbing&#13;
and Heating of Kenosha with a&#13;
base bid of $64,441;&#13;
Heating, ventilating and air&#13;
conditioning — Kaelber Plumbing&#13;
and Heating of Kenosha with&#13;
a base bid of $128,184,&#13;
Electrical — The Magaw Co.,&#13;
Sturtevant, with a base bid of&#13;
$105,955.&#13;
Bids will be reviewed by the&#13;
state before being formally&#13;
awarded.&#13;
The one-story structure, which&#13;
will connect to the west end of&#13;
the Classroom Building, will&#13;
house specialized space for&#13;
UW-Parkside's business and&#13;
administrative science and&#13;
engineering technology programs.&#13;
Completion of construction&#13;
and occupancy is anticipated&#13;
by August, 1979.&#13;
The building, with 16,225&#13;
assignable square feet, will&#13;
contain four major instructional&#13;
areas:&#13;
A production laboratory,&#13;
which will closely resemble&#13;
production areas of modern&#13;
manufacturing plants, where&#13;
various kinds of industrial&#13;
production lines and processes&#13;
will be set up, tested and&#13;
operated;&#13;
a case discussion laboratory,&#13;
with a terrraced floor auditorium&#13;
and projection booth, and a&#13;
demonstration area to accommodate&#13;
major pieces of&#13;
equipment and heavy display&#13;
items, which can be separated by&#13;
moveable partitions from the&#13;
lab;&#13;
a multi-purpose laboratory,&#13;
smaller than the case discussion&#13;
lab, which will provide a number&#13;
of stations where students can&#13;
obtain "hands on" experience in&#13;
various types of industrial testing&#13;
and inspection;&#13;
and, a graphics and design&#13;
laboratory for courses in&#13;
engineering drawing and design&#13;
and graphic presentation, including&#13;
a small reference library&#13;
and printing room.&#13;
The exterior of the new&#13;
building will be complementary&#13;
to the existing campus buildings&#13;
with skylights in the corridorsproviding&#13;
natural lighting similar&#13;
to the effect in other campus&#13;
common areas. Architect/engineer&#13;
for the project is&#13;
Wilson-Haney Associates, Inc. of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
jmoxe-in of maaison last Sunday. Not a policeman in sif &#13;
Wednesday October 4,1978 ganger&#13;
New Faces&#13;
Campus&#13;
To The Editor ...&#13;
Franks Defended&#13;
He has also been a researcher in&#13;
of New York at Binghamton and&#13;
received his MA from Arizona&#13;
Physical Oceanography at the&#13;
Institute of Marine Science of&#13;
the University of Maine.&#13;
Some of his hobbies include&#13;
camping, fishing, backpacking,&#13;
and jogging. He hopes to learn&#13;
how to cross country ski and is&#13;
looking forward to living in&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
Stephen Stuckwich&#13;
by Mollie Clarke&#13;
Students studying mathematics&#13;
under Professor Stephen F.&#13;
Stuckwich will undoubtedly find&#13;
themselves struggling through&#13;
"lots of homework." Professor&#13;
Stuckwisch believes mathematics&#13;
teachers should not only&#13;
present general theories for&#13;
understanding principles but use&#13;
several examples to illustrate the&#13;
theories. He also added that&#13;
math is a good background to&#13;
teach people how t&lt; hink&#13;
logically."&#13;
Professor Stuckwich received&#13;
his BA from the State University&#13;
State University. He is currently&#13;
completing his Ph.D. at Arizona&#13;
State. While studying at Arizona&#13;
he was a graduate teaching&#13;
assistant and research assistant.&#13;
As research assistant, Stuckwich&#13;
has worked on several projects,&#13;
including computer programs&#13;
dealing with geometric Hesign.&#13;
Peter Seybold&#13;
— Rob Gardner—&#13;
Peter Seybold is a Professor of&#13;
Sociology here at Parkside. He's&#13;
teaching Political Sociology this&#13;
semester and a class in Social&#13;
Stratification next semester.&#13;
Hailing from North Plainfield,&#13;
N.J., Prof. Seybold did his&#13;
undergraduate study at the&#13;
University of Bridgeport, Bridgeport,&#13;
Conn. He then went on to&#13;
New York State University at&#13;
Stoneybrook, studying there&#13;
from 1972 to 1978. He received&#13;
his Masters Degree in 1973, and&#13;
his PhD. in March of 1978&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic year&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D-139, Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Mike Murphy Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan General Manager&#13;
Tom Cooper Marketing Advisor&#13;
John Stewart News Editor&#13;
Sue Stevens Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Sports Editor&#13;
Dave Cramer Sports Editor&#13;
Kim Putman Copy Editor&#13;
Chris Miller Ad Manager&#13;
Nancy Szymanski Circulation Manager&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Laura Bianco, Carolyn Bresciano, Cathy Brownlee, Mollie&#13;
Clarke, Pete Cramer, Tom Fervoy, Rob Gardner, Krlsti&#13;
Honch, Thomas Jenn, Nicki Kroll, Janene Liecroci, Phil&#13;
Marry, Kathy Peters, Sue Salituro, Jeff Stevens, Lester&#13;
Thompson and Larry Weaver. \&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
Gary Adelson, Susan Caldwell, Denise D'Acquisto, Carlyn&#13;
Davis, Jim Etteldorf, Rob Gardner, Mike Holmdohl, Cindy&#13;
Mason, Julie Orth, Tony Raymond and Brian Taggart.&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig Dvorak, Rob Miller and Matthew Poliakon.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Cramer and Dawn Thomas.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted for publication if they&#13;
are typewritten, double spaced with one inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be Included&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and refuse&#13;
publication to leters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All material must be received by Thursday noon for&#13;
publication on the following Wednesday.&#13;
Prof. Seybold has the honor of&#13;
initiating a course in Political&#13;
Sociology here at Parkside. He&#13;
hopes to start a course in&#13;
Contemporary Sociological&#13;
Theory in the upcoming&#13;
semester.&#13;
A bachelor, Prof. Seybold&#13;
states that he spent almost all of&#13;
his life on the eastern seaboard;&#13;
this is his first trip to the&#13;
midwest. He enjoys the people&#13;
and is thoughly impressed with&#13;
the scenic beauty of the&#13;
Wisconsin country side.&#13;
An avid basketball fan, Prof.&#13;
Seybold can be found spending&#13;
his off hours on the courts&#13;
provided here at the University.&#13;
Good body, good mind.&#13;
When asked about his plans&#13;
for the future, the Prof, said he&#13;
would like to try to start classes&#13;
in Social Change, Class Structure&#13;
in the United States, Public&#13;
Service Administration and&#13;
Democracy and the Relation of&#13;
Third World Countries to the&#13;
U.S.&#13;
Surely everyone will .make&#13;
Prof. Seybold feel welcome here&#13;
at Parkside, and may his stay be&#13;
a profitable one for teacher and&#13;
student alike.&#13;
I could not help but be rather&#13;
amused upon reading the article&#13;
entitled "Fickle Franks" which&#13;
appeared in the September 6,&#13;
1978, edition of your campus&#13;
newspaper.&#13;
I feel that I should reply to you&#13;
concerning the article to clarify&#13;
some comments that are rather&#13;
distorted. The graphic description&#13;
of the contents of wieners is&#13;
hardly an accurate description of&#13;
wieners or of their process of&#13;
manufacture.&#13;
The USDA requires that all&#13;
ingredients for any processed&#13;
meat product appear on the&#13;
product label in decreasing&#13;
sequence of amount. OSCAR&#13;
MAYER WIENERS contain the&#13;
following: Pork, water, beef, salt,&#13;
corn syrup, dextrose, flavoring&#13;
(spices), sodium ascorbate and&#13;
sodium nitrite. The pork and&#13;
beef are selected skeletal cuts of&#13;
meat attached to the bone, and&#13;
not "bits" that were accidentally&#13;
attached to large pieces of fat.&#13;
Water is an ingredient, and is for&#13;
the purpose of providing a liquid&#13;
source to grind and chop the&#13;
meat. Salt, corn syrup, detrose&#13;
(sugar) and flavorings are all&#13;
used to provide additional&#13;
seasoning to the meat, and to&#13;
enhance the flavor of the meat.&#13;
Sodium ascorbate is Vitamin C&#13;
and is used for color retention,&#13;
and sodium nitrite is used as a&#13;
curing and preservative agent&#13;
The USDA requires the&#13;
ingredient listing for consumer&#13;
protection, and consumers&#13;
should be aware of any food&#13;
product packaging and product&#13;
labels. Ingredients such as soy,&#13;
dried milk, pork jowls or pork&#13;
salivary glands must appear in&#13;
the ingredients statement. It js&#13;
true that some franks contain&#13;
these ingredients, but it is the&#13;
consumer's choice to purchase&#13;
these products or not. Choicegrade&#13;
cattle are not used for the&#13;
manufacture of sausage because&#13;
the meat has a higher fat content&#13;
than commercial grade beef&#13;
(cow meat). Nitrites are used in&#13;
extremely small quantities, and&#13;
the amount of nitrite in the body&#13;
from processed meats is only&#13;
2%.&#13;
I feel the article could have&#13;
been more effective if the author&#13;
dwelt more on product labeling&#13;
and how consumers should be&#13;
more aware of what products&#13;
they purchase, and that they DO&#13;
have a choice in the product&#13;
quality in the products they&#13;
purchase.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
John H. Little&#13;
District Sales Manager —&#13;
Food Service&#13;
OSCAR MAYER &amp; CO.,&#13;
New Berlin, Wl.&#13;
(414) 784-0882&#13;
PSGA&#13;
by Mary Braun&#13;
Well, it is that time of year&#13;
again. Time to begin preparations&#13;
for the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Elections. In case&#13;
you are wondering why the&#13;
PSGA is having elections so&#13;
soon, let me explain. Although&#13;
each Senator and committee&#13;
member has a full one year term,&#13;
half of the Senators are elected&#13;
in the Spring elections and half&#13;
are elected in the Fall elections.&#13;
There is a total of nine Senate&#13;
Divisional Seats open this&#13;
election. These seats are:&#13;
Engineering Science, Fine Arts,&#13;
Humanities, Labor Economics,&#13;
Management Science, Social&#13;
Science, Science, and two&#13;
Undeclared Major seats. Besides&#13;
the Senate seats, we have a total&#13;
of five segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocation Committee seats&#13;
open.&#13;
How does a student get on one&#13;
of these seats? Well, it is fairly&#13;
simple. All you have to do is sign&#13;
out a petition form in the PSGA&#13;
office, WLLC. You need to get 25&#13;
signatures from your division for&#13;
the Senate Seats, and 25 general&#13;
signatures for the SUFAC seats. If&#13;
you are carrying at least six&#13;
credits, and are a living human&#13;
being, turn in your petition(s) at&#13;
least two Fridays before the&#13;
elections and we will put your&#13;
name on the ballot. The rest is up&#13;
to the students and your&#13;
campaign manager.&#13;
We at the PSGA office, would&#13;
really like to have a competitive&#13;
fall election. We urge students to&#13;
run, help out with the election,&#13;
or at least vote. The elections&#13;
will be held October 25th and&#13;
26th. See you at the polls!&#13;
P"&#13;
Ce W f&#13;
°&#13;
r tU Wd)&#13;
C«»J»yriGMT © /&gt;70 MAT-rKe* fUiAKoN &#13;
Wednesday October 4,1978&#13;
continued fr0m pg&lt; j&#13;
Theft and Vandalism&#13;
REPAIR AND/OR&#13;
UNION SQUARE- REPLACEMENT iSS^«Kr&#13;
ta - s.*c:r ir&#13;
s—&#13;
14 light bulbs stolen from the booth lights&#13;
Canvas curtain for grill window cut in two places&#13;
Union Square letters stolen from entrap wa&#13;
1 thermostate stolen '&#13;
BAZAAR:&#13;
2SS ITstolen alo"swith * &gt;&lt; isSf&#13;
at St&#13;
°'&#13;
e&#13;
" from 5etti&#13;
"S around planters,&#13;
other seats marked up with ink and pencil&#13;
2Sta&#13;
.&#13;
chairs bad,V turned when someone&#13;
started a fire in the chairs&#13;
1 magenta chair was stolen&#13;
1 small table was broken off at the base center&#13;
1 large table had the top broken off then stolen&#13;
6 moodglo bulbs were stolen from Theatre Marquee&#13;
12 plants stolen&#13;
1 - 6 foot round orange carpet&#13;
1 letter holder assembly for Information Desk&#13;
1 Philodendron plant&#13;
1 sign with Union policy and hours, North Entrance&#13;
LI and LOUNGE AREAS:&#13;
3 black velvet foam chairs stolen&#13;
4 molded potato chip seats stolen, 2 others have&#13;
holes dug in them&#13;
1 small table was broken off at the base center&#13;
Slats in Venetian blinds in the dining room are&#13;
being twisted and bent&#13;
A fire was started in the trash receptacle in the&#13;
women's wash room - cleaning&#13;
1 blue wing chair stolen&#13;
Inside doors of passenger elevator are being scratched&#13;
and marked with obscene words&#13;
3 aluminum tri-pods stolen from concourse after an&#13;
event&#13;
A large hole broken in wallboard in Ping Pong Room&#13;
Toilet tissue holder pulled loose from partition&#13;
in the men's room&#13;
ganger&#13;
3.88&#13;
15,50&#13;
3.88&#13;
143.20&#13;
9.66&#13;
45.00&#13;
235.84&#13;
84.52&#13;
213.00&#13;
190.00&#13;
723.40&#13;
361.70&#13;
117.62&#13;
237.75&#13;
8.10&#13;
45.00&#13;
36.00&#13;
22.95&#13;
1.50&#13;
33.48&#13;
255.00&#13;
1,813.80&#13;
127.00&#13;
25.00&#13;
6.00 V&#13;
164.65&#13;
75.00&#13;
89.25&#13;
29.54&#13;
Holes kicked in wallboard on bowling approach, Lane 8&#13;
2 large holes in the ceiling tile above the bowling&#13;
lanes on Lane 1. The other on Lane 7 about 10 feet&#13;
from the approach. A bowling ball went through the&#13;
ceiling.&#13;
Ping Pong tables have been broken, legs bent out of&#13;
shape and arms of chairs broken off of game tables&#13;
I oosball machine playing top cracked&#13;
OTHER AREAS:&#13;
Writing on furniture such as table tops, upholstered&#13;
seats, etc. - cleaning&#13;
LIGHT BULB THEFTS:&#13;
Total of 61 bulbs stolen&#13;
Labor to replace bulbs&#13;
7.75&#13;
30.62&#13;
31.00&#13;
75.00&#13;
30.00&#13;
26.87&#13;
31.00&#13;
GRAND TOTAL $5,353.34&#13;
3.88&#13;
'if the offense is&#13;
very major...&#13;
charges will&#13;
be pressed'&#13;
Note:'Any stolen or damaged&#13;
dishes or silverware are not&#13;
included in either report.&#13;
As you can see, there are a&#13;
many things being solen and/or&#13;
wrecked. It's either personal&#13;
property or something the&#13;
students end up paying for by&#13;
increased tuition.&#13;
There are certain measures&#13;
being taken by the Union and&#13;
Security to alleviate these&#13;
problems. The Union is&#13;
purchasing heavier, bulkier&#13;
furniture, making it harder to&#13;
steal, and planting the plants in&#13;
the planters so that theft would&#13;
include quite a mess. There is&#13;
also 24-hour coverage by&#13;
Security, but they can't be&#13;
everywhere all of the time.&#13;
"If the offenders are caught,&#13;
they will, in some cases, be given&#13;
the opportunity to pay for the&#13;
item they wrecked or stole, but if&#13;
the offense is very major or it's a&#13;
second offense, charges will be&#13;
pressed," said Niebuhr.&#13;
Both Niebuhr and Brinkman&#13;
said they know there are some&#13;
items at Parkside Village, but&#13;
unless someone calls them and&#13;
tells them, they can't get a&#13;
search warrant to recover the&#13;
items. "Even if we could recover&#13;
them," said Brinkman, "we&#13;
wouldn't necessarily catch the&#13;
offenders. Many times the&#13;
person living in the apartment&#13;
just moved in and isn't aware&#13;
that the item left there belonged&#13;
to Parkside."&#13;
Outsiders are also a problem.&#13;
"The vending machine thieves&#13;
weren't even enrolled in&#13;
Parkside," said Brinkman. "There&#13;
were some young kids vandalizing&#13;
and stealing things last&#13;
summer too," he also stated.&#13;
Niebuhr and Brinkman both&#13;
are doing all they can to stop the&#13;
theft and vandalism, but what's&#13;
needed is student input. If you&#13;
see anything unusual or&#13;
something which you know isn't&#13;
supposed to be happening, call&#13;
|4iebuhr or Brinkman and let&#13;
them know. They'd be happy to&#13;
check it out.&#13;
Wind Ensemble&#13;
to Perform&#13;
The Parkside Symphonic Wind&#13;
Ensemble will present its first&#13;
concert of the year on October&#13;
10, 1978 at eight o'clock p.m. in&#13;
the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Under the direction of Thomas&#13;
Dvorak, the ensemble will&#13;
perform the following pieces:&#13;
Fanfare, Pour Preceder "La Peri"&#13;
by Paul Dukas, Sinfonia V by&#13;
Timothy Broege, Suit Francaise&#13;
by Darius Milhaud, and Ye Banks&#13;
and Braes O' Bonnie Doon by&#13;
Percy Grainger as well as&#13;
selected marches.&#13;
There will be complimentary&#13;
admission taken at the door.&#13;
Retractions&#13;
In the New Faces Department&#13;
of our third issue, Ranger&#13;
reported that Miss Virginia Slater&#13;
of the Dramatic Arts Department&#13;
received her Ph.D. from&#13;
UW-Madison in 1974. This was&#13;
inaccurate. She does not have&#13;
her Ph.D. but has been working&#13;
toward it.&#13;
In our last issue Ranger stated&#13;
in its report of the September&#13;
19th Faculty Senate Meeting that&#13;
Chancellor Guskin was initiating&#13;
a reduced tuition program for&#13;
Lake County students attending&#13;
Parkside. This was also inaccurjate.&#13;
Chancellor Guskin was&#13;
merely describing to the Senate&#13;
several proposals for reduced&#13;
tuition for Illinois students that&#13;
had been discussed by the Board&#13;
of Regents and other University&#13;
System directors.&#13;
Miller time&#13;
H you've got the time,&#13;
we've got the beer.&#13;
Distributed by Triangle Wholesale Beer Co.&#13;
Kenosha . 657-5148 &#13;
Wednesday October 4,1978 ganger&#13;
Wisconsin Artist&#13;
Features Ameche&#13;
Don Ameche, famous screen&#13;
actor from the 1930's will be&#13;
featured in the film classic, "The&#13;
Story of Alexander Graham Bell,"&#13;
on Wednesday, October 4 at&#13;
7:00 p.m. in the Golden Rondelle&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Starring with Ameche are&#13;
Loretta Young and Henry Fonda,&#13;
in a film that captures the&#13;
emotion and excitement involved&#13;
with the invention of the&#13;
telephone. Ameche, who was&#13;
born in Kenosha, is one of&#13;
several Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
celebrities who are featured in&#13;
the "Wisconsin Artists on Film"&#13;
series which is being offered at&#13;
the Rondelle this fall.&#13;
Other films in the series are&#13;
"Citizen Kane" with Orson&#13;
Welles, "Woman of the Year"&#13;
featuring Spencer Tracy and&#13;
Katherine Hepburn and "The&#13;
Best Years of Our Lives" with&#13;
Fredric March.&#13;
Ljodte^^eatm^js^still&#13;
available for the October 4 film,&#13;
"The Story of Alexander Graham&#13;
Bell" and reservations can be&#13;
made by calling the Rondelle at&#13;
554-2154. For more information&#13;
on the dates of the other films in&#13;
the "Wisconsin Artists on Film"&#13;
series, contact the Rondelle.&#13;
Film at&#13;
Rondelle&#13;
The next vacation program&#13;
will begin at the Golden&#13;
Rondelle on October 6 and take&#13;
you on a guided film tour of&#13;
Scandinavia. Starting at 7:00&#13;
p.m., Travel Fun — Scandinavia&#13;
will give you a close-up look at&#13;
many of the spectacular sights of&#13;
this beautiful and exciting area&#13;
of the world.&#13;
The countries that will be&#13;
visited include Norway, Finland,&#13;
Denmark and Sweden. This film&#13;
trip captures the diverse&#13;
sceneries found in the mountains,&#13;
wildlife and lakes, highlights&#13;
the always-popular&#13;
capitals and main cities and then&#13;
finally explores the peaceful&#13;
magnificance of the Scandinavian&#13;
countryside.&#13;
Reservations for this free&#13;
program are limited and should&#13;
be made by calling the Rondelle&#13;
at 554-2154.&#13;
Theatre&#13;
Workshop&#13;
The Wisconsin Community&#13;
Theatre Association is sponsoring&#13;
a statewide theatre workshop&#13;
on October 7-8. The two-day&#13;
gathering will be held at the&#13;
Fond du Lac Holiday Inn and is&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Workshop sessions will deal&#13;
with acting, directing, lighting,&#13;
and other aspects of theatre.&#13;
Distinguished experts in the&#13;
theatre field are slated for each&#13;
session. They include Robert&#13;
Birch, Director of Rochester&#13;
(Minnesota) Community Theatre&#13;
on Acting; Dr. Gloria Link&#13;
(UW-Oshkosh) on Directing; and&#13;
David del Coletti (UW-Green&#13;
Bay) on Technical/Lighting.&#13;
These workshops will be held all&#13;
day Saturday.&#13;
In addition to the Saturday&#13;
sessions, mini-workshops will be&#13;
held on Sunday to discuss such&#13;
subjects as "How to be a Stage&#13;
Manager" and "The Art of&#13;
Make-up." There will also be an&#13;
opportunity for the various&#13;
groups to share experiences and&#13;
describe how they have solved&#13;
their production problems.&#13;
Rounding out the program will&#13;
be a dinner and a cabaret&#13;
performance on Saturday evening.&#13;
&#13;
The Community Theatre&#13;
Workshop is open to the public.&#13;
Anyone interested in attending&#13;
can obtain further information&#13;
on registration by writing Jim&#13;
Nintzel, Business Manager, Fond&#13;
du Lac Community Theatre, P.O.&#13;
Box 855, Fond du Lac, Wl 54935.&#13;
PAB COFFEEHOUSE PRESENTS&#13;
DAVE PARKER&#13;
THURSDAY OCT. 5 1:00 p.m.&#13;
UNION 104-106&#13;
FREE ADMISSION&#13;
WINE S ERVED&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE'S NEXT PRESENTATION&#13;
JOHN STIERNBURG OCT. 18&#13;
Pre Med Club&#13;
Preparing Future Doctors&#13;
— Mollie Clarke—&#13;
One of the most important&#13;
clubs students can join at school&#13;
is Parkside's Pre-Med Club. By&#13;
attending the "facts of life"&#13;
lecture during the fall registration&#13;
freshmen and new Pre-Med&#13;
students can become familiar&#13;
with the organization's main&#13;
objectives. According to Mark&#13;
DeCheck, president of the club,&#13;
these objectives are to teach&#13;
students what they have to do to&#13;
enter medical schools and to&#13;
help them meet their goals.&#13;
Students are also informed about&#13;
upcoming entrance exams.&#13;
Some activities of the Pre-Med&#13;
Club include touring medical&#13;
facilities and listening to guest&#13;
speakers from various medical&#13;
schools. Last week, for instance,&#13;
Dr. Sheldon Siegel from the&#13;
Illinois School of Optometry in&#13;
Chicago, spoke at Parkside. Also&#13;
on September 9th the PreMed&#13;
Club toured the new&#13;
addition of the Madison&#13;
University Hospital.&#13;
Upcoming events for this year&#13;
include a tour of the new&#13;
medical building at Marquette&#13;
during spring break. There will&#13;
also be a guest speaker coming&#13;
to Parkside on November 2 to&#13;
talk about dental Schools.&#13;
Mark DeCheck commented&#13;
that this year an "attempt is&#13;
being made to select speakers in&#13;
the areas of optometry, podiatry,&#13;
dentistry and medicine."&#13;
Mark emphasized the fact that&#13;
anyone can come to the&#13;
meetings. Student's having questions&#13;
may call him at 639-7927&#13;
(Racine) or contact Professor&#13;
A.M. Williams (Greenquist 140).&#13;
The success of Parkside's&#13;
Pre-Med Club is clearly evident&#13;
by the fact that it has existed for&#13;
10 years. Currently there are 120&#13;
members.&#13;
The Turning Point&#13;
Women in the Arts,Oct. 12-15&#13;
The Turning Point is the title&#13;
of Wisconsin Women in the Arts'&#13;
Fifth Annual Conference to be&#13;
held in Milwaukee, October&#13;
12-15, 1978. The Turning Point&#13;
marks the growth of Wisconsin&#13;
Women in the Arts from a small&#13;
steering committee in 1973 into&#13;
a major interdisciplinary arts&#13;
organization in 1978. The&#13;
Turning Point indicates a change&#13;
in WWIA from concern for&#13;
organizational growth to concern&#13;
for arts outreach and&#13;
audience development in cooperation&#13;
with other Midwest&#13;
arts organizations.&#13;
On October 12, the annual&#13;
conference will open with a&#13;
piano concert by internationally&#13;
known pianist Rebecca Penneys&#13;
at the recently renovated Pabst&#13;
Theater in Milwaukee. The&#13;
Penneys concert is co-sponsored&#13;
by the Wisconsin Conservatory&#13;
of Music. In addition to winning&#13;
the Special Critics' Prize at the&#13;
7th International Chopin Piano&#13;
Competition in Warsaw, Penneys&#13;
has played with the Los Angeles&#13;
Philharmonic and the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony Orchestra.&#13;
In addition to many workshops&#13;
and performances by&#13;
Wisconsin artists, the conference&#13;
will feature two keynote&#13;
speakers of national stature. On&#13;
October 13, Alice Neel will&#13;
present a slide/lecture entitled&#13;
"Fifty Years of Art". New York&#13;
based artist, Alice Neel, age 78,&#13;
had a retrospective show of her&#13;
work at the Whitney Museum of&#13;
American Art three years ago.&#13;
Her work reflects 25 years of life&#13;
in Harlem; the off-beat poor and&#13;
noted rich; the unknowns and&#13;
the neighbors next door; the&#13;
radicals of the 60's.&#13;
Adrienne Rich will deliver a&#13;
poetry reading and commentary&#13;
on October 14. Rich is both a&#13;
poet and prose writer with her&#13;
most noted books being: Diving&#13;
in to the Wreck-Poems 7977-&#13;
1972, Snapshots of a Daughterin-Law,&#13;
The Will to Change, Of&#13;
Woman Born: Motherhood as&#13;
Experience and Institution, and&#13;
her new book The Dream of a&#13;
Common Language. In addition,&#13;
Adrienne Rich is recipient of&#13;
numerous awards, such as, the&#13;
Ridgely Torrence Memorial&#13;
Award of the Poetry Society of&#13;
America, co-winner of the&#13;
National Book Awards (1972),&#13;
two Guggenheim fellowships, a&#13;
grant from the National Institute&#13;
of Arts and Letters, and an Amy&#13;
Lowell Traveling Fellowship.&#13;
The majority of the conference&#13;
will be held at the dreater&#13;
Milwaukee YWCA on N. Jackson&#13;
Street in downtown Milwaukee.&#13;
Additional conference inforr&#13;
^mation is available from&#13;
Wisconsin Women in the Arts,&#13;
Conference, 728 Lowell Hall, 610&#13;
Langdon Street, Madison, Wl&#13;
53702. Registration by mail ends&#13;
September 28. Registration will&#13;
be set-up during the conference&#13;
at the YWCA.&#13;
TERRACE ROOM&#13;
*36 LAKE AVE&#13;
RACINE&#13;
|iiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiui&#13;
UW-PLATTEVILLE W INTER INT ERIM STUDY TO URS&#13;
•TALY AND SWITZERLAND: Art, architecture, -and&#13;
it0&#13;
'&#13;
y&#13;
'&#13;
n Rome&#13;
' Florence, Venice, and Zurich December&#13;
47, 1978 to January 10, 1979 - $739&#13;
presents: "MOXTAGIf WED&#13;
"MATRIX"&#13;
entertainment 9 p.m.&#13;
"JAM SO GOOD"&#13;
THUR&#13;
SAT&#13;
FRI&#13;
AUSTRIA, YUGOSLAVIA, AND GREECE: Art&#13;
chitecture, and history in Vienna, Dubrovnik, Athens,&#13;
Isle of Crete December 26, 1978 to January 9, 1979&#13;
51059&#13;
arand&#13;
&#13;
GREAT BRITAIN: Theater in London and&#13;
December 28, 1978 to January 11, 1979 - $669&#13;
For information, contact:&#13;
Dr Peter DiMeglio&#13;
Institute of International Studies&#13;
'niversity of Wisdonsin-Platteville&#13;
Platteville, Wisconsin 53818&#13;
or telephone (608) 342-1727&#13;
Deadlme October 27, 1978&#13;
Stratford &#13;
Wednesday October 4,1978 &lt;Ranger&#13;
Parkside Trips Planned&#13;
Applications are now being&#13;
accepted for a one-week trip in&#13;
January to Acapulco, Mexico,&#13;
the sponsoring UW-Parkside&#13;
Campus Travel Center has&#13;
announced.&#13;
Those Eligible for the trip&#13;
include alumni of UW-Parkside,&#13;
members of organizations affiliated&#13;
with UW-P, students and&#13;
staff.&#13;
The trip will depart Chicago&#13;
O'Hare the morning of Jan. 2,&#13;
arrive that afternoon in&#13;
Acapulco, and return to Chicago&#13;
the evening of Jan. 9. Travel will&#13;
be 0n a regularly scheduled&#13;
Braniff Airlines flight.&#13;
The trip includes seven nights&#13;
lodging in the luxury class&#13;
Holiday Inn Acapulco, the&#13;
distinctive circular 28-story&#13;
beachfront hotel on popular&#13;
Paradise Beach, within walking&#13;
distance of many of Acapulco's&#13;
finest shops, restaurants and&#13;
discos.&#13;
Also included in the cost of&#13;
the trip is a full American&#13;
breakfast buffet daily, round trip&#13;
ground transfers in Acapulco&#13;
including porterage of luggage at&#13;
the airport and hotel, group&#13;
escort service throughout the&#13;
trip and a welcoming party.&#13;
Such popular Acapulco options&#13;
as the La Quebrada cliff&#13;
divers, bull fights, Acapulco Bay&#13;
cruises and day-long trips to&#13;
Taxco, the silver city, and&#13;
Mexico City are available at extra&#13;
charge.&#13;
Complete cost of the trip is&#13;
$439 per person for twin&#13;
occupancy, $389 for triple&#13;
occupancy and $359 for quad&#13;
occupancy. A limited number of&#13;
single rooms are available at&#13;
extra cost.&#13;
Noting that Mexico is girding&#13;
for another record tourist season,&#13;
with rooms at ocean resort cities&#13;
already in short supply, William&#13;
Niebuhr, UW-P Union Director,&#13;
said that the trip is limited to the&#13;
first 50 applicants and urged&#13;
those who are interested to act&#13;
quickly.&#13;
Niebuhr said that other trips&#13;
for the 1978-79 school year&#13;
which are being finalized&#13;
include a Jan. 2-7 ski trip to&#13;
Jackson Hole, Wyoming, via bus&#13;
or Amtrak; a one-week March&#13;
trip to Daytona Beach, Florida,&#13;
via bus or plane; a Kentucky&#13;
Derby weekend in May via bus;&#13;
and a two-week trip to Spain,&#13;
Portugal or Hawaii in late May&#13;
and early July.&#13;
Information about all travel&#13;
programs, including questions of&#13;
eligibility, should be directed to&#13;
Niebuhr in the UW-P Union,&#13;
553-2200.&#13;
by Rob Gardner&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
announced, that on Sat. Oct.&#13;
7th, a well known Madison&#13;
group, "FOUR CHAIRS NO&#13;
WAITING," will play for the first&#13;
time in this area.&#13;
This six member band has&#13;
been packing them in all around&#13;
Madison for over a year. Lead&#13;
vocalist and pianist Lynette&#13;
Marguiles is the founder of the&#13;
group and has composed the&#13;
bands original material.&#13;
Drummer Michael Weiss has&#13;
played drums for the past twelve&#13;
years in a variety of playing&#13;
situations; participating in&#13;
symphonic band, orchestra,&#13;
percussion ensemble, jazz ensemble,&#13;
and in a variety of&#13;
professional small groups.&#13;
Ira Sussman is a ten year&#13;
veteran of bass guitar and has&#13;
played in jazz trios for quite&#13;
some time. He is currently under&#13;
the tutelage of one of Madison's&#13;
most respected teachers.&#13;
Formerly of the regionally&#13;
known group, "Ziggy and the&#13;
Zeu," lead guitarist Joe Wickham&#13;
has captured audiences for the&#13;
last ten years with his special&#13;
brand of rock, rythm and blues.&#13;
Playing professionally for the&#13;
last seven years, Duane Freeman&#13;
has gone the route of local funk,&#13;
soul, and progressive jazz banas.&#13;
Besides being a gifted saxophone&#13;
player he also plays flute and&#13;
percussion.&#13;
Andrew Feldman has played&#13;
harmonica in country, folk, rock,&#13;
and rythm and blues bands for&#13;
the past four years.&#13;
All in all, this sounds like a&#13;
good evening's entertainment.&#13;
Madison critics have rated "Four&#13;
Chairs No Waiting" as one of the&#13;
finest contemporary groups in&#13;
the area. Plan to see them and&#13;
experience .their own special&#13;
brand of listening pleasure.&#13;
Parkside Prof,&#13;
in Marathon&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
The Mayor Daley Marathon,&#13;
Sunday, September 24, 1978 was&#13;
a real test of endurance for&#13;
Professor Otto Bauer of the&#13;
Parkside Communications Department.&#13;
Professor Bauer is not&#13;
an experienced runner, but&#13;
tackled the Marathon for the&#13;
simple challenge of it. He was&#13;
aiming at just finishing the 26.22&#13;
mile race. His time was five&#13;
hours, five minutes. Greg&#13;
Peterson, a Parkside student,&#13;
also ran in the Marathon and&#13;
finished in three hours, fifty-nine&#13;
minutes.&#13;
The Marathon started at 10:30&#13;
a.m. from Mayor Daley Plaza&#13;
and headed south toward the&#13;
Museum of Science and Industry&#13;
The route of the race was&#13;
generally around downtown&#13;
Chicago and back to the plaza.&#13;
Waterstops were provided every&#13;
two and a half miles along the&#13;
route. Mr. Bauer made good time&#13;
during the first 16 miles of the&#13;
race, eight miles an hour, but&#13;
then his muscles seized up and&#13;
he had to cut down to a fast walk&#13;
or slow jogging pace.&#13;
Mr. Bauer thinks that with&#13;
more training he could complete&#13;
the race, next year, in four hours.&#13;
His strategy for the race was just&#13;
to keep a good, steady pabe and&#13;
avoid dehydration. This was&#13;
especially important on as hot a&#13;
day as that particular Sunday. He&#13;
has been running consistently&#13;
since October, 1975 and works&#13;
on running three miles every&#13;
other day. Before the race he had&#13;
never run more than 15 miles at&#13;
any one time. On that occasion,&#13;
he lost eight pounds because of&#13;
dehydration. This time he&#13;
finished in fair shape, considering!&#13;
&#13;
Phony Phone Calls&#13;
In the past week, several area&#13;
women b&#13;
ave reported to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
that they have received&#13;
telephone calls from persons&#13;
identifying themselves as Parkside&#13;
students taking surveys.&#13;
The Parkside Public Information&#13;
Office said today that it has&#13;
no knowledge of any telephone&#13;
surveys being conducted by any&#13;
official campus body and&#13;
suggested that area residents&#13;
exercise caution in responding to&#13;
calls from persons claiming to&#13;
represent the University and&#13;
asking personal questions.&#13;
Persons wishing to check on&#13;
the legitimacy of surveys&#13;
purported to be affiliated with&#13;
UW-P should contact the Pubic&#13;
Information Office (553-2233).&#13;
Persons reporting telephone&#13;
incidents to UW-P have said that&#13;
in some cases callers have asked&#13;
sexually explicit questions. In&#13;
another case, the caller was&#13;
reported to have said he was a&#13;
student in "the Parkside theology&#13;
department." Parkside does not&#13;
have a theology department.&#13;
Ckeerleading Clinic&#13;
Jazz ***•••**••••*••••••••••••••••••••••*••••••••••••••••&#13;
Four Chairs No Waiting&#13;
A cheerleading clinic will be&#13;
held October 28 as Parkside&#13;
begins generating its cheerleading&#13;
squad for the upcoming sport&#13;
seasons. The clinic will feature&#13;
the Marquette cheerleaders&#13;
presenting cheers and instructional&#13;
training. All interested&#13;
men and women are invited to&#13;
attend.&#13;
The clinic, five hours in&#13;
length, will allow registering&#13;
cheerleaders to become familiar&#13;
new cheers and the art of&#13;
cheerleading.&#13;
For more information concerning&#13;
time and pla i contact&#13;
Dean Pedersen at 2367.&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESENTS&#13;
A FILM/LECTURE&#13;
BY&#13;
STAN WATERMAN&#13;
INTERNATIONALLY KNOWN CINEMATOGRAPHER OF&#13;
"THE DEEP"&#13;
WEDNESDAY OCT. 1 1 8:00 p.m.CINEMA THEATRE&#13;
ADM: $1.00 UW-P STUDENTS $1.50 GENERAL&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT INFO CENTER&#13;
PAB PRESENTS&#13;
A DANCE&#13;
WITH&#13;
"FOUR CHAIRS, NO WAITING"&#13;
SATURDAY, O CT. 7 9:00 p.m.&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
1.50- UW-P 2.00-guests&#13;
ID'S REQUIRED!&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES:&#13;
994&#13;
BREAKFAST SPECIALS&#13;
DAILY-ALL SEMESTER&#13;
MONDAYS - "EARLY RIS ER" (ALIAS E GG M cPARKSIDE) PLU S HASH BROW N POTATOS&#13;
TUESDAYS - SC RAMBLED E GGS, BAC ON OR S AUSAGE, TO AST &amp; JEL LY&#13;
WEDNESDAYS - PAN CAKES (STACK OF 3) PLUS BA CON O R SAU SAGE&#13;
THURSDAYS - FR IED E GGS, BACON OR S AUSAGE, TO AST &amp; JELLY&#13;
FRIDAYS - DEE P FR IED "TEXAS STY LE" FR ENCH T OAST, PLU S BACON OR SA USAGE&#13;
UNION DINING ROOM &#13;
Wednesday October 4,1978 GANGER&#13;
New Display&#13;
in Art Gallery&#13;
An exhioit of sculpture and&#13;
collages by Milwaukee artist&#13;
Frances Cheney opened Monday,&#13;
Sept. 25, in the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery with a&#13;
public reception for the artist&#13;
from 7 to 9 p.m. Regular gallery&#13;
hours through Oct. 19 are&#13;
Monday through Thursday from&#13;
noon to 5 p.m. and Wednesday&#13;
and Thursday evenings from 7 to&#13;
10 p.m.&#13;
Ms. Cheney's sculptures use&#13;
natural materials, principally&#13;
tree branches, sometimes combined&#13;
with fiber or textiles. Dale&#13;
Kohlstedt of the UW-Parkside&#13;
art faculty comments that the&#13;
nature-orientation of her work&#13;
compliments the natural prairie&#13;
and woodland preservation&#13;
maintained in development of&#13;
the Parkside campus.&#13;
"I turned to visual art when I&#13;
was a graduate student in&#13;
theater at Madison," Cheney&#13;
says. "I later took art classes at&#13;
Waukesha and UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
My subject matter generally has&#13;
to do with my relationships.with&#13;
nature. I grew up out west in&#13;
Idaho (and) recently spent time&#13;
on Long Island Sound near a&#13;
wild bird sanctuary. This is&#13;
where the sculptures (in the&#13;
current show) came about."&#13;
Also on display are intricately&#13;
weaved necklaces encased in&#13;
glass and mounted on the wall.&#13;
The necklaces, explained Ms.&#13;
Cheney were too intricate to be&#13;
worn and were to be excepted as&#13;
artwork, subject to personal&#13;
interpretation.&#13;
Mini Movie Review •••••••••••••••&#13;
High Plains Drifter&#13;
Oh to be Clint Eastwood. To&#13;
drift the High plains at magnum&#13;
force and get dirty and harry. Oh&#13;
to bathe in a stoic expressionless&#13;
character, say three lines of&#13;
dialogue and make a million&#13;
dollars.&#13;
In reality, Eastwood is not your&#13;
typical actor satisfied to&#13;
capitalize on a mere public&#13;
image. On occasion he expands&#13;
his horizons manipulating his&#13;
medium to articulate an artistic&#13;
need.&#13;
In "High Plains Drifter"&#13;
Eastwood not only stars but&#13;
directs the film, an indication&#13;
that he is serious about his art.&#13;
Eastwood again plays a lone&#13;
stranger who enters the little&#13;
western community of Lago,&#13;
eyes a lovely maiden (Mariana&#13;
Hill), carries her off to a livery&#13;
stable and forcebly rapes her.&#13;
Fine beginning to a family film.&#13;
Actually, Eastwood has produced&#13;
an interesting, almost selfparoding&#13;
formula that more or&#13;
less works. After establishing a&#13;
successful career in a series of&#13;
bitter, violent, Sergio Leone,&#13;
spaghetti westerns as the silently&#13;
dangerous "Man with no name,"&#13;
Eastwood takes that image and&#13;
expands upon it up almost gross&#13;
satirical porportions.&#13;
"Hig h Plains Drifter" is&#13;
another in the line of Eastwood's&#13;
"violence can be entertaining"&#13;
movies. Written by Ernest&#13;
Tidyman, "Drifter" is an atypical&#13;
often clever western. Although&#13;
Eastwood has a long way to go&#13;
before achieving stature as a&#13;
director, High Plains Drifter is&#13;
not likely to slow down his&#13;
career.&#13;
vU -"u GOODA&#13;
MON - FRI&#13;
11 - 2&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFF ON ALL&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICATION.&#13;
by Rob Gardner&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Jazz Program&#13;
I had the pleasure of interviewing&#13;
the director of the Parkside&#13;
Jazz Band, Dr. Tim Bell, on&#13;
Friday morning.&#13;
Dr. Bell, who is in his fourth&#13;
year as director of the Jazz Band,&#13;
hails from Wilkes-Barre, Penn. A&#13;
graduate of North Texas State, he&#13;
has performed with such all time&#13;
greats as Duke Ellington, and&#13;
before the former President of&#13;
the United States Lyndon&#13;
Johnson. Dr. Bell seemed very&#13;
enthusiastic about the possibilities&#13;
of this years jazz band and&#13;
its perspective members.&#13;
Two full bands comprise Parksides&#13;
Jazz program, the first&#13;
being made up of mostly Music&#13;
majors and the second nonmajors.&#13;
With a total of fifty very&#13;
talented musicians, the best&#13;
turnout in the four years he has&#13;
been in charge of the Jazz Band,&#13;
Dr. Bell hopes that this year they&#13;
will be accepted into the NotreDame&#13;
National Jazz Festival.&#13;
Due to the size of this college,&#13;
which is relatively small in&#13;
comparison with most other&#13;
colleges entered last year in the&#13;
Festival, Parksides Jazz Band was&#13;
not accepted into last years&#13;
competition. We wish them all&#13;
the best during this years&#13;
competition. •&#13;
Be prepared to follow the Jazz&#13;
Band ensemble as they progress&#13;
throughout the year. A Jazz Fest&#13;
is tentatively scheduled for the&#13;
upcoming week of Sept. 25th, so&#13;
be watching the bulletin boards.&#13;
Behind the W oodshed&#13;
by Scarf O'toole&#13;
I was having lunch with my&#13;
editor the other day when he&#13;
ppinted out to me that there was&#13;
an important meeting he&lt;had to&#13;
attend He asked me what time it&#13;
was, but that morning I had&#13;
pawned my wristwatch for a&#13;
mysterious brown paper bag. In&#13;
fact, that was my lunch.&#13;
He turned to the clock which&#13;
hung like father time eagerly&#13;
ticking off the minutes of the&#13;
busy academic diiy. The clock&#13;
said 11:30, and my editor rushed&#13;
off to his meeting.&#13;
I managed to crawl back to the&#13;
office and was greeted by the&#13;
,telephone ringing madly off the&#13;
hook. It was the familiar ring&#13;
which my editor uses when he is&#13;
disgusted, rejected, or perhaps a&#13;
bit perturbed. "What time did&#13;
that clock say when I left you?",&#13;
he asked with the rasp off his&#13;
throat that reminded me of a&#13;
drill sargeant I used to know.&#13;
"You know, chief, that's a&#13;
really difficult question," I&#13;
answered. "You see, I never&#13;
really learned the value of time.&#13;
When we were studying it in&#13;
school I was daydreaming about&#13;
Maryalice Jones, the heart-throb&#13;
of the third grade at old Jim&#13;
Beam Grade School. But I do&#13;
know enough to know that the&#13;
clocks around here leave me&#13;
severly confused."&#13;
Some investigation left me&#13;
with a shocking revelation which&#13;
I'm sure will change all of our&#13;
lives forever.&#13;
The reason why Parkside's&#13;
• mi cm Mom: than usi MAIM&#13;
_VC~' zyiutuitm Leaf&#13;
XVc offer I"R1:h individual&#13;
consultations for:&#13;
• I lair styling&#13;
• Conditioning&#13;
• Makeup Treatment&#13;
I lours:&#13;
9 to 9 Daily&#13;
« to 4:30 Saturday&#13;
Phone: &lt;&gt;39-1507&#13;
4&lt;)&lt;&gt;i n. Main St.&#13;
cyJututhQ Leaf&#13;
clocks are always telling&#13;
different times is because,&#13;
unbeknown to most chronologists,&#13;
there is an electric set of&#13;
time zones operating here at&#13;
UW-P.&#13;
For instance, there is Greenquist&#13;
time, in which all the&#13;
clocks tick with the authority of&#13;
a scientist trying to seduce the&#13;
experiment he is working on.&#13;
There is Union Standard time&#13;
which ticks slowly through the&#13;
first five beers, but seems to fly&#13;
when you remember that you&#13;
told the spouse that you would&#13;
be home three hours ago.&#13;
And of course, there is Comm&#13;
Arts Time which ticks ever&#13;
slowly as young thespians learn&#13;
to ply the trade of the seasoned&#13;
dramatist.&#13;
And finally, there is O'toole&#13;
Sub-standard time, which leaves&#13;
me just enough time to finish&#13;
this column before the saloons&#13;
close. Until next time. . .&#13;
r&#13;
OCCCCOCOOOOOCCOOFI&#13;
THIS SAT. I&#13;
j nw FUCKS&#13;
Walt Disneys&#13;
WINNIE&#13;
THE POOH&#13;
ADM. M.&#13;
H&#13;
8 10:00 A.M.&#13;
L&#13;
UNION CINEMA&#13;
sosccoososcooccoo &#13;
Wednesday October 4,1978&#13;
ganger&#13;
Volleyball Turns Tide&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
&amp; Dave Cramer&#13;
Co-Sports Editors&#13;
"We finally put it together as a&#13;
team and we're the team we&#13;
have to be to finish the season&#13;
very strong". Th^k was a&#13;
comment from women's volleyball&#13;
coach Linda Henderson&#13;
concerning her teams finish at&#13;
last weekends Michigan State&#13;
Invitational tournament held in&#13;
East Lansing.&#13;
Parkside was the only small&#13;
school of the ten schools at the&#13;
tournament that included such&#13;
big name schools as the&#13;
University of Michigan, Michigan&#13;
State University, the&#13;
University of Cinncinati and&#13;
more. A college is rated small or&#13;
large in women's athletics if it&#13;
has less than or more than 3,000&#13;
women enrolled as full time&#13;
students. Despite a finish of 7th&#13;
of ten the other teams at the&#13;
tournament were impressed with&#13;
the Rangers play.&#13;
Parkside ended the tournament&#13;
with an overall record of&#13;
3-3-1. Wins came against a tough&#13;
Grand Valley State team by&#13;
scores of 15-5 and 15-8. The&#13;
Rangers easily beat the University&#13;
of Cinncinati in two games,&#13;
15-6 and 15-3.&#13;
Big Ten school Michigan gave&#13;
the Rangers a little more trouble&#13;
by beating them the first game&#13;
15-13. Parkside regrouped and&#13;
the trounced Michigan in the&#13;
two remaining games by scores&#13;
of 15-5 and 15-3.&#13;
The best match as far as&#13;
Parkside was concerned was&#13;
against another big ten power,&#13;
Michigan State. The Rangers&#13;
played them twice, splitting the&#13;
first match 7-15 and 15-12. In a&#13;
rematch Parkside came up on&#13;
the short end of the stick. The&#13;
first two games were very close&#13;
with Michigan State'taking the&#13;
first game 15-12 and the Rangers&#13;
winning the second one by the&#13;
same score. The last game was a&#13;
close as the two previous games&#13;
as Parkside lost that game 15-13&#13;
on a bad call from the linesman.&#13;
Other losses in the tournament&#13;
came at the hands of Central&#13;
Michigan and Chicago Circle.&#13;
Coach Henderson also noted&#13;
that she was able to go to her&#13;
bench without losing talent.&#13;
After a match Tuesday against&#13;
UW-Whitewater and North Park&#13;
College at Parkside the Rangers&#13;
will travel to the Northern&#13;
Illinois Invitational Tournament&#13;
in DeKalb.&#13;
Tennis Splits Pair&#13;
Doug Edenhauser&#13;
&amp; Dave Cramer&#13;
Co-Sports Editors&#13;
News is starting to roll in from&#13;
the tennis courts these days as&#13;
the girls are preparing for future&#13;
meets. Kathy Thomas, the&#13;
number two singles player&#13;
sustained an injury to her&#13;
shoulder last week, which has&#13;
been diagnosed as hyperextended&#13;
elbow. Although this is a&#13;
painful injury, she should&#13;
recover quickly.&#13;
The good news continues as&#13;
Saturday the girls competed in&#13;
the Whitewater Invitational and&#13;
came away with the highest&#13;
placing Parkside has ever taken&#13;
in this particular meet. The girls&#13;
placed 4th out of 10 teams and&#13;
were just four points away from&#13;
capturing second place. Coach&#13;
Sue Tobachnik was extremely&#13;
pleased with the team's&#13;
performance, "everyone played&#13;
well and we were really up for&#13;
this tournament".&#13;
The girls also scored another&#13;
first when the doubles team&#13;
(seeded number one for the&#13;
tournament) of Kathy Logic and&#13;
Kathy Thomas, won the doubles&#13;
crown. The two Kathys got there&#13;
by receiving a bye in the first&#13;
round and then winning three&#13;
straight matches. Everyone&#13;
contributed toward the fine&#13;
showing.&#13;
Things were a little different&#13;
on Tuesday as the girls lost to&#13;
Oshkosh 5-4. Kathy Thomas&#13;
didn't play singles but did team&#13;
up with Logic to win their&#13;
doubles match to remain&#13;
undefeated. Logic won her&#13;
singles match as did Cathy&#13;
Brownlee. The other victory&#13;
came from the doubles team of&#13;
Brownlee-Kathie Feichtner.&#13;
The girls next match is&#13;
Tuesday in Waudesha against&#13;
Carroll at 3 p.m.&#13;
Chancellor's Cup at Parkside&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
&amp; Dave Cramer&#13;
Co-Sports Editors&#13;
In preparation for this&#13;
weekends upcoming Chancellors&#13;
Cup Soccer Tournament the&#13;
Rangers defeated UW-Whitewater&#13;
by a score of 4-3 last&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson pointed&#13;
out that the score was not a good&#13;
indicator as to the ability of the&#13;
Whitewater team. "The result of&#13;
the game was not quite what one&#13;
would desire. We were leading&#13;
4-1 in the second half and our&#13;
guys took it for granted that we&#13;
would beat them badly."&#13;
Parkside was ahead 2-0 at&#13;
halftime.&#13;
Whitewater scored their last 2&#13;
goals on free kicks. Henderson&#13;
added that the Rangers hit the&#13;
crossbar on three shots and one&#13;
sure goal sailed over the net on&#13;
a bad shot.&#13;
The Chancellors Cup Tournament&#13;
which will be held at&#13;
Parkside this year will have first&#13;
round games of Parkside vs.&#13;
UW-Green Bay and UW-Milwaukee&#13;
vs. UW-Platteville. These&#13;
games will be held Friday at 3&#13;
p.m. and 1 p.m. respectively. The&#13;
third place game will be at 1 p.m.&#13;
Saturday with the championship&#13;
game following at 3 p.m.&#13;
Henderson says his squad will&#13;
go into the tournament with a&#13;
great deal of optimism. The&#13;
Rangers have never beat Green&#13;
Bay and the coach feels that this&#13;
is his teams best chance to do it.&#13;
Green Bay went with Parkside on&#13;
the recent trip to Texas and came&#13;
back with the same result; no&#13;
wins in three games, being&#13;
shutout twice.&#13;
Should the Rangers make it to&#13;
the finals they will most likely&#13;
have to play a very tough&#13;
UW-Milwaukee team. Milwaukee&#13;
has seven starters returning&#13;
from last years team that posted&#13;
a 14-4 record compared to the&#13;
Rangers record of 5-8 last year.&#13;
Milwaukee was ranked seventh&#13;
in the midwest just two weeks&#13;
ago.&#13;
Frosh Takes Control&#13;
Doug Edenhauser&#13;
&amp; Dave Cramer&#13;
Co-Sports Editors&#13;
&gt;&#13;
In her first college crosscountry&#13;
meet ever, freshman&#13;
Barb Osborne ran away from the&#13;
pack and finished first by&#13;
covering the three mile course in&#13;
19:51. The other top Parkside&#13;
finisher was Chris Flahive who&#13;
finished ninth. Coach Bob&#13;
Lawson was satisfied with the&#13;
way Osborne handles herself,&#13;
"Barb looked real well, she has a&#13;
good attitude and if she runs to&#13;
her potential she should do&#13;
well."'&#13;
The other teams competing&#13;
were Marquette and Carroll.&#13;
None of the three teams could&#13;
field a squad big enough to keep&#13;
score so the girls ran for their&#13;
own benefit. The girls are&#13;
preparing themselves for the&#13;
upcoming state meet.&#13;
All Invited&#13;
Women's B-Ball Tryouts&#13;
All full-time female students&#13;
interested in playing on&#13;
Parkside's woman's varsity&#13;
basketball team are invited to an&#13;
organizational meeting to. The&#13;
meeting will be held on&#13;
Wednesday, October 4 at 6:00&#13;
p.m. in the second floor&#13;
conference room of the Physical&#13;
Education building.&#13;
Those who are unable to&#13;
Swimmers&#13;
Needed&#13;
Women and Men are needed&#13;
for both competitive swimming&#13;
and diving teams. Any student&#13;
may join the team; no prior&#13;
competitive experience is necessary.&#13;
Any student interested&#13;
should contact Coach Barb&#13;
Lawson immediately (2nd floor&#13;
PE Bldg.or 553-2257).&#13;
attend the meeting should&#13;
contact coach Sue Tobachnik at&#13;
553-2318. Practices begin October&#13;
30th with the season&#13;
beginning December 2nd and&#13;
running through the first week of&#13;
March.&#13;
PAB FILM PRESENTS&#13;
HIGH PLAINS&#13;
DRIFTER&#13;
WITH&#13;
CLINT EASTWOOD&#13;
FRIDAY, O CT. 6 8:00&#13;
SUNDAY, O CT. 8 7:30&#13;
UNION CINEMA&#13;
$1.00&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. at 62nd St.&#13;
Established in 1930&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
I From God's Country.&#13;
On Tap A t U nion S quare&#13;
ommcn&#13;
Scents&#13;
boufib * bAatnfioob % ^&#13;
• jjc&#13;
jValusuilly. £Pule-f&#13;
PRODUCTS FROM MADISON'S&#13;
' THE SOAP OPERA '&#13;
FIND US IN THE SCHOOLHOUSE SHOPPES 3516 RAPIDS CI.&#13;
• RACINE- 634-8223 BEHIND THE SOUND GALLERY &#13;
Wednesday October 4,1978&#13;
Winterim&#13;
D.C.&#13;
Students at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside have again&#13;
been invited to participate in&#13;
Washington Winterim, a threeweek&#13;
January program in the&#13;
nation's capitol. The Winterim is&#13;
a project of the Washington&#13;
Center for Learning Alternatives,&#13;
a non-profit independent organization&#13;
which arranges academic&#13;
programs with field experience&#13;
components for college&#13;
students.&#13;
UW-Parkside Coordinator of&#13;
Community Education Programs&#13;
Prof. Samuel J. Pernacciaro, who&#13;
announced the invitation, said&#13;
the program includes a comprehensive&#13;
academic program of&#13;
lectures, briefings by government&#13;
officials discussions with&#13;
top policy-makers and opportunity&#13;
to observe national decision&#13;
making at first hand.&#13;
Prof. Pernacciaro said that&#13;
UW-P students participants have&#13;
been awarded three credits for&#13;
work completed during the&#13;
three-week program. The fee of&#13;
$340 includes the Winterim&#13;
academic program, housing&#13;
accommodations in Washington&#13;
D.C., and an application fee.&#13;
Detailed information is available&#13;
from Pernacciaro at Room 344&#13;
Wyllie-Learning Center (Phone&#13;
553-2032).&#13;
Drug Clinic&#13;
Offered&#13;
The Racine Inner City Drug&#13;
Prevention Coalition in conjunction&#13;
with the Franklin Neighborhood&#13;
Association, Breakthru&#13;
Community Center, Washington&#13;
Park Center, Dr. John Bryant&#13;
Center and Racine/Kenosha&#13;
Community Action Agency, Inc.&#13;
are sponsoring an Alcohol and&#13;
Other Drug Abuse Prevention&#13;
Day. The clinic will be held&#13;
Wednesday, October 18, 1978 at&#13;
the Breakthru Community Center,&#13;
1134 Milwaukee Avenue,&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin from 9 a.m.&#13;
until 4 p.m.&#13;
The clinic will be composed of&#13;
informed persons enlightening&#13;
the community of the vital needs&#13;
of drug prevention. The clinic&#13;
will be monitored by Dr. E. Belter&#13;
of the A-Center.&#13;
A city and county proclamation&#13;
will be issued designating&#13;
October 18, 1978 as Alcohol and&#13;
Other Drug Abuse Prevention&#13;
Day. Also, the clinic will consist&#13;
of educational workshops such&#13;
as Senior Citizen-elderly health&#13;
education, community organization&#13;
workshop, church workshop-role&#13;
of church leader in the&#13;
community, Latino drug education&#13;
workshop and general rap&#13;
workshop.&#13;
Contact the Ranger or Delia&#13;
Buckley (637-8377) in Racine for&#13;
registration information.&#13;
U.S. Senator&#13;
to Speak&#13;
Harrison "Jack" Schmitt,&#13;
ex-astronaut who landed on the&#13;
moon, will be in Kenosha,&#13;
Saturday, October 8, on behalf&#13;
of Bill Petrie, 1st District&#13;
congressional candidate.&#13;
Schmitt, now a U.S. senator, will&#13;
speak at 6:30 p.m. at Parkside in&#13;
the Union Dinning Room, after a&#13;
cocktail hour and dinner,&#13;
sponsored by Mr. Petrie. Tickets&#13;
are available by calling 657-1666.&#13;
ganger&#13;
Coming&#13;
Events&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 5&#13;
Anthropology 12:00, CL 324. Discussion on Crosby.&#13;
Club Meeting Lecture, Pompeii exhibit and lots more!&#13;
Everyone Welcome.&#13;
Concert starting at 6:30 p.m. in Union Square featuring Allen&#13;
atte &amp; Freedom. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Sponsored by Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship.&#13;
Coffeehouse starting at 1 p.m. in Union Square, featuring Dave&#13;
Parker, a folk singer. Admission is free. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 6&#13;
Concert repeated at 3 p.m. in Union Square featuring Allen&#13;
Satte.&#13;
Movie "The High Plains Drifter will be shown at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre. Admission at the door is $1.00 for&#13;
Parkside students and $1.00 for guests. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Sports Men's Soccer: Wisconsin Chancellors Cup at Parkside.&#13;
UW-Platteville vs. UW-Milwaukee (1 p.m.) UW-Parkside vs.&#13;
UW-Green Bay (3 p.m.)&#13;
Women's Volleyball at Northern Illinois Invitational&#13;
Tournament.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 7&#13;
Sports Men's soccer: Wisconsin Chancellors Cup at Parkside&#13;
Third place (1 p.m.) Championship (3 p.m.)&#13;
Men's and Women's Cross Country at Lakefront Invitational,&#13;
Chicago. (10:30 a.m.)&#13;
Women's Tennis vs. UW-Whitewater and UW-Milwaukee at&#13;
Carthage (9 a.m.)&#13;
Kiddie Flicks "Winnie the Pooh" will be shown at 10 a.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre for the Parkside Community and their&#13;
families. Admission for children is $1.00. Sponsored by the&#13;
Student Life Office.&#13;
Dance starting at 9p.m. in Union Square featuring "Four chairs,&#13;
No Waiting." Admission at the door is $1.50 for Parkside&#13;
students and $2.00 for others. ID cards required at the door&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 8&#13;
Sports Golf at NAIA District 14 Tournament — River Falls.&#13;
(Through Tuesday)&#13;
Show TV series, Battlestar Galactica, to be shown every&#13;
Sunday on the Advent wall TV in Union Square.&#13;
Movie The High Plains Drifter" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Union Cinema Theatre.&#13;
Monday, Oct. 9&#13;
Round Table starting at 12:15 p.m. in Union 106. Prof. Tom&#13;
Reeves will talk on "Researching Joe McCarthy." Open to&#13;
faculty and interested students. Sponsored by Social Science&#13;
Division.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 10&#13;
Sports Volleyball at UW-Madison with UW-Oshkosh.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 11&#13;
Brown Bag Lunch starting at 12 noon in WLLC D174.&#13;
Admission is free and all are welcome. Sponsored by&#13;
Community Student Services.&#13;
Lecture Film starting at 8 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre,&#13;
featuring Stan Waterman, an underwater cinematographer.&#13;
Admission is $1.00 for Parkside students and $1.50 for others&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 12&#13;
Concert starting at 8 p.m. in Union Square featuring "Wet&#13;
Behind the Ears." Admission will be charged. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB. 1&#13;
AOE The Vienna Boys Choir will perform at 8 p.m. in the CAT&#13;
' ' s eats have been sold.&#13;
JPQO- OOOOCXMOCXKX3&#13;
u&#13;
T'TE&#13;
UVCK&#13;
DOOR&#13;
2608 21st St.&#13;
634-3810&#13;
OPEN EVENINGS&#13;
By Appoi i rment, Only&#13;
FEMALE STAFF&#13;
Hairstyling,&#13;
Facials,&#13;
Manicures&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
complete line of RK p roducts for Men&#13;
Classified Ads&#13;
CLASSIFIED AD POLICY&#13;
1. COST&#13;
A.) Student-Staff — Free (1 st 20 words)&#13;
(Each additional 10 words or less 25 cents)&#13;
B.) Non-Student, Staff $1.00 (1st 20 words)&#13;
(Each additional 10 words or less 50 cents)&#13;
C.) All additional runs $1.00&#13;
2. Every attempt will be made to publish ail submissions, but RANGER reserves the right to&#13;
omit any ad.&#13;
3. All categories will receive preference over personals.&#13;
4. Deadline Is Thursday, 10 a.m. for publication on the following Wednesday.&#13;
5. All classifieds must be submitted on the green form, available In the RANGER office&#13;
WLLCD-139.&#13;
INDEX&#13;
1. For sale&#13;
2. Wanted&#13;
3. Housing&#13;
4. Employment&#13;
5. Transportation&#13;
6. Personals&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
Reward for the return of a yellow salmon&#13;
unlimited jacket. Return to the information&#13;
desk or call 634-5898.&#13;
To Lori of 121 basic: I would like to know&#13;
you better. I really like you, I hin t k you are a&#13;
super girl. The Motors Guy.&#13;
Hockey Fanatic: You sink a Japanese&#13;
Freighter carrying purple, passionate,&#13;
pimento leaves — What next — Attack on&#13;
flashlight island? ISSY&#13;
To the person who picked up a yellow&#13;
salmon unlimited jacket: Could you return&#13;
to the lost &amp; found deck in the Union&#13;
please?&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Bass player and two violinists for&#13;
accompanyment. No pay; for a few benefit&#13;
gigs and fun I Popular music and originals.&#13;
Must be able to improvise. Call after 5:30 —&#13;
633-1210. (Other types of musicians are free&#13;
to call.)&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Magnavox cassette tape recorder — like&#13;
new. Best offer. Phone 652-7509&#13;
Shaklee products, for all your health,&#13;
beauty, and household needs. Call Scott&#13;
657-6798. Monday-Thursday after6:30.&#13;
'75 Dodge Van: Tape player, mags, carpet,&#13;
sunroof. One Owner. Call 632-6962, 4-7 p.m&#13;
weekdays or weekends.&#13;
'67 Chevy-Mallbu - 283. Must sell. Good&#13;
condition. $450. Phone 654-9277.&#13;
'76 Honda 360CB. Excellent&#13;
accessories. $750. Phone 632-8625.&#13;
with&#13;
'67 Buick Lesabre 340. Must sell. $400&#13;
Phone 632-8625.&#13;
Tropical fish (Two) Free: One Gourami and&#13;
one Catfish. Call 634-1792.&#13;
Apartment to sublet at Parkside Village.&#13;
C-Unit $88.25/mo. Available now. Call&#13;
1-414-291-9577.&#13;
•••••••••••l&#13;
* *&#13;
Our Biggest Jewelry Sale J&#13;
of the Year J&#13;
50% OFF I&#13;
fill Jewelry Thru-Oct. 7th J&#13;
*&#13;
ItflfflBOW&#13;
uptown&#13;
kenosha&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
* ( "«"iuaiid ^&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••a-*&#13;
LOU AOL? 0 MAtiy/SJC" ^»78P*.emoui»! Comomion&#13;
A" Right* Reserved&#13;
A PiWimognl Picture&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
LAKE 2&#13;
^-^0 jo /&#13;
STARTS&#13;
FRIDAY </text>
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                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
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        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69052">
              <text>Volume 7, issue 4</text>
            </elementText>
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        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
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            <elementText elementTextId="69053">
              <text>Light Theft Heavy Loss</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="69063">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90840">
              <text>Light -Theft p@lic&#13;
Service Administration&#13;
--- '&#13;
New 1t9sters Program&#13;
Proposed&#13;
Heavy Loss&#13;
loaded up the eight lights and&#13;
the plug-jn strip and drove off type of security is needed when&#13;
II' I ' material is in transit.&#13;
a. In ess than twenty-five minutes, Since the lighting equipment&#13;
Th that was stolen is needed to&#13;
e equipment is so large and po f I h produce certain events at&#13;
wer u t at it could only be Parkside they will have to be&#13;
used 10 auditoriums or large I&#13;
halls. Thus it has a very special rep aced. Also, since there was&#13;
use d no breaking and entering or&#13;
an cou Id not be used by .d&#13;
local musicians or the like in ~VI ence of theft, Parkside's&#13;
small night clubs. The two large Insurance arrangement requires&#13;
follow spot lights stand about six that Parkside pay for replacing&#13;
feet tall with a very large base. the equipment. Therefore ParkS'&#13;
h . side or rather the student' body&#13;
rnce t e thieves knew exactly whose tuition dollars support the&#13;
when it was safe to move in, they S d&#13;
mu~t have known a lot about the tu ef)t Union, will have to put&#13;
habits and schedules of the out five to six thousand dollars&#13;
I&#13;
for new lights and the cash for&#13;
peop e working in the Union h AI h f ' t e necessary security cage to be&#13;
so t e act that they did not installed.&#13;
take anything else from th&#13;
U&#13;
. I e I The Student Union Office&#13;
mon oading dock shows that f they knew what they were in ormed Ranger that although It&#13;
I ki has not suffered any other&#13;
00 tng.for .and came especially similar large thefts lately, there&#13;
for the lighting equipment. A are constant small thefts and&#13;
search for the equipment acts of vandalism going on all&#13;
was started immediately but was the time in the Union: plants&#13;
never accounted for. The and pieces of furniture are&#13;
S.ecurity Department is investiga- stolen; chairs are burned and&#13;
tmg the theft and the Union torn. Niebuhr s uggest s that&#13;
directors are already pricing the students should report such&#13;
cost of installing a metal holding thefts and acts of destructivecage&#13;
on the dock. Although most ness because, again, it is all&#13;
equipment is stored under lock coming out of their own pockets.&#13;
and key, it is apparent that some&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
News Editor&#13;
last Wednesday, between 2' 55&#13;
p.m. and 3'20 pm' .' .. approxima~ely&#13;
five to six thousand&#13;
dollars worth of the tr i I&#13;
I' h . a rica&#13;
rg ttng equipment was stolen&#13;
from .!he Student Union loading&#13;
dock. The ease with which the&#13;
theft seems to have been do&#13;
s t ne, ugges s a great deal of&#13;
knowledge about university&#13;
procedures and the lik&#13;
according to the Student U . e,&#13;
ff&#13;
' nlon&#13;
o ice.&#13;
Mr. Bill Niehbur, who gave us&#13;
the detai Is on the storv , said the&#13;
lighting that was stolen included&#13;
2 STRONG trouper follow spot&#13;
lights With carbon-arc fixtures' 6&#13;
elhpsoida l overhead thea;re&#13;
lamps; and an electrical plug-in&#13;
strip. The lighting was to be used&#13;
Saturday at the "Chet Atkins&#13;
concert in the Phy. Ed. building.&#13;
. The lighting equipment was&#13;
put on the Union loading dock in&#13;
order to be transferred to the&#13;
concert area. However, when&#13;
Jerry Hunt, the building&#13;
supervisor, left the dock at 2:55,&#13;
the thieves must have backed a&#13;
truck' up to the vacated dock&#13;
live ~nd work in this area. UWMadison&#13;
also offers an MA .&#13;
bli 10 pu .IC policy and administration&#13;
The Parkside Faculty Senate but It too is out of reach and is&#13;
l.....ldtheir first meeting Tuesday, not the same type of program as&#13;
.. f 3 30 3 50 Parks ide's, september19, rom : to:&#13;
pn, in CL-D107.The two major It is apparent then, that this&#13;
deCisionsmade concerned: 1) _program will fulfill a real need in&#13;
theapproval of a resolution to the. Kenosha/Racine area. for&#13;
'oin the Business Science administrative training in local&#13;
blV1S10nand the Labor Eco- government. and business, lm- _'&#13;
nomlCSDlVlsiqn into a Single pr~ved services are constantlv&#13;
Division of Business and - being d~manded of administra-&#13;
~ Administrativ~Science, and 2)' tors .and In order to provide these&#13;
... the approval of Parks ide's servlce~, .a program like. the&#13;
secondgraduate program, the MPSA IS necessary '0 that they&#13;
Master of Public Service m~y continually update their&#13;
Administration(MPSA). This was skills. .&#13;
5lIbmittedby the Academic In. fact, with no publicity or&#13;
Planningand Program Review public announcement of the&#13;
Committeeor APPRC. MPSA, the Chairman of the&#13;
J.heDivisionsof Business and Plan.ning Team has already&#13;
Administrative Science and received over a dozen phone&#13;
labor Economics have always calls from people interested in&#13;
IJtenprovisionally organized in the new program. Also, the Chief&#13;
anticipationof this move. The of Police of a local city has said&#13;
new Division will have two' that with-tthe presence of the&#13;
academicprogram areas' Busi- MPSA, he might be able to&#13;
ness' Management and' Labor insti-tute a requirement that all&#13;
IndustrialRelations. top level officers in his departThe&#13;
new Masters Level ment have a graduate degree or&#13;
Program in Public Service some graduate level education in&#13;
Administration is aimed at public administration. .&#13;
providingtheoretical and prac- The new program will be&#13;
tical administrative skills to supported by the faculty and&#13;
""",Ie already employed in the staff of the Business Adrninistralocalpublic&#13;
and service sectors. tion Division, the Division of&#13;
Therefore,unlike the Master of Behavioral Sciences, the Division&#13;
AdministrativeScience that was of Social Science and the Dean&#13;
initiated at UW-Parkside this of the Faculty's office. No new&#13;
semester,this program will be faculty will have to be hired in '&#13;
. primarilyat new students: order to run the MPSA and Wednesday S t b 27 197&#13;
8 v I ..&#13;
working in the com: present library facilities are also- ~:...._e:p_e_Ift__ e_r_:...:'.:..:~'..:.'__ ~"~,o=.=7...:n~O=.•~&#13;
Jlunftywho desire to move into ,atisfactory.&#13;
-advance in administrative and Since the MPSA students will&#13;
.... ment positions. be in-servi,ce personnel, with&#13;
~Iy, the new program will full-time job" the courses will be&#13;
11 Specialization in local offered largely on week nights&#13;
~ban government admin- and weekends. Therefore, it is&#13;
hum Il/l and in social and felt. that the program support&#13;
S ~n.sent.1ce administration. services. (counseling, placement,&#13;
':se~lahlat'o~s, in criminal etc.) will ~ave ~o be available&#13;
I bee admtnlstration and when these speCial students will&#13;
energy d b an natural resources e on campus.&#13;
managementmay also be added It is projected that there could&#13;
In the fIrst four years of the be 411-50students enrolled in the&#13;
programif the student demand 1979-1980 school year, 60-70 io&#13;
ex~ts. 1980-1981, and 100-115 by&#13;
but::C0shkoSh offers an MPSA continued on&#13;
not ~use of Its distance, it is&#13;
av",able to the people who back page&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sailing' Club On 'The Move&#13;
by Sue Stevens&#13;
Oh', the freedom of setting&#13;
sail! There is a certain thrill in&#13;
cutting the waves; with only the&#13;
wind as a propellpr, that isn't&#13;
easy 'to put into words. Perhaps&#13;
tha!" why Pete Gaitan and 11&#13;
other Parks ide students. belong&#13;
to the newly formed sailing club&#13;
here.&#13;
The club formally received&#13;
allocations and was declared astudent&#13;
organization last April.&#13;
Since then, they have been&#13;
preparing ·to,- compete in&#13;
intercollegiate races throughout&#13;
the Mid-West. The club now&#13;
belongs to both' the Mid-West&#13;
rntercollegiate Sailing Asso-&#13;
. dation and the Wisconsin&#13;
Intercollegiate Sailing Asso-.&#13;
ciation.&#13;
-The group primarily sails on&#13;
Lake Michigan out of the Racine&#13;
Yacht Club, but they do sail on&#13;
some of the inland lakes also.&#13;
The Yacht Club is also where&#13;
they keep their two sailb9ats. /&#13;
The boats owned by &gt;he&#13;
Parkside club are collegiate&#13;
models of Vanguard "flying&#13;
jl:miors." Each is 13 feet\long and&#13;
has approximately 100 square&#13;
feet of sail. Th{ boats, although&#13;
smaller than those owned by&#13;
many schools,~,are priced at&#13;
about p,700a piece. .&#13;
The size of the Parkslde boats&#13;
isn't as much of a disadvantage&#13;
as it may seem. Before each race .&#13;
the boats are ratecVby sire' ,and'&#13;
the smaller ones are giv~n a&#13;
handicap. Those with the largest&#13;
handicap begin the race a few&#13;
minutes before the others.&#13;
At' pach meet there are ~hr.ee&#13;
--- --'--&#13;
r&#13;
need it.&#13;
Pete, along with Bruce&#13;
Gondert, vice-president, and&#13;
Mike Cyzak, secretary·treasurer.&#13;
teaches beginners, Their purpose&#13;
is to teach people to sail at the&#13;
racing level. In case you're&#13;
wondering about their compe·&#13;
tence for teaching, Pete, for&#13;
example, has 13 years' o(sailing&#13;
experience on inland waters.&#13;
Not only do sailors race, but&#13;
they also socialize. According to&#13;
Pete, "Sailing is a very social&#13;
sport. Along with the races we&#13;
have parties." The people&#13;
involved are very hospitable.&#13;
When a team is racing away from&#13;
home, the members don't have&#13;
very much trouble finding a&#13;
place t&lt;&gt;stay that night. "People&#13;
are always putting each other up&#13;
for the night," says Pete.&#13;
There are many interesting&#13;
people to meet while sailing, or&#13;
even watching the competitions.&#13;
The Parkside club's next race is&#13;
against Marquette on October 6&#13;
and 7 at the Oktoberfesl1lrounds&#13;
in Milwaukee.&#13;
Watch the Ranger for more&#13;
information on meets. If anyone&#13;
';s inferested in the club, contact&#13;
either Pete Gaitan at S52-7293,&#13;
9' Mi~~JCyzak and 69:'!~1. I&#13;
to five races with three people&#13;
on a boat at a time, Between&#13;
races, which generally run two&#13;
miles each, the team} switch.&#13;
The winner of the meet is&#13;
decided by a point system. The&#13;
placement of the. boats in each -&#13;
race determin~s the number of&#13;
points they rece.ve.&#13;
"The outcome of each race is&#13;
fairly unpredictable," Pete&#13;
Gaitan, who is the president of&#13;
the club, said. "Even though&#13;
each race includes sJrategy and&#13;
skill, it's always a challenge."&#13;
The element of skill shouldn't&#13;
make the average person shy&#13;
away from sailing. As Pete says,&#13;
"sailing is an excellent sport for&#13;
anyone of any age and sex."&#13;
There are now seven~ guys and&#13;
five women in the club." The&#13;
average person can learn how to&#13;
sail," Pete added. "It's mainly a&#13;
team sport."&#13;
• Although sailing has long been&#13;
a oesignated sport for the "elite,"&#13;
_it is, -like ·tennis, gaining&#13;
popularity among middle c1a~s&#13;
people. Parkside provides an&#13;
opportunity to sail at an even&#13;
. more reasonable rate than many&#13;
schools. Students here pay 55.00&#13;
per semester in membership "fees&#13;
apd 5,2.~llf9r instruct/O," if they:.&#13;
~d of Regents Meet&#13;
Bakke Decision Discussed&#13;
TbeBod '&#13;
l!nh,ersityar&#13;
Of&#13;
of Regents of the&#13;
Iliet Frida WlSc?nsin system&#13;
UW-Supe,v,September 8 at&#13;
the m' lor. The summary of&#13;
,"utes f h' re'otealsOt IS m~eting everal . . OPlYients. interesting devel·&#13;
PresidIn the University -&#13;
Y entofth S . Oung e ystem Edwin&#13;
atlende~eported that he had&#13;
WingSp a conference at&#13;
h read' .• IIlUrSdaySe In RaCine, on&#13;
edbYthe' ptember 7, ,ponsorSYstemt~~versity&#13;
of California&#13;
bons of th ISCUSSthe implica·&#13;
'tatedthat~ Bakke deci,ion. He&#13;
talkabo e had been asked to&#13;
U . Ulthe . !llverS'lty POSition of the&#13;
ad ofW- o Whatit ISconsin System&#13;
He SlJmeant to us,&#13;
~iv~rSity~g~sted" that the&#13;
. kke d a. not expected the&#13;
dlH ec",on t&#13;
erence 0 make any&#13;
because-it ht&#13;
" the University&#13;
ad a f' .&#13;
hr...L .• Irrn direction&#13;
the regents to continue to bring&#13;
people who have been culturally&#13;
and economically deprived, and&#13;
we were going ahead with that&#13;
program. He noted that the&#13;
University was ahead of its goal&#13;
in this matter in the medicine&#13;
and law fields, but is not doing&#13;
quite as well as had been&#13;
expected in other areas, but we&#13;
have set a very high target -for&#13;
ourselves.&#13;
President Young also reported&#13;
that the enrollment for thissemester&#13;
of the total UW system&#13;
is about 148,600 students, an&#13;
- increase of about 1500 over last&#13;
semester fall.&#13;
In other business University of&#13;
Wisconsin Stout submitted its&#13;
proposal to begin the construc·&#13;
tion of its 56,972,900 Library&#13;
Learning Center Project. The&#13;
proposal was given the go-ahead.&#13;
P b~&#13;
lic service Administration ,&#13;
New Masters Program Light Tbift Heavy Loss&#13;
/ .&#13;
Proposed&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
News Editor&#13;
live ~nd work in this area. UWMad1son&#13;
also offers an MA . bl. pu In _,c policy and administration&#13;
The Parkside Faculty Senate but it too is out of reach and is&#13;
held their first meeting Tuesday, not the same type of program as&#13;
September 19, from 3:30 to 3:_50 Parkside's.&#13;
m in CL-D107. The two 1J1aIor It is appar_ent then, that this&#13;
~e~isions made concerned: 1) _program will fulfill a real need in&#13;
the approval of a resolution to the . K_enosha/Racine area . for&#13;
join the Business Science administrative training in local&#13;
Division and the Labor Eco- government and business. lmnomics&#13;
Division into a single proved services are constantly&#13;
Division of Business and · being demanded of administra-&#13;
~ Administrativ~ Science, and 2) tors _and in order to provide these&#13;
the approval of Parkside's serviceS, a program like _ the&#13;
second graduate program, the MPSA is necessary so that they&#13;
Master of Public Service may continually update their&#13;
Administration (MPSA). This was skills.&#13;
submitted by the Academic In fact, with no publicity or&#13;
Planning and Program Review public announcement of the&#13;
Committee or APPRC. MPSA, the Chairman of the&#13;
lhe Divisions of Business and Planning Team has already&#13;
Administrative Science and received over a dozen phone&#13;
Labor Economics have always calls from people interested in&#13;
been provisionally organized in the new program. Also, the Chief&#13;
anticipation of this move. The of Police of a local city has said&#13;
new Division will have two · that with ·the presence of the&#13;
academic program areas· Busi- MPSA, he might be able to&#13;
ness Management and ' Labor inShtute a requirement that all&#13;
Industrial Relations. top level officers in his departby&#13;
John Stewart&#13;
News Editor&#13;
_!,ast Wednesday, between 2:55&#13;
matel&#13;
p.m. and 3:20 Pm . f. · · approx,- . . y ive to six thousand&#13;
dollars worth of theatrical&#13;
lighting equipment was stolen&#13;
from the Student Union loading&#13;
dock. The ease with which the&#13;
theft&#13;
s seems to have been do ne, uggests a great deal - of&#13;
knowledge about university&#13;
procedures and the lik&#13;
according to the Student U . e, ff. nion&#13;
o 1~e.&#13;
Mr. Bill Niehbur, who gave us&#13;
t~e ~etails on the ·story, said the&#13;
lighting that was stolen included&#13;
2 STRONG trouper foHow spot&#13;
lights with carbon-arc fixtures· 6&#13;
ellipsoidal overhead thea;re&#13;
lamps; and an electr[cal plug-in&#13;
strip. The lighting was to be used&#13;
Saturday at the --Chet Atkins&#13;
concert in the Phy. Ed. building.&#13;
. The lighting equipment was&#13;
put on the Union loading dock in&#13;
order to be transferred to the&#13;
concert area. However, when&#13;
Jerry Hunt, the building&#13;
supervisor, left the dock at 2:55,&#13;
the thieves must have backed a&#13;
truck · up to the vacated dock&#13;
loaded up the eight lights and&#13;
the plug:.in strip and drove off&#13;
al~ in less than twenty-fiv~&#13;
minutes.&#13;
The equipment is so large and&#13;
powerful that it could only be&#13;
used m auditoriums or large&#13;
halls. Thus it has a very special&#13;
use and could not be used by&#13;
local musicians or the like in&#13;
small night clubs. The two large&#13;
follow spot lights stand about six&#13;
feet_ tall with a very large base.&#13;
Smee the thieves knew exactly&#13;
when it was safe to move in they&#13;
must have known a lot abo~t th&#13;
habits and schedules of th:&#13;
people working in the Union&#13;
Also the fact that they did no~&#13;
tak: anything else from the&#13;
Union loading dock shows that&#13;
they knew what they were&#13;
looking for _and came especially&#13;
for the l1ght1ng equipment.&#13;
A search for the equipment&#13;
was started immediately but was&#13;
never accounted for. The&#13;
S_ecurity Department is investigating&#13;
the theft and the Union&#13;
directors are already pricing the&#13;
cost of installing a metal holding&#13;
cage on the dock. Although most&#13;
equipment is stored under lock&#13;
and key, it is apparent that some&#13;
type of security is needed when&#13;
material is in transit.&#13;
Since the lighting equipment&#13;
that was stolen is needed to&#13;
produce certain events at&#13;
Parkside they will have to be&#13;
replaced. Also, since there was&#13;
no_ breaking and entering or&#13;
evidence of theft, Parkside's&#13;
insurance arrangement requires&#13;
that Parkside pay for replacing&#13;
the equipment. Therefore Parkside&#13;
or rather the student' body&#13;
whose tuition dollars support th~&#13;
Studel)t Union, will have to put&#13;
out five to six thousand dollars&#13;
for new lights and the cash for&#13;
the necessary security cage to be&#13;
installed.&#13;
' The Student Union Office&#13;
informed Ranger that although ,t&#13;
has not suffered any oth r&#13;
similar large thefts lately, there&#13;
are constant small thefts and&#13;
acts of vandalism going on all&#13;
the time in the Union plants&#13;
and pieces of furniture are&#13;
stolen; chairs ar.e burned and&#13;
torn . Niebuhr suggests that&#13;
students should report such&#13;
thefts and acts of destructiveness&#13;
because, again, it is all&#13;
coming out of their own pockets.&#13;
The new Maste-rs Level ment have a graduate degree or&#13;
Program in Public Service some graduate level education i.n&#13;
Administration is aimed at public administration. ·&#13;
providing thepretical and prac- The new program will · be&#13;
tical administrative skills to supported by the faculty and&#13;
people already employed in the staff of the Business Administralocal&#13;
public and service sectors. tion Division, the Division of&#13;
Therefore, unlike the Master of Behavioral Sciences, the Division&#13;
Administrative Science that was of Social Science and the Dean&#13;
initiated at UW-Parkside this of the Faculty's office. No new&#13;
semester, this program will be faculty will have to be hired in&#13;
• aimedprimarilyatnewstudents· order to run the MPSA and Wednesda S t b 27 197 l ..,,,, wo.t.;ng '" the com: P"""' J;b,a,y tacrntres .,. .,,.~ "I ep em er , 8 Vol.7 no.4 t munity who desire to move into satisfactory. ______ ;_ ____________________ ::._ ___________ _&#13;
or advance in administrative and Since the MPSA studen~ will&#13;
management positions. be in-servi.ce personnel, with&#13;
Initially, the new program will full-time jobs, the courses w ill be&#13;
offer a specialization in local offered largely on week nights&#13;
and urban government admin- and weekends. Therefore, it is&#13;
~!ration and in social and felt that the . program support&#13;
uman service administration services ( counseling, placement,&#13;
Specializations in · · 1· etc.) will have to be available jut' cr1m1na 5 ice administration and when these special students will&#13;
energy and natural resources be on campus.&#13;
management may also be added It is projected that there could&#13;
in the first four years of the be 49-50 students enrolled in the&#13;
~:~s~arn if the student demand 1979-1980 school year, 60-70 io 1980-1981 , and 100-115 by&#13;
buUtWbe·Oshkosh _offers an MPSA caus f continued on not availab~ o ,ts distance, it is&#13;
e to the people who back page&#13;
~ of Regents Meet&#13;
Bakke Decision Discussed&#13;
The Board f&#13;
University of o . Regents of the&#13;
lllet Frida W1sc?nsin system&#13;
UW-Supe _Y, September 8 at&#13;
the rti' nor. The summary of&#13;
inutes f h· reveal s O . t 1s meeting everal · Opments. h interesting devel- 1n t e U . . Presid niversity y ent of th s · oung e ystem Edwin&#13;
attende~eported that he had&#13;
Wingsp a conference at Th read . Ursday Se in Racine, on&#13;
ed by the' U ~tember 7, sponsorSystem&#13;
to niversity of California&#13;
lions of th discuss the implicastated&#13;
that~ Bakke decision. He&#13;
talk ab0 e had been asked to U · ut the · n1versi·ty position of the a of w· . nd what it isconsin System&#13;
He rneant to us u su . niver . ggested that th Ba s1ty had ~- e . kke d . . not expected the d1ft ec,s,on t be erence O make any&#13;
fr cause -it ht~d th~ University&#13;
om b. a firm direction&#13;
the regents to continue to bring&#13;
people who have been culturally&#13;
and economically deprived, and&#13;
we were going ahead with that&#13;
program. He noted that the&#13;
University was ahead of its goal&#13;
in this matter in the medicine&#13;
and law fields, but is not doing&#13;
quite as well as had been&#13;
expected in other areas, but we&#13;
have set a very high target for&#13;
ourselves.&#13;
President Young also reported&#13;
that the enrollment for thissemester&#13;
of the total UW system&#13;
is about 148,600 students, an&#13;
- increase of about 1500 over_ last&#13;
semester tall.&#13;
In other business University of&#13;
Wisconsin Stout submitted its&#13;
proposal to begin the construction&#13;
of its $6,972,900 Library&#13;
Learning Center Project. The&#13;
proposal was given the go-ahead.&#13;
Sailing · Club On ·The Move&#13;
by Sue Stevens&#13;
Oh, the freedom of setting&#13;
sail! There is a certain thrill in&#13;
cutting the waves; with only the&#13;
wind as a propellor, that isn't&#13;
easy lo put into words. Perhaps&#13;
that's why Pete Gaitan and 11&#13;
other Parkside students belong&#13;
to the newly formed sailing club&#13;
here.&#13;
The club formally received&#13;
allocations and was declared a&#13;
student organization last April.&#13;
Since then, they have been&#13;
preparing to'- compete in&#13;
intercollegiate races throughout&#13;
the Mid-West. The club now&#13;
belongs to both · the Mid-West&#13;
rntercollegiate Sailing Association&#13;
and the Wisconsin&#13;
Intercollegiate Sailing Asso- ,&#13;
ciation. -The group primarily sails on&#13;
Lake Michigan out of the Racine&#13;
Yacht Club, but they do sail on&#13;
some of the inland lakes also.&#13;
The Yacht Club is also where&#13;
they keep their two sailbpats. 1&#13;
The boats owned by the&#13;
Parkside club are collegiate&#13;
models of Vanguard "flying&#13;
jtmiors." Each is 13 feet' long and&#13;
has approximately 100 square&#13;
feet of sail. The' boats, although&#13;
smaller than those owned by&#13;
many schools,,. are priced at&#13;
about ~2,700 a ·piece. . The size of the P-arks1de boats&#13;
isn't as much of a disadvantage.&#13;
· as it may seem. Before each race ·&#13;
the boats are ratedt by size _and·&#13;
the smaller ones are given a&#13;
handicap. Those with the largest&#13;
handicap begin the race a few&#13;
minutes before the others.&#13;
_- At .. ach meet there are three&#13;
--·-----&#13;
to five races with three people&#13;
on a boat at a time. Between&#13;
races, which generally run two&#13;
miles each, the team~ switch.&#13;
The winner of the meet is&#13;
decided by a point system. The&#13;
placement of the. boats in each -&#13;
race determin~s the number of&#13;
points they recei\7e.&#13;
"The outcome of each race is&#13;
fairly unpredictable," Pete&#13;
Gaitan, who is the president of&#13;
the club, said. "Even though&#13;
each race includes strategy and&#13;
skill, it's always a challenge."&#13;
The element ·of skill shouldn't&#13;
make the average person shy&#13;
away from sailing. As Pete says,&#13;
"sailing is an excellent sport for&#13;
anyone of any age and sex."&#13;
There are now seven guys and&#13;
five women in the club." The&#13;
average person can learn how to&#13;
sail," Pete added. " It's mainly a&#13;
team sport." • Although sailing has long been&#13;
a aesignated sport for the "elite,"&#13;
- it is, l ike ·tennis, gaining&#13;
popularity among middle class&#13;
people. Parkside provides an&#13;
opportunity to sail at an even&#13;
• more reasonable rate than many&#13;
schools. Students here pay S5.00&#13;
per semester in membership.fees&#13;
and ~2-~0 tor instructi~n if they&#13;
need it.&#13;
Pete, along with Brue&#13;
Gandert, v1ce-pres1dent, and&#13;
Mike Cyzak, secretary-trea ur r,&#13;
teaches beginners Their purpo&#13;
is to teach people to sail at th&#13;
racing level. In case you're&#13;
wondering about their competence&#13;
for teaching, Pete, for&#13;
example, has 13 years of ·sailing&#13;
experience on inland waters.&#13;
Not only do sailors race, but&#13;
they also socialize. According to&#13;
Pete, "Sailing is a very social&#13;
sport. Along w~th the races we&#13;
have parties ." The people&#13;
involved are very hospitable&#13;
When a team is racing away from&#13;
home, the members don't ha e&#13;
very much trouble finding a&#13;
place to stay that night. "People&#13;
are always putting each other up&#13;
for the night," says Pete&#13;
There are many intere ting&#13;
people to meet while sailing, or&#13;
even watching the competitions .&#13;
The Parkside club's next race is&#13;
against Marquette on October 6&#13;
and 7 at the Oktoberfes~rounds&#13;
in Milwaukee.&#13;
Watch the Ranger for more&#13;
information on meets. If anyone&#13;
,is inferested in the club, contact&#13;
either Pete Gaitan at 552-7293,&#13;
pr Mike Cyzak and 694-0061. I &#13;
The newest addition to theParkside&#13;
Chemistry Department&#13;
. is Mr.' Fred Wayne Clough,&#13;
whose courses this year include&#13;
Chemistry 102 and Organic&#13;
Chemistry 1-201. These courses,&#13;
Mr. Clough stated, should be&#13;
considered by all students in the&#13;
comorehensive college education.&#13;
"Everything you do has to&#13;
do with Chemistry," said Mr.&#13;
Clough, "it goest ' with you&#13;
through your life: It's part of&#13;
everyone's life. It would be&#13;
interesting to know chemicals&#13;
and also the hazards of them.&#13;
by Kathy Peters&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Fred Clough&#13;
,&#13;
RANGERis written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and they are solely. responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission i$ required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGERcontent. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC 0-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Mike Murphy Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan ......••.. 4 ••••••••••••• General Manager&#13;
Tom Cooper ......•.•............... Marketing Advisor&#13;
John Stewart News Editor&#13;
Sue Stevens , Feature Editor&#13;
DougEdenheu88r Sporta Editor&#13;
Da.. Cramer Sport. Editor&#13;
Kim Putman , Copy Editor&#13;
Chria Miller Ad Manager&#13;
Maney Szymanski Circulation Manager&#13;
REPORTINGSTAFF&#13;
Laura Blanco, Carolyn Broaclano, Cathy Brownl.. , I\lollleClarke,&#13;
Pete Cramer, Tom Fervoy, Rob Granger, Krlstl&#13;
Honch. Thoma. Jenn, Nicki Kroll, Janene L1ecrocl, Phil&#13;
Marry, Kathy Pet•• , Sue SaUturo, Jeff Stevens, Le.ter&#13;
Thompaonand LarryW .. yer.&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
GaryAdelaon, SuaanCaldwell, Denl.e D'Acqulato, Carlyn&#13;
Dayl., Jim Etteldort, Rob Granger, Mike.Holmdohl, Cindy&#13;
Mason, Julie Orth; Tony Reymond end Brlln Tlgglrt.&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig Dyorak, Rob Miller Ind Mltthew Polllkon.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Cramer and Dawn Thoma •.&#13;
Letters to ~heEditor will be accepted for publication' if they&#13;
a~etypewritten, double spaced With one inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be Includedfor&#13;
purposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and refuse&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All ~aterial must be received by Thursday noon for.&#13;
publication on the following Wednesday.&#13;
'" ,.&#13;
anger ~&#13;
- /&#13;
rarely had to deal with b.~&#13;
He says that he sometimesf&#13;
it difficult to keep track of t I&#13;
John Noel is looking fa&#13;
to taking advantage of&#13;
outside opportunities around&#13;
campus. A regular user of&#13;
gym, he is also interested&#13;
music, ne has recently b&#13;
taking organ lessons. Mr.&#13;
and his wife are also look&#13;
forward to winter and thecha&#13;
to d? some cross~countryskii&#13;
You come away with a broader&#13;
awareness of principals that are&#13;
affecting your life all the -time."&#13;
Mr. Clough is in the process of&#13;
developing an active research&#13;
program for undergraduates that&#13;
will contribute to Chemotherapy,&#13;
of Cancer. A program such as&#13;
this will;provide an exposure to&#13;
the practical aspects of Organic&#13;
Chemistry in addition to&#13;
methodology .. Students 'wi II&#13;
become familiar with synthetic&#13;
methods as well as spectrographic&#13;
techniques that ~re&#13;
required of a practicing Organic&#13;
Chemist. In addition he says that&#13;
they will be exposed to the'&#13;
rudimentry screening procedures&#13;
and bio-chemical pharmacology&#13;
that is used to access the&#13;
efficacy of the products they&#13;
develop. "The first hand&#13;
exposure that these students will&#13;
have with respect to the&#13;
synthetic and biological aspects&#13;
of this project will most certainly&#13;
cultivate a greater awareness of&#13;
the. foundations of modern&#13;
science and demonstrate the.&#13;
value of an interdisciplinary&#13;
aoproach to scientific problem&#13;
solving." I&#13;
Mr. Clough has also developed&#13;
_a collaborative program with a&#13;
biochemical pharmacologist at&#13;
the University of Alberta in&#13;
Alberta, Canada. The pharmacologists&#13;
in Alberta will do the&#13;
initial testing of compounds&#13;
designed to combat cancer cells&#13;
developed at Parkside.&#13;
"I'm extremely pleased," Mr.&#13;
Clough - exclaims, with t~e&#13;
facilities here. They are excellent&#13;
to conduct research on ali levels.&#13;
I was pleasantly surprised.&#13;
because Parkside is an undergraduate&#13;
school. The facilities&#13;
are usually not this good at the'&#13;
undergrad level. The facilities&#13;
are better than some schools&#13;
with graduate programs 1" He&#13;
says that opportun ities are&#13;
available for students and should&#13;
be taken advantage of.&#13;
Clough was born in New&#13;
Hampshire. He received his B.A.&#13;
in Organic Chemistry at Colgate&#13;
University in New York. He&#13;
earned his Ph.D. in Medicinal&#13;
Chemistry at the University of&#13;
Southern Florida and did&#13;
post-tJoctorate work at the&#13;
University of. Utah. Mr. Clough&#13;
IDanisb If,ringles •&#13;
Shipped prt&gt;poid 81llJwherE' ill thE' continental U. S.&#13;
ELEVEN FLAVORS AV AILABLL&#13;
PeCdll Apricot&#13;
'R8spb~~rrlJ&#13;
Piueapple_PeCdll&#13;
Dote PillcopplE'&#13;
Blu~bemJ&#13;
Almond&#13;
•&#13;
Prune Cherry&#13;
~llUolld ~1&lt;lCdrOOll 25¢, each extra&#13;
Packed, . 1 Kril1t\lc per box $4.10&#13;
6.75&#13;
10$1.00 Extra to the West Coast&#13;
O&amp;H&#13;
DANISH 8AKE'RY&#13;
•&#13;
left Utah to come to Kenosha&#13;
where he is presently residing&#13;
with his wife and five year old&#13;
son. His hobbies include golfing&#13;
and wood-working.&#13;
I&#13;
John Noel&#13;
by Cathy Brownlee&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
John D. Noel, a new member&#13;
'of the Parkside administrative&#13;
staff, has recently filled the&#13;
position of Assistant to the Dean&#13;
of Faculty for budgets. Mr.&#13;
Noel's job is mainly to supervise -&#13;
the budgets of each' division.&#13;
However, he has many other&#13;
responsibilities that Assistant to&#13;
, the Dean of Faculty never had&#13;
before. At the moment, as Mr.&#13;
Noel described, his first goal is to&#13;
become familiar with Parkside's&#13;
procedures.&#13;
Mr. Noel attended CarnegieMellon&#13;
University in Pittsburgh&#13;
and majored in Public Administration&#13;
and Policy. He obtained a&#13;
position at Carnegie-Mellon as&#13;
Assistant to the Dean of&#13;
Humanities and Social Science.&#13;
At CMU, however, he didn't have&#13;
quite the budget responsibilities&#13;
he had hoped for and thus he&#13;
found the opening at UW-Parkside&#13;
quite interesting.&#13;
Parkside's location is also&#13;
favorable tOI Mr. Noel. Born in&#13;
Austin, Minnesota he attended&#13;
SI. Olaf'S College in Northfi~ld&#13;
Minnesota and thus is naturall~&#13;
familiar and comfortable in the&#13;
Midwest.&#13;
One difference that Mr. Noel&#13;
has noticed since working here&#13;
is that Parkside has part-tim~&#13;
faculty - something he has&#13;
. ,&#13;
Ie (@lbe~Wtetl ~~np,e&#13;
IN THE PARKSIOE UNION .&#13;
10:110 - 4:00 PM DAILY&#13;
NOW WITH OVER&#13;
. 30, . /'&#13;
VARIETIES OF YOUR' A 'iORITE&#13;
NUTS &amp; CANDIES&#13;
SOLD THE&#13;
OLD FASHION WAY&#13;
SPECIAL OF&#13;
THE MOM1H&#13;
CINNAMON&#13;
'DiSCS&#13;
NOW ONLY&#13;
. , 35&lt;&#13;
.. -.:...&#13;
1841 Douglas Avenu~&#13;
Racine,Wis. 53402&#13;
Arthur Corr&#13;
Arthur V. Corr is a profes&#13;
Business Management hereParkside.&#13;
For several yea~&#13;
was Dilector of- Educaf&#13;
Services for the Natio&#13;
Association of Accountants&#13;
prior to that, served as Man&#13;
of the Association's conti&#13;
education . department.&#13;
director he was responsible&#13;
developing, organizing, a&#13;
implementing ~the associati&#13;
many technical services&#13;
eluding research and educa·&#13;
pr6gfams.&#13;
Mr. Corr hollis a C&#13;
certificate and is a consultant&#13;
the field of managem&#13;
accounting. He has devel.&#13;
and conducted a wide variety&#13;
business seminars in accou .&#13;
and finance in the United5&#13;
the United Kingdom, and&#13;
Republic of South Africa. He&#13;
served on the accounti&#13;
faculities of New York Unive&#13;
and the University of&#13;
Africa.&#13;
Mr. Corr earned a B.s.d&#13;
magna cum laude in 1955 f&#13;
New York University and&#13;
M.B.A. degree in 1956 from&#13;
same institution. In addition,&#13;
has done extensive gra&#13;
work in accounting, man&#13;
ment, and economics at N.&#13;
Graduate School of BuS!&#13;
Administration, as well&#13;
publishing several articles.&#13;
professional journals deah&#13;
with management accou&#13;
and budgetary planning&#13;
control. f&#13;
He is a member 0&#13;
National Association of MeO&#13;
tants the Instltute of Man&#13;
, A er&#13;
ment Accounting,. t~e mnd&#13;
Accounting ASsociation, a..&#13;
American Economic AssOCla~&#13;
Mr. Corr has also spent four&#13;
ll at Franklin and Marshall Co&#13;
. ylvanla,&#13;
10 Lancaster, Penns&#13;
small liberal arts college.&#13;
by Kathy Peters&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Fred Clough&#13;
The newest addition to the&#13;
Parkside Chemistry Department&#13;
is Mr. Fred Wayne Clough,&#13;
whose courses this year include&#13;
Chemistry 102 and Organic&#13;
Chemistry 1-201 . These courses,&#13;
Mr. Clough stated, should be&#13;
considered by all students in the&#13;
comorehensive college education.·&#13;
"Everything you do has to&#13;
do with Chemistry," said Mr.&#13;
Clough, "it goest • with you&#13;
through your life: It's part of&#13;
everyone's life. It would be&#13;
interesting to know chemicals&#13;
and also the hazards of them.&#13;
r&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and they are solely. responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content.&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by ·&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission ii;, required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC 0-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141.&#13;
Mike Murphy . .. . ..................... . ........ Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan . ....................... General Manager&#13;
Tom Cooper ...... .................. Marketing Advisor&#13;
John Stewart ............................ News Editor&#13;
Sue Stevens ........................... Feature Editor ·&#13;
Doug Edenhauser ....................... Sports Editor&#13;
Dave Cramer .........•.................. Sports Editor&#13;
Kim Putman ...................... , ...... Copy Editor&#13;
Chris MIiier .... .......................... Ad Manager&#13;
Maney Szymanski ................. Circulation Manager&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Laura Blanco, Carolyn Bresclano, Cathy Brownlee, Mollie&#13;
Clarke, Pete Cramer, Tom Fervoy, Rob Granger, Kristi&#13;
Honch, Thomas Jenn, Nickl Kroll, Janene Llecrocl, Phil&#13;
Marry, Kathy Peters, Sue Sallturo, Jeff Stevens, Lester&#13;
Thompson and Larry Weaver.&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
Gary Adelson, Susan Caldwell, Denise D'Acquls·to, Carlyn&#13;
Davis, Jim Etteldorf, Rob Granger, Mike Holmdohl, Cindy&#13;
Mason, Julle Orth; Tony Raymond and Brian Taggart.&#13;
GRAPHIC&#13;
Craig Dvorak, Rob MIiier and Matthew Pollakon.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
John Cramer and Dawn Thomas.&#13;
Letters to ~tre Editor will be accepted for publication if they&#13;
a~e typewritten, double spaced with one inch margins and&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be included -&#13;
for purposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
publication, when valid reasons are given.&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and refuse&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All ~at~rlal must be received by Thursday noon for .&#13;
lubllcat,on on the following Wednes~ay.&#13;
IDa11ish 1f,ri11gles • •&#13;
Shipped prepaid am1wherc- in the continental U. S.&#13;
ELEVEN FLAVORS AV AILA.BLE:&#13;
•&#13;
Pecan&#13;
Pineapple&#13;
Blueberni&#13;
Almoucl&#13;
Apricot&#13;
'Rasp be mi&#13;
Prune&#13;
Pineapple-Pecan&#13;
Date&#13;
Packed:&#13;
Cherry&#13;
Almoucl Mncaroon 25&lt;r_ each extra&#13;
. 1 Krin~le per box&#13;
2 Kri11Ales per hox&#13;
$4.10&#13;
6.75&#13;
,.Sl .00 Extra to the West Coast&#13;
••• •&#13;
1841 Douglas Avenue .&#13;
DANISH BAKE·R.Y Racine, Wis. 53402&#13;
You come away with a broader&#13;
awareness of principals th,at are&#13;
affecting your life all the time."&#13;
· Mr. Clough is in the process of&#13;
developing an active research&#13;
program for undergraduates that&#13;
will contribute to Chemotherapy&#13;
of Cancer. A program such as&#13;
this willJprovide an exposure to&#13;
the practical aspects of Organic&#13;
Chemistry in addition to&#13;
methodology. _Students · wi II&#13;
become familiar with synthetic&#13;
methods as well as spectrograph&#13;
ic techniques that ~re&#13;
required of a practicing Organic&#13;
Chemist. In addition he says that&#13;
they will be exposed to the'&#13;
rudimentry screening procedures&#13;
and bio-chemical pharmacology&#13;
that is used to access the&#13;
efficacy of the products they&#13;
develop. "The first hand&#13;
exposure that these students will&#13;
have with respect to the&#13;
synthetic and biological aspects&#13;
of this project will most certainly&#13;
cultivate a greater awareness of&#13;
the. foundations of modern&#13;
science and demonstrate the.&#13;
value of an interdisciplinary&#13;
approach to scientific problem&#13;
solving."&#13;
Mr. Clough has.also developed&#13;
a collaborative program with a&#13;
biochemical pharmacologist at&#13;
the University of Alberta in&#13;
Alberta, Canada. The pharmacologists&#13;
in Alberta will do the&#13;
initial testing of compounds&#13;
designed to combat cancer cells&#13;
developed at Parkside.&#13;
"I'm extremely pleased," Mr.&#13;
&lt;;:lough exclaims, with the&#13;
facilities here. They are excellent&#13;
to conduct research on all levels.&#13;
I was pleasantly surprised .&#13;
because Parkside is an undergraduate&#13;
school. The facilities&#13;
are usually not this good at the&#13;
undergrad · level. The facilities&#13;
are better than some schools&#13;
with graduate programs!" He&#13;
says that opportunities are&#13;
available for students and should&#13;
be taken advantage of.&#13;
Clough was born in New&#13;
Hampshire. He received his B.A.&#13;
in Organic Chemistry at Colgate&#13;
· University in New York. He&#13;
earned his Ph.D. in Medicinal&#13;
Chemistry at the University of&#13;
Southern Florida and did&#13;
post-doctorate work at the&#13;
University of Utah. Mr. Clough&#13;
I,&#13;
left ~ah to come ~o~pe~b~ j '&#13;
where he is presently residing He says that he sometimes f i&#13;
with his wife and five year old it difficult to keep track of thin '~&#13;
son. His hobbies include golHng John Noel is looking forwe~ ,Ji&#13;
and wood-working. to ~aking adva_ntage of : f&#13;
outside opportunities around~ f~&#13;
campus . A regular user of~ ,'&#13;
gym, he 1s also interested . ~rJI&#13;
music; fie has recently beg m 11&#13;
taking organ lessons. Mr. N= l'&#13;
and his wif~ are also looki f&#13;
forward to winter arid the chan~ /~&#13;
to d? some cross-country ski ini ~-&#13;
John Noel&#13;
by Cathy Brownlee&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
John D. Noel, a new member&#13;
' of the Parkside administrative&#13;
staff, has recently filled the&#13;
position of Assistant to the Dean&#13;
of Faculty for budgets. Mr.&#13;
Noel's job is mainly to supervise&#13;
the budgets of each division.&#13;
However, he has many other&#13;
responsibilities that Assistant to&#13;
the Dean of Faculty never had&#13;
before. At the moment, as Mr.&#13;
Noel d!,'!scribed, his first goal is to&#13;
become familiar with Parkside's&#13;
procedures.&#13;
Mr. Noel attended CarnegieMellon&#13;
University in Pittsburgh&#13;
and majored in Public Administration&#13;
and Policy. He obtained a&#13;
position at Carnegie-Mellon as&#13;
Assistant to the Dean of&#13;
Humanities and Social Science.&#13;
At CMU, however, he didn't have&#13;
quite the budget responsibilities&#13;
he had hoped for and thus he&#13;
found the opening at UW-Parkside&#13;
quite interesting.&#13;
Parkside's location is also&#13;
favorable to, Mr. Noel. Born in&#13;
Austin, Minnesota he attended&#13;
St. Olaf's College in Northfield&#13;
Minnesota and thus is naturall;&#13;
familiar and comfortable in the&#13;
Midwest.&#13;
One difference that Mr. Noel&#13;
has noticed since working · here&#13;
is that Parkside has part-tim;&#13;
faculty - sor:ne~hing he has&#13;
Arthur Corr&#13;
Arthur V. Corr is a professor d&#13;
Business Management here 1&#13;
Parkside. For several years ~&#13;
was Director of Educati01&#13;
Services for the Nation&#13;
Association of Accountants a&#13;
prior to that, served as Man&#13;
of the Association's continui&#13;
education · department.&#13;
director he was responsible fol.&#13;
developing, organizing, and&#13;
implementing _ the association'&#13;
many technical services including&#13;
research and educati&#13;
programs.&#13;
Mr. Corr holds a CMA&#13;
certificate and is a consultantin&#13;
the field of managemenl&#13;
accounting. He has developed&#13;
and conducted a wide varietyd&#13;
business seminars in accounti&#13;
and finance in the United States&#13;
the United Kingdom, and&#13;
Republic of South Africa. Hehl!&#13;
served on the accountinl&#13;
faculities of New York Universi~&#13;
and the University of South&#13;
Africa.&#13;
It (@l~t §w.ett&#13;
1&#13;
§4nt.tt:tt&#13;
IN THE PARKSIDE UNION .&#13;
Mr. Corr earned a B.S. degree&#13;
magna cum laude in 1955 trorn&#13;
New York University and~&#13;
M.B.A. degree in 1956 from&#13;
same institution. In addition,he&#13;
has done extensive graduate&#13;
work in accounting, man~&#13;
ment and economics at NY&#13;
10:00 - 4:00 PM DAIL y&#13;
NOW WITH OVER&#13;
30 /&#13;
VA;{IETIES OF l'OUR ~ _;vORITE&#13;
NUTS &amp;. CANDIES&#13;
SOLD THE&#13;
OLD FASHION WAY&#13;
\ -&#13;
-~=GULARL Y SQc 112 LB ..&#13;
SPECIAL OF&#13;
THE MONlH&#13;
CINNAMON ·DISCS&#13;
NOW ONLY&#13;
35c&#13;
' · eSS Graduate School of Busin&#13;
Administration, as well a;&#13;
publishing several articles. 1&#13;
professional journals dealinl&#13;
with management accounti&#13;
and budgetary planriing a&#13;
control. f th!&#13;
He is a member O un·&#13;
National Association of Acco gt&#13;
tants, the Institute of Manarall&#13;
ment Accounting,_ the Arn~~\&#13;
Accounting Assoc1at1on, 3. ·o0&#13;
American Economic Associa!I&#13;
Mr. Corr has also spent tour&#13;
1&#13;
r:&#13;
at Franklin and Marshall Co_&#13;
in Lancaster, Pennsylvania,&#13;
small liberal arts college.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
·' &#13;
rted"esdllYSe~tember 27, J97~ CR!n~g::;;e::;r:-:------------------&#13;
Letter to the Editor Danforth Foundation 3&#13;
--- -- ,&#13;
!I A Plea For Writers ~~:~~~;:~?:~~:rs£~{~~~;~;:~'~i::&#13;
h four short weeks since write; competent people who time and may miss something nominated by Danforth Founda- oversee the Fellowship Program.&#13;
.Ina~a~emicyear begun, it.has can write good news articles. that deserves coverage. tion Baccalaureate Liaison All students interested in serving&#13;
:n brought to my attehntlo~, fThe Ra.ng~ has asked repeatedly If you notice something Officers. The Parkside Liaison on this committee should&#13;
of our readers, t at-In or Writers', People have come newsworthy going 01) around Officer is Professor Jerry contact Mr. Greenfield. The&#13;
bYdSO~:be ~alled a newspaper, into the office saying that they campus, call the Ranger office Greenfield, Assistant Professor of deadline for formal nominations&#13;
~ee~anger should print news. want to write and then never and tell us. We'll get-someone History, who can be contacted at is October 17.&#13;
f I have been told, the come back for assignments. on it as soon as we possibly can. Classroom Building 280. The Danforth Graduate Fel-&#13;
.so ar'has -been nothing but a If you want to write, we've Clubs, please tell us about The Fellowships are open to all lowship is a one-year award but&#13;
pa~r of feature articles got lots of ideas for prospective anything you are doing which qualified persons who have is normally renewable until&#13;
ser.le~led-with a few newsy writers, and if you've got an idea rnav ' be of interest to our serious interest in careeers of completion of the advanced&#13;
~::. Because of these remarks, for an article, by all means bring" readers. If you want news we'll teaching in colleges and degree or for a maximum of four&#13;
which. I lo.o.k. upon. ~s it in. There is always someone in do our, best .to get it for you, universities, and who plan to veers of graduate study.&#13;
constructiveCfltlClsm (so It IS the Ranger office during the&#13;
l&#13;
but, please, help us, too. We are study for a Ph.D. in any field of Fellowship stipends are based on&#13;
called), I feel compelled to day, or if ho editors are in, leave not ashamed nor are we study 'common to the under- individual need, but they will not&#13;
commentto the readers. a message-or, better still,' come embarrassed to ask for your help graduate Iiberal..arts curriculum exceed $2,500 for single Fellows,&#13;
The Ranger welcomes such back again. We cannot make so do not feel at all hesitant to in the United States. and for married Fellows with no&#13;
critic~m;we want to be told by you a member of the staff unless offer it.' Approximately 60-65 Fellow- children. Fellows who are&#13;
ourreaders what they want to you take the initiative. Also, we 'ships will be awarded to college married, or are "head of&#13;
- Nicki Kroll . h d b h hid" h&#13;
rea&#13;
d. But we need people to cannot be everywhere at every -seruors w 0 are nominate youse a , wit one child,&#13;
Ranger Staff Writer Baccalaureate liaison Officers. receive up to $3,500.&#13;
I&#13;
"I've got Pabst Blue Ribbon on my mind."&#13;
I&#13;
~1&#13;
j&#13;
"&#13;
.,&#13;
dnesday September 27, 197~ we \ '&#13;
Letter to the Editor ,&#13;
::;----r&#13;
'jij;,ger&#13;
Danforth Foundation&#13;
'&#13;
3&#13;
1 A Plea For Writers - Fellowships Off erred&#13;
The Danforth Foundation is&#13;
offering Graduate FellQwships to&#13;
college seniors who are&#13;
nominated by Danforth Foundation&#13;
Baccalaureate Liaison&#13;
Officers . The Parkside Liaison&#13;
Officer is Professor Jerry&#13;
Greenfield, Assistant Professor of&#13;
History, who can be contacted at&#13;
Classroom Building 280.&#13;
Mr. Greenfield is accepting&#13;
nominations for a campus&#13;
screening committee that will&#13;
oversee the Fellowship Program&#13;
All students interested in serving&#13;
on this committee should&#13;
contact Mr. Greenfield. The&#13;
deadline for formal nominations&#13;
is October 17 .&#13;
3,&#13;
h four short weeks since&#13;
Jn t e . h . academic year begun, 1t as&#13;
this bought to my attention, been r d h . Of our rea ers, t at- m&#13;
bY some - to be called a newspaper, order d . t R nger shoul pnn news.&#13;
the a&#13;
f I have been told, the&#13;
So ar, h' b · has been not mg ut a&#13;
paper of feature articles&#13;
series . kled with a few newsy spnn&#13;
. Because of these remarks, lines.&#13;
which . I lo_o~ _ upon . as&#13;
constructive cnt1c1sm (so 1t 1s&#13;
called), I feel compelled to&#13;
comment to the readers.&#13;
The Ranger welcomes sach&#13;
criticism; we want to be told by&#13;
our readers what they want to&#13;
ad But we need people to re .&#13;
write; competent people who&#13;
can write good news articles.&#13;
The Ra_ng~ has asked repeatedly&#13;
for writers·. People have come&#13;
into the office saying that they&#13;
want to write and then never&#13;
come back for assignments .&#13;
If you want to write, we've&#13;
got lots of ideas for prospective&#13;
writers, and if you've got an idea&#13;
for an article, by all means bring·&#13;
it in . There is always someone in&#13;
the Ranger office during th/&#13;
day, or if no editors are in, leave&#13;
a message or, better still, come&#13;
back again. We cannot make&#13;
you a member of the staff unless&#13;
you take.,.the initiative. Also, we&#13;
cannot be everywhere at every&#13;
time and may miss something&#13;
that deserves coverage.&#13;
If you ,notice something&#13;
newsworthy going on around&#13;
campus, call the Ranger office&#13;
and tell us. We'll get-someone&#13;
on it as soon as we possibly can.&#13;
Clubs, please tell us about&#13;
anything you are doing which&#13;
may ' be of interest to our&#13;
readers . If you want news we' ll&#13;
do our best _to get it for you,&#13;
but, please, help us, too. We are&#13;
not ashamed nor are we&#13;
· embarrassed to ask for your help&#13;
so do not feel at all hesitant to&#13;
offer it. '&#13;
- Nicki Kroll&#13;
Ranger Staff Writer&#13;
The Fellowships are open to all&#13;
qua I ified persons who have&#13;
serious interest in careeers of&#13;
teaching in colleges and&#13;
universities, and who plan to&#13;
study for a Ph.D. in any field of&#13;
study common to the undergraduate&#13;
liberal .arts curriculum&#13;
in the United States .&#13;
Approximately 60-65 Fellow-&#13;
. ships will be awarded to college&#13;
,seniors who are nominated by&#13;
Baccalaureate Liaison Officers .&#13;
"I've got Pabst Blue Ribbon on my mind."&#13;
/&#13;
i~::o~~;~~j~l{Mon~;, f ~S&lt;llOttUT PltODUCTS PIIOVtl&gt;E tTS Plll1£0fllMli·.l J/ lllY 111E FINEST OF ltOPS AND GIIAINS ~11£ Unt \!&#13;
t &amp;~ tld_/{~ ;B&amp;t in 1&amp;93 · s&#13;
~, . dl&#13;
· .. ;;:&#13;
The Danforth Graduate Fellowship&#13;
is a one-year award but&#13;
is normally renewable until&#13;
completion of the advanced&#13;
degree or for a maximum of four&#13;
years of graduate study&#13;
Fellowship stipends are based on&#13;
individual need, but they will not&#13;
exceed $2,500 for single Fellows,&#13;
and for married Fellows with no&#13;
children . Fellows who are&#13;
married , or are "head of&#13;
household", with one child,&#13;
receive up to $3,500. &#13;
Wednesday September 27,-197'&#13;
records *****************************&#13;
The Pat Methany Group'&#13;
Burton). But Methany's melodic&#13;
sense is not restricted to the -&#13;
traditional stance of Jhe jazz&#13;
Jazz in the seventies has been guitarist nor to the super-gu}.tar&#13;
somewhat of a bastard son. What prototechnics of someone like&#13;
the~ecOfdcompanies have been John McGlaughlin,' Instead,&#13;
pushing on the public for Methany -has managed to&#13;
lar consumption in the last transcend the traditional roles of popu&#13;
two or three years has been a each of these fields and has&#13;
hybrid of forms, some rock, a produced an album of subtle&#13;
hint of jazz, and a commercial textures which break oew-gro..und&#13;
package reminiscent of the latest in the field of jazz.&#13;
Methany has chosen to use the&#13;
pop craze. . h&#13;
This is not to demean artists guitar as just another voice In t e&#13;
such as Chick Corea or Herbie total picture. Nowhere does the&#13;
Hancock for instance. They have guitar stand out to blow us down&#13;
long paid their dues and are now with long extrapolations of&#13;
finding the field of jazz/rock (or current boring passages. What&#13;
fusion music as the record we get is a sound that stresses&#13;
companies would have us call it) the importance of tight-knit,&#13;
as the road to the long strived-for ensemble playing, something&#13;
commercial success that these currently I~&lt;:king i~ the jazz '&#13;
artists deserve. genre. "'-&#13;
So, it comes as a pleasant' Methany is ably assisted by a&#13;
surprise when an artist such as trio of-virtually unknown but still&#13;
Pat Methany emerges with a satisfying musicians, spotlighted&#13;
pleasantand palatable presenta- . by Waukesha's own Lyle Mays&#13;
tion of music which does on piano.&#13;
combine the popular form with Methany's group is just one of&#13;
the sophistication of the jazz many unknown yet extremely&#13;
realm, to produce this year's brilliant acts signed to Manfr:ed&#13;
most enjoyable excursion into Eicher's ECM label, a haven for&#13;
the jazz spectrum. musicians who want to put their&#13;
Entitled The Pat Methany art up front of the commerciallyGroup,&#13;
the album manages to oriented postures of most of the&#13;
seduce listeners with a sound big name labels. ECM has just&#13;
that is at first pleasant and finally signed a major distribution&#13;
just downright inspiring. agreement with Warner Bros. to&#13;
Methany is a guitar player handle its product in the US" So,&#13;
whose jazz roots run deep we may be hearing more from&#13;
(having spent a few years on the the wonderful world of progresroad&#13;
with jazz vibes player Gary sive [azz in the coming months.&#13;
by Terry Marccini&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
P!J~ 8 ,~r, Comm~on, 0&#13;
Scents .&#13;
W~-~· -&#13;
600ft?&gt;&#13;
*&#13;
o./uunftooJ.&#13;
*&#13;
lotion?&gt; ,* coJ.m.etic:.&#13;
JValuudl;, i¥..u!&#13;
PRODUCTS FROM MADISON'S&#13;
, 'THE SOAP.OPERA '&#13;
F)ND us IN THE SCHOOLHOUSE SHOPPES 3516 RAPIDS CT.&#13;
·RACINE_ 634-8223 BEHIND THE SOUND GALLERY&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
GOOD&#13;
MON - FRI&#13;
11 - 2&#13;
ALL PARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFI) ON ALL&#13;
REGULARLY PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICATION . .&#13;
An Inside L-ook&#13;
At&#13;
An Inside Look&#13;
by Tom Fervoy&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Beginning it's fourth season,&#13;
An Inside Look witn Paul Kleine&#13;
reaffirms the existence ~of&#13;
education television. 'Videotaped&#13;
in Parkside's Media&#13;
Service facilities as a part of the&#13;
Humanities Division's 'Community&#13;
Outreach', the program is&#13;
broadcast to the Racine-Kenosha&#13;
area via telecable channel 8A.&#13;
An "Inside Look is essentially&#13;
an education oriented talk show&#13;
produced with the intention of&#13;
relating to the public's needs&#13;
through the use of university&#13;
'know-how'. Originator and host&#13;
Prof. Paul Kleine-views the union&#13;
of university and area television&#13;
as an "untapped resourse" ana&#13;
hopes to "go beyond the classroom,&#13;
taking what Parkside has&#13;
and. extending it to the&#13;
community". Still, to inform an&#13;
audience, one must first have an&#13;
audience. A tvpical drawback on&#13;
the impact of programs of this&#13;
nature is the limited appeal and&#13;
public interest of educational&#13;
television. To make the program public welfare. The first of th&#13;
interesting, Prof. Kleine centers examines the situation of han&#13;
each show's subject matter on a capped persons in' society w'&#13;
topic which concerns many' guests Dan Johnson, director&#13;
people and goes on to view it the Advocacy of" the Physi&#13;
from the "different windows of a Disabled, and student Eliz&#13;
university." .. Perry, both themselves disabl&#13;
The content of the program Analyzed during the showwill be&#13;
covers anyone of three basic the changing climate of&#13;
formats. First, using members of : acceptance of the disabled, the&#13;
the Parkside faculty as guests, progress made fn emploYl1U!nl,&#13;
discussing various accomplish- education, and cultural and&#13;
ments sucfr as' current books, social activities, and the major:&#13;
publications, or research abroad. obstacles remaining in the WI:&#13;
Second is the coverage of of overall acceptance. Alsoto be&#13;
distinguished visitors appearing brought up are the exciting new&#13;
on campus including last season, projects underway, and advice&#13;
P.J. O'Rourke, editor of National on what individuals or group!&#13;
Lampoon Magazine. Third, and can do to belter their position,&#13;
most common are those dealing Admits Prof. Kleine; "60&#13;
with topicaTissues. Among past Minutes and Harry ReasonerI'm&#13;
broadcasts of this sort were not", nevertheless the quality of&#13;
series on Drug Abuse, Death and the program continues to&#13;
Dying, and a three part progra.!!L..improve. Director John Schoenon&#13;
the Family which included off and Producer Terry Maraceini&#13;
Philosopher, Economist, Educa- have added a permanent set for&#13;
tor, and others on the subject. three seperate Humanities Out·&#13;
This season, An Inside Look reach shows, including An Inside&#13;
narrows Its focus even further to Look, cutting down on time&#13;
t~e exploring of topical issues spent rearranging, speeding up&#13;
since they are of greater value to production and enabling con-&#13;
, centration on the show itself.&#13;
Notice&#13;
All Student Organizations&#13;
must register with the Student&#13;
Org~nizations Committee if theY&#13;
wish to receive funding thiS 11&#13;
semester The deadline is 5eP" 'II&#13;
tember 30th. More information lII.&#13;
is available in the StudentActl- 'Ill&#13;
vities Office, Union 207.&#13;
''''ON',~ FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO.BANK _&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL ~:&#13;
'PLEASANT PR'AIRIE ~,&#13;
. SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBED f.D.I.C.&#13;
Wednesday September 27, 1978&#13;
records **********1c******************&#13;
The Pat Methany Group ·&#13;
by Terry Marccini&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Burton). But Methany's melodic&#13;
sense is not restricted to the ·&#13;
traditional stance of the jazz&#13;
Jazz in the seventies has be~n guitarist nor to the super-gui_tar&#13;
somewhat of a bastard son. What prototechnics of someone like&#13;
the record companies have been John McGlaughlin . lnStead,&#13;
Pushing on the public for Methany ·has mana'ged to&#13;
h I transcend the traditional roles of popular consumption in t e ast&#13;
two or three years has been a each of these fields and has&#13;
hybrid of forms, some rock, a produced an album of subtle&#13;
hint of jazz, and a commer~ial textures which break oew groJ.Jnd&#13;
package reminiscent of the latest in the field of jazz. Methany has chosen to use the&#13;
pop craze. · h&#13;
This is not to demean artists guitar as just another voice int e&#13;
such as Chick Corea or Herbie total picture. Nowhere does the&#13;
Hancock for instance. They have guitar stand out to blow us down&#13;
long paid their dues and are now with long extrapolations of&#13;
find1ng the field of jazz/r6ck (or current boring passages. Wha!_&#13;
fusion music as the record we get is a sound that stresses&#13;
companies would have us call it) the importance of tight-knit,&#13;
as the road to the long strived-for ensemble playing, something&#13;
commercial success that these currently la_cking in the jazz ·&#13;
artists deserve. genre.&#13;
So it comes as a pleasant' Meth any is ably assisted by a&#13;
surp;ise when an artist such as trio of ~irt~all~ ~nknown b~t still&#13;
Pat Methany emerges with a satisfying mus1c1ans, spotlighted&#13;
pleasant and palatable ~res~nta- _ by Waukesha's own Lyle Mays&#13;
tion of music which does on pi_ano.&#13;
combine the popular form with Methany's group is just one of&#13;
the sophistication of the jazz many unknown yet extremely&#13;
realm, to produce this year's brilliant acts signed to Manfred&#13;
most enjoyable excursion into Eicher's ECM label, a haven for&#13;
the jazz spectrum. musicians who want to put their&#13;
Entitled The Pat Methany art up front of the commerciallyGroup,&#13;
the album manages to oriented postures of most of the&#13;
seduce listeners with a sound big name labels. ECM has just&#13;
that is at first pleasant and finally signed a major distribution&#13;
just downright inspiring. agreement with Warner Bros. to&#13;
Methany is a guitar player handle its product in the US. So,&#13;
whose jazz roots run deep we may be hearing more from&#13;
(having spent a few years on the the wonderful world of progresroad&#13;
with jazz vibes player Gary sive iazz in the coming months.&#13;
~)~ Comm~on .. _ · Scents ~ "&#13;
o.caf,,6- * 6-hanijww- * ~ '* C&lt;J6-m,elie6-&#13;
.Afa~ g,ruel&#13;
PRODUCTS FROM MADISON'S&#13;
' THE SOAP OPERA '&#13;
F}ND US IN THE SCHOOLHOUSE SHOPPES 3516 RAPIDS CT.&#13;
-RACINE- 634-8223 BEHIND THE SOUND GALLERY&#13;
t/4 lb&#13;
10% OFF-,&#13;
GOOG&#13;
MON - FRI&#13;
11 - 2&#13;
ALL l' ARKSIDE STUDENTS, FACULTY AND&#13;
STAFF WILL RECEIVE 10% OFI&lt;~ ON ALL&#13;
REGlJLARL Y PRICE MENU ITEMS WITH&#13;
PROPER PARKSIDE IDENTIFICATION.&#13;
An Inside Look&#13;
At&#13;
An Inside Look -by Tom Fervoy&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Beginning it's fourth season,&#13;
An Inside Look witli Paul Kleine&#13;
reaffirms t~e existence ' of&#13;
education television . Videotaped&#13;
in Parkside's Media&#13;
Service facilities as a part of the&#13;
Humanities Division's 'Community&#13;
Outreach', the program is&#13;
broadcast to the Racine-Kenosha&#13;
area via telecable channel 8A.&#13;
An Inside Look is essentially&#13;
an education oriented talk show&#13;
produced with the intention of&#13;
relating to the public's _needs&#13;
through the use of university&#13;
'know-how'. Originator and host&#13;
Prof. Paul Kleine view~ the union&#13;
of university and area television&#13;
as an "untapped resourse" and&#13;
hopes· to "go beyond the classroom,&#13;
taking what Parkside has&#13;
and- exten.ding it to the&#13;
community". Still, to inform an&#13;
audience, one must first have an&#13;
audience. A typi~al drawback on&#13;
the impact of programs of this&#13;
nature is the limited appeal and&#13;
public interest of educational&#13;
television. To make the program public welfare. The first of these&#13;
interesting, Prof. Kleine centers examines the situation of handieach&#13;
show's subject matter on a capped persons in · society with&#13;
topic which concerns many guests Dan Johnson, director of&#13;
people and goes on to view it the Advocacy of 1 the Physically&#13;
from the "different windows of a Disabled, and student Elizabeth&#13;
university." Perry, both themselves disabled.&#13;
The content of the program Analyzed during the show will be&#13;
covers any one of three basic the changing climate of&#13;
formats . First, using members of . acceptance of the disabled, the&#13;
the Parkside faculty as guests·, progress made fn employment,&#13;
discussing various accomplish- education, and cultural and&#13;
ments suclr" as current books, social activities, and the major&#13;
· publications, or research abroad. obstacles remaining in the way&#13;
Second is the coverage of of overall acceptance. Also to be&#13;
distinguished visitors appearing brought up are the exciting new&#13;
on campus including last season, projects underway, and advice&#13;
P. J. O'Rourke, editc5r of National on what individuals or groups&#13;
Lampoon Magazine. Third, and can do to better their position.&#13;
most common are those dealing Admits Prof. Kleine,· "60&#13;
with topicafissues. Among past Minutes ana Harry Reasoner I'm&#13;
broadcasts of this sort were not", nevertheless the quality of&#13;
series on Drug Abuse, Death and the program continues to&#13;
Dying, and a three part progra!E_improve. Director John Schoen·&#13;
on the Fami~y which included off and Producer Terry Maraccini&#13;
Philosopher, Economist, Educa- have added a permanent set for&#13;
tor, and others on the subject. three seperate Humanities Out·&#13;
This season, An Inside Look reach shows including An Inside&#13;
narrows its focus even further to Look, cutti~g down on time&#13;
t~e exploring of topical issues spent rearranging, speeding up&#13;
since they are of greater value to production and enabling con·&#13;
' centration on the show itself.&#13;
-Notice&#13;
All Student Organizations&#13;
must register with the Student&#13;
Organizations Committee if the,Y&#13;
wish to receive funding th1s&#13;
semester The deadline is SeP- • . n&#13;
tember 30th. More informat10.&#13;
is available in the Student Act1·&#13;
vities Office, Union 207.&#13;
~~llON~,'. FIRST 1 National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO.BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
'PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
' SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBED F.O.I.C. &#13;
.I., september 27,1978 ,,"'$11 ,&#13;
Insight On ,&#13;
Gwendolyn Bro~ks&#13;
byMollieClarke&#13;
" John Stewart&#13;
~ I began reading some of&#13;
~Iyn Brooks' poetry, I&#13;
foundmyself writing some&#13;
- own poems! At her recital&#13;
a/lIIYwednesday she recited&#13;
- f the same poems I had :=;;"ms she defined as "life&#13;
diItiJIed" ,&#13;
1924, at the age of seven, .&#13;
~Iyn Brooks began writmg&#13;
G 5 about friendshIp,' love,&#13;
poen! and nature, Initially, she&#13;
had "tried to stick- to, forms,"&#13;
OfftPOSirtg strictly organized.&#13;
c.l/eds and sonnets, She&#13;
this early poetry as&#13;
bel9JIginf to her "express&#13;
l'Jl'SI!f' stage.&#13;
.,. she attended High Park&#13;
• School in Chicago she&#13;
..,...ienced much prejudice&#13;
rnongststudents.&#13;
As a result of her experiences&#13;
in highschool she began writing&#13;
poems that were pleas for unity&#13;
...,ngst people. She called this&#13;
_ stage of .her writing\&#13;
e-eer"courting integration."&#13;
: Todayshe is writing largely in&#13;
ith free verse. She believes that&#13;
of atYthin~in Ijfe, .even subjects&#13;
like cows, abortions, and&#13;
lIy prbage are "valid material for&#13;
;h poetry," When she wrote a&#13;
~ palti&lt;ularpoem about abortion&#13;
of called, "The Mother," she&#13;
Ietalled how she was criticized he&#13;
for writingabout an experience&#13;
~ !Ile had never-had. In response&#13;
thisshe replied any "intense&#13;
ation is an aspect of&#13;
!Y rience,"and even though&#13;
" may not seem to be the&#13;
'/I&#13;
most exciting subjects to write , :,&#13;
about, Gwendolyn believes,&#13;
" ..._. .""" are' the most intelligent&#13;
~ people" she knows.&#13;
She is trying to write poetry&#13;
~ 'Ohichwill appeal to all blacks.&#13;
S1l! has read her poetry in&#13;
,.o PIIso. osaswell as in 'COlleges and&#13;
,i /USl recently appeared at the&#13;
" Menard Psychiatric Center in&#13;
t. Chicago,III. She makes about SO&#13;
" Il!nona&#13;
U&#13;
I appearances across the&#13;
.s. eachyear. .&#13;
, Ms: Brooks has also taught .&#13;
P creative writing at UW-Madison . r- CoIu b' , m la College in Chicago,&#13;
: New York City University.&#13;
~ gaveup teaching, however,&#13;
ause she found thar she&#13;
couldn'teach d' •&#13;
an wnte poetry too,&#13;
or&#13;
ns&#13;
pt&#13;
t( COQCCCQo---"8&#13;
,~&#13;
1" lH/$ SAT. I&#13;
IIJ1&#13;
d' KIDDIE FUCKS I&#13;
~&#13;
§&#13;
~&#13;
§&#13;
~&#13;
Walt Disneys&#13;
~&#13;
CUS §&#13;
THE MUu THAT K1Ci&lt;S&#13;
1110 YARD FiElD GOALS ~&#13;
§&#13;
ADM. $1.00 I&#13;
10:00 A.M. I&#13;
UNION CINEMA&#13;
_.&#13;
Drawarina&#13;
around the&#13;
-As poet laureate of Illinois, she&#13;
has given money to elementary&#13;
and high school students. who&#13;
participated in her writing&#13;
workshops and competitions.&#13;
The number and amount of these&#13;
awards vary with each year. She&#13;
commented that students who&#13;
are often considered "dumb" are&#13;
sometimesthe most imaginative.&#13;
When she was awarded the&#13;
Pulitzer Prize in 1949 for her&#13;
book of poetry, "Annie Allen," it&#13;
not only encouraged her to write&#13;
more but enabled her to teach in&#13;
colleges and help other&#13;
beginning writers.&#13;
Gwendolyn' advises writers&#13;
who are having difficulty with a&#13;
"writer's block" to read other&#13;
writers."not to imitate but to&#13;
forget about this compulsion to&#13;
write," and thut overcome the&#13;
block, "In time," she stated. "the&#13;
'spring' will fill up again." She&#13;
encourages writers to take notes&#13;
and keep a journal. In writing her&#13;
own aut~biography, Report From&#13;
Part One, she· recalled the&#13;
frustration of not being able to&#13;
remember the details of her past.&#13;
She had hoped that her&#13;
autobiography would be a "work&#13;
of art," But, in her opinion it&#13;
turned out to be a hodge-podge&#13;
of memories.&#13;
Currently she is working on&#13;
Report From Part Two, a&#13;
continuation of her authbiographv.&#13;
Her most recent b~ok is&#13;
titled Beckonings.-&lt;'&#13;
, Of her talk last Wednesday,&#13;
she said that she "trots around&#13;
making enemies and friends,"&#13;
but for all of us who heard her&#13;
this time she left behind only&#13;
friends. .":&#13;
• ••&#13;
iii iii•&#13;
5&#13;
Mini-Movie Revle. ***********&#13;
The Return of the Pink Panth.er&#13;
The return ?f the Pink Panther an entire office; or trying to&#13;
marks the ~hlrd of the popul~ sway a suspect with an utterly&#13;
P~nther series preceded by The rotten imitation of Humphrey&#13;
Pink; Panther (1964) and A Shot Bogart, Seller's Clouseau is&#13;
10 the Dark (1964), Given the irresistably hilarious,&#13;
lapse since the last Panther The story centers around the&#13;
effort (approximately twelve theft of the world famous Pink&#13;
ye'ars) The Return of the Pink Panther diamond. Clouseau&#13;
P~nther maintains much of the some misfortune, is assigned to&#13;
high comedic spirit of the latter recover the jewel and the laughs&#13;
two, . take off from there.&#13;
Peter Sellers once again The Return of the Pink&#13;
returns in the role of Inspector Panther also stars Herbert lorn&#13;
Clouseau, the clumsy, bumbling, back in his role as the Chief&#13;
inept French police inspector Inspector of the French police&#13;
who somehow wins against all who harbors a murderous dislike&#13;
odds. Sellers has always been for Clouseau. The movie also&#13;
one of the great comedy features Christopher Plummer as&#13;
performers on the screen and his the suspected jewel thief.&#13;
characterization of Clouseau is Although not as good as the&#13;
one of his most genius two earlier efforts (of which A&#13;
creations. Whether allowing a Shot in the Dark will probably&#13;
r~bbery to take place while remain the finest in the series)&#13;
reprimanding a sidewalk ped- The Return of the Pink Panther,&#13;
dler; posing as a telephone co-written and directed by Blake&#13;
repairman and nearly destroying Edwards, is fun and fun is all I&#13;
ask for in a movie.&#13;
a~&#13;
••••&#13;
1978&#13;
1 ',2 .&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
~ . -&#13;
.&#13;
-;&#13;
3 4 5 6 7. 8 9&#13;
"&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
10 11 12 13 14 15 16&#13;
I&#13;
.&#13;
17 18 19, 20 21 22 23&#13;
-&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
24 25· ! 26 27 28 29 30 -&#13;
1&#13;
. \&#13;
,&#13;
, \&#13;
-&#13;
I&#13;
-&#13;
, - , I -&#13;
.::1____ -- ~ - -&#13;
-&#13;
. -&#13;
sunday I tuesday&#13;
College ring day is&#13;
coming.&#13;
_ A Josten's representa· ..~. '\\ ..&#13;
tive will be on campus, \&#13;
on tile day circled -",.' if. ~&#13;
above to help you ".&#13;
place your order. Bookstore&#13;
Choose from four .&#13;
exclusive Josten's options .' S b 27. &amp; 2°&#13;
-at no extra chargel Choosewhlte or . ..eptem er I II.-&#13;
ellow gold ..Fu II name engraving or facslm lie ---""'~ WHEN&#13;
~ign atu re, Sun burst s.~t_o_n_e..:.:.o_r..;b:;;l_rt_h_s..;t_o_n_, e:.'__ ~ :=::::::R:i n:&#13;
g&#13;
:s:e:le:C:ti:0:n:&#13;
p&#13;
:ic:t:u:re:d:m::a;Y;d;if;fe;r;in;;Yo;u;r;siiciihiiOOiili'..&#13;
wednesday thursday fridoly saturday&#13;
.. ..... ,&#13;
Even encrusting.&#13;
No extra charge.&#13;
Draw a ring&#13;
around the day .50&#13;
you won't miss out.&#13;
Josten's&#13;
daY September 27, 1978 w,dnes&#13;
insight On , .&#13;
Gwendolyn Brooks&#13;
by Mollie Clarke&#13;
&amp; John Stewart&#13;
-&#13;
h I began reading some of Wen . I&#13;
d lyn Brooks' poetry, Gwen o .. f und myself wntrng some&#13;
SOon ° wn poems! At her recital&#13;
of ~y ;ednesday . she recited&#13;
las f the same poems I had&#13;
rnanv O d f" d "l"f d oems she e rne as I e&#13;
rea , P&#13;
distilled".&#13;
In 1924, at the abge of se_v~n,&#13;
dolyn Brooks egan wntrng&#13;
Gwens about friendship, love,&#13;
de~ and nature. Initially, she&#13;
a · k t f " had "tried to st,c - o or'.11s,&#13;
composing strictly organized .&#13;
allads and sonnets . She&#13;
Scribes this early poetry as&#13;
e - h " belonging to er express&#13;
yourself' stage.&#13;
When she attended High Park&#13;
High School in Chicag? ~he&#13;
experienced much preJ ud ice&#13;
amongst students.&#13;
As a result of her experiences&#13;
-As poet laureate of Illinois, she&#13;
has given money to elemeo.tary&#13;
and high school students, who&#13;
participated in her writing&#13;
workshops and competitions.&#13;
The number and amount of these&#13;
awards vary with each year. She&#13;
commented that students who&#13;
are often considered "dumb" are&#13;
sometimes the most imaginative.&#13;
When she was awarded the&#13;
Pulitzer Prize in 1949 for her&#13;
book of poetry, "Annie Allen," it&#13;
not only encouraged her to write&#13;
more but enabled her to teach in&#13;
colleges and help other&#13;
beginning writers.&#13;
Gwendolyn advises writers&#13;
who are having difficulty with a&#13;
"writer's block" to read other&#13;
writers. "not to imitate but to&#13;
forget about this compulsion to&#13;
write," and thut overcome the&#13;
block. "In time," she stated, "the&#13;
'spring' will fill up again." She&#13;
encourages writers to take notes&#13;
and keep a journal. In writing her&#13;
own autobiography, Report F;om&#13;
Part One, she . recalled the&#13;
frustration of not being able to&#13;
remember the details of her past.&#13;
She had hoped that her&#13;
autobiography would be a "work&#13;
of art," But, in her opinion it&#13;
turned out to be a hodge-podge&#13;
of memories.&#13;
Currently she is working on&#13;
Report From Part Two, a&#13;
continuation of her authbiography.&#13;
Her most recent book is&#13;
titled Beckonings.~&#13;
Of her talk last Wednesday,&#13;
she said that she "trots around&#13;
making enemies and friends,"&#13;
but for all of us who heard her&#13;
this time she left behind on-ly&#13;
friends.&#13;
Mini-Mcn,ie R•iew ***********&#13;
The Return of the Pink Panth,er&#13;
The return ?f the Pink Panther an entire office; or trying to&#13;
marks the third of the popul~ sway a suspect with an utterly&#13;
P~nther series preceded by The rotten imitation of Humphrey&#13;
Pink Panther (1964) and A Shot Bogart, Seller's Clouseau 1s&#13;
in the Dark (1964). Given the irresistably hilarious.&#13;
lapse since the last Panther The story centers around th&#13;
effort (approximately twelve theft of the world famous Pink&#13;
years) The Return of the Pink Panther diamond. Clouseau&#13;
Panther maintains much of the some misfortune, is assigned t~&#13;
high comedic spirit of the latter recover the jewel and the laughs&#13;
two. · take off from there.&#13;
Peter Sellers once again The Return of the Pink&#13;
returns in the role of Inspector Panther also stars Herbert Lorn&#13;
Clouseau, the clumsy, bumbling, back in his role as the Chief&#13;
inept French police inspector Inspector of the French police&#13;
who somehow wins against all who harbors a murderous dislike&#13;
odds. Sellers has always been for Clouseau. The movie also&#13;
one of the great comedy features Christopher Plummer as&#13;
performers on the screen and his the suspected jewel thief.&#13;
.::haracterization of Clouseau is Although not as good as the&#13;
one of his most genius two earlier efforts (of which A&#13;
creations. Whether allowing a Shot in the Dark will probably&#13;
r~bbery to take place while remain the finest in the series)&#13;
reprimanding a sidewalk ped- The Return of the Pink Panther,&#13;
dler; posing as a telephone co-written and directed by Blake&#13;
repairman and nearly destroying Edwards, is fun and fun is all I&#13;
ask for in a movie.&#13;
in high school she began writing&#13;
poems that were pleas for unity&#13;
amongst people. She called this&#13;
second stage of _her writing\&#13;
career "courting integration."&#13;
·Drawarin&#13;
free&#13;
Today&#13;
verse.&#13;
she&#13;
She&#13;
is writing&#13;
believes&#13;
largely&#13;
that&#13;
in --- anything in life, 'even subjects&#13;
like cows, abortions, and&#13;
garbage are ;,valid material for&#13;
poetry." When she wrote a&#13;
particular poem about abortion&#13;
around the ay.&#13;
• • • • ii • • ••••• called, "The Mother," she&#13;
recalled how she was criticized&#13;
for writing about an experience&#13;
it, she had never-had. In response d to this she replied any "inter:ise 197eSBPJ!&#13;
p&#13;
s&#13;
t&#13;
'(/&#13;
observation is an aspect of&#13;
~xperience."and even though&#13;
cows may not seem to be the&#13;
most exciting subjects to wfite&#13;
about, Gwendolyn believes,&#13;
"these .are · the most intelligent&#13;
people" she knows.&#13;
She is trying to write poetfY&#13;
which will appeal to all blacks.&#13;
She has read her poetry in&#13;
prisons as well as in colleges and&#13;
JUSt recently appeared at the&#13;
Menard Psychiatric Center in&#13;
Chicago, Ill. She makes about 50&#13;
personal appearances across the&#13;
U.S. each year. .&#13;
Ms_. Brooks has also taught&#13;
creative writing at UW-Madison&#13;
Columbia CoUege in Chicago'&#13;
;~d New York City University'.&#13;
e gave up teaching, however,&#13;
because she found thar she&#13;
couldn't teach and write poetry too.&#13;
~..,...,...,,...,...,...,....,.....,.....,....,....,....,....,.....,...,.....,.....,.1&#13;
TH/$ $AT. I&#13;
KIDDIE FLICKS ~ §&#13;
§ §&#13;
I § § § §&#13;
Walt Disneys ~ §&#13;
ous §&#13;
§&#13;
THE MULE THAT KIC~S § 10() y&#13;
-~ ARD FIELD GOALS&#13;
AD~. *t.oo §&#13;
§&#13;
l0:00 A.M. ~ . UNION CINEMA § .... _"'-!_ --~ SI&#13;
sunday , monday tuesday wednesday thursday fridcly saturday&#13;
-...........&#13;
3 4&#13;
10 11&#13;
17. 18&#13;
24 25 · ·&#13;
-J_&#13;
College ring day is&#13;
coming.&#13;
A Josten's representative&#13;
wi 11 be on campus&#13;
on th'e day circled _-&#13;
above to help you&#13;
place your order.&#13;
5&#13;
12&#13;
19 ,&#13;
26&#13;
Choose from four . , exc lusive Josten's options . . . - at no extra charge! Choose_ white or .•..&#13;
el low gold .. Fu ll name engrav1~g or facs imile&#13;
tgnature. Sunburst stone or b1rthston_e .&#13;
6&#13;
13&#13;
20&#13;
27&#13;
1&#13;
1. 8&#13;
14 15&#13;
21 22&#13;
\&#13;
28 29&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
... ..&#13;
9&#13;
16&#13;
23&#13;
30&#13;
Even encrusting.&#13;
No extra charge.&#13;
Draw a ring&#13;
around the da .so&#13;
you won't mis out.&#13;
Josten's&#13;
--=S'--=- eptemh~H~ 27. &amp; 28&#13;
Ring selection pictured may differ in our. hool. &#13;
Wednesday September 27,1978&#13;
Chillaukee Neils&#13;
The !weet Truth&#13;
1'/ I k f you 00 . or seeeeInes. yo ur search will be endless&#13;
You will 2,.ever be ,at"fied&#13;
But if you seek the true_taste&#13;
You will find what you are looking for Buddha&#13;
by Sharon Murphy&#13;
&amp; other friends of the food co-op&#13;
Sugar is big business and the&#13;
advertising of it floods the media&#13;
and touches all phases of our&#13;
lives from the christening to the&#13;
funeral. From cookies to beer,&#13;
sugar consumption is our most&#13;
main streamed addiction.'&#13;
A refined sucrose, the substance&#13;
to which we become&#13;
addicted is made from sugar&#13;
cane or sugar beets. The&#13;
difference between it and&#13;
glucose, which is made in the&#13;
body from natural carbohydrates&#13;
is remarkable. The two substances&#13;
have different chemical&#13;
structures, and affect the body in&#13;
profoundly different ways. Sugar&#13;
pushers tell' us how important&#13;
sugar is as an essential&#13;
component of the human body,&#13;
how it is oxidized to produce&#13;
energy, how it is metabolized to&#13;
produce warmth, and so on.&#13;
They are talking about glucose,&#13;
which is manufactured in the&#13;
body and they want us to believe&#13;
they are talking about sucrose,&#13;
which is made in their refineries.&#13;
Virtually everything we drink&#13;
- coffee, soft drinks, milk, beer,&#13;
tea, juices, distilled spirits and&#13;
wine - is loaded with sugar&#13;
and lor artificial sweeteners.&#13;
Canned vegetables, soups,&#13;
pickles, prepared and frozen&#13;
foods; jello; flavored yogurt;&#13;
packaged cere-als; processed&#13;
meats; fried rice mixtures;&#13;
peanut butter; crackers; contain&#13;
label ingredients like "sucrose,"&#13;
"glucose," "dextrose," "Malt&#13;
svrup," and "corn .svrup". Even&#13;
American cigarettes are as much&#13;
as 20% sugar due to curing&#13;
procedures and soaking the&#13;
tobaccoin sugar solutions for a&#13;
"sweeter" smoke. This curing&#13;
process is said to be.a factor in&#13;
the cigaretttes being more&#13;
carcinogenic. .&#13;
Sugar will rot your teeth, give&#13;
you pimples, cause headaches&#13;
and fatigue, enhance your&#13;
appeal to mosquitos, ruin your&#13;
appetite for real food to the&#13;
point of malnutrition or obesity&#13;
or both; and perhaps make you a&#13;
candidate for diabetes or heart&#13;
disease. .....&#13;
Besides that, it's worse than&#13;
nothing at all because it drains&#13;
and leechesthe bodv of precious&#13;
vitamins and minerals through&#13;
the demand its' digestion,&#13;
detoxification, and elimination&#13;
make upon one's entire system.&#13;
Minerals such as sodium (from&#13;
salt), potassium and magnesium&#13;
(from vegetables), and calcium&#13;
(from the bones) are mobilized&#13;
and used in chemical tran5m~tatlon.&#13;
Neutral acids are produced&#13;
that attempt toreturn the acidalkaline&#13;
balance factor of the&#13;
blood to a more normal' state.&#13;
Sugar taken ~ every day&#13;
produces a continuously overacid&#13;
condition, and more and&#13;
more minerals are required from&#13;
deep in the body to rectify the&#13;
imbalance. Finally, in order to&#13;
protect the, blood, so much&#13;
calcium is taken from the bones.&#13;
'and teeth that decay and general,&#13;
weakening begin.&#13;
'The liver has a limited&#13;
capacity for glucose and when It&#13;
blows up as far as it can, the&#13;
excess glycogen is returned to&#13;
the blood and stored as fatty&#13;
acid ir, inactive areas like the&#13;
belly, buttocks, breasts and the&#13;
thighs. When these areas are&#13;
filled, fatty acids are distributed&#13;
to active organs such as heartand&#13;
kidneys and they slow down,&#13;
And if our physiology alone&#13;
was affected it would be enoueh.&#13;
but that just ain't so, Our psyche&#13;
is also deeply affected by the&#13;
drastic [mbalance that sucrose&#13;
causes. It is absorbed into the&#13;
blood stream very readily&#13;
because its the next thing to&#13;
glucose already and largelv&#13;
escapes chemical processing.&#13;
The brain registers it first.&#13;
Hormones pour from the adrenal&#13;
casings and marshal· every&#13;
chemical resource for dealing&#13;
with the sugar. 'Insulin from the&#13;
endocrine "islets" of the&#13;
pancreas work specifically ~to&#13;
hold down' the glucose level in&#13;
the blood in. complementary&#13;
antagonism to the adrenal&#13;
hormones concerned' with keeping&#13;
the level up, All this is going&#13;
so fast that it goes to far. The&#13;
bottom drops out of the blood&#13;
glucose level and another crisis&#13;
begins. Pancreatic islets have to&#13;
shut down affected adrenal&#13;
casings and hormones.&#13;
While all this is happening our&#13;
moods are being, affected&#13;
porportionately, Quick, pick-up,&#13;
However, this surge of mortgaged&#13;
energy is succeeded bV&#13;
downs, When the bottom 0.&#13;
out we become tired, liStless.&#13;
require great effort to tni~&#13;
even move. Our poor brain&#13;
vuln~rable to suspicion and ~&#13;
hallucination. We can&#13;
irritable or jumpy:-- Severity&#13;
dependent upon the overload&#13;
we continue taking sugara&#13;
double crisis is always beginn&#13;
'&#13;
before the old one ends,&#13;
Any sugar, natural or refi&#13;
will give your svstem a sho&#13;
taken in large doses.&#13;
recommend fresh and d'&#13;
fruits, popcorn and nuts ra&#13;
than .candy ~nd nat&#13;
sweeteners in baking instead&#13;
white sugar.&#13;
For breakfast try pure m&#13;
syrup instead - of a proces&#13;
sugar type or blend one you&#13;
like: 1/2 cup molasses, %&#13;
honey, % 'teaspoon vanilla&#13;
pinch of salt or some nuts'&#13;
enhance flavor and nutrition&#13;
you won't suffer from t&#13;
awful sugar blues,&#13;
Soccer Grabs First Win&#13;
by Doug &amp; Dave&#13;
Co-Sports Editors&#13;
In a come from behind effort&#13;
the Parkside Men's soccer team&#13;
won its first game of the season&#13;
last Tuesday by defeating Trinity&#13;
College at Deerfield by a 3-2&#13;
score.&#13;
Parkside started off the scoring&#13;
with a goal by junior Earl&#13;
Campbell assisted by freshman&#13;
Ciaude Cielonko.&#13;
Trinity held a 2-1 lead in the&#13;
second half when the Rangers&#13;
tallied again as senior Alex&#13;
Burojevich scored on an assist&#13;
from Campbell.&#13;
With two minutes remaining&#13;
\&#13;
I-------------------~-----~&#13;
THE BEST IN LIVE ENTERTAINMENT!&#13;
happy~&#13;
moft-fri J-(),.&#13;
Also serving Italian Beef Sandwiches and&#13;
Italian Sausage Bombers&#13;
2319 63rd Street 652-8988&#13;
in the game Campbell scored the&#13;
decisive goal, his second of the&#13;
game on an assist from Niall&#13;
Power.&#13;
The Rangers then travelled to&#13;
battle three tough teams and the&#13;
heat in Texas for what will be'&#13;
their toughest road trip of the&#13;
year.&#13;
The first game saw Parkside in&#13;
a rough defensive battle losing to&#13;
a superior Southern Methodist&#13;
University team by a 3-0 score,&#13;
This game marked the return of&#13;
starting goalkeeper Danny&#13;
Brieschke who was out for three&#13;
gameswith a broken finger.&#13;
The next game was against&#13;
North Texas State and it saw the&#13;
heat taking its toll on&#13;
Rangers, Coach Hal Hen&#13;
was able to take only 15 p&#13;
with him on this trip, 11&#13;
.and 4 substitutes. All season&#13;
that has been the Ra&#13;
biggest setback, a lack&#13;
substitutes. The Rangers&#13;
beat 9-0.in this game and&#13;
looking forward to Monday'&#13;
home following a Sunday&#13;
against Texas Christian Uni&#13;
sitv.&#13;
The Rangers wjll take a&#13;
off when they return nom&#13;
preparation for a Saturday&#13;
against a visiting UWwater&#13;
team at 2 p'.m.&#13;
. .' . . . Raln,lnlury Hampers TenniS&#13;
----------------- J&#13;
by Doug &amp; Dave&#13;
Co-Sports Editors&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
•&#13;
'&#13;
~ -' ~&#13;
, ,&#13;
'l 'J!'¢t, ..t,&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosho, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone 654-0774&#13;
All MAJOR CREDIJ CARDS ACCEPTED'&#13;
As the saying goes, 'when it&#13;
rains it pours.' This old adage&#13;
applies to the women's tennis&#13;
team because their Wednesday&#13;
match against cross-town rival&#13;
Carthage was cancelled due to&#13;
inclement weather, and then on&#13;
Saturday lost to visiting WWIA&#13;
conference foe UW-Stevens&#13;
Point by a 6-3 score, The loss&#13;
dropped the Rangers conference&#13;
record to 2-2 and their overall&#13;
record to 3-2.&#13;
PARKSIOE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES .&#13;
FOOD SERVICE&#13;
HOUR CHANGES&#13;
-UNION DINING ROOM- Now open&#13;
/at 7: 15 AM to meet your breakfast&#13;
needs, Try our daily 99' speciall&#13;
/&#13;
-WLLC COFFEE SHOPPE- Now open&#13;
until 8:00 PM [Mon,theu Thur,]&#13;
- UNION SQUARE GRILL-Will be&#13;
closing at 7: 00 PM [Mon. thru Thur, 1&#13;
Begining in Oct,&#13;
THANK YOU FOR YOUR PATRONAGE ,&#13;
The only winners in the any matches due to the in'&#13;
Stevens Point match were the freshman Laura Bienco will&#13;
doubles teams of Kathy Logic into the starting six si&#13;
being the only singles victor. players.&#13;
Sophomore Kathy Thomas The Rangers will h&#13;
suffered her first defeat of the, UW-Oshkosh Tuesday and&#13;
season, but eve~ worse, she --.....travel Saturday to compete&#13;
suffered a shoulder injury in her . the Whitewater Invitational.&#13;
doubles match, She reinjured it&#13;
while trying to plav.in her singles&#13;
match later in the morning. The&#13;
extent of the injury was not&#13;
known at this writing-but the loss&#13;
of a player of Kathy's' caliber will&#13;
be "felt if she cannot continue&#13;
playing. If she is forced to miss&#13;
PAS. OUTING COMM.&#13;
PRESENTS: '&#13;
RANGER NEEDS WRITE&#13;
THE NCSA SKI) (1&#13;
WEEK AT JI ~c7J.!E--,_&#13;
Jackson Hole, Wyoming&#13;
Jan. 1-8 1979&#13;
Train 265.00&#13;
Drive 135.00&#13;
TONS OF PARTIES, RACES, ETC.&#13;
STOP IN UNION 209&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION&#13;
Wednesday September 27, 1978&#13;
Chiwaukee News&#13;
The !weet Truth&#13;
If you look for sweetness your search will be endless&#13;
You will {Lever be satisfied&#13;
But if you seek the true_ taste&#13;
You will find what you are looking for Buddha&#13;
by Sharon Murphy&#13;
&amp; other friends of the food co-op&#13;
and/or artificial sweeten·ers .&#13;
Canned vegetables, soups,&#13;
pickles, prepared arid frozen&#13;
Sugar is big business and the foods; jello; flavored yogurt;&#13;
advertising of it floods the media packaged cereals; processed&#13;
and touches all phases of our meats; · fried rice mixtures;&#13;
lives from the christening to the peanut butter; crackers; contain&#13;
funeral. From cookies to beer, label ingredients like " sucrose,'.'&#13;
sugar consumption is our most " glucose," "dextrose," "Malt&#13;
mainstreamed addiction.· syrup," and "corn syrup". Even&#13;
A refined sucrose, the sub- American cigarettes are as much&#13;
stance to which we become as 20% sugar due to curing&#13;
addicted is made from sugar procedures and soaking the&#13;
cane or sugar beets. The tobacco in sugar solutions for a&#13;
difference between it and "sweeter" smoke. This caring&#13;
glucose, which is made in the proces~ is said to be_ a factor in&#13;
body from natural carbohydrates the cigaretttes being more&#13;
is remarkable. The two sub- carcinogenic.&#13;
(from vegetables), and calcium&#13;
(from the bones) are mobilized&#13;
and used in chemical transmutation&#13;
. Neutral acids are produced&#13;
that attempt to' return the acidalkaline&#13;
balance factor of the&#13;
blood to a more normal' state.&#13;
. Sugar taken every day&#13;
produces a continuously overacid&#13;
condition, and more and&#13;
more minerals are required from&#13;
deep in the body to rectify the&#13;
imbalance. Finally, in order to&#13;
protect the . blood, so much&#13;
calcium is taken from the bones.&#13;
and teeth that decay and general ·&#13;
w,eakening begin.&#13;
The liver has a limited&#13;
capacity for glucose and when it&#13;
blows up as far as it can, the&#13;
excess glycogen is returned to&#13;
the blood and stored as fatty&#13;
ac;id ir, inactive areas like the&#13;
belly, buttocks, breasts and the&#13;
thighs. When these areas are&#13;
filled, fatty acids are distributed&#13;
to active organs such as heart,&#13;
and kidneys and they slow down.&#13;
And if our physiology alone&#13;
was affe,ted it would be enoueh.&#13;
but that just ain't so. Our psyche&#13;
is also deeply affected by the&#13;
drastic imbalance that sucrose&#13;
causes. It is absorbed into the&#13;
blood stream very readily&#13;
because its the next thing to&#13;
glucose already and largely&#13;
escapes chemical processing.&#13;
The brain registers it first.&#13;
Hormones pour from the adrenal&#13;
casings and marshal · every&#13;
chemical resource for dealing&#13;
with the sugar. Insulin from the&#13;
endocrine "islets" of the&#13;
pancreas work specifically . to&#13;
hold down ,the_ glucose level in&#13;
the blood in complementary&#13;
antagonism to the adrenal&#13;
hormones concerned with keeping&#13;
the level up. All this is gojng&#13;
so fast that it goes to far. The&#13;
bottom drops out· of the blood&#13;
glucose level and another crisis&#13;
begins. Pancreatic islets have to&#13;
shut down affected adrenal&#13;
casings and hormones.&#13;
While all this is happening our&#13;
moods are being affected&#13;
porportionately. Quick. pick-up.&#13;
However. this surge of mortgag-&#13;
~,&#13;
ed energy is succeeded by t~I&#13;
downs. When the bottom n&#13;
out we become tired, listlest i~&#13;
require great effort to thin[&#13;
even move. Our poor bra&#13;
vuln~rable to suspicion and in 11&#13;
h II . . w ~ a ucinat1on . e can&#13;
irritable or j ump.y. Severi~~&#13;
depende'nt upon the overload '-&#13;
we continue taking sugar a .f&#13;
double crisis is always begin~&#13;
before the old one ends.&#13;
Any sugar, natural or ref&#13;
will give your systel')'.l a sho~l&#13;
taken in large doses. W&#13;
recommend fresh and d. f . II&#13;
ru1ts, popcorn and nuts ra&#13;
than candy and natu&#13;
sweeteners in baking instead1&#13;
white sugar.&#13;
For breakfast try pure map&#13;
syrup instead - of a proce's&#13;
s_ugar type or blend one your ~&#13;
like: ½ cup hlolasses, ½ c ~ 1,&#13;
honey, ½ teaspoon vanilla 1111ne JO&#13;
pinch of salt or some nuts' to ~~iam 5&#13;
enhance flavor and nutrition a~ ~min1&#13;
~&#13;
you won't suffer from tho&#13;
awful sugar blues.&#13;
stances have different chemical Sugar will rot your teeth, give&#13;
structures, and affect the body in you pimples, cause headaches&#13;
profoundly different ways. Sugar and fatigue', enhance your&#13;
pushers tell us how important appeal to mosquitos, ruin your&#13;
sugar is as an essential appetite for real food to the&#13;
component of the human body, point of malnutrition or obesity&#13;
how it is oxidized to produce or both; and perhaps make you a&#13;
energy, how it is metabolized to candidate for diabetes or he.art&#13;
produce warmth, and so on. disease.&#13;
Soccer Grabs First Win&#13;
They are talking about glucose, Besides that, it's worse than&#13;
which is manufactured in the nothing at all because it drains&#13;
body and they want us to believe and leeches the ~ody of preci~us&#13;
they are talking about sucrose · vitamins and miner.als through&#13;
which is made in their refineries'. the demand its · digestion,&#13;
Virtually everything we drink detoxification, and elimination&#13;
- coffee, soft drinks, milk, beer, make upon one's entire system.&#13;
tea, juices, distilled spirits and Minerals such as sodium (from&#13;
wine - is loaded with sugar salt). potassium and magnesium&#13;
by Doug &amp; Dave&#13;
Co-Sports Editors&#13;
In a come from behind effort&#13;
the Parkside Men's soccer team&#13;
won its first game of the season&#13;
last Tuesday by defeating Trinity&#13;
College at Deerfield by a 3-2&#13;
score.&#13;
Parkside started off the scoring&#13;
with a goal by junior Earl&#13;
Campbell assisted by freshman&#13;
Claude Cielonko.&#13;
Trinity held a 2-1 lead in the&#13;
second half when the Rangers&#13;
tallied again as senior Alex&#13;
Burojevich scored on an assist&#13;
from Campbell.&#13;
With two minutes remaining&#13;
\&#13;
in the game Campbell scored the&#13;
decisiye goal, his second of the&#13;
game on an assist from Niall&#13;
Power.&#13;
The Rangers then travelled to&#13;
. battle three tough teams and the&#13;
heat in Texas for what will be&#13;
their toughest road trip of the&#13;
year.&#13;
The first game saw Parkside in&#13;
a rough defensive battle losing to&#13;
a superior Southern Methodist&#13;
University team by a 3-0 score.&#13;
This game marked the return of&#13;
starting goalkeeper Danny&#13;
Brieschke who was out for three&#13;
games with a broken finge~.&#13;
The next game was against&#13;
North Texas State and it saw the&#13;
Rain;lniury Hampers Tennis&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
. N_ational Varsity Club&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
by Doug &amp; Dave&#13;
Co-Sports Editors&#13;
•-~ - - ~&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha w· . , 1sconsm&#13;
As the saying goes 'when it&#13;
rains it pours.' This ~Id adage&#13;
applies to the women's tennis&#13;
team beca~se their Wednesday&#13;
f!latch against cross-town rival&#13;
Carthage was cancelled due to&#13;
inclement w';ather, and then on&#13;
Saturday lost to visiting WWIA&#13;
conference foe UW-Stevens&#13;
Point by a 6-3 score. The loss&#13;
dropped the Rangers conference&#13;
record to 2-2 and their overall&#13;
record to 3-2.&#13;
I .&#13;
~,~ .,}~·, ...&#13;
Phone 654-077 4&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
FOOD. SERVICE&#13;
HOUR CHANGES&#13;
•UNION DINING ROOM- Now open&#13;
,...-at 7 :15 AM t O meet your breakfast&#13;
needs. Try our daily 99• special!&#13;
I&#13;
•WLLC COFFEE SHOPPE N . . - ow open&#13;
- until 8.00 PM [Mon.thru Thur.)&#13;
- • UNl?N SQUARE GRILL- Will be&#13;
closing at 7:00 PM [Mon. thru Thur.)&#13;
Beg1ning in Oct.&#13;
THANK YOU FOR YOUR PATRONAGE&#13;
The only winners in the any matches due to the inju~&#13;
Stevens Point match were the freshman Laura Bienco will st~&#13;
do~bles teams of Kathy Logic into the starting six sing!&#13;
being the only singles victor. players.&#13;
Sophomore_ Kathy Thomas Th e Rangers will hOI'&#13;
suf_f ered her first defeat of the UW-Oshko h T d nd the'&#13;
season b t - s ues ay a , u eve~ worse, · she travel Saturday to compete ~&#13;
~uffebr1&#13;
ed a shoulder injury in her the Whitewater Invitational.&#13;
ou es match. She reinjwed it'&#13;
while trying to play.in her singles&#13;
match later in the morning. The&#13;
extent of the, injury was not&#13;
known at this writing-but the loss&#13;
of ~ player of Kathy's caliber will&#13;
be folt if she cannot continue&#13;
playing. If she is forced to miss&#13;
P.A.B. OUTING COMM&#13;
PRESENTS : .&#13;
Jackson Hole, Wyoming&#13;
Jan. 1-8 1979 .&#13;
Train 265.00&#13;
Drive 135.00&#13;
TONS OF PARTIES, RACES~ ETC.&#13;
STOP IN UNION 209&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION &#13;
~ .day september 27,1978&#13;
I fI'u'"&#13;
: volleyball 1:--- '&#13;
I Rangers· Must Pull Together&#13;
~ women's athletic team in record so far this season.&#13;
~ byDoug&amp; Dave Parkside history to a regional In a match last Thursday at&#13;
Co-SportsEditors tournament. If she is to enjoy Marquette against Marquette&#13;
that honor again this year her and UW-Oshkosh coach Hendergo&#13;
volleyball, coach Rangers are going to have to son's squad let it's record slip to&#13;
A y~r ~er50ntook the first improve on their 0-2 conference an overall mark of 0-7-2. In the&#13;
Linda en - first match of Rangers lost the&#13;
first game 15-3 and fell short in&#13;
the second game 17-15. In&#13;
volleyball the teams play for the&#13;
best Zout of 3 games.&#13;
Against Marquette they fared&#13;
a little better as they won the&#13;
first game 15-10. "We lost our Wednesday, Sept. 27 momentum' after the first garne-'&#13;
BrownBag Lunch starting at 12 noon in WLLC D174 .. Dr. wasthe reason coach Henderson&#13;
WayneJohnson will talk on "The Denlal.ot Death." The gave for the ensuing 15-7 and&#13;
prOgrami~ free and op~n to the publ ic. Sponsored by 15-6 losses. The results of both&#13;
Community Student Services. matches were unexpected as&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 28 Marquette hasn't beaten the&#13;
Modem Lenguage meeting at 3:00 p.m. in CA 233 to Rangers for 2 years prior to this&#13;
d&#13;
iscuSSclub activities and make plans for the semester. match and Parkside was 3-0&#13;
. k h t 2 30' CA 233 over UW-Oshkosh last fall.&#13;
Debateand ForensIcs wor s op a : In . W.iII Henderson called this years&#13;
go over the b.asics in debat~ and -rorenstcs, to give even team a strong one, however it&#13;
thenovice a firm understanding. still need; a little polishing to&#13;
SingleParents Get together at 7 p.fTl:. in CL 111.. repeat last years achievement.&#13;
SpOrts Women's Volleyball: at Michigan State Invitational A win is needed Tuesday in&#13;
Tournament,East Lansing. - order to prime the Rangers for&#13;
Friday, Sept. 29 \ their upcoming trip this weekend&#13;
EIrlhScience Collogquium 12 noon in GR 113. Dr. Peter to compete in the Michigan&#13;
Sheehanof the Milwaukee Public Museum wil speak on: State Invitational. A number of&#13;
'The Demise of North America's Tropical Ordovician larger teams will be competing&#13;
FaunaBrought on by African Glaciation." Free coffee and there and a good showing by&#13;
Parkside on this trip will greatly'&#13;
:1 doughnutswill be served. improve their chances of again&#13;
!loYle "Return of the Pink Panther" will be shown at 8 winning a bid to the WWIAC&#13;
p.m.in the Union Cinema Theatre. Admission at the door Regional Tournament in Milw.uIs$1.oofor&#13;
a Parks ide student and $1.00 for a guest. kee.&#13;
Sports Women's Volleyball: at Michigan State Invitational In order to be picked for the&#13;
Tournament, East Lansing: . regionals a team must either&#13;
, Saturday, Sept. 30 place first in their state or&#13;
Sports Men's 'Cross~Country: At Hillsdale (Mich.) compile an impressive record&#13;
111 Invitational.' against so called large schools,&#13;
Women'sCross-Country: MARQUETTE (10:30) ,- such as Marquette and UWGolf&#13;
(Men's): Parkside Invitational (Brighton Dale G.C.; Oshkosh. Winning the state&#13;
- playoffs is not out of the&#13;
9:30 a.m.) - question for this years squad.&#13;
Men'sSoccer: UW-Whitewater (2 p.m.) Last years team lost out in the&#13;
Women'sTennis: at Whitewater Invitational. finals to Carroll College, a team&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 1 Parkside had beat earlier last&#13;
MOYie"Return of the Pink Panther" will be repe-ated. at season.&#13;
7:30 p.rn, in the Union Cinema Theatre. The Rangers have a good&#13;
. Monday, Oct. 2 ' chance to change things around&#13;
Debete&amp; Forensics meeting at 3:30 in CA 233. Future this season as last Thursdays&#13;
t match at Marquette was only the&#13;
oumaments and high school tournaments will b, second of 15. As the season&#13;
si diSCUSSed.New members welcome. - progresses coach Henderson&#13;
• Tuesday, Oct. 3 fully expects her team to&#13;
SportsWqmen's Tennis: at Carroll College, Waukesha (3 improve. More team play is&#13;
,re Wp·m.) needed as the seasonprogresses.&#13;
I omen's Volleyball": UW-Whilewater &amp; North Park Coach Henderson pointed out&#13;
I Coliege (6:00 p.m.) that the team is not playing as a&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 4· -. ' team right now, but as&#13;
SOCcelebration from 11 :30-1 :30 in Union Bazaar. Student individuals.", "'&#13;
grou d Parks ide's next match is ps will have displays set up, free beer provided an&#13;
so tomorrow 'at Carthage against&#13;
meentertainment available. A good time for AII!!! Carthage and Elmhurst College.&#13;
e Thursday, Oct. 5 The Rangers will then travel to&#13;
f oflee House Starting at 1 p.m. in Union 104-106 East Lansing Michigan for the&#13;
ealunng Dave Parker, a folk singer. Admission is free. Michigan State Invitational&#13;
_S_po_n_s_o_re_d_b~y~P:...A:..::B:.:.. , .Tournament.&#13;
--~~~~~-&#13;
I Coming Events ~&#13;
I&#13;
Is&#13;
Smolce·ln This Sunday&#13;
What is the largest cash crop&#13;
in Hawaii, according to U.S.&#13;
government figures? What is&#13;
.known to create a pleasantly&#13;
euphoric state, but also to be of&#13;
aid to glaucoma victims and is&#13;
used to treat the side-effects of&#13;
chemotherapy treatment in&#13;
cancer patients? What will be&#13;
burned very slowly but in large&#13;
quantities on the Madison&#13;
Capitol lawn, Sunday,October 1,&#13;
from noon until 5:00 p.m.-&#13;
The answer is POT, reefer,&#13;
gage, weed, grass, good old&#13;
American Marijuana. The preceding&#13;
"facts, were sent to the&#13;
Rangerby the Wisconsin Student&#13;
Association which is sponsoring&#13;
a marijuana decriminalization&#13;
rally on the capitol lawn at the&#13;
above time. Keynote speakers&#13;
will include Representative&#13;
David Clarenbach, sponsor of&#13;
Wisconsin's marijuana decriminalization&#13;
bill, Gene Messina&#13;
from t'lORML (the national pot&#13;
reform group), and Dana Beal&#13;
from YIPI (the Youth International&#13;
Party). live music will&#13;
also be provided.&#13;
Although the Madison city&#13;
council hasattempted to halt the&#13;
rally it appears that it is gomg&#13;
ahead. Ranger hopes to have&#13;
pictures and more m-depth&#13;
information for our first issue of&#13;
October.&#13;
Special Smoker's Note: II&#13;
doesn': do you any good&#13;
unless you hold the smoke in'&#13;
.&#13;
TY~fmNQIJ&#13;
~[;3'..~.-.;Fl'- '1.' §- '&lt;W~:~' ~~&#13;
I&#13;
".' .~. ·L.:.....\· ~ 1; .- .. - :=WoI'&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Seleetcns&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. at 62nd St.&#13;
Established in 1930&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK IN&#13;
__ ! I I --. ~CAPULCO&#13;
...... -', " ,.\ JANUARY 2·9, 1979&#13;
II!!f TRIP INClUDES, !!~ROUND TRIP JET AIR VIA BRANIFF AIRLINES&#13;
rt" I 7 NIGHTS lODGING IN lUXURY BEACHFRQNT HOLIDAY INN&#13;
.- I _&#13;
._ ! FUll BREAKFAST BUFFET DAILY ,,0,&#13;
IIIlf • ROUND TRIP GROUND tUNsRRS&#13;
II·•&#13;
". • TIPS &amp; TAXES ON THE ABOVE&#13;
~~ GROUP ESCOrT THROUGHOUT&#13;
II' ,,'&#13;
II' 11'.&#13;
.~~1·· ~" . '&#13;
.,. ... .&#13;
.&gt; e '&#13;
..... '-::.-- \....&#13;
"J\Il'CIIl\1()HE TItAN .JlIST Il;\IH"-&#13;
,&#13;
-"&#13;
c:.A~eaf&#13;
\y&lt;, offer FREE individual&#13;
C'onsultations for:&#13;
• Hair Styling&#13;
• COnditioning&#13;
• Makeup 'rroannc-nt&#13;
flPltrs:&#13;
n to n Daily&#13;
R to 4:30 Saturday&#13;
40(il N, l\tain St.&#13;
,&#13;
rtednesdaY September 27, 1978&#13;
volleyball&#13;
.:---- . '&#13;
CR!nger&#13;
Rangers · Must Pull Together&#13;
women's ath·J.etic team in record so far this season.&#13;
by Doug &amp; Dave&#13;
Co-Sports Editors&#13;
Parkside history to a regional In a match last Thursday at&#13;
tournament. If she is to enjoy Marquette against Marquette&#13;
that honor again this year her and UW-Oshkosh coach Hender-&#13;
· ear ago volleyball coach&#13;
A Y derson took the first&#13;
Rangers are going to have to son's squad let it's record slip to&#13;
improve on their 0-2 conference an overall mark of 0-7-2. In the&#13;
unda Hen -&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 27&#13;
Brown Bag Lunch starting at 12 noon in WLLC D174. _Dr.&#13;
c Wayne Johnson will talk on "The Deni~I .of Death." The&#13;
program i~ free andsop~n to the public. Sponsored by&#13;
community Student ervIces.&#13;
Thursday,Sept.28&#13;
Modem Language meeting at 3:00 p.m. in CA 233 to&#13;
discuss club activities anc:l make plans for the semester.&#13;
Debate and Forensics workshop at 2 :30 in CA 233. Will&#13;
go over the b_asics in debat~ and forensics, to give even&#13;
the novice a firm understanding.&#13;
Single Parents Get together at 7 P-"l:. in CL 111. _&#13;
Sports Women's Volleyball: at Michigan State Invitational&#13;
Tournament, East Lansing.&#13;
Friday, Sept. 29 ,&#13;
Earth Science Collogquium 12 noon in GR 113. Dr. Peter&#13;
Sheehan of the Milwaukee Public Museum wil speak on:&#13;
"The Demise of North America's Tropical Ordovician&#13;
Fauna Broug_ht on by African Glaciation." Free coffee and&#13;
doughnuts will be served.&#13;
Movie "Return of the Pink Panther" will be shown at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre. Admission at the door&#13;
is $1.00 for a Parkside student and $1 .00 for a guest.&#13;
Sports Women's Volleyball: at Michigan State Invitational&#13;
Tournament, East Lansing. · ·&#13;
· first match of Rangers lost the&#13;
first game 15-3 and fell short in&#13;
the second game 17-15 . In&#13;
volleyball the teams play for the&#13;
best 2._out of 3 games.&#13;
Against Marquette they fared&#13;
a little better as they won the&#13;
first game 15-10. "We lost o·ur&#13;
momentum · after the first game-('&#13;
was the reason coach Henderson&#13;
gave for the ensuing 15-7 and&#13;
15-6 losses. The results of both&#13;
matches were unexpected as&#13;
Marquette hasn't beaten the&#13;
Rangers for 2 years prior to this&#13;
match and Parkside was 3-0&#13;
over UW-Oshkosh last fall.&#13;
Henderson called this years&#13;
team a strong one, however it&#13;
still needs a little polishing to&#13;
repeat last years achievement.&#13;
A win is needed Tuesday in&#13;
order to prime the Rangers for&#13;
their upcoming-trip this weekend&#13;
to compete in the Michigan&#13;
State Invitational. A number of&#13;
larger teams will be competing&#13;
there and a. good showing by&#13;
Parkside on this trip will greatly&#13;
improve their chances of again&#13;
winning a bid to the WWIAC&#13;
Regional Tournament in Milwaukee.&#13;
&#13;
In order to be picked for the&#13;
regionals a team must either&#13;
place first in their state or ,, Saturday, Sept. 30&#13;
Sports Men's ·cross-Country: At&#13;
Invitational.&#13;
Hillsdale (Mich.) compile an impressive record&#13;
against so called large schools,&#13;
Women's Cross-Country: MARQUETTE (10 :30)&#13;
Golf (Meo's): Parkside Invitational (Brighto~ Dale&#13;
9:30 a.m.)&#13;
Men's Soccer: UW-Whitewater (2 p.m.)&#13;
Women's Tennis: at Whitewater Invitational.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 1&#13;
such as Marquette and UWOshkosh.&#13;
Winning the state&#13;
G.C., playoffs is not out of the&#13;
question for this years squad.&#13;
Last years team lost out in the&#13;
finals to Carroll College, a team&#13;
Parkside had beat earlier last&#13;
Movie "Return of the Pink Panther" will be repeated _ at season. .&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema Theatre. The Rangers have a good&#13;
Monday, Oct. 2 ' chance to change things around&#13;
Debate &amp; Forensics meeting at 3 :30 in CA 233. Future this season as laSt Thursdays t match at Marquette was only the . ~urnaments and high school tournaments will bi second of 15 _ As the season&#13;
~ discussed. New members welcome. - progresses c?ach Hen~erson&#13;
h ~ Tuesday, Oct. 3 fully expects her team to&#13;
!ti Sports Women's Tennis: at Carroll College, Waukesha (3 improve. More team play is&#13;
lte p.m.) needed as the season progresses.&#13;
1. WComen's Volleyball': UW-Whitewater &amp; North Park Coach Henderson pointed out&#13;
ollege (6:00 p.m.) . that the team is not playing as a&#13;
Wednesday, Oct'. 4 · ·,, team right now, but as&#13;
SOC celebration from 11 :30-1 :30 in Union Bazaar. Student individuals. , gro d Parkside's next match is&#13;
ups Will have displays set up, free beer provid,ed an tomorrow ·at Carthage against&#13;
some entertainment available. A good time for All!!! Carthage and Elmhurst College.&#13;
C ·· Thursday, Oct. 5 The Rangers will then travel to&#13;
feoffe~ House Starting at 1 p.m. in Union 104-106 East Lansing Michigan for the&#13;
S atunng Dave Parker, a folk singer. Admission· is free. Michigan State Invitational&#13;
P_o_ns_o_r_ed_b..:_y_P_A_:.:B..:_· _________ ...,.,.. _______ . _Tournament.&#13;
Smolce-ln This Sunday&#13;
What is the largest cash crop&#13;
in Hawaii, according to U.S.&#13;
government figures? What is&#13;
known to create a pleasantly&#13;
euphoric state, but also to be of&#13;
aid to glaucoma victims and is&#13;
used to treat the side-effects of&#13;
chemotherapy treatment in&#13;
cancer patients? What will be&#13;
burned very slowly but in large&#13;
quantities on the Madison&#13;
Capitol lawn, Sunday, October 1,&#13;
from noon until 5:00 p.m.&#13;
The answer is POT, reefer,&#13;
gage, weed, grass, good old&#13;
American Marijuana. The preceding&#13;
'facts, were sent to the&#13;
Ranger by the Wisconsin Student&#13;
Association which is sponsoring&#13;
a marijuana decriminalization&#13;
rally on the capitol lawn at the&#13;
above time. Keynote speakers&#13;
will include Representative&#13;
David Clarenbach, sponsor of&#13;
Wisconsin's marijuana decriminalization&#13;
bill, Gene Messina&#13;
from l'-IORML (the national pot&#13;
reform group), and Dana Beal&#13;
from YIP! (the Youth International&#13;
Party) Live music will&#13;
also be provided&#13;
Although the Madison city&#13;
council has attempted to halt the&#13;
rally it appears that it I going&#13;
ahead. Ranger hopes to ha e&#13;
pictures and more in-d pth&#13;
information for our first issue of&#13;
October.&#13;
Special Smoker's ote: It&#13;
doesn 't do you any good&#13;
unless you hold the smoke in1&#13;
I&#13;
ff (I mH~fJ°IJ -~~~.;.;]~J--! ·-;;l~':~'l~r.;;l~ alir~~ J ~ ~~~ 0 ~tr'S&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. at 62nd St. Established ,n 1930&#13;
"l\fl 'CII i\1C)HE TIIAN Jl 'ST IIAIH'; UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK IN • ,,' '&#13;
c.A~eaf.&#13;
'Y&lt;' offer FREE inctivictual&#13;
c-onsultations for:&#13;
• Hair Styling .&#13;
• Co11ctitioning -&#13;
• Mak&lt;&gt;up Treatnwnt&#13;
Hours:&#13;
n ton Daily&#13;
8 to 4:30 Saturday&#13;
Phon&lt;&gt;: n:1n- 1507&#13;
40(it N. Mclin St.&#13;
, .. ,~C!,~.Y,.LCO&#13;
am I TRIP INCLUDES: =~ I ROUND TRIP iET AIR VIA BRANIFf AIRLINES&#13;
,ill / 7 NIGHTS LODGING IN LUXURY BEACHFRONT HOLIDAY INN&#13;
•• ••• I&#13;
,it! I&#13;
.... '&#13;
11• '&#13;
,, .. ,,. ,,,&#13;
~~&#13;
FULL BREAKFAST BUFfET DAILY&#13;
ROUND TRIP GROUND TRANSfERS&#13;
TIPS &amp; TAXES ON THE ABOVE&#13;
· &amp;·ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT : PARKSIDE UNION OFFICE, RM. FOR RESE~VATIONS &#13;
CR!,nger Wednesda, Se,tember 2·~7,~J~9~78:.... ~..=;,.- _&#13;
Classifieds MPSA&#13;
continued from 'fl.J&#13;
1982-1983. T~e first graduates&#13;
could be expected by 1980-1981,&#13;
although the time it would take&#13;
someone to complete the&#13;
program would be a very&#13;
individual matter. The program&#13;
is designed to meet the needs of&#13;
special, non-degree seeking'&#13;
students, as well. These would be&#13;
professionals desiring to just&#13;
up-date their skills.&#13;
Funding for the MPSA will&#13;
come from the. academic&#13;
divisions primarily responsible&#13;
for running the program, reallocation&#13;
from other areas of&#13;
the university and in the long&#13;
term, possible additional&#13;
revenue from outside funding.&#13;
The total cost of the program&#13;
during its first year would be&#13;
approximately $44,200 and&#13;
S80600 during the second year.&#13;
Th~ program's designers stress&#13;
how it will take full advantage of&#13;
personnel ~nd facilities already&#13;
available on campus.&#13;
From here the proposal will go&#13;
to the University System's&#13;
Central Administration, and to&#13;
the University Board of Regents&#13;
who will give it several&#13;
examinations or readings, whereupon&#13;
a final vote will be made in&#13;
or about March of next year.&#13;
Also at the Faculty Senate&#13;
meeting, in the Chancellor's&#13;
message, it was announced that&#13;
students attending Parkside·from&#13;
lake County, Illinois, will only&#13;
have to pay tuition on a&#13;
Wisconsin resident basis, which&#13;
is much cheaper than the usual&#13;
non-resident fee for Illinois&#13;
students. The reasons for this is&#13;
that Parkside is the closest four&#13;
year university to_lake County.&#13;
Computer Talk Friday&#13;
Forsel.&#13;
75 Dodge Van. carpeted, Tape, Sunroof,&#13;
mags. 632-69624-7 p.m. or weekends.&#13;
Sansul integrated stereo arnQllfler,&#13;
sSW/channel RMS, versatile, superb&#13;
condition and sound; $235.00 Phone&#13;
652-1980 anytime!&#13;
The Mathematics Discipline&#13;
and the Center for Appl ications&#13;
of Computers are sponsoring a&#13;
talk on Friday September 29,&#13;
1978 at 3:30 p.m. in Classroom&#13;
107 by Professor J.E. Hopcroft.&#13;
The title of the talk is "Asvmtcttc&#13;
Analysis of Algorithms". The talk&#13;
wi II survey some of the more&#13;
interesting improvements with&#13;
an eye to abstracting&#13;
principles in efficient alg&#13;
design. The talk will be&#13;
undergraduate level.&#13;
Professor Hopcroft was&#13;
assistant professor of Th&#13;
Cornputjng at ~Princeton&#13;
1964 to 1967 and presertly i&#13;
Associate Professor at ....C&#13;
University in the Camp&#13;
Science Department.&#13;
,&#13;
Local firm has immediate part' time&#13;
openings. $5.50/hr. Excellent tall &amp; winter&#13;
oppo"rtunity. Can. between 4·6 p.m.&#13;
652-3248.&#13;
Stately Racine Mansion moms for rent $30&#13;
per week or 7 roomuet w/loH $400 ~er&#13;
month. Wilt consider extended family&#13;
situation. Call 633:-7897. .&#13;
One white lot parking sticker. Call&#13;
552-8577. After 5 p.m.&#13;
All interested parties to join the Park~ide&#13;
Pam-Porn Girls. Organizational meetmg:&#13;
Tuesday, October 3 at 6:30 in Union&#13;
Square; If you cannot attend but are&#13;
interested contact: Estee Ktemlck 639-2524.&#13;
Transportation: Someone interested in carpooling&#13;
or sharing gas exp,enses fro~&#13;
North Side of Racine to parkstde Mon-Frr.&#13;
Call 639-4986.&#13;
Personals&#13;
Toni Ancona. I hope you'll live for many,&#13;
many years so that I can see you more&#13;
often. Happy Birthday! You crazy aClmlrer,&#13;
Carlos&#13;
eymnesucs Club If you are Interested m&#13;
starting a gymnastIcs club contact Ltnca&#13;
Hautzinger (843-2450) or VIcki Sacco&#13;
(843-3368).&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Students needed for general office work,&#13;
tutoring and assisting in the Learning Lab&#13;
for Educational Program Support; hours to&#13;
fit your class schedules; work-study&#13;
students are encouraged to apply; see&#13;
Barbara in EPS Offi~e, 0197, WLLC. *****&#13;
PAS. FILM SERIES PRESENTS:&#13;
"RETURN OF THE&#13;
PINK PANTHER" r~~~G~:L~~~~~¥~~G 4~&#13;
~ SUNDAY , ~&#13;
n OCTOBER 1 FREE BEER &amp; n&#13;
U SANDWICHESU&#13;
n NOON n&#13;
UCLOSING U&#13;
~ , ~.&#13;
U THE SANDBAR U&#13;
~!x:-==::ll.,~,,1=3::::&gt;l~O,.c:_.=M::::&gt;l~,~tc::=C=&lt;lr,~tc:A=E N=...~c:=LV=~'~IC=' =o~J&#13;
Eriday, Sept. 29. BPM&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 1 7:30 PM&#13;
ADMISSION&#13;
"I.&#13;
UNION CINEMA&#13;
Distributed by Triangle Wholesale Beer Co.&#13;
Kenosha • 657-5148-&#13;
HYOU've got the time, - .&#13;
we've got the beer.&#13;
. ,.•~&#13;
~t;~&#13;
j//[:.:\&#13;
.~:lI'&#13;
..&#13;
t"'",.&#13;
) .~'"''&#13;
,.&#13;
'R!,nger Wednesday September 2~7,~J~97&#13;
~8:_ _______ __:...,;::;,,_ ___ _&#13;
MPSA&#13;
continued from pg. J&#13;
1982-1983. The first graduates&#13;
could be expected by 1980-1981,&#13;
although the time it would take&#13;
someone to complete the&#13;
program wou Id be a very&#13;
individual matter. The program&#13;
is designed to meet the needs of&#13;
special, non-degree seeking -&#13;
students, as well. These would be&#13;
professionals desiring to just&#13;
up-date their skills.&#13;
Funding for the MPSA will&#13;
come from the. academic&#13;
divisions primarily responsible&#13;
for running the program, reallocation&#13;
from other areas of&#13;
the university and in the long&#13;
term , possible add itional&#13;
revenue from outside funding.&#13;
The total cost of the program&#13;
during its first year would be&#13;
approxi mate ly $44,200 and&#13;
$80 600 during the second year.&#13;
Th; program's designers stress&#13;
how it will take full advantage of&#13;
personnel and faci lities already&#13;
available on campus.&#13;
From here the proposal will go&#13;
to the University System' s&#13;
Central Administration, and to&#13;
the University Board of Regents&#13;
who will give it severa l&#13;
examinations or readings, whereupon&#13;
a final vote wi ll be made in&#13;
or about March of next year.&#13;
Also at the Faculty Senate&#13;
meeting, in the Chancellor's&#13;
message, it was announced that&#13;
students attending Parkside from&#13;
Lake County, Illinois, will only&#13;
have to pay tuition on a&#13;
Wisconsin resident basis, which&#13;
is much cheaper than the usual&#13;
non-resident fee for Illinois&#13;
students_ The reasons for this is&#13;
that Parkside is the closest four&#13;
year university to Lake County.&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
For Sale&#13;
75 Dodge Van. Carpeted, Tape, Sunroof,&#13;
mags. 632-6962 4.7 p.m. or weekends.&#13;
Sansul integrated stereo amplifier,&#13;
SSW/channel RMS, versatile, superb&#13;
condition and sound; $235.00 Phone&#13;
652-1980 anytime!&#13;
Personals&#13;
Toni Ancona. I hope you'll live for many,&#13;
many years so that I can see you n:iore&#13;
often. Happy Birthday! You crazy admirer,&#13;
Carlos&#13;
Gymnastics Club: If you are interested in&#13;
starting a gymnastics club contact Lmca&#13;
Hautzi nger (843--2450) or Vicki Sacco&#13;
(843--3368).&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Students needed for general office work,&#13;
tutoring and assisting in the Learning Lab&#13;
for Educational Program Support ; hours to&#13;
fit your class schedules ; work-study&#13;
students are encouraged to apply ; see&#13;
Barbara in EPS Office, 0197, WLLC.&#13;
Local firm has immediate part time&#13;
openings. $5.50/hr. Excellent fall &amp; winter&#13;
oppo"rtunity . Call . between 4-6 p.m.&#13;
652-3248.&#13;
Stately Racine Mansion rooms for rent $30&#13;
per week or 7 room· flat w /loft $400 per&#13;
month. Will consider extended family&#13;
situation. Call 633:-7897.&#13;
One white lot parking sticker. Call&#13;
552-8577. After 5 p.m.&#13;
All interested parties to join the Parkside&#13;
Porn-Porn Girls. Organizational meeting :&#13;
Tuesday, October 3 at 6:30 in Union&#13;
Square~ If you cannot attend but are&#13;
interested contact: Estee Klemick 639-2524.&#13;
Transportation : Someone interested in carpooling&#13;
or sharing gas exp_enses fro~&#13;
North Side of Racine to Parkside Mon-Fri.&#13;
Cal I 639-4986.&#13;
*****&#13;
==&gt;11MM==::&gt;1-lkk===&gt;wu-c:::==,.~:-1c:::::::=&gt;«1U•&#13;
n GRAND OPENING&#13;
U CELEBRATION&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
. SUNDAY&#13;
OCTOBER 1&#13;
·7&#13;
~ FREE BEER &amp; n&#13;
SANDWICHESU&#13;
n NOON&#13;
UCLOSING&#13;
~&#13;
~ THE SANDBAR&#13;
~,c: .. =•,,c;•1=3=0:x.~ic::'=M::::&gt;t;~;~N -~L V~.&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
.J&#13;
Computer Talk Friday&#13;
The Mathematics Discipline&#13;
and the Center for Applications&#13;
of Computers are sponsoring a&#13;
talk on Friday September 29,&#13;
197a at 3:30 p.m . in Classroom&#13;
107 by Professor J.E. Hopcroft.&#13;
The title of the talk is "Asymtotic&#13;
Analysis of Algorithms". The talk&#13;
will survey some of the more&#13;
interesting improvements with&#13;
an eye to_ abs~r~cting ge~&#13;
principles m eff1c1ent algori&#13;
design _ The talk will be at&#13;
undergraduate level.&#13;
Professor Hopcroft was&#13;
assistant prof~ssor of Theory&#13;
Computing at , Princeton h&#13;
1964 to 1%7 and prese,ntly is&#13;
Associate Professor at ' Cor&#13;
University in the Co.mp&#13;
Science Department.&#13;
\.;.__....,. ___ P-.A-.8-_-F-IL_M .. S~E~R~IE~S~P~R:E~S~EN:'.":'T~S~:----,&#13;
"RETURN OF THE&#13;
PINK PANTHER"&#13;
Friday, Sept. 29&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 1&#13;
8 PM&#13;
7:30 PM&#13;
UNION CINEMA ADMISSION&#13;
•1.00&#13;
If you've .got the time,&#13;
we've got-the beer. . , -~&#13;
Distributed by Triangle Wholesale Beer Co.&#13;
Kenosha 657-5148 •&#13;
t--=· ···- N=,t . .e~&#13;
~II/ I II. I I </text>
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              <text>Asst. Chancellor Takes Research Leave</text>
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              <text>sst. Chancellor Jakes Research leave&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
News Editor -&#13;
0 Clayton Johnson, Ass!stant&#13;
Jlor for Educational&#13;
ance k 'd .&#13;
tion needs of minority students&#13;
from this area. He said his study&#13;
will include improving his own&#13;
understanding of significant&#13;
problems facing minority group&#13;
members in higher education&#13;
nationally, partically as they&#13;
relate to institutions similar to&#13;
UW-Parkside.&#13;
at UW-Par s1 e, Is ice&#13;
a study-research leave .:f June, 1979, in order t? stu.dy&#13;
oblerns of minority pr d .&#13;
nts in higher e ucat1on. " I am hopeful that my&#13;
experience will improve educational&#13;
services to UW-Parkside&#13;
students and increase my&#13;
knowledge of a very important&#13;
aspect of higher education,"&#13;
Johnson said.&#13;
ncellor Guskin, who aped&#13;
the leave, has named&#13;
rla Stoffle, assista~t Director&#13;
the Library-Learning Centerrt-time&#13;
executive assistant pa . . the Chancellor, as interim&#13;
istant Chancellor for the&#13;
ucational Servi(es Area. Mrs .&#13;
fie will have all the powers of&#13;
new office and will not be r . rely an acting Assistant&#13;
ncellor.&#13;
r Johnson said that he will&#13;
ncentrate his efforts in such&#13;
ib as investigating programs&#13;
lated tq the recruitment,&#13;
ntion and campus socializaMrs.&#13;
Stoffle has served as&#13;
executive assistant to the&#13;
Chancellor _and has been a&#13;
member of his administrative&#13;
council since March 1 of this&#13;
year, in addition to continuing&#13;
her duties in the Library-Learning&#13;
Center. Her new duties in the&#13;
Educational Services Area will&#13;
concern the Library-Learning&#13;
Center, Athletics, Community&#13;
~ - - ____,...&#13;
Interim Asst. Chancellor Carla Stoffle&#13;
Seminar Examines&#13;
Child Abuse&#13;
An all-day conference on child&#13;
se and neglect will be held&#13;
Oct 5 in the University of&#13;
i.sconsin-Parkside Union. ·&#13;
A nationally-known authority the field, Dr. Newberger will&#13;
the keynote speaker. He is 1 of the Family Development&#13;
linic at Children's Hospital st&#13;
on, a former instruct~r i~&#13;
iatrics at Harvard Medical&#13;
hooJ and a member of the&#13;
itonal board of the Intern~-&#13;
nal Journal of Child Abuse and lect.&#13;
The conference is open both&#13;
1&#13;
i:ersons who deal professionwith&#13;
Young victims of abuse&#13;
Women's Program Director of&#13;
the Christopher Street Incest and&#13;
Childhood Sexual Abuse Program;&#13;
,&#13;
The Law and Children's Rights&#13;
and Recent Legislation on Child&#13;
Abuse and Neglect by Anne M.&#13;
Faletto, Child Protective Services&#13;
Specialist from the Wisconsin&#13;
Department of Health and Social&#13;
Services;&#13;
A Community Systems Approach&#13;
to Pfoble'ms of Child&#13;
Abuse and Neglect by Wayne&#13;
Kudick, Area Administrator for&#13;
the Children's Service Society;&#13;
The Hospital: A Team&#13;
Student Services, Student Development,&#13;
Computer Center,&#13;
Student Life, Educational Program&#13;
Support, and Institutional&#13;
Analysis and Registration.&#13;
Mrs. Stoffle predicts that in&#13;
the coming year, the Educational&#13;
Services Area will make definite&#13;
progress and changes . A steady&#13;
effort will be made to bring&#13;
better services to the entire&#13;
university population and to&#13;
bring the staff, faculty, and&#13;
students closer together. Furthermore,&#13;
the individual departments&#13;
within the Educational&#13;
Services Area will have more&#13;
power and control over their&#13;
individual areas. They will now&#13;
prepare their own budgets and&#13;
handle their own budget affairs,&#13;
for instance.&#13;
Mrs. Stoffle joined the UW-P&#13;
library in 1972 and was named&#13;
assistant director in 1976. Her&#13;
vari~d responsibilities have&#13;
included heading the library's&#13;
public service division and&#13;
developing a bibliograph ic&#13;
instruction program which has&#13;
received more than S100,000 in&#13;
outside grants while becoming a&#13;
0. Clayton Johnson&#13;
national model for college and&#13;
university libraries .&#13;
Widel published, she is&#13;
chairman-elect of the colle&#13;
library division of the A oc1a·&#13;
tion of College and R earch&#13;
Libraries and 1s on th e ec:ut,&#13;
board ot that or anizat1on's&#13;
instructional unit Hold r of a&#13;
master's degree in l ibrary I nc m nt&#13;
Wednesday September 20, 1978 Vol. 7 no.3&#13;
m.Y aim&#13;
in m.Y next future&#13;
is to write poems&#13;
thot will successf u 11.Y&#13;
'call'&#13;
all black people&#13;
Prizewinning Poet Visits Parkside&#13;
b neglect and the general Ii Th - 0 t&#13;
. c e sessions carry n inu· - Ith ing education credit for&#13;
a f care Professionals. Dead- 1ne or ,, . enrollment is Sept. 29&#13;
. registration information is· Vailabl I&#13;
ndli e . ocally from _ Jean&#13;
of the Racine Center for ornrnu . 637-917 n It y Concerns&#13;
30&#13;
6&#13;
). Sessions begin at a.rn.&#13;
Approach by Dr. Philip -Bond, -&#13;
associate clinical pr9fessor of&#13;
pediatrics at Me_dical College of&#13;
Wisconsin, medical director of&#13;
the Child Advocacy Center at&#13;
Milwaukee Children's Hospital&#13;
and a meniber of the task force&#13;
for curriculum development on&#13;
··chfld abuse of tne American&#13;
Academy of · Pediatrics, and&#13;
. ,Susann Carter, MSW, assistant&#13;
director of the Child Advocacy&#13;
Center.&#13;
Gwendolyn Brooks, Pulitzer&#13;
Prize-winning · black poet from&#13;
Chicago, will present a reading&#13;
from her work with a&#13;
commentary at 8 p.m . on&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 20 in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Union Cinema Theater under&#13;
sponsorship of the student&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
including ''Annie Allen" which&#13;
won the Pulitzer Prize in 1950,&#13;
" A Street in Bronze die,"&#13;
"Maude Martha," "The Bean&#13;
Eater," "Riot,'' " Famil Picture "&#13;
and " In the Mecca," a&#13;
book-length poem which was&#13;
nominated for a at1onal Boo&#13;
Award in 1969.&#13;
She has lectured and conduc·&#13;
ted poetry seminars at colle es&#13;
and universities throughout the&#13;
United States and has made a&#13;
number of guest appearance on&#13;
maior net\ ork tele is1on ho',I,&#13;
She has been awarded I h&#13;
honorary doctoral de ree , t o&#13;
Guggenheim Fellowship and&#13;
numerous other prize for her&#13;
poetry s nee 1968, he ha be n&#13;
poet laureate of lllino1&#13;
Follow·&#13;
ess&#13;
I&#13;
n.g . the key,:iote ad-&#13;
' Participants will attend a iesof w k&#13;
d or shops. The sessions&#13;
Presenters are: W,scon . . egl s&#13;
in Child Abuse and ect T • · orra· raining for Teachers by 1ne o ·&#13;
rt"" avis, Wisconsin De- .. ,ent f . · ·&#13;
Pe . 0 Pl]bhc Instruction rv1sor f&#13;
Ork 5 . or School So~ial erv1ces ·&#13;
Incest· th ' . . 1, · e V1ct1m Nobody eves b B&#13;
Y arbara Mvers.&#13;
The conference is ~onsored&#13;
by the Center for Social Ser~ice&#13;
of University Extens1or:, and&#13;
SCAN of Racine, an organization&#13;
devoted to child abuse problems.&#13;
Susan Wadwhani of&#13;
. SCAN chairs the conferen~e&#13;
planning committee. The re~1s-&#13;
. tration fee is $20 including&#13;
lu~cheon.&#13;
General admission tickets are&#13;
$2 _50 and are available at Sears&#13;
in Kenosha, TEAM Electronics in&#13;
Racine and the Campus Union&#13;
Information Center UW-P&#13;
student tickets are $2 at the&#13;
Information Center only .&#13;
Earlier in the day Miss Brooks&#13;
will give an informal talk, free&#13;
and open to the public, at 3 p.m .&#13;
in the Union .&#13;
Miss Brooks is the author of a&#13;
number of books of poetry&#13;
Born in Topeka, Kan 'vt1ss&#13;
Brooks has spent most of her life &#13;
Wednesday SeptemlJer 20,1978&#13;
-,&#13;
anger 2&#13;
From the Editor's' File&#13;
I AN EDITORIAL&#13;
I&#13;
EDITORIAL&#13;
Friday, September 1: Woke up. Fed the cats while,.they made my&#13;
lunch. They ate their breakfast while 1 cleaned their litterbox and&#13;
then we all took a bath together. .&#13;
I am approaching the first day of school with mass apprehension,&#13;
not toward my classes, but toward my position as editer of the sch~ol&#13;
newspaper. How willi organize things, what kind of paper am J tryl".g&#13;
to produce, what will be my editorial attitude and where the hell IS&#13;
mvwatch.Y . .&#13;
9:00 a.m.: I arrive at school late. My mass apprehens!on le.d l~to an&#13;
extended breakfast, a short novel, and a quick game of [okar! with the&#13;
ca~~0IogeticaIIY I make it to the office. Betty hands ~e a stack.of&#13;
messages says she hasn't seen my watch and conttnues tvpmg&#13;
exerpts from ao English text book on 'Writing .Well" which will be&#13;
compiled into a manual and published under a different name.&#13;
10:30 a.rn.: John the News Editor approaches me. .&#13;
john: Your gonna write an editorial for this issuearen't you?&#13;
Me: What?&#13;
John: I said your gonna write an editorial aren'tvoujMe:&#13;
Am I supposed to? " .&#13;
John: Well, I wouldn't have said anything but we reserved a whole&#13;
page for you .......'&#13;
Me: os. Well. Ok, on what?&#13;
john: How about the first days at school?&#13;
Me:OK&#13;
Creetings to the student ",?dY. This is your Editor. (I fu~ny th(ng&#13;
happened to me on the wavto my first day at schoof. .'. YUK.&#13;
I'll wait till the next issue.&#13;
Friday September 8: I woke up. Fed the cats while they made my&#13;
lunch. They shined my shoes while I cleaned their .tovs and we all&#13;
took a bath together. I've become very adept at judging time from the&#13;
sun since I lost my watch. It's either 11:45 a.m. or 3:01 p.rn.&#13;
7:30 a.m.: On the way to school my car makes ~;?trange noise.&#13;
which I dismiss as a lose coin in the trunk. Last week I dismissed the&#13;
same noise as a lose bolt in the engine. In reality the exhaust svstem&#13;
is falling off but I use imagination to make up,for lack of ambition to&#13;
repair it.&#13;
I arrive at the office. Betty hands me a stack of.messages and&#13;
continues typin (chapter 6 plagiarism).&#13;
by M. Murphy&#13;
(&#13;
9:30 a.m.: john the News Editor approaches me.&#13;
John: You gonna write an editorial this week?&#13;
Me: What'&#13;
john: 1said are you gonna write &lt;;ineditorial this week. -&#13;
Me: Well I don't know. I seem to have difficulty getting started.&#13;
can't think what to write about or how to write it.&#13;
John: What we need is a dynamic, petition inspiring piece of&#13;
writing that will reflect student attitudes and express the Ranger's&#13;
. concern for the student body. The parking situation would be a good&#13;
subject.&#13;
Me:OK.&#13;
EDITORIAL&#13;
'. • t The parking situation stinks. Never have so few been given to 50&#13;
many for so little at so much. So what? So how, sow butto'}, sow corn,&#13;
sore toe.seute't sewer, sinus congestion.&#13;
Next week. .&#13;
Friday September 15: Woke up. Waxed the floor and painted the&#13;
apartment. I couldn't find the cats so Itook a shower.&#13;
Sunrise: I arrive at school-early so I bribe the janitor to let me in.&#13;
1 open the office door. Betty hands me a lawsuit from Prentice-Hall&#13;
publishers. I thank her, sit at my desk, and play with the telephone&#13;
dial.&#13;
8:30 a.rn.. Jon (the General Manager) meets me at the bus station.&#13;
He pleads with me not to leave out of disgust and.discouragement&#13;
with the Ranger. He cites my duties and responsibilities to Parkside,&#13;
to my family; and 'mostly to myself. i tell him to shut up; the only&#13;
reason I'm at the bus station is because I think Ileft my watch there.&#13;
10:30 a.m.. John the News Editor approaches me.&#13;
John: I think.&#13;
Me: I know. You think "it's been three weeks now and thereaders&#13;
are expecting an editorial. You think that Ihave a responsibility to the&#13;
newspaper and the campus to express the student view on hard&#13;
hitting issues.You feel its about time I set an example to cur writers&#13;
and to future editors. Well I realize I have this responsibility, 'lknow&#13;
that it's mv-dutv and I guarantee you I will carrythrough as 'S90n as&#13;
my creative flow starts cbum ing.&#13;
. John: No. What I was going to say is I think I found your watch.&#13;
ME: Ho)Vdo you know its my watch? '.&#13;
John: Because the inscription on the back says "with love _ the&#13;
cats".&#13;
RANGEH Is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and&#13;
content. .&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academlcxyear,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays. RANGER is print~d by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company. Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
10 Part&lt;sldeRanger, U.W. Parkslde, WLLC D-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141. .&#13;
Mike Murphy , Editor&#13;
....Jon Flanagan ....•••.......... General Man-ager&#13;
John Stewart. . ...•..•............. News Editor&#13;
Sua Stevens Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhau.. r. . T: Sporta Edlto~&#13;
DaveCramer Sporta Editor&#13;
Kim Putman. . . . . . . . . Copy Editor&#13;
Chris Mlllor Ad Menoger&#13;
Tom Cooper. . . . . . . . Ma!'ketlng Advisor&#13;
Nancy Symanski Circulation Manager&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Laura Blanco, Carolyn Bresdano, Cathy Bro...,..I88,&#13;
Mollie Clarke, Tom Fervoy, Krlstl Honch, Thomas 'Jann,&#13;
Nicki Kroll, Janene L1ecrocl, Phil MarTy, Kathy Peters,&#13;
Sue Sallturo, Jeff Stevens, Lester Thompson and Larry&#13;
Weayer.&#13;
PHOTO .,&#13;
Gary Adalsen, Susan Caldwell, Denise D'Acq~lsto,&#13;
Carlyn 00.11, Jim Ettoldor, Mike Holmdohl, Cindy&#13;
Mason, Julie Orth, Tony Raymond and Brian Taggart.&#13;
'. GRAPHIC .&#13;
Craig Dvol1lk, Rob Miller and .Matthew PolI.kon~.,.&#13;
AD STAFF oc·&#13;
John Cl1Imerand Dawn Th~s.&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepte,Uor publication I' they.&#13;
are lypewrltt'l/l, double sPl\l:ed with one Inch margins and .&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be ,Includecf&#13;
for ~urposea of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
pUblication, when Y~lId reasons are given.'&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit lett"rs end i,,1IIse'&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All material must be receiVed·by Thursday noon for&#13;
~Ubtlcation on the f~"owlng .Wednesday·. . ~&#13;
PSG~(BmDJU(iJI]U&#13;
..byM~ry Mortl&#13;
Are you having trouble parking? Those So, it is'reasonable to oversell? Who figu'resh&#13;
of you who have been here a year or more, much? How is it calculated? Ron Brink~&#13;
recognize the begi'1ning of yet another parking- Director of. Security, .is ~e~ponsible f~r. ~roduc:&#13;
permit-fiasco _story. . the proper figures (he IStaking responslblJ~ty-f?rwed&#13;
I.hls year the p.ro~lem is magnified by an error in non-adjustment of ov.er-~ell). They ar~ revie the&#13;
projection, that IS,lin the number of permits that and approved by the Parking sub-cornmlttee of&#13;
can be sold over the number of parking spots Campus Planning 'Committee, by,. the.~a~PUS&#13;
available. Last spring, when the number of permits Pla,nnin.gr.'Committee and ultimately" by As~staJ1l&#13;
to be sold this fall semester was predicted; Security, Chancellor Gary Goetz. .&#13;
ultimately Ron Brinkman', was working with faultr The "how much" .is not-as easy, espeCl.allY&#13;
information. Instead of having 1370 white area non-m~th majors in the crowd. By multiplying 1&#13;
parking spaces there are only 1301 this semester. by the number of parking spaces available.&#13;
While the 359 red spaces climbed to 428. the 69' numher olparking permits to be sold is determl&#13;
white parking spaces directly in front of Tallent Hall In plain English, a 55% over-sell of· permIts&#13;
I has now become a .red parking lot. No downward always allowed for by this formula, 55%&#13;
adjustment oC over-sell figu~es for ,white 'permits Perm,its than ther.e ·a~e·~~rkingspaces." . wh&#13;
was made. I ThIS. semester with' the 1370 spots for&#13;
"O.ver·sell? Why not sell only as many permits as parking predicted, Security could ,ell up to 2&#13;
there are spaces?" you ask. "Then there wo'uld white permits. But, only 1301.. white spaces&#13;
never be any problem finding a_parking space,..there· . ~jgures should have ·been lower~d. to 2017&#13;
would be one space-.fOr each permitted car." permits. This makes the actual over~.sell of&#13;
..As ~11students are not on campus at any..one .permits 703 or 64% high~r than 'any over·seil&#13;
time, It seems understandable to sell more white. or have seen in recent vears.· .' '. .'&#13;
red permits than there are spaces, but w~'thtn Students are adding ,to the ,.·c'onf.used'pat'&#13;
reaso~.. There ,are ti'!les',t.his semester ·that, all sl.t.uation by not lJ1akil)g use ,ofPn.y Ed·lot. T&#13;
~arkslder~ want 'to. be h~re·.or ·are c,?mpelled b:y no.t~a,~.dose.·t~th'e centraLbuHdin'g c:D~ple~·as.&#13;
class ,chedules to lbe here. From . 10·11 a:nj. Comm Arts and Onion:iots,it is still a INh~e.&#13;
Mondays and Wednesdays, there· has been an area. Cars i~ the past weekhaVldieeidiUi"g&#13;
. Increaseof 200 students duri~g the same period last· 'Iait"r two.lots:and,parki'ng.on the iJ"'iinetero!&#13;
-year. ThiS .was~not conSidered when ~rmits' were parkil"!g lots &amp;nd access roads before.att~rnpti&#13;
sOldl&#13;
, the Information simply was not accessible . fill the Phy Ed lot. Th"'carspa' rkedin these untl aft . t r Th . .. . . ,&#13;
. I ~f er regis ra Ion. ese 200 students,. not ,'without permission are being tic;:ket'ed; ,.' "&#13;
~~c~ l,~g professors,. staff, chancellor~ and sljch,. . Whi~e parking ,permits 'i'n, th~ past ·.h~ve:&#13;
cked .the 1729 total non-metered, lInreserved labled ·hunting. permits and buried deep. withi&#13;
par 109 spaces on cam b ' .' J .' , ' .. ' .•&#13;
that 2612. r' ,p~s Y over ,300. C~&gt;ns~der.. ~~.r~mg broudlU!e yo~ received dui.ing regiS.,&#13;
."t.:~.,.. pa.~r.n~ pe.rmlts .h.av~ .been sold on ..It 1O(:,liJdesthat inf()~mation. But, YOJ.!.alway?h&#13;
~~~~U~it~;~:he problem mUlt!phesa~ multip.lies .the privil,,~eto Q1JJ&gt;l.JQtwhaLYQupaid for .&#13;
'&#13;
- I&#13;
2&#13;
Wednesday September 20, 1978&#13;
from the Editor's, File&#13;
AN · .. EDITOIIIAL&#13;
Friday, September 1: Woke up~ Fed the cats while·_th~y made my&#13;
lunch. They ate their br_eakfast while I cleaned their litterbox and&#13;
then we all took a bath together. . I am approaching the first day of school with mass apprehension,&#13;
not toward my classes, but toward my positioh as editor of the sch~ol&#13;
newspaper. How will I organize things, what kind of paper am I trymg&#13;
to produce, what will be my editorial attitude and where the hell 1s&#13;
my watch.' I d · ' 9:00a.m.: I arrive at school late. My mass apprehens!on e_ into an&#13;
extended breakfast, a short novel, and a quick game of Jokari with the&#13;
ca~~ologetically I make it to the office. Betty hand; ~e a stack_ of&#13;
messages, says she hasn't seen my watch and c~ntin~es" ~ping&#13;
exerpts from ao English text book on "Writing _Well which will be&#13;
compiled into a manual and published under a different name.&#13;
10:30 a.m. : John the News Editor approaches me. ..&#13;
John : Your gonna write an editorial for this issue aren't you?&#13;
Me: What? ,&#13;
John : I said your gonna write an ediforial aren't you?;:&#13;
Me: Am I supposed to? ' .&#13;
John : Well, I wouldn't have said anything but we reserved a whole&#13;
page for you .~ .. ,&#13;
Me : Oh. Well. Ok, on what?&#13;
John : How about the first days at school?&#13;
Me: OK&#13;
EDITORIAL&#13;
Greetings to the student body. This is your Editor. ';"\. funny t~Jng&#13;
happened to me on the way .to my first day at schoof. ,:;.YUK! .&#13;
I'll wait till the next issue. .&#13;
Friday September 8: I woke up. Fed the cats while they made my&#13;
lunch. They shined my shoes while I cleaned their tb.ys and we all&#13;
took a bath together. I've become very adept at judging time from the&#13;
sun since I lost my watch. It's either 11:45 a.m. or 3:01 p:m.&#13;
7:30 a.m. : On the way to school my car makes i¾;~trange noise.&#13;
which I dismiss as a lose coin in the trunk. Last week I dismissed the&#13;
same noise as a lose bo1t in the engine. In reality the exhaust system&#13;
is falling off but I use imagination to make up.for lack of ambition to&#13;
repair it.&#13;
I arrive at the office. Betty hands me a stack of.messages and&#13;
continues typing (chapter 6 plagiarism) . .&#13;
RANGl:H Is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy and content. ·&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic .-.year,&#13;
except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is prinred by&#13;
Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission Is required for reprint of any portion of&#13;
RANGER content. All correspondence should be addressed&#13;
to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D-139, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53141 . ·&#13;
Mike Murphy . . .... . . . .. .. . .. .... .... .... .. .. . Editor&#13;
Jon Flanagan ..... .. .. .. ..... .. . . . .. General Mai:tage.r&#13;
John Stewart .......... .. . . ..... .. ... ... . News Editor&#13;
Sue Stevens . . . .... .. . . . ...... . .. . .. . . . Feature Editor&#13;
Doug Edenhauser ... . ... . .. ... . .. .. ... .. Sports Edltoi:.&#13;
Dave Cramer ....... . .. . .. . . ... .... ... . . Sports Editor&#13;
Kim Putman ...... . .... ... . . .. . . .. .. . . . .. Copy Editor&#13;
Chris Miller ....... . ... . .... : . .... ..... . Ad NJanager&#13;
Tom Cooper . ........ . ...... .... ... Marketing Advisor&#13;
Nancy Symanski .. . .............. . Clrcu·lation Manager&#13;
by M. Murphy&#13;
9:'30 a.m.: John the News Editor approaches me.&#13;
John: You gonna write an editorial this week?&#13;
Me: What?&#13;
John: 1 said are you gonna write a11 editorial this week.&#13;
Me: Well I don't know. I seem to have difficulty getting started. I&#13;
can't think what to write about or how to write it. .&#13;
John: What we n~E:_d is a dynamic, petition inspiring piece ~f&#13;
. writing that will reflect student attitudes and express the Rangers&#13;
concern for the student body. The parking situation would be a good&#13;
subject.&#13;
Me:OK.&#13;
EDITORIAL&#13;
The parking situation stinks. Never have so few been given tb so&#13;
many for so little at so much. So what? So how, sow button, sow corn,&#13;
sore toe,' saute: sewer, sinus congestion.&#13;
Nextweek. · . . .&#13;
Friday September 15: Woke up. Waxed the floor and painted the&#13;
apartment. I couldn't find _the cats so I took a shower. .&#13;
Sunrise: I art:ive at school early so I bribe the janitor to let me in.&#13;
I open the office door. Betty hands me a lawsuit from Prentice-Hall&#13;
publishers. I thank her, sit at my desk, and play with the telephone&#13;
dial.&#13;
8:30 a.m.: Jon (the General Manager) meets me at the bus station.&#13;
He pleads with me not to leave out of disgust and , discouragement&#13;
with the Ranger. He cites my duties and responsibilities to Parkside,&#13;
to my family; and •mostly to myself. i tell him to shut .up; the only&#13;
reason I'm at the bus station is because I think I left my watch there.&#13;
10:30 a.m.: John the News Editor approaches nie.&#13;
John: I think ...&#13;
Me: I know. You tbink "it's been three weeks now and the readers&#13;
. are expecting an editorial. You think that I have a responsibility to the&#13;
newspaper and the campus to express the student view on hard&#13;
hitting issues. You feel its about time I set an example to our writers ·&#13;
and to future editors. Well I realize I have this responsibility, I know&#13;
that it's my'duty and I guarantee you I will carry tl·Hough as 590n as&#13;
my creative flow starts churning.&#13;
· John: No. What I was' going to say is I think I found your watch.&#13;
ME: Hoyvdoyou know its my watch? · · ·&#13;
John: Because the inscription on the back says "with love - the&#13;
cats".&#13;
PSGA l](DGJ1]aJCBU I '&#13;
by Mary Mortl&#13;
Are you having trouble parking? Those . So, it is reasonable to oversell? Who figu'res how&#13;
of you who have been here a year or more, much? How is it calculated? Ron Brinkman,&#13;
recognize the beginning of yet another parking- Director of Security, is responsible for producing permit-fiasco _story.\ ·. . · -· the proper figures (he is taking responsibil~tyf~r t~&#13;
I his year the problem is magnified by an error in non-adjustment of over-sell). They are review projection, that is, lin the number of permits that and approved by the Parking sub-committee of the&#13;
can be sold over the number of parking spots Campus Plaoning ·Committee, by the Campus&#13;
available. Last spring, when the number of permits Planning .Committee and ultimatefy .. by Assi 5!ant&#13;
to b~ sold this fall semester was predicted; Security,; Ch~nceh~r G~ry Goetz.&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Laura Blanco, Carolyn Bresclano, Cathy Bro•lee,&#13;
Mollie Clarke, Tom Fervoy, Kristi Honch, Thomas ·Jenn,&#13;
Nickl Kroll, Janene Llecrocl, Phil Marry, Kathy Peters,&#13;
Sue Sallturo, Jeff Stevens, Lester Thompson and Larry&#13;
Weaver.&#13;
ultimately Ron Brinkman, was working with fau~ty The "how much" _is not- as easy, especi_allv/:s&#13;
information . Instead of having 1370 white area non-math majors in the crowd . By multip_lying tl,e&#13;
parking spaces there are only 1301 this semester. by the number of parking spaces available_ ed&#13;
While the 359 red spaces dimbed to 428. the 69" number of.parking permits to be sold is de.termin i' white parking spaces directly in front of Tallent Hall In plain English, a 55% over-sell of permits ·&#13;
1 has now become a red parking lot. No downward always allowed for by this formula, 55% more&#13;
adjustment of. over-sell figu~es for white permits · permits than there ·areparkihg spaces . •· . h'lt&#13;
was made. . , . . , . This. semester with" the 1370 spots for w I&#13;
2&#13;
J&#13;
PHOTO&#13;
Gary Adelsen, Susan Caldwell, Denise D'Acqoi·sto,&#13;
Carlyn Davis, Jim Etteldor, Mike Holmdohr, Cindy&#13;
Mason, Julle Orth, Tony .Raymond and Brian Taggart. . . GRAPHIC .&#13;
Craig Dvorak, Rob MIiier and .Matthew Pollakon. ·&#13;
AD STAFF . ".' I·&#13;
John Cramer and Dawn Thomas.&#13;
~etters to the Editor will be _accepted .for publication if the;.&#13;
are typewrlttEU), double spa;ted with one Inch margins and ·&#13;
signed by the author. A telephone number must be incliided&#13;
for P_urposes of verification. Names will be withheld from&#13;
pUbllcation, when valid reasons are given.·&#13;
RANGER reserves the right to edit letters and refuse.&#13;
publication to letters with defamatory or unsuitable content.&#13;
All material must be received . by Thursday noon . for&#13;
lubncation on the following .Wednesday·.&#13;
.,&#13;
"O-ver-sell? Why not sell only as many permits as parking predicted, Security could sell up to 21ht&#13;
there are spaces?" you ask. "Then there wduld ~hite permits . But, only 130_1.. white spaces ~ilt&#13;
never be any problem finding a parking space, .. there . f1gur~s sho~ld have .been lowered . to 2017 VI hilt would be one space-fOr each permitted car." permits. This makes the. actual over-.sell of w wt&#13;
. . As ~II students are not on campus at an.y. one permits 703 or 64% higher than ·any over-sell&#13;
time, It seems Understandable to sell more white or have Seen .in recent years . . . . · · . . · . . .. ·· k'~&#13;
red permits than there are spaces, but withi-n . Stu?ents are adding .to .· the . confused. pa~~gh&#13;
reaso~ . There are times .· this semester . that all s1tu'.1t1on by not \Tlakir,.g use of Phy Ed lot. Th tf1e&#13;
Parksiders want to be here -or are compelled by . no_t as dose.tQ th.e ~e~tral. b_ui!din~ c;o~p.lex as rf1!l class schedules to 1be here. From ·· 10-11 am Comm Arts:,~ndUruonlots, .1t 1s still a~~~~,~ !tie&#13;
~ondays and Wednesday~, there - has been · a~ area. Cars 1n. the past w.eek have ~~en filling tit . crease _of 200 students ~un~g the same perio~ last latte~ two lots'. antitparki'ng.on th~,8erirneteryt to · year. This _was. not _cons1_dered when permits were _par~mg lots and access roads b¢fore·~t!'!rnptin~&#13;
~~~I the mfor~ati~n simply was not . accessibie . .. fil_l the :Phy f.d. lot. T.he-·.cats· parked 'in these a&#13;
· inJlud~~ter ;egistration · These 200 students, l')Ot · ¼'.ltho~t permission are being ticketed, . . ,&#13;
exce ·. } P ofessq~s'. staff, chancellors and such, · . Wh1~e parking. permits in the past ha~e:~&#13;
ark~nd ·:h:c::2:~total non-metered, unreser~ed, . labl~d hunting permits, and buri.ed deep w,~hir!ti~O&#13;
. . ibat_ 2!1t arkrn camp~s by over .300. Consider ·.· pa_rkmg brouchu_re yo~ received dudng reg1st~ta\lt&#13;
. : . . .,. . . P . . g permits . h~v~ . been sold on . it_ m~ludes that info~~atiei:, . But, yo\.! a.lways camd pus,, an1&#13;
?&#13;
a&#13;
the P.roblem IT)ult1pl1es and: multi.plies · .the f.')riv.ile-Mtt&gt; hunt 'o·r whaty·· nu.-paid. for.- .n mu .tIpIes . · • ·· .. · · ~ -- ·~- ·· .: "' · · .. ·&#13;
. \ ----&#13;
CR!,nger&#13;
New Faces On CaInpus&#13;
W,dllisday Septtmber 20,1978&#13;
what the Master of Administrative&#13;
Science degree is, she&#13;
&gt;- informs us that it is basically the&#13;
same as the more common&#13;
Master of Business Administration&#13;
degree. The difference&#13;
between the two is that the&#13;
M.A.S. program is not so&#13;
specialized as the M.B.A.&#13;
Universities such as Yale and&#13;
Untversttv of Chicago also offer&#13;
the M.A.S. degree.&#13;
Although the MAS. program&#13;
is new to Parks ide, she has not&#13;
encountered any problems. She&#13;
finds the staff here very helpful&#13;
and cooperative. Mrs. Grande&#13;
hopes to see the program grow&#13;
and says that they will be adding&#13;
new courses, this spring. These&#13;
will offer a wider variety at&#13;
various levels.&#13;
Mrs. Grande was raised in&#13;
Cleveland, Ohio, and attended&#13;
high school in Aurora, Illinois.&#13;
She attended Northern Illinois&#13;
University where she received&#13;
her B.A. in Business Education&#13;
and her M.B.A. in Business&#13;
Admi"nistration. Mrs. Grande also&#13;
taught there for three years and&#13;
worked with their graduate&#13;
program.&#13;
Mrs, Grande moved to&#13;
Kenosha with her husband in&#13;
July. Mrs. Grande says that she&#13;
sees quite a difference between&#13;
Kenosha and Chicago. "Everyone&#13;
is so friendly," she exclaimed, "I&#13;
am happy here, it's a gorgeous&#13;
setting (the campus) and so&#13;
large!"&#13;
,&#13;
Karen Grande&#13;
by Kathy Peters&#13;
Staff Write'&#13;
Karen Grande is new to the&#13;
BusinessDepartment this semester,&#13;
Mrs. Crande teaches one&#13;
c1as' and holds the rank of&#13;
'ecturer, She is also the&#13;
coordinating acedemic advisor&#13;
It the undergraduate and&#13;
pduate levels il) the Business&#13;
Dopartment. Mrs. Grande advISeS&#13;
all new students coming in&#13;
who have not declared a&#13;
,.,.e,aHzed field of interest. She&#13;
Iko evaluates all applications&#13;
for the new graduate progr.am,&#13;
She must decide if the&#13;
qualifications of the applicant&#13;
meetthe required standards.&#13;
Mrs: Grande would like to tell&#13;
students who are thinking of&#13;
entering the program that [lOW is&#13;
the time to begin applying. For&#13;
those who are not clear as to&#13;
Virginia Slater&#13;
by Kristi Honch&#13;
Lights, Camera, Costumes!&#13;
That was not a misprint&#13;
Costumes are a vital part of anv&#13;
theatrical production and the&#13;
Parkside Dramatic, Arts Department&#13;
has a new Theatre Costume&#13;
Specialist and instructor, Virginia&#13;
Slater.&#13;
Virginia received her BS and&#13;
MS in Art Education from State&#13;
University College, Buffalo, New&#13;
York; and her Ph.D in Art&#13;
Education from UW-Madison in&#13;
1974&#13;
Her professional work in&#13;
costuming ranges from plays like&#13;
The Tragedy of Macbeth to&#13;
musical productions like The&#13;
Gondoliers by Gilbert and&#13;
Sullivan, and the first staged&#13;
production of the Rock Opera&#13;
Tommy by the Who.&#13;
She feels her most challenging&#13;
as srsgnmem was the world&#13;
premiere of the opera, 'Madamt'&#13;
lumel." Apparently nothing had&#13;
ever been designed for thiS&#13;
production before and Ms Slater&#13;
had to start her costume designs&#13;
from scratch, Furthermore, there&#13;
were many costume changes In&#13;
the opera&#13;
Ms Slater has travelled Widely&#13;
and has taught both In public&#13;
schools and In universities She&#13;
was Interviewed by Parks Ide for&#13;
her current posruon for the fIrst&#13;
time, 10 ew Orleans. at an&#13;
American Theatre Association&#13;
Convention She lives In Racme,&#13;
near the lakeshore and loves her&#13;
view of the water She WIll be&#13;
[omed soon by her twelve year&#13;
old son 10 about a month&#13;
Barbara Maris&#13;
by Mollie Clork.&#13;
SQIl Writer&#13;
Students taking Professor&#13;
Barbara Mans for PiAnO and&#13;
MU\IC Theory I c1aues Win soon&#13;
f!Od themsel vft "att! Iv In&#13;
valved ,n the creation of llhe)&#13;
art' of musrc&#13;
Professoe MMIS, of tM Mu;IC&#13;
0, Clplone, doesn't t&gt;.10""e por.&#13;
f"""en should be robots" but&#13;
that they shoukl "prov,d&lt;! I Ion~&#13;
between the comp&lt;»or and the&#13;
Iostener "She stated thlt llou_&#13;
"mus.cel notation IS • ~&#13;
skeletal process of communlC."&#13;
tlng ideas, the Interp&lt;OUllon of&#13;
a prece IS ''''''''tllllv left up to&#13;
the pertormee "&#13;
Mans believes that plano&#13;
teachers should consider Il&#13;
Important that therr stud nls I ,&#13;
they are an IOteer.1 pan of th&#13;
mUSIc making precess •&#13;
Prof es"" Mol,.. performed as a&#13;
concert plaOl\t With rral&#13;
orchestra Indudl"" lh~ Be&#13;
Orche tra She has al'o studIed&#13;
the hrstoncel developrn nt of&#13;
the plano, from Mozart's 11...&#13;
octave plano to Llszt"s seven and&#13;
one half octave plano ThiS tudy&#13;
was done under a ahonal&#13;
Endowment for the Humanlt s&#13;
fellowship at the Unl\ter ltv of&#13;
orth Carolina 1an~ ha&#13;
studied plano In Parts With Jules&#13;
Cenut and has tak n • mMh'i"&#13;
class on Chopin With Alht"d&#13;
Cortot under a fulbr' ht&#13;
scholarshIp&#13;
Profe-~sor MarlS r f'1 td h&#13;
BM and MM !rom the Unl r ,t&#13;
of 11hnol&lt; and her OMA from th~&#13;
Peabody Conserv.tory of Mu ,&#13;
In Bat",noll" Ma land H&#13;
repertoire In ludes com e1tos&#13;
Beetho\fen, Schumann Gr~&#13;
Haydn Mendel sohn _zllt&#13;
and lilt She aho pia mUSI&#13;
by modern composer1lnclud,n&#13;
Ger,hwln and Mac()olwell H&#13;
tavontt" cornpoH'f , z&amp;lt&#13;
Wide Variety of Titles&#13;
Juvenile Titles also in Stock&#13;
An Ideal Gift Anytime&#13;
tln·THI. fOOl&gt;&#13;
nf.'1 IfR m \I III&#13;
ONLY&#13;
UW Park ide&#13;
Bookstor&#13;
Ilondly IhtsdlY 9 I. 1, •&#13;
frodly91.4,.&#13;
Sllu,dil 10 , .. I. Q&#13;
Wednesday September 20, 1978 ~nger&#13;
New Faces O~ Campus -&#13;
Karen Grande&#13;
by Kathy Peters&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Karen Grande is new to the&#13;
Bu iness Department this semester&#13;
Mrs. Grande teaches one&#13;
class and holds the rank of&#13;
lecturer. She is also the&#13;
coordinating acedemic advisor&#13;
at the undergradu a te and&#13;
raduate levels ir:, the Business&#13;
Department. Mrs. Gran.de ad-&#13;
~ises all new students coming in&#13;
who have not d ec lare d a&#13;
pec1alized field of interest. She&#13;
also evaluates all applicatio ns&#13;
or the new graduate progr.am.&#13;
She must dec ide if t he&#13;
qualifications of the applicant&#13;
meet the required standards.&#13;
Mrs: Grande would like to tell&#13;
students who are thinking of&#13;
entering the program that pow is&#13;
the time to begin applying. For&#13;
those who are not clear as to&#13;
what the Master of Administrative&#13;
Science degree is, she&#13;
&gt;- informs us that it is basically the&#13;
same as the more common&#13;
Master of Business Administration&#13;
degree. The difference&#13;
between the two is that the&#13;
M.A.S. program is not so&#13;
spe cialized as the M.B.A.&#13;
Universities such as Yale and&#13;
~niversity of Chicago also offer&#13;
the M.A.S. degree.&#13;
Although the M.A.S. program&#13;
is new to Parkside, she has not&#13;
e ncounte red any problems. She&#13;
finds the staff here very helpful&#13;
a nd cooperative. Mrs. Grande&#13;
hopes to see the program grow&#13;
and says that they will be adding&#13;
new courses, this spring. These&#13;
will offer a wider variety at&#13;
vario us levels.&#13;
Mrs. Grande was raised in&#13;
Cleve land, Ohio , a nd attended&#13;
high school in Aurora, Illinois.&#13;
She attended Northe rn Illinois&#13;
University whe re she received&#13;
he r B.A. in Business Education&#13;
and her M.B.A. in Business&#13;
Administration . Mrs. Grande also&#13;
taught there for three years and&#13;
worked with their graduate&#13;
program.&#13;
Mrs. Grande mo ved to&#13;
Kenosha with her husband in&#13;
Ju ly. Mrs. Grande says that she&#13;
sees quite a difference between&#13;
Kenosha a nd Chicago. "Everyone&#13;
is so friendly," she exclaimed, "I&#13;
am happy here, it's a gorgeous&#13;
setting (the campus) and so&#13;
large!"&#13;
Virginia Slater&#13;
by Kristi Honch&#13;
lights, Camera, Costumes!&#13;
That was not a misprint&#13;
Costumes are a vital part of ~ny&#13;
theatrical production and the&#13;
Parkside Dramat1 Arts Department&#13;
has a new Theatre Costume&#13;
Specialist and instructor, Virginia&#13;
Slater.&#13;
Virginia received her BS and&#13;
MS in Art Education from State&#13;
University College, Buffalo, ew&#13;
York; and her Ph.D in Art&#13;
Education from UW-Madison in&#13;
1974.&#13;
Her professional \ ork in&#13;
costuming ranges from plays like&#13;
The Tragedy of Macbeth to&#13;
musical productions like The&#13;
Gondoliers by Gilbert and&#13;
Sullivan, and the first staged&#13;
production of the Rock Opera&#13;
Tommy by the Who.&#13;
She feels her most challenging&#13;
Barbara Maris&#13;
b Mollie Clarke&#13;
St.iff W riter&#13;
Students taking Prof&#13;
BOOKT~FT&#13;
HARDCOVER&#13;
Wide Variety of Titles&#13;
Juvenile Titles also in Stock&#13;
An Ideal Gift Anytime&#13;
ONLY&#13;
$} 50&#13;
uw&#13;
B&#13;
3&#13;
or &#13;
Wednesday September 20, )978&#13;
•&#13;
6&#13;
......&#13;
!lI'-.~.&#13;
• •&#13;
r, .,..,&#13;
Boolcstore&#13;
Changes Cover&#13;
by·Nicki Kroll&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
"t·,&#13;
4&#13;
Indians Lure Student West&#13;
,&#13;
whcnl casually ask€? a friend of min~ what he did this summer he&#13;
replied that he had received both credit an? monev as a ,research&#13;
assistant working with Professor Florence Shipek and th: DI€.gue.no,&#13;
Luiseno and Cupena tribes in San Diego, California. "California" IS a&#13;
word that will attract almost everybody's attention. but when. Scott&#13;
Mandernack mentioned that he had the opportunity to work directly&#13;
with these Indians, my mouth dropped! .&#13;
As a research assistant, Scott concentrated on two projects:&#13;
researching the Indians' use of plants in their environment&#13;
(Ethnobotany) and a water claims 'case. Scott was involved with&#13;
writing down the Indian. names, the names of the parts, the&#13;
preparation and beneficial uses that the tribes h.ad for many plant.s.&#13;
Scott gave me a list of a few plants, many which c~n be found rn&#13;
Wisconsin. The Indians use the roots of the Yucca plant as soap and&#13;
the- buds for food. They also weave baskets from dried Yucca leaves&#13;
and burn the tips to make sewing needles.&#13;
The acorns of the Evergreen Oak can be used to make a mush&#13;
called "pinole" after the acorns are pounded and rinsed in water&#13;
taking away the bitterness.&#13;
They also have several uses for the Sage plant. The tea made from&#13;
Sage leaves is used to cure colds, fever and toothaches. The s~eds can&#13;
be mixed w.tbwheat to make a mush. Sage is also used to make a dye&#13;
for baskets and the Indians use the smoke of burning Sage to purify&#13;
their rifles and houses after someone has died. Tea made from Nettles&#13;
is used to quicken labor during childbirth.&#13;
From his own personal experience, Scott cari testify to the&#13;
effectiveness of the milky 'fluid of an oval-leaved plant called "Eyes&#13;
of the Earth," which he used to cure poison oak. He commented that&#13;
Professor Shipek plans on testing the substance on Poison Ivy.&#13;
Besides recording the Indians use of plants, Scott also examined&#13;
the historical agricultural records and annual reports of the Indians.&#13;
Behind the Wood.he&#13;
/ Environmental Sanitation 240&#13;
class was being held. J was at&#13;
first tempted to point to my&#13;
wastebasket where the remains&#13;
of last night's pastrami sandwich&#13;
had died a violent death.&#13;
"Young man, you obviously&#13;
have my- office confused with&#13;
one of the many parking lots&#13;
available to the average student&#13;
here at Parkside," I admonished&#13;
him.&#13;
To keep students 'up to date on what's going, on around :he&#13;
Parkside campus, we obtained some information on changes being&#13;
made in' the bookstore from its manager, Paul Hoffman. He also&#13;
mentioned some new features in the store which will be of interest to&#13;
students and faculty alike. Within a few weeks the bookstore will-be&#13;
equipped to accept VISA and Master Charge for purchases. Kodak&#13;
film processing will also be made available for our convenience. The&#13;
new charges will facilitate customers in purchasing the new&#13;
merchandise which is being added to the present stock.&#13;
At a meeting of the bookstore committee last year, Hoffman was&#13;
informed that people wanted to see more non-text items in the store&#13;
so he got together with the Follett Corporation and ordered several&#13;
thousand dollars worth of such merchandise. Among this&#13;
merchandise are such items as plants, macrame articles and a more&#13;
expanded supply of art materials. Hoffman says that .Art faculty&#13;
members gave hLma list of supplies that their students arerequired to&#13;
have and may sometimes need at short notice. He has ordered these&#13;
items (including various kinds of paperj-and they should be on the&#13;
shelves soon. Moving the office to the 02 level and taking the stock&#13;
room wall down at the back of the store has given the store about&#13;
1,400 square feet more to accomodate the new merchandise.&#13;
"You may have noticed that we had more books on the shelves&#13;
than we had in the annex (which was located in the D2 level of the&#13;
Library Learning Center)," Hoffman said. This was t~ result of&#13;
overstocking the shelves. "If a book wasn't found on the shelves we&#13;
could guarantee that it wasn't instock at all," Hoffman said. "I think&#13;
that book rush this year ran more smoothly than in previous years,&#13;
too ," he added.&#13;
The one way pattern with the entrance at the back and exit at the&#13;
front of the store made the traffic pattern move in a much more&#13;
orderly fashion than was possible in the annex. The wider aisles will&#13;
make it even better in the future. Once the new merchandise is in and&#13;
things are back to a more normal pace, a dressing room will be added&#13;
to the store to afford customers the opportunity of trying on the&#13;
clothing items which the bookstore has been stocking. 'The outside of&#13;
the store will have a slightly different appearance, too. Hoffman says&#13;
that he has Leen looking at various signs to call attention to the store.&#13;
Hopefully ..with all these changes and more to come throughout the&#13;
year, Parkside students wilt begin to take advantage- of the bookstore&#13;
to a greater extent. .&#13;
"We want to make it more their store," Hoffman emphasized.&#13;
"They've asked for it and we're trying to give them what.thev want."&#13;
So there it is, Parkside. You wanted changes made in the bookstore&#13;
and they're being made. What will happen now? Paul Hoffman seems&#13;
optimistic about it all, but as he said at the con~l~sion of our&#13;
conversation, "We'll see how it all goes."&#13;
by Scarf O'Toole&#13;
I was reading one of the many&#13;
letters from fans which pour&#13;
across my desk each morning (or&#13;
is it me who pours across I1lY&#13;
desk each morning), when I&#13;
noticed that there was a 1972&#13;
Plymouth Valiant parked where&#13;
my portable bar usually rests.&#13;
The driver emerged from his&#13;
vehicle and asked me where the&#13;
UNION&#13;
RECREATION&#13;
. CENTER '&#13;
9:00 A.M ••J.o:oo P.M.&#13;
MON,·THUR.&#13;
9:00 A.M ...IJ.:OO P.M.&#13;
FRIDAYS&#13;
l:oo-1'.M"'ll:OO P.M.&#13;
SATURDAYS&#13;
J.:OO P.M.·J.o:oo P.M.&#13;
SUNDAYS&#13;
- BOWLING&#13;
-BILLARDS&#13;
-FOOSBALL&#13;
.- PINBALL .:'&#13;
1...---_ - PING PONG&#13;
SIGN UP&#13;
FOR FALL&#13;
LEAGUES&#13;
NOW&#13;
FRIDAY HAPPY HOUR&#13;
UNION SQUAREr&#13;
I&#13;
"Oh. Mr. O'toole, you've&#13;
to help me. I'm late for class&#13;
I have to bring this samp&#13;
refuse in for examination,"&#13;
youth pleaded with me.&#13;
Sensing a story, I allow&#13;
. intrepid young friend to leave&#13;
car parked underneath a pile&#13;
last week's memos from&#13;
editor complaining about&#13;
disarray in my office.&#13;
Then, it hit me. I struck u&#13;
the greatest idea to hit educati&#13;
since the 25c beer. Oriv'&#13;
education. Think of it. No Ion&#13;
would administration have til&#13;
spend exorbitant fees 011&#13;
c.onstruction and maintainan&#13;
of parking lots; instead, we cou&#13;
simply drive to and from&#13;
classes: - ~&#13;
The benefits of drive-in c1as&#13;
are obvious. For example, ~&#13;
people (I assume they're peopl&#13;
who- run- the food service cou&#13;
hire car hops to service theincreasing&#13;
traffic. This would&#13;
boost the economy by providin,&#13;
more jobs, thus aiding thiS&#13;
country in its current economiC&#13;
slump. The theater could install&#13;
. speakers so that a night out II&#13;
the drive-in could be fit&#13;
somewhere between Biochemi&#13;
try 110 and Basketweaving J(Jt&#13;
You'd never ever have to -"lea:&#13;
your car.&#13;
Of course, there are dra#:&#13;
. backs to my plan. One would&#13;
the, amount of carbon mbnoxi&#13;
. ···whkh would penetrate into the&#13;
atmosphere around. here. ilIJt&#13;
don'tthink that even that sho&#13;
deter .the administration f&#13;
pursuing the feasibility of such&#13;
plan. Aft~r' all, the role of ,.&#13;
college student these days s&#13;
to be' adaptability .. And&#13;
, .. s~~,~e_nts.can adapt to the ro&#13;
food. served at most camp&#13;
across this great .countrv of au&#13;
then 1 suppose they could read!&#13;
see the benefits' of' the sc&#13;
O'Toole drive-ineduqtion pi'J'&#13;
Editors Note: Mr. O'Toole had&#13;
be pulled away from his br&#13;
paper bag full of 5C9tc;:h to&#13;
.this article. \tVhat a Mess!&#13;
Wednesday September 20, 1978&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
Changes Cover&#13;
t,y Nicki Kroll&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
To keep students up to date on what's going , on around the&#13;
Parkside campus, we obtained some information on changes being&#13;
made in the bookstore from its manager, Paul Hoffman. He also&#13;
mentioned some new features in the store which will be of interest to&#13;
students and faculty alike. Within a few weeks the bookstore will be&#13;
equipped to accept VISA and Master Charge for purchases. Kodak&#13;
film processing will also be made available for our convenience. The&#13;
new charges will facilitate customers in purchasing the new&#13;
merchandise which is being added to the present stock .&#13;
At a meeting of the bookstore committee last year, Hoffman was&#13;
informed that people wanted to see more non-text items in the store&#13;
so he got together with the Follett Corporation and ordered several&#13;
thousand dollars worth of such merchandise. Among this&#13;
merchandise are such items as plants, macrame articles and a more&#13;
expanded supply of art materials. Hoffman says that _Art faculty&#13;
members gave hLm a list of supplies that their students are·required to&#13;
have and may sometimes need at short notice. He has ordered these&#13;
items (including various kinds of paper) and they should be on the&#13;
shelves soon . Moving the office to the D2 level and taking the stock&#13;
room wall down at the back of the store has given the store about&#13;
1,400 square feet more to accomodate the new merchandise.&#13;
"You may have noticed that we had more books on the shelves&#13;
than we had in the annex (which was located in the D2 level of the&#13;
Library Learning Center)," Hoffman said . This was tire result of&#13;
overstocking the shelves. "If a book wasn't found on the shelves we&#13;
could guarantee that it wasn't in.stock at all," Hoffman said. "I think&#13;
that book rush this year ran more smoothly than in previous years,&#13;
too," he added.&#13;
The one way pattern with the entrance at the back and exit at the&#13;
front of the store made the traffic pattern move in a much more&#13;
orderly fashion than was possible in the annex. The wider aisles will&#13;
make it even better in the future . Once the new merchandise is in and&#13;
things are back to a more normal pace, a dressing room will be added&#13;
to the store to afford customers the opportunity of trying on the&#13;
clothing items which the bookstore has been stocking. The outside of&#13;
the store will have a slightly different appearance, too. Hoffman says&#13;
that he has Leen looking at various signs to call attention to the store.&#13;
Hopefully, with all these changes and more to come throughout the&#13;
year, Parkside students wm begin to take advantage of the bookstore&#13;
to a greater extent. ·&#13;
"We want to make it more their store," Hoffman empha~ized .&#13;
"They've asked for it and we're tryihg to give them what they want."&#13;
So there it is, Parkside. You wanted changes made in the bookstore&#13;
and they're being made. What will happen now? Paul Hoffman seems&#13;
optimistic about it all, but as he said at the con~l~s,on of our&#13;
conversation, "We' ll see how it all goes."&#13;
UNION&#13;
BECBEATlON&#13;
C·ENTER-&#13;
• BOWLING&#13;
•BILLAR·DS&#13;
·FOOSBALt--&#13;
.• PINBAtt&#13;
• PIN,G PONG&#13;
SlGN.UP&#13;
FOR FALL&#13;
LEAGUES&#13;
NOW&#13;
9:0o A,M.-10:00 P.M.&#13;
MON,-Tltua.&#13;
9:oo A,M,-11:00 P.M.&#13;
FRIDAYS&#13;
1:00'P.M1iJt:oo P.M.&#13;
SAT.URDA YS&#13;
. 1:00 P.M.-10:00 P.M.&#13;
SUNDAYS&#13;
4&#13;
Indians Lure Student West '-&#13;
When I casually askej a friend of mind what he did this summer he&#13;
replied that he had received both credit and moriey as a _research&#13;
assistant working with Professor Florence Sh1pek and the D1e_gue_no,&#13;
Luiseno ;nd Cupeno tribes in San Diego, California. "California" Is a&#13;
word that will attract almost everybody's attenti~n, but when Scott&#13;
Mandernack mentioned that he had the opportunity to work directly&#13;
with these Indians, my mouth dropped! .&#13;
As a research assistant, Scott concentrated on two projects :&#13;
researching the Indians' use of , plants in their . environment&#13;
(Ethnobotany) and a water claims case.· Scott was involved with&#13;
writing down the Indian names, the names of the parts, the&#13;
preparation -and beneficial uses that the tribes had for many plants .&#13;
Scott gave me a list of a few plants, many which can be found in&#13;
Wisconsin. The Indians use the roots of the Yucca plant as soap and&#13;
the. buds for food. They also weave baskets from dried Yucca leaves&#13;
and burn the tips to make sewing needles.&#13;
The acorns of the Evergreen· Oak can be used to make a mush_&#13;
called "pinole" after the acorns are pounded and rinsed in water&#13;
taking away the bitterness.&#13;
They also have several uses for the Sage plant. The tea made from&#13;
Sage leaves is used to cure colds, fever and toothaches. The seeds can&#13;
be mixed withwheat to make a mush. Sage is also used to make a dye&#13;
for baskets and the Indians use the smoke of burning Sage to purify&#13;
their rifles and houses after someone has died. Tea made from Nettles&#13;
is used to quicken labor during childbirth.&#13;
From his own personal experience, Scott can testify to the&#13;
effectiveness of the milky fluid of an ovaHeaved plant called "Eyes&#13;
of the Earth," which he used to &lt;;:ure poison oak . He commented that&#13;
Professor Shipek plans on testing the substance on Poison Ivy.&#13;
Besides recording the Indians use of plants, Scott also examined&#13;
the historical agricultural records and annual reports of the Indians.&#13;
Behind the Woodshed&#13;
/ Environmental Sanitation 240&#13;
class was being held. I was at&#13;
first tempted to point to my&#13;
wastebasket where the remains&#13;
of last night's pastrami sandwich&#13;
had died a violent death.&#13;
"Young man, you obviously&#13;
have my office confused with&#13;
one of the many parking lots&#13;
available to the average student&#13;
here at Parkside," I admonished&#13;
him .&#13;
by Scarf O'T oole&#13;
I was reading one of the many&#13;
letters from fans which pour&#13;
across my desk each morning (or&#13;
is it me who pours across l'J1Y&#13;
pesk each moming), when I&#13;
noticed that there was a 1972&#13;
Plymouth Valiant parked where&#13;
my portable bar usually rests.&#13;
The driver emerged from his&#13;
vehicle and asked me where the&#13;
FRIDAY HAPPY HOUR&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
9 oz. X ·.Jo&#13;
l2oz._)t(= .35&#13;
20oz.;8(' .45&#13;
Pitcher ~ s 1.25&#13;
: .· Soft Drlnks ·&#13;
&amp; Wine&#13;
5' OFF EACH GLASS&#13;
l · 2:~ OFF PITCHER ·&#13;
...&#13;
Thank&#13;
~~ you for your&#13;
patronage students!&#13;
"Oh, Mr. O'toole, you've got&#13;
to help me. I'm late for class and&#13;
I have to bring this sampled&#13;
refuse in for examination," the&#13;
youth pleaded with me.&#13;
Sensing a story, I allowed my&#13;
. intrepid young friend to leave his&#13;
car parked underneath a pile of&#13;
last week's memos from my&#13;
editor complaining about the&#13;
disarray in my office.&#13;
Then, it hit me. I struck upon&#13;
the ~reatest idea to hit education&#13;
since the 25c beer. Drive-in&#13;
education. Think of it. No longer&#13;
would administration have to&#13;
spend exorbitant&#13;
construction and maintainance&#13;
of parking lots; instead, we could&#13;
simply drive to and from our&#13;
classes.·&#13;
The benefits of drive-in classes&#13;
are obvious . For example, the&#13;
people (I assume they're people)&#13;
who run the food service could&#13;
hire car hops to service the&#13;
increasing traffic. This would&#13;
boost the economy by providing&#13;
more jobs, thus aiding this&#13;
country in its current economic&#13;
slump. The theater could install&#13;
· speakers so that a night out at&#13;
the drive-in could be fit&#13;
somewhere between Biochemis·&#13;
try 110 and Basketweaving 304-&#13;
You' d never ever have to 'leave&#13;
your car.&#13;
Of course, there are draw·&#13;
, backs to my plan. One would be&#13;
the. amount of carbon monoxide&#13;
·'' 'which would penetrate into the&#13;
~tmosphere ' arourid .. here .. But 1&#13;
don'tthink that even that stiould&#13;
det~r : the administration trorn&#13;
pursuing the feasibility of such a&#13;
plan. After, all the role of 1the&#13;
' s colleg~ student these days seem1&#13;
to be adaptability. _And 1&#13;
. , st~dents_ can adapt to the rorte:&#13;
food. served at ·most campuse&#13;
across this great country of our;,&#13;
then I suppose they could read:~&#13;
see the benefits · of the · Sc&#13;
O'Toole drive-in educ~tion p)anEditors&#13;
Note: Mr. O'Toole hadt~&#13;
be pulled away from his bro~&#13;
pape~ bag full of sc&amp;tch to wf/l~&#13;
. this article. What a Mess! &#13;
FREE Spotlight&#13;
·with the '.&#13;
p'urchase of a medium&#13;
. 'of Coca-Cola. lar~e SefVl~g . -. ',,&gt;e''''" II,&#13;
Available,at Union DInIng Room&#13;
.' ,oduct ot Ttle,Coca Cola Compa"v&#13;
. de m,lfkS which ,denl,ly ,he &amp;/Ime D&#13;
coca.~Ola" afld ,'Coke are reg,sleted ~ra&#13;
4&#13;
id to prove that they needed more water coming to their&#13;
Hedl ~o s and that they have in the past used-the water wisely. ervatlon '. _ '. . '.&#13;
res ommented that Professor Shipek IS working with a firm In&#13;
Scotteles to prove that the Escondido Water Company (north of&#13;
[osA~g 0) is taking too much water from the San luis Rey River,&#13;
San ~le~he shortages in the various reservations. Shipek has been&#13;
causing. f f&#13;
ki on this case or ourteen years&gt;"&#13;
wor ott also helped Professor Shipek locate the sacred sites or the&#13;
SeD tribe near the construction of a resort. The sight of the resort&#13;
cu~eno be called Warner's ranch, which existed in the 1800's, The&#13;
us bto'ldingthe resort wanted to work with the Cupenos to avoid man UI '. _&#13;
tying any of the sites.&#13;
de~rOtt pointed out that sacred sites were places where initiation&#13;
co nieswere held. During these ceremonies, the Indian children ceremo . .&#13;
- t ught about their ancestors and were given knowledge about&#13;
were a h ib f I f . 'subjects as the elders of t e tn es e t was sa e to present.&#13;
eerttatmentioned'that the Indians are still fearful of giving too much&#13;
Scorn ble to handle t&#13;
ledgeto those who may not be a Ie to handle It properly. kn: also learned much a~out t,heir hi.story and beliefs when he&#13;
d atthe Viejas Reservation with a Dieguenc named Sam Brown.&#13;
~t~~ereservationgot its name when the-Spaniards invaded the small&#13;
lIeyit is in and found only old women there,&#13;
vaBrowntold Scott many old stori~s one o~ which was abou.t h?~ the&#13;
"shaman"or medicine men obtained their power, If the Individual&#13;
becominga shaman dreamt that he made.a dead snake come to life,&#13;
it wasa good sign to other sham,an that this person was to become a&#13;
medicineman with magical healing powers, t "&#13;
Scott feels that even though ,trye Indians ii'e, worked with".re very&#13;
superstitious,he believes that they are "super intelligent" people wh?&#13;
havecommon sense, particulanlv concern)ng the us~ of their&#13;
immediateenvironment: . .&#13;
Asa-result of this experience. Scott has decided to change his&#13;
majorto Anthropology and he-hopesthat he will be ~?Ie to work _with&#13;
peoplein solving their problems in. the f~~e; Learmn~ "about&#13;
anotherculture-how they live-makes you realize people aren t all the&#13;
same."&#13;
wednesday September 20, J9~8&#13;
/&#13;
" '&#13;
CaJiforlJia Indians&#13;
continued from P9·4&#13;
SlaughterhouseThe&#13;
task was to"\ take&#13;
VOnnegufswild, biting, funny&#13;
time transcending novel, /.&#13;
Slaughterhouse_Five and turn it&#13;
into a wild, fast moving, well&#13;
nafted, entertaining film. Th&#13;
him,Sfaughterhouse_Fiye/ directed&#13;
by George Roy Hill and&#13;
adapted to the screen by&#13;
Stephen Geller successfuli&#13;
aCComplishesthis goal.&#13;
Naturally the novel is able to&#13;
explore its theme in greate&#13;
depth and detail b~t the film ver ' ,&#13;
stonisableto capt"re"most of th', "&#13;
e mtenslty and irreverence of&#13;
thostory,&#13;
8&#13;
Th. film follows the exploits of&#13;
illy P'l&#13;
" Ilgrim, 3' sort 0&#13;
everyman". figure whose&#13;
~emory Is inflicted with th~&#13;
oorrors of War World II and the&#13;
resden, bombings, He spends&#13;
1I10st h' ' I' ,&#13;
b" IS ,fe in search qf a "ssful ' eXistence away from his memory, ' ,&#13;
The f'l ' '" '&#13;
1 '0" like the novel inter- UptStho .'&#13;
ch' -=-Concept of "normal&#13;
b&#13;
ak,n of events" by ,jumping&#13;
aCa d f&#13;
th north in time through&#13;
Pile, t~ansgression of Billy&#13;
grHllslife.&#13;
d" Sfaughterhouse_Five',.iS a well&#13;
,r@eted b&#13;
lin I ,eautifu Ily filmed,&#13;
tirn:\~et~ two hours of"screen&#13;
cun" efllm, however, is also a&#13;
OOsotte f' Idf cOrn ~ n con uSing b en 0&#13;
flJse~~.' f~l1ta~~,..and drama ali&#13;
Seq" . Ithln an.undefinable, time&#13;
"enCe Th f ' , , SlIoo ' '- ere ore, It IS •• ested '&#13;
,Withan to approach the fi 1m&#13;
. h open rnl.nd· br better yet&#13;
t e book. fi'st.· ,&#13;
5&#13;
ISuper Pianol&#13;
returns&#13;
Tonight, George Fischoff,&#13;
renowned musician and com.&#13;
poser, will once again bring his&#13;
own brand of "Supet''Piano" to&#13;
Union Square at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
, Mr, Fischoff has been playing&#13;
piano since he was very young,&#13;
varying through such musical&#13;
styles as classical" jazz of Errol&#13;
Gardner, pop, and disco. Among&#13;
his song-writing credits include&#13;
Lazy Dev for Spankv and Our&#13;
" Gang and 98,6 for Keith, -&#13;
Several years ago Fischoff&#13;
became the youngest composer&#13;
on Broadway with the musical&#13;
Georgy. As of last spring he was&#13;
composing for the soon to be&#13;
produced Broadway musical&#13;
Fischoff, "though an admlttec&#13;
nonsinging talent, is a versatile,&#13;
professional pianist. In between&#13;
composing and producing&#13;
Broadway shows he tours the&#13;
Sayonara based on' James&#13;
-Michner's novel.&#13;
college circuit. His show consists&#13;
of hard hitting fast moving jazz,&#13;
rock and roll and disco, often&#13;
inviting the audience to&#13;
participate in the fun&#13;
. Fiscoff packs with him a fine&#13;
professional reputation and a&#13;
porfolio of glowing reviews from&#13;
former University dates HIS how&#13;
at Parkside last year was so&#13;
successful that he was invited to&#13;
return this semester&#13;
, I&#13;
,\&#13;
I&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
-&#13;
:k upO'&#13;
lucati11&#13;
Drive-!&#13;
J longe&#13;
,ave tc&#13;
es or&#13;
ainanC!&#13;
e couk&#13;
Jm rJ!&#13;
classe'&#13;
le, tht&#13;
people&#13;
" cou~&#13;
·ce UII&#13;
woula&#13;
ovidinl&#13;
g thi I .&#13;
on(Jl11~&#13;
I inst~'&#13;
out t&#13;
be fit&#13;
rhernii'&#13;
~g 3()1&#13;
J 1ea1t&#13;
Wednesday September 20, 19!8_ 'R!,nger 5&#13;
Calif orgia Indians 'Super Piano' returns&#13;
continued from pg.4&#13;
.d so to prove that they needed more .water coming to their&#13;
He di tions and that they have in the past us_ed ~the water wisely .&#13;
reservat ommented that Professor Shipek is wor-king wifh a firm in&#13;
Scot ~les to prove that the Escondido Water Company (north of&#13;
LOS Ang o) is -taking too much water from the San Luis Rey River,&#13;
San&#13;
causing Die~he shortages in the various reservations. Shipek has been _ f k. on this case for ourteen years .,&#13;
wor&#13;
I&#13;
~: also- helped Professor Shipek locate the sacred sites ot the&#13;
Seo tribe near the construction of a resort. The sight of the resort&#13;
(up;t be called Warner's ranch, which existed in the 1800's. The&#13;
use b:ilding the resort wanted to work with the Cupen0s to avoid&#13;
d&#13;
man f h ·t - troying any o t e s1 es.&#13;
e~ tt pointed out that sacred sites were places where initiation&#13;
~remo co n·ies were held. During these ceremonies, the Indian children .&#13;
were&#13;
- t&#13;
a&#13;
ught about their ancestors and were given knowledge about . . , subjects as the elders of the tribes felt was safe to present.&#13;
Scot&#13;
certatinmentioned that the Indians are still fearful of giving too much . ledge to those who may not be able to handle 1t properly.&#13;
kn~: also lea'rned much a~out t_heir hi_story and beliefs when he&#13;
d at the Viejas Reservation with a D1egueno named Sam Brown.&#13;
~t:i~ereservation got its name when the-Spaniards invaded the small&#13;
valley it is in irnd found only old women thereh. . b h h&#13;
Brown told Scott many old stori~s one of_ w ich was a ou_t o"'! t e&#13;
"shaman" or medicine men obtained their power. If the md1v1d~al&#13;
becoming a shaman dreamt that he made ,~ dead snake, come to life,&#13;
it was a good sign to other shaman that this person was to become a&#13;
edicine man with magical healing powers.&#13;
m Scott feels that even though the Indians h'e. worked with are very&#13;
Perstitious he believes that they are "super intelligen_t~1 people who SU ' have common sense, particularil¥ . h f h . concern,ing t e use o t e1r&#13;
immediate environment: ·. · · · . .&#13;
As a result of this experi_ence, Scott has decided to change his&#13;
major to Anthropology and he--hopes that he will be a?le to _work with&#13;
people in solving their problems in_ the f~~e. 'Learnm~ about&#13;
another culture-how they live-makes you realize people aren tall the&#13;
same."&#13;
SlaughterhouseThe&#13;
task was to ' take&#13;
Vonnegut's wild, biting, funny&#13;
time transcending novel , /.&#13;
Slaughterhouse-Five and turn it&#13;
into a wild, fast ~ oving, well&#13;
crafted, entertainin.g film. Th&#13;
film, Slaughterhouse-Five directed&#13;
by George Roy Hill · and&#13;
adapted to the screen · by&#13;
Stephen Geller successfully&#13;
accomplishes this goaL&#13;
Naturally the novel is able to&#13;
explore its theme . in greate&#13;
depth and detail but ·the film V . ' ersron is able to capture-most of th . . e rntens1ty and irreverence of the story. .&#13;
_The film follows the exploits of Brlly p·1 . · ,, r grrm, a·· sort o every ·&#13;
1 · . man". figure whose&#13;
~ernory is inflicted with th~&#13;
Dorrors of War World lland the&#13;
resden · bombings. He spends rnost h' · · ·&#13;
bl. rs life in search qf a Issful e · , xrstence away from his&#13;
Tonight, George Fischoff,&#13;
renowned musician· and composer,&#13;
will once again bring his&#13;
own brand of "Super Piano" to&#13;
Union Square at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Mr. Fischoff has been playing&#13;
piano since he was very young,&#13;
varying through such musical&#13;
styles as classical, jazz of Errol&#13;
Gardner, pop, and disco·. Among&#13;
his song-writing credits include&#13;
· Lazy Day for Sp_anky and Our&#13;
Gang and 98.6 for Keith. -&#13;
'I&#13;
lllernory. ·&#13;
The 1·1 1 · ·.. . m, lrke the novel inter- rupts th . ' h . e- concept of "normal&#13;
~a~t of events" by jumping&#13;
th and f?rth in time through&#13;
FREE $p0tlight&#13;
Severa! years ago Fischoff&#13;
became the youngest composer&#13;
on Broadway with the musical&#13;
Georgy. As of last spring he was&#13;
composing for the soon to be&#13;
produced Broadway musical&#13;
Fischoff, though an admitte..:&#13;
nonsinging talent, is a versatile,&#13;
professional pianist. In between&#13;
compos.ing and producing&#13;
Broadway shows he tours the&#13;
Sayonara based on · James&#13;
- Michner's novel.&#13;
P&#13;
.&#13;
1&#13;
e. transgressi'on of · Billy 1 gnrn's life. ·&#13;
'. Slaught h . .· · · d. er ouse-F1ve .. is a well irected b finel , eautifully filmed,&#13;
tirn/ T~Cted two hours ofscreen&#13;
curi · e film, however, is also a&#13;
corn:~s, often confusing blend of&#13;
fused;: fantasy, and drama a.Ii&#13;
seq rthin an undefinable, time&#13;
sugguence. Therefore, · it is&#13;
.·with.the . purchase of a medium . · - of Coca-Cola.&#13;
~ith ested t6 h h . approac . t e film&#13;
e d'~ 0 P,en _mind; or better yet&#13;
e book fost.. · .· .&#13;
lar~e servi~g .. ··'" ... . -Available at Union Dining Room z z&#13;
. . . p roduc1 at The,coca Cola eornoany&#13;
. . . d 1rade marks wh1c~ tde'nllty !he sa me Coca Cola' and :·Co1&lt;e are reg1stere .&#13;
college cIrcu1t His show consist&#13;
of hard hitting fast moving 1azz,&#13;
rock and roll and disco, oft n&#13;
inviting the audience to&#13;
participate rn the fun&#13;
· Fiscoff packs with hrm a f,n&#13;
professional reputation nd a&#13;
porfolro of glowing r , ws from&#13;
former universit dat Hr h&#13;
at Parkside last year wa o&#13;
successful that h v.. a in 1ted to&#13;
return thrs sem st r,&#13;
., &#13;
6&#13;
Science&#13;
Seminar&#13;
Friday&#13;
Wednesday)eptember 20,1978&#13;
English Soars· With Prof 'Marvel&#13;
by Cathy Brownlee&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Bitly Jean Batson sits, stumped with her t1omewor~ assignment,&#13;
h ddenly a voice is heard. - Poof! It's Professor Marvel to w en su ...&#13;
the rescue! - h&#13;
Sound like the newest Saturday morning cartoon? Well: the s. ow&#13;
does include your favorite comic book heroes, bUJ with a little&#13;
different twist and purpose,&#13;
Professor Marvel, the definition expert, is OAe of th~' many&#13;
characters of Bob Canary. Mr. Canary, professor of English ~nd.&#13;
chairman of the Humanities Division, has tound-a way of making&#13;
English Concepts "more entertaining by r.educing.boredom:."&#13;
This teaching is done through a series of eighteen video tap~s&#13;
entitled "Masterpieces of/Instructional Television ." Each ta~~ IS&#13;
introduced and concluded by host Alistair Kook, sound a bit familiar?&#13;
But, as the video continues, English principles are taught through&#13;
comedy sketches.&#13;
These sketches employ the acting talents of studrnts, faculty, and,&#13;
even administration. Bob Canary hastaken "marvelous teachers" a~d&#13;
let them' "make absolute idiots of themselves." Some of the stars In&#13;
the video "Definitions", for example, are Henry Kozicki as Alistair&#13;
Kook Peter Hoff as-Superman and Wayne johnson as Batman. Oh,&#13;
, ~ • I&#13;
and of course, you can't forget Bob Canary as ProfessorM~rve !&#13;
Mr. Canary hasfound that the video tapes can be used Instead of a&#13;
class lecture. "But," as Bob Canary stressed,"they are not to replace&#13;
faculty, but to free them for conferences." - _&#13;
The "Masterpieces of Instructional Television" are usually used for&#13;
Freshman composition. They're used later in the course as a&#13;
self·paced instruction, along with the help of guide sheets and&#13;
conferences. _&#13;
When students begin writing papers, the video tapes &lt;allow for&#13;
more choices and more education, since each stude~t .works on his&#13;
own. It's not necessaryto listen to lectures which don't apply to you&#13;
or your chosen topic when the tapes are used. ,.&#13;
An added advantage of video, commented MI". Canary, is that a&#13;
student "can flash back if he doesn't understand."&#13;
Working on the video tapes has left Bob Canary with memories of&#13;
many "treasured moments." Terry Maraccini, a student who helped&#13;
in production, feels the sameway. ~ _-&#13;
Terry said that, "It was one of the best experiencesLever had." He&#13;
was able to gain much experience in taping, but mostrewarding was&#13;
seeing the teachers act. Terry, aswell as'anyone who yit7wsthe tapes,&#13;
saw professors in a situation outside the classroom.A situation that&#13;
was quite hilarious and comical, aswell as revealing.&#13;
There IS, of course, a serious side to Bob Canary and his&#13;
productions.&#13;
Mr. Canary has also produced the "Literary Almanac", a public&#13;
service radio program. These are straight-forward, one-minute spots&#13;
that are distributed to the local radio stations.&#13;
Each short narration reveals a literary figure and his prominent&#13;
works. They aren't criticisms, but appreciations of literature. These&#13;
programs correspond with the date on which they are broadcasted,&#13;
for example, on D-Day World War II novels ac...ediscussed.&#13;
Mr. Canary does everything "from Homer to modern Science&#13;
Hction." Most of the literature is contemporary since they are most&#13;
.. Dr. Robert Hirsch of&#13;
,forest Untv.. North Caroli&#13;
be the guest speaker of th&#13;
Science Seminar on Friday&#13;
29 at 2,00 p.rn., Rm. CL&#13;
The subject of, his pres&#13;
will be "Distribution of Pa&#13;
Among Their Hosts:'. -&#13;
The program will explore&#13;
various patterns of distr'&#13;
of parasitic populations&#13;
different ecological condo&#13;
and stresses ....using stat'&#13;
analysis and computer m&#13;
~Dr.Hirsch is a co-author&#13;
recently published book, R&#13;
tion of Parasitic Populations.&#13;
out in 1977 by Academic&#13;
His expertise is in the area&#13;
.parasite populations in&#13;
natural systems.&#13;
readily available to those that are interested.&#13;
Bob Canary- does find- a -wav to add a-little humor. Some of his&#13;
shows for example include discussions of cookbooks as literature.&#13;
Through the work of Professor Canary and many others, the· study&#13;
of English has become even more interesting. He stressessimple ideas&#13;
which are sometimes hard to learn because they become boring.&#13;
With the insults and strange comments of host Alistair Kook, who&#13;
could fall asleep' "Well, there you are!"&#13;
(LICK'&#13;
Ll.1'{;';;.II&#13;
CLIC~ c..LA()(': 'ii'--"---'&#13;
Challenge Debate •&#13;
.In&#13;
by Sue Stevens&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
- that this tournament will open up Debate&#13;
'Forensics- at Parkside to high school debaters&#13;
the years to come." '&#13;
The program itself is interesting to look&#13;
Each year, one -topic is decided on for&#13;
collegiate debate teams. The teams then prep&#13;
the~selves -to debate either the positive or t&#13;
negative side of the topic by gathering. facts&#13;
planning .stratagtes. In order to insure that eno&#13;
information will be available for both sides of&#13;
issue, the topic has to - be general, signific&#13;
timely, and contraverstal. There is an element&#13;
suspense when the teams, conststtng of&#13;
people each, learn onlv minutes before whet&#13;
they wi II be debati ng the pro or con.&#13;
With the thrill of competition also comes&#13;
reputation of honor and high ethics. Seldom '&#13;
there any instance of intentional- misinformati&#13;
or cheating.&#13;
During the debates the participants, are jud&#13;
on areas of speaker ability, objection, use&#13;
evidence, logic, rationality, 'and organization.&#13;
winning team receives a trophy and recognitiQll,&#13;
If anyone is interested, come to the weeki ~&#13;
meetings on-Tuesdays at 3:30 in communications,&#13;
arts 233. You may acquire useful skills. As Jeff ,&#13;
says, "More than. anything else, it teach_esyOU \0 . ~&#13;
be more open-minded." I:l\&#13;
Are you looking for a. challenge? Do you like&#13;
competition? Or how about a little fun ~and&#13;
travel? Debate and Forensics can provide all ot&#13;
these plus more - a learning experience.&#13;
Parkside's Debate and Forensics group held its&#13;
first meeting on September 12, but it's not too&#13;
late to join. According to Jeff Prostko, president&#13;
of the group, "No experience- is necessary.. We&#13;
teach members everything they need to know."&#13;
Jeff also said that there are manv things in store&#13;
~ for those who join. ~&#13;
The first step into the year will be a trip to&#13;
Ripon, Wis. on September 23rd. During their one&#13;
day there, members will attend a workshop to&#13;
learn some basics o.f.... preparing a "debate or&#13;
speech. I . ,&#13;
Although there are many tournaments comingup,&#13;
Parkside's first ~ competition will be in&#13;
..tJovember in order to allow the team to prepare&#13;
prcperlv.&#13;
One big project for this year is a high school&#13;
- tournament to be held here at Parkside on&#13;
Oct~be-r 21. Approximately 70 schools are being&#13;
invited to the event that is to' help promote the&#13;
program here. As Prostko put it... "We're hoping&#13;
NOW AT 2 LOCATIONS&#13;
6100 Washington Ave,&#13;
Pioneer Village&#13;
·886-5077 • 886-0207&#13;
2615 Washington Ave.&#13;
~34.2373 • 634-2374&#13;
P.A.B. Fii~ BOQrd,Presents&#13;
SLAUGHTERHOUSE&#13;
FIVE&#13;
t&#13;
l.•~I '&#13;
,&#13;
. -:' .&#13;
I Phelta- Thi&#13;
The-first meeting of tltis sorority-fraternity&#13;
will be held in Union Square'on Monday, .&#13;
Septe,mber~5 at 7:30P.M. All interested&#13;
parties are eneouraged to attend. Be a&#13;
eharter member in Parbide'sfirst soeial &amp;.&#13;
eOllUllunity-mindedorganizaUon.&#13;
.. .&#13;
~.&#13;
Sept.22 ~:OOp.m;, Sept 24 7:30p.m.&#13;
UNION, CINEMA&#13;
ADmiSSION· $100&#13;
WednesdayJeptem&amp;er 20, 1978&#13;
English Soars With Prof 'MarVel&#13;
6&#13;
Sc-ience&#13;
Seminar&#13;
Friday . . Dr. Robert Hirsch · of VI&#13;
forest Univ., North Carolina&#13;
be the guest speaker of the&#13;
Science Seminar on Friday&#13;
29 at 2:00 p.m., Rm. CL lfll&#13;
by Cathy Brownlee&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
Billy Jean Batson sits, stumped with her ll~mewor~ assignment,&#13;
when suddenly ... a voice is heard. - Poof! Its Professor Marvel to&#13;
the rescue! - Sound like the newest Saturday morning cartoon? WeH, the show&#13;
does include your favorite comic book heroes, bu_t with a little&#13;
different twist and purpose. Professor Marvel, the definition exRert, is oAe of the· many&#13;
characters of Bob Canary. Mr. _Canary, professor of English and·&#13;
chairman of the Humanities Division, has found -a way of making&#13;
English concepts " more entertaining by r_educing_boredom· .. "&#13;
This teaching is done through a series of eighteen video tap~s&#13;
entitled "Masterpieces of ' Instructional Television." Each tape 1s&#13;
introduced and concluded by host Alistair Kook, sound a bit familiar?&#13;
But, as the video contin'-!.es, English principles are taught through&#13;
comedy sketches. These sketches employ the acting talents of studrnts, faculty, anct&#13;
even administration. Bob Canary has taken "marvelous teachers" and&#13;
let them "make absolute idiots of themselves." Some of the stars in&#13;
the video "Definitions", for example, are Henry Kozicki as Alistair&#13;
Kook, Peter Hoff as Superman.J and Wayne Johnson ~ Batman. Oh,&#13;
and of course, you can't forget Bob Canary as Professor M~rvel !&#13;
Mr. Canary has found that the video tapes_ can be used instead of a&#13;
class lecture. "But," as Bob Canary stressed, "they are· not to replace&#13;
faculty, but to free them for conferences." ·&#13;
The "Masterpieces of Instructional Television" are usually used for&#13;
Freshman composition . They're used later in the course as a&#13;
self-paced instruction, along with the help of guide sheets and&#13;
conferences. When students begin writing papers, the video tapes 'allow for&#13;
more choices and more education, since each student works on his&#13;
own. It's not necessary to listen to lectures which dori't"apply to you&#13;
or your chosen topic when the tapes are used. , .&#13;
An added advantage of video, commented Mr. Canary, is that a&#13;
student "can flash back if he doesn't understand."&#13;
Working on the video tapes has left Bob Canary with memories of&#13;
many "treasured moments." Terry Maraccini, a student who helped&#13;
in production, feels the same way. -&#13;
Terry said that, "It was one of the best experiencesJ~ever had.". He&#13;
was able to gain_ much experience in tapmg, but most rewarding was&#13;
seeing the teachers act. Terry, as well as anyone who views the tapes,&#13;
saw professors in a situation outside the classroom: A situation that&#13;
was quite hilarious and comical, as well as revealing.&#13;
There ,s, of course, a serious side to Bob Canary and his&#13;
productions. Mr. Canary has also produced the "Literary Almanac", a public&#13;
service radio program. These are straight-forward, one-minute spots&#13;
that are distributed to the local radio stations.&#13;
Each short narration reveals a literary figure and his prominent&#13;
works. They aren't criticisms, but appreciations of literature. These&#13;
prog~ams correspond with the date on which they are broadcasted,&#13;
for example, on D-Day World War II novels ac.,e discussed.&#13;
Mr. Canary does everything "from Homer to modern Science&#13;
Fiction." Most of the literature is contemporary since they are most&#13;
NOW AT 2 LOCATIONS&#13;
6100 Washington Ave.&#13;
Pioneer Village&#13;
· 886-5077 • 886-0207&#13;
2615 Washington Ave.&#13;
~34-2373 • 634-2374&#13;
The subject of his presen '&#13;
will be "Distribution of Paras&#13;
Among Their Hosts". ·&#13;
The program will explore&#13;
various patterns of distribu·&#13;
of parasitic populations u&#13;
different ecological condi ·&#13;
and stresses using stati ·&#13;
analysis and computer model·&#13;
Dr. Hirsch is a co-authorot&#13;
recently published book, Reg&#13;
tion of Parasitic Populations&#13;
out in 1977 by Academic Pr&#13;
His expertise is in the area ~&#13;
parasite populations in th~&#13;
natural systems. · ·&#13;
readily available to those that are interested.&#13;
Bob Canary does find a way to add a little humor. Some of his&#13;
shows for example include discussions of cookbooks as literature.&#13;
Through the work of Professor Canary and many others, the study&#13;
of English has become even more interesting. He stresses simple ideas&#13;
which are sometimes hard to learn because they become boring. ·&#13;
With the insults and strange comments of host Alistair Kook, who&#13;
could fall asleep? "Well, there you are!"&#13;
a,:;.{~.-!&#13;
(LI('!:'. &lt;..LAC~~&#13;
Challenge •&#13;
1n Debate&#13;
by Sue Stevens&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
that this tournament will open up&#13;
· Forensics at Parkside to high school&#13;
the years to come."&#13;
The program itself is interesting to look at.&#13;
Are you looking for a challenge? Do you like&#13;
competition? Or how about a little fun and&#13;
travel? Debate and ~orensics can provide all ot&#13;
these plus more - a learning experience.&#13;
Parkside's Debate and Forensics group held its&#13;
first meeting on September 12, but it's not too&#13;
late to join. According to Jeff Prostko, president&#13;
of the group, "No experience- is necessary. We&#13;
teach members everything they ne~d to know."&#13;
Jeff also said that there are many · things in store&#13;
• for those who join. ·-&#13;
The first step into the year will be a trip to&#13;
Ripon, Wis. on September 23rd. During their one&#13;
day there, members will attend a workshop to&#13;
learn some basics of-- preparing a debate or&#13;
speech. t . ,&#13;
Although therE! are many tournaments coming_&#13;
up, Parkside's first · competition will be in&#13;
tlovember in order to allow the team to prepare&#13;
pr_operly.&#13;
One big project for this year is a high school&#13;
tournament to be held here at Parkside on&#13;
Oct~ber 21. Approximately 70 schools are b·eing&#13;
invited to the event that is to help promote the&#13;
program here. As Prostko put it, "We're hoping&#13;
Each year, one topic is decided on for af&#13;
collegiate debate teams. The teams then prepare&#13;
the~selves to debate either the positive or the&#13;
negative side of the topic by gathering facts and&#13;
planning stratagies . In order to insure that enough&#13;
information will be available for both sides of the&#13;
issue, the topic has to be gene~al, significant,&#13;
timely, and contraversial. There is an element ol&#13;
suspense when the teams, consisting of tll~&#13;
people each, learn only minutes before whether&#13;
they will be debating the pro or con.,&#13;
With the thrill of competition also comes a&#13;
reputation of honor and high ethics. Seldom i,&#13;
there any instance of 'intentional misinformation I,&#13;
o_r cheating.&#13;
During the debates the participants, are judged&#13;
on areas of speaker ability, objection, use ol&#13;
evidence, logic, rationality, )and organization. The&#13;
winning team receives a trophy and recognitiqn.&#13;
If anyone is interested, come to the weekly&#13;
meetings on Tuesdays at 3:30 in communications&#13;
arts 233. You may acquire useful skills. As Jell t&#13;
says, " More than . anything else, it teaches you to'&#13;
be more open-minded."&#13;
P.A.B. Film Board, Presents&#13;
I Phelta' Thi&#13;
The~flrst meeting of tit.is sorority-fraternity&#13;
will be held in U_ulon Square'on Monday, ·&#13;
Septe,mber 25 at 7:30 ,P.M. All interested&#13;
parties are eneouraged to attend. Be a&#13;
eharter member in Parkside's _first social &amp;&#13;
eomntunlty-minded o~gaulzation.&#13;
,· ..&#13;
Sept 22 J:00 p.m~ . · . , Sept. 24 7 :30 p.111.&#13;
UNION CINEMA&#13;
ADffilSSION ' $100 &#13;
wed"esday Sept~m"er20;J978 CRinger 7&#13;
r Big Brothers of (;reater Racine,lnc.&#13;
The primary emphasIs In the btg brother pr~g.r~_m is "One man&#13;
b Y" However, there are some group activities available for all One 0 . ,&#13;
Of . B thers and little Brothers to attend. ~&#13;
Qli Big ro , Proi A hi h our second program. 15 r~Ject cceptance w rc uses male and&#13;
f Ie volunteers to give guidance, counseling and companionship&#13;
d fema h . ~ to boys and girls betw~en t e ages of. 1.1 an~ 18 who are having&#13;
Q hle with the system In some way. This IS basicallv a volunteer in a&#13;
troU. -&#13;
robatton program.whll:~hhas been expanded to .accept referral: from&#13;
P t only the juvenile court but the Human Service System, Runaway&#13;
~. h h .&#13;
H&#13;
S€ RUSH and at er sue agencies.&#13;
cu , I· Peoplewanting to be vo .unteers In our programs must go through&#13;
. ·I·,arinterviews as a LIttle Brother referral would, Our social SImI .. ~&#13;
orkerinterviews the prospective volunteer In the office and in their&#13;
;ome. The volu~teer must attend an .orientation session and pass&#13;
througha screening bv our Board of DIrectors. We get three written&#13;
1 referencesand run a police checkon every applicant.&#13;
lOr BigBrothers of Greater Racine, Inc. is an accredited social service&#13;
,R agency,open over .40 hrs. a week for your convenience;. we have a 24&#13;
tiOril hr. answering service. We are a member agency of BIg Brothers of&#13;
lie Americaand funded by Racine County and Racine United Way. What&#13;
we need are more people who want to get involved. There are a&#13;
numberof boys and girls who need help. .&#13;
Big Brothers of Greater Racine, Inc. serves all of Racine County&#13;
with two basic programs. The first program is the Big Brother program&#13;
itself. . . '&#13;
Big Brothers is ~n organization of volunteer men that works with&#13;
boyssix (6) to fifteen (15) years of age who have no father in their&#13;
homes,Eachvolunteer is expected to see his assigned Little Brother&#13;
at leastonce per week. Usually he engages in some sort of activity&#13;
with the boy during each visit. The purpose of a Big Brother is to&#13;
provideadult male companionship and guidance to a fatherless boy.&#13;
Heneedhave no special background or training to be a successful&#13;
BigBrother. He is generallv over 1~vears of age, single or married,&#13;
andinterestedin children.&#13;
TheBig Brother Staff interviews mothers and boys referred to our&#13;
Agencyfor service. They match men and boys on the basis of&#13;
personalityand interests so that they have a com......mon basis on which&#13;
to build their friendship.&#13;
Again the volunteers that are needed do not have to have any&#13;
specialbackground. However, we want people who are serious and&#13;
would like to spend 5 or 6 hrs. a week with a child who needs&#13;
someone.This would be ideal for those students who are in the Social&#13;
andEducational sciences where involvement of this kind proves to be&#13;
a positive and enriching learning experiences." But, of course, the ,&#13;
programsare open to all individuals who are sincere and want to get&#13;
involved.&#13;
Formore information give us a catl day or nightat 637-7625.&#13;
",&#13;
tell&#13;
One Man&#13;
One Boy&#13;
ADVERTISING CORRECTION&#13;
In the "Accent on Enrichment" have read "S14,50" rather than&#13;
ad on page 9 of the September 6, "$4.50". RANGER apclogrzes for&#13;
1978 issue, the price for any inconvenience their error&#13;
UW.-Parkside students should has caused.&#13;
ffi o'b] Coffeehouse Presents ...&#13;
Bock By Popular Demond&#13;
, George "Super Piano" Fischoff&#13;
IN&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
Wed. Sell. 20th at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
FREERDmlSSION&#13;
-&#13;
BEER &amp; WINE SERVED&#13;
Next Coffeehouse DRVE PRRKERThurs. Oct. 5&#13;
Social Club Formeil&#13;
generally just to get together."&#13;
The I Phelta Thi sorternity started out over a&#13;
few beer's while watching a Monday night&#13;
There is a new organization on campus. A football game down in Union Square, The idea&#13;
different tvpe of club which is a combination came about by just talking about how it would be&#13;
sorprityand fraternity, for a better lack of a name if a regular group of students got together every&#13;
a SORTERNITY.The name of this sortemitv.fvou Monday rright arid just sat around having a good&#13;
ask?The I Phelta Thi. It is based on the principle time The idea snowballed from there. The group&#13;
of a social group. A type of get-together for is very serious about what is happening and&#13;
people to meet their friends and to find new hopes to be a major part of the student life here&#13;
friends. at Parkside.&#13;
_ I Phelta Thi's plan is to sponsor dances, toga "We are ill no way trying to compete with the&#13;
parties (shades of Animal House), do civic P.A.B." says Kevin. "We just think that Parkside is&#13;
pr~jects and to generally have a good - time. ready for an organization of this type. We are&#13;
Meetingsare planned for every Monday night in'. open to anyone. That includes Students, faculty,&#13;
the Union Square at approximately 8:00~m. staff, administration, anybody-who wants to-join."&#13;
PreSident Kevin Dunk said that it will be Of course you have to apply for membership, but&#13;
generallyused as a get-together and have a good it is fairly-easy to get in.&#13;
time. "Of course" he said "we plan on doing a So, if .you are interested, stop on down to&#13;
I~t.of things. Trips .to concerts. shows, dances, Union Square and talk to one of the officers, they&#13;
CIVIC projects and other assorted things but will be more than willing to help you.&#13;
by John A. Gabriel&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
""~&#13;
jOl!&#13;
""&#13;
cat&#13;
IS&#13;
y~&#13;
"1\ll'CII,\l(lRE THAN JlTST HAIR"'&#13;
j&#13;
c:../l~eaf·&#13;
We:offer FREE individual&#13;
consu Itat ions-for:&#13;
• Hair Stylin~&#13;
• Conditioning&#13;
• Make:'::.lp'rreatmenr&#13;
Hours:&#13;
9 to n O~lily&#13;
'8 to 4:30J;atyrdoY.&#13;
Phone: ()39-.1507&#13;
4061 N. Main St.&#13;
~-:-/ ', ,&#13;
0uJt1~I:eaf&#13;
,&#13;
P.A.B.· DOUBLE FEATURE&#13;
A DANCE I A FREE CONCERT&#13;
WITH FEATURIIG&#13;
BLUE GRASS MUSIC "HEADSTONE" -&#13;
, "HOOM COOKN"&#13;
-&#13;
Saturday. Sept 23 . Friday, Sept. 22&#13;
'1,00 pm -2·5 Pm&#13;
vw-p $1.50 Special Happy Hour&#13;
Guest $2.00 2-6 Pm&#13;
10's Required&#13;
IN THE UNION SQUARE&#13;
het&#13;
6 Wednesday Sept~mber 20;1978 · 'R!nger&#13;
Big Brothers of (ireater&#13;
7&#13;
acine,lnc.&#13;
The primary emphasis in the ts1g tsrother Program is "CJne man _&#13;
boy" However, there are some group activitfes available for all&#13;
one . . Bothers and Little Brothers to attend. • Big r . . Our second program_ 1s ProJect Acceptanc_e which uses male and&#13;
f ale volunteers to give guidance, counseling and companionship ~ . h f . to boys and girls between t e ages o . 1_1 and 18 who are having&#13;
ble with the system in some way. This 1s basically a volunteer in a&#13;
trou . h · bation program which as been expanded to accept referrals from One Man&#13;
~~~-only the juveniJe court but the _Human Service System, Runaway&#13;
House, RUSH and other such agenc1_es.&#13;
People wanting to be vol_unteers in our programs must go through&#13;
miliar interviews as a Little Brother referral would. Our social SI h . I . h&#13;
orker interviews t e prospective vo unteer m t e office and in their&#13;
;ome. The volunteer must attend an orientation session and pass&#13;
through a screening by our Board of Directors. We get three written&#13;
references and run.a police check on every applicant.&#13;
One Boy&#13;
Big Brothers of Greater Racine, Inc. is an accredited soeiial service&#13;
agency, open over _40 hrs. a weeR for your convenience;_ we have a 24&#13;
hr. answering service. We are a membe,r agency of Big Brothers of&#13;
America and funded by Racine County and Racine United Way. What&#13;
we need are more people who want to get involved. There are a&#13;
number of boys and girls who need help. ·&#13;
Big Brothers of Greater Racine, Inc. serves all of Racine County&#13;
with two basic programs. The first program is the Big Brother program&#13;
itself. .&#13;
Big Brothers is i}n organization of volunteer men that works with&#13;
boys six (6) to fifteen (15) years of age who have no father in their&#13;
homes. Each volunteer is expected to see his assigned Little Brother&#13;
at least once per week. Usually he engages iii some sort of activity&#13;
with the boy during each visit. The purpose of a Big Brother is to&#13;
provide adult male companionship and guidance to a fatherless boy.&#13;
He need have no special background or training to be a successful&#13;
Big Brother. He is genera.lly over 18 ·years of age, single or married,&#13;
and interested in children.&#13;
The Big Brother Staff interviews mothers and boys referred to our&#13;
Agency for service. They match men and boys on the basis of&#13;
personality and interests so that they have a com;11on basis on which&#13;
to build their friendship.&#13;
Agaln the volunteers that are needed do not have to have any&#13;
special background. However, we want people who are serious and&#13;
would like to spend 5 or 6 hrs. a week with a child who needs&#13;
someone. Th-is would be ideal for those students who are in the Social&#13;
and Educational sciences where involvement of this kind proves to be&#13;
a positive and enriching learning experiences.· But, of course, the _&#13;
programs are open to all individuals who are sincere and want to get&#13;
involved.&#13;
For more information give us a ca_ll day or night at 637-7625.&#13;
•'&#13;
/&#13;
Social OUti Formed&#13;
by John A. Gabriel&#13;
Staff Writer&#13;
generally just to get together."&#13;
The I Phelta Thi sorternity started out over a&#13;
few beer's while watching a Monday night&#13;
There is a new organization on campus . A football game down in Union Square. The idea&#13;
different type of club which is a combination came about by just talking about how it would be&#13;
sorprity and fraternity, for a better lack of a ·name if a regular group of students got together every&#13;
a SORTERNITY. The natne of this sorternity,-you Monday night and just sat around having a good&#13;
ask? The I Phelta Thi. It is based on the principle time. The idea snowb411ed from there. The group&#13;
of a social group. A type of get-together for is very serious about what is happening and&#13;
people to meet their friends and to find new hopes to be a major part of the student life here&#13;
friends. at Parkside.&#13;
I Phelta Thi's plan is to sponso! dances, toga "We are in no way trying to compete with the&#13;
par~ies (shades of Animal House), do c ivic P.A .B." says Kevin . "We just think that Parkside is&#13;
pr~1ects and to generally have a good - time. ready for an organization of this type. We are&#13;
Meetings are- planned for every Monda't_night in ·. open to anyone. That includes Students, faculty,&#13;
the Union Square at approximately 8:00 p.m. staff, administration, anybody-who wants to.join ."&#13;
President Kevin Dunk said that it will be Of course you have to apply for membership, but&#13;
g_enerally used as a get-together and have a good it is fairly-easy to get in .&#13;
time. "Of course," he said, " we plan on doing a So, if you are interested, ~top on down to&#13;
lot _ of things . Trips .to concerts, shows, dances, Union Square and talk to one of the officers, they&#13;
civic projects and other assorted things but will be more than willing to help you .&#13;
-&#13;
ADVERTISING CORRECTION&#13;
In the "Accent on Enrichment"&#13;
ad on page 9 of the September 6,&#13;
1978 issue, the price for&#13;
U.W .-Parkside students should&#13;
have read "S14 50" rather than&#13;
"$4.50" RA GER apologizes for&#13;
any inconvenience their rror&#13;
has caused&#13;
(S' o '.li) Coffeehouse Presents ...&#13;
Bock By Populo r Demo nd&#13;
George "Super Piano!' Fischoff&#13;
IN&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
Wed. Se@t. 20th at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
FREE ADmlSSION&#13;
BEER &amp; WINE SERVED&#13;
Next Coffeehouse DAVE PARKER Thurc;. Oct. 5&#13;
'"J\ll'C.H J\IORE THAN Jl 1ST HAIR"&#13;
-/&#13;
cA~ear·&#13;
P.A.B .. DOUBLE FEATURE&#13;
consultations-for:&#13;
• Hair Styling&#13;
• Conditioning&#13;
•- Make~tp Treatment&#13;
Hours:&#13;
9 tog D~1ily&#13;
·s to 4:30_S aty,rctaY&#13;
Phone: 639-.1 507&#13;
4061 N . Main St.&#13;
/2·-;' -&#13;
~lJJrifhfJ..:~eaf •,,,.,. .&#13;
A DANCE I&#13;
WITH&#13;
''HEADSTONE'~&#13;
Soturdoy, Sept. 23&#13;
9:00 Pm&#13;
VW-P $1.50&#13;
Guest $2.00&#13;
ID's Required&#13;
A FREE CONCERT&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
BLUE· GRASS MUSIC&#13;
"HOOM COOKN" · Fridoy, Sept. 22&#13;
2-5 Pm&#13;
Speciol Hoppy Hour&#13;
2-6 Pm&#13;
IN THE UNION SQUARE &#13;
Wednesday September 20,1978&#13;
Tennis Splits Pai&#13;
Coach Sue Tobachnik's women's&#13;
tennis team competed in a '&#13;
couple of matches last week and&#13;
gained a split as they lost to UWMilwaukee&#13;
6-3 on Thursday in&#13;
Milwaukee and then clobbered&#13;
'visiting Stout on Saturday 8-1,&#13;
Against Milwaukee, Coach&#13;
Tobachnik was "pleased with the&#13;
way' we played because&#13;
Milwaukee is' a good solid team&#13;
and we played good close&#13;
matches." Number 1 seed Kathy&#13;
logic saw her individual winning&#13;
streak snapped at-two when she&#13;
was defeated as was \ #3 Pam&#13;
Blair, #5 Marge Balazs, 1/6 Cathy&#13;
Brownlee and the doubles teams&#13;
of #2 seed Blalr-Balazs and #3&#13;
Feithtner-Brownlee. Remaining&#13;
undefeated as .individuals were&#13;
#2 seed Kathy Thomas. and #4&#13;
Kathie Feichtner arid the doubles&#13;
team of lrogtc-Thomas.&#13;
Against lowly Stout the girls&#13;
had an easy time with everyone&#13;
but number 5 seed Marge Balazs&#13;
winning. #.1 seed Logic improved&#13;
her(overall individual re&#13;
3-1, #2 Kathy Tho&#13;
undefeated at 4-0, #3 BI&#13;
#4 Feichtner is perfect at&#13;
Balazs 2-2, 1/6 Brownlee 3-&#13;
the, #1- doubles ' tea&#13;
Logic-Thomas unblemis&#13;
4-0, ,:#2 Blair-Balazs 3-1 a&#13;
Feichtner-Brownlee 3-1. T&#13;
next match is here&#13;
cross-town . rival earth&#13;
Wednesday the 20th, at l&#13;
Are Rangers. Too Shallow For South?&#13;
minutes when Northern Illinoisby&#13;
Doug &amp; Dave scored with 4 minutes and 1&#13;
Imagine this, a week prior to secondleft.to defeat the Rangers&#13;
this week's game, you're soccer 1-0.&#13;
team lost a game on a disputed Coach Henderson "was&#13;
official's call against a major pleased in most respects)n how&#13;
school power, so naturally you're 'we played." The difference was&#13;
looking for better things to th.at Northern Illinois "could&#13;
come. Now you're playing the substitute freely" while with the&#13;
second game of the season lack of Ranger players, that's a&#13;
against another highly 'touted convenience Henderson doesn't&#13;
team and you're playing them have. The Rangers have to keep&#13;
dead even and you're feeling : switching players and positions&#13;
good about the game. Suddenly to "find the' best combination."&#13;
it happens, another break, but "We don't have depth," said&#13;
this time the opposing team Coach Henderson, "each half we&#13;
makes it without the help of an have played so far we have used&#13;
official asthey score a clean goal a different combination."&#13;
with 4:01 left to play. A nauseous Lets hope the Rangersflnd the&#13;
feeling overtakesyou - another right combination t-hisweek they&#13;
tough defeat. now make a trip down south to&#13;
This is what soccer coach Hal challenge two teams jn the top&#13;
Henderson'could feel if he keeps twenty in the country -in the.likes&#13;
losing such tough games. of southern Methodist University&#13;
Saturday's game was almost an (18th) and North' Texas State&#13;
instant, replay of the Parkside- University ·(14th),. as' well as&#13;
Madison game as the Rangers Trinity and ·Texas Christian,&#13;
.again lost in the last couple UnivE;r,sity." '*,&#13;
Come and be with us&#13;
You're invited til worship, study, serve ond&#13;
fellowship with us os we meet together at the&#13;
First United Methodist Church'&#13;
60th sr. &amp; Sheridan Rd&#13;
Kenosha Phone 658-3213-&#13;
Here's your chonce: Sunday's&#13;
9: 15-10,1'; a.m. Church School -,&#13;
,10: 15-10:45 a.m. Coffee Time&#13;
1O:45~11:45 o.m. Worship I&#13;
Wed. 7:00-8:30 p.m, Choir Rehearsal&#13;
We love you here'&#13;
WFN~&#13;
needs&#13;
Part - Time&#13;
,Announce,s&#13;
WE WILL TRAIN ,&#13;
FOR AN INTERVIEW&#13;
CALL ,MRS. WOODS&#13;
-(MORNINGS) AT&#13;
,&#13;
552-8640 .&#13;
CAR ESSENTIAL&#13;
Pure Brewed- . , ,&#13;
From God's COUntrY.·&#13;
On Tap AI Union S!Jaar&amp;- ,.~~&#13;
Wednesday .September 20, 1978&#13;
Tennis Splits Pai&#13;
Coach Sue Tobachnik's women's&#13;
tennis team competed in a&#13;
couple of matches last week and&#13;
gained a split as they lost to uw. Milwaukee 6-_3 on 1hursday in&#13;
Mil_waukee and then clobbered&#13;
visitin_g Stout on Saturday 8-1.&#13;
Against Milwaukee, Coach&#13;
Tobachnik was "pleased with the&#13;
way· we played because&#13;
Milwaukee is a good solid t~am&#13;
.. and we played gpod close&#13;
matches." Number 1 seed Kathy&#13;
Logic saw her individual winning&#13;
streak snapped at two when she&#13;
was defeated as · was ' #3 Pam&#13;
Blair, #5 Marge Balazs, #6 Cathy&#13;
Brownlee and,the doubles teams&#13;
of #2 seed Blair-Balazs and #3&#13;
Feithtner-Brownlee. Remaining&#13;
ur:,defeated as individuals were&#13;
#2 seed Kathy Thomas . and #4&#13;
Kathie Feichtner arid the doubles&#13;
team of L-ogics Thomas.&#13;
Against lowly Stout the girls&#13;
had an easy time with everyone&#13;
but riumber 5 seed Marge Balazs&#13;
winn ing. #1 seed Logic improved&#13;
her overall individual rec&#13;
3-1, #2 Kathy Thom&#13;
undefeated at 4-0, #3 Blair&#13;
#4 ·Feichtner is perf~ct at&#13;
Balazs 2-2, #6 Brownlee 3-1&#13;
the . #1 ~ doubles team&#13;
Logic-Thomas unblemished&#13;
4~0, ,.#2 Blair-Balazs 3-1 and&#13;
Feichtner-Brownlee 3-i. The·&#13;
· next match is here ag ·&#13;
cross, td~ n rival Carthage&#13;
Wednesday the 20th, at 3 p '°~&#13;
1 r . (It 1H&#13;
Are Rangers Too Shallow For South?·&#13;
minutes when Northern Illinois.&#13;
by Doug &amp; Dave scored with 4 minutes and 1&#13;
Imagine this, a week prior to second· leftto defeat the Rangers&#13;
this week's game, you 're soccer 1-0.&#13;
team lost a game on a disputed Coach' Henderson "was&#13;
official's call against a major pleased in most respects )n how&#13;
school power, so naturally you're ·we played." The difference was&#13;
looking for better th ings to that Northern IHi nois ·"could&#13;
come. Now you're playing the substitute freely" w hile with the&#13;
second game of the season lack of Ranger players, that's a&#13;
against another highly ·touted convenience Henderson doesn't&#13;
team and you're playing them have. The Rangers have to keep&#13;
dead even and you're feeling · switching players and positions&#13;
good about the game. Suddenly to "find the best combination."&#13;
it happens, another break, but "We don't have' depth,"· said&#13;
this time the opposing team Coach Henderson, "each half we&#13;
makes it without the help, of an have played so far we hav~ used&#13;
official as they score a clean goal a different combination ."&#13;
with 4:01 left to play. A nauseous ·Lets hope the Rangers find the&#13;
feeling overtakes you - another right combinqtion th is week they&#13;
tough defeat. ., ~. now make a trip down south to&#13;
This is what soccer coach Hal challenge two teams j n the top&#13;
Henderson ·could feel "if he keeps twenty in the country -in th ~ likes&#13;
losing such tough games. of southern Methodist University .&#13;
Saturday's game was almost an (18th) and Nortfi · Texas State&#13;
instant. replay of the Parkside- University . . (14th),. as well as&#13;
Madison game as the Rangers . Trinity and ·Texas Christian ,&#13;
. again lost in the last couple Univ~rsity. · •&#13;
Come· and be w'ith us&#13;
You're invited to worship, . study, serve and&#13;
fellowship with us as we meet together at the&#13;
First United Methodist Churd,-: ·&#13;
60th St. &amp; Sheridan Rd&#13;
Kenosha Phone 658-3213&#13;
Here's your chance: Sunday's&#13;
tl) @~ - 9: 15-10: 15 a.m. · Church School&#13;
SJ~f~_?t~ ·10: 15-10:4·? a..m. Coffee Time l! 1 r.,-~~ 10:45-11 :45 a.m. Worship&#13;
. i iP. Wed. 7 :00-8:30 p.m. Choir Rehearsal·&#13;
1&#13;
rWi' We love you here&#13;
WFN°;°7&#13;
needs&#13;
Part - lime&#13;
. Announcers&#13;
WE.WILL TRAIN \&#13;
FOR AN INTERVIEW ·&#13;
. CALL MRS. WOODS&#13;
'(MORNINGS) AT&#13;
' 552-8640 ,&#13;
Pure Brewed- . · · ·&#13;
From GOd's·Count,Y,·&#13;
On Tap At Union SQaar&amp;· .,~_: '· ~t--"' . r ~ I . •, ·, . ,· .&#13;
' . . . '. ~: .. ,....._...,_ _ / I , . &#13;
14 ••• 11'" September 20, J 978&#13;
C-C Host&#13;
Tour~ey&#13;
by Doug 8&lt; Dave&#13;
The Ranger's cross-country&#13;
lfOI" participatedin it's first dual&#13;
.-et of the season and came up&#13;
the short end of the score as&#13;
.. lost25-30to a highly rated&#13;
,nots-Chicago Circle te~m. In&#13;
(fOSS-country,the team with the&#13;
loW score wins.&#13;
for it being on IV the second (&#13;
.... 1 of the season, Coach&#13;
ucian Rosa was extremely'&#13;
ased with the performances&#13;
Joe Carey&#13;
d the two freshmen runners&#13;
0... Meuller and Chris Ohin:&#13;
h"" CoachRosa said that "these&#13;
1t] tIOyoungmen are looking very&#13;
pd." Rosa is also expecting&#13;
aIotofhelp from AI Halbur, Bill&#13;
WOlVe and Joe Carey. The&#13;
successof the year's team lies in&#13;
ille progressthat these people&#13;
Nke Bob langenhol (who&#13;
ishedfirst in the race) and&#13;
Priem (who was second) are&#13;
anchormen of this young&#13;
am.&#13;
Althoughthe Rangers haven't&#13;
vrona meet yet this year, things&#13;
lhould start looking up as the&#13;
IUSOn continues. The Ranger's&#13;
DIXt meet is Saturday as they&#13;
1&#13;
"~i1t~i the USTFF _Midwest&#13;
n-.~~teson Our own National&#13;
,...nlJlonship course.&#13;
':Parkside »,111 host the first&#13;
_ r fall a"-comers meets&#13;
Y on Its national champCOUrse.&#13;
~~ent meets will be held&#13;
•,..t.v1,Oct. 15 and Oct. 29&#13;
dates I&#13;
There are' hi'&#13;
"'Innin t Tee races&#13;
llllarale g at 1 pm:, with&#13;
III fogeand sex d IVlSionsA&#13;
n Orthose b .: 121ll&lt;f oys and girls&#13;
Iol!owe:inderwil.1go at 1 p.m.,&#13;
'I!No agat 1:20 by a two ·'mile&#13;
lind ~ a.~ groups; 18 and under&#13;
'N under A 5 000 IlIce at 1-45 . , meter&#13;
.... p;n~. 1tm. will have fOllr' a... ~ :" .aDdunder 30 and • "IUa,JU I .&#13;
r_.f&#13;
. over, and open .&#13;
_u "ales '11 .&#13;
iIPartici WI be awarded to&#13;
the top f' pants With ribbons to&#13;
I'Ve In ea h&#13;
.... P. Th. . c age and sex drrisi e Winner· h T on w'lI In. eac&#13;
"Shkt. I ~~~~. receive a&#13;
Entry fee' .... . '.'&#13;
~n. For IS SO.·.·;centS· per";'&#13;
&lt;ontact l"c' more '".for"mation lido u'anR .' crasH:. osa, UW-Park55).2245&#13;
Ountry coach' at&#13;
Or552-7869. .' ...&#13;
/'&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Tryouts&#13;
Begin&#13;
All Invited&#13;
Anyone interested participating&#13;
in spring baseball should&#13;
contact coach Ken Oberbruner&#13;
in his office at WllC D-175 or&#13;
call 553-2269. Practices are now \&#13;
in session on the baseball&#13;
diamond on the southeast side of&#13;
the P.E. building at 4 p.m.&#13;
Monday lbrough Friday.&#13;
CR!nger&#13;
Football Kicks Off&#13;
his squad as he h&#13;
I&#13;
as no returning ~larters back fr&#13;
est years wmless 0-10 om that beneficial ho e season One might consider&#13;
M • w ver experience al 0 hips&#13;
ost of last years squad w&#13;
but to no one sur rise m as expected to return&#13;
ineligible f p any of them were declared&#13;
or one reason Or a h Th&#13;
weren't declared tnehgtble dec,~~ ~r ose that&#13;
safer areas of recreation 0 venter Into&#13;
catching and such, sduchas skydIVing, Javelin&#13;
o ever Inlury Coach WI&#13;
bhlamed 'hIS on the lact that Parkside has p&lt;&gt;";;,one&#13;
t e worst equipment In tn aps&gt; football e country for playrng&#13;
I ~s ISusual With Ranger teams of the past none of&#13;
as years team has graduated '&#13;
Tlus game was expected to be a battle for th~&#13;
~as:m:ntdof the conference, but tight from the start&#13;
ar SI e om mated In every category needed&#13;
wtn the battle Fewest yards rushing and paiS Into&#13;
fewest fnst downs fewest third d g, and so on. I own ccnversrcm&#13;
Well It looks Ilk.e this year as has been th&#13;
P&#13;
, e case '"&#13;
years past. arkside football fans Will Just helve to&#13;
keep thel.r chinS up and say ·maybe h h ne:ct " ar'&#13;
w en t elf fflends from other schools around the&#13;
country ask the ageless question 'Ho'&#13;
football team1" • "'" 50 your&#13;
Girls Let Ball Bounce&#13;
by Doug and Dave&#13;
Sports Editors&#13;
When a coach openl d .&#13;
season looks dismal at bes rruts that the upcoming&#13;
fans for grumbling I.st, can anyone blame the&#13;
attempting to cheer :t Ittl~ at ~he prospect of&#13;
Athletic Director waY anDot er Winless team, Even&#13;
yne annehl a pe ho r&#13;
supposed to always ha ,rson w 0 IS&#13;
on campus was q t ~e a g~d word for athletics&#13;
a football t~am he~: :t pas~a~n~ that "any kind of&#13;
It appears that Parksid ~ SI e ISmany years off."&#13;
will have exactly that \ e k ang~r Football followers&#13;
looked like an 0 afs hast e Rangers first game&#13;
men 0 t ings t&#13;
certainly doesn't mea od 0 come. And that A n a go omen&#13;
s soon as the Rangers led b 8 .&#13;
T. Winnone, took the field . y -year coach Ken&#13;
Wisconsin State squad ~against a feeble looking&#13;
going to be one of tho dav co~ld tell that it was&#13;
opening kickoff it app~:r;r:h Rlg~t from Pa,rkside's&#13;
coach Winnone could d iah t e only thing that&#13;
score. He sure didn't 0 fight was predict the&#13;
. seem to ave the k k f&#13;
teaching his players the f ' nac or&#13;
That opening kickoff b l~er pOInts of football.&#13;
chance the Ranger's h~d t~ ~i:k;~~il ~:s the only y.&#13;
What exactly the Rangers did&#13;
was knock off two teams&#13;
Cincinnati, in what was termed&#13;
as an "up and down match" and&#13;
Eastern Michigan, The Rangers&#13;
faced stiff competition all day&#13;
long from the remaining five&#13;
teams, IllinoIS State (ranked 8th&#13;
last year), Dayton, Southern&#13;
Illinois, Drake and the hosting&#13;
team DePaul.&#13;
.Although the Rangers lost two&#13;
seasoned pla\'e~ from la~1 year s&#13;
squad. they also manaaed to&#13;
pick up two e:ll:perlencf'd pl. f'f'\&#13;
to offse' 'he los' In ,IMO&#13;
exchange the Ranaer&gt; ,1'0&#13;
gained a height adv.n,all". and&#13;
thIS WIll be needed as on&#13;
Thursday 'he Ranger t,k. on ,&#13;
tough MarqueU ~quad and ..&#13;
scrappy Oshkosh team&#13;
On Friday and Saturday of last&#13;
week the women's volleyball&#13;
team traveled to DePaul to&#13;
tangle with one other small&#13;
school and six major universities&#13;
The results were what y~&#13;
would expect, the Rangers lost.&#13;
However, even in defeat&#13;
Coach Linda Henderson wa~&#13;
"pleased with what we did,"&#13;
Selling Advertising&#13;
is as Simple as I ·2 •3&#13;
1&#13;
PREPARED CALL LIST. Ranger has created 3 steps to make seiling advertising specc a&#13;
simple as 1-2-3. Ranger will provide you with a prepared call list of polenllal advertiser In lh&#13;
Racme-Kenosha area to call on. Ranger also provides you with all you need to take your flnl&#13;
step in earning your 12 percent commission, Including information about how 10 \I ad&#13;
vertising space. A good opportunity for business and poychology ltudentsl&#13;
, ......3STOP A'r THE BUSINESS. This is the most important step in seiling advertising space II&#13;
requires you to be prepared to sell yourself, the newspaper, and the ail· YPU must be ready to&#13;
answer ihe questions of the merchant, obtain Qi$-her confidence and provide the advertising&#13;
~&#13;
...=... ~... ~.' =~, ~._.. '~ervices he-she will require. YOl&amp;must be prepared for this step, and we'll make sure you are"&#13;
_ ~ This is GR,EAT EXPERIENCE for anyone who, In Iheir career, will be cIeaIlng with peoplel&#13;
_. ---c--""- SEE JON FLANAGAN OR CHRIS MILLER FOB&#13;
FURTHER DETAILS&#13;
ON HOW SELLING ADVERTISING&#13;
CAN BE AS SIMPLE AS • - 2 - 3!!&#13;
Ranger office l~cated next to the coffee shop&#13;
in WLLC,&#13;
Phone 553-~287 or 553-2295&#13;
.""" .-- ..&#13;
.......- ,&#13;
_."',._ 1&#13;
.......,,-..- _. ~'fl _, .&#13;
.-._ .&#13;
.................... ,&#13;
a&#13;
PHONE FOR AN APPOINTMENT. When you receive your prepared call list and Ihe advertising&#13;
information you need, you are ready to begin lbe second step --phoning for an ap·&#13;
pointment. Don't worry about running up a bill at home, Ranger has 2 phones that can b&lt;I used&#13;
for selling up your appointments free for you to use almost all day. We'll make II pos ,ble for&#13;
you to receive free beer, lunches, bowling, pool, ping-pong, movie dc:keta and a bunch of other&#13;
exciting gifts for achieving or exceeding your sales goal for the week, which lin' I 10 bard--&lt;:omt&#13;
down to our office for the details.&#13;
RAM' .&#13;
""CIR NIIDS&#13;
WRITIRS i&#13;
1_.---·&#13;
I w,dnesday September 20, 1978 'R!,nger&#13;
c-C Ho5f Baseball&#13;
Football Kicks Off&#13;
am&#13;
Tour~ey&#13;
by [)oug &amp; Dave&#13;
Jhe Ranger's _ c~~ss-_country&#13;
ream participated rn 1t s first dual&#13;
t of the season and came up&#13;
the short end of the score as&#13;
:} lost 25-30 to _a highly rated&#13;
1 inois-Chicago C, rcle team. In&#13;
~,-country, the team with the&#13;
k7,I score wins. for it being only the second r&#13;
,neet of the season, Coach&#13;
ucian Rosa was extremely ·&#13;
p1eased with the performances&#13;
Joe Carey ishec&#13;
n arr The _t the two freshmen runners,&#13;
aga1 ;Jave Meuller and Chris Ohm.&#13;
hage Coach Rosa said that "these&#13;
t 3 :wo you ng men are looking very&#13;
ood" Rosa is also expecting&#13;
afot of help from Al Halbur Bill&#13;
\Verve and Joe Carey. 'The&#13;
success of the year's team lies in&#13;
the progress that these people&#13;
'11c1ke. Bob Langenhol (who&#13;
'n1shed first in the race) and&#13;
Cary Priem (who was second) are&#13;
anchormen of this young •am.&#13;
Although the Rangers haven't&#13;
\\On a meet yet this year things&#13;
s ould start looking up' as the&#13;
season continues. The Ranger's&#13;
~d meet is Saturday as they&#13;
ost the USTFF M"d Coll . 1 west&#13;
Ch egiates on our own National&#13;
amp1onship course.&#13;
of urrarkside ~ill host the first&#13;
r. our fall a1'-comers m ts&#13;
JU0day . ee ronsh on its national champ- 1P course&#13;
onSOubsequent ~eets will be held&#13;
ct 1 o · al15u · , ct. 15 and Oct. 29&#13;
nday dates. · ·_, '&#13;
There are h i , •&#13;
beg1nn· t ree races&#13;
ing at 1 . 5eJ&gt;aratea p .m., · w1th ·&#13;
rnile run f;; t~nd sex divisio·ns. A&#13;
12 and und o~e boys and girls&#13;
followed at _wdl go at 1 ~.m.,&#13;
fer tw 1.2o by a two mile&#13;
0 age gro&#13;
Tryouts&#13;
Begin&#13;
All ~nvited&#13;
Anyone interested participating&#13;
in spring baseball should&#13;
contact coach Ken Oberbruner&#13;
in his office at WLLC D-175 or&#13;
call 553-2269. Practices are now&#13;
in session on the baseball&#13;
diamond on the southeast side of&#13;
the P.E. building at 4 p.m.&#13;
Monday tbrough Friday.&#13;
by Doug and Dave&#13;
Sports Editors&#13;
When a coach open! ad . season looks dismal at i m1ts that the upcomrng&#13;
fans for grumblin 7st, can anyone blame the&#13;
attempting to che g a ittle at the prospect of&#13;
Athletic Director ~:et anDother winless team . Even&#13;
yne annehl a pe h&#13;
supposed to always h , rson w o IS&#13;
on campus was quot:~e a g°?d word for athletics&#13;
a football t~am here at /s ia-~n~ that "any kmd of&#13;
It appears that Park 'd : s1 e is many years off ,.&#13;
will have exactly tha:1t e k ang:r Football followers&#13;
looked like an omen ~: t:.s t e Rangers first game&#13;
certainly doesn't me odrngs to come. And that an a go omen&#13;
As soon as the Rangers led b . T. Winnone took th f Id y 8-year coach Ken&#13;
Wisconsin State s e ~e - against a feeble looking&#13;
going to be one of {hua ~ou could tell that it was&#13;
opening kickoff it ap~::r;t:h~i~~: f~~~ Pha_rkside's&#13;
coach Winnone could d . y t mg that&#13;
score. He sure didn't s o nghht was predict the&#13;
eem to ave the k k f&#13;
teaching his players th f . nae or That opening kickoff ~ ~~er points of football.&#13;
h h ' Y e way, was the onl c ance t e Ranger's had to kickoff all d Y&#13;
On Friday and Saturday of last&#13;
week the women's volleyball&#13;
team traveled to DePaul to&#13;
tangle with one other small&#13;
school and six major universities&#13;
The results were what yo~&#13;
would expect, the Rangers lost.&#13;
However, even in defeat&#13;
Coach Linda Henderson wa;&#13;
"pleased with what we did."&#13;
ay.&#13;
What exactly the Rangers did&#13;
was knock off two teams&#13;
Cincinnati, in what was termed&#13;
as an "up and down match • and&#13;
Eastern Michigan The Rangers&#13;
faced stiff competition all da&#13;
long from the remaining ti e&#13;
teams, Illinois State (ranked 8th&#13;
last year), Dayton , Southern&#13;
Illinois, Drake and the hosting&#13;
team DePaul.&#13;
,Although the Rangers lost two&#13;
Selling Advertising&#13;
is as Simple as I · 2 · 3&#13;
1 PREPARED CALL LIST. Ranger has created 3 steps to make Hing ad · rtl Ing&#13;
sim~le as 1-2-3. Ranger will provide you with a prepared call list of potential d rti r In th&#13;
Racme-Kenosha area to call on . Ranger also provides you with all you n d tot k our fr 1&#13;
step in earning your 12 percent commission, including information about how to II&#13;
vertising space. A good opportunity for business and psychology tudent I&#13;
ancf 16 a d ups; 18 and under&#13;
race at 1\tnder. A 5,000 meter&#13;
&amp;rOU ping;. ,tm. will have four ·. · O,,er 40 ' and under 30 and&#13;
2 PHONE FOR AN APPOINTMENT. When you receive your prepared call II t and t&#13;
vertising information you need, you are ready to begin the second tep ·-phon ng fo&#13;
pointment. Don't worry about running up a bill at home, Ranger ha 2 phon that&#13;
for setting up your appointments free for you to use almost all day. We'll mak 1t&#13;
you to receive free beer, lunches, bowling, pool, ping-pong, movie ticket aod • unch of th r&#13;
exciting gifts for achieving or exceeding your sales goal for the week, which n't to h rd--c:om • and O ' · - Cert,·t· ver, and open. . icates ·11 b all Part· . w1 e awarded to ,_ icrpants · h . ·. . . . . l,,e top 1· . . wit ribbons to · ive in e h . &amp;1oup. The . ~c ag~ and sex .&#13;
division . winner m. each&#13;
will I · ·shirt. a ~o . receive a&#13;
Entry f · . · -. . . · · .·. "" ee is 50 . . ... . . ""i"SO ·.cents · · y -·, · n. For .. : . pe,&#13;
tontaq LL , more · information&#13;
side . c1an Rosa· UW-P ·k'&#13;
cross- . • ar - SSJ.2245 country . coach ' at - or SS2-7869. ·· · f . ·_&#13;
/&#13;
RANIER HEEDS&#13;
WRITERS i&#13;
_1_&#13;
'·&#13;
down to our office for the details.&#13;
3 STOP AT THE BUSINESS. This is the most important step in selling advert! 1ng p c • I&#13;
· requires you to be prepared to sell yourself, the newspaper, and the ad. You mu t&#13;
,. . answer the questions of the merchant, obtain b.is-her confidence and pro ide the adv rt1 ng&#13;
· · ··~ervices he-she will require . You must be prepared for this step, and we'll make ure you ar&#13;
This is GR,EAT EXPERIENCE for anyone who, in their career, will be dealing with p opt I&#13;
.&#13;
SEE JON FLANAGAN OR CHRIS MILLER FOR&#13;
FURTHER DETAILS&#13;
ON HOW SELLING ADVERTISING&#13;
CAN BE AS SIMPLE AS I · 2 · 3!!&#13;
Banger ollice located next to the coif ee hop&#13;
in WLLC,&#13;
Phone SS3·2287 or SS3·229S &#13;
Wednesday September 10, 1978&#13;
~liger 10&#13;
,-&#13;
','&#13;
photos by Mike Holmd'ohl and . Brian Taggert -&#13;
,. ."&#13;
Wednesday September io, 1918&#13;
10&#13;
photos by Mike H_olmd~hl and . Brian Taggert &#13;
o "."".s"., S.ptember20,1978 tR!,nger 11&#13;
~. -----= - .&#13;
'Off \the Wall' Art&#13;
in Mainplace&#13;
by Cathy Brownlee&#13;
Staff writer&#13;
The idea for this huge piece began as an&#13;
outgrowth of a cerejntc series. The termination of&#13;
the series resulted in the fiberglass relief. The&#13;
relief stresses balance and volume by "relating&#13;
the positions of hard edges 01 geometric forms&#13;
with the soft-flowing lines of organic forms."&#13;
like most pieces of artwork, Mr. Murphy's relief&#13;
has a deeper meaning that is unexplainable -&#13;
known only to its creator.&#13;
As of yet, Mr. Murphy has not given his piece a&#13;
title. He has heard comments that it's "a broken&#13;
egg" and that it's "well, exciting!"&#13;
Mr. Murphy, over a period of two years, spent&#13;
600 to 700 hours on his piece. He said that he&#13;
enjoyed working on the piece very much; the&#13;
only real problem being space. Because of its&#13;
size, it demanded considerable room in the class&#13;
so, much of the work was done during the&#13;
summer.&#13;
Mr. Murphy, a native of California, was&#13;
educated at the University of Washington, Seattle&#13;
and received his M.A. from the University of&#13;
Montana. Drawn by the fact that it was a "new&#13;
School," he came to Parkside in 1969.&#13;
At Parkside, Mr. Murphy teaches Intro to Visual&#13;
Art 3D, Basic Design 3D, and Ceramics. He works&#13;
primarily in clay, but has no particular favorite.&#13;
Fiberglass is durable, but requires more time&#13;
while ceramics can easily be destroyed but are&#13;
more quickly completed.&#13;
Mr, Murphy has shown his artwork at many&#13;
ceramic exhibitions throughout the west and&#13;
midwest. Because of transportation problems,&#13;
these exhibitions are becoming harder and harder&#13;
to find.&#13;
You may think that art has no place in your&#13;
life, but that's far from the truth. As Mr. Murphy&#13;
pointed out, "Art is very important for just about&#13;
everybody," because we live in a "visual&#13;
environment," Art and its basic concepts lead to&#13;
a more well-rounded person. Art changes the&#13;
word "look" to "see" ..&#13;
Mr. Murphy concluded, "Maybe sometime in&#13;
the future, we can rectify the visual disasters&#13;
around us,"&#13;
. _~ '( ll",p,t'fS 10 ,1 At 1J16Ht."&#13;
• ~10 fll-.t:s ........ _&#13;
Have you seen any interesting art lately?&#13;
If not, then you haven't looked above the clock&#13;
on the west. wall of Main Place. This&#13;
thought-provoking relief was created by Associate&#13;
Professor of Art, John Murphy.'&#13;
P.A.B.Presents&#13;
GWENDOLYN&#13;
BROOKS&#13;
TOKIGHT AT&#13;
8:00 p.m,&#13;
UniOll Cinema&#13;
Adlissi.1&#13;
uw-p STUDEKTS $~&#13;
GEKERAL $rt&#13;
Tickets Available At lnfc&#13;
Ceoter and At Door&#13;
(Here ..,,;.:&#13;
.see.loe '.&#13;
",-«.kin'&#13;
e*e)&#13;
ior&#13;
funller Information cont ...:t:"O.'. Peter M. DiMeglio. .n;,tilute bf Internattcnal StudIes. University of Wisconsin&#13;
(608latteville. 'Platteville;,Wisconsln' 53818 or telephone&#13;
) 342,1727. . ..&#13;
ADMISSION:&#13;
II.gg&#13;
THE PARKSIDE N ANNOUNCES&#13;
~1A_aA1IIQIIIM&#13;
- Ie.Ad.. 11iIII"&#13;
--- UNION CINEMA&#13;
Show~,1Oam,- by 11.-. THEATRE&#13;
Sat., Sept. U&#13;
Te.r Fayerlte&#13;
Cart.. - Cbaracte" PI•• ,&#13;
Walt Dlsner:'s "GUS"&#13;
Tile".Ie Tbat lUck.&#13;
I"-Fard Field Geal.1&#13;
Other Kiddie Flick Dat .. ,&#13;
Oct.7 Ney.4 Dec.•&#13;
Oct.:11 Ney. IS&#13;
\ Ail-en-Provence,'France&#13;
/, .&#13;
Salzburg, Austria&#13;
SEMESTER'PROGRAMS ABROAD&#13;
$1850t$ .' . - . I 0 2500 per semester .&#13;
~Udes: flight. room. board. field trips. tuition a~d fees. ,&#13;
bliclln,-I'lu"! ha,ve at least ,Sophomore standmg and&#13;
G:t&gt;.A.Applfeaftoo -deadlineOctoper·15, 1978.'&#13;
ALL KIDS hrenb Md 011:., 16or ald., FlEE&#13;
L.....;, ........ TFtAU 15.&#13;
cn&#13;
chid eee -_ ... -- _ .. blr _ DntntI&#13;
Wednesday September 20, 197~&#13;
• ••f ~•pfCHS to of A1 IJIG//1 , , • 50 ff,fAfl "'",.. -&#13;
SEMESTER-PROGRAMS ABROAD&#13;
Aix-en-Prove~ce,' France -&#13;
Salzburg, Austria&#13;
l18SO to $2500 per sem~~ter . · ~ . . · · ·&#13;
tlu~es: flight, room, board, field trips, tuition and fees . .&#13;
2 jPhc.ants. mus~ . have at least _Sophomore standing and ·&#13;
· G:P.A. Appllcatton ·deadline O~tol;&gt;er: 15, 1978. ·&#13;
i~r _furt~r information c~ntact:))~·- P.~t~r M. Di_Megli?,&#13;
. phtute ~f Internat1011al· StudJe$, Univ.ers1ty of Wisconsin&#13;
(60 lattev,_lle·, Platteville · Wisconsin -53818. or · telephone 8) .,,.2 . ' .. . . ,, . ~~rn. . . .&#13;
) ~nger 11&#13;
'Off ·the Wall' Art&#13;
in Mainplace&#13;
by Cathy Brownlee&#13;
Staff writer&#13;
Have you seen any interesting art lately?&#13;
If not, then you haven't looked above the clock&#13;
on the wes~ wall of Main Place . This&#13;
thought-provoking relief was created by Associate&#13;
Professor of Art, John Murphy.&#13;
The idea for this huge piece began as an&#13;
outgrowth of a ceramic series. The termination of&#13;
the series resulted in the fiberglass relief. The&#13;
relief svesses balance and volume by "relating&#13;
the positions of hard edges at geometric forms&#13;
with the soft-flowing lines of organic forms ."&#13;
Like most pieces of artwork, Mr. Murphy's relief&#13;
has a deeper meanin~ that is unexplainable -&#13;
known only to its creator.&#13;
.· .. .:: : ·~ :-. . .&#13;
:· . .&#13;
(He.re~-:&#13;
.see Joe·.&#13;
kic.kfo'&#13;
·. E&gt;*«&gt;)&#13;
As of yet, Mr. Murphy has not given his piece a&#13;
title. He has heard comments that it's " a broken&#13;
egg" and that it's "well , exciting!"&#13;
Mr. Murphy, over a period of two years, spent&#13;
600 to 700 hours on his piece. He said that he&#13;
enjoyed working on the piece very much; the&#13;
only real problem being space. Because of its&#13;
size, it demanded considerable room in the class&#13;
so, much of the work was done during the&#13;
summer.&#13;
Mr. Murphy, a native of California, was&#13;
educated at the University of Washington, Seattle&#13;
and received his M .A. from the University of&#13;
Montana. Drawn by the fact that it was a " new&#13;
School," he came to Parkside in 1969.&#13;
At Parkside, Mr. Murphy teaches Intro to Visual&#13;
Art 3D, Basic Design 3D, and Ceramics . He works&#13;
primarily in clay, but has no particular favorite.&#13;
Fiberglass is durable, but requires more time&#13;
while ceramics can easily be destroyed but are&#13;
more quickly completed .&#13;
Mr. Murphy has shown his artwork at many&#13;
ceramic exhibitions throughout the west and&#13;
midwest. Because of transportation problems,&#13;
these exhibitions are becoming harder and harder&#13;
to find .&#13;
You may think that art has no place in your&#13;
life, but that's far from the truth. As Mr. Murphy&#13;
pointed out, "Art is very important for just about&#13;
everybody," because we live in a "visual&#13;
environment." Art and its basic concepts lead to&#13;
a more well-rounded person . Art changes the&#13;
word "look" to " see".&#13;
Mr. Murphy concluded, "Maybe sometime in&#13;
the future, we can rectify the visual disast rs&#13;
around us ."&#13;
THE PARKSIDE ION ANNOUNCES&#13;
P.A.B. Presents&#13;
GWENDOLYN&#13;
BROOKS&#13;
TONIGHT AT&#13;
8:00 p. .&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Admission&#13;
UW-P STUDENTS $~&#13;
GENERAL $?5°&#13;
Tickets Avolloble At Info&#13;
Center ond At Door&#13;
~11AIIIIM1 •QIIIII&#13;
ADMISSION:&#13;
11.QQ&#13;
ALL KIDS&#13;
Tf!RU 15.&#13;
lliMil (I" ••• ff UNION CINEMA&#13;
Showllmea 1~0IIW by 11 noon THEATRE&#13;
eecbem --&#13;
Sat., Sept. 23&#13;
Your Favorite&#13;
Cartoon Character• Pia•:&#13;
Walt Disney's "GUS"&#13;
TIie Mule That ltlck•&#13;
I00-7ard Field Goal•!&#13;
Other Kiddle Flick Dates!&#13;
Oct. 7&#13;
Oct.2I&#13;
Nov. 4&#13;
Nov.••&#13;
Oec.9&#13;
I~ &#13;
CR!,nge!&#13;
Coming&#13;
Events&#13;
Wednesday September 20,1978&#13;
PSGA Y.P.&#13;
Retires&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Harvey V. Hedden, VicePresident&#13;
of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association (PSGA)&#13;
has formally resigned as of&#13;
Wednesday night, September 13.&#13;
Harvey's resignation statement&#13;
stated work commitments,&#13;
school work and other responsibilities&#13;
as the reasons for his&#13;
decision. He did not believe that&#13;
he could devote enough time to&#13;
his office duties to do a proper&#13;
kind of [ob he would like.&#13;
Since the elections for a new&#13;
Vice-President will not be held&#13;
until the next Spring, it is up to&#13;
the President of PSGA to&#13;
nominate a candidate for the&#13;
position, who then must be&#13;
approved in by a two-thirds vote&#13;
of the entire student senate. Any&#13;
Parkside student not on Final&#13;
Academic Probation, carrying six&#13;
credits this semester at UWP,&#13;
and with at least twelve credits&#13;
behind them, is eligible for the&#13;
position. Those interested should&#13;
contact Rusty Smith, President&#13;
of PSGA in ·the student&#13;
government offices on the D~1&#13;
level of the Library-Learning&#13;
Center.&#13;
, Teaching··.&#13;
• • positions&#13;
open&#13;
Education students who plan&#13;
to student teach Spring Semester&#13;
1979 are reminded that the&#13;
deadline for applications is&#13;
October' 2, 1978. Forms are&#13;
available in the Clinical&#13;
ProgramsOffi~ Greenquist 210.&#13;
There are also a limited&#13;
number of elementary and&#13;
secondary science intern positions&#13;
available for Spring&#13;
Semester 1979 in this area of the&#13;
state. Students who are able' to&#13;
leave the immediate area have&#13;
the opportunity to apply for&#13;
secondary level internships in&#13;
English, German, Ma~hematics&#13;
and Science as well as several&#13;
elementary internships.&#13;
Students who have questions&#13;
about their eligibility for student&#13;
teaching or interning are urged&#13;
to consult the 1978-79 catalog&#13;
for a statement of admission&#13;
requirements. Other questions&#13;
such as timing the student&#13;
teaching/interning experience,&#13;
may be directed to Dr. Olsen,&#13;
- Greenquist 211.&#13;
Overseas student teaching in&#13;
Australia, England Scotland&#13;
Wales or Ireland, 'as well a5&#13;
studen~ teaching in other areas&#13;
of the U"!ited States, are options&#13;
available to uw~pstudents: For&#13;
furth~r information please contact&#13;
the Clinical Pr~grams&#13;
Office.&#13;
*****************~&#13;
YVednesday, Sept. 20&#13;
·p.s.GA. meeting at 8:00 at YVLLC D174. Will discuss such&#13;
issues as campus parking, up-corning senate elections and&#13;
promotion. Students are encouraged to attend.&#13;
Sports Women's Tennis vs. Carthage at Parkside. 3p.m. . J&#13;
Poetry Reading by Gwendolyn Brooks,at 8 p.m. In the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre. Admission is $2.00 for Parkside students and ,&#13;
$2.50 for general· public. Tickers available at the Union&#13;
Information Center. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Coffee House starting at 8 p.m. in Union Square featuring&#13;
George Fischoff. Admission is free. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 21 _&#13;
Sports Women's Volleyball at Marquette with UW-Oshkosh. 6&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Tournament: Parkside Card Club First Campus-Wide Cribbage&#13;
Tournament. Union Square. Sign up at Rec Center or at&#13;
tournament. Fee, $1.00/team.&#13;
CRIBBAGE starting at 7 p.m. in Union Square. Sign up at the&#13;
Recreation Center.&#13;
Friday, Sept. 22&#13;
Earth Science Colloqutum, 12 noon GR. 113. A slide&#13;
presentation of the Earth Science Club's trip to Wyoming will&#13;
be shown. Free coffee and doughnuts! II&#13;
Sports Men's Golf at UW-Creen Bay lnvitational. 10 a.m.&#13;
Sports Men's Soccer at Southern Methodist University. 8 p.m.&#13;
Movie "Slaughterhouse 5". will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre. Admission at the door is $1.00 for a Parkside~&#13;
student and $1.00 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 23&#13;
Sports Men's &amp; Women's Cross Country:" USTFF Midwest&#13;
Collegiates at Parkside. 12 Noon.&#13;
Sports Men's Soccer at North Texas State. 2 p.m.&#13;
Sports Women's Tennis vs. UW-Stevens Point at Parkside. 9&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Dance starting at 9 p.m. in Union Square featuring&#13;
"Headstone", a country rock band. Admission at the door is&#13;
$1.50 for a Parks ide student and $2.00 for others. ID cards are&#13;
required. Sponsored by PAB. '&#13;
Concert featuring Chet Atkins starting at 8 p.m in the Physical&#13;
Education Bldg. Tickets for bleacher seats are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center. Prlces are $3-:-S0 for a Parks ide&#13;
student and $5.00 for-general public.&#13;
. .. Sunday, Sept. 24&#13;
Sports Men's Soccer at Texas Christian University. 2 p.rn.&#13;
Movie "Slaughterhouse 5" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre. -&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 26&#13;
Debate and Forensics meeting, at 3:30 in CA 233.&#13;
Sports Men's Colf af Lawsonia Collegiate Tournament. 10 a.m.&#13;
Sports Women's Tennis vs. UW-Oshkosh at Parkside. 2 p.m.&#13;
Sports Women's Volleyball at Cart~age with Elm~hurst. 7:30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
_ Thursday, Sept. 28&#13;
GET TOGETHER for single parents at 7 p.m. in CL 111. Call ext.&#13;
2S73 for more ·details. Sponsored by Community Student&#13;
Services. .&#13;
January 2-91979&#13;
Trip price includes:&#13;
*&#13;
Round trip jet air via regular scheduled BraniH&#13;
airlines.&#13;
I 12&#13;
Classified Ads&#13;
CLASSIFIED AD POLICY&#13;
1. COST&#13;
A.) Student~Staff - Free (tet 20 words)&#13;
(Each additional 10 words or less 25 cents)&#13;
B.) Non-Student, St~ $1.00 (tat 20 words)&#13;
(Each additlonal10 words or less 50 cents)&#13;
C.) All additional runs $1.00 • -&#13;
2. Every attejppt will be made to publish all submissions, but RANGER reserves the rlOIl!&#13;
omit any ad. &gt;&#13;
3. All categories will receive preference over pereoners.&#13;
4. Deadline is Thursday, 10 a.m. for publication on the following Wednesday:&#13;
5. All classlfieds must be submitted on the green form, available in the RANGER Off&#13;
WllC D-139. '&#13;
INDEX&#13;
1. For sale&#13;
20 Wanted&#13;
3. Housing&#13;
4. Employment&#13;
5. Transportation&#13;
6. Personals&#13;
. WANTED&#13;
Woman to share wrwcmen 2 bedroom&#13;
near lake, bueunes. $92.50 a montft, ut!l&#13;
included. Gall Carrie658-8080.&#13;
FOR SALE Students of all ages needed for Inillfl&#13;
Two small Harleys. 1970; 350 cc. Road Bike. 1 work in Community Student SeNlcea lid&#13;
$250.1971: 125cc. Dirt bike. $150. Student oevetccment: hours to fit&#13;
class schedules; work-study students&#13;
1975 Honda c{360f. With highway bars, encouraged to apply; see Anltf,&#13;
backrest, hlghrlse handlebars, new battery, community Student Services Offlce, [),:&#13;
chrome I!,!.ggage rack, fairing, new paint, WLLC.&#13;
under 6,000 miles. Best Offer. Call Greg&#13;
554-7680.&#13;
Delivery work for date processing 0&#13;
Some data entry Involved. 8-15-hou"&#13;
week. Call 639-1218 for more inf&#13;
1971 Datsun 240Z, original vrntece, air&#13;
conditioned, 70 series radial, 64,000 miles,&#13;
plastic lenders. $2500.00. Phone 634-5615.&#13;
Carpool desired from the North side&#13;
Racine to Parks Ide. Mondays-jrl&#13;
Times can be arranged. For&#13;
PERSONALS Information call 639-4966 between 3-1.&#13;
Anyone interested In forming an on-campus&#13;
AAmeettng please call (553-)2575. v&#13;
I hope you, Kelly, Lisa, Roxanne and Leslie&#13;
had a good summer. I am looking to see you&#13;
soon. With love to all, Charlie-Garlos.&#13;
Lost: Reward for return of two&#13;
turquoise rings left in women's&#13;
sept. 5. '1 "Cortez" stamped on Inside&#13;
"JC" eng rayed on inside. These rings&#13;
sentimental value. Please return to: C",&#13;
phone 553-2331 .&#13;
*********************************&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
,..&#13;
-~*&#13;
,..&#13;
,..&#13;
~,..&#13;
,..&#13;
,..&#13;
,..&#13;
,..&#13;
,..&#13;
,..&#13;
,..&#13;
,..&#13;
,..&#13;
,..&#13;
,..&#13;
*&#13;
*:~~.~&#13;
,.. )~ /&#13;
* -----&#13;
*********************************~&#13;
~uptown&#13;
kenosha .,&#13;
'.&#13;
FROM&#13;
$359~&#13;
Quail. Occupancy&#13;
*&#13;
7_nights lodging at 28 8tory deluxe, rint-.class HO~idayfun Aca (I ,. d .&#13;
P d&#13;
' pu co, ocate on beautiful&#13;
ora IReBeach, -&#13;
..&#13;
*&#13;
Full American/M~xican breakfast burrel d ·1 al y.&#13;
*&#13;
Round trip ground transfers while in M' 'I d' eXlco me u 109 porteroge of I&#13;
. .. _ uggage.&#13;
*&#13;
Complimentary in night meals and complimentary welcome cockt '1 .&#13;
..- til upon arrival.&#13;
*&#13;
Tour ~Rcortthroughoul to repre"ol your· I&#13;
. 10 crests.&#13;
~ -&#13;
*&#13;
Tips &amp; taxes on the above (excluding the '500 M' d . eXlcan ~parture lax_1&#13;
Reservations &amp; information available:&#13;
-Parkside Union office, HM. 209--or- call: 553-2200 ..&#13;
12&#13;
Wednesday September 20, 1978 Cjenger&#13;
Coming&#13;
Events&#13;
ClasSified Ads PSGA V.P.&#13;
Retires&#13;
by John Stewart&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Harvey V. Hedden, VicePresident&#13;
of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association (PSGA)&#13;
has formally resigned as of&#13;
Wednesday night, September 13.&#13;
Harvey's resignation statement&#13;
stated work commitments,&#13;
school work and other responsibi&#13;
I ities as the reasons for his&#13;
decision. He did not believe that&#13;
he could devote enough time to&#13;
his office duties to do a proper&#13;
kind of job he would like.&#13;
Since the elections for a new&#13;
Vice-President will not be held&#13;
until the next Spring, ft is up to&#13;
the President of PSGA to&#13;
nominate a candidate for the&#13;
position, who then must be&#13;
approved in by a two-thirds vote&#13;
of the entire student senate. Any&#13;
Parkside student not on Final&#13;
Academic Probation, carrying six&#13;
credits this semester at UWP,&#13;
and with at least twelve credits&#13;
behind them, is eligible for the&#13;
position. Those interested should&#13;
contact Rusty Smith, President&#13;
of PSGA in the student&#13;
government offices on the D-1&#13;
level of the Library-Learning&#13;
Center.&#13;
Teaching&#13;
• • pos1t1ons&#13;
open&#13;
Education students who plan&#13;
to student teach Sp'ring Semester&#13;
1979 are remjnded that the&#13;
deadline for applications is&#13;
October · 2, 1978, Forms are&#13;
available in the Clinical&#13;
Programs Office, Greenquist 210.&#13;
There are also a limited&#13;
number of elementary and&#13;
secondary science intern positions&#13;
available for Spring&#13;
Semester 1979 in this area of the&#13;
state. Students who are able· to&#13;
leave the immediate area have&#13;
the opportunity to apply for&#13;
secondary level internships in&#13;
English, German, Mathematics&#13;
and Science as well ~s several&#13;
elementary internships.&#13;
Students who have questions&#13;
about their eligibility for student&#13;
teaching or interning are urged&#13;
to consult the 1978-79 catalog&#13;
for a statement of admission&#13;
requirements. Other questions&#13;
such as timing the student&#13;
teaching/interning experience,&#13;
may be directed to Dr. Olsen&#13;
- Greenquist 211. '&#13;
Wednesday,Sept.20&#13;
'PS.GA. meeting at 8:00 at WLLC D174. Will discuss such&#13;
issues as campus parking, up-coming senate elections and&#13;
promotion . Students are encouraged to atten_d.&#13;
Sports Women's Tennis vs . Carthage at Parkside. 3_p.m . .&#13;
Poetry Reading by Gwendolyn Brooks at 8 p .m. 1n the Union&#13;
Cinema Theatre. Admission is $2.00 for Parkside students and&#13;
$2.50 for general · ptJblic. Tickers available at the Union&#13;
Information Center. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Coffee House ·starting at 8 p .m . in Union Square featuring&#13;
George Fischoff. Admission is free . Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 21 _&#13;
Sports Women's Volleyball a,t Marquette with UW-Oshkosh . 6&#13;
p.m . Tournament: Parkside Card Club First Campus-Wide Cribbage&#13;
Tournament. Union Square. Sign up at Rec Center or at&#13;
tournament. Fee, $1 .00/ team.&#13;
CRIBBAGE starting at 7 p.m . in Union Square. Sign up at the&#13;
Recreation ½enter.&#13;
Friday, Sept. 22&#13;
Earth Science Colloqu1um, 12 noon GR. 113. A slide&#13;
pres~ntation of the ·Earth Science Club's trip to Wyoming will&#13;
be shown . Free coffee and doughnuts!!!&#13;
Sports Men's Golf at UW-Green Bay Invitational. 10 a.m.&#13;
Sports Men's Soccer at Souther~ Methodist University. 8 p .m .&#13;
Movie "Slaughterhouse 5".will be shown at 8 p.m . in the U nion&#13;
Cinema Theatre. Admission at the door is $1 .00 for a Parkside&#13;
student and $1 .00 for a guest . Sponsored by PA B.&#13;
Saturda¥,Sept.23&#13;
Sports Men's &amp; Women's Cross Country:·· USTFF Midwest&#13;
Collegiates at Parkside. 12 Noon.&#13;
Sports Men's Soccer at North Texas State. 2 p .m.&#13;
Sports Women's Tennis vs . UW-Stevens Point at Parkside. 9&#13;
a.m .&#13;
Dance starting at 9 p .m . in Union Square featuring&#13;
"Headstone", a country rock band . Admission at the door is&#13;
$1.50 for a Parkside student and $2.00 for others. ID cards are&#13;
required. Sponsored by PAB. '&#13;
ConcertfeatmingChetAtkins starting at 8 p.m. in the Physical&#13;
Education Bldg. Tickets for bleacher seats are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center. Pric;es are $350 for a Parkside&#13;
student and $5 .00 for-general public.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 24&#13;
Sports Men's Soccer at Texas Christian University. 2 p .m. - Movie "Slaughterhouse 5" will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre. -&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 26&#13;
Debate and Forensics meeting, at 3:30 in CA 233.&#13;
Sports Men's Coif at Lawsonia Collegiate Tournament. 10 a.m.&#13;
Sports Women's Tennis vs . UW-Oshkosh at Parkside. 2 p .m.&#13;
Sports Women's Volleyball at Cart~age with Elm-hurst. 7:30&#13;
a.m .&#13;
_ Thursday, Sept. 28&#13;
GET TOGETHER for single parents at 7 p .m . in CL 111 . Call ~xt.&#13;
2573_ for more -details. Sponsored by C!=)mmunity Student&#13;
Services.&#13;
January 2-9 1979&#13;
Trip price includes:&#13;
* Round trip jet air via regular scheduled Brani££&#13;
airlines.&#13;
CLASSIFIED AD POLICY&#13;
1. COST&#13;
A.) Student-Staff - Free (1st 20 words)&#13;
(Each additional 1 O words or less 25 cents)&#13;
B.) Non-Student, Sta,tf $1 .00 (1st 20 words)&#13;
(Each additional 1 () words or less 50 cents)&#13;
C.) All additional runs $1 .00 , - 2. Every atteryipt will be made to publish all submissions, but RANGER reserves the right~&#13;
omit any ad.&#13;
3. All categories will receive preference over personals.&#13;
4. Deadline is Thursday, 1oa.m. for publication on the following Wednesday.'&#13;
5. Ali classifieds must be submitted on the green form, avallable In the RANGER Ol!ict&#13;
WLLC D-139. - '&#13;
INDEX&#13;
1. Forsale&#13;
2. wanted&#13;
i. Housing&#13;
4. Employment&#13;
5. Transportation&#13;
6. Personals&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Two small Harleys. 1970: 350 cc. Road Bike.&#13;
$250. 1971 :125cc. Dirt bike. $150.&#13;
1975 Honda CB- 360T. With highway bars,&#13;
backrest, highrise handlebars, new battery,&#13;
chrome I1,!_ggage rack, fairing, new paint,&#13;
under 6,000 miles. Best Offer. Call Greg&#13;
554-7680.&#13;
1971 Datsun 2402, original vintage, air&#13;
conditioned, 70 series radial, 64,000 miles,&#13;
plastic fenders. $2500.00. Phone 634-5615.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
Anyone interested in forming an on-campus&#13;
AAm eetlng please call (553-)2575.&#13;
I hope you, Kelly, Lisa, Roxanne and Leslie&#13;
had a good summer. I am looking to see you&#13;
soon. With love to all, Charlie-Carlos.&#13;
FROM&#13;
$359&#13;
Quad occupancy&#13;
' WANTED&#13;
woman to share w/woman 2 bedroom&#13;
near lake, busllnes, $92.50 a month, ullilt&#13;
included. Call Carrie 656-8080.&#13;
Students of all ages needed for Interesting&#13;
work in Community Student Services 1/11&#13;
Student Development ; hours· to lit your&#13;
class schedules; work-study students 11 ),;&#13;
encouraged to apply ; see Anita In&#13;
Community Student Services Office, [).175&#13;
WLLC.&#13;
Delivery work for date processing ottlcl&#13;
Some data entry Involved. 8-15 hours 111&#13;
week. Call 639-121 8 for more information.&#13;
Carpool desired from the North side ~&#13;
Rac ine to Parkside. Mondays-.Frldayi.&#13;
Times can be arranged. For fu&#13;
information call 639-4986 between 3-7.&#13;
Lost: Reward for return of two lad&#13;
turquoise rings left in women's restr&#13;
Sept. 5. #1 "Cortez" stamped on inside;&#13;
"JC" engraved on inside. These rings are&#13;
sentimental value. Please return to: CA&#13;
phone 553-2331 .&#13;
' ·,&#13;
uptown&#13;
kenosha&#13;
* 7 _nights .. odging at 28 story deluxe, first-class Holiday hm Aca~ulco, located on beautiful&#13;
Paradise Beach. - ·&#13;
f&#13;
Overseas student tea~hing in&#13;
Australia, England, Scotland,&#13;
Wales or Ireland, as well as&#13;
student teaching in other areas&#13;
of the Un_ited States, are options&#13;
available to UW-P students: For&#13;
further information please contact&#13;
the Clinical Programs&#13;
Office. *****************~ * Full American/Mexican breakfast buffet daily.&#13;
* Round trip ground transfel"!I while in Mexico includ" . ~ mg portei;age ~f luggage.&#13;
* Complimentary in rlight meals and complimentary welcome cockt ·1 . , ai upon arrival.&#13;
* Tour escort throughou_t to represent your inte r ests.&#13;
' - * Tips &amp; taxes on the above \excluding the •5 00 M · .. ex1can dr parture tax.)&#13;
Reservations &amp; inforniation available:&#13;
· Parkside Union office, RM. 209-or- call: 553-2200 </text>
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