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              <text>Cross Country: Women take Nationals</text>
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              <text>pege&#13;
.3&#13;
PAS&#13;
proposes&#13;
constitutional changes&#13;
page&#13;
7&#13;
African students&#13;
criticize campus&#13;
page&#13;
13&#13;
Basketball team&#13;
in rebuilding season&#13;
University ofWisconsln-Parkslde&#13;
Vol. 15. No.1 2&#13;
Cross&#13;
Country&#13;
Womentake Nationals&#13;
seventh  place finish, and a&#13;
school record of 18 minutes,&#13;
three  seconds.  Sarah  Hiett&#13;
was the second runner&#13;
in&#13;
fore&#13;
the  team,  placing  18th. Her&#13;
time of&#13;
18: 20&#13;
was her per-&#13;
sonal best. Freshman  Jackie&#13;
Melotick placed 24th, and ran&#13;
her  best  time  by thirty  sec-&#13;
onds,  finishing  In 18:25. All&#13;
three  runners  achieved  All-&#13;
American  status&#13;
by&#13;
placing&#13;
in&#13;
the top 25.&#13;
Ji1Ieen Pobair- was the next&#13;
finisher.   Her  time  equaled&#13;
her best effort&#13;
as&#13;
she placed&#13;
38th&#13;
In&#13;
18:40. Colleen Wismer&#13;
placed  67th, running  her sec-&#13;
ond fastest  time on the&#13;
Park-&#13;
side  course.  Nancy  Marter&#13;
was the first  sixth  runner  to&#13;
finish the race. Her time was&#13;
19:15.&#13;
Julie&#13;
Wunrow, who was&#13;
slowed by a knee Injury,  fin-&#13;
Ished 202nd in 20:47.&#13;
Achieving  goals  was  the&#13;
order  of the day. "At the be-&#13;
ginning  of the  year  we  sat&#13;
down and  set six goals:  the&#13;
first was to score under 125&#13;
points,  then  to finish In the&#13;
top four,&#13;
win&#13;
the NCAA DIvi-&#13;
sion&#13;
n&#13;
regional,  be top seven&#13;
at  NCAA Nationals,  defeat&#13;
80% of&#13;
all&#13;
schools and 90% of&#13;
all Division I .schools,"  said&#13;
Coach Mike DeWitt. "We met&#13;
all these goals except winning&#13;
the  Great  Lakes  Regional,&#13;
and&#13;
I&#13;
count the final ranklngs&#13;
for  meeting  the  top  seven&#13;
goa) for&#13;
NCAA&#13;
because  we&#13;
were ranked seventh.&#13;
It&#13;
The team's score of 121&#13;
points  was  well below  their&#13;
goal of 125. It was the highest&#13;
score ever  to win Nationals,&#13;
but DeWitt didn't belleve the&#13;
field was getting any weaker.&#13;
He said,&#13;
"The&#13;
teams  were&#13;
really&#13;
even. There wasn't one&#13;
dominant  team  out there,&#13;
or&#13;
even two Uke there has been&#13;
in&#13;
the past."&#13;
The women's  performance&#13;
was&#13;
helped&#13;
by&#13;
some  poor&#13;
showings of other team's  top&#13;
runners.  Last year's  national&#13;
by&#13;
Michael&#13;
J.&#13;
Rohi&#13;
Asst.Sports Editor&#13;
This&#13;
past  weekend,   the&#13;
Parkslde women's   cross-&#13;
countryteam, which  hadn't&#13;
won&#13;
an InvItational  all&#13;
sea-&#13;
1lII,&#13;
captured the most impor-&#13;
tantone of the year  .  the&#13;
Nallonal&#13;
Association of Inter-&#13;
eoIleglateAthletics  (NAJA)&#13;
Nat10nal&#13;
Championship.&#13;
The&#13;
women,&#13;
who&#13;
were&#13;
raDked&#13;
third&#13;
In&#13;
the most&#13;
re-&#13;
....t&#13;
NAJA&#13;
poll, out-distanced&#13;
_ber.one&#13;
ranked  Pacific&#13;
~&#13;
and  number-two&#13;
,,-HIllsdale.&#13;
The top four&#13;
~    \Vere:&#13;
Parkslde,&#13;
121&#13;
......  Emporia  state   151.&#13;
:ma&#13;
State. 156; and' Hills:&#13;
.180.&#13;
Pacu!e Lutheran  finished&#13;
IIxth&#13;
and MIlwaukee finished&#13;
• dlstant tenth.  Places  two&#13;
tbrouby&#13;
gil&#13;
six were  separated&#13;
only&#13;
11&#13;
points.&#13;
The&#13;
Parkside  women  all&#13;
l::n:&#13;
trong&#13;
races.  Michelle&#13;
r&#13;
led the team  with a&#13;
photo by&#13;
8t1WI&#13;
P....&#13;
no&#13;
Sarah HIett's&#13;
1_&#13;
shc&gt;wsthe atraln&#13;
01&#13;
runnIng five kilome-&#13;
te.. In&#13;
lest&#13;
Saturday's  NAIA&#13;
Croaa&#13;
Country Natlonsla. The&#13;
effort&#13;
was&#13;
worth It, though, as she and her teemmat ..&#13;
c.p-&#13;
tured the team tille.&#13;
Natlonala see&#13;
page 16&#13;
mean $172 fee hike next fall&#13;
Tuition&#13;
increase will&#13;
den of higher tuition, to guar-&#13;
anteelng    employment    for&#13;
graduates  In teaching.  medi-&#13;
cal  and  engineering&#13;
protes-&#13;
slons,&#13;
"This&#13;
isn't an attack,"  Tol·&#13;
efree  said  of  the  proposal.&#13;
"It's  just  an attempt  to ad-&#13;
dress Issues Important  to stu-&#13;
dents. "&#13;
Seemann's,  Tolefree's  and&#13;
Emerson's  remarks  were met&#13;
with cheers  by fifteen Madi-&#13;
son  students  who  protested&#13;
the  proposed   tuition  hikes&#13;
with  signs  and  black&#13;
arm-&#13;
bands.&#13;
The protestors  also cheered&#13;
when Regent  John SchenJan,&#13;
the Board's  sole student  rep-:&#13;
resentaUve, introduced a mo-&#13;
tion to eliminate  the addition·&#13;
al&#13;
$9&#13;
million&#13;
in&#13;
academic&#13;
fees, transferrtng  that money&#13;
Into additional  GPR requesta.&#13;
SchenJan's motion, although&#13;
defeated   11·3. drew  strong&#13;
support   from  Regent  Ness&#13;
Flores.  "We're  making&#13;
to·&#13;
day's  students  pay  for  the&#13;
mIstakes  of the past."  Flores&#13;
Tuition ~&#13;
page&#13;
4&#13;
tion.&#13;
"I've&#13;
heard&#13;
a  lot&#13;
about&#13;
maintaining  a level of quality&#13;
education In WIsconsin," saId&#13;
Gary Seemann,  WSA legisla-&#13;
tive affairs  director.  "But&#13;
I&#13;
haven't  heard anything  about&#13;
affordabillty   and&#13;
I&#13;
think&#13;
that's&#13;
a&#13;
concern&#13;
that&#13;
should&#13;
be addressed as well.&#13;
"You have  to reallze  that&#13;
what you're doing Is going to&#13;
affect thousands&#13;
of&#13;
students,"&#13;
Seeman continued. "It&#13;
Is&#13;
very&#13;
easy for you to sll back and&#13;
play  around  with  numbers.&#13;
But you have to reallze  that&#13;
to&#13;
those  numbers   connect&#13;
up&#13;
with people."&#13;
System President  Kenneth Shaw&#13;
(I)&#13;
and Regenl Thom..  Lyon&#13;
Bryce  Tolefree,  UC presl-&#13;
listen to studenltesllmony.&#13;
.&#13;
dent,  and  Ed  Emerson.  the&#13;
n!&#13;
m&#13;
organizationts   Academic&#13;
Af·&#13;
$156,483,400of the $~,81,252~&#13;
':tej,resentatives   from  the   fairs  director,  presented  the&#13;
total  needed   to   maUl   "   Wisconsin  Student  Assocta-   Regents  with a "Declaration&#13;
current  levels  of operatlo~&#13;
tion (WSA), the UW-Madlson   of Basic Principles"  ouU1nlng&#13;
was to come from GPR.    e   campus   government,    and   ten  allematlve   funding  pro-&#13;
remaining    $24,768,900  was   UnIted  CouncIl  (UC).  ad·   posals to dilute the negative&#13;
earmarked  as academic  f~S't&#13;
dressed   members   of  the   effects   of  raising   tuition.&#13;
Nearly  $9 millIon  of   a&#13;
Board   regarding   the  pro·   Those  recommendations   ran&#13;
tuition    money   represents&#13;
posal&#13;
stating that to adopt It   the gamut from the establish·&#13;
qualitY    Improvement&#13;
In-   would block thousands  of stu-   ment of a four-year  flnanctal&#13;
creases  In tuition  to be paid    dents  from  a college educa- _ aId package  to offset the bur- -&#13;
....... cohllipnts over  the  bie,n·&#13;
by&#13;
Gary&#13;
L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
=:N.-vocal&#13;
student&#13;
op-&#13;
9IIlce&#13;
thwasn't enough to con-&#13;
Oll\e&#13;
0&#13;
UW-System Board&#13;
IlIai&#13;
bgedgnts&#13;
to&#13;
reject  a blen-&#13;
lor&#13;
bJt.&#13;
u  et&#13;
proposal  calling&#13;
It&#13;
!be ~&#13;
Increases&#13;
at&#13;
17.4%&#13;
It&#13;
earn&#13;
dIson and Mllwauk-&#13;
eluete&#13;
r&#13;
Pllses&#13;
b&#13;
and 14.3% at the&#13;
To&#13;
ee ools&#13;
P    .&#13;
'Ill!&#13;
m&#13;
arkside students,  that&#13;
~    ean&#13;
an annual  fee In-&#13;
Illng&#13;
WlO!&#13;
at least $172 begin-&#13;
198i.&#13;
th the fall semester,&#13;
'lb.&#13;
1987&#13;
ted by ~&#13;
budget,  pr-esen-&#13;
1lelh8ha&#13;
m&#13;
President  Ken-&#13;
"'lbnenlw, also proposes  en-&#13;
Illcans&#13;
reductions   as   a&#13;
fun&lt;ls,&#13;
e~lf'   supplementing&#13;
Ill" ProVl&#13;
led as GPR mo-&#13;
'l'Ii&#13;
e&#13;
ded by the state.&#13;
Planli~3&#13;
gents approved  the&#13;
AI&#13;
•&#13;
Illee~o&#13;
dUring the speical&#13;
llIutlon  :&#13;
Nov. 13 was a res-&#13;
Ia~&#13;
oeatlng  operating&#13;
o!nd&#13;
sea&#13;
In both state  GPR&#13;
.\II  ~:::~~&#13;
..&#13;
~e,;s.(tuJ.!~on).&#13;
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              <text>-page&#13;
3=&#13;
Streethustlers&#13;
.&#13;
morethan  prostitutes&#13;
pages  8 and 9&#13;
Fiction  contest&#13;
winning   entries&#13;
page  11&#13;
,&#13;
Drama  prof&#13;
visits  "Knots   Landing"&#13;
Unlveralty·ot  WlsconSln-Parkslde&#13;
Vol. 15, No. 13&#13;
~. ntPrOlessoruerald Greenfield speaka to participants&#13;
,no&#13;
recentOASconference held at Parkslde.&#13;
~&#13;
World problems solved by students&#13;
by ChrIs Lojeski&#13;
On Nov. 21, approximately&#13;
130&#13;
high school students from&#13;
Racine  and  Kenosha  took&#13;
part In a model OrganJzallon&#13;
of American  States  (OAS),&#13;
organized  and sponsored  by&#13;
the Intemallonal  studies pro-&#13;
gram and UW·extension&#13;
with&#13;
funds  also  donated  by  the&#13;
chancellor   and   assistant&#13;
chancellor's offices.&#13;
Parkside is one of three&#13;
universities in the country&#13;
to&#13;
sponsor such an event.&#13;
In&#13;
the model OAS, Parkslde&#13;
students acted as mentors to&#13;
the high school students  by&#13;
helping them get started  In&#13;
researching  their countries,&#13;
lending  moral  support  and&#13;
showing&#13;
them where mate.&#13;
rials are In the library.&#13;
Gerald Greenfield, director&#13;
of the international studies&#13;
program  explained,  .'The&#13;
OAS In Washington  runs  a&#13;
high school program  that Is&#13;
now entering Its fourth year,&#13;
so we're only one year behind&#13;
their national program."&#13;
He continued,  "We&#13;
devel-&#13;
oped the model we use be·&#13;
,cause, although&#13;
it&#13;
follows a&#13;
general simulation, the pre-&#13;
paratory  stage Is very differ.&#13;
ent from ours.&#13;
In&#13;
most of the&#13;
models, they send out infor.&#13;
mation and&#13;
-rely&#13;
on a teacher&#13;
and the students to get&#13;
It&#13;
aJI&#13;
down. We developed ours&#13;
in&#13;
the way that It dtdn't require&#13;
teachers  to  do  any  exira&#13;
work...we were able to do&#13;
that by developing materials&#13;
ourselves here...the second&#13;
thing&#13;
Is&#13;
that a Parkslde  stu.&#13;
dent serves as mentor&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
high school teams so we had&#13;
twelve  Parkslde  students&#13;
working with the project this&#13;
year."&#13;
According to ChrIs Kemper,&#13;
mentor&#13;
to&#13;
Panama, Peru and&#13;
Mexico, "The OAS has been&#13;
going since the tum  of the&#13;
century with the idea of&#13;
Pan-&#13;
Americanism,   that   North&#13;
America and South America&#13;
are&#13;
Inter- related&#13;
and working&#13;
to&#13;
solve problems."&#13;
The actual OAS&#13;
has&#13;
thirty-&#13;
three members and&#13;
has&#13;
na-&#13;
tions that act as observers,&#13;
such as canada and some&#13;
European nallons. Parkslde's&#13;
OAS admitted Cuba. which Is&#13;
not a member of the&#13;
Wash-&#13;
Ington OAS, In order to offer&#13;
Parkstde's    pallcipants    a&#13;
greater learning experience.&#13;
The high school students&#13;
were Instructed by their&#13;
men-&#13;
tors&#13;
to&#13;
act as&#13;
if&#13;
they were&#13;
ae- ,&#13;
tuaJIy&#13;
clllzens&#13;
of the countries&#13;
they represented.  They could&#13;
not&#13;
think&#13;
as&#13;
If&#13;
they were from&#13;
the United States, but&#13;
had&#13;
to&#13;
take acllon that would be&#13;
con-&#13;
alstent with their countries.&#13;
As&#13;
Kay Rouse, mentor  to&#13;
Brazil  stated.  "What  I dtd&#13;
with my group was tell them&#13;
that  from  the  minute  I&#13;
snapped my finger, they&#13;
wer-&#13;
en't students from Racine,&#13;
Wisconsin anymore. They&#13;
be-&#13;
came Brazlllans and they&#13;
had&#13;
to&#13;
think&#13;
like&#13;
BrazUlans.' ,&#13;
Nadene Ellis,  who served&#13;
as mentor to Nicaragua  and&#13;
Paraguay  and actuaJIy ltved&#13;
in&#13;
Paraguay for one year.&#13;
ex-&#13;
ptsJned that there were four·&#13;
committees  plus the general&#13;
committee and one person&#13;
from each country met with&#13;
each committee. resolutions&#13;
were  passed  and  later&#13;
brought to the general&#13;
assem-&#13;
bly, where they were either&#13;
passed or rejected.&#13;
Greenfield  explained  that&#13;
there were also a few faculty&#13;
members who sat&#13;
in&#13;
on the&#13;
committees and some awards&#13;
were given.&#13;
The  problems  addressed&#13;
ranged from the problem of&#13;
OAS&#13;
see&#13;
page&#13;
5&#13;
awkins&#13;
earned respect&#13;
of&#13;
COlleagues, students&#13;
byKellyMcKissick&#13;
WOO.&#13;
Mae Dawkins,&#13;
Coor-&#13;
tor&#13;
ofReferenceServices&#13;
the&#13;
UW·Parkslde library,&#13;
Sunday,Nov.&#13;
23&#13;
at the&#13;
She&#13;
0&#13;
I39&#13;
sfter a long lliness.&#13;
lived&#13;
In&#13;
Racine  with&#13;
husband, Marvin  Daw-&#13;
, SSSOCiateprofessor  of&#13;
logy at Parkside,  and&#13;
8011,Phillip.&#13;
She&#13;
was&#13;
burled  Sunday,&#13;
ember 3O,In Pittsboro,&#13;
Carolina,&#13;
her  birth.'&#13;
. A&#13;
memorialservice for&#13;
"klns&#13;
was&#13;
held on Wednes-&#13;
Y~December3, at&#13;
1:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
e&#13;
Galbraith&#13;
Conference&#13;
lI~eaml'llln01the Wylie Library.&#13;
Do&#13;
gCenter.&#13;
t&#13;
kins&#13;
was born on June&#13;
, 947&#13;
In&#13;
Pittsboro, North&#13;
In'&#13;
She received  her&#13;
llta&#13;
Englishfrom Technl-&#13;
In&#13;
te&#13;
University n Pitts·&#13;
IIl69.She then worked&#13;
as a research clerk for CBS,&#13;
a freelance writer, a substi-&#13;
tute teacher,  a broadcast&#13;
staff assistant  for a radio&#13;
sta-&#13;
lion In Durham.  North&#13;
Caro-&#13;
lina. and as research&#13;
secreta-&#13;
ry. for the Center for Educa·&#13;
tional- Research  and&#13;
Develop-&#13;
ment at Howard University In&#13;
Washington, D.C.&#13;
She received  her master's&#13;
degree In Library  and Infor·&#13;
mation Services  from the&#13;
University  of  Maryland  at&#13;
ColJege Park In&#13;
1979.&#13;
She was&#13;
hired at Parkside  In 1981as a&#13;
Reference/Instrucllon   Ltbrar-&#13;
ian and became  Coordinator&#13;
of Reference Services In&#13;
1985,&#13;
Dawkins' involvement&#13;
ta&#13;
Parkslde  Included  acllng  as&#13;
an advisor  to the Black stu-&#13;
dent  OrganJzallon,  planning&#13;
for CHAMP (Creating Higher&#13;
Asptrallons  Mollvatlons  Pro·&#13;
gram)  and serving  as Coor·&#13;
dinator  fo~ .RAP (Ref~r.enpe&#13;
Assistance   Program)&#13;
In&#13;
which minority students are&#13;
trained to provide&#13;
reference&#13;
assistance to students&#13;
in&#13;
corn-&#13;
pletlng their library skllls reo&#13;
qulrements. She had also just&#13;
published  her  first  arllcle&#13;
about RAP.&#13;
Dawkins was also acllve In&#13;
professional    organlzallons.&#13;
She was a member  of the&#13;
American  Library  Assocta-&#13;
lion serving on its Black oau-&#13;
cus and - Junior Members'&#13;
Round Tables  Minority  Re·&#13;
crultment   Committee;   a&#13;
member of the Association of&#13;
College and Research Llbrar·&#13;
ies, serving as cc-chatr for Its&#13;
Black  Studies  Llbrarlanship&#13;
Committee and its Copyright&#13;
Committee; a member of the&#13;
Wisconsin  Ubrary   Assocta-&#13;
lion and the Wisconsin Asso-&#13;
ciation of Academic&#13;
Librar-&#13;
les.&#13;
aer  outside  acllvilles  In·&#13;
..............&#13;
cluded  Involvement  In  the  has been with the program&#13;
NAACP (National Assoclallon   since February  of this year&#13;
for  the  Advancement  of  and Baker has been involved&#13;
Colored People) and a&#13;
post-&#13;
since&#13;
1983.&#13;
Baker commented,&#13;
tlon on the board of an organ.   "She was always  wtliing to&#13;
tzallon called&#13;
Hand-In-Hand.&#13;
help. She made sure that the&#13;
Comments   from   felJow  students   she   encountered&#13;
workers  and  students  were  'went In the right dlreclton."&#13;
posillve. "She&#13;
will&#13;
not only be    Barker added, "Wlllle Mae&#13;
missed by the students  and   as a boss was just wonderful.&#13;
faculty, but by the commu-&#13;
If&#13;
you came up to her with a&#13;
nlty of Racine,"  said Judith   problem  In work or a per-&#13;
Pryor, coordinator of the Ilb-  sonal problem.  she was&#13;
al-&#13;
rary's Instruction Program.  ways there&#13;
to&#13;
take time out&#13;
to&#13;
"She was particularly  close  ltsten to you. She. just auto-&#13;
to the students  In the pro.   mallcaJIy draws  you closer,&#13;
gram  (RAP),  but  she  was  ·she was just a wonderful per-&#13;
close&#13;
to&#13;
a lot of students on  son."&#13;
campus. They felt that she ws&#13;
"I&#13;
think&#13;
that  it would be&#13;
somebody who they could not  correct  to say that she had&#13;
only get&#13;
good&#13;
reference  help   reaJIy high standards for her.&#13;
from but she was a person   self. She was a very genlle&#13;
you could&#13;
lalk&#13;
to, she was a  person."  said&#13;
LInda&#13;
Plele,&#13;
person who cared."&#13;
Dawkins' supervisor. Baker&#13;
Lori&#13;
Barker, sophomore,  concluded. "I know we're&#13;
and&#13;
J)anita&#13;
Baker. senior, are  going&#13;
to&#13;
miss her&#13;
I&#13;
really we&#13;
bothinvolved&#13;
in&#13;
RAP. Barker •. are.&#13;
II&#13;
..&#13;
"&#13;
...&#13;
,&#13;
</text>
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          <element elementId="42">
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>Text</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72204">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90155">
              <text>page&#13;
7&#13;
"&#13;
.&#13;
Studyexammes&#13;
gender/phone link&#13;
Price moves on&#13;
page&#13;
14&#13;
Rangers win&#13;
home basketball opener&#13;
University of Wlsconsln-ParkSlde&#13;
·Vol. 15.No. 14&#13;
~~&#13;
Pitchers, carafes&#13;
might vanish again&#13;
!Icoholpolicies In Union&#13;
!qUare&#13;
andat special events&#13;
It&#13;
dances are  likely  to&#13;
o!IIIge&#13;
as&#13;
a result of the re-&#13;
lID!&#13;
raising&#13;
of Wisconsin's&#13;
~    age, according  to&#13;
Mlbers&#13;
of&#13;
a subcommittee&#13;
~1Ile&#13;
ParksideUnion Advlso-&#13;
~Boord&#13;
(PUAB).&#13;
!be&#13;
specially-convened&#13;
AI·&#13;
IIIrll&#13;
Policy Review&#13;
subcom-&#13;
_  ofPUAB,the slanding&#13;
IIIlJIlitlee&#13;
charged   with&#13;
_g&#13;
rulesof operation for&#13;
lie&#13;
Union, wlll  propose&#13;
lIIqes&#13;
In&#13;
present  alcohol&#13;
J*ies&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
full board  on&#13;
JIIIay,&#13;
Dec.&#13;
12.&#13;
K&#13;
ljlpI'OVedthere, the new&#13;
I*iis&#13;
wouldstill have to be&#13;
IIIIIned&#13;
by Chancellor Shei-&#13;
:"'Iaplan&#13;
before taking  ef-&#13;
1lIe&#13;
number one problem&#13;
.... *"essed In our meet-&#13;
.10&#13;
how&#13;
to&#13;
continue&#13;
rntx-&#13;
IIJIII-ege&#13;
peoplewith under.&#13;
I •&#13;
~ple without limiting&#13;
s access, ,. explained&#13;
Schneeberger, subcom-&#13;
member. "The&#13;
recom-&#13;
mendations we're giving the&#13;
Board  will allow everyone&#13;
to&#13;
use  the  facility,  allow those&#13;
with  the  right  to  drink  the&#13;
chance  to drink and will also&#13;
hopefully  alleviate  the possi-&#13;
bility that  the university  will&#13;
be sued for failing to enforce&#13;
the law."&#13;
The proposed  changes&#13;
in-&#13;
clude the elimination  of mul-&#13;
tiple  alcohol  purchases,&#13;
in-&#13;
cluding  the renewed&#13;
prohlbl-&#13;
tion of pitchers of beer and&#13;
carafes of wine, which had&#13;
been  eliminated   In 1984 but&#13;
reinstated  last spring. "The ra-&#13;
tionale  for this,  according  to&#13;
Schneeberger,  Is to minimize&#13;
the   opportunity   for  legal&#13;
drinkers  to purchase  alcohol&#13;
for those not yet of-age.&#13;
"A hike In the drinking age&#13;
isn't  very  effective&#13;
if&#13;
you&#13;
have one guy who's doing all&#13;
the  buying  for a lableful  of&#13;
minors,'&#13;
I&#13;
Schneeberger   said.&#13;
"By doing away with multiple&#13;
purchases,    and   publicizing&#13;
and  strengthening   the penal-&#13;
ties for anyone who is caught&#13;
:iW)~_2!~":~'&#13;
~i¥:&#13;
'WA&#13;
tjiJ1.ave&#13;
!fln&#13;
a&#13;
it10\1,&gt;inc!'ea,se&#13;
s&#13;
';.&#13;
i.fu,aJre~tyl1uYl!tgHa&#13;
dl:f&#13;
fl&#13;
9&#13;
ult&#13;
Who&#13;
has&#13;
seen  the'  oolite'  for~)"1);i..pll;rkslde  stu, .•&#13;
!lee&#13;
In&#13;
the&#13;
Ra,ngei';derjts,;llabta   l¢tf'h~s I!st~  the&#13;
IluIra&#13;
ea.lIy undetstahd){{Qffic'  'ethaye;a,g'reedto&#13;
act&#13;
1&#13;
I0&#13;
~d~:n~ri;.i;:l&#13;
.abdr~~~rl~r~tt;&gt;Jt~~&#13;
14  ;:&#13;
boys and  girls  at   otde··~atpl\lese':i!leservmg&#13;
b!pe&#13;
~'"&#13;
.'&#13;
stUdQnts'repej,,~l\le  gUts they&#13;
\lIIllt&#13;
calls&#13;
to  mind   so desperately  want.&#13;
~&#13;
has  a  real&#13;
If&#13;
you' are. left off the Iis.t,&#13;
iIldeed&#13;
appeal,  Santa   don't worry;  It doesn't  mean&#13;
0ffIel.&#13;
stop  by  the&#13;
'Mr.&#13;
Clau~ ha,s!Orgotten  you·&#13;
_&#13;
on Monday eve· .   as a ma.tter of fact he may&#13;
.at ~&#13;
Of the staff   be  hard. at  wQrk  trYing  to&#13;
celebra:&#13;
r&#13;
Kaplan's   make  tbe  90nnectlon!}. neces-&#13;
~te&#13;
on.&#13;
.'   sary  to get your gift deliver-&#13;
tookiesfO~' there  were   ed.This  partial  \illt may give.&#13;
Just&#13;
a f   the jolly  fat   you Ideas for when you sit on&#13;
~:W&#13;
extra  copies   his lap at the II}all:  .,,'&#13;
lQda&#13;
and some half-&#13;
.•.&#13;
..•..&#13;
. "1&#13;
etIPs&#13;
Siliing here and&#13;
Adrian. Serrano,  .Senlor. "&#13;
il~.~&#13;
desks.  Rumor   want all lake.home  exams.   .&#13;
...~   he. did order  a&#13;
Dave   Bogan,   Freshman.&#13;
.,-  tbe Coffee Shoppe   "A re!'ding  la~p  bepause  I&#13;
\town&#13;
to&#13;
go&#13;
over&#13;
hill&#13;
don't have one.&#13;
Angela  Repzool,  Gtaduate:&#13;
buying beer or wine for some.&#13;
OI~e':!nderage, we're hoping to&#13;
ehmmate  this problem."&#13;
"!hose penalties,  for  legal&#13;
drinkers&#13;
purchasing  alcohol&#13;
for underage  patrons,  would&#13;
include, in the first instance,&#13;
the immediate  confiscation of&#13;
all alcohol belonging to the in-&#13;
volved parties.  Repeated  of-&#13;
fenses  could  bring  possible&#13;
administrative&#13;
disciplinary&#13;
action or the involvement  of&#13;
campus police.&#13;
"Sure,  they're  stiff  sanc-&#13;
tions,"  commented  Schneeb-&#13;
erger,  "but that&#13;
should&#13;
make&#13;
sure those who've broken the&#13;
rules In the past won't do&#13;
it&#13;
again.&#13;
If&#13;
I&#13;
knew&#13;
my  wine&#13;
cooler would get  dumped&#13;
if&#13;
someone   sitting&#13;
with&#13;
me&#13;
bought alcohol for a minor, or&#13;
that&#13;
1&#13;
might  be referred  to&#13;
the  Student  Life  office  for&#13;
doing the same thing myself,&#13;
1'd&#13;
make  sure  no minors&#13;
I&#13;
knew would be drinking In the&#13;
Union.&#13;
"With the university  so&#13;
po-&#13;
tentially  open  to litigation,"&#13;
he  continued,  "we  have  to&#13;
make   sure   people   who&#13;
shouldn't  be dirnking  aren't&#13;
drinking."&#13;
In&#13;
addition to affecting  the&#13;
dally bar  service  operations&#13;
In Union Square, the proposed&#13;
revisions would also have an&#13;
impact  on the way In which&#13;
Dnnking&#13;
see-page&#13;
11&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
for Christmas  is.&#13;
"I&#13;
want  the  editor  of  the   out 01debt!"&#13;
:Ranger.&#13;
not the job, just'&#13;
Jennie ~Tunklelcz   SenIor:&#13;
the&#13;
man."&#13;
. •&#13;
"All&#13;
1 want Is a good&#13;
job."&#13;
Bruce Sturman, Freshman.&#13;
Everette  Henderson, Fresh-&#13;
'Tv~&#13;
got&#13;
everything&#13;
1&#13;
need&#13;
man:&#13;
HA&#13;
new&#13;
ankle."&#13;
already ...maybe a&#13;
pair&#13;
of&#13;
hik·&#13;
Bili Klaus,  Freshma.n:&#13;
"A&#13;
ing  boola  to  get  around   sandwich.&#13;
Oh,&#13;
also&#13;
1&#13;
want to&#13;
schOOl. '"&#13;
get&#13;
l .•. ."&#13;
Julie Pendelton,  Senior:&#13;
''1&#13;
Tad   Christensen,   Fresh·&#13;
want  a  college  degree&#13;
man:  "A teddy bear  named&#13;
NOW!"&#13;
Shelley."&#13;
Joe ManIscalco, Freshman:&#13;
David&#13;
Gertz,&#13;
Freshman:&#13;
"'A&#13;
porsche&#13;
944."&#13;
"Downhhlkl skis&#13;
because&#13;
I'm&#13;
John puhek, Freshman:  "A   going to Lake T~oe."&#13;
bowling ball. Since&#13;
J&#13;
took the&#13;
Lee&#13;
Zimmerman    Fresh-&#13;
bowling class, I've really got-   man:  "I'd  like any  kind of&#13;
ten&#13;
good&#13;
at It."&#13;
car, anything with wheele and&#13;
dary&#13;
Schneeberger,  Gradu·   heat."&#13;
Ie'&#13;
"1 want to wake up and&#13;
Lynda  Jones,  Freshman:&#13;
~iil&lt;j&#13;
Sheila  E.  and&#13;
Deml&#13;
"All&#13;
J&#13;
want&#13;
is&#13;
good health."  .&#13;
Moore stuffed Into a transpar-&#13;
Scott  Taylor,  Freshman.&#13;
ent  stocking  hung  on  my   "A trip to&#13;
Maul."&#13;
antle ,.&#13;
Robb&#13;
Luehr,   senior:&#13;
ill&#13;
mLiz Scharding,  Freshman:    want  everyone  to  get  what&#13;
.''Everything.    1 deserve&#13;
it!&#13;
It&#13;
they want. I also want a ne~&#13;
Susan  Urban,  Freshman:    butt  since  I've  just" about&#13;
"A million  dollars  •  to get   worked&#13;
It&#13;
off&#13;
this&#13;
year.&#13;
••&#13;
Gretchen  Gayhart,  Sopho-&#13;
more:&#13;
"1&#13;
want  a&#13;
VCR&#13;
and&#13;
every   Ca.ry  Grant   movie&#13;
every made."&#13;
Rick Luehr, Senior:&#13;
"Peace&#13;
on&#13;
earth,&#13;
good&#13;
will&#13;
toward&#13;
men  and&#13;
If&#13;
1  can't   have&#13;
thaL.make  it cash."&#13;
Kevin  Zirkelbach,  Junior:&#13;
U&#13;
A&#13;
Sony car stereo,&#13;
speakel1ll&#13;
of course,  and two weeks of&#13;
uninterrupted   se-,  1  mean&#13;
sleep! .,&#13;
Jenny Ca.rr, junior:  "Andy&#13;
Buchanan's  accent ...or&#13;
ElIuJ..&#13;
teln's  mind ...or Guy Crucla·&#13;
nelli's   writing   abllity ...or&#13;
Kim's patlence...oh. there's&#13;
so much!"&#13;
Dan  Cunningham,   Sopho·&#13;
more:  "Stock&#13;
In&#13;
Redl-Whlp&#13;
and 500&#13;
acres&#13;
to&#13;
grow&#13;
com. "&#13;
Bill Serpe, SColor: "I want&#13;
what Angela wanta. ,•&#13;
Brenda  Bucllana.n,  SenIor:&#13;
"A&#13;
secretary.,.&#13;
~.&#13;
"&#13;
2&#13;
'Thur'Id8y.&#13;
December  11. 1986&#13;
~&#13;
Reflect&#13;
on&#13;
the past,&#13;
plan for the future&#13;
TIle&#13;
hoUday """"""  la a&#13;
"""clal&#13;
time because&#13;
It&#13;
allOWS&#13;
u  to look&#13;
back&#13;
at the&#13;
year&#13;
we've&#13;
just&#13;
llved and acknowl·&#13;
edge _&#13;
experlenee8  which&#13;
made&#13;
It a&#13;
success.&#13;
It&#13;
la an e"""eIally&#13;
1lpeC1aJ&#13;
time&#13;
for&#13;
college students,&#13;
tn&#13;
that Its arrival  cobleides  with the cloalng of the semester,&#13;
allowing for added reflectlon  and&#13;
lhanIdU1ness&#13;
for all that&#13;
,we have attempted  and accompUshed.&#13;
For Parkslde.&#13;
1986 -&#13;
and&#13;
lhts&#13;
soon-to-end Fall semester&#13;
_ has&#13;
had&#13;
cause  for&#13;
celebration.&#13;
In&#13;
tste December,&#13;
1986.&#13;
groundbrealdng   took place  for&#13;
Parkslde's  flrst-ever  student  housblg units.&#13;
A $(.5&#13;
mllUon&#13;
cooperative  project  between  the universtty  and Its Benev-&#13;
olent  Foundation.  the soo.unit complex  promtsed  to add&#13;
another  dimensIon&#13;
to&#13;
Parkslde,   which  had  previously&#13;
been&#13;
excluslvely  a commuter&#13;
campus,&#13;
In&#13;
February   the  UW-System&#13;
Board&#13;
of Regents&#13;
an-&#13;
nounced  that  Shella Kaplan  had&#13;
been&#13;
named  Parkslde's&#13;
new chancellor  -  Jut  the&#13;
lhlrd&#13;
leader  the school had had&#13;
etece&#13;
Its blceptlon&#13;
In&#13;
1968.&#13;
A fe!sly, energetic  admlnistra·&#13;
tor&#13;
with progressive  Ideas about  redefining  the campus'&#13;
statement   of  purpose,   Kaplan  represented   Parkslde's&#13;
commitment&#13;
to&#13;
solld1tylng Its stalU8 as an btstltutlon  of&#13;
higher learnbtg_&#13;
Late&#13;
lhls&#13;
oummer,  Gary Grace was added&#13;
to&#13;
the admbl·&#13;
latratlve  offtce as asslslant  chancellor  for ltudent&#13;
affalrs.&#13;
HIs&#13;
appoblbnent  slgnaled  that the universlty  was&#13;
prepar-&#13;
ed&#13;
to Implement&#13;
rlgorDU8&#13;
reeroltment   and retention  pro-&#13;
grams,&#13;
the auc.,...&#13;
ot&#13;
which would provide  the true yard·&#13;
stick by which&#13;
to&#13;
measure  the strldes  Parkslde  was&#13;
tak·&#13;
Ing&#13;
toward Improving  Itself and Its standing.&#13;
Three&#13;
months&#13;
ago&#13;
the Fall  semester  began,  and many&#13;
of&#13;
us&#13;
returned  with hopes  much  higher&#13;
than&#13;
those with&#13;
whlch  we normally  return.  We were  eager&#13;
to&#13;
see&#13;
lhts'&#13;
newly-pooted  promlae  actuallzed,  and we weren't&#13;
dtsap-&#13;
poblted  when  admbtIstratlon,    faculty.   staff,   student&#13;
groups&#13;
and day.to-day  students  trled&#13;
lhlngs&#13;
they'd  never&#13;
trled&#13;
before -&#13;
and&#13;
-.cceeded&#13;
as&#13;
they&#13;
had&#13;
never  done be-&#13;
fore.&#13;
We&#13;
witneued&#13;
the suceeaa of PSGA'. "Wele.me Week/'&#13;
SOC's Recrultment   Fair  and  the  most  highly  attended&#13;
Homecoming celebration&#13;
in&#13;
our&#13;
history.&#13;
We watched as&#13;
the universlty  adopted  a stiffer admtsslons  pollcy. expan-&#13;
ded&#13;
the ofterlngs&#13;
ot&#13;
Its Honors  Program  and  btstltuted&#13;
birth  control  dlstrlbutlon  from the Student  Health  office.&#13;
We cheered&#13;
our&#13;
auccesstut&#13;
sports&#13;
teams,  espectslly  our&#13;
women's&#13;
cross  country&#13;
National  champs.  We sald hello&#13;
to&#13;
a new trlend,  C21ancellor Kaplan.  bl an blaugural  ceremo-&#13;
ny.&#13;
and&#13;
goodbye&#13;
to&#13;
an&#13;
old&#13;
frlend,&#13;
WWle&#13;
Mae&#13;
Dawkins,  bl&#13;
a memorlal&#13;
service.&#13;
At the Ranger,  we have&#13;
our own&#13;
accompUshments  to reo&#13;
flect&#13;
on.&#13;
We received  a FIrst&#13;
C1ass&#13;
rating  for&#13;
our&#13;
Spring&#13;
lIll&#13;
la8Ues from  the Associated  College&#13;
PJoess.&#13;
one of the&#13;
most  rellpeCted  college  medts&#13;
services&#13;
bl the&#13;
country.&#13;
nus&#13;
Fall.  we've  tmproved  the paper's  physlcal  appear·&#13;
ance and have&#13;
made&#13;
great  strldes  bl keeping the campus&#13;
community  _nned&#13;
ot&#13;
la8Ues relevant  to all -  be It a slt-&#13;
uatlon&#13;
regardbtg· seeurlty  stsfftng  or proposed  tuition bl-&#13;
creases.&#13;
Yet wblle we&#13;
draw&#13;
much  satisfaction  from&#13;
that&#13;
which&#13;
we've  accomplished&#13;
in&#13;
1986, we draw&#13;
just&#13;
as&#13;
much from&#13;
looking  to the  future,  to the  Improvements   still&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
made.  LIke Parkslde  Itself, we understand  that  the true&#13;
detlnitlon&#13;
ot&#13;
auccess&#13;
Is&#13;
never standing  pat, refusblg&#13;
to&#13;
rest&#13;
on&#13;
your&#13;
taurela.&#13;
OUr&#13;
commlbnent&#13;
to&#13;
1987&#13;
la the same&#13;
as&#13;
the chancellor's&#13;
and the same as any serlou  student·s:&#13;
To&#13;
do better&#13;
than&#13;
we did bl doing better&#13;
than&#13;
before.&#13;
~&#13;
LT&#13;
CoLONa.&#13;
OLIVER&#13;
NORTH, ABoUT  TO SEND&#13;
ARMS&#13;
TO&#13;
IRAN.&#13;
ANDllI:&#13;
PROFIT5&#13;
10 THE CONl'Rt\S. woNDER,5 IF&#13;
HE&#13;
SHOULD WAKE :mE GOVERNMENl,&#13;
Nobody' asked me, but ...&#13;
I&#13;
Reserve funds needed&#13;
now  :&#13;
get&#13;
more&#13;
out.of Our&#13;
budpI&#13;
I&#13;
blg.&#13;
I&#13;
All&#13;
the whlle we&#13;
fudge&#13;
0&#13;
fuss for funding, we&#13;
also&#13;
,&#13;
size  that  somewhere,&#13;
,&#13;
In&#13;
the bowels sf the&#13;
lJW&#13;
,&#13;
~m   are   those  "&#13;
Funds."&#13;
Everyone&#13;
about  them.  lIlat they&#13;
but few seem&#13;
to&#13;
know&#13;
what  they  are.&#13;
whe ..&#13;
are   and  most&#13;
1m&#13;
•&#13;
how much they&#13;
ore.&#13;
WIllI   II&#13;
even more&#13;
confusing&#13;
is&#13;
III&#13;
they  cannot&#13;
be&#13;
louched&#13;
!&#13;
out pUlling&#13;
aU&#13;
kinds&#13;
of; ..&#13;
and  cutting rolls&#13;
and&#13;
I1IIIr&#13;
'Ill&#13;
Nobody see&#13;
psge&#13;
5&#13;
R&#13;
by&#13;
BIll&#13;
serpe&#13;
verslty  Fees  A.llocatlon  Com·&#13;
mtttee,&#13;
where  we will be&#13;
an-&#13;
merclfuily&#13;
tom  to&#13;
shreds&#13;
If&#13;
our "rationale&#13;
oJ&#13;
does Rot ra-&#13;
tlona1lze any excess  in&#13;
spend-&#13;
blg.&#13;
"Excess"  seems&#13;
to&#13;
have&#13;
been refbled  to a poblt of pen-&#13;
nies,  whlch,  according   to the&#13;
value of the American  dollar,&#13;
are&#13;
worthless.&#13;
Rules  and  guidelines   ex·&#13;
pllcltly  tell  us  what  we  can&#13;
spend  and  where  and  why.&#13;
We learn  through  trying  and&#13;
denying&#13;
what&#13;
monies we&#13;
can·&#13;
spend  and  how we&#13;
can&#13;
allo·&#13;
cate and reallocate  so that we&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
"Money  Makes  the  world&#13;
go&#13;
'round."&#13;
"Money  Is the  root  of&#13;
all&#13;
evU."&#13;
"Your   money   or   your&#13;
llfe ... " And on and on 'lind on_&#13;
It's S.U.F&#13;
-A.C.&#13;
bUdget time&#13;
again and&#13;
everyone Is scram·&#13;
bUng  around   lookblg   for&#13;
money.  We're  asked&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
careful,&#13;
..&#13;
threatened"&#13;
at&#13;
times&#13;
wllhbt&#13;
an  blch  of our&#13;
llves&#13;
If&#13;
we dare&#13;
to&#13;
exceed last&#13;
year's  budgets.  and frlghten-&#13;
ed&#13;
to&#13;
death wIth the prospect&#13;
of facbtg the Segregated  Unl·&#13;
Letter&#13;
Registration needs revamping&#13;
To&#13;
the Editor&#13;
A&#13;
dlsturbblg   development&#13;
surroundbtg  early·Sprmg  reg-&#13;
istration  was the unexplalned&#13;
detenninatlon&#13;
of&#13;
enrollment&#13;
dates  and  times  assigned  to&#13;
students.&#13;
Reports  claimed  that fresh.&#13;
man and&#13;
sophomores  regis-&#13;
tered  ahead  of upper  class.&#13;
men.  This  was  an  extraor.&#13;
dbtarUy  sIgnificant   develop.&#13;
ment  slnce  stiff  competltlon&#13;
for  limited  course  openmgs&#13;
closed  many  courses   early.&#13;
The residues  of the newly  in·&#13;
stituted   registration&#13;
pollcy&#13;
notably  affected   students   in&#13;
the school  of educatlon.   Stu-&#13;
dents,&#13;
who&#13;
must  complete&#13;
seasonally-offered  courses&#13;
in&#13;
order&#13;
to&#13;
student&#13;
teach&#13;
next&#13;
year,   would   be  forced&#13;
to&#13;
delay  their  plans  yet another&#13;
year.&#13;
In&#13;
that  case  the  ques-&#13;
tion   of   "Who   registered&#13;
when?"  takes  on greater  slg.&#13;
niflcance.&#13;
After  talking&#13;
to&#13;
some  rell-&#13;
able sources&#13;
In&#13;
registrall&amp;&#13;
was uncovered&#13;
that&#13;
students  were given&#13;
over students {degree&lt;!.,';.,.&#13;
attended   other&#13;
onIv&#13;
regardless   of  a&#13;
II&#13;
progress  and needs&#13;
In&#13;
particular   course ~&#13;
That  decision was&#13;
a ..&#13;
the face"  to&#13;
a&#13;
newlY,&#13;
growblg   group of (&#13;
degreed  studenls. :;.&#13;
vidual.   hsve&#13;
re&#13;
retrabt,   reedueste,&#13;
I&#13;
Letler .ec&#13;
PII9'&#13;
GeIy&#13;
L.&#13;
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KrwIIch&#13;
Editor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Rangeriswritten&#13;
and&#13;
edded&#13;
by&#13;
studentsatUW-Parksideandtheyare&#13;
solely&#13;
responslII! '::.&#13;
Julie&#13;
PI_&#13;
Aut.&#13;
Editor&#13;
Leo Bose.&#13;
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Caspers. Mary&#13;
~'%f.::d content.RangerispUblished&#13;
evory&#13;
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pubi:'OO~~~:.~~&#13;
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in&#13;
bulk.Advertising&#13;
deadline&#13;
Is&#13;
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Photo Editor&#13;
Mahdaslan, Suzanne Mantuano&#13;
lettersto&#13;
the&#13;
editor&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
acceptedIItypewrittendouble-spacedon&#13;
staIldaf1l'&#13;
M....&#13;
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Bornhuetter&#13;
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Kelly McKissk:k.&#13;
NicolePaclone:&#13;
8IZephon~~eumber.lertte,nrscl,~~~ldf&#13;
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Serpe, Katia&#13;
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 15, issue 14, December 11, 1986</text>
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              <text>-&#13;
Jan,&#13;
22, 1987&#13;
University  of WlsconSln-Parkslde&#13;
VOl. 15, No.  115&#13;
;aving for&#13;
Moscow&#13;
Kaplan&#13;
to&#13;
-visit  Sakharov&#13;
'Gary L.&#13;
Schneeberger&#13;
b)    Editor&#13;
'&#13;
ChancellorSheila  Kaplan&#13;
the states  today  for&#13;
Ie&amp;,'es&#13;
w&#13;
where  she  and  nine&#13;
}fOSCOU'Shigher  education&#13;
other&#13;
.'&#13;
d&#13;
rs&#13;
will&#13;
meet&#13;
with Soviet&#13;
Jea  ~&#13;
rights activist  Andre&#13;
:srov  and his wife, Elena&#13;
sonner,&#13;
.&#13;
.   .&#13;
Tbe&#13;
trip&#13;
to the noted  dISSI-&#13;
dents'MosCOWa!,artment  Is&#13;
~~onein a&#13;
series&#13;
of stops&#13;
the&#13;
Americandelegation  will&#13;
make&#13;
in&#13;
an·.effort   to  "raise&#13;
nationalconsciousness&#13;
about&#13;
the&#13;
struggle for  human&#13;
rights&#13;
andabout higher&#13;
education's&#13;
commitmentto  that  strug-&#13;
gle,"&#13;
accordingto Kaplan.&#13;
"It'squitean honor to meet&#13;
1Ir.&#13;
Sakharovand Ms. Bon-&#13;
ner,"&#13;
Kaplan   explained.&#13;
"Whatever influence   we  (the&#13;
delegation)&#13;
can&#13;
have on&#13;
keep-&#13;
Ing&#13;
the country aware  that&#13;
peoplestili have to struggle&#13;
1m'&#13;
basichuman rights,  that&#13;
thingsare  not  'rosy,&#13;
I&#13;
will&#13;
make the&#13;
trip&#13;
a&#13;
success."&#13;
Kaplanwas chosen by the&#13;
trip'sorganizer,&#13;
City&#13;
Univer-&#13;
sity&#13;
of New York--Staten  Is-&#13;
,Sheila Kaplan&#13;
land President  Ed Volpe, bjl-&#13;
cause  "he didn't want to have&#13;
a strictly  East  Coast  group.&#13;
Also,&#13;
I.&#13;
Kaplan  said,  •'this&#13;
symbolizes  Wisconsin's  com-&#13;
mitment&#13;
to&#13;
human  rights&#13;
causes,  to making  sure&#13;
that&#13;
people  don't  forget  about  the&#13;
oppressed  because  Sakharov,&#13;
who has such a high profile,&#13;
has been released.&#13;
to&#13;
Following   the  visit  with&#13;
Sakharov  and Bonner on Sun.&#13;
day, Jan.&#13;
25,&#13;
the group. which&#13;
includes seven university  and&#13;
college presidents,  will travel&#13;
to Vienna, Austria to attend a&#13;
conference  on  Security  and&#13;
Cooperation&#13;
in&#13;
Europe&#13;
(CSCE) on Tuesday,  Jan.&#13;
27.&#13;
The first  such conference,&#13;
in&#13;
1975,&#13;
produced  the  Helsinki&#13;
Accords,&#13;
an&#13;
agreement&#13;
signed  by'&#13;
35&#13;
European   na-&#13;
tions&#13;
-dncludtng&#13;
the  Soviet&#13;
Union --and the U,S, and&#13;
Can-&#13;
ada,  which pledges  signatory&#13;
nations&#13;
to&#13;
respect   human&#13;
rights.&#13;
The  delegation  will return&#13;
to the  U.S, on Feb.&#13;
1.&#13;
Soon&#13;
thereafter,  Kaplan  will speak&#13;
at a Parkside  Social Science&#13;
Roundtable   to  discuss   the&#13;
trip.&#13;
As for the severe&#13;
sub-&#13;
zero&#13;
weather   blanketing   Russia,&#13;
which  has  been  reported  as&#13;
low as&#13;
100&#13;
below,  Kaplan  fs&#13;
casually  undeterred.&#13;
"I've  lived&#13;
in&#13;
Minnesota  for&#13;
seven   years,&#13;
to&#13;
she   jokes.&#13;
"There's  no way Moscow can&#13;
be colder than that."&#13;
New alcohol  policies&#13;
endorsed, take effect&#13;
by Gary&#13;
L.&#13;
Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
terlaced  in&#13;
all&#13;
their  recom-&#13;
mendations   was  a  serious&#13;
committment&#13;
to&#13;
responsible&#13;
Alcohol polley changes rec-  alcohol use, and I say 'Amen'&#13;
ommended  by a subcommit-  to that."&#13;
tee of the Parkside  Union&#13;
Ad-   Bill&#13;
Neibuhr, director of the&#13;
visory  Board&#13;
(PUAB)&#13;
have  Union, believes  the new&#13;
poll.&#13;
been  approved  by Assistant  cies  will  lessen  the  chance&#13;
Chancellor  Gary  Grace  and  that  the university  could be&#13;
took effect&#13;
Jan.&#13;
20.&#13;
sued  for  failing&#13;
to&#13;
comply&#13;
Those  policy  changes,  ap-  with Wisconsin's new&#13;
21&#13;
year-&#13;
proved by PUAB Dec.&#13;
16,&#13;
In·' old drinking law.&#13;
elude&#13;
the  elimination  of all    "They'll  be  beneficial  on&#13;
multiple alcohol purchases  In two counts,"  Netbuhr said of&#13;
Union Square,  including  the  the revised pol1cies. "First,&#13;
it&#13;
abolition  of pitchers  of beer  should lessen the likelihood of'&#13;
and&#13;
carafes  of wine. In&#13;
addl-&#13;
our being taken&#13;
to&#13;
court; and&#13;
tion,  mandatory   ID  checks  second, it should improve our&#13;
will become  standard&#13;
proce-&#13;
standing in the event we ever&#13;
dur-e,&#13;
as  will  departmental   are named in a suit.&#13;
tI&#13;
procedures  outlining the han-    Chancellor  SheUa  Kaplan&#13;
dling of intoxicated&#13;
Indlvidu-&#13;
also believes the new policies&#13;
als in the Union.&#13;
are the best possible answer&#13;
Also part of the subcommit-  to the slate's  higher drinking&#13;
tee's  report  are plans for an  age. She is especially in favor&#13;
experimental   "beer  garden"   of the&#13;
mandatory&#13;
ID&#13;
checks&#13;
dance In which segregation  of required  of&#13;
all&#13;
Unlon Square&#13;
legal  drinkers   and  minors  patrons.&#13;
would be more feasible.&#13;
"I  don't&#13;
think&#13;
Joe  Smith&#13;
"I was very Impressed  with  should  feel  slighted&#13;
if&#13;
he's&#13;
the work of the Alcohol Policy  asked to show proof of&#13;
age."&#13;
Review&#13;
subcommittee,"   Kaplan  explained.   "I'll  be&#13;
Grace said in announcing  his  personally   flattered    when&#13;
approval  of its revisions.  "In-  they ask&#13;
to&#13;
see my&#13;
ill."&#13;
erpe&#13;
resigns  position  as&#13;
by&#13;
Gary&#13;
L.&#13;
Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
Citinglack of support from&#13;
administrators and  student&#13;
government officials    Bill&#13;
Serpe,&#13;
chair of the  Student&#13;
OrganizationsCouncil  (SOC)&#13;
resignedTuesday.&#13;
.&#13;
SOC&#13;
represents   approxi-&#13;
mately&#13;
500&#13;
Parkslde  students&#13;
who&#13;
are&#13;
members  of  aca-&#13;
demic&#13;
and social clubs.&#13;
Serpe says  his  decision&#13;
comesas a result&#13;
of an ad-&#13;
ministratorcommenting  that&#13;
"e&#13;
dr&#13;
velj'one  knows   you're&#13;
OOhng"to receive the Dis.&#13;
~guishedStudent Award, an&#13;
d&#13;
nor presented to the  stu-&#13;
~~t&#13;
Whocontributes the most&#13;
Irahe university through  ex-&#13;
,;~urncularinvolvement.&#13;
pr/  that',~ the  Image  I'm&#13;
"u&#13;
:t~g,    Serpe explained,&#13;
elthe t ~the way I look, then&#13;
""" rim   doing  something&#13;
ingng&#13;
or people are&#13;
perceiv-&#13;
toq~~&#13;
wrong,&#13;
and it's&#13;
time&#13;
"I&#13;
thin&#13;
never intended for any-&#13;
ter&#13;
g&#13;
I've done at Parkside  in&#13;
tie~&#13;
of cO-curricular&#13;
activt-&#13;
COntin be&#13;
self-serving,"  Serpe&#13;
S1\'e ueu,&#13;
"Yes, I'm aggres-&#13;
do&#13;
iJ,!::'dassertive,  and  I'll&#13;
"on't gS that  most  people&#13;
do.&#13;
But "I'm  still  a&#13;
"I  just happen&#13;
to be the&#13;
patriotic type.&#13;
I'm proud of&#13;
Parkside and&#13;
I've only tried&#13;
to make it&#13;
better. "&#13;
--Bill  Serpe&#13;
human  being, and when peop-&#13;
le say things  that  hurt,  they&#13;
hurt  just  as  deep&#13;
in&#13;
me as&#13;
they do In anyone else."&#13;
. Serpe also contends  that he&#13;
hasn't  had the proper  support&#13;
from  the  Parkside   Student&#13;
Government&#13;
Association&#13;
{PSGAl,   and  that   group's&#13;
president,  A«;lrianSerrano.  As&#13;
a&#13;
standing   committee   of&#13;
PSGA. SOC needs.  according&#13;
to Serpe,  the cooperation  and&#13;
encouragement&#13;
of   student&#13;
government  representatives.&#13;
"I  definitely  don't  feel  ,I&#13;
have  any support  from Adn-&#13;
an,&#13;
to&#13;
Serpe  said.  'When  we&#13;
went through the controversy&#13;
over  the  GROW  workshop&#13;
(which   prompted    concern&#13;
over allocation of travel funds&#13;
when SOC members  did not&#13;
attend),  Adrian  remained on&#13;
the fence. not saying anythmg&#13;
either way. On this, and other&#13;
issues,  I haven't  felt  I was&#13;
able- to ask of him, 'So, what&#13;
do&#13;
you&#13;
think?'  "&#13;
Serpe's  resignation   comes&#13;
at  a  critical  time  in SOC's&#13;
evolution. The group has been&#13;
lobbying for major  organiza-&#13;
tion slatus all year, and pres-&#13;
ently appears  close to obtaln-&#13;
soc&#13;
chair&#13;
Ing that goal.&#13;
"No, I don't&#13;
think&#13;
SOC will&#13;
suffer  a loss of leadership,"&#13;
Serpe  commented,   "because&#13;
the strenglh  of the leadership&#13;
In any  organization   Is only&#13;
based  on the strength  of the&#13;
follOWing and  the  members'&#13;
commitment.&#13;
"I don't&#13;
think&#13;
SOC has been&#13;
committed   to  me,  I&#13;
think&#13;
they've  been  committed   to&#13;
SOC  as   an   organization.&#13;
That's  why  they're  fighting&#13;
(for major status).&#13;
"And&#13;
if&#13;
I'm&#13;
wrong,"   he&#13;
went on,  "then  SOC doesn't&#13;
deserve   major  status  any-&#13;
way."&#13;
Serpe admits  that eumtnat-&#13;
ing his campus  involvement&#13;
will be difficult.&#13;
In&#13;
addition to&#13;
his SOC chairmanship,  he has&#13;
also resigned from his post as&#13;
Winter  Carnival   committee&#13;
chair,  and forfeited  his seat&#13;
on the UnJon Advisory Board&#13;
(PUAB).&#13;
"There  are people who are&#13;
patriotic,  and those who look&#13;
at a patriotic  person and say,&#13;
'Ah,&#13;
what  an  asshole,'   ..&#13;
Serpe said of&#13;
his&#13;
involvement.&#13;
"I Just happen to&#13;
be&#13;
the&#13;
patrt-&#13;
otic&#13;
type.&#13;
I'm proud of&#13;
Park-&#13;
side,  and  I've  only tried  to&#13;
make&#13;
it&#13;
better.&#13;
"So, yeah,"  he concluded,&#13;
"leaving   (Involvement)&#13;
ts&#13;
going to be very  hard.  And&#13;
the only thing that's  going to&#13;
keep  me from  getting  down&#13;
on being gone Is that somebo-&#13;
dy thought I was drooling."&#13;
Inside&#13;
•••&#13;
Student   seWes  system   sult&#13;
3&#13;
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lIaI1In  Luther  KIng&#13;
remembered&#13;
a •••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
5&#13;
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keep&#13;
names&#13;
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,.&#13;
Student   ptOtesfa&#13;
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Korea ••••..••••••••••••••• _ ••••••••••••••• '2&#13;
New&#13;
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Shape&#13;
up&#13;
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11&#13;
J811• &#13;
22, &#13;
1 &#13;
987 &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside &#13;
Vol. &#13;
15, &#13;
No. &#13;
115 &#13;
;ving &#13;
tor &#13;
Moscow &#13;
i(aplan &#13;
to &#13;
visit &#13;
Sakharov &#13;
·Gary&#13;
L.Schne&#13;
ebergcr &#13;
b) &#13;
Editor &#13;
~ &#13;
Chancellor &#13;
Sheila &#13;
Kaplan &#13;
the &#13;
states &#13;
today &#13;
for &#13;
jeal'fS &#13;
w &#13;
where &#13;
she &#13;
and &#13;
nine &#13;
MOSCou•s &#13;
higher &#13;
education &#13;
other &#13;
•  · &#13;
ders &#13;
will &#13;
meet &#13;
with &#13;
Soviet &#13;
tea &#13;
an &#13;
rights &#13;
activist &#13;
Andre &#13;
~v &#13;
and &#13;
his &#13;
wife, &#13;
Elena &#13;
eonner. &#13;
nie &#13;
trip &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
noted &#13;
dissi-&#13;
dents' &#13;
Moscow &#13;
apartment &#13;
is &#13;
jUSI &#13;
one &#13;
In &#13;
a &#13;
series &#13;
of &#13;
stops &#13;
the &#13;
American &#13;
delegation &#13;
will &#13;
make &#13;
in &#13;
an &#13;
effort &#13;
to &#13;
"raise &#13;
national &#13;
consciousness &#13;
about &#13;
the &#13;
struggle &#13;
for &#13;
human &#13;
rights &#13;
and &#13;
about &#13;
higher &#13;
education's &#13;
commitment &#13;
to &#13;
that &#13;
strug-&#13;
gle," &#13;
according &#13;
to &#13;
Kaplan. &#13;
"It's &#13;
quite &#13;
an &#13;
honor &#13;
to &#13;
meet &#13;
Kr. &#13;
Sakharov &#13;
and &#13;
Ms. &#13;
Bon-&#13;
~:• &#13;
Kaplan &#13;
explained. &#13;
Whatever &#13;
influence &#13;
we &#13;
(the &#13;
delegation) &#13;
can &#13;
have &#13;
on &#13;
keep-&#13;
Ing &#13;
the &#13;
country &#13;
aware &#13;
that &#13;
people &#13;
still &#13;
have &#13;
to &#13;
struggle &#13;
for &#13;
basic &#13;
human &#13;
rights&#13;
, &#13;
that &#13;
U!lngs &#13;
are &#13;
not &#13;
'rosy.' &#13;
will &#13;
make &#13;
the &#13;
trip &#13;
a &#13;
success.&#13;
·' &#13;
Kaplan &#13;
was &#13;
chosen &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
trip's &#13;
organizer, &#13;
City &#13;
Univer-&#13;
sity &#13;
of &#13;
New &#13;
York--Stat&#13;
en &#13;
Is-&#13;
.Sheila &#13;
Kaplan &#13;
land &#13;
President &#13;
Ed &#13;
Volpe, &#13;
b  -&#13;
cause &#13;
"he &#13;
didn't &#13;
want &#13;
to &#13;
have &#13;
trictly &#13;
East &#13;
Coast &#13;
gro &#13;
p. &#13;
Also," &#13;
Kaplan &#13;
said, &#13;
"this &#13;
symbolizes &#13;
Wisconsin's &#13;
com-&#13;
mitment &#13;
to &#13;
human &#13;
rights &#13;
causes, &#13;
to &#13;
making &#13;
sure &#13;
that &#13;
people &#13;
don't &#13;
forget &#13;
about &#13;
the &#13;
oppressed &#13;
because &#13;
Sakharov, &#13;
who &#13;
has &#13;
such &#13;
a &#13;
high &#13;
profile, &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
released.'• &#13;
Following &#13;
the &#13;
visit &#13;
with &#13;
Sakharov &#13;
and &#13;
Bonner &#13;
on &#13;
Sun-&#13;
day, &#13;
Jan. &#13;
25, &#13;
the &#13;
group, &#13;
which &#13;
includes &#13;
seven &#13;
university &#13;
and &#13;
college &#13;
presidents, &#13;
will &#13;
travel &#13;
to &#13;
Vienna, &#13;
Austria &#13;
to &#13;
attend &#13;
a &#13;
conference &#13;
on &#13;
Security &#13;
and &#13;
Cooperation &#13;
in &#13;
Europe &#13;
{CSCE) &#13;
on &#13;
Tuesday, &#13;
Jan. &#13;
27. &#13;
The &#13;
first &#13;
such &#13;
conference, &#13;
in &#13;
1975, &#13;
produced &#13;
the &#13;
Helsinki &#13;
Accords, &#13;
an &#13;
agreement &#13;
signed &#13;
by &#13;
35 &#13;
European &#13;
na-&#13;
tions &#13;
--including &#13;
the &#13;
Soviet &#13;
Union &#13;
--and &#13;
the &#13;
U.S. &#13;
and &#13;
Can-&#13;
ada, &#13;
which &#13;
pledges &#13;
signatory &#13;
nations &#13;
to &#13;
respect &#13;
human &#13;
rights. &#13;
The &#13;
delegation &#13;
will &#13;
return &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
U.S. &#13;
on &#13;
Feb. &#13;
1. &#13;
Soon &#13;
thereafter, &#13;
Kaplan &#13;
will &#13;
speak &#13;
at &#13;
a &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Social &#13;
Science &#13;
Roundtable &#13;
to &#13;
discuss &#13;
the &#13;
trip. &#13;
As &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
severe &#13;
sub-zero &#13;
w &#13;
ath &#13;
r &#13;
blank &#13;
ting &#13;
Ru &#13;
sia, &#13;
which &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
reported &#13;
as &#13;
low &#13;
as &#13;
100 &#13;
below, &#13;
Kaplan &#13;
is &#13;
casually &#13;
undeterred. &#13;
"I've &#13;
lived &#13;
in &#13;
Minnesota &#13;
for &#13;
seven &#13;
years," &#13;
she &#13;
jokes. &#13;
"There's &#13;
no &#13;
way &#13;
Moscow &#13;
can &#13;
be &#13;
colder &#13;
than &#13;
that." &#13;
erpe &#13;
resigns &#13;
position &#13;
as &#13;
by &#13;
Gary &#13;
L. &#13;
Schneeberg&#13;
er &#13;
Editor &#13;
Citing &#13;
lack &#13;
of &#13;
support &#13;
from &#13;
administrators &#13;
and &#13;
student &#13;
government &#13;
officials, &#13;
Bill &#13;
Serpe, &#13;
chair &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
Student &#13;
Organizations &#13;
Council &#13;
(SOC) &#13;
resigned &#13;
Tuesday. &#13;
SOC &#13;
represents &#13;
approxi-&#13;
mately &#13;
500 &#13;
Parkside &#13;
students &#13;
!'_ho. &#13;
are &#13;
members &#13;
of &#13;
aca-&#13;
ui:m1c &#13;
and &#13;
social &#13;
clubs. &#13;
Serpe &#13;
says &#13;
his &#13;
decision &#13;
comes &#13;
as &#13;
a &#13;
result &#13;
of &#13;
an &#13;
ad-&#13;
~lnistrator &#13;
commenting &#13;
that &#13;
everyone &#13;
knows &#13;
you &#13;
're &#13;
drooling" &#13;
to &#13;
receive &#13;
the &#13;
Dis-&#13;
:guished &#13;
Student &#13;
Award, &#13;
an &#13;
nor &#13;
presented &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
stu-&#13;
:~~ &#13;
who &#13;
contributes &#13;
the &#13;
most &#13;
e &#13;
u_nlversity &#13;
throu&#13;
gh &#13;
ex-&#13;
~;curricular &#13;
involvement&#13;
. &#13;
U &#13;
that's &#13;
the &#13;
image &#13;
I'm &#13;
~~tt~g," &#13;
Serpe &#13;
explained, &#13;
either &#13;
t &#13;
~ &#13;
the &#13;
way &#13;
I &#13;
look, &#13;
then &#13;
v.-ro &#13;
I &#13;
m &#13;
doing &#13;
something &#13;
ing &#13;
ng &#13;
or &#13;
people &#13;
are &#13;
perceiv-&#13;
lo &#13;
q:~ &#13;
wrong, &#13;
and &#13;
it's &#13;
time &#13;
"l &#13;
thin &#13;
n?ver &#13;
intended &#13;
for &#13;
any-&#13;
teJ &#13;
1 &#13;
ve &#13;
done &#13;
at &#13;
Parkside &#13;
in &#13;
Ues &#13;
~ &#13;
of &#13;
co-curricular &#13;
activi-&#13;
COnt" &#13;
be &#13;
Self-serving," &#13;
Serpe &#13;
Bi\le &#13;
tnued. &#13;
"Yes, &#13;
I'm &#13;
aggres-&#13;
do &#13;
th &#13;
and &#13;
assertive, &#13;
and &#13;
I'll &#13;
~n·t &#13;
ings &#13;
that &#13;
most &#13;
people &#13;
do. &#13;
But &#13;
I'm &#13;
still &#13;
a &#13;
'' &#13;
I &#13;
just &#13;
happen &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
the &#13;
patriotic &#13;
type. &#13;
I'm &#13;
proud &#13;
of &#13;
Parkside &#13;
and &#13;
I've &#13;
only &#13;
tried &#13;
to &#13;
make &#13;
it &#13;
better.'' &#13;
--Bill &#13;
Serpe &#13;
human &#13;
being, &#13;
and &#13;
when &#13;
peop-&#13;
le &#13;
say &#13;
things &#13;
that &#13;
hurt, &#13;
they &#13;
hurt &#13;
just &#13;
as &#13;
deep &#13;
in &#13;
me &#13;
as &#13;
they &#13;
do &#13;
in &#13;
anyone &#13;
else." &#13;
Serpe &#13;
also &#13;
contends &#13;
that &#13;
he &#13;
hasn't &#13;
had &#13;
the &#13;
proper &#13;
support &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Student &#13;
Government &#13;
Association &#13;
(PSGA). &#13;
and &#13;
that &#13;
group's &#13;
president, &#13;
Adrian &#13;
Serrano. &#13;
As &#13;
a &#13;
standing &#13;
committee &#13;
of &#13;
PSGA, &#13;
soc &#13;
needs, &#13;
ac?ording &#13;
to &#13;
Serpe, &#13;
the &#13;
cooperation &#13;
and &#13;
encouragement &#13;
of &#13;
student &#13;
government &#13;
representatives. &#13;
"I &#13;
definitely &#13;
don't &#13;
feel &#13;
.&#13;
1 &#13;
have &#13;
any &#13;
support &#13;
from &#13;
Adri-&#13;
an," &#13;
Serpe &#13;
said. &#13;
'When &#13;
we &#13;
went &#13;
through &#13;
the &#13;
controversy &#13;
over &#13;
the &#13;
GROW &#13;
workshop &#13;
(which &#13;
prompted &#13;
concern &#13;
over &#13;
allocation &#13;
of &#13;
travel &#13;
funds &#13;
when &#13;
SOC &#13;
members &#13;
did &#13;
not &#13;
attend), &#13;
Adrian &#13;
remained &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
fence, &#13;
not &#13;
saying &#13;
anything &#13;
either &#13;
way. &#13;
On &#13;
this, &#13;
and &#13;
other &#13;
issues, &#13;
I &#13;
haven't &#13;
felt &#13;
I &#13;
was &#13;
able-&#13;
to &#13;
ask &#13;
of &#13;
him, &#13;
•so, &#13;
what &#13;
do &#13;
you &#13;
think?' &#13;
'' &#13;
Serpe's &#13;
resignation &#13;
comes &#13;
at &#13;
a &#13;
critical &#13;
time &#13;
in &#13;
SOC's &#13;
evolution. &#13;
The &#13;
group &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
lobbying &#13;
for &#13;
major &#13;
organiza-&#13;
tion &#13;
status &#13;
all &#13;
year, &#13;
and &#13;
pres-&#13;
ently &#13;
appears &#13;
close &#13;
to &#13;
obtain-&#13;
New &#13;
alcohol &#13;
policies &#13;
endorsed, &#13;
take &#13;
effect &#13;
by &#13;
Gary &#13;
L. &#13;
chneeberger &#13;
Editor &#13;
Alcohol &#13;
policy &#13;
changes &#13;
rec-&#13;
ommended &#13;
by &#13;
a &#13;
subcommit-&#13;
tee &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Union &#13;
Ad-&#13;
visory &#13;
Board &#13;
(PUAB) &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
approved &#13;
by &#13;
Assistant &#13;
Chancellor &#13;
Gary &#13;
Grace &#13;
and &#13;
took &#13;
effect &#13;
Jan. &#13;
20. &#13;
Those &#13;
policy &#13;
changes, &#13;
ap-&#13;
proved &#13;
by &#13;
PUAB &#13;
Dec. &#13;
16, &#13;
in-&#13;
clude &#13;
the &#13;
elimination &#13;
of &#13;
all &#13;
multiple &#13;
alcohol &#13;
purchases &#13;
in &#13;
Union &#13;
Square, &#13;
including &#13;
the &#13;
abolition &#13;
of &#13;
pitchers &#13;
of &#13;
beer &#13;
and &#13;
carafes &#13;
of &#13;
wine. &#13;
In &#13;
addi-&#13;
tion, &#13;
mandatory &#13;
ID &#13;
checks &#13;
will &#13;
become &#13;
standard &#13;
proce-&#13;
dure, &#13;
as &#13;
will &#13;
departmental &#13;
procedures &#13;
outlining &#13;
the &#13;
han-&#13;
dling &#13;
of &#13;
intoxicated &#13;
individu-&#13;
als &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Union. &#13;
Also &#13;
part &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
subcommit-&#13;
tee's &#13;
report &#13;
are &#13;
plans &#13;
for &#13;
an &#13;
experimental &#13;
"beer &#13;
garden" &#13;
dance &#13;
in &#13;
which &#13;
segregation &#13;
of &#13;
legal &#13;
drinkers &#13;
and &#13;
minors &#13;
would &#13;
be &#13;
more &#13;
feasible. &#13;
"I &#13;
was &#13;
very &#13;
impressed &#13;
with &#13;
the &#13;
work &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
Alcohol &#13;
Policy &#13;
Review &#13;
subcommittee," &#13;
Grace &#13;
said &#13;
in &#13;
announcing &#13;
his &#13;
approval &#13;
of &#13;
its &#13;
revisions. &#13;
"In-&#13;
terlaced &#13;
in &#13;
all &#13;
their &#13;
recom-&#13;
mendations &#13;
was &#13;
a &#13;
erlou &#13;
committment &#13;
to &#13;
responsible &#13;
alcohol &#13;
use, &#13;
and &#13;
I &#13;
say &#13;
'Amen' &#13;
to &#13;
that." &#13;
Bill &#13;
Neibuhr, &#13;
director &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
Union, &#13;
believes &#13;
the &#13;
new &#13;
poli-&#13;
cies &#13;
will &#13;
lessen &#13;
the &#13;
chance &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
university &#13;
could &#13;
be &#13;
sued &#13;
for &#13;
failing &#13;
to &#13;
comply &#13;
with &#13;
Wisconsin's &#13;
new &#13;
21 &#13;
year-&#13;
old &#13;
drlnklng &#13;
law. &#13;
"They'll &#13;
be &#13;
beneficial &#13;
on &#13;
two &#13;
cou.'\ts," &#13;
eibuhr &#13;
said &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
revised &#13;
policies. &#13;
• &#13;
'First, &#13;
lt &#13;
should &#13;
lessen &#13;
the &#13;
likelihood &#13;
of ' &#13;
our &#13;
being &#13;
taken &#13;
to &#13;
court; &#13;
and&#13;
' &#13;
second, &#13;
it &#13;
should &#13;
improve &#13;
our &#13;
standing &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
event &#13;
we &#13;
ever &#13;
are &#13;
named &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
sult." &#13;
Chancellor &#13;
Shella &#13;
Kaplan &#13;
also &#13;
believes &#13;
the &#13;
new &#13;
policies &#13;
are &#13;
the &#13;
best &#13;
possible &#13;
answer &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
state's &#13;
higher &#13;
drinking &#13;
age. &#13;
She &#13;
ls &#13;
especially &#13;
in &#13;
favor &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
mandatory &#13;
ID &#13;
checks &#13;
required &#13;
of &#13;
all &#13;
Union &#13;
Square &#13;
patrons. &#13;
"I &#13;
don't &#13;
think &#13;
Joe &#13;
Smith &#13;
should &#13;
feel &#13;
slighted &#13;
if &#13;
he's &#13;
asked &#13;
to &#13;
show &#13;
proof &#13;
of &#13;
age,'' &#13;
Kaplan &#13;
explained. &#13;
"I'll &#13;
be &#13;
personally &#13;
nattered &#13;
when &#13;
they &#13;
ask &#13;
to &#13;
see &#13;
my &#13;
ID." &#13;
SOC &#13;
chclir &#13;
ing &#13;
that &#13;
goal. &#13;
"No, &#13;
I &#13;
don't &#13;
think &#13;
SOC &#13;
will &#13;
suffer &#13;
a &#13;
loss &#13;
of &#13;
leadership," &#13;
Serpe &#13;
commented, &#13;
"because &#13;
the &#13;
strength &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
leadership &#13;
in &#13;
any &#13;
organization &#13;
ls &#13;
only &#13;
based &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
strength &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
following &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
members' &#13;
commitment. &#13;
"I &#13;
don't &#13;
think &#13;
SOC &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
committed &#13;
to &#13;
me, &#13;
I &#13;
think &#13;
they've &#13;
been &#13;
committed &#13;
to &#13;
SOC &#13;
as &#13;
an &#13;
organization. &#13;
That's &#13;
why &#13;
they're &#13;
fighting &#13;
(for &#13;
major &#13;
status). &#13;
"And &#13;
if &#13;
I'm &#13;
wrong," &#13;
he &#13;
went &#13;
on, &#13;
"then &#13;
SOC &#13;
doe &#13;
n't &#13;
deserve &#13;
major &#13;
status &#13;
any-&#13;
way." &#13;
Serpe &#13;
admits &#13;
that &#13;
eliminat-&#13;
ing &#13;
his &#13;
campus &#13;
involvement &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
difficult. &#13;
In &#13;
addition &#13;
to &#13;
Inside &#13;
... &#13;
his &#13;
SOC &#13;
chairmanship, &#13;
he &#13;
has &#13;
also &#13;
resigned &#13;
from &#13;
his &#13;
po &#13;
t &#13;
as &#13;
Winter &#13;
Carnival &#13;
committ &#13;
e &#13;
chair, &#13;
and &#13;
forfeited &#13;
his &#13;
eat &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
Union &#13;
Advisory &#13;
Board &#13;
(PUAB). &#13;
''There &#13;
are &#13;
people &#13;
who &#13;
ar &#13;
patriotic, &#13;
and &#13;
those &#13;
who &#13;
look &#13;
at &#13;
a &#13;
patriotic &#13;
person &#13;
and &#13;
say, &#13;
'Ah, &#13;
what &#13;
an &#13;
asshole.' &#13;
" &#13;
Serpe &#13;
said &#13;
of &#13;
his &#13;
involvem &#13;
nt. &#13;
"I &#13;
just &#13;
happen &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
the &#13;
patri-&#13;
otic &#13;
type. &#13;
I'm &#13;
proud &#13;
of &#13;
Park-&#13;
side, &#13;
and &#13;
I've &#13;
only &#13;
tried &#13;
to &#13;
make &#13;
it &#13;
better. &#13;
"So, &#13;
yeah," &#13;
he &#13;
conclud &#13;
d, &#13;
"leaving &#13;
(involvement) &#13;
ls &#13;
going &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
very &#13;
hard. &#13;
And &#13;
the &#13;
only &#13;
thing &#13;
that's &#13;
going &#13;
to &#13;
keep &#13;
me &#13;
from &#13;
getting &#13;
down &#13;
on &#13;
being &#13;
gone &#13;
ls &#13;
that &#13;
somebo-&#13;
dy &#13;
thought &#13;
I &#13;
was &#13;
drooling.'' &#13;
Student &#13;
settles &#13;
system &#13;
suit &#13;
...................................... &#13;
3 &#13;
Student &#13;
affairs &#13;
reorganized &#13;
...................................... &#13;
4 &#13;
Martin &#13;
Luther &#13;
King &#13;
remembered.................... &#13;
. ....... &#13;
,. &#13;
5 &#13;
Some &#13;
women &#13;
keep &#13;
names............................ &#13;
• .......... &#13;
I &#13;
Rader &#13;
leaves. &#13;
. . . . . . • . . . . . . &#13;
. . .  . • . . . &#13;
.. &#13;
. . . . • . • • . . &#13;
•• &#13;
• • • • • • • • • &#13;
• • • &#13;
••••••••• &#13;
10 &#13;
Student &#13;
protests &#13;
In &#13;
Ko,ea &#13;
...................................... &#13;
12 &#13;
New &#13;
Order &#13;
Interview &#13;
•••••• &#13;
,. &#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• &#13;
•· &#13;
••••••• &#13;
• &#13;
14' &#13;
Shape &#13;
up............................................................................. &#13;
19 &#13;
perspectives~~~~~~~!&#13;
our view&#13;
Cocaine not worth it&#13;
Cocaine. Euphoric.  seductive.  Additive. Fatal.&#13;
Southeastern  Wisconsin  newspapers  lately  read  like an&#13;
episode of&#13;
M1ami&#13;
Vice or a scene  from  Scarface.  Two&#13;
men were  bludgeoned,  stabbed  and burned,  one alive.&#13;
in&#13;
the middle of the night. In a&#13;
gas&#13;
station. allegedly because&#13;
of $11.000worth of cocaine. Maybe that could happen In&#13;
ChIcago. but not here. Not In my coummunlty.&#13;
Well. It did.&#13;
•&#13;
TIle problem with cocaine&#13;
Is&#13;
that the more press it gets.&#13;
the more attractive&#13;
It&#13;
becomes  to the potential  or occa-&#13;
sional user. As It gains more of an evil reputation,&#13;
it&#13;
be-&#13;
comes a forbidden fruit. Irresistible.&#13;
Use becomes an obsession. and the user becomes an ad-&#13;
dlct.Addlction  usually  results  In death.  Death  by over-&#13;
dose. or death&#13;
by&#13;
an irate dealer  hungry  for payment.&#13;
Sprtggte Hensley Jr .• 21 and Luigi AieUo. 22. have been&#13;
accused of the brutal  slayings of John E. Ekornaas,  19,&#13;
and Steven D. Klnney. 21. at the Slemper  Shell Station at&#13;
1-94and Highway 150.Hensley and Aiello have offered two&#13;
widely differing stories In their defense. with one thing In&#13;
eommon-ccocatne.&#13;
One&#13;
thing&#13;
is clear. Four human Uves have been destroy-&#13;
ed. before they barely had a chance&#13;
to&#13;
begin. because of&#13;
cocaine.&#13;
Priding&#13;
itself as a recreational&#13;
pastime,   cocaine  de-&#13;
stroys  llves  by suppressing   a young  person's  potential.&#13;
Obscured&#13;
by&#13;
the blInding obsession for cocaine.&#13;
that&#13;
po-&#13;
tential does not have a chance&#13;
to&#13;
grow&#13;
and develop as in-&#13;
tended. Soon It Is lost.&#13;
At&#13;
age&#13;
19. 21.&#13;
or&#13;
22,&#13;
a person&#13;
should be discovering&#13;
his&#13;
potential, not lying dead In the back room of a service sta-&#13;
lion. or sitting In&#13;
jail&#13;
accused  of murder.  The tragedy  of&#13;
this&#13;
incident lies deeper than the surface brutality  of&#13;
It.&#13;
I!&#13;
good can arise from evil, perhaps the loss of two lives&#13;
can&#13;
serve&#13;
as&#13;
the salvation  of&#13;
many&#13;
others.  Perhaps&#13;
this&#13;
tragedy&#13;
will&#13;
open the eyes of&#13;
the&#13;
potential  addict&#13;
and pre-&#13;
vent&#13;
that&#13;
addiction. Perhaps  potential&#13;
will&#13;
be salvaged.&#13;
Rich&#13;
man's&#13;
aspirin,&#13;
blow, coke, nose&#13;
candy-chowever&#13;
it&#13;
Is Identified. the results are lethal.&#13;
If&#13;
not physical deterio-&#13;
ration.  then  bankruptcy.   debt.  and  the  fatal  words.&#13;
"Sorry.&#13;
man. gotta waste&#13;
ya."&#13;
Ranger's new look&#13;
meant for you&#13;
YOU'll&#13;
notice many changes&#13;
in&#13;
the appearance  and con-&#13;
tent In today's  Ranger:  changes  designed  to make  the&#13;
paper more Interesting  and "readable"  to you.&#13;
In&#13;
tenns  of physical  appearance.   we've  added  page&#13;
headings&#13;
to&#13;
let&#13;
you&#13;
know&#13;
just&#13;
where&#13;
you are&#13;
when&#13;
you're&#13;
reading. Our. and your. opinions are page two's "perspec-&#13;
tives."  And when you want to find out the latest  In arts&#13;
news.&#13;
check out our "entertainment"   section.&#13;
Page three.  "park's  dept. ."&#13;
Is&#13;
where you'lI find Infer-&#13;
mallon  about  what's  happening  right  here at Parkslde.&#13;
With Club Events.  The Files,  Week at the Park  and a&#13;
weekly club profile, in addition&#13;
to&#13;
periodic  campus  news&#13;
updates.  you'll be kept abreast  of the gotngs-on In your&#13;
own&#13;
backyard.&#13;
The&#13;
back page. as well, illustrates  our new look and at-&#13;
Illude. By making the last page of the paper the first page&#13;
at&#13;
sports, we·U&#13;
be&#13;
emphasizing  athletics  more prominent-&#13;
ly. including a weekly fitness column and a weekly profile&#13;
of an&#13;
outatandlng athlete.&#13;
We hope you&#13;
appreciate&#13;
these changes  as&#13;
much&#13;
as we&#13;
appreciate  you.&#13;
I&#13;
pI&#13;
Gary&#13;
L. Schneeberger&#13;
u&#13;
Edltor&#13;
Kimber1le Kranich&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Kelly McKissick&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
Jenny&#13;
carr&#13;
Fe.ture&#13;
Editor&#13;
Julie Pendleton&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Feature&#13;
Editor&#13;
Jim Nelbaur&#13;
Entet1alnment  Editor&#13;
Robb Luehr&#13;
Sports  Editor&#13;
Mike&#13;
Aohl&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Dive&#13;
McEvoy&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Jack 80mhuetter&#13;
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Plcazo •••••.•••••••••.•••••··•••••Distribution&#13;
Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Leo Bose, Michelle Eirich.&#13;
Grelchen Gayhart. Chris Lojeski,&#13;
Rick Luehr. Suzanne  Manluano&#13;
Nancy Marter. Doug McEvoy   •&#13;
Michelle Petersen.  Ted Price:&#13;
Amy Ritter. Bill Serpe. Andy&#13;
Tschumpar,  Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
George .Vuckovich. Tyson Wilda.&#13;
~:~~  ~~;~tt~nl:~d edit~d by students of UW-Parkside,who are solely responsibleforilS~&#13;
days,&#13;
n.&#13;
IS&#13;
published every Thursday during the academic year exceptoverbrea&#13;
letters to the editor&#13;
will&#13;
b'&#13;
350 ords°&#13;
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letters must be'&#13;
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held upon reque;~~ned.With a telephone.number Included for verification purposes.Names~..,.&#13;
Rangerreservesthe right&#13;
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0 e I etters and-refusethose which arefalse&#13;
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10&#13;
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14/5&#13;
53-2287&#13;
(Editorial) 9r&#13;
4141553-2?95.W\V~rt.;  .&#13;
•&#13;
your views&#13;
Mini-car parkers tread on others&#13;
an article  pointing&#13;
out ...&#13;
yone's uncalled&#13;
for rush.&#13;
TI&#13;
author  of that article&#13;
SIJIIII&#13;
ted  that  people park&#13;
in&#13;
III&#13;
Phy Ed lot becauseIt's&#13;
c!&lt;Ir&#13;
tlian the Tallent lotand&#13;
III&#13;
ally doesn't fill up.&#13;
I&#13;
suggest.  though.&#13;
the Phy Ed lot a green&#13;
penI&#13;
parking  area  InsteadIII&#13;
white one.&#13;
1 don't mind&#13;
parkinglllll&#13;
lent  during  the sUlllllll'·&#13;
even prefer  It so 1can..&#13;
the  sidewalk&#13;
to&#13;
school"&#13;
when I have&#13;
to&#13;
walk&#13;
and&#13;
II&#13;
cold. 1 don't mind&#13;
makinl:&#13;
privileged parkers&#13;
walk'&#13;
Ie bit.&#13;
....&#13;
Steve-&#13;
over&#13;
is the&#13;
time you lose&#13;
from&#13;
having to walk from the other&#13;
spaces farther  away.&#13;
Granted.&#13;
I&#13;
realize  the&#13;
econ-&#13;
omy and saved  space  of hav-&#13;
Ing a minf  lot. and  the  fact&#13;
that  you  wouldn't   have  to&#13;
worry  about  the  extra&#13;
walk-&#13;
Ing&#13;
if&#13;
people weren't  wrongly&#13;
parked&#13;
in&#13;
the mini car  space&#13;
you could have had. but If the&#13;
mini car  lot were  exchanged&#13;
with the larger  spaces,  then I,&#13;
for Instance.  would be among&#13;
the  privileged   parkers   and&#13;
would  . be   annoyed.   when&#13;
someone took my. spot.&#13;
Parking&#13;
controversy&#13;
is not&#13;
a&#13;
new&#13;
thing&#13;
here. I remember&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In&#13;
response  to  the  letter&#13;
"Mini&#13;
lot not for&#13;
maxi&#13;
cars"&#13;
(Dec. 4. 1986Issue) 1 say this:&#13;
I agree  with the problem  of&#13;
abusing    the   handicapped&#13;
parking&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
Union  circle.&#13;
However,&#13;
I&#13;
feel&#13;
the&#13;
letter's&#13;
author.&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Hermann.  might&#13;
consider another viewpoint on&#13;
the mini car lot.&#13;
The&#13;
mini lots are&#13;
a discrtm-&#13;
ination  against  larger  cars.&#13;
People  with  little  cars  are&#13;
able to park  relatively  close&#13;
to the school. You talk of the&#13;
"rush  rush"  of sociely  when&#13;
what you're  actually  lighting&#13;
Deadline for all letters-to-&#13;
the-editor and classified ads&#13;
is Monday at 10 a.m. for&#13;
publication Thursday.&#13;
our &#13;
view &#13;
Cocaine &#13;
not &#13;
worth &#13;
it &#13;
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look &#13;
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"readable" &#13;
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page &#13;
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when &#13;
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and &#13;
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page &#13;
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s." &#13;
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when &#13;
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in &#13;
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wa, &#13;
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our &#13;
"entertainment" &#13;
section. &#13;
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thr &#13;
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"park's &#13;
dept.," &#13;
is &#13;
where &#13;
you'll &#13;
find &#13;
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about &#13;
what's &#13;
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here &#13;
at &#13;
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Week &#13;
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and &#13;
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club &#13;
profile, &#13;
in &#13;
addition &#13;
to &#13;
periodic &#13;
campus &#13;
news &#13;
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, &#13;
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abreast &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
goings.on &#13;
in &#13;
your &#13;
own &#13;
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back &#13;
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look &#13;
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be &#13;
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including &#13;
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response &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
letter &#13;
"Mini &#13;
lot &#13;
not &#13;
for &#13;
max.I &#13;
cars" &#13;
(Dec. &#13;
4, &#13;
1986 &#13;
issue} &#13;
I &#13;
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the &#13;
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parking &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
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circle. &#13;
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feel &#13;
the &#13;
letter's &#13;
author, &#13;
Mr. &#13;
Hermann, &#13;
might &#13;
consider &#13;
another &#13;
viewpoint &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
mini &#13;
car &#13;
lot. &#13;
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mini &#13;
lots &#13;
are &#13;
a &#13;
discrim-&#13;
ination &#13;
against &#13;
larger &#13;
cars. &#13;
People &#13;
with &#13;
little &#13;
cars &#13;
are &#13;
able &#13;
to &#13;
park &#13;
relatively &#13;
close &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
school. &#13;
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talk &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
"rush &#13;
rush" &#13;
of &#13;
society &#13;
when &#13;
what &#13;
you're &#13;
actually &#13;
fighting &#13;
over &#13;
ls &#13;
the &#13;
time &#13;
you &#13;
lose &#13;
from &#13;
having &#13;
to &#13;
walk &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
other &#13;
spaces &#13;
farther &#13;
away. &#13;
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realize &#13;
the &#13;
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and &#13;
saved &#13;
space &#13;
of &#13;
hav-&#13;
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a &#13;
mini &#13;
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and &#13;
the &#13;
fact &#13;
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have &#13;
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about &#13;
the &#13;
extra &#13;
walk-&#13;
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1f &#13;
people &#13;
weren't &#13;
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parked &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
mini &#13;
car &#13;
space &#13;
you &#13;
could &#13;
have &#13;
had, &#13;
but &#13;
if &#13;
the &#13;
mini &#13;
car &#13;
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with &#13;
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then &#13;
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for &#13;
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would &#13;
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parkers &#13;
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when &#13;
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my &#13;
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not &#13;
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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Conditional students upset by admission letter</text>
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              <text>"&#13;
29, 1987&#13;
JII •&#13;
University of WisconSin-ParkSide&#13;
.....&#13;
conditional&#13;
Vol. 15, No•&#13;
18&#13;
students&#13;
Upset&#13;
by&#13;
admission  letter&#13;
JIlmberUeKranich&#13;
JI1&#13;
NewsEditor&#13;
••_ ....ng to Larry Turner.&#13;
"'--wr--&#13;
some students  are&#13;
~y    ~ letter sent t? them&#13;
~&#13;
cashen, learnmg  as-&#13;
and counseling dtrec.&#13;
_use   they feel it adds&#13;
~",ull&#13;
requirements  not&#13;
::;;;-  their admissions&#13;
ac-&#13;
....,.e  letter.&#13;
CU&#13;
hen&#13;
sent a letter  dated&#13;
15&#13;
to&#13;
second  semester&#13;
~&#13;
students  and   a&#13;
.,.&#13;
one  to  first   time&#13;
conditional  students&#13;
;::etailed  part of program&#13;
are&#13;
supposedto follow.&#13;
~  intendedto make it (the&#13;
leiter)&#13;
stern so&#13;
that they (stu-&#13;
""'Isl&#13;
wouldknow It was not&#13;
something   they   could  take&#13;
lightly.   The  letter   for  the&#13;
other  students  (second semes.&#13;
ter)  is  even  sterner,"  said&#13;
Cashen.&#13;
A conditional  stUdent is one&#13;
who  did  not  have   the&#13;
ap.&#13;
proprlate&#13;
spread    of   high&#13;
school  units,  did not  rank  in&#13;
the top half of one's  graduat.&#13;
mg&#13;
class orIs  a transfer stu.&#13;
dent  with  at  least  15 college&#13;
credits   and   a  grade   POint&#13;
average  of less than 2.0.&#13;
Once accepted  to Parkside&#13;
conditional  stUdents&#13;
received&#13;
a letter  from Stuart  Rubner&#13;
director  of student  counseling&#13;
and   testing&#13;
I&#13;
which  read,&#13;
"Even   though  you  did  not&#13;
meet  all of the requirements&#13;
for  admissions,   a  review  of&#13;
your overall  record  indicates&#13;
potential  for success  in Colle-&#13;
ge.  You have  therefore  been&#13;
admitted  on the condition that&#13;
you meet With an adVisor and&#13;
follow the program&#13;
prescr-tb,&#13;
ed for you."&#13;
According  to Cashen,  "this&#13;
is  the  program   being  pre.&#13;
scribed  for them  (In the let.&#13;
ter) ... that program  prescrth.&#13;
ed  for  them  could  be  any&#13;
number  of  things.  The  one&#13;
that's&#13;
in&#13;
my letters  may  not&#13;
necessarily  be  the  only pro-&#13;
gram  that  will be  going  for&#13;
them.&#13;
"Conditional&#13;
admission,"&#13;
continued   Cashen,    "is&#13;
a&#13;
brand  new  status  and  what&#13;
the  university  is doing&#13;
is&#13;
to&#13;
try  to implement&#13;
a&#13;
program&#13;
that will help these students."&#13;
Cashen's   letter   to  spring&#13;
conditional&#13;
students&#13;
stated,&#13;
"You  must  meet  with  your&#13;
advisor&#13;
to&#13;
select  appropriate&#13;
courses for your first  semes-&#13;
ter  at   UW-Parkside...   You&#13;
must meet with your advisor&#13;
at  least  three  times  during&#13;
the  spring  semester.   These&#13;
meetings&#13;
will&#13;
take place dur-&#13;
ing the weeks&#13;
Jan.&#13;
26&#13;
to&#13;
Feb.&#13;
6;&#13;
March&#13;
2&#13;
to March  13; and&#13;
April 6&#13;
to&#13;
April 17...&#13;
You must&#13;
meet  with  your  advisor  any&#13;
time you wish to change your&#13;
Course enrollment."&#13;
The letter  continued,  "You&#13;
must  attend&#13;
a&#13;
special  pro-&#13;
gram  designed to assess  your&#13;
readiness  for college study. A&#13;
part  of the  program  will be&#13;
devoted&#13;
to&#13;
the administration&#13;
of  the  Learning   and  Study&#13;
Strategies&#13;
Inventory&#13;
(LASS1)."    Students&#13;
were&#13;
gi&#13;
yen  two  dates&#13;
to&#13;
choose&#13;
from to take the Inventory,&#13;
The last sentence of the Jet-&#13;
ter was underlined  and read,&#13;
"Remember,  attending  one of&#13;
these  sessions  is  a  require-&#13;
ment of your admission. ,.&#13;
"I&#13;
was  angry   and   very&#13;
upset;"&#13;
said  JoeUe  Ruffalo.&#13;
second   semester    sociology&#13;
major.&#13;
"I&#13;
wasn't  even think-&#13;
Ing about  coming  back  this&#13;
semester  because  of what the&#13;
letter  said ...&#13;
I took&#13;
that letter&#13;
(Cashen's)  after&#13;
I&#13;
got It and&#13;
I&#13;
ripped&#13;
It&#13;
up."&#13;
Admission&#13;
see pttge  7&#13;
Teacher evaluations&#13;
Students shouldn't expect access&#13;
§QQ&#13;
Harmeyer takes reins&#13;
byKeUyMcKissick&#13;
Asst.News Editor&#13;
by Gary&#13;
L.&#13;
Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
tion&#13;
forms&#13;
released&#13;
to&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents."&#13;
Serrano   said   that   when&#13;
PSGA&#13;
decided,  over  a  year&#13;
ago,&#13;
that&#13;
students&#13;
needed&#13;
"more&#13;
to&#13;
go&#13;
on" when decid-&#13;
ing&#13;
what  courses&#13;
to&#13;
take,&#13;
he&#13;
tried&#13;
to&#13;
secure&#13;
the&#13;
release  of&#13;
·the divisional  forms,  but ran&#13;
into&#13;
a&#13;
"dead end."&#13;
the  SAFE  form&#13;
Is  ..&#13;
good&#13;
form at all."  she S&amp;id."And&#13;
I&#13;
wish&#13;
that  maybe  someone  In&#13;
PSGA  had   gotten   together&#13;
with&#13;
some&#13;
faculty&#13;
to&#13;
get&#13;
some&#13;
help  In  producing   a  more&#13;
comprehensive  form.&#13;
"I&#13;
do&#13;
think&#13;
that  students&#13;
have a right to some valid In.&#13;
formation  on  what&#13;
their&#13;
in-&#13;
structors&#13;
are&#13;
doing,"   Peck&#13;
went&#13;
on.&#13;
"And&#13;
I'd&#13;
like&#13;
to&#13;
see&#13;
there&#13;
be a&#13;
resonalby  impar-&#13;
tIal&#13;
measure   to  counterbal-&#13;
ance  some  of  the  word  of&#13;
mouth&#13;
that's&#13;
generated  now.&#13;
But 1 don't&#13;
think&#13;
SAFE&#13;
Is&#13;
It."&#13;
Neither,  however,  does she&#13;
see the&#13;
dlvlslonal&#13;
evaluaUons&#13;
as&#13;
"it."&#13;
"Releasing&#13;
our&#13;
forms&#13;
would  be  the  same  kind  of&#13;
thing  as  saying  that&#13;
all&#13;
stu,&#13;
dents'  transcripts   should  get&#13;
published&#13;
In&#13;
the  newspaper&#13;
every year.&#13;
So&#13;
the 'priveleged&#13;
information'   nature&#13;
ot&#13;
both&#13;
situations&#13;
Is&#13;
very&#13;
slmUar.&#13;
"And,"&#13;
Peck  concluded.&#13;
"I&#13;
don't&#13;
think&#13;
this&#13;
kind of&#13;
prtn-&#13;
clple&#13;
Is&#13;
going  to  be  gone&#13;
against   by  the  admlntstra-&#13;
tion."&#13;
DonHarmeyer  has  taken&#13;
over as&#13;
chair of the  Student&#13;
OrganizationsCouncil  (SOC).&#13;
alter&#13;
Bill&#13;
Serpe resigned  the&#13;
firstweekof school.&#13;
Harmeyerhad&#13;
been vice.&#13;
cilaIr&#13;
of the SOC and was  In&#13;
lharge of the  BUdget  and&#13;
ReviewCommittee  &lt;B&amp;RC)&#13;
jIrior&#13;
to&#13;
Serpe's resignation.&#13;
Aecordlng to  regulations&#13;
erning SOC.  Harmeyer&#13;
take&#13;
over Serpe's&#13;
post-&#13;
t1.on.&#13;
Harmeyer&#13;
must&#13;
now&#13;
lind&#13;
someoneto fill the&#13;
post-&#13;
tion&#13;
of&#13;
Vice-chair&#13;
and must&#13;
also&#13;
relinquish his&#13;
position&#13;
on&#13;
8&amp;RC&#13;
to&#13;
that appointed  per-&#13;
"&#13;
..&#13;
,&#13;
Hestated that he wlU look&#13;
lorsomeonewithin the B&amp;RC&#13;
10&#13;
fiil&#13;
his&#13;
old  position  be.&#13;
cause,&#13;
"1&#13;
want&#13;
someone&#13;
who&#13;
knowswhat's   going&#13;
on."  The&#13;
8&amp;llC&#13;
Is&#13;
a SUbcommittee of&#13;
SOCsoc&#13;
whichallocates funds for&#13;
members.  SOC  is&#13;
a&#13;
~landingcommtttee  of  the&#13;
arkslde StUdent   Govern-&#13;
",entOrganization(PSGA).&#13;
b&#13;
AlthoughSOChas been lob.&#13;
:g   for major organization&#13;
tuB&#13;
an&#13;
year. Harmeyer  be-&#13;
Ueves&#13;
Serpe's abscence  will&#13;
IlltInlerfereWith the .group's&#13;
~'   "U's&#13;
not going to affect&#13;
... "lObbYingfor  major  sta.&#13;
t&#13;
Bald Harmeyer.   "Bill&#13;
~ theball roiling and it·s up&#13;
"';  to&#13;
keep  It  going.&#13;
It&#13;
::.t .&#13;
just  Bill's   Idea,   It&#13;
""'.' t lust my Idea, It's ever.&#13;
au    •&#13;
(SOC'S)Idea and they&#13;
!llat~ant&#13;
to&#13;
see&#13;
It&#13;
happen.&#13;
..... sle&#13;
our&#13;
goal for this  next&#13;
"""lIl&#13;
s r"&#13;
Ie    .'&#13;
l'pe&#13;
s resignation'  'was as&#13;
Teacher   evaluation   forms&#13;
fUled out  by students  at  the&#13;
end of each  semester,  which&#13;
are  used in tenure&#13;
and&#13;
merit&#13;
pay  decisions,   will  not  be&#13;
made available&#13;
to&#13;
students&#13;
i.r).&#13;
the future,  according&#13;
to&#13;
The-&#13;
resa  Peck-McGovern,  associ.&#13;
ate   professor   of  education&#13;
and  chair  of the  University&#13;
Committee.&#13;
"The faculty  member  has&#13;
a&#13;
right to ensure  that  the aver-&#13;
age   person   on  the   street&#13;
doesn't&#13;
get any look Into that&#13;
person's  personnel  file," Peck&#13;
explained.&#13;
"If&#13;
these  forms&#13;
were  to be generally  releas-&#13;
ed, the next argument  would&#13;
be, "Okay, now the public has&#13;
a right to look at any part  of&#13;
an    instructor's&#13;
personnel&#13;
fHe."&#13;
"And&#13;
in&#13;
that  case,"   she&#13;
continued,&#13;
"I&#13;
think  you're&#13;
really opening up&#13;
a&#13;
Pandora's&#13;
Box."&#13;
The issue of student  acces-&#13;
sibility  to teacher  evaluation&#13;
forms  was  raised  anew  dur-&#13;
Ing   last    week's    SUFAC&#13;
budgeting   sessions.   Adrian&#13;
Serrano,   Parkside    Student&#13;
Government&#13;
Association&#13;
(PSGA)  president.  requested&#13;
additional&#13;
segregated&#13;
fee&#13;
funds  to  hire  a  director  of&#13;
SAFE.  the  Student  Acquired&#13;
Faculty  Evaluation  program&#13;
run&#13;
by PSGA. He was denied&#13;
that   money.   according   to&#13;
SUFAC   chair    Andy   Bu·&#13;
chanan,  because  he needed&#13;
to&#13;
more clearly delineate the du·&#13;
tles of a SAFE  director,  and&#13;
also because'  'we wanted him&#13;
to  check  more  deeply  Into&#13;
getting  the divisional  evalua-&#13;
"We   did  a   tittle   poling&#13;
around,&#13;
to&#13;
he    remembers,&#13;
"and   made   some  informal&#13;
calls&#13;
to&#13;
the  UW-System,  but&#13;
what we found was that there&#13;
was  not  that  much  that&#13;
can&#13;
be  done  about  (getting  the&#13;
divisions&#13;
to&#13;
release    their&#13;
forms).  That's  when we went&#13;
ahead  and  devised  our  own&#13;
SAFE&#13;
form."&#13;
Don Harmeyer&#13;
The  SAFE  form  Itself  is&#13;
cited by some as a major rea.&#13;
son   why   the   university's&#13;
forms  need&#13;
to&#13;
be  released.&#13;
Last  semester,   the  Ranger&#13;
strongly  condemned  the  sur-&#13;
veys   as   "telling   students&#13;
nothing   substantive"    about&#13;
Instructor's  ability.  and Peck&#13;
concurs.&#13;
"Truth  fully.&#13;
I&#13;
don't&#13;
think&#13;
much  a surprise  to me  as  it&#13;
was  to everyone  else.&#13;
1&#13;
knew&#13;
that  Bill  was  under  a  lot of&#13;
pressure  and he had  commit-&#13;
ments  here and commitments&#13;
there,  but&#13;
it&#13;
was  a  shock,&#13;
to&#13;
explained  Harmeyer.&#13;
Harmeyer&#13;
continued,&#13;
"Major  status  for SOC is our&#13;
number  one goal. We're going&#13;
to  rally   aroud   this,   we're&#13;
going&#13;
to&#13;
pick  up  the  pieces.&#13;
This just&#13;
isn't&#13;
something  that&#13;
Bill wanted  or&#13;
I&#13;
wanted,&#13;
it's&#13;
what  we  all  want.  and  you&#13;
can put that In big bold print.&#13;
"I'd  like to clear  up a point&#13;
about  Bill Serpe."  Harmeyer&#13;
added.  "He was very dedicat·&#13;
ed to SOC and  Parkslde.   He&#13;
wasn't   doing  what  he  was&#13;
doing just for himself. He was&#13;
very   concerned   about   th,e&#13;
school  in  general.&#13;
It&#13;
wasn t&#13;
just self.gratlficatlon."&#13;
Inside •..&#13;
Fln.ncl.11Ikl   policies  ch.nge&#13;
4&#13;
HOU$lng: Ph8se&#13;
two?&#13;
5&#13;
System&#13;
president&#13;
ShlIwreceives con-u.&gt;n&#13;
.&#13;
aruslc.1  pl.y&#13;
.udltlon8&#13;
Ht&#13;
7&#13;
Le8dershlp  tr.lnlng&#13;
1IY.lleble&#13;
.&#13;
Marc&#13;
The.ters&#13;
buy&#13;
out&#13;
competition&#13;
10&#13;
K    n Greene:  VoileylNln  AlI-Amerlc:8n&#13;
15&#13;
RANGER  2&#13;
--...&#13;
perspectives&#13;
Thursday,  January 2;::'1&#13;
,98j&#13;
our  view&#13;
All  RIGHT. ALL&#13;
READY!&#13;
I&#13;
GeT·T~E/&#13;
POINT!~.&#13;
Students have right&#13;
to see&#13;
evaluations&#13;
As  students.  we  agree  that  teacher  evaluation  forms&#13;
should   not&#13;
be&#13;
released&#13;
to&#13;
"the   average   person   on  the&#13;
street."   However,  as  students  we  also  take  offense&#13;
to&#13;
being lumped Into that "average  person" category.&#13;
Since  the  information  we provide  on divisional  evahra-&#13;
Uon forms Is used In determining  faculty  pay Increases&#13;
and tenure, It Is not only logical,  but necessary,  that we&#13;
be&#13;
granted  access&#13;
to&#13;
the  evaluatory  results  those forms&#13;
generate.  As the  group most  affected&#13;
by&#13;
an  instructor's&#13;
ability or Inability  to teach, we deserve useful information&#13;
regardlng  that ability,  especially&#13;
It&#13;
we provide that Infor-&#13;
matton  ourselves.&#13;
Faculty and admlnlstration claim that&#13;
if&#13;
students are&#13;
given access&#13;
to&#13;
these  evaluations.&#13;
it&#13;
would be akin&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
universIty   advertising&#13;
each   student's    transcript&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
media.&#13;
What&#13;
they overlook&#13;
in&#13;
drawing  such  specious  con-&#13;
clusions  Is that we pay for the Instruction  we receive&#13;
here.  and  therefore  are  entitled  to know&#13;
its&#13;
effectiveness.&#13;
The general  public  does not pay  to know our grades,  and&#13;
thus  there's   no reason  they  should&#13;
be&#13;
granted  access&#13;
to&#13;
them.&#13;
It&#13;
has&#13;
also&#13;
been suggested that the Parkslde  Student&#13;
Government  Association  (PSGA)  work&#13;
to&#13;
further  develop&#13;
Ita Student  Acquired  Faculty  Evaluation  (SAFE)  pro-&#13;
gram,&#13;
80&#13;
that  students  have information  about  instructors&#13;
at their&#13;
disposal.&#13;
Our Viewpoint, and Indeed the viewpoint&#13;
of Chancellor  Sheila  Kapian,&#13;
as&#13;
she expressed  in a recent&#13;
interview   with  a  Ranger   reporter,   Is  that&#13;
"It&#13;
there's  no&#13;
good&#13;
reason  why  the  divisional  forms&#13;
are&#13;
not&#13;
released&#13;
to&#13;
students,&#13;
it&#13;
doesn't   make  sense&#13;
to&#13;
use  two&#13;
forms."  At&#13;
this&#13;
point, students are still waltlng for the ad.&#13;
ministration  to devise a "good reason"  for withholding&#13;
tho8e&#13;
forms.&#13;
VnW such  justification   is presented,   we owe&#13;
it&#13;
to&#13;
our-&#13;
.elves  to&#13;
tight&#13;
voraciously  for  access  to teacher   evalua-&#13;
tion forms.&#13;
In&#13;
an era  when decisions  regarding  issues  like&#13;
tuition  hikes&#13;
are&#13;
taken   further&#13;
and&#13;
further&#13;
from&#13;
our&#13;
hands.&#13;
it&#13;
could be one of the  last  areas&#13;
in&#13;
which  we can&#13;
control the direction  of our college education.&#13;
Nobody'askedme,~&#13;
Feminism a means to an&#13;
end&#13;
outside the range of&#13;
approprt-&#13;
ate female  behavior.&#13;
I  didn't  personally   know&#13;
other   women   who&#13;
had&#13;
gone&#13;
through  the  same  experiences&#13;
and  feelings  with  whom  I&#13;
could talk.&#13;
It&#13;
wasn't  until  one  year&#13;
ago, when I was talking  with&#13;
one of my  friends,  that&#13;
I&#13;
was&#13;
exposed  and  introduced   to&#13;
a&#13;
whole way of looking  at the&#13;
world   in  terms   of  women's&#13;
thoughts&#13;
and&#13;
experiences.&#13;
This  way,  much&#13;
to&#13;
my  sur-&#13;
prise,  is feminism.&#13;
I&#13;
had  known  this  friend  for&#13;
a&#13;
few  months   when,   during&#13;
one of our  conversations,    she&#13;
labeled    herself&#13;
a&#13;
feminist.&#13;
Right  then I was  forced  to&#13;
r-edefine&#13;
what  I  thought  a&#13;
feminist  was.&#13;
I&#13;
originally  thought  a  femi-&#13;
nist   was   an   angry    woman&#13;
who went  too far  with  this&#13;
equal rights  thing  and hated&#13;
men  and  maybe   even  was&#13;
a&#13;
lesbian.    My   definition    was&#13;
very  narrow,  and  only  includ-&#13;
ed some  of the  characteristics&#13;
of  some   feminists.    Where   I&#13;
got  such  a  denntuon,   I  may&#13;
never  know.&#13;
When&#13;
I&#13;
finally   forgave&#13;
myself  for having  such  a nar-&#13;
row definition,&#13;
I&#13;
went&#13;
a year  of talking&#13;
wilJl&#13;
reading    about  women&#13;
men  who are feminists.&#13;
(Ta&#13;
I&#13;
learned  that men~&#13;
feminists.&#13;
Actor   and&#13;
Alan Aida Is a prim,&#13;
e&#13;
Ie. )&#13;
There&#13;
are   men  and wonll&#13;
who  live as  feminists,&#13;
yet.&#13;
not label  themselves&#13;
as.&#13;
The  labeling  of&#13;
myself&#13;
II.&#13;
feminist  was&#13;
a  tough  decl*l&#13;
for  me.&#13;
I&#13;
decided to&#13;
do&#13;
II&#13;
cause&#13;
I&#13;
do not believe&#13;
that&#13;
person&#13;
can&#13;
be neutral.&#13;
Evei?'&#13;
one has biases&#13;
and&#13;
pnjI&#13;
dices.  Trying  to&#13;
deny&#13;
t/lls&#13;
In itself political.&#13;
In&#13;
I. .&#13;
myself a&#13;
feminist,&#13;
I&#13;
am&#13;
proactive.  In doing&#13;
so,&#13;
I&#13;
g&lt;I&#13;
chance  to define&#13;
what a fe&#13;
nist   is  instead  of&#13;
som&#13;
with&#13;
a&#13;
narrow&#13;
definiti&lt;ll&#13;
the term labeling&#13;
me&#13;
II~&#13;
The neat thing abOul&#13;
Ing myself a feministis&#13;
IlII&#13;
feel&#13;
a&#13;
sense of&#13;
being&#13;
up  with  a&#13;
larger&#13;
cause&#13;
feel that&#13;
I&#13;
am working~&#13;
good of society.&#13;
Th.t~:::;,&#13;
the  eradication of the~&#13;
sion of women&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
C&#13;
ing  of attitudes of&#13;
Utost'&#13;
Feminism&#13;
.ee&#13;
psg'&#13;
II&#13;
by K1mberlle Kranich&#13;
I&#13;
was brought  up in a&#13;
ram-&#13;
Ily that  didn't&#13;
dissuade-&#13;
me&#13;
from  participating   In activi-&#13;
ties&#13;
that&#13;
were&#13;
normally&#13;
thought   of   as   unfeminine.&#13;
Hence,  it was a huge  surprise&#13;
for  me  to  be  denied&#13;
a&#13;
job&#13;
stocking  shelves  because   the&#13;
owner  of  the  store  felt  that&#13;
that  type  of work  was not&#13;
ap-&#13;
propriate  for females.&#13;
The job incident,  along with&#13;
being labeled a tomboy most&#13;
of  my&#13;
pre-&#13;
adolescent   years,&#13;
clearly  and  early  pointed  out&#13;
to  me  the  bias  people  have&#13;
about  what  is  appropriate&#13;
female  and male  behavior.&#13;
I&#13;
always  felt  that  such  nar-&#13;
row  stereotypes   were  wrong,&#13;
and&#13;
I&#13;
felt  stifled  and  a misfit&#13;
because&#13;
I&#13;
wasn't   allowed  to&#13;
do what&#13;
I&#13;
did without&#13;
havtng&#13;
It&#13;
pointed  out to me that  I&#13;
was   .acting   outside   of&#13;
ap-&#13;
proprtate&#13;
female    behavior.&#13;
For example, one day&#13;
I&#13;
play-&#13;
fully    wrapped&#13;
my&#13;
arms&#13;
around   my   brother's&#13;
waist&#13;
and  proceeded  to tackle  him.&#13;
My dad  told me  to stop&#13;
it&#13;
be-&#13;
cause  I was  being  "unladyli-&#13;
ke."  I wasn't  supposed&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
aggressive   becau~e  that  was&#13;
lL...-yO_U_p_vi_ew_s&#13;
1&#13;
Discrimination, huh?&#13;
picture.&#13;
Requiring  a driver's  license&#13;
is   a   discrimination    against&#13;
those  who are  unable,&#13;
unwfll-&#13;
ing  or  not  allowed&#13;
to&#13;
drive.&#13;
Allowing people just  to own a&#13;
car&#13;
is&#13;
a&#13;
discrimination&#13;
against   those  who  don't  own&#13;
one.    Requiring&#13;
people    to&#13;
drive  on the  right  side  of the&#13;
road  (or  on  the  road&#13;
at&#13;
all,&#13;
for   that    matter)&#13;
discrtmf-&#13;
nates&#13;
against&#13;
those&#13;
who&#13;
would  choose  to drive  on the&#13;
left   side,   or   perhaps    over&#13;
your lawn, for instance.&#13;
Jon Anderson&#13;
To&#13;
the&#13;
Editor:&#13;
(Dear Steve Weber,)&#13;
I'm&#13;
embarrassed    for  you.&#13;
The&#13;
reason   is  because   the&#13;
Ranger   printed   your   letter&#13;
and   showed   you   and   your&#13;
type for the small-minded&#13;
litt-&#13;
le people you really  are.&#13;
So&#13;
you  feel  that&#13;
mtru.car&#13;
lots&#13;
are&#13;
a    discrimination&#13;
against   larger   cars?   (Surely&#13;
you    must&#13;
mean&#13;
against&#13;
PEOPLE&#13;
who   own   larger&#13;
cars.)   Since  you  used   that&#13;
kind of convoluted  reasoning,&#13;
then  let's   look  at  the  whole&#13;
•&#13;
Gary&#13;
L.&#13;
SChneeberger..............•..................... Edilor&#13;
KlmberUe Kranich •.••••••.•••.•.••••••••.•••.•.•..  News Editor&#13;
CRyanagn'd'ciSoWnt'eitntetn'tan,.sd·edbit,'dhbdYstudentsofUW·Parkside,whoaresolelyresponsible&#13;
forbi~e~.';~&#13;
Kelly McKissick  .•.••••.••••••••••••••••••.. Asst. News Editor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
pu&#13;
IS&#13;
T&#13;
.&#13;
r r ~&#13;
ill"&#13;
Jenny&#13;
Carr&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Leo Bose, Michelle Eirich&#13;
days.·&#13;
e every hursdayduringtheacademeyearexcept&#13;
ow&#13;
Julie Pendleton  ••••.•••..•.•.•.••.••.•.• Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
G&#13;
,letters&#13;
totheeditorwillbe   t d   .&#13;
350&#13;
wordsor'd&#13;
Jim&#13;
Nelbaur .............•....•....•.....   Entertalnment  Editor&#13;
retchen Gayhart, Chris Lojeski,&#13;
lettersmustbesignedwith af~ephe only&#13;
If&#13;
theyaretyped,do~ble·spacedand&#13;
N&#13;
meswi!lt&#13;
Robb&#13;
Luehr ...•••..•••.•••• ~•••••••••••••••.•••••••.&#13;
Sports&#13;
Editor&#13;
Rick Luehr, Suzanne Mantuano&#13;
helduponrequest .&#13;
I&#13;
a eeponenumberIncludedforverificationpurposes.a&#13;
Mike Rohl ..•••••.••••••••••••••.•..•••••.•••&#13;
A..&#13;
t.&#13;
Spotts&#13;
Editor&#13;
Nancy Marter, Doug McEvoy'&#13;
Rangerreservestherightt&#13;
dit&#13;
I&#13;
Dave McEvoy ...•••••.••••••••••••.••..•••....•••••.  Photo Editor&#13;
M' h II P&#13;
,famatory.&#13;
0&#13;
e&#13;
1&#13;
ettersandrefusethoseWhicharefalseand/orde-&#13;
Jack Bornhuetter  •..•••••••••••••••.•..••• Asst.&#13;
Photo&#13;
Editor&#13;
tc e.e  etersen, Ted Price,&#13;
Deadlineforallletters d   ..&#13;
' .&#13;
Andy Buchanan  .•.••••••.•••............•.  Business Manager&#13;
Amy Ritter, Bill S~rpe, Andy&#13;
Tburscay.&#13;
.&#13;
an claSSIfIedads,isMondayat 10a.m.forpublicatiOn&#13;
Brenda Buchanan  .•.....•••.•.••• Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Tschumper,  Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
AI!&#13;
correspondenceh ldb&#13;
Dave Roback .....•••••••••••••••••.••.•. Advertising  Manager&#13;
George&#13;
V&#13;
k  .&#13;
,nosha&#13;
WI53141&#13;
T&#13;
s au  eaddressedto:Ranger.UW-Parkside.Box2000.Ke·&#13;
SIevePlcazo&#13;
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UC oVlch, Tyson Wilda.&#13;
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. ,I,phon,&#13;
4141553·2287&#13;
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              <text>Administration responds to Chrysler closing</text>
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              <text>•&#13;
byKelly McKissick&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The announced   closing   on&#13;
Wednesday,Jan.  27 of  the&#13;
Chryslerauto plant In&#13;
Keno-&#13;
shameans&#13;
more than&#13;
the loss&#13;
ofsome 5,500 jobs  for  auto&#13;
workers.&#13;
For campus  students,&#13;
It&#13;
means additional&#13;
stress,&#13;
fi·&#13;
nancial need  and,  unfortu-&#13;
natelyfor some, the  end of&#13;
highereducation.&#13;
The Chrysler  Corporation&#13;
will&#13;
he closing auto assembly&#13;
operations&#13;
in&#13;
a city which  has&#13;
been bUilding cars  for  85&#13;
years.&#13;
When Chrysler  bought&#13;
theformer American  Motors&#13;
plantlast summer,  the plan&#13;
was&#13;
to&#13;
keep the plant open for&#13;
at&#13;
least&#13;
five years:  The plan'&#13;
obviouslydid not work out for&#13;
Chrysleror the plant.&#13;
Chancellor Sheila  Kaplan&#13;
reaUzesthat  many  faculty,&#13;
staff&#13;
and  students   have&#13;
spousesor parents  that  will&#13;
belosingjobs.&#13;
Kaplansaid that a series of&#13;
programsneed to be Installed&#13;
to&#13;
sid those faculty, staff and&#13;
studentswhose lives wlll be&#13;
affectedby the closing.  She&#13;
saidshe Is planning  to have&#13;
an&#13;
all-University town meet-&#13;
ing&#13;
next&#13;
week at which  the&#13;
University   of WiscOnSin-ParkSlde&#13;
-,&#13;
implications  of the plant  clo-&#13;
o&#13;
sure&#13;
will&#13;
be discussed.&#13;
"We want to talk about the&#13;
cycles that the city could ex.&#13;
pect  to go through;  and  we&#13;
want  to  talk  about  stress&#13;
issues that the people will be&#13;
facing  because  in  truth  the&#13;
studies that have taken place&#13;
on  the  subject  talk  about&#13;
plant  closure  and  the. re-&#13;
sponse to&#13;
it&#13;
being the same as&#13;
grieving  for  the  death  of a&#13;
loved one," Kaplan said.&#13;
She explained  that the&#13;
Unl-&#13;
versity  will be offering  a se-&#13;
ries  of workshops  on stress&#13;
management   for   those   on&#13;
campus  affected  by the shut.&#13;
down. .'This university has&#13;
offered  stress  management&#13;
workshops before, but&#13;
these&#13;
will be designed  specifically&#13;
for our own people&#13;
I .,&#13;
she said.&#13;
Kaplan  also addressed  the&#13;
potential  for. financial&#13;
prob-&#13;
lems  among  students.   "We&#13;
want to be able to&#13;
provide  ap-&#13;
propriate  financial aid coun-&#13;
seling  to  students.   It  may&#13;
mean  helping  them  re-write&#13;
and  re-negotiate   their  aid&#13;
package  or whatever  we can&#13;
do  to  stretch  out  the  pay-&#13;
ments So that&#13;
in&#13;
as humane&#13;
a&#13;
way as we can, help students&#13;
over the immediate  crisis  of&#13;
the financial crunch."&#13;
Bylaw change  nearly&#13;
dissolves United  Council&#13;
~A~ministration responds&#13;
~&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
by Amy&#13;
H.&#13;
Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
and&#13;
Ross&#13;
Pettit&#13;
The United Council nearly&#13;
paSSedlegislation  Saturday&#13;
~hichwould have altered&#13;
us&#13;
oY·laws&#13;
In&#13;
such a way  that&#13;
bUSinesswould never be con.&#13;
ductedagain.&#13;
The   proposed    by-laws&#13;
~hangewould have Increased&#13;
e quorum  count  for  the&#13;
UnitedCouncil from 46 to 66&#13;
Ing&#13;
vtll&#13;
ing&#13;
members' by tncreas-&#13;
ter&#13;
representation of.UW cen-&#13;
att SChools,who have a poor&#13;
tt endance record.&#13;
In&#13;
prac-&#13;
ace, quorum would never  be&#13;
~hIeved because,  according&#13;
ttlPSGAPresident  Alex Pet-&#13;
e.;&#13;
"Attendance  at  United&#13;
no;mcu meetings  is  usually&#13;
o( ntoear60 voting members&#13;
a&#13;
tal&#13;
92possible /lOW."&#13;
The  Change   that   was&#13;
~d,    and  later  recanted,&#13;
cd&#13;
for schools with popu-&#13;
......&#13;
lations  of 0-2,000, five&#13;
dele-&#13;
gates;&#13;
2,001-4,000,&#13;
six;&#13;
4,000·&#13;
10,ooo,seven;&#13;
10,001-20,000.&#13;
eight;  20,001-35,000,nine;  and&#13;
35,000 pius,  twelve.  UW-Cen·&#13;
ters  with  populations  of&#13;
0-&#13;
1,000 are permitted  one dele-&#13;
gate;   1,001-2,000, two;  and&#13;
2,000pius, three.&#13;
Pettit,  leader  of the Park-&#13;
side  delegation,  brought  to&#13;
the attention  of other student&#13;
leaders   the  1lkellhood  that&#13;
quorum would never again be&#13;
reached.  Pettit cornered lead-&#13;
ers of the Madison  and Mil·&#13;
waukee   delegations   before&#13;
they were  abie  to leave  the&#13;
General  Assembly  meeting,&#13;
taking  with  them  t,!e  votes&#13;
needed to nullify the change.&#13;
The  members  returned  to&#13;
the meeting,  and further  ac-&#13;
tion negated the change in the&#13;
by-laws.  Members  agreed&#13;
to&#13;
meet at a iater date.&#13;
I'The very existence  of the&#13;
organization  was  at  stake,"&#13;
Pettit said .&#13;
to- Chrysler closing&#13;
Sheila Kaplan&#13;
She stated  that she wanted&#13;
to  offer   other   workshops&#13;
through  the University,  such&#13;
as a&#13;
series for teachers&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
public schools to heip address&#13;
the emotional  probiems  that&#13;
grades  K-12 will face, and a&#13;
series  for  local  smail  busi-&#13;
nesses on surviving&#13;
the conse-&#13;
quences of the closure.&#13;
Kaplan said that she hopes&#13;
the programs  will be&#13;
Imple-&#13;
mented within February.&#13;
Last Saturday  John Collins,&#13;
Kenosha   county  executive,&#13;
called  a  meeting  to  assign&#13;
task 'forces to aid in probiems&#13;
from  the plant  closing.  Ka•&#13;
plan will be serving  on the&#13;
education  and  job  training&#13;
force  with  Chairman   John&#13;
Burkholtz,  head  of Kenosha&#13;
Gateway  Technical  College&#13;
and Greg Campbell, president&#13;
of Carthage College.&#13;
"Then  we  talk  about  a&#13;
larger  role for Parkside,&#13;
in&#13;
responding&#13;
to&#13;
the community&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
large number of peo-&#13;
ple not directly related to the&#13;
institution who will be laid off&#13;
and  those  from  local&#13;
bust-&#13;
nesses   that   support   the&#13;
plant," she said.&#13;
"It's  very  Important  that&#13;
we  coordinate   our  efforts&#13;
closely with Local 72 (United&#13;
Auto Workers Union&#13;
in&#13;
Keno.&#13;
sha)  because  it  makes  no&#13;
sense for us&#13;
to&#13;
put programs&#13;
in place to help the dispiaced&#13;
workers&#13;
if&#13;
council&#13;
72&#13;
is not&#13;
supportive of&#13;
It."&#13;
Kaplan said the majority of&#13;
the&#13;
respqnsibtltty&#13;
for retrain-&#13;
ing of the production workers&#13;
would be at&#13;
Gateway  Techrn-&#13;
cal College because they&#13;
"are&#13;
organized and have the staff&#13;
and  equipment   to  provide&#13;
short-term occupational train.&#13;
ing."&#13;
She  said  that   Parkslde&#13;
could play  a  role  with  the&#13;
"significant    number"&#13;
of&#13;
workers   who  have   taken&#13;
classes  at the University  al-&#13;
ready.  "We  would  want  to&#13;
help them organize their aca-&#13;
demic  plan and  see if they&#13;
would like to come back  to&#13;
finish a college degree."  She.&#13;
said  that  Col1lns asked  the&#13;
task force to work with the&#13;
white-collar managerial  post-&#13;
tons that  will also be elimi-&#13;
nated  to see What types  of&#13;
services could be offered.&#13;
Kaplan  stated  that  Park.&#13;
'stde&#13;
is also planning to hold a&#13;
symposium in early March on&#13;
plant closings and their&#13;
Impli-&#13;
cations.  Profes or&#13;
Lou&#13;
Fer.&#13;
man,&#13;
who  Is  a  nationally&#13;
known expert on' the Issues of&#13;
plant  closing,&#13;
wlll&#13;
speak  at&#13;
the symposium.  "We&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
inviting  all  the  appropriate&#13;
people in the community  to&#13;
learn and listen," she said.&#13;
It&#13;
may be possible, Kaplan said,&#13;
that Ferman  and his team of&#13;
researchers  will be asked  to&#13;
stay&#13;
in&#13;
Kenosha  for&#13;
a&#13;
few&#13;
days&#13;
to&#13;
do some consulting&#13;
with the city.&#13;
Kaplan   commented,&#13;
"I&#13;
think&#13;
what's  Important  here&#13;
is that  we all cooperate,  do&#13;
what we do best and put to.&#13;
gether a package  that meets&#13;
the needs of different&#13;
kinds&#13;
01.&#13;
people."&#13;
UC fears Parkside pullout&#13;
by Amy&#13;
H.&#13;
Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The arrival  of the Parkslde&#13;
delegates  to. Friday  and&#13;
sat-&#13;
urday's  United Council (UC)&#13;
meeting   at   UW-PlattevlUe&#13;
was  reportedly   a  surprise,&#13;
amidst  rumors  that Parkside&#13;
was pulling out of UC,&#13;
PSGA President  Alex Pettit&#13;
said  he  arrived  at  Friday&#13;
night's Presidents  Committee&#13;
meeting to the amazement  of&#13;
UC president  Adrian Serrano,&#13;
and  relief  of  presidents  of&#13;
several other UW schools.&#13;
Student  government  presi-&#13;
dents Harold Annen, UW-Mil·&#13;
waukee,   Frank   McKinney,&#13;
UW.Whitewater,   and   Rob&#13;
McGinnis,  UW·Madison, ush-&#13;
ered Pettit  into the hall upon&#13;
his  late  arrival  to Friday's&#13;
Presidents  Committee  meet-&#13;
ing,  expressing  surprise  at&#13;
his appearance.&#13;
Pettit  said  they  told  him&#13;
Serrano  had  been  depicting&#13;
Pettit  as an unstable  leader&#13;
and  reporting  that  Parkslde&#13;
was  planning"  to  withdraw&#13;
from UC.&#13;
"We have had problems  in&#13;
"From  his reaction, he was&#13;
awfully surprised to see me.&#13;
He&#13;
was  not  thrilled,  but&#13;
I&#13;
don't  know&#13;
If&#13;
was  pleased&#13;
or not."&#13;
-  Alex&#13;
Pettit&#13;
the past,"  Pettit  said,  "but&#13;
that comes with the territory.&#13;
If&#13;
I was pleased  with every-&#13;
thing UC was doing, I'd prob-&#13;
ably be running it myself."&#13;
In&#13;
a late interview, Serrano&#13;
said that  rumors  travel  fast&#13;
in politics and in the student&#13;
politics, 'and he did hear that&#13;
Parkslde   was   considering&#13;
pulling'&#13;
out,  but  he  was&#13;
pleased that Parkslde  showed&#13;
up.&#13;
"From&#13;
his&#13;
reaction, he&#13;
was&#13;
awfully surprised&#13;
to see&#13;
me,"&#13;
Pettit  said.&#13;
llHe  was&#13;
not&#13;
thrilled, but I don't know&#13;
It&#13;
he&#13;
was pleased or not. It'"&#13;
hard&#13;
to  say.  He  was  certalnly&#13;
shocked.&#13;
"From  the  comments&#13;
ot&#13;
other presidents,  I would say&#13;
he would have  cause  to be&#13;
upset with me. I ruined his&#13;
depiction of me as an unsta-&#13;
ble leader."&#13;
Inside&#13;
UC under fire&#13;
Student  writing&#13;
.contest&#13;
Studs strut  their stuff&#13;
Wrestlers  dominating&#13;
'Home sweet home&#13;
page 3&#13;
page 4&#13;
page 5&#13;
page 10&#13;
page 11&#13;
2 Thursday, Feltruary 4, 1987 Ranger&#13;
our views    .&#13;
Now is not the time to&#13;
give up on education&#13;
Parkslde  shared In the blow from Chrysler  Corporation&#13;
last week when the automobile  manufacturer   decided  to&#13;
shut the Kenosha plant.&#13;
As&#13;
the only state-supported  rour-&#13;
year learning  institution  In the area, we feel the eftecta of&#13;
that&#13;
decision&#13;
in&#13;
obvious and less obvious ways.&#13;
Naturally,  students  and administration   are  concerned&#13;
about the loss of potential&#13;
growth&#13;
of the student body due&#13;
to the loss of jobs In&#13;
this&#13;
area.&#13;
It&#13;
Is difficult for students  to&#13;
afford to pay tuition when the chief breadwinner  Is unem-&#13;
ployed.&#13;
An&#13;
even greater  concern&#13;
is&#13;
the way&#13;
this&#13;
news is affect·&#13;
ing&#13;
the current students and staff at Parkside. The tmpor- .&#13;
lant thing to remember&#13;
Is&#13;
that panIc&#13;
will&#13;
not solve the-&#13;
problems&#13;
this&#13;
factory closing&#13;
has&#13;
created.&#13;
The admlnlstratlon  at Parkslde&#13;
has&#13;
taken  a strong&#13;
In-&#13;
terest In helping studnets  and staff deal with the&#13;
addltton-&#13;
al stress  brought  about by&#13;
this&#13;
news. The financial  aids&#13;
people know that times are going to get tougher for some&#13;
or&#13;
our&#13;
students,  but they are ready  to assist  students  In&#13;
readdressing  their needs.&#13;
If&#13;
students  on&#13;
this&#13;
campus have enrolled In a university&#13;
to&#13;
lmprove U1.eirchances&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
job&#13;
market, the events of&#13;
the&#13;
last&#13;
week should Wustrate  how really  vital a college&#13;
educaUon&#13;
tiks&#13;
become.&#13;
This&#13;
is&#13;
not the time&#13;
to&#13;
ron away from higher education.&#13;
Take advantage  of the&#13;
support&#13;
oftered by Parkslde's&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents and administration.&#13;
Realize&#13;
that the pull-out&#13;
repre-&#13;
sents change. not the end. Don't give up on&#13;
yourselves.&#13;
Don't give up on Parkslde.  Stay In school.&#13;
..&#13;
Iyour views&#13;
Wheelchairarticle draws heat from "normal" student&#13;
by&#13;
BiU&#13;
Serpe&#13;
I  feel  compelled&#13;
to&#13;
corn-&#13;
ment upon&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Rick Luehr's&#13;
"Nobody Asked Me But" col-&#13;
umn In the&#13;
Jan.&#13;
28, 1988&#13;
Issue&#13;
of the Ranger:  his&#13;
nspoofy"&#13;
attack on "The great thinkers&#13;
who devised  these  plans  to&#13;
keep the disabled out of&#13;
Park-&#13;
side and staying  home where&#13;
they belong."&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Loehr,   don't  flatter&#13;
yourself by lhInk1ng all of this&#13;
was  done  just  for  yOU. We&#13;
"normer people,&#13;
tf&#13;
as you&#13;
call&#13;
anyone  not In a wheelchair,&#13;
have&#13;
our&#13;
own set of problems&#13;
with exacUy the aame Issues&#13;
as yours, which don't allow us&#13;
any time  to IntenUonaIly  be&#13;
"lrtpplng  you up."  (Oh...was&#13;
that a pun?)&#13;
Those  parking  spaces  for&#13;
the handicapped,  that you are&#13;
certain were filled&#13;
with&#13;
extra&#13;
snow just  for you, have&#13;
be-&#13;
come quite a burden for all of&#13;
us.&#13;
Consider.&#13;
if&#13;
you will, how&#13;
it&#13;
feels&#13;
to&#13;
come&#13;
to&#13;
Parkside  at&#13;
night to use the library,  duro&#13;
ing&#13;
sub-zero weather. and you&#13;
have parked&#13;
in&#13;
the nearest&#13;
space you can to the sidewalk&#13;
Into the building.&#13;
You&#13;
will&#13;
have to scale  the&#13;
berm In the middle of the lot,&#13;
climbing  over  two  plies  of&#13;
frozen,   jagged;    ploughed&#13;
snow, alIpplng and sliding up&#13;
and/or  down the berm  Itself,&#13;
(since those "great thinkers"&#13;
decided  not  to put  passage&#13;
ways In the middle of the lot&#13;
where  they  are  needed  by&#13;
normal  people,)  or you have&#13;
walked  around  either  end of&#13;
the berm-sa  considerable&#13;
dis.&#13;
tance&#13;
in&#13;
sub-zero weather.&#13;
As you approach  that  gap&#13;
between   parking   lot  and&#13;
Inner&#13;
Loop&#13;
Road, you see&#13;
empty all of the handicapped&#13;
parking spaces, save one, and&#13;
you would be willing  to bet&#13;
your  entire  National  Direct&#13;
Student  Loan  that  none  of&#13;
those spaces would get used&#13;
that&#13;
night.&#13;
Many  a  swear&#13;
word has been issued at that&#13;
spot.&#13;
Please  remember,  Mr.&#13;
Luehr, we .'normal  people"&#13;
wlll  stlll  have  to deal  with&#13;
this issue when the snow is&#13;
gone and a thunderstorm  is&#13;
happenIng.&#13;
You should also know,&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Luehr,  that  the  ramps  that&#13;
are cut Into curbings  to make&#13;
It possible.  for  wheel chaired&#13;
people  to get  to where  they&#13;
want  to go, are  exceedingly&#13;
treacherous  to we  •'normal&#13;
people." They ice over&#13;
in&#13;
a&#13;
most unusual and camou-&#13;
fiaged fashion,  causing  many&#13;
a&#13;
book-laden&#13;
person  a nasty&#13;
fall.&#13;
Now, about those elevators.&#13;
Did  you  know,&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Luehr,&#13;
that&#13;
~ome •'normal  people"&#13;
have  disabWtles  that  aren't&#13;
necessarily repairable  with a&#13;
wheelchair or crutches?  The&#13;
person who said "walking up&#13;
those three  flights  of stairs  Is&#13;
good for you,"  obviously  did&#13;
not have asthma, arthritis or&#13;
a bad heart.&#13;
Again, Mr. Luehr, you over-&#13;
estimate   your  own  Impor-&#13;
tance. "Out of Order" eleva-&#13;
tors are a problem for many&#13;
people.  Remember,&#13;
lfstuff"&#13;
happens.&#13;
That  human  roadblock   In&#13;
the Molinaro concourse,&#13;
that&#13;
gets set up just before you&#13;
ar-&#13;
rive  there,;  many  a  time&#13;
I&#13;
have seen you,&#13;
in&#13;
your wheel-&#13;
chair,  stopped  In that  very&#13;
same place,  deeply engrossed&#13;
In the problems  of the world,&#13;
cartng  Darry  a  whit  whose&#13;
path  you&#13;
were&#13;
blocking,  only&#13;
enjoying  the comraderle   that&#13;
makes  that&#13;
barrtcade&#13;
of&#13;
hu-&#13;
manIty  between  classes,  an-&#13;
other remarkable   facet  of the&#13;
Parkslde  community.&#13;
These  people  don't  have&#13;
time  to  intentionally  block&#13;
your   path,    Mr.   Luehr.&#13;
They're  much&#13;
too&#13;
busy&#13;
trying&#13;
to determine  the best&#13;
place&#13;
on campus  to dispense&#13;
con-&#13;
doms.&#13;
Mr.  Luehr,   look  sround&#13;
you. Life's a bitch, and !hat&#13;
Is&#13;
that.  What  you don't&#13;
resllze&#13;
about  we "normal  people"&#13;
Is&#13;
that,  yes, there&#13;
are&#13;
probably&#13;
lots of times when wheelcha!·&#13;
rites  do Impede  our course,&#13;
(and you probably have seen&#13;
our angry  faces).&#13;
However,&#13;
we try,  very  hard,&#13;
to&#13;
make&#13;
your life&#13;
easter,&#13;
for you,!lln&#13;
no other  way&#13;
than&#13;
to&#13;
relraltt&#13;
from writing  an&#13;
annual&#13;
letter&#13;
the&#13;
the  editor  or&#13;
"NObodY&#13;
Asked Me But" column sbOU&#13;
t&#13;
how   miserable   wheelchair&#13;
people are making our lives.&#13;
Most of us feel It&#13;
Is&#13;
In ~&#13;
taste   to&#13;
publlcly  eomp&#13;
bvl&#13;
about  something  that&#13;
is&#13;
0  •&#13;
ously just another&#13;
part&#13;
oflIle.&#13;
Ain't&#13;
It&#13;
a bitch?&#13;
RANGER&#13;
EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
Editor  Rsndy&#13;
LeCount&#13;
SportsEditor&#13;
Kelty Mc~k&#13;
,   News Ed~tor  Dave McEvoy&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Amy&#13;
H. Rm~ ······.··&#13;
News&#13;
Editor   John Kehoe&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
TerriDeRosier&#13;
F.sture Ednor&#13;
Robb&#13;
l.uehr&#13;
Copy&#13;
Editor&#13;
Ranger ISwntten a~d edit~d by students of UW-Parkside, who are solely responsible for&#13;
itS&#13;
edito;:J&#13;
=&#13;
cy and content. It&#13;
IS&#13;
published every Thursday during the academic year except over breaks&#13;
da~.&#13;
~&#13;
letterstol11eeditorwill.beacceptedonlyiftheyaretyped.double-spacedand&#13;
350&#13;
wordS&#13;
or~,.ii&gt;&#13;
lettersmustbesigned.WIthatelephonenumbermcludedforverificatiOnpurposes.&#13;
Names&#13;
williii&#13;
helduponrequest.&#13;
.&#13;
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famatory.&#13;
." ....&#13;
1/'"&#13;
Deadlineforallletters.andclassifiedads.isMondauat&#13;
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a.m.fOfpublication&#13;
,."Dc-&#13;
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'OU:f~"&#13;
AllcorrespOndencesl\ojlldbeaddressedto:Ranger.UW.Par1&lt;side.&#13;
Box&#13;
2000.&#13;
Ke- .....&#13;
~ha WI&#13;
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4'14/553-2287&#13;
(Editoriai)or&#13;
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STAFF&#13;
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Jobst.&#13;
Geo!oe~.&#13;
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00IIbie&#13;
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RiRtz. Bobbi&#13;
Jo&#13;
SIaler.&#13;
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.&#13;
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                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
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      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="78633">
              <text>Volume 15, issue 17</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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            <elementText elementTextId="78634">
              <text>Hazardous waste: System mandates removal</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="78644">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90159">
              <text>University 01WlsconSln-Parkslde&#13;
Vol. 1&#13;
S.&#13;
No. 17&#13;
m,mal1dstes&#13;
removal&#13;
~~KeIJy&#13;
McKissick&#13;
--  HOWlEditor&#13;
..  Landreman,&#13;
president&#13;
,,~1'POrt&#13;
for Adult Stu-&#13;
I&#13;
!lght,!",tgive In with-&#13;
In&#13;
response to&#13;
bt&#13;
tbat.&#13;
the organization&#13;
rernoved from  a&#13;
ataIua&#13;
PDslUonIn order&#13;
c::&#13;
Student Organi-&#13;
Illajo&#13;
cll (SOC)&#13;
to&#13;
ac-&#13;
L.&#13;
r&#13;
status&#13;
' ...  SU&#13;
rt  .&#13;
Years&#13;
was founded&#13;
Corn&#13;
B.go&#13;
as&#13;
a tribute&#13;
to&#13;
"bo&#13;
rnlngs, a counse-&#13;
~  was&#13;
concerned about&#13;
lludenr&#13;
~te non·traditlon_&#13;
.   serves as a&#13;
~ IIon&#13;
g&#13;
and support serv-&#13;
liaee&#13;
\Vh~t10nal&#13;
students&#13;
~havenotatwnded&#13;
fronl&#13;
~Y&#13;
after graduat-&#13;
IIolo&lt;!&#13;
school. Landre-&#13;
IloQ.lrs~t the majortty&#13;
~en&#13;
,?""I&#13;
students&#13;
ttoft.u&#13;
We want  the&#13;
student   at&#13;
ment .of Adminstratlon  .sur.&#13;
vey,  thO; dlsco:vep'  of aging&#13;
chemicals  il}some state agen-&#13;
cies&#13;
aroused&#13;
concern&#13;
In the&#13;
Administration.&#13;
Hazardous&#13;
waste.  such  as  piirtc&#13;
acid&#13;
which is&#13;
unstafne&#13;
and may b~&#13;
explosive, have accumulated&#13;
over  years&#13;
In&#13;
some  institu-&#13;
tions.&#13;
"Our pltrtc acid is gone&#13;
H&#13;
satd,&#13;
Brtnkmann.&#13;
"Ab9~t&#13;
three or four years ago. when&#13;
it&#13;
was being  removed  from&#13;
all&#13;
the&#13;
high schools,  we got&#13;
OU!:Il&#13;
out of he'te."&#13;
Brmkrnann&#13;
said that  there&#13;
has been&#13;
no&#13;
,accv.m\llatlon of&#13;
h'azardouslftWaste  here.  "The&#13;
i;&gt;w says we&#13;
have 90&#13;
days&#13;
to&#13;
rernove   acute   hazardous&#13;
waste,"   he  salW  "We  get&#13;
some, and get rtd' of It.&#13;
,Ty.~·t&#13;
beel}&#13;
accurnutat-&#13;
ing over teara.  We are&#13;
enmt-&#13;
patlng. stock.&#13;
WhAt.&#13;
we're&#13;
get-&#13;
tlng rtd &lt;1fn9w&#13;
III&#13;
chemicals,&#13;
.lll&gt;t&#13;
waste!'&#13;
;'YesJ.e1&lt;4y   .&#13;
Bi:lnkmann&#13;
~glul'&#13;
,s.elirching ~boratories&#13;
and' tile&#13;
phYsic~&#13;
pJanl.·&#13;
lor&#13;
ch&#13;
tliat'&#13;
&amp;1'e&#13;
llQt&#13;
In&#13;
cur-&#13;
a:&#13;
0&#13;
of&#13;
this&#13;
medal/.'&#13;
.tor&#13;
1i'le&#13;
of&#13;
it,"&#13;
he&#13;
"Almost every department&#13;
g.enerates hazardous  waste"&#13;
Brinkman  explained.  "fro;"&#13;
the&#13;
ut&#13;
deparlment&#13;
to the&#13;
physlcal plant&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
cbemts,&#13;
try labs:'&#13;
Representatives&#13;
from&#13;
Chemical   Wasw   Manage-&#13;
ment.  a Chicago area  firm.&#13;
are working with&#13;
Brinkmann&#13;
in&#13;
the search for and removal&#13;
of obsolete chemicals.&#13;
Brinkmann  said the cost of&#13;
removal here&#13;
will&#13;
be between&#13;
$11,000&#13;
and&#13;
$20,000.&#13;
In&#13;
Mil-&#13;
waukee and Madison, he said,&#13;
the bill will&#13;
run&#13;
upwards  of&#13;
$100.000.&#13;
Responslbillty  for  hazard-&#13;
ous waste disposal&#13;
runs&#13;
from&#13;
"cradle&#13;
to&#13;
grave.&#13;
It&#13;
Brink.&#13;
mann said.  "Our shipping&#13;
it&#13;
to&#13;
Waste Management&#13;
doesn't&#13;
get us&#13;
aU&#13;
the&#13;
hook.&#13;
We&#13;
k'!"'Jl&#13;
a&#13;
running  tally&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
cIieinI.&#13;
cals. Otten&#13;
the&#13;
ehellllcala&#13;
are&#13;
burned,&#13;
a.nd  ~&#13;
m0ni-&#13;
tored to&#13;
be&#13;
elIn&#13;
theI'e&#13;
are&#13;
lID&#13;
toxic&#13;
gases.&#13;
'1'beII  '"&#13;
are&#13;
lID&#13;
10Ilger&#13;
J'ClIPOIlBIbIe.&#13;
Or&#13;
1bey&#13;
are&#13;
stored&#13;
and&#13;
...,ycIed."&#13;
Monday&#13;
chemical&#13;
wale&#13;
was&#13;
belIIC&#13;
hekI&#13;
ill&#13;
a&#13;
locked&#13;
~~==.~&#13;
began&#13;
a.nd&#13;
will&#13;
continue&#13;
1hrouCh&#13;
JI'riday.&#13;
Parkside  to succeed and to&#13;
ha vi! a sense  of belonging:'&#13;
she said .&#13;
Peer. Support is Involved&#13;
in&#13;
campus  activities  and  re-&#13;
.cently turned In the names of&#13;
six students who were wi~ing&#13;
to  serve  as  volunteers  on&#13;
search-and-screen  and  aca-&#13;
demic policy committees.  The&#13;
organization   participates   In&#13;
the Winter Carnival and holds&#13;
an open house s~ weeks after&#13;
the semester begms.&#13;
In&#13;
the future.  Peer sup~rt&#13;
hopes&#13;
to&#13;
create a co-op child&#13;
care service among the non-&#13;
traditional  students. The or·&#13;
ganlzatlon  will present,  with&#13;
eight    other   .UW_system&#13;
schools.  a second state  con·&#13;
ference   for  non_traditional&#13;
students on campus on March&#13;
20-21.&#13;
.&#13;
h I&#13;
It&#13;
also offers a&#13;
$100&#13;
sc oar·&#13;
ship each semester  because,&#13;
as Landreman stated.&#13;
"There&#13;
are  very  few  scholarships&#13;
avalJable  to help  the older&#13;
student."&#13;
One possible  reason&#13;
Lan-&#13;
dreman finds for&#13;
the ouster&#13;
rumor is&#13;
that&#13;
fact&#13;
that&#13;
Peer&#13;
Support had some problems&#13;
with Its budget after a review&#13;
at the last SegregaWd Unlver·&#13;
sity&#13;
Fees&#13;
Allocation Commit-&#13;
tee  (SUFAC)  meeting.  She&#13;
said she asked for help with&#13;
the   organization's    budget&#13;
from Jenny price,&#13;
former&#13;
as·&#13;
slstant&#13;
to&#13;
the assistant  cha,n-&#13;
cellar&#13;
in&#13;
chUge of student af·&#13;
fairs.&#13;
to&#13;
"I&#13;
gave It (the budget)&#13;
Jenny with the underslanding&#13;
that&#13;
if&#13;
there&#13;
was any question&#13;
at all, she would come back&#13;
to&#13;
me." r.andreman&#13;
said.&#13;
One&#13;
portion  of the budget  dealt&#13;
with the requisition of a&#13;
sal·&#13;
ary increase  for a secretary&#13;
to&#13;
$4&#13;
per  hour.  Landreman&#13;
sald the budget was eventual·&#13;
Iy handed to SUFAC with,;,:"t&#13;
. any contact from Price.   U&#13;
there were any discrepancies&#13;
or things that&#13;
didn't&#13;
add up, It&#13;
was a surprise,"  she cern-&#13;
mented.&#13;
Another&#13;
problem&#13;
concerned&#13;
SUFAC's&#13;
request  for  Peer&#13;
Support&#13;
to&#13;
produce   head&#13;
counts, a&#13;
total&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
number&#13;
of students&#13;
in&#13;
the organlza·&#13;
tlon. Landreman  said.  "The&#13;
recent  emphasis   on  head&#13;
counts and organized  social&#13;
events disturbs me. Peer Sup-&#13;
port&#13;
Is&#13;
a unique organization&#13;
attempting  to address&#13;
a&#13;
myr·&#13;
lad of challenges&#13;
in&#13;
a&#13;
chang·&#13;
gbl.ul~g~'&#13;
Peer Support says major status deserved&#13;
Ing   educational&#13;
ment. "&#13;
.In&#13;
response&#13;
to&#13;
the rumor&#13;
that&#13;
SOC&#13;
would  take  Peer&#13;
Support's  position&#13;
lUI&#13;
major&#13;
status.  Landreman  said.&#13;
"I&#13;
talked&#13;
with&#13;
BOrneof the non·&#13;
traditional  students  and old&#13;
ottlcers&#13;
(at&#13;
Peer  Support),&#13;
and they&#13;
all&#13;
telt  the same&#13;
way . that they worked&#13;
hard&#13;
to get&#13;
thls&#13;
where  It Is. We&#13;
don't feel that&#13;
thls&#13;
should be&#13;
given up for SOC. That's&#13;
tool·&#13;
Ish.&#13;
Inside.~.&#13;
,&#13;
Angela Davis vlslta Milwaukee&#13;
p.&#13;
5&#13;
Black&#13;
HIstO&lt;y Month&#13;
plenned&#13;
_&#13;
p••&#13;
Perkslde _&#13;
a __&#13;
Pege •&#13;
Winter&#13;
c.mIvel&#13;
rolla&#13;
In&#13;
p••&#13;
Wreatllng&#13;
come8&#13;
to Raclne&#13;
p.&#13;
11&#13;
perspectives&#13;
~~~~~~~~~:=====---------2Ti;;;i;;~~~~&#13;
-&#13;
2  Thul'llday,  Februa:::-::--';ry&#13;
S&#13;
,,"&#13;
.&#13;
our view&#13;
Conditional program&#13;
deserves support&#13;
Last week's page one story on conditional students&#13;
has&#13;
generated  much conversation.  most of which&#13;
has&#13;
over-&#13;
looked the real Issue of the wtIverslty's  conditional pro.&#13;
gram - that It&#13;
Is&#13;
designed to help students and very likely&#13;
will.&#13;
By definition, conditional students are those who:&#13;
1)&#13;
do&#13;
not have the appropriate  spread of high school wtIts:&#13;
2)&#13;
did not&#13;
rank&#13;
In the top&#13;
half&#13;
of their graduating  class: or&#13;
3)&#13;
have lransferred  to Parkslde with at least&#13;
15&#13;
credits and a&#13;
cumulative  grade point average  of less&#13;
than 2.0.&#13;
Plainly&#13;
put, conditional students are those whose prior academic&#13;
records&#13;
have indicated that they may have dIff1culties at&#13;
Parkslde.&#13;
To&#13;
ensure that students classified as conditional maxi.&#13;
mtee&#13;
their educational  oporlWl!ty, the wtIverslty&#13;
has&#13;
de.&#13;
vised a progresstve,  responsible program.  EqUal&#13;
parts&#13;
ad.&#13;
vtsIng and monitoring,  the program&#13;
Is&#13;
designed  to help&#13;
students successfully  meet the demands of higher educa-&#13;
tion, alloWIng for frequent  consultation  between students&#13;
and counselors.&#13;
.  So&#13;
what's the problem?&#13;
It&#13;
seems that In Implementing&#13;
the&#13;
new procedures,  some counselors and adm1n1strators&#13;
..... "d  paths and contused students about what the pro-&#13;
gram's  requirements  are. WhIle we certainly sympathize&#13;
with&#13;
those&#13;
students who may have&#13;
been&#13;
misled, we none'&#13;
theless believe more energy should be spent lauding the&#13;
wtIversity  for establishing  such a worthwhile  program&#13;
than&#13;
criticizing  cerlaln  people for sending contradictory&#13;
letters.&#13;
Irour views&#13;
Mini-car complaint&#13;
was indeed justified&#13;
'1'0""_.&#13;
ThIs&#13;
letter&#13;
Is&#13;
In response to&#13;
the&#13;
letter&#13;
"MInl-Car&#13;
Parkers&#13;
Tread&#13;
On&#13;
Others,"  (Jan.&#13;
22,&#13;
1987).&#13;
Last  December&#13;
I&#13;
wrote a&#13;
letter to express  my feelings&#13;
about  the  mini-car  parking&#13;
lots and&#13;
"maxi&#13;
cars"&#13;
parking&#13;
In them.&#13;
I&#13;
thought&#13;
I&#13;
had&#13;
a&#13;
Ie-&#13;
gltlmate  beef.&#13;
But.&#13;
obviously&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Steve Weber thought&#13;
dif-&#13;
ferently.&#13;
So&#13;
I&#13;
did a lltue bit of&#13;
background  work and dtacov,&#13;
ered&#13;
I&#13;
stili have a legitimate&#13;
gripe.&#13;
FIrst, the Union Parking lot&#13;
was built and In use before&#13;
the Union BUilding was. When&#13;
It (the parking  lot) was first&#13;
used&#13;
there was equal distance&#13;
between  the&#13;
mini&#13;
and maxi&#13;
car&#13;
parking&#13;
and  Molinaro&#13;
Ball.&#13;
Secondly,  the&#13;
maxi&#13;
car&#13;
parking&#13;
In the&#13;
Oommunlea-&#13;
tlon&#13;
ArIa&#13;
parking lot&#13;
Is&#13;
closer&#13;
to the building&#13;
than&#13;
the mini&#13;
car parking lot.&#13;
So,&#13;
the people&#13;
with large cars are at the ad.&#13;
vantage there.&#13;
Since  the  parking  design&#13;
was&#13;
established  before  the&#13;
Union was built,  the blame&#13;
cannot&#13;
be&#13;
passed&#13;
to&#13;
those of&#13;
us who choose&#13;
to&#13;
buy econ-&#13;
omy sized cars.&#13;
It&#13;
is not our&#13;
fault.&#13;
If&#13;
people  want  large&#13;
cars then they should park In&#13;
spaces&#13;
that&#13;
are&#13;
designed for&#13;
them.&#13;
As&#13;
it Is now there Is not&#13;
even enough room for&#13;
all&#13;
the&#13;
mini cars to park In the mini&#13;
lots. Why, then, add to the sit.&#13;
uation?&#13;
Walter Hermann&#13;
Gary&#13;
l. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
Klmbertie&#13;
Kranich  ··••••••••••••..•••..••••••....•.&#13;
News Editor&#13;
kelly&#13;
McKissick   •••·&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
Jenny Carr •·&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Julie Pendleton  ••••.•.••••••••••••..••..  Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Jim Neibaur  •••••••••••••••.••••••.•••••• Entertainment   Editor&#13;
Robb luehr  ••••••.••••••••••.••••••••••••••.••••.••.  Sports Editor&#13;
Mike Rohl&#13;
Asst. Sports&#13;
Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy ••••••·••·&#13;
Pho10 Editor&#13;
Jack BornhueUer&#13;
AS5t. Photo Editor&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Business  Manager&#13;
Brenda  Buchanan  ••••••••.••••••• Asst. Business  Manager&#13;
Dave Roback ••.••••••••••••••••••••••••• Advertising&#13;
Manager&#13;
Steve&#13;
Picazo ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Distribution   Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
LEI?Bose, .Bernie Doll, Michelle&#13;
EIrich, Chris LOJeski,Rick Luehr,&#13;
Nancy Marter, Doug McEvoy&#13;
Michelle Petersen  Ted Price'&#13;
Amy H. Riller, BiII'Serpe  And&#13;
Tschumller, Jennie Tunkieicz y&#13;
Tyson Wilda.&#13;
'&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of UW-Parkside who are solely responsiblefor~&#13;
ty and content. ,It&#13;
IS&#13;
published every ThurSday dUring the acaceme year exceptover&#13;
days.&#13;
IJ&#13;
letters to the editor&#13;
Will.&#13;
be accepted only if they are typed. double-spacedand35O::s_&#13;
Ihettldersmust be SIgned.&#13;
With&#13;
a telephone number included for verification purposes.Na&#13;
e  upon request.&#13;
I&#13;
Ranger reserves the right to edit letters and retuse those which are falseand/orde- .&#13;
amatory.&#13;
,&#13;
T~C~sdJ~:tor all letters ..and classified ads. is Monday at 10 a.m. tor publiCation&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to' Ranger UW.Parkside Box 2000.tee'&#13;
nos)haWI 53141. Telephone 414/553-2287 (Editoriai) or 414/553-2295IAdvert~·&#13;
mg .&#13;
•••MEANWHILE, lHE  AIRCRAFT&#13;
CARRIERS USS&#13;
JOHN&#13;
f.&#13;
KENNEDY&#13;
AND  USS NIMITZ  CONTINUETO&#13;
PLY THE WATERS OFF THE COAST&#13;
OF LEBANON&#13;
IN&#13;
It.&#13;
DRAMATIC&#13;
SWIN&#13;
OF&#13;
IMPOTENCE.&#13;
your views&#13;
Ranger "shoddy, confusing'&#13;
To&#13;
tile&#13;
E41lor:&#13;
Shoddy. Contusing.&#13;
Nonsen-&#13;
slcaI.&#13;
Fragmented.&#13;
The Ranger's  editorial&#13;
arti-&#13;
cle "CocaIne&#13;
not worth&#13;
it..&#13;
(Jan.&#13;
22,  1987)&#13;
illuslrates&#13;
journalistic    writing   style&#13;
below that which&#13;
Is&#13;
to be ex.&#13;
pected from a college news.&#13;
paper.&#13;
Fundamental&#13;
journalistic&#13;
and   grammatical&#13;
errors&#13;
abounded throughout the&#13;
artt-&#13;
cleo These errors.  combined&#13;
with poor sentence  structure&#13;
and&#13;
inane assumptions.&#13;
re-&#13;
suited In what&#13;
I&#13;
believe to be&#13;
quite an embarrassing  edt-&#13;
torlal article.&#13;
A  few  examples   of  the&#13;
errors include:&#13;
1) "Cocaine.  Euphoric;  Se.&#13;
ductlve.   Additive&#13;
(?l..."&#13;
Additive&#13;
it&#13;
may well be, but I&#13;
don't believe that's  what the&#13;
author intended.&#13;
2) "Miami Vice" and "Scar-&#13;
face"  should obviously&#13;
be&#13;
In&#13;
quotes  or  Italicized.  which.&#13;
ever  form   the  newspaper&#13;
chooses,  to Indicate  the title&#13;
of&#13;
a&#13;
television  series  and  a&#13;
movie, respectively.&#13;
3)&#13;
"Two  men  were  bludg.&#13;
eoned,  stabbed  and  burned,&#13;
one alive, In the middle of the&#13;
.night,  In a&#13;
gas&#13;
station,&#13;
al-&#13;
legedly  because   of&#13;
$11,000&#13;
worth&#13;
of  cocaine."&#13;
Hrnm,&#13;
let's see&#13;
if&#13;
we can stick&#13;
a&#13;
few&#13;
more clauses&#13;
in that&#13;
sentence&#13;
next time.&#13;
4)&#13;
"One thing Is clear.&#13;
(pe-&#13;
riod?) Four human lives have&#13;
been destroyed."&#13;
Later on&#13;
the&#13;
author  writes  of "the  loss of&#13;
two lives." One thing Is clear,&#13;
the&#13;
author.&#13;
shows  an  utter&#13;
lack of consistency.&#13;
5)  "Priding   Itself  as  a&#13;
. recreational   pasttime,   co-&#13;
caine ..." Say _what?!  Is the&#13;
author  really  trying  to sug-&#13;
gest that cocaine is capable&#13;
of "priding&#13;
Ilself IS&#13;
a&#13;
tional pasttlme?"&#13;
6)&#13;
"Rich&#13;
man's&#13;
1lBjI...,l"&#13;
"blow,"  "coke&#13;
ll&#13;
and '&#13;
candy"&#13;
should&#13;
all&#13;
be&#13;
quotes,    Indlcsting&#13;
usage.&#13;
7)&#13;
"If&#13;
not&#13;
phyalcal&#13;
ration,&#13;
then&#13;
bankruptcy,&#13;
and the fatal&#13;
words,  •&#13;
man, galla&#13;
waste&#13;
ya.' ••&#13;
man,&#13;
that'.&#13;
not evena&#13;
tence.&#13;
If&#13;
the Ranger staff&#13;
IL&#13;
the  article&#13;
publlshed&#13;
below  the  edltorla!&#13;
.states,&#13;
making&#13;
"cIWII"&#13;
signed  to&#13;
make&#13;
the&#13;
more  Interestlng_~~&#13;
able'&#13;
II&#13;
(Why&#13;
is"~&#13;
quotes, by the&#13;
way?)&#13;
tt&#13;
start  by raising&#13;
its&#13;
d&#13;
dard writing style.&#13;
an&#13;
Ing&#13;
to the rules&#13;
of&#13;
grammar.&#13;
...............&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
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              <text>Sakharov "delightful, unassuming&#13;
Kaplan sees "substantive changes" in USSR&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
When Chancellor Sheila Kaplan&#13;
and nine other American&#13;
academic leaders traveled to&#13;
Russia last month, their purpose&#13;
was to emphasize higher&#13;
education's commitment to&#13;
basic human freedoms.&#13;
That goal was reached, Kaplan&#13;
says, characterizing the&#13;
expedition as "part of an action,&#13;
but not the cause" of the&#13;
U.S.S.R. agreeing to release&#13;
42 political dissidents last&#13;
weekend.&#13;
"There are substantive&#13;
changes taking place in the&#13;
Soviet Union in all spheres -&#13;
economic, political and&#13;
social," Kaplan explained of&#13;
the country she visited for&#13;
three days, meeting noted&#13;
dissidents Andre Sakharov&#13;
and Elena Bonner. "It's clear&#13;
that the release of Sakharov,&#13;
and the willingness of the&#13;
Soviet government to let our&#13;
group in illustrates a new attitude.&#13;
"In all our dealings with officials&#13;
there," Kaplan continued,&#13;
"we emphasized our concern&#13;
for human rights, and I&#13;
think it's clear from what's&#13;
happened since we came&#13;
back (the release of the additional&#13;
dissidents) that the&#13;
Soviets are serious about&#13;
doing something. We were in&#13;
Moscow at an important&#13;
time. We were one of many&#13;
groups that was bringing&#13;
pressure on the government&#13;
to look at these concerns, and&#13;
I think cumulatively we had&#13;
an effect."&#13;
Now that Soviet leaders&#13;
have indicated a desire to expand&#13;
human freedoms, Kaplan&#13;
hopes American leaders&#13;
take them seriously. "I certainly&#13;
hope that the American&#13;
government looks at what's&#13;
happening there and takes it&#13;
at face value," she says. "It&#13;
would be a shame if we just&#13;
shrugged it off and said, 'We&#13;
can't trust them anyway.' "&#13;
Kaplan and the American&#13;
contingent left the states Jan.&#13;
23, one day later than expected&#13;
after being grounded in a&#13;
New York blizzard, and they&#13;
met with Sakharov and Bonner&#13;
two days later, on Sunday,&#13;
Jan. 25.&#13;
"They were absolutely delightful&#13;
and unassuming people,"&#13;
she says of her hosts,&#13;
"especially when you consider&#13;
that here are two people&#13;
who have suffered so extraordinarily&#13;
for their . beliefs.&#13;
They have for five years lived&#13;
under very difficult circumstances&#13;
just because they refused&#13;
to keep their mouths&#13;
shut about violations to&#13;
human rights."&#13;
Kaplan see page 6&#13;
Sheila Kaplan (I) visits with Soviet dissidents Andre Sakharov and Elena Bonner during&#13;
recent goodwill trip to the Soviet Union.&#13;
her&#13;
AIDS scare taken seriously on local level&#13;
by Amy H. Hitter&#13;
First in a four-part series&#13;
The Acquired Immune Deficiency&#13;
Syndrome (AIDS) epidemic&#13;
in Wisconsin has triggered&#13;
government funding of&#13;
clinics and hotlines and individual&#13;
altering of high-risk&#13;
lifestyles.&#13;
Scattered throughout classroom&#13;
bulletin boards at Parkside&#13;
are posters advertising&#13;
the Milwaukee AIDS Project&#13;
Hotline. In operation for two&#13;
years, the project proclaims&#13;
itself an "information delivery&#13;
service line: Providing&#13;
confidential, accurate information&#13;
and referral services."&#13;
Mark Haupert, president of&#13;
the board on AIDS research,&#13;
said the project is funded by&#13;
the Wisconsin Division of&#13;
Health, with money they have&#13;
received from the Federal&#13;
Center for Disease Control.&#13;
Trained volunteers and one&#13;
paid director staff the phone&#13;
lines. The information they&#13;
distribute is -gathered from a&#13;
variety of publications, the&#13;
state division of health reports,&#13;
the federal division of&#13;
health reports and other private&#13;
AIDS networks.&#13;
According to the Wisconsin&#13;
Department of Health and&#13;
Social Services, the number&#13;
of AIDS cases nationwide was&#13;
29,144 as of Jan. 19. The death&#13;
toll had reached 16,812.&#13;
In Wisconsin, the department&#13;
reports that there were&#13;
66 cases and 43 deaths as of&#13;
Feb. 1, 1986. One year later,&#13;
the numbers rose to 141 cases&#13;
and 86 deaths.&#13;
The department predicts&#13;
that over the course of the&#13;
next two years, the number of&#13;
cases will double. Fifty-seven&#13;
percent of Wisconsin's AIDS&#13;
cases result in death.&#13;
Although AIDS now strikes&#13;
victims in all walks of life,&#13;
the single most affected&#13;
group remains that of gay&#13;
and bisexual males. - Of the&#13;
.141 cases reported this year,&#13;
111 were homosexual or&#13;
bisexual men.&#13;
Tony Larson, minister at&#13;
the- Unitarian Universalist&#13;
Church in Racine, who serves&#13;
as a chaplain to the Gay/Lesbian&#13;
Union, listens when&#13;
some members voice their&#13;
fears.&#13;
"When that happens (a person&#13;
expresses a fear that&#13;
he/she has AIDS), I, or anyone&#13;
in the group, will usually&#13;
refer them to something like&#13;
the Milwaukee AIDS Project,&#13;
which provides information&#13;
and counseling," Larson said.&#13;
"We should all be educated,&#13;
but some people are more informed&#13;
than others. That is&#13;
the case with the Milwaukee&#13;
AIDS Project.&#13;
"On a personal level, we&#13;
can be supportive, and not&#13;
treat them like lepers. AIDS&#13;
is not communicable by casual&#13;
contact. The fear needs to&#13;
be transcended," continued&#13;
Larson.&#13;
Larson believes that government&#13;
assistance should&#13;
not stop now. "A lot more&#13;
could be done," he said. "The&#13;
government could be doing a&#13;
lot more: more research, for&#13;
example.&#13;
"I am happy with the surgeon&#13;
general's approach -that&#13;
we need to educate people. It&#13;
is important to talk about."&#13;
Larson said that the AIDS&#13;
threat has caused a change in&#13;
the sexual behavior of many&#13;
gay men. "It's pretty clear&#13;
that (gay males) were more&#13;
sexually free and now are&#13;
more careful. Straight people&#13;
would do well to emulate&#13;
this," he said. "They should&#13;
either be more careful of who&#13;
they go to bed with, or use&#13;
condoms. Just make sure no&#13;
bodily fluids are exchanged."&#13;
AIDS has not affected&#13;
many gay women, who tend&#13;
to have more monogamous&#13;
relationships, Larson said.&#13;
"Surveys showed that lesbians&#13;
were not promisCuous&#13;
but gay men generally were.&#13;
However, gay women are less&#13;
promiscuous than straight&#13;
men, so the difference is between&#13;
men and women, not&#13;
gay and straight. Men will be&#13;
as promiscuous as they can&#13;
get away with. That's the&#13;
way our society is.&#13;
"The sexual behavior of the&#13;
gay male has changed drastically,"&#13;
he concluded. "They&#13;
are more careful (now) than&#13;
straight men."&#13;
——'——— —&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Chiwaukee zoning dispute goes on page 3&#13;
Writing Center adds computers page 4&#13;
A look at IHe from a black woman's perspective page 5&#13;
Residence halls change campus atmosphere... page 8&#13;
Katie Zavada: dancing mother.... P»9« 9&#13;
Conditional program benefits all ......page 10&#13;
"1&#13;
""g&#13;
REALITY CALLING&#13;
FOR THE PRESIDENT,&#13;
. MRS. REAGARje&#13;
THE PRESIDENT&#13;
CAN'T BE DISTURBED.&#13;
TELL REALITY HE .&#13;
WILL GET IN TOUCH I&#13;
jkVOTH IT LATER.&#13;
ntJCLEAfVSte&#13;
TEST KIT^-l,&#13;
our view&#13;
Condom week no joke&#13;
Although it's very easy to dismiss National Condom&#13;
Week as a bad, blue joke, the concern underlying it is no&#13;
laughing matter.&#13;
With AIDS well on the way to becoming the Bubonic&#13;
Plague of the 20th Century, killing many heterosexual&#13;
men and women in addition to homosexual men, the time&#13;
has come to make a concerned, concerted effort to educate&#13;
the public about the dangers of the disease and the&#13;
precautions necessary to avoid it.&#13;
Condoms have been proven to lessen the likelihood of&#13;
AIDS infection, and it's vital that the public be made&#13;
aware of this - even if TV networks aren't willing to provide&#13;
that information.&#13;
Designating an entire week to generate substantive&#13;
thought about responsible sexual practices is a practical&#13;
and symbolic response to the new, dire sexual revolution&#13;
we face.&#13;
Today, there is no such beast as safe sex. But informational&#13;
campaigns such as National Condom Week do much&#13;
to tame the terror inherent in the AIDS monster which is&#13;
no longer merely an actor in our nightmares.&#13;
perspectives RANGER 2&#13;
| your views&#13;
Faculty member supports conditional program&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In the Fall of 1977, Parkside&#13;
began its Collegiate Skills&#13;
Program. This program tested&#13;
students to see whether&#13;
they had appropriate reading,&#13;
writing, mathematics, library&#13;
skills and could write a research&#13;
paper. The particular&#13;
skills that were and are still&#13;
tested are those the faculty&#13;
identified as necessary to do&#13;
well in college.&#13;
The Collegiate Skills Committee&#13;
that prepared the policy&#13;
and planned the implementation&#13;
of the program&#13;
always had the good of the&#13;
students in mind. In spite of&#13;
the good intentions of the&#13;
Committee, several students&#13;
thought that this was just an&#13;
exercise by the faculty to&#13;
create another hurdle to overcome&#13;
to obtain a university&#13;
degree.&#13;
In the fall of 1986, Parkside&#13;
began to accept students&#13;
under a new admissions policy.&#13;
A student is classified as&#13;
standard if he/she is a graduate&#13;
from a recognized high&#13;
school or equivalent, has&#13;
proper distribution of 16 high&#13;
school units and ranks in the&#13;
upper half of his/her high&#13;
school class. These students&#13;
should succeed in college if&#13;
they apply themselves.&#13;
In the new admissions policy,&#13;
a student who does not&#13;
meet the requirements for&#13;
standard admissions may be&#13;
admitted as a conditional.&#13;
These students must be graudates&#13;
of recognized high&#13;
schools, and have appropriate&#13;
scores on English, Mathematics&#13;
and Reading Placement&#13;
Tests. Even though these students&#13;
do not meet all three of&#13;
the criteria listed for the&#13;
standard admission, they can&#13;
demonstrate potential to do&#13;
college-level work and that&#13;
whatever deficiency is identified&#13;
can be corrected with a&#13;
limited amount of remedial&#13;
work.&#13;
The Admissions Policy&#13;
states that students granted&#13;
conditional admissions will be&#13;
rquired to participate in a&#13;
special advising program.&#13;
Each conditional student will&#13;
be assigned an advisor who&#13;
will give written approval for&#13;
course loads, course selection&#13;
and registration changes.&#13;
Other help can be given to&#13;
conditional students when&#13;
necessary.&#13;
All students who are admitted&#13;
should receive any assist-&#13;
Facuity see page 6&#13;
...and student agrees that it's needed&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am amazed that there is&#13;
such an upheaval regarding&#13;
the conditional students. I&#13;
was shocked even to hear&#13;
that there are such students&#13;
at Parkside. I realize that&#13;
Parkside is so desirous to increase&#13;
enrollment that it&#13;
must compromise its policies&#13;
of admissions. However, to&#13;
me a policy is a policy, and&#13;
violations are unforgiveable&#13;
without a change in policy.&#13;
What else angers me is that&#13;
anyone who does not meet the&#13;
ridiculously low entry requirements&#13;
in the first place&#13;
deserves to be guided and&#13;
monitored in his career. At&#13;
the rate the admissions are&#13;
going, I would have qualified&#13;
for enrollment when I finished&#13;
junior high school, so I&#13;
could have graduated by now.&#13;
Except in extreme cases of&#13;
special circumstances, I am&#13;
sure people who do not meet&#13;
the present admission requirements&#13;
do not belong in&#13;
college. (This does not mean&#13;
I think they do not have the&#13;
right to be here.)&#13;
If they do arrive here, they&#13;
most likely belong in and take&#13;
remedial-level courses. I am&#13;
sorry that I have neither the&#13;
time nor the means to research&#13;
such facts and statistics.&#13;
Do not misunderstand&#13;
me, for I love Parkside and&#13;
my classes here, but I am almost&#13;
ashamed to be at a&#13;
school that offers such low&#13;
level classes which teach&#13;
things that should be mastered&#13;
in grammar school and&#13;
high school. If I could afford&#13;
a more prestigious university,&#13;
I would surely be there and&#13;
not here. I do not think the remedial-&#13;
level classes should be&#13;
removed, especially if there&#13;
is need for them, but there&#13;
should not be any need for&#13;
them in the first place.&#13;
My strongest feelings are&#13;
that the conditional students&#13;
Student see page 6&#13;
Gary L. Schneeberger Editor&#13;
Kimberlie Kranich News Editor&#13;
Kelly McKissick Asst. News Editor&#13;
Jenny Carr Feature Editor&#13;
Julie Pendleton Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Jim Neibaur Entertainment Editor&#13;
Robb Luehr Sports Editor&#13;
Mike Rohl Asst. %x&gt;rts Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy Photo Editor&#13;
Jack Bornhuetter Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
Andy Buchanan Business Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Dave Roback. .......Advertising Manager&#13;
Steve Picazo Distribution Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Leo Bose, Bernie Doll, Michelle&#13;
Eirich, Chris Lojeski, Rick Luehr,&#13;
Nancy Marter, Doug McEvoy,&#13;
Michelle Petersen, Ted Price,&#13;
Amy H. Ritter, Bill Serpe, Andy&#13;
Tschumper, Jennie Tunkieicz,&#13;
Tyson Wilda.&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students of UW-Parkside, who are solely responsible for its editorial policy&#13;
and content. It is published every Thursday during the academic year except over breaks and holiaays.&#13;
Letters to the editor will be accepted only if they are typed, double-spaced and 350 words or less. All&#13;
letters must be signed, with a telephone number included for verification purposes. Names will be withheld&#13;
upon request.&#13;
Ranger reserves the right t o edit letters and refuse those which are false and/or defamatory.&#13;
Deadline for all letters, and classified ads, is Monday at 10 a.m. for publication&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Ranger, UW-Parkside Box 2000 Kenosha&#13;
Wl 53141. Telephone 414/553-2287 (Editorial) or 414/553-2295 (Advertising)&#13;
....&#13;
Member of the&#13;
associaTeo&#13;
coneciaTe&#13;
p«essai *&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 12, 1987 3&#13;
Chiwaukee zoning dispute goes on&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
The dispute over the 1,825&#13;
acres of the Chiwaukee Prairie-&#13;
Carol Beach area may&#13;
finally be settled within the&#13;
next month. The fight over&#13;
preservation of the prairie&#13;
and with residents who live in&#13;
that area has been going on&#13;
for many years. The problem&#13;
is what to do with privatelyowned&#13;
and county-owned&#13;
property in areas zoned for&#13;
preservations.&#13;
On January 26, a public&#13;
hearing was held by the&#13;
Kenosha County Planning and&#13;
Development Committee to&#13;
review a map that had been&#13;
developed by the Department&#13;
of Natural Resources (DNR),&#13;
the Southeast Wisconsin Regional&#13;
Planning Commission&#13;
and the Zoning and Development&#13;
Committee. About 1,200&#13;
residents in the prairie were&#13;
sent letters and maps of the&#13;
proposed preservation zoning.&#13;
After hearing public comments&#13;
on the proposed zoning&#13;
map, the Planning and Development&#13;
Committee will vote&#13;
to determine if that map&#13;
could be used. If the zoning is&#13;
adopted, the map will go before&#13;
the Kenosha County&#13;
Board, which will also vote&#13;
for approval of the map. If it&#13;
is approved, the zoning ordinances&#13;
will become law.&#13;
The DNR originally stated&#13;
what land they wanted to buy&#13;
for preservation, and is coded&#13;
C-3 for conservation on the&#13;
map. However, there were already&#13;
residents in much of&#13;
the land zoned for preserva&#13;
A partial map of the over 1,825 acre land dispute in the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie Carol Beach area.&#13;
tion. The Zoning and Development&#13;
Committee allowed the&#13;
privately owned land to be&#13;
left out of C-3 areas.&#13;
Donna Peterson, vice-chair&#13;
of the Chiwaukee Prairie&#13;
Preservation Front, commented&#13;
on the map. "They&#13;
(the Committee) said to the&#13;
residents, 'We'll draw a little&#13;
circle around your lot and we&#13;
won't put you in C-3. But all&#13;
around will be C-3.' So there&#13;
are these little islands where&#13;
people live. But they don't&#13;
care, as long as their land&#13;
isn't_zoned for conservation.&#13;
It's a very strange looking&#13;
map. There are little dots and&#13;
dabs all over (privatelyowned&#13;
land)."&#13;
The real problem of the&#13;
zoning is the presence of&#13;
county-owned land within C-3.&#13;
This land is not occupied by&#13;
any residents, yet it was not&#13;
given to the DNR for preservation.&#13;
The land is intended&#13;
to be used for county parks.&#13;
"Those pieces were not put&#13;
into preservation, they were&#13;
left as 'land proposed to be&#13;
Small Business Center workshop&#13;
The Small Business Development&#13;
Center, directed by&#13;
Don Hancock, will present a&#13;
workshop on basic sales management&#13;
from 8 a.m. to 3&#13;
p.m. on Monday, Feb. 16, in&#13;
Union Room 207.&#13;
Cost of the all-day workshop&#13;
is $74. To register, call&#13;
553-2312.&#13;
Directed toward sales managers,&#13;
the workshop will&#13;
present techniques and resources&#13;
on how to inspire a&#13;
sales force, set priorities,&#13;
identify skills, manage time&#13;
and territory and evaluate&#13;
and control a sales force and&#13;
selling efforts, among other&#13;
topics.&#13;
Instructor will be Alan&#13;
Dankwerth, past president of&#13;
the Kansas City Sales and&#13;
Marketing Executives Association&#13;
and past director of the&#13;
St. Louis Sales and Marketing&#13;
Executives Association. He&#13;
has extensive practical experience&#13;
in all sales and marketing&#13;
management and has&#13;
been director of sales and&#13;
general manager for two successful&#13;
companies.&#13;
Sponsors are the Business&#13;
Outreach/SBDC, UW-Extension,&#13;
in partnership with the&#13;
U.S. Small Business Administration.&#13;
Personnel workshop to be held&#13;
"Personnel and the Law"&#13;
will be the topic of a workshop&#13;
for owners and managers&#13;
of small businesses&#13;
from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, March 10 in Union&#13;
Room 207.&#13;
The workshop, sponsored&#13;
by the Business Outreach Office,&#13;
directed by Dan Hancock,&#13;
will cover federal and&#13;
state laws governing personnel&#13;
policies and procedures.&#13;
Among topics examined will&#13;
be hiring, firing, pregnancy&#13;
discrimination, workers compensation,&#13;
veterans' rights&#13;
and alcohol and drug abuse.&#13;
To register for the workshop,&#13;
which costs $74, call&#13;
553-2047.&#13;
Instructors will be Edward&#13;
Pickett, a UW-Milwaukee&#13;
professor of small business,&#13;
and J.D. Thorne, a Milwaukee&#13;
attorney who specializes&#13;
in employment law and management-&#13;
labor relations.&#13;
The workshop is sponsored&#13;
in cooperation with the Small&#13;
Business Development Center&#13;
and the U.S. Small Business&#13;
Administration.&#13;
Deadline for all Club Events&#13;
is noon Monday for&#13;
publication Thursday.&#13;
preserved.' I'm waiting for&#13;
the county to say, 'Let's have&#13;
a baseball diamond, let's&#13;
have some playground equipment.'&#13;
Then you have all&#13;
these poeple coming in to picnic&#13;
or play baseball, and the&#13;
prairie is impacted. You can&#13;
just see what will happen if&#13;
this land is not turned over to&#13;
preservation," said Peterson.&#13;
An original plan was to&#13;
have alternating corridors or&#13;
urban development and&#13;
preservation land. However,&#13;
this plan seems to have never&#13;
been used. "Without the addition&#13;
of the county park land,"&#13;
explained Peterson, "we do&#13;
not have an environmental&#13;
corridor. Our environmental&#13;
corridor has enormous gaps&#13;
in it. I'm not talking one or&#13;
two blocks, I'm talking a&#13;
quarter of a mile."&#13;
If the county-owned land is&#13;
never developed, Peterson believes&#13;
that the prairie will be&#13;
fine. "But we don't know that&#13;
it will be that way forever.&#13;
Without it being zoned for&#13;
preservation, as long as it belongs&#13;
to the county, anything&#13;
can happen," she said.&#13;
Peterson said she thinks&#13;
that if the Planning and Development&#13;
Committee adopts&#13;
the zoning map and if the&#13;
County Board approves, the&#13;
zoning could become law by&#13;
March 3. She felt that the process&#13;
of approving the map&#13;
would be very carefully done&#13;
because "zoning is very important&#13;
to many people. It&#13;
can be a hot issue. There are&#13;
very strict regulations about&#13;
zoning changes. It will be&#13;
done very slowly and very&#13;
publicly."&#13;
Last call for&#13;
Black History&#13;
essays&#13;
Black History Month writings&#13;
are due by Monday, Feb.&#13;
16 at 11 a.m. in the Ranger office&#13;
(next to the Coffee&#13;
Shoppe). All black students,&#13;
faculty and staff are encouraged&#13;
to submit essays, poetry&#13;
and the like describing your&#13;
experiences. Please type and&#13;
double-space your writings&#13;
and limit them to 500 words_.&#13;
Hear Black&#13;
History on radio&#13;
WGTD, FM 91.1, will celebrate&#13;
Black History Month&#13;
with a special series of reports&#13;
focusing on the history&#13;
of the civil rights movement&#13;
. in Racine and Kenosha. The&#13;
remaining report will be&#13;
heard Feb. 13 at 7:30 a.m.&#13;
during WGTD's daily news&#13;
magazine, "Morning Edition."&#13;
Barb Axelson, producer and&#13;
host for the week-long series&#13;
said, "The series will be a&#13;
look at black history from a&#13;
local perspective, as told by&#13;
Julian Thomas, past president&#13;
of the Racine chapter of&#13;
the NAACP; George Bray,&#13;
who in 1947 organized the&#13;
chapter; Coreen Owens, current&#13;
president of the chapter;&#13;
Mary Mahone, past president&#13;
of the Kenosha chapter; and&#13;
other local leaders from the&#13;
black community. They'll be&#13;
talking about starting up&#13;
local chapters of the NAACP,&#13;
the turbulent 60's and where&#13;
we stand today."&#13;
Now—enjoy a job for MBA's&#13;
while studying to be one!&#13;
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Through internship you can gain valuable management&#13;
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Your degree will be from IIT. the university uniquely able&#13;
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This program is open to individuals with an&#13;
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Chicago, Illinois 60616&#13;
312/567-5140&#13;
4 Thursday, February 12, 1987 RANGER&#13;
News Briefs Writing Center gets computers&#13;
UW faculty salaries delayed&#13;
The University of Wisconsin system has been asked by&#13;
a Circuit Court to explain delays in granting salary increases&#13;
to faculty employees, reported the Wisconsin&#13;
State Journal.&#13;
The Wisconsin Education system went to court, arguing&#13;
that the legislature wanted 6000 UW employees to receive&#13;
salary increases by Jan. 1. UW must report by Feb. 9 to&#13;
Dane County Judge Mark Frankel with an explanation as&#13;
to why salary increases should not be issued.&#13;
Some campuses argued that pay-increase plans were&#13;
too expensive, so UW President Kenneth Shaw postponed&#13;
new "catch-up" increases. This refers to salary raises of&#13;
up to 15 percent over regular salary increases requested&#13;
by UW professors. They said they needed these extra increases&#13;
in order to keep their salaries comparable with&#13;
those of professors from other states.&#13;
Signing a language&#13;
Along with French, German and Spanish, colleges are&#13;
now beginning to accept sign language as fulfillments of&#13;
foreign language requirements, reported the Oshkosh&#13;
Northwestern.&#13;
Universities such as Harvard, Brown, Georgetown, the&#13;
Massachusetts Institute of Technology and several community&#13;
universities have already accepted American Sign&#13;
Language for fulfillment of graduate-level language requirements,&#13;
and several others are considering such a&#13;
move. Legislatures in Maine and Texas have already approved&#13;
sign language as a foreign language, but their universities&#13;
do not yet have programs.&#13;
The issue of sign language began two years ago when&#13;
Joey Schumacher, a deaf student, asked the University of&#13;
Minnesota to accept his proficiency in sign language as&#13;
fulfillment of the foreign language requirement. He was&#13;
initially turned down because the Scholastic Standing&#13;
Committee ruled that sign language did not meet requirements&#13;
for a language: research potential, a national culture&#13;
and syntax. Schumacher appealed and the university&#13;
reversed its decision in November. As a result, the committee&#13;
has begun to formulate a curriculum for sign language.&#13;
Gary W. Olsen, director of the National Association of&#13;
the Deaf, commented that the movement "means deaf&#13;
people will have a lot more opportunity to establish their&#13;
college education in the manner of their choice."&#13;
by Christina Lojeski&#13;
The Writing Center, located&#13;
in the lower level of the library,&#13;
recently received five&#13;
new Zenith computers with&#13;
word processing capabilities,&#13;
purchased through the annual&#13;
university capital expenditure&#13;
department.&#13;
Geoff Gajewski, writing&#13;
specialist, said, "By having&#13;
the computers here, given&#13;
that so many more students&#13;
are involved in word processing&#13;
and writing on word processors&#13;
and given the fact that&#13;
we have this area staffed&#13;
with people who are encouraging,&#13;
and who enjoy working&#13;
with students, and who are&#13;
committed to improving the&#13;
writing abilities of the students&#13;
and ourselves, we feel&#13;
this is a good place to do&#13;
that."&#13;
According to Gajewski having&#13;
word processors in the&#13;
writing center, "helps students&#13;
manipulate their own&#13;
writing. It encourages development.&#13;
One can overwrite&#13;
and edit.&#13;
"Ordinarily, a student only&#13;
puts out enough copy to fulfill&#13;
the requirement. With word&#13;
processing, it becomes more&#13;
enjoyable, and students can&#13;
develop their ideas more. One&#13;
can even select portions from&#13;
one document and insert&#13;
them into another document.&#13;
With word processors, there&#13;
is a greater attentiveness to&#13;
produce a quality piece of&#13;
paper," he continued.&#13;
Gajewski explained that&#13;
writing on a word processor&#13;
makes writing something&#13;
similar to sculpting.&#13;
"With sculpting," he said,&#13;
"you can take away, and you&#13;
can add on clay - you can reshape&#13;
your figure. You can&#13;
take full chunks and reform&#13;
photo by Jack Bornhuetter&#13;
New computers in the Writing Center on the D-1 level of the&#13;
library are for all students who want to capitalize on the&#13;
new technology of writing.&#13;
them, and I think that word&#13;
processors make writing&#13;
something like that."&#13;
According to Gajewski, the&#13;
word processors are not only&#13;
for English students.&#13;
"I've done training with&#13;
students in other courses such&#13;
as psychology, history, and so&#13;
on," he said.&#13;
The student who does not&#13;
know how to run a word processor&#13;
does not have to shy&#13;
away from them, either. According&#13;
to Gajewski, the writing&#13;
center has given many&#13;
students an introduction to&#13;
word processing.&#13;
In addition to the computers&#13;
in the library, where student&#13;
assistants help students&#13;
to work with word processing,&#13;
the writing center can now&#13;
offer "hands-on" help to students&#13;
on the computer, and&#13;
with the content, style and organization&#13;
of their papers.&#13;
Gajewski said, "Many students&#13;
are given a couple&#13;
hours of training and then we&#13;
hope that they come in and&#13;
use the word processor to develop&#13;
skill both in writing and&#13;
word processing."&#13;
The staff of the writing center&#13;
wants to see students actually&#13;
go in and write - not&#13;
just "talk about it."&#13;
While he does believe that&#13;
it is important for students to&#13;
get help with organization,&#13;
proof-reading, etc., Gajewski&#13;
stressed, "We want to see&#13;
students in here with their&#13;
notebooks open, their papers&#13;
spread out, or with their discs&#13;
booted up on the computer.&#13;
And doing writing, creating,&#13;
thinking through their writing&#13;
projects."&#13;
The computers cost approximately&#13;
$1100.00 a piece. This&#13;
cost, according to Gajewski,&#13;
is based on a figure available&#13;
to any student or staff member&#13;
of Parkside.&#13;
Happy Valentine's Day from the Ranger&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
ELECTIONS&#13;
March 9th and 10th&#13;
Positions up for Elections&#13;
PRESIDENT&#13;
S.U.F.A.C. At-large&#13;
VICE-PRESIDENT&#13;
P.U.A.B. At-large&#13;
9 Senate Seats&#13;
Petitions DUE FEBRUARY 27th.&#13;
Available in the P.S.G.A. Office WLLC D139A&#13;
MAXISAVER&#13;
SPECIAL LOW AIR RATES&#13;
NEWARK $ 98&#13;
DENVER $118&#13;
JACKSONVILLE... $119&#13;
TAMPA $159&#13;
ORLANDO $118&#13;
SALT LAKE $153&#13;
PHOENIX $158&#13;
TUCSON $158&#13;
PALM SPRINGS $198&#13;
LOS ANGELES $198&#13;
LAS VEGAS $196&#13;
SEATTLE $198&#13;
Travel must be completed by May 20, 1987. Stay minimum 1 Sat. night, 2 day&#13;
advance purchase. Payment due at time of booking. Tickets are non-refundable&#13;
once tney are purchased. Some restrictions may apply, due to limited space&#13;
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rates.&#13;
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KENOSHA Ph. 654-3551&#13;
WISCONSIN 1-100-342-3666&#13;
1-400-454-5713&#13;
Thursday, February 12, 1987&#13;
Black History Month celebration&#13;
"Through the Eyes of a Black Woman" for everyone&#13;
by Kimberlie Kranich&#13;
News Editor&#13;
"In spite of everything, we&#13;
are a people who have faith&#13;
and determination. Faith,&#13;
strength and determination in&#13;
spite of."&#13;
This is the message Mary&#13;
Helena (also known as Mary&#13;
Woods) would like people to&#13;
understand after they view&#13;
her one-woman show,&#13;
"Through the Eyes of a Black&#13;
Woman," which can be seen&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 21 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
"Through the Eyes of a&#13;
Black Woman" is part of the&#13;
celebration of Black History&#13;
Month, and is sponsored by&#13;
the Black History Month committee.&#13;
All proceeds will go to&#13;
the Willie Mae Dawkins Memorial&#13;
Scholarship Fund.&#13;
Mary Helena will entertain&#13;
and educate her audience&#13;
about the African-American&#13;
experience at different points&#13;
in history through dramatic&#13;
readings and audiovisuals.&#13;
She will present some of her&#13;
own work along with the&#13;
readings of such talent as Sojourner&#13;
Truth and Paul Laurence&#13;
Dunbar.&#13;
"Sojourner Truth was an&#13;
abolitionist and a woman who&#13;
spoke out in defense of&#13;
women's rights," explained&#13;
Mary Helena. "She was without&#13;
a doubt one of the first&#13;
black women to have an interest&#13;
that took her beyond&#13;
her own living room.&#13;
"Lots of people have an interest&#13;
in a lot of things, but&#13;
it's that armchair type of interest.&#13;
Truth was one of the&#13;
first to get out there and get&#13;
up on the platform," she continued.&#13;
Mary Helena also admires&#13;
Dunbar because he "was a&#13;
fantastic poet and writer of&#13;
enormous range from sonnets&#13;
and short stories to dialect&#13;
poetry."&#13;
Mary Helena had the idea&#13;
for a one woman show for&#13;
some time. "Initially, I had&#13;
different characters that I&#13;
wanted to present because I&#13;
see a lot of people and I&#13;
watch them very closely,"&#13;
she said. "I'd like to make a&#13;
recipe out of this person's&#13;
laughter, this person's thinking&#13;
patterns and this person's&#13;
dressing style and put them&#13;
all together."&#13;
Mary Helena said that she&#13;
chose the title "Through the&#13;
The Old&#13;
Book Corner&#13;
312 - 6th Street, Racine&#13;
Has a Special&#13;
Collection of Books&#13;
on Black Literature&#13;
and History During&#13;
February.&#13;
Come and Browse!&#13;
photo by Kimberlie Kranich&#13;
Mary Helena rehearses for her one-woman show, "Through&#13;
the Eyes of a Black Woman," which will be presented on&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 21 at 7 p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Eyes of a Black Woman" because&#13;
"I am a black woman&#13;
and I am seeing things&#13;
through my perspective.&#13;
There are a lot of black&#13;
women who have difficulties&#13;
with the women's movement&#13;
because some black women&#13;
do not want to be identified as&#13;
just a woman," she explained.&#13;
"You can't just leave your&#13;
blackness at the door when&#13;
you go to the NOW (National&#13;
Organization of Women)&#13;
meeting," continued Mary&#13;
Helena. "Whatever I do, I&#13;
can't do it just as a woman. I&#13;
wouldn't say I would do the&#13;
show just as a black person,&#13;
because I am a woman. The&#13;
pieces I interpret will be&#13;
through my eyes."&#13;
Mary Helena's show will&#13;
present material on slavery.&#13;
"Some people can say, 'Well,&#13;
the slavery thing's been beaten&#13;
over the head. Why do we&#13;
have to hear about that?' But&#13;
to me, for black people to forget&#13;
the reality of slavery is&#13;
like forgetting the Holocaust.&#13;
"There are some things you&#13;
may be experiencing that are&#13;
a result of slavery and you&#13;
may not even know that&#13;
you're experiencing these&#13;
things," she said.&#13;
"That system (slavery)&#13;
was so evil, so pervasive that&#13;
we still, in many ways, are&#13;
affected by it. That hatred (of&#13;
whites toward blacks) went&#13;
so deep it was passed down in&#13;
mothers' milk.&#13;
"I'm not saying that it&#13;
(racism) has to continue, but&#13;
when you check out the history,&#13;
it gives you a better understanding&#13;
of where you are&#13;
and it also gives you more appreciation&#13;
for where you can&#13;
get to," Mary Helena continued.&#13;
Despite the fact that slavery&#13;
was a part of Black&#13;
Americans' and whites' history,&#13;
Mary Helena doesn't feel&#13;
that most blacks have a hatred&#13;
toward whites. "Black&#13;
people don't really have hate&#13;
because we are a God-loving,&#13;
God-fearing, God-serving people.&#13;
We are a very religious&#13;
people," she said.&#13;
Mary Helena is excited&#13;
about her show because of its&#13;
universality. "All of this stuff&#13;
is about the black experience&#13;
but I say good work is universal.&#13;
If it's good work, it's&#13;
about people because there&#13;
are so many commonalities&#13;
that we all have like love&#13;
gone sour, abortions, problems&#13;
with children and&#13;
drugs."&#13;
Mary Helena has been in&#13;
the theater for a long time.&#13;
She is majoring in both industrial&#13;
organizational psychology&#13;
and dramatic arts and has&#13;
cPe//u&gt;mmen&lt;&#13;
(Coffee Shop)&#13;
Will Cater Small Parties Upon Availability&#13;
Hours: Mon.-Sat. 8-5 •Sun. 12-5&#13;
Friarswood Mall&#13;
4015 - 80th Street • Kenosha, Wl 53142&#13;
Phone: 694-8508&#13;
acted in Parkside's theatrical&#13;
productions of such plays as&#13;
last summer's Mark Twain&#13;
production and in "Trojan&#13;
Women." She enjoys theater&#13;
because "it's a vehicle in&#13;
which you can teach and influence,"&#13;
she said. Her years&#13;
of experience have taught her&#13;
valuable lessons.&#13;
"One thing that artists in&#13;
general but minorities in&#13;
particular who are in performing&#13;
arts need to do is be&#13;
more creative," said Mary&#13;
Helena. "Not just in their&#13;
performance but in their&#13;
marketing. If a show doesn't&#13;
cast you, get your own show.&#13;
We need to find more outlets&#13;
for ourselves and not be dependent&#13;
upon someone else&#13;
because they may not have a&#13;
place for you and it may not&#13;
be that you are not talented. I&#13;
think more people need to&#13;
blaze their own trails. Otherwise,&#13;
they're going to be out&#13;
in the wilderness for a long&#13;
time."&#13;
The process of becoming&#13;
more creative has to start&#13;
with one's children, said&#13;
Mary Helena. "We need to&#13;
give them (children) that&#13;
hunger to really know about&#13;
themselves. I think for black&#13;
people to really appreciate&#13;
themselves, they're going to&#13;
have to go back to Africa and&#13;
dig there.&#13;
"We need to instill in our&#13;
children a sense of responsibility&#13;
that goes beyond themselves,"&#13;
continued Mary Helena.&#13;
"There is a very&#13;
'gimme, gimme' generation&#13;
that's growing up with very&#13;
little responsibility that goes&#13;
beyond themselves.&#13;
"We need to instill a love, a&#13;
culture and a sense of responsibility&#13;
in our children because&#13;
that's our hope. I've&#13;
Helena see page 12&#13;
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For more information, call Iisa&#13;
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6 Thursday, February 12,1987&#13;
&gt;* * • • 1&#13;
RANGER&#13;
photo by Jack Bornhuetter Admiring art&#13;
Jeff Calvert (I) and John Kilmek admire Dennis Bayuzick's artwork.&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Letter - Faculty&#13;
Faculty from page 2&#13;
ance necessary for them to&#13;
make a successful start in the&#13;
pursuit of a college education.&#13;
The conditional student receives&#13;
assistance through the&#13;
special advising program. An&#13;
advisor will help these students&#13;
evaluate their educational&#13;
skills and design an appropriate&#13;
program of study.&#13;
Special care is given to help&#13;
students to select correct&#13;
entry level courses in mathematics&#13;
and English and in&#13;
particular to enroll in only&#13;
those courses for which they&#13;
have the necessary prerequisites.&#13;
The new admissions policy&#13;
is an effort by the faculty to&#13;
help admitted students be&#13;
successful. I hope the number&#13;
of students who view the new&#13;
admissions policy in a negative&#13;
way is a small part of all&#13;
students.&#13;
Samual R. Filippone&#13;
Associate Professor of&#13;
Mathematics&#13;
Chair, Admissions, Records&#13;
and Student Information&#13;
Committee&#13;
Letter - Student&#13;
Student from page 2&#13;
should appreciate the fact&#13;
that they are in college at all.&#13;
The school bends for them in&#13;
allowing them enrollment, so&#13;
they should bend for the&#13;
school in allowing it to provide&#13;
for them the best chance&#13;
of succeeding here. It is for&#13;
their benefit to receive supervision&#13;
and guidance in their&#13;
studies. It is a privilege for&#13;
them to be here at all.&#13;
If these students were Japanese&#13;
or Europeans, they&#13;
would have no chance of even&#13;
getting near a school. In&#13;
France, the country I know&#13;
best, the schools are so demanding&#13;
that only the very&#13;
top students gain a university&#13;
education. Sometimes this is&#13;
unfortunate within the country&#13;
because it creates a class&#13;
of educated elite, but every&#13;
culture has its problems.&#13;
The grading system is&#13;
strict such that very competent&#13;
students receive mediocre&#13;
grades, and perfect&#13;
scores (our A's) are only&#13;
ideals to strive for. Nobody&#13;
actually receives them.&#13;
Kim Barskaitiki&#13;
Important meeting&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA)&#13;
Senate was a "busy body"&#13;
Monday, undertaking three&#13;
important courses of action.&#13;
First was an endorsement&#13;
of National Condom Week&#13;
(Feb. 14-22), which is devoted&#13;
to promoting a more open,&#13;
mature view of sex.&#13;
"We felt it was important&#13;
to show our support of this&#13;
week," commented Adrian&#13;
Serrano, PSGA president. "It&#13;
promotes safe sex, and in this&#13;
day and age, with AIDS on&#13;
the rise, safe sex is very important."&#13;
The senate also passed a&#13;
policy statement clarifying&#13;
the mandatory naming of students&#13;
to university search&#13;
and screen committees. Although&#13;
students are currently&#13;
involved in most search proceedings,&#13;
Serrano says the&#13;
new policy "gets a little more&#13;
specific," and should therefore&#13;
receive endorsement&#13;
from the administration,&#13;
which rejected an earlier proposal&#13;
as too vague.&#13;
In other important business,&#13;
Serrano announced his&#13;
plans to seek the presidency&#13;
of United Council (UC), the&#13;
student issues lobbying organization&#13;
headquartered in&#13;
Madison. He currently serves&#13;
as UC vice-president.&#13;
"I care about the organization,"&#13;
Serrano explained.&#13;
"Even though I'm graduating&#13;
in May, I'm not ready to stop&#13;
working on student issues.&#13;
Besides," he added, "I feel&#13;
I'm the most qualified candidate."&#13;
Kaplan in Moscow&#13;
Kaplan from page 1&#13;
The U.S. delegation's visit&#13;
to Sakharov's and Bonner's&#13;
modest Moscow apartment&#13;
included dinner for all ten&#13;
members, even though, according&#13;
to Kaplan, food is difficult&#13;
to come by in Russia.&#13;
The dinner conversation was&#13;
"extremely stimulating intellectually,&#13;
covering everything&#13;
from human rights to disarmament,"&#13;
and the whole evening&#13;
was characteristic of the&#13;
still-outspoken dissidents.&#13;
"They have become the&#13;
clearinghouse for the whole&#13;
dissident movement in Moscow,"&#13;
Kaplan explained, noting&#13;
that "people are always&#13;
coming and going; apparently&#13;
the door is never&#13;
locked. They are always willing&#13;
to make an effort to help&#13;
others. They're very kind,&#13;
very sweet poeple."&#13;
As for her experience in&#13;
Russia as a whole, Kaplan is&#13;
similarly laudatory. She&#13;
PUT YOUR COLLEGE&#13;
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Going south for&#13;
spring break?&#13;
... Well, you don't have to&#13;
look like a snow bird.&#13;
Start your tan at Ruffolo's Hair Studio&#13;
and Tanning Salon.&#13;
For that healthy tanned look.&#13;
Student Special&#13;
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3519 52nd St. 654 6154&#13;
Free Bottle of&#13;
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admits to having felt a certain&#13;
amount of anti-American&#13;
sentiment from the country's&#13;
lay people, but for the most&#13;
part she believes forward&#13;
strides are being made.&#13;
"As Sakharov said to us,"&#13;
Kaplan explained, "we're in a&#13;
time of flux. That means&#13;
you're sometimes going to get&#13;
mixed messages from the&#13;
Soviet Union, but the thing to&#13;
look at is the trend line. And&#13;
he, for one, seems to think&#13;
the trend is going in the right&#13;
direction."&#13;
Clubs from pag e 7&#13;
be conducting the workshop&#13;
which will be an introduction&#13;
to the use of the "Statistical&#13;
Package for the Social&#13;
Sciences" as used on campus.&#13;
Psi Chi&#13;
Psychology Club&#13;
The Psi/Chi Psychology&#13;
Club will be holding a meeting&#13;
on Wednesday, Feb. 18&#13;
from 1-2 p.m. in Molinaro 311.&#13;
There will be a panel discussion&#13;
with former graduates&#13;
regarding their experiences&#13;
and how their background in&#13;
psychology has helped them.&#13;
Ballots will be finalized for&#13;
the elections of new officers.&#13;
All are welcome.&#13;
Accounting Club&#13;
There will be an Accounting&#13;
Club meeting on Monday,&#13;
Feb. 16 at 1 p.m. in Union 106.&#13;
The guest speaker will be Michael&#13;
Collins from Dun and&#13;
Broadstreet.&#13;
Physics Club&#13;
The Physics Club will be&#13;
showing the 12 original Flash&#13;
Gordon episodes on consecutive&#13;
Wednesdays beginning&#13;
Feb. 18. Two episodes will be&#13;
shown each Wednesday at 1&#13;
p.m. in Greenquist 230. All&#13;
are welcome.&#13;
7 RANGER park's dept.&#13;
The Files&#13;
One Year Ago&#13;
Feb. 13, 1986&#13;
Kaplan named Parkside chancellor&#13;
Sheila I. Kaplan, chief academic officer of the Minnesota&#13;
State University System, was appointed chancellor of&#13;
Parkside on Friday by the UW-System Board of Regents.&#13;
"I am quite delighted and pleased that the Regents&#13;
showed such confidence in me," said Kaplan.&#13;
Kaplan was one of five finalists recommended by the&#13;
Parkside Search and Screen committee to a sub-committee&#13;
of the Board of Regents in December.&#13;
Five Years Ago&#13;
Feb. 11, 1983&#13;
Teaching excellence procedure unchanged&#13;
After the recent issues and arguments brought up over&#13;
the Teacher Excellence Awards, it has been suggested&#13;
that the procedure this year be run under the current policy.&#13;
During the December 1981 University Committee meeting,&#13;
Eugene Norwood introduced a proposal to approve&#13;
the resolution that would replace the current policy on&#13;
teaching awards. The specified change would have broadened&#13;
the eligibility requirements and cut down the potential&#13;
number of nominees from 60 to 30. The current policy&#13;
states that no fewer than two and no more than five&#13;
teaching excellence awards shall be granted in an academic&#13;
year. No more than one member of the institutional&#13;
staff of an academic division shall receive the award and&#13;
the recipients will remain ineligible for the award for five&#13;
years after receiving it.&#13;
Week at the Park&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 12&#13;
Winter Carnival: continues&#13;
today with a faculty/staff&#13;
waterball toss and volleyball&#13;
finals.&#13;
Workshop: "Introduction to&#13;
SAS" starts at 2 p.m. in&#13;
WLLC D117. Call ext. 2235 for&#13;
reservations.&#13;
Blood Pressure Check: from&#13;
11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in WLLC&#13;
and from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. in&#13;
Molinaro Hall. Call ext. 2366&#13;
for more information.&#13;
Coffeehouse: featuring the&#13;
Graf Brothers from noon to 2&#13;
p.m. and from 6 p.m. to 8&#13;
p.m. in Union Square. The&#13;
event is free and open to the&#13;
public. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Friday, Feb. 13&#13;
Winter Carnival: ends today&#13;
with the kickball finals, tug of&#13;
war and a dance, which is&#13;
listed below.&#13;
Workshop: "Selling Your&#13;
Small Business" starts at&#13;
8: 30 a.m. in Union 207. Call&#13;
ext. 2047 for details.&#13;
Movie: "The Gods Must Be&#13;
Crazy" (PG) will be shown at&#13;
1:30 p.m. and at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
is free for Parkside and Carthage&#13;
students and $2 for&#13;
others. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Workshop: "Lotus 1-2-3"&#13;
starts at 2 p.m. in WLLC&#13;
D150E. Call ext. 2235 for&#13;
reservations.&#13;
Video: "Superman 1" will be&#13;
shown at 4 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square. All are welcome.&#13;
Dance: featuring the "Cheeters"&#13;
starts at 8 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square. Admission is $2 for&#13;
Parkside students and $3 for&#13;
others. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 14&#13;
Short Course: "Beginning Appleworks"&#13;
starts at 9 a.m. in&#13;
WLLC Computer Lab. Sponsored&#13;
by the Continuing&#13;
Education Office.&#13;
Program: "Dr. King's&#13;
Dream" by the Mixed Blood&#13;
Theatre Company at 5 p.m. in&#13;
the Union Cinema. The event&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 15&#13;
Movie: "The Gods Must Be&#13;
Crazy" will be repeated at&#13;
: 30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Feb. 16&#13;
Seminar: "Basic Sales Management"&#13;
starts at 8 a.m.&#13;
Sponsored by the Small Business&#13;
Development Center.&#13;
Film Discussion: "Aaron&#13;
Loves Angela" will be shown&#13;
at 11:30 a.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. The program is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
Round Table: "Mondragon:&#13;
A Working Example of Non-&#13;
Statistic Socialism" by Prof.&#13;
Ken Hoover starts at noon in&#13;
Union 106. The program is&#13;
open to the public at no&#13;
charge.&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 17&#13;
Workshop: "Introduction to&#13;
SPSSX" starts at 2 p.m. in&#13;
WLLC D117. Call ext. 2236 for&#13;
more information.&#13;
Short Course: "Water Color&#13;
Nature Series" starts at 7&#13;
p.m. in CA 111. Sponsored by&#13;
the Continuing Education Office,&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 18&#13;
Panel Discussion: "Black&#13;
Women Achieving" starts at 1&#13;
p.m. in Union 104-106. The&#13;
program is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
Movie: "Richard HI" will be&#13;
shown at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission is&#13;
free for Parkside and Car-&#13;
•thage students and $2 for&#13;
others. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 19&#13;
Breakfast Seminar: "Budgeting&#13;
for Financial Exigencies"&#13;
by Fred Patrie starts at 7:45&#13;
a.m. in Union 106. Call ext.&#13;
2518 for reservations.&#13;
Movie: "Lonely Hearts" will&#13;
be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Tickets for the&#13;
Thursday Foreign Film Series&#13;
will be available at the&#13;
door.&#13;
Thursday, February 12, 1987&#13;
SWEA&#13;
Student Wisconsin Education&#13;
Association (SWEA) will&#13;
be sponsoring a discussion on&#13;
teachers' unions and will be&#13;
giving a tour of the Kenosha&#13;
Educator Association (KEA)&#13;
Center in Kenosha on February&#13;
25 at 5:30 p.m. in the&#13;
KEA center.&#13;
In March, Jose Martinez&#13;
will speak about Teacher Expectations/&#13;
Student Achievement&#13;
(TESA).&#13;
PAB&#13;
The Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) will be sponsoring&#13;
a trip to the Brewers'&#13;
home opening game on Monday,&#13;
April 6. The cost will be&#13;
$10 and includes tickets,&#13;
transportation and a tailgate&#13;
party. The bus will leave at&#13;
10 a.m. Tickets are available&#13;
at the Information Desk.&#13;
Sociology Club&#13;
The Sociology Club will&#13;
hold a special meeting on&#13;
Friday, Feb. 20 at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
in Molinaro 214 to elect a new&#13;
president. All those who are&#13;
interested are requested to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Club Events1&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
The Pi Sigma Epsilon Co-ed&#13;
Marketing Fraternity will be&#13;
holding a meeting every Wednesday&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Molinaro&#13;
116.&#13;
Phi Alpha Theta&#13;
Phi Alpha Theta, an Honor&#13;
Society in History, will sponsor&#13;
a book sale on Monday,&#13;
Feb. 16 and Tuesday, Feb. 17&#13;
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the&#13;
Molinaro Concourse.&#13;
Computer Workshop&#13;
A computer orientation&#13;
class will be held Thursday,&#13;
Feb. 19 from 2-4 p.m. in&#13;
WLLC D117. M. Gurtman will&#13;
Clubs see page 6&#13;
a Sptittg Bieak&#13;
L fycwuuca&#13;
'roject Manager&#13;
Needed&#13;
FREE vacation&#13;
plus $$$$&#13;
-800-237-2061&#13;
FIRST&#13;
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KENOSHA'S ONLY INDEPENDENT&#13;
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PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
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MEMBER F.D.I.C. PHONE: 658-2331&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
SPRING BREAK,s DA YTONA BEACH&#13;
March 13-22, 1987&#13;
Arrangements by&#13;
Echo Travel, Inc.&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
$235 QUAD OCCUPANCY&#13;
THIS QUALITY TRIP INCLUDES&#13;
• Round trip transportation by ultra-modern motor&#13;
coach, bathroom equipped and air conditioned.&#13;
• Seven nights lodging at the Oceanfront International&#13;
Inn Hotel, center of a ctivities on the trip.&#13;
• Planned deck parties, contest, activities, etc. almost&#13;
daily.&#13;
• Optional excursions available to Epcot Center, Disney&#13;
World, party boats, luaus, etc.&#13;
• University escort throughout, plus full time travel representatives&#13;
available daily while in Florida.&#13;
This Is a trip for the student who cares about the&#13;
quality of the Spring Break vacation.&#13;
If yo u care about where you stay, what kind of bus you&#13;
ride, and how good your parties, discounts and&#13;
excursions are, sign up before this trip is full. Echo Travel&#13;
has been the number one quality college tour operator to&#13;
Daytorta for many years, last year handling over 9,000&#13;
people during Spring Break alone.&#13;
Don't trite the RISK of traveling vrtth someone&#13;
SIGN UP NOW AT&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION OFFICE&#13;
R 209 8-4:30&#13;
OR FOR MORE INFORMATION&#13;
CALL 553-2294&#13;
8 Thursday, February 12, 1987 RANGER&#13;
RUFFOLO'S&#13;
THE SPECIAL PIZZA&#13;
• THIN CRUST • PAN PIZZA&#13;
• PARTY PIZZA • HOT BOMBERS&#13;
• HENNY PENNY CHICKEN&#13;
• ITALIAN SPECIALTY DINNERS&#13;
MON. THRU THURS.&#13;
4 PM -11:30 PM&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. 4 PM -1:30 PM&#13;
SUN. 11:30 AM -11:30 PM&#13;
656-0685 DINE IN&#13;
CARRY OUTS&#13;
4621 38th Ave. Kenosha&#13;
Residence halls create "real" college atmosphere&#13;
Very Special Arts&#13;
Festival scheduled&#13;
More than 1,200 handicapped&#13;
people, most of them&#13;
children, will participate in&#13;
the eighth annual Racine-&#13;
Kenosha Very Special Arts&#13;
Festival on Tuesday, March&#13;
17, at Parkside.&#13;
The festival, held during&#13;
spring break, is one of a number&#13;
of similar festivals occurring&#13;
around the country and&#13;
has had the largest number of&#13;
participants in the nation the&#13;
past several years.&#13;
The festival offers handicapped&#13;
persons hands-on&#13;
workshop experience, performances,&#13;
and exhibits involving&#13;
both the fine and performing&#13;
arts. About 80 artists,&#13;
performers and craftsmen&#13;
from the Kenosha, Racine&#13;
and Milwaukee areas&#13;
will be involved. A number of&#13;
volunteers also will help with&#13;
the program.&#13;
Festival participants will&#13;
come from the Racine and&#13;
Mike Sliwa, Rob White, Rich Miller and Paul Heigel strut their stuff in the lip sync contest&#13;
Monday in Union Square.&#13;
Kenosha Unified School Dis-&#13;
-tricts, outlying schools in Racine&#13;
and Kenosha counties&#13;
and adult centers in the two&#13;
counties. They include mentally&#13;
handicapped, hearing&#13;
impaired, visually impaired,&#13;
orthopedically handicapped,&#13;
learning disabled, behavioral&#13;
disabled and those with&#13;
chronic diseases.&#13;
The festival is organized by&#13;
the Very Special Arts Festival&#13;
Committee, an organization&#13;
of area educators and&#13;
other interested community&#13;
residents. It is funded by&#13;
businesses and service organizations&#13;
in Racine and Kenosha,&#13;
by the National Committee&#13;
on Arts for the Handicapped&#13;
(an educational affiliate&#13;
of the John F. Kennedy&#13;
Center for the Performing&#13;
Arts) and by the Very Special&#13;
Arts-Wisconsin group.&#13;
Festival director is Diane&#13;
Welsh, student activities program&#13;
advisor. The festival&#13;
will run from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.&#13;
throughout the campus, and&#13;
an art show of works by&#13;
handicapped people will also&#13;
be displayed.&#13;
Total&#13;
Service&#13;
for&#13;
U. W. Parkside&#13;
Employees&#13;
and&#13;
Students&#13;
rector of housing, is very&#13;
pleased to see the progress&#13;
Parkside has made with the&#13;
addition of the residence&#13;
halls. "The housing staff and&#13;
I are working to create a&#13;
small community with a fun&#13;
atmosphere. Since the housing&#13;
is so new, there are so&#13;
many traditions to be created&#13;
and many house activities to&#13;
participate in. I am very&#13;
pleased with what has been&#13;
accomplished so far," she explained.&#13;
The halls have attracted&#13;
students from all over the&#13;
United States to students&#13;
from just the Kenosha/Racine&#13;
area. Christina Sibilsky,&#13;
from Kenosha, explains,&#13;
"There are several reasons&#13;
why I moved into the dorms.&#13;
The dorms are extremely&#13;
comfortable; it's like living in&#13;
an apartment. It saves me a&#13;
lot of driving time, and I'm&#13;
closer to the library. It's also&#13;
a lot of fun and the weekends&#13;
are great!"&#13;
Ken Karanoff, from New&#13;
York, comments, "I came to&#13;
Parkside because of a&#13;
friend's recommendation. It's&#13;
okay here, but too political.&#13;
The people are also much&#13;
slower. There is a good&#13;
chance tht I'll return. I do&#13;
like living in the dorms and&#13;
the people are nice."&#13;
A large percent of the residence&#13;
halls are occupied with&#13;
students on athletic scholarships.&#13;
"I came here on a&#13;
baseball scholarship," explained&#13;
Rob Peiffer. "I like&#13;
Parkside and living in the&#13;
dorms. I feel that they are too&#13;
strict, though, on a lot of&#13;
things. I strongly feel that the&#13;
food plan should be optional.&#13;
Otherwise, these dorms are&#13;
much nicer than most other&#13;
housing that I've seen. I'm&#13;
sure I'll be back next year,"&#13;
he added.&#13;
Along with the residence&#13;
halls, especially new ones,&#13;
can come excessive party&#13;
life. Jim Maastricht explained,&#13;
"I like living in the&#13;
dorms, but it is impossible to&#13;
study. There is really too&#13;
much noise. I usually have to&#13;
do most of my studying in the&#13;
library during the week — the&#13;
weekends I don't care."&#13;
Macho men?&#13;
TallentHall&#13;
by Michelle Eirich&#13;
The addition of the residence&#13;
halls to campus has&#13;
been a large success. Before&#13;
housing was a part of Parkside,&#13;
the school had a strong&#13;
reputation of being a commuter&#13;
institution. But, since&#13;
the spacious, apartment-style&#13;
student housing has opened in&#13;
late summer of 1986, Parkside's&#13;
image is definitely&#13;
changing for the better.&#13;
The residence halls have&#13;
added a fun and exciting atmosphere&#13;
to Parkside, according&#13;
to those who live&#13;
there. There also has been a&#13;
strong increase in participation&#13;
of athletics, club activities,&#13;
and dances, say housing&#13;
administrators.&#13;
Diane Schellinger, the di-&#13;
Work One Weekend&#13;
A Month And Earn&#13;
$18,000 For College.&#13;
With the New GI Bill and the Army National Guard.&#13;
If you have the mind for college, but not the&#13;
money, the Army National Guard has a golden&#13;
opportunity for you.&#13;
Lend us your brainpower one weekend a&#13;
month and two weeks a year, and we'll give you&#13;
$18,000 or more for college.&#13;
Under the New GI Bill, you'll qualify for up&#13;
to $5,000 for tuition and books. Then, you'll get&#13;
another $11,000—or more— in monthly Army&#13;
Guard paychecks. Plus, a cash bonus of up to&#13;
$2,000 as soon as you finish Advanced Individual Training.&#13;
And if you have college loans, the Guard will help you pay those&#13;
off, too, with up to $1,500 extra per year.&#13;
No other service offers you so many educational benefits, and asks&#13;
so little of your time.&#13;
So, if you can spare one weekend a month for your fTTTd!?&#13;
country, call your local recruiter.&#13;
And help yourself to a higher education. ^&#13;
SFC Willie Morgan&#13;
(414) 656-6496 National Guard&#13;
Army National Guard&#13;
A mericons A t Their Best.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
T&#13;
Thursday, February 12, 1987 9&#13;
Zavada's farewell a beginning, not an end&#13;
by Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
When the lights came up on&#13;
the Parkside stage one evening&#13;
last semester, it was&#13;
Katie Zavada's last performance&#13;
as a dancer.&#13;
Zavada's dancing farewell&#13;
was not a sad occasion, but&#13;
an opportunity for her to&#13;
begin new projects and to&#13;
spend more time with her&#13;
daughter, Laura.&#13;
Zavada has always thrived&#13;
on a schedule that would&#13;
make most people dizzy, and&#13;
which is complicated by her&#13;
course load. She is an adjunct&#13;
assistant professor of dramatic&#13;
arts, and she currently&#13;
teaches Stage Movement II&#13;
and Show Dance.&#13;
She also teaches Ballet and&#13;
Jazz dancing for the UW-Extension&#13;
at Parkside and Ballet&#13;
for the 8-12 age group for&#13;
the UW-Extension in Milwaukee.&#13;
In addition, she has her&#13;
own dance studio in Hales&#13;
Corners, where she also&#13;
teaches.&#13;
Despite such a hectic lifestyle,&#13;
Zavada foremost&#13;
strives to do everything well.&#13;
It was her drive for perfection&#13;
that made her decide to&#13;
stop performing as a dancer.&#13;
"I'm kind of an overachiever&#13;
and it just takes so&#13;
much time teaching and so&#13;
much time rehearsing and I&#13;
found I just didn't have&#13;
enough time for Laura. I only&#13;
have a few years to leave my&#13;
imprint on her, then she'll be&#13;
in school, "she said.&#13;
Zavada's spending time at&#13;
home with her two-year-old&#13;
will also allow her husband,&#13;
Paul, to continue working on&#13;
his Ph.D. "I've been gone all&#13;
these years and now it's time&#13;
for me to spend time at&#13;
home," she said.&#13;
But Zavada certainly hasn't&#13;
slowed down. She recently&#13;
choreographed a production&#13;
of "The Pajama Party" at&#13;
Nicolet High School in Glendale,&#13;
which is the 43rd musi-&#13;
THE FAR SIDE&#13;
cal she's choreographed. She&#13;
is also taking an education&#13;
course at Parkside toward&#13;
her education certification.&#13;
This summer she hopes to&#13;
again study voice and theater.&#13;
Zavada, who grew up in the&#13;
spot light, won't say she'll&#13;
never perform again.&#13;
At the age of four, Zavada&#13;
and her five sisters began&#13;
performing around the Eau&#13;
Claire area, much like a "female&#13;
Osmond" group, she&#13;
said. "I'm probably one of&#13;
the last people to have ever&#13;
done a minstrel show," she&#13;
added. Zavada didn't get serious&#13;
about performing until&#13;
she was 17.&#13;
Her sisters, she feels, were&#13;
better dancers, but Zavada&#13;
learned to become the better&#13;
performer. "My acting pulled&#13;
me through when my technique&#13;
was not as strong when&#13;
I was younger, but now both&#13;
are pretty strong. My leg&#13;
wasn't up to my ear, but I&#13;
learned to go up on stage and&#13;
sell, so now I have a real&#13;
sense of stage presence," she&#13;
said.&#13;
Dancing became Zavada's&#13;
primary focus when she was&#13;
at UW-Milwaukee working on&#13;
her bachelor of fine arts.&#13;
"I was in the theatre in&#13;
musicals and there were all&#13;
these dance parts. I thought I&#13;
should really learn to dance. I&#13;
didn't want to be 80 years old&#13;
sitting in my rocking chair,&#13;
saying 'Gee, I wish I would've&#13;
tried dancing,' " she&#13;
said.&#13;
A hip defect on her left side&#13;
has been more of an asset&#13;
than a hindrance to the dancer&#13;
and teacher. "I developed&#13;
a great sense of anatomy because&#13;
of my own hip defect so&#13;
now I'm able to help students&#13;
find what muscles to develop&#13;
to make them stronger," said&#13;
Zavada.&#13;
After graduating from UWM,&#13;
Zavada went on the road&#13;
to perform. Her credits in-&#13;
By GARY LARSON&#13;
Katie Zavada is both mother&#13;
(above) and dancer&#13;
elude the Vienna Operetta,&#13;
the Island Touring Group, a&#13;
jazz combo group, a modern&#13;
dance group and a great deal&#13;
of freelance work.&#13;
Zavada taught dance at various&#13;
times between her touring&#13;
stints. "I always knew&#13;
when I wanted to dance and&#13;
when I wanted to teach," she&#13;
said.&#13;
At 38 years old, Zavada&#13;
feels that although she is&#13;
physically very young, she&#13;
may want to do other kinds of&#13;
performing, such as voice&#13;
and acting.&#13;
"I've enjoyed what I've&#13;
done and I wanted to go out&#13;
on top. I plan to keep up on&#13;
dancing and I'll continue to&#13;
choreograph with other dancers&#13;
rather than dance myself,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
"As long as I have students&#13;
dancing part of me will&#13;
always be dancing too, even&#13;
though I'm not performing,"&#13;
said Zavada.&#13;
'So, until next week Actios, omoebas&#13;
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&gt; 10 Thursday, February 12, 1987 RANGER&#13;
Summer&#13;
internships&#13;
available&#13;
now&#13;
The National College Internship&#13;
Service, specializing&#13;
in internship development for&#13;
college students, is now accepting&#13;
applications for summer&#13;
1987 internships.&#13;
- Placements are available&#13;
with sponsoring companies in&#13;
New York City, on Long Island&#13;
and in Westchester.&#13;
Placements are individually&#13;
designed, fully supervised&#13;
and evaluated. New for 1987:&#13;
more paid internships.&#13;
Please call or write for application&#13;
material:&#13;
National College Internship&#13;
Service 374 New York Avenue,&#13;
Huntington, New York&#13;
11743 ( 516) 673-0440 or contact&#13;
your career and internship&#13;
placement offices on campus.&#13;
MON. &amp; WED.&#13;
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ADORES&#13;
Program offers support to students&#13;
by Julie L. Pendleton&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Recently it was noted that a&#13;
few students with the "conditional"&#13;
admissions status&#13;
were upset by a letter sent to&#13;
them by Carol Cashen, learning&#13;
assistance and counseling&#13;
director.&#13;
They felt that it added requirements&#13;
to those already&#13;
stated in their admissions acceptance&#13;
letter.&#13;
However, a letter sent to&#13;
these conditional students by&#13;
Stuart Rubner, director of&#13;
student counseling and testing,&#13;
states that "even though&#13;
you did not meet all the requirements&#13;
for admissions, a&#13;
review of your overall record&#13;
indicates potential for success&#13;
in college. You have therefore&#13;
been admitted on the condition&#13;
that you meet with an advisor&#13;
and follow the prescribed&#13;
program for you."&#13;
The particular program is not&#13;
mentioned in depth. This is&#13;
done more fully in Cashen's&#13;
letter.&#13;
When conditional students&#13;
are admitted to Parkside they&#13;
immediately become prescriptive&#13;
advisees. They remain&#13;
so until it is determined&#13;
that they no longer need special&#13;
attention. At such a time,&#13;
they are switched to a formative&#13;
advisee status. As prescriptive&#13;
advisees, however&#13;
they get more than the usual&#13;
amount of attention and direction&#13;
in order to help them&#13;
become successful students.&#13;
"If we're willing to admit&#13;
the student." said Cashen,&#13;
"then we need to support him&#13;
(or her). I would hope that&#13;
they look upon it as a support&#13;
system."&#13;
It is important to point out&#13;
that a large range of students&#13;
are admitted as conditional&#13;
students. Some students may&#13;
have just missed being placed&#13;
as a "standard" admissions&#13;
student because they did not&#13;
have the required spread of&#13;
classes. For example, they&#13;
may not have had the required&#13;
geometry class.&#13;
"That's the student who is&#13;
probably going to succeed&#13;
without any help what so&#13;
ever," said Cashen. On the&#13;
other hand, there are those&#13;
students who just missed&#13;
being deferred, or denied entrance&#13;
to Parkside.&#13;
"These students have all&#13;
sorts of problems," said&#13;
Cashen. ":They didn't do well&#13;
in high school. They scored&#13;
low on their placement tests.&#13;
They don't really know how&#13;
to study. They're going to&#13;
need a tremendous amount of&#13;
help."&#13;
Those few students who&#13;
were upset about Cashen's&#13;
letter further pointed out that&#13;
they were bothered by the&#13;
wording of the letter. In response,&#13;
Cashen replied, "It&#13;
was meant to be firm so that&#13;
the students would know that&#13;
we're serious-that we're not&#13;
taking it lightly and that they&#13;
shouldn't take it lightly either."&#13;
She further added, "I&#13;
feel it's immoral to admit students&#13;
that are not college material&#13;
and then not do anything&#13;
about it."&#13;
While not all conditional&#13;
students are in need of intense&#13;
counseling, many of&#13;
them do need it, at least until&#13;
they are able to develop their&#13;
learning skills. Cashen stated&#13;
in her letter that "you must&#13;
attend a special program designed&#13;
to assess your readiness&#13;
for college study. A&#13;
part of the program will be&#13;
devoted to the administration&#13;
of the Learning and Study&#13;
Strategies Inventory (LASSI).&#13;
The students were given&#13;
two dates to choose from to&#13;
take the inventory. A few of&#13;
the conditional students responded&#13;
with anger.&#13;
"If I want help I'm going to&#13;
get it," said Sandy Sliker,&#13;
second semester psychology&#13;
major. Unfortunately, not&#13;
everyone who needs help will&#13;
get it on their own. Statistics&#13;
point this out. Of the students&#13;
who were admitted in the fall&#13;
as conditional, 53 percent&#13;
were in academic difficulty&#13;
by the end of their first&#13;
semester. Twenty-two were&#13;
actually dropped because of&#13;
their grades, "but there was&#13;
no program like this then,"&#13;
said Cashen.&#13;
So, how does one draw the&#13;
line between which of the&#13;
conditional students have met&#13;
with their counselors and participate&#13;
in the Lassi program&#13;
and which ones don't? The&#13;
Lassi is merely a tool that&#13;
can be used in helping to&#13;
determine this.&#13;
"Parkside is not a pioneer&#13;
in the field," said Cashen.&#13;
"Although it is new for us,&#13;
the bigger universitities have&#13;
had programs like this for&#13;
years."&#13;
The purpose of the Lassi is&#13;
to look at the student's learning&#13;
stategies and see where&#13;
they are strong and where&#13;
they are weak. While it is still&#13;
being discussed, Cashen feels&#13;
strongly that if students are&#13;
doing well, and after taking&#13;
the Lassi shows no problems,&#13;
then they would not be&#13;
recommened to take particular&#13;
workshops or to register&#13;
for particular classes. They&#13;
would probably only need to&#13;
meet with their counselors&#13;
prior to registering for their&#13;
next semester classes. However,&#13;
there are, inevitably,&#13;
going to be those students&#13;
who need extra help and attention.&#13;
For those students,&#13;
the Lassi is crucial. It is&#13;
being used as a tool to help&#13;
discover what particular&#13;
problems students need help&#13;
with, if any.&#13;
With any change there are&#13;
always arguments for and&#13;
against it. The new admissions&#13;
policy is no exception to&#13;
the rule. Most of the other&#13;
reputable colleges and universities&#13;
have entrance requirements.&#13;
Parkside is joining&#13;
the ranks. Although the&#13;
requirements may make it&#13;
harder for students to get in,&#13;
it is ensuring that once they&#13;
are in they will be learning&#13;
and getting a quality education.&#13;
This will, in eventuality,&#13;
make it easier for the students&#13;
once they graduate.&#13;
Sales management workshop set&#13;
The Small Business Development&#13;
Center, directed by&#13;
Don Hancock, will present a&#13;
workshop on basic sales management&#13;
from 8 a.m. to 3&#13;
p.m. on Monday, Feb. 16, in&#13;
Union Room 207.&#13;
Cost of the all-day workshop&#13;
is $74. To register, call&#13;
553-2312.&#13;
Directed toward sales managers,&#13;
the workshop will&#13;
present techniques and resources&#13;
on how to inspire a&#13;
sales force, set priorities,&#13;
identify skills, manage time&#13;
and territory and evaluate&#13;
and control a sales force and&#13;
selling efforts, among other&#13;
topics.&#13;
Instructor will be Alan&#13;
Dankwerth, past president of&#13;
the Kansas City Sales and&#13;
Marketing Executives Association&#13;
and past director of the&#13;
St. Louis Sales and Marketing&#13;
Executives Association. He&#13;
has extensive practical experience&#13;
in all sales and marketing&#13;
management and has&#13;
been director of sales and&#13;
general manager for two successful&#13;
companies.&#13;
$295,000 financial aid&#13;
accepted by Regents&#13;
More than $295,000 in support&#13;
of student financial aid&#13;
was accepted today (Friday,&#13;
Feb. 6) by the UW System&#13;
Board of Regents.&#13;
The Regents accepted&#13;
$294,201 from the federal Department&#13;
of Education's Pell&#13;
Grant student financial aid&#13;
program; $660 from multiple&#13;
donors for a music scholarship&#13;
fund; $500 from multiple&#13;
donors for a scholarship fund&#13;
for students majoring in labor&#13;
and industrial relations; and&#13;
$400 from multiple donors for&#13;
the DeRose marketing scholarship&#13;
fund.&#13;
In addition, the Regents accepted&#13;
$880 from multiple&#13;
donors for the Veronica Ann&#13;
Wallen Memorial Endowment&#13;
Fund to be used for research&#13;
in the biomedical sciences.&#13;
• * * * * *v* ^ *&#13;
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RANGER Thursday, February 12, 1987 11&#13;
lnnsbruck-1987-a unique educational experience&#13;
The University of New Orleans&#13;
will sponsor its 12th annual&#13;
European Summer&#13;
School Program in Innsbruck,&#13;
Austria during the summer of&#13;
1987. This educational/travel-&#13;
/learning experience, entitled&#13;
UNO-INNSBRUCK-1987, will&#13;
involve over 250 college and&#13;
university students as well as&#13;
some 30 faculty/staff members.&#13;
"Spending the summer in&#13;
Innsbruck, Austria was one of&#13;
the most broadening experiences&#13;
of my life, not only&#13;
educationally, but socially&#13;
and culturally as well," said&#13;
Meg Hanks, a 1985 UNOINNSBRUCK&#13;
participant. "If&#13;
I ever have the chance to go&#13;
again, I'll have my bags&#13;
packed and ready in no time&#13;
flat."&#13;
Stephanie Rondenell, a student&#13;
participant in the 1986&#13;
UNO-INNSBRUCK program,&#13;
had this to say about her&#13;
European experience. "If&#13;
someone were to ask me to&#13;
name the most memorable&#13;
experience of my life, all I&#13;
would have to say is 'UNOINNSBRUCK.'&#13;
When I think&#13;
of my summer in Austria, I&#13;
would think of the mountains&#13;
that were outside my dorm&#13;
window and how wonderful it&#13;
was to wake up to them every&#13;
morning."&#13;
Applicants are already&#13;
signing for the 1987 summer&#13;
session. Part of the reason&#13;
why over the last 11 years&#13;
some 3,000 students from all&#13;
across the United States representing&#13;
over 150 different&#13;
colleges and universities have&#13;
participated in this unique&#13;
summer program is that over&#13;
60 courses in many different&#13;
academic subject areas are&#13;
offered in this magnificent Alpine&#13;
setting in the heart of&#13;
Central Europe. While particpants&#13;
can earn up to ten&#13;
semester hours of credit,&#13;
their classrooms are surrounded&#13;
by the towering&#13;
Tyrolean Alps, whose peaks&#13;
are always snowcapped.&#13;
Naturally, courses offered&#13;
with UNO-INNSBRUCK focus&#13;
on the cultural, historical,&#13;
social and political issues of&#13;
Europe. However, during the&#13;
1987 summer session, courses&#13;
in business and science will&#13;
also be taught. All instruction&#13;
is in English and faculty from&#13;
the Unviersity of New Orleans,&#13;
guest professors from&#13;
the University of Florida and&#13;
the University of Innsbruck,&#13;
as well as distinguished political&#13;
figures from the U.S. and&#13;
Austria will be teaching in&#13;
Innsbruck this summer.&#13;
"Academically the overall&#13;
learning is just great," said&#13;
Gunter Bischof, a professor&#13;
from Innsbruck who has&#13;
taught on the program for the&#13;
last five years. "A student&#13;
may read less, but see much&#13;
more. It is a true living&#13;
educational experience.''&#13;
A special feature of the 1987&#13;
session will be Gov. Richard&#13;
Lamm of Colorado who will&#13;
teach several history courses&#13;
concerning the great issues&#13;
facing today's Western nations.&#13;
Assisting Gov. Lamm&#13;
will be former U.S. Senator&#13;
and presidential candidate&#13;
George McGovern and the official&#13;
biographer of President&#13;
Dwight Eisenhower, Dr. Stephen&#13;
Ambrose.&#13;
During the summer, students&#13;
will be housed in the&#13;
Studenthaus at the 300-yearold&#13;
University of Innsbruck.&#13;
The school is just a fiveminute&#13;
walk from the many&#13;
inns, cafes and beer gardens&#13;
in the "Old Town" of Innsbruck.&#13;
And, three-day weekends&#13;
offer ample time for students&#13;
to travel to many different&#13;
destinations in Europe,&#13;
to hike in the Alps and even&#13;
to ski the nearby glaciers.&#13;
"You don't have to go very&#13;
far to see someplace that is&#13;
very different," said Hanks.&#13;
"From Innsbruck, . the efficient&#13;
Eurorail system&#13;
reaches all of Austria and&#13;
much of Europe within a few&#13;
hours. Innsbruck is an ideal&#13;
location for weekend travel."&#13;
UNO-INNSBRUCK-1987 will&#13;
convene with gala opening&#13;
ceremonies on July 5 and end&#13;
on Aug. 15, 1987. Several optional&#13;
pre-study tours are&#13;
being organized for those students&#13;
who want to spend an&#13;
extra month living and learning&#13;
in a different and stimulating&#13;
European environment.&#13;
Pre-study programs are offered&#13;
in Belgium, Italy and a&#13;
travel program through Western&#13;
Europe.&#13;
Enrollment in UNO-INNSBRUCK-&#13;
1987 is limited, so interested&#13;
students should&#13;
apply as soon as possible. Information&#13;
and a full color&#13;
brochure for UNO-INNSBRUCK&#13;
can be had by writing&#13;
to: UNO-INNSBRUCK-&#13;
1987, c/o International Study&#13;
Programs, Box 1315-UNO,&#13;
New Orleans LA 70148. Or&#13;
you can call the Office of International&#13;
Study Program^&#13;
at UNO: (504 ) 286-7116. Don't&#13;
delay; apply today!&#13;
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RANGER&#13;
Movie review&#13;
Judd Nelson plays well "From the Hip y y&#13;
Judd Nelson&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Judd Nelson is surrounded&#13;
by old acting pros and a&#13;
funny script, making "From&#13;
the Hip" a total delight.&#13;
No pretension, no wild special&#13;
effects, but a great deal&#13;
of genuine heart is evident in&#13;
this seriocomic courtroom&#13;
feature, recalling filmic&#13;
images of such classics as&#13;
"Adam's Rib."&#13;
Darren McGavin is his wonderfully&#13;
blustery self as the&#13;
attorney responsible for Nelson's&#13;
promotion to the case&#13;
that makes the yuppie attorney&#13;
famous for his unconventional&#13;
actions. Edward Winter&#13;
(late of TV's "M*A*S*H")&#13;
is amusing as the defendant&#13;
in Nelson's first case. Ray&#13;
Walston is fine as the tormented&#13;
judge in this same&#13;
case, turning in a character&#13;
performance that calls forth&#13;
vivid memories of such fine&#13;
old-time supporting players&#13;
as Edgar Kennedy or Donald&#13;
MacBride.&#13;
But it is John Hurt, in a&#13;
role obviously tailored for&#13;
Roddy McDowell, who steals&#13;
the film's acting awards. He&#13;
portrays a sinister individual&#13;
whom the now-popular Nelson&#13;
must defend in a can't-win&#13;
case.&#13;
Nelson's offbeat methods&#13;
include his proving, from a&#13;
literary perspective, that use&#13;
of the word "asshole" has relevance&#13;
to his first case; that&#13;
the plaintiff actually deserved&#13;
the assault that led to the battery&#13;
charge he is now defending,&#13;
and that important cases&#13;
will not go to trial simply because&#13;
of the trivial battery&#13;
cases brought about by unworthy&#13;
plaintiffs such as this&#13;
one, etc.&#13;
Nelson plays his role in a&#13;
wild, amusing fashion and&#13;
succeeds as well as any point&#13;
in his career (he'll have to&#13;
work a while to match his&#13;
brilliant portrayal of alienated&#13;
adolescence in John&#13;
Hughes' "The Breakfast&#13;
Club," however). He gets a&#13;
chance to do serious drama in&#13;
the sequences that follow the&#13;
film's opening antics, when&#13;
he is forced, by his spot in the&#13;
limelight,from bringing about&#13;
a form of "commercial" judicial&#13;
procedure as per his actions&#13;
in the first case, to defend&#13;
a murderer. The mur-&#13;
Mary Helena&#13;
Helena from page 5&#13;
often told children that it's&#13;
good to see yourself as a link&#13;
in a chain. If your link is&#13;
weak, that whole chain is&#13;
weaker. If your link is strong,&#13;
that whole chain is better for&#13;
it," continued Mary Helena.&#13;
Despite the current world&#13;
situation, Mary Helena is optimistic.&#13;
"I feel optimistic for&#13;
those who are willing to make&#13;
the sacrifice to make it good.&#13;
For those I feel very optimistic,&#13;
but for the others I can&#13;
only pray," she said.&#13;
Walking&#13;
Walking from page 14&#13;
swinging . arms vigorously&#13;
with a quick tempo, not like&#13;
the Parkside racewalkers,&#13;
but fast enough to breathe&#13;
hard and break a sweat.&#13;
For those of you who wonder&#13;
about how fast to go&#13;
remember this: if you can&#13;
walk a mile in under fifteen&#13;
minutes then you are doing&#13;
great for a beginner. Start&#13;
with this as a goal then try to&#13;
do two miles at the same&#13;
pace. If you can walk at this&#13;
pace three to four times a&#13;
week then you are doing even&#13;
better. Advanced walkers can&#13;
derer is guilty, and Nelson&#13;
must now deal with ethics vs.&#13;
his own interest in remaining&#13;
a darling of local news telecasts&#13;
as a result of his entertaining&#13;
style of defense.&#13;
Bob Clark ("Porky's,"&#13;
"The Christmas Story") cowrote&#13;
and directed this thoroughly&#13;
enjoyable entertainment&#13;
without any deep underlying&#13;
social commentary.&#13;
Thus, "From the Hip" is a&#13;
film that reminds many what&#13;
movies are supposed to provide:&#13;
entertainment and escapism&#13;
in a pure, professional&#13;
manner. That this film eschews&#13;
the gloss and overindulgence&#13;
of the "Star Wars"&#13;
type films or the heavy social&#13;
consciousness of something&#13;
like "Platoon" makes it a&#13;
very special little item indeed.&#13;
While critics are busy fawning&#13;
over today's heavy duty&#13;
cinema, it might be a good&#13;
time to have some fun at the&#13;
movies. This one, then, is recommended.&#13;
All people are welcome to&#13;
join in the festivities of Black&#13;
History Month. "Black History&#13;
Month isn't just for the&#13;
benefit of African-Americans,"&#13;
said Mary Helena.&#13;
"It's good that other people&#13;
from other cultures can see&#13;
things as well. Some people&#13;
seem to think that Black History&#13;
Month is a time when&#13;
blacks get to say their say.&#13;
But if blacks are saying their&#13;
say, someone needs to listen."&#13;
walk five to six times a week&#13;
with an hour walk on Sundays.&#13;
o W A r K cj T c" p[ D" s&#13;
Iyt] E L T N E B A] r10 .£ y" s" M D I Ti 0 R, E; M1l N " FT C E&#13;
G N A T E1 1] El Si Ej A R A&#13;
b E E N a R Al Tj m n M I R&#13;
y D D X E U a QJ B R I B E&#13;
Lf. X u E U N T 5 R&#13;
D _I A jL EC TJ E T C E E a S&#13;
I N T 0. K MH| u E K&#13;
S T I 0 E D_! 0 R ra U C c A&#13;
T E_ s P G 0 R_ E jsTH N E E D&#13;
A R T A R I D 0 E E A T E&#13;
S I zI s I N E X A S S A r&#13;
T [o R £L &lt;T S A S C E N E&#13;
E R. R. A NJ D s H 0 S e" s&#13;
EASTSIDE&#13;
EMPORIUM&#13;
• Customer Blended Pipe Tobaccos • Magazines I oarS Ma^e C'9ars. • Vidio Rental&#13;
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PHONE 414-634-4156&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 12, 1987 13&#13;
ftecord review&#13;
Husker&#13;
by Bernie Doll&#13;
On their latest release,&#13;
Husker Du culminates an already&#13;
voluminous, impressive&#13;
career.&#13;
"Warehouse: Songs and&#13;
Stories" gives us a band that&#13;
has honed its musical directions&#13;
and harnessed its unrelenting&#13;
attack. This double&#13;
LP released on Warner Bros,&#13;
allows the Huskers to showcase&#13;
their versatile productivity.&#13;
From the first strains&#13;
of Bob Mould's guitar on&#13;
"These are Your Important&#13;
Years" all through the&#13;
album's other nineteen cuts,&#13;
the Huskers display their love&#13;
of the 60's and knowledge of&#13;
the 80's.&#13;
Once again the Huskers&#13;
have self-produced the&#13;
album, and the production&#13;
quality is very high. The&#13;
large sheets of sound that exemplify&#13;
the band are presented&#13;
in a raw but polished form&#13;
that allows the group's impassioned&#13;
vocals and glorious&#13;
harmonies to come through&#13;
without losing the marvelous&#13;
Du continue to polish their sound&#13;
interplay between bassist&#13;
Greg Norton and drummer&#13;
Grant Hart as well as&#13;
Mould's manic guitar.&#13;
The songs are evenly divided&#13;
between compositions&#13;
written and sung by Mould&#13;
and Hart, and this gives the&#13;
album beautiful balance that&#13;
it has. While Hart's songs&#13;
tend to have a decidedly optimistic&#13;
tone, Mould's songs&#13;
show us the grey side of life,&#13;
as evident on "Friend,&#13;
You've Got to Fall" and with&#13;
lyrics like "if you don't stop&#13;
to smell the roses now, they&#13;
might end up on you."&#13;
Gone from this album is the&#13;
lightheadedness of previous&#13;
works as the Huskers give&#13;
their observations on the&#13;
human condition. However,&#13;
this not to say that this album&#13;
is a droning, self-indulgent,&#13;
morose work that seems to be&#13;
so popular now in the new&#13;
music arena. One listen to&#13;
"Back from Somewhere" or&#13;
"Up in the the Air" will convince&#13;
you of that.&#13;
The two things that distance&#13;
this album from Husker&#13;
EMOTIONAL&#13;
by Falco (Sire)&#13;
Before bursting out across&#13;
the ocean with "Rock Me&#13;
Amadeus" Falco first came&#13;
to the attention of modern&#13;
music fans with "Der Kommissar."&#13;
Falco's latest album, his&#13;
first release for Sire Records,&#13;
highlights "The Sound of&#13;
Musik," The Kiss of Kathleen&#13;
Turner," "Les Nouveaux&#13;
Riches" and "Coming Home"&#13;
(Jeanny part II). With creative&#13;
collaboration by Rob and&#13;
Ferdi Bolland, who produced,&#13;
arranged and played most of&#13;
the keyboards and synthesizers&#13;
on the album, Falco has&#13;
fashioned fast-paced furiously&#13;
ingenious style.&#13;
"Emotional" is an album&#13;
that reaches around categories&#13;
to stake out its own claim&#13;
on originality and has tapped&#13;
into a whole new kind of&#13;
music. It's a sound that&#13;
crosses borders and breaks&#13;
down barriers, full of intrigue,&#13;
invention and fun. It's&#13;
a full court assault on the ordinary.&#13;
••Mary DeFazio&#13;
INSIDE THE ELECTRIC&#13;
CIRCUS&#13;
by W.A.S.P. (Capitol)&#13;
The raucous sound of this&#13;
group keeps from trash metal&#13;
territory, but goes beyond the&#13;
headbanging of Motley Crue&#13;
or Kiss.&#13;
With this, their latest LP,&#13;
the group strives to sound&#13;
somewhat more melodic in&#13;
the metal realm. This is best&#13;
presented in their cover of&#13;
Humble Pie's "I Don't Need&#13;
No Doctor."&#13;
For the most part, however,&#13;
their style is .unchanged.&#13;
They still give the&#13;
listener a wild array of bleeding&#13;
eardrum rock filled with&#13;
sexual innuendo (e.g. "Son of&#13;
Sodom and Gommorah").&#13;
Plenty of ammunition for the&#13;
P.M.R.C.&#13;
Blackie Lawless appears&#13;
naked on the album cover&#13;
and utilizes this jungle persona&#13;
throughout each track.&#13;
This makes "Inside the Electric&#13;
Circus" an uninhibited effort,&#13;
but not an outstanding&#13;
one. Though more melodic&#13;
than 1985's "The Last Command,"&#13;
W.A.S.P. still haven't&#13;
captured the melodicism&#13;
achieved by such metal&#13;
groups as Ozzy Osbourne,&#13;
Yngwie Malmsteen's Rising&#13;
Force or Cinderella. But then&#13;
they aren't as bad as Slayer,&#13;
either.&#13;
-Jim Neibaur&#13;
HANK "LIVE"&#13;
by Hank Williams, Jr.&#13;
(Curb/Warner)&#13;
Okay, go ahead and ridicule&#13;
me. I liked this album, even&#13;
though I've said "I hate country&#13;
music" more than Seka's&#13;
said "Yes."&#13;
Sure, Junior overdoes the&#13;
Du's others are the incredible&#13;
Byrd-like harmonies and Bob&#13;
Mould's matured vocal delivery.&#13;
These traits are especially&#13;
evident on tracks like "Visionary,"&#13;
"Could You be the&#13;
One," "Ice Cold Ice" and&#13;
"No Reservations."&#13;
Most of the songs are uptempo,&#13;
and fans who first&#13;
started listening to Husker&#13;
Du for their mile-a-minute&#13;
hardcore decadence will not&#13;
be disappointed with this latest&#13;
effort if they can realize&#13;
the Husker Du has a much&#13;
broader musical base and&#13;
outlook than standard hardcore&#13;
fare. The band's ferocity&#13;
and passion has remained&#13;
constant throughout their&#13;
career and "Warehouse"&#13;
showcases the immense&#13;
range that Husker Du is capable&#13;
of.&#13;
This album could be the one&#13;
that gets the Huskers the&#13;
mainstream acceptance&#13;
which they are so deserving&#13;
of, due to the fact that it is&#13;
chock full of catchy choruses&#13;
and memorable hooks. This&#13;
Short Cuts&#13;
maudlin references to his Pa,&#13;
and he should know better&#13;
than to mess around with&#13;
"Sweet Home Alabama," but&#13;
the balance of this set is infectious&#13;
country R&amp;B that&#13;
Hank delivers with impressive&#13;
vocal and instrumental&#13;
force.&#13;
Side 1 is clearly superior to&#13;
Side 2, playing like one energetic,&#13;
intense medley that obviously&#13;
worked the crowd into&#13;
a frenzy. Especially noteworthy&#13;
is "My Name is Bocephus,"&#13;
a song whose solid&#13;
rock backbeat comes as no&#13;
surprise, since Van Halen&#13;
provided the instrumentation&#13;
on the original studio cut.&#13;
There's a bad remake of&#13;
"House of the Rising Sun" on&#13;
the flipside, but that's pretty&#13;
much offset by good-natured&#13;
numbers like "If Heaven&#13;
Ain't a Lot Like Dixie" and&#13;
"A Country Boy Can Survive."&#13;
I'm not ready to exchange&#13;
my Beatles collection for a&#13;
country sampler, but I am&#13;
going to break my promise to&#13;
my brother, a confirmed&#13;
Hankaholic and keep "Hank&#13;
Live" for myself.&#13;
-Gary Schneeberger&#13;
I 4STAB (VALUABLE COUPON?^&#13;
| with this coupon&#13;
RENT 2 MOVIES&#13;
and get a&#13;
3rd MOVIE FREE&#13;
Husker Du's latest is on Warner Brothers&#13;
album might even yield a single&#13;
that could put a dent in&#13;
the charts (I'll be struck&#13;
down for that one folks).&#13;
Hopefully "Warehouse" will&#13;
allow the Huskers to expand&#13;
their audience due to their&#13;
ever increasing accessibilty.&#13;
Husker Du is certainly one&#13;
of this country's greatest rock&#13;
and roll bands and their latest&#13;
release only reinforces&#13;
this fact. One can only hope&#13;
that the vitality and passion&#13;
on this album are transferred&#13;
to their live show that is currently&#13;
making the rounds&#13;
across the country.&#13;
BY THE LIGHT&#13;
OF THE MOON&#13;
by Los Lobos (Slash)&#13;
It's 1987 and this is the year&#13;
of the wolf.&#13;
It would follow then that&#13;
Los Lobos ("the wolves" in&#13;
Spanish) are back in prime&#13;
condition ready to once again&#13;
capture America's ears and&#13;
hearts. On this, their second&#13;
LP, the boys are showing no&#13;
signs whatsoever of the&#13;
dreaded sophomore slump.&#13;
From the R&amp;B rave-ups of&#13;
"Shakin' Shakin' Shakes" and&#13;
"My Baby's Gone" to the:&#13;
funk of "Is This All There&#13;
Is? " to the traditional&#13;
"Prenda Del Alma" all the&#13;
way up to the gospel soul of&#13;
"Tears of God," Los Lobos&#13;
performs with verve and&#13;
competence.&#13;
-Bernie Doll&#13;
Presented by&#13;
Jason's &amp; Lambies Limousine&#13;
Every Thursday Beginning February 19, 1987 at 8:30 p.m.&#13;
"When couples tell the intimate details of their first date."&#13;
• Winning dale will receive dinner &amp; champagne at Jason's.&#13;
• Chauffeured limousine with champagne anywhere in Racine,&#13;
Kenosha &amp; Milwaukee.&#13;
• PLUS . . . Cash for your date.&#13;
DURAND PLAZA 291^^554^9309 J&#13;
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$$vusuf. — QanriSip&#13;
Racine 632-2727&#13;
14 Thursday, February 12,1987 RANGER&#13;
Men's basketball&#13;
Rangers ground Hawks&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
What a difference a week&#13;
makes.&#13;
On January 31, Parkside&#13;
had to scratch and claw to defeat&#13;
Quincy College at home&#13;
by three points. Last Saturday,&#13;
the Rangers went to&#13;
Quincy and beat - literally -&#13;
the Hawks 76-56 in a very&#13;
physical game.&#13;
Physical isn't the word&#13;
coach Rees Johnson used,&#13;
however. "We were really intense,"&#13;
said Johnson, but&#13;
added "I like it that way."&#13;
As an example of how&#13;
physical the game was, two&#13;
Rangers took the worst of it.&#13;
First, Greg Nash was cut&#13;
above his eye because of a&#13;
stray elbow and Mike Henderson&#13;
also took an elbow,&#13;
producing a cut on his forehead.&#13;
For the first time since the&#13;
game against Lewis last&#13;
November, the Rangers&#13;
played a consistently good&#13;
game for the entire 40&#13;
minutes. "I was really encouraged,"&#13;
Johnson said.&#13;
"This was our best game&#13;
since the Lewis game. We&#13;
were physically and mentally&#13;
strong."&#13;
The Rangers led by only&#13;
three points at the half, but&#13;
poured it on in the last 20&#13;
minutes. They totally dominated&#13;
the Hawks in the second&#13;
half.&#13;
James Jones led all scorers&#13;
with 17 points. Zukley had 12&#13;
points, 10 in the second half,&#13;
while Steel and Henderson&#13;
had 11 and 10, respectively.&#13;
Shape Up! by Mike Rohl&#13;
collegiate crossword&#13;
Crossword Answers page 12&#13;
©Edward Julius Collegiate CW79-6&#13;
ACROSS&#13;
1 Johnny Cash hit,&#13;
" the Line"&#13;
6 Chirring Insects&#13;
13 Taking out&#13;
15 Sudden, violent&#13;
action&#13;
16 Lou Grant, for one&#13;
17 High rank or&#13;
reputation&#13;
18 Paternal relative&#13;
19 City room piece&#13;
20 Mr. Parseghlan&#13;
21 Hell-known magazine&#13;
22 Fury&#13;
24 Ruler in Kuwait&#13;
25 Crooner Nelson's&#13;
family&#13;
27 Numero&#13;
28 Certain payment&#13;
29 1/8 of a gallon&#13;
31 Football player&#13;
32 Vernacular&#13;
36 Goes too far&#13;
37 Vocalize&#13;
38 Work with corn&#13;
39 Remained in effect&#13;
4Q "Le Coq " , ,&#13;
41 New Mexico's flower&#13;
46 Meteorological&#13;
abbreviation&#13;
47 Bridge authority&#13;
49 Require&#13;
50 Onassis&#13;
51 Like the Kalahari&#13;
52 Fragrant ester&#13;
54 Words on a dress&#13;
tag&#13;
56 Serf&#13;
57 Foot ornaments&#13;
(2 wds.)&#13;
58 Make (create&#13;
a disturbance)&#13;
59 Certain chores&#13;
60 Garden gear&#13;
DOWN&#13;
1 Think&#13;
2 Stuck, in a way&#13;
3 Adjusted the front&#13;
end&#13;
4 Vocal prayer&#13;
5 Square or granny&#13;
6 Regained conscious&#13;
ness (2 wds.)&#13;
7 Type of coffee&#13;
8 Hit on the head&#13;
9 John Henry's tool&#13;
10 Boffo?&#13;
11 Attributed&#13;
12 Yellow journalists,&#13;
at times&#13;
14 Matured&#13;
15 Show-off of&#13;
knowledge&#13;
23 Pipsqueak&#13;
24 Sea eagle&#13;
26 Disburse&#13;
28 Ballplayer Dent&#13;
30 Work with a cake&#13;
31 Army stores&#13;
32 Aversion&#13;
33 Department 1n O.C.&#13;
34 Perfume nozzle&#13;
35 Hindy City&#13;
attraction&#13;
36 River to the Seine&#13;
38 Mobs&#13;
40 Events&#13;
42 Worldwide humanities&#13;
organization&#13;
43 Terminates&#13;
44 One of the paraffins&#13;
45 Davis and Astalre&#13;
-47 9-to-5 routine&#13;
48 Star or car&#13;
51 Have with&#13;
(have connections)&#13;
5? Cpwboy LaRue&#13;
55 Pitcher's statistic .&#13;
Sometime after the 1964&#13;
Olympics a movie was made&#13;
titled "Walk, Don't Run." It&#13;
starred Cary Grant. It was&#13;
basically about a racewalker&#13;
in the '64 Olympics and how&#13;
he did. It was comic and is&#13;
considered by some as a classic&#13;
sports comedy.&#13;
You may remember that&#13;
phrase from another place&#13;
and time. Teachers were&#13;
always telling me or my&#13;
classmates "Walk! Don't.&#13;
Run!"&#13;
Well, doctors have taken up&#13;
this call today. Just as there&#13;
was a running boom in the&#13;
seventies there is a walking&#13;
boom going on today. There&#13;
are more people walking for&#13;
fitness than any other sport in&#13;
the United States.&#13;
There are several reasons&#13;
why walking is slowly gaining&#13;
greater popularity. Walking&#13;
reaches a greater and more&#13;
varied population because it&#13;
has fewer physical limitations&#13;
than running. It may also be&#13;
less expensive than running.&#13;
Everyone can walk, and&#13;
that is its greatest asset. All&#13;
people can walk. Young, old,&#13;
weak, overweight, clumsy,&#13;
black, white, women and men&#13;
@11 can walk.&#13;
Walking has other advantages&#13;
than just being the true&#13;
universal exercise. One of its&#13;
advantages is it is less stressful&#13;
on the body than running.&#13;
The impact on a runner's feet&#13;
is three to four times his or&#13;
her body weight. A person's&#13;
impact during walking is only&#13;
one to two times body weight.&#13;
This is important to people&#13;
who may be missing cartilage&#13;
in their knees or who have&#13;
had back or other ailments&#13;
which stop them from running.&#13;
The reason walking is so&#13;
much easier on the body is&#13;
simple. During the running&#13;
the body is lifted at one point&#13;
completely in the air and it is&#13;
returned to the ground causing&#13;
an impact which jars the&#13;
bones, muscles, tendons and&#13;
ligaments throughout the&#13;
body. Walking on the other&#13;
hand does not raise the body&#13;
off the ground, which causes&#13;
less impact. Another reason&#13;
walking is less stressful than&#13;
running is that it is actually&#13;
more fluid than running.&#13;
Walking, though it is less&#13;
stressful on the body, still&#13;
puts a stress on the cardiovascular&#13;
system.&#13;
One may ask how can the&#13;
walking I do from class to&#13;
class help me get in shape. It&#13;
can't. You have to walk fast,&#13;
Walking see page 12&#13;
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Found&#13;
WOMAN'S WATCH outside Union. Describe&#13;
to claim. 633-1566 evenings.&#13;
Personals&#13;
DEAREST HELEN Miltimore: This&#13;
ain't Sunday brunch at Conrad Hilton&#13;
and it sure ain't a 3-carat cluster&#13;
cocktail ring, but it's the next best&#13;
thing. I LUVS YA. (Keep that in mind&#13;
next time we get chocolate ice&#13;
cream.)&#13;
Winter&#13;
Clearance&#13;
Sale Stop in Today for the&#13;
Best Selection&#13;
ALL CLOTHING&#13;
in Stock&#13;
20-50% OFF&#13;
CLOTHING&#13;
• DOLFIN HIND-WELLS&#13;
'• SUB-4&#13;
• FRANK SHORTER&#13;
• MOVING COMFORT&#13;
• NEW BALANCE&#13;
• MARATHON HER/SIR&#13;
• BILL RODGERS • BROOKS&#13;
• NIKE CLOTHING • LIFA&#13;
All Shoes Reduced&#13;
Running 15% OFF&#13;
&amp; Tennis 20% OFF&#13;
Racquetbail 25% OFF&#13;
MERRITT'S RUNNING CENTER&#13;
"Spec i al i s t i n Athlet i c and Running Clo t h ing"&#13;
5200 Washington Ave., Racine 632-4699&#13;
Located in Washington Square&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.-10 a.m. - 8 p.m.; Sat. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.;. Sun. 12 to 4 p.m.&#13;
MY DARLING dirty dog... I'm your&#13;
naughty girl.&#13;
DAVE: I'VE missed you. Let's work&#13;
on that ear infection. Kitty.&#13;
MICHELLE: HAPPY Valentines&#13;
Day. This time I'll try to remember&#13;
some flowers. Love, Michael.&#13;
GUYS ON the Ranger staff are the&#13;
sexiest, especially Dave, Tyson and&#13;
Gary. Sex kitten.&#13;
HEIDI WAKEFIELD: Happy Valentine's&#13;
Day. Love, Jesus.&#13;
RAINBOW, WHAT would I do without&#13;
you?&#13;
L.A. DON'T look at me! Don't you&#13;
fxxxing look at me! Love, Dennis H.&#13;
THE L.A. no longer exists. He is now&#13;
the LN: the Little Nick. And let the&#13;
world tremble.&#13;
GEORGE T: Give us a chance-English&#13;
poetry class.&#13;
H.C. COULD you reach the mail box&#13;
today?&#13;
AUNT TRACEE: Will you be our special&#13;
Valentine today and everyday?&#13;
We love you this much... Ross and&#13;
Marie.&#13;
JULIE: SORRY I forgot to mention&#13;
you in my letter. But now I'll tell&#13;
everyone that without your unflappable&#13;
precision and ability, we'd never&#13;
be able to produce the quality newspaper&#13;
product we're consistently disseminating.&#13;
Gary.&#13;
YOU CAN say that again, I think,&#13;
janethetypist.&#13;
HAPPY BELATED birthday, Gare.&#13;
Gare.&#13;
HUSHER PEOPLE eat milk and&#13;
cookies. Such a deal!&#13;
AS THE philosopher once said: Heah&#13;
heppin' de gain'; poah wumpin' dem&#13;
'bodaps.&#13;
LEIGH: SOMEDAY... maybe... I'll&#13;
face myself.&#13;
CAROL: NICE to see you again.&#13;
WANTED: SEXY woman to share&#13;
some intimacy. Reply here. Lonely.&#13;
MY SWEET, SWEET peanut: Happy&#13;
Valentine's Day to you and Jose! Love&#13;
forever, your little honey bunny.&#13;
ADRIAN: WHY did Sheila come to&#13;
our meeting?&#13;
GUESS WHO'S intellectually temperamental&#13;
today?&#13;
HAPPY VALENTINE'S day to the&#13;
Flower Garden Staff. I love you,&#13;
Marie.&#13;
CHEECH: ISN'T life wonderful?&#13;
AAAAH! Guess Who?&#13;
TO THE drooler of chocolate cake: I&#13;
value your poetic lines: "The appreciative&#13;
oneness of our eyes." "The teasing&#13;
element for excitement."&#13;
TO THE staff in the New Sunshine&#13;
Room - Happy Valentine's Day. Love&#13;
from Ross.&#13;
NANCY: THE men want yob!&#13;
LIZPOOH: HAVE a nice Valentine's&#13;
Day and keep your hand off the Wesson&#13;
Oil!&#13;
DADDY, DO we cause you more&#13;
stress or more joy'?'M&amp;R.&#13;
SPEND A U/EEK — NOT A FORTUNE&#13;
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
AND SIGN UP&#13;
Call Jeff&#13;
639-3553&#13;
Sponsored by Campus Marketing fx*«*c(D »o«sion*is in coui« kxjw-&#13;
RANGER Thursday, February 12, 1987 15 ^&#13;
• Aft taxes and tips&#13;
Intramural basketball&#13;
is underway again&#13;
Intramural basketball&#13;
moved into its second week&#13;
last Sunday.&#13;
There are 15 teams entered&#13;
in two five-on-five leagues.&#13;
They will play a seven week&#13;
season.&#13;
FEB. 8 RESULTS&#13;
FROM LEAGUE 1:&#13;
Beasty Boys 92, Schmenges 60&#13;
Zodes 56, Random Rats 46&#13;
Zoners 50, White Man's Disease 45&#13;
Hung 41, No Motion 39&#13;
STANDINGS:&#13;
Beasty Boys 2-0&#13;
Zodes 3-0&#13;
Sehmeges 1-1&#13;
No Motion 1-1&#13;
Zoners 1-1&#13;
Hung 1-1&#13;
Random Rats 0-2&#13;
W. M. Disease 0-3&#13;
FEB. 8 RESULTS&#13;
FROM LEAGUE 2:&#13;
L. A. Dream Team 92, Us &amp; Them 50&#13;
Booboos 51, The Drunks 48&#13;
Soccer Players 65. Princes/Universe&#13;
37&#13;
STANDINGS&#13;
The men's five-on-five is on&#13;
Sundays, starting at 2:15 p.m.&#13;
and goes through 6:15.&#13;
Parkside is also running the&#13;
Schick three-on-three tournament,&#13;
whose winners will advance&#13;
to regional play in Milwaukee&#13;
in March.&#13;
This marks the first year&#13;
that women have a tournament.&#13;
Four teams make up&#13;
the women's league: The&#13;
Ritas, K and the Bears, The&#13;
Flyers and We Be Volleyballers.&#13;
The men's tournament is&#13;
comprised of seven teams:&#13;
Runnin' Rebels I and II, Clippers,&#13;
G-Team, Wang Changs,&#13;
Dunksters and Love 'em and&#13;
Leave 'em.&#13;
The Schick three-on-three is&#13;
held Monday and Wednesday&#13;
from 4 to 6 p.m. in the Phy&#13;
Ed Building.&#13;
FEB. 9 RESULTS&#13;
Runnin' Rebels I 42, G-Team 22&#13;
Clippers 46, Dunksters 42&#13;
Runnin'Rebels II 36. Wang Changs 32&#13;
Clippers 54, Love 'em &amp; Leave "em 50.&#13;
Standings:&#13;
1-0&#13;
2-0&#13;
1-0&#13;
1-1&#13;
0-1&#13;
0-1&#13;
0-2&#13;
L.A. Dream Team&#13;
Dan's Merry Men&#13;
Princes/Universe&#13;
Booboos&#13;
Us &amp; Them&#13;
Soccer Players&#13;
The Drunks&#13;
2-0 Runnin' Rebels I&#13;
1-0 Clippers&#13;
1-1 Runnin" Rebels II&#13;
1-1 Wang Changs&#13;
0-1 Dunksters&#13;
0-2 Love 'em and Leave 'em&#13;
0-2 G-Team&#13;
WE DRIVE (THE PARTY STARTS HERE)&#13;
$209&#13;
An unidentified member of White Man's Disease goes for&#13;
the hoop against the Zoners jn l?st, weekend's _ intramural j&#13;
basketball action.&#13;
Wrestlers&#13;
by Ted Price&#13;
The Parkside wrestling&#13;
team put on an impressive&#13;
display of team balance last&#13;
Wednesday by rolling over&#13;
UW-Oshkosh 46-6.&#13;
Not only did the Rangers&#13;
sweep nine matches, but six&#13;
wrestlers were wrestling a&#13;
class above their normal&#13;
weight.&#13;
Once again, the opponent's&#13;
only points came because of a&#13;
forefeit at 190 lbs., since Ken&#13;
Arend was sidelined with a&#13;
back injury.&#13;
At 118 lbs., Arthur Demerath&#13;
received a forfeit, while&#13;
Dale Hall followed with a 10-1&#13;
win at 126 lbs.&#13;
At 134 lbs., Dennis DuChene&#13;
broke a long-standing Parkside&#13;
record. His pin in 4:34&#13;
gave him 29 wins for the season,&#13;
breaking the freshman&#13;
PARTY with Campus Marketing&#13;
overwhelm Titans&#13;
YOUR BEST DEAL TO FLORIDA&#13;
YOU DRIVE (TO THE PA RTY)&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• Round trip motof coach transportation to beautiful&#13;
Daytona Beach (WE DRIVE P ackages Only) We use&#13;
nothing but modern highway coaches&#13;
• Eight Florida days/seven endless nights at one of ou r&#13;
exciting oceanfront hotels, located right on the Daytona&#13;
Beach strip Your hotel has a beautiful pool, sun deck, air&#13;
conditioned rooms, color TV. and a nice long stretch of&#13;
beach&#13;
• A full schedule of FR EE pool deck parties every day.&#13;
• A full list of pre-arranged discounts to save you money in&#13;
Daytona Beach&#13;
• Travel representatives to insure a smooth trip and a&#13;
good time.&#13;
• Optional side excursions to Disney World. Epcof. deep&#13;
sea fishing, party cruises, etc&#13;
19-3 t echnical fall at 142 lbs.,&#13;
and John Karl notched a 17-5&#13;
decision at 150 lbs.&#13;
James Gundrum won an injury&#13;
default at 158 lbs., and&#13;
Mark Hemauer picked up a&#13;
102 victory at 167 lbs.&#13;
At 177 lbs., Ted Price&#13;
pinned his opponent in 1:27,&#13;
and Don Verbruggen closed&#13;
out the evening by winning&#13;
his heavyweight match 11-1.&#13;
Dennis DuChene&#13;
win record previously held by&#13;
seven-time Ail-American Dan&#13;
Winter.&#13;
Bruce Mergener recorded a&#13;
The Ranger wrestlers will&#13;
close out their dual meet season&#13;
on Wednesday, Feb. 18.&#13;
against Marquette. The dual&#13;
will also be the Rangers' last&#13;
home match before they head&#13;
into national competition.&#13;
The Parkside grapplers,&#13;
ranked 18 in both the NAIA&#13;
and Division II polls, are&#13;
sporting a 10-3 record.&#13;
Women's basketball&#13;
Rangers grill Muskies on Proeber's jumper&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Sports Editor's note: For&#13;
the last two months, there&#13;
has been no coverage of&#13;
women's basketball. This is&#13;
due to a combination of factors,&#13;
all of which were controllable,&#13;
and I take the&#13;
blame. I apologize to head&#13;
coach Wendy Miller, her assistants&#13;
Steve Grochowski&#13;
and Kim Van Deraa and the&#13;
entire team and also to the&#13;
fans of Parkside women's&#13;
basketball for the lack of&#13;
coverage. I will resume&#13;
coverage and will strive to&#13;
continue that until the end of&#13;
the season.&#13;
There is an old cliche in&#13;
sports that says "on a given&#13;
day, any team can beat any&#13;
other team." This certainly&#13;
was true of the Parkside&#13;
women's basketball game&#13;
last Wed., Feb. 3.&#13;
The Lady Rangers (5-14),&#13;
despite missing seven of nine&#13;
free throws in the last five&#13;
minutes of the game, upset&#13;
the Lakeland College Muskies&#13;
66-64.&#13;
Holly Proeber, a freshman&#13;
forward from Caledonia,&#13;
drilled a 15-foot jump shot&#13;
with two seconds left on the&#13;
clock to give Parkside the&#13;
win over the Muskies (11-4).&#13;
Five times, the Rangers&#13;
had a ten-point lead in the&#13;
second half, but they missed&#13;
the front ends of five consecutive&#13;
bonus free throw situations.&#13;
This allowed the&#13;
Muskies to tie the game with&#13;
one minute and 48 seconds&#13;
left. The Muskies went ahead&#13;
on a basket several seconds&#13;
later, but then Proeber made&#13;
a basket and was fouled. She&#13;
made the free throw, completing&#13;
the three-point play&#13;
and giving Parkside a onepoint&#13;
lead. A Julie Slaats free&#13;
throw made the score 64-62 in&#13;
favor of the Rangers.&#13;
But the Muskies weren't&#13;
done yet. They tied the game&#13;
with 10 seconds left and Parkside&#13;
coach Wendy Miller&#13;
called a time-out to set up a&#13;
play. The Rangers worked&#13;
the clock down to three seconds&#13;
before Proeber's gamewinner.&#13;
Miller's game plan against&#13;
Lakeland was simple: "To&#13;
win." She said her team has&#13;
been playing well lately, and&#13;
it showed. Despite their problems&#13;
at the free throw line,&#13;
the Rangers played the&#13;
Muskies evenly.&#13;
Of the 10 members of the&#13;
Rangers, two are sophomores&#13;
and the rest are freshmen.&#13;
"When you're young and inexperienced&#13;
and play a team&#13;
of seniors (there are four on&#13;
Lakeland's roster), you have&#13;
to play hard and smart to&#13;
win," Miller said.&#13;
And play hard, they did.&#13;
Despite losing Lori Wolter&#13;
and Sue Maass to foul trouble&#13;
(both fouled out), Parkside&#13;
held Lakeland's two top&#13;
scorers, Stacy Urbas and&#13;
Heidi Ver Gowe, to 11 points&#13;
each. This was a key to containing&#13;
the Muskies, Miller&#13;
Ranger men hang on for a&#13;
victory over St. Xavier&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
It's beginning to be a habit&#13;
for the Parkside Ranger&#13;
men's basketball team.&#13;
For the umpteenth time,&#13;
the Rangers broke down&#13;
early in the second half, but&#13;
recovered in time to pull out&#13;
a 69-65 win over the St. Xavier&#13;
Cougars.&#13;
"We were flat in the second&#13;
half," said coach Rees Johnson.&#13;
"We had no fire, no intensity.&#13;
I don't like it."&#13;
The Cougars (9-13) scored&#13;
the first 10 points of the second&#13;
half, erasing the eight&#13;
point lead the Rangers had at&#13;
halftime. Parkside didn't&#13;
score until Dave Peterson&#13;
made two free throws with&#13;
13:21 left in the game and&#13;
didn't make a field goal until&#13;
a minute later.&#13;
The game was even then&#13;
until James Jones put Parkside&#13;
ahead to stay with 4:23&#13;
to go. Later, Jones drilled two&#13;
three-point shots to give the&#13;
Rangers a six point lead.&#13;
St. Xavier wasn't through&#13;
yet, though. After Peterson&#13;
made two foul shots, the Cougars'&#13;
Rob Malchow made two&#13;
consecutive three-pointers -&#13;
one of them with two men on&#13;
him - to close the gap to 67-65&#13;
\yith J.4 seconds, left.&#13;
After a time-out, St. Xavier&#13;
intercepted a long Ranger&#13;
pass, giving the Cougars a&#13;
final chance to tie or win; but&#13;
John Dwyer bobbled a pass in&#13;
the lane and the Rangers'&#13;
Mike Henderson picked up&#13;
the ball and was fouled with&#13;
four seconds left. He calmly&#13;
made his two free throws to&#13;
seal the win for Parkside.&#13;
Despite the win, Johnson&#13;
was not happy with his&#13;
team's play. "I am happy we&#13;
won, I'm not happy with the&#13;
way we played," Johnson&#13;
said. "We made our share of&#13;
mistakes. We forced it inside&#13;
a few times and we just&#13;
didn't jell."&#13;
With the district playoffs&#13;
coming up at the end of this&#13;
month, Johnson feels his&#13;
team will be ready, although&#13;
they didn't show it against&#13;
the Cougars. "We're probably&#13;
entitled to a bad game, but&#13;
we'll be ready for the tournament."&#13;
Center Mark Zukley echoed&#13;
Johnson's statement. "I feel&#13;
good about this team,"said&#13;
Zukley. I realize we're going&#13;
to win because of this team.&#13;
We'll be ready at tournament&#13;
time - trust me."&#13;
Zukley had 17 points to lead&#13;
the Ranger attack. Jones&#13;
scored 16 points, 12 in the second&#13;
half and eight in the last&#13;
four and a half minutes. Peterson&#13;
and Henderson had 11&#13;
and 10 points, respectively.&#13;
Zukley also had seven rebounds.&#13;
St. Xavier was led by Dan&#13;
Klug's 14 points.&#13;
• * * * *&#13;
In the Feb. 2 Dunkel Ratings,&#13;
used to determine playoff&#13;
pairings, Parkside has&#13;
moved up to fourth place,&#13;
leapfrogging past Platteville,&#13;
Stout and River Falls.&#13;
A team in the top four is&#13;
guaranteed at least one home&#13;
game in the playoffs.&#13;
Included in the same report&#13;
were the District 14 statistics.&#13;
As a team, the Rangers&#13;
lead the district in free throw&#13;
percentage, hitting 77 percent.&#13;
They are third in scoring&#13;
offense (79.3 points per&#13;
game) and three-point field&#13;
goal percentage (42.5).&#13;
Individually, Zukley is&#13;
eighth in scoring average&#13;
with 16.4 points per game,&#13;
fifth in field goal percentage&#13;
with 60.9 percent and third in&#13;
rebounding average with 8.8&#13;
per game.&#13;
Henderson and Jones are&#13;
also in the top 25 in scoring&#13;
and in the top 10 in threepoint&#13;
shooting. Henderson is&#13;
also seventh in free-throw&#13;
percentage.&#13;
said.&#13;
Wolter and Susie Brugioni&#13;
led a balanced Ranger offensive&#13;
attack with 13 points&#13;
each. Brugioni also had three&#13;
assists and two steals.&#13;
Maass, who, according to&#13;
Miller, played the best game&#13;
of her collegiate career,&#13;
scored 12 points, 10 of them in&#13;
the second half. Proeber and&#13;
Slaats each added nine&#13;
points, and Angie Curtes had&#13;
eight. Slaats also led Parkside&#13;
with nine rebounds,&#13;
while Brugioni and Wolter&#13;
each had eight.&#13;
The Lady Rangers' next&#13;
home game is tonight at 7&#13;
p.m. against Parkland College.&#13;
This Saturday at 2 p.m.,&#13;
Parkside will host Concordia&#13;
College. It is also Parents'&#13;
Day.&#13;
* * * * * *&#13;
This past Saturday, the&#13;
Rangers travelled to Indiana&#13;
to play Valparaiso University.&#13;
Parkside was in control&#13;
of most of the game, but mental&#13;
lapses late in the second&#13;
half allowed Valparaiso to escape&#13;
wih a 71-68 win.&#13;
"We played totally different&#13;
in the second half compared&#13;
to the first," said Miller. "We&#13;
fell asleep; we were completely&#13;
flat. We had no execution&#13;
on offense and our defense&#13;
was sluggish /'&#13;
Proeber led the Lady&#13;
Rangers with 25 points on 10&#13;
of 20 from the floor and five&#13;
of six from the free throw&#13;
line.&#13;
Curtes and Wolter had 13&#13;
and 12 points, respectively.&#13;
Racewalkers win TAC&#13;
by Michael J. Rohl&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
Parkside has won yet another&#13;
national championship.&#13;
This time it was the men's&#13;
racewalking team. Three&#13;
members of the team attended&#13;
The Athletics Congress&#13;
(TAC) National 15-kilometer&#13;
Championship in West Palm&#13;
Beach, Florida.&#13;
The team members were&#13;
Andrew Kaestner, Mike&#13;
Stauch and Doug Fournier.&#13;
The Parkside squad soundly&#13;
defeated archrival Eastside&#13;
Track club by over five&#13;
minutes. (Team scoring is&#13;
kept by total time of the first&#13;
three team members.)&#13;
Stauch led the team effort&#13;
with a fourth place finish in&#13;
1:08:00. Kastner was sixth in&#13;
1:09:42 and Fournier finished&#13;
tenth in 1:12:00. Also, walking&#13;
was Dave McGovern, who&#13;
will be joining the team in the&#13;
outdoor season. McGovern&#13;
finished sixth in 1:08:00.1.&#13;
In two weeks a second&#13;
group of racewalkers will&#13;
compete in Monteray, California&#13;
for the National 50-kilometer&#13;
title. Making that trip&#13;
will be Coach Mike DeWitt,&#13;
Andrew Kaestner and Michael&#13;
Rohl.&#13;
Schedule&#13;
Men's Basketball&#13;
Sat., Feb. 14 - At Northern Michigan, 8 p.m.&#13;
Women's Basketball&#13;
Tonight, Feb. 12 - Home vs. Parkland College, 7 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Feb. 14 - Home vs. Concordia College&#13;
(Parents' Day), 2 p.m.&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
Fri. and Sat., Feb. 13-14 - At the Wheaton College&#13;
Invitational, starting at 4 p.m.&#13;
and continuing at 9 a.m. Sat.&#13;
Men's Track&#13;
Sat., Feb. 14 - At the LaCrosse Invitational, noon.&#13;
Women's Track&#13;
Sat., Feb. 14 - At the Golden Track Shoe meet,&#13;
Madison, 10 a.m.</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78662">
                <text>1987-02-19</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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              </elementText>
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                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
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                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78670">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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        <name>kenosha county circuit court</name>
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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="90160">
              <text>-&#13;
University of Wlsconsln-Parkslde&#13;
Vol.&#13;
15.&#13;
No. 20&#13;
Anotherone rides the bus&#13;
Actually,manystudents walt daily in the Comm Arts lot for&#13;
• bua ride  home.&#13;
PSGA executive elections&#13;
Prer;&#13;
VPcandidates revealed&#13;
by Gary&#13;
1...&#13;
Schneeberger  '&#13;
Editor&#13;
Five  students  seeking  the&#13;
Parkslde   Student   Govern-&#13;
ment   Association   (PSGA)&#13;
presidency,  and three  seeking&#13;
the vice-presidency.&#13;
will&#13;
par-&#13;
ticlpate&#13;
in&#13;
a candidate debate&#13;
on Monday, March  2, at  1&#13;
p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
The debate,  sponsored by&#13;
the Ranger,&#13;
will&#13;
allow each&#13;
candidate   to  address   the&#13;
issues he or she&#13;
will&#13;
under-&#13;
take&#13;
if&#13;
elected. Elections will&#13;
take place on March&#13;
9&#13;
and&#13;
10.&#13;
The   following   students,&#13;
listed alphabetically, have an-&#13;
nounced their candidacy and&#13;
will&#13;
be taking part in the de-&#13;
bate.&#13;
Corbett  Anderson,&#13;
21,&#13;
Is&#13;
seeking  the  office  of vice-&#13;
president.  A junior political&#13;
science/economics    major&#13;
f&#13;
Anderson Is a member of the&#13;
PSGA Information  Resources&#13;
Committee  and  a  former&#13;
Ranger staff writer.&#13;
"I've been a&#13;
part&#13;
of the uni-&#13;
versity for a few years now&#13;
and bave had a chance to lis-&#13;
ten to a number  of student&#13;
concerns, ..  he  says  of&#13;
his&#13;
qualifications  for the office.&#13;
"I feel I should be elected so&#13;
that I can put wbat I know&#13;
about Parkslde  to good use&#13;
for&#13;
all&#13;
of us."&#13;
Rich  Borkowski,&#13;
23,&#13;
Is a&#13;
senior sociology major  pursu-&#13;
ing   teacher    certlflcation&#13;
who's seeking the PSGA pres-&#13;
idency. A member  of sociolo-&#13;
gy&#13;
club, a campus ambassa-&#13;
dor  and  a  participant   in&#13;
ROTC,&#13;
Borkowski  believes&#13;
students  should  have  more&#13;
representation  on university&#13;
committees.&#13;
"As an officer&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
Army&#13;
National Guard," he says,&#13;
"I&#13;
have proved&#13;
to&#13;
be responsi-&#13;
ble,  dedicated  and  commit-&#13;
ted.&#13;
I&#13;
feel&#13;
this&#13;
experience&#13;
will&#13;
also give me valuable lever-&#13;
age in dealing with state as&#13;
well as local officials."&#13;
Dan&#13;
Galbraith,&#13;
25,&#13;
is&#13;
a&#13;
sen-&#13;
ior seeking the office&#13;
of presl-&#13;
dent.&#13;
An&#13;
applied  computer&#13;
science major,&#13;
his&#13;
experience&#13;
includes involvement&#13;
with&#13;
the&#13;
Parkslde   Activities   Board&#13;
(PAB), the dance  ensemble&#13;
and the Budget and Review&#13;
Committee of SOC.&#13;
"Through my past and cur-&#13;
rent involvement at Parkside,&#13;
I feel qualified to best repre-&#13;
sent the student body." Gal-&#13;
braith  says.&#13;
If&#13;
elected, he'll&#13;
"continue lobbying&#13;
the&#13;
Park-&#13;
side  administration   to  im-&#13;
prove&#13;
student  positions&#13;
on&#13;
issues like tuition and&#13;
nnan-&#13;
cial&#13;
aid&#13;
cuts .' •&#13;
Jim  Laweil,  Jr.,&#13;
21,&#13;
Is a&#13;
sophomore&#13;
international&#13;
studies major  vying for the&#13;
president's   post.  A  PSGA&#13;
senator, he's also president of&#13;
the  Circle  K  Club,  and  a&#13;
member&#13;
of&#13;
the International&#13;
Studies and Polltical Science&#13;
Clubs.&#13;
If&#13;
elected, "I would search&#13;
out the needs and views&#13;
of&#13;
students and bring attention&#13;
to&#13;
them," Lawell says.&#13;
"I&#13;
do&#13;
not consider&#13;
this&#13;
election&#13;
a&#13;
popularity  contest;&#13;
I&#13;
know&#13;
my&#13;
record speaks for itself."&#13;
Fred  Monardi  is  seeking&#13;
the vice-presidency&#13;
and&#13;
will&#13;
discuss his views at the de-&#13;
bate, but no information was&#13;
available at press time.&#13;
Alex&#13;
Pettit,&#13;
20,&#13;
is a senior&#13;
business  major&#13;
running   for&#13;
president.  He's  done behind&#13;
the scenes work for&#13;
the&#13;
Park.&#13;
side Association of&#13;
Communi-&#13;
cators   (PAC),   and&#13;
has&#13;
worked extensively&#13;
with&#13;
the&#13;
university's   Microcomputer&#13;
Lab.&#13;
If&#13;
elected,  Pettit   would&#13;
"suggest a more equltable de-&#13;
ferred  tuition plan and ask&#13;
for  student  participation  in&#13;
food service planning.&#13;
I'I&#13;
feel&#13;
I&#13;
am&#13;
on&#13;
a better&#13;
level of understanding  with&#13;
most students here, given&#13;
my&#13;
work&#13;
with  the&#13;
library,&#13;
,t&#13;
Pettit&#13;
says of&#13;
his&#13;
quatlflcations.&#13;
Kay&#13;
Rouse.&#13;
f2,&#13;
18&#13;
a&#13;
senior&#13;
majoring in human bebavlor&#13;
and society. Among other in-&#13;
volvement, she's a PSGA jus-&#13;
tice, president of the Interna-&#13;
tional  Studies  Club  and  a&#13;
campus&#13;
ambassador.&#13;
"Rather&#13;
than&#13;
use a&#13;
direct,&#13;
confrontational style of lead-&#13;
ership,"  Rouse  says.&#13;
"I&#13;
c.ndldstea  _&#13;
/»SIft&#13;
4&#13;
brkside reacts to crisi~&#13;
AIDSforces  students  to  examine  sex practices&#13;
by&#13;
Amy&#13;
H.&#13;
Ritter&#13;
l'hil'&lt;!  •&#13;
In&#13;
a four-part&#13;
series&#13;
In&#13;
The&#13;
threat of AcqUired&#13;
Im-&#13;
(~Deficlency    Syndrome,&#13;
) has&#13;
become real  to&#13;
~   Parkslde students,  as&#13;
llon ~&#13;
to&#13;
the ,rest of the&#13;
na-&#13;
ler.    Student Health Cen-&#13;
help&#13;
aCCOl'd1nglyis  offering&#13;
"If&#13;
Inforrnationand advice.&#13;
that&#13;
fa student came in with&#13;
Po1ed&#13;
ear (of&#13;
having&#13;
been&#13;
ex-&#13;
laenb&#13;
to&#13;
AIDS),"&#13;
said Edith&#13;
!leaJ&#13;
erg, COOrdinatorof the&#13;
8I&gt;on~&#13;
Center, "we would&#13;
re-&#13;
Wouldthe  same  way  we&#13;
"lib&#13;
reSpondto any student&#13;
1r&lt;ouI&#13;
a health problem.  We&#13;
~&#13;
talk&#13;
to the student, and&#13;
Ute&#13;
to&#13;
the atudent,  and&#13;
If&#13;
les~ludentWouldlike to have&#13;
ilude:i We would refer  the&#13;
~Thele  are&#13;
three&#13;
things&#13;
we&#13;
~d&#13;
teu&#13;
the student,"  Isen-&#13;
eontlnued.&#13;
,TIle'&#13;
center&#13;
would refer the student to his&#13;
private  physician,  or&#13;
if&#13;
pre- ,&#13;
ferred,   to  the  Milwaukee&#13;
AIDS Project, or to the South-&#13;
eastern  Family  Practice,&#13;
10-'&#13;
cated&#13;
In&#13;
Tallent  Hail.  The&#13;
,FamUy  practice  Is equlpped&#13;
to  take  blood  tests,  which&#13;
they send to the State Depart.&#13;
ment  of Health  for testing.&#13;
"This  (the  test  result)   Is&#13;
totally   confidential,"    she&#13;
said. "We would not be noti-&#13;
fied.&#13;
)&#13;
"If&#13;
a student fears (he/she&#13;
bas&#13;
been eKPOsedto AIDS,&#13;
If,&#13;
the student  is in a high-risk&#13;
group  or&#13;
if&#13;
the student&#13;
ex-&#13;
hiblts'symptoms,   we recom-&#13;
mend  they  be  tested.  We&#13;
don't force anyone to, be test-&#13;
ed. That's  an individual mat-&#13;
ter. But certainly anyone who&#13;
would like&#13;
to&#13;
be tested  can&#13;
be;'we ~ould ask the student&#13;
to come back at&#13;
any&#13;
time&#13;
If&#13;
he or She needed  addl':~.&#13;
..&#13;
.&#13;
help or someone to talk to,"&#13;
she added. "This is a fright-&#13;
ening stressful situation, and&#13;
we w.wt to be supportive."&#13;
Isenberg was involved with&#13;
displaying  Milwaukee&#13;
AIDS&#13;
Line posters&#13;
on&#13;
campus&#13;
re-&#13;
cently. "Initially,  we decided&#13;
(to put up the pooIers)  be-&#13;
cause It's (the AIDS Line) is&#13;
more anonymous,&#13;
It&#13;
she said.&#13;
Some students may feel more&#13;
comfortable&#13;
expresefng&#13;
their&#13;
fears  over  the  phone&#13;
than&#13;
voicing   them   face-to-face&#13;
with someone at the Health&#13;
center.&#13;
Isenberg said that the Cen-&#13;
ter follows the guidelines of&#13;
the American College Health&#13;
AssOCtation (A~)&#13;
as out-&#13;
lined in their booklet, "AIDS&#13;
on  the   College  campus:&#13;
ACHA Special Report."  The&#13;
booklet&#13;
Is&#13;
the work of ACHA&#13;
and lis National Task Force&#13;
on  AIDS.&#13;
It&#13;
encompasses&#13;
such topics as the institution·&#13;
,&#13;
'"&#13;
.........&#13;
-&#13;
.....&#13;
al reponse  to AIDS, institu-&#13;
tional policies and the&#13;
admin-&#13;
Istrative llalson, housing poil-&#13;
cles,  educational   priorities&#13;
and methods,&#13;
HTLV-m&#13;
anti-&#13;
body testing (testing for e"PO-&#13;
sure to AIDS) and a state-&#13;
ment on confidentiality of in-&#13;
formallon.&#13;
The center&#13;
also&#13;
provides in-&#13;
formation on&#13;
AIDS&#13;
by offer-&#13;
ing&#13;
free pamphiels,  such as&#13;
"AIDS: Protect Your Health,&#13;
Know&#13;
the&#13;
Facts ." and "Safe&#13;
Sex."&#13;
A committee on AIDS&#13;
will&#13;
BOOnbe developed  at Park-&#13;
side, accordlng  to Isenberg.&#13;
"Gary Grace (asaistant chan-&#13;
cellor of student&#13;
affalrs)&#13;
is&#13;
appointing  a  committee&#13;
to&#13;
study  inslltutional  polley&#13;
on&#13;
AIDS and  make  recommen-&#13;
AloS_,..S&#13;
------------&#13;
our view&#13;
SOME ~EOPLE WAtO" TO WRrrE OFF&#13;
"THE LAST,-wO  'l'£l\RS  OF OUR&#13;
___    ~PR~E5;;IOENCY...&#13;
Four-year college&#13;
a thing of past&#13;
During&#13;
his&#13;
election  campaign", Tommy· Thompson  was&#13;
hardly viewed by the publlc as the students'  friend.&#13;
Now that he's governor,  that view&#13;
Isn't&#13;
likely to change.&#13;
Last  week.  Thompson  proposed  a plan  which  would&#13;
markedly  raise full-time tuition at all UW-System schools&#13;
for those students  taking  more&#13;
than&#13;
four years  to gradu-&#13;
ate. His rationale.  as we interpret  It. Is that students  reo&#13;
qulrlng  extra  time to receive  their  degrees  are clogging&#13;
up the educational system for other, more studious sorts.&#13;
and as a result these loafers  should be punished.&#13;
Such reasoning Is as ludicrous. and dangerous,  as the&#13;
governor's  proposal Itself.&#13;
The days of college as an exclusively  four-year  journey&#13;
are over. Today.&#13;
with&#13;
bachelor's  degrees  meaning less&#13;
and less to employers  since more and more people are at-&#13;
taining' them,  university  experience  Is no longer  viewed&#13;
simply as a place to obtsln a parchment  and a sheepskin&#13;
after eight semesters  of poking your nose in a book.&#13;
Instead.  students  seeking to maximize  their educational&#13;
opportw1ities  now use college as a forum for attamtng  ex-&#13;
perience  not related&#13;
to&#13;
bookwork. Internships,  extern-&#13;
ships.&#13;
cooperative  education  and community  outreach  are&#13;
just some of the practical  means  sought by today's  truly&#13;
serious students&#13;
to&#13;
arrive  at a successful  end: career  em-&#13;
ployment.&#13;
It&#13;
Is obvious. to everyone  but Governor  Thompson.  that&#13;
education of this type often requires  more&#13;
than&#13;
the&#13;
accus-&#13;
tomed four year tour.&#13;
It&#13;
Is not. however,  an occurence  de-&#13;
serving punishment  the likes of that the governor&#13;
has&#13;
pro-&#13;
posed.&#13;
If&#13;
anything.&#13;
It&#13;
Is something  to&#13;
be&#13;
recognized  and praised&#13;
as an answer&#13;
to&#13;
the question, "HoW can&#13;
I&#13;
make myself&#13;
more employable after&#13;
acboot?"&#13;
'your views&#13;
I&#13;
Research not for sale&#13;
To&#13;
tbeEdllor&#13;
After&#13;
three&#13;
weeks of library&#13;
research.  writing and&#13;
edittng,&#13;
I&#13;
have finally  completed  my&#13;
required  collegiate  skills  re-&#13;
search paper.&#13;
To  say  the  least.&#13;
I&#13;
was&#13;
stunned&#13;
to&#13;
discover&#13;
a&#13;
service,&#13;
which  Is advertised  right  on&#13;
my&#13;
Comm&#13;
Arts&#13;
classroom&#13;
bulletin  board,  that offers re-&#13;
search   papers   for   sale.&#13;
"Qua1Jty&#13;
guaranteed,&#13;
15,279&#13;
research   papers   to  choose&#13;
from."  This&#13;
company  even&#13;
allows you to use your&#13;
:Mas.&#13;
tercard  or&#13;
Vtsa&#13;
to pay for an&#13;
order.&#13;
This&#13;
upsetting   discovery&#13;
leaves&#13;
me&#13;
with many&#13;
ques-&#13;
tions. HoW could such&#13;
afla':&#13;
grant  form of cheating  be ad-&#13;
vertised  right  in  my  class-&#13;
room? Who is responsible for&#13;
placing these advertisements&#13;
on  the  classroom  bulletin&#13;
boards?  And, why&#13;
hasn't&#13;
any-&#13;
one removed these ads?&#13;
As a student  of the Univer-&#13;
sity  of Wisconsin  System,&#13;
I&#13;
am deeply concerned.&#13;
I&#13;
don't&#13;
belleve that this company has&#13;
any right&#13;
to&#13;
place  these  ads&#13;
here  on the  campus.&#13;
I&#13;
can&#13;
only feel sorry  for the&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents who choose&#13;
to&#13;
use this&#13;
service.  How can they expect&#13;
to  learn   anything&#13;
If&#13;
they&#13;
choose quick, easy solutions&#13;
like this.&#13;
I&#13;
hope mine is not a&#13;
minority  opinion. and&#13;
I&#13;
would&#13;
llke&#13;
to&#13;
see these ads removed.&#13;
Now!&#13;
Todd&#13;
J.&#13;
Niles&#13;
j&#13;
~&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
UobodY..asked me,&#13;
but"&#13;
Let's get our priorities straight&#13;
by Andy Buchanan&#13;
It&#13;
strikes me as very&#13;
curt-&#13;
ous that&#13;
a&#13;
group of relatively&#13;
moderate  students  have&#13;
col-&#13;
lected   a  3OO-name petition&#13;
and propose to picket the Cof-&#13;
fee Shoppe  over  a five  cent&#13;
cup of water.&#13;
One  protestor   claims  that&#13;
student  rights  are  being  vio-&#13;
lated.&#13;
I&#13;
doubt that's  true.  but&#13;
even so, where are our&#13;
prtort-&#13;
ties?&#13;
As a Parkslde  student body,&#13;
we are  presently  being  con-&#13;
fronted  with  a  difficult  and&#13;
complex llst of problems.  Our&#13;
own university  Board  of Re-&#13;
gents Is proposing  the Iargest&#13;
tuition increase&#13;
in&#13;
memory;&#13;
financial  aid cuts are&#13;
extin-&#13;
gulshlng    the    educational&#13;
hopes  of young.  independent&#13;
students;  faculty  governance&#13;
is&#13;
stonewalling  on releasing&#13;
evaluation  forms and thereby&#13;
supporting  mediocrity  in the&#13;
classroom;&#13;
an   incredlbly&#13;
wasteful  and  expensive  book&#13;
buying  system   operates   so&#13;
that  perfectly  good textbooks&#13;
become   worthless   on  the&#13;
whim of an instructor.   These&#13;
are&#13;
some&#13;
of the more impor-&#13;
tant  Isuses  being  addressed&#13;
by the  student  government,&#13;
and&#13;
I&#13;
urge  students   to  be-&#13;
.come involved  in trying  to&#13;
re-&#13;
solve them.&#13;
I've  worked  in student  af-&#13;
fairs  for  more  than  a  few&#13;
"-years and have  noticed  how&#13;
we let the major  issues pass&#13;
us by and yet strike&#13;
outtorce-&#13;
fully  at  the  trivial   and  in-&#13;
consequential.&#13;
When   State&#13;
Representative   Jeff Neubauer&#13;
visited  the  PSGA  office  to&#13;
gauge   student   opinion   on&#13;
education  issues,  there  were&#13;
barely  enough  bodles  to fill a&#13;
sofa. When we&#13;
are&#13;
asked&#13;
to&#13;
pay&#13;
$40&#13;
for a new edition  of a&#13;
textbook  which  Is essentially&#13;
identical&#13;
to&#13;
the one previously&#13;
used  (and now useless),  we&#13;
comply with resignation.  as if&#13;
the Issue were unimportant.&#13;
Faculty  and administration&#13;
by&#13;
virtue&#13;
of organization and&#13;
experience,  tend&#13;
to&#13;
dominate&#13;
campus  policy-making.   This&#13;
Is  particularly    true  at  the&#13;
higher   levels  (e.g.· Admin.&#13;
Council).  where real policy&#13;
Is&#13;
set and students  are carefully&#13;
excluded.  Students  would&#13;
be&#13;
listened  to with greater effect&#13;
If they  were  more organized&#13;
and&#13;
would address&#13;
the serious&#13;
issues  affecting  their&#13;
eduea-&#13;
tlon.&#13;
The   student   government&#13;
exists  to represent  us&#13;
in&#13;
this&#13;
regard..&#13;
and  through its&#13;
ot-&#13;
fices&#13;
I&#13;
urge students&#13;
to&#13;
focus&#13;
their activities on&#13;
such&#13;
issue5&#13;
as  the  release  of&#13;
teacher&#13;
evaluation  forms. Implement.&#13;
ing a textbook  rental system&#13;
and getting  equal representa·&#13;
tion&#13;
in&#13;
campus&#13;
governance.&#13;
Organize   the  protests  and&#13;
petitions  for better  teaching&#13;
and  an&#13;
education  ordinary&#13;
people  can  afford.  This&#13;
Is&#13;
where your leadership&#13;
can&#13;
be&#13;
effective.&#13;
Regarding    the  cup and&#13;
water  Issue:  The appropriate&#13;
forum  to address  this ;neon·&#13;
venience  already  exists· it&#13;
Is&#13;
the  Union  Advisory  Board&#13;
(PUAB).   which  was&#13;
set-up&#13;
specifically   to  addreSS stu'&#13;
dent concerns&#13;
in&#13;
this area.&#13;
-&#13;
•&#13;
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UW-Parkside,who are&#13;
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Ranger: UW.Parkside,~Bo)(&#13;
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.BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
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Brenda Buchanan&#13;
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EDITORIAL  STAFF&#13;
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 15, issue 20, February 26, 1987</text>
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