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              <text>Tubes interview&#13;
Page 8&#13;
»&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Page 12&#13;
Woodstock&#13;
remembered&#13;
Page 7&#13;
Space Shuttle "Discovery9&#13;
has a Parkside connection&#13;
The space shuttle Discovery,&#13;
which went into orbit last Friday,&#13;
has a strong Parkside connection.&#13;
The shuttle is carrying an experiment&#13;
designed by Keith Ward, a&#13;
former Parkside chemistry professor&#13;
and Mary Ann Perozzo, a 1983&#13;
chemistry graduate.&#13;
Perozzo, 23, is a research assistant&#13;
at the U.S Naval Laboratory in&#13;
Washington, D.C. and Ward is a research&#13;
biophysicist in that lab.&#13;
Their experiment involves the&#13;
growth of protein crystals in a&#13;
weightless environment. The crystals&#13;
were isolated by the researchers&#13;
in the bioluminescent marine&#13;
jellyfish, a species common to the&#13;
world's oceans.&#13;
Keith Ward&#13;
It is hoped that the weightless&#13;
environment will facilitate the&#13;
growth of the crystals and make&#13;
them easier to study.&#13;
Perozzo said the two researchers&#13;
are hoping to get the experiment&#13;
back within a week.&#13;
Since the crystals will grow more&#13;
perfectly in a low gravity environment,&#13;
she said, they will not only&#13;
be able to study the structure of&#13;
protein, which requires the proteiq&#13;
to be in a crystal form, but they&#13;
will also be able to study crystal development&#13;
and growth.&#13;
Ward, who taught chemistry at&#13;
Parkside from 1976 to 1984, has&#13;
been working on the experiment in&#13;
Washington since October. Perozzo,&#13;
who taught chemistry lab last semster,&#13;
has been with the lab as&#13;
Ward's assistant for several&#13;
months.&#13;
David Beach named Director&#13;
of new advising center&#13;
Thursday, April 18, 1985 University of Wisconsin-Parkside Vol. 13, No. 27&#13;
by Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
David Beach, associate professor&#13;
of Psychology, has been named Interim&#13;
Director of Advising an d Orientation&#13;
for the newly developed&#13;
Advising Center located in WLLC&#13;
D-174 in th e former Career Resource&#13;
Center.&#13;
The Advising Center, which was&#13;
established by the Faculty Senate&#13;
last fall, will serve students who are&#13;
admitted to Parkside under "conditional"&#13;
status, which requires prescriptive&#13;
advising. Beach said the&#13;
Center will probably be operational&#13;
to a limited extent in the fall&#13;
semester.&#13;
"I would like to contribute to&#13;
student success at Parkside. Success,&#13;
I feel, includes grades, but it&#13;
goes f ar beyond. I hope to provide&#13;
encouragement to students, prod&#13;
them to think further and to explore&#13;
and experience the full range of&#13;
undergraduate education. I feel&#13;
that if in a student's mind the classroom&#13;
experience is more than 50&#13;
percent of their education, then&#13;
that student is not getting an education.&#13;
It's too seductive for students,&#13;
faculty and staff to put on such a &gt;&#13;
conceptual blinder that they lose&#13;
sight of the more general purpose&#13;
and direction, to the detriment of&#13;
all involved," said Beach.&#13;
Beach is currently working on&#13;
developing a steering committee&#13;
for the Advising Center, as well as&#13;
putting together a budget. "I am&#13;
also developing some ways to invol-&#13;
David Beach&#13;
ve counselor, students, and various&#13;
other groups, such as financial aids,&#13;
in the Advising Center," said&#13;
Beach. '&#13;
The Career Resource Center materials&#13;
are now located in the&#13;
Career Planning and Placement Office,&#13;
WLLC D-173.&#13;
Info counter opened on Concourse&#13;
An academic information&#13;
counter has been opened on the&#13;
WLLC concourse across from the&#13;
Library/Learning Center. The&#13;
counter is staffed by Student Services&#13;
personnel who will answer&#13;
questions about enrollment and will&#13;
refer students to staff, faculty or&#13;
other campus or community resources.&#13;
"The idea is to put ourselves and&#13;
some of the services we provide&#13;
more directly in front of the students.&#13;
Staff felt that being in a&#13;
highly visible and accessible location&#13;
would make it easier for students&#13;
to approach us and get information&#13;
they need. A lot of s tudents&#13;
may have questions or want more&#13;
information about such things as&#13;
general degree requirements, adding&#13;
and dropping classes, registration,&#13;
placement tests and many&#13;
other things," said Stuart Rubner,&#13;
Director of Community Student&#13;
Services.&#13;
Rubner said that after staffing&#13;
the counter for only a few days this&#13;
week, it is obvious, by t he number&#13;
of students who have sought infor-&#13;
Two phones have been installed&#13;
at the counter — o ne is available&#13;
for students to make quick on-campus&#13;
calls or in the community, and&#13;
another for staff to use to gather requested&#13;
information or make referrals.&#13;
„&#13;
The counter will be staffed in the&#13;
morning and early afternoons and&#13;
then again in late afternoon and.&#13;
evening. A counselor is also on duty&#13;
in WLLC D-175 Student Services office&#13;
from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily andi&#13;
to 4:30 p.m. on Friday. , J&#13;
Up on a roof -&#13;
The leaky roof of the Concourse walkway, which overlooks&#13;
Inner Loop Road, is getting a needed repair job.&#13;
Guskin discusses issues&#13;
by Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin discussed&#13;
the housing proposal, engineering&#13;
accreditation and the catchup&#13;
pay plan at the Open Forum on&#13;
Monday.&#13;
An aud ience member asked Guskin&#13;
to explain the rationale for senior&#13;
citizen housing which was part&#13;
of the on-campus housing development&#13;
proposal.&#13;
"The marketing survey has&#13;
shown that the current demand for&#13;
senior housing is such that we're&#13;
going to put the plan on the back&#13;
burner for now. I do feel, though,&#13;
that this project could benefit the&#13;
university. Universities are prime&#13;
places for the elderly. Elder Hostel&#13;
programs have been very successful&#13;
at other campuses. It would be exciting&#13;
to serve that type of population&#13;
at Parkside. We have also recently&#13;
found that the market is not&#13;
right yet for the married student&#13;
housing. The price estimates for&#13;
apartments are not consistent with&#13;
what students indicated they would&#13;
pay for rent when asked in a survey.&#13;
Our present plan is to develop&#13;
traditional student apartments for&#13;
300 to 350 students with six people&#13;
per suite, two double and two singles.&#13;
This plan is consistent to the&#13;
original layout plan for Parkside.&#13;
What makes this housing proposal&#13;
unique is that it will be funded by&#13;
private money and not funded by&#13;
the state," said Guskin.&#13;
When asked when the housing is&#13;
projected to be completed, Guskin&#13;
said, "If the Board of Regents approves&#13;
the proposal in June, and I&#13;
Continued on page 2&#13;
. . -&#13;
t&#13;
/DO YOU DIFFER&#13;
WITH PRESIDENT&#13;
REAGAN ON &lt;RY . ANYTHING&#13;
V WELL ^&#13;
' I THINK T HAT MAROON&#13;
TIE OF HIS WITH THE&#13;
BLUE STRIPES IS&#13;
L TOO WIDE... /"T&#13;
WELL ^ DQ YOU DIFFER '&#13;
WITH PRESIDENT REAGAN&#13;
ON ANYTHING «P&#13;
THERE IS&#13;
THAT T IE.&#13;
2 Thursday, April 18,1985&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Remember the Holocaust&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
In the period between 1933 and&#13;
1945, more than 29 million people&#13;
were killed. Six million of them&#13;
were killed because they were Jewish.&#13;
On Monday, the film "To Bear&#13;
Witness" was shown on campus.&#13;
The film was developed by the&#13;
United States Holocaust Memorial&#13;
Council.&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin commented&#13;
before the film began, "We&#13;
must never forget — not only Jews&#13;
but every person — we must&#13;
remember that this holocaust happened&#13;
in one of the 'civilized' countries&#13;
of the world. It is the best indication&#13;
that intelligence and rational&#13;
learning is not enough in&#13;
educating people — we must also&#13;
deal with our values of social justice,&#13;
of commitment to a humane&#13;
and just society.&#13;
"Will a holocaust be repeated?&#13;
Maybe not in the same grotesque&#13;
manner as in Nazi Germany. But&#13;
there are the 'killing fields' of Cambodia,&#13;
the massacres in Africa, the&#13;
wanton killing in almost every part&#13;
of the globe.&#13;
"People massacre others when&#13;
they believe that the other is nonhuman&#13;
or sub-human. What we&#13;
must never forget is that all human&#13;
beings of whatever beliefs, of whatever&#13;
background, of whatever ethnicity,&#13;
of whatever conditions,&#13;
remain human beings and must be&#13;
given the humane treatment, the&#13;
same potential for hope, and to&#13;
have the same ability to achieve a&#13;
sense of integrity."&#13;
"To Bear Witness" focused in on&#13;
events throughout the holocaust period,&#13;
the applicaton of anti-Semitic&#13;
laws, Kristallnacht (the Night of&#13;
the Broken Glass when anti-Semitic&#13;
attacks took place in Germany and&#13;
Austria), the deportation of 300,000&#13;
Jews from the Warsaw Ghetto to&#13;
•Treblinka, the liquidation of the&#13;
Warsaw Ghetto, the constant extermination&#13;
of the Jewish population.&#13;
The film brings out the concept&#13;
that it was no longer a question of&#13;
how one hopes to survive in the&#13;
Nazi world, but for a Jew it became&#13;
a question of how one chose to die.&#13;
You could go down easy, just take&#13;
it and die, or you could go down&#13;
. more honorably, fightinbg, even&#13;
though the chance for survival&#13;
seemed unreachable. At one point&#13;
in the film, the speaker comments&#13;
that it was not a matter of "Hitler&#13;
being so evil, but that millions had&#13;
not the courage to be good."&#13;
When liberation finally came,&#13;
after the invasion by the Allied Forces,&#13;
there may have been some&#13;
cheering at the camps, but by then,&#13;
for a lot of prisoners of the camps,&#13;
it was too late. They had gone past&#13;
the point of malnutrition and hunger,&#13;
abuse and suffering to merely&#13;
hanging on to be able to die in freedom.&#13;
For some that was all the hope&#13;
there was...&#13;
Letter to the Editor&#13;
Faith healing a reality&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This letter is addressed to all&#13;
people who have always wanted to&#13;
see God move in a mighty way.&#13;
If you are a Christian and are a&#13;
fan of the Christian talk show PTL&#13;
•Club, then you know what I'm talking&#13;
about.&#13;
So many people have ridiculed&#13;
the teachings of the Bible without&#13;
really knowing what those teachings&#13;
are. In most cases their understanding&#13;
is limited only to what&#13;
they have learned in their denominational&#13;
Sunday School: man-made&#13;
doctrine presented as Bible teaching.&#13;
The Bible says in Heb. 11:6 that&#13;
without faith it is impossible to&#13;
please God. Without faith does not&#13;
mean being a certain denominational&#13;
member. Many churches&#13;
teach Biblical salvation, but don't&#13;
know a thing about Biblical healings&#13;
or the devil or speaking with&#13;
npw tongues.&#13;
There is a church in Dallas&#13;
started eight years ago by a man&#13;
and his wife who hungered to know&#13;
God. They had a successful ministry&#13;
of preaching and teaching&#13;
God's word. The man's name is&#13;
Bob Tilton.&#13;
Two years ago Bob Tilton had a&#13;
vision where he saw the word of&#13;
God being beamed up to a satellite,&#13;
and the satellite literally rained it&#13;
back down on the North American&#13;
continent and around the world.&#13;
If y ou did see PTL Club this past&#13;
Sunday, April 14 marked the 45th&#13;
night of God's miracle healing revival.&#13;
Miracles by the thousands have&#13;
taken place all around the world.&#13;
Many, many healings of cancer and&#13;
back problems — even short legs&#13;
grow to full length at the command&#13;
of Jesus' name.&#13;
You say, "Yea, that's all set up.&#13;
They have a few people shout 'Hal-&#13;
, **t Continued on Page 8&#13;
RANGER&#13;
by Kari Dixon&#13;
Nobody asked me, but I am sick&#13;
of Cyndi Lauper and Madonna&#13;
being billed as the epitome of the&#13;
"new woman" in popular music.&#13;
While Lauper has more artistic&#13;
depth than the sex kitten Madonna,&#13;
both come up short when compared&#13;
to the singers of the 70's like&#13;
Patti Smith, Janice Ian and Joni&#13;
Mitchell. But the new woman of&#13;
the 80's dies completely in comparison&#13;
to the female singers of the&#13;
60's, including Grace Slick, Tina&#13;
Turner, and especially Janis Joplin.&#13;
Joplin, quite simply, brought&#13;
misery into popular music. She incorporated&#13;
her love of the blues&#13;
style of Bessie Smith into a type of&#13;
popular music that no one has yet&#13;
to recreate. In between little&#13;
phrases of wisdom like "If you've&#13;
got it today, you don't wear it tomorrow&#13;
because tomorrow never&#13;
happens," and "If you got a cat for&#13;
one day, man, you got to call that&#13;
love." She sang (and I mean sang)&#13;
songs that dripped with emotion,&#13;
depression, booze and cigarette&#13;
smoke.&#13;
Today's new woman sings about&#13;
nice things and worries about her&#13;
clothes. Madonna sings about feeling&#13;
"like a virgin," and Cyndi Lauper&#13;
says profoundly that "Money&#13;
changes everything." The albums&#13;
are produced for mass commercial&#13;
success, with the eye on the everpopular&#13;
video that further pushes&#13;
the artist to a visual rather than&#13;
musical emphasis. And the contents&#13;
of the songs themselves are totally&#13;
different.&#13;
The songs sung by Joplin had an&#13;
Continued on Page 3&#13;
Guskin discusses issues at Open Forum&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
think it will, then September 1987 is&#13;
reasonable time for completion."&#13;
A student asked Guskin why&#13;
Parkside's Engineering Technology&#13;
program has not yet been accredited.&#13;
"I've been told since 1978 that&#13;
the engineering program would receive&#13;
accreditation and it still has&#13;
not," said the student. The student&#13;
also felt that non-accreditation was&#13;
hurting students' chances to get&#13;
jobs after graduation.&#13;
Guskin said, "I am not in favor&#13;
of specialized accreditation. This is&#13;
a big debate at many campuses. In&#13;
order to get accreditation, one&#13;
group of faculty comes in and tries&#13;
to determine if your program is desirable&#13;
in relationship to some national&#13;
criteria. What is important is,&#13;
do the faculty and students in the&#13;
institution think the program is desirable?&#13;
It would be better if these&#13;
groups would determine what the&#13;
goals of the program in an institution&#13;
are and see if those goals are&#13;
being met. I'm not willing to let&#13;
other campuses dictate what they&#13;
think is desirable. It's too prescriptive.&#13;
"I don't believe there is any evidence&#13;
that states Parkside graduates&#13;
are not getting jobs because&#13;
the program is not accredited. If&#13;
that is the case though, then our&#13;
job is to convince businesses that&#13;
we offer quality. Accreditation only&#13;
whipsaws the campus. If there is a&#13;
case to be made in favor of accreditation,&#13;
then I would consider&#13;
it, but I am wary about it. Accreditation&#13;
also affects the balance&#13;
of resources on a campus and those&#13;
kinds of decisions should be made&#13;
within the university," said Guskin.&#13;
An audience member asked Guskin&#13;
to elaborate on the status of the&#13;
catch-up pay plan for faculty and&#13;
academic staff. "Everyone has&#13;
agreed to a plan which will give&#13;
Madison 15 percent, Milwaukee 12&#13;
percent, cluster campuses, such as&#13;
Parkside, 10 percent and academic&#13;
staff 6 percent. There seems to be&#13;
an indication that this plan will go.&#13;
through," said Guskin.&#13;
The Open Forum was sposored&#13;
by the Ranger.&#13;
Nobody asked me, but...&#13;
U&#13;
9&#13;
•oO&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Kiesling&#13;
Jim Neibaur&#13;
Rick Luehr&#13;
Carol Kortendick&#13;
Dave McEvoy&#13;
Jill Whitney Nielsen.&#13;
Andy Buchanan&#13;
Wendy Westphal&#13;
Pat Zirkelbach&#13;
Brenda Buchanan.&#13;
Editor&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
Community News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
.... Advertising Manager&#13;
... Distribution Manager&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Tim Brass, Kari Dixon, Steve&#13;
OalMon. Kimberbe Krankfa, Steve&#13;
Kratochvil, RobbLuehr, Joan&#13;
Mattox, JnUe Pendleton, Bill Serpe&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
Sue Baumann, Jay Crapser, Darryl&#13;
Hahn, Kristine Odegard.&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students at UW-Parkside and they are solely responsible&#13;
for its editorial policy and content. Published every Thursday during the&#13;
academic year except during breaks and holidays.&#13;
Ranger is printed by the Racine Journal Times.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger. University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Box No. 2000. Kenosha. Wl 53141. Telephone (414) 553-&#13;
2295 or (414) 553-2287.&#13;
Letters to the editor will be accepted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard&#13;
size paper. Letters should be less than 350 words and must be signed, with a telephone&#13;
number included for verification p urposes. Names will be withheld upon request.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 10 a.m. for publi cation Thursday. Ranger&#13;
reserves the right to edit letters and refuse letters containing false and defamatory&#13;
content&#13;
Quality quartet set for fall modules&#13;
A one-credit course, Modules&#13;
with Professional Associates (41-&#13;
391), will be offered either for&#13;
credit or audit during the fall&#13;
semester.&#13;
Orientation will be held on Sept.&#13;
17.&#13;
Following are descriptions of the&#13;
modules:&#13;
• Sept. 24 and Oct. 1: "A Small&#13;
Business Experience: Creative&#13;
Education Associates," presented&#13;
by Carol Piggins, director of Creative&#13;
Education Associates, and Kay&#13;
Crimnungs Nordeen, its associate&#13;
director.&#13;
• Oct. 8 and 15: "Political Communication:&#13;
Problems and Opportunities,"&#13;
presented by Peter Jansson,&#13;
a lawyer in private practice.&#13;
• Oct. 22 and 29: "Best Foot&#13;
Forward," presented by Serge&#13;
Logan, director of Corporate Social&#13;
Responsibility for S.C. Johnson &amp;&#13;
Sons, Inc. (manufacturers of Johnson's&#13;
Wax and other products) and&#13;
James May, Corporate Public Relations&#13;
Manager for the company.&#13;
• Nov. 5 and 12: "A Day at an&#13;
Ad Agency," by Richard Palmquist,&#13;
president of Palmquist Creative&#13;
Services, Inc.&#13;
In addition to the modules, a&#13;
project meeting and project presentation&#13;
will be held on Nov. 29 and&#13;
Dec. 10. These final sessions are&#13;
mandatory for gaining credit.&#13;
Students may choose three of the&#13;
- four modules. Upon completion of&#13;
the modules, a presentation, either&#13;
written or oral, is due in order to&#13;
receive credit for the class.&#13;
"It's not a research paper," said&#13;
Judy Logsdon Pugh, Coordinator of&#13;
the Professional Associates Program.&#13;
"Rather, it's a free-thinking&#13;
paper that allows students to explore&#13;
new ideas.&#13;
"The point of the Professional&#13;
Associates Program is to bring the&#13;
academic and business world together,"&#13;
concluded Pugh.&#13;
Nobody asked&#13;
Continued from Page 2&#13;
assertiveness and independence&#13;
about them. In "Bye, Bye Baby"&#13;
she sings "I ain't got to wait on&#13;
you/I've got lots of things I gotta&#13;
do." In "Move Over" she says,&#13;
"You say that it's over baby/You&#13;
say that it's over now/But still you&#13;
hang around/C'mon, why don't you&#13;
move over?"&#13;
Contrast the tone and meaning of&#13;
those lyrics to Lauper's "Girls just&#13;
want to have fun," and especially&#13;
Madonna's "Material Girl" in&#13;
which she proudly sings "The boy&#13;
with the cold, hard cash is always&#13;
Mr. Right." One starts to get the&#13;
feeling that the shallowness and&#13;
frivolousness are not accidents, but&#13;
rather marketing tools to sell records&#13;
and videos. Unfortunately, I&#13;
think it's having a negative effect&#13;
on the generation growing up with&#13;
this music.&#13;
The cause of the women's movement&#13;
has probably been set back a&#13;
few steps with the emergence of&#13;
"new women" in music. It's very&#13;
difficult to eradicate sexism, insensitivity&#13;
and insincerity in this society&#13;
of major cultural influences insist&#13;
on perpetuating and exploiting&#13;
women to make a buck. After musical&#13;
pioneers like Turner, Slick and&#13;
Joplin broke new ground twenty&#13;
years ago, why are we regressing to&#13;
a Connie Frances kind of female&#13;
singer? Whatever the answer, Joplin&#13;
is probably lucky not to be&#13;
around to listen to the drivel produced&#13;
today. Nevertheless, I wish&#13;
she still was.&#13;
UW-O displays atomic bomb&#13;
The Atomic Bomb has been on&#13;
display all week at UW-Oshkosh,&#13;
the first time the bomb has ever&#13;
been publicly displayed, as part of&#13;
Nuclear Awareness Week at the&#13;
school, sponsored by the UW-Oshkosh&#13;
Student Association. Friday,&#13;
April 19, marks the conclusion of&#13;
the event and special events for the&#13;
day include:&#13;
• 12:30-2:30 p.m. — "Second&#13;
Childhood Band"&#13;
• 3 p.m. — Chancellor Penson&#13;
will give an introductory speech&#13;
• 3:15 — Address by Don Schwartz,&#13;
UW-0 graduate and now assistant&#13;
to a senator in charge of the&#13;
Joint Economic Committee&#13;
• 4 p.m. — Ad dress by Dr. Jeff&#13;
Peterson, president of the Wisconsin&#13;
Chapter of Physicians for Social&#13;
Responsibility&#13;
• 4:45 p.m. — G len Silver, producer/&#13;
director of the Academy&#13;
Award-nominated films "The War&#13;
at Home, "Nicaragua Today" and&#13;
El Salvador: Another Vietnam"&#13;
• 5:30 p.m. — "Fire and Ice"&#13;
band.&#13;
These events will be held at Shapiro&#13;
Park, on the Fox River. All are&#13;
encouraged to attend.&#13;
Chamber Singers perform Sunday&#13;
The Parkside Chamber Singers,&#13;
directed by music professor Steven&#13;
Powell and assisted by selected&#13;
members of the Parkside Orchestra,&#13;
will perform a concert at Grace&#13;
Lutheran Church, 2006 2 0th St., Kenosha&#13;
at 3 p.m. on Sunday, April&#13;
21.&#13;
Tickets, available at the door, are&#13;
$1 for all students, senior citizens&#13;
and Parkside faculty and staff, $2&#13;
for others.&#13;
In observance of the 300th anniversary&#13;
of the birth of J.S. Bach,&#13;
the cornerstone of the program will&#13;
be a performance of B ach's Cantata&#13;
No. 140 "Wachet Auf (Sleepers&#13;
Awake)," one of his most famous&#13;
cantatas. The 30-minute work, written&#13;
in 1731, contains one of Bach's&#13;
most well-known melodies, in the&#13;
violins of the fourth movement,&#13;
and two lovely duets to go with the&#13;
beautiful choral movements.&#13;
The program will also include a&#13;
capella choral works by Brahms&#13;
and Haydn and some Renaissance&#13;
madrigals.&#13;
The 10-member Parkside Chamber&#13;
Singers is a select group that&#13;
performs frequently throughout&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
Haberman wins scholarship&#13;
The Parkside Association of&#13;
Communicators announced that&#13;
Natalie P. Haberman has been&#13;
awarded the PAC Scholarship for&#13;
Spring 1985.&#13;
The PAC scholarship was established&#13;
as a way of recognizing&#13;
Communication majors who have&#13;
made extraordinary and valuable&#13;
contributions to the Communication&#13;
program, PAC and the university&#13;
as a whole. Winners must demonstrate&#13;
excellence both within the&#13;
classroom and in extracurricular activities.&#13;
PAC feels that Haberman&#13;
has done both. Some of her specific&#13;
accomplishments include: secretary&#13;
of PAC, member of the International&#13;
Association of Business Communicators,&#13;
Homecoming Queen&#13;
for 1984-85, participant in the&#13;
Women in Communication Program&#13;
and staff writer for the&#13;
Ranger. In addition to these accomplishments,&#13;
PAC feels Haberman&#13;
has been a vital and active force in&#13;
planning and coordinating PAC activities&#13;
which have benefited many&#13;
different constituencies within the&#13;
Parkside community. PAC is proud&#13;
to have this opportunity to recognize&#13;
her achievements in this way.&#13;
Vopat to read from her novel&#13;
Carol Vopat, associate professor&#13;
of English, will read from her novel&#13;
in progress, "The Cookie Stories,"&#13;
Monday, April 29 at 1 p.m. in CA&#13;
233. Refreshments will be served.&#13;
Everyone is invited.&#13;
UNITARIAN&#13;
UNIVERSALISTS&#13;
have always&#13;
been known to&#13;
question&#13;
hand-me-down&#13;
religious doctrines.&#13;
Have you ever felt disenchanted&#13;
with an orthodox religion&#13;
b e c a u s e i t h a n d s y o u a&#13;
predigested faith? If so. our&#13;
church may be for you. For&#13;
hundreds of years this vttal denomination&#13;
has been encouraging&#13;
individuals to question and to&#13;
grow.&#13;
The n ew name of o ur congregation&#13;
is:&#13;
BRADfORD COMMUNITY CHURCH&#13;
(Unitarian Universalis!)&#13;
Woman's Club • 6028 Stti Ave.&#13;
Rev. Tony la rsen. Minister&#13;
*30 a.m. Services ft Sunday School&#13;
Students maced in Madison&#13;
UW-Madison campus police maced student CIA recruitment protestors&#13;
on April 10 when the crowd attempted to cross a police line&#13;
barring them from the interview location.&#13;
The Daily Cardinal reported that about 200 students attended the&#13;
protest at the Engineering Building where 13 students were interviewed&#13;
for CIA jobs.&#13;
At least three campus police officers sprayed mace at the crowd in&#13;
an attempt to disperse the protest. Although campus regulations prohibit&#13;
campus police from spraying mace above shoulder level, several&#13;
students were injured do to having the irritant sprayed directly in&#13;
their faces. Madison campus police have not used mace to control a&#13;
demonstration since April 10, 1981, exactly five years from the recent&#13;
incident.&#13;
The Madison University Committee has agreed to listen to student&#13;
concerns about CIA recruitment on Monday, April 22.&#13;
IRS computer system problem&#13;
The Internal Revenue Service may have trouble getting tax'refunds&#13;
out before May. 30, when the government has to pay 13 percent interest&#13;
on all unpaid refunds, the New York Times reported.&#13;
The delays are mostly being caused by problems with the agency's&#13;
new computer system, which was just installed. IRS officials say that&#13;
according to an internal survey taken two weeks ago, the agency was&#13;
8 million returns behind.&#13;
IRS Commissioner Roscoe L. Egger said the agency had "neither&#13;
the experts nor the resources" to keep the agency's 20-year-old computer&#13;
running while the new system was being tested. Also, the&#13;
agency and Sperry, Inc., which manufactured the computers, did not&#13;
run a full series of tests on the new system.&#13;
Support in Nam questionable&#13;
One-third of adult Americans questioned in an ABC News-Washington&#13;
Post news poll did not know which side the United States supported&#13;
in the Vietnam War, and more than half did not know what&#13;
the war was about, Associated Press reported.&#13;
Twelve percent of the 1,506 adults surveyed said incorrectly that&#13;
the U.S. backed North Vietnam, and 21 percent answered that they&#13;
didn't know which side the U.S. backed.&#13;
In a companion poll of 1,249 Vietnam-era veterans, 61 percent responded&#13;
that they had a clear idea of what the war was all about,&#13;
while 37 percent said they did not know clearly what the war was&#13;
about.&#13;
When asked if American troops fought in a worthwhile war, 57 percent&#13;
of the veterans said yes, compared to 41 percent in the other&#13;
poll, while 37 percent of the veterans said the war was not worthwhile,&#13;
compared to 55 percent in the general poll who concurred.&#13;
COMPUTER&#13;
SYSTEMS:&#13;
If you're a computer science major, you'll&#13;
want to be part of today's Air Force. We&#13;
currently have openings in the Computer&#13;
Systems areas for graduating seniors with a&#13;
computer science or related degree. Talk to&#13;
your Air Force recruiter about the advantages&#13;
of being an Air Force officer.&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL:&#13;
Capt. Bob Howald&#13;
Toll Free 1-800-242-USAF&#13;
On the leading edge of technology&#13;
Student art show brings out winners&#13;
A juried show of works by Parkside&#13;
art students featuring an impressive&#13;
diversity of media including&#13;
painting, sculpture, print-making,&#13;
ceramics, drawing and weaving&#13;
is on display in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery through Thursday,&#13;
May 2.&#13;
Gallery hours are from 1 to 6&#13;
p.m. Monday through Thursday; in&#13;
addition, the gallery is open from 7&#13;
to 10 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday.&#13;
Admission is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
The exhibition includes 88 works&#13;
selected from 180 entries by juror&#13;
Nancy Hild, of Paste-Up, Etc., a&#13;
commercial production art studio&#13;
in Chicago. Hild, who holds an&#13;
MFA degree from Indiana University&#13;
in Bloomington, said that the&#13;
Parkside show is "...outstanding.&#13;
The range of media and the enormous&#13;
talent demonstrated really is&#13;
exceptional."&#13;
Hild's main criterion for judging&#13;
was the degree to which artists&#13;
demonstrated strong aesthetic concepts&#13;
and the success they had in&#13;
articulating them. "I was looking&#13;
for good ideas," she said. "And I&#13;
found them. I had some tough choices&#13;
to make."&#13;
The show is sponsored by a student&#13;
club, the Art Addicts, and by&#13;
Parkside's art discipline. It includes&#13;
three cash awards and two honorable&#13;
mentions as well as a Parkside&#13;
library purchase award.&#13;
The first prize, of $50, was awarded&#13;
to Lee Ann Basterash of Racine&#13;
for a large oil painting titled&#13;
"Subliminal Preference." The work&#13;
is something of a modernized still&#13;
\SW^SElN&#13;
life, featuring flowing forms, lines&#13;
and shapes of, for example, a desk&#13;
lamp, a pocket calculator and a pair&#13;
of scissors.&#13;
The colors are striking, almost&#13;
neon in intensity, with reds, blues&#13;
and greens dominating. Basterash&#13;
created the painting under the&#13;
supervision of Parkside art professor&#13;
Dennis Bayuzick.&#13;
"Bessy Takes a Vacation," a penand-&#13;
ink drawing by Susan Miller of&#13;
Racine, was selected for both the&#13;
$150 li brary purchase award and a&#13;
$25 cash award. The drawing shows&#13;
a beach scene on the French Riviera&#13;
dominated by a sea of umbrellas,&#13;
with people lounging in lawn&#13;
chairs. Nestled improbably among&#13;
all this is a woman sitting on a stool&#13;
and milking a cow (presumably the&#13;
"Bessy" of the title). The bovine's&#13;
rump is turned toward the viewer.&#13;
The introduction of the milking&#13;
scene into a beach milieu produces&#13;
a humorous and whimsical sense of&#13;
incongruity. Miller created the&#13;
drawing under the supervision of&#13;
Parkside art professor David&#13;
Holmes.&#13;
A Trio of Superb Musicians&#13;
Present&#13;
FIRST CLASS FOLK&#13;
Friday, April 26,1985 8:00 p.m.&#13;
The Prairie Performing Arts Center&#13;
4050 Lighthouse Drive Racine,WI 53402&#13;
DALGLISH, LARSEN AND SUTHERLAND —&#13;
have garnered widespread and enthusiastic&#13;
praise from audiences throughout North&#13;
America. They present an exhilarating blend&#13;
of traditional and original music derived from&#13;
various folk idioms performed on hammer,&#13;
dulcimer, fiddle, flute, concertina, guitar,&#13;
banjo, spoons and bones. Their repertoire&#13;
ranges from Kentucky mountain dance tunes&#13;
' and Celtic reels to European folk melodies&#13;
and 19th century riverboat songs.&#13;
All Seats Reserved&#13;
Tickets&#13;
$6°° Adults S300 Students •&#13;
Call 639- 3845 for Ticket Reservations&#13;
Tickets also available at all Heritage Banks in R acine and Schmrtt Musk Store&#13;
THE PRAIRIE SCHOOL&#13;
SPONSORS BY&#13;
cHeritageBank &lt;-* ANomurr&#13;
Award Recipient&#13;
A n i n t a g l i o p r i n t t i t l e d&#13;
"Perched," by Ken Kangas of Kenosha,&#13;
was the other $25 cash&#13;
award winner. (Last year Kangas&#13;
won the first prize cash award.)&#13;
The print shows a large parrot&#13;
perched next to a window in a living&#13;
room. The bird casts a wary eye&#13;
on the viewer. Kangas makes skillful&#13;
use of contrasts between light&#13;
and dark, and between geometric&#13;
and fluid shapes.&#13;
He was supervised in the crea-&#13;
; pfc&#13;
Best of Show&#13;
tion of his print by Parkside art&#13;
professor Douglas DeVinny.&#13;
Winners of honorable mentions&#13;
were a large acrylic painting titled&#13;
"This Little Piggy," by William&#13;
Greider of Racine, and an untitled&#13;
ceramic sculpture by Michael Taylor&#13;
of Kenosha.&#13;
Greider's work is a startling&#13;
blend of whimsy and peril. The&#13;
painting shows an infant lying in&#13;
bed next to its sleeping mother.&#13;
The baby is smiling and wriggling&#13;
happily, oblivious to a pack of&#13;
mean-looking pigs clustered around&#13;
the bed, their long snouts and&#13;
beady eyes in some cases only inches&#13;
from the baby's head. In the&#13;
context of the painting, the pigs are&#13;
merely images on wallpaper. But&#13;
the threat seems real enough.&#13;
Greider made the painting under&#13;
Holmes' supervision.&#13;
Taylor's serene ceramic sculpture&#13;
boasts a variety of exquisite&#13;
textures and colors. The refined,&#13;
spherical piece has a smooth base&#13;
and becomes progressively roughtextured&#13;
toward the top. Colors include&#13;
black, aquamarine and purple.&#13;
Taylor created the work under&#13;
the guidance of Parkside art lecturer&#13;
Alex Mandli.&#13;
All the entries in the show were&#13;
created by Parkside students under&#13;
the supervision of art faculty Rollin&#13;
Jansky, John Murphy, DeVinny,&#13;
Holmes, Bayuzick and Mandli.&#13;
Artists entered and their media&#13;
include:&#13;
Ken Kangas (intaglio), Jane Soderquist&#13;
(polyester resin), Joyce Ohlgart (print, colorgraph),&#13;
Carmen Acosta (lithograph, grapmte),&#13;
Gabriela Pettit (mixed media), Ann Kestell (lithograph,&#13;
intaglio), Steve Sadowski (intaglio),&#13;
Kathy Trentadue (acrylic), Laura Ambrose&#13;
(stoneware), Anita Lura (clay), Marilyn Weschenefski&#13;
(welded steel, porcelain), Jo Ann-Marie&#13;
Blasi (intaglio, felt pen), Jennifer Gourdoux (dry&#13;
point), Shawn Falduto (prismacolor), Brenda Buchanan&#13;
(fiber), Susan Schimian (intaglio, watercolor,&#13;
raku), Gary Weidner (lithograph, intaglio,&#13;
welded steel), Sendee Houghton-Gardinier (lithograph),&#13;
Colleen Tobin (lithograph), Lee Basterash&#13;
(oil), Carol Bohn (oil, prismacolor). Barb Beck&#13;
(intaglio), Gregory L. Carson (ceramics). Scott&#13;
Ludwig (prismacolor, raku stoneware), Sue Pasch&#13;
(pencil, oil), Rita Turner (ceramic, sawdust fired&#13;
ceramic), Susan M. Miller (pen and ink, intaglio),&#13;
Diane Caron (raku), Tami Bowman (pencil), Sue&#13;
Nelson (clay slabs, clay,), Kathy Rider, (painted&#13;
warp/weft lkat, earthenware), Terri Aaen (raku&#13;
clay, stoneware). Amy Bernett (pit fired), Michael&#13;
Taylor (stoneware), Dave Landre (clay),&#13;
Rachel Klees (clay). Laura Bates iraku clay),&#13;
Alice Johnson (pencil), Dan McKelvie (acrylic,&#13;
oil), Christopher Dorf (intaglio), Michael Nitsch&#13;
(lithograph), Stephen J. Vasy (steel, marble),&#13;
Joyce Kiesling (intaglio, monoprint. lithograph),&#13;
Tracy Travis (clay), Christine Sibilsky (pencil).&#13;
Sarah Kotz-Andersen (pen and ink, pencil), John&#13;
Zehren (encaustic), Karin Welke (acrylic, lithograph),&#13;
William J. Greider (acrylic, lithograph),&#13;
Dan Thomas (clay), Donald O'Hare (ceramic),&#13;
Richard P. Kruse (acrylic), Eva J. Solarez (clay)&#13;
and L. Pete Koilman (acrylic).&#13;
Award Recipient&#13;
Armenian genocide explored in&#13;
presentation by Dr. Guroian&#13;
Dr. Vigen Guroian of Loyola College&#13;
in Baltimore, Maryland, will&#13;
give a free public talk on the Armenian&#13;
genocide at 1 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
April 24, in Union Room 106 at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Guroian's presentation, titled.&#13;
"Collective Responsibility and Official&#13;
Excuse-Making: The Case of&#13;
the Turkish Genocide of the Armenians,"&#13;
is being organized by Parkside&#13;
librarian Nazaly Bagdassian&#13;
and history professor John Buenker.&#13;
Guroian, whose visit here coincides&#13;
with the 70th anniversary of the&#13;
Armenian genocide, which began in&#13;
1915, also will speak that evening at&#13;
the St. Mesrob Armenian Apostolic&#13;
Church, 4605 Erie St., Racine.&#13;
There will be a display on the&#13;
genocide in the Parkside library&#13;
from April 17 through April 30.&#13;
Bagdassian said that between&#13;
1915 and 1923 some 1.5 million Armenians&#13;
in Ottoman Turkey were&#13;
slaughtered on orders of the Turkish&#13;
government. Hundreds of thousands&#13;
survived the massacre and&#13;
w e r e t r a n s p l a n t e d a r o u n d t n e&#13;
world. The Turkish government to&#13;
this day refuses to acknowledge&#13;
that the massacre ever occurred,&#13;
she said.&#13;
In conjunction with the 70th anniversary&#13;
of the genocide, there&#13;
will be rallies in cities around the&#13;
world. One will be held in Washington,&#13;
D.C. and will be attended by&#13;
genocide survivors, their families&#13;
and other persons of Armenian descent.&#13;
It will feature exhibits, seminars&#13;
and cultural events among&#13;
other activities.&#13;
The Armenian National Committee,&#13;
headquartered in Washington,&#13;
is strongly advocating the passage&#13;
of a resolution, co-sponsored by&#13;
Rep. Les Aspin (D-Wis.) that would&#13;
make April 24 a "National Day of&#13;
Remembrance of Man's Inhumanity&#13;
to Man" with reference to the&#13;
1915 Armenian genocide, Bagdassian.&#13;
Dr. Guroian presented a paper&#13;
and was a participant at the International&#13;
Conference on the Holocaust&#13;
and Genocide, in Tel Aviv, Israel,&#13;
in 1982.&#13;
RANGER 5 Thursday, April 18,1985&#13;
Student Awards Banquet&#13;
up and coming April 26&#13;
by Julie Pendleton&#13;
Parkside will holds its sixth annual&#13;
Student Awards Banquet on&#13;
Friday, April 26.&#13;
The agenda for the evening will&#13;
include cocktails at 5:30, dinner at&#13;
6:15, the awards ceremony from 7:&#13;
30 to 9:30 and ending the evening, a&#13;
PAB-sponsored dance in Union&#13;
Square, free of charge.&#13;
A 15-minute slide presentation&#13;
will open the awards ceremony.&#13;
Then Peer Support, Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, Student Organizations&#13;
Council, Parkside Student&#13;
Government Assocation, Ranger&#13;
and the All-Campus Events Committee&#13;
will present various awards&#13;
to outstanding members of their&#13;
clubs.&#13;
In addition to international organizational&#13;
awards, two prestigious&#13;
awards are presented. The first is&#13;
the Outstanding Advisor Award.&#13;
Any faculty or staff member involved&#13;
in a student organization&#13;
may be nominated. Criteria include&#13;
any singular achievement and/or&#13;
extraordinary service in advising a&#13;
student organiztion. Such distinguished&#13;
service can be one significant&#13;
activity or a pattern of exemplary&#13;
service over the years. The&#13;
deadline for nominations is 4 p.m.&#13;
Monday, April 22.&#13;
The second award to be presented&#13;
is the Distinguished Student&#13;
Award. Any student currently enrolled&#13;
at Parkside who is a member&#13;
WARE scholarships&#13;
The Women Associated with&#13;
Real Estate (WARE) is offering&#13;
two $300 scholarships. Anyone pursuing&#13;
a business related education&#13;
is eligible to apply. The scholarships&#13;
will be awarded on a competitive&#13;
basis with the criteria for&#13;
Post Nasal Strip&#13;
evaluating applicants being scholastic&#13;
achievement, financial need,&#13;
leadership potential and motivation.&#13;
Application forms are available&#13;
from Mineva Reichenstein,&#13;
Moln. 344. The application deadline&#13;
is April 30.&#13;
Ranger is now accepting applicants for&#13;
Editor&#13;
for the 1985-86 academic year&#13;
Requirement: UW-Parkside student in go od standing, carrying at least 6&#13;
credits per semester and 2.0 cumulative GPA.&#13;
Qualifications: Previous editorial experience preferred, as is knowledge&#13;
of UW-Parkside organization and activities.&#13;
This is a paid position.&#13;
Application deadline is April 19, 1985&#13;
Ranger is looking for applicants for other positions:&#13;
SUB-EDITORS, WRITERS, PHOTOGRAPHERS,&#13;
ADVERTISING SALESPERSONS.&#13;
JOIN RANGER NOW&#13;
Club Events&#13;
of at least one recognized organization&#13;
may be nominated. Nominees&#13;
must carry at least six credits and&#13;
have a minimum 2.0 grade point&#13;
average. Criteria include any distinguished&#13;
service or achievement that&#13;
benefits the student organization or&#13;
Parkside as a whole. It is a service&#13;
that exceeds the normal duties of&#13;
any position held. The distinguished&#13;
service may be one significant&#13;
activity or a pattern of exemplary&#13;
service over the years. The deadline&#13;
for these nominations is 4 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, April 24.&#13;
Any supporting documents or&#13;
tangible evidence of outstanding or&#13;
distinguished behavior for either&#13;
award should be submitted with&#13;
the nomination forms in the Student&#13;
Activities Office.&#13;
Nomination forms and tickets&#13;
are now available at the Union Information&#13;
Desk, the Information&#13;
kiosk in lower Main Place and in&#13;
the Student Activities Office.&#13;
Tickets will be on sale through&#13;
Wednesday, April 24. Price is $8.30&#13;
per person.&#13;
by Paul Berge&#13;
Hispanic Club&#13;
Schedule of Events:&#13;
• Monday, April 29, Lecture on&#13;
Hispanics in Education, 12-2 p.m.,&#13;
Moln. 107.&#13;
• Tuesday, April 30, Movie: "Insurgent&#13;
Mexico, time and location&#13;
to be announced.&#13;
• Wednesday, May 1, Lecture/slide&#13;
presentation on Mexican Art by&#13;
Jose Gonzales, 1-2 p.m., Greenquist&#13;
101.&#13;
• Friday, May 3, Mexican Folklore&#13;
Dance Troupe, 7-8 p.m. Union&#13;
Square. Dance featuring Villa Fuerte&#13;
8 p.m.-l a.m. Union Square.&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
Peer Support is having an election&#13;
of officers on April 24 at 1 p.m.&#13;
in the PSO office, WLLC D139F.&#13;
All interested students are requested&#13;
to be present.&#13;
Peer Support will be holding an&#13;
open house/campus tour for new&#13;
incoming students on Thursday,&#13;
April 25 at 7 p.m. in Molinaro 111.&#13;
Information on the university's academic&#13;
programs, as well as cultural&#13;
and social activities, will be presented.&#13;
Members of the faculty and&#13;
staff, as well as other student&#13;
groups, will be on hand to answer&#13;
questions.&#13;
Peer Support also sponsors two&#13;
scholarships each year. The PSO&#13;
Scholarship of $100 is awarded each&#13;
fall, and the Connie Cummings $100&#13;
scholarship is awarded each spring&#13;
semester. Scholarship applications&#13;
and information are available in the&#13;
PSO Office WLLC D139F and in the&#13;
CSS Office, WLLC D175. For more&#13;
information, call 553-2706.&#13;
IVCF&#13;
Join us Wednesday for a topic&#13;
and discussion of "Built Up In&#13;
Christ," on Wednesday, April 24 at&#13;
1 p.m. All Christians and non-Christians&#13;
are encouraged to come for&#13;
stimulating talks. You will find us'&#13;
in Moln. 107. Intervarsity Christian&#13;
Fellowship welcomes everyone.&#13;
Geology Club&#13;
Dr. Larry Boyer, Department of&#13;
Geology and Geophysics, UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
will present a colloquium&#13;
at 1 p.m. on Friday, April 19 in&#13;
Greenquist 113, entitled "Modern&#13;
Marine Sedimentological Techniques&#13;
Applied to a Lacustrine Environment."&#13;
The application of&#13;
these techniques will be focused on&#13;
the recent work on the Milwaukee&#13;
Harbor. The talk is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
Dr. Sam Huffman, Department&#13;
of Geology, UW-River Falls, will Present a colloquium entitled "Oil&#13;
'otential of the Mid-Continentj&#13;
Rift, Northern Wisconsin" on Wednesday,&#13;
April 24 at 1 p.m. in Greenquist&#13;
113. The mid-continent rift is,&#13;
a basinal structure that formed 1000&#13;
million years ago and extends from&#13;
the Keweenaw Peninsula of upper&#13;
Michigan into central Kansas. This&#13;
structural basin was filled with&#13;
sediments, and if those sediments&#13;
contained organic matter, could&#13;
yield oil and/or natural gas. Northwestern&#13;
Wisconsin is currently a&#13;
target for oil companies who are attempting&#13;
to acquire drilling rights&#13;
from local property owners (for&#13;
royalties on any petroleum found).&#13;
This basin is similar in origin,&#13;
though much older, than many current&#13;
oil-producing areas around the&#13;
world.&#13;
HUFVW&#13;
UMtTED TIME OFFER. COME TO THE ARTCARVED RMG TABLE AM) ORDER YOUR RMGi&#13;
Dates: Mon. 22, Tues. 23, Time: 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Place: Bookstore&#13;
W Deposit Required c 1935 ArtCarved Class Rings 18433-6&#13;
6 Thursday, April 18,1985 RANGER&#13;
Peace Corps volunteer returns&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
Community News Editor&#13;
Mary Jane Kortendick, a nursing&#13;
graduate of St. Luke's Hospital in&#13;
Racine, feels her stay in Guatemala&#13;
had its advantages and disadvantages,&#13;
but mostly advantages. Kortendick&#13;
returned recently from a&#13;
three-year stint with the Peace&#13;
Corps in Guatemala.&#13;
Kortendick often had to act as a&#13;
physician, simply because there&#13;
was no one else. She made diagnoses,&#13;
treated patients and prescribed&#13;
drugs, which nurses in the&#13;
U.S. simply do not do. She had to&#13;
get used to the role, since nurses in&#13;
this country take their orders from&#13;
doctors.&#13;
She found that she had to get&#13;
used to the country as well. "I was&#13;
in shock," Kortendick said of her&#13;
first night there. She stayed in a&#13;
small house with a family of 13. "It&#13;
was a real surprise, to say the&#13;
least."&#13;
Once she got over the shock,&#13;
which involved outhouses with no&#13;
doors and chickens in the bedroom,&#13;
she began adjusting to the country&#13;
and the people.&#13;
"They are simple, and I don't&#13;
mean simple-minded," she said.&#13;
"Guatemalans have more basic life&#13;
styles and are warmer than we&#13;
are."&#13;
The Guatemalans also had trouble&#13;
adjusting to her, she said. "I&#13;
was the only blonde many of them&#13;
had seen in their lives," she said.&#13;
She also couldn't speak Spanish.&#13;
But after about three months of&#13;
language and cultural training,&#13;
which all Peace Corps volunteers&#13;
get, she got to know people in San&#13;
Antonio La Paz, the town of about&#13;
3,500 where she stayed.&#13;
Kortendick often found herself in&#13;
charge of the town's clinic, since&#13;
the doctor there would often be&#13;
away. She had a staff of several&#13;
workers, who were the equivalent&#13;
of LPN's in the U.S.&#13;
After she began working there,&#13;
which included a six kilometer walk&#13;
to a health outpost three days a&#13;
week and giving health care lectures,&#13;
she found that she began to&#13;
become part of the community.&#13;
People called her "Seno," short for&#13;
senorita, when they greeted her on&#13;
the street.&#13;
Kortendick says the pace of life&#13;
there is much slower than here,&#13;
with no TV and very few radios.&#13;
Latin Americans, she said, have a&#13;
much more relaxed attitude toward&#13;
time than do North Americans.&#13;
"In Latin America, there's always&#13;
tomorrow," she said.&#13;
She said her stay in Latin America&#13;
changed her own attitude toward&#13;
nursing and her expectation of&#13;
what she wants in her career.&#13;
"I want to be more independent,&#13;
she said, "and I want to deal with&#13;
Spanish-speaking people if possible."&#13;
Even tnough Kortendick says sne&#13;
was "more idealistic than realistic"&#13;
when she joined the Peace Corps,&#13;
she has few regrets about her stay&#13;
in Guatemala.&#13;
"I might have regretted it once&#13;
or twice, but I'll never regret it&#13;
again," she said. "It's probably the&#13;
best thing I've done so far."&#13;
Peer Support open house&#13;
and campus tour set&#13;
An open house and campus tour&#13;
for incoming Parkside students age&#13;
23 and older will be held Thursday,&#13;
April 25, at 7 p.m. in Molinaro Hall&#13;
Room 111.&#13;
The event, sponsored by Peer&#13;
Support, one of five major student&#13;
organizations at Parkside, will include&#13;
information on the university's&#13;
academic programs as well as&#13;
its cultural and social activities.&#13;
Parkside faculty and staff, and representatives&#13;
of other student&#13;
groups, will be on hand to answer&#13;
questions.&#13;
In addition, applications are&#13;
being accepted for a $100 Peer Support&#13;
scholarship for the fall semester.&#13;
Application forms and further&#13;
information can be obtained in the&#13;
Peer Support Office, Room D139F&#13;
in the Wyllie Library-Learning Center,&#13;
or by calling 553-2705.&#13;
A week at the Park&#13;
Accent on Women this weekend&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Thursday, April 18&#13;
FILM: "The Hangman" with comments&#13;
about the holocaust by Chancellor&#13;
Guskin and Rabbi Marc&#13;
Gruber at 12 noon in Union 104.&#13;
The program is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
TALK: "Nigeria: In Search of An&#13;
Acceptable Solution" by Prof. Victor&#13;
Ororunsola of Iowa State University&#13;
at 3:30 p.m. in Union 106.&#13;
The talk is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
COURSE: "It's Back to Booze"&#13;
starts at 7 p.m. in Tallent Hall. Call&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
'85&#13;
FALL SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are seeking&#13;
a degree at UW-Parkside) should consult their academic&#13;
adviser prior to registration for FALL SEMESTER. A&#13;
certification of advising form, signed by the adviser, is&#13;
required for registration.&#13;
FALL SEMESTER course schedules are now available,&#13;
April 9-22 has been designated as an academic advising&#13;
period, and advisers will make every effort to meet with you.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
CONTACT YOUR ADVISER FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
If you have any questions, contact the Office of the Dean of&#13;
Faculty&#13;
348 Wyllie Library-Learning Center&#13;
553-2368&#13;
NOTE: Non-matriculant students (students not seeking a degree at&#13;
UW-Parkside) are exempt from this requirement.&#13;
ext. 2312 fo r details. Sponsored by&#13;
UW-Extension.&#13;
MOVIE: "Woodstock" will be&#13;
shown at 3:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. The movie is rated R and&#13;
runs 184 minutes. Admission at the&#13;
door is $1 for a Parkside student&#13;
and $1 for a guest. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
COURSE: "Crises of Conscience:&#13;
Present Moral Problems" starts at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in Tallent Hall. Sponsored&#13;
by UW-Extension.&#13;
Friday, April 19&#13;
SPEAKER: Dr. Larry Boyer, Department&#13;
of Geology and Geophysics,&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, will present a&#13;
slide illustrated talk on the use of&#13;
modern marine investigative instruments&#13;
in a lacustrine environment&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Grn. 113. The lecture is&#13;
f"F00&#13;
COLLOQUIUM: "Computers and&#13;
Composition" by William Wresch&#13;
of UW-Stevens Point at 1 p.m. in&#13;
CA 233. The talk is open to the public&#13;
at no charge.&#13;
MOVIE: "Woodstock" will be repeated&#13;
at 1:30 p.m. and at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
CONFERENCE: "Accent on&#13;
Women" starts at 7 p.m. in Main&#13;
Place. Call ext. 2496 for information.&#13;
PLAY: "She Stoops to Conquer"&#13;
starts at 8p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. Tickets are available&#13;
at the Union Information Center&#13;
and the Fine Arts Division Office.&#13;
Saturday, April 20&#13;
CONFERENCE: "Accent on&#13;
Women" continues today with various&#13;
workshops and seminars pertaining&#13;
to women.&#13;
PLAY: "She Stoops to Conquer"&#13;
will be repeated at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater. Tickets&#13;
will be available at the door.&#13;
Sunday, April 21&#13;
CONCERT: At 3 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema featuring the Parkside&#13;
Swing Choir. Admission at the door&#13;
is $1 for Parkside students and senior&#13;
citizens and $2 f or others.&#13;
MOVIE: "Woodstock" will be repeated&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
Monday, April 22&#13;
ROUND TABLE: "The U S SR&#13;
Revisted" by Prof. Ken Hoover at&#13;
12:15 p.m. in Union 104-106. The&#13;
event is free and open to the public.&#13;
WORKSHOP: :"Job Search Skills"&#13;
at 1 p.m. in WLLC D174. All are&#13;
welcome&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Resume Preparation"&#13;
at 5:30 p.m. in WLLC D174.&#13;
All are welcome.&#13;
Tuesday, April 23&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Job Search Skills"&#13;
will be repeated at 5:30 p.m. in&#13;
WLLC D174. All are welcome.&#13;
Wednesday, April 24&#13;
SPEAKER: Dr. Sam Hufman, Department&#13;
of Geology, UW-River&#13;
Falls, will present a lecture "Oil&#13;
Potential of the Mid-continent Rift&#13;
in Northwestern Wisconsin." The&#13;
lecture is free and will be held in&#13;
Grn. 113 at 1 p.m.&#13;
COFFEESHOP: featuring Sally&#13;
Fingerett from 12 noon to 2 p.m.&#13;
and from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Bazaar Area. Come, join the&#13;
fun! Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
LECTURE: "Collective Responsibility&#13;
and Official Excuse-Making:&#13;
The Case of the Turkish Genocide&#13;
of the Armenians" by Dr. Vigen&#13;
Guroian of Loyola College, Baltimore,&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Union 106. The&#13;
lecture is open to the public at no&#13;
charge.&#13;
LECTURE: "War and Ethos" by&#13;
Prof. John Longeway at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Moln D107. The lecture is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Resume Preparation"&#13;
starts at 1 p.m. in WLLC&#13;
D174. All are welcome.&#13;
LECTURE: "Philosophy and Literary&#13;
Interpretations: Three Ways of&#13;
Looking at Wallace Stevens' 'Thirteen&#13;
Ways of Looking at a Blackbird'&#13;
" at 3:30 p.m. in CA 223. The&#13;
event is free and open to the public.&#13;
CONFERENCE: "Working Moms"&#13;
starts at 6 p.m. Call ext. 2312 for information.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
Workshop discounts&#13;
available for students&#13;
Discounts for all Business Outreach&#13;
and Small Business Development&#13;
Center seminars, workshops&#13;
and conferences are now available&#13;
to the Parkside community. Full or&#13;
part time employees receive a 25&#13;
percent discount, alumni receive a&#13;
25 percent discount and students&#13;
receive a 50 percent discount.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Woodstock • • • • •&#13;
7 Thursday, April 18,1985&#13;
Film presentation celebrates a past decade&#13;
We were so close,&#13;
There was no room,&#13;
We bled inside&#13;
Each other's wounds.&#13;
We all had caught&#13;
The same disease -&#13;
We all sang&#13;
The songs of peace.&#13;
—Melanie Safka&#13;
This week's PAB film, "Woodstock,"&#13;
is the 1970 Oscar winner for&#13;
best documentary.&#13;
"Woodstock" is more than just&#13;
the documentary of a 1969 gala concert.&#13;
It is the definitive statement&#13;
of the sixties, the culmination of&#13;
that era's youth's feelings about&#13;
love, hate, war, peace, black and&#13;
white.&#13;
Anti-hippie idealists will argue&#13;
that the film is dated, and many&#13;
important performers (Janis Joplin,&#13;
Creedence Clearwater Revival, The&#13;
Band) are not in the film, while&#13;
some minor ones (It's a Beautiful&#13;
Day, Sha Na Na) are. But that&#13;
doesn't take away from the power&#13;
of Joan Baez's rendition of "Joe&#13;
Hill" or Arlo Guthrie's seriocomic&#13;
ode to dope smuggling, "City of&#13;
Getting back to the garden&#13;
New Orleans." Jimi Hendrix makes^&#13;
the definitive statement of sixties&#13;
youth patriotism with his rendition&#13;
of "The Star Spangled Banner,"&#13;
and Country Joe McDonald's infamous&#13;
"Fish Cheer" sums up Vietnam&#13;
in four handy letters.&#13;
There is more than a touch of&#13;
melancholy in the experience of&#13;
viewing this film more than fifteen&#13;
years after a fact. We have come&#13;
full circle, the deadening effect of&#13;
Reaganism presently abroad in this&#13;
country making the overall effect of&#13;
"Woodstock" more than a little&#13;
sad. Joan Baez dedicating "Drug&#13;
Store Truck Driving Man" to Reagan&#13;
(who was then only governor)&#13;
is almost frightening now that the&#13;
same man is running the country.&#13;
"Woodstock' is also a sad signpost&#13;
for the seventies. It was the&#13;
last true expression of a mass&#13;
love/friendship experience where&#13;
race, creed, color, religion, status,&#13;
et al, didn't matter.&#13;
The film captures much of the&#13;
excitement and emotion that was&#13;
"Woodstock." Unlike, say "Hair"&#13;
(which was what the squares all&#13;
thought the sixties were all about),&#13;
"Woodstock" reveals the true&#13;
meaning behind the rebellion in&#13;
rock music and in youth. They rebelled&#13;
against authority and questioned&#13;
it because they were against&#13;
society's barriers. They were&#13;
against racial prejudice, rash judgments&#13;
of one's fellow man, war,&#13;
violence and the feeling that touching&#13;
was sexually derived and nothing&#13;
less.&#13;
Maybe we need another "Woodstock"&#13;
today, but the ugly truth is&#13;
that it wouldn't draw the 500,000&#13;
that this event drew. Not enough&#13;
people care anymore. Don't miss&#13;
the film.&#13;
Parkside student recalls attending Woodstock&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Jenny Carr was 19 when she&#13;
hitchhiked with her then-husband&#13;
and friends to Max Yasgur's farm&#13;
in New York to attend what she believed&#13;
would be tantamount to today's&#13;
King Richard's Faire. She attended&#13;
the real Woodstock, a concert-&#13;
made documentary of which&#13;
will be shown on campus this week.&#13;
"It was advertised on the radio&#13;
like King Richard's Faire," she&#13;
said. "It was going to be a weekend&#13;
of rock and roll, no big deal.&#13;
"My husband at the time was a&#13;
Bob Dylan freak and Dylan had&#13;
been making surprise appearances&#13;
whenever The Band performed.&#13;
The Band was to be appearing at&#13;
Woodstock, so that's why we went.&#13;
"The radio ads stated that it was&#13;
going to be a farm, that there were&#13;
going to be lots of meadows, that&#13;
tents were going to be set up and&#13;
that between acts you could walk&#13;
around and talk to the musicians.&#13;
"We didn't drive. We hitchhiked,&#13;
took the bus, hitchhiked some&#13;
more. On the bus it was like a&#13;
brotherhood. We were all going to&#13;
the same place, everybody was&#13;
dressed the same, and everyone&#13;
knew we were all going together to&#13;
this 'happening.' "&#13;
Coffeehouse&#13;
Jenny continued, "As we got&#13;
closer, there were as many people&#13;
coming back as were going in. We&#13;
thought we had missed it, but when&#13;
we asked the people coming back,&#13;
they said it was just too crowded."&#13;
"People who owned houses in the&#13;
area set up Kool Aid and water&#13;
stands, giving us free Kool Aid and&#13;
water. It was a really hot, humid&#13;
day," she said.&#13;
"We got in and found ourselves a&#13;
spot on a hill right in front of the&#13;
stage. Bands played, it rained and&#13;
they stopped a while, then began&#13;
playing again. There was lots of&#13;
food, dope and wine, everybody&#13;
sharing with each other. And there&#13;
were no hassles. At one point we&#13;
just wanted to get a little closer to&#13;
the stage, so we just walked right&#13;
up there. It was like Moses parting&#13;
the Red Sea. Rather than hassle us&#13;
about getting in the way, people&#13;
just moved aside and let us by. In&#13;
the morning Grace Slick came out&#13;
and started giving out bread.&#13;
Everyone was really comfortable.&#13;
It was nice."&#13;
Jenny described the event as&#13;
magical, stating that one would fall&#13;
asleep hearing a band like Creedence&#13;
Clearwater Revival playing&#13;
live, wake up and find Jefferson&#13;
Airplane performing on stage. The&#13;
mood was one of love and peace,&#13;
never knew anyone who was killed&#13;
in Vietnam, but I still cry for everyone&#13;
who ever was; I don't have to&#13;
know them personally. Today people&#13;
don't want a nuclear war. Neither&#13;
do I, but it's because I don't&#13;
want to get killed and I don't want&#13;
YOU to get killed. So many people&#13;
are worried only about themselves.&#13;
They're a product of the seventies&#13;
"Me Decade."&#13;
Jenny continued, "The drummer&#13;
in Def Leppard lost his arm. That's&#13;
going to change his life, it's tragic!&#13;
But the attitude is 'So what?' There&#13;
are a million more like him. My&#13;
generation followed the belief that&#13;
everyone was unique. Everyone&#13;
had something to offer. We didn't&#13;
think 'So what?' when it didn't happen&#13;
to affect us personally."&#13;
In recalling the "me decade,"&#13;
Jenny said, "Martin Luther King&#13;
was killed, then Bobby Kennedy,&#13;
then Nixon was elected, then we&#13;
had Woodstock. Nixon soon pulledi&#13;
down his pants in front of the&#13;
whole country. Finally America&#13;
said, 'Well, who can you trust? I&#13;
trust me. Me, me, me!' And that's&#13;
the way it is."&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
not sex and drugs.&#13;
"Whenever I mention I was at&#13;
Woodstock, people always ask&#13;
about the drugs and the nudity. The&#13;
only nudity we saw were some&#13;
people bathing."&#13;
Woodstock was characterized by&#13;
no pretension and a lot of caring.&#13;
Jenny attempted to explain the caring&#13;
of her generation.&#13;
"The Vietnam war had a lot to&#13;
do with our concept of caring. I&#13;
Fingerett a talented stylist&#13;
Sally Fingerett, whose talents&#13;
have graced many festivals and concerts,&#13;
is to appear at the next Coffeehouse&#13;
presentation on Wednesday,&#13;
April 24 in the Union Bazaar&#13;
from noon until 2 p.m. and again&#13;
from 6 to 8 p.m.&#13;
Playboy Magazine called her&#13;
album "a fine debut album." Red&#13;
Skelton called her musical salute to&#13;
him, "The Redman," "heartfelt&#13;
warmth." Northern Essex Community&#13;
College in Massachusetts referred&#13;
to her as "exciting and energetic."&#13;
Sally Fingerett was nominated&#13;
"Coffeehouse Performer of 1984"&#13;
by the National Association of Campus&#13;
Activities. Her country-cumfolk&#13;
musical style has been compared&#13;
to Jimmy Buffett, Harry Chapin&#13;
and Joni Mitchell.&#13;
As with all Coffeehouse performers,&#13;
Sally's performance is free,&#13;
with free popcorn served. Being the&#13;
last Coffeehouse presentation of the&#13;
year, Sally Fingerett should serve&#13;
as a very effective culmination of&#13;
an excellent year of free entertainment.&#13;
idnight un&#13;
Tanning Salon^&#13;
Get Your&#13;
Tan before IrM|&#13;
Summer Starts&#13;
College Student Special&#13;
10 sessions for '40.00&#13;
(Bring your I.D.)&#13;
Reg. s5.00 per session&#13;
8 sessions for $35.00&#13;
15 sessions for $60.00&#13;
20 sessions for $75.00&#13;
609 Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
Downtown Racine&#13;
633-3022&#13;
TRY US FREE FOR 15 MINUTES&#13;
NOTICE!&#13;
STUDENT JOB OPENING&#13;
IN THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
BUILDING SUPERVISOR&#13;
Responsible for evening and weekend building operation and internal&#13;
security; involves coordination of special events, cash receipt handling and&#13;
student payroll audit; must be personable and have the ability to work with&#13;
others.&#13;
Applications accepted in Union Room 209 through Friday, April 26.&#13;
The Parkside Union is an equal opportunity employer. Women and minorities&#13;
are encouraged to apply.&#13;
8 Thursday, April 18,19$S RANGER&#13;
The Tubes in concert&#13;
Fee Waybill spills guts about rock and roll&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Last Friday, April 12, the Tubes&#13;
and Utopia invaded the Riverside&#13;
Theater in Milwaukee with their&#13;
unique brands of music and spectacle.&#13;
After a 45-minute delay due to&#13;
technical problems, Utopia (Todd&#13;
Rundgren, Kasim Sultan, Roger&#13;
Powell and Willie Wilcox) took the&#13;
stage with a very entertaining one&#13;
hour set. The group's characteristic&#13;
blend of close vocal harmonies and&#13;
superb musicianship proved to be a&#13;
great crowd pleaser, and showed&#13;
that they are one of the most unfairly&#13;
underrated bands in music&#13;
today.&#13;
Then it was time for The Tubes.&#13;
A black curtain parted to reveal an&#13;
immense set featuring a long central&#13;
staircase and movable platforms&#13;
for the keyboards and drums.&#13;
The Tubes (Fee Waybill, Bill&#13;
Spooner, Michael Cotton, Vince&#13;
Welnick, Rick Anderson, Prairie&#13;
Prince and Roger Steen) had the&#13;
audience on its feet for most of the&#13;
one and one-half hour show.&#13;
The show was filled with the&#13;
elaborate theatricality that has become&#13;
the group's trademark. Costumed&#13;
characters and scantily-clad&#13;
dancers came and went as the&#13;
group presented songs from their&#13;
new album "Love Bomb," as well&#13;
as old favorites like "Mondo Bondage"&#13;
and "White Punks On Dope."&#13;
The group also utilized a video&#13;
screen to provide a film lead-in to&#13;
The Tubes in concert at the Riverside&#13;
Photos by Robb Luehr&#13;
the production number "Wild&#13;
Women of Wongo" and a brief&#13;
"commercial" for their new album.&#13;
The highlight of the show was the&#13;
appearance of Waybill's most famous&#13;
character, Quay Lewd.&#13;
Descending the central staircase in&#13;
pseudo-Victorian garb and wearing&#13;
two-foot high platform shoes, Waybill&#13;
launched into the most entertaining&#13;
portion of the program, a&#13;
medley consisting of "White Punks&#13;
on Dope," "Mondo Bondage" and&#13;
the Beatles' "I Saw Her Standing&#13;
There," in which Waybill chased&#13;
most of the performers on the stage&#13;
with a chainsaw.&#13;
The elaborate stage shows have&#13;
become a trademark for the Tubes,&#13;
and Waybill says they change frequently&#13;
to keep the shows fresh.&#13;
"We do a new show every album,"&#13;
Waybill said. "When we do a new&#13;
tour, we do a new show. We used&#13;
to do way too many 'show' numbers.&#13;
It used to be nothing but&#13;
show segments through the whole&#13;
concert, and nobody got the music&#13;
— it never sunk in. It was just too&#13;
much overload. So we learned to do&#13;
straight performance sections as&#13;
well as the show sections, and we&#13;
try to blend them together so you&#13;
get the full benefit of both the&#13;
music and the visual. It's a fine&#13;
line. We've gone both ways. We've&#13;
done way too much show, and then&#13;
we've gone to the other extreme in&#13;
reaction and done too much&#13;
straight performance stuff. Now&#13;
we've sort of come back to a balance,&#13;
a kind of harmony."&#13;
Waybill went on to explain that&#13;
the shows are not only changed between&#13;
tours, but often change goes&#13;
on during a tour. "We find out as&#13;
we go along that some things don t&#13;
really work, and some things work&#13;
so well that we want to put them&#13;
farther back in the show to save for&#13;
a big finish. It just depends. We've&#13;
had disastrous failures, numbers&#13;
we've only performed two or three&#13;
times because the routine was so&#13;
esoteric or so completely unfocused&#13;
that nobody knew what the hell&#13;
was going on. We've had classics&#13;
like that we've never done again.&#13;
There may be one or two of these&#13;
in this show for all I know, but you&#13;
can never tell."&#13;
Waybill said the reason the&#13;
Tubes and Utopia decided to torntogether&#13;
is that the audience for&#13;
both groups is similar. "Somehow&#13;
the fans of Todd's and Tubes fans&#13;
are a lot alike, in that they aren't in&#13;
the 'stream.' Probably not Prince&#13;
fans. We're kind of an alternative&#13;
to popular listening. We don't get&#13;
played much on the radio, and God&#13;
knows they hardly ever play Todd&#13;
on the radio. So it's sort of a n alternative&#13;
for people who don't want to&#13;
listen to Madonna, Cyndi Lauper or&#13;
Prince."&#13;
Unlike most bands today, The&#13;
Tubes are not interested in saturating&#13;
the market with music videos.&#13;
"We purposely don't do a lot of videos,"&#13;
Waybill explained, "because&#13;
I think the whole video scene has&#13;
gone down the toilet. People see so&#13;
many videos of a band that the&#13;
whole mystique of live performance&#13;
is lost. So our not doing many&#13;
videos helps to keep our live performances&#13;
more mysterious and&#13;
there's more curiosity about what&#13;
we might do live. I think that's why&#13;
we've managed to stay together all&#13;
these years. We can still garner that&#13;
curiosity out of people."&#13;
The members of the Tubes were&#13;
Fee Waybill&#13;
raised in Phoenix, but moved to&#13;
California when they wanted to get&#13;
into the music business. They&#13;
ended up in San Francisco, home to&#13;
other diverse artists such as Greg&#13;
Kihn, The Grateful Dead and Jefferson&#13;
Airplane/Starship. Waybill&#13;
said he thinks it is the environment&#13;
and atmosphere that seem to draw&#13;
these performers to San Francisco.&#13;
"It takes a different kind of person&#13;
to live in San Francisco. A lot of&#13;
great music comes from L.A., but&#13;
San Francisco is a little more esoteric.&#13;
It's a melting pot — there&#13;
aren't a lot of natives there.&#13;
"People like us were saying,&#13;
'Let's get into the music business.&#13;
We gotta go to L.A.' And we went&#13;
to L.A. and realized there's no fucking&#13;
way to live in that city. It's disgusting.&#13;
So we went up to San&#13;
Francisco, because it's just up the&#13;
road. It's clean, there's no pollution&#13;
and it's a very liberal culture. And&#13;
basically, you can get away with&#13;
murder there."&#13;
PAB sponsors Kentucky Derby trip&#13;
The Parkside Activies Board&#13;
(PAB) is sponsoring a trip to the&#13;
Kentucky Derby on May 3, 4 and 5.&#13;
The price for the trip is $35&#13;
which includes round trip motorcoach&#13;
transportation, two nights&#13;
camping at the University of Louisville&#13;
Derby Hostel (located only six&#13;
blocks from Churchill Downs), access&#13;
to school shower facilities and&#13;
cooking grills. Infield passes for the&#13;
Derby will be available at the gate&#13;
on Derby day for an additional $20.&#13;
Tents and sleeping bags will be&#13;
available at discount rates at the&#13;
Rec Center, and there will be two&#13;
circus tents at the hostel for those&#13;
without a tent. The tour will leave&#13;
Parkside at 5:30 a.m., Friday, May&#13;
3, and will return at 10 p.m., Sunday,&#13;
May 5. Space is limited to 47&#13;
people. Further information and&#13;
sign up are available in the Student&#13;
Life Office, Union 209.&#13;
Letter to the Editor - faith healing&#13;
Continued from Page 2&#13;
lelujah!' and 'Praise the Lord!' All&#13;
they're really after is my money!"&#13;
It's funny to say this, but that's&#13;
what I used to think! Then it happened&#13;
to both my wife and me. We&#13;
were intrigued when we heard&#13;
about this stuff, so we went and&#13;
checked it out for ourselves. My&#13;
wife had a short leg that was causing&#13;
her back problems. She went up&#13;
to the altar for prayer after the&#13;
service, and her leg grew to full&#13;
length before our eyes. We couldn't&#13;
believe it! Since then we've seen&#13;
many things happen. Many short&#13;
legs have grown, blind eyes and&#13;
deaf ears have been opened, and&#13;
cancers have disappeared. People&#13;
have even been set free from drug&#13;
and alcohol addiction, migraine&#13;
headaches and homosexuality.&#13;
Since my wife's first healing, we&#13;
have been attending this small&#13;
church in downtown Kenosha pastored&#13;
by Gerald Moravec. It is one&#13;
of the 1600 affiliate churches across&#13;
the country and around the world.&#13;
Many denominations are joining in&#13;
each day.&#13;
Now this letter is not intended as&#13;
a recruiter, only to make people&#13;
aware that our God cares for us&#13;
and wants to set us free. The services&#13;
air via live satellite at 6:45&#13;
p.m. Monday through Friday and 5:&#13;
45 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. The&#13;
Kenosha Word of Faith is located&#13;
at 5621 6 th Avenue, Kenosha. The&#13;
phone number is 657-5373. There's&#13;
no cost and all are welcome.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Tom Hathoot&#13;
NEVER A COVER I Learn to quit smoking at St. Luke's - * - — W* P" J M M M M • VdU r»On mol'Q o frocb cforf /inn O a Meachem 554-6644&#13;
(Behind Ferraro's and White Hen)&#13;
You can make a fresh start in&#13;
April by joining St. Luke's Hospital's&#13;
Fresh Start-Quit Smoking&#13;
clinic co-sponsored by the American&#13;
Cancer Society.&#13;
The clinic meets from 5 to 7 p.m.&#13;
on April 16, 17, 18 and 23. Call 636-&#13;
2811 weekdays 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.&#13;
for required registration. The fee is&#13;
$10.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
9 Thursday, April 18,1985 Theater ~&#13;
Julich and Miskulin discuss futures by Bill Serpe&#13;
In 1980 Lee VanDyke came to&#13;
Parkside as head of the Dramatic&#13;
Arts Discipline. His intention was&#13;
to build the department and the&#13;
staff into an effective major program.&#13;
That same year, Rebecca Julich&#13;
and John Miskulin came to&#13;
Parkside as dramatic arts students.&#13;
Their intentions were to become&#13;
professionals in the theater. In May&#13;
they will both graduate, having&#13;
reaped the most benefits from Van-&#13;
Dyke's program.&#13;
"The new additions to the staff,&#13;
Skelly Warren, Judy Snider and&#13;
Keith Harris, brought with them&#13;
connections to the profesisonal&#13;
stage," said Julich. "They made us&#13;
all more aware as professionals. We&#13;
couldn't afford to mess up because&#13;
these were our connections to the&#13;
future."&#13;
Next summer Julich will be&#13;
working as a member of "The&#13;
Troupe" in Colorado Springs, Colorado.&#13;
"Dave Thompson is the director&#13;
there. Skelly Warren had worked&#13;
with that group at one time.&#13;
Dave came to Parkside to see our&#13;
production of 'Crimes of the&#13;
Heart.' He hired me on the spot to&#13;
work with him this summer doing&#13;
'Crimes' and three other shows. It&#13;
was Dave's direction connection&#13;
with Skelly that got me the job."&#13;
Miskulin will be going to Southern&#13;
Methodist University in Dallas&#13;
this fall. His full scholarship came&#13;
as a result of VanDyke's efforts and&#13;
honesty in approaching graduate&#13;
school auditions. "He (VanDyke)&#13;
told me that it was going to be&#13;
rough and he didn't know if I had&#13;
enough experience to make the&#13;
fights," said Miskulin. "His honesty&#13;
made me work harder and be better.&#13;
I wouldn't have made it if he&#13;
had let me slide by with less sound&#13;
advice."&#13;
The competition that both Miskulin&#13;
and Julich found themselves&#13;
up against was stiffer than one&#13;
would imagine. "SMU accepted six&#13;
men and four women out of some&#13;
six hundred candidates," said Miskulin.&#13;
"At the end of their three-&#13;
Rebecca Julich and John Miskulin&#13;
year program, they present their&#13;
graduates in New York City in a&#13;
showcase performance that will expose&#13;
us to agents from live theater,&#13;
television and movies."&#13;
While Julich has accepted the&#13;
position in Colorado, she is still&#13;
waiting to hear from the Actors&#13;
Theatre in Louisville, Kentucky.&#13;
"While I was in New York over&#13;
spring break, I auditioned for these&#13;
people. They had 3,000 candidates&#13;
for their program and will accept&#13;
sixteen into their fall semester,"&#13;
said Julich. "I have since gone to&#13;
Louisville for a call-back, which is&#13;
like making the first cut. Now it's&#13;
the old waiting game to see if I&#13;
make the team."&#13;
Julich and Miskulin will be performing&#13;
in "She Stoops to Conquer,"&#13;
which opens on the Comm&#13;
Arts Main Stage tomorrow night. It&#13;
will be their final performance at&#13;
Parkside and the culmination of&#13;
their many efforts in the dramatic&#13;
arts discipline. "Lee has built a&#13;
program that allowed us to work&#13;
with so many different people,"&#13;
said Miskulin. "The more directors&#13;
and the more personalities you&#13;
have to deal with, the more you&#13;
learn. Besides VanDyke, we have&#13;
worked under several other directors&#13;
who have brought their professional&#13;
talents and connections to&#13;
us. They have been very helpful in&#13;
preparing us for the reality of professional&#13;
theater."&#13;
"The staff here gets you involved&#13;
in every aspect of the theater," said&#13;
Continued on page 11 ,&#13;
Desperately Seeking Susan * •&#13;
Madonna can act O-K, but it doesn't really matter&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
New singing star Madonna makes&#13;
her screen acting debut (she appeared&#13;
without dialogue in "Vision&#13;
Quest" as a nightclub singer and&#13;
has done some porno flick work) in&#13;
Susan Seidlman's "Desperately&#13;
Seeking Susan."&#13;
The plot deals with a bored&#13;
housewife, Roberta (Roseanna Arquette),&#13;
who becomes her idol,&#13;
Susan (Madonna), after a blow on&#13;
the head gives her amnesia. This is&#13;
very similar to last year's better&#13;
"American Dreamer," the only difference&#13;
being that "Desperately&#13;
Seeking Susan" is directed more toward&#13;
the younger set.&#13;
As an actress, Madonna succeeds&#13;
in playing an extension of her own&#13;
musical persona (which is markedly&#13;
more interesting than counterpart&#13;
Cyndi Lauper). Her attire looks as&#13;
though she dressed in a hurry on&#13;
her way to a bowling tournament,&#13;
and shots of a scantily-clad Madonna&#13;
reveal her excess body mass.&#13;
This doesn't take away from the&#13;
fact that she has a nice, natural acting&#13;
ability that makes it easy to understand&#13;
her present day popularity&#13;
with teenage girls. Considered an&#13;
angrier, more "serious" top 40 performer&#13;
than Lauper, Madonna utilizes&#13;
her wise-gal charm to its fullest.&#13;
Roseanna Arquette, by contrast,&#13;
is a slim, attractive, charming actress&#13;
whose performance is another&#13;
of the film's highlights. Achieving&#13;
notoriety as Gary Gilmore's tragic&#13;
girlfriend in the made-for-TV flick&#13;
about the assassin's life and as the&#13;
Jewish princess in "Baby It's&#13;
You," Arquette (whose grandfather&#13;
is the late Hollywood Squares TV&#13;
comic, Charley Weaver), further&#13;
displays her skills as an actress,&#13;
managing to balance between sex&#13;
kitten and serious thespian images&#13;
without stumbling into the quagmire&#13;
of screen actresses with serious&#13;
character limitations.&#13;
Aidan Quinn is fine as Arquette's&#13;
alter ego's lover, Mark Blum is effective&#13;
as her stuffy husband and&#13;
Robert Day does fine as Madonna's&#13;
confused boyfriend. The shots of&#13;
New York are scenic, the glimpses&#13;
of that city's various "types" are&#13;
both amusing and rather fascinating,&#13;
while the soundtrack plays&#13;
everything from Madonna's own&#13;
work to Betty Everett's "Shoop&#13;
Shoop Song."&#13;
With all of these good points,&#13;
"Desperately Seeking Susan" still&#13;
fails to rise above mediocrity. The&#13;
script, by Leora Barish, is rife with&#13;
cliches, while Susan Seidlman's direction&#13;
maintains a very slow pace&#13;
that is quite ineffective. The scenes&#13;
just ramble into one another with&#13;
sluggish transitions, giving the overall&#13;
production a very lazy look.&#13;
Many sequences state that the film&#13;
cries for a faster pace, but things&#13;
don't pick up until the end, which&#13;
comes off as frustrating and ultimately&#13;
rather disturbing, the&#13;
abruptness in pace-changing throwing&#13;
the film's rhythm further off&#13;
the track.&#13;
"Desperately Seeking Susan" is&#13;
artistically insubstantial, but may&#13;
possess greater appeal for fans of&#13;
the performers, who are more interested&#13;
in seeing Madonna display,&#13;
her personality than in seeing a&#13;
good movie. It is a film of good&#13;
average worth, but still flawed in&#13;
many essential ways.&#13;
$£ (Dill*&#13;
^uicct l^hoppe&#13;
20% OFF&#13;
Smoked&#13;
Almonds&#13;
We have a full&#13;
selection of&#13;
Candy &amp; Nuts&#13;
Located in the Union Bazaar&#13;
Directly Across from the Info. Ctr.&#13;
CROSSWORD PUZZLER&#13;
= Puzzler Answers on Page 11 =—=&#13;
ACROSS&#13;
1 Watering place&#13;
4 Exists&#13;
6 Antlered animal&#13;
11 Chastise&#13;
13 Land surrounded&#13;
by water&#13;
15 Either&#13;
16 Former Russian&#13;
rulers&#13;
18 Covers&#13;
19 A light meal&#13;
21 Mountains of&#13;
Europe&#13;
22 Indian mulberry&#13;
23 More pleasing&#13;
26 That woman&#13;
29 Mature&#13;
31 District in&#13;
Germany&#13;
33 Printer's&#13;
measure&#13;
34 Forenoon&#13;
35 Mournful&#13;
38 Change color of&#13;
39 Three-toed&#13;
sloth&#13;
40 Sun god&#13;
41 Allowance for&#13;
waste&#13;
43 Fruit cake&#13;
45 Large bird&#13;
47 Repealed&#13;
50 Therefore&#13;
52 Century plant&#13;
53 Obscure&#13;
56 Urge on&#13;
58 Pertaining to&#13;
birth&#13;
60 Symbol for&#13;
tantalum&#13;
61 Tolled&#13;
63 Runs away to be&#13;
married&#13;
65 Winter vehicles 27&#13;
66 Steamship:&#13;
abbr.&#13;
67 Irritate&#13;
DOWN&#13;
1 Blemish&#13;
2 Unadulterated&#13;
3 Article&#13;
4 Send forth&#13;
5 Portion&#13;
6 Deceive&#13;
7 Bone&#13;
8 Spanish pot&#13;
9 Goes by water&#13;
10 Terminate&#13;
12 Italy: abbr.&#13;
14 Symbol for&#13;
dysprosium&#13;
17 Rodents&#13;
20 Viper&#13;
24 Direction&#13;
25 Beam&#13;
28&#13;
29&#13;
30&#13;
32&#13;
36&#13;
37&#13;
42&#13;
44&#13;
46&#13;
48&#13;
49&#13;
51&#13;
Listen to&#13;
Throw off&#13;
Unusual&#13;
Mohammedan&#13;
priest&#13;
Nerve network&#13;
Macaw&#13;
Requires&#13;
Tissue&#13;
Sum up&#13;
Commonplace&#13;
Memoranda&#13;
Transactions&#13;
Heraldic&#13;
bearing&#13;
Roman road&#13;
Disguise&#13;
Spanish: abbr&#13;
Footlike part&#13;
Beholdl&#13;
Revised: abbr.&#13;
Greek letter&#13;
I Initwl Ftfflliim ftvnflirmfl&#13;
1 u i nursaay, AprU 18, 1985 RANGER&#13;
Team looks back by Carol Kortendick&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Next year, the wrestling team&#13;
will not have any returning Ail-&#13;
Americans, the first ever for Jim&#13;
Koch.&#13;
"We'll be hit really hard," said&#13;
Koch. "Our top three wrestlers are&#13;
leaving."&#13;
Next year, however, is still far&#13;
away. As Koch looks back on this&#13;
past season, Koch feels his team's&#13;
top performance was at the Midwest&#13;
Classic last January, when the&#13;
team fell short of winning by onequarter&#13;
of a point.&#13;
Other notable performances for&#13;
the Rangers were the Wisconsin&#13;
Collegiate Tournament and the&#13;
Warhawk and Wheaton invitationals.&#13;
Koch said the team also defeated,&#13;
for the third time, rival&#13;
Northern Michigan.&#13;
Though the team had its moments&#13;
of success, Koch felt the&#13;
year could have been better.&#13;
"Losing Todd Yde for a month&#13;
really hurt us as a team. Also, that&#13;
extra month could have meant an&#13;
NCAA National finish for him.&#13;
Mike Muckerheide, a senior at&#13;
158 lbs., had one of the best records&#13;
for Parkside, finishing his career&#13;
with 15845-9. Muckerheide suffered&#13;
from an elbow injury the entire&#13;
year. Koch felt that if Muckerheide&#13;
was in perfect condition, he might&#13;
have done even better, though&#13;
Koch admitted he had an outstanding&#13;
year as it was.&#13;
As far as Outstanding Wrestler,&#13;
Koch said the team has not decided&#13;
who will be accorded this title. He&#13;
did say the choice will probably be&#13;
between tri-captains Muckerheide,&#13;
Yde and Ted Keyes.&#13;
Wrestling successfully on the mat&#13;
was important, but academics also&#13;
played an important role for the&#13;
men. Muckerheide and Keyes were&#13;
named Academic All-Americans,&#13;
the second time for each.&#13;
Final standings for the year for&#13;
individual wrestlers are: Dan Hall&#13;
(sophomore) 30-14; Jack Danner&#13;
(sophomore) 31-15; Mark Dubey&#13;
(sophomore) 22-17; Yde (senior) 34-&#13;
13; Keyes (senior) 37-14; Craig Patz&#13;
(freshman) 25-12 and Don VerBruggen&#13;
(freshman) 9-7.&#13;
Parkside's Mike Muckerheide&#13;
on hip opponent.&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
c&amp;aefr&#13;
You can travel the world over&#13;
and never find a better beer.&#13;
ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
Photo by Chris Ma yesMba&#13;
Front row, (left to right): Jack Danner,&#13;
Johnnie Walker, Jerril Grover, Dan Hall,&#13;
Mark Dubey, Bruce Mergener. Middle&#13;
row: Coach Jim Koch, Mike Muckerheide,&#13;
Mike Mackovich, John Manowski,&#13;
Todd Yde, Paul Roth. Back rowr: Shawn&#13;
Yde, Ted Keyes, Tedd Kreuger, Craig&#13;
Patz, Scott Priebe. (not pictured, Don&#13;
VerBruggen)&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
TYPING: PROFESSIONAL results guaranteed.&#13;
Reasonable rates. 639-2874, mornings and evenings.&#13;
TYPING: FAST and professional service. Student&#13;
rates. Call Debbie, 681-3522.&#13;
EDITING: ANY course paper. Help yourself to&#13;
better grades. Recent English major and experienced&#13;
writer will edit your papers for grammar,&#13;
punctuation, structure, coherence and style. Will&#13;
correspond through mail or pick up and deliver.&#13;
Call Margaret at 639-2047.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
1974 CAMARO, clean. 74,000 miles. 350 auto, reliable.&#13;
$1500. 637-2439.&#13;
Classified&#13;
WOMAN'S BURGUNDY leather dress jacket, in&#13;
beautiful condition. An asset to anv wardrobe.&#13;
Size 12-14. $35. Call Jennie at 654-8398 p.m. or&#13;
553-2287 a.m.&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
NOW HIRING summer help: bartenders, bar&#13;
cart operators, banquet waitresses. Females preferred.&#13;
Apply at Maple Crest Country Club, 859-&#13;
2887, as k for Micky.&#13;
WANTED: AMBITIOUS person, full or parttime,&#13;
to represent our health product line in the&#13;
Kenosha area. Free training, excellent earnings.&#13;
Write K.C. &amp; Associates, P.O. Box 100. LeCenter,&#13;
MN 56057.&#13;
Two Great Places&#13;
All Rolled Into&#13;
One Package&#13;
INSIDE ffifc&#13;
MID-TOWN LOUNGE W'HGS&#13;
Snacks, Pizza &amp; Sandwiches&#13;
Monday - All You Can Eat&#13;
Chicken Wings&#13;
For Carry Outs Call 658-8788&#13;
Personals&#13;
THANK YOU for your compliment. Sure. I'll go&#13;
out with you on a date. Try to introduce yourself&#13;
to me on Thursday in the Union at 4 p.m. A.N.&#13;
MOLTEN MOLASSES loves Quicksilver Mercury&#13;
always, always, always.&#13;
LAURA, DO you like 'Unchained Melody?"&#13;
JOHN HANSEN: You're gorgeous, exciting, wonderful,&#13;
fun.&#13;
DAN HALL: Maybe we can have fun again.&#13;
Love, Karen.&#13;
JIM NAVMO, This is so you won't feel left out!&#13;
Guess who?&#13;
TODD, YOU ain't mean. You is Arnold Schwarzenegger!&#13;
Trina Sugden.&#13;
DANHALL, why ,a re you called "horsie?" -BJQ&#13;
DAVE: SEC. found the Blackroom. We Blew It.&#13;
Dam. Jay.&#13;
THE MASTER of all baiters is the O.E.W.&#13;
Worm.&#13;
SAMANTHA: YOUR eyes are like dew drops on&#13;
a rose.&#13;
BECK JUNIOR and Ingemar say you're beautiful!&#13;
Jose.&#13;
JAY: THE B.P.A. Sec'ty found the Blackroom.&#13;
Bummer.&#13;
HERBIE: THANKS for a wonderful Sat. night.&#13;
Hope there's many more to come. Dimples.&#13;
DENISE MULLIGAN: Jim says "Happy Birthday."&#13;
PAT SQUARED: Thanks again for Chicago.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
needs&#13;
writers&#13;
ANDERSON T RANSCRIPTION &amp; •&#13;
TYPING&#13;
Letters - Resumes&#13;
Term Papers&#13;
Student Rates&#13;
PHONE 637 3600&#13;
Jacqueline Anderson&#13;
• 1441 Park Avenue&#13;
• Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
RANGER 11 Thursday, April 18,1985&#13;
Parkside tennis player&#13;
warming up for a match&#13;
against rival Carthage.&#13;
Parkside defeated Carthage&#13;
12-0 on Wednesday,&#13;
April 10. Photo by Kris Odegard&#13;
Quincy tournament means&#13;
The softball team had an unsuccessful&#13;
weekend when it played in&#13;
the Quincy Tournament on Friday&#13;
and Saturday. The women came&#13;
home with a record of 1-3.&#13;
The Ranger's first game was&#13;
against The College of St. Francis.&#13;
The game was tight all the way&#13;
until the seventh inning, when&#13;
Parkside lost due to a "mental&#13;
error." Parkside, however, outhit&#13;
St. Francis 6-1.&#13;
Parkside's only victory was&#13;
against Augustana College. The&#13;
final score was 6-3. Renee Spear&#13;
went two for three with one double&#13;
header and one triple. Janet Koenig&#13;
pitched five innings and Michele&#13;
Martino "saved the game" by&#13;
pitching the last two.&#13;
The next game for Parkside was&#13;
against Southern Illinois University&#13;
at Edwardsville (SIU Edwardsville).&#13;
Parkside walked away with another&#13;
loss 2-0. This game ended&#13;
pool play, with the Rangers fourth&#13;
in their pool.&#13;
In what Coach Linda Draft called&#13;
"an up-and-down game," Parkside&#13;
lost their next game to host Quincy,&#13;
8-4. Martino pitched 3Vh innings&#13;
with Koenig finishing the game.&#13;
Koenig went three for four, with&#13;
two hits carrying balls over the&#13;
fence for homeruns. Ann Althaus&#13;
went three for three.&#13;
"I think we could have come&#13;
back with a record of 3-1, but instead&#13;
we had 1-3," said Draft. She&#13;
added that many tough schools participated&#13;
in this tournament.&#13;
The next tournament for the&#13;
team will be this weekend at the&#13;
College of St. Francis.&#13;
Northwoods National&#13;
Karate Championship&#13;
loss for softball team&#13;
Outstanding Sound System • Live DJ 7 Nights • Dance Floor &amp;&#13;
Lighting System • 64" Big Screen TV • Comfortable Seating • 3&#13;
Pool Tables • Video Games • Kitchen • &amp; THE LIST GOES ON!&#13;
The Northwoods National Karate&#13;
Championship will be held at Parkside&#13;
Sunday, April 21.&#13;
Eliminations will begin at 11&#13;
a.m., and the finals will begin at 3:&#13;
30 p .m.&#13;
Advance spectator tickets will be&#13;
sold at the Black Belt Karate Studios&#13;
in Racine and Kenosha, and at&#13;
Sixth Degree Martial Arts Supplies&#13;
in Kenosha. Advance ticket price is&#13;
$1. Tickets sold at the door are:&#13;
adults, $4, children, $3 (under six&#13;
free).&#13;
For more information, call 554-&#13;
5105.&#13;
Kenosha's ninth annual&#13;
"Seasons on Ice"&#13;
The Kenosha County Ice Arena&#13;
will present its ninth annual Ice&#13;
Holidays, "Seasons on Ice," at the&#13;
arena located at 7727 60th Ave., Kenosha.&#13;
The four performances are:&#13;
Friday, April 26 at 7 p.m., Saturday,&#13;
April 27 at 1:30 and 7:00 p.m.&#13;
and Sunday, April 28 at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
The show is under the direction&#13;
of Candi Neveu and features figure&#13;
skaters and hockey players from&#13;
the Kenosha-Racine area.&#13;
Call 694-8010 or s top in at the Ice&#13;
Arena for tickets.&#13;
Puzzler&#13;
Answers&#13;
Julich/Miskulin&#13;
Theater futures •&#13;
Continued from rage 9&#13;
Julich. "You have mere freedom&#13;
here to design your own program&#13;
within the spectrum of the curriculum.&#13;
I've had so many teachers ar.d&#13;
so many various opportunities that&#13;
there is nothing that should r &gt;p&#13;
me in the professional theater."&#13;
Although they are leaving 1'*&#13;
dramatic arts discipline at Parkiide,&#13;
both Miskulin and Julich will be&#13;
a continuing asset to the department.&#13;
With their futures already secured&#13;
in graduate work, they represent&#13;
the high calibre of training&#13;
that is a direct result of the program&#13;
that VanDyke has built in the&#13;
last five years.&#13;
Janet Broeren caught between second and third base last Wednesday, April&#13;
•«Ib' wl*d l*• I' •I' -tf&#13;
Pork/s Tavern &amp; Cocktail Lounge&#13;
"Fast becoming the talk of the town"&#13;
2109-2117 91st St. • Kenosha&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
• • • • EVERY WEEK • • • •&#13;
'1.00&#13;
Pitchers Sundays&#13;
12 Noon-Midnight&#13;
• • • • EVERY WEEK • • • •&#13;
ANIMAL HOUSE NIGHT!&#13;
THURSDAY...&#13;
** Bar Stool Races!&#13;
** Nuts &amp; Bolts Contest&#13;
** 7-9 p.m. Ladles Drink Free!&#13;
25* Tap/75* Mixed/'2 Pitchers&#13;
MILLER HIGH UFE&#13;
ATHLETES OF THE WEEK&#13;
Duane McClean&#13;
Captain of the baseball team, senior Duane&#13;
McClean plays centerfield. Duane hit 7 for&#13;
15, including 7 RBI's.&#13;
Mike Stolnak&#13;
Mike, a junior, plays left field. He hit 8 for&#13;
15, including 2 home runs.&#13;
"Make it the happy hour," yelled&#13;
Coach Ken "Red" Oberbruner to&#13;
his team in last Thursday's game&#13;
against Lewis University. It wasn't&#13;
the happy hour for Parkside, however,&#13;
as Lewis won the double&#13;
header, 5-3 and 11-0.&#13;
Parkside outhit Lewis 9-3 in the&#13;
first game. Tim Sorensen pitched&#13;
five innings and Kyle Backes finished&#13;
the game pitching two innings.&#13;
The following game, Oberbruner&#13;
wanted to try out his pitching staff&#13;
and divided pitching between Chris&#13;
Rozell and Mike Zuckley.&#13;
The team traveled to Aurora College&#13;
Friday and lost. Pitcher Rozell&#13;
had a no-hitter for four and onehalf&#13;
innings. After that, Rozell&#13;
started getting tired and made four&#13;
errors. Backes replaced him, but he&#13;
made three errors.&#13;
"We opened up to Lewis, who is&#13;
very strong, and they nailed us. We&#13;
didn't get out of that," said Oberbruner&#13;
about Friday's loss to Aurora.&#13;
Saturday, however, the Rangers&#13;
were out of t heir slump as they de&#13;
feated Milwaukee School of Engineering&#13;
(MSOE) in the first&#13;
16-3. Sorensen pitched,&#13;
three hits and striking out five.&#13;
The second game was rained out&#13;
in the third inning. Parkside had&#13;
the lead, 9-0, but wasn't given the&#13;
game because of t he lack of innings&#13;
played.&#13;
The Rangers will be playing&#13;
today against Lakeland College at 2&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Photo by Kris Odegaard&#13;
Parkside player throws bat after hitting&#13;
ball to defending team Lewis.&#13;
The Rangers gave up their benches to Lewis University at last Thursday's game.&#13;
12 Thursday, April 18, 1985 " RANGER&#13;
Parkside's Patti Mueller&#13;
rounds second base as&#13;
Loyola fields the ball.&#13;
More photos inside.&#13;
Pboto by Chris Mayes hi ba&#13;
Season begins with loss&#13;
Photo by Kris Odegaard&#13;
A Parkside baseball player sliding into home base.</text>
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              <text>PFM leads food bid</text>
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              <text>Thursday, April 25, 1985&#13;
R08a&#13;
reaps&#13;
good crop&#13;
Page&#13;
u&#13;
~&#13;
University of WiscoDsin-Parkside&#13;
Rubner the 8hutter&#13;
bug&#13;
PageS&#13;
PFM leads food bid&#13;
they understand  the specifications.&#13;
This is an opportunity for the bid-&#13;
der to make sure they did not make&#13;
a mistake  and allows them to with-&#13;
draw&#13;
if&#13;
they have made an error"&#13;
said .Niebuhr.&#13;
'&#13;
PFM&#13;
is a&#13;
nationally known com-&#13;
pany which serves several UW cam-&#13;
puses, such as Eau Claire, La Cros-&#13;
se, River Falls, Green Bay and Su-&#13;
perior.&#13;
"PFM&#13;
is a proven company  na-&#13;
tionwide,  so we have no question of&#13;
how good they are," said Niebuhr.&#13;
Heritage, which has served Park-&#13;
side since 1980, placed second in&#13;
the bid process with Ace Food&#13;
Service _placing a close third.&#13;
If&#13;
PFM officially receives the&#13;
contract,  they  will take  over  the&#13;
food service operations  on June&#13;
1.&#13;
Heat&#13;
pours in on campus&#13;
Lauer explained that the cooling&#13;
water  system which currently  pulls&#13;
the heat out of the buildings is&#13;
being set up and repaired. "The&#13;
temperatures  have to be fairly&#13;
warm in order to work on them, so&#13;
it's not like we can&#13;
fix&#13;
them in the&#13;
winter.  We have to do that when&#13;
it's  warm.  The first night  it was&#13;
warm we started  working on them,&#13;
and then it just got hotter and hot-&#13;
ter."&#13;
Lauer also explained that as long&#13;
as the system is working proper~y&#13;
and as long as it's warm out, they&#13;
11&#13;
try to have them on by May&#13;
1.&#13;
"If&#13;
it's only&#13;
50&#13;
out, there  isn't a need&#13;
for it. We'll  do our best to keep&#13;
things cool over there."&#13;
Tunks loses UCrace&#13;
to work on UC public relations. "&#13;
Richard said of her&#13;
victory,   1&#13;
think  United  council   m~mbers&#13;
were looking for an agress&#13;
lVe&#13;
per-&#13;
son,  who  can motivate  ~ro~  the&#13;
bottom up -  the vote&#13;
Indicated&#13;
that."  Richard  is a b?ard  membe~&#13;
and executive  comulIttee  membe&#13;
of the United States Student Asso-&#13;
ciation (the largest student lobbymg&#13;
.  the nati'on) and has lobb-&#13;
groupm&#13;
.&#13;
I  I&#13;
. ied for students  on a national  eve.&#13;
Richard feels Parkside has grown&#13;
in its involvment  with ~C&#13;
a~~now&#13;
has  quality  participatIOn.   Terry&#13;
has put a lot into UC and 1&#13;
horn&#13;
she will continue  to be ~~Ol~~ed&#13;
the  student   movemen  ,&#13;
Richard.&#13;
ed    the elec-&#13;
Tunks  c;omm&#13;
ent&#13;
.   on&#13;
titien&#13;
ti&#13;
'on "There was stiff compe . f .&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
Jor dlf er-&#13;
1don't feel there were rna&#13;
Coatioued&#13;
08&#13;
page 2&#13;
by&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
"HeritageFood Service at this&#13;
time,&#13;
it&#13;
appears,&#13;
will&#13;
not  retain&#13;
Parkside'sfood service bid," said&#13;
Bill&#13;
Niebuhr,Union Director.&#13;
Professional Food-Sevice&#13;
Man-&#13;
agement,Inc. (PFM) is the appar-&#13;
entbid winner, although the fea-&#13;
turesof the bid must still&#13;
be&#13;
evalu-&#13;
ated.Sixcompanies placed bids for&#13;
thefood service contract.  The bids&#13;
I&#13;
wereopened in Mad.ison on April&#13;
17.&#13;
~&#13;
"The way the bidding process&#13;
works,&#13;
sometimes  there  are&#13;
unu-&#13;
'sua!featureswhich need to be ex-&#13;
plained.For example  we must&#13;
checkand&#13;
see&#13;
how they arrived at&#13;
theirbid,howthey will handle cash&#13;
sales&#13;
and catering,  and make  sure&#13;
by&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
Somewhere between&#13;
-20&#13;
degrees&#13;
~nd&#13;
80&#13;
above we lost spring. Sitting&#13;
In&#13;
classwhen the room is a swelter-&#13;
ing&#13;
85&#13;
degrees can be relatively  un-&#13;
pleasant,but May I is the general&#13;
guidelinedate for when the air con-&#13;
ditioningcan be turned on.&#13;
Accordingto Tom Lauer Assist-&#13;
antDirectorof Utilities&#13;
the&#13;
heat is&#13;
turnedofl, "But people: light, type-&#13;
wnters, computers  all create  heat.&#13;
Thesystem here does two different&#13;
things. First, it removes  the heat.&#13;
Then&#13;
it pushes cold air up through&#13;
the&#13;
prpes,&#13;
blows cold air over them&#13;
and creates air conditioning."&#13;
by&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
Joann Richard,  UW-Oshkosh,&#13;
wonher bid for the United Council&#13;
presidency over Terry  Tunks,  for-&#13;
merPSGApresident.&#13;
Aftersix balloting sessions Rich-&#13;
ard  rec  .&#13;
ed&#13;
'&#13;
t   .&#13;
ere&#13;
enough of a majority&#13;
°&#13;
WIDthe post. The final vote&#13;
~runtWas44-19.There are 84&#13;
possi-&#13;
e&#13;
votes but only&#13;
63&#13;
voting&#13;
rnem-&#13;
~r~&#13;
were present. The election was-&#13;
U~,&#13;
at UW-Oshkosh April 18 at&#13;
~ general session.&#13;
Richard said her first action  as&#13;
P~esident will be to orient  herself&#13;
WIththe UCstafl. "I would like to&#13;
~  a positive UC staff that can&#13;
bo&#13;
rk&#13;
well with students"   said&#13;
"leh  d&#13;
'&#13;
ar . She hopes to develop a&#13;
~ogram requiring two stall mem-&#13;
rs to visit campuses each month&#13;
Housing&#13;
..&#13;
_-&#13;
More planned for singles&#13;
by&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
More single student housing&#13;
will&#13;
replace the abandoned plan&#13;
for family and retired housing,&#13;
said  Tom  Krimmel,  Develop-&#13;
ment and Alumni Affairs.&#13;
The new proposal&#13;
is&#13;
a two&#13;
phase plan with three buildings&#13;
per  phase.  Phase  one  would&#13;
bouse&#13;
360&#13;
students, and phase&#13;
two would house&#13;
396&#13;
students.&#13;
The buildings will&#13;
be&#13;
located&#13;
northwest of the Union near&#13;
Outer Loop road.&#13;
Krimmel said the units will&#13;
be&#13;
similar to Sandburg&#13;
Hall&#13;
at UW-&#13;
Milwaukee  in design,  except&#13;
Parkside's   housing  will  have&#13;
more  of&#13;
an&#13;
apartment  atmos-&#13;
phere. Eacb unit will house&#13;
SIX&#13;
students, with two baths, a small&#13;
kitchen facitity and a livingroom&#13;
area.&#13;
"In&#13;
essence it will&#13;
be&#13;
a&#13;
unit&#13;
within a unit, with two wings in&#13;
a&#13;
unit," said Krimmel.&#13;
Some parking&#13;
will be&#13;
available&#13;
next  to the  buildings,  and  a&#13;
recreation  area&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
created&#13;
near Inner Loop road. The build-&#13;
ings will&#13;
be&#13;
co-ed with a single&#13;
sex in a unit. The cost estimate&#13;
for the&#13;
single&#13;
units&#13;
is&#13;
$125-135&#13;
per month and $165-175for dou-&#13;
ble rooms.  Krimmel  said  this&#13;
price is at the top of the range&#13;
for residence  halls.&#13;
•'This&#13;
plan&#13;
is very similar to&#13;
the  original  housing  plan  de-&#13;
signed for Parkside  at its incep-&#13;
tion. We would like support for&#13;
the housing plan from the&#13;
peop-&#13;
le who helped bring the&#13;
univer-&#13;
.....&#13;
-&#13;
...... " o..t&#13;
E,.,.&#13;
Top half of picture shows the inside look for tbe pro-&#13;
posed student bousing; bottom balf how the plan for&#13;
the outside facade,&#13;
stty&#13;
here," said Krimmel&#13;
Krimmel said the housIDgpro-&#13;
posal&#13;
IS&#13;
uruque because there&#13;
will be&#13;
no cost or liabitity to the&#13;
state.&#13;
A&#13;
private corporauoe.&#13;
the&#13;
UW-Parkside Foundation, will&#13;
own the facility and&#13;
WIll&#13;
pay the&#13;
university  to operate  it. The&#13;
Foundation&#13;
will&#13;
collect the fees&#13;
and contract  for services&#13;
According&#13;
to&#13;
Krimmel there&#13;
is&#13;
still a possibility that family&#13;
housmg will be&#13;
built&#13;
"It&#13;
will&#13;
de-&#13;
was&#13;
around, Aaen felt It&#13;
was&#13;
sale to&#13;
run in the Coffee Shoppe&#13;
to&#13;
check&#13;
the time. Before she got up she&#13;
reached  around  and  tucked  her&#13;
purse&#13;
behind&#13;
a tree, without getting&#13;
up.&#13;
When  she  returned   only&#13;
minutes later ber purse&#13;
was&#13;
gone.&#13;
"It&#13;
really makes me&#13;
think&#13;
some-&#13;
body was bangmg out in the&#13;
woods.&#13;
I'm pretty cautious -  I looked&#13;
around before&#13;
I&#13;
went in the build·&#13;
ing and there  wasn't  anybody&#13;
around. They couldn't have&#13;
been&#13;
inside the building because they&#13;
pend&#13;
If&#13;
I&#13;
tronger&#13;
ckmand&#13;
de-&#13;
velops&#13;
It&#13;
the&#13;
"&amp;ht&#13;
pnce," he&#13;
saJd&#13;
M&#13;
tbe n t  t&#13;
p,&#13;
Krimm&#13;
1&#13;
plans&#13;
to&#13;
requ&#13;
bids&#13;
(rom&#13;
IrtlI&#13;
contracto&#13;
1n&#13;
ord~&#13;
to&#13;
deter&#13;
mme  more  eeeurate  bUlld.n,&#13;
prices  "There&#13;
WeI&#13;
till I&#13;
lot&#13;
01&#13;
potitical&#13;
wort&#13;
to&#13;
be dooe,&#13;
sucb  tal~,,« wtth&#13;
the   .&#13;
tern&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
Board&#13;
01 R&#13;
h. SlId&#13;
~dent' warns&#13;
Beware of the prowler&#13;
UNIT  PLAN  .. __&#13;
•••&#13;
would&#13;
'1!&#13;
had&#13;
to&#13;
move&#13;
prettj'&#13;
I&#13;
saJd&#13;
Aaen&#13;
Ron&#13;
Bnnknwl,&#13;
DIrector 01&#13;
Cam·&#13;
pus&#13;
8e&lt;:unty&#13;
was&#13;
not IvlllabIe lor&#13;
comment.&#13;
"I'm&#13;
concerned&#13;
thaloomebody&#13;
Is&#13;
lurkmg&#13;
m&#13;
the&#13;
woods&#13;
and&#13;
peopI&lt;&#13;
should&#13;
be&#13;
aware&#13;
of&#13;
thlt:'   said&#13;
Aaen.&#13;
Aaen&#13;
IS&#13;
ollenng I&#13;
reward&#13;
lor the&#13;
return of her address&#13;
book&#13;
and&#13;
noteboolt Any information&#13;
regard-&#13;
ing&#13;
ber&#13;
poses510ns&#13;
can&#13;
be&#13;
brought&#13;
to&#13;
the Ranger O!Ilce, WLLCDI:l9A&#13;
by&#13;
Jennie Tunkieia&#13;
Editor&#13;
There may&#13;
be&#13;
strangers lurking&#13;
in the woods at&#13;
Parkside,&#13;
according&#13;
to a woman who had her purse&#13;
stolen last Thursday.&#13;
Terri&#13;
Aaen&#13;
was sitting  on the&#13;
lawn&#13;
between  the Communication&#13;
Arts  building  and  the  Library-&#13;
jLearning  Center near the pond at&#13;
9:t5 p.m. on Thursday, April 18.&#13;
Aaen said she sat there for about 15&#13;
minutes and only a couple walked&#13;
by in that time period. Since no one&#13;
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              <text>Student discusses&#13;
Union changes&#13;
Page 4 - - ti .&#13;
Vietnam remembered&#13;
Pages 6 and 7&#13;
Men's track team&#13;
readies for the big one&#13;
Page 12&#13;
Thursday, May 2, 1985 University of Wisconsin-Parkside Vol. 13, No. 29&#13;
Piracy discussed at Fair ••l&#13;
by Bob Kiesling&#13;
Community News Editor&#13;
Question: Take several hundred&#13;
people, about a dozen vendors, lots&#13;
of high tech hardware and a controversial&#13;
seminar topic, and what&#13;
do you have?&#13;
Answer: Computer Fair 9.&#13;
Even though one vendor didn't&#13;
show at the fair, there were plenty&#13;
of other attractions. Colortron&#13;
Computers from Racine showed off&#13;
MacOffice, a local area network for&#13;
the Macintosh. Several clean-cut&#13;
IBM reps came down from Milwaukee&#13;
with a PC-AT in a clear&#13;
plastic case and a new flat panel&#13;
display screen. And Hewlett-&#13;
Packard was showing their Thinkjet&#13;
printer, a $400, near-letter-quality&#13;
printer about the size and&#13;
weight of the Milwaukee Consumer&#13;
Yellow Pages.&#13;
There was also Parkside's segment&#13;
of the International Computer&#13;
Problem Solving Contest, which is&#13;
held worldwide but coordinated by&#13;
Professor Don Piele, who started&#13;
it. The awards, given to elementary,&#13;
junior and senior high school&#13;
students from around the state,&#13;
were presented by Piele and&#13;
Thomas Smedinghoff, the keynote&#13;
speaker, shortly before Smedinghoff&#13;
spoke to a packed lecture hall.&#13;
Smedinghoff, a Chicago attorney&#13;
who specializes in software piracy,&#13;
titled his address "Software Piracy&#13;
and the Law," a subject he said is&#13;
"a real hot topic."&#13;
It is estimated that half the software&#13;
in use is pirated. For the $50&#13;
billion software industry that translates&#13;
into a substantial loss of revenue.&#13;
And many people do not realize&#13;
they are doing anything wrong.&#13;
The lines have been drawn between&#13;
programmers who wish to&#13;
protect their revenues and users&#13;
who don't want to pay high prices&#13;
for software.&#13;
A relatively small amount of software&#13;
is pirated by people who want&#13;
to resell either the software or the&#13;
ideas in the software.&#13;
"A lot of people view that as a&#13;
challenging activity that is essentially&#13;
harmless," he said. "A lot of&#13;
other people get very upset about&#13;
Vietnam survey&#13;
Results not surprising&#13;
by Kari Dixon&#13;
"The statistics in the Vietnam&#13;
survey did not really surprise me,"&#13;
said Mary-Etta Bublitz, a student in&#13;
Oliver Hayward's Vietnam class,&#13;
who circulated an opinion survey&#13;
among the Vietnam veterans at&#13;
Parkside. "What did surprise me&#13;
was how seriously people took it.&#13;
No matter where you are politically,&#13;
the wounds are very deep."&#13;
Bublitz will use the statistics that&#13;
she gathered for a couple of research&#13;
projects. She finds the Vietnam&#13;
class very interesting, because&#13;
during the 1960's she was an antiwar&#13;
protester around the San Francisco&#13;
Bay area in California. She&#13;
was involved in several marches,&#13;
had her skull fractured and was visited&#13;
by the FBI. The class, she said,&#13;
has changed the way she feels&#13;
about the war.&#13;
"This class has affected me more&#13;
than any other class," she said. "I&#13;
am just beginning to understand&#13;
the depth and intensity of feeling&#13;
that exists about the war."&#13;
Bublitz said that during the war,&#13;
she was a pacifist and blamed the&#13;
soldiers for what was happening. "I&#13;
have changed. I no longer believe&#13;
that all war is wrong," she said.&#13;
"And I have just begun to understand&#13;
the plight of the vets."&#13;
The anti-war movement was exciting,&#13;
she continued, but she eventually&#13;
became disillusioned with it.&#13;
"The movement called attention to&#13;
some of the changes that needed to&#13;
be made, but when I really looked&#13;
at the idea of revolution, it wasn't&#13;
realistic."&#13;
Bublitz said the type of movement&#13;
that existed during the 60's&#13;
can draw attention to serious problems,&#13;
but that martyrs are not really&#13;
necessary. "We need the far left&#13;
and the far right — otherwise how&#13;
can you tell where the middle is?"&#13;
she said.&#13;
The country needs to listen to&#13;
the Vietnam veterans," she said.&#13;
"The only way these guys are going&#13;
to get well is if someone listens to&#13;
them. The problem is that the only&#13;
ones who really understand them&#13;
are other vets, and only a handful&#13;
of them are well enough to help.&#13;
How can a handful help thousands?&#13;
Bublitz said she is no longer a&#13;
member of the radical left. "It was&#13;
Continued on page 2&#13;
that."&#13;
"It's perceived as something&#13;
everybody's doing," he said and&#13;
added that one of the best ways to&#13;
protect software is through copyright&#13;
laws.&#13;
But the standard copyright laws&#13;
are not well adapted to protecting&#13;
software, he said, mostly because a&#13;
program is not a physical entity; it&#13;
is rather a group of electrical impulses.&#13;
Most states, though, are moving&#13;
to correct that situation.&#13;
Also federal criminal laws for&#13;
software piracy are being stiffened,&#13;
he said. Piracy is a misdemeanor,&#13;
but legislation to make it a felony is&#13;
pending.&#13;
Wisconsin has passed laws which&#13;
provide stiffer penalties for pirates.&#13;
Those laws make it illegal to disclose&#13;
restricted access codes, modify&#13;
or destroy computer programs or&#13;
data and to take posession of programs&#13;
or data without the owner's&#13;
permission.&#13;
Smedinghoff said Wisconsin's&#13;
law is typical of the law in most&#13;
states which have piracy statutes.&#13;
Catch-up&#13;
stagnates&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
Governor Anthony Earl has endorsed&#13;
the proposal to grant the&#13;
faculty catch-up pay of 15 percent&#13;
to Madison, 12 percent to Milwaukee&#13;
and 10 percent to the cluster&#13;
schools like Parkside. However, the&#13;
issue of Academic staff catch-up is&#13;
still up ir| the air.&#13;
The plan proposed early last&#13;
week by head of the Select Committee&#13;
studying the UW-System,&#13;
Tom Loftus, called for the putting&#13;
the potential catch-up for academic&#13;
staff aside and requesting further&#13;
justification for the distribution of&#13;
the catch-up.&#13;
According to Stuart Rubner, Director&#13;
of Community Student Services,&#13;
"Loftus is saying we need to&#13;
make more clear the need for&#13;
catch-up. I believe he stated that&#13;
the salary study report could bear&#13;
no scrutiny, and that putting the&#13;
money in escrow until a more defensible&#13;
case can be built would be&#13;
issue&#13;
for staff&#13;
one suggestion."&#13;
Rubner then pointed out that a&#13;
later development does not make&#13;
the Loftus proposal seem like as&#13;
much of a problem. Secretary of&#13;
the Department of Employee Relations&#13;
(DER) Howard Fuller, in a&#13;
letter to Loftus, stated, "There is&#13;
no justification for extending the&#13;
catch-up principle beyond the three&#13;
categories that were targeted in the&#13;
Board of Regents proposal."&#13;
The original three categories included&#13;
librarians, lecturers and research&#13;
people, or those involved in&#13;
the academic function of instructing&#13;
students.&#13;
Fuller points out in his document&#13;
that extending catch-up raises to all&#13;
academic staff is of concern to the&#13;
DER for several reasons.&#13;
Fuller questions whether or not&#13;
many of the academic staff do not&#13;
perform similar or identical work&#13;
to their counterparts, classified&#13;
staff. If the entire academic staff&#13;
were to receive catch-up raises, the&#13;
Continued on page 9&#13;
Veterans' benefits hard to get&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Community News Editor&#13;
At Parkside and many other&#13;
schools in the UW-system, veterans&#13;
have been having trouble in getting&#13;
their entitled benefits.&#13;
According to Stuart Rubner, Director&#13;
of Community Student Services,&#13;
"The problem seems to be&#13;
coming from a federal level and not&#13;
within the schools themselves. We&#13;
were audited just last week and&#13;
there was 'no problem at all with&#13;
our paper work."&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) Senator Susan&#13;
Walborn said, "At this point there&#13;
are 12 veterans who are having&#13;
trouble getting their benefits at the&#13;
federal level. The concern here is&#13;
that the vets will be forced out of&#13;
school because they have no money&#13;
to take care of expenses. We don't&#13;
want to lose continuing students&#13;
with that kind of potential, but the&#13;
money they're losing is money they&#13;
live on. We would like to see any&#13;
vets who are having a problem getting&#13;
their money stop down to&#13;
Community Student Services and&#13;
let them know. We can't help in&#13;
any way if we don't know there's a&#13;
problem."&#13;
Rubner pointed out that Parkside&#13;
sends in a lot of certification.&#13;
"We rely a lot on the vets to come&#13;
here themselves and tell us they're&#13;
vets, and to come and tell us if&#13;
they're having a problem. When&#13;
they do come in with a problem,&#13;
we ask them to come back in a&#13;
couple of days and we'll try to have&#13;
some answers for them by then.&#13;
"Part of the problem," continued&#13;
Rubner, "is that the V.A. (Veterans&#13;
Administration) in Milwaukee&#13;
has to handle all the requests,&#13;
survivor benefits, social security,&#13;
disability, education... It goes&#13;
through that office and they have&#13;
been cut a lot in terms of staffing."&#13;
Nick Rott, the official liason&#13;
from the V.A. office for Parkside&#13;
said, "I wasn't aware that there&#13;
was a problem. The last thing we&#13;
want to do is to stop a vets from&#13;
getting their benefits. There can be&#13;
circumstances when some vets&#13;
aren't getting checks, but if that's&#13;
the case then they should see the&#13;
person who handles that on their&#13;
campus."&#13;
Rubner said, "It's frustrating all&#13;
the way around. Some vets opt for&#13;
early payment, but then it's just&#13;
that much longer until they get&#13;
their next check. If the V.A. would&#13;
just retain better records and cut&#13;
the processing time down. Sometimes&#13;
when a vet comes in, we'll&#13;
call to find that a file has been lost,&#13;
so we'll start to process a new one,&#13;
but by the next day we get a call&#13;
saying the file has been found.&#13;
Then it still takes another 7 to 10&#13;
days before the vet starts to get&#13;
benefits.&#13;
"The Bursar here has been great.&#13;
If she knows the student is a vet&#13;
waiting on benefits, then she understands&#13;
the late tuition, but the vet&#13;
is still living on virtually nothing.&#13;
Maybe there's a way to set up some&#13;
kind of veterans loan fund through&#13;
the financial aid office, something&#13;
that's there just for the vets. That&#13;
could create more paper work, but&#13;
if that will help them to stay in&#13;
school and let the V.A. run through&#13;
their process, then it seems like an&#13;
issue worth exploring."&#13;
John Ziolkowski, the Veterans&#13;
worker in CSS commented that, "It&#13;
may be even more effective to start&#13;
up the Veteran's Club again, then&#13;
maybe we can be seen as a group&#13;
dealing with the problems and hassles&#13;
of benefits instead of a lot of&#13;
different individuals working at different&#13;
levels. We need to gain our&#13;
own support."&#13;
2 Thursday, May 2,1985 RANGER&#13;
Opinion&#13;
War lingers for vets&#13;
by Kari Dixon&#13;
Tuesday marked the tenth anniversary&#13;
of the Communist takeover&#13;
of the city of Saigon in South&#13;
Vietnam. The war of which this&#13;
event is the culmination is to me a&#13;
series of ambiguous images... Cambodian&#13;
children on NBC news... soldiers&#13;
walking off the plane after&#13;
they came home... guerilla warefare&#13;
and grass huts... and the Nixon/&#13;
McGovern election. I was 11&#13;
years old when Saigon fell, and I&#13;
remember feeling a naive sense of&#13;
relief because "the war was over."&#13;
Now, ten years later, I realize that&#13;
the end of the war, like its unconstitutional&#13;
beginning, is still ambiguous.&#13;
For many, the war rages on.&#13;
It is imperative that my generation&#13;
understand and remember the&#13;
decade of the 60's and especially&#13;
the war itself. Unfortunately, the&#13;
recent polls being taken in high&#13;
schools and colleges indicate this is&#13;
not happening. It may be easier to'&#13;
pretend the 60's never happened,&#13;
but that does not erase the pain,&#13;
turmoil, death and destruction that&#13;
occurred.&#13;
The Vietnam War, to me, is&#13;
something that never should have&#13;
happened. Everybody lost, and nobody&#13;
won. For the first time I have&#13;
come to understand how much the&#13;
government of thi s country can dictate&#13;
the content and direction of&#13;
people's lives.&#13;
A report earlier this week said&#13;
that the publicity about the fall of&#13;
Saigon has prompted large numbers&#13;
of vets to seek help. That is because&#13;
they are the walking wounded. The&#13;
Vietnam veterans are a new breed&#13;
of American soldiers. They were&#13;
forced to fight a war for a country&#13;
that did not want a war. They were&#13;
forced to choose between possible&#13;
death or unyielding patriotism.&#13;
And, they were brought home too&#13;
quickly to a country that did not&#13;
welcome them and did not want&#13;
them. Their battles did not end ten&#13;
years ago.&#13;
There is no way that what has&#13;
happened can be undone. The war&#13;
was an unnecessary disaster, and&#13;
the senseless destruction and death,&#13;
like at Watts and Kent State, did&#13;
happen. What must be done now is&#13;
simple. We have to examine the&#13;
past, and avoid these situations in&#13;
the future. We need to be damned&#13;
sure what we are doing when we&#13;
involve ourselves in the affairs of&#13;
other countries. And, social movements&#13;
need to choose leaders and&#13;
strategies very, very carefully.&#13;
The only way to honor) those who&#13;
died during that time is to continue&#13;
to fight for the kind of country they&#13;
wanted. Whether they died in Vietnam&#13;
or at Kent State, they died for&#13;
what they wanted this country to&#13;
be. It is up to us, the next generation,&#13;
to attempt to attain their&#13;
goals, and at the same time try to&#13;
help those who came back from the&#13;
war, alive but not whole. And buttons&#13;
saying "El Salvador is Spanish&#13;
for Vietnam" are not making those&#13;
ideals any easier or more feasible&#13;
to achieve.&#13;
Letter to the Editor&#13;
Faith healing false&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to respond to the letter&#13;
from Tom Hathoot. Many people&#13;
have died as a result of their&#13;
faith in God. As a former student of&#13;
religions, I can testify to the false&#13;
nature of faith healing. I will not go&#13;
into the arguments as I would not&#13;
convince you anyway, and educated&#13;
people aren't likely to believe you.&#13;
But to study Zoroaster is to realize&#13;
that Christ was not the first son of&#13;
God and to study Mythology is to&#13;
realize that the Polytheistic Religions&#13;
had the same purpose as&#13;
Christianity. When you shut your&#13;
mind to facts and rely on faith, altering&#13;
the facts to suit your reality,&#13;
it's best to be on the receiving end&#13;
of the passed hat.&#13;
I lived by claiming Bible promises&#13;
for three years. Other people&#13;
supported my work of obtaining Bibles&#13;
in foreign languages for people&#13;
who didn't read English. But this&#13;
type of panhandling works with or&#13;
without leaning on the Bible, as I&#13;
lived for five years by working&#13;
scams from Seattle to St. Thomas&#13;
V.I. that had nothing to do with&#13;
God. The faith ones are better because&#13;
the marks won't testify&#13;
against you in court, at least they&#13;
aren't apt to. There is usually less&#13;
money in the faith ones unless you&#13;
see your message bounced off a satellite.&#13;
But then again we can't all&#13;
be a "Yellow Kid" ( the "Yellow&#13;
Kid" was the nickname given to the&#13;
man voted King of Con, who on his&#13;
100th birthday was able to say "I've&#13;
never worked a day in my life.")&#13;
Thad Scropos&#13;
Cemetery&#13;
^cath&#13;
SO IT'S BEEN TEN YEARS SOOTH VIET NAM&#13;
SINCE ^ |&#13;
FELL TO THE&#13;
COMMUNISTS.&#13;
HOW TIME FLIES WHEN YOU'RE ,&#13;
Vietnam survey discussed&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
exciting, and I was a rabble-rouser,&#13;
and we seemed to need a way to&#13;
express our discontent directly,"&#13;
she continued. "There really wasn't&#13;
much of a choice between Nixon&#13;
and Humphrey, and there was the&#13;
frustration at the death of the&#13;
Black Panthers in California,&#13;
Bobby Kennedy, Malcolm X and&#13;
Martin Luther King. We felt like&#13;
we had to do something."&#13;
Despite her change in attitude toward&#13;
the war and the anti-war&#13;
movement, Bublitz still believes&#13;
that history can teach us things. "If&#13;
you don't think and learn, and&#13;
remember the past, it's going to&#13;
happen all over again," she said. "I&#13;
decided now maybe it was time for&#13;
me to learn about Vietnam."&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz Editor&#13;
Pat Hensiak Campus News Editor nrr» TTr-no Sanger is written and edited by students at UW-Parkside end they are solely re-&#13;
• i Bob Kiesling Community News Editor WRITERS sponsible for its editorial policy and content. Published every Thursday during the&#13;
m JimNeibaur Feature Editor Tim Bruns. Kari Dixon, Steve ocademk year except during breaks and holidays.&#13;
Jr* Rick Luehr A«t Foatnr* VMtnr GaUion. Kimberlie Kranich, Steve Sanger is printed by the Sacine Journal Times.&#13;
zP Carol Kortendick w WitZ KratOChvil, Robb Luehr, Joan correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Sanger, University of&#13;
c I^m£^zzzzzzzz:::;ZZZ::: K IS «**«.JuBe ™ s^. ~ w r~ 14,41553-&#13;
J# J'M Whitney Nielsen Copy Editor PlinTHr D A nriirD o Letters to the editor will be accepted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard&#13;
Andy Buchanan Business Manager c n UutvArnrjlVO size paper. Letters should be less than 350 words and must be signed, with a te/e-&#13;
| W e n d y W e s t p h a l A d v e r t i s i n g M a n a g e r " ™ a n n '^ r a p s e r , D a Cr r y l phone number included for verification pu rposes. Names will be withheld upon re-&#13;
• Pat Zirkelbach Distribution Manager ' Knstine Odegaard. quest. Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 10 a.m. for publication Thursday. Ranger&#13;
Brenda Buchanan ...ZZ.ZZ Asst. Bus iness Manager reserves the right to edit letters and refuse letters containing false and defamatory&#13;
o content&#13;
At the sixth annual Student&#13;
Awards Banquet, Friday, April 26,&#13;
many students were honored for&#13;
their participation in student activities.&#13;
Pat Hensiak received the campus-&#13;
wide Distinguished Student&#13;
Award for her years of participation&#13;
in student activities. Hensiak&#13;
has served as Ranger editor, news&#13;
editor, and is presently campus&#13;
news editor. She also served as&#13;
chair of SUFAC for two years. Hensiak&#13;
has also sat on numerous campus&#13;
committees and graduated with&#13;
a B.A. in communication in less&#13;
than four years.&#13;
Prof. P.A. Nielsen received the&#13;
distinction of Advisor of the Year.&#13;
Nielsen has been very active with&#13;
the Geology Club this year.&#13;
Adrian Serrano received the&#13;
President's Award given by the&#13;
presidents of major organizations.&#13;
Serrano is SUFAC chair, PSGA&#13;
senator, and a member of the&#13;
Political Science Club.&#13;
Distinguished Student Awards&#13;
were given to outstanding members&#13;
of each of the major organizations.&#13;
Recipients were: Rose Mutchler&#13;
and Pam Beach for Peer Support;&#13;
Valerie Olson and Marie DeRosch&#13;
for SOC; Jennie Tunkieicz and Pat&#13;
Hensiak for Ranger; Keith Har-&#13;
UNITARIAN&#13;
UNIVERSALIS&#13;
have always&#13;
been known to&#13;
question&#13;
hand-me-down&#13;
religious doctrines.&#13;
Have you ever felt disenchanted&#13;
with an orthodox religion&#13;
because it hands you a&#13;
predigested faith? If so, our&#13;
church may be for you. For&#13;
hundreds of years this vital denomination&#13;
has been encouraging&#13;
individuals to question and to&#13;
grow.&#13;
The new name of our congregation&#13;
is:&#13;
BRADFORD COMMUNITY CHURCH&#13;
(Unitarian UntvwvaHct)&#13;
Woman's Club • 6028 8tti Ave&#13;
Rev. Tony Lar son, Minister&#13;
9:30 a.m. Services &amp; Sunday School&#13;
mann and Cheryl Niccolai for PAB;&#13;
and Terry Tunks and Adrian Serrano&#13;
for PSGA.&#13;
Jenny Price, Interim Director of&#13;
Student Life, said, "I think the student&#13;
awards banquet is an important&#13;
tradition for a young campus. I&#13;
am especially delighted with all the&#13;
people who won major awards.&#13;
They have made exceptional contributions&#13;
to this campus. I also think&#13;
my staff did a fantastic job of putting&#13;
on the event."&#13;
The banquet was planned and&#13;
hosted by Buddy Couvion and Marilyn&#13;
Bugenhagen of Student Activities.&#13;
P. A. Nielsen&#13;
Hispanic Club received awards&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
LSAT&#13;
Low School Admission&#13;
Tost Review&#13;
Section II:&#13;
Ju•n e• •8 -•1 5&#13;
2 Saturdays&#13;
9am-5pm $115&#13;
Lalumiere Language&#13;
Hall&#13;
GRE&#13;
Graduate Record&#13;
Exam Review&#13;
Section III:&#13;
May 25 •a n• d• •J une 1-2&#13;
2 Saturdays &amp; 1 Sunday&#13;
9am-5pm $130&#13;
Lalumiere Language&#13;
Hall 201&#13;
For more information, contact:&#13;
ITVV AlTU T Marquette University&#13;
Division of Continuing Education&#13;
1918 West Wisconsin Avenue&#13;
Milwaukee Wl 53233&#13;
(414) 224-7465&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
UWM votes to ban ROTC&#13;
It seems that demonstrations are once again becoming a common&#13;
occurrence in Madison. About a week after students were maced&#13;
while protesting CIA recruiting on campus, the capitol hosted two&#13;
back-to-back protests last Wednesday.&#13;
Both demonstrations were party of an anti-apartheid protest in&#13;
which about 800 students boycotted classes and protested the state's&#13;
investment in companies that do business in South Africa.&#13;
During the afternoon, about 100 students occupied the governor's&#13;
conference room for 4 ¥2 hou rs, but left after the Gov. Anthony Earl&#13;
made a statement condemning apartheid in South Africa.&#13;
The 200 protesters occupied the capitol rotunda Wednesday evening.&#13;
The protesters were in a festive mood. Some played cards,&#13;
while others danced, chatted or relaxed.&#13;
Capitol Police Chief Robert Hemele said he had hoped the afternoon&#13;
group could limit themselves to 50 people, both to minimize the&#13;
possibility of damage and "getting the building back so we can function."&#13;
Aspin wants defense shift&#13;
Les Aspin, who has been walking a tightrope on defense issues&#13;
since he became chairman of the House Armed Services Committee&#13;
last January, last week challenged fellow Democrats to "stop playing&#13;
the 'Doctor No' of the defense debate," Time magazine reported.&#13;
In a speech that attracted considerable attention, Aspin told the&#13;
Coalition for a Democratic Majority, "If Democrats want to spend&#13;
the rest of their careers writing op-ed pieces and giving lectures at&#13;
universities, then we can continue to stroke our antidefense image.&#13;
But if we want to make defense policy in the White House and the&#13;
Pentagon, then we had better stand for something."&#13;
Aspin said the party should point to some areas that need increased&#13;
military spending, and should construct a positive defense policy&#13;
around issues like Pentagon reform.&#13;
Capitol target of protests&#13;
UW-Milwaukee could become the first university in the country to&#13;
ban ROTC activities on campus, in an attempt to resolve the school's&#13;
non-discrimination policy toward homosexuals with the Army's admitted&#13;
anti-gay policies, the UW-M Post reported.&#13;
The UW-M faculty senate voted 32-7 several weeks ago to stop&#13;
ROTC activities on the campus. The decision must be approved by&#13;
Chancellor Frank Horton.&#13;
There are currently 150 students in the program. They will be allowed&#13;
to finish, but the ban calls for a halt to all ROTC activities by&#13;
1988.&#13;
Lt. Col Cliff MacDonald, head of UW-M's military science department,&#13;
said the decision would remove many opportunities for UW-M&#13;
students.&#13;
"I'm not convinced what the faculty senate did was in the best interest&#13;
of the university,""he said.&#13;
3 inursaay, May 2, iy»5&#13;
Celebration&#13;
Cinco de Mayo important&#13;
"Cinco de Mayo is an important&#13;
event for all students because it&#13;
helps them become enriched in different&#13;
cultures," said Carmen&#13;
Acosta, member of the Cinco de&#13;
Mayo Committee.&#13;
The Cinco de Mayo celebration&#13;
dates back to the 19th Century&#13;
Mexican-French War when, on May&#13;
5, 1862, a famous Mexican general&#13;
and his heavily outnumbered troops&#13;
repulsed the French for several&#13;
days at Pueblo. The Mexican army&#13;
lost that battle, but eventually led&#13;
Mexico to its independence from&#13;
France.&#13;
The Cinco de Mayo Committee&#13;
planned many events this week to&#13;
celebrate Mexico's independence.&#13;
The celebration culminates tomorrow&#13;
night, Friday, May 3. The&#13;
Folkloric Latino, a dance troupe&#13;
from Milwaukee will perform from&#13;
7-8p.m. in Union Square. Children&#13;
will have the opportunity to take a&#13;
swing at a pinata filled with Spanish&#13;
candies in the Union Bazaar at 8&#13;
p.m. A da nce will be held in Union&#13;
Square until 1 a.m. featuring the&#13;
music of Villa Fuerta.&#13;
This is the second year that Parkside&#13;
has hosted this celebration.&#13;
"Hispanic students have been&#13;
very passive but we want them to'&#13;
start voicing their opinions and become&#13;
more active on campus," said&#13;
Jose Anaya, chairman of the committee.&#13;
"It helps to celebrate these holidays,&#13;
including National Hispanic&#13;
Week, which is the third week in&#13;
September. Hopefully there is a lot&#13;
more to come, "said Jesus Alvarado,&#13;
committee member.&#13;
"Personally, I want the public to&#13;
see the positive aspects of Mexico -&#13;
a beautiful culture with a beautiful&#13;
history," said Juana Cortez, committee&#13;
member.&#13;
The event is open to the public&#13;
and has been well received by the&#13;
community. "I believe everyone&#13;
we've contacted has been very enthusiastic&#13;
about the event. People&#13;
from Milwaukee, Waukegan, Racine&#13;
and Kenosha are involved. The&#13;
community is glad to see Hispanic&#13;
students participating in this celebration,"&#13;
said Anaya.&#13;
The committe encourages all to&#13;
attend tomorrow night's event and&#13;
TODOS ESTAN BIEN VENIDOS! Students honored at banquet&#13;
COMPUTER&#13;
SYSTEMS:&#13;
If you're a computer science major, you'll&#13;
want to be part of today's Air Force. We&#13;
currently have openings In the Computer&#13;
Systems areas for graduating seniors with a&#13;
computer science or related degree. Talk to&#13;
your Air Force recruiter about the advantages&#13;
of being an Air Force officer.&#13;
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL:&#13;
Capt. Bob Howald&#13;
Toll Free 1-800-242-USAF&#13;
On the leading edge of technology&#13;
4 Thursday, May 2,1985 RANGER&#13;
Student seat in&#13;
for UW Regents&#13;
On Tuesday, the State Assembly&#13;
voted 69-30 in favor of adding a student&#13;
member to the UW-System&#13;
Board of Regents.&#13;
The proposal was strongly supported&#13;
by t he United Council of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Student&#13;
Governments, the state student lobbying&#13;
organization representing students&#13;
on 23 of the 26 UW-System&#13;
campuses.&#13;
"It looks like students may finally&#13;
have the input they deserve as&#13;
major financial contributors to&#13;
higher education," said United&#13;
Council president Scott Dacey.&#13;
"We commend the members of&#13;
the assembly for recognizing the&#13;
value of direct student involvement&#13;
in educational policy decisions," he&#13;
said.&#13;
The bill, AB 53, introduced by&#13;
Rep. David Clarenbach (D-Madison),&#13;
directed the governor to appoint&#13;
a full-time UW-System student&#13;
to a two-year term on the&#13;
Board of Regents.&#13;
Senate consideration began yesterday&#13;
with a hearing before the&#13;
Education and Government Operations&#13;
Committee.&#13;
If t he senate passes the measure,&#13;
Gov. Anthony Earl has said he will&#13;
sign the legislation into law.&#13;
Parkside Union&#13;
Kemper recalls the changes&#13;
Library book sale held&#13;
The Library/Learning Center&#13;
will hold a book sale on May 7, 8&#13;
and 9 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. outside&#13;
the entrance of the Library on&#13;
Level 1.&#13;
Approximately 1,000 books covering&#13;
a variety of subjects will be included.&#13;
Most hardcover books will&#13;
sell for $1 and paperbacks for 25&#13;
cents. There will also be a silent&#13;
auction for several special sets of&#13;
books.&#13;
These books have accumulated&#13;
over a period of time and consist of&#13;
duplicates, discards and gift items&#13;
not needed for the library collection,&#13;
according to Hannelore B.&#13;
Rader, Director of the Library/&#13;
Learning Center.&#13;
Neubauer speaks here&#13;
Jeff Neubauer (D-Racine) will&#13;
discuss his recent trip to Nicaragua,&#13;
his impressions and his ideas for alternate&#13;
solutions to regional problems.&#13;
His speech will be held on&#13;
May 7 in Moln D137, f rom 3:30 to&#13;
5:30.&#13;
by Julie Pendleton&#13;
"Parkside has the potential of&#13;
becoming a much better place,"&#13;
said Jack Kemper, a senior Geology&#13;
major.&#13;
Kemper will be completing his&#13;
fifth and final year at Parkside in&#13;
May. "I've had a good experience&#13;
here," said Kemper, "but things&#13;
have changed." According to Kemper,&#13;
five years ago students were&#13;
more willing to get involved. In the&#13;
last few years, that involvement has&#13;
slackened noticeably.&#13;
Kemper admits that it is difficult&#13;
for students to see Parkside as a&#13;
"real" college, because it plays&#13;
such a minor role in the majority of&#13;
students' lives. Students here have&#13;
homes to go to, jobs, friends and&#13;
family.&#13;
However, as a bartender at the&#13;
Union, Kemper hears first hand the&#13;
many complaints students have&#13;
about Parkside. He feels that if s tudents&#13;
are going to complain, they&#13;
should be willing to do something&#13;
about it. If they're not willing to do&#13;
something, then they shouldn't&#13;
complain.&#13;
"What people don't seem to realize&#13;
is that there is a lot of opportunity&#13;
to get involved," said Kemper.&#13;
"The inDut of one student can&#13;
make a big difference." InvolveRANGER&#13;
IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR THE FOLLOWING STAFF&#13;
POSITIONS FOR THE 1985-86 A CADEMIC YEAR.&#13;
• NEWS EDITOR&#13;
• FEATURE EDITOR&#13;
• SPORTS EDITOR&#13;
• PHOTO EDITOR&#13;
• COPY EDITOR&#13;
• ADVERTISING MANAGER&#13;
• ASST. BUSINESS MANAGER&#13;
• DISTRIBUTION MANAGER&#13;
Requirements: UW-Parkside student in good standing carrying at least&#13;
6 credits per semester.&#13;
Qualifications: Previous newspaper experience preferred.&#13;
All positions are paid&#13;
Applications available in the Ranger office D139C&#13;
Jack Kemper at the Union Square bar&#13;
ment does not necessarily require a&#13;
major time commitment. Kemper&#13;
feels that if students would spend&#13;
just one hour a week getting involved,&#13;
either officially or just&#13;
sticking around to have fun, the atmosphere&#13;
on campus would change&#13;
considerably.&#13;
Since Kemper has worked as a&#13;
bartender since the first week of&#13;
his freshman year, he is especially&#13;
attached to the Union. "It's just not&#13;
a fun place anymore," admitted&#13;
Kemper. "What students don't&#13;
seem to realize is that they pay for&#13;
the majority of the Union's upkeep&#13;
through segregated student fees.&#13;
It's their Union. They should take&#13;
advantage of it."&#13;
Kemper believes the Union is&#13;
more than just a place to get together&#13;
and drink. "The Union is a&#13;
gathering point at the University. A&#13;
lot of things happen here. It's a&#13;
place to meet with your friends,&#13;
make new friends, get to know your&#13;
professors, and, most of a ll, a place&#13;
to have fun."&#13;
Another concern of Kemper's is&#13;
The End. It used to be that The&#13;
End was the biggest event of the&#13;
year. Now attendance is down considerably&#13;
compared with a few&#13;
years ago. Kemper feels that it's&#13;
important to be part of this yearend&#13;
bash. "It's the perfect opportunity&#13;
for students to be a part of&#13;
Parkside," said Kemper. "I've&#13;
heard enough complaints about&#13;
how boring Parkside is. If that's the&#13;
way students feel, they should do&#13;
something about it. You only get&#13;
what you're willing to give."&#13;
When asked why it matters to&#13;
him what happens at Parkside&#13;
when he leaves, Kemper replied, 'I&#13;
care. You can't spend as much time&#13;
here as I have and not become attached&#13;
to the place. It would be&#13;
nice if the upcoming students were&#13;
able to come to a place that is close&#13;
to realizing its potential."&#13;
Kemper will be continuing his&#13;
education at graduate school in&#13;
South Dakota at the School of&#13;
Mines and Technology.&#13;
CtgzycDayz&#13;
Friday MAY 3 toThursday MAY 9&#13;
ONLY $2.00&#13;
with current PARKSIDE student i d.&#13;
"AN INTERNATIONAL TREAT THAT WILL TICKLE&#13;
EVERY FANCY. Part Ke ystone Cops, part br eathtaking safari and part&#13;
sweet love story. It is p erfectly delightful an d ha ppily recommended."&#13;
Joanna langlieio WABC RADIO&#13;
"A REFRESHINGLY LOOPY MOVIE!"&#13;
Kamieen Carro" NEW YORK DAILY NEWS&#13;
"A COMEDY ABOUT THE CLASH OF CULTURES.&#13;
EVEN F UNNIER THAN IT IS ECCENTRIC WHICH&#13;
IS SAYING QUITE A L OT."&#13;
Janei Masim NEW YORK TIMES&#13;
THE GOW MUST BE&#13;
yfri 6spic- Ctnn&amp;cOj... Of /HriuAcL Pvyp^^Zoyi/y-&#13;
A TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX RELEASE&#13;
JAMIE UYS "THE GODS MUST BE CRAZY" a CAT FILMS PRODUCTION&#13;
MARIUS WEYERS SANDRA PRINSLOO and XAO. THE BUSHMAN&#13;
BOET TROSKIE JOHNNY BOSHOFF JAMIE UYS&#13;
FRI. 7:30 &amp; 9:30&#13;
SAT. 5:30, 7:30. 9:30&#13;
SUNDAY 1:30. 3:30. 5:30. 7:30. 9:30&#13;
APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED THROUGH JUNE 1, 1985&#13;
RANGER&#13;
. 5 t, Thursday, May 2; 1985 Club Events Volleyoop is coming to The End&#13;
Phi Gamma Nu&#13;
Phi Gamma Nu, business fraternity&#13;
will be holding its last meeting&#13;
of the semester Monday, May 6.&#13;
The meeting will be at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Union 207. We will be electing officers&#13;
for next year. Join now! We&#13;
are currently making plans for next&#13;
year.&#13;
Physics Club&#13;
The Physics club picnic will be&#13;
held at Sanders Park, Racine, on&#13;
Friday May 10. There is a sign up&#13;
sheet on GR 233. Please sign up if&#13;
you plan to attend. The picnic is&#13;
free, but we ask that you bring a&#13;
snack (bag of chips, cookies, etc.)&#13;
Beer and brats will be served.&#13;
Students working on project&#13;
PEST: we have set aside Friday,&#13;
May 17 to complete the wave tank.&#13;
Plan to be here Friday at 10 a.m.&#13;
A week at the Park&#13;
The new officers for the 85-86&#13;
academic year have been elected:&#13;
President-David Marx, Vice-President&#13;
James Boyle.&#13;
On Wednesday, May 8, a talk entitled&#13;
"Fiber Optics'" will be&#13;
presented by Peggy Perozzo. Fiber&#13;
optics is a rapidly developing technology&#13;
which has found application&#13;
in telecommunications, computers&#13;
and medicine. The talk will be held&#13;
in GR 230 at 1 p.m. All are welcome.&#13;
Two Parkside physics students,&#13;
Dave Marx and Peggy Perozzo,&#13;
have been awarded summer research&#13;
scholarships at Argonne National&#13;
Laboratory. The lab is located&#13;
20 miles southwest of Chicago.&#13;
The work involves conductivity&#13;
measurements on organic conductors&#13;
and the preparation of samples&#13;
of superconducting ternary materials.&#13;
"I want my volleyoop," proclaims&#13;
a charicature of B illy Idol on&#13;
a poster in Comm Arts. "Fine. But&#13;
what the hell is a volleyoop?" reply&#13;
students.&#13;
Volleyoop is a volleyball tournament&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Association of Communicators in&#13;
conjunction with The End, said&#13;
Greg Carson, PAC president. The&#13;
tournament will be held on Saturday,&#13;
May 18 from 11 to 1 p.m. in&#13;
the Union field. The tourney is set&#13;
up as a 10-team round robin. There&#13;
must be six members to a team and&#13;
two must be female. The entry fee&#13;
is $2 per team member, which includes&#13;
volleyoop t-shirts for all.&#13;
There will be three place awards,&#13;
and each will receive special gifts,&#13;
New identity potentials&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Thursday, May 2&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Performance Management"&#13;
by Prof. Dennis Laker at&#13;
8:30 a.m. in Union 206.Call ext.&#13;
2047 for details.&#13;
MOVIE: "The Karate Kid" will be&#13;
shown at 3:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. The movie is rated PG and&#13;
runs 118 minutes. Admission at the&#13;
door is $1 for a Parkside student&#13;
and $1 for a guest. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
MOVIE: "Le Cage Aux Folles II"&#13;
will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. All seats are sold&#13;
for the Thursday Foreign Film series.&#13;
CONCERT: featuring the Parkside&#13;
Wind Ensemble at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater. Admission&#13;
at the door is $1 for students&#13;
and senior citizens and $2 for&#13;
others.&#13;
Friday, May 3&#13;
COLLOQUIUM: "Pitfalls and Triumphs&#13;
in Teaching Composition&#13;
With the Aid of a Computer: A&#13;
Workshop" by Debbie Hoidstein of&#13;
the Illinois Institute of Technology&#13;
at 1 p.m. in WLLC Dl. The event is&#13;
open to the public at no charge.&#13;
MOVIE: "The Karate Kid" will be&#13;
repeated at 1:30 p.m. and at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
FOLKLORICA LATINO: starting&#13;
at 7 p.m. in Union Square. At 8&#13;
p.m. the music of "Villa Fuerte"&#13;
will be featured. The event is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
Saturday, May 4&#13;
MOVIE: "Le Cage Aux Folles II"&#13;
will be repeated at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. All seats are sold.&#13;
Sunday, May 5&#13;
MOVIE: "Le Cage Aux Folles II"&#13;
will be repeated at 2 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. This ends the Foreign&#13;
Film Series for the season.&#13;
CONCERT: featuring the Parkside&#13;
Swing Choir at 7:30 p.m. in Greenquist&#13;
103. Admission at the door is&#13;
$1 for students, senior citizens,&#13;
Parkside faculty and staff and $2&#13;
for others.&#13;
MOVIE: "The Karate Kid" will be&#13;
repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
Monday, May 6&#13;
ROUND TABLE: "The Brazilian&#13;
Presidential Election: The Democratic&#13;
Opening?" by Prof. Gerald&#13;
Greenfield at 12:15 p.m. in Union&#13;
104-106. The event is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
Tuesday, May 7&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Credit Collections&#13;
in a Small Business" by Joseph&#13;
Knors starts at 7 p.m. in Union 106.&#13;
Call ext. 2047 for more information.&#13;
CONCERT: featuring the Parkside&#13;
Jazz Ensemble at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. Admission&#13;
at the door is $1 for students&#13;
and senior citizens and $2 for&#13;
others.&#13;
Wednesday, May 8&#13;
LECTURE: "The Inevitability of&#13;
War" by Paul Tungseth at 1 p.m. in&#13;
MOLN D107. The lecture is open to&#13;
the public at no charge.&#13;
ACCENT ON ENRICHMENT:&#13;
presents Woody Herman and the&#13;
Thundering Herd at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre. Admission&#13;
is $5 for Parkside students&#13;
and $7 for others. Tickets are available&#13;
at the Union Information Center.&#13;
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Mon.-Thurs. 10-6 pm Fri. 10-8 pm&#13;
Sat. 10-5 pm • Sun. 12-5 pm&#13;
such as six free brunches at the TBird&#13;
Lounge, a case of wine, beer,&#13;
bratwurst, bookstore items, The&#13;
End beer tickets and The End tshirts.&#13;
"We've structured the event so it&#13;
won't be so competitive and we're&#13;
emphasizing the fun aspect," said&#13;
Carson.&#13;
Carson said students are encouraged&#13;
to picnic near the tourney&#13;
site.&#13;
Immediately following the tourney&#13;
PAC is sponsoring a performance&#13;
of the Jazz band in Union&#13;
Square from 1-3 p.m.&#13;
For more information about volleyoop&#13;
or to sign up, call Prof.&#13;
David Habbel at 553-2532 or Carson&#13;
at 654-1653.&#13;
Book buy-back changes&#13;
Students must have their Parkside&#13;
identification cards when selling&#13;
their books back to the bookstore,&#13;
according to a new policy of Campus&#13;
Stores Associates.&#13;
CSA Director Nancy Schroeder&#13;
said the new policy is part of a new&#13;
record keeping procedure. When&#13;
students bring their books to the&#13;
buy-back counter, they will be&#13;
given a voucher, not cash, which&#13;
can then be redeemed for cash at&#13;
the Bookstore on Level 1. Schroeder&#13;
said this policy was adopted by&#13;
CSA fo r all their bookstores.&#13;
Schroeder and Campus Security&#13;
also urge students to be especially&#13;
alert for book bandits — people&#13;
who steal books and then sell them.&#13;
She said that this is the time of&#13;
year when many book bandits strike.&#13;
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MMMMM&#13;
6 Thursday, May 2,1985 RANGER&#13;
Vietnam: To live in it, to live thr&#13;
by Kari Dixon&#13;
The tenth anniversary of the&#13;
fall of Saigon was Tuesday.&#13;
Most major papers, including&#13;
the New York Times, the&#13;
Milwaukee Journal and the&#13;
Chicago Tribune, as well as&#13;
the three major television&#13;
networks, have looked at the&#13;
war in retrospect.&#13;
In order to attempt to inform&#13;
its readers, and possibly&#13;
make the event and its ramifications&#13;
more understandable,&#13;
the Ranger has interviewed&#13;
various individuals&#13;
who played different parts in&#13;
the drama known as the -&#13;
Vietnam War.&#13;
which we have now begun to see."&#13;
Hayward has taught the course&#13;
twice, and has had 40 members in&#13;
each section. This, he says, is very&#13;
good for an upper level political science&#13;
course. The text that is used is&#13;
"Vietnam: A History," on which&#13;
the public television series was&#13;
based.&#13;
"It was difficult to find good&#13;
texts, and I was reluctant to teach&#13;
something too close in time to&#13;
when it happened," he said. "But&#13;
now there have been eight or ten&#13;
years, and things are being sorted&#13;
out."&#13;
Hayward&#13;
on 'Nam&#13;
"The country is still making up&#13;
its mind about the Vietnam war,"&#13;
said Oliver Hayward, history lecturer,&#13;
who teaches a class on the subject.&#13;
"It was necessary to let some&#13;
time pass, cool down, and get some&#13;
new and objective information,&#13;
Hayward said that teaching the&#13;
cla3s is interesting because it covers&#13;
the entire spectrum of age and&#13;
political ideology. During the&#13;
semester he has had veterans in to&#13;
talk with the class, and their experiences&#13;
have been educational.&#13;
"I have really learned a lot from&#13;
the vets," Hayward said. "Their&#13;
stories have been very powerful,&#13;
and the support network groups for&#13;
helping them work through their&#13;
problems are getting better."&#13;
The problems of the vets are&#13;
many and complex, according to&#13;
Hayward. The post-traumatic stress&#13;
disorder (PST) seen in previous&#13;
wars is the most pervasive and&#13;
severe with the Vietnam veteran.&#13;
"There are some guys who are just&#13;
developing it now, ten years after,"&#13;
he said. "Can you imagine storing&#13;
all that up for ten years?"&#13;
The veterans have told Hayward&#13;
that they never really feel comfortable&#13;
unless they are with other&#13;
veterans.&#13;
The reason veterans are having&#13;
problems never seen before is due&#13;
in part to the fact that Vietnam was&#13;
a new kind of war, Hayward said.&#13;
"Combat soldiers were rotated in&#13;
individually rather than in units,&#13;
and this made the soldiers already&#13;
over there suspicious and hostile to&#13;
newcomers," he said. "For the&#13;
most part the soldiers were isolated&#13;
and any advantages from being in a&#13;
military unit were lost."&#13;
Another problem, Hayward continued,&#13;
was that the soldiers would&#13;
leave Saigon and be home in 24&#13;
hours. They had little or no time to&#13;
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Vietnam War memorial photo by Sue Traylor&#13;
be debriefed, and this resulted in&#13;
culture shock.&#13;
"They returned to a largely indifferent&#13;
America, with no pats on the&#13;
back, no ticker-tape parades, and&#13;
this contributed to their difficulties&#13;
in coping," he said.&#13;
The anti-war movement, Hayward&#13;
is convinced, did help to get&#13;
the US out of the war. He said that&#13;
the success of the movement was&#13;
proportional to its necessity, and&#13;
when it was no longer needed, it&#13;
died down. "The movement could&#13;
have been more effective," he said.&#13;
"It could have used more restraint;&#13;
there was some violence that was&#13;
counter-productive. Its job was to&#13;
convince the average American that&#13;
the war was wrong.&#13;
"The fact that we are a country&#13;
where that kind of movement could&#13;
occur made me believe that America&#13;
really does work," he continued.&#13;
Militarily, Vietnam taught us the&#13;
importance of mobility, Hayward&#13;
added, and indicated a need for&#13;
more counter-insurgency or jungle&#13;
combat training.&#13;
"Militarily, this was was not the&#13;
humiliation it has been described&#13;
as. We learned the importance of&#13;
firepower, and many units fought&#13;
well," he said. "Militarily, we won&#13;
the war."&#13;
Hayward said that it is dangerous&#13;
to draw oversimplifcations from&#13;
history, and that one has to be careful&#13;
how one uses it. "The current&#13;
debate is healthy. If we use careful&#13;
reasoning, what happened there&#13;
might affect other involvements,"&#13;
he said, "but that is not a one-toone&#13;
correlation. Each situation has&#13;
to be looked at separately."&#13;
Hayward said that those in his&#13;
class who are too young to remember&#13;
much about Vietnam have the&#13;
interest, but not a lot of knowledge.&#13;
"That's why I think this course is a&#13;
good thing to teach," he said.&#13;
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Directly Across from the Info. Ctr.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
7 Thursday, May z, 1985&#13;
rough it, trying to live beyond it&#13;
War Memorial was too late&#13;
by Kari Dixon&#13;
The Vietnam Memorial in Washington&#13;
D.C. and the recent publicity&#13;
surrounding the tenth anniversary&#13;
of th e fall of Saigon are attempts by&#13;
the American people to "further&#13;
understand what happened," according&#13;
to George Werve, a Vietnam&#13;
veteran in Oliver Hayward's&#13;
class on Vietnam. "But, if the&#13;
people who made war had to fight&#13;
it, there would be no more war,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Werve had just graduated from&#13;
Dominican College in Racine when&#13;
he was drafted. He served in a division&#13;
that was stationed in the&#13;
northern part of South Vietnam at&#13;
a military base at Chu Lai from&#13;
1969 to 1970.&#13;
"The people over there were&#13;
more concerned about their day-today&#13;
survival — whether they had&#13;
enough to eat — instead of whether&#13;
or not they could vote," he said.&#13;
"The GI's who were over there&#13;
were concerned with what they had&#13;
to do to survive their tours."&#13;
The most serious misconceptions&#13;
ihat Americans have about the war,&#13;
according to Werve, are the ideas&#13;
that the individual soldiers were to&#13;
blame, and that they wanted to be&#13;
over there. "The American public&#13;
perceived the individual soldier as&#13;
part of government policy and that&#13;
is an unfair attitude," he said. "A&#13;
lot of guys who were over there&#13;
didn't want to be there; most of us&#13;
were assigned there."&#13;
Werve said that the change from&#13;
military to civilian life was done&#13;
very quickly. "I left Vietnam on&#13;
Wednesday^ and at 1:30 Friday I.&#13;
was watching a Cubs game," he&#13;
said. "People didn't know how to&#13;
react when you first came home;&#13;
they were very cautious in what&#13;
they said, but I had a very supportive&#13;
family."&#13;
The soldiers watched the efforts&#13;
of th e anti-war movement on television,&#13;
and read about it in the papers,&#13;
while they were in Vietnam.&#13;
"It certainly was very easy to condemn&#13;
soldiers going off to war&#13;
when you were sitting in the comfort&#13;
of your own living room," he&#13;
said. The fact that the soldiers were&#13;
not greeted warmly when they returned&#13;
did not surprise him either.&#13;
"The war was so unpopular that&#13;
there was no reason for them to&#13;
welcome us home," he said.&#13;
But the soldiers in Vietnam were&#13;
no different than anyone else, he&#13;
said. They had families, feelings,&#13;
needs, just like everyone else.&#13;
"Many vets couldn't or wouldn't&#13;
talk about it because it often&#13;
brought contempt," he said.&#13;
Werve is taking Hayward's class,&#13;
without credit, because he wants to&#13;
understand the scope of the war&#13;
that he fought in. "I took the course&#13;
because I am trying to find the&#13;
objective truth about Vietnam," he&#13;
said. "The scope is so much broader&#13;
than anyone could see at the&#13;
time."&#13;
Like Werve, Paul Johnson, former&#13;
vice-president of PSGA and&#13;
president of the Veterans Club, is a&#13;
Vietnam combat veteran. He was&#13;
already in the military when he was&#13;
assigned as a field combat specialist&#13;
cook and sent to serve outside Da-&#13;
Nang. Cooking became second&#13;
priority, because he was sent out on&#13;
manuevers.&#13;
"We lived from day to day," he&#13;
said. "You worried about keeping&#13;
your buddy alive because keeping&#13;
him alive meant you stayed alive."&#13;
This need forced the men to become&#13;
close. "There was a natural&#13;
bond between us," Johnson said.&#13;
Johnson feels the United States&#13;
lost the war. "We got run out with&#13;
shame: the American soldiers'&#13;
hands were tied," he said. "If we&#13;
had been allowed to do our job, the&#13;
war never would have lasted as&#13;
long as it did."&#13;
Remorse was something that&#13;
Johnson did not feel then, but he&#13;
feels it now. "Then the Vietnamese&#13;
were the enemy," he said. "Now I&#13;
have a lot of remorse for the things&#13;
I did; we were destroying human&#13;
life that was probably just as innocent&#13;
as a child over here would&#13;
be."&#13;
The anti-war movement, according&#13;
to Johnson, didn't really know&#13;
what was going on in Vietnam because&#13;
the press printed only one&#13;
side — the bad side. "The deserters&#13;
(those who left the United States to&#13;
avoid the draft) should have been&#13;
stood up against a wall and shot,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Like Werve and most other Vietnam&#13;
combat veterans, Johnson&#13;
feels that the transition between&#13;
combat and civilian life occurred&#13;
Johnson said that the hardest&#13;
part of the whole experience was&#13;
attempting to life as a civilian. "I&#13;
never adjusted," he said. He is involved&#13;
in three area groups for Vietnamese&#13;
veterans, one of which he&#13;
established in Kenosha. He has&#13;
health problems due to exposure to&#13;
areas sprayed with Agent Orange.&#13;
Like many veterans, he has moved&#13;
around a lot and will do so again&#13;
when school ends next month.&#13;
"Many of us were thankful because&#13;
we thought we came back&#13;
whole — we had no loss of limbs&#13;
and we thought we were OK, but&#13;
we're not. Anytime another veteran&#13;
wants to talk, I have the time,"&#13;
Johnson said.&#13;
The war, according to Johnson,&#13;
proved that the U.S. was not the&#13;
world power it thought it was. "We&#13;
had the idea we were stopping&#13;
communist oppression," he said.&#13;
"But when we got back we realized&#13;
it was to protect the interest of big&#13;
business.&#13;
"The War Memorial in Washington&#13;
is really too little, too late,"&#13;
Johnson concluded. "The U.S. has&#13;
finally realized that we are the victims."&#13;
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Parkside was quiet&#13;
much too quickly. "We were built&#13;
up to kill, and with no retraining&#13;
we came home and were turned&#13;
loose on society," he said. "When I&#13;
came home, people were very distant.&#13;
I was called names like baby&#13;
killer, warmonger."&#13;
by Kari Dixon&#13;
Parkside at the height of the&#13;
anti-Vietnam war protests in the&#13;
late 1960's and early 1970's was actually&#13;
very quiet, according to John&#13;
Harbeson, political science professor&#13;
and Oliver Hayward, history&#13;
lecturer.&#13;
"There were some activities — a&#13;
small band of militant students and&#13;
some teach-ins — b ut for the most&#13;
part, the attitude was pretty complacent,"&#13;
said Hayward.&#13;
Both Harbeson and Hayward&#13;
went to see Eugene McCarthy (candidate&#13;
for the Democratic nomination&#13;
for president in 1968 and one&#13;
of the anti-war movement's heroes)&#13;
when he spoke at the two-year center&#13;
in Racine. "We packed the&#13;
place. I got to introduce him," said&#13;
Harbeson. "It (McCarthy's speech)&#13;
was picked up on national TV."&#13;
The teach-ins were information&#13;
sessions that allowed speakers with&#13;
expertise to share information and&#13;
answer questions about the war.&#13;
"Some members of the administration&#13;
were very nervous about the&#13;
teach-ins, because they were concerned&#13;
that what was happening in&#13;
Madison could happen here," Harbeson&#13;
said.&#13;
"The faculty was almost universally&#13;
opposed to the war," Harbeson&#13;
continued. "Those who were in&#13;
favor of it were not real vocal about&#13;
it." But Hayward said, "There&#13;
were some who felt that the war&#13;
was not an issue that should be&#13;
dealt with on campus."&#13;
Hayward came to Parkside after&#13;
attending graduate school in Madison,&#13;
just prior to the anti-war activities&#13;
there. Harbeson also attended&#13;
school at Madison and participated&#13;
in protest activities while&#13;
there. But there were no sit-ins,&#13;
marches or bombings at Parkside.&#13;
"Even in my classes, students&#13;
were not attempting to seize the&#13;
agenda and make Vietnam the&#13;
issue," Harbeson said. "There was&#13;
more of a modest consciousness."&#13;
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Parkside theater season in review&#13;
by Bill Serpe&#13;
Last Saturday night, the final&#13;
curtain came down on "She Stoops&#13;
to Conquer." It marked the culmination&#13;
of a long and successful&#13;
year for the Dramatic Arts Discipline.&#13;
The four productions of the&#13;
season at Parkside have left a&#13;
strong impression on theater in&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin, while&#13;
providing those involved with experiences&#13;
and memories to last a long&#13;
time.&#13;
Eighty different characters emerged&#13;
from the abilities of seventeen&#13;
different actors. A professional actress&#13;
accented one show, while another&#13;
play was directed by a guest&#13;
professional director. Two of the&#13;
four shows were presented on the&#13;
road, and a children's breakfast-&#13;
/theater was added as an annual&#13;
feature.&#13;
Dr. Leon VanDyke, department&#13;
head, led his students and staff&#13;
through the year beginning last fall&#13;
with auditions and ending Saturday&#13;
night. Skelly Warren designed the&#13;
sets that were student-built and&#13;
maintained, while the costumes&#13;
were created by Judith Tucker-&#13;
Snider and her crew. The theater itself&#13;
underwent major technical and&#13;
Swing choir to perform&#13;
The Parkside Swing Choir, directed&#13;
by music professor Steven&#13;
Powell and choreographed by&#13;
dance instructor Royanne Cruthers,&#13;
will perform a concert at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, May 5 in the Communiction&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Tickets, available in the Fine&#13;
Arts Division Office (Communication&#13;
Arts Room 221) or at the door,&#13;
are $1 f or all students, senior citizens&#13;
and Parkside staff and faculty,&#13;
and $2 fo r others.&#13;
The Swing Choir, in its first year,&#13;
has already made a name for itself&#13;
with several banquet and conference&#13;
performances in southeast&#13;
Wisconsin. This will be the group's&#13;
first full-length concert at Parkside.&#13;
The choir performs music from&#13;
the Broadway stage, vocal jazz a nd&#13;
various pop standards, all in a&#13;
choreographed production that&#13;
promises entertainment for young&#13;
and old.&#13;
Pieces include group production&#13;
numbers such as the New York&#13;
Medley including "42nd Street"&#13;
and the theme from "New York,&#13;
New York;" nostalgia dance numbers&#13;
like "A Twenties Medley;"&#13;
light group pieces including "A&#13;
Salute to Disney" and contemporary&#13;
pieces like "Dancin' in the&#13;
Streets."&#13;
The program also features solo&#13;
performances by choir members of&#13;
recent hits by Dan Fogelberg,&#13;
Kenny Rogers and others.&#13;
Choir members are Todd Becker,&#13;
Paul Mitchell, Laura Potenziani,&#13;
Jean Larsen, Sandi Saladis, Rayann&#13;
Huth and Missy Weaver. The band&#13;
features Scott Scheuber on drums,&#13;
Mike Gudbaur on bass and Ronnie&#13;
Schaff on keyboards.&#13;
Powell has worked with and arranged&#13;
music for swing groups in&#13;
Michigan, Indiana and Louisiana.&#13;
His Louisiana group, "The Electones,"&#13;
averaged 30 performances a&#13;
year in a three-state region and was&#13;
in constant demand.&#13;
Cruthers is a frequent dance performer&#13;
throughout southeast&#13;
Wisconsin. She has a strong background&#13;
in show and jazz dance and,&#13;
Powell said, "has added an exciting&#13;
dimension to the Parkside Swing&#13;
Choir program."&#13;
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decorative changes by Keith Harris&#13;
and his staff.&#13;
"Crimes of the Heart" led the&#13;
season. With professional actress&#13;
Carolyn Blackinton and senior students&#13;
Rebecca Julich and John&#13;
Miskulin, the department set its&#13;
pace for the year. The show went&#13;
on to win a seat in the regional performance&#13;
of the American College&#13;
Theater Festival in Madison.&#13;
At Christmas, Snider directed&#13;
"Peppermint Bear and the Toy&#13;
Elves." Fifteen hundred children&#13;
and adults enjoyed breakfast in the&#13;
Union cafeteria as they watched&#13;
Santa, the elves and a huge white&#13;
bear work their way through a dilemma.&#13;
The show was trucked and&#13;
bused to Barrington, 111. for additional&#13;
performances. "Peppermint&#13;
Bear" will become an annual show,&#13;
working not only as a department&#13;
production, but also as a production/&#13;
workshop course offered in&#13;
the university curriculum.&#13;
Jonathan Smoots, professional&#13;
actor/director, came to Parkside in&#13;
January to direct "The Dining&#13;
Room." The studio production sold&#13;
out all performances, including the&#13;
dress rehearsal, to standing-roomonly&#13;
audiences.&#13;
Oliver Goldsmith's "She Stoops&#13;
to Conquer" returned the department&#13;
to the main stage of the&#13;
Comm Arts Theater. Under VanDyke's&#13;
direction, cast and crew&#13;
presented classic theater on a&#13;
proscenium stage. With sets created&#13;
by sophomore Eric Englander,&#13;
from designs by Warren, and costumes&#13;
by Snider and her crew, the&#13;
18th-century comedy came to life&#13;
and took audiences to a time gone&#13;
by.&#13;
As the end of the year arrives,&#13;
the department will be seeing both&#13;
of its senior students further&#13;
careers in dramatic arts. Miskulin&#13;
will be attending graduate school at&#13;
Southern Methodist University in&#13;
Dallas. The Actors Theater of&#13;
Louisville (Ken.) has accepted Julich&#13;
into its one-year New York&#13;
showcase program.&#13;
With the success of its four productions&#13;
and 100 percent placement&#13;
of its graduates, the dramatic arts&#13;
department closes the 1984-85 se ason,&#13;
looking ahead to next year and&#13;
four new shows.&#13;
Ladvhawke * *&#13;
Costume actioner just fair&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Costume acticners are a staple of&#13;
American and British films, and&#13;
"Ladyhawke" tries to make a dent&#13;
, in this genre by appealing to a wide&#13;
crossover of the masses.&#13;
The problem with this film is&#13;
that the plotline (a spell causing a&#13;
man to become a wolf by night&#13;
while his lover becomes a hawk by&#13;
day) is a bit trite for seriousminded&#13;
adults, while the violence&#13;
in some scenes is a bit too intense&#13;
for children. Rather than blend for&#13;
the masses, these elements clash&#13;
and cancel each other out.&#13;
Matthew Broderick ("War&#13;
Games") is the essence of youthful&#13;
innocence combined with energetic&#13;
eagerness, allowing him to play heroics&#13;
along with humor quite effectively.&#13;
Broderick is another of the&#13;
many young actors and actresses&#13;
who are moving into American&#13;
films in a sort of takeover, rejuvenating&#13;
old formulas and adding&#13;
spicy new ones (exemplified in the&#13;
productions of John Hughes or&#13;
Rutger Hauer and Matthew&#13;
Broderick&#13;
Steven Spielberg).&#13;
Rutger Hauer ("Blade Runner")&#13;
is cast as the spell-plagued hero&#13;
who vows vengeance. He acts with&#13;
firm assurance, but recites dialogue&#13;
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with a stiff, rigid feel that spoils his&#13;
performance.&#13;
Michelle Pfeiffer ("Scarface,"&#13;
"Into the Night") is the essence of&#13;
beauty (the costume drama's niche&#13;
as far as results to battle for are&#13;
concerned), her acting wavering&#13;
from breathy innocence to perky&#13;
exuberance.&#13;
The best performance comes&#13;
from old hand Leo McKern, a character&#13;
actor who's best known as the&#13;
dour doctor in "The French Lieutenant's&#13;
Woman." His success in&#13;
British theater is among acting's&#13;
most impressive accomplishments.&#13;
Director/producer Richard Donner&#13;
("Superman the Movie," "The&#13;
Omen") is successful in pacing the&#13;
film's action, humor, romance and&#13;
dramatic monologues so they compliment&#13;
each other, but the abrupt&#13;
switch from violence to kiddieoriented&#13;
"Ali Baba"-type dialogue&#13;
is the feature's ultimate downfall.&#13;
"Ladyhawke" uses all the&#13;
cliches, adds a lot of color, mixes it&#13;
all up into a standard souffle of action&#13;
and melodramatics spiced with&#13;
humor and foists it upon the hapless&#13;
moviegoer, who gets smacked&#13;
with more marginality than he or&#13;
she probably cares to see. Want to&#13;
see a good costume drama? Then I&#13;
hope you attended the Golden Rondelle's&#13;
free Errol Flynn film series.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
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RANUEK if mursaay, May z , lasa-&#13;
Jackson: recalling 60 years as entertainer&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Eugene "Pineapple" Jackson has&#13;
been in show business for over sixty&#13;
years, with movies, television and&#13;
stage work among his activities as&#13;
an entertainer.&#13;
"I love it all," said Jackson during&#13;
a recent interview, stating that&#13;
he has no preference for any of the&#13;
different aspects of show business&#13;
he has worked in.&#13;
Jackson saw the rise of show&#13;
business from early childhood&#13;
through the eyes of one of its first&#13;
black stars. Joining the ranks of&#13;
Stepin Fetchit, Mantan Moreland,&#13;
Willie Best, Lorenz Tucker, Farina&#13;
Hoskins, Sunshine Sammy Morrison,&#13;
Butterfly McQueen, Hattie Mc-&#13;
Daniel and Eddie "Rochester" Anderson&#13;
as one of the entertainment&#13;
world's most popular black performers,&#13;
Jackson experienced the&#13;
development of performing arts&#13;
from silent movies to television.&#13;
"I started out by doing the 'shimmy'&#13;
in a dance contest," he said. "I&#13;
would win first prize, which was a&#13;
box of groceries. That would feed&#13;
my family all week. Then I'd go&#13;
back the next week and win first&#13;
prize again. Those were hard times&#13;
and that's how we ate."&#13;
Jackson's prowess on stage attracted&#13;
movie people, so his family&#13;
moved to Culver city in hopes of&#13;
getting Eugene in pictures. After a&#13;
'bit' in a Thomas Ince production&#13;
in which Jackson dove into a pond&#13;
of water during an action scene, he&#13;
joined the Our Gang comedies at&#13;
the Hal Roach studios, replacing&#13;
Sunshine Sammy Morrison.&#13;
"I played Farina's older brother,"&#13;
said Jackson. "He was only&#13;
about four years old at the time. He&#13;
and I were very close friends. We&#13;
lost track of each other as time&#13;
went on, but met up again during&#13;
the war.&#13;
"After I left the Our Gang comedies,&#13;
I appeared in the movie 'Cimarron,'&#13;
" said Jackson. "That&#13;
won the Academy Award for best&#13;
picture in 1931. Then I did a film&#13;
called "Dixie," which featured an&#13;
all-colored cast."&#13;
These all-black films were produced&#13;
by low budget distributors in&#13;
Hollywood for theaters in black&#13;
areas and smaller movie houses in&#13;
cities that would not permit blacks&#13;
in commercial theaters. They usually&#13;
featured most of the well&#13;
known black performers of the&#13;
time.&#13;
Another series Jackson appeared&#13;
in was called The Harlem Tuff&#13;
Kids, the black film equivalent of&#13;
the Dead End Kids adventures.&#13;
Despite the fact that he didn't always&#13;
get the meaty roles that young&#13;
white actors such as Jackie Cooper&#13;
and Jackie Coogan would get, Jackson&#13;
does not feel regrets about his&#13;
career. He balks at his early film&#13;
work being labeled a bad stereotype&#13;
of the black race, stating that&#13;
these roles are just roles, and are&#13;
never meant to depict an entire&#13;
group of people.&#13;
"You remember 'Amos and&#13;
Andy' years ago? Now that was a&#13;
great show! There was nothing&#13;
wrong with it! But the NAACP cut&#13;
them down."&#13;
Comedian Mantan Moreland&#13;
(noted for his role as Birmingham&#13;
Brown, the chauffeur in the Charlie&#13;
Chan movies) once said upon being&#13;
admonished for playing roles that&#13;
many younger blacks found&#13;
demeaning to their race, "I'm a comedian.&#13;
If I'm not afraid of ghosts&#13;
in my pictures, I wouldn't be very&#13;
funny. Jimmy Cagney kills people&#13;
in his pictures, but he doesn't do&#13;
that in real life!"&#13;
Jackson added, "It's just a part&#13;
that you're playing. You're not trying&#13;
to make fun of any race.&#13;
Jackson also noted that times&#13;
have gotten markedly better for&#13;
black performers in show business&#13;
since his years in silent movies and&#13;
early talkies.&#13;
"There were a lot of great black&#13;
shows on ten or so years ago," he&#13;
said. "Then it stopped, but now it's&#13;
coming back again with Bill Cosby&#13;
and such."&#13;
During the forties Jackson was in&#13;
the army and also appeared in several&#13;
westerns with Gene Autry. The&#13;
fifties saw him working with his&#13;
brothers in a musical act called The&#13;
Jackson Trio, which played all over&#13;
the United States.&#13;
"We played a lot in your area,"&#13;
said Jackson. "Milwaukee, Green&#13;
Bay, all over Wisconsin."&#13;
The sixties had Jackson playing&#13;
Uncle Lou on the hit network series&#13;
"Julia," which starred Diahann&#13;
Carroll. "Julia" is considered a&#13;
milestone in TV, casting a black in&#13;
a non-stereotypical role.&#13;
Among his most recent work,&#13;
Jackson cited the Clint Eastwood&#13;
feature "Escape from Alcatraz" as&#13;
a favorite.&#13;
"Boy that Alcatraz was a spooky&#13;
place," recalled Jackson. "When&#13;
they closed that big iron gate it&#13;
made a noise that went right&#13;
through my bones. I wouldn't kill a&#13;
fly to stay in prison. It was terrible!&#13;
It was nice when we could walk out&#13;
of there."&#13;
Jackson continued "There was a&#13;
big kitchen, and during lunch I&#13;
would play my saxophone to get&#13;
everyone in the mood. Clint Eastwood&#13;
was a real sweet guy, a real&#13;
nice man to work with."&#13;
Another notable film Jackson did&#13;
recently was the TV production&#13;
"The Day After."&#13;
"I did my scene (the opening&#13;
scene) without having read the&#13;
whole script," he said. "I had no&#13;
idea what it was about, so I was&#13;
surprised myself when I saw it."&#13;
Jackson recently did a spot in a&#13;
Burger King commercial and states&#13;
that he would like to work in another&#13;
television series. He owns a&#13;
dancing school where his two&#13;
daughters teach, The New Stage&#13;
Workshop, located in his hometown&#13;
of Compton, California. His son,&#13;
who had a major role in the Jimmy&#13;
Catch-up pay&#13;
still an issue&#13;
Continued from Page 1&#13;
adjustment would mean a raise of&#13;
up to 20 percent for some workers,&#13;
something Fuller called unjustifiable&#13;
in terms of classified staff.&#13;
Finally, Fuller argues that the&#13;
catch-up plan would "blow the lid&#13;
off" bargaining, as it would be "extremely&#13;
difficult to convince unions&#13;
that money is not available for&#13;
similar catch-up raises for represented&#13;
classified employees."&#13;
Rubner argued against Fuller's&#13;
thinking, stating "Fuller doesn't&#13;
realize that everyone in academic&#13;
staff was put there because they&#13;
didn't fit anywhere else. Now,&#13;
when things were getting ready to&#13;
wrap up, Fuller starts up. Why&#13;
didn't he bring this up six months&#13;
ago? This is very draining."&#13;
NOTICE!&#13;
STUDENT JOB OPENING&#13;
IN THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
CASH-HANDLING&#13;
ATTENDANT&#13;
All positions available Fall semester. Applications&#13;
now being accepted in Room 209 of the Parkside&#13;
Union through Monday, May 13.&#13;
CASHIERS/BARTENDERS&#13;
• UNION SQUARE BAR&#13;
• RECREATION CENTER&#13;
CINEMA THEATER&#13;
SWEET SHOPPE&#13;
The Parksde Union is an equal opportunity employer. Women&#13;
and minorities are encouraged to apply.&#13;
Stewart feature "Shenandoah," is&#13;
now a top camera man.&#13;
Eugene Jackson is proud of his&#13;
achievements as an actor as well as&#13;
his success as a family man and his&#13;
health. This veteran of show business&#13;
does not complain about having&#13;
been oppressed because he is&#13;
black, nor does he feel that blacks&#13;
were poorly represented on the&#13;
screen. He is a happy, talented individual&#13;
who has been successful in&#13;
show business for over sixty years.&#13;
"The white kids might have gotten&#13;
a few better breaks than me,&#13;
but in the end I'm the one who survived.&#13;
I have a beautiful family, my&#13;
health and I'm looking good. Many&#13;
of the others are dead."&#13;
Jackson remains successful with&#13;
his dance studio and work in movies&#13;
and on television. His insights&#13;
into the world of show business are&#13;
unique in that he is one of the last&#13;
surviving black entertainers whose&#13;
career dates back to silent pictures,&#13;
and one of the few of any race to&#13;
maintain good health, a happy&#13;
home life and a show biz career for&#13;
so many years.&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
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Fri. 1 pm-6 pm&#13;
ADVANCE&#13;
RESERVATIONS&#13;
NECESSARY&#13;
CALL: 553-2408&#13;
4&#13;
10 Thursday, May 2,1985 RANGER&#13;
Illinois professor addresses TV stereotypes&#13;
by Gary Schneeberger&#13;
Since the days of "Amos 'n'&#13;
Andy," Black Americans have&#13;
struggled against television's stereotypical&#13;
depiction of their race. In&#13;
its thirty-five year history, the industry&#13;
has repeatedly promised&#13;
blacks that their lot would be improved,&#13;
and those promises have&#13;
just as repeatedly been broken.&#13;
Even today, when many people dismiss&#13;
prejudice as a nightmare from&#13;
a different age, TV maintains its&#13;
time-worn caricatures in programs&#13;
like "The Jeffersons" and "Gimme&#13;
a Break."&#13;
One man who understands the.&#13;
innate detriment of this situation is&#13;
J. Fred MacDonald, professor of1&#13;
history at Northeastern Illinois University&#13;
in Chicago and past president&#13;
of the Popular Culture Assocation.&#13;
Having spent 13 years amassing&#13;
a private television archive,&#13;
MacDonald has celluloid evidence&#13;
of T V's mistreatment of blacks, and&#13;
he put that evidence to scathing use&#13;
in "Blacks and White TV," not just&#13;
the definitive, but the only book-&#13;
? ANDERSON T RANSCRIPTION &amp; * 2 TYPING •&#13;
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Term Papers&#13;
Student Rates&#13;
* I PHONE 637-3600&#13;
Jacqueline Anderson&#13;
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Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
length study of the problem. Although&#13;
his critically-lauded book&#13;
was published over two years ago,&#13;
MacDonald doesn't believe the&#13;
Negro's small screen status has&#13;
changed very substantially. Not yet,&#13;
anyway.&#13;
"I think we're in a period where&#13;
racial stereotypes have come&#13;
back," he explained in a recent interview&#13;
in his university office.&#13;
"Sure, they've been stylized, updated&#13;
and mellowed somewhat; but&#13;
they're still the same ones America&#13;
has always found 'lovable;' the&#13;
Tom, the coon, the mammy and so&#13;
on.&#13;
"Just look at Ted Lange (who&#13;
plays Isaac, the bartender, on 'The&#13;
Love Boat'). He's a servant. Ultimately,&#13;
the role he plays is to bring&#13;
black viewers in and to be a liaison&#13;
between the boat and any black&#13;
guests who come aboard. But he's&#13;
not a major force. Why didn't they&#13;
make the captain black? Why&#13;
doesn't Isaac have any responsibility?&#13;
I mean, he mixes drinks."&#13;
In addition to traditional servile&#13;
roles like Lange's and Roger Mosley's&#13;
on "Magnum P.I.," MacDonald&#13;
points to the medium's fondness&#13;
for cute, non-threatening black&#13;
children — like Gary Coleman of&#13;
"Diff'rent Strokes" and Emmanuel&#13;
Lewis of "Webster."&#13;
"He's the classic pickaninny,"&#13;
MacDonald said of Lewis' character,&#13;
noting his similarity to Buckwheat&#13;
and Farina of the "Our&#13;
Gang" film series. "Why was he&#13;
given a white family? Why couldn't&#13;
it have been a black family that&#13;
adopted him? Why is it somehow&#13;
superior, if you're black, to live&#13;
HE&#13;
Did&#13;
YLE&#13;
SPECIAL EXPORT&#13;
You can travel the world over&#13;
and never find a better beer.&#13;
8 i&#13;
8 ON TAP AT UNION SQUARE 8&#13;
„ . S&#13;
with whites? The message that&#13;
would be delivered to me if I were&#13;
a black child is that it's better to&#13;
live in a white family than in a&#13;
black family."&#13;
Although he is quick to indict the&#13;
industry for its failure to project&#13;
positive, realistic black images,&#13;
MacDonald doesn't believe that&#13;
TV's powerbrokers are motivated&#13;
by malevolence. Instead, he sees&#13;
the problem as an unfortunate outgrowth&#13;
of television's status as a&#13;
business — a business whose chief&#13;
goal is to make money.&#13;
"What motivates these guys," he&#13;
explained earnestly, in reference to&#13;
network executives, "are bottomline&#13;
business decisions. Most of&#13;
them think like this: 'We're playing&#13;
for one-third of the audience plus,&#13;
and black viewers aren't that many.&#13;
The distribution of black viewers is&#13;
something we can live with — if&#13;
they come with us or they don't.&#13;
But we want the white viewer, and&#13;
we aren't going to get him if we&#13;
highlight a black person too prominently.&#13;
We feel that there are still&#13;
degrees of racism out there, and we&#13;
don't want to risk all those millions&#13;
of dollars on pumping up a black&#13;
guy as a hero when the show's just&#13;
going to go down the toilet.'&#13;
"However," he continued with a&#13;
hint of optimism, "as whites flee&#13;
free television, because they've got&#13;
cable or because they can afford&#13;
video tapes, blacks — who are 12&#13;
percent of the population — are&#13;
going to become a higher percentage&#13;
of the viewing population, because&#13;
they can't get cable and can't&#13;
afford video tapes. When that happens,&#13;
the smart programmers are&#13;
going to be the ones who realize&#13;
they need to have mature representations&#13;
of blacks in programs because&#13;
blacks gravitate to watch&#13;
other blacks."&#13;
" 'The Cosby Show' is definitely&#13;
a major step forward," MacDonald&#13;
said, "and I think its success is&#13;
going to cause a lot of new thinking.&#13;
TV is, after all, a copycat industry,&#13;
and since 'Cosby's' made it,,&#13;
• •&#13;
we're going to see more black families&#13;
and more blacks in prominent&#13;
roles — and not just the Mr. T images&#13;
of black animal rage."&#13;
Yet no matter how swiftly&#13;
change sets in, Fred MacDonald&#13;
thinks it's much too long overdue.&#13;
"White liberal society has always&#13;
said, 'Just wait. Things are going to&#13;
get better.' And they never really&#13;
have.&#13;
"We saw what it led to in the&#13;
urban riots of the 1960's. After all,&#13;
you can only take so many promises&#13;
— an d all they're really promising&#13;
is that you're going to get a&#13;
fair break. And how long can people&#13;
continue not getting a fair break&#13;
when the white liberals — who&#13;
have the power — a re giving them&#13;
a bunch of rhetoric which hasn't&#13;
meant anything for 30 y ears?&#13;
"The bottom line is that we're a&#13;
society with a deep racist past that&#13;
has not really been able to shake it.&#13;
We're still only in the infancy of&#13;
trying to overcome racism."&#13;
On TV, as well as in life.&#13;
Karate Kid • •&#13;
Final PAB film presentation&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Noriyuki "Pat" Morita's Oscarwinning&#13;
performance is the axis of&#13;
John Avildsen's "The Karate Kid,"&#13;
the movies chosen to close the PAB&#13;
Post Nasal Strip&#13;
film presentations for this semester.&#13;
This Rocky-esque story of inner&#13;
strength motivated by love was a&#13;
big box office hit in 1984, the depiction&#13;
of emotional and physical&#13;
power being among the film's most&#13;
impressive elements.&#13;
Many have reacted to the film&#13;
more negatively, calling it corn. Do&#13;
so if you please; however, this&#13;
remains one of the most popular&#13;
and entertaining pictures in recent&#13;
years.&#13;
by Paul Berge&#13;
OUR 6UEST "TONIGHT IS&#13;
PRO WRESTLER GRI6A&#13;
*THE RABID RUMANIAN"&#13;
TAMASESCU. WELCOME&#13;
TO T HE PROGRAM. , '&#13;
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THURSDAY...&#13;
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Pool Tables • Video Games • Kitchen • &amp; THE LIST GOES ON!&#13;
RANGEK i i . i nur sua y , may c, l aoo ^&#13;
College Media Night.&#13;
by Raymond G. Novak&#13;
The Milwaukee Brewers played&#13;
host on Thursday, April 25 to 120&#13;
reporters from 32 c olleges and universities&#13;
in Wisconsin as part of the&#13;
Brewers' annual State College&#13;
Media Night.&#13;
Media Night gave the students an&#13;
opportunity to discuss the future of&#13;
journalism with several members&#13;
of the team's front office and the&#13;
chance to take part in a press conference&#13;
featuring manager George&#13;
Bamberger and catcher Bill Schroeder.&#13;
The group was welcomed to Milwaukee&#13;
by Brewer vice-president of&#13;
marketing Dick Hackett, who&#13;
pointed out that the media was&#13;
very important to the Brewers, because&#13;
"Fifty percent of our home&#13;
Students see how the pros do it&#13;
attendance comes from outside the&#13;
Milwaukee metro area." After telling&#13;
the group he hoped they would&#13;
learn something about the business&#13;
during the day, Hackett turned the&#13;
floor over to Tom Skibosh, director&#13;
of publicity for the Brewers.&#13;
Also on hand to lend some professional&#13;
observations and advice&#13;
on media work were Jim Paschke&#13;
of WOT-TV6 and Tom Flaherty of&#13;
the Milwaukee Journal. Both men&#13;
spent a good deal of time talking&#13;
about the integrity expected of professional&#13;
journalists. Paschke agreed&#13;
journalists should be aggressive,&#13;
but pointed out, "Be well informed&#13;
before you're aggressive."&#13;
The press conference paired&#13;
Bamberger, a 40-year baseball man,&#13;
with Schroeder, a young catcher in&#13;
his first starting season.&#13;
Bamberger is in his second stint&#13;
as manager of the Brewers. He left&#13;
the team after the 1980 season to&#13;
recover from bypass surgery, but&#13;
returned to baseball in 1982 as manager&#13;
of the New York Mets. He resigned&#13;
after 43 games in 1983, and&#13;
in September of last year rejoined&#13;
the Brewers.&#13;
"What I like best about Milwaukee&#13;
is it's more down to earth,"&#13;
Bamberger said. "New York is go,&#13;
go, go. You're in traffic jams all the&#13;
time. You're fighting people all the&#13;
time. Everybody seems to be mad&#13;
at each other. Milwaukee is more&#13;
relaxed...I kind of like the style&#13;
here. Go out and have a beer or&#13;
two and have some fun."&#13;
Schroeder compared college&#13;
baseball with the brand played in&#13;
the minor leagues.&#13;
"I played three years at Clemson,"&#13;
Schroeder related, "and we&#13;
won the ACC ( Atlantic Coast Conference)&#13;
title three years. We had a&#13;
very good team and good competition.&#13;
I never was much of a power&#13;
hitter in college, but I hit for an&#13;
average of .300.&#13;
"When I went to Butte (Montana,&#13;
in the rookie league), I hit for&#13;
power and I hit .300, so it was kind&#13;
of a step down to go from Clemson&#13;
to rookie ball. But then when I&#13;
went to "A" ball (low professional&#13;
minor leagues), it was pretty much&#13;
on a par with my college years."&#13;
Schroeder also said, "You'll see&#13;
a lot more guys play in college. I&#13;
know I learned a lot of baseball&#13;
under Bill Wilhelm at Clemson."&#13;
After the press conference, it&#13;
was up to the field to watch the*&#13;
Brewers take on the World Champion&#13;
Detroit Tigers.&#13;
Detroit built a 7-1 lead, but the&#13;
Brewers staged a furious comeback&#13;
and tied the score with two out in&#13;
the bottom of the ninth. Paul Molitor&#13;
homered into the left-centerfield&#13;
seats. After the next three hitters&#13;
reached base, Ted Simmons hit&#13;
the first pitch thrown to him over&#13;
the left field wall for a grand slam*&#13;
home run and an exciting 11-7&#13;
Brewer victory.&#13;
At some point during the day,&#13;
Flaherty had said, "People want to&#13;
read what players say." That might&#13;
be true, but State College Media&#13;
Night closed with Simmons' bat&#13;
doing all the talking for him.&#13;
Attention&#13;
LOSE WEIGHT safely, quickly and inexpensively.&#13;
Call me now. 100% money-back guarantee.&#13;
637-0156.&#13;
RUNNERS, JOGGERS, all athletes use my herbal&#13;
products. Help you go that extra mile. These&#13;
products are used by several internationallyknown&#13;
p ros. 100% money-back guarantees. Call&#13;
637-0156 today.&#13;
INTERESTED IN a skin and beauty clinic or&#13;
having a FREE facial? CaU 654-1455.&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
TYPING: FAST and professional service. Student&#13;
rates. Call D ebbie, 681-3522.&#13;
EDITING: ANY cou rse paper. Help yourself to&#13;
better grades. Recent English major and experienced&#13;
writer will ed it your papers for grammar,&#13;
punctuation, structure, coherence and style. Will&#13;
correspond through mail or pick up and deliver.&#13;
Call Margaret, 630-2047.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
NORTH SIDE of Kenosha. Walk to Parkside&#13;
from this lovely 3-bedroom L-shaped ranch in&#13;
park-like setting with lots of trees. Reduced&#13;
55000. Must sel l. Owners moving. No reasonable&#13;
offer ref used. Phone 553-9750.&#13;
COMPLETE BED with oak headboard, full&#13;
sized. 5250 or best offer. Also, a child's rocking&#13;
horse, brand new, 530. Call 553-967 6&#13;
1976 B UICK Skyhawk. Cheap but solid, reliable&#13;
transportation. Asking 5500. Call 637-110 7.&#13;
Classified — Men's tennis —&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
EARN THAT extra money needed for school expenses&#13;
by helping others help themselves. Call&#13;
637-0156 for interview.&#13;
WANTED: PERSON for occasional painting and&#13;
small maintenance work. Should have access to&#13;
own small tools and transportation. 835-1206.&#13;
PERSON NEEDED who is proficient in lawn&#13;
and garden care for part-time summer employment.&#13;
Ask for Mary, call 654-8398.&#13;
PART-TIME secretary needed. Interested persons&#13;
need t o be a student at Parkside, have minimal&#13;
typing and filing skills, be able to work&#13;
through the summer months. Please inquire in&#13;
the PSGA Office. WLLC D-139A. with P at Ramsdell.&#13;
Personals&#13;
CONGRATS TO our very own Pat. You deserve&#13;
it. Love, the Ranger Staff.&#13;
SARGE: MAX and I didn't want you to think we&#13;
have forgotten you!&#13;
GET YOUR team together now for Volley Oop!&#13;
See any PAC member for more information.&#13;
CARE TO share your sheets with a ghost or two?&#13;
PICNIC AND watch Volley Oop in action on Sat.,&#13;
May 18. Hos ted by PAC.&#13;
KARI, HOW are the Reds in Russia? How about&#13;
Moln 378?&#13;
SHEET SALE at your favorite funeral home!&#13;
T. RICE: have fun and good luck next year! M.P.&#13;
HEY, GORGEOUS, it's been a fun semester.&#13;
You can sleep on my pi llow anytime! L.G.&#13;
KATO: YOU'RE supposed to drink beer, not&#13;
wear it. Negative fun&#13;
KATO, YOU fool. Tie your shoes. Go back to&#13;
Church of Fun pre-school.&#13;
BRIAN: WANNA go to the local funeral parlor??&#13;
DAVE AND Jay: Thanks for the furs. Not the&#13;
S£C.&#13;
U-P BASEBALL players, c'mon now!!! Your 4&#13;
most loyal fan s. , , „ RIM., THANKS for hel ping out our workshop!!&#13;
Dolly, Organization 9.&#13;
DON'T GO sheetless! Get cheap sheets at your&#13;
neighborhood funeral parlor!&#13;
BLUE EYES, I'm glad we're on the right track.&#13;
Please...let's not stray from it!!! Love, Pudgy&#13;
Bunny.&#13;
ONE-EYED wonder worm.&#13;
THANK YOU from the Ranger staff to the Communicationssssss&#13;
Club for your award to us.&#13;
SARGIE: I'M glad you're back. The weekends&#13;
just aren't the same without you!&#13;
PAC, THE founders of Volley Oop, present the&#13;
Parkside Jazz Ensemble in the Union from 1-3&#13;
p.m. MI Sat., May 18.&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, grandma! Boy, are you&#13;
old! Love, Max.&#13;
HL BECK!!! Love. Dave.&#13;
QUI CHANG'S s chool of shoe-lace-tying and finesse.&#13;
Classes begin next week in Union Square.&#13;
JAY: YOU'LL probably never even see this&#13;
classified-Dave.&#13;
JAY LOVES dicknose!&#13;
SARGE'S BUNNY needs a name!&#13;
TO CAROL the teasing sex kitten: I want you,&#13;
signed Big Jim Slade.&#13;
MAX'S BUDDY needs a name.&#13;
HERB IE: THIS is to cordially invite you over&#13;
ALL next weekend. Love, Dimples.&#13;
MAX: CAN Sa rge's bunny share your rug?&#13;
TO CAROL the sports ed: I've been in love with&#13;
you for two years now. I think you're beautiful-&#13;
Your semi-secret admirer (not too cliche or anything).&#13;
HI SARGE, you c utie!&#13;
Though the weather was cold&#13;
and cloudy, the sun was shining for&#13;
the men's tennis team as it defeated&#13;
Carthage, Concordia and&#13;
Carroll College, 9-0, 9-0 and 9-0.&#13;
Parkside's record is 12-2.&#13;
Parkside (P) vs. Carthage&#13;
College (Cr)&#13;
Singles: Dan Hyatt-P d. Pieter Provo Kluit 6-2, 7-&#13;
5. Frank Mejia-P d. Kevin Suchsland 6-1, 641.&#13;
Chris Schuleit-P d. Kevin Parker 6-3, 6-1. Art&#13;
Shannon-P d. Mark Merrill 6-1, 60. Tom PacetUP&#13;
d. Steve Rose 6-1, 6-4. Dave Hyatt-P d. Dan&#13;
Holt 64, 5-4.&#13;
Doubles: Hyatt-Hyatt d. Suchsiand-Parker 7-5, 6&#13;
2. Mejia-Shannon d . Provo Kluit-Merrill 6-4, 6-2.&#13;
Schuleit-Pacetti d. Rose-Holt 6-2, 6-3.&#13;
Parkside (P) vs. Carroll&#13;
£Se!f SS l£tt-P d. John Zellner 60, 64&gt;&#13;
Frank Mejia-P d. Scott Schultz 60. 6-1. Chris&#13;
Schuleit-P d. John Butler 66. 6-2, 6-1. Art Shannon-&#13;
P d. Greg Forston 6-1, 6-1. Tom Pacetti-P d.&#13;
Rich Ross 6-2, 7-5.&#13;
Doubles: Dan Hyatt-Dave Hyatt d. Zellner-Butler&#13;
64. 30, 62. Mejia-Shannon d. Schultz-Forston 6&#13;
1, 61. Pacetti-schuleit d. Bob FineGreg Seymour&#13;
62, 60.&#13;
Parkside (P) vs. Concordia&#13;
StogLs: Chris Schuleit-P d. Frank Menon 62, 61.&#13;
Art Shannon-P d. Stew Crown 60, 60. Tom Pacetti-&#13;
P d. Ray Lesada 60, 60. Dave Hyatt-P d.&#13;
Mark Penning 60, 62. Alan Elsmo-P d. Carl&#13;
Brandt 30, 61,64. Dan Hyatt-P d. Kevin Ross 6&#13;
0, 60.&#13;
Doubles: Schuleit-Shannon d. Menon-Crown 6-3,&#13;
60. Hyatt-Hyatt d. Brandt-Penning 60, 62. Pacetti-&#13;
ELsmo d. Lesada-Ross 62, 63.&#13;
Your Campus Bookstore&#13;
will pay up to 50% of&#13;
your purchase price!&#13;
Sit -A— -A- -1- i-f— —I— —f - -|1- S— —if I- -A* -if- —f— ^&#13;
T'TTTTTTT^T^T^TTTTTTT^T^^T&#13;
**D OW N UNDER DIVING f&#13;
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*&#13;
*&#13;
Your Complete Diving Center&#13;
• Sales&#13;
5% Discount With&#13;
Parkside I.D.&#13;
• Service&#13;
• Rentals&#13;
• Travel&#13;
• P. A.D.I. Certified&#13;
Instruction&#13;
I f you ' r e looking for&#13;
scuba equipment , c a l l&#13;
for a quote . New custom&#13;
wet s u i t s f or wind&#13;
surfing and catamaran .&#13;
Hours: Mon 10-6&#13;
Wed 10-6&#13;
Fri. 10-8&#13;
Sat. 10-6&#13;
3405 DOUGLAS AVE. • RACINE&#13;
639-9344&#13;
*****************************£&#13;
INSTANT CASH&#13;
for Your Textbooks!&#13;
TIMES: May 8 &amp; 9 - 9:00-4:00&#13;
May 13, 14, 15, 16 - 9:00-7:00&#13;
May 10 &amp; 17 - 9:00-3:00&#13;
WHERE: Alcove beside the&#13;
Campus Bookstore.&#13;
You can get CASH ON THE SPOT when&#13;
you sell your textbooks to your Campus&#13;
Bookstore. We'll pay you top prices —&#13;
UP TO 50% of your purchase price!&#13;
The best time to sell is right after your&#13;
final exams...just bring your books to the&#13;
Campus Bookstore!&#13;
We look forward to seeing you.&#13;
*UW Parkside I.D. Required&#13;
MILLER HIGH LIFE&#13;
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK&#13;
Chris won his 11th straight singles match this&#13;
past Saturday at Concordia. His 1985 record is&#13;
a very impressive 13-1.&#13;
He has been very consistent all season, and&#13;
we wish him much good luck in the future.&#13;
• "" y" : r" " • - ' V RANGER&#13;
Men's track team&#13;
12 Thursday, May 2,1985&#13;
Women's trnrk&#13;
Team takes sixth in meet&#13;
"It was a chilly day, but the&#13;
track was good," said women's&#13;
track coach Mike DeWitt, referring&#13;
to Saturday's meet at Elmhurst&#13;
College. Parkside finished sixth out&#13;
of 11 teams, with a score of 39.&#13;
The Rangers qualified their 3200-&#13;
meter relay team for Nationals by&#13;
winning in 9:19. Runners were&#13;
Michelle Marter, Karen Jacobsen,&#13;
Sarah Hiett and Jill Fobair.&#13;
In the 1600-meter relay, the&#13;
women broke the school record&#13;
with a time of 4:03.6. Fobair, Jacobsen,&#13;
Merri Valukas and Hiett&#13;
ran.&#13;
Parkside took third in the 400-&#13;
meter and sprint medley relays.&#13;
Karen Savage, Jacqueline Cotton,&#13;
Valukas and Fobair represented&#13;
Parkside in the 400-meter and finished&#13;
in 5:1. Valukas, Marter, Cotton&#13;
and Savage ran the medley and&#13;
finished in 1:5.&#13;
Carol Romano finished sixth in&#13;
the 1500-meter run with 5:14.4.&#13;
Laurie Jacusz took third in the&#13;
javelin with a throw of 85-6.&#13;
"In the next few weeks we&#13;
should break some records," said&#13;
DeWitt. With only Hiett, Marter&#13;
and Cotton qualified for individual&#13;
events at Nationals, breaking school&#13;
records may not be enough.&#13;
Next week the team will travel to&#13;
West Lafayette to compete in the&#13;
Purdue meet.&#13;
"It was a real good meet," said&#13;
men's track coach Lucian Rosa, referring&#13;
to the Drake Relays in Des&#13;
Moines, Iowa. "They (the team)&#13;
know they can run well." And the&#13;
Rangers did run well in the two relays&#13;
in which they participated.&#13;
Parkside broke the school record&#13;
in the distance medley, shearing&#13;
16.06 from the old record. Dan Stublaski&#13;
ran the 1200-meter heat in 3:&#13;
6.4, Fred Knoch ran the 400-meter&#13;
in 5:1.6, Rich Miller ran the 800-&#13;
meter heat in 1:54.5 and Tim Renzelmann&#13;
ran his 1600-meter heat in&#13;
4:15.7.&#13;
Those times earned "personal&#13;
bests" for Stublaski and Miller and&#13;
a seventh place (out of 16 teams)&#13;
finish for the team.&#13;
The next relay was the 4 b y 1600&#13;
meter, in which the Rangers were&#13;
only 1:5 off the school record. Stublaski&#13;
had his best mile in 4:14.75.&#13;
Miller ran in 4:30.3, Dan Peterson&#13;
in 4:23.4 and Renzelmann in 4:17.5.&#13;
Renzelmann, Ted Miller, Andy&#13;
Kaestner and Mike Rohl are qualified&#13;
for Nationals. Rosa is optimistic&#13;
about Stublaski, Rich Miller,&#13;
John Anderson, Andy Serrano and&#13;
Peterson also becoming qualified.&#13;
Judy McKinney trying to pass Green Bay's player in last Monday's game.&#13;
Rangers defeat Green Bay&#13;
"I think we'll go all the way to&#13;
Nationals," said softball coach&#13;
Linda Draft, "with the way we're&#13;
playing now: clean defense, strong&#13;
, batting and we're executing the&#13;
bunts."&#13;
If winning the sub-district against&#13;
Green Bay last Monday, April 29 is&#13;
any indication, the Rangers will go&#13;
all the way. Parkside won the double-&#13;
header against the Phoenix 8-0&#13;
and 2-1.&#13;
Parkside's Michele Martino&#13;
pitched the first game. Martino&#13;
gave up three hits and struck out&#13;
two batters. She was relieved by&#13;
freshman Julie Gaestel in the seventh&#13;
inning. Gaestel gave up one&#13;
hit, one walk and struck out one&#13;
batter.&#13;
Lea Hammen was two for three,&#13;
driving in two runs. Patti Mueller&#13;
and Martino were two for four.&#13;
"Green Bay committed a lot of&#13;
fielding errors," said Draft. "Ever&#13;
since the Whitewater Tournament,&#13;
we've been playing clean defense.&#13;
The umpire took two runs away&#13;
from us at the plate," she added.&#13;
Green Bay's only run in the second&#13;
game came in the first inning.&#13;
Parkside earned its two runs in the&#13;
Triathlon&#13;
set&#13;
The third annual Racine on the&#13;
Lake Triathlon will be held on Sunday,&#13;
August 18, 1985 and will encompass&#13;
both the north and south&#13;
ends of the Lake Michigan shoreline&#13;
in Racine.&#13;
Applications are now being accepted&#13;
for the full distance triathlon&#13;
and the "Try-A-Tri," which is&#13;
new this year.&#13;
The full distance triathlon will&#13;
consist of a half-mile swim, a 25-&#13;
mile bike race and a 6.2 mile run.&#13;
The "Try-A-Tri," designed for&#13;
those who have limited training&#13;
time or first-time triathletes, will&#13;
consist of a quarter-mile swim, an&#13;
11-mile bike race and a 3 mile run.&#13;
Entry is $30 for the full triathlon&#13;
and $20 for the "Try-A-Tri." Late&#13;
entry (after August 9) is $35 and $25&#13;
respectively. The first 500 applicants&#13;
will be guaranteed a spot.&#13;
May 10, 11 and 12 will be the bidistrict&#13;
playoffs. If the Rangers defeat&#13;
Superior on Wednesday, they&#13;
will travel to Minnesota State to&#13;
participate in these playoffs. If&#13;
Parkside wins, the team will travel&#13;
to Indianapolis for the National&#13;
Tournament.&#13;
second inning. Janet Koenig was&#13;
hit by a pitched ball, stole second&#13;
base, was advanced to third base by&#13;
Ann Althaus and then made it&#13;
home on an error by Green Bay's&#13;
catcher. Janet Young then drove&#13;
Althaus home.&#13;
Judy McKinney being tagged out&#13;
• Saturday. May 18th&#13;
• 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.&#13;
• Union Field&#13;
• Featuring the music of&#13;
the Parkside Jazz&#13;
Ensemble&#13;
• $12 00 entry fee per&#13;
team&#13;
• Each team receives six&#13;
free T-shirts&#13;
• 6 persons per team&#13;
(2 must be female)&#13;
• sign up now-10 team&#13;
limit&#13;
Prizes Include&#13;
Trophies • Wine • Brunches&#13;
Beer • T-Shirts • Brats&#13;
For Further Information Contact:&#13;
David Habbel Greg Carson&#13;
CA 210 or 654-1653&#13;
553-2532&#13;
"The Volleyball Tournament of the Decade"&#13;
Roger Ebert-Chicago Tribune</text>
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              <text>r Dr. Ward&#13;
to leave&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Dave Marsh&#13;
interview&#13;
Page 9&#13;
Men's&#13;
baseball&#13;
Page 10&#13;
10**&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 20, 1984 University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
PSGA&#13;
IV&#13;
Vol. 13, No. 3&#13;
: . V V i;'&#13;
Ranger photo by Jay Crapser&#13;
New PSGA President Terry Tunks and Vice President Paul Johnson&#13;
Enrollment drop&#13;
lessens seg. fees&#13;
by Je nnie Tunkieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
If the estimated Fall 1984 enrollment&#13;
of 5,626 and the estimated&#13;
Summer 1984 enrollment of 1,873&#13;
do not change, the potential for a&#13;
Segregated Fee Revenue shortfall&#13;
is estimated at 4.9% or $34,657.&#13;
Pat Hensiak, Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocations Committee&#13;
(SUFAC) chairperson, explained&#13;
briefly that when the economy goes&#13;
up, "it stands to reason that more&#13;
students will be able to afford to go&#13;
away to school, so enrollment here&#13;
(Parkside) is bound to drop."&#13;
Hensiak explained in the Senate&#13;
meeting Friday that SUFAC needs&#13;
an opportunity to look over the figures&#13;
and then there would have to&#13;
be a meeting in regard to the situation.&#13;
"What I meant by that comment&#13;
was simply to say that no decisions&#13;
have been made. As a committee&#13;
we've not had an opportunity to&#13;
look over the figures, and up to this&#13;
point any speculation or estimation&#13;
as to what will happen could probably&#13;
be billed as premature," she&#13;
said after the meeting.&#13;
The potential shortfall could affect&#13;
any groups who receive funding&#13;
from SUFAC. "I don't think it's&#13;
necessary for anyone who receives&#13;
Seg Fees to start losing sleep. The&#13;
committee will have to make some&#13;
decisions on this, including finding&#13;
a more exact figure as to how short&#13;
we will be. Once we know more,&#13;
we'll be happy to share any information&#13;
with the students."&#13;
When asked how she personally&#13;
feels the situation should be handled,&#13;
Hensiak stated, "As fairly as&#13;
possible. Until I have more solid&#13;
figures, I really think speculation&#13;
would be out of line. I am quite&#13;
sure, though, that the committee&#13;
will work for the benefit of the&#13;
campus. We'll do our best."&#13;
Officers switch places&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
At the PSGA (Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association) Senate&#13;
meeting on Friday, Sept. 24, Pr esident&#13;
Paul Johnson and newly-appointed&#13;
Vice-President Terry Tunks&#13;
switched executive positions.&#13;
Johnson explained to the Senate&#13;
that he would like their consent to&#13;
install Terry Tunks as the Vice&#13;
President, which the Senate unanimously&#13;
approved. Johnson then resigned,&#13;
stating that the job of&#13;
PSGA President is a big one and&#13;
while he is more than capable of&#13;
doing the job, family and classroom&#13;
obligations restricted him. Johnson&#13;
felt that Tunks will do a better job&#13;
for the students.&#13;
Upon Johnson's resignation,&#13;
Tunks became the new PSGA&#13;
President and reappointed Johnson&#13;
to the Vice-Presidency, which was&#13;
also unanimously approved.&#13;
Johnson's last act as President&#13;
was to appoint Luis Valdujuli as&#13;
Chief Ju stice.&#13;
After the Senate meeting, Tunks&#13;
was questioned as to why she reinstated&#13;
Johnson as Vice-President,&#13;
when it appeared he was opposed&#13;
to taking on the full responsibility&#13;
of t he Vice-President by not retaining&#13;
the office of President after Peterson's&#13;
resignation. "I believe that&#13;
Paul and I can work well together.&#13;
It would have been difficult for us&#13;
to work the other way around. Personalities&#13;
are such that this will be&#13;
the best way for us to work for the&#13;
organization."&#13;
Tunks also explained in greater&#13;
detail why a non-Senator was&#13;
chosen over a Senator. "Paul and I&#13;
have worked together for quite&#13;
some time. We have worked well&#13;
together. I was, at the time of my&#13;
appointment, the secretary and&#13;
treasurer of PSGA. I have been involved&#13;
w ith this organization since&#13;
1981 when I was elected Senator. Of&#13;
the Senators and officers involved,&#13;
I have had the longest involvement.&#13;
Paul felt that this was an important&#13;
asset. Paul and Scott had both&#13;
asked me in the past about the history&#13;
of many issues. Paul thinirc&#13;
there are qualified members of the&#13;
Senate, but that we can work the&#13;
best together under the present circumstances.&#13;
Many of those who&#13;
might be qualified are not prepared&#13;
at this time to give the office the&#13;
time it takes to do the job right."&#13;
Tunks said she is most concerned&#13;
about three primary issues: Parkside's&#13;
decision to pull out of United&#13;
Council (UC) l ast spring; the current&#13;
segregted fee shortfall; and rebuilding&#13;
the Senate.&#13;
"I would like to help the student&#13;
body make a more intelligently&#13;
based decision on United Council. I&#13;
Roundtable schedule set&#13;
have scheduled an open forum for&#13;
Oct. 1. There will be student leaders&#13;
both for and against membership,&#13;
as well as members from UC.&#13;
This will allow the student body to&#13;
ask their own questions and allow&#13;
UC to present their case. In the last&#13;
election, students were allowed to&#13;
present their biases, but UC was&#13;
not really given t he opportunity to&#13;
talk to the student body," said&#13;
Tunks.&#13;
Tunks also feels that student organizations&#13;
funded by Segregated&#13;
Fees need to be concerned about&#13;
their budgets. "With enrollment&#13;
down to approximately 5,500, the re&#13;
is less revenue than needed to fund&#13;
every budget fully. This is one of&#13;
the motivations for the Senate's&#13;
budget cuts last week." Tunks&#13;
added that some priorities need to&#13;
be set about the services offered on&#13;
campus. While she is not in favor of&#13;
cutting services substantially,&#13;
Tunks is hoping that the reserve&#13;
funding will only be used as a last&#13;
resort.&#13;
Finally Tunks addressed the&#13;
issue of rebuilding the Senate. She&#13;
stated that recruitment of the new&#13;
freshmen has already started. "In&#13;
the coming weeks, I will be urging&#13;
any and all students interested to&#13;
stop in the office. It is unfortunate&#13;
that at the beginning of every&#13;
semester the Senate shrinks."&#13;
Six Social Science Roundtables&#13;
featuring discussions on faculty and&#13;
academic staff compensation in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System, artificial&#13;
intelligence, book-banning&#13;
and President Reagan's "New Federalism,"&#13;
are scheduled at Parkside&#13;
beginning Monday, Sept. 24.&#13;
All Roundtables are free and&#13;
open to the public and begin at&#13;
noon on Mondays in Union Room&#13;
106. Participants are encouraged to&#13;
bring their lunches. Programs&#13;
begin with 20- to 25-minute talks&#13;
by guest speakers followed by questions&#13;
and comments. Labor groups boycott Coors&#13;
by Bob Riesling&#13;
Community News Editor&#13;
An attempt by Coors to gain a&#13;
larger share of the competitive&#13;
Wisconsin beer market is being&#13;
challenged by labor groups here, as&#13;
part of a nationwide boycott of the&#13;
company.&#13;
Coors is the only major brewery&#13;
in the country that uses nonunion&#13;
workers.&#13;
While Coors sales have fallen.&#13;
they have not decreased more than&#13;
other brands, said John Wavro,&#13;
president of May Beverages, which&#13;
distributes Coors in Kenosha.&#13;
"There's no question that the&#13;
boycott has hurt Coors," said&#13;
Wavro, but added, "I'm pleased&#13;
with the amount they're selling."&#13;
He said the decrease was part of&#13;
an industry-wide sales slump, because&#13;
of changes in the beer market.&#13;
Labor groups charge the brewery&#13;
with mistreatment of employees,&#13;
such as polygraph tests which question&#13;
sexual preference, and political&#13;
activism. There have also been&#13;
charges of racial discrimination.&#13;
Ron Stevens, editor of Kenosha&#13;
Labor, said the paper was "trying&#13;
to make the boycott as visible as&#13;
possible since it (Coors) is being introduced&#13;
in this area."&#13;
While the re is no organization in&#13;
the area specifically dedicated to&#13;
organizing t he boycott, he said, the&#13;
paper has been using press releases&#13;
and other information supplied by&#13;
the Colorado AFL-CIO.&#13;
He said several bars in Kenosha&#13;
have stopped carrying the beer, and&#13;
that other bars report that it is not&#13;
selling well.&#13;
"It isn't selling what they expected,"&#13;
said Stevens. He stated that&#13;
distributors believe the decline in&#13;
Coors sales will be offset by sales of&#13;
other brands.&#13;
Program dates, topics and speakers&#13;
are:&#13;
-Sept. 24-"Catch-up and Keepup:&#13;
The Status of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Compensation Plan,"&#13;
with Parkside economics professor&#13;
Larry Duetsch and director of com munity&#13;
student services Stuart Rubner,&#13;
both of whom are members of&#13;
the UW-System Biennial Budget&#13;
Working Group on Faculty and&#13;
Academic Staff Compensation.&#13;
Rubner also is cochair of the UW&#13;
System Academic Staff Salary&#13;
Study Committee and chairman of&#13;
Parkside's Academic Staff Committee.&#13;
-Oct. l-"So You Think You&#13;
Have the Right to Know?" with Judith&#13;
Krug, director of the American&#13;
Library Association's Office for Intellectual&#13;
Freedom and a nationally&#13;
prominent defender of freedom of&#13;
speech, who will discuss book-banning.&#13;
At 1 p.m. immediately follow-&#13;
Conttnued on page 7&#13;
2 Thursday, Sept. 20,1984&#13;
Editorial&#13;
PSGA switch&#13;
Once again t he PSGA is playing executive musical chair s.&#13;
Scott Peterson, who was elected PSGA president last spring was&#13;
found academically ineligible for his position. Vice Pr esident Paul&#13;
Johnson automatically became president. It is the duty of the vice&#13;
president to fufill the duties of the presidency when the president is&#13;
incapacitated. President Johnson appointed Terry Tunks to the vice&#13;
prudent position. Tunks was serving as secretary and treasurer of&#13;
PSGA a paid, nonelected position. At Friday's Senate meeting President&#13;
Johnson resigned from his acquired presidency; therefore Tunks&#13;
automatically became president. Her first act as president was to&#13;
reappoint Johnson as vice president&#13;
Sound confusing? It should sound familiar. The same type of&#13;
switch occured last fall under a different administration.&#13;
Former PSGA Presid ent Phil Pogreba was injured in a car accident&#13;
which incapacitated him. Vice P resident Mike Scoon became&#13;
President and appointed Jeanne Phillips as vice president. Scoon&#13;
then resigned and President Phillips reappointed him to the vice&#13;
presidency.&#13;
The ol' switcheroo seems to have become just that. But this situation&#13;
brings about some concerns about PSGA's operation and its fu-&#13;
Has the situation really been hand led democratically? The switch&#13;
was legal a nd constitutional but reflects "smoked-filled room" politics.&#13;
It seems that many of the Senators were in the dark about the&#13;
appointment of Tunks and the switch that followed. All of the Senators&#13;
should have consulted. The Senate members are, on the average&#13;
inexperienced, but this situation was presented to them as fait ac-'&#13;
compli and then they were asked to give their seal of approval. More&#13;
of an effort should have been made to consult with and to help the&#13;
Senators understand the situation and the other options that were&#13;
available.&#13;
Some student leaders were also unsure about what was&#13;
place. PSGA should have held an emergency informational meeting&#13;
with student leaders, which could have lessened the confusion.&#13;
Most disturbing is the apparent dereliction of duties by vice presidents.&#13;
One of t he essential duties of a vice president is to take over&#13;
the presidency when it is necessary, as it has been for the last two&#13;
years By passing on the position of president like a hot potato, PSGA&#13;
is failing in its responsiblity to the students. It should be noted that&#13;
both Johnson and Scoon h ave families, which they felt prevented&#13;
them from devoting t he time necessay to fufill the presidential duties.&#13;
It is surprising that both Scoon and Johnson were reinstated in&#13;
positions that they did not want to completely fufill. If for some reason&#13;
Tunks is unable to fufill her duties as president, will there be another&#13;
switch?&#13;
One option that was not considered was having an emergency election&#13;
to name a new president. Since Johnson and the Senators did not&#13;
want to take the position, then an election would have been a very&#13;
fair way to handle the situation. An in terim president could have&#13;
been appointed until the election.&#13;
It is very important that action be taken to prevent executive&#13;
pitching in the future. PSGA should not set a precedent such as&#13;
this. The Senate should be reeducated about the duties of the vice&#13;
president so that this situation can be avoided in the future.&#13;
Students need to take an interest in what is going on in their Senate.&#13;
Take note of how student decisions are being made. Senate elections&#13;
are coming up and students are urged to take out petitions and&#13;
get involved in t he Senate. The only way things can change is if there&#13;
are people concerned enough to help make those changes.&#13;
• ••••••&#13;
Jack Dudley, director of Physical Plant, notified the Ranger of an&#13;
error which appeared in last week's editorial. The editorial said the&#13;
former PSGA/SOC office in WLLC is now being used as a second&#13;
shift custodial break area. Dudley said that the office is actually a&#13;
Custodial Manager's office. Although the space is used p rimarily by&#13;
the second shift, Dudley said th at the office will soon b e used more&#13;
during the first shift.&#13;
Dudley said that he is willing to help Peer Support find a new offi-&#13;
Conttnaed on page 3&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Nobody asked me, but...&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor t&#13;
When it comes to accessibility for people confined to&#13;
wheelchairs, Parkside is one of the best schools in the&#13;
UW System. The layout of the buildings and classrooms&#13;
makes it relatively easy for disabled people, lik**&#13;
me, to get around. However, in my two-and-a-half&#13;
years here, I have noticed a few things tha t need improvement.&#13;
One of the first problems that disabled students run&#13;
into when they come to Parkside is the lack of an orientation&#13;
program. As it now stands, the disabled student&#13;
must locate the various accessibility features,&#13;
such as elevators, in each of the buildings, by himself&#13;
or herself. If the student needs help, he or she must actively&#13;
seek it out. On the application forms, as I&#13;
remember, there is a box for indicating whether the&#13;
student is disabled. Why can't this information be used&#13;
by th e administration to send information to disabled&#13;
students that would explain the various accessibility&#13;
features of the campus?&#13;
Another major problem lies in the fact that both the&#13;
Letter to the editor&#13;
bursar's office and the financial aids office are located&#13;
on the second floor of T allent Hall, and as Tallent has&#13;
no elevator, it is impossible for wheelchair-bound students&#13;
to get to either of these offices. This makes the&#13;
disabled st udent totally reliant on someone else to do&#13;
something as simple as getting an I.D. validated. I&#13;
don't have an easy answer for this problem, but I'm&#13;
sure something could b e done.&#13;
The final problem I wish to address is the congestion&#13;
in the Molinaro Concourse. Every morning the entire&#13;
concourse area of Molinaro is filled with people standing&#13;
in groups talking and creating an annoying traffic&#13;
problem. It's almost impossible for people to walk&#13;
through Molinaro, so you can imagine how difficult it&#13;
is for those of us in wheelchairs. I understand that&#13;
people like to talk to their friends; we all do. But could&#13;
you (and you know who y ou are) show a little consideration&#13;
toward others by not blocking off t he whole concourse?&#13;
At least leave some room for people to get&#13;
through.&#13;
Parkside has made great strides in making itself accessible&#13;
for disabled students. But there is still a long&#13;
way to go.&#13;
President's fiance discloses finances&#13;
(Editor's note: Richard Oberbruner&#13;
is engaged to the new PSGA (Parkside&#13;
Student Government Assocation)&#13;
President, Terry Tunks.)&#13;
Dear Parkside en masse:&#13;
Lest controversy arise, I wish to&#13;
publicly disclose my full financial&#13;
records in an effort to keep my personal&#13;
background from hampering&#13;
my darling fiance's administration.&#13;
For the past t hree to four years,&#13;
I have been employed as a&#13;
Groundskeeper here at Parkside&#13;
University. At thi s moment, I hold&#13;
Limited Term Employee (LTE) status,&#13;
which allows me to work onethousand-&#13;
and-some-odd hours. I&#13;
forget the exact amount. I receive a&#13;
minimum wage that includes several&#13;
raises (tacked on) over my&#13;
seemingly tenured term.&#13;
Whatever wages I have managed&#13;
to save have paid for my tuition. I&#13;
have n o college loans to pay back&#13;
and no borrowing to regret except&#13;
for my sister who gave me 4500 to&#13;
pay for the Spring 1983 semest er.&#13;
She's a fine gal and deserves immediate&#13;
payment. But don't worry,&#13;
she reminds me of the debt every&#13;
Continued on pag e 4&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz..&#13;
Pat Hensiak&#13;
Bob Riesling&#13;
Editor&#13;
Campus News Editor STAFF&#13;
&lt;06&#13;
„ - Community News Editor&#13;
JtaNeibaur Feature Editor&#13;
Rick Luehr ..Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
S^ol5°2fndlck Sports Editor&#13;
™7™M.cEvoy Photo Editor&#13;
Jill Nielsen Copy Editor&#13;
Andy Buchanan Business Manager&#13;
Mike Farrell&#13;
Pat Zirkelbach...&#13;
Brenda Buchanan.&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
....Distribution Manager&#13;
Asst. Business Manager&#13;
"™9Jr'S andad,tad by students at UW-Parkside and they are solely re-&#13;
Jay Crapser, Natalie Haberman, Dar- J t T , e d f t ° " * l p o l i c y a n d c o n t e n t . P u b l i s h e d e v e r y T h u r s d a y d u r i n g t h e&#13;
ryl Hahn, Kimberlie Kranich Robb „ c y.ear except durin9 breaks and holidays.&#13;
Luehr, Tori Murray, Julie Pendleton f,?ger's by the Racine J"""'! Times.&#13;
Chris Pappe. ' corraspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger. University of&#13;
ngTfZnsIvS?"0- ^ W' 5314U Tehph°ne &lt;41*&gt; *53-&#13;
si^ZV0,*: edil°r d'L be, accepted if ^P^tten, double-spaced on standard&#13;
phoZnumbZZf Z r »• " 35° and must be sipned' with a &lt;*'*-&#13;
ouest oZdlZJ fZ^ • v%ificat,on Ptoses. Names will be withheld upon re-&#13;
ZZZff i !!?. 'S Tuesday at 10 a-m. for publicat ion Thursday. Ranger&#13;
content '° ""d refuse ,etters staining false and defamatory&#13;
RANGER&#13;
All Campus Events&#13;
Committee given approval "Nerds" made unhappy&#13;
— AT MT Revenue vet •&#13;
by Pat Henslak&#13;
Campus News Edit or&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA ) and the Segregated&#13;
University Fees Allocations&#13;
Committee (SUFAC) both recently&#13;
approved the funding and policy of&#13;
the All Campus Events Committee.&#13;
The purpose of the proposal is to&#13;
identify certain major all-campus&#13;
events which are of such importance&#13;
that it should be the responsibility&#13;
of the campus to sponsor&#13;
them each year and to suggest a&#13;
mechanism to insure that this occurs.&#13;
Two of the events included on&#13;
the committee plan are Homecoming&#13;
and Winter Carnival, which in&#13;
the past have been campus-wide&#13;
events sponsored each year by&#13;
segregated fees and event-generated&#13;
revenue. Homecoming, a relatively&#13;
new event on campus, was&#13;
previously budgeted for $3200. Winter&#13;
Carnival has been held traditionally&#13;
in February and has been&#13;
budgeted for $3225.&#13;
New Events included in the ap-&#13;
Message boards out&#13;
Brunner Broadcasting Co., Inc.,&#13;
of Texas, the firm that provides the&#13;
electronic message boards in the&#13;
WLLC Coffee Shop and Union&#13;
Square, has notified the campus&#13;
that it will interrupt normal broadcasting&#13;
via the boards for the next&#13;
two to three weeks.&#13;
A letter from the firm stated that&#13;
"A technical problem related to the&#13;
breakup of AT&amp;T has magnified an&#13;
internal communication problem.;;&#13;
The "Campus Source" message&#13;
and poster boards in the cafeteria,&#13;
bookstore and Physical Education&#13;
Building will continue to operate.&#13;
proved allocation of $5000 from resaves&#13;
are: National Hispanic Week&#13;
($1000), Martin Luther King Jr.&#13;
Commemorative ($300), Black History&#13;
Month ($2000), Women's History&#13;
Week ($1000) and Cinco de Mayo&#13;
($700).&#13;
With the approval of the proposal,&#13;
a Steering Committee will be&#13;
set up consisting of two faculty&#13;
members, three students (appointed&#13;
by PSGA) and one staff&#13;
member. The Steering Committee&#13;
will be responsible for developing&#13;
the program budget to be presented&#13;
to SUFAC each year and provide&#13;
continuity and guidance for designated&#13;
all-campus programs presented&#13;
on an annual basis. They will&#13;
also evaluate programs, recommend&#13;
innovations in all-campus&#13;
programming and cooperate with&#13;
other programming units on campus&#13;
to continue to develop and produce&#13;
programs that would be of interest&#13;
to the campus community.&#13;
Peer Support&#13;
Group continues searching&#13;
"Revenge of the Nerds" didn't get rave reviews on the campus&#13;
where it was filmed -Mthe University of Arizona. Among those unhappy&#13;
with the finished product were fraternity and sorority leaders&#13;
who met with producers during the filming, to discuss ways of more&#13;
accurately representing fraternity and sorority life. Few changes resulted,&#13;
say those students. Some UA officials were unhappy enough&#13;
to wish they had stuck with their original decision not to allow filming&#13;
on campus. On the positive side, UA di d receive $10,000 in improvements&#13;
of handicapped services, courtesy of the film crew.&#13;
Thousands killed last year&#13;
Over 9,000 peo ple were killed by handguns last year,(about 1,000&#13;
fewer than the year before), despite a drop in the national crime rate,&#13;
said the National Coalition to Ban Handguns.&#13;
United Press International reported that Michael Beard, the&#13;
group's president, said the drop was a result of a drop in handgun&#13;
sales, shifting demographics, and a general awareness of the problems&#13;
associated with handguns.&#13;
Using FBI statistics, the group said Detroit had the highest homicide&#13;
rate -M49.3 per 100,000 last year, almost eight times the national&#13;
average. Texas, with a murder rate of 14.2 per 100,00, led states in&#13;
murders. Both have virtually no handgun control, said Beard.&#13;
Business means competition&#13;
(NOCR) The boom in business students at UW-Madison will mean&#13;
tough competition for grades - and less fun for students, warn two&#13;
business department members.&#13;
A rec ord 19 percent of this fall's freshman class plan to major in&#13;
business. Most of the students will have to get 3.0 averages just to get&#13;
into the business school, and many will need to make their college&#13;
career choices early to plot specific course sequences.&#13;
Editorialby&#13;
Je nnie Tunlrieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
The PSGA (Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association) Senate&#13;
again remained uncommitted in regard&#13;
to taking a stand on behalf of&#13;
Peer Support, the newest major organization&#13;
on campus, now seeking&#13;
office space to conduct business.&#13;
The group was asked to leave its&#13;
old office in Community Student&#13;
Services shortly before the semester&#13;
started. The office is now being&#13;
used for its original intent, for the&#13;
Associate Director of Community&#13;
Student Services.&#13;
At a previous meeting the Senate&#13;
failed to take any stand in regard to&#13;
the issue. They felt it was difficult&#13;
to get the whole story from those&#13;
present in the meeting, because of&#13;
turbulent feelings on the issue. The&#13;
issue was brought up to the Senate&#13;
again this past week.&#13;
New PSGA President Terry&#13;
Tunks addressed the Senate, saying&#13;
they should be willing to support a&#13;
group like Peer Support once the&#13;
group has more clearly defined&#13;
what they need. "The question&#13;
really isn't whether or not Peer&#13;
Support deserves an office - we all&#13;
know they do. The question really&#13;
is how can PSGA as a group do&#13;
something to really help Peer Support&#13;
grow?"&#13;
Pat Hensiak, Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocations Committee&#13;
(SUFAC) chairperson, added, "I&#13;
agree. We a s a group need to be&#13;
prepared to give Peer Support&#13;
some added direction, and more&#13;
than that, we really have to start to&#13;
put a little bit of what we've gotten&#13;
out of the school back into it. There&#13;
are a lot of students who have&#13;
fought a long, hard time to secure&#13;
the rights we currently work under,&#13;
and we should be working to make&#13;
the organizations we run strong&#13;
enough to stand strong without us.&#13;
When a group takes hard hits, like&#13;
Peer Support has, or like any of our&#13;
groups could, we should be prepared&#13;
to bounce back. After all, tough&#13;
situations never last, tough people&#13;
do."&#13;
The Senate took no formal action&#13;
at its last meeting, but agreed that&#13;
prepared t o help Peer Support.&#13;
Sex&#13;
Continued from page I&#13;
ce, and he has made suggestions to them already, although those suggestions&#13;
were unacceptable to the group.&#13;
We feel that the Custodial Management office is a "prime" area,&#13;
and would perfectly meet Peer Support's needs. We hope that the option&#13;
to relocate the Custodial Management office will be one that will&#13;
be kept open.&#13;
Revolutionary dust is settling&#13;
Student leader workshop&#13;
weekend coming up&#13;
The Student Leadership Workshop&#13;
"Smooth Sailing HI" will be&#13;
presented on Sept. 22 and 23 at&#13;
Camp Juniper Knolls near East&#13;
Troy, Wis. The third annual workshop,&#13;
sponsored by the Student Activities&#13;
Office, is designed to increase&#13;
communication and awareness&#13;
among student organizations&#13;
and the administrative staff.&#13;
•Those attending the workshop&#13;
will participate in such topics as&#13;
"Working With Committees," "Developing&#13;
Good Communication&#13;
Skills," "Recruitment and Retention&#13;
of Volunteers," and "Goal Setting."&#13;
The topics presented should&#13;
assist participants by providing&#13;
helpful information for the organization&#13;
as well as the person.&#13;
The cost is $5 per person and includes&#13;
meals, materials, lodging,&#13;
transportation and a T-shirt. Student&#13;
organization officers and&#13;
members who are interested can&#13;
sign up in the Student Activities Office,&#13;
Union 209.&#13;
(NOCR) Aside from being generally&#13;
in favor of it, what do college&#13;
students think about sex? Two studies,&#13;
at Rugters University and the&#13;
University of Maryland, indicate&#13;
the dust has settled from the sexual&#13;
revolution.&#13;
While students have become&#13;
more liberal in many areas, such as&#13;
homosexuality and abortion, other&#13;
attitudes, like those toward monogamy&#13;
and contraception, remain&#13;
moderate and conservative.&#13;
Sexual behavior among college&#13;
students, the studies say, doesn't&#13;
seem much different from that in&#13;
the general population.&#13;
The Rutgers study, conducted by&#13;
psychotherapist Pat Murphy and&#13;
sociologist Aim Pare lius, found that&#13;
less than half the male population&#13;
was sexually active, and only 70&#13;
percent reported having intercourse&#13;
within the last year.&#13;
Fewer Rutgers women, 67 percent,&#13;
reported occasional intercourse,&#13;
but more, 50 percent, described&#13;
themselves as sexually active than&#13;
did the males.&#13;
A large percentage of both&#13;
groups - 83 percent of the males&#13;
and 90 percent of the females -&#13;
said they were sexually monogamous.&#13;
Fear of herpes and AIDS (Acquired&#13;
Immune Deficiency Syndrome)&#13;
has made 27 percent of the&#13;
males and 29 percent of the females&#13;
change their sexual practices. Still,&#13;
medically diagnosed venereal disease&#13;
appeared in 13 percent of the&#13;
female population and 14 percent&#13;
of the males.&#13;
The Maryland study, which compared&#13;
student attitudes from 1973&#13;
to 1983, found that awareness of&#13;
where to go on campus for information&#13;
about V.D., contraception and&#13;
abortion has dropped from 91 percent&#13;
ten years ago to 75 percent&#13;
today.&#13;
At Rutgers only 35 percent of the&#13;
sexually active students said they&#13;
had an adequate contraceptive&#13;
method they always used. While&#13;
most students said that using contraception&#13;
eased their minds, 35&#13;
percent of the males said they&#13;
would be "disappointed" if their&#13;
partner used a diaphragm, and 25&#13;
percent said they would be "turned&#13;
off." Twenty-seven percent of the&#13;
women showed a similar attitude,&#13;
saying they would be turned off if&#13;
their partner used a condom.&#13;
Interestingly, unwanted pregnancies&#13;
were reported by both&#13;
sexes in roughly the same percentages&#13;
as venereal disease.&#13;
The major findings of the Maryland&#13;
study won that more students&#13;
engage in premarital sex now than&#13;
in 1973. Attitudes toward abortion&#13;
have become more liberal, and&#13;
fewer students believe homosexuals&#13;
need psychological treatment More&#13;
students in 1983 sa id they would&#13;
keep their homosexuality a secret&#13;
than in 1973, however.&#13;
The study also turned up an increasingly&#13;
conservative attitude toward&#13;
what is acceptable sexual behavior&#13;
for women. The belief that&#13;
women should only have sex with&#13;
partners with whom they are involved&#13;
emotionally has increased&#13;
from 42 percent to 52 percent in ten&#13;
years. Also, significantly more&#13;
females than males believed the&#13;
availability of contraceptives on&#13;
campus increased promiscuity.&#13;
A recent Johns Hopkins study of&#13;
high school students showed the inconsistency&#13;
of some of these attitudes&#13;
is not a product of college&#13;
life; high school students also have&#13;
contradictory feelings about sex.&#13;
For example, 60 percent of the&#13;
females and 80 percent of the males&#13;
said they had already lost their virginity.&#13;
But 83 percent said that 18&#13;
would be the best age at which to&#13;
begin having sexual relations.&#13;
That, says Hopkins researchers,&#13;
means many of the young people&#13;
who have started having sex wish&#13;
they had not. One fourth of the&#13;
high school students said that&#13;
premarital sex is, simply, wrong.&#13;
Most high school students agreed&#13;
that having sex without contraceptives&#13;
is foolish, but (me fourth admitted&#13;
doing so in their most recent&#13;
sexual contact.&#13;
4 Thursday, Sept. 20,1984 HANGER&#13;
Homecoming OWJiitlhk THIo mecomii ng soon upon us, '84 starts&#13;
it's time once again to begin thinking&#13;
about Homecoming King and&#13;
Queen elections.&#13;
Anyone can be nominated by any&#13;
student organization, club o r Parkside&#13;
office, providing they are a&#13;
registered student carrying a minimum&#13;
of six non-audit c redits and&#13;
have a 2.0. grade point average or&#13;
better.&#13;
Nomination forms can be obtained&#13;
from the Student Activities Office&#13;
(Union 209) and must be returned&#13;
there by 4 p.m. Friday,&#13;
Sept. 28 for eligibility.&#13;
Nominees must also bring a&#13;
signed copy of th e nomination form&#13;
to the Ranger office and have thenpicture&#13;
taken. Deadline for pictures&#13;
is 4 p.m. Monday, Oct. 1.&#13;
Voting will take place on the&#13;
Molinaro Concourse between Oct. 3&#13;
and 10. Students can vote for their&#13;
favorite candidates by dropping&#13;
pennies in the hole in the voting&#13;
box nearest the candidate's picture.&#13;
(Other coins will b e accepted, but&#13;
only count for one vote.) The male&#13;
and female candidates with the&#13;
most pennies will be named Homecoming&#13;
King and Queen.&#13;
Money received in the voting will&#13;
be placed in the Parkside University&#13;
Scholarship Fund.&#13;
The King and Queen will be announced&#13;
at Coronation on Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 11 from 5 to 7 p.m. in the&#13;
Cafeteria.&#13;
Once crowned, the King and&#13;
A wmk at t*ifi Park&#13;
Romancing the Stone&#13;
Irtwtttrof WOconMn-Paiktoda&#13;
Queen will receive two free tickets&#13;
to all Homecoming events, chaufeurred&#13;
ride to the Saturday night&#13;
semi-formal, flowers and Parkside&#13;
watches.&#13;
They will also be required to&#13;
reign at all Homecoming events,&#13;
which include the dance following&#13;
Coronation, the Variety Show on&#13;
Oct. 12 and the soccer game and&#13;
semi-formal Oct. 13.&#13;
The King and Queen will have&#13;
the privilege of wearing the crowns&#13;
and representing Parkside at other&#13;
events upon request.&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 20&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Fresh Start" by&#13;
Jane Frederick at 1 p.m. in Union&#13;
202. The workshop is free and open&#13;
to the public. Sponsored by The&#13;
Parkside Health Office.&#13;
MOVIE: "Romancing the Stone"(&#13;
PG) will be shown at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Union Cinema. Admission at&#13;
the door is $1.00 for a Parkside student&#13;
and $1.00 for a guest. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
MOVIE: "Alexander" will be&#13;
shown a t 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center for the&#13;
Foreign Film Series.&#13;
Friday, Sept 21&#13;
MOVIE: "Romancing the Stone"&#13;
PSGA announces&#13;
weekly meeting time&#13;
PSGA Senate Meetings will be&#13;
held this and every Friday at 1 p.m.&#13;
in CA 129. All students are encouraged&#13;
to attend. PSGA is the&#13;
students' representative, and the&#13;
students' input is needed s o PSGA&#13;
can effectively repres ent them.&#13;
Issues that may be discussed a re&#13;
the private account interest earnings,&#13;
off-campus events and United&#13;
Council membership.&#13;
Questions on these or any o ther&#13;
issues can be addressed a t the Senate&#13;
meeting, or by stopping by the&#13;
PSGA office, WLL C D139A.&#13;
Comm interns to&#13;
speak at colloquium&#13;
Attention-Communication students&#13;
and interested others. A series&#13;
of presentations will b e given&#13;
on the subject of communication&#13;
internships. Students will discuss&#13;
their internship experiences and&#13;
what they have learned by participating&#13;
in the communication internship&#13;
program.&#13;
The first of the series will be&#13;
given on Wednesday, Oct. 3 at 1&#13;
p.m. in Moln. 105. Presentations&#13;
will be given by Dave Arnone, Patti&#13;
Brock, Jennie Tunkieicz and Trad&#13;
Fordham.&#13;
All are welcome to attend. If&#13;
anyone is interested in holding a&#13;
communication internship, contact&#13;
Jeff McKelvie or David Ha bbd at&#13;
553-2532 or attend what promises to&#13;
be an enlightening and interesting&#13;
series of presentations. UW-Extension offers short subjects&#13;
Confidence&#13;
in communication&#13;
"Confidence Through Communication,"&#13;
a workshop designed to&#13;
help persons communicate more&#13;
forcefully and assertively, will be&#13;
offered by University Extension,&#13;
Parkside, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on&#13;
Friday, Oct. 5 in Union Room 104 .&#13;
Cost of the workshop, including&#13;
lunch, is $50. To register, call 553-&#13;
2312. Registration deadline is Tuesday,&#13;
Oct. 2.&#13;
The workshop will be led by&#13;
Beth Harwood, an independent&#13;
consultant specializing in interpersonal&#13;
and organizational communication.&#13;
The workshop will explore&#13;
topics including credibility, performance&#13;
anxiety and image projection&#13;
in developing a convincing,&#13;
persuasive and confident manna* of&#13;
communication.&#13;
Harwood has conducted programs&#13;
for managers and supervisors&#13;
throughout the UW System&#13;
and for professional organizations&#13;
for the past nine years. She holds a&#13;
master's degree.&#13;
Costumes course&#13;
A workshop in making costumes&#13;
from material around the house&#13;
and applying make-up will be offered&#13;
by University Extension,&#13;
Parkside, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 6, in the Communication&#13;
Arts T heater lobby.&#13;
The workshop, a good Halloween&#13;
preparation for parents and teachers&#13;
or an informative session for&#13;
those interested in theater, costs&#13;
$17. To register, call 553 -2312. Registration&#13;
deadline is Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 3.&#13;
Instructor will b e Judith Tucker&#13;
Snider, an assistant professor of&#13;
dramatic arts at Parkside, who has&#13;
extensive experience in costume design&#13;
and construction and who has&#13;
been involved in more than 60 theatrical&#13;
productions, including the&#13;
Broadway play "C ats."&#13;
Mid-life issues&#13;
"Mid-life Issues and Opportunities"&#13;
is the name of a course to be&#13;
offered by University Extension&#13;
Parkside from 7 to 9 p.m. on four&#13;
consecutive Tuesdays beginning&#13;
Oct. 9.&#13;
The course, which will examine,&#13;
the fears and opportunities that accompany&#13;
full maturation, costs $15.&#13;
To register call 553-2312. Registration&#13;
deadline is Friday, Oct. 5.&#13;
The course will focus on moving&#13;
through mid-life changes with confidence&#13;
and how to use this time&#13;
for self-affirmation and self-discovery.&#13;
Also covered will be physiological&#13;
changes of men and&#13;
women that accompany the midlife&#13;
stage.&#13;
Instructor will be Kathleen Hanold,&#13;
an associate professor at UW&#13;
Cooperative Extension in Milwau kee.&#13;
Hands on computers*&#13;
An introductory course on computers&#13;
for junior and senior high&#13;
school students will be offered by&#13;
University Extension, Par kside, on&#13;
eight consecutive Saturdays from&#13;
9:30 to 11:30 a.m. beginning Oct. 6&#13;
in the Parkside library.&#13;
The "hands-on" course costs $50&#13;
and will cover computer&#13;
programming and problem-solving&#13;
The family picture-&#13;
"Stress and the Family," a course&#13;
that will explore stress in the&#13;
family context and strategies for&#13;
dealing with it, will b e offered by&#13;
University Extension, Parkside,&#13;
from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. on five consecutive&#13;
Wednesdays beginning&#13;
Oct. 10 in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Fee for the course is $19. To register,&#13;
call 553-2312. Registration&#13;
deadline is Friday, Oct. 5 .&#13;
The course will cover th e developmental&#13;
cycle of the family, family&#13;
dynamics, time and health, factors&#13;
in illness and aging, family violence&#13;
and what happens if a family&#13;
as well as computer gaming. Students&#13;
will learn computer logic and&#13;
sequential solutions through the use&#13;
of flow-charts.&#13;
To register, call 553-2312. Registration&#13;
deadline is Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 3.&#13;
Students will be required to purchase&#13;
a $3.50 flopp y disc available&#13;
in the class.&#13;
breaks up. The course will emphasize&#13;
sharing, problem-solving and&#13;
group discussions.&#13;
Couples are asked to attend, but&#13;
individuals may, too.&#13;
Instructor will be Kevin Bamberger,&#13;
a psychologist at the Southeastern&#13;
Family Practice Cento: located&#13;
on the Parkside campus. Bamberger&#13;
is a member of the Kenosha&#13;
County Domestic Abuse Intervention&#13;
Program and coordinator of&#13;
the Men's Group Domestic Violence&#13;
Program at the Family Practice&#13;
Center.&#13;
Baroque-a-thon marathon concert&#13;
features local musicians&#13;
The Baroque-a-thon, a marathon&#13;
baroque concert featuring area professional&#13;
and amateur musicians,&#13;
will be held Oct. 7 at St. Luke's&#13;
church in downtown Racine.&#13;
The concert, a benefit for the Racine&#13;
Sesquicentennial Festival Site&#13;
Fund Drive, will feature the music&#13;
of Handel, Bach, Scarlatti and&#13;
Schuetz. Vocal and instrumental&#13;
solos, woodwind, brass and string&#13;
ensembles as well as choral and&#13;
keyboard works will be presented.&#13;
The Baroque-a-thon is modeled&#13;
after the Bach-a-thon in Milwaukee,&#13;
say promoters. Several of the&#13;
Baroque-a-thon's performers have&#13;
participated in the Milwaukee festival.&#13;
Tickets are $3 for adults and&#13;
$1.50 for students and are available&#13;
at area music stores and all Heritage&#13;
Banks. Brown bag lunches an d&#13;
refreshments will be available.&#13;
will be repeated at 1:30 p.m. and at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 22&#13;
MOVIE: "Alexander" will be repeated&#13;
at 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
Sunday, Sept 23&#13;
ROAD RACE: Starts at 9:30 a.m.&#13;
on the Inner Loop Road. Call ext'&#13;
2308 for more information.&#13;
MOVIE: "Alexander" will be repeated&#13;
at 2 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
MOVIE: "Romancing the Stone"&#13;
will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Sept 24&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Interviewing Techniques"&#13;
starts at 1 p.m. in WLLC&#13;
D-174. All Parkside students are&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 25&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Financial Planning&#13;
for Closely Held Companies" starts&#13;
at 8:30 a.m. in Union 104 -106. Cal l&#13;
ext. 2047 for more information.&#13;
DANCE: At 11:30 a.m. in Union&#13;
Square featuring the contemporary&#13;
folk music of Brian Huskey. Admission&#13;
is free. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Interviewing Techniques"&#13;
will be repeated at 5:30&#13;
p.m. in WLLC D-174.&#13;
COURSES: "Say What You Mean"&#13;
and "Basic Investments" start at 7&#13;
p.m. in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 231 2&#13;
for information. Sponsored by UWExtension.&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 26&#13;
SEMINAR: "Focus 84: Diabetes"&#13;
starts at 8 a.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Call ext. 2312 for more details.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-E xtension.&#13;
SUPPORT GROUP: For the&#13;
divorced and separated, at 1 p.m. in&#13;
MOLN D-128. The program is open&#13;
to the public at no charge. Sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Health Office.&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 27&#13;
MOVIE: "Return of th e Pink Panther"&#13;
(G) will be shown at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in t he Union Cinema.&#13;
letter Coatinaed from pa ge 2&#13;
time we talk on the telephone.&#13;
I hold a second, more personal,&#13;
position - that of a jobseeker. My&#13;
limited term will b e over soon, so&#13;
cry me a river, will ya? All travel&#13;
expenses come out of my wallet,&#13;
which is filled by the State of&#13;
Wisconsin every two weeks. I retain&#13;
my check stubs for tax purposes&#13;
and store them in a box with other&#13;
records, including phone, electric,&#13;
MasterCard and Tommy Dorsey.&#13;
Oh yes, and I have a Bachelor of&#13;
Arts degree in English Literature&#13;
from P.U. (Parkside University).&#13;
One week ago tomorrow I lost&#13;
my wallet. This has left me flat&#13;
broke and with no credit power.&#13;
I'm hungry when I think about&#13;
food, but I overlook this trifling&#13;
urge, for I have amassed acquaintances&#13;
who like to see me eat.&#13;
One major topic is of vital concern&#13;
and the dirt should be cleaned&#13;
up before it gets wet and becomes&#13;
mud to be slung. This past summer&#13;
I did host a party for a group of&#13;
Puerto Rican diplomats, held in the&#13;
Continued on pa ge 8&#13;
RANGER&#13;
5 Thursday,&#13;
Steve Gipson gets good crowd; great reaction Hv P! »L- I V_ '&#13;
20,1984&#13;
hy Rick Luehr&#13;
Asst Feature Editor&#13;
Last Wednesday, an almost capacity&#13;
crowd in the Union was&#13;
treated to one of the most unique&#13;
acts on the college circuit - comedian/&#13;
cartoonist Steve Gipson.&#13;
Gipson's act is a combination of&#13;
music, comedy and caricatures,&#13;
which he draws on an overhead&#13;
projector. Among his targets were&#13;
such celebrities as Mr. T, Tom Selleck&#13;
and the Ewoks. Gipson, however,&#13;
proved that he didn't need his&#13;
drawings in order to be fanny as&#13;
he talked about everything from&#13;
hunters to a young boy's experience&#13;
buying his first jockstrap. At one&#13;
point in his show, Gipson handed&#13;
out an "audience survey," which&#13;
consisted of she ets of power which&#13;
the audience members could wad&#13;
up and throw at him.&#13;
Wildlife&#13;
MR. rnovDfiLE-, i/ o uieu or&#13;
wier LfftESr Public OA/mio/O&#13;
Polls that HMe too trails&#13;
THC PtfE SlD£7JT BY Z5%.&#13;
Lookj i'n) sick or&#13;
PILL TH /&#13;
Gipson says he first started drawing&#13;
cartoons in the ninth grade because&#13;
he didn't want to pick up in&#13;
the parking lot. "When you got into&#13;
trouble in our study hall, they made&#13;
you either clean up the parking lot,&#13;
mop the floors, or do things like&#13;
work on the annual staff or the student&#13;
newspaper. So that's when I&#13;
started drawing cartoons, to get out&#13;
of having to do maintenance work.&#13;
I had no idea I could do it I just&#13;
knew I didn't want to pick up beer&#13;
cans."&#13;
Gipson discovered that he could&#13;
link comedy and cartooning when&#13;
he worked on shopping malls,&#13;
where he was billed as "The&#13;
World's Fastest Cartoonist." "It's a&#13;
silly title, but it gets press. I would&#13;
sit in the mall, someone would sit&#13;
in front of me. I'd embarrass them&#13;
in front of the whole mall and&#13;
Yoo PKesS People AR&amp;All.&#13;
THe same.' Yoo just umor m&#13;
COUtJT MET O UT LVe/O E wETbPJT&#13;
THE' KHCE' H ftS Basofj •'&#13;
I l jould ApppfciAtf rr if *&#13;
You LtoOLD jOSTTftKE" MY&#13;
CftMPAlG-NJ M Ol?f SeWOOSLV!&#13;
Kem-Y.' thanjk you.&#13;
they'd pay me for it While I would&#13;
sit there doing caricatures, I would&#13;
make jokes to keep myself entertained.&#13;
I began to find that there&#13;
were people standing around my&#13;
table all day listening t o me."&#13;
He thai put an act together to do&#13;
in the mall, moving on to the college&#13;
circuit, where he has played for&#13;
the last eight years. He is now beginning&#13;
to gain recognition as an&#13;
opening concert act. Four months&#13;
ago, he opened for the group "Firefall,"&#13;
and in October, he will open&#13;
for Andy Willi ams in LaCrosse.&#13;
Gipson said there is really no&#13;
way tha t a person can learn to be&#13;
funny. "You're either born sick o r&#13;
you fall on your head, or while your&#13;
mother's pregnant s he takes some&#13;
kind of drug tha t alto's your mind.&#13;
That's your only diploma, being an&#13;
odd person with a sick sense of&#13;
humor."&#13;
ftLY Q ULSTJOWS ?&#13;
Ranger Phot o by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Steve Gipson entertains and amuses students in Parkside&#13;
Union&#13;
ANDERSON T RANSCRIPTION&#13;
8r TYPING&#13;
by John Kovalic&#13;
UHfrr poes -me Pnfttse&#13;
'"Deflp iw roewOTO&#13;
YOUj M R MOUDftLT"7&#13;
TNHOAWT o OaHr".1&#13;
Letters - Resumes&#13;
Term Papers&#13;
Student Rates&#13;
PHONE 637-3600&#13;
Jacqueline Andersen&#13;
1441 Park Avenue&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
•&#13;
t •&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Planned parenthood looks ahead&#13;
% DUp&#13;
iKj&amp;fca-&#13;
Ranger&#13;
needs&#13;
writers&#13;
Planned Parenthood of Kenosha-&#13;
Walworth is sponsoring a workshop&#13;
called "A Positive Look at the&#13;
Middle Ye ars" for anyone interested&#13;
in that special time of life. It&#13;
will be held on Saturday, Oct. 13&#13;
from 8:30 to 12:30 at St. Matthew's&#13;
Guild Hall, 59 00 7th Ave., Kenosha.&#13;
The workshop will feature a keynote&#13;
address by Ruth Weyland, executive&#13;
director of Racine Mental&#13;
Health Association on some of the&#13;
mid-life problems women face.&#13;
The morning will also feature the&#13;
following workshops:&#13;
• "How to Grow Old Gracefully,"&#13;
by Ruth Weyland;&#13;
• "Menopause, by Trudy Neitzke,&#13;
a nurse practitioner from Menomonee&#13;
Falls;&#13;
• "Stress and Relaxation," by&#13;
Sue Ihlenfeld, manager of St.&#13;
Catherine's Relaxation Therapy&#13;
Program; and&#13;
• "Nutrition Issues for Women&#13;
over 35," by Julie Pawlowski, clinical&#13;
dietician at Kenosha Memroail&#13;
Hospital.&#13;
Participants will be able to attend&#13;
2 out of th e 4 workshops.&#13;
Participant fee is 38.00 per person,&#13;
which includes tuition, materials&#13;
and refreshments.&#13;
Registration is limited to 50 participants.&#13;
To register, call Judy or&#13;
Michelle a t the Kenosha Planned&#13;
Parenthood office (6544)491).&#13;
Club Events&#13;
Inter-Varsity&#13;
Christian Fellowship&#13;
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship&#13;
would like to invite the students,&#13;
faculty and staff of Pa rkside&#13;
to attend our next meeting. The&#13;
meeting will center on prayer!&#13;
IVCF will be meeting Wednesday,&#13;
Sept. 26 at 1 p.m. in Molinaro 107.&#13;
All are invited.&#13;
IVCF is sponsoring a Bible study&#13;
for Parkside non-traditional age&#13;
adult students and employees. The&#13;
study will be on Thursdays from&#13;
11:45-12:45 in Greenquist D103.&#13;
"Rivers of Life" will b e the topic&#13;
studied this semester, which will&#13;
cover references to water in the&#13;
Bible - from the river in the Garden&#13;
of Eden to the River of Life as&#13;
seen by John in the Book of Revelation.&#13;
Everyone interested is invited t o&#13;
bring a lunch and join us. If you&#13;
have any questions, call Barbara&#13;
Larson, advsiro for IVCF, at 553-&#13;
2122.&#13;
International Student&#13;
Organization&#13;
International Student Organza,&#13;
tion (BO) Club's Welcome Back*&#13;
Party will be Sept. 212 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Club House at Birchwood&#13;
Condominiums on 30th Ave. in Kenosha.&#13;
Bring a dish, appetizer or some&#13;
type of beverage . If you don't bring&#13;
anything, there will be a 32 charge&#13;
at the door. And if you hrinp a&#13;
guest, they should bring something&#13;
too! It's sure to be a lot of fun, so&#13;
we 11 see you there.&#13;
Life Science Club&#13;
The Life Science Club will be&#13;
holding its first meeting of the year&#13;
to discuss "places to see," "people&#13;
to hear," and "things to do " "nie&#13;
meeting will be held Friday, Sept.&#13;
21 at 1 p.m. in Greenquist D115.&#13;
SOFT CONTACT&#13;
LENSES&#13;
&amp;• $34.50&#13;
Get top-quality soft contact lenses at a price that's&#13;
easy on the college student's budget (standard spherical&#13;
lenses only).&#13;
50% Off Extended Wear Lenses&#13;
Save 50% on the soft contact lenses you can wear for&#13;
days at a time. Eye-care accessories available.&#13;
50% Off on All Frames&#13;
When Purchased With Lenses.&#13;
Save 50% on our entire inventory of frames, including&#13;
the latest designer styles.&#13;
Please show student I.D. cards for these special offers.&#13;
Sorry, other discounts do not apply.&#13;
Pershing Plaza&#13;
Shopping Center&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
694-2400&#13;
Eye exams available by&#13;
Licensed Wisconsin Optometrists&#13;
Kindv&#13;
EYEWEAR PROFESSIONALS&#13;
Dave Rudolf&#13;
College performer&#13;
Captivating, inventive, comical.&#13;
These are some of the words that&#13;
have been used to describe musician,&#13;
songwriter, comedian Dave Rudolf.&#13;
Rudolf, who performed yesterday&#13;
as part of PAB's Coffeehouse&#13;
series, has been recognized by&#13;
Newsweek as one of the most recommended&#13;
college acts in the country.&#13;
His unique blend of music and&#13;
comedy has brought him accolades&#13;
from critics all over the country.&#13;
He has opened for such acts as&#13;
Cheech and Chong, Ramsey Lewis&#13;
and the Amazing Rhythm Aces.&#13;
Rudolf, a native of Park Forest,&#13;
Illinois, describes his musical style&#13;
as "crossover," blending manyi&#13;
types of music into a one-of-a-kind&#13;
act. He enjoys interacting with his&#13;
audiences, frequently encouraging&#13;
feedback from them in order to&#13;
cater to the preferences of that particular&#13;
group of people. His numbers&#13;
range from bluegrass to ballads,&#13;
from comedy to tragedy.&#13;
An English major with a double&#13;
minor in philosophy and psychol-&#13;
Keith Ward leavecamp««^&#13;
Dave Rudolf&#13;
ogy, Rudolf worked for five years&#13;
in a mental institution. He now&#13;
works full time as a performer in&#13;
midwest college coffeeehouses and&#13;
local concert halls. He has become&#13;
a successful and much-sought-after&#13;
entertainer; and if the past is any&#13;
indication, he will remain so for a&#13;
long time to come.&#13;
Student given refund&#13;
Salina, Kan-A college that promised&#13;
to refund the tuition of any&#13;
student who failed to get a job offer&#13;
within 120 days of graduation will&#13;
be making its first refund, a school&#13;
official said Saturday.&#13;
United Press International reported&#13;
that Myrna Baxter, a computer&#13;
programming student who&#13;
graduated in May, will get a 96,210&#13;
refund from Brown Mackie College&#13;
because she failed to get a serious,&#13;
full-time job offer within the time&#13;
limit, said college president Gary&#13;
Talley.&#13;
The school will also reimburse&#13;
the government $540 for an education&#13;
grant Baxter received from the&#13;
Department of Education, he said.&#13;
Baxter is the first student to ask&#13;
for the refund under the tuitionback&#13;
guarantee announced in December,&#13;
Talley said. She has since&#13;
found a job as a computer programmer&#13;
for a Kansas City truck-leasing&#13;
company.&#13;
But Talley said a committee decided&#13;
she is entitled to the refund&#13;
because she did not get a legitimate&#13;
offer within the time limit.&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Dr. Keith Ward, one of the best&#13;
and most respected chemists on&#13;
campus, is leaving Parkside for a&#13;
position in Washington, D.C.&#13;
"My decision to move was a&#13;
complex decision with many factors,"&#13;
he said. "I was offered a&#13;
prestigious position and was flattered&#13;
to be offered this position. It&#13;
will give me an opportunity to wort:&#13;
in a laboratory that is better&#13;
equipped and better funded than&#13;
any other lab that I've worked in,&#13;
and the salary is a lot better than&#13;
what I'm making here.I'm pessimistic&#13;
about University salaries,&#13;
particularly the last few years in&#13;
the University of Wisconsin System&#13;
in general. "Because of my particular&#13;
age and the point in my scientific&#13;
career, I'm still able to move,&#13;
I'm still employable, while I might&#13;
not be in five or ten years."&#13;
The position the 41-year-old&#13;
Ward is taking is that of s enior research&#13;
bio-physicist at the Naval&#13;
Research Laboratories in Washington,&#13;
D.C., a federally-supported&#13;
basic research laboratory.&#13;
"I will be working in the laboratory&#13;
for the structure of matter,&#13;
and the work I will be doing there&#13;
is very similar to the types of things&#13;
I have been doing at Parkside for&#13;
the last eight years; that is, studying&#13;
the structure of proteins in an&#13;
attempt to determine how they&#13;
work based on what your atomic&#13;
structure is."&#13;
Ward did not apply for this position,&#13;
but was soujght out by the&#13;
Naval Laboratories.&#13;
"There is a large community that&#13;
do this type of work and I think we&#13;
all know of each other. It happens&#13;
ACROSS&#13;
1 Poems&#13;
5 Seasoning&#13;
9 Perform&#13;
12 Harbor&#13;
13 Hebrew&#13;
measure&#13;
14 Brown kiwi&#13;
15 Dung beetle&#13;
17 Three-toed&#13;
sloth&#13;
18 Viper&#13;
19 Dillseed&#13;
21 Separates&#13;
23 Genealogical&#13;
tree&#13;
27 Symbol for&#13;
tantalum&#13;
28 By oneself&#13;
29 Bitter vetch&#13;
31 Sailor: colloq.&#13;
34 Sun god&#13;
35 Crafty&#13;
37 Tattered&#13;
cloth&#13;
39 Negative&#13;
40 Goal&#13;
42 Weight of&#13;
India&#13;
44 Demand&#13;
46 Latin&#13;
conjunction&#13;
48 Appalling&#13;
50 Heavy&#13;
volumes&#13;
53 Act&#13;
54 Time gone by&#13;
55 Behold!&#13;
57 Skilled&#13;
persons&#13;
61 Wager&#13;
62 Sea in Asia&#13;
64 Harvest&#13;
65 Diocese&#13;
66 Cripple&#13;
67 Epic-like&#13;
narrative&#13;
DOWN&#13;
1 Harvest&#13;
goddess&#13;
2 Physician:&#13;
colloq.&#13;
3 Period of&#13;
time&#13;
4 Stretches&#13;
5 Sedate&#13;
6 Before&#13;
noon&#13;
7 Meadow&#13;
8 Journey&#13;
9 Biblical&#13;
mountain&#13;
10 Expense&#13;
11 Hits lightly&#13;
16 Heavenly&#13;
beings&#13;
20 Golf&#13;
mound&#13;
22 Near&#13;
23 Peel&#13;
24 Verve&#13;
25 Fulfill&#13;
26 Sin&#13;
30 Holy&#13;
32 Dye plant&#13;
33 European&#13;
capital&#13;
36 Still&#13;
38 Engineless&#13;
planes&#13;
41 Lower in rank&#13;
43 Crimson&#13;
45 Hebrew&#13;
month&#13;
47 Symbol for&#13;
tellurium&#13;
49 Domain&#13;
50 Flaps&#13;
51 S-shaped&#13;
molding&#13;
52 Bridge term&#13;
56 Anglo-Saxon&#13;
money&#13;
58 Edible seed&#13;
59 Label&#13;
60 Health resort&#13;
63 Three-toed&#13;
sloth&#13;
9 10 11&#13;
14&#13;
18&#13;
1984 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.&#13;
Puzzler answers on Page 12&#13;
FIRST&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
Of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN WAIN&#13;
OFFICE&#13;
ACT© BANK&#13;
24-HOLR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER FDIC&#13;
Ranger photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Dr. Keith Ward&#13;
also to be the same laboratory that&#13;
I did post-op work in, and I was&#13;
there two years previous to coming&#13;
to Parkside."&#13;
Ward will be leaving sometime in&#13;
October, the final date as yet undetermined.&#13;
He has moved various office&#13;
supplies and lab equipment already.&#13;
"I will continue to work on research&#13;
projects with faculty members&#13;
here and continue to direct research&#13;
of students who will be here&#13;
for another year or so, returning to&#13;
Parkside once every two months&#13;
for a few days, and also communicating&#13;
with my students by phone&#13;
and through the mail.&#13;
"The work that we're doing here&#13;
will slow down, but it won't stop altogether."&#13;
Ward is married, with two children,&#13;
a grown daughter living in&#13;
PAB Review&#13;
Romancing&#13;
* *&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
This week's PAB film presentation&#13;
is the runaway hit of last&#13;
spring, "Romancing the Stone."&#13;
The plot is relatively simple. Romance&#13;
novelist Joan Wilder receives&#13;
a phone call from her sister&#13;
in Colombia. The sister, Elaine, has&#13;
been kidnapped, and Joan is to deliver&#13;
a map to the kidnappers as&#13;
ransom. In Colombia, Joan gets involved&#13;
not only with the kidnappers,&#13;
but also with drug runners,&#13;
the secret police, and last but not&#13;
least, an American named Jack Colton.&#13;
"Romancing the Stone" is action&#13;
packed, fast moving, and a whole&#13;
lot of f un. The characters are likeable,&#13;
and the story, though at times&#13;
improbable and contrived, is well&#13;
plotted and exciting.&#13;
The character of Jack Colton,&#13;
played by Michael Douglas (who&#13;
also produced the film) is another&#13;
California and a young son. He&#13;
states that his wife, a master of fine&#13;
arts, is excited about the move to&#13;
California.&#13;
Mary Ann Terozzo, a recent&#13;
Parkside chemistry gradute, who&#13;
has been working in Dr. Ward's research&#13;
lab for the past four years,&#13;
will also be going to the Naval Research&#13;
Labs, probably in January,&#13;
to be employed by the science division.&#13;
This ws not only by Ward's recommendation,&#13;
it was one of the&#13;
conditions upon which he took the&#13;
job.&#13;
While happy with his promotion,&#13;
both in prestige and financially,&#13;
Ward is sorry to leave Parkside&#13;
but he states that he has enjoyed&#13;
working with college students very&#13;
much and will miss this experience.&#13;
the Stone&#13;
• •&#13;
in a series of imperfect heroes. I&#13;
like this type of character; it lends&#13;
a sense of reality to the film. By&#13;
being imperfect and prone to mistakes,&#13;
this kind of character is easy&#13;
for the audience to identify with.&#13;
As Joan, Kathleen Turner gives a&#13;
wonderful portrayal of a city girl&#13;
who is totally out of h er element in&#13;
the jungles of Colombia. With this&#13;
role, Miss Turner proves herself to&#13;
be one of the most versatile actresses&#13;
in film today.&#13;
The only real flaws in "Romancing&#13;
the Stone" are the several quite&#13;
brutal scenes near the end of the&#13;
film. These scenes seem very out of&#13;
place in a movie which, for the&#13;
most part, is a light, breezy comedy-&#13;
adventure. Still, these scenes&#13;
won't detract much from your enjoyment&#13;
of the film. "Romancing&#13;
the Stone" is an enjoyable, exciting&#13;
adventure tale. It will have you on&#13;
the edge of your seat and it will&#13;
make you laugh, often both at the&#13;
same time.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
A !2i at retu5$5"faii TV shows Thursday, Sept. 20,1984&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
For all of the wailing critics are&#13;
doing regarding the new fall TV&#13;
shows (and it doesn't look like a&#13;
mercilessly bad crop), nobody has&#13;
bothered to speculate as to how the&#13;
networks dare bring back the&#13;
worthless drek they have been&#13;
presenting to us for years.&#13;
So many really worthless programs&#13;
are returning (due to high&#13;
ratings from Mr. and Mrs. two-anda-&#13;
half-room flat) that an article&#13;
complaining profusely about the&#13;
more terminal ly nauseating shows&#13;
seemed imperative.&#13;
And he re they are...&#13;
THE LOVE B OAT&#13;
Also know as the only place Dack&#13;
Rambo, Donna Douglas, Dawn&#13;
Wells and Maureen McCormick can&#13;
find work. This cruise for television&#13;
has-beens gets nothing but nasty&#13;
reviews, and everyone you talk to&#13;
insists they hate it. So who's watching??&#13;
DIFFERENT STROKES&#13;
The producers must have hired&#13;
Gary Coleman with the full realization&#13;
t hat he could play a twelveyear-&#13;
old for an eternity. Since Todd&#13;
Bridges got busted on a firearm rap&#13;
and Dana Plato was knocked up recently,&#13;
the cast is dwindling to a&#13;
mere few orig inal players.&#13;
GIMME A B REAK&#13;
Give US one! Star Nell Carter&#13;
was said to have lost a great deal of&#13;
weight last year. Good, now she's&#13;
only about the size of a pregnant&#13;
whale.&#13;
JHE JEFFERSONS&#13;
This screaming, obnoxious, ster-&#13;
ALICE&#13;
JfEttUvi? ^ right on Barney&#13;
Miller a few years ago, but left&#13;
?? ^nes th&gt; get her own...this&#13;
takeoff on the feature film "Alice&#13;
Doesn t Live Here Anymore." Once&#13;
it was whitewashed for the family&#13;
dpm « tGd to critical condmnauon-.&#13;
and damn high ratings.&#13;
The really surprising thing about&#13;
this show is that it has managed to&#13;
get even worse as the seasons go&#13;
SILVER SPOONS&#13;
After seeing Ricky Schroeder in&#13;
the sappy remake of the 1932 Walla-&#13;
•&lt;eTh!^"JaC*? Co°Per susder.&#13;
The Champ, I knew right away&#13;
that I wanted to see him with his&#13;
legs broken and dumped into shallow&#13;
water like the mules in&#13;
Hemingway's "On the Quai at&#13;
Smyrna." After seeing "Silver&#13;
Spoons," this is a bit more deserved.&#13;
KNIGHT RIDER&#13;
More shallow action capers for&#13;
children who just don't know any&#13;
better, or mindless adults who miss&#13;
Captain Nice."&#13;
TV BLOOPERS AND PRACTICAL&#13;
JOKES/FOUL-UPS, BLEEPS&#13;
AND BLUNDERS&#13;
Both of these shows ran out of&#13;
good bloopers when they were still&#13;
specials. As weekly telecasts, they&#13;
have no choice but to continually&#13;
With six you&#13;
get eggroll&#13;
by Natalie P. Habennao&#13;
The idea of writing a restaurant review column began during the&#13;
spring semester of la st year. It arose out of a twofold situation of allowing&#13;
me to share frequent explorations of area restaurants and&#13;
their attributes (both good and bad) with the Parkside community.&#13;
This in turn provided the opportunity to take eight years of institutional&#13;
food experience and mold it into an informative public service.&#13;
Each week a different Racine or Kenosha restaurant, diner, snack&#13;
shop or bar will be reviewed. Features such as location, parking&#13;
availability, atmosphere, menu selection, drink specials, house specialities,&#13;
service, cleaniness, appropriate atttire and a multide of&#13;
other relevant tidbits will be included. While I cannot assure you that&#13;
my observations and opinions will coincide with everyone else's experiences&#13;
relating to a specific restaurant (after all, review columns are&#13;
by nature subjective), there is one guarantee that will be made: absolutely&#13;
no restaurant will be reviewed if i t cannot cater to the college&#13;
student and our conscientious budgets.&#13;
It would be unrealistic and cruel to describe in detail an eight-course,&#13;
five-hour meal. Although many of us would find this total dining&#13;
experience to be a worthwhile value, most students simply do not&#13;
have the revenue nor the desire to indulge in such a lavish outing. On&#13;
the other hand, a review of "fast food chains" would be equally&#13;
cruel. The majority of t hese places are not as prompt and reasonably&#13;
priced as they advertise to be. The food certainly does not taste as&#13;
good as it looks on the big plastic signs above the registers. In fact, it&#13;
often tastes more like the big plastic signs themselves!&#13;
Our area i^ full of surp risingly good places to eat. We are surrounded&#13;
by a variety of ethnic and specialty establishments, along with&#13;
some of the most classic and traditional "hamburger and malt shop"&#13;
places to be found anywhere.&#13;
With this in mind, I hope you will be able to use the restaurant&#13;
column not as a rating system, but as a helpful guide the next time&#13;
someone says, "Where should we go to eat?"&#13;
show non-talents fluffing lines, getting&#13;
all flustered and ppgiinp&#13;
AFTERMASH&#13;
What a nifty idea! Take three of&#13;
the least interesting characters&#13;
from a classic series and build a&#13;
spinoff. Now how about "Aftergilli-&#13;
831, with Russell Johnson and&#13;
Dawn Wells? Or maybe "Afterlostinspace,"&#13;
with Mark Goddard&#13;
and the robot? I know! "Afterhogan'sheroes,"&#13;
with Ivan Dixon and&#13;
Larry Hovis.&#13;
the 'A' TEAM&#13;
More silly, sexist muscle stuff&#13;
with that big hulking schmuck who&#13;
grunts and wears lots of jewelry.&#13;
the FACTS OF LIFE&#13;
....is something these gals haven't&#13;
learned, seeing as how they're still&#13;
hanging around with each other&#13;
and Charlotte Rae. The one thing&#13;
these young ladies have in common&#13;
is that they all grew up to be pretty&#13;
damn ugly.&#13;
WEBSTER&#13;
...and if Gary Coleman ever does&#13;
miraculously grow past three-and-ahalf&#13;
feet, NBC ha s another precocious&#13;
dwarf in the stables. Emmanuel&#13;
Lewis is a friend of Michael&#13;
Jackson's, as is Brooke Shields. All&#13;
three of them deserve the oblivion&#13;
they someday will surely get. This&#13;
may be the worst family TV show&#13;
ever, "Father Knows Best" notwithstanding.&#13;
THE DUKES OF HAZZARD&#13;
There have been many shows as&#13;
bad as this that the lobotomy crowd&#13;
has been watching religiously and&#13;
thus keeping on the air, lowering&#13;
American tastes considerably as far&#13;
as art is concerned. Good television&#13;
is so much a thing of the past that&#13;
reruns are grabbing higher ratings&#13;
than network programming. "The&#13;
Dukes of Hazzard" is the epitome&#13;
of bad television: no acting, no&#13;
writing, no direction, no general&#13;
construction, just a lot of spills and&#13;
thrills with two dipshits who take&#13;
turns as "hunk of the month" in&#13;
Tiger Beat magazine. Shows like&#13;
this make "Andy Griffith" and&#13;
"Bewitched" reruns look better&#13;
every day...and that's bad!&#13;
The one nice thing about so&#13;
many bad TV shows is that Americans&#13;
with any taste at all will boy-&#13;
Social Science&#13;
cott the boob tube and start reading&#13;
again. There are a few good s hows&#13;
("The Cosby Show," "Cheers,"&#13;
"Newhart," et al), but so precious&#13;
few that the fate of network television&#13;
as we know it may soon be defeated&#13;
by various cable outlets offering&#13;
something a bit more substantial&#13;
in the way of entertainment.&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
ing Krug's presentation, there will&#13;
be a moderated panel discussion on&#13;
the topic of book-banning featuring&#13;
local speakers representing both&#13;
sides of t he issue.&#13;
-Oct. 8-"Artificial Intelligence:&#13;
Can Machines Really Think?" with&#13;
Parkside physics professor Morris&#13;
Firebaugh who currently is writing&#13;
a book on the subject of artificial&#13;
intelligence.&#13;
-Oct. 15-"Conservative Ideology&#13;
and Reagan's New Federalism: But&#13;
What About The Poor?" with Parkside&#13;
political science professor Kenneth&#13;
Hoover, who currently is writing&#13;
an article for the scholarly journal&#13;
"Publius" on President Reagan's&#13;
domestic policies.&#13;
-Oct. 22-"Environmental Studies&#13;
at Tell Halif," with Parkside&#13;
vice-chancellor and dean of faculty&#13;
Mary Elizabeth Shutler, who also&#13;
holds an appointment at Parkside&#13;
as professor of anthro pology. Shutler&#13;
is associate director of the&#13;
Lahav Research Project in Israel,&#13;
in which anthropologists and&#13;
archeologists are excavating the ancient&#13;
city of Tell Halif in southern&#13;
Israel.&#13;
-Oct. 29-"The Elections: Issues&#13;
and Prophetsd," with a panel of&#13;
Parkside political science professors&#13;
who will discuss the U.S. presidential&#13;
race.&#13;
The Social Science Roundtable&#13;
series is co-sponsored by t he Parkside&#13;
Social Science Division and the&#13;
university's Office of Community&#13;
Outreach.&#13;
Bus riders surveyed&#13;
If you are accosted on the bus by&#13;
a person passing out surveys, don't&#13;
worry. It's part of a survey to determine&#13;
who is using the bus systems&#13;
of R acine and Kenosha.&#13;
The survey, which began Wednesday&#13;
and will last until Sept. 25,&#13;
is being conducted in cooperation&#13;
with the Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
Regional Planning Commission&#13;
(SEWRPAC).&#13;
Riders will be asked their addresses,&#13;
their origins and destinations,&#13;
their type of household and&#13;
whether they intend a round trip.&#13;
About 60 percent of the riders of&#13;
both systems will be surveyed.&#13;
Jack Taylor, manager of the&#13;
Belle Urban System (BUS), said&#13;
that SEWRPAC employees were&#13;
training BUS employees to administer&#13;
the surveys, which can be completed&#13;
either on the bus or taken&#13;
home and returned to SEWRPAC.&#13;
8 PM — CLOSE&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
MIND IF I SMOKE?&#13;
THIS PUB'S FOR YOU!&#13;
8 Thursday, .Sept.. 20,1984 HANGER&#13;
Post Nasal Strip by Paul Berge L (f(,r&#13;
% my 1.&#13;
Ws,&#13;
fi J J&gt;^&#13;
r Wfb ®&#13;
a, s mfA v^s&#13;
Continued from page 4&#13;
Union building. True, I did rent out&#13;
all activity areas, including the&#13;
Recreation Center, where we did&#13;
have a ping pong tournament for no&#13;
more than $1000, give or take a few&#13;
zeroes.&#13;
But I must honestly report that&#13;
the funds from this quasi-fundraiser&#13;
do not and will not support Terry's&#13;
coffee habit, as vicious rumors have&#13;
stated. Our interests are domestic,&#13;
except when entertaining, and we&#13;
try to stick to inviting guests from&#13;
this hemisphere.&#13;
After paying the atrocious rental&#13;
fee, I placed the remaining cash in&#13;
a strongbox, which fell out of an&#13;
open front-seat window and into&#13;
the Root River when my car was&#13;
side-swiped by a drunken college&#13;
student. There were no injuries, the&#13;
punk is paying for the damages to&#13;
my Audi, and the box floated out&#13;
into Lake Michigan. I have a diving&#13;
team dredging the bottom near the&#13;
mouth of the Root When and if&#13;
they recover the strongbox, I will&#13;
donate the cash to a charity other&#13;
than Parkside.&#13;
There you have it. An abbreviated&#13;
version of my lengthy finances.&#13;
In the interests of space, I have&#13;
paraphrased the actual text and&#13;
condensed its content so incoming&#13;
freshmen can stay afloat on this&#13;
issue. Further investigations from&#13;
any factions would be a waste of&#13;
my imagination. So, please don't&#13;
bother.&#13;
My Social Security number is&#13;
390-78-0522.&#13;
I am: Richard S. Tanks Zaccaro&#13;
Oberbruner.&#13;
Tanks Tunks!&#13;
SHARE-A-I&#13;
INFORMATION &amp; SIGN UP AT&#13;
UNION INFORMATION DESK&#13;
7:45 a.m.-7:30 p.m. Monday-Thursday&#13;
7:45 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Friday&#13;
9:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Saturday&#13;
Ranger Film Review&#13;
All of Me~k • •&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
"All of Me" is the new starring&#13;
vehicle for Steve Martin. In it he&#13;
stars as the vehicle for Lily Tomlin.&#13;
Let me explain that. In "AH of&#13;
Me" Martin plays Roger Cobb, an&#13;
idealistic young lawyer. Roger's&#13;
new case involves Edwina Cutwater&#13;
(Tomlin), a rich, dying woman. Edwina&#13;
has a plan whereby even&#13;
though her body will die, her soul&#13;
will live on in the body of Terry&#13;
(Victoria Tennant), Tomlin's stableman's&#13;
daughter. This exchange&#13;
of souls is to be accomplished with&#13;
the aid of a Tibetan mystic named&#13;
Praka Lasa, wonderfully played by&#13;
Richard Libertini. Through a&#13;
mixup, Edwina's soul ends up in&#13;
Roger's body.&#13;
"All of Me," which was adapted&#13;
from Ed Davis' novel "Me Two" by&#13;
screenwriter Phil Alden Robinson,&#13;
is another collaboration between&#13;
Martin and director Carl Reiner.&#13;
This combination is again successful,&#13;
as "All of Me" is Martin's best&#13;
film to date. The film opens&#13;
strongly, with several of the funniest&#13;
scenes I have seen in a long&#13;
time. It sags a bit in the middle, becoming&#13;
somewhat uneven, but it regains&#13;
its footing in time for a very&#13;
funny ending. One thing that puts&#13;
"All of Me" above many other film&#13;
comedies is its development of the&#13;
characters of Roger and Edwina.&#13;
The characters do not remain&#13;
static, but grow and change as the&#13;
film progresses. This character development&#13;
is something that one&#13;
doesn't see often in comedies and I&#13;
find it quite refreshing.&#13;
As Roger Cobb, Martin proves&#13;
himself a superb physical comedian.&#13;
When Roger and Edwina&#13;
struggle for control of Roger's&#13;
body, Martin very nearly turns the&#13;
"silly walk" into an art form. Lily&#13;
Tomlin does an adequate job as Edwina,&#13;
considering that most of the&#13;
time she is seen only in mirrors.&#13;
But as good as Martin and Tomlin&#13;
are, the film is very nearly stolen&#13;
by the supporting cast, especially&#13;
Richard Libertini as Praka Lasa,&#13;
and Jason Bernard as Tyrone, a&#13;
blind street musician. These two,&#13;
along with Selma Diamond (one of&#13;
my favorite character actresses),&#13;
give "All of Me" one of the strongest&#13;
supporting casts in recent years.&#13;
"All of Me" is a treat for Steve&#13;
Martin fans and should also create&#13;
many new fans. It's a light, very&#13;
funny film, which is perfect fare to&#13;
take your mind off your problems,&#13;
at least for a while.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Ranger photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Material by Dave Marsh&#13;
Dave Marsh&#13;
Writing on 'rock'&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Dave Marsh has been writing on&#13;
rock music for some years now. He&#13;
has contributed articles to Creem,&#13;
Rolling Stone, Record, TV Guide,&#13;
and Village Voice, among others.&#13;
Marsh has wr itten well-researched,&#13;
definitive biographies on rock&#13;
legends Bruce Springsteen, Elvis&#13;
Presley and The Who, as well as&#13;
editing " The Book of Rock L ists"&#13;
and volumes one and two of "The&#13;
Rolling Stone Record Guide."&#13;
Marsh is now publishing a newsletter&#13;
called " Rode and Roll Confidential."&#13;
There are no photos,&#13;
there is no advertising, no real gloss&#13;
of any kind. "Rod e and Roll Confidential"&#13;
strives to go straight to the&#13;
heart of rock and roll: a serious&#13;
perspective on one of ou r most important&#13;
and outspoken forms of&#13;
popular music.&#13;
"The focus isn't on personalities,"&#13;
said Marsh during a recent&#13;
interview, "b ut on issues and politics&#13;
in music, none of which the&#13;
rock magazines ar e about. They're&#13;
all about personalities. For instance,&#13;
I don't know where you&#13;
could read about the rock music&#13;
that's coming from Poland, which&#13;
is what was in our last issue."&#13;
In its eighteen months of existence,&#13;
"Rock and Roll Confidential"&#13;
has risen to three thousand subscribers,&#13;
according to Marsh. This&#13;
is quite impressive, since Marsh has&#13;
done very little advertising to promote&#13;
the newsletter.&#13;
(hie problem that plagues "Rock&#13;
and Roll Confidential" is that&#13;
Marsh, the central writer of the&#13;
newsletter, is mercilessly opinionated;&#13;
if be doesn't like it, then it&#13;
just can't be any good.&#13;
This is quite evident with the&#13;
"Record Guide" bodes. After the&#13;
first volume was released in 1979,&#13;
Marsh and his staff put together a&#13;
second, updated volume in 1983. In&#13;
the second edition, however, Marsh&#13;
went through the bode and re-rated&#13;
several albums t hat had been critiqued&#13;
in the first edition by other&#13;
reviewers.&#13;
"If you don't change your&#13;
reviews and your ideas are fixed,"&#13;
said Marsh, "then you just aren't&#13;
doing your jo b."&#13;
When re-rating records, Marsh&#13;
caused a bit of furor among rock&#13;
fans when docking The Doors' classic&#13;
final LP "L.A. Woman" from&#13;
five stars to a mere two.&#13;
"I don't care what you're comparing&#13;
it to, in any remotely objective&#13;
sense, "L.A. Woman" is not a&#13;
great record," said Marsh during&#13;
our interview.&#13;
Marsh didn't bother explaining&#13;
why he felt this way, but it seems&#13;
that no other rock critics or fans&#13;
agree with him. Marsh, meanwhile,&#13;
reserved his five star ratings for albums&#13;
like Michael Jackson's overhyped&#13;
and overplayed "Thriller"&#13;
which some folks are already&#13;
predicting will soon meet th e same&#13;
oblivion as 1977's commercial&#13;
smash "Saturday Night Fever."&#13;
In answer to a statement written&#13;
in a recent Chicago Tribune column&#13;
stating that "Out of the thirty million&#13;
people who bought Michael&#13;
Jackson's "Thriller," probably&#13;
twenty-six million are sorry,"&#13;
Marsh stated "I think that's one&#13;
hundred percent wrong!"&#13;
These arbitrary criticisms aren't&#13;
all Marsh is about, however. While&#13;
"Rock and Roll Confidential" is&#13;
subject to Marsh's opinions, it still&#13;
does serve its purpose as a newsletter&#13;
giving it s readers information&#13;
on rock that just isn't found elsewhere.&#13;
The absence of banal photos,&#13;
ads and glossy profiles on teen&#13;
idols is also welcome.&#13;
Marsh's books are well researched&#13;
and intelligently written. His&#13;
opinionated criticisms seem absent&#13;
in his affectionate and accurate&#13;
evaluation of Presley's undeniable&#13;
impact and artistry in the book,&#13;
"Elvis," doing similar service to&#13;
The Who in the book "Before I Get&#13;
Old" and Bruce Springsteen in&#13;
"Born To Run."&#13;
Dave Marsh is opinionated as&#13;
hell, true, but he is also a good&#13;
writer, and like few others, genuinely&#13;
loves rock music (even to the&#13;
point of calling " rap" exciting). It&#13;
is these positive aspects tha t make&#13;
"Rock and Roll Confidential"&#13;
worth checking out. Information regarding&#13;
the newsletter is available&#13;
from Marsh at Box 1073, De pt. 5,&#13;
Maywood, NJ 07607.&#13;
by Patrick Zirkelbach&#13;
Watch out. They're coming.&#13;
Speeding through t he streets instilling&#13;
terror in the hearts of the&#13;
people.&#13;
Sleek and quiet, the metal and&#13;
chrome of their frames glisten in&#13;
the glow of the street lights.&#13;
Mothers pull their children in to&#13;
the house to protect them from the&#13;
horror they will eventually face. As&#13;
you wait in the house, you know&#13;
they'll be driving down your str eet&#13;
soon. You hear the engines now,&#13;
pulling around the corner.&#13;
Mopeds. Charging down the&#13;
avenues, swerving in and out of&#13;
traffic. Motorized vehicles taking&#13;
advantage of their maneuverability&#13;
and small size.&#13;
The drivers are an elite crowd.&#13;
Wearing nylon and spandex, they&#13;
look upon the world with disdain&#13;
and contempt, reassuring themselves&#13;
that they are superior to all&#13;
other vehicles.&#13;
They use their gas mileage as&#13;
weapons, fighting back the ridiculing&#13;
mobs with phrases like, "Well, I&#13;
filled my tank three months ago&#13;
and it's not down to the half-way&#13;
mark yet," or "I had to spend all of&#13;
53' to fill my tank. What is this&#13;
world coming to? "&#13;
Not to be outdone, the a uto drivers&#13;
retaliate with phrases like, "At&#13;
least I can go over 30 miles an&#13;
hour," and "Who's going to be&#13;
looking for a ride this winter?" and&#13;
"Oh yeah, says you."&#13;
Judging by their popularity, it&#13;
unfortunately looks like mopeds are&#13;
here to stay. Mothers and students&#13;
alike are taking to the words of&#13;
Adam Ant by spending that hardearned&#13;
money they we re saving for&#13;
a Ford Catalina and running to the&#13;
nearest Honda dealer to get in on&#13;
the action.&#13;
So take advantage of the situation.&#13;
Do yourself a favor. Do society&#13;
a favor. Invite a moped over to&#13;
l Ranger photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Pat Zirkelbach&#13;
lunch. Then run it over repeatedly&#13;
with your Che vy 4x4.&#13;
COMING EVENTS FROM&#13;
PGiMK«iiama susasna&#13;
"Romancing The Stone&#13;
Thurs., Sept. 20 — 3: 30&#13;
Fri., Sept. 21 - 1:30 &amp; 7:30&#13;
Sun., Sept. 23 — 7:30&#13;
&lt;1.00 Rated PG Union Cinema&#13;
//&#13;
Brian Huskey&#13;
Contemporary Folk Music&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 25&#13;
11:30 AM — U nion Square FREE&#13;
FREE&#13;
TUESDAY FLICKS&#13;
Starting Oct. 2&#13;
Clint Eastwood Month&#13;
"Hang 'Em High"&#13;
Oct. 2&#13;
Rated G&#13;
Brewers vs.&#13;
Toronto Blue Jays&#13;
Friday, Sept. 28&#13;
*8°° in cludes beer/bus&#13;
Only 20 Tickets Left!&#13;
Fan Appreciation Night&#13;
Events&#13;
Sponsored&#13;
By&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Activities&#13;
Board&#13;
A pause in the disaster&#13;
10 Thursday, Sept. 20, 1984 RANGER&#13;
Baseball season begins&#13;
Golfers tie for sixth&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
The Parkside men's golf team&#13;
began its season two weeks ago.&#13;
On Sept. 9, the Rangers traveled&#13;
to Stevens Point for the Pointer Invitational.&#13;
Fifteen teams participated,&#13;
and when it was all over, UWWhitewater,&#13;
led by medalist Jim&#13;
Wahl's 78, stood alone at the top of&#13;
the standings with 385. Parkisde&#13;
finished in a tie for sixth with St.&#13;
Norbert at 413.&#13;
The top finisher for the Rangers&#13;
was Rick Elsen with a 79. Other&#13;
scores were Ken Maegaard at 80,&#13;
Jim Zuzinec at 84 and Scott Schellpfeffer&#13;
and Bill Aiello at 85. "We&#13;
played OK," said coach Steve Stephens,&#13;
"but nobody got it going,&#13;
which is typical of the first tournament&#13;
of the year."&#13;
Things improved at the next&#13;
tournament on Sept. 10 at the&#13;
Tuscumbia Invitational. Led by Zuzinec's&#13;
73, Parkside shot a team&#13;
total of 385, just six shots behind&#13;
UW-Oshkosh. Zuzinec's score put&#13;
him in a three-way tie for second&#13;
place in individual honors, one shot&#13;
behind medalist Dale Seidl of UWGreen&#13;
Bay.&#13;
"Jim played extremely well, but&#13;
he didn't putt well," commented&#13;
Stephens. "However, he was consistent&#13;
for the most part." The rest of&#13;
the team had good roun ds, also, all&#13;
breaking 80. Maegaard had 77,&#13;
Mike Ritacco and Schelpfeffer each&#13;
shot 79 and Kyle Corrigall had a 79.&#13;
Stephens said he was happy with&#13;
his team's play and he was "pleased&#13;
with the overall consistency of&#13;
the team."&#13;
After these first two matches,&#13;
the team is playing well, and Stephens&#13;
believes they will be very&#13;
competitive the rest of t he fall season.&#13;
"If we can keep it coming&#13;
now," said Stephens, "I think we&#13;
can approach what we did at the&#13;
beginning of the season. If we're&#13;
able to do that, Parkside will have&#13;
to be reckoned with."&#13;
The men's fall baseball season is&#13;
off to a good start. Last year's defending&#13;
champions played two&#13;
games with Marquette last Saturday,&#13;
at Parkside, with a 1-1 result.&#13;
The team lost the first game 12-8.&#13;
According to captain Duane&#13;
McLean, they lost because Parkside&#13;
gave up 13 walks. Starting for the&#13;
team as pitcher was Chris Rozell, a&#13;
returning junior. Kyle Backes, a returning&#13;
junior, relieved Rozell.&#13;
Senior Duane McLean had two&#13;
hits and two RBI's. One home run&#13;
was hit by freshman John Nielsen.&#13;
McLean said the team still did&#13;
quite well. "We were down 11-0&#13;
and we came back in the fifth inning...&#13;
we couldn't, however, overcome&#13;
the walks," McLean corn-&#13;
Last Saturday, Sept. 15, the&#13;
men's cross country team took second&#13;
out of 19 te ams in the SIU-Edwardsville&#13;
Invitational. The men&#13;
ran on an eight-kilometer course.&#13;
George Kapheim placed fifth,&#13;
with a time of 26.01. Tim Renzelmann&#13;
placed eighth, with a time of&#13;
26.05. Dan Stublaski, with a time of&#13;
26.35, finished in eighteenth place.&#13;
Rich Miller finished right behind&#13;
Stublaski, with a time of 26.40.&#13;
Andy Ferrano completed the race&#13;
in 27.10 and took 29th place.&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
IMPROVE STUDY habits. Lose weight, stop&#13;
smoking. Reduce stress and anxiety through&#13;
clinical hypnosis. Call Randall Potter at&#13;
414/652-2727.&#13;
EDITING AND typing of papers, essays and&#13;
manuscripts. Reasonable, professional. 632-&#13;
For Sale&#13;
BEAUTIFUL, WARM, hand-woven ECUADORAN&#13;
PONCHOS for fan, back-to-school&#13;
wear. Send for FREE color brochure. Ponchos,&#13;
PO Box 142, Sussex WI 53069.&#13;
COFFEE TABLE-rotmd. Oak loveseat, early&#13;
American rocker. Phone 554-6021.&#13;
French Provincial Girls dresser and nfahtstand.&#13;
Abo wash machine. If interested aul JiU&#13;
at 637-9928.&#13;
mented.&#13;
Parkside came back in the second&#13;
game. The men won 4-1. Tim&#13;
Sorensen, a returning junior, was&#13;
the winning pitcher. He pitched 4%&#13;
innings. He allowed four hits,&#13;
walked none and struck out four&#13;
batters. Freshman Darryl Hastings&#13;
picked up a save. McLean was two&#13;
for three with three RBI's.&#13;
The following two games will be&#13;
held here at Parkside. Saturday^&#13;
Sept. 22 at noon, Parkside will compete&#13;
against UW-Milwaukee. Concordia&#13;
will be the visiting team on&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 23. The game will&#13;
begin at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
The fall season roster includes&#13;
junior Scott Brooks and freshman&#13;
Guy Hoffman as catchers; first&#13;
The first place team, Southeastern&#13;
Missouri, ended up with 51&#13;
points. Parkside left the Invitational&#13;
with 79 points. Northwest Missouri&#13;
came in third with 87 poi nts,&#13;
and fourth place was claimed by&#13;
SIU-Evansville, with team scores&#13;
adding up to 124.&#13;
According to Coach Lucian Rosa,&#13;
the team ran a good race, even&#13;
though three of the top nine players&#13;
were injured. Both Stublaski and&#13;
Ferrano ran good races. Rosa felt&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHY AND sales, part-time. Flexible&#13;
hours, experience desirable. Phone Sears&#13;
Portrait Studio. 694-3030, ask for Kim.&#13;
Personals&#13;
DAN HALL: Mr. B.H.C. with No Balls at all.&#13;
WANNA CALIFORNIA Sui te program? Contact&#13;
PA&amp;L.&#13;
B AC. Cannot perform under pressure.&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, Julie, from all of us at&#13;
Ranger Hall.&#13;
CYNDE-MEET me meet me in the elevator&#13;
tonight Love elevator mystery man.&#13;
JOHN WHETHERLY- the "great" R.A., you&#13;
have the sexiest bod in Ranger Hall&#13;
KATHY D. We know what you're up to.&#13;
Remember Karma, what goes around comes&#13;
around.&#13;
Jhn Ndbesrx classified for you because you&#13;
didn't want oae.&#13;
JIM: NOW you have two classifieds. What are&#13;
you going t o do?&#13;
base, Barry Freitag, a transfer student&#13;
and John Nielsen, freshman;&#13;
second base, John Wagner, freshman&#13;
and Tim Wieperp, senior.&#13;
Competing for the starting shortstop&#13;
position are junior John Fisher,&#13;
sophomore Stu Bloom and&#13;
freshman Jon Gordon. Third base&#13;
is manned by s enior Scott Brzenk.&#13;
Left fielder is Mike Stolnack, a&#13;
transfer student. Captain Duane&#13;
McLean plays center field, and&#13;
right field is played by freshman&#13;
Earl Niebaur.&#13;
The pitching staff is composed of&#13;
Tim Sorensen, a returning junior;&#13;
Chris Rozell, junior; Kyle Backes,&#13;
returning junior; and freshmen&#13;
Darryl Hastings and Mike Ramchek.&#13;
these two members helped the&#13;
team take second place.&#13;
The Midwest Collegiate Invitational&#13;
will be held at Parkside this&#13;
weekend, beginning on Saturday at&#13;
12:45 p.m. Rosa said this is the biggest&#13;
meet of the season. Among the&#13;
teams will be top runners from&#13;
UW-Madison, Eastern Illinois, Purdue&#13;
and St. Cloud (Minnesota).&#13;
Madison, Eastern Illinois and Purdue&#13;
are all in Division I categories.&#13;
Sports fans are encouraged to come&#13;
and watch the team run it out.&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
results&#13;
This past week, Parkside's&#13;
women's volleyball team placed&#13;
third out of 20 teams in the UWMilwaukee&#13;
Panther Open. Parkside&#13;
beat Northwestern Illinois 15-13,15-&#13;
7. In the semifinals, Parkside lost&#13;
to Bradley, 17-15, 20-1 5.&#13;
The team's standings are 6-3. The&#13;
next game will be at Parkside on&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 20 a t 7 p.m. This&#13;
weekend they will travel to La-&#13;
Crosse for a tournament. The results&#13;
will be featured in next Thursfle&#13;
(Dliiz&#13;
&amp;uieet&#13;
25 ° OFF&#13;
Chocolate Covered&#13;
Malted Milk Balls&#13;
Week of Sept. 24&#13;
We have a full&#13;
selection of&#13;
Candy &amp; Nuts&#13;
Located in the Union Bazaar&#13;
Directly Across from the Info. Ctr.&#13;
FALL BOWLING LEAGUES&#13;
IN THE&#13;
REC CENTER&#13;
Mixed Couple — Every Other Fri. — Begin Sept. 28 — 7 p.m.-9:30 p.m&#13;
4 Person Teams — 7 Weeks — $ 2.50/Person&#13;
Mixed Couple — S undays — Begin Sept. 30 — 7 p.m.-9 30 p m —&#13;
4 Person Teams — 8 Weeks — $ 2.50/Person&#13;
Parent-Child — S at. —&#13;
4 Person Teams&#13;
Begin Oct. 6 — 1 0 a.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
— 16 Weeks — $ 1.25/Person&#13;
League Fee Includes Trophies &amp; E nd of Year Pizza Partv&#13;
SIGN UP FOR LEAGUES AT THE REC CENTER OR&#13;
CALL 553-2695 FOR MORE INFORMATION&#13;
Classified ads&#13;
Men's cross country&#13;
Team brings home second&#13;
HANGER&#13;
Men's soccer&#13;
Rangers dominate game&#13;
11 Thursday, Sept. 20,1984 •&#13;
The Parkside Rangers got their&#13;
first notch in the win column in&#13;
Deerfield, HL on Tu esday. The outcome&#13;
was never in doubt, although&#13;
Trinity played a defensive game&#13;
throughout th e afternoon.&#13;
Scoring was done in the first&#13;
half. At 11:05 Scott Gerhartz drove&#13;
a ball into the goalmouth that came&#13;
off the foot of an opponent and into&#13;
the Trinity goal. Wayne Adema&#13;
scored the se cond goal at 17:17, assisted&#13;
by Rocky Donovan.&#13;
Greater Milwaukee Open&#13;
Parkside dominated statistically&#13;
£2?• • g* ^ and corner d'.&#13;
Gaahe Jeff Medin picked ud the&#13;
shut-out while the Trinity keeper&#13;
was forced to make 17 saves.&#13;
The Rangers were once again&#13;
without the services of veteran&#13;
sweeper Andy Buchanan. Junior&#13;
college transfer Mike Robertson&#13;
moved over from his outside back&#13;
position and did an excellent job&#13;
Freshman John Scanlan had a good&#13;
game, playing at outside fullback.&#13;
Tennis team loses again&#13;
The women's tennis team lost&#13;
again. In Milwaukee the team's&#13;
overall score was 9-0. According to&#13;
coach Wendy Miller, player Linda&#13;
Masters had a good match considering&#13;
the other player's scores. Masters&#13;
lost, however, with match&#13;
scores 64 and 6-3.&#13;
Saturday's doubles tournament&#13;
in Oshkosh e nded up in a loss for&#13;
Parkside. Miller feels that the team&#13;
didn't even place. Linda Masters&#13;
and Amy Tropin teamed up, but&#13;
lost to Eau Claire, 6-1, 3-6 and 6-3.&#13;
Tropin a nd Master lost the consofcfion&#13;
match against UW-Stout 3-&#13;
6, 6-1 and 6-1. Miller said t here was&#13;
a loss of concentration by both&#13;
women, which contributed to their&#13;
losses.&#13;
The team needs moral support&#13;
from the fans. Their next match is&#13;
today at 3 p.m. against Aurora College&#13;
The next home game will be&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 23 at noon. The team&#13;
will compete against UW-Stevens&#13;
Point. All ho me games are located&#13;
in the back of the PE building on&#13;
the tennis court.&#13;
Jeu de paume, anyone?&#13;
by Kimberlie Kranich&#13;
What sport originated in France,&#13;
can be played with either two or&#13;
four players a nd is so strict on etiquette&#13;
on the professional level that&#13;
a player breaking the rules is readily&#13;
fined? The answer: tennis. As&#13;
early a s the 12th or 13th century,&#13;
the game of tennis began, but was&#13;
called "jeu de paume," meaning&#13;
game of the palm. In "jeu de&#13;
paume," the players batted a ball&#13;
back and fo rth over a net with the&#13;
palm of their hand.&#13;
Major Walter Clopton Wingfield&#13;
of England, generally considered&#13;
the father of modern tennis, introduced&#13;
in 1873 a version of the game&#13;
closely resembling the sport as it is&#13;
played today.&#13;
Tennis is played on a court made&#13;
either of grass, clay, concrete,&#13;
wood or commercial surfaces (a&#13;
combination of asphalt, cork and&#13;
plastic fibe rs). The game we refer&#13;
to today simply as "tennis" is actually&#13;
"lawn tennis."&#13;
When tennis was first brought to&#13;
the U.S., it was played solely on&#13;
grass. Most major tennis tournaments,&#13;
Wimbledon for example, are&#13;
played on grass courts. The ball&#13;
bounces low on gr ass courts, thereby&#13;
fostering a n aggressive match.&#13;
Played on clay courts, the ball&#13;
takes a slower bounce, thus fostering&#13;
a game of long rallies. The concrete&#13;
courts, like those at Parkside,&#13;
elicit high an d deep rebound shots.&#13;
The fastest of all court surfaces&#13;
is the wood su rface. Because of t he&#13;
speed with which the hall leaves&#13;
the court, the player must use a&#13;
very s hort backswing on the forehand&#13;
an d backhand strokes.&#13;
To play tennis, one needs a tennis&#13;
racquet, tennis balls, tennis&#13;
shoes and comfortable clothing.&#13;
Tennis racquets vary in materials&#13;
from wood to aluminum to graphite.&#13;
For a beginner, a wooden racrecommended&#13;
because it&#13;
a player's control of the&#13;
quet is&#13;
aids in&#13;
ball.&#13;
When selecting a racquet, the&#13;
most important factor to consider&#13;
is the "grip" size, or circumference&#13;
of the handle. If the grip is too&#13;
small, the racquet will tend to slip&#13;
in one's hand; if the grip is too&#13;
large, the racquet cannot be held&#13;
firmly and may slip.&#13;
One way to determine one's&#13;
proper grip size is to wrap the fin-&#13;
Continned on pa ge 12&#13;
by Rob b Luehr&#13;
Friday was a big day for me - I&#13;
finally got to see a major golf&#13;
tournament, thanks to the Ranger&#13;
and the organizers of the Greater&#13;
Milwaukee Open.&#13;
I received a guest pass to do a&#13;
story on what it's like to be at a&#13;
major Professional Golfers Assocation&#13;
event. As a golfer myself, I can&#13;
tdl you it was a good feeling to be&#13;
within mere feet of some of the&#13;
best golfers in the world: men such&#13;
as Tom Watson, Calvin Peete, Andy&#13;
Bean, Tom Kite and ChiChi Rodriquez.&#13;
The first incarnation of the GMO&#13;
was held at the North Shore Country&#13;
Club in 1968. I t was held there&#13;
through 1970. In 1971 and 1972 th e&#13;
event was moved to the Tripoli&#13;
Country Club. In 1973 Tuckaway&#13;
Country Club became the permanent&#13;
home of the tournament.&#13;
The only drawback to the tournament&#13;
in the past was that it was&#13;
played only one week before the&#13;
British Open. All the big names&#13;
wait to Britain to prepare for that,&#13;
thus leaving t he GMO with second&#13;
division play ers. Naturally, without&#13;
a big name or two, not many people&#13;
are going to come out to see the&#13;
event. I mean, who's gonna follow&#13;
Gavin Levinson or Rick Dalpos for&#13;
18 holes?&#13;
It's not that they haven't had&#13;
great players play in the GMO: Arnold&#13;
Pa lmer, Gary Player and Sam&#13;
Snead played there in the early&#13;
days of the tournament, and Lee&#13;
Trevino was there as recently as&#13;
1978. He came to Milwaukee and&#13;
intended to leave right after the&#13;
last round to catch a plane to the&#13;
British Open. As luck would have&#13;
it, Trevino ended up in a sudden&#13;
death playoff that lasted for eight&#13;
holes, the longest in PGA history.&#13;
He just barely made his plane.&#13;
This year, however, was differWATCH&#13;
THE ^•(4r Si&#13;
CHICAGO CUBS \ M ^&#13;
THIS WEEK&#13;
AT THE CUBS WIN!&#13;
UNION SQUARE y y&#13;
, ATHLETE OF THE WEEK&#13;
•••••••••••••••&#13;
Senior Cross Country Runner&#13;
GEORGE KAPHE1M&#13;
was at his best this week. He ran fifth at the Edwardsville Invitational,&#13;
out of 172 starting entries. Last year George was&#13;
named a NAIA All American for the first time and he is on his&#13;
way to achieving that status again this year. Before the Edwardsville&#13;
event, he ran second in the two previous cross&#13;
country competitions. We wish George Good Luck throughout&#13;
the coming year.&#13;
ent. The people in charge of the&#13;
GMO decided that if they wanted&#13;
big names in Milwaukee, they&#13;
would have to change the timing of&#13;
the event. They decided to have it&#13;
the second week of September so&#13;
conflict with an important tournament&#13;
would b e eliminated.&#13;
The strategy worked. Tom Watson,&#13;
this year's top money winner,&#13;
and Tom Kite, number two in earnings,&#13;
announced that they would&#13;
come to Milwaukee. In fact, six of&#13;
the top 20 money w inners entered.&#13;
I figured that following a particular&#13;
player for a round would be interesting.&#13;
I forked out 50 cents for a&#13;
pairing sheet and looked for a familiar&#13;
name who might be teeing&#13;
off when I got there. I quickly&#13;
noticed Tom Kite was about ready&#13;
to go on his second nine holes of&#13;
the day. Upon further scanning, I&#13;
noticed another very well-known&#13;
name. ChiChi Rodriguez, Puerto&#13;
Rico's answer to Jack Nicklaus,&#13;
was to tee off a bout the time Kite&#13;
was to finish his round. So I had&#13;
time to follow Kite and got back in&#13;
time to follow Rodriques.&#13;
Kite and his playing partners&#13;
Gary Hallberg and Mark McCumber&#13;
went out on hole number one.&#13;
For all three golfers, it was an uneventful&#13;
round, except on hole four,&#13;
where Kite's second shot decided&#13;
to home in on a man sitting in a&#13;
lawn chair. On one bounce, the ball&#13;
ended up in the guy's lap. Fortunately&#13;
for both men, Kite got a free&#13;
drop and made a par on the hole.&#13;
Kite went on to shoot a 71, as did&#13;
McCumber. Hallberg shot a 75.&#13;
Now it was time. Rodriguez got a&#13;
big hand from the crowd as he&#13;
stepped up to the first tee. He acknowledged&#13;
the gallery more than&#13;
once. In fact, during his whole&#13;
round he talked to spectators constantly.&#13;
He answered questions,&#13;
told jokes and basically had a good&#13;
time on the course.&#13;
Rodriguez did his famous sword&#13;
act when he made a birdie on the&#13;
sixth hole. For those who have&#13;
never seen the Rodriguez saber&#13;
dance, he sticks his putter in his&#13;
belt, pulls it out, does a mark of&#13;
Zorro, wipes off the blade and puts&#13;
it back in his belt. After that, on&#13;
the seventh tee, he stated that golf&#13;
was "the most fun you could have&#13;
with your clothes on." He went on&#13;
to post a 72.&#13;
I have to say something about&#13;
Rodriguez's putter. I spoke to his&#13;
caddy, who said the putter&#13;
Rodriguez was using was 48 ye ars&#13;
old and that Rodriguez found it in a&#13;
pawn shop 15 years ago. A true&#13;
golfer would appreciate seeing that&#13;
putter.&#13;
I know for some of you, hitting a&#13;
little white ball with a stick is not&#13;
exactly enough to make goose&#13;
bumps appear. But for those of you&#13;
who have had the unequaled feeling&#13;
of hitting a shot within two feet of&#13;
the cup, this game grabs you and&#13;
won't let go. Just ask the estimated&#13;
33,000 people who attended the last&#13;
day of the GMO. They all saw a&#13;
great tournament and look forward&#13;
to next year to see who'll be here to&#13;
challenge this course. I think that&#13;
this year was just the beginning of&#13;
a new era of golf in Milwaukee.&#13;
Look for many more stars of the&#13;
PGA to be there next year and for&#13;
many years to come.&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
IN THE SQUARE&#13;
T SCREEN&#13;
MONDAY, SEPT. 24&#13;
SAN DIEGO AT&#13;
LA RAIDERS &gt;&#13;
• BEER • SODA * WINE&#13;
• POPCORN&#13;
THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
12 Thursday, Sept. 20, 1984&#13;
Graduate continues career at Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
by Carol Kortendick&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
What happens to past students&#13;
and athletes? One former favorite,&#13;
Dona Driscoll, is working part-time&#13;
in the physical education building.&#13;
She also assists Mike Dewitt in&#13;
coaching the women's cross country&#13;
team.&#13;
To jog your memory, Driscoll ran&#13;
for Parkside's track and cross-country&#13;
teams. She was awarded All&#13;
American twice in cross country,&#13;
twice for the 600 yd. race and once&#13;
in the 3000 M.&#13;
She began her athletic career at&#13;
Jeu de paume, anyone?&#13;
Muskego High, not as a runner,&#13;
however, but as a swimmer.&#13;
Driscoll explained, "I was a swimmer&#13;
before I was a runner. I never&#13;
went out for cross country in high&#13;
school. I was never a serious runner,"&#13;
Dona concluded.&#13;
Driscoll was a sprinter, however,&#13;
and in her senior year, former&#13;
Parkside coach Barb Lawson&#13;
recruited her. College wasn't in&#13;
Driscoll's picture, but she couldn't&#13;
refuse a scholarship to run for&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
As a freshman, Driscoll only ran&#13;
indoor and outdoor track. Her&#13;
Continued from page 11&#13;
gers around the handle in one direction&#13;
and the thumb in the other&#13;
direction. If the grip is proper,&#13;
one's thumb should extend over the&#13;
first knuckle of the middle finger.&#13;
Tennis has what is perhaps the&#13;
most unique scoring system of a ny&#13;
popular sport today. There are four&#13;
basic points in the game. The first&#13;
point has a value of 15; the second&#13;
poind 30; the third point 40; and&#13;
the fourth point is simply "game."&#13;
The term for a score of zero in tennis&#13;
is "love."&#13;
When calling off the score, the&#13;
server's score is always declared&#13;
first. When e ach player wins three&#13;
points apiece, the score is "deuce."&#13;
Once at deuce, a player must win&#13;
the next two consecutive points in&#13;
order to win the set.&#13;
"Advantage" is the term that refers&#13;
to the point following deuce. If&#13;
it is the server's advantage, it is&#13;
called "advantage in" and when it&#13;
is the receiver's advantage, it is&#13;
called "advantage out."&#13;
There is a variation to the way in&#13;
which one can score tennis. Instead&#13;
of giving t he value of the first point&#13;
at 15. it can be called 1; the second&#13;
point 2; the third point 3; and the&#13;
fourth point "game." The term for&#13;
zero is still "love." The reason for&#13;
this change is to make the game&#13;
shorter.&#13;
After one has the proper tennis&#13;
equipment and knows how to keep&#13;
score, one must learn the four basic&#13;
strokes of tennis: the forehand&#13;
drive, the backhand drive, the serve&#13;
and the volley.&#13;
To put the ball in play, one must&#13;
utilize the serve. With the serve,&#13;
one throws the ball into the air and&#13;
hits it with the racquet in midair&#13;
before it bounces, sending it over&#13;
the net into the opponent's service&#13;
box. The receiver of the serve can&#13;
return the serve on one bounce&#13;
with a backhand or forehand drive,&#13;
depending on where the ball lands&#13;
in the service box.&#13;
After the ball has been in play a&#13;
while, one may want to charge the&#13;
net and hit a volley. During a volley&#13;
one punches the ball with the racquet&#13;
while it is still in midair, before&#13;
it has bounced, forcing it into&#13;
the opponent's court.&#13;
There are variations of each of&#13;
these shots and the mastering of&#13;
each takes many hours of practice.&#13;
If you want to improve your tennis&#13;
game, just look under "tennis" in&#13;
the subject catalog of the Parkside&#13;
library, and you'll find some helpful&#13;
books with illustrations on how&#13;
to play.&#13;
Tennis is for the young and old,&#13;
amateurs and professionals. Although&#13;
the game of tennis has not&#13;
changed drastically since it was introduced&#13;
to the U.S. by Sir Walter&#13;
Wingfield, one's own tennis game&#13;
can improve dramatically, depending&#13;
upon the number of hours one&#13;
devotes to practice. Sports&#13;
Trivia&#13;
In the 1956 World Series, Don&#13;
Larsen pitched the only perfect&#13;
game in Series history. What team&#13;
did he beat, and what was the final&#13;
score of the game?&#13;
The answer to last week's question&#13;
is Jim O'Brian.&#13;
Puzzler&#13;
Answer&#13;
Ranger needs&#13;
sportswriters&#13;
roommates, on the other hand,&#13;
were cross country runners. She&#13;
watched their dedication, early&#13;
morning runs and twice-a-day&#13;
workouts and decided to follow&#13;
their lead. Driscoll added, "My&#13;
friends said, 'Just go out for cross&#13;
country. It'll help your base for&#13;
track.' "&#13;
In her first year of cross country,&#13;
Driscoll made All American. She&#13;
placed 17th in a field of 25 ru nners&#13;
in Salinas, Kansas. The following&#13;
year, at Parkside, Driscoll took 14th&#13;
out of 25. Again, she made All&#13;
American honors.&#13;
Suffering from an injury, Driscoll&#13;
was unable to run the 1983 indoor&#13;
track season. Her final semester&#13;
was approaching, and her qualification&#13;
as an athlete was running out.&#13;
When the outdoor season arrived in&#13;
March, she was still injured. Nationals&#13;
were coming up in a month&#13;
and a half.&#13;
Wanting to leave Parkside in&#13;
style, Driscoll began intense training.&#13;
Nothing was going to stop her.&#13;
"Everything centered around training&#13;
back then," Driscoll recalled. "I&#13;
was afraid to miss one day or my&#13;
twice-a-day workouts. My season&#13;
records weren't that great, but that&#13;
didn't matter; everything came&#13;
down to Nationals."&#13;
When it came time for Nationals,&#13;
Driscoll wasn't sure she was ready.&#13;
"At the race I was afraid, but I&#13;
guess I was as ready as I ever was&#13;
going to be at that time." "Everything&#13;
fell into place," she added.&#13;
"It was a great race, probably the&#13;
best race I've ever run."&#13;
She remembered certain feelings&#13;
at the race. "In the first couple of&#13;
miles, I was about sixth or seventh.&#13;
After a couple more laps, I started&#13;
picking off the runners. All of a&#13;
sudden, I realized I was right in&#13;
front with the lead runner. No one&#13;
else was around." Driscoll finished&#13;
second, with a time of 947.6. Sh e&#13;
was .3 seconds behind first.&#13;
Now, she's not as serious. She&#13;
runs with the team in the evenings&#13;
and by herself in the morning. She&#13;
runs every day except Saturdays&#13;
and Sundays. Throughout the week,&#13;
she varies her workouts from difficult&#13;
to easy to medium days. She&#13;
averages about 70-75 miles a week.&#13;
This past summer, Driscoll participated&#13;
in a European race. She&#13;
went with an International Sports&#13;
Exchange group out of California.&#13;
This year's race was held in Cologne,&#13;
West Germany. Driscoll had&#13;
the opportunity to compete against&#13;
some teams that participated in&#13;
this summer's Olympic games.&#13;
Driscoll completed first in the 3000&#13;
M rac e.&#13;
At pr esent, Driscoll doesn't have&#13;
any dreams of contending in the&#13;
Olympics. "I don't think I'm Olympic&#13;
caliber right now, nor think I&#13;
ever will be. I just like to take one&#13;
seaso at a time," asserted Driscoll.&#13;
She added, "I know my times have&#13;
come down a lot over the years just&#13;
from a l i t t l e harder&#13;
training...Maybe I'll join a national&#13;
team."&#13;
In January, 1985 Driscoll hopes&#13;
to move to Arizona. The 24-year-old&#13;
stated, "Hopefully I can start training&#13;
more seriously, especially in the&#13;
warmer climate."&#13;
Ranger photo by Jay Crapser&#13;
Dona Driscoll&#13;
Driscoll is competing in races.&#13;
She leaves weekends open for just&#13;
that. Last weekend she ran at&#13;
County Stadium in the Miller Brewery&#13;
Race. With a time of 17.32, she&#13;
took first in the 5000 M. race.&#13;
Running with the present cross&#13;
country team, Driscoll has the&#13;
chance to watch the girls and offer&#13;
advice. She stated, "I think this&#13;
year's team is together and self motivated.&#13;
They like training and like&#13;
each other. They're everything a&#13;
coach could ask for in a team,"&#13;
concluded Driscoll.&#13;
She also offers advice to the&#13;
team and to beginners. "It's hard in&#13;
the beginning, but it gets easier. If&#13;
you really want it, you have to&#13;
work for it; and finally, things start&#13;
falling into place." @® @®^7®D0(°1&#13;
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              <text>Security &#13;
and &#13;
guns &#13;
Page &#13;
4 &#13;
Newhart's &#13;
"Stephanie &#13;
" &#13;
interviewed &#13;
Page &#13;
10 &#13;
Tennis &#13;
and &#13;
teamwork &#13;
Page &#13;
19 &#13;
Vol. &#13;
13, &#13;
No. &#13;
30 &#13;
Tuition &#13;
hike &#13;
sought &#13;
A &#13;
discussion &#13;
group &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
Joint &#13;
Finance &#13;
Committee &#13;
has &#13;
backed &#13;
a &#13;
tuition &#13;
hike &#13;
for &#13;
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Hutton." &#13;
UW-M &#13;
faculty &#13;
bows &#13;
to &#13;
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faculty &#13;
members &#13;
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all &#13;
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don't &#13;
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cost &#13;
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old &#13;
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in &#13;
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with &#13;
a &#13;
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Ranger &#13;
editor &#13;
at &#13;
a &#13;
recent &#13;
Board &#13;
of &#13;
Directors &#13;
meeting. &#13;
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served &#13;
as &#13;
editor &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
1984-85 &#13;
year &#13;
and &#13;
was &#13;
previously &#13;
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is &#13;
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editor &#13;
of &#13;
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no. &#13;
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addition &#13;
to &#13;
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work &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
Ranger. &#13;
Tunkieicz  was &#13;
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member &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
1984 &#13;
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tee &#13;
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de &#13;
Union &#13;
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is &#13;
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by &#13;
the &#13;
Kenosha &#13;
Unified &#13;
School &#13;
District &#13;
as &#13;
editor &#13;
of &#13;
their &#13;
newsletter, &#13;
and &#13;
was &#13;
recently &#13;
hired &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
Milwaukee &#13;
Sentinel &#13;
to &#13;
write &#13;
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articles. &#13;
She &#13;
is &#13;
also &#13;
a &#13;
provisional &#13;
member &#13;
of &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
Press &#13;
Women. &#13;
"This &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
a &#13;
very &#13;
good &#13;
year &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
Ranger &#13;
due &#13;
to &#13;
a &#13;
wonderful &#13;
staff &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
cooperation &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
Parkside &#13;
community. &#13;
I've &#13;
learned &#13;
a &#13;
lot &#13;
this &#13;
year. &#13;
Some &#13;
mistakes &#13;
were &#13;
made &#13;
along &#13;
the &#13;
way &#13;
but &#13;
I &#13;
feel &#13;
I &#13;
c an &#13;
look &#13;
back &#13;
and &#13;
learn &#13;
from &#13;
those &#13;
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takes. &#13;
which &#13;
will &#13;
make &#13;
the &#13;
paper &#13;
even &#13;
stronger &#13;
next &#13;
year." &#13;
said &#13;
Tun­&#13;
kieicz. &#13;
Andy &#13;
Buchanan. &#13;
Ranger &#13;
Busi­&#13;
ness &#13;
Manager, &#13;
said &#13;
of &#13;
Tunkieicz' &#13;
reappointment. &#13;
"I &#13;
think &#13;
Jennie &#13;
will &#13;
do &#13;
an &#13;
even &#13;
better &#13;
job &#13;
next &#13;
year. &#13;
She &#13;
has &#13;
put &#13;
a &#13;
lot &#13;
of &#13;
time &#13;
and &#13;
effort &#13;
Alumni &#13;
help &#13;
students &#13;
in &#13;
career &#13;
search &#13;
by &#13;
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L. &#13;
Pendleton &#13;
The &#13;
Alumni &#13;
Career &#13;
Network &#13;
is &#13;
now &#13;
available &#13;
for &#13;
those &#13;
students &#13;
in­&#13;
terested &#13;
in &#13;
gathering &#13;
information &#13;
about &#13;
specific &#13;
career &#13;
areas. &#13;
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Network &#13;
currenty &#13;
consists &#13;
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over &#13;
75 &#13;
volunteer &#13;
alumni &#13;
represent­&#13;
ing &#13;
27 &#13;
different &#13;
career &#13;
fields. &#13;
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alumni &#13;
are &#13;
offering &#13;
their &#13;
time &#13;
and &#13;
advice &#13;
to &#13;
students &#13;
interested &#13;
in &#13;
get­&#13;
ting &#13;
a &#13;
realistic &#13;
view &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
work &#13;
world. &#13;
Anyone &#13;
interested &#13;
in &#13;
exploring &#13;
the &#13;
Network &#13;
should &#13;
contact &#13;
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Goodyear, &#13;
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of &#13;
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ning &#13;
and &#13;
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in &#13;
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for &#13;
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meet­&#13;
ings &#13;
with &#13;
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alumni. &#13;
Once &#13;
matched &#13;
with &#13;
an &#13;
alumnus, &#13;
it &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
student's &#13;
responsibility &#13;
to &#13;
establish &#13;
contact, &#13;
either &#13;
by &#13;
phone &#13;
or &#13;
by &#13;
mail. &#13;
At &#13;
that &#13;
point, &#13;
a &#13;
decision &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
made &#13;
as &#13;
to &#13;
where &#13;
the &#13;
meet­&#13;
ing &#13;
will &#13;
take &#13;
place. &#13;
At &#13;
present, &#13;
five &#13;
students &#13;
have &#13;
used &#13;
the &#13;
network. &#13;
"If &#13;
there &#13;
is &#13;
enough &#13;
interest, &#13;
other &#13;
alumni &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
solicited &#13;
to &#13;
participate &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
program" &#13;
said &#13;
Goodyear. &#13;
Later &#13;
this &#13;
summer, &#13;
Goodyear &#13;
plans &#13;
to &#13;
discuss &#13;
further &#13;
plans &#13;
for &#13;
publicizing &#13;
the &#13;
program &#13;
with &#13;
Tom &#13;
Krimmel, &#13;
Di­&#13;
rector &#13;
of &#13;
Development &#13;
and &#13;
Alumni &#13;
Affairs, &#13;
who &#13;
is &#13;
also &#13;
involved &#13;
with &#13;
the &#13;
program. &#13;
"It &#13;
is &#13;
important &#13;
to &#13;
emphasize &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
purpose &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
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is &#13;
not &#13;
to &#13;
help &#13;
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find &#13;
jobs. &#13;
Rather, &#13;
it &#13;
is &#13;
to &#13;
help &#13;
them &#13;
learn &#13;
more &#13;
about &#13;
the &#13;
career &#13;
areas &#13;
they're &#13;
interested &#13;
in," &#13;
said &#13;
Krimmel. &#13;
Tunkieicz &#13;
ecstatic &#13;
over &#13;
editorship &#13;
into &#13;
this &#13;
position, &#13;
more &#13;
so &#13;
than &#13;
most &#13;
students &#13;
are &#13;
willing &#13;
to &#13;
devote &#13;
to &#13;
a &#13;
student &#13;
organization. &#13;
I'm &#13;
look­&#13;
ing &#13;
forward &#13;
to &#13;
another &#13;
good &#13;
year.' &#13;
After &#13;
attending &#13;
a &#13;
leadership &#13;
con­&#13;
ference &#13;
in &#13;
Washington &#13;
D &#13;
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from &#13;
May &#13;
19 &#13;
to &#13;
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1, &#13;
Tunkieicz &#13;
said &#13;
she &#13;
will &#13;
begin &#13;
the &#13;
process &#13;
of &#13;
getting &#13;
the &#13;
paper &#13;
in &#13;
shape &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
fall. &#13;
"There &#13;
is &#13;
so &#13;
much &#13;
to &#13;
do &#13;
in &#13;
prepara­&#13;
tion &#13;
for &#13;
next &#13;
year. &#13;
I &#13;
want &#13;
to &#13;
really &#13;
improve &#13;
and &#13;
expand &#13;
our &#13;
methods, &#13;
coverage &#13;
and &#13;
organization. &#13;
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toughest &#13;
job &#13;
though &#13;
is &#13;
hiring &#13;
the &#13;
staff &#13;
for &#13;
next &#13;
year," &#13;
she &#13;
said. &#13;
Tunkieicz &#13;
hopes &#13;
to &#13;
encourage &#13;
more &#13;
students &#13;
to &#13;
get &#13;
involved &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
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"It &#13;
is &#13;
very &#13;
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to &#13;
become &#13;
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in &#13;
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Ranger &#13;
offers &#13;
students &#13;
the &#13;
opportunity &#13;
to &#13;
learn &#13;
and &#13;
improve &#13;
skills &#13;
that &#13;
can &#13;
only &#13;
be &#13;
obtained &#13;
through &#13;
experience," &#13;
she &#13;
said. &#13;
She &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Ranger &#13;
office &#13;
, &#13;
WLLC &#13;
D &#13;
139A, &#13;
this &#13;
summer &#13;
and &#13;
encourages &#13;
students &#13;
to &#13;
stop &#13;
in &#13;
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or &#13;
for &#13;
more &#13;
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mation &#13;
about &#13;
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at &#13;
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inar," &#13;
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the &#13;
newly &#13;
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ed &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
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by &#13;
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Education &#13;
Office &#13;
from &#13;
1 &#13;
to &#13;
4 &#13;
p.m. &#13;
on &#13;
Sunday, &#13;
May &#13;
19, &#13;
in &#13;
Tallent &#13;
Hall. &#13;
To &#13;
register &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
seminar, &#13;
which &#13;
costs &#13;
$18, &#13;
call &#13;
553-2312. &#13;
The &#13;
seminar &#13;
is &#13;
for &#13;
people &#13;
who &#13;
want &#13;
to &#13;
explore &#13;
their &#13;
identities &#13;
after &#13;
facing &#13;
crises &#13;
such &#13;
as &#13;
loss &#13;
of &#13;
personal &#13;
status, &#13;
or &#13;
who &#13;
want &#13;
to &#13;
learn &#13;
to &#13;
help &#13;
others &#13;
through &#13;
a &#13;
grief &#13;
or &#13;
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process. &#13;
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will &#13;
discuss &#13;
how &#13;
a &#13;
new &#13;
self-image &#13;
can &#13;
emerge &#13;
following &#13;
a &#13;
loss. &#13;
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seminar &#13;
will &#13;
use &#13;
the &#13;
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sonal &#13;
Profile &#13;
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a &#13;
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can &#13;
open &#13;
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door &#13;
to &#13;
more &#13;
under­&#13;
standing &#13;
of &#13;
oneself &#13;
and &#13;
others. &#13;
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to &#13;
break &#13;
into &#13;
management &#13;
with &#13;
no &#13;
prior &#13;
experience. &#13;
Become &#13;
an &#13;
officer &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Army &#13;
National &#13;
Guard. &#13;
Take &#13;
our &#13;
College &#13;
Student &#13;
Officer &#13;
Program &#13;
part-time &#13;
while &#13;
you &#13;
go &#13;
to &#13;
school &#13;
full-time. &#13;
Get &#13;
management &#13;
experience &#13;
and &#13;
a &#13;
good &#13;
paycheck &#13;
every &#13;
month. &#13;
And &#13;
be &#13;
a &#13;
Second &#13;
Lieutenant &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
time &#13;
you &#13;
graduate. &#13;
Then &#13;
you &#13;
serve &#13;
just &#13;
one weekend &#13;
a &#13;
month &#13;
and &#13;
two &#13;
weeks &#13;
each &#13;
summer. &#13;
For &#13;
more &#13;
information &#13;
call: &#13;
, &#13;
rrrrnp &#13;
654-5179 &#13;
National &#13;
Guard &#13;
Americans &#13;
at &#13;
their &#13;
best. &#13;
4 &#13;
Thursday, &#13;
May &#13;
9,1985 &#13;
RANGER &#13;
Security: &#13;
To &#13;
protect &#13;
and &#13;
serve &#13;
unarmed &#13;
by &#13;
Tim &#13;
Bruns &#13;
and &#13;
Jennie &#13;
Tunkieicz &#13;
Increased &#13;
concern &#13;
about &#13;
campus &#13;
safety &#13;
has &#13;
promted &#13;
debate &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
issue &#13;
of &#13;
Campus &#13;
Security &#13;
Police &#13;
carrying &#13;
guns. &#13;
Parkside &#13;
is &#13;
one &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
few &#13;
UW-&#13;
System  schools &#13;
where &#13;
sworn &#13;
police &#13;
officers &#13;
do &#13;
not &#13;
carry &#13;
a &#13;
gun &#13;
on &#13;
a &#13;
daily &#13;
basis. &#13;
The &#13;
unwritten &#13;
policy &#13;
for &#13;
about &#13;
nine &#13;
years &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
that &#13;
Campus &#13;
Security &#13;
Police &#13;
may &#13;
carry &#13;
guns &#13;
in &#13;
their &#13;
squad &#13;
cars &#13;
while &#13;
making &#13;
money &#13;
escorts, &#13;
or &#13;
if &#13;
a &#13;
life-threaten­&#13;
ing &#13;
situation &#13;
is &#13;
imminent. &#13;
Officers &#13;
may &#13;
not &#13;
carry &#13;
their &#13;
guns &#13;
on &#13;
cam­&#13;
pus. &#13;
If &#13;
for &#13;
any &#13;
reason &#13;
an &#13;
officer &#13;
draws &#13;
a &#13;
gun. &#13;
he/she &#13;
must &#13;
submit &#13;
a &#13;
report &#13;
stating &#13;
why &#13;
the &#13;
firearm &#13;
was &#13;
drawn. &#13;
Parkside &#13;
has &#13;
a &#13;
staff &#13;
of &#13;
six &#13;
fully &#13;
trained &#13;
and &#13;
certified &#13;
police &#13;
officers. &#13;
Most &#13;
of &#13;
them &#13;
are &#13;
experienced &#13;
in &#13;
police &#13;
work, &#13;
and &#13;
have &#13;
served &#13;
as &#13;
of­&#13;
ficers &#13;
in &#13;
various &#13;
city &#13;
or &#13;
county &#13;
de­&#13;
partments &#13;
in &#13;
Wisconsin. &#13;
Each &#13;
offic­&#13;
er &#13;
is &#13;
required &#13;
to &#13;
qualify &#13;
for &#13;
gun &#13;
cer­&#13;
tification &#13;
every &#13;
month &#13;
by &#13;
testing &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
Racine &#13;
Police &#13;
Department &#13;
fir­&#13;
ing &#13;
range. &#13;
Parkside &#13;
police &#13;
are &#13;
tes­&#13;
ted &#13;
more &#13;
often &#13;
than &#13;
Racine &#13;
or &#13;
Ke­&#13;
nosha &#13;
police &#13;
officers. &#13;
Each &#13;
Parksi­&#13;
de &#13;
officer &#13;
is &#13;
issued &#13;
a &#13;
four &#13;
inch &#13;
.38 &#13;
caliber &#13;
pistol. &#13;
The &#13;
guns &#13;
are &#13;
kept &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
cabinet &#13;
and &#13;
must &#13;
be &#13;
checked &#13;
out &#13;
when &#13;
needed. &#13;
Ron &#13;
Brinkman, &#13;
director &#13;
of &#13;
Secu­&#13;
rity. &#13;
said &#13;
guns &#13;
used &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
a &#13;
part &#13;
of &#13;
every &#13;
Parkside &#13;
police &#13;
officer's &#13;
uni­&#13;
form. &#13;
but &#13;
they &#13;
were &#13;
taken &#13;
away &#13;
after &#13;
two &#13;
officers &#13;
fired &#13;
their &#13;
weap­&#13;
ons &#13;
unnecessarily. &#13;
The &#13;
officers &#13;
were &#13;
terminated &#13;
from &#13;
their &#13;
posi­&#13;
tions. &#13;
"This &#13;
administration &#13;
has &#13;
elected &#13;
to &#13;
set &#13;
a &#13;
policy &#13;
that &#13;
weapons &#13;
won't &#13;
be &#13;
carried &#13;
except &#13;
in &#13;
special &#13;
circum­&#13;
stances. &#13;
What &#13;
they &#13;
feel &#13;
is &#13;
best &#13;
I &#13;
wil l &#13;
do. &#13;
Police &#13;
officers &#13;
look &#13;
at &#13;
it &#13;
like &#13;
"without &#13;
a &#13;
weapon &#13;
I'm &#13;
not &#13;
a &#13;
cop.' &#13;
The &#13;
fact &#13;
that &#13;
they &#13;
don't &#13;
carry &#13;
guns &#13;
doesn't &#13;
make &#13;
them &#13;
any &#13;
less &#13;
of &#13;
a &#13;
police &#13;
officer. &#13;
I &#13;
don't &#13;
see &#13;
where &#13;
it &#13;
says &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
oath &#13;
that &#13;
they &#13;
took &#13;
that &#13;
they &#13;
need &#13;
guns.'' &#13;
Brinkman &#13;
said &#13;
that &#13;
most &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
problems &#13;
encountered &#13;
by &#13;
officers &#13;
come &#13;
from &#13;
outside &#13;
the &#13;
university. &#13;
"Our &#13;
l ast &#13;
arrest &#13;
was &#13;
a &#13;
non-student. &#13;
Thefts &#13;
are &#13;
the &#13;
biggest &#13;
problem &#13;
on &#13;
campus &#13;
but &#13;
even &#13;
those &#13;
have &#13;
gone &#13;
down &#13;
considerably. &#13;
I &#13;
wouldn't &#13;
trade &#13;
this &#13;
campus &#13;
with &#13;
any &#13;
other &#13;
campus. &#13;
In &#13;
the &#13;
14 &#13;
years &#13;
I've &#13;
been &#13;
here &#13;
we've &#13;
only &#13;
had &#13;
three &#13;
or &#13;
four &#13;
incidents &#13;
when &#13;
weapons &#13;
were &#13;
in­&#13;
volved." &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
Officers &#13;
without &#13;
guns, &#13;
according &#13;
to &#13;
Brinkman. &#13;
may &#13;
be &#13;
more &#13;
apt &#13;
to &#13;
calm &#13;
a &#13;
situation &#13;
down. &#13;
Brinkman &#13;
stressed &#13;
that &#13;
guns &#13;
are &#13;
only &#13;
a &#13;
tool &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
trade. &#13;
One &#13;
tool &#13;
available &#13;
to &#13;
Parkside &#13;
officers &#13;
is &#13;
a &#13;
large &#13;
baton &#13;
called &#13;
a &#13;
PR &#13;
24. &#13;
which &#13;
Brinkman &#13;
feels &#13;
may &#13;
be &#13;
a &#13;
more &#13;
ef­&#13;
fective &#13;
tool &#13;
than &#13;
a &#13;
firearm &#13;
in &#13;
many &#13;
situations. &#13;
If &#13;
a &#13;
dangerous &#13;
situation &#13;
is &#13;
un­&#13;
avoidable. &#13;
Brinkman &#13;
said &#13;
any &#13;
offic­&#13;
er &#13;
who &#13;
is &#13;
alone &#13;
should &#13;
back &#13;
off &#13;
and &#13;
call &#13;
in &#13;
reinforcements. &#13;
"We &#13;
don't &#13;
want &#13;
any &#13;
dead &#13;
heros." &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
Other &#13;
campus &#13;
police &#13;
officers &#13;
should &#13;
be &#13;
called &#13;
in &#13;
and. &#13;
depending &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
situation, &#13;
the &#13;
Kenosha &#13;
Sherrifs' &#13;
De­&#13;
partment &#13;
can &#13;
assist. &#13;
Parkside's &#13;
third &#13;
shift &#13;
officer &#13;
works &#13;
alone &#13;
with­&#13;
out &#13;
a &#13;
dispatch &#13;
person, &#13;
and &#13;
on &#13;
week­&#13;
ends &#13;
four &#13;
sworn &#13;
student &#13;
officers &#13;
are &#13;
on &#13;
duty. &#13;
Campus &#13;
Security &#13;
is &#13;
under &#13;
the &#13;
authority &#13;
of &#13;
Gary &#13;
Goetz. &#13;
assistant &#13;
chancellor. &#13;
Goetz &#13;
is &#13;
against &#13;
Secu­&#13;
rity &#13;
officers &#13;
carrying &#13;
guns. &#13;
"In &#13;
this &#13;
environment &#13;
guns &#13;
are &#13;
not &#13;
appropri­&#13;
ate. &#13;
Weapons &#13;
breed &#13;
violence, &#13;
tragic &#13;
violence, &#13;
and &#13;
that's &#13;
not &#13;
what &#13;
we're &#13;
about. &#13;
It &#13;
is &#13;
a &#13;
challenge &#13;
to &#13;
officers &#13;
to &#13;
consider &#13;
other &#13;
methods &#13;
first &#13;
be­&#13;
fore &#13;
using &#13;
weapons. &#13;
If &#13;
a &#13;
violent &#13;
sit­&#13;
uation &#13;
occurs, &#13;
then &#13;
officers &#13;
should &#13;
be &#13;
sure &#13;
there &#13;
is &#13;
back-up &#13;
support &#13;
be­&#13;
fore &#13;
approaching &#13;
a &#13;
situation &#13;
where &#13;
weapons &#13;
are &#13;
required. &#13;
But &#13;
on &#13;
a &#13;
day-to-day &#13;
basis &#13;
we &#13;
have &#13;
the &#13;
kind &#13;
of &#13;
students &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
kind &#13;
of &#13;
environ­&#13;
ment &#13;
in &#13;
which &#13;
I &#13;
find &#13;
having &#13;
people &#13;
walking &#13;
around &#13;
with &#13;
guns &#13;
in &#13;
their &#13;
pocket &#13;
is &#13;
inappropriate." &#13;
said &#13;
Goetz. &#13;
Chancellor &#13;
Alan &#13;
Guskin &#13;
is &#13;
also &#13;
against &#13;
security &#13;
officers &#13;
carrying &#13;
guns &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
building. &#13;
He &#13;
feels &#13;
that &#13;
if &#13;
a &#13;
shot &#13;
is &#13;
fired &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
building &#13;
bul­&#13;
lets &#13;
might &#13;
ricochet &#13;
off &#13;
the &#13;
walls &#13;
Students &#13;
busting &#13;
out &#13;
all &#13;
over &#13;
After &#13;
a &#13;
winter &#13;
of &#13;
discontent, &#13;
stu­&#13;
dents &#13;
are &#13;
taking &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
streets &#13;
in &#13;
protest. &#13;
While &#13;
the &#13;
big &#13;
issue &#13;
is &#13;
South &#13;
Afri­&#13;
can &#13;
divestment, &#13;
there &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
a &#13;
number &#13;
of &#13;
protests &#13;
on &#13;
other &#13;
issues. &#13;
• &#13;
Tuition &#13;
— &#13;
In &#13;
Texas, &#13;
nearly &#13;
3,000 &#13;
students &#13;
marched &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
state &#13;
capitol &#13;
to &#13;
protest &#13;
a &#13;
proposed &#13;
tuition &#13;
increase. &#13;
• &#13;
Nuclear &#13;
Weapons &#13;
— &#13;
Yale &#13;
Divinity &#13;
School &#13;
students &#13;
blocked &#13;
access &#13;
to &#13;
a &#13;
General &#13;
Dynamics &#13;
nu­&#13;
clear &#13;
submarine &#13;
plant &#13;
by &#13;
barricad­&#13;
ing &#13;
themselves &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
stairway. &#13;
Eleven &#13;
were &#13;
arrested. &#13;
• &#13;
Financial &#13;
Aid &#13;
— &#13;
Tw o &#13;
rallies &#13;
at &#13;
if &#13;
ale &#13;
protesting &#13;
Reagan's &#13;
proposed &#13;
:uts &#13;
in &#13;
financial &#13;
aid &#13;
drew &#13;
more &#13;
-han &#13;
1,500 &#13;
students. &#13;
• &#13;
Drinking &#13;
Age &#13;
— &#13;
About &#13;
1,000 &#13;
State &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
New &#13;
York &#13;
stu­&#13;
dents &#13;
rallied &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
state &#13;
capitol &#13;
in &#13;
opposition &#13;
to &#13;
raising &#13;
the &#13;
drinking &#13;
age &#13;
to &#13;
21. &#13;
• &#13;
Racism &#13;
— &#13;
At &#13;
the &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Pennsylvania, &#13;
600 &#13;
students &#13;
rallied &#13;
to &#13;
protest &#13;
what &#13;
they &#13;
called &#13;
the &#13;
school's &#13;
racist &#13;
hiring &#13;
practices &#13;
and &#13;
a &#13;
campus &#13;
atmosphere &#13;
of &#13;
racial &#13;
in­&#13;
tolerance. &#13;
PARKSIDE &#13;
FOOD &#13;
SERVICE &#13;
Announces &#13;
STUDY &#13;
BREAK &#13;
COFFEE &#13;
SPECIAL &#13;
Mon., &#13;
May &#13;
13 &#13;
Thru &#13;
Final &#13;
Exams &#13;
WLLC &#13;
C offee &#13;
Shoppe &#13;
Buy &#13;
a &#13;
Cup &#13;
of &#13;
Coffee &#13;
Get &#13;
a &#13;
Coupon &#13;
Good &#13;
For &#13;
A &#13;
Second &#13;
Cup &#13;
of &#13;
The &#13;
Same &#13;
Size &#13;
FREE! &#13;
GOOD &#13;
LUCK &#13;
WITH &#13;
EXAMS &#13;
and &#13;
injure &#13;
innocent &#13;
people. &#13;
When &#13;
asked &#13;
if &#13;
he &#13;
will &#13;
request &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
new &#13;
Chancellor, &#13;
when &#13;
one &#13;
is &#13;
named, &#13;
that  officers  be &#13;
given &#13;
guns &#13;
on &#13;
a &#13;
full-time &#13;
basis. &#13;
Brinkman &#13;
said. &#13;
" &#13;
Yes. &#13;
I &#13;
will &#13;
always &#13;
request &#13;
guns. &#13;
9 &#13;
Dave &#13;
McEvoy &#13;
"With &#13;
the &#13;
staff &#13;
I &#13;
have &#13;
now &#13;
I &#13;
would &#13;
have &#13;
no &#13;
qualms &#13;
about &#13;
them &#13;
carrying &#13;
firearms &#13;
all &#13;
the &#13;
time. &#13;
My &#13;
officers &#13;
are &#13;
well-trained &#13;
and &#13;
can &#13;
handle &#13;
their &#13;
weapons." &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
Continued &#13;
on &#13;
Page &#13;
15 &#13;
• &#13;
CIA &#13;
Recruiting &#13;
— &#13;
More &#13;
than &#13;
400 &#13;
a rrests &#13;
were &#13;
made &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
Uni­&#13;
versity &#13;
of &#13;
Colorado-Boulder. &#13;
And &#13;
in &#13;
Madison, &#13;
campus &#13;
police &#13;
used &#13;
chemical &#13;
mace &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
first &#13;
time &#13;
in &#13;
five &#13;
years &#13;
to &#13;
prevent &#13;
200 &#13;
students &#13;
from &#13;
making &#13;
a &#13;
citizens' &#13;
arrest &#13;
of &#13;
a &#13;
CIA &#13;
recruiter. &#13;
• &#13;
Student &#13;
Power &#13;
— &#13;
At &#13;
the &#13;
Uni­&#13;
versity &#13;
of &#13;
M assachusetts, &#13;
more &#13;
than &#13;
200 &#13;
st udents &#13;
rallied &#13;
outside &#13;
the &#13;
ad­&#13;
ministration &#13;
building &#13;
in &#13;
support &#13;
of &#13;
25 &#13;
students &#13;
who &#13;
were &#13;
staging &#13;
a &#13;
four-day &#13;
sit-in &#13;
in- &#13;
protest &#13;
of &#13;
a &#13;
pro­&#13;
posed &#13;
fee &#13;
increase &#13;
and &#13;
an &#13;
end &#13;
to &#13;
student &#13;
control &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
Campus &#13;
Cen­&#13;
ter &#13;
Student &#13;
Union. &#13;
• &#13;
Central &#13;
America &#13;
— &#13;
More &#13;
than &#13;
2,600 &#13;
Duke &#13;
University &#13;
students &#13;
indi­&#13;
cated &#13;
in &#13;
a  student &#13;
referendum &#13;
that &#13;
they &#13;
would &#13;
boycott &#13;
classes &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
event &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
U.S. &#13;
military escalation &#13;
in &#13;
Nicaragua. &#13;
•Students &#13;
asked &#13;
about &#13;
guns— &#13;
by &#13;
Patrick &#13;
Zirkelbach &#13;
The &#13;
question &#13;
posed &#13;
to &#13;
students &#13;
at &#13;
Parkside &#13;
this &#13;
week &#13;
was &#13;
a &#13;
con­&#13;
troversial &#13;
one: &#13;
What &#13;
would &#13;
you &#13;
think &#13;
if &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Security &#13;
Police &#13;
started &#13;
carrying &#13;
handguns? &#13;
"I &#13;
don't &#13;
believe &#13;
in &#13;
guns. &#13;
They're &#13;
not &#13;
necessary, &#13;
and &#13;
I &#13;
don't &#13;
advocate &#13;
their &#13;
use." &#13;
— &#13;
Sh awn &#13;
Falduto &#13;
"The &#13;
campus &#13;
police &#13;
at &#13;
UW-M &#13;
d o &#13;
have &#13;
handguns, &#13;
but &#13;
they &#13;
have &#13;
more &#13;
problems &#13;
there. &#13;
I &#13;
don't &#13;
know &#13;
if &#13;
guns &#13;
are &#13;
the &#13;
answer." &#13;
— &#13;
Bob &#13;
Dunke, &#13;
a  student &#13;
at &#13;
UW-M &#13;
"Handguns &#13;
are &#13;
not &#13;
necessary. &#13;
Not &#13;
at &#13;
Parkside." &#13;
— &#13;
D enise &#13;
Fisch­&#13;
er &#13;
"It &#13;
really &#13;
wouldn't &#13;
bother &#13;
me &#13;
if &#13;
they &#13;
did." &#13;
— &#13;
J ames &#13;
Catel &#13;
"I &#13;
think &#13;
that &#13;
they &#13;
are &#13;
not &#13;
neces­&#13;
sary. &#13;
There &#13;
is &#13;
no &#13;
violence &#13;
at &#13;
Parksi­&#13;
de, &#13;
no &#13;
rapes. &#13;
At &#13;
best &#13;
it &#13;
seems &#13;
like &#13;
the &#13;
police &#13;
are &#13;
looking &#13;
for &#13;
things &#13;
to &#13;
do." &#13;
— &#13;
V ickie &#13;
Scherr &#13;
"I'd &#13;
rather &#13;
see &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
officers &#13;
would &#13;
have &#13;
an &#13;
option &#13;
of &#13;
whether &#13;
to &#13;
carry  guns &#13;
or &#13;
not, &#13;
but &#13;
not &#13;
to &#13;
make &#13;
it &#13;
mandatory." &#13;
— &#13;
Diane &#13;
Tuinstra &#13;
"Guns &#13;
could &#13;
be &#13;
necessary &#13;
at &#13;
times. &#13;
It &#13;
really &#13;
doesn't &#13;
matter &#13;
to &#13;
me." &#13;
— &#13;
C harles &#13;
Berry &#13;
"If &#13;
they &#13;
did &#13;
start &#13;
carrying &#13;
guns, &#13;
I &#13;
don't &#13;
see &#13;
it &#13;
as &#13;
a &#13;
problem, &#13;
but &#13;
it &#13;
is &#13;
really &#13;
not &#13;
necessary." &#13;
— &#13;
G retchen &#13;
Katt &#13;
Honor &#13;
Council &#13;
held &#13;
in &#13;
Berrien &#13;
Springs &#13;
One &#13;
faculty &#13;
member,  Dr. &#13;
Beecham &#13;
Robinson, &#13;
and &#13;
one &#13;
honors &#13;
student, &#13;
Amy &#13;
Heck, &#13;
represented &#13;
Parkside &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
Annual &#13;
Upper &#13;
Mid­&#13;
west &#13;
Honors &#13;
Council, &#13;
held &#13;
this &#13;
year &#13;
at &#13;
Andrews &#13;
University &#13;
in &#13;
Berien &#13;
Springs, &#13;
Michigan, &#13;
April &#13;
11 &#13;
and &#13;
12. &#13;
The &#13;
theme &#13;
of &#13;
this &#13;
year's &#13;
council &#13;
was &#13;
"Freedom &#13;
and &#13;
Morality." &#13;
Nu­&#13;
merous &#13;
workshops &#13;
were &#13;
presented &#13;
by &#13;
faculty &#13;
and &#13;
student &#13;
representa-&#13;
Send &#13;
Your &#13;
Love &#13;
to &#13;
Your &#13;
Special &#13;
Mother &#13;
with &#13;
lTU«0en£!!!&#13;
S &#13;
SINCE &#13;
1 908 &#13;
637-6558 &#13;
219 &#13;
Sixth &#13;
Street &#13;
• &#13;
Downtown &#13;
Racine &#13;
tives &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
thirty &#13;
colleges &#13;
and &#13;
universities &#13;
attending, &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
to­&#13;
pics &#13;
ranged &#13;
from &#13;
morality &#13;
and &#13;
cen­&#13;
sorship &#13;
to &#13;
ethics &#13;
in &#13;
medicine. &#13;
Of &#13;
particular &#13;
interest &#13;
to &#13;
dele­&#13;
gates &#13;
was &#13;
an &#13;
address &#13;
by &#13;
Dr. &#13;
Jack &#13;
Provansha, &#13;
professor &#13;
for &#13;
Christian &#13;
Ethics &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
director &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
Cen­&#13;
ter &#13;
of &#13;
Christian &#13;
Ethics &#13;
at &#13;
Loma &#13;
Linda &#13;
(Calif.) &#13;
University, &#13;
entitled &#13;
"Whose &#13;
Life &#13;
Is  It &#13;
Anyway?" &#13;
Dr. &#13;
Provansha &#13;
was &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
Board &#13;
of &#13;
Ethics &#13;
concerning &#13;
the &#13;
Baby &#13;
Fae &#13;
case &#13;
and  shared &#13;
his &#13;
views &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
ethics &#13;
involved &#13;
in &#13;
this &#13;
controversy. &#13;
During &#13;
the &#13;
lYz &#13;
hour &#13;
address, &#13;
he &#13;
read &#13;
letters &#13;
from &#13;
the &#13;
public &#13;
ex­&#13;
pressing &#13;
positive &#13;
and &#13;
negative &#13;
views &#13;
regarding &#13;
the &#13;
decision &#13;
to &#13;
transplant &#13;
a &#13;
baboon's &#13;
heart, &#13;
de­&#13;
scribed &#13;
Baby &#13;
Fae's &#13;
situation &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
process &#13;
of &#13;
choosing &#13;
the &#13;
ba­&#13;
boon's &#13;
heart &#13;
and &#13;
unhesitatingly &#13;
confirmed &#13;
his &#13;
belief &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
trans­&#13;
plant &#13;
was &#13;
indeed &#13;
appropriate. &#13;
At &#13;
the &#13;
state &#13;
caucuses, &#13;
Robinson &#13;
was &#13;
elected &#13;
faculty &#13;
representative &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
colleges &#13;
and &#13;
uni­&#13;
versities. &#13;
His &#13;
position, &#13;
which &#13;
he &#13;
will &#13;
hold &#13;
for &#13;
two &#13;
years, &#13;
will &#13;
take &#13;
him &#13;
next &#13;
year &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
National &#13;
Ho­&#13;
nors &#13;
Council &#13;
in &#13;
Salt &#13;
Lake &#13;
City &#13;
and &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
Upper &#13;
Midwest &#13;
Honors &#13;
. &#13;
CoundJ- &#13;
jq &#13;
Normal, &#13;
111 &#13;
\ &#13;
,',7.7. &#13;
</text>
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              <text>State debates lottery</text>
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              <text>'Green&#13;
Bay&#13;
defeated&#13;
Page   16&#13;
Chorale&#13;
needs   singers&#13;
Page   7&#13;
Ferraro's   son'&#13;
to&#13;
speak   on  Campus&#13;
Page&#13;
13&#13;
.&#13;
Photo   hy&#13;
McEvoy&#13;
Many   Wisconsm&#13;
residents&#13;
travel&#13;
to&#13;
IlliDois&#13;
to&#13;
purchase&#13;
lottery&#13;
tickets&#13;
which&#13;
they   hope&#13;
will  be&#13;
the&#13;
big&#13;
wiDDer,   BriDgiDg   a  lot·&#13;
tery&#13;
to&#13;
WiscoDsiD&#13;
is  currently&#13;
under&#13;
debate.&#13;
Peer  Support's   home&#13;
office   over   there   duriDg  the   day,&#13;
I&#13;
think&#13;
they'll   become   greatli    visible&#13;
and&#13;
I&#13;
think&#13;
students&#13;
will&#13;
re4IIY&#13;
start&#13;
to&#13;
use&#13;
the  services   they  oftr&#13;
more&#13;
often."&#13;
r ~&#13;
Assistant&#13;
ChaDcellor&#13;
GalW&#13;
Goelz&#13;
gave    his    fiDal   approval&#13;
lior    the&#13;
group   to  occupy&#13;
the&#13;
office   duriDg&#13;
the  day  on  Friday.&#13;
Peer   Support&#13;
sees&#13;
the  move   as  a&#13;
very   positive   one.   Laverne&#13;
Christi-&#13;
anson,&#13;
Peer&#13;
Support's&#13;
President,&#13;
esplained&#13;
that   the   office   wouldn't&#13;
take   them   far  away  from   the  Com-&#13;
munity   Student   Service  Offices,  and&#13;
yet   it  would   bring   them&#13;
closer&#13;
to&#13;
the   students,&#13;
and   much   more   visi-&#13;
ble  to  the  rest  of  the  campus.   Chris-&#13;
tianson&#13;
also&#13;
said   that   without    the&#13;
help  of  Peer   Support's    advisor   and&#13;
the   generous&#13;
approval&#13;
from&#13;
Gary&#13;
Goetz,&#13;
the    group&#13;
might&#13;
still    be&#13;
looking.&#13;
The  newest   organization&#13;
on  cam-&#13;
pus,&#13;
which   had&#13;
been searching&#13;
for&#13;
SOIDelime  for  a  "bome   "&#13;
bas&#13;
found&#13;
a  temporary    'place&#13;
to'   stay.    Peer&#13;
Support,   a  group   designed    to  help&#13;
non-traditional&#13;
students&#13;
and&#13;
re-&#13;
entry    students&#13;
make&#13;
a   smooth&#13;
transition&#13;
back&#13;
into    classes&#13;
had&#13;
heeo&#13;
removed   from   their   office   in&#13;
August.  Now  they   have&#13;
been&#13;
given&#13;
permission   to&#13;
use&#13;
office   space    in&#13;
lbe   WLLC   coffeesbop&#13;
area&#13;
until&#13;
belter&#13;
arrangements&#13;
can&#13;
be  made.&#13;
The office&#13;
is&#13;
currently    being&#13;
used&#13;
at   night    to   house&#13;
the    custodial&#13;
supervisor&#13;
in&#13;
a central   area.   The  of-&#13;
fice's    only   being&#13;
used&#13;
at    night&#13;
seemed to  be  "rather   wasted&#13;
space,"    according&#13;
to   Jennie&#13;
Tun-&#13;
kieicz,&#13;
the  Ranger   Editor.&#13;
"People&#13;
know  where   we&#13;
are&#13;
(Ranger),    and&#13;
that's    only&#13;
because&#13;
everyone&#13;
sits&#13;
down   out   there    for   something&#13;
or&#13;
other.&#13;
H&#13;
Peer   Support&#13;
can  use&#13;
that&#13;
Homecoming   time  nears&#13;
by&#13;
W..&#13;
McCarver&#13;
Just    when    you   tho~ght&#13;
things&#13;
were&#13;
winding&#13;
down,   Homecoming&#13;
is&#13;
staring   you   right    in   the    face.&#13;
Homecoming&#13;
will&#13;
be  held&#13;
OCt.&#13;
11,&#13;
12&#13;
and&#13;
13&#13;
and&#13;
will&#13;
be   so   action-&#13;
packed   that   when   asked   why&#13;
the&#13;
event&#13;
took&#13;
all  of&#13;
three&#13;
days    Mike&#13;
Dry,&#13;
chairman&#13;
of  the   H~ming&#13;
committee   replied,    "There&#13;
was&#13;
some  debate   about   lenghtening&#13;
it."&#13;
Aside  from   having   a  great   ·time,&#13;
there&#13;
will&#13;
also&#13;
be  some  educational&#13;
benefits.  Homecoming   isn't   just&#13;
an-&#13;
other&#13;
party,&#13;
it's  a wortb-wbiIe&#13;
espe-&#13;
nonce.&#13;
Walking&#13;
down&#13;
the&#13;
balls,&#13;
you&#13;
may&#13;
~ve   noticed   many&#13;
posters&#13;
indIcat-&#13;
UIll the&#13;
beginning&#13;
of&#13;
this&#13;
auspicious&#13;
occasion   as&#13;
OCt.&#13;
11,  but   there&#13;
are&#13;
many&#13;
things&#13;
that&#13;
will&#13;
take  place  be-&#13;
fore   the    event.&#13;
Balloting&#13;
for   the&#13;
King  and  Queen   begins&#13;
OCt.&#13;
3,&#13;
and&#13;
for  those  who&#13;
are&#13;
interested,&#13;
dance&#13;
lessons&#13;
will&#13;
be  held&#13;
OCt.&#13;
1.&#13;
..  The    first&#13;
actual&#13;
Homecoming&#13;
event&#13;
is&#13;
the   Coronation&#13;
Ceremony&#13;
on  Thursday,&#13;
OCt.&#13;
11  at  5  p.m.   in&#13;
the  Union  Dining  Room.&#13;
An&#13;
assort-&#13;
ment    of   food   featuring&#13;
"celebrity&#13;
sauces"&#13;
will&#13;
be&#13;
served&#13;
duriDg&#13;
the&#13;
ceremony.&#13;
After&#13;
the&#13;
Coronation,&#13;
the&#13;
TIme&#13;
CapsuIe&#13;
event&#13;
will&#13;
take   place.&#13;
'lbe&#13;
committee&#13;
is&#13;
askinll&#13;
clubs   and   or-&#13;
Contbiued    on  Page   6&#13;
people   to  gamble   in  illegal,&#13;
casino-&#13;
type&#13;
games.  "For  me  it's  a&#13;
fun&#13;
thing,"&#13;
she&#13;
said.&#13;
Assemblyman&#13;
Ron&#13;
Sell&#13;
(D-CaJe.&#13;
donia)   said,   however,    that   the   lot-&#13;
tery&#13;
"fosters    the  idea  that   you  can&#13;
get  something   for  nothing."&#13;
Sell&#13;
said  that&#13;
when&#13;
be&#13;
was&#13;
a  pas-&#13;
tor  he  dealt   with  people&#13;
who&#13;
were&#13;
compulsive   gamblers,   and  that  hav-&#13;
ing a state-run   lottery   would  be  like&#13;
approving   what   be&#13;
caIIed&#13;
"a  mind-&#13;
set&#13;
about   gambling."&#13;
"I&#13;
think&#13;
the&#13;
biggest&#13;
culprit is&#13;
the&#13;
lottery,"    he&#13;
also&#13;
stated.&#13;
He&#13;
also&#13;
said    the    lottery&#13;
is&#13;
a&#13;
regressive&#13;
tax,&#13;
and&#13;
that   it&#13;
will&#13;
not&#13;
make   a  significant&#13;
impact&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
state   budget.&#13;
While   be  said&#13;
the&#13;
social&#13;
impact&#13;
of  a  lottery   would   be  mostly&#13;
nega-&#13;
tive,  he&#13;
said&#13;
be  had  constituents    on&#13;
both&#13;
sides&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
issue.&#13;
"I&#13;
really&#13;
sense&#13;
people&#13;
lru\y&#13;
on&#13;
both  sides   of&#13;
the&#13;
lottery,"&#13;
be  said.&#13;
"It's&#13;
definitely   a  mixed   bag."&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
SeV}iii••&#13;
2.7._19.8.4&#13;
...;U;,;m;,;·v,;ers;i~ty;.;o;f.;W;;.:is;c;on::.:s:in:;:.P~ar~ksi=·d:.e&#13;
...:V~o;:,;1.~1~3::.,~N:o;..:,.4&#13;
State  debates&#13;
lottery&#13;
and   hingo   for   cbarilable&#13;
organiza-&#13;
tions,"said   LaFollette.    Hit's   like&#13;
being&#13;
'a  little   bit   pregnant'&#13;
to  say&#13;
we  shouldn't    have  a  lottery."&#13;
Michael&#13;
Youngman,&#13;
an   aide   to&#13;
Assembly   speaker   Tom  Loftus,   said&#13;
that    while   Loftus&#13;
personally&#13;
op-&#13;
poses&#13;
a  lottery,   be&#13;
will&#13;
not&#13;
use&#13;
his&#13;
power&#13;
as&#13;
speaker   to  hlock  its&#13;
passa-&#13;
ge.&#13;
Loftus&#13;
told  interviewers   last&#13;
week   the  assembly   would&#13;
pass&#13;
the&#13;
measure  "over  my&#13;
dead&#13;
body."&#13;
While  the  lottery&#13;
is&#13;
still&#13;
being&#13;
de-&#13;
hated    in  Madison,    the   number&#13;
of&#13;
Wisconsinites&#13;
who&#13;
travel   to&#13;
D1inois&#13;
is&#13;
increasing.&#13;
Dorothy&#13;
Ruffalo,&#13;
of   Kenosha,&#13;
said  there&#13;
bas&#13;
been&#13;
an  increase    in&#13;
the  number   of players&#13;
she&#13;
bas&#13;
seen.&#13;
"All   my&#13;
friends&#13;
play   it,"&#13;
she&#13;
said.&#13;
When&#13;
asked&#13;
if&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
should   have  its  own  lottery,&#13;
she&#13;
re-&#13;
plied:   "Absolutely,"&#13;
But   she   said   the   lottery&#13;
wouId&#13;
not,    as   some    claim,&#13;
lead    more&#13;
great   step   for  students    in  the&#13;
sys-&#13;
tem    to   be   heard.&#13;
Tunks&#13;
briefly&#13;
talked&#13;
about   the   budgeting&#13;
short-&#13;
fall,&#13;
esplaining&#13;
that    Pat&#13;
Hensiak,&#13;
SUF AC  chairperson,&#13;
would   further&#13;
point   out   the   options   that&#13;
can&#13;
be&#13;
taken.&#13;
Carla   Thomas&#13;
was&#13;
appointed    by&#13;
Tunks   as   a  justice    for&#13;
the&#13;
PSGA.&#13;
Thomas&#13;
bas&#13;
been&#13;
active  on&#13;
campus&#13;
for  several   years,   and  Tunks  stated&#13;
she&#13;
was&#13;
certain&#13;
'Jbomas    would&#13;
do&#13;
an   exceptional&#13;
job.    The    SeDate&#13;
voted   and  accepted    'Jbomas   to&#13;
the&#13;
position.&#13;
.&#13;
Dave&#13;
Higgins,&#13;
PSGA  representa-&#13;
tive   of   PUAB,   espIained&#13;
that    be&#13;
had&#13;
been&#13;
elected&#13;
to   the   seat   on&#13;
PUAB;   however,   a&#13;
time&#13;
"",cement&#13;
had&#13;
never&#13;
been&#13;
made,&#13;
therefore&#13;
be&#13;
felt  he&#13;
sbouId&#13;
reestabIisb    his  stand-&#13;
ing  with  PSGA  in&#13;
nogard&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
ap-&#13;
pointment.&#13;
Higgins&#13;
went&#13;
on&#13;
to&#13;
eI-&#13;
PSGA Senate&#13;
Fall  elections discussed&#13;
plain  he  had&#13;
just been&#13;
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with-&#13;
in&#13;
the    committee&#13;
as   the    Chair.&#13;
After&#13;
several    minutes&#13;
on&#13;
discus-&#13;
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gins   concerning&#13;
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way&#13;
Higgins&#13;
had   voted&#13;
on&#13;
certain&#13;
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last&#13;
year,&#13;
the&#13;
Senate    did   not&#13;
approve&#13;
him&#13;
as&#13;
the&#13;
official   representative.&#13;
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forth ..   espIanation&#13;
for  his&#13;
past&#13;
actions,   the  Senate&#13;
reconsider-&#13;
ed   their   position&#13;
and&#13;
reappointed&#13;
Higgins&#13;
to  the  seat.&#13;
After&#13;
discussion&#13;
of&#13;
other&#13;
issues,&#13;
including&#13;
instaIlation&#13;
of   outside&#13;
campus&#13;
emergency&#13;
pbones,   putting&#13;
wood&#13;
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the ""'"&#13;
gross&#13;
paths&#13;
around&#13;
campns,&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Paul   Jolmson&#13;
caIIed&#13;
011&#13;
HeDIiak&#13;
to&#13;
give&#13;
her&#13;
report&#13;
frcm&#13;
SUFAC.&#13;
Ben-&#13;
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the    bndget&#13;
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$35,000&#13;
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Continued   on  Page   10&#13;
United  Council open forum&#13;
by  Jalle   PeDdIeton&#13;
dent   lobby,   its   function&#13;
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sin;&#13;
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and  other&#13;
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rights   and&#13;
issues.&#13;
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and&#13;
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of   the&#13;
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of&#13;
by-laws,   "The&#13;
purpose&#13;
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promote&#13;
and&#13;
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the free&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Student&#13;
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Continued&#13;
OD&#13;
Page   1%&#13;
~--_.&#13;
hy  Boh  KIeslIng&#13;
Community    News  EdItor&#13;
The  controversey    over   a  Wiscon-&#13;
sin    slate-run&#13;
lottery&#13;
is   gaining&#13;
momentum.&#13;
Many   Wisconsinites,&#13;
proponents&#13;
say,  already   travel   across   the   bor-&#13;
der  to&#13;
Dlinois&#13;
to  play  their   lottery,&#13;
especially&#13;
since    the&#13;
$40&#13;
million&#13;
jackpot   several&#13;
weeks&#13;
ago.&#13;
Also,&#13;
the   revenue    generated&#13;
by&#13;
the   lottery&#13;
will&#13;
make&#13;
a  significant&#13;
positive&#13;
impact&#13;
in   state    revenue,&#13;
say  proponents.&#13;
Opponents   say  that  the  economic&#13;
impact&#13;
of   a   lottery&#13;
is&#13;
not   well&#13;
known,   and   that   estimates&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
revenue   generated   hy  a lottery&#13;
vary&#13;
widely,   between    less   than&#13;
$0&#13;
mil-&#13;
lion  to  more   than&#13;
$200&#13;
million.&#13;
Attorney&#13;
General&#13;
Bronson&#13;
La-&#13;
Follette&#13;
bas&#13;
said   the   lottery&#13;
will&#13;
provide&#13;
DO&#13;
problem&#13;
for   law&#13;
en-&#13;
forcement&#13;
officials   and   no  fnot   in&#13;
the  door  for&#13;
organized&#13;
crime.&#13;
"We've   already   approved    raffles&#13;
The   Parbide&#13;
Student&#13;
Govern-&#13;
ment   Association    (PSGA)   met&#13;
last&#13;
Friday   to&#13;
discuss&#13;
several   issues  that&#13;
could&#13;
affect&#13;
students   in  the&#13;
PaItsi-&#13;
de  community.&#13;
New  President    Terry  Tunks  gave&#13;
her   first   full  report   to  the   Senate,&#13;
remindiag&#13;
them   that   elections    for&#13;
student&#13;
Seuale   seats   and   the   stu-&#13;
dent-at-large    seats  for  PUAB&#13;
(Park-&#13;
side   Union    Advisory&#13;
Board)&#13;
and&#13;
SUFAC&#13;
(Segregated&#13;
University&#13;
Fees&#13;
Allocation&#13;
Committee)&#13;
are&#13;
coming&#13;
up.    She    encouraged&#13;
all&#13;
senators    to   help   interested&#13;
people&#13;
into  the  SeDate,  to  help  orient&#13;
them&#13;
and&#13;
to   build&#13;
the&#13;
SeDate   stronger&#13;
than&#13;
ever.&#13;
Tunks&#13;
also&#13;
mentioned&#13;
briefly&#13;
the&#13;
bill  for  the   students    to  gain  a  seat&#13;
on   the&#13;
UW-8yslem  Board&#13;
of&#13;
IU&gt;-&#13;
gents.   She   felt   the   seat&#13;
wouId&#13;
be&#13;
obtained&#13;
and&#13;
that    it&#13;
would&#13;
be   a&#13;
;&#13;
.&#13;
.,&#13;
.&#13;
INTERiOR  DEPT.&#13;
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01   the&#13;
students&#13;
said   they   supported&#13;
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28%&#13;
supported&#13;
Walter&#13;
Mondale.&#13;
11&#13;
one&#13;
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Walter&#13;
Mondale&#13;
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USA  Today   poll   bad   Reagan    lead-&#13;
ing&#13;
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22&#13;
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NBC&#13;
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trail-&#13;
byKMlDlna&#13;
Tbe&#13;
cuneol&#13;
presidential&#13;
race&#13;
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the    whole&#13;
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and&#13;
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factual&#13;
analysis.&#13;
The    current&#13;
attempt&#13;
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place&#13;
prayer  back  in&#13;
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public  schools&#13;
is&#13;
just&#13;
such&#13;
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issue.&#13;
The&#13;
Reagan   administration&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
Moral   Majority&#13;
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to   bave&#13;
some   support&#13;
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Handguns  are not  the  problem&#13;
To  the  Editor:&#13;
num~&#13;
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handguns&#13;
plays    little&#13;
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each  year.&#13;
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More&#13;
career&#13;
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ous   years.   Tbis   shows   lbat&#13;
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nals  are&#13;
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each&#13;
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53141.&#13;
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Letters to the edit&#13;
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tt&#13;
or&#13;
will be accepted  if typewritten.  doubltrspBced  on stenu&#13;
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words and must be signed. with e tele·&#13;
quest. Desdl:::":orul&#13;
ded&#13;
for. verificstion  purposes.  Nsmes  will be withheld upon&#13;
rt-&#13;
rflserves the right&#13;
t&#13;
ett~rs&#13;
IS&#13;
Tuesday  at&#13;
10&#13;
a.m. for publication  Thursday. Ranger&#13;
Content.&#13;
a edit letters and refuse letters containing  false snd d~em8tOIY&#13;
'"&#13;
';&#13;
.&#13;
in~    Reagan&#13;
by    a   whopping&#13;
30&#13;
pomts.   Why&#13;
does&#13;
Moodale&#13;
seem&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
in&#13;
so&#13;
much   trouble?&#13;
The   answer&#13;
is&#13;
not&#13;
easy.&#13;
It&#13;
does&#13;
seem,&#13;
however.&#13;
lbat&#13;
tbe&#13;
Reagan&#13;
and&#13;
his&#13;
lollowen&#13;
are&#13;
determined-to&#13;
win  re-election    on  a  plaUorm  01&#13;
de-&#13;
mocracy,&#13;
patriotism,&#13;
loyalty&#13;
and&#13;
morality.&#13;
The   Right,   true&#13;
to&#13;
lonn&#13;
manages&#13;
to   lal&lt;e  the&#13;
Democratk&#13;
stands   on  abortion&#13;
and&#13;
school&#13;
pIIy-&#13;
er  and&#13;
tum&#13;
them   into&#13;
immoral&#13;
and&#13;
anti-American&#13;
positions.   Then  th.&#13;
attention&#13;
is&#13;
lal&lt;en  away&#13;
from&#13;
the&#13;
real&#13;
social&#13;
issues,   like&#13;
the&#13;
deficit&#13;
the&#13;
military,&#13;
labor   unions&#13;
and   ~&#13;
POOr. while   the  Democrats   strugle&#13;
to&#13;
reassure&#13;
the&#13;
American&#13;
publie&#13;
that   they&#13;
are  as moral&#13;
and&#13;
Ameri·&#13;
can  as&#13;
the  Republicans.&#13;
The  Constitution    that  establislled&#13;
the   separation&#13;
01&#13;
church and&#13;
stale&#13;
Continued    on  Page  4&#13;
ing&#13;
up.&#13;
Any    general&#13;
awareness&#13;
wouJ&lt;l&#13;
come   from   safety&#13;
dasseS&#13;
tat..&#13;
by&#13;
handgun&#13;
ownen.    The  grealestlhre-&#13;
at   of&#13;
handgun&#13;
probibition&#13;
in&#13;
19!3&#13;
would   bave  come&#13;
from&#13;
the&#13;
passage&#13;
of&#13;
a&#13;
lew&#13;
Ioca1&#13;
waiti"l&#13;
periods&#13;
Oft&#13;
the   purchase    01&#13;
handguns.&#13;
In&#13;
addi-&#13;
tion,   laws&#13;
requiring&#13;
a&#13;
gun&#13;
in&#13;
everY&#13;
home&#13;
were&#13;
also&#13;
passed.&#13;
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              <text>Zaccaro campaigns for Mom</text>
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              <text>,&#13;
......&#13;
Homecoming&#13;
candidates&#13;
PageS&#13;
.Thursday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
4,  1984&#13;
Morey&#13;
Amsterdam&#13;
Page 1&#13;
.&#13;
,&#13;
Intramurals&#13;
disputed&#13;
PagelZ&#13;
Vol.  13, No.&#13;
I)&#13;
Zaccaro  campaigns   for Mom&#13;
Zaccaro&#13;
maintained&#13;
that   in  na-&#13;
tional  elections  Democrats  are  tra-&#13;
ditionally slow&#13;
starters&#13;
and&#13;
that  lbe&#13;
gap&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
polls&#13;
is&#13;
lessmng.   uRon.&#13;
aid&#13;
Reagan&#13;
is&#13;
no&#13;
mainstream&#13;
He-.&#13;
publican,"&#13;
he   said.&#13;
If&#13;
He&#13;
is&#13;
a  mem-&#13;
ber  of lbe  radical  right&#13;
"The  problem  wilb  Ronald&#13;
Rea-&#13;
gaD&#13;
is&#13;
very   simple:   be   does   not&#13;
know  what  be&#13;
is&#13;
doing."   Zaccaro&#13;
continued,&#13;
"I&#13;
don't&#13;
know&#13;
what&#13;
else&#13;
be  doesn't  know,  but&#13;
I&#13;
don't  want&#13;
to wake up one night and&#13;
find&#13;
out."&#13;
Zaccaro  said that&#13;
if&#13;
e1eeted&#13;
Moo-&#13;
dale  and  Ferraro   would  attempt   to&#13;
negotiate   a  nuclear   freeze&#13;
during&#13;
lbe&#13;
first   six&#13;
weeks&#13;
in  office.  "Wai-&#13;
ter   Mondale  told  a  group   of&#13;
vet-&#13;
erans&#13;
a  couple  of&#13;
weeks&#13;
ago&#13;
that&#13;
every  day we are  without  a nuclear&#13;
lies that  earn&#13;
$25.~,OOO&#13;
would&#13;
freeze&#13;
is&#13;
a day that&#13;
we&#13;
move&#13;
c:looer&#13;
bave an increase  of&#13;
'100.&#13;
and&#13;
tbooe&#13;
10&#13;
Armageddon,"   be&#13;
said.&#13;
"If&#13;
Ron-&#13;
that  earn  above&#13;
f60.000  would&#13;
bave&#13;
aid&#13;
Reagan&#13;
is&#13;
eleeted.&#13;
we&#13;
can  for-&#13;
a&#13;
higher&#13;
increase.&#13;
"There&#13;
would&#13;
let&#13;
the&#13;
freeze&#13;
until&#13;
at  least&#13;
1990."&#13;
also&#13;
be   a   slJl'Cbarle  on   corpora-&#13;
Zaccaro&#13;
outlined    lbe   Mondale&#13;
tions.&#13;
and&#13;
more&#13;
of   the&#13;
loopholes&#13;
plan   for   increasing&#13;
lues.&#13;
Those&#13;
would be&#13;
closed."    be  said.&#13;
"1bis&#13;
is&#13;
families   that&#13;
earn&#13;
UDder&#13;
$25,~&#13;
necessary   because&#13;
lbe  government&#13;
would  not  be&#13;
affeeted.&#13;
Those&#13;
fanis&#13;
t&#13;
Continued  on Page  3&#13;
Downtown Racine&#13;
t~&#13;
reborn&#13;
by&#13;
Karl&#13;
Dlxoa&#13;
The  administration&#13;
of   Walter&#13;
Mondale  and   Geraldine&#13;
Ferraro&#13;
will&#13;
utilize&#13;
all&#13;
diplomatic   alterna-&#13;
tives  in  foreign  policy  operations&#13;
and  .&#13;
adhere   to   lbe   separation    of&#13;
church&#13;
and state  provided  for in lbe&#13;
Constitution, said Jobo  Zaccaro Jr.,&#13;
son  of  vice-presidential   candidate&#13;
Geraldine&#13;
Ferraro,   when  be  spote&#13;
here&#13;
to  an  overfiow&#13;
crowd&#13;
on&#13;
Fri-&#13;
day  (Sept&#13;
28)&#13;
during   an  Intro   to&#13;
World Politics&#13;
class.&#13;
Zaccaro,&#13;
20.&#13;
graduated  from&#13;
Ch0-&#13;
ate,&#13;
and&#13;
is&#13;
a&#13;
junior&#13;
majoring  in&#13;
IJi5.&#13;
tory  at&#13;
Middlebury&#13;
CoDege,  Ver-&#13;
IDODt.He&#13;
bas&#13;
taken   lbe&#13;
semester&#13;
off&#13;
from&#13;
his&#13;
studies  to belp wilb&#13;
his&#13;
mother's  eampaip.&#13;
"I&#13;
lint&#13;
got&#13;
in-&#13;
volved in politics at lbe  age of&#13;
14&#13;
to&#13;
get&#13;
my&#13;
mother&#13;
out  of  the  bouse,"&#13;
be&#13;
joked  as  be&#13;
began&#13;
his   speech.&#13;
"Now&#13;
we&#13;
are&#13;
involved&#13;
in&#13;
an&#13;
JUs..&#13;
toric    campaiga&#13;
that   is&#13;
seeing&#13;
the&#13;
IiIst&#13;
woman&#13;
and&#13;
lbe&#13;
first    Italian&#13;
American&#13;
running&#13;
for lbe&#13;
yjce.pres-&#13;
idency."&#13;
by&#13;
Bob&#13;
KIes1Iall&#13;
Commaalty&#13;
News&#13;
EdItor&#13;
Downtown  Racine,    whicb&#13;
bas&#13;
been&#13;
in steady decline  for  lbe&#13;
last&#13;
decade,&#13;
is&#13;
bouncing&#13;
back.&#13;
The area's problems.&#13;
a'&#13;
refieclinn&#13;
of Racine's&#13;
general&#13;
economic&#13;
beal·&#13;
lb, are not unique to&#13;
the&#13;
city, which&#13;
like  many&#13;
midwestern&#13;
cities,&#13;
lost&#13;
bolb&#13;
jobs&#13;
and&#13;
manufacturers&#13;
during&#13;
lbe&#13;
last&#13;
decade.&#13;
EconOmic planners   in  bolb   lbe&#13;
pubUc&#13;
and&#13;
private   sectors.   how·&#13;
ever,&#13;
arecouating&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
d0wn-&#13;
town&#13;
area to&#13;
become&#13;
self-llUfficient,&#13;
and&#13;
they&#13;
are&#13;
p1analng to  do  it  wilb&#13;
~&#13;
iJld.ustry&#13;
that&#13;
is&#13;
mostly&#13;
unknown&#13;
In   midwestern&#13;
manufacturinl&#13;
towns   -&#13;
tourism.&#13;
RecogniJIag&#13;
that&#13;
the&#13;
city's&#13;
ec0n-&#13;
omy must  be  diversified.  planners&#13;
are  &lt;onating  on   Late    Micbillan.&#13;
naW  now&#13;
almost&#13;
untapped   as  an&#13;
~&#13;
.........,..&#13;
to&#13;
provide&#13;
lbe&#13;
1IDpelus&#13;
to&#13;
turn&#13;
Racine&#13;
into&#13;
kind&#13;
of&#13;
a&#13;
midwestem&#13;
Marina&#13;
del&#13;
Hey.&#13;
.&#13;
To&#13;
this&#13;
end,&#13;
lbe&#13;
Racine&#13;
common&#13;
&lt;ouncu&#13;
bas&#13;
spent  about&#13;
fl&#13;
mDlioa&#13;
to&#13;
PUIdIase&#13;
lbIrteen&#13;
acres&#13;
of&#13;
land&#13;
a10aB&#13;
the  latefront,&#13;
which&#13;
wiD&#13;
be&#13;
&lt;oavertedinto ----ts&#13;
and  con-&#13;
domiaiums.&#13;
--&#13;
Also.&#13;
the&#13;
Racine&#13;
Conaty&#13;
Boord&#13;
is&#13;
l!Ipecled&#13;
to&#13;
IpIO¥e&#13;
Iuada&#13;
within&#13;
the&#13;
Delt&#13;
Ie¥era1&#13;
IIIOIltba&#13;
to&#13;
dredge&#13;
the&#13;
harbor&#13;
and&#13;
baiJd&#13;
up&#13;
the&#13;
bieatwal-&#13;
..,~u.-.,Tbe&#13;
ho .......&#13;
which&#13;
1&amp;&#13;
DOW&#13;
~&#13;
-n&#13;
,,,&#13;
Jobo  Zaeearo.  Jr.&#13;
relatively&#13;
unjlrotected,&#13;
is  consider-&#13;
lbough  be  declined  to  pve   any de-&#13;
ed  one&#13;
of  the&#13;
area's&#13;
W4!Ilk&#13;
points.&#13;
tails.&#13;
"We're   looking  at   a   total&#13;
reo-&#13;
Gibson  said,  however,  it  would&#13;
rientation   of  Racine's   beart,"   said&#13;
take  some  lime  before&#13;
developers&#13;
Tom   Wright,&#13;
direcinr&#13;
of  Racine's&#13;
begin&#13;
to  take  a  largHcaie   interest&#13;
Department   of City&#13;
Developenient.&#13;
in lbe&#13;
latefront.&#13;
"I&#13;
don·tlbint    that&#13;
"We're   going  to  recreate   a  totally&#13;
you're  going to  see  a&#13;
developer&#13;
10&#13;
new  neiBbborbood  in  a  totally&#13;
new&#13;
in lbere  and&#13;
spend&#13;
much  money on&#13;
environment."&#13;
residences&#13;
until   he  sees   the   harbor&#13;
Amollll lbe  plans  to  create  what&#13;
developing as a recreational  boating&#13;
Wright&#13;
calls&#13;
"an  ambiance"   are  a&#13;
harbor&#13;
and&#13;
marina."&#13;
Wright said&#13;
it&#13;
causeway&#13;
and&#13;
part&#13;
aIollll&#13;
the&#13;
soulb&#13;
is  critical  that&#13;
the&#13;
downtown  area&#13;
breakwater.    a   mall   composed   of&#13;
develop   a   residential    population.&#13;
several&#13;
buildinls&#13;
alonl&#13;
Late&#13;
ralber&#13;
than&#13;
just&#13;
a&#13;
wottiDc&#13;
popula-&#13;
Avenue  and  a  convention  center  at&#13;
tioa.&#13;
because&#13;
in addition to creating&#13;
the&#13;
site  of  what  is  now&#13;
Berman-&#13;
a&#13;
sense&#13;
of community  there,&#13;
down-&#13;
Shaver&#13;
Chevrolet.&#13;
town  residents&#13;
would&#13;
spend&#13;
more&#13;
While&#13;
most&#13;
of.the&#13;
plans  are&#13;
sliD&#13;
money  lbere,   attracting   aew&#13;
busi-&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
future.  there&#13;
bas   been&#13;
about&#13;
ness.&#13;
'10&#13;
million  in private  investment  in&#13;
There·&#13;
are&#13;
also&#13;
plans.  said  Gil&gt;-&#13;
downtown  in&#13;
the&#13;
last&#13;
year.&#13;
mostly&#13;
son,&#13;
to   renovate&#13;
Mala&#13;
Street&#13;
to&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
renovation   of  old&#13;
buildinp&#13;
mate&#13;
it  more  &lt;omIortable  for&#13;
p0-&#13;
lite&#13;
the&#13;
D's&#13;
Club  and&#13;
the&#13;
Nelson&#13;
destrians.&#13;
The plan&#13;
calls&#13;
for&#13;
redo.,.&#13;
Hotel,   said&#13;
Robert&#13;
Gibson,&#13;
presi-&#13;
ing&#13;
traffie   lanes&#13;
to&#13;
one&#13;
in&#13;
each&#13;
di-&#13;
dent  of  lbe  Downtown  Racine&#13;
De-&#13;
reclion.  adding  a  median  strip&#13;
and&#13;
velopment  corporation.&#13;
widening  lbe&#13;
sldewalks.&#13;
"There   are  a  number   of&#13;
build-&#13;
Wright cautioned  that  it  may  be&#13;
inllS&#13;
downtown  that  are&#13;
being&#13;
1001&lt;-&#13;
a&#13;
decade&#13;
or more  before&#13;
the&#13;
down-&#13;
ed  at&#13;
now,&#13;
(and)&#13;
there  are  a&#13;
lot&#13;
of&#13;
town  area&#13;
begins&#13;
to&#13;
approach&#13;
plan-&#13;
smaller   retall    buildiap&#13;
that   are&#13;
ners'  current&#13;
vision.&#13;
He&#13;
said  _&#13;
being&#13;
sold and  rehabilitated.&#13;
If&#13;
you&#13;
involved  in&#13;
renovalinll&#13;
downtown&#13;
go  up&#13;
and&#13;
down&#13;
Mala&#13;
and&#13;
Sixlb&#13;
are    progressiall,&#13;
but    tbey    are&#13;
Streets.&#13;
vou'll  see&#13;
conlinuinll&#13;
wort&#13;
JlNCIessinll&#13;
deliberately.&#13;
done,"&#13;
Gibson&#13;
said.&#13;
"For&#13;
ISO&#13;
years  we&#13;
used&#13;
the&#13;
!a-&#13;
He&#13;
alao&#13;
said&#13;
at&#13;
leut&#13;
one&#13;
deveI-&#13;
.&#13;
tefroot&#13;
lite&#13;
a&#13;
domp,"&#13;
said&#13;
Wright&#13;
oper&#13;
1&amp;&#13;
Iaterelted&#13;
in&#13;
buI1diall&#13;
resI-&#13;
"If&#13;
it&#13;
takes&#13;
IA!n&#13;
or&#13;
fIfteeD&#13;
years&#13;
to&#13;
do&#13;
It,&#13;
10&#13;
be&#13;
It"&#13;
deaeel,&#13;
~OIIJ&#13;
~:~t,&#13;
al~...&#13;
Ualted&#13;
ConacD&#13;
President&#13;
Scott&#13;
Dacey&#13;
and&#13;
BrIan&#13;
Schimmlllll. LegIsla-&#13;
live&#13;
AIfatrs&#13;
DIrector.  came  to  P_e&#13;
Moaday  boping  to&#13;
regain&#13;
campas&#13;
support.&#13;
UC tries for&#13;
membership&#13;
by&#13;
JID&#13;
W1dlIIey&#13;
NleIoea&#13;
&lt;MOthers&#13;
Against&#13;
Drunk&#13;
Drivers)&#13;
is&#13;
Last&#13;
spring&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
PSGA&#13;
(Partsi-&#13;
be1ping&#13;
the&#13;
push&#13;
by&#13;
writing&#13;
letters&#13;
de   Student   Government&#13;
Assoca-&#13;
to   lbeir&#13;
Congressmen&#13;
and&#13;
pnbU·&#13;
tion)  elections&#13;
baI10t&#13;
there&#13;
was&#13;
a&#13;
cally speakinll in&#13;
Iavor&#13;
of  the&#13;
raised&#13;
referendum&#13;
asking&#13;
students  wbetb-&#13;
drinking&#13;
age.&#13;
The&#13;
only&#13;
ones&#13;
who&#13;
er  or  not  Pubide&#13;
sbould  resume&#13;
care&#13;
about  a lower&#13;
drinking&#13;
age&#13;
are&#13;
its  membership   in  Ualted&#13;
Council&#13;
bar&#13;
owners&#13;
and&#13;
students.&#13;
"So&#13;
if&#13;
we&#13;
(UCl, lbe&#13;
WISCOnsin&#13;
campuses'&#13;
1ob-&#13;
reaDy want  to  fight&#13;
Ibis,&#13;
we&#13;
need&#13;
bying force.  The referendum&#13;
failed&#13;
the&#13;
numbers.&#13;
which&#13;
means&#13;
we&#13;
need&#13;
pulling&#13;
Pubide&#13;
out&#13;
of&#13;
UC.&#13;
•&#13;
Pubide&#13;
badt   in  UC,"&#13;
said&#13;
Schi-&#13;
On&#13;
Monday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
1&#13;
UC's  Presi-&#13;
mrning.&#13;
dent&#13;
Scott   Dacey&#13;
and&#13;
LegIslative&#13;
Several&#13;
questions  were&#13;
raised&#13;
by&#13;
Affairs&#13;
Dlrector&#13;
BrIan&#13;
Schi"""illll&#13;
lbe  audience,  including lbe  propor-&#13;
spote  to  a&#13;
small&#13;
group&#13;
of&#13;
students&#13;
tion of votes per achool,&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
10-&#13;
about&#13;
Ibis&#13;
issue&#13;
and&#13;
about  UC.&#13;
catinn&#13;
of&#13;
all&#13;
the&#13;
meetings&#13;
at&#13;
Madi-&#13;
The&#13;
talk&#13;
began&#13;
wilb&#13;
Dacey&#13;
ez-&#13;
son.&#13;
Dacey&#13;
explained&#13;
that&#13;
not&#13;
all&#13;
paining&#13;
UC's&#13;
two&#13;
major  roles,  that&#13;
lbe  monthly&#13;
meetings&#13;
were  held  in&#13;
of a  lobbying force&#13;
and&#13;
a&#13;
networl&lt;-&#13;
Madison,&#13;
that&#13;
every&#13;
University&#13;
bad&#13;
ing&#13;
force,&#13;
and&#13;
his&#13;
role on lbe&#13;
Board&#13;
its&#13;
turn&#13;
to&#13;
host&#13;
a  UC&#13;
meeting    and&#13;
of&#13;
Regents.   "Right   now  I'm&#13;
the&#13;
lbe  yeaar!y&#13;
one&#13;
held&#13;
in&#13;
Madison&#13;
only&#13;
student   voice  on  lbe&#13;
Board.&#13;
was&#13;
not&#13;
boated&#13;
by&#13;
Madison&#13;
but  by&#13;
The   only   way   lbey   (lbe&#13;
Boord)&#13;
UC itself.&#13;
It&#13;
was&#13;
also  explained&#13;
that&#13;
know  lbe  mind  of&#13;
the&#13;
student   is&#13;
every  achool  is  allocated&#13;
one&#13;
vote&#13;
through&#13;
me."&#13;
per thousand  students.  so there&#13;
was&#13;
He&#13;
also&#13;
went  on  to&#13;
explain&#13;
the&#13;
no· way   Madison   could   create   a&#13;
different  offices on UC. "There's   a&#13;
block wilb&#13;
just&#13;
its&#13;
votes.&#13;
President,   Vice-President,&#13;
LegIsla-&#13;
There&#13;
was&#13;
also&#13;
a&#13;
question&#13;
raised&#13;
live&#13;
Affairs&#13;
Director.&#13;
Academic    AI-&#13;
as  to&#13;
who&#13;
asaIgns&#13;
the&#13;
schools'&#13;
dif-&#13;
fairs&#13;
Dlrector,   Executive&#13;
Director&#13;
forent&#13;
delaptes&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
rule&#13;
of&#13;
one&#13;
(in&#13;
charge&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
business&#13;
aspect&#13;
of&#13;
women/one&#13;
minority  de1apte   per&#13;
UC). Minority&#13;
Affairs&#13;
Director&#13;
and&#13;
scboo1.&#13;
Dacey&#13;
stated  that&#13;
it&#13;
is up to&#13;
Women's&#13;
AIfatrs&#13;
Director.'·&#13;
lbe   individual    school   who   lbey&#13;
Schi"""illll  spote   about  lbe&#13;
dif-&#13;
want&#13;
their&#13;
UC de1aptes   to  be  and&#13;
ferent  pieces  of legislation that  are&#13;
added   that&#13;
the&#13;
oae   woman/one&#13;
currently&#13;
being&#13;
worked&#13;
on  in  UC.&#13;
minority&#13;
rule&#13;
is not&#13;
considered&#13;
ger-&#13;
The  tuition&#13;
increases&#13;
are  a  major&#13;
mane&#13;
and&#13;
I&#13;
feel  that  it&#13;
was&#13;
Wl'ODll&#13;
concern  of  UC&#13;
and&#13;
all&#13;
achoois&#13;
in&#13;
to adopt it&#13;
according&#13;
to&#13;
ParlImenta-&#13;
lbe&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
University&#13;
system.&#13;
ry  Procedure.&#13;
Schimminll&#13;
explained&#13;
that  lbe&#13;
28%&#13;
.&#13;
Dacey&#13;
also&#13;
clarified&#13;
the&#13;
point  on&#13;
increses&#13;
were&#13;
doe to  an&#13;
increase&#13;
in&#13;
Scott&#13;
Bentley's&#13;
(past&#13;
UC&#13;
president&#13;
faeulty&#13;
salaries,&#13;
cost&#13;
of  living&#13;
and&#13;
who&#13;
was&#13;
impeached  from&#13;
office&#13;
for&#13;
ioDation.&#13;
But,  Schimming  pointed&#13;
misuse&#13;
of&#13;
UC&#13;
Iuada)&#13;
lIDl!IIIpIoyment&#13;
out,&#13;
"If&#13;
we&#13;
as&#13;
students&#13;
don't&#13;
do&#13;
com:-satlon,&#13;
staling&#13;
that  be  is no&#13;
sometbiDc&#13;
about  it.&#13;
it&#13;
could&#13;
go  to&#13;
longer&#13;
receiving&#13;
any.&#13;
33%."&#13;
Dacey&#13;
and  ScNmmillll&#13;
both&#13;
feel&#13;
Another&#13;
piece&#13;
of&#13;
legislation&#13;
is&#13;
the&#13;
that   this&#13;
visit&#13;
bas&#13;
be1ped&#13;
clarify&#13;
push&#13;
to raise&#13;
the&#13;
drlakiac&#13;
age&#13;
to&#13;
Zl.&#13;
quetioas&#13;
the&#13;
students&#13;
may&#13;
have&#13;
ScblmmJag&#13;
stated&#13;
that&#13;
MADD&#13;
bad.&#13;
.'&#13;
.&#13;
I  ,.&#13;
~..&#13;
"&#13;
~&#13;
•&#13;
YOU CAN\&#13;
r&#13;
CALL ME&#13;
WALTER&#13;
MOl'-lDALE .&#13;
(  OR  YOU CAN&#13;
CALL ME&#13;
FRITZ&#13;
MONDALE.&#13;
Letters tothe Editor&#13;
Intramurals need revision&#13;
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              <text>Theatre Children and Cubs&#13;
season communication duds?&#13;
w&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 11, 1984 University of Wisconsin-Parkside Vol. 13, No. 6&#13;
Faculty want equal&#13;
distribution of UW salaries&#13;
by Karl Dixon&#13;
Those faculty members present&#13;
last Tuesday afternoon at the first&#13;
all-faculty meeting since 1976 unanimously&#13;
passed a resolution requesting&#13;
a 20% pay raise.&#13;
The request is due in part to the&#13;
fact that the faculty received no&#13;
pay increase last year and only a 3.8&#13;
percent increase this year, and in&#13;
part because of the recommendations&#13;
made by a committee in Madison&#13;
th at studied the salaries of the&#13;
UW-System and compared them&#13;
with other colleges.&#13;
In a letter to the Board of Regents,&#13;
the Faculty Salary Committee&#13;
outlined their basic concerns:&#13;
"We are writing to you out of concern&#13;
for the situation at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside in view&#13;
of t he Governor's report on faculty&#13;
salaries," the letter begins. "The&#13;
report on compensation endangers&#13;
all that has been accomplished here&#13;
by using a methodology that places&#13;
us at the bottom of the system in&#13;
terms of c atch-up pay increases."&#13;
The letter goes on to say that the&#13;
reason Parkside faculty salaries&#13;
seem so high in the study is because&#13;
"there are an unusual number&#13;
of faculty at the upper end of&#13;
the salary range for assistant and&#13;
associate professors." This, in turn,&#13;
skewed the data of the study.&#13;
"Ironically," the letter says, "if we&#13;
had recruited with less emphasis on&#13;
quality and promoted more easily,&#13;
the methodology would have rewarded&#13;
us."&#13;
The letter cites a study by Economics&#13;
Professor Larry Duetsch&#13;
that found, "The 21 fa culty members&#13;
who have won a campus-wide&#13;
teaching award, a sabbatical or a&#13;
senior scholar award and were employed&#13;
here from 1972-73 thro ugh&#13;
1983-84 have been 'rewarded' for&#13;
their meritorious performance by a&#13;
16.9 percent average decline (constant&#13;
dollars) in salaries during this&#13;
period." Five other award winners&#13;
resigned to accept more attractive&#13;
positions elsewhere.&#13;
The letter also cites the fact that&#13;
under the current recommendation&#13;
of the Governor's report, "The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Madison would&#13;
receive pay increases seven times&#13;
as large as the faculty pay increases&#13;
at U-W Parks ide."&#13;
The resolution passed on Tuesday&#13;
states, among other things,&#13;
some of the for the increase: it&#13;
would take raises of 40 per cent or&#13;
more to return faculty salaries to&#13;
where they were at the time of the&#13;
merger; the State of Wisconsin is&#13;
projected to have a $250-300 million&#13;
surplus of revalues; and Wisconsin&#13;
Statutes 36.01(1) specifically prescribes&#13;
that the U-W system shall&#13;
stress undergraduate teaching as its&#13;
main priority.&#13;
"Therefore," the resolution asks&#13;
for, "...sufficient funds to support a&#13;
twenty percent average pay increase&#13;
so all campuses can compete&#13;
at a reasonable level in the national&#13;
employment market for qualified&#13;
employees, and a committment to&#13;
distribute the funds provided by the&#13;
state so the faculty at each campus&#13;
will receive an average pay increase&#13;
Continued on Page 8&#13;
Cummings dies of injuries&#13;
Constance Cummings&#13;
Constance Cummings, Parkside's&#13;
community relations liaison and a&#13;
counselor until she left last year,&#13;
died Friday of injuries she received&#13;
when her car was struck by a truck&#13;
last week.&#13;
Cummings, 51, worked at Parkside&#13;
from 1974 to 1983. She was instrumental&#13;
in the formation of Peer&#13;
Support, an organization that helps&#13;
older, nontraditional students adjust&#13;
to college.&#13;
Cummings was born March 16,&#13;
1933 in Chicago, 111. She was a graduate&#13;
of Wheaton High School and&#13;
graduated from Southern Illinois&#13;
University with her bachelor's and&#13;
master's degrees.&#13;
"Connie was a good strong person&#13;
with a lot of fresh ideas. Connie&#13;
took that with her and gave it to&#13;
people wherever she went. She and&#13;
Pat Mulligan set up Peer Support&#13;
on campus and Connie was a great&#13;
fighter for the rights and help for&#13;
the nontraditional students. She always&#13;
let us know we had a friend,"&#13;
stated Pat Hensiak.&#13;
Kenosha County Coroner&#13;
Thomas Dorff said she died from&#13;
head and internal injuries received&#13;
when her car was struck from behind&#13;
by a semi truck driven by Ray&#13;
C. Smith, a stop sign violation.&#13;
Variety show features Settimi&#13;
If it's true that variety is the&#13;
spice of life, then we're all in for a&#13;
very spicy time tomorrow night at&#13;
the Homecoming Variety Show.&#13;
The Variety Show, which will be&#13;
hosted by comedian Tim Settimi,&#13;
will spotlight six acts. Singers&#13;
Christine Kies accompanied on the&#13;
piano by Cheri Niccolai a nd Sandi&#13;
Salidas accompanied by Tom Turkowski.&#13;
Turkowski will also perform&#13;
a short solo piano piece.&#13;
Also featured are two dance&#13;
groups: Galaxy (Mary Edwards,&#13;
Lisa Eppler and Sherry Garrett)&#13;
and The Parkside Dance Ensemble&#13;
(Brad Amann, Sandra Williams,&#13;
Tina Miller, Tessa Butler, Dan Galbraith,&#13;
Brenda Kenth and John&#13;
Wright). Rounding out the slate of&#13;
performers will be the Faculty Barbers&#13;
hip Quartet with Philosophy&#13;
professors Wayne Johnson and&#13;
Roger Gilman, English professor&#13;
Carol-Lee Saffioti and the music department's&#13;
own Steven Powell).&#13;
If t his year's Variety show is anything&#13;
like last year's, we are all in&#13;
for a very entertaining time tomorrow&#13;
night at 8 p.m.&#13;
This scarecrow invites all to Homecoming&#13;
Homecoming — food, fun,&#13;
entertainment and more...&#13;
Parkside will hold its second annual&#13;
Homecoming featuring a number&#13;
of events open to the public,&#13;
beginning Thursday, Oct. 11&#13;
through Saturday, Oct. 13.&#13;
The Homecoming is being held&#13;
in conjunction with Parkside's soccer&#13;
game against the booters of&#13;
Northland College. The game begins&#13;
at 2 p.m. on Saturday at the&#13;
Parkside soccer field along 30th&#13;
Ave. (Wood Rd .). Admission to the&#13;
game is $1 for students and $2 for&#13;
the general public.&#13;
On Thursday there will be a public&#13;
Homecoming coronation of King&#13;
and Queen from 5 to 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Dining Room. During that&#13;
time there will be a "celebrity&#13;
sauce contest," in which top Parkside&#13;
administrators, including&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin, will&#13;
present their favorite spaghetti&#13;
sauce recipes, to be sampled by all.&#13;
A panel will choose the winning&#13;
recipe, and the food will be available&#13;
for a fee.&#13;
A variety show featuring student,&#13;
faculty and alumni talent will be&#13;
held at 8 p.m. on Friday in the&#13;
Union Cinema theater. Admissior&#13;
is $2 f or students and $3.50 for th&lt;&#13;
general public. The show will be&#13;
emceed by Tim Settimi, who is billed&#13;
as the "Red Skelton of the&#13;
80's."&#13;
Settimi will contribute his own&#13;
brand of zaniness to the event&#13;
blending mime, stand-up comedy&#13;
ventriloquism, rolls' skating, prat&#13;
fall comedy and music in his act.&#13;
Settimi currently is on a 100-datc&#13;
tour of college campuses, aftei&#13;
being named Performing Artist am&#13;
Continued on Page 7&#13;
2 Thursday, Oct. 11,1984 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Support the faculty&#13;
Parkside's faculty deserves a 20 percent pay increase and we deserve&#13;
a quality university.&#13;
The Governor's Report on Faculty Compensation recommends a&#13;
pay increase to UW-Madison faculty seven times as large as a recommended&#13;
increase to Parkside faculty. Meanwhile, Parkside faculty&#13;
are leaving to enter industry, and potenial faculty decide against coming&#13;
to Parkside in order to find greener pastures.&#13;
What does this report say for the quality of Parkside, the quality of&#13;
degrees obtained at this institution and the quality of faculty? Not&#13;
much.&#13;
The underlying message of t his report puts Parkside at the bottom&#13;
of the UW System and thus destroys all of what this university was&#13;
meant to be.&#13;
It is ludicrous to put money into only two campuses and forget the&#13;
rest. Parkside, as well as the other UW campuses, UW Centers and&#13;
Extensions, need not be overshadowed by Madisons or Milwaukees.&#13;
We do have a quality faculty. Much research is done here, and the&#13;
work load for faculty is high. Most of Madison's faculty have teaching&#13;
assistants to teach their courses; at Parkside all the courses are&#13;
taught by the faculty themselves. Parkside's standards for faculty are&#13;
no less stringent than at other campuses. In fact, Parkside is quite selective&#13;
in hiring and in granting promotions.&#13;
Students, as well as all of southeastern Wisconsin, will lose the&#13;
most in the long run. If t he quality of fac ulty declines due to the inability&#13;
of Parkside to compete, then this university will fail to produce&#13;
reputable graduates.&#13;
If we want to maintain a quality university in southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
with a quality faculty, then we must support our faculty in their&#13;
quest for a 20 percent pay increase.&#13;
We, as students can help the faculty obtain this increase by contacting&#13;
our legislators. Call and/or write state representatives and senators&#13;
and voice this concern. Do it now before the next legislative session&#13;
begins.&#13;
The following list includes the names, a dresses and phone numbers&#13;
of s tate legislative representatives, incumbents and opponents, prior&#13;
to the Nov. 6 election.&#13;
Kenosha a rea:&#13;
Senate, 22nd District-Joseph Andrea (D), 2405 45th St., Kenosha&#13;
53140, Mad ison office phone 1-008-267-8979 vs. John Allen (R), 406&#13;
78th St, Kenosha 53140.&#13;
Assembly, 64th District-Peter Barca (D), 1538 Sheridan Rd., Kenosha&#13;
53140 vs. G ary Adelsen (R), 4530 20th Ave., Kenosha 53140.&#13;
Assembly, 65th District-John Antaramian (D) incumbent, 8318 25th&#13;
Ave., Kenosha 53140, Madison office phone 1-608-266-0455.&#13;
Assembly, 66tfa District-Peter Selander, 612A 15th PL, Kenosha&#13;
53140 vs. Cloyd Porter (R) incumbent, Rt. 3, PO Box 331, 28322&#13;
Durand Ave., Burlington 53105, Madison o ffice phone 1-60&amp;-266-2530.&#13;
Racine area:&#13;
Senate, 21st District-Joe Strohl (D) incumbent, 603 Main St., Racine&#13;
53403, office phone 632-6800 (te rm runs to 1986).&#13;
Senate, 61st District-Scott Fergus (D), 2142% Clar ence Ave., Racine&#13;
53405 vs. Don Walsh (R), 32 Stonewood Ct., Racine 53402.&#13;
Senate, 62nd District-Jeffrey Neubauer (D) incumbent, 1111 11th&#13;
St., Racine 53403, Madison office phone 1-608-2666634 (uno pposed).&#13;
Senate, 63rd District-Ron Sell (D) incumbent, 4612 Erie St., Racine&#13;
53402, Madison office phone 1-608-266-0650 versus James Ladwig (R),&#13;
4616 Marcia D r., Racine 53405.&#13;
Letter to the Editor&#13;
Ranger senseless drivel&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I've recently returned to Parkside&#13;
after a three-year tour of gra duate&#13;
school at Marquette University.&#13;
Things appear to be changing here&#13;
at UW-P. What's happened to all&#13;
the depressed housewives, unemployed&#13;
auto workers and Vietnam&#13;
vets who used to inhabit these hallowed&#13;
halls? There are things that&#13;
will and do remain constant and&#13;
unalterable here at Parkside: the&#13;
coffee shop still serves delicious bagels,&#13;
the parking situation is still&#13;
atrocious and A1 Guskin co ntinues&#13;
to weather the tempest of mediocrity&#13;
at the helm of his ivory tower.&#13;
My reaso n for writing this letter&#13;
is not to indulge in nostalgia or&#13;
even to comment on the general&#13;
state of affairs. I am writing to&#13;
Continued on Page 14&#13;
...FOR WHICH OF HIS&#13;
COMMENTS DO YO U TH INK&#13;
YOUR OPPONENT SHOULD&#13;
BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE?&#13;
WELL...IN 1977, THE UH&#13;
DEFICIT WAS $50 BILLION,&#13;
AND MR. MONDALE SAID HE&#13;
WISHED IT CO ULD BE&#13;
BIGGER...&#13;
...THAT THAT WOULD&#13;
, STIMULATE GROWTH A ND&#13;
'REDUCE UNEMPLOYMENT&#13;
AND INFLATION.&#13;
WELL, NOW THE DEFICIT&#13;
IS &amp;200 BILLION.&#13;
GROWTH IS UP—UNEMPLOYMENT&#13;
AND INFLATION&#13;
ARE um, DOWN, AND NOW MY&#13;
OPPONENT.. uhh .WANTS TO—&#13;
Nobody asked me, but...&#13;
Fritz win no surprise&#13;
by Kari Dixon&#13;
As a devoted Mondale supporter,&#13;
I was filled with an emotion I cannot&#13;
really express during the debate&#13;
on Sunday night. After nearly a&#13;
month of the pollsters telling us&#13;
that the election was over, a glimmer&#13;
of hope showed through. More&#13;
mature, euphemistic descriptions of&#13;
the debate do not express how&#13;
Mondale performed. Simply put,&#13;
Fritz kicked ass.&#13;
Mondale showed exactly what he&#13;
is made of Sunday night. He was&#13;
cool, calm, relaxed and friendly.&#13;
IDs arguments woe lucid and be&#13;
pointed out the blatant inconsistencies&#13;
in Ronald Reagan's actions&#13;
and promises. He toadied on some&#13;
of the more obvious blunders that&#13;
Reagan has made in his career, like&#13;
quitting the Democratic Party the&#13;
year John Kennedy won, and supporting&#13;
Richard "I am not a crook"&#13;
Nixon.&#13;
Mondale also mentioned the neglected&#13;
fact that the staunch antiabortion&#13;
Reagan, as governor of&#13;
California, signed into law (Hie of&#13;
the most liberal abortion bills in&#13;
the nation. When Reagan tried to&#13;
goad Mondale by saying, "There&#13;
you go again," Mondale cooly responded&#13;
by saying the last time&#13;
Reagan had said that in a debate,&#13;
he promised that he would not cut&#13;
Medicare. "The people remember&#13;
these things, you know," Mondale&#13;
said.&#13;
Of course, t he President did have&#13;
his moments. He surprised almost&#13;
everyone when he said that there is&#13;
no connection between the interest&#13;
rate and the deficit and that the&#13;
Congressional Office of Management&#13;
and Budget is never accurate.&#13;
He also tried to draw an analogy&#13;
between abortion and a man who&#13;
was sentenced for murder when he&#13;
beat up a woman and killed ha- unborn&#13;
child. When Mondale replied&#13;
that abortion is a matter of the&#13;
woman's rights, Reagan retorted,&#13;
when it was his turn, "Isn't that&#13;
what a murderer is asking for (his&#13;
own rights)...when he kills someone?"&#13;
Reagan later told Barbara&#13;
Walters that he was confused about&#13;
the format of th e debate. I think he&#13;
was just plain confused.&#13;
As a Mondale supporter, I was&#13;
worried that Walter Mondale would&#13;
be outshown by the "Great Communicator,"&#13;
but happily this was&#13;
not the case. In the hour and a half&#13;
the candidates had, Mondale was&#13;
able to get his message across, finally,&#13;
in a way that he never could&#13;
do in a one-minute news clip or a&#13;
sixty-second commercial.&#13;
And, Ronald Reagan, for the first&#13;
time in four years, was vulnerable&#13;
and exposed before the American&#13;
press and public without the insulation&#13;
of h is staff. Guess what, folks,&#13;
U&#13;
9&#13;
*08&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Jennie Tunldeicz Editor&#13;
Pat Hensiak Campus News Editor&#13;
Bob KiesUng Community News Editor&#13;
Jim Neibaur Feature Editor&#13;
Rfck Luehr Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Carol Kortendick Sports Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy Photo Editor&#13;
Jill Whitney Nielsen.. Copy Editor&#13;
Andy Buchanan.... Business Manager&#13;
Mike Farrefi Advertising Manager&#13;
PatZirkelbach..... Distribution Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan.... Asst. Business Manager&#13;
the Emperor has no clothes. It took&#13;
Walter Mondale to point that out.&#13;
I'm sure he would have done it&#13;
sooner, but the Emperor's court&#13;
kept him, and everyone else, away.&#13;
Like Walter Mondale, I like Ronald&#13;
Reagan. He is a funny, personable&#13;
man who has, in a few ways,&#13;
benefited the country. He is also&#13;
the same man who has given every&#13;
allowance to the rich that he could,&#13;
and taken as much away from the&#13;
poor, minorities, labor unions and&#13;
education as he has given to the&#13;
rich. He reminds me of something&#13;
the late folk-singer and radical Phil&#13;
Ochs said in a song titled, "Here's&#13;
to the State of Richard Nixon."&#13;
"The speeches of the President are&#13;
the ravings of a clown."&#13;
Ronald Reagan is a funny man.&#13;
But I'll enjoy my laughter a lot&#13;
more when he is riding horses on&#13;
his ranch and not attempting to run&#13;
the foreign and domestic affairs of&#13;
this country.&#13;
Get voters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It is a shame that no political&#13;
party has come on campus with a&#13;
voter registration drive. The only&#13;
reason that I can think of why they&#13;
have not is that all the political parties&#13;
consider college students as&#13;
being too unpredictable politcally,&#13;
Continued on Page 16&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jim Burge, Konise Cassity, Jay&#13;
Crapser, Mike Froehlke, Michele&#13;
Geary, Natalie Haberman, Darryl&#13;
Hahn, Kimberlie Kranich, Steve&#13;
Kratochvil, Mark Leipzig, Jeff&#13;
Leisgang, Mary Loj eski, Robb Luehr,&#13;
Joan Mattox, Wes McGarver, Julie&#13;
Pendleton, Chris Pappe, Laureen&#13;
Wawro, Kevin Zir kelbach.&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students at UW-Parkside and they are solely responsible&#13;
for its editorial policy and content. Published every Thursday during the&#13;
academic year except during breaks and holidays.&#13;
Ranger is printed by the Racine Journal Times.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger. University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Box No. 2000. Kenosha, Wl 53141. Telephone (414) 553-&#13;
2295 or (414) 553-2287.&#13;
Letters to the editor will be accepted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard&#13;
size paper. Letters should be less than 350 words and must be signed, with a telephone&#13;
number included for verification purposes. Names will be withheld upon request.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 10 a.m. for pu blication Thursday. Ranger&#13;
reserves the right to edit letters and refuse letters containing false and defamatory&#13;
content.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Campus groups working to&#13;
"Get out the vote"&#13;
Can local student registration&#13;
campaigns surmount the countless&#13;
bureaucratic and political obstacles&#13;
that have halted past registration&#13;
efforts in their tracks?&#13;
Two of the national groups backing&#13;
the student vote effort -the&#13;
United States Student Association&#13;
and the National Student Education&#13;
Fund - confront those problems&#13;
head-on in a new book, "Overcoming&#13;
Student Voting Barriers: A&#13;
Guide to Electoral Power and Enfranchisement."&#13;
The book is a clear-cut guide to&#13;
some murky problems. It provides&#13;
case studies of past and present difficulties&#13;
facing student organizers,&#13;
including summer purges of student&#13;
voter rolls like the one in 1983&#13;
which disenfranchised 3,000 students&#13;
at Rutgers University.&#13;
Resistance to student registration&#13;
remains strong in many areas&#13;
where local officials view student&#13;
participation in the electoral process&#13;
as unfair to "permanent" residents,&#13;
especially in local elections.&#13;
Pennsylvania just banned voter registration&#13;
on state-owned property,&#13;
for example.&#13;
In other cases election officials&#13;
simply lack sufficient staff to handle&#13;
a large influx of new registrations.&#13;
The Manual provides checklists&#13;
of actions for handling both&#13;
sorts of situations.&#13;
Minority student conferences set&#13;
The seventh annual Conference&#13;
on Graduate Education for Minority&#13;
Students will be held this year&#13;
on Friday, Oct 12 at the Circle&#13;
Center of the University of Illinois&#13;
at Chicago.&#13;
The conference will provide information&#13;
on the opportunities for&#13;
and benefits of pursuing graduate&#13;
study on the master's and doctoral&#13;
level.&#13;
Registration will start at noon,&#13;
with th e conference beginning at 1&#13;
p.m. The keynote s peaker will be&#13;
Dr. Samuel Betances, a professor of&#13;
NEH Grants&#13;
available&#13;
Guidelines and application forms&#13;
for the Younger Scholars Program&#13;
of the National Endowment f or the&#13;
Humanities are now available for&#13;
photocopying in the Placement Office.&#13;
The program will award up to&#13;
100 grants nationally to students&#13;
under 21 years of age to conduct&#13;
their own research and writing&#13;
projects in such fields as history,&#13;
philosophy and the study of liter ature.&#13;
Applicants must be under 21&#13;
years of age throughout the entire&#13;
calendar year in which the application&#13;
is submitted. They may not&#13;
have received a bachelor's degree,&#13;
or expect to receive one, within two&#13;
months of the completion of Younger&#13;
Scholars grant . The application&#13;
deadline is October 15, ' 1984.&#13;
Recipients of these awards will&#13;
receive a stipend of 31,800 and be&#13;
expected to wort: full time for nine&#13;
weeks during the summer of 1985 ,&#13;
researching and writing a humanities&#13;
paper under the close supervision&#13;
of a humanities scholar. Please&#13;
note that this is not a financial aid&#13;
program and that no academic&#13;
credit should be sought for these&#13;
projects.&#13;
If guidelines ar e not available a t&#13;
the Career Planning and Placement&#13;
Office, please write for them to:&#13;
Younger Scholars Guidelines, Div.&#13;
of General Programs, Room 420,&#13;
National Endowment for the Humanities,&#13;
1100 Pennsylvania&#13;
Avenue, Washingto n DC 205 06.&#13;
quirements, opportunities and rewards&#13;
of graduate study in their&#13;
sociology at Northeastern University&#13;
and co-host of WMAQ's "Inside&#13;
Out." Dr. Betances, an expert in&#13;
race and ethnic relations, is cofounder&#13;
of the Latino Institute of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Following Dr. Betances' address,&#13;
six concurrent workshops will be&#13;
held from 2 t o 3:30 pjn. Students&#13;
may choose to attend any one, according&#13;
t o their interests. In these&#13;
workshops, a panel of minority faculty,&#13;
staff, graduate students and&#13;
graduate alumni will discuss the re-&#13;
Journalism conference set&#13;
The six workshops will cover: biological&#13;
and health sciences; business,&#13;
economics and accounting;&#13;
humanities and fine arts; physical&#13;
sciences, mathematics and physics;&#13;
psychology and social work; social&#13;
science and engineering.&#13;
All minority students are eligible&#13;
to attend this conference. Sign up&#13;
with Teoby Gomez or Esrold&#13;
Nurse, WLLC D-175, by Monday,&#13;
Oct 8.&#13;
The 1984 American Political&#13;
Journalism Conference will be held&#13;
Nov. 16-18 in Washington, D.C.&#13;
Scholarships will be provided by&#13;
the sponsoring organization, The&#13;
Charles Edison Memorial Youth&#13;
Fund, for each of the 75 undergraduate&#13;
and graduate students chosen&#13;
to participate.&#13;
Participants will be given the opportunity&#13;
to explore various media&#13;
issues regarding the 1984 elections,&#13;
including: the special role of a&#13;
press secretary in an election year;&#13;
media coverage of minority presidential&#13;
candidates; and print vs.&#13;
broadcast journalism - who gets&#13;
the better story?&#13;
The primary format will be panel&#13;
discussions followed by open question&#13;
and answer sessions. Several&#13;
keynote speake rs will be featured&#13;
as well. Past speakers include&#13;
David S. Broder, Jody Powell and&#13;
Eric Sevareid, all foremost authorities&#13;
in the field of political journalism.&#13;
If you a re interested in applying&#13;
for participation, contact: Charles&#13;
Taylor, The Charles Edison Man orial&#13;
Youth Fund, 1000 16th St. NW,&#13;
Suite 401, Washington D.C. 20036.&#13;
Phone number is (202) 29 3-5092.&#13;
The application deadline is Oct.&#13;
17.&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
Students turn debate ugly&#13;
(NOCR) — A student political debate turned ugly at Citrus College&#13;
and prompted two students to file formal complaints against one of&#13;
the speakers.&#13;
The event was supposed to feature campus Democrats and Republicans&#13;
squaring off on election issues, but instead became more personal.&#13;
One of the students filing a complaint charged a Republican&#13;
speaker with calling the National Organization for Women a lesbian&#13;
group, and making other defamatory comments.&#13;
Pizzeria owner free on bond&#13;
A U.S. Magistrate in Maditon has released Emanuele Palazzolo, the&#13;
Milton pizzeria owner charged by U.S. and Italian auth orities for participation&#13;
in an international heroin smuggling operation, on bail during&#13;
extradition bearings last week.&#13;
The Milwaukee Journal reported that U.S. Magistrate James Groh&#13;
released Palazzolo on a continuation of the 3450,000 bond posted earlier&#13;
this year.&#13;
Groh set a hearing for Nov. 19 to determine whether Palazzolo&#13;
should be extradited to Italy to face charges for his involvement in&#13;
^ "^2za Connection," a smuggling operation allegedly hea dquartered&#13;
in Sicily, with branches in several countries.&#13;
Palazzolo, a U.S. citizen, moved to the U.S from Sicily and opened&#13;
his restaurant in Milton about five years ago.&#13;
Man shoots trapped bear&#13;
An Upper Peninsula man shot and killed a 350 pound black bear he&#13;
found suffocating with its head stuck in a five gallon milk can.&#13;
"I could see there was something wrong," said Frank Basso of&#13;
Watersmeet, Mich, in an Associated Pres s story. "I could see the can&#13;
on its head. It was suffering and was having a hard time breathing."&#13;
Basso and a hunting partner spotted the animal on a road outside&#13;
Watersmeet, several miles across the Wisconsin state line. He said he&#13;
knew no human would try t o pull the can off the bear's head while it&#13;
was alive.&#13;
Political debate draws charge&#13;
President Reagan, campaigning in Milwaukee, drew laughs and applause&#13;
as he recalled how he once stuck his foot behind the Iron Curtain,&#13;
reported the New York Times.&#13;
The Times quoted Reagan as saying that when he visited the Berlin&#13;
wall, he "saw those Polizei looking at me very sternly with their&#13;
guns, and sneaked a foot across the line.&#13;
"Just wanted to let them know I'd been there," he said. "I saw the&#13;
barbed wire and the guards and understood, in a more powerful way,&#13;
the value of h uman liberty."&#13;
PSGA addresses issues&#13;
Wind ensemble performs&#13;
Write a&#13;
letter to&#13;
the Editor&#13;
A joint concert featuring the&#13;
wind ensembles of Parkside and&#13;
William Horlick High School will be&#13;
held at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, Oct.&#13;
18 at Horlick's Joseph Mooney Theater,&#13;
2119 Rapids Drive, Racine.&#13;
Parkside's ensemble is conducted&#13;
by music professor Mark Eichner;&#13;
Horlick's conductor is music&#13;
teacher Don Young .&#13;
Admission will be charged a t the&#13;
door.&#13;
Pieces to be performed by Parkside's&#13;
ensemble are:&#13;
-"La Procession d u Rocio," by&#13;
the Spanish composer Joaquin&#13;
Turina. Composed in 1913, the&#13;
piece has the flavor of a Strauss&#13;
symphonic poem but is clearly&#13;
Spanish in character. The work&#13;
made Turina one of Spain's most&#13;
important composers. It was premiered&#13;
by the Madrid Symphony and&#13;
performed throughout Europe.&#13;
-"Concerto for Band," by 20th&#13;
century English composer Gordon&#13;
Jacob, a prolific artist best known&#13;
for his music in the tradition of military&#13;
bands. "Co ncerto" is a more&#13;
festive, modern and liberated work&#13;
that serves as a virtuoso piece highlighting&#13;
the talents of the entire&#13;
band.&#13;
-"Street Music," by Henry&#13;
Brant, which aims to depict a small&#13;
village mini-band, making do with a&#13;
skeleton combo with some misting&#13;
parts "supplied enthusiastically&#13;
(but not always accurately) by&#13;
memory, and perhaps some printed&#13;
parts which sound as though they&#13;
have to be played on the wrong instruments,"&#13;
according to Brant's&#13;
description of t he piece.&#13;
-"Handel in the Strand," by Australian-&#13;
ban composer Percy Grain,&#13;
go-. The piece attempts to depict a&#13;
tune that the great German baroque&#13;
composer Handel might have&#13;
whistled as he strolled through&#13;
London's Strand marketplace amid&#13;
the various market sound s.&#13;
The ensembles will team up at&#13;
the conclusion of the concert to&#13;
perform Valder's "A Norwegian&#13;
Concert March."&#13;
by Jill Whitney Nielsen&#13;
A resolution asking PSGA (Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association)&#13;
to put the referendum for&#13;
United Council on t he ballot in t he&#13;
fall senatorial elections was one of&#13;
the main topics of the Oct. 5 Senate&#13;
meeting.&#13;
UC Legislative Affairs Director&#13;
Brian Schimming and UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Student Government President&#13;
Larry Pritchett were there to&#13;
discuss UC and answer any questions&#13;
Senate had.&#13;
Schimming discussed the tuition&#13;
increases and the drinking age.&#13;
Schimming also mentioned this&#13;
year's UC was more organized and&#13;
together than in recent years. "UC&#13;
has a full staff, we're traveling&#13;
more and trying to accomplish&#13;
more outreach (to the individual&#13;
campuses)," Schimming stated. He&#13;
will also be starting a weekly legislative&#13;
affairs newsletter sent out to&#13;
all campuses to keep them informed&#13;
about what UC is doing.&#13;
Pritchett stated that "the goal of&#13;
UC is to work for the pampqfft and&#13;
to make sure all students are getting&#13;
the best education and best&#13;
deal." Pritchett also stressed UC is&#13;
stronger and can fight issues better&#13;
with a ll the campuses in membership.&#13;
Briefly discussed in a question&#13;
/answer session was the student appointment&#13;
to the Board of Regents&#13;
and Governor Earl's promise to&#13;
keep tuition down.&#13;
Ihe UC resolution to put the referendum&#13;
on the fall election ballot&#13;
was passed.&#13;
Other matters discussed during&#13;
the Senate meeting were implementing&#13;
the "I'm Driving Club" on&#13;
campus. This is when one person in&#13;
a group wears an "I'm Driving"&#13;
button and receives free soda all&#13;
night. This is to promote safe driving&#13;
conditions.&#13;
Also discussed were periodicals&#13;
being changed in the library. The library&#13;
will soon list periodicals in&#13;
the card catalogue with the caU&#13;
numbers listed under "subject"&#13;
Another motion was passed during&#13;
the meeting stating that "Senators&#13;
should maintain good behavior&#13;
and character during their term in&#13;
office and that this resolution be&#13;
part of .senator's duties."&#13;
Mondale urges student&#13;
vote; makes difference Past to be seen with time capsule&#13;
by La ureen Wawro&#13;
While most of us are preparing&#13;
for the Homecoming celebration,&#13;
Pam Beach is looking further into&#13;
the future -M16 years further.&#13;
Beach, secretary of the Homecoming&#13;
Committee, has been busy&#13;
collecting "significant memorabilia"&#13;
from campus divisions, departments&#13;
and student organizations&#13;
to fill a time capsule that will&#13;
be opened in the year 2000.&#13;
The time capsule itself is an old&#13;
trunk being donated by Homecoming&#13;
Committee Chairman Mike&#13;
Dry. Sporting a new paint job and a&#13;
warning "Do not open until the&#13;
year 2000," it will be stored in the&#13;
Union Building. The exact location&#13;
is still a matter of debate. It is&#13;
possible that the Student Activities&#13;
Office may someday use it as a&#13;
coffee table in their future reception&#13;
area.&#13;
A wide variety of donations wil&#13;
be made to the capsule. Archives&#13;
will contribute an early Racine&#13;
Journal Times supplement telling&#13;
of t he opening of the campus and a&#13;
book of user material put together&#13;
by Nick BurckeL From the bookstore&#13;
comes a Ranger Bear t-shirt&#13;
and PAB donated a pocket calculator.&#13;
A formation letter from the Behavioral&#13;
Science division will also&#13;
be included in the capsule. It is the&#13;
Financial aid policy&#13;
to come under view&#13;
original letter that organized the&#13;
division.&#13;
The items will be presented by a&#13;
representative of each contributing&#13;
group on Thursday, Oct. 11 at 7&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cafeteria. Students&#13;
wishing to make donations&#13;
may do so by turning in a form to&#13;
the Student Activities Office no&#13;
later than 3 p.m. Oct. 11.&#13;
This will be the second time capsule&#13;
installed at Parkside. The first&#13;
is located in the northwest corner&#13;
of Molinaro D139. I t was built into&#13;
the wall in June of 1979 for 24 kindergarten&#13;
through second grade&#13;
children enrolled in the "College&#13;
for Kids" program. It will be opened&#13;
in June of 2029.&#13;
Comparable&#13;
worth raises&#13;
WASHINGTON - Calling on students&#13;
to register and vote in record&#13;
numbers, Democratic presidential&#13;
nominee Walter F. Mondale urged&#13;
that students not allow Ronald&#13;
Reagan to get away with trivializing&#13;
both their votes and issues of concern&#13;
to them.&#13;
Speaking on National Student&#13;
Voter Registration Day (Oct 1),&#13;
Mondale said, "More than any&#13;
other group, this is your election.&#13;
Your generation will decide this,&#13;
race. You will live with its consequences,&#13;
and you will shape the&#13;
American landscape for the rest of&#13;
this century.&#13;
"For Ronald Reagan to think&#13;
that you don't care about your own&#13;
futures - that you don't care about&#13;
having to repay his huge budget&#13;
deficits, that you don't care about&#13;
cuts in loans for education and,&#13;
most of all, about nuclear war - is&#13;
sheer arrogance," said Mondale.&#13;
"Despite'what the polls say, it&#13;
should be because of these very issues&#13;
- and certainly others - that&#13;
students will vote in significant&#13;
numbers to put an end to Reagan's&#13;
by Kari Dixon&#13;
The second and third in a series&#13;
of five presentations on "Issues in&#13;
the National Elections," sponsored&#13;
by the Young Democrats and the&#13;
Pre-Law Society will be held next&#13;
Monday and Wednesday at 1 p.m.&#13;
in Molinaro D107.&#13;
Frank Edgerton, history professor,&#13;
will discuss "Reagan's Environmental&#13;
Record" on Monday,&#13;
Oct. 15. On Wednesday, Oct. 17,&#13;
John Harbeson, political science,&#13;
Jerry Greenfield, history and Jose&#13;
Oretga, Spanish, will discuss&#13;
"American Foreign Policy and the&#13;
Intervention in America."&#13;
underestimation of your generation,"&#13;
he added.&#13;
Launching an intensive last-week&#13;
voter registration drive on hundreds&#13;
of campuses nationwide,&#13;
Gary Brickman, the Mondale-Ferraro&#13;
National Youth Coordinator,&#13;
noted since passage of the 26th&#13;
Amendment, guaranteeing 18-yearolds&#13;
the right to vote, student participation&#13;
has declined from a high&#13;
of 48% in 1972 to just under 36% of&#13;
the eligible, registered 18-26-yearolds&#13;
in 1980.&#13;
"But," Brickman said, "the tide&#13;
is turning. Students are looking harder&#13;
at issues that affect them. They&#13;
see all sizzle and no substance from&#13;
the Reagan Administration. Because&#13;
of t his, we intend to register&#13;
thousands in the coming week. We&#13;
have no choice," he added.&#13;
Youth for Mondale-Ferraro and&#13;
the College Young Democrats of&#13;
America are conducting the drive&#13;
during the last week of voter registration,&#13;
along with the United&#13;
States Student Association, the National&#13;
Student Campaign for Voter&#13;
Registration and Student Government&#13;
Associations.&#13;
Future "Issues" presentations&#13;
will be given on Wednesday, Oct 24&#13;
and Wednesday, Oct 31.&#13;
On Oc t. 24, economics professor&#13;
Bill Reiber will discuss "The Deficit&#13;
and the Sustainability of the&#13;
Economic Recovery."&#13;
Ken Hoover, political science,&#13;
Jan Ocker, Director of Financial&#13;
Aid an d Greg Squires, former employee&#13;
of the U.S. Commission on&#13;
Civil Rights will discuss "Fairness:&#13;
Income Redistribution, Aid to Education&#13;
and Civil Rights" on Oct. 31.&#13;
All presentations will be in&#13;
Molinaro D107 at 1 p.m. The public&#13;
is invited.&#13;
In October 1985, existing financial&#13;
aid programs will come under&#13;
review when the Higher Education&#13;
Act undergoes reauthorization.&#13;
But the Reagan administration's&#13;
budget cuts have already had a&#13;
devastating impact on financial aid&#13;
programs, says the United States&#13;
Student Assocation.&#13;
In a printed statement, the USSA&#13;
said that financial aid funding has&#13;
fallen by more than 20 percent&#13;
since fiscal 1982, and while student&#13;
aid has increased slightly this year,&#13;
it is still |6 million below I960&#13;
levels.&#13;
In 1982 alone, said the USSA, the&#13;
President's budget proposals would&#13;
have cut financial aid funding by 60&#13;
percent, and have restricted graduate&#13;
students from Guaranteed Student&#13;
Loan eligibility.&#13;
Reagan's budget also called for a&#13;
GSL origination fee of t en percent,&#13;
requiring students to pay interest in&#13;
GSLs while still in school, the&#13;
USSA said.&#13;
In 1983 President Reagan's&#13;
budget proposal was based on a&#13;
"new philosophy of self-help," the&#13;
statement said. The philosophy required&#13;
students obtain 40 percent&#13;
of their educational costs to be eligible&#13;
for grant aid, which would&#13;
have shifted emphasis from grant&#13;
aid to loan dependency.&#13;
Last week the House and Senate&#13;
Labor, Health and Human Services&#13;
and Education Appropriations Subcommittee&#13;
agreed on financial aid&#13;
levels for fiscal 1985. The subcommittee&#13;
approved $3.3 billion for&#13;
Pell grants, which includes a $2100&#13;
maximum; $412.5 million for&#13;
SEOG's $592.5 million for Work/Study;&#13;
and $190 million for NDSL .&#13;
The statement said funding levels&#13;
have increased $2 million since&#13;
fiscal 1984, and Reagan's budget&#13;
proposal, which would have cut&#13;
need-based programs by $330 million,&#13;
was rejected by Congress.&#13;
PSGA elections&#13;
PSGA (Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association) will hold Fall&#13;
elections on Wednesday and Thursday&#13;
Oct. 17 and 18. The positions to&#13;
be voted on by students include&#13;
nine senatorial seats, one PUAB&#13;
(Parkside Union Advisory Board)&#13;
seat and one SUFAC (Segregated&#13;
University Fees Allocations Committee)&#13;
seat.&#13;
All Parkside students can vote.&#13;
Voting booths will be set up on the&#13;
Molinaro Concourse from 9 a m to&#13;
8 p.m. on both election days.&#13;
All s tudents are urged to come&#13;
out and vote. It is not too late to&#13;
run for a seat if you are interested.&#13;
For more information stop in at the&#13;
PSGA office, WLLC D-139A.&#13;
questions&#13;
by Jill Whitney Nielsen&#13;
"Comparable Worth is simply&#13;
paying an individual on the basis of&#13;
their value to an organization (regardless&#13;
of sex or race)," stated&#13;
Peggy Lee, one of the members of&#13;
the Task Force on Comparable&#13;
Worth.&#13;
This is what the Task Force is&#13;
doing through a job evaluation&#13;
study sent to various state workers:&#13;
finding out how to rate "value" in&#13;
terms of pay. To do this, the Task&#13;
Force will be divided into three&#13;
committees and will assign points&#13;
to "comprehensible factors," such&#13;
as knowledge, responsibility and&#13;
skill. There will be twelve factors in&#13;
all.&#13;
This is the second part of a threepart&#13;
study. The first part was to determine&#13;
where and if job segregation&#13;
was occuring. The second part&#13;
is the job evaluation study. The&#13;
third part will determine what discrepancies&#13;
there are between men&#13;
and women in pay for similar, related&#13;
jobs and how to rectify the&#13;
situation.&#13;
Lee also stressed that Comparable&#13;
Worth is a family issue, not just&#13;
a women's issue, because it will affect&#13;
the whole family's income.&#13;
"Hopefully this will raise&#13;
wages," stated Lee. It had already&#13;
been decided that lowering men's&#13;
wages will not be considered. "I&#13;
see many women students choosing&#13;
Data Processing simply because of&#13;
the pay. With Comparable Worth,&#13;
students and workers will have&#13;
more choices," stated Lee.&#13;
Exceptional&#13;
Management Opportunities&#13;
For exceptional College Grads (and those who are soon to be)&#13;
CURRENT&#13;
OPPORTUNITIES:&#13;
• NUCLEAR ENGINEERING&#13;
• BUSINESS MANAGEMENT&#13;
• AVIATION • LAW&#13;
• MEDICINE • INTELLIGENCE&#13;
• CIVIL ENGINEERING&#13;
• SHIPBOARD OPERATIONS&#13;
Sign up for an interview in the Career Placement Office.&#13;
Interviews will be held in the Career Placement Office&#13;
between 8:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. October 15-16, or call tollfree&#13;
1-800-242-1569.&#13;
National election&#13;
issues explored&#13;
The Sixth Annual&#13;
Manager's Dinner&#13;
Thursday, November 1, 1984&#13;
7:00 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Keynote speaker will b e Mr. David R. Allardice,&#13;
Economic Advisor and Vice President&#13;
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago.&#13;
Tickets will be $5.00 for students and will&#13;
be for sale from Oct. 8-19 on Concourse.&#13;
--Sponsored by the Accounting Club, Data Processing, American&#13;
Society of Personnel Administrators, Phi Gamma Nu and Pi&#13;
Sigma Epsilon.&#13;
RANGER 5 Thursday, Oct. 11,1984&#13;
Sales scams prey on depressed students (NOCR) — The ads promise&#13;
travel, high pay and independence.&#13;
The jobs they lead to aid in misery.&#13;
Students who answer the ads aid&#13;
up selling magazines or household&#13;
cleaner door-to-door sixteen to&#13;
eighteen hours a day, under conditions&#13;
characterized by psychological&#13;
oppression and dependence.&#13;
Students sleep three or four to a&#13;
room in cheap motels, live on $4 to&#13;
$8 a day food allowance, have their&#13;
mail and phone calls censored and&#13;
sometimes never see a cent of their&#13;
earnings. In fact, when they finally&#13;
do break away or are dumped by&#13;
crew chiefs in some distant city,&#13;
they may be told they owe the company&#13;
money.&#13;
Abhorent though it is, this student&#13;
employment scam has existed&#13;
for at least twenty years. And while&#13;
there are protections for consumers&#13;
who buy their products, there are&#13;
few legal protections for the student&#13;
salespeople. Currently, information&#13;
and public awareness offer&#13;
the only protection available for&#13;
this kind of employment.&#13;
Earlene Williams, founding director&#13;
of Parent Watch, an organization&#13;
that monitors the situation&#13;
and offers help to stranded young&#13;
people, says there are about 200&#13;
companies operating this way, and&#13;
that they employ an avoage work&#13;
force of 15,000 students on any&#13;
given day. Major offenders named&#13;
in a recent suit in New York include&#13;
Circulation Builders of America,&#13;
National Circulating Company,&#13;
North American Book Sales and.&#13;
Solar Circulation. Most such sales&#13;
operations go year-round but enjoy&#13;
a new flowering around summer&#13;
and semester breaks.&#13;
Typically ads and posters appear&#13;
saying "Guys and Gals: want to&#13;
earn $400 a week or more?" Interested&#13;
students are invited to a hotel&#13;
or motel room, usually plush,&#13;
where they may be told absolutely&#13;
anything.&#13;
That's a major part of the problems,&#13;
says Williams: there is no&#13;
regulation of hiring practices. Students&#13;
agree to become "independent&#13;
contractors," and thus fall into&#13;
a gray legal area also occupied by&#13;
reputable companies like Avon and&#13;
Mary Kay, who also use independent&#13;
contractors.&#13;
Williams contends, however, that&#13;
the highly mobile magazine-selling&#13;
students are a new class of migrant&#13;
worker, deserving special protection.&#13;
The protection is needed, she&#13;
says, not only because of the working&#13;
conditions, but also because of&#13;
the psychological intimidation used&#13;
to entice and control students.&#13;
Juanita Kidder, 20, an Oregon&#13;
woman stung by the scam two&#13;
years ago, said the contractors "had&#13;
a way of talking to you, making you&#13;
want to do what they want you to&#13;
do. It's a psychological thing."&#13;
Told she would be selling speedreading&#13;
equipment to universities,&#13;
Kidder learned she would be selling&#13;
magazines only after being driven&#13;
to another city. She didn't like it,&#13;
but was afraid to leave.&#13;
Kidder was rescued by her mother.&#13;
Other students, however,&#13;
haven't been so fortunate. Detective&#13;
Tom Harber of the Las Vegas,&#13;
Choosing software difficult&#13;
HOME&#13;
COMPUTING&#13;
by Chris Pappe&#13;
Many people are confused by&#13;
educational software and aren't&#13;
sure what kind of program to buy.&#13;
Educational software is the fastest&#13;
growing segment of the software industry,&#13;
and the variety of programs&#13;
make choosing the correct one difficult.&#13;
The first educational software for&#13;
home computers was simple drill&#13;
and practice. Then came programs&#13;
that were fun and entertaining.&#13;
Now there are interactive programs&#13;
that allow you to control the flow&#13;
of the program.&#13;
Drill and practice is the easiest&#13;
type of educational program to create.&#13;
In this type of program you are&#13;
drilled on a subject such as multiplication&#13;
tables and then tested&#13;
with practice problem. This reduces&#13;
the scope of the program to&#13;
subjects that can be drilled.&#13;
To increase the effectiveness of&#13;
educational software, the video&#13;
game element was introduced.&#13;
These programs are a mixture of&#13;
fun and games and drill and practice.&#13;
Some are more fun, and some&#13;
more educational. Actually, there is&#13;
much debate as to how much fun&#13;
educational software should be.&#13;
Too much fun, and there is no education!&#13;
Too much education, and&#13;
there is a loss of interest.&#13;
You can choose from several interactive&#13;
programs. Unique in design,&#13;
these programs allow you to&#13;
interact with the software and&#13;
change the way the program flows.&#13;
Two types of interactive software&#13;
stand out.&#13;
The first type is a construction&#13;
set. These programs allow you to&#13;
contol the scenario for the game or&#13;
lesson and allow you to move at&#13;
your own speed. They can be made&#13;
harder or easier to suit your own&#13;
needs. Construction sets usually&#13;
aim to teach teenage children logic,&#13;
decision making and problem-solving&#13;
skills. However, they can be&#13;
quite challenging for adults, too.&#13;
Second, there are interactive programs&#13;
that don't follow a set procedure&#13;
of learn, practice, be tested.&#13;
These programs, offered by Prentice-&#13;
Hall, utilitze teaching methods&#13;
used by Socrates. You can interrupt&#13;
a lesson to ask questions, take a&#13;
test or review some other material.&#13;
These programs are for grades 7-12&#13;
and complement the school curriculum.&#13;
The latest educational software&#13;
makes full use of your micro's&#13;
graphics and sound capabilities.&#13;
The educational value of software&#13;
is increasing as more and more&#13;
educators become involved in the&#13;
development of these programs. Club Events&#13;
Art Addicts&#13;
Our next meeting will be on&#13;
Monday, Oct. 15 in Communication&#13;
Arts D141 at 1 p.m. Topics to be&#13;
discussed are: field trip, guest&#13;
speaker, Art Fair and Community&#13;
Awareness. All interested persons&#13;
are invited to attend.&#13;
Geology Club&#13;
Dr. Norris Jones of UW-Oshkosh&#13;
Department of Geology will discuss&#13;
"The Techtronks of Northeastern&#13;
Mexico," on Friday, Oct. 12 at 1&#13;
p.m. in Greenquist 113. Jones ami&#13;
his students have been conducting&#13;
field research in the area for the&#13;
past three years.&#13;
Pre-Law Club&#13;
The Pre-Law Club will hold an&#13;
organizational meeting on Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 17 at 1 p.m. in Molinaro&#13;
126. Everyone is welcome.&#13;
Young Democrats&#13;
The Young Democrats will hold&#13;
a general meeting on Friday, Oct.&#13;
12 at 1:30 p.m. in Molinaro 128.&#13;
Everyone is invited. Activities to be&#13;
held during the remainder of the&#13;
pre-election period will be discussed.&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
Sue Strickler or Kari Dixon in&#13;
the Social Science Division office.&#13;
IVCF&#13;
Intervarsity Christian Fellowship&#13;
will be having a meeting in Molinaro&#13;
107 on Wednesday, Oct. 17 at 1&#13;
p.m. The meeting will center&#13;
around God's principles for success.&#13;
Hope to see you there.&#13;
Career Planning&#13;
and Placement&#13;
Carreer Planning and Placement&#13;
will hold two workshops on&#13;
Resume Preparation on Monday,&#13;
Oct. 15 from 1-2 p.m. and on Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 17 from 5:304:30 p.m.&#13;
All students are encouraged to attend.&#13;
Nev. police department is familiar&#13;
with cases in which job scams led&#13;
young people to prostitution, narcotics&#13;
use and pornography.&#13;
"They set these impossibly high&#13;
sales quotas, and when the girls&#13;
can't meet them, the crew chiefs&#13;
may say, 'There are other ways to&#13;
make money, you know,' " says&#13;
Harber.&#13;
Students sucked into the scam fit&#13;
the same psychological profile as&#13;
those who fall prey to cults. They&#13;
often have unhappy borne situations,&#13;
have had major disruptions&#13;
in their lives in the previous twelve&#13;
months or find themselves in&#13;
transition.&#13;
Physics Colloquium set&#13;
For the past two decades, astronomers&#13;
have been collecting images&#13;
of the sky in x-rays. This extremely&#13;
energetic form of light is produced&#13;
by some of the most fantastic objects&#13;
imaginable, including neutron&#13;
stars, black holes and colliding&#13;
galaxies.&#13;
X-ray imaging of the sky is not&#13;
easy, because x-rays cannot be focused&#13;
by lenses like ordinary light&#13;
and because the earth's atmosphere&#13;
absorbs most of the x-rays reaching&#13;
it from celestial objects. Thus, this&#13;
area of research requires specialized&#13;
imaging devices that can be lifted&#13;
above the atmosphere. In the&#13;
early days of x-ray astronomy, the&#13;
detectors were shot up on rockets,&#13;
giving them only a few seconds of&#13;
uncontrolled observing.&#13;
The first Physics Colloquium of&#13;
the 1984-85 year will be given by an&#13;
x-ray astronmer, Professor Mel&#13;
Ulmer of Northwestern University.&#13;
He has been working on an x-ray&#13;
detector that will ride into orbit on&#13;
the shuttle, and he will describe the&#13;
experiment in a talk titled "X-Ray&#13;
Astronomy from the Space Shuttle."&#13;
The talk will be given at 1&#13;
p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 17 in&#13;
Greenquist 230. Everyone is invited&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Crop walk good cause&#13;
Kenosha's seventh annual CROP&#13;
Walk for Hunger will be held Sunday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
Proceeds from the walk -&#13;
about $10,000 last year - will go to&#13;
the Kenosha Emergency Food Program,&#13;
the Kenosha Soup Kitchoi,&#13;
Church World Service and other national&#13;
relief agencies.&#13;
Walkers will have a choice of two&#13;
routes of five and ten miles. Registration&#13;
will begin at 12:30 at First&#13;
United Methodist Church at the&#13;
corner of 60th St. and Sheridan&#13;
Road. The routes aid at the same&#13;
parking lot.&#13;
Walkers should wear two pairs of&#13;
heavy socks, good walking shoes&#13;
and appropriate clothing, and are&#13;
encouraged to donate a non-perishable&#13;
food item, said promoters. For&#13;
more information, contatc* Lois&#13;
Peterson at 658-1463.&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
• X&#13;
X •&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
ANDERSON TRANSCRIPTION&#13;
&amp; TYPING&#13;
Letters - Resumes&#13;
Term Papers&#13;
Student Rates&#13;
PHONE 637-3600&#13;
Jacqueline Andersen&#13;
1441 Park Avenue&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•I •• •• •&#13;
FAMILY PLANNING&#13;
IS HERE!&#13;
To Discuss:&#13;
When:&#13;
Where:&#13;
Birth C ontrol&#13;
Family P lanning&#13;
PMS Assessment&#13;
2-6 p.m. every Tues.&#13;
Student Health Services&#13;
Molinaro D-l 15&#13;
Stop in any time to make an&#13;
appointment, or just stop in&#13;
any Tuesday!!&#13;
All discussions confidential&#13;
-6 Thursday, Oct. 11,1984&#13;
, « , • I &gt; t I i • » S I &lt; i • « I » r J I . i • « f • • • &gt; » « « ' • " - ' * P.S.G.A Constitution » t « « • • » * « * ! ' &gt;&#13;
paid advertisement&#13;
We, the students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside do hereby organize&#13;
ourselves pursuant to Wisconsin Statute&#13;
36.09(5) and the Parkside Student Govern&#13;
ment Association Inc. Constitution Art. 4 I in&#13;
the manner set forth in this constitution and&#13;
select our representatives to participate in&#13;
institutional governance in the manner set&#13;
forth below. We invest the powers of this,&#13;
constitution in the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. All previous&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
constitutions shall be null and void upon&#13;
ratification of this constitution on March 5&#13;
and 6, 1980. This constitution shall be the sole&#13;
constitution of Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. and the student body and&#13;
subject only to amendments.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. shall be responsible to the&#13;
students of the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. shall have the power to enforce&#13;
and protect the following articles by&#13;
passing motions, resolutions or taking legal&#13;
action to insure that no student's rights are&#13;
violated.&#13;
Those students seeking positions in the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc. (P.S.G.A., Inc.) must fulfill all&#13;
requirements of that office in accordance&#13;
with Student Life Eligibility Criteria specified&#13;
in the Senate Rules.&#13;
ARTICLE I&#13;
'Section 1. All legislative powers granted&#13;
herein shall be vested in the Senate of the&#13;
*&gt;.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Section 2. The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
shall consist of 18 student members, half of&#13;
which will be elected in the spring and half in&#13;
the fall, whose term shall be for one year.&#13;
Section 3. The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc.:&#13;
shall choose their own officers and also aj&#13;
President Pro Tempore.&#13;
Section 4. In the absence of the Vice j&#13;
President of P.S.G.A., Inc. who shall be the!&#13;
president of the Senate, the President Pro!&#13;
Tempore shall be the President of the Senate.:&#13;
The President Pro Tempore shall be a:&#13;
Senator and shall be a member of all Senate:&#13;
Committees.&#13;
When vacancies happen in the representation&#13;
from any at large seat, the President!&#13;
Pro Tempore shall fill such vacancies with'&#13;
the concurrence of a simple majority of thei&#13;
entire legislative branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc.;&#13;
Section S. A simple majority of the total&#13;
Senate shall constitute a quorum to do&#13;
business.&#13;
Section 6. The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
shall have the power to determine the rules of!&#13;
its proceedings, censure Its members for&#13;
disorderly conduct and, with the concurrence:&#13;
of two thirds of the entire Senate, expel a&#13;
member. The Senate shall keep a journal of1&#13;
its proceedings, and publish the same monthly&#13;
at the minimum, a copy of the journal!&#13;
shall be available for review by the public in&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc. offices.&#13;
The Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall meet&#13;
at an established place and time no less than,&#13;
once a week during the fall and spring j&#13;
semesters, and no less than once a month&#13;
during the summer session.&#13;
Upon presentation of a petition by a simple,&#13;
majority of the entire Senate a meeting shall I&#13;
be called by the Vice President or in the case:&#13;
of the Vice President's absence the President'&#13;
Pro Tempore shall have the responsibility toj&#13;
call a meeting within 48 hours.&#13;
Section 7. Bills may either originate in the&#13;
Senate or be sent to the Senate from the&#13;
executive branch of the P.S.G.A.. Inc. Every bill,&#13;
order, resolution or vote on which the concurrence&#13;
of the Senate is necessary shall have&#13;
passed the Senate by a simple majority and&#13;
shall be presented to the President of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. before it takes effect. If t he President&#13;
does not approve, he/she shall send it&#13;
back to the Senate for reconsideration with&#13;
his/her reasons for rejection.&#13;
If. after such reconsideration, a simple&#13;
majority of the entire Senate shall agree to&#13;
pass the bill, it shall become law. But in all such&#13;
cases the votes of Senate shall be determined&#13;
by a roll call vote, and the names of persons&#13;
voting for and against the bill shall be entered&#13;
in the journal of the Senate. If an y bill shall not&#13;
be returned by the President within ten school&#13;
days after it has been presented to him/her, the&#13;
same shall become law, in the manner as if&#13;
he/she had signed it. All proceedings of the&#13;
Senate of the P.S.G.A, Inc.. shall be sent to the&#13;
executive branch for incorporation purposes. If'&#13;
the President vetoes the legislation, he/she&#13;
shall send it back to the Senate A two-thirds&#13;
vote of the entire Senate shall be required to&#13;
override the Veto.&#13;
Section I. The Senate shall have the power&#13;
to make motions, resolutions, or take legal&#13;
actions which shall be necessary and proper&#13;
for carrying Info execution the foregoing&#13;
powers, and all other powers vested by this&#13;
constitution in the P S.G.A . Inc&#13;
Section 9. The Senate of the P S G.A., Inc.&#13;
shall have the power to amend this constitution&#13;
by a two thirds vote of the entire&#13;
Senate In the event of an amendment being&#13;
passed by the Senate, said amendment shall&#13;
be placed on the ballot of the next election. If&#13;
the students confirm the amendment by a&#13;
simple majority vote, it shall be added to the&#13;
Constitution. If the students vote against if,&#13;
the amendment will be deleted. In the event&#13;
the Senate does not confirm the proposed&#13;
amendment, said amendment will not appear&#13;
on the ballot. The proponent of an amendment&#13;
that is turned down may. if he or she so&#13;
chooses, follow the procedures set up in Article&#13;
V, Section 2.&#13;
When amendments are up for approval they&#13;
shall appear on the October and March&#13;
ballot*, in cases of urgency, a special&#13;
referendum may be held at any time.&#13;
Section 10. The Senate shall have the sole&#13;
power of impeachment and the power to try&#13;
all impeachments. When sitting for that&#13;
purpose they shall be of oath or affirmation.&#13;
When the President of the P.S.G.A., Inc. is&#13;
fried the Chief Justice of the Judicial court&#13;
shall preside, and no person shall be con&#13;
victed without the concurrence of two-thirds&#13;
of the entire Senate. Judgement in cases of&#13;
impeachment shall not extend further than&#13;
removal from office and disqualification to&#13;
hold and enjoy any office or position that the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. has jurisdiction over, appointment&#13;
to, or election for. Impeachment&#13;
shall not begin until two thirds of the entire&#13;
Senate of the P.S.G.A., Inc. have voted to hold&#13;
an impeachment hearing.&#13;
Section 11. Roberts Rules of Order shall&#13;
govern the proceedings of all Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association, Inc.&#13;
meetings except when inconsistent with the&#13;
Constitution of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
ARTICLE II&#13;
Section 1. All executive powers, within this&#13;
article, shall be vested in the President of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Section 2. The President shall hold office&#13;
during the term of one year together with the&#13;
Vice-President who will be chosen for the&#13;
same term. They shall be eligible for reelection&#13;
and shall not serve more than 2&#13;
consecutive terms.&#13;
Before the President and the Vice&#13;
President elect enters on the execution of •: e&#13;
office of the Presidency or Vice-Presidency,&#13;
he or she shall take the following oath:&#13;
"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I w ill&#13;
faithfully execute the office of President (or&#13;
Vice President) of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. and will to the&#13;
best of my ability preserve, protect and&#13;
defend the constitution and actions of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Inc."&#13;
The President of the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall&#13;
also be able to draw compensation while in&#13;
office, the amount of which shall be determined&#13;
by a majority vote of the entire&#13;
Legislative branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. This&#13;
compensation can be suspended by the Senate&#13;
while the President is on trial for purposes of&#13;
impeachment. If, however, after impeachment&#13;
proceedings the President is&#13;
found to be innocent, all benefits will be paid&#13;
to him/her retroactive from the date of&#13;
suspension. Increases in compensation will&#13;
not be awarded to a President while in office&#13;
unless he/she is re-elected to another term of&#13;
office or to his/her immediate successor, at&#13;
which time such benefits would begin to be&#13;
implemented. All increases must be approved&#13;
by a majority of the entire Senate.&#13;
Upon resignation or removal from office or&#13;
inability to discharge power and duties of the&#13;
Presidency, the Vice-President shall assume&#13;
the office of President of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
and shall meet the constitutional&#13;
requirements of the Presidency of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., inc.&#13;
Section 3. The President shall have the&#13;
power by and with the advice and consent of&#13;
the majority of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate to&#13;
nominate and appoint the treasurer,&#13;
corresponding secretary and all other officers&#13;
of the executive branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
and all student judges with the consent of twothirds&#13;
of the entire Senate.&#13;
The President shall have the power to line-&#13;
Item veto specific portions of Senate bills.&#13;
He/she may line item veto the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
budget, but shall not line item veto the&#13;
Segregated Fee Budget. The President may&#13;
not veto legislation or any portion of it, passed&#13;
by the Senate which deals with the Senate&#13;
Procedural Rules, Regulations or Senate&#13;
appointments.&#13;
The President shall have the power to&#13;
require written reports from all standing or&#13;
special committees and individuals to whom&#13;
responsibilities have been delegated within&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc. and shall be required to&#13;
furnish written reports on his/her executive&#13;
activities to the legislative branch of the&#13;
P S G A , inc. by a majority vote of the&#13;
Senate. Any required written reports shall be&#13;
requested in writing and shall be received&#13;
within one week of the presentation of such&#13;
request to th-» P.S.G.A., Inc. member being&#13;
required to tumish the report.&#13;
The President shall have the power, by and&#13;
with the advice and consent of the Legislative&#13;
branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. to sign contracts,&#13;
provided that a majority of the entire Senate&#13;
concurs.&#13;
The President shall draw up the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
toe. budget and send it to the Legislative&#13;
branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. for approval.&#13;
The President shall take care that the&#13;
constitution of the P.S.G.A., Inc. and its bylaws&#13;
be faithfully executed.&#13;
The President, vice President and all of&#13;
ficers of the P.S.G.A., inc. shall be removed&#13;
from office for dereliction of duty or failure to&#13;
take care that the constitution of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. and its by-laws be faithfully executed.&#13;
Section 4. The President of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. shall nominate student appointees to all&#13;
faculty codified committees with a simple&#13;
majority of the entire Senate needed for&#13;
approval and shall publish such vacancies in&#13;
the student newspaper.&#13;
Section 5. The treasurer of the P.S.G.A ,&#13;
inc. shall keep records and recipts on all&#13;
expenditures of a" P S G.A., inc monies and&#13;
shall make such records public.&#13;
ARTICLE III&#13;
Section 1. All judicial powers of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be vested in judiciary&#13;
court, and in lower courts that the Senate of&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc. may establish. The judges,&#13;
of all courts, shall maintain good behavior&#13;
and character during their terms of office.&#13;
Section 2. The judicial court shall consist of&#13;
four judges and one Chief Justice. Student&#13;
members of the judicial branch of the&#13;
P.S.G.A , Inc. shall be University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside students, and must be&#13;
confirmed by the Chancellor of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin Parkside after a two-thirds&#13;
approval by the entire Senate of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. Appointments to the judicial branch of&#13;
the P.S.G.A., Inc., shall be for three years.&#13;
Section 3. In the case of deciding the constitutionality&#13;
of the actions of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. the decisions shall be binding on all&#13;
parties involved, and shall be forwarded to&#13;
the designated disciplinary head of the administrative&#13;
branch of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside on to the appropriate&#13;
authorities for implementation.&#13;
ARTICLE IV&#13;
Section 1. The P.S.G.A., inc., subject to the&#13;
responsibilities and powers of the Board of&#13;
Regents, the President of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin system, the Chancellor of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Parkside, and the&#13;
faculty of the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside shall be active participants in the&#13;
immediate governance of and policy&#13;
development for such institutions. As such,&#13;
the P.S.G.A. shall have primary responsibility&#13;
for the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student life, services, and&#13;
interests. As such, the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be&#13;
the sole representative student group of the&#13;
students of the University of Wisconsin •&#13;
Parkside allowed to participate in institutional&#13;
governance.&#13;
i SUB—ARTICLE I&#13;
Section 1. The P.S.G.A., Inc., in consultation&#13;
with the Chancellor of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin - P arkside and subject to the&#13;
final confirmation of the Board of Regents&#13;
shall have the responsibility for the&#13;
disposition of those student fees which constitute&#13;
substantial support for campus&#13;
student activities.&#13;
Section 2. An Allocation Committee shall be&#13;
established as a subcommittee of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate. The committee shall&#13;
review requests for program support and&#13;
budget allocations of the allocable portion of&#13;
the segregated University fee. All action of&#13;
said committee shall be subject to the final&#13;
approval of the P.S.G.A., Inc. in conjunction&#13;
with the Chancellor of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside.&#13;
A. MEMBERSHIP. The Allocations&#13;
Committee shall consist of 8 voting members,&#13;
6 of whom shall be P.S.G.A., Inc. Senators.&#13;
The remaining 2 shall be chosen by the&#13;
student body of the University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside, one elected in the spring, one&#13;
elected in the fall. Three P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Senators shall be chosen in the spring and&#13;
three shall be chosen in the fall by blind&#13;
drawing of interested P.S.G.A., Inc. Senators.&#13;
The drawing shall be conducted by the&#13;
Judicial Branch of the P.S.G.A., Inc. The&#13;
term of office shall be one year. The committee&#13;
shall elect its own chairperson after&#13;
each spring election. In addition, the&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Educational Services,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Administration&#13;
and Fiscal Affairs, and the&#13;
Campus Controller may sit with the com&#13;
mittee as non voting members. Should a&#13;
vacancy occur on the Allocations Committee&#13;
the following procedures shall be used:&#13;
1 The President Pro Tempore of the&#13;
P S.G.A , Inc. Senate, in consultation with the&#13;
Chancellor or designee, will fiil any unoccupied&#13;
Senatorial seat with the confirmation&#13;
of the P S.G.A., Inc. Senate.&#13;
2 The President of the P.S.G.A., Inc., in&#13;
consultation with the Chancellor or designee,&#13;
shall appoint to any at-large seat on the&#13;
Allocations Committee. The P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Senate does not need to approve the&#13;
President's appointment.&#13;
B. PROCEDURES. Upon the call of the&#13;
Chancellor and the President of the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. the Committee shall annually prepare&#13;
recommendations on the disborsal of the&#13;
Segregated University Fee. Should the&#13;
p S G.A., Inc. concur in the recommendation,&#13;
the President of P.S.G.A., Inc. shall so advise&#13;
the Chancellor and Chairperson of the&#13;
Allocations Committee. Should the Chancellor&#13;
concur in the P.S.G.A., Inc. recommendation.&#13;
he/she shall arrange for its implementation.&#13;
Should the Chancellor not&#13;
concur, the provisions under negotiations&#13;
shall be used. The Senate may not amend the&#13;
Allocations Committee recommendation.&#13;
Rejection cf the Committees' recom&#13;
mendation takes a 2/3 vote of the entire&#13;
Senate. In the case of rejection by the Senate,&#13;
the reasons for rejection shall be agreed to&#13;
and forwarded to the Chairperson of the&#13;
Aliocations Committee. The Allocations&#13;
Committee shall reconsider its recom&#13;
mendation and again forward it to the Senate.&#13;
C. NEGOTIATIONS. The President of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., inc., the Chairperson of S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
and the President Pro Tempore of the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate or their designees (who&#13;
must be members of the P.S.G.A., Inc.) shall&#13;
be representatives of the P.S.G.A., Inc. in any&#13;
consultation with the Chancellor or his/her&#13;
designee in dealing with the P.S.G.A., Inc.&#13;
Allocations Committee. If the President Pro&#13;
Tempore of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate is a&#13;
member of S.U.F.A.C. then the Senator with&#13;
the most seniority of the P.S.G.A., Inc. Senate&#13;
will assume the duties of the Pro Tempore In&#13;
negotiations with the Chancellor.&#13;
If the P.S.G.A., Inc. and the Chancellor&#13;
cannot reconcile their differences in the&#13;
allocation of the allocable portion of&#13;
Segregated University Fees, each will submit&#13;
a set of recommendations to the Board of&#13;
Regents for final disposition.&#13;
D. DUTIES. The Allocations Committee&#13;
shall have primary responsibility in setting&#13;
the allocable portion of the auxiliary budget&#13;
and to insure proper monetary expenditures&#13;
in total and within budgetary categories. The&#13;
Allocations Committee shall meet year round&#13;
to review the allocable portion of the&#13;
Segregated Fees Budget according to the&#13;
procedures set up in the Senate Rules.&#13;
SUB ARTICLE II&#13;
Section 1. A standing Senate Committee,&#13;
the Student Organization Council, shall be&#13;
established consisting of the Presidents (or&#13;
their designees) of all student organizations&#13;
who choose to participate.&#13;
Section 2. No student shall be denied&#13;
membership to any on-campus organization&#13;
for reasons of race, color, religious creed,&#13;
national origin, sex, past criminal record,&#13;
political belief, political action, or sexual&#13;
preference.&#13;
Section 3. Students shall be free to&#13;
assemble, to demonstrate, to communicate,&#13;
and to protest individually or through a&#13;
student organization so long as no federal,&#13;
state, or municipal law is violated.&#13;
Section 4. Students shall be free to use&#13;
campus facilities for meetings of student&#13;
organizations, subject to uniform regulations&#13;
to time and manner governing the facility.&#13;
Section S. Students shall have the right to&#13;
invite and hear speakers of their choice and&#13;
approval shall not be witheld by the P.S.G.A.,&#13;
Inc. or university authorities for purposes of&#13;
censorship.&#13;
Section t . Affiliation with an extramural&#13;
organization shall not in itself disqualify a&#13;
student organization from student government&#13;
recognition or institutional recognition.&#13;
Section 1. The student press shall be free of&#13;
censorship and advance approval of copy,&#13;
and its editors shall be free to develop their&#13;
own editorial policies and news coverage.&#13;
Section 8. The student press Shall be accorded&#13;
all those rights as stated in the United&#13;
States Constitution.&#13;
Section 9. Students shall have the right to&#13;
distribute or sell information of a printed&#13;
nature that does not conflict with University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside binding contracts.&#13;
ARTICLE V&#13;
Section 1. Fall elections for the P.S.G.A.,.&#13;
Inc. shall be held the third week of October.&#13;
At that time, one half of the representatives&#13;
from the legislative branch as well as one at&#13;
FALL SENATORIAL ELECTIONS&#13;
paid advertisement&#13;
large S U F.A.C seat shall be elected. Spring&#13;
elections for the P.S.G.A., Inc. shall be held&#13;
during the eighth week of the spring&#13;
semester. At that time the President, Vice&#13;
President, remaining legislative seats, one at&#13;
iarge S.U.F.A.C. seat and five Union&#13;
Operating Board seats shall be elected.&#13;
Section 2. The students, upon requesting a&#13;
petition with 10 percent of the signatures of&#13;
the entire student body, shall have the right to&#13;
request a constitutional referendum to amend&#13;
this constitution, or to request an advisory&#13;
referendum. The petition shall be presented&#13;
to both the President and the Vice President&#13;
and the President Pro Tempore of P.S.G.A.,&#13;
inc.&#13;
Section 3.&#13;
1) For recall against a Senator or officer of&#13;
P S.G.A., Inc., any University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside student may start the petition and&#13;
any University of Wisconsin • Parkside&#13;
student may sign it. Fifteen percent of the&#13;
Parkside student body must sign the petition.&#13;
2) The recall petition must have a&#13;
statement of the reason(s) for removal from&#13;
office. This must deal with actions committed&#13;
in the present term of office.&#13;
3) The studenf(s) shall present the petition&#13;
to the Senate. Upon receiving verification of&#13;
the petition, the Senate must immediately&#13;
notify the school paper that a recall is in&#13;
progress and a special election will take&#13;
place. There must be an election within 15&#13;
school days after notification of the valid&#13;
petition is received by the Senate&#13;
4) Upon receiving the recall petition the&#13;
Senate must immediately turn it over to the&#13;
election committee. The election committee&#13;
shall have five days to verify the names on the&#13;
petition. In the event that there is no election&#13;
committee, the Senate must appoint one&#13;
within five days.&#13;
If illegal names are found on the petition,&#13;
and the number of legal names drop to less&#13;
than 15%, the election committee must notify&#13;
the student(s) who presented the petition.&#13;
Upon notification, the students have five&#13;
school days to get the required number of&#13;
names. If they fail to do so, their recall&#13;
petition shall be declared null. At the request&#13;
of the student(s) who presented the petition,&#13;
the election committee must show that the&#13;
names are illegal.&#13;
No legal name can be removed from the&#13;
petition after filing. Once the petition is&#13;
presented to the Senate, it cannot be with&#13;
drawn. A person can be recalled only once per&#13;
offense during his/her term in office. The&#13;
person who is cited in the recall petition shall&#13;
have his/her name placed on the ballot&#13;
automatically unless he/she resigns. Students&#13;
who wish to run for the position shall follow&#13;
normal election procedure.&#13;
5) If a Senator or Officer resigns and is&#13;
reappointed to a position within the term of&#13;
office he/she last held, it shall be considered&#13;
only a continuation of his term.&#13;
ARTICLE VI&#13;
Section 1. An applicant shall not be denied&#13;
admission to the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside for reasons of race, color, national&#13;
origin, religious creed, sex, previous criminal&#13;
record, political beliefs, political action, or&#13;
sexual preference.&#13;
Section 2. Financial aid shall not be denied&#13;
for reasons of race, color, national origin,&#13;
religious creed, sex, previous criminal&#13;
record, political beliefs, political action, or&#13;
sexual preference.&#13;
Section 3. Students are free to take exception&#13;
to the data presented or views offered&#13;
in any course of study and may advocate&#13;
alternative opinions to those presented within&#13;
the classroom.&#13;
Section 4. AM S tudent Disciplinary matters&#13;
will be processed through the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Parkside Student Disciplinary&#13;
Procedures Chapter UWS 17.&#13;
Section 5. Students shall be evaluated only&#13;
on their knowledge of the subject and&#13;
academic performance and in turn are responsible&#13;
to maintain standards of academic performance&#13;
established for each course they have&#13;
enrolled in.&#13;
Section 6. Disclosure of students political or&#13;
personal beliefs in connection with course work&#13;
shall not be made public without express permission&#13;
of the student.&#13;
Section 7. Student records on academic&#13;
performance and disciplinaary actions shall be&#13;
separate.&#13;
Section t. Information from counseling and&#13;
disciplinary files shall not be made available&#13;
to persons on or off campus without the ex&#13;
press consent of the student involved, except&#13;
under legal compulsion.&#13;
Section 9. All records and information kept&#13;
on file shall be readily acceslbleto the student&#13;
to whom they pertain.&#13;
Section 10. Students shall have the right to&#13;
be present at all committee meetings directly&#13;
affecting the students.&#13;
Section 11. The constitutional rights of any&#13;
student, as stated in the United States Constitution,&#13;
shall not be denied anyone, at the&#13;
University of Wiscdnsin - Parkside.&#13;
October 17th and 18th&#13;
Petitions Available in P.S.G.A. Office&#13;
RANGER&#13;
7 Thursday, Oct 11,1084&#13;
New faculty appointments PPoarrlkrosli/dlAe hknans announced new »f ac.&#13;
bring variety&#13;
ulty and staff appointments in the&#13;
divisions of Science, Business ami&#13;
Administrative Science and Humanities&#13;
as well as in academic&#13;
support areas such as the computer&#13;
center, media services and career&#13;
planning and placement.&#13;
Joining the Humanities Division&#13;
music is Steven Powell, who will&#13;
conduct the university's chorale&#13;
and the chamber singers. Powell&#13;
also is establishing vocal jazz and&#13;
swing groups.&#13;
He replaces William Weinert,&#13;
who has accepted a position at UWMadison.&#13;
Powell holds a master's degree&#13;
in music with an emphasis in choral&#13;
conducting from Indiana University&#13;
in Bloomington and a bachelor's&#13;
degree in music from the University&#13;
of Michigan.&#13;
He has been director of choral&#13;
activities at the University of Central&#13;
Florida as a visiting assistant&#13;
professor and has also taught at&#13;
Northeast Louisiana University and&#13;
the School of Music at Indiana University.&#13;
Powell also taught high school&#13;
vocal music for two years. He has&#13;
performed as a soloist in recital and&#13;
with choral groups in concert as&#13;
well as in a wide variety of major&#13;
and minor baritone roles in opera&#13;
productions, opera workshops, civic&#13;
light opera, civic musicals and nonmusical&#13;
theater productions.&#13;
Joining the Humanities Division&#13;
as an English lecturer is Tim Redman,&#13;
who holds a master's degree&#13;
in comparative literature from the&#13;
University of Chicago and is currently&#13;
working toward his PhD from&#13;
that institution.&#13;
Redman holds a bachelor's degree&#13;
from Loyola University and&#13;
has taught at the Illinois Institute&#13;
of Technology, Loyola, DePaul University&#13;
and the University of Chicago.&#13;
Redman served as president of&#13;
the U.S. Chess Federation from&#13;
1981 to 1984.&#13;
Also joining die Humanities Division&#13;
is Roger Gilman, who is a visiting&#13;
philosophy instructor. Gilman&#13;
holds a master's degree in the&#13;
philosophy of science from the University&#13;
of Chicago, where he is a&#13;
PhD candidate. His areas of specialization&#13;
are aesthetics and the&#13;
Homecoming events fill week&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 11&#13;
SUPPORT GROUP: For parents&#13;
with infants, at 12 noon in MOLN&#13;
D128. All are welcome. Sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Health Office.&#13;
MOVIES: "Shall We Dance" and&#13;
"Top Hat" (both rated G) will be&#13;
shown at 3:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission at the door is&#13;
31.00 for a Parkside student and&#13;
31.00 for a guest. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
HOMECOMING EVENTS: Pizza,&#13;
pasta and celebrity sauces at 5&#13;
p.m., homecoming coronation ceremonies&#13;
at 6 p.m. and the time capsule&#13;
ceremony at 7 p.m., all in the&#13;
Union dining room. All are welcome.&#13;
SHORT COURSE: "Mushrooms"&#13;
starts at 7:30 p.m. in MOLN D105.&#13;
Call ext. 2312 for more details.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
DANCE: "Cimmeron" performs at&#13;
8 p.m. in Union Square. Admission&#13;
will be charged at the door. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 12&#13;
MOVIES: "Shall We Dance" and&#13;
"Top Hat" will be repeated at 1:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema and at 7:&#13;
30 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
COLLEGE BOWL: Faculty challenge&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Union Square.&#13;
Admission is free. All are welcome.&#13;
VARIETY SHOW: Featuring comedian&#13;
Tim Settimi as MC at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Union Cinema. Advance tickets&#13;
are available at the Union Information&#13;
Coiter and tickets will also be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Monday, Oct. 15&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Resume Preparation"&#13;
at 1 p.m. in WLLC D174. All&#13;
are welcome.&#13;
ROUND TABLE: "Conservative&#13;
Ideology and Reagan's New Federalism:&#13;
But What About the Poor?"&#13;
at 12 noon in Union 106. The speaker&#13;
is Prof. Ken Hoover of Parkside's&#13;
Social Science Division. The&#13;
program is open to the public at no&#13;
charge.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 16&#13;
WORKSHOP: "The Psychology of&#13;
Selling" by Prof. Leslie Martin of&#13;
UW-Whitewater at 8:30 a.m. in&#13;
Union 104-106. Call ext. 2047 for&#13;
more details.&#13;
WORKSHOP: " Assertiveness&#13;
Training" at 1 p.m. in Union 202 by&#13;
Larry Turner. The program is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
SHORT COURSE: "Heritage: Civilization&#13;
and the Jews" starts at 7&#13;
p.m. in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312&#13;
for more details. Sponsored by UWExtension.&#13;
MOVIE: "The Enforcer" (R) will&#13;
be shown at 7: 30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is free. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
SHORT COURSE: "Individual Differences"&#13;
starts at 7:30 p.m. Sponsored&#13;
by UW-Extension.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 17&#13;
SEMINAR: "Health Care Delivery:&#13;
Emergency Rooms and Clinics" by&#13;
Allan Spath of Kenosha Memorial&#13;
Hospital at 11:50 a.m. in Union 207.&#13;
The program is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
COffeehOUSE: Featuring&#13;
Southwick &amp; Stevenson in the&#13;
Union Bazaar area from 12 noon to&#13;
2 p.m. and from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
Admission is free; all are welcome.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Resume Preparation"&#13;
at 5:30 p.m. in WLLC D174.&#13;
All are welcome.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Changing Employee&#13;
Attitude Toward Change" by&#13;
Dennis Laker at 7 p.m. in Union&#13;
106. Call ext. 2047 for more information.&#13;
Homecoming: fun and more&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 13&#13;
HOMECOMING EVENTS: Soccer&#13;
vs. Northland College at 2 p.m.&#13;
PSGA, PAB and Ranger reunion at&#13;
5 p.m. and semi-formal dance at 8&#13;
p.m. Tickets for the dance are&#13;
available at the Union Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 14&#13;
MOVIES: "Shall We Dance" and&#13;
"Top Hat" will be repeated at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Novelty-Variety Artist of the Year&#13;
by the representatives of the 1,000&#13;
college members of the National&#13;
Association of Campus Activities at&#13;
their 1984 convention in Nashville.&#13;
He has worked in a number of&#13;
film and television projects, including&#13;
the Tim Conway movie "The&#13;
Prize Fighter" and a special on&#13;
Showtime cable television.&#13;
Other Homecoming activities for&#13;
the campus community incude&#13;
movies, a rock dance, creation of a&#13;
time-capsule to be opened in the&#13;
year 2000, a semi-formal dance, and&#13;
alumni reunions, including those&#13;
among former Ranger newspaper&#13;
staffers and onetime leaders of student&#13;
government.&#13;
For more information, call 553-&#13;
2278.&#13;
t JAZZ%&#13;
j*If you have a contemporary jcuez&amp;&#13;
^ group with a wide repertoire and^&#13;
^ need a quality location to practice9 ^&#13;
M Call 886-6100 £&#13;
philosophy of art and literature.&#13;
Before joining Parkside, Gilman&#13;
held dual teaching assignments at&#13;
Loyola University and the Illinois&#13;
Institute of Technology.&#13;
Joining the Business and Administrative&#13;
Science Division as a lecturer&#13;
in management information&#13;
systems is Vanda Gupta, who&#13;
earned master's degrees in systems&#13;
science from the University of Ottawa&#13;
(Canada), applied mathematics&#13;
from Carleton (Canada) University&#13;
and mathematics from the University&#13;
of Delhi in India, from where&#13;
she also holds a bachelor's degree&#13;
in mathematics.&#13;
Beverly Burnell, who holds a&#13;
master's degree in counseling and a&#13;
bachelor's degree in mathematics&#13;
from State University of New York&#13;
at Pittsburgh, has joined Parkside's&#13;
office of Career Planning and&#13;
Placement as a career counselor.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside Burnell&#13;
worked as a career planning&#13;
and placement counselor at Pittsburgh&#13;
campus, where she was also&#13;
an academic advisor. Burnell also&#13;
worked as a mathematics and English&#13;
teacher for two years at the&#13;
Gobaru Secondary School in Sierra&#13;
Leone, West Africa, and was a consumer&#13;
advocate and VISTA project&#13;
representative for one year in&#13;
Brooklyn, New York.&#13;
Joining the computer center are&#13;
Terry Hirsch, a systems programmer,&#13;
and Amy Skrzypchak, a&#13;
programming and data control specialist.&#13;
Hirsch holds a master's degree in&#13;
teaching and a bachelor's degree in&#13;
mathematics and German from&#13;
Marquette University, where he is&#13;
currently taking graduate courses in&#13;
computer science. He has worked&#13;
as a software engineer at the Astronautics&#13;
Corporation of America in&#13;
Milwaukee where he designed,&#13;
coded and tested communications&#13;
software for the U.S. Department&#13;
of Defense.&#13;
Skrzypchak was assigned to her&#13;
current full-time position from that&#13;
of a part-time student computer&#13;
programmer. She is a graduate of&#13;
St. Joseph High School in Kenosha&#13;
and is a senior at Parkside majoring&#13;
in applied computer science.&#13;
Her other computer experience includes&#13;
data entry for S.C. Johnson&#13;
&amp; Son, Inc. in Racine and data&#13;
entry and production control for&#13;
HPI Nichols, Inc. in Sturtevant.&#13;
Lewis E. Scfaultz, who holds an&#13;
associate degree in photography&#13;
from the Milwaukee Area Technical&#13;
College, has joined Parkside as&#13;
a photo specialist in the media services&#13;
division of the Library-Learning&#13;
Center.&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Needed&#13;
To devote quality time and creativity&#13;
to the Ranger&#13;
WLLC D-139C - Ask for Dave&#13;
ACROSS&#13;
1 Suspend&#13;
5 Article of&#13;
furniture&#13;
8 Hurried&#13;
12 Region&#13;
13 Before&#13;
14 Comfort&#13;
15 Small brook&#13;
16 Bitter vetch&#13;
17 Ascend&#13;
18 Higher&#13;
20 Bartered&#13;
22 Conjunction&#13;
23 Journey&#13;
24 Prayer&#13;
ending&#13;
27 Thing owned&#13;
31 Fall behind&#13;
32 Supplicates&#13;
33 Garden tool&#13;
34 Advances&#13;
36 Farm animals&#13;
37 Speed&#13;
contest&#13;
38 Symbol for&#13;
tantalum&#13;
39 Tell&#13;
42 Head rest&#13;
46 Leave out&#13;
47 Female deer&#13;
49 Affection&#13;
50 Extremely&#13;
terrible&#13;
51 Sea eagle&#13;
52 Paradise&#13;
53 Periods of&#13;
time&#13;
54 Deposit&#13;
55 Depression&#13;
DOWN&#13;
1 Male deer&#13;
2 Solo&#13;
3 Girl's&#13;
nickname&#13;
4 Liquid&#13;
measure&#13;
5 Beverage&#13;
6 Transgress&#13;
7 Demolishes&#13;
8 Mexican&#13;
shawl&#13;
9 Remunerated&#13;
10 Actual being&#13;
11 Act boxes&#13;
19 Teutonic 36 Hailed&#13;
deity 38 Note of scale&#13;
21 Tears 39 Was borne&#13;
23 Barter 40 Arabian&#13;
24 High commander&#13;
mountain 41 Unit of&#13;
25 Deface Italian&#13;
26 The self currency&#13;
27 Goes before 42 Confined&#13;
28 Greek letter 43 Mine vein&#13;
29 Haul 44 Part of&#13;
30 Affirmative stove&#13;
32 Fuel 45 Departed&#13;
35 Wooden 48 Native metal&#13;
1 2 3 4&#13;
12&#13;
15&#13;
1(1&#13;
1984 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.&#13;
Puzzler answers on Page 15&#13;
PHOTO ART SALE&#13;
Taken by&#13;
National Geographic Photographers&#13;
AND OTHER BEAUTIFUL&#13;
ROOM DECOR&#13;
PRICES: $2-$50&#13;
DATES: October. 15 &amp; 10 9 a.m.-7 p.m.&#13;
LOCATION: Union Bridge&#13;
SPONSOR: Parkside Activities. Board&#13;
University of Wiseonsin-Parkside Comm. Arts Theatre&#13;
OCT. 19,20,26,27at.8 P.M. OCT. 25 AT 3:30 P.M. '&#13;
8 Thursday, Oct. 11, 1984 ___ RANGER&#13;
Giants reside in Gallery&#13;
by Chris Dorf&#13;
Two slumbering giants ar e presently&#13;
occupying the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery. When I hurried over&#13;
for a peek between classes last&#13;
week, the two behemoths were indeed&#13;
dozing. Before I left, however,&#13;
the two giants began to rouse.&#13;
The "two giants" are two mixedmedia&#13;
sculpture constructions,&#13;
creations of Robert Merline,&#13;
Wisconsin-born artist and Door&#13;
County high school teacher. The&#13;
pieces ar e part of a n exhibit entitled&#13;
"Recent Works From The&#13;
Great American Midwest Landscape&#13;
Series," cm display through&#13;
Oct. 18 in the Communicatio n Arts&#13;
Gallery. Viewing hours are Monday-&#13;
Thursday, 1-6 p.m. and Wednesday&#13;
and Thursday, 7- 10 p.m.&#13;
The initial quiet ambiance of th e&#13;
gallery, with its muted lighting and&#13;
soft features, belies the tensions&#13;
that exist in Merline's constructions.&#13;
In fact, the materials used&#13;
seem at first so ordinary and usual&#13;
you may be tempted to walk by&#13;
without a look.&#13;
Don't!&#13;
If you do walk by, you will miss&#13;
an almost spiritual experience, a n&#13;
excursion into a world of logs, wire,&#13;
steel, copper, marble and bird&#13;
quills, which a re melded together&#13;
with craftsman-like expertise, tempered&#13;
by an astute sensitivity to&#13;
materials. This combination affords&#13;
us sculp ture that is both powerful&#13;
and delicate.&#13;
The aura of tension is the first&#13;
noticeable element of this show.&#13;
Tension exists everywhere. There is&#13;
tension in the wires that threaten to&#13;
Oriana given funding&#13;
The Oriana Trio, resident chamber&#13;
ensemble at Parkside, has been&#13;
awarded funding support by the Affiliated&#13;
State Arts Agencies of the&#13;
Upper Midwest for a five-state concert&#13;
tour during the 1985-86 season.&#13;
The funding organization is composed&#13;
of five midwestern arts agencies&#13;
supported by the National Endowment&#13;
for the Arts.&#13;
The organizatio n will c ontribute&#13;
35 percent of costs for the Oriana&#13;
tour.&#13;
The Oriana Trio is composed of&#13;
James McKeever, piano; Ali Forough,&#13;
violin; and Michael Masters,&#13;
cello. In addition to formal concert&#13;
programs featuring standard classical&#13;
and romantic music literature,&#13;
the Oriana Trio is committed to&#13;
promoting new works for piano trio&#13;
through its Oriana Trio International&#13;
Composition Competition, which&#13;
carries a cash award of $1,500 and&#13;
attracts entries from around the&#13;
world.&#13;
During next season's tour, trio&#13;
members will also present residency&#13;
activities, including informal&#13;
programs in public schools, master&#13;
classes on chamber music o r individual&#13;
instruments, coaching of student&#13;
chamber groups and soloists&#13;
and recitals for college audiences.&#13;
McKeever, an assistant professor&#13;
of music at Parkside, previously&#13;
taught at Murray State University&#13;
in Kentucky and holds master of&#13;
music and doctor of musical arts&#13;
degrees from the University of Cincinnati&#13;
College-Conservatory of&#13;
Music. He has been active as a recitalist&#13;
and chamber musician and&#13;
has published articles in Clavier.&#13;
McKeever's principal teacher was&#13;
the noted Russian pedagogue Olga&#13;
Conus. McKeever also studied with&#13;
Lelia Gousseau of the Paris Conservatory&#13;
and coached with Santos&#13;
Ojeda.&#13;
Forough, an adjunct professor of&#13;
music a t Parkside and one of the&#13;
few violinists in th e world t o study&#13;
with the late David Oistrakh, was a&#13;
finalist in the Tchaikovsky International&#13;
Competition in Moscow. Forough&#13;
has toured with orchestras in&#13;
East and West Germany, Hungary,&#13;
Austria, Belgium, the Soviet Union,&#13;
Czechoslovakia, Rumania, Poland,&#13;
the Middle Ea st and the U.S. Recently&#13;
he was a faculty member at&#13;
Rice University in Houston. Forough&#13;
performs on the famous Wilmotte&#13;
Stradivarious violin of 171 8.&#13;
Masters, who teaches music at&#13;
Parkside, earned both master's and&#13;
bachelor's degrees at Julliard&#13;
School. He has been principal cellist&#13;
of the Atlanta Chamber Orchestra,&#13;
the Richmond Symphony and&#13;
the Festival of Two Worlds Opera&#13;
Orchestra in Spoleto, Italy. He is&#13;
the editor of "Eisenberg's Bach,"&#13;
the six solo suites of J.S. Bach. His&#13;
awards include first prize in the international&#13;
cello competition of the&#13;
"Costa dol Sol" in Estoril, Portugal.&#13;
He has performed throughout&#13;
the U.S. as a soloist and chamber&#13;
musician and is a member of the&#13;
Chicago Ensemble.&#13;
Peer Support awards&#13;
two scholarships&#13;
Since 1984, Peer Support has&#13;
awarded two $50.00 scholarships&#13;
pa* semester to qualifying students.&#13;
In order to qualify, studen ts must&#13;
certify that they have not been a&#13;
full time student for at least seven&#13;
years and that they are not receiving&#13;
any other financial aid. Each&#13;
applicant must al so submit a letter&#13;
to the Peer Support Scholarship&#13;
Committee indicating his or her&#13;
educational goals at Parkside.&#13;
This semester the Scholarship&#13;
Committee has selected Karen M.&#13;
Vyvyan, a communication major,&#13;
and Donna Walan, a math and computer&#13;
science major, to receive the&#13;
awards.&#13;
Faculty pay increase&#13;
One of the art pieces on display&#13;
snap and slap two planks together&#13;
in "Toiling in The Danger and in&#13;
the Morals of Despair," and there&#13;
is tension in the marble slab that&#13;
threatens to topple, causing wires&#13;
to snap and steel to fly in "To Ease&#13;
the Time of Idleness and Meaning&#13;
of Decay."&#13;
But there is no snap or flip. You&#13;
are not slapped, crushed or shoved.&#13;
You escape physically unscathed.&#13;
And that is the intention. Tension is&#13;
created by thinking that something&#13;
may happen...or may not.&#13;
Merline says in a statement that&#13;
he "illustrates an ongoing concern&#13;
for the inter-relationships between&#13;
opposites: life and de ath, right and&#13;
left, male and female...and the&#13;
symbiotic balance that assures either&#13;
half." Merline does seem to use&#13;
balance as a metaphor, symbolic of&#13;
man's struggle to coexist with the&#13;
tensions he creat es.&#13;
Mo-line explores this balance on&#13;
many levels through his sculptur e.&#13;
There is balance in the union of&#13;
the pieces, from dainty bird quill to&#13;
chunk of raw steel, in how all parts&#13;
are responsible for safe-guarding&#13;
the sculptures from imminent collapse.&#13;
There is balance in how raw,&#13;
earthy logs ar e gradually and delicately&#13;
tapered into finished boards.&#13;
And there is balance in die way&#13;
steel, brass, wood, marble, wire&#13;
and quill, so different in torture&#13;
and feeling, keep their dignity and&#13;
work together in harmony.&#13;
Balance and tension. Tension and&#13;
balance. That is the central theme&#13;
of Merline's exhibit. The total effect&#13;
is quite hypnotic, beckoning&#13;
you t o come and explore th e tensions...&#13;
the balances...the harmony.&#13;
Continued from Page 1&#13;
of twenty percent, with individual&#13;
raises to be determined at each&#13;
campus."&#13;
Copies of this resolution will b e&#13;
sent to the members of the state&#13;
legislature. Both Chancellor Guskin&#13;
and Kenneth Hoover, member of&#13;
the Faculty Salary Committee and&#13;
Political Science professor, urged&#13;
the faculty to contact legislators.&#13;
Hoover said that Sen. Joseph&#13;
Strohl, D-Racine and Rep. Jeff&#13;
Neubauer, D-Racine, are aware of&#13;
the problem, and may be of help&#13;
during the next session of t he legislature.&#13;
"One need not worry about being&#13;
self-serving," Hoover told the faculty.&#13;
"This is for the future of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin."&#13;
Theater Department announces season slate&#13;
Amy Capobiano, Carolyn Blackinton and Rebecca&#13;
Julich in "Crimes of the Heart."&#13;
By Bill Serpe, Jr.&#13;
In 1984 a woman will shoot her&#13;
husband in the stomach because&#13;
she doesn't like his looks, and a&#13;
peppermint bear will unicycle its&#13;
way into your life. Several meals&#13;
will be consumed in a very short&#13;
time and a woman will go much&#13;
further than she should to please a&#13;
man. All this and more will be happening&#13;
in the coming year in the&#13;
four productions to be presented by&#13;
the Dramatic Arts Department in&#13;
the next season of plays at Parkside.&#13;
"Crimes of the Heart," by Beth&#13;
Henley, is already in rehearsal and&#13;
will open on the Main Stage of the&#13;
Communication-Arts Theatre Oct.&#13;
19 and run three more evenings on&#13;
Oct. 20, 28 and 27. A special morning&#13;
performance is scheduled for&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 26. The cast, under&#13;
the direction of Dr. Lee Van Dyke,&#13;
will include Rebeca Julich, John&#13;
Miskulin, Amy Copabianco and Bill&#13;
Serpe, all Parkside students; Denise&#13;
Valente of Racine and Caroline&#13;
Blackinston, a professional actress&#13;
from Chicago.&#13;
PAB&#13;
Musical Gems&#13;
• • • • •&#13;
by Jim Nribaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
In commemoration of Parkside's&#13;
homecoming, PAB is featuring a&#13;
double feature of classic RKO studio&#13;
musicals featuring Fred Astaire&#13;
and Ginger Rogers in vivid black&#13;
and white.&#13;
"Top Hat" (1935) uses an old&#13;
mistaken identity plot. "Shall We&#13;
Dance" (1937) features a simple&#13;
plot about a dance team who are&#13;
forced to pose as married.&#13;
These films will be shown Friday,&#13;
Oct. 12 at 1:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema and 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Square and Sunday, Oct. 14&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Price of admission is $1.00.&#13;
The plots of these films aren't&#13;
what matters. Both features are essential&#13;
representations of the thirties&#13;
song and dance film ("Top&#13;
Hat" perhaps being the better of&#13;
the two by a small margin) and are&#13;
a nice nostalgic change of pace&#13;
from current movie fare.&#13;
"Shall We Dance" features songs&#13;
by George and Ira Gershwin including&#13;
"Let's Call The Whole Thing&#13;
Off" and the title tune. "Top Hat"&#13;
was scored by Irving Berlin, the&#13;
songs including numbers like&#13;
"Cheek to Cheek" and "Top Hat,&#13;
White He, and Tails."&#13;
If you don't like old musicals, beware.&#13;
If you do, definitely check&#13;
these features out, as they are&#13;
among the most important am} well&#13;
.crafted of their genre.&#13;
It is all .t oo rare that early screen&#13;
classics are presented uncut and&#13;
uninterrupted on the big screen.&#13;
.Whether you're in the homecoming&#13;
spirit or not, this is a perfect opportunity&#13;
to view aeouple of screen&#13;
classics the way they were intended&#13;
to be seen.&#13;
In addition to acting in this show,&#13;
Caroline is also teaching an acting&#13;
class in comedy and giving professional&#13;
advice to any student interested&#13;
in pursuing a career in the theater.&#13;
The second production of the&#13;
year is "Peppermint Bear and the&#13;
Toy Elves." The Saturday and Sunday&#13;
morning productions of this&#13;
Christmas musical children's show&#13;
will be presented in December with&#13;
breakfast and a visit from Santa in&#13;
the Parkside Union. Charlie Myking,&#13;
John Miskulin, Connie Kowalski,&#13;
Andrew Brehl, Amy Copabianco,&#13;
Paul Mitchell and Missy&#13;
Weaver head up the cast under the&#13;
direction of Judith Tucker-Snider.&#13;
Putting this show together is a part&#13;
of Production Workshop, a regularly&#13;
scheduled class in the Dramatic&#13;
Arts curriculum, and students will&#13;
be earning credit hours while learning&#13;
all the ins and mits of professional&#13;
theatre. Students from the&#13;
Music Department will also be involved.&#13;
In February, "The Dining&#13;
Room" will be presetted as a studio&#13;
production, utilizing the television&#13;
studio as a theatre in the&#13;
round. Auditions for this show will&#13;
be announced late this year and&#13;
the cast will be directed by a guest&#13;
professional director. Dates for that&#13;
show are Feb. 22 and 23 and March&#13;
1 and 2.&#13;
The final show of the year will&#13;
again be presented on the Main&#13;
Stage. Lee Van Dyke will direct the&#13;
Parkside Players in Oliver Goldsmith's&#13;
"She Stoops To Conquer."&#13;
Auditions for this show will also be&#13;
announced at a lata* date and performances&#13;
will be held on April 19,&#13;
20, 26 and 27.&#13;
Ticket prices for all shows will&#13;
be $4.00 for adults and $3.00 for students,&#13;
except "Peppermint Bear,"&#13;
which will be $5.50 and $4.50 and&#13;
will include breakfast. However, a&#13;
special discount of 25 percent is&#13;
bring offered if tickets for the entire&#13;
season are ordered now. This&#13;
season ticket price equals four&#13;
shows for the price of three. Brochures&#13;
with all of file production&#13;
dates, prices and an order form can&#13;
be picked up at the Fine Arts office&#13;
in the Communication Arts building.&#13;
This year, for the first time,&#13;
Parkside is offering both a major&#13;
and a minor degree program in&#13;
Dramatic Arts. With the addition of&#13;
Keith Harris to the staff, all areas&#13;
of theater education will be presented,&#13;
from basic stagecraft to directing.&#13;
Any students interested in enrolling&#13;
in dramatic arts classes or&#13;
volunteering to work on productions&#13;
should come backstage any&#13;
time during school hours.&#13;
VOTE!&#13;
-k&#13;
•k&#13;
•k&#13;
-k&#13;
•k&#13;
•k&#13;
-k&#13;
-k&#13;
-k&#13;
-k&#13;
-k&#13;
•k&#13;
-k&#13;
-k&#13;
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•k&#13;
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•k&#13;
PSGA ELECTIONS&#13;
October 17 &amp; 18&#13;
are now available in the PSGA Office, D139A.&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
£&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
Jf-&#13;
*&#13;
-k Petitions for the following fall seats £&#13;
$&#13;
*&#13;
* * NINE SENATOR SEATS * *&#13;
-k ONE PUAB (Parkside Union Advisory Board) ^&#13;
^ ONE SUFAC (Segregated University Fees Allocation Committee) £&#13;
GET INVOLVED! *&#13;
ANYONE INTERESTED IS ASKED TO *&#13;
% STOP IN SOON! ;&#13;
I Petitions Are Due October 12 j&#13;
10 Thursday, Oct. 11,1984 RANGER&#13;
Coffeehouse&#13;
Music duo slated News not even worth seeing&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
T.J. South wick and Scott Stevenson,&#13;
a musical duo, are scheduled&#13;
to perform at the next PAB Coffeehouse&#13;
presentation in the Union&#13;
Bazaar Wednesday, Oct. 17 from&#13;
noon until 2 p.m. and again from 6&#13;
p.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
South wick and Stevenson enjoy&#13;
playing a variety of music to a va-&#13;
. riety of audiences, using various&#13;
elements of boogie, fusion and&#13;
swing in their original compositions.&#13;
Spontaneous dialogue, audience&#13;
interaction and experimental&#13;
toying with various gadgets as instruments&#13;
are also major aspects of&#13;
their performances.&#13;
South wick and Stevenson have&#13;
performed in a wide variety of&#13;
campuses and clubs in the Wisconsin&#13;
and Illinois area. Stout called&#13;
them "fun, enlightening and unforgettable."&#13;
The Mill Race Inn of Geneva,&#13;
Illinois stated they were "effective&#13;
entertainers and very talented&#13;
musicians."&#13;
Aside from the aforementioned&#13;
gadgetry, the guys perform with&#13;
such "real" instruments as guitar,&#13;
piano and harmonica. Since they&#13;
never do the same show twice, it&#13;
might be a good idea to catch both&#13;
of their performances Oct 17.&#13;
Dance to Cimmeron&#13;
at Homecoming&#13;
Students who appreciate the rock&#13;
n' roll sounds of the past are urged&#13;
to attend the PAB dance in the&#13;
Union Square Thursday, Oct. 11 at&#13;
8 p.m.&#13;
The band that is playing for this&#13;
dance is Cimmeron, a 3-member&#13;
group performing music by such&#13;
groups as the Beatles, the Beach&#13;
Boys, the Doors, Rolling Stones and&#13;
the Kinks, as well as several groups&#13;
unfortunately forgotten, such as the&#13;
Dave Clark Five and Paul Revere&#13;
and the Raiders.&#13;
Cimmeron performs roughly 200&#13;
engagements per year, and is said&#13;
to be one of the major area bands&#13;
specializing in classic early rockers.&#13;
PAB has announced that all persons&#13;
attending that evening's&#13;
Homecoming Coronation ceremony&#13;
and the Time Capsule event from 5&#13;
until 8 p.m. will be admitted to the&#13;
dance at half price. A student ID&#13;
and Wisconsin State ID are required.&#13;
9* (§lbe&#13;
50 OFF Spicettes&#13;
Week of Oct. 15&#13;
We have a full&#13;
selection of&#13;
Candy &amp; Nuts&#13;
Located in the Union Bazaar&#13;
Directly Across from the Info. Ctr.&#13;
by Did Oberbraner&#13;
TULSA — A spokeswoman from&#13;
the Geological Department of Jerry&#13;
Falwell's Moral Majority predicts&#13;
that a major earthquake will soon&#13;
devastate the "heathen capitol of&#13;
die world-Hollywood.''&#13;
Lucy WetwaDs, right-wing geologist&#13;
and born-again sandblaster,&#13;
gave ho* report after a life-long&#13;
study.&#13;
"Oh, those people are bad. All&#13;
that glitter and gold. They have it&#13;
coming. Good heavens, it'll be a&#13;
seven or eight on the Richter scale.&#13;
"I strongly recommend moving&#13;
to reality or converting. Ether one&#13;
will do. If every celebrity quit right&#13;
now, we'd pray for no such catastrophe.&#13;
We're interested in saving&#13;
people, not superstars."&#13;
Wetwalls warned that San&#13;
Franciso should prepare as well.&#13;
"No earthquake disrupts clean&#13;
Americans."&#13;
She said the quakes would occur&#13;
during the winter television reruns&#13;
or before next summer's blockbuster&#13;
movies.&#13;
" "Ghostbusters" caused a scare&#13;
in our hearts. The Reverend saw&#13;
this sham and nearly pushed the&#13;
panic button."&#13;
Dual-colored cotton shirts, pleated&#13;
at the waist, with shell buttons,&#13;
canvas trousers and boots are some&#13;
of the features in this new collection.&#13;
"It will bring men alive in the&#13;
dead of winter. Looking your best&#13;
no matte- how odd is what lime&#13;
Capsule is all about," Boop added.&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
LONDON — What will fashionable&#13;
men be wearing this winter?&#13;
Why the frozen looks of British&#13;
sailors, of course.&#13;
"It's very important that we&#13;
learn from history," wfaiim fashion&#13;
designer Beattie Boop, who is&#13;
at the frozen tombs of two British&#13;
sailors in the Arctic. "Hie wellpreserved&#13;
look will be in this winter."&#13;
The Time Capsule line will follow&#13;
the current military trend in&#13;
fashion, but has a looser, swashbuckling&#13;
appeal. Sort of an Indiana&#13;
Jones on ice.&#13;
DUBLIN, IRELAND — The&#13;
Irish Navy confiscated seven tons of&#13;
American candy bound for Northern&#13;
Ireland from a 50-foot trawler&#13;
in international waters.&#13;
Five members of the well-known&#13;
Irish Plaque Army woe arrested.&#13;
Police identified one of them as&#13;
Russel O'Leary, a dissident Irish&#13;
dentist who came to the U.S. after&#13;
the Irish Dental Society voted down&#13;
unionization in 1978.&#13;
"This candy was being brought&#13;
to our country to ruin the teeth of&#13;
Irish people," IDS president Malcolm&#13;
O'Burke said, describing the&#13;
shipment as "insidious" and criticizing&#13;
American support of tooth&#13;
decay.&#13;
"We know Americans who aim&#13;
for the mouth, debilitating the&#13;
teeth and guns until all of Ireland is&#13;
quiet. The American public doesn't&#13;
realize that we need to avoid&#13;
sweets like they do. And brushing&#13;
and flossing is the backbone of dental&#13;
hygiene. The scheming radials&#13;
of the IPA must be stopped."&#13;
In Dublin, police said the seven&#13;
ton shipment, including candy bars,&#13;
jelly beans, bubble gum and malted&#13;
milk balls, had been loaded onto&#13;
the Good time Charlie from an&#13;
American cargo vessel.&#13;
It was the largest candy haul&#13;
since June 1983 when the Irish&#13;
Navy seized a ten ton shipment of&#13;
jujubes aboard the Greek coaster,&#13;
Fordicelli.&#13;
The PIA is fighting dental repeal&#13;
in Ireland, garnering world-wide&#13;
support against anti-union dentists.&#13;
NEW YORK - "National Geographic&#13;
Magazine," which often depicts&#13;
topless tribal women, offered&#13;
Elizabeth Taylor |1 million to pose&#13;
naked in a native New Guinea setting.&#13;
"Geographic" publisher, Harold&#13;
P. Grosvenor, made the offer&#13;
through a spokesman for Ms. Taylor.&#13;
"She refused to disrobe but&#13;
would like the money anyway," he&#13;
reported. Opinions vary as to how&#13;
the deal was offered and how it&#13;
broke off.&#13;
Grosvenor states his offer was&#13;
for her to be photographed in native&#13;
clothing. Women in some New&#13;
Guinea tribes only wear long braided&#13;
hair and bikini underwear.&#13;
Taylor said that Grosvenor was&#13;
"insensitive to the ethnic histories&#13;
of both myself and New Guineans.&#13;
Receiving money for unnatural&#13;
modeling is a slap in the face."&#13;
However, Taylor never said that&#13;
she would not pose nude. "I&#13;
demanded Welsh countryside or no&#13;
shooting at all. I'm native to England,&#13;
not New Guinea."&#13;
Grosvenor refused to budget&#13;
from his original plan. And he will&#13;
not give her the money "just for&#13;
kicks."&#13;
I guess her husbands will only&#13;
know.&#13;
Men wanted&#13;
So you wanna be a model! MEM&#13;
Company has announced a national&#13;
campus search for a man to represent&#13;
their English Leather Musk&#13;
men's toiletries for 1985. Hie winners&#13;
will receive cadi, prizes and&#13;
fame.&#13;
To enter, send a black and white&#13;
or color photo to Campus Search&#13;
for English Leather Musk Man, in&#13;
care of the editor of the Ranger.&#13;
The photos can be no more than six&#13;
months old, no larger than 8x10 and&#13;
no smaller than 3x5.&#13;
The editorial staff of the Ranger&#13;
will select three male student representatives&#13;
of Parkside as semifinalists.&#13;
Each wil receive a gift set&#13;
of English Leather Musk men's toiletries.&#13;
A panel of judge selected&#13;
by the manufacturer win select one&#13;
campus winner who will be entered&#13;
in th e finals&#13;
Hie national winner win be the&#13;
English Leather Musk Man for 1985&#13;
and receive a cash contribution of&#13;
*1.000 toward his tuition, a selection&#13;
of merchandise prizes and an&#13;
aU-expense paid trip to New York&#13;
to be photographed by a leading&#13;
photographer. AD selections are&#13;
based on photographic appeal. Employees&#13;
of the MEM Company and&#13;
their families are not eligible.&#13;
Uwsrt,,* WBcor*»Hp*iu«j.&#13;
Don't miss it&#13;
Wild Life&#13;
by&#13;
John Kovalic&#13;
A pause&#13;
in the&#13;
disaster&#13;
by Pat Zirkelbach&#13;
and Bob KiesUng&#13;
We went through a lot of beer&#13;
when we moved.&#13;
Not only did we use it to persuade&#13;
our potential helpers to find&#13;
time to help us that Labor Day&#13;
weekend; by the time we'd actually&#13;
moved in, we needed it.&#13;
Nobody in their right mind&#13;
moves by themselves. We were no&#13;
exception. Our helpers were typical:&#13;
well-meaning and helpful, but&#13;
slightly inept and getting slowly&#13;
drunk. On our beer, of course. We&#13;
were too busy becoming interior&#13;
decorators to notice then.&#13;
"Where should that chair go?"&#13;
asked Pat.&#13;
"Oh, I don't know, maybe somewhere&#13;
over th ere."&#13;
"I don't know..."&#13;
"Will you please for chrissakes&#13;
make up your mind?" cries Bill,&#13;
who was holdin g the chair&#13;
"Just put it down for now."&#13;
Bill looked at the cluttered floor&#13;
for a moment, and dropped the&#13;
chair on a box of dishes. There&#13;
were other narrowly averted disasters.&#13;
"You know," said one of our&#13;
friends, who was in the dining&#13;
room, " the records would fit just&#13;
right on to p of this radiator."&#13;
And so it went. We did get everything&#13;
sorted out eventually, but&#13;
that wasn't the end of our problems.&#13;
We found ourselves fully furnished&#13;
but ill-equipped. The refrigerator,&#13;
it turned out, had gone south&#13;
for the winter. It was in the basement,&#13;
to be exact, and we were on&#13;
the second flow.&#13;
We finally went downstairs to&#13;
look at it. Pat opened it. The inside&#13;
was getting rusty, and it smelled as&#13;
if a c reature had lived and died inside.&#13;
"You want to keep food in&#13;
there?"&#13;
"No way," said Bob. It was thai&#13;
we decided to get another refrigerator.&#13;
A fondness for warm beer is an&#13;
acquired ta ste, we found.&#13;
We can laugh about it now, but it&#13;
wasn't funny then, buying food that&#13;
wouldn't spoil. But now, six weeks&#13;
into our residency here, we're getting&#13;
settled. We're even learning to&#13;
cook.&#13;
Ski' TGhree at Unknown'&#13;
CTCffiDBum&#13;
Jump into the action on the slopes of&#13;
one of Colorado's finest ski resorts —&#13;
CRESTED BUTTE. Travel Associates and&#13;
the NCSA have put together a&#13;
program of Wild West skiing,&#13;
parties and fun you won't want&#13;
to miss. The official 1 985 NCSA&#13;
"National Collegiate Ski Week"™&#13;
package includes:&#13;
io o&#13;
*285 per&#13;
person&#13;
• Round-trip transportation&#13;
• 7 nights deluxe lodging at one&#13;
of Crested Butte's finest facilities&#13;
• A lift ticket for 5 days of skiing&#13;
Crested Butte's "Great Unknown"&#13;
• Two "Wild West" parties with bands&#13;
• A major concert&#13;
• A special "on-mountain"&#13;
Beer &amp; Cheese Party&#13;
• Entry fees to two races with&#13;
prizes for the top male and&#13;
female winners&#13;
it Special appearances by&#13;
Lite "All-Stars"&#13;
• A discount coupon program for&#13;
area bars, restaurants and services&#13;
• All applicable taxes&#13;
• Services of Travel Associates'&#13;
professional on-site staff&#13;
Contact: Ann Fralich&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
553-2650&#13;
or sign up in Union 209&#13;
Tour Date:&#13;
Jan. 3-12&#13;
12 Thursday, Oct. 11,1984 RANGER&#13;
Post Nasal Strip by Paul Berge cuRRems in euoLunon A&#13;
IN CENTURIES TO COME,&#13;
ANIMALS WILL DEVELOP&#13;
DEFENSES AGAINST BEING&#13;
HIT BY CARS:&#13;
ID rule explained With six you get eggroll&#13;
by Jim Ndbaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Advertisements promoting PABsponsored&#13;
activities on campus&#13;
stress that students "must have a&#13;
Parkside ID and a Wisconsin State&#13;
ID to enter." Many have been confysed,&#13;
wondering if students under&#13;
nineteen are allowed into these&#13;
dances.&#13;
According to the PAB's Contemporary&#13;
Entertainment Chairperson&#13;
Sandy Wachs, students of any age&#13;
can attend the activities, but must&#13;
be of legal age to drink alcoholic&#13;
beverages.&#13;
Patrons will have their hand&#13;
stamped to show that they did pay&#13;
(in case they needed to leave and&#13;
later return), while those with&#13;
proper ID's to drink would be given&#13;
a wristband. Since the wristband&#13;
cannot be removed without being&#13;
destroyed, exchanging bands with&#13;
someone under age is virtually impossible.&#13;
Student Organizations Committee&#13;
representative for the PUAB&#13;
(Parkside Union Advisory Board)&#13;
Jack Kemper added that underage&#13;
guests are no longer allowed, the&#13;
board believing that an underage&#13;
non-student would be more likely&#13;
to chance illegal drinking Hmn an&#13;
underage student.&#13;
The Parkside ID rule is standard&#13;
practice. The Wisconsin ID rules&#13;
are being enforced due to the new&#13;
law regarding legal age for the consumption&#13;
of alcholic beverages in&#13;
this state.&#13;
UWM films announced&#13;
i The Dream On Film Society at&#13;
UW-Milwaukee has announced the&#13;
film events scheduled for the&#13;
month of October.&#13;
Among the films to be presented&#13;
are "Hester Street," "Breakin' ",&#13;
"Rose Marie," "American at the&#13;
Movies," "Willard" and "Psycho."&#13;
The films are run in a variety of&#13;
locations on the Milwaukee campus&#13;
including the Union Cinema, Sandburg&#13;
Flicks Theater, Bolton Hall&#13;
room 150, and Engelman Hall room&#13;
117.&#13;
Showtime is usually 8 p.m. and&#13;
10 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday,&#13;
but these times do vary. Admission&#13;
is 82 for Milwaukee students,&#13;
|2.50 for non-students. Season&#13;
tickets are available at |1 for&#13;
students and $1.50 for non-students&#13;
per film.&#13;
For any further information, contact&#13;
the Dream On Film Society in&#13;
care of UWM, Box 413, Milwaukee,&#13;
Wisconsin 53201.&#13;
by Natalie P. Haberman&#13;
"A Change From The Ordinary&#13;
Fast Food" is the slogan used by&#13;
Tacos El Ray, located at 2000 Birch&#13;
Rd. (Hwy. EE-literally five minutes&#13;
from campus). The decision to go&#13;
there was unanimous, based on the&#13;
fact that the four of us had never&#13;
been there and I had one of my biweekly&#13;
cravings for taco salad (it is&#13;
usually one of the few Mexican&#13;
items that comes without those&#13;
icky refried beans).&#13;
When we pulled into the parking&#13;
lot, I was instantly reminded of a&#13;
beauty parlor. I'm not sure if it was&#13;
becuase of the ornate drapes with&#13;
fringe in the windows, or because&#13;
you have to walk to the side of the&#13;
building to get in. In either case,&#13;
the cleanliness of the building and&#13;
the availability of the location to&#13;
Parkside are a definite plus.&#13;
The ordering is done in a fashion&#13;
similar to most fast food restaurants.&#13;
A friendly young woman in a&#13;
red uniform took our order at the&#13;
counter, we paid separately, picked&#13;
up our food and sat down to eat.&#13;
This set up is nice because you can&#13;
help yourself to the plastic utensils,&#13;
as many napkins as you think you'll&#13;
need and sauce (mild or hot),then&#13;
pick up your food by the time you&#13;
get done with these preliminaries.&#13;
In other words, it is time-efficient&#13;
for a student with one hour be-&#13;
DRINKING IS&#13;
AMERICA'S&#13;
#1 PASTIME!&#13;
PORKY'S 2117 91st Street Kenosha&#13;
* Convenient location&#13;
* Ample off street parking&#13;
(lighted)&#13;
* Featuring some of the&#13;
area's best music live&#13;
* Affo rdable prices (we're&#13;
the lowest!)&#13;
* Large d ance floor&#13;
* Large seating capacity&#13;
* Exc ellent food s erved&#13;
* 3 billiard tables &amp; vid eo&#13;
games&#13;
Check It Out!&#13;
Mon.-Ladies Night - reduced prices (Jockey Shorts contest&#13;
begins Nov.)&#13;
Tues.-Men's Night Out - reduced prices (Wet T-Shirt contest&#13;
begins Nov.)&#13;
,Wed.-The Porky Review: 50's &amp; 60's live entertainment (begins&#13;
Nov.)&#13;
Thurs.-25* 6-oz. tap/$1.75 55-oz. pitchers!&#13;
Fri.-The best in live music for your entertainment!&#13;
Sat.-The best in live music for your entertainment!&#13;
Sun.-Sports Fans! 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Happy Hour with food served!&#13;
Country A Western after 7 p.m. (begins Nov.)&#13;
PORKY'S IS YOUR KIND O F PUCE!"&#13;
I 1 Racine-Kenosha County Line Rd. ^&#13;
»I1 st Street&#13;
PORKY'S —&#13;
State Line Rd.&#13;
(RusseH Rd.)&#13;
tween classes to eat there.&#13;
Because I had been looking for&#13;
taco salad all day, my friends let&#13;
me order first. The taco salad was&#13;
available in two small for&#13;
31.45 and large for $2.80. The price&#13;
of the large salad is slightly less expensive&#13;
than the going rate around&#13;
town, so undo- this pretense I ordered&#13;
the large. There are two&#13;
kinds of dressing normally served&#13;
on taco salads-a mild salsa (spicy&#13;
tomato dip) and a sour-cream-base&#13;
dressing. Taco El Ray saves the&#13;
salsa. The dressing was good, but&#13;
I've been known to put sour cream&#13;
on cabbage, so I ordered some on&#13;
the side.&#13;
The salad was average. There&#13;
was an ample portion of tasty meat,&#13;
lettuce and fresh cheese, but not&#13;
nearly enough tomatoes. The real&#13;
downfall was that practically every&#13;
restaurant in the area that serves&#13;
taco salad presents theirs in an edible&#13;
shell-shaped bowl. Taco El&#13;
Ray's comes in a plastic, microwave-&#13;
safe dish.&#13;
Bruce ordered one of the three&#13;
combination plates. It consisted of&#13;
one enchilada, one taco, one burrito,&#13;
Spanish rice, refried beans, avocado&#13;
and sour cream, for 84.45. He&#13;
thai totally confused the woman at&#13;
the counter by asking for no beans,&#13;
no onion, no tomato and no avocado.&#13;
He also ordered a small order&#13;
of nachos (81-25) with a side of guacamole&#13;
(gwa ku mo li). The combination&#13;
plate was huge and would&#13;
have easily been enough for two&#13;
people to share. Bruce found his&#13;
meal a bit bland (gee, I wonder&#13;
why?). The best thing about his&#13;
meal was that the dreaded refried&#13;
beans were mistakenly plopped on&#13;
his burrito and he was able to exchangd&#13;
it (at no extra cost) fa a&#13;
sirloin tip burrito. Normally priced&#13;
at 31-75, the sirloin tip burrito is&#13;
one of the most unique thing* I&#13;
have ever sampled at a Mexican&#13;
restaurant. It was big and filling&#13;
and is definitely the item I will&#13;
order the next time I go to Tacos&#13;
El Ray.&#13;
Randy ordered the Cheese Enchilada&#13;
Plate. This had three&#13;
cheese-and-onion filled enchiladas&#13;
(a fried corn tortilla topped with a&#13;
special salsa sauce), Spanish rice,&#13;
beans, avocado and sour cream.&#13;
The beans woe replaced by an&#13;
extra order of rice, and once again&#13;
the size of the saving was more&#13;
than enough. This is really saying a&#13;
lot because Randy is one of the biggest&#13;
eaters I know (and I know&#13;
many people who eat). Although he&#13;
was satisfied with his meal, he&#13;
commented that the rice was&#13;
"nothing to write to Uncle Ben&#13;
about."&#13;
Greg is the only one of us who&#13;
likes refried beans! He ordered a&#13;
bean burrito (80 cents), a tostada&#13;
(75 cents) and an order of guacamole&#13;
with chips (31-95). Both the&#13;
tostada and the burrito had refried&#13;
beans, onions and cheese, but the&#13;
tostada is saved "open face" on a&#13;
crisp corn tortila and has seasoned&#13;
ground beef. Greg enjoyed his&#13;
lunch very much.&#13;
Guacamole is one of the most interesting&#13;
foods cm e arth. It is also&#13;
one of the few things that is green&#13;
and nasty-looking and still edible.&#13;
Made from fresh avocados, this dip&#13;
is excellent. Greg and I differed a&#13;
bit in our opinion because I thought&#13;
it should have been just a tad spicier&#13;
and have a few more tomato&#13;
bits. He thought it was perfect.&#13;
Ova all, the things that stick out&#13;
my mind are the friendly counter&#13;
service, the large portions, the sirloin&#13;
tip burrito and the generous&#13;
amount of fresh cheese that went&#13;
on everything. The soft drinks were&#13;
fairly priced (65 cents for a large&#13;
one) and the atmosphere was subdued,&#13;
with a touch of Mexican design.&#13;
Where else can you go and&#13;
hear "Pretty Woman" sung in&#13;
Spanish? (I never knew Roy Orbison&#13;
was bi-lingual!) There is also a&#13;
wide assortment of little rugs with&#13;
Mexican designs, and plants casualty&#13;
scattered about the place.&#13;
Would I go bade? Yes. The menu&#13;
is large and has many alternatives&#13;
to taco salad. The owner, Ben&#13;
Rodriguez, claims that all the&#13;
dishes are made from recipes passed&#13;
on to him by his parents who&#13;
owned a small restaurant in Mexico.&#13;
He also said that the chimichanga&#13;
(chiro me rhan gah) is&#13;
the house specialty; but this deepfried&#13;
flour tortilla stuffed with&#13;
everything on the menu and then&#13;
topped with sour cream, avocado&#13;
and tomatoes (83.55) would have&#13;
been too much for lunch time.&#13;
Tacos El Ray is convenient, reasonably&#13;
priced and cozy. I would recommend&#13;
it to all my amigos.&#13;
Next week "With Six You Get&#13;
Eggroll" will feature tips on tipping.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Child Care Center&#13;
Effective communication helps child development&#13;
by Kathy Hart&#13;
Effective communication with&#13;
children can foster a more positive&#13;
self-concept and heightened self-esteem,&#13;
both of which result in a&#13;
more positive atti tude toward the&#13;
self, others and learning.&#13;
The development of self-concept&#13;
and self-esteem are acquired in&#13;
much the same way as the child's&#13;
formed concepts of his or ho* physical&#13;
environment. From a great&#13;
deal of information processed&#13;
through a variety of experiences,&#13;
the young child generalizes and&#13;
forms concepts.&#13;
There are four major sources by&#13;
which self-conc ept and self-esteem&#13;
originate: the impression the child&#13;
receives from others; the child's experiences;&#13;
the child's ability to&#13;
achieve and internalize the goals set&#13;
for him by "significant others," like&#13;
parents, teachers and siblings; and&#13;
the child's ability to evaluate his&#13;
performance based on his own&#13;
standards.&#13;
Hie information received from&#13;
the significant others is essential to&#13;
the formation of the child's selfconcept.&#13;
The comments by these&#13;
significant others about their concern&#13;
f or the child's welfare, their&#13;
approval or disapproval and their&#13;
attitudes, facial expressions and&#13;
tone of voice all influence the manner&#13;
in which the child perceives&#13;
and values hims elf.&#13;
Verbal instructions between the&#13;
child and parents or teachers are an&#13;
important in the development of&#13;
the child's self-concept. The young&#13;
child lacks the sophisticated cognitive&#13;
s tructures for self-analysis, so&#13;
it is through comments he perceives&#13;
of himself as shy or noisy,&#13;
good or naughty, pretty, nice, careful,&#13;
neat or sloppy.&#13;
For example, Jerry, a kindergarten&#13;
s*- \ accidentally spills a jar&#13;
of pa^u. Teacher A replies, "Why&#13;
are you so sloppy? Nobody else&#13;
spills their paint Can't you be like&#13;
everyone else?" Reactions like&#13;
these do little to enhance the&#13;
child's positive self-concept.&#13;
Too often adults either ignore&#13;
the child's feelings or do not accept&#13;
them as meaningful and relevant to&#13;
a situation. There are alternative&#13;
modes of communication, b ut one&#13;
must be aware and sensitive to the&#13;
child's feelings, and realize that&#13;
even a young child has an ego and a&#13;
sense of pride.&#13;
Effective communication is a&#13;
way parents and teachers can encourage&#13;
a strong self-concept and&#13;
heighten self-esteem in young children.&#13;
This language of communication&#13;
i s based on a mutual respect&#13;
between the adult and the child. An&#13;
important component of effective&#13;
communication is the ability of th e&#13;
adult to address the situation, and&#13;
not the personality and character of&#13;
the child.&#13;
Phrases like "Why can't you&#13;
ever..." or "Why are you so. .." or&#13;
"How many times..." or "What's&#13;
the matter with you?" must be eliminated&#13;
from the adult's interactions&#13;
with t he child. Here is an example&#13;
of utilizing t he principle of&#13;
addressing the situation and not the&#13;
child's personality and character:&#13;
In a kindergarten classroom during&#13;
snack time, two boys were holding&#13;
a contest to see who could throw&#13;
more cookies out the window. Several&#13;
cookies missed the window and&#13;
smashed on the floor. The teacher&#13;
responded with "1 get very a ngry&#13;
and I am most displeased when I&#13;
see food being wasted and thrown.&#13;
Cookies are not for throwing. The&#13;
floor needs immediate cleaning."&#13;
This verbal interaction states clearly&#13;
the teacher's philosophy about&#13;
throwing food, without any verbal&#13;
abuse or insults, and no derogatory&#13;
attack was made on either child.&#13;
Adopting new phrases that allow&#13;
the child to maintain his or her selfesteem,&#13;
integrity and dignity is&#13;
needed.&#13;
Such phrases include: "I feel&#13;
(blank) when you (do this)," or "To&#13;
see you (do this) would make me&#13;
happy." or "I would appreciate..."&#13;
or "I have confidence that you&#13;
wifi..."&#13;
When the adult tells the child&#13;
how some unacceptable behavior is&#13;
making the adult fed, the message&#13;
generally turns out to be what Dr.&#13;
Thompson Gordon, author of&#13;
"P.E.T. (Parent Effectiveness&#13;
Training)" calls an "I-message."&#13;
The I-messages seem to be more effective&#13;
in influencing a child to&#13;
modify his/her behavior and at the&#13;
same time not be destructive to the&#13;
child's self-concept and pride. The&#13;
Children learn by working with teachers and their peers&#13;
I-message tells the child that he or&#13;
she is responsible for his/ho- own&#13;
behavior and gives the child the opportunity&#13;
to handle a situation constructively&#13;
because of the lessthreatening&#13;
use of I-messages.&#13;
A dramatic change in the manner&#13;
in which we speak with children&#13;
can result in substantial changes in&#13;
behavior. If effective communication&#13;
is used by parents and teachers,&#13;
children will feel better about&#13;
themselves as individuals and wifi&#13;
begin to adopt these principles of&#13;
communication with their parents,&#13;
siblings and friends.&#13;
3:30 p.m.&#13;
5:00 p.m.&#13;
5:00 p.m.&#13;
7:00 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
OCTOBER 11&#13;
PAB Rims: "Shall We Dance" and "Top&#13;
Hat"&#13;
Union Cinema 51.00&#13;
Pizza, Pasta and Celebrity Sauces&#13;
Union Dining Room&#13;
Homecoming King and Queen&#13;
Coronation&#13;
Union Dining Room&#13;
University Time C apsule Ceremony&#13;
Union Dining Room&#13;
PAB/Homecoming Dance&#13;
Featuring 6Cs music by "Cimmeron"&#13;
Union Square&#13;
$1 student&#13;
$2 faculty, staff, alumni &amp; g uests&#13;
(Half p rice admission if you attend&#13;
Coronation and Time Capsule)&#13;
HOMICO 84&#13;
11:00 a.m.&#13;
University of Wrsconsin-Parkside&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
OCTOBER 13&#13;
Reunions:&#13;
• Med Tech&#13;
• Math Teachers&#13;
Union&#13;
2:00 p.m. Reunion:&#13;
• Engineering&#13;
Union&#13;
2:00 p.m. Soccer Game: Rangers vs. Northland&#13;
Soccer Field&#13;
$1 students&#13;
$2 general&#13;
5.-00 p.m. Reunions:&#13;
• Ranger Newspaper&#13;
• Parkside Student Government&#13;
Assocation&#13;
• Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Union Dining Rom&#13;
8:00 p.m. Homecomining Semi-Formal Dance&#13;
with Casino&#13;
Main Place&#13;
53.00 students&#13;
$5.00 faculty, staff, alumni and guests&#13;
TICKET PACKAGE&#13;
Attend the Homecoming events by purchasing&#13;
the ticket package. Package includes the Thursday&#13;
evening dance, Homecoming Variety&#13;
Show, Soccer Game and the Semi-Formal&#13;
Dance. Student tickets are $4.50. Faculty, staff,&#13;
alumni and guest price is $8.50. Package tickets&#13;
as well as individual tickets will be on sale at the&#13;
Union Information Desk. • •&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
OCTOBER 12&#13;
1:30 p.m. PAB Rims: "Shall We Dance" and "Top Haf&#13;
Union Cinema $1.00&#13;
8:00 p.m. Homecoming Variety Show&#13;
Featuring Comedian Tim Settfmi&#13;
Union Cinema&#13;
Advance: $1.50 students&#13;
$3.00 general&#13;
At Do or: $2.00 students&#13;
$3.50 general&#13;
10:30 p.m. Union Square Open Alter Variet y Show&#13;
144 Thursday, Oct I'l, 1984 RANGER&#13;
Health center for students&#13;
by Wes McCarver&#13;
. Parkside offers many health&#13;
services to help students stay&#13;
healthy or get healthy. " I think&#13;
that health services on campus can&#13;
have a significant impact on peoples'&#13;
lives," said Marry Bassis,&#13;
Health Services program coordinator.&#13;
Some of the ongoing services&#13;
are: Body Shoppe, Personal Counseling,&#13;
Lifestyle Assessments, Family&#13;
Planning, Birth Control and&#13;
PMS Assessment. These services&#13;
are available at the Health Service&#13;
Cento-, Moln. 9-115.&#13;
The Body Shoppe is basically a&#13;
weight loss clinic, which includes a&#13;
10-week program and a support&#13;
group. "Now there are people to&#13;
talk with and get support from,"&#13;
said Bassis. The Body Shoppe&#13;
meets every Wednesday from 2 to 3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Those who seek personal counseling&#13;
can also meet with Bassis. In&#13;
Edith Isenberg's absence, counseling&#13;
is open to anyone, on any subject,&#13;
but according to Bassis, people&#13;
frequently come in to sort out&#13;
what the issues are-issues such as&#13;
"Where do I want to go?" "What&#13;
do I want to do?" and "Is this what&#13;
I want?"&#13;
The topics dealth with in the&#13;
Lifestyle Assessments program are&#13;
cigarette smoking, alcohol and drug&#13;
abuse, eating habits, exercise, fitness,&#13;
stress control, and safety. According&#13;
to a pamphlet available in&#13;
the Health Cento entitled "Becoming&#13;
Independently Healthy," wellness&#13;
is "feeling good enough about&#13;
yourself to regularly take stock of&#13;
your life, to intervene and/or nourish&#13;
whenever possible and to find&#13;
or develop the necessary means of&#13;
reinforement and motivation to&#13;
continue your involvement toward&#13;
becoming a better you."&#13;
Bassis feels that the Health Services&#13;
has adopted a this wellness&#13;
model. The program is designed to&#13;
help one quit smoking, abandon the&#13;
to&#13;
Sports Schedule&#13;
Friday, Oct 12&#13;
Women's volleyball at the St. Ambrose&#13;
(Iowa) tournament, continuing&#13;
through Saturday.&#13;
Saturday, Oct 13&#13;
Men's cross-country at the UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Invitational, beginning at&#13;
11 a.m.&#13;
Women's cross-country at the UWMilwaukee&#13;
Invitational, beginning&#13;
at 11 a.m.&#13;
Women's tennis at UW-Green Bay,&#13;
beginning at 11 a.m.&#13;
Men's soccer vs. Northland at the&#13;
Parkside field (Homecoming), beginning&#13;
at 2 p.m.&#13;
Monday, Oct 15&#13;
Men's soccer at the College of St.&#13;
Francis (HI.), beginning at 4 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct 17&#13;
Women's volleyball hosts the Parkside&#13;
Triangular. Lewis vs. Parkside&#13;
at 5:30 p.m.; UW-Milwaukee vs.&#13;
Lewis at 6:30 p.m.; UW-M vs.&#13;
Parkside at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
IT'S *****&#13;
TIME&#13;
ENJOY&#13;
OLD STYLE&#13;
ON TAP&#13;
AT&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
use of drugs and alcohol and&#13;
help one improve his/her life.&#13;
"I think that there are a lot of dimensions&#13;
to our lives, and if we are&#13;
well, as well as we can be, then the&#13;
things that we want to do are going&#13;
to work out just that much better,"&#13;
she said. Bassis hopes to have some&#13;
self-care modules scheduled within&#13;
the next two months on colds, and&#13;
next semester cm bl ood pressure.&#13;
Counseling is available concerning&#13;
family plannint, birth control&#13;
and PMS. The Health Cento has&#13;
hired Family Planning of Racine to&#13;
help council students on these topics.&#13;
This does not mean they are&#13;
handing out birth control devices.&#13;
The counseling is available in the&#13;
Health Services Cento between 2&#13;
and 6 p.m. on Tuesdays.&#13;
First aid is still available at the&#13;
Cento, but those involved in the&#13;
Health Services organization want&#13;
to offer more. "What we've really&#13;
dime," summed up Bassis, "is to&#13;
try to develop programs that will&#13;
have some impact on students' lives&#13;
in the long run."&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Victory by default&#13;
by Dennis Harbach&#13;
Last Saturday, Parkside's soccer&#13;
team was scheduled to play Milwaukee&#13;
School of Engineering for&#13;
the district championship. As it&#13;
turned out, MSOE never showed&#13;
and Parkside won by default. After&#13;
witnessing this turn of events.&#13;
Coach Rick Kilps stated, "In ten&#13;
years of college coaching, this has&#13;
never happened to me." With that&#13;
victory, Parkside will represent&#13;
Wisconsin in the regional play-offs.&#13;
But there was exciting soccer to&#13;
watch last Saturday. The team&#13;
divided itself and played some&#13;
tough ball with the Green Slime&#13;
winning 3-1. Scoring to the Slime&#13;
were Chucky Rodriguez and Scott&#13;
Gerhartz. Tyson added a goal as&#13;
time ran out.&#13;
Last week, Parkside pounded&#13;
Carthage College 30. They dominated&#13;
the contest from start to finish.&#13;
Wayne Donovan provided two&#13;
goals in the first period, which&#13;
proved to be all the scoring the&#13;
guys needed. Freshman Steve Donovan&#13;
had two assists. According to&#13;
Kilps, total domination by Parkside&#13;
with good team effort made the&#13;
game not much of a contest.&#13;
Last Wednesday, Parkside was to&#13;
see a different fete. Parkside was&#13;
confronted by the ruthless Madison&#13;
team. Parkside fought hard in the&#13;
first half, and at its end the game&#13;
was still scoreless. The Badgers&#13;
jumped out quickly in the first half&#13;
though, scoring within the first five&#13;
minutes and again several minutes&#13;
later.&#13;
"We had nothing to be ashamed&#13;
of," stated a content Kilps. "We&#13;
played hard." Parkside's standings&#13;
are 6-3. In Division Two of the&#13;
NCAA, they are ranked fourteenth&#13;
in the country and second in the&#13;
midwest. Kilps reiterated, "They&#13;
have worked hard and are much&#13;
improved." Parkside plays at home&#13;
this Saturday in the Homecoming&#13;
game against Northland College.&#13;
Men's cross country&#13;
Team runs to third victory&#13;
by Mike Froehlke&#13;
The Parkside men's cross country&#13;
team won its third meet of the&#13;
season last Saturday by defending&#13;
its title at the October 6 Loyola Invitational&#13;
in Chicago, The team&#13;
continued its very strong showing&#13;
with a close victory over Marquette&#13;
and Loyola. When two second place&#13;
finishes in five total meets are&#13;
added to three firsts, the sum is a&#13;
fine start for the Rangers.&#13;
The Rangers were led by Tim&#13;
Renzelman's 25:00, Rich Miller's&#13;
25:26, Dan Stublaski's 25:43 and&#13;
Andy Serrano's 25:48. Renzelman's&#13;
quick finish was good enough for&#13;
third place, while Miller, Stublaski&#13;
and Serrano finished fifth, seventh&#13;
and eighth respectively. Also putting&#13;
out strong performances were&#13;
Ted Miller in eleventh place, Mark&#13;
Manning in 22nd and Dan Peterson,&#13;
32nd.&#13;
Marquette finished a close second&#13;
to the Rangers. Behind Marquette,&#13;
Loyola and North Central&#13;
came in third and fourth respectively.&#13;
Parkside coach Lucian Rosa expected&#13;
a somewhat easier meet. "I&#13;
was very surprised that Marquette&#13;
was there. They were not scheduled&#13;
to be there. I was happy, and we&#13;
did have a good meet, although it&#13;
was much tougher than I expected,"&#13;
said Rosa.&#13;
The eighth ranked Rangers will&#13;
move to the Milwaukee Invitational&#13;
on Oct. 13, where Parkside is also&#13;
the defending champion. Classified Ads For Sale&#13;
1171 YAMAHA 650 Special. Excellent condttkn.&#13;
$1600. 637-1860, aik for Steve.&#13;
BEAUTIFUL, WARM hand-woven ECUADORAN&#13;
PONCHOS for fan twck-toacfaool wear.&#13;
Send for FREE color brochure. Ponchos,&#13;
P.O. Box 142, Sussex, WI 58060.&#13;
TAN SEATS, front and back for an early "70a&#13;
Camaro Firebird. AND a frontcnd spoiler.&#13;
For info call 6844)662, 1« pjn. Ask for Chip.&#13;
Personals&#13;
CKM. ICH fehJe du und wiQe tinnier sei da&#13;
wartea! S.S.R.&#13;
116061, INI Edi Kita! 061668&#13;
ZIAD, HAPPY 21st B titbday!! Many wishes&#13;
and lots more! AOP&#13;
HEY, Z: May Dreams Come True on October&#13;
15. Happy Btitbday!!&#13;
CYNDE: YOU will alw ays be a part of me.&#13;
R1Z&#13;
JIM N.: Will you come to Sex Class with me?&#13;
CYNDE: BELIEVE me, what you don't&#13;
know wont hurt you!&#13;
STEVE A BOB: rm guilty. I confess. When&#13;
do I get my free dinner? ESK.&#13;
JOHN C.W.-R.A. Make my life completeshare&#13;
some Ash with me and be mine! you&#13;
gorgeous thing!&#13;
A.T. IF it might take a long distance call, I'd&#13;
rather use Western Union. I've i&#13;
ber. MISS YOU. TX.&#13;
EMPO: I'M looking foward to your B-day a&#13;
B-day suit. Love Orge&#13;
• got your num-&#13;
J.C.W. YOUR week is finally up. I guess&#13;
you're forgiven. i&#13;
A.T. LOOKING for ward to the 1Mb. T.L.&#13;
C.K-M. ICH bebe dkh! Icfa wille fanmer sei&#13;
da! S.S.R&#13;
HEATHER: How have you survived? It's&#13;
been a month!!&#13;
I'VE GOT the best looking date for the&#13;
Homecoming Dance. He also doubles as a terrific&#13;
soccer player. Not to mention what a&#13;
great dad he is. MOM&#13;
HEATHER: HAVE you found your massive&#13;
oak limb yet?&#13;
HEATHER: THANKS for all the help in art&#13;
class. Next time you are in Oriental, tdl Julia&#13;
to give you an extra fortune cookie on me.&#13;
Brenda.&#13;
Ranger good, but needs improvement&#13;
Continued from Page 2&#13;
comment on some of the senseless&#13;
drivel that sometimes tries to pass&#13;
as serious journalism in the&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
First of all, the October 4 Ranger&#13;
printed a pointless, meandering&#13;
essay by Joan Mattox on individuality.&#13;
Let's be honest, shall we? This&#13;
is the stuff junior high school papers&#13;
are made of. Joan presents an&#13;
untenable defense of punk rockers.&#13;
While kingdoms perish, the world&#13;
teeters on the brink of destruction,&#13;
people are starving and being tortured&#13;
in Third World countries,&#13;
Joan is concerned with a group of&#13;
deviants who revere Sid Vicious,&#13;
Rat Scabbies and the "Dead Kennedys."&#13;
Joan needs some serious&#13;
enlightenment about ho- priorities,&#13;
not to mention ho* lack of good&#13;
taste.&#13;
Jim Neibaur's article on Tapen&#13;
Sinha was inexcusable. Who cares&#13;
about his opinions cm pu blic transportation?&#13;
For God's sake, Jim,&#13;
where did this man obtain his degrees,&#13;
what is his area of specialization?&#13;
You've done this person a&#13;
great disservice. By reading this article&#13;
the reader comes away with&#13;
the impression that he's just another&#13;
lazy foreigner who can't&#13;
drive.&#13;
In writing this letter, I realize&#13;
that my cynical side has come to&#13;
the forefront of my psyche. Howeve*,&#13;
if my massive investment in&#13;
education has taught me anything,&#13;
it has taught me the difference between&#13;
intelligent commentary and&#13;
mindless patterings. I sincerely&#13;
hope you will take this letter not as&#13;
a personal insult, but as an article&#13;
of constructive criticism. Writers&#13;
and editors have the responsibility&#13;
to not only report facts and opinions,&#13;
but to do so intelligently and&#13;
responsibily.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Gary Eckstein, M.A.&#13;
P.S. The Ranger has improved immeasurably&#13;
in three years. Keep&#13;
striving to perfection.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Energy feeds on itself&#13;
by Mary-Fhmces Lojesti&#13;
It hits most of us between 1 and&#13;
3 p.m.: the mid-afternoon blahs.&#13;
It's that time of day when your attention&#13;
wanders, you dread going to&#13;
class and you can't seem to stop&#13;
yawning.&#13;
According to "Self" magazine,&#13;
most of us hit a low point five to&#13;
eight hours after waking. This is&#13;
part of the normal sleep/wake&#13;
cycle. After about half an hour your&#13;
body once again begins its upward&#13;
swing.&#13;
What do you do in the meantime?&#13;
The answer to this question is&#13;
not the same for everyone. You can&#13;
force your eyes open and muddle&#13;
through, take a break from your&#13;
normal routine (but please don't&#13;
cut class) or you can always give in&#13;
to the urge and take a nap.&#13;
The people who seem to have the&#13;
most energy aren't sure where it&#13;
comes from, but most of us know&#13;
that the more energy we have the&#13;
more we want to do. "Energy feeds&#13;
on itself," says Tenley Albright,&#13;
M.O., the former Olympic&#13;
champion who is now a surgeon at&#13;
New England Baptist Hospital in&#13;
Boston. "Once you're active, you&#13;
don't want to stop."&#13;
According to Dr. Albright, people&#13;
who exercise regularly tend to need&#13;
less sleep and they often avoid midafternoon&#13;
energy rundown. It's generally&#13;
tiie inactive individuals who&#13;
complain the most about lack of energy.&#13;
Exercise gets you breathing&#13;
deeply, and it relieves some of the&#13;
cramping in muscles that tend to&#13;
become tight during the day.&#13;
When you exercise regularly, you&#13;
develop stamina to get you through&#13;
the day. Small changes in your exercise&#13;
routine - roughly thirty&#13;
minutes three times per week -&#13;
help increase your energy level.&#13;
Since our bodies cannot store our&#13;
primary food source of muscle energy,&#13;
carbohydrates, in significant&#13;
amounts, taking some form of these&#13;
foods at regular intervals during the&#13;
day will help increase your energy.&#13;
Fresh fruit or juice raises blood&#13;
Caffeine gives people a kick&#13;
but kills bug — d ead&#13;
Caffeine, the drug that gives coffee&#13;
its kick, also kills insect larvae&#13;
and could be useful as a pesticide, a&#13;
Washington researcher said last&#13;
week.&#13;
United Press International reported&#13;
that James Nathanson, a&#13;
Harvard Medical School neurologist,&#13;
said caffeien, which is found in&#13;
many plants, probably acts as a natural&#13;
insect repellent.&#13;
Concentrations of caffeine found&#13;
naturally in undried tea leaves or&#13;
coffee beans were enough to kill tobacco&#13;
worm larvae, Nathanson&#13;
found. While flour beetle adults&#13;
survived a dose of the caffeine-related&#13;
compound, long term exposure&#13;
kept them from reproducing.&#13;
sugar and this also will relieve the&#13;
one o'clock slump.&#13;
Drinking a lot of water may also&#13;
get you going. Avoid, however,&#13;
foods and drinks with caffeine.&#13;
These temporarily increase your&#13;
metabolism and speed your heart&#13;
rate. The cycle of highs and lows'&#13;
can leave you drained.&#13;
For some of us, low energy is&#13;
sometimes a form of avoiding&#13;
things we unconsiously don't want&#13;
to do, like study.&#13;
Remember, there is no one cure&#13;
for lack of energy. Try some erf the&#13;
things mentioned or come up with&#13;
some of your own. If nothing&#13;
works, console yourself with the&#13;
thought that the semester cant go&#13;
on forever! (Or can it?)&#13;
Intramural&#13;
match results&#13;
The Blitzed remain undefeated in&#13;
intramural flag football as they&#13;
handed Hall's Raiders their first&#13;
loss of the season in a close game,&#13;
8-6.&#13;
Top scorer this week was Sean&#13;
Patterson, with four touchdowns&#13;
for Yde's Monsters.&#13;
Other scores this week were:&#13;
Hall's Raiders 19, Mass Wasters 0;&#13;
GNADS 27, Racine Raiders 6;&#13;
Yde's Monsters 31, Ass Bandits 6.&#13;
Standings are as follows: Blitzed&#13;
3-0; Hall's Raiders 2-1; Yde's Monsters&#13;
2-1; GNADS 2-1; Mass Wasters&#13;
2-1; Chunga's Revenge 1-2; Racine&#13;
Raiders 1-2; Schultz 1-2; Bohamas&#13;
0-3 and Ass Bandits 0-3.&#13;
Rangers lose two-year&#13;
hold on Invitational&#13;
by KimberUe Kranich&#13;
Unlike the past two years, the&#13;
Parkside women's volleyball team&#13;
did not end up champions in the&#13;
annual Ranger Invitational. The&#13;
two day tournament was held Oct.&#13;
5 and 6 at Parkside. The other&#13;
teams competing were Elmhurst&#13;
College, Northeastern Illinois, Illinois&#13;
Benedictine and Ferris State.&#13;
On Friday, Parkside played two&#13;
matches. They lost their first match&#13;
to Illinois Benedictine in three&#13;
games, by scores of 15-17, 15* and&#13;
11-15. They beat their second opponent,&#13;
Northeastern Illinois, in three&#13;
games, by scores of 17-15, 4-15 and&#13;
18-15. In the match against Northeastern,&#13;
Parkside had a total of&#13;
three serving aces, as Kim Tesher,&#13;
Lorie Herman and Amy Henderson&#13;
contributed one ace apiece. Parkside's&#13;
defense was led by Janet Koenig,&#13;
who had a total of 13 digs and 9&#13;
blocks. Close behind Koenig in digs&#13;
were Kim VanDeraa with 8 and&#13;
Sherie Lechner with 7.&#13;
Saturday's first matches begin at&#13;
9 a.m. and the championship game&#13;
was played at 3 p.m. Parkside's&#13;
first match was against Ferris State&#13;
who defeated than in two games&#13;
by scores of 9-15 and 10-15. In their&#13;
last match before the semi-finals,&#13;
Parkside was defeated by Elmhurst&#13;
College in two games, 7-15 and 10-&#13;
15. Earlier in the year Parkside&#13;
beat Elmhurst, but such was not&#13;
the case Saturday.&#13;
For their semi-final game, Parkside&#13;
again played the tough team&#13;
from Michigan, Ferris State. Parkside&#13;
was defeated in two games by&#13;
scores of 6-15 and 6-15, and thus eliminated&#13;
from the championship&#13;
match. Although such scores might&#13;
lead one to believe Parkside was&#13;
easily handled by Ferris State, the&#13;
match was actually quite close for a&#13;
while. Many times throughout the&#13;
match Parkside held Ferris State at&#13;
scores of 2* and 3-4 with sane&#13;
good defaisive play.&#13;
Parkside played Ferris State earlier&#13;
in the year in Michigan and in&#13;
comparing Saturday's performance&#13;
with the earlier performance, Parkside&#13;
Coach Terry Paulson said, "I&#13;
know the scores were different, but&#13;
I think we hustled as much hoe in&#13;
the semi-final match as we did in&#13;
Michigan."&#13;
Paulson attributes his team's loss&#13;
against Ferris State to Parkside's&#13;
lack of offense, and specifically to&#13;
their inability to put the ball away.&#13;
Paulson added, "It's just not us.&#13;
Ferris is starting to move now.&#13;
They played very, very good. We&#13;
have problems with our short hitters&#13;
putting the ball away."&#13;
Herman said she could fed the&#13;
pressures of playing at home.&#13;
"When we woe at Ferris and we&#13;
played than, we had nothing to&#13;
lose. But when we're at home in&#13;
front of our home crowd, there's an&#13;
added pressure to win." Lechner&#13;
added, "We played Ferris a lot&#13;
tougher in Michigan. We were&#13;
more fired up. We weren't fired up&#13;
today."&#13;
In the semi-final game against&#13;
Parkside, Ferris was able to put the&#13;
ball through most of Parkside's&#13;
blocking attempts. Paulson attributes&#13;
this to Parkside's lack of&#13;
height. "We had a line in thoe of&#13;
5'7", 5'5" and 5'5", and they had a&#13;
line in there of 5'10", 5*10" and&#13;
5'11"."&#13;
With one month left of the season,&#13;
Paulson said, "We are just trying&#13;
to get better. We're trying to do&#13;
the little things well. We'll have to&#13;
keep working on our offense."&#13;
Trivia quiz&#13;
Ready for another trivia question,&#13;
folks?&#13;
Which European city was the&#13;
only one to host the Winter Olympics&#13;
twice, in 1964 and 1976?&#13;
Last week's question: What&#13;
Olympic pole-vaulter appeared in&#13;
the television series "Soap" as Dennis,&#13;
the gay quarterback? The answer&#13;
is Bob Seagren. " * * '&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Fall season completed&#13;
by Steve Kratochvil&#13;
The Parkside baseball team concluded&#13;
its foil season with an explosion&#13;
at UW-Milwaukee last Friday&#13;
night. Die Rangers swept a doubleheader,&#13;
posting their 12th and 13th&#13;
victories of the season against three&#13;
The twin bill saw only three Milwaukee&#13;
hits in both games combined.&#13;
Parkside took the opener 7-1.&#13;
Tom Sorensen buried a one-hitter&#13;
in that game.&#13;
In the night cap, freshman Darryi&#13;
Hastings and junior Chris Rosell&#13;
combined to shut out the Patnbers&#13;
on just two hits, as Parkside completed&#13;
the sweep 11-0. "We hit the&#13;
stuffing out of the ball,' said coach&#13;
Kai "Red" Oberbruner. Milwauk*&#13;
ee used seven pitchers in game two&#13;
in an effort to thwart the Ranger&#13;
onslaught.&#13;
The team hosted the alumni in a&#13;
game on Saturday. The elder&#13;
Rangers defeated the current squad&#13;
9-7. "The alumni game is a yearly&#13;
thing for us. The sole purpose is to&#13;
have a lot of fun, which everybody&#13;
did!" commented Oberbruner.&#13;
Oberbruner noted that juniaj&#13;
outfielder Mike Stolnack, senior&#13;
outfielder Duane McLean and junior&#13;
pitcher Ton Sorensen are all&#13;
being look at by pro scouts.&#13;
Intramurals In the afternoon&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
IN THE SQUARE&#13;
T SCREEN&#13;
MONDAY, OCT. 15&#13;
GREEN BAY AT&#13;
DENVER y&#13;
* BEER * SODA * WINE&#13;
* POPCORN&#13;
THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
16 Thursday, Oct. 11,1984 RANGER&#13;
? ' — True blue Brewer fan boos phony Cub fans&#13;
by Steve Kratochvil&#13;
Hey? Hey! Cubs choke! Cubs&#13;
choke! Cub fans, this dud's for you!&#13;
Everybody except the frequently&#13;
narrow-minded Cub fan knew it&#13;
was going t o happen, it was just a&#13;
matter of time. TTiis year the Cubs&#13;
waited until October to fold up&#13;
shop, which is a month or two longer&#13;
than it usually takes. It was almost&#13;
worth struggling through the&#13;
Brewers season to see the Cubs humiliate&#13;
their fans on national television.&#13;
Okay, the Brewers had a bad&#13;
year. Thirty-seven games out of&#13;
first place is nothing to be proud&#13;
of; however, I am not ashamed to&#13;
be a Brewer fan. I stick with my&#13;
team regardless of how they perform.&#13;
I am not going to jump on&#13;
the Cubby bandwagon like so many&#13;
fair-weather fans are doing.&#13;
Cub fans are a curious breed.&#13;
There were very few of t hem; they&#13;
were almost extinct...until this&#13;
year. Remember 1969, so-called&#13;
Cub fans? Let me refresh your&#13;
memory. 1969 was the year the&#13;
^Cubs blew a 9-game lead to the&#13;
New York Mets. I know that is past&#13;
history, but this article deals primarily&#13;
with the many "false" Cub&#13;
fans, and to a lesser extent, the&#13;
Cubs themselves.&#13;
In 1969, the day after the Cub&#13;
lead vanished to the Mets, there&#13;
were only 2500 people in the stands&#13;
at Wrigley Field. (I've seen more&#13;
people at a Parkside basketball&#13;
game.) The Cubs were only one&#13;
game out, but where were those&#13;
loyal fans? The fans quit on than.&#13;
A comparatively smaller town,&#13;
Milwaukee, drew 1.6 million fans&#13;
this year for a last-place team that&#13;
televises only thirty of its games.&#13;
Many tim es the Cubs had to struggle&#13;
to attract one million people to&#13;
the gate. Let's face it: the advent of&#13;
cable TV has increased Cub popularity.&#13;
Combine that with a rare&#13;
winning season, and everybody is a&#13;
Cub fan.&#13;
Remember that fat, bald-headed&#13;
man who announced for the Cubs?&#13;
No, it wasn't Humpty Dumpty. It&#13;
was Jack Brickhouse. Brickhouse&#13;
broadcast for the Cubs for some&#13;
thirty years, and this alone made&#13;
him great. I remember one time&#13;
Jack called a play like this: "Back,&#13;
back, back, oh the wind held the&#13;
ball up and it's caught by t he Met&#13;
third baseman!" C'mon, Jack, the&#13;
wind can't stop a ball that much!&#13;
Anyway, he is in the hall of fame.&#13;
Why? You tell me. He exemplifies&#13;
a Cub fan. He thinks with his heart,&#13;
not with his mind.&#13;
Then there is Wrigley Field,&#13;
home of the Cubs. Have you ever&#13;
had nature call on you there? If you&#13;
have, you have experienced the&#13;
thrill of relieving yourself in a&#13;
horse trough! The scoreboard is&#13;
rusty and outdated. They have&#13;
vines on the outfield wall instead of&#13;
padding. And something is missing&#13;
(m th e upper deck -Mlights.&#13;
When is the Cubs organization&#13;
going to come out of the dark ages&#13;
and see the light? I know...tradition.&#13;
Well, if you believe in the Cub&#13;
tradition, why woe you a fan this&#13;
year? It is a tradition for Cubs to&#13;
lose! If you are a traditionalist at&#13;
heart, give me your modern car and&#13;
I will give you a horse and buggy.&#13;
It is also a tradition to pay an&#13;
outrageous amount of money to&#13;
park your car. One can have the&#13;
privilege of paying as much as $15&#13;
to park, if he is lucky enough to&#13;
find a parking lot near the ball&#13;
park. If the Cub organization really&#13;
cared about their fans, they would&#13;
destroy that archaic dump and&#13;
move to a place where there is&#13;
ample parking and easy accessibility.&#13;
I really cannot blame the Cub organization&#13;
for not giving th eir fans&#13;
a better facility, because they don't&#13;
deserve it. It's a two-way street.&#13;
Women's cross country&#13;
Team grabs third place in meet&#13;
by Eric Hilmoe&#13;
The Parkside women's cross&#13;
country team took i ts show on the&#13;
road last Saturday and came away&#13;
with a third place. Michelle Marter&#13;
led Parkside, finishing second with&#13;
a personal best time of 18:33.&#13;
The only runner to beat Marter&#13;
was NAIA All-Am eri can Linda Marqua&#13;
rdt. Marquardt broke away&#13;
early and coasted to victory in a&#13;
time of 17.33.&#13;
The meet was won by Milwaukee,&#13;
who had a final score of 44.&#13;
They were followed by the host&#13;
team, Loyola, who finished with a&#13;
score of 47. The Ranger women&#13;
captured third with a score of 67.&#13;
Wheaton and North Park rounded&#13;
out the top five with scores of 100&#13;
and 150 respectively.&#13;
Coach Mike DeWitt said of the&#13;
third place finish, which improved&#13;
Parkside's record to 21-21, "I t was&#13;
probably the second best performance&#13;
of the season." DeWitt also&#13;
mentioned that five out of eight&#13;
runners turned in personal best&#13;
times of the season. Other Parkside&#13;
finishers included Jill Fobair, 12,&#13;
Sarah Hiett, 13, J ulie McReynolds,&#13;
19; Julie Wunrow, 21; Colleen&#13;
Wiesmer, 23; Carol Romano, 40;&#13;
and Cathy Polacheck, 41.&#13;
Golf&#13;
Team takes second in Oshkosh&#13;
by Robb Loehr&#13;
On Oct. 2 the Ranger golfers&#13;
traveled to Oshkosh for the UW-&#13;
^ Oshkosh I nvitational. At the end of&#13;
the 18-faole event, Oshkosh finished&#13;
at the top of the standings, while&#13;
Parkside posted a 393 total, just&#13;
five shots behind the host school.&#13;
Rick Elsen was Parkside's first&#13;
individual medalist. His round of&#13;
(34-38}-72 included three birdies.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens said this&#13;
was a tight tournament all the way,&#13;
and with a few breaks, his team&#13;
could have finished first. Other&#13;
scores for Parkside were: Mike Ritacca&#13;
with (39-38&gt;-77, Scott Schellpfeffer&#13;
with (39-39)-78, Kyle Comgall&#13;
with (43-37&gt;-80 and Ken Maegaard&#13;
with (45-41)-86.&#13;
The Rangers' nod challenge is&#13;
the NAIA District 14 tournament to&#13;
be held at the Stevens Point Country&#13;
Club on Oct. 7-9. There are nine&#13;
schools participating, including all&#13;
but two of the W.S.U.C. (Wisconsin&#13;
State University Conference)&#13;
schools. The favorites, according to&#13;
Stephens, are UW-Eau Claire, UWStevens&#13;
Point, UW-La Crosse and&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Cub organization could care&#13;
less about its fans, and the fans&#13;
could care less about the Cubs -&#13;
Mexcept when they are winning.&#13;
Lee Smith, who has pitched well&#13;
for the Cubs all season, came in relief&#13;
in a game against Pittsburgh on&#13;
Sept. 20. Smitty did not do so well,&#13;
and finally manager Jim Frey had&#13;
to take him out of the ball game.&#13;
Smith was booed unmercifully by&#13;
the Cub fans, (hie kid about nine&#13;
years old yelled, "We don't want&#13;
you anymore! You stink!"&#13;
Larry Bowa, Leon Durham,&#13;
Keith Moreland and Scott Sanderson&#13;
have all felt the wrath of the&#13;
Cub fan. Do you think the Cubs&#13;
would have been winners without&#13;
all these players? I doubt it. They&#13;
deserve a better audience to play&#13;
for.&#13;
Cub fans also support the Boston&#13;
Celtics, the Edmonton Oilers, the&#13;
Miami Dolphins and any other&#13;
team that appears unbeatable. Ask&#13;
the majority of Cub fans something&#13;
about 1983 and you will get an "I&#13;
don't know" or "I forgot" for an&#13;
answer. Lea Elia, former manager,&#13;
once said, "Cub fans are brainless,&#13;
unemployed bums who know nothing&#13;
about baseball!" This is undoubtedly&#13;
an overstatement.&#13;
Ex-Brewer skipper Rene Lachman&#13;
said "Brewer fans show a lot&#13;
of class." I can't argue with that.&#13;
Lachman was given a standing ovation&#13;
at the end of the year for his&#13;
efforts. He did his best, and that is&#13;
all you can ask of any human bong&#13;
in any situation. Brewer fans know&#13;
this.&#13;
I was at County Stadium in&#13;
September of 1984, rooting for the&#13;
Brewers, just like I was in October&#13;
of 1982. Th ose of you who cheered&#13;
the Cubs in October of 1984, woe&#13;
you cheering for the Cubs in&#13;
September of any other year?&#13;
If your answer is yes, congratulations!&#13;
For what it's worth, the Chicago&#13;
Cubs are the NL Eastern division&#13;
champs, and you alone deserved&#13;
to sip champagne on September&#13;
24. It's too bad you had so&#13;
many free loaders on your championship&#13;
ride. At one time we had&#13;
some, too, but they are yours now.&#13;
The Cubs may have a better&#13;
team than the Brewers do, but the&#13;
Brewers have better fans than the&#13;
Cubs. We Brewer fans appreciate&#13;
our team and we will t ake the ribbing&#13;
over the winter. If, however,&#13;
the Cubs should falter in 1985 and&#13;
the Brewers rise to the stop -Mstay&#13;
away from County Stadium, Cub&#13;
fans. We d on't want or need your&#13;
kind.&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
begins&#13;
Practice for wrestling begins&#13;
Monday, Oct. 15 at 4 p.m. with two&#13;
grueling hours of constant drill.&#13;
Coach Jim Koch, in his 15th year&#13;
as head coach for the Parkside&#13;
wrestling team, said "I'm very optimistic&#13;
this year for the squad. It's a&#13;
small team, but there are no weak&#13;
links. Also, i t is one of the hardest&#13;
working groups of guys I've had in&#13;
a long time."&#13;
The wrestlers must be prepared&#13;
for physical and mental battle.&#13;
"You can't have a weakness, or you&#13;
will get manhandled mentally and&#13;
physically. Wrestling is the most&#13;
physical collegiate sport," Koch&#13;
said. The Rangers will start their&#13;
season at the UW-Stevens Point&#13;
Open on Nov. 9 and 10. The first&#13;
home meet is Dec. 8.&#13;
Voter registration great&#13;
Continued from Page 2&#13;
and political parties are always&#13;
looking to put their effort in registration&#13;
in areas where they are assured&#13;
a positive vote for the candidate&#13;
they are supporting.&#13;
"Praise the Lord." I applaud the&#13;
•4 members of the faculty and staff on&#13;
campus who are planning to hold a&#13;
voter registration drive. As the&#13;
present PSGA Chairman of the&#13;
Legislative Affairs Committee I can&#13;
envision the expansion of their&#13;
work into the school registration&#13;
process, and in that way enabling&#13;
the continuous registration of&#13;
newly eligible voters at the start of&#13;
each new semester.&#13;
Since the beginning of this letter&#13;
I've changed my opinion about&#13;
political parties registering students&#13;
on campus. Now my feeling is that&#13;
they should stay away because as&#13;
the old saying goes, "As the sapling&#13;
is bent, so grows the tree." Parkside&#13;
is in the business of growing&#13;
straight and sturdy trees that can&#13;
weather any storm. Again I salute&#13;
those faculty and staff members involved&#13;
in the upcoming voter registration.&#13;
Franklin Kttczenski&#13;
Puzzler&#13;
answer&#13;
&lt;—WELCOME—)&#13;
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK&#13;
•••••••••••••••&#13;
Michelle Marter&#13;
Cross Country Runner&#13;
Michelle, a freshman from Beaver Dam, was&#13;
2nd at the recent Hillsdale, Mich. Invitational.&#13;
She was 1st at the Indiana Manchester Invitational,&#13;
setting a new course record of 18.45.&#13;
Other recent Finishes include a 2nd at the&#13;
Loyola Lakefront Invitational and 44th at the&#13;
Midwest Collegiate competition at Parkside.&#13;
Congratulations, Michelle, and Good Luck in&#13;
the Future.&#13;
to IMLerTime</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text>Social Science Roundtable - Reagan's poverty policies</text>
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              <text>....&#13;
Soccer Player&#13;
profiled&#13;
Poge&#13;
1Z&#13;
Ce1l8orBhip&#13;
e%amined&#13;
Page 4&#13;
Homecoming  '84&#13;
reviewed&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
18,1984~==~~~m~~~~~~~====;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;==-:V~I:-:==~.J&#13;
o.13,No.7&#13;
Social Science  Roundtable&#13;
Reagan's&#13;
poverty  policies&#13;
by Karl&#13;
Dixon&#13;
Reb!~th&#13;
of   Conservative&#13;
Capital-&#13;
Ism,&#13;
Hoover   discovered&#13;
statistics&#13;
that    refute    the   Regan   administra-&#13;
tion's   claim   that   they  are   spending&#13;
more  money  on  the  poor  than&#13;
has&#13;
any  other   administration.&#13;
"Looking&#13;
at  the   data   in  a  racial   analysis,   all&#13;
the    economic&#13;
progress&#13;
made&#13;
by&#13;
black   people   in  the  1960's&#13;
bas&#13;
been&#13;
wiped&#13;
away."&#13;
Some   trends   that   Hoover  discov-&#13;
ered  in  his  research   include  the  fact&#13;
that   key  income&#13;
security&#13;
programs&#13;
were  cut,&#13;
tax&#13;
savings  went  to  upper&#13;
income   groups  and  the  welfare   cuts&#13;
put  many  people   below  the  poverty&#13;
line.   The   combined&#13;
effects   of   the&#13;
cuts   and   the&#13;
tax&#13;
changes   hurt   the&#13;
poor much more because they&#13;
came   on  top  of  the  recession.&#13;
According   to  a&#13;
book,   The&#13;
Reagan&#13;
Record,    which   Hoover   quoted   fre-&#13;
quently,&#13;
many   of   the   Reagan    ad-&#13;
ministration's&#13;
plans    to   cut&#13;
social&#13;
programs    were   stopped   in  the  Sen-.&#13;
ate   and   House.   Originally,   the   ad-&#13;
ministration   wanted&#13;
to&#13;
cut  unem-&#13;
ployment    insurance    by&#13;
20&#13;
percent;&#13;
AFDC   by&#13;
30&#13;
percent;&#13;
food  stamps&#13;
by&#13;
50&#13;
percent;    child  nutrition   by  45&#13;
percent;&#13;
the    WlC   (Women's,&#13;
In-&#13;
fants'&#13;
and    Children)&#13;
Program&#13;
60&#13;
percent;&#13;
housing,   assistance&#13;
by&#13;
20&#13;
percent;   and  b&gt;wincome  energy  as-&#13;
PSGA candidates speak out&#13;
•&#13;
on,&#13;
current campus&#13;
issues&#13;
by&#13;
Laureen&#13;
Wawro&#13;
ate&#13;
functions&#13;
and    talk    to   some&#13;
When&#13;
walking&#13;
through&#13;
Parkside   s&#13;
Senators,"&#13;
he   said.&#13;
Leipzig    was&#13;
halls, it's  not&#13;
bard&#13;
to&#13;
realize&#13;
it&#13;
is&#13;
talked   into&#13;
running&#13;
for  the   Senate&#13;
election  lime.   Signs   lurk    every-&#13;
by  Paul   Johnson,    PSGA  viee-presi-&#13;
Where,&#13;
urging&#13;
everyone    to   either&#13;
dent.    "He   (Johnson)&#13;
said   that   for&#13;
run for a student  government&#13;
posi-&#13;
one   thing,   we&#13;
set&#13;
up  dillerent&#13;
ac-&#13;
tion, or&#13;
vote&#13;
for  someone    who   is.&#13;
tivities,   like  Homecoming,"&#13;
Leipzig&#13;
Running  for   seven    open&#13;
Senate&#13;
stated.&#13;
seats  are   seven   candidates.&#13;
The&#13;
John    Rather    has   a  political&#13;
sel-&#13;
PUAB&#13;
(Parkside    Union    Advisory&#13;
ence   class  that   sparked&#13;
his&#13;
interest&#13;
Board)&#13;
seat  is&#13;
also&#13;
being&#13;
sought.&#13;
in  government.&#13;
"I   decided   I'd   like&#13;
Many&#13;
candidates  feel  It is  lime  to&#13;
to&#13;
run&#13;
for   student&#13;
government&#13;
to&#13;
~et1D.voIVedin&#13;
something&#13;
political.&#13;
find   out   more   about   constitutional&#13;
k&#13;
his&#13;
IS&#13;
the&#13;
case&#13;
with   Teron   Nici-&#13;
government.&#13;
I'D  be  there   to&#13;
learn.&#13;
owski.  "Everybody&#13;
talks&#13;
about&#13;
I'm   certainly    interested&#13;
10&#13;
belp~&#13;
what&#13;
should&#13;
be&#13;
done&#13;
but   no&#13;
one&#13;
the   students    and  doiJ)g whatever   .t&#13;
does an&#13;
v&#13;
";_&#13;
..  "&#13;
be&#13;
"d   N'cik&#13;
takes,"    said  Rather.&#13;
ki&#13;
ho&#13;
~.......&#13;
"6.&#13;
sat.&#13;
I&#13;
OWS--&#13;
I&#13;
asked   by&#13;
:  W&#13;
is  not   presently&#13;
familiar&#13;
Christopher&#13;
Baier    was&#13;
.&#13;
WIththe activities&#13;
of&#13;
PSGA   is&#13;
aDJ[-&#13;
a  member   of  PSGA&#13;
if&#13;
he&#13;
was&#13;
inter-&#13;
IOUS&#13;
to&#13;
learn.  "I  just  want  ~   gel  on&#13;
ested    in   becoming    a   Senator.&#13;
His&#13;
a&#13;
COllUnittee&#13;
and&#13;
see&#13;
wbat's    going&#13;
aim&#13;
is to  "learn   a  lot  about  the  Sen-&#13;
on."&#13;
ate   meetings   and&#13;
aU&#13;
I&#13;
can&#13;
possibly&#13;
.    M:ut&lt;&#13;
Leipzig&#13;
was&#13;
on  the   Senate&#13;
bandle,"&#13;
Baierl   said.  '&#13;
In&#13;
high&#13;
sehoul  for&#13;
two&#13;
years&#13;
but&#13;
One   candidate,&#13;
Andy   Bucbanan,&#13;
Wants&#13;
to&#13;
see&#13;
bow   Parkside's'    gov.'&#13;
is   back   for   a&#13;
second&#13;
term&#13;
in   the&#13;
enunent&#13;
differs&#13;
from&#13;
that&#13;
expert_&#13;
Senate.    He  served   for  a&#13;
term&#13;
~t&#13;
~.   "I&#13;
_t&#13;
to  see'&#13;
bow&#13;
tIW&#13;
Sen-.  .&#13;
.mill!&lt;!&#13;
last&#13;
~pring..&#13;
Bucbanan,&#13;
whO&#13;
IS •&#13;
The current   data   being&#13;
used&#13;
by&#13;
the  in  the   Republican&#13;
campaign&#13;
ahout the  poor  in&#13;
this&#13;
country&#13;
is&#13;
a&#13;
deliberate attempt    to   mislead&#13;
the&#13;
AlDericanpublic,  according   to  Ken-&#13;
neth  Hoover,   who   spoke&#13;
at    the&#13;
Social Science  Roundtable,&#13;
"Con-&#13;
servative&#13;
Ideology   and    Reagan's&#13;
New&#13;
Federalism:&#13;
But   What   About&#13;
the Poor?"  Monday  in  Union&#13;
106.&#13;
According  to   Hoover,&#13;
several&#13;
major changes   bave   aflected&#13;
the&#13;
amount of&#13;
money&#13;
that   people&#13;
earn&#13;
and  the  nwnber   of   people    living&#13;
helow  the   poverty&#13;
line.&#13;
"After&#13;
watchingthe debates  between   Mon-&#13;
dale-Reagsn and   Ferraro-Bush,&#13;
I&#13;
believelhatthere    is a  deliberate    at-&#13;
tempt&#13;
to&#13;
cover   up   the    statistics&#13;
ahout the nwnber&#13;
01&#13;
poor  people   in&#13;
this&#13;
country,"&#13;
Hoover  said.&#13;
"There&#13;
used&#13;
to  be  no&#13;
real&#13;
diller-&#13;
ence in&#13;
terms&#13;
of  ideology,   and   one&#13;
writer&#13;
even&#13;
caDed  the   two&#13;
parties&#13;
Tweedle-Dee and   Tweedle-Dum,"&#13;
he&#13;
continued.  "But&#13;
this&#13;
election    is&#13;
P~&lt;ling&#13;
the  best  example   of  Ideo-&#13;
Iog1caldifferences  that   I  have   seen&#13;
sill&lt;eI have&#13;
been&#13;
a  political   scien-&#13;
tist."&#13;
While&#13;
researching&#13;
for  a  paper   en.&#13;
titled&#13;
"The&#13;
New&#13;
Federalism&#13;
and&#13;
sislance   by  40 percent.&#13;
During   the  debate   the   President&#13;
claimed   he  had   "reduced    the   rate&#13;
of  increase   of  poverty   in&#13;
this&#13;
eoun-&#13;
try,"&#13;
Hoover   said.   "That    may   be&#13;
true,   but   he   has   not   reduced&#13;
the&#13;
number&#13;
of   people    living   in   pov-&#13;
erty:'&#13;
Hoover   said   that&#13;
the&#13;
numbers&#13;
show&#13;
46&#13;
million   Americans   live  at&#13;
125&#13;
percent    of   poverty   or   below,&#13;
and  nearly  one-half  of all  black&#13;
chil-&#13;
dren&#13;
(47  percent)&#13;
live&#13;
under&#13;
the&#13;
poverty   line.&#13;
The   conclusions    that    Hoover&#13;
draws   from&#13;
his&#13;
research&#13;
are  these:&#13;
income&#13;
has&#13;
been&#13;
redistributed&#13;
up-&#13;
ward,   but  it  is  not  likely  to  trickle&#13;
down;   any  economic   improvement&#13;
is  largely  the  result   of&#13;
military&#13;
eJ:-&#13;
penditures    which   have&#13;
steered&#13;
the&#13;
economy  away  from  sustainable&#13;
re-&#13;
covery;   and  public  funds  sbould  be&#13;
going  into  economically   productive&#13;
infra-structure&#13;
jobs&#13;
to  bring&#13;
down&#13;
unemployment&#13;
and    rebuild&#13;
tbe&#13;
hase  of  the  economy.&#13;
"I&#13;
really&#13;
do&#13;
think&#13;
that   there&#13;
bas&#13;
been   a  deliberate    cover-up   by&#13;
this&#13;
administration    about  the  amount   of&#13;
poverty&#13;
and&#13;
their&#13;
role&#13;
in    tbe&#13;
amount    of   poverty.&#13;
tt&#13;
Hoover   con-&#13;
cluded.&#13;
already   on  the  Athletic   Board,&#13;
the&#13;
Course   and  Curriculum    Board,   the&#13;
Ranger   staff   and   the&#13;
soccer&#13;
team,&#13;
said  he  would  like  to&#13;
fill&#13;
out  some&#13;
committees,   such  as SUF AC&#13;
(Segre-&#13;
gated    University    Fees&#13;
AUocalions&#13;
Committee)&#13;
and   Siudeni&#13;
Services.&#13;
"I&#13;
think&#13;
that   Student   Government&#13;
needs    more    people    to   get   io-&#13;
volved,"   said  Bucbanan.&#13;
For   Jose   Valldejuli,&#13;
running&#13;
for&#13;
the  Senate&#13;
was&#13;
a  last  minute&#13;
deci-&#13;
sion.   "I   just   decided   to&#13;
do&#13;
it&#13;
the&#13;
night  before,"   be  said.  Jose&#13;
also&#13;
eJ:-&#13;
pressed   the&#13;
urge&#13;
to  "get  involved."&#13;
The    one    open&#13;
PUAB    seat&#13;
is&#13;
being&#13;
sought   by&#13;
Dennis   Padlock,&#13;
a&#13;
Union  supervisor.   Padlock   is  inter-&#13;
. esled  in  PUAB  mainly  because&#13;
they&#13;
are   a  policy&#13;
making&#13;
board.&#13;
"They&#13;
are   policy   makers,   and   I'd   like  to&#13;
be   a&#13;
part&#13;
of   that,"&#13;
Padlock&#13;
said.&#13;
"I'd&#13;
like   to&#13;
see&#13;
the&#13;
constitution&#13;
changed&#13;
and&#13;
help&#13;
get  It&#13;
changed."&#13;
Elections&#13;
will&#13;
be  held&#13;
on&#13;
Oct.&#13;
17&#13;
and&#13;
18&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
Molinaro   Concourse&#13;
from&#13;
11&#13;
a.m.&#13;
to&#13;
8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Ruce&lt;&#13;
pIoole ..,&#13;
Homeeoming    King  Bruce   Preston   and  Queen  Nata·&#13;
lie Haberman,&#13;
Guskin   open  forum&#13;
Mock election  scheduled&#13;
The  Young  Democrats   are&#13;
spon-&#13;
soring  a  mock  Presidential&#13;
election&#13;
during  the  PSGA&#13;
elections&#13;
today  in&#13;
the  Molinaro   Concourse.&#13;
among&#13;
the  student   body,"  said&#13;
Kari&#13;
Dixon,&#13;
president&#13;
of   the    Young&#13;
Democrats.&#13;
"This&#13;
sbould&#13;
encourage&#13;
sludents&#13;
to&#13;
improve&#13;
their&#13;
knowl·&#13;
edge&#13;
on&#13;
the   important&#13;
election&#13;
is-&#13;
sues,&#13;
and&#13;
motivate&#13;
them&#13;
to&#13;
vote&#13;
on&#13;
Nov.&#13;
6."&#13;
"The   purpose   of&#13;
this&#13;
election&#13;
is&#13;
to   heighten    politeal    awareness&#13;
The    Ranger&#13;
is   sponsoring&#13;
an   couraged  and  welcomedto   attend   to&#13;
open   forum   with&#13;
ChanceUor&#13;
Alan&#13;
ask&#13;
questions&#13;
or&#13;
make  comments   to&#13;
Guskin&#13;
on  Monday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
29&#13;
at&#13;
1:15&#13;
the  Chancellor.&#13;
p.m.   in&#13;
Main    Place.&#13;
AU&#13;
are&#13;
en-&#13;
Aspin/Jansson   debate  here&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Congressman&#13;
Les&#13;
Aspin&#13;
(0)&#13;
and  his&#13;
opponent   for&#13;
the&#13;
First&#13;
District&#13;
congressional&#13;
seal,&#13;
Peter   Jansson   (R),&#13;
will&#13;
participate&#13;
in   a   debate    on   Monday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
29&#13;
from&#13;
12-1&#13;
p.m.&#13;
in    the&#13;
Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
Each&#13;
candidate&#13;
will&#13;
make&#13;
opening&#13;
statements&#13;
and    accept&#13;
questions   from  the  audience.&#13;
The  debate&#13;
is being&#13;
sponoored&#13;
by&#13;
the&#13;
Social  Science&#13;
Roundtable&#13;
and&#13;
the&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
and&#13;
Racine&#13;
chapIen&#13;
01&#13;
the&#13;
League&#13;
of&#13;
Women Volen&#13;
and&#13;
is&#13;
opeo&#13;
to  all&#13;
Interested&#13;
per-&#13;
sons.&#13;
•&#13;
z&#13;
,.....,.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
II, 11M&#13;
Letters&#13;
to&#13;
the Editor&#13;
I&#13;
Campus intramurals&#13;
To the Edrtor'&#13;
keep&#13;
snm  former&#13;
sIaDdoul&#13;
bigb&#13;
The follcnrUlc coromenl&#13;
is&#13;
in&#13;
re-&#13;
school&#13;
football  players&#13;
from&#13;
form-&#13;
__   to&#13;
the&#13;
criticism&#13;
thai  bas&#13;
ing&#13;
a&#13;
team&#13;
and destroying&#13;
the other&#13;
b«n _&#13;
apinslthe    IDlramural&#13;
team!  in the league?&#13;
lootball&#13;
procram.&#13;
Sewn!&#13;
points&#13;
4&#13;
As&#13;
slatal&#13;
pn!YiousIy.&#13;
the&#13;
loot-&#13;
ere&#13;
blpblurdl,&#13;
Ibrown&#13;
out,&#13;
ball&#13;
p&lt;o«nm&#13;
bas&#13;
been  lIoundtriDg&#13;
pousls  thai  I feel&#13;
.-.I&#13;
to&#13;
lit&#13;
put&#13;
and&#13;
at  the  poinl&#13;
of&#13;
extinction&#13;
for&#13;
Into&#13;
tbm&#13;
propt&lt;&#13;
pmpt&lt;:lJvt.&#13;
the&#13;
pa&gt;l&#13;
snm&#13;
years.&#13;
If&#13;
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MHOO&#13;
r......&#13;
that&#13;
was&#13;
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the  die-hard  tflO&lt;ls&#13;
of&#13;
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ustd&#13;
IS&#13;
_tWJy  _,&#13;
bow-&#13;
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be&#13;
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p&lt;o«nm.&#13;
....    the dIslnbollon  of that&#13;
monty&#13;
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oaJs&#13;
to&#13;
d&lt;l&lt;nnin&lt;&#13;
if&#13;
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are&#13;
quali-&#13;
, monty&#13;
IS&#13;
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for  sUlf  _&#13;
lied.   Sb.  k&lt;pt  lb.   leagu.   alive&#13;
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pbysi&lt;al&#13;
tducaboll&#13;
_&#13;
teams&#13;
were&#13;
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and&#13;
l&gt;wIdIDc ........&#13;
saIarl&lt;s&#13;
lor stud&lt;nls&#13;
pres«!&#13;
101"&#13;
playen,&#13;
and&#13;
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who&#13;
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lhe _&#13;
room.&#13;
pay-&#13;
ed  team!   lor&#13;
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players  who&#13;
I1l&lt;fttof oIflCllls for _ural&#13;
....&#13;
wanted  to play bul&#13;
bad&#13;
no team&#13;
to&#13;
t"'\&lt;s.&#13;
kHpinc&#13;
lhe&#13;
pool .......&#13;
and&#13;
play&#13;
on&#13;
po"...&#13;
Woguanls  Wbon&#13;
all&#13;
IS&#13;
said&#13;
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&lt;OIdI.&#13;
instructor&#13;
and&#13;
ad-&#13;
and&#13;
doD&lt;.&#13;
thai&#13;
$44.000&#13;
g&lt;ls&#13;
spr.-l&#13;
nWustrator.&#13;
Linda  approad&gt;&lt;s  lbt&#13;
YftY&#13;
tlun _  .. _   ,.,...&#13;
job as intramural&#13;
c:oordiDator&#13;
wilb&#13;
2&#13;
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oIIIcIaIs&#13;
are&#13;
soucbt&#13;
out.&#13;
lbt&#13;
sam&lt;&#13;
zeal&#13;
and tffort&#13;
sb&lt;&#13;
aIIords&#13;
They&#13;
are&#13;
on.-&#13;
as&#13;
far&#13;
as _&#13;
all&#13;
be&lt;&#13;
other  activities.&#13;
Now&#13;
lbt&#13;
and&#13;
UJl&lt;I~e&#13;
IDthe&#13;
pm&lt;&#13;
as&#13;
lootball&#13;
p&lt;o«nm&#13;
bas&#13;
grown.&#13;
and&#13;
...u&#13;
IS&#13;
the&#13;
abtbty&#13;
to "'"&#13;
good&#13;
com-&#13;
wilb It&#13;
&lt;OIll&lt;&#13;
the&#13;
probl&lt;ms&#13;
thai&#13;
will&#13;
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It&#13;
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on&#13;
lbIo&#13;
basIS&#13;
lbty&#13;
only&#13;
naturally&#13;
0«Ul.&#13;
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iD-&#13;
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t&lt;Ie&lt;ttd&#13;
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ID&#13;
official&#13;
and&#13;
I&#13;
stead  of  solving&#13;
lb&lt;se&#13;
probl&lt;ms,&#13;
player&#13;
of _&#13;
and&#13;
nac&#13;
lootbaD&#13;
ID&#13;
partJc1pants  have&#13;
d&lt;cidtd&#13;
to&#13;
laIte&#13;
South&#13;
MJtwauQe&#13;
and&#13;
Oak&#13;
aM.&#13;
I&#13;
pol&#13;
shots  It ao individual  who de-&#13;
kMw bow&#13;
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serves  mo..,&#13;
credit&#13;
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• ap«iaJ1y&#13;
wben&#13;
the&#13;
players   given.&#13;
Well.  I&#13;
say&#13;
thank&#13;
YOU.&#13;
Linda&#13;
b«&lt;lme&#13;
nther..,...,...ve&#13;
I&#13;
abo&#13;
Oralt for k~&#13;
the program&#13;
alive&#13;
kMw&#13;
bow&#13;
dlflI&lt;uIt&#13;
II&#13;
IS&#13;
worting&#13;
and&#13;
rongntulations   on lbt&#13;
growth&#13;
lb&#13;
only&#13;
two&#13;
ref...,... -....-,&#13;
I&#13;
01&#13;
the&#13;
program.&#13;
The  partJc1pants&#13;
would&#13;
nib«   _&#13;
Wllb on)y&#13;
two&#13;
should&#13;
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elfO&lt;ls&#13;
01&#13;
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t oI6da1s&#13;
lbao&#13;
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as&#13;
dedicated.&#13;
bard-_-&#13;
I&#13;
1l&lt;OlIlp&lt;l&lt;ntofflCllls&#13;
It&#13;
IS&#13;
a&#13;
me&#13;
and&#13;
n!SOUl&lt;eIuI&#13;
as Linda&#13;
DraIt&#13;
Ii&lt;uJI&#13;
job&#13;
that&#13;
&lt;an&#13;
on)y ... appre-&#13;
worting  lor  lbem.&#13;
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led&#13;
by&#13;
people&#13;
who have olfi&lt;iat·&#13;
rlDd&#13;
a&#13;
mo..,&#13;
qualified&#13;
penoo.&#13;
btlu...&#13;
As&#13;
far as the  stud&lt;nts&#13;
who&#13;
just&#13;
3&#13;
The&#13;
wrestJers&#13;
For  lbt&#13;
pa&gt;l&#13;
learned  bow  to  write,&#13;
!be&#13;
rom-&#13;
yean.&#13;
lbt  IDlramural  lootball&#13;
meals&#13;
lbty&#13;
made&#13;
in&#13;
lbe paper were&#13;
procram&#13;
bas&#13;
suffend&#13;
due&#13;
to&#13;
bet&#13;
of&#13;
qUite  misleading,    and&#13;
in&#13;
many&#13;
team!&#13;
If&#13;
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101"&#13;
the .......&#13;
cases,&#13;
qwte&#13;
untrue.&#13;
Perhaps&#13;
a little&#13;
tJen&#13;
providrn&amp;&#13;
one&#13;
01"&#13;
two&#13;
teams.&#13;
lboogbt&#13;
should&#13;
lit&#13;
applied&#13;
10&#13;
what&#13;
lbt&#13;
program&#13;
may  have&#13;
died&#13;
You&#13;
you&#13;
wnte  nther&#13;
lbao&#13;
pure&#13;
emu-&#13;
can't  have  a  &lt;on1pehtive   league&#13;
lion, so as&#13;
to&#13;
lIlSUre that&#13;
!be&#13;
igno-&#13;
..,lb  two&#13;
01"&#13;
lb...e  teams&#13;
Tba.nJr.s,&#13;
nnt   comments   that  lound&#13;
!beir&#13;
WT&lt;SlIen.&#13;
bolb&#13;
put&#13;
and  present.&#13;
way  mto&#13;
!be&#13;
Ranger   would  not&#13;
and&#13;
thanb&#13;
to&#13;
Coad&gt;&#13;
Koch fOl"&#13;
beIp-&#13;
ooze&#13;
lbeir  way into print  again.&#13;
"'ll&#13;
the&#13;
program&#13;
sUrYlYe.&#13;
""'bat's&#13;
to&#13;
Steven&#13;
J. Grod"".sId&#13;
seems  lbe  Cubs&#13;
drew&#13;
2.1  million&#13;
fans to day games&#13;
Ibis&#13;
year;&#13;
can&#13;
lbe&#13;
Brewers  say lbe same?&#13;
I&#13;
think&#13;
not.&#13;
As&#13;
for lbe Cubs nol caring  about&#13;
their  fans,  that  "a&lt;eusation"&#13;
is&#13;
to&#13;
ludicrous  to allack.&#13;
H&#13;
they  didn'l&#13;
&lt;are.  wby did  lbey  pul  togelber   a&#13;
division  &lt;bampion?  To brag  about&#13;
during  lbe  winter?!&#13;
I&#13;
don'l&#13;
think&#13;
so.&#13;
1982&#13;
season.  You&#13;
seem&#13;
to&#13;
baftft.&#13;
gollen  that  lillie&#13;
fact.&#13;
Bat ....&#13;
were  lbey  during&#13;
\be&#13;
'83&#13;
II1II,&#13;
season?  Nowhere&#13;
to&#13;
be _&#13;
I"J&#13;
convenient.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
00&#13;
O&lt;:t.&#13;
II,&#13;
there&#13;
was&#13;
a leller&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
editor&#13;
slating  that  the  Ranger&#13;
wrote  a greal  deal  of "drivel"   in&#13;
the  paper.&#13;
1&#13;
didn'l  really&#13;
believe&#13;
that  leller&#13;
until&#13;
I saw  Steve  Kra-&#13;
tochvil's  article  aboul  lbe&#13;
Chitago&#13;
Cubs.&#13;
What  lbe  bell does  any  Brewer&#13;
fan&#13;
know&#13;
about  the  Cubs?  How&#13;
dare  he  call  Cub  fans  narrow-&#13;
minded   and   unknowledgeable&#13;
about  basebaJI?!  Cub fans  are  lbe&#13;
greatest&#13;
and&#13;
mosl  knowledgeable&#13;
lans  in the  entire  basebaJI  world.&#13;
You&#13;
ask&#13;
any die-hard  Cub Fan any-&#13;
thing  at  all  about   baseball   and&#13;
you'D get more of an answer&#13;
than&#13;
you&#13;
can&#13;
handle!  That's&#13;
be&lt;ause&#13;
lbe&#13;
Cubs&#13;
have one of the most illustri.&#13;
ous traditions&#13;
in&#13;
lbe&#13;
history&#13;
01&#13;
base-&#13;
ball,  whi&lt;b  is  lbe  one&#13;
!bing&#13;
!be&#13;
Brewers  don't  have  and  never&#13;
wim.! I suppose  that's  jusl jealousy&#13;
commg&#13;
up.&#13;
And  tbe  way  you  maligned&#13;
Wrigley. Field?!  I suppose  you&#13;
would SPit on the Washington  Mon-&#13;
ument and the&#13;
Lincoln&#13;
Memorial!&#13;
The&#13;
Friendly&#13;
Confines&#13;
is lbe  btst&#13;
ballpark  in  lbe  majors&#13;
\0&#13;
see&#13;
a&#13;
game.  And  when  I say&#13;
see,&#13;
that&#13;
means  wilbout&#13;
using&#13;
binoculars&#13;
like you need  at&#13;
County&#13;
Sladium!&#13;
Wngley Field&#13;
epitomizes&#13;
a&#13;
baseball&#13;
~ladium&#13;
I&#13;
As&#13;
for lights,&#13;
who&#13;
needs&#13;
em?&#13;
Baseball&#13;
was&#13;
meanl&#13;
\0&#13;
be&#13;
played  in tbe  sunshine,  and&#13;
it&#13;
Oh.  by lbe  way, the&#13;
IlEAL '"&#13;
son lbe  Brewer  fans&#13;
&lt;bemd&#13;
I!Ilt&#13;
er manager  Rene&#13;
1.a&lt;benwm's&#13;
ill&#13;
game  was  thai  they&#13;
were&#13;
clad •&#13;
gel rid&#13;
01&#13;
him!&#13;
Whyelsewoulllllr&#13;
cheer  a man  who led a&#13;
team&#13;
II&#13;
I&#13;
"glamorous"&#13;
cellar&#13;
6nish,&#13;
37&#13;
plIIll&#13;
out?&#13;
. So&#13;
lbe  next  lime&#13;
you&#13;
feel&#13;
*&#13;
need  to defame  the&#13;
Cubs&#13;
0lpDiI&gt;&#13;
tion  and  lbeir  great lans,&#13;
lie&#13;
iIJIo&#13;
until&#13;
it&#13;
goes&#13;
away. To quote'"&#13;
"We don't  want or need&#13;
your&#13;
kind!"&#13;
Die-Hard  Cub&#13;
Fan,  14&#13;
YfIII&#13;
Todd E.&#13;
Ilo!ll&#13;
The only thing I'm willing  to con-&#13;
ceed&#13;
to&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Krato&lt;bvil  is&#13;
his&#13;
slale-&#13;
ment   about   fans  jumping   on  a&#13;
bandwagon.   But  thai  jusl  comes&#13;
wilb lbe  territory  of&#13;
winners.&#13;
As&#13;
a&#13;
card  earring   die-bard.&#13;
1&#13;
bave&#13;
\0&#13;
admil  lbal&#13;
1&#13;
wasn'l&#13;
too&#13;
crazy about&#13;
them.   but&#13;
1&#13;
was  open-minded&#13;
enougb  to a&lt;:cepl lbem.  But  I seem&#13;
to remember  Brewer fans coming&#13;
out&#13;
01&#13;
lbe  woodwork   during   lbe&#13;
Cub fan returns kick&#13;
Brewers.&#13;
ruusbes&#13;
37&#13;
games  out&#13;
01&#13;
the&#13;
mooey.&#13;
it's&#13;
easy&#13;
to&#13;
c:hide&#13;
laos&#13;
who've&#13;
bad&#13;
a betler  go of it.  But&#13;
there  really&#13;
is&#13;
00&#13;
excuse  for some&#13;
of  the  stupid&#13;
&lt;ra&lt;:ks&#13;
you  make,&#13;
whicb  make  me  question&#13;
if&#13;
you&#13;
know eooogb about basebaJI&#13;
to&#13;
fo~&#13;
low WlUe League  games&#13;
in&#13;
Paw-&#13;
tocket.&#13;
Case&#13;
in&#13;
poust: Sure, lbe&#13;
Brewers&#13;
drew&#13;
I&#13;
6 nullioo&#13;
while playing like&#13;
old  Cub  dubs  who  struggled  lor&#13;
900.000.&#13;
But don't  forget that&#13;
Coun-&#13;
Iy&#13;
Stadium&#13;
bolds&#13;
16.776 mo..,&#13;
fans&#13;
lbao&#13;
Wrigley  Field.&#13;
and&#13;
that  all&#13;
Continued&#13;
OD&#13;
Pate  II&#13;
To the Edltor&#13;
Cubs better than Brewers&#13;
As&#13;
a&#13;
~I&#13;
toae&#13;
Chicago&#13;
Cubs lao. I&#13;
got&#13;
qwt.  a&#13;
k&gt;dt&#13;
out of Steve&#13;
Kn-&#13;
VI!'S&#13;
article&#13;
10&#13;
!be October&#13;
II&#13;
Rangei'&#13;
In&#13;
that&#13;
pte&lt;e.&#13;
SI....  derlY-&#13;
speciaJ&#13;
JOy&#13;
10 ...&#13;
tdung  the Cubs&#13;
and&#13;
tbm&#13;
fard make .....   of&#13;
tbem-&#13;
ID&#13;
wUng&#13;
to caplu...  the&#13;
NL&#13;
~nnant~·and I can undersL1nd&#13;
·~btr&#13;
be's _&#13;
from&#13;
Alter&#13;
all.&#13;
I&#13;
d&lt;nved&#13;
)lISt&#13;
as much&#13;
joy ...&#13;
tching&#13;
make ao&#13;
us&#13;
out&#13;
ollumseU&#13;
in&#13;
paragraph&#13;
after  absurd&#13;
paragrapb&#13;
S\el;e.&#13;
I&#13;
understand&#13;
the&#13;
sour&#13;
(n-&#13;
pes,&#13;
wben&#13;
your JaVOilte t&lt;am. lbt&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
1982;&#13;
however.  I believe&#13;
it&#13;
was&#13;
Ilt&#13;
year  everyone&#13;
became a&#13;
BrelM&#13;
fan. The Cub fans have alwal'lIt&#13;
ported  lbeir  t&lt;am. I woukl1itt&#13;
l&#13;
know  wbere  in lbe world&#13;
y"&#13;
P&#13;
your  inlormation   lrom'&#13;
B_&#13;
you  did  give two &lt;orred&#13;
faell:&#13;
I&#13;
lhe  Cubs  have  a better&#13;
team&#13;
n-&#13;
Ihe Brewers'   and&#13;
2)&#13;
the&#13;
Cubs"&#13;
the  National'League&#13;
East.&#13;
...&#13;
True&#13;
Blue&#13;
Cub&#13;
TimJllllll&#13;
Nice  try.  Steve,  to  ruin  a  fan-&#13;
Iastic  year  for  lbe  Cubs  and  lbeir&#13;
FANlastic  fans.&#13;
1&#13;
am sorry&#13;
to lell&#13;
you  lbis.  but  you  know  nothing&#13;
about  baseball.  lbe  Cubs  or  lbeir&#13;
fans.  You obviously  cannol  accepl&#13;
the  lact  thai  your  leam,  lbe  Mil-&#13;
waukee   Brewers,    finished   dead&#13;
last.&#13;
I&#13;
as a Cub Ian  admired   whal&#13;
the  Brewers  have  accomplished   in&#13;
Ra~ger is written and edited by students  at UW-Parkside end the,/Sfe&#13;
solelYrr-&#13;
::;slb~e   for its editorial policy and content.  Published  every Thursdayduring&#13;
tilt&#13;
R ern/C year except  dUring breaks end holidays.&#13;
A~;~er is printed by the Racine Journal  Times.&#13;
.&#13;
'I&#13;
01&#13;
W,SCO&#13;
~rre;pon~ence  should  be addressed  to: Parkside Ranger. Unive;I'~3'&#13;
2295 nsm-  srkside. Box No. 2000.  Kenosha,&#13;
WI&#13;
53141.&#13;
Telephone (41&#13;
or&#13;
(4141 553-2287.&#13;
Siz~et~Brs to the editOr wi" be accepted  if typewritten.  doubfe-Sp8ced&#13;
on,sr'nd~&#13;
pho:e Pe~f1tt~rs  should be less than&#13;
350&#13;
words and must be signed.&#13;
with'&#13;
I".&#13;
que t;:&#13;
~r&#13;
included for verffication purposes.  Names wi" be wirhhe&#13;
ld&#13;
uPO'!&#13;
II¢"&#13;
res:~s&#13;
ra::'n.&#13;
e&#13;
;or lette,rs is Tuesday at&#13;
10&#13;
a.m. for publication Thursday.&#13;
R8'faIY&#13;
content.&#13;
rIg t to edit letters and refuse letters containing falsB and def8ffl&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jim  Burge,  Konise  Cassity   Jay&#13;
Crapser,  Mike  Froehlke.   MIcbele&#13;
Geary,  Natalie  ,Haberman,  Darryl&#13;
Hahn,  Ki~berlie   Kranich,   Steve&#13;
KratochvIl,   Mark  Leipzig   Jeff&#13;
LeiooaaI,&#13;
Mary&#13;
LojeMi.&#13;
RolIIi'Luebr&#13;
JoaD&#13;
MOlloz,&#13;
W..&#13;
McGuver&#13;
Jan,;&#13;
~=~~~.&#13;
~ureeD&#13;
</text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 13, issue 7, October 18, 1984</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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            <name>Date</name>
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                <text>1984-10-18</text>
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                <text> Student publications</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>Guskins return Tennis season "Crimes of the Heart"&#13;
to Thailand closes play review&#13;
Page 6 Page 16 Page 9&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 25, 1984 University of Wiseoesin-Parkside Vol. 13, No. 8&#13;
Parkside survey&#13;
Reagan favored in area poll&#13;
Residents of Kenosha and Racine&#13;
counties favor President Ronald&#13;
Reagan over former vice president&#13;
Walter Mondale by a 44 t o 30 p ercent&#13;
margin, shows a survey conducted&#13;
Sept. 10 through Oct. 1 by&#13;
Parkside's Center for Survey and&#13;
Marketing Research (CSMR).&#13;
The question, "If the election&#13;
were held today who would you&#13;
vote for?" was just one of many&#13;
questions asked of 1,000 heads of&#13;
households in the two counties as&#13;
part of an in-depth, "quality of&#13;
life" survey by the CSMR.&#13;
The survey seeks to assess attitudes&#13;
of Kenosha and Racine residents&#13;
toward their communities,&#13;
jobs, local governments and other&#13;
subjects, as well as their shopping&#13;
habits and recreational and entertainment&#13;
activities.&#13;
The survey, supported by funds&#13;
from a number of local groups, including&#13;
the Kenosha Area Chamber&#13;
of Commerce and the Kenosha&#13;
Area Economic Development Office,&#13;
was conducted by phone using a&#13;
trained team of Parkside students.&#13;
Telephone interviews averaged&#13;
about 20 minutes.&#13;
Complete results of the survey&#13;
will be available in January, said&#13;
Parkside business professor James&#13;
Rovelstad, director of the CSMR.&#13;
Rovelstad and Parkside behavioral&#13;
science professor Ron Pavalko designed&#13;
the questions for the survey.&#13;
The researchers said significant and&#13;
timely data from the survey will be&#13;
released as it is processed.&#13;
The interviewing phase of the&#13;
survey was completed one week before&#13;
the first presidential debate.&#13;
Rovelstad said that while the trend&#13;
in national post-debate polls shows&#13;
Reagan's lead over Mondale narrowing,&#13;
there still exists a substantial&#13;
gap between the two candidates.&#13;
The survey contains a three percent&#13;
margin of error, plus or minus.&#13;
Of the survey respondents, 44&#13;
percent favored Reagan, 30 percent&#13;
favored Mondale, and 16 percent&#13;
were undecided.&#13;
Reagan is favored more heavily&#13;
by men than women - 49 percent&#13;
of t he men preferred Reagan while&#13;
41 percent of the women did.&#13;
Perhaps surprisingly, the&#13;
researchers said, there was no difference&#13;
between men and women&#13;
in their support of the Mondale-&#13;
Ferraro ticket. Thirty percent of&#13;
both the men and women chose&#13;
Mondale. Thus it appears u&amp;t votes&#13;
Reagan may be losing among&#13;
women are not necessarily being&#13;
picked up by Mondale, the&#13;
researchers said. Twenty percent of&#13;
the women were undecided and 12&#13;
percent of the men were.&#13;
Among full-time working men,&#13;
Reagan was heavily favored - 52&#13;
to 28 percent - over Mondale. Interestingly,&#13;
the researchers said,&#13;
full-time working women also preferred&#13;
Reagan, by a margin of 42 to&#13;
31 percent. Women keeping house&#13;
full-time were strong Reagan backers,&#13;
preferring the incumbent by a&#13;
Mondale winner&#13;
in mock election&#13;
Walter Mondale has a slight edge&#13;
over President Reagan, according&#13;
to the mock presidential election&#13;
held on campus last week.&#13;
Walter Mondale/Geraldine Ferraro&#13;
received 195 votes and Ronald&#13;
Reagan/George Bush received 169&#13;
votes. The mock election ballots&#13;
were available at the PSGA senate&#13;
polling site.&#13;
The ballots presented only the&#13;
Democratic and Republican candidates.&#13;
Serious write-in candidates&#13;
were Gary Hart and John Anderson.&#13;
Bill the Cat headed the list of&#13;
less serious write-ins.&#13;
Kari Dixon, president of the&#13;
Young Democrats, which sponsored&#13;
the mock election, said she was&#13;
not surprised by t he results. "Reagan&#13;
has strong support with the&#13;
youth, according to the National&#13;
polls.&#13;
"To those people who are wondering&#13;
where all the Ronald Reagan&#13;
supporters are on this campus,&#13;
I ask the same question. If there&#13;
are 169 Reagan supporters, then&#13;
there should be an organization on&#13;
campus showing this support,"she&#13;
added.&#13;
Dixon was happy that so many&#13;
people participated in the mock&#13;
election. "Whether Republican or&#13;
Democrat, I feel it is important for&#13;
students to repeat their participation&#13;
on Nov. 6," she said.&#13;
45 to 27 per cent split.&#13;
Types of jobs influenced candidate&#13;
support. For example, managers&#13;
of businesses preferred Reagan&#13;
by a whopping 72 to 8 percent&#13;
margin and professionals 51 to 23&#13;
percent, while assembly-line workers&#13;
favored Mondale by a 47 to 30&#13;
percent span. General laborers favored&#13;
Mondale by a slight 38 to 34&#13;
percent.&#13;
Persons who said they belong to&#13;
a union preferred Mondale by 44 to&#13;
34 percent; non-union respondents&#13;
favored Reagan by an almost 2 to I&#13;
margin - 49 to 25 percent.&#13;
Levels of education also influenced&#13;
candidate support. Persons with&#13;
less than a high school education&#13;
favored Mondale by a 42 to 25 percent&#13;
margin, while persons with a&#13;
high school diploma favored Reagan&#13;
by 47 t o 30 percent.&#13;
Graduates of vocational and technical&#13;
schools preferred Reagan 43&#13;
to 28 percent while persons with&#13;
four year bachelor's degrees favored&#13;
Reagan by a 61 to 25 percent&#13;
margin.&#13;
Support for Reagan increased as&#13;
incomes did. For example, persons&#13;
earning below $10,000 per year favored&#13;
Mondale by some 15 percentage&#13;
points; persons earning between&#13;
$15,000 and $20,000 preferred&#13;
Reagan by about a five point&#13;
spread; persons at the $25,000 to&#13;
$30,000 level supported Reagan by&#13;
about a 13 percent margin; and persons&#13;
earning more than $50,000 preferred&#13;
Reagan 69 to 13 percent.&#13;
Age was a factor in support of&#13;
the candidates. Persons 18 to 24&#13;
supported Reagan by a 43 to 37 percent&#13;
margin while those age 25 to&#13;
34 p referred Reagan 49 to 31 percent.&#13;
Persons age 45 to 64 chose&#13;
Reagan by a margin of 46 to 29 percent.&#13;
Those over 65 expressed&#13;
weaker support for Reagan, choosing&#13;
the incumbent by a 38 to 30 percent&#13;
margin over Mondale. Those&#13;
over 65 also tended to be more undecided&#13;
- 21 percent said they&#13;
weren't sure who they would vote&#13;
for.&#13;
Of persons registered to vote in&#13;
the upcoming election, Reagan was&#13;
favored by a margin of 45 to 31 percent.&#13;
Among those not registered,&#13;
the split was 42 to 25 percent in&#13;
Reagan's favor.&#13;
Of re spondents who voted in the&#13;
1980 presidential election, Reagan&#13;
was preferred by a 47 to 30 per cent&#13;
margin. Of those who didn't vote,&#13;
Mondale was favored by a 39 to 30&#13;
percent margin. '&#13;
PSGA election fun&#13;
PSGA&#13;
All win, UCpassed&#13;
OFFICIAL RESULTS&#13;
P.S.G.A. ELECTIONS&#13;
FALL, 1984&#13;
SENATOR&#13;
186 - Andy Buchanan&#13;
129 • Christopher Baierl&#13;
162 • Mark Leipzig&#13;
136 • Teron Nicldkowsld&#13;
158 • John Rather&#13;
158- Jose VaUdejuli&#13;
S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
No Candidate&#13;
P.U.A.B.&#13;
180 • Dennis Padlock&#13;
Referendum A:&#13;
We, the students of UW-Parkside,&#13;
agree to support the UW System&#13;
student lobby, United Council,&#13;
through a mandatory fee, refundable&#13;
upon written request, of $ .50&#13;
per semester.&#13;
194- Yes&#13;
108- No&#13;
309 STUDENTS VOTED,&#13;
APPROXIMATELY 6% OF THE&#13;
STUDENT BODY.&#13;
Aspin/J ansson&#13;
debate Monday&#13;
A debate between Rep. Les&#13;
Aspin (D-Wis.) and Republican&#13;
challenger Peter Jansson will be&#13;
held from noon to 1:15 p.m. on&#13;
Monday, Oct. 29, in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theater.&#13;
The debate, free and open to the&#13;
public, is sponsored by Parkside's&#13;
Social Science Roundtable Series&#13;
and the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Leagues of Women Voters. Format&#13;
will include opening statements and&#13;
rebuttals by the candidates, written&#13;
questions from the audience and an&#13;
opportunity for representatives of&#13;
the media to ask questions of the&#13;
candidates, who will then give closing&#13;
statements.&#13;
The debate will be broadcast live&#13;
by WGTD-FM 91 public radio.&#13;
Moderator will be Parkside associate&#13;
dean of faculty Michael&#13;
Bassis. The debate will be introduced&#13;
by Marry Merriam, president of&#13;
the Kenosha League of Women&#13;
Voters. Audience questions will be&#13;
stated by Sue Anderson, president&#13;
of the Racine League of Women&#13;
Voters.&#13;
Free shuttle bus service will be&#13;
offered from the East parking lot&#13;
near Tallent Hall on the east side of&#13;
30th Ave. (Wood R d.) Very li mited&#13;
parking will be available in the&#13;
Communication Arts and Union&#13;
lot •&#13;
2 Thursday, Oct. 25, 1984 RANGER&#13;
Opinion&#13;
Black and white of it&#13;
by Joan Mattox&#13;
Switchblades, nurn-chucks and&#13;
other various weapons seem to&#13;
have replaced the traditional books,&#13;
pencils and paper in some of our&#13;
area high schools, one being Kenosha&#13;
Bradford.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct 2, several students&#13;
were involved in a racial brawl at&#13;
the aid of the school day. This resulted&#13;
in two students having to be&#13;
treated for minor injuries.&#13;
The saddest part about this is the&#13;
fact that the active participants are&#13;
tomorrow's adults. As teens, if they&#13;
feel the answer to the racial problem&#13;
lies in the ability to handle a&#13;
switchblade or the expert twirling&#13;
of num-chucks, what will they feel&#13;
will satisfy the problem when they&#13;
are adults: guns, B-52's or nuclear&#13;
missiles?&#13;
Ignoring or underestimating the&#13;
problem of racial prejudice, as&#13;
many do, will not make it go away.&#13;
We must meet the problem head&#13;
on. Even Bradford's principal was&#13;
quite evasive when describing his&#13;
idea of the root of the problem. "I&#13;
felt it was a school-boy fight," he&#13;
stated. When you have fifteen students&#13;
with knives and other various&#13;
dangerous weapons screaming&#13;
"Black supremacy!" and "White&#13;
supremacy!" I think that far exceeds&#13;
the usual "school-boy" fight.&#13;
Students were injured. The police&#13;
were summoned, and the principal&#13;
calls this a "school-boy" fight?&#13;
High school is not grade school.&#13;
The students are young adults facing&#13;
many adult problems, this one a&#13;
racial conflict. So how does the&#13;
principal handle it? He wants to&#13;
expel or suspend all those involved.&#13;
Expulsion is not the answer. Suspension&#13;
and explusion might teach&#13;
than not to create a public ruckus&#13;
again, but it will by no means solve&#13;
the underlying problem, which is&#13;
the existence of prejudice.&#13;
So what, you may ask, should&#13;
they do? I say give all those involved&#13;
an ultimatum: either suspension&#13;
or a chance to air out their&#13;
differences in a group session with&#13;
counselors. You would be surprised&#13;
at how group therapy can be quite&#13;
helpful in cases like this. It would&#13;
give all those involved a chance to&#13;
air their differences. They could&#13;
discuss their likes and dislikes&#13;
while at the same time clearing up&#13;
any stereotypes or false beliefs that&#13;
one group may have about another.&#13;
It is a chance to exchange ideas and&#13;
thoughts without the fear of a knife&#13;
stuck in your back later.&#13;
A group rap session is a way to&#13;
bring students together so they can&#13;
verbally enact their disagreements&#13;
rather than participating in some&#13;
violent act to show their views. And&#13;
who knows, it might even bring the&#13;
students closer together and erase&#13;
any negative thoughts that one particular&#13;
group might feel about another.&#13;
It is sad to see that people with&#13;
different racial backgrounds find it&#13;
hard to get along. Why can't they&#13;
just accept the fact that the minority&#13;
groups as well as the Caucasian&#13;
race will always be in existence, so&#13;
the best way to deal with it is trying&#13;
to get along. It's not an A, B or&#13;
C world. It's an ABC world. We're&#13;
all in this together. So straighten&#13;
up, people, because at the rate&#13;
we're going, today's morality could&#13;
lead to tomorrow's fatality.&#13;
HOW TO S URVIVE&#13;
NUCLEAR&#13;
WAR&#13;
ONE HEARS MANY COMMENTARIES&#13;
THESE DAYS AB OUT THE&#13;
UNSURVIVABLLITY OF NUCLEAR&#13;
WAR. HOWEVER. YOU M AY BE&#13;
ABLE TO SURVIV E ONE...&#13;
. -IF YOU MEMORIZE THE&#13;
PROPER SAFETY PROCE DURES&#13;
TO BEGIN WIT H, WEAR LIGHTCOLORED&#13;
CLO THING.&#13;
KEEP AN EMERGENC Y KIT&#13;
WITH PLENTY OF WA TER, RAISINS,&#13;
CHOCOLATE, COARSE SOAP&#13;
CHLORINE, BUR N LO TION (N OT&#13;
CREAM), IODINE, AND A FIRST&#13;
AID BO OKLET.&#13;
LISTEN TO YO UR RADIO.&#13;
WHEN YO U AR E TOLD THAT&#13;
NUCLEAR WAR IS IMMINENT,&#13;
PROCEED AS QUIC KLY A S&#13;
POSSIBLE TO THE NEAREST&#13;
HOSPITABLE PLANET.&#13;
-I084&#13;
Nobody asked me, but...&#13;
I don't like either candidate&#13;
Posters unnecessary To the Editor:&#13;
This letter is in response to the&#13;
Mondale-Ferraro posters hanging in&#13;
the Hanger office. I realize that the&#13;
newspaper has the right (and some&#13;
may argue responsibility) to support&#13;
one candidate, however, the&#13;
Coffee Shoppe is a place where&#13;
many students frequently gather&#13;
and the Ranger office windows face&#13;
into that area. I do not feel like becoming&#13;
inundated with political advertisements&#13;
while relaxing in this&#13;
area.&#13;
In the past, political advertisements&#13;
have been removed from the&#13;
PSGA office for the very reason&#13;
stated above. The Editor informed&#13;
me that it is her window in her office&#13;
and that she can put whatever&#13;
she wants to in her windows. Two&#13;
issues are raised here. First, is it&#13;
her office? Don't we pay for it with&#13;
our segregated fees? Second, how&#13;
responsible is it for the leader of a&#13;
student organization to impose&#13;
his/her beliefs and personal opinions&#13;
on a captive audience (in this&#13;
case, consumers in the Coffee Shoppe).&#13;
Let us especially consider the&#13;
fact that at the time the posters&#13;
were put up no formal (or informal)&#13;
vote was ever taken to arrive&#13;
at a consensus of opinion among&#13;
staff members.&#13;
If this is the one-sided approach&#13;
to issues we are to expect, then perhaps&#13;
we can use our segregated&#13;
fees to purchase an outside curtain&#13;
to cover HER windows and HER&#13;
personal opinions.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Bruce R. Preston&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
We have folks for Reagan and&#13;
folks for Mondale. Me? I don't like&#13;
either one, so I thought I'd rant and&#13;
rave a bit. Certainly both have good&#13;
and bad points, but their bad points&#13;
tend to overshadow the good.&#13;
The following are lines from&#13;
songs which, in their entirety,&#13;
meant a variety of different things.&#13;
Taken out of context, these lines&#13;
pretty much say how I feel about&#13;
this election.&#13;
Hope you've got your things&#13;
together,&#13;
Hope you are quite prepared to die,&#13;
Looks like we're in for nasty&#13;
weather,&#13;
One eye is taken for an eye.&#13;
—John Fogerty&#13;
Dead babies,&#13;
Can't take care,&#13;
Of themselves&#13;
—Alice Cooper&#13;
Won't you tell me Mr. Jesus,&#13;
Won't you tell me if you can,&#13;
When you see this world we live in,&#13;
Do you still believe in man?&#13;
—Geezee Butler&#13;
And I would rather be anywhere&#13;
else&#13;
But here today.&#13;
—Elvis Costello&#13;
Old man take a look at my life,&#13;
I'm a l^flike you.&#13;
—Neil Young&#13;
No short-haired yellow-bellied son&#13;
of tricky Dicky's,&#13;
Gonna mother-hubbard soft soap&#13;
me,&#13;
With just a pocketful of hope,&#13;
Money for dope,&#13;
Money for rope.&#13;
—John Lennon&#13;
There will be an answer,&#13;
Let it be.&#13;
—Paul McCarteny&#13;
Heirs of a cold war,&#13;
That's what we've become,&#13;
Inheriting troubles,&#13;
I'm mentally numb,&#13;
Crazy,&#13;
I just cannot bear,&#13;
I'm living with something,&#13;
That just isn't fair.&#13;
—Ozzy Osbourne&#13;
And you tell me,&#13;
Over and over and over again my&#13;
friend,&#13;
You don't believe,&#13;
We're on the eve of destruction&#13;
— P .F. Sloane&#13;
Well I'm not dumb,&#13;
But I can't understand,&#13;
Why she walks like a woman,&#13;
And talks like a man.&#13;
—Ray Da vies&#13;
It's all over now baby blue&#13;
—Bob Dylan&#13;
This is the end&#13;
—Jim Morrison&#13;
Letters rebutted by reader&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to comment on the&#13;
letters in the Ranger last week and&#13;
the fact that I found three uplifting&#13;
and five put downs.&#13;
Queen Natalie was very gracious&#13;
in her thank you to the homecoming&#13;
committee and her hopes for a&#13;
better homecoming in the future.&#13;
Let's all commit ourselves to better&#13;
homecomings in the future.&#13;
Thanks, Steve, for the admirable&#13;
defense of the in tram urals on campus.&#13;
I'm sure with other people like&#13;
you helping Linda Draft, the intramurals&#13;
program won't just stay on&#13;
the ground, but will soar to new&#13;
heights.&#13;
I'm glad to hear Ruth is excited&#13;
about voting, but also important is&#13;
voter education and political in-&#13;
Continued on Page 11&#13;
U&#13;
9&#13;
*00&#13;
c%&#13;
&lt;2&#13;
P^j7tkia Editor&#13;
ftahKfofmiL' " • Campus News Editor&#13;
5m Community News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Asst Feature Editor&#13;
£ £? Sports Edtor&#13;
KSZ Edito*"&#13;
KJJftP Nidsen Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
^7iri^n?oA Advertising Manager&#13;
Pat Zfrkelbach Distribution Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan Asst. Business Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jim Burge, Konise Cassity, Jay&#13;
Crapser, Mike Froehlke, Michele&#13;
Geary, Natalie Haberman, Darryl&#13;
Hahn, Kimberlie Kranich, Steve&#13;
Kratochvil, Mark Leipzig, Jeff&#13;
Leisganx, Mary L ojeski, Robb Luehr,&#13;
Joan Mattox, Wes McGarver, Julie&#13;
Pendleton, Chris Pappe, Laureen&#13;
Wawro, Kevin Zirfcelbach.&#13;
T JL andfdnfd by Students at UW-Parkside and they are solely responsible&#13;
for ,t s editor,at policy and content. Published every Thursday during the&#13;
academic year except during breaks and holidays.&#13;
"anger is printed by the Racine Journal Times.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger. University of&#13;
2295^4^53-2287 ^ "" """ T"'Ph°"° '4"" 553~&#13;
srienaZrVJZ^"'^ accefted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard&#13;
sue paper. Letters should be /ess than 350 words and must be signed with a te/equTst&#13;
ZTd/iMfaZfZ' f°r- VeSmcaJion PurP°*&gt;* "ames will be withheld upon re-&#13;
1™,&gt;S TueSdaV St Wa m- for Publication Thursday. Ranger&#13;
content. * containing false and defamatory&#13;
Third party senate&#13;
candidate discusses issues&#13;
Political fervor praised&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This is in response to the letter&#13;
published on Oct. 18, written by&#13;
Brad Osborne. Mr. Osborne wrote&#13;
that he is highly offended by the&#13;
fact that most of the political fervor&#13;
generated on the Parfcside campus&#13;
is Democratic-oriented. This may&#13;
be true. While we have been lucky&#13;
enough to have had both Ted Mondale&#13;
and John Zaccaro, Jr. speak at&#13;
forums, we seem to have had no&#13;
Republican-backed programs sponsored.&#13;
Mr. Osborne, I believe the&#13;
Republican record on education&#13;
may be reason enough for the apparent&#13;
under-representation on&#13;
campus. Perhaps the Republicans&#13;
realize that cutting Federal aid for&#13;
higher education by 25 percent&#13;
would not create avid supporters in&#13;
a university setting.&#13;
As for the series of discussions&#13;
sponsored by the Young Democrats,&#13;
I am personally proud that&#13;
students of Parkside are as politically&#13;
aware and concerned as they&#13;
appear to be. While there is no&#13;
Young Republican organization on&#13;
campus, those Republican students&#13;
are invited and urged to attend&#13;
these discussions. If topics such as&#13;
poverty, the arms race and the environment&#13;
aren't presented fairly in&#13;
your opinion, then I would assume&#13;
Ranger accused of bias&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Come on, Ranger! Let's not be&#13;
so biased. Mondale may be the better&#13;
choice for president, but then&#13;
again he may not be. I think that&#13;
both sides of an issue should be&#13;
printed, not just one side as you did&#13;
in the Oct. 11 issue ("Fritz win no&#13;
surprise," "Mondale urges student&#13;
vote; makes difference," "Financial&#13;
aid policy to come under&#13;
view," and the cartoon on page&#13;
two). Even though Kari Dixon&#13;
(writer) and Jennie Tunkieicz (editor)&#13;
are both members of the&#13;
Young Democrats club, you should&#13;
find someone who is a supporter of&#13;
Reagan and allow that person to&#13;
voice the opinion of Reagan backers.&#13;
If you c an't find anyone, then&#13;
try to write an unbiased article. I&#13;
know that it can be done, because&#13;
I've seen it in this paper before. Besides&#13;
sounding more fair, a newspaper&#13;
that is unbiased is also more&#13;
professional.&#13;
Keith Harmann&#13;
Print those letters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
What do you want, Wicker?!&#13;
Where's the letter?&#13;
What is this? Why is it that when&#13;
my friend and fellow Union bartender&#13;
Keith Harmann writes a letter&#13;
to the editor that his letter&#13;
doesn't get printed in the paper?&#13;
His letter concerns a current issue.&#13;
The answer may be that there were&#13;
ads that had to be printed on that&#13;
page because ads pay for the printing&#13;
of the paper, but the "news&#13;
briefs" are only in the paper because&#13;
they've been there all semester.&#13;
Haven't you been soliciting letters&#13;
all semester and printing&#13;
them? Isn't campus news more important&#13;
than the news briefs printed&#13;
in last week's Ranger? The articles&#13;
in the news briefs were probably&#13;
already known by the students&#13;
who have enough initiative to pick&#13;
up a Ranger and read it.&#13;
Why also is it that even though&#13;
Harmann's letter doesn't get printed,&#13;
people know about it and hassle&#13;
him about his political ideologies&#13;
when he hasn't mentioned any of&#13;
them in his letter? Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
sent him a memo which wasn't&#13;
very professional and said that she&#13;
has "..never not allowed anyone to&#13;
present their opinion..." If this is&#13;
so, why t hen wasn't his letter published?&#13;
Kari Dixon sent him the&#13;
"Congressional Weekly," stating in&#13;
her letter to him that she hopes&#13;
that he "writes more letters (to the&#13;
editor) expressing your opinions."&#13;
This raises another question: how&#13;
did she know in the first place that&#13;
he wrote a letter to the editor when&#13;
the letter was handed directly to&#13;
the editor early Tuesday morning?&#13;
She (Kari Dixon) isn't even ? staff&#13;
member of the Ranger; therefore,&#13;
she should have no business knowing&#13;
the contents of letters to the&#13;
editor until they're printed.&#13;
If this attitude of attacking others'&#13;
opinions happens weekly, you&#13;
shouldn't wonder why hardly anyone&#13;
writes letters to the editor.&#13;
Shouldn't editorial opinions, in&#13;
the form of letters intended for&#13;
publication, be answered in the&#13;
same way, instead of privately harrassing&#13;
the person who wrote the&#13;
letter? What right does a person&#13;
have to criticize someone's opinion?&#13;
This to me seems bias on behalf&#13;
of the editor. Is the editor's&#13;
opinion the only and right one&#13;
every time?&#13;
One more question: why are&#13;
there posters for Mondale/Ferraro&#13;
in the window of Ranger? Are the&#13;
Young Democrats running Ranger&#13;
or is the Ranger running the Young&#13;
Democrats?&#13;
I feel that you should print&#13;
what's said, not what the editor&#13;
feels should be printed. A college&#13;
newspaper should act with responsibility.&#13;
With responsibility comes&#13;
dignity.&#13;
In this situation, I think that the&#13;
editor abused her position and&#13;
should consider the purpose and responsibility&#13;
of a newspaper on campus.&#13;
Someone who writes a letter&#13;
opposite to her opinion should not&#13;
be intimidated and the letter ignored.&#13;
The letter should be printed as&#13;
are those letters that agree with her&#13;
viewpoint.&#13;
Neil C. Nelson&#13;
that it is your responsibility to help&#13;
educate those of us who see President&#13;
Reagan's policies as highly irregular&#13;
and quite unfair.&#13;
Your blatant accusation of faculty&#13;
"parading their Democratic&#13;
views" in classrooms is also unfair.&#13;
Unfortunately, I can fully understand&#13;
why the faculty in this university&#13;
might feel more strongly than&#13;
most. Again, my suggestion to you&#13;
is to convince us that President&#13;
Reagan will give us a better four&#13;
years. I don't think he can and&#13;
frankly, I hope that he won't have a&#13;
chance to.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Traci A. Fordham&#13;
Child care&#13;
workshop&#13;
A ser ies of five child-care workshops&#13;
that meet the requirements&#13;
of licensure by the Department of&#13;
Health and Human Services will be&#13;
offered by t he Parkside Child Care&#13;
Center.&#13;
Individuals or agencies may enroll&#13;
in the workshops, which cost&#13;
$12 in total or $2.50 individually.&#13;
The workshops will b e from 7 to&#13;
9 p.m. in Union Room 104-106.&#13;
Dates and topics are:&#13;
-Dec. 4. "Music Fun in the classroom."&#13;
-Jan. 22. "Le gal Rights and Responsibilities&#13;
in Early Childhood&#13;
Programs."&#13;
-March 5. "Growing with Puppets."&#13;
-April 30. "Families in Stress."&#13;
For more information, contact&#13;
Sherry Thomas or Marily Noreen in&#13;
the Parkside Child Care Center at&#13;
553-2227.&#13;
The Federal Reserve system and&#13;
personal income taxes are unconstitutional,&#13;
and they should be abolished,&#13;
says the Constitution Party&#13;
candidate for Wisconsin's 22nd Senate&#13;
District.&#13;
Charles Olson of Kenosha said&#13;
the government has drifted far&#13;
from the original intent of the Constitution.&#13;
For example, he said,&#13;
laws are only tested for constitutionality&#13;
in the courts after they are&#13;
in effect.&#13;
"A bill that's unconstitutional&#13;
should never be passed in the first&#13;
place," said Olson in an interview&#13;
Tuesday. "It's not passed by the&#13;
people at all."&#13;
The government survived for 125&#13;
years without personal income&#13;
taxes, said Olson. Revenue sharing,&#13;
which comes from those taxes, he&#13;
said, is inefficient and unfair.&#13;
"The government has no money&#13;
to share," said Olson. "They're getting&#13;
it from the people and it comes&#13;
back with controls."&#13;
He cited the federal government's&#13;
requirement for a nationwide&#13;
21-year-old drinking age as a&#13;
condition for federal highway funds&#13;
as an example.&#13;
Olson sa id high interest rates, a'&#13;
creation of the Federal Reserve&#13;
System, are an unproductive drain&#13;
on income. Under the party's platform,&#13;
congress would issue only&#13;
non interest bearing federal notes.&#13;
The party, which is part of the National&#13;
Populist party, would also repudiate&#13;
the federal deficit.&#13;
Olson is running for office, he&#13;
Charles Olson&#13;
says, because "We have to get honesty&#13;
and integrity in our govrament.&#13;
We hav e to turn out the old&#13;
guard.&#13;
"The problem is that these legislators&#13;
get into office (and) they see&#13;
how the person who's been there&#13;
the longest has been doing it."&#13;
Olson will be appearing, along&#13;
with other candidates for the district,&#13;
on channels 10 and 36 on Oct.&#13;
29 and 30.&#13;
Guskin open forum set&#13;
The Ranger is sponsoring an&#13;
Open Forum with Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin on Monday, Oct 29 a t 1:15&#13;
p.m. in Main Place. All are encouraged&#13;
to attend to ask questions&#13;
or make comments to the Chancellor.&#13;
Parties respond to survey&#13;
by Kari Dixon&#13;
Neither the Mondale nor the&#13;
Reagan campaigns expect defeat in&#13;
Racine and Kenosha counties, despite&#13;
the reults of a Parkside marketing&#13;
poll t hat has Ronald Reagan&#13;
leading Walter Mondale by 14&#13;
points in those counties.&#13;
The pre-debate survey obtained&#13;
some results that pleased Reagan-&#13;
Bush organizer Eric Olsen of Kenosha.&#13;
"I have not seen the poll,"&#13;
he said, "but we expect to carry&#13;
Kenosha County, though by a somewhat&#13;
smaller margin."&#13;
Olsen said he thought that the&#13;
first debate favored Mondale, the&#13;
second favored Reagan.&#13;
"The election was really won&#13;
after the nomination," Olsen said,&#13;
"and there probably will not be any&#13;
great change. The issues like abortion,&#13;
leadership and national pride&#13;
are important to the people of Kenosha&#13;
County, and this strengthens&#13;
Reagan's support."&#13;
In Kenosha County, Reagan received&#13;
45.4% of the vote and Mondale&#13;
32.2%. In Racine County, Reagan&#13;
received 43.4% and Mondale&#13;
29.2%, with 18.44% undecided.&#13;
These numbers apparently dp noti&#13;
reflect what the Mondale campaign&#13;
is seeing in Racine.&#13;
"If one looks at the elections of&#13;
1976, 1980 and 1982, it seems&#13;
strange that Racine would go Republican,"&#13;
said Almay Gonzalez, a&#13;
state coordinator for the Mondale&#13;
campaign, who is currently assigned&#13;
to Racine County.&#13;
Gonzalez said that she had some&#13;
problems with the Parkside poll&#13;
and the national polls as well. "No&#13;
matter where a poll comes from, it&#13;
is wrong to generalize the opinion&#13;
of millions of people by polling&#13;
500."&#13;
According to the survey, the&#13;
older the voting population became,&#13;
the stronger the support for&#13;
Ronald Reagan became. Gonzalez&#13;
disputed this. "Ronald Reagan is&#13;
clearly an enemy of the aging," she&#13;
said. "I have not come into contact,&#13;
while traveling the state, with one&#13;
elderly person who is a friend of&#13;
his."&#13;
Reagan also scored higher than&#13;
Mondale in the 18-24 age range.&#13;
Gonzalez attributed this to a lack of&#13;
involvement by this age group.&#13;
"The 18-24 year olds are the leastregistered&#13;
group, and their turnout&#13;
at the polls is generally poor."&#13;
Nevertheless, Gonzalez does not believe&#13;
that the young, the old or Racine&#13;
County will go Republican.&#13;
"I was with the Governor at a&#13;
meeting last week and he said the&#13;
Republicans think Wisconsin is a&#13;
"swing" state," she continued.&#13;
"Yet we have only had one visit&#13;
from the President and four major&#13;
visits from the Mondale/Ferraro&#13;
ticket. I think the Republicans&#13;
know they can't take Wisconsin."&#13;
Like Olsen in the Reagan campaign,&#13;
Gonzalez believes he- party's&#13;
candidate has what it takes to win&#13;
the election. "The elderly and the&#13;
old will not be that easily fooled,"&#13;
she concluded.&#13;
As the campaign grinds into the&#13;
last two weeks, the Mondale campaign&#13;
is planning several stops in&#13;
Wisconsin. Walter Mondale, Jesse&#13;
Jackson, Gary Hart and Bill Mondale&#13;
will be in Milwaukee this&#13;
week. A campaign worker at the&#13;
Milwaukee Reagan/Bush headquarters&#13;
said that at this point no further&#13;
visits by the President are&#13;
planned, but that is not absolute.&#13;
"All that is done by the White&#13;
House and through the press," she&#13;
said. "We are not always the first&#13;
»to» «kn ow&gt; .•" » « . i * &lt; &gt; &gt; • « .&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Roundtable&#13;
Tell Halif study searches past&#13;
St a f f s alar ies s t u d i e d&#13;
Tell Halif is the modern name&#13;
for an archaeological study site in&#13;
Israel.&#13;
The site has had several names&#13;
previous to Tell Halif and there&#13;
have been occupants in this area of&#13;
study as early as 4500 B.C., according&#13;
to Vice-Chancellor Betty Shutler.&#13;
Shutler presented the Social&#13;
Science Roundtable last Monday on&#13;
"Environmental Studies at Tell&#13;
Halif."&#13;
Shutler has been studying the&#13;
site at Tell Halif for seven years,&#13;
and explained that "We don't have&#13;
the whole history of the world written,&#13;
so we search and look at&#13;
what's left over to find out what it&#13;
says."&#13;
Tell Halif has not been occupied&#13;
continually. There have been some&#13;
periods when it was a city, some&#13;
periods when it was a smaller settlement&#13;
and some extended periods&#13;
when there were no occupants.&#13;
The area of the site that Shutler&#13;
studied is very dry. To the north&#13;
there is a great deal of agriculture;&#13;
to the south there is very little agriculture&#13;
because of the extreme dryness;&#13;
to the west lies a coastal area&#13;
and to the east is a group of mountains.&#13;
Shutler explained that the dig&#13;
has brought up a lot of flint from a&#13;
limestone base, including tools like&#13;
scrapers, used to scrape the bark&#13;
off trees and sickle blades used to&#13;
cut wheat and barley. Other stones&#13;
were used for grinding grain. The&#13;
stones were used to reduce the crop&#13;
to a kind of coarse meal used to&#13;
make oatmeal and bread. Other&#13;
rocks and stones were used as&#13;
weapons.&#13;
Stone tools were made right on&#13;
the site, even into the twentieth&#13;
century. Stone tools are even today&#13;
regarded as more effective than&#13;
metal, as they are sharper.&#13;
Several different seeds have been&#13;
found on the site, including an&#13;
abundance of wheat, barley and&#13;
olives and a fair amount of lentils&#13;
and grapes. Wood found in the area&#13;
r University of Wisconsin-ParkskJe&#13;
Puerto&#13;
Semester Break January 2-9, 1985&#13;
From $420Complete&#13;
Plus 10% Service &amp; Taxes Based on quad-occupancy&#13;
• Round Trip J et Air&#13;
• Ocean Front, First-Class Hotel&#13;
• Ground Transfers &amp; Po rterage&#13;
• Tour Escort&#13;
• Orientation&#13;
Phone 553-2294 For More Information&#13;
Or Stop in Union 209&#13;
at this point has been attributed to&#13;
the Bronze Age, when there was a&#13;
great deal of o ak found.&#13;
Donkeys are a very common animal&#13;
found and were used primarily&#13;
for hauling and pulling. Other animals&#13;
found were pigs, sheep and&#13;
goats, used for food. Wild gazelle&#13;
have also been found, which seems&#13;
to make clear that at one time&#13;
hunting was an important factor in&#13;
the lives of the occupants.&#13;
"The study group is always looking&#13;
for other cities in the area to&#13;
determine what the relationships&#13;
between the cities were," said&#13;
Shutler. "There is always an interest&#13;
in other communities, roads,&#13;
farms, or anything that may be evidence&#13;
of man's presence. A lot of&#13;
the time is spent there walking&#13;
around the area, observing what's&#13;
going on and recording it."&#13;
Next issue -&#13;
Profile of&#13;
presidential&#13;
candidates&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
There is a need for funds to bring&#13;
academic staff salaries to a competitive&#13;
position, according to the&#13;
Academic Staff Salary Committee.&#13;
Within the UW System, there are&#13;
approximately 7100 people serving&#13;
in academic staff positions, covering&#13;
a wide variety of f unctions. The&#13;
committee's recommendations&#13;
were based primarily on information&#13;
comparing the salaries of the&#13;
"indicator groups" of academic&#13;
staff titles with those provided at&#13;
peer institutions. The committee&#13;
also understood that the institutions&#13;
compete for hiring and retention&#13;
of t he academic staff with private&#13;
enterprise, local educational&#13;
institutions, other institutions of&#13;
higher education, state agencies&#13;
and others that employ individuals&#13;
in comparable positions.&#13;
The committee recommends that&#13;
faculty and academic staff continue&#13;
to be considered in the same budgetary&#13;
processes and with the same&#13;
objective of insuring quality higher&#13;
education regarding the duties of&#13;
academic staff members, such as&#13;
teaching, conducting research,&#13;
counseling, administering educational&#13;
programs and performing&#13;
other functions integrally related to&#13;
the academic enterprise.&#13;
Based on the data examined, the&#13;
Academic Staff Salary Committee&#13;
finds that in 1983-84 and continuing&#13;
in 1984-85, the salaries paid to academic&#13;
staff in most categories in&#13;
the UW System are below those at&#13;
peer institutions. In a survey of UW&#13;
System institutions, all but one of&#13;
the fifteen institutions reported&#13;
that recruitment and retention&#13;
problems have increased over the&#13;
past several years and that the&#13;
problems primarily are due to low&#13;
salary increases and low starting&#13;
salaries.&#13;
In order to make the UW System&#13;
academic staff salaries competitive,&#13;
the committee recommended the&#13;
following: a special, one-time&#13;
provision should be included in the&#13;
1985-87 executive budget that would&#13;
make academic staff salaries more&#13;
competitive; changes that are made&#13;
in the process to develop the pay&#13;
plan for faculty should also be&#13;
made for academic staff; the recommendations&#13;
to increase the&#13;
Board of Regents' flexibility in allocating&#13;
budget resources to address&#13;
faculty salary problems and to meet&#13;
other instructional needs should be&#13;
extended to academic staff; academic&#13;
staff salary increases should&#13;
be funded from the same proportion&#13;
of the GPR and fees as supports&#13;
the UW System operating&#13;
budget; the UW System administration&#13;
should develop objectives and&#13;
guidelines for the development of a&#13;
compensation program for the academic&#13;
staff.&#13;
Ex-spy warns about Russians&#13;
by Laureen Wawro&#13;
Peter James, former spy, is on a&#13;
mission to save the United States&#13;
from the Russians. James gave a&#13;
presentation entitled "How to Spy&#13;
on the United States" in the Union&#13;
Cafeteria on Oct. 18.&#13;
"The FBI. will be the first to tell&#13;
you of what significance this presentation&#13;
is around the country,"&#13;
he said. "There are so many Russian&#13;
spies out there, there are so&#13;
many (spy) facilities - eleven thousand&#13;
plus- they can't cover all of&#13;
them themselves. They need the&#13;
help and participation of t he American&#13;
public."&#13;
James, a 1962 physics graduate&#13;
from the Case Institute of Technology&#13;
in Cleveland, was employed as&#13;
a rocket engineer by Pratt and&#13;
Whitney Aircraft when he was apprached&#13;
by the CIA. After being&#13;
asked to "assist our government,"&#13;
James "became an expert in Soviet&#13;
rocketry and Soviet space defense&#13;
programs. Basically, I was meeting&#13;
Russians in a number of international&#13;
affairs and reporting to the&#13;
CIA technical information plus&#13;
political-dossier type information,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
JameS currently uses his spying&#13;
experiences to warn Americans&#13;
against the Russians and against&#13;
Russians themselves. He travels&#13;
about 100,000 miles a year, giving&#13;
presentations and "basically raising&#13;
a lot of issues," he said.&#13;
"I often find myself playing the&#13;
role of devil's advocate to keep&#13;
both my Republican and Democratic&#13;
friends in Washington honest."&#13;
He incorporates a slide show into&#13;
his presentation, which shows pictures&#13;
of him during various CIA&#13;
missions and of documents, both&#13;
American and foreign, that are evidence&#13;
of the troubled American security&#13;
system. He emphasized that&#13;
the United States constitution&#13;
works against our security system&#13;
by allowing anyone to photograph&#13;
virtually anything.&#13;
In Russia, film is confiscated if&#13;
things such as industrial sites, government&#13;
complexes or airports are&#13;
Dr. Peter L. Emer &amp; Dr. Wayne C. Bartel&#13;
Optometrists&#13;
3612 Roosevelt Road • Kenosha&#13;
Dr. Peter L. Emer, Optometrist, is pleased to announce that he has reduced&#13;
the traditional contact lens fees by 20% at his office at 3612 Roosevelt Road.&#13;
Dr. Emer is f itting all types of contact lenses, including tinted and extended&#13;
wear. Consider a professional eye exam (the contact lens exam will take 60&#13;
minutes) at a reasonable price.&#13;
If you have any questions on price or contact lenses in general. Dr. Emer will&#13;
be more than glad to answer them on the phone.&#13;
'Illllh •hiiii* American Optometric&#13;
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Peter James&#13;
photographed. James feels that not&#13;
only do our laws sometimes work&#13;
against us, but that our security&#13;
personnel are often incompetent.&#13;
He cited numerous examples of this&#13;
and recounted instances where he&#13;
broke through security barriers just&#13;
to prove this incompetence to himself.&#13;
Although James urges his audiences&#13;
to take an active role in keeping&#13;
America safe, he emphasizes&#13;
the need for caution. "As an American&#13;
citizen, you shouldn't try to&#13;
play any James Bond games, because&#13;
these people are sharp,&#13;
shrewd. They take their work seriously,&#13;
and if you run across a highlevel&#13;
espionage operation, your life&#13;
is worth nothing."&#13;
ANDERSON TRANSCRIPTION&#13;
&amp; TYPING&#13;
Letters - Resumes&#13;
Term Papers&#13;
Student Rates&#13;
PHONE 637-3600&#13;
Jacqueline Anderson&#13;
1441 P ark Avenue&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
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RANGER&#13;
Accent on Enrichment reaches new plateau&#13;
A Broadway musical and a Pulitzer&#13;
Prize-winning drama, puppets&#13;
and Chinese acrobats, and two legends&#13;
of jazz music and dance high-&#13;
Mil Wailkee Repertory Theater&#13;
Fall 1984Tour * * * « « • • * • • • • •&#13;
:::MISS :::&#13;
:: :LULU:::&#13;
: BETT.:: • • 'by Zona Gale • • .&#13;
light the 1984-85 Accent on Enrichment&#13;
Series at Parkside.&#13;
The popular entertainment series,&#13;
which is in its eighth season,&#13;
will feature six performances opening&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 11, with the Milwaukee&#13;
Repertory Theater's production&#13;
of "Miss Lulu Bett." Following&#13;
are "The National Marionette&#13;
Theater" on Wednesday, Dec.&#13;
5; "The Pirates of Penzance," a&#13;
fully-staged musical on Thursday,&#13;
Jan. 22; th e "Chinese Magic Circus&#13;
Revue" on Thursday, March 5; Gus&#13;
Giordano's Jazz Dance Company on&#13;
Tuesday, March 19; and Woody&#13;
Herman and his Thundering Herd&#13;
on Tuesday, April 9.&#13;
The cost of this year's series is&#13;
$33.50 p lus $2.50 tax and handling&#13;
for reserved seats for the six attractions.&#13;
Sponsors say that is a savings&#13;
of 20 perc ent over buying what individual&#13;
tickets would remain after&#13;
the season ticket sale. Individual&#13;
event tickets will average $7.50.&#13;
All performances but one will be&#13;
in the Communication Arts Theater&#13;
and all begin at 8 p.m. The exception&#13;
is the Chinese Magic Revue of&#13;
Taiwan, which will be held in the&#13;
Physical Education Center because&#13;
of t he height and scope required for&#13;
the show.&#13;
Tickets can be ordered by mail&#13;
through coupons in newspaper ads,&#13;
or by tele phone or in person at the&#13;
Parkside Union Information Cotter,&#13;
553-2345.&#13;
"Miss Lulu Bett," which edged&#13;
Eugene O'Neill's "The Emperor&#13;
Jones" for the Pulitzer Prize for&#13;
drama in 1921, was written by&#13;
Wisconsin's Zona Gale, a lifelong&#13;
resident of Portage and the first&#13;
A&#13;
Q tP \ATIO\AL&#13;
MARIOVETTE&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
Chemistry Club officers, from left: Maria Brockhaus, secretary; Julie&#13;
DeBus, vice president; Sharon Rynders, president; and Drew Kuffel,&#13;
treasurer.&#13;
Chem Club joins ACS&#13;
The Chemistry Club has formed&#13;
a national chapter of the American&#13;
Chemical Society. The club was formally&#13;
accepted by ACS a nd honored&#13;
with a plaque by Dr. John&#13;
Berge, President of the ACS Milwaukee&#13;
Chapter, on Oct. 18 at a&#13;
dinner meeting in Racine.&#13;
To qualify for national chapter&#13;
status the club was required to&#13;
form by-laws which were thai submitted&#13;
and excepted by ACS. Mike&#13;
DeRosh, former Chemistry Club&#13;
president, is credited with forming&#13;
the by-laws.&#13;
There are several ACS ch apters&#13;
in southeastern Wisconsin, but the&#13;
Chemistry Club felt it would be&#13;
more prestigious to have a national&#13;
chapter at Parkside and also more&#13;
advantageous, said Sharon Rynders,&#13;
president National chapters of ACS&#13;
are informed of internships and job&#13;
opportunities in the chemistry&#13;
field, and they can also obtain free&#13;
speakers to visit the campus. Rynders&#13;
said the Chemistry Club plans&#13;
to be an active chapter of ACS.&#13;
Ranger needs&#13;
ad representatives&#13;
woman playwright to win a Pulitzer&#13;
for drama. The play, about the&#13;
plight of a single woman in the&#13;
early 1900's, is a delightful and&#13;
touching comedy with universal&#13;
and timeless appeal.&#13;
Pirates o f P enzance&#13;
"The Pirates of Penzance," will&#13;
be a rousing, full company musical&#13;
based on the hit Broadway and Hollywood&#13;
version of the Gilbert and&#13;
Sullivan classic done by the popular&#13;
Skylight Com ic Opera Ltd. of Milwaukee.&#13;
The Skylight company has&#13;
long been considered master of G &amp;&#13;
S extravaganzas and performs more&#13;
Gilbert and Sullivan than any&#13;
United States company outside of&#13;
New York City.&#13;
The breathtaking acrobatic and&#13;
balancing feats of the Chinese&#13;
Magic Circus Revue will thrill the&#13;
audience as towers of chairs and&#13;
human pyramids rise to the rafters&#13;
of the Parkside fieldhouse. This&#13;
company remains one of the most&#13;
popular in show business and is&#13;
regularly replenished by new performers&#13;
who begin their training as&#13;
early as three or four years of age.&#13;
The National Marionette Theater&#13;
features David Syrotiak, considered&#13;
America's most distinguished puppeteer&#13;
in what is esentially a European&#13;
art form. His show, called "In&#13;
Concert," is a brilliant one man&#13;
tour de force in which Syrotiak performs&#13;
in full view of t he audience a&#13;
series of vignettes noted both for&#13;
their visual beauty and manipulative&#13;
techique.&#13;
Chinese Magic&#13;
Revue of T aiwan&#13;
The series concludes with jazz&#13;
legends Gus Giordano, the preeminent&#13;
U.S. jazz dance choreographer,&#13;
and all-time great clarinetist Woody&#13;
Herman, a Milwaukee native.&#13;
Giordano's company fuses jazz&#13;
with the lexicon of ballet and modern&#13;
dance. The exciting contemporary&#13;
troupe has made extensive international&#13;
tours, including a rare&#13;
visit by a U.S. dance company to&#13;
Russia at the invitation of the Bolshoi&#13;
Ballet who were impressed&#13;
with Giordano's dancers during a&#13;
Soviet tour of this country.&#13;
Herman and his umpteenth Hod&#13;
will thunder into Parkside for the&#13;
final performance of the series. Active&#13;
as ever, the two-time Grammy&#13;
Award-winner recently became the&#13;
first inductee into Wisconsin's&#13;
Music Hall of Fame. Graduates of&#13;
past Herman hods include some of&#13;
the greatest names in jazz and big&#13;
band music for nearly half a century.&#13;
We Speak&#13;
Technology&#13;
Space&#13;
Systems?&#13;
If you're an electrical, mechanical&#13;
or industrial engineering&#13;
major, you'll want&#13;
to be part of today's Air&#13;
Force. We're working on&#13;
projects of tomorrow that&#13;
are today's science fiction.&#13;
Are you majoring in engineering,&#13;
physics, math,&#13;
computer science, or the&#13;
physical sciences? If so,&#13;
today's Air Force has openings&#13;
for you in the exciting&#13;
field of Space Systems. As&#13;
a Satellite Operations Officer&#13;
You'll have a career with&#13;
challenges AND rewards at&#13;
the forefront of technology.&#13;
Take a close look at Air&#13;
Force engineering. We have&#13;
a limited number of engineering&#13;
management positions&#13;
available.&#13;
you'll plan and organize&#13;
spacecraft operations, to include&#13;
launce preparations,&#13;
and develop software and&#13;
hardware systems. Take a&#13;
close look at these and otl ler&#13;
Air Force technical field&#13;
opportunities.&#13;
For Information call:&#13;
TSgt. Tim Glersch at 414-964-8880&#13;
Outside area call collect&#13;
ON THE LEADING EDGE OF TECHNOLOGY&#13;
mousing&#13;
6 Thursday, Oct. 25,1984 RANGER&#13;
Alan and Judv Guskin&#13;
Peace Corps volunteers return to Thailand&#13;
by Jennie Tunlrieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
What would it be like to leave&#13;
home and not return until twenty&#13;
years lata-? Thailand was home for&#13;
two years to Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
and his wife Judy while they&#13;
served as Peace Corps volunteers&#13;
from 1961-64. The Guskins returned&#13;
to Thailand this summer to find&#13;
their home had changed in twenty&#13;
years.&#13;
The Guskins were instrumental&#13;
in forming the Peace Corps. On&#13;
Oct. 14,1960 Presidential Candidate&#13;
John Kennedy, prior to his election,&#13;
made a speech at the University&#13;
of Michigan, where the Guskins&#13;
were students, outlining the broad&#13;
plans for the creation of the Peace&#13;
Corps. The Guskins were inspired&#13;
by this speech, so they organized&#13;
other students and faculty who&#13;
were also interested in the project.&#13;
Kennedy met with the Guskins and&#13;
other enthusiasts in Toledo where&#13;
they presented a petition to Kennedy&#13;
in support of forming the Peace&#13;
Corps. Kennedy went on to formally&#13;
create the Peace Corps program.&#13;
The Peace Corps will s oon be celebrating&#13;
a 25 year anniversary.&#13;
In 1961 the Guskins were among&#13;
the first group of volunteers to go&#13;
to Thailand. Both were faculty&#13;
memebers at Chulaongkorn University.&#13;
Guskin was involved in psychology&#13;
and education research and&#13;
taught the first masters degree students&#13;
in educational research in&#13;
Thailand. He also helped set up the&#13;
MA program at the university. Judy&#13;
taught English language and literature&#13;
and supervised student teachers.&#13;
The trip this summer was both&#13;
business and pleasure for Guskin,&#13;
his wife and two daughters. Guskin&#13;
chaired a delegation of fifteen university&#13;
presidents as part of an exchange&#13;
program designed to increase&#13;
the contact and understanding&#13;
between American university&#13;
presidents and university presidents&#13;
of other countries. The trip was&#13;
sponsored by the American Association&#13;
of State Colleges and Universities.&#13;
University presidents&#13;
from Thailand will come to the&#13;
United States in November to reciprocate&#13;
the exchange. They are&#13;
expected to visit Parkside on Nov.&#13;
13 and 14.&#13;
The Guskins are very familiar&#13;
with Thailand and the customs because&#13;
of their experience there as&#13;
Peace Corps volunteers. Judy is&#13;
fluent in Thai and Guskin can speak&#13;
a little of the language.&#13;
Vast changes have occurred in&#13;
the country they left twenty years&#13;
ago and this fascinated them. Thailand&#13;
has almost doubled in population,&#13;
made political and educational&#13;
strides and considerable developments&#13;
in most all areas.&#13;
When the Guskins taught at Chulalongkorn&#13;
University in Thailand&#13;
20 years ago, they had to use English&#13;
textbooks. Although the Thai&#13;
students were taught English, they&#13;
read very slowly.&#13;
"You felt terrible assigning anything&#13;
of length because it would&#13;
take them forever to read it," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Little educational and social research&#13;
was done in Thailand twenty&#13;
years ago. One of Guskin's projects&#13;
was to aid and encourage Thais to&#13;
do their own research. He was obviously&#13;
successful.&#13;
When the Guskins returned to&#13;
Chulalongkorn University this summer,&#13;
they were happy to find that&#13;
Presentation of plaque on behalf of the President and Chancellor of&#13;
the ASCU by Chancellor Guskin to the Prime Minister of Thailand.&#13;
most books used at the university&#13;
are now in Thai, written and&#13;
researched by the Thais. "That&#13;
means that the education of students&#13;
has increased many, many&#13;
fold. It's all changed from an intellectual&#13;
point of view and an educational&#13;
point of view. There is so&#13;
much scholarship in that country-so&#13;
much writing," said Guskin.&#13;
The Guskins were excited by the&#13;
political developments that have&#13;
transpired over the years. "When&#13;
we were last there, Thailand was a&#13;
military dictatorship and now it is a&#13;
democratic country. The King is a&#13;
constitutional monarch. Now t here&#13;
is a parliament and the Prime Minister&#13;
is elected. No one could serve&#13;
Gallery exhibit is not for the refrigerator door&#13;
"Not for the Refrigerator Door&#13;
Only" is the name of a n exhibit of&#13;
art work by students of Racine's&#13;
Stephen Bull Fine Arts Specialty&#13;
School on display beginning Monday,&#13;
Oct. 29 through Thursday,&#13;
Nov. 15.&#13;
The art, created by students in&#13;
grades one through five, represents&#13;
media including painting, drawing,&#13;
sculpture and printmaking. It will&#13;
be on display in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery. Hours are from 1&#13;
to 6 p.m. Monday through Thursday&#13;
and 7 to 10 p.m. Wednesday&#13;
and Thursday. Admission is free.&#13;
A free public reception, sponsored&#13;
by t he Parkside Fine Arts Division&#13;
and the Fine Arts Parents&#13;
Group, Inc. of Stephen Bull, will be&#13;
held from 3 to 5 p.m. on Sunday,&#13;
Nov. 4, in the Communication Arts&#13;
Gallery. Organizers describe the&#13;
event as a "mini afternoon arts festival."&#13;
There will be tours of Parkside's&#13;
art studios, free cookies and&#13;
punch and a special visit by the&#13;
Peppermint Bear, a character in an&#13;
upcoming Parkside dramatic arts&#13;
production for children and parents.&#13;
In addition, Parkside's newly established&#13;
Swing Choir, conducted&#13;
by music professor Steven Powell,&#13;
will perform a free concert at 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
The art display is in conjunction&#13;
with "Children's Art Education&#13;
Month" at Parkside, said art professor&#13;
David Holmes. In addition to&#13;
the art show, there will be a series&#13;
of guest speakers on the subject of&#13;
children's art education. Speakers&#13;
will appear before Holmes' Art in&#13;
Elementary Education class, which&#13;
meets in Communication Arts&#13;
Room HI. The lectures are free and&#13;
open to the public. Dates, times, topics&#13;
and speakers are:&#13;
-8 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 31.&#13;
"Reading a Child's Image as Psychological&#13;
Portrait," with Mary&#13;
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Bassis, a psychiatric nurse who&#13;
holds a degree from Yale.&#13;
-9 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 31.&#13;
Parkside art professor Dennis&#13;
Bayuzick will speak on the stages of&#13;
children's artistic development.&#13;
-9 a.m. Monday, Nov. 5. "Why&#13;
Art in Public Schools?" with Dr.&#13;
Nancy Hunt, superintendent of art&#13;
education in the Racine Unified&#13;
School District.&#13;
-9 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 7. "Activating&#13;
an Art Curriculum: Why,&#13;
What and How" with Lisa Johnson&#13;
and Cathleen Holmes, art teachers&#13;
at Stephen Bull Fine Arts School.&#13;
-9 a.m. Monday, Nov. 12. "Using&#13;
Art as Part of the Total Classroom&#13;
Experience," with Autumn Lenart,&#13;
a classroom teacher at Stephen&#13;
Bull.&#13;
Professor Holmes emphasized&#13;
that the show is a "teaching exhibit."&#13;
Teachers will make placards&#13;
that explain the artistic concepts&#13;
and techniques used by the students&#13;
in creating their work. Thus&#13;
the viewer can better read the images&#13;
and see the artistic development&#13;
in the art of the children.&#13;
"The goal (of a good art education&#13;
curriculum) is to make students&#13;
visually literate," Holmes&#13;
said. "The final product is not the&#13;
chief o bjective, although it may be&#13;
quite exciting. What's important&#13;
are the various levels of creative&#13;
problem-solving - conceptual,&#13;
technical-structural, aesthetic -&#13;
engaged in by t he students.&#13;
"The art becomes more than a&#13;
decorative embellishment for the&#13;
refrigerator door - it has real&#13;
meaning," he said.&#13;
He said that students and educators&#13;
as well as the general public&#13;
through the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
areas are encouraged to attend the&#13;
reception and lectures and view the&#13;
exhibit.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Soviet trip meeting&#13;
Ever wondered what it is like&#13;
"behind the Iron curtain?" Find&#13;
out first hand by attending the&#13;
Soviet Seminar March 9-25.&#13;
Moscow, Leningrad and Copenhagen&#13;
head the itinerary.&#13;
For more information about the&#13;
Soviet Seminar, attend either of&#13;
two preview meetings. There will&#13;
be slides, copies of the itinerary,&#13;
comments by p revious participants&#13;
and information on the details of&#13;
the seminar and tour.&#13;
Meetings will be held in Union&#13;
106 on Tuesday, Oct. 30, 4:30-5:30&#13;
and Friday, Nov. 2, 1-2 p.m.&#13;
For more information, contact&#13;
Professor Ken Hoover, 553-2318.&#13;
CPR classes offered&#13;
The Student Health Services, in&#13;
cooperation with the American Red&#13;
Cross, is offering a one-session CPR&#13;
(cardio-pulmonary resuscitation)&#13;
class on Monday, Nov. 5 from 9&#13;
a.m. to 12 noon. The class will include&#13;
first aid for choking, mouthto-&#13;
mouth breathing and one-rescuer&#13;
CPR. This class is designed to prepare&#13;
an individual to handle emergencies&#13;
until the rescue squad arrives.&#13;
A cert ificate will be awarded&#13;
at the successful completion of the&#13;
session.&#13;
A registration fee of $7 (which includes&#13;
a workbook) will be required&#13;
upon sign up. If an enrolee already&#13;
has the 1980 CPR workbook, the&#13;
fee is $4. Red Cross would prefer&#13;
payment in cash rather than check.&#13;
Please register at the Student&#13;
Health Services, Molinaro D115 bv&#13;
Nov. 1.&#13;
Rognsvoog gets scholarship&#13;
Parkside freshman Mark Rognsvoog,&#13;
son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry&#13;
Rognsvoog, 1600 Carlisle Ave., Racine,&#13;
has been awarded a $500&#13;
scholarship from Derse Co., an advertising&#13;
service firm headquartered&#13;
in Milwaukee.&#13;
Rognsvoog plans to major in&#13;
computer science at Parkside.&#13;
The scholarship is from the "Old&#13;
Timers Club" of the Derse Co. and&#13;
is available to families of Derse Co.&#13;
employees. Rognsvoog is the first&#13;
to be awarded a scholarship from&#13;
the newly organized group.&#13;
Geology&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26 Jack Kemper and&#13;
Matt Giovanelli, graduating seniors&#13;
in the Geology Program will&#13;
present a colloquium highlighting&#13;
the geology of north central Wyoming,&#13;
an area they studied while attending&#13;
the summer Geology Fie ld&#13;
Course offered by Iowa State University.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 2 Dr. Peter A. Nielsen,&#13;
assistant professor in the Geology&#13;
program at Parkside will&#13;
present a colloquium on "Core Processes&#13;
and Loithosphere Evolution."&#13;
The colloquium discusses a&#13;
model that may account for the&#13;
driving forces of plate techtonics&#13;
for the past two billion years and&#13;
for the formation of t he continental&#13;
crust as far back in time as 3.8 billion&#13;
years, the age of the oldest&#13;
preserved crust.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 16 Dr. William&#13;
Mode, assistant professor of Geology&#13;
at Oshkosh will pr esent a colloquium&#13;
entitled "Late quarternary&#13;
environments of Baffin Island, Canada."&#13;
Dr. Mode will discuss the&#13;
paleo-climatic conditions of the&#13;
northern Arctic based on studies of&#13;
glacial deposits and analysis of fossil&#13;
pollen assemblages (palynology).&#13;
All colloquia are held in Greenquist&#13;
113 at 1 p.m. Everyone is welcome&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Club Events•&#13;
Dr. Who Club&#13;
The D.W.S.F.S. will be sponsoring&#13;
the Masterfest, a compilation of&#13;
episodes featuring one of the doctor's&#13;
oldest and most dreaded enemies,&#13;
the MASTER, on Saturday,&#13;
Nov. 1 at 1 p.m. in Union 104.&#13;
Shown first will be the ultra-rare&#13;
"Frontier in Space," to be followed&#13;
by the premiere presentation of&#13;
"Planet of Fire."&#13;
Chemistry Club&#13;
At a dinner Thursday, Oct. 18,&#13;
the Chemistry Club became an official&#13;
American Chemical Society&#13;
Student Affiliate Chapter. Much&#13;
hard work went into proposing and&#13;
drawing up the charter, and a few&#13;
people deserve special thanks. They&#13;
are: Mark DeRosch for spending&#13;
the time to write the charter and&#13;
send it in for consideration, Julie&#13;
DeBus, the "right hand man" in organizing&#13;
everything; and Dr.&#13;
Branchini, club advisor, for steering&#13;
things in the right direction and&#13;
having confidence in what the club&#13;
was doing. Don't forget to sign up&#13;
at Greenquist 108 for the Miller&#13;
Brewery Trip, leaving the Union&#13;
Info desk on Friday, Nov. 9 at 1&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Hispanic Club&#13;
On Friday, Oct. 26 at 6:30 p.m. at&#13;
the Racine Spanish Center, there&#13;
Extension offering variety to appeal to many&#13;
Family roots&#13;
A course on the use of microcomputers&#13;
by genealogists with emphasis&#13;
on the Genealogy Data Base&#13;
program "Family Roots" will be&#13;
offered by the Continuing Education&#13;
office, Parkside, from 7 to 9&#13;
p.m. on three consecutive Tuesdays&#13;
beginning Nov. 13 in Tallent Hall.&#13;
To register for the course, which&#13;
costs $11, call 553-2312. Registration&#13;
deadline is Thursday, Nov. 8.&#13;
Students will learn to operate the&#13;
Family Roots program, which is&#13;
available to the public through the&#13;
Parkside library to aid genealogy&#13;
record-keeping.&#13;
The course will include hands-on&#13;
experience with record storage and&#13;
searching, chart and family group&#13;
sheet generation and other features.&#13;
Instructors will be David&#13;
Holle of Parkside and Joanne&#13;
Baker, a member of the Kenosha&#13;
County Genealogy Society, both&#13;
avid genealogists.&#13;
Child development&#13;
A course on the structure and development&#13;
of a child's ideas and behaviors&#13;
will be offered by t he Continuing&#13;
Education office, Parkside,&#13;
on four consecutive Tuesdays from&#13;
7:30 to 9:30 p.m. beginning Nov. 13.&#13;
The course, which will cover a&#13;
child's growth from birth to teenager&#13;
and will offer parenting guidelines,&#13;
costs $15. To register, call&#13;
553-2312. Registration deadline is&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8.&#13;
Instructor will be Paul Erling&#13;
Tungseth, an individual and family&#13;
psychotherapist specializing in child&#13;
development, who practices at Racine's&#13;
Lighthouse Counseling Associates.&#13;
Potentials&#13;
"Potentials," a seminar to help&#13;
persons better understand themselves&#13;
and others through the use of&#13;
the "personal profile system," a&#13;
communication tool, will be offered&#13;
by the Continuing Education office,&#13;
Parkside, from 1 to 4 p. m. on Sunday,&#13;
Nov. 11 in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Cost of the seminar, which is designed&#13;
to help persons increase selfesteem&#13;
in family, social and work&#13;
situations, is $16. To register for the&#13;
course, call 553-2312. Registration&#13;
deadline is Thursday, Nov. 8.&#13;
Instructor will be Virginia Burlingame,&#13;
a Racine psychotherapist.&#13;
Public speaking&#13;
A workshop on public speaking&#13;
will be offered by the Continuing&#13;
Education Office, Parkside, from 9&#13;
a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 16,&#13;
in Union Room 104.&#13;
The course, which will offer&#13;
techniques and practice sessions to&#13;
improve speech delivery and develop&#13;
confidence, costs $50, which&#13;
includes materials and lunch. To&#13;
register, call 553-2312. Reg istration&#13;
deadline is Tuesday, Nov. 13.&#13;
Through video tape recordings&#13;
and feedback, participants will discover&#13;
the impressions they give&#13;
while making presentations. Ways&#13;
of organizing speeches and capturing&#13;
an audience's attention will be&#13;
stressed.&#13;
Instructor will be Carol Trinastic,&#13;
who has 10 years' experience as a&#13;
public relations specialist and holds&#13;
a master of arts degree in communication.&#13;
Storytelling&#13;
A workshop on the craft of storytelling&#13;
will be offered by the Continuing&#13;
Education office, Parkside,&#13;
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday,&#13;
Nov. 10 in Communication Arts&#13;
Room 140.&#13;
Cost of the workshop is $17. It&#13;
will be led by Carol Ann Piggins,&#13;
who has done more than 600 onewoman&#13;
shows and storytelling concerts&#13;
in the U.S., the Netherlands&#13;
will be a panel discussion covering&#13;
the effects that minorities can have&#13;
on the upcoming presidential elections.&#13;
The Spanish Center is located&#13;
at 720-17th Street. The panel will be&#13;
composed of local community leaders&#13;
and is sponsored by the Hispanic&#13;
Club of Parkside in conjunction&#13;
with the Racine and Kenosha Spanish&#13;
Centers. Everyone is invited&#13;
and encouraged to attend.&#13;
PSGA&#13;
The PSGA Senate meeting will&#13;
be held on Thursday at 7 p.m. in&#13;
CA 129. Topics for discussion will&#13;
be: off-campus events policy, new&#13;
senators' orientation, the upcoming&#13;
assistant pro tempore elections, the&#13;
1984-65 budget and the Chancellor's&#13;
open forum. As always, all students&#13;
are encouraged to attend and give&#13;
their input on these and other issues.&#13;
Please be reminded that all&#13;
senators and executive officers&#13;
have office hours during the week&#13;
to hear from the student body.&#13;
Please stop by and let us know how&#13;
things are going f or you.&#13;
Intervarsity&#13;
Christian Fellowship&#13;
IVCF will be holding a meeting&#13;
on Wednesday, Oct. 31 at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Moln 107. The meeting will focus&#13;
on the question: "Jesus Christ:&#13;
God or Man?" Everyone is invited.&#13;
and Germany. To register, call 553-&#13;
2312. Regis tration deadline is Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 7.&#13;
The Workshop is for teachers, librarians,&#13;
parents and others who&#13;
work with children and youth, and&#13;
will cover finding and creating stories&#13;
as well as using movements,&#13;
creative drama, music and props to&#13;
enhance stories. The workshop also&#13;
will discuss how to use stories as a&#13;
source of motivation, concept development&#13;
and creativity.&#13;
Bottle of Redken or RK Shampoo&#13;
with every&#13;
Shampoo, Cut, &amp; Style at&#13;
3519 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wl&#13;
Phone&#13;
654-6154&#13;
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HANGER&#13;
Home computing&#13;
Database program is essential&#13;
McKeever performs&#13;
by Chris Pappe&#13;
A database manager program is&#13;
possibly the most versatile piece of&#13;
software available and should be a&#13;
part of everyone's software library.&#13;
The purpose of a database manager&#13;
is to organize and manipulate&#13;
a database. A database is simply a&#13;
collection of information that has&#13;
been stored in a logical order. An&#13;
office filing cabinet, for example, is&#13;
a database. You may have your&#13;
own filing box with the names and&#13;
addresses of all your friends. You&#13;
have the box, which is called a file&#13;
in computer terms. Each card containingsthe&#13;
information about each&#13;
person is called a record. Each record&#13;
is divided into fields. Each&#13;
field contains a specific item of information.&#13;
For example, the first&#13;
field might contain the person's&#13;
name, the second field the street&#13;
and number, the third the town and&#13;
state and the fourth field the zip&#13;
code.&#13;
Imagine trying to sort an index&#13;
card file into alphabetical order. If&#13;
there are less than one hundred&#13;
cards, it shouldn't take you more&#13;
than a half an hour, but if there are&#13;
five or six hundred, it could take all&#13;
day. With a database manager, the&#13;
complete file is sorted in a matter&#13;
of a few seconds. Even thousands&#13;
of records can be sorted in a few&#13;
minutes. Files can also be sorted in&#13;
any field, and once sorted the way&#13;
you want, the information can be&#13;
printed.&#13;
You might alphabetize the list by&#13;
name for a printout of all the&#13;
names and addresses to use as an&#13;
address book. When the pages become&#13;
dogeared and the ink smudged,&#13;
you can run off another copy&#13;
in juk a few minutes. You could&#13;
then re-sort the list by zip code and&#13;
print mailing labels.&#13;
A powerful database manager&#13;
will create files of any size or shape&#13;
and for any purpose. The number&#13;
of uses for a database is limited&#13;
only by your imagination and ingenuity.&#13;
Recipes can be stored on a&#13;
floppy disk and printed whenever&#13;
needed. Collections of stamps ro&#13;
coins can be catalogued. Inventories&#13;
can be kept up to date. If you&#13;
subscribe to a magazine, you could&#13;
create an index with information&#13;
such as subject and author, each&#13;
filed in separate fields. Then, when&#13;
you need to research a particular&#13;
subject or author, your database&#13;
manager can find and display the&#13;
exact information that you want. It&#13;
is all done in a fraction of the time&#13;
it would take you to leaf through&#13;
several years' worth of back issues.&#13;
The most powerful database&#13;
managers will search in more than&#13;
one field at a time and can search&#13;
for partial or exact matches to the&#13;
information that you want. As well&#13;
as being extremely versatile by itself,&#13;
a database manager's files can&#13;
be used by a word processor or a&#13;
spreadsheet program to prepare&#13;
form letters or financial reports. If&#13;
you don't have a database manager&#13;
yet, then perhaps you should consider&#13;
buying one.&#13;
Parkside music professor and pianist&#13;
James McKeever will perform&#13;
a solo concert of works ranging&#13;
from baroque to romantic at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Monday, Oct. 29 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission is $1.50 for senior citizens&#13;
and Parkside students and&#13;
staff, $3 f or the general public.&#13;
Works to be performed by McKeever,&#13;
who has just completed a concert&#13;
tour of Kentucky, Tennessee,&#13;
Virginia, West Virginia and Pennsylvania,&#13;
include Scarlatti's Sonata&#13;
in E Major K. 162; Beethoven's Sonata&#13;
in F Minor, Op. 57; Chopin's&#13;
Fantasie in F Minor; Medtner's&#13;
Canzona Serenata in F Minor, Op.&#13;
38 no. 6; Rachmaninoff's Two Preludes;&#13;
and Scriabin's Etude Op. 8&#13;
no. 12 in D-shaMp minor.&#13;
McKeever, who joined Parkside&#13;
in 1982, previously taught at Murray&#13;
State University in Kentucky.&#13;
He holds master of music and doctor&#13;
of musical arts degrees from the&#13;
University of Cincinnati College-&#13;
Conservatory of Music.&#13;
He has been active as a recitalist&#13;
and chamber musician throughout&#13;
the midwest and south and has&#13;
A week at the Park presented numerous workshops.&#13;
Assertiueness training and a full week of events&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 25&#13;
MOVIE: "A Clockwork Orange"&#13;
(R) will be shown at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Union Cinema. Admission at&#13;
the door is $1.00 for a Parkside student&#13;
and $1.00 for a guest. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
PLAY: "Crimes of the Heart"&#13;
starts at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. Advance tickets&#13;
are available at the Union Information&#13;
Center and the Fine Arts Division&#13;
office. Tickets will also be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
MOVIE: "Passione d'Amore" will&#13;
be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. All seats are sold for the&#13;
Thursday Foreign Film series.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26&#13;
MOVIE: "A Clockwork Orange"&#13;
will be repeated at 1:30 p.m. and 7:&#13;
30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
PLAY: "Crimes of the Heart" will&#13;
be repeated at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 27&#13;
MOVIE: "Passione d'Amore" will&#13;
be repeated at 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. All seats are sold.&#13;
PLAY: "Crimes of the Heart" will&#13;
be repeated at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 28&#13;
MOVIE: "Passione d'Amore" will&#13;
be repeated at 2 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Some tickets do remain&#13;
for sale in the Sunday Foreign Film&#13;
series.&#13;
MOVIE: "A Clockwork Orange"&#13;
will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Oct. 29&#13;
ROUNDTABLE: "The Elections:&#13;
Issues and Prospects," at 12 noon&#13;
in Union 106, by the Parkside&#13;
Political Science Faculty. The program&#13;
is open to the public at no&#13;
charge.&#13;
CONCERT: by James McKeever at&#13;
8 p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. Admission at the door is&#13;
$1.50 for Parkside students, staff&#13;
and senior citizens and $3.00 for&#13;
others.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 30&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Communication&#13;
Skills for Secretaries and Administrative&#13;
Assistants" starts at 8:30&#13;
a.m. in Union 106. Call ext. 2047 for&#13;
more information&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Assertiveness&#13;
Training" by Larry Turner at 1&#13;
p.m. in Union 207. All are welcome.&#13;
MOVIE: "High Plans Drifter" (R)&#13;
will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission is free.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE: Featuring an&#13;
open stage from 12 n oon 3 to p.m.&#13;
in the Union Bazaar Area. Applications&#13;
are available at the Union Information&#13;
Center. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
DISCUSSION: "Fairness: Income&#13;
Redistribution, Aid to Education&#13;
and Civil Rights" by Ken Hoover,&#13;
Jan Ocker and Greg Squires at 1&#13;
James McKeever&#13;
His articles "The Wrist In Technical&#13;
Perspective" and "Godowsky&#13;
Studies on the Chopin Etudes"&#13;
have appeared in "Clavier."&#13;
McKeever's principal teacher&#13;
was the noted Russian pedagogue&#13;
Olga Corn us. He also has studied&#13;
with Lelia Goussea of the Paris&#13;
Conservatory and coached with&#13;
Santos Ojeda.&#13;
p.m. in Molinaro D107. The event is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
SUPPORT GROUP: For the&#13;
divorced and separated at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Molinaro D138. All are welcome.&#13;
Sponsored by Parkside Health Office.&#13;
DANCE: Featuring the rock music&#13;
of "Sterling" at 8:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square. Admission will be charged&#13;
at the door. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
en&#13;
CROSSWORD PUZZLER&#13;
DRINKING IS&#13;
AMERICA'S&#13;
#1 PASTIME!&#13;
PORKY'S&#13;
2117 91st Street Kenosha&#13;
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
EVERY&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHT&#13;
PORKY'S IS YOUR KIND OF PUCE!"&#13;
* Convenient location&#13;
* Ample off street parking&#13;
(lighted)&#13;
* Featuring some of the&#13;
area's best music live&#13;
* Affordable prices (we're&#13;
the lowest!)&#13;
* Large dance floor&#13;
* Large seating capacity&#13;
* Excellent food served&#13;
* 3 billiard tables A video&#13;
games&#13;
—I 1 Racine-Kenosha County Line Rd. ^&#13;
—————cc&#13;
(O&#13;
at Street&#13;
PORKY'S *&#13;
State Line Rd.&#13;
(Russell Rd.)&#13;
ACROSS&#13;
1 Hard-wood&#13;
tree&#13;
4 Haste&#13;
9 Perform&#13;
12 Hawaiian&#13;
wreath&#13;
13 Angry&#13;
14 Hint&#13;
15 Mexican dish&#13;
17 Declare&#13;
19 Was borne&#13;
21 Gem weight:&#13;
abbr.&#13;
22 Encourage&#13;
25 Anger&#13;
27 Girl's name&#13;
31 Fruit seed 1&#13;
32 Book of an&#13;
opera: pi.&#13;
34 Symbol for&#13;
silver&#13;
35 Posed for&#13;
portrait&#13;
36 Alcoholic&#13;
beverage&#13;
37 Bone&#13;
38 Finished&#13;
41 Employ&#13;
42 Sicilian volcano&#13;
43 Lair&#13;
44 Barracuda&#13;
45 Sun god&#13;
47 Arabian seaport&#13;
49 Unit of&#13;
electric&#13;
current&#13;
53 Expunges&#13;
57 Sorrow&#13;
58 Light-colored&#13;
mild cigar&#13;
60 Jump&#13;
61 Dine Asia holiday 39 Symbol for&#13;
62 Negligent 16 Skill manganese&#13;
63 One, no 18 Strict 40 Beverage&#13;
matter which 20 Before 41 Above&#13;
DOWN 22 Swiftly 44 Nahoor&#13;
1 In music, high 23 Intolerant sheep&#13;
2 Ocean person 46 Alms box&#13;
3 Pronoun 24 Latin 48 God of love&#13;
4 Farm conjunction 49 Solemn&#13;
structure 26 Produces wonder&#13;
5 Forecasted 28 Roman 50 Extinct flight6&#13;
Babylonian gods less bird&#13;
deity 29 Loop 51 Fondle&#13;
7 Greek letter 30 Item of 52 Shade tree&#13;
8 Article of property 54 The urial&#13;
furniture 32 Sodium 55 Vast age&#13;
9 High card chloride 56 Secret agent&#13;
10 Mongrel 33 Succor 59 Three-toed&#13;
11 Southeast 35 Extra sloth&#13;
O&#13;
1 2 |3~ 4 5 r 7~ T~• 9 ~ 10 11&#13;
"12"&#13;
1 • J. I IT r R w&#13;
15 F TT F&#13;
mE£ m&#13;
•m• • m im m&#13;
uu m mmm 32 33&#13;
34 35 36 37&#13;
39 40 IT&#13;
42 43 [44&#13;
45 46 4T n 4T&#13;
49 50 51 52 B53! 54 5T 5T&#13;
57 • 58 w • W&#13;
61 • 6T i m BT&#13;
1984 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Curtain call for crew of "Crimes"&#13;
by Bill Serpe&#13;
When the lights came up on&#13;
"Crimes of the Heart" last Friday&#13;
night, the efforts of the entire Dramatic&#13;
Arts Discipline unfolded in&#13;
the kitchen they had built as a&#13;
home for a cast, a play and an idea.&#13;
Backstage the crew listened for&#13;
the audience reaction to a refrigerator&#13;
that needed to be defrosted, a&#13;
sink with running water and cupboards&#13;
and drawers that actually&#13;
worked.&#13;
They waited behind curtains and&#13;
light boards, each one watching and&#13;
listening to make sure that every&#13;
detail of that show was just right.&#13;
As th e cast took the stage at the&#13;
end of the show for the curtain call,&#13;
the crew breathed a sigh of relief&#13;
and then began setting up for the&#13;
next night.&#13;
As an actor in that show, I realized&#13;
that what all these "technies"&#13;
had done made my job easier. So&#13;
this is a curtain call for the people&#13;
backstage who made "Crimes of&#13;
the Heart" physically wort. Stand&#13;
up and take a well-earned bow.&#13;
The crew in order of appearance&#13;
includes Director Lee VanDyke,&#13;
who saw all the aspects of the show&#13;
in one complete picture and then&#13;
put it all together. Skelly Wan-en,&#13;
as scenic designer, took people by&#13;
the hand and taught them to read a&#13;
board from a blue print into a wall.&#13;
Judith Tucker-Snider, as costume&#13;
and make up designer, coordinated&#13;
what was right for a play set in 1974&#13;
and the actors' need to feel right in&#13;
what they wore. As the newest&#13;
member of the staff in the Dramatic&#13;
Arts Discipline, Keith Harris&#13;
executed a lighting design that&#13;
complimented both the set and the&#13;
idea of "Crimes of the Heart."&#13;
Ron Larson deserves a round of&#13;
applause all of his own. As s tage&#13;
manager, he very ably integrated&#13;
all aspects of the technical designs&#13;
by pleasantly interpreting them&#13;
from one person to another, while&#13;
technically directing all of the crew&#13;
through all of the flawless production.&#13;
With Steve Orth and Mart&#13;
Rognsvoog running sound and&#13;
lights, phones rang on time, day became&#13;
night a nd lights went on and&#13;
off as actors pretended to move&#13;
switches.&#13;
Paula Boehler, as properties mistress,&#13;
ran for days filling cupboards&#13;
with foodstuffs, dishes and utensils&#13;
and all the other paraphernalia&#13;
needed to make the actors' "bits"&#13;
wort. She built a cake that would&#13;
last three weeks and could be eaten&#13;
every night. Through Paula's efforts&#13;
and those of her assistants,&#13;
Connie Kowalski and Debbie Ryback,&#13;
actors were always where&#13;
they had to be on time and carrying&#13;
whatever they were supposed to&#13;
carry.&#13;
Just in case the sink doesn't&#13;
work, Eric Englander waits backstage&#13;
every night ready to fix i t or&#13;
to deal with any other technical situation&#13;
that may arise. Eric was at&#13;
work during the building "Crimes&#13;
of the Heart" in every area, from&#13;
hanging lights to marking stage&#13;
areas that were off limits. As studio&#13;
assistant with Rebecca Julich, he&#13;
helped organize the set construction&#13;
crew into an efficient operation.&#13;
There are many other people&#13;
who deserve to take a bow. Laurel&#13;
Dane-VanDyke's design for poster&#13;
and program is a piece of a rt. The&#13;
box office staff, under the direction&#13;
of Diane Smith and the ushers and&#13;
concession people saw capably to&#13;
the comforts of the audience.&#13;
All of th ese and more deserve accolades.&#13;
Your sawing and nailing,&#13;
painting and worrying have resulted&#13;
in one of the finest technical&#13;
productions ever presented at Parkside&#13;
or anywhere else in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin. As an actor in this&#13;
show, I thank all the crew who&#13;
wonderful experience.&#13;
"Crimes" performed with capable style&#13;
Write a letter to&#13;
the Editor&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Beth Henley's "Crimes of the&#13;
Heart," despite its being a Pulitzer&#13;
Prize-winner, is just not much of a&#13;
play, wavering uncomfortably between&#13;
fast and slow too often. It's&#13;
quite the challenge to take an average&#13;
play and make it look good, but&#13;
those involved with Parkside's production&#13;
of "Crimes of the Heart"&#13;
succeed in doing so, and admirably.&#13;
Director Lee VanDyke maintained&#13;
a reasonably good pace with&#13;
Henley's story about a trio of southem&#13;
sisters and the various quirks&#13;
and idiosyncracies inhabiting them&#13;
and those in their company. The set&#13;
was extremely impressive, the result&#13;
of much hard wort.&#13;
The real credit, though, should&#13;
go to the actors and actresses. Rebecca&#13;
Julich, as oldest sister Lenny&#13;
McGrath, was forced to play a variety&#13;
of d ifferent emotions, a difficult&#13;
challenge for an actress which&#13;
she handled with remarkable conviction.&#13;
Professional actress Carolyn&#13;
Blackinton essayed the role of&#13;
middle sister Meg through the courtesy&#13;
of Actor's Equity Assocation,&#13;
while Amy Capobianco managed to&#13;
portray "air-headedness" while rePAB&#13;
film&#13;
Stanley Kubrick's&#13;
'Clockwork Orange&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Comm. Arts Theatre&#13;
OCT. 19,20,26,27AT8P.M. OCT. 25AT330p.M&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Are you in the mood for some&#13;
ultra-violence and a little bit of the&#13;
old in-out in-out, all to the music of&#13;
good old Ludwig von? If you are,&#13;
then you're ready for this week's&#13;
PAB film presentation, "A Clockwork&#13;
Orange."&#13;
This 1971 classic tells the story of&#13;
Alex, a young man in an unspecified&#13;
future year, whose life is devoted&#13;
to committing acts of what&#13;
he and his "droogs" call "ultra-violence."&#13;
Alex also is a lover of the&#13;
music of Beethoven, whom he refers&#13;
to as Ludwig von. Alex's life is&#13;
going along pretty well until he gets&#13;
arrested and put in prison. After a&#13;
while in jail, Alex vo lunteers for a&#13;
rather unorthodox "rehabilitation."&#13;
"A Clockwork Or ange" is a brilliant&#13;
film filled with great ideas and&#13;
remarkable images. Malcolm McDowell&#13;
gives a riveting performance&#13;
as Alex. Alex is one of the&#13;
most repellent characters in the&#13;
history of film; but as the film&#13;
progresses, you find yourself being&#13;
drawn to him and becoming sympathetic&#13;
to his plight. With this performance,&#13;
McDowell proves himself&#13;
to be one of the finest actors in&#13;
film. Also turning in a fine performance&#13;
is Patrick Magee as one&#13;
of Alex's victims, who attempts to&#13;
exact a bizarre "revenge" on him.&#13;
"A Clockwork Orange," written,&#13;
produced and directed by Stanley&#13;
Kubrick, is based on Anthony Burgess'&#13;
semi-autobiographical novel.&#13;
It is a remarkable, challenging film.&#13;
I strongly urge you to see this film.&#13;
It's one of the only really great&#13;
films that we're going to get out of&#13;
PAB this semester.&#13;
taining the audience's sympathy extremely&#13;
well.&#13;
Denise Valente should get some&#13;
sort of awar d for "most words said&#13;
clearly in the shortest amount of&#13;
time while maintaining a southern&#13;
accent" with her outstanding portrayal&#13;
of the sisters' cousin Chick&#13;
Boyle. Bill Serp e is almost frighteningly&#13;
subdued and ultimately quite&#13;
believable as Meg's old boy frie nd,&#13;
Doc Porter; and John Miskulin is&#13;
delightfully bumbling in his scenestealing&#13;
performance as Babe's lawyer&#13;
Barnette Lloyd.&#13;
I didn't like Beth Henley's&#13;
"Crimes of the Heart." I did, however&#13;
like Beth Henley's "Crimes of&#13;
the Heart" as performed by Parkside's&#13;
talented actors and actresses.&#13;
As a result, I highly recommend&#13;
this production.&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Amy Capobiano, Rebecca Julich, Carolyn Blakinton&#13;
RANGER&#13;
10 Thursday, Oct. 25,1984&#13;
Great&#13;
play&#13;
at&#13;
PAC&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Larry Shue's clever, intelligent&#13;
and funny play "Wenceslas Square"&#13;
is given more than capable treatment&#13;
by the people at the Milwaukee&#13;
Repertory Theater company.&#13;
Director John Dillon maintains a&#13;
nice, brisk pace throughout Shue's&#13;
comedy about a writer's troubles&#13;
gathering information for his book&#13;
on Czech theatrical performers due&#13;
to the political troubles occurring&#13;
in 1974 Pr ague.&#13;
The story is both funny and a bit&#13;
moving, ending on a note that forces&#13;
you to think about it as you&#13;
leave the theater.&#13;
The acting is nothing less than&#13;
top drawer. Daniel Mooney and&#13;
Jeffrey Hutchinson do splendidly in&#13;
the lead roles of Vince (the writer)&#13;
and Dooley (his student photographer),&#13;
while Alan Brooks and Ellen&#13;
Lauren show incredible versatility,&#13;
taking on a number of varying character&#13;
roles. Everyone's timing, delivery&#13;
and physical expression lent&#13;
so much believability to their performances&#13;
that they never looked&#13;
to be "acting," the viewer often&#13;
feeling that rather than watching a&#13;
play, the story was actually unfolding&#13;
before his or her very eyes.&#13;
The play is being performed in&#13;
the Todd Wehr Theater at the Performing&#13;
Arts Center in Milwaukee&#13;
Oct. 19 through Nov. 25. Curtain&#13;
times are 8 p.m. Tuesday through&#13;
Friday, 7:30 p.m. Sundays, 5 p.m.&#13;
and 9:15 p.m. Saturdays and afternoon&#13;
matinees Wednesdays and&#13;
Sundays at 2 p.m. Ticket prices&#13;
range from $4.50 to $12.50 for weekdays&#13;
and matinees and $5.50 to&#13;
$13.50 Friday through Sunday.&#13;
"Wenceslas Square" is well written,&#13;
well directed and well performed,&#13;
in the true fashion of the&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Company.&#13;
Open Stage&#13;
/• Ski "The Great Unknown&#13;
CflEmDBum Jump into the action on the slopes of&#13;
one of Colorado's finest ski resorts—&#13;
CRESTED BUTTE. Travel Associates and&#13;
the NCSA have put together a&#13;
program of Wild West skiing,&#13;
parties and fun you won't want&#13;
to miss. The official 1985 NCSA&#13;
"National Collegiate Ski Week&#13;
package includes:&#13;
» TM ONLY 8 SPOTS LEFT!!&#13;
* Round-trip transportation&#13;
* 7 nights deluxe lodging at one&#13;
of Crested Butte's finest facilities&#13;
• A lift ticket for 5 days of skiing&#13;
Crested Butte's "Great Unknown"&#13;
* Two "Wild West" parties with bands&#13;
• A major concert&#13;
• A special "on-mountain"&#13;
Beer &amp; Cheese Party&#13;
Contact: Ann Fralich&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
553-2650&#13;
or sign up in Union 209&#13;
• Entry fees to two races with&#13;
prizes for the top male and&#13;
female winners&#13;
• Special appearances by&#13;
Lite "All-Stars"&#13;
• A discount coupon program for&#13;
area bars, restaurants and services&#13;
• All applicable taxes&#13;
• Services of Travel Associates'&#13;
professional on-site staff&#13;
Tour Date:&#13;
Jan. 3-12&#13;
On Halloween, Oct. 31, the PAB&#13;
Coffeehouse will present its infamous&#13;
Open Stage Event in the&#13;
Union Bazaar from noon until 2&#13;
p.m. and again from 6 p.m. until 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Students with even a modicum of&#13;
talent are urged to try their luck&#13;
with the tough campus audience in&#13;
this special event, the results being&#13;
a chance to spot fresh, new talent&#13;
in the music, comedy and general&#13;
nuisance fields.&#13;
As with all Coffeehouse presentations,&#13;
there will be no admission&#13;
charge. And don't forget - FREE&#13;
popcorn!&#13;
Lip sync&#13;
contest&#13;
Ah, c'mon now, why don't you&#13;
just admit it? Haven't we all stood&#13;
in front of mirrors when some of&#13;
our favorite music has been blaring&#13;
on the stereo, fantasizing ourselves&#13;
as the performer? Maybe even&#13;
going to the point of strumming an&#13;
imaginary "air guitar" and strutting&#13;
around the living room like a&#13;
batfarobed Mike Jagger or Diana&#13;
Ross?&#13;
Sure we have. So why hide it?&#13;
Well, "Puttin' On The Hits" has&#13;
decided to bring all of the "closet"&#13;
performers out of their own living&#13;
rooms and put them on stage.&#13;
"Puttin' On The Hits" contest accomplishes&#13;
this by rewarding the&#13;
most daring and most creative of&#13;
these musical imposters by allowing&#13;
them their moment in the spotlight,&#13;
and at the same time providing&#13;
the audience with an enjoyable&#13;
evening full of entertainment.&#13;
Chromathon Video presents this&#13;
lip-sync contest in conjunction with&#13;
Dick Clark's show "Puttin' On The&#13;
Hits," an entertainment event that&#13;
is a truly unique, sensational contest&#13;
full of m usic, comedy and fun.&#13;
This contest debuts at just the right&#13;
time to draw from the countless&#13;
"lip-sync" and "air guitar" contests&#13;
that are springing up everywhere,&#13;
from high school gymnasiusms to&#13;
college fraternities to nightclubs&#13;
and bars.&#13;
The "Puttin' On The Hits" Kenosha&#13;
contest will occur on Nov. 16&#13;
at the Eagles Club, 302 58th St., at&#13;
7:30 p.m. People of a ll ages are encouraged&#13;
to enter and have the opportunity&#13;
to lip-sync their way to&#13;
fame and fortune in put-ons of th eir&#13;
favorite stars. Many prizes will be&#13;
awarded and the winner will be&#13;
reviewed in Hollywood by the&#13;
"Puttin' On The Hits" producers&#13;
through a video tape provided by&#13;
WVTV-Channel 18, Milwaukee.&#13;
This current lip-sync craze has&#13;
even gone so far as to spawn a bestselling&#13;
book, Simon &amp; Schuster's&#13;
"The Complete Air Guitar Handbook,"&#13;
and has been reported upon&#13;
in depth by magazines and newspapers&#13;
such as People Magazine&#13;
and The Los Angel es Times.&#13;
Tickets are available at Bidinger's,&#13;
Luchyne's, Ruffolo's, Kenosha&#13;
School of Cosmetology and&#13;
The Hairport. To enter, call&#13;
Chromathon Video at (414) 551-&#13;
7484.&#13;
BANGER II Thursday, OH. 25, 1984&#13;
The future of&#13;
movie theaters by J im Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The moviegoing experience has&#13;
changed a great deal in the brief&#13;
history of mo tion pictures, from silent&#13;
pictures to talkies to color to&#13;
cinemascope and wide screen films&#13;
to 3D - the list is seemingly endless.&#13;
Lately, changes have been taking&#13;
place even more rapidly. The big&#13;
movie houses have been replaced&#13;
by four- and five-plex cinemas due&#13;
to competition from pay cable and&#13;
video markets, while the thirteenyear-&#13;
old rating system has added&#13;
yet another rating.&#13;
Jim Janssen, manager of the Regency&#13;
Mall General Cinema theaters&#13;
in Racine, gave some of his own&#13;
views on these subjects based on&#13;
personal experience, noting of course&#13;
that his observations are not related&#13;
to the General Cinema corporation.&#13;
"With extended houses you&#13;
aren't limited to one picture," he&#13;
said. "You have more product and&#13;
are more likely to have what the&#13;
public wants to see in the same&#13;
amount of space as a big movie theater&#13;
and for the same rent. It's really&#13;
hard to maintain heating and&#13;
cooling in a big house, and the&#13;
people just don't turn out like they&#13;
used to.&#13;
"Five or six years ago when the&#13;
pay cable and video markets were&#13;
looming on the horizon and insiders&#13;
were predicting the death of the&#13;
movie industry, there was some&#13;
real concern. As it turned out,&#13;
cable and video haven't worked&#13;
against us t he way some of us feared.&#13;
There is a distinct market of&#13;
people who want to see the movie&#13;
in the theater, especially with films&#13;
like "2001: A Space Odyssey" that&#13;
don't translate well at all to the&#13;
small screen," said Janssen.&#13;
Another event that has occurred&#13;
in t he film industry is the addition&#13;
of a ra ting called PG-13, where paternal&#13;
guidance is suggested, but&#13;
specifically for those children under&#13;
the age of 13.&#13;
"That was a response to public&#13;
concern regarding pictures that&#13;
weren't comfortably PG, but not&#13;
quite R-rated films. The one that&#13;
caused the most concern was "Indiana&#13;
Jones and the Temple of&#13;
Doom" and there was some concern&#13;
about "Gremlins." Most of the&#13;
confusion was due to the fact that&#13;
"Gremlins" was following "E.T.,"&#13;
which was a nice family film and&#13;
people expected the same from the&#13;
latest Spielberg picture.&#13;
"Theaters are not asked to enforce&#13;
the PG-13 rating like the R rating,&#13;
but PG-13 is there to give the&#13;
parents cause to stop and think perhaps&#13;
check the film out themselves&#13;
before allowing their children to attend.&#13;
That's the sole purpose. We&#13;
don't card at the box office," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Another, rather trivial, question&#13;
that was brought up concerned the&#13;
demise of pre-feature cartoons.&#13;
Short subjects, the likes of which&#13;
featured The Three Stooges or&#13;
Laurel and Hardy, were overtaken&#13;
by television, but why no cartoon&#13;
before the feature?&#13;
"The old cartoons just aren't in&#13;
good shape anymore, and they&#13;
aren't making any more new cartoons,"&#13;
said Janssen.&#13;
The Regency Mall Cinemas are&#13;
perhaps the best examples of theaters&#13;
of the future, and the days of&#13;
the big movie houses seem to be&#13;
over. "It is my understanding that&#13;
any theater General Cinema builds&#13;
in the future will be no less than a&#13;
four-plex," said Janssen.&#13;
Fortunately any fears that cable&#13;
and video are contributing to a&#13;
gradual demise of the original&#13;
moviegoing experience are for&#13;
naught. So despite changes for better&#13;
or worse, the American tradition&#13;
of going to movies looks destined&#13;
to be here for a long time.&#13;
Letter to the Editor&#13;
Reader questions writers&#13;
Continued from Page 2&#13;
volvement. An opportunity does&#13;
exist on campus for you, as well as&#13;
for all students, to become a student&#13;
senator. If you c an't be a senator,&#13;
then you can serve by taking a&#13;
student seat on a faculty committee.&#13;
Hey, Brad! It is always easier to&#13;
knock the other side, and you honestly&#13;
don't expect Democrats to&#13;
praise President Reagan, do you? If&#13;
you want some information on&#13;
what the Republican party is planning&#13;
on campus, I'd be glad to give&#13;
you a few numbers. Stop in the&#13;
PSGA o ffice on Tuesdays from 12:&#13;
30-3:30. The same offer given to&#13;
Ruth applies to you too, and that is&#13;
get involved in student government.&#13;
Tim! Now is the time to start&#13;
planning next year's Homecoming&#13;
and to begin work on Winter Carnival.&#13;
Stop in at the PSGA office or&#13;
get involved at the PAB office. Join&#13;
these committees and help make&#13;
these events better. Anyway, one&#13;
catches more with honey than vinegar,&#13;
as your letter explains.&#13;
Gary, Tim and Todd - the only&#13;
thing I wish n ever to do is write to&#13;
an editor about something as trivial&#13;
as a sports article, especially one in&#13;
the Ranger. The one thing I know&#13;
for sure since coming back to&#13;
school is that the Ranger needs&#13;
sports writers. Seeing that you&#13;
three are so knowledgeable about&#13;
sports, please stop in the Ranger&#13;
and become sports writers, and&#13;
leave Letters to the Editor space&#13;
for more important issues like off;&#13;
campus accounts, off campus&#13;
events policy, voter registration and&#13;
other events that really affect student&#13;
life on campus.&#13;
I hope this letter is taken as positive&#13;
by all who read it.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Franklin Kuczensld&#13;
A Pause in the Disaster&#13;
Offensive music to laugh by&#13;
We talked all about TV and records&#13;
in previous installments of&#13;
this column; now the time has&#13;
come to acknowledge the major&#13;
motion pictures being released for&#13;
Oscar contention at Christmas&#13;
time.&#13;
"BLOWIN' IN THE WIND"&#13;
Rod Stewart and Elton John star&#13;
as two desert explorers caught in a&#13;
dust storm.&#13;
"KABOOM!"&#13;
Irwin-Allen produced disaster&#13;
flick about survivors of a nuclear&#13;
holocaust features an all-star cast&#13;
including Robert Reed, Mike Farrell,&#13;
Clint Eastwood, Charles Branson,&#13;
Charro, Joan Rivers and Steve&#13;
Martin at Father Putz.&#13;
"LET'S SPEND A MINUTE TOGETHER"&#13;
Concert film in which Prince&#13;
sings all his best songs.&#13;
"WHO PUT THE BOMB IN&#13;
THE BOMB-BA-BOMB-BABOMB?"&#13;
Ronald Reagan returns to film&#13;
acting this this wartime drama directed&#13;
by Bria n DePalma.&#13;
"GOOD GUYS DIE REAL&#13;
HARD IN THE RAIN AT NIGHT&#13;
WEDNESDAYS"&#13;
Action drama with Chuck Norris.&#13;
"SMOKEY AND THE CANNONBALL&#13;
RUN FROM THE&#13;
BANDIT"&#13;
Burt Reynolds starts in this action&#13;
comedy featuring Dom De&#13;
Luise, Jerry Reed, Jackie Gleason,&#13;
Andy G riffith, Jim Nabors, Buddy&#13;
Ebsen, Mel TUlis, Arnold Ziffel and&#13;
a whole lot of cars.&#13;
"A STARE IS BORN"&#13;
Biography of film comic Marty&#13;
Feldman.&#13;
"WHO DICED VIC?"&#13;
Filmization of the trail regarding&#13;
the "Twilight Zone" movie.&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
HALLOWEEN DANCE&#13;
f o r e v e r r o c k i n '&#13;
Wed. October 31&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
DOORS OPEN AT 8:00pm&#13;
$1.00 STUDENTS&#13;
$2.00 GUESTS ^&#13;
A. —— ~ 1/2 PR/CE&#13;
paE&#13;
• IF yOU WEAR A COSTUME 4&#13;
Note: Free Student Tables for Arts &amp; Crafts Fair on Dec. 1 still available. Sign&#13;
up by Nov. 1 in Union 209.&#13;
Ranger needs writers&#13;
12 Thursday, Oct. 25, 1984 RANGER&#13;
Guskin's Thailand trip&#13;
Continued from Page 6&#13;
as Prime Minster without military&#13;
support, but the military doesn't&#13;
necessarily control the elected person.&#13;
Members of Parliament are&#13;
also elected. People really speak&#13;
their minds, write what they want&#13;
to write and there is very little censorship&#13;
as far as I could see. That's&#13;
an exciting development," he said.&#13;
Guskin hopes to have some Thai&#13;
faculty members come to Parkside.&#13;
Over 100,000 Thais were trained in&#13;
the U.S. in the past twenty years&#13;
and many would like to return to&#13;
the U.S. fo r a short while to interact&#13;
with their American counterparts.&#13;
Business, marketing and science&#13;
are the areas where Guskin&#13;
feels the Thai faculty could best&#13;
participate at Parkside.&#13;
"Anything that could give a more&#13;
international flair to the campus is&#13;
highly desirable. The advantage to&#13;
us is the fact that it would expand&#13;
our horizons. Parkside's International&#13;
Studies program is starting to&#13;
expand and that's very good. I view&#13;
that as part of our effort to increase&#13;
our consciousness about the rest of&#13;
the world," said Guskin.&#13;
The Guskins were disappointed&#13;
by the increased stress in Bangkok.&#13;
"The heat seemed worse than in&#13;
the past, especially now that so&#13;
many of the trees have been cut&#13;
down to accommodate the heavy&#13;
construction that is going on. The&#13;
traffic is much worse. There is no&#13;
real urban transit system and only&#13;
one or two super highways so the&#13;
traffic is always bumper to bumper.&#13;
Our friends told us that 20 percent&#13;
of their lives are spent in traffic,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
It was very sad to see the combination&#13;
of tremendous construction&#13;
and stress obstruct everyday lives,&#13;
said Guskin. Also, since government&#13;
salaries are very low and university&#13;
faculty are civil service positions,&#13;
there is a lot of pressure on&#13;
the intellectual and professional.&#13;
Many must leave their university&#13;
positions to go into business, he&#13;
said.&#13;
Little change has occurred in&#13;
Thailand's rural areas, according to&#13;
Guskin. Thailand is 80 percent agricultural.&#13;
"The countryside is very&#13;
pleasent and slower paced," said&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Thailand has 100,000 or more&#13;
Cambodian refugees, said Guskin.&#13;
They visited a refugee camp located&#13;
two miles from the Cambodian&#13;
/Thailand border, very near to the&#13;
ongoing fighting. This was one of&#13;
the most moving parts of their trip&#13;
to Thailand.&#13;
"There were 35,000 re fugees in&#13;
that camp and they probably will&#13;
never go home. What a tragedy.&#13;
The camps have become a problem&#13;
for the Thais because the Cambodians&#13;
came into the country in the&#13;
poorest area where food is the least&#13;
available. It's a no-mans' land for&#13;
the poor Cambodians. They aren't&#13;
taught Thai because the Thais don't&#13;
want them to leave the camp and&#13;
go into Thailand. They aren't&#13;
taught English because then they&#13;
might leave the camp and go to&#13;
America. So what they do is teach&#13;
them Cambodian and they may&#13;
never go back th ere. It's all tied up&#13;
in world politics. They are used as&#13;
pawns. All th e Cambodians want to&#13;
do is live and all the children want&#13;
to do is grow up," said Guskin.&#13;
The Guskins visited four universities&#13;
in Thailand, as well as many&#13;
other sites. The delegation of university&#13;
presidents participated in&#13;
many ceremonies. In Thailand university&#13;
presidents are highly honored&#13;
because of their high status,&#13;
although they are not rewarded&#13;
monetarily. The most memorable&#13;
ceremony for the Guskins was&#13;
when they met the King of Thailand,&#13;
the Queen and two Princesses.&#13;
' 'We were all quite anxious&#13;
when we met them. Judy was scared&#13;
to talk to the King in Thai because&#13;
there is a special court language,&#13;
but the King was very gentle&#13;
and he spoke to her in everyday&#13;
Thai. He also speaks perfect English.&#13;
Our children got the chance to&#13;
talk to the royal family and that&#13;
was exciting. It was really special,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
As head of the delegation, Guskin&#13;
had the opportunity to present&#13;
a plaque to the Thailand Prime&#13;
Minister on behalf of the American&#13;
university presidents.&#13;
The 16 days the Guskins spent in&#13;
Chancellor Guskin toasting Permanent Secretary Athorn at a private&#13;
dinner given by Athorn. Judy Guskin at Guskin's left.&#13;
Thailand were very enjoyable, although&#13;
very tiring, said Guskin.&#13;
It took the Guskins twenty years&#13;
to return to Thailand but they don't&#13;
plan on waiting another twenty to&#13;
visit the country again. They have&#13;
several projects in the works that&#13;
may require a return visit. Judy is&#13;
currently writing a proposal to obtain&#13;
a grant to do a video program&#13;
in Thailand on children and youth.&#13;
A Thai professor, formerly Guskin's&#13;
student, is redoing a study that&#13;
Guskin did in 1964 in Thailand on&#13;
the changing values of Thai students.&#13;
Guskin is working with his&#13;
former student in this study. In addition,&#13;
the Guskins plan to write an&#13;
article about the perceptions of&#13;
Peace Corps volunteers returning&#13;
to the country they worked in twenty&#13;
years later.&#13;
Record review&#13;
Hendrix gems remastered&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Some believe that the power of&#13;
Jimi Hendrix has been eclipsed by&#13;
later guitar heroes as Eddie Van-&#13;
Halen, Jimmy Page, Michael&#13;
Schenker and the late Randy&#13;
Rhodes. On the contrary, Hendrix&#13;
remains king of the rock guitar, as&#13;
Warner Brothers' upcoming album&#13;
"Kiss the Sky" demonstrates.&#13;
"Kiss the Sky" takes some&#13;
Hendrix classics from the rocker's&#13;
major LPs - "Are You Experienced?"&#13;
"Axis Bold as Love,"&#13;
"Electric Ladyland," and "Band of&#13;
Gypsies" and combines them with&#13;
rare tracks (the unreleased "Killing&#13;
Floor" as well as an extended version&#13;
of "Red House"), and live material&#13;
from the 1969 Montery Pop&#13;
Festival and Jimi Hendrix concerts.&#13;
More than just another ill-fated&#13;
compilation slapped together for&#13;
monetary gain, "Kiss the Sky" is a&#13;
half-speed master digital recording,&#13;
one of the finest quality pressings&#13;
obtainable this side of laser discs.&#13;
New dimensions to the old classics&#13;
abound in clearer, more crystallized&#13;
recordings, while the new material&#13;
is further proof of Hendrix's influential&#13;
guitar work.&#13;
His i nnovative riffs give a whole&#13;
new meaning to the Bob Dylan-penned&#13;
"All Along the Watchtower,"&#13;
while fans of Eric Clapton's bluesrock&#13;
guitar work should faint when&#13;
they hear Hendrix's groundbreaking&#13;
blues jams on "Red House."&#13;
Record retail stores state that an&#13;
audiophile master such as this&#13;
would sell for anywhere from 820&#13;
to $30, but judging by the quality of&#13;
most domestic pressings, the price&#13;
is well worth it.&#13;
Along with being technically&#13;
marvelous, "Kiss the Sky" successfully&#13;
displays the true genuis of thi s&#13;
eternal guitar hero who came and&#13;
left so abruptly.&#13;
8 Ball Tourney&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31 1 p.m.&#13;
$2°° Entry Fee&#13;
Etimination Prizes for 1st, 2nd, 3rd Entry limited to the first 16 participants - sign up in the Rec Center&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Homecoming&#13;
Soccer&#13;
team&#13;
victorious&#13;
by Mark Leipzig&#13;
There's an old saying that goes&#13;
something like "When you're hot,&#13;
you're hot." This little adage was&#13;
fitting on Oct. 13, when the Parkside&#13;
Rangers beat Northland 6-0.&#13;
Going into the game , the&#13;
Rangers had a win-loss record of 7-&#13;
3, while N orthland had a 9-1-1 r ecord.&#13;
From the beginning, the Rangers&#13;
came on strong, scoring five goals&#13;
in the first half. Greg Whipple and&#13;
Wayne Adema led the offense with&#13;
two goals each. Dave Dahlke scored&#13;
the final goal of the first half.&#13;
The second half wasn't as fastpaced&#13;
as the first. George Vukovich&#13;
scored th e only goal.&#13;
The Rangers took 27 shots on&#13;
Northland's goal, while only three&#13;
shots were taken against Parkside.&#13;
Ranger goalie Jeff Medin had two&#13;
saves, while goalie Andy Matheus&#13;
Men's Basketball Looking forward&#13;
to great year!&#13;
Homecoming soccer in the log. photo by Chris Mayeshiba&#13;
had 12. The Rangers took six corner&#13;
kicks as opposed to three by Northland.&#13;
At this point, the Rangers have&#13;
175 shots on goal, 29 goals and 59&#13;
corner kicks. Jeff Medin has 51&#13;
saves and one assist.&#13;
Bowlers get high scores&#13;
by Pa tricia Zarletti&#13;
The seventh week of bowling is&#13;
approaching an d the standings are&#13;
being scrambled around. The&#13;
league consists of eight teams of&#13;
four each, primarily faculty and&#13;
staff bowlers.&#13;
Jim Marks, the president of the&#13;
Faculty Bowling League, bowled a&#13;
234 game. Craig Puder and Rick&#13;
Bloomquist bowle d 570 and 587 respectively.&#13;
The Four Play team&#13;
topped off the team high series&#13;
with a 2614 .&#13;
Sub Dar lene Safrarisky bowled a&#13;
470 series. Ellie Suwalski's 506 is&#13;
tops in the league at present for the&#13;
women, and Rick Bloomquist's 587&#13;
is tops f or the men.&#13;
U* dH&amp;e&#13;
l^uieet&#13;
25% OFF&#13;
Assorted&#13;
Toffees&#13;
We have a full&#13;
selection of&#13;
Candy &amp; Nuts&#13;
Located in the Union Bazaar&#13;
Directly Across from the Info. Ctr.&#13;
Players worth mentioning are&#13;
Jeff Medin, Wayne Adema, who&#13;
has eight goals and two assists,&#13;
Greg Whipple with four goals and&#13;
four assists, Tony Pinkert with two&#13;
goals and two assists and Dave&#13;
Dahlke, two goals and one assist.&#13;
Puzzler&#13;
Answer&#13;
by Steve Kratochvil&#13;
The 1984-85 basketball season&#13;
looks promising for the Rangers.&#13;
"We are much deeper and much&#13;
quicker than last year. I am very&#13;
happy with the competition in the&#13;
pre-season; it makes for tough,&#13;
emotional practices," said head&#13;
coach Rees Johnson.&#13;
The roster includes seven returning&#13;
lettermen. They are Clay&#13;
Brooks, Robert Jones and Ron Zeihen,&#13;
sophomores, and juniors Sean&#13;
Patterson, Arthur Rundles and&#13;
Erik Womeldorf. Stan Cameron is a&#13;
returning senior.&#13;
Top newcomers include Mike&#13;
Zukley, a 6'8" transfer from Southwestern&#13;
Community College in&#13;
Creston, Iowa and his brother,&#13;
Mark (6'9"). Both are sophomores&#13;
and are expected to help the&#13;
Rangers' inside game.&#13;
The team compiled a 14-15 record&#13;
last season, according to Johnson.&#13;
Last year's record does not indicate&#13;
how good the team was or&#13;
how good it will be. "Last year we&#13;
played probably the toughest Division&#13;
n schedule in the nation," said&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
This year's schedule is also difficult.&#13;
Parkside will play two NCAA&#13;
Division I teams who are ranked in&#13;
the top twenty. The games will be&#13;
played at Alabama-Birmingham on&#13;
Jan. 3 and at South Alabama on&#13;
Jan. 8. The Rangers will also face&#13;
Southern Mississippi and Green&#13;
Bay, both NCAA Division I opponents.&#13;
The Rangers will also play&#13;
Stevens Point, the NAIA's s econdranked&#13;
team in the country.&#13;
Johnson is looking forward to the&#13;
challenge of the 1984-85 season.&#13;
"We are more capable this year.&#13;
Men practice for season&#13;
We expect better shooting, rebounding&#13;
and defense," said Johnson.&#13;
In the shooting department,&#13;
Johnson is looking for good things&#13;
from Arthur Rundles. Johnson explained,&#13;
"Rundles is an outstanding&#13;
scorer with people on him especially.&#13;
He has Division I ability. He is&#13;
strong enough to play professional&#13;
basketball in the Continental&#13;
League. He is a definite prospect."&#13;
Erik Womeldorf, who finished&#13;
last year averaging 11.3 poi nts per&#13;
game and 7.2 rebounds per game, is&#13;
expected to be a big piece in J ohnson's&#13;
puzzle. According to Johnson,&#13;
the starting center can "play pro&#13;
ball overseas. He probably will not&#13;
choose to do so, however, seeing he&#13;
is an academic Ail-American."&#13;
This year could be the year Parkside&#13;
basketball returns to the championship&#13;
form of the mid 1970's.&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
RECREATION CLASSES&#13;
Aerobics&#13;
Better&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Mastering&#13;
Billards&#13;
Tue., 4:45 p.m.-5:45 p.m., Nov 6-Dec 11, Course Fee:SJ5&#13;
Thurs., 4:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m., Nov. 8-Dec. 13, Course Fee:$I5&#13;
Mon, 4:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m., Nov. 5-Dec.I0, Course Fee:$20&#13;
Tues/Thur., 5:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m., Nov. 6-Dec. 13,&#13;
Course Fee:$20&#13;
Register for recreation classes by stopping in Union Room 2 09.&#13;
Between 8:00 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday-Friday or calling 553-2408.&#13;
A 1&#13;
14 Thursday, Oct. 25,1984 RANGER&#13;
SEASON PASSES&#13;
All games start at 7:30 P.M.&#13;
Phy Ed season passes&#13;
for all games&#13;
(available at Phy Ed)&#13;
student: $10.00&#13;
general: $18.00&#13;
Post-game entertainment after&#13;
every game in Union Square&#13;
provided by PAB&#13;
The entertainment after the games&#13;
is free if you attend the game.&#13;
UW-P Men's Varsity Basketball Home Game Schedule&#13;
Monday Nov. 19&#13;
Tuesday Nov. 20&#13;
Saturday Nov. 24&#13;
Wednesday Nov. 28&#13;
Monday Jan. 14&#13;
Thursday Jan. 17&#13;
Friday Jan. 25&#13;
Monday Feb. 4&#13;
Wednesday Feb. 6&#13;
Tuesday Feb. 12&#13;
Saturday Feb. 16&#13;
Wednesday Feb. 20&#13;
Tuesday Feb. 26&#13;
Thursday Feb. 28&#13;
vs Trinity College&#13;
Macalester College&#13;
St. Xavier College&#13;
Lake Superior State College&#13;
UW Stevens Point&#13;
Illinois Institute of Technology&#13;
Milwaukee School of Engineering&#13;
Concordia College&#13;
UW Milwaukee&#13;
UW Oshkosh&#13;
Purdue University-Calumet&#13;
Northeastern Illinois University&#13;
Judson College&#13;
St. Joseph's College&#13;
BUY YOUR SEASON PASS NOW!&#13;
RANGER 15 Thursday, Oct. 25,1984&#13;
to IMlerTime&#13;
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK&#13;
•••••••••••••••&#13;
Kim Tesher&#13;
Women's Volleyball&#13;
* BEER • SODA * WINE&#13;
* POPCORN&#13;
THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
Classified Ads&#13;
MONDAY N IGHT&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
IN THE SQUARE&#13;
T SCREEN&#13;
Volleyball team&#13;
generates offense&#13;
MONDAY, OCT. 29&#13;
SEATTLE AT&#13;
SAN DIEGO&#13;
by Kimberl ie Kranicb&#13;
Offense showed its face more&#13;
than usual Wednesday, Oct. 17 at&#13;
the Parkside Triangular. The&#13;
women played Le wis, a team from&#13;
Illinois, and Milwaukee.&#13;
Parkside won their match against&#13;
Lewis with scores of 8-15, 15- 4 and&#13;
15-9. In their first game against&#13;
Lewis, t he women were up by 7-1,&#13;
but lost. Coach Terry Paulson attributes&#13;
his team's loss to a "total&#13;
metal and physical breakdown."&#13;
Team member Janet Koenig added,&#13;
"We came out ready to play, and&#13;
then we fell back in to our old syndrome&#13;
of letting the other team&#13;
catch up. Then we lost our momentum."&#13;
Game two ag ainst Lewis was an&#13;
offensive show for Parkside. The&#13;
women were successful at bumping&#13;
the ball up to the setter, thus improving&#13;
their chances for the crushing&#13;
spike. Paulson said, "If the offense&#13;
works, we're going to have a&#13;
good volleyball team and that's&#13;
what we had out there in the second&#13;
game."&#13;
In game three, Parkside started&#13;
off slowly. They w ere down 1-7 but&#13;
came back strong to become the&#13;
victors. "We were really fired up to&#13;
beat Lewis. When we felt they were&#13;
unbeatable, we really fired up,"&#13;
Paulson said. In their match&#13;
against Lewis, Parkside had a total&#13;
of six serving a ces with Sheri Lechner&#13;
serving four aces and Karen&#13;
Greene and Amy Henderson serving&#13;
one apiece.&#13;
Milwaukee defeated Parkside in&#13;
two games by scores of 8-15 and 8-&#13;
15. Even though both game scores&#13;
were the same, Parkside played&#13;
Milwaukee much tougher in the&#13;
first game. The first game consisted&#13;
of long rallies back and forth. Parkside&#13;
generated good offense the&#13;
first half of the game and at one&#13;
point tied Milwaukee 7-7. After the&#13;
tie broke, Parkside's offense seemed&#13;
to have stopped.&#13;
"We know Milwaukee is beatable.&#13;
We have to be totally consistent&#13;
in every facet to beat them.&#13;
Our offense has to be on and that's&#13;
why we played them to 7-7 because&#13;
our offense was on," said Paulson.&#13;
The second game, Parkside was&#13;
down by 0-8 but gradually came&#13;
back, only to lose 8-15. Milwaukee&#13;
used their middle hitters and were&#13;
able to crush the spike down the&#13;
middle with Parkside unable to dig&#13;
the ball up.&#13;
Coach Paulson said, "I'm very&#13;
disappointed in the scores. I&#13;
thought we could have played Milwaukee&#13;
tougher." Despite the fact&#13;
that his offense wasn't consistent&#13;
against Milwaukee, Paulson was&#13;
very happy with what he saw.&#13;
Ranger needs writers&#13;
Parkside spiking against Lewis&#13;
Women's cross country&#13;
Team shows improvement by Eric Hilmoe&#13;
Coach Mike DeWitt was pleased&#13;
with his team's seventh place finish&#13;
running against a strong thirteenteam&#13;
field.&#13;
DeWitt mentioned the team's improvement&#13;
came in their total time&#13;
compared to the times of the three&#13;
top finishing teams.&#13;
Host LaCrosse won the meet&#13;
with 58 poin ts. They were followed&#13;
by second place Marquette and&#13;
third place Eau Claire, with scores&#13;
of 89 and 93 respect ively. Running&#13;
in previous meets against these&#13;
three teams, Parkside improved by&#13;
2:45 against LaCrosse, 1:45 against&#13;
Marquette and 1:06 against Eau&#13;
Claire.&#13;
Parkside was led by freshman&#13;
Michelle Marter who turned in a&#13;
time of 18:47, good enough for&#13;
twelfth place. Other Ranger runners&#13;
to turn in strong performances&#13;
were Sarah Heitt-41, Jill Fobair-44,&#13;
Colleen Weismer-45, Julie McReynolds-&#13;
47, Julie Wunrow-50, Cathy&#13;
Polacheck-76 and Carol Romano-78.&#13;
St. Thomas of Minnesota followed&#13;
third place Eau Claire with a&#13;
score of 110. North Dakota State&#13;
finished fifth and Mankato State&#13;
(Minnesota) finished sixth.&#13;
The Ranger women also hope to&#13;
improve next week in their final&#13;
regular season meet against Marquette&#13;
and Milwaukee. The runners'&#13;
next meet will be the NAIA&#13;
Nationals on Nov. 17.&#13;
Into those beautiful eyes!&#13;
JOHN C.W. R.A. A f arewell bid to you, my&#13;
love, until we meet eye to eye.&#13;
JIG: HOW many pbone numbers did you get&#13;
last weekend?&#13;
S.S.R. YOUR friendship means more to me&#13;
than anything else in the world.&#13;
THIS ONE'S for you, Teoby! It could get&#13;
worse if you don't keep quiet!&#13;
CYNDE! STUFF your face in my litterbox.&#13;
Max.&#13;
JIM N.: Sorry we forget a classified for you&#13;
last week. Hope this makes up for it.&#13;
JIM N.: That goes ditto for me.&#13;
JAMES NEIBAUR, when are you going to do&#13;
something dirty? We're waiting.&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
IMPROVE STUDY habits, lose weight, stop&#13;
smoking. Reduce stress and anxiety through&#13;
clinical hypnosis. Call Randall Potter at&#13;
414/652-2727.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
BEAUTIFUL, WARM hand-woven ECUADORAN&#13;
PONCHOS for fall, back-to-school wear.&#13;
Send for free color brochure. Ponchos, P.O.&#13;
Box 142, S ussex WI 53089.&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
CAM PL'S REP to run break vacation trip to&#13;
Daytona Beach. Earn free trip and money.&#13;
Send resume to College Travel Unlimited,&#13;
P.O. Box 6063, Station A. Daytona Beach FL&#13;
32022. Include phone numbers, please.&#13;
STUDENT ASSISTANT: 10 hours a week,&#13;
hours flexible. 33.35/bour. Clerical, communication&#13;
and organizational skills necessary. Call&#13;
Peer Support, 553-2706.&#13;
Wanted&#13;
RIDERS WANTED to Chicago O'Hare. To&#13;
share gas. Usually depart Friday A.M. Call&#13;
957-0593.&#13;
LATE MODEL Dodge Van, in need of (^cylinder&#13;
engine. (414) 654-2575.&#13;
FEMALE. ROOMMATES to rent out robins&#13;
in house. $150/month. Needed by end of Nov.&#13;
For more details, contact Anne or Mary, 554-&#13;
Personals&#13;
ASPA BAKE Sale Monday, Oct. 29,10 a.m. to&#13;
1 p.m.&#13;
DAVID GERLACH: How's life by you?&#13;
SHARON: ARE you heading south for the&#13;
winter? I am.&#13;
HOWDY, SHARON. Just think-one more&#13;
ffppfc I&#13;
BOSSY, THANKS for the Sweetest Day Treat&#13;
I LOVE you. Dinky.&#13;
HAPPY B IRTHDAY, Di Ilove you! Jim&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, MOMMIE. I love you.&#13;
too! Max.&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, Diana Neibaur! The&#13;
Ranger Staff.&#13;
SHARON RYNDERS: This one is especially&#13;
for you, "Toots."&#13;
HI, SHARON!!! Now you know we still think&#13;
of you.&#13;
OK, SHARON. This is it for the week. Yoolie.&#13;
DINKY: KEEP the fire burning, ya comfrittin'&#13;
peapod. Love, Bossy.&#13;
C.R.M. I was meant to be for you.&#13;
CYNDE: WITHIN my soul you'll always sail,&#13;
always sail!!! Rizalino.&#13;
EVERYONE COME to CA-129 at 1:00 on Friday.&#13;
JOHN C.W. R.A. I can't wait until I can look&#13;
16 Thursday, Oct. 25, 1984 RANGER&#13;
Soccer team tie&#13;
with Marquette&#13;
The Rangers took on Marquette,&#13;
the number four ranked team in&#13;
the mid-east Division I polls and&#13;
came away with a 1-1 tie. "It was a&#13;
moral victory for us," said Coach&#13;
Rick Kilps.&#13;
Marquette came into the game&#13;
with a 10-2-2-mark and eyes on an&#13;
NCAA play-off s pot.&#13;
"I'm proud of this team and the&#13;
way they played this match. We&#13;
went in with a game plan and fulfilled&#13;
that objective. We knew we&#13;
would have to be patient and we&#13;
were."&#13;
The patience paid off at 88:55&#13;
when junior college transfer Greg&#13;
Whipple stole the ball from the&#13;
Marquette sweeper and went one&#13;
on one with the Warrior goalie for&#13;
the score. Marquette had scored at&#13;
62:50 of th e second half - a goal in&#13;
which the Parkside defense pulled&#13;
up in an offsides trap that the referee&#13;
did not call.&#13;
The Rangers, ranked 17th nationally&#13;
in the NAIA poll, received an&#13;
outstanding game from senior goat&#13;
keeper Jeff Medin. Kilps said,&#13;
"Jeff was flawless in the net. He's&#13;
stepped into the starting spot this&#13;
year and performed admirably for&#13;
us."&#13;
The Rangers finished the week&#13;
with an 8-3-2 record.&#13;
From left to right, first row: Ed Herrera, Andy Buchanan,&#13;
Charles Rodriguez, John Scanlan, Mike Riva,&#13;
Jeff Medin, Tony Pinkert, Mike Chock, Scott Gerhartz,&#13;
Don Theisen. Second row, left to right: Jose&#13;
Ramirez, Steve Donovan, Chris Schuleit, Dave Dahlke,&#13;
Wayne Adema, Greg Whipple, Richard Blay,&#13;
George Vukovich, Mike Robertson, Jim Spielmann&#13;
and Rick Kilps, coach.&#13;
•IIIHUWHI MM—• Phy-ed requirement examined&#13;
by Carol Kortendick&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The physical education department&#13;
asks students who are adding&#13;
modular classes in October to obtain&#13;
signatures from Wayne Dannehl,&#13;
director of physical education,&#13;
and the professor. "We have received&#13;
some criticism with kids adding&#13;
in October, so we're trying to watch&#13;
who's adding," stated Dannehl.&#13;
some of the concern lies with the&#13;
athletes. According to Dannehl, the&#13;
department will not allow athletes&#13;
to add. There are some exceptions.&#13;
The department is also watching&#13;
for another situation that occurs&#13;
when a student drops an academic&#13;
course and adds the physical education&#13;
course to continue receiving financial&#13;
aid. The student, according&#13;
to Dannehl, will not be penalized&#13;
for this. The department only&#13;
wants to keep a record.&#13;
"I think it's unfair for non-athletic&#13;
students," said student Brenda&#13;
Buchanan. Buchanan tried adding&#13;
the figure improvement class but&#13;
was told to get the two signatures.&#13;
She decided not to add as a result&#13;
of this.&#13;
Buchanan asked, if the classes&#13;
haven't met, why are signatures&#13;
necessary? Other departments&#13;
allow adding (before class starts)&#13;
without any hassles.&#13;
Dannehl answered, "This was&#13;
precipitated by the fact that we're&#13;
the only department with late modulars."&#13;
The department thus has a&#13;
lot of late adders. Dannehl added,&#13;
"We're the last resort of maintaining&#13;
credits.&#13;
"I have not denied any that I can&#13;
recall, except athletes. Basically,&#13;
we're just monitoring trends and&#13;
collecting data. We ask the student&#13;
to fill out a form, then get the&#13;
signatures of the professors and&#13;
myself. All I want you to tell me is&#13;
why you're adding."&#13;
According to Dannehl, this data&#13;
had not been collected or processed.&#13;
•••••••••• Tennis season closes&#13;
on traveled ground&#13;
by Kimberlie Kranich&#13;
Although the women's tennis&#13;
team started off their season on relatively&#13;
untraveled ground, the last&#13;
meet of the season showed how&#13;
well the women adjusted to the circumstances.&#13;
In their final meet, the&#13;
women defeated Green Bay 5-4.&#13;
In the first week of prac tice, only&#13;
four members of last year's team&#13;
showed up consistently. When&#13;
school began, Linda Masters returned&#13;
to the squad to boost the&#13;
number to five, and later the team&#13;
picked up Amy Tropin.&#13;
Coach Wendy Miller is liked by&#13;
all the members of her team,&#13;
though she was tougher and did&#13;
things differently than Noreen Goggin.&#13;
The biggest difference was in&#13;
the amount of running required.&#13;
Before each practice the women&#13;
ran a mile, ran sprints and jumped&#13;
over metal hurdles. After practice&#13;
came more running and bill&#13;
charges.&#13;
"This year, I think the members&#13;
of the tennis team were more like&#13;
cross country runners. Due to our&#13;
extensive training, however, we had&#13;
no injuries and we didn't get fatigued&#13;
when we had to play threeset&#13;
matches," said Masters.&#13;
Another major difference between&#13;
this and last year's training&#13;
was that Miller used drills that&#13;
helped both singles and doubles&#13;
strategy. "The first day of practice,&#13;
I was scared because I didn't know&#13;
what I was going to do. There was&#13;
a lot I had to learn," Miller stated&#13;
of h er first year of coaching tennis.&#13;
By reading books on tennis and&#13;
with the help of professor and tennis&#13;
player Esther Will, Miller was&#13;
able to prepare the team members&#13;
for their matches.&#13;
Jackie Rittmer said, "Coach kept&#13;
us motivated throughout the season.&#13;
She always had helpful advice&#13;
and a new drill which usually&#13;
helped us during a match." Masters&#13;
added, "Coach Miller helped us&#13;
with our game plan. We learned&#13;
different tactics and ways to beat&#13;
our opponents."&#13;
Miller said only good things of&#13;
her team. "I think it was a real&#13;
good year and I appreciated the opportunity&#13;
to work with everyone."&#13;
According to Miller, the biggest&#13;
change came after the team's loss&#13;
to Beloit College. Miller explained,&#13;
"Beloit was a good match. Sure, we&#13;
lost 1-8 but everyone except for two&#13;
people went three sets. They were&#13;
all close matches."&#13;
A change for the better did&#13;
occur. The women placed seventh&#13;
out of ten teams at the Whitewater&#13;
Doubles Tournament and outscored&#13;
the number of points they earned&#13;
last year in the same tournament.&#13;
Miller said she saw a lot of improvement&#13;
in everyone's ability and&#13;
felt the biggest changes occurred in&#13;
Ann A lthaus and Kim Kranich. Althaus&#13;
completed the season&#13;
strongly, winning her last four out&#13;
of five singles and doubles matches.&#13;
The season is over. Miller said,&#13;
"I thought we had a really close&#13;
team and it's different not seeing&#13;
the team every day." Masters said,&#13;
"The comradeship was better this&#13;
year that it has ever been in the&#13;
past.&#13;
"As a player, I thought the tennis&#13;
season was like eating an ice cream&#13;
cone, only better. I knew the season&#13;
was going to be fun, and even&#13;
though it's physically over now, it's&#13;
still a part of me because the memories&#13;
will be with me always."&#13;
cross country&#13;
Cross country team&#13;
loses to North Central&#13;
by Eric Hilmoe&#13;
The Ranger men were edged out&#13;
of first place by North Central by&#13;
the score of 41 to 52 at Saturday's&#13;
Carthage Invitational.&#13;
Parkside was again led by Tim&#13;
Renzelmann and George Kapheim.&#13;
Renzelmann and Kapheim turned&#13;
in times of 24:37 and 24:56, good&#13;
for first and third places, respectively.&#13;
Rich Miller also turned in a&#13;
strong performance, finishing fifth.&#13;
Other Parkside finishers included&#13;
Ed Miller-21, Andy Serrano-22,&#13;
Mark Manning-35 and Dan Peterson-&#13;
55.&#13;
"We ran the race without our&#13;
number three runner, Dan Stublaski,&#13;
who came down with the flu. I&#13;
think if Dan would have run, we&#13;
would have had a good chance to&#13;
finish first," said Coach Lucian&#13;
Rosa.&#13;
Overall, Rosa was satisfied with&#13;
his team's performance and is looking&#13;
forward to the upcoming meets.&#13;
The Ranger men have two meets&#13;
remaining. Next week they end the&#13;
regular season with the Chicago Invitational.&#13;
Following that meet,&#13;
they take the next three weeks off&#13;
in preparation for the NAIA National&#13;
Meet.&#13;
Rosa feels his team has a very&#13;
good chance to improve on last&#13;
year's tenth place finish in Nationals.&#13;
"Last year my guys really surprised&#13;
me with the tenth place finish&#13;
and 1 hope they can surprise me&#13;
with an even higher finish this&#13;
year," Rosa said.&#13;
Out of the 22 teams that participated&#13;
in the Carthage Invitational,&#13;
Parkside and North Central were&#13;
the only two teams to finish under&#13;
100 poin ts. Oshkosh finished a distant&#13;
third with a score of 103. Stevens&#13;
Point and Wheaton finished&#13;
fourth and fifth respectively.&#13;
Bowling club&#13;
in existence by Dennis Harbach&#13;
Recently I was asked if Parkside&#13;
has a bowling club or team. The answer&#13;
is yes.&#13;
Each Friday the Parkside Bowling&#13;
Club gets together for camaraderie&#13;
and exciting bowling action.&#13;
The bowlers with the highest averages&#13;
are placed on a team that&#13;
bowls against other UW schools, as&#13;
well as in prestigious tournaments,&#13;
such as the ones in St. Louis or Las&#13;
Vegas.&#13;
Last weekend, Oshkosh hosted&#13;
the first match against Parkside&#13;
and Platteville. Representing Parkside&#13;
were Rick Kelly, Kris Johnson,&#13;
Jeff Floyd, Frank Bisotti and Glen&#13;
Malmkus, four members and a substitute.&#13;
Seven points were awarded&#13;
for each match.&#13;
In the first match, Parkside defeated&#13;
Oshkosh 2-5, 5-1 and 6-1.&#13;
They also received two extra points&#13;
for winning the best of three. The&#13;
team went on to soundly beat Platteville&#13;
5-2, 6-1 and 7-0. In that series&#13;
they established a new four-man&#13;
high total of 909 pins.&#13;
Kelly rolled a 256 game and&#13;
Floyd a 255. "We just exploded that&#13;
game," Malmkus said. "We showed&#13;
ourselves to be a true contender."&#13;
Kelly said this is one of the best&#13;
teams he has seen in years. "We&#13;
have determination and a strong&#13;
will to win. Some of us could be on&#13;
the pro bowlers' tour," he said.&#13;
This Saturday, Parkside heads to&#13;
Milwaukee to play Madison and&#13;
Milwaukee, which the team considers&#13;
one of the most important&#13;
matches of the season. The match&#13;
could be crucial to the team's success&#13;
this year.&#13;
Malmkus is undaunted, however.&#13;
He boldly contended, "We'll have&#13;
more pins than the U.S. Wrestling&#13;
Team did in the Olympics this&#13;
year."</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="71275">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1986">
        <name>center for survey and marketing research (CSMR)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1989">
        <name>IocaI governments</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1994">
        <name>james roveIstad</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1988">
        <name>jobs</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1991">
        <name>kenosha area chamber of commerce</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1992">
        <name>kenosha area economic development office</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1996">
        <name>presidential election</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1995">
        <name>ron pavalko</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1224">
        <name>ronald reagan</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1993">
        <name>telephone interviews</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1953">
        <name>walter mondale</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
