<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/items/browse?output=omeka-xml&amp;page=311&amp;sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CTitle" accessDate="2026-05-13T01:26:00+00:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>311</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>4375</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="3639" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4880">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/3d098ab9564d89cf4bcd509b546ad641.pdf</src>
        <authentication>ff9be6be75d07446c91b7ed86344fdbf</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="78813">
              <text>Volume 15, issue 29</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="78814">
              <text>Anderson steps down</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="78824">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="91169">
              <text>SOC gets major status&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
After sbc months of work and five drafts of its constitution,&#13;
the Student Organizations Council (SOC) has gained&#13;
major status and is no longer a standing committee of the&#13;
farkside Student Government Association (PSGA).&#13;
f!SPA Senate voted on Monday, April 27, in favor of&#13;
attaining major status, provided the change passes&#13;
as a fall referendum.&#13;
SOC's constitution will go into effect July 1. It plans to&#13;
continue its standing programs, including Toys for Tots,&#13;
Food for Families, involvement in the Recruitment Fair&#13;
and helping clubs with budgeting.&#13;
In addition, it plans to start a Student Orientation Corn-&#13;
Committee freshmen and a sPrin£ Leadership Workshop&#13;
Before the Senate vote, Don Harmeyer, president of&#13;
SOC, addressed the Senate with some of his concerns.&#13;
"It would be nice if we could set personalities aside and&#13;
focus on the issues. I don't want SOC to become the political&#13;
football of PSGA and Ranger. SOC doesn't write what&#13;
goes in the paper," he said.&#13;
Harmeyer commented on SOC's accomplishments.&#13;
"Like I said back in January when I took over SOC chairmanship,&#13;
our number one goal would be to gain major&#13;
status. We've accomplished that, so I feel it's been a successfull&#13;
semester.&#13;
"We're very proud of the constitution. After five drafts&#13;
we finally got one we felt we could work with. That's the&#13;
one we presented to the Senate. It's very hard to sit down&#13;
and write a 25 page document and have it turn out exactly&#13;
the way you want it on the first try," he said.&#13;
Harmeyer also addressed the concerns other major&#13;
status organizations had about SOC. "With SOC gaining&#13;
SOC see page 9&#13;
Inside...&#13;
ildinBS Moody visits •. .v.4&#13;
Student debuts on TV........................page 5&#13;
Women of color special center&#13;
"Cradle," "Camelot" reviews page 10&#13;
Stranglers interview page 11&#13;
Wrestler also racewalker ...page 15&#13;
PSGA vice president resigns&#13;
Anderson steps down&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
Citing scheduling conflicts&#13;
and lack of cooperation from&#13;
colleagues, Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Vice&#13;
President Corby Anderson resigned&#13;
Tuesday, April 28.&#13;
At press time, PSGA officials&#13;
were in the process of&#13;
setting up a selection procedure&#13;
for his successor.&#13;
In his resignation letter,&#13;
Anderson said the decision&#13;
"was in the best interests of&#13;
the university."&#13;
"I think the senate is an&#13;
important enough body that&#13;
we need somebody who can&#13;
be an effective leader (to&#13;
serve as vice-president)," Anderson&#13;
explained when interviewed&#13;
Wednesday morning.&#13;
"I thought I could work my&#13;
way toward that - but I don't&#13;
envision things getting better;&#13;
they're just getting&#13;
worse."&#13;
The resignation has "very&#13;
little" to do with the controversy&#13;
surrounding the senate's&#13;
approval of SOC's major&#13;
status bid. "That wasn't a&#13;
deciding factor," he noted.&#13;
One of the factors that did&#13;
contribute to his resignation,&#13;
Anderson said, was that the&#13;
job required more time than&#13;
he had anticipated it would.&#13;
"When I decided to run, I&#13;
was told by Sue (Brudvig,&#13;
former PSGA vice-president)&#13;
and Adrian (Serrano, former&#13;
PSGA president) that I would&#13;
need to put in between 20 and&#13;
Corby Anderson&#13;
30 hours per week. I was prepared&#13;
to do that, but I wound&#13;
up putting in that much time&#13;
and more, and I wasn't getting&#13;
anything done.&#13;
"It's not that I can't make&#13;
it my top priority," he went&#13;
on. "But I can't make it the&#13;
only reason I come to school.&#13;
I do have to work, I do have&#13;
to take classes and I do have&#13;
to do well in them."&#13;
Another problem, according&#13;
to Anderson, was that he and&#13;
PSGA President Alex Pettit&#13;
"got off to a bad start" with&#13;
the senate.&#13;
"A lot of people didn't support&#13;
our candidacy in the beginning,&#13;
and they weren't&#13;
about to start after we won&#13;
the election," he commented.&#13;
"It's a relatively young senate,&#13;
and rather than working&#13;
together to try to gain some&#13;
experience as a body, the senate&#13;
seemed to work against&#13;
me and A1 right from the&#13;
start."&#13;
Anderson admits that his&#13;
inexperience (he had never&#13;
worked in student government&#13;
prior to winning the&#13;
March election) contributed&#13;
to the difficulty of the transition&#13;
of administrations, but&#13;
he doesn't believe all the&#13;
problems can be traced to&#13;
that source.&#13;
"I think my inexperience&#13;
only hurt me to the extent&#13;
that other people anticipated&#13;
I wasn't going to be able to do&#13;
the job," he said. "And when&#13;
that's the case, you don't get&#13;
much cooperation or respect&#13;
from your colleagues.&#13;
"You get to feeling," he&#13;
added, "that you're just a figurehead&#13;
and that other people&#13;
are really running the organization."&#13;
Although the experience&#13;
hasn't been as rewarding as&#13;
he would have liked, Anderson&#13;
has no regrets about&#13;
seeking as capturing the position.&#13;
"The vice-presidency is&#13;
something you can't really&#13;
prepare for," he explained.&#13;
"But it's been a good experience&#13;
for me - and I don't&#13;
think I'm the only one who&#13;
benefitted from it. If anything&#13;
can be gained from this (resignation),&#13;
I hope it's that people&#13;
will realize how important&#13;
student leadership positions&#13;
like PSGA vice-president&#13;
are."&#13;
i ne old and the new PHOTO BY DAVE MCEVOI&#13;
Past PSGA president Adrian Serrano confers with SOC chair&#13;
Don Harmeyer at Monday's Senate meeting, in background,&#13;
current PSGA president Aiex Pettit and ex-SOC chair Bill&#13;
Serpe listen to the proceedings.&#13;
Carr takes over Ranger driver's seat&#13;
Vol. IS, No. 29&#13;
Jenny Carr has been named&#13;
editor-in-chief of the Ranger&#13;
for 1987-88.&#13;
The selection was made on&#13;
the recommendation of a&#13;
committee consisting of two&#13;
students, two faculty and a&#13;
member of the administration.&#13;
The Ranger Board of Directors&#13;
then voted to accept&#13;
the recommendation.&#13;
She replaces Gary Schneeberger,&#13;
who has held the position&#13;
for the past year.&#13;
Carr served as both news&#13;
editor and feature editor this&#13;
year, after contributing as a&#13;
staff writer during 1985-86. In&#13;
addition to her Ranger involvement,&#13;
she's been PSGA&#13;
senator, a Campus Ambassador,&#13;
a member of SUFAC, a&#13;
tutor in the writing center&#13;
and has served on several&#13;
faculty and university committees.&#13;
"I hope the students will&#13;
recognize that the Ranger is&#13;
their paper," Carr commented.&#13;
"I want to encourage students&#13;
who have story ideas or&#13;
would like to be part of the&#13;
Ranger family to come in and&#13;
get acquainted with our eclectic&#13;
group.&#13;
"When I was first a student&#13;
at Parkside I was very critical&#13;
of the paper," she continued.&#13;
"I kept my mouth shut,&#13;
however, because I was not in&#13;
a position to give the time&#13;
necessary to make a contribution."&#13;
• "When I did become involved,&#13;
I realized that the&#13;
production of a quality paper&#13;
is &amp; difficult job and takes a&#13;
lot of cooperation from a&#13;
number of people. (Former&#13;
editors) Jennie Tunkiecz and&#13;
Gary Schneeberger have very&#13;
different managment styles&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
and they both leave very big&#13;
shoes for me to attempt to&#13;
fill."&#13;
April 30, 1987 University of Wlaconaln-Parkalde Vol. 1 IS, No. 29&#13;
The old and the new&#13;
P t PSGA p dent Adrian Senano confer• with SOC chair&#13;
Don Harm y1 rat Mond y'a Senate m ting. In background,&#13;
current PSGA president Alex Pettit and ex~OC chair BIii&#13;
Serpe II t n to the proceedings.&#13;
SOC gets major status&#13;
ter 1x months of work and five drafts of Its constltutlo&#13;
, the tudent Organlzatton Council (SOC) has gained&#13;
m Jor status and la no longer a landing committee of the&#13;
Park ld Student Government Association (PSGA).&#13;
he P GA Senate voted on Monday. April 27, in favor of&#13;
ttalning major tatu • provided the change passes&#13;
f 11 r ferendum.&#13;
0 ' constitution wlll go into effect July 1. It plans to&#13;
n u Its landing program , including Toys for Tots,&#13;
Food for Families, involvement in the Recnlltment Fair&#13;
and h )ping club With bu g Ung.&#13;
In ddltlon, lt plans to ta.rt a Student Orlentatton Committ&#13;
for fr hmen and a spring Leader hip Work hop&#13;
mmltt .&#13;
fo the Senat vote, Don Harmeyer, president of&#13;
, ddre d the Senate with some of his concerns.&#13;
"J would be nlce lf w could set personallUes aside and&#13;
fo us on the issues. don't want SOC to become the pollU-&#13;
1 football of PSGA and Ranger. SOC doesn't write what&#13;
go ln the paper," he said.&#13;
H rm yer commented on SOC's accompllshmenta.&#13;
"Like J s Id back in January when I took over SOC chairmanshlp,&#13;
our number one goal would be to galn major&#13;
talus. We've accompllsh d th t, so If el tt• been a sucsfull&#13;
emest r.&#13;
" e're very proud of th consUtution. After f1v drafts&#13;
e flnally got one we felt we could work with. That's the&#13;
one we presented to the Senate. It's very hard to sit down&#13;
and write a 25 page document and have it tum out exactly&#13;
the way you want 1t on the fl.nt try," he said.&#13;
Harmeyer also addressed the concerns other major&#13;
statu organizations had about OC. "With OC gaining&#13;
S0Caeepage9&#13;
Inside ...&#13;
James Moody visits •.•••.••••••.•••..•.••••••• page 4&#13;
Student debuts on TV •.•••..•..••••..•.••••.• page 5&#13;
Women of color peclal. ...•••••..••....•••• center&#13;
"Cradle," "Camelot" reviews .•..••••••• page 10&#13;
Stranglers Interview ........•................ page 11&#13;
Wrestler also racewalker .......•...•...••. page 15&#13;
. . . . . . . . .&#13;
PSGA vice P..tesident reslgJ1.!&#13;
Anderson steps down&#13;
by Gar L chD&#13;
Editor&#13;
Citing scheduUng conflicts&#13;
and lack of cooperation from&#13;
colleague • Park Id Student&#13;
Government Association Vice&#13;
President Corby And rson resigned&#13;
Tue day, Aprll 28.&#13;
At pre s time, PSGA Ottl•&#13;
la.ls were in the proces of&#13;
ttlng up a election procedure&#13;
for his succes or.&#13;
In his r s gnation letter,&#13;
Anderson said the decision&#13;
"was in the best interests of&#13;
the un1versity."&#13;
"I think the senate la an&#13;
Important enough body that&#13;
we ne d som body who can&#13;
be a effective leader (to&#13;
serve as vice-president),'' Anderson&#13;
explained when Lntervtewed&#13;
W dnesday morning.&#13;
"l thought I could work my&#13;
way toward that - but I don't&#13;
enviston things getting better:&#13;
they're just getting&#13;
worse.''&#13;
The resignation has "very&#13;
Ultl " to do W1th the controversy&#13;
surrounding the senate's&#13;
approval of soc• major&#13;
status bid. "That wasn't a&#13;
deciding factor," he noted.&#13;
One of the factors that dld&#13;
contribute to his resignation,&#13;
Anderson aid, was that the&#13;
job required more time than&#13;
he had anticipated 1t would.&#13;
"When I decided to run, I&#13;
was told by Sue (Brudvig,&#13;
former PSGA vice-president}&#13;
and Adrl.a.n (Serrano, form r&#13;
SGA pre ident) that 1 would&#13;
n d to put Ln between 20 and&#13;
Corby Anderson&#13;
80 hours per week. I was prepared&#13;
to do that, but I wound&#13;
up putting 1n that much time&#13;
and more, an wasn't g tttng&#13;
anything done.&#13;
"It's not that 1 can't make&#13;
1t my top priority," he went&#13;
on. ''But I can't mak lt the&#13;
only res.son I come to school.&#13;
I do have to work, I do hav&#13;
to take classes and I do have&#13;
to do well in them."&#13;
Another problem, according&#13;
to Anderson, was that he and&#13;
PSOA President Alex P Wt&#13;
"got off to a bad start" with&#13;
the senate.&#13;
• A lot of people didn't support&#13;
our candidacy in the b •&#13;
giMlng, and they weren't&#13;
about to start a.tter we won&#13;
the election," he comment d.&#13;
"Jl'a a relatively young senate,&#13;
and rather than working&#13;
together to try to gain some&#13;
experience as a body, the nate&#13;
seemed to work against&#13;
me and Al right from the&#13;
et.art.''&#13;
Anderson admita that his&#13;
inexperience (he had nev r&#13;
worked in student government&#13;
prior to wlnnlng the&#13;
March election) contributed&#13;
to the difficulty of the transition&#13;
of admlnl trationa, bu&#13;
he doesn't believe all the&#13;
problem can be traced to&#13;
that source.&#13;
"I think my lnexperlenc&#13;
only hurt me to the extent&#13;
that oth r people anticipated&#13;
I wasn't going to be able to do&#13;
the job,·' he said. "And when&#13;
that's the caa , you don"t get&#13;
much cooperation or respect&#13;
from your colleagues.&#13;
''You get to feeling,.. he&#13;
added, ''that you're just a fig.&#13;
u.reh.ead and that other people&#13;
are really running th organization."&#13;
Although the experience&#13;
hun't been aa rewarding as&#13;
h would have llk d, Anderson&#13;
baa no regre about&#13;
seekbtg as capturing the position.&#13;
''The vice-preeldency 1s&#13;
something you can't really&#13;
prepare for," he explalned.&#13;
"But lt's been a good experience&#13;
or me • and I don't&#13;
think I'm the only one who&#13;
benef1tted from lt. H anyth1rt&#13;
can be gained from th1a (re •&#13;
lgnation), I hope lt's that people&#13;
wU1 realize how important&#13;
student leadership poslUo&#13;
like PSGA vice-preeld nt&#13;
are. ♦ '&#13;
Carr takes over Ranger driver's seat&#13;
J nny Carr has been named&#13;
editor-in-chief of the Ranger&#13;
for 1987-88.&#13;
The selection was made on&#13;
the recommendation of a&#13;
committee conststJng of two&#13;
students, two faculty and a&#13;
member of the adminlstration.&#13;
The Ranger Board of Directors&#13;
then voted to accept&#13;
the recommendation.&#13;
She replaces Gary Schneeberger,&#13;
who has held the position&#13;
for the past year.&#13;
Carr served as both news&#13;
editor and feature editor this&#13;
year, after contributing a a&#13;
staff writer during 1985-86. In&#13;
addition to her Ranger in•&#13;
volvement, she' been SOA&#13;
senator, a Campus Ambassa•&#13;
dor, a member of SUFAC, a&#13;
tutor in the writing center&#13;
and has served on several&#13;
faculty and university committees.&#13;
"I hope the tudents will&#13;
recognize that the Ranger ls&#13;
their paper," Carr commented.&#13;
"l want to encourage students&#13;
who have story ideas or&#13;
would llke to be part of the&#13;
Rang r family to come 1n and&#13;
get acquainted with our eclectic&#13;
group.&#13;
"When I was first a student&#13;
at Parkside I was very crttlcal&#13;
of the paper," she contln•&#13;
ued. "I kept my mouth shut,&#13;
however, ecause I was not Ln&#13;
a poslUon to give the time&#13;
necessary to make a contrtbuUon."&#13;
' "When I did b come involved,&#13;
I realized that the&#13;
productton of a quality paper&#13;
1s Q difficult job and takes a&#13;
lot of cooperation from a&#13;
number of people. (Former&#13;
edit.ors) J ennte Tunkiec.z and&#13;
Gary Schneeberger have very&#13;
different managment styles&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
and they both leave very btg&#13;
shoes for me to attempt to&#13;
fill ...&#13;
L ---&#13;
perspectives 2 Thursday, April 29, 1987 RANGER&#13;
youn views&#13;
Masturbation: pro&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I'm writing in response to&#13;
Mr. Hogan's letter about his&#13;
embarassment over the article&#13;
on masturbation.&#13;
I'm somewhat embarassed&#13;
(just a tiny bit) myself - only&#13;
my embarassment stems&#13;
from knowing there are&#13;
adults (I'm assuming Mr.&#13;
Hogan is over 18 years of&#13;
age) who are embarassed&#13;
just by reading about sexuality.&#13;
And I feel sorry for those&#13;
who equate non-exploitative&#13;
articles of sexuality with&#13;
phrases or terms such as "hit&#13;
bottom," "disgusting," etc.&#13;
The article was clearly titled,&#13;
so that if you were skittish&#13;
about the topic of masturbation,&#13;
you didn't have to read&#13;
it.&#13;
The Ranger has not pushed&#13;
"freedom of the press to the&#13;
extreme." One of the responsibilities&#13;
of "freedom of the&#13;
press" is to inform. The article&#13;
did just that - it informed.&#13;
And it did so in a non-sensational,&#13;
nonexploitative manner.&#13;
I fear for the survival of&#13;
our society if we are not willing&#13;
to accept an obviously&#13;
small risk of the "freedom of&#13;
the press;" that risk being&#13;
that we might read some&#13;
things that will bother us. It's&#13;
a small price to pay. Hopefully,&#13;
someday everyone will&#13;
be willing to pay it.&#13;
Glen Larson&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Two things bother me coneering&#13;
the April 16 edition of&#13;
the Ranger. The article entitled&#13;
"Masturbation is safe,&#13;
satisfying" was woefully&#13;
inappropriate and perhaps&#13;
misplaced. This article would&#13;
have served a better purpose&#13;
in a sex manual.&#13;
While it could be argued&#13;
that this article is part of the&#13;
"Safe Sex Campaign" and&#13;
prevention of AIDS, etc., I&#13;
hardly think that students of&#13;
college age need to be lectured&#13;
on safe sex practices.&#13;
This is especially true when&#13;
one takes into account all of&#13;
the information which has&#13;
been made readily available&#13;
since the ADDS scare broke&#13;
out. Is this institution In existence&#13;
for the purposes of developing&#13;
intellect while attaining&#13;
higher education, or it&#13;
is here to serve as a mainstay&#13;
for social workers from&#13;
and con&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Brian Hogan's letter in response&#13;
to the article on masturbation&#13;
echoes my own sentiments&#13;
on the article. The article&#13;
was hardly informative&#13;
unless one was interested in&#13;
Ms. Kranich's personal experiences&#13;
in the area of selfgratification.&#13;
In the article Ms. Kranich&#13;
states that she was in third&#13;
Planned Parenthood?&#13;
As staff reporters, editors,&#13;
publishers, etc., for the&#13;
Hanger, what you print reflects&#13;
very much on the other&#13;
Parkside students - which&#13;
brings me to my other complaint.&#13;
I do not appreciate&#13;
being portrayed as condoning&#13;
such "literary artwork" as&#13;
the use of the four-letter "f&#13;
word" in editorials (as was&#13;
used in the Prince editorial)&#13;
or any other article. I hear&#13;
these words often enough in&#13;
the hallways or student&#13;
Union. I do not need to be exposed&#13;
to them in my student&#13;
newspaper as well.&#13;
I Relieve that those responsible&#13;
for making such slop&#13;
ought to re-evaluate a few&#13;
priorities, as you are making&#13;
a mockery out of the Ranger&#13;
and those whom it represents&#13;
- the entire student body here&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
Elizabeth Osredkar&#13;
grade and that "for some reason"&#13;
she "knew not to share&#13;
my experience with any of&#13;
my schoolmates." Obviously&#13;
she had more taste and class&#13;
as a third-grader!&#13;
She was correct in assuming&#13;
one thing: nobody asked&#13;
and quite frankly I'm surprised&#13;
she thought anyone&#13;
would care.&#13;
Diane Perkins&#13;
Stranger puts protestor in "pique&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am writing this letter to&#13;
protest the sexual slur and innuendo&#13;
perpetrated by the&#13;
front cover of your April&#13;
Fools' issue of t he Stranger.&#13;
As a man, as a masculist,&#13;
and as one of Frank Sinatra's&#13;
biggest fans, I object to that&#13;
cover's obvious insinuation&#13;
that Frank Sinatra does not&#13;
measure up to some standard&#13;
of masculine attractiveness.&#13;
While all men are aware of&#13;
society's standards of beauty,&#13;
few can measure up to it.&#13;
Sure, Frank is no Tom Selleck,&#13;
but hey, with all his&#13;
hair, Tom Selleck looks more&#13;
like Chancellor Kaplan than&#13;
Frank Sinatra does. (Okay,&#13;
I'll grant that Ms. Kaplan has&#13;
no mustache, but the point is&#13;
that if the standards of masculine&#13;
attractiveness are to&#13;
have anything to do with objective&#13;
reality, they should include&#13;
baldness. You're welcome,&#13;
Gary.)&#13;
One cannot look at the Kaplan/&#13;
Sinatra photo in isolation:&#13;
in the same issue,&#13;
Frank Gorshin and Wayne&#13;
Dannehl are both demeaned&#13;
for their shared deviances&#13;
from the Leading Man Look,&#13;
and Sports Editor Robb&#13;
Luehr is once again held up&#13;
(oof!) to riduicule and derision&#13;
for the fact that his body&#13;
will probably never show up&#13;
in any Soloflex commercials.&#13;
Granted, your so-called&#13;
"Mr. Blackwell's Best&#13;
Dressed List" does mention&#13;
Ranger award surprises student To ttlA EHitnr*&#13;
two female professors, presumably&#13;
included to protect&#13;
yourself against charges of&#13;
sexism; this feeble gesture,&#13;
however, is shown for what it&#13;
is by the fact that there are&#13;
not two, not three, but six&#13;
male professors chided because&#13;
they fall short of GQ&#13;
criteria.&#13;
I call upon the Ranger to&#13;
learn to understand and annihilate&#13;
sexism. If this comes&#13;
at the expense of o ur sense of&#13;
humor, or ability to laugh at&#13;
ourselves, our sense of and&#13;
appreciation for beauty, and&#13;
the differences between us, so&#13;
be it. In seriousness,&#13;
blandness and sameness only&#13;
can we collectively triumph.&#13;
In a fit of pique,&#13;
Paul Berge&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
When I first read that the&#13;
Ranger won a national award&#13;
for excellence among college&#13;
and university newspapers, I&#13;
was surprised. After reading&#13;
the last few issues, that surprise&#13;
has changed to shock.&#13;
Have national standards&#13;
sunk so low that the Ranger&#13;
ranks among the top college&#13;
papers in the United States? I&#13;
surely hope that these high&#13;
marks have not been based&#13;
upon content.&#13;
Kim Kranich's article&#13;
"Masturbation is safe, satisfying"&#13;
(April 16, 1987) and&#13;
one of the (personal) ads&#13;
found in the current issue&#13;
(April 23, 1987) "The exploitation&#13;
of Frank Sinatra based&#13;
on his physical appearance&#13;
deeply upsets us. We ca n feel&#13;
ourselves becoming anorexic&#13;
already. Nancy and Frank&#13;
Jr."&#13;
Constance Rovelsta&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Gary L. Schneeberger Editor&#13;
Jenny Carr News Editor&#13;
Kelly McKissick Asst. News Editor&#13;
Kimberlie Kranich Feature Editor&#13;
Jim Neibaur Entertainment Editor&#13;
Tyson Wilda Asst. Entertainment Editor&#13;
Robb Luehr sports Editor&#13;
Michael J. Rohl Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
Amy H. Ritter Copy Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy Photo Editor&#13;
Jack Bornhuetter Photo Editor&#13;
Leo Bose Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Andy Buchanan Business Manager&#13;
Don Harmeyer Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan ...Business Staff Assistant&#13;
Dave Roback Advertising Manager&#13;
Steven Picazo Distribution Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
Bernie Doll. Mary DeFazio, Terri DeRosier,&#13;
Michelle Eirich, Christina Lojeski, Randy LeCount,&#13;
Rick Luehr, Doug McEvoy, Julie Pendleton,&#13;
Michelle Petersen, Ted Price. Maria Rintz, Adrian&#13;
Serrano, Andy Tschumper, Jennie Tunkic'cz,&#13;
Karen Wegerhauer.&#13;
cyaml contenMns published evervThu!^ riarkSid»hWho days. puoiisned every Thursday during the acaadreem soicie ylye arre sePx°cenpsitb olev feorr bi,rse aekdist oarniadl phoollit&#13;
letfersmus/be signedW wiuf aafe I e otfon p 'li n m double"sPaced and 350 words or less \&#13;
held upon request ' elePhone number included for ver ification purposes. Names will be with&#13;
tag*. reserves the right to edit letters and refuse those which are false and/or de-&#13;
Thursday ** a" ^ a"d C,aSSified ads'is Mo^V at 10 a.m. for publication&#13;
^?5«&#13;
Member of the caossuoeocairaeroe p«essia &gt;&#13;
your views&#13;
Masturbation: pro ...&#13;
To Ul EdHor:&#13;
I'm writing In respo e to&#13;
Mr. Hogan's letter about h1I&#13;
embaraaament over the arti•&#13;
cle on masturbation.&#13;
I'm somewhat emba.rassed&#13;
(just a tiny blt) my elf. only&#13;
my emba.rassment stems&#13;
trom knowing the are&#13;
adults (I'm assuming .&#13;
Hogan 1a over 18 yean of&#13;
ag ) who are embaraa ed&#13;
just by reading about aexuallty.&#13;
And I fe 1 sorry for those&#13;
who equate non-exploitative&#13;
articles of sexuality with&#13;
phrases or terms such a.a "hit&#13;
bottom," "dlaguetlng," etc.&#13;
Th article WU clearly tilled,&#13;
so that If you were klttish&#13;
about the topic of m turba•&#13;
t1on, you dldn•t have to read&#13;
lt.&#13;
The Ranger has not pushed&#13;
"freedom of the press to the&#13;
extreme." One of the responslbllltles&#13;
of ''freedom of the&#13;
press,. is to Inform. The article&#13;
did Just that - 1t informed.&#13;
And it did so In a non-sensational,&#13;
nonexploitaUve manner.&#13;
I fear for the survival ot&#13;
our society lf we are not will·&#13;
Ing to accept an obviously&#13;
small ruk of the "freedom of&#13;
the press;" that risk being&#13;
that we might read some&#13;
things that will bother us. It's&#13;
a small prtce to pay. Hopefully,&#13;
someday eveeyone w1ll&#13;
be will1ng to pay it.&#13;
GI n I.anon&#13;
• • and con&#13;
To tbe Editor:&#13;
Two things bother me concerlng&#13;
the Aprtl 16 edition of&#13;
th Rang r. Th artlcl entitled&#13;
''Masturbation 1s safe,&#13;
satisfytng'' was woefully&#13;
Inappropriate and perh&amp;p&#13;
misplaeed. ThJa article would&#13;
have aerv a better purpose&#13;
tn a aex manual.&#13;
Wh1I It could be argu d&#13;
that lhJa article is part or th&#13;
"Sa! X Campaign" and&#13;
p ventl n of AIDS, tc., I&#13;
hardly think that atudenta of&#13;
11 ge age ne d to be lectured&#13;
on safe ex practices.&#13;
Th1.a is specl.ally true wb n&#13;
o tak s lnto cc unt all of&#13;
th lnformaUon which baa&#13;
mad readily Vall bl&#13;
th AIDS broke&#13;
th1B lnaU uUon ln extstnc&#13;
for th purposes of dev&#13;
opln lntell ct whll attatning&#13;
higher e ucatton, or It&#13;
l here to serve as a mainstay&#13;
tor 1aJ wor en from&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Planned Parenthood?&#13;
M staff reporters, editors,&#13;
publishers, tc., for the&#13;
Ranger, what you print reflects&#13;
very much on the other&#13;
Parkside students ~ Which&#13;
brings me to my other complaJnt.&#13;
I do not appreciate&#13;
being portrayed as condoning&#13;
such "literary artwork " as&#13;
the use ol the four-letter • 'f&#13;
word" 1n editorial (as was&#13;
used In the Prince edltortal)&#13;
or any other article. I hear&#13;
these words otten enough 1n&#13;
the hallways or student&#13;
Union. I do not need to be exposed&#13;
to them 1n my student&#13;
newspaper as well.&#13;
I 6elleve that those responalble&#13;
for making such slop&#13;
ought to re.evaluate a few&#13;
prlortttes, as you are making&#13;
mockery out of the Ranger&#13;
and thOse whom it represents&#13;
• the entire student body here&#13;
at Park lde.&#13;
Elizabeth Osredkar&#13;
grade and that "for some reason"&#13;
she "knew not to share&#13;
my experience wlth any of&#13;
my schoolmates.' ' Obviously&#13;
she had mor taste and class&#13;
a.a a lhlrd-grader!&#13;
She was correct ln assuming&#13;
one thing: nobody asked&#13;
and quite frankly I'm surprised&#13;
she thought anyone&#13;
would care.&#13;
Dian Perkins&#13;
..&#13;
lrour views I&#13;
Stranger puts protestor in ''pique''&#13;
To tbe Editor:&#13;
I am writing lhls letter to&#13;
protest the sexual slur and In·&#13;
nuendo perpetrated by th&#13;
front cover of your April&#13;
Fools' issue of the Stranger.&#13;
As a man, as mascullst,&#13;
and as one of Frank Sinatra' s&#13;
biggest fans, I object to that&#13;
cover's obvious insinuation&#13;
that Frank Sinatra doe not&#13;
measure up to some standard&#13;
of masculine attractiveness.&#13;
While all men are aware of&#13;
society's standards of beauty,&#13;
few can measur up to lt.&#13;
Sure, Frank ts no Tom Selleck,&#13;
but hey, with all his&#13;
hair, Tom Selleck looks more&#13;
llke Chancellor Kaplan than&#13;
Frank Sinatra does. (Okay,&#13;
I'll grant that Ms. Kaplan has&#13;
no mustache, but the point is&#13;
that lf the standards of masculine&#13;
attractiveness are to&#13;
have anything to do with objective&#13;
reallty, the y should Include&#13;
baldne s. You' r welcome,&#13;
Gary. )&#13;
One cannot look at the Kaplan/&#13;
Sinatra photo ln isolation:&#13;
1n the same issue,&#13;
Frank Gorshin and Wayne&#13;
Da.nnebl are both demeaned&#13;
for their shared deviances&#13;
from the Leading Man Look,&#13;
and Sports Editor Robb&#13;
Luehr is once again held up&#13;
(oof!) to rtduicule and derision&#13;
for the fact that his body&#13;
will probably never show up&#13;
In any Soloflex commerc ial .&#13;
Granted , your SO·Call d&#13;
"Mr. Blackwell's Best&#13;
Dressed List" does mention&#13;
two female professors. pre.&#13;
sumably ineluded to protect&#13;
yourself against charges of&#13;
e m : this feebl ge ture,&#13;
however. ls shown for what tt&#13;
ls by tile tact that there are&#13;
not two, not three, but six&#13;
male professors chided b •&#13;
cause they fall short of GQ&#13;
criteria.&#13;
l call upon the Rang r to&#13;
learn to understand and rumlhllate&#13;
sexism. If thi comes&#13;
at the expense of our sen of&#13;
humor, or ability to laugh t&#13;
ourselves, our sense of and&#13;
appreciation for beauty, and&#13;
the differences betw en us, so&#13;
be tt. In seriousness,&#13;
blandness and samen s only&#13;
can we collecUvely triumph.&#13;
ID a flt of pique,&#13;
Paul Berge&#13;
Ranger award surprises student&#13;
To th Editor:&#13;
When I flrst read tha the&#13;
Ranger won a national award&#13;
for excellence among college&#13;
and university newspapers, I&#13;
was surprised. After reading&#13;
the Ia.st few issues, that surprise&#13;
has changed to shock.&#13;
Have national standards&#13;
sunk low that the Ranger&#13;
ranks among th top college&#13;
papers in the United tates? I&#13;
surely hope that these high&#13;
marks have not been based&#13;
upon content.&#13;
Kim Kranich' s article&#13;
"Masturbation ls safe, $8.tlStying'&#13;
' (Aprtl 18, 19 7) and&#13;
one of the (person l) ads&#13;
found in the current I ue&#13;
(April 23, 1987) "The explolla·&#13;
Uon or Frank Sinatra based&#13;
on his physical appearance&#13;
deeply upsets us. W can feel&#13;
ourselves becoming anorexic&#13;
already. Nancy and Frank&#13;
Jr."&#13;
.-:nintr1tAnce Ro I tad&#13;
DITORIAL AFF BUSINESS STAFF Ranger is wntten and edited by students of UW-Parkside. who are solely res()OllSlble tor ,ts ed1ton~ ~t&#13;
cy and content It IS IIUbltShed every Thursday dunng the academte year except over brea ao Gary L. Schneeber r .... ............ ...... Editor&#13;
Jenny Carr .............................. News Editor&#13;
Ketly McK1ssick ................ Asst. News Editor&#13;
Kimberli Kr n ct, ................. Feature Editor&#13;
Jim Ne1baur .... .............. Entert 1nment Editor&#13;
Tyson Wilda ......... Asst Entert inment Editor&#13;
Robb Luehr ............... ......... .. $Ports Editor&#13;
Mtcha I J . Rohl ............... Asst . Sports Editor&#13;
Amy H Ritter ... ................ ...... ... Copy Edi.tor&#13;
Dave McEvoy ............ .... ............ Photo Editor&#13;
Jack Bomhuetter ...................... Photo Editor&#13;
Leo Bose ..................... . .... Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
Andy Buchanan .. ............. Business Manager&#13;
Don Harmeyer .. ... . . Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan .. Business Staff Assistant&#13;
Dave ROback ... .... ... .. .... Advertising Manager&#13;
Steven Picazo ...... ........ Distribution Manager&#13;
GE .ERAL STAFF&#13;
8emie Doll. Mary D&amp;Fazio. Terri DeR0$191',&#13;
MiChelle EtrlCh . Chrishna, loie&amp;k1. Randy LeCount ,&#13;
Rlctc. Luohr. Doug McEvoy, Julie Pendleton .&#13;
Michelle Petersen. Ted Pnce, Mena R1ntz Adnan&#13;
Serrano . ArtfJy Tsehumper. Jennl8 Tunkr.·~.&#13;
Karen Wegemauer&#13;
days&#13;
Letters to the editor will be accepted only ti 1ney are typed . double •spaced and 350 wonts or °"'&#13;
letters most be signed, With a telephone number mclu&lt;led for venf1cat1on purposes Names •,,11 be Vilfflheld&#13;
UPOn reQUest&#13;
Ranoer reserves the right to edit lette rs and reruse those which are false and/or d&#13;
!amatory . ,,, ... ,. vi , ..&#13;
Deadline for all letters. and clasSthed ads. IS Monday at 10 am tor pub ication&#13;
Thursday .&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to Ra r. UW -Par e. Bo 2000 . Ke-&#13;
~ha WI 53141 . Telephone 414/5-53-2287 (Edrtonal) or 414/553 2295 (Adv rtis•&#13;
mg)&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday, April 29, 1987 3 perspectives&#13;
Ranger lax in "reporting" details of SOC delay&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The article "reporting" the&#13;
delay of the approval of&#13;
major status for the Student&#13;
Organizations Council (SOC)&#13;
and the Ranger's editorial,&#13;
"Senate sloppy in dealing&#13;
with SOC," seriously lack the&#13;
proper perspective and do not&#13;
include all the issues involved.&#13;
In fall 1986. SOC placed the&#13;
pursuit of major status as one&#13;
of their top priorities of the&#13;
year. It took six months from&#13;
the time of inception to final&#13;
SOC approval for the matter&#13;
to be presented to the PSGA&#13;
Senate. To assume that a constitution,&#13;
titled a fifth draft&#13;
(not titled final copy) would&#13;
have to pass in one meeting&#13;
of the PSGA Senate after it&#13;
took six months to formulate&#13;
is absolutely ridiculous.&#13;
The UW-Parkside Student&#13;
Organization Handbook,&#13;
Chapter 10, states: "An organization&#13;
is granted major&#13;
group status by the PSGA,&#13;
Inc., Senate after an extensive&#13;
application process. For&#13;
the specific process that a&#13;
group must go through to become&#13;
a major status organization,&#13;
contact the Pro-Tempore&#13;
of the PSGA, Inc., Senate."&#13;
Both Don Harmeyer, the&#13;
current SOC chair, and Bill&#13;
Serpe, the past SOC chair,&#13;
were informed by the Pro-&#13;
Tempore and myself that a&#13;
three-week process (consistent&#13;
with the three weeks it&#13;
took for Peer Support's appeal)&#13;
was in place and should&#13;
be used for SOC's appeal.&#13;
SOC's leadership not only ignored&#13;
this process, they also&#13;
failed to notify the PSGA Vice&#13;
President or Pro-Tempore&#13;
that this business would be&#13;
presented to the Senate at the&#13;
April 20 meeting. This was&#13;
highly irresponsible.&#13;
When Peer Support appealed&#13;
for major organization&#13;
status in 1981, not only did&#13;
they present their governing&#13;
documents, they included a&#13;
rationale, their budget, a list&#13;
of accomplishments and their&#13;
future plans. This information&#13;
was not presented by SOC to&#13;
the PSGA senate.&#13;
Finally, and most important,&#13;
SOC failed to propose&#13;
the appropriate changes to&#13;
PSGA's governing documents:&#13;
the PSGA constitution&#13;
(Article IV, sub-article II,&#13;
section 1), the PSGA Senate&#13;
By-Laws (XII) and the PSGA&#13;
Bylaws (SOC's governing&#13;
documents).&#13;
I suggest that the Ranger&#13;
get the facts straight before&#13;
they accuse the Senate of incomptence.&#13;
Sue Brudvig&#13;
1986-87 PSGA&#13;
Senate President SOC made some mistakes in major status bid&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Let's not discuss if SOC&#13;
should get major status or&#13;
not. Let's discuss the charges&#13;
that the PSGA Senate was&#13;
sloppy and irresponsible for&#13;
not making a decision on this&#13;
issue at a recent meeting.&#13;
The PSGA Senate meeting&#13;
in question took place April&#13;
20. The Senate did make mistakes&#13;
at this meeting; however&#13;
the blame for the mistakes&#13;
is not theirs alone.&#13;
At its April 8 meeting, SOC&#13;
approved a a fifth draft of its&#13;
proposed constitution. They&#13;
did not make nor pass a motion&#13;
to appeal for major&#13;
status. They finally passed&#13;
the motion to appeal two days&#13;
after the PSGA Senate meeting&#13;
on April 22. This is one&#13;
reason the PSGA Senate&#13;
should not have been asked to&#13;
act on this issue at the April&#13;
20th meeting.&#13;
At PSGA's April 20 Senate&#13;
meeting, Don Harmeyer, the&#13;
SOC chairperson, asked the&#13;
PSGA Senate to take action&#13;
on business that was done at&#13;
the April 8 SOC meeting, however,&#13;
no minutes of this meeting&#13;
were presented to the&#13;
senators. The Senate should&#13;
not have been asked to take&#13;
action on this issue without&#13;
the minute.&#13;
SOC has a committee called&#13;
the Budget and Review Committee&#13;
(B&amp;RC). I have been&#13;
attending SOC meetings for&#13;
over three years and SOC has&#13;
never approved business of&#13;
B&amp;RC without minutes of the&#13;
meeting when the business&#13;
took place. Why should the&#13;
SOC chairperson expect the&#13;
PSGA Senate to pass SOC&#13;
business without the minutes?&#13;
This is another reason the&#13;
PSGA Senate should not have&#13;
been asked to act on this&#13;
issue at the Senate meeting of&#13;
April 20th.&#13;
SOC started working on this&#13;
five or six months ago; obviously,&#13;
it is important. It took&#13;
them a long time to formulate&#13;
the constitution. Why should&#13;
SOC expect the Senate to act&#13;
in one week? Sure they set up&#13;
a meeting for those interested&#13;
to talk about the issue, but&#13;
this just shows how important&#13;
the issue is and should just&#13;
mark the beginning of long&#13;
debate on the issue.&#13;
Harmeyer stated that the&#13;
Senate was irresponsible.&#13;
What about the half-dozen&#13;
times this year that SOC&#13;
minutes should have been&#13;
presented to the Senate for&#13;
approval and the SOC chairperson&#13;
was not at the meeting&#13;
to present them? Also, it is irresponsible&#13;
on Harmeyer's&#13;
part that no documentation of&#13;
SOC's accomplishments or&#13;
goals have been presented to&#13;
the PSGA Senate to supportthe&#13;
appeal for major status.&#13;
The PSGA Senate did make&#13;
mistakes at this meeting,&#13;
however these facts show that&#13;
they are not the only group&#13;
that makes mistakes. We are&#13;
all students working for the&#13;
good of the students and what&#13;
is needed is more communication.&#13;
I will take fault for&#13;
some of this lack of communication&#13;
and the SOC officers&#13;
need to take some fault also.&#13;
Adrian Serrano&#13;
Nobody asked me. but...&#13;
Why are we making such a fuss over some jokes?&#13;
by Tyson Wilda&#13;
Anorexia, AIDS, homosexuality,&#13;
feminism, chauvinism,&#13;
racism, sexuality, masturbation,&#13;
abortion and rape are all&#13;
wonderful words to use to attract&#13;
attention to an article.&#13;
They also make good topics&#13;
of "tasteless" humor.&#13;
HELLO! I really hope&#13;
someone made it past that&#13;
last paragraph because this is&#13;
the important part. Is everyone&#13;
paying attention now?&#13;
THESE ARE ONLY JOKES!!&#13;
Somehow, someone seems&#13;
to have gotten the idea that&#13;
this "tasteless" humor is a&#13;
personal attack directed&#13;
straight at them and meant to&#13;
publicly humiliate them and&#13;
anyone like them. Somehow,&#13;
the new sensitive mood of the&#13;
Eighties seems to have replaced&#13;
our collective sense of&#13;
humor.&#13;
Lately, there's an anti-sexism&#13;
bandwagon claiming that&#13;
a photo poking fun at Chancellor&#13;
Kaplan is a disgrace to&#13;
all women. These same people&#13;
seem to have completely&#13;
missed the fact that the editor&#13;
of this same publication&#13;
was shown bald on the front&#13;
page and Sports Editor Robb&#13;
Luehr was the target of a&#13;
joke about obesity. The argument&#13;
could be made that this&#13;
would make men feel insignificant&#13;
about their self-images&#13;
much more directly than one&#13;
woman's fictional resemblance&#13;
to a popular male&#13;
singer.&#13;
Anorexia, AIDS, homosexuality,&#13;
feminism, chauvinism, racism, sexuality,&#13;
masturbation, abortion and rape are all&#13;
wonderful words to use to attract&#13;
attention to an article.&#13;
I'm sorry, I forgot that&#13;
white males aren't sensitive&#13;
to humor. I guess that this&#13;
means that a joke is only OK&#13;
if it's directed at a male&#13;
WASP. Only the "majority"&#13;
deserves to be made fun of&#13;
these days.&#13;
The point of a joke is to&#13;
make people laugh and forget&#13;
about their problems. The&#13;
point is not to hurt people.&#13;
The American culture has&#13;
always made jokes about&#13;
sensitive subjects in order to&#13;
not only brighten people's&#13;
moods, but also to point out&#13;
the serious nature of these&#13;
subjects. Three volumes of&#13;
"Tasteless" humor were published&#13;
in this decade. All of&#13;
them made a large profit. No&#13;
cases of suicide or homicide&#13;
are on record as being caused&#13;
,by these books. I doubt that&#13;
-the Ranger will cause this&#13;
such heartache either.&#13;
Look, people, they are just&#13;
jokes. If you find them offensive&#13;
don't repeat them. If you&#13;
censor them, the only jokes in&#13;
the future will be about abstract&#13;
concepts that can't&#13;
whine about their offensive&#13;
nature. When was the last&#13;
time you found an abstract&#13;
concept to be funny?&#13;
Next week is our last publication date.&#13;
All letters must be in by 10 a.m. Monday.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
-Thurs-day,-AprU-29,19-87 -3 ------·'perspectives&#13;
I your views I&#13;
Ranger lax in ''reporting'' details of SOC delay&#13;
To th Editor:&#13;
The article "reporting" the&#13;
del y of th approval of&#13;
major status fQr the Student&#13;
OrganlzaUons Council (SOC)&#13;
and the Ranger's editorial,&#13;
"S nate sloppy ln dealing&#13;
with OC," seriously lack the&#13;
proper per pectlve and do not&#13;
include all the Issues lnvolv&#13;
d .&#13;
In fall 1986, SOC plac d the&#13;
pur ult of major status as one&#13;
of their top priorities of the&#13;
year. It took slx months from&#13;
th tlme of Inception to final&#13;
SOC approval for the matter&#13;
to be presented to the PSGA&#13;
Senate. To assume that a constitution,&#13;
t1Ued a fifth drat&#13;
(not titled final copy) would&#13;
have to pass in one meeting&#13;
of the PSGA Senate after lt&#13;
took slx months to formulate&#13;
is absolutely ridiculous.&#13;
The UW·Park8iae Student&#13;
Organ®tion Handbook,&#13;
Ch.apt r 10, states: "An organJzation&#13;
ls granted major&#13;
group status by the PSGA,&#13;
Inc., Senate after an extenlve&#13;
appllcatlon process. For&#13;
the specific process that a&#13;
group must go through to become&#13;
a major status organization,&#13;
contact the Pro-Tempore&#13;
of the PSGA, Inc. , Senate."&#13;
Both Don Harmeyer, the&#13;
current SOC chair, and BW&#13;
Serpe, the past SOC chair,&#13;
were informed by the ProTempore&#13;
and myself that a&#13;
three-week process ( consistent&#13;
with the three weeks it&#13;
took for Peer Support's appeal)&#13;
was in place and should&#13;
be used for SOC's appeal.&#13;
SOC's leadership not only Ignored&#13;
Ul1s process, they al.so&#13;
failed to noWy the PSGA Vice&#13;
President or Pro-Tempore&#13;
that thls business would be&#13;
presented to the Senate at the&#13;
April 20 meeting. This was&#13;
highly irresponsible.&#13;
When Peer Support appealed&#13;
for major organization&#13;
status in 1981, not only did&#13;
they present their governing&#13;
documents, they included a&#13;
rationale, their budget, 11st&#13;
of accomplishments and their&#13;
future plans. Thls information&#13;
was not presented by SOC to&#13;
the PSGA senate.&#13;
Flnally, and most important,&#13;
SOC failed to propose&#13;
the appropriate changes to&#13;
PSGA's governing documents:&#13;
the PSGA constitution&#13;
(Article IV, sub-article II,&#13;
section 1), the PSGA Senate&#13;
By-Laws (XII) and the PSGA&#13;
Bylaws (SOC's governing&#13;
documents).&#13;
I suggest that the Ranger&#13;
get the facts straight before&#13;
they accuse the Senate of lncomptence.&#13;
Sue Brudvlg&#13;
1988-8'2 PSGA&#13;
Senate President&#13;
SOC made some mistakes • ,n major status bid&#13;
To th Editor:&#13;
Let's not discuss lf SOC&#13;
hould g t major status or&#13;
not. Let's discus the charges&#13;
that the PSGA Senate was&#13;
sloppy and irresponsible for&#13;
not ma.kl.ng a decision on thl&#13;
l ue at a rec nt me ting.&#13;
Th PSGA Sena.te meeUng&#13;
tn question took place April&#13;
20. Th enate did make m .&#13;
takes at this meeting; however&#13;
the blame for the mistake&#13;
l not th lrs alone.&#13;
At its Aprll 8 meeting, SOC&#13;
approv d a a fifth draft of its&#13;
proposed consUtution. They&#13;
did not make nor pass a motion&#13;
to appeal for major&#13;
status. They finally passed&#13;
the motion to appeal two days&#13;
after the PSGA Senate meet•&#13;
ing on April 22. This ls one&#13;
reason the PSGA Senate&#13;
hould not have been asked to&#13;
act on thls issue at the Aprll&#13;
20th meeting.&#13;
At PSGA's Aprll 20 Senate&#13;
meeting, Don Harmeyer, the&#13;
SOC chairperson, asked the&#13;
PSGA Senate to take action&#13;
on business that was done at&#13;
the Aprll 8 SOC meeting, howver,&#13;
no minutes of this meeting&#13;
were presented to the&#13;
senators. The Senate should&#13;
not hav been asked to take&#13;
action on this lsaue without&#13;
the minute.&#13;
NobodY. asked roe~ but ...&#13;
SOC has a committee called&#13;
the Budget and Review Committee&#13;
(B&amp;RC). I have been&#13;
attending SOC meetings for&#13;
over three years and SOC has&#13;
never approved business of&#13;
B&amp;RC without minutes of the&#13;
meeting when the business&#13;
took place. Why should the&#13;
SOC chairperson expect the&#13;
PSGA Senate to pass SOC&#13;
business without the minutes?&#13;
This ls another reason the&#13;
PSGA Senate should not have&#13;
been asked to act on th.ts&#13;
issue at the Senate meeting of&#13;
Aprtl 20th.&#13;
SOC started working on th1s&#13;
five or slx months ago; obviously,&#13;
it ls Important. It took&#13;
them a long tim to formulate&#13;
the constitution. Why shOuld&#13;
SOC expect the Senate to act&#13;
Jn one week? Sure they set up&#13;
a meeting for those interested&#13;
to talk about the issue, but&#13;
this just shows how important&#13;
the issue is and should just&#13;
mark the beginnlng of long&#13;
debate on the issue.&#13;
Harmeyer stated that the&#13;
Senate was irresponsible.&#13;
What about the half-dozen&#13;
times this year that SOC&#13;
minutes should have been&#13;
presented to the Senate for&#13;
approval and the SOC chairperson&#13;
was not at the meeting&#13;
to present them? Also, it ls irresponsible&#13;
on Harmeyer'•&#13;
part that no documentation of&#13;
SOC's accomplishments or&#13;
goals have been presented to&#13;
the PSGA Senate to supportthe&#13;
appeal for major status.&#13;
The PSGA Senate did make&#13;
mistakes at this meeting,&#13;
however these facts show that&#13;
they are not the only group&#13;
that makes mistakes. We are&#13;
all students working for the&#13;
good of the students and what&#13;
ls needed ls more communication.&#13;
I wUl take fault for&#13;
some of this lack of communication&#13;
and the SOC officers&#13;
need to take some fault also.&#13;
Adrian. Serrano&#13;
Why are we making such a fuss over some Jokes?&#13;
I••&#13;
by Ty n Wilda&#13;
Anorexia, AIDS, homosexuality,&#13;
femlnlsm. chauvtnlsm,&#13;
racism, s xuality, masturbaUon,&#13;
abortion and rape are all&#13;
wonderful words to use to attract&#13;
attention to an article.&#13;
They also make good topics&#13;
of '•tasteless'' humor.&#13;
HELLO! 1 r ally hope&#13;
someone made lt pa t that&#13;
last paragraph because this is&#13;
the lmportant pa.rt. Is everyone&#13;
paying attention now?&#13;
THESE ARE ONLY JOKES!!&#13;
m how, som one seems&#13;
to have gotten the idea that&#13;
this "tasteles " humor t a&#13;
personal ttack dir cted&#13;
straight at them and meant to&#13;
publicly humlllate them and&#13;
anyone Uk them. Somehow,&#13;
the new sensitive rnood of the&#13;
Eighties seems to have replaced&#13;
our collective sense of&#13;
humor.&#13;
Lately, there's an anti-sexism&#13;
bandwagon claiming that&#13;
a photo poking fun at Chancellor&#13;
Kaplan is a disgrace to&#13;
all women. These same people&#13;
eem to have completely&#13;
missed the fact that the editor&#13;
of this same publication&#13;
was shown bald on the front&#13;
page and Sports Editor Robb&#13;
Luehr was the target of a&#13;
joke about obesity. The argument&#13;
could be made that this&#13;
would make men feel inslgniflcant&#13;
about their self-images&#13;
much more directly than one&#13;
woman's fictional resemblance&#13;
to a popular male&#13;
singer.&#13;
Anorexia, AIDS, homosexuality,&#13;
feminism, chauvinism, racism, sexuality,&#13;
masturbation, abortion and rape are all&#13;
wonderful words to use to attract&#13;
attention to an article.&#13;
I'm sorry, I forgot that&#13;
white males aren't sensitive&#13;
to humor. I guess that thls&#13;
means that a joke ls only OK&#13;
lf It's directed at a male&#13;
WASP. Only the "majortty"&#13;
deserves to be made fun of&#13;
theae days.&#13;
The point of a joke ls to&#13;
mak people laugh and forget&#13;
about their problems. The&#13;
point la not to hurt people.&#13;
The American culture has&#13;
, always made jokes about&#13;
sensitive subjects in order to&#13;
not only brlghten peopte•s&#13;
moods, but also to potnt out&#13;
the sertous nature of these&#13;
subjects. Three volumes of&#13;
"Tasteless" humor were published&#13;
in this decade. All of&#13;
them made a large profit. No&#13;
cases of suicide or homicide&#13;
are on record as being caused&#13;
, by these books. I doubt that&#13;
, the Ranger will cause this&#13;
such heartache either.&#13;
Look, people, they are just&#13;
jokes. U you find them offensive&#13;
don't repeat them. If you&#13;
censor them, the only jokes in&#13;
the fUture will be about abatract&#13;
concepts that can't&#13;
whine about their offensive&#13;
nature. When was the last&#13;
time you found an abstract&#13;
concept to be funny?&#13;
Next week is our last publication date.&#13;
All letters must be in by 10 a.m. Mond~y. . . . . . ... . . . . . . .. t .. • • • •• I • • ,. ...&#13;
,&#13;
4 Thursday, April 29, 1987&#13;
55 Ranger&#13;
— NEWS BRIEFS —&#13;
Deposit on admission required&#13;
New freshmen must pay a $100 deposit when applying&#13;
at Stevens Point to confirm their intent to attend the college,&#13;
reported the Stevens Point Journal.&#13;
Chancellor Phillip Marshall told members of the Faculty&#13;
Senate that the deposits are being used to help determine&#13;
how many students will indeed attend Stevens Point&#13;
JrV^S' The deP°sits will be applied toward the individual's&#13;
tuition.&#13;
The deposit requirement has been in effect for nearly&#13;
three weeks. Nearly 700 prospective students have paid,&#13;
while nineteen others requested waivers, citing need for&#13;
financial aid.&#13;
Marshall and his administrative staff have decided that&#13;
«ienew freshman class this fall should be limited to about&#13;
1.700 students, down nearly 122 from one year earlier.&#13;
Marshall said that if applications continue to be received&#13;
so quickly, it will be necessary to "close or greatly curtail'&#13;
admissions as has been done several times before.&#13;
Student credit more valuable&#13;
Obtaining a credit card has become easier for students&#13;
over the past few years as credit card companies compete&#13;
for sales, reported the National On-Campus Report.&#13;
Most credit card companies only handle billing and settlement&#13;
guidelines, leaving the banks, credit unions and&#13;
savings and loans to determine recipients of cards.&#13;
Although students are usually considered risks because&#13;
most have unstable employment records and no established&#13;
credit rating, competition between credit cardcompanies&#13;
has driven them to accept students.&#13;
However, some companies are lessening the risk of&#13;
monetary loss by requesting a parent to co-sign application&#13;
forms. Professor Noel Capon of Columbia feels that&#13;
the companies are taking more risks because "students&#13;
graduate and become real people. The companies are attempting&#13;
to make people loyal to them early on in their&#13;
lives and hope that they'll hold on to the cards over&#13;
time."&#13;
Valparaiso has complaint man&#13;
Students at Valparasio are encouraged to complain - to&#13;
Henry Prahl, head of a retention committee aimed at&#13;
really listening to students' concerns, reported the National&#13;
On-Campus Report.&#13;
Prahl makes himself a target for school complaints, inviting&#13;
angry students to tell him about their frustrations.&#13;
He directs specific complaints to the appropriate officials&#13;
and follows up on how the complaints are being handled.&#13;
-compiled by Kelly McKissick&#13;
FIRST&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
KENOSHA'S ONLY INDEPENDENT&#13;
COMMUNITY BANK&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Main Office — Auto Bank — TYME&#13;
NORTH BRANCH — TYME&#13;
SOUTH BRANCH — TYME&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C. PHONE: 658-2331&#13;
Trade bill means "massive job loss"&#13;
by Amy Hitter&#13;
The U.S. House of Representatives&#13;
began debate Tuesday&#13;
on a sweeping trade bill&#13;
and the controversial Gephardt&#13;
Amendment. Parkside&#13;
students Monday were&#13;
treated to a preview of the&#13;
discussion when congressman&#13;
Jim Moody, a member of the&#13;
house Ways and Means Committee,&#13;
spoke in Main Place.&#13;
Moody discussed free trade&#13;
and protectionism, the two&#13;
extremes around which debate&#13;
is expected to centralize.&#13;
"As a professional economist,"&#13;
he said, "I start with a&#13;
strong bias in favor of free&#13;
trade. Trade without barriers,&#13;
trade without tariffs&#13;
does benefit both parties. But&#13;
we do not live in a world of&#13;
free trade. We live in a world&#13;
where there is a vast array of&#13;
complex, and sometimes not&#13;
so complex, hidden, and&#13;
sometimes not so hidden, direct,&#13;
and sometimes not so direct,&#13;
barriers to free trade.&#13;
"Over the course of our history,"&#13;
Moody continued,&#13;
"trade with foreign countries&#13;
has not been a very significant&#13;
element. It hasn't made&#13;
much of a dent in our economy.&#13;
It has never been controversial.&#13;
But it has become&#13;
very controversial (now) because&#13;
of the staggering volume&#13;
of the trade imbalance."&#13;
The U.S. trade deficit has&#13;
ballooned from $37 billion in&#13;
1980 to $170 billion in 1986,&#13;
Moody explained. This year's&#13;
deficit may reach $190 billion.&#13;
"What this means," the&#13;
Congressman said, "is a massive&#13;
loss of U.S. jobs. For&#13;
every $40,000 you add to the&#13;
trade imbalance, you lose one&#13;
American job, on average. So&#13;
a $190 billion trade deficit&#13;
loses a range of 4 million U.S.&#13;
jobs per year."&#13;
U.S. trade imbalances&#13;
occur only in certain countries.&#13;
Moody cited seven&#13;
countries that are making&#13;
huge profits in America. Canada&#13;
exports 153 percent more&#13;
goods to the U.S. than it imports&#13;
from the U.S. The export-&#13;
import ratio for Japan is&#13;
318 percent; for Taiwan, 410&#13;
percent; for West Germany,&#13;
248 percent; for Italy, 235 percent;&#13;
for Hong Kong, 317 per-&#13;
Coming...&#13;
Friday, May 8th&#13;
PARTY ON&#13;
THE PAD&#13;
Live Band -&#13;
Free Admission&#13;
Watch for it!&#13;
James Moody speaks in Main Place. photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
cent; and for Brazil, 187 percent.&#13;
"These are the kind of staggering&#13;
figures that are unsustainable,&#13;
politcally or economically,&#13;
for the United&#13;
States," said Moody.&#13;
He went on to explain that&#13;
the Gephard Amendment&#13;
classifies countries whose export-&#13;
import ratio is higher&#13;
than 150% as "excessive import&#13;
countries." Countries&#13;
that practice "a systematic&#13;
method of excluding American&#13;
imports" through tariff&#13;
or nontariff barriers, are&#13;
classified as "unwarranted&#13;
surplus." The Gephardt&#13;
Amendment applies only to&#13;
countries that are placed on&#13;
both excessive import and unwarranted&#13;
surplus lists.&#13;
"The Gephardt Amendment&#13;
says that if a country falls&#13;
under both those categories,&#13;
then the president of&#13;
United States must -&#13;
may, but must - engage m&#13;
negotiations with the country&#13;
in question to bring the surplus&#13;
down," Moody said.&#13;
Those negotiations have a&#13;
year to run. If at the end of&#13;
that year, nothing has happened&#13;
to remedy either the&#13;
excessive surplus or the unsAurPlus&#13;
situation,&#13;
the president must take certain&#13;
action to reduce the sur-&#13;
P1® Pe of action he&#13;
takes is not specified in the&#13;
amendment, or in the bill&#13;
that would be up to&#13;
president.&#13;
''So if a country is using unfair&#13;
trading practices/® he&#13;
continued, ••but less thin 175 SntorVXP°rtS o ver ^ ports, or if a country has a&#13;
large trade surplus over 175&#13;
more of its exports to&#13;
imports, but it's not pursuing&#13;
unfair trade practices ®&#13;
Gephardt Amendment&#13;
not come into play.&#13;
the&#13;
not&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
the&#13;
does&#13;
4. — Bouutt iift&#13;
they are doing both, then it&#13;
does. And if it does, then the&#13;
president has a finite period&#13;
to achieve results or must&#13;
take final action."&#13;
In the past, Moody said,&#13;
"What we have had before us&#13;
in Congress has been a series&#13;
of sector-specific proposals,&#13;
on shoes, on glassware, on&#13;
leather goods, on textiles, on&#13;
copper, to either enforce&#13;
trade agreements that have&#13;
been not very well kept, or&#13;
even go beyond those trade&#13;
agreements to insure American&#13;
jobs and American exports,&#13;
or to bar imports. The&#13;
problem with those is that&#13;
they are truly protectionistic,&#13;
and they do reduce the total&#13;
amount of goods and services&#13;
that are traded. I think they&#13;
are unwarranted and I am&#13;
opposed to them, except perhaps&#13;
as a bargaining technique.&#13;
"In my judgment, the Gephardt&#13;
Amendment is very&#13;
subjective," he continued. "It&#13;
is, more than anything, a bargaining&#13;
technique. I don't&#13;
think that year's time will&#13;
ever be needed. I think it is&#13;
only because there are real,&#13;
live, breathing, red-blooded&#13;
sanctions that lie at the end&#13;
of the trail of the Gephardt&#13;
Amendment - that those&#13;
sanctions are real - is the&#13;
very reason they will never&#13;
be invoked. The philosophy of&#13;
the Gephardt Amendment is&#13;
that it is results-oriented.&#13;
"I think we are overdue in&#13;
taking international trade seriously&#13;
in America," Moody&#13;
concluded. "We need to think&#13;
in terms of international&#13;
trade. Our future depends on&#13;
changing our basic philosophy&#13;
of foreign trade. We have&#13;
to take it seriously and we&#13;
have to demand equal fair&#13;
trade. All the Gephardt&#13;
Amendment does, and the&#13;
rest of the bill, is to try to&#13;
level the playing field."&#13;
4 Thursday, April 29, 1987&#13;
- NEWS BRIEFS -&#13;
Deposit on admission required&#13;
New freshmen must pay $100 d po lt wh n applying&#13;
at Stev na Point to confirm thelr Intent to attend the coll&#13;
ge, reported th tevena Polnt Journal.&#13;
Chancellor PhWlp Marshall told members of the Faculty&#13;
Senat that the d po lts are being used to help determine&#13;
how many students will lnd ed attend Stevens Polnt&#13;
in th fall. The deposita will be applied toward the Individual's&#13;
tuition.&#13;
The d po it requirement has b n tn effect for nearly&#13;
thre we ka. Nearly 700 pro p ctlv student have paid,&#13;
while nineteen others requested waivers, citing need for&#13;
flnanclal aid.&#13;
hall and his dmtn tratJv staff ha.ve decided that&#13;
th new r shman cl this fall sh uld be Umlt d to about&#13;
1,700 students, own nearly 122 from one year earlier.&#13;
f hall said that if ppl cations continue to be received&#13;
so lckly, It wt1l be ne s ry to "close or greaUy curtail'&#13;
admt slona aa has been done several limes before.&#13;
Student cred t more valu ble&#13;
Obtalnlng credit card ecome easier for students&#13;
over the p t few yea as credit card companies compete&#13;
for sale , r ported th National On- mpu Report.&#13;
Mo t er dlt card companies only handle bllllng and ettlement&#13;
guide s, J a lng th bank , er dit unions and&#13;
ving and loans to determine recipients of cards.&#13;
Although students are usually considered rlaks because&#13;
most have unstabl employment records and no established&#13;
credit rating, competition between credit cardcompanlee&#13;
drlven them to accept tudents.&#13;
Ho ev r, some companies are lessening the rlsk of&#13;
mon tary oss by requesting a parent to co-slgn appllcatlon&#13;
forms. Professor oel Capon or Columbia feels that&#13;
th companies a.r ta.king more rlsks because "students&#13;
graduate and become real people. The companies are attempting&#13;
to m e people loyal to them early on ln their&#13;
Uv and hope that th y'll hold on to the cards ov r&#13;
Ume."&#13;
Valparaiso has complaint man&#13;
tud nta t Valparasio ar ncouraged to compl.ain - to&#13;
H nry Prahl, head of a r t nuon committee aimed at&#13;
ally Ustenlng to atu nta' concerns, reported th National&#13;
On-Campu Report&#13;
Prahl makes himself a target for school complaints, 1nv1tlng&#13;
angry students to t ll him about th tr frustrations.&#13;
He di c specific compl lnts to the appropriate officials&#13;
and follows up on how th compl lnts are being handled.&#13;
••comp led by Kelly McKlsalck&#13;
FIRST&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
KENOSHA'S ONLY INDEPENDENT&#13;
COM UNllY BANK&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Main Office - Auto Bank - TYME&#13;
NORTH BRANCH - TYME&#13;
SOUTH BRANCH - TYME&#13;
BRISTOL .&#13;
PLEASANT PRA RIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
MEMBER F.0.1.C. PHONE: 658-2331&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Trade bill means ''massive job loss''&#13;
by Amy Ritter&#13;
Th U.S. Hou e of RepresentaUves&#13;
began debate Tuesday&#13;
on a sweeping trade bill&#13;
and the controversial Gephardt&#13;
Amendment. Parkside&#13;
tudenta Monday were&#13;
treated to a preview of the&#13;
c:U.acusalon when congreuman&#13;
Jim oody, a member of the&#13;
house Way and Means Committee,&#13;
spoke in Main Place.&#13;
Moody discussed free trade&#13;
and protectionism, the two&#13;
extremes arowid which d •&#13;
bate la expected to centralize.&#13;
'' s a professional economl&#13;
t," he d, "l tart wtth a&#13;
strong blas ln favor of tree&#13;
trade. Trad without barriers,&#13;
trade without tarlffa&#13;
does benefit both partte . But&#13;
we do not live 1n a world of&#13;
fre trade. We live in a world&#13;
where there Ja a vast array of&#13;
complex, an sometime not&#13;
so complex, hidden, and&#13;
sometimes not so hidden, direct,&#13;
and aometlmes not so direct,&#13;
barriers to free trade.&#13;
• 'Over the course of o r history,"&#13;
Moody continued,&#13;
"trad with foreign COWltries&#13;
has not been a very signlf1-&#13;
cant element. It hasn't made&#13;
much of a dent tn our economy.&#13;
It has never been controveraial.&#13;
But it has become&#13;
very controversial (now) be·&#13;
cause of the staggering volume&#13;
of the trade imbalance.,.&#13;
The U.S. trade deficit haa&#13;
ballooned from $87 bllllon ln&#13;
1980 to $170 blllion 1n 1986,&#13;
Moody explained. Thia year's&#13;
deficit may reach $100 bll11on.&#13;
.,What th1s means," the&#13;
O)ngresaman said, "is a maaatve&#13;
loss of U.S. jobs. For&#13;
every $40,000 you dd to the&#13;
trade imbalance, you lose one&#13;
American job, on average. So&#13;
a $100 billion trade deficit&#13;
loses a range ot 4. m111lon U.S.&#13;
jobs per year."&#13;
U.S. trade imbalances&#13;
occur only ln certa.ln countries.&#13;
Moody cited !!even&#13;
countries that are making&#13;
huge profits 1n Amerlca. Canada&#13;
exports 1~ percent more&#13;
goods to the U.S. than It im•&#13;
ports from the U.S. The export-&#13;
import ratio for Japan 1&#13;
S18 percent: for Taiwan, UO&#13;
percent; for West Germany,&#13;
2"8 percent: for Italy, 286 percent;&#13;
for Hong Kong, 817 per-&#13;
Coming •••&#13;
Friday, May 8th&#13;
PARTY ON&#13;
THE PAD&#13;
Live Band•&#13;
Free Admission&#13;
Watch for it!&#13;
cent; and for Brazil, 187 percent.&#13;
"These are the 1nd of taggertng&#13;
ttgure that are unsustainable,&#13;
polltcally or eco.&#13;
nomlcally, for the United&#13;
States," saJd Moody.&#13;
He wen on to explain that&#13;
the Gephard Amendment&#13;
elaaslfles countries whose export-&#13;
import raUo is higher&#13;
than IGO% as · 'excessive import&#13;
countries." Countries&#13;
that pracUce "a sy tematic&#13;
method of excluding Amertcan&#13;
imports" through tariff&#13;
or nontarlff barriers, are&#13;
class1fled aa "unwarranted&#13;
surplus." The Gephardt&#13;
Amendment applies only to&#13;
countries that are placed on&#13;
both exce slve lmport and unwarranted&#13;
surplus lists.&#13;
"The Gephardt Amendment&#13;
says that lf country falls&#13;
under both those categorles,&#13;
then the president of th&#13;
United States must - not&#13;
may, but mu t . engage tn&#13;
negotiations with the country&#13;
1n question to bring the urplus&#13;
down," Moody said.&#13;
"Those negotiations have a&#13;
year to run. If at the end of&#13;
that year, nothing has happened&#13;
to remedy either the&#13;
excessive surplus or the unwarranted&#13;
surplu situation,&#13;
the president mu t take certain&#13;
acUon to reduce the surplus.&#13;
The type of acUon he&#13;
takes ls not speclf1 d ln the&#13;
amendment, or tn the blll .&#13;
that would be up to the&#13;
presld nt.&#13;
"So lf a country l u lng unfair&#13;
trading practices." he&#13;
continued, "but less than 17~&#13;
percen of exports over lmports,&#13;
or 1f a country has a&#13;
large trade surplus over 17?5&#13;
percent more of 1 exports to&#13;
imports, but it's not pursuing&#13;
unfair trade practice , th&#13;
Gephardt Amendment does&#13;
not co e Into play. But 11&#13;
they re doln both, th lt&#13;
photo by oaw 11(:ffoJ aln Place.&#13;
doe . And if t , then the&#13;
president finite period&#13;
to achieve results or must&#13;
tak Hnat action."&#13;
In th pa.st, oody said,&#13;
"What we hav bad before us&#13;
ln Congress haa been series&#13;
of sector-apeclftc proposal.I,&#13;
on shoes, on glassware, on&#13;
leather goods, on textiles, on&#13;
copper, to either enforce&#13;
trade agreements that have&#13;
been not very well k pt, or&#13;
e en go b yond those trade&#13;
gr emen to Insure Amerl•&#13;
can jobs and Americ n exports.&#13;
or to bar imports. The&#13;
problem with those la that&#13;
they are truly protectlonlBUc,&#13;
and they do r duce the total&#13;
amount of goodS and services&#13;
that a.re traded. I think they&#13;
are Wlwarranted and I am&#13;
oppo d to them, exc pt per•&#13;
hap as a bargaining tech•&#13;
nlque.&#13;
"In my judgment, the Gephardt&#13;
Amendment ts very&#13;
subjective," he conttnu d. ''It&#13;
la. more than anything. a bar·&#13;
galnlng technique. I don't&#13;
think that year's tlme wU1&#13;
ever be n eded. I think lt ls&#13;
only because there are real,&#13;
ll e, br athing, red.blooded&#13;
sanctions that lie at the end&#13;
of the trail of the Gephardt&#13;
Amendment - that those&#13;
sancUon are real • ls the&#13;
very reason they wlll never&#13;
be invoked. The philosophy of&#13;
the Gephardt Amendment is&#13;
that tt results-oriented.&#13;
''I think w are overdue In&#13;
taking 1nt ma onal trade seriously&#13;
1n Amerlca,'' oodY&#13;
conclud d. "We need to thlnknal&#13;
1n term of Int rnatio&#13;
trade. r future d pends on&#13;
changing our basic phlloSO•&#13;
phy of foreign trad . We have&#13;
to tak it ertou ly and we&#13;
hav to d mand equal fall'&#13;
tr d . All the Gephardt&#13;
Am ndm nt o , and the&#13;
t of th blll, l to try to&#13;
1 ln&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday, April 29,1987 5&#13;
lie president&#13;
Tolefree reflects on year&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It has been an honor and&#13;
pleasure to serve as United&#13;
Council President.&#13;
During the organization's&#13;
27-year existence, there have&#13;
been several dramatic&#13;
changes in the way students&#13;
interact and relay important&#13;
issues to policy makers.&#13;
There were periods where&#13;
students set the agenda. In&#13;
the 60's, the student involvement&#13;
in the political process&#13;
was at an all-time high. During&#13;
the past several years, we&#13;
have also dealt with a decline&#13;
in student participation. The&#13;
presence of apathy on our&#13;
campuses has caused frustrations&#13;
for student activists and&#13;
policy makers alike.&#13;
During my tenure as president,&#13;
I have been committed&#13;
to setting's new direction for&#13;
United Council (UC). Over&#13;
the years, UC has reacted to&#13;
changes only after the final&#13;
decisions have been made,&#13;
rather than proposing viable&#13;
solutions to the many complicated&#13;
issues facing students. I&#13;
have felt it is important for&#13;
our organization to become&#13;
pro-active, thereby increasing&#13;
our involvement in the process.&#13;
Today's students are different&#13;
from those who crowded&#13;
campuses twenty years ago.&#13;
Today's students are aggressive,&#13;
competitive, independent,&#13;
moderate, older and a little&#13;
selfish. These are changes&#13;
that UC must deal with if we&#13;
hope to continue to effectively&#13;
represent students in Wisconsin.&#13;
I am very pleased with our&#13;
achievements this year. However,&#13;
without the combined&#13;
efforts of the staff, the General&#13;
Assembly and, of course,&#13;
the students, none of these&#13;
goals could have realistically&#13;
been obtained. We must&#13;
always remember that UC&#13;
isn't the president, the staff&#13;
or an individual campus or&#13;
unit. UC is a union of students&#13;
working together to achieve&#13;
common goals.&#13;
This year, that goal has focused&#13;
on maintaining an affordable,&#13;
accessible University&#13;
System for all Wisconsin&#13;
citizens. We have expanded&#13;
and clarified students' rights&#13;
by developing new language&#13;
(under Section 36.00(5) of the&#13;
State Statutes) to help student,&#13;
administrators and the&#13;
Regents better understand&#13;
the role the students play in&#13;
The Old&#13;
Book Corner&#13;
the governing process of our&#13;
instutitions. We have heightened&#13;
the intent of the Statute&#13;
by becoming more responsible&#13;
for upholding the provision&#13;
prescribed under&#13;
36.09(5). This can be illustated&#13;
by the level of dialogue exchanged&#13;
between UC, the&#13;
Board of Regents and the&#13;
System Administration concerning&#13;
the future of the System,&#13;
segregated fee policies,&#13;
students rights, financial aid,&#13;
tuition and a number of other&#13;
issues that directly affect student&#13;
life, services and interest.&#13;
We have also become more&#13;
visible by inundating the&#13;
media with information and&#13;
maintaining continuous contact&#13;
with relevant agencies&#13;
that interface with the system.&#13;
We have extended our&#13;
outreach program to organizations&#13;
like the AFL-CIO, the&#13;
Wisconsin Action Coalition&#13;
and the Association of University&#13;
of Wisconsin Faculties.&#13;
Finally, we have&#13;
strengthened our efforts to inform&#13;
our student members of&#13;
our activities and of the important&#13;
role they play in influencing&#13;
policy decisions.&#13;
I have dedicated over five&#13;
years of my life to the student&#13;
movement and I am proud to&#13;
say that student activism is&#13;
alive and well in Wisconsin.&#13;
Bryce Tolefree&#13;
Class assignment leads to TV&#13;
by Amy H. Hitter&#13;
with&#13;
Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
What began as a simple&#13;
class assignment to find and&#13;
investigate a social problem&#13;
has become a "once-in-a-decade&#13;
kind of experience," for&#13;
senior Jennie Tunkieicz, according&#13;
to the professor who&#13;
made that assignment.&#13;
Tunkieicz, a 22-year-old&#13;
communications major, received&#13;
the assignment in&#13;
Carol-Lee Saffioti's Technical&#13;
Writing course last fall. Interested&#13;
in a career in journalism,&#13;
Tunkieicz decided to research&#13;
the nearby Zion nuclear&#13;
power plant and how&#13;
the media informs the public&#13;
about the facility.&#13;
"I chose to look into the&#13;
Zion plant and discover how&#13;
the public learns about it,"&#13;
she explained of the project.&#13;
"How they get their information,&#13;
what role the media&#13;
plays in educating, what kind&#13;
of relationship the media&#13;
have with the plant."&#13;
What she discovered not&#13;
only helped her get an "A" in&#13;
the class, it also helped her&#13;
get on television.&#13;
Soon after Tunkieicz submitted&#13;
her project, Saffioti -&#13;
who produces and hosts&#13;
"Space: The Final Frontier"&#13;
for Kenosha's Jones Intercable&#13;
- was asked if she'd like&#13;
to produce an installment of&#13;
"Kenosha Today," another&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
Jones local access series,&#13;
which spotlighted the Zion&#13;
plant.&#13;
"She immediately called&#13;
me," Tunkieicz recalls, "and&#13;
said that since I'd done some&#13;
research already on the&#13;
plant, she felt it would really&#13;
be educational for me - and&#13;
helpful to her - for me to get&#13;
involved in the program."&#13;
Get involved she did, serving&#13;
as an assistant to the producer&#13;
(Saffioti) and also appearing&#13;
as an interviewer on the&#13;
program, which airs Friday,&#13;
May 1 at 6 p.m. and Saturday,&#13;
May 2 at 11 a.m. on&#13;
Kenosha Cable Channel 21.&#13;
The show, which was&#13;
filmed in two half-hour segments,&#13;
looks at radiation&#13;
leaks and what concerns&#13;
would arise if Kenosha had to&#13;
be evacuated. "The first half&#13;
of our discussion centers&#13;
around how the plant operates&#13;
and a little bit about how&#13;
people can get information&#13;
about it," Tunkieicz explained.&#13;
"Hie next half-hour&#13;
focuses on a federal test&#13;
that's coming up this summer,&#13;
how it's going to work,&#13;
how it's going to afffect the&#13;
plant and whether or not the&#13;
public will be involved."&#13;
Of Tunkieicz's involvement,&#13;
Saffioti says, "It's a good experience&#13;
for her, whether it's&#13;
for credit or whether it's for&#13;
the experience because she&#13;
can say that she was able to&#13;
do something that went from&#13;
classroom research to abroader&#13;
audience.&#13;
While she acknowledges the&#13;
professional benefits of her&#13;
stint at TV production assist-,&#13;
ant and on-camera talent,&#13;
Tunkieicz was more intrigued&#13;
by the experience of just&#13;
being on television for the&#13;
first time.&#13;
"What was interesting for&#13;
me as a writer was that I feel&#13;
I'm very writing-oriented, so&#13;
I wasn't prepared for being&#13;
on camera," she commented.&#13;
"All the while I was thinking,&#13;
'How do I look? Is my dress&#13;
straight?' And because of&#13;
that, it was really hard to&#13;
think of more questions or to&#13;
concentrate on how they answered&#13;
them.&#13;
"It was an exciting educational&#13;
experience," she went&#13;
on, in conclusion. "I hope&#13;
more students can try to get&#13;
this kind of experience.&#13;
312 - 6th Street, Racine&#13;
RANGER Thul'9day, Aprif29, 1987 5&#13;
~president&#13;
Tolefree reflects on year Class assignment leads to TV.&#13;
by AmJ H. Bitter ates and a little blt about how&#13;
people can get information&#13;
about tt." Tunklelcz explained.&#13;
"''1'1\e next half-hour&#13;
focuses on a federal test&#13;
that'• comlng up th1a aumm&#13;
r, how it's golng to work,&#13;
how it's going to aff1 ct th&#13;
plant and whether or not th&#13;
public w11l be involved."&#13;
To th Editor:&#13;
It h b n an honor and&#13;
pleasure to serve as Unit d&#13;
ncu re ldenL&#13;
During the organlzat1on's&#13;
27-ye r exJ tenc , there have&#13;
b en v ral dramatic&#13;
chan ln the way tudenta&#13;
inter ct and re y important&#13;
lssu s to policy makera.&#13;
Ther were periods where&#13;
tud nta set the agenda. In&#13;
th 60's, th tudent lnvolv&#13;
m nt 1n th poUUcal proc&#13;
at an all-time high. During&#13;
th paal V ral yea.rs, we&#13;
hav al d alt with a decline&#13;
ln tu nt pa.rttclpaUon. Th&#13;
pres nc of apathy on our&#13;
campu ha.a caused rn.tstrat.&#13;
lon. for tudent actlviata and&#13;
policy makers allke.&#13;
During my tenur as pre 1-&#13;
dent, I h v been committed&#13;
to ttln · n w dire Uon for&#13;
nite Council (UC). Over&#13;
th y • bu react d to&#13;
chang s only after th final&#13;
d c ton hav be n made,&#13;
r th r than propo lng vlable&#13;
solution to th many compllcated&#13;
ls u a faclng students. I&#13;
h ve felt lt ls important for&#13;
our organization to become&#13;
pro-acllv , thereby tncrea.sing&#13;
our Involvement ln th pro-&#13;
Tod y·s students are d1ffernt&#13;
from tho who crowd d&#13;
c mpuses twenty ye rs ago.&#13;
Today' students are aggreslve.&#13;
competitlv , independnt.&#13;
mod rate, old r and a llt•&#13;
tle elfish. These are chang&#13;
that UC mu t deal With lf we&#13;
hope to continue to effectively&#13;
represent tud nts ln Wlaconln.&#13;
I am v ry pleaaed with our&#13;
achle em nts th.la year. Howv&#13;
r, without th combined&#13;
efforts of th ata.tt, the General&#13;
Assembly and, of coune,&#13;
th stud nta, non of th&#13;
goal could have reallaUcally&#13;
b en obtained. We must&#13;
alw y r member that UC&#13;
l n't th president. the staff&#13;
or an individual campus or&#13;
unlt. C 1 a union of students&#13;
working together to achieve&#13;
common goals.&#13;
Thi year, that goal has focu&#13;
d on malntalnlng an af.&#13;
fordabl , accessible University&#13;
System for all Wlsconsln&#13;
clUzen . we have xpanded&#13;
and clartfled students' rights&#13;
by v loping n w language&#13;
(un r cUon 36.09(15) of the&#13;
Stat t tut ~&gt; to help tu•&#13;
d nt, dmlnlstr tors and the&#13;
g n better understand&#13;
th rol the students play in&#13;
The Old&#13;
Book Corner&#13;
)&#13;
312 - 6th Street, Racine&#13;
the governing process or our&#13;
tnstutlttons. We have heightened&#13;
the Intent ol the Statute&#13;
by becoming more responsible&#13;
for upholding the provlalon&#13;
prescribed under&#13;
S6.09(G). This can be Ulustated&#13;
by th level of dialogue exChanged&#13;
between UC, the&#13;
Board of Regents and the&#13;
System Admln18tratlon concerning&#13;
the future of the Byatem.&#13;
segregated tee policies.&#13;
students rights, flnanclal ald,&#13;
tuition and a number of other&#13;
tau a that dlrecUy af.fect student&#13;
life, services and interest.&#13;
We have also become more&#13;
vlaible by Inundating the&#13;
medla w1th information and&#13;
malnta.lnlng continuous contact&#13;
with rel va.nt agencies&#13;
that interface with the sys.&#13;
tem. W have extended our&#13;
outreach program to organlzaUons&#13;
like th AFL-CIO, the&#13;
Wisconsin Action Coalltion&#13;
and the Association of University&#13;
of Wlsconsln Faculties.&#13;
Flnally, w have&#13;
strengthened our efforts to inform&#13;
our l!lludent members of&#13;
our actlvlties and of the important&#13;
role they play in innuenclng&#13;
pollcy d ctslons.&#13;
I have dedicated over five&#13;
y a.rs of my life to the student&#13;
movement and I am proud to&#13;
say that student actlvlsm is&#13;
alive and well in Wf consin.&#13;
Hryce Tolefree&#13;
with&#13;
Gary L. Scbneeberpr&#13;
What began as a slmple&#13;
class assignment to flnd and&#13;
investigate a social problem&#13;
has become a "once-in-a-decade&#13;
kind of experience," for&#13;
aenlor Jennie Tunklelcz, accol"&#13;
d!ng to the professor who&#13;
made that assignment.&#13;
Tunklelez, a 22-year-old&#13;
communications major, re- '----,.a.. __ ..._ __ _&#13;
celved the aastgrunent tn&#13;
Carol-Lee Saffloti's Technical&#13;
Writing course last fall. Inter•&#13;
ested in a career 1n ,Oumal·&#13;
lsm, Tunklelcz decided to re•&#13;
search the nearby Zlon nuclear&#13;
power plant and how&#13;
the media Informs the public&#13;
about the faclllty.&#13;
"I chose to look into the&#13;
Zion plant and discover how&#13;
the publlc learns about tt,"&#13;
she explained of the project.&#13;
"How they get their lnfonnaUon,&#13;
what role the medla&#13;
plays in educating, what kind&#13;
or relationship the media&#13;
have with the plant."&#13;
What she discovered not&#13;
only helped her get an "A" 1n&#13;
the class, it also helped her&#13;
get on televtalon.&#13;
Soon arter Tunkielez ubmitted&#13;
her project, Safflotl •&#13;
who produces and hosts&#13;
"Space: The Final FronUer"&#13;
for Kenosha's Jones Intercable&#13;
• was asked 1f she'd like&#13;
to produce an installment of&#13;
..Kenosha Today," another&#13;
Jennie Tunklelcz&#13;
Jones local access rtea.&#13;
which spoWgbted the Zion&#13;
plant.&#13;
"She Immediately called&#13;
me,'' Tunkielcz recalls, '•and&#13;
sald that since I'd done some&#13;
reaea.rch already on th&#13;
plant. she felt lt would really&#13;
be educattonal tor me • and&#13;
helpful to her - for me to get&#13;
Involved ln the program."&#13;
Get Involved she did. serving&#13;
aa an assistant to the producer&#13;
(sattlotl) and also appearing&#13;
as an Interviewer on th&#13;
program, which airs Friday,&#13;
May 1 at 6 p.m. and Saturday,&#13;
May 2 at 11 a.m. on&#13;
Kenosha Cable Channel 21.&#13;
The how. which was&#13;
filmed in two half-hour segments,&#13;
look.a at radiation&#13;
leaka and what concems&#13;
would arise if Kenosha had to&#13;
be evacuated. "The first half&#13;
of our dlecu lon centers&#13;
around how the plant oper-&#13;
Of Tunklelct's involvement,&#13;
Saffiot1 says, "It's a good experience&#13;
for her, whether it's&#13;
for credit or whether Lt'a for&#13;
the expen C8 becPJlN lbe&#13;
can ., that Ille WU able to&#13;
do aomethlng that went trom&#13;
clasaroom research to a·&#13;
broader audience.&#13;
While she acknoWledgea the&#13;
profeatonal benefits of her&#13;
stint at TV producUon asslst.&#13;
ant and on-camera talent,&#13;
Tunldelcs waa more intrigued&#13;
by the experience of just·&#13;
being on televlston for the&#13;
first tune.&#13;
"What was interesting for&#13;
me as a writer was that I feel&#13;
I'm very wrltlng-orlented, 80&#13;
I waan't prepared for being&#13;
on camera.'' she commented.&#13;
"All the while I was thinking,&#13;
'How do 1 look? Is my dress&#13;
straight?' And because of&#13;
that, tt was really ha.rd to&#13;
th.Ink of more questlona or to&#13;
concentrate on how they answered&#13;
them.&#13;
"It was an exciting educational&#13;
experience," she went&#13;
on, 1n conclusion. • 'I hope&#13;
more atudenta can try to get&#13;
tb1a kind of experience.&#13;
COMING ••• MONDAY, MAY 4th, NOON to 2:00&#13;
C&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
Featuring: UW-Parkside Jazz Band&#13;
ALSO APPEARING AT 4 P.M.: C&#13;
FREE ADMISSION -&#13;
6 Thursday, April 29, 1987&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Nobody asked me. hut&#13;
Record reviewing not a simple task&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
In the recent wake of mail&#13;
our record review section has&#13;
managed to dredge up, I figured&#13;
it was finally time to explain&#13;
our method of operation.&#13;
First of all, we do not buy&#13;
these records, they are sent&#13;
to us by the record companies.&#13;
These free promo LPs&#13;
are sent by most of the major&#13;
labels (we have made attempts&#13;
to obtain material&#13;
from underground labels to&#13;
little avail), and we rarely&#13;
have any choice as to what&#13;
we're sent. It all depends&#13;
what the respective companies&#13;
deem appropriate for a&#13;
college audience.&#13;
As entertaiment editor, I&#13;
decide, with my assistant&#13;
Tyson Wilda, who among our&#13;
staff reviews what album. It&#13;
generally comes down to&#13;
which writers are most familiar&#13;
with the body of a particular&#13;
artist's work and have no&#13;
bias. In the case of the Prince&#13;
album, that was given to&#13;
Gary Schneeberger to do because,&#13;
ironically, he is not&#13;
biased against this performer&#13;
(his most recent review notwithstanding).&#13;
Gary is familiar&#13;
with Prince's past work&#13;
and likes some of it (he gave&#13;
"Parade," the previous effort,&#13;
a good review in an&#13;
issue last year).&#13;
Otherwise, we distribute according&#13;
to type. I do blues,,&#13;
heavy metal and oldies reissues.&#13;
Tyson does new wave&#13;
and punk. Bernie Doll, an entertainment&#13;
staff writer, also&#13;
does much of the new wave&#13;
product (there is probably&#13;
more of that than anything&#13;
else). Pop, country, and other&#13;
musical styles not mentioned&#13;
are given to staff members&#13;
who like that style and can&#13;
give an unbiased review of&#13;
the LP's contents.&#13;
I will admit our having little&#13;
in the way of urban contemporary&#13;
music, or music&#13;
that is performed predominantly&#13;
by Black artists. My&#13;
reason is that we are basically&#13;
unqualifed. The few records&#13;
we do get in by such&#13;
artists are given to writers&#13;
who have at least a modicum&#13;
of understanding of this type&#13;
of music.&#13;
I, personally, do not dislike&#13;
this musical style, per se, but&#13;
don't feel I know it well&#13;
enough to analyze it even&#13;
journalistically. For instance&#13;
a recent letter to the editor&#13;
labeled Prince as one of the&#13;
greatest Black musical entertainers.&#13;
I can't in any way&#13;
see how Prince would rank&#13;
along side Marvin Gaye&#13;
Count Basie, Billie Holliday&#13;
Bessie Smith, Ray Charles&#13;
Jackie Wilson, Duke Elling&#13;
ton, Art Tatum, Sam Cooke&#13;
or any of the other black en&#13;
tertainers whose music was&#13;
powerful enough to influence&#13;
virtually any musical style. If&#13;
Prince is indeed the contemporary&#13;
example of these&#13;
great black musical entertainers,&#13;
then I must say I am&#13;
not qualified to review this&#13;
style of music.&#13;
What we try to present in&#13;
the entertainment section is&#13;
an example of what film and&#13;
music has to offer the college&#13;
student. We are coming off as&#13;
other students describing&#13;
what we heard or saw. As far&#13;
as our credentials are concerned,&#13;
we have at least a&#13;
general understanding of the&#13;
material we cover, some of&#13;
us a bit more versed on certain&#13;
subjects than others.&#13;
We welcome writers with a&#13;
good knowledge of any musical&#13;
styles especially in the&#13;
categories we are weak on,&#13;
and thus review little of. The&#13;
one fringe benefit of reviewing&#13;
record for The Ranger is&#13;
that the reviewer is allowed&#13;
to keep the record he or she&#13;
is asked to review.&#13;
I hope this editorial helps&#13;
you to understand how we do&#13;
things as far as record reviews&#13;
are concerned. Your&#13;
comments and suggestions&#13;
are always welcome. If you&#13;
have any interest in contributing,&#13;
please arrange to see&#13;
either myself or Tyson in the&#13;
Ranger office. This year is&#13;
over, but there is always next&#13;
year. Thanks for reading.&#13;
Art gallery announces upcoming show&#13;
TT hheo RRoanciirni Ae AA »r*tf AA ssociation i i . it i . . .&#13;
(RAA) of the Charles A. Wustum&#13;
Museum of Fine Arts,&#13;
2519 Northwestern Avenue,&#13;
Racine, announces that it will&#13;
hold its annual jurying of a rtists'&#13;
work for its Art Sales&#13;
and Rental Gallery on Saturday,&#13;
May 2, 1987.&#13;
Each year the Gallery re-&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS PARKSIDE&#13;
GRADUATES! APPLY FOR THE NEW&#13;
COLLEGE GRADUATE PLAN TODAY!&#13;
YOUR DOWN PAYMENT CAN BE&#13;
LOW AS 5°/o!&#13;
• 1.8 liter fuel-injected engine&#13;
• Power front disc brakes&#13;
• Steel belted radial tires&#13;
• Halogen headlamps&#13;
• Tinted glss&#13;
• Electric rear window defogger&#13;
• Intermittent wipers&#13;
• Remote controlled mirror&#13;
All standard equipment&#13;
IT'S HERE&#13;
The 1987 Volkswagen FOX!&#13;
AH AUTOMOBILE FOR ALL MAJORS...&#13;
s ?s mai°rs Wl" a 9r®ftt deal at an investment of&#13;
$6310.*&#13;
• Engineering majors will appreciate its fine German engineering&#13;
utilizing a 1.8 liter fuel-injected engine and front wheel drive&#13;
• Art majors will also appreciate its Geirgio Givgiaro design, the&#13;
same designer who has inspired Ferrari s&#13;
* Fox 2 door only.&#13;
©Racine&#13;
8100 Washington Ave. 886-2886&#13;
Hwy. 20 West of Hwy. 31 on the Frontage Road&#13;
views actual pieces submitted&#13;
by Midwestern artists who&#13;
wish to have their work represented&#13;
for sale and for rent&#13;
at the Wustum. Artists may&#13;
deliver up to five framed&#13;
pieces to the Wustum on&#13;
Thursday, April 30 from 1:00-&#13;
9:00 pm, Friday, May 1 from&#13;
1:00-5:00 pm and on Saturday,&#13;
May 2 from 9:00-11:00&#13;
am. '&#13;
Pettit's PSGA update&#13;
I have nothing but good news for this week's column. I&#13;
hope to continue this for the rest of t he year.&#13;
Frist of all, I will run the questionnaire for another&#13;
week, as I don't feel 27 returns is a good number to draw&#13;
conclusions upon. I intend to print the results in next&#13;
week's column.&#13;
United Council met last weekend. I would like to thank&#13;
the delegation who volunteered to go up with me. I will&#13;
print their names as soon as the Senate approves them as&#13;
our delegation for the next year. We also agreed to allow&#13;
Madison and Milwaukee a stronger voice when deciding&#13;
issues of budget and platform. This will hopefully bring&#13;
Madison back into UC.&#13;
The Senate (as I'm sure you've read) approved SOC for&#13;
major status. I would like to thank Adrian Serrano for his&#13;
help in guiding the Senate as to what was needed to be&#13;
done to pass this.&#13;
The Information Resource Committee (my computer&#13;
project) will have met by the time this is printed. I will&#13;
print the results of the meeting in the next column. I am&#13;
looking forward to a successful meeting.&#13;
PSGA Questionnaire&#13;
Drop off in PSGA Office, WLLC&#13;
Would you use a skating pond if one were available on&#13;
campus?&#13;
YES-NO-UNDECIDED&#13;
Comments&#13;
on°campus?liSten l° 3 radi° Station if we were to run one&#13;
YES-NO-UNDECIDED&#13;
Comments&#13;
Would you participate—support&#13;
were one on campus?&#13;
YES-NO-UNDECIDED&#13;
Comments ___&#13;
a football club if there&#13;
University of&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Limited Space is&#13;
Available for fall, 1987&#13;
in the Residence Hall.&#13;
F°r aPcLii^tS.n«tnCft°ntraCt informa»ion&#13;
Call 553-8900 or 553-2320 "source."&#13;
•••&#13;
6 Thursday, April 29, 1987 RANGER&#13;
Nobody asked me, but ...&#13;
Record reviewing not a simple task Pettit's PSGA update&#13;
I have nothing but good news for this week' column. I&#13;
hope to continue this for the rest of the year.&#13;
by Jim Nelbaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
In the recent wake of mall&#13;
our record revlew secUon has&#13;
managed to dredge up, I fig.&#13;
ured it waa flnally time to explain&#13;
our method of operation.&#13;
FlrlJt of all, we do not buy&#13;
the r cords, they a.re sent&#13;
to us by the record companies.&#13;
These free promo LPs&#13;
are sent by most of the major&#13;
l belS (we have made attempts&#13;
to obtain mater1al&#13;
from underground labels to&#13;
little avail), and we rarely&#13;
have any choice as to what&#13;
we're s nt. It all depend&#13;
what the respective compa.&#13;
rues deem appropriate for a&#13;
college audience.&#13;
Aa entertatment editor, I&#13;
decide, with my assistant&#13;
Ty n Wilda, who among our&#13;
staff reviews what album. It&#13;
generally comes down to&#13;
which writ rs are mo t famUlar&#13;
with the body of a particular&#13;
a.rtlat's work and have no&#13;
blas. In the case of the Prine&#13;
album, that was given to&#13;
Gary chneeberger to do be·&#13;
cause, ironically, he Is not&#13;
biased against this performer&#13;
(his mo t recent revlew not.&#13;
withstanding). Gary ls familiar&#13;
with Prince' p t wor&#13;
and like some or It (he gav&#13;
"Parade,•' the prevlous ef.&#13;
fort, a good revlew In an&#13;
1 el t year).&#13;
Otherwise, we distribute according&#13;
to type. I do blues,,&#13;
heavy metal and oldies re-&#13;
1ssues. Tyson does new wave&#13;
and punk. Bernie Doll, an entertainment&#13;
staff writer, also&#13;
does much of the new wave&#13;
product (there Is probably&#13;
more of that than anything&#13;
else). Pop, country, and other&#13;
musical styles not menUoned&#13;
are given to staff members&#13;
who like th.at style and can&#13;
give an unbiased review of&#13;
the LP's contents.&#13;
I will admit our having little&#13;
In the way of urban contemporary&#13;
music, or music&#13;
that is performed predoml•&#13;
nanUy by Black artists. My&#13;
reason is that we are basically&#13;
unquallfed. The few records&#13;
we do get in by such&#13;
a.rtlats are given to writers&#13;
who have at least a modicum&#13;
of understanding of thls type&#13;
of music.&#13;
I, personally, do not dlsllke&#13;
this' musical style, per se, but&#13;
don't feel I know lt well&#13;
enough to analyze it even&#13;
journallstlcaJly. For instance&#13;
a recent letter to the editor&#13;
labeled Prince as one of the&#13;
greatest Black musical entertainers.&#13;
I can't 1n any way&#13;
see how Prince would I'8Jl.k&#13;
along side Marvin Gaye,&#13;
Count Basie, B1ll1e Holllday,&#13;
Bessie Smith, Ray Charle ,&#13;
Jackie Wilson, Duke Ellington,&#13;
Art Tatum, Sam Cooke,&#13;
or any of the other black en•&#13;
tertainers whose music was&#13;
powerful enough to Influence&#13;
Virtually any musical style. If&#13;
Prince ls indeed the contemporary&#13;
example of these&#13;
great black musical entertainers,&#13;
then I must say I am&#13;
not qualified to review this&#13;
style of music.&#13;
What we try to present In&#13;
the entertainment section ls&#13;
an example of what fUm and&#13;
music has to offer the college&#13;
student. We are coming oft as&#13;
other students describing&#13;
what we heard or saw. As far&#13;
as our credentials are concerned,&#13;
we have at least a&#13;
general understanding of the&#13;
material we cover, some of&#13;
us a bit more versed on certain&#13;
subjects than others.&#13;
We welcome writers with a&#13;
good knowledge of any musical&#13;
styles especially in the&#13;
categories we a.re weak on,&#13;
and thus review little of. The&#13;
one fringe benefit of reviewing&#13;
record for The Ranger ls&#13;
that the reviewer is allowed&#13;
to keep the record he or she&#13;
ls asked to review.&#13;
I hope th1s editorlal helps&#13;
you to understand how we do&#13;
things as far as record reViews&#13;
are concerned. Your&#13;
comments and suggestions&#13;
are always welcome. If you&#13;
have any interest In contributing,&#13;
please arrange to see&#13;
either myself or Tyson In the&#13;
Ranger office. This year ls&#13;
over. but there 1 always next&#13;
year. Thanks for reading.&#13;
Frist of all, I will run the quesUoMaire for another&#13;
week, as I don't feel 27 returns is a good number to draw&#13;
conclusions upon. I intend to print the results ln next&#13;
week's column.&#13;
United Council met last weekend. I would like to thank&#13;
the delegation who volunteered to go up with me. I will&#13;
print their names as soon as the Senate approves them as&#13;
our delegation for the next year. We also agreed to allow&#13;
Madison and Milwaukee a stronger voice when deciding&#13;
issues of budget and platform. This will hopefully bring&#13;
Madison back into UC.&#13;
The Senate (as I'm sure you've read) approved SOC for&#13;
major status. I would like to thank Adrian S rrano for h1&#13;
help 1n guiding the Senate as to what was needed to be&#13;
done to pass this.&#13;
The Information Resource Committee my computer&#13;
project) will have met by the tlme this I print d. I wlll&#13;
print the results of the meeting 1n th next column. l am&#13;
looking forward to a succe sful meeting.&#13;
-&#13;
PSGA Questionnaire&#13;
Drop off in PSGA Office, WLLC&#13;
Would Y.OU use a skating · pond it one were available on&#13;
cafr!pus?&#13;
YES-NO-UNDECIDED&#13;
Comments&#13;
Would you listen to a radio station if we were to run one&#13;
on campus?&#13;
YES-NO-UNDE IDED&#13;
Comments&#13;
Art 9allery announces upcoming show&#13;
Would you partici~te-support a football club if th re&#13;
were one on campus? The Racln Art s oclatlon hold Its annual jurying of art-&#13;
( A) of the les A. Wus- ists' work for lts Art Sales&#13;
tum u um of Fin Arts, and Rental G Uery on atur-&#13;
25 9 orthwestern Avenue, day, May 2, 1987.&#13;
cine, announces that 1t will Each year the Gallery re-&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS PARKSIDE&#13;
GRADUATES! APPLY FOR THE NEW&#13;
COLLEGE GRADUATE PLAN TODAY!&#13;
YOUR DOWN PAYMENT CAN BE&#13;
LOW AS 5o/o!&#13;
• 1.8 I ter fuel-Injected ang ne&#13;
• Power front dllC brake&#13;
• St I belted r8dl81 tlr&#13;
• Halogen headlamps&#13;
• Tinted g&#13;
• Electric rear wlndOw defogger&#13;
• Intermittent wipers&#13;
• Remote controlled mirror&#13;
AH •tandard fHIU/pmtml&#13;
IT'S HERE&#13;
FOX!&#13;
AN AUTOMOBILE FOR ALL MAJORS ...&#13;
• Business majors will find a great deal at an investment of&#13;
$6310.·&#13;
• En9lneerlng majo(s will appreciate its fine German engineering&#13;
utihzing a 1.8 liter fuel-injected engine and front wheel drive.&#13;
• Art majors will also appreciate its Geirgio Givgiaro design, the&#13;
same designer who has inspired Ferrari s.&#13;
• Fox 2 door only. ~Racine -=- rnazoa&#13;
8100 Washington Ave. 886-2886&#13;
Hwy. 20 We t of Hwy. 31 on the Frontage Road&#13;
vtews actual pieces submitted&#13;
by Midwestern artists who&#13;
wish to have thelr work represented&#13;
for sale and for rent&#13;
at the Wustum. Artists may&#13;
deliver up to five framed&#13;
pieces to the Wustum on&#13;
Thursday, Aprll so from 1:00-&#13;
9: 00 pm, Friday, May 1 from&#13;
1:00-6:00 pm and on Saturday,&#13;
May 2 from 9:00-11:00&#13;
am.&#13;
YES- 0-U DECIDED&#13;
Comments&#13;
University of&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Limited Space is&#13;
Available for fall, 1987&#13;
in the Residence Hall.&#13;
For . application &amp; contract information&#13;
C~II 553-8900 or 553-2320&#13;
There's&#13;
no&#13;
''alternative''&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
It's&#13;
the only&#13;
"source.''&#13;
.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Students travel to Missouri&#13;
Participate as mock members of the NSC&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
Richard Marshall, Kay&#13;
Rouse, Cindy Hoffmann and&#13;
Anne Peacock are Parkside&#13;
students, but on April 16-18&#13;
they were also members of&#13;
the National Security Council.&#13;
Sort of.&#13;
All four international&#13;
studies students attended a&#13;
public affairs conference at&#13;
Principia College in St. Louis,&#13;
Missouri, where they roleplayed&#13;
policymakers drafting&#13;
United States foreign policy&#13;
in the Middle East. Designed&#13;
to resemble the American&#13;
NSC, the conference group&#13;
(consisting of about 60 students&#13;
from across the country)&#13;
reached general agreements&#13;
in three broad areas&#13;
and offered participants insight&#13;
into the problems and&#13;
pressures of policymaking.&#13;
"You walk in and you butt&#13;
heads with everybody," explained&#13;
Marshall of the experience.&#13;
"Trying to get a concise&#13;
policy is almost impossible,&#13;
since everyone is arguing&#13;
for their own viewpoint and&#13;
you're all operating against a&#13;
deadline."&#13;
Students were originally&#13;
divided, based on their interests,&#13;
into nine small groups of&#13;
3-10 members to discuss&#13;
aspects of Middle East policy&#13;
such as U.S. economic interests,&#13;
U.S.-Israeli relations&#13;
and Islamic resurgence and&#13;
the Palestine situation. Following&#13;
initial debate, three of&#13;
these small groups were combined&#13;
into "mini plenaries,"&#13;
where further discussion&#13;
ensued. In the end, all participants&#13;
met in final session and&#13;
recommended a general policy.&#13;
Among the agreements&#13;
reached were provision to&#13;
recognize Yassi Arafat as the&#13;
spokesperson of the Palestinians&#13;
and to establish dialogue&#13;
between between Israeli and&#13;
Arab nations.&#13;
More important than what&#13;
the policy stated, however,&#13;
was what the students&#13;
learned about formulating&#13;
that policy. "What came&#13;
through loud and clear in my&#13;
group," Rouse said, "was the&#13;
extreme imporatance of lobbying&#13;
(in policy decisions).&#13;
Special interest groups, I&#13;
found out, don't just influence&#13;
policy, they can formulate&#13;
it."&#13;
Marshall discovered in his&#13;
sessions that humanitarianism&#13;
has little place in the&#13;
realistic world of public policy.&#13;
"I guess a lot of people in&#13;
my group had never been out&#13;
in the real world," he said,&#13;
"because they were speaking&#13;
idealistically rather than&#13;
realistically. They kept saying&#13;
that everything had to be&#13;
for the people - that the individual&#13;
was more important&#13;
than the state.&#13;
"But looking at it realistically,"&#13;
he went on, "you can't&#13;
sit there and say, 'These poor&#13;
little people; we might kill&#13;
three or four. Oh, my heart&#13;
bleeds.' At this level, the individual&#13;
isn't important at all."&#13;
Hoffman agreed partly with&#13;
Marshall, noting that in her&#13;
group there was "a constant&#13;
struggle to balance a feeling&#13;
of humanity with the very&#13;
real feelings of a government&#13;
(like Israel) struggling to&#13;
maintain itself and its national&#13;
security. It (the issue of&#13;
humanitarianism) kept coming&#13;
up in discussion, and we&#13;
found that realistically it&#13;
couldn't be a top priority."&#13;
Honors concert final one in series&#13;
The final concert in the&#13;
Wednesday 1 o'clock Concert&#13;
Series will be preented Wednesday,&#13;
May 4 in Communication&#13;
Arts D-118.&#13;
The concert, an honors concert,&#13;
will be followed by a reception&#13;
given by the Music&#13;
Department for its graduating&#13;
music majors.&#13;
From the Exiting&#13;
Ed.&#13;
to the&#13;
Redheaded Ed.&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
You'll do great!&#13;
Concert performers include&#13;
Randy Rovik, trumpet, recent&#13;
winner of the Kenosha Symphony&#13;
Youth Scholarship&#13;
Auditions. Accompanied by&#13;
music professor James&#13;
McKeever, he will perform&#13;
Hummel's Trumpet Concerto.&#13;
William Nelson, clarinet,&#13;
will perform a suite by&#13;
Darius Milhaud, with Tersa&#13;
Naidicz, violin and McKeever,&#13;
piano. Nelson was named&#13;
outstanding soloist in the recent&#13;
Elmhurst College Jazz&#13;
Festival for his performance&#13;
on tenor saxophone.&#13;
Denise Barrett, classical&#13;
guitar, will perform five Estudios&#13;
Sencillos by Leo&#13;
Brower.&#13;
Graduating seniors who will&#13;
be honored include Sandra&#13;
Saladis, William Nelson, Rick&#13;
Soens, Vivian Rodriguez, Denise&#13;
Barrett, Karen Newell,&#13;
Katherine Martin and Cheryl&#13;
Brown.&#13;
The concert and reception&#13;
are open to the public.&#13;
THE OLD BOOK CORNER&#13;
312-6th St. Racine&#13;
Gently Used Books&#13;
on all subjects.&#13;
Racine's only&#13;
used Bookstore.&#13;
MARTHA MERRELLS&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
We Call It&#13;
Special Checking&#13;
• Free Printed Checks&#13;
• Unlimited Checkwriting&#13;
• Safekeeping of Checks&#13;
• No Minimum Balance&#13;
• Nominal Flat Monthly Fee&#13;
• 24 Hour Access with TYME&#13;
© Bank of Elmwood&#13;
• Moior Bank&#13;
Durand at Kentucky&#13;
&amp;«/ (birjbef &lt; lerrttce&#13;
554-5321&#13;
• Main Office&#13;
2704 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Racine. WI 53405&#13;
• Green Acre Office&#13;
Hwys. 31 &amp; 38&#13;
FDIC&#13;
Conference participants (l-r): Richard Marshall,&#13;
Kay Rouse, Cindy Hoffmann and Anne&#13;
Peacock.&#13;
Peacock found the conference&#13;
educational because it&#13;
allowed her to see the Middle&#13;
East issue from a different&#13;
vantage point. "Everything in&#13;
this country is oriented toward&#13;
Israel," she commented.&#13;
"I think we get a really&#13;
one-sided view of this issue.&#13;
There were two speakers&#13;
about Arab concerns, and I&#13;
thought they were most interesting.&#13;
They talked about how&#13;
we perceive them, and how&#13;
they perceive us, and how&#13;
those perceptions aren't&#13;
always accurate."&#13;
Summing up the experience,&#13;
Hoffman admitted that&#13;
the conference was "very tiring.&#13;
We were exhausted at&#13;
the end."&#13;
The experience&#13;
of a lifetime&#13;
For people who want more than a paycheck.&#13;
It* not your ordinary Job.&#13;
If you're looking for more than a regular summer job, try Six&#13;
Flags Great America. Here you'll deal with literally&#13;
thousands of Guests of all types, and learn the real meaning&#13;
of responsibility Because It 's more than a summer Job.&#13;
It* not your ordinary fun.&#13;
Keep the fun going after the work Is done I Along with a&#13;
great experience, you'll receive a regular wage, free&#13;
admission, and complimentary passes for family and friends.&#13;
Plus, there are special employee activities Including movies,&#13;
dances, and sports activities.&#13;
Apply In person for following seasonal&#13;
positions.&#13;
• Food Jervlcei • Merchandise • Rides/front gate/area&#13;
• Clerical • Show operations •Games and arcades&#13;
• Electronic technicians&#13;
Apply 7 days a week. 9:00 am - 5:00 pm at:&#13;
Employment Office: Route 21 (Between Grand Ave. &amp;&#13;
U&amp;shlngton St) • Gurnee, IL 60031 *13121249-2045&#13;
an equal opportunity employer&#13;
WORK AT&#13;
HAVING FUN I&#13;
• ^&#13;
E&#13;
pIX FLAGS •Riitf AMixiea i A $ i%Xorfipany&#13;
•-*' tm A&#13;
RANGER Thureday, April 29, 1987 7&#13;
Students travel to Missouri&#13;
Participate as mock members of the NSC&#13;
LSchn&#13;
dltor&#13;
1 four lnternaUonal&#13;
tudl s students tten d a&#13;
public affalra conferenc at&#13;
rlnclpla College ln t. Lou18,&#13;
Ussourt, where they rolepl&#13;
yed pollcymakers drafting&#13;
Unit d tales foreign poll y&#13;
ln the Middle East. Designed&#13;
to res mble the American&#13;
NSC, the conference group&#13;
( on lstlng of about 60 student&#13;
from across the country)&#13;
reached general agree.&#13;
men~ 1n three broad areas&#13;
and off r d participants ln·&#13;
sight into the problem and&#13;
pr ssur s of poUcymaking.&#13;
"You walk 1n and you butt&#13;
h ads wlth everybody,'' explain&#13;
d M hall of the experlenc&#13;
. ''Trying to get a con.&#13;
els policy ls almost trnposslble,&#13;
since everyon i arguing&#13;
for thelr own viewpoint and&#13;
you'r nil operating against a&#13;
d adlln ."&#13;
Stud n w re orlglnally&#13;
divid d, bas d on their Interests,&#13;
lnto nine small groups of&#13;
8-10 members to dlscuss&#13;
aspects of Middle East poUcy&#13;
BUCh .s. economic tnteresta,&#13;
U. .-Israeu relations&#13;
and I l mlc _re urgenc and&#13;
th Palesttne situation. Following&#13;
lnltlal debate, three of&#13;
these small group were combined&#13;
into "mlnl plen rles,''&#13;
wh further d1 cusslon&#13;
ensued. In the end, 11 participants&#13;
met ln final session and&#13;
recommended general policy.&#13;
Among the agreements&#13;
reached were provision to&#13;
recognlz l Arafat as the&#13;
spokesperson of the Palestinians&#13;
and to establish cllalogue&#13;
between between Israeli and&#13;
Arab nations.&#13;
More Important than what&#13;
the poUcy stated, however,&#13;
was what the students&#13;
learned about formulating&#13;
that policy. "What came&#13;
through loud and clear in my&#13;
group," Rouse said, "was the&#13;
extreme imporatance of lobbying&#13;
(in policy decisions).&#13;
S clal interest groups, I&#13;
found out. don't just influence&#13;
policy, they can formulate&#13;
it ...&#13;
Marshall discovered 1n his&#13;
sessions that humanitarianism&#13;
has little place ln the&#13;
reallBtic world of public pollcy.&#13;
"I gu a lot of people in&#13;
my group had never been out&#13;
In the real world,•' he said,&#13;
• 'because they were speakJJlg&#13;
ideallstlcally rather than&#13;
realistically. They kept aay.&#13;
lng that everyth,lng ha.d to be&#13;
for the people - that the incllvtdual&#13;
was more important&#13;
than the tate.&#13;
"But looking at it reausttcally,"&#13;
he went on, "you can't&#13;
sit there and say, 'These poor&#13;
litUe people; we might kill&#13;
three or four. Oh, my heart&#13;
bleeds.' At thl level, the individual&#13;
Isn't Important at all."&#13;
Hoffman agre d partly with&#13;
Marshe.11, noting that 1n her&#13;
group there was "a constant&#13;
struggle to balance a feeling&#13;
of humanity with the very&#13;
real feelings of a government&#13;
(like Israel} struggling to&#13;
maintain ttselt and Its national&#13;
security. It (the lsBUe of&#13;
humanitarianism) kept coming&#13;
up ln cllscusslon, and we&#13;
found that reallstically tt&#13;
couldn't be a top priority."&#13;
Honors concert final one in series&#13;
Th !lnal concert 1n the&#13;
W dn day 1 o'clock Concert&#13;
rl wlll be preented Wedn&#13;
d· y. May 4 1n Communication&#13;
Arts D-118.&#13;
h concert, an hono concert.&#13;
will be followed by a reception&#13;
given by the Music&#13;
Department for lt.s gradualin&#13;
mu le majors.&#13;
-&#13;
From the Exiting&#13;
Ed.&#13;
to the&#13;
Redheaded Ed.&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
You'U do great!&#13;
THE OLD BOOK CORNER&#13;
312 -1111 St. Racine&#13;
Gently Used Books&#13;
on all subjects.&#13;
Racine's only&#13;
used Bookstore.&#13;
MARTHA MERRELLS&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
Concert performers lnclude&#13;
Randy Rovlk. trumpet, recent&#13;
w1nn r of the Kenosha Symphony&#13;
Youth Scholarship&#13;
Auclltlons. Accompanied by&#13;
music professor James&#13;
McKeever, he wlll perform&#13;
Humm l's Trumpet Concerto.&#13;
Wllllam Nelson, clarinet,&#13;
will perform a suite by&#13;
Darius Mllhaud, wlth Tersa&#13;
Naldlcz, violin and McKeever,&#13;
piano. NelSon wa named&#13;
outstanding soloist in the recent&#13;
Elmhurst College Jazz&#13;
Festival for his performance&#13;
on tenor saxophone.&#13;
Denise Barrett, classical&#13;
guitar, wlll perform five Estucllos&#13;
Senclllo by Leo&#13;
Brower.&#13;
Gradua.tlng seniors who will&#13;
be honored include 8andra&#13;
Saladts, William Nelson, Rick&#13;
Soens, Vivian Rodriguez, Denlse&#13;
Ba.rrett, Karen Newell,&#13;
Katherine Martin and Cheryl&#13;
Brown.&#13;
The concert and reception&#13;
are open to the public.&#13;
We Call It&#13;
Special Checking&#13;
• Free Printed Checks&#13;
• Unlimited Checkwriting&#13;
• Safekeeping of Checks&#13;
• No Minimum Balance&#13;
• Nominal Flat Monthly Fee&#13;
• 24 Hour Access with TYME&#13;
_(D_&#13;
Bank of Elmwood&#13;
~l?t·,I a,~, , 1~"'H"'&#13;
554-5311&#13;
• M tl'lf Banlt • Mam om«&#13;
Durand I keniuck)' 27()4 Lathrop A.,t.&#13;
kacmt. Y. I ,3-401&#13;
. ' ....&#13;
• Orn:11 A~re Omct&#13;
H"Y' ll &amp; 3&#13;
Conference participants . (l•n~ Richard Marshall,&#13;
Kay Rou , Cindy Ho ann and Anne&#13;
Peacock.&#13;
Peacock found the conference&#13;
educational because tt&#13;
allowed her to see the Middle&#13;
East issue from a dltferent&#13;
vantage point. ''Everything in&#13;
this country is oriented toward&#13;
Israel,'' she commented.&#13;
"I think we get a really&#13;
one-slded view of this issue.&#13;
There w re two speakers&#13;
about Arab concerns, and I&#13;
thought they were most interesting.&#13;
They talked about how&#13;
we perceive them, and how&#13;
they perceive us, and how&#13;
those perceptions aren't&#13;
always accurate."&#13;
Summing up the xperlence,&#13;
Hottman admitted that&#13;
the conference was "very tiring.&#13;
We were exhausted at&#13;
the end,"&#13;
The e~erience&#13;
of a lifetime&#13;
For people who want more than a paycheck.,,__ __&#13;
lt"s not your ordinary Job.&#13;
If y04/1'9 tooktng for more than • regular unmer Job, try SIX&#13;
Flags Great America. Here y04III deaf with literally&#13;
thousands of Guests of II t;ypes. and learn the l'HI meaning&#13;
ot responslbtllty. Because 10 mo,e than • summer Jab.&#13;
'"not your ordinary tun.&#13;
Keep the fun going after the work Is donel Along with a&#13;
great uperieta. yau'N f'Kefw a regular wage, free&#13;
admission. and compltmentay paaes for famlly and friends.&#13;
Plus. there .. speda emplOyN acttvttle, lndudlng fflOYta,&#13;
danCes. -,,cl spo,u actMtles.&#13;
=r!:.~forfollowlng semi&#13;
• food servb1 • Mltchandlse • Rldetlfnlnt gall{ ...&#13;
• Clerical • Showap..akllw • GIINI anda'Cldls&#13;
• Eiedronlc tectndanl&#13;
Apply 7 days a wieek. 9!00 am • 5!00 pn a:&#13;
~It Offlce: Route 21 (Between GrandAve. &amp;&#13;
~igtcn St.f • Gurnee. IL 60031 • 13121249-2045&#13;
... .qaa ~...,,.&#13;
WORK/IG'&#13;
HAVINGFUNI&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday, April 29,1987 7&#13;
Students travel to Missnnri&#13;
Participate as mock members of the NSC&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
Richard Marshall, Kay&#13;
Rouse, Cindy Hoffmann and&#13;
Anne Peacock are Parkside&#13;
students, but on April 16-18&#13;
they were also members of&#13;
the National Security Council&#13;
Sort of.&#13;
All four international&#13;
studies students attended a&#13;
public affairs conference at&#13;
Principia College in St. Louis,&#13;
Missouri, where they roleplayed&#13;
policymakers drafting&#13;
United States foreign policy&#13;
in the Middle East. Designed&#13;
resemble the American&#13;
NbC, the conference group&#13;
(consisting of about 60 students&#13;
from across the country)&#13;
reached general agreements&#13;
in three broad areas&#13;
and offered participants insight&#13;
into the problems and&#13;
pressures of policymaking.&#13;
"You walk in and you butt&#13;
neads with everybody," explained&#13;
Marshall of the experience.&#13;
"Trying to get a concise&#13;
policy is almost impossible,&#13;
since everyone is arguing&#13;
for their own viewpoint and&#13;
you're all operating against a&#13;
deadline."&#13;
Students were originally&#13;
divided, based on their interests,&#13;
into nine small groups of&#13;
3-10 members to discuss&#13;
aspects of Middle East policy&#13;
such as U.S. economic interests,&#13;
U.S.-Israeli relations&#13;
and Islamic resurgence and&#13;
the Palestine situation. Following&#13;
initial debate, three of&#13;
these small groups were combined&#13;
into "mini plenaries,"&#13;
where further discussion&#13;
ensued. In the end, all participants&#13;
met in final session and&#13;
recommended a general policy.&#13;
Among the agreements&#13;
reached were provision to&#13;
recognize Yassi Arafat as the&#13;
spokesperson of the Palestinians&#13;
and to establish dialogue&#13;
between between Israeli and&#13;
Arab nations.&#13;
More important than what&#13;
the policy stated, however&#13;
was what the students&#13;
learned about formulating&#13;
that policy. "What came&#13;
through loud and clear in my&#13;
group," Rouse said, "was the&#13;
extreme imporatance of lobbying&#13;
(in policy decisions).&#13;
Special interest groups, I&#13;
found out, don't just influence&#13;
policy, they can formulate&#13;
Marshall discovered in his&#13;
sessions that humanitarianism&#13;
has little place in the&#13;
realistic world of public policy-&#13;
"I guess a lot of people in&#13;
my group had never been out&#13;
in the real world," he said,&#13;
"because they were speaking&#13;
idealistically rather than&#13;
realistically. They kept saying&#13;
that everything had to be&#13;
for the people - that the individual&#13;
was more important&#13;
than the state.&#13;
"But looking at it realistically,"&#13;
he went on, "you can't&#13;
sit there and say, 'These poor&#13;
little people; we might kill&#13;
three or four. Oh, my heart&#13;
bleeds.' At this level, the individual&#13;
isn't important at all."&#13;
Hoffman agreed partly with&#13;
Marshall, noting that in her&#13;
group there was "a constant&#13;
struggle to balance a feeling&#13;
of humanity with the very&#13;
real feelings of a government&#13;
(like Israel) struggling to&#13;
maintain itself and its national&#13;
security. It (the issue of&#13;
humanitarianism) kept coming&#13;
up in discussion, and we&#13;
found that realistically it&#13;
couldn't be a top priority."&#13;
Honors concert final one in series&#13;
«/ ?e al concert in the&#13;
Wednesday l o'clock Concert&#13;
Series will be preented Wednesday,&#13;
May 4 in Communication&#13;
Arts D-118.&#13;
The concert, an honors concert,&#13;
will be followed by a reception&#13;
given by the Music&#13;
Department for its graduating&#13;
music majors.&#13;
From the Exiting&#13;
Ed.&#13;
to the&#13;
Redheaded Ed.&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
You'll do great!&#13;
Concert performers include&#13;
Randy Rovik, trumpet, recent&#13;
winner of the Kenosha Symphony&#13;
Youth Scholarship&#13;
Auditions. Accompanied by&#13;
music professor James&#13;
McKeever, he will perform&#13;
Hummel's Trumpet Concerto.&#13;
William Nelson, clarinet,&#13;
will perform a suite by&#13;
Darius Milhaud, with Tersa&#13;
Naidicz, violin and McKeever,&#13;
piano. Nelson was named&#13;
outstanding soloist in the recent&#13;
Elmhurst College Jazz&#13;
Festival for his performance&#13;
on tenor saxophone.&#13;
Denise Barrett, classical&#13;
guitar, will perform five Estudios&#13;
Sencillos by Leo&#13;
Brower.&#13;
Graduating seniors who will&#13;
be honored include Sandra&#13;
Saladis, William Nelson, Rick&#13;
Soens, Vivian Rodriguez, Denise&#13;
Barrett, Karen Newell,&#13;
Katherine Martin and Cheryl&#13;
Brown.&#13;
The concert and reception&#13;
are open to the public.&#13;
r&#13;
We Call It&#13;
Special Checking&#13;
• Free Printed Checks&#13;
• Unlimited Checkwriting&#13;
• Safekeeping of Checks&#13;
• No Minimum Balance&#13;
• Nominal Flat Monthly Fee&#13;
• 24 Hour Access with TYME&#13;
© Bank of Elmwood&#13;
1 M otor Bank&#13;
Durand at Kentucky&#13;
da/pef &lt; iervtce&#13;
554-5321&#13;
• Main Office&#13;
2704 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Racine. WI 53405&#13;
• Green Acre Office&#13;
Hwys. 31 &amp; 38&#13;
FDIC&#13;
Conference participants (l-r): Richard Marshall,&#13;
Kay Rouse, Cindy Hoffmann and Anne&#13;
Peacock.&#13;
Peacock found the conference&#13;
educational because it&#13;
allowed her to see the Middle&#13;
East issue from a different&#13;
vantage point. "Everything in&#13;
this country is oriented toward&#13;
Israel," she commented.&#13;
"I think we get a really&#13;
one-sided view of this issue&#13;
There were two speakers&#13;
about Arab concerns, and I&#13;
thought they were most interesting.&#13;
They talked about how&#13;
we perceive them, and how&#13;
they perceive us, and how&#13;
those perceptions aren't&#13;
always accurate."&#13;
Summing up the experience,&#13;
Hoffman admitted that&#13;
the conference was "very tiring.&#13;
We were exhausted at&#13;
the end."&#13;
The experience&#13;
of a lifetime&#13;
For people who want more than a paycheck.&#13;
It* not your ordinary Job.&#13;
If you re looking for more than a regular summer Job, try Six&#13;
Flags Great America. Here you'll deal with literally&#13;
thousands of Guests of all types, and learn the real meaning&#13;
of responsibility Because It 's more than a summer Job.&#13;
It* not your ordinary fun.&#13;
Keep the fun going after the work Is done I Along with a&#13;
great experience, you'll receive a regular wage , free&#13;
admission, and complimentary passes for family and friends.&#13;
Plus, there are special employee activities Including movies,&#13;
dances, and sports activities.&#13;
Apply In person for following seasonal&#13;
positions.&#13;
• Food services • Merchandise • Rides/front gate/ area&#13;
• Clerical • Show operations • Games and arcades&#13;
• Electronic technicians&#13;
Apply 7 days a week, 9:00 am - 5:00 pm at:&#13;
Employment Office: Route 21 (Between Grand Ave. &amp;&#13;
wasnington St.) • Gumee. II60031 &gt; 13121249-2045&#13;
an equal opportunity employer ' —&#13;
WORK AT&#13;
HAVING FUNI ©Warner Bros. Inc. IS76&#13;
SIX FLAGS&#13;
GREAT AMERICA&#13;
A Company&#13;
RANGER Thuraday, Aprll 29, 1987 7&#13;
Students travel to Missouri&#13;
Partic i pate as mock members of the NSC&#13;
b ry L. Scbn berg r&#13;
dltor&#13;
Rlch rd Marshall, Kay&#13;
Rou , Cindy Hoffmann and&#13;
Ann P acock are Parkside&#13;
students, but on April 16-18&#13;
they wer ala&lt;&gt; members of&#13;
th a tlonal S curtly Council.&#13;
Sort of.&#13;
All four lntemaUonal&#13;
tudl s student&amp; atten ed&#13;
pubHc affairs confer n t&#13;
rlnclpla ollege 1n t . LoulB,&#13;
Ml url, where they role•&#13;
played policymakers drafting&#13;
Unl d tates foreign poll y&#13;
ln the • fiddle East. Deslgned&#13;
to r s mble the American&#13;
N C, the conference group&#13;
( on lsllng of about 60 students&#13;
from across the country&#13;
) reached general agreements&#13;
ln three broad areas&#13;
and offered participants fn.&#13;
lght Into the problems and&#13;
pressur s of policymaking.&#13;
"You walk in and you butt&#13;
head with everybody," explaln&#13;
d Marshall of the experience.&#13;
"Trying to get a conctse&#13;
poUcy ls almost impossible,&#13;
slnce everyone ls arguing&#13;
for th Ir own viewpoint and&#13;
you're all operating against a&#13;
deadlin ."&#13;
Students w re originally&#13;
dlvld d, b ed on their interests,&#13;
into nine small groups of&#13;
S-10 memb rs to discuss&#13;
aspects of Middle East policy&#13;
such as .S. economic lnterta,&#13;
U .S.-Israell relations&#13;
and Islamic r surgence and&#13;
th Palestine sttuaUon. Foltowtng&#13;
lnlttal debate, three of&#13;
these smaU groups were combined&#13;
Into "ml.ni plenaries,"&#13;
whel'e further dlscusslon&#13;
nsu d . In the end, all partlclpants&#13;
met 1n flnal session and&#13;
recommend d a general policy.&#13;
Among the agreements&#13;
reached were provision to&#13;
recognize Ya l Ara.fat as the&#13;
spokesperson of the Palestinian&#13;
and to establlsh dialogue&#13;
between between Israeli and&#13;
Arab nations.&#13;
More Important than what&#13;
the policy stated, however,&#13;
was what the students&#13;
learned about formulating&#13;
that pollcy. "What came&#13;
through loud and clear In my&#13;
group," Rouse said, "was the&#13;
extreme imporatance of lobbying&#13;
(ln pollcy decisions).&#13;
Special Interest groups, I&#13;
found out, don't just lnfluence&#13;
policy, they can formulate&#13;
lt."&#13;
Marshall discovered 1n his&#13;
sessions that humanltartantsm&#13;
has llttle place in the&#13;
realistic world of public policy.&#13;
"I gues a lot of people 1n&#13;
my group had never been out&#13;
1n the real world," he said,&#13;
"because they were speaking&#13;
ideallstlcally rather than&#13;
real! tically. They kept aaylng&#13;
that everything had to b&#13;
for the peopl . that the indt'&#13;
ridual was more important&#13;
than the state.&#13;
"Bttt looking at it rea1tst1-&#13;
cally," he went on, "you can't&#13;
slt there and say. 'These poor&#13;
UtUe people; we might klll&#13;
three or four. Oh, my heart&#13;
bleeds. ' At th1B level, the individual&#13;
isn't important at all."&#13;
Hoffman agreed partly wtth&#13;
Marshall, noting that 1n her&#13;
group there was "a constant&#13;
struggle to balance a feellng&#13;
of humanity with the very&#13;
real feelings of a government&#13;
(Uke Israel) struggling to&#13;
maintain ltsel.t' and its national&#13;
security. It (the issue of&#13;
humanltarlantsm) kept comIng&#13;
up in dlscusslon, and we&#13;
found that realistically 1t&#13;
couldn't be a top priority."&#13;
Honors concert final one in series&#13;
The final concert 1n the&#13;
N dn day 1 o'clock Concert&#13;
erle wUI b preented Wedn&#13;
sday, y t 1n Communication&#13;
Arts 0-118.&#13;
Th concert, an honors cone&#13;
rt, will b followed by a reception&#13;
given by the MusJc&#13;
partment for lts graduating&#13;
mu le majors.&#13;
- From the Exiting&#13;
Ed .&#13;
to the&#13;
Re dheaded Ed.&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
You 'U do great!&#13;
Concert performers Include&#13;
Randy Rovik, trumpet, recent&#13;
winner of the Kenosha Symphony&#13;
Youth Scholarship&#13;
Auditions. Accompanied by&#13;
muslc professor James&#13;
McKeever, he will perform&#13;
Hummel's Trumpet Concerto.&#13;
William Nelson, clarinet,&#13;
wUl perform a suite by&#13;
Darius Mllhaud, with Tersa&#13;
Naldlcz, vtolln and McKeever,&#13;
piano. Nelson waa named&#13;
outstanding soloist 1n the recent&#13;
Elmhurst College Jazz&#13;
Festival tor his performance&#13;
on tenor axophone.&#13;
Denise Barrett, classical&#13;
guitar, wlll perform five Estudlos&#13;
Senclllos by Leo&#13;
Brower.&#13;
Graduating seniors who will&#13;
be honored include Sandra&#13;
Saladis, Wllllam Nelson, Rick&#13;
Soens, Vlvlan Rodriguez, Denise&#13;
Barrett, Karen Newell,&#13;
Katherine Martin and Cheryl&#13;
Brown.&#13;
The concert and reception&#13;
are open to the public.&#13;
We Call It&#13;
Special Checking&#13;
1 l&#13;
• Free Printed Checks&#13;
• Unlimited Checkwriting&#13;
• Safekeeping of Checks&#13;
• No M inimu m Balance&#13;
• Nominal Flat Monthly Fee&#13;
• 24 Hour Access wit h TYME&#13;
- ~ -. - Bank of Elmwood&#13;
~Jful a,rpel &lt; fel'fJtU&#13;
554-5321&#13;
• fotOf Bank • Mam Office • Grttn re Office&#13;
Our nd t Kcntud,y 2704 La1hrop A,c. H"'} )I &amp; 3&#13;
Racine, WI S340S FOIC&#13;
Conference participants (1-r): Richard Marshall,&#13;
Kay Rouse, Cindy Hoffmann and Anne&#13;
Peacock.&#13;
Peacock found the conference&#13;
educational because It&#13;
allowed her to see the Middle&#13;
East issue from a dillerent&#13;
vantage point. • 'Everything 1n&#13;
th18 country Is oriented toward&#13;
Israel,'' she commented.&#13;
"I think we get a really&#13;
one-sided view of this issue.&#13;
There were two peakers&#13;
about Arab concems, and I&#13;
thought they were most lnterestlng.&#13;
They talked about how&#13;
we perceive them, and how&#13;
they perceive us, a.nd how&#13;
those perceptions aren't&#13;
always accurate.''&#13;
Summing up the experience,&#13;
Hoffman admitted that&#13;
the conference wa "very tiring.&#13;
We were exhausted at&#13;
the end."&#13;
The e~erience&#13;
of a lifetime&#13;
For people who want more than a paycheck.,...,_,..&#13;
lt"I not your ordinary Job.&#13;
tr )'OU'N looklng for more than a regular summer Job, try Six&#13;
Flags GrNt America. Here you'll deal with ltteratty&#13;
1housa1ds of Guests of an t;ypes. and team the ru1 meaning&#13;
of respomlblllt)( BecaM It's more than• summer Job.&#13;
It's not your ordinary tun.&#13;
KNp the bl going after the W0fk Is donel Along wtth a&#13;
great expe,1etice, you'I recelw a regular wage , free&#13;
admlsSlon. and compllment• y passes for fanlly and friends.&#13;
Plus. there .. spedal employee actMt1a lndudlng mcwla,&#13;
dances. and spon:s actMtles.&#13;
Apply In person few folloWlng seasonal&#13;
poiltlons •&#13;
• Food serYk:es • Meff:handltll • Rldesl9ronC gata1a,u&#13;
• Oerkal • ShawCfl"atiol• • Gaw and .cactes&#13;
• £1ectronk tCChnldanl&#13;
Apply 7 days a week. 9:00 am • 5:00 pm at:&#13;
EmpkJyment Office: Route 21 (Between Grand Ave. &amp;&#13;
Wilshkigton St.) • Gurnee, IL 60031 • 13121249-2045 an.....,~..,,_&#13;
WORKAr&#13;
HAVING FUNI&#13;
Solidarity Coalition works to end war in El Salvador&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
The Racine/Kenosha Central&#13;
American Solidarity&#13;
Coalition (CASC) be sponsor&#13;
a station on May 6-7 from 10&#13;
a.m. to 2 p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
The station will provide information&#13;
on the events in Central&#13;
America and ballots for&#13;
the "National Referendum to&#13;
End the War in Central&#13;
America."&#13;
Elaine Kinch, organizer of&#13;
the Campaign to Stop the&#13;
Human Rights Abuses in El&#13;
Salvador and member of&#13;
CASC, explained that CASC&#13;
"is a voluntary organization&#13;
seeking justice for the people&#13;
of Central America and a&#13;
more just relationship between&#13;
the U.S. government&#13;
and the governments of the&#13;
Central American nations."&#13;
The "National Referendum"&#13;
is the most recent project&#13;
of CASC. In February the&#13;
organization sponsored fundraising&#13;
for the re-population&#13;
of El Salvador. In March it&#13;
sponsored the refugee caravans&#13;
across the country.&#13;
CASC is a country-wide organization&#13;
of nearly 100 cities&#13;
and over 100 sponsors. It attempts&#13;
to reach as many&#13;
Americans as possible to inform&#13;
them of the military actions&#13;
in . Central America. It&#13;
also helps refugees in Central&#13;
America through visits to the&#13;
Central American countries,&#13;
letter-writing to Central&#13;
American and American&#13;
political leaders and relief aid&#13;
for victims of bombings.&#13;
Kinch explained the reason&#13;
for directing the "National&#13;
Referendum" at colleges.&#13;
"We want to reach a new&#13;
audience. Two-thirds of the&#13;
American people are against&#13;
the Reagan Administration's&#13;
policy in Central America.&#13;
We want to give them an opportunity&#13;
to come out and&#13;
vote for peace," she said.&#13;
CASC is gathering referendum&#13;
ballots now in the hope&#13;
that a bill will soon come up&#13;
before Congress. Having a&#13;
number of ballots to give to&#13;
officials immediately "is&#13;
much better than scrambling&#13;
around after the bill is announced.&#13;
We want to be&#13;
ready,'"' Kinch commented.&#13;
Kinch feels "Congress isn't&#13;
really looking at our foreign&#13;
policy from the standpoint of&#13;
whether or not it is a moral&#13;
policy. They're not even looking&#13;
at the suffering the U.S.&#13;
government is causing in&#13;
Central America."&#13;
David Castaneda, senior,&#13;
feels the same way. "I guess&#13;
no one can relate to hundreds&#13;
of thousands of Nicaraguan&#13;
refugees dying, yet they can&#13;
definitely relate to a few&#13;
Americans dying," he said.&#13;
"We just want people to come&#13;
by to get an idea of what is&#13;
going on in Central America&#13;
and what the U.S. policy is&#13;
there. We want people to ex&#13;
press their feelings about&#13;
Central American just bv&#13;
marking 'YES' or 'NO' on the&#13;
ballot. ne&#13;
He also stressed the impor&#13;
tance of hearing college students'&#13;
opinions, "it's important&#13;
for 18 and 19 year old&#13;
students to realize that thev&#13;
soon may be drafted again 1&#13;
doubt staying in college win&#13;
help this time. People need to&#13;
take personal responsible&#13;
for just filling out a simple&#13;
referendum baUot."&#13;
Students are encouraged to&#13;
stop by the station and fill out&#13;
a ballot on May 5 and 6.&#13;
Committee okays undergraduate tuition caps&#13;
April 22 aPPr°Ved a ™&lt;™™nda- cent&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
UWP&#13;
EMPLOYEES&#13;
Save while&#13;
you borrow&#13;
with a ECU&#13;
Loan:&#13;
• Car Loans&#13;
• Mortgages&#13;
• Line of Credit&#13;
• Home Improvement&#13;
• Any Purpose&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
Room 286&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 10-3&#13;
Serving four other locations&#13;
Racine Waukesha&#13;
Burlington Milwaukee&#13;
approved recommendation&#13;
by United Council of UW&#13;
Student Governments to cap&#13;
resident undergraduate tuition&#13;
at 33.4 percent of instructional&#13;
costs.&#13;
The recommendation to the&#13;
Joint Finance Committee&#13;
would still allow for Governor&#13;
Thompson's proposed 12 percent&#13;
tuition increase. Rep&#13;
Bill Berndt (R-River Falls)&#13;
proposed the cap, effective&#13;
through the 1988-89 school&#13;
year. It passed by a 7-1 vote.&#13;
"For years, the state has&#13;
looked upon tuition as a blank&#13;
check," said UC President&#13;
Bryce Tolefree. "The committee's&#13;
recommendation&#13;
MKSH&amp;e r I&#13;
activiti**/&#13;
50AR&amp;^&#13;
MAY 16 AND 17&#13;
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
2:00 pm Road Rally&#13;
&lt;6:30 Tent opens&#13;
7:00 pm Mind if I Smoke?&#13;
10:00 pm Bad Boy&#13;
1:00 am Ruthless People&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
6:30 pm Tent opens&#13;
7:00 pm Pat McCurdy &amp;&#13;
the Confidentials&#13;
10:00 pm The Cheeters&#13;
1:00 am Pee Wee's Big Adventure&#13;
Advance tickets are available at the Union Information Center&#13;
Students, faculty, staff, alumni $3.00 per day $5.00 per weekend&#13;
Guest $4.00 per day $7.00 per weekend&#13;
H!!i9«?mts milst be.StA,,e?st 18 years old. Limit of 3 guests per&#13;
UW-P ID per d ay. AH tickets will be $5.00 per day at the door.&#13;
would once again inject&#13;
stability into the state's tuition&#13;
policy."&#13;
During the 1970's, resident&#13;
undergraduate tution was&#13;
frozen at 25 percent of instructional&#13;
costs. Since 1980,&#13;
however, the resident undergraduate&#13;
portion has increased&#13;
to 31.4 percent.&#13;
Under Gov. Thompson's proposed&#13;
12 percent increase, it&#13;
would be 33.4 percent.&#13;
Tolefree said that while he&#13;
is pleased with the proposed&#13;
cap, UC will seek to cut&#13;
Thompson's tuition hike. "A&#13;
$172 tuition increase would&#13;
still hurt needy students. In&#13;
the last six years, state and&#13;
federal financial aid appropriations&#13;
have not kept up&#13;
S&amp;,. increased student&#13;
Tolefree is optimistic about&#13;
a tuition cap passing the&#13;
legislature. "There appears&#13;
to be substantial support&#13;
among legislators for controlling&#13;
tuition increases. Legislators&#13;
are rightfully concerned&#13;
that a large number of&#13;
low- and middle-income students&#13;
are being priced out of&#13;
the university."&#13;
Those voting in favor of the&#13;
tuition cap were: Berndt,&#13;
Stan Gruszynski (D-Stevens&#13;
Point), Sue Magnuson (DMadison),&#13;
John Medinger (DLaCrosse),&#13;
Spencer Coggs&#13;
(D-Milwaukee), Barbara Linton&#13;
(D-Highbridge) and Ben&#13;
Brancel (R-Endeavor).&#13;
Rep. Margaret Lewis (RJefferson)&#13;
voted against the&#13;
cap.&#13;
the far side By GARY LARSON&#13;
x—Mnv take th;s gram+e^&#13;
bowl- It Up not far&#13;
from here and probably dates&#13;
to... Oh, Td say early July.&#13;
5- 5&#13;
Early archaeologists&#13;
I • a• • I la .. • • • ' • • .. • • • , f • . .. 1•41 ., • • ,, . ' . ' • • , . ' . ' •• • I -., I , ,&#13;
8 Thursday• April 29, 1987 RANGER&#13;
Solidarity Coalition works to end war in El Salvador&#13;
by Kelly McKt lck&#13;
Ant. Newa Edl1or&#13;
The Racine/Kenosha Cen•&#13;
tra1 America.n Sollda.rity&#13;
Coalltton (CASC) be aponsor&#13;
a station on May ~-'l from 10&#13;
a.m. to 2 p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
The station w1ll provide infor.&#13;
mation on the events in Central&#13;
America and ballots for&#13;
the "National Referendum to&#13;
End the War 1n Central&#13;
America."&#13;
Ela.lne Kinch, organizer of&#13;
the Campaign to Stop the&#13;
Human Rlghts Abuse in El&#13;
Salvador and member of&#13;
ASC, explained that CASC&#13;
"ilJ a voluntary organization&#13;
seeking justice for the people&#13;
of Central America and a&#13;
more Just relationship between&#13;
the U.S. government&#13;
and the governments of the&#13;
Central merican nations.''&#13;
The "National Referendum"&#13;
ts the moot recent project&#13;
of CASC. In February the&#13;
organimtion sponsored fundraising&#13;
for the re-population&#13;
of El Salvador. In March it&#13;
sponsored the refugee caravans&#13;
across the country.&#13;
CASC ls a country-Wide organization&#13;
of nearly 100 cities&#13;
&amp;11d over 100 sponsors. It attempts&#13;
to reach as many&#13;
Americans as possible to inform&#13;
them of the rnilltary actions&#13;
1n Central America. It&#13;
also helps· refugees 1n Central&#13;
America through visits to the&#13;
Central American countries,&#13;
letter-writing to Central&#13;
American and American&#13;
poliUca.l leaders and relief aid&#13;
for victims of bombings.&#13;
Kinch explained the reason&#13;
for dlrectlng the "National&#13;
Referendum" at colleges.&#13;
"We want to reach a new&#13;
audience. Two-thirds of the&#13;
American people are against&#13;
the Reagan Admlnlstration's&#13;
policy in Central America.&#13;
We want to give them an opportunity&#13;
to come out and&#13;
vote for peace," she sald.&#13;
CASC 1s gathering referendum&#13;
ballots now 1n the hope&#13;
that a bill wlll soon come up&#13;
before Congress. Having a&#13;
number of ballots to give to&#13;
officials immediately "ls&#13;
much better than scrambllng&#13;
around after the blll 1s announced.&#13;
We want to be&#13;
ready,,., Kinch comment~d-&#13;
Klnch feels "Congress lsn 't&#13;
really looking at our foreign&#13;
policy from the standpoint of&#13;
whether or not It ls a moral&#13;
policy. They're not even look•&#13;
Ing at the suffering the U.S.&#13;
government ls causing in&#13;
Central America."&#13;
David Castaneda, senior,&#13;
feels the same way. "I guess&#13;
no one can relate to hundreds&#13;
of thousands of Nicaraguan&#13;
refugees dying, yet they can&#13;
definitely relate to a few&#13;
Americans dying," he aald.&#13;
"We just want people to come&#13;
by to get an ldea of what ls&#13;
going on in Central America&#13;
and what the U.S. policy is&#13;
there. We want people to ex.&#13;
press their feelings about&#13;
Central American ju t b&#13;
marklng 'YES' or 'NO' on th!&#13;
ballot.&#13;
He also stressed the impor.&#13;
tance of hearing college stu.&#13;
dents' oplnfons. "It's impor.&#13;
tant for 18 and 19 ye r old&#13;
students to realize that they&#13;
soon may be drafted again. r&#13;
doubt staying In college wUJ&#13;
help this time. People need to&#13;
take per onal responsibllty&#13;
for just fllltng out a simple&#13;
r ferendum ballot"&#13;
Students are encouraged to&#13;
stop by the station and fill out&#13;
a ballot on May 5 and 6.&#13;
Committee okays undergraduate tuition caps&#13;
The Ass mbly Colleges ancl&#13;
Unlventties Committee April&#13;
.(~Utis)&#13;
~i•D1~~,o .&#13;
ATTENTION&#13;
UWP&#13;
E PLOYEES&#13;
Save while&#13;
you borrow&#13;
withaECU&#13;
Loan:&#13;
• Car Loan&#13;
• Mortgage&#13;
• Lin of Credit&#13;
• Home lmprov ment&#13;
• Any Purpo e&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
Room 286&#13;
on.-Fr". 10-3&#13;
ning four oth,•r (O&lt;' lion&#13;
R in W uke ha&#13;
Burlin on tilwnukt'&#13;
22 approved a recommendation&#13;
by United Council of UW&#13;
Student Governments to cap&#13;
resident undergraduate tuition&#13;
at ss., percent of Instructional&#13;
costs.&#13;
The recommendation to the&#13;
Joint Finance Committee&#13;
would still allow for Governor&#13;
Thompson's proposed 12 percent&#13;
tuition increase. Rep.&#13;
Bill Berndt (R·Rlver Falls)&#13;
propo ed the cap, effective&#13;
through the 1988-89 school&#13;
year. It passed by a 7-1 vote.&#13;
..For years, the late has&#13;
looked upon tuition as a blank&#13;
check,'' said UC President&#13;
Bryce Tolefree. "The committee's&#13;
recommendation&#13;
MAY 16 AND 17&#13;
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS&#13;
SUNDAY .&#13;
1:30 Pill T opens&#13;
'7:00 pa Pat McCunly &amp;&#13;
tlttConfldefttlals&#13;
10:00 nae Cbeeters&#13;
1:00 • Pee Wee's A ture&#13;
avalilabl11 at Ill Unlo I nnaUon Center.&#13;
mnl $3.00 per dar $5.00 per weekend&#13;
$4.00 per day $7 .00 per weeke d&#13;
All guests tnust be at least 18 years old. UmH of 3 gusts per&#13;
uw;:p ID day. All tickets WIii bl $5.00 per day at the door.&#13;
would once again inject&#13;
tabllity into the state's tuition&#13;
policy."&#13;
During the 1970' resident&#13;
undergraduate tution was&#13;
frozen at .2ti percent of instructional&#13;
costs. Since 1980,&#13;
however, the resident undergraduate&#13;
portion has increased&#13;
to a1 .• percent.&#13;
Under Gov. Thompson's proposed&#13;
12 percent Increase, It&#13;
would be 38.4 percent.&#13;
Tolefree said that whlle he&#13;
ls pleased Wlth the proposed&#13;
cap, UC will seek to cut&#13;
Thompson's tuition hike. " A&#13;
$172 tuition Increase would&#13;
still hurt needy students. In&#13;
the last six years, state and&#13;
federal financial aid appropriations&#13;
have not ke pt up&#13;
with increased student&#13;
costs.''&#13;
THI FAR SIDI&#13;
5- 5&#13;
Tolefree ls opttmlstlc about&#13;
a tuition cap pas Ing the&#13;
legtslatur . "There appears&#13;
to be sub tantial support&#13;
among legislators for controlllng&#13;
tultion lncreas s . Leg! •&#13;
lators are rightfully con•&#13;
cemed that a large number or&#13;
low- and middle-income students&#13;
are being priced out of&#13;
the unlve rslty. "&#13;
Those voting 1n favor of the&#13;
tulUon cap were: B rndt,&#13;
Stan Gruszynskl (D-Stevens&#13;
P oint l. Sue Magnuson CD·&#13;
Madison), John Medinger {D·&#13;
Lacrosse) , Spencer Coggs&#13;
CD -Milwaukee), Barbara Linton&#13;
(D-Hlghbridge) and Ben&#13;
Brancel CR-Endeavor .&#13;
Rep. Margaret Lewis IR•&#13;
Jefferson, voted again t th&#13;
cap .&#13;
By GARY LARSON&#13;
1&#13;
Early archaeolog~ lst=•=-------------&#13;
Historically, higher&#13;
by Kimberlie Kranich Because wnmon I..A« education access limited&#13;
Table 1 Enrollment at Parkside (Spring, 1987)&#13;
by Heritage and Sex&#13;
Male Female&#13;
American Indian&#13;
Black&#13;
Oriental&#13;
Latin or Latin American&#13;
White&#13;
Foreign&#13;
Barbara Shade&#13;
data collected on these contrasts.&#13;
"In many instances we can&#13;
only reliably describe the experiences&#13;
of Black Americans&#13;
because the most detailed&#13;
and complete educational record&#13;
exists for this category&#13;
of people," according to Marrett&#13;
and Matthews.&#13;
It has only been in the last&#13;
decade that enrollment statistics&#13;
have been broken down&#13;
by both heritage or race and&#13;
gender.&#13;
Barbara Shade, chair of the&#13;
Education Division and associate&#13;
professor of education,&#13;
talked about the importance&#13;
of looking at many factors&#13;
when considering women&#13;
of color and higher education.&#13;
"When you talk to Black&#13;
women," Shade explained,&#13;
"you have to look at them&#13;
from where they came up and&#13;
at the whole social strata&#13;
around them and what they&#13;
plan to use education for and&#13;
their age."&#13;
Shade attended college in&#13;
the early 1950's and had an&#13;
experience different from&#13;
what Black women college&#13;
racism sexism&#13;
Feminist women of color&#13;
have spoken of the need to be&#13;
heard. The book, "This&#13;
Bridge Called My Back: Writings&#13;
By Radical Women of&#13;
Color," by Cherrie Moraga&#13;
and Gloria Anzaldua for example,&#13;
is a collection of writings&#13;
that address issues of&#13;
race, class, ethnicity, gender&#13;
and sexuality.&#13;
Feminists of color have&#13;
stressed the need for an understanding&#13;
of their unique&#13;
struggles which are a result&#13;
of race, ethnicity, class and&#13;
gender.&#13;
There are some hurdles&#13;
that women of color, by virtue&#13;
of being women and nonwhite,&#13;
have had to overcome&#13;
'Ranger Special&#13;
Women Of Color&#13;
Historically, higher education access l(mited&#13;
by Klmberlle Kranich Because women were -~~- ..,.,__~ Table 1 Enrollment at Parkside (Spring, 1987)&#13;
Feature Editor dented access to most male ~~~ by Heritage and Sex&#13;
There are 178 women of&#13;
color currently attending&#13;
Parkside (see table 1) out of&#13;
a total student enrollment of&#13;
4,M6. In 1978 when enrollment&#13;
figures totalled 4,624 atudenta,&#13;
there were lM women of&#13;
color. This increa.Re Is indicative&#13;
of the trend across the&#13;
nation .&#13;
In the early 1960'1, far&#13;
more men than women attended&#13;
college: during the&#13;
1970's, the education level of&#13;
women 1n the United States&#13;
rose . In the population as a&#13;
whole. more women than men&#13;
entered lnstitutiona of higher&#13;
educo.tlon. For Black, Hlspan.&#13;
lc, Aslan, and American Indian&#13;
women, college enrollments&#13;
rose more than for&#13;
men of the same race or ethnicity.&#13;
Women have not always&#13;
had access to institutions of&#13;
higher education.&#13;
"There were no advanced&#13;
educational opportunJtiea for&#13;
women unW Emma Wlllard&#13;
opened a seminary for females&#13;
in Troy, N.Y. in 1821,"&#13;
according to Catherine Clinton,&#13;
author of the book, "The&#13;
Other Civil War."&#13;
Women's access to higher&#13;
education waa llmited by the&#13;
attitudes held by men.&#13;
··Argument&amp; against&#13;
women's education were that&#13;
the pathway to equality would&#13;
seriously undermine women's&#13;
health," according to Clinton.&#13;
"Male opponents also argued&#13;
that women were mentally inferior&#13;
and incapable of pursuing&#13;
an advanced degree."&#13;
Oberlln College became the&#13;
first co-educational institution&#13;
when ll opened lts doors to&#13;
both men and women in 1837.&#13;
unJversltles and colleges,&#13;
women started their own colleges,&#13;
Vassar, in 1861S, was&#13;
the flrst bonaflde women's&#13;
college.&#13;
"But not unW Smith and&#13;
Wellesley opened ln 1875,"&#13;
states Clinton, • 'were&#13;
women's colleges able to&#13;
clalm that thelr qualifications&#13;
for admission as well as their&#13;
curriculum matched that of&#13;
male instltuUoM.''&#13;
These separate women's&#13;
colleges had enrollments of&#13;
mainly white women. However,&#13;
organized efforts to educate&#13;
Black girls began u&#13;
early as 1838 when Prudence&#13;
Crandall instituted and attempted&#13;
to maintain a school&#13;
for Black girls in Connecticut.&#13;
Finally, in 1881, Spelman&#13;
College in Atlanta, Georgia&#13;
was founded as the first college&#13;
for Afro-American&#13;
women in the U.S.&#13;
Cora Bagley Marrett and&#13;
Westlna Matthews have examined&#13;
women of color in&#13;
higher education and polnt&#13;
out in their essay. "The Participation&#13;
of Minority Women&#13;
in Higher Education," the dif.&#13;
flculties ln doing so.&#13;
"Ideally. one should distinguish&#13;
between MexlcanAmericans,&#13;
Puerto Ricans&#13;
and persons from various&#13;
Latln American countries&#13;
when reporting on H.lspanlc&#13;
populations," wrote the two&#13;
authors. "However, the data&#13;
are not adequate for such distinctions."&#13;
Marrett and Matthews&#13;
point out that the experiences&#13;
of forelgn-bom Asian women,&#13;
for example, differ from&#13;
those of U .s. born A8lan&#13;
women. There has been little&#13;
Barbara Shade&#13;
data collected on these contrasts.&#13;
"In many lnstancea we can&#13;
only reliably describe the experiences&#13;
of Black Americans&#13;
because the most detailed&#13;
and complete educational record&#13;
exists for th18 category&#13;
of people," according to Marrett&#13;
and Matthews.&#13;
It has only been in the last&#13;
decade that enrollment atatistica&#13;
have been broken down&#13;
by both heritage or race and&#13;
gender.&#13;
Barbara Shade, chair of the&#13;
Education Division and associate&#13;
professor of education,&#13;
talked about the importance&#13;
of looking at many factors&#13;
when considering women&#13;
of color and higher education.&#13;
"When you talk to Black&#13;
women," Shade explalned,&#13;
"you have to look at them&#13;
from where they came up and&#13;
at the whole social strata&#13;
around them and what they&#13;
plan to use education for and&#13;
their age."&#13;
Shade attended college 1n&#13;
the early lOtiO's and had an&#13;
experience different from&#13;
what Black women college&#13;
Heritage&#13;
American Indian&#13;
Black&#13;
Oriental&#13;
Latin or Latin American&#13;
White&#13;
Foreign&#13;
atudenta experience today.&#13;
"When I entered school I&#13;
went in business because I&#13;
was in the early liro's, you&#13;
simply couldn't go on and fin.&#13;
lah off in bu.siness 80 I got&#13;
into teaching because that&#13;
was the way to do lt," said&#13;
Shade.&#13;
Generally. there are three&#13;
different cultural groups&#13;
within Blacka in the U.S.&#13;
"There were those who&#13;
grew up in the northeast and&#13;
even from the begtnnlng of&#13;
history they were free," explalned&#13;
Shade. "They started&#13;
1n education early because&#13;
they were pinpointed for&#13;
going into teaching. Most&#13;
women, up unW very recently,&#13;
started out 1n education.&#13;
''The young Black women&#13;
on campus hit education at a&#13;
time when lt ls a choice and&#13;
they are not necessarUy&#13;
majoring in teaching education.&#13;
They're in looking at a&#13;
whole broad perspective of&#13;
occupations.&#13;
''The second cultural&#13;
group," continued Shade, "la&#13;
in the South. In the South&#13;
they had real layers . not&#13;
only of skin color but of, high&#13;
statua and they therefore did&#13;
very different things.&#13;
"Spelman Oollege waa&#13;
almed, a.a near as I can tell,&#13;
for atartlng to Insure that&#13;
those of very high 11tatua had&#13;
Feminists of color speak about racism, sexism&#13;
by KJmberUe Kranich&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Feminist women of color&#13;
have spoken of the need to be&#13;
heard. The book, • 'Thls&#13;
Bridge Called My Back: Writings&#13;
By Radical Women of&#13;
Color," by Cherrie Moraga&#13;
and Gloria Anzaldua for example,&#13;
la a collection of writings&#13;
that address 1asuea of&#13;
race, class, ethnicity, gender&#13;
and sexuality.&#13;
Femlnlst.a of color have&#13;
stressed the need for an understanding&#13;
of thelr unique&#13;
struggles which are a result&#13;
of race, ethnicity, class and&#13;
gender.&#13;
There are some hurdles&#13;
that women of color, by virtue&#13;
of being women and nonwhite.&#13;
have had to overcome&#13;
what white women and all&#13;
men do not face.&#13;
The phrase, women of&#13;
color, in the book, "The&#13;
Feminist Dictionary" by&#13;
Cherts Kramerae and Paula&#13;
A. Treichler, la defined a.a "a&#13;
posltlve term designating&#13;
women of many different ethnic&#13;
and racial heritages (in•&#13;
eluding Black, Native American,&#13;
Chicano, Puerto Rican,&#13;
Filipino, Hlspanic and A81an)&#13;
and emph.aslzlng commonalities,&#13;
sisterhood, and shared&#13;
expressions.••&#13;
Sexism, according to the&#13;
"Femlnlst Dictionary," ta&#13;
"behavior, policy, language,&#13;
or other action of men or&#13;
women which expresses the&#13;
in.stltutlonallzed, systematic,&#13;
comprehensive, or constatent&#13;
view that women are inferior.&#13;
"Sexism and racism define&#13;
indivtduala as inferior, llmlt&#13;
their options and subject&#13;
them to exploitation and demeaning&#13;
treatment on the&#13;
baala of their membership ln&#13;
some general claaa ( e.g.&#13;
women or blacks)," writes&#13;
Mary Anne Warren.&#13;
Black writer Angela y.&#13;
Davla wama that sex.tam&#13;
"can never be seen in isolation.&#13;
It has to be placed in the&#13;
context of ita intercoMectiona&#13;
with raclam, and especially&#13;
with claaa exploitation."&#13;
Raclam ls defined as "lnstltuUonallzed&#13;
dlacrimlnaUon,&#13;
prejudice and oppression&#13;
baaed on race; specifically&#13;
oppreaston by white people of&#13;
people of color."&#13;
Black lesbian femln18t poet&#13;
Audre Lorde writes that rac-&#13;
1am 1a "the belief in the inherent&#13;
superiority of one race&#13;
over all others and thereby&#13;
the right to dominance, manifest&#13;
and Implied."&#13;
Raetam 1a also an ideology.&#13;
"Everyone ta capable of&#13;
being ractat whatever their&#13;
color and condition," writes&#13;
Puerto Rican femlnlat Rourlo&#13;
Morales. "Only some of us&#13;
are liable to racist attack."&#13;
Angela Davia believes all&#13;
white people should have a&#13;
, vested interest ln eradicating&#13;
ractam.&#13;
"White people, white&#13;
women In particular," Davia&#13;
writes, "should not tight ractam&#13;
almply because they&#13;
want to help those ot us who&#13;
are hurt by lt. The v~ ma-&#13;
Femln!m ... ,,.,_ 3&#13;
Male&#13;
7&#13;
66&#13;
38&#13;
47&#13;
2,0M&#13;
H&#13;
Female&#13;
6&#13;
106&#13;
21&#13;
89&#13;
1,982&#13;
g&#13;
the culture and the manners&#13;
as well as the education. In&#13;
the Black community lt waa&#13;
always asaumed that the&#13;
women would be educated because&#13;
that'• how to keep her&#13;
out ot the kitchen and a prey&#13;
of white malea. They forced&#13;
her (Black women) into&#13;
education but they didn •t&#13;
force the men.&#13;
"There la the third group of&#13;
the West," Shade continued,&#13;
"which 1a a much more integrated&#13;
soclety. Therefore,&#13;
their orientation was very dlf.&#13;
ferenl''&#13;
The trend 18 for Black&#13;
women to enter lnatltutions of&#13;
higher education on a greater&#13;
scale than Black men. 'nlere&#13;
are 106 Black fem.ales attendIng&#13;
Parkside compared to 66&#13;
Black malea.&#13;
"Becaw,e of th1a trend,"&#13;
said Shade, "young Black&#13;
women 1n college now are&#13;
staring to rethink whether&#13;
they should go on for a muter'•&#13;
and PhD. because they&#13;
are perceiving that 1t may&#13;
llmlt their abllity to marry,&#13;
and that's really important to&#13;
them."&#13;
Shade related an example&#13;
of her daughter's friend who&#13;
stopped going to school because&#13;
of pressure from her&#13;
husband.&#13;
"Thia young woman graduated&#13;
from the Univeralty of&#13;
Shade ... page2&#13;
Editor's note&#13;
Th.la four-page special section&#13;
focuses on women of&#13;
color at Parkside. The inter-'&#13;
views are of Native American.&#13;
Hispanic, Asian, Black&#13;
and Indian women who are&#13;
part of the 178 women of color&#13;
on campus. We also spoke to&#13;
all of the Black women on&#13;
campus who teach or hold&#13;
staff positions (a total of&#13;
three).&#13;
'nle word.a of these women&#13;
have been left as cloeely as&#13;
poaatble to the or1glnal&#13;
spoken interviews, illustrating&#13;
the diversity of Engllah&#13;
language speakers.&#13;
All stories were written and&#13;
edited by Klmberlle Kranich&#13;
except for the two atorlea by&#13;
Mary Woods, special guest&#13;
Writer to the Ranger.&#13;
Native American Ramnna Powell&#13;
'Echo' tells of nationality, stereotypes BBoorrnn oonn nann ITnndHiiaann reservaa&#13;
n. . . .&#13;
tion in northern Wisconsin to&#13;
a young Native American&#13;
woman of 16 who was too&#13;
young to care for her, Echo&#13;
was removed from the reservation&#13;
at six months old and&#13;
at three was legally adopted.&#13;
Echo's real name is Ramona&#13;
Powell but she doesn't go&#13;
by it very often. She has identified&#13;
herself with Indian&#13;
names from the time she was&#13;
little.&#13;
"When I grew up," Echo&#13;
explained, "my best friend&#13;
was an Indian and we gave&#13;
each other Indian names. I&#13;
was Shy Fox because I was&#13;
shy and because a fox is&#13;
clever."&#13;
Echo wanted to know more&#13;
about her family history, but&#13;
since she was adopted, obtaining&#13;
information is very&#13;
difficult. She knows that her&#13;
biological mother was a&#13;
member of the Chippewa&#13;
tribe and that her biological&#13;
father was German.&#13;
"I was brought up knowing&#13;
my nationality," said Echo.&#13;
"When people are asked what&#13;
are they and they say, 'I'm&#13;
German, I'm Italian,' their&#13;
descendants go back overseas.&#13;
But with me, at least&#13;
the Indian part, my ancestors&#13;
are here."&#13;
Echo has lived in both Wisconsin&#13;
and California. People&#13;
in both places seldom recognize&#13;
her as Native American.&#13;
"Here, a lot of people think&#13;
I'm Italian, Spanish, or Indian.&#13;
I lived in California and&#13;
there they didn't even think&#13;
of Indian right away, they&#13;
just assumed I was from&#13;
Mexico.&#13;
"Of course, people can tell&#13;
I'm something," continued&#13;
Echo. "A lot of people generalize&#13;
that whole kind of look -&#13;
being a little darker. Indians&#13;
have high cheek bones, that's&#13;
how I know. I've been mistaken&#13;
a lot."&#13;
As a child in school, Echo&#13;
was aware of the images people&#13;
have in their heads about&#13;
Native Americans.&#13;
"Growing up, when kids in&#13;
school knew I was Indian,&#13;
they thought I could run really&#13;
fast," Echo explained.&#13;
While in high school, Echo&#13;
took a history course on Native&#13;
Americans.&#13;
"In the books the male Indians&#13;
were always shown as&#13;
the ones who went out and&#13;
shot the buffalo and then&#13;
brought it home to the wife,"&#13;
Echo explained. "He was the&#13;
one who produced. The female&#13;
or wife, was just like&#13;
today; even though she did&#13;
work, she stayed home and&#13;
had to take care of the house&#13;
and kids and food. The book&#13;
mainly focused on how the&#13;
buffalos were skinned."&#13;
A different picture comes to&#13;
Echo's mind than that found&#13;
in the history books.&#13;
"I have a scene that comes&#13;
to mind," she said. "I have a&#13;
scene of a tepee, camping&#13;
(which is what I love) with a&#13;
family and cooking outdoors&#13;
with horses. No war paint,&#13;
just living out in nature and&#13;
Sandra Villarreal&#13;
Strong Hispanic community urged&#13;
"To me, being Hispanic&#13;
means coming from a Spanish&#13;
speaking background,"&#13;
said Sandra Villarreal, a&#13;
sophomore majoring in inter-&#13;
• national studies.&#13;
She explained the different&#13;
geographical regions included&#13;
in the term Hispanic.&#13;
"Hispanic is everybody&#13;
from Mexico, Central America&#13;
and South America, Spain,&#13;
Puerto Rico and American-&#13;
Mexican," she said.&#13;
"To me," Villarreal continued,&#13;
"Mexico is Indian, yet&#13;
the Spanish came so you&#13;
could say your roots go back&#13;
to Spain also. The European&#13;
and the Indian together is&#13;
called mestizo. In a way I&#13;
don't like the term Mexican&#13;
because I wasn't born in Mexico.&#13;
At the same time it's&#13;
hard to say that you're a&#13;
Spaniard. It's easier to say&#13;
Mexican heritage.''&#13;
Villarreal was a member of&#13;
the Hispanic club on campus&#13;
which is currently defunct.&#13;
"We can't get people involved.&#13;
Every time we do&#13;
Cinco De Mayo or National&#13;
Hispanic Heritage Week,&#13;
there's very few people involved,"&#13;
Villarreal explained.&#13;
"They say, 'I've got stuff outside&#13;
school or I have to work.'&#13;
It's Hispanics we're trying to&#13;
get in the club and that's&#13;
their excuses."&#13;
Villarreal knows only a few&#13;
of approximately 90 Hispanics&#13;
on campus. She would like&#13;
a stronger Hispanic community&#13;
to develop on campus but&#13;
there are difficulties.&#13;
"Sometimes I wonder&#13;
what's the matter," said Villarreal.&#13;
"I think it would be&#13;
so nice to experience Hispanic&#13;
culture the way Blacks are&#13;
getting into Black history. I&#13;
think it would be nice for Hispanics&#13;
to do the same.&#13;
"When we (Hispanics)&#13;
don't even know each other,&#13;
then we don't even have that&#13;
(a sense of culture) and we&#13;
can't move on to another&#13;
level," Villarreal continued.&#13;
Except for her family and&#13;
the few Hispanic friends she&#13;
has at school, Villarreal&#13;
knows few other Hispanics in&#13;
Racine where she lives. "I've&#13;
told people I'm not exactly&#13;
sure I know what the minority&#13;
experience is because I've&#13;
always lived in neighborhoods&#13;
where we were the one or two&#13;
minorities in that neighborhood,"&#13;
she explained. "I went&#13;
to a school and all my friends&#13;
were white."&#13;
Villarreal's experience as a&#13;
Hispanic student at Parkside&#13;
differs in a unique way from&#13;
what white students experience.&#13;
Her experience in a&#13;
Spanish class is an example.&#13;
Although both her parents are&#13;
Spanish-speakers, Spanish is&#13;
not spoken in Villarreal's&#13;
home.&#13;
"I took a Spanish class and&#13;
the students wondered why. A&#13;
friend was telling me what&#13;
the students were saying.&#13;
They'd say, 'She just wants&#13;
an easy A, that's all.' I felt&#13;
like I had to explain myself.&#13;
That's just one instance," Villarreal&#13;
explained.&#13;
"I don't like to be paranoid&#13;
about it but sometimes I feel&#13;
that when I walk into a class,&#13;
people look at me just a bit&#13;
differently. Here are all these&#13;
white people and then somebody&#13;
with darker colored skin&#13;
comes in. I noticed this a lot&#13;
in the classes; it's not just&#13;
Mexicans but Blacks too. The&#13;
Sandra Villarreal&#13;
proportion (of people of&#13;
color) is so smaU that you&#13;
kind of stick out.&#13;
"At the same time," Villarreal&#13;
continued, "I don't like&#13;
to say that people are looking&#13;
at me because I'm Hispanic,&#13;
because maybe they're looking&#13;
at me because of what&#13;
I'm wearing for example."&#13;
Villarreal believes that too&#13;
much worry over what people&#13;
are thinking about her builds&#13;
limitations to what she can&#13;
do.&#13;
"It limits people to be the&#13;
fullest person they can be.&#13;
People will say, 'I don't want&#13;
to do it because I don't want&#13;
to stick out.* So what they've&#13;
done is limited themselves&#13;
and then they don't grow in&#13;
the way that they could have.&#13;
"My parents have always&#13;
said, 'Be a person.' You're&#13;
not just Hispanic, you're not&#13;
just a woman, you're a person&#13;
and you do what you do&#13;
as a person," Villarreal concluded.&#13;
peace, not war. I have a view&#13;
of how great it must have&#13;
been to live back then."&#13;
There are thirteen Native&#13;
Americans on campus, some&#13;
of whom are interested in&#13;
starting an American Indian&#13;
club. Echo is interested in the&#13;
club.&#13;
"I thought it'd be interesting&#13;
to meet and become&#13;
friends with other people who&#13;
are Indian. I'd have somebody&#13;
to talk to about being Indian&#13;
instead of always being&#13;
'someone else,' " she explained.&#13;
Echo is pleased with the attention&#13;
given to people of&#13;
color and believes that it will&#13;
help secure needed jobs.&#13;
"Whatever I do, I always&#13;
do my best, but you've got to&#13;
be given the chance first.&#13;
That (attention to people of&#13;
color) might be a way for me&#13;
to be given a chance to prove&#13;
myself other than (an employer)&#13;
picking a white male&#13;
who looks the part.&#13;
"I'm not the typical female,"&#13;
Echo continued,&#13;
"where I put on a bunch of&#13;
make-up and wear little frilly&#13;
dresses. I like adventure."&#13;
Echo has gone scuba diving,&#13;
has jumped off cliffs in California&#13;
and plans to go hand&#13;
gliding this summer. "I could&#13;
do a job that some might not&#13;
be able to, but I might not be&#13;
given a job because I am female.&#13;
"Moving furniture is an example.&#13;
I'm pretty strong but&#13;
Education&#13;
Shade from page 1&#13;
Minnesota, got into medical&#13;
school, went to work for a lab&#13;
and married someone who&#13;
was a steamfitter," explained&#13;
Shade. "He put so much pressure&#13;
on her and she put so&#13;
much pressure on herself...he&#13;
couldn't tolerate her going&#13;
away or spending additional&#13;
time in school and as a result&#13;
she refused to go to medicai&#13;
school."&#13;
There are 202 persons holding&#13;
teaching positions at&#13;
Parkside; 153 are males and&#13;
49 are females. Out of the 153&#13;
males, all are white except&#13;
for 13 Asians, two Hispanics&#13;
and one Black. There are two&#13;
Asian and one Black among&#13;
the female faculty.&#13;
Being the only Black female&#13;
professor on campus&#13;
has some unique consequences&#13;
for Shade.&#13;
"When I taught in Madison,&#13;
I became involved with Black&#13;
females there. I have not&#13;
done that here and I think it&#13;
is a disadvantage for the&#13;
young people, but it gets to be&#13;
a disadvantage to me by&#13;
being the only one." explained&#13;
Shade. *&#13;
''Jf 1 indeed get caught in it&#13;
(being a mentor for 106 Black&#13;
women), then what I do is&#13;
spend so much time being a&#13;
tthhePmm t^hWatI rae nndd* au pm neont thoar vifnogr&#13;
Ramona Powell&#13;
I'll be helping someone move&#13;
a desk and some guy will say,&#13;
"Oh, don't do that, I'll do it."'&#13;
While in California a few&#13;
years ago, Echo auditioned&#13;
for an Indian role in a movie.&#13;
"The men producers,&#13;
writers and directors who&#13;
hire, after they hire you, you&#13;
don't know if it is just for the&#13;
job because they think you&#13;
can do it or because they&#13;
think you're cute. This&#13;
producer said I was right for&#13;
an Indian part. He came over&#13;
to my apartment and made&#13;
advances. Fortunately, I&#13;
never heard from him&#13;
again," Echo recalled.&#13;
Echo plans to study mass&#13;
communications at UW-Milwaukee&#13;
in the near future and&#13;
would like to make her own&#13;
film documentaries. She one&#13;
day envisions herself making&#13;
nature films with National&#13;
Geographic.&#13;
anyone to respond to myself&#13;
because I have no peers to&#13;
share it with.&#13;
"Secondly," . continued&#13;
Shade, "I end up getting flack&#13;
from my colleagues because&#13;
then when I get involved with&#13;
106 people, that means I don't&#13;
do research, I don't spend&#13;
time teaching, I don't spend&#13;
time doing the committee&#13;
work.&#13;
"If I spend so much time&#13;
with all of that (mentoring),&#13;
then they (colleagues) have&#13;
only one expectation for me -&#13;
that I ought to function in one&#13;
way and that may not be my&#13;
particular culture," concluded&#13;
Shade.&#13;
Hendricks from page 4&#13;
and the experiences that I&#13;
can bring in.&#13;
"The experiences that I've&#13;
had over time with people,&#13;
education, young people and&#13;
experiences that I've had in&#13;
my personal life, bring a certain&#13;
perspective. My reading&#13;
and understanding of the research&#13;
and seeing and knowing&#13;
what's happening with&#13;
young people in school everyday,&#13;
gives me a certain perspective.&#13;
So, I see my perspective&#13;
as the greatest thing&#13;
that I can bring to Parkside,"&#13;
Hendricks concluded.&#13;
Native American Ramona Powell&#13;
'Echo' tells of nationality, stereotypes&#13;
Bom on an Indian reservation&#13;
in northern Wisconsin to&#13;
a young Native American&#13;
woman of 16 who was too&#13;
young to care for her, Echo&#13;
wu removed from the reservation&#13;
at six months old and&#13;
at three was legally adopted.&#13;
Echo's real name ls Ramona&#13;
Powell but she doesn't go&#13;
by it very often. She baa idenWied&#13;
herself with Indian&#13;
names from the time she was&#13;
little.&#13;
"When I grew up," Echo&#13;
explained, "my best friend&#13;
was an Indian and we gave&#13;
each other Indian names. I&#13;
waa Shy Fox because I waa&#13;
shy and because a fox 11&#13;
clever."&#13;
Echo wanted to know more&#13;
about her family history, but&#13;
since ahe wu adopted, ob•&#13;
ta1nlng information ls very&#13;
difficult. She knows that her&#13;
biological mother waa a&#13;
member of the Chippewa&#13;
tribe and that her biological&#13;
father waa German.&#13;
• 'I waa brought up knowing&#13;
Sandra Villarreal&#13;
my nationality," said Echo.&#13;
'· When people are asked what&#13;
are they and they say, 'I'm&#13;
German, I'm Italian,' their&#13;
descendants go back overseas.&#13;
But wtth me, at least&#13;
the Indian part, my ancestors&#13;
are here.''&#13;
Echo has lived in both Wisconsin&#13;
and cautomia. People&#13;
in both places seldom recognize&#13;
her as Native American.&#13;
"Here, a lot of people think&#13;
I'm Italian, Spanish, or Indian.&#13;
I lived in C&amp;llfomia and&#13;
there they didn •t even think&#13;
of Indian right away, they&#13;
just assumed I wa.a from&#13;
Mexico.&#13;
"Of course, people can tell&#13;
I'm something," continued&#13;
Echo. "A lot of people generalize&#13;
that whole kind of look ·&#13;
being a little darker. Indians&#13;
have high cheek bones, that's&#13;
how I know. I've been mistaken&#13;
a lot."&#13;
As a child in school, Echo&#13;
wa.a aware of the Images people&#13;
have in their heads about&#13;
Native Americans.&#13;
"Growing up, when kids in&#13;
school knew I was Indian,&#13;
they thought I could run really&#13;
fast," Echo explained.&#13;
While tn high school, Echo&#13;
took a history course on Native&#13;
Americans.&#13;
"In the books the male In•&#13;
dlans were always shown as&#13;
the ones who went out and&#13;
shot the buffalo and then&#13;
brought it home to the wife,"&#13;
Echo explained. "He was the&#13;
one who produced. The female&#13;
or wife, was Just 11.ke&#13;
today; even though she did&#13;
work, she stayed home and&#13;
had to take care of the house&#13;
and kids and food. The book&#13;
mainly focused on how the&#13;
buffalos were skinned."&#13;
A different picture comes to&#13;
Echo's mind than that found&#13;
in the history books.&#13;
"I have a scene that comes&#13;
to mind," she said. " I have a&#13;
scene of a tepee, camping&#13;
(which ls what I love) wtth a&#13;
family and cooking outdoors&#13;
with horses. No war paint,&#13;
just llvlng out in nature and&#13;
Strong Hispanic community urged&#13;
"To me, being Hispanic&#13;
meana coming from a Span•&#13;
lsh speaking background,''&#13;
said Sandra Villarreal, a&#13;
sophomore majoring in international&#13;
studies.&#13;
She explained the different&#13;
geographical regions included&#13;
in the term Hispanic.&#13;
"Hi.span1c ls everybody&#13;
from Mexico, Central America&#13;
and South America, Spain,&#13;
Puerto Rico and AmericanMexican,"&#13;
ahe aald.&#13;
"To me," Vlllarreal continued,&#13;
"Mexico 11 Indian, yet&#13;
the Spanlah came 10 you&#13;
could say your root. go back&#13;
to Spain alao. The European&#13;
and the Indian together 11&#13;
called mestizo. In a way I&#13;
don •t 11.ke the term Mexican&#13;
ooeauae I wasn't bom in Mexico.&#13;
At the same time ll'a&#13;
hard to say that you're a&#13;
SpanJ&amp;rd. It's ea.aler to aay&#13;
Mexican heritage.''&#13;
Vlllarreal waa a member of&#13;
the HJ.lpanic club on campus&#13;
whlch 11 currenUy defUnet.&#13;
. "We can't get people in•&#13;
volved. Every time we do&#13;
Cinco De Mayo or National&#13;
Hispanic Heritage Week,&#13;
there'• very few people involved,''&#13;
Villarreal explained.&#13;
"They say, 'I've got stuff outside&#13;
school or I have to work.'&#13;
It's Hilpanics we're trying to&#13;
get in the club and that's&#13;
their excuses.•'&#13;
Villarreal knows only a few&#13;
of approximately 90 Hispanics&#13;
on campus. She would 11.ke&#13;
a stronger Hispanic community&#13;
to develop on campus but&#13;
there are difficulties.&#13;
"Sometimes I wonder&#13;
what's the matter," said Villarreal.&#13;
"I think it would be&#13;
so nlce to experience Hispanic&#13;
culture the way Blacks are&#13;
getting into Black history. I&#13;
think lt would be nice for Hispanics&#13;
to do the same.&#13;
"When we (Hispanics)&#13;
don't even know each other,&#13;
then we don't even have that&#13;
(a sense of culture) and we&#13;
can't move on to another&#13;
level," Villarreal continued.&#13;
Except for her family and&#13;
the few H!spanic friends she&#13;
has at school, Villarreal&#13;
knows few other Hispanics in&#13;
Racine where she lives. "I've&#13;
told people I'm not exacUy&#13;
sure I know what the minority&#13;
experience is because I've&#13;
always lived in neighborhoods&#13;
where we were the one or two&#13;
minorities in that neighborhood,"&#13;
she explained. "I went&#13;
to a school and all my friends&#13;
were white.''&#13;
Villarreal's experience aa a&#13;
Hispanic student at Parkside&#13;
differs in a unique way from&#13;
what white students experience.&#13;
Her experience in a&#13;
Spanish class 1s an example.&#13;
Although both her parents are&#13;
Spanl.sh•apeakers, Spanish ls&#13;
not spoken in Villarreal's&#13;
home.&#13;
"I took a Spanish class and&#13;
the students wondered why. A&#13;
friend was telling me what&#13;
the students were saying.&#13;
They'd say, 'She just wants&#13;
an easy A, that's all.' I felt&#13;
11.ke I had to explain myself.&#13;
That's just one instance," Villarreal&#13;
explained.&#13;
• "I don't llke to be paranoid&#13;
about it but sometimes I feel&#13;
that when I walk into a class,&#13;
people look at me Just a bit&#13;
differently. Here are all these&#13;
white people and then somebody&#13;
with darker colored skin&#13;
comes in. I noticed this a lot&#13;
in the classes; it's not Just&#13;
Mexicans but Blacks too. The&#13;
Sandra VIilarreai&#13;
proportion ( of people of&#13;
color) ls so small that you&#13;
kind of stick out.&#13;
"At the same tlme.'' Villarreal&#13;
continued, "I don't llke&#13;
to aay that people are looking&#13;
at me because I'm Hispanic,&#13;
because maybe they're looking&#13;
at me because of what&#13;
I'm wearing for example.••&#13;
Villarreal believes that too&#13;
much worry over what people&#13;
are thinking about her builds&#13;
limitations to what she can&#13;
do.&#13;
"It llmlts people to be the&#13;
fullest person they can be.&#13;
People wl11 aay, 'I don't want&#13;
to do it because I don •t want&#13;
to stick out.' So what they've&#13;
done ls llmited themselves&#13;
and then they don't grow in&#13;
the way that they could have.&#13;
"My parents have always&#13;
said, 'Be a person.' You're&#13;
not just Hispanic, you're not&#13;
just a woman, you're a person&#13;
and you do what you do&#13;
as a person," Villarreal eon.&#13;
eluded.&#13;
peace, not war. I have a view&#13;
of how great it must have&#13;
been to live back then.''&#13;
There are thirteen Native&#13;
Americans on campus, some&#13;
of whom are interested in&#13;
starting an American Indian&#13;
club. Echo ls interested in the&#13;
club.&#13;
"I thought it'd be interesting&#13;
to meet and become&#13;
friends wtth other people who&#13;
are Indian. I'd have somebody&#13;
to talk to about being Indian&#13;
instead of always being&#13;
•someone else,' " she explained.&#13;
Echo 11 pleased wtth the attention&#13;
given to people of&#13;
color and believes that it will&#13;
help secure needed jobs.&#13;
"Whatever I do, I always&#13;
do my best, but you've got to&#13;
be given the chance first.&#13;
That (attention to people of&#13;
color) might be a way for me&#13;
to be given a chance to prove&#13;
myaelf other than (an em•&#13;
ployer) picking a whlte male&#13;
who looks the part.&#13;
"I'm not the typical female,"&#13;
Echo continued,&#13;
• 'where I put on a bunch of&#13;
make-up and wear little frilly&#13;
dresses. I like adventure."&#13;
Echo has gone scuba diving,&#13;
has jumped off cliffs in Califomla&#13;
and plans to go hand&#13;
gliding this summer . " I could&#13;
do a job that some might not&#13;
be able to, but I might not be&#13;
given a job because I am female.&#13;
"Moving furniture is an example.&#13;
I'm pretty strong but&#13;
Education&#13;
Shade from page 1&#13;
Minnesota, got into medical&#13;
school, went to work for a lab&#13;
and married someone who&#13;
was a steamfitter," explained&#13;
Shade. "He put so much pressure&#13;
on her and she put so&#13;
much pressure on herself .. . he&#13;
couldn't tolerate her going&#13;
away or spending additional&#13;
Ume in school and as a result,&#13;
she refused to go to medical&#13;
school.''&#13;
There are 202 persons holding&#13;
teaching positions at&#13;
Parkside; 153 are males and&#13;
49 are females. Out of the 163&#13;
males, all are white except&#13;
for 18 Asians, two Hispanics&#13;
and one Black. There are two&#13;
Asian and one Black among&#13;
the female faculty.&#13;
Being the only Black female&#13;
professor on campus&#13;
has some unique consequences&#13;
for Shade.&#13;
"When I taught in Madlson&#13;
I became involved with Black&#13;
females there. I have not&#13;
done that here and I think it&#13;
ls a disadvantage for the&#13;
young people, but lt gets to be&#13;
a disadvantage to me by&#13;
being the only one," explained&#13;
Shade.&#13;
"If I indeed get caught in it&#13;
(being a mentor for 106 Black&#13;
women), then what I do ls&#13;
spend so much time being a&#13;
counselor and a mentor for&#13;
them that I end up not having&#13;
Ramona Powell&#13;
I'll be helping someone move&#13;
a desk and some guy will say,&#13;
"Oh, don't do that, I'll do lt."&#13;
While in Callfomla a few&#13;
years ago, Echo auditioned&#13;
for an Indian role in a movie.&#13;
"The men producera,&#13;
writers and directors who&#13;
hire, after they hire you, you&#13;
don't know it lt ls just for the&#13;
job because they think you&#13;
can do 1t or because they&#13;
think you're cute. Thia&#13;
producer said I waa right for&#13;
an Indian part. He came over&#13;
to my apartment and made&#13;
advances. Fortunately, I&#13;
neve r heard from him&#13;
again," Echo recalled.&#13;
E cho plans to study mass&#13;
communlcatlons at UW•Mll•&#13;
waukee in the near future and&#13;
would like to make her own&#13;
film documentaries. She one&#13;
day envisions herself making&#13;
nature films with National&#13;
Geographic.&#13;
anyone to respond to myself&#13;
because I have no peers to&#13;
share lt with.&#13;
"Secondly," . continued&#13;
Shade, "I end up getting nack&#13;
from my colleagues because&#13;
then when I get involved with&#13;
106 people, that means I don't&#13;
do research, I don't spend&#13;
tlme teaching, I don't spend&#13;
time doing the committee&#13;
work.&#13;
"If I spend so much Ume&#13;
with all of that (mentoring),&#13;
then they (colleagues) have&#13;
only one expectation for me •&#13;
that I ought to function in one&#13;
way and that may not be my&#13;
particular culture," conclud•&#13;
ed Shade.&#13;
Hendricks from pi,oe 4&#13;
and the experiences that I&#13;
can bring in.&#13;
"The experiences that I've&#13;
had over time with people,&#13;
education, young people and&#13;
experiences that I've had ln&#13;
my personal life, bring a certain&#13;
perspective. My reading&#13;
and understanding of the research&#13;
and seeing and know•&#13;
ing what's happening with&#13;
young people in school every•&#13;
day, gives me a certain per•&#13;
spectlve. So, I see my per•&#13;
spectlve as the greatest thing&#13;
that I can bring to Parkside,"&#13;
Hendricks concluded.&#13;
Suiata and Sunita Shah&#13;
Left India for education in United States&#13;
They heard from some relatives&#13;
in America that the U.S.&#13;
is the place to go to get good&#13;
education. That's why two&#13;
sisters from India, Sujata and&#13;
Sunita Shah, came here four&#13;
years ago.&#13;
The Shah family did not&#13;
leave India together, but left&#13;
months apart. The traumatic&#13;
experience of changing countries&#13;
and being separated&#13;
from their family is not easily&#13;
forgotten by either sister.&#13;
Sujata, now 19 years old,&#13;
came over with her father&#13;
and older brother leaving&#13;
Sunita, their mother and&#13;
younger brother behind for&#13;
six months.&#13;
"I came down here (America),&#13;
it was in the nighttime&#13;
and it was snowing," Sujata&#13;
recalled. "It was cold and I&#13;
feel like why did I come. It&#13;
was hard for me because I&#13;
did't know how to speak, read&#13;
and write."&#13;
Sunita, now 17, remembered&#13;
what it felt like to be in&#13;
a foreign country.&#13;
"It was real difficult," she&#13;
recalled. "I was like in jail&#13;
because I didn't know how to&#13;
speak English or write or&#13;
anything else. When I go to&#13;
school (at this time it was a&#13;
high school in Chicago) the&#13;
teacher talked to me and&#13;
gave me homework. I didn't&#13;
know how to do it and I come&#13;
home and cry."&#13;
It took the sisters two years&#13;
of liv ing in American to learn&#13;
English. They had taken an&#13;
English course in India but it&#13;
didn't teach them how to&#13;
speak English.&#13;
"There's a difference between&#13;
British pronunciation&#13;
and American pronunciation,"&#13;
Sujata explained.&#13;
."Sometimes American students&#13;
are talking to me and I&#13;
don't understand what they&#13;
are saying. If they write it&#13;
down we can understand."&#13;
Sunita had heard, prior to&#13;
coming to the U.S., that&#13;
"America is a free country."&#13;
When she moved here she&#13;
found out that the meaning of&#13;
freedom is subject to different&#13;
interpretations.&#13;
"They say that America is&#13;
a free country, but not really&#13;
to me," Sunita explained.&#13;
"Like here you could do anything&#13;
you want but you cannot&#13;
go to your friends' house.&#13;
You have to call them if they&#13;
are free or not. And you cannot&#13;
play through your neighbors*&#13;
ground. In India you&#13;
don't have to call, you can&#13;
just go over and talk and play&#13;
with them. Everybody knows&#13;
who is living next to each&#13;
other."&#13;
The Shah sisters are glad to&#13;
be women in America. They&#13;
say it is more difficult to be a&#13;
woman in India than in the&#13;
U.S.&#13;
"It's very difficult. They&#13;
treat you real differently,"&#13;
Sunita explained. "If you're a&#13;
girl, you have to be very&#13;
careful who you talk to. You&#13;
have to know how to respect&#13;
other people. I kind of like it&#13;
here. You can talk anyway&#13;
you want to anyone."&#13;
A sexual division of labor&#13;
exists in India.&#13;
"Women don't really work&#13;
outside the home," said Sunita.&#13;
"Men only work. Most of&#13;
them are farmers. Women&#13;
stay home and do the home&#13;
cooking and clean the&#13;
dishes."&#13;
Neither sister works outside&#13;
the home because they've&#13;
been unable to find work.&#13;
Since their mother works,&#13;
they cook an Indian dinner in&#13;
the evening.&#13;
"We eat mostly Indian food&#13;
- bread, rice, no meat," Sujata&#13;
explained. "It takes almost&#13;
one and one half hours to&#13;
make. In India and here, boys&#13;
have to eat only. They don't&#13;
do nothing."&#13;
In two years when Sujata is&#13;
21, she will be expected, according&#13;
to Indian custom, to&#13;
consider marriage.&#13;
"I like to pick my own but&#13;
they (parents) tell me we&#13;
have to do it Indian way, not&#13;
American way. In India we&#13;
don't have boyfriend or girlfriend,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
In India the parents pick a&#13;
male for their daughter and&#13;
then the prospective couple&#13;
meets and talks.&#13;
"First your mother and father&#13;
see the boy and if they&#13;
like the boy they tell me that&#13;
we like this boy so would you&#13;
like to get married. Then we&#13;
(she and the man) talk and&#13;
then afterward I say I like&#13;
you and if he say I like you&#13;
too, then we get married,"&#13;
photo by Klmbertlo Kranlch&#13;
Sunita Shah (I) and her sister Sujata, both originally from&#13;
working their degrees.&#13;
Sujata explained.&#13;
The wedding date is set by&#13;
the parents. Traditionally, the&#13;
woman moves into the husband's&#13;
house with his family&#13;
and must take on the household&#13;
responsibilities. Sujata's&#13;
marriage will deviate slightly&#13;
from custom.&#13;
"I will go after two years to&#13;
India but my mother and father&#13;
are going first. They go&#13;
to some of the relatives house&#13;
and they ask, 'Do you know&#13;
any boy for my girl?' If they&#13;
say yes, then they will give&#13;
me a call and I will go,"&#13;
Sujata explained.&#13;
Sujata's husband will come&#13;
back to the U.S. where the&#13;
two will live with her parents&#13;
for one year and then they&#13;
will move into their own&#13;
apartment. Sujata plans to&#13;
finish college and become a&#13;
travel agent. However, it is&#13;
expected of her to have children.&#13;
"If you don't have children,"&#13;
she explained, "they&#13;
call you bad names." After&#13;
two years of marriage she&#13;
will have a child and if it's a&#13;
boy "It's lucky for everyFlorence&#13;
Blends cultures for best of two worlds&#13;
A native of Hong Kong,&#13;
Florence Lo left her hometown&#13;
four years ago. Separated&#13;
from her parents and&#13;
friends, she and her younger&#13;
brother stayed with an uncle&#13;
in Kenosha, whom they had&#13;
never met before.&#13;
Lo began her studies at&#13;
Parkside in 1983 and was&#13;
joined in the United States by&#13;
her mother one year later. In&#13;
1985 while co-founding the&#13;
Parkside Asian Student Organization&#13;
(PASO), her father&#13;
came to America and the&#13;
family unit was completed.&#13;
According to Lo, PASO was&#13;
started because the Asian students&#13;
with whom she talked&#13;
felt it would be a good idea.&#13;
"We thought," Lo explained,&#13;
"might as well get&#13;
this started and have somebody&#13;
in school recognize us as&#13;
part of t he Oriental culture."&#13;
Lo, president of PASO, believes&#13;
that some club members&#13;
expressed concern with&#13;
her as president because she&#13;
is a woman.&#13;
"When I first started the&#13;
club," explained Lo, "I feel&#13;
that there are people that feel&#13;
it's a bit uncomfortable having&#13;
a girl run a club. This is&#13;
really true. They feel that a&#13;
girl shouldn't be doing something&#13;
really powerful. I&#13;
always try to give my first&#13;
image that I'm a woman, but&#13;
it doesn't mean I cannot do it.&#13;
"Just to give you an example,"&#13;
continued Lo, "I know&#13;
that there are a few guys in&#13;
the club that show some kind&#13;
of interest in me because I'm&#13;
different, yet one of the differences&#13;
is that I am pretty&#13;
much dominant when I do&#13;
things. I'm not the kind of&#13;
girl that's 'traditional.'&#13;
"This is particularly true&#13;
for these Asian guys since&#13;
most of them are not from&#13;
here and they do look at&#13;
'tradition' as a very important&#13;
component in a wife or&#13;
girlfriend. A woman might&#13;
want to go out and work even&#13;
as a wife, that's no problem,&#13;
but you aren't supposed to&#13;
achieve anything higher than&#13;
what you started out to work&#13;
Lots of guys think that a&#13;
woman shouldn't be sitting at&#13;
the top of the hierarchy and&#13;
be an executive person.&#13;
"Some guys in our club&#13;
think that I shouldn't be the&#13;
president because I'm a girl.&#13;
Some of them just look at&#13;
what I do as overdominant&#13;
but at the same time they go&#13;
along with what I've plannedthey&#13;
think it's great."&#13;
Lo has been learning English&#13;
since she was in first&#13;
grade. She is fluent in Chinese.&#13;
Even though she's studied&#13;
the English language extensively,&#13;
Lo has had some&#13;
difficulties while a student at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
"I had been having a bit of&#13;
a hard time understanding&#13;
stuff when I first came. Ordinary&#13;
communicating I don't&#13;
have a lot of problems," explained&#13;
Lo. "When I was taking&#13;
my first semester, I&#13;
couldn't listen to the professor&#13;
as fast as he speak. He&#13;
speaks ordinary speech but to&#13;
me it's not ordinary, it's fast.&#13;
"Anytime I feel I need&#13;
some help in terms of something,&#13;
I go to the professor,"&#13;
continued Lo. "I think they do&#13;
try to help me. Sometimes I&#13;
will even be offering to tell&#13;
them that I come from another&#13;
country and I just&#13;
couldn't understand it as well&#13;
as other people do."&#13;
Lo believes she has the best&#13;
of both worlds because she,&#13;
can blend American and Chinese&#13;
culture together.&#13;
"I feel good about being in&#13;
America. I feel I'm different&#13;
but I can have something to&#13;
be proud of in my culture.&#13;
Orientals have some values&#13;
Florence Lo&#13;
that Americans think are&#13;
really good. I'm like one of&#13;
the products shipped from&#13;
Hong Kong over here.&#13;
"Don't hesitiate to be proud&#13;
of where you come from," advises&#13;
Lo. "I know there are&#13;
people who stay real quiet&#13;
about their own backgroundwhere&#13;
they came from and&#13;
what they do. I think you&#13;
should carry some of your&#13;
own culture. I can understand&#13;
people who blend the cultures&#13;
together, that's what I'm&#13;
doing. You have the advantage&#13;
of knowing two things."&#13;
"I think a woman shouldn't&#13;
be ashamed of being woman," concluded Lo.&#13;
body," Sujata explained. "If&#13;
she has girl people will say,&#13;
'Oh, gosh!' You have to spend&#13;
more money on the girl for&#13;
her marriage ceremony.'"&#13;
Sujata practices the Jain&#13;
religion, which dictates the&#13;
marriage process. A person is&#13;
only allowed to marry within&#13;
the same caste, which is indicated&#13;
by last names. Hence,&#13;
Sujata's mother and father&#13;
had the same last names before&#13;
they married.&#13;
Wedding ceremonies are&#13;
in India and&#13;
last for about two and one&#13;
half hours. The woman's father&#13;
hall gives gold, money and clothes&#13;
costs between&#13;
dollars and is attended by 400&#13;
500 man walk around a fire seven&#13;
times and thus become husband&#13;
If religion. Divorce in India is&#13;
Feminists&#13;
of c olor&#13;
Feminists from page 1&#13;
jority of people in this country,&#13;
and especially the&#13;
masses of women, stand to&#13;
benefit from the most militant,&#13;
the most assertive, challenge&#13;
to racism..."&#13;
bell hooks has written that&#13;
"while it is in no way racist&#13;
for any author to write a book&#13;
exclusively about white&#13;
women, it is fundamentally&#13;
racist for books to be published&#13;
that focus solely on the&#13;
American white woman's experience&#13;
in which that experience&#13;
is assumed to be the&#13;
American women's experience."&#13;
Racism is a joint responsibility.&#13;
"I do not hold any individual&#13;
American woman (or&#13;
man) responsible for the&#13;
roots of this ignorance about&#13;
other cultures (which is one&#13;
basis for racist oppression)..."&#13;
writes Judith Moschkovich,&#13;
"I do hold every&#13;
woman (or man) responsible&#13;
for the transformation of this&#13;
ignorance."&#13;
.&#13;
l&#13;
§JJjata relaUves&#13;
In 18 Inclla, and&#13;
Inclla ot 19 slx it 1n it snowing." "It llke hard 17, it In&#13;
"It "I 1n jail&#13;
(at In It It llvlng In Engllsh. ta.ken 1n Inclla Florence Lo&#13;
- -&#13;
. "I&#13;
If understand.'•&#13;
Suntta had ls Interpretations.&#13;
tree Suntta call lt are cannot&#13;
neighbors'&#13;
Indla call, ls In it in In diUicult. Suntta "If girl, it&#13;
.&#13;
A in Suntta.&#13;
dlahes."&#13;
thelr in&#13;
• half Indla ls&#13;
21, will Indian Indla girl•&#13;
friend," Inclla a&#13;
talks.&#13;
If so I if say llke Lo In Lo 1n 1983 In 1986 famlly Lo, 1t be Idea.&#13;
Lo In part the as isa "I ls&#13;
something&#13;
lt It.&#13;
In&#13;
Interest In I kind of&#13;
·traditional.•&#13;
''ts are In than&#13;
as. In I overdomlnant&#13;
plannedthey&#13;
in ls fiuent In Chinese.&#13;
extensively.&#13;
having blt hard I Lo. my fast 1n Lo. ''1t Lo "1 good in&#13;
photo_.,,, l(lfflbM1le Kranich&#13;
Suntta (1) 118te, India, are worldng on Sujata explained. The wedding date 1a set by baa a the parents. Traditionally, the goah!' woman moves Into the hus- girl band's house with hl8 family marrtage and must take on the house- hold responsibilities. Sujata's rellglon, marriage will deviate slightly 1a&#13;
from custom. "I will go after two years to 18 lndiInclla&#13;
but my mother and fa- cated laat ther are going first. They go Sujata•• to some of the relatives house laat beand&#13;
they ask, 'Do you know fore any boy for my girl?' If they say yes, then they will give very elaborate In Inclla me a call and I will go," Sujata explained. fa-&#13;
Sujata's husband will come ther arranges everything&#13;
back to the U.S. where the from the to the food and&#13;
two wlll live with her parenta givea for one year and then they to the marrriage.&#13;
will move Into their own The ceremony coats beapartment.&#13;
Sujata plans to tween three and five thousand&#13;
finish college and become a ls travel agent. However, it 18 or IIOO people. At the end of&#13;
expected of her to have chll- the wedding, the woman and&#13;
dren. f1re "If you don't have chll- husdren,"&#13;
she explained, "they band and wife. either&#13;
call you bad names." After spouse dies, the other cannot&#13;
two years ot marrtage she remarry, according to Jain&#13;
will have a child and lt it's a 1n ls&#13;
boy "It's lucky for every- not heard of.&#13;
good. hesttJate qulet&#13;
backgroundwhere&#13;
I I'm&#13;
shouldn •t&#13;
being a&#13;
ofcolor -~&#13;
from P""8 1&#13;
Jorlty 01 1n milltant,&#13;
racism ... "&#13;
baa ·it in is raclat be 1n is aasumed the&#13;
experience.••&#13;
Raclam ls responaibllity.&#13;
''I Individual&#13;
man) thls is oppression)&#13;
... " Moschkovlch,&#13;
tranaformation this&#13;
Pamela Smith&#13;
Accepts being a role model on campus, in community&#13;
by Mary Woods&#13;
Pamela Smith is a role&#13;
model at the Parkside&#13;
campus, as well as in the Racine&#13;
community at large. "I&#13;
accept the responsibilty of&#13;
being a role model," she said.&#13;
As one of only two Black&#13;
women on campus in a staff&#13;
position, Smith is sought out&#13;
for advice which she freely&#13;
gives so that others may&#13;
benefit from her knowledge.&#13;
As a minority professional,&#13;
she tries to pass on what she&#13;
knows to others.&#13;
"Each generation should&#13;
prepare the next," she said.&#13;
Smith realizes that not all&#13;
minority professionals have&#13;
interests that extend beyond&#13;
themselves.&#13;
"As different as minorities&#13;
are, as different as men are&#13;
from women, you'll find these&#13;
differences in terms of commitment&#13;
to one another."&#13;
Smith acknowledges that&#13;
her strong commitment to&#13;
helping others is a personal,&#13;
individual commitment. It is&#13;
this interest, the interest in&#13;
seeing others succeed, that is&#13;
one factor which accounts for&#13;
her effectiveness as an advisor/&#13;
educational outreach&#13;
counselor at EOC (Educational&#13;
Opportunity Center) where&#13;
she has worked since the program&#13;
began in October 1985.&#13;
In her position, she is responsible&#13;
for assisting adults&#13;
in exploring vocational/technical&#13;
or college programs.&#13;
EOC is funded by by the Department&#13;
of Education for the&#13;
purpose of aiding low-income&#13;
minorities, women, veterans&#13;
and the handicapped who&#13;
have fewer opportunities to&#13;
pursue information on post&#13;
secondary programs.&#13;
Smith realizes that being a&#13;
Black woman equips her with&#13;
the required empathy for&#13;
those with whom she works.&#13;
However, she adds, it is possible&#13;
for non-minorities to be&#13;
effective in such a position -&#13;
just not as likely. She points&#13;
to the effectiveness of missionaries&#13;
who freely gave of&#13;
themselves for humankind.&#13;
She realizes that the missionary&#13;
spirit lives in but a few.&#13;
Having trained in behavioral&#13;
psychology at Western&#13;
Michigan, Smith understands&#13;
incremental learning and is&#13;
able to transfer this to her&#13;
work by giving her clients appreciation&#13;
of the various&#13;
steps necessary for them to&#13;
realize their dreams. Her unquestionable&#13;
commitment to&#13;
others over the years gives&#13;
her respected stature in the&#13;
community and makes her a&#13;
most valuable staff member.&#13;
Smith views education as&#13;
"the most viable avenue of&#13;
achieving because it broadens&#13;
your thinking capabilities, analytical&#13;
abilities and self-introspection.&#13;
"It is a process," Smith&#13;
continued, "and ultimately&#13;
we'd like to think that the end&#13;
result is a degree and therefore&#13;
a marketable skill, but I&#13;
think there's something missing&#13;
when you forget about the&#13;
learning process itself. The&#13;
process itself is important."&#13;
When asked what she would&#13;
like minority students to gain&#13;
from higher education, she&#13;
responded by saying, "One of&#13;
the most important skills that&#13;
a minority person can have is&#13;
to be able to learn the system,&#13;
to learn systematic&#13;
ways of thinking, to learn the&#13;
process and to learn organizational&#13;
structure because all&#13;
of society and everything you&#13;
want to do is based on a&#13;
structure or a system.&#13;
"If we, as minorities, don't&#13;
have the confidence or are intimidated&#13;
by pursuing a phenomenon&#13;
from one step to the&#13;
next, we lose," Smith continued.&#13;
"We may start the process&#13;
and then there's a second&#13;
level or a third level or a&#13;
Debbie Hendricks&#13;
A woman with a beneficial view by Mary Woods&#13;
As Director of CHAMP&#13;
(Creating Higher Aspirations&#13;
and Motivations Program),&#13;
Debbie Hendricks tries to instill&#13;
within pre-college students&#13;
the idea that CHAMP&#13;
serves their motivation to&#13;
achieve whatever it is that&#13;
they deem important for their&#13;
fulfillment.&#13;
The CHAMP program&#13;
works with minority students&#13;
in eighth through twelfth&#13;
grades. The purpose of the&#13;
program is to motivate students&#13;
to attend and be prepared&#13;
for college.&#13;
Hendricks, though director&#13;
of CHAMP, has also served&#13;
as acting director of Minority&#13;
Student Services, much to the&#13;
delight of the students served&#13;
by that office. She has implemented&#13;
positive change while&#13;
serving in both capacities.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside&#13;
in July, 1986, she was the assistant&#13;
director of the Educational&#13;
Opportunity Program&#13;
at Marquette University&#13;
where she also received her&#13;
Master's degree.&#13;
In her work with CHAMP&#13;
students and Parkside students,&#13;
Hendricks tries to&#13;
show that having a sense of&#13;
responsibility of self is responsibility&#13;
to other people.&#13;
The CHAMP program,&#13;
under her direction, has&#13;
added a new course entitled,&#13;
"Ethnic History," to show the&#13;
results of others' sense of responsibility.&#13;
Contributions of&#13;
Blacks, Native Americans&#13;
and Hispanics will be presented&#13;
in this new course to show&#13;
that being responsible for&#13;
oneself has implications for&#13;
the lives of others.&#13;
As a Black woman at Parkside,&#13;
Hendricks would like to&#13;
see the day when she is "not&#13;
looked at as a Black woman&#13;
who works in the CHAMP&#13;
program, but as an individual&#13;
who can be helpful to anyone,"&#13;
Hendricks said.&#13;
"I would like for a visitor to&#13;
be able to come on campus&#13;
and not be told where the&#13;
Blacks are, where the Hispanics&#13;
are, where the International&#13;
students are," Hendricks&#13;
continued. "I'd like&#13;
them to feel while they are&#13;
here that Parkside encompasses&#13;
everybody. That's the&#13;
impact that I'd like to make.&#13;
That's what I'd like to see."&#13;
When asked how important&#13;
it is for minority students to&#13;
interact with the majority&#13;
population, she responded,&#13;
"It is critical for minority&#13;
students to interact.&#13;
"We must mix, mingle and&#13;
understand one another. Minorities&#13;
are bothered by&#13;
others' not understanding&#13;
them, so that's why it's so important&#13;
for minorities to mingle&#13;
with others. It's the way&#13;
that the majority will get to&#13;
know the minority. I resist&#13;
the idea of being separate but&#13;
equal. This is not to say that&#13;
the minorities at times may&#13;
not need outlets together, but&#13;
real understanding will only&#13;
come from interaction."&#13;
In her short time at Parkside,&#13;
Hendricks has been a&#13;
mover. She has worked&#13;
ceaselessly in helping the university&#13;
come to grips with its&#13;
understanding of the importance&#13;
of Minority Student&#13;
Services. Funds have been allocated&#13;
and a staff will be&#13;
coming in to further serve the&#13;
needs of minority students.&#13;
Hendricks is currently responsible&#13;
for proposal writing&#13;
and the day-to-day operations&#13;
of both CHAMP and Minority&#13;
Student Services.&#13;
Hendricks comes from a&#13;
family that has high regard&#13;
for education. Both of her&#13;
parents have college degrees.&#13;
One of her grandfathers was&#13;
a horse shoer in Mississippi&#13;
where he worked and sent all&#13;
of his children through college.&#13;
Hendricks is dedicated to&#13;
seeing more minorities attend&#13;
and be prepared for college.&#13;
She is very proud that at this&#13;
time, CHAMP has its highest&#13;
enrollment of Spanish students.&#13;
When asked how she sees&#13;
herslf in the university she&#13;
responded, "The only difference&#13;
between myself and anyone&#13;
else here is perspective,&#13;
Hendricks see page 2&#13;
fourth level and before we&#13;
can make it through the hierarchy,&#13;
we've gotten wiped&#13;
out. So once we've mastered&#13;
the thinking, once we've&#13;
adapted our thinking to a systematic&#13;
way, then it's harder&#13;
to eliminate us from the process."&#13;
Her mother and grandmother&#13;
(who is now 80 years&#13;
old) instilled within her a&#13;
strong desire to help others.&#13;
She was taught at an early&#13;
age that her responsibilities&#13;
go beyond herself. As a single&#13;
mother who finds parenting&#13;
rewarding, she is instilling&#13;
these same qualities in her&#13;
daughter.&#13;
Smith is the eldest daughter&#13;
and one of seven children, six&#13;
of whom have obtained colege&#13;
educations. For this, she&#13;
credits her mother, who&#13;
values education.&#13;
Smith feels that Parkside&#13;
could have a positive impact&#13;
on the community and is&#13;
somewhat optimistic of this&#13;
end because of the broader&#13;
educational concept of the&#13;
present administration.&#13;
When asked if being a minority&#13;
places extra responsibilities&#13;
and additional expectations&#13;
upon her, she said&#13;
that if and when that is the&#13;
case, she uses it as an oppor-&#13;
Pamela Smith&#13;
tunity to educate others. She&#13;
feels that minorities have an&#13;
obligation to educate non-minorities&#13;
about the minority&#13;
experience since the majority&#13;
population seldom has the&#13;
cause to look beyond their&#13;
own experience.&#13;
If there is a message that&#13;
Smith would deliver to the&#13;
Parkside community, it&#13;
would be to "be receptive to&#13;
new ideas, to new ways of&#13;
looking at the same thing."&#13;
To minority students, she&#13;
would say, "Develop a sense&#13;
of self, a security, a confidence.&#13;
If you take that with&#13;
you, you can make it."&#13;
'We share same problems differently&#13;
"We all go through the&#13;
same problems whether&#13;
you're Black, white, Hispanic&#13;
or whatever. It's just that we i&#13;
share it differently."&#13;
That is the belief of Sophia&#13;
Tina Miller, one of 106 Black&#13;
female students on campus.&#13;
Miller is a sophomore who&#13;
has been attending Parkside&#13;
for four years.&#13;
"The first two years I was&#13;
doing real good, but the peer&#13;
pressure groups I hung&#13;
around with, I lost confidence&#13;
in what I really wanted to do&#13;
at Parkside," Miller explained.&#13;
The peer groups Miller associated&#13;
with gave her advice&#13;
but not the kind that she&#13;
would now give to a student.&#13;
"Put your facts in order,"&#13;
suggested Miller. "Is this a&#13;
good place for you to be?&#13;
What are the requirements?&#13;
No one ever told me this&#13;
They (peer groups) told me&#13;
what teacher not to take and&#13;
what teacher to take. But&#13;
sometimes if you get the&#13;
teacher by yourself and you&#13;
open up to them, they can see&#13;
where you come from."&#13;
Lack of positive encouragement&#13;
from peer groups also&#13;
didn't help Miller in her academic&#13;
career.&#13;
"Some people don't like to&#13;
see you put forth an effort&#13;
and try to put you down," explained&#13;
Miller. "I found the&#13;
majority of them was my own&#13;
race, which was a shock.&#13;
"To me, the majority of&#13;
Black women have the worst&#13;
attitude problem about one&#13;
another. They judge you on&#13;
the outside, how you dress up,&#13;
and not normally on what you&#13;
really are on the inside.&#13;
"You got to know how to&#13;
take criticism. That's what&#13;
Black women have to learn to&#13;
do with themselves in order&#13;
to relate to others. They criticize&#13;
with each other but when&#13;
somebody criticizes them,&#13;
they hold a grudge on each&#13;
other," Miller explained.&#13;
In addition to being a student,&#13;
Miller is very active in&#13;
church. She wishes more professors&#13;
would understand why&#13;
she sometimes takes time off&#13;
from her classes to engage in&#13;
various church activities.&#13;
Miller believes that professors&#13;
are more understanding&#13;
of the time involved in athletics&#13;
than other activities.&#13;
"Athletes get away with it&#13;
(being excused from classes).&#13;
With me, my church activities&#13;
are more important (than&#13;
school) and they (professors)&#13;
can't accept that. I have a lot&#13;
of church and prayer service&#13;
that I'm trying to get into,"&#13;
explained Miller. "I would&#13;
like to sometimes go to&#13;
prayer service but the teacher&#13;
would tell you, 'Well, you&#13;
have to work it out and if you&#13;
don't, I don't care.' "»&#13;
Faith in God is a major&#13;
positive force in Miller's life.&#13;
"I'm trying to let God lead&#13;
"JY w»y that I can accomplish&#13;
my goal. There's a lot of&#13;
stuff that I can do and I don't&#13;
even have to have the educa-&#13;
**or ^ because I have&#13;
faith in myself," said Miller.&#13;
' I&#13;
. \&#13;
...&#13;
Pamela Smith&#13;
Accepts being a role model on campus, in community&#13;
by Mary Woods&#13;
Pamela Smith ls a role&#13;
model at the Parkside&#13;
campus, aa well as in the Racin&#13;
community at large. "I&#13;
ccept th re.8pons1bllty of&#13;
being a role model,•· she said.&#13;
As one of only two Black&#13;
women on campus in a staff&#13;
po ltion, Smith 1s sought out&#13;
for advice which she freely&#13;
gtv so that others may&#13;
benefit from her knowledge.&#13;
As a minority professional,&#13;
h tries to pass on what she&#13;
know to others.&#13;
"Each generation should&#13;
prepare the next," sh said.&#13;
Smith realizes that not all&#13;
minority professionals have&#13;
interests that extend beyond&#13;
themselves.&#13;
••As diff rent as mlnoritl s&#13;
are, a.a dllferent as men are.&#13;
from women, you '11 find these&#13;
differences in terms of commitment&#13;
to one another."&#13;
Smith acknowledges that&#13;
her strong commitment to&#13;
h lping others ls a personal,&#13;
individual commitment. It 1a&#13;
this interest, the interest In&#13;
eing others succeed, that ls&#13;
on fact.or which accounts for&#13;
her effectlvene s as an advisor/&#13;
educational outreach&#13;
counselor at EOC (Education-&#13;
1 Opportunity Center) where&#13;
she has worked since the program&#13;
began in October 1986.&#13;
In her position, she ls responsible&#13;
tor aastatlng adults&#13;
in exploring vocational/techn1cal&#13;
or college programs.&#13;
EOC is funded by by the Department&#13;
of Education for the&#13;
purpos of aiding low-Income&#13;
minorities, women, veterans&#13;
and the handicapped who&#13;
have f wer opportunities to&#13;
pursue lnformaUon on post&#13;
secondary programs.&#13;
Smith realizes that being a&#13;
Black woman equips her with&#13;
the r quired empathy for&#13;
those with whom she works.&#13;
However, she adds, 1t ls possible&#13;
for non-minorities to be&#13;
effecUve in such a posttlon -&#13;
just not as likely. She points&#13;
to the effectiveness of missionaries&#13;
who freely gave of&#13;
themselves for humankind.&#13;
She reall.zes that the missionary&#13;
splrtt lives in but a f.ew.&#13;
Having trained in behavioral&#13;
psychology at Westem&#13;
Michigan, Smith understands&#13;
incremental leamtng and ls&#13;
able to transfer this to her&#13;
work by giving her clients ap.&#13;
preclation of the various&#13;
step necessary for them to&#13;
reallze thelr dreams. Her unquestionable&#13;
commitment to&#13;
others over the yea.rs gives&#13;
her respected tature 1n the&#13;
Debbie Hendricks&#13;
community and makes her a&#13;
most valuable staff member.&#13;
Smith views education as&#13;
"the most viable avenue of&#13;
achieving because it broadens&#13;
your thinking capabilities, analytical&#13;
abillties and el!-introspectlon.&#13;
"It ls a process," Smith&#13;
continued, "and ultimately&#13;
we'd like to think that the end&#13;
result ls a degree and therefore&#13;
a marketable skill, but I&#13;
think there's something missing&#13;
when you forget about th&#13;
leamlng process itself. The&#13;
process itself is important.••&#13;
When asked what sh would&#13;
ll.ke minority students to gain&#13;
from higher education, she&#13;
responded by saying, "One of&#13;
the most important skills that&#13;
a minority person can have is&#13;
to be able to learn the system,&#13;
to learn systematic&#13;
ways of thinking, to learn the&#13;
process and to learn organizational&#13;
structure because all&#13;
of society and everything you&#13;
want to do 1 based on a&#13;
structure or a system.&#13;
"If we, as minorities, don't&#13;
have the confidence or are intimidated&#13;
by pursuing a phenomenon&#13;
from one step to the&#13;
next, we lose," Smith continued.&#13;
"We may start the pro.,&#13;
cess and then there's a second&#13;
level or a third level or a&#13;
A woman with a beneficial view&#13;
by Mary Woods&#13;
As Director of CHAMP&#13;
(Creating Higher Aspirations&#13;
and Motivations Program),&#13;
Debbie Hendricks tries to instill&#13;
within pre-college students&#13;
the idea that CHAMP&#13;
serves their motivation to&#13;
acht ve whatever it ls that&#13;
th y d em Important for th ir&#13;
fulfillment.&#13;
The CHAMP program&#13;
work with minority stud nta&#13;
1n lghth through twelfth&#13;
grad s. Th purpo of th&#13;
program ls to motivate stud&#13;
nts to attend and be prepared&#13;
for coll g .&#13;
H ndrlcka, though director&#13;
of CHAMP, ha.a also served&#13;
acting director of Minority&#13;
Stud nt services, much to th&#13;
d light of th students served&#13;
by that offlc . Sh baa implemented&#13;
posltlv change while&#13;
serving tn both capacltlea.&#13;
B fore coming to Parkaide&#13;
ln July, 1986, she was the a.&#13;
aiatant director of the Educational&#13;
Opportunity Program&#13;
at Marquette University&#13;
where she al80 received her&#13;
Master'• degree.&#13;
In her work wtth CHAMP&#13;
students and Parkside atuden&#13;
, Hendrlcka trte1 to&#13;
ahow that having a senae of&#13;
responstbUlty of self la responsibility&#13;
to other people.&#13;
Th CHAMP program,&#13;
under her direction, ha.a&#13;
added a new course entitled,&#13;
"Ethnic Hlatory," to show the&#13;
results of others' sense of re-&#13;
1ponsibility. Contributions of&#13;
Blacks, Nativ Americana&#13;
and Hispanics will be presented&#13;
in this new eourae to show&#13;
that being responsible for&#13;
onesel1 has lmplicatlons for&#13;
the lives of others.&#13;
&gt;J a Black woman at Parkllde,&#13;
Hendricks would like to&#13;
see the day when she is "not&#13;
looked at as a Black woman&#13;
who works in the CHAMP&#13;
program, but an individual&#13;
who can be helpful to anyone,"&#13;
H ndrtcks said.&#13;
"l would Uke for a visitor to&#13;
be able to come on campus&#13;
and not be told where the&#13;
Blacks are, where the Hispanics&#13;
are, where the International&#13;
students are," Hendricks&#13;
continued. "I'd like&#13;
them to f l while they are&#13;
here that Parkside encompasses&#13;
everybody. That's the&#13;
impact that I'd l1k to make.&#13;
That's what I'd like to see."&#13;
When asked how important&#13;
it 1B for minority students to&#13;
interact with the majority&#13;
population, she responded,&#13;
"It ls critical for minority&#13;
students to interact.&#13;
"We must mlx, mingle and&#13;
understand one another. Minorities&#13;
are bothered by&#13;
others' not understanding&#13;
them, 80 that's why it'• so important&#13;
for minorities to mingle&#13;
with others. It's the way&#13;
that the majority wUl get to&#13;
know the minority. I reslat&#13;
the Idea of betng separate but&#13;
equal. This ls not to say that&#13;
the minorities at tlmes may&#13;
not need outlets together, but&#13;
real understandJng will only&#13;
come from interaction."&#13;
In her short time at Park•&#13;
side, Hendricks has been a&#13;
mover. She has worked&#13;
ceaselessly tn helping the university&#13;
come to grips with lta&#13;
understanding of the importance&#13;
of Minority Student&#13;
Services. Funds have been allocated&#13;
and a staff will be&#13;
coming ln to further serve the&#13;
n eds of minority students.&#13;
Hendricks ls currently responsible&#13;
for proposal writing&#13;
and the day-to-day operations&#13;
of both CHAMP and :Minority&#13;
Student Services.&#13;
Hendricks comes from a&#13;
family that has high regard&#13;
for education. Both of her&#13;
pa.nmts have college degrees.&#13;
One of her grandfathers wu&#13;
a horse shoer in Misalssippl&#13;
where he worked and sent all&#13;
of hl8 children through college.&#13;
Hendricks ts dedicated to&#13;
seeing more mlnoritles attend&#13;
and be prepared for college.&#13;
She ls very proud that at this&#13;
tlme, CHAMP has lts highest&#13;
enrollment of Spanlah students.&#13;
When asked how she aeelJ&#13;
henlf in the un1vemty she&#13;
reaponded, ''The only dlffer4&#13;
ence between myself and anyone&#13;
else here la perspective,&#13;
tMndrick91ffP-,.2&#13;
fourth level and before we&#13;
can make it through the hierarchy,&#13;
we've gotten wiped&#13;
out. So once we've mastered&#13;
the thlnldng, once we've&#13;
adapted our thinking to a systematic&#13;
way, then it's harder&#13;
to eliminate us from the process."&#13;
Her mother and grandmother&#13;
( who 1s now 80 years&#13;
old) lnStllled within her a&#13;
strong desire to help others.&#13;
She waa taught at an early&#13;
age that her responslbllltles&#13;
go beyond herself. Aa a single&#13;
mother who finds parenting&#13;
rewarding, she 1s lnSttlltng&#13;
these sam qualltl ln h r&#13;
daughter.&#13;
Smith ls the eldest daughter&#13;
and one of seven children, slx&#13;
of whom have obtained colege&#13;
educations. For this, she&#13;
credits her mother, who&#13;
values education.&#13;
Smith feel that Parkside&#13;
could have a positive impact&#13;
on the community and is&#13;
somewhat optimlsUc of th.ta&#13;
end because of the broader&#13;
educational concept of the&#13;
present admlnistratlon.&#13;
When aaked if. being a minority&#13;
places extra responsibilities&#13;
and additional expectations&#13;
upon her, she said&#13;
that if and when that 1s the&#13;
case, she uses lt as an oppor-&#13;
Pamela Smith&#13;
tun1ty to educate others. She&#13;
feels that minorities have an&#13;
obligation to ducate non-mJ.&#13;
norittes about the minority&#13;
experience since the majority&#13;
population seldom has the&#13;
cause to look beyond thelr&#13;
own experience.&#13;
If there ls a message that&#13;
Smith would deliver to the&#13;
Parkside community, tl&#13;
would be to ''be receptive to&#13;
new Ideas, to new ways of&#13;
looking at the same thing."&#13;
To minority students, she&#13;
would say, "Develop sense&#13;
of self, a security, a confidence.&#13;
If you take that with&#13;
you, you can make lt."&#13;
'We share same problems differently'&#13;
"We all go through the&#13;
same problem whether&#13;
you're Black, white, Hispanic&#13;
or whatever. It's Just that we 1&#13;
share it dlfferenUy."&#13;
That 1s the belief of Sophia&#13;
Tina Miller, one of 106 Black&#13;
female students on campus.&#13;
Miller is a sophomore who&#13;
has been attending Parkside&#13;
for four years.&#13;
• 'The first two yea.rs I was&#13;
doing real good, but the peer&#13;
pressure groups I hung&#13;
around with, I lost confidence&#13;
in what I really wanted to do&#13;
at Parkside," Miller explained.&#13;
The peer groups Miller associated&#13;
with gave her advice&#13;
but not the kind that she&#13;
would now gtve to a student.&#13;
"Put your facts 1n order,"&#13;
suggested Miller. "la thla a&#13;
good place for you to be?&#13;
What are the requlrements?&#13;
No one ever told me th.ta.&#13;
They (peer groups) told me&#13;
what teacher not to take and&#13;
what teacher to take. But&#13;
sometimes if. you get the&#13;
teacher by yourself and you&#13;
open up to them, they can see&#13;
where you come from."&#13;
Lack of poaitlve encourage.&#13;
ment from peer groups also&#13;
didn't help Miller in her academic&#13;
career.&#13;
"SOme people don't l1k to&#13;
see you put forth an effort&#13;
and try to put you down," explained&#13;
Miller. "I found the&#13;
majority of them was my own&#13;
race, which was a shock.&#13;
"To me, the ma:,Orlty of&#13;
Black women have the worst&#13;
attitude problem about one&#13;
another. They judge you on&#13;
the outside, how you dre up,&#13;
and not normally on what you&#13;
really are on the inside.&#13;
"You got to know how to&#13;
take criticlsm. That's what&#13;
Black women have to learn to&#13;
do with themselves ln order&#13;
to relate to others. They criticize&#13;
with ach other but when&#13;
somebody criticizes them,&#13;
they hold a grudge on each&#13;
other," Miller explained.&#13;
In addition to being a student,&#13;
Miller ls very active ln&#13;
church. She wishes more profe$&#13;
80rs would understand why&#13;
she sometimes takes time off&#13;
from her classes to engage in&#13;
various church activities.&#13;
Miller believes that professors&#13;
are more understanding&#13;
of the time involved in athletic&#13;
than other activities.&#13;
"Athletes get away with lt&#13;
(being excused from classes}.&#13;
With me, my church activl•&#13;
ties are more important (than&#13;
school) and they (professors)&#13;
can't accept that. I have a lot&#13;
of church and prayer service&#13;
that I'm trying to get into,"&#13;
explained Miller. "I would&#13;
like to sometimes go to&#13;
prayer service but the teacher&#13;
would tell you, 'Well, you&#13;
have to work lt out and if you&#13;
don't, I don't care.· •~&#13;
Faith 1n God ls a major&#13;
positive force in Miller's llte.&#13;
"I'm trying to let Ood lead&#13;
my way that I can accompllsh&#13;
my goat. There's a lot of&#13;
stuff that I can do and I don't&#13;
even have to have the education&#13;
for 1t because t have&#13;
faith in myself," said Miller.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 29,1987 9 park's dept.&#13;
Thursday, April 30&#13;
VIDEO: "Shoah" will be&#13;
shown continuously all day&#13;
starting at 8:30 a.m. in Union&#13;
104. This film is about the destruction&#13;
of Jews during&#13;
World War II. The showing is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, May 1&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky" (R)&#13;
will be shown at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
and at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
cinema. Admission is free for&#13;
Parkside/Carthage students&#13;
and $2 for others. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
A Week at the Park•&#13;
PLAY: "The Cradle Will&#13;
Hock" starts at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Tickets will be available at&#13;
the door.&#13;
Saturday, May 2&#13;
WORKSHOPS: "Successful&#13;
Parenting of Teenagers" and&#13;
"Advanced Lotus 1-2-3" both&#13;
start at 9 a.m. Call ext. 2312&#13;
for further details.&#13;
PLAY: "The Cradle Will&#13;
Rock" will be repeated at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Tickets will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Sunday, May 3&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: "Shoah"&#13;
(part one of part two) will be&#13;
shown at 2 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky" (R)&#13;
will be repeated at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, May 4&#13;
CONCERT: "Pizza, Pasta&#13;
and all that Jazz" featuring&#13;
the Parkside Jazz Ensemble&#13;
from 12 noon to 2 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square. All are welcome.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be shown at 1:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: "Shoah"&#13;
(part two of part two) will be&#13;
shown at 6 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. The film is open to&#13;
the public at no charge.&#13;
Tuesday, May 5&#13;
CONCERT: featuring the&#13;
Parkside Wind Ensemble&#13;
starting at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission&#13;
will be charged at the&#13;
door.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be repeated at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square.&#13;
Wednesday, May 6&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Marketing in&#13;
a Non-Profit Organization"&#13;
starts at 9 a.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Sponsored by the Continuing&#13;
Education Office.&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE: featuring&#13;
Steve Mullin from noon to 2&#13;
p.m. and from 6-8 p.m. in&#13;
Main Place. The event is free&#13;
and open to the public. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be repeated at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square.&#13;
16. The rally will be a road&#13;
race/scavenger hunt and will&#13;
begin at 2 p.m. A $5 entry fee&#13;
will be charged, but all entrants&#13;
will have the opportunity&#13;
to win a $100 cash prize&#13;
for the best time. There will&#13;
be a post-rally celebration&#13;
with food and beverages. The&#13;
rally winner will be announced&#13;
at The End Saturday&#13;
night.&#13;
— ThFeil es —&#13;
One Year Ago&#13;
May 1, 1986&#13;
Residence director dies&#13;
The recently-named residence director for Parkside's&#13;
new housing project died this weekend in a seven-car accident&#13;
near Oklahoma City, OK.&#13;
Craig A. Hall and his wife Jill were killed when a semitruck&#13;
veered across the highway median strip and hit&#13;
seven cars, according to Jenny Price, director of student&#13;
life.&#13;
Hall, who was chosen for the position last month, was to&#13;
begin work at Parkside next week.&#13;
Price said she is uncertain what will happen to fill the&#13;
position. She speclated another candidate from the final&#13;
pool will be selected to fill the vacancy.&#13;
Five Years Ago&#13;
April 29, 1982&#13;
"Save the Library Day" set&#13;
Members of student organizations - PAB, PSGA,&#13;
Ranger and SOC - are organizing "Save the Library Day"&#13;
on Wednesday, May 12 in an effort to raise funds for the&#13;
library, which has been seriously hurt by state mandated&#13;
budget cuts.&#13;
The library is also receiving attention from the PSGA&#13;
Senate and the Science Division Ad Hoc Library Crisis&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The student organization leaders have arranged for&#13;
more than 30 items to be donated to a raffle to raise funds&#13;
for the library. The prizes include a semester's books and&#13;
a white parking sticker.&#13;
They also have sought and received several donations&#13;
from the business communities in Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
Ten Years Ago&#13;
April 27, 1977&#13;
Balsano receives unisexual grant&#13;
Life science professor Joseph Balsano has been awarded&#13;
a $35,000 grant from the National Science Foundation&#13;
to continue his studies of an evolutionary biology of an&#13;
unusual species of small unisexual fish in which all offspring&#13;
are female.&#13;
Balsano, who has been studying the various aspects of&#13;
the Poecilia formosa since the mid-1960's, points out that&#13;
the research is particularly valuable for genetic research.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
The Pi Sigma Epsilon Co-&#13;
Ed Marketing Fraternity will&#13;
hold meetings every Wednesday&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Molinaro 116.&#13;
PAB&#13;
The Parkside Activities&#13;
Board will be sponsoring a&#13;
road rally on Saturday, May&#13;
Club Events&#13;
Geology Club&#13;
Mr. Bart Adrian of the&#13;
Weather Department of&#13;
WITI-Channel 6 in Milwaukee&#13;
will speak on "Tornadoes and&#13;
Severe Thunderstorms" on&#13;
Friday, May 1 at 1 p.m. The&#13;
talk is scheduled for Greenquist&#13;
113 but may be moved&#13;
to a larger room if interest&#13;
dictates. Everyone is welcome.&#13;
Humanities&#13;
Symposium&#13;
Sheila Kaplan will be&#13;
speaking on "State Colleges&#13;
and Universities: Their Role&#13;
in the Future" on Sunday,&#13;
May 3 at 7:30 p.m. The symposium&#13;
will be held at 4601&#13;
Edgewater Drive in Racine.&#13;
Everyone is welcome.&#13;
English Club&#13;
Students interested in forming&#13;
an English club will meet&#13;
Monday, May 4 in CA 233 at&#13;
12:15 p.m. The winner of the&#13;
English scholarship will be&#13;
announced at the meeting and&#13;
organizational strategies will&#13;
be discussed. All interested&#13;
students are encouraged to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon will be&#13;
sponsoring the Loop 500 on&#13;
SOC&#13;
SOC from page 1&#13;
major status, it doesn't mean another organization has to&#13;
lose major status. There is no guideline stating that there&#13;
can only be four major status organizations on campus.&#13;
"Our goals for the next year are to continue club involvement&#13;
on campus and continue the worthwhile activities&#13;
SOC has been doing all along. Hopefully we'll be able&#13;
to set up new clubs on campus, we've also got several&#13;
new committees that are going to keep us busy," Harmeyer&#13;
stated.&#13;
"I hope that as a result of SOC gaining major status, we&#13;
don't have a break from PSGA. Although we're not going&#13;
to be a standing committee of PSGA anymore, I would&#13;
hope that the president and vice-president would continue&#13;
to work with SOC as well as the other organizations on&#13;
campus. Just because we're leaving PSGA, it doesn't&#13;
mean we have to stop doing all the important things we&#13;
do together," he added.&#13;
Harmeyer summarized his feelings about SOC by saying,&#13;
"The whole thing with SOC could never have been&#13;
done without the help of people like Bill Serpe, Dan Galbraith,&#13;
Buddy Couvion, Kay Rouse and many others. I'm&#13;
really thankful for the help all those people have given me&#13;
this past semester. I hope they continue in their support&#13;
for SOC.&#13;
"This is what SOC deserves. We've worked long and&#13;
hard to gain major status. I don't see any problems with&#13;
SOC keeping major status. We're a vital part of Parkside&#13;
and will continue to be for years to come," Harmeyer&#13;
concluded.&#13;
In other Senate business, Senators and Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocation Committee (SUFAC) members&#13;
were elected.&#13;
Kay Rouse and Sue Walborn were elected senators of&#13;
PSGA. Dan Vogt was re-elected assistant pro-tempore of&#13;
PSGA. The three spring SUFAC seats were filled by Senators&#13;
Kevin Zirkelbach, Blake Topel and Sue Walborn. The&#13;
two fall seats were filled by Chief Justice of PSGA Scott&#13;
Peterson and Peer Support member Ralph Abagian.&#13;
Friday, May 1 at 1 p.m. in the&#13;
Inner Loop Road. Team fees&#13;
are $12 and price includes a&#13;
Loop 500 t-shirt for each&#13;
member. Prizes will be&#13;
awarded for winners. Sign-up&#13;
will be held through May 1 in&#13;
the Alcove.&#13;
Remember,&#13;
no issue&#13;
after next&#13;
week.&#13;
Get your club&#13;
events in by&#13;
Monday&#13;
at&#13;
noon&#13;
GOOD EXPERIENCE&#13;
GREAT EARNINGS&#13;
Telecable of Ra cine has need of&#13;
part-time direct sales people&#13;
WE OFFER:&#13;
• paid training&#13;
• evenings and weekend hours&#13;
• average income $200-$300&#13;
per week&#13;
WE NEED PEOPLE WITH:&#13;
• professional appearance&#13;
• professional attitude&#13;
• dependable transportation&#13;
CALL TELECABLE AT 637 6977&#13;
ASK FOR FRED&#13;
eoe - M/F&#13;
RANGER Thursday , April 29, 1987 9 park's dept&#13;
- --------A Week at the Park--------&#13;
Thursday, April 80&#13;
\1DEO: "Shoah" wlll be&#13;
shown continuously all day&#13;
starting at 8:30 a .m. ln Union&#13;
104. ThJs film ls about the destruction&#13;
of Jews during&#13;
World War II. The showing Ls&#13;
free and open to the publlc.&#13;
Friday, May 1&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky'' (R)&#13;
will be shown at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
and at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
cLnema. Admission ls free for&#13;
Parkside/Carthage students&#13;
and $2 for other . Sponsored&#13;
byPAB.&#13;
PLAY: "The Cradle Will&#13;
Rock" starts at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Tickets will be available at&#13;
the door.&#13;
Saturday, May 2&#13;
WORKSHOPS: ''Successful&#13;
Parenting of Teenagers" and&#13;
"Advanced Lotus 1-2-3" both&#13;
start at 9 a.m. Call ext. 2312&#13;
for further details.&#13;
PLAY: "The Cradle Will&#13;
Rock" will be repeated at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Tickets will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Sunday, May S&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: ''Shoah''&#13;
(part one of part two) wlll be&#13;
shown at 2 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky" (R)&#13;
will be repeat d at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Uruon Cinema.&#13;
Monday, May 4:&#13;
CONCERT: "Pizza, Pasta&#13;
and all that Jazz'' featuring&#13;
the Parkside Jazz Ensemble&#13;
from 12 noon to 2 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square. All are welcome.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be shown at 1:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: ''Shoah''&#13;
(part two of part two) will be&#13;
shown at 6 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. The ftlm is open to&#13;
the public at no charge.&#13;
Tuesday, May cs&#13;
CONCERT: featuring the&#13;
Parkside Wind Ensemble&#13;
starting at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatr . Admission&#13;
w111 be charged at the&#13;
door.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon'' will&#13;
be reoeated at 8 p.m. ln&#13;
Unton Square.&#13;
Wecln y, Ma&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Mark ting in&#13;
a Non-Profit Organlzation"&#13;
tarts at 9 a.m. in nton 207.&#13;
Sponsor d by the Continuing&#13;
Education Offlc .&#13;
OOFFEEHOU E: featuring&#13;
Steve Mullln from noon to 2&#13;
p.m. and from 6-8 p.m. ln&#13;
Main Place. The v nt l fr e&#13;
and open to th public. ponsored&#13;
by p AB.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" wlll&#13;
be repeat d at 3:SO p.m. in&#13;
Uruon Squ r .&#13;
- - --------Club Events----------&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon 16 . The rally will be a road&#13;
race/ scavenger hunt and will&#13;
begin at 2 p.m. A $IS entry fee&#13;
will be charged, but all entrants&#13;
will have the opportunity&#13;
to win a 100 cash prize&#13;
for the best time. There will&#13;
be a post-rally celebration&#13;
with food and beverages. The&#13;
rally winner will be announced&#13;
at The End Saturday&#13;
night.&#13;
The Pl Sigma Epsilon CoEd&#13;
arketing Fraternity will&#13;
hold meetings every Wednesday&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Molinaro 116.&#13;
PAB&#13;
Th Park ide Activities&#13;
Board will be sponsoring a&#13;
road rally on Saturday, May - The Files&#13;
On Year Ago&#13;
May 1.1986&#13;
Rettld n dlr tor di&#13;
-&#13;
The recently-named residence director for Parkside's&#13;
new housing project died this weekend in a seven-car accident&#13;
near Oklahoma City, OK.&#13;
Craig A. Hall and hJ wife Jlll were killed when a semitruck&#13;
veered across the highway median strip and hJt&#13;
sev n cars, according to JeMy Price, director of student&#13;
llfe.&#13;
Hall, who was chosen for the posltlon last month, was to&#13;
begin work at Parkside next week.&#13;
rice said she is uncertain what will happen to fill the&#13;
position. She speclat d another candidate from the ftnal&#13;
pool will be selected to fill the vacancy.&#13;
Flv Years Ago&#13;
April 29, 1982&#13;
"Sav th Ubra.ry Day" set&#13;
Members of student organizations - P AB, PSGA,&#13;
Ranger and SOC. are organlzlng "Save the Library Day"&#13;
on Wednesday, May 12 ln an effort to ralSe funds for the&#13;
Ubra.ry, which has been seriously hurt by state mandated&#13;
budget cuts.&#13;
The library ts also receiving attention from the PSGA&#13;
Senate and the Science Divlslon Ad Hoc Library Crisis&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The student organization leaders have arranged for&#13;
more than 30 items to be donated to a raffle to raise funds&#13;
for the library. The prizes include a semester's books and&#13;
a white parking sticker.&#13;
They also have sought and received several donations&#13;
from the business communities in Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
TenYean Ago&#13;
April 7, 1977&#13;
Bal ano r celv unJ xual grant&#13;
Lif scienc professor Joseph Balsano has been awardd&#13;
a $35,000 grant from the National Science Foundation&#13;
to continue his studies of an evolutionary biology of an&#13;
unusual species of small untsexuaJ fish in which all offspring&#13;
are female.&#13;
Balsano who has been studying the various aspects of&#13;
the Poectlla formosa stnce the mid-1960's, points out that&#13;
the research ts particularly valuable for genetic research.&#13;
oeology Club&#13;
Mr. Bart Adrian of the&#13;
Weather Department of&#13;
WITI-Channel 6 in Milwaukee&#13;
will speak on "Tornadoes and&#13;
Severe Thunderstorm '• on&#13;
Friday, May l at I p.m. The&#13;
talk is scheduled for Greenqulst&#13;
113 but may be moved&#13;
to a larger room 1f interest&#13;
dictates. Everyone Is welcome.&#13;
Humanities&#13;
Symposium&#13;
Shella Kaplan wtll be&#13;
speaking on "State Colleges&#13;
and Universities: Their Role&#13;
in the Future" on Sunday,&#13;
soc&#13;
May 3 at 7:SO p.m. The ympostum&#13;
will be held at 4601&#13;
Edgewater Drive ln Racine.&#13;
Everyone ls welcome.&#13;
English Club&#13;
Students interested ln forming&#13;
an Engll.sh club will meet&#13;
Monday, May t In CA 233 at&#13;
12:15 p.m. The winner of the&#13;
English scholarship will be&#13;
announced at the meeting and&#13;
organizational strategies will&#13;
be discussed. All interested&#13;
students are encouraged to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Pi Sigma. Epsilon&#13;
Pl Sigma Epsilon will be&#13;
sponsoring the Loop ISOO on&#13;
SOC from page 1&#13;
major status, It doesn't mean another organization has to&#13;
lose major status. There is no guideline stating that there&#13;
can only be four major statu organizations on campus.&#13;
"Our goals for the next year are to continue club involvement&#13;
on campus and continue the worthwhile actlvi•&#13;
ties SOC has been doing all along. Hopefully we'll be able&#13;
to set up new clubs on campus, we've also got several&#13;
new committees that are going to keep us busy," Harmeyer&#13;
stated.&#13;
"I hope that as a result of SOC gatntng major status, we&#13;
don't have a break from PSGA. Although we're not going&#13;
to be a standing committee of PSGA anymore, I would&#13;
hope that the president and vice-president would continue&#13;
to work with SOC as well as the other organlzationa on&#13;
campus. Just becau se we're leaving PSGA, it doesn't&#13;
mean we have to stop doing all the important things we&#13;
do together," he added.&#13;
Harmeyer summarized his feelings about SOC by saying,&#13;
"The whole thing with SOC could never have been&#13;
done without the help of people like Bill Serpe, Dan Galbraith,&#13;
Buddy Couvion, Kay Rouse and many others. I'm&#13;
really thankful for the help all those people have given me&#13;
thJs past semester. I hope they continue in their support&#13;
for SOC.&#13;
"This ls what SOC deserves. We've worked long and&#13;
hard to gain major status. I don't see any problems with&#13;
SOC keeping major status. We're a vital part of Parkside&#13;
and will continue to be for years to come," Harmeyer&#13;
concluded.&#13;
In other Senate business, Senators and Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocation Committee (SUFAC) members&#13;
were elected.&#13;
Kay Rouse and Sue Walborn were elected senator of&#13;
PSGA. Dan Vogt was re-elected assistant pro-tempore of&#13;
PSGA. The three spring SUF AC seats were filled by Senators&#13;
Kevin Zlrkelbach, Blake Topel and Sue Walborn. The&#13;
two fall seata were filled by Chief Justice of PSOA Scott&#13;
Pet erson and Peer Support member Ralph Aba gian.&#13;
Friday, May l at 1 p.m. in th&#13;
Inner Loop Ro d. Team fee&#13;
are $12 and price includ s a&#13;
Loop ISOO t -shirt for h&#13;
member. Prizes will be&#13;
awarded for wlnn n. Sign-up&#13;
will b held through y 1 ln&#13;
the Alcove.&#13;
Reme mber,&#13;
• no issue&#13;
after next&#13;
week.&#13;
Get your club&#13;
ev ents in by&#13;
Mond ay&#13;
at&#13;
noon&#13;
GOOD EXPERIENCE&#13;
GREAT EARNINGS&#13;
Telecable of Racine has need of&#13;
part-time direct sales people&#13;
WE OFFER:&#13;
• paid train ing&#13;
• evenings and weekend hours&#13;
• average income s200.s300&#13;
per week&#13;
NEED PEOPlE WITH:&#13;
• professional appearance&#13;
• professional attitude&#13;
• dependable transportation&#13;
CAlL TElECABLE AT 837-8977&#13;
ASK FOR FRED&#13;
eoe. M/F&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday, April 29,1987 9 park's dept.&#13;
Thursday, April 30&#13;
VIDEO: "Shoah" will be&#13;
shown continuously all day&#13;
starting at 8:30 a.m. in Union&#13;
104. This film is about the destruction&#13;
of Jews during&#13;
World War II. The showing is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, May 1&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky" (R)&#13;
will be shown at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
and at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
cinema. Admission is free for&#13;
Parkside/Carthage students&#13;
and $2 for others. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
A Week at the Park•&#13;
PLAY: "The Cradle Will&#13;
Rock" starts at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Tickets will be available at&#13;
the door.&#13;
Saturday, May 2&#13;
WORKSHOPS: "Successful&#13;
Parenting of Teenagers" and&#13;
"Advanced Lotus 1-2-3" both&#13;
start at 9 a.m. Call ext. 2312&#13;
for further details.&#13;
PLAY: "The Cradle Will&#13;
Rock" will be repeated at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Tickets will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Sunday, May 3&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: "Shoah"&#13;
(part one of part two) will be&#13;
shown at 2 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky" (R)&#13;
will be repeated at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, May 4&#13;
CONCERT: "Pizza, Pasta&#13;
and all that Jazz" featuring&#13;
the Parkside Jazz Ensemble&#13;
from 12 noon to 2 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square. All are welcome.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be shown at 1:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: "Shoah"&#13;
(part two of part two) will be&#13;
shown at 6 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. The film is open to&#13;
the public at no charge.&#13;
Tuesday, May 5&#13;
CONCERT: featuring the&#13;
Parkside Wind Ensemble&#13;
starting at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission&#13;
will be charged at the&#13;
door.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be repeated at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square.&#13;
Wednesday, May 6&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Marketing in&#13;
a Non-Profit Organization"&#13;
starts at 9 a.m. in Union 207.&#13;
Sponsored by the Continuing&#13;
Education Office.&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE: featuring&#13;
Steve Mullin from noon to 2&#13;
p.m. and from 6-8 p.m. in&#13;
Main Place. The event is free&#13;
and open to the public. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be repeated at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union Square.&#13;
16. The rally will be a road&#13;
race/scavenger hunt and will&#13;
begin at 2 p.m. A $5 entry fee&#13;
will be charged, but all entrants&#13;
will have the opportunity&#13;
to win a $100 cash prize&#13;
for the best time. There will&#13;
be a post-rally celebration&#13;
with food and beverages. The&#13;
rally winner will be announced&#13;
at The End Saturday&#13;
night.&#13;
— The Files —&#13;
One Year Ago&#13;
May 1, 1986&#13;
Residence director dies&#13;
The recently-named residence director for Parkside's&#13;
new housing project died this weekend in a seven-car accident&#13;
near Oklahoma City, OK.&#13;
Craig A. Hall and his wife Jill were killed when a semitruck&#13;
veered across the highway median strip and hit&#13;
seven cars, according to Jenny Price, director of student&#13;
life.&#13;
Hall, who was chosen for the position last month, was to&#13;
begin work at Parkside next week.&#13;
Price said she is uncertain what will happen to fill the&#13;
position. She speclated another candidate from the final&#13;
pool will be selected to fill the vacancy.&#13;
Five Years Ago&#13;
April 29, 1982&#13;
"Save the Library Day" set&#13;
Members of student organizations - PAB, PSGA,&#13;
Ranger and SOC - are organizing "Save the Library Day"&#13;
on Wednesday, May 12 in an effort to raise funds for the&#13;
library, which has been seriously hurt by state mandated&#13;
budget cuts.&#13;
The library is also receiving attention from the PSGA&#13;
Senate and the Science Division Ad Hoc Library Crisis&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The student organization leaders have arranged for&#13;
more than 30 items to be donated to a raffle to raise funds&#13;
for the library. The prizes include a semester's books and&#13;
a white parking sticker.&#13;
They also have sought and received several donations&#13;
from the business communities in Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
Ten Years Ago&#13;
April 27, 1977&#13;
Balsano receives unisexual grant&#13;
Life science professor Joseph Balsano has been awarded&#13;
a $35,000 g rant from the National Science Foundation&#13;
to continue his studies of an evolutionary biology of an&#13;
unusual species of small unisexual fish in which all offspring&#13;
are female.&#13;
Balsano, who has been studying the various aspects of&#13;
the Poecilia formosa since the mid-1960's, points out that&#13;
the research is particularly valuable for genetic research.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
The Pi Sigma Epsilon Co-&#13;
Ed Marketing Fraternity will&#13;
hold meetings every Wednesday&#13;
at 1 p.m. in Molinaro 116.&#13;
PAB&#13;
The Parkside Activities&#13;
Board will be sponsoring a&#13;
road rally on Saturday, May&#13;
Club Events&#13;
Geology Club&#13;
Mr. Bart Adrian of the&#13;
Weather Department of&#13;
WITI-Channel 6 in Milwaukee&#13;
will speak on "Tornadoes and&#13;
Severe Thunderstorms" on&#13;
Friday, May 1 at 1 p.m. The&#13;
talk is scheduled for Greenquist&#13;
113 but may be moved&#13;
to a larger room if interest&#13;
dictates. Everyone is welcome.&#13;
Humanities&#13;
Symposium&#13;
Sheila Kaplan will be&#13;
speaking on "State Colleges&#13;
and Universities: Their Role&#13;
in the Future" on Sunday,&#13;
May 3 at 7:30 p.m. The symposium&#13;
will be held at 4601&#13;
Edgewater Drive in Racine.&#13;
Everyone is welcome.&#13;
English Club&#13;
Students interested in forming&#13;
an English club will meet&#13;
Monday, May 4 in CA 233 at&#13;
12:15 p.m. The winner of the&#13;
English scholarship will be&#13;
announced at the meeting and&#13;
organizational strategies will&#13;
be discussed. All interested&#13;
students are encouraged to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon will be&#13;
sponsoring the Loop 500 on&#13;
Friday, May 1 at 1 p.m. in the&#13;
Inner Loop Road. Team fees&#13;
are $12 and price includes a&#13;
Loop 500 t-shirt for each&#13;
member. Prizes will be&#13;
awarded for winners. Sign-up&#13;
will be held through May 1 in&#13;
the Alcove.&#13;
Remember,&#13;
no issue&#13;
after next&#13;
week.&#13;
Get your club&#13;
events in by&#13;
Monday&#13;
at&#13;
noon&#13;
GOOD EXPERIENCE&#13;
GREAT EARNINGS&#13;
Telecable of Rac ine has need of&#13;
part-time direct sales people&#13;
WE OFFER:&#13;
• paid tr aining&#13;
• evenings and weekend hours&#13;
• average income $200-$300&#13;
per week&#13;
WE NEED PEOPLE WITH:&#13;
• professional appearance&#13;
• professional attitude&#13;
• dependable transportation&#13;
CALL TELECABLE AT 637-6977&#13;
ASK FOR FRED&#13;
eoe-M/F&#13;
SOC&#13;
SOC from page 1&#13;
major status, it doesn't mean another organization has to&#13;
lose major status. There is no guideline stating that there&#13;
can only be four major status organizations on campus.&#13;
"Our goals for the next year are to continue club involvement&#13;
on campus and continue the worthwhile activities&#13;
SOC has been doing all along. Hopefully we'll be able&#13;
to set up new clubs on campus, we've also got several&#13;
new committees that are going to keep us bus v." Harmeyer&#13;
stated.&#13;
^^°Pe that as a result of SOC gaining major status, we&#13;
don t have a break from PSGA. Although we're not going&#13;
to be a standing committee of PSGA anymore, I would&#13;
hope that the president and vice-president would continue&#13;
to work with SOC as well as the other organizations on&#13;
campus. Just because we're leaving PSGA, it doesn't&#13;
mean we have to stop doing all the important things we&#13;
do together," he added.&#13;
Harmeyer summarized his feelings about SOC by saving,&#13;
"The whole thing with SOC could never have been&#13;
done without the help of people like Bill Serpe, Dan Galbraith,&#13;
Buddy Couvion, Kay Rouse and many others. I'm&#13;
really thankful for the help all those people have given me&#13;
this past semester. I hope they continue in their support&#13;
for SOC.&#13;
"This is what SOC deserves. We've worked long and&#13;
hard to gain major status. I don't see any problems with&#13;
SOC keeping major status. We're a vital part of Parkside&#13;
and will continue to be for years to come," Harmeyer&#13;
concluded.&#13;
In other Senate business, Senators and Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocation Committee (SUFAC) members&#13;
were elected.&#13;
Kay Rouse and Sue Walborn were elected senators of&#13;
PSGA. Dan Vogt was re-elected assistant pro-tempore of&#13;
PSGA. The three spring SUFAC seats were filled by Senators&#13;
Kevin Zirkelbach, Blake Topel and Sue Walborn The&#13;
two fall seats were filled by Chief Justice of PSGA Scott&#13;
Peterson and Peer Support member Ralph Abagian.&#13;
A&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 29, 1987 9 park's dept.&#13;
--------A Week at the Park--------&#13;
'lbunda , April SO&#13;
VIDEO: "Shoah" wlll b&#13;
shown continuously all day&#13;
starting at 8:80 a.m. in Union&#13;
104. This film ls about the destruction&#13;
of Jews during&#13;
World War II. The showing is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, May 1&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky" (R)&#13;
will be shown at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
and at 7:30 p.m. In the Union&#13;
cinema. Admis ion is fr e for&#13;
Parkside/Carthage students&#13;
and $2 for others. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
PLA y: "The Cradle Will&#13;
Rock" starts at 8 p.m. In the&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Tickets will be available at&#13;
the door.&#13;
Saturday, May Z&#13;
WORKSHOPS: •·successful&#13;
Parenting of Teenagers" and&#13;
"Advanced Lotus -2-3" both&#13;
start at 9 a.m. Call ext. 2812&#13;
for further detail .&#13;
PLAY: "The Cradle wm&#13;
Rock" will be repeated at 8&#13;
p.m. 1n the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Tickets will be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Sunday, May 3&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: "Shoah"&#13;
(part one of part two) will be&#13;
shown at 2 p.m. In the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
MOVIE: "Liquid Sky" (R)&#13;
will be repeated at 8 p.m. 1n&#13;
the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, May t&#13;
CONCERT: "Pizza, Pasta&#13;
and all that Jazz" featuring&#13;
the· Parkside Jazz Ensemble&#13;
from 1.2 noon to 2 p.m. 1n&#13;
Union Square. All are welcome.&#13;
VIDEO: "Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be shown at l:M p.m. 1n&#13;
Union Square. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
DOCUMENTARY: ''Shoah''&#13;
( part two of part two) will be&#13;
shown at 6 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. The film ls open to&#13;
the public at no charge.&#13;
Tuesday, May 5&#13;
OONCERT: featuring the&#13;
Parkside Wind Ens mble&#13;
starting at 8 p.m. 1n the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission&#13;
will be charged at the&#13;
door.&#13;
VIDEO: ''Flash Gordon" will&#13;
be repeated at 8 p.m. In&#13;
Uruon Square.&#13;
Wedneaday, May 8&#13;
WORK HOP: "Marketing In&#13;
a Non-Profit Organization"&#13;
starts at 9 a.m. In Union 207.&#13;
Sponsored by the Continuing&#13;
Education Offlc&#13;
OOFFEEHO f turing&#13;
Steve Mulltn from noon to 2&#13;
p.m. and from 6-8 p.m. In&#13;
Main Place. The event ls free&#13;
and open to th public. Sponsored&#13;
by p AB.&#13;
VIDEO: "Fl h Gordon" wlll&#13;
be repeated at 3:30 p.m. In&#13;
Union Square.&#13;
----------Club Events----------&#13;
Pl Sigma Epsilon&#13;
The Pl Sigma Epsilon Co·&#13;
Ed Marketing Fraternity will&#13;
hold meeting every Wednesday&#13;
at 1 p.m. In Molinaro 116.&#13;
PAB&#13;
The Parkside AcUvitles&#13;
Board will be sponsoring a&#13;
road rally on Saturday, May&#13;
16. The rally will be a road&#13;
race/scavenger hunt and will&#13;
begin at 2 p.m. A $~ entry fee&#13;
will be charged, but all entran&#13;
will have the opportunity&#13;
to wtn a $100 cash prize&#13;
for the best time. There will&#13;
b a post-rally celebration&#13;
with food and beverages. The&#13;
rally winner will be announced&#13;
at The End Saturday&#13;
night. - The Files -&#13;
On Year go&#13;
May 1, 1986&#13;
Iden dlrector di&#13;
The recently-named residence director for Parkslde's&#13;
new housing project di d this weekend in a seven-car accident&#13;
near Oklahoma City, OK.&#13;
Craig A. Hall and his wife Jill were killed when a semitruck&#13;
veered across the highway median strip and hit&#13;
seven cars, according to Jenny Prlce, director of student&#13;
life.&#13;
Hall, who was cho en for the position last month, was to&#13;
begin work at Park Ide next week.&#13;
Price said she ls uncertain what will happen to fill the&#13;
position. Sh speclated another candidate from the final&#13;
pool will be selected to fill the vacancy.&#13;
Flv Y rs Ago&#13;
April 29, 198&#13;
" th Llbrary Day" t&#13;
Members of student organizations • P AB, PSOA,&#13;
Ranger and SOC. are organizing "Save the Library Day"&#13;
on Wednesday, May 1.2 in an effort to raise funds for the&#13;
library, which has been seriously hurt by state mandated&#13;
budget cuts.&#13;
The library ls also receiving attention from the PSGA&#13;
Senate and the Science Division Ad Hoc Library Crisis&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The student organization leaders have arranged for&#13;
more than so items to be donated to a raffle to raise funds&#13;
for the library. Th prize Include a semester's books and&#13;
a whit parking Ucker.&#13;
They also have sought and received several donations&#13;
from the busln communities In Racine and Keno ha.&#13;
Lt cl nc profe or Jo eph Balsano has been award•&#13;
d 35,000 grant from the atlonal Science Foundation&#13;
to contlnu hi tudl of an volutlonary biology of an&#13;
unusu l specl of small unlsexual fish in which all o!f•&#13;
spring ar f male.&#13;
Balsano who ha b en studying the various aspects 0 f&#13;
the Poecuia formo inc the mld-1960's, points out tha&#13;
the research Is particularly valu ble for genetic research.&#13;
oeology Club&#13;
Mr. Bart Adrian of the&#13;
Weather Department of&#13;
WITl•Channel 6 In Milwaukee&#13;
will speak on • 'Tornadoes and&#13;
Severe Thunderstorms" on&#13;
Friday, May 1 at 1 p.m. The&#13;
talk Is scheduled for Greenqulst&#13;
113 but may be moved&#13;
to a larger room if Interest&#13;
dictates. Everyone Is welcome.&#13;
Humanities&#13;
Symposium&#13;
Sheila Kaplan will be&#13;
speaking on "State Colleges&#13;
and Universities: Their Role&#13;
1n the Future" on Sunday,&#13;
soc&#13;
May S at 7:30 p.m. The symposium&#13;
will b held at 4001&#13;
Edgewater Drive In Racine.&#13;
Everyone is welcome.&#13;
English Club&#13;
Students interested In formIng&#13;
an English club will meet&#13;
Monday, May 4 1n CA 283 at&#13;
12:lr» p.m. The winner of the&#13;
English scholarship will be&#13;
announced at the meeting and&#13;
organizational strategies will&#13;
be discussed. All Interested&#13;
students are encouraged to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Pi Sigma. Epsilon&#13;
Pl Sigma Epsilon will be&#13;
sponsoring the Loop ISOO on&#13;
SOC from page 1&#13;
major status, lt doesn't mean another organization has to&#13;
lose major status. There ts no guideline stating that there&#13;
can only be four major status organizations on campus.&#13;
"Our goals for the next year are to continue club involvement&#13;
on campus and continue the worthwhile activities&#13;
SOC has been doing all along. Hopefully we'll be able&#13;
to set up new clubs on campus, we've also got several&#13;
new committees that are going to keep us busy," Harmeyer&#13;
stated.&#13;
"I hope that as a result of SOC galntng major status, we&#13;
don't have a break from PSGA. Although we're not going&#13;
to be a standing committee of PSOA anymore, I would&#13;
hope that the president and vice-president would continue&#13;
to work with SOC as well as the other organizations on&#13;
campus. Just because we're leaving PSGA, it doesn't&#13;
mean we have to stop doing all the important things we&#13;
do together," he added.&#13;
Harmeyer summarized his feelings about SOC by saying,&#13;
"The whole thing with SOC could never have been&#13;
done without the help of people like Bill Serpe, Dan Galbraith,&#13;
Buddy Couvion, Kay Rouse and many others. I'm&#13;
really thankful for the help all those people have given me&#13;
this past semester. I hope they continue In their support&#13;
for SOC.&#13;
"This is what SOC deserves. We've worked long and&#13;
hard to gain major status. I don't see any problems with&#13;
SOC keeping major status. We're a vital part of Parkside&#13;
and will continue to be for years to come," Harmeyer&#13;
concluded.&#13;
In other Senate business, Senators and Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocation Committee (SUFAC) memb&#13;
were elected.&#13;
Kay Rouse and Sue Walborn were elected senators of&#13;
PSGA. Dan Vogt was re-elected assistant pro-tempore of&#13;
PSGA. The three spring SUF AC s ats were filled by Senators&#13;
Kevin Zlrkelbach, Blake Topel and Sue Walborn. The&#13;
two fall seats were fUled by Chief Justice of PSGA Scott&#13;
Peterson and Peer Support member Ralph Abagian.&#13;
Friday, May 1 at 1 p.m. Jn the&#13;
Inner Loop Road. T m f&#13;
are $12 and price lnclud&#13;
Loop 500 t- hirt for&#13;
member. mes will b&#13;
awarded for winners. lgn-up&#13;
will b h ld through y in&#13;
the Alcove.&#13;
.&#13;
Remember,&#13;
• no issue&#13;
after next&#13;
week.&#13;
Get your club&#13;
events in by&#13;
Monday&#13;
at&#13;
noo n&#13;
GOOD EXPERIENCE&#13;
GREAT EARNINGS&#13;
Telecable of Racine has need of&#13;
part-time direct sales people&#13;
WE OFFER:&#13;
• paid training&#13;
• evenings and weekend hours&#13;
• average income '200-'300&#13;
per week&#13;
WE NEED PEOPLE WITH:&#13;
• professional appearance&#13;
• professional attitude&#13;
• dependable transportation&#13;
CAl.l TB.ECABlE AT 837-8977&#13;
ASK FOR FRED&#13;
10 Thursday, April 29, 1987 entertainment Play on campus&#13;
"The Cradle Will Rock" has fine performances bv Kimberlin Kmnirh Q/ttinrv ... 1 - 3 1. • •- -- — I •iniMWi—IMMMMMMMilUllMIII I -&#13;
RANGER&#13;
by Klmberlie Kranich&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The Dramatic Arts Discipline's&#13;
production of Marc&#13;
Blitzstein's play, "The Cradle&#13;
Will Rock," has broken the&#13;
long record of non-musical&#13;
performances on campus.&#13;
Judging by the acting and directing&#13;
of "Cradle," more&#13;
musicals should be staged.&#13;
"Cradle's" pro-union plot&#13;
about a foreman who tries to&#13;
organize workers In a steel&#13;
mill is not a big audiencedrawer,&#13;
given the conservative&#13;
tone of the Reagan administration.&#13;
Nonetheless, the&#13;
excellent acting combined&#13;
with the directing of Lisa&#13;
Kornetsky provide the audience&#13;
with an unusual experience.&#13;
The musical never intended&#13;
to give the audience the illusion&#13;
that what they were seeing&#13;
was real - one knew it&#13;
was a performance the whole&#13;
time. Kornetsky achieved this&#13;
from the beginning of the&#13;
play when the audience was&#13;
seated in front of an empty&#13;
stage. The play began with&#13;
the stage hands setting up the&#13;
scenery, the stage manager&#13;
checking the lights and the&#13;
entire cast walking across&#13;
stage in full costume.&#13;
All of the actors were on&#13;
stage at all times. When they&#13;
weren't acting, they would&#13;
watch the musical from the&#13;
sidelines, in clear view of the&#13;
audience. Signs with quotations&#13;
from union leaflets and&#13;
comments about the human&#13;
condition were lowered and&#13;
raised on stage to get the&#13;
audience to think about the&#13;
play in addition to reminding&#13;
us that what we were seeing&#13;
wasn't real.&#13;
In addition, several actors&#13;
had to play more than one&#13;
role. With little more than&#13;
putting on a robe or adding&#13;
an accent, these actors had to&#13;
convince the audience that&#13;
they were a different character.&#13;
They pulled it off, especially&#13;
Dave Heller and Scott&#13;
Verissimo. Heller played&#13;
three characters - a sleazy&#13;
gent, a grimy thug and a&#13;
pseudo artist. Everything&#13;
from Heller's accent to gestures&#13;
proved that he was well&#13;
cast for his three roles. Verissimo&#13;
was the perfect Reverend&#13;
with a voice for singing&#13;
gospel. He also convincingly&#13;
played the character opposite&#13;
the Reverend Salvation; Mr.&#13;
Mister, a ruthless union-busting&#13;
manipulator who has the&#13;
town under his thumb.&#13;
Pianist August M. Wegner&#13;
and the actors managed to&#13;
stay in sync with one another&#13;
throughout the musical. The&#13;
music, which was played entirely&#13;
on a piano, also helped&#13;
shatter the reality illusion.&#13;
Often times the beat and the&#13;
lyrics seemed to contradict&#13;
one another. In one scene,&#13;
Mrs. Mister, the rich wife&#13;
who manages to wrap men&#13;
around her finger, sings a depressing&#13;
song about the idiocy&#13;
of war with a smile on her&#13;
face accompanied by a light&#13;
and bouncy melody.&#13;
Missy Weaver was originally&#13;
cast to play Mrs. Mister&#13;
but came down with a case of&#13;
the chicken pox and was replaced&#13;
by Paula Boehler.&#13;
Boehler turned out a fine per*&#13;
formance and can really sing.&#13;
Other excellent performances&#13;
included John A.J. Oleksy as&#13;
Editor Daily, the town newspaper&#13;
editor who prints lies in&#13;
his paper because he's afraid&#13;
of Mr. Mister; Andrew Holahan&#13;
as the brave union organizer&#13;
and Connie Kowalski as&#13;
Sister Mister, a bratty,&#13;
preadolescent girl. Kowalski&#13;
is a joy to watch because her&#13;
facial expressions are so precise&#13;
and appropriate to her&#13;
character. She also does an&#13;
excellent job while she's sitting&#13;
on the sidelines.&#13;
The only criticism I have is&#13;
the choice to have the thug&#13;
light and smoke his cigarette&#13;
on stage. Several audience&#13;
members, including myself,&#13;
tried to fan the smoke away.&#13;
RANGER IS NOW ACCEPTINGAPPUCATION^ORTHEFOriSwiNG&#13;
STOFPOSITIBMSraaI THE 1987-88 ACADEMIC YEAR&#13;
NEWS EDITOR&#13;
• ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR&#13;
• FEATURE EDITOR&#13;
• SPORTS EDITOR&#13;
• PHOTO EDITOR&#13;
• ADVERTISING MANAGER&#13;
• DISTRIBUTION MANAGER&#13;
• BUSINESS MANAGER&#13;
Requirements: UW-Parkside student in good standing carrying at&#13;
least 6 credits per semester.&#13;
Qualifications: Previous newspaper experience helpful.&#13;
All positions are paid&#13;
Applications available in the Ranger office D139C&#13;
Scene from "The Cradle Will Rock'&#13;
Camelot&#13;
Harris a&#13;
show is&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Richard Harris and "Camelot"&#13;
played the Riverside&#13;
Theater in Milwaukee on&#13;
Tuesday, April 28, the first in&#13;
a series of engagements running&#13;
through Sunday, May 3.&#13;
One of them was sensational.&#13;
Harris, the Britisher, as&#13;
noted for his drinking as for&#13;
his acting, was superlative as&#13;
King Arthur, the legendary&#13;
role with which his name has&#13;
become synonymous. The&#13;
overall production, however,&#13;
hampered by leaden performances&#13;
and technical problems,&#13;
rose just slightly above&#13;
the best a high school drama&#13;
department has to offer.&#13;
By now everyone is familiar&#13;
with the story of Lerner&#13;
and Loewe's musical, which&#13;
was immortalized in the 1967&#13;
film starring Harris. Arthur,&#13;
a frivolous chap, who more or&#13;
less becomes King of England&#13;
by accident, marries Guenevere&#13;
(Elizabeth Williams)&#13;
and starts to get serious&#13;
about his royal duty.&#13;
Envisioning a world where&#13;
"might for right" replaces&#13;
"might is right," he establishes&#13;
an order of knights devoted&#13;
not to destruction but to&#13;
peace. Leading these Knights&#13;
of the Round Table is Lancelot&#13;
(Bob Cuccioli), a flawless&#13;
Frenchman who knows no&#13;
passion until he falls in love&#13;
with Guenevere and ushers in&#13;
the end of the idyllic civilization&#13;
Arthur has succeeded in&#13;
building.&#13;
Harris, now 54. brings a&#13;
world-weariness to Arthur&#13;
that wasn't present in his almost&#13;
chUdhke portrayal in&#13;
the mm, and the effect is&#13;
striking. Still vigorous and&#13;
photo by Ken McCray&#13;
Richard Harris&#13;
forceful even though he could&#13;
easily sleepwalk through the&#13;
part after 20 years of doing it,&#13;
the veteran actor/singer&#13;
clearly has a good time, especially&#13;
in his comical scenes&#13;
with Merlyn, his magical&#13;
mentor (delightfully played&#13;
by James Valentine).&#13;
But, alas, Harris and&#13;
Valentine can't compensate&#13;
for the performances of Williams&#13;
and Cuccioli, who are&#13;
wholly unbelievable in their&#13;
central roles. Williams'&#13;
Guenevere comes off not as&#13;
the naive girl made to be a&#13;
woman and wife before her&#13;
time, but rather as a spoiled,&#13;
maneuvering wench deserving&#13;
little or no compassion&#13;
from the audience or the husband&#13;
she betrays. And Cuccioli,&#13;
an Italian, sounds like&#13;
Steve Martin doing his&#13;
Swinging American" character&#13;
on "Saturday Night&#13;
Live ' when he tries to tackle&#13;
a French accent.&#13;
e rite rt a i nm en t ~1&#13;
0 T~hureday:::• Aprl:::l 29:::•&#13;
1987&#13;
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&#13;
Play on C8fflRUS&#13;
'' The Cradle Will Rock'' has fine performances&#13;
by Kimberli Kranich&#13;
tur Editor&#13;
Th Dramatic Arts clplln&#13;
' s producUon ot Mate&#13;
lltzsteln's play, "The Cradle&#13;
WW Rock," has broken the&#13;
long cord of non-muate&amp;J&#13;
p rformances on campus.&#13;
Judging by the acting and dieting&#13;
of "Cradl , " mor&#13;
musical Bhould be tag; d.&#13;
''Cradle's" pro-union plot&#13;
bout foreman who trle to&#13;
organize worker&amp; tn a. teel&#13;
mill ls not a big audlencedrawer,&#13;
given the conservative&#13;
tone of the Reagan a.dmlnlstratlon.&#13;
Nonethel s , th&#13;
c llent ctlng combined&#13;
with the directing of Lisa.&#13;
Kornetsky provide the audience&#13;
wlth an unusual expertenc.&#13;
The musical never intended&#13;
to gtv th audience the Wuslon&#13;
that what they were seeing&#13;
w real - one knew it&#13;
as a performance the whole&#13;
me. Kometsky achieved this&#13;
from the beginning of the&#13;
play when the audience was&#13;
eated 1n front of an empty&#13;
stage. The play began with&#13;
th stag hands tting up the&#13;
sc n ry, th stag manager&#13;
checking the lights and the&#13;
nUr cast walking across&#13;
stag 1n full co tume.&#13;
All of the actors were on&#13;
tage t all times. When they&#13;
wer n't acting, they would&#13;
watch the musical from the&#13;
aldeUnes, in clear view of the&#13;
audlenc . Signs with quotations&#13;
from union leaflets and&#13;
comm nts about the human&#13;
condltion were lowered and&#13;
rats d on tage to get th&#13;
audience to think about the&#13;
play in addition to reminding&#13;
ua th t what we were eing&#13;
wasn't real.&#13;
In ddltlon, several actors&#13;
had to play more than on&#13;
role. Wlth little more than&#13;
putting on a robe or adding&#13;
an accent, these actors had to&#13;
convince the audlence that&#13;
they were a different character.&#13;
They pulled lt off, especlally&#13;
Dave Heller and Scott&#13;
Verissimo. Heller played&#13;
three characters - a sleazy&#13;
gent, a grimy thug and a&#13;
pseudo artlat. Everything&#13;
from Heller's accent to gestures&#13;
proved that he was well&#13;
cast for his three roles. Verissimo&#13;
wa. the perfect Reverend&#13;
with a voice tor slnglng&#13;
gospel. He also convlnctngly&#13;
played the character opposite&#13;
the Reverend Salvation; Mr.&#13;
Mister, a ruthle s union-busting&#13;
manipulator who ha.s the&#13;
town under hJs thumb .&#13;
Pianist August M. Wegner&#13;
and the actors managed to&#13;
stay in sync with one another&#13;
throughout the musical. The&#13;
music, which was played en-&#13;
• NEWS EDITOR&#13;
tlrely on a piano, also helped&#13;
shatter the reality Uluslon.&#13;
Often times the beat and th&#13;
lyric s med to contradict&#13;
one another. In one scene,&#13;
Mrs. MJster, the rich wUe&#13;
who manages to wrap men&#13;
around her fln er, ings ad •&#13;
pressing song a.bout the idiocy&#13;
of war with a smile on her&#13;
face accompanied by a llght&#13;
and bouncy melody.&#13;
Missy We ver w orlg1nally&#13;
cast to play Mrs. Mister&#13;
but came down With a case of&#13;
the chicken pox and was replaced&#13;
by Paula Boehler.&#13;
Boehler turned out a fine per•&#13;
formance and can really sing.&#13;
Other excellent performances&#13;
included John A.J. Oleksy as&#13;
Editor Daily, the town newspaper&#13;
edltor who prints lies 1n&#13;
his paper because he's afraid&#13;
of Mr. Mister; Andrew Holahan&#13;
as the brave union organizer&#13;
and Connie Kowalski as&#13;
Sister Mister, a bratty,&#13;
preadole cent glrl. Kowalski&#13;
1.8 a joy to watch because her&#13;
facial xpresslons are so precui&#13;
and appropriate to her&#13;
character. She also does an&#13;
excellent job while she's sitting&#13;
on the sidelines .&#13;
The only crltlctsm I have ts&#13;
the choice to have the thug&#13;
light and smoke h1a cigarette&#13;
on stage. Several audience&#13;
members, including ·myself,&#13;
tried to fan the smoke away.&#13;
• ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR&#13;
• FEATURE EDITOR&#13;
• SPORTS EDITOR&#13;
• PHOTO EDITOR&#13;
• ADVERTISING MANAGER&#13;
• DISTRIBUTION MANAGER&#13;
• BUSINESS MANAGER&#13;
Requirements: UW-Parkside student in good standing carrying at&#13;
least 6 credits per semester.&#13;
Quallflcatlons: Previous newspaper experience helpful.&#13;
All positions are paid&#13;
Appllcatlons available In the Ranger office D139C&#13;
photo by Kll'l llcCNy&#13;
Scene from • 'The Cradle WIii Rock''&#13;
Camelot&#13;
Harris a gem,&#13;
show is not&#13;
by Gary L Scbneeberger&#13;
Richard Ha rts and "Cameiot"&#13;
played the Riverside&#13;
Theater in Milwaukee on&#13;
Tuesday, April 28. the first ln&#13;
a series of engagements running&#13;
through Sunday, May s.&#13;
One of them W&amp;.8 sensational.&#13;
Harris, the Britisher, as&#13;
noted for his drlnklng u for&#13;
his acting, wa.s superlative as&#13;
King Arthur, the legendary&#13;
role wtth which h1.a name ha.s&#13;
become synonymous. The&#13;
overall production, however,&#13;
hampered by leaden performances&#13;
and technical problems,&#13;
rose juat l'lllghtly abOve&#13;
the best a high school drama&#13;
department ha.s to offer.&#13;
By now everyone ls fa.mu.&#13;
tar with the story of Lerner&#13;
and Loewe's musical, which&#13;
was immortalized 1n the 1967&#13;
film starring Harris. Arthur,&#13;
a frivolous chap, who more or&#13;
le becomes King ot England&#13;
by accident, marries Guenevere&#13;
(Elizabeth Wllllams)&#13;
and starts to get serious&#13;
about h.1s royal duty.&#13;
Envisioning a world where&#13;
"might for right" replaces&#13;
"might ls right," he establishes&#13;
an order of knights devoted&#13;
not to destruction but to&#13;
peace. Leading these Knights&#13;
of the Round Table ls Lancelot&#13;
(Bob Cuccloll), a flawless&#13;
Frenchman who knows no&#13;
passion until he falla ln love&#13;
with Guenevere and ushers 1n&#13;
the end of the idylllc ctv111za.&#13;
tion Arthur has succeeded in&#13;
building.&#13;
Harris, now M, brings a&#13;
world-weariness to Arthur&#13;
that wasn't present in his al.&#13;
mo.st childlike portrayal in&#13;
the film, and the effect 18&#13;
strlklng. Stlll vigorous and&#13;
Richard Hams&#13;
forceful even though he could&#13;
easily sleepwalk through the&#13;
part after 20 years of doing It,&#13;
the veteran actor/singer&#13;
clearly has a good time, especially&#13;
ln his comical scenes&#13;
with Merlyn, his magical&#13;
mentor ( delightfully played&#13;
by James Valentin ).&#13;
But, alas, Harrl8 and&#13;
Valentine can't compensate&#13;
for the performances of Williams&#13;
and Cucctoll, who are&#13;
wholly unbelievable In their&#13;
central roles. WW!ams'&#13;
Guenevere comes off not as&#13;
the naive girl mad to be a&#13;
woman and wife before her&#13;
time. but rather as a spoiled,&#13;
maneuvering wench d serving&#13;
little or no compassion&#13;
from the audlenct, or the husband&#13;
she betrays. And Cuccloll,&#13;
an Italian, sounds llk&#13;
Steve Martin doing his&#13;
"Swinging American" character&#13;
on • 'Saturday Night&#13;
Live'' wh n he tries to tackle&#13;
a French accent.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Exclusive interview&#13;
Thursday, April 29, 1987 11&#13;
Stranglers' drummer discusses philosophies&#13;
by Rick Luehr so Ion, . ^ ^&#13;
Rising out of the turbulent&#13;
mid-seventies British music&#13;
scene, The Stranglers made&#13;
their mark with their own&#13;
brand of harsh, often cynical&#13;
commentaries on the world&#13;
around them.&#13;
Still going strong afer 13&#13;
years, The Stranglers are embarking&#13;
on their first American&#13;
tour in five years. In a&#13;
recent phone interview,&#13;
drummer Jet Black discussed&#13;
the band's philosophy and&#13;
reasons for tourning after&#13;
such a long abscence.&#13;
"We decided to tour," said&#13;
Black, "because it has been&#13;
so long, and one can't keep&#13;
going to the same pices,&#13;
which one has to do if you&#13;
keep missing out on America.&#13;
that's really why we've&#13;
come here, because we feel&#13;
its overdue. It's great to be&#13;
back here. It's surprising me,&#13;
the audiences seem to be getbigger&#13;
all the time,&#13;
wnich is encouraging. It's&#13;
going so well, it's been suggested&#13;
we stay away a bit&#13;
more often."&#13;
Over their 13 year existence,&#13;
The Stranglers have&#13;
gone through an almost constand&#13;
evolution, becoming&#13;
smoother and more melodic.&#13;
The addition of horns on their&#13;
two most recent albums has&#13;
aided in this transition. The&#13;
horns also bring a new dimension&#13;
to the bands older&#13;
material in concert. Black,&#13;
who for an undisclosed reason&#13;
was absent from the band's&#13;
recent Milwaukee appearance,&#13;
explained that, although&#13;
their music is becoming&#13;
smoother, and several&#13;
songs more optimistic, this&#13;
does not mean the band's&#13;
basic philosophy has&#13;
changed.&#13;
"I think we're still prophets&#13;
of doom, in a minor, unimportant&#13;
way," Black explained.&#13;
"I think that we observe&#13;
some of the nastier facets of&#13;
Record review&#13;
Del Fuegos release third LP Scrt*a. nd.i »UTp_&#13;
The Del Fuegos (Slash)&#13;
Oh muse give me the gift of&#13;
the golden tongue so I may&#13;
laud the talents of a band of&#13;
rogues known as The Del&#13;
Fuegos. These boys just don't&#13;
stop producing music that&#13;
needs to be heard from the&#13;
highest mountaintops. Their&#13;
third release just furthers the&#13;
status of the Fuegs as the&#13;
band with probably the best&#13;
chops in the business.&#13;
The Fuegs are augmented&#13;
by the awesome talents of&#13;
producer Mitchell Fromm&#13;
(who also handled production&#13;
chores on the bands' other&#13;
two releases.) He captures&#13;
the Fuegs' killer live sound in&#13;
the studio while also giving&#13;
them a smoothness and soulfulness&#13;
that has yet to be&#13;
equaled by any of those other&#13;
so-called "American" music&#13;
bands.&#13;
The key word to describe&#13;
what makes "Stand&#13;
Up" different from the band's&#13;
previous work is Soul.&#13;
Fromm adds some background&#13;
singers, horns, very&#13;
tasty Hammond organ licks&#13;
(Fromm's own) and, get this,&#13;
there is even a track with&#13;
strings!&#13;
There is absolutely no filler&#13;
on this album and every&#13;
track has its own character&#13;
and feel showing the various&#13;
influences that have touched&#13;
the Fuegs and their music.&#13;
Lyrically the Fuegs are direct&#13;
and emotive. They seem&#13;
to be in touch with what is&#13;
common to most people's experience.&#13;
Rather than giving&#13;
the listener diatribes on the&#13;
joys of burning flesh for&#13;
satan, the Fuegs tell us the&#13;
story of a guy who tossed&#13;
back one too many at the cor--&#13;
ner bar and if that isn't poetry&#13;
I don't know what is.&#13;
The Fuegs are one of the&#13;
best recorded bands emerging&#13;
in the last few years, and&#13;
The Del Fuegos continue success&#13;
the mix on "Stand Up" is&#13;
proof positive of this fact.&#13;
Rock and roll is too often&#13;
seen in black and white terms&#13;
and that is why a band like&#13;
Del Fuegos is so needed, because&#13;
their overabundance of&#13;
talent allows them to bring&#13;
out the full spectrum of colors&#13;
that exist in the rock and roll&#13;
idiom.&#13;
This album should be the&#13;
one to catapault the Fuegs&#13;
into success ("Long Slide,"&#13;
the first single, is doing quite&#13;
well) on a mainstream level&#13;
and there isn't a band in this&#13;
country (except Milwaukee's&#13;
Pat McCurdy and the Confidentials)&#13;
more deserving.&#13;
"Bernie Doll&#13;
1841 Douglas Ave.&#13;
Racine, Wl 53402&#13;
637-8895&#13;
4006 Durand Ave.&#13;
554-1311&#13;
We Have It All!&#13;
The Finest Danish Kringles,&#13;
Cakes, Rolls, Breads &amp; Donuts.&#13;
OH-SO-GOOD!&#13;
3 Generations of Quality Baking&#13;
the environment in which we&#13;
move, and occasionally make&#13;
comments on them. But," he&#13;
added, "it's usually done in a&#13;
very ambiguous manner, and&#13;
it isn't always apparent what&#13;
we're actually saving.&#13;
"We've never attempted to&#13;
promote any kind of doctrine",&#13;
Black continued, "but&#13;
we do, in fact use various&#13;
social and political scenarios&#13;
to explore a lyrical idea."&#13;
Having been in the music&#13;
business for 13 years, Black&#13;
has some very definite views&#13;
on the industry. "We don't&#13;
really listen to any particular&#13;
music, except one might be&#13;
travelling and have the radio&#13;
on. So, I just have a general&#13;
idea of whats going on, and&#13;
basically it's the same as&#13;
always, a mixture of the&#13;
blend and adventurous.&#13;
"From the artist's point of&#13;
view," Black continued, "The&#13;
industry is rotten to the core.&#13;
On the one hand, you have&#13;
the artist, who is, generally&#13;
speaking, only capable of&#13;
doing one thing, that is,&#13;
producing his art. Then on&#13;
the other side of things, you&#13;
have the entrepreneurs, who&#13;
are only good at one thing,&#13;
and that's making money, out&#13;
of anyone or anything. And&#13;
unless one of those parties&#13;
has sympathies for the other,&#13;
there's no way the two groups&#13;
can work together with the&#13;
same interests. So," he&#13;
added, "it makes for a&#13;
strained existance most of the&#13;
time for most of the artists."&#13;
Black says the band has no&#13;
definite long range plans, but&#13;
that, as long as they enjoy&#13;
what they're doing, they will&#13;
continue. "We've always felt&#13;
that we're doing what we&#13;
wanted to do. It was very,&#13;
very difficult in the beginning,&#13;
but it's getting easier&#13;
all the time. We don't actually&#13;
look that far ahead. In retrospect,&#13;
I wouldn't have&#13;
dreamt that we'd still have&#13;
been active after 13 years. As&#13;
long as we have plenty more&#13;
ideas, there'll be plenty more&#13;
work to be done.&#13;
"I shouldn't think anyone&#13;
will remember us after 20 or&#13;
30 years," Black added,&#13;
"knowing the state of the&#13;
music industry. If it ended tomorrow,&#13;
it would be nice to&#13;
be remembered as those are&#13;
the guys who managed to last&#13;
13 years.&#13;
TW012" PIZZAS&#13;
FOR $9.87&#13;
TRY THE PEPPERONI SPECIAL&#13;
YYon&gt;u, onnnlly.. kha.v..e. t.o aski .f.o.r. .t.h e •&#13;
Pepperoni Special, then give&#13;
the delivery person the&#13;
special coupon when your&#13;
pepperoni special arrives.&#13;
Remember the Domino's&#13;
Pizza Double Guarantee:&#13;
If yo u pizza isn't right,&#13;
we'll fix it. If it' s late,&#13;
we'll give you $3.00 off!&#13;
Call us for details.&#13;
) Pepperoni&#13;
i Special&#13;
Offer not valid with any oiher&#13;
Offer vC 1987 Doming s Pizza. Inc&#13;
• M&#13;
0 3S O E&#13;
Avoid The NOID*&#13;
Call Domino's Pizza-&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
2136 Washington Ave.&#13;
654-5070&#13;
8028 22nd Ave.&#13;
652-1222&#13;
4919 60th Street&#13;
654-5577&#13;
Hours:&#13;
4:00pm -1:00am Sun. -Thurs.&#13;
4:00pm - 2:00am Fri. &amp; Sat.&#13;
TWO 12" PEPPERONI I&#13;
PIZZAS FOR $9.87! I&#13;
Simply present this •&#13;
coupon when you&#13;
receive your order. •&#13;
I&#13;
Name J&#13;
Address p&#13;
Prion# J&#13;
Last time I or dered a pizza |&#13;
from Domino's Pizza was |&#13;
Expires: 7/15/871&#13;
Fast, Free Delivery'" J|&#13;
Our drivers carry less man $20 00 Limned&#13;
delivery area Toppings car oe svesniuied&#13;
; I&#13;
RANGER • I • J f Thursday, April 29, 1987 11&#13;
Exclusive interview&#13;
Stranglers' drummer discusses philosophies&#13;
by Rick Lu br&#13;
Rislng out of the turbulent&#13;
mld-sevenU s Britlah muslc&#13;
scene, The Stranglers made&#13;
thelr mark with their own&#13;
brand of harsh, often cynical&#13;
commentaries on the world&#13;
around them.&#13;
Still golng strong afer lS&#13;
years, The Stranglers are embarking&#13;
on their first Amert.&#13;
can tour ln five years. In a&#13;
recent phone interview,&#13;
drummer Jet Black discussed&#13;
the band's philosophy and&#13;
reasons for tourning after&#13;
such a long abscence.&#13;
"We decided to tour," said&#13;
Black, ''because It has been&#13;
Record review&#13;
so long, and one can't keep&#13;
going to the same plces,&#13;
which one has to do U you&#13;
keep missing out on America.&#13;
So that's really why we've&#13;
come here, becau e we feel&#13;
it's overdue. It's great to be&#13;
back here. It's surprlslng me,&#13;
the audiences seem to be getting&#13;
bigger all the time,&#13;
which ts encouraging. It's&#13;
going so well, it's been suggested&#13;
we stay away a bit&#13;
more often."&#13;
Over their S year existence,&#13;
The Stranglers have&#13;
gone through an almost constand&#13;
evolution, becoming&#13;
smoother and more melodic.&#13;
The addition of horns on their&#13;
two most recent albums has&#13;
aided in this transltlon. The&#13;
homs also brlng a new dimension&#13;
to the bands older&#13;
material in concert. Black,&#13;
who for an undisclosed reason&#13;
was absent from the band's&#13;
recent Milwaukee appearance,&#13;
explained that, although&#13;
their music ls becoming&#13;
smoother, and several&#13;
songs more optlmistic, th1&#13;
does not mean the band's&#13;
basic phllosophy baa&#13;
changed.&#13;
"I think w 're still prophets&#13;
of doom, in a minor, unimportant&#13;
way," Black explained.&#13;
"I think that we observe&#13;
some of the nasUer facets of&#13;
Del Fuegos release third LP&#13;
Stand Up&#13;
1b Del Fu gos ( h)&#13;
Oh muse give me the gift of&#13;
the golden tongue so I may&#13;
laud the talents of a. band of&#13;
rogues known a The Del&#13;
Fuegos. These boys just don't&#13;
stop producing music that&#13;
needs to be heard from the&#13;
highest mountaintops. Their&#13;
third rel as just furthers the&#13;
status of the Fuegs as the&#13;
band with probably the best&#13;
chop ln the business.&#13;
The Fuegs are augmented&#13;
by th awesom talents of&#13;
producer Mitchell Fromm&#13;
(who also handled production&#13;
chores on the bands' other&#13;
two releases.) He captures&#13;
th Fu g • killer live sound 1n&#13;
the studio while al o giving&#13;
them a smoothnes and soulfulnes&#13;
that has y t to be&#13;
equaled by any of those other&#13;
so-call d "American" mu le&#13;
band.&#13;
The key word to descrlb&#13;
what mak " tand&#13;
Up" different from the band's&#13;
previous work is Soul.&#13;
Fromm adds some background&#13;
singers, horns, very&#13;
ta.sty Hammond organ licks&#13;
(Fromm's own) and, get thls,&#13;
there ls even track with&#13;
etrlngs!&#13;
There ls absolutely no filler&#13;
on thls album and very&#13;
track has its own character&#13;
and feel showing the varlou&#13;
influences that have touched&#13;
the Fuegs and their music.&#13;
Lyrically the Fuegs are direct&#13;
and emotive. They seP.m&#13;
to be 1n touch with what is&#13;
common to most peopl 's experience.&#13;
Rather than giving&#13;
the listener diatribes on the&#13;
Joys of burning flesh for&#13;
satan, the Fuegs tell us the&#13;
story of a guy who toss d&#13;
back one too many at the corner&#13;
bar and if that isn't po try&#13;
I don't know what ls.&#13;
Th ueg ar one of the&#13;
b st r corded bands em rglng&#13;
in th last few ye rs, and&#13;
The Del Fuegos continue success&#13;
the mix on "Stand Up" ts&#13;
proof positive of this fact.&#13;
Rock and roll is too often&#13;
se n in black and white terms&#13;
and that ls why a band 11.ke&#13;
Del Fuegos ts so needed, because&#13;
their overabundance of&#13;
ta.lent allows them to bring&#13;
out the full spectrum of colors&#13;
that exist in the rock and roll&#13;
idiom.&#13;
DANISH&#13;
This album should be the&#13;
one to cata.pault the Fuegs&#13;
into success ( "Long Slide,"&#13;
the first single, ls doing quite&#13;
well) on a mainstream level&#13;
and there Isn't a band in this&#13;
country (except Milwaukee's&#13;
Pat ?t{cCurdy and the Confi.&#13;
dentlals) more deservtng.&#13;
•·Berni Doll&#13;
We Have It All!&#13;
BAKERY The Finest Danish Kringles,&#13;
Cak s, Rolls, Breads &amp; Donuts.&#13;
1841 Oougla~ Ave-.&#13;
ltKIM, W1 'i J402&#13;
637-889S&#13;
.-006Ourind Aw.&#13;
554-1'.111&#13;
OH-SO-GOOD!&#13;
Gen ration of Quality aking&#13;
the environment 1n which we&#13;
move, and occasionally make&#13;
comments on them. But,'' he&#13;
added, "it's usually done 1n a&#13;
very ambiguous manner, and&#13;
lt isn't always apparent what&#13;
we're actually saving.&#13;
• 'We've never attempted to&#13;
promote any k.lnd of doctrine",&#13;
Black continued, "but&#13;
we do, in fact use varlous&#13;
social and political cenarlos&#13;
to explore a lyrical idea.''&#13;
Having been in the mu le&#13;
business for 18 years, Black&#13;
has some very definite views&#13;
on the industry. "We don't&#13;
really listen to any particular&#13;
music, except one mlght be&#13;
travelling and have the radio&#13;
on. So, I Just have a general&#13;
idea of whats going on, and&#13;
basically it's the same as&#13;
always, a mixture ot the&#13;
blend and adventurous.&#13;
"From the artist's point of&#13;
view," Black continued, "The&#13;
industry ts rotten to the core.&#13;
On the one hand, you have&#13;
the artist, who ls, generally&#13;
speaking, only capable of&#13;
doing one thing, that ls,&#13;
producing h1s art. Then on&#13;
the other side of things, you&#13;
have the entrepreneurs, who&#13;
are only good at one thing,&#13;
and that's making money, out&#13;
of anyone or anything. And&#13;
unless one of those parties&#13;
has sympathies for the other,&#13;
there's no way the two group&#13;
can work together with the&#13;
same interests. So,'' he&#13;
added, "it makes tor a&#13;
sll"a1ned extstance moat of the&#13;
Ume for most of the artists."&#13;
Black says the band has no&#13;
deflnlte long rang plan , but&#13;
that, as Ion as they njoy&#13;
what they're doing, they will&#13;
continue. "W 've alway f lt&#13;
that we're dolng what we&#13;
wanted to do. It was very,&#13;
very difficult 1n the b glnn1ng,&#13;
but It's g ttlng !er&#13;
all the time. We don't actually&#13;
look that far ahead. In ret.&#13;
rospect, I wouldn' hav&#13;
dreamt that w 'd till hav&#13;
been active after 18 years. A&#13;
Ion as w have plenty mor&#13;
Ideas, there'll be plenty more&#13;
work to be done.&#13;
"I houldn't think anyon&#13;
will remember us aft r 20 or&#13;
80 years," Blac added,&#13;
"knowing the sta.te of th&#13;
music industry. U 1t ended tomorrow,&#13;
1t would be nice to&#13;
be remembered as thos ar&#13;
the guys who managed to last&#13;
S years.&#13;
TRY THE PEPPERONI SPEaAL&#13;
You only ha-le to ask for the&#13;
~onl Speciaf, then give&#13;
tne dehvery l)fflOn the&#13;
special coup0n when your&#13;
pepperoni SJ)8Ctal arrives&#13;
Remember the Oomino"s&#13;
Pilla Double Guarantee:&#13;
If you ptua tSn·t right,&#13;
we1I fix it If ,t's late.&#13;
we'll give you $3.00 off!&#13;
Call us for details.&#13;
Avoid The NOIDw&#13;
Call Domino·• Pizza•&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
2136 Washington Ave.&#13;
654-5070&#13;
8028 22nd Ave.&#13;
652-1222&#13;
4919 60th Street&#13;
654-5577&#13;
Hours:&#13;
4 OO?m • 1 OOam Sun • ThuB&#13;
-'()()pm• 2 ooam Fn &amp; Sat&#13;
·----------------------· I p • TWO 12" PEPPERONI I&#13;
I epperon1 PIZZAS FOR $9.871 I&#13;
I S . I Simply present this I&#13;
I pec,a coup0n when you I&#13;
I receive your order. I&#13;
I I&#13;
I ------ ■ I ~ I&#13;
I ============ I illl • ;_·-~·~ i I lrom eom,1101 Pou.a was I&#13;
I lllr] f • ____ Eap1ret 7/ 15187 I&#13;
I LIii : · . T Fast, Fre Delivery~ I&#13;
~----------------------· Ofle, nQI • ltd w th tny O!hltt&#13;
()lie, 1917 Oc,,,, r,Qt P.u• I,.,;&#13;
12 Thursday, April 29, 1987&#13;
Shaka Zulu&#13;
Ladysmith Black Mabazo&#13;
(Warner)&#13;
Paul Simon and Warner&#13;
Brothers have opened a window&#13;
on an incredibly rich and&#13;
inspired culture which is almost&#13;
as totally foreign to us&#13;
as the Saxons who decorated&#13;
Deerhurst Chapel with jagged&#13;
toothed monsters of sinister&#13;
beauty.&#13;
Never mind that there have&#13;
been periodic peeks at this&#13;
culture over the past thirty&#13;
years. Let us acknowledge&#13;
Harry Belafonte's consistent&#13;
efforts to secure an audience&#13;
for the music of South Africa's&#13;
Blacks. Don't denigrate&#13;
"King Kong," a notable musical&#13;
of the early sixties in London.&#13;
Indeed, as a refugee,&#13;
Kurt Weill did a gallant job of&#13;
trying to identify with native&#13;
music in "Lost in the Stars."&#13;
We have no real chance to&#13;
experience the Black South&#13;
African musical scene in&#13;
depth. We can't pretend to&#13;
judge whether what we hear&#13;
when we listen to Shaka Zulu&#13;
is typical, top rank, or musical&#13;
genius.&#13;
But if this disc is a unique&#13;
contribution, it can still have&#13;
an impact on serious popular&#13;
music akin to that of Japanese&#13;
prints upon Impressionist&#13;
painting. If this disc only&#13;
served to remind us of how&#13;
many rich musical forms we&#13;
are ignorant of, whether Portugese&#13;
fados, Malaysian theater&#13;
music, or South American&#13;
Indian lullabies, it would be&#13;
worth all the fuss.&#13;
But apart from all the&#13;
social and cultural overtones,&#13;
Shaka Zulu is a stunning&#13;
musical tour de force that&#13;
people will either love or&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Short Cuts&#13;
hate. I, for one, love it.&#13;
-Davie M. Doll&#13;
GUIS GUIS&#13;
by Dr. John (Alligator)&#13;
Dr. John, who had a hit&#13;
with "Right Place Wrong&#13;
Time" back around 1972, is&#13;
being hailed with his first and&#13;
best LPs in Alligator's "rockback"&#13;
series.&#13;
The release of the long outof-&#13;
print "Gumbo" last fall&#13;
proved successful enough to&#13;
release Dr. John's debut classic&#13;
"Gris Gris," which many&#13;
find to be his masterpiece.&#13;
In the wake of John Fogerty's&#13;
present urge of "we&#13;
missed you" popularity,&#13;
Dr.John's often more stated&#13;
musical works are a much&#13;
deeper presentation of the&#13;
same Bayou style.&#13;
Similar to "Gumbo," the&#13;
music of "Gris Gris" is much&#13;
grittier and, thus, more biting&#13;
Dr. John is back in print&#13;
in its delivery. And the Doctor's&#13;
gravelly, swamp-filled&#13;
sound is a fascinating extension&#13;
of the blues that Alligator&#13;
Records is so noted for.&#13;
Continuing with their string&#13;
of blues and rock roots LPs,&#13;
Alligator has initiated a wonderful&#13;
series with "Rockback"&#13;
that is destined to rerelease&#13;
many rare gems the&#13;
likes of "Gris Gris." As per&#13;
usual, everything the label releases&#13;
is the foundation of virtually&#13;
all rock-oriented&#13;
music.&#13;
-Jim Neibaur&#13;
Made In The USA:&#13;
Soundtrack&#13;
Various Artists (Chrysalis)&#13;
What we have here is an interesting&#13;
compilation of the&#13;
music that - for the most&#13;
part- Top 40 has deemed&#13;
unacceptable. Music that can&#13;
only be found in the back of&#13;
Pignotti's&#13;
- if&#13;
Please use our products in moderation.&#13;
HOURS&#13;
Open Mon. thru Sat.&#13;
9-9&#13;
Open Sunday&#13;
10-9&#13;
UWP&#13;
Liquor 1585 - North 22nd Avenue • Ph. 551-8020&#13;
FREE POSTERS&#13;
HwyE&#13;
CENTER&#13;
OF THE&#13;
WORLD&#13;
LIQUOR&#13;
'APERBACK&#13;
.EXCHANGE&#13;
15 pack&#13;
'Stroh's Spoken Here"&#13;
Seagram's Wine Coolers&#13;
Original • Golden • Peach •&#13;
Wild Berries • Apple Cranberry&#13;
$999 $1699&#13;
4 pack • "C aassee no f 24&#13;
lit-; Miller&#13;
Meister Brau&#13;
$999&#13;
mm 12 ppkk//ccia ns&#13;
Old Style&#13;
$419&#13;
• 1 2 1p k/cans&#13;
Barrel Specials&#13;
Hamms V* S12"&#13;
Schlitz V\ $14"&#13;
Baron Von&#13;
Scheuter's Schnapps&#13;
• Peach • Apple&#13;
• Root Beer &amp; More&#13;
|| «5"'L iter&#13;
$2 Rebate&#13;
WINE COOLERS&#13;
Close Out Sale&#13;
Assorted Flavors&#13;
$299 $1699&#13;
4 pack 24 Pack Match&#13;
alternative record stores.&#13;
Unique music that's been rejected&#13;
because of its difference&#13;
and lack of commercial&#13;
attractiveness.&#13;
Low. points of the album include&#13;
yet another "Enuff"&#13;
song from The Fabulous&#13;
Thunderbirds. "Can't Tear It&#13;
Up Enuff" is identical to any&#13;
other T-bird's song. Also marring&#13;
the LP is the appearance&#13;
of Timbuck's suicidal and depressing&#13;
"Life Is Hard," and&#13;
a cumbersome cowpunk tune&#13;
by Flies On Fire, "Baptize&#13;
Me Over Elvis Presley's&#13;
Grave."&#13;
These are balanced by&#13;
some great performances, including&#13;
the return of Peter&#13;
Case (ex of The Plimsolls)&#13;
with "Old Blue Car." Also&#13;
bright is the Dyianesque&#13;
"Ballad Of The Little Man"&#13;
by World Party. Mojo Nixon&#13;
and Skid Roper bring their bizarre&#13;
sense of humor in "I&#13;
Hate Banks."&#13;
This soundtrack is like the&#13;
unlabeled box of chocolates.&#13;
You might grab something&#13;
really tasty or it might end&#13;
up being a really disgusting&#13;
piece.&#13;
-Tyson Wilda&#13;
Boom Baby Boom&#13;
Mondo Rock (CBS)&#13;
Synthesizer meets power&#13;
percussion, jazz sax, and a&#13;
voice like Kenny Loggins in&#13;
this rocking debut album.&#13;
With summer just around&#13;
the corner, the release of the&#13;
LP is perfectly timed. This is&#13;
the typical good-time, cruisin-&#13;
'-with-the-top-down music.&#13;
This is high-energy, fun&#13;
music. Surprisingly, Mondo&#13;
Rock manages to create this&#13;
sound without becoming Tod&#13;
40 clones. v&#13;
Sizzling guitar solos mix&#13;
with deep, throaty vocals. A&#13;
soul background chorus harmonizes&#13;
with keyboards.&#13;
Horns punch up bright dance&#13;
tunes. Real drums accentuate&#13;
an atmosphere of fast times&#13;
and girl chasing. This is 80's&#13;
style surf and summer music&#13;
at its best.&#13;
Unfortunately, the band&#13;
seems to lack an ability to&#13;
capture other musical styles&#13;
They stand out in their rock&#13;
but fail with slower moods!&#13;
This is most obvious in the&#13;
track "Let It Rain," which is&#13;
a nice mellow island song,&#13;
but doesn't seem any different&#13;
than thousands of other&#13;
nice mellow island songs on&#13;
the adult listening charts&#13;
today.&#13;
Mondo Rock's chance for&#13;
success lies in their power&#13;
their ability to create a last!&#13;
ing impression with a powerful&#13;
rock beat. This does make&#13;
them a one dimensional band&#13;
but within that dimension!&#13;
they work wonders.&#13;
-Tyson Wilda&#13;
Atmosphere&#13;
Various Artists (CBS)&#13;
"Atmospheres" is CBS records'&#13;
latest entry into the&#13;
market of new age samplers&#13;
and though there are some&#13;
wonderful tracks included on&#13;
this disk it does not contain&#13;
the cohesiveness of a Windham&#13;
Hill or Narada sampler.&#13;
That is not to say that "Atmospheres"&#13;
is not a worthy&#13;
effort to garner some attention&#13;
for the new instrumental&#13;
artists recording for CBS, but&#13;
they can learn from the independents&#13;
who have really cornered&#13;
the market on this type&#13;
of music.&#13;
"Atmospheres" is a sometimes&#13;
acoustic, sometimes&#13;
electric, and sometimes vocal&#13;
journey that take you anywhere&#13;
that the music inspires&#13;
your mind to go. The album&#13;
features the incomparable&#13;
talents of electric harpist Andreas&#13;
Vollenweider, cellist&#13;
Yo-Yo Ma, guitarist Liona&#13;
Boyd, and the fusion group&#13;
Free Flight. It is their tracks&#13;
that make "Atmospheres" a&#13;
worthwhile addition to your&#13;
collection.&#13;
The album does have a&#13;
problem with the fact that&#13;
some of the other artists included&#13;
are simply overshadowed&#13;
by the aforementioned&#13;
musicians and the tracks by&#13;
avant garde composers simply&#13;
do not have a place here.&#13;
"Atmospheres" is a noble&#13;
and worthwhile effort that includes&#13;
some of the most talented&#13;
instrumentalists of our&#13;
day. Too bad it doesn't sustain&#13;
the quality of performances&#13;
throughout.&#13;
-Bernie Doll&#13;
ALL THE WAY CRAZY&#13;
by Little Charlie&#13;
and the Nightbeats&#13;
(Alligator)&#13;
For years a fixture on the&#13;
San Francisco music scene,&#13;
Little Charlie and the Nightbeats&#13;
play a hard driving&#13;
mixture of rock and blues,&#13;
aptly described on the album&#13;
as "genuine houserockin'&#13;
music."&#13;
Much of the credit for the&#13;
album's drive and excitement&#13;
goes to vocalist and harmonica&#13;
player Rick Estrin. Estrin&#13;
has one of the most expressive&#13;
and powerful blues&#13;
voices around, and has been&#13;
described as "the best harmonica&#13;
player working&#13;
today".&#13;
Many of the songs exhibit a&#13;
rather bizarre sense of&#13;
humor. Numbers such as&#13;
"T.V. Crazy" and "Poor Tarzan"&#13;
take a warped and very&#13;
funny look at life and relationships.&#13;
The album also&#13;
gives the band ample opportunity&#13;
to demostrate its skill&#13;
at slower, more traditional&#13;
blues numbers.&#13;
Alligator Records is to be&#13;
commended for giving broad&#13;
exposure to one of San Francisco's&#13;
best and most popular&#13;
bands. This is the kind of&#13;
stuff the Fabulous Thunderbirds&#13;
only wish they could&#13;
Play.&#13;
-Rick Luehr&#13;
12 Thul'8day, April 29, 1987&#13;
Zahl&#13;
m.lt.b Black I buo&#13;
(Wam r)&#13;
Paul Simon and Wamer&#13;
Brothers have opened a window&#13;
on an incredibly rich and&#13;
lnsplred culture which ls almost&#13;
totally fol"elgn to u&#13;
aa the Saxons who decorated&#13;
D erhurst Chapel with jagged&#13;
toothed monsten of lnlster&#13;
be uty.&#13;
Never mind that there have&#13;
b en period.le peeks at thla&#13;
culture over the past thirty&#13;
years. Let us acknowledge&#13;
Harry Bela.fonte's consistent&#13;
efforts to secure an audience&#13;
for the music of South Africa&#13;
'a Bl ck . Don't denigrate&#13;
"King Kong," a notable musical&#13;
of the early sixties ln Lon•&#13;
don. Inde d, a retug e,&#13;
Kurt Welll did a gallant job of&#13;
trying to ld nWy with naUve&#13;
mustc tn "Lost in the Stars."&#13;
W have no real chance to&#13;
experl nee the Black South&#13;
African musical scene in&#13;
depth. We can't pretend to&#13;
judge whether what we hear&#13;
when we llsten to Sha.lea Zulu&#13;
1 yptcal, top rank, or mustcal&#13;
genius.&#13;
But lf this disc la a unique&#13;
contribution, tt can sUll have&#13;
an imp ct on serious popular&#13;
mu le kin to that of Japanese&#13;
prints upon Impressionist&#13;
painting. If th1s disc only&#13;
erved to remind us of how&#13;
many rlch mwdcal forms we&#13;
are Ignorant of, wh ther Portuges&#13;
fadoa, M.alayalan theater&#13;
music, or South American&#13;
Indian lullabies, lt would be&#13;
worth all the fuss.&#13;
But apart from all the&#13;
aoclal and cultural overtonea,&#13;
Shak ZUlu 11 a .tunning&#13;
mu lcal tour de force that&#13;
people will either love or&#13;
Short Cuts&#13;
Dr. John I back In print&#13;
hate. I, for one, love tt.&#13;
··Dav M . DoU&#13;
ORIS ORIS&#13;
by Dr. John (All1pt:or)&#13;
Dr. John, who had a hit&#13;
with "Right Place Wrong&#13;
Time.. back around 1972, ls&#13;
being hailed with his first and&#13;
best LPs in Alligator's • 'rockback"&#13;
series.&#13;
The release of the long outof-&#13;
prlnt "Gumbo" last fall&#13;
proved successful enough to&#13;
release Dr. John's debut classic&#13;
"Orta Orta," which many&#13;
find to be his masterpiece.&#13;
In the wake of John Fogerty'a&#13;
present urge of "w&#13;
mined you" popularity,&#13;
Dr.John's often more stated&#13;
musical works are a much&#13;
deeper presentaUon of the&#13;
same Bayou atyle.&#13;
SJmllar to •'Gumbo,•' the&#13;
music of "Gris Oris" ls much&#13;
grittier and, thus, more biting&#13;
in its delivery. And the Doctor's&#13;
gravelly, swamp-filled&#13;
sound ls a fascinating extension&#13;
of the blues that Alllgator&#13;
Records ts so noted for.&#13;
Continuing with their et.ring&#13;
of blues and rock roots LPs,&#13;
AlUgator has lnttiated a wonderful&#13;
series with "Rockback"&#13;
that ls destined to re•&#13;
release many rare gem the&#13;
likes of "Orts Gris." All per&#13;
usual, everything the label releases&#13;
ls the fowtdaUon of virtually&#13;
all rock-oriented&#13;
music.&#13;
•·Jfm Nelbaur&#13;
Made In Tbe USA~&#13;
8ouDdtrae&#13;
Various .Artim (Olryuli9)&#13;
What we have here la an interesting&#13;
compilation of the&#13;
music that • for the moet&#13;
part. Top .0 hU deemed&#13;
unacceptable. Muatc that can&#13;
only be found in the bacJc of&#13;
P~~-notg~ Please use our products In moderation.&#13;
HOURS HwyA&#13;
Open Mon. thru Sat. r 1&#13;
S.9 : UWP :&#13;
Open Sunday t . __ J HwyE&#13;
10-9&#13;
Liquor&#13;
585 · North 22nd Avenue • Ph. 551-8020&#13;
FREE POSTERS l&#13;
~~saa gram s ne o ers&#13;
Ong1nal • Golden • Peach •&#13;
Wild Berries • AWle Cranbeny s2,!ck s1 ·e!!of 24&#13;
15pack&#13;
"Stmh's Spok,n Hm"&#13;
Miller&#13;
~ s4~2,ckcans&#13;
Meister Brau&#13;
Ps2t!L&#13;
I Old Style ~:~&#13;
• Peach • Apple s41 9 ! -~ I • P.oot 0eer &amp; More&#13;
12 pk/cans iii s51&amp;1ter - t.J $2Rebate&#13;
Barrel Specials&#13;
Hamms ¼ s12 1 •&#13;
Schlitz ¼ s1 41 9&#13;
WINE LERS&#13;
Close Out Sale&#13;
Assorted Flavors&#13;
$299 $1699 ~~x&#13;
4 pack 24 Pack Match&#13;
altemativ r cord stor s .&#13;
Unique muslc that's been rejected&#13;
because of Its differ•&#13;
ence and lack of commercial&#13;
attractiveness.&#13;
Low points of the album Include&#13;
yet another "Enu!t"&#13;
song from The Fabulous&#13;
Thunderbirds. "Can't Tear It&#13;
Up Enuff'' ls identical to any&#13;
other T -blrd's song. Also mar•&#13;
ring the LP la the appearanc&#13;
of nmbuck's sulcidaf and depressing&#13;
"Life Is Ha.rd," and&#13;
a cumbersome cowpunk tune&#13;
by Files On Fire, "Baptize&#13;
Me Over Elvis Presle.,"B&#13;
Grave."&#13;
These ar balanced by&#13;
some great performances, Including&#13;
the return of Peter&#13;
Case ( ex of The Plimsolls)&#13;
with "Old Blue Car.'' Also&#13;
bright le the Dylanesque&#13;
"Ballad Of The Little Man"&#13;
by World Party. Mojo Nixon&#13;
and Skid Roper bring their bizarre&#13;
sens of humor in "I&#13;
Hate Banks.''&#13;
Th1s soundtrack ts like the&#13;
unlabeled box of chocolates.&#13;
You might grab something&#13;
really tasty or lt might end&#13;
up being a really disgusting&#13;
piece.&#13;
··T11~on Wilda&#13;
Boom Baby Boom&#13;
Mondo Bock (CBS)&#13;
Synthesizer meets power&#13;
percu.sslon. Jazz sax, and a&#13;
voice llke KeMy Logglna 1n&#13;
th.la rocking debut album.&#13;
With summer Just around&#13;
the comer, the release of the&#13;
LP ls perfectly Umed. This ls&#13;
the typical good-time. crulsin•&#13;
'•with-the-top.down mualc.&#13;
Thia is high-energy, tun&#13;
music. Surprisingly, M.ondo&#13;
Rock manages to create this&#13;
aound without becoming Top&#13;
to clones.&#13;
Btzzllng gultar aolos mix&#13;
with deep, throaty Vocals. A&#13;
IOUl background chorus har·&#13;
moniles with keyboards.&#13;
Horns punch up bright dance&#13;
tunes. Real drums accentuate&#13;
an atmosphere of faat times&#13;
and girl chasing. This ts SO's&#13;
styl surf and summer muslc&#13;
at its best.&#13;
Unfortunately, the band&#13;
aeems to lack an ability to&#13;
capture other musical style .&#13;
They stand out in their rock,&#13;
but fall with lower mOOd .&#13;
Thi ls most obvious ln the&#13;
track "Let It Rain," which ls&#13;
a nlce mellow 1 land song,&#13;
but doesn't s m any differnt&#13;
than thousands of oth r&#13;
n1ce mellow Island songs on&#13;
the adult listening charts&#13;
today.&#13;
ondo Rock's chanc or&#13;
success lles in their power,&#13;
their ability to create a last.&#13;
Ing impression with a powertut&#13;
rock beat. Thi does make&#13;
them one dimensional band&#13;
but Within that dimen Ion'&#13;
they work wonders. '&#13;
· ·Tyson Wilda&#13;
tmosph r&#13;
V rlous Artist (CBl )&#13;
"Atmospheres" is CB records'&#13;
latest entry into the&#13;
market of n w age sampler&#13;
RANGER&#13;
and though there re some&#13;
wonderful tracks lnclud d on&#13;
th1.9 disk it does not contain&#13;
the coheslv ness of a Windham&#13;
Hill or Narada sampler.&#13;
That ls not to y that "Atmospheres"&#13;
ls not a worthy&#13;
effort to gamer some attention&#13;
for the new instrumental&#13;
artists recording for CB • bu&#13;
they can learn from the independents&#13;
who hav really cornered&#13;
th m rke on Um type&#13;
of muslc.&#13;
., Atmospheres" la a sometimes&#13;
acoustic, sometlmea&#13;
electric, and sometJmes vocal&#13;
journey that take you aay.&#13;
where that the music lmpl..rea&#13;
your mind to go. The album&#13;
features th incomparable&#13;
talents of el ctrtc harplst Andreas&#13;
Vollenweld r, celllsl&#13;
Yo-Yo M , gultarlst Liona&#13;
Boyd, and the fusion group&#13;
Free Flight. It ls thel.r tracks&#13;
that make "Atmospheres" a&#13;
worthwhll addition to your&#13;
collection.&#13;
The album does have a&#13;
problem with the fact that&#13;
some of the other artists included&#13;
are simply overshadowed&#13;
by the aforemenUoned&#13;
muslclans and the tracks by&#13;
avant garde composers simply&#13;
do not have a place here.&#13;
"Atmosphere " la a noble&#13;
and worthwhile effort that includes&#13;
some of the most taJ.&#13;
ented lnstrumentallats of our&#13;
day. Too bad 1t doesn't sustain&#13;
the qua.ltty of performance&#13;
throughout.&#13;
··Beml6 DoU&#13;
ALL THE WAY CRAZY&#13;
by Uttle rlle&#13;
and the lgbtbea&amp;a&#13;
(Alligator)&#13;
For years a fixture on the&#13;
San Franclseo mu.ale scene,&#13;
Little Chad.le and th Night•&#13;
beata play a hard driving&#13;
mixtuN of rock and blues,&#13;
aptly described on the album&#13;
as "genuine houserockln'&#13;
music."&#13;
Much of the credit for the&#13;
album's drive and excitement&#13;
goes to vocallst and harmon•&#13;
ica player Rick Estrin. Estrin&#13;
haa one of the most expressive&#13;
and powerful blues&#13;
volces around, and has been&#13;
described "th b t har·&#13;
monica play r working&#13;
today''.&#13;
1:any of the songs exhlbll a&#13;
rather bizarre ense of&#13;
humor. Numb rs such as&#13;
"T.V. Crazy" and "Poor TarUU'l"&#13;
take a warped and v ry&#13;
funny look at life and rel •&#13;
Uonships. The album also&#13;
giv the band ample oppor•&#13;
tunlty to demostrate lts skill&#13;
at alower, more tradlUonal&#13;
blues numb rs.&#13;
Alligator Record Is to&#13;
commended for giving bro d&#13;
xposure to one of San Francisco's&#13;
b st nd most popular&#13;
band . This L the kJnd of&#13;
luff th Fabulou Titund r -&#13;
birds only i h th y could&#13;
play.&#13;
·· Rick Lu hr&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Movie review Thursday, April 29, 1987 13&#13;
as;&#13;
Ra,S,"g Ari??na" towers viewer expectations ITlOrp an fhon overplay even funny. However, nnthino- ,, .«« * ... .&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
The Three Stooges meet&#13;
Jerry Lewis as per their&#13;
comic styles in this wild, unhibited&#13;
farce by brothers Joel&#13;
and Ethan Coen ("Blood Simple").&#13;
As one awaits a surprise&#13;
cameo by Jim Nabors or&#13;
Andy Griffith, the Coens&#13;
present a film of startling&#13;
comic images that owe more&#13;
to intentional overacting and&#13;
director brother Joel's intentionally&#13;
obtrusive close-ups&#13;
than to the script.&#13;
A childless couple steals a&#13;
baby from a child-filled couple,&#13;
complicated- by two&#13;
greasy-but-loveable ex-cons,&#13;
plenty of sight gags that that&#13;
pay affectionate homage to&#13;
Mack Sennet silents, and a&#13;
hillbilly setting (complete&#13;
with intentionally blatant&#13;
southern accents) that makes&#13;
one wonder whatever became&#13;
of Max Baer, Jr.&#13;
What hinders this film most&#13;
significantly is its pacing.&#13;
While it does want to be obtrusive,&#13;
it hastily exerts high&#13;
levels of energy in its opening&#13;
moments and thus has trouble&#13;
maintaining such a breakneck&#13;
pace throughout its&#13;
duration. Hence after about&#13;
twenty minutes it dies on its&#13;
feet.&#13;
An interesting aspect is&#13;
that the Coens, like Jerry&#13;
Lewis, allow their supporting&#13;
players to overplay even&#13;
more so than the leads. Durwhirl&#13;
^ tPPing attem which the two ex-consP (tB iinll&#13;
J0hn ^man)&#13;
dnl th ^ drive back down the street looking for it.&#13;
all the while screaming repeatedly&#13;
at the top of their&#13;
(a ^ect parallel to a&#13;
similar scene in Jerry Lewis'&#13;
"Which Way to the FnnVr&#13;
. ™ leads. on the other&#13;
are more low key.&#13;
Nicholas Cage plays deadpan&#13;
. . . manic s h enani gans ,&#13;
while Holly Hunter is a cute,&#13;
fiery example of southern&#13;
belle screen sexism. As thev&#13;
are at the forefront of the action,&#13;
they are the most reserved&#13;
(although reserved in&#13;
this film is comparatively inrf"&#13;
e)- 11 is their duty to uphold&#13;
the thread of the narrative&#13;
amidst the craziness that&#13;
even manages to include Tex&#13;
Cobb as a fugitive from a&#13;
Road Warrior film.&#13;
Another interesting ode to&#13;
Jerry Lewis is a scene directly&#13;
borrowed from his 1959 feature&#13;
"Rock-a-Bye-Baby" in&#13;
which Cage attempts to steal&#13;
one of five infants, only to&#13;
have them be a bit frisky for&#13;
his careful maneuvering&#13;
(Joel Coen's camera work&#13;
here rivals Frank Tashiln's in&#13;
the Lewis original).&#13;
"Raising Arizona" does&#13;
manage to give enough depth&#13;
to the characters so that it is&#13;
not merely the gags that are&#13;
funny. However, nothing in&#13;
the film is too terribly innovative,&#13;
Joel's camera work the&#13;
only genuinely original aspect&#13;
(presenting not so much a&#13;
new technique in photography&#13;
as a different way of photoghraphing&#13;
this type of film).&#13;
But can I recommend the&#13;
movie? Upon my comparing&#13;
it to the Three Stooges, I had&#13;
a friend mention to me that&#13;
not everyone is all that familiar&#13;
with the Stooges. So perhaps&#13;
this is a comedy for people&#13;
who have never seen the&#13;
Three Stooges. They won't&#13;
know any better anyway.&#13;
Selected Shorts&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
THREE FOR THE ROAD&#13;
More teenage shenanigans,&#13;
this time featuring Charlie&#13;
Sheen and Kerri Greene - the&#13;
principals of "Lucas"- and&#13;
John Ruck of "Ferris Bueller&#13;
' fame.&#13;
Greene is a senator's&#13;
daughter with a wild streak,&#13;
Sheen is the senator's yuppie&#13;
yes man who's ordered to&#13;
drive Greene to a girl's&#13;
prison. Ruck is a Maynard G.&#13;
Krebs incarnate who is just&#13;
along for the ride.&#13;
Greene is both amusing and&#13;
terminally attractive as the&#13;
uninhibited lass with a taste&#13;
for the truly outrageous. Her&#13;
antics are in rebellion of her&#13;
staid father's political status&#13;
and his insistence that she act&#13;
like a "real lady." Sheen,&#13;
wno s come down from "Pla-&#13;
°?J}" here. is appropriately&#13;
stitf as the brown-nosing&#13;
young bureaucrat, while&#13;
Kuck adds the necessary&#13;
character balance in a familiar&#13;
"trusted friend" role.&#13;
The script alternates from&#13;
amusing, to poignant, to sophomoric,&#13;
then back to amusnS.&#13;
etc. It apparently is attempting&#13;
an underlying&#13;
ineme regarding teenage&#13;
pris who should not be afraid&#13;
10 be themselves, along with&#13;
the genuine nastiness of the&#13;
suppressive parent role. That&#13;
it takes such a stand is impressive,&#13;
but the ensuing hijinks&#13;
make the film more a&#13;
"cute" item than one to go&#13;
away pondering.&#13;
Sally Kellerman's substantial&#13;
talents are wasted in the&#13;
small, thankless role of the&#13;
girl's estranged mother, especially&#13;
in comparison to a&#13;
similar role Kellerman had in&#13;
the 1979 feature "Foxes" with&#13;
Jodie Foster.&#13;
In some ways "Three For&#13;
The Road" makes the same&#13;
see page 14&#13;
Coming...&#13;
Friday, May 8th&#13;
PARTY ON&#13;
THE PAD&#13;
Live Band -&#13;
Free Admission&#13;
Watch for it!&#13;
21^ CINEMAS 5 57th AVE . &amp; 75th St. • 694-7301&#13;
m m.&#13;
STARTING JUNE 26th&#13;
An MGM. UA Communications company&#13;
£196; MtrnOGpLOWYN MAYER PICTURES. INC&#13;
RANGER Thursday, April 29, 1987 13&#13;
Movie review&#13;
"Raising Arizona" lowers viewer expectations&#13;
players to overplay even&#13;
more 80 than the leads. DurIng&#13;
a kidnapping attempt In&#13;
which the two ex-cons (BW&#13;
Forsythe and John Goodman)&#13;
lose the baby. they drive back&#13;
down the street looking for lt,&#13;
all the while screaming repeatedly&#13;
at the top of their&#13;
lungs (a direct parallel to a&#13;
similar scene In Jerry Lewis'&#13;
"Which Way to the Front").&#13;
by Jim NelbauJ'&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
The Three Stooges meet&#13;
Jerry Lewis as per their&#13;
comic styles In this wild, unhlblted&#13;
farce by brothers Joel&#13;
and Ethan Coen ( "Blood Simple").&#13;
AB one awaits a surprise&#13;
cameo by Jim Nabors or&#13;
Andy Griffith, the Coens&#13;
present a tum of startling&#13;
comic Images that owe more&#13;
to Intentional overacting and&#13;
director brother Joel's lntenUonally&#13;
obtrusive close-ups&#13;
than to the script.&#13;
A childless couple steals a&#13;
baby from a chlld-fllled COU•&#13;
pie, complicated by two&#13;
greasy-but-loveable ex-cons,&#13;
plenty of sight gags that that&#13;
pay affectionate homage to&#13;
Mack Sennet silents, and a&#13;
hillbilly setting ( complete&#13;
with Intentionally blatant&#13;
aouthem accents) that makes&#13;
one wonder whatever became&#13;
of Max Baer, Jr.&#13;
What hinders this film most&#13;
algnlftcanUy ls its pacing.&#13;
While lt does want to be obtrusive,&#13;
It hastily exerts high&#13;
levels of energy In its opening&#13;
moments and thus has trouble&#13;
maintaining such a breakneck&#13;
pace throughout Its&#13;
duration. Hence after about&#13;
twenty minutes It dies on Its&#13;
feet.&#13;
An lnteresttng aspect ls&#13;
that the Coens, like Jerry&#13;
Lewis, allow their supporting&#13;
The leads, on the other&#13;
hand, are more low key.&#13;
Nicholas Cage plays deadpan&#13;
to the manic shenanigans,&#13;
while Holly Hunter ls a cute,&#13;
fiery example of southern&#13;
belle screen sexism. As they&#13;
are at the forefront of the action,&#13;
they are the most reserved&#13;
(although reserved In&#13;
this film ls comparatively in•&#13;
snne). It ls their duty to uphold&#13;
the thread of the narrative&#13;
amidst the craziness that&#13;
even manages to Include Tex&#13;
Cobb as a fugitive from a&#13;
Road Warrior film.&#13;
Another Interesting ode to&#13;
Jerry Lewis ls a scene directly&#13;
borrowed from his 1969 feature&#13;
"Rock-a-Bye-Baby" In&#13;
which Cage attempts to steal&#13;
one of five Infants, only to&#13;
have them be a bit frisky for&#13;
his careful maneuvering&#13;
(Joel Coen's camera work&#13;
here rivals Frank Tashlln's In&#13;
the Lewis original).&#13;
"Raising Arizona" does&#13;
manage to give enough depth&#13;
to the characters so that It ts&#13;
not merely the gags that are&#13;
-Selected Shortsby&#13;
Jim .Selbaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
THREE FOR THE ROAD&#13;
More teenage shenanigans,&#13;
this time featuring Charlie&#13;
Sheen and Kerri Greene . the&#13;
principals of "Lucas"- and&#13;
John Ruck of "Ferris Bueller"&#13;
fame.&#13;
Greene ls a senator's&#13;
daughter with a wild streak,&#13;
Sheen Is the senator's yuppie&#13;
yes man who's ordered to&#13;
drive Greene to a girl's&#13;
prison. Ruck Is a Maynard G .&#13;
Krebs Incarnate who ls just&#13;
along for the ride.&#13;
Greene ls both amusing and&#13;
terminally attractive as the&#13;
uninhibited lass with a taste&#13;
for the truly outrageous. Her&#13;
antics are ln rebellion of her&#13;
staid father's poutical status&#13;
and his Insistence that she act&#13;
llke a "real lady." Sheen,&#13;
who's come down from "Platoon"&#13;
here, ls appropriately&#13;
stiff as the brown-nosing&#13;
young bureaucrat, while&#13;
Ruck adds the necessary&#13;
character balance In a famll•&#13;
lar "trusted friend" role.&#13;
The script alternates from&#13;
amusing, to poignant, to soph•&#13;
omorlc, then back to amusing,&#13;
etc. It apparently Is at•&#13;
tempting an underlying&#13;
theme regarding teenage&#13;
girls who should not be afraid&#13;
to be themselves, along with&#13;
the genuine nastiness of the&#13;
suppressive parent role. That&#13;
It takes such a stand ls Impressive,&#13;
but the ensuing hijlnks&#13;
make the film more a&#13;
"cute•· Item U1an one to go&#13;
away pondering.&#13;
Sally Kellerman's substanlla.&#13;
l talents are wasted In the&#13;
small, thankless role of the&#13;
girl's estranged mother, especially&#13;
In comparison to a&#13;
similar role Kellerman had 1n&#13;
the 1979 feature "Foxes" with&#13;
Jodie Foster.&#13;
In some ways • 'Three For&#13;
The Road" makes the same&#13;
...page 14&#13;
Coming ..•&#13;
Friday, May 8th&#13;
PARTY ON&#13;
THE PAD&#13;
Live Band•&#13;
Free Admission&#13;
Watch for it!&#13;
funny. However, nothing In aa a different way of photogh- not everyone la all that famll•&#13;
the rum Ls too terribly innova- raphing th1.s type of ft1m). lar with the Stooges. So per-&#13;
Uve, Joel's camera work the But can I recommend the hapa th1.s la a comedy for peoonly&#13;
genuinely original aspect movie? Upon my comparing pie who have never seen th~&#13;
(presenting not 80 much a lt to the Three Stooges, I had Three Stooges. They won t&#13;
new technique In photography a friend mention to me that know any better anyway.&#13;
14 Thursday, April 29, 1987 RANGER&#13;
Columbia Press releases cinema books&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Four new cinema studies&#13;
by Columbia University Press&#13;
can be considered somewhat&#13;
of a series on American film&#13;
studies.&#13;
The Classical Hollywood&#13;
Cinema by David Bordwell,&#13;
Janet Staiger, and Kristin&#13;
Thompson&#13;
This first tome deals with&#13;
film style and mode of production&#13;
to 1960. Encompassing&#13;
what many consider to be&#13;
Hollywood's "golden years,"&#13;
we can get an idea of various&#13;
technological changes that occured&#13;
in the film medium in&#13;
this country (which in turn&#13;
affected all other countries).&#13;
The final essays deal briefly&#13;
with the mode of f ilm practice&#13;
since 1960 (the previous&#13;
eras having already been&#13;
studied at extreme length). It&#13;
is here that the authors observe&#13;
alternate film practices&#13;
from this contemporary era.&#13;
The appendices, which include&#13;
things like brief synopses&#13;
of U.S. film industry&#13;
structures, are most helpful&#13;
for the film student.&#13;
POWER ANDPANANOIA&#13;
by Dane Polan&#13;
Subtitled "History, Narrative,&#13;
and the American Cinema,&#13;
1940-1950,' this study&#13;
closely examines a very pivotal&#13;
decade in American film&#13;
that is often overlooked.&#13;
This is the period that was&#13;
so deeply affected by World&#13;
War Two, the film offerings&#13;
balancing somewhere between&#13;
the blatant flag waving&#13;
propaganda of John Wayne&#13;
and the dark film noir with&#13;
actors like Humphry Bogart&#13;
and Robert Mitchum, the latter&#13;
having a tremendous influence&#13;
on the French New&#13;
Wave that spawned Francois&#13;
Truffaut and Jean Luc Goddard.&#13;
Scholarly film studies&#13;
rarely if ever touch upon the&#13;
historical significance that&#13;
American cinema exhibits.&#13;
That the author chooses to&#13;
concentrate on one decade,&#13;
allows for a more complete&#13;
analysis that covers every&#13;
aspect of that period's motion&#13;
picture output.&#13;
THE WORLD WAR TWO&#13;
COMBAT&#13;
by Jeanine Basinger&#13;
A perfect companion piece&#13;
to the "Power and Paranoia"&#13;
tome, and the best of the four&#13;
book reviewed here.&#13;
Basinger examines a&#13;
screen sub-genre in full, giving&#13;
attention to World War&#13;
One Films as a veritable&#13;
foundation for the basis of her&#13;
study, while commenting on&#13;
Korea and View Nam interpretations&#13;
to culminate her&#13;
Book review&#13;
Lorentz critical essays&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
"Lorentz on Film" (University&#13;
of Oklahoma Press) collects&#13;
some of the most important&#13;
critical essays from longtime&#13;
movie critic Pare Lorentz.&#13;
Focusing on the years from&#13;
1927 until Lorentz's retirement&#13;
in 1941, th is compilation&#13;
allows us to see period reviews&#13;
of some of the most&#13;
honored screen classics. What&#13;
is most fascinating about this&#13;
book, is that often the reviews&#13;
at the time of the film's initial&#13;
release belie its lasting&#13;
value. Good examples are Lorentz's&#13;
reviews of Laurel and&#13;
Hardy and The Marx Brothers;&#13;
two comedy teams that&#13;
have withstood the test of&#13;
time, but whom Lorentz&#13;
merely found quaint back&#13;
then.&#13;
That Lorentz became a fine&#13;
filmmaker in his own right&#13;
("The Plow That Broke The&#13;
Plains") makes his criticisms&#13;
all the more valid. But reviews&#13;
aren't all this book has&#13;
to offer. We also get articles&#13;
on film arts and commercialism&#13;
that are as topical now as&#13;
they were some fifty years&#13;
ago when first written.&#13;
"Lorentz on Film" is an engrossing&#13;
look at criticism&#13;
from an era when film genuinely&#13;
mattered, even from a&#13;
commercial aspect.&#13;
Open 7 days&#13;
857-7333&#13;
1-94 at 60th St,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
(1 mile north of&#13;
the Factory&#13;
Outlet Centre)&#13;
FACTORY OUTLCT&#13;
Shorts&#13;
from page 13&#13;
statement as Stanley&#13;
Kramer's thoughtful "Bless&#13;
The Beasts and the Children"&#13;
(1972), in which juveniles&#13;
were compared to beasts&#13;
being slaughtered as their&#13;
spirit is continually broken by&#13;
parental oppression. However&#13;
B.W.L. Norton's direction&#13;
paces the film so that the&#13;
comedy is pretty much at the&#13;
forefront, causing the whole&#13;
thing to look like "Doris Day&#13;
and Rock Hudson meet Lynette&#13;
'Squeaky' Fromme."&#13;
But Greene turns in a fine&#13;
performance (outclassing&#13;
"Goonies" and "Lucas"). She&#13;
thoughts on World War Two.&#13;
It is these films that are&#13;
most dismissed among all examples&#13;
popular American&#13;
motion picutes, in that they&#13;
are too often propogandafilled&#13;
and dated. Basinger&#13;
looks carefully at these works&#13;
(her essay on the 1948 John&#13;
Wayne feature "Sands of I wo&#13;
Jima" is most interesting),&#13;
understanding the underlying&#13;
substance that adds the&#13;
meaning and depth to the&#13;
often otherwise superficial&#13;
narratives.&#13;
These films were far different&#13;
during the war than afterward,&#13;
and have taken on a&#13;
whole new meaning in the aftermath&#13;
of Korea and Vietnam.&#13;
Basinger approaches&#13;
these points in her analysis.&#13;
Strongly recommended for all&#13;
libraries.&#13;
HOLLYWOOD FROM VIETNAM&#13;
TO REAGAN&#13;
by Robin Wood&#13;
Wood puts an indelible&#13;
stamp on all of his fiim&#13;
essays, so this book is no different.&#13;
A nice culmination to the&#13;
three afore mentioned books,&#13;
this bold look at changing&#13;
trends and ideas in the past&#13;
twenty or so years of American&#13;
cinema gives extensive&#13;
coverage to horror films,&#13;
while also looking at the&#13;
treatment of Women, the&#13;
buddy pictures, and important&#13;
works by Martin Scorcese&#13;
and Micael Cimino.&#13;
The radical political viewpoint&#13;
Wood has likes to weave&#13;
its way into the writings,&#13;
making them seem aU the&#13;
more personal and interesting.&#13;
It gives us a different,&#13;
more liberal understanding of&#13;
many trends within the&#13;
American screen system that&#13;
would often be shielded had&#13;
the author not carefully&#13;
pointed them out.&#13;
Cineaste interviews&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
Cineaste has always been a&#13;
very politically oriented film&#13;
magazine, as attested to by&#13;
this compilation of interviews&#13;
from that periodical.&#13;
Editors Dan Georgakas and&#13;
Lenny Rubenstein have compiled&#13;
some of the most interesting&#13;
conversations for "The&#13;
Cineaste Interviews" (Lake&#13;
View Press). From Village&#13;
Voice critic Andrew Sarris to&#13;
German filmmaker Rainer&#13;
Werner Fassbinder to actress&#13;
Jane Fonda, the interviews&#13;
contained in this fascinating&#13;
compilation not only give the&#13;
reader a diverse look at several&#13;
aspects of film, but also&#13;
give an excellent idea of the&#13;
depth contained within the&#13;
pages of Cineaste.&#13;
The filmmakers discuss&#13;
their work with the perception&#13;
only they themselves can&#13;
have. The performers comment&#13;
on what they find film&#13;
should be from both commercial&#13;
and artistic perspectives.&#13;
is the antithesis of the apple&#13;
pie wholesomeness she had&#13;
projected in her other films,&#13;
and this difference is impressive&#13;
on more than a visceral&#13;
level. It is her character that&#13;
has the most potential to&#13;
make some sort of statement&#13;
through the narrative's underlying&#13;
intentions. Unfortunately,&#13;
this aspect is not explored&#13;
well enough to cause&#13;
"Three For The Road" to rise&#13;
above the commonplace.&#13;
THE ARISTOCATS&#13;
This 1970 Disney animation&#13;
is hampered by the fact that&#13;
it was not made under Walt's&#13;
» * &lt; » # i&#13;
* * * * *****************„* * * * *&#13;
POOL CENTER: 5102 Green Bay Rd., Kenosha *&#13;
THE SWIMMING POOL I&#13;
M M PROFESSIONALS&#13;
IN-GROUND - ABOVE GROUND *&#13;
• CHEMICALS T&#13;
• ACCESSORIES *&#13;
; • SERVICE . EQUIPMENT *&#13;
• PHONE: KENOSHA 654-3341 RACINE 632-522^ *&#13;
* ** * ^* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * • •&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
k&#13;
k&#13;
*&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
* • SALES&#13;
J • INSTALLATION&#13;
PUS&#13;
supervison (he died in 1966),&#13;
but still manages to exhibit&#13;
some of the Disney magic.&#13;
All of the most desirable&#13;
aspects of Disney cartoon features&#13;
(amusing villians,&#13;
savvy heroes, slapstick,&#13;
colorful images) are present,&#13;
without a lot of preachiness.&#13;
But then there isn't a great&#13;
deal of true substance to&#13;
please more discerning adult&#13;
lovers of animated features.&#13;
Yet it should be successful in&#13;
keeping most small children&#13;
amused for an hour-and-ahalf.&#13;
Perhaps this is best recommended&#13;
as a good film to&#13;
take the kids to see. Since the&#13;
youngsters will be out of&#13;
school for spring break soon,&#13;
"The Aristocats" might be a&#13;
good way to keep them&#13;
amused for a short time.&#13;
SURPLUS GOODS&#13;
Stereos, TVs, Refrigerators,&#13;
Stoves, Furniture,&#13;
and Much More!&#13;
Get the Surplus Price&#13;
SUPER SURPLUS OUTLET&#13;
5535 22ntf AV E.&#13;
OPEN 7 days a week&#13;
14 Thurad y, April 29, 1987 RANGER&#13;
Columbia Press releases cinema books&#13;
by Jim Nelb Ill'&#13;
Enterlalrunent Editor&#13;
Four new cinema studies&#13;
by Columbia University Press&#13;
can be considered somewhat&#13;
of a series on American tum&#13;
studies.&#13;
Tb Hollywood&#13;
ClneJD&amp; by David Bordwell,&#13;
Janet Staiger, and K.rlatln&#13;
omp on&#13;
This first tome deals with&#13;
film style and mode of production&#13;
to 1960. Encompass•&#13;
Ing what many consider to be&#13;
Hollywood's "golden years,"&#13;
we can get an idea of various&#13;
technological changes that occured&#13;
1n the !Um medium In&#13;
th18 country (which in tum&#13;
affected all other countries).&#13;
The final essays deal brief.&#13;
ly With the mode of film practice&#13;
ince 1960 (the previou&#13;
eras having already been&#13;
studied at extreme length). It&#13;
ls here that the authors ob-&#13;
Book review&#13;
serve alternate fllm practices&#13;
from thJs contemporary era.&#13;
The append.lees, which in•&#13;
elude ~gs llke brief synopses&#13;
of U.S. film industry&#13;
structures, are most helpful&#13;
for the film student.&#13;
POWER AND PANANOIA&#13;
by Dane Polan&#13;
SubtiUed "History. Narrative,&#13;
and the American Cinema,&#13;
19ffl-1960,' this study&#13;
closely examines a very pivotal&#13;
decade In American film&#13;
that ls often overlooked.&#13;
This ts the period that waa&#13;
so deeply affected by World&#13;
War Two, the film otferlngs&#13;
balancing somewhere between&#13;
the blatant flag waving&#13;
propaganda of John Wayne&#13;
and the dark film nolr wtlh&#13;
actors like Humphry Bogart&#13;
and Robert Mitchum. the latter&#13;
having a tremendous influence&#13;
on the French New&#13;
Wave that spawned Francola&#13;
Tnltta.ut and Jean Luc Goddard.&#13;
Scholarly film studies&#13;
rarely 1f ever touch upon the&#13;
historical significance th.at&#13;
American cinema exhibits.&#13;
That the author chooses to&#13;
concentrate on one decade,&#13;
allows for a. more complete&#13;
analysis that covens every&#13;
aspect of that period's motion&#13;
picture output.&#13;
THE WORLD WAR TWO&#13;
COMBAT&#13;
by Jea.nlne Ba.singer&#13;
A perfect companion piece&#13;
to the · 'Power and Para.nola''&#13;
tome, and the best of the four&#13;
book reviewed here.&#13;
Basinger examines a&#13;
screen sub-genre In full, giving&#13;
attention to World War&#13;
One Films as a veritable&#13;
foundation for the basis of her&#13;
study, while commenting on&#13;
Korea and View Nam interpretations&#13;
to culminate her&#13;
thoughts on World War TWo.&#13;
It is these Wms that are&#13;
most dismissed among all examples&#13;
popular American&#13;
moUon picutes, 1n that they&#13;
are too often propogandafilled&#13;
and dated. Basinger&#13;
looks carefully at these works&#13;
(her essay on the 1948 John&#13;
Wayne feature "Sande of Iwo&#13;
Jona" ts most interesting),&#13;
understanding the underlying&#13;
substance that addS the&#13;
meaning and depth to the&#13;
often otherwise superficial&#13;
narratives.&#13;
These films were far different&#13;
during the war than afterward,&#13;
and have ta.ken on a&#13;
whole new meaning In the aftermath&#13;
of Korea and Viet•&#13;
nam. Basinger approaches&#13;
these points In her analysis.&#13;
Strongly recommended for all&#13;
Hbrarles.&#13;
HOLLYWOOD FROM VIETNAM&#13;
TO REAGAN&#13;
by Robin Wood&#13;
Wood puts an lndellble&#13;
stamp on all of hls film&#13;
essays, so th1 book ls no dlf.&#13;
ferent.&#13;
A nice culmination to the&#13;
three afore mentioned books,&#13;
this bold look at changing&#13;
trends and ldea.s in the past&#13;
twenty or so years of Amert.&#13;
can cinema gives extensive&#13;
coverage to horror films,&#13;
while also looking at the&#13;
treatment of Women, the&#13;
buddy pictures, and lmpor.&#13;
tant works by Martin Scor.&#13;
cese and Mlcael Cimino.&#13;
The radical political View.&#13;
point Wood has likes to weave&#13;
its way into the writings,&#13;
making them seem all the&#13;
more personal and interest.&#13;
ing. It gives us a di!fer nt,&#13;
more liberal understanding of&#13;
many trends Within the&#13;
American screen system that&#13;
would often be shlelded had&#13;
the author not carefully&#13;
pointed them out.&#13;
Lorentz critical essays&#13;
Cineaste interviews&#13;
by Jim NelbBW'&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
.Jane Fonda, the Interviews&#13;
contained in th1s fascinating&#13;
compllation not only glve the&#13;
reader a diverse look at several&#13;
aspects of film, but alsO&#13;
give an excellent ldea ot the&#13;
depth contained within the&#13;
pages of Cineaste.&#13;
by Jlm Nelbaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
''Lorentz on Film" (University&#13;
of Oklahoma Pree•&gt; collects&#13;
some of the most important&#13;
critical essays from longt1rne&#13;
movl critic Pare Lorentz.&#13;
Focusing on the years from&#13;
1927 until Lorentz's retirement&#13;
in 1941, this compllatlon&#13;
allows us to see period reviews&#13;
of some of the most&#13;
honored screen classics. What&#13;
l8 most fascinating about this&#13;
book, ls that often the reviews&#13;
at the time of the film' lnltial&#13;
release belle its lasung&#13;
value. Good examples are Lorentz's&#13;
reviews of Laurel and&#13;
Hardy and The Man( Brothers;&#13;
two comedy teams that&#13;
have withstood the tellt of&#13;
t:lme, but whom Lorentz&#13;
merely found quaint back&#13;
then.&#13;
That Lorentz became a fine&#13;
filmmaker 1n h1a own right&#13;
Open7days&#13;
8.57-7333&#13;
1-M at 60th St.,.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
(1 mile north of&#13;
the F dory&#13;
Outlet Centre)&#13;
(' 'The Plow That Broke The&#13;
Pla1ns") makes his crttlclsms&#13;
all the more valld. But reviews&#13;
aren't all this book has&#13;
to otter. We also get articles&#13;
on film arts and commercialism&#13;
that are as topical now as&#13;
they were some fifty years&#13;
ago when first written.&#13;
"Lorentz on Film" 18 an en•&#13;
grossing look at criticism&#13;
from an era when film genuinely&#13;
mattered, even from a&#13;
commerc1al aspect.&#13;
Shorts&#13;
lrompage 13&#13;
statement as Stanley&#13;
Kramer's thoughtful "Bless&#13;
The Beasts and the Children"&#13;
(1972), in which juvenil s&#13;
were compared to beasts&#13;
being slaughtered as their&#13;
splrit ls continually broken by&#13;
parental oppression. However&#13;
B.W.L. Norton's direction&#13;
paces the film so that the&#13;
comedy 1s pretty much at the&#13;
forefront, causing the whole&#13;
thing to look llke ''Doris Day&#13;
and Rock Hudson meet Lynette&#13;
'Squeaky' Fromme."&#13;
Clneaste has alwaya been a&#13;
very politically oriented film&#13;
magazine, as attested to by&#13;
this compilation of interviews&#13;
from that periodical.&#13;
Editors Dan Georgakas and&#13;
Lenny Rubenstein have compiled&#13;
some of the most interesting&#13;
conversations for ''The&#13;
Cineaste Interviews" (Lake&#13;
View Preas), From Village&#13;
Voice critic Andrew Sarris to&#13;
German fllmmaker Rainer&#13;
Werner Fassbinder to actress&#13;
ls the antithesis of the apple&#13;
pie wholesomeness she had&#13;
projected in her other films,&#13;
and this difference ls impressive&#13;
on more than a visceral&#13;
level. It ls her character that&#13;
has the most potential to&#13;
make some sort of statement&#13;
through the narrative's un•&#13;
derlylng intentions. Unfortunately,&#13;
this aspect ls not explored&#13;
well enough to ca.use&#13;
"Three For The Road" to rlse&#13;
above the commonplace.&#13;
THE ARISTOCATS&#13;
But Greene turns in a fine This 1970 Disney animation&#13;
per!ormwice (outclassing Ls hampered by the fact that&#13;
"Goontes" and "Lucas"}. She lt was not made under Walt'&#13;
***************************~i*&#13;
! e · POOL CENTER: :1gs 5102 Green Bay Rd., Kenosha •&#13;
* THE SWIMMING POOL :&#13;
*. PROFESSIONALS •&#13;
: · IN-GROUND • ABOVE GROUND *&#13;
* *•SALES • CHEMICALS *&#13;
: • INSTALLATION • ACCESSORIES *&#13;
~ • SERVICE • EQUIPMENT :&#13;
* PHONE: KENOSHA 654-3341 RACINE 632-5223 !&#13;
****************************** .... . ,. , .. .. .... ....... ,, ..&#13;
The filmmakers discuss&#13;
their work with the perception&#13;
only they them elves can&#13;
have. The performers comm&#13;
nt on what they find film&#13;
should be from both commercial&#13;
and artistic perspectives.&#13;
supervison (he died in 1966},&#13;
but sWl manages to exhlblt&#13;
some of the Disney magic.&#13;
All of the most desirable&#13;
aspects of Disney cartoon features&#13;
( amusing vtlllans,&#13;
88.vvy heroes, slapstick,&#13;
colorful lmages) are present,&#13;
without a lot of preachiness.&#13;
But then there isn't a great&#13;
deal of true substance to&#13;
please more discernlng adult&#13;
lovers of animated features.&#13;
Yet 1t should be successful tn&#13;
k eping most mall children&#13;
amused for an hour-and-a•&#13;
half. Perhaps this ts best rec•&#13;
ommended as a good fUm to&#13;
take the kids to see. since the&#13;
young ler wlll be out of&#13;
school for spring break soon,&#13;
"The Aristocats" might be a&#13;
good way to keep them&#13;
amused for a short time.&#13;
SURPLUS GOODS&#13;
Stereos. TVs. Refrigerators,&#13;
Stoves. Furniture.&#13;
and Much Morel&#13;
Get the Surplus Price&#13;
SUPER SURPLUS OUTLET&#13;
5535 22 d AVE.&#13;
OPEN 7 days a week&#13;
•&#13;
RANGER&#13;
•• 11" iS Thursday, April 2d, 1987 15&#13;
Athlete profile&#13;
Wrestler tries racewalking&#13;
by Michael J. Rohl&#13;
It is rare today for college&#13;
athletes to participate in two&#13;
different sports. The length of&#13;
the season and caliber of&#13;
skills required to compete at&#13;
the collegiate level are so&#13;
great they usually require the&#13;
specialization.&#13;
That is the case for most&#13;
athletes, but Ken Arend is not&#13;
like most athletes. The&#13;
twenty four year old senior&#13;
sociology major transferred&#13;
from Illinois University to&#13;
Parkside two years ago.&#13;
Since then he has qualified&#13;
for three National wrestling&#13;
tournaments, and now he has&#13;
qualified for his fourth national&#13;
meet - in track and field.&#13;
"An interest" got Arend&#13;
started in racewalking. "I&#13;
saw the Parkside guys do it&#13;
and I decided to try it just for&#13;
fun" said Arend.&#13;
"I have a knack for trying&#13;
new things,'' continued&#13;
Arend, "and seeing if I can&#13;
Ken Arend&#13;
win something out of it."&#13;
Trying different things is&#13;
nothing new to Arend. He was&#13;
a triple sport athlete in high&#13;
school where he was an allconference,&#13;
all-area offensive&#13;
guard and he placed at the Illinois&#13;
state wrestling meet.&#13;
He also played hockey, which&#13;
was his first sport.&#13;
"Hockey used to be my&#13;
main sport," said Arend "but&#13;
that got too expensive so I&#13;
made the transition to wrestling.&#13;
Wrestling is my main&#13;
sport now, but I decided to&#13;
try it (racewalking)."&#13;
The transition seemed natural&#13;
to Arend. "The big difference&#13;
is you're using different&#13;
muscles," said Arend. "I'd&#13;
also characterize wrestling&#13;
and racewalking as individual&#13;
sports."&#13;
Arend also recognizes another&#13;
similarity. "In wrestling&#13;
you have to be flexible;&#13;
in racewalking its the same.&#13;
That's the similarity."&#13;
Of course, many people&#13;
would want to know which is&#13;
more difficult, and Arend has&#13;
an answer. "Most people&#13;
think wrestling would be&#13;
harder, but racewalking is&#13;
very competitive. I wouldn't&#13;
say walking was a piece of&#13;
cake."&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Rangers sweep Concordia&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
ACCURATE, FAST professional typing.&#13;
Any size job. Call Pat, 662-7261.&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
8TUDENT INTERNSHIP. Further&#13;
your career opportunities by interning&#13;
in the office of Student Enrollment&#13;
Services this fall. Open to all majors.&#13;
For more information, call or stop in&#13;
WLLC D-196, 562-2355.&#13;
EARN UP to $8000 next school year&#13;
managing on-campus marketing program&#13;
for national companies. Flexible&#13;
part-time hours. Must be junior, senior&#13;
or grad student. Ask for Gene or&#13;
Dee at 1-800-592-2121.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
QUEEN-SIZE waterbed. 9 months old.&#13;
$125. 553-9525.&#13;
STEREO CABINET with dural glass&#13;
doors. Paid $199, asking $85. Call&#13;
653-9525.&#13;
Classified Ads&#13;
ROBB: NOW are you old and mature?&#13;
Happy Birthday!&#13;
MIKE SLIWA, love those legs! The&#13;
Female Society.&#13;
LET THE sunshine, let the sunshine,&#13;
let the peace flow. To my brothers, in&#13;
peace, Dave.&#13;
PEACE TO all the brothers-peace&#13;
brother Os, peace brother Jim, peace&#13;
brother Randy, peace brother Hung -&#13;
from brother Dave.&#13;
BROTHERS: JOIN me now in a silent&#13;
moment of peaceful&#13;
reflection Amen. I feel&#13;
sweetfully peaceful, peace brothers,&#13;
Dave.&#13;
TAKE YOUR best shots now, you&#13;
idiots! There's only one week left...&#13;
CHERRY B, the offer still stands.&#13;
Sucking on your?! Crank.&#13;
C.I., no snagging. You are now&#13;
SNAFU. Beaner.&#13;
"IF I had a penis, I'd still be a girl,&#13;
but I'd make more money and conquer&#13;
the world!"&#13;
MEATHEAD. MOANIN Winona&#13;
awaits you. You should prevail --on&#13;
top? Bean.&#13;
TENNESSEE IS not a state. You are&#13;
an impression. Elephant.&#13;
EDITOR DAILY: Gus Polack:&#13;
GREAT job, nice voice, too! Devotee&#13;
K.&#13;
ALL RIGHT, Dave. I won't say anything&#13;
nasty about your having 2 fiancees!&#13;
TO THE guy who used to have a multi-&#13;
colored carpet: you're so sexy!!&#13;
RUDY: I love you. Rainbow.&#13;
DON'T YOU have anything better to&#13;
do? Try taking a reading course here.&#13;
Snorts.&#13;
OF COURSE I don't. That's why it's&#13;
so much fun annoying you with these&#13;
ads 'dash' The masked kindergarten&#13;
crayon killer!&#13;
AND REMEMBER kids, only one&#13;
more issue of the Ranger is left to be&#13;
crude, offensive and suggestive. Let's&#13;
doit!&#13;
Personals&#13;
THE HARDER you work, the bigger&#13;
penis you become.&#13;
3J, DAVE missed Saturday night. He&#13;
knows what he did was wrong, and he&#13;
wont let it happen again.&#13;
KENOWHERE DID you lost your Red&#13;
Bandana lately?&#13;
KENNY, IS that toothpick all that&#13;
you're sucking on? Crunchy.&#13;
DOMINO'S DUDES: It was fun while&#13;
it lasted. I'll miss you. Love, Amy.&#13;
8COTT, THANK you for everything.&#13;
Love, Shelly.&#13;
KIM: IS one's theological flexibility&#13;
commensurate with the propensity to&#13;
get into a woman's pants?&#13;
HEARD IN the Ranger: "Steve's not&#13;
here, make me feel better."&#13;
BILL R. Thanks for last week's&#13;
Ranger. We couldn't have done it&#13;
without you, really.&#13;
JENNY CARR, do you spit or swallow?&#13;
JIM, IT'S definite swallow. You know&#13;
how power hungry I am! Jen.&#13;
JIM, LET me show you where real&#13;
power lies!&#13;
JENNY, I didn't write those above&#13;
classifieds; Terri did.&#13;
JILL: I am glad that there is at least&#13;
one thing that you have managed to&#13;
keep a secret.&#13;
ANN WILLEMS, you're finally free!!!&#13;
No more school! Congratulations!&#13;
Tim.&#13;
TAMMI P: Just remember when you&#13;
stare out at the moon it's the same&#13;
one that Mike sees on his lonely nights&#13;
without you, but I'm not sure about&#13;
the azmuth and altitude ... Mrs. B.&#13;
TERRI, YOUNGER men Jiave bigger&#13;
tools. AOWGT.&#13;
We've Moved&#13;
We're Bigger and Better&#13;
Than Ever&#13;
Midnight Sun Tanning Saton&#13;
Now Offering:&#13;
Exclusive to the&#13;
Racine/Kenosha area...&#13;
Thermo Trim "Body Wrap&#13;
The most advanced European weight loss and&#13;
cellulite reduction treatment&#13;
\Tan&#13;
Before&#13;
I You&#13;
\Travel&#13;
Student Special&#13;
10 sessions s4000&#13;
• SCA Wolff Systems&#13;
• Solana Systems&#13;
• Solana Torso Systems&#13;
Parkside i.D. Required&#13;
With Coupon&#13;
Only&#13;
633-3022&#13;
304 6th St. .&#13;
Downtown Racine I&#13;
^RjerTTK^rirT^enter&#13;
For pour ultimate tan - we have the ultimate in tanning beds.&#13;
304 6th St., Downtown Racine • 633-3022&#13;
by Randy LeCount&#13;
The men's baseball team&#13;
raised its record to 7-5 with&#13;
two victories at Concordia&#13;
College on Monday (Apr. 27)&#13;
by 12-4 and 9-5 scores.&#13;
The Rangers began paving&#13;
the road to their present record&#13;
with a 7-5 win a game&#13;
ended by rain after five innings&#13;
against Carroll College&#13;
back on Tuesday, April 21.&#13;
The Rangers then proceeded&#13;
to defeat Concordia at&#13;
home on April 25 (Sat.) with&#13;
2-1 and 7-4 victories. These&#13;
games were highlighted by&#13;
successive shutouts pitched&#13;
by Steve Leonhart and Joel&#13;
Bumgarner.&#13;
In Monday's 12-4 and 9-5&#13;
wins at Concordia, shutouts&#13;
were once again pitched by&#13;
Robb Peiffer and Doug&#13;
Londo.&#13;
As the recent wins have&#13;
shown, the Rangers have&#13;
been getting good pitching as&#13;
well as good hitting.&#13;
Catcher/outfielder Craig&#13;
Kealty leads the team in batting&#13;
with a .444 average. He&#13;
also leads in RBIs with 10 and&#13;
hits with 12. First baseman&#13;
Randy Spiegelhoff is not fir&#13;
behind with a .423 average, 4&#13;
RBIs, and 11 hits. Center&#13;
fielder Armond Bonofiglio&#13;
also sports a .344 average, as&#13;
well as 11 hits and 3 RBIs.&#13;
The Rangers next game&#13;
was on Wednesday, April 29&#13;
against Northwestern Illinois.&#13;
Results will be available in&#13;
next week's Ranger.&#13;
Men's track improving&#13;
Track from page 16&#13;
Rangers were Damkot, John&#13;
Hunt and Mike Nelson in the&#13;
5000 meters. Damkot placed&#13;
third in 15:22.7, however,&#13;
Rosa feels that he is "much&#13;
better than his time shows."&#13;
Hunt was 6th with his 15:37.9,&#13;
and once again Mike Nelson&#13;
raced to a personal best by 28&#13;
seconds with a time of 15:&#13;
49.5. He finished eighth.&#13;
With the constant progress&#13;
his team has been showing.&#13;
Coach Rosa is already looking&#13;
forward to the future.&#13;
"I'm really happy with&#13;
Brown and Nelson. For freshmen,&#13;
they are running good&#13;
times. Next year, we'll put together&#13;
a good two-mile relay&#13;
team."&#13;
RANGER Thursday, Aprtl 29, 1987 15&#13;
Baseball Athlete P.,rofile&#13;
Wrestler tries racewalking . Rangers sweep Concordia&#13;
by Mlebael I, Rohl&#13;
It Is rare today for college&#13;
athletes to participate In two&#13;
dllferent sports. The length ot&#13;
the season and caliber of&#13;
skills required to compete at&#13;
the colleglate level are so&#13;
great they usually require the&#13;
specla.llzation.&#13;
He also played hockey. which&#13;
was his first sport.&#13;
"Hockey used to be my&#13;
main sport," ll&amp;id Arend "but&#13;
that got too expensive so I&#13;
made the transitlon to wresUing.&#13;
Wrestl1ng ls my main&#13;
sport now, but I decided to&#13;
try it (racewalldng)."&#13;
The transition seemed natural&#13;
to Arend. "The blg difference&#13;
ls you're using dillerent&#13;
muscles," said Arend. "I'd&#13;
also characterize wresUing&#13;
and racewalklng as individual&#13;
sports."&#13;
That ls the case for most&#13;
athletes, but Ken Arend ls not&#13;
llke most athletes. The&#13;
twenty four year old senior&#13;
sociology ma.Jor transferred&#13;
from Illinois University to&#13;
Parkside two years ago.&#13;
Since then he has quallfied&#13;
for three National wrestling&#13;
tournaments, and now he has&#13;
quallfied for his fourth nation- '--....,........,':"':'" ______ ..._.....,;w&#13;
al meet • in track and field. Ken Arend&#13;
Arend also recognizes another&#13;
almllarlty. "In wresWng&#13;
you have to be flexible;&#13;
in racewalking its the same.&#13;
That's the simllar1ty."&#13;
"An interest" got Arend&#13;
started in racewalking. "I&#13;
saw the Parkside guys do it&#13;
and I decided to try tt just for&#13;
fun" said Arend.&#13;
"I have a knack for trying&#13;
new things," continued&#13;
Arend, "and seeing if I can&#13;
win something out of it."&#13;
Trying different things ts&#13;
nothlng new to Arend. He wu&#13;
a triple sport athlete in htgh&#13;
school where he was an allcon!&#13;
erence, all-area offensive&#13;
guard and he placed at the n.&#13;
llnols state wrestling meet.&#13;
Of course, many people&#13;
would want to know which ts&#13;
more difficult, and Arend has&#13;
an answer. "Most people&#13;
think wrestling would be&#13;
harder, but racewalklng la&#13;
very competitive. I wouldn't&#13;
say walking waa a piece of&#13;
cake."&#13;
~classified Ads~&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
AOCURATE, FAST proteulonal typ~.&#13;
Any aiu Job . can Pat, 062·7=1.&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
TUDE INTERN HIP. Further&#13;
your career opportwuUes by lntemtna&#13;
ln the office of Student Enrollmen1&#13;
Servic • th18 tall. Open to all majors .&#13;
For more lnfonnatJon. call or atop 1n&#13;
D·1&amp;6, 662·23&amp;11.&#13;
R. J&gt; to S8000 next IIChool year&#13;
managing on, campua mark ting prorram&#13;
C r naUonal compa.ni . Flwbl&#13;
pa.rt.ume hours. u.st be Junior. eenlOr&#13;
or grad ■ tudent. Aak for Gene or&#13;
Dee al 1-800-692•212:1 .&#13;
For Sale&#13;
Q 'E • IZE waterbed. 9 mont.ha old.&#13;
S12ts . 1161-96211 .&#13;
TEREO ABINET with dural glaall&#13;
doors. Paid Sl99. uktng $86. Call&#13;
1163-9023.&#13;
Personal&#13;
'111E HARDER you work, 1he bigger&#13;
~nit you become&#13;
SI, DA mlaaed Saturday night. He&#13;
what h dld waa wrong, and h&#13;
wont let It happen again.&#13;
KESOWHERJ!: DID you loet your Red&#13;
Bandan lat ly?&#13;
K s. y. I that toothpick all that&#13;
you're 1111ckln on? Crunchy.&#13;
OOMI. O' DL'D : It Wll■ tun whll&#13;
It la■ ted. I'll mll!I you. Lov • Amy.&#13;
!ICOTT, TH K you ror ev ryt.hinf&#13;
Love.Shelly&#13;
Kl:\!: l one•• theological flex.lb llty&#13;
commenaurate with the propen.elty to&#13;
g t Into womM'11 panlllf&#13;
HEARD I the Ranger: "St.eve•• not&#13;
here. mall.e me feel better."&#13;
BILL ft. Thanka for laat w k' ■&#13;
Ranger. We couldn' t hav done It&#13;
without you. really.&#13;
JE. • ·v RR, do you IIJ)ll or swal&#13;
low?&#13;
IM, IT' d rtnlt allow . You know&#13;
how power hungry 1 am! Jen.&#13;
JIM, LET me show y0u where real&#13;
power ilea!&#13;
' ·y, I didn't write thou above&#13;
claQl!I ds; T rri did.&#13;
Jll.L: I am glad tho.t there i. at 1ea11t&#13;
on thing that you h v managed to&#13;
ke p cret .&#13;
A, N WlLLEM, , you' re f1na.lly fl"ff !I !&#13;
Tio mo IC:hool 1 Congn,.tulationa!&#13;
m ,&#13;
T ~• P1 Just reme-mber wh n you&#13;
■ta.re out at ~ moon It's the aame&#13;
on that Mike on hl.!J ton Jy night.II&#13;
lhwlthout you. but I'm not lRltt about&#13;
&amp;2muth and n!Utud rs. B .&#13;
Tl.ooEJUU. VO . ·oER men hav btgg r&#13;
Is. AOWGT.&#13;
ROBB: NOW are you old and matureT&#13;
Happy Birthday!&#13;
MJKE SLIWA, love thole legal 'lbe&#13;
Female Society.&#13;
LET THI) sunahine. let the IWl&amp;h.lne&#13;
let th peace flow. To my broth rs, In&#13;
peace, Dave.&#13;
PEACE TO all the brothent-PN,Ce&#13;
brother 0.. peace broth(!r Jlm. ~&#13;
brot.Mr Randy, peace brother Hung.&#13;
from brother Dave.&#13;
B.ROTBERS: IOIN - now 1n a ■uent&#13;
moment of ~&#13;
reflectlon ... ... ............ .... Amen. I feel&#13;
sweettully peaceful, peac brothera,&#13;
T.&gt;ave.&#13;
TU YOU&amp; but ahot■ now, you&#13;
Idiot■ ! There•• only one week left. ..&#13;
CHERRY B. the offer ■till 1umd■ •&#13;
Sucldng on your?! Crank.&#13;
C.I., no 11nAffU1« You now&#13;
SNAFU. Bean r .&#13;
"IF I had a penil, I'd sWI be a prt&#13;
but I ' d maJr mo mon y and con'.&#13;
querthe world ! ' '&#13;
lllEAmEAD. MOANIN Winona&#13;
await■ you. You ahould prevail -on&#13;
top! Bean.&#13;
TENNESSEE 18 not a state. You are&#13;
an lmpreaslon. ltlephanl.&#13;
EDITOR DAILY: Oua Pow:JI·&#13;
GREAT Job. nice voice. too! Devotee&#13;
K.&#13;
ALL BIGHT, Dave. I won't aay any&#13;
thin~ naaty about your having 2 Oan·&#13;
ceu.&#13;
TO THE guy who u■ed lo have a mul,&#13;
U·COIO~ carpet: you' re ao JQ'I I&#13;
RUDY: I lov you. Rainbow.&#13;
DO 'T YOO have anything tter to&#13;
do? Try taking a reading courae here.&#13;
Snort.I.&#13;
OF OOVR81l I don't. That'■ hy It's&#13;
10 much tun annoying you with theae&#13;
ads ' duh' The masked kindergarten&#13;
crayon kWer!&#13;
A.ND . R kl , only one&#13;
more lUue ot the Ranger S. left to be&#13;
cnide. offen■lve and augge■Uve Let's&#13;
do It' .&#13;
We-veMoved&#13;
We-re Bigger and Better&#13;
Than Ever&#13;
7dnlght Sun Tanning Salon&#13;
Now Offering:&#13;
Exclusive to the&#13;
Radne/ Kenosha area ...&#13;
Thermo Trim uBody Wrap"&#13;
The most adoanced European weight loss and&#13;
cellulite reduction treatment I T;;;- - ~~;;~.;.- - 7ia.:7c:u:: 7&#13;
IBe'ore 10 sessions •4000 633ont3y022 I v ~ • • SCA Wolff Sy•tem• •&#13;
6 OU • Solana Systems 304 I T • Solana Tono Systems 6th St. no I t.Ifaoel Parka/de I.D. Required Dc::t~ ~~ l''.&#13;
~ lllli 1dnight S un&#13;
Tanning&#13;
Salon&#13;
'For JIOllt ultrmate tan • we ha/Jt' th6 ulnmme m tannmg l&gt;e&lt;b&#13;
304 6th St., Downtown Racfne • 633-:3022&#13;
by Randy LeCount&#13;
The men's baseball team&#13;
raised tta record to 7.5 with&#13;
two victories at Concordia&#13;
College on Monday (Apr 27)&#13;
by 12-4 and 9-5 acor a.&#13;
The Rangers began pa vlng&#13;
the road to their present record&#13;
wlth a 7-5 win a game&#13;
ended by rain after five innings&#13;
against Carroll College&#13;
back on Tue day, April 21.&#13;
The Rangers then proceeded&#13;
to defeat Concordia at&#13;
home on April 26 (Sat.) with&#13;
2-1 and 7 ◄ victories. These&#13;
games were highlighted by&#13;
successive shutouts pitched&#13;
by Steve Leonhart and Joel&#13;
Bumgarner.&#13;
In Monday's 12., and 9-5&#13;
wins at Concordia, shutouts&#13;
were once again pitched by&#13;
Robb Peuter and Doug •&#13;
Londo.&#13;
A8 the recent wins have&#13;
shown, the Rangers have&#13;
been getting good pitching as&#13;
well aa good hitting.&#13;
Catcher/outfielder Craig&#13;
Kealty leadS the team In batting&#13;
with a .«4 verage. H&#13;
also leads In RBIs with 10 and&#13;
hits with 12. First baseman&#13;
Randy SplegelhoU la not ...r&#13;
behind with a .t28 verag • 4,&#13;
RBIs, and 11 hits. nter&#13;
fielder Armond BonofigUo&#13;
also sports a .s« averag .&#13;
well aa 11 hlts and S RBIs.&#13;
The Rang ra next gam&#13;
was on Wednesday, Aprll 29&#13;
against Northwestern Illinois.&#13;
Results will be available ln&#13;
next week's Ranger.&#13;
Men's track improving-&#13;
Track ttom page 16&#13;
Rangers were Damkot, John&#13;
Hunt and Mike Nelson in the&#13;
~ meters. Damkot placed&#13;
third in 15: 22 . 7. however,&#13;
Rosa feels that he la "much&#13;
better than hl8 tlme shows."&#13;
Hunt was 6th with hl8 115:87.9,&#13;
and once again Mike Nelson&#13;
raced to a personal best by 28&#13;
seconds with a time of lG:&#13;
•9.15. He f1n1 bed eighth.&#13;
With the constant progre&#13;
hl8 team has been showing,&#13;
Coach Rosa la already lookIng&#13;
forward to the future.&#13;
"I'm really happy with&#13;
Brown and Nelson. For fresh•&#13;
men, they are running good&#13;
time■. Next year, we'll put together&#13;
a good two-mile relay&#13;
team."&#13;
•&#13;
Women s, men's track teams showing progress&#13;
Marter sisters lead squad&#13;
by Michael J. Rohl&#13;
In track and field, unlike&#13;
other sports, the relative improvement&#13;
an athlete makes&#13;
can be accurately measured.&#13;
The competition may change,&#13;
the course may change, but&#13;
on a track a mile is a mile&#13;
any where you go.&#13;
Because of this ability to&#13;
accurately gauge performance&#13;
pr's or personal bests&#13;
are very important to the athletes.&#13;
If nothing else, the&#13;
Parkside women's track team&#13;
is good at getting pr's. This&#13;
past weekend the women&#13;
traveled to Elmhurst, Illinois&#13;
to run on one of the fastest&#13;
tracks in the midwest.&#13;
There were some very noteworthy&#13;
performances. Nancy&#13;
and Michelle Marter both&#13;
came away with victories in&#13;
the 800 and 1500 and ran their&#13;
personal bests. Sarah Hiett&#13;
ran second to the Marter sisters&#13;
in both the 800 and 1500.&#13;
Hiett too, ran her best time in&#13;
the 1500.&#13;
In the 5000, Colleen Wismer,&#13;
Patty Tweork and Stacy&#13;
Kisting placed third, fourth,&#13;
and fifth.&#13;
The Parkside relays also&#13;
placed very well. The 4x100&#13;
and Sprint Medelay relay&#13;
teams of Jacuquline Cotton,&#13;
Veronica Chamlee, Rebbeca&#13;
Scott and Yolanda Finely&#13;
placed second and first respectively.&#13;
In all, ten women have now&#13;
qualified for the NAIA National&#13;
Championship to be&#13;
held in Arkedephia, Arkansas&#13;
May 20-23.&#13;
Complete Parkside Results:&#13;
100 - Jacquline Cotton 3rd,&#13;
12.1; Rebbeca Scott 4th, 12.2.&#13;
800 - Nancy Narter 1st, 2:14.7&#13;
pr; Sarah Hiett 2nd, 2:15.6;&#13;
Anne Rietter 1st (unseeded)&#13;
2:29.7.&#13;
1500 - Michelle Marter 1st, 4:&#13;
28.5 sr; Sarah Hiett 2nd, 4:&#13;
32.0 pr; Jill Fobair 3rd, 4:40.3&#13;
pr; Laura Kauffman 4:49.6&#13;
pr; Jackie Melotick 4:55.5 pr;&#13;
Kristan Alioto 5:00.6 pr.&#13;
5000 - Colleen Wismer 3rd,&#13;
19:00.0; Patty Tweork 4th, 19:&#13;
26; Stacy Kisring 5th, 19.38.&#13;
10,000 walk - Carol Romano&#13;
1st, 53:50; Val Smith 2nd 54:&#13;
07; Julie Wunrow 3rd, 55:03.&#13;
4x100 - Cotton, Chamlee,&#13;
Scott and Finely 2nd, 49.4.&#13;
Sprint Medally Sames as&#13;
above 1st time not available.&#13;
Rosa "happy" with team&#13;
by Sarah Hiett&#13;
It was a perfect day for&#13;
running, and it showed in the&#13;
results of the men's track&#13;
team as they competed in Illinois&#13;
at the Elmhurst Relays.&#13;
The sun was warm, but&#13;
didn't begin to slow the men&#13;
down as the walkers began&#13;
the day of competition for the&#13;
Rangers. Once again, Parkside&#13;
dominated the track.&#13;
Mike Stauch, the team's premier&#13;
walker, finished first in&#13;
the 10,000 m. race in 42:11.&#13;
Doug Fournier walked to a&#13;
strong second place with a&#13;
44:22. Mike Rohl, in training&#13;
for the 50 kilometer (a race&#13;
covering over 31 miles) finished&#13;
third in 48:26. In a solid&#13;
effort, Ken Arend, walked 53:&#13;
55, getting a personal best by&#13;
over three minutes and finish&#13;
ing fourth in the process.&#13;
The next place winner for&#13;
the Rangers was Dan Vogt.&#13;
His time of 15:8 in the 110m.&#13;
high hurdles earned him a&#13;
sixth place.&#13;
As a relay meet, Elmhurst&#13;
offered competitors the&#13;
chance to race in some different&#13;
events. In the distance&#13;
medley, runners are required&#13;
to run a half, quarter, three&#13;
quarters and finally a mile.&#13;
Parkside's team of Derek&#13;
Brown, Dan Vogt, Robb&#13;
White, and Randy Damkot&#13;
proved equal to the challenge&#13;
as they came from behind to&#13;
place second in 10:28.04.&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa was&#13;
"very happy with their performance."&#13;
Finishing up the day for the&#13;
_ . Ti rraacckx see ppai ge 15&#13;
Lady Ranger softball team's troubles continue&#13;
bbyy RRoobbbb LLuueehhrr hall tanm'a wnac onnt&lt;n,in^ *&lt;&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside women's soft&#13;
ball team's woes continued&#13;
this past week as they lost&#13;
seven straight games, five of&#13;
the&#13;
the&#13;
an&#13;
photo by Leo Boss ttrtsttsuszsrtss rr&#13;
lost 6-5,&#13;
SOFTBALL&#13;
Sat., May 2 - Home vs. Alumni, 10:30 p.m.&#13;
Sun., May 3 - Home vs. St. Francis, noon&#13;
Mon., May 4 - At St. Xavier, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Tue., May 5 - Home vs. UW-Whitewater, 4 p.m.&#13;
All dates are doubleheaders&#13;
TENNIS&#13;
Today - At Concordia College,-3 p.m.&#13;
Fri., May 1 -Home vs. UW-Whitewater, 3pm&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
Fri. and Sat., May 1-2 - Wisconsin Independent College&#13;
Association playoffs&#13;
, _ WOMEN'S TRACK&#13;
Sat., May 2 - At the Illinois State U. Redbird Invitational&#13;
Normal, 111., 10 a.m. *&#13;
them by just one run, to drop&#13;
their record to 25-17.&#13;
Tuesday, April 21, the&#13;
Rangers hosted DePaul University,&#13;
a team they've had&#13;
trouble with all year long.&#13;
Once again, the Lady Blue&#13;
Demons took the double-header,&#13;
this time by scores of 6-5&#13;
and 1-0.&#13;
This past weekend,&#13;
Rangers participated in&#13;
I.U.P.U.I. tournament,&#13;
event the team has done well&#13;
in in recent years, but it&#13;
wasn't to be this time. Parkside&#13;
lost all five games of the&#13;
tournament, three of them&#13;
heartbreaking one-run&#13;
defeats.&#13;
In the first game Friday,&#13;
the Rangers took a six-run&#13;
lead in the second inning, but&#13;
a breakdown of pitching in&#13;
the middle innings by Parkside&#13;
led to eight St. Xavier&#13;
runs to send the Rangers to&#13;
an 8-6 defeat.&#13;
In the second game, against&#13;
Spring Arbor (Mich.), all the&#13;
scoring was done by both&#13;
teams in the first inning.&#13;
Parkside, playing as the visitors,&#13;
opened the game with&#13;
one run. Then Spring Arbor&#13;
tallied two in the bottom of&#13;
the inning. Pitching then took&#13;
over. The Rangers actually&#13;
outhit their opponent 12-2, but&#13;
couldn't put anything together&#13;
to score. The final was 2-1&#13;
tn favor of Spring Arbor.&#13;
The next morning, Butler of&#13;
Indiana was the Rangers' foe&#13;
and once again, the result&#13;
was a 2-1 loss. They had a&#13;
chance to win the game in the&#13;
seventh when Parkside loaded&#13;
the bases with two out, but&#13;
a line shot by Karen Livesey&#13;
was speared on a pure reaction&#13;
play by the third baseman&#13;
for the game-ending out.&#13;
The fourth game of the&#13;
tournament, against the host&#13;
I.U.P.U.I. team, was a disaster&#13;
for the Rangers as they&#13;
lost 13-3 in six innings due to&#13;
the 10-run rule. According to&#13;
coach Linda Draft, she&#13;
couldn't remember the last&#13;
time one of her teams lost a&#13;
game due to the rule.&#13;
In the last game of the tournament,&#13;
Parkside took on&#13;
Valparaiso University and&#13;
played well, but lost 1-0.&#13;
Draft was disappointed by&#13;
the results of the week, but&#13;
remained optimistic. "We&#13;
were in almost every ball&#13;
game, but we had some pitching&#13;
problems," Draft said.&#13;
"We're playing well."&#13;
Footwear for: • Aerobic Dance • Basketball&#13;
• Running • Soccer • Volleyball,&#13;
• Tennis • Racquetball&#13;
Footwear by: • Converse&#13;
* Etonic • n6w Balance&#13;
• Brooks&#13;
• Tiger&#13;
• Rocksport&#13;
• Saucony&#13;
• Adidas&#13;
• Pony'&#13;
• Nike&#13;
• Bata&#13;
• Reebok&#13;
• Treturn&#13;
• Le Cog Sportif&#13;
13% OFF with tfah ad |&#13;
Specialist in Athletic Footwear and&#13;
Running Clothing&#13;
MERBITT'S RUNNING CENTER&#13;
5200 WASHINGTON AVE&#13;
WASHINGTON SQUARE&#13;
RACINE. WISCONSIN&#13;
. PHONE: 632-4699&#13;
HOURS: Dtity 10-8; Sit. 105; Sun. 12-4&#13;
Women's, men's track teams showing progress&#13;
Marter sisters lead DeWitt's squad&#13;
by MJchaeJ J. RohJ&#13;
In track and field, unlike&#13;
other sports, the relative lmprovement&#13;
an athlete makes&#13;
can be accurately measured.&#13;
The competition may change,&#13;
the course may change, but&#13;
on a track a mile ls a mile&#13;
any where you go.&#13;
Because of this ability to&#13;
accurately gauge performance&#13;
pr' or p rsonal be ts&#13;
are very important to the athletes.&#13;
U nothing else, the&#13;
Parkside women's track team&#13;
is good at gettlng pr's. This&#13;
past weekend the women&#13;
traveled to Elmhurst, lllinois&#13;
to run on one of the fastest&#13;
tracks 1n the mldwest.&#13;
There were some very noteworthy&#13;
performances. Nancy&#13;
and Michelle Marter both&#13;
came away with victories 1n&#13;
the 800 and ll500 and ran their&#13;
personal bests. Sarah Hiett&#13;
ran second to the Marter lsters&#13;
in both the 800 and 1500.&#13;
Hiett too, ran her best time 1n&#13;
the ll500.&#13;
In the 5000, Colleen Wismer,&#13;
Patty Tweork a.nd Stacy&#13;
Klstlng placed third, fourth,&#13;
and fifth.&#13;
The Parkside relay also&#13;
placed very well. The 4xl00&#13;
and Sprint Medelay relay&#13;
teams of Jacuqullne Cotton,&#13;
Veronica Chamlee, Rebbeca&#13;
Scott and Yolanda Flnely&#13;
placed second and first respectively.&#13;
In all, ten women have now&#13;
qualified for the NAIA National&#13;
Champlonshlp to be&#13;
held in Arkedephia, Arkansas&#13;
May 20-23.&#13;
Complete Parkside Results:&#13;
100 - Jacquline Cotton 3rd,&#13;
12.1; Rebbeca Scott 4th, 12.2.&#13;
800 - Nancy Narter 1st, 2:14.7&#13;
pr; Sarah Hiett 2nd, 2:115.6;&#13;
Anne Rletter 1st (unseeded)&#13;
2:29.7.&#13;
ll500 - Michelle Marter lat, 4:&#13;
28.IS sr; Sarah Hiett 2nd, 4:&#13;
32.0 pr: Jlli Foba!r Srd, 4:40.S&#13;
pr; Laura Kauffman 4:49.6&#13;
pr; Jackie Melotlck 4:51S.IS pr:&#13;
KrlStan AUoto IS:00.6 pr.&#13;
l5000 - Colleen Wismer Srd,&#13;
19:00.0; Patty Tweork 4th, 19:&#13;
26; Stacy Klsrlng 5th, 19.38.&#13;
10,000 walk - Carol Romano&#13;
1st, 153:l50; Val Smith 2nd M;&#13;
07; Julie Wunrow 3rd, 51S:03.&#13;
4.xlOO • Cotton, Chamlee,&#13;
Scott and Finely 2nd, 49.4.&#13;
Sprint Medally sames as&#13;
above 1st tlme not available.&#13;
Rosa ''happy'' with team&#13;
b · rah Hiett&#13;
It was a perfect day for&#13;
running, and lt showed in the&#13;
r suit of the men's track&#13;
team as they comp ted in Ill1•&#13;
nols at the Elmhur t Relays.&#13;
The sun was warm, but&#13;
dldn 't begln to slow the men&#13;
down the walker began&#13;
the day of competition for the&#13;
Rangers. Once again. Parkside&#13;
dominated the track.&#13;
Mike Stauch, the team's pre&#13;
mier walker, flnlshed flrst in&#13;
the 10,000 m. race in 42:11.&#13;
Doug FournJer walked to&#13;
strong second place with a&#13;
«:22. Mike Rohl, in training&#13;
for the l50 kilometer (a race&#13;
covering over 31 mil s) finished&#13;
third in 48: 26. In a solid&#13;
effort. Ken Arend, walked 153:&#13;
M, getting personal b t by&#13;
over three minutes and flnlshing&#13;
fourth ln the process.&#13;
The next pface winner for&#13;
the Rangers was Dan 'ogt.&#13;
Hi Ume of llS:8 in th 11 m.&#13;
hi h hurdle earned him o.&#13;
sixth place.&#13;
A a r lay meet, Elmhur t&#13;
offered comp tito th&#13;
chance to race in some differ- 1&#13;
ent even . In the distance&#13;
medley, runne ar requlr d&#13;
to run a half, quarter, thr e&#13;
quarter and finally a mu .&#13;
arkslde's team of Derek&#13;
Brown, Dan Vogt, Robb&#13;
Wlute, and Randy Damkot&#13;
proved equal to the cha.ll nge&#13;
as th y cam from b hlnd to&#13;
plac second ln 10:28.04.&#13;
Coach Lucian Rosa was&#13;
" ery happy with th tr performance."&#13;
flnl h1n up the day for the&#13;
Track see page 15&#13;
Lady Ranger softball team's troubles continue&#13;
by Robb Loehr&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The Parkside women's soft.&#13;
ball team's woes continued&#13;
this past week as they lost&#13;
seven straight games, ,five of&#13;
phofobyLaoBote&#13;
Parltskle'• Julie Gaestel alleles home safely In the first gam&#13;
o. if • doUblehead r against DePaul on Aprtl 21. Unfortar&#13;
nately, the run wasn't enough u the Lady ~gera loat 6-5&#13;
then fell 1-0 In the second game. •&#13;
Sports Schedule&#13;
SOFTBALL&#13;
Sat., May 2. Home vs. Alumni, 10:so p.m.&#13;
Sun., Mays. Home vs. St. Francis. noon&#13;
Mon., May t • At st. 'Xavier, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Tue., May rs - Home vs. UW-Whltewater, 4 p.m.&#13;
All dates are doubleheaders&#13;
TENNIS&#13;
Today - At Ooncordla Ooll ge;S p.m.&#13;
Fri., May 1 -Home vs. UW-Whltewater, S p.m.&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
Fri. and Sat., May 1-2 • Wisconsin Independent College&#13;
~ssociation playoffs&#13;
, WOMEN'S TRACK&#13;
Sat., May 2 - At the Winois State U. Redbird Invitational,&#13;
Normal, Ill., 10 a.m.&#13;
them by just one run, to drop&#13;
their record to 25-17.&#13;
Tuesday, April 21, the&#13;
Rangers hosted DePaul University,&#13;
a team they've had&#13;
trouble with all year long.&#13;
Once again, the Lady Blue&#13;
Demons took the double-header,&#13;
this time by scores of 6-IS&#13;
and 1-0.&#13;
Th.ls past weekend, the&#13;
Rangers participated 1n the&#13;
I.U.P.U.I. tournament, an&#13;
event the team has done well&#13;
1n in recent years, but it&#13;
wasn't to be this time. Parkside&#13;
lost all five games of the&#13;
tournament. three of them&#13;
heartbreaking one-run&#13;
defeats.&#13;
In the first game Friday,&#13;
the Rangers took a six-run&#13;
lead in the second ilmfng, but&#13;
a breakdown of pitching 1n&#13;
the middle tnnings by Park•&#13;
slde led to eight St. xavler&#13;
runs to send the Rangers to&#13;
an s.e defeat.&#13;
In the second game, against&#13;
Spring ArbOr (Mich.), all the&#13;
scoring was one by both&#13;
teams in the first lnning.&#13;
Parkside, playing as the visitors,&#13;
opened the game wlth&#13;
one nm. Then Spring ArbOr&#13;
tallled two in the bottom of&#13;
the ilmfng. Pitching then took&#13;
over. The Rangers actually&#13;
outhit their opponent 12-2, but&#13;
couldn't put anything together&#13;
to score. The final was 2-1&#13;
In favor of Spring Arbor.&#13;
The next morning, BuUer of&#13;
Indiana was the Rangers' foe&#13;
and once again, the re ult&#13;
was ·a 2-1 loss. They had a&#13;
chance to win the game in the&#13;
seventh when Parkside loaded&#13;
the bases with two out, but&#13;
a Une shot by Karen Livesey&#13;
was speared on a pure reaction&#13;
play by the third bas -&#13;
man for the game-ending out.&#13;
The fourth game of th&#13;
tournament, against the host&#13;
I.U.P.U.I. team, was a disaster&#13;
for the Rangers as they&#13;
lost 13-3 in slx lnnlngs due to&#13;
the 10-run rule. According to&#13;
coach Linda Draft, she&#13;
couldn't remember the last&#13;
time one of her te ms lost a&#13;
g me due to the rule.&#13;
In the last ame of the tournament,&#13;
Park lde took on&#13;
Valpara.tso University Md&#13;
plf\Y d well, but lost 1-0.&#13;
Draft w disappoint d by&#13;
th results of the we k, but&#13;
r maJn d opllml tic. "W&#13;
wer in o.lmo t every b 1&#13;
game, but we had me pit hing&#13;
problems," Ora.ft aid.&#13;
"We'r playing well."&#13;
Footwear for: • Aerobic Dance • Basketbal&#13;
• Running&#13;
• Tennis&#13;
Footw ar by:&#13;
• Etonic&#13;
• Adida~&#13;
• Pony&#13;
• Nike&#13;
• Soccer&#13;
• Racquetball&#13;
• Volleyball&#13;
• Converse • Bata&#13;
• New Balance • Reebok&#13;
• Brooks&#13;
• Tiger&#13;
• Rocksport&#13;
• Saucony&#13;
( 1~Dff&#13;
• Tretum&#13;
• Le Cog Sportif&#13;
$psclalist In Athlellc FoolwHr 1111d&#13;
Running Clothing&#13;
MERRln'S RUNNING CENTER&#13;
5200 WASHINGTON AVE.&#13;
WASHINGTON SQUARE&#13;
RACINE. WISCONSIN&#13;
PHONE: 632-4699&#13;
HOURS: 0., IN: Sat 10-$; Sc#!. 1Z-4</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78810">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 15, issue 29, April 30, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78811">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78812">
                <text>1987-04-30</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78815">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="78816">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="78817">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78818">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78819">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78820">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78821">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78822">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78823">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="2622">
        <name>feminists</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2621">
        <name>national security council</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="234">
        <name>parkside activities board (PAB)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1271">
        <name>racism</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2623">
        <name>sexism</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1697">
        <name>student organization council (SOC)</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="3186" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3672">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/5a6ca282fe861daaf8faf99450290d62.pdf</src>
        <authentication>0786c641ac0affd47c7c99b8c3d9d3a3</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72044">
              <text>Volume 15, issue 3</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72045">
              <text>Kenosha County airs nuclear disaster concerns</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72055">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90147">
              <text>Page4&#13;
Hoff-Ginsberg studies&#13;
children's learning&#13;
sept.&#13;
18. 1e8S&#13;
Pages 6 and&#13;
7t.'C""~-------.....,&#13;
Life in.the residence halls&#13;
Page 1?-~---&#13;
Volleyball team&#13;
takes second&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Vol. 15. No.3&#13;
~nosha CS;Uta:t&#13;
CO&#13;
fi&#13;
l&#13;
nucleal1&#13;
dfSllst9&#13;
E&#13;
d&#13;
D.r&#13;
IUDdlerJle&#13;
Krimlch&#13;
~t;  ,&#13;
el\P'l;iIne4&#13;
Roth,&#13;
'm&#13;
.tl6aM'&#13;
hea/:4·WrJGqs&#13;
,*Ullc1&lt;a&#13;
1'11_&#13;
Editor&#13;
not going+qstell&#13;
YW.&#13;
tIl&amp;tthe.  mlld~.'..   ..ttll'eJiZlon plant&#13;
"There has been a lot writ.&#13;
I'IldioacUyerele~the.elt.and!.th,,-.$!\lty·Of&#13;
1til ~~ten&#13;
about nuclear power in&#13;
~embers&#13;
of&#13;
the Health and  vironmen,t.."c"mes ·f,l'Dm'an  :tion  RQ~tattve    ..&#13;
;from  .&#13;
the'Unlted  States"~ admits&#13;
~&#13;
Services Committee  enormous nuclellrfUeJ .Cyclg/ bilUt.COimilonwlill;lth~·&#13;
J"hn&#13;
Ca:mpbell,wh"  Is cur.&#13;
, Of&#13;
tile&#13;
Kenclsha&#13;
COuntyl3Qardft"f.procesSing and&#13;
fn1llirig&#13;
uw:q&gt;an&lt;h&#13;
the-&#13;
JlT,Uilleai'!fRegpleJO.ry&#13;
rently fInlshing a bookon that '&#13;
met last Thul'Sday and heui1'  urantum, and nQt just from  CO'n'nri!sslbru,&#13;
(NRO)&#13;
we!'O'i  very SUbject.&#13;
testimony&#13;
regarding Advisory  operating,a plant," , •.&#13;
!....&#13;
there&#13;
to&#13;
respond.   .,&#13;
....&#13;
Resolution39.&#13;
Doctor HarveY Kaplan.4an&#13;
d.·&#13;
Terrance' Rieck&gt;'Zion.,ata..&#13;
"But most of tha, writing.&#13;
~utiOll   39, authored by  authority 'iilthe  fields of&#13;
C'nu:;)&#13;
s&#13;
tlOnmanager, said tIl&amp;t~uWe .. has bee.ri.a'polemic either for.'&#13;
Supervisor EdWin M.·Ander"; .clear melllcil!e and d1agr\&lt;!"tic.. are not complacent. about.&#13;
tlw.'&#13;
.Ilr·agalnst. There hasn't. been' "&#13;
9011,was created to safeguard,·radlology •.favored the,dlstrl.t  .operationt.of·&#13;
ZIon ....&#13;
tatiOI'''-o'''...a  wbOJelot·Writteriwhich has. .&#13;
thehealth, safety and proper.. "butlon of theKHabletsJ.&#13;
the safetY""r'Zionstation/!', ...;··been\vell:baianced;"&#13;
ty&#13;
of Kenosha Cqunty'-resl.'&#13;
"If&#13;
it. (IOdine cqntamlna.,  •".one board'mellmber askede .,;~,That:s&#13;
why.&#13;
Ca:mpbell..·4!l,&#13;
dents&#13;
In&#13;
case&#13;
of&#13;
a .nuclear&#13;
dla'"&#13;
tlon) eV.er,·happell/l("sa!¢KIl"(about"the safet)!()f the alleg,' . ", allSlsta{ltprofessor' of' soclol-. ...&#13;
aser at the Zion, Illinois nu;. plan;, ':and. Ihope't,to"G&lt;id It  ed ·.embrittiment&lt;&#13;
of ..&#13;
ZIon's . '. ogyj' d.eclded"to Write,,'&#13;
"Nu.,&#13;
.Clearpo,.,erplant.. .&#13;
..  .. doesn't;.the.best pi"ot~ctlonil\" Unit· 1 . reactor- walls.&#13;
Roy&#13;
cleat·, Power,in'  CrIsis,"&#13;
his"&#13;
Much&#13;
of&#13;
the discussion&#13;
.ceIl';&#13;
mo,stcases Is&#13;
to&#13;
takeJU."&#13;
'Woods;who&#13;
haS&#13;
been 'employ~' . sOOl).t!&gt;-lre-eompleted..look·at&#13;
tered&#13;
around' the request in   Potassium  Iodide&#13;
wU1&#13;
not· ed with"the'NRC In Washing.,   the Ainerlcan nuclear power.&#13;
Resolution39to'dlstribute po.  protect a person against mas· . ton for the past six years, has    Industry.&#13;
.&#13;
lasSiIimiodide'(KI) tablets to· slve  whole body .radlatlol\.. researched the embrittlement&#13;
:HWhatI try to&#13;
do&#13;
here Is to&#13;
ail&#13;
t&lt;enoshaCounty residents.   such as skin and bo~e' cane·  .Issue.·,&#13;
,&#13;
develop an' institutional&#13;
anal.&#13;
Prior to hearing from·mem·  'ers, but it will protect against    "We (NRC) have looked at    ysls;" he says. "By that, I&#13;
bers of the ChIwaukee AllI· "thyroid cancer. However; to : how embritUed a t'&lt;!actorcan    mean I'm trying to to look..at   And one of the bases of that&#13;
aneeand the Citizens Against  be effective, ·the&#13;
Ki&#13;
'tablets  be and.have compared all of   the effects that the structure   competition has been increas.&#13;
Nuclear Power and Weapons.... must be taken soon after ex·  the events that theo,retiCally   of the political system and   Ing the&#13;
size&#13;
and updsting the&#13;
attendingcitizens were allow·  posure.'&#13;
.'.,&#13;
could happen.and we ve set a    the stnicture of.the industry   design of the reactors,"&#13;
edcomments.&#13;
"If&#13;
the Ingestion of KI is de· ' limit on embrittlement below   itself have ()n nuclear Power    The economic aspect of nu.&#13;
Susan Michetti  who lives  layed' three  to four  hours  Which 'Is adequately· safe,"    in this country."&#13;
clear power may be a' moot&#13;
within&#13;
ten miles (,f the plant, :.'after expOsure to radioactive'  said Woods.&#13;
.&#13;
Those effects are felt 'much   point these days, Campbell&#13;
felt that the i'taking of KI'  Iodine," sal!!'Ed GogoI,presl..&#13;
..It&#13;
I~, true,"  continued    more than people realize. Un.  admits. "No one's contracted&#13;
shouldbe an educated choice'  dent of the Citizens Against .Woods, that Zion plant ·will   like other nations, such as the   for a new reactor since 1978,"&#13;
made&#13;
by the people within the" .Nuclear 'Power' and Weapons,  be·hlll"hupon the IIst,of plants    SOvietUnion, America boasts   he  points  out.  Right  now&#13;
community(l(enosha) as well  "the benefit 'drops off to.50%. ..that will,approach that limit    a political system which&#13;
Is..&#13;
thing.&#13;
are  stagnant,  and&#13;
as by the board.:'&#13;
'·If&#13;
taken  Immedlately,  the  in the next century....&#13;
. .&#13;
fairly open, partiCUlarly at   there Isn't much reason to be.&#13;
Citizen Clu'tsRoth  warned'  protective  benefit'  can  be   The County Board Is ex·   points of policy' Implementa.   lIeve that will change In the&#13;
the board about what they'  higher than 90%." .&#13;
. 'pe~ted  to'vote on 'Resblutlon   tlon.&#13;
near future.&#13;
would not· hear  "Officials   ..In addition to hearing sup· . 39'1nthe new few months.&#13;
from  the'  nucl~ar  power'  port for the' KI tablets,  the&#13;
"There are a lot of hearings&#13;
Although Campbell believes&#13;
people can be involved in,"   reactor safety deserves to be&#13;
Campbell explained. "There   considered,  he  wonders&#13;
If&#13;
are also many state and local  enough attention Is being fo-&#13;
government agencies people  cused on oUler aspects of the&#13;
can look to&#13;
to&#13;
if&#13;
they want&#13;
to&#13;
nuclear question.&#13;
intervene and try to effect the&#13;
polley. Those optlorts .aren't&#13;
"Yeah, I get a little nerv·&#13;
open in many European coun.  ous thinking about the possl·&#13;
tries. ••&#13;
bllity&#13;
of a reactor  disaster,"&#13;
On  an  economic  side,  he said. "But what I find&#13;
Campbell also sees this coun.  much  more  concerning  Is&#13;
try's  unique  structure  as   what the hell we're going to&#13;
making our nuclear  Issues  do with all that waste.&#13;
different from others.&#13;
"A reactor  accident  pre.&#13;
"The main problem Amerl·  sumably   could  happen,,"&#13;
cans have had is in trying to   Campbell   continued,   "and&#13;
standardize the design of nu-  that would have consequences&#13;
clear reactors.  It's been said   for some segment of the pop_&#13;
that&#13;
If&#13;
we do start standardlz-   ulation.&#13;
ing their size and construc-&#13;
tion, we'll be able to build&#13;
"But even if there isn't an&#13;
safer plants and bring their   accident, we've got this waste&#13;
cost down.&#13;
we're producing every single&#13;
day, and we haven't figured&#13;
"The problem."&#13;
he continu-&#13;
ed, "Is that the way the reac.   out what to do with&#13;
It&#13;
yet.&#13;
tor system has been structur-&#13;
"And some of that stuff,' he&#13;
ed&#13;
in&#13;
the U.S., four major   concluded.   '~remains   toxic&#13;
manufacturers   have  been  and lethal for literally thou·&#13;
competing with each other.   sands of years."&#13;
Enrollment,·director' search&#13;
goesnaffonalafteraH&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
At a Parkslde Student Gov·&#13;
ernment Association (PSGA)&#13;
meetingWednesday, Septem-&#13;
ber 10. Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Student  Affairs  Gary&#13;
Grace announced that  a na-&#13;
tion-Wide search  and screen&#13;
Wouldbe held&#13;
to&#13;
fill the posl:&#13;
lionof director of student en.&#13;
''Ollmentservlce.s.&#13;
Originally, the adminlstra.&#13;
tlon's decision was to conduct&#13;
an in·house search and screen&#13;
to flll the position. However,&#13;
Withthe consideration of PS-&#13;
GA'sunanimous opposition to&#13;
this process, another meeting&#13;
was   held   on   Tuesday,&#13;
September  9. According&#13;
to&#13;
Grace  it was decided that&#13;
"we (fue administration) will&#13;
be going, as quickly as we&#13;
can,&#13;
to&#13;
an&#13;
open  .national&#13;
search  with  strong  encour-&#13;
agement to any internal fa·&#13;
culty-staff  who  wants  to&#13;
apply."&#13;
A  national  search  and&#13;
screen  would take a mini·&#13;
mum oUour to five months to&#13;
conduct  including time for&#13;
advertl~ement of the position.&#13;
Grace is not happy with the&#13;
amount of time&#13;
It&#13;
wl1ltake to&#13;
fill the position. "The longer&#13;
we keep active, the longer It&#13;
sets  up  a  very  tentative&#13;
Image  for  this  University.&#13;
God's speed, let's get on with&#13;
the&#13;
search&#13;
and&#13;
screen  com-&#13;
mittee."&#13;
Student enrollment services&#13;
Is a new office at Parkslde.&#13;
It&#13;
was&#13;
created  last  April  be-&#13;
cause of&#13;
a&#13;
general decline&#13;
in&#13;
·enrollment. Grace said "The&#13;
offices of Admissions, Finan·&#13;
Cial Aid  and  Registration&#13;
have not generally been able&#13;
to be coordinated in such a&#13;
way as to really meet the&#13;
changing enrollment needs."&#13;
The' enrollment  management&#13;
officewas installed to help in·&#13;
crease enrollment.&#13;
..&#13;
Sociology prof pens .'&#13;
nuclear power study&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
John Campbell&#13;
2  Thursdey,  S:pt::e~m~be::.r~1~81o!&#13;
1~9=8~6~&#13;
__  ..&#13;
----~~:-:::,,:::::;;=::;~;;m;;:~~&#13;
ggitorial&#13;
Union is lacking&#13;
Last fall, a group of student  leaders  got together  to sug-&#13;
gest possible revisions&#13;
in&#13;
the layout and operation of&#13;
Union Square.  To their minds.  the Square  was plagued&#13;
by&#13;
problems   that  made&#13;
it&#13;
hard  for  all  students  to  enjoy  them-&#13;
selves.&#13;
So the group met. came up&#13;
with&#13;
some recommendations&#13;
and reported  them to Bill Niebuhr,  director  of the Union,&#13;
At the lime, Niebuhr  told the group that he's look into the&#13;
feaslbllity  of theIr suggesllons.&#13;
It's been a year  now.&#13;
:Mr.&#13;
Niebuhr  must still be looking,&#13;
because  the situation  hasn't  improved&#13;
in&#13;
Union Square.&#13;
One of the recommendations  was restructuring  the&#13;
room so that there would be a quiet area for students who&#13;
wished to talk, not shout. at one another.&#13;
It&#13;
was suggested&#13;
that partiUons be erected&#13;
to&#13;
sequester a section of the&#13;
Square from the noise that sometimes occurs there.&#13;
Granted,  there&#13;
is&#13;
nothing wrong&#13;
with&#13;
a little good-natur-&#13;
ed&#13;
partying;  nor is there  anything  wrong with students&#13;
who wish to partake  of more peaceful social activities.  As&#13;
things stand now, that Is not an option at Union Square.&#13;
It&#13;
should be.&#13;
There  was also talk of redesigning  the building  so as to&#13;
eliminate  what  one  member  of that  student  leadership&#13;
group referred&#13;
to&#13;
as its 'discotheque"  look. Indeed, Pa.rk-&#13;
side has come&#13;
to&#13;
a point&#13;
in&#13;
its history where the physical&#13;
appearance  of its buildings is&#13;
in&#13;
dire need of change, so&#13;
that the campus  can look&#13;
like&#13;
the up~and-coming institu-&#13;
tion it's striving to be. Union Square should be an impor-&#13;
tant part of that updallng.&#13;
Food  service  also  presents&#13;
a&#13;
problem.  When&#13;
PAB&#13;
makes  a genuine  good faith  effort  to lure more  students&#13;
into Union Square  by showing  a film on video, many&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents stay away, since&#13;
2&#13;
p.m. 1s when the movie starts as&#13;
well  as  when  the  grlll  closes.  Such  shortsightedness&#13;
speaks&#13;
to&#13;
the miscommunication  between the Union&#13;
ad-&#13;
mlnlstrallon   and  the Actlvllles  Board.  For  either  to be&#13;
successful, both need to work together.&#13;
In&#13;
general,  then, we urge&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Niebuhr to seriously re-&#13;
consider&#13;
the&#13;
recommendations   made  to him last term.&#13;
And&#13;
we&#13;
also&#13;
encourage  students wishing to see&#13;
trnprove-&#13;
ments  in Union Square  to voice their  opinions.  The stu-&#13;
dent Union Is just  that  -  the student  Union, financed  by&#13;
student  turtion.&#13;
Each and all of us should have a say in the way It's&#13;
run.&#13;
Nobody. asked ...&#13;
WLLCtapestries behind times&#13;
by Gary&#13;
L.&#13;
Schneeberger&#13;
"New"  is  the  operative&#13;
word  this  year  at  Parkslde.&#13;
Except in Main Place,&#13;
There's&#13;
a&#13;
new chancellor,&#13;
a&#13;
new assistant  chancellor, new&#13;
residence  halls, a new admis-&#13;
sions policy, new enthusiasm&#13;
and  even .a&#13;
new&#13;
front-page&#13;
flag for the newspaper you're&#13;
presently reading.&#13;
But in Main  Place,  where&#13;
the pyramids  stretch  up from&#13;
the floor, the Seven Wonders&#13;
of the Parkslde  world are the&#13;
tapestries   hangtng  from  the&#13;
ceUing.&#13;
They&#13;
are  old.  And  ugly,&#13;
.Letters'&#13;
Bathroom   problems  fixed&#13;
To&#13;
The Editor:&#13;
I&#13;
guess this could really  be&#13;
a "Nobody  Asked Me,&#13;
But..;"&#13;
column,  but  there  Isn't  that&#13;
much copy on this Issue.&#13;
I&#13;
just wanted  to pass  along&#13;
some good news&#13;
to&#13;
the female&#13;
users  of the Physical  Educa·&#13;
tlon bullding.  After  using the&#13;
building&#13;
on&#13;
several  occasions&#13;
to play  racquetball,&#13;
I&#13;
found&#13;
out  that  the  men's  locker&#13;
room&#13;
has&#13;
electrical   outlets&#13;
for  the  male  users  of  the&#13;
bullding.&#13;
I&#13;
had  searched  the&#13;
women's.  locker  area  to no&#13;
avall in hopes of finding elec-&#13;
trical  outlets  to use for my&#13;
curling Iron and halr dryer.&#13;
When&#13;
I&#13;
realized   that  the&#13;
men had something  that  the&#13;
women  did  not,  I  sent  a&#13;
memo&#13;
to&#13;
Asst.  Chancellor&#13;
Gary  Goetz,  who  has  taken&#13;
care of the oversight.  He&#13;
in-&#13;
formed me&#13;
this week that the&#13;
order for the outlets has been&#13;
slgnned  and he expects  them&#13;
to  be  installed   within   six&#13;
weeks.&#13;
The lesson  here  is that  the&#13;
system works. I urge students&#13;
who have  problems  with the&#13;
way  the  university  is  run,&#13;
whether&#13;
it&#13;
be something  as&#13;
mundane&#13;
as&#13;
the lack of a&#13;
con-&#13;
venience  or  the  lack  or&#13;
an&#13;
educational   program,   to  let&#13;
someone know.&#13;
The&#13;
only way&#13;
to&#13;
change the way things are&#13;
Is to let your voice be heard.&#13;
It&#13;
worked  for  me,  and&#13;
I&#13;
know the  women  who have&#13;
been wanting to use the gym&#13;
but have not done so because&#13;
they would have to spend the&#13;
rest of the day looking less-&#13;
than-appealtng&#13;
will  be  glad&#13;
that&#13;
I&#13;
spoke up.&#13;
Jenny Carr&#13;
And past their  prime.&#13;
For  five  years&#13;
now,&#13;
I've&#13;
looked  at  those   antiquated&#13;
eyesores  and  wondered&#13;
why&#13;
they  haven't   been  replaced&#13;
with something  more  contem-&#13;
porary.  Are they, in their  psy-&#13;
chedellc&#13;
orange.and.red&#13;
glory,  an homage  to the&#13;
Par-&#13;
trldge  Family's   painted  bus?&#13;
Are  they  to remind  us  of a&#13;
time when "groovy,"  "bitch-&#13;
ing'  " and  "mod"  were  the&#13;
"hip"  things  to  say?  Were&#13;
they  deslsgned  by Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie'S  wife?  Was  she  color&#13;
blind?&#13;
Whatever  the  answer,  the&#13;
fact remains  that those  tapes-&#13;
tries,   aside   from&#13;
InduciDg&#13;
headaches,   hardly present"&#13;
up-to-date&#13;
Image of&#13;
this&#13;
cam.&#13;
pus  to those  who&#13;
vlsit.&#13;
And&#13;
that's   not  good,  espectally&#13;
when  we're  trying&#13;
to&#13;
repoif&#13;
tion ourselves  in academia"&#13;
alive and thriving,&#13;
With  all  the  talented&#13;
art&#13;
students  enrolled here,the.&#13;
must be someone&#13;
who&#13;
can&#13;
de-&#13;
sign new tapestries that&#13;
ce1&gt;&#13;
brate  what  we're becomilll,&#13;
instead    of   reminding ~&#13;
where  we began, The&#13;
t1m0l&#13;
as Bob Dylan warned, hav",&#13;
changed.&#13;
MaIn&#13;
Place'a&#13;
tape&gt;&#13;
tries&#13;
a-should,&#13;
too.&#13;
Come to meet the candidates&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In&#13;
response&#13;
to&#13;
your last two&#13;
editorials  on voter apathy and&#13;
student  involvement   on  the&#13;
Parkside&#13;
campus,&#13;
I&#13;
believe I&#13;
speak for the Student ·Govern.&#13;
~ent  and Senate&#13;
and&#13;
Execu-&#13;
ttves&#13;
,,:he~ I say thank you.&#13;
Your&#13;
sentiments&#13;
on these is-&#13;
sues ar~ definitely shared by&#13;
your neighbor organization&#13;
And  to  demonstrate   ~ur&#13;
feelings, we are going to give&#13;
students  a dlrect  opportunity&#13;
to take action on both Issues&#13;
,&#13;
starting   with   next   week's&#13;
voter  registration   dlrve  and&#13;
"Meet  the Campaign"   public&#13;
forums.&#13;
The  registrallon   drive  wUl&#13;
be held at various  times  all of&#13;
next week,  giving  area&#13;
resr-&#13;
dents a chance  to learn  and&#13;
prepare a response  to several&#13;
stUdent-oriented  issues.  The&#13;
Meet  the  Campaign   forums,&#13;
currently  featuring  Lt. Gover-&#13;
nor  candidate   Sharon   Metz&#13;
and&#13;
Btate&#13;
Representative    (for&#13;
Racme)  incumbent   Jeff  Neu-&#13;
bauer,  wUl give every~~&#13;
chance   to&#13;
tearn&#13;
the&#13;
,,"w&#13;
dates'   stands  on issues&#13;
ani&#13;
the Importance  ov voting·&#13;
Now  in  response&#13;
to&#13;
iii'"&#13;
"less  than enthusiastic"&#13;
peq&gt;&#13;
Ie  who  are&#13;
now&#13;
wonderill&#13;
"Why bother?"  oneword:~&#13;
tion. Among the myriad&#13;
d~&#13;
sues  that  your&#13;
represeno~&#13;
ttves, senators and&#13;
go,ve~&#13;
I)Il,&#13;
form  influential decis&#13;
lOn&#13;
fO!&#13;
one happens  to be lumon&#13;
Letter&#13;
see&#13;
page 6&#13;
Gary&#13;
L.&#13;
Schneeberger&#13;
••....•.•.........................••&#13;
Edltor&#13;
Jenny    earr&#13;
News   Editor&#13;
Klmbef1le&#13;
Kranich&#13;
........•........................&#13;
News   Editor&#13;
Julie    Pendleton&#13;
Asst.    News   Editor&#13;
Kay  Murach    ..................................•....&#13;
Feature    Editor&#13;
Jim   Nelbaur&#13;
Entertalnment&#13;
Editor&#13;
Robb   Luehr&#13;
·.···.Sports&#13;
Editor&#13;
Michael&#13;
Rohl..   ......•.•....................&#13;
Asst.    Sports    Editor&#13;
Dive&#13;
McEvoy    ...•...•....•....••........•...••......&#13;
Photo    Editor&#13;
Jack   80rnhuener&#13;
...•....•...............•........&#13;
Photo    Editor&#13;
Andy    Buchanan&#13;
•....•......•.......•......&#13;
Business&#13;
Manager&#13;
Brenda&#13;
Buchanan&#13;
Asst.    Business&#13;
Manager&#13;
O.ye    Roback   ..••.•.••.••....•.••••..••..&#13;
Advertlsing&#13;
Manager&#13;
Steve   Plcazo   ....••......................&#13;
Dlstribution&#13;
Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Leo Sose, Jason Caspers' Mary&#13;
D~Fazio,&#13;
Erikk&#13;
Dingman,   Ronda&#13;
Diller,Gretchen Gayhart, Carol&#13;
Kortendlck, Randy LeCount Rick&#13;
Leonard, RickLuehr, Vaha~&#13;
,&#13;
Mahdaslan, Suzanne Mantuano&#13;
KellyMcKissick,SCOIIOsimitz '&#13;
N!cole  Pacione,   Michelle   Pete;sen&#13;
SillSerpe, MikeStephens  And   '&#13;
Tschumper, Jennie Tunki~icz y&#13;
Tyson Wilda.&#13;
.,'&#13;
Rangeriswrittenandeditedb&#13;
.   i~~&#13;
policyandcontent.Ranger'ysbtudentsat UW·Parl&lt;sideandtheyaresolelyresponSibleI~'ring~~&#13;
and holidays.&#13;
IS&#13;
pu   hshed  e....ery  Thursday    during   the  academic   year except&#13;
uu&#13;
All  correspondence   shOUld b&#13;
.&#13;
r\&lt;Side,~&#13;
No. 2000,  Kenosha WI  53141   ~  addressed&#13;
to:&#13;
Parkside   Ranger&#13;
Uni ....ersity   of  Wlsconsm-pa&#13;
Advertisingratesara&#13;
$4'&#13;
.&#13;
alephone&#13;
(4141553·2295&#13;
or&#13;
(414) 553·2287.&#13;
g.n&#13;
l&#13;
publICation Thursday.&#13;
per  column   Inch  or  less  in  bulk.   '",d....ertislng   deadline  is Tuesdayat&#13;
~etters  to  the  editor   will   b&#13;
.&#13;
s~e  paper.lett~rs&#13;
should  b:   I~;cefuted ~n5typewrit1en,&#13;
dOUble-spaced   on. standard&#13;
"t"'bo""',~&#13;
p   Orte numb~r  inclUded for&#13;
·f~&#13;
.an&#13;
0  words   and  must   be  signed.&#13;
With&#13;
a tele-&#13;
&lt;W,O(~l~;1C&#13;
quest.  Deadhn.efodetters&#13;
i;i-&#13;
n&#13;
Icatlon   purposes.    Names   will   be  withheld    upon  reo&#13;
t:Oll~f'"&#13;
reserved  the  nght  to  edit  lett&#13;
uesday  at  10  a  m.   for   publication&#13;
Thursday.    Ranger&#13;
rR('~&#13;
cont~nt..&#13;
.&#13;
ers  and  refuse  letters   containing&#13;
false  and  defamatOry&#13;
Ranger,ls pnnted  by  the Racine  Journal  Times.&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72041">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 15, issue 3, September 18, 1986</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72042">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72043">
                <text>1986-09-18</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72046">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="72047">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="72048">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72049">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72050">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72051">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72052">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72053">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72054">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="2451">
        <name>chiwaukee alliance</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2452">
        <name>citizens against nuclear power and weapons</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="110">
        <name>community</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2449">
        <name>health and human services committee</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="942">
        <name>kenosha county board</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="652">
        <name>nuclear power</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2459">
        <name>nuclear regulatory commission (NRC)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2462">
        <name>voting</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="3640" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3700">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/00075746d3831f88d557dc4c6b1443f0.pdf</src>
        <authentication>7b5df46a62e9df59d3cc0ca8140b4fdf</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="78828">
              <text>Volume 15, issue 30</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="78829">
              <text> Commencement '97: Shaw set to give keynote</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="78839">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78825">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 15, issue 30, May 7, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78826">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78827">
                <text>1987-05-07</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78830">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="78831">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="78832">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78833">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78834">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78835">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78836">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78837">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78838">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="2624">
        <name>interracial dating</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2627">
        <name>ozzy osbourne</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="234">
        <name>parkside activities board (PAB)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2625">
        <name>sabbatical</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2626">
        <name>wingspread</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="3187" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4929">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/77f635a0c9863dad9ef9ffb65c007ef3.pdf</src>
        <authentication>3edb1f65567e1e4693dd61b7a6e5d5e1</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72059">
              <text>Volume 15, issue 4</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72060">
              <text>Housing not included in Campus Police jurisdiction</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72070">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90948">
              <text>Page 5 mmmmmmwmm ••••••HIM&#13;
Student researches&#13;
gravity&#13;
Page 7&#13;
What exactly is day care?&#13;
Page 11 mmsmammmmmmmmmmmmammmmmmm&#13;
Parkside's All Americans&#13;
A r Sept. 25, 1 986 University of Wisconsin-Parkside Vol. 1 5, No. 4&#13;
Keep on truckin'&#13;
: v. is : , •«&#13;
1 —:&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Construction on County Highway E is a major ject, begun in July, won't be completed until&#13;
inconvenience to Parkside commuters, and it at least November 1, according to the Wiswill&#13;
continue to be one for a while. The pro — consin Highway Department.&#13;
Housing not included in&#13;
Campus Police jurisdiction&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
If a crime is committed in&#13;
or around the residence halls,&#13;
Parkside's Campus Police&#13;
won't be doing the investigating.&#13;
But that's no cause for concern,&#13;
according to Gary&#13;
Goetz, assistant chancellor&#13;
for administrative and fiscal&#13;
affairs.&#13;
"We would love to provide&#13;
our security force the authority&#13;
to investigate crimes in&#13;
the halls," Goetz explained.&#13;
"The problem is that the&#13;
piece of property upon which&#13;
the residence complex sits is&#13;
privately held by the Parkside&#13;
Foundation. It's really, in&#13;
effect, an island completely&#13;
surrounded by campus&#13;
troops."&#13;
In the event of criminal activity,&#13;
then, jurisdiction falls&#13;
to the Kenosha County Sheriff's&#13;
Department. Captain&#13;
Roger Zeihen, the department's&#13;
director of operations,&#13;
does not feel any expediency&#13;
is being sacrificed under such&#13;
a set-up.&#13;
"If you have any type of&#13;
felony or accident going on,"&#13;
Zeihen said, "it would only be&#13;
a matter of minutes before&#13;
we responded, depending on&#13;
where the squad is located in&#13;
that area.&#13;
"So I don't see where it&#13;
would create any different&#13;
type of situation than we have&#13;
anywhere else in the county,"&#13;
he continued. "We've been&#13;
policing Woodcreek (now Orchard&#13;
Courts) apartments for&#13;
years, and anytime there's&#13;
any activity there, it's ours to&#13;
investigate. And I'd say we're&#13;
there within two or three&#13;
minutes."&#13;
Just what role the Campus&#13;
Police has in maintaining&#13;
order around the residence&#13;
halls is clear to its director,&#13;
Ron Brinkman.&#13;
"By the Foundation and&#13;
through the chancellor,"&#13;
Brinkman explains, "we've&#13;
been directed to police that&#13;
property. If a crime is going&#13;
down, we'll take into custody&#13;
who is responsible for it and&#13;
turn him over to the sheriff's&#13;
department. We can apprehend&#13;
and detain; but the&#13;
sheriff does the investigating."&#13;
That scenario could change&#13;
if campus security personnel&#13;
were deputized by Sherrif&#13;
Fred Ekornaas. Such an option&#13;
has been studied, but to&#13;
no avail.&#13;
"It is the strong policy of&#13;
our country sherrif that he&#13;
will not get into the deputation&#13;
program," Goetz said.&#13;
"He does not want to entertain&#13;
the liability of having a&#13;
bunch of deputized people&#13;
running around who he has no&#13;
control over; and yet he&#13;
would be responsible for any&#13;
liability that is incurred."&#13;
Still, Goetz is looking into&#13;
increasing the Campus&#13;
Police's role in serving the&#13;
residence halls.&#13;
"We will be trying to purchase&#13;
radios that will allow&#13;
us to get in immediate contact&#13;
with the sheriff's department&#13;
as soon as possible,"&#13;
Goetz said. "And, if it's necessary,&#13;
we'll seek on-the-spot&#13;
deputization in emergency&#13;
situations which rapidly develop."&#13;
New security&#13;
staffing planned&#13;
by Julie Pendleton&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
With the advent of residence&#13;
halls at Parkside, increased&#13;
concern about campus&#13;
security has developed.&#13;
Parkside Campus Police&#13;
currently maintains three&#13;
levels of security, the lowest&#13;
which is student security officers.&#13;
Their duties include&#13;
patrolling the art gallery,&#13;
parking lots, dances and athletic&#13;
events.&#13;
The second level consists of&#13;
Buildings and Grounds Patrol&#13;
Officers (B&amp;Gs). A prerequisite&#13;
for becoming a B&amp;G is&#13;
approximately one year of experience&#13;
as a student security&#13;
officer. When there is an&#13;
opening they then may apply&#13;
for a B&amp;G position.&#13;
. Once employed as B&amp;Gs,&#13;
students then begin schooling&#13;
to become certified police officers.&#13;
They attend recruiting&#13;
school twice a week and within&#13;
four years may receive&#13;
state certification as police&#13;
officers.&#13;
Parkside currently employs&#13;
four part-time B&amp;Gs. These&#13;
B&amp;Gs are either already certified&#13;
or in the process of becoming&#13;
certified as police officers.&#13;
The highest level of security&#13;
at Parkside consists of&#13;
six full-trained and certified&#13;
police officers. "Security is&#13;
like insurance-you can never&#13;
get enough" said Gary Goetz&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Administration&#13;
and Fiscal Affairs.&#13;
However, when working&#13;
within budget constraints,&#13;
there are limits, even in security.&#13;
As a result of the new housing&#13;
on campus, Campus&#13;
Police have been forced to reconsider&#13;
and redeploy its security.&#13;
"We're doing our best&#13;
with the resources that we&#13;
have" said Goetz.&#13;
The most change in the&#13;
redeployment of security include&#13;
having full-time police&#13;
officer on duty over the weekend&#13;
for a total of 20 hours and&#13;
having a B&amp;G covering part&#13;
of third shift from 2 a.m. until&#13;
6 a.m. alone without a dispatcher.&#13;
In the past Parkside had&#13;
maintained only student security&#13;
over the weekend. However,&#13;
it is the opinion of Ron&#13;
Brinkman, Director of Campus&#13;
Policy and Public Safety,&#13;
that weekends have become a&#13;
"peak" period — "peak"&#13;
meaning that there are more&#13;
people on campus at that&#13;
time. Therefore, that justifies&#13;
a need for a full-time police&#13;
officer to be on duty.&#13;
As for a B&amp;G being alone&#13;
from 2 a.m. until 6 a.m.,&#13;
Brinkman feels that this is essentially&#13;
a "non-peak" period,&#13;
and that there is not&#13;
much activity occuring.&#13;
"Working within the budget&#13;
constraints, we've have to utilize&#13;
our person power, look at&#13;
where would be the best place&#13;
to deploy them" said Brinkman.&#13;
In the past, Parkside&#13;
had maintained a full-time&#13;
certified police officer on&#13;
third shift.&#13;
According to PSGA president,&#13;
Adrian Serrano this&#13;
redeployment of security is&#13;
questionable. "About a year&#13;
and a half ago we began to&#13;
look at security and safety on&#13;
campus," said Serrano. "We&#13;
started looking at such things&#13;
as emergency call boxes,&#13;
lighting, pathways-basically&#13;
all aspects of safety. To me,&#13;
this (redeployment) is a step&#13;
backwards."&#13;
Serrano went on to say&#13;
"Hopefully this system will&#13;
never be tested, and everything&#13;
will run smoothly; but&#13;
if the system is ever tested&#13;
and it is shown that things&#13;
might have worked out better&#13;
had there been a a third shift&#13;
professional officer on duty&#13;
instead of a student, the university&#13;
is going to get so&#13;
much bad flack. And that's&#13;
going to hurt everyone-the&#13;
people involved, the security&#13;
department, and it can also&#13;
hurt Parkside's image."&#13;
In response to this, Goetz&#13;
maintained that it is the opinion&#13;
of the campus police that&#13;
they provide a capable and&#13;
ample level of service.&#13;
2 Thursday, September 25, 1986 RANGER&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Paper's responsibility&#13;
to report all the facts&#13;
While gathering information for this week's front-page&#13;
stories on campus security, the Ranger also discovered&#13;
that some people don't understand this paper's role in the&#13;
university environment.&#13;
When asked about the early morning security staff situation,&#13;
one administrator said that the Ranger would not&#13;
be serving the best interests of the campus community if&#13;
it reported that only student security personnel are on&#13;
duty from 2 til 6 a.m. By publicizing this staffing change,&#13;
the administrator said, the Ranger would in effect be advertising&#13;
the best "strike" time to potential lawbreakers.&#13;
Such an intimation is dangerously absurd. The mission&#13;
of this newspaper is now, and has always been, to inform&#13;
the community it serves of issues and events relevant to&#13;
it. When something occurs that is important to the students,&#13;
staff and administration of this university, it is our&#13;
duty to identify, report and occasionally interpret those&#13;
concerns in our newspaper.&#13;
What we're talking about, essentially, is responsibility.&#13;
We characterize our responsibility in the above terms. At&#13;
least one administrator thinks our responsibility should&#13;
instead be that we don't tell people what they may not&#13;
want to hear.&#13;
But bad news, if indeed this week's security story can&#13;
be called bad news, needs to be reported just as much, if&#13;
not more, than good news. For it is only by knowing all&#13;
the facts that responsible adults can take action to correct&#13;
what they might perceive to be wrongs.&#13;
After all, no one really believes that Bob Woodward and&#13;
Carl Bernstein were overjoyed to find a cancer infesting&#13;
the White House. But all of us, we're sure, are glad that&#13;
they told us what they did.&#13;
THE REAGAN TASK FORCE MEETS TO DISCUSS OPTIONS&#13;
FOR FREEING THE HOSTAGES STILL HELD IN LEBANON:&#13;
Former librarian dies&#13;
David B. Knowles, 39, formerly&#13;
of Kenosha, late of Lincoln,&#13;
Neb., passed away suddenly&#13;
at his home on Sept. 11,&#13;
1986.&#13;
The son of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Leo A. Knowles, he was born&#13;
Nov. 3, 1946, in Elkhart, Ind.&#13;
He received a bachelor's&#13;
degree in library science in&#13;
1973 from the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Milwaukee.&#13;
Knowles lived in Kenosha&#13;
for about 18 years before&#13;
moving to Lincoln six years&#13;
ago to head the catalog department&#13;
at the University of&#13;
Nebraska library. He had&#13;
been employed as a librarian&#13;
at Parkside from 1968-1979, as&#13;
head of the catalog and circulation&#13;
departments.&#13;
Knowles was involved in&#13;
the planning, installation and&#13;
implementation of the OCLC&#13;
on-line cataloging system in&#13;
February 1976. His most notable&#13;
and unique contribution&#13;
was the design of the shelving&#13;
for the Library of Congress&#13;
National Union Catalog. Commercial&#13;
shelving was not&#13;
available in 1972 to house the&#13;
large, irregular-sized volumes.&#13;
Letter&#13;
David Knowles&#13;
On July 7, 1979, at the'Carthage&#13;
College Chapel, he&#13;
married Ruth Lillian Pauschert.&#13;
Survivors include his wife,&#13;
of Lincoln, and his parents, of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Accessibility update in the works&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
When I see a one-sided article,&#13;
such as the one on&#13;
wheelchair access by Mr.&#13;
Luehr, I first question why&#13;
the author would not take the&#13;
little extra effort required to&#13;
learn from us what is happening&#13;
with that project.&#13;
Then I answer my own&#13;
question to myself and realize&#13;
that, although we are one of&#13;
the largest single departments&#13;
on campus, by virtue&#13;
of our role and location we&#13;
are, like icebergs, largely invisible.&#13;
Therefore, to better&#13;
acquaint you with us, I am attaching&#13;
a copy of our service&#13;
guide and will get on with&#13;
"the rest of the story."&#13;
We have estimated the cost&#13;
of providing interior access to&#13;
mid-main place at $40,000;&#13;
too costly for the campus&#13;
alone to support. That project,&#13;
along with a $75,000 project&#13;
to access the second floor&#13;
in Tallent Hall, were submitted&#13;
in the Campus Capital&#13;
Budget Request for funding&#13;
by the State Building Commission&#13;
in the 1985/87 biennium.&#13;
Although there is a special&#13;
"pot" of money created by&#13;
the State Legislature for projects&#13;
of this nature, neither&#13;
project was funded. The reasoning&#13;
was, that access in&#13;
both cases does exist although&#13;
it is inconvenient. We&#13;
do not agree with the conclusion&#13;
and have resubmitted&#13;
the projects in our 1987/89&#13;
Capital Budget Request.&#13;
What can be helpful for Parkside&#13;
is for local legislators to&#13;
be made aware from more&#13;
sources of the need for the&#13;
work and pressure brought on&#13;
the State Building Commission&#13;
to get funding for the&#13;
projects.&#13;
In July of this year, our Engineering&#13;
Section completed a&#13;
very comprehensive survey&#13;
of the campus to identify all&#13;
areas which do not meet current&#13;
access standards. One&#13;
result of this survey has been&#13;
to release a $140,000 Building&#13;
Commission access project&#13;
which has been under design&#13;
for over a year. This project&#13;
will accomplish things such&#13;
as relocating elevator controls,&#13;
changing certain entry&#13;
points to various rooms,&#13;
lower mirrors and washstands,&#13;
etc. Construction will&#13;
probably begin early in 1987.&#13;
Additionally the campus&#13;
has, from its own resources,&#13;
spent $10,000 to provide automatic&#13;
openers for entrance&#13;
doors in the Student Union,&#13;
Physical Education Building&#13;
and Comm Arts Building. We&#13;
anticipate this installation&#13;
will be complete this month.&#13;
All documents relating to&#13;
the project work I've discussed&#13;
are available at the Facilities&#13;
Management Center for&#13;
review. Please contact us if&#13;
you are interested in seeing&#13;
any of them.&#13;
Jack Dudley,&#13;
Director of&#13;
Facilities Management&#13;
Gary L. Schneeberger Editor&#13;
Jenny Carr News Editor&#13;
Kimberiie Kranich ..News Editor&#13;
Julie Pendleton Asst. News Editor&#13;
Kay Murach Feature Editor&#13;
Jim Neibaur Entertainment Editor&#13;
gobb Luehr.. Sports Editor&#13;
Michael Rohl Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy Photo Editor&#13;
Jack Bornhuetter Photo Editor&#13;
Andy Buchanan Business Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan Asst. Business Manager&#13;
*??'ve goback Advertising Manager&#13;
Steve Picazo Distribution Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Leo Bose, Jason Caspers, Mary&#13;
DeFazio, Erikk Dingman, Ronda&#13;
Ditter, Gretchen Gayhart, Carol&#13;
Kortendick, Randy LeCount, Rick&#13;
Leonard, Rick Luehr, Vahan&#13;
Mahdasian, Suzanne Mantuano,&#13;
Kelly McKissick, Scott Osimitz,&#13;
Nicole Pacione, Michelle Petersen,&#13;
Bill Serpe, Mike Stephens, Andy&#13;
Tschumper, Jennie Tunkieicz,&#13;
Tyson Wilda.&#13;
nnii!?er ls,wn!*fn and edited by students at UW-Parkside and they are solely responsible for its editorial&#13;
and'holidays0' 'S publ,shed every Thursday durin9 the academic year except during breaks&#13;
m orw«e^P0nd^nce S^0u'd be addressed to: Parkside Ranger, University of Wisconsin-Parked? Rnx&#13;
No 2000, Kenosha Wl 53141. Telephone (414)553-2295 or (414 553-2287 '&#13;
pubSion Thursday^ $4 ** 'nCh °r 'eSSbulk' Adver1isin9 deadline is Tuesday at 9 a.m. for&#13;
cbflf/Ll0 WM be accepted in typewritten, double-spaced on standard&#13;
size paper. Letters should be less than 350 words and must be signed with a tele-&#13;
552? npTiifnJ r?Ui h vesication purposes. Names will be withheld upon re-&#13;
ESllnil H®[S. 'ETuesday at 10 a m- tor publication Thursday. Ranger&#13;
content S se ,etters containin9 false and defamatory&#13;
Ranger is printed by the Racine Journal Times.&#13;
Wtntbf of rhi?&#13;
roiior.inio&#13;
TROSSI a3&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 25,1986&#13;
I 11.11 ... I ======&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Scientific research soars&#13;
Federal sponsorship of basic scientific research at&#13;
universities has soared in the first six years of the&#13;
Reagan adminstration - a revival that appears unmatched&#13;
since the post-Sputnik era of the early&#13;
1960s, reported the New York Times News Service.&#13;
This dramatic increase, 61 percent since 1981, has&#13;
surprised many university officials who had predicted&#13;
just a few years ago that fundamental research&#13;
would be an early casualty of the federal budget&#13;
cuts.&#13;
Futhermore, statistics and interviews with&#13;
researchers across the country indicate that the administration&#13;
has concentrated much of its research&#13;
funding in unusually large projects. Consequently,&#13;
many feel that the funds for individual scientists&#13;
may be more scarce than ever.&#13;
Earl against tuition hike&#13;
Governor Earl will oppose the large tuition hike&#13;
proposed by University of Wisconsin System President&#13;
Kenneth Shaw and a special committee study -&#13;
ing the future of the UW System, reported Oshkosh&#13;
Northwestern.&#13;
It is Earl's opinion that using high tuition to control&#13;
enrollment is unacceptable. Instead of concentrating&#13;
on tuition increases, Earl said the UW System&#13;
should try to control and contain costs through&#13;
stiffer admission requirements and higher academic&#13;
standards.&#13;
Education Dept. fights drugs&#13;
The U.S. Education Department joined President&#13;
Reagan's war on drugs with a handbook on how to&#13;
drive the drug problem out of the nation's schools,&#13;
reported the Milwaukee Sentinel.&#13;
The 78-page booklet is aimed at educators, parents&#13;
and students themselves laying out basic facts about&#13;
drugs. Furthermore, it provides a detailed explanation&#13;
of educators' rights to search students for drugs&#13;
and to suspend or expel offenders.&#13;
Club Events Homecoming&#13;
Anthropology Club&#13;
Dr. Florence Shipek will&#13;
speak at a roundtable discussion&#13;
on Tuesday, Sept. 30 at&#13;
11:00 a.m. in Molinaro 324.&#13;
Topics of discussion will include&#13;
how national policy and&#13;
minority cultures deal with&#13;
the nations of Asia and the&#13;
Pacific, including Red China.&#13;
International Studies&#13;
Club&#13;
A "Get Acquainted Party"&#13;
will be held on Saturday,&#13;
Sept. 27, at 6:30 p.m. at Dr.&#13;
Manogaran's home, 2114&#13;
Grand Prix Dr., Raicne.&#13;
Bring a snack to pass, a new&#13;
member and ideas. (R.S.V.P.&#13;
553-2701 or 553-2316).&#13;
PASO&#13;
Parkside Asian Student Organization&#13;
(PASO) will be&#13;
meeting on Friday, Sept. 26&#13;
at 1:00 p.m. in Union 207. Information&#13;
on upcoming club&#13;
events will be discussed.&#13;
Geology&#13;
Dr. Steve Leavitt of the Department&#13;
of Geology will&#13;
speak on Friday, Sept. 26 in&#13;
Greenquist 113. The discussion,&#13;
"Isotope Dendrochronology&#13;
and the Dating of Historic&#13;
and Precolumbian&#13;
Buildings in the Southwest,"&#13;
will cover a new method of&#13;
dating growth rings of trees,&#13;
including pilot studies on&#13;
wood from the Hubbell Trading&#13;
Post in northern Arizona&#13;
and wood from Casa Grande&#13;
Ruins in southern Arizona.&#13;
Everyone is welcome.&#13;
Voter drive Recruitment Fair&#13;
by Jenny Carr&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The legislative affairs committee&#13;
is holding a voter registration&#13;
drive this week on&#13;
campus. Registration will be&#13;
held on the main concourse&#13;
today, Sept. 25 and Monday,&#13;
Sept. 29.&#13;
Chris Baierl, committee&#13;
chair, states that voter participation&#13;
among 18-24 yearolds&#13;
has been notoriously low.&#13;
His committee has contacted&#13;
the Kenosha League of&#13;
Women Voters to assist them&#13;
in the registration drive.&#13;
"Students are quick to complain&#13;
about high tuition, but if&#13;
they would vote, their complaints&#13;
would be heard,"&#13;
Baierl asserts.&#13;
A selection of condidates&#13;
will be on campus during the&#13;
week of Sept. 22 to talk about&#13;
the issues in the upcoming&#13;
election. Students are encouraged&#13;
to listen to the candidates,&#13;
ask questions and,&#13;
most importantly, to register&#13;
to vote.&#13;
mfA-M*W..&#13;
Involvement stressed&#13;
"On Monday, September 29,&#13;
we're going to change the&#13;
main concourse of Parkside&#13;
into a circus," said Bill&#13;
Serpe, Chair of the Student&#13;
Organizations Council.&#13;
"Every club and organization&#13;
will have a table set up&#13;
and will be selling themselves&#13;
to recruit new members.&#13;
There are over forty different&#13;
opportunities at this school&#13;
for people to get involved and&#13;
this event will give everyone&#13;
a chance to find out about all&#13;
of them on one day in one&#13;
place."&#13;
Every group that will be on&#13;
hand that day has been encouraged&#13;
to do anything and&#13;
everything they can to get&#13;
students' attention. 'I've suggested&#13;
that social clubs like&#13;
the Dart Team set up a dart&#13;
game. I'd even like to see the&#13;
Bowling Club try to demonstrate&#13;
on the main concourse,&#13;
"Serpe said.&#13;
Some clubs don't have the&#13;
advantage of drawing attention&#13;
in this way. Serpe had&#13;
some suggestions for them&#13;
too.&#13;
Helium balloons are a very&#13;
obvious attraction, not to&#13;
mention giveaways. Clubs&#13;
could hold a drawing at the&#13;
end of the day and give a free&#13;
prize. Food will always get&#13;
people's attention too, expecially&#13;
if it's free.&#13;
"Our slogan this year,"&#13;
Serpe continued, is "Drop in&#13;
and Sign Up." We have already&#13;
recognized two new clubs&#13;
this year and are looking at&#13;
several more.'&#13;
When asked what the new&#13;
clubs were Serpe said, "Come&#13;
to Recruitment Fair 86 and&#13;
see for yourself. We'll be&#13;
going from 9 a.m. untill 1&#13;
p.m. in the Main/concourse&#13;
from the Union all the way to&#13;
Upper Main Place. Get involved&#13;
this year."&#13;
New look, new feel&#13;
is this year's goal&#13;
by Bill Serpe&#13;
"There will be more things&#13;
happening this year for 'Horncoming&#13;
86', " said Chuck&#13;
Christoffersen, chair of this&#13;
year's committee, "and we&#13;
think what we have planned&#13;
will encourage more student&#13;
involvement."&#13;
Among the changes slated&#13;
for this year's big event are a&#13;
picnic on the pad on Friday&#13;
afternoon featuring The Surf&#13;
Boys (aka the Class of 62)&#13;
and a dance on Friday evening&#13;
with Pat McCurdy and&#13;
the Confidentials.&#13;
Between these two events&#13;
there will be a bonfire.&#13;
"We're trying to have more&#13;
things going on that are traditionally&#13;
related to Homecoming,"&#13;
said Diane Welsh, activities&#13;
advisor. "And we're&#13;
also trying to schedule things&#13;
back-to-back so that people&#13;
will stay involved."&#13;
A "derder" decorating&#13;
party is also scheduled for&#13;
Friday. This will coincide&#13;
with the "World's Largest&#13;
University Derder Band" record-&#13;
setting attempt to be&#13;
held during half-time at Saturday's&#13;
soccer game.&#13;
"First let me explain what&#13;
a Derder is," said Christoffersen.&#13;
"It's the cardboard&#13;
core in the middle of the roll&#13;
of toilet paper. When you take&#13;
it off, the holder it becomes a&#13;
musical instrument, in a&#13;
way."&#13;
This idea, according to&#13;
Christoffersen, came from&#13;
another member of the committee,&#13;
who sees it as a fun&#13;
way to get people to the soccer&#13;
game and to put Parkside&#13;
on the map. "We will be inviting&#13;
newspapers from Milwaukee,&#13;
Racine and Kenosha,&#13;
as well as television and&#13;
radio stations," commented&#13;
Christofferson. "We're also&#13;
going to try to get a national&#13;
reporting service like USA&#13;
Today or People Magazine,&#13;
and then we want to have this&#13;
recorded with the Guinness&#13;
"We wanted to&#13;
give this event the&#13;
same kind of&#13;
excitement Winter&#13;
Carnival&#13;
generates."&#13;
-- Sandy Saladis&#13;
Book of World Records."&#13;
Sandy Saladis, a senior music&#13;
major on the committee,&#13;
talked about club involvement&#13;
for Homecoming.&#13;
"We wanted to give this&#13;
event the same kind of excitement&#13;
that Winter Carnival&#13;
generates. We are encouraging&#13;
more clubs to sponsor&#13;
candidates for King and&#13;
Queen. The winning people&#13;
will score points for the club&#13;
they represent."&#13;
Other events, like the Tugof-&#13;
War Tournament, and attendance&#13;
at the soccer game&#13;
and dances will win the&#13;
Homecoming Spirit award&#13;
which will be a cash prize&#13;
and a trophy.&#13;
"More than anything, "-&#13;
Saladis said, "we want to&#13;
change the image of the&#13;
penny voting for the King and&#13;
Queen. The money that is&#13;
raised during this election&#13;
goes to the Child Care Center&#13;
here at Parkside, but by making&#13;
it a club contest with a&#13;
prize we hope to make it&#13;
more competitve for the clubs&#13;
and less of a popularity contest."&#13;
Clubs and other organizations&#13;
sponsoring King and&#13;
Queen candidates are reminded&#13;
that they must turn in&#13;
names for this contest to the&#13;
Ranger office by Friday Sept&#13;
26, so that candidates' pictures&#13;
can be taken for the&#13;
voting and next week's paper.&#13;
Entry forms are available&#13;
at the Ranger Office, PSGA&#13;
office and the Student Activities&#13;
Office, Union 209.&#13;
Apply to study in Innsbruck&#13;
The University of New Orleans&#13;
will sponsor its 12th annual&#13;
session of UNO-INNSBRUCK,&#13;
an International&#13;
Summer School program in&#13;
Innsbruck, Austria. This educational/&#13;
travel experience&#13;
will involve over 250 s tudents&#13;
and some 30 faculty and staff&#13;
for the summer of 1987.&#13;
"UNO's popular Alpine&#13;
summer school atracted students&#13;
from 35 different American&#13;
universities and colleges&#13;
and several foreign countries&#13;
for the summer of '86," says&#13;
Carl Wagner, Associate Director&#13;
of the Office of International&#13;
Study Programs at&#13;
UNO. "As a result, UNO-INNSBRUCK&#13;
is now one of the&#13;
largest overseas summer&#13;
schools offered by an American&#13;
university."&#13;
Applicants are already lining&#13;
up for the 1987 session.&#13;
Part of the secret may be&#13;
that more than 70 courses in&#13;
many different academic subject&#13;
areas are offered in this&#13;
magnificent and scenic Alpin&#13;
Innsbruck setting in the&#13;
"heart of Central Europe".&#13;
While participants can earn&#13;
up to ten semester hours of&#13;
credit, their classrooms are&#13;
surrounded by the towering&#13;
Tyrolean Alps, whose peaks&#13;
are always snow-capped.&#13;
Stephanie Rondenell, a student&#13;
participant in the 1986&#13;
UNO-INNSBRUCK program,&#13;
had this to say about her&#13;
European experience. "If&#13;
someone were to ask me to&#13;
name the most memorable&#13;
experience of my life all I&#13;
would have to say is 'Innsbruck'.&#13;
When I think of my&#13;
summer in Insbruck, I think&#13;
of the mountains that were&#13;
outside my dorm window and&#13;
how wonderful it was to wake&#13;
up to them every morning."&#13;
Registration for UNO-INNSBRUCK&#13;
is already underway.&#13;
Enrollment in the program&#13;
is limited, so interested&#13;
applicants should apply as&#13;
soon as possible. Information&#13;
and a full color brochure describing&#13;
the program in detail&#13;
can be had by writing to UNO-&#13;
INN SBRUCK-1987, c/o International&#13;
Study Program,&#13;
Box 1315-UNO, New Orleans,&#13;
LA 70148. Or, you can call&#13;
(504) 286-7116.&#13;
4 Thursday, September 25, 1986 RANGER&#13;
Petersen&#13;
Fine Arts degree pays&#13;
PSGA approves&#13;
nominations&#13;
Book sale&#13;
by Ronda Ditter&#13;
Each year, students graduate&#13;
from Parkside with degrees&#13;
in various fields of expertise.&#13;
Sometimes, these graduates&#13;
enjoy great success, thanks to&#13;
the education they received&#13;
here.&#13;
Such is the case of Gary&#13;
Study in&#13;
&amp; Sp&#13;
evittej&#13;
oitt&#13;
Emphases in&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
International Business&#13;
Equestrian Studies&#13;
Courses available in Spanish&#13;
and in English&#13;
Fluency in Spanish not required&#13;
All courses approved by UW-Platteville&#13;
and validated on an official&#13;
UW-Platteville transcript&#13;
$2495 per semester for Wisconsin &amp;&#13;
Minnesota residents&#13;
$2795 per semester for non-residents&#13;
Costs include&#13;
Tuition and Fees&#13;
Room and Board with Spanish families&#13;
Fieldtrips&#13;
All financial aids apply&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
Study Abroad Programs&#13;
308 Warner Hall&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Platteville&#13;
I University Plaza&#13;
Platteville. Wl 53818-3099&#13;
(608) 342-1726&#13;
Petersen, a Parkside alumnus&#13;
working as the promotion&#13;
manager for The Milwaukee&#13;
Journal and Milwaukee Sentinel.&#13;
Petersen, who majored in&#13;
fine arts and minored in English,&#13;
says that Parkside&#13;
"provided me with an excellent&#13;
broad-based background.&#13;
Getting out of college, I&#13;
wasn't at the disadvantage of&#13;
being restricted in what I'd&#13;
learned."&#13;
Petersen enjoys his job,&#13;
which consists of overseeing&#13;
a staff of writers and artists&#13;
who devise marketing ads&#13;
and presentations that promote&#13;
the Journal and Sentinel.&#13;
"We also take on 'extra'&#13;
jobs, like community affairs&#13;
events,"he says.&#13;
There isn't much time for&#13;
relaxation in all this, Petersen&#13;
admits. "A few more&#13;
hours in the day would help,"&#13;
he explains, "because deadlines&#13;
usually mean extra&#13;
hours. I'm usually busy, and&#13;
but I like it that way."&#13;
A successful graduate of&#13;
Parkside, Petersen does have&#13;
some parting words of encouragement&#13;
for those still&#13;
enrolled.&#13;
"Try to learn everything&#13;
you can in a broad, rather&#13;
than narrow perspective," he&#13;
says. "You never know when&#13;
your career direction could&#13;
change."&#13;
By Jenny Carr&#13;
News Editor&#13;
i&#13;
At last week's PSGA meeting,&#13;
President Adrian Serrano&#13;
recommended and the Senate&#13;
approved the appointment of&#13;
Kay Rouse and Scott Peterson&#13;
as justices for the student&#13;
government association.&#13;
The judicial branch of the&#13;
student government intervenes&#13;
whenever a situation arises&#13;
that requires an official&#13;
interpretation of the PSGA&#13;
constitution.&#13;
Peterson is a former PSGA&#13;
president. Rouse is a Campus&#13;
Ambassador and is involved&#13;
in the Honors program and&#13;
International Studies Club.&#13;
The Senate also approved&#13;
the nominations of Bev Landreman&#13;
and Dan Nicholson to&#13;
the search and screen committee&#13;
to select the director&#13;
of Student Enrollment Services.&#13;
Nicholson worked in enrollment&#13;
services during the&#13;
summer and Landreman,&#13;
president of Peer Support,&#13;
brings a keen interest in&#13;
building enrollment to the&#13;
committee.&#13;
The Library/Learning Center&#13;
will hold its annual book&#13;
sale Tuesday through Thursday,&#13;
Sept. 30 and Oct. 1 and 2,&#13;
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. outside&#13;
the entrance of the Library&#13;
on Level 1.&#13;
Approximately 1500 books&#13;
covering a variety of subjects&#13;
will be included. Most hardcover&#13;
books will sell for $1&#13;
and paperbacks for 25®. There&#13;
also will be a silent auction&#13;
for several special sets of&#13;
books.&#13;
These books have accumulated&#13;
over a period of time&#13;
and consist of duplicates, discards,&#13;
and gift items which&#13;
are not needed for the Library&#13;
collection.&#13;
Credit card tips given Free music&#13;
This year, 83 percent of all&#13;
college students have joined&#13;
the 90 million credit card&#13;
holders in the United States.&#13;
To educate consumers on&#13;
how to select and use these&#13;
cards, the United States Office&#13;
of Consumer Affairs and&#13;
the American Institute of Certified&#13;
Public Accountants&#13;
(AICPA) have published a&#13;
new brochure, "Choosing a&#13;
Credit Card. These 25 Tips&#13;
May Save You Money."&#13;
The brochure suggests that&#13;
consumers look for hidden&#13;
credit card costs and shop for&#13;
the best finance charge before&#13;
acquiring credit cards.&#13;
Credit card fraud may&#13;
reach $1.13 billion by 1990. To&#13;
The most&#13;
demanding,&#13;
challenging,&#13;
enlightening,&#13;
rigorous,&#13;
satisfying,&#13;
difficult,&#13;
rewarding,&#13;
motivating and&#13;
exciting course&#13;
you can take&#13;
in college.&#13;
ARMY RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS&#13;
For more information contact Captain Ed Recke&#13;
(collect) 414-224-7195&#13;
avoid credit card fraud, keep&#13;
a running list of credit card&#13;
numbers and issuer's phone&#13;
numbers in case of loss or&#13;
theft.&#13;
Before acquiring a credit&#13;
card, be aware of finance&#13;
charges that will be imposed&#13;
if the balance is not paid in&#13;
full. Students may not be&#13;
aware that it is illegal to send&#13;
an unsolicited credit card in&#13;
the mail. If a student receives&#13;
a card and doesn't want to&#13;
use it, the card should be&#13;
destroyed.&#13;
Any student wishing a free&#13;
copy of this useful brochure&#13;
may write to: "Choosing a&#13;
Credit Card," Consumer Information&#13;
Center, Pueblo, CO&#13;
81009.&#13;
Three free public concerts&#13;
are scheduled at Parkside for&#13;
1 p.m. in Communication Arts&#13;
Room D118 on Wednesdays&#13;
Sept. 24, Oct. 15 and Oct. 29.&#13;
The series will open with a&#13;
performance by Parkside&#13;
music professor and Fine&#13;
Arts Division chair James&#13;
McKeever, piano; the next&#13;
concert will be by Madison&#13;
classical guitarist George&#13;
Lindquist; and the third by&#13;
the Bliss-Goldberg piano duo&#13;
from Milwaukee.&#13;
Music professor Robert&#13;
Campbell will host the series,&#13;
presented by Parkside's&#13;
music discipline.&#13;
For more information call&#13;
553-2581.&#13;
Here It&#13;
Comes Again&#13;
Quality Men's and&#13;
Women's clothing at&#13;
affordable prices and&#13;
antique jewelry&#13;
Mon. 12-5&#13;
Tues.-Sat. 10-5&#13;
5817 6th Ave.&#13;
Kenosha 652-0430&#13;
Happy Birthday,&#13;
Lori!&#13;
CLUB DEADLINE!!&#13;
The deadline for clubs to&#13;
register for the 1986-87 year&#13;
is Wed., Oct 1st.&#13;
Forms are available in the&#13;
Student Activities Office,&#13;
Union 209&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 25, 1986 5&#13;
Tom Pedersen&#13;
Student breaks ground with study&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
Words such as gravimeter&#13;
and batholith may ribt often&#13;
come into everyday conversation&#13;
but are far from alien for&#13;
Geology student Tom Pedersen.&#13;
A senior at Parkside, Pedersen&#13;
has selected an interesting&#13;
and very important&#13;
senior thesis. By using Geophysics&#13;
and a process called&#13;
a gravity survey, he is determining&#13;
the gravitational geology&#13;
of an area in northern&#13;
Wisconsin. The importance of&#13;
Pedersen's work is that it is&#13;
the first gravity survey done&#13;
in this area of Wisconsin, an&#13;
astounding feat for a professor,&#13;
let alone a student.&#13;
Pedersen is studying an&#13;
area in northern Wisconsin&#13;
called the Wolf River&#13;
batholith. A batholith is basicallly&#13;
a magnetic intrusion&#13;
that occurred under the Earth's&#13;
surface approximately&#13;
1500 million years ago. In&#13;
other words, rocks that became&#13;
magnetic rose to just&#13;
under the Earth's surface.&#13;
Pedersen has so far covered&#13;
175 miles in his studies. He&#13;
measures differences in the&#13;
intensity of the Wolf river&#13;
batholith gravity field in two&#13;
lines across northern Wisconsin.&#13;
He picked his starting&#13;
and end points in towns. One&#13;
line runs from Wild Rose to&#13;
Amberg; the other from&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Geology student Tom Pedersen displays his gravimeter on&#13;
loan from UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
Gleason to Nichols.&#13;
Pedersen takes his readings&#13;
with an instrument called a&#13;
gravimeter (on loan from&#13;
UW-Milwaukee). This instrument&#13;
measures gravity beneath&#13;
the Earth's surface. All&#13;
of his readings have to be&#13;
taken using topographic maps&#13;
at road intersections. He&#13;
must measure in places&#13;
where exact elevations can be&#13;
recorded.&#13;
Pedersen began working on&#13;
his thesis in August of this&#13;
year. Nearly all of his data&#13;
has been collected and he will&#13;
complete his readings this&#13;
October. "That's the easy&#13;
part," he adds. His next project&#13;
will be to take all of the&#13;
data he has been collecting&#13;
and feed it into a computer&#13;
where it will be transferred&#13;
into truly usable data. As of&#13;
now, Pedersen has only raw&#13;
data with which to measure&#13;
his success. "Right now, I&#13;
can't tell too much (whether&#13;
the data is good or not), because&#13;
it isn't processed. Once&#13;
I get it out of the computer, it&#13;
will be well worthwhile," he&#13;
commented.&#13;
The computer will also correct&#13;
drifts (errors) in the&#13;
gravimeter and account for&#13;
elevation differences. Geographical&#13;
factors such as&#13;
large hills must be accounted&#13;
for, since they can cause errors&#13;
in the gravimeter readings.&#13;
The finished product will&#13;
provide data to allow a map&#13;
similar to a topographic map&#13;
to be created. However, instead&#13;
of changes in elevation,&#13;
this map will show changes in&#13;
gravitation. This map will be&#13;
called a Bouguer (pronounced&#13;
boo-gay) Anomaly Map. Bouguer&#13;
is the man who invented&#13;
it and anomaly means an outof-&#13;
the-ordinary clash between&#13;
two things. The map will&#13;
show anomalies, or changes,&#13;
in the gravitational field in&#13;
the Wolf River batholith.&#13;
Pedersen expects the process&#13;
to be finished next&#13;
spring. He may then give a&#13;
talk on his findings in May&#13;
1987 at the Institute on Lake&#13;
Superior Geology, and perhaps&#13;
even have a paper published&#13;
to be used in the institute's&#13;
guide. He points out&#13;
that this project is "a very&#13;
general type of survey; later&#13;
on there will be more studies&#13;
done in smaller areas to determine&#13;
exact geology."&#13;
. Pedersen see page 6&#13;
Math support group meets&#13;
A math support group is&#13;
being offered by the Academic&#13;
Resource Center and&#13;
the Student Counseling and&#13;
Development Office on Wednesdays&#13;
from 3 to 4 p.m. beginning&#13;
Oct. 1.&#13;
The group will meet weekly&#13;
for the first four Wednesdays,&#13;
and after that meetings will&#13;
be scheduled based on the&#13;
needs of the group.&#13;
If you are enrolled in Math&#13;
09-010, 66-015 or 66-016 and believe&#13;
that a math support&#13;
group would be helpful to&#13;
you, then call 553-2605 or stop&#13;
by WLLC D175 to register.&#13;
This group is designed to offeryou&#13;
emotional support and&#13;
is not a substitute for math&#13;
tutoring, which is available in&#13;
the Academic Resource Center.&#13;
Enrollment is limited; so&#13;
call immediately.&#13;
If you have any questions,&#13;
contact Doris Nice at 553-2395&#13;
or Barbara Larson at&#13;
553-2122.&#13;
If l i f e i s a ma t t e r of&#13;
choice, would you&#13;
want someone&#13;
choosing for you?&#13;
Protect your life by&#13;
Protecting the preborn..&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin ProLife&#13;
Coalition&#13;
DROP IN-JOIN UP&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
September 29&#13;
9:00 a.m. -1:00 p.m.&#13;
MAIN CONCOURSE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
SPONSORED BY S.O.C.&#13;
Energy talk&#13;
Energy is essential to the&#13;
survival of any population of&#13;
organisms. This energy is&#13;
generally available in many&#13;
forms-food, sunlight, minerals,&#13;
etc., but the total&#13;
amount is always finite. The&#13;
fact that energy is limited&#13;
means that any population&#13;
must learn to live within its&#13;
"energy budget" or face&#13;
ecological disaster.&#13;
Energy and energy consumption&#13;
have long been a&#13;
concern of physicists. The use&#13;
of energy by populations will&#13;
be the subject of a Physics&#13;
Colloquium to be presented&#13;
by Dale Snider of the UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Physics Department.&#13;
The talk is titled "Population&#13;
and Energy" and is based on&#13;
a set of articles Snider wrote&#13;
for the Milwaukee Journal.&#13;
"Population and Energy" will&#13;
be given at 1 p.m. on Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 1, in 230 Greenquist.&#13;
The talk is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
Total&#13;
Service&#13;
for&#13;
U. W. Parkside&#13;
Employees&#13;
and&#13;
Students&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
Room 286&#13;
Mon. • FrI. 10 - 3&#13;
Serving four other locations&#13;
Racine Waukesha&#13;
Burlington Milwaukee&#13;
6 Thursday, September 25, 1986 RANGER&#13;
Week at the Park&#13;
Folk music, films on tap&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 25&#13;
Movie: "Back to the Future"&#13;
(PG) will be shown at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission at the door is $1&#13;
for a Parkside student and $2&#13;
for others. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
Workshop: "Interview Techniques"&#13;
starts at 5:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union 104. Call ext. 2452 for&#13;
reservations.&#13;
Movie: "Slave of Love" will&#13;
be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Tickets for the&#13;
Thursday Foreign Film Series&#13;
will be available at the&#13;
door.&#13;
Friday, Sept. 26&#13;
Movie: "Back to the Future"&#13;
will be repeated at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
and at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
live Entertainment: featuring&#13;
"Gypsy" starts at 8:30&#13;
p.m. in Union Square. Admission&#13;
will be charged at the&#13;
door. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 27&#13;
Short Courses: "The Gifted&#13;
Child" starts at 9:30 a.m. and&#13;
"Ballet for Children" starts&#13;
at 12:30 p.m. Call ext. 2312 for&#13;
details. Sponsored by the Continuing&#13;
Education Office.&#13;
Concert: starting at 7 p.m. in&#13;
the Physical Education Building&#13;
featuring Pete Seeger,&#13;
Bobby McGee, Larry Penn,&#13;
Mud River Lee and more.&#13;
Tickets are available at the&#13;
Union Information Center;&#13;
admission is $10.00.&#13;
Movie: "Slave of Love" will&#13;
be repeated at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. All seats are&#13;
sold for the Saturday Foreign&#13;
Film Series.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 28&#13;
Movie: "Slave of Love" will&#13;
be repeated at 2 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Tickets for the&#13;
Sunday Foreign Film Series&#13;
will be available at the door.&#13;
Movie: "Back to the Future"&#13;
will be repeated at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Sept. 29&#13;
Round Table: "Problems of&#13;
Health Policy" by Dr. John&#13;
Surry of the Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin Family Practice&#13;
Center starts at 12 noon in&#13;
Union 106. The event is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
Tuesday, Sept. 30&#13;
Short Courses: "Adult Children&#13;
of Alcoholics" starts at 7&#13;
p.m. in T182 and "Investing&#13;
Those Hard Earned Dollars"&#13;
starts at 7 p.m. in T281. Spon-&#13;
1,000,000 Customers&#13;
Can't Be Wrong!&#13;
Now on Sale!&#13;
$59each&#13;
3fors159&#13;
Choice of finishes:&#13;
• Oak&#13;
. • While&#13;
\ • Walnut&#13;
Each bookcase corses with A&#13;
shelves (3 ate adjustable). Eoch&#13;
unit measues 3CTW « 72"H « 12"D&#13;
Oefcveiy not included&#13;
That's how many bookcases&#13;
Scandinavian Design has&#13;
sold over the last 10 years.&#13;
That's because people come&#13;
back for quality., it's&#13;
something we've been&#13;
selling for a long time.&#13;
Now you can enjoy our bestselling&#13;
bcokcase at a terrific&#13;
price! . which makes it an&#13;
even better value&#13;
Our sturdy bookcases are in&#13;
stock, so you can take them&#13;
home today But. don't&#13;
delay, this special pricing&#13;
doesn't last long!&#13;
Sale ends September 28.&#13;
All accessories also on sale!&#13;
Large docre Small aoas&#13;
Now $27 Now $22.50&#13;
©OSS OOOI5&#13;
Now $45&#13;
Drco W&#13;
Now $22.50&#13;
. 10" drainer&#13;
Now $26.10&#13;
New! $3Q&#13;
30" high w&#13;
16" 3 for $199&#13;
deep! Peg S89 eoch&#13;
Perfect for the study,&#13;
den, bedroom, even&#13;
the kids' room!&#13;
&amp; c* me cioces »c*j con use a snc*t&#13;
tor*cose Jhecat^rxm rr&gt;e x-Jcnon mo&#13;
garage, evw n ca« o&#13;
*rwto5n«h Peg $ J9&#13;
Coop coc*cas« are g&#13;
C* Ovori str*QCVKTSCP&#13;
furniture with a difference&#13;
Scandinavian Design mm&#13;
3127 Roosevelt Road, Kenosha • 652-0034&#13;
Daily 10-6 (Friday 'til 9) • Saturday 10-5 • Sunday 1 -5&#13;
sored by the Continuing Education&#13;
Office.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 1&#13;
Coffeehouse: featuring "Moulin&#13;
Rouge" from noon to 2&#13;
p.m. and from 6 p.m. to 8&#13;
p.m. in the Union Bazaar&#13;
Area. All are welcome. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
Workshops: "Estate Planning&#13;
starts at 7 p.m. in T281 and&#13;
"Beginning Guitar" starts at&#13;
8 p.m. in CA D118. Call ext.&#13;
2312 for reservations.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 2&#13;
Workshop: "Grantsmanship"&#13;
starts at 8:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
104. Sponsored by the Continuing&#13;
Education Office.&#13;
Movies: "Romancing the&#13;
Stone" and "Jewel of the&#13;
Nile," both rated PG, will be&#13;
shown at 3:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission at&#13;
the door is $1 for a Parkside&#13;
student and $2 for others.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Workshop: "Pricing Strategy:&#13;
How Much To Charge"&#13;
starts at 6 p.m. Call ext. 2312&#13;
for details.&#13;
Movie: "They Don't Wear&#13;
Black Ties" will be shown at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Tickets are available&#13;
for the Thursday Foreign&#13;
Film Series.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Looks Good&#13;
On A&#13;
Resume&#13;
Geology student&#13;
Pedersen from page 5&#13;
Peter Nielsen, a member of&#13;
the geology faculty, has&#13;
helped Pedersen with his&#13;
studies. Nielsen will be coauthor&#13;
of the paper, and Pedersen&#13;
expressed that "he&#13;
has been an extreme help.&#13;
Most of the project was laid&#13;
out by him, and I carried it&#13;
out. Without him this&#13;
wouldn't be happening." He&#13;
also added that "when I&#13;
started this survey, I knew&#13;
nothing about gravitational&#13;
measure. This experience&#13;
was to teach me about gravitational&#13;
survey.''&#13;
One of Pedersen's main&#13;
reasons for picking such an&#13;
unusual, unexplored thesis&#13;
was "to better my chances of&#13;
getting into a graduate school&#13;
with some sort of assistantship.&#13;
Learning the geophysical&#13;
techniques of gravitational&#13;
surveying will hopefully&#13;
impress some of the larger&#13;
graduate schools." He adds&#13;
with a hopeful joke, "Maybe&#13;
they will let me go for free."&#13;
Day care&#13;
Day care from page 7&#13;
staff of Parkside is lower&#13;
than that of the general public.&#13;
According to Thomas,&#13;
there are no foreseen cuts in&#13;
funding.&#13;
One improvement Madson&#13;
says the center would like to&#13;
make is renovation and new&#13;
equipment for the playground.&#13;
"The nutritional balance of&#13;
childrens' lunches is a concern,"&#13;
Thomas states, as the&#13;
center does not serve hot lunches.&#13;
Of course, at first, both parents&#13;
and children feel a little&#13;
apprehensive aobut a day&#13;
care center. The reservations&#13;
they have, though, are usually&#13;
short-lived. Parents receive&#13;
the assurances of the&#13;
staff, and adjacent to Preschool&#13;
Program Coordinator,&#13;
Janet Robbins' office is a resource&#13;
center which contains&#13;
literature parents can read to&#13;
learn about various characteristics&#13;
of their children's&#13;
ages.&#13;
BSO sets agenda&#13;
The Black Student Organization&#13;
(BSO) is in the process&#13;
of re-establishing its foundation&#13;
after a series of unfortunate&#13;
developments during the&#13;
85-86 school year.&#13;
The organization was sanctioned&#13;
by the Parkside Office&#13;
of Student Life for an infraction&#13;
of procedure; its elections&#13;
were contested, a controversial&#13;
"Miss BSO" pageant&#13;
was conducted and there&#13;
have been difficulties concerning&#13;
the operation of the&#13;
Minority Student Resource&#13;
Center.&#13;
In an effort to reaffirm its&#13;
credibility, Pamela Smith,&#13;
president, conducted meetings&#13;
over the summer with&#13;
elected BSO officers who&#13;
agreed to serve in a temporary&#13;
capacity and to hold new&#13;
elections. A revised constitution&#13;
has also been drafted and&#13;
will be ratified after installation&#13;
of officers. In addition, at&#13;
CH1PM&#13;
CANTONESE &amp; AMERICAN RESTAURANT&#13;
DELICIOUS CANTONESE &amp; AMERICAN FOODS - FAMILY DINNERS&#13;
DINE IN OR CARRY OUT - LE AVE THE COOKING TO US&#13;
least three BSO members will&#13;
attend the Student Leadership&#13;
Workshop at Camp Juniper&#13;
Knolls, and a 1986-87 Work&#13;
Plan will be developed for&#13;
submission to the Student&#13;
Life office. These steps are&#13;
being taken to insure a productive&#13;
and successful operation&#13;
of BSO during the coming&#13;
year.&#13;
The BSO is starting ANEW!&#13;
Membership is open to all&#13;
students who support the&#13;
goals, objectives and programs&#13;
of the organization.&#13;
Your ideas and input are&#13;
needed! The success and effectiveness&#13;
of the organization&#13;
will depend solely on the&#13;
participation of its members.&#13;
Memberships are available&#13;
during hours posted in the&#13;
Minority Student Resource&#13;
Center, MOLN Dill. JOIN&#13;
TODAY!&#13;
A Candidates' Forum will&#13;
be held during the general&#13;
meeting of the BSO on Wednesday,&#13;
September 24, 1986 at&#13;
1 PM in Molinaro D107. Nominees&#13;
for 1986-87 school year&#13;
will be introduced. Vote on&#13;
Thursday and Friday, Sept.,&#13;
26-27! Voting opened to members&#13;
ohly!&#13;
BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCHEONS&#13;
COCKTAIL LOUNGE&#13;
BANQUET ROOM&#13;
YOUR HOST TOMMY KM&#13;
ORDER BY PHONE FOR FAST SERVICE&#13;
J Gnonnok Drfb» Of*' ObiMokw •&#13;
•' 553-5514&#13;
— F R E E P A R K I N G&#13;
ES 1700 Sheridan Rd., Keno. fU&#13;
^HSHSE5asasHsasasa_saj5Hsas^5Bs3&#13;
CLOSED MONDAY&#13;
TUES. THRU SUN 11 30A M - 9 .30P M&#13;
FRI ANO SAT 11 30A M 11 30P M&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Needs&#13;
Writers&#13;
How do Parkside's facilities compare to others? by Ronda Ditter&#13;
Today, more mother than&#13;
ever are joining the work&#13;
force. In fact, two-thirds of&#13;
America's moms have decided,&#13;
for various reasons, to&#13;
work outside the home.&#13;
However, because full-time&#13;
'baby sitters' are costly and&#13;
often hard to find, many&#13;
mothers have opted for private&#13;
child care outside the&#13;
home. These day care centers&#13;
aim toward giving the child a&#13;
'more-fun-than-home' experience.&#13;
Day care flourished in the&#13;
late 70's, as an increasing&#13;
number of women began&#13;
working. Since then, the cen-&#13;
THE FAR SIDE&#13;
ters have been criticized for&#13;
using child care services as a&#13;
means for quick cash.&#13;
The cost of child care&#13;
ranges widely from center to&#13;
center, largely depending&#13;
upon the number of hours the&#13;
child remains there and&#13;
whether or not he or she is&#13;
fed a snack or a meal.&#13;
In the east, the cost per&#13;
eight-hour day is, on the average,&#13;
$26. The same can be&#13;
said for the west, although&#13;
the northern, southern and&#13;
midwestern regions are&#13;
slightly cheaper, charging an&#13;
average price of $22 per&#13;
eight-hour day.&#13;
Most childcare agencies&#13;
have lengthy rules and regu-&#13;
By GARY LARSON&#13;
lations that are established&#13;
largely by the state. Most&#13;
deal with maintaining the&#13;
building, safety approval of&#13;
all recreational apparati (including&#13;
everything from a&#13;
ball to a swingset) and the&#13;
type of food served (snacks&#13;
must be nutritional and meals&#13;
must contain all four food&#13;
groups).&#13;
Finally, each 'social counselor,'&#13;
or day care attendant,&#13;
must report any signs of&#13;
abuse to authorities or risk&#13;
losing his required permit. In&#13;
addition, it is also possible&#13;
that these attendants can face&#13;
conviction as an accomplice&#13;
if the child is later found to&#13;
be the victim of abuse. or playing in a maze of tires. photo by Dave McEv°y&#13;
Pignottl's&#13;
Liquor&#13;
HOURS&#13;
Open Mon. thru Sat.&#13;
9-9&#13;
Open Sunday&#13;
10-9&#13;
UWP&#13;
- W W W W J . W W W * * * * * * * * * * : FREE POSTERS : Last Week's Winner:&#13;
Christina Sibilsky&#13;
This Week's Prize&#13;
A Dr. McGillicuddy Mirror&#13;
Bay Cere&#13;
What exactly is it all about, anyway?&#13;
"Wawa!"&#13;
by Chris Lojeski&#13;
The Budlowe Day Care&#13;
Center, housed on 30th&#13;
Avenue, between Tallent Hall&#13;
and Orchard Court Apartments,&#13;
serves the students&#13;
and staff of Parkside, in addition&#13;
to the general public.&#13;
The center, with halls lined&#13;
with apples laminated with&#13;
each child's name, and&#13;
murals painted by the children,&#13;
cares for children ranging&#13;
in age from newborn infants&#13;
up to 4-year-olds.&#13;
They are divided by age&#13;
into classrooms, according to&#13;
the Infant/Toddler Program&#13;
Coordinator, Terrie Madson.&#13;
The Classrooms have names&#13;
such as "Flower Garden,"&#13;
"Pumpkin Patch" and&#13;
"Apple Tree Room."&#13;
Each classroom is staffed&#13;
1585- North 22nd Avenue • Ph. 551-8020&#13;
* COME REGISTER FOR OUR FREE DRAWING *&#13;
• M ICHELOB $199&#13;
6 pk cans&#13;
$795&#13;
24/12 oz cans&#13;
OLD STYLE&#13;
40 oz Bottles&#13;
'THE BIG ONE'&#13;
Seagrams&#13;
Orlglnal*Golden»Peach&#13;
$299-,*&#13;
$1699CM0I24&#13;
use our products in moderation.&#13;
CLUB&#13;
Fuzzy Navel&#13;
i $399 750ml&#13;
VODKA %&#13;
GIN i&#13;
^4®® liter&#13;
by two teachers, possessing&#13;
at least an Associate or&#13;
Bachelor's Degree, and they&#13;
make up lesson plans for&#13;
each day, which are posted&#13;
right next to the sign-in sheet&#13;
so parents can easily see&#13;
what their children will spend&#13;
the day doing. According to&#13;
Sherry Thomas, the Day Care&#13;
Center's Coordinator, the children's&#13;
classes entail "structured&#13;
play" geared to the&#13;
various age groups. Says&#13;
Thomas, "We believe that&#13;
children learn through play."&#13;
Each month at the day care&#13;
center brings a new theme.&#13;
For instance one month was&#13;
the "Self-concept" theme,&#13;
which focused on how the&#13;
children see themselves.&#13;
Next, is the "Fall" theme,&#13;
which focuses on the changes&#13;
Autumn brings, such as the&#13;
changes in nature, animals,&#13;
and harvesting.&#13;
According to laws of licensing,&#13;
the children are required&#13;
to take a nap each afternoon&#13;
for a couple hours, and students&#13;
are employed as nap&#13;
aides. Trish Arentz, a student&#13;
working at the center, states,&#13;
"The four-year-olds use less&#13;
nap time, so for them the&#13;
time between noon and 2 is&#13;
usually used mainly as quiet&#13;
time."&#13;
"The day care center is&#13;
supported by funding from&#13;
the University and by income&#13;
the center generates," says&#13;
Madson. The charge is higher&#13;
for infants, and although parents&#13;
sometimes run into a&#13;
problem with financial aid,&#13;
the charge for students and&#13;
Day care see page 6&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
For kids in day care, fun can mean peeking&#13;
through a fence ...&#13;
Exclusive interview&#13;
Timbuk 3 an up-and-coming music act&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
A man, a woman, and a&#13;
boom box.&#13;
Not what you would consider&#13;
the basis for a strong and&#13;
innovative new band. However,&#13;
that's just what Timbuk&#13;
3 is.&#13;
He is Pat McDonald,&#13;
founder of the popular and influential&#13;
early eighties Madison&#13;
band, Pat McDonald and&#13;
the Essentials, and Timbuk&#13;
3's main songwriter.&#13;
She is Barbara K. McDonald,&#13;
guitar, violin and mandolin&#13;
player, and Pat's wife&#13;
and partner in the Austin,&#13;
Texas-based duo.&#13;
And the boom box is just&#13;
that, a tape player which, in&#13;
concert, plays the rhythm&#13;
tracks recorded by Pat.&#13;
These rhythm tracks, however,&#13;
are not the electronic&#13;
banging which these days&#13;
passes for "rhythm," rather,&#13;
these tracks consist of honestto-&#13;
god bass guitar and drums.&#13;
The band's first album, on&#13;
I.R.S. records, entitled&#13;
"Greetings from Timbuk 3,"&#13;
is an eclectic set of songs reflecting&#13;
a wide variety of influences.&#13;
"I think I have hundreds&#13;
of them," said Pat,&#13;
during a recent phone interview.&#13;
"I'm always listening&#13;
to different kinds of things. I&#13;
turn on the radio now and&#13;
then, and something will&#13;
manage to catch my interest."&#13;
This diverse group of influence&#13;
ranges from country&#13;
to funk to straight ahead rock&#13;
and roll.&#13;
Timbuk 3 first gained attention&#13;
when they appeared on&#13;
the MTV music series "The&#13;
Cutting Edge." A recording&#13;
contract with I.R.S. followed&#13;
closely, and it was off to Hollywood&#13;
to record the album.&#13;
Said Pat, "The record is&#13;
probably the loest-budget&#13;
I.R.S. record in the history of&#13;
the company. The whole thing&#13;
Book review&#13;
IN l evV&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
"Cinema of Paradox" by&#13;
Evelyn Ehrilich (Columbia&#13;
University Press) is sub-titled&#13;
"French filmmaking during&#13;
the German Occupation" and&#13;
is a scholarly study of the&#13;
era.&#13;
What characterizes this&#13;
book over the standard scholarly&#13;
cinema tome is that is&#13;
combines its perception on&#13;
film with a thorough knowledge&#13;
of the era. Interviews&#13;
with performers and filmmakers&#13;
help to enhance the&#13;
careful study, while listings&#13;
of film production during the&#13;
era (1940-1944) make it a&#13;
valuable reference as well.&#13;
This portion of French filmmaking&#13;
is a pre-New Wave&#13;
look at how films during that&#13;
time and under those conditions&#13;
were created under&#13;
strict jurisdiction of dictatorial&#13;
leadership, suppressing&#13;
Ron's Place&#13;
Sandwiches and Cocktails&#13;
TRY OUR&#13;
FAMOUS&#13;
Opens Mon-Sat 11 am&#13;
Sundays 12 noon&#13;
3301 52nd&#13;
Kenosha, Wl&#13;
657-4455&#13;
was done for about $15,000."&#13;
"And," added Barbara,&#13;
"that included everything, including&#13;
putting us up in L.A.&#13;
The actual money spent on&#13;
the recording of the album&#13;
was about eight or nine thousand."&#13;
The stripped-down&#13;
sound resulting from this low&#13;
budget suits the band. The album's&#13;
sound is crisp and&#13;
clear and the minimum of&#13;
studio tricks allows every element&#13;
of the music to shine&#13;
through.&#13;
Many of Pat's songs can be&#13;
seen as somewhat cynical,&#13;
but this cynicism is almost always&#13;
backed up with a sense&#13;
of humor. The subjects of&#13;
these songs range from political&#13;
comment ("Just Another&#13;
Movie") to society's stereotyping&#13;
of people by the way&#13;
they wear their hair ("Haircuts&#13;
and Attitudes.") In spite&#13;
of his often biting jabs at society&#13;
and the world, Pat describes&#13;
himself as "basically&#13;
Barbara K (I) and Pat McDonald&#13;
a happy person. It's just that&#13;
it would be hard to write&#13;
songs all the time about sitting&#13;
on the porch and watching&#13;
the lawn grow."&#13;
The McDonalds are quite&#13;
happy with the band's line-up&#13;
at the present time. They feel&#13;
that the "jambox" is an ideal&#13;
third band member. It allows&#13;
them the freedom to play&#13;
anywhere.&#13;
French cinema released&#13;
much of the imagination and&#13;
yet still leaving room for&#13;
some important works. One&#13;
can also see how the French&#13;
filmmakers eventually evolved&#13;
into a fascination with&#13;
American film noir from this&#13;
very period (which culminated&#13;
in the New Wave of French&#13;
filmmaking that gave us&#13;
artists like Truffeau, Cocteau,&#13;
and Renoir).&#13;
That this is an intelligent,&#13;
scholarly study makes it important&#13;
for serious students of&#13;
the cinema (especially since&#13;
it deals with an aspect of the&#13;
French cinema that is often&#13;
overlooked in favor of the&#13;
more chic New Wave). Its&#13;
cerebral presentation is combined&#13;
with straight factual&#13;
data for reference purposes&#13;
which makes it a library imperative.&#13;
"Cinema of Paradox" is yet&#13;
another important study on&#13;
French cinema and one which&#13;
is complete and insightful.&#13;
That it covers much untouched&#13;
territory in a comprehensive&#13;
manner adds immeasurably&#13;
to its value.&#13;
Vopat to give reading&#13;
On Sunday, Sept. 28 at 5&#13;
p.m. the Humanities Symposium&#13;
will kick off its 1986-87&#13;
season by sponsoring a reading&#13;
by Professor Carole&#13;
Vopat of excerpts from her&#13;
award-winning novel-in-progress,&#13;
"The Cookie Stories."&#13;
The gathering will take&#13;
place at the home of Professor&#13;
James Dean, 1642 Park&#13;
Avenue, Racine, and will feature&#13;
food and drink as sell as&#13;
Professor Vopat. Everyone is&#13;
invited, and urged to bring&#13;
refreshments to share.&#13;
Carole Vopat has been&#13;
working on a novel, "The&#13;
Cookie Stories," since July&#13;
1980. In 1983 she received an&#13;
Honorable Mention Award in&#13;
the Wisconsin Arts Board's&#13;
Fellowship Program. That&#13;
same year the Board awarded&#13;
her a grant of $3000 to&#13;
continue work on her novel.&#13;
SWATCH THIS SPACE - NEXT WEEK ^&#13;
£YOU - MAY BE A WINNER 5&#13;
% 10 free movie passes (1 student and&#13;
^ guest) will be awarded in next&#13;
J week's Ranger.&#13;
^ (Each student winner will be chosen&#13;
^ at random and will also receive&#13;
^ refreshments.)&#13;
J Winners sponsored by&#13;
•, U.A. CINEMA AND&#13;
* RANGER STAFF&#13;
%&#13;
%&#13;
%&#13;
%&#13;
The Board described her&#13;
work as "luminous" and&#13;
"riveting," especially praising&#13;
the character development.&#13;
"Panelists found themselves&#13;
so drawn into the story&#13;
that they wanted to know&#13;
more about Cookie at the&#13;
chapter's end. The narrative&#13;
development is deft and the&#13;
content important."&#13;
Ms. Vopat received a second&#13;
grant from the Arts&#13;
Board in 1984, and a third this&#13;
past summer. She has also&#13;
been awarded a sabbatical&#13;
leave to work on her novel for&#13;
the Spring semester, 1987,&#13;
from Parkside. Vopat lives in&#13;
Milwaukee and has two cats.&#13;
THE OLD BOOK CORNER&#13;
312 — 6th St. Racine&#13;
Gently Used Books&#13;
on all subjects.&#13;
Racine's only&#13;
used Bookstore.&#13;
MARTHA MERRELLS&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
HANGER Thursday, September 25,1986 9&#13;
Record review&#13;
Paul hits the bottom after long fall&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Since 1970, people have&#13;
been saying that Paul McCartney's&#13;
music is feeble&#13;
when compred to his work&#13;
with the Beatles.&#13;
Today, some 12 albums&#13;
after the break-up of the Fab&#13;
Four, that complaint is no&#13;
longer justified.&#13;
That's because "Press to&#13;
Play," Paul's latest, is feeble&#13;
even by today's undemanding&#13;
standards.&#13;
The most successful songwriter&#13;
in the history of recorded&#13;
sound, McCartney has,&#13;
plainly and simply, run out of&#13;
worthwhile ideas. The selections&#13;
on "Press to Play" (six&#13;
written in collaboration with&#13;
lOcc's Eric Stewart) are&#13;
dumb, drab throwaways with&#13;
repetitious rhythms and pseudo-&#13;
surrealistic lyrics that are&#13;
as laughable as they are impenetrable.&#13;
From McCartney's point of&#13;
view, such cuts, like "However&#13;
Absurd," "Pretty Little&#13;
Head" and "Press" (which&#13;
may very well be the worst&#13;
single of the year) represent&#13;
an attempt to shake the cutesy&#13;
balladeer tag his post-Beatles&#13;
work has earned him.&#13;
For listeners, however,&#13;
these songs merely reinforce&#13;
why that stereotype was developed&#13;
to begin with--because&#13;
Pauly (unlike John&#13;
Lennon) never was too good&#13;
with words and thereby had&#13;
to rely on catchy melodies&#13;
and his admittedly sweet&#13;
voice to succeed.&#13;
But even the pipes are corroding&#13;
these days. Although&#13;
in the past his singing could&#13;
make worthless efforts like&#13;
"No More Lonely Nights"&#13;
palatable, that option is no&#13;
longer open. Tracks like&#13;
"Footprints" and "Angry" illustrate&#13;
just how thin the&#13;
voice has gotten when it&#13;
reaches for those upper octaves.&#13;
And "Only Love&#13;
Remains," a more McCartneyesque&#13;
weeper, is tightly&#13;
miked and overdubbed, an&#13;
obvious response to rickety&#13;
vocal cords.&#13;
If there is a bright spot surrounding&#13;
the release of this&#13;
woeful record, it is that it finally&#13;
frees Beatlemaniacs&#13;
from the burden of shaking&#13;
their heads and muttering,&#13;
"Is this the same guy who&#13;
wrote 'Eleanor Rigby' and&#13;
'We Can Work It Out'? "&#13;
"Press to Play," once and&#13;
for all, proves that it isn't. Paul McCartney&#13;
Short Cuts&#13;
RETURNED TO THE&#13;
SCENE OF THE CRIME&#13;
by Rossington (Atlantic)&#13;
Once known as the Rossington-&#13;
Collins has since departed),&#13;
Rossington now not&#13;
only stands for guitarist-songwriter&#13;
Gary Rossington, but&#13;
also lead vocalist Dale Krantz-&#13;
Rossington.&#13;
This latest release presents&#13;
the listener with a diverse&#13;
style of straight-ahead rock&#13;
and roll that is too gritty for&#13;
power pop and yet too tame&#13;
to be classified heavy metal.&#13;
Dale Krantz-Rossington's&#13;
vocals still have the smooth&#13;
flow that characterized earlier&#13;
Rossington-Collins works&#13;
and enhance the better tracks&#13;
on this album. The most successsful&#13;
cuts are those that&#13;
employ a rock ballad style as&#13;
opposed to the more formulaic&#13;
upbeat numbers. The lyrics&#13;
are a welcome generic&#13;
relief from all of the pretentious&#13;
attempts at "meaningful"&#13;
words that usually do no&#13;
more than appear heavy handed&#13;
and sanctimonious.&#13;
"Returned to the Scene of&#13;
the Crime" has a 1970's rock&#13;
and roll reel, something that&#13;
could be dismissed as dated.&#13;
However in the wake of so&#13;
many groups that fall under&#13;
the category of "New music"&#13;
giving us no more than redundant&#13;
electronics and depressed&#13;
moaning for vocals,&#13;
the purity of hearing genuine&#13;
instruments rather than machines&#13;
is a welcome step&#13;
backwards. At least before&#13;
we forget how rock and roll&#13;
with true feeling sounds.&#13;
•Jim Neibaur-&#13;
BOOMERANG&#13;
by Boomerang (Atlantic)&#13;
This new female rock act&#13;
consists of three vocalists-Adriana&#13;
Kaegi, Cheryl Poirier&#13;
and Perri Lister. As you have&#13;
probably already guessed,&#13;
they sound a great deal like&#13;
The Go-Go's and Bananarama.&#13;
This, their debut album,&#13;
contains ten tracks, most of&#13;
which are fast-paced and upbeat.&#13;
The title cut, "When the&#13;
Phone Stops Ringing," "Baby&#13;
I'm Back in Love Again,"&#13;
and "In the Darkness" are&#13;
amoung the dancable songs&#13;
that seem destined for Top&#13;
Forty popularity, as the trio&#13;
presents this dance pop style&#13;
quite effectively.&#13;
While helping Kaegi with&#13;
artistic direction, Poirier also&#13;
accomplishes the task of&#13;
vocal arrangements. Kaegi is&#13;
the artistic talent responsible&#13;
for the album cover as well.&#13;
If you're a fan of the contemporary&#13;
girl group pop formula&#13;
that characterizes the&#13;
work of The Go-Go's and Bananarama,&#13;
"Boomerang" is&#13;
an effort that's well worth&#13;
picking up.&#13;
•Karen Wiegert-&#13;
FIRST DOWN AND TEN&#13;
by Keep It Dark (Elektra)&#13;
Yet another group from&#13;
England trying to make it big&#13;
with the same old pop formulas-&#13;
Keep It Dark.&#13;
Using the mellow sort of&#13;
tones of the Dream Academy&#13;
and the jazzlike style of the&#13;
Blow Monkeys, Keep It Dark&#13;
has managed to create an unobtusive&#13;
collection of tunes&#13;
that are sure to be accepted&#13;
by the same Top 40 charts&#13;
that made A-hA, Wham!, and&#13;
Whitney Houston big.&#13;
Although it is quiet talented,&#13;
the instrumentation is&#13;
not innovative. The saxaphone&#13;
solo on "Better Than Me"&#13;
is an excellent piece of jazz&#13;
work and the horns throughout&#13;
the album are superbly&#13;
used. The use of keyboards in&#13;
the style of Howard Jones is&#13;
pervasive in this work. Very&#13;
unusual is the incredible similarity&#13;
between the background&#13;
of "Fish Out Of&#13;
Water" and Steely Dan's 1972&#13;
(3H2VCINEMAS 5 57th AVE &amp; 75th St.&#13;
694 7301&#13;
ti Playing For Keeps"&#13;
Danny has a dream of turning a wreck into&#13;
a rock and roll hotel. But the town, the&#13;
cops and the odds are against him. So,&#13;
he's getting some help from the oddest&#13;
team he can find his friends.&#13;
This youth-oriented, rags-to-riches story&#13;
features music by Phil Collins, Pete&#13;
Townshend, Julian Lennon, OMD,&#13;
Arcadia, Sister Sledge, Eugene Wilde,&#13;
Loose Ends, Peter Frampton and Chris&#13;
Thompson.&#13;
"Playing for Keeps," starring Daniel&#13;
Jordano, Matthew Penn and Leon W.&#13;
Grant, opens Oct. 3 at the UA Cinema 5&#13;
Theater located at 7310 57th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
hit "Reelin in the Years."&#13;
Do not, however, expect too&#13;
much in the way of lyrical intellectuality.&#13;
They range&#13;
from sappy love songs ("If&#13;
you'll be mine tonight then&#13;
I'll be yours") to more sappy&#13;
love songs ("Love lost forever-&#13;
makes me cry").&#13;
The vocals of Jimmy Barret&#13;
are very soothing, something&#13;
on the order of a heavy&#13;
overdose of either. He seems&#13;
to be in severe emotional pain&#13;
with each note sung. An emotional,&#13;
tear jerking, crystal&#13;
clear voice with these lyrics&#13;
make for such deep love&#13;
songs. Such emotion! Such&#13;
pain! Such standard, trendy&#13;
music.&#13;
Keep It Dark is a good&#13;
standard pop group, a new&#13;
version of the old fare. If you&#13;
search for daring, creative&#13;
music, you have gone to the&#13;
wrong group. However, this is&#13;
just the thing for any pop&#13;
music fan!&#13;
•Tyson Wilda-&#13;
EAT YOUR PAISLEY!&#13;
by The Dead Milkmen&#13;
(Restless)&#13;
Unusual even for a punk&#13;
group, this is the Milkmen's&#13;
second attack on society&#13;
through comic music. Shockabilly&#13;
tunes, whines, screams,&#13;
and terribly strange lyrics&#13;
are the trend here.&#13;
The Milkmen use their own&#13;
style in combination with established&#13;
musical trends to&#13;
satirize both the music of&#13;
today and the world in general.&#13;
Rodney Anonymous Melloncamp&#13;
moans out his insane&#13;
lyrics with a "spoiled rich&#13;
kid" whine.&#13;
•Tyson Wilda-&#13;
[!2£\CINEMAS 5&#13;
H&#13;
57th AVE. &amp; 75th St.&#13;
694 7301&#13;
Jumpin' Jack Flash&#13;
Whoopi Goldberg (The Color Purple) plays&#13;
her first comedy role in "Jumpin' Jack&#13;
Flash." Terry Doolittle (Whoopi Goldberg)&#13;
is a bright young woman in a dull job who&#13;
finds excitement and romance when she&#13;
comes upon a plea on a computer screen,&#13;
sent by a CIA operative trapped in an&#13;
Eastern Bloc country.&#13;
This comedy-thriller, directed by&#13;
Penny Marshall, also stars Stephen&#13;
Collins, Carol Kane, John Wood, Roscoe&#13;
Lee Browne and Annie Potts, as well as&#13;
several surprise cameo players.&#13;
Coming Oct. 10 to the UA Cinema 5&#13;
Theater, 7310 57th Ave., Kenosha.&#13;
T&#13;
10 Thursday, September 25,1986 RANGER&#13;
WALK BETWEEN&#13;
CAMPUS AND&#13;
'ORCHARD HOME - COURTS&#13;
Studio Furnished, 1 or 2 students&#13;
$240 Single Occupancy&#13;
$280 Double Occupancy&#13;
Phone: 553-9009&#13;
Earn $10 per month for referring&#13;
someone to Orchard Court.&#13;
(Subject to signing lease contract.)&#13;
Soccer extends&#13;
winning streak&#13;
by Vahan Mahdasian&#13;
The Parkside men's soccer&#13;
team won two games last&#13;
week to extend its unbeaten&#13;
streak to seven games and&#13;
improve its record to 6-1-1.&#13;
Two major feats were accomplished&#13;
in the Rangers' 6-&#13;
4 victory over the NCAA Division&#13;
I DePaul Blue Demons.&#13;
First, the win was a milestone&#13;
for Coach Rick Kilps,&#13;
as he recorded his 100th victory&#13;
as a coach. He currently is&#13;
33-12-5 in two-plus years at&#13;
Parkside. Previously, he&#13;
complied a 67-39-10 r ecord at&#13;
Aurora College, Illinois.&#13;
The second feat accomplished&#13;
came from freshman&#13;
Sam Kongla who led the&#13;
Rangers to victory with a&#13;
school record five goals and&#13;
one assist. The five goals ties&#13;
the record set by Wayne&#13;
Adema last year, and&#13;
Kongla's 11 points set a new&#13;
school record for most points&#13;
in a game.&#13;
The Ranger's other victory&#13;
came last Saturday at home&#13;
as Parkside beat Lawrence&#13;
University 6-1.&#13;
Freshman Jim Chomko&#13;
scored three goals, Adema&#13;
scored two and Kongla added&#13;
one as the Rangers easily&#13;
handled Lawrence.&#13;
Though the Rangers face a&#13;
tough schedule ahead, Coach&#13;
Kilps continues to see improvement&#13;
in his team and&#13;
knows that his team can continue&#13;
to build confidence and&#13;
momentum as the season&#13;
wears on.&#13;
"We're getting a good blend&#13;
of play. Our seniors (Jeff Fischer,&#13;
Patrick Gayle, Carlos&#13;
Gil, Adema), are taking charge,&#13;
our freshmen (Brian&#13;
Maher, Mike Lee, Chomko,&#13;
Kongla) are showing great&#13;
improvement and giving solid&#13;
efforts and our bench is coming&#13;
through for us."&#13;
The Ranger's now have the&#13;
undesirable task of facing Alderson-&#13;
Broaddus (U-Va) in&#13;
the opening round of a&#13;
tournament this weekend in&#13;
Wilmington, Ohio.&#13;
"'Classified Ads~~&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
SWEETEST DAY is coming! Oct.&#13;
19th, slay your lover with laughter!&#13;
Send them a knight in shining armor.&#13;
RUB-A-DUB, Hot Tub Rental. Delivered&#13;
to your home. 551-9024.&#13;
ACCURATE AND dependable typing&#13;
for the student and professional. 553-&#13;
9095.&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE STUDENTS for ride&#13;
sharing information contact Union Information&#13;
to be put on the "Ride Sharing"&#13;
List for all surrounding communities.&#13;
TYPING MY home, fast and professional.&#13;
student rates and free estimates.&#13;
Call Debbie at 681-3522.&#13;
LEARN HOW to better cope with&#13;
daily pressure - Learn how to use&#13;
simple relaxation techniques at St.&#13;
Catherine's Hospital WORKSHOP on&#13;
Well Day. Wednesday, October 8th.&#13;
Sign up in Student Health Services&#13;
Molinaro D115 or Call 553-2366 for&#13;
ONE OF TWO sessions. 11 a.m.-11:45&#13;
a.m. OR 1 p.m.-1:45 p.m.&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
PART-TIME Jobs. $6.85 to start. Flexible&#13;
hours available. 18 or older with&#13;
car, for appointment call (312)249-&#13;
3444.&#13;
$60.00 PER Hundred Paid for remailing&#13;
letters from home! Send self-addressed,&#13;
stamped envelope for information/&#13;
application. Associates, Box&#13;
95-B, Roselle, NJ 07203&#13;
For Sale&#13;
HOUSE-GREAT location! New offering,&#13;
completely remodled 3 bedroom&#13;
home at 613 Ohio St., Racine. Spacious&#13;
panelled family room with wood burning&#13;
fireplace overlooking private&#13;
patio. 2 car garage many extras.&#13;
$59,900. Phone 886-1143 or 637-3287.&#13;
DODGE CORONET-1976. New tires,&#13;
brakes. V-6. Dependable. $500.00. 634-&#13;
0988.&#13;
BEETHOVEN: BICENTENNIAL Edition&#13;
1770-1970 "Records" (17 volumes)&#13;
$75.00&#13;
654-7396.&#13;
1980 DODGE Omni 4 dr., 4 speed stereo&#13;
cassette $2000. 681-1402.&#13;
Personals&#13;
RUDY DARNKOT, nice race, the&#13;
team.&#13;
JEN: THINKIN' about you, drivin'&#13;
me crazy, love always, Scotty.&#13;
FRAULEIN GUNDLACH, Gratulieren&#13;
auf das ende de Arbeit um Fashion&#13;
rack.&#13;
CHADDIE, MAKE plans to party this&#13;
weekend! Di and Orson.&#13;
CHEECH, HERE'S what you've been&#13;
waiting for! The dizzy blonde!&#13;
I WANT to know what kind of slime&#13;
steals a guys fuzzy dice and his favorite&#13;
Who/Clapton tape at the same&#13;
time.&#13;
JIP, WHERE'S the thigh meat?&#13;
DREAMS CAN come true&#13;
Tarn...Thank you!&#13;
JOHN BEACH-contrary to popular belief,&#13;
a lot of your students think you&#13;
are a good teacher. Work never hurt&#13;
anyone.&#13;
VAHAN, NURKIE nurk nurk, Furm.&#13;
MICHELLE, TAKE any wrong turns&#13;
lately?&#13;
MAUREEN M., how about another&#13;
BEER. Tim&#13;
MMM MEATHEAD. How'a Tara.&#13;
She's looking Hot!!! Cheese D.&#13;
THANK YOU for turning in my wallet!&#13;
JJM&#13;
MOMMY AND Daddy. It takes us&#13;
some time to get used to all the fun&#13;
we have at the cay care, so we're not&#13;
crying any more.&#13;
J.J.M.-I came. I saw, I will conquer-&#13;
Secret Admirer.&#13;
ANDY B. dido onlast weeks classifieds.&#13;
MR. JOHNSON I still love you even&#13;
when you yell at me. Mrs. J.&#13;
B.C. GOT a new office.&#13;
SK-1111-P-P-P.&#13;
photo by Jack Bornhuetter&#13;
Mike Sliwa matches&#13;
strides with an Eastern&#13;
Illinois runner duri&#13;
n g t h e M i d w e s t&#13;
C o l l e g i a t e C r o s s c&#13;
o u n t r y C h a m p i onships,&#13;
held last Saturday&#13;
on the Parkside&#13;
National Course.&#13;
£) 1986 United Feature Syndicate&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
Women 9th, men 15th&#13;
team. She placed 18th and her&#13;
time was a school record 18:&#13;
13. Marter said after the race&#13;
"The competition was tougher&#13;
then I thought it would be.&#13;
I was happy with my place&#13;
and time, but I realize I have&#13;
a lot of work to do to accomplish&#13;
my goals."&#13;
The men's team placed 15th&#13;
with 424 points. Two of the&#13;
team's top runners, John&#13;
Hunt and Mike Stauch, droped&#13;
out because of the humidity.&#13;
Coach Rosa said "As a&#13;
team we had a poor showing,&#13;
but the season is still young&#13;
yet." The women's team&#13;
placed ninth scoring 264&#13;
points.&#13;
Varsity men: Randy Damkot,&#13;
26th, 25:51; Mike Lunow,&#13;
63rd, 26:38; Derek Brown,&#13;
92nd, 27:00; Dan Peterson,&#13;
146th, 27:49; Scott Rench,&#13;
154th, 27:56; Andy Kaestner,&#13;
164th, 28:03; Mike Nelson,&#13;
167th, 28:04.&#13;
Varsity women: Michelle&#13;
Marter, 18th, 18:13; Jilleen&#13;
Fobair, 54th, 19:16; Sarah&#13;
Hiett, 69th, 19:28; Julie Wunrow,&#13;
71st, 19:32; Kristin Alioto,&#13;
83rd, 19:42; Nancy Marter,&#13;
84th, 19:43; Colleen&#13;
Wismer, 88th, 19:48.&#13;
by Michael Rohl&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
The Midwest Collegiate&#13;
Cross-Country Championships&#13;
were held this past weekend&#13;
on the Parkside National&#13;
Cross-Country course. There&#13;
were 25 men's and 21&#13;
women's teams in attendance.&#13;
The UW-Madison men's and&#13;
women's teams thoroughly&#13;
dominated the competition,&#13;
winning both the team and individual&#13;
titles. The overall&#13;
men's winner was Rusty Korhonen&#13;
who completed the&#13;
course in 24 minutes, 14 seconds.&#13;
The women's champion&#13;
Stephanie Herbst, along with&#13;
freshman Suzie Favor, broke&#13;
the previous course record&#13;
with a time of 16:43.&#13;
The Madison team easily&#13;
outdistanced second place&#13;
Hillsdale scoring a mere 27&#13;
points to Hillsdale's 100. All&#13;
five of Madison's scoring runners&#13;
were in the top ten. The&#13;
women, not to be outdone,&#13;
scored a meet record low of&#13;
21 points. The next nearest&#13;
team was Ohio State with 91&#13;
points. The Madison women&#13;
also placed all five of their&#13;
scoring runners in the top&#13;
ten.&#13;
For the Parkside men&#13;
Randy Damkot was the first&#13;
to cross the finish line. He&#13;
placed 26th with a personal&#13;
best of 25:51. Coach Lucian&#13;
Rosa said "He had a good&#13;
race. I couldn't ask any more&#13;
of one of my runners."&#13;
Michelle Marter was the&#13;
first finisher for the women's&#13;
CROSSWORD PUZZLER&#13;
28 Spanish&#13;
article&#13;
29 Singing voice&#13;
30 Worship&#13;
32 Yellow ocher&#13;
33 Evil&#13;
35 Talk&#13;
39 Myself&#13;
40 A young child&#13;
41 Note of scale&#13;
44 Encountered&#13;
46 Wagers&#13;
48 Rumple&#13;
49 Overturn&#13;
50 Top player&#13;
51 Unused&#13;
52 Soak, as flax&#13;
54 Meadow&#13;
55 Breakfast&#13;
item&#13;
56 Fish eggs&#13;
59 Lithium&#13;
symbol&#13;
34 Article&#13;
35 Convene&#13;
36 Spring month&#13;
37 Japanese&#13;
drama&#13;
38 Finished&#13;
41 On behalf of&#13;
42 Cedar or elm&#13;
43 Decimal point&#13;
44 Female horse&#13;
45 Hebrew&#13;
month&#13;
47 Subdued&#13;
49 Oil-carrying&#13;
ship&#13;
53 Manservant&#13;
57 Refrigerate&#13;
58 Narrates&#13;
60 The self&#13;
61 Church&#13;
bench&#13;
62 Pigpens&#13;
63 Mature&#13;
DOWN&#13;
1 Ordinance&#13;
2 Japanese&#13;
sash&#13;
3 Prohibit&#13;
4 Region&#13;
5 Made&#13;
flawless&#13;
6 Running&#13;
7 Blushing&#13;
8 Taunt&#13;
9 Pallor&#13;
10 Bind&#13;
11 Wander&#13;
16 Attempt&#13;
18 Domestic cat&#13;
20 Paving&#13;
substance&#13;
22 Pamphlet&#13;
23 Award&#13;
24 Latin&#13;
conjunction&#13;
26 Train&#13;
schedule&#13;
ACROSS&#13;
1 Tennis stroke&#13;
4 To the left&#13;
-9 Devoured&#13;
12 Arabian&#13;
garment&#13;
13 Renovate&#13;
14 Title of&#13;
respect&#13;
15 Season of&#13;
year&#13;
17 Confused&#13;
condition&#13;
19 Float&#13;
21 Tantalum&#13;
symbol&#13;
22 Pronoun&#13;
25 Dine&#13;
27 Second of a&#13;
series&#13;
31 Decay&#13;
32 Scrawled&#13;
RANGER&#13;
1&#13;
Thursday, September 25, 1986 11 *&#13;
Parkside All -Americans 1985-86&#13;
Jackie Cotton-Track&#13;
1986: NAIA Indoor Distance&#13;
Medley-3rd&#13;
Jack Danner-Wrestling&#13;
1986: NAIA, NCAA Academic Ail-&#13;
American&#13;
Doug Fournier-Track&#13;
1986: NAIA 10K Walk-3rd&#13;
Andy Buchanan-Soccer&#13;
1985: NAIA First Team Sweeper&#13;
NAIA Academic All American&#13;
Dan Hall-Wrestling&#13;
1966: NAIA, NCAA Academic All-&#13;
American&#13;
Karen Greene-Volleyball&#13;
1986: NAIA All American Outside&#13;
Hitter&#13;
Sarah Hiett-Track Andy Kaestner-Track&#13;
1985: NAIA Mile Run-Indoor 1985: NAIA National Champion&#13;
4x80 Relay-2nd 10K Walk&#13;
1986: NAIA 1000 yd. lndoor-5th 1986: NAIA 10K Walk Outdoor-&#13;
NAIA 800 Outdoor-6th 2nd&#13;
Tim Renzelman-Track&#13;
1985: NAIA 10K Outdoor Run-2nd&#13;
NAIA 5K Outdoor&#13;
1986: NAIA 3 Mile lndoor-2nd&#13;
NAIA 3 Mile Outdoor-3rd&#13;
Mike Stauch-Track&#13;
1986: NAIA National Champion&#13;
Outdoor 10K Walk&#13;
Don VerBruggen-Wrestling&#13;
1986: All-American Heavyweight&#13;
£r~&#13;
Pat Neder-Softball&#13;
1986: All-American Outfield&#13;
Wendy Sackman-Softball&#13;
1986: All-American Second Base&#13;
Jackie Rittmer-Softball&#13;
1983-86: All-American Outfield&#13;
Mike Robertson-Soccer&#13;
1986: All-American Midfielder&#13;
Mike Rohl-Track&#13;
1985: NAIA 10K Walk Outdoor&#13;
1986: NAIA 10K Walk Outdoor&#13;
Janet Koenig-Softball&#13;
1984,1986: All-American Utility&#13;
Player&#13;
Michelle Marter-Track&#13;
1985: NAIA 4x800 Relay-2nd&#13;
NAIA Cross Country-15th&#13;
1986: NAIA Indoor Mile Run-3rd&#13;
NAIA Indoor Dist. Medley-3rd&#13;
NAIA Outdoor 3000m Run-4th&#13;
12 Thursday, September 25, 1986 HANGER&#13;
Tennis&#13;
Team struggles to 3-5 mark&#13;
by Jason Gaspers&#13;
The Parkside women's tennis&#13;
team kept busy last week&#13;
by playing four home meets,&#13;
winning one against Ripon.&#13;
However, they didn't fare as&#13;
well in their other meets.&#13;
On Tuesday, Sept. 16, the&#13;
team lost to Carthage 1-8. The&#13;
only winner for Parkside was&#13;
the number one doubles team&#13;
4$ Amy Tropin and Kim Kranich&#13;
6-2, 6-3.&#13;
On Saturday the team played&#13;
quite well in defeating&#13;
Ripon 6-3. The Ranger winners&#13;
were Kranich at number&#13;
three singles 6-2, 6-1, JoJo&#13;
Bramhill at number five singles&#13;
7-6, 6-1, Nancy O'Connell&#13;
at number six singles 6-3, 6-4&#13;
and all three doubles teams:&#13;
Tropin/Kranich 6-4, 6-3, Elizabeth&#13;
Spala/Lori Henry 6-1, 6-&#13;
3 and Bramhill/O'Connell 6-0,&#13;
6-0. The three losses were all&#13;
extremely close. Tropin lost&#13;
•; 4-6, 3-6, Spalla lost 5-7, 7-6, 6-7&#13;
and Henry lost 2-6, 6-7 in a&#13;
match that took four hours to&#13;
complete.&#13;
On Sunday they had a doubleheader,&#13;
dropping meets to&#13;
both St. Francis and Stevens&#13;
Point 1-8, which lowered their&#13;
record to 3-5. The only winners&#13;
for the Rangers in both&#13;
meets were Tropin and Kranich&#13;
at number one doubles.&#13;
They won 8-2 (in a pro-set format)&#13;
against St. Francis and&#13;
6-0, 6-3 against Stevens Point.&#13;
The team of Tropin and&#13;
Kranich has been a bright&#13;
_spot this year. They are undefeated&#13;
so far and coach&#13;
Wendy Miller thinks they are&#13;
as good as any other team in&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Rained out&#13;
by Randy LeCount&#13;
The Rangers fell victim not&#13;
to their opponents this week,&#13;
but to the rain.&#13;
Rain halted the Rangers&#13;
scheduled doubleheader&#13;
against MATC on Wednesday,&#13;
Sept. 17 in the third inning&#13;
with Parkside leading 8-5.&#13;
Sunday's (Sept.21) scheduled&#13;
home doubleheader against&#13;
M.S.O.E. never even got&#13;
started because of the wet&#13;
playing field from the recent&#13;
rain.&#13;
Head Coach Ken "Red"&#13;
Oberbruner was pleased with&#13;
his team's effort in the three&#13;
innnings played against&#13;
MATC. He noted that it was&#13;
raining hard throughout the&#13;
innings played, and that the&#13;
umpires had no choice but to&#13;
call the game to avoid injuries&#13;
to players.&#13;
With Sunday's games&#13;
cancelled, Parkside has a&#13;
weekend tournament in Illinois&#13;
to look forward to. The&#13;
Rangers will travel to Chicago&#13;
to play in the University of&#13;
Illinois Circle Tournament&#13;
this Friday and Saturday&#13;
(Sept. 26-27).&#13;
a;&#13;
photo by Jack Bornhuetter&#13;
Elizabeth Spalla shows concentration on a shot during a recent&#13;
women's tennis match.&#13;
the state. "They are very&#13;
scrappy at the net and are finally&#13;
understanding the workings&#13;
of doubles," Miller said.&#13;
Tropin, Kranich and the&#13;
rest of the team will get the&#13;
biggest test of the year this&#13;
weekend when the team&#13;
travels to Whitewater for the&#13;
11-team UW-Whitewater Invitational.&#13;
Miller has high expectations&#13;
for her team,&#13;
which finished eighth last&#13;
year.&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
Sat. and Sun., Sept. 27-28 - At the Kiwanis Classic&#13;
in Wilmington, Ohio.&#13;
Mon., Sept. 29 - Reserve team home vs. Waukesha&#13;
Technical College, 4 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Oct. 1 - Reserve team at College of Lake&#13;
County, 4 p.m.&#13;
VOLLEYBALL&#13;
Fri., Sept. 26 - Parkside hosts the Ranger Invitational;&#13;
teams in the tournament are&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, St. Ambrose and the&#13;
National College of Education; 1:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Tues., Sept. 30 - At Illinois-Chicago, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
Sat., Sept. 27 - At the UW-Whitewater Invitational,&#13;
10:45 a.m.&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
Fri. and Sat., Sept. 26-27 - At the Illinois-Chicago&#13;
tournament in Chicago,&#13;
time to be announced.&#13;
GOLF&#13;
Fri. and Sat., Sept. 26-27 -Parkside hosts the Ranger&#13;
Invitational; Friday at the Kenosha&#13;
Country Club, Sat. at Maplecrest; 9&#13;
a.m. both days&#13;
WOMEN'S TENNIS&#13;
Thurs., Sept. 25 - Home vs. Beloit College, 3 p.m.&#13;
Sat., Sept, 27 - at the Whitewater Invitational, 8:30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Mon., Sept. 29 - At Northeastern Illinois in Chicago,&#13;
3 p.m.&#13;
•ffldluuj Qwa/&#13;
¥&#13;
EA/cqy THCIPSDAY&#13;
starting Sept. 25, /98£ at 8:30p.™.&#13;
Glister to be a Contestant- and&#13;
gou could a_ "DREAM DATE"&#13;
Come to coatch the -fun /&#13;
•SINGLES MlXECS&#13;
» • BEDUCED D filNK PR ICES&#13;
•DANCING D.3?&#13;
(olOO ( uASHlN6r£)/V R ACiNE&#13;
&amp;h' ZFlanneru*s w TTAAVwErrRokNi ^ call 866-15^.3&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
IN THESQUARE&#13;
8' SCREEN&#13;
• GRILL OPEN&#13;
• BEER • SODA • WINE&#13;
• POPCORN&#13;
THE PARKSIDE UNION</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72056">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 15, issue 4, September 25, 1986</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72057">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72058">
                <text>1986-09-25</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72061">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="72062">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="72063">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72064">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72065">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72066">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72067">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72068">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72069">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="2755">
        <name>campus police</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1405">
        <name>crime</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="995">
        <name>gary goetz</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2466">
        <name>kenosha county sheriff's department</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="96">
        <name>library</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2468">
        <name>orchard courts apartments</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2387">
        <name>parkside foundation</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2469">
        <name>woodcreek apartments</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="3188" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4418">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/e7c479750f51e5c12106f72f1e4b24f6.pdf</src>
        <authentication>0f98c959675ba5b2e5f41182e47c9995</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72074">
              <text>Volume 15, issue 5</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72075">
              <text>Meet the Campaign: Candidates for state offices emphasize traditional issues</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72085">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90676">
              <text>&#13;
page &#13;
Tuition &#13;
increase &#13;
discussed &#13;
page &#13;
1382888NHH1MINIINV8 &#13;
Exclusive &#13;
interview-&#13;
Hal &#13;
Holbrook &#13;
page &#13;
Race-walker &#13;
excels &#13;
A &#13;
¥ &#13;
Oct. &#13;
2, &#13;
1 &#13;
986 &#13;
University &#13;
off &#13;
Wisconsin-Parksicfle &#13;
Vol. &#13;
1 &#13;
5&#13;
V &#13;
No. &#13;
8 &#13;
Meet &#13;
the &#13;
Campaign &#13;
Candidates &#13;
for &#13;
state &#13;
offices &#13;
emphasize &#13;
traditional &#13;
issues &#13;
by &#13;
Suzanne &#13;
Mantuano &#13;
and &#13;
Kelly &#13;
McKissick &#13;
For &#13;
the &#13;
candidates &#13;
vying &#13;
for &#13;
election &#13;
to &#13;
Wisconsin's &#13;
State &#13;
Assembly &#13;
and &#13;
Senate, &#13;
traditional &#13;
campaign &#13;
concer­&#13;
ns &#13;
were &#13;
the &#13;
topic &#13;
of &#13;
conversa­&#13;
tion. &#13;
More &#13;
than &#13;
ten &#13;
candidates &#13;
or &#13;
speakers &#13;
representing &#13;
can­&#13;
didates &#13;
for &#13;
state &#13;
legislative &#13;
offices &#13;
addressed &#13;
Parkside &#13;
students &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
PSGA-spon-&#13;
sored &#13;
Meet &#13;
the &#13;
Campaign &#13;
fo­&#13;
rums &#13;
last &#13;
week. &#13;
"There &#13;
were &#13;
a &#13;
number &#13;
of &#13;
attempts &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
past &#13;
legisla­&#13;
ture &#13;
to &#13;
raise &#13;
the &#13;
share &#13;
of &#13;
cost &#13;
of &#13;
your &#13;
education," &#13;
said &#13;
Scott &#13;
Fergus, &#13;
Democratic &#13;
candi­&#13;
date &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
State &#13;
Assembly's &#13;
61st &#13;
(Northern &#13;
Racine) &#13;
Dis­&#13;
trict. &#13;
"We &#13;
can't &#13;
look &#13;
at &#13;
increas­&#13;
ing &#13;
that &#13;
cost &#13;
anymore," &#13;
Fer­&#13;
gus &#13;
continued. &#13;
"Otherwise, &#13;
what &#13;
we &#13;
are &#13;
going &#13;
to &#13;
wind &#13;
up &#13;
doing &#13;
is &#13;
limiting &#13;
access &#13;
of &#13;
lower &#13;
income &#13;
people &#13;
to &#13;
edu­&#13;
cational &#13;
opportunities &#13;
that &#13;
usually &#13;
wind &#13;
being &#13;
better &#13;
for &#13;
society &#13;
as &#13;
a &#13;
whole." &#13;
Norman &#13;
Monson, &#13;
Fergus' &#13;
Republican &#13;
challenger &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
61st &#13;
Disctrict, &#13;
thinks &#13;
that &#13;
taxes &#13;
are &#13;
the &#13;
main &#13;
issue. &#13;
"We've &#13;
got &#13;
a &#13;
great &#13;
state &#13;
here," &#13;
Monson   says, &#13;
"but &#13;
what's &#13;
happened &#13;
is &#13;
that &#13;
our &#13;
governments, &#13;
both &#13;
state &#13;
and &#13;
local, &#13;
have &#13;
gotten &#13;
little &#13;
car­&#13;
ried &#13;
away. &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
resi­&#13;
dents &#13;
are &#13;
one &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
five &#13;
most &#13;
taxed &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
United &#13;
States." &#13;
For &#13;
R. &#13;
Frenchy &#13;
Bouton, &#13;
Re­&#13;
publican &#13;
Assembly  candidate &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
62nd &#13;
(Southern &#13;
Racine) &#13;
District, &#13;
the &#13;
issues &#13;
of &#13;
taxes &#13;
and &#13;
business &#13;
were &#13;
of &#13;
a &#13;
differ­&#13;
ent &#13;
color. &#13;
According &#13;
to &#13;
Jim &#13;
Bradley, &#13;
who &#13;
spoke &#13;
on &#13;
Bou-&#13;
ton's &#13;
behalf, &#13;
"Business &#13;
has &#13;
a &#13;
right &#13;
to &#13;
make &#13;
a &#13;
profit. &#13;
Fren­&#13;
chy &#13;
is &#13;
a &#13;
union &#13;
man &#13;
and &#13;
uses &#13;
common &#13;
sense &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
work­&#13;
ing &#13;
people." &#13;
Jeff &#13;
Neubauer, &#13;
Bouton's &#13;
Democratic &#13;
rival, &#13;
also &#13;
sup­&#13;
ports &#13;
the &#13;
working &#13;
man, &#13;
and &#13;
would &#13;
like &#13;
to &#13;
see &#13;
more &#13;
join &#13;
those &#13;
ranks. &#13;
"I'm &#13;
very &#13;
much &#13;
in &#13;
favor &#13;
of &#13;
workfare &#13;
meas­&#13;
ures &#13;
that &#13;
are &#13;
designed &#13;
to &#13;
em­&#13;
power &#13;
people &#13;
who &#13;
are &#13;
on &#13;
pub­&#13;
lic &#13;
assistance &#13;
to &#13;
help &#13;
them &#13;
get &#13;
jobs &#13;
and &#13;
become &#13;
employ­&#13;
ed," &#13;
he &#13;
said. &#13;
"It's &#13;
good &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
recipients, &#13;
it's &#13;
good &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
state &#13;
and &#13;
it's &#13;
good &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
community &#13;
because &#13;
it &#13;
has &#13;
an­&#13;
other &#13;
productive &#13;
working &#13;
citi­&#13;
zen." &#13;
For &#13;
candidates &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
63rd &#13;
(Western &#13;
Racine) &#13;
District, &#13;
employment &#13;
figures &#13;
took &#13;
precedence. &#13;
"Jobs &#13;
are &#13;
con­&#13;
tinuing &#13;
to &#13;
leave &#13;
the &#13;
state &#13;
in &#13;
droves," &#13;
said &#13;
Republican &#13;
Jim &#13;
Ladwig. &#13;
"Sixty &#13;
percent &#13;
of &#13;
our &#13;
college &#13;
graduates &#13;
are &#13;
leaving &#13;
the &#13;
State &#13;
of &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
to &#13;
get &#13;
jobs. &#13;
This &#13;
has &#13;
got &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
drawn &#13;
to &#13;
a &#13;
halt; &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
only &#13;
way &#13;
that's &#13;
going &#13;
to &#13;
happen &#13;
is &#13;
if &#13;
we &#13;
provide &#13;
jobs &#13;
for &#13;
them." &#13;
Marilyn &#13;
Nemeth, &#13;
Ladwig's &#13;
Democratic &#13;
opponent, &#13;
also &#13;
believed &#13;
lowering &#13;
unemploy­&#13;
ment &#13;
was &#13;
important, &#13;
adding &#13;
that &#13;
"the &#13;
question &#13;
in &#13;
this &#13;
election &#13;
is &#13;
whether &#13;
we &#13;
are &#13;
going &#13;
to &#13;
have &#13;
full &#13;
time &#13;
legis­&#13;
lative &#13;
representation &#13;
or &#13;
are &#13;
Campaign &#13;
see &#13;
page &#13;
2 &#13;
National &#13;
hopefuls &#13;
give &#13;
local &#13;
perspective &#13;
to &#13;
big &#13;
concerns &#13;
by &#13;
Suzanne &#13;
Mantuano &#13;
and &#13;
Kelly &#13;
McKissick &#13;
National &#13;
issues &#13;
were &#13;
given &#13;
local &#13;
perspective &#13;
in &#13;
speeches &#13;
by &#13;
gubernatorial &#13;
and &#13;
legisla­&#13;
tive &#13;
candidates &#13;
who &#13;
attended &#13;
the &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Student &#13;
Govern­&#13;
ment &#13;
Association-sponsored &#13;
Meet &#13;
the &#13;
Campaign &#13;
forums &#13;
last &#13;
week. &#13;
"Ed &#13;
Garvey &#13;
believes &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
federal &#13;
government &#13;
has &#13;
a &#13;
responsibility &#13;
to &#13;
support &#13;
high­&#13;
er &#13;
education," &#13;
said &#13;
Mike &#13;
Serpe, &#13;
who &#13;
spoke &#13;
on &#13;
behalf &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
Democratic &#13;
candidate &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
United &#13;
States &#13;
Senate. &#13;
"We &#13;
need &#13;
to &#13;
make &#13;
programs &#13;
accessible &#13;
to &#13;
all &#13;
children, &#13;
in­&#13;
cluding &#13;
those &#13;
of &#13;
lesser &#13;
means &#13;
in &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
and &#13;
around &#13;
the &#13;
nation. &#13;
"The &#13;
gap &#13;
between &#13;
the &#13;
rich &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
poor &#13;
has &#13;
widened," &#13;
Serpe &#13;
continued. &#13;
"Ed &#13;
Garvey &#13;
knows &#13;
our &#13;
real &#13;
security &#13;
rests &#13;
on &#13;
a &#13;
healthy &#13;
economy &#13;
and &#13;
vi­&#13;
brant &#13;
communities, &#13;
not &#13;
on &#13;
more &#13;
and &#13;
more &#13;
military &#13;
spending &#13;
and &#13;
weapons &#13;
sys­&#13;
tems." &#13;
Sharon &#13;
Metz, &#13;
a &#13;
Democratic &#13;
candidate &#13;
for &#13;
lieutenant &#13;
governor, &#13;
addressed &#13;
the &#13;
budget &#13;
issue. &#13;
"We &#13;
(Wisconsin) &#13;
have &#13;
done &#13;
something &#13;
that &#13;
the &#13;
federal &#13;
government &#13;
cannot &#13;
and &#13;
will &#13;
not &#13;
do," &#13;
she &#13;
said. &#13;
"We &#13;
have &#13;
balanced &#13;
the &#13;
budget. &#13;
Tony &#13;
Earl &#13;
and &#13;
Sharon &#13;
Metz &#13;
are &#13;
committed &#13;
to &#13;
keeping &#13;
this &#13;
state &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
black, &#13;
and &#13;
to &#13;
not &#13;
raising &#13;
tuition." &#13;
Continuing &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
subject &#13;
of &#13;
education, &#13;
Metz &#13;
said &#13;
she &#13;
has &#13;
respect &#13;
for &#13;
higher &#13;
education. &#13;
"The &#13;
university &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
busi­&#13;
ness &#13;
climate &#13;
cannot &#13;
be &#13;
sepa­&#13;
rated," &#13;
she &#13;
indicated. &#13;
"One &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
reasons &#13;
that &#13;
businesses &#13;
are &#13;
able &#13;
to &#13;
attract &#13;
their &#13;
em­&#13;
ployees &#13;
here &#13;
is &#13;
that &#13;
they &#13;
be­&#13;
come &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
residents &#13;
and &#13;
their &#13;
children &#13;
are &#13;
able &#13;
to &#13;
come &#13;
into &#13;
the &#13;
finest &#13;
univer­&#13;
sity &#13;
systems &#13;
in &#13;
this &#13;
nation &#13;
at &#13;
a &#13;
very &#13;
affordable &#13;
price." &#13;
A &#13;
candidate &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
First &#13;
Ditrict &#13;
seat &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
U.S. &#13;
House &#13;
of &#13;
Representatives &#13;
also &#13;
spoke &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
forums. &#13;
The &#13;
Republi­&#13;
can &#13;
challenger &#13;
to &#13;
incumbent &#13;
Les &#13;
Aspin, &#13;
Iris &#13;
Petersen &#13;
said &#13;
that &#13;
"we &#13;
can &#13;
feed &#13;
this &#13;
world. &#13;
We &#13;
can &#13;
work &#13;
around &#13;
political &#13;
barriers. &#13;
We &#13;
can &#13;
have &#13;
a &#13;
pros­&#13;
perous &#13;
agriculture &#13;
and &#13;
a &#13;
prosperous &#13;
country. &#13;
Agricul­&#13;
ture &#13;
is &#13;
just &#13;
one &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
areas &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
deficit &#13;
that &#13;
we &#13;
must &#13;
ad­&#13;
dress, &#13;
and &#13;
I &#13;
believe &#13;
that &#13;
I &#13;
am &#13;
uniquely &#13;
qualified &#13;
to &#13;
do &#13;
so." &#13;
photo &#13;
by &#13;
Loo &#13;
Bose &#13;
Peter &#13;
Barca, &#13;
Democratic &#13;
candidate &#13;
for &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
State &#13;
As­&#13;
sembly &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
64th &#13;
District, &#13;
was &#13;
one &#13;
of &#13;
many &#13;
who &#13;
spoke &#13;
at &#13;
PSGA's &#13;
Meet &#13;
the &#13;
Campaign &#13;
forums &#13;
last &#13;
week. &#13;
Homecoming &#13;
King &#13;
and &#13;
Queen &#13;
voting &#13;
set &#13;
for &#13;
next &#13;
week &#13;
Voting &#13;
for &#13;
this &#13;
week's &#13;
Homecoming &#13;
King &#13;
and &#13;
Queen &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
held &#13;
Thursday, &#13;
Oct. &#13;
9 &#13;
and &#13;
Friday, &#13;
Oct. &#13;
10 &#13;
with &#13;
a &#13;
special &#13;
primary &#13;
election. &#13;
The &#13;
primary &#13;
is &#13;
being &#13;
in­&#13;
stituted &#13;
as &#13;
a &#13;
change &#13;
this &#13;
year &#13;
since &#13;
so &#13;
many &#13;
clubs &#13;
are &#13;
spon­&#13;
soring &#13;
candidates. &#13;
Of &#13;
the &#13;
10-&#13;
15 &#13;
hopefuls &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
crowns, &#13;
five &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
selected &#13;
to &#13;
com­&#13;
pete &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
final &#13;
voting, &#13;
to &#13;
take &#13;
place &#13;
the &#13;
following &#13;
week. &#13;
In &#13;
next &#13;
week's &#13;
Ranger, &#13;
look &#13;
for &#13;
pictures &#13;
and &#13;
profiles &#13;
of &#13;
each &#13;
candidate &#13;
to &#13;
help &#13;
you &#13;
make &#13;
your &#13;
important &#13;
voting &#13;
decision. &#13;
This &#13;
year, &#13;
the &#13;
voting &#13;
proce-1 &#13;
dure &#13;
is &#13;
going &#13;
to &#13;
be &#13;
altered, &#13;
so &#13;
that &#13;
winners &#13;
will &#13;
no &#13;
longer &#13;
be &#13;
determined &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
collection &#13;
of &#13;
pennies. &#13;
While &#13;
details &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
new &#13;
voting &#13;
procedure &#13;
were &#13;
not &#13;
available &#13;
at &#13;
press &#13;
time, &#13;
they &#13;
will &#13;
be &#13;
posted &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
voting &#13;
area &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Molina-&#13;
ro &#13;
Concourse, &#13;
with &#13;
pictures &#13;
of &#13;
each &#13;
candidate &#13;
also &#13;
on &#13;
dis­&#13;
play. &#13;
Remember, &#13;
your &#13;
vote &#13;
can &#13;
make &#13;
a &#13;
difference. &#13;
I &#13;
THOUGHT &#13;
WE &#13;
ARMS &#13;
CONTROL &#13;
. &#13;
..o &#13;
-TI\AP &#13;
' &#13;
. &#13;
RANGER &#13;
Editorial &#13;
What &#13;
does &#13;
apathy &#13;
say &#13;
about &#13;
Many &#13;
of  you &#13;
are &#13;
probably &#13;
sick &#13;
and &#13;
tired &#13;
of &#13;
hearing &#13;
about &#13;
the &#13;
topic &#13;
addressed &#13;
here. &#13;
So &#13;
are &#13;
we. &#13;
That &#13;
topic &#13;
is &#13;
apathy &#13;
on &#13;
this &#13;
campus, &#13;
and &#13;
it's &#13;
been &#13;
dra­&#13;
matized &#13;
and &#13;
discussed &#13;
by &#13;
Just &#13;
about &#13;
everyone &#13;
since &#13;
clas­&#13;
ses &#13;
began. &#13;
But &#13;
before &#13;
you &#13;
dismiss &#13;
this &#13;
as &#13;
yet &#13;
another &#13;
exercise &#13;
in &#13;
didacticism, &#13;
stop &#13;
to &#13;
consider &#13;
why &#13;
concerned &#13;
campus &#13;
groups &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
spotlighting &#13;
Parkside's &#13;
apathy. &#13;
Last &#13;
week &#13;
represents &#13;
a &#13;
fine &#13;
example of &#13;
why &#13;
this &#13;
univer­&#13;
sity's &#13;
lack &#13;
of &#13;
Interest &#13;
and &#13;
involvement &#13;
is &#13;
such &#13;
a &#13;
weighty &#13;
issue. &#13;
Last &#13;
week &#13;
was &#13;
when &#13;
the &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Student &#13;
Govern­&#13;
ment &#13;
Association &#13;
(PSGA) &#13;
sponsored &#13;
its &#13;
Meet &#13;
the &#13;
Cam­&#13;
paign &#13;
forums; &#13;
it &#13;
was &#13;
also &#13;
a &#13;
week &#13;
where &#13;
candidates &#13;
who &#13;
came &#13;
here &#13;
to &#13;
speak &#13;
found &#13;
themselves &#13;
playing &#13;
to &#13;
meager &#13;
crowds &#13;
more &#13;
suited &#13;
for &#13;
a &#13;
Tupperware &#13;
party &#13;
than &#13;
a &#13;
public &#13;
political &#13;
forum. &#13;
Forget &#13;
about &#13;
the &#13;
possible &#13;
causes &#13;
for &#13;
such &#13;
a &#13;
sickening &#13;
turnout; &#13;
they're &#13;
mostly &#13;
lame &#13;
excuses &#13;
we've &#13;
heard &#13;
before. &#13;
Instead, &#13;
focus &#13;
attention &#13;
on &#13;
what &#13;
last &#13;
week's &#13;
pitiful &#13;
show­&#13;
ing &#13;
tells &#13;
the &#13;
community &#13;
about &#13;
our &#13;
school. &#13;
It &#13;
Indicates &#13;
that, &#13;
as &#13;
an &#13;
institution, &#13;
we're &#13;
haplessly &#13;
and &#13;
hopelessly &#13;
reckless &#13;
with &#13;
regard &#13;
to &#13;
our &#13;
future. &#13;
In &#13;
simpler &#13;
terms, &#13;
we &#13;
just &#13;
don't &#13;
give &#13;
a &#13;
damn. &#13;
We &#13;
don't &#13;
care &#13;
enough &#13;
about &#13;
matters &#13;
like &#13;
tuition &#13;
increases &#13;
or &#13;
politi­&#13;
cal &#13;
campaigns &#13;
to &#13;
sacrifice &#13;
half &#13;
of &#13;
our &#13;
lunch &#13;
hours &#13;
or &#13;
to &#13;
miss &#13;
"All &#13;
My &#13;
Children." &#13;
We're &#13;
content &#13;
to &#13;
luxuriate &#13;
in &#13;
our &#13;
ignorance and &#13;
let &#13;
decisions &#13;
about &#13;
our &#13;
lives &#13;
be &#13;
made &#13;
with &#13;
none &#13;
of &#13;
our &#13;
input. &#13;
Letter &#13;
Innsbruck &#13;
is &#13;
To &#13;
the &#13;
Editor: &#13;
I &#13;
would &#13;
like &#13;
to &#13;
further &#13;
ex­&#13;
pand &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
Ranger &#13;
article &#13;
"Apply &#13;
to &#13;
study &#13;
in &#13;
Inns­&#13;
bruck" &#13;
appearing &#13;
9/26/86. &#13;
I &#13;
participated &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
UNO-IN­&#13;
NSBRUCK &#13;
program &#13;
this &#13;
sum­&#13;
mer &#13;
and &#13;
it &#13;
was &#13;
truly &#13;
the &#13;
ex­&#13;
perience &#13;
of &#13;
my &#13;
life. &#13;
There &#13;
is &#13;
no &#13;
better &#13;
place &#13;
to &#13;
attend &#13;
a &#13;
study &#13;
abroad &#13;
pro­&#13;
gram &#13;
than &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Innsbruck &#13;
in &#13;
Austria. &#13;
The &#13;
surroundings, &#13;
course &#13;
curricu­&#13;
lum, &#13;
program &#13;
activities, &#13;
and &#13;
teaching &#13;
excellence &#13;
make &#13;
this &#13;
one &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
best &#13;
programs &#13;
around. &#13;
The &#13;
program &#13;
offers &#13;
more &#13;
than &#13;
70 &#13;
courses &#13;
in &#13;
many &#13;
dif­&#13;
ferent &#13;
academic &#13;
areas, &#13;
many &#13;
of &#13;
which &#13;
are &#13;
fully &#13;
accredited &#13;
by &#13;
Parkside &#13;
as &#13;
long &#13;
as &#13;
they &#13;
are &#13;
pre-approved &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
divi­&#13;
sion &#13;
chairman. &#13;
All &#13;
courses &#13;
are &#13;
taught &#13;
in &#13;
English &#13;
by &#13;
pro­&#13;
fessors &#13;
from &#13;
primarily &#13;
the &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
New &#13;
Orleans &#13;
or &#13;
the &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
Florida. &#13;
In &#13;
addition &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
education &#13;
you &#13;
receive &#13;
through &#13;
the &#13;
cour­&#13;
ses, &#13;
you &#13;
get &#13;
the &#13;
oportunity &#13;
to &#13;
great &#13;
experience &#13;
the &#13;
culture &#13;
and &#13;
lifestyle &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
natives &#13;
of &#13;
Aus­&#13;
tria. &#13;
The &#13;
program &#13;
owes &#13;
much &#13;
Qf &#13;
its &#13;
success &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
compe­&#13;
tence &#13;
of &#13;
its &#13;
director, &#13;
Carl &#13;
Wagner; &#13;
the &#13;
dedication &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
student &#13;
workers; &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
teaching &#13;
excellence &#13;
of &#13;
its &#13;
staff. &#13;
Most &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
class &#13;
weeks &#13;
are &#13;
four &#13;
days &#13;
long, &#13;
which &#13;
allows &#13;
ample &#13;
time &#13;
to &#13;
travel &#13;
around &#13;
Europe. &#13;
On &#13;
the &#13;
weekend &#13;
you &#13;
may &#13;
find &#13;
yourself &#13;
Whitewater &#13;
rafting &#13;
down &#13;
the &#13;
Inn &#13;
River, &#13;
skiing &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Swiss &#13;
Alps, &#13;
shop­&#13;
ping &#13;
in &#13;
Italy, &#13;
touring &#13;
Holland,. &#13;
para-sailing &#13;
in &#13;
Nice, &#13;
celebrat­&#13;
ing &#13;
the &#13;
4th &#13;
of &#13;
July &#13;
at &#13;
an &#13;
authentic &#13;
beer &#13;
garden &#13;
in &#13;
Ger­&#13;
many, &#13;
or &#13;
even &#13;
having &#13;
an &#13;
in­&#13;
teresting &#13;
encounter &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
train. &#13;
If &#13;
you &#13;
have &#13;
the &#13;
opportunity, &#13;
want &#13;
to &#13;
study &#13;
abroad, &#13;
are &#13;
looking &#13;
to &#13;
make &#13;
many &#13;
new &#13;
friendships, &#13;
and &#13;
want &#13;
to &#13;
have &#13;
the &#13;
time &#13;
of &#13;
your &#13;
life, &#13;
the &#13;
pro­&#13;
gram &#13;
offered &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
Univer­&#13;
sity of &#13;
New &#13;
Orleans &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
one &#13;
for &#13;
you. &#13;
Alan &#13;
Davidove &#13;
Letter &#13;
Food &#13;
service &#13;
leaves &#13;
bad &#13;
taste &#13;
To &#13;
the &#13;
Editor &#13;
People &#13;
of &#13;
Parkside, &#13;
PLEASE &#13;
WAKE &#13;
UP!!! &#13;
What &#13;
has &#13;
happened &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
food &#13;
service &#13;
here? &#13;
I'm &#13;
refer­&#13;
ring &#13;
to &#13;
increased &#13;
cost, &#13;
lower &#13;
quality, &#13;
decreased &#13;
availabl-&#13;
ity, &#13;
lack &#13;
of &#13;
service &#13;
and &#13;
forced &#13;
food &#13;
purchases. &#13;
The &#13;
cost &#13;
of &#13;
select &#13;
items &#13;
has &#13;
Increased &#13;
beyond &#13;
the &#13;
rate &#13;
of &#13;
inflation &#13;
in &#13;
a &#13;
three &#13;
month &#13;
pe­&#13;
riod &#13;
(May &#13;
to &#13;
August). Bread-&#13;
sticks: &#13;
25* &#13;
to &#13;
35* &#13;
- &#13;
up &#13;
40% &#13;
(and &#13;
inches &#13;
shorter). &#13;
Salads: &#13;
99* &#13;
to &#13;
$1.09 &#13;
— &#13;
up &#13;
10%. &#13;
Salad &#13;
Bar: &#13;
12*/oz. &#13;
to &#13;
14*/oz. &#13;
— &#13;
up &#13;
17%. &#13;
Fish-n-chips: &#13;
$1.49 &#13;
to &#13;
$1.69 &#13;
— &#13;
u p &#13;
13%. &#13;
This &#13;
is &#13;
only &#13;
a &#13;
partial &#13;
list &#13;
of &#13;
unacceptable &#13;
in­&#13;
creases &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
most &#13;
popular &#13;
foods. &#13;
The &#13;
quality &#13;
of &#13;
many &#13;
food &#13;
products &#13;
has &#13;
decreased. &#13;
A &#13;
prime &#13;
example &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
pizza &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Union &#13;
Square. &#13;
Last &#13;
semester &#13;
a &#13;
pizza &#13;
had &#13;
crisp &#13;
crust, &#13;
gooey &#13;
cheese &#13;
and &#13;
tasty &#13;
sausage. &#13;
This &#13;
semester's &#13;
pizza &#13;
has &#13;
a &#13;
cardboard &#13;
crust, &#13;
very &#13;
little &#13;
cheese, &#13;
dried-up &#13;
sauce, &#13;
and &#13;
greasy, &#13;
uncooked &#13;
sausage. &#13;
Decreased &#13;
availability &#13;
of &#13;
food &#13;
and &#13;
a &#13;
lack &#13;
of service &#13;
are &#13;
evident &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
cafeteria, &#13;
espe­&#13;
cially &#13;
during &#13;
the &#13;
evening &#13;
hours. &#13;
The &#13;
salad &#13;
bar &#13;
and &#13;
coff­&#13;
ee &#13;
pot &#13;
are &#13;
often &#13;
depleted. &#13;
When &#13;
I &#13;
asked &#13;
for &#13;
more &#13;
toma­&#13;
toes, &#13;
I &#13;
was &#13;
told &#13;
there &#13;
were &#13;
none; &#13;
when &#13;
I &#13;
asked &#13;
for &#13;
a &#13;
fresh &#13;
cup &#13;
of &#13;
coffee, &#13;
I &#13;
was &#13;
told &#13;
that &#13;
it &#13;
wasn't &#13;
worth &#13;
it &#13;
to &#13;
make &#13;
another &#13;
pot. &#13;
You &#13;
will &#13;
also &#13;
be &#13;
lucky &#13;
to &#13;
find &#13;
soup &#13;
after &#13;
5:30. &#13;
In &#13;
addition, &#13;
hardly &#13;
a &#13;
day &#13;
goes &#13;
by &#13;
when &#13;
the &#13;
yo­&#13;
gurt &#13;
selection &#13;
consists &#13;
of &#13;
something &#13;
other &#13;
than &#13;
"plain." &#13;
Most &#13;
striking, &#13;
students &#13;
liv­&#13;
ing &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
residential &#13;
halls &#13;
are &#13;
required &#13;
to &#13;
buy &#13;
a &#13;
food &#13;
plan. &#13;
In &#13;
other &#13;
words, &#13;
students &#13;
are &#13;
being &#13;
forced &#13;
to &#13;
buy &#13;
a &#13;
poor &#13;
quality &#13;
service. &#13;
The &#13;
underly­&#13;
ing &#13;
assupmtion &#13;
of &#13;
this &#13;
"logic" &#13;
is &#13;
that &#13;
college &#13;
students &#13;
are &#13;
not &#13;
capable &#13;
of &#13;
budget &#13;
man­&#13;
agement &#13;
nor &#13;
preparing &#13;
meals &#13;
for &#13;
themselves &#13;
other &#13;
than &#13;
beer &#13;
and &#13;
Wheaties. &#13;
On &#13;
the &#13;
other &#13;
hand, &#13;
one &#13;
can &#13;
assume &#13;
that &#13;
somebody &#13;
is &#13;
making &#13;
a &#13;
pretty &#13;
penny &#13;
off &#13;
this &#13;
"logic." &#13;
What &#13;
does &#13;
this &#13;
all &#13;
mean? &#13;
Last &#13;
year, &#13;
a &#13;
new &#13;
food &#13;
service &#13;
contract &#13;
was &#13;
signed. &#13;
This &#13;
new &#13;
contract &#13;
should &#13;
have &#13;
stipulated &#13;
gradual &#13;
price &#13;
in­&#13;
creases &#13;
and &#13;
maintenance &#13;
of &#13;
quality. &#13;
But &#13;
it &#13;
did &#13;
not &#13;
do &#13;
th is &#13;
or &#13;
it &#13;
is &#13;
not &#13;
being &#13;
implemen­&#13;
ted, &#13;
and &#13;
as &#13;
usual, &#13;
the &#13;
stu­&#13;
dents &#13;
are &#13;
the &#13;
ones &#13;
taken &#13;
for &#13;
a &#13;
ride &#13;
on &#13;
this &#13;
deal. &#13;
"Brown &#13;
baggin' &#13;
it &#13;
Meet &#13;
the &#13;
Campaign &#13;
Campaign &#13;
from &#13;
page &#13;
1 &#13;
we &#13;
going &#13;
to &#13;
have &#13;
someone &#13;
there &#13;
just &#13;
part &#13;
time? &#13;
" &#13;
Peter &#13;
Barca, &#13;
the &#13;
only &#13;
64th &#13;
(Northern &#13;
Kenosha) &#13;
District &#13;
candidate &#13;
to &#13;
appear &#13;
at &#13;
the &#13;
PSGA &#13;
forum, &#13;
addressed &#13;
an &#13;
issue &#13;
close &#13;
to &#13;
Parkside's &#13;
heart. &#13;
"I &#13;
think &#13;
you're &#13;
going &#13;
to &#13;
see &#13;
tuition &#13;
go &#13;
up &#13;
slightly &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
next &#13;
ten &#13;
years, &#13;
but &#13;
I &#13;
also &#13;
think &#13;
that &#13;
we &#13;
need &#13;
to &#13;
tie &#13;
tui­&#13;
tion &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
level &#13;
of &#13;
student &#13;
aid. &#13;
If &#13;
you're &#13;
going &#13;
to &#13;
raise &#13;
tuition, &#13;
then &#13;
I &#13;
think &#13;
then &#13;
I &#13;
think &#13;
you &#13;
have &#13;
to &#13;
make &#13;
sure &#13;
there &#13;
is &#13;
more &#13;
aid &#13;
available." &#13;
And &#13;
for &#13;
Don &#13;
Walsh, &#13;
the &#13;
only &#13;
State &#13;
Senate &#13;
candidate &#13;
to &#13;
appear, &#13;
the &#13;
education &#13;
issue &#13;
was &#13;
also &#13;
important. &#13;
"I &#13;
deve &#13;
-&#13;
oped &#13;
a &#13;
program &#13;
called &#13;
indi­&#13;
vidual &#13;
education &#13;
accounts, &#13;
Walsh, &#13;
the &#13;
21st &#13;
(Racinepuri­&#13;
ty) &#13;
Republican &#13;
said. &#13;
Tney &#13;
clmllor &#13;
tn &#13;
TRAs. &#13;
but &#13;
in &#13;
2 &#13;
Thursday, &#13;
October &#13;
2, &#13;
1986 &#13;
Gary &#13;
L. &#13;
Schnoebergor &#13;
Ed &#13;
tor &#13;
JannyCarr &#13;
NawaEdrtor &#13;
Klmbaiiia &#13;
Kranlch &#13;
News &#13;
Editor &#13;
Julia &#13;
Pendleton &#13;
Asst. &#13;
News &#13;
Editor &#13;
Jim &#13;
Neibaur &#13;
Entertainment &#13;
Editor &#13;
Robb Luehr &#13;
Sports &#13;
Editor &#13;
Michael &#13;
Rohl &#13;
Asst. &#13;
Sports &#13;
Editor &#13;
Dave &#13;
McEvoy &#13;
Photo &#13;
Editor &#13;
Jack &#13;
Bomhuetter &#13;
Photo &#13;
Editor &#13;
Andy &#13;
Buchanan &#13;
Business &#13;
Manager &#13;
Brenda &#13;
Buchanan &#13;
Asst. &#13;
Business &#13;
Manager &#13;
Dave &#13;
Roback &#13;
Advertising &#13;
Manager &#13;
Steve &#13;
Picazo &#13;
Distribution &#13;
Manager &#13;
STAFF &#13;
Leo &#13;
Bose, &#13;
Jason &#13;
Caspers, &#13;
Mary &#13;
DeFazio, &#13;
Erikk &#13;
Dingman, &#13;
Ronda &#13;
Ditter, &#13;
Gretchen &#13;
Gayhart, &#13;
Carol &#13;
Kortendick, &#13;
Randy &#13;
LeCount, &#13;
Rick &#13;
Leonard, &#13;
Rick &#13;
Luehr, &#13;
Vahan &#13;
Mahdasian, &#13;
Suzanne &#13;
Mantuano, &#13;
Kelly &#13;
McKissick, &#13;
Scott &#13;
Osimitz, &#13;
Nicole &#13;
Pacione, &#13;
Michelle &#13;
Petersen, &#13;
Bill &#13;
Serpe, &#13;
Mike &#13;
Stephens, &#13;
Andy &#13;
Tschumper, &#13;
Jennie &#13;
Tunkieicz, &#13;
Tyson &#13;
Wilda. &#13;
nniirl&#13;
e&#13;
r&#13;
a&#13;
n&#13;
S&#13;
H&#13;
W&#13;
/i&#13;
n &#13;
?S &#13;
edited &#13;
b&#13;
y &#13;
studef1ts &#13;
at &#13;
UW-Parkside &#13;
and &#13;
they &#13;
are &#13;
solely &#13;
responsible &#13;
for &#13;
its &#13;
ed &#13;
and &#13;
hoHdays &#13;
^er &#13;
is &#13;
published &#13;
every &#13;
Thursday &#13;
during &#13;
the &#13;
academic &#13;
year &#13;
except &#13;
during &#13;
c &#13;
All &#13;
P.nrrPCnr\nHort/&gt;f» &#13;
ok^,,u &#13;
u_ &#13;
__  u &#13;
..... &#13;
. &#13;
_t- &#13;
n«ri,riHp &#13;
at &#13;
9 &#13;
a. &#13;
JUXOIIQU &#13;
qvciy &#13;
iM UOUdy &#13;
UUllliy &#13;
ll ie &#13;
dUdUemiq &#13;
ycai &#13;
caw,/. &#13;
be &#13;
address&#13;
e&#13;
d &#13;
to: &#13;
P arkside &#13;
Ranger, &#13;
University &#13;
of &#13;
W isconsin-Parksid &#13;
AdveSinn &#13;
SA™&#13;
1 &#13;
S&#13;
14&#13;
1&#13;
" &#13;
Te&#13;
,&#13;
lephon&#13;
e &#13;
(A14)553-2295 &#13;
or &#13;
(414) &#13;
553-2287 &#13;
, &#13;
. &#13;
publication &#13;
Thursday &#13;
^ &#13;
C&#13;
° &#13;
inCh &#13;
0r &#13;
less &#13;
in &#13;
bul&#13;
k&#13;
" &#13;
Advertisi&#13;
n&#13;
9 &#13;
deadline &#13;
is &#13;
Tuesda&#13;
y &#13;
sizfoaDpl&#13;
0&#13;
liL^ch^S &#13;
f&#13;
e &#13;
accepted &#13;
in &#13;
typewri tten, &#13;
double-spaced &#13;
on &#13;
standard &#13;
phone &#13;
number &#13;
kiriivM &#13;
£&gt; &#13;
*&#13;
s &#13;
-&#13;
an &#13;
350 &#13;
words &#13;
and &#13;
must &#13;
be &#13;
signed, &#13;
with &#13;
a &#13;
tele-&#13;
quest &#13;
Deadlinp &#13;
fnr &#13;
ip tti &#13;
• &#13;
v&#13;
?. &#13;
lcatl0&#13;
n &#13;
P&#13;
ur&#13;
Poses. &#13;
Names &#13;
wi ll &#13;
be &#13;
withheld &#13;
upon &#13;
re-&#13;
KSveJtheS,ftn^Sl5&#13;
Tues&#13;
,&#13;
5&#13;
y &#13;
at &#13;
10 &#13;
am&#13;
-&#13;
for &#13;
p&#13;
ublication &#13;
Thursd&#13;
a&#13;
y-&#13;
Range&#13;
r &#13;
content. &#13;
re &#13;
use &#13;
letter&#13;
s &#13;
containing &#13;
false &#13;
and &#13;
defamatory &#13;
Ranger &#13;
is &#13;
printed &#13;
by &#13;
the &#13;
Racine &#13;
Journal &#13;
Times. &#13;
Mrmbf' &#13;
' &#13;
aisocio &#13;
COlf' &#13;
r«c«' &#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72071">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 15, issue 5, October 2, 1986</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72072">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72073">
                <text>1986-10-02</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72076">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="72077">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="72078">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72079">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72080">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72081">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72082">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72083">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72084">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="681">
        <name>elections</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2218">
        <name>homecoming</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="222">
        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2473">
        <name>wisconsin state assembly</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="3189" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3675">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/33f0275c3bbf6a0e40f5e0956699ff00.pdf</src>
        <authentication>d8ced418a0ccaa6505a4e6c9094c3840</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72089">
              <text>Volume 15, issue 6</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72090">
              <text>PSGA elections to fill vital positions</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72100">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90148">
              <text>page&#13;
3--------..&#13;
-JFip;;a~ge;;-;4~a;ndd';5_:=========~~~~=========::1&#13;
Page&#13;
6&#13;
Workingwomen's&#13;
Ho"'!ecomingcandidate&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
rolediscussed&#13;
profiles&#13;
inauguration planned&#13;
•&#13;
University of WisconSin-Parkside&#13;
Vol. 1&#13;
S.&#13;
No.&#13;
e&#13;
Thenew Joan Rivers?&#13;
ChancellorSheila Kaplan wowed the crowd&#13;
withher wit, and teams from&#13;
PSGA&#13;
and the&#13;
Rangerwowed her with their inability to an.&#13;
photo&#13;
by&#13;
Dave McEvoy&#13;
swer questions  in Monday's College Bowl&#13;
practice matches In Main Place.&#13;
PSGA elections&#13;
to&#13;
fill vital positions&#13;
by Kelly McKissick&#13;
The Parkside  Student Gov-&#13;
ernment  Association  (PSGA)&#13;
will&#13;
be holding elections  on&#13;
Monday, Oct. 13 and Tuesday,&#13;
Oct. 14.&#13;
.&#13;
Referenda  will Include&#13;
elec-&#13;
tions for nine senate seats,&#13;
one  representative   for  the&#13;
Segregated University Fee&#13;
Allocations  Committee   (SU.&#13;
F AC) and one representative&#13;
for the Parkside  Union AdvI-&#13;
sory Board (PUAB).&#13;
Ballots  will also deal with&#13;
two changes  In PSGA's  con-&#13;
stitution  and referendum  for&#13;
United&#13;
Oouncn.&#13;
Adrian  Serrano,  president&#13;
of PSGA, sald  that  a lot of&#13;
people have taken out nomi-&#13;
nation papers  for the elected&#13;
positions,   but   the   papers&#13;
won't  be  due  until  Friday,&#13;
Oct. 10. He said,&#13;
"11&#13;
looks like&#13;
there might be a full slate of&#13;
candidates;  at  least  nine&#13;
people  are  running  for  the&#13;
senate."  In other years. there&#13;
have not been races  for sen-&#13;
ate&#13;
seats.&#13;
The SUFAC committee is a&#13;
committee that allocates over&#13;
$700,000 a  year  In  student&#13;
fees.  The  position  on  the&#13;
PUAB will be an Imporlant&#13;
seat this year because of the&#13;
change In the drinking age.&#13;
Serrano  explained,  "That&#13;
board will be asked to make&#13;
some  policy  recommenda.&#13;
tions  on  the  fact  that  the&#13;
drinking age has changed and&#13;
what direction the Union&#13;
will&#13;
be laking  as the grandfather&#13;
'clause runs out.&#13;
OJ&#13;
The   two   constitutional&#13;
changes  will be dealing  with&#13;
In-house  structural   Changes.&#13;
One will be spreading  more&#13;
responsibility&#13;
to&#13;
the  vice.&#13;
president.  allowing the presi-&#13;
dent  and  vice-president   to&#13;
share more power. The other&#13;
will&#13;
be on a change  In the&#13;
procedure  of electing  senate&#13;
members  to SUFAC. The rep.'&#13;
resenlatlves  used&#13;
to&#13;
be drawn&#13;
out of a hat,  and  now they&#13;
will be elected.  Serrano  be.&#13;
Ileves this Is a good change&#13;
Election&#13;
see&#13;
pags&#13;
3&#13;
All-new Homecoming gala ready to begin&#13;
by&#13;
Bill&#13;
Serpe&#13;
pThereis a new look about&#13;
arkslde'sHomecoming  this :&#13;
year.&#13;
m~We'veeliminated  the for.&#13;
In&#13;
dance,:'&#13;
said Homecom-&#13;
e:&#13;
CommIttee chairperson&#13;
ha:&#13;
k&#13;
Christoffersen.   "By&#13;
think&#13;
g II more  casual,  we&#13;
lI'edm~repeople will attend.&#13;
fair&#13;
On want it to be an af-&#13;
Thethat requires  a  date."&#13;
Cas~turday night dance and&#13;
mlnat~Night will be the cui.&#13;
Homeon of  the  thr-ee-day'&#13;
Thlncomingcelebration.&#13;
TIIu gs Will kick  off  on&#13;
liter~ay at 7:30 p.m.  with&#13;
and&#13;
Q&#13;
ronallon of the  King&#13;
Cinernaueen  In  the  Union&#13;
PaIr&#13;
"'iii ~&#13;
oting for the royal&#13;
m Can  ke place in Molina.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
9. course beginning  on&#13;
"w&#13;
Candi~a~av~,a f1el? of twenty&#13;
Saladises,    saId   Sandy&#13;
AdVis'acommitteemember.&#13;
Diane&#13;
W&#13;
to the committee,&#13;
Changesin&#13;
eish&#13;
, lalked  about&#13;
dure.&#13;
the voting proce-&#13;
"In&#13;
previous years,  people&#13;
merely  dropped  pennies  In a&#13;
box with the candidate's  pic.&#13;
ture. We've had a lot of&#13;
corn-&#13;
plaints  about that  system.  so&#13;
this year  everyone  will only&#13;
have one vote for their favor-&#13;
ite  candidate,   and  that  vote&#13;
will also count toward  spirit&#13;
award points."&#13;
There   will   be   several&#13;
events  throughout  the  week-&#13;
end  that   will  have   spirit&#13;
points  awarded  to the  clubs&#13;
and organizations.&#13;
A&#13;
comple-&#13;
te list of these events can be&#13;
obtained  In the SOC office or&#13;
the Student Activities  Office.&#13;
After  the  Coronation   on&#13;
Thursday,  there will be a Va-&#13;
riety Show with comedian  Sid&#13;
Youngers as' the emcee .: Acts&#13;
for the show will be audition-&#13;
ed by the Homecoming  corn-&#13;
mittee,&#13;
and    registration&#13;
should be made  with the ac-&#13;
tlvltles office.&#13;
On Friday,  Oct. 17, the fes-&#13;
tivities  will  begin  at  noon&#13;
with  a  Derder   Decorating&#13;
Party in Union Square. A der-&#13;
der Is the cardboard  core In&#13;
the middle  of a roll of toilet&#13;
paper.  These will be used on&#13;
Saturday  during  half-time  to&#13;
set the Gulness Book of World&#13;
Records for the World's Larg-&#13;
est University Derder Band.&#13;
At 1 p.rn, on Friday.  the Pi&#13;
Sigma   Epsilon   Marketing&#13;
Fraternity  will host its second&#13;
annual  golf .outing.  This  is&#13;
open&#13;
to&#13;
anyone who wants to&#13;
participate".&#13;
The first round of the 'I'ug-&#13;
of-War tournament  will begin&#13;
at 2 p.m. on Friday.  This Is a&#13;
spirit point event, and roles,&#13;
regulations  and  registration&#13;
can be obtained from SOC.&#13;
Two bands will play at the&#13;
Union on Friday.  From&#13;
3&#13;
to&#13;
6:30-p.rn. "The Class  of '62"&#13;
will play on the pad during a&#13;
picnic. Admission is free, and&#13;
brats,  burgers  and beverges&#13;
will  be  sold.  A dance  will&#13;
begin  at&#13;
9&#13;
p.m.  In  Union&#13;
Square.  Admission  will be $1&#13;
for  students,  and  one point&#13;
will be&#13;
given&#13;
for each person&#13;
representing  a club or organt-&#13;
zalton. "Pat McCurdy and the&#13;
Confldentlals"  will be playing&#13;
contemporary  rock.&#13;
Parkslde's  first bonfire will&#13;
be held at 7 p.m. on Friday.&#13;
The soccer  team  and  coach&#13;
Rick KIlps will be In attend-&#13;
ance as well&#13;
as&#13;
university ad-&#13;
ministrators.    The   Somers&#13;
Volunteer  Fire  Department&#13;
will&#13;
also&#13;
be&#13;
there  to insure&#13;
the event's success.&#13;
A faculty-vs.cjuntor&#13;
varsity&#13;
soccer  game  will be held on&#13;
Saturday  at noon,. This will&#13;
be  followed  by  the  varsity&#13;
soccer  game  at&#13;
1: 30,&#13;
when&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
nationalty.ac,&#13;
claimed  team  will host trw-&#13;
Oshkosh.  During   half-time.&#13;
the World's  Largest  Univer-&#13;
sity Derder Band will set the&#13;
Guinness Book record. This is&#13;
another  spirit  award  event.&#13;
An admission  charge  will be&#13;
levied  for  entrance&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
game,&#13;
but&#13;
those with&#13;
a&#13;
derder&#13;
wlll be admitted  free.&#13;
After the game,  at 3 p.m.,&#13;
the  Tug-of-Wa.r&#13;
tournament&#13;
semi-finals&#13;
and finals will be&#13;
held.  This  event  Is  being:&#13;
scheduled  over  a  mud  pit,&#13;
and  should  prove  to be fun&#13;
and dlrty.&#13;
Alumni  receptions  will be&#13;
held at 6:30 on Saturday.  Var-&#13;
ious clubs&#13;
and&#13;
organizations&#13;
will&#13;
be sponsoring individual&#13;
receptions at this time to wel-&#13;
come  back  their  respective&#13;
alumni.&#13;
"Atlanllc  City:&#13;
An&#13;
Event at&#13;
the Boardwalk"  is&#13;
the&#13;
theme&#13;
for  the  dance  on  Saturday&#13;
night.  Main  Place  will  be&#13;
transformed   Into  the  best&#13;
aspects   of   Atlantic   city.&#13;
·"Mickey&#13;
and&#13;
Memories"  will&#13;
be playing  music of the 50's&#13;
and  60's  In  Middle  Main&#13;
Place,   and   during   their&#13;
breaks,   Upper  Main  Place&#13;
will be&#13;
a&#13;
cocktanIounge.&#13;
Entertainment&#13;
for&#13;
this&#13;
lounge will be solicited  from&#13;
the  Parkslde  community.  A&#13;
casino will be going strong In&#13;
Lower  Main  Place,  and  the&#13;
Coffee Shoppe will be set up&#13;
as the actual boardwalk,&#13;
with&#13;
concessions   selling   coney&#13;
dogs, pizza and more.&#13;
There  will  be  five  spirit&#13;
points  awarded  for  persons&#13;
attending  the dance, and duro&#13;
Homecoming see page&#13;
9&#13;
2  Thursday.&#13;
October&#13;
9. 1986&#13;
th2JHHly~,...J1.!lk&#13;
... Someone should&#13;
by Bill&#13;
Serpe&#13;
On Monday,  Sept.  29, the&#13;
Student Organizations  Council&#13;
(SOC) sponsored  an ali-cam-&#13;
pus recruitment  fair.&#13;
The event was a tremen-&#13;
dous success, yet the Ranger&#13;
chose only&#13;
to&#13;
print one small&#13;
photograph,  and that was re-&#13;
legated&#13;
to&#13;
page 8.&#13;
When I asked edttcr-In-chtet&#13;
Gary  Schneeberger   why,  he&#13;
replled  that&#13;
It&#13;
was a matter&#13;
of "after  the fact"  reporting.&#13;
In&#13;
my  opinion,  "after   the&#13;
fact"   reporting   could  have&#13;
asked?  How successful  was&#13;
the event? How many people&#13;
got involved?  And the Ranger&#13;
might  have  soticlted  respon-&#13;
ses from   various  clubs  and&#13;
organizations,&#13;
the   general&#13;
student  population  and obser-&#13;
vaUons from   faculty.   staff&#13;
and admInIstration.&#13;
The  real  "after  the  fact"&#13;
results  are:  there  were  34&#13;
clubs   and   organizations&#13;
represented   all  along  the&#13;
main concourse;  there  were&#13;
over&#13;
100&#13;
students  involved  in&#13;
the recrnitment  process;  and&#13;
an estimated  250 students or&#13;
more were recruited into the&#13;
represented  organizations.&#13;
Even   though   that   figure&#13;
amounts&#13;
to&#13;
about seven per-&#13;
cent  of  Parkside's  student&#13;
population, this is still a con-&#13;
siderably  larger  number&#13;
than&#13;
in&#13;
past years.&#13;
The  Sept.  4 Ranger  edlto-&#13;
rial was titled  "Make  a com-&#13;
mttment"  and  delivered  the&#13;
following conclusion:&#13;
"This year, let's make our&#13;
goal the commitment&#13;
to&#13;
be-&#13;
coming  committed.   Take  a&#13;
good, long look at the student&#13;
life opportunities  available  to&#13;
you, choose one or more and&#13;
go lor&#13;
It.&#13;
You'll be amazed  at&#13;
the  difference  your  involve-&#13;
ment can make -&#13;
in&#13;
yourself&#13;
and&#13;
in&#13;
your university."&#13;
It&#13;
Is my suggestion  that the&#13;
Ranger's   editorial  staff  tape&#13;
this paragraph   to their  type.&#13;
wrttera  and  that  each  week&#13;
they&#13;
try&#13;
to choose  for  their&#13;
paper articles that reflect this&#13;
dedication   to  commitment.&#13;
l.JU1iu&#13;
Support  United  Council&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Next week the fall Parkside&#13;
Student Govern.ment  Associa-&#13;
tion elections  will take  place&#13;
on Monday and Tuesday.&#13;
Besides    electing    PSGA&#13;
Senators,  representatives  on&#13;
the   Segregated    University&#13;
Fees  Allocation  Committee&#13;
and the Parkside  Union Advi-&#13;
sory  Board,  the  student  body&#13;
w1ll&#13;
vote on two constitution&#13;
changes.  These  changes  were&#13;
approved by the PSGA Senate&#13;
last spring.  The student  body&#13;
will&#13;
also vote on the biennial&#13;
United Council referendum.&#13;
Every  two years,  schools&#13;
that  are  members  of United&#13;
Council have to reafflrm  their&#13;
membership  by voting for UC&#13;
in  a  student  body  refer-en-&#13;
dum. Being  a member  of DC&#13;
costs each  student  $.50 per&#13;
semester.&#13;
I&#13;
want&#13;
to&#13;
tell you some of&#13;
the th1Rgs that  UC does and&#13;
will&#13;
be doing with your fifty&#13;
cents.&#13;
DC&#13;
has  six&#13;
employees&#13;
who work in MadJ80n on stu.&#13;
dent  issues  ranging  from&#13;
minority   recruitment   and&#13;
drinking  age to equal  rights,&#13;
campus safety,&#13;
tuttron.&#13;
credit&#13;
transfer,  etc.&#13;
Last  year,  some  of&#13;
DC's&#13;
victories  included:  acWeving&#13;
a student seat on the Board of&#13;
Regents,  helping  to obtain  $3&#13;
million&#13;
more&#13;
in&#13;
state&#13;
finan-&#13;
cial&#13;
aid,  and  obtaining  three&#13;
student  positions  on the High.&#13;
er  Educational  Aids Board.&#13;
UC's biggest  defeat  last year&#13;
was the drinking age.&#13;
DC&#13;
is the only student voice&#13;
in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
DC&#13;
monitors the&#13;
state  legislature,  the  gover-&#13;
nor's office, tile Board of Re-&#13;
gents and the UW.System  Ad.&#13;
ministration.  UC serves as&#13;
a&#13;
lobbyist  organization   and  a&#13;
service organization.&#13;
This&#13;
year the big issue of&#13;
UC will be the proposed  tut-&#13;
tion increases.  In the  past,&#13;
UC&#13;
has had Success&#13;
in&#13;
stop-&#13;
ping some tuition increases;&#13;
this year's  battle will be the&#13;
biggest  ever.&#13;
It&#13;
will  be  a&#13;
tough  fight,  but  the  point  Is&#13;
that UC Is the only organlza.&#13;
tlon in Madison  fighting  for&#13;
our interests.&#13;
. I urge you to vote&#13;
YES&#13;
for&#13;
United  Council.  You will be&#13;
helping yourself.&#13;
Adrian  Serrano&#13;
THE  oRGANIZATION&#13;
oF&#13;
AFRI~~~.&#13;
HERE&amp;\'&#13;
IMPOSES  SANCTIONS&#13;
"'U&lt;"  .~.&#13;
SOUTH AFRICA .&#13;
THE  lIIlIT15H COMMONWEALTH HERE5Y&#13;
IMPOSES   SANCTIONS&#13;
UPON VOU.&#13;
SOUTH  AFRICA,&#13;
THE&#13;
UNITED STATES HEREBY  IMPOSES&#13;
SANCTIONS   UPON YOU•&#13;
.sooTH&#13;
AFRICA.&#13;
Letter&#13;
Tuition  issue  demands  involvement&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As most of us are  aware,&#13;
either  by  articles&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
Ranger, our local newspapers&#13;
or as&#13;
a&#13;
"HOT"&#13;
issue in the&#13;
upcoming  elections,  the single&#13;
most important  issue facing&#13;
us as students&#13;
is&#13;
tuition&#13;
in-&#13;
creases.&#13;
Our  continuing  education&#13;
now rests on whether or not&#13;
many  of us will be able to&#13;
meet  these  rising  costs and&#13;
finish our education  here  at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Last December,  the legtsla-&#13;
ture, as&#13;
a&#13;
result of an out-of-&#13;
system   audit  and  with  the&#13;
recommendation   of the Presl-&#13;
dent  and  Board  of Regents,&#13;
voted to withdraw  $22 million&#13;
from the University  Reserve&#13;
Fund.  As  a  result,  we  at&#13;
Parkside  were forced to allo-&#13;
cate&#13;
$335,000&#13;
of this money to&#13;
campus areas  funded&#13;
by&#13;
our&#13;
segregated   fees .. This  figure&#13;
was arbitrarily  given to our&#13;
assistant  chancellor  of flnan-&#13;
cial  affairs,   and  he,  along&#13;
with the compotroller,&#13;
com-&#13;
plied  with  the  letter  of  the&#13;
law.&#13;
Next  year,   we  students&#13;
musl&#13;
begin  paying  back  this&#13;
allocation.  Not only were  the&#13;
funds  arbitrarily   allocated,&#13;
but we had no student  input&#13;
in&#13;
this decision. However, we&#13;
must  next  year  begin  paying&#13;
back  this  sum  ... next  year&#13;
alone the figure  is an&#13;
addi-&#13;
tional  $20  per  student   per&#13;
year,  for the next ten years.&#13;
Along  with&#13;
tuition,&#13;
our&#13;
segregated  fees must be rats-&#13;
ed. 'We have no choice!  The&#13;
areas that we are responsible&#13;
to&#13;
fund cannot&#13;
run&#13;
short this&#13;
amount  of money.  While we&#13;
conscientiously   pay  our bills,&#13;
we must now pay  this addi-&#13;
tional amount.  Along with our&#13;
administration,&#13;
we   were&#13;
given  no  choice.  This  edict&#13;
came  down to us from  our&#13;
very own legislators.&#13;
Most  student   representa-&#13;
tives agree that this is&#13;
a&#13;
total.&#13;
Iy unfair  decision.  The bottom&#13;
line.• is  that  the  money  is&#13;
gone!  We must  pay  It back.&#13;
What  can  be  done  about  It&#13;
now, you ask? Make sure that&#13;
not one incumbent is re-elect,&#13;
ed. Whether  or not they voted&#13;
for this injustice,  they were&#13;
there.  I am  not responsible&#13;
for the decision,  either,  but&#13;
when I pay the additional tul·&#13;
tion increase,  I have to&#13;
pay!'&#13;
Because  of the tuition&#13;
In-&#13;
creases,  I am responsible&#13;
to&#13;
help pay back  this amount of&#13;
money.  Not one legislator&#13;
has&#13;
any  excuse,&#13;
in&#13;
my  opinion.&#13;
I'm&#13;
sure&#13;
if&#13;
most&#13;
of&#13;
thenm&#13;
were  questioned,  they&#13;
would&#13;
deny any and all involvement&#13;
in&#13;
this decision. By their&#13;
pas  .&#13;
sage of this bill, they are&#13;
reo&#13;
sponsible.  As usual, we&#13;
stu-&#13;
dents will adhere  to the letter&#13;
of the  law,  But,  we have&#13;
to&#13;
I&#13;
pay  back  the  monies,  and&#13;
they  (the  legislators)  should&#13;
I&#13;
have  to  pay  back  for their&#13;
share&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
decision by not&#13;
being  returned   to office. We&#13;
can show them that we&#13;
do&#13;
not&#13;
approve   of  their  decision.&#13;
There  are  some  remaining&#13;
I&#13;
funds  in  the  reserves.&#13;
Will&#13;
they take more next time?&#13;
As I stated  before,  nowis&#13;
the time to make your desires&#13;
clear.  By your  vote, you can&#13;
let  these  people  know that&#13;
we're  mad&#13;
as&#13;
hell and&#13;
we're&#13;
not going to take it&#13;
any   more,&#13;
I&#13;
Mary  Janice  Perry&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Gary  L,  SChneeberger-::.:&#13;
•••••••••.•.••••••••••••.•••••••   Edltor&#13;
Ktmberlle    Kranich    ••••.•••••••••••••••••••••.•••••.   News  Editor&#13;
Julie   Pendleton·   •••••••••••••.••••••••..••••   Aast.   News  Editor&#13;
•  Jenny   Carr&#13;
Feature   Editor&#13;
Jim  Helbaur    ••••.•.•..••••.•••••••••••.••    Entertalnment&#13;
Editor&#13;
Robb  Luehr&#13;
Sports   Editor&#13;
Michael   Rohf  ••••.••.••••..••••••••••..•••••    Asst.   Sports   Editor&#13;
Dave  McEvoy   ••••••••••••...•••••••••••••••••.••••••    Photo   Editor&#13;
Jack   Bomhuetter&#13;
Photo   Editor&#13;
Andy   Buchanan&#13;
•••.••.•••••••••••••••••••.  8uslness&#13;
Manager&#13;
Brenda   Buchanan&#13;
•.•••••••••••••• Asst.   Business    Manager&#13;
Dave  Roback  ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••  Advertlslng&#13;
Manager&#13;
Steve   Plcazo  ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••  Distrtbutlon&#13;
Mana~er&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Leo Bose, Jason Caspers, Mary&#13;
DeFaZIO,Enkk Dingman, Ronda&#13;
Ditter,Gretchen Gayhart, Carol&#13;
Kortendlck, Randy LeCount, Rick&#13;
Leonard, Chris Lojeski Rick Luehr&#13;
Vahan  Mahdasian,   Su~anne&#13;
'&#13;
Ma.ntl!ano •.Kelly  McKissick,   Scott&#13;
OSlmltz,&#13;
Nicole  Pacione    Michelle&#13;
Petersen, BillSerpe, MikeStevens,&#13;
, KatleThomey, AndyTschumper&#13;
.Jennie Tunkieicz, Karen Wiegert&#13;
Tyson Wilda.&#13;
'&#13;
RangeriswottenandeditedbystudentsatUW·Parksideandtheyaresolelyresponsibletornsedilonj&#13;
polley and content.  Ranger&#13;
IS&#13;
pubhshed every Thursday during  the academic  year except duringbreaks&#13;
and holidays.&#13;
N&#13;
AJI&#13;
2'OoOOrres&#13;
K&#13;
P&#13;
ondenceshould  be addressed to:  Parkside Ranger, University  of  Wisconsin.ParkSide,BoX&#13;
0.   .',&#13;
enoshaW153141.Telephone(414)553-2295or(414)553-2287&#13;
p~g~~~~~~h~~;~:;~&#13;
$4&#13;
per column  inch or  less in bulk.  Advertising  dead'line is Tuesday at 9 a.m.for&#13;
s~:ttp~~e~o~~ge~i;~o  ~~I ~el·accePted If typewritten.  double·spaced  on  standard&#13;
."r ...l}.o,nf'~t&#13;
pho&#13;
. ber&#13;
i&#13;
u&#13;
e  ess than 350 words  and must  be signed   with  a&#13;
tete-&#13;
Que~~D~~dlr;el~Cludedfo~ verification  purposes.  Names&#13;
will&#13;
be withh'eld upon reo&#13;
t~~~~I:.frg&#13;
reserVesthe righ~~~e~~[~~~TueSdda&#13;
y&#13;
aft 10 a.m.  for  pU~Ii~ation Thursday.  Ranger&#13;
PRC.,\IP&#13;
content.&#13;
ers an   re use letters con.tammgfalse and defamatory&#13;
Ranger is printed by the Racine Journal Times.&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72086">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 15, issue 6, October 9, 1986</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72087">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72088">
                <text>1986-10-09</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72091">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="72092">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="72093">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72094">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72095">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72096">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72097">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72098">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72099">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="681">
        <name>elections</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2218">
        <name>homecoming</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1836">
        <name>parkside union advisory board (PUAB)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2482">
        <name>segregated university fee allocation committee (SUFAC)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1090">
        <name>tuition</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="3190" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3676">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/77fee47dd1809f870757b471aade0f14.pdf</src>
        <authentication>d730ec6a91411755e1ea0c67e3cc978b</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72104">
              <text>Volume 15, issue 7</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72105">
              <text>Reserve funds taken without consultation, SUFAC says</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72115">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90149">
              <text>&#13;
P~===1~~===r;;;;:==:=,&#13;
I&#13;
page&#13;
4&#13;
page&#13;
8&#13;
page&#13;
9&#13;
Parksidejoins&#13;
Exclusive interview&#13;
WingspreadFellows&#13;
Allen Melvin&#13;
-&#13;
Oprah Winfrey&#13;
in Racine&#13;
oct.&#13;
16. 1986&#13;
University of Wlsconsln-Parkslde&#13;
Vol. 1&#13;
5.&#13;
NO.7&#13;
Kenosha County Stadium?&#13;
photo by&#13;
Don&#13;
Moldenhauer&#13;
No,this complex may look likea baseball stadium, but it's actually&#13;
Parkside's residence halls seen Irom a perspective usually re-&#13;
served lor birds. For details on a housing open house, see page 10.&#13;
Reservefunds taken without consultation,  SUFAC says&#13;
byKimberlle Kranich&#13;
News Editor&#13;
as&#13;
In&#13;
a letter&#13;
to&#13;
Gary  Goetz&#13;
c~1stantchancellor of finan:&#13;
Chalaffairs, Andy Buchanan,&#13;
UJl!v~anof the segregated&#13;
CQ",,,,~\ty fees   allocation&#13;
Pre"&#13;
ee   (SUFAC),   ex.&#13;
Cerned his committee's   con-&#13;
"wen over  being&#13;
informed&#13;
8ionsafter&#13;
the&#13;
fact,&#13;
of dect-&#13;
rnOval"'aderegarding  the reo&#13;
stude&#13;
tOf&#13;
reserve&#13;
funds&#13;
from&#13;
'!'h&#13;
n organizations"&#13;
to&#13;
d:&#13;
letter was&#13;
In&#13;
response&#13;
and&#13;
nCISlonsmade  by Goetz&#13;
troUer&#13;
ave&#13;
liolle, director/con.&#13;
a,&#13;
to&#13;
fu&#13;
f&#13;
bUSiness services,&#13;
fro",&#13;
Pe removal  of funds&#13;
arkslde'S  cash   reo&#13;
serves   to  pay  a  debt  of&#13;
$335,900to the UW System.&#13;
In&#13;
addition  to the  $335,900&#13;
that was removed from Park-&#13;
side's cash reserves last De-&#13;
cember,  an additional  annual&#13;
fee of $25,756 wl1l have to be&#13;
paid over the next te,ny~ars&#13;
to&#13;
replenish reserves&#13;
in&#13;
SIster&#13;
institutions.&#13;
Orglnally,  a  total  of $22.5&#13;
million  was  taken  from  th~&#13;
budget  surpluses  of all  Uni-&#13;
versity  institutions  to  help&#13;
reduce  tuition increases  ~nd&#13;
provide  funds  for  llbranes,&#13;
computers  and faculty  catch-&#13;
up pay.&#13;
I&#13;
Once the  money  was  co-&#13;
lected,  it was redistributed  to&#13;
each campus based on enroll-&#13;
ment figures. However. Park-&#13;
side  received  about&#13;
$600.000&#13;
more  than  what  was  origi-&#13;
nally  taken.  Since  Parkside&#13;
had  already  spent  this  "ex-&#13;
cess"  money,  it was neces-&#13;
sary to draw upon Its cash reo&#13;
serves  (fund 126) to pay back&#13;
the debt.&#13;
According   to   Buchanan,&#13;
such decisions are  supposed&#13;
to&#13;
be made  at  the campus&#13;
level.&#13;
"SUF&#13;
AC" as a commit-&#13;
tee  was  not  consulted  by&#13;
'Goetz or Holle as to where&#13;
the funds were going to spe-&#13;
ciflcally  come from.  We be-&#13;
live we  deserve  more  con-&#13;
sultation, "&#13;
While  Buchanan  received&#13;
an itemized  list of the cash&#13;
reductions   made  by  Goetz&#13;
and Holle&#13;
In&#13;
late September,&#13;
.the list was compiled&#13;
in&#13;
May&#13;
and  the  decision  to remove&#13;
cash reserves  was made&#13;
in&#13;
December.&#13;
To explain his lack of con.&#13;
sultatlon  with SUFAC, Goetz&#13;
wrote&#13;
In&#13;
an October 10 letter&#13;
to Buchanan,  "unfortunately&#13;
at this time (end of May) ex.&#13;
cept  for  us  administrative&#13;
servants,  the university  was&#13;
shut down&#13;
in&#13;
that&#13;
Impass&#13;
be.&#13;
tween the end of the semester&#13;
and  start&#13;
of&#13;
summer&#13;
ses-&#13;
ston."&#13;
The  leller  further   stated&#13;
that  a copy of the Itemized&#13;
cash reduction list was sent&#13;
to Jenny Price,  then director&#13;
•&#13;
of student  life, new interim&#13;
director,  and  was  also  dis-&#13;
cussed belpre Administrative&#13;
Council&#13;
"In&#13;
the bellef that the&#13;
appropriate&#13;
Educaltonal&#13;
Services or Student LIfe staff&#13;
would communicate  the plan&#13;
to  you  and  any  comments&#13;
would get back  to us."  Such&#13;
was not the case,&#13;
"Before  I  went  on vaca-&#13;
tion."  said&#13;
Price °1 urged&#13;
Holle not to take  any action&#13;
until  I  got  back.  I  also&#13;
warned  Carol Cashen  (Then&#13;
acting  assistant  chancellor),&#13;
that no final action should be&#13;
taken."&#13;
According  to  Price,  upon&#13;
her  return,  action  had  been&#13;
Reserves 8ee page 2&#13;
---&#13;
----&#13;
·'""!1&#13;
%&#13;
2&#13;
Thur:d:y.&#13;
October&#13;
16. 1988&#13;
~&#13;
Homecoming&#13;
a&#13;
step&#13;
in the right direction&#13;
Hom&#13;
m!JIC&#13;
a celebration  steeped In tradition,  and&#13;
lradltJoQ&#13;
la .. methln&amp; that takes time to butid,&#13;
Ha~&#13;
hlatorlc&amp;Uy had  IIttie of either&#13;
eommodtty-.&#13;
tradition&#13;
or&#13;
Urn&#13;
to&#13;
tulU&#13;
v·ate it··Parkslde   should&#13;
be&#13;
com-&#13;
mended&#13;
tor&#13;
trying&#13;
to moe  Homecoming a&#13;
ttrne-honored&#13;
&lt;ampul  tradlUon&#13;
In&#13;
lhla,&#13;
just th  fourth year of the&#13;
mrd-octobee  cerebra-&#13;
Uon.&#13;
tie&#13;
aeU\1U.   and events are being instituted  to res-&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
eoa.1&#13;
5C&#13;
nee or the unJversity  community.&#13;
~&#13;
th   b  n   of a football t  m&#13;
Is,&#13;
as always, a&#13;
":~;~bl   anomaly. this y  r's festivities boast more of a&#13;
~&#13;
m!JIC&#13;
"f&#13;
"lhan&#13;
they did In years&#13;
past.&#13;
'The&#13;
ap-&#13;
ran&#13;
of a bonfire,&#13;
the&#13;
Idea&#13;
of a conceptual  "casino&#13;
ht •&#13;
an&lt;I&#13;
attempt  to spur student Interest  and&#13;
tn-&#13;
¥OIv m&#13;
t&#13;
an a unlv  ratty  "'deroer'·   band&#13;
all&#13;
represent&#13;
po&#13;
In&#13;
a&#13;
uve direction.&#13;
'hMn&#13;
&amp;1"8.&#13;
no&#13;
doubt.&#13;
nay..uyera  who perceive some of&#13;
nla ..&#13;
too&#13;
hllh&#13;
IIChoollsh&#13;
and thereby&#13;
destructive&#13;
to ParIuII&#13;
'a&#13;
/map&#13;
II&#13;
Is&#13;
tnI&#13;
that 10m  of th  planned&#13;
events&#13;
can&#13;
be&#13;
conatI\MICI&#13;
aa&#13;
vlng qu  lienable  college quality,  the&#13;
IcIeaa&#13;
beJIInd&#13;
them deaer\'e nothing but praise.  lore&#13;
Im-&#13;
portant&#13;
lhan&#13;
w  t&#13;
Is&#13;
actually  being planned Is that plan.&#13;
0(&#13;
lhla&#13;
nature  la ev n going on··plannlng that&#13;
recog-&#13;
n.tau&#13;
Park.sJde".&#13;
n&#13;
d&#13;
to encourage  closer  relaUons  within&#13;
It.I campul&#13;
community  and&#13;
among  Its&#13;
surrounding&#13;
com-&#13;
munlUes.&#13;
J.I11IJ:&#13;
Candidate  provides&#13;
Homecoming  information&#13;
To&#13;
tha Editor'&#13;
1nce&#13;
lMore wu   no lntonna·&#13;
don&#13;
avaJ.1&amp;ble on m  ..  a can·&#13;
dldale    tor    Homecom.lng&#13;
qu&#13;
n.&#13;
I&#13;
foe!&#13;
It&#13;
n ceaary&#13;
to&#13;
oupply&#13;
you&#13;
with lOme,&#13;
I am&#13;
a&#13;
nIOr music mjor repreaent.&#13;
Ing the Sociology club and the&#13;
reason&#13;
I&#13;
want&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
queen&#13;
is&#13;
this:&#13;
Slnce  there  Is  no  black&#13;
monarchy&#13;
in&#13;
the  House  of&#13;
Windsor, there  should&#13;
be&#13;
at&#13;
least one at Parkslde.&#13;
Cheryl Brown&#13;
~&#13;
Inauguration on Oct. 27&#13;
In&#13;
laat&#13;
w&#13;
k'.&#13;
article about&#13;
the chane 1I0r'. lnaugura lion&#13;
(''TradJUon&#13;
a&#13;
part&#13;
of planned&#13;
f  tivlU  .. ).&#13;
the&#13;
Ra.nger&#13;
In.&#13;
adv&#13;
rt&#13;
nUy&#13;
I&#13;
It&#13;
out the date&#13;
of    v&#13;
nt.&#13;
The&#13;
C'&#13;
remon)r~&#13;
'U."Dl&#13;
take&#13;
place on Monday,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
'n&#13;
at&#13;
3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
A&#13;
luncheon will proceed&#13;
at&#13;
I&#13;
p.m. and a reception will&#13;
follow at&#13;
4; 30.&#13;
'The  Ra.nger  regrets   lis&#13;
error  and  any  COnfusion&#13;
it&#13;
may have caused.&#13;
Reserve cuts debated'----_&#13;
Raerv"'rom _&#13;
1&#13;
tak n  d&#13;
to&#13;
dead1lnes  but&#13;
that such  cllon    • able to&#13;
modttI&#13;
Buchanan&#13;
eau&#13;
the lack of&#13;
consu1&#13;
Uon&#13;
"untl&#13;
terallam&#13;
lIIat&#13;
plnat  the splrtt of&#13;
""U'&lt;INJ&#13;
CO\'&#13;
mane&#13;
We  wOUld&#13;
lill&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
Includ    as&#13;
an&#13;
equal&#13;
partner&#13;
in&#13;
future deter.&#13;
mlnaUons  or&#13;
this&#13;
nature."&#13;
"Be&#13;
assured," said Goetz's&#13;
letter,  ..&#13;
that&#13;
Y.ith&#13;
the excel-&#13;
lent  new  leadership  In the&#13;
Student  Services  area  such&#13;
breakdo,,"ns&#13;
in&#13;
communlca.&#13;
tion will&#13;
be&#13;
rare&#13;
or like&#13;
this&#13;
one- the&#13;
result&#13;
01&#13;
unintention.&#13;
ed overslght."&#13;
[~",~t.&#13;
~Et'~~o~~&#13;
®&#13;
RUN  INSPIRATIONAL   MEDIA&#13;
ADs,&#13;
BOB I&lt;ASoTENIS A LOUSE.&#13;
FORTUNATEL~  SOMEONE IS&#13;
R.UNNING  AGAINST    HIM.. VOTE&#13;
FOR    ED   GAR".I":..:E:,:'&lt;.:.'_~_&#13;
'~&#13;
®&#13;
GET ENIXlR5EO  BY&#13;
UlCA1.&#13;
POlmCAL&#13;
LEADERS&#13;
wtTH&#13;
&amp;ROAD ELECTORAtE  APPEAL.&#13;
HELLO.  I'M&#13;
RA1.PH&#13;
NADER. .. _ tol(}QMAN&#13;
MAlLEJl AND I&#13;
AA.E&#13;
HERE 10 TELL&#13;
V04J&#13;
1Mo\T&#13;
60&amp;&#13;
KASTEN  15  A LOU5£,:-,;,,'l&#13;
1iilI~&#13;
.:;&#13;
@&#13;
WHEN  ASKED  ABOUT  THE&#13;
'TENOR,&#13;
OF&#13;
YOUR. CAMPAIGN,   SA.Y&#13;
LISTEN.&#13;
r&#13;
WANTED&#13;
-ro')&#13;
CONDlJC.T A&#13;
&lt;:!£AN&#13;
CAMPAIGN ..•&#13;
Nobody'asked m~, but."&#13;
Child  care  murals  are priceless&#13;
by Brenda&#13;
L.&#13;
Buchanan&#13;
TIle  Parkside  Child  care&#13;
center  now owns two price-&#13;
less painted murals.&#13;
The value  on the  colorful&#13;
pieces is not measured&#13;
in&#13;
monetary  terms.   but&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
form  of appreciation  of the&#13;
gift,&#13;
the&#13;
viewing pleasure  of&#13;
the  staff,  visitors,  parents&#13;
and&#13;
ch1ldren who&#13;
use&#13;
the Cen-&#13;
ter,  but mostly  In the sk1l1,&#13;
creativity  and  pride  of the&#13;
children who patnted  the two&#13;
pieces.&#13;
Sherry 'Thomas, director  of&#13;
the  center,  was  invited&#13;
by&#13;
D.avid Holmes, master  artist,&#13;
Linda Roberts,  artlsls  assist.&#13;
ant. and the junior apprentice&#13;
artists of the summer  College&#13;
for&#13;
Klds,&#13;
to&#13;
come view and&#13;
choose&#13;
two&#13;
from  the  four&#13;
murals&#13;
that&#13;
they  worked&#13;
on&#13;
in&#13;
their class.&#13;
Sherry  and two other staff&#13;
members  arrived  to find the&#13;
artists  sUll working&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
flnlshtng touches,&#13;
It&#13;
was dlttl.&#13;
cult to choose because each of&#13;
the four painted murals were&#13;
so fascinating  and  carefully&#13;
done.&#13;
Finally  Sherry  chose  an&#13;
underwater   scene  complete&#13;
"The value of&#13;
the colorful&#13;
pieces is not&#13;
measured in&#13;
monetary&#13;
terms, but in&#13;
the viewing&#13;
pleasure."&#13;
with&#13;
a&#13;
treasure  chest,  deep~&#13;
sea  diver.&#13;
an&#13;
octopus  with&#13;
rappllng  tentacles  and  a se.&#13;
lection  of tlsh  that  puts  the&#13;
Shedd&#13;
Aquarium&#13;
to shame.&#13;
The  second  choice  was  a&#13;
brilliant  interpretation  of&#13;
life&#13;
on another  planet.  There  are&#13;
two more  suns  than  we are&#13;
use&#13;
to,&#13;
people  traveling  ln&#13;
ultra&#13;
all-terrain   vehicles,&#13;
a&#13;
selection  of flora  and&#13;
fauna&#13;
that can be found in only the&#13;
imaginations&#13;
of the&#13;
creators&#13;
of the palntlng.&#13;
One factor that help Sherry&#13;
and&#13;
the staff decide  is what&#13;
visual imagery  would be most&#13;
interesting&#13;
to&#13;
the  children,&#13;
~T~H&#13;
Leo&#13;
Bose,&#13;
Jason  Caspers,   Mary&#13;
DeFazIO,&#13;
Enkk   Dingman.&#13;
Ronda&#13;
Diner,  Gretchen&#13;
Gayhan.    Carol&#13;
Kortendock. Randy&#13;
lecounl,&#13;
Rick&#13;
Leonard.   Chns   LOJ8skl.  RICk  Luehr.&#13;
Vahan&#13;
Mahdas1an,    Suzanne&#13;
Manluano,&#13;
KeUy  McKISSICk,   Scott&#13;
Os,mltz.&#13;
NICOle PactOne,   MtChelle&#13;
Petersen,&#13;
B.II&#13;
Serpe,   Mike   Stevens&#13;
Kahe Thomey.  Andy  Tschumper.&#13;
•&#13;
Jennie&#13;
Tunkl8tCZ,   Karen   WIegert&#13;
TysonW'lda&#13;
'&#13;
-_&#13;
....&#13;
~;;;::~~&#13;
GMyL,Sc_V-&#13;
r_.__&#13;
Edrtor&#13;
KI_   K_h&#13;
_   _&#13;
E6Itor&#13;
Juloo __&#13;
_&#13;
_&#13;
Editor&#13;
~CorT.&#13;
_.F&#13;
E6Itor&#13;
JurI"'-'&#13;
_&#13;
E/QrtIo_&#13;
Edttor&#13;
_&#13;
......tv&#13;
_&#13;
_._.....&#13;
.SportsEdltor&#13;
0.-.&#13;
Wee..,., _.....................&#13;
Photo&#13;
Edttor&#13;
J.ctt&#13;
Botnhuette,&#13;
•••~................&#13;
Photo  Ecf.ttof&#13;
Andy&#13;
lkJchonon&#13;
1Iv...---.&#13;
~&#13;
auehaNn   _&#13;
Aut.&#13;
eu...nne"~&#13;
0....._&#13;
dvo&lt;1Jolng&#13;
_&#13;
5_&#13;
P1cuo.•.._._._&#13;
Dt••&#13;
n_   '""-'&#13;
the&#13;
most  frequent&#13;
viewera.&#13;
"When  children  and&#13;
parents&#13;
are entering&#13;
and&#13;
leaving&#13;
the&#13;
center  I&#13;
can&#13;
often hear them&#13;
talking   about   the&#13;
muraIJ&#13;
from my ottlce,"  stated 3her,&#13;
ry.&#13;
The&#13;
murals&#13;
on  the&#13;
wall&#13;
are helping the chlldren&#13;
to&#13;
de·&#13;
velop  their   language&#13;
and&#13;
communication&#13;
skills,&#13;
in&#13;
addi-&#13;
tion&#13;
to&#13;
expanding&#13;
their  imagi.&#13;
nations.&#13;
When&#13;
completed,&#13;
the works&#13;
of art&#13;
were transported&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
center&#13;
in&#13;
the  same  manner&#13;
that the artlsls  of the Renais-&#13;
sance -&#13;
would&#13;
deliver&#13;
thelr&#13;
works.&#13;
The&#13;
pieces&#13;
would&#13;
be&#13;
carried  though  the town&#13;
by&#13;
the&#13;
artists&#13;
and   delivered&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
patron.&#13;
In&#13;
this&#13;
case&#13;
tht&#13;
murals  were&#13;
carried&#13;
through&#13;
the&#13;
campus&#13;
grounds&#13;
to the&#13;
center where both&#13;
the  art  and&#13;
artists   were  welcomed. A&#13;
welcoming reception&#13;
was  held&#13;
by&#13;
the  center&#13;
as   a   show&#13;
of&#13;
thanks,&#13;
The  Parkside  Child&#13;
cart&#13;
Center Is grateful for the&#13;
glIl&#13;
Sherry Thomas says that&#13;
tJuj&#13;
is just  one  example  of&#13;
t.hf&#13;
many  ways that the facult)'&#13;
staff.  and&#13;
students&#13;
of the&#13;
UJll·&#13;
versity  have been&#13;
supporti&#13;
w&#13;
of the center.&#13;
•&#13;
~:~~&#13;
wnnen  an~ edIted by&#13;
students  at  UW-Parkside   and  they  are  solely  responsible  for its&#13;
ed:l(W.&#13;
and hOhda:ntent.&#13;
anger  IS PUblished  every  Thursday  dunng  the  academiC  year  except  dUrlnQbrt3ll5&#13;
N't&#13;
~es~~Sehr::~m~lgl&#13;
b~&#13;
ad,&#13;
dressed&#13;
10:&#13;
Parkside   Ranger,  University   of  Wisconsin-ParkSlde&#13;
80'&#13;
Advertts;n&#13;
ralesare&#13;
.   eephone   (414)  553-2295  or (414)  553-2287.&#13;
.&#13;
PUbkcanon ~hurSday.&#13;
S4&#13;
per  column   Inch  or  less&#13;
III&#13;
bulk.  Adver1lslng  deadline  is Tuesday  at&#13;
9&#13;
a m&#13;
fo:&#13;
leners&#13;
10&#13;
the  editor&#13;
will&#13;
be  ace    t  d&#13;
"1&#13;
.&#13;
SlZ'e&#13;
paper   leners   should  be less ~~ e  3lsJypewnnen,&#13;
double-spaced    on  standard&#13;
Phone&#13;
number  Included  for  vent&#13;
an&#13;
words  and must  be  sIgned.&#13;
With&#13;
a tele-&#13;
Quest&#13;
Deadline  lor  leners&#13;
IS&#13;
T~tlon&#13;
puWO&#13;
ses&#13;
.&#13;
Names.wIII&#13;
be&#13;
Withheld  upon  reo&#13;
reserves  Ihe  ngtllto    edrtleners    anJ&#13;
Y&#13;
~l 1&#13;
a&#13;
m.  lor  DUbhcallon  ThurSday.   Ranger&#13;
corllent.&#13;
re use  letters  contalnrng&#13;
false&#13;
and defamatory&#13;
Ranger IS pnnted&#13;
by Ihe&#13;
RaCine Journal&#13;
Times.&#13;
fi~&#13;
..&#13;
I "&#13;
I&#13;
/;&#13;
I&#13;
/~&#13;
..&#13;
l~~&#13;
....&#13;
.:;&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72101">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 15, issue 7, October 16, 1986</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72102">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72103">
                <text>1986-10-16</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72106">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="72107">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="72108">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72109">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72110">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72111">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72112">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72113">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72114">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1930">
        <name>Educational Services</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="995">
        <name>gary goetz</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2482">
        <name>segregated university fee allocation committee (SUFAC)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="300">
        <name>student life</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="900">
        <name>uw system</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="3191" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3677">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/a1ab80288a3cf0f23a6a3eff2a3da22c.pdf</src>
        <authentication>334ba21ebb686213cf1637bed83e26a5</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72119">
              <text>Volume 15, issue 8</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72120">
              <text>Segregated fee increase might be necessary in fall</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72130">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89958">
              <text>e4&#13;
Governor'srace&#13;
comesto campus&#13;
page 5&#13;
Expert says&#13;
terrorism inevitable&#13;
page 12&#13;
Soccer star&#13;
breaks record&#13;
Segregated fee increase&#13;
might be necessary in fall&#13;
by K1mberlie Kranich&#13;
News Etptor&#13;
The current $92 segregated&#13;
.fee that full-time students pay&#13;
per year may increase as&#13;
much as $26 per semester due&#13;
to budget crunches, according&#13;
to Andy Buchanan, chairman&#13;
of the Segregated Fees Allocation&#13;
Committee (SUFAC).&#13;
•'This is an unacceptable&#13;
amount, t. said Buchanan. The&#13;
administration agrees and,&#13;
according to Buchanan, beHeves&#13;
that an increase is not&#13;
llkely to exceed $10 per&#13;
semester. .&#13;
Parkslde has recently had&#13;
to come up with money to pay&#13;
a debt of $335,900 that was removed&#13;
from its cash reserves&#13;
last December. An additional&#13;
annual $25,756 will have to be&#13;
paid over the next ten years&#13;
to replenish reserves in sister&#13;
institutions.&#13;
Parkside incurred the preceding&#13;
debt when It received&#13;
an "excess" of about $600,00'&#13;
from Its share of $22.5 million&#13;
that was collected from the&#13;
budget surpluses of all university&#13;
instituitions to help&#13;
reduce tuition increases and&#13;
provide funds for libraries,&#13;
computers and faculty cathup&#13;
pay.&#13;
According to Buchanan,&#13;
segregated fees funds a&#13;
budget of about $700,000 per&#13;
year. "Last year," said Buchanan,&#13;
"there was a shortfall&#13;
In the budget of $30,000&#13;
which was funded from Parkside's&#13;
reserves (fund 128)."&#13;
Hence, not only is money&#13;
needed to pay for Parkslde's&#13;
annual ten year debt of&#13;
$25,756 but also tor: the&#13;
$30,000.&#13;
lOin addition," continued&#13;
Buchanan, •'the administration&#13;
has been Instructed by&#13;
the system to pass certain&#13;
nonacademic support expenses&#13;
that they have paid for In&#13;
the past to segregated fees.&#13;
This amounts to about&#13;
$18,000."&#13;
Taking Into account the&#13;
above expenses and the addttional&#13;
expense of academic&#13;
staff catch-up pay, which w11l&#13;
be effective Jan. 1, 1987, an&#13;
additional increase of about&#13;
$100,00 would have to be Ineluded&#13;
In the 1987-88 budget.&#13;
"There are three places&#13;
from which these funds can&#13;
be raised," said Buchanan.&#13;
"From an acceptable segregated&#13;
fee Increase, drawing&#13;
money from the reserves&#13;
again, or by boosting campus&#13;
revenues. The final result will&#13;
probably be a combination of&#13;
all three."&#13;
With all of the pressures on&#13;
the budget for the 1987-88 academic&#13;
year, campus organizations&#13;
w11l also be affected.&#13;
"It's going to be extremely&#13;
dtfftcult to grant Increases to&#13;
present year budgets for&#13;
campus organizations," Buchanan&#13;
explained .• 'There are&#13;
obvious pressures to cut back&#13;
on . current levels of services.&#13;
"&#13;
. . photo by Jack Bornhuetter&#13;
omecoming comedy&#13;
tiC Sid Youngers entertained at last Thursday's Home-&#13;
., ~9 VarietyShow, pointing out traditional college come- mea.&#13;
Enrollment Services steps&#13;
up plans for recruitment&#13;
responsibilities. She will also life that they may have on a&#13;
be In charge of all open one to one basis with that fachouses.&#13;
ulty member. "I think It will&#13;
Open houses are another be meaningful for sutdents to&#13;
change. Instead of having know that we really do care&#13;
just one open house in April about them, and about having&#13;
there will now be several. them here," said Budowle.&#13;
The purpose of this is to allow Further developments inthe&#13;
students to come to cam- elude attending nearly every&#13;
pus and learn more about national and Wisconsin colleParkslde&#13;
while they are In ge fair. At college fairs many&#13;
the decision-making process. schools are represented and&#13;
By April, most students have students, parents and counsealready&#13;
decided which college lors are Invited to attend.&#13;
to attend. In that respect, Publications about Parkside&#13;
having just one open house in are made available, and staff&#13;
April is more or less just an is on hand to answer any&#13;
orientation for those students questions that may arise. Any&#13;
who have already decided to student who is interested may&#13;
come to Parkside. instead of fill out a contact card with&#13;
It being the time to recruit their name, address and&#13;
more students to Parkside. phone so that Student EnrollOther&#13;
developments include ment Services can maintain&#13;
the start of the faculty-eon, that contact by calling and&#13;
tact system. The Idea behind sending Information.&#13;
this is that a letter would be "We have developed a very&#13;
sent out by faculty members complex follow-up system, "_&#13;
to individual students inviting said Budowle, "that Involves&#13;
them to campus to discuss a series of contacts and retheir&#13;
area o~ major or any&#13;
other concerns about college&#13;
Julie Pendleton&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
Because of the new admissions&#13;
requirements that went :&#13;
Into effect at the start of this&#13;
semester, Student Enrollment&#13;
Services predicted that freshman&#13;
enrollment would be&#13;
down. However, much to&#13;
their surprise freshman. enrollment&#13;
increased by 68 students&#13;
over enrollments in the&#13;
fall of 1985.&#13;
Maureen Budowle, acting&#13;
director of student enrollment,&#13;
attributes this increase&#13;
to several new developments&#13;
within Student Enrollment&#13;
Services.&#13;
"One really exciting development&#13;
that has come up,"&#13;
said Budowle, "is that we've&#13;
hired Jeanne Betz." This is to&#13;
compensate for the loss of&#13;
two of the counselors in Student&#13;
Enrollemt Services ea.rlier&#13;
this semester. Betz Will&#13;
be actively Involved In&#13;
recruiting students to Parkside,&#13;
primarily in the northern&#13;
Illinois area, with some local Enrollment see page 6&#13;
....&#13;
2 Thursd8Y. OCtotiel' 23. 1986&#13;
~&#13;
Classified ads not&#13;
libelous or "dirty"&#13;
LaBt year, the Ranger was charged with printing pornographic&#13;
classlfjed ads.&#13;
Last week, we were told those same ads were libelouS.&#13;
This week, we defend ourselves.&#13;
The pornography charge surrounded some personal advertisements&#13;
last fall which used what at least one student&#13;
deemed sexually suggestive, and thereby offensive.&#13;
language, That charge was expressed In the "Voice of the&#13;
People" section of the Kenosha News,&#13;
It was countered In that same forum Ranger editor-Inchief&#13;
Jennie Tunkielcz, who explained that "The Ranger&#13;
haa never printed ads that were illegal or libelous, and&#13;
the newspaper will not begin the practice of censorship. ~t&#13;
Is every individual'. right to Interpret what they feel is&#13;
morally acceptable: it 15 not their right, however, to for.ce&#13;
that detlnltJon on others."&#13;
1l\e libel charge was leveled in response to a section of&#13;
the Classl!led Ad. labeled the "MIke Rohl Personals."&#13;
Several students expressed shock that the paper would&#13;
print such ads as "Rohl, you are gonna DIE!!!" EditorIn-chlef&#13;
Gary Schneeberger responded to the complainants&#13;
that, to his mlnd, the ads In question were meant as&#13;
joke. and that, Indeed, Mr. Rohl (Ranger assistant sports&#13;
editor) had taken them as such.&#13;
At Issue In both of these Instances are two separate, yet&#13;
interwoven, princ1ples--princlpleS obviously blurry to the&#13;
individual. who expressed their displeasure.&#13;
One Is the principle of tree speech. as outllned by the&#13;
First Amendment to the Constitution, which insures every&#13;
citizen the right to express his or her oplnlons. It was&#13;
upon this foundation that newspapwers were born, and&#13;
without this same foundation Americans may never have&#13;
dlSCovered the facts of watergate or the horrors of Vietnam.&#13;
The Ranger respects and upholds this fundamental&#13;
human right. Members of the university community-teeulty.&#13;
staff and student allke·-are always free to express&#13;
themeelves throUgh this newspaper. Our classified adverlislng&#13;
Is just one of many means available to those who&#13;
wIah to make their views known.&#13;
The second principle at work In this controversy, the&#13;
principle of editorial judgement. Is less easily defined.&#13;
Roughly atated, editorial judgement Is the value system&#13;
by which an editor or editors decide what submitted information&#13;
does, In fact. appear In the paper. It Is, by defln!·&#13;
non. a aubjecttve process. varying sometimes widely&#13;
from editor to editor, depending upon how one interprets&#13;
the responslbillty he or she has to the readership of his or&#13;
her paper.&#13;
Considerations that come Into ptay under this principle&#13;
Include how timely an article Is (Can It be postponed until&#13;
next week and .un be relevant?); how Important It Is to&#13;
the community served by the paper (Are students at&#13;
Parkslde more likely to be Interested In Story A or Story&#13;
B?); and f1nally, whether or not the material In question&#13;
Is Ubelous or likely to offend readers. It Is this conslderatlon&#13;
that applies to the instances cited.&#13;
Taken in tandem, then, the principles of freedom of&#13;
speech and editorial judgement reaponatble for the alleded\y&#13;
pornographic and Ubelous classiried that have appeared&#13;
In the Ranger. The guarantee of free speech allowed&#13;
those who wrote the ads to speak their minds, and the&#13;
principle of editorial jUdgement--based upon individual&#13;
dec1s1ons that the ads were in no way offensive or illegal··&#13;
secured their ptacement In the paper.&#13;
The Ranger .tands behind Its decisions to publish those&#13;
advertisements and wtll continue to serve the campus&#13;
under the principles explained above.&#13;
.on: COULD Hl\VE BEEN DIS~~~ .. ~ ElIIOUS SL6STANTIVE ,....... L&#13;
~NG -ri-lIS)'EAR:'S SENATORIA&#13;
CAMPAIGN ......~ ~&#13;
... BUOCEI' CUTS, NUCLEAA&#13;
sUPPOR:!" 1"0 EDUCATIONMEo~ 1&#13;
SOCIAL SECURITY, UN' ~&#13;
COMPENSolmON.CHEMlCAL~~&#13;
coKTAA AID, 11IE PUGIfr OFI':&#13;
...., C\II1L R1ro::l&#13;
~"""W&#13;
.I&amp;WUi eso not just tor blacks&#13;
Editor needs some social sensitivity&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Black Student organi·&#13;
zation will be holding Its second&#13;
party of the year. Our&#13;
first party was real success,&#13;
but one Important part of the&#13;
dance was missing - nonblacks.&#13;
Contrary to popular belief.&#13;
BSO events are not just for&#13;
black people.&#13;
One of the major objectives&#13;
of the BSO Is to promote actlvtttes&#13;
(educational and&#13;
recreational) that support&#13;
and display the black culture.&#13;
These events can be enjoyed&#13;
by all students: black s, whltea,&#13;
hispanlcs, and Asians.&#13;
I trled to advertise our first&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Journalistic style aside. I&#13;
would expect a man of the&#13;
SO"s and a newspaper editor&#13;
with a command of the Iandance&#13;
by handing out flyers&#13;
through the halls. The number&#13;
one response of the white&#13;
students was "Will I be the&#13;
only white person there?"&#13;
Now what if you are the&#13;
only white person there? Are&#13;
you afraid of getting jumped?&#13;
Are you afraid of being unwelcome?&#13;
Do you visualize&#13;
the music stopping and everyone&#13;
turning around and IookIng&#13;
at you? These fears can&#13;
be related to something that&#13;
blacks go through every day.&#13;
being the minority.&#13;
Let me assure you that you&#13;
are more than welcome to attend&#13;
a BSO dance, speaker&#13;
series or workshop. It Is true&#13;
guage to come up with a&#13;
more socially sensitive&#13;
phrase than "knocked up"&#13;
(Oct. 16. Madonna review).&#13;
ThIs has to be one of the&#13;
more tasteless phrases about&#13;
that you can hivt I&#13;
time. but also 11 will&#13;
Important on anothtr&#13;
blacks do a lot more&#13;
side that play b&#13;
ron track. Thereare&#13;
In most majors lIId&#13;
clubs.&#13;
Just as we arep....&#13;
Black Athlete. we&#13;
just as proud ofour&#13;
achievers, who IIl8II/&#13;
are one in the same,&#13;
Take this as a&#13;
vltation to attend&#13;
dance , Friday, OCl..&#13;
p.m. In the UnloD&#13;
This dance couldbe&#13;
our interaction danee.&#13;
BynIDE,&#13;
Soccer coach thanks fans for support&#13;
To the Editor: Homecoming 'S6. it was a us on to victor1,&#13;
great feeling to play in front YOU!&#13;
of a vocal and enthusiastic&#13;
crowd on Saturday.&#13;
To the loo-plus who cheered&#13;
My sincere thanks to the&#13;
students and their organizations&#13;
for the support given to&#13;
GaIy L. Schneeberger Edltor&#13;
Klmberlle Kranich News Editor&#13;
Julie Pendleton Asst. New. Editor&#13;
Jenny carr Feature Editor&#13;
Jim Nelbaur Entertalnment Editor&#13;
Robb Luehr Sport. Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy ..•....•......•.•••••••••••.•• Photo Editor&#13;
Jack Bomhueller Photo Editor&#13;
Andy Buchanan .•........•.......• 8uslness Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan A.. t. Bu.lness Manager&#13;
Dave Roback Advertlslng Manager&#13;
Steve Picazo : Dlstrlbutlon Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
LeoBose, Jason Caspers Mary&#13;
DeFazio, ErikkDingman, Ronda&#13;
Ditter.Gretchen Gayhart,&#13;
Rcah~dVLeCount, RickLeonard&#13;
rlB LOJeski. Rick Luehr '&#13;
Vahan Mahdaslan, Suza~ne&#13;
Mantuano, Kelly McKissick&#13;
Nicole Pacione, Michelle •&#13;
Petersen, BillSerpe, MikeStevens&#13;
Kal,eThomey, AndyTschumper '&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz, Ty""n Wilda. '&#13;
Range. . ••• "",W olic r IS wntten and edited by students at UW-Parkside and they are solely res",~&#13;
~nd fio~~~ content. Ranger is pubiished every Thursday during the academicyear&#13;
ys.&#13;
N~"28ooes~ondence should be addressed to: Parl&lt;side Ranger; UniversitYof WistO '&#13;
Advertisin enosha WI 53141. Telephone (414) 553-2295 or (414) 553-2287.. . ,..daY/!&#13;
publication~h~~~~:;~ $4 per column Inch or less in bulk. Advertising deadlineIST&#13;
s~:npe;ge~~~~ge~~i10~0~~I bbeIaccepted if typewritten. double-sp.acedon.standta~&#13;
phone number i u e e.s~th.an 350 words and must be Signed,with a e&#13;
Quest. Deadline~~~uld'iffo~ verifIcatIOn purposes. Names will be withheld UpORa" ~&#13;
reserves the ri ht e ~rs ISTuesday at 10 a.m. for publication Thursday. ng&#13;
content. g to edit letters and refuse letters containing false and defamatOfY&#13;
Ranger is printed by the Racine Journal Times.&#13;
RANGER ... ;&#13;
, '&#13;
Thursday, October 23, 1986 3&#13;
hard Hunt&#13;
rtists' murets, models and drawings displayed&#13;
nowof photo murals,&#13;
eSmodelsand dra wings of&#13;
largemetal sculptures of&#13;
d Hunt, whose works&#13;
be seen in public places&#13;
citles across the country.&#13;
be ondIsplay In the CorncationArts&#13;
Gallery from&#13;
day, Oct. 30 through&#13;
ay Nov.25.&#13;
Runt~Illspeak on his art&#13;
a freepublic session at 3&#13;
.onOct.30 In the Gallery.&#13;
gular gallery hours are&#13;
I to 6 p.m. Monday&#13;
ghThursday; also from&#13;
to 10 p.m, Wednesday and&#13;
day,&#13;
Theshow Is organized by&#13;
sideart professor Rollin&#13;
kyand sponsored by the&#13;
rerstty'a Fine Arts Divi-&#13;
, The photo murals are of&#13;
, permanently Installed&#13;
tures.&#13;
mmt.of Chicago, has been&#13;
I g on his sculptures for&#13;
several years at Bert Jensen&#13;
and Sons, Inc., a metal fabricating&#13;
firm in Racine. At that&#13;
facility, as well as In his Chicago&#13;
studio, Hunt fashions&#13;
large commissioned sculptures&#13;
that ultimately grace&#13;
many publlc landscapes.&#13;
At 51, Hunt is one of America's&#13;
foremost liVing seulptors.&#13;
In his 1973 book "The&#13;
Age of the Avant-Garde," Hilton&#13;
Kramer called him j 'one&#13;
of the most gifted and assured&#13;
artists -working in the direct-metal,&#13;
open-forum medIum&#13;
...anywhere in the&#13;
world,"&#13;
Hunt transforms rigid bran.&#13;
ze, brass, copper, aluminum&#13;
and stainless steel Into angular&#13;
and curved volumes that&#13;
rival the mystery and wonder&#13;
of nature's energy. Although&#13;
his polished and welded&#13;
sculptures have no specific&#13;
representational references,&#13;
the Iinear- spatial configura.&#13;
tions and enclosed, solid masses&#13;
often expressionistically&#13;
refer to natural forms, organic&#13;
and evolutionary.&#13;
Hunt once said, "In some of&#13;
my works-It is my intention to&#13;
develop the kind of forms nature&#13;
might create if only heat&#13;
and steel were available to&#13;
her."&#13;
Since 1966 Hunt has completed&#13;
more than 55 publlc&#13;
commissions, including those&#13;
in Illinois, California, Indlana,&#13;
Michigan, Missouri, New&#13;
York, Ohio, South Carolina&#13;
and Washington, D.C.&#13;
He holds a bachelor of art&#13;
education degree from the&#13;
School of the Art Institute of&#13;
Chicago, and was awarded a&#13;
foreign travel fellowship upon&#13;
graduation, studying in England,&#13;
France, Spain and Italy.&#13;
His work, ••Arachne" was&#13;
purchased by the New York&#13;
Museum of Modern Art in&#13;
1957, when Hunt was just 22.&#13;
The next year Hunt held his&#13;
first one-man show in New&#13;
York.&#13;
Since then he has received&#13;
numerous national and local&#13;
honors, teaching posts and&#13;
commissions, and participated&#13;
in many one-man exhibitions.&#13;
He 'Is founder of the Chica·&#13;
go Sculpture Society, a member&#13;
of the Board of Direcotrs&#13;
at the International SCUlpture&#13;
Center In Washington. D.C.,&#13;
and an organizer of the First&#13;
World Congress of SCUlpture&#13;
Organizations held in Chicago&#13;
last year.&#13;
In .addltion to his many&#13;
public sculptures. his works&#13;
are Included In the collection&#13;
of the Art Institute of Chicago;&#13;
the Museum of Modern&#13;
Art, Metropolitan Museum of&#13;
Art, and WhIiney Museum of&#13;
Art, all In New York: the Hlrshorn&#13;
Museum and Sculpture&#13;
Garden in Washington, D.C -. :&#13;
t==Club .Events==&#13;
emistry Club&#13;
'IlleChemistryClub will be&#13;
oring a used textbook&#13;
onTuesday, Oct. 27 and&#13;
esday,Oct. 28. This will&#13;
heldIn Greenquist's main&#13;
I, and books wl1l Include&#13;
in Chemistry, life setandmathematics.&#13;
chology Club&#13;
d Psi Chi Psychology Club&#13;
lit meelWednesday, Oct. 29&#13;
1·2p.m. In Molinaro 311.&#13;
e Goodyear from the&#13;
g and Placement offi·&#13;
""I speak on careers in&#13;
hology.All are welcome.&#13;
logy Club&#13;
TheParkslde Geology Club&#13;
~ boldIts next meeting on&#13;
-,e'day, Oct. 29. Items on&#13;
week's agenda include&#13;
upcomingrock and gem&#13;
W, Possible club fundrs,&#13;
the Christmas Craft&#13;
. and the upcoming club&#13;
Ail I. .&#13;
jo nps are open to non. :8 as well as majors.&#13;
I I and get the full scoop&#13;
OU'!b·mIn. Greenquist 118.&#13;
e glad yOUdid.&#13;
eer SuPPOrt&#13;
Pee .&#13;
r SUPPOrtIs proUd to&#13;
nilis seml.annual schol.&#13;
P award of $100 to Rem&#13;
~~Ier. Rebecca plans&#13;
In elementary educa-&#13;
. Ii addition to her own&#13;
on, she also has two&#13;
chUdren attending&#13;
. ,making It a family&#13;
t, ASPA&#13;
COuntin ' I'l\fA g ClUb,&#13;
PSt&#13;
b ~d ~~ A, Accounting&#13;
Park MA are sponsorsIde's&#13;
eighth annual&#13;
~rs dinner. It will be&#13;
Y&#13;
~e cafeteria on&#13;
, nOV. 12 from 6-10&#13;
The event is a sit-down dinner&#13;
where students have the&#13;
opportunity to make contact&#13;
with managers of businesses&#13;
of all scales in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
The special gust speaker&#13;
for the evening is Jack MeMahon,&#13;
director of worldwide&#13;
management for Johnson&#13;
Wax. All students are welcome&#13;
to attend. For more information&#13;
on cost or reservation,&#13;
contact the business department.&#13;
Physics Club&#13;
Nov. 7: Julian Mack lecture&#13;
at UW·Madison. Each year&#13;
the physiCS department at&#13;
Madison invites a prominel?-t&#13;
physicist to give a talk. This&#13;
year's talk Is being gtven by&#13;
A.M. Weinberg from the Institute&#13;
for Energy Analysis.&#13;
The title of the talk Is "A Second&#13;
Nuclear ear: prospect&#13;
and Perspectives!' The Phys~&#13;
Ics Club wiJI provide transportation.&#13;
We wiJI meet at the&#13;
Union Bazaar. at noon. Signup&#13;
for this event on the door&#13;
of Greenquist 233.&#13;
Nov. 15: Annual Adler&#13;
Planetarium and Museum of&#13;
Science and Industry trip.&#13;
The Physics Club will provide&#13;
transportation. There Is a&#13;
small admission fee ($2-3).&#13;
We will meet at the Union Ba~&#13;
zaar at 8 a.m. Sign up on the&#13;
door of Greenqulst 233.&#13;
Finally, there wll1 be a&#13;
Physics Club meeting at 1&#13;
p.m. Oct. 29 in Greenqulst&#13;
230. Topics wiJI include the&#13;
wave tank. .&#13;
All students and faculty are&#13;
welcome to club events.&#13;
PAC .&#13;
The Parkside AssociatIon of&#13;
Communicators (PAC) ~ill&#13;
hold an Informal dlscuSSlOn,&#13;
"The Marketing of political&#13;
Candidates," on Friday, Oct.&#13;
24 at 12 noon in the Union. All&#13;
interested people are en·&#13;
couraged to have a beer and&#13;
join the discussion. LOOk for&#13;
the PAC sign.&#13;
Wing~ gram&#13;
Students represent Parkside&#13;
•.!'.y;Kelly McKissick&#13;
Last Thursday, Oct. 16,&#13;
eight women broke ground&#13;
for Parkside by becoming the&#13;
first members of the Johnson&#13;
Foundation Wingspread Fellows&#13;
Program. These students&#13;
will represent Parkside&#13;
until May 1987.&#13;
Their names and major&#13;
fields are: Bonnie Davis, education;&#13;
Nancy Dietmeyer,&#13;
polltical science and psychology:&#13;
CIndy Hoffman, international&#13;
studies; Nancy Marla·&#13;
to, economics; Tamara Pierce,&#13;
education; Marti Schiele.&#13;
education; Lynette Selkurt,&#13;
education; and Robin White,&#13;
education.&#13;
The Fellows program was&#13;
established in 1970 to allow&#13;
students the chance to observe&#13;
polley makers and world&#13;
leaders and to enhance their&#13;
profession through exposure.&#13;
Students attended an tndoctrination&#13;
session at the Wingspread&#13;
Conference Center aecompanied&#13;
by faculty adviser&#13;
Willie Curtis. They received a&#13;
tour of the various conference&#13;
rooms, the radio station and&#13;
board rooms. It was explained&#13;
to them that all of the&#13;
radio programs and discussions&#13;
held in the radio room&#13;
are kept on tape and are&#13;
available to students at their&#13;
request.&#13;
Students also got the opportunlty&#13;
to speak with two of&#13;
the three vtce.prestdents of&#13;
the program, Rita Goodman&#13;
and Henry Halstead. Background&#13;
about the center and&#13;
conferences was given, and&#13;
students were able to ask&#13;
questions about their concerns.&#13;
Mary Ellen Demming,&#13;
coordinator of Fellows attendance&#13;
at Wingspread confer.&#13;
ences, was also present to answer&#13;
questions.&#13;
One of the unfortunate penalties&#13;
Parkside faced in joinIng&#13;
the program so late In the&#13;
semeter was very limited&#13;
openings for conferen~es.&#13;
Conferences allow an average&#13;
of three Fellows to attend.&#13;
Most of these spaces were already&#13;
filled by other institutions&#13;
who have been in the&#13;
program for years. There&#13;
may be up to four openings in&#13;
three conferences for some of&#13;
the Fellows from Parkslde to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Also, Goodman was able to&#13;
reserve two openings for a&#13;
one day conference on Latin&#13;
America scheduled to be held&#13;
on October 27. The rest of the&#13;
new Fellows will not be able&#13;
to attend a conference until&#13;
next semester.&#13;
The process by which Fel·&#13;
lows are allowed to attend&#13;
conferences begins with an&#13;
application letter sent to&#13;
Demming. After constderation,&#13;
a letter of approval Is&#13;
sent to some of the Fellows.&#13;
An attendance from must be&#13;
filled out, and finally a welcome&#13;
letter is sent out with&#13;
an invitation and Information&#13;
about the conference.&#13;
J5mmColor Prlntsandfitl Slides fromthe .&#13;
sameroU .&#13;
5elmk FilmWorb hat adApted Kodak" pro(aIlonII&#13;
Motion Pic;Nre film fat we inyow 35mm&#13;
camen. Now you can UIIl:the.IM film-wtlh&#13;
~.me miaoflne ,",in ,l\d mh-colof&#13;
.turadon _ Hollywood" top INdioe demand. •&#13;
III wide exposure btitu&amp; it peTkct Cor everyday&#13;
thou. You can capture IIXd,1 dfeca, too. Shoot&#13;
kin briaN Of low light-at up to 1200ASA.&#13;
What" more, it', economical. And mnember.&#13;
Stank FilmWorIt.s lets you chooIe prina Of&#13;
IIidea, Of both, from the same roU.&#13;
Try dds rtlT\llrbbte fibn todayl ·10165fW&#13;
...._ ---- fREE IDfJoductDl'Y ORa&#13;
o RUSHmetw020-espoIUreroD.olKodlk&#13;
MP film fot my 35mm amera.l'd like. 2-ro11&#13;
amr pKk incllldma ~ 52...,._&#13;
5294.- Fndoeed ill $2 forpr ... ~ t.rdIklf.&#13;
"""'......... a-...-I .&#13;
.......&#13;
ern Sf ATE ZIP&#13;
Mail to: Seatde RIm\\brb. 500 lid/we. W.&#13;
P.o. eo. J.tO'6, Satde. WA 98IU&#13;
kodN.'1.7""d1~",~"'U I:&lt;&gt;eWoCo,SnoIIo&#13;
FiIm'4ibrlt"wItoI&lt;_Itom """'"'EO!·1L •&#13;
.....-_ ------&#13;
PUT YOUR&#13;
COLLEGE DEGREE&#13;
TO WORK.&#13;
Air Force Officer Training School is an&#13;
excellent start to a challenging career as an&#13;
Air Force Officer. We offer great starting&#13;
pay, medical care, 30 days of vacation with&#13;
pay each year and management&#13;
opportunities. Contact an Air Force recruiter.&#13;
Find out what Officer Training School can&#13;
mean for you. Call&#13;
MSgt Wayne Metz&#13;
(414) 964·8880 collect&#13;
t.======~AlR=;&gt;:..&#13;
- ..&#13;
~ "&#13;
"Tony is a good man, good governor&#13;
anger many groups have felt university system when&#13;
toward Governor Earl during other agencies had to be all&#13;
his term, Ms. Earl is quick to Now that's a commitmen~%&#13;
point out that her husband's the university."&#13;
record easily bests that of It's a commitment that to&#13;
Tommy Thompson, his Re- her mind, is not shared' b&#13;
publican challenger. . Thompson. "He's proposin Y&#13;
"Tony himself has said that flve percent across.the'b~&#13;
he's most proud of his accom- cut out of all state agencies&#13;
plishments in three areaa-the What IS that going to do~&#13;
three E's: education, environ- students? What is that going&#13;
ment and economic develop. to mean to facilittes, in the&#13;
ment" she said. "He has university? It win mean d&#13;
done a lot on all those ron ' f t tti" ev. 5, as a on.&#13;
and when he came in, it was In closing, Ms. Earl relter .&#13;
not all that easy. ated that while not everyO~:&#13;
"When he was running, he may always agree With&#13;
said he would have to raise Governor Earl, he is cleanI&#13;
taxes and cut some pro- the better choice on elecu~&#13;
grams, and he did. But he did day. I&#13;
It in such a way that no one "You're probably thinking ~&#13;
group was unjustly affected, 'I don't like this about Earl i I&#13;
and then he eliminated his don't like that about Ea.1.'&#13;
tax increase one year before Well, hell, I don't llke evely&#13;
he had planned to. thing about Earl, either,bui ~&#13;
"With regard to educa- I'm going to vote for him ~ ~&#13;
tton," Ms. Earl continued, cause he's not just an or&#13;
"he has pushed successfully dinarily good governor, he' ~&#13;
for a faculty pay increase. He an extraordinarily ~1Ii&#13;
has increased money for the governor. "&#13;
4 Thun:d:y,CkrtOber23,1986&#13;
by Gary L, Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
The unexpected closeness&#13;
of the upcoming Wisconsin&#13;
gubernatorial election prompted&#13;
Sheila Earl's visit to&#13;
Parkslde last Friday (Oct.&#13;
17).&#13;
Her respect for the man&#13;
who Is both the state's governor&#13;
and her husband prompted&#13;
her praising, prideful&#13;
comments on behalf of Tony&#13;
Earl in his campaign for reelection.&#13;
"I can say things to you&#13;
that Tony would not or cannot&#13;
say," Ms. Earl, an assistant&#13;
to the director of the LaFol·&#13;
lette Institute in Madison,&#13;
said to a roomful of listeners&#13;
gathered for her speech,&#13;
sponsored by the Political&#13;
Science Club.&#13;
"I am not going to be able&#13;
to discuss his record as extensively&#13;
as you might Uke, because&#13;
I don't know a lot of&#13;
specifics about It. But I do&#13;
'Scott McCallum&#13;
Sheila Earl&#13;
know what kind of person he&#13;
Is; I know his style and I&#13;
know that he's been a good&#13;
governor.&#13;
"He cares deeply about the&#13;
state," Ms. Earl continued.&#13;
"He cares about the people in&#13;
the state ..the students, senior&#13;
citizens, the disadvantaged,&#13;
the working men and women&#13;
and the faculty. And he also&#13;
cares about this beautiful&#13;
land of ours and its great natural&#13;
resources."&#13;
Caring can only go so far in&#13;
contributing to a politician's&#13;
effectiveness, Ms. Earl admits.&#13;
"More than his caring, OJ&#13;
she explains, "what drives&#13;
his administration and what&#13;
drives him as a public official,&#13;
is his very deep, strong&#13;
commitment to fairness and&#13;
justice. When you view his&#13;
administration, you see that&#13;
at every turn.&#13;
"He does not respond to the&#13;
quick fix or political advantage,"&#13;
Ms. Earl went on.&#13;
"Sometimes, his people wish&#13;
that he would ..but he has&#13;
never considered doing that.&#13;
The evidence? Tony has managed&#13;
to get everyone in the&#13;
state, for one thing or another,&#13;
mad at him at some&#13;
time."&#13;
While acknowledging the&#13;
"We won't close Parkside"&#13;
by Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
When Scott McCallum, the&#13;
Republican candidate for&#13;
lieutenant governor. came to&#13;
Parkslde, he probably knew&#13;
he'd have to field questions&#13;
about his and running mate&#13;
Tommy Thompson's budget,&#13;
cutting plan.&#13;
But he probably didn't ex.&#13;
pect someone in the minimart&#13;
to ask him Why he&#13;
wanted to close the campus&#13;
down.&#13;
"He (Thompson) Is going to&#13;
ask every state agency to&#13;
come in (to budgeting proceedings)&#13;
with 95% of their&#13;
present budget," McCallum&#13;
conceded while here to speak&#13;
to students about the Republican&#13;
stand on educational issues.&#13;
IIAnd I support that because&#13;
time and again agencies&#13;
come in with 110% proposals,&#13;
and then we're looking&#13;
at large increases right&#13;
off the bat.&#13;
•'There are some agencies,"&#13;
he continued, "with excesses&#13;
that need to be cut, but&#13;
Thompson has said that although&#13;
he's asking the Un!-&#13;
McCallum see page 7&#13;
p u B L I c H E A R I N G&#13;
On the Preliminary Report of the Regents Study Group on&#13;
The Future of The University&#13;
of Wisconsin System&#13;
TuitionLevels - Changesin CreditTransfer• ManagementFlexibility&#13;
Role in Swe EconomicDevelopment - AdmissionRequirements_ Improved&#13;
Opportunities for Women and Minorities - Services for Disabled Students _and other issues&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 5,1986&#13;
10 a.m, - Noon and 12:45 p.m, - 5 p.m, •&#13;
AUditorium, State Historical Society&#13;
Library Mall, 816 State Street, Madison Wisconsin&#13;
ORAL AND WRITTEN TESTIMONY INVITED'&#13;
. .Speakers should register ~ advance. Registrationforms and specific&#13;
infOtmabOO on Ibe bearing are availablein the Office of Ibe Oumcellor or write or call&#13;
The University of Wisconsin System&#13;
Secretary or the Board of Regents&#13;
1860 Van Rise Hall, 1220 Linden Drive - Madison, Wisconsin 53706&#13;
Telephone:608/262·2324 or 608/263-3961&#13;
. .Copies or Ibe Pre1iminary Report of the Regents Study Group&#13;
are available m Ibe Cbancellor'soffice and at the campus and COIDII1unitypublic libraries.&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
SADD is sad&#13;
According to Herbert Grover, superintendent of public&#13;
instruction, Students Against Drunk Driving (SADD) In.&#13;
correctly urges parents and children to condone teenage&#13;
drinking, the Wisconsin State Journal reported.&#13;
One of the major activities of SADD chapers is getting&#13;
the students and their parents to sign an agreement reo&#13;
garding drinking and driving.&#13;
The SAnD programs operate so that students haveto&#13;
pledge that they'll let someone else or their parents drive&#13;
them home if they've been drinking. Their parents,in&#13;
turn, pledge that they'll respond to a call and not argueor&#13;
quiz a student who calls for a ride home.&#13;
In Grover's opinion, state officials should push tor&#13;
changes within the student-run programs that now appear&#13;
in forty schools statewide.&#13;
"Hey," Grover said, "there's a state law setttng the&#13;
legal drinking age at 21 and it needs to be enforced!"&#13;
rio&#13;
S&#13;
~I, ex in dorms okay tm'&#13;
Abbe&#13;
A University of Colorado student panel has concludedBen,'&#13;
that sex in dormitories is okay as long as it doesn't violate The&#13;
a student's right to privacy, according to the Eau Clair! '" M&#13;
Leader-Telegram. "It'&#13;
The dormitory representative Council voted 16-0 in k'Le&#13;
favor of recommending that the wording in the camPUS 'fun&#13;
handbook be changed to reflect that sex in the dormltorl~tho'v&#13;
Is okay; 1IPe~&#13;
!real ....----------------"111'1&#13;
o&#13;
CANTONESE &amp; AMERICAN RESTAURANT d&#13;
DElICIOUS CANTONESE &amp; AMERICAN FOODS. FAMILY DINNERS&#13;
DINE IN OR CARRY OUT· LEAVE THE COOKING TO US&#13;
YOURHOlT . tOMM'''''&#13;
DADO IY ..... fOfl fAIT IInt'&#13;
31&#13;
Gem&#13;
Ona&#13;
Raci&#13;
IL 553-5514 USed&#13;
• ,on,...".o ~I CEl 1700 llher1cIan Rd" Kll"&#13;
~S2Si!!S2Sii!S'i!!~&#13;
BUSINESS IlEII'S LUNClfEOHS&#13;
COCKTAlI. LOUlIGE&#13;
IAIlClUET IlOOIII '&#13;
CLOSEO MONOAY&#13;
TUlI. TMRUSUN. 11:.10A.M .. ':JOp M&#13;
flU·.vet"T 11.1O'\.M. 1':3OP.M.·&#13;
~fGarY L 8elmeeberger&#13;
EdItor&#13;
A1tJWUghinternational terrorfSIII&#13;
bas been a hot media&#13;
~c lhe last few years, one&#13;
IJII'OI'l on the SUbject doesn't&#13;
IbInk It threstens the -safety&#13;
of JIIOSl Americans.&#13;
. ''TerrorISmIs not-In any&#13;
'WI'!, shape or form ..a threat&#13;
~ IIIe vital interest of this&#13;
"""!rl'," explained Unlted&#13;
51a\OS MarIne Corps Colon~1&#13;
Henrl' Buse, who spoke at a&#13;
ISOOisl Science Roundtable&#13;
~ to various political sci-&#13;
_ classes on Oct. 20.&#13;
"I considerthe vital inter.&#13;
.. of the country really as&#13;
our survival," he continued.&#13;
''l'errorlstactivity does not&#13;
Ibreaten us that way, but It&#13;
~ Impactupon other inter.&#13;
..ts lIlatwe have, particular.&#13;
~ In lhe MiddleEast."&#13;
Buse, an Instructor with the&#13;
Departmentof MIlitary strat-&#13;
!If In the National War Oollipin&#13;
Washington,D.C., met&#13;
llliatsntprofessor of political&#13;
;ancs WUlIe Curtis this&#13;
IlllUner.Curtis, in light of reo&#13;
""I developmentsin InternaIoos1&#13;
terrorism such as the&#13;
Idled States' bombing of&#13;
Ubya,was instrumental in&#13;
liltingBusehere.&#13;
''Theeasy part, when you&#13;
~ sboutterrorism, Is to de.&#13;
IiWlceIt, to decry It, to be.&#13;
....e upeetby It," Buse said.&#13;
"l1levery hard part when&#13;
"Terrorism tries&#13;
to weaken values&#13;
and contidenceina&#13;
government by&#13;
indicating that a&#13;
country can't secure&#13;
its citizens.&#13;
"&#13;
Col. Henry Buse&#13;
.' " ..,.&#13;
.,,,w.~~~:.A~h··"'.~'.;;.w,_.~:..•__ ._=v _'.m,~.&#13;
,~»:·_~...".~"'.~=hW'":.:.;..;v"nff.~:..."W.""v.w . '_.~.....,v.&gt;:.,.,~~_.v.·.:.,,__.'~'~'A»~..:._._,~~~._.&#13;
.-_'~'h.,.:._~V,Y...,.:N·;&lt;·,:...:,~,"' ...,"'wma&#13;
you discuss terrorism Is try.&#13;
ing to figure out what deerslons&#13;
should be made and&#13;
what solutions we should&#13;
come up with to combat It."&#13;
Although there are fifty.&#13;
seven definitions of terrorism&#13;
presently employed by groups&#13;
in America alone, Buse indio&#13;
cates that four salient characteristics&#13;
are evident in most.&#13;
Those are threat or use of&#13;
violence, a desire to achieve&#13;
a political end, the intent to&#13;
reach an audience beyond the&#13;
Immediate victim and the&#13;
transcendence of national&#13;
boundaries .&#13;
"Terrorism tries to weaken&#13;
values and confidence in a&#13;
government by indicating&#13;
that a country can't secure its&#13;
citizens. ,. Buse added. "It&#13;
doesn't have any geographtcalor&#13;
moral boundaries, no&#13;
code of conduct. And that&#13;
makes It extremely difficult&#13;
to combat."&#13;
The U.S. polley regarding&#13;
terrorism, however, takes on&#13;
the difficult task of attemptlng&#13;
to combat international&#13;
terrorist activities. The tactics&#13;
available to the government&#13;
include those of a polttical&#13;
nature (public eondemnation&#13;
of those nations, like&#13;
Libya, who sponsor and aid&#13;
terrorist organizations);&#13;
those of an economic nature&#13;
London trip is guaranteed to be a jOlly-good time&#13;
If DaytonsBeach Isn't your&#13;
alp of sand, then maybe a&#13;
b1rof London's countryside&#13;
~ theatreswould be a jolly.&#13;
~ change of pace this&#13;
"ring.&#13;
~dY MCLean,professor of&#13;
~1lsh, has put together a&#13;
Y package of the 1987&#13;
Itring recess Which includes&#13;
least three theatre per. tmances,In addtion to guld·&#13;
Ib lours of Westminster&#13;
Be bey, Parliament and Big&#13;
n.&#13;
lren:~.trip's scheduled dates&#13;
-reh 13.22&#13;
,;'!t's not a c'redited trip,"&#13;
I~an explained. "It's just&#13;
'bo' Urnethat allows those&#13;
IXpeve never seen London to&#13;
.... rience one of the truly If:Citiesof the world."&#13;
~an has been trying to&#13;
SUch an excursion&#13;
many years now. never&#13;
to surmount what wound&#13;
31~lD BOOKCORNER&#13;
- 6tII St. Racine&#13;
GentlyUsed Books&#13;
°Ran~IISubjects.&#13;
cme'sonly&#13;
USedBookstore.&#13;
MARTHA MERRELLS&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
up being exhorbitant costs.&#13;
Those problems have been&#13;
eliminated with this London&#13;
and the Theatre tour, McLean&#13;
says.&#13;
Cost for the trip, which Includes&#13;
hotel accomodatlons,&#13;
some complimentary meals&#13;
and guided tours, Is $895 for&#13;
students under 21 with triple&#13;
or quadruple occupancy; and&#13;
$995 for double occupancy or&#13;
anyone over 21.&#13;
., "These aren't.youth hotels,&#13;
either, " McLean emphasizes.&#13;
"They're reputable, quality&#13;
establishments. ,.&#13;
Deadline for payment is&#13;
Dec. I, 1986. For further in·&#13;
formation, contact McLean,&#13;
CA 271, ext. 2019.&#13;
MANAGER'S.&#13;
DINNER&#13;
THURSDAY,&#13;
NOVEMBER 13TH&#13;
5:30 - 6:00 Tours of Campus &amp; Housing&#13;
6:00·7:00 Social Hour with Managers/Cash Bar&#13;
7:00 - 8:00 Dinner - Prime Rib&#13;
8:00 - 9:00 SPEAKER&#13;
9:00 -10:00 Social Hour/Cash Bar&#13;
Keynote Speaker -&#13;
Jack McMahon&#13;
Director - World Wide&#13;
Management Development For&#13;
Johnson Wax.&#13;
. ". &gt; '. ,., •&#13;
'....&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
(placement of sanctions or&#13;
embargoes or the severing of&#13;
diplomatic ties); and, finally,&#13;
military deterrents.&#13;
"It Is important that everyone&#13;
understand that any mill.&#13;
tary action Is going to require&#13;
two things which are absolutely&#13;
critical,' Buse Is quick&#13;
to point out. 'One Is good tntelligence,&#13;
and good Intellfgence&#13;
in the arena of International&#13;
terrorism is sometimes&#13;
very, very hard to come by.&#13;
'The second thing that Is reo&#13;
-qulred Is risk, and an accept.&#13;
ance of that risk. There will&#13;
be cases-Itke when we tried&#13;
to retrieve our hostages from&#13;
Iran or when we retaliated&#13;
against L1bya··that Innocent&#13;
people will be killed. It's extremely&#13;
regrettable, but It's a&#13;
risk that has to be accepted."&#13;
According to Buse, terrorism&#13;
has become more pro ..&#13;
nounced recently' for a vartety&#13;
of factors, ali interrelated.&#13;
"It's war on the cheap, for&#13;
one thing," he explained. "It&#13;
doesn't cost much to train&#13;
terrorists when you compare&#13;
It to the cost of developing&#13;
conventional forces. It can&#13;
also be used as a weapon to&#13;
tnfiuence the behavior of&#13;
much more powerful nations&#13;
by folks that are far weaker&#13;
than these nations. It helps&#13;
military organizations with&#13;
little power get worldwide&#13;
recognition for their causes.··&#13;
One controversial way in&#13;
which that recognition Is gar.&#13;
nered 18_via the _ne~$ media ...&#13;
Critics of America's news or.&#13;
ganizations have said that&#13;
media saturation of terrorist&#13;
acts only contributes to the&#13;
problem. Buse also recognizes&#13;
a relationship between&#13;
terrorist activities and media&#13;
coverage.&#13;
uThe world's a stage when&#13;
there is no ongoing war," he&#13;
said. "That's why terrorism&#13;
Is at a peak in peacetime.&#13;
There's nothing to really conflIct&#13;
With the act when there&#13;
Isn't any other really news.&#13;
worthy headline happening.&#13;
"Terrorists want a lot of&#13;
people to watch," Bose con..&#13;
tlnued. 'But they don't necessartly&#13;
want a lot of people to&#13;
die. What they really want,&#13;
Ultimately, Is to create a&#13;
news spectacle. fI&#13;
For the future, Buse doesn't&#13;
expect terrortsm to be ellmtnated,&#13;
regardless of President&#13;
Reagan's hardlJne stand&#13;
against It and Its sponsors.&#13;
"It's inevitable that terrorism&#13;
Is going to occur as world&#13;
peace continues," he conclud- .&#13;
ed. 'And God knows we aU&#13;
want world peace to continue."&#13;
Come and meet representatives from accredited&#13;
graduate schools throughout the United States at&#13;
the GRE/CGS FOrUm on Graduate Education.&#13;
PALMER HOUSE&#13;
State and Monroe st. eets&#13;
saturday. october 25&#13;
9 a.m.-4 p.m.&#13;
WORKSHOPS&#13;
9:00·10:00 PRE·FORUMWorkshop on Admissions and&#13;
Financial Aid&#13;
11 :00-12:00 Graduate Study in Biological. Health, and&#13;
Physical SCiences,and-Graduate Study in&#13;
Education and Humanities&#13;
12:30- 1:30 GREGeneral Test and Subject Test&#13;
Preparation&#13;
2:30- 3:30 Graduate Study in Computer Science,&#13;
Engineering, and Mathematics, andGraduate&#13;
Study in Economics, Psychology,&#13;
and Other SOCialSCiences&#13;
REGlSTRATION belIIns at 8:50 a.m. FIE $5, payallle at tIIe_ ilRADuATE SCHOm.IXHI8ITS wu. __ 10 a.m.·' p.m.&#13;
JOintly spOnsored by the Craduate Record Examinations Board and&#13;
the Council Of Craduate SChools In the Untted states&#13;
6 Thursday, October 23, 1986&#13;
~&#13;
PAB candidates honored&#13;
"Parkside needs me as&#13;
Its Homecoming King," said&#13;
candidate Keith Harmann to&#13;
the assembled at last week's&#13;
King and Queen Coronation.&#13;
U the election results are&#13;
any indication, he was right,&#13;
Harmann, along with ronning&#13;
male Sue Stec, w1lI preside&#13;
over Parkslde tor the&#13;
next year as Homecoming&#13;
royally. Both members of&#13;
PAB, Keith and Sue were definitely&#13;
excited and honored&#13;
by their election.&#13;
"We want to thank everyone&#13;
who voted for us," Har·&#13;
mann said. "It's really an&#13;
honor."&#13;
Harmann and Stee were&#13;
Just two of an unprecedented&#13;
22 candidates vying for the&#13;
King and Queen lilies this&#13;
year. Each candidate was allowed&#13;
to say a few words on&#13;
his or her behalf before&#13;
Chuck Christofferson, Hornecomlng&#13;
Commltttee chair,&#13;
and Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Gary Grace announced the&#13;
winners.&#13;
Harmann and Stec were&#13;
presented their crowns by&#13;
last year's royally, Bill Serpe&#13;
and Janet Doering,&#13;
photo by Jack BornhueUer&#13;
Janet Doering and Bill Serpe congratulate Sue Stec and Keith&#13;
Harmann at the coronation cere-monies.&#13;
Followng the coronation,&#13;
the crowd of about 50 watched&#13;
a Variety Show that, in&#13;
reality, wasn't much of either.&#13;
Only four acts partlclpated-vsome&#13;
with more success&#13;
than others-but all were&#13;
singing acts and two were&#13;
barbershop quartets.&#13;
Helping pad out the time.&#13;
Earn Up To $200 In&#13;
Extra Credit! .&#13;
.Nowyou can earn credit doliars-up to a $200 cash rebate'-&#13;
With the purchase of an Apple(!)computer from an authorized Apple&#13;
dealer between"nowand Oct.ober31, 19.86.It's calied "Appte's&#13;
Student Break, And all that s requireo IS wntten verification of&#13;
your ful!·tlme status,as a student in a two- or four-year college or&#13;
University. It couldn t be any easier than that.&#13;
Of any more worthwhile. Because you can use your new Apple&#13;
computerto research. and write, organize and create high-quality&#13;
presentations. AndWithaccess to hundreds of educational&#13;
softw~re programs, you can, in~rease your knowledge in hundreds&#13;
of subjects. In fact, you won t find a bener learning toolthan an&#13;
Applecomputer.&#13;
Or a bener time 10 bUyone. See us today for further details.&#13;
RACINE'S OLOEST AND MOST EXPERIENCED&#13;
COMPUTER STORE&#13;
Colortron Computers&#13;
2101 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
• Mon.-Fri. 9-9, Sat. 9-5 • 553-9755&#13;
'Rebates of $75 With anApple~ne, $175 with Macintosh'· andS200 with Macintosh Plus&#13;
ADpJeaM the Apple logo are reigstered trademarks 0' Apple Computer, Inc. Macintosh is a trademark&#13;
of McIntosh laboratory, Inc. and is Oemgused with express permission of its owner.&#13;
5&#13;
between acts was comedian&#13;
Sid Youngers, who trod familiar&#13;
college ground like sex,&#13;
sports and family. Often&#13;
fighting hissing from the&#13;
small-but-dlscernlng crowd,&#13;
Youngers netted fewer laughs&#13;
than Assistant .Chancellor&#13;
Grace, whose deft ad-libbing&#13;
kept the coronation portion of&#13;
the night moving along.&#13;
Homecoming lau~&#13;
by Bill Serpe&#13;
Congratulations are In&#13;
order for Chuck onrtstorrerson&#13;
and Sandy Saladls and&#13;
other students on the Hornecoming&#13;
committee. Along&#13;
with ·Diane Welsh of the Activities&#13;
Office, their efforts&#13;
gave Parkslde the most successful&#13;
homecoming ever In&#13;
this event's history.&#13;
There are, of course, those&#13;
who will complain that one&#13;
function or another over the&#13;
weekend was less than wondertul;&#13;
however, those of us&#13;
who have been at Hornecoming&#13;
in the past can easily attest&#13;
to how much better&#13;
things were In 1986.&#13;
The standard at Parkslde&#13;
for measuring the success of&#13;
an event is not in the number&#13;
of people attending, but&#13;
whether or not those people&#13;
genuinely enjoy themelves, If&#13;
the picture on the front page&#13;
of last Sunday'S Kenosha&#13;
News is any indication, those&#13;
smiling faces (including&#13;
members of the soccer team)&#13;
definitely represent Parkslde&#13;
poeple having a good time&#13;
during the Derder band at Saturday'S&#13;
game. Last year's&#13;
attendance of 20 people at the&#13;
game was easily increased&#13;
this year to what lOok&#13;
over 200. ed iii,&#13;
Compliments on that&#13;
of the weekend were e&gt;ctPoJtI&#13;
to the Homecoming c end&lt;;&#13;
tee from top level ad~mii&#13;
lion as well as PhYSicalIra&#13;
cation people. Perhaps eo.&#13;
was the largest croWde \ti,&#13;
a Parkside home ver~&#13;
game. Considering th:"'"&#13;
level of promotion that I~.&#13;
Involved, think what a w~&#13;
posters and honest en f~&#13;
agement could do on a ~1I\ir&#13;
lar basis for next y ill&#13;
Homecoming game, earl&#13;
All of the other events0&#13;
the weekend were very l\'~&#13;
attended. Over 400 attend~&#13;
Friday nighl's dance, an~&#13;
attended Saturday eve&#13;
festivities. Part 01 this&#13;
volvement should be attrlb~&#13;
ed to the "Spirit Award"tIw&#13;
was added this year.&#13;
Homecoming '86 m~&#13;
many positive steps forward;&#13;
New things were added~&#13;
involvement was up. "~&#13;
off" to all who workedon&#13;
were Involved in this aU.&#13;
pus event. The green Ught&#13;
on for student involvement&#13;
Parkslde this school y&#13;
Let's all make sure it doesn&#13;
have a chance to turn red.&#13;
Business outreach programs set&#13;
These programs are being&#13;
offered by the Office 01 Business&#13;
Outreach, directed by&#13;
Dan Hancock:&#13;
• •'Investments : A Primer&#13;
for Business Owners and&#13;
Managers," from 6:30 to 9:30&#13;
p.m, on Tuesdays, Oct. 28 and&#13;
Nov. 11 in Molinaro 109. Cost&#13;
Is $60. Covered will be In Investment&#13;
return and risk,&#13;
capital formation, stocks,&#13;
bonds, government securities,&#13;
income versus growth objectives,&#13;
IRA's and' municipal&#13;
bonds, among other topics.&#13;
• "Estate Planning for&#13;
Business Owners and Professionals,"&#13;
from 6: 30 to 9: 30&#13;
p.m. on Tuesdays, Nov. 18&#13;
Ron's PCace&#13;
. Sandwiches and Cocktails&#13;
Sundays:&#13;
BlOody Marys&#13;
2forl,&#13;
12-4 p.m,&#13;
TueSdays:&#13;
"South of the&#13;
Border Day"&#13;
Margarltas&#13;
Pina COladas&#13;
Dreamslcles $1.50&#13;
Opens Mon-Sat 11 am&#13;
Sundays 12 noon&#13;
330152nd&#13;
Kenosha, WI&#13;
.. 657-4455 -&#13;
-=:'J&#13;
and Dec. 2 in Molinaro&#13;
Cost Is $60. Covered wlllbe&#13;
nanclal plans, WUls,~e&#13;
.plans, working with y&#13;
legal counsel, living&#13;
and providing for be&#13;
among other topics.&#13;
To register for the co&#13;
call 553-2047.&#13;
EnrollmentEnrollment~m&#13;
'pagel I&#13;
contacts, boih by -;';,ail and1&#13;
telephone." The purpose&#13;
this system is to continuOllS!&#13;
provide information to an,&#13;
one who shows any interosl&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Alumni are also beco~1&#13;
Involved In racruttlng effo~&#13;
"We've discovered that pE(t&#13;
Ie who graduated fromP~&#13;
side are real excited 81J(l'&#13;
the education they got ~:~&#13;
and sometimes several y~&#13;
later are beginning to un ,&#13;
stand the quality of edU"~&#13;
Ihey received, so theY~&#13;
real anxious to help US&#13;
others," said Budowie.,&#13;
also invites any staff. fa&#13;
or student who Is int~ •&#13;
to become involved 111"1&#13;
recruiting effort.&#13;
With the advent of~&#13;
dence halls on camp~:&#13;
semester Budowle fee to&#13;
students are beginningII&#13;
Parkside as .'A real cfer&#13;
'&#13;
and not just a cammu r&#13;
lege. Therefore, In ~~""&#13;
ion, the time has C a&#13;
make a rea.! effort to&#13;
sudents 10 Parkslde.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, October 23, 1986 7&#13;
'"&#13;
~ver&#13;
political thoughts analyzed&#13;
by Doug McEvoy&#13;
KennethR.Hoover, a Parksideprofessor&#13;
of political setenee&#13;
and published author ,&#13;
/I8S just released his fourth&#13;
bOOk, "Ideology and Political&#13;
Life."&#13;
The bOOkpresents the key&#13;
ideOlogiesIn today's world.&#13;
In esch chapter, Hoover&#13;
dIScussesa political Ideology.&#13;
He begins by explaining&#13;
polilicallife under that Ideology.&#13;
He explains how it atfectsthe&#13;
lives of those under&#13;
It. and the political and economicpolicies&#13;
of it.&#13;
He then provides a themalichistory&#13;
of the Ideology&#13;
andanalyzes the Idea behind&#13;
it.&#13;
Theeight major ideologies&#13;
explained In the book are:&#13;
classicalliberalism, traditional&#13;
conservatism, libertarian&#13;
conservatism and anarchism,&#13;
reformliberalism, Marxism,&#13;
socialism, liberation ideologies&#13;
and fascism. Finally,&#13;
Hooverpredicts the future of&#13;
Ideology.&#13;
Ken Hoover&#13;
"It Is a useful source to&#13;
anyone wanting to understand&#13;
political Ideology.vcommented&#13;
Hoover.&#13;
The book is currently available&#13;
In the Parkslde library&#13;
as well as Martha Merrell's&#13;
Bookstore in Racine. All local&#13;
royalties go to the Parkslde&#13;
Scholarship Fund.&#13;
Hoover's other books are&#13;
currently In use In over two&#13;
hundred colleges across the&#13;
nation. He hopes his new book&#13;
will enjoy the same success.&#13;
So far. it has received a great&#13;
deal of praise by others In his&#13;
field.&#13;
"Hoover's 'Ideology and&#13;
Political LIfe' presents an In.&#13;
telllgent and intelligible portrait&#13;
of. the Ideologies that&#13;
have shaped and reshaped&#13;
the political landscape of the&#13;
twentieth century." commented&#13;
Terence Ball of the UnI·&#13;
versity of Minnesota. "No&#13;
other text accomplishes so&#13;
much in so short a compass."&#13;
The book Is particularly designed&#13;
for American students&#13;
since we are often ignorant of&#13;
other ideologies. They are&#13;
presented In an unbiased and&#13;
factual manner and give a&#13;
true picture of the life they&#13;
create.&#13;
"Ideology is about the most&#13;
controversial subject you can&#13;
write a text on," explained&#13;
Hoover. "It has been a struggle&#13;
to contend with the variety&#13;
of points of view which the&#13;
book discusses but I have enjoyed&#13;
It, and it was clearly&#13;
worth the effort."&#13;
Candidatespeaks-------------------------&#13;
McCallumfrom page 4&#13;
veraily of Wisconsin System&#13;
to come In with 95%, they'll&#13;
probably get more than&#13;
that."&#13;
In fact, says McCallum. the&#13;
Republicans are seeking to&#13;
strengthenthe university system&#13;
In the state. something&#13;
whichtheir Democratic challengersaren't&#13;
doing.&#13;
"If you're looking at the&#13;
ProPOsals being made, we&#13;
won't close Parkslde down&#13;
we'llmake it even stronger,':&#13;
he said. Both parties are lookIng&#13;
to place caps on enrollments.&#13;
The difference is that&#13;
the Thompson-McCallum approach&#13;
Is based on grades&#13;
coming out of high school to&#13;
raise the standard for new&#13;
students and those transferring&#13;
Into the system.&#13;
"The Earl·Metz approach,&#13;
however, Is to have a lottery.&#13;
So even if you have&#13;
astralght-A average, you'd be&#13;
thrown Into a pool with others&#13;
who only have a C·average.&#13;
To me, that is destroying the&#13;
university system, because&#13;
you're only basing admission&#13;
on. academic excellence."&#13;
This propsal, McCallum believes,&#13;
will benefit. not harm,&#13;
. schools such as Parkslde.&#13;
HI would expect that our&#13;
policies would encourage&#13;
people to go to two-year campuses&#13;
and campuses which&#13;
have not been meeting their&#13;
enrollment .projections, like&#13;
Parkalde," he said.&#13;
Week at the Park&#13;
"Learned Ladies" begins&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 23&#13;
Movie: "Bonnie and Clyde"&#13;
(PG13) will be shown at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission at the door is $1.00&#13;
for Parkslde and Carthage&#13;
students and $2.00 for others.&#13;
Sponsored by P AB.&#13;
Worksbop: "How to Use Fi·&#13;
nancial Statements for Forecasting&#13;
and Budgeting" starts&#13;
at 6 p.m. Call ext. 2047 for details,&#13;
Sponsored by the Small&#13;
Business Development Center.&#13;
Movies: "The Gold Rush"&#13;
and "City Lights" will be&#13;
shown at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Tickets for the&#13;
Thursday Foreign FUm Series&#13;
will be avaUable at the&#13;
door.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 24&#13;
Movie: "Bonnie and Clyde"&#13;
will be repeated at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
and at 7: 30 p.m. In the Union&#13;
Cinema.&#13;
Play: "The Learned Ladies"&#13;
starts at 8 p.m. In the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Call&#13;
ext. 2564 for ticket information.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 25&#13;
Play: "The Learned Ladies"&#13;
will be repeated at 8 p.m. In&#13;
the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. Tickets will be available&#13;
at the door.&#13;
Movies: •'The Gold Rush"&#13;
and "City Lights" will be reo&#13;
peated at 8 p.m. In the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. All&#13;
seats are sold for the Saturday&#13;
Foreign Film Series.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 26&#13;
Movies: liThe Gold Rush"&#13;
and "City Lights" wlll be repeated&#13;
at 2 p.m. In the Union&#13;
Cinema. Tickets for the Sunday&#13;
Foreign FUm Series will&#13;
be available at the door.&#13;
Movie: "Bonnie and Clyde"&#13;
will be repeated at 7: 30 p.m.&#13;
In the Union CInema.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 28&#13;
Worksbop: "How to Find&#13;
Jobs and Contact Employers" '~&#13;
starts at 5:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
104. Call ext. 2452 for reservations.&#13;
Workshop: "Investments and&#13;
Estate Planning" starts at 6:&#13;
30 p.m. In MOLN 109. Call&#13;
ext. 2047 for reservations.&#13;
Sponsored by the Small Business&#13;
Development Center.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 29&#13;
Workshop: "Resume Preparation"&#13;
starts at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Union 104. Sponsored by the&#13;
Career Planning and Placement&#13;
Center.&#13;
Concert: Featuring pianists&#13;
Bllss and Goldberg starting&#13;
at 1 p.m. In CA DU8. The&#13;
concert is free and open to&#13;
the publlc.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 30&#13;
Open House: For area high&#13;
schoolers starting at 8 a.m.&#13;
Call ext. 2355 for details.&#13;
Movie: "The Exorcist" (R)&#13;
will be shown at 3:30 p.m. In&#13;
the Union Cinema. Admission&#13;
at the door Is $1.00 for Parkslde&#13;
and Carthage students and&#13;
$2.00 for others. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
Workshop: "Resume Preparation"&#13;
starts at 5:30 p.m. in&#13;
Union 104. Call ext. 2452 for&#13;
reservations.&#13;
HwyA&#13;
r------,&#13;
,&#13;
UWpl ,&#13;
, ,&#13;
HwyE '--- -&#13;
~&#13;
CENTER&#13;
l&#13;
~&#13;
oFTHE&#13;
WORLD&#13;
s:&#13;
-c UQUOR c&#13;
'0 J&#13;
15 g, ~&#13;
'" '"&#13;
L *&#13;
I&#13;
P&#13;
. ., Please use our products in moderation. IgnottlrS openHM~~~~Sat&#13;
. z: "", ~' ~ '0 OpenSunday 9-9&#13;
\\'tB'l'JOh 10-9&#13;
Liquor&#13;
1585 - North 22nd Avenue· Ph. 551·8020&#13;
Ic=FR=EE=PO~=TE=RsICOMEREGISTR FOR OUR FREE DRAWING&#13;
*&#13;
~&#13;
c Winner of the BARTLES "- IAYMES J'.J~...,A,A. This Week's Prize:&#13;
Giant Inflatable Bottle ~~. COORS . \ NICOLE PACIONE IElVira-Mistress of the Dark l (life·Slzedisplay)&#13;
.rkOneWeekend&#13;
A Month And Earn&#13;
818,000For College.&#13;
With the New GI8m and the Army National Guard.&#13;
If you have the mind forcollege,but notthe&#13;
money.the Army NationalGuard has a goldenopportunity&#13;
foryou. d th Lend us your brainpower one weeken a moo&#13;
I&#13;
and two weeks a year. and well give you $18.000or&#13;
morefor college. .&#13;
Under the New GI Bill you'll qualifyforup to&#13;
$5000 fortuitionand books.Then. you;1get another&#13;
$Ii OOO-ormore-in monthlyArmy Guard pay.&#13;
y fini ch';;ks. Plus, a cash bonus of up to $2,000as soonas&#13;
au AndrushAdvancedIndividualTraining. ff t&#13;
'ith rlyouhave collegeloans,the Guard willhelp you pay those 0 • 00,&#13;
~ to$1.500extraper year. k solittle&#13;
of 0otherserviceoffersyou so many educationalbenefits.and as s&#13;
YOUrll.me. ~ ,:&#13;
try :I·'f YOU can spareone weekend a month for yourCOWl' -&#13;
, your local recruiter. ~&#13;
Andhelpyourselfto a higher education. ~I_'_'"&#13;
SFC 11ILLIE ~;OP,GA~ ..... - ......&#13;
(.'0\4) 1156-6496&#13;
Miller&#13;
99c 4~oz'ers&#13;
Red, White &amp; Blue&#13;
S1099 1/4 bbl.&#13;
Wewillholdchecksor driving&#13;
licensesfordeposits.&#13;
llARTLES "'- jAYMES&#13;
S2994_Pk.&#13;
S1899 caseof 24&#13;
Ginor Vodka&#13;
S49!!rliter&#13;
PosmONS&#13;
AVAILABLE&#13;
usa UPIIANAGEIl&#13;
",..-y. . ...&#13;
he InftL PoGdocl boeola a mars, w"'01'.... i LiS&#13;
~ b • .........., CIOIqtc&#13;
trneI aad II '''" ftn:a.&#13;
ApprozImateIr 20 boun per&#13;
wak, IdaI for 8ClIlor or&#13;
aracfuate ......&#13;
CAMPUS allP&#13;
___ co he&#13;
InftL MartooI old bach&#13;
tOUR on your """P"L&#13;
Call $me Mandefman III&#13;
414-216-nOO or _ to&#13;
AmerIcan Aaaa T......J. 238&#13;
W WIscoMln Ave.. SuIte&#13;
800, MIl. •... WI 53203&#13;
&lt;:AU. TOU-FREE&#13;
(800) 992·3n3&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
Room 286&#13;
Moa., Fri. 10,3&#13;
~Ts)&#13;
(e,,~..\o"&#13;
Total&#13;
Service&#13;
for&#13;
u.W.Parkside&#13;
Employees&#13;
and&#13;
Students&#13;
Senio.row odIler loa"""'.&#13;
....&#13;
.&#13;
T ,-+ "&#13;
.'&#13;
...,&#13;
~~,\CK~!!nslJ:V~!~~U OlJS~&#13;
~ Of Solid Rattan Furmtur ADJUSTABLE PAPASAN&#13;
, CHAIR &amp; STOOL :"""J' ,&#13;
Combo Offer ,-".,.l" ~ t ": ....&#13;
NOW .,......., r "'..J .&#13;
ONLY&#13;
- - - -COUPON- - - --, r 8ASKETS &amp; WICKERWARE I&#13;
I 29~...Reg. S2 to 55&#13;
':30 Lm. - 11:00 •. m. I&#13;
I&#13;
TIlunI. ThnI s.t.&#13;
Limit 6 L__::::~'::'__:J&#13;
GIANT40"KONGFANS ~&#13;
21$~OO \~~&#13;
All Brass &amp; Sterling Silver Jewelry&#13;
NOW 500/0 OFF&#13;
Profits for Lighthouse&#13;
Brigade Band and Racine&#13;
Unified School District&#13;
$9900&#13;
- --'l:~t&#13;
Corner of Ohio Street -~ !Ee~ Mas ani &amp; Washington Ave. (Hwy. 20) ~-~~&#13;
------ RACINE·633-2150 '&#13;
TheHaun~ing&#13;
HAUNTED HOUSE&#13;
Admission S2DD&#13;
Only&#13;
LIVE ACTORS! HAUNTING SOUNDS! FRIGHTENING DISPLAYSI&#13;
9I=rightening Days,&#13;
Oct. 23rd to Nov. 1st&#13;
Hours:&#13;
rnurs., Oct. 23·5 to 9 pm&#13;
Frl., Oct. 24·5 to 9 pm&#13;
sat., Oct. 25·1 to 9 pm&#13;
sun, Oct. 26·1 to 5 prn&#13;
Racine's Totally Enclosed&#13;
estgate&#13;
all&#13;
4901 Washington Ave. (Washington &amp; Ohio)&#13;
(next to Shopko) 634-8090 ' '&#13;
Mon., Oct. 27·CLOSED&#13;
Tues., Oct. 28-5 to 9 pm&#13;
wed., Oct. 29-5 to 9 pm&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 30-5 to 9 pm&#13;
[FRIDAY, OCT. 31·1 to 9 pml&#13;
sat., Nov.'·, to 5pm&#13;
SATISI=ACTION&#13;
GUARANTEED!&#13;
LISTEN TO WRKR FM RADIO&#13;
FOR MORE DETAILSSMALL&#13;
CHILDREN MUST BE&#13;
ACCOMPANIED s·y PARENTS&#13;
�ER Thursday, October 23,1986 9&#13;
by Jim Nelbaur&#13;
EntertaillmentEditor&#13;
peoplejust won't watch. silentmovies&#13;
nowadays, givmg&#13;
the feeble axcuse that a film&#13;
~emptysands dialogue.&#13;
"Chlldrenof a Lesser God"&#13;
~ a potent drama almost&#13;
,trtcUyon the basis that actress&#13;
MarleeMatlin performs&#13;
IhroUghpantomIme.&#13;
Thedeaf mute theme was&#13;
better presented in Joseph&#13;
Pevney's"Man of a 'I'housandFaces'"&#13;
(1957) In which&#13;
JamesCagney played Lon&#13;
OWley,a silent movie actor&#13;
whosepantomimIc skills were&#13;
enhanced by the fact that- his&#13;
parents were stone deaf But&#13;
"Children of a Lesser God"&#13;
merely uses this theme as a&#13;
backdrop to present a love&#13;
story for all time and generations.&#13;
William Hurt perfectly en.&#13;
acts the glib·yet.commpas_&#13;
sionate teacher of the deaf&#13;
whose bizarre, innovative&#13;
methods cause genuine&#13;
breakthroughs in several&#13;
areas. His passion for the&#13;
young clea~-up girl who refuses&#13;
to use her voice is the&#13;
motivation for a very warm,&#13;
offbeat screen romance that&#13;
sets the pace for the remainis&#13;
der of the film.&#13;
The story does tend to drag&#13;
a great deal and actually is&#13;
more interesting durtng the&#13;
schoolroom sub-plot sequences&#13;
than. during the romance&#13;
that is the main thrust&#13;
of the narraative. The Hurt&#13;
character can even be considerect&#13;
unsuccessful in the&#13;
film's denouement since his&#13;
attempts to teach speech to&#13;
the Mallin character and his&#13;
desperate attempts at breakIng&#13;
through to a quiet rebel in&#13;
his classroom both fail In the&#13;
end.&#13;
What causes' 'Children of a&#13;
Lesser God" to succeed in&#13;
spite of the narrative's shortvisually&#13;
effective&#13;
comings is director Randa&#13;
Haines' fascinating use of visual&#13;
images to emphasize the&#13;
fact that we're dealing with&#13;
the hearing imparied (sequences&#13;
with the Matlin cnaracter&#13;
swimming alone are ron&#13;
without sound).&#13;
Another plus is the acting.&#13;
Hurt is very comfortable in&#13;
his role, one that seems tatlor-made&#13;
for his particular&#13;
style. Matlin is a stunning&#13;
presence whose facial expressions&#13;
say more than any of&#13;
the discursive modern-day&#13;
talking film actors. The lost&#13;
art of pantomime in motion&#13;
pictures is recaptured in all&#13;
its silent screen glory.&#13;
film&#13;
In the final analysis. "Children&#13;
of a Lesser God" is a&#13;
sad film - sad in that it emphasizes&#13;
how little modem&#13;
day filmmaking utilizes&#13;
something as obvious as visuals.&#13;
That it takes a film&#13;
where the central character&#13;
Is deaf to present a fair&#13;
amount of visuals L1 both&#13;
style and acting Is mors than&#13;
a little ridiculous.&#13;
The film is recommended&#13;
. even if only to show today's&#13;
mass audiences how movies&#13;
would be made if more filmmakers&#13;
were fortified with&#13;
the understanding that In motion&#13;
pictures. visual should&#13;
come before audJai.&#13;
by Jim Nelbaur&#13;
Entertainment Editor&#13;
---------Selected Shorls:---------&#13;
PEGGYSUE GOT&#13;
MARRIED&#13;
Francis Ford Coppola's&#13;
filmsalways have some sort&#13;
of esoteric style and theme&#13;
under the narrative surface.&#13;
WIththis one. Coppola carefullymanipulates&#13;
the ernotions&#13;
of views from their late&#13;
twenUesto early forties by&#13;
presenUngnostalgic images&#13;
o!theInnocentpast.&#13;
KathieenTurner plays the&#13;
llUecharacter that is whisked&#13;
awayfrom her 25 year high&#13;
schoolreunion to her senior&#13;
year circa 1960,What follows&#13;
Ia a compelling character&#13;
studythat presents an era in&#13;
retrospect.&#13;
Themajority ,X-1960 teenagerscling&#13;
to dreams of suburbta,&#13;
Dion and Fabian, and&#13;
other idyllic images all of&#13;
which became anachronisms&#13;
very quickly as the sixlies&#13;
wore on. The one outcast, a&#13;
rebellious literary student&#13;
name Fitzsimmons, embodJes&#13;
the very type that came Into&#13;
vogue as the innocent "Ozzie&#13;
and Harriet" era came to a&#13;
crashing halt amid the Asian&#13;
wars and outdoor rock festivals&#13;
that defined the coming&#13;
decade.&#13;
"Peggy Sue. Got Married"&#13;
will easily be considered another&#13;
"Citizen Kane" by&#13;
many sentimental folks In&#13;
their thirties. This 28-year old&#13;
sees it as a very expertly&#13;
crafted example of audience&#13;
manipulation that will be&#13;
anachronism itself in about&#13;
five years.&#13;
The Files&#13;
Ten Years Ago&#13;
Oct. 2Q, 1976&#13;
Dedication, open house set&#13;
On Oct. 24, an all campus open house and the official&#13;
dedicationof Irvin G, Wyllie Library-Learning Center.will&#13;
beheld.The dedication program will feature the unveiling&#13;
01 a POrtrait of the late Chancellor Wyllie done by Kenoshaartist&#13;
George Pollard.&#13;
Also featured in the open house will be the recently&#13;
completed$3.7mtllion Union building.&#13;
Five Years Ago&#13;
Oct. 22, 1981&#13;
Senate takes stand on&#13;
teaching awards&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Associaton. Inc. took&#13;
a stand against a decision made by Chancellor Alan Gus·&#13;
kin and the awards committee on this year's Teaching&#13;
ExcellenceAwards.&#13;
The awards, which are usually presented at the beginningof&#13;
each school year, are delayed this year because&#13;
ShirleyKersey, one of the recipients, is no longer teach-&#13;
~g here. She will not receive it. Two awards are tradiODallygiven&#13;
each year.&#13;
One Year Ago&#13;
oct. 24, 1985&#13;
New programs added . r&#13;
A number of new programs have been added this yea&#13;
at ParkSlde to help orient students both academiCally and&#13;
aoClallyto college life. In&#13;
Amongthe new programs this year the advising desk&#13;
!datn Place, the Academic Resource Center In the library,&#13;
~Ority Student Services, orientation for new students~&#13;
I e Campus Ambassador program and planned program&#13;
~r a rolling registration and studJes intended to measure&#13;
e Impact of education at Parkside. .&#13;
.....&#13;
SID AND NANCY&#13;
Unquestionably the most&#13;
heartbreaking film in recent&#13;
memory as well as one of the&#13;
most thoroughly dJsgustlng.&#13;
Fascinating In that It&#13;
presents Sid Vicious and&#13;
Nancy Spungen's llves In all&#13;
their tragic glory. Compeliing&#13;
In its vivid look at the British&#13;
punk scene of the last seventies.&#13;
Disgusting in its realistic&#13;
portrayal of the ugliness of&#13;
this entire lifestyle.&#13;
But to totally dismiss this&#13;
film is to state that you have&#13;
no compassion for troubled&#13;
young people. Boiher Sid and&#13;
Nancy are repugnant, but&#13;
their rebelliousness stems&#13;
from an existence that cries&#13;
for a type of love that neither&#13;
of them seemed to have experienced.&#13;
Though not a very good&#13;
movie in the proper sense, its&#13;
realism is undeniable. You'll&#13;
either be utterly revolted or&#13;
TRADiWiND~ I VILLAGE ~&#13;
I&#13;
1518 Washington Ave. '1&#13;
(Hwy. 20) • 633-3161&#13;
I We'.,egot 1&#13;
I BANDS I&#13;
I Friday, Oct. 24th I&#13;
I&#13;
Clmmeron (50's &amp; 60's) I&#13;
Band Starts at 9:00 p.m.&#13;
I&#13;
Join us Fri. 10/31 for our I&#13;
Halloween Partyl&#13;
1&#13;
Largest Facilities In Raclnel 1&#13;
Ample Parking in Rear 1&#13;
1 C?~9~~~8t~~~~~.:J&#13;
L.:---~-&#13;
thoroughly depressed., Either&#13;
way you're sure to be&#13;
awestruck.&#13;
REFORM SCHOOL GIRLS&#13;
Cheap trash a'ia poverty&#13;
row of the 1940's featuring&#13;
Wendy O. Williams, who&#13;
achieved local fame by being&#13;
busted in Milwaukee for "Assimilating&#13;
fornication on&#13;
stage ...&#13;
Ready-made drive-in/video&#13;
fodder, "Reform School&#13;
Girls" sinks in its own swaggering,&#13;
pathetic subject matter.&#13;
It relies totally on visceral&#13;
images, using the fast&#13;
pace that is the center of anylow-budget&#13;
actioner. No attempt&#13;
is made within the narrative&#13;
to address the problems&#13;
of reform schools.&#13;
That there are enough demented&#13;
people out there to&#13;
make it worth filming a turkey&#13;
like this is more than a&#13;
little scary.&#13;
DEADLY FRIEND&#13;
Elizabeth Shue goes from&#13;
"Karate Kid" innocence to&#13;
this shocky teen horror epic&#13;
in one fell swoop.&#13;
The ideas in "Deadly&#13;
Friend" are all the ususal&#13;
ones, with no real good. new&#13;
ideas. The scares are manufactured&#13;
rather than built up&#13;
to a'ta Hitchcock. The whole&#13;
Idea, In fact, is sold to us In&#13;
the coming attraction trailer.&#13;
But, then. selilng is what&#13;
some filmmakers seem to&#13;
think making movies is all&#13;
about.&#13;
FILM ON CAMPUS&#13;
Arthur Penn's "Bonnie and&#13;
Clyde" Is generally regarded&#13;
as one of the films that&#13;
spawned the seventies generation&#13;
of serious film students&#13;
of which this writer is a product.&#13;
The fUm featurs several innovative&#13;
technical treats to&#13;
enhance the cnaractertsations.&#13;
Faye Dunaway and&#13;
Warren Beatty In the title&#13;
roles, give us more than historionic&#13;
dramatics as was per&#13;
usual for bad guys In films of&#13;
the late sixties.&#13;
A trend setter In that it utilizes&#13;
elements of comedy,&#13;
melodrama and socLal cornmentary.&#13;
Michelle Neal&#13;
John Poehls&#13;
Stephanie Hynes&#13;
ONCE AGAIN WE HAVE LUCKY&#13;
WINNERS OF MOVIE PASSES FOR&#13;
UA CINEMAS, 7370 57TH AVE.&#13;
Essie Bennett&#13;
Tracee Demoe&#13;
Suzanne Harris&#13;
Dan Cunningham&#13;
THE WINNERS OF&#13;
THE WHooPI GOLDBERG WATCH ARE:&#13;
Diane Perkins Gary Goslinski&#13;
SEE JUMPIN' JACK FLASH&#13;
SHOWING ALL THIS WEEK&#13;
TO CLAIM YOUR PASS, PLEASE COME TO THE RANGER&#13;
OFFICE, WLLC 0139C. NEXT TO THE COFFEE SHOPPE.&#13;
c&#13;
Huey hollers "Fore!"&#13;
I&gt; T) 1.. lM'r r a New Drug" and "Working&#13;
For a Llvtng."&#13;
Granted, the underlying&#13;
theme of these numbers is&#13;
sUll "have a good time.&#13;
party, etc.," but most are&#13;
aurprtsingly serious, Intended&#13;
to be taken at face value as&#13;
comments upon SO's llfe chan.&#13;
neled vte a 60's musIcaJ style.&#13;
The' sore excepUon Is "Hlp&#13;
pIHt to Be Square." which, with&#13;
sense of humor intact. Illus-&#13;
!rates how UghUy the group's&#13;
approach fils wtth more Ilghthearted&#13;
material. BoasUng&#13;
lyrics Uke "T used to be a renpde.&#13;
I used to run around...&#13;
I 'ow I'm playing It real&#13;
slraJght and yes I cut my&#13;
halt ." the song Is Innocuously&#13;
Lotta pteaeant.&#13;
That fewer consumers&#13;
oeem disposed to digest&#13;
Huey's brand of dOO-WOpsuggeato&#13;
that he and the boys&#13;
were a passing fad.&#13;
Ciassified A dS'o;;;..;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;_;;;;;;o;;;_o;;;;..;;;;;;o;;;.. o;;;;_;;;;;;o;;;&#13;
K'OTT Rt:'OI Break a freshman's&#13;
head ..-.n wUb )' r num (hucks.&#13;
"COTT R '(1:1 You and your frtemls&#13;
are .ror&amp;nc La die U )'OU ever pull an.&#13;
Otber mml Uk. that -.pin&#13;
"lTkf; ROKL hal had h1I rev~!!&#13;
8OCCL.R y,,-, ; "Il1an.k )"OU for your&#13;
.-upport lI\J.I; homecomiri,g weekend.&#13;
You made II • memorable and enjoya.b~&#13;
"" .lr.e--.nd. 'Th&amp;n.k$-the Soccer&#13;
....,......&#13;
CROSSWORD PUZZLER&#13;
ACIlO ..&#13;
35_&#13;
31long._ ,.."&#13;
39_. Print.".&#13;
"O~&#13;
• 2 ObKure&#13;
.. o.nn.&#13;
O&amp;~01 """""&#13;
doocord&#13;
48T.,.,. stro*.&#13;
50 Youngol ..&#13;
~1-'01&#13;
-.go..&#13;
M~~-&#13;
Uquod&#13;
58~",&#13;
e,~&#13;
a Aucticns 64 __&#13;
ll$ Anned&#13;
conllIcl&#13;
eo long IrQg!d'&#13;
bord&#13;
81 Sook. eo nu&#13;
1I,nl, t&#13;
...."".,1&#13;
4 CooII.SIn ~&#13;
t •&#13;
'11&lt;"" 12 PeriOd of&#13;
,-&#13;
1314_. Roam&#13;
IS E.pen&#13;
11Mwtn """_Ill I.eon-ed&#13;
21E~&#13;
22 T_ard..&#13;
24 HutrMd&#13;
2llTIdy&#13;
21 A.wd&#13;
310&lt;_&#13;
33~&#13;
"..&#13;
301 EIev 'Of ..... _&#13;
,&#13;
...&#13;
t&#13;
s&#13;
f&#13;
1&#13;
I&#13;
DO_&#13;
I Or... border 25 Scokl&#13;
:2 Anglo-Saxon 27 In front o'&#13;
money 28 Cares tor&#13;
3 Squonde,ocl 30 ee-&#13;
• lJber.te 32 Existed&#13;
5 Mote unusual 36 No'hIng&#13;
6 A. home 38 Badgenike&#13;
7 The self -&#13;
e Of ,he same ~ ~or&#13;
mat..,., 45 Pantry&#13;
I~&#13;
=&#13;
41 Drunkard&#13;
II F • ~ 4. Swiss ClItl'on&#13;
00 e "-' 52 Tableland&#13;
16 Walt on S4 rrilll&#13;
188ectnfied 55 Ordinance&#13;
partICle 56 Greek letter&#13;
20 P&gt;geon pea ~1 Informer&#13;
22 Enter1a&amp;n 59 Be in debt&#13;
23 Suffer-: from 60 Encounl.ed&#13;
d........ -. 63_51&#13;
RANGal&#13;
Q&#13;
------Short Cuts---- __&#13;
SOMEWHERE IN TIllIE&#13;
by Iron Maiden (Capitol)&#13;
Considered by many to be&#13;
the consummate heavy metal&#13;
band Iron Maiden also keeps&#13;
up with their heavily detailed&#13;
album cover graphics (this&#13;
latest one may be the best of&#13;
all).&#13;
The music within retains&#13;
the same technical competence&#13;
and emotional power as&#13;
can be expected from the&#13;
popular headbangers, the title&#13;
cut being an extended shouter&#13;
in the tradition of songs like&#13;
"Flight of Icarus" from&#13;
1983's "Piece of Mind."&#13;
Other cuts getUng airplay&#13;
on the metal radio stations include&#13;
the scorching IIAlexander&#13;
the Great ... "Heaven Can&#13;
watt" and perhaps the best&#13;
track. "The Loneliness of the&#13;
Long DIstance Runner."&#13;
which is saId to be based on&#13;
the brUllant 1962 Tony Richardson&#13;
British film of the&#13;
same name.&#13;
With lhJs, their ninth LP&#13;
(including the 1981 EP&#13;
l&lt;Ma1den Japan"). Iron&#13;
Malden retain their firm and&#13;
lofty position in the annals of&#13;
meat and potatoes rock.&#13;
Jim Neibaur&#13;
SHOT IN THE DARK by&#13;
Great WhIte (Capitol)&#13;
Hard, meaty rock music&#13;
from yet another group out of&#13;
the Los Angeles club scene.&#13;
Great WhIte achieved&#13;
strong noteriety with the independently&#13;
released EP:&#13;
"Out of the Night" Which was&#13;
soon followed by a self-titled&#13;
debut LP. With this. another&#13;
independent effort just recenUy&#13;
pIcked up for dlstrlbuttion&#13;
by Capitol. Great White&#13;
has cl&gt;anged very llttle .&#13;
The group's work is a bit&#13;
subtler than many metal&#13;
acts, and closer to bard rock&#13;
(that Is, tamer In Its fundamental&#13;
approach).&#13;
The LP's best !lOngby far Is&#13;
"Face the Day," while it includes&#13;
yet another cover of&#13;
Iron Maiden's latest is on Capitol Records&#13;
the old Spencer Davis Group&#13;
oldie "Gimme Some Lovin."&#13;
Although Great White's cover&#13;
of the sixties gem is far better&#13;
than the bombastic Blues&#13;
Brothers bastardization, Jack&#13;
Russell's powerful vocals are&#13;
still no match for Steve Winwood's&#13;
on the original.&#13;
Six other original tracks&#13;
balance out the package with&#13;
frequent emphasis on Mark&#13;
Kendall's guitar llcks.&#13;
"Shot in the Dark" is acceptable&#13;
on its own terms&#13;
even if it still lacks the unllm-&#13;
!ted passion found In the better&#13;
metal attempts. That !t&#13;
retains rock and roll purity&#13;
by straying from technologt.&#13;
cal intrusions Is its major&#13;
strong point.&#13;
-Jim Neibaur&#13;
PRIVATE REVOLUTION&#13;
World Party (Chrysalis)&#13;
This is Waterboy's bassist&#13;
Karl Wallinger's solo effort&#13;
displaying even more varied&#13;
musical abilities than that of&#13;
the Innovative Waterboys.&#13;
While the Waterboys stick&#13;
to a basic. stripped down tradlUonal&#13;
sound. World Party&#13;
try different musical styles.&#13;
The title track and "Mak.&#13;
Ing Love (To The World)"&#13;
have the lyrical effervescense&#13;
of Waterboys frontman Mike&#13;
Scott. but the music could be&#13;
mistaken for another Prince&#13;
proto. type from Minneapolis.&#13;
These two songs seem to&#13;
have been placed In sequence&#13;
deliberately to filter out those&#13;
listeners who do not have the&#13;
open mind to continue Ilaten.&#13;
Ing. Obvtously detectable.&#13;
and wonderfully so, Water.&#13;
boys' saxaphonlst Anthony&#13;
ThisUethwaile gives his band.&#13;
mate a hand on "Ship Of&#13;
Fools."&#13;
A traditional Chleflanesque&#13;
Interlude, "Dance Of The&#13;
Hoppy Lads," is a unique sur.&#13;
prise. and Waliinger's croon.&#13;
ing voice and the soothing&#13;
music of "It Can Be Beautiful&#13;
(Sometimes) to are merely&#13;
preparations for continued&#13;
brilliance on side two.&#13;
Although WalUnger may&#13;
have stood in the shadow 01&#13;
Mike Scott, he no longer&#13;
needs to. His prominent abW.&#13;
ties, which were once abrevl.&#13;
ated. are now overwhelming&#13;
and diverse.&#13;
··Gretchen Gayhart&#13;
Immunization.&#13;
UNICEF, the United Na.&#13;
tions' Chlldren's Fund. Is&#13;
ploneerlng a Child SUrviVal&#13;
------------&#13;
UNICEF'charity dance to be held&#13;
Every minute fourteen children&#13;
In the developing world&#13;
die either from malnutritIon&#13;
and hunger or from lack of&#13;
Just When you thought it was safe&#13;
to stay in your room and stUdy&#13;
'TRETURNS&#13;
8.S.0. JAM Part II&#13;
Friday Oct. 24th&#13;
Union Square&#13;
9:00·Until ?&#13;
$1 Entry for all StUdents&#13;
11&#13;
A Black StUdent Org.&#13;
and&#13;
Big"B"&#13;
PrOduction&#13;
CampaJgn which provides&#13;
low-cost health care to the&#13;
most vulnerable children in&#13;
the world. _.&#13;
For only a few dol1.al'l,&#13;
UNICEF can protect a child&#13;
from death by disease or&#13;
famine.&#13;
On Oct. 31, tens of thOUi&#13;
sands of people througJ!OU&#13;
the United States and can::&#13;
Will participate in the&#13;
Annual "TrIck or Treat tor&#13;
UNICEF" program. SinceIII&#13;
Inception. lhJs program /l&amp;I&#13;
raised over $80 million tor&#13;
UNICEF actIvlUes worldwl·&#13;
de. take&#13;
A dance.a·thon will&#13;
place at Parkslde on Oct. SI&#13;
at the P AB.spon!lOred daII'"&#13;
featuring "Signs." PledP&#13;
sheets Will be available ~&#13;
week at the slgn·up boOlII COl"&#13;
cated In the Mollnal'O&#13;
Course. . ....wI&#13;
All students are enCOUJ1l6-&#13;
to partIcipate in lhJs effort.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
CrosS-COY ntry&#13;
- Marter outruns field at Carthage Invitational&#13;
.~:~~ ~:or ~:r ~in~re~ouf:e. Her ~me of could not overcome the Osh-. placed 11th with 271 points. tenUy," said Rosa. "I have&#13;
. th' secon 5 was kosh Titans, who placed first The team title was claimed three of my top seven hurt&#13;
e second fastest time ever With 46 points, three better by North central easily out. and I may not be able to have&#13;
by a Parkside runner. She than Parkside. However, the distancing Luther' College 42 a team at nationals this&#13;
now has the top two times for Rangers finished well ahead to 74. year."&#13;
Parkslde women on the cour- of Mllwaukee This is the first&#13;
se, tI th . The top fInlsher for the&#13;
me ey have beaten the Rangers was once again&#13;
Panthers. Randy Darnkot, who finished&#13;
The overall men's winner 22nd In 25: 53.&#13;
was Keith Hanson, a Mar.&#13;
quette graduate, who covered&#13;
the course in 23 minutes, 42&#13;
seconds.&#13;
Thursday, October 23, 1986&#13;
The Parkslde National&#13;
cross-Country course was the&#13;
site of the Carthage Invtta,&#13;
uanaI this past weekend. 22&#13;
men's teams and 12 women's&#13;
teamS participated. There&#13;
were 279 men and 150 women&#13;
entered.&#13;
The overall women's' winner&#13;
was MIchelle Marter.&#13;
'llIiS was the first time Mar·&#13;
ter has won an Invtatlonal on&#13;
Top tMlvea womeD.:&#13;
Sarah Hiett was second In&#13;
the collegiate division with a&#13;
time of 18: 26. The rest of the&#13;
team showed excellent depth&#13;
by placing fQur of their team&#13;
members in the top 15. Despite&#13;
these finishes. the Rangers&#13;
Marter; Hiett; Jilleen Fobalr, 1, 18:&#13;
46; Colleen WIsmer, 18, 18:157; Nancy&#13;
:Marter, 26, 19:M: KrtaUn AlIoto, 31,&#13;
Head coach Lucian Rosa 19:1J3; Jackie :MeloUk, Sf, 19:56.&#13;
said that injuries have been&#13;
hurting the team. "They are&#13;
better than they show. they&#13;
just aren't nmnlng constsTop&#13;
ab: men:&#13;
Darnkot: John Hunt, 23. 26:D:i; Mike&#13;
Lunow, 79. 26:1:11i Mike Sllwa, 87, 267&#13;
57: Robb White, 1M, 27:67; Andy Ka- The Parkside men's team estner, 156,28:02.&#13;
Bowling club off to a rolling start Sports Briefs_&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
The season ended Saturday for the women's tennis team&#13;
when the doubles team of Amy Tropin and Kim Kranich&#13;
was defeated by UW-Stout's number one doubles team at&#13;
the NAIA District 14 tournament In Oshkosh.&#13;
The Rangers finished the season with a dual meet record&#13;
of 3-10, but coach Wendy M1ller pointed out that "we&#13;
had a lot of close meets including two 4-5 losses right near&#13;
the end of the season.&#13;
"They all played well." she added. "They were inexperienced&#13;
and not used to as high a caliber of competition as&#13;
they met. They showed a lot of Improvment which Is the&#13;
main thing. I commend them for their efforts."&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
On Oct. is, the Parkside women's volleyball team lost a&#13;
close meet to Lewis University on the Flyers' home court .&#13;
The scores were 13·15,14-16.15-13,6-15.&#13;
Statlatlcal leaders for the Rangers were Karen Green&#13;
with four k1lls and 12 digs, Laurie Jacusz with four blocks,&#13;
Kay Wolferstetter with 12 digs and Amy Henderson with&#13;
27 assists.&#13;
Their current record Is now 25-11.&#13;
by Katie Thomey&#13;
The Parkslde bowling club&#13;
has now had two "meets and&#13;
Ute men's and women's&#13;
teamshave each lost only one&#13;
match.&#13;
won by the same score, but&#13;
the men fell 5-21.&#13;
Last Saturday, the teams of&#13;
the Big 6 Conference were at&#13;
Parkside for a meet. The&#13;
Rangers bowled against PlattevlIle&#13;
and Oshkosh this time.&#13;
Both teams pounded the Pioneers,&#13;
the men by a 23-3&#13;
count and the women by a 23-&#13;
o whitewash. In the match&#13;
with Oshkosh, the men won&#13;
20%-5%. but the women lost&#13;
7%-15%.&#13;
Glen Malkmus had the high&#13;
single game on Saturday with&#13;
a 236. Mike Torosian leads&#13;
the team with a 206 average.&#13;
Club president Jeff Floyd&#13;
said "during the match with&#13;
Oshkosh, It was the first time&#13;
the team had come together&#13;
and bowled well. Other times&#13;
we had been somewhat lackadaisical,&#13;
so that was encouraging.&#13;
Overall, it was a&#13;
good day."&#13;
OnOct. 11, the club was in&#13;
Mllwaukee and competed&#13;
againstMIlwaukee and Madison.&#13;
'!be men and women&#13;
beat the Panthers by scores&#13;
of 19-7and 19-4. respectively.&#13;
AgaInstMadison, the women&#13;
.iII"J7UJT...cr..o'I''''''''Classified Ads ,""""",1&#13;
GRETCHEN OAYHART is STILL an&#13;
LPS!&#13;
KENNEDY'S VICTORY over Nixon&#13;
was less crooked than this year's&#13;
Homecoming election.&#13;
STEVE NELSEN: Did you have a&#13;
nice swim in the Mighty Root? You&#13;
big dummy. From your fellow root&#13;
buddies.&#13;
MAD AUSTRIAN: Attention, Commander&#13;
Salamander: Prepare for fuklfledged&#13;
attack. Mary! wnet a weekend!&#13;
She's Gotta Have It!&#13;
A RIDDLE: The best ones are always&#13;
taken. \Vhy don't they ever take me?&#13;
BONI: I have a recipe book for you-·&#13;
101 ways to cook com. DMC.&#13;
OARY: PLEASE wear those, I~ower&#13;
shorts and my wool sweater ... Mr.&#13;
GQ (Gary Quarterly).&#13;
F.F: HAVE you checked for grass&#13;
staIns lately?&#13;
SANDY: 11IANK you for a great&#13;
·Homecoming. CA·s.&#13;
DAVE McEVOY: Even If you are a&#13;
Homecoming dud. to us you're still&#13;
The Stud. The staff.&#13;
G.O: HOW 'bout a .,two-man tug o'&#13;
war just me and you. G.S.&#13;
SUzANNE: WELCOME ~ the real&#13;
world of journalism. That s a case of&#13;
Schaeffer, right?&#13;
DIANA NEIBAUR: you'lI be home for&#13;
your birthda!&#13;
SCOTT RENCH: Got another spee·&#13;
ding ticket? .&#13;
Classllieds see page 10&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
AOOllBATE AND dependable typing&#13;
:..: sbJdent and professional.&#13;
RUB-A·DUB, Hot Tub Rentals. Delivered&#13;
to your home. 551.9023.&#13;
TYPING; MY home. Fast and de-&#13;
)lendabJe, Student rates. Free eetrmate!.&#13;
Call Debbie. 681.3fi22.&#13;
PElLA·GRAM when the bare essentIa18&#13;
are the best credentials. eatl us&#13;
~ that stagttte party, birthday, etc.&#13;
1lII~~ SInging Telegram,&#13;
HelpWanted&#13;
..... PER hundred for remailing let- ::nfromhome! Send selr-addressed, Plieal:: envelope for tntcrmanon/apIe&#13;
1(J 0720aAssociates, Box 95-B, Rosel·&#13;
:OMEWORKERS WANTED. top pay.&#13;
tOri~~~e. Call Cottage Industries&#13;
~VEL FIELD position Immedtval&#13;
avatlable. Good commission,&#13;
otheuab~ WOrkexperience, travel and&#13;
taa. r nents. Call Bm Ryan 1.800-&#13;
..~~r complete Information.&#13;
re : STUDENT spring break&#13;
~reBentauve for Collegiate Tours&#13;
and Travel. Earn complimentary trips&#13;
I12I7~or more information, call&#13;
N E Mlnn • or wrIte 9434 Naples,&#13;
NEED capoUs MN 55434.&#13;
""h.1o EDITING services for my&#13;
r theSis. Call 886.0477.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
::o:~DESK; $40. Tables. cur·&#13;
It'l5 'Po . 633-24~, Mike.&#13;
"M:fF1.t: RD, 4-door. Very utUe rust.&#13;
hIrh bl~dIO, automatic, will sell to POira ... !'.: 414/857-5202.&#13;
Ile'{er 1l-;;;Ca1stools,high back, brown,&#13;
&amp;rU8IC • I 639-3690.&#13;
ClaruietL INSTRUMENTS. B-flat&#13;
at tl37'll82~te~tosaxophone. Call Kim&#13;
p·m. durlo, .. ore 8:30 a.m. or after 8&#13;
camPus -.;;~ school hours. Call on&#13;
'~-~ .&#13;
Personals·&#13;
1.01'1: BU havethe DDHAS, (Hope, Leah): I&#13;
l"OUtlovebaby011 if you have the time.&#13;
It '~MN god. ~ and Y Carr ever got mad at Leo&#13;
It -OUld bealledhim by his last name,&#13;
~ger Off~Grand March Time In the&#13;
"C.\ClA' Sce. I:a Y Uam ETH y tu son personas bel- '!CJ&lt;sO o.&#13;
~s~: YOU'RE a sweetheart.&#13;
~l1stlna r all the papers. Luv ya,&#13;
'''''ZQ::&#13;
Plnttielj'l!E Want to get in your&#13;
PAIl IS -th/economIcs)&#13;
to Homecoming elections&#13;
what Ferdinand Marcos is to Philli·&#13;
pine elections.&#13;
ANTHROPOLOGY CLUB meeting&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 28 at 11 a.m. in Molina·&#13;
ro 321. Everyone welcome.&#13;
NO, YOU go to hell!!&#13;
WHO WOULDN'T get dnmk with me .&#13;
a year ago? Just wondering, Gary.&#13;
TYSON: MY spam of love weighs&#13;
more than you do.&#13;
PUDGIE'BUNNY: You are god!&#13;
DAVE: I'M sure that poster would've&#13;
given you the edge. Jen.&#13;
GREETINGS: FROM Parkside to&#13;
AUC'&#13;
WHAT'S UP, doc!! Happy Birthday.&#13;
DUTCH LIVESl Dutch l1ves!&#13;
A BIRO in the hand is better than a&#13;
bird in MIchigan. "Big Guns."&#13;
HOW COME no one's writing about&#13;
John Beach anymore?&#13;
TO -THE administrator who ehallenged&#13;
the Ranger to a tug o'war: we&#13;
dIdn't want to drag you or your name&#13;
through the mud. ,&#13;
NO..LAST week's front page wasn t&#13;
supposed to look as damned ridiculous&#13;
as it did. Red-faced Ed. RRRRRRRR.&#13;
FURM: FUUUHHR&#13;
RRRRRRRRNT!&#13;
TO SWELL: Boy. you need a woman&#13;
in your Hfe! P.S. Nice car. Eddie.&#13;
TIA TlA Tia' I hope Tom the&#13;
chicken will ask you out. Maybe we&#13;
could double sometime. R d Tyson&#13;
Y SCHNEEBERGE an&#13;
~:a starring in the new vl(lrsion of&#13;
"The Odd Couple."&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Intheir last doubleheader of the fall season. the Parkstde&#13;
baseball team split with Mllwaukee Area Technical&#13;
College, losing the first game 8-7 but w1nnIng the nightcap&#13;
13-2.&#13;
Compiled by Robb LIte"r and Jas ... Caspers&#13;
SOUP/SALAD &amp;&#13;
BUILD-VOUR-OWN DELI&#13;
BUFFET&#13;
Monday,&#13;
Oct;. 27&#13;
11 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
IfUfe is a matter of&#13;
choice, would gou&#13;
want someone&#13;
choosing for gou? UNION&#13;
BAZAAR&#13;
•&#13;
i&#13;
!!i~~NDTE: Union dining&#13;
rOD", cla •• d frDm&#13;
10:00 8.m. to 4:30&#13;
p.m. an this dllte to&#13;
IIccomodllte the&#13;
specllli chllncellor&#13;
Inaugural luncheon.&#13;
. Protect your life by&#13;
Protecting the prebom ...&#13;
S&#13;
fheastern Wisconsin ProLife&#13;
ou 10 • Coa ltwn&#13;
-&#13;
12 T y. October 23. 1986&#13;
Adema&#13;
Hard work brings rewards for soccer star&#13;
. phere. It "I'm seriously thinking a&#13;
Adema's high school had a ending my playing c';:t&#13;
soccer team, but he didn't but not by choice, I lOvePiar&#13;
,&#13;
play for them, "The players lng, but lf I can't play at y.&#13;
weren't very talented. I just level at which I want. I&lt;bn~&#13;
didn't feel I fit In there very think I'll play. I think I't&#13;
well. 1 wanted tougher corn- going to move on to nm",.~&#13;
petition for myself. I liked it. biking and SWimming-:~&#13;
I thrived on it." He found that athlon sports. II&#13;
level of play in the Wisconsin Adema believes that 8J)Orta&#13;
major leagues. "1 usually are a necessary part of&#13;
played with older players be- ge life. "There's a lot of:n'.&#13;
cause I felt their competition tive things being said a~&#13;
was moving along quicker. ,. athletes these days and I f 1&#13;
It was In Milwaukee that athletics do more gOOd ttl&#13;
Adema was noticed. He was harm. I think sports In g than&#13;
attending UW·Sheboygan and al is a great thing fo:n&#13;
".&#13;
playing for the Croattan Eag- dents· II helps put lh·tu&#13;
.&#13;
les when former Parkside through school, " he said fill&#13;
soccer coach Hal Henderson He also feels that ath! u&#13;
saw him play and offered him can put a strain on a stu~CI&#13;
a scholarship. He had recetv- academically. "When ou,nl&#13;
ed offers from NCAA Division into sports so much, yO~ 1&amp;"&#13;
I schools, but he could only and it's all that's on P J&#13;
play two years for any of mind; it takes a lot ofun?~&#13;
them. He chose NAlA-affHat- really takes over your Uf . t&#13;
ed Parkside because he could you're serious about it ,~.~&#13;
have four years of ellgibillty. said. "Some guys can' pia&#13;
Adema plans to graduate and when they walk off ~&#13;
this year with a degree in filed, it's over; but SOme&#13;
on to get a physical education to&#13;
geography, then he will stay live for their sport.&#13;
study and do well aca.demlIt'.&#13;
=&#13;
degree ~d to get his coach- cally for those people.&#13;
trig certification. He would "I know for me it taktI&#13;
Ilke to coach soccer at the lot of my lime thinking •&#13;
high school or college level. it. Soccer's always on&#13;
Despite his success, Adema mind - it's actually n&#13;
may have to hang up his cleo one. To be the' best It baa&#13;
ats after this season is over, be. It can't be second to&#13;
due to nagging Injuries, such thing. But I'm glad I DWII&#13;
as a chronically bad left through. It was a lot of&#13;
ankle. "It's been giving me a and I'm happy with IIle&#13;
hard time this year," he said. come." factor&#13;
.-&#13;
~to by Rickleonerd&#13;
Wayne Adema In ectlon. He received much of his training In&#13;
1M Nelherillnds. He worl&lt;ed out with Ihe Dulch National&#13;
' .... In 1985.&#13;
in Adema's soccer career was&#13;
his family'. devotion to the&#13;
gam . Hla father was a player&#13;
and his uncle also played&#13;
and now is a coach at a&#13;
Wisconsin college..' 'Being&#13;
from a European background&#13;
and having a family that's&#13;
into soccer, that helped. 1 was&#13;
always around that atmos,&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Rangers topple outclassed Titans&#13;
b \ alIaa _ ......... '"&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
tnemserves down 1.() with&#13;
only 35 seconds gone, the&#13;
RangeMi rattled au four goals&#13;
In a 10 minute span. Goals&#13;
were scored by Gil, Peters&#13;
(2) and Mike Lee.&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
wed., OCt. 29 -Hcme vs. Concordia College, 2 p.rn.&#13;
CROSS OOUNTRY&#13;
Sat., Oct. 2:\. At the lliwaukee Invitational'&#13;
women at 10:30 a.m .• men at il:15 a.m.&#13;
VOLLEYBALL&#13;
FrL and sat .. Oct. 24·2:\. At Mlnnesota.Duluth,&#13;
1 p.m./9 a.m.&#13;
Wed., Oct. 29 -Home vs. Marquette, 7 p.m.&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
IN TI:iE SQUARE&#13;
S'SCREEN&#13;
OMING&#13;
MONDAY, OCTOBER 27&#13;
WASHINGTON vs.&#13;
NEW YORK I NTS&#13;
*&#13;
GRILL OPEN * BEER * SODA * WINE *&#13;
POPCORN&#13;
THE PARKSIDE UNION</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72116">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 15, issue 8, October 23, 1986</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72117">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72118">
                <text>1986-10-23</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72121">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="72122">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="72123">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72124">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72125">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72126">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72127">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72128">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72129">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="2489">
        <name>cash reserves</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="219">
        <name>segregated fees</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2482">
        <name>segregated university fee allocation committee (SUFAC)</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="3192" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3678">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/3e3b982b35145cb65afa5cccb3382a47.pdf</src>
        <authentication>3336b724453d600f281f626a6d117a51</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72134">
              <text>Volume 15, issue 9</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72135">
              <text>Welcome, Sheila!</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="72145">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90150">
              <text>Page&#13;
4----------&#13;
Tommy&#13;
Thompson&#13;
riles&#13;
students' .&#13;
Page 5&#13;
PSGA,PUAB&#13;
face big issues&#13;
Page 6&#13;
Writing Center&#13;
fiction contest&#13;
University of WisconSin-parkSide&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
Vol. "5; NO.9&#13;
We~~ome,&#13;
Sheila/-&#13;
by GarY,L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor&#13;
"In the words of Will Rog-&#13;
ers," Sheila Kaplan told the&#13;
crowd '.of friends,  relatives&#13;
and  welt-wisher-s,  "even&#13;
if&#13;
you are on the right track,&#13;
you&#13;
will&#13;
get run over&#13;
if&#13;
you&#13;
just sit there.&#13;
"Parkside is clearly on the&#13;
right track,"  she continued.&#13;
"We do not&#13;
intend&#13;
to sit still.&#13;
We will welcome the oppor.tu-&#13;
nity to relate to new issues&#13;
and challenges. "&#13;
Kaplan's  remarks  were the&#13;
culmination of an afternoon's&#13;
celebration honoring 'her&#13;
in-&#13;
uaguration   as  Parkside's&#13;
chancellor  on Monday. Oct.&#13;
27,&#13;
She becomes the untverst-&#13;
ty's third chancellor, succeed-&#13;
ing Irving Wyllle and Alan&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
A&#13;
speciai&#13;
inaugural  lunch-&#13;
eon was held at 1 p.m.&#13;
in&#13;
the&#13;
cafeteria,  attended&#13;
by&#13;
such&#13;
guests as former chancellor&#13;
Guskin, UW System Prest-&#13;
dent  Kenneth  Shaw  and&#13;
Wisconsin gubernatorial  can-&#13;
didate Tommy Thompson. A&#13;
champagne reception in Main&#13;
Place followed the inaugural&#13;
ceremony, which began at 3&#13;
-,&#13;
bea&#13;
i/a&#13;
Kaplan&#13;
(above)&#13;
lie&#13;
DIsafter&#13;
being&#13;
ll.&#13;
ugUra&#13;
ted as&#13;
-:akSide'sthird&#13;
ce~ce/lor.Before the&#13;
lIirt&#13;
DIony,&#13;
faculty&#13;
III&#13;
and&#13;
students&#13;
IChed&#13;
in&#13;
a&#13;
~eSSiona/.&#13;
ae::flet&#13;
e&#13;
with full&#13;
ernieregalia.&#13;
Photosby Dave McEvoy&#13;
p.m.&#13;
All significant  university&#13;
and community groups who&#13;
will be working with Kaplan&#13;
were represented&#13;
by&#13;
platform&#13;
speakers who joined in wel-&#13;
coming the 40-year old native&#13;
of Brooklyn, N.Y. to her new&#13;
post. Each speaker  offered&#13;
greetings  from  the groups&#13;
they represented.&#13;
•'Chancellor Irving Wyllie&#13;
saw that beautiful buildings&#13;
were erected on this splendid&#13;
site and began to assemble a&#13;
faculty  of  teacher/scholars&#13;
any  university  would  be&#13;
proud of," said Vice Chancel-&#13;
-lor Mary Elizabeth  Shutler,&#13;
who spoke on behalf of Park-&#13;
side's administration.&#13;
"Chancellor  Alan  Guskin&#13;
led the faculty and staff to&#13;
maturity and into a. cohesive&#13;
group with a strong sense of&#13;
university  and  community&#13;
mission," Shutler continued.&#13;
"We are proud of the uni-&#13;
versity we entrust to Sheila's&#13;
care, and we look forward to&#13;
~working with her in achieving&#13;
the improvement of education&#13;
at our school and around the&#13;
community. "&#13;
Theresa  Peck,  associate&#13;
professor of education, spoke&#13;
for the .faculty. "These are&#13;
challenging times in higher&#13;
education, and these are es-&#13;
pecially challenging times for&#13;
this campus," Peck began.&#13;
"We have confidence that&#13;
in&#13;
Sheila Kaplan we have a&#13;
leader who will handle these&#13;
challenges successfully," -she&#13;
"concluded,&#13;
•&#13;
Dave Holle, university con-&#13;
troller speaking for Parksi-&#13;
de's staff, thanked Kaplan for&#13;
showing an interest&#13;
in&#13;
work-&#13;
ing closely with staff mem-&#13;
bers.  "We look forward to&#13;
working with you,"he said.&#13;
"And welcome to the Univer-&#13;
sity of Wisconsin-Parkside. "&#13;
Speaking on behalf of the&#13;
student body, Parkside  Stu-&#13;
dent Government Association&#13;
(PSGA)  President   Adrian&#13;
Serrano posed a question to&#13;
the assembled.&#13;
"What does Sheila Kaplan&#13;
mean&#13;
to&#13;
Parkside?"  Serrano&#13;
asked. "She means tnsptra.&#13;
tton. Just the other day, I&#13;
overheard a freshman saying,&#13;
'If&#13;
a  chain-smoker  from&#13;
Brooklyn can make&#13;
it,&#13;
so can&#13;
1.' "&#13;
John Graham, president of&#13;
Parkside's  Alumni Associa-&#13;
tion, commented on behalf of&#13;
Kaplan see&#13;
page&#13;
7&#13;
2  Thursday, OCtober 30, 1986&#13;
.&#13;
FE.Ail-lER    11-lE   SIDES   AND   LEAV£&#13;
"THEM&#13;
JUST   ABOVE  THE   EAR;  E.VEN&#13;
~§=::;:;.__&#13;
-&#13;
-nlE.&#13;
51DEBURNS&#13;
AND&#13;
TAPER&#13;
"THE&#13;
~&#13;
BACK  TO&#13;
ABOU"T&#13;
HALF AN&#13;
INCH&#13;
A&#13;
D&#13;
_n:&#13;
T\-IE&#13;
c.0L1.AR.;&#13;
AND   JUST&#13;
W1l£&#13;
FRON"T SO  IT&#13;
ISN'T&#13;
IN&#13;
fo,\Y&#13;
EYES.&#13;
J&amp;1W:&#13;
Realistic  look  at Wisconsin&#13;
TO th  EdItor:&#13;
r of employ&#13;
rs are&#13;
1&#13;
.o••&#13;
"Old&#13;
po&#13;
t clalms  to pr    nt an&#13;
accurate   picture   of  wtseon-&#13;
a!n&#13;
0&#13;
•&#13;
current   conomtc  aitua·&#13;
lion.&#13;
Ideology  and pollUcs&#13;
are&#13;
In-&#13;
vet v&#13;
ed,&#13;
ince  Tommy   Thomp-&#13;
son&#13;
has&#13;
ndon  d&#13;
Its&#13;
analysis.&#13;
C&lt;&gt;vemor Tony Earl  has said,&#13;
"I&#13;
xpllclUy  reject  the premo&#13;
I   of 'Cholces'  .. that Wlscan·&#13;
In&#13;
hould  cut  Its   rvlce.  so&#13;
It ranks  25th In the naUon  In&#13;
ucaUon.  cl an&#13;
air.&#13;
and weI·&#13;
fare   People  need  to  see&#13;
what&#13;
lhLs cle ... rty  done  \ideotape&#13;
reallya)·s.&#13;
Th&#13;
argument&#13;
Is&#13;
that&#13;
\\ Isconsln's   abUlly   to  pay&#13;
tax&#13;
has&#13;
fallen  off In recent&#13;
years.  while  Its public  expen·&#13;
s have  risen&#13;
(albeit&#13;
at  the&#13;
low  t&#13;
ra&#13;
te In&#13;
30&#13;
years).  The&#13;
recommended   soluUon  Is&#13;
to&#13;
cut  expendltures  on  publlc&#13;
rvlcet.  The&#13;
not  too&#13;
subtle&#13;
m sage&#13;
Is&#13;
that a dollar spent&#13;
Ln&#13;
the pubUc &amp;ector Is a dollar&#13;
subtracted   from&#13;
in....&#13;
estment&#13;
In growth.&#13;
moment·s   thought   sug·&#13;
g&#13;
that  the problem  of the&#13;
I&#13;
p between   Wisconsin's&#13;
In·&#13;
com&#13;
and&#13;
1\.1&#13;
expenses  ought&#13;
to&#13;
be&#13;
attacked   at  Its source.&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
The baste cause, "Choices"&#13;
allows.&#13;
is&#13;
that&#13;
wtsconstn'a&#13;
manu.facturing&#13;
economy&#13;
haS&#13;
undergone   a   recession.   The&#13;
realistic   choice.   then,  is  to&#13;
help the citizens  of Wisconsin&#13;
adapt  their  economic&#13;
acuvtty&#13;
to&#13;
changing&#13;
circumstances.&#13;
'''''hat&#13;
is&#13;
required&#13;
for revi-&#13;
talization'?  "Choices"  would&#13;
have  us believe&#13;
that&#13;
cutting&#13;
access to education, reducing&#13;
welfare,&#13;
and  curbing  other&#13;
services  ....&#13;
111&#13;
somehow  spur&#13;
growth.  Yet  education  Is the&#13;
progressive force&#13;
in&#13;
economic&#13;
de\'elopment;   access  to&#13;
it&#13;
spells  opportunity   for  those&#13;
displaced&#13;
by    economic&#13;
changes;  research  done  at&#13;
the university is prime source&#13;
of&#13;
innovation&#13;
and&#13;
entrepre·&#13;
neurship;  the unemployment&#13;
rate&#13;
for&#13;
college graduates&#13;
is&#13;
far  iower&#13;
than&#13;
the  general&#13;
rate.&#13;
Cutling  welfare  blames  the&#13;
\iclim.   The  key  problem   Is&#13;
what  to do ",ith slngle·headed&#13;
famUles  where  employment&#13;
is  not&#13;
in&#13;
the  picture.  The&#13;
meat·a.x approach  is&#13;
to&#13;
redu·&#13;
ce&#13;
beneflts&#13;
to&#13;
all&#13;
welfare&#13;
re-&#13;
cipients   Including   displaced&#13;
workers; the sensible alterna-&#13;
tive&#13;
is&#13;
to&#13;
tailor&#13;
an&#13;
employ-&#13;
ment and counseling  program&#13;
to the needs of&#13;
lhIs&#13;
group.  En·&#13;
Gary l. Schneeberger&#13;
Edilor&#13;
K1mberlle&#13;
Kranlch&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Julie Pendleton&#13;
Asst. News Editor&#13;
Janny Carr&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Jim Heibaur .......••••.•••.•.•.• Entert.inment    Editor&#13;
Robb luehr&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Mlka Rohl..&#13;
Asst. Sports Editor&#13;
Dsve McEvoy&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Jack Bomhuelter&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
Andy  Buchan.n   ...•••.............   Business  Manager&#13;
arend.   Buchanan  ...•....&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Business  Manager&#13;
Dave  Roback   •..•.••.........•.•&#13;
Advertislng   Manager&#13;
Steve Picazo&#13;
DI.trlbutlon  Manager&#13;
forced poverty doesn't cure&#13;
il-&#13;
legitimacy.   The   "welfare·&#13;
magnet"   problem,  to the  ex-&#13;
tent that it really exists, can&#13;
be  dealt  with  selectively   as&#13;
well.&#13;
Enlightened&#13;
policy    pro-&#13;
ceeds  from   understanding&#13;
that there are public as well&#13;
as private  forms  of invest-&#13;
ment  in  opportunity   and&#13;
growth. Wisconsin's public&#13;
in-&#13;
vestments  have paid off ·for&#13;
years we have been below the&#13;
national  average&#13;
in&#13;
unem-&#13;
ployment.    Arter   a   slump&#13;
caused by the economic dislo·&#13;
cations in the last few years&#13;
(which  temporarily   raised&#13;
our welfare burden), we have&#13;
seen continuing increases&#13;
in&#13;
the employment levels.&#13;
Wisconsin's  university  ex-&#13;
penditures  are  high because&#13;
we have  relatively  few pri-&#13;
vate   Institutions   of  higher&#13;
education, and no junior col-&#13;
lege system, and because our&#13;
citizens go&#13;
to&#13;
school at one of&#13;
the highest  rates  in the na-&#13;
tion. The&#13;
per&#13;
stUdent cost in&#13;
our universities is well below&#13;
that  of  comparable  institu-&#13;
tio.ns..Education is our strong&#13;
SUlt.&#13;
ill&#13;
the fast·moving  eco-&#13;
nomIC  game   that&#13;
Is&#13;
being&#13;
played.&#13;
There  are   some&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Leo Bose. Jason Caspers, Mary&#13;
DeFaziO, Enkk Dingman, Ronda&#13;
Ditter, Gretchen Gayhart, Randy&#13;
LeCount, Rick Leonard, Chris&#13;
LOleskl,R,ck Luehr Vahan&#13;
Mahdasian,  Suzan~e  Mantuano&#13;
KellyMcKissick, Nicole Paclone'&#13;
Michelle  Petersen,  Bill Serpe,  Katie&#13;
Thon:e~   Andy Tschumper,   Jennie&#13;
Tunklelcz,  Tyson  Wilda.&#13;
Ednorial&#13;
~&#13;
Ranger&#13;
endorses&#13;
Earl and&#13;
Garvey&#13;
It&#13;
has been  a policy,  traditionally,    for the Ran&#13;
dorse  those  candidates   seeking  publlc  office tha~ei~&#13;
to&#13;
III&#13;
mbers deem worthy of endor~ement.&#13;
8tatf&#13;
m~lth  a statewide   general  electton  coming up No&#13;
with  educational   concerns   at the  forefront  of&#13;
rna:;&#13;
4,,,,&#13;
dates'  election  agendas,   we feel It Is especially&#13;
lin&#13;
0iIIIl.&#13;
th&#13;
t&#13;
we not only  inform  students   of what  the is&#13;
Potllit&#13;
b~  also help  them  in interpreting   the cadidates'  s~~&#13;
Itt&#13;
those issues.&#13;
"&#13;
.  In&#13;
the governor's  race,. democr~tic  incumbent&#13;
An&#13;
Earl  is  seekipg  reelectlOn  agamt  state&#13;
assernbl~&#13;
Tommy  Thompson,   a republican   from Elroy, Wiseo&#13;
Y01I&amp;&#13;
Mr. Earl is not&#13;
a&#13;
faultless  g?vernor,  especially&#13;
fron:a&#13;
student  perspective.   DurIng.  hIS term,  state COllege"...~&#13;
has  risen,  and  the  legal  drinking   age  has also lnc- ..&#13;
~mdW21.·     .  .&#13;
~&#13;
Mr. Thompson's   record  is  not educationally  SOund.&#13;
er. As a state representatIve,   he has rated less&#13;
than,e&#13;
factorily&#13;
on&#13;
the legi~lati~e. scorecards  of.two stateWI:"&#13;
ganizatio&#13;
ns&#13;
with unIverSIty and student mterests&#13;
at~&#13;
What truly  separates   these  candidates  are&#13;
their&#13;
posals&#13;
for the  future.  Mr.  Earl  has  indicated&#13;
that&#13;
beP!&gt;&#13;
seek another  tuition  hike  only as a last resort and&#13;
that~&#13;
will&#13;
recommend  an increase&#13;
in&#13;
state dollars&#13;
to&#13;
the&#13;
t&#13;
system.&#13;
HIs  opponent,   MF.  Thompson,   has  indicate&lt;!&#13;
that.&#13;
elected,  he will  require   all  state  agencIes&#13;
to&#13;
submill!llr&#13;
budgets  at  95% of their  present   levels.  Although&#13;
the&#13;
II&#13;
system is included&#13;
in&#13;
this .r~qulrement,&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Thompsonlll&#13;
said  he will  allocate   addItIOnal  funds  to the system&#13;
indicates&#13;
a&#13;
justifiable  need.&#13;
Based  on  this,  the 'Ranger   supports  the candidacr&#13;
Governor Earl.&#13;
We believe&#13;
that Mr. Thompson's&#13;
PflII&#13;
cord on education,   combined   with  his plan for&#13;
ac......&#13;
board  reduction   of state  agencies,   could potenUally&#13;
Parkside  and other smaller  campuses&#13;
in&#13;
dangerof&#13;
exta&#13;
tton.&#13;
In the  other  statewide   race  of interest&#13;
and&#13;
Impod&#13;
Wisconsin college  students,  republican  Robert&#13;
Kaslea&#13;
seeking   reelectlon   to  the  United   States  Senate&#13;
spil&#13;
democrat  Ed Garvey.&#13;
As anyone who owns&#13;
a&#13;
television or reads&#13;
ane~&#13;
knows, the candidates  themselves  have blurred&#13;
the&#13;
by slinging  mud  at one another  in one of the more&#13;
repugnant  campaigns&#13;
in&#13;
recent memory.&#13;
When one scrapes  the mud away, however,&#13;
an&#13;
based  distinction   is  discernIble.   Senator&#13;
Kasten,&#13;
his term,  has supported  controversial  programs&#13;
Star  Wars  and  aid  to the  Contra  rebels,  programs&#13;
this newspaper  does not support.&#13;
Mr. Garvey,  although  as&#13;
a&#13;
private citizenhe&#13;
was&#13;
a position to legislatively  oppose such programs,&#13;
haS&#13;
cated  that  he does  not  support  them.  He has&#13;
also ~&#13;
ed he is in favor of increasing  the availabUityofs!uif&#13;
flnacial  aid.&#13;
Although  we  do not  respect   the undignified&#13;
manJlll&#13;
which  either  candidate   has  managed  his campalgl1,"&#13;
endorse Mr. Garvey&#13;
in&#13;
the senate race. We&#13;
aeknO\l&#13;
Mr.&#13;
Kasten's  years  of public service, but&#13;
we alSO&#13;
feel&#13;
it Is tlme  for a change,   and  we believe  that&#13;
chaDgt&#13;
work positively&#13;
if&#13;
Mr. Garvey serves Wisconsin&#13;
intbt&#13;
ate.&#13;
ctes  help&#13;
to&#13;
bUy&#13;
thr&#13;
low  crime  rate&#13;
and&#13;
social  peace&#13;
thaI,&#13;
Wisconsin dlstlnCUI&lt;&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
see&#13;
pIfIi&#13;
Wisconsin    doesn't&#13;
spend&#13;
much money on compared  to&#13;
other  states:  crime,  for one.&#13;
Isn't&#13;
It&#13;
reasonable   to suggest&#13;
that  a  good  educational    sys·&#13;
tern and humane welfare&#13;
poli-&#13;
Ra~ger is written  and edited. by students   at UW-Parkside  and they  are solely resPOnsible&#13;
f«&#13;
polley  ~nd content.   Ranger  IS published  every  Thursdau  during  the academiCyearexce~&#13;
and holidays.&#13;
1&#13;
N~" i8~hesrndence&#13;
should  be  addressed   to:  Parkside  Ranger.  University of WISCOrISI&#13;
.&#13;
.'.&#13;
enosha  WI  53141.   Telephone   (414)  553-2295   or  (4141 553·2287..&#13;
.&#13;
esd!Y.1&#13;
P&#13;
AUbdVl,ntlSlngrates  are&#13;
$4&#13;
per  column    inch  or  less  in  buik    Advenising   deadlln"&#13;
Tu&#13;
Ica Ion Thursday.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
~etters&#13;
to  the  editor  will  be  accepted&#13;
jf&#13;
typewritten&#13;
double-spaced  on standard&#13;
he paper.  Lett~rs  should  be less than  350  words&#13;
and&#13;
must  be signed. with a tele·&#13;
~u~~:  6~~~r&#13;
I~ciuded  fo~ verification   purp·oses.  Names  will  be withheld uPOn&#13;
re-&#13;
reserVes&#13;
t~&#13;
Ine  or  lett~rs&#13;
IS&#13;
Tuesday  at  10  a.m.  for  publication  Thursday. Ranger&#13;
content.&#13;
e nght  to  edIt  letters  and refuse  lett~rs  containing   false  and defamatory&#13;
Ranger is printed  by the Racine Journal  Times.&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72131">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 15, issue 9, October 30, 1986</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72132">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72133">
                <text>1986-10-30</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72136">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="72137">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="72138">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72139">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72140">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72141">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72142">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72143">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="72144">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="963">
        <name>chancellor alan guskin</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="648">
        <name>chancellor irvin g. wyllie</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2537">
        <name>chancellor sheila kaplan</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="4500">
        <name>governor tommy thompson</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2494">
        <name>inauguration</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="709">
        <name>main place</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="222">
        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="3641" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4797">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/3804f9cb74c15c383e0d2a70d249e822.pdf</src>
        <authentication>5f06b09dc8f2761c502edf64906e8296</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="78843">
              <text>Volume 16, issue 1</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="78844">
              <text>USSA conference yields United Council pullout</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="78854">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="90959">
              <text>by Dan Chiapetta&#13;
Remember those long hard&#13;
days spent struggling to find&#13;
needed materials through the&#13;
card catalog? Well, no more&#13;
struggling.&#13;
Keeping in step with other&#13;
universities, Parkside is replacing&#13;
its card catalog with&#13;
the LS2000 Online Computerized&#13;
Catalog. The Online&#13;
Catalog is a computerized automatic&#13;
catalog containing all&#13;
materials the card catalog&#13;
contains and much more.&#13;
"The LS2000 is not only&#13;
easy and fun to operate, it&#13;
will save you a lot of time,"&#13;
said Judith Pry or, acting&#13;
head of public service. "You&#13;
will receive more information&#13;
through the LS2000 than you&#13;
would from the card catalog."&#13;
Inside...&#13;
Convocation awards page 4&#13;
Possible annexation plan page 7&#13;
New housing director page 9&#13;
New minority student services director&#13;
page 11&#13;
Elvis releases page 14&#13;
Sports preview page 16&#13;
The card catalog will remain&#13;
in the library for the&#13;
time being, but will be totally&#13;
eliminated in the near future.&#13;
Learning how to operate the&#13;
LS2000 Online Catalog should&#13;
be no problem. Eight workshops&#13;
are planned for the&#13;
month of September to aid&#13;
and give students the opportunity&#13;
to operate the LS2000.&#13;
The library aides said they&#13;
are very excited about this&#13;
new system and will be more&#13;
than happy to help any student&#13;
in need. A sign-up sheet&#13;
for the classes can be found&#13;
at the Reference desk.&#13;
The LS2000 can be found on&#13;
all floors, along with instructions&#13;
on its operation. Having&#13;
the LS2000 on all floors is another&#13;
advantage for the students.&#13;
"If you wrote down a wrong&#13;
number, you don't have to&#13;
run downstairs to the main&#13;
floor (card catalog); you can&#13;
Photo by Kelly McKlssick&#13;
LS2000 Online Computerized Catalog assists students with&#13;
inquiring minds.&#13;
use the LS2000 on the floor&#13;
you're on," said Plyor.&#13;
The success of the LS2000&#13;
will be determined durin&#13;
this fall semester, as student&#13;
and faculty take advantage c&#13;
the benefits it offers.&#13;
"That really&#13;
hurt, that my&#13;
region, my&#13;
state, would&#13;
vote against the&#13;
constitution&#13;
when I was one&#13;
of its primary&#13;
authors."&#13;
-Adrian Serrano&#13;
Computerized card catalog is "user friendly"&#13;
USSA conference yields United Council pullout&#13;
by Amy H. Ritter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
United Council, the state&#13;
lobbying organization with&#13;
which Parkside is affiliated,&#13;
has withdrawn from the&#13;
United States Student Association,&#13;
its national lobbying organization,&#13;
after a USSA conference&#13;
where tempers&#13;
flared, voices were raised, insults&#13;
were thrown and UC&#13;
President Adrian Serrano&#13;
cried.&#13;
During an Aug. 7-12 USSA&#13;
conference in Madison, arguments&#13;
began when delegates&#13;
from Milwaukee and Madison&#13;
brought up an amendment to&#13;
the newly, created USSA constitution&#13;
pushing affirmative&#13;
action. Shouting and namecalling&#13;
resulted.&#13;
"What we found when we&#13;
presented this for discussion,"&#13;
said Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association&#13;
President Alex Pettit, "was&#13;
that this was not an allowable&#13;
topic for debate. It was snowballed&#13;
by individuals higher&#13;
in this organization who&#13;
should not have been behaving&#13;
in this manner."&#13;
"A lot of mistakes were&#13;
made on both sides," said&#13;
Serrano, a former PSGA&#13;
president. "The proposal on&#13;
affirmative action that was&#13;
pushed by Milwaukee and&#13;
Madison wasn't thought&#13;
through and was presented&#13;
badly."&#13;
He added that the response&#13;
offering their proposal at the&#13;
last minute, almost secretly,&#13;
amde them look as if their intent&#13;
was questionable.&#13;
The constitution passed almost&#13;
unanimously, Serrano&#13;
said, in every delegation except&#13;
Illinois and Wisconsin.&#13;
"That really hurt, that my&#13;
region, my state, would vote&#13;
against the constitution when&#13;
I was one of its primary authors.&#13;
"It was a rough week for&#13;
me, it was an emotional&#13;
time."&#13;
Two weeks later, during&#13;
Friday and Saturday's (Aug.&#13;
28-29) UC meeting, members&#13;
voted to withdraw from&#13;
USSA.&#13;
The general assembly vote&#13;
to pull out was 28-20-4, and&#13;
the vote of the leaders was&#13;
approximately 28-3, said Pettit.&#13;
Serrano emphasized that as&#13;
one of three authors of the&#13;
new constitution, he had been&#13;
keeping UC leaders posted on&#13;
its progress, and had received&#13;
no complaints over the&#13;
past year.&#13;
"It was as if they came to&#13;
the conference and said&#13;
'We've got to change something&#13;
- or else we'll have&#13;
nothing to do here."&#13;
UC leaders had had an opportunity&#13;
to offer changes on&#13;
the constitution, Serrano said,&#13;
but missing the deadline and&#13;
Among the Parkside delegation,&#13;
Sue Walborn voted&#13;
yes; Pettit, Kevin Zirkelbach&#13;
and Stephanie Tatem voted&#13;
no; and PSGA vice president&#13;
Sandra Villarreal abstained.&#13;
Pettit said that at the meeting,&#13;
held in River Falls,&#13;
"tempers were still very hot.&#13;
"If we were going to pull&#13;
out, it should be a very levelheaded&#13;
type of decision. It&#13;
should be made with as many&#13;
facts as can be assembled at&#13;
United Council president Adrian Serrano&#13;
that time.&#13;
"Personally, my attitude is&#13;
yes, the Congress is a shambles,&#13;
and according to the information&#13;
we've received, it's&#13;
been a shambles for years."&#13;
Serrano and Pettit pointed&#13;
out that the motion to withdraw&#13;
was made by a delegate&#13;
from Whitewater, who had&#13;
not attended the USSA conference,&#13;
but fed on the negative&#13;
attitudes of the other delegates.&#13;
Pettit said UC's options&#13;
now are: to rejoin USSA as it&#13;
is; to rejoin USSA with&#13;
changes; to join another national&#13;
student lobbying group&#13;
such as National Student&#13;
Roundtable; or to remain independent,&#13;
using UC as a national&#13;
as well as a state lobbying&#13;
organization.&#13;
of the USSA leaders was not&#13;
appropriate. "Things were&#13;
really bad, and I was caught&#13;
in the middle," he said.&#13;
perspectives&#13;
our view&#13;
Numbers not the&#13;
only game in town&#13;
It seems as though numbers are the name of the game&#13;
these days.&#13;
It is certanly the case with higher education, where&#13;
numbers are significant for both students and administrators.&#13;
If the number of students attending Parkside increases.&#13;
budgets become more abundant, and. important&#13;
to students, the segregated university fee will remain&#13;
stable.&#13;
In recent years, the Segregated University Fee Allocation&#13;
Committee (SUFAC) has had to deal with shortfalls&#13;
due to a decrease in actual versus projected enrollment.&#13;
The bottom line is the bottom line: Students at Parkside&#13;
mean dollars for everyone.&#13;
During the summer, Parkside held its third annual orientation&#13;
program, and by all reports this was the best one&#13;
so far. There were nine orientation sessions during which&#13;
more than 650 new students had the opportunity to learn&#13;
about Parkside and to learn about their responsibilities as&#13;
students here.&#13;
Orientation served both as a vehicle to teach these students&#13;
the tools to be more successful as students and as&#13;
an opportunity for the new students to meet one another&#13;
and feel more a part of the university.&#13;
Orientation was an expensive venture on the part of the&#13;
university, yet it illustrates Parkside's commitment to the&#13;
retention of students. These 650 students have had the opportunity&#13;
to meet advisers, faculty members, student&#13;
services employees and other students. They have had the&#13;
chance to take a tour of the complex and figure out where&#13;
Molinaro Hall is and that they must have a parking permit.&#13;
They haven't had to run around to find an adviser to&#13;
sign the advising card because the orientation program&#13;
included an advising session. These students have the best&#13;
chance for survival of their freshman year than any other&#13;
freshman who have ever attended Parkside.&#13;
There was much more than mere dollars involved in&#13;
orientation: the time and energy of countless students,&#13;
staff, faculty and administrators was priceless. Vacation&#13;
shedules were changed and weekend trips were cancelled&#13;
in order to accomodate the orientation schedule. These&#13;
things were done with smiling faces and in the spirit of&#13;
teamwork that is always necessary to see a project&#13;
through to fruition.&#13;
When the dust has finally settled in the registrar's office&#13;
and the enrollment count has been tallied for the fall&#13;
semester, it may very well be that our numbers will be&#13;
down from the projected figures. There are two very good&#13;
reasons that Chancellor Kaplan has cited for this decrease.&#13;
The first, and most obvious, is that we have tightened&#13;
our admission standards. No longer is Parkside the "if-Ican't-&#13;
get-in-anywhere-else" university. We have several&#13;
excellent programs here, and it is foolish to accept students&#13;
whom we know at the outset will not be successful.&#13;
Secondly, due to the economic upturn in the Racine-&#13;
Kenosha area, many non-traditional students have returned&#13;
to the work force to recoup some of the financial&#13;
losses of the recent past. We feel these students will return&#13;
to Parkside when their family finances have stabilized.&#13;
For Ihose of you who were asked but were too busy,&#13;
don't complain about our lack of numbers or our budget&#13;
cuts. You have not become part of the proposed solution,&#13;
but remain part of the problem.&#13;
2 Thursday, September 3, 1987&#13;
Ex-editor expresses pride&#13;
To the Editor: Last year,&#13;
under my direction, the&#13;
Ranger enjoyed one of its&#13;
most controversial, colorful&#13;
years.&#13;
Few who read the paper&#13;
those nine months are likely&#13;
to forget the cold shoulder&#13;
students, this one included,&#13;
gave Tommy Thompson when&#13;
he crashed Chancellor Kaplan's&#13;
inaugural gala; or the&#13;
controversy generated by this&#13;
paper's endorsement of candidates&#13;
for PSGA's executive&#13;
elections; or some students'&#13;
attempt to void those executive&#13;
elections for rule infractions.&#13;
Or, ahem, the infamous&#13;
masturbation article.&#13;
But old news is old news,&#13;
and the real reason for this&#13;
letter isn't for me to wax nostalgic;&#13;
it's for me to wax&#13;
prideful.&#13;
That's because even as we&#13;
were being colorful and controversial&#13;
last year, we still&#13;
found time to place five of our&#13;
staff with "real" newspapers&#13;
in the Racine-Kenosha area.&#13;
And for a school without a&#13;
journalism program, that's&#13;
not just damn good, that's&#13;
damn remarkable.&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz, a fiveyear&#13;
Ranger veteran, heads&#13;
the list of t he accomplished. A&#13;
two-time editor-in-chief and&#13;
the extremely tough act I had&#13;
to follow, Jennie wasted no&#13;
time landing a part-time reporting&#13;
job with the Kenosha&#13;
News, starting there soon&#13;
after she finished her communication&#13;
degree at Parkside.&#13;
Another communication&#13;
graduate, Kim Kranich, now&#13;
works with The Communicator&#13;
News, a Racine weekly.&#13;
Kim, who last year served as&#13;
both news and feature editor,&#13;
is a committed, capable&#13;
writer who is certain to excel&#13;
with that publication. Kim&#13;
worked with the Ranger for&#13;
three years.&#13;
As for myself, a 1986 English&#13;
graduate who returned&#13;
last year to be Ranger editor,&#13;
I'm working as a full-time&#13;
temporary general assignment&#13;
reporter with the Racine&#13;
Journal-Times. Technically,&#13;
the job runs out Nov.&#13;
20, when the woman I'm sitting&#13;
in for, who's on maternity&#13;
leave, returns. I'm hoping,&#13;
however, to be there&#13;
much longer, since a fulltime,&#13;
full-term opening is&#13;
being created in January. I&#13;
worked two years for the&#13;
Ranger, and I miss it and&#13;
everyone very much.&#13;
Still with the Ranger, and&#13;
still with the papers that&#13;
hired them on as summer interns,&#13;
are this year's news&#13;
editors: Kelly McKissick and&#13;
Amy Ritter.&#13;
Kelly spent the summer&#13;
working as a reporter/photographer&#13;
with the Shoreline&#13;
Leader, a Racine weekly. An&#13;
articulate, poised writer who&#13;
displayed more talent last&#13;
year than any freshman&#13;
should be allowed to have,&#13;
Kelly impressed the Leader&#13;
brass so much that they invited&#13;
her back during the&#13;
school year on a part-time&#13;
continued on page 15&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jenny Carr Editor&#13;
Kelly McKissick News Editor&#13;
Amy H. Ritter News Editor&#13;
Jim Neibaur.. Features/Entertainment Editor&#13;
Terri DeRosier Asst. Features Editor&#13;
Bernie Doll Asst. Entertainment Editor&#13;
Randy LeCount Sports Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy Photo Editor&#13;
Ken McCray Asst. Photo Editor&#13;
Jon Hearron Ad Manager&#13;
Michael J. Rohl Distribution Manager&#13;
Robb Luehr Copy Editor&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Don Harmeyer Business Manager&#13;
Kathy Clapp-Harmeyer... Asst. Business Manager&#13;
GENERAL STAFF&#13;
Jeff Stanich, Christina Lojeski. Dan&#13;
Chiappetta, Maria Rintz, Steve Picazo,&#13;
Tyson wilda, Pattl Nitz, Debbie Michna, Jenny&#13;
Walter and Rick Luehr.&#13;
Sand content Vis oubiKhprl "w-pj«de. «solely responsible tor its editorial polldays&#13;
ent' " ,s Pub,ishe&lt;1 every Thu rsday dunng the academic year except over breaks and hol ilettersmus/&#13;
be sm^wifh^Snh^ 0nly ifJheV are double-spaced and 350 words or less. All&#13;
hew upon request telePh°ne number included tor verification purposes. Names will be withfaS^&#13;
56^5 the fiQht ,0 edit letlers and refuse ,hose whi&lt;* ^ false and/or de-&#13;
Thureday.&lt;0f a" a"d ClaSS',ied ads'is Monday a! 10 a m- tor publication&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Ranaer UW-Parksirip Rn* ?nnn uo&#13;
nosha W. 53141. Telephone 414/553-2287 (Ed^o^ai,T414%we229°5 f^erSl-'&#13;
Slrmlfr' of tht&#13;
aivocureo&#13;
cotieoare &amp;&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 3, 1987 3&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
Teaching jobs scarce&#13;
Teachihg positions are few and far between in some&#13;
areas across the country, according to an informal study&#13;
conducted by the National Center for Education Information&#13;
and an informal UPI survey, reported the Chippewa&#13;
Herald-Telegram.&#13;
In Los Angeles, 594,000 students are preparing to become&#13;
teachers. However, about 9,300 applicants are already&#13;
vying for the 2,500 available jobs. In Houston, applicants&#13;
outnumber positions by nearly five to one. In Philadelphia,&#13;
the ratio jumps to forty to one. In St. Louis, applicants&#13;
have at least a one in seven chance of obtaining a&#13;
position.&#13;
Even through there is an excess of teachers in these cities,&#13;
there are still shortages in bilingual education, special&#13;
education, math and some science.&#13;
For those really in need of a teaching position, New&#13;
York seems to be the hot spot. The nation's largest school&#13;
system hires about 4,000 new teachers each year, with&#13;
year-round recruiting at thirty area colleges.&#13;
War against illiteracy&#13;
The State Vocational School System will be starting a&#13;
campaign to fight illiteracy soon, reported the Wisconsin&#13;
State Journal.&#13;
John Coughlin, a state board member, said there are&#13;
525,000 people in Wisconsin over 18 who have not completed&#13;
ninth grade. Group involvement numbers 50,000 per&#13;
year in basic skills and adult education, and they feel the&#13;
vocational schools should take a more direct role in fighting&#13;
illiteracy.&#13;
The group plans to approach Wisconsin foundations to&#13;
start three- to five-year pilot programs. State Vocational&#13;
School Director Robert Sorenson said UW President Robert&#13;
Shaw and State School Superintendent Herbert Grover&#13;
have agreed the system should lead the attack against the&#13;
growing illiteracy rate in Wisconsin.&#13;
Phy ed requirements cut&#13;
Wisconsin school districts may lower physical education&#13;
requirements if the State Department of Public Instruction&#13;
has its way, reported the Capital Times.&#13;
The recommended change is a result of a review of 1973&#13;
standards that required daily physical education for&#13;
school children in kindergarten through sixth grades. The&#13;
old standards required physical education classes daily;&#13;
the new standards will reduce that to three times per&#13;
week.&#13;
Space limitations in some elementary schools have&#13;
caused the recommendation, but the DPI will not be asking&#13;
every grade school in the state to lower class frequency.&#13;
DPI's robert Gomoll said "We continue to recommend&#13;
daily physical education. Space and scheduling are&#13;
the two primary reasons for this amendment.&#13;
Associate dean moves to IUS&#13;
Peter Hoff&#13;
Peter S. Hoff, associate&#13;
dean of faculty at Parkside,&#13;
has been named dean of academic&#13;
affairs at Indiana University&#13;
Southeast (IUS) in&#13;
New Albany, Ind.&#13;
He began his new duties as&#13;
chief academic officer of the&#13;
university July 1.&#13;
IUS has 4,600 students and&#13;
offers both graduate and undergraduate&#13;
degrees.&#13;
Hoff, 42, who joined Parkside&#13;
in 1970, has served as&#13;
chair of the University Committee,&#13;
the executive faculty&#13;
committee at Parkside and&#13;
has long been a leader in&#13;
statewide faculty development&#13;
programs.&#13;
He served as chair of Parkside's&#13;
Center for Teaching&#13;
Excellence from 1978-1980, director&#13;
of the UW System's&#13;
Undergraduate Teaching Improvement&#13;
Council from 1980-&#13;
83, director of the Lilly Endowment&#13;
Post-Doctoral&#13;
Teaching Awards Program&#13;
for the UW System from 1983-&#13;
86 and director of Wisconsin&#13;
Teaching Fellows, a continua-&#13;
Nature club&#13;
to meet&#13;
The Racine-Kenosha Hoy&#13;
Nature Club will meet on&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 3 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
at the Kenosha Museum, 5608&#13;
10th Ave. The program will&#13;
feature films on the classification&#13;
of animals and on&#13;
surviving in the cold. Refreshments&#13;
will be served.&#13;
The Hoy Nature Club meets&#13;
the first Thursday of each&#13;
month at various sites in Racine&#13;
and Kenosha. Other activities&#13;
include nature hikes,&#13;
bird identification classes,&#13;
field trips and picnics. People&#13;
of all ages who are interested&#13;
in nature are cordially invitpd&#13;
—Classifieds—&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
LOOKING FOR part-time sales help&#13;
for morning and afternoon shifts. Photographic&#13;
experience preferred. Apply&#13;
at Camera World, 3212 Washington&#13;
Ave.. Racine.&#13;
We Want You&#13;
And Two Friends You II make friends at Red Lobster. But you can apply with a friend&#13;
too! What a way to earn and learn with the best in food service.&#13;
Openings Available:&#13;
• Day Food Preparation&#13;
• Evening Kitchen&#13;
• Dishwashers&#13;
• Day and Night Utility&#13;
• Hostesses&#13;
Waiters&#13;
Waitresses&#13;
Bartenders&#13;
Hosts&#13;
Bus Persons&#13;
Cashiers&#13;
We Offer:&#13;
Full &amp; Part Time&#13;
Flexible Hours&#13;
Great Starting Salary&#13;
TYaining &amp; Advancement&#13;
Paid vacations/holidays&#13;
Meal Discounts&#13;
Profit sharing/savings plan&#13;
Eligibility for group&#13;
health/dental insurance&#13;
Stop in and ask for the Manager&#13;
this week at&#13;
5550 Durand Avenue&#13;
Racine. Wl&#13;
Red*^&#13;
Lobster&#13;
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F&#13;
tion of the Lilly program,&#13;
from 1986 to the present.&#13;
Hoff, who taught English&#13;
and humanities at Parkside&#13;
before becoming associate&#13;
dean, was presented the Distinguished&#13;
Teaching Award in&#13;
1985. His scholarly publications&#13;
focus on the 19th century&#13;
novel. He is an authority&#13;
on the British satirist Thomas&#13;
Love Peacock.&#13;
He holds Ph.D. and Masters&#13;
degrees in English and humanities&#13;
from Stanford University&#13;
and a bachelor's degree&#13;
in English from UWMadison.&#13;
In addition to his academic&#13;
post at IUS, he will hold the&#13;
rank of full professor of English.&#13;
He has also performed as&#13;
co-principal French horn with&#13;
the Kenosha Symphony Orchestra&#13;
for more than a decade.&#13;
'Cummings! Schneider! You've got plenty of&#13;
research to work on... and for the last time,&#13;
stop playing with those plastic models!"&#13;
FIRST&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
KENOSHA'S ONLY INDEPENDENT&#13;
COMMUNITY BANK&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Main Office — Auto Bank — TYME&#13;
NORTH BRANCH — TYME&#13;
SOUTH BRANCH - TYME&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C. SOMERS PHONE: 658-2331&#13;
4 Thursday, September 3,1987 RANGER&#13;
Awards given for outstanding service&#13;
An associate professor, two&#13;
lecturers and a classified&#13;
staff member at Parkside&#13;
have been selected for&#13;
awards based on their outstanding&#13;
service to the university.&#13;
The annual awards were&#13;
presented at the university's&#13;
convocation ceremony Aug.&#13;
31. Convocation traditionally&#13;
opens the new academic&#13;
year, which began Sept. 2.&#13;
Associate professor of&#13;
mathematics Thomas Fournelle&#13;
and English lecturer&#13;
Pamela Pierce were winners&#13;
of the Stella C. Gray/Alumni&#13;
Association Distinguished&#13;
Teaching Award. Alma Renish,&#13;
science lecturer, won the&#13;
Academic Staff Distinguished&#13;
Service Award, and Mary&#13;
Lou France, student status&#13;
examiner in the Admissions&#13;
Office, won the Classified&#13;
Staff Distinguished Service&#13;
Award, presented this year&#13;
for the first time.&#13;
Award winners received&#13;
$500 each.&#13;
Fournelle, who joined Parkside&#13;
in 1983, holds a Ph.D. degree&#13;
in mathematics from the&#13;
University of Illinois at Urbana-&#13;
Champaign. His research&#13;
into abstract algebraic structures&#13;
has been supported by a&#13;
$33,000 grant from the National&#13;
Science Foundation.&#13;
Fournelle was described by&#13;
one of his students as "creative,&#13;
energetic, and enthusiastic,&#13;
a priceless educator." Another&#13;
said "he explained even&#13;
the most complex principles&#13;
in a vocabulary that enabled&#13;
us all to understand and to&#13;
learn."&#13;
Pierce joined Parkside in&#13;
1983 and holds a Masters degree&#13;
in English language and&#13;
Mary Lou France&#13;
literature, with a secondaryschool&#13;
teaching certificate,&#13;
from Eastern Michigan University.&#13;
She teaches numerous&#13;
writing courses, among&#13;
them introductory composition&#13;
courses that require&#13;
"much time, effort, patience&#13;
and enthusiasm on the part of&#13;
the teacher," according to a&#13;
faculty member who nominated&#13;
her for the award.&#13;
"Pamela's scores on teaching&#13;
evaluation forms are, to&#13;
put it simply, extraordinary,"&#13;
the faculty member said.&#13;
"She has received the highest&#13;
possible merit rating from&#13;
the divisional personnel each&#13;
of her first two years. This&#13;
recognition is virtually unprecedented."&#13;
Renish, who joined Parkside&#13;
in 1970 and holds a Masters&#13;
degree in biology from&#13;
Marquette University,&#13;
teaches biological sciences as&#13;
well as computer science&#13;
courses.&#13;
She consistently receives&#13;
Escape to Williams Bay&#13;
September For A Little&#13;
18-20 Smooth Sailing&#13;
Smooth&#13;
Smooth Sailing is an exciting&#13;
seminar which focuses on the&#13;
development of your leadership&#13;
abilities. Session topics&#13;
include:&#13;
• Team Building&#13;
• Organization&#13;
»Recruitment and&#13;
Retention&#13;
• Improving Organizational Image&#13;
• Communication Development&#13;
Applications are available in the&#13;
Student Activities Office&#13;
Union 209&#13;
Registration is LimitedSo Sign Up Early!&#13;
Thomas Fournelle&#13;
outstanding teaching evaluations&#13;
from her students, and&#13;
recently coordinated a $22,000&#13;
laboratory renovation project&#13;
in the biological sciences department&#13;
that expanded both&#13;
equipment and facilities. She&#13;
currently is chair of the Academic&#13;
Staff Committee, on&#13;
which she has served for several&#13;
years.&#13;
Renish also has been active&#13;
in the communities, as a&#13;
guest lecturer in area&#13;
schools, a chaperone for field&#13;
trips on ecology and a volunteer&#13;
naturalist at Racine's&#13;
YWCA River Bend Nature&#13;
Center, among other activities.&#13;
France was hired in 1965 as&#13;
secretary to Dean Albert E.&#13;
May at the former UW-Racine&#13;
Center which, along with&#13;
a similar Center in Kenosha,&#13;
was a precursor to Parkside.&#13;
When Parkside opened in&#13;
1968, France assumed an&#13;
equivalent position as dean's&#13;
secretary and, in 1977, joined&#13;
Alma Renish&#13;
the Admissions Office as student&#13;
status examiner, her&#13;
present post. She is responsible&#13;
for all clerical work involved&#13;
in admitting students.&#13;
When the university&#13;
adopted stringent admission&#13;
standards last year, France&#13;
assisted in the design and implementation&#13;
of an efficient&#13;
system of transferring information&#13;
from high school transcripts&#13;
to computer data&#13;
banks, streamlining the admissions&#13;
process.&#13;
She has served as president&#13;
of the American Federation&#13;
of State, County and Municipal&#13;
Employees' Local 2180 at&#13;
Parkside and has been active&#13;
in a number of causes, including&#13;
the women's movement.&#13;
France's late husband,&#13;
Parkside psychology professor&#13;
William R. Morrow, was&#13;
a co-founder of the Racine&#13;
/Kenosha Central America&#13;
Solidarity Coalition. France is&#13;
a member of that group.&#13;
LOOKING FOR A&#13;
PART TIME JOB?&#13;
Worth's is a Young Juniors'&#13;
Clothing Store looking for&#13;
people 18 or older with/&#13;
without sales experience.&#13;
Must be outgoing and able to&#13;
talk to people. Call 554-9116&#13;
or come in and apply in&#13;
person. Located in&#13;
REGENCY MALL&#13;
GEOFF GAJEWSKI&#13;
IS&#13;
STILL GONE&#13;
WARTMENT HOTEL ROOMS&#13;
Available. Full maid service.&#13;
Telephone, furnished. Weekly&#13;
rates from $120. Monthly, rates&#13;
SSL*0* APPLE VALLEY&#13;
LODGE, Racine. 6377911.&#13;
Arbet&#13;
named&#13;
county&#13;
fair&#13;
queen&#13;
by Jeffrey C. Dreher&#13;
The competition for the 1987&#13;
Kenosha County Fair Queen&#13;
was intense.&#13;
Twenty-eight women entered&#13;
this year's competition,&#13;
making the task of selecting a&#13;
queen more difficult than last&#13;
year, when 16 women competed.&#13;
Ten semi-finalists were selected&#13;
in the first round of&#13;
cuts Aug. 6 through an interview&#13;
session held at Central&#13;
High School in Wilmot.&#13;
The next cut was made&#13;
Aug. 11, the day before the&#13;
Fair began, to five finalists.&#13;
From these, the queen and&#13;
first-runner up would be&#13;
chosen, and the remaining&#13;
three would serve as the&#13;
queen's court.&#13;
The five finalists were Judy&#13;
Arbet, Debby Lasco, Kristen&#13;
Jackson, Malena Matthews&#13;
and Maria Scheckel.&#13;
Two hours before the&#13;
crowning of the Queen on&#13;
Thursday, Aug. 13, the finalists&#13;
and judges sat through a&#13;
tense dinner, the competitors'&#13;
last chance to make a good&#13;
impression.&#13;
"I think all of us were nervous,"&#13;
said the ultimate winner.&#13;
"I wasn't thinking about&#13;
food or anything, I didn't&#13;
even know what to think. We&#13;
were all sitting in formals&#13;
trying to eat steak. It was an&#13;
experience."&#13;
Soon after arriving back at&#13;
the fair, the contestants took&#13;
their places on stage awaiting&#13;
the final results. Lasco, a former&#13;
Parkside student was selected&#13;
as first runner-up.&#13;
And then, a surprised Judy&#13;
Arbet, a Parkside junior in&#13;
the business management&#13;
program, was crowned 1987&#13;
Kenosha County Fair Queen.&#13;
"I feel kind of like an underdog&#13;
in winning," Arbet&#13;
said, "because so many qualified&#13;
contestants competed."&#13;
The role of Queen has been&#13;
a natural progression for&#13;
Arbet because "I have been&#13;
active in the 4-H competitions&#13;
since I was nine years old. I&#13;
always like the county fair&#13;
because I was always doing&#13;
something every day," she&#13;
said.&#13;
Arbet, as an involved&#13;
Queen, said she would like to&#13;
have seen the Combine&#13;
Demolition Derby, which&#13;
created much excitement as&#13;
the first event of its kind in&#13;
this area, but it was held at&#13;
the same time as her coronation.&#13;
"I stayed at the fair all five&#13;
days (Aug. 12-16) through the&#13;
rain," Arbet said. The Queen&#13;
continued orr page 6&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday, September 3,1987 5&#13;
Students are greeted during Welcome Week&#13;
The beginning of a new&#13;
school year is a time when&#13;
many students must leave&#13;
their summer jobs and continue&#13;
the pursuit of their&#13;
studies at Parkside. Some&#13;
students will not leave their&#13;
jobs, but will merely add the&#13;
study schedule to their already&#13;
heavy loads. At Parkside,&#13;
this time of year signals&#13;
the beginning of a long-standing&#13;
tradition - Welcome&#13;
Week.&#13;
This year's theme for Welcome&#13;
Week is "In the Beginning."&#13;
This theme indicates&#13;
that for many of our students,&#13;
this is the beginning of a new&#13;
way of life. The activities office&#13;
has worked hard to ensure&#13;
a good time is had by all&#13;
students who participate in&#13;
the week's activities.&#13;
Those of us who have been&#13;
om campus this week have&#13;
seen the week's activities&#13;
begin with a picnic on Monday.&#13;
Tuesday there was&#13;
recreation free-for-all in the&#13;
Rec Center. Wednesday from&#13;
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. there was a&#13;
student activities fair. This&#13;
Poli Sci&#13;
Internships&#13;
are offered&#13;
The Public Service Internship&#13;
Program (PSIP) has fall&#13;
1987 semester openings for&#13;
students who wish to earn&#13;
political science credits in&#13;
local, state, or national agencies.&#13;
PSIP provides students&#13;
with an opportunity to gain&#13;
practical experience working&#13;
in local courts, helping with&#13;
legal services for the poor,&#13;
solving constituent problems&#13;
for legislators, assisting local&#13;
administrators in providing&#13;
community services and&#13;
working with planning agencies.&#13;
Persons interested in PSIP&#13;
internships should call&#13;
553-2032.&#13;
Political science professor&#13;
Samuel Pernacciaro, who&#13;
coordinates PSIP, said opportunities&#13;
also exist for students&#13;
to gain practical political experience&#13;
working in the upcoming&#13;
political campaigns&#13;
for local, state and national&#13;
offices.&#13;
Students may enroll for&#13;
three to 12 credits for their internship&#13;
work.&#13;
PSIP was begun in 1976 and&#13;
160 students have participated&#13;
in the program. Students&#13;
have worked for Rep. Les&#13;
Aspin (D-Wis.), the city of&#13;
Kenosha, the Racine Police&#13;
Department, the Racine&#13;
County Economic Development&#13;
Corporation, the Kenosha&#13;
District Attorney's Office,&#13;
the Kenosha Juvenile Court&#13;
and many other public and&#13;
private agencies.&#13;
was a good opportunity to&#13;
check out the clubs and organizations&#13;
on campus. Wednesday&#13;
at 11 a.m. there was a&#13;
picnic on the Union Pad.&#13;
Music was provided by&#13;
"Thrill Shop." Later Wednesday&#13;
afternoon the Parkside&#13;
soccer team opened its season&#13;
against Judson College in&#13;
a game scheduled for 4 p.m.&#13;
This evening the Parkside&#13;
Activties Board (PAB) will&#13;
sponsor an outdoor presentation&#13;
of "Revenge of the&#13;
Nerds" at 9 p.m. The movie&#13;
is free, and popcorn and refreshments&#13;
will be available.&#13;
Friday, Sept. 4, "Revenge&#13;
of the Nerds" will be shown&#13;
again at 7 p.m in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admisson for the&#13;
movie is $1 for Parkside students&#13;
and $2 for others. At&#13;
8:30 p.m. there will be a&#13;
dance featuring "LP the&#13;
Band." In honor of the movie,&#13;
the dance will be a night for&#13;
nerds. All students who dress&#13;
as nerds will be admitted at&#13;
half the admission price.&#13;
Prizes will be given for the&#13;
best nerd look-alikes. Admission&#13;
is $2 with UW-P ID, $3&#13;
for guests.&#13;
The soccer team will wrap&#13;
the week up with a game&#13;
against the University of&#13;
Dayton at 1:30 p.m on Saturday,&#13;
Admission is $2.50 or&#13;
free with a season pass. Season&#13;
passes are available in&#13;
the athletic building. PAB&#13;
will again show "Revenge of&#13;
the Nerds" at 4 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission for&#13;
the film is $1 with a UW-P ID&#13;
and $2 for others.&#13;
YOU CAN HAVE IT&#13;
ALL FOR HALF PRICE!&#13;
a ? ( . Wl 1 keep you informed on sports,&#13;
current events. national employment trends, social&#13;
issues, the economy and global politics with awardwinning,&#13;
in-depth coverage of the news-the kind of&#13;
coverage you can't find on T.V. or radio.&#13;
The Chicago Tribune gets high marks for:&#13;
A+ Tempo: America's most-read feature section&#13;
Award-winning columnists: Mike Royko&#13;
K'SSLan&lt;lers- D0Or ona&#13;
*+ JESSES' in,e'nati°™'- and local&#13;
A+ wepcOTBrcSe" Miawest tor college and&#13;
A+ w^HH'c!!?e«se&lt;?sonls coolest world s hottest spots. vacations in the&#13;
Art?dR?ti SUNDAY Magazine. TempoWoman. The&#13;
A Ate, Business. Jobs. Tribune Books, TV Week.&#13;
rt^?i.r£lca9?Inbun?is transmitted via satellite&#13;
ila^taestt neaw sp and'n 9spSolr,ets .n ear you to gy ive yy ou tnhwe&#13;
3onSe2 oEf thSe7 to bpr^ teank: nSeit wdoswpanp weritsh itnh eth Ceh ciocaungtory T ribune&#13;
Spruce"" f°reCeiV®the Chicago Tribune for&#13;
• YES! Begin delivery of the Chicago Tribune.&#13;
Special&#13;
University&#13;
Offer!&#13;
lA Price&#13;
Chicago Tribune&#13;
Delivery&#13;
Call:&#13;
CTS Kenosha&#13;
654-5400&#13;
Order&#13;
Vfe price&#13;
/week&#13;
1 semester&#13;
/16 weeks&#13;
2 semesters&#13;
32 weeks&#13;
Amount&#13;
paid&#13;
• Daily/Sunday&#13;
• Daily Only&#13;
• Sunday Only&#13;
$1.68&#13;
$1.05&#13;
$.63&#13;
$26.88&#13;
$16.80&#13;
$10.08&#13;
$53.76&#13;
$33.60&#13;
$20.16&#13;
• Visa&#13;
Signature.&#13;
Name&#13;
• MasterCard Acct. #. Expiration Date&#13;
Address/Dorm.&#13;
City&#13;
Phone&#13;
State.&#13;
Class (F.S.J.S)&#13;
. Apt. /Room&#13;
•Zip&#13;
Permanent Address&#13;
City.&#13;
Phone&#13;
State Zip_&#13;
^°inre"~ — Offer expires October 15.1987.&#13;
Mail To: Chicago Tribune 3101 - 60 St. Kenosha. Wl 53142&#13;
6 Thursday, September 3, 1987&#13;
Susan R. Takata&#13;
UW-P prof leads gang study&#13;
Wanda Leiting, left, and Susan R. Takata&#13;
listen to Sheila Baskln speak about gangs.&#13;
by Amy H. Hitter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Assistant Sociology Professor&#13;
Susan R. Takata and her&#13;
league of 13 Parkside student&#13;
researchers on August 24&#13;
presented preliminary findings&#13;
of an eight month study&#13;
of Kenosha youth gangs to the&#13;
Mayor's Task Force on Youth&#13;
Gangs.&#13;
The study, which began in&#13;
January, sought to create a&#13;
picture of the gang situation&#13;
in Kenosha based on agency&#13;
records, interviews with persons&#13;
who work with gangs&#13;
and interviews with former&#13;
gang members. Its objective&#13;
was to provide the Task&#13;
Force with a report by which&#13;
they could make recommendations&#13;
to the Kenosha City&#13;
Council and to provide an&#13;
educational opportunity in sociological&#13;
research for the&#13;
students involved.&#13;
Preliminary findings of the&#13;
research were presented by&#13;
students Sheila Baskin, Racine,&#13;
and Wanda Leiting,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The Parkside study differerd&#13;
from a parallel study by&#13;
the Task Force in its evaluation&#13;
of the problem of gangs&#13;
in Kenosha.&#13;
The Task Force study,&#13;
presented by chairman Gregg&#13;
N. Guttormsen, said, "At this&#13;
time, it is believed that a&#13;
problem does exist within the&#13;
community with regard to&#13;
street gangs."&#13;
In the Parkside study, interviews&#13;
with task force&#13;
members, juvenile justice&#13;
personnel and community&#13;
leaders indicated that the ex-&#13;
HOURS&#13;
Recreation Center&#13;
Mon.-Thur. 9 a.m.-10 p.m.&#13;
Friday 9 a.m.-Midnight&#13;
Saturday 9 a.m.-Midnight&#13;
Sunday Noon-10 p.m.&#13;
istence of gangs may not be a&#13;
problem.&#13;
"A number of the interviews&#13;
indicate that the gang&#13;
problem in Kenosha is minimal&#13;
and controllable," the report&#13;
read, "and there is some&#13;
debate as to whether or not&#13;
the problem is getting better&#13;
or worse."&#13;
But Takata said it is too&#13;
early in the research process&#13;
to draw conclusions.&#13;
"What we are trying to do&#13;
is share the initial findings,"&#13;
she said after the meeting.&#13;
"I'm not going to make any&#13;
kind of concluding remarks&#13;
or bind it all together. I need&#13;
more time with the data."&#13;
Gang interviews in the&#13;
Parkside study produced&#13;
tentative conclusions that&#13;
gang members join gangs to&#13;
make money through criminal&#13;
activities, in reaction to&#13;
family problems, or due to&#13;
lack of alternative activities.&#13;
The existence of six gangs&#13;
in Kenosha (the Disciples, the&#13;
Union Square&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. 10:30 a.m.-11:30 p.m.&#13;
Fri. 10:30 a.m.-7 p.m.&#13;
Sat. 11 a.m.-5 p.m.&#13;
Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m.&#13;
Latin Kings, the Vikings, the&#13;
Vice Lords, the KKK and the&#13;
White Opals) was verified&#13;
through interviews.&#13;
Kenosha gang members describe&#13;
their organizations as&#13;
hierarchical, although not as&#13;
well organized as Chicago&#13;
gangs.&#13;
The interviewed gang members&#13;
also said more community&#13;
activities, such as sports&#13;
organizations and events,&#13;
would be beneficial. More&#13;
jobs are also desired.&#13;
Recommendations by the&#13;
study suggest more community&#13;
centers for youth, more&#13;
resource sharing among&#13;
agencies, more counseling in&#13;
general, more concerted efforts&#13;
to involve the entire&#13;
community in the gang problem,&#13;
more jobs and employment&#13;
training, and the need&#13;
to develop long-range delinquency&#13;
prevention programs.&#13;
Recommendations by Guttormsen&#13;
prior to Takata's re-&#13;
Information Center&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. 7:45 a.m.-5:30 p.m.&#13;
Fri. 7:45 a.m.-4:30 p.m.&#13;
Dining Room&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. 7:30 a.m.-7:00 p.m.&#13;
Friday 7:30 a.m.-2:00 p.m.&#13;
port coincide in most instances&#13;
with the Parkside results.&#13;
The Task Force was established&#13;
by former Kenosha&#13;
Mayor John Bilotti in September&#13;
1986.&#13;
When the Parkside group&#13;
presents its final report in&#13;
September, the Task Force&#13;
will incorporate its results&#13;
with theirs.&#13;
The project was funded by&#13;
a grant of $6,360 from the&#13;
task force, and $13,103 in&#13;
services and expenses from&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Students involved received&#13;
credit in behavior science.&#13;
Besides Baskin and Leiting,&#13;
the Kenosha Gang Project&#13;
Research Team members&#13;
were: Pat Baird, Racine;&#13;
John Fisher, Burlington;&#13;
Lynda Jackson, Racine; Dae&#13;
Kim, Kenosha; Marge Martin,&#13;
Kansasville; Todd Nienhaus,&#13;
Racine; Kevin Polheber,&#13;
Twin Lakes; Robert Rettammel,&#13;
Racine; Randy Spiegelhoff,&#13;
Burlington; Kay&#13;
Wolferstetter, Kenosha; and&#13;
Franz Zeisberger, Racine.&#13;
In the Kenosha study, the&#13;
group must rely upon agency&#13;
records, which have yielded&#13;
incomplete statistical resuls&#13;
in several areas at this point.&#13;
"We're taking what the&#13;
agencies identify and not&#13;
what we identify," Takata&#13;
said. "So we're sort of at the&#13;
mercy of agency records. I&#13;
think we need to keep that in&#13;
perspective in terms of what&#13;
the study is saying. It's what&#13;
agency records are reflecting."&#13;
By the end of September,&#13;
Takata said, firm conclusions&#13;
will be drawn.&#13;
* • r *&#13;
PANGEA&#13;
Judy Arbet&#13;
Queen&#13;
named&#13;
continued from page 4&#13;
and her court were in the&#13;
Sunday parade, handed out&#13;
ribbons during the 4-H&#13;
competitions, and helped the&#13;
younger 4-H competitors prepare&#13;
their prized possessions.&#13;
"I had a lot of fun and met&#13;
hundreds of people," said&#13;
Arbet. "It's odd being treated&#13;
like a Queen - being given&#13;
free food and drinks in many&#13;
places I went. I wasn't expecting&#13;
that."&#13;
The Queen has duties&#13;
throughout the year, appearing&#13;
in local parades, and&#13;
competing in the Fairest of&#13;
Fairs competition in January.&#13;
The 1986 Kenosha County&#13;
Fair Queen, Lisa Ann Guckenberger,&#13;
was first runner-up&#13;
in the state competition.&#13;
Arbet's helpful pleasant attitude&#13;
has already been noticed&#13;
by Assistant Chancellor&#13;
G. Gary Grace, for whom she&#13;
works as a secretarial assistant.&#13;
"I love the job, and everybody&#13;
I work with is great,"&#13;
she said. She holds the job&#13;
year-round along with holding&#13;
a position as a Campus Ambassador.&#13;
In the future, Arbet hopes&#13;
to do promotion work for&#13;
Kenosha. She would also like&#13;
to own her own business.&#13;
Awards accompanying&#13;
Arbet's title were a $500&#13;
scholarship and a number of&#13;
gift certificates, including&#13;
several for restaurants.&#13;
The Parkside Union&#13;
Tin*#*&#13;
Mini Mart&#13;
Mon.-Fri. Noon-8 p.m.&#13;
Sat. 9 a.m.-Noon&#13;
Sun. 4 p.m.-7 p.m.&#13;
Coffee Shoppy&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. 7:30 a.m.-8 p.m&#13;
Fri. 7:30 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
Reservations Office&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.&#13;
Help Wanted: UW-Parkside&#13;
Residence Life is accepting&#13;
applications for&#13;
Maintenance / Grounds&#13;
workers and for Office&#13;
Desk/ Reception area&#13;
workers. Work study&#13;
eligibility preferred. Pick&#13;
up applications ASAP in 4C&#13;
of the Residence Hall&#13;
Complex.&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 3,1987 7&#13;
Parkside could be annexed to Kenosha city&#13;
by Amy H. Hitter&#13;
News Editor&#13;
The possibility of Parkside&#13;
being annexed by the city of&#13;
Kenosha (becoming part of&#13;
the city) is currently under&#13;
consideration by Kenosha's&#13;
City Council.&#13;
Research is underway to&#13;
determine the benefits to the&#13;
city and to the university before&#13;
a decision is made.&#13;
"The city is exploring the&#13;
costs and benefits of annexation,"&#13;
said Chancellor Sheila&#13;
Kaplan. "We have not received&#13;
any formal request&#13;
from Kenosha to consider annexation,&#13;
so there's nothing&#13;
official on the table."&#13;
Benefits to Parkside, if annexed,&#13;
would be in the form&#13;
of increased services, Kaplan&#13;
said. City police protection&#13;
would be offered as backup to&#13;
campus security, where the&#13;
Sheriff's department is now&#13;
available; full-time City of&#13;
Kenosha fire protection would&#13;
be offered, replacing the&#13;
Town of Somers' volunteer&#13;
fire department's duties; and&#13;
sanitation responsibilities&#13;
would possibly be taken over&#13;
by the city, instead of the current&#13;
private contractor removal.&#13;
Parkside currently&#13;
spends $12,000 per year to&#13;
have waste removed.&#13;
Parkside is a state-owned&#13;
facility, and annexation could&#13;
mean state funds for the city&#13;
to compensate for services&#13;
provided.&#13;
"It would more or less solidify&#13;
the establishment of a&#13;
northside fire station," said&#13;
Paul Raddatz, Kenosha City&#13;
Council President, referring&#13;
to an issue that has been debated&#13;
in the council for some&#13;
time now.&#13;
"I was hoping we would&#13;
annex Parkside," he said.&#13;
Ray Forgianni, Director of&#13;
City Development, in a July&#13;
memo to Kenosha Mayor Eugene&#13;
Dorff, said that the process&#13;
of annexation could be&#13;
initiated by the publication of&#13;
a "Notice of Intent to Circulate&#13;
an Annexation Petition."&#13;
The petition must be signed&#13;
by a majority of the electors&#13;
living in the area, and the&#13;
owners of at least one-half the&#13;
land.&#13;
Then, said Forgianni, a referendum&#13;
can be called. If no&#13;
referendum is petitioned or if&#13;
one is passed, the city may&#13;
pass an annexation ordinance.&#13;
The procedure becomes&#13;
complicated in consideration&#13;
of the Board of Regents as&#13;
the owners of Parkside, and&#13;
the students as the electors.&#13;
Forgianni warned that annexation&#13;
could become a student&#13;
political issue and be defeated&#13;
in a referendum.&#13;
The other alternative, he&#13;
said, would be by an act of&#13;
the Wisconsin state legislature&#13;
moving Parkside into the&#13;
city of Kenosha.&#13;
Kaplan said that a request&#13;
to be annexed would originate&#13;
with Parkside's Administration,&#13;
as the UW Board of Regents,&#13;
who govern Parkside,&#13;
consider this a local matter.&#13;
Dorff said he will take no&#13;
action to initiate annexation,&#13;
Travel Study&#13;
Program offered&#13;
Travel the world with San&#13;
Jose State University Travel&#13;
Study programs in 1988 for&#13;
professionally-guided experiences&#13;
in the culture, language,&#13;
history, wildlife and&#13;
other aspects of countries&#13;
from Australia to Zanzibar.&#13;
Academic escorts give you&#13;
a special look at your locations&#13;
- and you may earn university&#13;
degree credit if you&#13;
wish on many tours.&#13;
Itineraries for 1988 include:&#13;
London Theater, Mar. 26-&#13;
April 2; Mexico City: Spanish&#13;
Language Program, June 10-&#13;
July 27; World EXPO 1988&#13;
(Australia, New Zealand,&#13;
Fiji), June 17-July 4; A Focus&#13;
on Italy: Eternal Images,&#13;
June 26-July 15; China and&#13;
Tibet, June 29-July 18; Workshop&#13;
in French Language and&#13;
Culture, June 29-Aug. 1; Alaska&#13;
(Inland Passage Cruise),&#13;
July 3-17; Summer School in&#13;
London, July 9-Aug. 13;&#13;
Kenya Odyssey (Nairobi,&#13;
Samburu, Rift Vallye and the&#13;
Lakes, Masai Mara, Amboseli,&#13;
Tsavo), July 8-27; East&#13;
Africa Safari (Kenya Coast,&#13;
Tanzania, Zanzibar), July 27-&#13;
Aug. 15; Soviet Union History&#13;
WORK FOR YOURSELF&#13;
As a campus representative you'll&#13;
be responsible for placing advertising&#13;
materials on bulletin boards&#13;
and working on marketing&#13;
programs for clients such as&#13;
American Express, Boston University,&#13;
Eurall, and various movie&#13;
companies, among others. Parttime&#13;
work, choose your own&#13;
hours. No sales. Many of our reps&#13;
stay with us long after graduation.&#13;
If you are self-motivated, hardworking,&#13;
and a bit of an entrepreneur,&#13;
call or write for more&#13;
information to:&#13;
AMERICAN PASSAGE&#13;
NETWORK&#13;
6211 W. HOWARD STREET&#13;
CHICAGO, IL. 60648&#13;
1(800) 221-5942 or&#13;
(312) 647-6860&#13;
CHICAGO DALLAS LOS ANGELES&#13;
NEW YORK SEATTLE&#13;
because consideration is in&#13;
the hands of the council.&#13;
"I'm leaving the decision to&#13;
the council," he said. "At the&#13;
present time, the annexation&#13;
process is in limbo. I will&#13;
take no stand for or against&#13;
it."&#13;
A concern of both Dorff and&#13;
Raddatz is how the Town of&#13;
Somers would react to annexation.&#13;
"I don't want the city of&#13;
Kenosha getting into a turf&#13;
battle with Somers," Dorff&#13;
said. "Things are so upbeat&#13;
throughout the county right&#13;
now, I don't want a conflict.&#13;
If there was an agreement&#13;
between Somers and the city&#13;
of Kenosha (to annex Parkside),&#13;
I would agree."&#13;
David D. Holtze, Town of&#13;
Somers chairman, said that&#13;
the town board has taken no&#13;
stand on the issue.&#13;
"I'm not in favor of the city&#13;
taking any more land than&#13;
necessary," he said.&#13;
Holtze said that a 1974&#13;
agreement between Kenosha&#13;
and Somers defined which&#13;
land in Somers may someday&#13;
become part of the city, and&#13;
which land will always belong&#13;
to Somers. Parkside is defined&#13;
as an area that may become&#13;
part of Kenosha.&#13;
"There seems to be some&#13;
economic value for the city,"&#13;
Holtze said, "but the state is&#13;
notorious for holding out carrots,&#13;
and when you take the&#13;
carrot, they pull away the&#13;
rest of the carrots, and you&#13;
end up feeding the animal&#13;
yourself."&#13;
The Town of Somers receives&#13;
$4,000 per year from&#13;
Parkside for services rendered,&#13;
Holtze said. The city of&#13;
Kenosha is expecting to receive&#13;
between $150,000 and&#13;
$360,000 from the state if annexation&#13;
is successful, he&#13;
said. Dorff cited similar figures.&#13;
An attempt to annex Parkside&#13;
in 1971 was unsuccessful.&#13;
and Culture (dates pending);&#13;
Fall Foliage (Eastern U.S.),&#13;
Sept. 19-26; Hong Kong Bargain&#13;
Shopping, Nov. 21-28 (or&#13;
extend and visit Bangkok and&#13;
Singapore, too).&#13;
For your free schedule of&#13;
tours, call (408) 277-3781 or&#13;
write: Travel Programs, San&#13;
Jose State University, San&#13;
Jose, CA 95192-0135.&#13;
Schedule of Events&#13;
Thursday. September 3&#13;
19:00 P.M. Outdoor Movie: Revenge of the Nerds&#13;
Enjoy an outdoor movie on Union Pad. Popcorn&#13;
and refreshments will be available. No&#13;
admission charge. Sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board.&#13;
Friday. September 4&#13;
17:00 P.M. Film: Revenge of the Nerds&#13;
Union Cinema. $1.00 with UW-Parkside ID; $2.00&#13;
others.&#13;
8:30 P.M.-1:00 A.M. Dance /featuring LP the Band&#13;
P.A.B.'s Welcome Week dance features one of&#13;
Wisconsin's hottest bands-very danceable-very&#13;
fun! And it's Nerd Night at the Dances! Dress up as&#13;
a nerd and win-a $25 prize will be awarded to the&#13;
nerdiest. Union Square. Admission is only $1.00 if&#13;
you're dressed as a nerd, or if you have a ticket&#13;
stub from the film; or $2.00 with UW-Parkside ID;&#13;
$3.00 for guests.&#13;
|Saturdav, September 5&#13;
1:30 P.M. Soccer Game&#13;
4:00 P.M.&#13;
The UW-Parkside Rangers will play the University of&#13;
Dayton. Enjoy an afternoon in the sun while you&#13;
support your team. Admission is $2.50 or free with a&#13;
season pass.&#13;
Film: Revenge of the Nerds&#13;
Union Cinema. $1.00 with UW-Parkside ID; $2.00&#13;
others.&#13;
8 Thursday, September 3, 1987 RANGER&#13;
Bedford promoted to Prof status&#13;
Emmett Bedford, a recently&#13;
retired associate professor&#13;
of English at Parkside,&#13;
has been promoted to full professor&#13;
emeritus by the UW&#13;
System.&#13;
Bedford, who joined Parkside&#13;
in 1980, holds a Ph.D. degree&#13;
in English from Southern&#13;
Illinois University. He is&#13;
a specialist in 18th century&#13;
English literature, particularly&#13;
the works of Alexander&#13;
Pope.&#13;
Bedford served for three&#13;
years as secretary of the faculty&#13;
at Parkside. He began&#13;
his career as a journalist,&#13;
working for the Washington&#13;
Post, among other newspapers.&#13;
WELCOME&#13;
BACK&#13;
STUDENTS!&#13;
YiuVE&#13;
GOT&#13;
YLE&#13;
Distributed by May Beverages, Inc.&#13;
3120 64th St.&#13;
Winter Walk&#13;
The beginning of school signals the first signs of fall. Before&#13;
we know it, scenes such as this one will appear, and&#13;
the campus will be masked in snow.&#13;
(ta )&#13;
Total&#13;
Service&#13;
for&#13;
U. W. Parkside&#13;
Employees&#13;
and&#13;
Students&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
Room 286&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 10-3&#13;
Serving four other locations&#13;
Racine&#13;
Burlington Waukesha&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Fees may&#13;
be raised&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA)&#13;
President Alex Pettit said&#13;
talk of increasing the mandatory&#13;
refundable fee has begun&#13;
once again. The fee is&#13;
charged to each student in&#13;
addition to their tuition. It is&#13;
currently 50 cents, and United&#13;
Council President Adrian Serrano&#13;
is proposing that the fee&#13;
be raised to $1 during the&#13;
school year.&#13;
"The purpose of the fee is&#13;
to retain Parkside's membership&#13;
in UC, our state lobby&#13;
group," Pettit said. The proposed&#13;
increase would increase&#13;
UC's budget by 80 percent.&#13;
Pettit is opposed to the increase,&#13;
because it does not indicate&#13;
how the increased revenue&#13;
will be spent.&#13;
Program&#13;
requires&#13;
volunteers&#13;
A general information&#13;
meeting for those persons interested&#13;
in volunteering in the&#13;
Kinship Program will be held&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 10, at 7:00&#13;
p.m. at the Kinship office, 201&#13;
80th Street, Kenosha.&#13;
The Kinship Program is designed&#13;
to befriend and help&#13;
children from single parent&#13;
families by matching them&#13;
with mature adults with good&#13;
character. Those adults interested&#13;
in becoming Kinspersons&#13;
and their spouses or special&#13;
friends are encouraged to&#13;
attend this meeting.&#13;
For further information,&#13;
call the Kinship office,&#13;
658-0151.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
gtei/e Erwin&#13;
Residence director&#13;
Thursday, September 3,1987 9&#13;
by Terri DeRosier&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
With the on-campus housing&#13;
program starting its second&#13;
year, there will be many&#13;
changes t aking place. One of&#13;
the major changes is a new&#13;
director.&#13;
Steve Erwin took over the&#13;
job of Director of Residence&#13;
Life on June 1, replacing&#13;
Diane Schellinger.&#13;
After receiving an undergraduate&#13;
degree in theater,&#13;
Erwin went into education&#13;
quite by accident. "I ended&#13;
up getting a graduate assistantship&#13;
in this field. I didn't&#13;
really know what I was going&#13;
to do when I got into it. Housing&#13;
was the furthest thing&#13;
from my mind. At that time,&#13;
it seemed more glamorous to&#13;
be in admissions or financial&#13;
aids."&#13;
Erwin received a Masters&#13;
degree in Educational Psychology&#13;
in 1984 from Eastern&#13;
Illinois University. He began&#13;
his career in the fall of 1984&#13;
at UW-Stevens Point as a&#13;
Hall Director and worked on&#13;
that campus for three years&#13;
• ''"^opportunity to become&#13;
the Director of Residence&#13;
Life and the broader base of&#13;
responsibility for the overall&#13;
operation of the program "&#13;
were what attracted Erwin to&#13;
the Parkside campus. Erwin&#13;
accepted the job here because&#13;
I was ready to move up out&#13;
of an entry-level position, and&#13;
this was an opportunity to&#13;
stay in the UW system."&#13;
Erwin seems to have a&#13;
strong sense of where he&#13;
wants to take the housing program&#13;
this year. First of all,&#13;
he would like to get a stronger&#13;
Hall Council established.&#13;
He would like to break it into&#13;
smaller groups, where each&#13;
house would have a council&#13;
over which the Resident Advisor&#13;
(RA) would advise, and&#13;
from that group a representative&#13;
would be sent to the overall&#13;
Hall Council.&#13;
Erwin would also like to&#13;
shift the focus of the housing&#13;
office to just housing issues,&#13;
and he would like a separate&#13;
desk area for other student&#13;
housing needs.&#13;
wants student camaraderie&#13;
Steve Erwin&#13;
One of his major challenges&#13;
will be in promoting a community&#13;
atmosphere among&#13;
everyone who lives on&#13;
campus.&#13;
"With so many demands on&#13;
a student's time," he said,&#13;
"when there is some free&#13;
time, the students want to be&#13;
alone, and not always involved&#13;
in something. There's&#13;
a balance somewhere. When&#13;
we present a program, we'll&#13;
do our best with planning and&#13;
promoting it, and beyond that&#13;
it's really the student's choice&#13;
on whether he or she will participate&#13;
or not."&#13;
Erwin plans on using&#13;
"theme programming" to&#13;
promote a feeling of unity&#13;
among students. "It will be&#13;
important to present a real&#13;
positive image right- away,"&#13;
Erwin said. "I think the real&#13;
advantage toward residence&#13;
hall living is the chance for&#13;
the students to connect with&#13;
each other."&#13;
Erwin feels that the increase&#13;
in the number of residents&#13;
per apartment will be&#13;
manageable. He feels students&#13;
sharing apartments will&#13;
need to come to an understanding&#13;
about the common&#13;
areas of the apartment. By&#13;
talking these things out,&#13;
Erwin feels that a lot of the&#13;
problems will be alleviated.&#13;
Finally, Erwin said he&#13;
would like to promote an&#13;
"open door" policy in the&#13;
housing office. "I want to&#13;
hear from the students about&#13;
the problems that they might&#13;
be having. We (the housing&#13;
office) are doing our best for&#13;
the students. We want to&#13;
meet the needs of the students,&#13;
their physical environment&#13;
first of all, but I think&#13;
we also have a responsibility&#13;
to promote them personally&#13;
and academically in terms of&#13;
success. We're here to facilitate&#13;
that and to help them in&#13;
any way we can."&#13;
At the same time, Erwin&#13;
feels that the students here&#13;
are adults and that they need&#13;
to take responsibility for their&#13;
own success, but he feels the&#13;
housing staff is here to aid&#13;
the students in other ways besides&#13;
just a place to stay.&#13;
"I want to turn this into&#13;
more than just a place to&#13;
sleep," he said. "I want it to&#13;
be a place where students&#13;
live and thrive, a place where&#13;
students will grow personally&#13;
and educationally."&#13;
Resident advisors are here to&#13;
by Terri DeRosier&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
It's two o'clock in the morning;&#13;
it's raining, and you&#13;
come back to the residence&#13;
halls, and you realize you&#13;
don't have your keys with&#13;
you. After an unsuccessful attempt&#13;
at trying to wake up&#13;
your roommates, you're wondering&#13;
who will help you with&#13;
your predicament?&#13;
Fortunately for you, there&#13;
are seven people, with the&#13;
title of Resident Advisors,&#13;
who are ready and willing to&#13;
help you out. Not only will the&#13;
RA's let you in out of the&#13;
rain, they will also help you&#13;
out with any problem you&#13;
might have. Whether it's a&#13;
school-related problem or a&#13;
personal one, the RA's are&#13;
there to listen and give advice.&#13;
The RA's can be considered&#13;
your campus resource if you&#13;
just don't know who else to&#13;
se®- If they don't know the&#13;
answer, they will make sure&#13;
that you get in contact with&#13;
the right people to help you&#13;
get your problem solved.&#13;
Candy Isetts, the only reurning&#13;
RA, is a senior&#13;
majoring in psychology with&#13;
students&#13;
an elementary education certification.&#13;
"The opportunity to meet&#13;
interesting people, and the&#13;
fact that the position is very&#13;
rewarding," according to&#13;
Isetts were the main reasons&#13;
she returned to housing this&#13;
year.&#13;
One of the first year RA's,&#13;
Michelle Herrem, a sophomore&#13;
majoring in nursing&#13;
stated, "I wanted to be more&#13;
active in campus activities,&#13;
and the chance to meet a lot&#13;
of people are what inspired&#13;
me to apply for the job."&#13;
John Thierfelder, a senior&#13;
majoring in biology said, "I&#13;
wanted to be more involved&#13;
in campus life."&#13;
Tracey Conners, a junior&#13;
majoring in history with a&#13;
secondary education certification&#13;
and a minor in&#13;
speech commented, "I&#13;
wanted to meet and work&#13;
with people."&#13;
Monica Hensen, a junior&#13;
majoring in business with a&#13;
concentration in accounting&#13;
said, "I became a RA because&#13;
I felt it would be a new&#13;
and challenging experience."&#13;
Jim Maastrict, a junior&#13;
majoring in applied computer&#13;
science stated that he wanted&#13;
to have some decision making&#13;
input in the housing activities.&#13;
Terri DeRosier, a junior&#13;
majoring in English decided&#13;
that becoming a RA would&#13;
not only be a challenge, but&#13;
also a rewarding opportunity.&#13;
"It gives me a chance to&#13;
work one-on-one with the students&#13;
and also with the staff&#13;
of the housing office."&#13;
The RA's, who went&#13;
through a screening process&#13;
in the spring of '87, also underwent&#13;
a week's worth of&#13;
training under the Director of&#13;
Residence Life, Steve Erwin.&#13;
For their duties, the RA's receive&#13;
their room and board&#13;
for the school year.&#13;
DON'T MISS&#13;
Parkside's six Resident Advisors left to right: Monica Henson,&#13;
Tracey Conner, Terri DeRosier, Jim Maastricht, John&#13;
Thierfelder, Michelle Herrem&#13;
r^or ° Sho^p/ r&#13;
Ranger&#13;
needs&#13;
writers.&#13;
OUR LABOR DAY&#13;
TENT SALE&#13;
SEPTEMBER 4th, 5th, 6th &amp; 7th&#13;
• Clothes&#13;
Ronnie 2 Pc.&#13;
Wetsuits&#13;
9129.95&#13;
butterf:&#13;
OVER 50 SAILBOARDS IN STOCK.&#13;
PRICED TO BLOW YOU AWAY!&#13;
Everything Summer is Priced To Move!&#13;
Shorts • Wetsuits • Waterskis • Kneeboards • Skateboards • Paddleseats&#13;
1987 F2&#13;
Fanatic &amp;&#13;
Mistral&#13;
Demos&#13;
Below Cost&#13;
Tlga one&#13;
SailBoard&#13;
ONLY&#13;
9439.00 Complete&#13;
*&gt;$S$SF&#13;
8UNFISH&#13;
2926-75 St., Kenosha&#13;
(E Hwy. 50)&#13;
652-5434&#13;
Swapsale&#13;
Bring Your Old&#13;
Boards, Sails,&#13;
Masts or Booms&#13;
to Sell&#13;
mbt/ol FANATIC&#13;
SWIMWEAR • SAILBOATS&#13;
u&#13;
FREE&#13;
90 DAY SALE HOURS: Fri. 9-8&#13;
FINANCING sat., Sun. &amp; Mon. 9-5&#13;
SAILBOARDS • SKATEBOARDS • SURFWEAR&#13;
10 Thursday, September 3,1987 RANGER&#13;
===== SSBSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSasSSSSSSSSSSSSSmSSSSSSSSSSSSmm^&#13;
Keith Harris&#13;
Theater manager with a variety of abilities&#13;
by Terr! DeRosier&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
If you haven't had the&#13;
chance to take a tour of the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater,&#13;
you have missed out on one of&#13;
the most interesting aspects&#13;
of this campus.&#13;
Not only is the backstage&#13;
area a hidden wonderland,&#13;
but its manager, Keith&#13;
Harris, is one of Parkside's&#13;
best kept secrets. You can&#13;
never be sure what Harris&#13;
will be doing when you start&#13;
your exploration of the stage -&#13;
one minute he'll be covered&#13;
with paint, the next he'll be&#13;
giving instructions on lighting&#13;
design - but no matter how&#13;
busy he might be, he will&#13;
always take the time to talk&#13;
about his wonderland with a&#13;
sense of pride and admiration&#13;
in his voice.&#13;
According to Harris, he is&#13;
One Year Ago&#13;
September 4, 1986&#13;
New admissions&#13;
policy instituted&#13;
A new admissions policy&#13;
which states that students&#13;
must meet a set of necessary&#13;
requirements before being allowed&#13;
to attend Parkside was&#13;
instituted.&#13;
To be admitted to Parkside&#13;
as a "standard admissions"&#13;
student, one must place in the&#13;
upper 50 percent of their high&#13;
school class and have followed&#13;
a particular pattern of&#13;
courses throughout high&#13;
school.&#13;
responsible for "any group&#13;
that uses the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater space. I do anything&#13;
from designing the&#13;
lighting for them to just making&#13;
sure there is a table and&#13;
microphone set up."&#13;
Harris also designs lighting&#13;
and scenery in tandem with&#13;
Skelly Warren, Assistant Professor&#13;
of Dramatic Arts. "My&#13;
degree is geared for design&#13;
and stage, including sets,&#13;
lights and costumes," he&#13;
said. "I did very little work&#13;
with costumes in grad school,&#13;
but did more than my share&#13;
of work with lights and scenery."&#13;
Although Harris does not&#13;
teach any classes here, he&#13;
does work one-on-one with&#13;
students. His contact comes&#13;
mainly from his hiring of students&#13;
to help design lighting&#13;
and to design and build sets.&#13;
"Most generally, I hire and&#13;
From&#13;
Students unable to meet&#13;
these criteria are required to&#13;
take the placement tests prior&#13;
to applying for admission. If&#13;
at this point, the student is&#13;
able to place in English 100&#13;
and Math 015, and is reading&#13;
at approximately a tenthgrade&#13;
level, that student will&#13;
be admitted as a "conditional&#13;
admissions" student.&#13;
Five Years Ago&#13;
September 9,1982&#13;
YMCA housing provided&#13;
The YMCA, in conjunction&#13;
with the Parkside Housing Office,&#13;
has agreed to open up its&#13;
top three floors in an effort to&#13;
\&#13;
Keith Harris&#13;
supervise," he said. "The students&#13;
get paid while learning.&#13;
which I feel compliments&#13;
both myself and the students."&#13;
Harris' goals for Parkside's&#13;
Communication Arts Theather&#13;
include making the stage&#13;
as much a lab space as possible.&#13;
"My goal is to help the&#13;
students learn where things&#13;
go, and how things are used&#13;
as quickly as possible."&#13;
Harris has some larger&#13;
goals in mind also. "I would&#13;
like to make some changes in&#13;
the lobby. I'd like to modernize&#13;
it more."&#13;
Support from the administration&#13;
has been important to&#13;
Harris. "I feel they've backed&#13;
us. If there has been a need, I&#13;
feel I've been listened to,&#13;
which is one of the reasons&#13;
I'm still here.&#13;
"I'd like to see the Fine&#13;
Arts program grow as far as&#13;
majors and the number of&#13;
people who get involved," he&#13;
concluded.&#13;
Harris not only works with&#13;
the theater department, but&#13;
he also works with the music&#13;
and the art departments.&#13;
Harris feels that by using the&#13;
resources from those three&#13;
departments and by using the&#13;
lobby area of the theater he&#13;
will draw more attention to&#13;
those programs.&#13;
"My dream is that when&#13;
you leave through the exit,&#13;
there will be posters hanging&#13;
there for the entire semester&#13;
announcing upcoming programs."&#13;
Harris feels strongly that&#13;
both physical ends of the&#13;
campus need to work together.&#13;
"Somehow we have to&#13;
connect both major exits of&#13;
this university to let everyone&#13;
on campus know what's going&#13;
on."&#13;
the Ranger files&#13;
accommodate those students&#13;
who desire a place of residence&#13;
for this school year.&#13;
The building, which has&#13;
been dubbed "Ranger Hall"&#13;
on the lease agreement,&#13;
marks the first type of dormitory&#13;
living Parkside has been&#13;
able to offer In the university's&#13;
13-year existence.&#13;
The three floors total 85 single&#13;
living quarters, with two&#13;
Resident Assistants (RA's) in&#13;
charge of each floor. Only students&#13;
and their guests will be&#13;
allowed to the top floors.&#13;
The room agreements state&#13;
that a student can rent a&#13;
room at the YMCA from Sept.&#13;
1, 1982 until May 23, 1983 for a&#13;
cost of $450 per semester, or a&#13;
total of $900 for the school&#13;
year, excluding a $120 escrow.&#13;
A room with private bath&#13;
costs $1080 for the year.&#13;
Ten Years Ago&#13;
September 7,1977&#13;
WLLC gets improvement&#13;
grants&#13;
The Council on Library Resources&#13;
(CLR) has awarded&#13;
$21,350 to Parkside for a selfstudy&#13;
among library staff&#13;
members.&#13;
The study is directed toward&#13;
improving the services&#13;
and operations of the library&#13;
system.&#13;
In performing the study, the&#13;
staff will utlize a draft manual&#13;
resulting from procedures&#13;
developed in a 1976 pilot project&#13;
at the University of North&#13;
Carolina at Charlotte. The&#13;
UNC-C project was the first&#13;
phase of the Council's Academic&#13;
Library Program. In&#13;
phase two, several universities&#13;
- including Parkside -&#13;
will be selected to work with&#13;
the evolving model program.&#13;
CENTER R&#13;
OF THE / =&#13;
WORLD /P&#13;
LIQUOR /©&#13;
^PAPERBACK&#13;
„ EXCHANGE&#13;
Bartles &amp; Ja&#13;
White • Ed's F&#13;
15 Pack&#13;
'Stroh's Spoken Here&#13;
PignottPs Please use our&#13;
HOURS&#13;
Open Mon. thur Sat. |&#13;
9.9 UWP&#13;
Open Sunday&#13;
10-9 Liquor&#13;
1585 - North 22nd Avenue • Ph. 551-8020&#13;
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS-OPEN DURING CONSTRUCTION&#13;
V4 BARREL SPECIALS&#13;
Hamms $12"&#13;
Busch Si 499&#13;
Stroh's $18"&#13;
Schlitz s14"&#13;
Returnable Cases&#13;
Hamms s459&#13;
Kingsbury s459&#13;
24-12 oz. Returnable Bottles&#13;
J. Roget Spumante&#13;
$259 $489&#13;
750 ml 1.5 liter&#13;
products In moderation.&#13;
CARLO ROSSI&#13;
Rhine • Chablis • Vin Rose •&#13;
Pink Chablis • Lt. Chianti •&#13;
Paisano • Burgundy • Sangria&#13;
SUN COUNTRY&#13;
COOLERS&#13;
Citrus • Tropical • Cherry •&#13;
Peach • Orange • Classic&#13;
Foreign Film series&#13;
schedule announced&#13;
Season tickets are available&#13;
for this year's popular Foreign&#13;
Film Series at Parkside.&#13;
The series will include 16&#13;
critically-acclaimed fulllength&#13;
features films from&#13;
England, Russia, Denmark,&#13;
France, Poland, Germany,&#13;
Italy, Spain, Sweden, Brazil&#13;
and the United States.&#13;
Subscriptions to the film series&#13;
are $17 for the general&#13;
public and $15 for senior citizens&#13;
and students. They can&#13;
be purchased at the Union Information&#13;
Center, or by calling&#13;
553-2345. Group rates are&#13;
available.&#13;
Admission is by season subscription.&#13;
No individual tickets&#13;
will be sold.&#13;
Subscribers have the option&#13;
of attending screenings at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on Thursdays, 8&#13;
p.m. on Saturdays, or 2 p.m.&#13;
on Sundays. Screenings are in&#13;
the Union Cinema Theater.&#13;
Each season ticket holder will&#13;
be allowed to bring a guest to&#13;
three showings free. Parkside&#13;
economics professor Norman&#13;
Cloutier is director of the series.&#13;
Following is a list of dates,&#13;
films, countries and directors:&#13;
Sept. 24-27, "My Beautiful&#13;
Laundrette," a 1986 English&#13;
film by Frears.&#13;
Oct. 1-4, "Oblomov," a 1981&#13;
Russian film by Mikhalkov.&#13;
Oct. 22-25, "She's Gotta&#13;
Have It," a 1986 American&#13;
film by Lee.&#13;
Oct. 29-Nov. 1, "A Room&#13;
With a View," a 1986 English&#13;
film by Ivory.&#13;
Nov. 19-22, "A Sunday in&#13;
Hell," a 1976 film from Denmark&#13;
by Leth.&#13;
Dec. 3-6, "Vagabond," a&#13;
1986 French film by Varda.&#13;
Dec. 17-20, "Three Men and&#13;
a Cradle," a 1986 French film&#13;
by Serreau.&#13;
Jan. 7-10, "Knife in the&#13;
Water," a 1960 Polish film by&#13;
Polanski.&#13;
Jan. 21-24, "The Marriage&#13;
of Maria Braun," a 1979 film&#13;
from Germany by Fassbinder.&#13;
Feb. 4-7, "Le Bal," a 1984&#13;
film from Italy/France by&#13;
continued on page 13&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 3,1987 11&#13;
Dr. Wayne ft. Williams&#13;
Minority Student Service director sets goals&#13;
by Christina Lojeski&#13;
Dr. Wayne R. Williams&#13;
begins this semester at Parkside&#13;
as the new director of&#13;
minority student services.&#13;
Williams, 42, is a Racine&#13;
native and a 1963 graduate of&#13;
Washington Park High&#13;
School. He attended the UWExtension&#13;
in Racine, and&#13;
later received his bachelor's&#13;
degree in linguistics and completed&#13;
his Masters degree in&#13;
African language and literature,&#13;
both at UW-Madison.&#13;
After completing his dissertation&#13;
and research in Africa,&#13;
he received his Ph.D. in linguistics&#13;
from Indiana University.&#13;
Williams was employed by&#13;
the University of Washington-&#13;
Seattle in African studies and&#13;
linguistics as a lecturer in&#13;
1975 and was promoted to an&#13;
assistant professor in 1976. In&#13;
1981 he was named director of&#13;
the university's Afro-Ameriby&#13;
Terri DeRosier&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
The final of many search&#13;
and screen committees conducted&#13;
in the student affairs&#13;
area of campus has brought&#13;
Parkside a new Director of&#13;
Student Life. Steve McLaughlin,&#13;
who holds a Ph.D. from&#13;
the University of Kansas-&#13;
Lawrence, was selected by&#13;
the search and screen committee&#13;
for the director's position.&#13;
McLaughlin's office will be&#13;
responsible for the child care&#13;
center, the student health&#13;
services, the union and all&#13;
areas of residential life and&#13;
all student activities.&#13;
Although McLaughlin has&#13;
been on campus for only two&#13;
weeks, he has jumped right in&#13;
and started to get to know the&#13;
people at Parkside.&#13;
"I'm most impressed with&#13;
the students and staff,"&#13;
McLaughlin said. "They are&#13;
all very supportive and&#13;
friendly."&#13;
Dr. Wayne R. Williams&#13;
can Studies Program.&#13;
Williams has presented numerous&#13;
papers at professional&#13;
conferences and published&#13;
magazine articles in scholarly&#13;
publications. He is author&#13;
and co-author of two&#13;
book-length manuscripts&#13;
being considered for publica-&#13;
Steve McLaughlin&#13;
In planning his first few&#13;
months here at Parkside,&#13;
McLaughlin said he will begin&#13;
by associating names with&#13;
faces and programs.&#13;
"I will also be assessing all&#13;
the programs to see how they&#13;
can better serve all stution.&#13;
Because most minority student&#13;
services programs were&#13;
initiated in the 60s, Williams&#13;
explained that the program&#13;
here is in its "embryonic&#13;
stages," having been instituted&#13;
in 1982. That fact, stated&#13;
Williams, has its advantages&#13;
as well as its disadvantages.&#13;
"The disadvantage is that&#13;
there is no program here that&#13;
is already well-established,&#13;
providing services to minorities.&#13;
The advantage is that we&#13;
can learn from the succeesses&#13;
and failures of other programs.&#13;
My goal is to make&#13;
this one of the best programs&#13;
in the United States," he explained.&#13;
Presently, minority student&#13;
services here has had a very&#13;
low visibility, according to&#13;
Williams.&#13;
"Most of the students who&#13;
come into the office now&#13;
come in only if they desire to.&#13;
I would like for minority students."&#13;
Although it is too soon for&#13;
any definite plans, McLaughlin&#13;
said that he would like to&#13;
get students to identify with&#13;
campus life and to provide&#13;
better services.&#13;
"I would like to find out&#13;
what the needs of the students&#13;
are and the campus&#13;
community in general,"&#13;
McLaughlin said. "I want to&#13;
find out if there are ways to&#13;
build or improve existing programs."&#13;
Addressing the needs of the&#13;
non-traditional students is one&#13;
of McLaughlin's high priorities.&#13;
"I want to assess the needs&#13;
of the non-traditional students&#13;
to see what we can do to meet&#13;
those needs.&#13;
"This is a beautiful&#13;
campus, not only in the setting,&#13;
but in the facilities&#13;
themselves," McLaughlin&#13;
said in closing. "I'm anxious&#13;
to meet the students and I'm&#13;
looking forward to working&#13;
with all of them."&#13;
dent services to attain a higher&#13;
visibility, and begin assisting&#13;
advisors in all conditional&#13;
admissions," Williams commented.&#13;
"I would also like to institute&#13;
obtrusive advising, which&#13;
would mean that we would&#13;
provide continous academic&#13;
and personal counseling to&#13;
any minority students interested,"&#13;
Williams stated.&#13;
"Additionally, I would like to&#13;
establish a mentor system, in&#13;
which successful minority&#13;
students would be able to&#13;
share some of their knowledge&#13;
with others."&#13;
He also plans to shed some&#13;
of the myths he believes have&#13;
become connected with minority&#13;
student services&#13;
throughout the public school&#13;
systems.&#13;
His background in that area&#13;
consists of serving as a consultant&#13;
to Seattle public&#13;
schools, developing a model&#13;
for multicultural and international&#13;
education. He also&#13;
served as a consultant to&#13;
Portland public schools, developing&#13;
an image-enhancement&#13;
program for black high&#13;
school students, and to the&#13;
National Labor Relations&#13;
Board in the Northwestern&#13;
United States advising it on&#13;
developing effective writing&#13;
programs for minority employees.&#13;
"Minority student services&#13;
programs have been suffering&#13;
from a bad image. The word&#13;
'minority' had come to imply&#13;
small, minuscule and inferior&#13;
to the majority, when, in&#13;
truth, minority students come&#13;
from different cultural, socioeconomic&#13;
backgrounds than&#13;
the majority population,"&#13;
Williams explained.&#13;
He plans to correct and to&#13;
counter that public school&#13;
training and provide services&#13;
to remedial students as well&#13;
as establishing an honors program.&#13;
Williams also plans to gather&#13;
information about how minorities&#13;
are perceived here.&#13;
He is chairing a committee&#13;
that is looking into ways to&#13;
establish ethnic studies on&#13;
campus, to provide education&#13;
about different ethnic groups&#13;
of the United States. Also on&#13;
this committee are professors&#13;
Teresa Peck-McGovern and&#13;
Robert Canary.&#13;
"I want to see the majority&#13;
population of t he campus educated&#13;
about the history, culture&#13;
and social problems of&#13;
people of color in the United&#13;
States," he explained.&#13;
"I want to see minority student&#13;
services here shaping&#13;
the leaders and workers of&#13;
the 21st century. I plan to empower&#13;
minority students to go&#13;
into the American society to&#13;
become full partners and&#13;
leaders in an increasingly&#13;
global community," Williams&#13;
concluded.&#13;
by Sandy Leicht, R.N.&#13;
Your eyes are the most&#13;
complex organs you possess&#13;
except for your brain, providing&#13;
you with 80% of your total&#13;
knowledge. The eyeball surveys&#13;
the world from a bony&#13;
socket in the skull. Fat cushions&#13;
it, and six muscles hold&#13;
it in a sling that rotates in&#13;
whatever direction we wish to&#13;
look. The outer layer, the&#13;
white of th e eye, is the sclera,&#13;
a tough opaque film of con-&#13;
Well Aware&#13;
nective tissues. At the front,&#13;
transparent tissue forms the&#13;
cornea, which covers the iris,&#13;
the colored part of the eye.&#13;
Anyone who is vain about&#13;
their big baby blues might&#13;
consider that the blueness&#13;
means only that there is less&#13;
pigment than in darker eyes.&#13;
Every day your eyes take a&#13;
50 mile hike - or the equivalent&#13;
- in their muscular workout,&#13;
blinking every two to ten&#13;
seconds. They are so much an&#13;
automatic part of you that&#13;
you might take them for&#13;
granted. You might never&#13;
give tham a thought unless&#13;
they let you down. Or, more&#13;
precisely, unless you let them&#13;
down. Although nature built&#13;
in some safeguards to maintain&#13;
the function of your eyes&#13;
and to prevent their injury,&#13;
the job of maintenance and&#13;
prevention is mostly yours.&#13;
September is National Sight&#13;
Saving Month. Stop in the&#13;
Student Health Center at&#13;
Molinaro D-115 for a free vision&#13;
screening. "Eye'11 be&#13;
seeing you!"&#13;
FREE SLICE&#13;
of a&#13;
Bakers Square&#13;
PIE With Every Hamburger Order&#13;
With This Ad&#13;
Now Through Sept. 15,. 1987&#13;
ViAlJt tang e&#13;
&gt; RESTAURANT&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
3619 - 30th Ave.&#13;
652-2026&#13;
RACINE&#13;
5930 Washington Ave.&#13;
886-1433&#13;
Sunday-Thursday&#13;
5:30am-12am&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat.&#13;
Until 1:30pm&#13;
Steve McLaughlin&#13;
Meeting needs of students&#13;
i&#13;
12 Thursday, September 3,1987&#13;
Book reviews&#13;
Cinema studies for buffs and scholars by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
LAUREL AND HARDY:&#13;
THE MAGIC BEHIND&#13;
THE MOVIES&#13;
by Randy Skretvedt&#13;
(Moonstone Press)&#13;
While this is one of many&#13;
studies on Laurel and Hardy,&#13;
it may be the definitive volume.&#13;
Skretvedt analyzes each of&#13;
the duo's films, giving ample&#13;
space to their weaker efforts&#13;
as well as their timeless classics.&#13;
Along with critical analyses&#13;
which attempt to explain&#13;
just why the duo's films work&#13;
so well, Skretvedt includes interesting&#13;
historical comments&#13;
about each entry.&#13;
Statistically the book&#13;
eclipses all other studies,&#13;
Skretvedt not only including&#13;
complete info on each film,&#13;
but also appendices listing&#13;
supporting players and technical&#13;
craftsman who helped&#13;
make the Laurel and Hardy&#13;
comedies so essential to&#13;
American film.&#13;
Prior to this tome, it was&#13;
necessary to purchase at&#13;
least a half dozen books on&#13;
Laurel and Hardy in order to&#13;
acquire so much information.&#13;
Skretvedt says more in his&#13;
460-odd pages than the many&#13;
other Laurel and Hardy&#13;
studies combined, and also includes&#13;
several nice illustrations&#13;
(many never before&#13;
published).&#13;
JUMP CUT:&#13;
HOLLYWOOD, POLITICS&#13;
AND COUNTER&#13;
CINEMA&#13;
edited by Peter Steven&#13;
(Praeger)&#13;
As "Jump Cut," the newspaper,&#13;
is the journalistic&#13;
Bible of counterculture cinema,&#13;
this compilation of articles&#13;
is a unique and essential&#13;
addition to libraries of cinema&#13;
studies.&#13;
The five sub-headings include&#13;
"Hollywood: the Dominant&#13;
Cinema," "Independent&#13;
Filmmaking in North America,"&#13;
"Women's Counter Cinema,"&#13;
"Gay and Lesbian Cinema"&#13;
and "Radical Third&#13;
World Cinema." Under each&#13;
of these five sub-hedings are&#13;
five or six articles on that&#13;
particular subject, all culled&#13;
from issues of "Jump Cut"&#13;
and featuring such fine film&#13;
scholars as the late Charles&#13;
Eckert, Julia Lesage, Richard&#13;
Dyer and Tom Waugh&#13;
among the writers.&#13;
As all of these topics are&#13;
key movements in today's&#13;
cinema, "Jump Cut" is a&#13;
highly recommended compilation&#13;
of important articles on&#13;
several aspects of motion pictures.&#13;
CASHIERS DU CINEMA;&#13;
THE 1960s&#13;
edited by Jim Hillier&#13;
(Harvard University Press)&#13;
As with the previous compilation&#13;
on the 50's, this collection&#13;
of articles from the&#13;
French cinema periodical is&#13;
most interesting when one&#13;
reads the re-evaluations of&#13;
Hollywood.&#13;
Contributions by Francois&#13;
Truffaut, Jean-Luc Goddard,&#13;
and other important names of&#13;
the French cinema add depth&#13;
and authenticity to this anthology.&#13;
But one aspect of&#13;
French criticism in regard to&#13;
sixties Hollywood film is&#13;
missing. It is one of the more&#13;
notorious legends of cinema&#13;
that Jerry Lewis is considered&#13;
a comic genius in&#13;
France, while American&#13;
critics dismiss him as the&#13;
banal equal of Pee Wee Herman.&#13;
None of the very&#13;
lengthy and in-depth analyses&#13;
on Lewis that appeared in&#13;
"Cashiers du Cinema" during&#13;
the sixties are translated&#13;
here.&#13;
The book is still noteworthy&#13;
for its articles on Hitchcock,&#13;
Nicholas Ray, Howard&#13;
Hawks, "King Kong," and&#13;
several studies on the French&#13;
New Wave methods spawned&#13;
by many of t he writers here.&#13;
REEL CHARACTERS&#13;
by Jordan R, Young&#13;
(Moonstone Press)&#13;
This collection of interview&#13;
pieces on old character performers&#13;
from American films&#13;
of the thirties and forties is a&#13;
must for buffs.&#13;
The supporting players&#13;
added luster to a film industry&#13;
that really could not have&#13;
survived without them.&#13;
Director-writer Huston was motion picture aiant by Jim Neibaur •A»^ n 1 .4 i inn. - ar.&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
John Huston's death last&#13;
Thursday night ends the legacy&#13;
of one of the finest filmmakers&#13;
of the American cinema.&#13;
Nobody believed Huston&#13;
would ever match his directorial&#13;
debut, "The Maltese&#13;
Falcon," but he went on to&#13;
helm such fine creations as&#13;
"The African Queen," "The&#13;
Man Who Would Be King,"&#13;
and "The Treasure of the&#13;
Sierra Madre," in which he&#13;
directed his father, the late&#13;
Walter Huston, to an Academy&#13;
Award-winning performance&#13;
as he did for his daughter,&#13;
Angelica Huston, in the&#13;
most recent "Prizzi's Honor."&#13;
Huston's direction incorporated&#13;
many diverse filmmaking&#13;
styles, most notably the&#13;
film noir of "The Maltese&#13;
Falcon." However, aside&#13;
from the mise-en-scene of the&#13;
Huston canon, the director&#13;
also paid close attention to&#13;
character detail. For instance&#13;
Humphrey Bogart's Fred C.&#13;
Dobbs character in "Sierra&#13;
Madre" embodies the American&#13;
male's paranoia in postwar&#13;
America - Dobb's unfounded&#13;
suspicions about his&#13;
fellow gold prospectors' paralleling&#13;
the American male's&#13;
reaction to the Communist&#13;
scare.&#13;
The last film Huston was&#13;
involved with was directed by&#13;
his son.&#13;
BRATS, BURGE&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
z &lt;&#13;
(1)&#13;
a III&#13;
I \ &lt;* ) m /&#13;
Fri., September 11 • 11 am-2 pm • Union Patio&#13;
Live Music by: "JAK MAKARAL"&#13;
Free Admission!!&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 3,1987 13&#13;
Movie Review&#13;
"Dirty Dancing" uses new musical trends&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
We a re long past the glory&#13;
years of the Hollywood musical,&#13;
as the American cinema&#13;
will never produce another&#13;
"Singin' in the Rain."&#13;
In "Dirty Dancing," Patrick&#13;
Swayze and Jennifer&#13;
Grey capably exhibit exciting&#13;
dance moves while backed by&#13;
the sort of narrative that&#13;
passes for musical drama in&#13;
today's American cinema.&#13;
All of the predictable circumstances&#13;
are here, from&#13;
the young girl replacing the&#13;
veteran when the latter is incapable&#13;
of performing, to the&#13;
nice girl's father being unable&#13;
to understand the attractive&#13;
bad boy she in infatuated&#13;
with.&#13;
The whole thing takes place&#13;
at a family resort during the&#13;
early sixties, with news&#13;
events of the period popping&#13;
up in casual conversation lest&#13;
we forget what era we're in.&#13;
Grey's character's pre-hippie&#13;
liberalism is suppressed by&#13;
her family's disturbing conservatism,&#13;
and thus she feels&#13;
alienated. She finds an escape&#13;
through dancing with the bad&#13;
boy who works at the resort,&#13;
her Daddy doesn't approve,&#13;
and so forth.&#13;
But then in a musical, it is&#13;
the musical sequences that&#13;
deserve to have the greatest&#13;
attention. The dance bits are&#13;
all exceptionally well done,&#13;
especially those that take&#13;
place during the party sequences&#13;
with a period rock&#13;
and roll track thundering beneath.&#13;
The filmmakers were&#13;
careful in selecting the&#13;
raunchiest and most timeless&#13;
rockers from the post-Elvis&#13;
pre-Beatle early sixties, staying&#13;
away from the bland&#13;
Beach Boy bubble gum that&#13;
pervaded the airwaves during&#13;
this period.&#13;
Grey's character is nicknamed&#13;
"Baby" by her family.&#13;
Often the narrative is very&#13;
weak with some laughably&#13;
bad dialogue:&#13;
"Can I have 200 dollars&#13;
Daddy?"&#13;
"Sure, Baby, I'll have it for&#13;
you before dinner." The&#13;
money turns out to be for a&#13;
friend's abortion, this plan&#13;
going awry when the friend&#13;
almost dies during the procedure.&#13;
Yet the film's attempts&#13;
to dispel abortion don't come&#13;
off totally within the framework&#13;
of the already soggy&#13;
narrative.&#13;
Like ' 'Flashdance'' or&#13;
"Footloose," "Dirty Dancing"&#13;
comes alive in the musical&#13;
sequences (with the exception&#13;
of the two leads' ridiculous&#13;
pantomime to Mickey&#13;
and Sylvia's "Love is&#13;
Strange" and the strange climactic&#13;
dance which is backed&#13;
for some reason by a discofied&#13;
eighties beat). The&#13;
narrative is merely written&#13;
around the dance sequences&#13;
in an attempt to exhibit some&#13;
facile and disquieting social&#13;
commentary. Patrick Swayze&#13;
Selected Shorts&#13;
CAN'T BUY ME LOVE&#13;
The commercial critics have&#13;
been very aggressive in their&#13;
hatred for this film. I liked it.&#13;
But, then, it has everything&#13;
a commercial critic hates:&#13;
youthful vitality, charm, a&#13;
heavy anti-capitalist message,&#13;
no flagrant titty-bouncing,&#13;
et al.&#13;
This is a youth comedy, and&#13;
a rather typical one on the&#13;
surface, however beneath the&#13;
superficial story of a nerd&#13;
renting a pretty cheerleader&#13;
in o rder to obtain popularity,&#13;
the filmmkaers deliver an underlying&#13;
message that scorns&#13;
capitalism and diehard efforts&#13;
to be "one of the&#13;
crowd."&#13;
Unlike "Revenge of the&#13;
Nerds" and "Soul Man," this&#13;
film doesn't spend eighty-nine&#13;
minutes presenting ugly&#13;
stereotypes and then try&#13;
presenting a positive message&#13;
in the final two minutes.&#13;
"Can't Buy Me Love" instead&#13;
presents its message through&#13;
the situations, which are&#13;
harmlessly amusing.&#13;
Some sermonizing towards&#13;
the end of the film doesn't&#13;
come off, and it's true that a&#13;
film dircted toward a teenage&#13;
audience couldn't truly deal&#13;
with t he complexities of adolescence&#13;
on an academic&#13;
level, but "Can't Buy Me&#13;
Love" still succeeds as lightweight&#13;
entertainment. The&#13;
filmmakers are also wise in&#13;
using the original Beatle song&#13;
under the opening and closing&#13;
credits rather than a pallid&#13;
remake by a wimpy New&#13;
Wave never-was.&#13;
Jim Neibaur&#13;
BORN IN EAST L.A.&#13;
Cheech without Chong is —&#13;
well — Cheech, alone.&#13;
In his first solo venture,&#13;
which he wrote, directed, and&#13;
stars in, Richard "Cheech"&#13;
Marin does the Anglo guilt bit&#13;
with a distracting comedy&#13;
about an L.A.-born Hispanic&#13;
American who is shuttled into&#13;
Mexico when caught during&#13;
an immmigration raid without&#13;
his wallet.&#13;
On this premise we have a&#13;
series of comic vignettes, not&#13;
unlike many Cheech and&#13;
Chong films. Thus the film is&#13;
a loosely episodic one whose&#13;
parts don't always combine to&#13;
make a logical whole. Some&#13;
bits seem like they're from&#13;
another movie.&#13;
However, and this is crucial,&#13;
there are several very&#13;
positive aspects to "Born in&#13;
East L.A." Cheech, his first&#13;
time directing, proves adept&#13;
at showcasing physical gags&#13;
in the Mack Sennett tradition.&#13;
His script, while a little&#13;
forced in some places&#13;
(Cheech is NOT a romantic&#13;
character), does include several&#13;
pointed messages about&#13;
the Hispanic experience beneath&#13;
the humor. And his performance&#13;
is believable in all&#13;
but the romantic sequences.&#13;
Cheech trying to teach several&#13;
non-Mexican immigrants&#13;
how to act like stereotypical&#13;
Foreign Film series&#13;
continued from page 10&#13;
Scola.&#13;
Feb. 18-21, "What Have I&#13;
Done to Deserve This?" a&#13;
1984 fi lm from Spain by Almodovar.&#13;
Mar. 3-6, "Round Midnight,"&#13;
a 1986 French film by&#13;
Tavernier.&#13;
Mar. 24-27. " Stranger Than&#13;
Paradise." a 1984 USA film&#13;
by Jarmusch.&#13;
Apr. 7-10, "Scenes from a&#13;
Marriage," a 1983 film from&#13;
Sweden by Bergman.&#13;
Apr. 21-24, "Hour of the&#13;
Star," a 1985 film from Brazil&#13;
by Amaral.&#13;
" May 5-8, "Turtle Diary," a&#13;
1985 film from England by&#13;
Irvin.&#13;
Hispanic Californians and his&#13;
attempt to teach a Mexican&#13;
combo how to perform the&#13;
song "Twist and Shout,"&#13;
which to them sounds suspiciously&#13;
like "La Bamba," are&#13;
some of the film's more&#13;
amusing sequences.&#13;
Jim Neibaur&#13;
FILM ON CAMPUS&#13;
It's amazing how a mediocre&#13;
film like "National Lampoon's&#13;
Animal House" was&#13;
not only a huge box office&#13;
success, but was so damned&#13;
influential. Case in point:&#13;
"Revenge of the Nerds,"&#13;
which is this week's PAB film&#13;
presentation.&#13;
The standard comic attack&#13;
on the inadequacy of others&#13;
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
EVERY NIGHT!&#13;
Beat the Clock Double Bubble&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 3-7&#13;
Thursday All Night&#13;
Monday &amp; Wednesday&#13;
LADIES NIGHT&#13;
LABOR DAY&#13;
LOVE EXPRESSION&#13;
Tuesday - Rex Rizz&#13;
50e Shorties&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 10&#13;
Double Bubble&#13;
Friday, Sept. 11&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 12&#13;
Spectaculars&#13;
50's &amp; 60 's&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 13&#13;
SIGNS&#13;
All&#13;
at RUMORS&#13;
Located in&#13;
APPLE VALLEY LODGE&#13;
5005 Wash. Ave.&#13;
RELAX&#13;
Single *19"&#13;
Weekend *26"&#13;
Double *23"&#13;
Weekend *30"&#13;
With this coupon&#13;
c/lfxjiCz (1/a[[zy&#13;
Jlodye.&#13;
FAMILY BUDGET INN&#13;
5005 Washington Ave. 637-7911&#13;
takes a perverse and rather&#13;
repugnant turn here, especially&#13;
since the apparent&#13;
point of the film is to dispell&#13;
rumors that all nerds are&#13;
losers. However the filmmakers&#13;
try proving their point by&#13;
using the most obvious and&#13;
juvenile bathroom humor as&#13;
well as a strong dose of ugly&#13;
sexism.&#13;
In a film where the characters&#13;
closely follow the offensive&#13;
nerd stereotypes and&#13;
then become mawkish in the&#13;
end by making a speech on&#13;
how "nerds are people too"&#13;
(with Queen's "We are The&#13;
Champions" playing in the&#13;
background, no less), the only&#13;
thing a discriminating filmgoer&#13;
can do is shrug his or her&#13;
Robert Carradine&#13;
shoulders and forget this simple&#13;
minded travesty as quickly&#13;
as possible.&#13;
Jim Neibaur&#13;
LOOKING FOB HOUSING?&#13;
UW-Parkside Residence&#13;
Life has a limited number&#13;
of spaces available for the&#13;
1987-88 academic year.&#13;
Experience on-campus&#13;
living in our modern,&#13;
apartment style residence&#13;
hall.&#13;
Call 553-2320 for more&#13;
information, or stop by the&#13;
Office of Residence Life&#13;
located in 4C of the&#13;
Residence Hall Complex.&#13;
14 Thursday, September 3, 1987 RANGER&#13;
Record re vie w&#13;
RCA anthologies help to eulogize Elvis Presley&#13;
Elvis Presley during 1968 TV Special&#13;
THUNDER&#13;
Andy Taylor (MCA)&#13;
Former double Duran guitarist&#13;
Andy Taylor has come&#13;
a long way from the prima&#13;
donna poses of his former&#13;
bandmates on his first solo&#13;
release "Thunder."&#13;
This album is a rocker and&#13;
it is a fine showcase of Taylor's&#13;
guitarwork (although he&#13;
does get a little self-indulgent&#13;
from time to time).&#13;
Taylor co-produced this effort&#13;
with former Sex Pistol&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Amidst much ballyhoo, this&#13;
past August 14 marked the&#13;
tenth anniversary of Elvis&#13;
Presley's death.&#13;
In commemoration, RCA&#13;
has released four welcome&#13;
anthologies of his recorded&#13;
work.&#13;
THE COMPLETE SUN&#13;
SESSIONS&#13;
This is by far the most important&#13;
anthology of the&#13;
group, as it focuses on the&#13;
purest and most influential&#13;
music in the whole of Presley's&#13;
massive output.&#13;
This double album includes,&#13;
for the first time, all of the&#13;
songs Presley cut at Sam&#13;
Phillips' studio just prior to&#13;
having massive superstardom&#13;
thrust upon him. Songs like&#13;
"Mystery Train," "That's All&#13;
Right Mama," and "Good&#13;
Rockin' Tonight" are staples&#13;
of a genre steeped in the&#13;
blues, gospel, and R&amp;B styles&#13;
of Black artists who most&#13;
heavily influenced Presley.&#13;
THE NUMBER ONE HITS&#13;
/THE TOP TEN HITS&#13;
Both of these albums are essential,&#13;
however the latter&#13;
eclipses the former.&#13;
"The Number One Hits" in-&#13;
Short Cuts Steve Jones (who also cowrote&#13;
all but one of the&#13;
album's tunes with Taylor)&#13;
and his influence is evident in&#13;
the very upfront guitar sound&#13;
that is on display.&#13;
Taylor has assembled a&#13;
crack band for the album&#13;
eludes all of the Presley&#13;
songs that hit the top of the&#13;
charts. "The Top Ten Hits" is&#13;
a double album that contains&#13;
these songs and others that&#13;
just missed the number one&#13;
mhrk. While the former has&#13;
the most important hits from&#13;
"Hound Dog," "Jailhouse&#13;
Rock," and "Heartbreak&#13;
Hotel" to "Suspicious&#13;
Minds," the latter incorporates&#13;
more essential tracks&#13;
the likes of "Return to&#13;
Sender" and "I Need Your&#13;
Love Tonight."&#13;
These are the songs that&#13;
put rock and roll on the map,&#13;
opening the door for the great&#13;
Black artists who had been&#13;
shut out by segregated white&#13;
radio for so many years,&#13;
somebody finally realizing&#13;
that Presley's work would&#13;
have been inconceivable without&#13;
them.&#13;
The all-out rockers accost&#13;
the listener with the same&#13;
reckless abandon as they had&#13;
some thirty years before,&#13;
while the ballads re-emphasize&#13;
the fact that Presley is&#13;
the best singer the music has&#13;
ever produced.&#13;
THE MEMPHIS RECORD&#13;
After nearly a decade of&#13;
weak songs from bad movies,&#13;
Presley seemed an anachronism&#13;
eclipsed by the British&#13;
invasion and Motown.&#13;
But on a 1968 TV special he&#13;
turned in the greatest performance&#13;
of his career, a&#13;
celebration of all that rock&#13;
and roll has ever stood for.&#13;
These 1969 Memphis sessions,&#13;
cut immediately after&#13;
the exhilarating TV special,&#13;
show Presley catching up&#13;
with musical trends that had&#13;
seemed to have passed him&#13;
by during the doldrums of the&#13;
early mid-sixties. There are&#13;
the obligatory ballads along&#13;
with some tough blues and&#13;
all-out rockers which rank&#13;
with his best work. These sessions&#13;
are in many ways as&#13;
important as those at Sun,&#13;
even if only to prove that&#13;
Presley was not just a star of&#13;
cheap beach films during the&#13;
sixties.&#13;
All of these anthologies&#13;
must be included in any comprehensive&#13;
record collection.&#13;
They prove once and for all&#13;
that despite the bad films,&#13;
drug and weight problems,&#13;
pretentious Las Vegas appearances,&#13;
and a host of bad&#13;
jokes and ridiculous idol worshippers,&#13;
Elvis Presley is still&#13;
the most significant and talented&#13;
rock and roll performer&#13;
of them all.&#13;
Thursday Night is&#13;
CCIIRT N&#13;
At Jason's American Grill&#13;
Anyone wearing a skirt&#13;
receives free house&#13;
drinks from 9-11 P.M.&#13;
JASON'S AMERICAN GRILL&#13;
2010 DOUGLAS AVE. RACINE&#13;
which includes Mickey Curry&#13;
on drums, Patrick O'Hearn&#13;
(ex-Missing Person and current&#13;
new age star) on bass&#13;
and Steve Jones on rhythm&#13;
guitar. What Taylor needed to&#13;
do in order to make the&#13;
album an unquestionable&#13;
success was to get away from&#13;
the overwhelming keyboard&#13;
dominance displayed in&#13;
Duran Duran, but keys play&#13;
an important factor on this&#13;
record and they basically&#13;
weaken its impact.&#13;
Lyrically and vocally Taylor&#13;
still has a lot of room for&#13;
maturity, but he is a fine instrumentalist&#13;
and his talents&#13;
are quite evident on "Thunder,"&#13;
especially on tracks&#13;
like "I Might Lie" and "Don't&#13;
Let Me Die Young" which&#13;
make this a release worthy of&#13;
purchase.&#13;
Andy Taylor has come a&#13;
long way from ultra wimp to&#13;
rocker, but he still needs to&#13;
move toward a harsher edge&#13;
both musically and if he does&#13;
his next release should be a&#13;
scorcher.&#13;
Bemie Doll&#13;
SENTIMENTAL HYGIENE&#13;
Warren Zevon (Virgin)&#13;
With "Sentimental Hygiene,"&#13;
his first album of new&#13;
music in five years. Warren&#13;
Zevon has turned out his finest&#13;
work since 1978's critically&#13;
acclaimed "Excitable&#13;
Boy."&#13;
Zevon showcases a lyrical&#13;
depth that most songwriters&#13;
only dream of. As usual with&#13;
Zevon, his songs cover a diverse&#13;
range of subjects —&#13;
from his own battle with alcoholism&#13;
("Detox Mansion")&#13;
to media accuracy ("Trouble&#13;
Waiting to Happen").&#13;
Perhaps the strongest song&#13;
on the album is "Boom Boom&#13;
Mancini," which begins as a&#13;
tribute to boxer Ray Mancini,&#13;
but quickly emerges as a&#13;
strong indictment of the sport&#13;
of boxing. Also quite powerful&#13;
is "Leave My Monkey&#13;
Alone," co-produced by&#13;
George Clinton, a song about&#13;
race relations in Africa, satirically&#13;
told from the point of&#13;
view of white colonialists.&#13;
Musically, 4' Sentimental&#13;
Hygiene" also rises above&#13;
much of the material being&#13;
recorded today. Zevon has assembled&#13;
an impressive group&#13;
of guest stars which includes&#13;
Neil Young, Bob Dylan, Don&#13;
Henley, Tony Levin and&#13;
R.E.M. members Peter Buck,&#13;
Mike Mills and Bill Berry,&#13;
who sound more impressive&#13;
here than on many of the&#13;
band's own releases. The&#13;
musical styles range from&#13;
straight-ahead rock to funk to&#13;
Eastern Indian.&#13;
Rick Luehr&#13;
FAHRENHEIT&#13;
Farrenheit (Warner Bros.)&#13;
Out of the vast collage of&#13;
new groups appearing on the&#13;
music scene, usually producing&#13;
rather mediocre material,&#13;
comes some minor promise.&#13;
Farrenheit, who opened for&#13;
Boston at four sold-out Alpine&#13;
Valley concerts recently,&#13;
could generate some sparks&#13;
continued on page 15&#13;
RANGER Thursday, September 3,1987 15&#13;
Short Cuts continued&#13;
provided they are allowed&#13;
airplay. Their music on this&#13;
debut is a typical hybrid of&#13;
blues and rock and roll.&#13;
"Lost in Loveland," the&#13;
first and best cut, opens the&#13;
door with an energy that is&#13;
not quite maintained throughout&#13;
the album. It is a good example&#13;
of where Top 40 should&#13;
be. "Fool in Love" and "New&#13;
Days" are Huey Lewis-esque&#13;
pop, while "Shine" is simply&#13;
a waste of t ime.&#13;
The less thrilling cuts could&#13;
perhaps be helped a bit by&#13;
prominent guitar work. Boisterous&#13;
guitar solos have&#13;
saved many lackluster songs.&#13;
But then, perfection can't be&#13;
expected from a group whose&#13;
drummer is named Muzz.&#13;
Patti Nitz&#13;
THE ICICLE WORKS&#13;
IF YOU WANT TO DEFEAT&#13;
YOUR ENEMY 8ING HIS&#13;
SONG (Beggars Banquet)&#13;
One of the original one-hit&#13;
wonders of the English New&#13;
Wave scene has returned with&#13;
a sound reminiscent of late&#13;
60's biker rock.&#13;
This LP is a collection of&#13;
Selected short&#13;
continued on page 13&#13;
BACK TO THE BEACH&#13;
This nightmarish bit of nostalgia&#13;
fortunately refuses to&#13;
take itself seriously&#13;
Annette Funicello has cupboards&#13;
filled with jars of&#13;
Skippy peanut butter, Bob&#13;
Denver and Alan Hale do&#13;
their turn as Gilligan and&#13;
Skipper, Jerry "Beaver"&#13;
Mathers and Tony "Wally"&#13;
Dow do a sendup of Siskel&#13;
and Ebert, Connie Stevens&#13;
vies for Frankie Avalon's&#13;
body, and surf music relic&#13;
Dick Dale duets with Stevie&#13;
Ray Vaughn.&#13;
During the early-to-mid&#13;
sixties, Beach movies were&#13;
the absolute in wholesome&#13;
trendiness much like Top 40&#13;
radio is today. "Back to the&#13;
Beach" says what most of us&#13;
always felt.&#13;
Jim Neibaur&#13;
Letter&#13;
songs on such diverse topics&#13;
as girls, love, girls that they&#13;
want to meet, love, girls they&#13;
haven't met, love, girls&#13;
they'll never get to meet,&#13;
love, and girls. Fortunately&#13;
this lack of thematic material&#13;
has no effect upon the music -&#13;
this band rocks. When Icicle&#13;
Works takes on a song of a&#13;
different nature, the ballad&#13;
about the music industry,&#13;
"Up Here In The North Of&#13;
England," they have a melodic,&#13;
hypnotic style which&#13;
enraptures the listener.&#13;
The Icicle Works takes the&#13;
rich bass vocals of Robert&#13;
McNabb, combines it with&#13;
powerful guitar, drums and&#13;
keyboard and creates hard&#13;
rock with a soul. The production&#13;
wizardry of Ian (Echo&#13;
and The Bunneymen)&#13;
Browdie has enabled this&#13;
band to find a musical direction&#13;
that works. &gt;r&#13;
The Icicle Works of today&#13;
are a mutant breed of Springsteen,&#13;
Lou Reed, and U2.&#13;
Typical rock that works.&#13;
Tyson Wilda&#13;
continued from pa ge 2&#13;
basis. Smart people.&#13;
Similarly, Amy Ritter will&#13;
continue reporting for the&#13;
Kenosha News, who know a&#13;
gem or a reporter when they&#13;
employ one. Amy, who God&#13;
sent to us from UW-Madison&#13;
just in time for the spring&#13;
semester last year, has a&#13;
great news nose (and the funniest&#13;
laugh since Arnold Horshack).&#13;
The purpose of this, I guess,&#13;
is so that all of you recognize&#13;
just what a high class student&#13;
newspaper you have in the&#13;
Ranger. And as you page&#13;
through each issue this year,&#13;
keep your eyes on the bylines.&#13;
You c an be sure that someday,&#13;
somewhere, soon, they'll&#13;
turn up elsewhere.&#13;
Gary L. Schneeberger&#13;
Editor Emeritus&#13;
JUST BECAUSE SCHOOL IS&#13;
STARTING, YOU DONT&#13;
HAVE TO FORGET YOUR&#13;
SUMMER FRIENDS!&#13;
WELCOME BACK&#13;
STUDENTS!&#13;
MILLER HIGH LIFE, MILLER LITE ON TAP AT THE UNION SQUARE&#13;
Distributed by C.J.W., Inc., 2117-81st St., 552-7273&#13;
Good luck&#13;
Ranger athletes&#13;
from the&#13;
sports staff&#13;
Ranger's 1987 fall sports preview&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
Once again, the fall semester&#13;
is upon us and that means&#13;
4t's time once again for this&#13;
season's sports previews.&#13;
This week we look at soccer&#13;
and women's tennis.&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Head coach Rick Kilps lost&#13;
four starters from last year's&#13;
13-8-1 team but has high&#13;
hopes for the coming year.&#13;
"We're working hard in&#13;
practice and I'm optimistic&#13;
we'll have a good season,"&#13;
Kilps said.&#13;
Gone from last year's&#13;
squad are seniors Wayne&#13;
Adema, Carlos Gil, Jeff&#13;
Fische and Patrick Bayle,&#13;
who used up their eligibility.&#13;
In addition, the leading goal&#13;
scorer from last year, freshman&#13;
Sam Kongla, is likely to&#13;
be ineligible for the coming&#13;
season. These five players accounted&#13;
for half of the team's&#13;
68 goals scored last year.&#13;
Returnees include senior&#13;
Ed Paprocki, who is presently&#13;
injured, juniors Greg&#13;
Peters, who had nine goals;&#13;
Greg Winter, Mike Baldwin,&#13;
Mickey Dukic and Rocky&#13;
Donovan and sophomores Jim&#13;
Chomko, Mike Lee, Claudio&#13;
Aranguiz and Brian Maher.&#13;
At the goalkeeper position,&#13;
juniors Stan Anderson and&#13;
Mark Litton, who split time&#13;
evenly in the nets last year,&#13;
both return, as does reserve&#13;
team goalie Don Brubor. Anderson&#13;
and Litton were virtually&#13;
equal statistically in 1986.&#13;
The Rangers have a lot of&#13;
work to do, but Kilps is prepared&#13;
for the challenge.&#13;
"We have the nucleus and&#13;
the potential to have a good&#13;
season," said Kilps, "but nucleus&#13;
and potential are words&#13;
that need to be realized with&#13;
:tthe end result. All of that is&#13;
not very good if we don't do&#13;
our work."&#13;
The Rangers need to be at&#13;
their best, considering their&#13;
schedule, which includes&#13;
games with nine NCAA Division&#13;
I teams. New to Parkside's&#13;
schedule are the University&#13;
of Dayton, Bradley&#13;
University and Minnesota.&#13;
Also on the docket are perennial&#13;
foes Marquette, Wisconsin,&#13;
Milwaukee and Green&#13;
Bay, who are members, with&#13;
Parkside, of t he Wisconsin Intercollegiate&#13;
Soccer League.&#13;
DePaul and Illinois-Chicago&#13;
round out the Division I opponents.&#13;
New NAIA foes include&#13;
Judson Colelge, Lindenwood&#13;
College and Harris-Stowe College.&#13;
"This is one of the top&#13;
(NCAA) Division II/NAIA&#13;
schedules you can get, so we&#13;
do have a challenge," said&#13;
Kilps, "and I think our&#13;
players are going to be ready&#13;
for it. To go on as far as we&#13;
want to do, we have to knock&#13;
off the defending national&#13;
champion (who is) in our&#13;
area." Kilps is referring to&#13;
Sangamon State, who beat&#13;
the Rangers in the NAIA&#13;
Area 5 final and went on to&#13;
win the national title. "But&#13;
why not - let's do it."&#13;
The Rangers opened their&#13;
season against Judson yesterday&#13;
at home and will also be&#13;
at home this Saturday against&#13;
Dayton. Game time is 1:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Tennis&#13;
Women's tennis coach&#13;
Wendy Miller is understandly&#13;
excited about this fall's season.&#13;
She has nine players&#13;
trying out for the team and&#13;
has added talent this year in&#13;
Ann Althoff, a transfer from&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and Stacy&#13;
Stanich, a high school standout&#13;
from Kenosha Tremper.&#13;
The addition of Althoff and&#13;
Stanich "will greatly improve&#13;
our skill level," said Miller.&#13;
"We're going to have considerably&#13;
more depth than we've&#13;
ever had. Before, we were&#13;
strong in one of two or three&#13;
positions, but now it looks like&#13;
we'll be strong throughout."&#13;
The team lost Kim Kranich,&#13;
a top singles and doubles&#13;
player, to graduation. Also&#13;
gone is Jo Jo Brahmill.&#13;
Returning to the Rangers&#13;
are senior Amy Tropin, last&#13;
year's number one singles&#13;
and doubles player, junior&#13;
Nancy O'Connell and sophomores&#13;
Elizabeth Spalla and&#13;
Laurie Henry.&#13;
New faces, besides Althoff&#13;
and Stanich, include Dorothy&#13;
Dorow, a transfer from Stevens&#13;
Point and Softball&#13;
players Kathy Livesey and&#13;
Kim Vanderbush.&#13;
One consequence of a full&#13;
complement of players is a&#13;
tough battle for spots on the&#13;
team, and Miller's squad is&#13;
no exception. "We've had lots&#13;
of nice competition among&#13;
each other for the top six&#13;
spots," she said. The number&#13;
one singles position is between&#13;
Tropin and Althoff, according&#13;
to Miller.&#13;
"I think it wil be a good&#13;
year - I'm very excited,"&#13;
said Miller. "I think some&#13;
teams are going to be surprised&#13;
- we're a lot stronger&#13;
than we've been in the past."&#13;
The team's schedule has&#13;
been increased from 11 to 17&#13;
matches and three tournaments&#13;
and will include more&#13;
state teams. "I didn't feel we&#13;
were getting the adequate&#13;
competition we needed in&#13;
order to compete at the district&#13;
level," Miller said. "We&#13;
needed to play more state&#13;
schools and play more&#13;
matches. Playing against&#13;
schools that play 20 to 30&#13;
matches a season, we really&#13;
didn't have enough experience.&#13;
"Our schedule is not overpowering,&#13;
but it's competitive&#13;
for us."&#13;
The Rangers open their&#13;
season at Ripon College tomorrow&#13;
and will play in the&#13;
Carthage Quadrangular on&#13;
Saturday. Their home opener&#13;
is on Saturday, Sept. 12 at 9&#13;
a.m. against Valparaiso.&#13;
•i</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78840">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 16, issue 1, September 3, 1987</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78841">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78842">
                <text>1987-09-03</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78845">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="78846">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="78847">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78848">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78849">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78850">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78851">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78852">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="78853">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1827">
        <name>computer</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1">
        <name>kenosha</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2363">
        <name>study abroad</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2633">
        <name>teaching</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="809">
        <name>united council (UC)</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
