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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Earl Hines to perform</text>
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              <text>W Univ ersit y of W isconsi n -Pa r ks ide&#13;
Wednesday September 26, 1979&#13;
Earl Hines&#13;
to perform&#13;
Jazz piano great Earl "Fatha"&#13;
Hines, his quartet and featured&#13;
vocalist Marva Josie will open the&#13;
fourth Accent on Enrichment&#13;
Subscription Series at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside Communication&#13;
Arts Theater at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Saturday, Sept. 29.&#13;
A limited number of tickets&#13;
($6.50 each) is available for this&#13;
event from the Parkside Union&#13;
Information Center (Phone 553-&#13;
2345). Season subscribers receive&#13;
their tickets by mail.&#13;
Hines' appearance continues the&#13;
AOE tradition of bringing to the&#13;
area each year one of the great jazz&#13;
artists or groups of all time. Others&#13;
have included Dizzy Gillespie,&#13;
Stan Kenton and the Preservation&#13;
Hall band.&#13;
A living legend at 73, the&#13;
remarkably energetic Hines has&#13;
no intention of trading in his&#13;
piano bench for a rocking chair&#13;
after more than 50 years of making&#13;
jazz history, bringing this particularly&#13;
American musical form&#13;
from the black clubs and back&#13;
roads to a world-wide audience.&#13;
Hines is recognized by critics&#13;
and musicians alike as the "fatha"&#13;
of modern jazz piano and as one of&#13;
the three or four premier&#13;
influencers of the development of&#13;
jazz in this country.&#13;
Hines has been profiled in The&#13;
New Yorker magazine by Whitney&#13;
Bailliet and is the subject of a&#13;
recent book, "The World of Earl&#13;
Hines," by British jazz critic&#13;
Stanley Dance. In Dance's book,&#13;
Hine's colleagues are effusive in&#13;
their praise: "The greatest piano&#13;
player in the world," is how Count&#13;
Basie has described him. "When&#13;
you talk about greatness," Erroll&#13;
Garner said, "you talk about Art&#13;
Tatum and Earl Hines."&#13;
Hines' concerts have a broad&#13;
appeal because the music is&#13;
familiar and boasts a strong,&#13;
buoyant beat. His program&#13;
typically includes the best of&#13;
popular standards as well as a&#13;
healthy dose of tributes to such&#13;
departed colleagues as Louis&#13;
Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Fats&#13;
Waller and Jack Teagarden.&#13;
His career dates back to the 20's&#13;
when he came to Chicago trom his&#13;
native Pittsburgh and teamed witn&#13;
Louis Armstrong and clarinetist&#13;
J i m m i e Noo ne to mak e a s e r i es of&#13;
records still regarded as classics.&#13;
When the big band era dawned, he&#13;
opened at the Grand Terrace —&#13;
Chicago's equivalent of Harlem's&#13;
Cotton Club — for a run that&#13;
lasted 12 years and included&#13;
appearances with such stars as&#13;
Ethel Waters and Bill "Bojangles"&#13;
Robinson. Members of Hines' big&#13;
bands included Jonah Jones, Dizzy&#13;
Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Trummy&#13;
Young, Budd Johnson, Omer&#13;
Simeon and Wardell Young.&#13;
Hines' flair for finding and&#13;
developing local talent is no less&#13;
legendary. His protegees have&#13;
included Herb Jeffries, biny&#13;
Eckstine, Sarah Vaughan and&#13;
Johnny Hartman. Latest on that&#13;
list is his current featured vocalist&#13;
Marva Josie, whose multi-register&#13;
voice has won critical raves mixing&#13;
jazz feeling with a hint of her early&#13;
operatic training.&#13;
In recent years, Hines' records&#13;
have repeatedly won honors and&#13;
awards including the International&#13;
Critics Poll of Downbeat magazine,&#13;
which twice named him the&#13;
world's number one pianist. He&#13;
appears regularly in the nation's&#13;
top clubs, on network TV shows,&#13;
as guest artist with major&#13;
symphony orchestras, has made&#13;
three guest appearances at the&#13;
White House and toured the Soviet&#13;
Union, Europe, South America.&#13;
Japan and Australia. Following&#13;
the slight thaw in U.S. relations&#13;
with Castro, he was the first&#13;
American jazzman to play in Cuba&#13;
in 16 years.&#13;
'a nger&#13;
Vol. 8 No. 4&#13;
Sci-fi films featured&#13;
by Donald Scherrer&#13;
The U.W. Parkside Library&#13;
Learning Center, with the Racine&#13;
and Kenosha Public Libraries, is&#13;
sponsoring an upcoming science&#13;
fiction film series. "OUT OF&#13;
THIS WORLD." The Project was&#13;
made possible by funding from a&#13;
Wisconsin Humanities Committee&#13;
grant and local funds.&#13;
Each of the five weekly&#13;
programs will feature the screening&#13;
of a classic sci-fi film, followed&#13;
by a discussion of the film and&#13;
book led by Dr. Robert Canary.&#13;
The programs will be on Monday&#13;
and Tuesday nights; every Monday.&#13;
starting October 1 and&#13;
running through October 29. at&#13;
the Kenoha Public Library's West&#13;
Branch. 2419 63rd St.. at 7:30&#13;
P.M.; and every Tuesday night&#13;
from October 2-30 in Racine at the&#13;
Main Library. 75 7th St.. at 7&#13;
October 1 and 2&#13;
The Thing (1951; from the&#13;
novella Who Goes There? by John&#13;
W. Campbell Jr.)&#13;
October 8 and 9&#13;
Forbidden Planer (1956; Shakespeare's&#13;
The Tempest]&#13;
October 15 and 16&#13;
Journey to the Center of the&#13;
Earth (1959; novel by Jules Verne)&#13;
October 22 and 23&#13;
The Time Machine (1960; novel&#13;
by H.G. Wells)&#13;
October 29 and 30&#13;
Fahrenheit 451 (1966; novel by&#13;
Ray Bradbury)&#13;
1 he project is designed to&#13;
attract adults with an interest in&#13;
sci-11 films to libraries to stimylate&#13;
their interest in. and critical&#13;
appreciation of. the literature of&#13;
science fiction. Extra copies of&#13;
each book will be available for&#13;
loan at the public libraries.&#13;
P.M.. and please call 636-9241 for&#13;
reservations. &lt;*&#13;
Minority fellowships available&#13;
The Committee on Institutional&#13;
Cooperation has established two&#13;
fellowship programs designed to&#13;
increase the representation of&#13;
members of minority groups&#13;
among those who hold doctorates&#13;
in the social sciences and the&#13;
humanities.&#13;
Funded by grants front the Lilly&#13;
Endowment, Inc., and The&#13;
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation&#13;
that total more than $1 million,&#13;
the program will provide 25&#13;
two-year fellowships in the so'cial&#13;
sciences and 10 in the humanities&#13;
for the 1980-81 academic year. The&#13;
Committee on Institutional Cooperation&#13;
(CIC) is the academic&#13;
consortium of 11 Midwestern&#13;
universities — the Big Ten&#13;
universities and the University of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Anyone who has or will receive a&#13;
bachelor's degree by September.&#13;
1980 is eligible to apply for the&#13;
1980 competition.'Graduate students&#13;
outside the CIC may also&#13;
apply.&#13;
The application deadline is&#13;
January 15. 1980. Anyone desiring&#13;
detailed information about either&#13;
fellowship program should write&#13;
to: CIC Minorities Fellowships&#13;
Program. Kirkwood Hall 111.&#13;
Indiana University. Bloomington.&#13;
Indiana 47405. Between September&#13;
15 and January 15, prospective&#13;
applicants front outside Indiana&#13;
may call toll free between 9:00&#13;
a.m. and 5:00 p.m. EST for&#13;
information. I he number is&#13;
(800)45'-4420. Now in its third&#13;
year, the C 1C fellowships Program&#13;
in the social sciences makes&#13;
awards in anthropology.' economics.&#13;
geography, history, political&#13;
science, psychology, and&#13;
sociology. The humanities fellowships&#13;
arc available to students&#13;
seeking doctorates in American&#13;
studies, art history, classics,&#13;
comparative literature, English,&#13;
German, linguistics, music, philosophy.&#13;
religion. Romance languages.&#13;
and Slavic languages.&#13;
INSIDE. . .&#13;
Editorial reply:&#13;
Students to blame&#13;
Babies suffer—boycott Nestle'&#13;
4 A Little Victory Every Day4&#13;
Soccer team splits pair&#13;
J &#13;
reshroan&#13;
"Open; You should be a&#13;
•vote for who von want.'*&#13;
Bmnim-;l • fi;" '&#13;
:-&#13;
: e ihf &lt;:&gt;m P art|;S||&#13;
'' 1 &lt;&#13;
CM* let&#13;
I hav&#13;
much. Ji&#13;
choice.&#13;
of u.w. Parkside and they are solely responsible&#13;
editorial&#13;
Gassed about gas&#13;
by Jeff Stevens&#13;
weT,&#13;
hHingv&#13;
S&#13;
.&#13;
S&#13;
l!tUati0n iS&#13;
rf&#13;
tting ridicul&#13;
°&#13;
us&#13;
'&#13;
Th&lt;= Arabs think we're pigs, and&#13;
enrarinn in " ^ reSU,t " 3 de&#13;
"&#13;
eaSe &gt;" ^bution and an enraging increase in costs.&#13;
JT thC f Sh&#13;
°&#13;
uId be free t0 se» their commodity at&#13;
/!!? tever capacity they want&#13;
' but t0 raise the cost&#13;
almost beyond the average taxpayer's income in order to conserve is&#13;
outrageous. Again we see the majority become a minority because it's&#13;
money is less of an economic vote than that of a member of the elite.&#13;
Sure many of the rich worked hard for what they have and deserve it,&#13;
but if the earth is to survive, all people must share and share alike.&#13;
Offertory in church is, for the most part, collected in percentages of&#13;
peoples weekly incomes. This is the case with many things and should be&#13;
the case in saving gas. The oil companies shouldn't just raise the price at&#13;
one standard amount. If they have to raise it, they should charge on the&#13;
basis of gas mileage.&#13;
The car owners whose cars get less than ten miles to a gallon should&#13;
pay ten dollars a gallon, and the ones who have economical cars should&#13;
pay less.&#13;
One might say, "That's crazy! It'll just cause a crisis with the big car&#13;
business. Screw Chrysler! Forget the big car business. Maybe a system&#13;
like this would force these "gas hog producers" to meet certain gas&#13;
saving standards.&#13;
This type of cost system would force conservation of energy by&#13;
everyone, and the oil companies would still get the money they need for&#13;
more research.&#13;
Bo vou think that the Wisconsin&#13;
Primary should he open or closed?&#13;
editorial Reply&#13;
Students to blame&#13;
ATTENTION RANGER MEMBERS!&#13;
There will be a&#13;
General Membership Meeting&#13;
on Friday, Sept. 28lh at 6pm&#13;
in the Hunger general office&#13;
Elections for Directors to be held!&#13;
A" members must be there.&#13;
AI&#13;
Set It...&#13;
by Sue Stevens&#13;
With people all over the place&#13;
developing depression because&#13;
there aren't set roles for them,&#13;
you'd think that legislators would&#13;
try for some consistency in age&#13;
legislation.&#13;
At present there are bills being&#13;
introduced to up the drinking age&#13;
in Wisconsin from 18 to 19. Our&#13;
neighboring states already have&#13;
higher drinking ages and Illinois&#13;
has just passed legislation to raise&#13;
the legal age from 19 to 21.&#13;
When Wisconsin legislators&#13;
were faced with the problem of&#13;
minors from other states crossing&#13;
the border to drink, they thought&#13;
they better do something about it.&#13;
But what? Nobody can decide&#13;
which age would be fair and solve&#13;
alcohol problems in the schools.&#13;
Bills were introduced to change&#13;
the age for hard liquor to 19, and&#13;
leave it at 18 for beer and wine. No&#13;
good. Kids would be driving long&#13;
distances to get to beer bars, and&#13;
there'd be more chance for&#13;
accidents caused by drunk teens.&#13;
Another bill was introduced to&#13;
leave the drinking age at 18, but&#13;
change it to 19 for carry-outs so&#13;
that high schoolers wouldn't buy it&#13;
for their friends. Still no good.&#13;
What about those 18 year olds out&#13;
of school, would that be fair?&#13;
Some have suggested raising the&#13;
age all the way up to 21 again. No&#13;
way say many tavern owners. Too&#13;
by Tim Zbnmer&#13;
As I sat on my "throne" last&#13;
Tuesday night reading Doug&#13;
Edenhauser's opinion on Student&#13;
Government, I couldn't help but&#13;
smile. Someone had finally&#13;
realized that Student Government&#13;
at UW-Parkside is nothing more&#13;
than a big joke. Let's stop for a&#13;
moment and look at the situation.&#13;
At the time of this writing,&#13;
P.S.G.A. consists of a President,&#13;
Vice-President and six Senators.&#13;
There are 18 open Senate seats.&#13;
The two standing committees of&#13;
P.S.G.A. contain a total of 21&#13;
seats. Only five of these seats are&#13;
filled. That's pretty poor participation&#13;
on the part of students.&#13;
P.S.G.A. has done nothing&#13;
about the parking problem.&#13;
P.S.G.A. has done nothing about&#13;
the food service. P.S.G.A. has&#13;
done nothing about many of the&#13;
problems found on the Parkside&#13;
campus. It is a simple fact that the&#13;
administration will not listen to&#13;
the views of a student government&#13;
that has only seven members.&#13;
The next time you get to school&#13;
and can't find a parking space,&#13;
remember that YOU are to blame.&#13;
The next time you buy food on&#13;
campus and find that it doesn't&#13;
suit your taste, remember YOU&#13;
are to blame. The next time you&#13;
stand in line at registration for&#13;
hours, only to get classes you don't&#13;
want, remember YOU are to&#13;
blame. YOU, the student body of&#13;
UW-Parkside, are to blame&#13;
because you are content with&#13;
sitting back and letting things&#13;
continue as they are.&#13;
This campus is in strong need of&#13;
a student body that cares about&#13;
campus problems and is willing to&#13;
work at correcting those problems.&#13;
Student Government will be as&#13;
strong as you make it. Fall&#13;
elections will be held on October&#13;
17 and 18. Twelve Divisional&#13;
Senate seats will be open. In&#13;
addition, five S.U.F.A.C. seats and&#13;
five Union Operating Board seats&#13;
will be open. It is time for the&#13;
students of this campus to stop&#13;
complaining and start getting&#13;
involved. If we work together, we&#13;
can solve the problems faced by&#13;
this campus.&#13;
/tu :&gt;i/\rr&#13;
Linda Andersen. Charles Cliflon, Dan Galbraith, Nancy Mikaelian. Mike Murphy&#13;
Letters lo the Editor will he accepted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard size Paper&#13;
with one-inch margins. All letters must be signed. Names will he withheld lor valid reasons.&#13;
Include a telephone number Tor verification. Maximum length accepted is 500 words.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Friday at 10 am for publication the following Wednesday.&#13;
many of the bars and discos in the&#13;
area cater to younger crowds.&#13;
Their businesses would go down&#13;
the drain.&#13;
Well then, what about raising&#13;
the drinking age to 19 all the way&#13;
across the board. This seems to be&#13;
the best solution, but I believe it&#13;
causes just as many problems, if&#13;
not more, than it solves.&#13;
It's bad enough that the legal&#13;
age to have a driver's license is 16,&#13;
and that kids handling autos don't&#13;
have to be completely responsible&#13;
for their driving record because&#13;
they aren't considered adults.&#13;
It's hard enough to determine&#13;
which 17 year old should be tried&#13;
as an adult in criminal court and&#13;
which should be turned over to&#13;
juvenile authorities.&#13;
If an 18 year old is old enough to&#13;
vote, get married, be a criminal&#13;
offender, or to be drafted, is he an&#13;
adult?&#13;
If w e're to raise the drinking age&#13;
to 19,1 truly believe that we should&#13;
make it clear who is an adult and&#13;
who isn't. I think it's foolish to&#13;
slap 18 year olds on the back of&#13;
their hands for drinking, and then&#13;
tell them they must be responsible&#13;
for their actions.&#13;
If it means raising the legal age;&#13;
voting, marriage, drafting, and all&#13;
to 19 or even 21, it should be done.&#13;
Otherwise, there'll be even more&#13;
contusion in an already confused&#13;
world.&#13;
PHOTO STAFF&#13;
Mark Anderson, Rhonda Gerolmo, Jiin Knolek, Brian Passino&#13;
LAYOUT&#13;
Mary Arnold, NanPy Hernandez.&#13;
KM'UKIIM, STAFF&#13;
Liz Arkowski. Dave Cramer. Pete Cramer, Andrea Crandall, Dan Galbrailh&#13;
Harris, Ginger Helgesen. Renec' Jones, Mira Lochanski. Reed McMillai&#13;
Mcrlen, Kai Nail, Wall Remondini, Don Scherrer, Joe Sykora. Vicki Welle&#13;
Sue Slevens&#13;
Brian Felland&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Jeff Stevens&#13;
Kevin Padula&#13;
Mike Murphy&#13;
F.dilor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
• Advertising Manager &#13;
'News Briefs&#13;
Hanger Wednesday September 26, 1979 3&#13;
Bedfords&#13;
perform in Racine&#13;
Harpsichordist Frances Bedford&#13;
and oboist Monte Bedford will&#13;
present a concert of chamber&#13;
music at 8 p.m. on Saturday, Sept.&#13;
29, in St. Luke's Church, 614 Main&#13;
St., Racine. They will be assisted&#13;
by Laura Frisk playing continuo&#13;
cello.&#13;
Frances Bedford, an associate&#13;
professor of music at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
is active as a harpsichord recitalist,&#13;
charnber music performer and&#13;
soloist with orchestras. A specialist&#13;
in Baroque music, her training&#13;
included studies with London&#13;
harpsichordist Jane Clark and&#13;
master classes with Kenneth&#13;
Gilbert. She has written a number&#13;
of harpsichord articles for music&#13;
journals and is the author of two&#13;
books, the most recent on 20th&#13;
century harpsichord music.&#13;
Monte Bedford is oboist with&#13;
the Claremont Woodwind Quintet,&#13;
principal oboist with the Altoona,&#13;
Pa., Symphony and an assistant&#13;
professor of music at the&#13;
Pennsylvania State University. In&#13;
addition to his studies for the&#13;
master's degree in oboe performance&#13;
at UW-Madison, he has&#13;
studied with Robert Bloom and&#13;
Ronald Roseman of the New York&#13;
Philharmonic and with the&#13;
principal oboists of the National&#13;
Symphony and the St. Louis&#13;
Symphony.&#13;
Their free public program will&#13;
include Six Metamorphoses after&#13;
Ovid by Benjamin Britten for&#13;
unaccompanied oboe, harpsichord&#13;
solo sonatas by Thomas Arne and&#13;
Domenico Scarlatti and works by&#13;
Francois Couperin, J.H. Fiocco,&#13;
Johann Sebastian Bach and&#13;
Alessandro Marcello. Concertgoers&#13;
are invited to a reception in&#13;
the church library after the&#13;
concert.&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Tournament&#13;
Parkside's Women in Business&#13;
Club invites you to take a break&#13;
from your weekly Saturday routine&#13;
and join us in a volleyball&#13;
tournament on Saturday, October&#13;
6, at Sanders park. They challenge&#13;
any club on campus for this event&#13;
— or if you don't belong to any&#13;
organization but would like to&#13;
participate, feel free to form your&#13;
own team. A maximum of ten&#13;
players is required for each team&#13;
with a $15.00 charge per team to&#13;
enter.&#13;
Sign up for this tourney will be&#13;
on October 1 and 2 in Molinaro&#13;
Hall. WIB will provide free beer&#13;
for everyone and trophys will be&#13;
awarded to the top three teams.&#13;
Parkside&#13;
given land&#13;
The Renak-Polak Woods, one of&#13;
four off-campus natural areas&#13;
totalling more than 500 acres of&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
has been enlarged by a&#13;
gift of additional land from The&#13;
Nature Conservancy.&#13;
The Renak-Polak tract is&#13;
termed by naturalists a "Climax&#13;
Woods," characterized by the&#13;
presence of beech and maple trees&#13;
— estimated to be more than 200&#13;
years old — and by unusual&#13;
ground cover including the rare&#13;
ginseng.&#13;
The tract is located tn&#13;
Caledonia, slightly east of River&#13;
Road and west of the old North&#13;
Shore right of way and north of the&#13;
Five Mile Road.&#13;
Governments&#13;
attack PTA&#13;
The United Council of University&#13;
of Wisconsin Student Governments,&#13;
Inc. wishes to make public&#13;
its condemnation of the marijuana&#13;
propagandizing activities oy ixitain&#13;
Parent Teacher Associations&#13;
around the State of Wisconsin.&#13;
The PTA's are creating false&#13;
impressions about the so-called&#13;
'bad" effects of marijuana.&#13;
Recent programs, such as those&#13;
which sponsored high school&#13;
speakers who are adamantly&#13;
opposed to the consumption of&#13;
Dot. can be added to their list of&#13;
reactionary activities.&#13;
Kim Kachelmyer, Legislative&#13;
Affairs Director for United&#13;
Council, in reference to the pot&#13;
and paraphernalia bills pending in&#13;
the State Legislature, says, "The&#13;
PTA has not introduced any&#13;
legislation to ban the sale of&#13;
glasses used in the consumption of&#13;
alcohol. Do they condone a drug&#13;
(alcohol) that has been proven to&#13;
be more harmful than marijuana?"&#13;
&#13;
New home&#13;
for records&#13;
Records of Kemper Hall, a&#13;
private girls' school which operated&#13;
in Kenosha from 1870 to&#13;
1975, have a new home in the&#13;
Archives and Area Research&#13;
Center of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside LibraryLearning&#13;
Center.&#13;
Included are records from the&#13;
Board of Trustees, the Headmaster's&#13;
Office, the Principal's&#13;
Office, the Admissions Office,&#13;
Public Relations Office and&#13;
Business Office and a general&#13;
subject file covering such topics as&#13;
alumnae, fund raising, expansion&#13;
of buildings and grounds, recruitment&#13;
and student activities.&#13;
Red Cross&#13;
offers class&#13;
Cardio-pulmonary Resuscitation&#13;
Classes will be offered by&#13;
the American Red Cross on&#13;
campus in October. This year, the&#13;
RACE program, a one session,&#13;
three-hour course, is scheduled at&#13;
three different times, in order to&#13;
accomodate more people. This&#13;
course includes first aid for&#13;
choking, mouth to mouth breathing,&#13;
and one rescue CPR. A&#13;
certificate is awarded at the&#13;
successful completion of a threehour&#13;
session.&#13;
The dates are:&#13;
Tuesday, October 9, 1979. 9AM&#13;
to 12 noon&#13;
Wednesday, October 10. 1979,&#13;
1PM to 4PM&#13;
Thursday, October 11, 1979,&#13;
6:30PM to 9:30PM&#13;
Please sign up by calling ext.&#13;
2366 or stopping at the Campus&#13;
Health Office WLLC D 198.&#13;
Energy Fair&#13;
on Saturday&#13;
The "Midwest Alternative Energy&#13;
Fair" will take place in Zion, 111.&#13;
at Shiloh Park this Saturday,&#13;
September 29th. During the day&#13;
there will be exhibits, speakers,&#13;
music, and rallying. 1 he rally will&#13;
begin at 10 A.M. in Shiloh Park&#13;
where many people win camp tne&#13;
night before. Music will be&#13;
provided beginning at 11 A.M.,&#13;
and the speakers will start at noon.&#13;
At 1:30 P.M., there will be a&#13;
march to the Zion Nuclear Plant.&#13;
For more information, call the&#13;
Chiwaukee Radioactivists at 587-&#13;
1510 or 689-3585.&#13;
GCT MCk TO MSICS&#13;
JOIN&#13;
BCOkY&#13;
CO-OP&#13;
-N&#13;
C.S.C.'s Book Co-op is operated by&#13;
students and depends on people to drop&#13;
off their used textbooks, paperbacks and&#13;
albums, to sell to other students. In a sense&#13;
we act as an exchange center for students&#13;
and our system allows you to either make&#13;
or save the maximum amount of money&#13;
you can on your textbooks. Want to get rid&#13;
of your old albums? C.S.C.'s Book Co-op&#13;
is the best place. — You set your own&#13;
price! On all of the Book Co-op's services,&#13;
members are not charged, non-members&#13;
pay 15% over member price. Help us out&#13;
this year and you'll see the benefits of cooperation.&#13;
&#13;
FAL L&#13;
M O N&#13;
TUE - 1 to 3&#13;
HOURS&#13;
W E D - 1 to 7&#13;
THUR - 2 to 5&#13;
r&#13;
FOOD:&#13;
The Food Co-op offers hundreds of items&#13;
of food including: milk, bread, yogurt,&#13;
fresh produce, natural cheeses, grains,&#13;
nuts, dried fruit, vitamins, juices, frozen&#13;
foods and many canned and packaged&#13;
goods. Stop in and look around. We are&#13;
proud of the pleasant atmosphere and we&#13;
have convenient hours for all students,&#13;
including night students. Parking is available&#13;
right in front. Support this co-op. it is&#13;
one of the most unique services at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
F ALL H OU R S&#13;
M O N 10 to 6&#13;
TUE - W ED -T H U R :. . . 1 0 to 10&#13;
F R I &amp; S AT 9 to 6&#13;
CW" . y/f ' '.'J T- ' y»'• - 7 'U' ; »' •!»&#13;
T h e C o - o p e r a t i ve S e r v i c es&#13;
Collective is a not-for-profit student&#13;
organization at Parkside. A membership&#13;
in C.S.C. allows member&#13;
benefits in all C.S.C. projects&#13;
including the Book and Food Coops.&#13;
A monthly Newsletter is also&#13;
sent to each C S.C. member. Sign&#13;
up this year.&#13;
New Student&#13;
R a te&#13;
$3.00 / yr.&#13;
F A C U L T Y - S T A F F&#13;
ALUM M l $ 7 . 0 0 / y r . &#13;
4 Wednesday September 26, 1979 Ranger&#13;
Babies suffer - boycott Nestle&#13;
by bv friends friends nf of tho the _ _ . $« .« . ^&#13;
food &amp; book co-ops&#13;
There is a malady in Asia,&#13;
Africa and Latin America that&#13;
over 10 million babies fed on&#13;
infant formula suffer every year. It&#13;
is called "bottle baby disease" and&#13;
its symptoms are diarrhea,&#13;
malnutrition, brain damage and&#13;
even death. Over 27,000 babies&#13;
will fall victim to bottle baby&#13;
disease today.&#13;
Multi-national corporations&#13;
such as Nestle, Abbott/Ross Labs,&#13;
American Home Products and&#13;
Bristol Myers contribute significantly&#13;
to that problem by&#13;
promoting the use of milk formula&#13;
products to mothers who could&#13;
breastfeed.&#13;
In places like Singapore, and&#13;
other areas around the world&#13;
where promotion is intense,&#13;
breastfeeding rates among poor&#13;
families have plummeted from&#13;
71% in 1951 to 5% in 1971. The&#13;
costs in lives is enormous. Studies&#13;
in Chile, for example, show death&#13;
rates two to three times higher for&#13;
bottle fed babies.&#13;
The 1978 World Health&#13;
Organization explains why: The&#13;
probability of mothers having&#13;
Chiwaukee News&#13;
Presents&#13;
The NCSA Ski Week&#13;
January 1 - 9,1980&#13;
to&#13;
Big Sky Montana&#13;
$250.00 Includes: $50.00 Deposit&#13;
Due Oct. 10&#13;
Sign up in Union 209&#13;
Bus Transportation&#13;
Lodging&#13;
Lift Tickets&#13;
Parties &amp; Races.&#13;
access to clean water is&#13;
low and preparation of&#13;
formula which requires clean&#13;
water, good sanitation, and literate&#13;
parents to follow printed instructions&#13;
in areas where sewage runs in&#13;
the streets and poverty is severe&#13;
presents problems. Mothers who&#13;
become dependent upon breastmilk&#13;
substitutes are often unable&#13;
to purchase the quantity of&#13;
the commercially prepared product&#13;
that would be needed. Formula&#13;
is thus over diluted.&#13;
ACADEMY OF BATON &amp; DANCE&#13;
Headquarters for "Gym Kin" Body Suits,&#13;
Gymnastic Suits, Tights&#13;
— Ballet Shoes — Tap Shoes —&#13;
All Dancing Supplies&#13;
Hey Parkside... NEXT MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
TH^E GUYS CAN SCORE&#13;
DINNER FOR YOU.&#13;
OCT. 1&#13;
NEW ENGLAND&#13;
vs.&#13;
GREEN BAY&#13;
Stretching formulas because&#13;
they cost up to 60% of the family&#13;
income is common and leads to&#13;
severely nutritionally impotent&#13;
food. The economics of little fuel&#13;
for sterilization of bottles and the&#13;
lack of refrigeration complicate&#13;
what is sometimes overly burdensome.&#13;
&#13;
Nestle, a giant food corporation&#13;
based in Switzerland, wholly owns&#13;
its U.S. subsidiaries: Nestle Co.,&#13;
Stouffer, and Libby.&#13;
Nestle employs "milk nurses" who&#13;
have uniforms on to sell their&#13;
products directly to mothers on a&#13;
commission basis. Nestle supplies&#13;
colorful posters and free medical&#13;
equipment to hospitals; they give&#13;
gifts to doctors to promote their&#13;
endorsements. In some areas they&#13;
continue to advertise through the&#13;
mass media. Their aggressive&#13;
campaign has persuaded millions&#13;
of women to stop breast feeding&#13;
and use formula.&#13;
These babies with difficulty&#13;
enough surviving don't need&#13;
exploitive marketing and merchandising&#13;
to induce their mothers&#13;
to let her milk dry up in a week&#13;
and then have to rely on formula&#13;
out of necessity. The Infant&#13;
Formula Action Coalition,&#13;
(INFACT), a nationwide coalition&#13;
of consumer, women's and&#13;
religious groups, has called a&#13;
boycott of all Nestle's products&#13;
until this company stops all&#13;
promotion which contributes to&#13;
this disaster.&#13;
For over eight years nutritionists,&#13;
doctors and consumer groups&#13;
have presented reports to Nestle&#13;
showing that their promotion is&#13;
contributing to a "bottle baby&#13;
disaster." Despite these years of&#13;
mounting criticism including&#13;
letters, delegations and even a&#13;
lawsuit, they have made only the&#13;
smallest changes in its promotion&#13;
methods.&#13;
What can we do? Two things.&#13;
First, urge the support for The&#13;
Infant Nutrition Act of 1979 !&#13;
The second thing you can do&#13;
is speak to Nestle in the language&#13;
they understand. BOYCOTT&#13;
NESTLE!&#13;
BOYCOTT NESTLE LIST:&#13;
CHOCOLATES: Nestle's&#13;
CRUNCH; Toll House Chips;&#13;
Nestle's Quik; Hot Cocoa Mix;&#13;
Choco'lite; Choco-Bake; $100,000&#13;
Candy Bar; Price's Chocolates; Go&#13;
Ahead Bar&#13;
COFFEES AND TEAS: Taster's&#13;
Choice; Nescafe; Nestea; Decaf;&#13;
Sunrise; Pero&#13;
WINES: Beringer Bros.; Los&#13;
Hermanos; Crosse and Blackwell&#13;
CHEESES: Swiss Knight; Wispride;&#13;
Gerber Cheeses; Old Fort;&#13;
Provalone Lacate'.li; Cherry Hill;&#13;
Roger's&#13;
PACKAGED FRUITS, SOUPS,&#13;
ETC.: Libby's; Stouffer frozen&#13;
foods; Souptime; Maggi Soups;&#13;
Crosse and Blackwell&#13;
HOTELS AND RESTAURANTS:&#13;
Stouffer; Rusty Scupper&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS: L'Oreal Cosmetics;&#13;
Nestle Cookie Mixes; Deer&#13;
Park Mountain Spring Water;&#13;
Pine Hill Crystal Water; Kavli&#13;
Crispbread; McVities; Keiller;&#13;
James Keller &amp; Son, Ltd.;&#13;
Contique by Alcon; lonax by&#13;
Owen Labs; Lancome.&#13;
For further information about&#13;
the boycott or any related issue,&#13;
contact: Infant Formula Action&#13;
Coalition (INFACT). 1701 University&#13;
Ave., SE. Minneapolis.&#13;
Minnesota 55414. (612) 331-3437.&#13;
You can win from $1 to $25 in food purchase coupons this week&#13;
" »&#13;
y&#13;
is&#13;
n&#13;
i?7o&#13;
r&#13;
art&#13;
FOO,b&#13;
,&#13;
al1&#13;
" WUh US&#13;
" Y°&#13;
U 961 8 ,ree 9&#13;
ame «cket e^ time you Visit a participating campus food location. No skill required.&#13;
Union Dining Room, Union Square Grill and WLLC Coffee Shoppe&#13;
and be eligible for additional Half-time prizes. Watch the game on Union Square's T Scr&#13;
3:oo pm of the next mqni &#13;
'A Little Victory Every Day' ~ Coming Events -&#13;
&gt; Ijannn l»nnr tile 72 llOIir Hfhif U . ni&gt;k(lut' Want "1*1 by Renee Jones&#13;
Is it easier to die than to cope?&#13;
This question is asked by many&#13;
women who suffer post-partum&#13;
depression. Now to ask yourself,&#13;
what is post-partum depression?&#13;
The post-partum (afterbirth)&#13;
period is the time after the baby's&#13;
birth, the stay-in the hospital and&#13;
the time period adjusting to&#13;
becoming a mother.&#13;
Last March, Laurence Kruckman,&#13;
assistant professor of&#13;
Anthropology, along with Sharon&#13;
Svendsen and June Craig, U.W.&#13;
Parkside students majoring in&#13;
Social Anthropology, began the&#13;
making of the post-partum&#13;
depression film. The idea for the&#13;
film occured when Kruckman was&#13;
doing his discertation in South&#13;
America on peasant women. He&#13;
became interested in the aspects of&#13;
child bearing and changes women&#13;
go through.&#13;
There are three stages of&#13;
post-partum depression. The first&#13;
is the 72 hour blues, which occurs&#13;
•" the hospital. The mother goes&#13;
through a period of crying, has&#13;
frightening dreams and doubts her&#13;
role as a parent. Ninety percent of&#13;
womer have this type of stress.&#13;
The second stage, also called&#13;
blues, occurs three to five months&#13;
later. According to Kruckman,&#13;
this stage of depression is more&#13;
emotional. It causes tremendous&#13;
exhaustion, insomnia, headaches,&#13;
rapid change of moods and more&#13;
crying. One researcher calls it&#13;
miserable sleepiness." Kruckman&#13;
stated, "Women who have&#13;
children out of wedlock and the&#13;
women who don't relate well to&#13;
their mothers are the ones who&#13;
suffer most."&#13;
The third stage is psychotic&#13;
depression, which is related to lack&#13;
of support. This stage of&#13;
depression is usually controlled by&#13;
drugs. Kruckman also stated that&#13;
"Women who are the most excited&#13;
are those who will suffer most&#13;
because they will go from this&#13;
tremendous high to this tremendous&#13;
low. Many women are&#13;
unaware ot how to cope with&#13;
post-partum depression mainly&#13;
because the doctors will tell you&#13;
'you'll get over it'," said Kruckman.&#13;
" That's also the reason little&#13;
research is done."&#13;
Kruckman, Svendsen and Craig&#13;
worked closely with a group of&#13;
women at Harper College in&#13;
Palatine, Illinois. The group&#13;
coping with the problems of&#13;
having children is the panel of&#13;
women in the film. The women&#13;
discuss the different problems they&#13;
experience and how they eventually&#13;
learned to cope with themselves.&#13;
As one of the ladies put it, "You&#13;
have to give yourself a little victory&#13;
every day." Which brings us to the&#13;
title of the film — A Little Victory&#13;
Every Day. The 37-minute film&#13;
will soon be released to the library&#13;
so all studenfs interested in&#13;
viewing it can do so.&#13;
II you re one of the women who&#13;
suffered from post-partum depression,&#13;
give yourself A Little Victory&#13;
Every Day.&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 26&#13;
MOVIF. "Tile Fantastic Animation Festival" will be shown at 7 pm in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission at the door is SI.50. Coupon tickets are&#13;
available at the Union Information; Center with prices of $10.00 for 10&#13;
admissions and $15.00 lor 20 admissions. Sponsored by the Kinesis&#13;
Film Series.&#13;
Friday, Sept. 28 ,&#13;
MOVIE "Who is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe" will be shown at 8 pm in&#13;
the Union Cinema. Admission at the door is $ 1.50 for Parkside students&#13;
and $1.50 lor a guest. Sponsored by PAH.&#13;
DANCE a. 8 pm in Union Square. Admission will be charged at the door.&#13;
Sponsored by the Minority Student Union.&#13;
SF.MINAR File Science-Chemistry Seminar Series — Sue Kristopeil and&#13;
Larry Johansen. Subject — summer research projects.&#13;
Saturday. Sept. 29&#13;
MOVIES "Sounder" and "Kud/u" will h e show n a. 7 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
k piogram is open lo the public. Admission at the door is SI 50&#13;
Sponsored hv the Kinesis Film Series.&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
A&#13;
by Edith Isenberg&#13;
In last week's column, you were&#13;
given the opportunity to take&#13;
"Your Lifestyle Profile" and I&#13;
promised that I would share with&#13;
you the suggestions prepared by&#13;
the Canadian Department of&#13;
Health and Welfare for improving&#13;
your score. If your score was not to&#13;
your satisfaction, take a few&#13;
minutes to review their suggestions&#13;
which are printed below.&#13;
Exercise&#13;
While there'p nothing like a&#13;
good physical workout to tire you&#13;
out, lack of exercise can make you&#13;
feel equally fatigued while reducing&#13;
your muscle tone and&#13;
contributing to obesity (even when&#13;
you eat moderately). The chances&#13;
of suffering from certain forms of&#13;
heart disease may also be&#13;
increased by inadequate physical&#13;
activity. Exercise is an ideal way to&#13;
relieve tension and stress and have&#13;
fun at the same time. If you are&#13;
otherwise in good health, regular&#13;
vigorous physical activity for at&#13;
least 30 minutes three times a&#13;
week will help shape up a healthier&#13;
you in a matter of months.&#13;
Nutrition&#13;
The answer to overweight is not&#13;
a crash diet. Instead, a sensibly&#13;
balanced intake of moderate&#13;
amounts of food combined with&#13;
increased physical activity will&#13;
reduce your weight and generally&#13;
increase your sense of well-being.&#13;
Alcohol&#13;
Just three glasses of wine per&#13;
day, three pints of beer or three&#13;
drinks of hard liquor can place you&#13;
in the danger zone for possible&#13;
alcoholism or cirrhosis of the liver.&#13;
If you cannot moderate your&#13;
drinking by yourself, consult a&#13;
community health organization or&#13;
obtain professional advice. Fifty&#13;
per cent of all fatal motor vehicle&#13;
accidents involve alcohol. If you&#13;
drink, don't drive.&#13;
Tobacco&#13;
The smoking habit is a hard one&#13;
to break, but if you can quit before&#13;
any disease develops, your chances&#13;
of contracting lung cancer and&#13;
other respiratory diseases as well&#13;
as heart disease are considerably&#13;
reduced. If you cannot quit, try to&#13;
cut down on your daily consumption,&#13;
reduce inhaling and switch to&#13;
low tar and nicotine brands. Even&#13;
if some form of lung disease is&#13;
present, reducing or halting your&#13;
tobacco intake may improve your&#13;
condition so that you feel better,&#13;
breathe more freely and have more&#13;
energy.&#13;
Road and Water Safety&#13;
You can reduce your chances of&#13;
death or injury while riding in a&#13;
motor vehicle by over 50 per cent&#13;
simply by buckling your seatbelt.&#13;
Maintaining the speed limit is&#13;
another means of controlling your&#13;
vehicle and your life. Other&#13;
self-induced risks such as drinking&#13;
or taking drugs which impair&#13;
alertness at the wheel endanger&#13;
both your own life and that of&#13;
others. Water accidents can be&#13;
averted by wearing life preservers&#13;
while boating, swimming with a&#13;
"buddy", and never diving into&#13;
unknown waters.&#13;
to&#13;
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New Book Gives Straight Talk on a&#13;
Career in Selling Life Insurance&#13;
If you qualify, you can start right now — while&#13;
you're still in college. It's a super part-time job,&#13;
and you learn while you earn. You can find out if&#13;
it's the right career path for you, before you graduate.&#13;
It's free! Send for your copy today.&#13;
Donald I brink. ("I.U&#13;
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Name ,&#13;
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starting Sept. 12&#13;
RANGER will offer&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
deadline: every thursday&#13;
at 10 am&#13;
STUDENT-STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE&#13;
Any registered U.W.P. student or student organization is qualified to insert a classified line ad&#13;
in the Ranger at no cost if under or equilavent to 10 words.&#13;
ganger WLLC D139 &#13;
6 Wednesday September 26, 1979 Ranger&#13;
continued1&#13;
p , rFirvoim iitnhig erPaarrmkiwng wLoi t&#13;
Loming Events Prison people are problems&#13;
A/E SSEERRIIEES presents Ear, "Fartha" Hinaas in aocncar, a, .8 pm min ,he |~&#13;
SR,rSmer&#13;
Am THEA,RE- ™ E,S •* "&#13;
AIIABIE * "T *•" -•&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 30&#13;
M0Cinem'aS&#13;
°&#13;
U°&#13;
der&#13;
" rCPM'&#13;
ed " 1:10 pm in ,he Uni&#13;
°"&#13;
MOVIE "Who is Killing .ha Graal Chefs of Europe" wil, ba repeated a.&#13;
7.30 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Oct. 1&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 ndon in Union 106. Prof. James McKeown will talk on&#13;
Impressions of Chicago Politics". The program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
MEETING I PHELTA THI Organizational meeting over a few beers. 7 pm in&#13;
the Union Square.&#13;
Red's Roller Rink&#13;
7220 67th Street&#13;
ADULTS ONLY&#13;
SKATING SESSION&#13;
SUNDAY EVENINGS&#13;
7:30-10:30 PM&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
Admission $2.00&#13;
Skate Rental .75&#13;
•N THE&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
SQUARE Oct. 1&#13;
New England&#13;
V8.&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
WHILE WATCHING THE GAME&#13;
WIN ADDITIONAL PRIZES&#13;
GN UNION SQUARE'S T&#13;
SCREEN!&#13;
A=5 BEER OR SODA PITCHER TICKETS&#13;
B=4 BEER OR SODA PITCHER TICKETS&#13;
C=3 BEER OR SODA PITCHER TICKETS&#13;
D &amp; ENLARGE BEER OR SODA &amp; TUB OF POPCORN&#13;
REDEEMABLE ONLY AT HA LF-TIME&#13;
IN UNION SOU ARE&#13;
G. Helgeson&#13;
Now that some of you&#13;
hot-headed idealists have calmed&#13;
down a bit from what Kenosha&#13;
News called your "uninterrupted&#13;
parade of opposition" to the idea&#13;
of building a correctional facility&#13;
on Parkside land, let's think about&#13;
this idea logically for a moment.&#13;
As soon as I heard about the&#13;
idea of putting cons next-door to&#13;
students, I thought, "Here's a&#13;
possibility that will give this&#13;
university's outreach missionaries&#13;
something they can really get their&#13;
teeth into."&#13;
No more of this small-time stuff.&#13;
Recruiting non-traditional students&#13;
from the ranks of small-town&#13;
mid-America for a commuterschool&#13;
like Parkside is, you have to&#13;
admit, a little in the line of&#13;
recruiting groupies for the Rolling&#13;
Stones from an all-girls boarding&#13;
school. In both cases, most of the&#13;
recruits are only too eager to catch&#13;
up on what they've been missing&#13;
anyway.&#13;
But, give those missionaries a&#13;
whole institution just bursting full&#13;
of tax-evaders, petty theives,&#13;
rapists, and all sorts of educational&#13;
dropouts. A real challenge — puts&#13;
me in mind of Billy Graham&#13;
crusading in hell.&#13;
However, all these potential&#13;
recruits will just be sitting around&#13;
the old cell-block, a captive&#13;
audience with absolutely nothing&#13;
to do but prepare themselves for a&#13;
career in computer science or&#13;
business administration when&#13;
their time is served.&#13;
This could be a real test for&#13;
outreach, but I have faith in them.&#13;
They'll pass with flying colors.&#13;
It's just that I know their&#13;
methods so well. First, a few&#13;
innocent postcards in the mailbox.&#13;
Soon followed by a large manila&#13;
envelope containing a blank form&#13;
and a substantial amount of slick&#13;
propoganda. Then, a day or so&#13;
later — they like to give you some&#13;
time to think about it — a letter or&#13;
two appealing to conscience ("You&#13;
intimated interest in attending&#13;
UW-P. Yet, we have not received&#13;
your completed application or&#13;
transcripts. We believed you were&#13;
sincerely interested in becoming a&#13;
seeker of knowledge and sent you&#13;
the necessary forms. Please don't&#13;
break our trust.")&#13;
And then, finally, they start to&#13;
get rough. They send, by registered&#13;
mail, a menacing little card&#13;
commanding: YOU WILL REGISTER&#13;
AT MAIN PLACE ON&#13;
THIS DATE.&#13;
I mean, I felt compelled to&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISUDNSIN-PARKSIDE'&#13;
•4 SEMESTER BREAK IN&#13;
JANUARY 3-10, 1980&#13;
FROM $399 COMPLETE — INCLUDES:&#13;
• ROUND TRIP GROUND TRANSFERS WHILE IN MEXICO&#13;
• SEVEN NIGHTS LODGING "HACIENDA DEL LOBO"&#13;
• ROUND TRIP JET AIR VIA PAN AM 707 C HARTER&#13;
• ALL TIPS &amp; TAKES (CHAMBERMAIDS, B ELLHOPS, E TC )&#13;
• GROUP ESCORT &amp; ORIENTATION MATERIALS&#13;
For Complete Information &amp; Application Forms Contact Union 209 or call: 553-2200&#13;
register. The night before I did, in&#13;
fact, register, I had a very strange&#13;
dream about a huge man wearing&#13;
a funny little flat hat with a tassle.&#13;
He was breaking my little finger&#13;
and telling me the Boss was going&#13;
to be very disappointed if he didn't&#13;
see me at registration.&#13;
Now don't get me wrong. I don't&#13;
hold a grudge or anything. I like&#13;
Parkside fine. But those outreach&#13;
people are really good at their jobs.&#13;
I bet they'd have those cons&#13;
skipping rope to the tune of&#13;
"Macho, macho student, I wanna&#13;
be a macho student" in no time.&#13;
And, once you think about it,&#13;
what is so distasteful about&#13;
attending college courses with&#13;
cons? Real students won't have to&#13;
eat with them, or use the same&#13;
bathrooms or anything. Just sit in&#13;
the same classroom, listen to the&#13;
same lecture and breathe the same&#13;
air.&#13;
Once they're here, I really can't&#13;
see too many problems involved in&#13;
integrating this new type of non&#13;
traditional into student life. As a&#13;
matter of fact, there could be a lot&#13;
of important advantages in store&#13;
for the UW system, Parkside, and&#13;
the students, not to mention the&#13;
cons.&#13;
First of all, the whole UW&#13;
system will greatly enhance its&#13;
reputation by being the first state&#13;
system to roll out the old red&#13;
carpet to people from all walks of&#13;
life. Proponents of equal rights in&#13;
higher education will stand up to&#13;
applaud the UW system for this&#13;
noble move toward expanding&#13;
higher educational facilities to&#13;
meet the needs of the environment.&#13;
They'll probably even call it&#13;
"humanistic." The UW system&#13;
will become a model of the ideals&#13;
for which all other state systems&#13;
strive.&#13;
Parkside will profit in two ways.&#13;
With the appearance of cons on&#13;
campus, the average cumulative&#13;
Parkside student gradepoint will&#13;
rise. Unlike most students, those&#13;
cons will have nothing to do after&#13;
classes but study. And their grades&#13;
will reflect that.&#13;
Also, with a little cooperation&#13;
from the warden (plus a lot of&#13;
coercion from the guards),&#13;
Parkside will have a guaranteed&#13;
enrollment for many years to&#13;
come.&#13;
Cons on campus could even be a&#13;
personal boon to the rest of the&#13;
student body. Almost everyone has&#13;
heard the business world's stock&#13;
criticism of universities: college&#13;
graduates do not leave school&#13;
prepared to work.&#13;
Well, I'm sure that after a few&#13;
years spent with cons, most&#13;
Parkside students will be wellprepared&#13;
for the business world's&#13;
rat race. After all, they'll be&#13;
learning first-hand from drug&#13;
traffickers, embezzlers and political&#13;
criminals. What better way to&#13;
learn a trade than from an old pro.&#13;
And dorms? It has been said&#13;
that Parkside's lack of campus life&#13;
goes hand in hand with its lack of&#13;
student housing. Here's my&#13;
solution! Since both the physical&#13;
tacilities and the atmosphere of&#13;
the two are so similar, the prison&#13;
facilities could double as forms.&#13;
No problems with setting residence&#13;
hall curfews, regulating parties or&#13;
preventing illicit sex in Parkside's&#13;
dorms!&#13;
So you see, everyone would&#13;
benefit from building a correctional&#13;
tacil'ty on Parkside land. Don't&#13;
you agree? &#13;
Parkside soccer&#13;
team splits pair&#13;
H voi n n o n n n A ^&#13;
Hanger Wednesday September 26, 1979 7&#13;
Having an up and down week&#13;
has been the history of many of&#13;
Parkside's sport teams of late, and&#13;
Hal Henderson's men's soccer&#13;
team is no exception.&#13;
Last Wednesday the Rangers&#13;
hosted Trinity College and made&#13;
quick work of them. Junior Karl&#13;
Goetz scored the first goal of the&#13;
game with assists from Brad Faust&#13;
and Lee Cielonko. Trinity was&#13;
never to recover.&#13;
The final score of the game was&#13;
3-1 as Trinity scored their only&#13;
goal with three minutes left in the&#13;
game. In the meantime freshman&#13;
Beejan Beheshti scored two goals,&#13;
both of them with assists from Lee&#13;
Cielonko.&#13;
Saturday proved to be a&#13;
different story alltogether as&#13;
Parkside hosted a tough UWMadison&#13;
team.&#13;
"We stubbed our toe. Our youth&#13;
caught up with us, said Henderson."&#13;
"It was just a case of&#13;
their juniors beating our freshmen&#13;
to the ball."&#13;
Statistically the game looked&#13;
even as Wisconsin barely outshot&#13;
Parkside 23-18. Actually though&#13;
the game was no contest as the&#13;
Rangers scored their only goal on a&#13;
penalty kick by Earl Campbell.&#13;
"The toughest part of our&#13;
schedule is coming up. If we can&#13;
win halt ot the next six games we&#13;
should be alright," said Henderson.&#13;
&#13;
Parkside's next match will be&#13;
Wednesday at Aurora College and&#13;
Friday at divisional opponent&#13;
UW-Whitewater. The next home&#13;
game is October 10 against&#13;
Lawrence University.&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Women win three&#13;
KAII1BOW&#13;
Coach Linda Henderson's&#13;
women's volleyball team had a&#13;
successful week last week winning&#13;
all three of the matches they took&#13;
part in and running their season&#13;
record to 5-3.&#13;
Last Tuesday against Concordia&#13;
was more of a practice as the girls&#13;
won the best of five match in three&#13;
straight games.&#13;
Saturday they traveled to&#13;
Marquette to face two tough teams&#13;
in UW-Platteville and Marquette.&#13;
Henderson said that Platteville&#13;
proved to be tougher than she&#13;
thought they would be, as the&#13;
Rangers lost the first game 17-15.&#13;
GIFTS&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
JEWELRY&#13;
uptown&#13;
kenosha&#13;
Two previously injured starters,&#13;
Roxanne Nelson and Liz Venci&#13;
returned to the starting lineup to&#13;
help the Rangers take the next two&#13;
games 15-8 and 15-9. Freshman&#13;
Sheri Festge led the way for&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Marquette, with their star&#13;
player out with pneumonia, proved&#13;
to be bo match as the Rangers won&#13;
the contest in two games 15-8 and&#13;
16-14. Parkside was paced by&#13;
Cindy Henschel and Tess Manzano.&#13;
Junior Terri Bieser turned in&#13;
a fine defensive performance..&#13;
The Rangers will travel to East&#13;
Lansing, Michigan to take part in&#13;
the tough Michigan State Invitational&#13;
this weekend.&#13;
THE GREAT CHEFS&#13;
OF EUROPE?&#13;
Friday, Sept. 28 8:00 pm&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 30 7:30 pm&#13;
Union Cinema Admission $1.50&#13;
open, joggers and grade school&#13;
divisions.&#13;
A $25 bond will be awarded to&#13;
the first male and the female&#13;
finisher with second through 25th&#13;
placers receiving gift certificates.&#13;
The top three in each age group,&#13;
exclusive of those finishing in the&#13;
top 25, will also receive gift&#13;
certificates.&#13;
Two mile race awards will&#13;
include gift certificates to the first&#13;
male and female finishers in each&#13;
age classification and trophies to&#13;
the second and third placers in&#13;
each age group.&#13;
All pre-entered runners will&#13;
receive a T-shirt at race&#13;
registration as will late entries&#13;
while shirts last.&#13;
Registration is $5 for each race&#13;
if received by Sept. 26 at&#13;
UW-Parkside Physical Education&#13;
Building, $6 after that date and at&#13;
late registration beginning at 8&#13;
a.m. on race day.&#13;
For more information, telephone&#13;
(414)553-2245.&#13;
By ANHEU SER-BU SCH, INC. • ST. I O U I S • INC S E 1 8 9 o&#13;
Distributed by E.F. MADRIGRANO&#13;
1831 -55th St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wise.&#13;
658-3553&#13;
Michelob&#13;
NOW AVAILABLE "ON TAP" AT UNION SQUARE&#13;
UW-Parkside and the KenoshaWest&#13;
Rotary Club will sponsor a&#13;
10,000 meter road race Sunday,&#13;
Oct. 7, for the benefit of the Scout&#13;
Rescue Squad, a volunteer&#13;
organization that provides emergency&#13;
medical services at many&#13;
group functions.&#13;
The 10,000 meter race will be at&#13;
11 a.m. and will follow the same&#13;
route through Petrifying Springs&#13;
Park and the UW-Parkside&#13;
campus that the July race took. It&#13;
will be preceded by a two mile race&#13;
at 10 a.m.&#13;
Men's age groups in the 10,000&#13;
include the following: 18 and&#13;
under, 24 and under, 29 and&#13;
under, 30-34, 35-39, 40-44, 45-49,&#13;
50-55 and 56 and over; for women,&#13;
29 and under, 30-39 and 40 and&#13;
over. The two mile race will have&#13;
Rotary&#13;
sponsors run&#13;
Mini&#13;
vacation?&#13;
Weekends&#13;
were made&#13;
forMichelok &#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
Look out pab here comes the&#13;
I RANGER, packed with power from&#13;
[twinkle toes, harvard, tiger and&#13;
[two ton. bring enough cash to pay&#13;
[for the bet. signed, no stranger.&#13;
[RARE opportunity for the right&#13;
[Parkside student. Retired college&#13;
[professor requires part-time help,&#13;
[ideal for teacher, student or nurse.&#13;
[Chores include making breakfast,&#13;
[walking, reading. No housework.&#13;
[Excellent chance to advance&#13;
[one's education. Call afternoon or&#13;
[evenings 694-2251.&#13;
[For Sale: 24' above ground pool.&#13;
[New filter. $200. Phone 639-0861&#13;
latter 6.&#13;
Help wanted: Male student for&#13;
maintenance work. Hours 2 to 4&#13;
Mon.-Sat. Koffe Pot Restaurant.&#13;
4914 7th Ave. Phone 657-7911.&#13;
Spanish tutoring available. Phone&#13;
654-5724. Call 7 to 9 p.m.&#13;
Car: Honda Civic Hatchback.&#13;
1978, red, excellent condition.&#13;
14,800 miles, $3,995 firm. Phone&#13;
554-3271 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
639-9272 after 5 p.m.&#13;
Dog: Setter/Retriever. Free to&#13;
good home, housebroken and&#13;
lovable, has shots. Call Clyde&#13;
Caudill 654-4966 after 6 p.m.&#13;
COLLEGE STUDENTS&#13;
Improve your grades! Send $1.001&#13;
for your up-to-date, 306 page col-1&#13;
legiate research paper catalog.&#13;
10,250 p a per s on file. A l l&#13;
academic subjects.&#13;
Research Assistance, 11322 Idaho&#13;
Ave. #206Z, Los Angeles. CA&#13;
90025 (213)477-8226.&#13;
DANIMAL-You are to be taxed this&#13;
coming first week of October.&#13;
Danzahrnybphrd. S. P. Gumby.&#13;
Hope you had a very happy 25th,&#13;
Keith. Love, D.H.&#13;
8 Wednesday September 26, 1979 Ranger&#13;
Cramer's Corner What are the rules?&#13;
"They can't score touchdowns&#13;
unless they have written permission&#13;
from Tiger Stoffle, and she&#13;
needs written permission from&#13;
Twinkle Toes Guskin, and he&#13;
needs written permission from me.&#13;
So basically Dave, I don't think&#13;
we've got a damn thing to worry&#13;
about."&#13;
What does your training&#13;
program consist of?&#13;
"Michelob.. .lots of it. We&#13;
drink it, we s hower in it, and we&#13;
even sleep with it."&#13;
Isn't that a slightly rigorous&#13;
training program?&#13;
"Yeah, but the team wants to&#13;
win, so they follow it. As a matter&#13;
of fact, they love it. They're happy&#13;
all of the time. I never hear any&#13;
back talk, but when they're in a&#13;
drunken stupor, what do you&#13;
expect?"&#13;
What do you feel your chances&#13;
are of winning this game?&#13;
"Being perfectly honest Dave, I&#13;
have to say that PAB has as much&#13;
chance of winning as Dick Nixon&#13;
has of being voted the 'Honest&#13;
Abe' of the 1970's."&#13;
Next week I hope to interview&#13;
the coach of PAB (whoever that&#13;
might be) and get their opinion of&#13;
this game.&#13;
Coach Cooper during training session with team members.&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
I was sitting in the library,&#13;
diligently studying my textbook on&#13;
basketweaving when someone&#13;
walked by me and said to a friend&#13;
who was with him that the Ranger&#13;
and PAB (Parkside Activity Board)&#13;
were going to have a touch football&#13;
game. My reporter's curiosity got&#13;
the better of me and I had to find&#13;
out more about it. Having heard&#13;
that Tom Cooper was going to&#13;
coach the Ranger team, I thought&#13;
I'd have a talk with him.&#13;
Foolishly I went down to the&#13;
Ranger office to talk to Cooper.&#13;
When I got there and asked for&#13;
him, the entire room burst out&#13;
with laughter. I was told that he&#13;
wasn't there, but was where he did&#13;
all his studying — in the Union&#13;
Square.&#13;
1 strolled on down to the Union&#13;
and found Cooper, who I was to&#13;
find out later is a strict disciple of&#13;
Morris Buttermaker, enjoying a&#13;
liquid lunch consisting of Michelob,&#13;
more Michelob and even&#13;
more Michelob. Just as I was&#13;
about to approach him and ask for&#13;
an interview, he got up and&#13;
staggered into the ladies and then&#13;
men's washroom.&#13;
I waited outside for a half hour&#13;
before I decided something was&#13;
wrong and thought he might be in&#13;
some sort of trouble and needed&#13;
some assistance. I entered only to&#13;
find Cooper kneeling over a&#13;
commode. I introduced myself and&#13;
told him of my mission. He readily&#13;
accepted my request and this is&#13;
how the interview went.&#13;
Why are you having this game?&#13;
"To beat the shit out of PAB. To&#13;
teach them a lesson. They've been&#13;
bitching at us since we've started&#13;
charging them for ads. They want&#13;
everything for free, free, free.&#13;
We're going to give it to them.&#13;
Well, actually, to promote student&#13;
interest in life on campus. To&#13;
pump some interest into this we&#13;
have a little side-bet."&#13;
What's Ranger's team strategy?&#13;
"I'm glad you asked me that&#13;
question. I've been out recruiting.&#13;
But not just anybody. I'm bringing&#13;
in Parkside's highest paid personnel&#13;
on campus. I've got A1&#13;
(Twinkle Toes) Guskin, Larry&#13;
Ratner, and Carla (The Tiger)&#13;
Stoffle. And I'm also working on&#13;
picking up 'Two-ton' Goetz."&#13;
But what's your actual strategy?&#13;
"I'm buying off the refs. But I'm&#13;
also going to hit them with&#13;
everything we've got — typewriters,&#13;
layout tables, editors, etc."&#13;
Enough about you. Do you&#13;
know anything about PAB?&#13;
"You mean other than they&#13;
suck? It's costing me a fortune to&#13;
find this out (Totero doesn't come&#13;
cheap), but they have a strong&#13;
defense."&#13;
How strong is their defense?&#13;
"They are so strong that&#13;
personally I think they haven't&#13;
taken a shower for months."&#13;
What about their offense?&#13;
"I think they are a bit offensive,&#13;
don't you?"&#13;
COMING.&#13;
_&#13;
TO THE L)W&#13;
PRO BOWLER&#13;
PERSON&#13;
RECREATION CENTER&#13;
Swimmers p,&#13;
needed&#13;
Parkside swimming coach Barb&#13;
Lawson has .. inounced the teams&#13;
First p ractice will be held October&#13;
1st. Anyone interested in trying&#13;
out should contact her at&#13;
553-2257.&#13;
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              <text>Zion Energy Fair&#13;
solar power, not&#13;
• n . • «" .&lt;&gt;. 1' I U.&gt; by Sue Stevens&#13;
Approximately 1,000 people&#13;
rallied against nuclear power&#13;
Saturday at Shiloh Park in Zion,&#13;
Illinois. The 2nd Annual F.nergy&#13;
Fair, as it lias been titled, was the&#13;
largest in the M i d - W e st so far. but&#13;
it was far fro m comparable to the&#13;
one in New York City just one&#13;
week before.&#13;
Ihe highlight of the fair was&#13;
clearly the m a r ch down to the Zion&#13;
nuclear facility with ralliers&#13;
marching live abreast and stretching&#13;
over live city blocks. I he&#13;
marchers chanted slogan alter&#13;
slogan along t he mile stretch from&#13;
the park to the plan.&#13;
One of t h o se chants during the&#13;
march can best describe the&#13;
purpose for the rally. It was. NO&#13;
M KFS. . .SOLAR POWHR!"&#13;
Not only did the ralliers condemn&#13;
nuclear power, but they also&#13;
pushed for the advancement&#13;
alternative forms of energy su e ! ' , as&#13;
solar and w ind.&#13;
I he lair at the park consisted ot&#13;
exhibits, speakers, entertainment.&#13;
for&#13;
nukes&#13;
food, information tables, and&#13;
T-shirts and other paraphernalia&#13;
The fair at the park consisted of&#13;
exhibits..speakers, entertainment,&#13;
food, information tables, and&#13;
T-shirts and other paraphernalia&#13;
for sale. The o v e r a ll atmosphere in&#13;
the park seemed to lie somewhere&#13;
between a carnival and a h()'s&#13;
antiwar rally. One of th e banners&#13;
floating around the park claimed.&#13;
•STOP fill DRAFT:" Organizers.&#13;
01 "peace keepers."&#13;
• 4&#13;
lJltra Vixens1&#13;
' a big bus!&#13;
• More on the nuke rally&#13;
• Hiteheoek-Truffaut series opens&#13;
• Hamsters taken for grant-ed&#13;
*-&#13;
INSIDE. . . &#13;
OPINION&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Press wins phenomenal victory&#13;
by Sue Stevens should have no access to public records at ail?&#13;
Before we know it, the Court will also ban half the books in the libraries across the&#13;
During these times when the press is getting attacked from all sides, any victory a—nation because they contain a bit of information that may&#13;
publication can win in the courts is phenomenal. In the past few weeks one such security.&#13;
victory has been won by the Progressive magazine. Yes, the Progressive has won just one victory in the courts for the press If he&#13;
Last spring, United States Federal Judge Robert Warren denied the Progressive the Government believes that the press shouldn t print in orma ion or e&#13;
right to print an article about the secret of the hydrogen bomb. Since that denial, general public which it affects, then we would ve ne\er oun ou a ou a erga&#13;
there has been a constant battle over whether or not the press should be able to print many other cases of corruption.&#13;
information that may have an effect on our national defense. Does the Court truly feel that certain articles like the one in t e rogressive w ic&#13;
But just what information is so important to our national defense that it can't be will appear soon) will severely harm our national defense?&#13;
released to the public it's supposed to be protecting?&#13;
Here there are definitely two sides of the argument. One argument says that&#13;
national defense at any cost, is more secure if only a handful of people know the&#13;
details. This side realizes the delicacy with which some defense situations must be&#13;
dealt with.&#13;
One such example of this hush-hush method is the Cuban missile crisis of October&#13;
1962. If the general public had known exactly what was going on, what would've&#13;
happened?As the story goes, J.F.K.'s little secret plan worked and the Soviets backed&#13;
off.&#13;
But what if it hadn't worked? The United States and the Soviet Union could very&#13;
well have started World War III! Then where would the American public be? The&#13;
secrecy that was to protect them would've possibly ended civilization as we know it&#13;
today.&#13;
Do you remember the Pentagon Papers? Now there's one instance where&#13;
information was classified wrongly. The content of these documents wasn't even all&#13;
that important, but someone chose to classify them as secret. Why? Who knows.&#13;
That is just one reason why the press should be allowed to publish information that&#13;
it feels the public should be aware of. The elements of the hydrogen bomb story are&#13;
said to be found in open public records. Why then was the press denied the right to&#13;
publish that information?&#13;
Was it really the worry that the information would get into the wrong hands that led&#13;
the judge to push the restraint? I don't think so.&#13;
I believe that the courts are trying to gain on the press wherever they can. If this&#13;
wasn't the case, why would the Supreme Court say that they can look into an Editor's&#13;
mind to find motive when they know they cant accomplish that in criminal courts?&#13;
I believe that our high court officials are afraid of losing their power in a society&#13;
that has begun more and more to question authority. Do they really care whether the&#13;
information contained in the pages of national publications affects our national&#13;
security?&#13;
How can they say that the information itself could be a large threat to our defense?&#13;
A nation like our own that spends so much on defense should know that if&#13;
information is given to the public bit by bit, sooner or later it will no longer be a&#13;
secret. The information contained in the Progressive s article on the hydrogen bomb&#13;
was found in public records. Will the Supreme Court now decide that the public&#13;
Or do they know something we don't?&#13;
r&#13;
ganger&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside and they are solely responsible&#13;
for its editorial policy and content.&#13;
Published every Wednesday during the academic year, except during breaks and holidays,&#13;
RANGER is printed by Zion Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER content. All&#13;
correspondence should be addressed to Parkside Ranger, U.W. Parkside, WLLC D-139,&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53141.&#13;
Sue Stevens Editor&#13;
Brian Felland Business Manage;&#13;
Ken Meyer Feature Editor&#13;
DOUR Edenhauser Sports Editor&#13;
Jeff Stevens News Editor&#13;
Kevin Padula Photo Editor&#13;
Mike Murphy Advertising Manager&#13;
REPORTING STAFF&#13;
Liz Arkowski, Dave Cramer, Pete Cramer, Andrea Crandall, Dan Galbraith, Marcia&#13;
Harris, Ginger Heigesen, Renee' Jones, Mira Lochanski, Reed McMillan, Lori&#13;
Merten, Kai Nail, Walt Remondini, Don Scherrer, Joe Sykora, Vicki Wetlens.&#13;
PHOTO STAFF&#13;
Mark Anderson, Rhonda Gerolmo, Jim Knotek, Brian Passino&#13;
LAYOUT&#13;
Mary Arnold, Nancy Hernandez.&#13;
AD STAFF&#13;
Linda Andersen, Charles Clifton, Dan Galbraith, Nancy Mikaelian, Mike Murphy&#13;
Letters to the Editor will be accepted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard si/.c paper&#13;
with one-inch margins. All letters must be signed. Names will be withheld for valid reasons.&#13;
Inelude a telephone number for verification. Maximum length accepted is 500 words.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Friday at 10 am for publication the following Wednesday.&#13;
1/iecvfo&lt;U*£ What do&#13;
Square?&#13;
you think of Union&#13;
Dorothy Singer — "I haven't&#13;
been there yet this year."&#13;
Ed Heinlsch — "It's nice, but I&#13;
can't make a good comparison&#13;
because I haven't seen other&#13;
campus squares. I don't go there&#13;
often otherwise I don't get my&#13;
homework done."&#13;
Angie Boyle — "I don't go there&#13;
much either."&#13;
Roberto Salinas — "I like to go&#13;
there every once in a while."&#13;
Jody Bieze — "It's simply devastating."&#13;
&#13;
Rich So wiles — "I think it's&#13;
allright. The tunes could be&#13;
louder. 1 like the selection of music&#13;
they have. I wish it was bigger and&#13;
there was more bar. The beer is&#13;
cold; that's what 1 l ike." i 0 ta jiLSLfL*•'..-sX.VJ.. JL&gt;', ; , &#13;
Banker Wednesday October 3, 1979 ?&#13;
News Briefs.&#13;
Seminar on Shroud&#13;
Friday Oct. 6&#13;
Can the image on the Shroud of&#13;
Turin be that of Christ?&#13;
A member of the scientific team&#13;
which investigated that question&#13;
last year will describe some of the&#13;
scientific detective methods used&#13;
in the examination at a free public&#13;
seminar at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Friday. Oct. 5, in Molinaro Hall&#13;
Room 105.&#13;
Sam Pellicori, a Kenosha native,&#13;
was a member of the group's&#13;
scientific photography and imaging&#13;
team, which designed equipment&#13;
used to study the shroud in&#13;
an attempt to discover how the&#13;
image on it was formed. Pellicori&#13;
will illustrate his talk on the&#13;
experimental methods used with&#13;
slides. •&#13;
The experiments will be the&#13;
subject of an article in National&#13;
Geographic next April. The&#13;
scientific team plans to announce&#13;
results of its experiments with&#13;
their interpretations in October.&#13;
1980.&#13;
In addition to photographic and&#13;
photometric studies, the examination&#13;
of the shroud included&#13;
ultraviolet flourescence, X-ray&#13;
reflectance and transmission,&#13;
infared emittance. micro-chemical&#13;
study of fragments, archeology,&#13;
hemitology and textile and image&#13;
processing and enhancement of&#13;
multi-color photos.&#13;
Pellicori graduated from Bradford&#13;
High School and then&#13;
attended the University of Arizona,&#13;
where he earned his&#13;
undergraduate degree in physics&#13;
and a graduate degree in optical&#13;
sciences. Before joining the Turin&#13;
team, he was involved in designing&#13;
optical equipment for space&#13;
studies at the Lunar and Planetary&#13;
Lab in Arizona and at the Santa&#13;
Barbara Research Center in&#13;
California.&#13;
Chain letters a&#13;
big rip-off&#13;
MADISON — Attorney General&#13;
Bronson C. La Follette warned&#13;
Wisconsin college students not to&#13;
participate in any of the numerous&#13;
chain letters and pyramid schemes&#13;
now operating in the State.&#13;
"All money-making plans which&#13;
require the payment of a&#13;
'qualifying' fee, promise a return&#13;
larger than the fee. and rely on&#13;
others to keep the chain going are&#13;
a f orm of gambling and are illegal&#13;
lotteries in Wisconsin," La Follette&#13;
said.&#13;
The Department of Justice&#13;
Office of Consumer Protection has&#13;
received numerous calls from&#13;
citizens since June inquiring about&#13;
the legality of these schemes.&#13;
Recent calls indicate the letters are&#13;
now hitting the campuses. Many of&#13;
the letters indicate that the law is&#13;
not broken if the U.S. mail is not&#13;
used in the scheme. Some&#13;
instruction sheets state that the&#13;
plan was designed or approved by&#13;
an attorney to insure its legality.&#13;
La Follette said all such assertions&#13;
are false.&#13;
The most popular examples of&#13;
chain or pyramid plans currently&#13;
operating are known as the "Circle&#13;
of Platinum" or the "Circle of&#13;
Gold." In these schemes, the&#13;
consumer pays $50 to S1 .(XX) for a&#13;
Iv-t of Hi*" the fee is P?fid&#13;
''t&#13;
to the seller, the other half goes to&#13;
the person on top of the list. The&#13;
buyer crosses the top name out,&#13;
adds his or her own to the bottom,&#13;
then duplicates and resells the&#13;
modified list. The chain then&#13;
repeats itself.&#13;
"Many consumers are misled&#13;
into thinking that every participant&#13;
in a chain plan will be&#13;
successful in obtaining a return&#13;
larger than their initial 'qualifying'&#13;
fee," La Follette said. "However,"&#13;
he added, "only those whose&#13;
names appear at the top of the&#13;
initial lists succeed.&#13;
Since an ever-increasing number&#13;
of participants is necessary&#13;
before new entrants can succeed,&#13;
the longer a chain scheme&#13;
continues, the more difficult it&#13;
becomes for each new entrant to&#13;
obtain a return. Eventually, the&#13;
plan must fail, with the result that&#13;
thousands of entrants further&#13;
down the chain will lose their&#13;
entire investment."&#13;
La Follette said that the&#13;
attorneys general in Minnesota,&#13;
Illinois and several other states&#13;
have filed suit against the chain&#13;
scheme promoters operating in&#13;
For more information, contact&#13;
the Department of JusticevOffice&#13;
of Consumer Protection at 114&#13;
East. State Capitol. Madison,&#13;
Wisconsin, 53702. (608)266-1852.&#13;
or at 819 North 6th Street.&#13;
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 53203,&#13;
(414)224-1867&#13;
VTAE&#13;
system enlarged&#13;
Madison. Wisconsin):.... The&#13;
State Vocational, Technical and&#13;
Adult Education System is&#13;
exhibiting excellent growth in the&#13;
number of students attending its&#13;
programs according to State&#13;
VTAE System Director, Dr.&#13;
Robert Sorensen.&#13;
Dr. Sorensen told State Board&#13;
Members, at their regularly&#13;
scheduled meeting in Madison,&#13;
that recently completed tabulations&#13;
indicated 414,836 students&#13;
attended VTAE programs during&#13;
fiscal year 1978-79. He said this&#13;
represented a 9.2 percent increase&#13;
over fiscal year 1977-78. Sorensen&#13;
also told board members that an&#13;
accurate enrollment estimate for&#13;
this current school year is&#13;
currently being tabulated and '&#13;
should be available shortly after&#13;
October 10. 1979.&#13;
In making his announcement,&#13;
Sorensen explained that the figure&#13;
represented total number of&#13;
students enrolled in all courses&#13;
and did not reflect the number of&#13;
full-time equivalent students in the&#13;
system. He told board members&#13;
that 52,299 full-time equivalent&#13;
students enrolled during 1978-79&#13;
representing a relatively small&#13;
increase in that category.&#13;
The State Director explained&#13;
that the significance of an&#13;
increasing head count and&#13;
stabilizing FTE count is that&#13;
students are taking less full-program&#13;
work and are being more&#13;
selective in the types of courses&#13;
they are enrolling in.&#13;
According to VTAE Assistant&#13;
State Director. Frederick Hiestand.&#13;
"This can be attributed to&#13;
several factors, including the fact&#13;
that Wisconsin is enjoying a&#13;
relatively stable economic situation&#13;
in spite of what appears to be&#13;
happening economically in some&#13;
\ocations around the country."&#13;
Hiestand went on to say that it&#13;
appears that people are cutting&#13;
back on the number of courses&#13;
they are enrolling in, in order to&#13;
spend more time on their jobs.&#13;
This, according to Hiestand, is&#13;
evidenced by the increase in the&#13;
number of part-time students&#13;
enrolling in the VTAE system.&#13;
Dr. Sorensen told board&#13;
members that a local VTAE&#13;
District having a large increase in&#13;
part-time vocational and adult&#13;
enrollment, may have stabilizing&#13;
or declining FTE enrollment and&#13;
as a result that District might&#13;
receive State aids which fund less&#13;
and less of the District's program&#13;
costs. State aids are based on a&#13;
formula which considers FTE's.&#13;
Sorensen assured board members&#13;
that the State Board staff was&#13;
acutely aware that this could&#13;
happen and was looking at several&#13;
possibilities to assure that the&#13;
problem would be avoided.&#13;
"We may have to look at a&#13;
change in the state aid formula."&#13;
Sorensen said, "in order to&#13;
determine a method that will&#13;
maintain current state funding&#13;
while at the same time not&#13;
promote rapid or escalating&#13;
costs." those states.&#13;
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PRICE AND&#13;
When&#13;
mcL&#13;
you join&#13;
book coop),&#13;
QUALITY&#13;
C.S.C. ("tke (pi&#13;
you own it!&#13;
tome&#13;
m ml&#13;
SIGH UP....&#13;
1000 already have.&#13;
STUDENTS:&#13;
$3.00/yr.&#13;
faculty staff:&#13;
$7.00 yr.&#13;
Get Involved !&#13;
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4 Wednesday October - 3, J 979 Raii^er&#13;
I Phelto Thi again?&#13;
rgM&amp;mmtt-mzmm&#13;
fun tit* Pa'fclm Ut&#13;
Procrastination&#13;
by Denise Sobicski&#13;
At the beginning of the semester&#13;
comes the time for Parkside's&#13;
clubs and organizations to start&#13;
their wheels turning again. New&#13;
members need to be recruited,&#13;
interest needs to be stirred,&#13;
organization meetings held...which&#13;
eventually leads to ORGANIZATION.&#13;
&#13;
Well, it's not such an easy task,&#13;
especially for a small, new group.&#13;
First someone must take the&#13;
initiative to register. Sometimes it&#13;
takes a while for a pair of&#13;
ambitious feet to tread up those&#13;
stairs in the Union to pick up the&#13;
appropriate form. But once the&#13;
papers are in hand...then comes&#13;
the fun part!&#13;
Fun?! The one page registration&#13;
form must be completed and&#13;
returned with the organization&#13;
constitution and a statement of the&#13;
source of funds. Bui where did the&#13;
constitution disappear to? Who's&#13;
got the money? How can I get the&#13;
president's signature if we don't&#13;
have one? What can we do to con&#13;
one of our professors into being&#13;
our advisor?&#13;
I PHELTA THI happens to be a&#13;
good example of the average&#13;
struggling organization. I happen&#13;
to be a part of that small radius.&#13;
Sure, we'll have to go through all&#13;
the initial proceedings—registration,&#13;
recruiting new members,&#13;
filling out information forms,&#13;
etc.—but things will get themselves&#13;
together \&#13;
Going by the attendance at the&#13;
first meeting, things didn't look so&#13;
promising for I PHELTA THI. We&#13;
didn't even have enough people&#13;
there for a baseball team, but it&#13;
was encouraging to see some&#13;
enthusiasm. So we decided to have&#13;
a publicity meeting over a few&#13;
beers to inspire more interset.&#13;
It looks like things'U shape up.&#13;
We've got a few people who want&#13;
to have a good time (sometimes&#13;
there doesn't seem to be too many&#13;
here at Parkside.) Maybe we'll&#13;
watch a little Monday night&#13;
football, have a few beers, go to a&#13;
few concerts, have a crazy party, or&#13;
whatever.&#13;
That's what clubs and organizations&#13;
are all about—to enjoy being&#13;
with other people and having a&#13;
good time. So don't be afraid to&#13;
get involved. There's something&#13;
for everyone whether you're an&#13;
artist, an athlete, a writer, or just a&#13;
partier. You might have a good&#13;
time.&#13;
G. Helgeson&#13;
There has got to be. to&#13;
paraphrase a pop tune,«at least,&#13;
"fifty ways to put off doing&#13;
homework." Actually, there is an&#13;
infinite variety of ways to avoid&#13;
doing what you are supposed to do&#13;
when you are supposed to do it.&#13;
You probably have done it already&#13;
or will do it in the future. Maybe&#13;
you are doing it right now.&#13;
Procrastination is certainly one of&#13;
the most popular private human&#13;
failings. It's in the top ten, along&#13;
with picking the nose, eating lead&#13;
paint, and driving over the speed&#13;
limit. It's one of those things only&#13;
the harshly toilet-trained can&#13;
escape.&#13;
Procrastination is one of the&#13;
more common human failings on&#13;
college campuses, and avoiding&#13;
homework is one of the most&#13;
common occupations of the&#13;
procrastinators on every campus.&#13;
Still, a lot of students just sort of&#13;
blunder through, putting off work&#13;
a little at a time, never fully&#13;
realizing where their true talents&#13;
lie.&#13;
If you're not going to do&#13;
something,,you might as well not&#13;
do it right. And you might as well&#13;
not feel guilty afterwards. It is&#13;
hard to procrastinate correctly,&#13;
but taking the easy way out could&#13;
be disasterous.&#13;
The easiest and least successful&#13;
way to procrastinate is always to&#13;
do just plain nothing. However,&#13;
this show no forethought or&#13;
initiative and is considered poor&#13;
form by most skilled procrastinators.&#13;
It has been found that it&#13;
is more conductive to suicidal&#13;
behavior to sit in a chair watching&#13;
"Charlie's Angels" re-runs and&#13;
Ban Roll-On commercials than it&#13;
is to work calculus problems.&#13;
A better way to get out of&#13;
homework is to have something&#13;
else to do. It always helps to join a&#13;
lot of organizations. Good procrastinators&#13;
will sign on the dotted line&#13;
of every petition, sign-up sheet,&#13;
and membership list that is shoved&#13;
in front of their faces. Dedicated&#13;
procrastinators will belong to&#13;
organizations that they are for or&#13;
against, and some that they aren't&#13;
sure about.&#13;
Good procrastinators will also&#13;
volunteer to help other people. I&#13;
once knew a procrastinator who&#13;
always volunteered to help his&#13;
slower classmates. Since his&#13;
classmates were very slow, he&#13;
tutored seven nights a week. He&#13;
never got his own work done, but&#13;
he got everyone else's done. And&#13;
he was working so hard, he only&#13;
felt guilty twice during the&#13;
semester. "&#13;
Forgetting completely about an&#13;
assignment is difficult, but it can&#13;
be done, The following methods&#13;
demand a lot of the procrastinator,&#13;
but they have been tested and&#13;
proven. Good procrastinators&#13;
everywhere use them, and it is time&#13;
you learned to be a more effective&#13;
procrastinator, too.&#13;
Have you ever heard a classmate&#13;
say, "Boy, I got so drunk last&#13;
night... I forgot all about the&#13;
assignment until my alarm went&#13;
off this morning." If you have, you&#13;
should have been impressed. That&#13;
noble person was using one of the&#13;
finest examples of procrastination&#13;
that has ever come from the&#13;
inventive mind of a procrastinating&#13;
student.&#13;
First of all, getting smashed is a&#13;
near-perfect method of putting off&#13;
until tomorrow what should have&#13;
been done yesterday. All school&#13;
work seems a little farther away, a&#13;
little less difficult, and a little less&#13;
important when you are drunk.&#13;
And you're not only apathetic;&#13;
your brain is so pickled that you&#13;
are incapable of doing homework&#13;
anyway. In addition, you don't feel&#13;
guilty because of the interference&#13;
of the hangover pain, and when&#13;
the pain is gone, it's too late to&#13;
worry anyway.&#13;
Among fhe best ways to forget&#13;
about an assignment is to avoid&#13;
hearing about it in the first place,&#13;
So. when the professor coughs at&#13;
the end of the period to signify fhe&#13;
Announcing of the Assignment,&#13;
the procrastinator can close his&#13;
eyes, stuff pencils in his ears, and&#13;
begin singing, very loudly, any&#13;
obnoxious song that comes to&#13;
mind. This blocks out most of the&#13;
details of the assignment, but it&#13;
has one drawback. The procrastinator&#13;
knows there was an&#13;
assignment to begin with, and&#13;
('•Mil. (Ml pg. #• &#13;
Rnnger Wednesday October 3, 1979&#13;
Hitchcock-Truffaut series opens tonight&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
"Hitchcock and Truffaut. .. in&#13;
Retrospect," a film series featuring&#13;
three of each director's films,&#13;
opens tonight at 7 pm in Racine's&#13;
Golden Rondelle Theater, with the&#13;
showing of Hitchcock's "Shadow&#13;
of a Doubt."&#13;
Alfred Hitchcock is known to&#13;
almost everyone. He has directed&#13;
54 motion pictures and has&#13;
repeatedly experimented with the&#13;
genre of the suspense. Francois&#13;
Truffaut, a French filmmaker, is&#13;
identified with the New Wave&#13;
movement of film that emerged in&#13;
France in the late 1950's.&#13;
"We wanted to give people a&#13;
chance to see two different&#13;
directors and styles of filmmaking."&#13;
said Walt Ulbricht,&#13;
Lecturer of Humanities. "Hitchcock,&#13;
of course, is very popular&#13;
with American audiences. There's&#13;
a certain mystique surrounding&#13;
the man. We thought Hitchcock&#13;
would be popular to a great many&#13;
people."&#13;
"We also wanted to introduce a&#13;
European film director," said&#13;
Ulbricht. "Once we thought about&#13;
Hitchcock, the natural choice was&#13;
Francois Truffaut because Truffaut&#13;
because Truffaut considers&#13;
Hitchcock his mentor. He learned'&#13;
a great deal about filmmaking&#13;
from Hitchcock. He has considered&#13;
Hitchcock a teacher in&#13;
many respects."&#13;
"Some of Truffaut's films&#13;
reflect Hitchcock's influence,"&#13;
said Ulbricht. "We thought it&#13;
would be interesting to show&#13;
Hitchcock films and then show the&#13;
European filmmaker, Truffaut.&#13;
and see what sort of similarities&#13;
there are in technique and theme&#13;
between the two directors although&#13;
they're separated by continents&#13;
and 40 years of age."&#13;
The film schedule begins with&#13;
Hitchcock's films:&#13;
Oct. 3-Shadow of a Doubt (1943)&#13;
Oct. 17-North by Northwest&#13;
(1959)&#13;
Oct. 31-Psycho (1960)&#13;
The Truffaut film schedule is:&#13;
Nov. 7-The 400 Blows (1959)&#13;
Nov. 28-The Bride Wore Black&#13;
Film r eview&#13;
'Ultra Vixens' a big bust&#13;
by Ken Meyer&#13;
Russ Meyer, the king of softcore&#13;
pornography, has said that his&#13;
movies deal with fun sex. Meyer's&#13;
latest film, "Beneath the Valley of&#13;
the Ultra Vixens," it does deal&#13;
with sex, but it's not fun.&#13;
Meyer notes that the difference&#13;
between his movies and "X"&#13;
movies is that while his movies are&#13;
fun, "X" movies are "the&#13;
scumbag, the compost heap of&#13;
filmmaking. They deal in very&#13;
explicit, clinical shots of the&#13;
human sexual organs." Meyer's&#13;
right about t.ie explicitness, but I&#13;
think he has the scumbag and&#13;
compost heap part backwards.&#13;
That description seems more&#13;
suited for "Ultra Vixens," a&#13;
boring and childish movie about&#13;
humungously breasted women&#13;
trying to reform a man to "look a&#13;
good -—in the face." It could also&#13;
be described as 90 minutes of&#13;
43E's (or bigger) bouncing around&#13;
the screen.&#13;
That's all there is to "Ultra&#13;
Vixens." The script consists of&#13;
scenes that go nowhere and do&#13;
nothing. Written by Meyer and&#13;
film critic Roger Ebert, the script&#13;
has a grand total of one laugh.&#13;
That laugh has to do with a&#13;
lingerie salesman from "Frederico's&#13;
of Wisconsin" who states that&#13;
the home office is in Racine. That&#13;
might be funny to us, but around&#13;
the country people will ask,&#13;
"Where the hell is Racine?" So,&#13;
local jokes aside, there isn't a&#13;
single good joke.&#13;
In order to fill up 90 minutes,&#13;
Meyer uses his well-known&#13;
rapid-fire editing. What that&#13;
means is that we see close-ups of a&#13;
tree, an antenna, a radio, a sign, a&#13;
building, a pile of clothes, a&#13;
speaker, a chimney, a bed&#13;
wheel... Each of these shots is&#13;
repeated a couple of dozen times.&#13;
The editing pattern is: show some&#13;
sex, some of these stupid shots,&#13;
some more sex, some more suptid&#13;
shots, etc. Interesting, huh?&#13;
The sex in the picture cannot be&#13;
considered erotic in any way,&#13;
shape or form. It is more like&#13;
cartoon sex with women who make&#13;
Dolly Parton look like Twiggy. Sex&#13;
is present, but it takes a backseat&#13;
to the continuous, erratic movement&#13;
of the women's breasts.&#13;
That's not erotic — it only causes&#13;
headaches and kinks in the neck.&#13;
The lead actress (to use the term&#13;
loosely). Francesca "Kitten" Natividad,&#13;
can't be understood on the&#13;
rare occasions that she speaks and&#13;
is facially ugly. But then again,&#13;
why be picky — it's supposed to be&#13;
a "fun" movie.&#13;
There are many other bad&#13;
points to mention, such as the&#13;
narrator on hand throughout the&#13;
picture to tell us what is&#13;
happening. It's intended to give&#13;
the film the look of a commentary&#13;
on today's sexual society. All it&#13;
really does is waste time and use a&#13;
few more unfunny jokes.&#13;
Another "highlight" of the&#13;
picture is when the characters&#13;
spew out brightly colored slime.&#13;
There are colors for everyone —&#13;
white, green, brown, yellow, blue,&#13;
pink and red. These shots were&#13;
just thrown in for shock value.&#13;
Since there wasn't much of a&#13;
story in the first place, the ending&#13;
probably didn't give Meyer any&#13;
trouble. All he did was steal from&#13;
Mel Brooks' "Blazing Saddles"&#13;
and end with a parody of&#13;
filmmaking itself. It's a cop-out&#13;
ending, but at least the movie&#13;
ends.&#13;
Some peole laughed at a corny&#13;
and predictable joke out of&#13;
desperation for a good joke. One&#13;
of the characters defecates on the&#13;
ground and his "fun" friend&#13;
secretly steals it and throws it&#13;
away. When he realizes his pile is&#13;
gone, the man looks into the&#13;
camera and says. "No shit."&#13;
Sorry Russ — yes it is.&#13;
^eafafyctMcf, tfAcvt*,&#13;
by Edith Isenberg&#13;
Are you prepared to assist a&#13;
family member or a friend in the&#13;
case of a life threatening cardiac or&#13;
respiratory emergency? Next week&#13;
you will have the opportunity to&#13;
learn the necessary life saving&#13;
techniques by spending just three&#13;
hours in a one session CPR course&#13;
offered by the American Red Cross&#13;
right on our own campus. This&#13;
course includes first aid for&#13;
choking, mouth to mouth resuscitation.&#13;
and one rescue CPR.&#13;
Knowledge of these techniques will&#13;
enable you to help victims of heart&#13;
attack, drowning, suffocation,&#13;
drug overdose, to name just a few,&#13;
until the rescue squad arrives. The&#13;
class offered gives you the&#13;
opportunity to practice on mannequins&#13;
under supervision and. after&#13;
successful completion, you will be&#13;
awarded a certificate.&#13;
Perhaps you are unsure what&#13;
CPR is. CPR stands for eardio&#13;
pulmonary resuscitation, heartlung&#13;
resuscitation methods. The&#13;
primary purpose is to get&#13;
oxygenated blood to the brain and&#13;
the body tissues as quickly as&#13;
possible. To sustain life, oxygen&#13;
must be supplied in adequate&#13;
amounts and distributed to the&#13;
tissues constantly. If oxygen is&#13;
withheld for periods of more than&#13;
four to six minutes, brain damage&#13;
or death will result. Therefore, the&#13;
success of heart-lung resuscitation&#13;
is directly related to the speed and&#13;
efficiency with which it is applied.&#13;
You. too. can learn to recognize&#13;
these emergencies and the necessary&#13;
life saving methods by&#13;
attending one of the CPR classes.&#13;
In order to accommodate the large&#13;
number of people who have shown&#13;
interest in these classes, they will&#13;
be held on three different days and&#13;
at three different times. The first&#13;
class will be held on Tuesday.&#13;
October 9. from 9AM to Noon: the&#13;
second class will be held on&#13;
Wednesday. October 10. from 1 to&#13;
4 PM; and the last class will be&#13;
held on Thursday. October 11.&#13;
from 6:30 to 9:30 PM. All classes&#13;
will be held in Union. Rooms 104&#13;
and 106. To sign up. please stop at&#13;
the Campus Health Office. WLLC&#13;
D 198. or call 2366.&#13;
Red's Roller Rink&#13;
7220 67 th Si reet&#13;
ADUITS ONLY&#13;
SKATING SESSION&#13;
SUNDAY EVENINGS&#13;
7:30-10:30 PM&#13;
MUM I"' L "&#13;
R&#13;
"&#13;
L,L,T&#13;
Admission S2.00&#13;
Skate Rental ./5&#13;
(1967)&#13;
Dec. 12-Day for Night (1973)&#13;
I here will be no admission&#13;
charge. Ticket reservations will be&#13;
taken two weeks prior to the film&#13;
program date. In order to reserve&#13;
tickets, call 554-2154.&#13;
There will be a short discussion&#13;
after each movie. "There'll be&#13;
program notes that will accompany&#13;
each film, too." said Ulbricht,&#13;
"so a person coming to the festival&#13;
will not only have an opportunity&#13;
to see some very good films in&#13;
outstanding facilities, but they will&#13;
also have a chance to pick up a bit&#13;
of knowledge about Hitchcock and&#13;
Truffaut."&#13;
3&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
14th Ave. at" 62nd St.&#13;
Established in 1930&#13;
presentation&#13;
EAMEL0T&#13;
Starring&#13;
Richard Harris&#13;
Friday, Oct. 5&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 7&#13;
8:00pm&#13;
7:30pm&#13;
Uaioa Cinama Admission $1.30 &#13;
6 Wednesday October 3, 1979 Ranger&#13;
Students frenching it&#13;
This spring Parkside students&#13;
will participate in a semester in&#13;
France. The program is sponsored&#13;
by the Milwaukee, Oshkosh, and&#13;
Parkside campuses. It offers you&#13;
the opportunity to improve all&#13;
aspects of your French. There'll be&#13;
four weeks spent in Paris and the&#13;
rest of. the time will be spent in&#13;
Reims.&#13;
While in Reims, art and music&#13;
students will spend most of their&#13;
t/ne at the conservatory of music&#13;
and the art school. They'll take a&#13;
reduced number of French credits.&#13;
There are two vacation weeks&#13;
while in Reims (dates vary).&#13;
To qualify for the semester&#13;
abroad all students, whether in&#13;
French, art, or music, must have&#13;
completed college French or its&#13;
equivalent with a B average or&#13;
better. Junior or Senior standing&#13;
(60 and 90 credits) is preferred, but&#13;
second semester sophomores (45&#13;
credits) who meet the requirements&#13;
and show evidence of&#13;
promise will be considered. Art&#13;
students should complete basic&#13;
training in drawing design, 3-d, or&#13;
volume design since the school&#13;
only accepts students in courses of&#13;
specialization. Music students&#13;
should have their basic music&#13;
studies completed and look to&#13;
specialized courses in their area&#13;
while at the conservatory.&#13;
The program costs approximately&#13;
$2,200. This covers round&#13;
trip transportation from Chicago,&#13;
room and board in Paris and&#13;
Reims, all French tuitions, fees&#13;
and in-state tuition, several group&#13;
excursions, meals, and some&#13;
incidental expenses. Out-of-state&#13;
Residents must add the difference&#13;
between in-state and out-of-state&#13;
tuition. An additional $100 per&#13;
month in travelers check for&#13;
personal expenses is advisable.&#13;
Any financial aid received is&#13;
applicable to the program.&#13;
Applications for the expedition&#13;
are available from any French&#13;
profesor at Parkside. The deadline&#13;
for receipt of applications is&#13;
October 15, 1979. Students will be&#13;
notified of a decision in the&#13;
following week. If accepted the&#13;
whole payment of $2,200 must be&#13;
paid before departure.&#13;
Any additional information&#13;
about the program is obtainable&#13;
from Professor Evelyn Zepp.&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
MAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F D I C .&#13;
Johnson L. Abukutsa (center), Deputy Librarian of the University of&#13;
Nairobi (Kenya) who is touring the United States on a grant from the&#13;
Council on Library Resources to study bibliographic instruction&#13;
programs in this country, was at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Library this week to study programs here. The UW-P Library's programs&#13;
have attracted national attention and are being used as models for&#13;
bibliographic instruction in major teaching libraries throughout the&#13;
country. Abukutsa is shown with Thomas Kirk, acting director of the&#13;
UW-P Library-Learning Center, and Judith Pryor, instructional&#13;
librarian.&#13;
Librarians&#13;
on tour&#13;
at UW-P&#13;
LAST MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
THESE GUYS PLAYED.&#13;
THESE GUYS WON.&#13;
Ginni Shelley — Kenosha $25&#13;
Sieve Dykstra — Racine $10&#13;
Ray Bougneit — Kenosha 25&#13;
Elwood Becker — Kenosha $ 5&#13;
Fred Jacobson — Racine $ 5&#13;
Terry Peterson — Racine $25&#13;
Joseph Fromm — Racine $ 5&#13;
Paul Jackel — Racine $ 5&#13;
Philip Tohl — Wind Lake $25&#13;
Charles McMahon — Racine $10&#13;
Jim Foster — Racine $ 5&#13;
Tom Lesniak — Kenosha $10&#13;
DJBurmeister — Racine $25&#13;
Patrick Lebon — Racine $25&#13;
(PLUS MANY OTHER ONE AND TWO DOLLAR WINNERS)&#13;
You c ould w in this week!&#13;
From the&#13;
Parking L ot&#13;
cont. from pg. 4&#13;
once in awhile lets conscience take&#13;
over about a day before the work is&#13;
due, when even the most dedicated&#13;
of procrastinators have been&#13;
known to call a classmate to find&#13;
out what it was they were singing&#13;
over.&#13;
The best way to forget about an&#13;
assignment is to experience some&#13;
emotional or physical trauma&#13;
immediately after the assignment&#13;
is given. This results in true&#13;
forgetting, and is not a gimmick. It&#13;
is also cheaper than drinking. It is&#13;
THE choice of True Procrastinators&#13;
everywhere.&#13;
It often involves advance&#13;
planning, but the results are worth&#13;
it. Inviting a group of friends to&#13;
jump out from your classroom&#13;
doorway to scream "BOO" at you&#13;
is good, but the more inventive you&#13;
are, the better results you will get.&#13;
Breaking you arm by tripping over&#13;
the desk in front of yours may&#13;
sound simplistic, but it involves a&#13;
lot of planning, and could even&#13;
result in a profitable lawsuit.&#13;
Well, there you have it. Some of&#13;
the best ideas I have ever come&#13;
across. There are a lot of other&#13;
good ideas, since procrastination is&#13;
so popular. I would love to read&#13;
about them, and, if they are very&#13;
inventive, print them.&#13;
This is the FAVORITE WAYS&#13;
TO PROCRASTINATE contest,&#13;
and, if you get around to it, send&#13;
me your favorites. If I get around&#13;
to it. I'll print them.&#13;
PLAY PRO FOOTBALL ON MONDAY NIGHTS&#13;
Get a free game ticket evei ytime you visit apai1icipatin|f;campLi&gt; \\ M h! &gt;c; \ m- i&lt; k a;&#13;
Oakland vs. Miami October 8th at 8:00 pm &#13;
Ranker Wednesday October 3, 1979 7&#13;
No nukes.&#13;
could be spotted by the yellow&#13;
bands on their arms that bore a&#13;
green peace symbol.&#13;
Are these people actually trying&#13;
to attach themselves to some kind&#13;
of movement? If so, why the&#13;
antinuclear movement? According&#13;
to all of the information found at&#13;
the fair, the antinuke movement is&#13;
not only an emotional issue, but&#13;
also an economic one as well. As&#13;
one bumper sticker available at&#13;
the fair indicated, "Nuclear Power&#13;
= Rate Hikes and Cancer."&#13;
One of the most emotional&#13;
struggles of the many groups&#13;
sponsoring the rally is that of th&#13;
One of the most emotional&#13;
struggles of the many groups&#13;
sponsoring the rally is that of the&#13;
Black Hills Alliance, a group&#13;
mainly consisting of native&#13;
Americans. This group is trying to&#13;
defend their land in the Black&#13;
Hills of South Dakota where strip&#13;
mining for both uranium and coal&#13;
has been proposed. The area in&#13;
mention included a national park,&#13;
a w ater supply for area ranchers,&#13;
and a sacred area of the Lakota&#13;
Indians.&#13;
During the 1950's, there was&#13;
heavy mining activity in Fall River&#13;
County, South Dakota where the&#13;
cancer rate is now 50% higher than&#13;
in other parts of the country.&#13;
Approximately 3,200,000 tons of&#13;
radioactive tailings (the waste from&#13;
uranium processing) were left&#13;
behind in the open air. No one&#13;
bothered at that time about proper&#13;
disposal.&#13;
At the present, disposal of&#13;
nuclear waste is one of the most&#13;
pressing problems of producing&#13;
energy using breeder reactors. The&#13;
Zion facility is now trying to&#13;
expand its area for waste storage&#13;
because Commonwealth Edison,&#13;
the company that owns the facility,&#13;
can't figure out what to do with all&#13;
°t it. At the fair Saturday there&#13;
was a continuing film in the&#13;
middle of the park demonstrating&#13;
the dangerous effects of radiation&#13;
and nuclear waste.&#13;
'he film's purpose was magnified&#13;
by the many speakers at the&#13;
'air who stood up to voice their&#13;
opposition to nuclear power.&#13;
Among those who spoke out at&#13;
'be rally was Sid Lens of the&#13;
Progressive magazine. Lens began&#13;
bv indicting the "cock-eyed&#13;
administration" with its "cock&#13;
solar power!&#13;
constantly ctowded around the&#13;
tables displaying bumper stickers&#13;
that read: Stop Silent Death. Split&#13;
Wood Not Atoms. Better Active&#13;
Today Than Radioactive Tomorrow.&#13;
Who Killed Karen Silkwood.&#13;
and Question Authority among&#13;
others. Besides the bumper&#13;
stickers, there were also T-shirts&#13;
and buttoms available.&#13;
And for the hungry rallier? Well&#13;
what fair would be complete&#13;
without food? The starved marchers&#13;
could choose from roasted&#13;
corn, peanut butter sandwiches&#13;
with sprouts, piro sandwiches&#13;
topped with clover, and cookies.&#13;
Then to quench the thirst, one cold&#13;
find apple cider, lemonade, and of&#13;
course, solar tea.&#13;
eyed thinking" about nuclear&#13;
power. As he stated, "I don't care&#13;
if someone commits suicide...&#13;
That's their business.. .but I&#13;
don't want anybody to put me in&#13;
an early grave by killing me slowly&#13;
with radiation." He also attacked&#13;
a few of our country's past&#13;
presidents for their contributions&#13;
to the nuclear industry.&#13;
"I don't want that born again&#13;
Christian in the White House to&#13;
kill me with a nuclear bomb or&#13;
radiation... Truman was the&#13;
worst criminal in history. He&#13;
murdered millions with the&#13;
Hiroshima bomb... and Eisenhower.&#13;
he's the one who got us&#13;
started on nuclear research."&#13;
When speaking of the Progressive&#13;
and the hydrogen bomb story.&#13;
Lens said. "Watch for that article&#13;
during the next week."&#13;
Most of the speakers at the rally&#13;
emphasized the safety record of&#13;
the Zion nuclear facility, saying&#13;
that the plant has been shut down&#13;
about 40% of the time because of&#13;
problems.&#13;
But the speakers definitely&#13;
weren't the only means of&#13;
obtaining information on nuclear&#13;
power and its effects. During the&#13;
day there were people handing out&#13;
information sheets and selling&#13;
papers and magazines all over the&#13;
park. One could hardly escape&#13;
them or the people circulating one&#13;
of approximately 10 petitions.&#13;
Perhaps the most constructive&#13;
action of the fair was the displays&#13;
set up by different companies&#13;
showing their solar, wind, and&#13;
wood-burning energy systems. Not&#13;
only was there the usual solar&#13;
panels and demonstrations, but&#13;
there also was a s olar still!&#13;
Like any other affair of its kind,&#13;
the Energy Fair could not escape&#13;
the usual paraphernalia distributors&#13;
making a buck. People were&#13;
Campus/Community Film Series&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
7&#13;
WIZARD OF OZ&#13;
Union Square Theater&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 6 7pm&#13;
• Sunday, Oct. 7 1:30pm&#13;
$1.50 Single Admission&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
I \ '&#13;
Thursday Oct. 11 8:00 pm&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Admission: $2.50 UW-P Students&#13;
$4.00 General&#13;
Tickets at Union Info Center &#13;
Tfee&#13;
'Everything&#13;
IHachine!&#13;
But a&#13;
Machine&#13;
Needs the&#13;
Right Parts&#13;
to Work&#13;
Properly!&#13;
m Y414 OCT'79&#13;
The Ranger&#13;
Needs You to&#13;
Keep Things Moving&#13;
Stop by the&#13;
Ranger General Office&#13;
[WLLC D 139 next to the Coffee Shoppe]&#13;
today and join!&#13;
... or call one of these numbers:&#13;
553-2295 553-2287&#13;
Something for&#13;
Everyone&#13;
National Newspaper Week Oct. 7 -13,1979 &#13;
miter Wednesday Jctofoer 3, 1979 9&#13;
WpfimSSSS&#13;
Volleyball&#13;
Women win some, lose some&#13;
After an easy win over&#13;
UW-Milwaukee earlier in the&#13;
week. Parkside's women's volleyball&#13;
team took part in the always&#13;
tough Michigan State Invitational&#13;
last weekend.&#13;
Milwaukee didn't put up much&#13;
of a fight as the Rangers won three&#13;
out of four games to take the&#13;
match.&#13;
The first match against the&#13;
University of Waterloo of Canada&#13;
seemed to show how the rest of the&#13;
tournament was to be for the&#13;
Rangers. The first game was an&#13;
exhibition of excellence with&#13;
Parkside taking it 15-3. Inconsistency&#13;
took over at this point as&#13;
Waterloo did in the Rangers with a&#13;
score 15-6.&#13;
From this point on the Rangers&#13;
didn't show anything special as&#13;
they dropped matches to Northern&#13;
Kentucky. University of Michigan.&#13;
Central Michigan and Cleveland&#13;
State. The only two victories for&#13;
Parkside came at the hands of&#13;
Grand Valley of Michigan. In the&#13;
final game of the last match the&#13;
Rangers had to overcome a 10-0&#13;
deficit.&#13;
Coach Linda Henderson did&#13;
point out some good aspects of the&#13;
tournament. Cindy Henschel&#13;
proved to be the Ranger's top&#13;
offensive threat while she also&#13;
showed her best defensive effort of&#13;
the year.&#13;
Henderson was also pleased&#13;
with the performances of Julie&#13;
Workman. Linda £eihen and&#13;
Martha Aiello coming oft' the&#13;
bench. *&#13;
The Ranger's record now stands&#13;
at 8-7-1 for the season. This&#13;
weekend will be another tough one&#13;
for Parkside as they host their own&#13;
Tourney. Play will begin Friday&#13;
evening and continue Saturday&#13;
morning. Visiting teams joining&#13;
the Rangers will be' George&#13;
Williams College. Chicago Circle.&#13;
St. Francis, St. Xavier and&#13;
UW-Oshkosh.&#13;
Hamsters taken for arant-ed&#13;
by Doug Edenhauser&#13;
Despite the relatively young age&#13;
of Pakside, this being it's tenth&#13;
year in existence, this school is on&#13;
a very competitive level in the area&#13;
of being awarded grants from such&#13;
organizations as the National&#13;
Science Foundation.&#13;
The most recent of these grants&#13;
was awa rded this past August to&#13;
professor Ed Wallen of the Life&#13;
Science division for his work on&#13;
the pineal gland of hamsters.&#13;
The research is directed at&#13;
defining the relationship between&#13;
the light/dark cycle and the pineal&#13;
gland in the control of the brain's&#13;
regulation of reproduction in&#13;
mammals.&#13;
"This work is still basic research&#13;
in the field," said Wallen, who&#13;
became involved in this subject 10&#13;
years ago as a Ph.D. candidate at&#13;
the University of Kansas.&#13;
Although most; of the research&#13;
will call for the utilization of&#13;
hamsters, because of their extremely&#13;
seasonal reproductive&#13;
cycle, rats will alio be used. The&#13;
reason for using rats is that&#13;
experiments have shown that they&#13;
have remnants of the ability to&#13;
respond to the light/dark cycle.&#13;
"The rats seem to have evolved out&#13;
of that cycle," says Wallen.&#13;
"Research on this subject has&#13;
been going on heavily since the&#13;
60's, but knowledge of the pineal&#13;
gland goes back to Descartes, who&#13;
called it the 'seed of the rational&#13;
soul.' He thought it had a special&#13;
function."&#13;
Most of the work done in the&#13;
past has been in isolating a&#13;
hormone produced by the pineal&#13;
gland called melatonin, which&#13;
happens to be in the family of LSD&#13;
compounds. It is also known to be&#13;
a sleep inducing agent.&#13;
Professor Wallen has a couple of&#13;
important people helping him on&#13;
this grant. "I'm very dependent on&#13;
Professor Wallen has a couple ot&#13;
important people helping him on&#13;
the grant. "I'm very dependent on&#13;
these people in fulfilling this&#13;
grant." John Georgeson, one of&#13;
Wallen's assistants, and Parkside&#13;
graduate is the animal caretaker&#13;
here on campus. Bill Stone and&#13;
Paul Sorenson are on the&#13;
electronics design and maintenance&#13;
staff. "They are the first&#13;
people that I know of to use a&#13;
microcomputer to measure the&#13;
rhythms in small animals,"&#13;
Wallen added.&#13;
"Grant activity has been&#13;
increasing every year here at&#13;
Parkside, and I think that is a&#13;
reflection on the quality of the&#13;
people here." said Wallen. "We&#13;
have a good strong nucleus of&#13;
people, and there's a good&#13;
comradery among the faculty that&#13;
you don't have at a big university."&#13;
"A lot of people still think ot&#13;
Parkside as a two-year community&#13;
college and don't realize the&#13;
educational opportunity they have&#13;
here."&#13;
Definite results of this research&#13;
as it relates to man and his&#13;
environment are still far oft. but&#13;
the possibile uses in future&#13;
generations include the regulation&#13;
of fertility in women. This can not&#13;
only affect birth control but may&#13;
also have applications in detecting&#13;
why some women are unable to&#13;
have children. .&#13;
Other possible uses are apparent&#13;
in the farming industry. It&#13;
has been known for years that&#13;
chickens that are exposed to&#13;
longer days lay more eggs. Also&#13;
cows that are exposed to more&#13;
light produce an increased milk&#13;
yield.&#13;
"While working on a project of&#13;
this type there is always the&#13;
possibility of making a major&#13;
discovery." adds Wallen, who&#13;
plans to continue work in this area&#13;
after the grant runs out. "This is&#13;
not a two-year project, it is&#13;
definitely long term."&#13;
Scotl Mather. Parkside'* new wind ensemble rnnduetor, rehearse*&#13;
with ensemble in preparation for their upcoming concert on&#13;
Tuesday, October 9th at 8 pm in the (Utmmunicaiion Art*&#13;
cheater.&#13;
all&#13;
things&#13;
considered 99&#13;
THE TITLE SAYS IT ALL&#13;
Onpr&#13;
National Public Radio&#13;
4pm Mondays - Fridays&#13;
bwctd0&#13;
fw 91 U&#13;
STEREO&#13;
6AM11PM D aily&#13;
isn't It about&#13;
lyme. ,&#13;
you got your card?&#13;
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT YOUR&#13;
BANK OR THE UNION INFO CENTER&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
prepare yourselves..&#13;
[he NCSA Ski Week&#13;
January 1 - 9,1980&#13;
to&#13;
Big Sky Montana&#13;
8T0.00 Deposit&#13;
Put? Oct. 10&#13;
Sign up in Union 209&#13;
srm.oo Inc ludes,&#13;
Huh Transportation&#13;
Lodqiuq&#13;
Lift Tickets&#13;
Parties \ Kaces. &#13;
Cramer's Corner&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
Well, it took me long enough&#13;
but I finally got hold of Tom&#13;
Shulak, the PAB coach. I felt a bit&#13;
uncomfortable during the interview&#13;
because it was conducted on&#13;
enemy territory, the Union Square.&#13;
Throughout the interview Shulak&#13;
Seemed slightly incoherent. He&#13;
said it was because he had. just&#13;
come.from'a Chemistry test. I&#13;
think the only test he participated&#13;
in was the consumption and&#13;
reaction of alcohol to his body.&#13;
This fact aside, he had no kind&#13;
words for coach Tommie Cooper&#13;
or the Ranger football team. The&#13;
touch football game between these&#13;
two student organizations seems as&#13;
if it is turning into a game of&#13;
student group supremacy, at least&#13;
that's the idea I came away with&#13;
after my conversation with Tom.&#13;
See-what you think.&#13;
Why did you accept the Ranger&#13;
challenge?&#13;
"Good question. I thought it&#13;
was a friendly gesture towards&#13;
another student organization on&#13;
campus. Besides, the Ranger&#13;
would be no challenge because&#13;
they drink Michelob. Also, we&#13;
want to put the Ranger in their&#13;
place, on D-l while we're on L-2.&#13;
That shouldn't take much of an&#13;
effort, especially when Cooper is&#13;
playing for them."&#13;
How bad does PAB want to win&#13;
this game?&#13;
"It's not how bad we want to&#13;
win but how bad we want to beat&#13;
the Ranger. I just wonder if they&#13;
will be able to finish the game.&#13;
With a bunch of lower class&#13;
students, we must prove to&#13;
everyone who the leaders are in&#13;
this university. Simply put, the&#13;
Ranger is nothing but trouble."&#13;
What kind of team do you have?&#13;
"The best. I don't see how we&#13;
can lose. We got speed, agility,&#13;
everything to beat the Ranger.&#13;
And that doesn't take much. Our&#13;
first string probably won't even&#13;
have to get upp off the bench."&#13;
Who are your outside players?&#13;
"Our outside players are a big&#13;
part of our team. They are Tony&#13;
Totero, whose class is only&#13;
exceeded by his playing ability.&#13;
He'll neutralize Ranger's big gun,&#13;
A1 Guskin. Sue Wesley, whose size&#13;
and speed speaks for herself. Tom&#13;
Krimmel. Being an alumni of&#13;
Parkside, he has plenty of reason&#13;
for revenge, and Bill Niebuhr. A&#13;
guy who has the knowledge to&#13;
downright out-wit the Ranger and&#13;
has 8.4 speed in the 100 yard&#13;
dash."&#13;
Does PAB know anything about&#13;
the Ranger team?&#13;
"Only that they don't have a&#13;
chance to beat a club as elite and&#13;
influential as PAB. Also with a&#13;
coach like "One Beer" Cooper, I&#13;
don't see how they can win, or even&#13;
score any points."&#13;
What is your reaction to last&#13;
week's Ranger article?&#13;
"It was crude, but I suppose&#13;
that thats the only way that&#13;
Ranger will get in anyjicks against&#13;
PAB because they sure won't be&#13;
able to get any during the game&#13;
with our tough team.&#13;
Do you have any words for&#13;
Cooper? %&#13;
"Actually, I don't see why he'&#13;
even set up this game in the first&#13;
place. He knows what the outcome&#13;
of the game will be, PAB will win.&#13;
Besides, Cooper should be coaching&#13;
a nursery school team, because&#13;
he would fit right in."&#13;
Do you want to predict what the&#13;
score will be?&#13;
"I'm just glad that I work in the&#13;
computer center because we'll&#13;
need a computer to calculate our&#13;
score after just the first quarter of&#13;
play. As for the Ranger score, a&#13;
goose egg is a goose egg. Even&#13;
Cooper can figure that out. By the&#13;
way Dave, I heard you and Cooper&#13;
were related and I really feel sorry&#13;
for you.&#13;
"I just hope that the Ranger&#13;
realizes what they're getting into&#13;
because this game is not only to&#13;
prove who is a better group of&#13;
people, but also a better student&#13;
organization."&#13;
"This game won't be taken&#13;
lightly and I just hope that Ranger&#13;
is able to field a team. It will be&#13;
interesting to see how many of&#13;
them finish the game."&#13;
Kim Merritt second&#13;
in International&#13;
Women's Marathon&#13;
Kim Merritt, former Parkside&#13;
All-American and Boston marathon&#13;
champ, finished second in the&#13;
International Women's Marathon&#13;
September 16.&#13;
Merritt. of Racine, covered the&#13;
26 mile course in 2 hours, 39&#13;
minutes and 43 seconds, three&#13;
minutes behind the winner. Joyce&#13;
Smith of Great Britain.&#13;
This was the second time that&#13;
Merritt had finished second in the&#13;
vent.&#13;
UW-P graduates&#13;
walking across&#13;
West Germany&#13;
UW-Parkside graduates Jim&#13;
Heiring and Chris Hansen will&#13;
compete in the 20-kilometer walk&#13;
Saturday at the Lugano Cup world&#13;
race walking championships in&#13;
Eschborn. West Germany.&#13;
For Heiring. a 1977 UW-P&#13;
graduate from Kenosha, it's a&#13;
return trip to the Lugano meet as&#13;
he finished 36th for the top U.S.&#13;
finish in the 1977 race in England.&#13;
Heiring won six NAIA walk .titles&#13;
during his Parkside career.&#13;
Hansen, a 1978 Parkside&#13;
graduate from Racine, got his first&#13;
taste ot international competition&#13;
in France earlier this summer, but&#13;
will be competing in the Lifgano&#13;
meet lor the first time. He won the&#13;
NA1A 10.000 meter walk as a&#13;
senior.&#13;
Joining the local duo as the&#13;
other U.S. entries in the&#13;
20-kilometer walk are Neal Pyke of&#13;
BHImont. CaL. and Steve Peconovsky&#13;
o| Columbus. Ohio&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Puerto&#13;
Vallarta&#13;
Mexie« ^&#13;
Sports Briefs&#13;
Semester Break January 3-10, 1980&#13;
$339 COMPLETE Quad Occupancy&#13;
LIMITED SPACE - MAKE YOUR&#13;
RESERVATIONS, N OW!!!&#13;
($50 D EPOSIT REQUIRED)&#13;
• For a pplication fo rms o r a dditional information&#13;
contact: Parkside l/n ion O ffice 553-2200&#13;
UW-P soccer&#13;
splits another&#13;
Parkside's men's soccer team&#13;
showed awesome defense as they&#13;
split a pair of games last week.&#13;
Last Wednesday the Rangers&#13;
played an especially tough Aurora&#13;
College team and were defeated&#13;
with the opponents first shot on&#13;
goal. Seven minutes into the game&#13;
they scored on a picture perfect&#13;
play which ended the Ranger's&#13;
hopes for the day.&#13;
"It was just a matter of two&#13;
decent teams beating each other,"&#13;
said coach Hal Henderson. "It was&#13;
not a well played game but it was&#13;
not a bad played game either."&#13;
Last Friday the Rangers turned&#13;
the tables on District 14 opponent&#13;
UW-Whitewater with a 1-0 victory&#13;
on what Henderson called a&#13;
"horrendously bad field." "That&#13;
had to be the worst field I have&#13;
ever played on in 15 years of&#13;
coaching. The only positive aspect&#13;
is that it didn't rain."&#13;
The score was deceptive as to&#13;
the actual play of the game. The&#13;
Rangers totally dominated the&#13;
play. Parkside outshot Whitewater&#13;
13-3 with all the opponents shots&#13;
coming in the first half. Henderson&#13;
said that it was significant that&#13;
Whitewater couldn't even get a&#13;
shot on goal in the second half. He&#13;
also pointed out that the opposing&#13;
Presents&#13;
a dance with&#13;
ARROYO&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 6&#13;
9:00 pm&#13;
Union Square&#13;
UW-P Students&#13;
$1.00&#13;
Guest&#13;
$1.50&#13;
State and Parkside IP's Required&#13;
goalkeeper made excellent saves&#13;
on Parkside's first four shots of the&#13;
game.&#13;
The Rangers goal was scored by&#13;
freshman Bob Newstrom with an&#13;
assist from senior Lee Cielonko.&#13;
This weekend the Rangers will&#13;
travel to Milwaukee to take part in&#13;
the UW Chancellors Cup Tournament.&#13;
Parkside's first foe will be&#13;
host UW-Milwaukee, who is&#13;
presently ranked sixth in the&#13;
midwest with a record of 6-1-2.&#13;
.Milwaukee is the favored team this&#13;
year and has won the last two&#13;
tournaments. Platteville and&#13;
Green Bay will also play each other&#13;
Friday with the winners and losers&#13;
matching up on Saturday.&#13;
Parkside's record now stands at&#13;
3-3 on the season.&#13;
Hockey interest&#13;
develops in K-town&#13;
A relatively unheard of sport in&#13;
this area, hockey, is again going to&#13;
be offered in Kenosha for those&#13;
who like to play but don't really&#13;
have enough talent to make the&#13;
semi-pro team.&#13;
The Kenosha Komets will try&#13;
their hand this year for the first&#13;
time ever in the Badger State&#13;
Hockey League. This is a league&#13;
for 17 years and older who would&#13;
like to play. Conditioning and&#13;
tryout clinics are now being held&#13;
for skaters who would like to&#13;
tryout for the team.&#13;
Assistant general manager and&#13;
trainer. Ted Barnett said that at&#13;
present only 21 people have tried&#13;
out for the roster of 24.&#13;
Since Parkside at present does&#13;
not have a hockey team Barnett&#13;
says that this would be a perfect&#13;
opportunity for college age guys&#13;
who like to play.&#13;
There is a minor tryout fee of 10&#13;
dollars and a fee of $200 for those&#13;
who make the team. Players must&#13;
also supply their own equipment.&#13;
The Komets schedule begins&#13;
November 3rd with a slate of 11&#13;
home games and 10 away contests.&#13;
If you are interested or have anv&#13;
questions von can call Larry Myers&#13;
between 9am and 4pm at 694-8010&#13;
or 094-8011. &#13;
Ranger Wednesday October 3, 1979 ll*&#13;
—Coming Events—&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 4&#13;
HEARING by Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources at 10:30 am in the&#13;
Cinema Theatre. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
RECITAL by students at 2 pm in the Union Cinema. The program is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
SEMINAR "Women and Finances" starts today at 7 pm in T 181. Please call ext.&#13;
2312 for more details.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 5&#13;
SEMINAR "Family Court Counseling" at 9 am in Tallent 181. Call ext. 2312 for&#13;
more details. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
MOVIE Camelot at 8 pm in the Union Cinema. Admission at the door is $1.50&#13;
for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 6&#13;
BUS TOUR "Old World Wisconsin" starts at 8:30 am. The tour is open to the&#13;
public. Call ext. 2312 for information. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
MOVIES "The Wizard ofOz" and "Powers of Ten" will he shown at 7 pm in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission at the door is $1.50. The program is open to the&#13;
public. Sponsored by Kinesis Film Series. Discount coupons are available at&#13;
the Union Imormation Center with prices of $10.00 for 10 admissions and&#13;
$15.00 for 20 admissions.&#13;
DANCE at 9 pm in Union Square featuring "Arroyo". Admission wiU be charged.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 7&#13;
MOVIES "The Wizard of Oz" and "Powers of Ten" will be repeated at 1:30 pm&#13;
in the Union Cinema.&#13;
MOVIE "Camelot" will be repeated at 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Oct. 8&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. Kenosha's Mayor Paul Saftig will talk&#13;
on "Tax Issues in Municipal Development". The program is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
BUS TOUR "Milwaukee Beer Barons" starts at 12:30 pm. Sponsored by UWExtension.&#13;
Call ext. 2312 for more information.&#13;
CLASS "Ancient Religion" starts today at 7:30 pm in Tallent 121. Call ext. 2312&#13;
for more information.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 9&#13;
CONCERT at 8 pm in the Union Cinema featuring Scott Mather directing the&#13;
Parkside Wind Ensemble. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
COURSE Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation from 9 am to 12 noon in Union 104-&#13;
106. The program is free to students, staff and faculty. Sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Health Office.&#13;
DEBATE &amp; FORENSICS The Debate and Forensics team meeting at 1:15 in CA&#13;
258. Ext. 2420.&#13;
Duffers&#13;
fair well&#13;
Parkside's men's golf team took&#13;
part if two tournaments this past&#13;
week, first traveling to Oshkosh&#13;
and then hosting their own&#13;
tourney.&#13;
At Oshkosh coach Steve&#13;
Stephens' team placed fifth in the&#13;
ten team event with a total score of&#13;
421. UW-LaCrosse won the&#13;
tournament with a score of 932.&#13;
UW-Green Bay followed with 406,&#13;
UW-Stevens Point with 411,&#13;
UW-Eau Claire with 416 and&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Todd Schalinske led the&#13;
Rangers shooting a 78 followed by&#13;
Mike Redfearn with 82, Mark&#13;
Peterson with 85, Bob Sobol with&#13;
86 and Brian Graham with 90.&#13;
Friday the team finished third in&#13;
it's own tourney at Brighton Dale&#13;
Country Club. Marquette won the&#13;
meet with a 402 total, UW-Green&#13;
Bay was second with 412 followed&#13;
by parkside at 417.&#13;
Medalists for the Rangers were&#13;
Todd Schalinske, 79; Mark&#13;
Peterson, 83; Bob Sobol, and&#13;
Brian Graham at 84; Mike&#13;
Redfearn, 87.&#13;
The team's lone match this week&#13;
will be Friday at Lawrence&#13;
University.&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
t&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
t -&#13;
• *&#13;
i: • .&#13;
j:&#13;
r&#13;
Help Support T hem&#13;
So T hey C on&#13;
Support u s.&#13;
PLEASE&#13;
PATRONIZE OUR&#13;
ADVERTISERS&#13;
Chiwaukee Coop&#13;
Flowers by&#13;
Joseph&#13;
First National&#13;
Bank of Kenosha&#13;
E.F. Madrigrano&#13;
Kinesis Film&#13;
Society&#13;
Leader Store&#13;
(Kenosha/Racine)&#13;
Main Place&#13;
Pepsi-Cola&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Activities Board&#13;
Parkside Union&#13;
Red's Roller Rink&#13;
Sound Gallery&#13;
WGTD-Gateway&#13;
s I • • I • • • • • •&#13;
t&#13;
•&#13;
• 1 •&#13;
X&#13;
•&#13;
• &gt;&#13;
06&#13;
DOWNTOWN /KCNOSHA&#13;
ELM WOOD PLAZA/ RACINE&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha for women's wear&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
classifieds&#13;
Thanks Tony for all the valuable&#13;
info on PAB's football team - I&#13;
promise not to tell anyone where&#13;
we got our information, the&#13;
coach.&#13;
To our unworthy opponents&#13;
take a shower before the game&#13;
signed no stranger.&#13;
Apt. to sublet - Parkside Village&#13;
Apts. across from Parkside&#13;
College. Call 552-8955 or&#13;
553-9074.&#13;
Locking File Cabinet: the&#13;
government office of Comm 102&#13;
is looking for a locking file&#13;
cabinet to secure material of&#13;
CONFIDENTIAL nature. Contact&#13;
Jim Kausalik at 632-3858. Willing&#13;
to pay $10.&#13;
For Sale: Craig Power Play FMCassette&#13;
w/Power Booster 6x9&#13;
Triaxials, $125. Phone 654-6179.&#13;
Wanted: graphic artists and&#13;
reporters. Contact Sue in the&#13;
Ranger office (next to the Coffee&#13;
Shop WLLC) ext. 2287.&#13;
Wanted: clean responsible&#13;
female babysitter, room &amp; board.&#13;
Call days Connie 654-0217.&#13;
Needed: people willing to work&#13;
on ihe Ranger* Staff.&#13;
Qualifications are you must be&#13;
6'3" or over and weigh 240 lbs. or&#13;
better. Contact Coach Cooper at&#13;
553-2287&#13;
Wanted: we need two more&#13;
referees for a football sgame.&#13;
Qualifications are you must be&#13;
willing to take money and favor&#13;
our team! Call Coach Cooper at&#13;
553-2287.&#13;
Wanted: babysitter — 2-3&#13;
evenings a week. 1 child, 3 yrs.&#13;
old. Own transportation. Racine,&#13;
So. side 634-5709.&#13;
Wanted: custodian, flexible&#13;
hours, i^pply Parkside Child Care&#13;
Center, 553-2227.&#13;
Billiard players: all students&#13;
interested in a billiards league&#13;
please come to the Recreation&#13;
center &amp; sign up.&#13;
My pal Sal: say goodbye 'cuz&#13;
PAB is gonna die! Guess who.&#13;
Ranger: R.K.P. &amp; B. PAB&#13;
To ALL... the "THUNDERTRUCK"&#13;
is Back!! HURRAY!&#13;
Ranger: is HE really the coach&#13;
and Editor for the Ranger? PAB&#13;
Ranger: is Tom Cooper Really&#13;
Bart Starr in Disguise? O.R.&#13;
For Sale: Stereo - Marantz&#13;
receiver #2245, 45 watts, 8 ohms,&#13;
AR Turntable 40 watts, 8 ohms,&#13;
Utah speaker 25" x 15" x 14".&#13;
Pioneel- 8-track #H-R100. Call&#13;
Parry at 657-9151 after 2 p.m.&#13;
schooldays. Reasonable.&#13;
"Computer Science Fair" this&#13;
coming Tuesday. Clown suits&#13;
optional. Droopy.&#13;
"Hangnail Imporium," second&#13;
Wednesday in October. GRNQ&#13;
103, 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Brother's of Artificial Flavoring&#13;
will huddle outside bookstore&#13;
Thursday afternoons.&#13;
John Vogt wears maple syrup&#13;
behind his ears and toes.&#13;
Ken, how come your beard is&#13;
red?&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads&#13;
to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
deadline: every thursday at 10 am&#13;
STUDENT-STUDENT ORGANIZATION RAT E&#13;
Any registered U.W.P. student or student organization is qualified to insert a classified line ad&#13;
in die Ranger at no cost if under or equilavent to 10 words.&#13;
ganger&#13;
NAME&#13;
SS NO.&#13;
WLLC D139 &#13;
"For Sound&#13;
Savings, See Us!' Sound&#13;
Gallery&#13;
"For Sound&#13;
Savings, Set Us!'&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
Along With Our Racine Store&#13;
A NEW KENOSHA LOCATION&#13;
I 'Good Stereo At A Price You Can Afford'&#13;
\IN RACINE - 3618 Northwestern Ave.&#13;
\ phone 634-9100&#13;
\IN KENOSHA - 5718 - 75th Street&#13;
Phone694-8480&#13;
PARKSIDE STUDENTS&#13;
&gt; COUPONS •'&#13;
r&#13;
1&#13;
I&#13;
II i&#13;
I with the p&#13;
| of a $15.00&#13;
| Disc Washer&#13;
Li—coupon&#13;
r™n&#13;
m&#13;
coupon&#13;
FREE&#13;
I Sound Gallery&#13;
I T-Shirt I&#13;
L-.&#13;
with any&#13;
$100.00 purchase $11&#13;
co upon mii&#13;
FREE I&#13;
couponi&#13;
r&#13;
i&#13;
coupon——&#13;
FREE I&#13;
I&#13;
Credit Cards Welcome&#13;
[set of HEADPHONES!&#13;
| Valued at $30.00&#13;
| with Home Stereo |&#13;
I Purchase over I&#13;
$50000&#13;
couponnJ&#13;
90 DAY FREE FINANCING AVAILABLE&#13;
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with every&#13;
Turntable - Cartridge&#13;
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Ll.i COU p O It IMMlJ </text>
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                <text>The Ranger, Volume 8, issue 5, October 3, 1979</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="41">
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              <elementText elementTextId="89408">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="40">
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              <elementText elementTextId="89409">
                <text>1979-10-03</text>
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              <text>University &#13;
o&#13;
f &#13;
Wisconsin &#13;
- &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Wednesday &#13;
October &#13;
10, &#13;
1979 &#13;
SAGA &#13;
continues &#13;
ot &#13;
UW-Parkside &#13;
by &#13;
Wait &#13;
R emondini &#13;
When &#13;
friends &#13;
attending &#13;
dif­&#13;
ferent &#13;
colleges &#13;
get &#13;
together &#13;
one &#13;
of &#13;
he &#13;
questions &#13;
that &#13;
is &#13;
usually &#13;
asked-&#13;
' &#13;
!!&#13;
Ho&#13;
W&#13;
's &#13;
the &#13;
food?" &#13;
Answers &#13;
IS&#13;
' &#13;
,orv &#13;
but &#13;
often &#13;
times &#13;
way &#13;
"How &#13;
s &#13;
" &#13;
va&#13;
r&#13;
y &#13;
but &#13;
printable &#13;
co mments &#13;
follow. &#13;
"torn &#13;
^at &#13;
the     RANGER &#13;
tound &#13;
the &#13;
situation &#13;
here &#13;
at &#13;
Parkside &#13;
has &#13;
both &#13;
its &#13;
pluses &#13;
and &#13;
minuses, &#13;
but &#13;
the &#13;
general &#13;
consen­&#13;
sus &#13;
is &#13;
that &#13;
food &#13;
service &#13;
has &#13;
shown &#13;
improvement &#13;
ove r &#13;
past &#13;
years. &#13;
According &#13;
to &#13;
Fred &#13;
Moore, &#13;
of &#13;
SAGA &#13;
Foods, &#13;
the &#13;
which &#13;
handles &#13;
food &#13;
UW-P, &#13;
"The &#13;
been &#13;
some &#13;
we've &#13;
manager &#13;
company &#13;
service &#13;
here &#13;
at &#13;
comments &#13;
this &#13;
year &#13;
have &#13;
pretty &#13;
good... &#13;
we &#13;
had &#13;
complaints &#13;
last &#13;
year &#13;
but &#13;
done &#13;
the &#13;
best &#13;
we &#13;
could &#13;
to &#13;
rectify &#13;
them, &#13;
and &#13;
so &#13;
far &#13;
I &#13;
think &#13;
we &#13;
have &#13;
done &#13;
a &#13;
good &#13;
job." &#13;
The &#13;
majority &#13;
of &#13;
complaints &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
past &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
centered &#13;
around &#13;
the &#13;
high &#13;
cost &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
poor &#13;
quality &#13;
and &#13;
selection &#13;
of &#13;
food. &#13;
Commenting &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
cost, &#13;
Moore &#13;
said, &#13;
"Some &#13;
students &#13;
have &#13;
complained &#13;
about &#13;
the &#13;
fact &#13;
that &#13;
some &#13;
items &#13;
are &#13;
more &#13;
expensive &#13;
here &#13;
than &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
supermarket &#13;
but &#13;
on &#13;
many &#13;
items &#13;
we &#13;
are &#13;
barely &#13;
•making &#13;
end s &#13;
meet." &#13;
One &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
reasons &#13;
is &#13;
that &#13;
SAGA &#13;
only &#13;
receives &#13;
5% &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
profit &#13;
on &#13;
sales. &#13;
The &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Union &#13;
receives &#13;
10%. &#13;
In creased &#13;
employee &#13;
salaries &#13;
and &#13;
rising &#13;
food &#13;
costs &#13;
have &#13;
also &#13;
been &#13;
influenzal &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
rising &#13;
prices. &#13;
When &#13;
comparing &#13;
prices &#13;
to &#13;
other &#13;
UW &#13;
schools &#13;
M  oore &#13;
claims, &#13;
"The &#13;
prices &#13;
here &#13;
are &#13;
about &#13;
dead &#13;
average &#13;
while &#13;
on &#13;
some &#13;
items &#13;
such &#13;
as &#13;
cold &#13;
sandwiches, &#13;
small &#13;
hamburgers, &#13;
and &#13;
beer, &#13;
they &#13;
are &#13;
substantially &#13;
below &#13;
average." &#13;
When &#13;
asked &#13;
about &#13;
the &#13;
nutri­&#13;
tional &#13;
quality &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
food, &#13;
Moore &#13;
commented, &#13;
"Some &#13;
students &#13;
have &#13;
requested &#13;
we &#13;
use &#13;
more &#13;
whole &#13;
grains &#13;
and &#13;
having &#13;
whole &#13;
wheat &#13;
muffins, &#13;
wheat &#13;
germ, &#13;
vegetarian &#13;
dishes &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
like, &#13;
but &#13;
with &#13;
the &#13;
increased &#13;
costs &#13;
this &#13;
would &#13;
entail &#13;
I &#13;
I &#13;
really &#13;
don't &#13;
know &#13;
if &#13;
the &#13;
students &#13;
would &#13;
buy &#13;
it." &#13;
SAGA &#13;
has &#13;
instituted &#13;
vege­&#13;
tarian &#13;
main &#13;
dishes &#13;
this &#13;
year, &#13;
but &#13;
sales &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
going &#13;
very &#13;
slowly. &#13;
"Last &#13;
week, &#13;
we &#13;
had &#13;
to &#13;
end &#13;
up &#13;
selling &#13;
half &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
dish &#13;
to &#13;
the &#13;
staff &#13;
at &#13;
reduced &#13;
rates," &#13;
said &#13;
Moore. &#13;
He &#13;
also &#13;
added &#13;
that, &#13;
"Vegetarian &#13;
meals &#13;
also &#13;
pose &#13;
an &#13;
additional &#13;
problem &#13;
because &#13;
none &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
food &#13;
can &#13;
be &#13;
reused, &#13;
nonetheless &#13;
we &#13;
will &#13;
continue &#13;
to &#13;
provide &#13;
the &#13;
vegetarian &#13;
dishes &#13;
on &#13;
a &#13;
regular &#13;
basis &#13;
until &#13;
we &#13;
can &#13;
make &#13;
a &#13;
further &#13;
evaluation &#13;
of &#13;
whether &#13;
or &#13;
not &#13;
they &#13;
are &#13;
profitable &#13;
for &#13;
us." &#13;
Moore &#13;
also &#13;
added &#13;
that &#13;
he &#13;
would &#13;
be &#13;
trying &#13;
to &#13;
make &#13;
improvements &#13;
in &#13;
both &#13;
the &#13;
salad &#13;
bar &#13;
and &#13;
soup &#13;
areas. &#13;
"I. &#13;
feel &#13;
that &#13;
both &#13;
the &#13;
salads &#13;
and &#13;
soups &#13;
are &#13;
one &#13;
ot &#13;
the &#13;
best &#13;
buys &#13;
in &#13;
southeastern &#13;
Wisconsin, &#13;
and &#13;
we &#13;
will &#13;
try &#13;
to &#13;
enlarge &#13;
the &#13;
variety &#13;
of &#13;
offerings &#13;
in &#13;
this &#13;
area." &#13;
Moore &#13;
concluded, &#13;
"1 &#13;
think &#13;
that &#13;
if &#13;
students &#13;
really &#13;
wanted &#13;
to, &#13;
they &#13;
could &#13;
eat &#13;
nutritional &#13;
meals &#13;
but &#13;
when &#13;
you &#13;
see &#13;
dozens &#13;
of &#13;
students &#13;
come &#13;
in &#13;
and &#13;
grab &#13;
four &#13;
big &#13;
cookies &#13;
and &#13;
a &#13;
coke &#13;
it &#13;
really &#13;
makes &#13;
you &#13;
wonder." &#13;
"Much &#13;
time &#13;
has &#13;
been &#13;
spent &#13;
trying &#13;
to &#13;
respond &#13;
to &#13;
student &#13;
needs," &#13;
stated &#13;
Moore. &#13;
"We &#13;
made &#13;
some &#13;
changes &#13;
in &#13;
personnel &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
staff &#13;
and &#13;
also &#13;
began &#13;
the &#13;
football &#13;
promotion &#13;
this &#13;
year &#13;
where &#13;
we &#13;
have &#13;
away &#13;
$253 &#13;
worth &#13;
of &#13;
coupons &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
first &#13;
week." &#13;
Mohre &#13;
also &#13;
plans &#13;
to &#13;
continue &#13;
pasf" &#13;
favorites &#13;
such &#13;
as &#13;
the &#13;
indoor &#13;
picnic &#13;
over &#13;
the &#13;
winter. &#13;
"I &#13;
thinK &#13;
thus &#13;
far &#13;
the &#13;
students &#13;
have &#13;
been &#13;
generally &#13;
pleased &#13;
with &#13;
our &#13;
ser­&#13;
vice." &#13;
says &#13;
Moore. &#13;
If &#13;
sales &#13;
are &#13;
any &#13;
indicator, &#13;
he &#13;
is &#13;
right. &#13;
Food &#13;
sales &#13;
last &#13;
year &#13;
jumped &#13;
to &#13;
over &#13;
$340,000, &#13;
up &#13;
over &#13;
$255,000 &#13;
in &#13;
1977 &#13;
- &#13;
78. &#13;
You &#13;
may &#13;
conclude &#13;
that &#13;
SAGA'S &#13;
large &#13;
profits &#13;
are &#13;
to &#13;
blame &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
high &#13;
price &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
food &#13;
(the &#13;
major &#13;
complaint &#13;
among &#13;
students), &#13;
but &#13;
according &#13;
to &#13;
Moore, &#13;
employee &#13;
salaries &#13;
and &#13;
the &#13;
high &#13;
rate &#13;
of &#13;
inflation &#13;
are &#13;
the &#13;
major &#13;
contribu­&#13;
tors &#13;
to-the &#13;
rising &#13;
costs. &#13;
"You &#13;
are &#13;
always &#13;
going &#13;
to &#13;
hear &#13;
complaints &#13;
about &#13;
prices, &#13;
but &#13;
I &#13;
think &#13;
that &#13;
for &#13;
the &#13;
money, &#13;
the &#13;
quality &#13;
and &#13;
value &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
food &#13;
are &#13;
very &#13;
good." &#13;
Another &#13;
area &#13;
which &#13;
SAGA &#13;
has &#13;
looked &#13;
into &#13;
this &#13;
year &#13;
is &#13;
the &#13;
possibility &#13;
of &#13;
contracting &#13;
to &#13;
provide &#13;
a &#13;
meal &#13;
plan &#13;
for &#13;
students &#13;
living &#13;
near &#13;
the &#13;
campus, &#13;
particular­&#13;
ly &#13;
those &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Parkside &#13;
Village. &#13;
This &#13;
practice &#13;
helps &#13;
keep &#13;
food &#13;
costs &#13;
low &#13;
at &#13;
other &#13;
UW &#13;
campuses &#13;
such &#13;
as &#13;
UW-LaCrosse &#13;
and &#13;
Eau &#13;
Claire &#13;
where &#13;
the &#13;
number &#13;
of &#13;
students &#13;
living &#13;
on &#13;
campus &#13;
is &#13;
substantial. &#13;
"If &#13;
we &#13;
had &#13;
a &#13;
few &#13;
hundred &#13;
students &#13;
who &#13;
we &#13;
know &#13;
would &#13;
become &#13;
involved &#13;
1 &#13;
think &#13;
we &#13;
could &#13;
come &#13;
up &#13;
with &#13;
a &#13;
feasabie &#13;
plan," &#13;
he &#13;
commented. &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
meantime, &#13;
business &#13;
continues &#13;
to &#13;
grow, &#13;
and &#13;
Fred &#13;
Moore &#13;
wishes &#13;
it &#13;
to &#13;
keep &#13;
growing &#13;
by &#13;
encouraging &#13;
customer &#13;
feedback. &#13;
'We &#13;
are &#13;
always &#13;
looking &#13;
for &#13;
customer &#13;
feedback &#13;
in &#13;
order &#13;
to &#13;
continue &#13;
doing &#13;
the &#13;
best &#13;
possible &#13;
job &#13;
we &#13;
can." &#13;
PSGA &#13;
holds &#13;
fall &#13;
elections &#13;
Oct. &#13;
24-25 &#13;
-• &#13;
•• &#13;
• &#13;
• &#13;
- - &#13;
i &#13;
• &#13;
j &#13;
• - &#13;
g &#13;
fhe &#13;
meHNHgrH &#13;
Hii idrntK &#13;
we &#13;
on &#13;
monitor* &#13;
around &#13;
ttehool &#13;
originate &#13;
here &#13;
MediaSei &#13;
Message &#13;
wheel &#13;
rolling &#13;
^ &#13;
M'&#13;
ra &#13;
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the &#13;
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^'&#13;
c&#13;
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entl &#13;
ar&#13;
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d &#13;
effective &#13;
are &#13;
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t0 &#13;
describe &#13;
th&#13;
c &#13;
mode &#13;
of&#13;
css&#13;
a&#13;
8&#13;
e &#13;
Wheel, &#13;
a &#13;
new &#13;
c&#13;
"&#13;
n&#13;
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mn&#13;
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nless&#13;
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cs &#13;
sponsored &#13;
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C&#13;
U&#13;
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ms &#13;
or &#13;
activi,ics &#13;
facuitv &#13;
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j &#13;
,&#13;
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s &#13;
student. &#13;
Edition &#13;
to &#13;
S&#13;
'&#13;
a&#13;
t&#13;
' &#13;
o&#13;
r&#13;
8&#13;
aniza,ions &#13;
in &#13;
%"eics. &#13;
community &#13;
groups &#13;
and &#13;
Presently, &#13;
there &#13;
are &#13;
two &#13;
such &#13;
"wheels" &#13;
or &#13;
monitors &#13;
in &#13;
existence &#13;
at &#13;
Parkside. &#13;
Monitors &#13;
are &#13;
located &#13;
in &#13;
Main &#13;
Place &#13;
and &#13;
in &#13;
the &#13;
Media &#13;
Services &#13;
Center. &#13;
The &#13;
message &#13;
wheel &#13;
is &#13;
updated &#13;
twice &#13;
daily, &#13;
once &#13;
at &#13;
8 &#13;
am &#13;
and &#13;
also &#13;
at &#13;
4:30 &#13;
pm. &#13;
The &#13;
message &#13;
wheel &#13;
runs &#13;
.front &#13;
8 &#13;
- &#13;
1 0.30 &#13;
pm &#13;
daily. &#13;
Typical &#13;
messages &#13;
that &#13;
are &#13;
played &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
wheel &#13;
include: &#13;
concerts, &#13;
plays, &#13;
films, &#13;
exhibits. &#13;
and &#13;
sporting &#13;
events &#13;
as &#13;
well &#13;
as &#13;
important &#13;
deadlines &#13;
and &#13;
special &#13;
reminders. &#13;
Stu &#13;
Rubner. &#13;
in &#13;
charge &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
wheel, &#13;
said &#13;
that &#13;
if &#13;
any &#13;
club &#13;
or &#13;
organization &#13;
on &#13;
campus &#13;
would &#13;
like &#13;
an &#13;
announcement &#13;
made &#13;
on &#13;
the &#13;
wheel, &#13;
it &#13;
must &#13;
do &#13;
so &#13;
one &#13;
week &#13;
in &#13;
advance &#13;
of &#13;
the &#13;
date &#13;
the &#13;
activity &#13;
is &#13;
Colli, &#13;
on &#13;
l&gt;"¥&#13;
r &#13;
(&gt; &#13;
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              <text>PSGA elections&#13;
held 24th -25th&#13;
Fall elections for the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
are being held today and tomorrow&#13;
in the main concourse of Molinaro&#13;
Hall. All students are eligible to&#13;
vote for the candidates of their&#13;
choice for positions on the Senate&#13;
and SUFAC (Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocations Committee).&#13;
The candidates for the Senate&#13;
are as follows: Business and&#13;
Administrative Science Division —&#13;
David P. Hale, Undeclared major&#13;
— Chris Hammelev, Write-in&#13;
candidates for the Senate are:&#13;
Behavioral Science — Gary Neu,&#13;
Business and Administrative&#13;
Science — Gary Ledger, Engineering&#13;
Science — Gregory S. Davies,&#13;
Humanities — Thomas Ellsworth,&#13;
Social Science — William Gohde,&#13;
Undeclared Major — James&#13;
Broshat.&#13;
The SUFAC candidates are:&#13;
Sally Wesley, Susan P. Johnson,&#13;
and David R. Rottgen. Joan&#13;
Barton is a write-in candidate for&#13;
SUFAC.&#13;
The election booths will be open&#13;
both days from 8 a.m. until 9 p.m.&#13;
so that every student gets a chance&#13;
to vote. As President Tim Zimmer&#13;
stated, "The fall elections have&#13;
traditionally seen a low voter&#13;
turnout. We're hoping that the&#13;
campus atmosphere this year will&#13;
lend itself to more action and more&#13;
students voting."&#13;
"The Senate hasn't been very&#13;
active lately because we haven't&#13;
had enough people. After this&#13;
election, we should be able to get&#13;
moving."&#13;
'Mexifest' Saturday, Nov. 10&#13;
Moscow Orchestra&#13;
to appear tonight&#13;
The Moscow Pops Orchestra,&#13;
featuring three stars of the Bolshoi&#13;
Opera and two principals of the&#13;
Kiev Ballet, will appear in concert&#13;
at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
tonight, Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 24, at 8 p.m.&#13;
The concert, part of the Accent&#13;
on Enrichment subscription series,&#13;
will be held in the Physical&#13;
Education building so that there is&#13;
ample seating for the general&#13;
public. Tickets ($5) for bleacher&#13;
seating are available at Sears in&#13;
Kenosha, Cook-Gere in Racine,&#13;
the Union Information Center at&#13;
UW-Parkside and, if available, at&#13;
the door.&#13;
Because of recent defections by&#13;
Russian performers in this&#13;
country, there was some doubt as&#13;
to whether this company would be&#13;
allowed to leave Russia. An AOE&#13;
spokesman said, however, that the&#13;
company has arrived in the U.S.&#13;
and is currently performing on the&#13;
east coast. Earlier, the Moscow&#13;
Symphony, a different group, was&#13;
forced by Russian officials to&#13;
cancel its scheduled tour.&#13;
The touring company of 75&#13;
which will be performing at&#13;
UW-Parkside represents a&#13;
marriage of three of the Soviet&#13;
Union's most exciting traditions:&#13;
the Nekrosov Russian Folk&#13;
Orchestra, the Bolshoi and the&#13;
Kiev Ballet.&#13;
The program will feature the&#13;
orchestra in a variety of traditional&#13;
Russian folk songs and waltzes, as&#13;
well as such classical selections as&#13;
Schubert's "Serenade" and&#13;
Moussorgsky's "Great Gate at&#13;
Kiev" from Pictures at an&#13;
Exhibition. Balalaika and "gusli"&#13;
solos and duets also will be&#13;
featured.&#13;
"Mexifest," an evening of&#13;
Mexican entertainment and food,&#13;
will be held Saturday. Nov. 10. at&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
and is open to the public.&#13;
In the tradition of previous theme&#13;
dinners at UW-Parkside. Mexifest&#13;
will feature a multi-course dinner,&#13;
complete with strolling guitarists&#13;
and singers, dancers, a Mariachi&#13;
band and a 10-piece Latin&#13;
American orchestra.&#13;
And if tradition follows,&#13;
Mexifest could sell out as fast as&#13;
previous UW-P theme dinners.&#13;
Last Winter's Faschingfest sold&#13;
out within 48 hours after it was&#13;
announced. Other past dinners&#13;
have included "An Evening with&#13;
Leonardo da Vinci" and "An&#13;
Evening at Monticello" with&#13;
Thomas Jefferson, also turn-away&#13;
affairs.&#13;
Like Faschingfest, Mexifest will&#13;
begin in the campus Union Bazaar&#13;
with a reception, move to the&#13;
Union dining room for dinner and&#13;
entertainment, then move downstairs&#13;
to Union Square where&#13;
entertainment and dancing will b^&#13;
featured in a nightclub setting.&#13;
Sponsors say all entertainment&#13;
will be in costume and. as in the&#13;
past, guests are encouraged to&#13;
come in theme dress.&#13;
Reservations for the dinner will&#13;
be accepted at the Union&#13;
Information Center beginning&#13;
Wednesday (October 24) for staff&#13;
students at 8 a.m. Reservations&#13;
may be made in person, bv mail-, or&#13;
by calling '553-2345. Phone&#13;
reservations, however, must be&#13;
followed within 48 hours by&#13;
payment. Checks should be made&#13;
out to UW-P Mexifest. Total cost&#13;
is $12.50 per person.&#13;
The evening will begin at 6 p.m.&#13;
with a Sangria punch reception.&#13;
An authentic five-course Mexican&#13;
meal will follow at 7 p.m.&#13;
Seating is limited to about 320&#13;
persons. Group table reservations&#13;
may be made.&#13;
INSIDE. . .&#13;
Fornes talks career&#13;
From the Parking Lot:&#13;
'Life of Brian&#13;
Cramer's Corner:&#13;
cross-country women&#13;
v J&#13;
Early registration coming&#13;
Jazz Ensemble performs&#13;
The Parkside Jazz Ensemble performed during Fabulous Friday in&#13;
Union Square last week to the delight of those having their weekly Friday&#13;
beer. Watch for their album to be coming out soon. The ensemble is&#13;
directed bv Tim Bell. photo by M. Anderson&#13;
Early registration will be held&#13;
again this fall for the upcoming&#13;
spring semester. Members of the&#13;
early registration committee are&#13;
Bill Misamore (chairman). Stu&#13;
Rubner. Don Gunderson. Jim&#13;
Marks. Deana Wild. Stella Gray,&#13;
and Geoff Gajewski. They urge&#13;
all students to take advantage of&#13;
this program. Said Stu Rubner.&#13;
"It will do the students nothing&#13;
but good if they register early.&#13;
They will be assured of obtaining&#13;
almost any class they want!"&#13;
V '&#13;
New undergraduate, re-entry,&#13;
and transfer students must applyby&#13;
November lb to be able to&#13;
register early. Continuing students&#13;
can pick up their registration&#13;
packets in the Molinaro Hall&#13;
concourse on the following dates:&#13;
Friday. November 9 from 8:30&#13;
• a.m. until 4:00 p.m.; Monday.&#13;
November 12 from 8:30 a.m.&#13;
until 7:00 p.m.: and Tuesday.&#13;
November 13 from 8:30 a.m.&#13;
until TOO p.m.&#13;
The academic advising program&#13;
will also be included in the&#13;
spring registration. All matriculant&#13;
students must have the&#13;
advising card signed. If the&#13;
; si&#13;
-&#13;
ncd M -&#13;
registration the matriculant student&#13;
cannot register. The card is&#13;
not necessary for non-matriculant&#13;
students. The time for&#13;
continuing matriculant students&#13;
to see their advisor and obtain&#13;
this card is from November 12 to&#13;
November 21.&#13;
Registering early, a person&#13;
may enjoy any of the many&#13;
campus facilities. The ID given to&#13;
the student will not be valid until&#13;
payment is made but another&#13;
temporary card will be handed&#13;
out to enable the student to use&#13;
all of the facilities.&#13;
Payment of fees is not&#13;
necessary upon registration in&#13;
November, but it is possible. A&#13;
list of courses will be mailed to&#13;
all students in December, along&#13;
with details on fee payments.&#13;
Textbooks will not be available&#13;
tor purchasing until January 9.&#13;
Students may stop by any time&#13;
before that and familiarize&#13;
themselves with the bookstore.&#13;
All undergraduate students&#13;
should take the Mathematics and&#13;
English Placement Tests prior to&#13;
enrolling at Parkside. The November&#13;
Registration Testing&#13;
Dates are: November 2b at b:(X)&#13;
p.m.:.November,-,!; at, 12 npo.li, or&#13;
6:00 p.m.; and November 28 at&#13;
12 noon or 6:00 p.m. All of the&#13;
placement tests will be given in&#13;
Greenquist Hall. Room 10.3. The&#13;
total testing time is approximately&#13;
3 hours.&#13;
The times for early registration&#13;
are: November 27 and 28. from&#13;
8:30 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. for fulltime&#13;
continuing students and&#13;
6:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. for&#13;
part-time continuing students:&#13;
November 29. from 8:30 a.m.&#13;
until 5:00 p.m. for part-time and&#13;
full time students; and from 6:00&#13;
p.m. until 9:00 p.m. for new&#13;
students (counseling and advising&#13;
will be given also).&#13;
People that don't register early&#13;
can always register in Januar;&#13;
Any additional questions about&#13;
early registration can be directed&#13;
to the Student Development . i&#13;
Community Student Services&#13;
center in D-175 of the Wvlhe&#13;
Library Learning Center&#13;
553-2000. Graduate students&#13;
should call in the Division, ui'n&#13;
for their graduate [ o-;: -t&#13;
Master of administrative Science&#13;
(Mas). 553-2280; Master ot&#13;
Public Service AdminH-trrvDnti&#13;
(MPSA). 553-2021. or 553-2316-&#13;
, . .Ed u^ifkyn,552-2,180,&#13;
October 24, 1979&#13;
j/T University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger &#13;
ftMN tlAC{&#13;
usimm m&#13;
S1N&lt; E 1918&#13;
LUNCH&#13;
Mon-Sat&#13;
11-2&#13;
BRUNCH&#13;
10:20 - 2&#13;
DINNER&#13;
Thurs-Sat.&#13;
5-9&#13;
633-7744&#13;
2 Wednesday October 24, 1979&#13;
When you pick up a Ranger,&#13;
where is the first place you turn?&#13;
im IT wA5 AH )ceMP-6 £ . TH€'R£ */&amp;£&amp;. G6/-A, To&#13;
e &gt; £ U E \ J E THU. "&#13;
Music at Parkside Nov. 11 Terry Friso - Freshman&#13;
The advertisements, that's what&#13;
I mostly look for. Parkside Piano Duo: Carol Bell&#13;
and August Wegner; and Invention&#13;
for Piano and Tape by&#13;
John Biggs, performed by pianist&#13;
Barbara English Maris.&#13;
The series is* directed by Harry&#13;
Sturm and August Wegner, and is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
Concert-goers are invited to stay&#13;
for a wine and cheese reception&#13;
immediately following the concert.&#13;
For further information call the&#13;
Parkside Fine Arts Division Office&#13;
at 553 - 2042.&#13;
Composers' Competition and was&#13;
given its first performance by the&#13;
OrianaTrioon May 13, 1979. Also&#13;
on the program are Divertimento&#13;
for harpsichord and percussion by&#13;
Jurg Baur, performed by Frances&#13;
Bedford, harpsichord, and David&#13;
Lenz, percussion; Three Pieces for&#13;
Clarinet by Igor Stravinsky,&#13;
performed by clarinettist Timothy&#13;
Bell; Adagio Lyrico for two pianos&#13;
by Milwaukee composer JohrDowney,&#13;
performed by *•' t&#13;
The first concert in the J979-80&#13;
season in the New Music at&#13;
Parkside series at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside will be presented&#13;
on November 11, 1979 in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
The featured work will be Music&#13;
for Oriana by John White,&#13;
performed by the Oriana Trio: S.&#13;
Eden Vaning, violin; Harry Sturm,&#13;
cello; and Carol Bell, piano.&#13;
This was the winning work in&#13;
the 1979 Oriana Trio International&#13;
Dick Sykes - Sophomore&#13;
I turn right to the personals. I&#13;
have a lot of girlfriends that write&#13;
me notes.&#13;
To the Hditnr&#13;
Minority Student Union active&#13;
Chris Kortiang - Sophomore&#13;
The front page to find out what&#13;
is in the newspaper.&#13;
photos by B. Passino&#13;
John Conforti - Freshman&#13;
The forest, that's where I'd&#13;
pick up a Ranger, right?&#13;
i . Stevens&#13;
i i ian Felland&#13;
Itoug Edenhauser&#13;
Ken Meyer&#13;
Foff S tevens&#13;
Kevin Padula&#13;
MBke Murphy&#13;
Tom Cooper&#13;
Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Photo Editor&#13;
... A d v e r t i s i ng M a n a g er&#13;
Chairman of the Board&#13;
Reminder&#13;
The Ranger appreciates hearing&#13;
from you! If you'd like to write a&#13;
letter to the Editor, just follow&#13;
these guidelines:&#13;
Ail letters must be in the Ranger&#13;
office by 10 am on the Friday&#13;
before publication. The Ranger&#13;
office is located at WLLC D139&#13;
(next to the Coffee Shoppe).&#13;
The maximum length for letters&#13;
accepted is 500 words. They must&#13;
be typewritten, double-spaced with&#13;
one-inch margins on standard&#13;
typing paper.&#13;
Ail letters must be signed.&#13;
Names will be withheld for valid&#13;
reasons. Include a phone number&#13;
for verification.&#13;
All letters will be printed&#13;
without editing. Remember to&#13;
check for typing errors, misspellings,&#13;
and grammatical errors.&#13;
The Ranger has editorial&#13;
priviliges and may refuse to&#13;
publish letters found to be&#13;
defamatory in content.&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Mark Anderson, Curtis Moldenauer, Brian Passino&#13;
Layout&#13;
Mary Arnold, Nancy Hernandez, Nancy Mikaelian&#13;
Graphic Artists&#13;
Jill Stougaard, Michael Williams &#13;
Ranger Wednesday October 24, 1979 3&#13;
Phi Alpha Theta&#13;
to meet Oct. 30&#13;
An organizational meeting to&#13;
elect officers for a Parkside&#13;
chapter of Phi Alpha Theta. the&#13;
International Honor Society in&#13;
History, will be held at 12:30&#13;
P-m.. Tuesday, October 30, in&#13;
Molinaro ill. Any student&#13;
interested in history is encouraged&#13;
to attend, as a history club&#13;
is also being organized. The club&#13;
and the honorary will cooperate&#13;
on all activities and programs.&#13;
Students are eligible for membership&#13;
in Phi Alpha Theta if&#13;
they have completed a minimum&#13;
of 12 credits in history with a 3.1&#13;
average or above and a 3.0&#13;
average or above in two-thirds of&#13;
the remainder of their course&#13;
work.&#13;
Phi Alpha Theta offers awards&#13;
and scholarships to members,&#13;
publishes The Historian magazine&#13;
which publishes student papers,&#13;
and tries to promote the study of&#13;
history by bringing students and&#13;
faculty together both intellectually&#13;
and socially.&#13;
If unable to attend the meeting,&#13;
or it additional information is&#13;
requested, contact history faculty&#13;
members Dr. Angela Howard&#13;
Zophy or Dr. Oliver Hayward in&#13;
the Social Science office, ext 2316.&#13;
Fornes to direct&#13;
Obie award play&#13;
Off Broadway playwright Maria&#13;
Irene Fornes will direct her 1977&#13;
Obie Award play "Fefu and Her&#13;
Friends" at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside at 8 p.m.&#13;
Thursday through Sunday, Oct.&#13;
25 - 28, and at 2 p.m. on Sunday,&#13;
Oct. 28, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Critics have hailed the play as a&#13;
"coup d'theatre" for its unique&#13;
environmental design.&#13;
The action begins and ends in&#13;
the conventional setting of the&#13;
theater. But in between, the&#13;
audience moves physically through&#13;
the New England country house&#13;
where Fefu and seven women&#13;
friends have gathered for a&#13;
reunion. The time is the 1930s and&#13;
they are planning a fund-raising&#13;
event for a school they hope to&#13;
start.&#13;
As the players move in groups of&#13;
two and three through the rooms&#13;
of the house, the audience follows&#13;
them... to the kitchen, to a&#13;
bedroom, to the living room, to the&#13;
lawn where a croquet game is in&#13;
progress. The audience is divided&#13;
into four groups to view these&#13;
scenes, moving from room to room&#13;
as the cast repeats its performance&#13;
for each group. The rooms are&#13;
"real" rooms, rather than conventional&#13;
theatrical sets, with four&#13;
walls and ceilings enclosing both&#13;
actors and audience.&#13;
This intimacy affects the acting&#13;
style Fornes has adopted for her&#13;
cast. It is a cinematic, close-up&#13;
style, she explains. The audience&#13;
sees the characters blink and&#13;
breathe as they re-live shared joys&#13;
and sorrows and search for a vision&#13;
of their future.&#13;
Donna Hutchings of Evanston&#13;
plays Fefu (pronounced Feh-foo —&#13;
a nickname for Stephanie). Cast as&#13;
her frien ds are Mary Ann&#13;
Lulewicz. Mary-Beth Kelleher and&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Patricia B. Casciaro of Kenosha,&#13;
Sarah Spencer, Mary Stankus and&#13;
Gail G. Ross of Racine and Rita R.&#13;
Bislew of Kansasville.&#13;
Prof. Rhoda Gale Pollack is the&#13;
producer, set and light design is by&#13;
John H. Dickson and costume&#13;
design by Barbara Thompson.&#13;
Because of space limitations in&#13;
the play's special environments,&#13;
seating will be limited to 200&#13;
persons per performance. Reservations&#13;
can be made by calling&#13;
553-2345 or 553-2042. Admission&#13;
is $3 for the general public; $2 for&#13;
senior citizens and UW-Parkside&#13;
students, faculty and staff. Tickets&#13;
are available at the Parkside&#13;
Union Information Center.&#13;
Marketing Club&#13;
needs support&#13;
Now you have the opportunity to&#13;
expand your marketing knowledge&#13;
and experience through two&#13;
methods — a soon-to-be-formed&#13;
Marketing Club with Glenn Bozon&#13;
as advisor, and a Marketing&#13;
Seminar.&#13;
The Marketing Club will&#13;
attempt to promote interest in&#13;
marketing at UW-Parkside, and&#13;
we need your support! We are&#13;
looking for students carrying a&#13;
marketing specialty, or any&#13;
students interested in the field.&#13;
The Club will be exploring such&#13;
areas as collegiate competition and&#13;
practical experience in the field&#13;
through other projects.&#13;
The first of these activities will&#13;
be a Sales and Marketing&#13;
Round-Up to be held at Carthage&#13;
College on November 2 and 3. It&#13;
will feature guest speakers, work&#13;
shops, and other social activities.&#13;
The topics to be discussed include&#13;
Women In Business, Dressing For&#13;
Success, Resume Writing, and Job&#13;
Interviewing, among others. Cost&#13;
will be $10 per session or $25 for&#13;
all three sessions. The sessions run&#13;
Friday, November 2, from 4:30 to&#13;
10:00 p.m. and Saturday, November&#13;
3, from 8:00 - 1:15 and 1:45 -&#13;
6:45 p.m. The price of the sessions&#13;
includes meals.&#13;
For further information about&#13;
the seminar, or the Marketing&#13;
Club, contact Glenn Bozon or the&#13;
business office at Extension 2243,&#13;
or 652-5584.&#13;
Blood drive to&#13;
be held today&#13;
Parkside's Fourth Annual Blood&#13;
Drive will be held today in Union&#13;
104-106 from 9 a.m. until 2:30&#13;
p.m. Those students interested in&#13;
giving blood may do so on a&#13;
walk-in basis.&#13;
As Dr. Richard Pomazal,&#13;
co-director of the event along with&#13;
Edith Isenberg, stated, "It is&#13;
anticipated that 100,000 blood&#13;
donations will be needed this year&#13;
for southeastern Wisconsin."&#13;
The drives here at Parkside have&#13;
been successes in the past, but&#13;
everyone is hoping that students&#13;
will give even more this year.&#13;
"This drive, we're hoping for&#13;
100 pints. That'll put us over last&#13;
year's 93," Pomazal stated. The&#13;
campus health department is&#13;
working on the drive with help&#13;
from the Life-Science and PreMed&#13;
clubs.&#13;
Any questions about eligibility&#13;
requirements and procedures may&#13;
be directed to the campus health&#13;
office, ext. 2366.&#13;
The fastest-growing. Premium Beer&#13;
in America.&#13;
On Tap&#13;
at&#13;
Union&#13;
Square&#13;
C HtlLlMAN BREWING CO INC LA CROHS WISCONSIN&#13;
PPORT&#13;
udent&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
an izations&#13;
LOOk WHrtT we&#13;
FOR VOU&#13;
DO&#13;
c. s.c.&#13;
The Co-operative Services Collective is&#13;
Parkside's largest student group with over&#13;
1,000 members, providing the Food &amp; B ook&#13;
Co-ops and Learning Center for the entire&#13;
Parkside community. Call 553-2667 for info.&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board brings you all of&#13;
Parkside's student programming. Attend a&#13;
movie, dance, concert, etc. and support the&#13;
hard work that goes into each of these&#13;
programs. Call 553-2278&#13;
s. o. c.&#13;
The Student Organization Council&#13;
represents over 25 student groups that work&#13;
on a variety of campus interests. These&#13;
clubs need your support by participation&#13;
and co-operation with their activities. Call&#13;
553-2594 for club info.&#13;
P. S. G. A.&#13;
Parkside Student Government Assoc.&#13;
Represents all Parkside students and&#13;
student groups. Get involved, participate in&#13;
student government by getting on a&#13;
committee, run for office or voice your&#13;
concerns. Call 553-2244 for info.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
It takes a lot of work to put out this&#13;
newspaper every week. The students who&#13;
work on the Ranger need your support by&#13;
contributing letters to the editor, writing&#13;
articles, layout, or photography. There's&#13;
something for everyone. Call 553-2295.&#13;
P.C.C.C.&#13;
Parkside Child Care Center has been&#13;
providing Parkside with quality child care&#13;
services for many yqars. If you could use&#13;
their services call 553-2227 for info. The&#13;
Center has convenient hours for all types of&#13;
students.&#13;
J&#13;
HELP OUT ! &#13;
4 Wednesday October 24, 1979 Ranger.&#13;
classifieds&#13;
policy&#13;
1. All paid classifieds must be initialed by a staff member.&#13;
2. All classifieds must include social security number and signature of advertiser.&#13;
3. Limit three free classifieds per person.&#13;
for sale&#13;
Car: 1974 Hornet wagon,&#13;
60,000 miles, good condition,&#13;
$1,400. Call 634-7646.&#13;
Car: 1971 Chevrolet Nova.&#13;
Good running condition. Good&#13;
winter car. Snowtires and rims&#13;
included. Cheap. Call Racine&#13;
634-5363.&#13;
ANTIQUES: from family attic,&#13;
1832 truck, 1940's Philco. Call&#13;
632-2462.&#13;
Vasque Hiker II hiking boots.&#13;
Mens size 9. Excellent condition.&#13;
$60 or best offer. Call&#13;
552-9068 after 6 p.m.&#13;
Parrots- large selection available.&#13;
Phone 694-2108 after 3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
BOOKS: Used, out-of-print,&#13;
rare hardcover books at&#13;
paperback prices! A nice&#13;
selection in all areas. See this&#13;
month's special; books on&#13;
writing and journalism; of&#13;
interest to anyone who likes to&#13;
or wants to write. The Old&#13;
Book Corner, upstairs at&#13;
martha Merrell's in Racine&#13;
(312-6th Street)&#13;
wanted&#13;
Ride * aeded to Madison or&#13;
Port ..ge area and back.&#13;
November 2-4. Call 552-7724.&#13;
personals&#13;
Happy Birthday Sharon Keller!&#13;
From; Porker toruqer,&#13;
Whippoorwill, and Mommy!&#13;
Jackie- Happy Birthday... I&#13;
still owe you one. The&#13;
Shadow.&#13;
Hey Doc, I'm crazy about you.&#13;
Your little bear grizzly.&#13;
BOB &amp; them suck, not the&#13;
Cars &amp; the Knack.&#13;
Roxanne: You'd make excellent&#13;
Jane. Why not you single?&#13;
TARZAN.&#13;
RANGER will be undefeated&#13;
this season.&#13;
Denise Sobieski - Party's Over.&#13;
Now name thy desire. Don&#13;
Juan.&#13;
MIRA: Why are lovely maidens&#13;
so coy? PALADIN.&#13;
Hi Reed! Give Michael a kiss&#13;
for me. Who else!&#13;
Judas Priest has condemned&#13;
Disco to DEATH. Signed THE&#13;
PRIESTS.&#13;
To Music Department: Our&#13;
motto is: "When you mess&#13;
with the best you get hurt like&#13;
the rest." — so you may want&#13;
to reconsider your unworthy&#13;
challenge. Ranger.&#13;
Don, Remember the Alamo.&#13;
Be kind to animals today.D.S.&#13;
Jim- The memories of green&#13;
Chevys, Stroh's and Michelob&#13;
will live on forever - Art and&#13;
Moldy.&#13;
To Music Dept. the 'tiger' is&#13;
ready.&#13;
Music Dept.&#13;
"Twinkle toes"!&#13;
beware of&#13;
Barr Female engagements to&#13;
male drug Pushers. Signed&#13;
Angry Admirer.&#13;
Truckey's new apartment is&#13;
animal haven; Right Dennis&#13;
M?&#13;
lost &amp; found&#13;
Lost: Commodore calculator&#13;
on 3rd floor of Library.&#13;
Reward! Please contact Janet&#13;
Smith at 657-5709.&#13;
miscellaneous&#13;
A L T E R N A T I V E ENER G Y&#13;
PROGRAM. Anyone interested&#13;
in starting a Student&#13;
Mobilization for Survival: to&#13;
support anti-nuclear and alternative&#13;
energy programs&#13;
contact Jeanna LeSuer, 639-&#13;
2574.&#13;
EDIBLE ARTS - Watch for IT!&#13;
October 31.&#13;
m&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
deadline: every thursday at 10 am&#13;
STUDENT-STUDENT ORGANIZATION RATE&#13;
Any registered U.W.P. student or student organization is qualified to insert a classified line ad&#13;
in oie Ranger at no cost if under or equilavent to 10 words.&#13;
name&#13;
ss no.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
W L L C D l* 9&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24&#13;
Blood Drive from 9 am until 2:30 pm in Union 104-106. The program is open to&#13;
the public. Sponsored by the Parkside Health Office.&#13;
Movies "A Doll's House" and "Ricky &amp; Rocky" will be shown at 7 pm in the&#13;
Union Cinema Theatre. Admission is $1.50. The program is open to the public.&#13;
Sponsored by the Kinesis Film Series.&#13;
A/E Series presents the Moscow "Pops" Orchestra with performers from the&#13;
Bolshoi Theatre and Kiev Ballet at 8 pm in the Physical Education Bldg.&#13;
Tickets are available at the Union Information Center. Admission is $5.00.&#13;
Coffeehouse at 8 pm in Union Square featuring "Buck, Stove and Range".&#13;
Admission is free. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 25&#13;
Meeting Organizational meeting for Individuals interested in forming a Competitive&#13;
Club Team. 6:00 pm at level 2 Phy. Ed. Building.&#13;
Speaker Jerry Wolsham Union 104 from 12:00-1:00.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26&#13;
Play "Fefu and Her Friends" at 8 pm in the Communication Arts Theatre. The&#13;
play is being directed and written by Maria Irene Fornes, Artist in Residence.&#13;
Tickets are available at the Union Information Center. Admission is $2.00 for&#13;
Parkside students and senior citizens and $3.00 for others.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 27&#13;
Movies "Amarcord" and "Experiments in Motion Graphics" will be shown at 7&#13;
pm in the Union Cinema. Admission is $1.50. The program is open to the&#13;
public. Sponsored by the Kinesis Film Series.&#13;
Play "Fefu and Her Friends" will be repeated at 8 pm in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 28&#13;
Play "Fefu and Her Friends" will be repeated at 2 pm and 8 pm in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre.&#13;
Movies "Amarcord" and "Experiments in Motion Graphics" will be repeated at&#13;
1:30 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Oct. 29&#13;
Round Table at 12 noon in Union 106. Racine Circuit Judge John Ahlgrimm will&#13;
talk on "The New Children's Code-One Year Later". The program is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Meeting I PHELTA THI at 7:00 pm in Union Square. Important I PHELTA THI&#13;
to discuss future plans. New members welcome to listen in.&#13;
Come&#13;
on&#13;
down!&#13;
to the&#13;
RANGER&#13;
office&#13;
WLLC D139&#13;
Rec Center&#13;
Weekly Specials!&#13;
Mondays, -&#13;
6pm - 10pm&#13;
Tuesdays,&#13;
7pm - 10pm&#13;
Ladies Nite&#13;
1&#13;
/2 price bowling, billiards&#13;
foosball, table tennis&#13;
Lucky 13&#13;
13 frame bowling games&#13;
special prizes each night for&#13;
high games&#13;
No Tap Bowling&#13;
Thursdays,&#13;
9 P'&#13;
n s down count as strike —&#13;
7™v. in special prizes each night for /pm - 10pm high games&#13;
Moonlight Bowling&#13;
Saturdays, ~&#13;
O . 1 cash prizes if you c an leave red&#13;
pm - llpm pj n standing a,lone on 1st ball&#13;
Red Pin Bowling&#13;
IVIon F " ——&#13;
n ri&#13;
' Special prizes if you can strike&#13;
hours posted o n r e d head pin&#13;
For more info Call 553-2695 or&#13;
1&#13;
stop down at the Union Rec Center.&#13;
Specials begin the week of Oct. 24&#13;
and run through the semester. &#13;
Ranger Wednesday October 24, 1979 5&#13;
I to R; Terry Jones, Terry" Gilliam, Graham Chapman, Eric Idle&#13;
John Cleese, and Michael Palin.&#13;
from Hie Parking Lot&#13;
'Life of Brian'&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
At a time when so many seem to&#13;
be compromising logical thought,&#13;
abandoning imperfectly mundane&#13;
daily life, and replacing it with&#13;
illogically perfect infinity, along&#13;
comes a movie that gives the&#13;
viewer a second chance at facing&#13;
up to brutal reality, according to&#13;
the Monty Python gospel.&#13;
Their "Life of Brian" reveals,&#13;
through satire and grotesque&#13;
slapstick comedy, that there is a&#13;
lot of "silliness" in the world.&#13;
Perhaps you already know that.&#13;
But even if you do, "Brian" is still&#13;
worth your $3.50. Silly things have&#13;
never before been exposed in such&#13;
a silly way.&#13;
Brian can be compared to&#13;
Christ, but if this comparison is&#13;
too offensive to those wholly&#13;
snagged in Christianity, he can&#13;
also be compared to a few more&#13;
infamous, perhaps luckier, individuals&#13;
that have claimed to&#13;
represent the same doctrines (and&#13;
the same Father). ;&#13;
No matter who Monty Python's&#13;
"Brian" is supposed to represent,&#13;
his figure will be recognized. Brian&#13;
is the innocent bystander who is&#13;
always in the wrong place at the&#13;
right time, and never fully aware of&#13;
his role in the scheme of things.&#13;
It's kind of fun guessing if and&#13;
how he'll get out of all the tangled&#13;
scrapes he manages to get himself&#13;
into so innocently.&#13;
As usual, nearly every social&#13;
institution and human quirk&#13;
known to man is made laughable&#13;
by the Pythons. . .including&#13;
nationalist organizations, Roman&#13;
conquerors and their conquered&#13;
subjects, over-possessive mothersin-drag,&#13;
the common rabble,&#13;
individuals with speech defects,&#13;
feminists, UFO's and their&#13;
Hollywood clones, stock scenes&#13;
from old movies, and prophets.&#13;
There s more: holy men, various&#13;
government officials and laborers,&#13;
severed limbs, tood, elderly people,&#13;
biblical figures, legal searches,&#13;
public executions, grade school&#13;
jokes, and even British "tea time."&#13;
And it's all very silly. You might&#13;
find yourself laughing heartily one&#13;
minute, then spending the next&#13;
tew minutes trying to convince&#13;
yourself that you weren't laughing&#13;
at anything that childish.&#13;
Monty Python's "Life of Brian"&#13;
is not just another cult movie, to be&#13;
watched uijder the influence after&#13;
the bars close. Stay sober for this&#13;
one. Or you might wake up the&#13;
next morning confused — yet&#13;
vaguely aware that you've had an&#13;
epic nightmare.&#13;
Actually, "Brian" offers no&#13;
arguments against the Bible, God,&#13;
or even Jesus himself. Jesus is&#13;
portrayed twice — both times as&#13;
very white, clean, and holy. The&#13;
slapstick is saved for those who&#13;
were exposed to His teachings. The&#13;
Pythons are more interested in&#13;
showing us man's fraudulence&#13;
than in exposing religion as a&#13;
fraud.&#13;
Myths &amp; facts&#13;
by Edith Isenberg&#13;
Just for variety, I'd like to share&#13;
with yoii some medical myths&#13;
collected by my colleagues in other&#13;
health services and a few of my&#13;
own. With the health information&#13;
explosion of the last few years,&#13;
health myths are common. These&#13;
medical misconceptions usually&#13;
grow out of common problems or&#13;
situations and it is important to&#13;
remove the "myth" and substitute&#13;
sound medically accepted&#13;
concepts.&#13;
Myth: A person with 20/20&#13;
vision does not need glasses.&#13;
Fact: This person may not need&#13;
glasses. The 20/20 vision indicates&#13;
normal visual acuity, the ability to&#13;
read on the eye examination chart,&#13;
the letters designated to be read at&#13;
20 feet. Visual acuity does not&#13;
include focusing ability, eye&#13;
coordination, depth perception&#13;
and other eye activity necessary for&#13;
continued good vision. So having&#13;
20/20 vision only is a good start,&#13;
but not the final answer.&#13;
Myth: Butter or lard is good for&#13;
a burn.&#13;
Fact: No grease should be&#13;
applied. Cold water is the accepted&#13;
treatment for burns. The cold will&#13;
not only relieve some of the pain,&#13;
but will also stop the burn process&#13;
that may continue in serious&#13;
burns.&#13;
Myth: A hot soak will limber up&#13;
a newly sprained ankle.&#13;
Fact: Remember 'the actions of&#13;
heat and cold. Heat expands, and&#13;
will allow newly ruptured blood&#13;
vessels to bleed and produce&#13;
swelling. Cold contracts and will&#13;
help inhibit bleeding and swelling.&#13;
The ICE rule: ICE, Compression,&#13;
Elevation. "Just been socked?&#13;
Keep it cold. Use the heat when&#13;
it's two days old."&#13;
Myth: A penicillin or antibiotic&#13;
shot will cure a cold.&#13;
Fact: A cold is caused by a&#13;
virus. A penicillin or antibiotic&#13;
shot is effective only against&#13;
bacteria, never viruses.&#13;
The Parkside Union Announces. . .&#13;
Sat. Nov. 10&#13;
mecikd J&#13;
B Sa ngria Punch Reception&#13;
• Five Course Mexican Dinner&#13;
• Strolling Musicians&#13;
• Costumed Folkdancers&#13;
• Authentic Mariachi Band&#13;
• 10 Piece Latin American Orchestra&#13;
$12.50 Per Ticket&#13;
Tickets On Sale Now — Union Information Center&#13;
Seating limited to the first 320 reservations&#13;
Art Dept. sponsors trip&#13;
The ART DISCIPLINE is&#13;
planning a fall field trip to the&#13;
Chicago Art Institute on Saturday,&#13;
November 3rd. Those attending&#13;
will view the special ToulouseLautrec&#13;
exhibition as well as the&#13;
world-famous permanent collection&#13;
of the Institute.&#13;
Although primarily intended for&#13;
art students, all art lovers from the&#13;
University community are invited&#13;
to participate and take advantage&#13;
of the low group rates. Sign up at&#13;
the Fine Arts Office in CA 285&#13;
before Wed., Oct 31st. Cost is&#13;
$2.00 for round-trip transportation&#13;
by train (meals &amp; admission&#13;
are extra). All those attending&#13;
must meet at the Chicago &amp;&#13;
Northwestern Station in Kenosha&#13;
at 8:30 a.m. on Nov. 3; train will&#13;
return by 6:30 p.m. If you are&#13;
interested in art, don't miss this&#13;
all-day art adventure!&#13;
m Prudential&#13;
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tra ini ng pr o g r am t h at is u ne q u a lle d in th e i ns u r a n c e&#13;
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Full and part-time openings in both&#13;
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A r r a n ge f or a c onfi den tia l i n ter view w ith u s right no w .&#13;
James Madson&#13;
4401 Taylor Ave.&#13;
Racine, Wis. 53405&#13;
552-7515&#13;
Parkside Food Service&#13;
says&#13;
"MAMA MIA. . .&#13;
WHATA WEDNESDAY!"&#13;
-SAWED, NOV. 24&#13;
(UNION DIN ING ROOM&#13;
featuring&#13;
• ANTIPASTO PLATES&#13;
• MANICOTTI&#13;
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• DEEP FRIED&#13;
EGGPLANT&#13;
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• PIZZA BR EAD&#13;
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• CHEESE TORTE&#13;
ITALIAN BRE AD&#13;
COMBINATION PLATE SPECIAL&#13;
$2.29&#13;
Includes a Complimentary&#13;
Giass of Wine &#13;
6 Wednesday October 24, 1979 Ronger&#13;
RANGER NEEDS ...&#13;
• AD REPS * LAYOUT PEOPLE&#13;
• AD LAYOUT PEOPLE • NEWS REPORTERS&#13;
• ARTISTS + PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
• FEATURE REPORTERS • SPORTS REPORTERS&#13;
KINESIS&#13;
Campus/Community Film Series&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
Forties talks on career&#13;
by Donald Scherrer&#13;
Off Broadway playwright Maria&#13;
Irene Fornes, visiting artist-inresidence&#13;
in dramatic arts here at&#13;
U.W.-Parkside, will direct her&#13;
1977 Obie Award-winning play,&#13;
"Fefu and Her Friends," October&#13;
25-27, at 8 p.m., and October 28 at&#13;
2 and 8 p.m., in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Maria Fornes, in addition to the&#13;
Village Voice Qff-Broadway (Obie)&#13;
Award for "Fefti", has also&#13;
received Obies for her plays&#13;
"Promenade" "The Successful&#13;
Life of 3," and one for directing&#13;
her 1978 - 1979 play, "Eyes on the&#13;
Harem." "Dr. Kheal" and "Tango&#13;
Palace" are likewise of her doing.&#13;
Maria Fornes has garnered&#13;
many prestigious awards, among&#13;
Fefu and friends rehearse for the fund raiser that has brought them&#13;
together. Gail Ross, right, executes a joyful lead applauded by, from left,&#13;
Donna Hutchings (Fefu), Mary Ann Lulewicz (Cindy), Sarah Spencer&#13;
(Julie), Mary Stankus (Paula), Patricia Casciaro, on couch (Emma), and&#13;
Mary Beth Kelleher (Christina).&#13;
• , k&#13;
felliiji's &amp;iqacord&#13;
Union Square Theater&#13;
Oct. 27 7:00 pm&#13;
Oct. 28 1:30 pm&#13;
S1.50 Single Admission&#13;
Part-time work&#13;
available now!&#13;
Position could lead&#13;
to full-time&#13;
Summ er positi ons.&#13;
Hours are flexible,&#13;
for interview.&#13;
Phone 634-7106&#13;
them: Whitney, Rockefeller,&#13;
Guggenheim, New York State&#13;
Grants and National Endowment&#13;
for the Arts.&#13;
Her plays have been produced&#13;
throughout the U.S. and in such&#13;
major European theatrical centers&#13;
as London, Stockholm, Glasgow,&#13;
Svalegange, Spoletb, Amsterdam,&#13;
and Melbourne and Zurich. A&#13;
volume of her work, Promenade&#13;
and Other Plays, is presently&#13;
distributed by Drama Book&#13;
Specialists in New York.&#13;
She is also president of the New&#13;
York Theater Strategy, an OffBroadway&#13;
playwrights' organiThere&#13;
are easier ways to pay for college.&#13;
Co C^nnHl IPtinn i»L.I nducting telethons, waiting tables or&#13;
parking cars may not be the only ways to&#13;
help you pay for college. There may be a&#13;
scholarship or grant available that you've&#13;
overlooked. Or it may be as simple as cutting&#13;
back on expenses. Read the next issue of&#13;
Insider and find out.&#13;
Ford hopes this next issue of Insider will&#13;
give you a "better idea" for paying your way&#13;
through college. And if you need a set of&#13;
wheels to get you around campus, check out&#13;
the sporty Fords for the 80's.&#13;
Look for Insider-* ftortfs continuing series&#13;
of College newspaper supplements.&#13;
FORD&#13;
FORD DIVISION&#13;
zation which she co-founded.&#13;
At the age of 15, Fornes left her&#13;
native Havana with her mother&#13;
and sister, and settled in New York&#13;
City in October, 1945, when "the&#13;
joy of it being the end of the war&#13;
was still felt very much in the&#13;
U.S."&#13;
"I was always interested in the&#13;
arts," said Maria. "My family was&#13;
quite artistic. My father encouraged&#13;
the children to do&#13;
something in the arts. At first I&#13;
thought I'd be a musician, and I&#13;
started studying the piano, but I&#13;
really didn't have very much&#13;
talent. Then I started painting for&#13;
a while. I enjoyed that much more&#13;
but I didn't really feel a deep&#13;
passion for painting. It was more&#13;
like work."&#13;
"It was around that time, when&#13;
I was 24, that I went to Europe&#13;
(Paris), and lived there for three&#13;
years, And I wasn't doing very&#13;
much of anything. -I was still&#13;
painting, and really doing nothing&#13;
but sitting in cafes."&#13;
When asked to comment on her&#13;
upcoming play, "Fefu and Her&#13;
Friends," which concerns the&#13;
gathering of 8 women in Fefu's&#13;
country house, in New England in&#13;
1935, and in which, the audience,&#13;
like guests, is invited to visit the&#13;
rooms to intimately witness the&#13;
events and conversations evolving&#13;
into profound insights into the&#13;
feminine mind, she remarked,&#13;
"It's very difficult to explain a&#13;
play. Explaining a play is no&#13;
different from explaining your life.&#13;
A play is a complete world."&#13;
"Every time you write a&#13;
character, the character is&#13;
connected with your knowledge of&#13;
people and of yourself. The&#13;
characters in this play are more&#13;
realistic than the characters I've&#13;
written before."&#13;
"In the course of writing this&#13;
play, there would be a scene in&#13;
which one of the characters I was&#13;
working on would come close to&#13;
someone I'd be thinking of; it's not&#13;
the total character, but it could be&#13;
cont. on DQ. 8&#13;
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Books&#13;
&gt;V- • .V«VvW. \S»V-W &#13;
Cramer's Corner »•'&#13;
Burman, Sharon&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
As a follow-up to last week's&#13;
column on women in sports, I felt&#13;
I should interview some of the&#13;
women I defended. The subjects&#13;
of this week's column are the&#13;
runners on the women's crosscountry&#13;
team. A minimum of five&#13;
runners are required if a team is&#13;
to compete for score, but&#13;
unfortunately Parkside only has&#13;
three, Sharon Keller, Wendy&#13;
Burman and Barbara Osborne.&#13;
Although they can't compete&#13;
score-wise as a team, each runner&#13;
places well as an individual when&#13;
they run in meets. All of the&#13;
three come to Parkside with&#13;
impressive personal accomplishments&#13;
in high school. Osborne, a&#13;
sophomore, while running at&#13;
Bradford went to state every year,&#13;
while freshman Wendy Burman&#13;
went her senior year and placed&#13;
second in the two mile. Sharon&#13;
Keller, also a freshman, qualified&#13;
for state twice.&#13;
Each of the women started&#13;
running in high school because it&#13;
was their first chance to compete&#13;
in a varsity sport. The "desire to&#13;
compete, and the feeling of self&#13;
accomplishment" as Keller puts&#13;
it, is what she gets out of&#13;
running. Burman adds, "I want a&#13;
sense of self fulfillment and&#13;
running gives me a chance to&#13;
develop my potential."&#13;
For people who think it&#13;
unfeminine for women to participate&#13;
in sports, the athletes&#13;
dispelled that way of thinking.&#13;
"If anything, in a way it makes&#13;
you become more feminine." says&#13;
Burman. Osborne comments, "Of&#13;
course women belong in sports,&#13;
Volleyball team&#13;
in invitational&#13;
Last weekend coach Linda&#13;
Henderson's women's volleyball&#13;
team took part in the tough&#13;
Northern Illinois Invitational at&#13;
DeKalb. "This was an excellent&#13;
tournament. Everyone played just&#13;
great." said Henderson.&#13;
Parkside lost their first match to&#13;
Northwestern University by scores&#13;
of 15-13 and 15-7. The bad luck&#13;
continued as the Rangers lost to a&#13;
strong Iowa team in two games&#13;
15-8 and 15-12.&#13;
Loyala University was the next&#13;
Parkside foe. The Rangers lost the&#13;
first game of this match 15-5 but&#13;
came back to win the next two 15-4&#13;
and 15-8 for a victory.&#13;
The Rangers continued their&#13;
winning streak by beating a tough&#13;
Host Northern Illinois squad by&#13;
scores of 15-9 and 16-14.&#13;
Parkside's record is now 13-13-1&#13;
and looking forward to the&#13;
state tournament coming up&#13;
November 3rd. This weekend they&#13;
will take part in the Carthage&#13;
Invitational.&#13;
Osborne Passino&#13;
just as much as men do.&#13;
Competition is healthy, ..it's an&#13;
outlet for frustrations." but&#13;
perhaps Keller summed it up&#13;
best. "Some people don't have&#13;
the guts to compete. 1 have a lot&#13;
ot talent and a lot of people are&#13;
afraid ot showing it. I'm trying to&#13;
accomplish something in spite of&#13;
what people say and think."&#13;
The daily workout schedule&#13;
varies with Mondays and&#13;
Wednesdays set up for speed&#13;
work and Tuesdays and Thursdays&#13;
set aside for distance&#13;
running and weights. On Fridays&#13;
they prepare for the meets over&#13;
the weekend.&#13;
The state cross country meet is&#13;
on Saturday at LaCrosse. Let's&#13;
hope that Keller, who is nursing&#13;
a leg injury, can compete with&#13;
her other teammates. 1 w ish them&#13;
the best of luck.&#13;
with this coupon I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Volleyball C lub forms&#13;
There is a new club being&#13;
organized oh campus. The&#13;
volleyball club is being organized&#13;
for individuals interested in&#13;
forming a competitive club team&#13;
for intercollegiate competition,&#13;
and club play under the United&#13;
States Volleyball Association&#13;
Sanctions.&#13;
Linda Henderson, coach of the&#13;
women's varsity volleyball team,&#13;
will be the faculty adviser. The&#13;
club is open to all interested&#13;
students, but will emphasize men's&#13;
competition since there is already&#13;
a women's varsity team. There will&#13;
be an organizational meeting on&#13;
Thursday, October 25, 1979 at&#13;
6:00 PM in the Phy. Ed. Building&#13;
on level two. Anyone interested&#13;
who cannot attend should leave&#13;
their name and phone number&#13;
with Coach Henderson in the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Office.&#13;
$1.50 off&#13;
RAINBOW&#13;
uptown Vegimal HatS)&#13;
I r- - kenosha&#13;
offer expires Oct. 30, 1979 j&#13;
JUNIORS AND SENIORS:&#13;
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business world?&#13;
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8 Wednesday October 24, 1979 Ranger&#13;
continued from pg, 6&#13;
in a moment."&#13;
"For example, there's a watertight&#13;
in the play. And what is part&#13;
of the watertight was one summer&#13;
in Spain. I was there with a friend&#13;
and her daughter, and her&#13;
daughter's boyfriend. And there&#13;
was a watertight in that house, and&#13;
it was mostly my friend who had&#13;
the energy. They were running all&#13;
over the house, up and down and&#13;
around. The house was completely&#13;
wet. I wasn't involved. I was&#13;
sitting, writing, and they were&#13;
running, passing by me; and I&#13;
enjoyed so much watching them&#13;
that I know that that was why I put&#13;
it in the play. But that doesn't&#13;
mean my friend is one of the&#13;
people in the play."&#13;
When questioned about" her&#13;
favorite or what she considers her&#13;
best play, she revealed "It always&#13;
happens that at the time when I&#13;
am working on a play. That's the&#13;
one I think is best, and that's the&#13;
one I feel closest to. The others&#13;
seem distant to me."&#13;
"The hardest part of playwriting&#13;
is to work alone. Writing is very&#13;
difficult. That's why I think there&#13;
are a few very good plays. I see&#13;
writing a play as a picture. Most&#13;
people think writing a play is a&#13;
good plot or a good character, or a&#13;
good sense of language. All of&#13;
those things are important, but&#13;
Patronize&#13;
our&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
Fornes story&#13;
they are just tools to construct. It's&#13;
like a house. A house has to have a&#13;
living room, a bedroom — walls&#13;
that you can work around, and&#13;
use. Whether it's wonderful&#13;
architecture or just poor. That is&#13;
the difference — how the&#13;
proportions and the dimensions&#13;
are. How you go up the steps, how&#13;
wide they are, how you go from one&#13;
room to another."&#13;
"In any play at all, the audience&#13;
goes from one level to another.&#13;
That is the true art of&#13;
playwriting."&#13;
"What comes natural to me, in&#13;
relation to other playwrights, is&#13;
that I have a very strong visual&#13;
sense, and I know what is&#13;
happening on stage. That is why I&#13;
can also direct a play, because I&#13;
can see the images and the&#13;
composition, and see how people&#13;
relate to a show in relation to the&#13;
positions they are in."&#13;
"Writing is like cooking the&#13;
meal. Directing is like eating it. I&#13;
always felt that when I wrote a play&#13;
and had someone else directing it,&#13;
it was like I had prepared the meal&#13;
but I was not allowed to taste it. I&#13;
love directing."&#13;
Red's Roller Rink&#13;
7220 67th Street '~T r&#13;
ADULTS ONLY&#13;
SKATING SESSION&#13;
SUNDAY EVENINGS aj&#13;
_ on oityf Admission $2.00&#13;
7:30—10:30 PM Skate Rental .75&#13;
Must be 18 or older&#13;
Fefu&#13;
and Her&#13;
Friends&#13;
WHtten and Directed by Maria Irene Fornes&#13;
visiting artist-m-residence&#13;
• WINNER OF THREE OBIE AWARDS&#13;
Presented by Dramatic Arts, University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
October25,26,27,28 at 8=00, Matinee Oct.28,2:00&#13;
Communication Arts Theatre&#13;
Seating fimited to 200per performance&#13;
Admission: $2.00 Parkside students,faculty,staf &amp; senior citizens&#13;
$3.00 general public&#13;
Tickets: available at Union Information Desk &amp; at the door&#13;
Reservations: 553-2345 or 553-2042 Information: 553-2457&#13;
Beginnings&#13;
brings you two freebies!&#13;
Bluegrass Buck's StOVe&#13;
Wed Oct 2 4 .&#13;
8:00 pm aild&#13;
Union Square Range Co.&#13;
ttie lively music e#&#13;
CfCRCE riilSil!&#13;
1:00 pm Wed. Nov. 7&#13;
Union 104-106&#13;
Because We Care!&#13;
1st Annual Miller High Life&#13;
Open Bowling Tournament&#13;
Thursday November 8th&#13;
Starting 1:00 p.m.&#13;
Two Division Winners:&#13;
"Pen a"d Handicap&#13;
Each bowler will bowl a 3 game Qualifying Set with the 5 highest Scorers&#13;
in each division having a step-iadder roll-off for the Championship.&#13;
Trophies will be awarded to the 1st, 2nd and 3rd place in each division.&#13;
A FREE Bowling Towel and BEER for all participants.&#13;
A $5 Entry Fee must accompany all entries.&#13;
Turn Entries in to Rec Center Desk.&#13;
Distributed by:&#13;
CJW, Inc.&#13;
2117-81 st St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Name&#13;
Address&#13;
Sanctioned A verage&#13;
Division • Open CU H andicap&#13;
Open Division: All bo wlers w ith 175 or be tter average. </text>
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              <text>Parkside Village up for grabs</text>
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              <text>Wednesday October 31, 1979&#13;
tfW-P bids low&#13;
"IP University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
anger&#13;
Vol. 8 No.&#13;
Parkside Village up for grabs&#13;
by Denise Sobieski&#13;
The question of university&#13;
owned housing has been in the air&#13;
for several years here at U.W.-&#13;
Parkside. One place to look for&#13;
available housing for the future is&#13;
Parkside Village, right across the&#13;
street from the university.&#13;
When Parkside was constructed&#13;
an agreement was made between&#13;
the university and the owner of&#13;
Parkside Village, Emil Abendroth.&#13;
The agreement was that the&#13;
campus couldn't have any housing&#13;
developments for seven years.&#13;
More than seven years has passed&#13;
and the university has been&#13;
approached by the owner to make&#13;
bids on the Parkside Village.&#13;
Although Parkside Village is not&#13;
officially for sale, as Mr.&#13;
Abendroth stated, the University&#13;
has been asked to place a bid. The&#13;
starting price of $4 million dollars,&#13;
based on the cost of new&#13;
construction, is too steep for the&#13;
University. Since the University&#13;
has no revenue, any housing would&#13;
have to be purchased using federal&#13;
funds or by working out a land&#13;
contract.&#13;
A H.U.D. loan is hard to get as&#13;
Chancellor Guskin explained. As&#13;
of yet the University has not gone&#13;
in and looked into the matter, but&#13;
is keeping an eye on U.W.-Green&#13;
Bay, who is in a similar situation.&#13;
The University of Green Bay is&#13;
purchasing a housing facility&#13;
under a government loan with 3%&#13;
interest. U.W .-Parkside is waiting&#13;
to see how the Green Bay situation&#13;
turns out. At the present time,&#13;
U.W.-Parkside is not proceeding&#13;
to make a decision.&#13;
There are several factors to&#13;
consider before purchasing Parkside&#13;
Village. Is there a need to&#13;
purchase a facility such as&#13;
Parkside Village for University&#13;
housing? "We don't know, quite&#13;
frankly, how many students want&#13;
housing," said Chancellor A1&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Presently the occupancy in&#13;
Parkside Village is low. Maybe&#13;
students who have lived in the&#13;
Village previously have moved to&#13;
apartments of better quality and&#13;
relatively lower rental costs.&#13;
Construction in many of the&#13;
buildings is poor, especially in the&#13;
wooden buildings appropriately&#13;
labeled "cracker boxes." The little&#13;
time and effort spent in&#13;
construction of the apartments is&#13;
evident. The buildings seem to&#13;
have little insulation. Apartments&#13;
without individual adjustable&#13;
heaters for each room too often&#13;
have to generate their own heat,&#13;
which can be fun for a few hours,&#13;
but it doesn't comply with housing&#13;
health standards. The wooden&#13;
apartments have attractive wooden&#13;
beams, but aren't the same boards&#13;
that are supported by the beams&#13;
the same ones that are the upstairs&#13;
neighbor's floor?&#13;
The maintenance is poor. Last&#13;
winter in one apartmentr leaks in&#13;
the ceiling did not get fixed.Jhey&#13;
were discovered while one of the&#13;
occupants felt drops of water&#13;
falling on his face while in bed.&#13;
An old woter heoter s.ts in the middle of the lawn at Parks.de V.lloge&#13;
There are problems in winter&#13;
because the parking lot isn't&#13;
cleared of snow often enough.&#13;
Stairs and sidewalks are not&#13;
adequately shoveled; thick ice&#13;
develops V&gt;n the wooden stairs.&#13;
There is sufficient maintenance to&#13;
cut the lawn in spring and&#13;
summer. More could be done to&#13;
take care of the nice outer&#13;
landscaping, but that.no doubtjis&#13;
the result of neglect by the&#13;
students.&#13;
Another question is whether or&#13;
not purchasing Parkside Village is&#13;
a worthwhile investment. The&#13;
University hasn't assessed the&#13;
Village. In its present state&#13;
Parkside Village wouldn't meet&#13;
University state code. Reconstruction&#13;
and repair costs may be too&#13;
high to feasibly manage the&#13;
purchase.&#13;
The nature of the facility would&#13;
have to be altered. One of the&#13;
possibilitie s is to change the&#13;
apartment complex to a dorm-like&#13;
facility. Food could be purchased&#13;
with tickets at the Union? or&#13;
Tallent Hall could be used; or a&#13;
cafeteria could be constructed&#13;
inside one of the apartment&#13;
buildings. The possibilities are&#13;
numerous.&#13;
Other considerations are additional&#13;
expenses that would have to&#13;
be included, such as staff advisors,&#13;
security, and physical plant.&#13;
Would it be fair to get Segregated&#13;
Fees for so few? Plus,consider all&#13;
photo by C. Moldenauer&#13;
the extra maintenance needed to&#13;
keep the standards high.&#13;
There's little doubt that a&#13;
housing complex would advocate&#13;
more campus activities. "As a&#13;
whole. It wouM Ko jjnnA Foe&#13;
campus." Carla Stoffle also added&#13;
that money and the quality of the&#13;
buildings were the major considerations.&#13;
&#13;
Chancellor A1 Guskin is willing&#13;
to explore the possibilities of&#13;
Parkside Village. But there is no&#13;
hurry. If it is bought,all the good&#13;
for the campus, but the problems&#13;
involved — is there a real need for&#13;
housing, lack of funds, meeting&#13;
building standards, naming only a&#13;
few — are a definite slow down to&#13;
the purchase of a housing complex&#13;
for U.W.-Parkside.&#13;
Internationally known philosopher.&#13;
Max Black speaks here 31st &amp; 1st&#13;
Internationally-known philosopher&#13;
Max Black will give two&#13;
public lectures during a visit to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
campus next week. Black is an&#13;
emeritus professor of Cornell&#13;
University where for many years he&#13;
was Susan Linn Sage Professor of&#13;
Philosophy and Director of its&#13;
Program on Humanities, Science .&#13;
and Technology and Andrew D.&#13;
White Professors-at-Large&#13;
Program.&#13;
Black will speak on "The&#13;
Elusiveness of Rationality" at 7:30&#13;
p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 31, in&#13;
the parkside Union Theater and&#13;
on "A New Look at the Prisoner's&#13;
Dilemma" at 6:30 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 1, in Communication&#13;
Arts Bldg. Room 129. The&#13;
Wednesday program will be&#13;
followed by a reception in the&#13;
Union Bazaar. The talks are&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Philosophical&#13;
Society.&#13;
In his long career as a teacher&#13;
and scholar, Black has won a wide&#13;
reputation for his studies on&#13;
philosophy of language, philosophy&#13;
of science and mathematics,&#13;
philosophical logic, theory of&#13;
knowledge and metaphysics. His&#13;
penchant for applying philosophy&#13;
to general intellectual issues in&#13;
contemporary society has attracted&#13;
a broad general audience to his&#13;
work.&#13;
A past president of the&#13;
American Philosophical Society,&#13;
Black has been a visiting professor&#13;
at Oxford and Cambridge Universities&#13;
in Great Britain, Princeton&#13;
University, Stanford. University's&#13;
Center for Advanced Study in the&#13;
Behavioral Sciences, Hebrew&#13;
University in Israel and Kyoto&#13;
University in Japan. He also has&#13;
chaired All-India and All-Japan&#13;
Philosophical Conferences.&#13;
His books include "Language&#13;
and Philosophy," "The Nature of&#13;
Mathematics," "Critical Thinking,"&#13;
"Models and Metaphors,"&#13;
"A Cdmpanian to Wittgenstein's&#13;
Tractatus," "Caveats and&#13;
Critiques," 'Margins of Precision"&#13;
and "The Labyrinth of&#13;
Language." His articles have&#13;
appeared in such prestigious&#13;
journals as Philosophical Review,&#13;
MIND, Bulletin of the Atomic&#13;
Scientists and many others.&#13;
He is a member of the American&#13;
Academy of Arts and Sciences,&#13;
Aristotlean Society, International&#13;
Institute of Philosophy and the&#13;
Association of Symbolic Logic.&#13;
IT %&#13;
INSIDE. . .&#13;
• Spook story&#13;
• Rape misgivings&#13;
• Back to the land&#13;
• Tennis team&#13;
second &#13;
2 Wednesday October 31, 1979 Ranger&#13;
To the Editor.&#13;
Editorial&#13;
needs&#13;
examining&#13;
On October 17 an editorial was&#13;
written that should be examined.&#13;
The article was about the violence&#13;
that occured at Seabrook during&#13;
an antinuclear demonstration. The&#13;
message went on, saying in the&#13;
past "ralliers pushed their&#13;
message to whoever would&#13;
listen... no longer are the demonstrations&#13;
peaceful.. .no longer is&#13;
the public looking at the issue at&#13;
hand... no one believes that the&#13;
issue is emotional enough to fight&#13;
about..." I challenge those&#13;
statements.&#13;
The violence that occured at&#13;
Seabrook began from acts of civil&#13;
disobedience. (Civil disobedience&#13;
is the right to nonviolently but&#13;
deliberately violate the law). As the&#13;
protestors scaled the fences that&#13;
surround the power plant, they&#13;
were forcibly removed by police&#13;
with the aid of billyclubs and&#13;
teargas. The demonstrators fought&#13;
back.&#13;
It is unfortunate that the&#13;
incident happened. But isn't it&#13;
interesting that those who stand on&#13;
the sidelines and wait for peace&#13;
and justice pontificate the moment&#13;
an incident such as this occurs?&#13;
They seem not so concerned about&#13;
the weightier matters which&#13;
motivate the protestors in the first&#13;
place.&#13;
At the start, the antinuke&#13;
protestors did spread- their&#13;
message to whomever would listen.&#13;
Yet, people did not listen back in&#13;
the 1950's when nuclear power&#13;
made its debut. Time is running&#13;
short. We don't have the time to&#13;
wait for the corporate owner and&#13;
operator, or the government to&#13;
decide the will sit down and&#13;
discuss "things". We must make&#13;
them stop and listen now. It has&#13;
been estimated that there will be&#13;
500 nuclear plants in existence by&#13;
the 1990's. The new ones are being&#13;
built faster and the old ones are&#13;
wearing down, both of which gives&#13;
great potential to the worst&#13;
oossible nuclear accidents.&#13;
The issue we are faced with now&#13;
is a life and death matter. It may&#13;
be outwardly violent, or insidiously&#13;
silent. The people are questioning&#13;
the violence. We must make sure&#13;
that when we ask these questions&#13;
we are not changing the focal point&#13;
of the issue. The focus is the dire&#13;
effect of nuclear power and its&#13;
wastes. Will any of us be alive to&#13;
see the last of these violent&#13;
outrages? Will we forget to look at&#13;
what is causing the anger? Will we&#13;
continue to write about the&#13;
problem of problems, rather than&#13;
writing about the reasons for&#13;
incidents like the one at Seabrook?&#13;
And will we get into the arena and&#13;
face our opponents squarely, or&#13;
will we support them with&#13;
complaints about our brothers and&#13;
sisters who are fighting our battles&#13;
without us? Let's get some&#13;
perspective.&#13;
We do question violence. The&#13;
violence that is breathed into our&#13;
lungs, eaten and drunk every day.&#13;
The violence that rearranges our&#13;
gene structures. We do believe the&#13;
issue is emotional enough to fight;&#13;
we expect to be alive 'til we're&#13;
ninety...so we're shutting those&#13;
power plants down!&#13;
Jeanna K. LeSuer&#13;
Thanks to&#13;
the voters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I'd like to thank the students&#13;
that took a few minutes to vote at&#13;
last's week's elections — especially&#13;
those voting me onto the Business&#13;
Division Senate Seat. A special&#13;
thanks to my bus riding&#13;
companions.&#13;
I'll be in the PSGA office on&#13;
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday&#13;
from 1:00 to 5:00 and Thursdays&#13;
from 3:30 to 5:00. Senate meetings&#13;
will be held on Tuesdays, starting&#13;
at 3:30.&#13;
Stop in anytime.&#13;
Gary Ledger&#13;
&lt;Ra»ger&#13;
Sue Stevens&#13;
Brian Felland&#13;
Doug Edenhauser Man»«&#13;
er&#13;
Ken Meyer ... Sports Editor&#13;
Jeff Stevens Fea,ure Ed,tor&#13;
Kevin Padula Ed,,or&#13;
Mike Murphy Edllor&#13;
Tom Cooper. Advertising Manager&#13;
Chairman of the Board&#13;
Reporters&#13;
^"h.«W Tori M h CT.!L' ^ Cr"&#13;
mer&#13;
' G'&#13;
nger He,geson&#13;
' Ren&#13;
« Jones, Mira&#13;
Loekanskl Lori Merte, Iteed McMillan, Terry Peterson, Walt Remond.ni, Don&#13;
scherrer, Denise Sobieski, Becky Waller, Karen Walters&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Mark Anderson, Curtis Moldenauer, Brian Passino&#13;
Layout&#13;
Mary Arnold, Nancy Hernandez, Nancy Mikaelian&#13;
Graphic Artists&#13;
Bill Stougaard, Michael Williams&#13;
Ad Representatives&#13;
Linda Andersen, Dan Galbralth, Margarita Schonenberg&#13;
RANGER is written and edited by students of U.W. Parkside and they are solely&#13;
responsible for its editorial policy and content. Published every Wednesday during the&#13;
acadonic year except during breaks and holidays, RANGER is printed by the Zion&#13;
Publishing Company, Zion, Illinois.&#13;
Written permission is required for reprint of any portion of RANGER content All&#13;
CD&#13;
0uTCZtl1d31^.&#13;
addreSSed t&lt;&gt;: RangCr&#13;
' U W" Parkside&#13;
' WLLC&#13;
™TrJffh&#13;
he Wi&#13;
" bC aCCCPted if typCWritten&#13;
' double-spaced on standard size&#13;
f .'nC maTS&#13;
" ICtterS mUSt * signed and a te&#13;
'&#13;
ephone number&#13;
acceoted T ? ^ * Withheld for Valid reasons&#13;
" Maximum length&#13;
accepted ,s 500 words. Deadline for letters is Friday at 10 a.m. for publication the&#13;
orimTtter h^h ay&#13;
'tThe&#13;
f&#13;
R,&#13;
ANGER reSmeS a&#13;
" edit&#13;
°&#13;
riaI privlHges in refus&#13;
'&#13;
n8 to print letters which contain false or defamatory content.&#13;
Demonstration&#13;
defended&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Your Editorial of Oct. 17&#13;
focused on the actions of a&#13;
frustrated segment of the Clamshell&#13;
alliance. I was at the June '79&#13;
Seabrook demonstration when&#13;
dissension began to grow in the&#13;
alliance. The group which opted&#13;
for agression was the Boston Clam.&#13;
While not defending the actions of&#13;
the group; I do think they are&#13;
justifiable. I do not advocate&#13;
aggressive actions because they&#13;
alienate the masses. But, the&#13;
violence being perpetrated against&#13;
the public by the nuclear power&#13;
industry is far greater than the&#13;
ripping of fences by frustrated&#13;
environmentalists.&#13;
I did appreciate your editorial. I&#13;
just wanted to point out that the&#13;
police had the clubs. The members&#13;
of the Boston Clam are tired of&#13;
being ignored and denied their&#13;
rights to fair trials by the state of&#13;
New Hampshire.&#13;
Wendy Miller&#13;
Reminder&#13;
The Ranger appreciates hearing&#13;
from you! If you'd like to write a&#13;
letter to the Editor, just follow&#13;
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The maximum length for letters&#13;
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Ail letters must be signed.&#13;
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....&#13;
Photos by Itft.&#13;
What the hell&#13;
was that?&#13;
photo by M. And&#13;
than, , ,&#13;
US r&#13;
ni"&#13;
S ,0 Parkside? M""&gt; students may have tho&#13;
Theate, I I"!' '&#13;
en&#13;
' aPPeared behind ,hc Communication&#13;
o f " e u a t r i t . T " f °&#13;
r " "&#13;
S P a s t w e e k e n d&#13;
'&#13;
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er ,f -v«u missed some , &#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Breakfast with&#13;
Santa Dec. 8&#13;
The North Pole News Service&#13;
and UW-Parkside Child Care&#13;
Center this week announced that a&#13;
Breakfast With Santa will be held&#13;
in the Union Dining Room&#13;
Saturday, December 8, at 9:00&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Santa Claus will eat a merry&#13;
meal of pancakes and sausage,&#13;
juice, milk and coffee with the&#13;
families of Parkside students,&#13;
faculty, staff and alumni. Santa&#13;
promises to visit with the children,&#13;
to hear Christmas lists, and to&#13;
have a bag of Christmas goodies&#13;
for each child.&#13;
A variety of entertaining&#13;
features will be provided that&#13;
morning: beautiful music performed&#13;
by area choral groups; a&#13;
lively "Family Sing" led by&#13;
children and staff from the Child&#13;
Care Center; and special fun&#13;
planned by elves, a magician and a&#13;
juggler. Activity tables staffed by&#13;
teachers will have supplies for&#13;
children tc make Christmas cards&#13;
and decorations. Door prizes for&#13;
some lucky adults will also be&#13;
given.&#13;
Admission is by advance&#13;
reservation only. Tickets are&#13;
available at the Child Care Center&#13;
until November 30, and cost $3.00&#13;
per person, adult and child. The&#13;
proceeds from Breakfast With&#13;
Santa will go to the Child Care&#13;
Center to support its new extended&#13;
hours program.&#13;
Overseas&#13;
studies offered&#13;
in Scandinavia&#13;
Scandinavian Seminar is now&#13;
accepting applications for its 1980-&#13;
81 academic year abroad in&#13;
Denmark, Finland, Norway or&#13;
Sweden. This unique learning&#13;
experience is designed for college&#13;
students, graduates and other&#13;
adults who want to study in a&#13;
Scandinavian country, becoming&#13;
part of another culture and&#13;
learning its language.&#13;
After orientation and a 3-week&#13;
intensive language course, often&#13;
followed by a family stay, students&#13;
are placed individually at Scandinavian&#13;
folk schools (small residential&#13;
liberal arts schools) Or other&#13;
specialized institutions. There they&#13;
live and study with Scandinavians&#13;
of diverse backgrounds. At the&#13;
Seminar's Midyear and Final&#13;
Courses, students and staff meet to&#13;
discuss the year's studies and&#13;
experiences and to review individFIRST&#13;
&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
AAAIN OFFICE&#13;
AUTO BANK&#13;
24 HOUR TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRARIE&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER F .D.I.C.&#13;
ual progress and language ability.&#13;
An independent study project&#13;
provides a focus for an in-depth&#13;
study in each participant's own&#13;
field of interest. On the basis of a&#13;
detailed written evaluation of their&#13;
work, most college students receive&#13;
full or partial academic credit for&#13;
their year.&#13;
The fee, covering tuition, room,&#13;
board, and all course-connected&#13;
travels in Scandinavia, is $4,900.&#13;
Interest-free loans are granted on&#13;
the basis of need, as are a few&#13;
partial scholarships.&#13;
For further information, please&#13;
write to: Scandinavian seminar,&#13;
100 East 85th Street, New York,&#13;
N.Y. 10028.&#13;
Basic Skills&#13;
implementors meet&#13;
November 1 &amp; 2&#13;
Basic skills educators from&#13;
University of Wisconsin campuses&#13;
around the state will meet to&#13;
explore ideas for implementation&#13;
of recommendations of a US&#13;
System Basic Skills Task Force&#13;
Nov. 1 and 2 here at University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
The task force, which issued its&#13;
final report last spring after two&#13;
years of study, was formed to&#13;
examine "the issue of basic skills&#13;
expected of university graduates,&#13;
examine areas of basic skills&#13;
deficiencies among UW students&#13;
which might require compensatory&#13;
instruction, determine the need for&#13;
work on basic skills and&#13;
recommend approaches for&#13;
System support of basic skills&#13;
improvement."&#13;
Members of the task force,&#13;
chaired by Prof. William T.&#13;
Lenehan of UW-Madison, will&#13;
report on their findings and give&#13;
basic skills educators from the&#13;
various campuses an opportunity&#13;
to respond and share ideas on&#13;
implementing recommendations&#13;
of the task force report, which calls&#13;
for active involvement of higher&#13;
education in basic skills.&#13;
Conference participants also&#13;
will attend a series of workshops&#13;
on teaching strategies for basic&#13;
skills in mathematics, writing,&#13;
reading, English, verbal competency&#13;
and study skills. Other&#13;
sessions will deal with computer&#13;
assisted instruction, pre-'college&#13;
programs, testing and tutorial&#13;
programs.&#13;
The agenda also includes a&#13;
presentation on UW-Parkside's&#13;
Collegiate Skills program, which&#13;
requires students to demonstrate&#13;
competency in reading, writing,&#13;
mathematics and library use by&#13;
the end of the student's first 45&#13;
credits of work (about three&#13;
semesters). The program has&#13;
attracted national attention both&#13;
for its scope and for its focus on&#13;
requiring students to demonstrate&#13;
• ski lls early in their university&#13;
careers while they still can be&#13;
applied to completion of their&#13;
studies.&#13;
The conference is sponsored by&#13;
UW-P's Office of Educational&#13;
Program Support and coordinated&#13;
by Carol J. Cashen, OEPS&#13;
director.&#13;
Piano duo&#13;
performs Friday&#13;
The newly-formed Parkside&#13;
Piano Duo of Carol Bell and&#13;
August Wegner will present its&#13;
first campus concert at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Friday, Nov. 2, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
The program will consist of&#13;
Three Romantic Waltzes by&#13;
Emmanuel Chabrier, the Concerto&#13;
for two solo pianos by Igor&#13;
Stravinsky, Adagio Lyrico by&#13;
Milwaukee composer John&#13;
Downey and Fantasy on George&#13;
Gershwin's "Porgy and Bess" by&#13;
Percy Grainger.&#13;
Downey is a composer at UW&#13;
Milwaukee with an extensive list of&#13;
credits including a residence at the&#13;
MacDowell Colony and several&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra&#13;
premieres of his work. He holds&#13;
degrees from DePaul and Roosevelt&#13;
Universities and studied in&#13;
Paris with Nadia Boulanger,&#13;
Darius Milhaud and Arthur&#13;
Honnegger from 1952 to 1958, the&#13;
period in which he wrote Adagio&#13;
Lyrico.&#13;
Nursing students&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
to meet Nov. 2&#13;
All UW-M Nursing Students at&#13;
Parkside are asked to attend an&#13;
urgent meeting on Nov. 2nd,&#13;
Union 207 from 1:30 to 3:30 pm.&#13;
Assoc. Dean Krueger, from&#13;
UW-M School of Nursing, will be&#13;
discussing important changes and&#13;
will provide supplementary information&#13;
nursing students will&#13;
need to be aware of. Dean Krueger&#13;
will also answer any questions you&#13;
may have concerning the Nursing&#13;
Program at Parkside.&#13;
The R.N. Advisor from UWMilwaukee&#13;
will discuss Challenge&#13;
exams this sem. for those R.N.'s&#13;
who are eligible.&#13;
The fastest-growing Premium Beer&#13;
in America.&#13;
On Tap&#13;
at&#13;
Union&#13;
Square&#13;
HIILIMAN M1WINC CO INC LA CHOSSI WISCONSI&#13;
JOIN&#13;
BOOK:&#13;
C.S.C.'s Book Co-op is operated by&#13;
students and depends on people to drop&#13;
off their used textbooks, paperbacks and&#13;
albums, to sell to other students. In a sense&#13;
we act as an exchange center for students&#13;
and our system allows you to either make&#13;
or save the maximum amount of money&#13;
you can on your textbooks. Want to get rid&#13;
of your old albums? C.S.C.'s Book Co-op&#13;
is the best place. — You set your own&#13;
price! On all of the Book Co-op's services,&#13;
members are not charged, non-members&#13;
pay 15% over member price. Help us out&#13;
this year and you'll see the benefits of cooperation.&#13;
&#13;
FALL&#13;
M ON&#13;
TUE - 1 to 3&#13;
H O U R S&#13;
W ED - 1 to 7&#13;
THUR - 2 to 5&#13;
CO-OP&#13;
fOOD:&#13;
The Food Co-op offers hundreds of items&#13;
of food including: milk, bread, yogurt,&#13;
fresh produce, natural cheeses, grains,&#13;
nuts, dried fruit, vitamins, juices, frozen&#13;
foods and many canned and packaged&#13;
goods. Stop in and look around. We are&#13;
proud of the pleasant atmosphere and we&#13;
have convenient hours for all students,&#13;
including night students. Parking is available&#13;
right in front. Support this co-op, it is&#13;
one of the most unique services at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
FALL H OU R S&#13;
M O N 10 to 6&#13;
TUE - W E D . - T H U R .. . JO to 10&#13;
F R I. &amp; SAT 9 to 6&#13;
"~r-* - • Easr 5«Je Cf Wood Road a &#13;
4 Wednesday October 31, 1979 Ranger&#13;
Strange black-robed phantoms at Parkside&#13;
by Donald Scherrer&#13;
Specter!&#13;
The cry rings of TERROR, of&#13;
unappeased abominations! And&#13;
Parkside, to sociable spirits, looks&#13;
remarkably like a castle, with its&#13;
towers, autonomous slave quarters,&#13;
(the PE building/Tallent&#13;
Hall), and its moat (the inner loop&#13;
road). The drawbridge, leading&#13;
from the Union, is unquestionably&#13;
attractive to ghostly passersby.&#13;
There have been reports of&#13;
strange, black-robed monks&#13;
slithering through Parkside's corridors&#13;
in the late eve. One student,&#13;
having never regained her composure&#13;
after a sighting, remains in&#13;
critical condition. Her last words&#13;
were: "It hadn't a face!"&#13;
Security is currently conducting&#13;
an investigation into the matter,&#13;
while an anonymous student&#13;
officer who goes by the name of&#13;
DC intimated, "I watched on once&#13;
as it went around a corner and&#13;
through a wall. At about the same&#13;
time a fellow officer tapped my&#13;
shoulder, and I nearly joined it!"&#13;
Others have seen, or heard the&#13;
dreaded cries of, a headless&#13;
horseman on the D-2 level of the&#13;
school. The black horse with&#13;
&gt;» imstone eyes is reported to snort&#13;
fire and belch smoke out of its&#13;
hideous nostrils. And its rider —&#13;
oh what a fiend he is! He twirls his&#13;
head round and round on his&#13;
index finger like a Harlem Globetrotter&#13;
fingering a basketball; and&#13;
the head, all the while, with its&#13;
gleammg- sernentinp evrs, .laughs.,&#13;
CconntlVvul IIICIimhr A PfOfC* sively. A colleage of Professor&#13;
X—y is alleged to have beenovertaken&#13;
by this demon on his&#13;
hellish Pegasus, and is now the&#13;
saddle upon which this specter&#13;
sits.&#13;
Voracious vampires (of both&#13;
sexes) have long been known to&#13;
inhabit the theaters, lunching on&#13;
hearty necks; and low-flying&#13;
witches have been sighted by star&#13;
gazers atop Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Likewise, there have been sightings&#13;
of greenish, grotesque&#13;
gargoyles in flight and perched&#13;
atop our castle's towers. And&#13;
witches' chants echo nightly from&#13;
the depths of the Music&#13;
department.&#13;
Oh! But the most dreaded spot&#13;
of habitation by these preternatural&#13;
demons — beings — is, of&#13;
all places, the library!!! They are&#13;
known to steal just completed&#13;
Library Skills notebooks before a&#13;
librarian has had time to correct&#13;
the; x, instruction librarian Judith&#13;
Flyer reported recently.&#13;
They also have a bold habit, in&#13;
the daytime, of setting off the&#13;
alarms in the library by opening&#13;
the emergency doors in helter&#13;
skelter fashion, Luellen Breed,&#13;
Head of Circulation commented&#13;
last week. She also noted that the&#13;
LLC has had a hard time finding&#13;
shelvers because "once a student&#13;
sees books foating around&#13;
between shelves and pages being&#13;
turned as if being read, they've&#13;
had it. I mean they've only worked&#13;
for forty-five minutes and then&#13;
shoot straight out the door —&#13;
without signing their time sheets!"&#13;
Thomas Quirk, acting director&#13;
of the LLC confided that he too&#13;
has seen very strange things. "Last&#13;
week I was riding in one of the&#13;
front elevators and it halted,&#13;
dropped rapidly, rose up again, as&#13;
if on a string, like a yoyo, and&#13;
continued for a period of about&#13;
five minutes. Just between you and&#13;
me, how do you think my hair&#13;
became so curled. It scared the&#13;
out of me!"&#13;
JQorman Doe. Spec.ial .. I Col V-Ul--&#13;
lections Development Officer,&#13;
recently confided that he, too, has&#13;
been the victim of some ghostly&#13;
pranks. There have been times&#13;
when he has felt a hand rest&#13;
gracefully on his shoulder. "It&#13;
looked like a beautiful woman's&#13;
hand, pale, with long nails. Not&#13;
bad I say. But hell, I'm married."&#13;
Yet there have been other times&#13;
when he has seen a bobbing head&#13;
staring through his outer office&#13;
windows. (Perhaps it is a jealous&#13;
ex-husband.) "It was just dreadful&#13;
Rec Center&#13;
Weekly Specials!&#13;
Ladies Nite&#13;
1&#13;
/2 price bowling, billiards,&#13;
foosball, table tennis&#13;
Lucky 13&#13;
13 frame bowling games —&#13;
special prizes each night for&#13;
high games&#13;
Mondays, -&#13;
6pm - 10pm&#13;
Tuesdays,&#13;
7pm - 10pm&#13;
No Tap Bowling&#13;
Thursdays,&#13;
9 P'&#13;
ns d&#13;
°wn count as strike —&#13;
7 in special prizes each niqht for&#13;
/pm - 10pm high games&#13;
Moonlight Bowline&#13;
Saturdays, I T : ~&#13;
o -i 1 Cash prizes if you can leave red&#13;
opm - lipm pin standing alone on 1st ball&#13;
Red Pin Bowline&#13;
A/r tj • " "—— Q.&#13;
on n, Special prizes if you can strike&#13;
hours posted on red head pin&#13;
For more info Call 553-2695 or&#13;
stop down at the Union Rec Center.&#13;
Specials run through the semester.&#13;
D6mrVJ&#13;
— this piratical head with a&#13;
patched eye and scarlet kerchief&#13;
wound tightly around it. It&#13;
followed me once when I left the&#13;
office, bouncing along merrily as I&#13;
ran down the stairs. But I'm&#13;
prepared now" he said with an air&#13;
of confidence, pointing to his new&#13;
blufe suede Trax.&#13;
Among other precautions being&#13;
taken by the library staff include:&#13;
running — a considerable distance;&#13;
swimming; or — get this —&#13;
lifting weights! Some have resorted&#13;
to carrying very hot coffee pots&#13;
Jffien using the back elevator or&#13;
stairs. (Little good it will do them.&#13;
The more sociable spirits are&#13;
certain to prefer something with&#13;
more potency to raise their spirits.)&#13;
Still others prefer unabridged&#13;
Oxford dictionaries as lethal&#13;
weapons; and still there are those,&#13;
a rash of them, suddenly taking to&#13;
high heels. They aren't especially&#13;
good for running in, but to&#13;
another, given the boot, they are&#13;
very much to the point. (Some&#13;
people have put their foot through&#13;
the wall, but through a ghost?)&#13;
And some have resorted to hiding&#13;
behind great white sheets, occasionally&#13;
bumping into each&#13;
other going around corners, and&#13;
thereafter letting out the loudest&#13;
screams yet heard in the library.&#13;
John Bison, reference librarian,&#13;
has been seen sporting boxing&#13;
gloves while on duty at the&#13;
reference desk. "I can't be sure&#13;
they'll fight fair and square," he&#13;
said with a crackle in his voice.&#13;
r0!/£^«&#13;
"But the way some of those guys or&#13;
things dance, Ali would have been&#13;
quite at home with them. Some&#13;
student employees have even worn&#13;
shoulder pads to look threatening&#13;
in case of a sudden confrontation.&#13;
A petite student who works in&#13;
the LLC, Lori Higher, complained&#13;
recently that she has also been the&#13;
victim of these ghosts. Too shy to&#13;
give it with gusto, a friend, Denise&#13;
Soverighastly, explained. 'T have&#13;
had the same sort of trouble. They&#13;
pat you and when you turn around&#13;
there's no one there." When asked&#13;
^?&#13;
re tf&#13;
l&#13;
ey Patted her, she refused&#13;
to comment further.&#13;
There have been other&#13;
STRANGE doings reported there.&#13;
Among them: Satanic chants&#13;
rising up from the Archival area&#13;
very late at night; some ghostly&#13;
stuntman who gets his kicks by&#13;
giving nightly performances, falling&#13;
from the uppermost floor of&#13;
the library to its lowest, landing&#13;
perfectly within his chalk outline&#13;
on the D-2 level.&#13;
The hovering monks have also&#13;
been reported here, as have eerie&#13;
elevator passengers. On occasion,&#13;
some contented person, feeling&#13;
quite secure, will jump into an&#13;
elevator full of people, only to&#13;
discover between floors that they&#13;
are no longer with him. And chairs&#13;
have been known to pull&#13;
themselves out for ladies so that&#13;
they can sit down; tables seen&#13;
scratching their legs; and even&#13;
pieces of chalk as if controlled by&#13;
some invisible hand scrawling&#13;
DOWNTOWN /KENOSHA&#13;
ELMW00D PLAZA RACINE&#13;
Shop downtown Kenosha tor women s wear&#13;
Shop both locations for men's wear&#13;
n r&#13;
Sporting &amp; Athletic Equipment&#13;
One of The Midwests Largest Selections&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
1,4th Ave. at 62nd St.&#13;
Established in 1930&#13;
grafitti on the bulletin boards.&#13;
Movies have been seen with new&#13;
faces in the film, records with&#13;
nothing on them but heavy&#13;
breathing, and calculators which&#13;
suddenly take to playing PONG by&#13;
slapping the decimal point&#13;
around.&#13;
As if this weren't enough,&#13;
newspapers and periodicals are&#13;
known to change their titles and&#13;
headlines at will: The Chicago&#13;
Tribune has become, on occasion,&#13;
the Windy City Whistler, whereas&#13;
CLIO became OLEO, and Money&#13;
Magazine has been known to read&#13;
Master Charge.&#13;
It has become so appalling&#13;
around here that Ronald Shrinkmann,.&#13;
Head of Campus Security,&#13;
told me the other eve that "all of&#13;
this is definitely aiming towards a&#13;
climax — on All Hallows Eve. He&#13;
said this with the force of a&#13;
soothsayer, then promptly&#13;
vanished. One source revealed that&#13;
Mr. Shrinkmann was home that&#13;
night, in bed with the flu.&#13;
Even the staff can no longer&#13;
trust each other. Yesterday&#13;
Dorman Smith's new shoes were&#13;
stolen. "I had a hell of a time&#13;
chasing them down. And when I&#13;
finally had them cornered, they&#13;
walked all over me." If anyone&#13;
spies them walking the halls,&#13;
please notify the lost and found.&#13;
And the ladies who have taken&#13;
to exercising have incurred similar&#13;
problems. On a good day there&#13;
may be someone alongside them&#13;
(The Invisible Man, who else.)&#13;
making waves in the pool, or&#13;
lifting incredible huge weights&#13;
with not so much strain as raising&#13;
a visible finger. On the worst days,&#13;
the showers give forth snowflakes,&#13;
the Irish Spring becomes ice, the&#13;
their clothes simply straighten&#13;
themselves up and walk off. (Tall&#13;
tales or high heels?)&#13;
And in handing this story to my&#13;
editor, she gladly thanked me, and&#13;
as I turned to leave, I glanced&#13;
back. Shades of Scorpio!!!! The&#13;
typewriters clickety-clacked away&#13;
with no one at the keys! I turned&#13;
back to pat my editor on the... (as&#13;
was my old habit of contact), and&#13;
the story goes that her dress that&#13;
day was most certainly a&#13;
see-through, as was the rest of her!&#13;
And when I left her office, since&#13;
the door was still locked, I&#13;
departed via the same way I had&#13;
entered. Walls aren't really all that&#13;
bad at heart, once you get to know&#13;
them, on the inside, where it&#13;
counts.&#13;
It Karl Kochak could see me&#13;
now! &#13;
Back to the land&#13;
Wednesday October 31, 1979 5&#13;
by G. Helgeson&#13;
Everybody in southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
seems to be pipe-dreaming&#13;
a better way of life in northern&#13;
Wisconsin, northern Michigan,&#13;
.Alaska, Canada, or Tibet. There&#13;
are simpler, better ways to live, all&#13;
these adventurous pioneers&#13;
philosophize as they cruise along&#13;
94 in their Cadillac dreams. Cries&#13;
of "Get back to the land," and&#13;
"Grow your own," and "Become&#13;
self-sufficient" are tugging at the&#13;
diamond cuff-links of all those&#13;
who like to follow the latest trends&#13;
in Beautiful Living.&#13;
When you do get "back to the&#13;
land" wouldn't you like to be one&#13;
step ahead of the rest? Wouldn't&#13;
you like to be able to conquer such&#13;
problems as: What do you do&#13;
when you get hungry for a&#13;
Quarter Pounder in Canada? Or,&#13;
what do you do when you are in&#13;
labor, and the jeep is out of gas,&#13;
and the nearest Clark station,&#13;
along with the nearest incorporated&#13;
town and the hospital, is 45&#13;
miles due south of your cabin?&#13;
And remember, there are no&#13;
shopping malls in the wilderness.&#13;
As a matter of fact, there aren't&#13;
even any Park 'n' Shops north of&#13;
the Twin Cities.&#13;
The following quiz is designed&#13;
to make you think a little clearer&#13;
about your move — before you&#13;
make it. If you get even one&#13;
question wrong, you will probably&#13;
become a screaming maniac,&#13;
crying out for the familiar strains&#13;
of car horns and Pepsi commercials&#13;
before the end of your first&#13;
fiscal year in the wilderness of your&#13;
choice. But, cheer up! If you get all&#13;
the questions correct, you have a&#13;
50/50 chance of surviving the first&#13;
winter. Which is better odds than&#13;
most city people who pipe-dream&#13;
about getting "back to the land"&#13;
have while driving to work in the&#13;
morning.&#13;
BE CAREFUL NOW. SOME OF&#13;
THESE ARE TRICKY.&#13;
1. What is the best thing to do&#13;
when you wake up shivering on a&#13;
Sunday morning and you discover&#13;
your power is out because of a&#13;
blizzard? (Assume your firewood&#13;
upply is diminished because your&#13;
chain saw ate itself last time yon&#13;
used it to cut your homemade&#13;
bread.)&#13;
A. Plug in the electric blanket&#13;
and go back to sleep.&#13;
B. Pay your utility bills before&#13;
your pipes freeze.&#13;
C. Load up the jeep with all your&#13;
bottled goods and your credit&#13;
cards and drive south until you see&#13;
a Best Western motel.&#13;
2. What do you do when you get&#13;
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever&#13;
from tick bites?&#13;
A. Shoot your dog.&#13;
B. Using tweezers and lighted&#13;
matches, depilate yourself.&#13;
C. Load up the jeep with all your&#13;
bottled goods and your credit&#13;
cards and drive south until you see&#13;
a Best Western motel.&#13;
3. What do you do when you&#13;
have rats in your little log cabin?&#13;
1. Burn your cabin, and while it&#13;
is burning, surround it with&#13;
friends armed with pitchforks.&#13;
B. Buy a kitten and hope it will&#13;
grow up mean.&#13;
C. Load up the jeep with all your&#13;
bottled goods and your credit&#13;
cards and drive south until you see&#13;
a Best Western motel.&#13;
4. What do you do when you&#13;
discover you owe $5,000 back taxes&#13;
on your back 40?&#13;
A. Sit in the open doorway to&#13;
your cabin with a loaded rifle by&#13;
your side.&#13;
B. Marry the tax assessor's&#13;
old-maid daughter.&#13;
C. Load up the jeep with all your&#13;
bottled goods and your credit&#13;
cards and drive south until you see&#13;
a Best Western motel.&#13;
5. What do you do when you run&#13;
out of Dry Idea in January and you&#13;
can't get to town until spring&#13;
thaw?&#13;
A. Do nothing and think clean,&#13;
pine-scented thoughts.&#13;
B. Never take your long-johns&#13;
off.&#13;
C. Load up the jeep with all your&#13;
bottled goods and your credit&#13;
cards and drive south until you see&#13;
a Best Western motel.&#13;
ANSWERS&#13;
If you picked C for any or all&#13;
questions, congratulations!. You&#13;
may live to send your mother a&#13;
postcard next spring. Best of luck&#13;
to the rest of you.&#13;
WE&#13;
SUPPORT&#13;
PUBLIC RADIO&#13;
%&#13;
•I' 5 •&#13;
i'l&#13;
HOW ABOUT YOU&#13;
WCTD&#13;
Fm 91&#13;
STEREO&#13;
0&#13;
6AM-11PM Daily&#13;
FM/91 Has What&#13;
Your Listening For&#13;
Chinese culture workshop offered&#13;
The Chinese Community and&#13;
Chinese culture will be the topic of&#13;
a one-day workshop sponsored by&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Center for Multicultural&#13;
Studies on Saturday, Nov. 3, at the&#13;
Kenosha Public Museum.&#13;
The program will include a&#13;
panel on "China: A View From&#13;
Two Perspectives" by UW-Parkside&#13;
Chinese-American faculty&#13;
members and recent American&#13;
visitors to China, and lectures on&#13;
the politics of modern China by&#13;
Prof. Li Hong-yung of Marquette&#13;
University and on US-China&#13;
relations by Prof. Edward Friedman&#13;
of UW-Madison.&#13;
The program also will include&#13;
music of China performed by&#13;
musicians from Northern Illinois&#13;
University, a tour of the Kenosha&#13;
Museum's Chinese Art collection&#13;
conducted by Dr. Janice Kuhn, a&#13;
demonstration of Chinese calligraphy&#13;
and films on the Chinese&#13;
people and their culture.&#13;
A Chinese luncheon will be&#13;
catered by the Whey Chai&#13;
Restaurant of Zion, 111.&#13;
The workshop may be taken for&#13;
one of UW-P undergraduate credit&#13;
or on a non-credit, audit basis.&#13;
Registration information is available&#13;
from the UW-P Office of&#13;
Institutional Analysis and Registration&#13;
(Phone 553 - 2281).&#13;
Persons planning to attend the&#13;
luncheon must make reservations&#13;
by Oct. 29 with the UW-P Center&#13;
for Multicultural Studies or the&#13;
Kenosha Museum.&#13;
Rape.. misgivings&#13;
by Linda Marcussen&#13;
Note: This week's column is&#13;
written by a guest writer, Linda&#13;
Marcussen, co-founder and secretary&#13;
of the Board of Directors of&#13;
KASA [Kenoshans Against Sexual&#13;
Assault, Inc.],&#13;
Rape is the most frequently&#13;
committed violent crime in this&#13;
country and it is increasing. In&#13;
Wisconsin, the State Department&#13;
of Jusice reports that rape has&#13;
increased 14% during the first six&#13;
months of 1979. That figure&#13;
represents only reported attacks&#13;
and the FBI estimates that only&#13;
one rape in ten is reported.&#13;
There are many myths about&#13;
rape, myths that increase the&#13;
suffering of the victims and&#13;
wrongly shift blame away from the&#13;
attackers. Three of the most&#13;
dangerous myths are:&#13;
1. Rape is a spontaneous act of&#13;
passion. Seventy per cent of all&#13;
rapes are totally planned. The&#13;
rapist makes a conscious decision&#13;
to rape. His victim may be selected&#13;
at random, but usually she has&#13;
been purposely singled out.&#13;
Passion or sexual gratification&#13;
have little or nothing to do with&#13;
rape. The rapist's motivation is to&#13;
dominate, brutalize and humiliate.&#13;
Rape is a deliberate act of hostility&#13;
and violence.&#13;
2. Victims are usually young&#13;
attractive, "loose" women. Young&#13;
pretty women of "questionnable"&#13;
reputation do sometimes get&#13;
raped, but so do older "respectable"&#13;
women, pretty or not, and&#13;
handicapped women, institutionalized&#13;
women, wives, and children.&#13;
Girls as young as 2&gt;Vi months have&#13;
been treated for rape in&#13;
Wisconsin. Since rape is a crime&#13;
committed by men against women,&#13;
every women is a potential rape&#13;
victim simply because she is,&#13;
female. All women are vulnerable&#13;
regardless of their dress, behavior,&#13;
residence, social standing, age, or&#13;
attractiveness. Joggers have become&#13;
a prime target of rapists, but&#13;
Member Partside 200&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
any woman can be raped, anytime,&#13;
anywhere.&#13;
3. Rapists are psychotic&#13;
perverts. Three out of five rapists&#13;
are married and/or have access to&#13;
normal sex. They are not insane.&#13;
More often than not, the rapist&#13;
turns out to be your neighbor or&#13;
brother-in-law, the garage mechanic&#13;
or delivery man, a teacher,&#13;
your boss, or your date. Rapists&#13;
are simply not easily identifiable&#13;
until it is too late.&#13;
Next week's column will deal&#13;
with how to survive a rape and'how&#13;
KASA helps victims and their&#13;
families. Information on Wisconsin's&#13;
sexual assault law, KASA,&#13;
and protection and prevention&#13;
tactics is available at the&#13;
University Health Office.&#13;
My Joseph&#13;
4433-22nd Avenue Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Phone. 654-0774&#13;
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTH)&#13;
Presents&#13;
w OLD STYLE ^&#13;
NIGHT&#13;
Featuring&#13;
Wood Song&#13;
Union Square&#13;
November 14, 8pm&#13;
Free Admission&#13;
Urn &#13;
6 Wednesday October 31, 1979 Ranger&#13;
classifieds&#13;
policy&#13;
1. All paid classifieds must be initialed by a staff member.&#13;
2. All classifieds must include social security number and signature of advertiser.&#13;
3. Limit three free classifieds per person.&#13;
for sale&#13;
Car: 1979 Chevy Van: 350-V8;&#13;
Loaded; 11,500 miles; excellent&#13;
condition. Phone 762-&#13;
1063.&#13;
Car: '73 Volkswagon Beatle 30&#13;
mpg - best offer - call 553-&#13;
2441 or 679-2862.&#13;
Parts! 1968 Ambassador and&#13;
Rebel, 2-door and 4-door&#13;
models. Phone 551-7589.&#13;
Stereo: Panasonic component.&#13;
Excellent condition&#13;
for $50. Call 551-7693 after 6&#13;
pm.&#13;
8-Track Pioneer super tuner&#13;
w/31 tapes, Scorpions, Judas&#13;
Priest, UFO...$175 with&#13;
under dash mount. Call Tom&#13;
after 5:30-658-8807.&#13;
Amplifier- Pioneer 7500 II 45&#13;
wt. per channel. 1 year left on&#13;
pts. labor. Call Al at 657-0142.&#13;
Guitar- 1972 Les Paul Custom,&#13;
black, good condition, must&#13;
sell. Best offer over $250.&#13;
Phone 654-5230 or 551-8110&#13;
evenings.&#13;
Electric oven- and girl's 3-&#13;
speed bike. Call 639-0152.&#13;
personals&#13;
The Round Table - may Mr.&#13;
Spock take personal interest&#13;
in Torque's Illogical Flowcharts.&#13;
&#13;
Where the hell did the Ranger&#13;
dig up this Curtis (Moldy&#13;
Sucker) for the photo team -&#13;
'The Ranger must be hard up'.&#13;
From the Round Table.&#13;
How Is the Ranger's team like&#13;
a vacuum cleaner?&#13;
To Music Dept. We devour&#13;
crumbs like music dept.&#13;
peons. See you on your backs&#13;
one way or another November&#13;
3.&#13;
The Animals can out party I&#13;
PHELTA THI.&#13;
The wind section really blows&#13;
- and good too.&#13;
Jani Kre- I'm the guy who&#13;
stares at you, Steve.&#13;
Dick, you hit a homerun in my&#13;
park. Ella Fitzgerald.&#13;
Happy Birthday Harry Hart!&#13;
From: Bird.&#13;
Happy Birthday to Parkside's&#13;
favorite "Strawberry Blonde"&#13;
DK, KK, TH, BM, DP.&#13;
Lir Pumpkin - Happy eleventh,&#13;
Trick or Treat, Jack-O-Lantern.&#13;
Donna, Let's all do Nitrus&#13;
Oxide in Class. Booze Fairy.&#13;
Moldy- I told you it wouldn't&#13;
work! The rabbit died and the&#13;
date is set. Goldy.&#13;
Jani Kre, I love you; Steve, in&#13;
Union at noon.&#13;
Don Juan, who says the party&#13;
is over?&#13;
Donna Mills, Acting is fun! I&#13;
think we're learning too!&#13;
Roger and Michael, Rollie&#13;
wants to go out with you.&#13;
I'm sick of torturing the&#13;
welder.. .let's kill him.&#13;
Dick, you two-faced moron.&#13;
Signed Robby, Chip and&#13;
Ernie.&#13;
Dear SYKE-Oh, I th ought I w as&#13;
the only one. Signed Fred&#13;
MacMurrey.&#13;
Dickey, I'm cutting you off!&#13;
Signed "Jaws"&#13;
To Judas Priest - Thanks for&#13;
burning our stage; Uptown&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Son of the weider - REBEL!&#13;
Protect your home!&#13;
Pammy, Weekends hot in Eau&#13;
Claire this time of year.&#13;
Understanding the whirlpool&#13;
and underpull. Boys bathroom&#13;
137 Comm Arts.&#13;
Beware, the super destroyer is&#13;
looking to perform a face&#13;
splitter. KRA CHI CHI VIL.&#13;
Depressing D.: A g ood tall tale&#13;
will cure your sadness. A&#13;
victim.&#13;
Dennis M.: When I have been&#13;
partying you don't tell me I&#13;
can't have popcorn. Mondo.&#13;
Dennis M. You should be&#13;
barred from animal heaven.&#13;
Mondo and gang.&#13;
Animal Lovers, forget the zoo.&#13;
Visit the WLLC. Ask librarian&#13;
for details.&#13;
WLLC second floor glassroom&#13;
declared animal room;&#13;
entrants beware!&#13;
Just because the animals lost&#13;
loesn't mean they can't score!&#13;
miscellaneous&#13;
Work-Study Position Open.&#13;
The Communication Dept. is&#13;
looking for a work-study&#13;
person to help with departmental&#13;
paperwork. Nature of&#13;
position indicates other than&#13;
student in Comm 102 preferred&#13;
Apply at Communication&#13;
department office, third floor,&#13;
Comm Arts Bldg. Please&#13;
mention this ad.&#13;
Production Control Trainee.&#13;
Preferably junior or senior&#13;
status in Operation Management&#13;
Curriculum. We will train&#13;
student on input reporting to&#13;
3ur MRP (Material Requirement&#13;
Planning System). This&#13;
opportunity will afford student&#13;
to see shop floor control in a&#13;
major corporation which may&#13;
coincide with classroom&#13;
studies. Part-time 2nd or 3rd&#13;
shift - 20 hours a week. For&#13;
interview, contact Bev&#13;
Fountas, personnel coordinator&#13;
J.I. Case, 636-7001.&#13;
Lifeguard- swimming pool -&#13;
Phy Ed. Building. 11:30 to 1:00&#13;
MWF. Contact Loran Hein.&#13;
Ride Needed to Madison or&#13;
Portage area, weekend of&#13;
November 2. Call 553-5575.&#13;
r M&#13;
K&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
FREE&#13;
classified ads&#13;
to&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
deadline: every thursday at 10 am&#13;
STUDENT-STUDENT ORGANIZATION R ATE&#13;
Any registered U.W.P. student or student organization is qualified to insert a classified line ad&#13;
in the Ranger at no cost if under or equilavent to 10 words.&#13;
name RANGER&#13;
WLLC D139 ssno.&#13;
Cramer's Corner&#13;
by Dave Cramer&#13;
"Winning isn't everything, it's&#13;
the only thing", is a quote from the&#13;
late, great football coach, Vince&#13;
Lombardi. It's meaning is obvious.&#13;
To a professional, this may hold&#13;
true but to amateurs, I don't&#13;
believe it should. The focus of this&#13;
column will be on the amateur&#13;
scene.&#13;
On major campuses such as&#13;
Madison or UCLA, a college coach&#13;
of a major sport is hired to turn a&#13;
loser into a winner and once that is&#13;
established, continue with the&#13;
winning seasons. John Cotta and&#13;
John Jardine, former head coaches&#13;
of the Madison campus football&#13;
team were two coaches who&#13;
couldn't produce a winner. They&#13;
were fired. Madison's new head&#13;
coach, Dave McClain, a very&#13;
successful coach at Ball State, was&#13;
hired to rejuvinate the football&#13;
program. Last year was the&#13;
Badger's first winning season since&#13;
1974. This year the Badgers are&#13;
doing poorly and already you hear&#13;
mumbles of releasing McClain. A&#13;
school that is used to not only&#13;
winning but being either perennial&#13;
champions or challengers are&#13;
usually quicker to release a coach&#13;
than a school that's rebuilding. An&#13;
example of this is Gary Cunningham,&#13;
who as head basketball&#13;
coach at UCLA lost but four&#13;
games in his first year there and&#13;
resigned. His reason being that&#13;
there was too much pressure on&#13;
him.&#13;
Here at Parkside, coaches are&#13;
not hired strictly for coaching a&#13;
sport. They are hired as teachers&#13;
first, and as coach Barb Lawson&#13;
puts it "coaching is another&#13;
responsibility. Our coaches don't&#13;
shirk this responsibility, it's just&#13;
that they are hired as teachers&#13;
first." When posed with the&#13;
question of the importance of&#13;
winning, Lawson replied "Your&#13;
goal is to win, but a coach must&#13;
face reality. If we have a small&#13;
team and aren't going to win the&#13;
meet, we just try to concentrate on&#13;
winning a certain event or placing&#13;
in an event or upsetting the other&#13;
team with our line-up." This is a&#13;
far cry from the attitude a major&#13;
college coach would have.&#13;
The "must win" attitude also&#13;
applies to everyday life, but&#13;
Lawson has an answer to this, "I&#13;
think it's declining and that&#13;
jogging has helped change that&#13;
philosophy. People are now&#13;
participating and getting satisfaction&#13;
out of it."&#13;
Films explore female roles&#13;
Four films exploring the role of&#13;
work in women's lives will be&#13;
shown at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside this fall. This&#13;
film series, sponsored by the&#13;
Women's Studies Colloquium, sets&#13;
the stage for a Spring Lecture&#13;
Series on the challenges, achievements,&#13;
and frustrations faced by&#13;
women in their working lives.&#13;
Exceptional&#13;
Opportunity&#13;
for learning experience.&#13;
Humanity student, English&#13;
major preferred, to&#13;
take on walks and read&#13;
to retired college professor.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 694-2251.&#13;
"Womanhouse," a film based&#13;
on the pioneering women's art&#13;
programs of Judy Chicago, will be&#13;
shown on Wednesday, Nov. 7&#13;
"Crystal Lee Jordan," a documentary&#13;
scheduled for presentation&#13;
on Wednesday, Nov. 14&#13;
"Norma Rae," the popular film&#13;
about a young woman who defies&#13;
community censure and family&#13;
difficulties to help achieve union&#13;
representation for her fellow&#13;
workers, will have a special&#13;
showing on Friday, Nov. 30&#13;
"Union Maids" will be featured&#13;
on Wednesday, Dec. 5 in Molinaro&#13;
Hall at noon in Room 103 and at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in Room 144.&#13;
Lee Stepina, Professor of Business&#13;
Management and a specialist in&#13;
industrial relations, will moderate&#13;
a discussion following the film.&#13;
LUNCH&#13;
Mon-Sat&#13;
11-2&#13;
BRUNCH&#13;
10:20 - 2&#13;
DINNER&#13;
Thurs-Sat.&#13;
5-9 &#13;
Ranger Wednesday October 31, 1979 7&#13;
Coming Events Kherdian to speak here&#13;
'"•"."'"wwAftun, • W T~\nii&lt;i4 1/ t. . _ J! . 1. . _ x H ! _ r 1 1 I&#13;
-* • 1. . if. i ( r» • .&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31&#13;
LECTURE at 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema. Max Black will talk on "The&#13;
Elusiveness of Rationality". The program is free and open to the public&#13;
FILM "Night of the Living Dead" will be shown at 8 pm in Union Square&#13;
Admission is 50c. Sponsored by PAB. square.&#13;
Thursday,Nov.T&#13;
WOexf 2W f " ?T" fr&#13;
°&#13;
m 9 am &lt;° 3 "&gt;* in U™" ' W6. Phone&#13;
ext. 2312 for information. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
LECTURE at 6:30 pm in CA 129. Max Black will talk on "A New Look at the&#13;
Prisoners Dilemma . The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
SEMINAR "How Vitamins Affect You" at 7 pm in T 181. Call ext. 2312 for registration&#13;
information.&#13;
WORKSHOP "Math Anxiety" at 7 pm in T 121. The program is open to the&#13;
public. Sponsored by UW-Extension. Call ext. 2312 for reservations.&#13;
BROWN BAG LUNCH Intervarsity Christian Fellowship presents speaker Kent&#13;
Carlson talking on "God's ideal love relationship with the opposite sex"&#13;
Union 207 at noon.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 2&#13;
SEMINAR at 12 noon in MOLN 114. Dr. R.D. Stewart will talk on "Unusual&#13;
Exposure to Carbon Monoxide". The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
CONCERT at 8 pm in the Communication Arts Theatre featuring Carol Bell and&#13;
August Wegner at the piano. The program is free and Open to the public.&#13;
MOVIE "Blazing Saddles" will be shown at 8 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Admission is SI.50 for a Parkside student and $1.50 for a guest. Sponsored by&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 3&#13;
MOVIES "Two Women" and "A Bird's Life" will be shown at 7 pm in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Admission is $1.50. The program is open to the public. Spor-^'id&#13;
by the Kinesis Film Series.&#13;
FIELD TRIP Art field trip to Chicago Art Institute to see Toulouse-Lautrec&#13;
exhibition. Cost: $2.00 round-trip for transportation; Sign up in CA 285&#13;
today. Meet at Chicago &amp; Northwestern station at 8:30 am on 3rd.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 4&#13;
MOVIES "Two Women" and "A Bird's Life" will be repeated at 1:30 pm in the&#13;
Union Cinema. The program is open to the public&#13;
MOVIE "Blazing Saddles" will be repeated at 7:30 pm in the Union Cinema.&#13;
MEETING I Phelta Thi will hold a meeting in the Union Square at 7 pm to&#13;
discuss coming events. Please be there and have a beer with us.&#13;
Monday, Nov. 5 \&#13;
ROUND TABLE at 12 noon in Union 106. Teresa Peck will talk on "Stages in&#13;
Adult Development". The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 6&#13;
MATH TALK Talk is entitled "How fast is the Euclidean Algorith?" 3 pm in GR&#13;
101. Free refreshments.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 7&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE at 1 pm in Union 104 - 106 featuring the lively music of George&#13;
Russell. Admission is free to Parkside students. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
SEMINAR at 7:30 pm in Union 106. Larry Kruckman, J. Craig, and S. Svendsen&#13;
will talk on "Post Partum Depression". The program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Campus/Community Film Series&#13;
at UW-Parkside&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
TWO WOMEN&#13;
Union Square Theater&#13;
Saturday Nov. 3 7pm&#13;
Sunday Nov. 4 1:30pm&#13;
^SIJjOSingh^Admissior^^&#13;
Writer David Kherdian, whose&#13;
work reflects both his Armenian&#13;
heritage and his youth in Racine,&#13;
will be involved in a number of&#13;
civic and cultural events in the&#13;
community and on the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside campus&#13;
during a two-week visit to his&#13;
home state beginning today,&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31.&#13;
Xherdian, who--now lives in&#13;
Oregon, is a poet, essayist,&#13;
translater and novelist. His latest&#13;
book, "The Road From Home," is&#13;
the fictionalized story of his&#13;
mother's girlhood, her family's&#13;
persecution by the Turkish&#13;
government, which had decided to&#13;
rid Turkey of its Armenian&#13;
population, and her acceptance at&#13;
16 of a mail-order proposal of&#13;
marriage from an Armenian living&#13;
in Racine. The book has won both&#13;
the Lewis Carroll Prize and the&#13;
Boston Globe-Horn Book Award.&#13;
A complete collection of&#13;
Kherdian's work is housed-in the&#13;
Special Collections section of the&#13;
UW-Parkside Library.&#13;
Kherdian and his wife, two-time&#13;
Caldecott Medal winning illustrator&#13;
and author of children's books&#13;
Nonny Hogrogian, will arrive in&#13;
Wisconsin in time to participate in&#13;
the Midwest Federation of Library&#13;
Associations' annual conference,&#13;
which is expected to attract about&#13;
3,000 librarians to Milwaukee's&#13;
MECCA Oct. 31 through Nov. 3.&#13;
Kherdian and Hogrogian will be&#13;
the speakers for the MFLA&#13;
Children's Author's luncheon on&#13;
Friday, Nov. 2 at the Marc Plaza.&#13;
About 500 will attend the session,&#13;
co-chaired by Nancy Elsmo of the&#13;
Racine Public Library.&#13;
On Saturday, Nov. 3, Kherdian&#13;
will be one of two principal&#13;
speakers at a reception and dinner&#13;
sponsored by the Armenian&#13;
General Benevolent Union and the&#13;
UW-Parkside Center for Multicultural&#13;
Studies, beginning at 6:30&#13;
p.m. at Prairie School, Racine.&#13;
Tickets are $12.50 and are&#13;
available from Mary Akgulain and&#13;
Mary Mahdasian, both^of Racine.&#13;
The other major speaker for the&#13;
event will be another Racine&#13;
native, vDr. Dickran Kouymjian,&#13;
director of Armenian Studies at&#13;
California State UniversityFresno,&#13;
who is an authority on&#13;
Armenian art, architecture and&#13;
manuscripts.&#13;
On Sunday, Nov. 4, Kherdian&#13;
will be the guest of honor at a&#13;
public reception sponsored by the&#13;
Racine Public Library and the&#13;
UW-P Library from 2:30 to 4:30&#13;
p.m. at the Racine Library.&#13;
In connection with the visit,&#13;
both the Racine and UW-P&#13;
libraries will display books by&#13;
Kherdian and Hagrogian as well&#13;
as examples of Armeniana and&#13;
bibliographies of Kherdian's work&#13;
will be available. Individually and&#13;
as collaborators, the couple has&#13;
published more than 60 books,&#13;
about a dozen of them dealing&#13;
with aspects of Armenian life both&#13;
in the U.S. and in the Old World.&#13;
Kherdian plans to remain in&#13;
Racine until about mid-November.&#13;
During that period he plans to do&#13;
research for a forthfoming book&#13;
and will read from his poems and&#13;
discuss his work at UW-Parkside&#13;
(time and date to be announced).&#13;
ALL NEW&#13;
0* LMTEftN&#13;
Tuesday, Friday, Saturday&#13;
* DISCO *&#13;
Wednesday, Thursday, Sunday&#13;
• 50'i and BO's&#13;
ROCK and ROLL •&#13;
Monday&#13;
• 51 "E R E O NIGHT •&#13;
HALLOW! CM 3 IN PARTY&#13;
Prizes for best costume (Wed. Oct. 31)&#13;
x Mon-Sat 3:30-2 am&#13;
Sun 12 -2 am&#13;
Come watch Sunday Football with us!&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
for&#13;
SPRING SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are seeking a degree&#13;
at UW-Parkside) should consult their academic adviser prior to&#13;
registration for Spring Semester. A Certification of Advising form,&#13;
signed by the adviser, is required for registration.&#13;
Spring Semester Course Schedules will be available on November 9.&#13;
November 12-21 has been designated as an academic advising&#13;
period, and advisers will make every effort to meet with you then.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
CONTACT YOUR ADVISER&#13;
FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
If you have any questions,&#13;
contact the Office of the Dean of Faculty,&#13;
348 Wyllie Library-Learning Center, 553-2144.&#13;
NOTE: Non-matriculant students (students not seeking a degree af UW-Parkside)&#13;
are exempt from this requiremeni. &#13;
8 Wednesday October 31, 1979 Ranger&#13;
IPO,BUT i LOVE N&#13;
WHAT we GET WITH IT. )&#13;
WAIT A MiWUTE,&#13;
YOU HATE PIZZA f WHAT'6 THAT?&#13;
* MUSPCOCM.&#13;
WHAT TASTES BETTER&#13;
WITH PIZZA THAN MAYBE&#13;
ANYTHING ELSE IN THE&#13;
ENTIRE, ISAID,&#13;
BNTike W ORLD? J I PU NNO.&#13;
ALL ,&#13;
RI6HP&#13;
b,&#13;
HOW STUPlP OF ME&#13;
WHY DO YOU THINK.&#13;
THEV GALL 'E M&#13;
TASTE BUDS ANYWAY?&#13;
Don't Fiddle&#13;
Around!&#13;
Join&#13;
the Ranger&#13;
Soccer team splits another pair&#13;
As is (he habit with coach Hal&#13;
Henderson's men's soccer team&#13;
they split another pair of games&#13;
last week by defeating PurdueCalumet&#13;
and then losing to&#13;
Western Michigan.&#13;
Last Wednesday the Rangers&#13;
destroyed a weak Purdue-Calumet&#13;
team by a score of 7-1. The&#13;
Rangers outshot their opponents&#13;
in this game 45 - 6.&#13;
Purdue scored first four minutes&#13;
into the game. That was all they&#13;
were allowed as.Earl Campbell&#13;
tied the game on a penalty kick.&#13;
Alan Gibson got the game winner&#13;
off an assist from Ale Mora. Mora&#13;
then went on a scoring binge of his&#13;
own as he scored the next three&#13;
Racine&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
goals for the Rangers. The first&#13;
one came off an assist from Beejan&#13;
Beheshti. The second assist went&#13;
to Niall Power and Mora's last&#13;
goal was assisted by John&#13;
Momoima.&#13;
Momoima scored the sixth goal&#13;
with the assist going to Carlos&#13;
Duchicela. The lasi goal of the&#13;
game went to Duchicela unassisted.&#13;
&#13;
Saturday the Rangers weren't so&#13;
lucky as they traveled to Western&#13;
Michigan to get involved in a&#13;
defensive battle and eventually lost&#13;
1 - 0 .&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson was&#13;
pleased with the play of his team.&#13;
"We played with more intensity&#13;
last Saturday than at anytime in&#13;
the eight years I've been here."&#13;
said Henderson. He also mentioned&#13;
that senior Carl Goetz&#13;
'played the best I've seen him play&#13;
in his three years here at Parkside.'&#13;
Coach Henderson also announced&#13;
that senior Lee Cielonko&#13;
had quit the team and sophomore&#13;
Claude Cielonko had been kickedoff&#13;
the team.&#13;
The Rangers record is now 7 - 7 ,&#13;
thus equalling Parkside's best ever&#13;
record of 7-7-2 two years ago.&#13;
Parkside will play out the rest of&#13;
their regular season schedule this&#13;
week hosting Roosevelt University&#13;
Wednesday and traveling to&#13;
Platteville on Saturday.&#13;
Red's Roller Rink&#13;
7220 67th Street&#13;
ADULTS ONLY&#13;
SKATING SESSION&#13;
SUNDAY EVENINGS&#13;
7:30-10:30 PM&#13;
Must be 18 or older&#13;
Admission $2.00&#13;
Skate Rental .75&#13;
Parkside places second&#13;
in tennis tournament&#13;
As co-host of the WWIAC&#13;
tennis tournament this past&#13;
weekend first year coach Noreen&#13;
Goggin's women coasted into a&#13;
second place finish behind a&#13;
strong Marquette team. Marquette&#13;
ended the competition with&#13;
78 points, easily out-distancing the&#13;
Rangers who had 40 points.&#13;
Co-host Carthage was third with&#13;
22 points followed by Carrol&#13;
College with 18 and UW-Green&#13;
Bay with 14.&#13;
In taking the crown the&#13;
Warriors won 8 of the'9 separate&#13;
championships with parkside&#13;
taking the only other one. The&#13;
Rangers were defeated by Marquette&#13;
in five of the championships&#13;
with the no. 1 doubles team of&#13;
Kathy Logic-Kathy Thomas&#13;
winning that crown.&#13;
Kathy Logic won her first match&#13;
at no. 1 singles but lost the finals&#13;
to Robin Barksdale of Marquette.&#13;
At no. 2 singles Kathy Thomas&#13;
also lost in the finals to her&#13;
Warrior opponent Andrea Foeller.&#13;
At no. 3 singles senior Maryann&#13;
Cairns made it to the finals but&#13;
was forced to forfeit the match to&#13;
her Marquette opponent because&#13;
of an injury to her foot.&#13;
Parkside's Nancy Kivi and Lori&#13;
Bleashka at no. 4 and 5 singles&#13;
also won their first matches and&#13;
were defeated by their Marquette&#13;
foes in the finals. Laura Bianco at&#13;
no. 6 singles wasn't as lucky as the&#13;
rest of her teammates as she lost to&#13;
Maryann Gerisbach of Marquette&#13;
in the first round.&#13;
At first doubles the champion&#13;
Logic-Thomas team easily defeated&#13;
their Marquette opponents&#13;
by scores of 6 - 1 and 6 - 2.&#13;
Maryann Cairns and Nancy Kivi&#13;
were forced to forfeit their match&#13;
in the finals because of the foot&#13;
injury to Cairns. At third doubles&#13;
the Parkside team of Laura&#13;
Bianco-Lori Bleashka lost in^their&#13;
first round.&#13;
Coach Goggin said she was&#13;
pleased with the improvement the&#13;
team showed over the season and&#13;
is looking forward to next year.&#13;
Only one member of the team,&#13;
Maryann Cairns, will be lost to&#13;
graduation.&#13;
Try Michelob now on tap at the Union!!&#13;
Women give in&#13;
to Carthage&#13;
at invitational&#13;
Parkside's women's volleyball&#13;
team took- part in the Carthage&#13;
Invitational tournament over the&#13;
weekend and did well up until&#13;
their last match of the tourney&#13;
against champion Carthage.&#13;
"We played consistently up&#13;
until the Carthage match,"&#13;
commented coach Linda Henderon.&#13;
"We did not play well in the&#13;
finals."&#13;
She also mentioned that she was&#13;
happy about the group of fans that&#13;
showed over at Carthage to cheer&#13;
for the Rangers.&#13;
Parkside started off by defeating&#13;
UW-Platteville, 15-8, 7-15 and&#13;
15-4. They went on to defeat&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, UW-Whitewater,&#13;
Elmhurst College and UWOshkosh&#13;
before their loss to&#13;
Carthage.&#13;
The Ranger's record now stands&#13;
at 19 - 15 - 1 as they will host their&#13;
own tournament this Saturday.&#13;
Other entries in the tourney are&#13;
Carthage, Carrol, Marquette and&#13;
Northland. The tournament will&#13;
begin at 9 am with the finals being&#13;
held at 4 pm. </text>
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                  <text>Photographer and U.S. Army non-commissioned officer Charles Nicholas Johnson (1923-2005) was stationed in Tokyo from fall 1954 to September 1957. During this time he photographed color images, capturing everyday life in Japan, urban scenes, landscapes and representations of Japanese culture. The family of Charles Nicholas Johnson donated this collection of 260 slides to the archives in 2013. Many of the images were taken at Nikkō Tōshō-gū, a Shinto shrine established in 1617 to enshrine Tokugawa Ieyasu, the first shogun of the Tokugawa shogunate. For more information on Nikkō Tōshō-gū, please visit: &lt;a href="http://www.toshogu.jp/english/"&gt;http://www.toshogu.jp/english/&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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