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              <text>Parkside survey - Reagan favored in area poll</text>
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              <text>Guskins return Tennis season "Crimes of the Heart"&#13;
to Thailand closes play review&#13;
Page 6 Page 16 Page 9&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 25, 1984 University of Wiseoesin-Parkside Vol. 13, No. 8&#13;
Parkside survey&#13;
Reagan favored in area poll&#13;
Residents of Kenosha and Racine&#13;
counties favor President Ronald&#13;
Reagan over former vice president&#13;
Walter Mondale by a 44 t o 30 p ercent&#13;
margin, shows a survey conducted&#13;
Sept. 10 through Oct. 1 by&#13;
Parkside's Center for Survey and&#13;
Marketing Research (CSMR).&#13;
The question, "If the election&#13;
were held today who would you&#13;
vote for?" was just one of many&#13;
questions asked of 1,000 heads of&#13;
households in the two counties as&#13;
part of an in-depth, "quality of&#13;
life" survey by the CSMR.&#13;
The survey seeks to assess attitudes&#13;
of Kenosha and Racine residents&#13;
toward their communities,&#13;
jobs, local governments and other&#13;
subjects, as well as their shopping&#13;
habits and recreational and entertainment&#13;
activities.&#13;
The survey, supported by funds&#13;
from a number of local groups, including&#13;
the Kenosha Area Chamber&#13;
of Commerce and the Kenosha&#13;
Area Economic Development Office,&#13;
was conducted by phone using a&#13;
trained team of Parkside students.&#13;
Telephone interviews averaged&#13;
about 20 minutes.&#13;
Complete results of the survey&#13;
will be available in January, said&#13;
Parkside business professor James&#13;
Rovelstad, director of the CSMR.&#13;
Rovelstad and Parkside behavioral&#13;
science professor Ron Pavalko designed&#13;
the questions for the survey.&#13;
The researchers said significant and&#13;
timely data from the survey will be&#13;
released as it is processed.&#13;
The interviewing phase of the&#13;
survey was completed one week before&#13;
the first presidential debate.&#13;
Rovelstad said that while the trend&#13;
in national post-debate polls shows&#13;
Reagan's lead over Mondale narrowing,&#13;
there still exists a substantial&#13;
gap between the two candidates.&#13;
The survey contains a three percent&#13;
margin of error, plus or minus.&#13;
Of the survey respondents, 44&#13;
percent favored Reagan, 30 percent&#13;
favored Mondale, and 16 percent&#13;
were undecided.&#13;
Reagan is favored more heavily&#13;
by men than women - 49 percent&#13;
of t he men preferred Reagan while&#13;
41 percent of the women did.&#13;
Perhaps surprisingly, the&#13;
researchers said, there was no difference&#13;
between men and women&#13;
in their support of the Mondale-&#13;
Ferraro ticket. Thirty percent of&#13;
both the men and women chose&#13;
Mondale. Thus it appears u&amp;t votes&#13;
Reagan may be losing among&#13;
women are not necessarily being&#13;
picked up by Mondale, the&#13;
researchers said. Twenty percent of&#13;
the women were undecided and 12&#13;
percent of the men were.&#13;
Among full-time working men,&#13;
Reagan was heavily favored - 52&#13;
to 28 percent - over Mondale. Interestingly,&#13;
the researchers said,&#13;
full-time working women also preferred&#13;
Reagan, by a margin of 42 to&#13;
31 percent. Women keeping house&#13;
full-time were strong Reagan backers,&#13;
preferring the incumbent by a&#13;
Mondale winner&#13;
in mock election&#13;
Walter Mondale has a slight edge&#13;
over President Reagan, according&#13;
to the mock presidential election&#13;
held on campus last week.&#13;
Walter Mondale/Geraldine Ferraro&#13;
received 195 votes and Ronald&#13;
Reagan/George Bush received 169&#13;
votes. The mock election ballots&#13;
were available at the PSGA senate&#13;
polling site.&#13;
The ballots presented only the&#13;
Democratic and Republican candidates.&#13;
Serious write-in candidates&#13;
were Gary Hart and John Anderson.&#13;
Bill the Cat headed the list of&#13;
less serious write-ins.&#13;
Kari Dixon, president of the&#13;
Young Democrats, which sponsored&#13;
the mock election, said she was&#13;
not surprised by t he results. "Reagan&#13;
has strong support with the&#13;
youth, according to the National&#13;
polls.&#13;
"To those people who are wondering&#13;
where all the Ronald Reagan&#13;
supporters are on this campus,&#13;
I ask the same question. If there&#13;
are 169 Reagan supporters, then&#13;
there should be an organization on&#13;
campus showing this support,"she&#13;
added.&#13;
Dixon was happy that so many&#13;
people participated in the mock&#13;
election. "Whether Republican or&#13;
Democrat, I feel it is important for&#13;
students to repeat their participation&#13;
on Nov. 6," she said.&#13;
45 to 27 per cent split.&#13;
Types of jobs influenced candidate&#13;
support. For example, managers&#13;
of businesses preferred Reagan&#13;
by a whopping 72 to 8 percent&#13;
margin and professionals 51 to 23&#13;
percent, while assembly-line workers&#13;
favored Mondale by a 47 to 30&#13;
percent span. General laborers favored&#13;
Mondale by a slight 38 to 34&#13;
percent.&#13;
Persons who said they belong to&#13;
a union preferred Mondale by 44 to&#13;
34 percent; non-union respondents&#13;
favored Reagan by an almost 2 to I&#13;
margin - 49 to 25 percent.&#13;
Levels of education also influenced&#13;
candidate support. Persons with&#13;
less than a high school education&#13;
favored Mondale by a 42 to 25 percent&#13;
margin, while persons with a&#13;
high school diploma favored Reagan&#13;
by 47 t o 30 percent.&#13;
Graduates of vocational and technical&#13;
schools preferred Reagan 43&#13;
to 28 percent while persons with&#13;
four year bachelor's degrees favored&#13;
Reagan by a 61 to 25 percent&#13;
margin.&#13;
Support for Reagan increased as&#13;
incomes did. For example, persons&#13;
earning below $10,000 per year favored&#13;
Mondale by some 15 percentage&#13;
points; persons earning between&#13;
$15,000 and $20,000 preferred&#13;
Reagan by about a five point&#13;
spread; persons at the $25,000 to&#13;
$30,000 level supported Reagan by&#13;
about a 13 percent margin; and persons&#13;
earning more than $50,000 preferred&#13;
Reagan 69 to 13 percent.&#13;
Age was a factor in support of&#13;
the candidates. Persons 18 to 24&#13;
supported Reagan by a 43 to 37 percent&#13;
margin while those age 25 to&#13;
34 p referred Reagan 49 to 31 percent.&#13;
Persons age 45 to 64 chose&#13;
Reagan by a margin of 46 to 29 percent.&#13;
Those over 65 expressed&#13;
weaker support for Reagan, choosing&#13;
the incumbent by a 38 to 30 percent&#13;
margin over Mondale. Those&#13;
over 65 also tended to be more undecided&#13;
- 21 percent said they&#13;
weren't sure who they would vote&#13;
for.&#13;
Of persons registered to vote in&#13;
the upcoming election, Reagan was&#13;
favored by a margin of 45 to 31 percent.&#13;
Among those not registered,&#13;
the split was 42 to 25 percent in&#13;
Reagan's favor.&#13;
Of re spondents who voted in the&#13;
1980 presidential election, Reagan&#13;
was preferred by a 47 to 30 per cent&#13;
margin. Of those who didn't vote,&#13;
Mondale was favored by a 39 to 30&#13;
percent margin. '&#13;
PSGA election fun&#13;
PSGA&#13;
All win, UCpassed&#13;
OFFICIAL RESULTS&#13;
P.S.G.A. ELECTIONS&#13;
FALL, 1984&#13;
SENATOR&#13;
186 - Andy Buchanan&#13;
129 • Christopher Baierl&#13;
162 • Mark Leipzig&#13;
136 • Teron Nicldkowsld&#13;
158 • John Rather&#13;
158- Jose VaUdejuli&#13;
S.U.F.A.C.&#13;
No Candidate&#13;
P.U.A.B.&#13;
180 • Dennis Padlock&#13;
Referendum A:&#13;
We, the students of UW-Parkside,&#13;
agree to support the UW System&#13;
student lobby, United Council,&#13;
through a mandatory fee, refundable&#13;
upon written request, of $ .50&#13;
per semester.&#13;
194- Yes&#13;
108- No&#13;
309 STUDENTS VOTED,&#13;
APPROXIMATELY 6% OF THE&#13;
STUDENT BODY.&#13;
Aspin/J ansson&#13;
debate Monday&#13;
A debate between Rep. Les&#13;
Aspin (D-Wis.) and Republican&#13;
challenger Peter Jansson will be&#13;
held from noon to 1:15 p.m. on&#13;
Monday, Oct. 29, in the Union&#13;
Cinema Theater.&#13;
The debate, free and open to the&#13;
public, is sponsored by Parkside's&#13;
Social Science Roundtable Series&#13;
and the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Leagues of Women Voters. Format&#13;
will include opening statements and&#13;
rebuttals by the candidates, written&#13;
questions from the audience and an&#13;
opportunity for representatives of&#13;
the media to ask questions of the&#13;
candidates, who will then give closing&#13;
statements.&#13;
The debate will be broadcast live&#13;
by WGTD-FM 91 public radio.&#13;
Moderator will be Parkside associate&#13;
dean of faculty Michael&#13;
Bassis. The debate will be introduced&#13;
by Marry Merriam, president of&#13;
the Kenosha League of Women&#13;
Voters. Audience questions will be&#13;
stated by Sue Anderson, president&#13;
of the Racine League of Women&#13;
Voters.&#13;
Free shuttle bus service will be&#13;
offered from the East parking lot&#13;
near Tallent Hall on the east side of&#13;
30th Ave. (Wood R d.) Very li mited&#13;
parking will be available in the&#13;
Communication Arts and Union&#13;
lot •&#13;
2 Thursday, Oct. 25, 1984 RANGER&#13;
Opinion&#13;
Black and white of it&#13;
by Joan Mattox&#13;
Switchblades, nurn-chucks and&#13;
other various weapons seem to&#13;
have replaced the traditional books,&#13;
pencils and paper in some of our&#13;
area high schools, one being Kenosha&#13;
Bradford.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct 2, several students&#13;
were involved in a racial brawl at&#13;
the aid of the school day. This resulted&#13;
in two students having to be&#13;
treated for minor injuries.&#13;
The saddest part about this is the&#13;
fact that the active participants are&#13;
tomorrow's adults. As teens, if they&#13;
feel the answer to the racial problem&#13;
lies in the ability to handle a&#13;
switchblade or the expert twirling&#13;
of num-chucks, what will they feel&#13;
will satisfy the problem when they&#13;
are adults: guns, B-52's or nuclear&#13;
missiles?&#13;
Ignoring or underestimating the&#13;
problem of racial prejudice, as&#13;
many do, will not make it go away.&#13;
We must meet the problem head&#13;
on. Even Bradford's principal was&#13;
quite evasive when describing his&#13;
idea of the root of the problem. "I&#13;
felt it was a school-boy fight," he&#13;
stated. When you have fifteen students&#13;
with knives and other various&#13;
dangerous weapons screaming&#13;
"Black supremacy!" and "White&#13;
supremacy!" I think that far exceeds&#13;
the usual "school-boy" fight.&#13;
Students were injured. The police&#13;
were summoned, and the principal&#13;
calls this a "school-boy" fight?&#13;
High school is not grade school.&#13;
The students are young adults facing&#13;
many adult problems, this one a&#13;
racial conflict. So how does the&#13;
principal handle it? He wants to&#13;
expel or suspend all those involved.&#13;
Expulsion is not the answer. Suspension&#13;
and explusion might teach&#13;
than not to create a public ruckus&#13;
again, but it will by no means solve&#13;
the underlying problem, which is&#13;
the existence of prejudice.&#13;
So what, you may ask, should&#13;
they do? I say give all those involved&#13;
an ultimatum: either suspension&#13;
or a chance to air out their&#13;
differences in a group session with&#13;
counselors. You would be surprised&#13;
at how group therapy can be quite&#13;
helpful in cases like this. It would&#13;
give all those involved a chance to&#13;
air their differences. They could&#13;
discuss their likes and dislikes&#13;
while at the same time clearing up&#13;
any stereotypes or false beliefs that&#13;
one group may have about another.&#13;
It is a chance to exchange ideas and&#13;
thoughts without the fear of a knife&#13;
stuck in your back later.&#13;
A group rap session is a way to&#13;
bring students together so they can&#13;
verbally enact their disagreements&#13;
rather than participating in some&#13;
violent act to show their views. And&#13;
who knows, it might even bring the&#13;
students closer together and erase&#13;
any negative thoughts that one particular&#13;
group might feel about another.&#13;
It is sad to see that people with&#13;
different racial backgrounds find it&#13;
hard to get along. Why can't they&#13;
just accept the fact that the minority&#13;
groups as well as the Caucasian&#13;
race will always be in existence, so&#13;
the best way to deal with it is trying&#13;
to get along. It's not an A, B or&#13;
C world. It's an ABC world. We're&#13;
all in this together. So straighten&#13;
up, people, because at the rate&#13;
we're going, today's morality could&#13;
lead to tomorrow's fatality.&#13;
HOW TO S URVIVE&#13;
NUCLEAR&#13;
WAR&#13;
ONE HEARS MANY COMMENTARIES&#13;
THESE DAYS AB OUT THE&#13;
UNSURVIVABLLITY OF NUCLEAR&#13;
WAR. HOWEVER. YOU M AY BE&#13;
ABLE TO SURVIV E ONE...&#13;
. -IF YOU MEMORIZE THE&#13;
PROPER SAFETY PROCE DURES&#13;
TO BEGIN WIT H, WEAR LIGHTCOLORED&#13;
CLO THING.&#13;
KEEP AN EMERGENC Y KIT&#13;
WITH PLENTY OF WA TER, RAISINS,&#13;
CHOCOLATE, COARSE SOAP&#13;
CHLORINE, BUR N LO TION (N OT&#13;
CREAM), IODINE, AND A FIRST&#13;
AID BO OKLET.&#13;
LISTEN TO YO UR RADIO.&#13;
WHEN YO U AR E TOLD THAT&#13;
NUCLEAR WAR IS IMMINENT,&#13;
PROCEED AS QUIC KLY A S&#13;
POSSIBLE TO THE NEAREST&#13;
HOSPITABLE PLANET.&#13;
-I084&#13;
Nobody asked me, but...&#13;
I don't like either candidate&#13;
Posters unnecessary To the Editor:&#13;
This letter is in response to the&#13;
Mondale-Ferraro posters hanging in&#13;
the Hanger office. I realize that the&#13;
newspaper has the right (and some&#13;
may argue responsibility) to support&#13;
one candidate, however, the&#13;
Coffee Shoppe is a place where&#13;
many students frequently gather&#13;
and the Ranger office windows face&#13;
into that area. I do not feel like becoming&#13;
inundated with political advertisements&#13;
while relaxing in this&#13;
area.&#13;
In the past, political advertisements&#13;
have been removed from the&#13;
PSGA office for the very reason&#13;
stated above. The Editor informed&#13;
me that it is her window in her office&#13;
and that she can put whatever&#13;
she wants to in her windows. Two&#13;
issues are raised here. First, is it&#13;
her office? Don't we pay for it with&#13;
our segregated fees? Second, how&#13;
responsible is it for the leader of a&#13;
student organization to impose&#13;
his/her beliefs and personal opinions&#13;
on a captive audience (in this&#13;
case, consumers in the Coffee Shoppe).&#13;
Let us especially consider the&#13;
fact that at the time the posters&#13;
were put up no formal (or informal)&#13;
vote was ever taken to arrive&#13;
at a consensus of opinion among&#13;
staff members.&#13;
If this is the one-sided approach&#13;
to issues we are to expect, then perhaps&#13;
we can use our segregated&#13;
fees to purchase an outside curtain&#13;
to cover HER windows and HER&#13;
personal opinions.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Bruce R. Preston&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
We have folks for Reagan and&#13;
folks for Mondale. Me? I don't like&#13;
either one, so I thought I'd rant and&#13;
rave a bit. Certainly both have good&#13;
and bad points, but their bad points&#13;
tend to overshadow the good.&#13;
The following are lines from&#13;
songs which, in their entirety,&#13;
meant a variety of different things.&#13;
Taken out of context, these lines&#13;
pretty much say how I feel about&#13;
this election.&#13;
Hope you've got your things&#13;
together,&#13;
Hope you are quite prepared to die,&#13;
Looks like we're in for nasty&#13;
weather,&#13;
One eye is taken for an eye.&#13;
—John Fogerty&#13;
Dead babies,&#13;
Can't take care,&#13;
Of themselves&#13;
—Alice Cooper&#13;
Won't you tell me Mr. Jesus,&#13;
Won't you tell me if you can,&#13;
When you see this world we live in,&#13;
Do you still believe in man?&#13;
—Geezee Butler&#13;
And I would rather be anywhere&#13;
else&#13;
But here today.&#13;
—Elvis Costello&#13;
Old man take a look at my life,&#13;
I'm a l^flike you.&#13;
—Neil Young&#13;
No short-haired yellow-bellied son&#13;
of tricky Dicky's,&#13;
Gonna mother-hubbard soft soap&#13;
me,&#13;
With just a pocketful of hope,&#13;
Money for dope,&#13;
Money for rope.&#13;
—John Lennon&#13;
There will be an answer,&#13;
Let it be.&#13;
—Paul McCarteny&#13;
Heirs of a cold war,&#13;
That's what we've become,&#13;
Inheriting troubles,&#13;
I'm mentally numb,&#13;
Crazy,&#13;
I just cannot bear,&#13;
I'm living with something,&#13;
That just isn't fair.&#13;
—Ozzy Osbourne&#13;
And you tell me,&#13;
Over and over and over again my&#13;
friend,&#13;
You don't believe,&#13;
We're on the eve of destruction&#13;
— P .F. Sloane&#13;
Well I'm not dumb,&#13;
But I can't understand,&#13;
Why she walks like a woman,&#13;
And talks like a man.&#13;
—Ray Da vies&#13;
It's all over now baby blue&#13;
—Bob Dylan&#13;
This is the end&#13;
—Jim Morrison&#13;
Letters rebutted by reader&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to comment on the&#13;
letters in the Ranger last week and&#13;
the fact that I found three uplifting&#13;
and five put downs.&#13;
Queen Natalie was very gracious&#13;
in her thank you to the homecoming&#13;
committee and her hopes for a&#13;
better homecoming in the future.&#13;
Let's all commit ourselves to better&#13;
homecomings in the future.&#13;
Thanks, Steve, for the admirable&#13;
defense of the in tram urals on campus.&#13;
I'm sure with other people like&#13;
you helping Linda Draft, the intramurals&#13;
program won't just stay on&#13;
the ground, but will soar to new&#13;
heights.&#13;
I'm glad to hear Ruth is excited&#13;
about voting, but also important is&#13;
voter education and political in-&#13;
Continued on Page 11&#13;
U&#13;
9&#13;
*00&#13;
c%&#13;
&lt;2&#13;
P^j7tkia Editor&#13;
ftahKfofmiL' " • Campus News Editor&#13;
5m Community News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Asst Feature Editor&#13;
£ £? Sports Edtor&#13;
KSZ Edito*"&#13;
KJJftP Nidsen Copy Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
^7iri^n?oA Advertising Manager&#13;
Pat Zfrkelbach Distribution Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan Asst. Business Manager&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jim Burge, Konise Cassity, Jay&#13;
Crapser, Mike Froehlke, Michele&#13;
Geary, Natalie Haberman, Darryl&#13;
Hahn, Kimberlie Kranich, Steve&#13;
Kratochvil, Mark Leipzig, Jeff&#13;
Leisganx, Mary L ojeski, Robb Luehr,&#13;
Joan Mattox, Wes McGarver, Julie&#13;
Pendleton, Chris Pappe, Laureen&#13;
Wawro, Kevin Zirfcelbach.&#13;
T JL andfdnfd by Students at UW-Parkside and they are solely responsible&#13;
for ,t s editor,at policy and content. Published every Thursday during the&#13;
academic year except during breaks and holidays.&#13;
"anger is printed by the Racine Journal Times.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger. University of&#13;
2295^4^53-2287 ^ "" """ T"'Ph°"° '4"" 553~&#13;
srienaZrVJZ^"'^ accefted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard&#13;
sue paper. Letters should be /ess than 350 words and must be signed with a te/equTst&#13;
ZTd/iMfaZfZ' f°r- VeSmcaJion PurP°*&gt;* "ames will be withheld upon re-&#13;
1™,&gt;S TueSdaV St Wa m- for Publication Thursday. Ranger&#13;
content. * containing false and defamatory&#13;
Third party senate&#13;
candidate discusses issues&#13;
Political fervor praised&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This is in response to the letter&#13;
published on Oct. 18, written by&#13;
Brad Osborne. Mr. Osborne wrote&#13;
that he is highly offended by the&#13;
fact that most of the political fervor&#13;
generated on the Parfcside campus&#13;
is Democratic-oriented. This may&#13;
be true. While we have been lucky&#13;
enough to have had both Ted Mondale&#13;
and John Zaccaro, Jr. speak at&#13;
forums, we seem to have had no&#13;
Republican-backed programs sponsored.&#13;
Mr. Osborne, I believe the&#13;
Republican record on education&#13;
may be reason enough for the apparent&#13;
under-representation on&#13;
campus. Perhaps the Republicans&#13;
realize that cutting Federal aid for&#13;
higher education by 25 percent&#13;
would not create avid supporters in&#13;
a university setting.&#13;
As for the series of discussions&#13;
sponsored by the Young Democrats,&#13;
I am personally proud that&#13;
students of Parkside are as politically&#13;
aware and concerned as they&#13;
appear to be. While there is no&#13;
Young Republican organization on&#13;
campus, those Republican students&#13;
are invited and urged to attend&#13;
these discussions. If topics such as&#13;
poverty, the arms race and the environment&#13;
aren't presented fairly in&#13;
your opinion, then I would assume&#13;
Ranger accused of bias&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Come on, Ranger! Let's not be&#13;
so biased. Mondale may be the better&#13;
choice for president, but then&#13;
again he may not be. I think that&#13;
both sides of an issue should be&#13;
printed, not just one side as you did&#13;
in the Oct. 11 issue ("Fritz win no&#13;
surprise," "Mondale urges student&#13;
vote; makes difference," "Financial&#13;
aid policy to come under&#13;
view," and the cartoon on page&#13;
two). Even though Kari Dixon&#13;
(writer) and Jennie Tunkieicz (editor)&#13;
are both members of the&#13;
Young Democrats club, you should&#13;
find someone who is a supporter of&#13;
Reagan and allow that person to&#13;
voice the opinion of Reagan backers.&#13;
If you c an't find anyone, then&#13;
try to write an unbiased article. I&#13;
know that it can be done, because&#13;
I've seen it in this paper before. Besides&#13;
sounding more fair, a newspaper&#13;
that is unbiased is also more&#13;
professional.&#13;
Keith Harmann&#13;
Print those letters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
What do you want, Wicker?!&#13;
Where's the letter?&#13;
What is this? Why is it that when&#13;
my friend and fellow Union bartender&#13;
Keith Harmann writes a letter&#13;
to the editor that his letter&#13;
doesn't get printed in the paper?&#13;
His letter concerns a current issue.&#13;
The answer may be that there were&#13;
ads that had to be printed on that&#13;
page because ads pay for the printing&#13;
of the paper, but the "news&#13;
briefs" are only in the paper because&#13;
they've been there all semester.&#13;
Haven't you been soliciting letters&#13;
all semester and printing&#13;
them? Isn't campus news more important&#13;
than the news briefs printed&#13;
in last week's Ranger? The articles&#13;
in the news briefs were probably&#13;
already known by the students&#13;
who have enough initiative to pick&#13;
up a Ranger and read it.&#13;
Why also is it that even though&#13;
Harmann's letter doesn't get printed,&#13;
people know about it and hassle&#13;
him about his political ideologies&#13;
when he hasn't mentioned any of&#13;
them in his letter? Jennie Tunkieicz&#13;
sent him a memo which wasn't&#13;
very professional and said that she&#13;
has "..never not allowed anyone to&#13;
present their opinion..." If this is&#13;
so, why t hen wasn't his letter published?&#13;
Kari Dixon sent him the&#13;
"Congressional Weekly," stating in&#13;
her letter to him that she hopes&#13;
that he "writes more letters (to the&#13;
editor) expressing your opinions."&#13;
This raises another question: how&#13;
did she know in the first place that&#13;
he wrote a letter to the editor when&#13;
the letter was handed directly to&#13;
the editor early Tuesday morning?&#13;
She (Kari Dixon) isn't even ? staff&#13;
member of the Ranger; therefore,&#13;
she should have no business knowing&#13;
the contents of letters to the&#13;
editor until they're printed.&#13;
If this attitude of attacking others'&#13;
opinions happens weekly, you&#13;
shouldn't wonder why hardly anyone&#13;
writes letters to the editor.&#13;
Shouldn't editorial opinions, in&#13;
the form of letters intended for&#13;
publication, be answered in the&#13;
same way, instead of privately harrassing&#13;
the person who wrote the&#13;
letter? What right does a person&#13;
have to criticize someone's opinion?&#13;
This to me seems bias on behalf&#13;
of the editor. Is the editor's&#13;
opinion the only and right one&#13;
every time?&#13;
One more question: why are&#13;
there posters for Mondale/Ferraro&#13;
in the window of Ranger? Are the&#13;
Young Democrats running Ranger&#13;
or is the Ranger running the Young&#13;
Democrats?&#13;
I feel that you should print&#13;
what's said, not what the editor&#13;
feels should be printed. A college&#13;
newspaper should act with responsibility.&#13;
With responsibility comes&#13;
dignity.&#13;
In this situation, I think that the&#13;
editor abused her position and&#13;
should consider the purpose and responsibility&#13;
of a newspaper on campus.&#13;
Someone who writes a letter&#13;
opposite to her opinion should not&#13;
be intimidated and the letter ignored.&#13;
The letter should be printed as&#13;
are those letters that agree with her&#13;
viewpoint.&#13;
Neil C. Nelson&#13;
that it is your responsibility to help&#13;
educate those of us who see President&#13;
Reagan's policies as highly irregular&#13;
and quite unfair.&#13;
Your blatant accusation of faculty&#13;
"parading their Democratic&#13;
views" in classrooms is also unfair.&#13;
Unfortunately, I can fully understand&#13;
why the faculty in this university&#13;
might feel more strongly than&#13;
most. Again, my suggestion to you&#13;
is to convince us that President&#13;
Reagan will give us a better four&#13;
years. I don't think he can and&#13;
frankly, I hope that he won't have a&#13;
chance to.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Traci A. Fordham&#13;
Child care&#13;
workshop&#13;
A ser ies of five child-care workshops&#13;
that meet the requirements&#13;
of licensure by the Department of&#13;
Health and Human Services will be&#13;
offered by t he Parkside Child Care&#13;
Center.&#13;
Individuals or agencies may enroll&#13;
in the workshops, which cost&#13;
$12 in total or $2.50 individually.&#13;
The workshops will b e from 7 to&#13;
9 p.m. in Union Room 104-106.&#13;
Dates and topics are:&#13;
-Dec. 4. "Music Fun in the classroom."&#13;
-Jan. 22. "Le gal Rights and Responsibilities&#13;
in Early Childhood&#13;
Programs."&#13;
-March 5. "Growing with Puppets."&#13;
-April 30. "Families in Stress."&#13;
For more information, contact&#13;
Sherry Thomas or Marily Noreen in&#13;
the Parkside Child Care Center at&#13;
553-2227.&#13;
The Federal Reserve system and&#13;
personal income taxes are unconstitutional,&#13;
and they should be abolished,&#13;
says the Constitution Party&#13;
candidate for Wisconsin's 22nd Senate&#13;
District.&#13;
Charles Olson of Kenosha said&#13;
the government has drifted far&#13;
from the original intent of the Constitution.&#13;
For example, he said,&#13;
laws are only tested for constitutionality&#13;
in the courts after they are&#13;
in effect.&#13;
"A bill that's unconstitutional&#13;
should never be passed in the first&#13;
place," said Olson in an interview&#13;
Tuesday. "It's not passed by the&#13;
people at all."&#13;
The government survived for 125&#13;
years without personal income&#13;
taxes, said Olson. Revenue sharing,&#13;
which comes from those taxes, he&#13;
said, is inefficient and unfair.&#13;
"The government has no money&#13;
to share," said Olson. "They're getting&#13;
it from the people and it comes&#13;
back with controls."&#13;
He cited the federal government's&#13;
requirement for a nationwide&#13;
21-year-old drinking age as a&#13;
condition for federal highway funds&#13;
as an example.&#13;
Olson sa id high interest rates, a'&#13;
creation of the Federal Reserve&#13;
System, are an unproductive drain&#13;
on income. Under the party's platform,&#13;
congress would issue only&#13;
non interest bearing federal notes.&#13;
The party, which is part of the National&#13;
Populist party, would also repudiate&#13;
the federal deficit.&#13;
Olson is running for office, he&#13;
Charles Olson&#13;
says, because "We have to get honesty&#13;
and integrity in our govrament.&#13;
We hav e to turn out the old&#13;
guard.&#13;
"The problem is that these legislators&#13;
get into office (and) they see&#13;
how the person who's been there&#13;
the longest has been doing it."&#13;
Olson will be appearing, along&#13;
with other candidates for the district,&#13;
on channels 10 and 36 on Oct.&#13;
29 and 30.&#13;
Guskin open forum set&#13;
The Ranger is sponsoring an&#13;
Open Forum with Chancellor Alan&#13;
Guskin on Monday, Oct 29 a t 1:15&#13;
p.m. in Main Place. All are encouraged&#13;
to attend to ask questions&#13;
or make comments to the Chancellor.&#13;
Parties respond to survey&#13;
by Kari Dixon&#13;
Neither the Mondale nor the&#13;
Reagan campaigns expect defeat in&#13;
Racine and Kenosha counties, despite&#13;
the reults of a Parkside marketing&#13;
poll t hat has Ronald Reagan&#13;
leading Walter Mondale by 14&#13;
points in those counties.&#13;
The pre-debate survey obtained&#13;
some results that pleased Reagan-&#13;
Bush organizer Eric Olsen of Kenosha.&#13;
"I have not seen the poll,"&#13;
he said, "but we expect to carry&#13;
Kenosha County, though by a somewhat&#13;
smaller margin."&#13;
Olsen said he thought that the&#13;
first debate favored Mondale, the&#13;
second favored Reagan.&#13;
"The election was really won&#13;
after the nomination," Olsen said,&#13;
"and there probably will not be any&#13;
great change. The issues like abortion,&#13;
leadership and national pride&#13;
are important to the people of Kenosha&#13;
County, and this strengthens&#13;
Reagan's support."&#13;
In Kenosha County, Reagan received&#13;
45.4% of the vote and Mondale&#13;
32.2%. In Racine County, Reagan&#13;
received 43.4% and Mondale&#13;
29.2%, with 18.44% undecided.&#13;
These numbers apparently dp noti&#13;
reflect what the Mondale campaign&#13;
is seeing in Racine.&#13;
"If one looks at the elections of&#13;
1976, 1980 and 1982, it seems&#13;
strange that Racine would go Republican,"&#13;
said Almay Gonzalez, a&#13;
state coordinator for the Mondale&#13;
campaign, who is currently assigned&#13;
to Racine County.&#13;
Gonzalez said that she had some&#13;
problems with the Parkside poll&#13;
and the national polls as well. "No&#13;
matter where a poll comes from, it&#13;
is wrong to generalize the opinion&#13;
of millions of people by polling&#13;
500."&#13;
According to the survey, the&#13;
older the voting population became,&#13;
the stronger the support for&#13;
Ronald Reagan became. Gonzalez&#13;
disputed this. "Ronald Reagan is&#13;
clearly an enemy of the aging," she&#13;
said. "I have not come into contact,&#13;
while traveling the state, with one&#13;
elderly person who is a friend of&#13;
his."&#13;
Reagan also scored higher than&#13;
Mondale in the 18-24 age range.&#13;
Gonzalez attributed this to a lack of&#13;
involvement by this age group.&#13;
"The 18-24 year olds are the leastregistered&#13;
group, and their turnout&#13;
at the polls is generally poor."&#13;
Nevertheless, Gonzalez does not believe&#13;
that the young, the old or Racine&#13;
County will go Republican.&#13;
"I was with the Governor at a&#13;
meeting last week and he said the&#13;
Republicans think Wisconsin is a&#13;
"swing" state," she continued.&#13;
"Yet we have only had one visit&#13;
from the President and four major&#13;
visits from the Mondale/Ferraro&#13;
ticket. I think the Republicans&#13;
know they can't take Wisconsin."&#13;
Like Olsen in the Reagan campaign,&#13;
Gonzalez believes he- party's&#13;
candidate has what it takes to win&#13;
the election. "The elderly and the&#13;
old will not be that easily fooled,"&#13;
she concluded.&#13;
As the campaign grinds into the&#13;
last two weeks, the Mondale campaign&#13;
is planning several stops in&#13;
Wisconsin. Walter Mondale, Jesse&#13;
Jackson, Gary Hart and Bill Mondale&#13;
will be in Milwaukee this&#13;
week. A campaign worker at the&#13;
Milwaukee Reagan/Bush headquarters&#13;
said that at this point no further&#13;
visits by the President are&#13;
planned, but that is not absolute.&#13;
"All that is done by the White&#13;
House and through the press," she&#13;
said. "We are not always the first&#13;
»to» «kn ow&gt; .•" » « . i * &lt; &gt; &gt; • « .&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Roundtable&#13;
Tell Halif study searches past&#13;
St a f f s alar ies s t u d i e d&#13;
Tell Halif is the modern name&#13;
for an archaeological study site in&#13;
Israel.&#13;
The site has had several names&#13;
previous to Tell Halif and there&#13;
have been occupants in this area of&#13;
study as early as 4500 B.C., according&#13;
to Vice-Chancellor Betty Shutler.&#13;
Shutler presented the Social&#13;
Science Roundtable last Monday on&#13;
"Environmental Studies at Tell&#13;
Halif."&#13;
Shutler has been studying the&#13;
site at Tell Halif for seven years,&#13;
and explained that "We don't have&#13;
the whole history of the world written,&#13;
so we search and look at&#13;
what's left over to find out what it&#13;
says."&#13;
Tell Halif has not been occupied&#13;
continually. There have been some&#13;
periods when it was a city, some&#13;
periods when it was a smaller settlement&#13;
and some extended periods&#13;
when there were no occupants.&#13;
The area of the site that Shutler&#13;
studied is very dry. To the north&#13;
there is a great deal of agriculture;&#13;
to the south there is very little agriculture&#13;
because of the extreme dryness;&#13;
to the west lies a coastal area&#13;
and to the east is a group of mountains.&#13;
Shutler explained that the dig&#13;
has brought up a lot of flint from a&#13;
limestone base, including tools like&#13;
scrapers, used to scrape the bark&#13;
off trees and sickle blades used to&#13;
cut wheat and barley. Other stones&#13;
were used for grinding grain. The&#13;
stones were used to reduce the crop&#13;
to a kind of coarse meal used to&#13;
make oatmeal and bread. Other&#13;
rocks and stones were used as&#13;
weapons.&#13;
Stone tools were made right on&#13;
the site, even into the twentieth&#13;
century. Stone tools are even today&#13;
regarded as more effective than&#13;
metal, as they are sharper.&#13;
Several different seeds have been&#13;
found on the site, including an&#13;
abundance of wheat, barley and&#13;
olives and a fair amount of lentils&#13;
and grapes. Wood found in the area&#13;
r University of Wisconsin-ParkskJe&#13;
Puerto&#13;
Semester Break January 2-9, 1985&#13;
From $420Complete&#13;
Plus 10% Service &amp; Taxes Based on quad-occupancy&#13;
• Round Trip J et Air&#13;
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• Ground Transfers &amp; Po rterage&#13;
• Tour Escort&#13;
• Orientation&#13;
Phone 553-2294 For More Information&#13;
Or Stop in Union 209&#13;
at this point has been attributed to&#13;
the Bronze Age, when there was a&#13;
great deal of o ak found.&#13;
Donkeys are a very common animal&#13;
found and were used primarily&#13;
for hauling and pulling. Other animals&#13;
found were pigs, sheep and&#13;
goats, used for food. Wild gazelle&#13;
have also been found, which seems&#13;
to make clear that at one time&#13;
hunting was an important factor in&#13;
the lives of the occupants.&#13;
"The study group is always looking&#13;
for other cities in the area to&#13;
determine what the relationships&#13;
between the cities were," said&#13;
Shutler. "There is always an interest&#13;
in other communities, roads,&#13;
farms, or anything that may be evidence&#13;
of man's presence. A lot of&#13;
the time is spent there walking&#13;
around the area, observing what's&#13;
going on and recording it."&#13;
Next issue -&#13;
Profile of&#13;
presidential&#13;
candidates&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
There is a need for funds to bring&#13;
academic staff salaries to a competitive&#13;
position, according to the&#13;
Academic Staff Salary Committee.&#13;
Within the UW System, there are&#13;
approximately 7100 people serving&#13;
in academic staff positions, covering&#13;
a wide variety of f unctions. The&#13;
committee's recommendations&#13;
were based primarily on information&#13;
comparing the salaries of the&#13;
"indicator groups" of academic&#13;
staff titles with those provided at&#13;
peer institutions. The committee&#13;
also understood that the institutions&#13;
compete for hiring and retention&#13;
of t he academic staff with private&#13;
enterprise, local educational&#13;
institutions, other institutions of&#13;
higher education, state agencies&#13;
and others that employ individuals&#13;
in comparable positions.&#13;
The committee recommends that&#13;
faculty and academic staff continue&#13;
to be considered in the same budgetary&#13;
processes and with the same&#13;
objective of insuring quality higher&#13;
education regarding the duties of&#13;
academic staff members, such as&#13;
teaching, conducting research,&#13;
counseling, administering educational&#13;
programs and performing&#13;
other functions integrally related to&#13;
the academic enterprise.&#13;
Based on the data examined, the&#13;
Academic Staff Salary Committee&#13;
finds that in 1983-84 and continuing&#13;
in 1984-85, the salaries paid to academic&#13;
staff in most categories in&#13;
the UW System are below those at&#13;
peer institutions. In a survey of UW&#13;
System institutions, all but one of&#13;
the fifteen institutions reported&#13;
that recruitment and retention&#13;
problems have increased over the&#13;
past several years and that the&#13;
problems primarily are due to low&#13;
salary increases and low starting&#13;
salaries.&#13;
In order to make the UW System&#13;
academic staff salaries competitive,&#13;
the committee recommended the&#13;
following: a special, one-time&#13;
provision should be included in the&#13;
1985-87 executive budget that would&#13;
make academic staff salaries more&#13;
competitive; changes that are made&#13;
in the process to develop the pay&#13;
plan for faculty should also be&#13;
made for academic staff; the recommendations&#13;
to increase the&#13;
Board of Regents' flexibility in allocating&#13;
budget resources to address&#13;
faculty salary problems and to meet&#13;
other instructional needs should be&#13;
extended to academic staff; academic&#13;
staff salary increases should&#13;
be funded from the same proportion&#13;
of the GPR and fees as supports&#13;
the UW System operating&#13;
budget; the UW System administration&#13;
should develop objectives and&#13;
guidelines for the development of a&#13;
compensation program for the academic&#13;
staff.&#13;
Ex-spy warns about Russians&#13;
by Laureen Wawro&#13;
Peter James, former spy, is on a&#13;
mission to save the United States&#13;
from the Russians. James gave a&#13;
presentation entitled "How to Spy&#13;
on the United States" in the Union&#13;
Cafeteria on Oct. 18.&#13;
"The FBI. will be the first to tell&#13;
you of what significance this presentation&#13;
is around the country,"&#13;
he said. "There are so many Russian&#13;
spies out there, there are so&#13;
many (spy) facilities - eleven thousand&#13;
plus- they can't cover all of&#13;
them themselves. They need the&#13;
help and participation of t he American&#13;
public."&#13;
James, a 1962 physics graduate&#13;
from the Case Institute of Technology&#13;
in Cleveland, was employed as&#13;
a rocket engineer by Pratt and&#13;
Whitney Aircraft when he was apprached&#13;
by the CIA. After being&#13;
asked to "assist our government,"&#13;
James "became an expert in Soviet&#13;
rocketry and Soviet space defense&#13;
programs. Basically, I was meeting&#13;
Russians in a number of international&#13;
affairs and reporting to the&#13;
CIA technical information plus&#13;
political-dossier type information,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
JameS currently uses his spying&#13;
experiences to warn Americans&#13;
against the Russians and against&#13;
Russians themselves. He travels&#13;
about 100,000 miles a year, giving&#13;
presentations and "basically raising&#13;
a lot of issues," he said.&#13;
"I often find myself playing the&#13;
role of devil's advocate to keep&#13;
both my Republican and Democratic&#13;
friends in Washington honest."&#13;
He incorporates a slide show into&#13;
his presentation, which shows pictures&#13;
of him during various CIA&#13;
missions and of documents, both&#13;
American and foreign, that are evidence&#13;
of the troubled American security&#13;
system. He emphasized that&#13;
the United States constitution&#13;
works against our security system&#13;
by allowing anyone to photograph&#13;
virtually anything.&#13;
In Russia, film is confiscated if&#13;
things such as industrial sites, government&#13;
complexes or airports are&#13;
Dr. Peter L. Emer &amp; Dr. Wayne C. Bartel&#13;
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3612 Roosevelt Road • Kenosha&#13;
Dr. Peter L. Emer, Optometrist, is pleased to announce that he has reduced&#13;
the traditional contact lens fees by 20% at his office at 3612 Roosevelt Road.&#13;
Dr. Emer is f itting all types of contact lenses, including tinted and extended&#13;
wear. Consider a professional eye exam (the contact lens exam will take 60&#13;
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If you have any questions on price or contact lenses in general. Dr. Emer will&#13;
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Peter James&#13;
photographed. James feels that not&#13;
only do our laws sometimes work&#13;
against us, but that our security&#13;
personnel are often incompetent.&#13;
He cited numerous examples of this&#13;
and recounted instances where he&#13;
broke through security barriers just&#13;
to prove this incompetence to himself.&#13;
Although James urges his audiences&#13;
to take an active role in keeping&#13;
America safe, he emphasizes&#13;
the need for caution. "As an American&#13;
citizen, you shouldn't try to&#13;
play any James Bond games, because&#13;
these people are sharp,&#13;
shrewd. They take their work seriously,&#13;
and if you run across a highlevel&#13;
espionage operation, your life&#13;
is worth nothing."&#13;
ANDERSON TRANSCRIPTION&#13;
&amp; TYPING&#13;
Letters - Resumes&#13;
Term Papers&#13;
Student Rates&#13;
PHONE 637-3600&#13;
Jacqueline Anderson&#13;
1441 P ark Avenue&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
•&#13;
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RANGER&#13;
Accent on Enrichment reaches new plateau&#13;
A Broadway musical and a Pulitzer&#13;
Prize-winning drama, puppets&#13;
and Chinese acrobats, and two legends&#13;
of jazz music and dance high-&#13;
Mil Wailkee Repertory Theater&#13;
Fall 1984Tour * * * « « • • * • • • • •&#13;
:::MISS :::&#13;
:: :LULU:::&#13;
: BETT.:: • • 'by Zona Gale • • .&#13;
light the 1984-85 Accent on Enrichment&#13;
Series at Parkside.&#13;
The popular entertainment series,&#13;
which is in its eighth season,&#13;
will feature six performances opening&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 11, with the Milwaukee&#13;
Repertory Theater's production&#13;
of "Miss Lulu Bett." Following&#13;
are "The National Marionette&#13;
Theater" on Wednesday, Dec.&#13;
5; "The Pirates of Penzance," a&#13;
fully-staged musical on Thursday,&#13;
Jan. 22; th e "Chinese Magic Circus&#13;
Revue" on Thursday, March 5; Gus&#13;
Giordano's Jazz Dance Company on&#13;
Tuesday, March 19; and Woody&#13;
Herman and his Thundering Herd&#13;
on Tuesday, April 9.&#13;
The cost of this year's series is&#13;
$33.50 p lus $2.50 tax and handling&#13;
for reserved seats for the six attractions.&#13;
Sponsors say that is a savings&#13;
of 20 perc ent over buying what individual&#13;
tickets would remain after&#13;
the season ticket sale. Individual&#13;
event tickets will average $7.50.&#13;
All performances but one will be&#13;
in the Communication Arts Theater&#13;
and all begin at 8 p.m. The exception&#13;
is the Chinese Magic Revue of&#13;
Taiwan, which will be held in the&#13;
Physical Education Center because&#13;
of t he height and scope required for&#13;
the show.&#13;
Tickets can be ordered by mail&#13;
through coupons in newspaper ads,&#13;
or by tele phone or in person at the&#13;
Parkside Union Information Cotter,&#13;
553-2345.&#13;
"Miss Lulu Bett," which edged&#13;
Eugene O'Neill's "The Emperor&#13;
Jones" for the Pulitzer Prize for&#13;
drama in 1921, was written by&#13;
Wisconsin's Zona Gale, a lifelong&#13;
resident of Portage and the first&#13;
A&#13;
Q tP \ATIO\AL&#13;
MARIOVETTE&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
Chemistry Club officers, from left: Maria Brockhaus, secretary; Julie&#13;
DeBus, vice president; Sharon Rynders, president; and Drew Kuffel,&#13;
treasurer.&#13;
Chem Club joins ACS&#13;
The Chemistry Club has formed&#13;
a national chapter of the American&#13;
Chemical Society. The club was formally&#13;
accepted by ACS a nd honored&#13;
with a plaque by Dr. John&#13;
Berge, President of the ACS Milwaukee&#13;
Chapter, on Oct. 18 at a&#13;
dinner meeting in Racine.&#13;
To qualify for national chapter&#13;
status the club was required to&#13;
form by-laws which were thai submitted&#13;
and excepted by ACS. Mike&#13;
DeRosh, former Chemistry Club&#13;
president, is credited with forming&#13;
the by-laws.&#13;
There are several ACS ch apters&#13;
in southeastern Wisconsin, but the&#13;
Chemistry Club felt it would be&#13;
more prestigious to have a national&#13;
chapter at Parkside and also more&#13;
advantageous, said Sharon Rynders,&#13;
president National chapters of ACS&#13;
are informed of internships and job&#13;
opportunities in the chemistry&#13;
field, and they can also obtain free&#13;
speakers to visit the campus. Rynders&#13;
said the Chemistry Club plans&#13;
to be an active chapter of ACS.&#13;
Ranger needs&#13;
ad representatives&#13;
woman playwright to win a Pulitzer&#13;
for drama. The play, about the&#13;
plight of a single woman in the&#13;
early 1900's, is a delightful and&#13;
touching comedy with universal&#13;
and timeless appeal.&#13;
Pirates o f P enzance&#13;
"The Pirates of Penzance," will&#13;
be a rousing, full company musical&#13;
based on the hit Broadway and Hollywood&#13;
version of the Gilbert and&#13;
Sullivan classic done by the popular&#13;
Skylight Com ic Opera Ltd. of Milwaukee.&#13;
The Skylight company has&#13;
long been considered master of G &amp;&#13;
S extravaganzas and performs more&#13;
Gilbert and Sullivan than any&#13;
United States company outside of&#13;
New York City.&#13;
The breathtaking acrobatic and&#13;
balancing feats of the Chinese&#13;
Magic Circus Revue will thrill the&#13;
audience as towers of chairs and&#13;
human pyramids rise to the rafters&#13;
of the Parkside fieldhouse. This&#13;
company remains one of the most&#13;
popular in show business and is&#13;
regularly replenished by new performers&#13;
who begin their training as&#13;
early as three or four years of age.&#13;
The National Marionette Theater&#13;
features David Syrotiak, considered&#13;
America's most distinguished puppeteer&#13;
in what is esentially a European&#13;
art form. His show, called "In&#13;
Concert," is a brilliant one man&#13;
tour de force in which Syrotiak performs&#13;
in full view of t he audience a&#13;
series of vignettes noted both for&#13;
their visual beauty and manipulative&#13;
techique.&#13;
Chinese Magic&#13;
Revue of T aiwan&#13;
The series concludes with jazz&#13;
legends Gus Giordano, the preeminent&#13;
U.S. jazz dance choreographer,&#13;
and all-time great clarinetist Woody&#13;
Herman, a Milwaukee native.&#13;
Giordano's company fuses jazz&#13;
with the lexicon of ballet and modern&#13;
dance. The exciting contemporary&#13;
troupe has made extensive international&#13;
tours, including a rare&#13;
visit by a U.S. dance company to&#13;
Russia at the invitation of the Bolshoi&#13;
Ballet who were impressed&#13;
with Giordano's dancers during a&#13;
Soviet tour of this country.&#13;
Herman and his umpteenth Hod&#13;
will thunder into Parkside for the&#13;
final performance of the series. Active&#13;
as ever, the two-time Grammy&#13;
Award-winner recently became the&#13;
first inductee into Wisconsin's&#13;
Music Hall of Fame. Graduates of&#13;
past Herman hods include some of&#13;
the greatest names in jazz and big&#13;
band music for nearly half a century.&#13;
We Speak&#13;
Technology&#13;
Space&#13;
Systems?&#13;
If you're an electrical, mechanical&#13;
or industrial engineering&#13;
major, you'll want&#13;
to be part of today's Air&#13;
Force. We're working on&#13;
projects of tomorrow that&#13;
are today's science fiction.&#13;
Are you majoring in engineering,&#13;
physics, math,&#13;
computer science, or the&#13;
physical sciences? If so,&#13;
today's Air Force has openings&#13;
for you in the exciting&#13;
field of Space Systems. As&#13;
a Satellite Operations Officer&#13;
You'll have a career with&#13;
challenges AND rewards at&#13;
the forefront of technology.&#13;
Take a close look at Air&#13;
Force engineering. We have&#13;
a limited number of engineering&#13;
management positions&#13;
available.&#13;
you'll plan and organize&#13;
spacecraft operations, to include&#13;
launce preparations,&#13;
and develop software and&#13;
hardware systems. Take a&#13;
close look at these and otl ler&#13;
Air Force technical field&#13;
opportunities.&#13;
For Information call:&#13;
TSgt. Tim Glersch at 414-964-8880&#13;
Outside area call collect&#13;
ON THE LEADING EDGE OF TECHNOLOGY&#13;
mousing&#13;
6 Thursday, Oct. 25,1984 RANGER&#13;
Alan and Judv Guskin&#13;
Peace Corps volunteers return to Thailand&#13;
by Jennie Tunlrieicz&#13;
Editor&#13;
What would it be like to leave&#13;
home and not return until twenty&#13;
years lata-? Thailand was home for&#13;
two years to Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
and his wife Judy while they&#13;
served as Peace Corps volunteers&#13;
from 1961-64. The Guskins returned&#13;
to Thailand this summer to find&#13;
their home had changed in twenty&#13;
years.&#13;
The Guskins were instrumental&#13;
in forming the Peace Corps. On&#13;
Oct. 14,1960 Presidential Candidate&#13;
John Kennedy, prior to his election,&#13;
made a speech at the University&#13;
of Michigan, where the Guskins&#13;
were students, outlining the broad&#13;
plans for the creation of the Peace&#13;
Corps. The Guskins were inspired&#13;
by this speech, so they organized&#13;
other students and faculty who&#13;
were also interested in the project.&#13;
Kennedy met with the Guskins and&#13;
other enthusiasts in Toledo where&#13;
they presented a petition to Kennedy&#13;
in support of forming the Peace&#13;
Corps. Kennedy went on to formally&#13;
create the Peace Corps program.&#13;
The Peace Corps will s oon be celebrating&#13;
a 25 year anniversary.&#13;
In 1961 the Guskins were among&#13;
the first group of volunteers to go&#13;
to Thailand. Both were faculty&#13;
memebers at Chulaongkorn University.&#13;
Guskin was involved in psychology&#13;
and education research and&#13;
taught the first masters degree students&#13;
in educational research in&#13;
Thailand. He also helped set up the&#13;
MA program at the university. Judy&#13;
taught English language and literature&#13;
and supervised student teachers.&#13;
The trip this summer was both&#13;
business and pleasure for Guskin,&#13;
his wife and two daughters. Guskin&#13;
chaired a delegation of fifteen university&#13;
presidents as part of an exchange&#13;
program designed to increase&#13;
the contact and understanding&#13;
between American university&#13;
presidents and university presidents&#13;
of other countries. The trip was&#13;
sponsored by the American Association&#13;
of State Colleges and Universities.&#13;
University presidents&#13;
from Thailand will come to the&#13;
United States in November to reciprocate&#13;
the exchange. They are&#13;
expected to visit Parkside on Nov.&#13;
13 and 14.&#13;
The Guskins are very familiar&#13;
with Thailand and the customs because&#13;
of their experience there as&#13;
Peace Corps volunteers. Judy is&#13;
fluent in Thai and Guskin can speak&#13;
a little of the language.&#13;
Vast changes have occurred in&#13;
the country they left twenty years&#13;
ago and this fascinated them. Thailand&#13;
has almost doubled in population,&#13;
made political and educational&#13;
strides and considerable developments&#13;
in most all areas.&#13;
When the Guskins taught at Chulalongkorn&#13;
University in Thailand&#13;
20 years ago, they had to use English&#13;
textbooks. Although the Thai&#13;
students were taught English, they&#13;
read very slowly.&#13;
"You felt terrible assigning anything&#13;
of length because it would&#13;
take them forever to read it," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Little educational and social research&#13;
was done in Thailand twenty&#13;
years ago. One of Guskin's projects&#13;
was to aid and encourage Thais to&#13;
do their own research. He was obviously&#13;
successful.&#13;
When the Guskins returned to&#13;
Chulalongkorn University this summer,&#13;
they were happy to find that&#13;
Presentation of plaque on behalf of the President and Chancellor of&#13;
the ASCU by Chancellor Guskin to the Prime Minister of Thailand.&#13;
most books used at the university&#13;
are now in Thai, written and&#13;
researched by the Thais. "That&#13;
means that the education of students&#13;
has increased many, many&#13;
fold. It's all changed from an intellectual&#13;
point of view and an educational&#13;
point of view. There is so&#13;
much scholarship in that country-so&#13;
much writing," said Guskin.&#13;
The Guskins were excited by the&#13;
political developments that have&#13;
transpired over the years. "When&#13;
we were last there, Thailand was a&#13;
military dictatorship and now it is a&#13;
democratic country. The King is a&#13;
constitutional monarch. Now t here&#13;
is a parliament and the Prime Minister&#13;
is elected. No one could serve&#13;
Gallery exhibit is not for the refrigerator door&#13;
"Not for the Refrigerator Door&#13;
Only" is the name of a n exhibit of&#13;
art work by students of Racine's&#13;
Stephen Bull Fine Arts Specialty&#13;
School on display beginning Monday,&#13;
Oct. 29 through Thursday,&#13;
Nov. 15.&#13;
The art, created by students in&#13;
grades one through five, represents&#13;
media including painting, drawing,&#13;
sculpture and printmaking. It will&#13;
be on display in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery. Hours are from 1&#13;
to 6 p.m. Monday through Thursday&#13;
and 7 to 10 p.m. Wednesday&#13;
and Thursday. Admission is free.&#13;
A free public reception, sponsored&#13;
by t he Parkside Fine Arts Division&#13;
and the Fine Arts Parents&#13;
Group, Inc. of Stephen Bull, will be&#13;
held from 3 to 5 p.m. on Sunday,&#13;
Nov. 4, in the Communication Arts&#13;
Gallery. Organizers describe the&#13;
event as a "mini afternoon arts festival."&#13;
There will be tours of Parkside's&#13;
art studios, free cookies and&#13;
punch and a special visit by the&#13;
Peppermint Bear, a character in an&#13;
upcoming Parkside dramatic arts&#13;
production for children and parents.&#13;
In addition, Parkside's newly established&#13;
Swing Choir, conducted&#13;
by music professor Steven Powell,&#13;
will perform a free concert at 4&#13;
p.m.&#13;
The art display is in conjunction&#13;
with "Children's Art Education&#13;
Month" at Parkside, said art professor&#13;
David Holmes. In addition to&#13;
the art show, there will be a series&#13;
of guest speakers on the subject of&#13;
children's art education. Speakers&#13;
will appear before Holmes' Art in&#13;
Elementary Education class, which&#13;
meets in Communication Arts&#13;
Room HI. The lectures are free and&#13;
open to the public. Dates, times, topics&#13;
and speakers are:&#13;
-8 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 31.&#13;
"Reading a Child's Image as Psychological&#13;
Portrait," with Mary&#13;
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Bassis, a psychiatric nurse who&#13;
holds a degree from Yale.&#13;
-9 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 31.&#13;
Parkside art professor Dennis&#13;
Bayuzick will speak on the stages of&#13;
children's artistic development.&#13;
-9 a.m. Monday, Nov. 5. "Why&#13;
Art in Public Schools?" with Dr.&#13;
Nancy Hunt, superintendent of art&#13;
education in the Racine Unified&#13;
School District.&#13;
-9 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 7. "Activating&#13;
an Art Curriculum: Why,&#13;
What and How" with Lisa Johnson&#13;
and Cathleen Holmes, art teachers&#13;
at Stephen Bull Fine Arts School.&#13;
-9 a.m. Monday, Nov. 12. "Using&#13;
Art as Part of the Total Classroom&#13;
Experience," with Autumn Lenart,&#13;
a classroom teacher at Stephen&#13;
Bull.&#13;
Professor Holmes emphasized&#13;
that the show is a "teaching exhibit."&#13;
Teachers will make placards&#13;
that explain the artistic concepts&#13;
and techniques used by the students&#13;
in creating their work. Thus&#13;
the viewer can better read the images&#13;
and see the artistic development&#13;
in the art of the children.&#13;
"The goal (of a good art education&#13;
curriculum) is to make students&#13;
visually literate," Holmes&#13;
said. "The final product is not the&#13;
chief o bjective, although it may be&#13;
quite exciting. What's important&#13;
are the various levels of creative&#13;
problem-solving - conceptual,&#13;
technical-structural, aesthetic -&#13;
engaged in by t he students.&#13;
"The art becomes more than a&#13;
decorative embellishment for the&#13;
refrigerator door - it has real&#13;
meaning," he said.&#13;
He said that students and educators&#13;
as well as the general public&#13;
through the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
areas are encouraged to attend the&#13;
reception and lectures and view the&#13;
exhibit.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Soviet trip meeting&#13;
Ever wondered what it is like&#13;
"behind the Iron curtain?" Find&#13;
out first hand by attending the&#13;
Soviet Seminar March 9-25.&#13;
Moscow, Leningrad and Copenhagen&#13;
head the itinerary.&#13;
For more information about the&#13;
Soviet Seminar, attend either of&#13;
two preview meetings. There will&#13;
be slides, copies of the itinerary,&#13;
comments by p revious participants&#13;
and information on the details of&#13;
the seminar and tour.&#13;
Meetings will be held in Union&#13;
106 on Tuesday, Oct. 30, 4:30-5:30&#13;
and Friday, Nov. 2, 1-2 p.m.&#13;
For more information, contact&#13;
Professor Ken Hoover, 553-2318.&#13;
CPR classes offered&#13;
The Student Health Services, in&#13;
cooperation with the American Red&#13;
Cross, is offering a one-session CPR&#13;
(cardio-pulmonary resuscitation)&#13;
class on Monday, Nov. 5 from 9&#13;
a.m. to 12 noon. The class will include&#13;
first aid for choking, mouthto-&#13;
mouth breathing and one-rescuer&#13;
CPR. This class is designed to prepare&#13;
an individual to handle emergencies&#13;
until the rescue squad arrives.&#13;
A cert ificate will be awarded&#13;
at the successful completion of the&#13;
session.&#13;
A registration fee of $7 (which includes&#13;
a workbook) will be required&#13;
upon sign up. If an enrolee already&#13;
has the 1980 CPR workbook, the&#13;
fee is $4. Red Cross would prefer&#13;
payment in cash rather than check.&#13;
Please register at the Student&#13;
Health Services, Molinaro D115 bv&#13;
Nov. 1.&#13;
Rognsvoog gets scholarship&#13;
Parkside freshman Mark Rognsvoog,&#13;
son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry&#13;
Rognsvoog, 1600 Carlisle Ave., Racine,&#13;
has been awarded a $500&#13;
scholarship from Derse Co., an advertising&#13;
service firm headquartered&#13;
in Milwaukee.&#13;
Rognsvoog plans to major in&#13;
computer science at Parkside.&#13;
The scholarship is from the "Old&#13;
Timers Club" of the Derse Co. and&#13;
is available to families of Derse Co.&#13;
employees. Rognsvoog is the first&#13;
to be awarded a scholarship from&#13;
the newly organized group.&#13;
Geology&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26 Jack Kemper and&#13;
Matt Giovanelli, graduating seniors&#13;
in the Geology Program will&#13;
present a colloquium highlighting&#13;
the geology of north central Wyoming,&#13;
an area they studied while attending&#13;
the summer Geology Fie ld&#13;
Course offered by Iowa State University.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 2 Dr. Peter A. Nielsen,&#13;
assistant professor in the Geology&#13;
program at Parkside will&#13;
present a colloquium on "Core Processes&#13;
and Loithosphere Evolution."&#13;
The colloquium discusses a&#13;
model that may account for the&#13;
driving forces of plate techtonics&#13;
for the past two billion years and&#13;
for the formation of t he continental&#13;
crust as far back in time as 3.8 billion&#13;
years, the age of the oldest&#13;
preserved crust.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 16 Dr. William&#13;
Mode, assistant professor of Geology&#13;
at Oshkosh will pr esent a colloquium&#13;
entitled "Late quarternary&#13;
environments of Baffin Island, Canada."&#13;
Dr. Mode will discuss the&#13;
paleo-climatic conditions of the&#13;
northern Arctic based on studies of&#13;
glacial deposits and analysis of fossil&#13;
pollen assemblages (palynology).&#13;
All colloquia are held in Greenquist&#13;
113 at 1 p.m. Everyone is welcome&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Club Events•&#13;
Dr. Who Club&#13;
The D.W.S.F.S. will be sponsoring&#13;
the Masterfest, a compilation of&#13;
episodes featuring one of the doctor's&#13;
oldest and most dreaded enemies,&#13;
the MASTER, on Saturday,&#13;
Nov. 1 at 1 p.m. in Union 104.&#13;
Shown first will be the ultra-rare&#13;
"Frontier in Space," to be followed&#13;
by the premiere presentation of&#13;
"Planet of Fire."&#13;
Chemistry Club&#13;
At a dinner Thursday, Oct. 18,&#13;
the Chemistry Club became an official&#13;
American Chemical Society&#13;
Student Affiliate Chapter. Much&#13;
hard work went into proposing and&#13;
drawing up the charter, and a few&#13;
people deserve special thanks. They&#13;
are: Mark DeRosch for spending&#13;
the time to write the charter and&#13;
send it in for consideration, Julie&#13;
DeBus, the "right hand man" in organizing&#13;
everything; and Dr.&#13;
Branchini, club advisor, for steering&#13;
things in the right direction and&#13;
having confidence in what the club&#13;
was doing. Don't forget to sign up&#13;
at Greenquist 108 for the Miller&#13;
Brewery Trip, leaving the Union&#13;
Info desk on Friday, Nov. 9 at 1&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Hispanic Club&#13;
On Friday, Oct. 26 at 6:30 p.m. at&#13;
the Racine Spanish Center, there&#13;
Extension offering variety to appeal to many&#13;
Family roots&#13;
A course on the use of microcomputers&#13;
by genealogists with emphasis&#13;
on the Genealogy Data Base&#13;
program "Family Roots" will be&#13;
offered by the Continuing Education&#13;
office, Parkside, from 7 to 9&#13;
p.m. on three consecutive Tuesdays&#13;
beginning Nov. 13 in Tallent Hall.&#13;
To register for the course, which&#13;
costs $11, call 553-2312. Registration&#13;
deadline is Thursday, Nov. 8.&#13;
Students will learn to operate the&#13;
Family Roots program, which is&#13;
available to the public through the&#13;
Parkside library to aid genealogy&#13;
record-keeping.&#13;
The course will include hands-on&#13;
experience with record storage and&#13;
searching, chart and family group&#13;
sheet generation and other features.&#13;
Instructors will be David&#13;
Holle of Parkside and Joanne&#13;
Baker, a member of the Kenosha&#13;
County Genealogy Society, both&#13;
avid genealogists.&#13;
Child development&#13;
A course on the structure and development&#13;
of a child's ideas and behaviors&#13;
will be offered by t he Continuing&#13;
Education office, Parkside,&#13;
on four consecutive Tuesdays from&#13;
7:30 to 9:30 p.m. beginning Nov. 13.&#13;
The course, which will cover a&#13;
child's growth from birth to teenager&#13;
and will offer parenting guidelines,&#13;
costs $15. To register, call&#13;
553-2312. Registration deadline is&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8.&#13;
Instructor will be Paul Erling&#13;
Tungseth, an individual and family&#13;
psychotherapist specializing in child&#13;
development, who practices at Racine's&#13;
Lighthouse Counseling Associates.&#13;
Potentials&#13;
"Potentials," a seminar to help&#13;
persons better understand themselves&#13;
and others through the use of&#13;
the "personal profile system," a&#13;
communication tool, will be offered&#13;
by the Continuing Education office,&#13;
Parkside, from 1 to 4 p. m. on Sunday,&#13;
Nov. 11 in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Cost of the seminar, which is designed&#13;
to help persons increase selfesteem&#13;
in family, social and work&#13;
situations, is $16. To register for the&#13;
course, call 553-2312. Registration&#13;
deadline is Thursday, Nov. 8.&#13;
Instructor will be Virginia Burlingame,&#13;
a Racine psychotherapist.&#13;
Public speaking&#13;
A workshop on public speaking&#13;
will be offered by the Continuing&#13;
Education Office, Parkside, from 9&#13;
a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 16,&#13;
in Union Room 104.&#13;
The course, which will offer&#13;
techniques and practice sessions to&#13;
improve speech delivery and develop&#13;
confidence, costs $50, which&#13;
includes materials and lunch. To&#13;
register, call 553-2312. Reg istration&#13;
deadline is Tuesday, Nov. 13.&#13;
Through video tape recordings&#13;
and feedback, participants will discover&#13;
the impressions they give&#13;
while making presentations. Ways&#13;
of organizing speeches and capturing&#13;
an audience's attention will be&#13;
stressed.&#13;
Instructor will be Carol Trinastic,&#13;
who has 10 years' experience as a&#13;
public relations specialist and holds&#13;
a master of arts degree in communication.&#13;
Storytelling&#13;
A workshop on the craft of storytelling&#13;
will be offered by the Continuing&#13;
Education office, Parkside,&#13;
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday,&#13;
Nov. 10 in Communication Arts&#13;
Room 140.&#13;
Cost of the workshop is $17. It&#13;
will be led by Carol Ann Piggins,&#13;
who has done more than 600 onewoman&#13;
shows and storytelling concerts&#13;
in the U.S., the Netherlands&#13;
will be a panel discussion covering&#13;
the effects that minorities can have&#13;
on the upcoming presidential elections.&#13;
The Spanish Center is located&#13;
at 720-17th Street. The panel will be&#13;
composed of local community leaders&#13;
and is sponsored by the Hispanic&#13;
Club of Parkside in conjunction&#13;
with the Racine and Kenosha Spanish&#13;
Centers. Everyone is invited&#13;
and encouraged to attend.&#13;
PSGA&#13;
The PSGA Senate meeting will&#13;
be held on Thursday at 7 p.m. in&#13;
CA 129. Topics for discussion will&#13;
be: off-campus events policy, new&#13;
senators' orientation, the upcoming&#13;
assistant pro tempore elections, the&#13;
1984-65 budget and the Chancellor's&#13;
open forum. As always, all students&#13;
are encouraged to attend and give&#13;
their input on these and other issues.&#13;
Please be reminded that all&#13;
senators and executive officers&#13;
have office hours during the week&#13;
to hear from the student body.&#13;
Please stop by and let us know how&#13;
things are going f or you.&#13;
Intervarsity&#13;
Christian Fellowship&#13;
IVCF will be holding a meeting&#13;
on Wednesday, Oct. 31 at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Moln 107. The meeting will focus&#13;
on the question: "Jesus Christ:&#13;
God or Man?" Everyone is invited.&#13;
and Germany. To register, call 553-&#13;
2312. Regis tration deadline is Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 7.&#13;
The Workshop is for teachers, librarians,&#13;
parents and others who&#13;
work with children and youth, and&#13;
will cover finding and creating stories&#13;
as well as using movements,&#13;
creative drama, music and props to&#13;
enhance stories. The workshop also&#13;
will discuss how to use stories as a&#13;
source of motivation, concept development&#13;
and creativity.&#13;
Bottle of Redken or RK Shampoo&#13;
with every&#13;
Shampoo, Cut, &amp; Style at&#13;
3519 52nd Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wl&#13;
Phone&#13;
654-6154&#13;
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Database program is essential&#13;
McKeever performs&#13;
by Chris Pappe&#13;
A database manager program is&#13;
possibly the most versatile piece of&#13;
software available and should be a&#13;
part of everyone's software library.&#13;
The purpose of a database manager&#13;
is to organize and manipulate&#13;
a database. A database is simply a&#13;
collection of information that has&#13;
been stored in a logical order. An&#13;
office filing cabinet, for example, is&#13;
a database. You may have your&#13;
own filing box with the names and&#13;
addresses of all your friends. You&#13;
have the box, which is called a file&#13;
in computer terms. Each card containingsthe&#13;
information about each&#13;
person is called a record. Each record&#13;
is divided into fields. Each&#13;
field contains a specific item of information.&#13;
For example, the first&#13;
field might contain the person's&#13;
name, the second field the street&#13;
and number, the third the town and&#13;
state and the fourth field the zip&#13;
code.&#13;
Imagine trying to sort an index&#13;
card file into alphabetical order. If&#13;
there are less than one hundred&#13;
cards, it shouldn't take you more&#13;
than a half an hour, but if there are&#13;
five or six hundred, it could take all&#13;
day. With a database manager, the&#13;
complete file is sorted in a matter&#13;
of a few seconds. Even thousands&#13;
of records can be sorted in a few&#13;
minutes. Files can also be sorted in&#13;
any field, and once sorted the way&#13;
you want, the information can be&#13;
printed.&#13;
You might alphabetize the list by&#13;
name for a printout of all the&#13;
names and addresses to use as an&#13;
address book. When the pages become&#13;
dogeared and the ink smudged,&#13;
you can run off another copy&#13;
in juk a few minutes. You could&#13;
then re-sort the list by zip code and&#13;
print mailing labels.&#13;
A powerful database manager&#13;
will create files of any size or shape&#13;
and for any purpose. The number&#13;
of uses for a database is limited&#13;
only by your imagination and ingenuity.&#13;
Recipes can be stored on a&#13;
floppy disk and printed whenever&#13;
needed. Collections of stamps ro&#13;
coins can be catalogued. Inventories&#13;
can be kept up to date. If you&#13;
subscribe to a magazine, you could&#13;
create an index with information&#13;
such as subject and author, each&#13;
filed in separate fields. Then, when&#13;
you need to research a particular&#13;
subject or author, your database&#13;
manager can find and display the&#13;
exact information that you want. It&#13;
is all done in a fraction of the time&#13;
it would take you to leaf through&#13;
several years' worth of back issues.&#13;
The most powerful database&#13;
managers will search in more than&#13;
one field at a time and can search&#13;
for partial or exact matches to the&#13;
information that you want. As well&#13;
as being extremely versatile by itself,&#13;
a database manager's files can&#13;
be used by a word processor or a&#13;
spreadsheet program to prepare&#13;
form letters or financial reports. If&#13;
you don't have a database manager&#13;
yet, then perhaps you should consider&#13;
buying one.&#13;
Parkside music professor and pianist&#13;
James McKeever will perform&#13;
a solo concert of works ranging&#13;
from baroque to romantic at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Monday, Oct. 29 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Admission is $1.50 for senior citizens&#13;
and Parkside students and&#13;
staff, $3 f or the general public.&#13;
Works to be performed by McKeever,&#13;
who has just completed a concert&#13;
tour of Kentucky, Tennessee,&#13;
Virginia, West Virginia and Pennsylvania,&#13;
include Scarlatti's Sonata&#13;
in E Major K. 162; Beethoven's Sonata&#13;
in F Minor, Op. 57; Chopin's&#13;
Fantasie in F Minor; Medtner's&#13;
Canzona Serenata in F Minor, Op.&#13;
38 no. 6; Rachmaninoff's Two Preludes;&#13;
and Scriabin's Etude Op. 8&#13;
no. 12 in D-shaMp minor.&#13;
McKeever, who joined Parkside&#13;
in 1982, previously taught at Murray&#13;
State University in Kentucky.&#13;
He holds master of music and doctor&#13;
of musical arts degrees from the&#13;
University of Cincinnati College-&#13;
Conservatory of Music.&#13;
He has been active as a recitalist&#13;
and chamber musician throughout&#13;
the midwest and south and has&#13;
A week at the Park presented numerous workshops.&#13;
Assertiueness training and a full week of events&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 25&#13;
MOVIE: "A Clockwork Orange"&#13;
(R) will be shown at 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Union Cinema. Admission at&#13;
the door is $1.00 for a Parkside student&#13;
and $1.00 for a guest. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
PLAY: "Crimes of the Heart"&#13;
starts at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. Advance tickets&#13;
are available at the Union Information&#13;
Center and the Fine Arts Division&#13;
office. Tickets will also be&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
MOVIE: "Passione d'Amore" will&#13;
be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. All seats are sold for the&#13;
Thursday Foreign Film series.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26&#13;
MOVIE: "A Clockwork Orange"&#13;
will be repeated at 1:30 p.m. and 7:&#13;
30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
PLAY: "Crimes of the Heart" will&#13;
be repeated at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 27&#13;
MOVIE: "Passione d'Amore" will&#13;
be repeated at 8 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. All seats are sold.&#13;
PLAY: "Crimes of the Heart" will&#13;
be repeated at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 28&#13;
MOVIE: "Passione d'Amore" will&#13;
be repeated at 2 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Some tickets do remain&#13;
for sale in the Sunday Foreign Film&#13;
series.&#13;
MOVIE: "A Clockwork Orange"&#13;
will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, Oct. 29&#13;
ROUNDTABLE: "The Elections:&#13;
Issues and Prospects," at 12 noon&#13;
in Union 106, by the Parkside&#13;
Political Science Faculty. The program&#13;
is open to the public at no&#13;
charge.&#13;
CONCERT: by James McKeever at&#13;
8 p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. Admission at the door is&#13;
$1.50 for Parkside students, staff&#13;
and senior citizens and $3.00 for&#13;
others.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 30&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Communication&#13;
Skills for Secretaries and Administrative&#13;
Assistants" starts at 8:30&#13;
a.m. in Union 106. Call ext. 2047 for&#13;
more information&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Assertiveness&#13;
Training" by Larry Turner at 1&#13;
p.m. in Union 207. All are welcome.&#13;
MOVIE: "High Plans Drifter" (R)&#13;
will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. Admission is free.&#13;
Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE: Featuring an&#13;
open stage from 12 n oon 3 to p.m.&#13;
in the Union Bazaar Area. Applications&#13;
are available at the Union Information&#13;
Center. Sponsored by&#13;
PAB.&#13;
DISCUSSION: "Fairness: Income&#13;
Redistribution, Aid to Education&#13;
and Civil Rights" by Ken Hoover,&#13;
Jan Ocker and Greg Squires at 1&#13;
James McKeever&#13;
His articles "The Wrist In Technical&#13;
Perspective" and "Godowsky&#13;
Studies on the Chopin Etudes"&#13;
have appeared in "Clavier."&#13;
McKeever's principal teacher&#13;
was the noted Russian pedagogue&#13;
Olga Corn us. He also has studied&#13;
with Lelia Goussea of the Paris&#13;
Conservatory and coached with&#13;
Santos Ojeda.&#13;
p.m. in Molinaro D107. The event is&#13;
free and open to the public.&#13;
SUPPORT GROUP: For the&#13;
divorced and separated at 1 p.m. in&#13;
Molinaro D138. All are welcome.&#13;
Sponsored by Parkside Health Office.&#13;
DANCE: Featuring the rock music&#13;
of "Sterling" at 8:30 p.m. in Union&#13;
Square. Admission will be charged&#13;
at the door. Sponsored by PAB.&#13;
en&#13;
CROSSWORD PUZZLER&#13;
DRINKING IS&#13;
AMERICA'S&#13;
#1 PASTIME!&#13;
PORKY'S&#13;
2117 91st Street Kenosha&#13;
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
EVERY&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHT&#13;
PORKY'S IS YOUR KIND OF PUCE!"&#13;
* Convenient location&#13;
* Ample off street parking&#13;
(lighted)&#13;
* Featuring some of the&#13;
area's best music live&#13;
* Affordable prices (we're&#13;
the lowest!)&#13;
* Large dance floor&#13;
* Large seating capacity&#13;
* Excellent food served&#13;
* 3 billiard tables A video&#13;
games&#13;
—I 1 Racine-Kenosha County Line Rd. ^&#13;
—————cc&#13;
(O&#13;
at Street&#13;
PORKY'S *&#13;
State Line Rd.&#13;
(Russell Rd.)&#13;
ACROSS&#13;
1 Hard-wood&#13;
tree&#13;
4 Haste&#13;
9 Perform&#13;
12 Hawaiian&#13;
wreath&#13;
13 Angry&#13;
14 Hint&#13;
15 Mexican dish&#13;
17 Declare&#13;
19 Was borne&#13;
21 Gem weight:&#13;
abbr.&#13;
22 Encourage&#13;
25 Anger&#13;
27 Girl's name&#13;
31 Fruit seed 1&#13;
32 Book of an&#13;
opera: pi.&#13;
34 Symbol for&#13;
silver&#13;
35 Posed for&#13;
portrait&#13;
36 Alcoholic&#13;
beverage&#13;
37 Bone&#13;
38 Finished&#13;
41 Employ&#13;
42 Sicilian volcano&#13;
43 Lair&#13;
44 Barracuda&#13;
45 Sun god&#13;
47 Arabian seaport&#13;
49 Unit of&#13;
electric&#13;
current&#13;
53 Expunges&#13;
57 Sorrow&#13;
58 Light-colored&#13;
mild cigar&#13;
60 Jump&#13;
61 Dine Asia holiday 39 Symbol for&#13;
62 Negligent 16 Skill manganese&#13;
63 One, no 18 Strict 40 Beverage&#13;
matter which 20 Before 41 Above&#13;
DOWN 22 Swiftly 44 Nahoor&#13;
1 In music, high 23 Intolerant sheep&#13;
2 Ocean person 46 Alms box&#13;
3 Pronoun 24 Latin 48 God of love&#13;
4 Farm conjunction 49 Solemn&#13;
structure 26 Produces wonder&#13;
5 Forecasted 28 Roman 50 Extinct flight6&#13;
Babylonian gods less bird&#13;
deity 29 Loop 51 Fondle&#13;
7 Greek letter 30 Item of 52 Shade tree&#13;
8 Article of property 54 The urial&#13;
furniture 32 Sodium 55 Vast age&#13;
9 High card chloride 56 Secret agent&#13;
10 Mongrel 33 Succor 59 Three-toed&#13;
11 Southeast 35 Extra sloth&#13;
O&#13;
1 2 |3~ 4 5 r 7~ T~• 9 ~ 10 11&#13;
"12"&#13;
1 • J. I IT r R w&#13;
15 F TT F&#13;
mE£ m&#13;
•m• • m im m&#13;
uu m mmm 32 33&#13;
34 35 36 37&#13;
39 40 IT&#13;
42 43 [44&#13;
45 46 4T n 4T&#13;
49 50 51 52 B53! 54 5T 5T&#13;
57 • 58 w • W&#13;
61 • 6T i m BT&#13;
1984 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Curtain call for crew of "Crimes"&#13;
by Bill Serpe&#13;
When the lights came up on&#13;
"Crimes of the Heart" last Friday&#13;
night, the efforts of the entire Dramatic&#13;
Arts Discipline unfolded in&#13;
the kitchen they had built as a&#13;
home for a cast, a play and an idea.&#13;
Backstage the crew listened for&#13;
the audience reaction to a refrigerator&#13;
that needed to be defrosted, a&#13;
sink with running water and cupboards&#13;
and drawers that actually&#13;
worked.&#13;
They waited behind curtains and&#13;
light boards, each one watching and&#13;
listening to make sure that every&#13;
detail of that show was just right.&#13;
As th e cast took the stage at the&#13;
end of the show for the curtain call,&#13;
the crew breathed a sigh of relief&#13;
and then began setting up for the&#13;
next night.&#13;
As an actor in that show, I realized&#13;
that what all these "technies"&#13;
had done made my job easier. So&#13;
this is a curtain call for the people&#13;
backstage who made "Crimes of&#13;
the Heart" physically wort. Stand&#13;
up and take a well-earned bow.&#13;
The crew in order of appearance&#13;
includes Director Lee VanDyke,&#13;
who saw all the aspects of the show&#13;
in one complete picture and then&#13;
put it all together. Skelly Wan-en,&#13;
as scenic designer, took people by&#13;
the hand and taught them to read a&#13;
board from a blue print into a wall.&#13;
Judith Tucker-Snider, as costume&#13;
and make up designer, coordinated&#13;
what was right for a play set in 1974&#13;
and the actors' need to feel right in&#13;
what they wore. As the newest&#13;
member of the staff in the Dramatic&#13;
Arts Discipline, Keith Harris&#13;
executed a lighting design that&#13;
complimented both the set and the&#13;
idea of "Crimes of the Heart."&#13;
Ron Larson deserves a round of&#13;
applause all of his own. As s tage&#13;
manager, he very ably integrated&#13;
all aspects of the technical designs&#13;
by pleasantly interpreting them&#13;
from one person to another, while&#13;
technically directing all of the crew&#13;
through all of the flawless production.&#13;
With Steve Orth and Mart&#13;
Rognsvoog running sound and&#13;
lights, phones rang on time, day became&#13;
night a nd lights went on and&#13;
off as actors pretended to move&#13;
switches.&#13;
Paula Boehler, as properties mistress,&#13;
ran for days filling cupboards&#13;
with foodstuffs, dishes and utensils&#13;
and all the other paraphernalia&#13;
needed to make the actors' "bits"&#13;
wort. She built a cake that would&#13;
last three weeks and could be eaten&#13;
every night. Through Paula's efforts&#13;
and those of her assistants,&#13;
Connie Kowalski and Debbie Ryback,&#13;
actors were always where&#13;
they had to be on time and carrying&#13;
whatever they were supposed to&#13;
carry.&#13;
Just in case the sink doesn't&#13;
work, Eric Englander waits backstage&#13;
every night ready to fix i t or&#13;
to deal with any other technical situation&#13;
that may arise. Eric was at&#13;
work during the building "Crimes&#13;
of the Heart" in every area, from&#13;
hanging lights to marking stage&#13;
areas that were off limits. As studio&#13;
assistant with Rebecca Julich, he&#13;
helped organize the set construction&#13;
crew into an efficient operation.&#13;
There are many other people&#13;
who deserve to take a bow. Laurel&#13;
Dane-VanDyke's design for poster&#13;
and program is a piece of a rt. The&#13;
box office staff, under the direction&#13;
of Diane Smith and the ushers and&#13;
concession people saw capably to&#13;
the comforts of the audience.&#13;
All of th ese and more deserve accolades.&#13;
Your sawing and nailing,&#13;
painting and worrying have resulted&#13;
in one of the finest technical&#13;
productions ever presented at Parkside&#13;
or anywhere else in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin. As an actor in this&#13;
show, I thank all the crew who&#13;
wonderful experience.&#13;
"Crimes" performed with capable style&#13;
Write a letter to&#13;
the Editor&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Beth Henley's "Crimes of the&#13;
Heart," despite its being a Pulitzer&#13;
Prize-winner, is just not much of a&#13;
play, wavering uncomfortably between&#13;
fast and slow too often. It's&#13;
quite the challenge to take an average&#13;
play and make it look good, but&#13;
those involved with Parkside's production&#13;
of "Crimes of the Heart"&#13;
succeed in doing so, and admirably.&#13;
Director Lee VanDyke maintained&#13;
a reasonably good pace with&#13;
Henley's story about a trio of southem&#13;
sisters and the various quirks&#13;
and idiosyncracies inhabiting them&#13;
and those in their company. The set&#13;
was extremely impressive, the result&#13;
of much hard wort.&#13;
The real credit, though, should&#13;
go to the actors and actresses. Rebecca&#13;
Julich, as oldest sister Lenny&#13;
McGrath, was forced to play a variety&#13;
of d ifferent emotions, a difficult&#13;
challenge for an actress which&#13;
she handled with remarkable conviction.&#13;
Professional actress Carolyn&#13;
Blackinton essayed the role of&#13;
middle sister Meg through the courtesy&#13;
of Actor's Equity Assocation,&#13;
while Amy Capobianco managed to&#13;
portray "air-headedness" while rePAB&#13;
film&#13;
Stanley Kubrick's&#13;
'Clockwork Orange&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Comm. Arts Theatre&#13;
OCT. 19,20,26,27AT8P.M. OCT. 25AT330p.M&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Are you in the mood for some&#13;
ultra-violence and a little bit of the&#13;
old in-out in-out, all to the music of&#13;
good old Ludwig von? If you are,&#13;
then you're ready for this week's&#13;
PAB film presentation, "A Clockwork&#13;
Orange."&#13;
This 1971 classic tells the story of&#13;
Alex, a young man in an unspecified&#13;
future year, whose life is devoted&#13;
to committing acts of what&#13;
he and his "droogs" call "ultra-violence."&#13;
Alex also is a lover of the&#13;
music of Beethoven, whom he refers&#13;
to as Ludwig von. Alex's life is&#13;
going along pretty well until he gets&#13;
arrested and put in prison. After a&#13;
while in jail, Alex vo lunteers for a&#13;
rather unorthodox "rehabilitation."&#13;
"A Clockwork Or ange" is a brilliant&#13;
film filled with great ideas and&#13;
remarkable images. Malcolm McDowell&#13;
gives a riveting performance&#13;
as Alex. Alex is one of the&#13;
most repellent characters in the&#13;
history of film; but as the film&#13;
progresses, you find yourself being&#13;
drawn to him and becoming sympathetic&#13;
to his plight. With this performance,&#13;
McDowell proves himself&#13;
to be one of the finest actors in&#13;
film. Also turning in a fine performance&#13;
is Patrick Magee as one&#13;
of Alex's victims, who attempts to&#13;
exact a bizarre "revenge" on him.&#13;
"A Clockwork Orange," written,&#13;
produced and directed by Stanley&#13;
Kubrick, is based on Anthony Burgess'&#13;
semi-autobiographical novel.&#13;
It is a remarkable, challenging film.&#13;
I strongly urge you to see this film.&#13;
It's one of the only really great&#13;
films that we're going to get out of&#13;
PAB this semester.&#13;
taining the audience's sympathy extremely&#13;
well.&#13;
Denise Valente should get some&#13;
sort of awar d for "most words said&#13;
clearly in the shortest amount of&#13;
time while maintaining a southern&#13;
accent" with her outstanding portrayal&#13;
of the sisters' cousin Chick&#13;
Boyle. Bill Serp e is almost frighteningly&#13;
subdued and ultimately quite&#13;
believable as Meg's old boy frie nd,&#13;
Doc Porter; and John Miskulin is&#13;
delightfully bumbling in his scenestealing&#13;
performance as Babe's lawyer&#13;
Barnette Lloyd.&#13;
I didn't like Beth Henley's&#13;
"Crimes of the Heart." I did, however&#13;
like Beth Henley's "Crimes of&#13;
the Heart" as performed by Parkside's&#13;
talented actors and actresses.&#13;
As a result, I highly recommend&#13;
this production.&#13;
photo by Dave McEvoy&#13;
Amy Capobiano, Rebecca Julich, Carolyn Blakinton&#13;
RANGER&#13;
10 Thursday, Oct. 25,1984&#13;
Great&#13;
play&#13;
at&#13;
PAC&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Larry Shue's clever, intelligent&#13;
and funny play "Wenceslas Square"&#13;
is given more than capable treatment&#13;
by the people at the Milwaukee&#13;
Repertory Theater company.&#13;
Director John Dillon maintains a&#13;
nice, brisk pace throughout Shue's&#13;
comedy about a writer's troubles&#13;
gathering information for his book&#13;
on Czech theatrical performers due&#13;
to the political troubles occurring&#13;
in 1974 Pr ague.&#13;
The story is both funny and a bit&#13;
moving, ending on a note that forces&#13;
you to think about it as you&#13;
leave the theater.&#13;
The acting is nothing less than&#13;
top drawer. Daniel Mooney and&#13;
Jeffrey Hutchinson do splendidly in&#13;
the lead roles of Vince (the writer)&#13;
and Dooley (his student photographer),&#13;
while Alan Brooks and Ellen&#13;
Lauren show incredible versatility,&#13;
taking on a number of varying character&#13;
roles. Everyone's timing, delivery&#13;
and physical expression lent&#13;
so much believability to their performances&#13;
that they never looked&#13;
to be "acting," the viewer often&#13;
feeling that rather than watching a&#13;
play, the story was actually unfolding&#13;
before his or her very eyes.&#13;
The play is being performed in&#13;
the Todd Wehr Theater at the Performing&#13;
Arts Center in Milwaukee&#13;
Oct. 19 through Nov. 25. Curtain&#13;
times are 8 p.m. Tuesday through&#13;
Friday, 7:30 p.m. Sundays, 5 p.m.&#13;
and 9:15 p.m. Saturdays and afternoon&#13;
matinees Wednesdays and&#13;
Sundays at 2 p.m. Ticket prices&#13;
range from $4.50 to $12.50 for weekdays&#13;
and matinees and $5.50 to&#13;
$13.50 Friday through Sunday.&#13;
"Wenceslas Square" is well written,&#13;
well directed and well performed,&#13;
in the true fashion of the&#13;
Milwaukee Repertory Company.&#13;
Open Stage&#13;
/• Ski "The Great Unknown&#13;
CflEmDBum Jump into the action on the slopes of&#13;
one of Colorado's finest ski resorts—&#13;
CRESTED BUTTE. Travel Associates and&#13;
the NCSA have put together a&#13;
program of Wild West skiing,&#13;
parties and fun you won't want&#13;
to miss. The official 1985 NCSA&#13;
"National Collegiate Ski Week&#13;
package includes:&#13;
» TM ONLY 8 SPOTS LEFT!!&#13;
* Round-trip transportation&#13;
* 7 nights deluxe lodging at one&#13;
of Crested Butte's finest facilities&#13;
• A lift ticket for 5 days of skiing&#13;
Crested Butte's "Great Unknown"&#13;
* Two "Wild West" parties with bands&#13;
• A major concert&#13;
• A special "on-mountain"&#13;
Beer &amp; Cheese Party&#13;
Contact: Ann Fralich&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
553-2650&#13;
or sign up in Union 209&#13;
• Entry fees to two races with&#13;
prizes for the top male and&#13;
female winners&#13;
• Special appearances by&#13;
Lite "All-Stars"&#13;
• A discount coupon program for&#13;
area bars, restaurants and services&#13;
• All applicable taxes&#13;
• Services of Travel Associates'&#13;
professional on-site staff&#13;
Tour Date:&#13;
Jan. 3-12&#13;
On Halloween, Oct. 31, the PAB&#13;
Coffeehouse will present its infamous&#13;
Open Stage Event in the&#13;
Union Bazaar from noon until 2&#13;
p.m. and again from 6 p.m. until 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Students with even a modicum of&#13;
talent are urged to try their luck&#13;
with the tough campus audience in&#13;
this special event, the results being&#13;
a chance to spot fresh, new talent&#13;
in the music, comedy and general&#13;
nuisance fields.&#13;
As with all Coffeehouse presentations,&#13;
there will be no admission&#13;
charge. And don't forget - FREE&#13;
popcorn!&#13;
Lip sync&#13;
contest&#13;
Ah, c'mon now, why don't you&#13;
just admit it? Haven't we all stood&#13;
in front of mirrors when some of&#13;
our favorite music has been blaring&#13;
on the stereo, fantasizing ourselves&#13;
as the performer? Maybe even&#13;
going to the point of strumming an&#13;
imaginary "air guitar" and strutting&#13;
around the living room like a&#13;
batfarobed Mike Jagger or Diana&#13;
Ross?&#13;
Sure we have. So why hide it?&#13;
Well, "Puttin' On The Hits" has&#13;
decided to bring all of the "closet"&#13;
performers out of their own living&#13;
rooms and put them on stage.&#13;
"Puttin' On The Hits" contest accomplishes&#13;
this by rewarding the&#13;
most daring and most creative of&#13;
these musical imposters by allowing&#13;
them their moment in the spotlight,&#13;
and at the same time providing&#13;
the audience with an enjoyable&#13;
evening full of entertainment.&#13;
Chromathon Video presents this&#13;
lip-sync contest in conjunction with&#13;
Dick Clark's show "Puttin' On The&#13;
Hits," an entertainment event that&#13;
is a truly unique, sensational contest&#13;
full of m usic, comedy and fun.&#13;
This contest debuts at just the right&#13;
time to draw from the countless&#13;
"lip-sync" and "air guitar" contests&#13;
that are springing up everywhere,&#13;
from high school gymnasiusms to&#13;
college fraternities to nightclubs&#13;
and bars.&#13;
The "Puttin' On The Hits" Kenosha&#13;
contest will occur on Nov. 16&#13;
at the Eagles Club, 302 58th St., at&#13;
7:30 p.m. People of a ll ages are encouraged&#13;
to enter and have the opportunity&#13;
to lip-sync their way to&#13;
fame and fortune in put-ons of th eir&#13;
favorite stars. Many prizes will be&#13;
awarded and the winner will be&#13;
reviewed in Hollywood by the&#13;
"Puttin' On The Hits" producers&#13;
through a video tape provided by&#13;
WVTV-Channel 18, Milwaukee.&#13;
This current lip-sync craze has&#13;
even gone so far as to spawn a bestselling&#13;
book, Simon &amp; Schuster's&#13;
"The Complete Air Guitar Handbook,"&#13;
and has been reported upon&#13;
in depth by magazines and newspapers&#13;
such as People Magazine&#13;
and The Los Angel es Times.&#13;
Tickets are available at Bidinger's,&#13;
Luchyne's, Ruffolo's, Kenosha&#13;
School of Cosmetology and&#13;
The Hairport. To enter, call&#13;
Chromathon Video at (414) 551-&#13;
7484.&#13;
BANGER II Thursday, OH. 25, 1984&#13;
The future of&#13;
movie theaters by J im Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
The moviegoing experience has&#13;
changed a great deal in the brief&#13;
history of mo tion pictures, from silent&#13;
pictures to talkies to color to&#13;
cinemascope and wide screen films&#13;
to 3D - the list is seemingly endless.&#13;
Lately, changes have been taking&#13;
place even more rapidly. The big&#13;
movie houses have been replaced&#13;
by four- and five-plex cinemas due&#13;
to competition from pay cable and&#13;
video markets, while the thirteenyear-&#13;
old rating system has added&#13;
yet another rating.&#13;
Jim Janssen, manager of the Regency&#13;
Mall General Cinema theaters&#13;
in Racine, gave some of his own&#13;
views on these subjects based on&#13;
personal experience, noting of course&#13;
that his observations are not related&#13;
to the General Cinema corporation.&#13;
"With extended houses you&#13;
aren't limited to one picture," he&#13;
said. "You have more product and&#13;
are more likely to have what the&#13;
public wants to see in the same&#13;
amount of space as a big movie theater&#13;
and for the same rent. It's really&#13;
hard to maintain heating and&#13;
cooling in a big house, and the&#13;
people just don't turn out like they&#13;
used to.&#13;
"Five or six years ago when the&#13;
pay cable and video markets were&#13;
looming on the horizon and insiders&#13;
were predicting the death of the&#13;
movie industry, there was some&#13;
real concern. As it turned out,&#13;
cable and video haven't worked&#13;
against us t he way some of us feared.&#13;
There is a distinct market of&#13;
people who want to see the movie&#13;
in the theater, especially with films&#13;
like "2001: A Space Odyssey" that&#13;
don't translate well at all to the&#13;
small screen," said Janssen.&#13;
Another event that has occurred&#13;
in t he film industry is the addition&#13;
of a ra ting called PG-13, where paternal&#13;
guidance is suggested, but&#13;
specifically for those children under&#13;
the age of 13.&#13;
"That was a response to public&#13;
concern regarding pictures that&#13;
weren't comfortably PG, but not&#13;
quite R-rated films. The one that&#13;
caused the most concern was "Indiana&#13;
Jones and the Temple of&#13;
Doom" and there was some concern&#13;
about "Gremlins." Most of the&#13;
confusion was due to the fact that&#13;
"Gremlins" was following "E.T.,"&#13;
which was a nice family film and&#13;
people expected the same from the&#13;
latest Spielberg picture.&#13;
"Theaters are not asked to enforce&#13;
the PG-13 rating like the R rating,&#13;
but PG-13 is there to give the&#13;
parents cause to stop and think perhaps&#13;
check the film out themselves&#13;
before allowing their children to attend.&#13;
That's the sole purpose. We&#13;
don't card at the box office," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Another, rather trivial, question&#13;
that was brought up concerned the&#13;
demise of pre-feature cartoons.&#13;
Short subjects, the likes of which&#13;
featured The Three Stooges or&#13;
Laurel and Hardy, were overtaken&#13;
by television, but why no cartoon&#13;
before the feature?&#13;
"The old cartoons just aren't in&#13;
good shape anymore, and they&#13;
aren't making any more new cartoons,"&#13;
said Janssen.&#13;
The Regency Mall Cinemas are&#13;
perhaps the best examples of theaters&#13;
of the future, and the days of&#13;
the big movie houses seem to be&#13;
over. "It is my understanding that&#13;
any theater General Cinema builds&#13;
in the future will be no less than a&#13;
four-plex," said Janssen.&#13;
Fortunately any fears that cable&#13;
and video are contributing to a&#13;
gradual demise of the original&#13;
moviegoing experience are for&#13;
naught. So despite changes for better&#13;
or worse, the American tradition&#13;
of going to movies looks destined&#13;
to be here for a long time.&#13;
Letter to the Editor&#13;
Reader questions writers&#13;
Continued from Page 2&#13;
volvement. An opportunity does&#13;
exist on campus for you, as well as&#13;
for all students, to become a student&#13;
senator. If you c an't be a senator,&#13;
then you can serve by taking a&#13;
student seat on a faculty committee.&#13;
Hey, Brad! It is always easier to&#13;
knock the other side, and you honestly&#13;
don't expect Democrats to&#13;
praise President Reagan, do you? If&#13;
you want some information on&#13;
what the Republican party is planning&#13;
on campus, I'd be glad to give&#13;
you a few numbers. Stop in the&#13;
PSGA o ffice on Tuesdays from 12:&#13;
30-3:30. The same offer given to&#13;
Ruth applies to you too, and that is&#13;
get involved in student government.&#13;
Tim! Now is the time to start&#13;
planning next year's Homecoming&#13;
and to begin work on Winter Carnival.&#13;
Stop in at the PSGA office or&#13;
get involved at the PAB office. Join&#13;
these committees and help make&#13;
these events better. Anyway, one&#13;
catches more with honey than vinegar,&#13;
as your letter explains.&#13;
Gary, Tim and Todd - the only&#13;
thing I wish n ever to do is write to&#13;
an editor about something as trivial&#13;
as a sports article, especially one in&#13;
the Ranger. The one thing I know&#13;
for sure since coming back to&#13;
school is that the Ranger needs&#13;
sports writers. Seeing that you&#13;
three are so knowledgeable about&#13;
sports, please stop in the Ranger&#13;
and become sports writers, and&#13;
leave Letters to the Editor space&#13;
for more important issues like off;&#13;
campus accounts, off campus&#13;
events policy, voter registration and&#13;
other events that really affect student&#13;
life on campus.&#13;
I hope this letter is taken as positive&#13;
by all who read it.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Franklin Kuczensld&#13;
A Pause in the Disaster&#13;
Offensive music to laugh by&#13;
We talked all about TV and records&#13;
in previous installments of&#13;
this column; now the time has&#13;
come to acknowledge the major&#13;
motion pictures being released for&#13;
Oscar contention at Christmas&#13;
time.&#13;
"BLOWIN' IN THE WIND"&#13;
Rod Stewart and Elton John star&#13;
as two desert explorers caught in a&#13;
dust storm.&#13;
"KABOOM!"&#13;
Irwin-Allen produced disaster&#13;
flick about survivors of a nuclear&#13;
holocaust features an all-star cast&#13;
including Robert Reed, Mike Farrell,&#13;
Clint Eastwood, Charles Branson,&#13;
Charro, Joan Rivers and Steve&#13;
Martin at Father Putz.&#13;
"LET'S SPEND A MINUTE TOGETHER"&#13;
Concert film in which Prince&#13;
sings all his best songs.&#13;
"WHO PUT THE BOMB IN&#13;
THE BOMB-BA-BOMB-BABOMB?"&#13;
Ronald Reagan returns to film&#13;
acting this this wartime drama directed&#13;
by Bria n DePalma.&#13;
"GOOD GUYS DIE REAL&#13;
HARD IN THE RAIN AT NIGHT&#13;
WEDNESDAYS"&#13;
Action drama with Chuck Norris.&#13;
"SMOKEY AND THE CANNONBALL&#13;
RUN FROM THE&#13;
BANDIT"&#13;
Burt Reynolds starts in this action&#13;
comedy featuring Dom De&#13;
Luise, Jerry Reed, Jackie Gleason,&#13;
Andy G riffith, Jim Nabors, Buddy&#13;
Ebsen, Mel TUlis, Arnold Ziffel and&#13;
a whole lot of cars.&#13;
"A STARE IS BORN"&#13;
Biography of film comic Marty&#13;
Feldman.&#13;
"WHO DICED VIC?"&#13;
Filmization of the trail regarding&#13;
the "Twilight Zone" movie.&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
HALLOWEEN DANCE&#13;
f o r e v e r r o c k i n '&#13;
Wed. October 31&#13;
UNION SQUARE&#13;
DOORS OPEN AT 8:00pm&#13;
$1.00 STUDENTS&#13;
$2.00 GUESTS ^&#13;
A. —— ~ 1/2 PR/CE&#13;
paE&#13;
• IF yOU WEAR A COSTUME 4&#13;
Note: Free Student Tables for Arts &amp; Crafts Fair on Dec. 1 still available. Sign&#13;
up by Nov. 1 in Union 209.&#13;
Ranger needs writers&#13;
12 Thursday, Oct. 25, 1984 RANGER&#13;
Guskin's Thailand trip&#13;
Continued from Page 6&#13;
as Prime Minster without military&#13;
support, but the military doesn't&#13;
necessarily control the elected person.&#13;
Members of Parliament are&#13;
also elected. People really speak&#13;
their minds, write what they want&#13;
to write and there is very little censorship&#13;
as far as I could see. That's&#13;
an exciting development," he said.&#13;
Guskin hopes to have some Thai&#13;
faculty members come to Parkside.&#13;
Over 100,000 Thais were trained in&#13;
the U.S. in the past twenty years&#13;
and many would like to return to&#13;
the U.S. fo r a short while to interact&#13;
with their American counterparts.&#13;
Business, marketing and science&#13;
are the areas where Guskin&#13;
feels the Thai faculty could best&#13;
participate at Parkside.&#13;
"Anything that could give a more&#13;
international flair to the campus is&#13;
highly desirable. The advantage to&#13;
us is the fact that it would expand&#13;
our horizons. Parkside's International&#13;
Studies program is starting to&#13;
expand and that's very good. I view&#13;
that as part of our effort to increase&#13;
our consciousness about the rest of&#13;
the world," said Guskin.&#13;
The Guskins were disappointed&#13;
by the increased stress in Bangkok.&#13;
"The heat seemed worse than in&#13;
the past, especially now that so&#13;
many of the trees have been cut&#13;
down to accommodate the heavy&#13;
construction that is going on. The&#13;
traffic is much worse. There is no&#13;
real urban transit system and only&#13;
one or two super highways so the&#13;
traffic is always bumper to bumper.&#13;
Our friends told us that 20 percent&#13;
of their lives are spent in traffic,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
It was very sad to see the combination&#13;
of tremendous construction&#13;
and stress obstruct everyday lives,&#13;
said Guskin. Also, since government&#13;
salaries are very low and university&#13;
faculty are civil service positions,&#13;
there is a lot of pressure on&#13;
the intellectual and professional.&#13;
Many must leave their university&#13;
positions to go into business, he&#13;
said.&#13;
Little change has occurred in&#13;
Thailand's rural areas, according to&#13;
Guskin. Thailand is 80 percent agricultural.&#13;
"The countryside is very&#13;
pleasent and slower paced," said&#13;
Guskin.&#13;
Thailand has 100,000 or more&#13;
Cambodian refugees, said Guskin.&#13;
They visited a refugee camp located&#13;
two miles from the Cambodian&#13;
/Thailand border, very near to the&#13;
ongoing fighting. This was one of&#13;
the most moving parts of their trip&#13;
to Thailand.&#13;
"There were 35,000 re fugees in&#13;
that camp and they probably will&#13;
never go home. What a tragedy.&#13;
The camps have become a problem&#13;
for the Thais because the Cambodians&#13;
came into the country in the&#13;
poorest area where food is the least&#13;
available. It's a no-mans' land for&#13;
the poor Cambodians. They aren't&#13;
taught Thai because the Thais don't&#13;
want them to leave the camp and&#13;
go into Thailand. They aren't&#13;
taught English because then they&#13;
might leave the camp and go to&#13;
America. So what they do is teach&#13;
them Cambodian and they may&#13;
never go back th ere. It's all tied up&#13;
in world politics. They are used as&#13;
pawns. All th e Cambodians want to&#13;
do is live and all the children want&#13;
to do is grow up," said Guskin.&#13;
The Guskins visited four universities&#13;
in Thailand, as well as many&#13;
other sites. The delegation of university&#13;
presidents participated in&#13;
many ceremonies. In Thailand university&#13;
presidents are highly honored&#13;
because of their high status,&#13;
although they are not rewarded&#13;
monetarily. The most memorable&#13;
ceremony for the Guskins was&#13;
when they met the King of Thailand,&#13;
the Queen and two Princesses.&#13;
' 'We were all quite anxious&#13;
when we met them. Judy was scared&#13;
to talk to the King in Thai because&#13;
there is a special court language,&#13;
but the King was very gentle&#13;
and he spoke to her in everyday&#13;
Thai. He also speaks perfect English.&#13;
Our children got the chance to&#13;
talk to the royal family and that&#13;
was exciting. It was really special,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
As head of the delegation, Guskin&#13;
had the opportunity to present&#13;
a plaque to the Thailand Prime&#13;
Minister on behalf of the American&#13;
university presidents.&#13;
The 16 days the Guskins spent in&#13;
Chancellor Guskin toasting Permanent Secretary Athorn at a private&#13;
dinner given by Athorn. Judy Guskin at Guskin's left.&#13;
Thailand were very enjoyable, although&#13;
very tiring, said Guskin.&#13;
It took the Guskins twenty years&#13;
to return to Thailand but they don't&#13;
plan on waiting another twenty to&#13;
visit the country again. They have&#13;
several projects in the works that&#13;
may require a return visit. Judy is&#13;
currently writing a proposal to obtain&#13;
a grant to do a video program&#13;
in Thailand on children and youth.&#13;
A Thai professor, formerly Guskin's&#13;
student, is redoing a study that&#13;
Guskin did in 1964 in Thailand on&#13;
the changing values of Thai students.&#13;
Guskin is working with his&#13;
former student in this study. In addition,&#13;
the Guskins plan to write an&#13;
article about the perceptions of&#13;
Peace Corps volunteers returning&#13;
to the country they worked in twenty&#13;
years later.&#13;
Record review&#13;
Hendrix gems remastered&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Some believe that the power of&#13;
Jimi Hendrix has been eclipsed by&#13;
later guitar heroes as Eddie Van-&#13;
Halen, Jimmy Page, Michael&#13;
Schenker and the late Randy&#13;
Rhodes. On the contrary, Hendrix&#13;
remains king of the rock guitar, as&#13;
Warner Brothers' upcoming album&#13;
"Kiss the Sky" demonstrates.&#13;
"Kiss the Sky" takes some&#13;
Hendrix classics from the rocker's&#13;
major LPs - "Are You Experienced?"&#13;
"Axis Bold as Love,"&#13;
"Electric Ladyland," and "Band of&#13;
Gypsies" and combines them with&#13;
rare tracks (the unreleased "Killing&#13;
Floor" as well as an extended version&#13;
of "Red House"), and live material&#13;
from the 1969 Montery Pop&#13;
Festival and Jimi Hendrix concerts.&#13;
More than just another ill-fated&#13;
compilation slapped together for&#13;
monetary gain, "Kiss the Sky" is a&#13;
half-speed master digital recording,&#13;
one of the finest quality pressings&#13;
obtainable this side of laser discs.&#13;
New dimensions to the old classics&#13;
abound in clearer, more crystallized&#13;
recordings, while the new material&#13;
is further proof of Hendrix's influential&#13;
guitar work.&#13;
His i nnovative riffs give a whole&#13;
new meaning to the Bob Dylan-penned&#13;
"All Along the Watchtower,"&#13;
while fans of Eric Clapton's bluesrock&#13;
guitar work should faint when&#13;
they hear Hendrix's groundbreaking&#13;
blues jams on "Red House."&#13;
Record retail stores state that an&#13;
audiophile master such as this&#13;
would sell for anywhere from 820&#13;
to $30, but judging by the quality of&#13;
most domestic pressings, the price&#13;
is well worth it.&#13;
Along with being technically&#13;
marvelous, "Kiss the Sky" successfully&#13;
displays the true genuis of thi s&#13;
eternal guitar hero who came and&#13;
left so abruptly.&#13;
8 Ball Tourney&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31 1 p.m.&#13;
$2°° Entry Fee&#13;
Etimination Prizes for 1st, 2nd, 3rd Entry limited to the first 16 participants - sign up in the Rec Center&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Homecoming&#13;
Soccer&#13;
team&#13;
victorious&#13;
by Mark Leipzig&#13;
There's an old saying that goes&#13;
something like "When you're hot,&#13;
you're hot." This little adage was&#13;
fitting on Oct. 13, when the Parkside&#13;
Rangers beat Northland 6-0.&#13;
Going into the game , the&#13;
Rangers had a win-loss record of 7-&#13;
3, while N orthland had a 9-1-1 r ecord.&#13;
From the beginning, the Rangers&#13;
came on strong, scoring five goals&#13;
in the first half. Greg Whipple and&#13;
Wayne Adema led the offense with&#13;
two goals each. Dave Dahlke scored&#13;
the final goal of the first half.&#13;
The second half wasn't as fastpaced&#13;
as the first. George Vukovich&#13;
scored th e only goal.&#13;
The Rangers took 27 shots on&#13;
Northland's goal, while only three&#13;
shots were taken against Parkside.&#13;
Ranger goalie Jeff Medin had two&#13;
saves, while goalie Andy Matheus&#13;
Men's Basketball Looking forward&#13;
to great year!&#13;
Homecoming soccer in the log. photo by Chris Mayeshiba&#13;
had 12. The Rangers took six corner&#13;
kicks as opposed to three by Northland.&#13;
At this point, the Rangers have&#13;
175 shots on goal, 29 goals and 59&#13;
corner kicks. Jeff Medin has 51&#13;
saves and one assist.&#13;
Bowlers get high scores&#13;
by Pa tricia Zarletti&#13;
The seventh week of bowling is&#13;
approaching an d the standings are&#13;
being scrambled around. The&#13;
league consists of eight teams of&#13;
four each, primarily faculty and&#13;
staff bowlers.&#13;
Jim Marks, the president of the&#13;
Faculty Bowling League, bowled a&#13;
234 game. Craig Puder and Rick&#13;
Bloomquist bowle d 570 and 587 respectively.&#13;
The Four Play team&#13;
topped off the team high series&#13;
with a 2614 .&#13;
Sub Dar lene Safrarisky bowled a&#13;
470 series. Ellie Suwalski's 506 is&#13;
tops in the league at present for the&#13;
women, and Rick Bloomquist's 587&#13;
is tops f or the men.&#13;
U* dH&amp;e&#13;
l^uieet&#13;
25% OFF&#13;
Assorted&#13;
Toffees&#13;
We have a full&#13;
selection of&#13;
Candy &amp; Nuts&#13;
Located in the Union Bazaar&#13;
Directly Across from the Info. Ctr.&#13;
Players worth mentioning are&#13;
Jeff Medin, Wayne Adema, who&#13;
has eight goals and two assists,&#13;
Greg Whipple with four goals and&#13;
four assists, Tony Pinkert with two&#13;
goals and two assists and Dave&#13;
Dahlke, two goals and one assist.&#13;
Puzzler&#13;
Answer&#13;
by Steve Kratochvil&#13;
The 1984-85 basketball season&#13;
looks promising for the Rangers.&#13;
"We are much deeper and much&#13;
quicker than last year. I am very&#13;
happy with the competition in the&#13;
pre-season; it makes for tough,&#13;
emotional practices," said head&#13;
coach Rees Johnson.&#13;
The roster includes seven returning&#13;
lettermen. They are Clay&#13;
Brooks, Robert Jones and Ron Zeihen,&#13;
sophomores, and juniors Sean&#13;
Patterson, Arthur Rundles and&#13;
Erik Womeldorf. Stan Cameron is a&#13;
returning senior.&#13;
Top newcomers include Mike&#13;
Zukley, a 6'8" transfer from Southwestern&#13;
Community College in&#13;
Creston, Iowa and his brother,&#13;
Mark (6'9"). Both are sophomores&#13;
and are expected to help the&#13;
Rangers' inside game.&#13;
The team compiled a 14-15 record&#13;
last season, according to Johnson.&#13;
Last year's record does not indicate&#13;
how good the team was or&#13;
how good it will be. "Last year we&#13;
played probably the toughest Division&#13;
n schedule in the nation," said&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
This year's schedule is also difficult.&#13;
Parkside will play two NCAA&#13;
Division I teams who are ranked in&#13;
the top twenty. The games will be&#13;
played at Alabama-Birmingham on&#13;
Jan. 3 and at South Alabama on&#13;
Jan. 8. The Rangers will also face&#13;
Southern Mississippi and Green&#13;
Bay, both NCAA Division I opponents.&#13;
The Rangers will also play&#13;
Stevens Point, the NAIA's s econdranked&#13;
team in the country.&#13;
Johnson is looking forward to the&#13;
challenge of the 1984-85 season.&#13;
"We are more capable this year.&#13;
Men practice for season&#13;
We expect better shooting, rebounding&#13;
and defense," said Johnson.&#13;
In the shooting department,&#13;
Johnson is looking for good things&#13;
from Arthur Rundles. Johnson explained,&#13;
"Rundles is an outstanding&#13;
scorer with people on him especially.&#13;
He has Division I ability. He is&#13;
strong enough to play professional&#13;
basketball in the Continental&#13;
League. He is a definite prospect."&#13;
Erik Womeldorf, who finished&#13;
last year averaging 11.3 poi nts per&#13;
game and 7.2 rebounds per game, is&#13;
expected to be a big piece in J ohnson's&#13;
puzzle. According to Johnson,&#13;
the starting center can "play pro&#13;
ball overseas. He probably will not&#13;
choose to do so, however, seeing he&#13;
is an academic Ail-American."&#13;
This year could be the year Parkside&#13;
basketball returns to the championship&#13;
form of the mid 1970's.&#13;
PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
RECREATION CLASSES&#13;
Aerobics&#13;
Better&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Mastering&#13;
Billards&#13;
Tue., 4:45 p.m.-5:45 p.m., Nov 6-Dec 11, Course Fee:SJ5&#13;
Thurs., 4:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m., Nov. 8-Dec. 13, Course Fee:$I5&#13;
Mon, 4:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m., Nov. 5-Dec.I0, Course Fee:$20&#13;
Tues/Thur., 5:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m., Nov. 6-Dec. 13,&#13;
Course Fee:$20&#13;
Register for recreation classes by stopping in Union Room 2 09.&#13;
Between 8:00 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday-Friday or calling 553-2408.&#13;
A 1&#13;
14 Thursday, Oct. 25,1984 RANGER&#13;
SEASON PASSES&#13;
All games start at 7:30 P.M.&#13;
Phy Ed season passes&#13;
for all games&#13;
(available at Phy Ed)&#13;
student: $10.00&#13;
general: $18.00&#13;
Post-game entertainment after&#13;
every game in Union Square&#13;
provided by PAB&#13;
The entertainment after the games&#13;
is free if you attend the game.&#13;
UW-P Men's Varsity Basketball Home Game Schedule&#13;
Monday Nov. 19&#13;
Tuesday Nov. 20&#13;
Saturday Nov. 24&#13;
Wednesday Nov. 28&#13;
Monday Jan. 14&#13;
Thursday Jan. 17&#13;
Friday Jan. 25&#13;
Monday Feb. 4&#13;
Wednesday Feb. 6&#13;
Tuesday Feb. 12&#13;
Saturday Feb. 16&#13;
Wednesday Feb. 20&#13;
Tuesday Feb. 26&#13;
Thursday Feb. 28&#13;
vs Trinity College&#13;
Macalester College&#13;
St. Xavier College&#13;
Lake Superior State College&#13;
UW Stevens Point&#13;
Illinois Institute of Technology&#13;
Milwaukee School of Engineering&#13;
Concordia College&#13;
UW Milwaukee&#13;
UW Oshkosh&#13;
Purdue University-Calumet&#13;
Northeastern Illinois University&#13;
Judson College&#13;
St. Joseph's College&#13;
BUY YOUR SEASON PASS NOW!&#13;
RANGER 15 Thursday, Oct. 25,1984&#13;
to IMlerTime&#13;
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK&#13;
•••••••••••••••&#13;
Kim Tesher&#13;
Women's Volleyball&#13;
* BEER • SODA * WINE&#13;
* POPCORN&#13;
THE PARKSIDE UNION&#13;
Classified Ads&#13;
MONDAY N IGHT&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
IN THE SQUARE&#13;
T SCREEN&#13;
Volleyball team&#13;
generates offense&#13;
MONDAY, OCT. 29&#13;
SEATTLE AT&#13;
SAN DIEGO&#13;
by Kimberl ie Kranicb&#13;
Offense showed its face more&#13;
than usual Wednesday, Oct. 17 at&#13;
the Parkside Triangular. The&#13;
women played Le wis, a team from&#13;
Illinois, and Milwaukee.&#13;
Parkside won their match against&#13;
Lewis with scores of 8-15, 15- 4 and&#13;
15-9. In their first game against&#13;
Lewis, t he women were up by 7-1,&#13;
but lost. Coach Terry Paulson attributes&#13;
his team's loss to a "total&#13;
metal and physical breakdown."&#13;
Team member Janet Koenig added,&#13;
"We came out ready to play, and&#13;
then we fell back in to our old syndrome&#13;
of letting the other team&#13;
catch up. Then we lost our momentum."&#13;
Game two ag ainst Lewis was an&#13;
offensive show for Parkside. The&#13;
women were successful at bumping&#13;
the ball up to the setter, thus improving&#13;
their chances for the crushing&#13;
spike. Paulson said, "If the offense&#13;
works, we're going to have a&#13;
good volleyball team and that's&#13;
what we had out there in the second&#13;
game."&#13;
In game three, Parkside started&#13;
off slowly. They w ere down 1-7 but&#13;
came back strong to become the&#13;
victors. "We were really fired up to&#13;
beat Lewis. When we felt they were&#13;
unbeatable, we really fired up,"&#13;
Paulson said. In their match&#13;
against Lewis, Parkside had a total&#13;
of six serving a ces with Sheri Lechner&#13;
serving four aces and Karen&#13;
Greene and Amy Henderson serving&#13;
one apiece.&#13;
Milwaukee defeated Parkside in&#13;
two games by scores of 8-15 and 8-&#13;
15. Even though both game scores&#13;
were the same, Parkside played&#13;
Milwaukee much tougher in the&#13;
first game. The first game consisted&#13;
of long rallies back and forth. Parkside&#13;
generated good offense the&#13;
first half of the game and at one&#13;
point tied Milwaukee 7-7. After the&#13;
tie broke, Parkside's offense seemed&#13;
to have stopped.&#13;
"We know Milwaukee is beatable.&#13;
We have to be totally consistent&#13;
in every facet to beat them.&#13;
Our offense has to be on and that's&#13;
why we played them to 7-7 because&#13;
our offense was on," said Paulson.&#13;
The second game, Parkside was&#13;
down by 0-8 but gradually came&#13;
back, only to lose 8-15. Milwaukee&#13;
used their middle hitters and were&#13;
able to crush the spike down the&#13;
middle with Parkside unable to dig&#13;
the ball up.&#13;
Coach Paulson said, "I'm very&#13;
disappointed in the scores. I&#13;
thought we could have played Milwaukee&#13;
tougher." Despite the fact&#13;
that his offense wasn't consistent&#13;
against Milwaukee, Paulson was&#13;
very happy with what he saw.&#13;
Ranger needs writers&#13;
Parkside spiking against Lewis&#13;
Women's cross country&#13;
Team shows improvement by Eric Hilmoe&#13;
Coach Mike DeWitt was pleased&#13;
with his team's seventh place finish&#13;
running against a strong thirteenteam&#13;
field.&#13;
DeWitt mentioned the team's improvement&#13;
came in their total time&#13;
compared to the times of the three&#13;
top finishing teams.&#13;
Host LaCrosse won the meet&#13;
with 58 poin ts. They were followed&#13;
by second place Marquette and&#13;
third place Eau Claire, with scores&#13;
of 89 and 93 respect ively. Running&#13;
in previous meets against these&#13;
three teams, Parkside improved by&#13;
2:45 against LaCrosse, 1:45 against&#13;
Marquette and 1:06 against Eau&#13;
Claire.&#13;
Parkside was led by freshman&#13;
Michelle Marter who turned in a&#13;
time of 18:47, good enough for&#13;
twelfth place. Other Ranger runners&#13;
to turn in strong performances&#13;
were Sarah Heitt-41, Jill Fobair-44,&#13;
Colleen Weismer-45, Julie McReynolds-&#13;
47, Julie Wunrow-50, Cathy&#13;
Polacheck-76 and Carol Romano-78.&#13;
St. Thomas of Minnesota followed&#13;
third place Eau Claire with a&#13;
score of 110. North Dakota State&#13;
finished fifth and Mankato State&#13;
(Minnesota) finished sixth.&#13;
The Ranger women also hope to&#13;
improve next week in their final&#13;
regular season meet against Marquette&#13;
and Milwaukee. The runners'&#13;
next meet will be the NAIA&#13;
Nationals on Nov. 17.&#13;
Into those beautiful eyes!&#13;
JOHN C.W. R.A. A f arewell bid to you, my&#13;
love, until we meet eye to eye.&#13;
JIG: HOW many pbone numbers did you get&#13;
last weekend?&#13;
S.S.R. YOUR friendship means more to me&#13;
than anything else in the world.&#13;
THIS ONE'S for you, Teoby! It could get&#13;
worse if you don't keep quiet!&#13;
CYNDE! STUFF your face in my litterbox.&#13;
Max.&#13;
JIM N.: Sorry we forget a classified for you&#13;
last week. Hope this makes up for it.&#13;
JIM N.: That goes ditto for me.&#13;
JAMES NEIBAUR, when are you going to do&#13;
something dirty? We're waiting.&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
IMPROVE STUDY habits, lose weight, stop&#13;
smoking. Reduce stress and anxiety through&#13;
clinical hypnosis. Call Randall Potter at&#13;
414/652-2727.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
BEAUTIFUL, WARM hand-woven ECUADORAN&#13;
PONCHOS for fall, back-to-school wear.&#13;
Send for free color brochure. Ponchos, P.O.&#13;
Box 142, S ussex WI 53089.&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
CAM PL'S REP to run break vacation trip to&#13;
Daytona Beach. Earn free trip and money.&#13;
Send resume to College Travel Unlimited,&#13;
P.O. Box 6063, Station A. Daytona Beach FL&#13;
32022. Include phone numbers, please.&#13;
STUDENT ASSISTANT: 10 hours a week,&#13;
hours flexible. 33.35/bour. Clerical, communication&#13;
and organizational skills necessary. Call&#13;
Peer Support, 553-2706.&#13;
Wanted&#13;
RIDERS WANTED to Chicago O'Hare. To&#13;
share gas. Usually depart Friday A.M. Call&#13;
957-0593.&#13;
LATE MODEL Dodge Van, in need of (^cylinder&#13;
engine. (414) 654-2575.&#13;
FEMALE. ROOMMATES to rent out robins&#13;
in house. $150/month. Needed by end of Nov.&#13;
For more details, contact Anne or Mary, 554-&#13;
Personals&#13;
ASPA BAKE Sale Monday, Oct. 29,10 a.m. to&#13;
1 p.m.&#13;
DAVID GERLACH: How's life by you?&#13;
SHARON: ARE you heading south for the&#13;
winter? I am.&#13;
HOWDY, SHARON. Just think-one more&#13;
ffppfc I&#13;
BOSSY, THANKS for the Sweetest Day Treat&#13;
I LOVE you. Dinky.&#13;
HAPPY B IRTHDAY, Di Ilove you! Jim&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, MOMMIE. I love you.&#13;
too! Max.&#13;
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, Diana Neibaur! The&#13;
Ranger Staff.&#13;
SHARON RYNDERS: This one is especially&#13;
for you, "Toots."&#13;
HI, SHARON!!! Now you know we still think&#13;
of you.&#13;
OK, SHARON. This is it for the week. Yoolie.&#13;
DINKY: KEEP the fire burning, ya comfrittin'&#13;
peapod. Love, Bossy.&#13;
C.R.M. I was meant to be for you.&#13;
CYNDE: WITHIN my soul you'll always sail,&#13;
always sail!!! Rizalino.&#13;
EVERYONE COME to CA-129 at 1:00 on Friday.&#13;
JOHN C.W. R.A. I can't wait until I can look&#13;
16 Thursday, Oct. 25, 1984 RANGER&#13;
Soccer team tie&#13;
with Marquette&#13;
The Rangers took on Marquette,&#13;
the number four ranked team in&#13;
the mid-east Division I polls and&#13;
came away with a 1-1 tie. "It was a&#13;
moral victory for us," said Coach&#13;
Rick Kilps.&#13;
Marquette came into the game&#13;
with a 10-2-2-mark and eyes on an&#13;
NCAA play-off s pot.&#13;
"I'm proud of this team and the&#13;
way they played this match. We&#13;
went in with a game plan and fulfilled&#13;
that objective. We knew we&#13;
would have to be patient and we&#13;
were."&#13;
The patience paid off at 88:55&#13;
when junior college transfer Greg&#13;
Whipple stole the ball from the&#13;
Marquette sweeper and went one&#13;
on one with the Warrior goalie for&#13;
the score. Marquette had scored at&#13;
62:50 of th e second half - a goal in&#13;
which the Parkside defense pulled&#13;
up in an offsides trap that the referee&#13;
did not call.&#13;
The Rangers, ranked 17th nationally&#13;
in the NAIA poll, received an&#13;
outstanding game from senior goat&#13;
keeper Jeff Medin. Kilps said,&#13;
"Jeff was flawless in the net. He's&#13;
stepped into the starting spot this&#13;
year and performed admirably for&#13;
us."&#13;
The Rangers finished the week&#13;
with an 8-3-2 record.&#13;
From left to right, first row: Ed Herrera, Andy Buchanan,&#13;
Charles Rodriguez, John Scanlan, Mike Riva,&#13;
Jeff Medin, Tony Pinkert, Mike Chock, Scott Gerhartz,&#13;
Don Theisen. Second row, left to right: Jose&#13;
Ramirez, Steve Donovan, Chris Schuleit, Dave Dahlke,&#13;
Wayne Adema, Greg Whipple, Richard Blay,&#13;
George Vukovich, Mike Robertson, Jim Spielmann&#13;
and Rick Kilps, coach.&#13;
•IIIHUWHI MM—• Phy-ed requirement examined&#13;
by Carol Kortendick&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
The physical education department&#13;
asks students who are adding&#13;
modular classes in October to obtain&#13;
signatures from Wayne Dannehl,&#13;
director of physical education,&#13;
and the professor. "We have received&#13;
some criticism with kids adding&#13;
in October, so we're trying to watch&#13;
who's adding," stated Dannehl.&#13;
some of the concern lies with the&#13;
athletes. According to Dannehl, the&#13;
department will not allow athletes&#13;
to add. There are some exceptions.&#13;
The department is also watching&#13;
for another situation that occurs&#13;
when a student drops an academic&#13;
course and adds the physical education&#13;
course to continue receiving financial&#13;
aid. The student, according&#13;
to Dannehl, will not be penalized&#13;
for this. The department only&#13;
wants to keep a record.&#13;
"I think it's unfair for non-athletic&#13;
students," said student Brenda&#13;
Buchanan. Buchanan tried adding&#13;
the figure improvement class but&#13;
was told to get the two signatures.&#13;
She decided not to add as a result&#13;
of this.&#13;
Buchanan asked, if the classes&#13;
haven't met, why are signatures&#13;
necessary? Other departments&#13;
allow adding (before class starts)&#13;
without any hassles.&#13;
Dannehl answered, "This was&#13;
precipitated by the fact that we're&#13;
the only department with late modulars."&#13;
The department thus has a&#13;
lot of late adders. Dannehl added,&#13;
"We're the last resort of maintaining&#13;
credits.&#13;
"I have not denied any that I can&#13;
recall, except athletes. Basically,&#13;
we're just monitoring trends and&#13;
collecting data. We ask the student&#13;
to fill out a form, then get the&#13;
signatures of the professors and&#13;
myself. All I want you to tell me is&#13;
why you're adding."&#13;
According to Dannehl, this data&#13;
had not been collected or processed.&#13;
•••••••••• Tennis season closes&#13;
on traveled ground&#13;
by Kimberlie Kranich&#13;
Although the women's tennis&#13;
team started off their season on relatively&#13;
untraveled ground, the last&#13;
meet of the season showed how&#13;
well the women adjusted to the circumstances.&#13;
In their final meet, the&#13;
women defeated Green Bay 5-4.&#13;
In the first week of prac tice, only&#13;
four members of last year's team&#13;
showed up consistently. When&#13;
school began, Linda Masters returned&#13;
to the squad to boost the&#13;
number to five, and later the team&#13;
picked up Amy Tropin.&#13;
Coach Wendy Miller is liked by&#13;
all the members of her team,&#13;
though she was tougher and did&#13;
things differently than Noreen Goggin.&#13;
The biggest difference was in&#13;
the amount of running required.&#13;
Before each practice the women&#13;
ran a mile, ran sprints and jumped&#13;
over metal hurdles. After practice&#13;
came more running and bill&#13;
charges.&#13;
"This year, I think the members&#13;
of the tennis team were more like&#13;
cross country runners. Due to our&#13;
extensive training, however, we had&#13;
no injuries and we didn't get fatigued&#13;
when we had to play threeset&#13;
matches," said Masters.&#13;
Another major difference between&#13;
this and last year's training&#13;
was that Miller used drills that&#13;
helped both singles and doubles&#13;
strategy. "The first day of practice,&#13;
I was scared because I didn't know&#13;
what I was going to do. There was&#13;
a lot I had to learn," Miller stated&#13;
of h er first year of coaching tennis.&#13;
By reading books on tennis and&#13;
with the help of professor and tennis&#13;
player Esther Will, Miller was&#13;
able to prepare the team members&#13;
for their matches.&#13;
Jackie Rittmer said, "Coach kept&#13;
us motivated throughout the season.&#13;
She always had helpful advice&#13;
and a new drill which usually&#13;
helped us during a match." Masters&#13;
added, "Coach Miller helped us&#13;
with our game plan. We learned&#13;
different tactics and ways to beat&#13;
our opponents."&#13;
Miller said only good things of&#13;
her team. "I think it was a real&#13;
good year and I appreciated the opportunity&#13;
to work with everyone."&#13;
According to Miller, the biggest&#13;
change came after the team's loss&#13;
to Beloit College. Miller explained,&#13;
"Beloit was a good match. Sure, we&#13;
lost 1-8 but everyone except for two&#13;
people went three sets. They were&#13;
all close matches."&#13;
A change for the better did&#13;
occur. The women placed seventh&#13;
out of ten teams at the Whitewater&#13;
Doubles Tournament and outscored&#13;
the number of points they earned&#13;
last year in the same tournament.&#13;
Miller said she saw a lot of improvement&#13;
in everyone's ability and&#13;
felt the biggest changes occurred in&#13;
Ann A lthaus and Kim Kranich. Althaus&#13;
completed the season&#13;
strongly, winning her last four out&#13;
of five singles and doubles matches.&#13;
The season is over. Miller said,&#13;
"I thought we had a really close&#13;
team and it's different not seeing&#13;
the team every day." Masters said,&#13;
"The comradeship was better this&#13;
year that it has ever been in the&#13;
past.&#13;
"As a player, I thought the tennis&#13;
season was like eating an ice cream&#13;
cone, only better. I knew the season&#13;
was going to be fun, and even&#13;
though it's physically over now, it's&#13;
still a part of me because the memories&#13;
will be with me always."&#13;
cross country&#13;
Cross country team&#13;
loses to North Central&#13;
by Eric Hilmoe&#13;
The Ranger men were edged out&#13;
of first place by North Central by&#13;
the score of 41 to 52 at Saturday's&#13;
Carthage Invitational.&#13;
Parkside was again led by Tim&#13;
Renzelmann and George Kapheim.&#13;
Renzelmann and Kapheim turned&#13;
in times of 24:37 and 24:56, good&#13;
for first and third places, respectively.&#13;
Rich Miller also turned in a&#13;
strong performance, finishing fifth.&#13;
Other Parkside finishers included&#13;
Ed Miller-21, Andy Serrano-22,&#13;
Mark Manning-35 and Dan Peterson-&#13;
55.&#13;
"We ran the race without our&#13;
number three runner, Dan Stublaski,&#13;
who came down with the flu. I&#13;
think if Dan would have run, we&#13;
would have had a good chance to&#13;
finish first," said Coach Lucian&#13;
Rosa.&#13;
Overall, Rosa was satisfied with&#13;
his team's performance and is looking&#13;
forward to the upcoming meets.&#13;
The Ranger men have two meets&#13;
remaining. Next week they end the&#13;
regular season with the Chicago Invitational.&#13;
Following that meet,&#13;
they take the next three weeks off&#13;
in preparation for the NAIA National&#13;
Meet.&#13;
Rosa feels his team has a very&#13;
good chance to improve on last&#13;
year's tenth place finish in Nationals.&#13;
"Last year my guys really surprised&#13;
me with the tenth place finish&#13;
and 1 hope they can surprise me&#13;
with an even higher finish this&#13;
year," Rosa said.&#13;
Out of the 22 teams that participated&#13;
in the Carthage Invitational,&#13;
Parkside and North Central were&#13;
the only two teams to finish under&#13;
100 poin ts. Oshkosh finished a distant&#13;
third with a score of 103. Stevens&#13;
Point and Wheaton finished&#13;
fourth and fifth respectively.&#13;
Bowling club&#13;
in existence by Dennis Harbach&#13;
Recently I was asked if Parkside&#13;
has a bowling club or team. The answer&#13;
is yes.&#13;
Each Friday the Parkside Bowling&#13;
Club gets together for camaraderie&#13;
and exciting bowling action.&#13;
The bowlers with the highest averages&#13;
are placed on a team that&#13;
bowls against other UW schools, as&#13;
well as in prestigious tournaments,&#13;
such as the ones in St. Louis or Las&#13;
Vegas.&#13;
Last weekend, Oshkosh hosted&#13;
the first match against Parkside&#13;
and Platteville. Representing Parkside&#13;
were Rick Kelly, Kris Johnson,&#13;
Jeff Floyd, Frank Bisotti and Glen&#13;
Malmkus, four members and a substitute.&#13;
Seven points were awarded&#13;
for each match.&#13;
In the first match, Parkside defeated&#13;
Oshkosh 2-5, 5-1 and 6-1.&#13;
They also received two extra points&#13;
for winning the best of three. The&#13;
team went on to soundly beat Platteville&#13;
5-2, 6-1 and 7-0. In that series&#13;
they established a new four-man&#13;
high total of 909 pins.&#13;
Kelly rolled a 256 game and&#13;
Floyd a 255. "We just exploded that&#13;
game," Malmkus said. "We showed&#13;
ourselves to be a true contender."&#13;
Kelly said this is one of the best&#13;
teams he has seen in years. "We&#13;
have determination and a strong&#13;
will to win. Some of us could be on&#13;
the pro bowlers' tour," he said.&#13;
This Saturday, Parkside heads to&#13;
Milwaukee to play Madison and&#13;
Milwaukee, which the team considers&#13;
one of the most important&#13;
matches of the season. The match&#13;
could be crucial to the team's success&#13;
this year.&#13;
Malmkus is undaunted, however.&#13;
He boldly contended, "We'll have&#13;
more pins than the U.S. Wrestling&#13;
Team did in the Olympics this&#13;
year."</text>
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