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              <text>Open Forum&#13;
photo by Darryl Hahn&#13;
Twins Laura and Karen Bever are watched during&#13;
registration by Pink Person Becky Tremmel.&#13;
Pink People help parents&#13;
by Julie Pendleton&#13;
Registration often presents a&#13;
number of problems for students&#13;
with children. The process of registering&#13;
is tedious enough without&#13;
the added stress of bringing young&#13;
children along.&#13;
In response to this, the Parkside&#13;
Child Care Center and Peer Support,&#13;
in a cooperative effort, developed&#13;
the concept of Pink People.&#13;
Pink People are students trained at&#13;
the Child Care Center who will be&#13;
present at registration to entertain&#13;
children with songs, stories and&#13;
games. No designated area will be&#13;
set up as a daycare area. Instead,&#13;
Pink People will roam around the&#13;
registration area with their pink toy&#13;
bags, looking for children to amuse.&#13;
Pink People will introduce themselves&#13;
to the children as "parents'&#13;
helpers" and signs will be posted,&#13;
informing parents of this service.&#13;
One Pink Person will be on duty at&#13;
all times during registration. Pink&#13;
People will be easily recognized by&#13;
the bright pink T-shirts they will be&#13;
wearing.&#13;
Funds for this project were donated&#13;
by Peer Support.&#13;
Rape -first in Serrano named B.B. King -&#13;
a series of stories SUFAC chair a real thriller&#13;
Page 51 Page 6 Page 8&#13;
The Ranger is sponsoring an&#13;
Open Forum with Chancellor Alan&#13;
E. Guskin on Tuesday, April 16&#13;
from noon to 1 p.m. in Main Place.&#13;
Students, faculty and staff are encouraged&#13;
to attend the Open&#13;
Forum and ask questions or express&#13;
concerns.&#13;
Thursday, April 11, 1985 University of Wisconsin-Parkside Vol. 13, No. 26&#13;
US/USSR relations examined&#13;
by Kari Dixon&#13;
by Julie Pendleton&#13;
It is required by law that Parkside&#13;
reopen bidding on its food service&#13;
every five years. Since Heritage&#13;
Food Service, Inc. has been with&#13;
the university since 1980, in June of&#13;
this year their contract will expire.&#13;
"Heritage has done a good job&#13;
here," said Bill Niebuhr, Director&#13;
of the Union. "They plan to rebid."&#13;
Bidding is a complicated process.&#13;
Numerous details must be taken&#13;
into consideration when a company&#13;
decides to bid. However, the&#13;
amount of rebate a company is able&#13;
to give the university is the deciding&#13;
factor. This amount is based on&#13;
day-to-day cash sales, catering&#13;
events and camp conventions.&#13;
There are several changes in the&#13;
specifications of the new contract.&#13;
Most obvious is the introduction of&#13;
new products, such as the stuffed&#13;
potato. Five years ago, when the&#13;
contract was drawn up, this item&#13;
was not popular. Now that it is,&#13;
specifications must be included for&#13;
it in the new contract.&#13;
In addition, changes have been&#13;
made in a company's participation&#13;
in promotion and advertising. As&#13;
stated in the new contract, they&#13;
will be required to spend a certain&#13;
amount of their sales on promotion&#13;
and advertising.&#13;
Also included is a provision for a&#13;
food program in the event that oncampus&#13;
housing does develop.&#13;
"Housing will inevitably have a&#13;
positive impact on the amount of&#13;
total sales," said Niebuhr. "Therefore&#13;
the amount of rebate will increase&#13;
and the Union budget will&#13;
require less from segregated student&#13;
fees." If on-campus housing&#13;
does become a reality, the university&#13;
and the contractor will sit&#13;
down at that time and reach a mutual&#13;
agreement on the program.&#13;
As for the employees presently&#13;
employed by Heritage, if a new&#13;
company does take over the service,&#13;
it will be their decision as to&#13;
whom they wish to retain. "Staff&#13;
usually remains basically the&#13;
same," said Niebuhr. "It's the&#13;
management that changes."&#13;
On March 28, a bidders' meeting&#13;
was held at Parkside. Eight potential&#13;
bidders arrived for presentation&#13;
on the new contract specifications.&#13;
Included were Heritage, Canteen&#13;
Corporation, Professional Food&#13;
Management, Ace Foods, Creative&#13;
Food Service, Servomation, Western&#13;
Food Service and Kenosha&#13;
Achievement Center. After the presentation,&#13;
they were taken on a&#13;
tour of the facilities, then were&#13;
given time to ask questions.&#13;
A sealed bid opening will be held&#13;
on Wednesday, April 17 in Madison.&#13;
All companies must either bring or&#13;
send their bids to Madison by 2&#13;
p.m. that day. The envelopes will&#13;
then be opened, all at once, when&#13;
everyone is present. (All bidders&#13;
are not required to have a representative&#13;
present.)&#13;
"The UW bidding process is one&#13;
of the most detailed and complicated&#13;
bids in the United States,"&#13;
said Niebuhr. "The reason for this&#13;
is so we can ensure certain levels of&#13;
quality and make the process completely&#13;
honest and above board."&#13;
Approximately three weeks after&#13;
public announcement of the bids is&#13;
made, the Office of Auxiliary Operations&#13;
in Madison will make a final&#13;
decision. "The intervening time is&#13;
used for any necessary evaluation,&#13;
either by the university or the contractor,"&#13;
Niebuhr said. The official&#13;
take-over, if Heritage does not win&#13;
the bid, is June 1.&#13;
Rebidding for vending service&#13;
follows the same process.&#13;
"In the last forty&#13;
years, the US has lost&#13;
its nuclear monopoly,&#13;
and the Soviets have&#13;
become a military&#13;
equal. At the same&#13;
time, however, the&#13;
Soviets have fallen&#13;
economically and&#13;
technologically behind&#13;
us."&#13;
—Madeline Albright&#13;
Food services bid&#13;
er," Albright added. "The US and&#13;
the Soviets are going to the peace&#13;
talks in Geneva with two different&#13;
game plans. The Soviets see the&#13;
three main areas as being linked&#13;
and we want to negotiate each part&#13;
separately."&#13;
Albright said she would like to&#13;
see summits like the one Reagan&#13;
offered Gorbachev become an annual&#13;
event, but without becoming&#13;
strictly a media event.&#13;
for new contract&#13;
"The Soviets are not like us, but&#13;
they are not ten feet tall, either,"&#13;
she said. "They are not a democracy,&#13;
but we should manage the rivalry&#13;
in areas, like trade, where&#13;
ideology does not make that much&#13;
difference."&#13;
"The new Soviet leader and his&#13;
wife are not the Kennedys, and&#13;
Russia is not becoming Camelot,"&#13;
said Madelyn Albright, former&#13;
member of the National Security&#13;
Council, when she spoke April 4 a t&#13;
Parkside. "In the short run, Mikhail&#13;
Gorbachev will probably be&#13;
good for the US, but in the long&#13;
term, he may be bad."&#13;
Albright was a member of the&#13;
National Security Council during&#13;
the Carter administration and assisted&#13;
in writing the memoirs of Zbigniew&#13;
Brzezinski. She was active in&#13;
the campaigns of Edwin Muskie&#13;
and Walter Mondale and is a professor&#13;
of political science at Georgetown&#13;
University, where she&#13;
teaches a course on the Soviet&#13;
Union.&#13;
According to Albright, the last&#13;
three years have been the worst in&#13;
the history of US and Soviet relations.&#13;
"In the last forty years, the&#13;
US has lost its nuclear monopoly,&#13;
and the Soviets have become a military&#13;
equal," she said. "At the same&#13;
time, however, the Soviets have&#13;
fallen economically and technologically&#13;
behind us."&#13;
The main aims of the Soviets&#13;
right now, according to Albright,&#13;
are to protect their borders, spread&#13;
their ideology and compete with&#13;
and possibly defeat the US. The&#13;
goals of the US, she said, include an&#13;
increased military and defense&#13;
budget, border security and the&#13;
prevention of the spread of communism.&#13;
"The United States supports the&#13;
status quo," she said, "while the&#13;
Soviets are expansionists."&#13;
The most important thing to&#13;
remember about Gorbachev, Albright&#13;
stated, is that he is a loyal&#13;
member of the Communist Party.&#13;
"He is a Party man, and he may reform&#13;
the system, but he certainly is&#13;
not going to get rid of it."&#13;
The agenda Gorbachev faces on&#13;
the domestic front is a difficult one,&#13;
according to Albright. There is a&#13;
stagnant economy, agricultural production&#13;
is abysmal and corruption&#13;
among officials is common.&#13;
"In foreign policy, Gromyko will&#13;
probably continue to be the lead2&#13;
Thursday, April 11, 1985 RANGER&#13;
Letter to the Editor&#13;
China's abortion view&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Although pro-choice and pro-life&#13;
individuals can find little common&#13;
ground in the abortion debate, recent&#13;
actions taken by the Chinese&#13;
government will incite sincere individuals&#13;
in both camps to take action.&#13;
According to a series on China's&#13;
population program appearing in&#13;
the Jan. 6-8 i ssues of "The Washington&#13;
Post," China has implemented&#13;
a forced abortion program,&#13;
where many pregnancies are terminated&#13;
in their last trimester,&#13;
some as late as the ninth month. In&#13;
the province of Gansu, a place&#13;
where pregnant women gathered&#13;
after fleeing from their homes to&#13;
escape harassment, local officials&#13;
were ordered to "terminate within&#13;
a limited time all unplanned pregnancies&#13;
of women not in their&#13;
home residential area," according&#13;
to an internal document.&#13;
While there is no direct U.S. aid&#13;
to China, two organizations responsible&#13;
for China's population&#13;
control efforts, the International&#13;
Planned Parenthood Foundation&#13;
(IPPF) and the United Nations&#13;
Fund for Population Activities&#13;
(UNFPA) are provided with onequarter&#13;
of their annual budgets by&#13;
Congress. Although IPPF is no longer&#13;
eligible for further U.S. aid,&#13;
UNFPA gave the Chinese population&#13;
control program $50 million in&#13;
aid between 1981 and 1984 and has&#13;
started another $50 million grant.&#13;
Congress has earmarked $46 million&#13;
for UNFPA in 1985.&#13;
One of the individuals who will&#13;
play a major role in determining if&#13;
the $46 million will be released to&#13;
UNFPA is Rep. David Obey of&#13;
Wisconsin, who serves as Chairman&#13;
of the House Appropriations Committee&#13;
Subcommittee on Foreign&#13;
Operations. His mailing address is:&#13;
2217 Rayburn Building, Washington&#13;
DC 20515. Also, you can write your&#13;
congressman and urge him or her&#13;
to oppose further aid to UNFPA.&#13;
Pro-choice advocates have to&#13;
agree that women in China have no&#13;
choice to do what they want with&#13;
their own bodies. Pro-life advocates,&#13;
especially those of you who&#13;
voted for Reagan, must realize that&#13;
your responsibilities do not end at&#13;
the ballot box.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Corby James Anderson&#13;
Barca takes stand&#13;
on farm issues&#13;
State Representative Peter W.&#13;
Barca today released the text of a&#13;
recent letter he sent to local lending&#13;
institutions urging them to take&#13;
part in a state loan guarantee program&#13;
for economically distressed&#13;
farmers that the legislature adopted&#13;
recently.&#13;
"This has the potential to be a&#13;
very successful program for rural&#13;
Wisconsin," Barca wrote to the&#13;
lenders. "But its success depends&#13;
on a strong commitment on your&#13;
part. I hope that you will make a&#13;
concerted effort to make this program&#13;
available through your lending&#13;
institution to the farmers who&#13;
qualify."&#13;
The state loan guarantee program&#13;
is designed for farmers who&#13;
are unable to receive credit to buy&#13;
seed, fertilizer, pesticides and fuel&#13;
for spring planting. Farmers will be&#13;
able to receive up to $20,000 u nder&#13;
the program through private lending&#13;
institutions. The loans will have&#13;
an interest rate ceiling of 11 percent,&#13;
but the state will buy down&#13;
two interest points, resulting in&#13;
loans being issued nine percent. In&#13;
case of a default, the state will&#13;
reimburse the lender for 90 percent&#13;
of the remaining principal.&#13;
Barca said this program will benefit&#13;
all segments of the rural economy.&#13;
"It is all too clear that a farm&#13;
failure has a ripple effect that&#13;
reverberates throughout the countryside.&#13;
By buying the farmers&#13;
time, we are also ensuring that the&#13;
farmer will continue to patronize&#13;
the merchants who depend on the&#13;
farm trade for their livelihood.&#13;
Without this trade, these businesses&#13;
also would be in dire straits."&#13;
Barca closed by saying that&#13;
members of the legislature are not&#13;
"fooling ourselves into believing&#13;
that this program is a cure-all for&#13;
the farm crisis." But he said that&#13;
the program will help farmers who&#13;
are in trouble to get their spring&#13;
crops in the ground, which was the&#13;
intent of the legislation.&#13;
Next Roundtable cancelled&#13;
Nobody asked me, but...&#13;
Parkside is losing sight of its purpose&#13;
The Social Science Roundtable&#13;
scheduled at Parkside for Monday,&#13;
April 15 titled "Ethics in International&#13;
Politics" has been cancelled.&#13;
All other Roundtables will be&#13;
held as scheduled. They include&#13;
"The U.S.S.R. Revisited" on April&#13;
22, "How Children Learn to Talk"&#13;
on April 29 and "The Brazilian&#13;
Presidential Election" on May 6.&#13;
When the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside was in its developmental&#13;
stages, one of its&#13;
prime concerns was to offer an outstanding&#13;
science-oriented educational&#13;
opportunity to the residents&#13;
of the area. Since Racine and Kenosha,&#13;
as well as the outlying areas,&#13;
are in the heart of Wisconsin's industrial&#13;
and manufacturing community,&#13;
a great need for highy technical&#13;
bachelor of science programs&#13;
was realized. Area manufacturers&#13;
showed interest in the development&#13;
of mechanical, electricaj and computer&#13;
science programs.&#13;
The original intentions of this&#13;
campus and the development of individual&#13;
programs to satisfy the industrial&#13;
and manufacturing community&#13;
seem to be lagging far behind,&#13;
especially when comparisons are&#13;
made with the development and&#13;
progress of the liberal arts programs&#13;
(i.e. art, music, drama).&#13;
Chancellor Guskin has publicly referred&#13;
to Parkside as being a liberal&#13;
arts school when in fact the majority&#13;
of students attending Parkside&#13;
are enrolled in business and science&#13;
programs. (61% BS vs. 39% BA).&#13;
Probably one of the biggest issues&#13;
that concerns the science division,&#13;
especially engineering science,&#13;
is the fact that the electrical engineering&#13;
technology and mechanical&#13;
engineering technology programs&#13;
are not recognized as being accredited&#13;
programs by the Accrediting&#13;
Board for Engineering and Technology&#13;
(A.B.E.T.). Also, the American&#13;
Society of Professional Engineers&#13;
(A.S.P.E.) will not recognize&#13;
the engineering programs offered&#13;
at Parkside as being adequate training&#13;
for membership in their organization.&#13;
Each state offers a licensing and&#13;
registration procedure for recognition&#13;
of an individual as a professional&#13;
engineer. To become licensed&#13;
by the State of Wisconsin as a&#13;
professional engineer, a person&#13;
must successfully pass an eight&#13;
hour Fundamentals of Engineering&#13;
exam (Engineer in Training) and&#13;
then pass an eight hour Principals&#13;
of Practice exam (Professional Engineer).&#13;
Along with the successful&#13;
completion of these exams, a person&#13;
must obtain four years' work&#13;
experience as an engineer and show&#13;
proof of a ttendance and completion&#13;
of an A.B.E.T.-accredited, fouryear&#13;
degree (this degree can be a&#13;
BSET).&#13;
Parkside engineering graduates&#13;
have been given the opportunity to&#13;
take the E.I.T. exams and the P.E.&#13;
exams. Last year 80% of the Parkside&#13;
students who took the E.I.T&#13;
exam received a passing grade. The&#13;
state-wide pass rate for this exam is&#13;
substantially lower than 80%. This&#13;
seems to indicate that the curriculum&#13;
offered and the faculty members&#13;
who are teaching the engineering&#13;
and science programs are doing&#13;
their jobs. With the "track-record"&#13;
that Parkside graduates are beginning&#13;
to display, it is becoming obvious&#13;
that the engineering programs&#13;
are developing very well.&#13;
So the real question is: Why&#13;
haven't these programs been accredited&#13;
by the A.B.E.T.? If minor&#13;
adjustments must be made in the&#13;
curriculum to satisfy A.B.E.T.'s requirements,&#13;
then let them be&#13;
made! Certainly no one in the engineering&#13;
department will complain&#13;
if the students are required to earn&#13;
three more credits of calculus or&#13;
one more credit in statistics. If a&#13;
few more full-time professors must&#13;
be hired, then it should be done.&#13;
The job future of the graduates&#13;
may be at stake and it doesn't seem&#13;
fair that these graduates are being&#13;
put at a disadvantage just because&#13;
the development of the engineering&#13;
programs at Parkside has yet to be&#13;
completed.&#13;
Chancellor Guskin has done a&#13;
tremendous job and has been commended&#13;
by both the University and&#13;
the community. It is no secret that&#13;
his interests lie with the liberal arts&#13;
program. We hope the next chancellor&#13;
will have an equal interest in&#13;
both arts and sciences.&#13;
&lt;00&#13;
Jennie Tunkieicz Editor&#13;
Pat Hensiak . Campus News Editor&#13;
Bob Kiesling Community News Editor&#13;
Jim Neibaur Feature Editor&#13;
Rick Luehr Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
Carol Kortendick Sports Editor&#13;
Dave McEvoy Photo Editor&#13;
Jill Whitney Nielsen Copy Editor&#13;
Andy Buchanan Business Manager&#13;
Wendy Westphal Advertising Manager&#13;
Pat Zirkelbach Distribution Manager&#13;
Brenda Buchanan Asst. Business Manager&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Tim Bruns, Kari Dixon, Steve&#13;
Gallion, Kimberlie Kranich, Steve&#13;
Kratochvil, Robb Luehr, Joan&#13;
Mattox, Julie Pendleton, Bill Serpe.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
Sue Baumann, Jay Crapser, Darryl&#13;
Hahn, Kristine Odegaard.&#13;
Ranger is written and edited by students at UW-Parkside and they are solely responsible&#13;
for its editorial policy and content. Published every Thursday during the&#13;
academic year except during breaks and holidays.&#13;
Ranger is printed by the Racine Journal Times.&#13;
All correspondence should be addressed to: Parkside Ranger. University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Box No. 2QOO. K enosha. Wl 53141. Telephone (414) 553-&#13;
2295 or (414) 553-2287.&#13;
Letters to the editor will be accepted if typewritten, double-spaced on standard&#13;
size paper. Letters should be less than 350 words and must be signed, with a telephone&#13;
number included for verification purposes Names will be withheld upon request.&#13;
Deadline for letters is Tuesday at 10 a.m. for p ublication Thursday. Ranger&#13;
reserves the right to edit letters and refuse letters containing false and defamatory&#13;
content.&#13;
KAINUfcH 6 lnursaay, April n, urea&#13;
Russian tour diverse&#13;
by Kari Dixon&#13;
A visit to the summer palace of&#13;
Peter the Great, a ballet based on&#13;
the history of Armenia and the&#13;
death of Constantin Chernenko&#13;
were some of the experiences of&#13;
the 13 people who traveled to the&#13;
Soviet Union on the Parkside Soviet&#13;
Study Tour over spring break.&#13;
The group, led this year by&#13;
Political Science Professor Ken&#13;
Hoover, was combined with a&#13;
group from Oshkosh and crossed&#13;
paths with other UW groups during&#13;
the tour — the 17th year of this&#13;
program. They traveled to Leningrad,&#13;
Erevan (the capitol of Soviet&#13;
Armenia), Tbilisi (the capitol of&#13;
Soviet Georgia) and Moscow.&#13;
Hoover was in a department&#13;
store in Leningrad when the death&#13;
of Chernenko was announced. "We&#13;
were aware that the public address&#13;
system was asking everyone to be&#13;
quiet, and then a clerk explained&#13;
that he had died," Hoover said.&#13;
"Then business resumed after not&#13;
too much of a pause."&#13;
Hoover said there was not a lot&#13;
of evidence during or after the announcement&#13;
of Chernenko's death&#13;
that this was a personal loss for&#13;
Soviet citizens.&#13;
"Like Gorbachev, Chernenko&#13;
was a product of the communist&#13;
party rather than a military hero or&#13;
popularly elected leader," he said.&#13;
"There was no real sense of identity&#13;
with him."&#13;
The Soviet lifestyle differs&#13;
greatly from ours. In the Soviet&#13;
Union, housing, food, health care,&#13;
transportation and education are all&#13;
heavily subsidized by the government.&#13;
The average Russian family,&#13;
Hoover said, lives in an apartment&#13;
with primitive kitchen appliances&#13;
that are too small for their needs.&#13;
"Cars are expensive and difficult&#13;
to maintain. Stereos are becoming&#13;
more popular, although they, too,&#13;
are quite expensive," he said.&#13;
Contact with Soviet citizens apart&#13;
from the tour was difficult, Hoover&#13;
said, because of government restrictions.&#13;
"Soviet citizens do not go&#13;
to Intourist hotels, and if they are&#13;
too friendly to foreigners, they can&#13;
expect to be talked to and harassed,"&#13;
Hoover said.&#13;
Hoover said that black marketeering&#13;
is found in Soviet Georgia.&#13;
Alcoholism is present throughout&#13;
the country. "In Tbilisi I did see&#13;
two beggars, but one gets the feeling&#13;
that the streets are relatively&#13;
safe, even late at night."&#13;
Throughout the tour, Hoover&#13;
said, one was reminded of the different&#13;
form of government. "In&#13;
Tbilisi we were followed for most&#13;
of an afternoon and into our hotel&#13;
lobby after dinner," he said. "The&#13;
way the tour is set up means that&#13;
you only get to see the things regarded&#13;
as aspects of a model society."&#13;
Hoover will speak more about&#13;
the tour when he presents the&#13;
Social Science Roundtable on April&#13;
22.&#13;
Strengthening contacts helpful&#13;
Four members of the Parkside&#13;
Hispanic Club attended the second&#13;
annual Hispanic Leadership Conference&#13;
in Whitewater on March 30.&#13;
They were Jesus Alvarado, Jose M.&#13;
Anaya. Juana Cortez and Carmen&#13;
Acosta.&#13;
The keynote speech was delivered&#13;
by Luis Alvarez who has been&#13;
president of National Urban Fellows,&#13;
Inc. since 1976. He is director&#13;
of Aspira and has worked on "Sesame&#13;
Street" with PBS. Born in&#13;
Puerto Rico and raised in New-&#13;
York. Alvarez serves as a role&#13;
model to Hispanics. He has political&#13;
influence .in America as well as&#13;
other countries. He accompanied&#13;
President Carter to Panama, and&#13;
he has represented the United&#13;
States in Israel.&#13;
Alvarez, as president of National&#13;
Urban Fellows, seeks applicants&#13;
from minority groups with demonstrated&#13;
leadership potential for&#13;
mid-career fellowships in public administration.&#13;
Fellowship assignments&#13;
are made at all levels of government.&#13;
Past Fellows hve worked&#13;
with such urban executives and national&#13;
political leaders as Los Angeles&#13;
Mayor Tom Bradley, Alan&#13;
Beals, Executive Director of the&#13;
National League of Cities and San&#13;
Antonio Mayor Henry Cisneros.&#13;
Alvarez also talked about the recognition&#13;
of his own pain and conflicts&#13;
as well as the problems of&#13;
other Puerto Ricans in America.&#13;
He viewed Puerto Requenios as&#13;
having an identity crisis because of&#13;
their lack of self-esteem. Puero Ricans&#13;
are recent immigrants, but are&#13;
unique because they are already&#13;
American citizens. Puerto Ricans&#13;
have some conflict with Americans&#13;
solely because of this political identity.&#13;
He stated that the emergence of&#13;
Hispanic people has become a force&#13;
in some cities, such as Miami. The&#13;
three most significant factors for&#13;
Hispanics and other Americans to&#13;
recognize are that 90 percent of the&#13;
Hispanic population in the United&#13;
States has been urbanized, Hispanics&#13;
have the highest birth rate of&#13;
any minority group and Hispanics&#13;
already have some visible political&#13;
status. Whatever political potential&#13;
Hispanics have is still underdeveloped&#13;
because they have only just&#13;
started to recognize their self-determination.&#13;
Hispanics are realizing&#13;
that they have the right to define&#13;
their destinies. Alvarez said Hispanics&#13;
need to become aware of the&#13;
potential of leadership within themselves.&#13;
Hispanics can emerge politically&#13;
by becoming highly vocal as&#13;
well as visible in political matters,&#13;
according to Alvarez.&#13;
Alvarez emphasized the unfortunate&#13;
position of many Hispanic&#13;
women, who are often abandoned&#13;
and live in poverty. In order to improve&#13;
this situation, Hispanic men&#13;
need to address the poverty among&#13;
their mothers, their wives and their&#13;
children. Hispanic men need to&#13;
open their eyes to the fact that&#13;
women are the transmitters of their&#13;
"rasa" and should be provided for&#13;
and protected. Above all, Hispanics&#13;
need to work together to transcend&#13;
the poverty level.&#13;
Regents accept research funding&#13;
More than $35,000 in funds supporting&#13;
research and instruction at&#13;
Parkside was accepted Friday.&#13;
April 5 by the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
The Regents accepted $1,000&#13;
from the American Sociological Association&#13;
in Washington D.C. for a&#13;
national conference on the theme&#13;
of "Women at Work" being organized&#13;
by Parkside sociology professor&#13;
Anne Statham.&#13;
The conference, to be held in the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine area next fall, will&#13;
be co-sponsored by the National&#13;
Commission on Working Women&#13;
and will be the first of its kind. It&#13;
will feature people from higher&#13;
education, government, women's&#13;
advocacy groups and labor unions,&#13;
all of whom will discuss their research&#13;
into women in the workplace.&#13;
Statham, whose research specialty&#13;
concerns the changing roles of&#13;
women in modern society, recently&#13;
conducted a study of the differences&#13;
in the management styles of&#13;
men and women. The study has received&#13;
national attention, including&#13;
a front-page description in the Wall&#13;
Street Journal.&#13;
Also accepted by the Regents&#13;
was $28,238 from the New York&#13;
State Department of Commerce for&#13;
a research project by Parkside's&#13;
Center for Survey and Marketing&#13;
Research (CSMR). The CSMR, directed&#13;
by business professor James&#13;
Rovelstad, will set up and implement&#13;
an economic measurement&#13;
system to gauge the impact of tourism&#13;
on the state of New York. The&#13;
study is made possible by a special&#13;
computer program called "TRAITS&#13;
II" developed by Rovelstad.&#13;
The Regents also accepted $3,000&#13;
from the Kenosha Area Chamber of&#13;
Commerce for a retail shopping&#13;
study conducted by the CSMR and&#13;
for research services the CSMR&#13;
provided to the Kenosha Area Economic&#13;
Development.&#13;
In addition, the Regents accepted&#13;
$1,800 from multiple donors&#13;
to defray the costs of producing the&#13;
training manual on the problems of&#13;
mentally retarded criminal offenders.&#13;
The manual, being done by&#13;
UW Extension professor Kim&#13;
Baugrud, is for use by the 50 largest&#13;
police departments in the U.S., including&#13;
those in New York City.&#13;
Chicago, Los Angeles, Miami and&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Also, the Regents accepted $400&#13;
for the DeRose Marketing Scholarship&#13;
Fund for Parkside students&#13;
majoring in marketing. Half the&#13;
money came from Parkside alumnus&#13;
Roger DeRose and half in&#13;
matching funds from his employer,&#13;
S.C. Johnson &amp; S on, Inc.&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
Mondale admits mishandling&#13;
Walter Mondale, talking about his defeat in the 1984 presidential&#13;
election, said he "fundamentally mishandled my case to the American&#13;
people" by failing to emphasize the positive side of his message.&#13;
"They heard opportunity from the other side, they didn't hear it&#13;
from me," Mondale said Sunday on the TV program "Meet the&#13;
Press.&#13;
While Mondale said that he was "essentially correct on the fundamental&#13;
issues," he was no match for Reagan when it came to communicating.&#13;
He said the Democratic Party in the future will have to&#13;
field candidates who in addition to being right on the issues and stating&#13;
them correctly "can master this modern challenge of communication&#13;
in this huge country of ours."&#13;
Republicans support Contras&#13;
A poster urging Americans to support a freedom fighter is being&#13;
used by College Republicans to help raise private funds for Nicaraguan&#13;
rebels, Cox News Service reported.&#13;
The poster, which asks Americans to adopt a Contra and support&#13;
his effort to overthrow the Nicaraguan government for "only 53 cents&#13;
a day," has drawn fire from some Republicans in Congress.&#13;
The text of the poster, which was produced by the College Republican&#13;
National Committee and modeled after the "Save the Children"&#13;
ads, urges Americans to help Charley, a menacing-looking young Nicaraguan,&#13;
in his fight.&#13;
"I have taken up arms against the Soviet Empire and its satellite&#13;
government in Nicaragua and I need your help," Charley declares.&#13;
A White House spokesman, who said people "have the right to give&#13;
money to whoever they want," described the group as a maverick organization&#13;
over which the administration has little control.&#13;
Frequent flyers t axed&#13;
The Internal Revenue Service will hear testimony next week on&#13;
whether "frequent flier" programs should be viewed as fringe benefits&#13;
and taxed accordingly, the New York Times reported.&#13;
IRS spokesman Ellen Murphy said the agency did not suggest taxation&#13;
of the benefits, but it was proposed when the agency solicited&#13;
comments on taxing the use of company cars and planes.&#13;
If bonus coupons are received by an individual for personal flights&#13;
or corporations use bonus coupons for business travel, then the free&#13;
flights are not likely to be taxed. The problem lies with individuals&#13;
who earn the flights on business travel and then use them for personal&#13;
use.&#13;
Spokesmen for American and United Airlines, the nations two&#13;
largest carriers, said the program is the most succesful promotion&#13;
they ever tried. Each airline has about 2 million fliers in the program.&#13;
A spokeswoman for American Airlines, Linda Johnson, said it is&#13;
too early to tell whether taxing the program will have any effect. A&#13;
United spokesman did not comment.&#13;
How to break into&#13;
management with&#13;
no prior experience&#13;
Become an officer in the Army National Guard.&#13;
Take our College Student Officer Program part-time&#13;
while you go to school full-time. Get management&#13;
experience and a good paycheck every month. And&#13;
be a Second Lieutenant by the time you graduate.&#13;
Then you serve just one weekend a&#13;
month and two weeks each summer.&#13;
For more information call: ||&#13;
6 5 4 - 5 1 7 9 Americans at their best.&#13;
4 Thursday, April 11, 1985&#13;
Childhood friendships - Nutt visits campus&#13;
central to development&#13;
by Kathy Hart&#13;
Child Care Center&#13;
James and Cory, both 3 years&#13;
old, are busy building a rocket ship&#13;
together. "Can I play, too?" asks&#13;
Sarah. "No," replies Cory. "James&#13;
and I are friends." James nods in&#13;
agreement. Sarah goes off to find&#13;
another activity.&#13;
Children's friendships are among&#13;
the central ingredients of children's&#13;
lives. These friendships are often&#13;
sources of children's greatest pleasures&#13;
and deepest frustrations.&#13;
Childhood friendships have important&#13;
positive implications for social&#13;
development. Throughout childhood&#13;
and adulthood, friendships&#13;
foster the development of social&#13;
concepts and skills that may initially&#13;
be features of friendships but are&#13;
eventually extended beyond the&#13;
friendship into the larger world of&#13;
interpersonal functioning.&#13;
Peer friendships are very different&#13;
from parent-child or authority&#13;
relationships. Peer friendships are&#13;
not based on authority, but on giveand-&#13;
take between equals. If adults&#13;
do not interfere when young friends&#13;
Reductio ad Absurdum&#13;
disagree over who should get the&#13;
first turn with a toy, the two must&#13;
somehow settle the matter between&#13;
themselves, since neither child has&#13;
authority. If friendship is to be&#13;
maintained, the participants must&#13;
cooperate with the interaction&#13;
"rules" they have mutually constructed.&#13;
Piaget contrasts these&#13;
rules with a parent-child relationship.&#13;
The interaction "rules" are&#13;
not mutually constructed but instead&#13;
are set forth by one member&#13;
(the parent) and conformed to or&#13;
rebelled against by the other (the&#13;
child). According to Piaget, friendships&#13;
based on mutual interaction&#13;
"rules" lead to the development of&#13;
concepts of cooperation and mutual&#13;
respect.&#13;
Friendships allow children to&#13;
"talk back" to each other without&#13;
fear of punishment, to learn when&#13;
to speak out, when to listen and&#13;
when and how to apologize. The&#13;
skills of friendship also include the&#13;
ability to manage conflict successfully.&#13;
In order to maintain friendship&#13;
in the face of disagreement,&#13;
the children learn to express their&#13;
own rights and feelings clearly,&#13;
while remaining sensitive to the&#13;
rights and feelings of others. It is in&#13;
peer friendships that they learn to&#13;
suggest and accept compromises, a&#13;
valuable and necessary skill. The&#13;
development of communication&#13;
skills through interactions with&#13;
one's peers may be a prerequisite&#13;
for the acquisition of some friendship&#13;
skills.&#13;
There are some children who&#13;
need help from adults in mastering&#13;
some particular skills of friendship.&#13;
The friendless child must interact&#13;
with his peers in order to develop&#13;
the self-confidence and skills&#13;
needed for friendship making.&#13;
When helping a friendless child, an&#13;
adult may steer that child to someone&#13;
with whom the adult feels the&#13;
child might feel comfortable. But&#13;
rather than pushing a child into&#13;
social skills he/she is not ready for,&#13;
adults must recognize that some&#13;
children have many friends, some&#13;
children have one or two friends&#13;
and other children spend much&#13;
time alone. Adults must be sensitive&#13;
to events in a child's life that&#13;
may cause problems in making and&#13;
keeping friends.&#13;
Internationally-known artist Jim&#13;
Nutt will visit the Parkside campus&#13;
on Tuesday, April 16, to speak on&#13;
his role as a major figure in the development&#13;
of the Chicago-bred&#13;
style of art known as Imagism.&#13;
Nutt will present a free, public,&#13;
slide-illustrated lecture on the&#13;
evolution of his work at 2:15 p.m.&#13;
in Greenquist Hall Room 101. Later&#13;
he will meet with art students for&#13;
critiques and discussions.&#13;
Nutt's fantasy-oriented paintings&#13;
are characterized by bizarre figuration,&#13;
humorous narratives and&#13;
comic-book stylization. On both a&#13;
formal and thematic level, his work&#13;
can be viewed as highly representative&#13;
of the Chicago Imagist style,&#13;
which emphasizes complex patterning,&#13;
strong color and very personal&#13;
imagery.&#13;
Nutt was born in 1938 in Pittsfield,&#13;
Mass., and moved to Chicago&#13;
to study at the School of the Art Institute.&#13;
While a student there he&#13;
joined with five other young artists&#13;
to form the infamous "Hairy Who"&#13;
group, whose exhibitions were very&#13;
influential in the Chicago art world&#13;
during the 1960's and early 70's.&#13;
Currently, he is affiliated with the&#13;
Phyllis Kind Gallery of Chicago and&#13;
New York.&#13;
Over the years, Nutt has exhibby&#13;
Paul Berge&#13;
TAKE THIS QUARTER&#13;
AND PLAY ^CHATTANOOGA&#13;
CHOO CHOO" ME, OK?&#13;
) f r , Q u p «&#13;
Ranger is now accepting applicants for&#13;
Editor&#13;
for the 1985-86 academic year&#13;
Requirement: UW-Parkside student in good standing, carrying at least 6&#13;
credits per semester and 2.0 cumulative GPA.&#13;
Qualifications: Previous editorial experience preferred, as is knowledge&#13;
of UW-Parkside organization and activities.&#13;
This is a paid position.&#13;
Application deadline is April 19, 1985&#13;
Ranger is looking for applicants for other positions:&#13;
SUB-EDITORS, WRITERS, PHOTOGRAPHERS,&#13;
ADVERTISING SALESPERSONS.&#13;
JOIN RANGER NOW&#13;
UNITARIAN&#13;
UNIVERSALISTS&#13;
have always&#13;
been known to&#13;
question&#13;
hand-me-down&#13;
religious doctrines.&#13;
Have you ever felt disenchanted&#13;
with an orthodox religion&#13;
because it hands you a&#13;
predigested faith? If so, our&#13;
church may be for you. For&#13;
hundreds of years this vital denomination&#13;
has been encouraging&#13;
individuals to question and to&#13;
grow.&#13;
The new name of our congregation&#13;
is:&#13;
BRADFORD COMMUNITY CHURCH&#13;
(Unitarian Untversalist)&#13;
Woman's Club • 6028 8th Ave.&#13;
Rev. Tony Larsen, Minister&#13;
9:30 a.m. Services l Sunday School&#13;
ited his art in many national and international&#13;
group shows at major&#13;
museums, including the Camden&#13;
Arts Centre in London; the Institute&#13;
of Contemporary Art in Boston;&#13;
the Whitney Museum of American&#13;
Art in New York; the National&#13;
Gallery of Canada in Ottawa; the&#13;
Museum de Sao Paolo in Brazil;&#13;
the Smithsonian Institution in&#13;
Washington, D.C.; and the Museum&#13;
of Contemporary Art in Chicago.&#13;
He also has had numerous oneperson&#13;
shows at the Phyllis Kind&#13;
Gallery in both New York and Chicago,&#13;
as well as solo exhibits at the&#13;
Whitney Museum of Art in New&#13;
York, the Walker Art Center in&#13;
Minneapolis and the San Francisco&#13;
Art Institute.&#13;
Nutt's appearance is organized&#13;
by the art discipline and funded by&#13;
the Exxon Corp.&#13;
Avoiding&#13;
cultural&#13;
conflicts A two-session workshop for business&#13;
people on how to avoid crosscultural&#13;
conflicts when dealing with&#13;
people from different cultures will&#13;
be offered by Parkside's Continuing&#13;
Education Office from 6:30 to 9&#13;
p.m. on Mondays, April 29 and May&#13;
6, in Union Room 104-106.&#13;
The workshop, which will show&#13;
how misunderstandings occur in&#13;
cross-cultural situations and how to&#13;
prevent and resolve them, costs&#13;
$25. To register and obtain more information&#13;
call 553-2312. Registration&#13;
deadline is Monday, April 22.&#13;
The workshop will be taught by&#13;
Parkside faculty, all of whom have&#13;
experience teaching and living&#13;
abroad. They are:&#13;
• Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz, a communication&#13;
professor and member&#13;
of Parkside's International Studies&#13;
Program faculty. She has traveled&#13;
through most of Western Europe&#13;
and teaches courses on inter-cultural&#13;
commuication.&#13;
• Lillian Trager, an anthropology&#13;
professor and a member of the&#13;
International Studies Program&#13;
steering committee at Parkside. A&#13;
cultural anthropologist, she has&#13;
been leading workshops and teaching&#13;
courses on cross-cultural interaction&#13;
for six years. She has lived&#13;
and worked in West Africa and&#13;
Southeast Asia.&#13;
• Richard Ammann, who&#13;
teaches part-time at Parkside and is&#13;
a reading specialist in the Racine&#13;
Unifed School District. He uses&#13;
cross-cultural approaches in education.&#13;
As a Peace Corps volunteer in&#13;
the Phillipines he trained teachers&#13;
and new volunteers. He has worked&#13;
with American educators in understanding&#13;
cultural differences and&#13;
has done research on differences in&#13;
interaction patterns among American&#13;
immigrant groups.&#13;
The workshop is for people who&#13;
travel overseas on business and&#13;
those who interact with customers&#13;
from different cultures. It will&#13;
cover increasing cultural selfawareness,&#13;
understanding cross-cultural&#13;
dynamics and improving&#13;
cross-cultural interaction.&#13;
RANGER 5 ~ T hursday, April li^lyJto&#13;
Rape and child abuse: crimes with closet victims&#13;
by Pat Hensiak&#13;
Campus News Editor&#13;
There was a time when rape and&#13;
child abuse were not regarded as&#13;
crimes of violence, but now "rape&#13;
is right under murder. People are&#13;
finally waking up to see what it's&#13;
all about," said Sher Rosko, director&#13;
of St. Catherine's Sexual Abuse&#13;
Treatment Center, Kenosha.&#13;
Rosko said she's happy that&#13;
people are realizing that there is&#13;
nothing more important than keeping&#13;
women and children safe.&#13;
There are two different degrees&#13;
of rape: first degree rape enlists a&#13;
threat of force or violence with a&#13;
weapon, and second degree rape&#13;
enlists a threat of violence without&#13;
a weapon. When a child under age&#13;
16 is sexually abused it is automatically&#13;
considered first degree rape.&#13;
Rosko stressed that there is no&#13;
typical rape victim nor perpetrator.&#13;
"The victim doesn't have to be in a&#13;
short skirt and tight blouse. The&#13;
perpetrator doesn't have to be a&#13;
person frothing from the mouth.&#13;
Anybody could be a victim, anybody&#13;
could be a perpetrator," she&#13;
said.&#13;
The crime of rape isn't one that&#13;
stems from sexual gratification.&#13;
"It's for taking complete control of&#13;
another person," stated Rosko.&#13;
"Some are planned, some aren't."&#13;
Reactions to rape are usually different&#13;
between two victims, said&#13;
Rosko. It has been found, however,&#13;
that most women who have been&#13;
raped feel better when they start to&#13;
understand what other women have&#13;
gone through, she added.&#13;
"Victims are treated differently&#13;
now. It is easier for women to&#13;
come forward now because the judicial&#13;
experience isn't as humiliating&#13;
as in the past. Lawyers aren't as&#13;
interested in chewing up and spitting&#13;
out the victim any longer.&#13;
There was a time when women&#13;
could expect that, but I think people&#13;
realize now that the woman is&#13;
the victim, not the perpetrator,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
Rosko said, "The most important&#13;
way to protect ourselves is to be&#13;
aware of ourselves, be in control&#13;
and to think in terms of prevention."&#13;
According to a brochure distributed&#13;
in the Center, "Self protection&#13;
is more than just physical defense&#13;
skills; it's also knowing how&#13;
to avoid trouble."&#13;
The brochure gives the following&#13;
suggestions for avoiding an attack:&#13;
• On the street peqple should&#13;
walk in well lighted areas on the&#13;
outside of the sidewalk and walk&#13;
against traffic. It is also important&#13;
to be aware of who is around you.&#13;
If you're being followed by a car,&#13;
turn and walk in the opposite direction.&#13;
Avoid areas like shrubbery,&#13;
space between buildings, dark&#13;
areas, etc., and if followed on foot,&#13;
you should cross the street or do&#13;
the unexpected.&#13;
• If you experience car trouble,&#13;
lift the hood and tie a white cloth&#13;
to the antenna. If a stranger stops,&#13;
ask him or her to go for help. Don't&#13;
get into their car. If you're followed,&#13;
don't go home, go to the police&#13;
station or the fire station or an all&#13;
night service station. Always check&#13;
the rear seat before getting into&#13;
your car and always keep your car&#13;
locked.&#13;
• At home, never unlock the&#13;
door before you know who is there&#13;
and if a stranger asks to use your&#13;
phone, take the number from them&#13;
and call for them. If you come&#13;
Free public recital&#13;
A free public recital by Parkside&#13;
senior music major LoRee Rattle,&#13;
harpsichord, will be preented at 3&#13;
p.m. on Sunday, April 14 in Greenquist&#13;
Room 103.&#13;
Rattle, who will be accompanied&#13;
by Carol Kestell, flute, Terri Nadicz,&#13;
violin, and Eric Oakley, cello,&#13;
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Robert Wheeler of Racine.&#13;
Works to be performed include&#13;
"March Minuet" by Henry Purcell,&#13;
"Gavot" by John Blow, "Suite in E&#13;
minor" by Jean-Philippe Rameau,&#13;
"Two Sonatas in F minor" by&#13;
Domenico Scarlatti, "Little Harpsichord&#13;
Book," Op. 155 by Vincent&#13;
Persichetti and "Prelude and&#13;
Fugue in F-sharp minor," by J.S.&#13;
Bach.&#13;
The recital is sponsored by Parkside's&#13;
Fine Arts Division and organized&#13;
by Parkside music professor&#13;
Frances Bedford, whose principal&#13;
instrument is the harpsichord and&#13;
who is the author of the book&#13;
"Twentieth Century Harpsichord&#13;
Music."&#13;
New software store&#13;
Software City, Inc., the nation's&#13;
largest chain of retail software&#13;
stores, opens another location, this&#13;
one in Racine. Free CRT Cleaners&#13;
are available through April 15.&#13;
According to store manager Juanita&#13;
Brehm, the store carries a&#13;
complete inventory of discounted&#13;
software for business, home and&#13;
education. There are over 100 Software&#13;
City stores operating worldwide.&#13;
Located at 4700 Washington Ave.,&#13;
Software City of Racine is open 10&#13;
a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through&#13;
Thursday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday&#13;
and noon to 5 p.m. Saturday.&#13;
Gem show next month&#13;
On the weekend of May 18 and&#13;
), the Kenosha Gem and Mineral&#13;
Dciety will host its 24th annual&#13;
em "and Mineral Show at the&#13;
leasant Prairie Town Hall, 9915-&#13;
)th Ave., Kenosha. The Town Hall&#13;
ill be open Saturday from 10 a.m.&#13;
itil 6 p.m. and on Sunday from&#13;
x&gt;n to 6 p.m. Club members will&#13;
present a variety of exhibits including&#13;
handmade jewelry, mineral&#13;
specimens and lapidary displays.&#13;
Demonstrations will be given each&#13;
day. Jewelry dealers will be showing&#13;
new materials and fittings for&#13;
hobbyists. A silent auction of rocks,&#13;
slabs and minerals will take place&#13;
continuously both days.&#13;
home to find a broken window or&#13;
door open, do not enter the house,&#13;
leave at once and call the police.&#13;
Never reveal that you're home&#13;
alone and be aware of suspicious&#13;
questioning on the phone. Don't&#13;
give information about yourself to a&#13;
stranger.&#13;
Rosko pointed out that the purpose&#13;
of the Center is not to scare&#13;
people. "It may take scaring people&#13;
into reality, but we don't want to&#13;
have to do that. For every rape&#13;
that's reported there are probably&#13;
ten that aren't. In 1984 one out of&#13;
every 10 women would be raped,&#13;
this year that figure jumped to one&#13;
out of every four."&#13;
Rosko explained that the part of&#13;
the reasoning behind the jump in&#13;
the figure is that awareness has&#13;
made people come forward.&#13;
"People want to believe that if&#13;
they choose to simply take care of&#13;
their family, they'll be ok, but then&#13;
something happens and ruins it for&#13;
them. We don't live in isolation, we&#13;
have to interact," said Rosko.&#13;
Rosko gives presentations to&#13;
school children in the Kenosha Unified&#13;
district about molestation.&#13;
"Usually three children out of&#13;
every group of children have something&#13;
they want to say, something&#13;
they want to talk to someone about.&#13;
What we tell the children is that&#13;
they do not have let anyone touch&#13;
them in any of their genital areas.&#13;
A lot of times after we talk to the&#13;
children, they are willing to talk because&#13;
they feel maybe now someone&#13;
will understand."&#13;
For treatment for victims of&#13;
child abuse, Rosko gives children&#13;
anatomically correct dolls to help&#13;
the children explain what has happened&#13;
to them. "It's easier for the&#13;
children when they don't feel like&#13;
they have to say the words."&#13;
Rosko said that the dolls are&#13;
great for therapy for children. "At&#13;
one time we used puppets and the&#13;
monster puppet was always the&#13;
perpetrator. It's had soda poured&#13;
on it, it's been punched on and&#13;
cried into, it's been stomped on,&#13;
and it seems help the kids. Whatever&#13;
will work we do.&#13;
"There really isn't any reason for&#13;
any child to be abused, physically,&#13;
sexually or mentally. They're only&#13;
children, and they deserve a better&#13;
chance than we got. When they're&#13;
abused by the people who they're&#13;
supposed to be able to trust, what&#13;
does that do to them?"&#13;
Rosko said that the youngest&#13;
child sexually abused in this state&#13;
was 11 Vz months old. The child was&#13;
damaged vaginally so badly that she&#13;
required a hysterectomy before she&#13;
was a year old. "Who's going to tell&#13;
that little girl that she'll never have&#13;
children, that she won't go through&#13;
a normal menstrual cycle, like all&#13;
the other children. And who's going&#13;
to tell her that at one time she&#13;
probably would've been able to do&#13;
all those things?"&#13;
Rosko posed questions to people&#13;
who could potentially find themselves&#13;
in a situation directly related&#13;
to assault. "Be a little less trusting.&#13;
How many times do you look in the&#13;
back seat of your car before you get&#13;
in it? If someone were walking behind&#13;
you, would you be too embarrassed&#13;
to run? And how many&#13;
times have you answered the phone&#13;
and basically offered information&#13;
about yourself to a stranger without&#13;
thinking about it? "&#13;
In terms of the campus and those&#13;
who frequently find themselves&#13;
leaving campus alone, Rosko encouraged&#13;
finding a buddy or two or&#13;
three to leave with. "There's a&#13;
great need for more lighting out&#13;
there. And I can't believe there are&#13;
no readily available emergency&#13;
phones. I would encourage people&#13;
to never cross campus alone, and to&#13;
never go to their car alone, especially&#13;
at night. Find two or three&#13;
other people who can walk with&#13;
you out to your car or at least&#13;
watch you until they see you are in&#13;
your car safely.&#13;
"It doesn't take a lot to walk&#13;
someone to their car; maybe two or&#13;
three minutes in between a class.&#13;
When you think about it a little bit,&#13;
I hope you think it's a service&#13;
worth giving a friend."&#13;
ACADEMIC ADVISING&#13;
'85&#13;
FALL SEMESTER&#13;
Continuing matriculant students (students who are seeking&#13;
a degree at UW-Rarkside) should consult their academic&#13;
adviser prior to registration for FALL SEMESTER. A&#13;
certification of advising form, signed by the adviser, is&#13;
required for registration.&#13;
FALL SEMESTER course schedules are now available.&#13;
April 9-22 has been designated as an academic advising&#13;
period, and advisers will make every effort to meet with you.&#13;
Advising will not be available in the registration area.&#13;
CONTACT YOUR ADVISER FOR AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
If you have any questions, contact the Office of the Dean of&#13;
Faculty&#13;
348 Wy l l i e l i b r a r y -Lea r n ing Cen t e r&#13;
553-2368&#13;
NOTE Non-matriculant students (students not seeking a degree at&#13;
LJW-Parkside) are exempt from this requirement.&#13;
6 Thursday, April 11,1985 RANGER&#13;
"She Stoops to Conquer" comedic favorite&#13;
Mm- Pat Hensiak (left) passes chairmanship to Adrian Serrano Serrano takes over Adrian Serrano, 21, was elected&#13;
chairman of the Segregated University&#13;
Fees Allocation Committee on&#13;
Monday. The position was held for&#13;
two years by Pat Hensiak.&#13;
SUFAC is a standing subcommittee&#13;
of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association. The student-run&#13;
committee is in charge of allocating&#13;
all of the segregated fees assessed&#13;
to students through tuition. The&#13;
chairmanship of SUFAC is a paid&#13;
position of $500 per year.&#13;
Serrano, a double major in&#13;
Political Science and International&#13;
Studies, was elected to the Senate&#13;
in the Spring semester 1984 and has&#13;
been a member of SUFAC for one&#13;
year. In addition to his participation&#13;
in student government he is&#13;
also a member of the Track and&#13;
Cross Country teams.&#13;
Serrano decided to vie for the&#13;
position of SUFAC chair because of&#13;
his experience on the committee.&#13;
"I want to keep SUFAC running&#13;
smoothly as I feel it has over the&#13;
last year," he said.&#13;
Serrano said he would like the&#13;
committee to develop guidelines&#13;
for unbudgeted capital equipment&#13;
requests and for unfunded trips. He&#13;
would also like the committee to&#13;
review the guidelines which govern&#13;
SUFAC.&#13;
One serious problem facing&#13;
SUFAC is the reduced amount of&#13;
segregated fees due to the decline&#13;
of enrollment. Serrano said he&#13;
would be against any increases in&#13;
the assessment of fees from students.&#13;
"If enrollment continues to&#13;
decline then there has to be a decline&#13;
in budget requests. I would&#13;
like to see student contributions&#13;
stay the same or lower than they&#13;
are now," said Serrano.&#13;
Helping student clubs become&#13;
more creative in fund raising is one&#13;
of Serrano's priorities. "I'd like to&#13;
help the Student Organizations&#13;
Council, through SUFAC and&#13;
PSGA, increase their strength so&#13;
that they could raise more money&#13;
themselves. This would help them&#13;
have big budgets without increasing&#13;
segregated fees," he said.&#13;
Serrano added, "The position of&#13;
SUFAC chair is a very important&#13;
one and I'm going to give the position&#13;
my best effort. I will be available&#13;
to the student population to aid&#13;
them with hudget matters."&#13;
Two Great Places&#13;
All Rolled Into&#13;
One Package&#13;
INSIDE&#13;
MID-TOWN LOUNGE - ——5&#13;
Snacks, Pizza &amp; Sandwiches&#13;
Monday - All You Can Eat&#13;
Chicken Wings&#13;
For Carry Outs Call 658-8788&#13;
*&#13;
"She Stoops to Conquer," the&#13;
classic 18th century comedy of&#13;
manners by British playwright Oliver&#13;
Goldsmith, is the spring main&#13;
stage production at Parkside, directed&#13;
by Prof. Lee VanDyke.&#13;
Performances, all in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater, are at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Fridays, April 19 and 26 and on&#13;
Saturdays, April 20 a nd 27.&#13;
A special matinee performance&#13;
will be presented at 10 a.m. on&#13;
Thursday, April 25.&#13;
Tickets are $4 for all students,&#13;
senior citizens and Parkside faculty&#13;
and staff, $5 for others. They can&#13;
be purchased at the Fine Arts Division&#13;
Office (Communication Arts&#13;
Room 221), at the Union Information&#13;
Center or at the door. Reservations&#13;
can be made by calling 553-&#13;
2581.&#13;
"She Stoops to Conquer" has&#13;
been described as the most popular&#13;
comedy between the times of&#13;
Shakespeare and George Bernard&#13;
Shaw. The play centers on young&#13;
Marlow and his bride-to-be Kate&#13;
Hardcastle. The two, matched by&#13;
the parents, have never met. Marlow&#13;
and his friend Hastings, on&#13;
their way to the Hardcastles, are directed&#13;
to the house by practical&#13;
joker Tony Lumpkin. They are deceived&#13;
into thinking the house an&#13;
inn and treat Hardcastle as a landlord&#13;
and Kate as a maid. Kate takes&#13;
advantage of the misunderstanding&#13;
to break down Marlow's reserve.&#13;
Mistaken identities, insults and&#13;
amorous trysts abound. As they run&#13;
about, the players unwittingly&#13;
reveal their true characters, but, in&#13;
good comedic tradition, they mend&#13;
their quarrels at the play's conclusion.&#13;
VanDyke describes "She Stoops&#13;
to Conquer" as pure comedy. "The&#13;
play is very entertaining, with elements&#13;
of farce, but it also has an&#13;
Rebecca Julich (left), and Missy Weaver rehearse a scene&#13;
18th century elegance and refinement&#13;
reflected in the elaborate costumes&#13;
and sparkling, witty language.&#13;
"It is one of those rare plays that&#13;
gets revivals constantly — it is filled&#13;
with delight and is very fastmoving,"&#13;
VanDyke said.&#13;
Cast members for the production&#13;
are, from Kenosha, Steve Orth,&#13;
Missy Weaver, Mike McDowal,&#13;
John Oleksey and Ron Larson;&#13;
from Racine, Denise Valente, Bill&#13;
Serpe, Rebecca Julich, Connie Kowalski,&#13;
John Miskulin, Paul Mitchell;&#13;
from Cudahy, Andrew Brhel&#13;
and from Milwaukee, John&#13;
Weatherall. Paula Boehler, Racine,&#13;
is stage manager.&#13;
Dramatic arts professor Judith&#13;
Tucker Snider designed the costumes,&#13;
which for this play represented&#13;
a special challenge. The play&#13;
takes place in the time of England's&#13;
George III (late 18th century),&#13;
when both men and women wore&#13;
powdered wigs and powdery makeup.&#13;
Women wore heavy, restricting&#13;
corsets and a lot of hip-padding, resulting&#13;
in thin waists and full skirts.&#13;
Material for the production's costumes&#13;
includes cotton brocade and&#13;
chintz.&#13;
In order to get that "just right"&#13;
look, Snider even designed&#13;
women's underwear of the day that&#13;
won't be seen by the playgoers.&#13;
The set was designed by dramatic&#13;
arts professor Skelly Warren,&#13;
with lighting by Keith Harris, technical&#13;
manager of the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
"Days of Remembrance" here&#13;
The annual "Days of Remembrance"&#13;
memorializing the victims&#13;
of the Nazi Holocaust will be commemorated&#13;
in three different programs&#13;
being held at Parkside and&#13;
at Beth Hillel Temple in Kenosha.&#13;
The "Days of Remembrance" are&#13;
being observed nationally under the&#13;
auspices of the United State Holocaust&#13;
Memorial Council established&#13;
by federal legislation.&#13;
• Monday, April 15, 1 p.m.,&#13;
Union 104: The powerful documentary&#13;
"To Bear Witness" will be&#13;
FIRST&#13;
NATIONAL BWK&#13;
Of Kenosha&#13;
DOWNTOWN MAIN&#13;
OFFICE&#13;
At TO BANK&#13;
24-HOt R TELLER&#13;
BRISTOL&#13;
PLEASANT PRAIRIE&#13;
SOWERS&#13;
Phone 658-2331&#13;
MEMBER FDIC&#13;
shown. This film depicts a littleknown&#13;
aspect of the Holocaust, the&#13;
liberation of the Nazi concentration&#13;
camps by allied armies in 1945. The&#13;
film includes excerpts from the oral&#13;
histories of l iberators from 14 countries,&#13;
as well as survivors.&#13;
• Wednesday, April 17, 7:30&#13;
p.m., Beth Hillel Temple, 6050 8 th&#13;
Ave., Kenosha: The classic documentary&#13;
"Night and Fog" will be&#13;
shown. It examines the concentration&#13;
camp in its brutal reality.&#13;
• Thursday, April 18,12:30 p.m.,&#13;
Union 104: A short animated film&#13;
"The Hangman" will be shown. It&#13;
is based on the epic poem by&#13;
Maurice Ogden, and is narrated by&#13;
Herschel Bernardi. This film-poem&#13;
raises questions concerning indifference,&#13;
prejudice, social responsibility&#13;
and the nature and dynamics&#13;
of power.&#13;
The film will be followed by a&#13;
discussion about our individual&#13;
social responsibilities to oppose&#13;
such evils as those leading to the&#13;
holocaust. The discussion will be&#13;
facilitated by Parkside Chancellor&#13;
Alan Guskin.&#13;
• Sunday, April 14-Monday,&#13;
April 29: There will be a pictorial&#13;
display about the holocaust in the&#13;
Parkisde Library/Learning Center.&#13;
LI Level, and at the Beth Hillel&#13;
Temple, Kenosha.&#13;
Kenosha Mayor John D. Bilotti&#13;
will be officially proclaiming the&#13;
week of April 14 "Days of Remembrance"&#13;
for victims of the Nazi&#13;
Holocaust, in conjunction with the&#13;
national "Days of Remembrance."&#13;
Chicago tour set&#13;
by Julie Pendleton&#13;
On Thursday, May 9, a bus tour&#13;
arranged by Parkside's Opera Guild&#13;
will leave for Chicago. The bus will&#13;
leave Racine promptly at 8:15 a.m.&#13;
from the Kohl's Department Store&#13;
parking lot. Additional stops will be&#13;
made at Godfather's Restaurant on&#13;
Hwys. 31 and 20 and at Howard&#13;
Johnson's, Hwys. 1-94 and 50 in Kenosha.&#13;
The attractions of the tour include&#13;
the Oriental Institute, the Robie&#13;
House (an historical landmark),&#13;
Rockefeller Memorial Chapel and&#13;
numerous other sites.&#13;
The bus will return to Racine at&#13;
5:30 p.m. The $15 fee includes the&#13;
bus trip, a box lunch, relish tray&#13;
and soda. Enrollment is limited.&#13;
You can sign up in the Continuing&#13;
Education office in Tallent, room&#13;
180. Registration ends April 15.&#13;
i Rocky JyRococo&#13;
4002 52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-4000&#13;
RANGER&#13;
—i&#13;
Not just another pretty face...&#13;
but a pretty great pizza!&#13;
Sure, it would be easy for Rocky&#13;
Rococo to make a living on his charm&#13;
alone.&#13;
But not Rocky.&#13;
He is devoted to baking and selling&#13;
Pan Style Pizza.&#13;
The kind with the thick crust, the&#13;
zesty sauce, two layers of real mozzarella&#13;
cheese, and the freshest vegetables and&#13;
meats.&#13;
Rocky sells his Pan Style Pizza two&#13;
ways: whole pies, perfect for dinner or a&#13;
crowd, and slices, perfect at lunchtime and&#13;
ready when you are.&#13;
Now that Rocky has moved to town,&#13;
be among the first to discover that Rocky&#13;
Rococo is more than just a pretty face.&#13;
8 * Thursday, April 11,1985 RANGER&#13;
B.B. King proves the thrill ain't gone&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
In the words of the great B.B.&#13;
King, "Blues is like a tonic that's&#13;
good for whatever ails you." That&#13;
proved to be true last Sunday night&#13;
as King, along with Bobby "Blue"&#13;
Bland, brought the blues to the&#13;
Riverside Theater in Milwaukee.&#13;
King grew up in the delta region&#13;
of Mississippi. His first real exposure&#13;
to the blues came through listening&#13;
to artists like Blind Lemon&#13;
Jefferson and Django Reinhard.&#13;
"When I was 18 years old," King&#13;
said, "I heard some stuff by T-Bone&#13;
Walker. That did it. I decided right&#13;
there that I wanted to play the&#13;
blues for a living." King then got a&#13;
recording contract with a small record&#13;
company in Nashville, and the&#13;
rest, as they say, is history.&#13;
Interestingly, King first learned&#13;
to play guitar by learning country&#13;
songs. "When I first started to&#13;
learn to read music, the first musical&#13;
notations I saw were on mail&#13;
order sheet music from the Sears&#13;
catalog. The first book I ordered&#13;
had country tunes in it. I learned to&#13;
read music playing 'My Darling&#13;
Clementine' and 'You Are My Sunshine'&#13;
long before I could play&#13;
'Three O'Clock Blues.' "&#13;
King expalined that he thinks&#13;
blues' popularity is due to the fact&#13;
that it is "reality." "This is real.&#13;
ger photo&#13;
B.B. King in concert at the Riverside&#13;
It's not Disneyland at all. There is&#13;
nobody around, young or old,&#13;
black, white, red or yellow, who&#13;
hasn't had problems. The badness&#13;
as well as the happiness, it's always&#13;
the two sides of the coin. Believe&#13;
me, nobody is happy all the time.&#13;
On the other hand, nobody is sad&#13;
all the time.&#13;
"Now let's assume you have a&#13;
problem, and most of us do have a&#13;
problem at one time or another.&#13;
When you can talk about it, even if&#13;
the person you're talking to doesn't&#13;
Puzzler answers on Page 10&#13;
ACROSS&#13;
1 Exhaust&#13;
gradually&#13;
4 Proceed&#13;
6 Perspiration&#13;
11 Be prevalent&#13;
13 Annoyed&#13;
15 Exists&#13;
16 Dessert&#13;
18 Compass point&#13;
19 Teutonic deity&#13;
21 Leak through&#13;
22 Soft drink&#13;
24 Wife of Geraint&#13;
26 Knocks&#13;
28 Lair&#13;
29 Essence&#13;
31 Dregs&#13;
33 Rupees: abbr.&#13;
34 Verve&#13;
36 Temporary&#13;
shelter&#13;
38 For instance&#13;
40 Roman road&#13;
42 Underground&#13;
parts of&#13;
plant&#13;
45 Secret agent&#13;
47 Go by water&#13;
49 Forehead&#13;
50 Cravats&#13;
52 Seized&#13;
54 Greek letter&#13;
55 Half an em&#13;
56 Sham&#13;
59 Symbol for&#13;
chlorine&#13;
61 Medleys&#13;
63 Mitigate&#13;
65 Doctrine&#13;
66 Thoroughfare:&#13;
abbr.&#13;
67 Organ of sight&#13;
DOWN&#13;
1 Capuchin&#13;
monkey&#13;
2 Not present&#13;
3 River in Italy&#13;
4 African&#13;
antelopes&#13;
5 More unusual&#13;
6 Small piece&#13;
7 Pale&#13;
8 Urges on&#13;
9 Symbol for&#13;
silver&#13;
10 Fragile&#13;
12 Above&#13;
14 College officials&#13;
17 Attend to&#13;
20 Ceremony&#13;
23 Hypothetical&#13;
force&#13;
24 Babylonian&#13;
deity&#13;
25 Spanish painter&#13;
27 Prophet&#13;
30 Rodents&#13;
32 Supercilious&#13;
person&#13;
35 Tidiest&#13;
37 Ripped&#13;
38 Showy flower&#13;
39 Kind of piano&#13;
41 Disturbance&#13;
43 Irascible&#13;
44 Opp. of NE&#13;
46 Old pronoun&#13;
48 Clayey earth&#13;
51 Twirled&#13;
53 Difficulty&#13;
57 Female ruff&#13;
58 Execute&#13;
60 Confederate&#13;
general&#13;
62 Brother of Odin&#13;
64 Symbol for&#13;
tellurium&#13;
1 2 3 I&#13;
11&#13;
15&#13;
know what it's about, it helps. Then&#13;
when you can sing about it, laugh&#13;
about it, you'll solve it. There have&#13;
been some of my roughest times —&#13;
times I cried — and I sing and&#13;
think about it, and I start to see a&#13;
silver lining. You can work things&#13;
out then."&#13;
Blues has had some difficulty&#13;
getting radio airplay in the past,&#13;
but King sees some hope in changing&#13;
that. "I think it's starting to&#13;
open up now. My latest tune, 'Into&#13;
the Night,' is being played. It's&#13;
being played across the board. It's&#13;
blues, but it's a different kind of&#13;
blues. It's like 'The Thrill is Gone.'&#13;
When that came out, it was blues,&#13;
but it was a different kind of blues.&#13;
"For some reason, certain artists,&#13;
with certain types of blues,&#13;
have a hard time getting airplay.&#13;
But then, other artists, like Eric&#13;
Clapton or Stevie Ray Vaughn, can&#13;
play anything they want and radio&#13;
stations will play it. They won't do&#13;
that with me or Bobby 'Blue' Bland&#13;
or Little Milton, but they will do it&#13;
with Clapton. If he does it, they 11&#13;
do it. If Stevie Ray Vaughn does it,&#13;
they'll do it. They're playing things&#13;
we used to play. They'll play them&#13;
on the air, but if we do it they&#13;
won't."&#13;
Not only is King's new single&#13;
"Into the Night" getting radio airplay,&#13;
the video for the song has&#13;
been played on MTV. "So you&#13;
know I'm in big cotton now. I never&#13;
really expected them to play my&#13;
things, but I did think that they&#13;
should play people like James&#13;
Brown or Rick James, which they&#13;
didn't used to play. Now they've&#13;
started to do it, and I'm grateful to&#13;
them. Not only are they playing&#13;
people like that, but they're playing&#13;
yours truly. God Almighty, I never&#13;
thought I'd live to see that."&#13;
Recently, King did the soundtrack&#13;
for the film "Into the Night."&#13;
"John Landis, the film's director,&#13;
said he's been a fan of mine since&#13;
he was a teenager. He was checking&#13;
MCA's list of artists to find someone&#13;
to do the soundtrack, and happened&#13;
to run across my name and&#13;
A blues giant&#13;
felt I could be the one to do what&#13;
he was thinking of. He got Ira Newborn,&#13;
and Ira worked with me."&#13;
King said the soundtrack was&#13;
done in a very different way.&#13;
"What they did was, they rolled the&#13;
scenes on the screen and let me sit&#13;
by myself in a room and let me&#13;
play what I felt behind the scenes.&#13;
Then they took a 60-piece orchestra&#13;
and incorporated what I played into&#13;
it."&#13;
When asked how he wants to be&#13;
remembered, King said simply, "I&#13;
just want to be thought of as the&#13;
guy next door, a good neighbor who&#13;
loved and wanted to be loved."&#13;
2001: A Jtoace Odvssev&#13;
PAB presents sci-fi classic&#13;
by Rick Luehr&#13;
Asst. Feature Editor&#13;
This week's PAB film presentation&#13;
will be "2001: A Space Odyssey,"&#13;
the 1968 science fiction film&#13;
classic.&#13;
"2001" was the first documentary/&#13;
narrative film to cross success-,&#13;
fully into the mainstream of filmmaking,&#13;
gaining both critical and&#13;
public acceptance. "2001" transcends&#13;
the normal bounds of science&#13;
fiction films, presenting important&#13;
ideas rather than just telling&#13;
a futuristic story.&#13;
The film is the story of man's&#13;
odyssey through physical and mental&#13;
evolution. It carries man from&#13;
his ape-like ancestors to the creation&#13;
of the "starchild," the next&#13;
step in man's evolution.&#13;
The film stars Keir Dullea and&#13;
Gary Lockwood, and is directed by&#13;
Stanley Kubrick. "2001" features&#13;
wonderful special effects by Douglass&#13;
Trumbull. The soundtrack employs&#13;
classical music by great composers&#13;
including Richard Strauss.&#13;
"2001: A Space Odyssey" is a&#13;
true classic. It works not only as a&#13;
great science fiction film, but also&#13;
is a film of wonderful ideas and&#13;
fabulous vision. "2001" is a film&#13;
that should be seen on a big screen&#13;
to be really appreciated. Don't pass&#13;
up this rare chance to experience&#13;
"2001" as it was intended to be&#13;
seen.&#13;
*&#13;
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KAINASEelV 9 Thursday April *11, 19 85&#13;
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by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
VanZandt's self-titled Warner&#13;
Brothers LP is yet another power&#13;
pop-cum-hard-rock excursion with&#13;
nothing challenging or different.&#13;
The vocals are harmonized tightly,&#13;
but the lyrics aren't saying much&#13;
of anything. The hooks and riffs are&#13;
very standard, and the beat of each&#13;
song is just too well calculated.&#13;
While they eschew electronic effects,&#13;
VanZandt shows almost no&#13;
variety in their singing, playing or&#13;
song writing. Every song on the&#13;
ten-cut LP bears such strong similarities&#13;
to the others that it would&#13;
take repeated listenings to be able&#13;
to differentiate the tracks from one&#13;
another.&#13;
Virtually any group that puts out&#13;
an album (especially for a major&#13;
label) deserves some sort of respect&#13;
for achieving this goal, assuming&#13;
that they have clawed and bit their&#13;
way through high school dances,&#13;
bar and club appearances, bar mitzvahs,&#13;
etc. VanZandt, however, are&#13;
such unimpressive stylists that it's&#13;
difficult to extend to them even the&#13;
most fleeting acknowledgement.&#13;
Unless they spice up their repertoire&#13;
with a bit of variety, it looks&#13;
as though VanZandt will slip right&#13;
past the record-buying public very&#13;
quietly without anyone noticing.&#13;
This week in rock&#13;
This week in rock and roll&#13;
history...&#13;
April 11, 1981-Eddie Van Halen&#13;
marries Valerie Bertinelli in Los&#13;
Angeles.&#13;
April 12, 1966 -Jan Berry of Jan&#13;
and Dean barely survives the crash&#13;
of his white Corvette. He is paralyzed&#13;
for more than a year and never&#13;
fully regains his original mental&#13;
state.&#13;
April 13,1979 -David Leo Roth&#13;
collapses on stage due to exhaustion&#13;
and is told by doctors to slow&#13;
down.&#13;
April 15, 1976 -Guitarist Ron&#13;
Wood, formerly of Faces, makes&#13;
his first appearance with the Rolling&#13;
Stones on the LP "Black and&#13;
Blue," a record that causes controversy&#13;
because of its sexist overtones&#13;
and a billboard depicting violence&#13;
against women.&#13;
April 17, 1960 -Eddie Cochran is&#13;
killed and Gene Vincent seriously&#13;
injured when Cochran's car blows a&#13;
tire and crashes at Chippenham,&#13;
England. The two fifties rock rebels&#13;
were in the midst of a major&#13;
British tour.&#13;
April 17, 1970-Paul McCartney's&#13;
first solo LP, "McCartney," is released.&#13;
He plays all the instruments&#13;
on the record himself and no one&#13;
should doubt it.&#13;
April 17, 1974 -Sha Na Na's Vinne&#13;
Taylor is found dead of a drug overdose.&#13;
Cancer prevention&#13;
Cancer patients have questions&#13;
about how the disease will affect&#13;
their bodies, their lives and their&#13;
families. Their families share the&#13;
same concerns.&#13;
St. Luke's Hospital, in cooperation&#13;
with the American Cancer Society,&#13;
is again offering a new series&#13;
of "I Can Cope" classes. These six&#13;
free classes help cancer patients&#13;
and their families find answers to&#13;
their questions and concerns.&#13;
Classes meet on Wednesdays,&#13;
April 10, 17, 24, May 1, 8 and 15&#13;
from 6 to 8 p.m.&#13;
The course is conducted by R.N.&#13;
Luan Wells, St. Luke's community&#13;
services coordinator, and R.N. Pat&#13;
Holly, St. Luke's patient education&#13;
coordinator.&#13;
To register, call 636-2811 weekdays&#13;
from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.&#13;
Life be neath the sea&#13;
"Life Beneath the Sea" is the&#13;
name of a two-session seminar to&#13;
be offered by Parkside's Continuing&#13;
Education Office from 9:30 to 11:30&#13;
a.m. on Saturdays April 13 and 20.&#13;
Cost of the seminar is $10. To&#13;
register, call 553-2312.&#13;
Covered will be exotic fish, invertebrates,&#13;
colorful corals and&#13;
sponges. Underwater photographs&#13;
show how these creatures survive&#13;
through unusual eating habits,&#13;
adaptation techniques and relationships&#13;
between species.&#13;
The seminar will include slides&#13;
taken in the waters surrounding Jamaica,&#13;
Hawaii, the Florida Keys,&#13;
West Palm Beach and the Florida&#13;
Springs, among other places.&#13;
Instructor will be Nancy Boucha&#13;
of Chicago, a member of the Professional&#13;
Association of Diving Instructors&#13;
and an underwater photography&#13;
instructor.&#13;
Hello Baby class set&#13;
Three-to 12-year-old children&#13;
whose mothers are expecting a&#13;
baby may now be enrolled in St.&#13;
Luke's Hello Baby class.&#13;
Held each month on the second&#13;
Saturday, classes prepare siblings&#13;
for the expected newborn. The classes&#13;
are sponsored by St. Luke's&#13;
Birth Center and Childbirth and&#13;
Parent Education Services&#13;
(CAPES). Classes are limited to 15,&#13;
and a parent is required to accompany&#13;
children in the three-to fiveyear-&#13;
old group.&#13;
The next class is Saturday, April&#13;
13 from 10 to 11:30 a.m. in the Hospital&#13;
Cafeteria annex. Call 636-2748&#13;
weekdays from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. to&#13;
register. Parking is available across&#13;
the street from the main hospital&#13;
entrance.&#13;
Kim* David * •&#13;
Pretentious Bible epic&#13;
by Jim Neibaur&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
For every great Biblical epic&#13;
("Ben Hur," "The Robe," "The&#13;
Ten Commandments," et al) there's&#13;
at least one turkey ("King of&#13;
Kings," "The Greatest Story Ever&#13;
Told," "The Bible" and so on).&#13;
"King David," unfortunately, falls&#13;
into the latter category.&#13;
The film's good points are standard&#13;
ones: the sets are nice, the costumes&#13;
and hairstyles are appropriate&#13;
for how modern day folks conceive&#13;
this era, there are a few exciting&#13;
battle scenes and the film&#13;
remains faithful to its original source.&#13;
The problems include dialogue:&#13;
every line sounds as though it is a&#13;
major historical statement, calling&#13;
attention to even the most marginal&#13;
statements. Another problem is the&#13;
film's erratic pacing, as the story of&#13;
David is told from beginning to&#13;
end, snipping out ten or twenty&#13;
year sections, thus hampering continuity.&#13;
Richard Gere looks great in long&#13;
hair, but just isn't that great an&#13;
actor. While his portrayal of the&#13;
title character may so far be his&#13;
best performance, he still doesn't&#13;
merit any better adjective than mediocre&#13;
when referring to his acting&#13;
abilities. At times he is quite believable,&#13;
while at other times he's&#13;
about as convincing as Diana Ross&#13;
was in the "The Wiz."&#13;
"King David" is as pretentious a&#13;
Bible picture as one can fear. God&#13;
isn't dead, but Cecil B. DeMille certainly&#13;
is.&#13;
Starts Friday, April 12 at Selected Theatres.&#13;
A JAMES FR/WLEY FILM "FRATERNITY VACAT ION" stam^ STEPHEN GEOFFREYS&#13;
SHEREE J. WILSON CAMERON DYE TIM ROBB1NS LEIGH McCLOSKEY MATT McCOY&#13;
JOHN VERNON Mu»c by BRAD F1EDEL by LINDSAY HARRISON&#13;
j WHTwrctrp •3&gt;&gt; Produced by ROBERT C. PETERS {\|£W WORLD PICTURES&#13;
I "^® Directed by JAMES FRAWLEY&#13;
Meet Wendell Tvedt.&#13;
Would you believe he's about&#13;
to become America's #1 hunk?&#13;
What happens to him,&#13;
could happen to you!&#13;
fi - Thnrcifeiv. -Al»ra 11. 1985 '&#13;
10 Thursday, April 11, 1985 mm&#13;
Extension courses reaching out to offer more&#13;
CPA&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Extension&#13;
has announced a local&#13;
workshop series of interest to attorneys&#13;
and CPAs who work with Racine/&#13;
Kenosha area business co ncerns.&#13;
How to sell a business avoiding&#13;
sales tax, how to contest a sales and&#13;
use audit tax, taxable sales and uses&#13;
including the rental of property,&#13;
and exemptions (especially for the&#13;
manufacturer and contractor) are&#13;
among topics to be covered.&#13;
Originating from sites in Milwaukee&#13;
and Madison, the sessions&#13;
will be carried throughout the state&#13;
over the Educational Teleconference&#13;
Network (ETN), and attorneys&#13;
will serve as i nstructors. Kenosha&#13;
County Agent Kim Baugrud said&#13;
the local sessions will be in Tallent&#13;
Hall, room 289, from 12-1:20 p .m.&#13;
on May 14, 16, 21 and 23.&#13;
The program carries four continuing&#13;
legal education credits. A&#13;
$50 fee covers all four sessions.&#13;
Registration materials are available&#13;
at the Kenosha County Extension&#13;
Office or by phoning (608) 2 62-3833.&#13;
TV classes&#13;
In May, Racine and Kenosha&#13;
County residents can choose from a&#13;
variety of University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Extension courses to £e offered&#13;
over the Educational Teleconference&#13;
Network (ETN) and the Statewide&#13;
Extension Education Network&#13;
(SEEN).&#13;
The two networks link the entire&#13;
state, with over 200 site s providing&#13;
all residents quality educational&#13;
programs and courses without having&#13;
to travel great distances, said&#13;
coordinator Kim Baugrud. ETN&#13;
classes in Kenosha County are he ld&#13;
at Parkside in Tallent Hall, room&#13;
289.&#13;
The May ETN classes and s tarting&#13;
dates are:&#13;
• Ag/Agribusiness: Dairy Goat&#13;
Seminar, May 9.&#13;
• Communication Skills: Managing&#13;
Conflicts Effectively, May 7.&#13;
• Local Governmental Affairs:&#13;
Role of the Police and Fire Commission,&#13;
May 6.&#13;
• Real Estate: Questions to Ask&#13;
When Purchasing Raw Land or&#13;
Rural Property, May 6.&#13;
In the Kenosha area. SEEN classes&#13;
are held Tallent Hall, room 281.&#13;
IVCF&#13;
Club Events&#13;
Inter -Varsity Christian Fellowship&#13;
presents "Ch anged because of&#13;
Christ." Join in on Wednesday,&#13;
April 17 at 1 p.m. in Moln. 107 to&#13;
hear about the "Incomparable&#13;
Christ." All students and faculty&#13;
are encouraged to come.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
There will be a meeting Monday,&#13;
April 15 at 1 p.m. in Moln. 109. Topics&#13;
to be discussed include initiation&#13;
and the Loop 500. New members&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Bullpen&#13;
State Line &amp; Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's Hottest&#13;
New Night Club • Totally Remodeled&#13;
TWO FULL FLOORS OF ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
DOWNSTAIRS&#13;
A Milwaukee&#13;
Transit Bus for&#13;
a D.J. Booth!&#13;
with&#13;
David P. McGrath as&#13;
D.J.&#13;
UPSTAIRS&#13;
• This Weekend:&#13;
"Dance Fever"&#13;
audition win a trip&#13;
to the Papagaio by&#13;
Limo to audition in&#13;
front of the&#13;
Hollywood&#13;
producer.&#13;
For more information,&#13;
call 694-0555.&#13;
A-WAM-BAM&#13;
Singing Telegram&#13;
Ladies' Night: FREE DRINKS 7-10&#13;
Win $50.00 in our "Throwback'' Dance&#13;
Contest. Lady with the most dance ticket at&#13;
midnight wins.&#13;
Homemade Food • Open Every Day at 11:00&#13;
The May SEEN classes and starting&#13;
dates are :&#13;
• Environmental Resources:&#13;
Ultra Light Aircraft-Weather Application,&#13;
May 14.&#13;
• Wisconsin Water Works Operators,&#13;
May 22.&#13;
For more information, contact&#13;
Kim Baugrud at the Kenosha County&#13;
Extension Office at Parkside, or&#13;
call 553-2312.&#13;
NCARB refresher course&#13;
Architects can prepare for the&#13;
National Council of Architectural&#13;
Registration Board (NCARB)&#13;
licensing examination through a&#13;
refresher course offered by the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Extension beginning&#13;
this month.&#13;
The NCARB refresher course&#13;
will be offered in the Racine/Kenosha&#13;
area over the Statewide Extension&#13;
Education Network&#13;
(SEEN) at Parkside's Tallent Hall,&#13;
said coordinator Kim Baugrud.&#13;
The course will cover history,&#13;
theory, architectural programming,&#13;
project design to construction and&#13;
structural systems, environmental&#13;
control systems and professional&#13;
administration, said Donald&#13;
Schramm, UW-Extension Engineering&#13;
and Applied Science.&#13;
Schramm, who teaches the c ourse,&#13;
said this will be helpful for anyone&#13;
taking the three-day exam in&#13;
Wisconsin scheduled for June 17-20.&#13;
The course will be offered from&#13;
5-7 p .m. for six Thursdays beginning&#13;
April 18. The fee is $85. an d&#13;
participants will earn 2.4 Contin uing&#13;
Education Credits (CEU).&#13;
For more information, call Kim&#13;
Baugrud at the Kenosha County&#13;
Extension Office, phone 553-2312,&#13;
or Schramm or Janice Friis in Madison&#13;
at (608) 26 2-2026.&#13;
Buying land&#13;
The process of buying land or&#13;
rural property is the topic of a University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Extension&#13;
class fo r Racine/Kenosha area residents&#13;
on Mondays, May 6,13 and 20&#13;
from 6-9:20 p.m. in the Continuing&#13;
Education Office in Tallent Hall on&#13;
the Parkside Campus.&#13;
Parkside's Kim Baugrud said the&#13;
class is designed fo r consumers or&#13;
real estate professionals who may&#13;
want to buy and sell land for home&#13;
building, recreation or resale investment.&#13;
The program will be held in&#13;
meeting rooms in every county connected&#13;
by the Extension's Educational&#13;
Teleconference Network&#13;
(ETN). The class w ill present several&#13;
checklists for consumers and&#13;
real estate people to help them understand&#13;
the land buying process&#13;
and avoid problems. It will cover&#13;
the legal and professional responsibilities&#13;
of buyers, sellers and brokers.&#13;
New regulations affecting land&#13;
purchases and an update on financing&#13;
techniques will be presented.&#13;
Brokers can earn 10 hours of required&#13;
relieensing credit. The course&#13;
fee is $65.&#13;
The course's title is "Questions&#13;
to Ask When Purchasing Raw Land&#13;
or Rural Property." For details, or&#13;
to enroll, contact Kim Baugrud at&#13;
Parkside, 553-2312.&#13;
A week at the Park&#13;
Writing a history of poetry&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Thursday, April 11&#13;
LECTURE: "Dreams and Interpretations,"&#13;
by Dr. Daniel Condron&#13;
at 12 noon in Union 104-106. The&#13;
event is free and open to the public.&#13;
Sponsored by P AB.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Stress Management"&#13;
by Jane Frederick at 2 p.m.&#13;
in Union 207 and at 5 p.m. in Moln&#13;
D128. The workshop is open to the&#13;
public at no charge. Sponsored by&#13;
Parkside Health Office.&#13;
LECTURE: "Giving Each His&#13;
Due: Justice and Punishment," by&#13;
Visiting Professor Aaron Snyder o f&#13;
Puzzler&#13;
Answers&#13;
ANDERSON TRANSCRIPTION&#13;
&amp; TYPING&#13;
Letters - Resumes&#13;
Term Papers&#13;
Student Rates&#13;
PHONE 637-3600&#13;
Jacqueline Anderson&#13;
1441 Park Avenue&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
Northwestern University, at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in CA 233. The event is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
MOVIE: "2001: A Space Odyssey"&#13;
will be shown at 3:30 p. m. in the&#13;
Union Cinema. The movie is rated&#13;
G and runs 143 minutes. Admission&#13;
at the door is $1 for a Parkside student&#13;
and $1 for a guest. Sponsored&#13;
by PAB.&#13;
MOVIE: "The Magic Flute" 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, April 12&#13;
COLLOQUIUM: On Writing a History&#13;
of American Poetry" by Prof.&#13;
Alan Shucard at 1 p.m. in CA 233.&#13;
The talk is open to the public at no&#13;
charge.&#13;
MOVIE: "2001: A Space Odyssey"&#13;
will be repeated at 1:30 p.m. and at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema.&#13;
Saturday, April 13&#13;
SYMPOSIUM: "Singles" starts at&#13;
8:30 a.m. with breakfast in the&#13;
Union Dining Room. Call ext. 2312&#13;
for details. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
COURSE: "Life Beneath the Sea"&#13;
starts at 9:30 a.m. in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
WINE TASTING: starts at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in Main Place. Call ext. 2414&#13;
for information. Sponsored b y the&#13;
Alumni Office.&#13;
MOVIE: "The Magic Flute" will&#13;
be repeated at 8 p .m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. All seats are sold.&#13;
Sunday, April 14&#13;
MOVIE: "The Magic Flute" will&#13;
be repeated at 2 p.m. in the Union&#13;
Cinema. Tickets for the Sunday&#13;
Foreign Film Series will be available&#13;
at the door.&#13;
RECITAL: by LoRee Rattle starts&#13;
at 3 p.m. in Greenquist 103. The&#13;
event is free and open to the public.&#13;
MOVIE: "2001: A Space Odyssey"&#13;
will be repeated at 7:30 p.m . in the&#13;
Union Cinema.&#13;
Monday, April 15&#13;
ROUND TABLE: "Ethics in International&#13;
Politics" by Daniel Keck.&#13;
Dean of Carthage College, at 12:15&#13;
p.m. in Union 104-106. The event i s&#13;
free and open t o the public.&#13;
FILM: "Holocaust" with comments&#13;
by Rabbi Marc Gruber, at 1&#13;
p.m.. in Union 104. The event is fre e&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
COURSE: :"Avoiding Problems in&#13;
Communications" starts at 7 p.m.&#13;
in Tallent Hall. Call ext. 2312 fo r&#13;
more details. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Dreams" starts at 7&#13;
p.m. in Tallent Hall. Sponsored by&#13;
UW-Extension.&#13;
Tuesday, April 16&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Sexual Assault" at&#13;
12 noon in Union 104-106, with comments&#13;
by Marlene Johnson. The&#13;
workshop is free, and open to the&#13;
public. Sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Security Department.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Prepare for Your&#13;
Interview" at 2 p.m. in Moln. 112.&#13;
Wednesday, April 17&#13;
WORKSHOP:: "Discipline and&#13;
Working with Marginally Effective&#13;
Employees" starts at 8:30 a.m. in&#13;
Union 106. Call ext. 2047 for details.&#13;
SEMINAR: "Non-traditional Sources&#13;
of Health Care" by John Burkhardt&#13;
at 11:50 a. m. in Union 104.&#13;
Call ext. 2312 for de tails. Sponsored&#13;
by UW-Extension.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Management of&#13;
Personal Selling Effort" by William&#13;
Jankovich at 7 p.m. in Moln. 107.&#13;
Call ext. 2047 for more information.&#13;
WORKSHOP: "Cash Flow, Structure&#13;
and Financing in Small Business"&#13;
by Scott Scampini, CPA, at 7&#13;
p.m. in Union 104. Sponsored by&#13;
the Small Business Development&#13;
Center.&#13;
COURSE: "Investments: The Basics"&#13;
starts at 7 p.m. in Tallent&#13;
Hall. Sponsored by UW-Extension.&#13;
HANGER 11 Thursday, April 11, 1985&#13;
Johnson has eggs&#13;
in the basket&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
Two weeks ago the Racine Journal&#13;
Times reported that Parkside's&#13;
head basketball coach Rees Johnson&#13;
was a candidate for the head&#13;
coaching job at Green Bay, which&#13;
was left vacant when Dick Lein resigned.&#13;
The job, however, went to&#13;
Stevens Point head coach Dick&#13;
Bennett.&#13;
"The people in Green Bay called&#13;
to find out if I was interested in the&#13;
job, and they wondered if I was&#13;
going to apply. I wasn't thinking&#13;
• about it, but they got me interested,"&#13;
said Johnson. However, he&#13;
pulled out of the running on March&#13;
25, before the Journal Times ran&#13;
the story.&#13;
Green Bay's athletic department&#13;
or administration did not approach&#13;
Johnson, but Green Bay's daily&#13;
newspaper did. "The Press-Gazette&#13;
called me at least seven or eight&#13;
times within a month."&#13;
Johnson decided not to run because&#13;
he knew Dick Bennett was&#13;
the main candidate. "I talked to&#13;
some people. They said Bennett&#13;
wanted the job, it was his. I also&#13;
talked to Dick's best friend, and he&#13;
said Dick was going to take the job,&#13;
so I decided to get out of it." Johnson&#13;
also felt he still had work to do&#13;
here.&#13;
"The program here is close. We&#13;
still want to improve on it. We'd&#13;
like all our players to be 'A' students,&#13;
if possible, but that's not&#13;
realistic. Even if you take the average&#13;
student in college, that's not&#13;
the way it is.&#13;
"We put a pretty good load on&#13;
our athletes, especially our basketball&#13;
players. We realize they're not&#13;
all going to be 'A' students, but we&#13;
shoot for a high academic level.&#13;
"The team's grade point average&#13;
was 2.4 two semesters ago and 2.3&#13;
last semester. The GPA is improved&#13;
from when I got here, and the&#13;
GPA requirements for athletes&#13;
have become more strict."&#13;
Johnson was hired here to&#13;
change the direction of the program.&#13;
Before that, he spent four&#13;
years at Augsburg College in Minnesota.&#13;
Though Parkside's program&#13;
is going well, it's not perfect for&#13;
Johnson. "There are some things&#13;
that make me wonder about looking&#13;
sometimes. We don't have paid&#13;
assistant coaches. They don't get a&#13;
penny for it. They're not on campus,&#13;
so I'm really here alone."&#13;
According to Johnson, it takes a&#13;
minimum of three years to build a&#13;
program, but agrees it takes luck to&#13;
do it in three years. "Even if you&#13;
win right away, it doesn't necessarily&#13;
mean the program is going in&#13;
the direction you want. It takes&#13;
time to initiate your philosophies,&#13;
ideas and ideals to the players and&#13;
the campus. A lot of instructors,&#13;
administrators and students still&#13;
feel it's the same program as before."&#13;
Johnson added, "It usually&#13;
takes five years before a program is&#13;
established."&#13;
How did the players react to the&#13;
news of Johnson's application? "I&#13;
don't think most of them knew."&#13;
Athletic Director Wayne Dannehl&#13;
"The people in Green&#13;
Bay called to find out&#13;
if I was interested in&#13;
the job, and they&#13;
wanted to know if I&#13;
was going to apply. I&#13;
wasn't thinking about&#13;
it, but they got me interested.&#13;
"&#13;
—Rees Johnson&#13;
knew, however, and asked Johnson&#13;
if he had applied.&#13;
"I don't think he was real pleased.&#13;
I think he was concerned that I&#13;
might be involved enough to leave.&#13;
He knows we've made a lot of progress.&#13;
"Now that the Stevens Point job&#13;
is open, a lot of rumors have it that&#13;
I should be interested in that job,&#13;
but I'm not."&#13;
If an opportunity should arise,&#13;
Johnson said he'd be "foolish not&#13;
to consider it," but would be careful&#13;
in his choice. "It's not like when&#13;
I was 28. Then, I would have gone&#13;
to Alaska to coach. Now, the opportunity&#13;
has to be good not only as far&#13;
as money, but as far as the program&#13;
and where I want to live.&#13;
"Right now, I'm just not going to&#13;
move. I've established myself here.&#13;
I'm not going to jump at any opportunity.&#13;
It has to be the right one.&#13;
I'm much more selective."&#13;
30% OFF&#13;
Blanched&#13;
n Oil.&#13;
B.K.-F.A. and R.M. say society isn't ready. B P.&#13;
B.K.-MUFFY says no Dubbage when the Queen's&#13;
ILR- Thank you.&#13;
TART: WOULD you at your convenience?&#13;
HAS THE Black Room finally been found??!!&#13;
TO T.T.- Many tanks.&#13;
JY THE bag of d oor knobs is just a brown puckered&#13;
anus!!! Tis true and we hate it!!!-Dave.&#13;
NASSER-YOU'RE the best looking guy in school.&#13;
Love you.&#13;
MISSY GOT a Nerf.&#13;
NASSER-I would like to go out with you in a&#13;
date&#13;
NASSER:-HAVEN'T seen you lately. I've missed&#13;
you.&#13;
Reg. s5.00 per session&#13;
8 sessions for 5oo.uu&#13;
15 sessions for $60.0u&#13;
20 sessions for $75.00&#13;
609 Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
Downtown Rocine wBmtmm&#13;
633-3022&#13;
TRY US FREE FOR 15 MINUTES&#13;
Peanuts&#13;
Week of April 15&#13;
Located in the Union Bazaar&#13;
Directly Across from the Info. Ctr.&#13;
Services Offered&#13;
TYPING: FAST and professional service. Student&#13;
rates. Call Debbie at 681-3522.&#13;
EDITING: ANY course paper. Help yourself to&#13;
better grades. Recent English major and experienced&#13;
writer will edit your papers for grammar,&#13;
punctuation, structure, coherence and style. Will&#13;
correspond through mail or pick up and deliver.&#13;
Call Margaret at 639-2047.&#13;
Help Wanted&#13;
NOW HIRING summer help — bartenders, bar&#13;
cart operators, banquet waitresses. Females preferred.&#13;
Apply at Maple Crest Country Club, 859-&#13;
2887. Ask tor Mickey.&#13;
WANTED: AMBITIOUS person, full-or parttime&#13;
to represent our health product line in the&#13;
Kenosha area. Free training, excellent earnings.&#13;
Write K.C. Associates, PO Box 100, LeCenter,&#13;
MN 56057.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
1983 FORD Escort. Power brakes and steering,&#13;
A/C. $4500. 681-3131.&#13;
Personals „ "ORG-COMM GR#4" presents a Quality Circle&#13;
Workshop, Gmqst 103, 4/17/85. 1 p.m.&#13;
—Classified—&#13;
THE CHURCH of Fun isn't dead, just in financial&#13;
remission.&#13;
CLOSING THE Union on Good Friday was negative&#13;
fun and interfered with my beliefs. Son Fun.&#13;
CLOSING THE Union Grill in the afternoon is&#13;
negative fun.&#13;
EATING COFFEE Shoppe "food" is also negative&#13;
fun.&#13;
WRITING CLASSIFIEDS on Monday morning is&#13;
positive fun.&#13;
TYPING CLASSIFIEDS on Tuesday morning is&#13;
not.&#13;
GEOLOGY CLUB will be there (in high spirits)&#13;
for Vollyoop.&#13;
THE END will be extremely high levels of positive&#13;
fun.&#13;
SEAN CRANLEY has a new name-Gilligan. Pass&#13;
Get Your&#13;
Tan before&#13;
Summer Starts&#13;
College Student Special&#13;
10 sessions for $40.00&#13;
(Bring your I.D.)&#13;
We have a full&#13;
selection of&#13;
Candy &amp; Nuts&#13;
Above is the women's track team: first&#13;
row, left to right, Julie Wunrow, Colleen&#13;
Wismer, Karen Savage, Jill Fobair,&#13;
Michelle Marter. Second row: Jacqueline&#13;
Cotton, Merri Valukas, Laurie Jacusz,&#13;
Karen Jacobsen, Carol Romano, Sarah&#13;
Hiett and Coach Mike DeWitt.&#13;
At right, Laurie Jacusz in the midst of a&#13;
high jump in Saturday's home meet. Jacusz&#13;
took first in this event.&#13;
Story on page 12.&#13;
12 Thursday, April 11, 1985 RANGER&#13;
Sports&#13;
Women's track&#13;
by Robb Luehr&#13;
Parkside held its first home&#13;
women's track meet in three years&#13;
last Saturday, competing in a dual&#13;
meet against Augustana.&#13;
The Rangers ran well, but lack of&#13;
entries in the hurdle events and a&#13;
few field events allowed Augustana&#13;
to win the meet 78-57. "We beat&#13;
them on the track and stayed even&#13;
in the field events, but the hurdles&#13;
were our downfall," said coach&#13;
Mike DeWitt. "We did a respectable&#13;
job, though."&#13;
With the exception of the hurdles,&#13;
the Parkside women took first&#13;
places in all the running events.&#13;
Jacqueline Cotton set a new&#13;
school record winning the 100-&#13;
meter dash with a time of 12.2 seconds,&#13;
breaking the old record by&#13;
one-tenth of a second. Cotton also&#13;
won the 200 in 26.6, teamed up with&#13;
Karen Savage, Jill Fobair and&#13;
Merri Valukas to win the 400 meter&#13;
relay and was third in the shot-put&#13;
with a distance of 28-11.&#13;
Valukas was second in the 400-&#13;
meter dash with a time of 1:3.5 and&#13;
took second in the shot with a distance&#13;
of 29-7. Savage was fourth in&#13;
the 400 i n 1:04.5.&#13;
In the 800 meters, Karen Jacobsen&#13;
finished first in 2:29.3, and Fobair&#13;
was second in 2:30.7.&#13;
Colleen Wismer won the 1500&#13;
meters with a time of 5:10.8, and&#13;
Sarah Hiett won the 3000 meters in&#13;
10:53.&#13;
Laurie Jacusz was the busiest&#13;
Ranger at the meet, competing in&#13;
six events. She won the high jump&#13;
with a height of 4-10, was second in&#13;
the discus with 82-9, third in the&#13;
long jump with 12-10, fourth in the&#13;
shot with 26-2, f ourth in the javelin&#13;
with 75-5 and sixth in the 100-meter&#13;
hurdles with a time of :21.1.&#13;
Julie Ann McReynolds took first&#13;
in the 5000 meters with a time of&#13;
19:06.3, while Wismer was third&#13;
with 19:43. McReynolds was also&#13;
third in the javelin with 76-8, and&#13;
Wismer was third in the discus with&#13;
64-6.&#13;
The 1600-meter relay team&#13;
(Hiett, Jacobsen, Savage and Valukas)&#13;
was second with a time of 4:&#13;
18.1.&#13;
In the 10,000-meter walk (which&#13;
was not an official part of the&#13;
meet), Carol Romano walked the&#13;
distance in 56:17, which may have&#13;
qualified her for the TAC outdoor&#13;
national meet.&#13;
The women's team will compete&#13;
this Friday at Northwestern University.&#13;
Twenty teams are expected&#13;
to participate. This Saturday, the&#13;
team goes to Hillsdale, Michigan&#13;
for a meet against mainly NCAA&#13;
Division II and NAIA teams.&#13;
Women's softball&#13;
Parkside's softball team had its share of April&#13;
Fools April 1 as it split a doubleheader with DePaul&#13;
University. Parkside lost the first game 3-0, and won&#13;
the second 3-2.&#13;
Michele Martino pitched the first game for Parkside&#13;
and gave up ten hits, two of them doubles.&#13;
The Rangers, however, had only two hits, one of&#13;
which was a triple by Judy McKinney, a junior college&#13;
transfer.&#13;
DePaul earned its three runs in the first inning.&#13;
Parkside regained its composure to keep the score 3-&#13;
0, but not enough to win.&#13;
The next game proved more rewarding for the&#13;
Rangers. Janet Koenig pitched the second game and&#13;
gave up only six hits, one of them a double.&#13;
DePaul gave up five hits, two of them doubles by&#13;
Parkside's Janet Broeren and Koenig.&#13;
The game saver for the Rangers was junior outfielder&#13;
Jackie Rittmer. The game was in the seventh inning,&#13;
two outs, and the score 3-2. Runners were on&#13;
second and third base. The batter hit to Rittmer in&#13;
centerfield. She fielded the ball on one hop and threw&#13;
to the plate. Catcher Pam Young tagged the runner&#13;
coming from third to end the game.&#13;
Next home games for the Rangers will be Monday&#13;
and Tuesday, April 22 and 23.&#13;
The Rangers are currently ranked fifth in the nation,&#13;
which is a first. Coach Linda Draft feels her&#13;
team is not playing up to this high rank.&#13;
"I wouldn't be surprised if we slipped down from&#13;
this rank," said Draft. "We're waiting for the snow to&#13;
melt, while other teams are playing." The number&#13;
one-ranked team's record is 24-3, while Parkside's is&#13;
7-3.&#13;
•Men's tennis&#13;
The men's tennis team won three out of four&#13;
matches this past week with victories over Carroll&#13;
College 9-0, College of Lake County 7-2 and Green&#13;
Bay 8-1. The Rangers lost to Beloit College 7-2.&#13;
Statistics for the individual matches are:&#13;
Parkside (P) vs. Carroll College (C) April 2:&#13;
Dan Hyatt-P d. John Zellner-C 2-6, 7-6. 7-6. Frank Mejia-P d. John Butler-&#13;
C 6-0, 6-2. Chris Schuleit-P d. Rich Ross-C 6-2, 6-0. Art Shannon-P d.&#13;
Greg Forston-C 6-3, 6-3.&#13;
Tom Pacetti-P d. Gary Middleton-C 7-6, 6-3. Dave Hyatt-P d. Scott&#13;
Schultz-C 5-7, 6-3. 6-2.&#13;
Doubles: Dan Hyatt-Dave Hyatt d. Zellner-Butler 6-1, 6-4. Mejia-Shannon&#13;
d. Ross-Schultz 6-2. 6-2 Pacetti-Alan Elsmo d. Bob Fine-Greg Sevmour&#13;
7-5, 6-1. "&#13;
Parkside vs. Lake County (LC) April 3:&#13;
Dan Hyatt-P d. Dave Klien-LC 7-5, 4-6. 64. Fred Acosta-LC d. Mejia-P&#13;
6-3. 3-6, 6-2. Schuleit-P d. Bill Krueger-LC 6-1, 6-1. Lande Laverty-LC'd.&#13;
Shannon-P 7-5, 3-6. 64. Pacetti-P d. Scott Doweil-LC 6-0, 6-1. Dave Hyatt-&#13;
P d. Rich Kuehn-LC 6-0, 6-0.&#13;
Doubles: Hyatt-Hyatt d. Klien-Krueger 6-1. 6-3. Mejia-Shannon d.&#13;
Aeosta-Lavert, 6-2, 4-6, 64. Pacetti-Elsmo d. Dowell-Kuehn 6-0. 6-0.&#13;
Parkside vs. Beloit College (B) April 5:&#13;
Carter Veach-B d. Dan Hyatt-P 6-3, 6-2. Peter Gullstram-B d. Schuleit-&#13;
P 6-0, 6-1. Shannon-P d. Ward Krull-B 6-3, 2-6, 6-2. Rob Dassow-B d. Pacetti-&#13;
P 7-5. 6-2. Chris Bonner-B d. Dave Hyatt-P 2-6, 6-1, 6-3. Elsmo-P d.&#13;
Craig Wogelmuth-B 2-6, 64, 6-3.&#13;
Doubles: Veach-Dassow d. Hyatt-Hyatt 6-3, 6-3, Krull-Gullstram d.&#13;
Schuleit-Shannon. 6-3. 6-0. Wogelmuth-Shaw Rezal d. Pacetti-Elsmo .6-2,6-&#13;
Parkside vs. Green Bay (GB) April 6:&#13;
, Novaic-GBdDanHyatt-P, 64. 6-7, 6-2. Mejia-P. d. Rick Vanderleest-&#13;
GB 64 6-4. Schuleit-P d. Dale Hyska-GB 7-6, 3-6, 6-1. Shannon-P d.&#13;
Tom Hyska-GB 6-1, 6-0. Pacetti-P d. Hiro Notaney-GB 6-3 6-2&#13;
Doubles: Hyatt-Hyatt d. N'ovak-Vanderleest 7-5, 6-2. Shannon-Mejia d&#13;
Hyska-Hyska 6-0, 7-5. Pacetti-Elsmo d. Gayle-.N'otaney 6-4, 6-2.&#13;
Students can work overseas The Council on International&#13;
Educational Exchange (CIEE), the&#13;
largest student travel organization&#13;
in the U.S., is offering young adults&#13;
the opportunity to work overseas&#13;
this summer as volunteers on service&#13;
projects aimed at helping local&#13;
communities. Free room and board&#13;
help to keep participation costs&#13;
minimal.&#13;
"It met and surpassed all my expectations,"&#13;
was the reaction of&#13;
one participant in last year's program.&#13;
Although work camps have&#13;
been operating in many parts of the&#13;
world for more than 30 years, they&#13;
still are a relatively new concept in&#13;
the United States.&#13;
"We had no plumbing or electricity&#13;
and slept in a barn, but I think&#13;
that made us better as a group because&#13;
we really had to work together&#13;
and help each other," reported a&#13;
volunteer who helped convert an&#13;
old barn into a community room in&#13;
Denmark.&#13;
Other projects included garden&#13;
work and restoration at a castle in&#13;
Veltrusy, Czechoslovakia; housecleaning&#13;
at the Technical Institute&#13;
at Gdansk, Poland and rebuilding&#13;
seawalls on an island in Germany.&#13;
Except for a modest program fee&#13;
of $100, there is no cost other than&#13;
the airfare — a nd even that expense&#13;
may be reduced by special student&#13;
and youth fares available&#13;
through any Council Travel office.&#13;
Work camps, usually two, three&#13;
or four weeks in duration, are available&#13;
in Czechoslovakia, Denmark,&#13;
France, Germany, Poland, Spain&#13;
and Canada. A working knowledge&#13;
of German is recommended for&#13;
placements in Germany; language&#13;
requirements apply in France and&#13;
Spain. Volunteers need not be students&#13;
but must be at least 18 years&#13;
old (except in Germany, which accepts&#13;
16-year-olds). Application&#13;
deadline is May 1, 1985.&#13;
For more information about the&#13;
program, write or phone: CIEE,&#13;
PR-IWC, 205 East 42nd Street, New&#13;
York NY 10017, (212) 661-1414; or&#13;
312 Sutter Street, San Francisco CA&#13;
94108, (415) 421-3473.&#13;
Julie Ann McReynolds&#13;
running in the women's&#13;
home track meet. This&#13;
was Parkside's first&#13;
home meet in&#13;
three years.&#13;
More photos inside.&#13;
Jill I:,&#13;
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK&#13;
Art Shannon&#13;
Tennis&#13;
Art i s a junior a nd competed l a s t week with a&#13;
record of 3 wins-1 lo s s in singles and 3 wins-1&#13;
loss in d oubles with p a r tner Frank Mejia.&#13;
Miller Brewing Co wishes Art g ood luck for&#13;
the r e s t of the season.</text>
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              <text>Russians whirl through UW-P&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
, I The Russians are cormng:&#13;
h tin essence, was the&#13;
T a, hi it&#13;
ge given t IS wri er messa .&#13;
day morning. Nov. 28. Tues k&#13;
ha Mayor Wallace Bur ee&#13;
Kenos lc tour of ondueting a frenetic tour 0&#13;
wase . f&#13;
ha for 20 of the sailors rom Kenos .".. h&#13;
he Russian ship Nemirovic&#13;
tDane . henko" The vessel was&#13;
docked at Kenosha harbor fo~ a&#13;
f&#13;
.days and the crew was being&#13;
•• I k "Iife i&#13;
, en a superficial 00 at I e III&#13;
grv lean cit "&lt;Thi an average American CI y. IS&#13;
. luded a look at an average&#13;
me iversit I American uruverst y -. u~.&#13;
Just prior to arrIvIng. at&#13;
Parkside, the group had drIven&#13;
ound the grounds of Carthage&#13;
ar th ' College, but did not leave elr&#13;
bus. They arrived at Greenquist&#13;
Hall about 20 minutes behind&#13;
s~he.d~le and were met by&#13;
Virginia Scherr, Assistant to Vice&#13;
Chancellor Otto Bauer, and a&#13;
student tour guide from the Information&#13;
Center. Clarence&#13;
Brockman, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Administration, was also to&#13;
have met them but as they were&#13;
late getting here, he left to attend&#13;
a meeting just before they&#13;
arrived. When they finally did&#13;
show up, there was a flurry of&#13;
photographic activity as the&#13;
group headed up the ramp at&#13;
Greenquist.&#13;
First stop was the large lecture&#13;
hall off the concourse, where a&#13;
class was momentarily interrupted&#13;
as we all trooped&#13;
through the room and stared at&#13;
each other. Then on to the Upper&#13;
300 level of Greenquist to&#13;
meander through var-ious science&#13;
labs, Photographs taken from the&#13;
Mariner 9 space craft proved a&#13;
special fascination for the&#13;
visitors. Down to the computer&#13;
center on the upper 100level next.&#13;
then to the LibrarY-learning&#13;
Center. We were about to enter&#13;
the library when Burkee led&#13;
everyone to the rail overlooking&#13;
10werl\1ain Place.&#13;
Photographers wanted a few&#13;
group pictures and then we were&#13;
out the door and on the way to the&#13;
Phy. Ed, BUilding. Burkee kept&#13;
explaining that there just wasn't&#13;
enough time to see e\,erything&#13;
(not even the library).&#13;
The pool and the '" eight&#13;
tr-aining room seemed the&#13;
greatest attraction. Prior to the&#13;
Ph) Ed Building. the) had&#13;
dutlfull" ru bed around behind&#13;
Burkee' and the guides, from one&#13;
top to the next With hardly a&#13;
chance to take in anything But&#13;
here they lingered to take pictures&#13;
of a student working out on&#13;
the weight traimng equipment&#13;
and watch a ph) ed class for a&#13;
moment&#13;
In less than an hour it wa over&#13;
and they were on their bus again,&#13;
headed 'for numerous other tops&#13;
on their vi It to Kenosha. USA&#13;
Included in the aflernoon's&#13;
itineraf)' was a tour of American&#13;
Motors. where the Russians&#13;
would choose one man from the&#13;
TheParkside!---- _&#13;
RANGE&#13;
assembly line \l, hose hom th~·&#13;
~ould like to \."1 It That bome&#13;
~ ould then be the ne t ,top&#13;
"They're . laiPICIOlai of U •&#13;
Ihc) thlOk ~ 've @Ol erylh,&#13;
rigged," Burk explamed "By&#13;
lelling them &lt;boo '" bose hom&#13;
to \'i It we hope to dispel som of&#13;
that SUSPiCion ,.&#13;
The lOUr gurd at Park id&#13;
"'ould h3\ hked to pmvid a&#13;
more m-depth tour or the&#13;
l mv.".,lll for the Ru ia .... but&#13;
as Virginia h rr pointed out,&#13;
"Thev're probably more 10·&#13;
lerte.. 10 seemg the prop! _&#13;
t.h tudents 10 the mfcnnal at.&#13;
mosphere - than th building&#13;
anl",ay," And beea of th&#13;
rush they probably learned on&#13;
thing ,'er) characteristIC: of&#13;
Ameroca - the f I pace of hf&#13;
edne da December 6 1972&#13;
Santa Claus~ German style~&#13;
early for Wyllie as he tours&#13;
West German universities&#13;
Santa Claus, the real German&#13;
kind, came early this year for&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie.&#13;
The Federal Republic of&#13;
Germany has invited Chancellor&#13;
Wyllieto be its guest for a visit to&#13;
lhe leading German universities&#13;
and cultural centers in early&#13;
December.&#13;
The visit began last Sunday and&#13;
will exlend to Dec, 17, It will&#13;
Involve stops at a dozen cities,&#13;
tours of new as well as long+&#13;
established universities, and&#13;
Conferences with a variety of&#13;
higher education officials.&#13;
Among the cities to be visited are&#13;
Bonn. Cologne, Hamburg, Berlin,&#13;
Stuttgart and Munich.&#13;
The visits will cinclude&#13;
SCientific and technical schools&#13;
as well as general purpose&#13;
Universities. At Bonn Wyllie will&#13;
!"ISllthe Ministry of Education&#13;
and Science. meet with officials&#13;
or Germany's international&#13;
cullural exchange program, and&#13;
COnferwith representatives of the&#13;
Fulbright Commission. There&#13;
Will be similar conferences in&#13;
other major cities.&#13;
Wyllie said he expects the&#13;
German visit to be "a tremendous&#13;
learning experience" and to&#13;
be Useful in charting UWParkside's&#13;
future, just as visits to&#13;
new campuses in California and&#13;
other states in 1966were useful in&#13;
planning Parkside's early&#13;
development,&#13;
"Comparative knowledge is&#13;
e~Sential," Wyllie said, "for&#13;
Without it there is no awareness&#13;
of alternatives and no outside&#13;
slalidard by which to judge&#13;
~ahty ~nd performance. That is&#13;
f e malO benefit that has come&#13;
rom my inVOlvement in accr~ditation&#13;
visits to other&#13;
url!verS't' , \ hiles In recent years.&#13;
( ot 109 dispels complacency so 'tck1y as a visit to a better indl~~utl?n.&#13;
a.nd nothing relieves&#13;
-atlsfactlon so readily as a&#13;
visit to a place that is wor~e. The&#13;
trick is to be discriminatmg, to&#13;
learn from others, and to adopt&#13;
those practices that are likely _to&#13;
be beneficial to one's own institution,&#13;
..&#13;
Wyllie has visited ~ ?umber of&#13;
colleges and univerSIties across&#13;
the country as an examiner for&#13;
the North Central Association of&#13;
Colleges and Secondary Schools&#13;
and earlier this week headed a&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
aml'ning Carneron~e team ex&#13;
College in Lawton, Okla. .&#13;
the German umver- Among .' ·t are 't' Wyllie will VISI Sl les. ld t and&#13;
Heidelberg. one of the 0 es the&#13;
most prestigious. and&#13;
h&#13;
t&#13;
UniverSity' f the Ru r a 0&#13;
h the largest of the 10 Boc urn. been ' 't' which have UOlverSI les G rman\'&#13;
established in West. e ~&#13;
, 1960 \\'\'lIie said thai the&#13;
since ." h is similar UniverSity of the Ru I'&#13;
in purpose to L:W·Parkside In&#13;
that it serves as the Intellectual&#13;
center for the highly In+&#13;
dustrialized region that&#13;
surrounds it .&#13;
"Except for the cost and size&#13;
1$500 million In buildmgs a.nd&#13;
13.000 students). the similantl.es&#13;
are remarkable:' Wyllie s.:ud.&#13;
"including such things a' the&#13;
abandonment of single academic&#13;
discipl ines as tpe ba!;ls for&#13;
academiC organization. the&#13;
de\'elopment of a ph~ 'Ical plan&#13;
that features inter-connected&#13;
bUildings that support close&#13;
relationships among the&#13;
academic fields. and the location&#13;
of the campus outside the city In&#13;
the expectatlon that futu.re&#13;
gro\\ th will lead .to., full In&#13;
tegratlOn with the city&#13;
Another parallel. a cording to&#13;
Wvllie. is that the new German&#13;
un"i\'ersilies \\ere designed to&#13;
take enrollment pressure on&#13;
older institutions. serve .a&#13;
regional clientele, and ha\"e.the,r&#13;
own special educational&#13;
missions.&#13;
"German universities are no\\&#13;
undergoing radical change, s.ome&#13;
. of it inspired by A~er.'~a.n&#13;
example and innuence. \\) lite&#13;
'd "In the 19th century.&#13;
sa I . .. f Ilowed American uni\'ersltl~ 0&#13;
German models in their gradua~e&#13;
training programs. an~ In&#13;
research. Now. especially 10 the&#13;
new universities. t~e Germans&#13;
are following Amencan m~els&#13;
as they try to expand eduC3!lOnal&#13;
opportunities for ordinary&#13;
, ' trl' to make the cItizens. .&#13;
universities more r~ponsl\'e ~&#13;
student wishes and needs. a.&#13;
, them a central role In assign ds f&#13;
meeting the manpo~'er nee. o. ~&#13;
modern technological soclet~&#13;
All arrangements for the trip&#13;
made in Bonn. after&#13;
were h th&#13;
reliminary contact wit e&#13;
~ffice of the Consul Gene~al of the&#13;
Federal Republic 10 Chicago&#13;
Vol. I) o. 11&#13;
The Joffrey 11 Ballet Company funushed an evenIng of nn en.&#13;
tertamment and culture for Park Ide IOOe"'$, faculty and Wf&#13;
Lecture and Fme Arts committee ponsored lheever1l. a new cultural&#13;
experience for many in the Parkside COmmw-lIly.&#13;
1 -------,&#13;
'Hunchback'&#13;
The 1939 version of The Hunchback&#13;
of ~otre Dame. starnng&#13;
Charles Laughton as Quaslmodo.&#13;
will be sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Film Society today at 7:30 p,m. in&#13;
Room 103 or Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Critics consider this adaptation&#13;
of \'ictor Hugo's oo\"el to be the&#13;
most successful of the three best+&#13;
known versions of Hunchback. It&#13;
tells the story of the deaf,&#13;
deformed bellringer of Notre&#13;
Dame cathedral lorn between&#13;
dogJike de\'otion to his masters&#13;
and hopeless lO\'e for a gypsy girl&#13;
he has saved from the hangman.&#13;
The girl becomes the focus of a&#13;
struggle between King. commoners&#13;
and nobilit:y in this&#13;
horror-drama of 15th century&#13;
France&#13;
Laughton's Widely praised&#13;
here tonight&#13;
mIster portrayal 01 the hWl·&#13;
chback projeCts a piliful human&#13;
being Crotlcs have Iik ned the&#13;
film' brilliant carnival sets to a&#13;
Breughel-Iike pageant of&#13;
vulgarity and "iolence and have&#13;
called the film a "superb&#13;
e\'ocalion of medieval hfe ..&#13;
Featured players 10 addition to&#13;
Laughton are Maureen O'Hara,&#13;
Cedric Hardwicke, Thomas&#13;
~"tchell and Edmond O'Brien,&#13;
The Boat, a 1921 short sharring&#13;
Buster Keaton, will also be&#13;
shown It is the slory of a family&#13;
reduced to a primeval struggle to&#13;
survive aboard a "e I which&#13;
ha destroyed the family's home.&#13;
Keaton pursues the one-way trip&#13;
to catastrophe WIth unshakable&#13;
aplomb&#13;
The program IS open to Lhe&#13;
public, Admission is charged&#13;
. \&#13;
Russians whirl through UW-P&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
• I The Russians are coming.&#13;
That, in essence, . was . the&#13;
ge given this writer rnes a&#13;
Tue day morning, Nov. 28.&#13;
K ha Mayor Wallace Burkee eno . t f ,ia conducting a frene~1c ofur o . osha for 20 of the sailors rom Ken . "N . · h the Russian ship emirov1c&#13;
Dane henko " The vessel was · docked at Kenosha harbor fo: a&#13;
r . days and the crew was being e11 k t "J"f . given a superficia_l loo ; ,, 1 ;h1_n&#13;
an average American c1 y. 1s&#13;
included a l?&lt;&gt;k ~tt an av1&#13;
erage&#13;
American umvers1 y -. u~.&#13;
Just prior to arnvmg_ at&#13;
Parkside, the group had driven&#13;
around the grounds of Carthage&#13;
College, but did not leave their&#13;
bus. They arrived at Greenquist&#13;
Hall about 20 minutes behind&#13;
s~he_d~le and were met by&#13;
Virginia Scherr, Assistant to Vice&#13;
Chancellor Otto Bauer, and a&#13;
student tour guide from the Information&#13;
Center. Clarence&#13;
Brockman, Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Administration, was also to&#13;
have met them but as they were&#13;
late getting here, he left to attend&#13;
a meeting just before they&#13;
arrived. When they finally did&#13;
show up, there was a flurry of&#13;
photographic activity as the&#13;
group headed up the ramp at&#13;
Greenquist.&#13;
First stop was the large lecture&#13;
hall off the concourse, where a&#13;
class was momentarily interrupted&#13;
as we all trooped&#13;
through the room and tared at&#13;
each other Th n on to th upper&#13;
300 level of Greenqui t to&#13;
meander through vario - cienc&#13;
lab . Photographs tak n from th&#13;
Mariner 9 pace craft pro,·ed a&#13;
pecial fa cination for the&#13;
\'isitor . Down to th computer&#13;
center on th upper 1 le\'el n . t,&#13;
then to the Librarv-Learm&#13;
Center. We were about to nt r&#13;
the library when Bur ·ee led&#13;
e, eryone to the rail ov rloo ing&#13;
lower:\lain Place.&#13;
Photographers wanted a f&#13;
group pictures and th n we were&#13;
out the door and on th wav to the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Building. Bur ee ep&#13;
explaining that there ju t ·a n't&#13;
enough time to ee eve!')·thing&#13;
(not even the library).&#13;
The Parkside--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Santa Claus, Gerinan style,&#13;
early for Wyllie as he tours&#13;
West Gerntan universities&#13;
·anta Claus, the real German&#13;
kmd. came early this year for&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie.&#13;
The 1' ederal Republic of&#13;
Germany has invited Chancellor&#13;
\\yllie lo be its guest for a visit to&#13;
the leading German universities&#13;
and cultural centers in early&#13;
Deeember.&#13;
Th vi it began last Sunday and&#13;
v.111 extend to Dec. 17. It will&#13;
ln\'Olve tops at a dozen cities,&#13;
lour of new as well as long-&#13;
. labli h d universities, and&#13;
conrerences with a variety of&#13;
higher education officials.&#13;
,\moni the cities to be visited are&#13;
Honn, Cologne, Hamburg, Berlin,&#13;
luttgart and Munich.&#13;
Th vi it · will cinclude&#13;
ci ntific and technical schools&#13;
visit to a place that is wor e . The&#13;
trick is to be discriminating, to&#13;
learn from others, and to adopt&#13;
those practice that are likely _ lo&#13;
be beneficial to one's own institution.··&#13;
Wvllie ha visited a number of&#13;
coll~ges and universities_ aero ·&#13;
the country as an exam_in~r for&#13;
the orth Central A soc1at1on of&#13;
Colleges and , econdary hools&#13;
and earlier this week headed a&#13;
dn&#13;
101 . J, o . II&#13;
a well a general purpose&#13;
un1\'er ·itte . At Bonn Wyllie will&#13;
v1 it the Ministry of Education&#13;
ilnd :c1ence, meet with officials&#13;
or Germany's international&#13;
cultural exchange program, and&#13;
tonr rwith representatives of the&#13;
1-'ulbright ommission. There&#13;
\\ill be imilar conferences in&#13;
0th r major cities.&#13;
own&#13;
mi ion . "German uni,·er :itie are no\1 'Hunchba&#13;
Wyllie said he expects the&#13;
German visit to be "a tremendou&#13;
· learning experience" and to&#13;
b u eful in charting UWPark&#13;
id 's future, just as visits to&#13;
new campuses in California and&#13;
oth r state in 1966 were useful in&#13;
Planning Parkside's early d velopment.&#13;
_"Co'!1parative knowledge is&#13;
-ential," Wyllie said, "for&#13;
Without it there is no awareness&#13;
or ~lternatives and no outside&#13;
lanoard by which to judge&#13;
~hahty ~nd performance. That is&#13;
r main benefit that has come&#13;
rom my involvement in accredi&#13;
talion visits to other Un1ver · · ot . sit1es in recent years.&#13;
hmg dispels complacency so&#13;
QUickly a a visit to a better in- I tttJon d . . d , an nothing relieves I ·11t f . · action so readily as a&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
team examining Cameron~e&#13;
College in Lawton. Okla. . the German umver- Among . ·t are Tes Wvllie will v1s1&#13;
~;e:delberg. one of the oldest and&#13;
most . · s and the prest1g1ou , t . f the Ruhr a nivers1ty O f the 10 Bochum. the largest o b . . ·h· h have een univers1t1es \\ ic nv • bl. hed in West Germa . esta 1s . ·ct th t the . e 1960 \\'y]he a1 a . smc _ · · hr is imilar L nivers1ty of the Ru&#13;
undergoing radical ch nge. _om&#13;
f it in pir d by ,\menca_n&#13;
. ~xample and influence," Wylhe&#13;
aid "In the l?t_h century,&#13;
American uni\'er 1l1es fol10,1ed&#13;
German model in their gradua~e&#13;
tra1n1n - · g program and tn . . Ch ·ow pec1allv m the resear , · · new um,·er ities. th German&#13;
are following American m~el -&#13;
a they try to expand educa!1ona~&#13;
portunitie for ordmar)&#13;
~ftizens. tr) to make_ the&#13;
univer itie more rE!- pon ive lo&#13;
tudent ,1 i he. and need . and&#13;
a . them a central role m ,gn f&#13;
me eting the manpower needs o a . I t . ., modern technolog1ca soc1e ) :&#13;
All arrangemen for the trip&#13;
were made in Bonn, after . h I. man· contact ,, 1th t e pre 1m . , 1 th office o the Con. ul C,enc:a ot e&#13;
Fed ral Republic in Chicago&#13;
Franc&#13;
Lu hton&#13;
c ntury&#13;
1d l~ prai d&#13;
r &#13;
1 THE PARKSIOE RANGER Wed., Dec. 6, 1971&#13;
EDITORIALS/&#13;
OPINIONS&#13;
The iron sieve&#13;
The visit paid our campus last week by 20 Russian&#13;
sailors was remarkable, to say the least. They weren't&#13;
on campus all that long, but their mere presence is an&#13;
Indica lion 01 the real pulling together of this world.&#13;
#ISmail wars" and "sklrmlshes#l continue across the&#13;
globe and yet everyday business handled by everyday&#13;
people Irom all nations continues. This is not to&#13;
minimize the Importance of the end of wars and frictions&#13;
today but. put In perspective, these occurrences seem to&#13;
be less serious than normal - unless you're there, of&#13;
course.&#13;
T\le gist of this editorial. however, concerns the socia I&#13;
acceptance which allowed a group of foreign sailors to&#13;
tour our campus. They were special because they were&#13;
Russian but they smiled, laughed, questioned and were&#13;
deflnllely Interested. Much as if one of us toured Russia,&#13;
they scanned sights of the school and en joyed themselves.&#13;
The Iron curtain can be as strong as US Steel's latest&#13;
metallic advancement, but all curtains have space to go&#13;
under, over and around. That's one way to get together_&#13;
-- Rudy Lienau&#13;
Rebuttal&#13;
In the la t I ueol the Parkside Ranger. Rudy Lienau stated, "If the&#13;
ludenl government were to in tall a committee responsible [or&#13;
replaclI'llthe chancellor. II would bave as much hacking or power as&#13;
the udent Union Committee."&#13;
Let's examine the University structure. We have two elements,&#13;
admlOl lration and the student body. Both 01 these are needed in order&#13;
to U lam the Universtty as a functioning, cohesive institution. The&#13;
chancellor is part of that administration. He is a professional wbo uses&#13;
drmDl kat" ..e expertise to coordinate and implement Ule services&#13;
needed by all those wbom the Universily is designed 10 serve. Obviously.&#13;
we, the sludenl body, need the cbancellor and other admil\lstrators&#13;
The second'element, lhe studenl body, has its prolessionals in the&#13;
lorm 01 representation by a studenl government. The Student Union&#13;
Committee is part of the representation.&#13;
As the tudent Union Committee. we have the obligation to assist the&#13;
admiOlslration in the decision making process by providing the proper&#13;
velucle lor the needed sludent input. The Student Union Committee is&#13;
that proper vehicle, SImply because it is part of the duly authorized&#13;
representative body democratically elected by the students 01 the&#13;
UNverslt)' of Wisconsln-Parkside.&#13;
Withoul studenls there would be 00 University! Therelore, the&#13;
tudent Union CommIttee inately bas the duty and righl to he involved&#13;
rn the pohcy and decision making process in order to develop an&#13;
educaltonal and social milieu which makes use of available resources&#13;
In a manner which is most beneficial toaU.&#13;
In brier. I would like to reply to a few more of Mr. Lienau's&#13;
mi representations: 1. Lienau states only 28 people voted for those on&#13;
lhe udent Umon Committee.&#13;
I contend thaI all those wbo voted lor student governmenl voted lor&#13;
the ludenl Umon Commiltee, helng that the Student Union Committee&#13;
is part of student government. 2. Lienau stated we have no&#13;
legahly' lor deci Ion making.&#13;
Who gave Lienau and student activities board any legality? 3.&#13;
LIenau taled the tudent Union Commiltee is self installed.&#13;
1 say, \l.ho voted for Lienau or anyone else on the Student Activities&#13;
Board! The answer is, absolutely no one. 4. Lienau stated he inI&#13;
rpret the PSQA constitution to stale that the Student Union Commlttee&#13;
i only a reviewing committee and not a policy·making com·&#13;
mltteer&#13;
say tudent government will inlerpret its own constitution.&#13;
- Thomas Weiss, Chairman&#13;
i mmittee&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
"The use or possession of intoxicating l~quors or&#13;
lermented mall beverages with an a1coholic.:;onte~i&#13;
of more than 5 percent by weight is prohibit on a&#13;
university property,. except. in faculd~r a;~o~~~:&#13;
housing and at suitable times un .&#13;
conditio~, in' faculty and staff dining and meeting&#13;
facilities." U.W. t.07(11) LIquor.&#13;
The above and other amusing anecdotes are now. in&#13;
print in the University of Wisconsin.pa:kslde&#13;
Student Handbook, available through your fnendly&#13;
neighborbood Studenl Activities OffICe. Anthony&#13;
Totero assures us that he personally bad nothing to&#13;
do with the contents 01 regulations included, Just&#13;
had the books printed.&#13;
Included in the book are rive pag~ d~aling with&#13;
Guidelines Governing Student OrgamzatlOns. These&#13;
rules were drawn up by the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee is a strangely&#13;
evolved committee which has somehow managed to&#13;
gain control of the purse strings of every student&#13;
organization on campus. Their i~a?ility to handle&#13;
this task is evidenced by the r-idiculously small&#13;
stipends allocated to the two mosl Important&#13;
organizations on campus, Student Government and&#13;
Ranger.&#13;
The student newspaper which bad requested $3800&#13;
was allowed $2000. The eee did not even a~pr0.ve&#13;
expenses for ornce space or salaries for edltor-m~&#13;
chief and business manager. These two people, or&#13;
any two people in these positions, cannot afford to&#13;
spend the twenty-plus hours a week working .for the&#13;
paper unless they receive some compensation.&#13;
eedless to say, without an editor, and especially&#13;
without a business manager to handle accounts&#13;
receivable, this newspaper will very soon fold. We&#13;
may not be around next semester. This would be a&#13;
true waste, especially alter tbe University went&#13;
through the trouble of retaining a full-time adviser,&#13;
to see the paper fold for want of someone to handle&#13;
the accounts.&#13;
Student Government submitted a request of $3100&#13;
and in tum received the piddling sum of $1800. When&#13;
you wonder why Student Government is not as.,er·&#13;
fective as it would like to be, remember it is not&#13;
because of the people, the majority of which seem to&#13;
he dedicated, it is because they have no money to&#13;
pul programs into effect.&#13;
On the ridiculous side, the Black Student Union&#13;
requested $6000 from CCC, On the basis of campus&#13;
population alone, this should have been trimmed to&#13;
$150 at the most. They received $300. Amounts are&#13;
recommendations of subcommittee to full cec.&#13;
If you have nothing better to do during the next&#13;
week, and you haven't, sit down and write a letter of&#13;
protest to the Dean of Students prntesting the&#13;
niggardly sum of funds available for student&#13;
organizations on campus and request that in the&#13;
future students sit on the board which determines&#13;
the breakdown of segregated fees.&#13;
An example of two.campus organizations that have&#13;
entirely too much money to spend are the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board and the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee. Tbe $29,000 Student Activities now&#13;
spends could easily he reduced to $24,000 by employing&#13;
more efficient methods of operation and use&#13;
of more profit-making ventures.&#13;
The Lecture and Fine Arts Committee which now&#13;
receives more money than all student organizations&#13;
combined should have the $7000 it now receives cut&#13;
to $3000. This fairer allocation of student generated&#13;
lees would give an additional $9000 to the people whn&#13;
pay the money in the first place, the students&#13;
The Park:&amp;iUidde-8-------&#13;
The studenl-staff directories which should ba&#13;
been completed in September, which w ve&#13;
promised for November, will not be out till ~re&#13;
December, just in time for the second semester ~&#13;
the new group of students registering. a&#13;
They've done it again, leaping before the look·&#13;
part was through. All those beautiful evergreens IlIg&#13;
the Tallent Hall parking lot have no room /t&#13;
growth. Already it can be seen that they have"':&#13;
planted too close to the roads and lots by the&#13;
damage done to their lower foliage. Quick.&#13;
somebody, dig them up and replant them righl '&#13;
before they are ruined completely. -&#13;
I must protest ~r. Rudy. Lienau's editorial last&#13;
issue. I am afraid Rudy did not use his head too&#13;
much before he wrote it or he would have realized&#13;
that the Student Union Committee, just as ev&#13;
other position on the ballot, was selected by ~&#13;
entire student body, not 28 people as he woul~&#13;
mislead you to believe, and as such is certain!&#13;
more representative than the Parkside Activili~&#13;
Board which should be disbanded.&#13;
An unwell done to whoever lettered the sign On the&#13;
road to "Safley and Security."&#13;
Student Organizations have been having a little bit&#13;
of trouble finding space on campus. Why not allow&#13;
them the ortices on the third floor of Ihe library that&#13;
are not being used?&#13;
I promised I wouldn't mention pencil sharpeners&#13;
this week, but how about: Shelves in the balhrooms&#13;
on which to put hooks. Coat hooks in the&#13;
laboratories. More of those large erasers in the&#13;
classrooms (the old ones have all been slolerll.&#13;
Keeping all the doors to the buildings open as 10111I&#13;
as the buildings are. A TV in D-I73.&#13;
What we could use are more people on Student&#13;
Government Committees and less grafitf artista&#13;
messing up the walls in the men's johns.&#13;
There is a rumor going around that Jelco is buYIll&amp;&#13;
different buses to be used around here next year&#13;
Instead of this, why not buy our own on long-term&#13;
contracts, have them driven by work-study students&#13;
and put out a contract to havethem maintained?&#13;
Student Government had planned to put out a rap&#13;
sheet to he pr-inted bi-weekly telling 01 all student&#13;
. government activities. This bubble was shattered&#13;
when CCC cut this out 01 their budget. Instead it was&#13;
suggested that the newspaper is available in lieu of&#13;
this. Unlortunately, some mehers on the staff donot&#13;
feel that Student Goverrunent should receive onefourth&#13;
page a week to fill as they see fit. This is •&#13;
conflict that may leave some mighty bruised&#13;
feelings this week.&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee has sent out the&#13;
Teacher Evaluation Form to all faculty. During this&#13;
and next week you will be asked to fill oul this form&#13;
at a time convenient to the individual instructor, 001&#13;
necessarily during his class, and return them 10&#13;
him. These will be compiled and results returned ID&#13;
individual instructors, hopefully prior to the start of&#13;
the spring semester.&#13;
~Individuals who desire to find out results of final&#13;
"compilations will be able to do so by making I&#13;
req"uest through the Academic Policies Committee&#13;
and will, if there is need to know, be allowed 10study&#13;
specific results which will be on file in the archives.&#13;
The committee needs a lot of people to assist iD&#13;
manual compilation of results. Next semester thIS&#13;
may be done by computer, bul for tbe presenl the)'&#13;
could use at least 30 volunteers willing to work"&#13;
hours apiece" Volunteers may contact the Student&#13;
'Gpvernment office.&#13;
Those ad commissions are terrific. Last week I&#13;
went out jusl for the heck 01 it a couple of days and&#13;
sold pver $700 worlh. My cut of this is beller than&#13;
$70, for about four hours' work!&#13;
EDiTORSAND WRITERS - Rudy Lienau, Ken Konkol, Tom Petersen,&#13;
l1en~ LevlD, Jane Schliesman, Marilyn SchUbert, Jeannine Sipsma,&#13;
Craig Roberts, Pat Nowak&#13;
SPORTS STAFF - Geoff Blaesing, Kris Koch Dale Martin Kathryn&#13;
Wellner "&#13;
REVIEWERS - Bill Brobaugh, Gary Jensen, Pat Nowak&#13;
CARTOONIST - Gary Huck&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS - Larry Gunnell, Pat Nowak, Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER - Ken Pestka&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER - Kathryn Wellner&#13;
OFFICE SECRETARY - Bonnie Jack&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER - Fred Lawrence&#13;
~DVEkRTCISING STAFF - Ken Konkol, Alex Marlis, Jerry Murphy, Pat&#13;
owa, ralg Roberts, RUdy Lienau&#13;
ADVISER - Dnn Kopriva&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the sludents of The Uoiversity 01 Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wiscan in 53140. Offices are located at D-I94 Library:&#13;
LearnUli Cenler, Telepbone (414) SS3-Z295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected 10 colwnns and editorials are nol necessarily the ofricial&#13;
\'iew or The University of Wiscons.iJl.Parkside.&#13;
Letters to lhe Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
Interest to sludents, laculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
less, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the rigbt to edit&#13;
letters lor length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number and studenl status or laculty rank. Names will&#13;
be Wlthheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
CIa ified and display ad rates will be furnisbed upon request.&#13;
lti' ".,UPaESENTED ~ NATIONAL ADVEilTISING BY T Nauonal Educational Advertising Services,Inc.&#13;
}6() Le:l:inpon Ave., New York, N. Y, 10017&#13;
.~&#13;
I&#13;
. 2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Dec. 6, 972&#13;
EDITORIALS/&#13;
OPI IONS&#13;
Th •&#13;
iron •&#13;
1eve&#13;
e v1si paid our campus last ee by 20 Russian&#13;
tors s remar able, to say the least. They eren't&#13;
on c mpu II tha long, bu heir mere presence is an&#13;
nd c tlon of the real pulling together of this world.&#13;
II ar " and " s lrmishes" continue across the&#13;
glo nd yet everyday business handled by everyday&#13;
p opl from all nat ons continues. This ls not to&#13;
nlm z th Importance of the end of wars and frictions&#13;
od y but, pu n pe spectlve, these occurrences seem to&#13;
I rlou han normal - unless you're there, of&#13;
Rebuttal r. Rud: Uen u tated. "If the&#13;
committee re po ible for&#13;
· much bac ·ng or power a&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
. f . tox1·cating liquors or "The use or possess10n o m . t&#13;
fermented malt beverages with an alcoh?~c conte~1&#13;
of more than 5 percent by weight is prohibit~ ont!rf&#13;
university propert ' except in faculty an s housing and at suitable times under decor?us&#13;
conditio~. in• faculty and s~aff dining and meetmg&#13;
facilitie : · .W. 1.07(11) Liquor.&#13;
The above and other amusing anecdotes_ are n~~ dn&#13;
prmt in the niversity of Wisconsm-P~ s1 e&#13;
ud nt Handbook, available through ~our fnendly&#13;
neighborhood tudent Activities Office. An~hony&#13;
Totero a ure u that he personally had nothm~ to&#13;
do with the contents of regulations included, Just&#13;
had the books printed.&#13;
Included m th book are five pag~ d~aling with&#13;
Guid Im Governing tudent Organizations. These&#13;
rule \\ere drawn up by the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The ampu Con ern Committee is a strangely&#13;
evolved committee which has somehow managed to&#13;
gain control or th purse string~ of _e_very student&#13;
organization on campu . Their i~a?1bty to handle&#13;
thi t k i evid need by the nd1culou~ly small&#13;
ti n allocated to th two most important&#13;
or anization on campu , tudent Government and&#13;
• 'eedl to say, without an editor, and especially&#13;
without a busines manager to handle accounts&#13;
r i able, thi newspaper will very soon fold. We&#13;
ma, not be around next semester. This would be a true wa te, e pecially after the University ~ent&#13;
through the trouble of retaining a full-time adviser,&#13;
to ee the paper fold for want of someone to handle&#13;
the accounts.&#13;
tudent Government submitted a request of $3100&#13;
and in turn received the piddling sum of $1800. When&#13;
you wonder why tudent Government is not as effective&#13;
as 1t would like to be, remember it is not&#13;
because of the people, the majority of which seem to&#13;
be dedicated, it is because they have no money to&#13;
put programs into effect.&#13;
On the ridiculous side, the Black Student Union&#13;
requested $6000 from CCC. On the basis of campus&#13;
population alone, this should have been trimmed to&#13;
$150 at the most. They received $300. Amounts are&#13;
recommendations of subcommittee to full CCC.&#13;
If you have nothing better to do during the next&#13;
week, and you haven't, sit down and write a letter of&#13;
protest to the Dean of Students protesting the&#13;
niggardly sum of funds available for student&#13;
organizations on campus and request that in the&#13;
future students sit on the board which determines&#13;
the breakdown of segregated fees.&#13;
An example or two campus organizations that have&#13;
entire!_ too much money to spend are the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board and the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee. The $29,000 Student Activities now&#13;
spends could easily be reduced to $24,000 by employing&#13;
more efficient methods of operation and use&#13;
of more profit-making ventures.&#13;
The Lecture and Fine Arts Committee which now&#13;
recei~es more money than all student organizations&#13;
combmed hould have the $7000 it now receives cut&#13;
to $3000. This fairer allocation of student generated&#13;
fees would give an additional $9000 to the people who&#13;
pay the money in the first place, the students&#13;
The student-staff directories which should ha&#13;
been completed in Sept~mber, which w:&#13;
promised for November, will not be out till late&#13;
December, just in time for the second semester&#13;
the new group of students registering. anc1&#13;
They've done it again, leaping before the look:&#13;
part was through. All those beautiful evergreens tng&#13;
the Tallent Hall parking lot have no room tt&#13;
growth. Already it can be seen that they have~&#13;
planted too close to tl_ie roads and lots by th&#13;
damage done to their lower foliage. Qui&#13;
somebody, dig them up and replant them right • before they are ruined completely. -&#13;
I must protest ~r. Rudy . Lienau's editorial la l&#13;
issue. I am afraid Rudy did not use his head loo&#13;
much before he wrote it or he would have reahzed&#13;
that the Student Union Committee, just as ev&#13;
other position on the ballot, was selected by i&#13;
entire student bod~, not 28 people as he V.:ouJd&#13;
mislead you to believe, and as such is certain)&#13;
more representative than the Parkside Act,Vtti )&#13;
Board which should be disbanded.&#13;
An unwell done to whoever lettered the sign on th&#13;
road to "Saftey and Security."&#13;
Student Organizations have been having a little bit&#13;
of trouble finding space on campus. Why not allO\I&#13;
them the offices on the third floor of the library that&#13;
are not being used?&#13;
I promised I wouldn't mention pencil sharpen&#13;
this week, but how about: Shelves in the bathr&#13;
on which to put hooks. Coat hooks in th&#13;
laboratories. More of those large eraser in&#13;
classrooms (the old ones have all been tol )&#13;
Keeping all the doors to the buildings open a Jo&#13;
as the buildings are. A TV in D-173.&#13;
What we could use are more people on tud&#13;
Government Committees and less grafitti art,&#13;
messing up the walls in the men's johns.&#13;
There is a rumor going around that Jelco is buy&#13;
different buses to be used around here next ·ear.&#13;
Instead of this, why not buy our own on long-term&#13;
contracts, have them driven by work-study studen&#13;
and put out a contract to have them maintained!&#13;
Student Government had planned to put out a rap&#13;
sheet to be printed bi-weekly telling of all stud l&#13;
government activities. This bubble was shattered&#13;
when CCC cut this out of their budget. Instead it"&#13;
suggested that the newspaper is available in lieu of&#13;
this. Unfortunately, some mebers on the staff do not&#13;
feel that Student Government should receive onefourth&#13;
page a week to fill as they see fit. This is a&#13;
conflict that may leave some mighty bruised&#13;
feelings this week.&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee has sent out 1M&#13;
Teacher Evaluation Form to all faculty. During th&#13;
and next week you will be asked to fill out this form&#13;
at a time convenient to the individual instructor, oot&#13;
necessarily during his class, and return them to&#13;
him. These will be compiled and results returned to&#13;
individual instructors, hopefully prior to the start of&#13;
the spring semester.&#13;
: Individuals who desire to find out results of final&#13;
. compilations will be able to do so by making 1&#13;
req·uest through the Academic Policies Commitltt&#13;
and will, if there is need to know, be allowed to tud)&#13;
specific results which will be on file in the archiv&#13;
The committee needs a lot of people to assist&#13;
manual compilation of results. Next semester th&#13;
may be done by computer, but for the present th.&#13;
could use at least 30 volunteers willing to work&#13;
hours apiece. Volunteers may contact the Stud 1&#13;
· Government office.&#13;
Those ad commissions are terrific. Last week 1&#13;
went out just for the heck of it a couple of day aod&#13;
sold over $700 worth. My cut of this is better th&#13;
$70, for about four hours' work!&#13;
RANGER EDITORS_AND WRITERS - Rudy Lienau, Ken Konkol, Tom Petersen,&#13;
lien~ Levm, Jane Schliesman, Marilyn Schubert, Jeannine Sipsma, Craig Roberts, Pat owak&#13;
PORTS STAFF - Geoff Blaesing, Kris Koch Dale Martin Kathryn&#13;
Wellner ' '&#13;
REVIEWERS - Bill Brohaugh, Gary Jensen, Pat Nowak&#13;
CARTOONIST - Gary Huck&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS - Larry Gunnell Pat Nowak Craig Roberts&#13;
B SINESS 1.ANAGER - Ken Pestk~ '&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER - Kathryn Wellner&#13;
OFFICE SECRETARY - Bonnie Jack&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER - Fred Lawrence&#13;
ADVEkRTCIS~NG STAFF-Ken Konkol, Alex Marlis, Jerry Murphy, Pat&#13;
owa ' ra1g Roberts, Rudy Lienau&#13;
ADVISER - Don Kopriva&#13;
• ·· ,llEPaESENTEO FOi. NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY T Nat1onal Educational Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
360 Lexinpon Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017&#13;
.,&#13;
i &#13;
Academic Information&#13;
Week hegins today&#13;
demic Information Week --&#13;
Aca. of "open houses" by&#13;
a series '11 be .&#13;
d&#13;
lc discipline -- WI gin aca em] .&#13;
today at Parkslde.&#13;
. The sessions a~e open to the&#13;
blic and will include an oppu&#13;
I lty to talk with faculty portum .&#13;
bers and academic counmem&#13;
, b k d el rs examme text 00 s an&#13;
~ouOrn~ls,discuss career opJ&#13;
ortunities, and learn of&#13;
p kside's general degree&#13;
Par d recui t [rarnents an requiremen s requi ..&#13;
for specific academic majors.&#13;
Sessions will be bled from 9&#13;
to 1 p.m. in Library-&#13;
~~ning Center Rooms D-l73&#13;
an - , d 0 174 adj acent to the Mam • .&#13;
Place according to the following&#13;
schedule:&#13;
Wednesday. December 6&#13;
n 173 Art&#13;
o 173 Geography&#13;
0174 Mathematics&#13;
n 174 Medical Technology&#13;
Thursday, December 7&#13;
D 173 History&#13;
D 173 Modern Language&#13;
French&#13;
German&#13;
Spanish&#13;
n 174 Psychology&#13;
Student Senate&#13;
Notes&#13;
Grievance&#13;
Committee&#13;
Grievance and Clearinp House&#13;
Co~.mittee is CirCUI;ting a&#13;
petlllOn to receive Some effective&#13;
aC~~n on a pass-fail system. This&#13;
petillon will cover those subjects&#13;
not. directly related to your&#13;
major. If SUfficient interest is&#13;
shown, the petitions will be&#13;
submitted to the Academic&#13;
POlicies Committee for further action.&#13;
CIIAMPION TERMPAPERS&#13;
636 Beacon St, (No. 605)&#13;
Boston. Mass. 02215&#13;
617-536·9700&#13;
R~lIrCh mlllerilli tor Termpapers,&#13;
R'POrls. Theses, etc. lOWEST PRICES.&#13;
OUICK SERVICE For informCition, DlellS~write or call&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
~~d for your. descriptive, up-to-date,&#13;
'page, mall order catalog of 2,300&#13;
~~aIIIY research papers. Enclose&#13;
.00 to CGVerpostal! and handlillf.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLIMITED&#13;
519 GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIf. 90024&#13;
1213} 417-8474 • 477-5493&#13;
"We need a local salesman"&#13;
New parking&#13;
rules set&#13;
Friday, December 8&#13;
D 173 Philosophy&#13;
D 173 Elementary Education&#13;
n 173 Secondary Education&#13;
D 174 Life Science&#13;
D 174 Economics&#13;
Monday, December 11&#13;
D 173 Earth Science&#13;
D 173 English&#13;
D 174 Sociology&#13;
D 174 Modern American SOCiety&#13;
D 174 Comparative Modern&#13;
Industrial SOCiety&#13;
Tuesday, December 12&#13;
D 173 BUSiness Management&#13;
D 173 Labor Economics&#13;
D 173 Communications&#13;
D 174 Physics&#13;
D 174 Chemistry&#13;
Wednesday, December 13&#13;
D 173 Applied Science &amp;&#13;
Technology&#13;
D 173 Music&#13;
D 174 Political Science&#13;
D 174 Coaching Certificate&#13;
Second semester timetables&#13;
will be available for the sessions.&#13;
Union Committee&#13;
All those interested in obtaining&#13;
information at&gt;,out tJ:te&#13;
Student Union Committee 10&#13;
connection with involvement or&#13;
roles they, as indivi~uals, may&#13;
play in said committee, may&#13;
leave name, address, and phone&#13;
number at the Student Govern4&#13;
ment Office in care of Senator&#13;
Thomas B. Weiss. . .&#13;
Any student wit.h artl~tIc&#13;
ability interested In h~I~I!1g&#13;
decorate the student activIties&#13;
building in a Christmas decor&#13;
please leave name, address, and&#13;
phone number in the Student&#13;
Government Office, in. care of&#13;
Senator Thomas B. Weiss.&#13;
Student Court&#13;
A steering committee has been&#13;
initiated to review and bring&#13;
abQut negotiations between&#13;
administration and student&#13;
government in relation to the&#13;
proposed judicial struct~re at ~e&#13;
University of WisconSin.&#13;
Parkside, This steering committee&#13;
is chaired by Thomas B.&#13;
Weiss. also chairman of the&#13;
Student Court and Arbitration&#13;
Committees and a member of the&#13;
Wisconsin Bar Association. The&#13;
committee also has as members.&#13;
Thomas Haack, PSGA-President,&#13;
Joe Harris, PSGA·VicePresident.&#13;
,Wed" DeC. 6, 1?72 THE PARKSIOE RAN.GER 3&#13;
Cartoonist's eye view _&#13;
£VCRYBOIl'i TRLKS IlBOUT&#13;
'n-l( AP&lt;rrH'( aT ~RK SlOE:&#13;
q NO Wi A l IIRC (O&gt;JClAJ/C b&#13;
.lI&lt;&gt;uTIT&#13;
BUT DONT''rAl/(,ABOuT I.TO&#13;
m~H • OIl. fiET roo COoVCtRNCO&#13;
I)lCllI.S( IF" 'lOU 00 Tjj(~£&#13;
\,J()&gt;J 'T BlllN'-ImoRt A~Tlfi&#13;
TliOJ (..'HATWCu lD &lt;..;£&#13;
,Al K RBGUT11?&#13;
.,.&#13;
The following parking rules&#13;
ha ve just been annouoced by the&#13;
Department of Safety and&#13;
Security, to clarify the&#13;
disposition of special parking&#13;
spaces.&#13;
1. Visitor's Stalls: These stalls&#13;
have been established for use by&#13;
individuals having business with&#13;
the university who are not&#13;
faculty staff or students. These&#13;
stalls are for visitor's use Crom 1&#13;
a.rn. to 5 p.m.&#13;
2. Handicap Stalls: These staUs&#13;
have been established Cor the use&#13;
of indivtduals having a need for&#13;
special parking consideration&#13;
because of a medical disability.&#13;
Use of these stalls is permitted&#13;
after an individual has presented&#13;
a jnedical disability, Use of these&#13;
stalls is permitted after an individual&#13;
has presented a medical&#13;
statement Crom his doctor to the&#13;
Department of Safety and&#13;
Security, at which time a special&#13;
permit will be issued.&#13;
3. 'I'empor ar-y Substitute&#13;
Vehicles: In some situations.&#13;
faculty, staff and students have&#13;
found it necessary to bring a&#13;
substitute vehicle on campus for&#13;
which they have not oblained an&#13;
alternate parking permit. A&#13;
Temporary Substitute Vehicle is&#13;
defined as any vehicle not having&#13;
1&#13;
· an alternate parking permit llarlOneCorps se ection which will not be on campus for&#13;
l'.l.l not more than three consecutive&#13;
days. In many instances the team here Dec. 18 obtainingoftbe alternate permit&#13;
is not feasable since generally the The Marine Corps Officer go on active duty. If a young man secondary vehicle is only being&#13;
selection Team from Milwaukee accepts a commission following used for a couple of days wbile&#13;
will visit Parkside on Dec. 18 to graduation, he must serve at their regular car is being serinform&#13;
interested students of least 2&#13;
1&#13;
/2 years on active duty. viced or used by some other&#13;
programs leading to a corn- Financial assistance of $100 per memberof the family. Should the&#13;
mission as a Marine Officer. The school month is available in occasion arise when it is&#13;
minimum starting salary for a addition to aviation options necessary for a faculty, staff or&#13;
Marine Officer is $9,000 per year, leading to designation as a student to bring a temporary&#13;
increasing to $11,000 within 2 Marine Pilot or Marine Flight secondary vehic1eon campus. the&#13;
years. All training is done in the Officer (vision 20-100 or better). vehicle should be parked in the&#13;
summer and there are no on- Captain D. M. Buckovetz hea~s same area that is used for their&#13;
campus commitments. THos·e· the Officer Selection efforts 10 regular vehicle .. Individu~ls&#13;
students who apply and are ac- Wisconsin and Upper Michigan should then immediately notify&#13;
cepted as undergraduates accrue and will be available in the the Department of Safety and&#13;
longevity while in the program Passageway between Greenquist Security at Extension 2455 oC the&#13;
resulting in a freshman, for Hall and the Library-Learning description of the vehicle being&#13;
example, starting at $10,500 after Center to further explain the used and its location and the&#13;
he graduates and accepts a Marine Corps commissioning reason for being brought on&#13;
commission. There is no programs and how to apply. campus. In following this&#13;
obligation to complete training or procedure. an individual wi.ll find&#13;
-&#13;
----- -, that in most cases they WIU not&#13;
receive a parking ticket for not&#13;
having a permit.&#13;
We get letters ...&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
We stand-with due humility&#13;
and apology-corrected: we WIll&#13;
not even claim the cowardly and&#13;
philistine excuse that our degrees&#13;
are not in Spanish but in one of&#13;
the world's least phonetic&#13;
languages. We hope that Ir&#13;
Ramirez rbave we the pelling&#13;
right at long last') understands&#13;
that we did not mtend to miU him&#13;
or any group to wtuch be belongs&#13;
on purpose or by chance. Further.&#13;
we tbank Dr. Tushmt of the&#13;
Sparusch dISCIpline f&lt;&gt;&lt;spendIng&#13;
his valuable time calling the&#13;
error to OUT attention: In the&#13;
future we will nte nollce con&#13;
grater cuidado.&#13;
Andn" MacLane&#13;
Allen Schukardt&#13;
AssIstant Professors of English&#13;
A" '0 AdVisers to the&#13;
Park Ide Poetry Forcum&#13;
To the EdItor'&#13;
It I depre Ing to ,In th&#13;
same I ue of the Ranger, a&#13;
rather mediocre review of th&#13;
excellent new album by Pet r&#13;
Town. hend, who 1 con idered by&#13;
many to be a gemus 10 (he world&#13;
or rock mu. ic, plus a fa\lorabl&#13;
revl.,. of the recent concert by&#13;
Grand Funk, "hlch I consIdered&#13;
b) me and e,'ef) other rock fan&#13;
\lolth any amount of mUSical t t&#13;
to be one of Ih great t hltbands&#13;
In th h, tory of rock&#13;
T""n hend play gUItar "Ith hl$&#13;
toe better than ~Iark Farner can&#13;
en~r hop(' to pia) Volth hi (lOg&#13;
Your concert reVl 'ollerdJdn't fool&#13;
me lit&gt; must ha\' been trlpPI&#13;
at th ,Imphltheater that nIght&#13;
\\110.1. could find God at&#13;
Grand Funk concert'&#13;
'lark )'unna&#13;
MON. &amp; TU ES. EVENING, s: 00 ... : 00&#13;
sB'''mflW.WDli&#13;
.... Ye PUBllc hOuse&#13;
u.lh,op and 21st (Almost)&#13;
Academic Information&#13;
Week begins today d mic Information Week -- Aca.;, of "open houses" by&#13;
a sednmic discipline -- will begin aca e . -today at Parkside.&#13;
The session~ a~e open to the&#13;
bl"c and will mclude an oppu&#13;
t&#13;
1 ·ty to talk with faculty por um . bers and academic coun- mem . b k d 1 rs examme text oo s an se o , ·ournals, discuss career opJ&#13;
ortunities, and learn of&#13;
~arkside's general . degree . ements and reqwrements reqwr . . for specific a~adem1c maJors.&#13;
Sessions will be ?1ed ~rom 9&#13;
a.m. to 1 p.m. m LibraryLearning&#13;
Center Rooms D-1?3&#13;
and 0 _174, adjacent tp the M~m&#13;
Place according to the followmg&#13;
schedule:&#13;
Wednesday, December 6&#13;
D 173 Art&#13;
o 173 Geography&#13;
D174 Mathematics&#13;
0 l74 Medical Technology&#13;
Thursday, December 7&#13;
o 173 History&#13;
o 173 Modern Language&#13;
French&#13;
German&#13;
Spanish&#13;
D 174 Psychology&#13;
Friday, December 8&#13;
D 173 Philosophy&#13;
D 173 Elementary Education&#13;
D 173 Secondary Education&#13;
D 174 Life Science&#13;
D 174 Economics&#13;
Monday, December 11&#13;
D 173 Earth Science&#13;
D 173 English&#13;
D 174 Sociology&#13;
D 174 Modern American Society&#13;
D 174 Comparative Modern&#13;
Industrial Society&#13;
Tuesday, December 12&#13;
D 173 Business Management&#13;
D 173 Labor Economics&#13;
D 173 Communications&#13;
D 174 Physics&#13;
D 174 Chemistry&#13;
Wednesday, December 13&#13;
D 173 Applied Science&#13;
Technology&#13;
D 173 Music&#13;
D 174 Political Science&#13;
D 174 Coaching Certificate&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Second semester timetables&#13;
will be available for the sessions.&#13;
Marine Corps selection&#13;
team here Dec. 18&#13;
The Marine Corps Officer&#13;
Selection Team from Milwaukee&#13;
will visit Parkside on Dec. 18 to&#13;
inform interested students of&#13;
programs leading to a commission&#13;
as a Marine Officer. The&#13;
minimum starting salary for a&#13;
Marine Officer is $9,000 per year,&#13;
increasing to $11,000 within 2&#13;
years. All training is done in the&#13;
summer and there are no oncam&#13;
pus comniitmertts. "Thos·e·&#13;
tudents who apply and are accepted&#13;
as undergraduates accrue&#13;
longevity while in the program&#13;
resulting in a freshman, for&#13;
example, starting at $10,500 after&#13;
he graduates and accepts a&#13;
commission. There is no&#13;
obligation to complete training or&#13;
go on active duty. If a young man&#13;
accepts a commission following&#13;
graduation, he must serve at&#13;
least 2112 years on active duty.&#13;
Financial assistance of $100 per&#13;
school month is available in&#13;
addition to aviation options&#13;
leading to designation as a&#13;
Marine Pilot or Marine Flight&#13;
Officer (vision 20-100 or better).&#13;
Captain D. M. Buckovetz hea~s&#13;
the Officer Selection efforts m&#13;
Wisconsin and Upper Michigan&#13;
and will be available in the&#13;
Passageway between Greenq~ist&#13;
Hall and the Library-Learnmg&#13;
Center to further explain the&#13;
Marine Corps commissioning&#13;
programs and how to apply.&#13;
New parking&#13;
rules set&#13;
The following parking rules&#13;
have just been announced by the&#13;
Department of Safety and&#13;
Security, to clarifv the&#13;
disposition of special ·par ing&#13;
spaces.&#13;
1. isitor• all : These tall&#13;
have been established for use by&#13;
individuals having busin v.ith&#13;
the university who are not&#13;
faculty, taff or students. The e&#13;
stalls are for visitor's use from , a .m. to 5 p.m.&#13;
2. Handicap tall : These tall&#13;
have been established for the u&#13;
of individual having a need for&#13;
special parkmg con iderat10n&#13;
because of a medical dis.ab1lit_·.&#13;
se of these tall i permitted&#13;
after an indi,i dual ha pre nted&#13;
a Jnedical disability. Use of th&#13;
stalls is permitted after an individual&#13;
ha presented a medical&#13;
statement from his doctor to the&#13;
Department of afet_- and&#13;
Security, at which time a pedal&#13;
permit \\ill be i ued.&#13;
3. Temporar1 u tilute&#13;
\'ehicles: In some ituatioo&#13;
faculty . staff and tudents have&#13;
found it necessary to bring a&#13;
substitute vehicle on carnpu for&#13;
which thev ha,e not obtained an&#13;
alternate- parking permit A&#13;
Temporary ubstitute Vehicle lS&#13;
defined a:; any vehicle not ha,·ing&#13;
an alternate parking permit&#13;
which will not be on campus for&#13;
not more than three consecutive&#13;
days. In many in tances the&#13;
obtaining of the alternate permit&#13;
is not feasa ble since generally the&#13;
secondary vehicle i only being&#13;
used for a couple of days ·bile&#13;
their regular car is being serviced&#13;
or used by some other&#13;
memberof the family . Should the&#13;
occasion arise when it i&#13;
necessary for a faculty, taff or&#13;
student to bring a temporary&#13;
secondary vehicle on campus, the&#13;
vehicle should be parked in the&#13;
same area that is used for their&#13;
regular vehicle . _lndividu~I&#13;
should then immediately notif.&#13;
the Department of Safety and&#13;
Security at Exten ion 2455 or the&#13;
description of the vehicle i.ng&#13;
used and its location and the&#13;
reason for being brought on&#13;
campus. Jn following thi&#13;
procedure. an individual \\ill find&#13;
that in most ca e they \\ill not&#13;
--------------------------, receive a parking ticket for not&#13;
Student Senate&#13;
Notes&#13;
Grievance&#13;
Committee&#13;
rievance and Clearing House&#13;
o~_mittee is circulating a&#13;
petition to receive some effective&#13;
act!o_n on a pass-fail system. This&#13;
l)ehhon will cover those subjects&#13;
not . directly related to your&#13;
maJor. If sufficient interest is&#13;
hown, the petitions will be&#13;
ubmitted to the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee for further action.&#13;
CHAMPION TERMPAPERS&#13;
636 Beacon St. (No. 605)&#13;
Boston, Mass. 02215&#13;
617-536-9700&#13;
~e~earch material tor Termpapers,&#13;
Repc,rts. Theses. etc . LOWEST PR ICES. 00tCK SERVICE For information. Plea~t- wnte or call.&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
tad for your_ descriptive, up-to-date, jpage, mail order catalog of 2,300&#13;
qua tty research papers. Enclose&#13;
$1.00 to com postage and handling.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLIMITED&#13;
Sl9 GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024&#13;
(213) 477-8474 • 477-5493&#13;
- "We need a local salesman"&#13;
Union Committee&#13;
All those interested in obtaining&#13;
information a~ut ~e&#13;
Student Union Committee m&#13;
connection with involvement or&#13;
roles they' as indivi~uals, may&#13;
play in said committee, may&#13;
leave name, address, and phone&#13;
number at the Student Government&#13;
Office in care of Senator&#13;
Thomas B. Weiss. . . Any student wit_h art1~t1c&#13;
ability interested m h~11?1~g&#13;
decorate the student act1V1tles&#13;
building in a Christmas decor&#13;
please leave name, address and&#13;
phone number in ~e Student&#13;
Government Office, m_ care of&#13;
Senator Thomas B. Weiss.&#13;
having a permit.&#13;
Student Court&#13;
A steenn committee ha been&#13;
initiated to re\·iew and bring&#13;
abo.ut negotiation between&#13;
admini tration and tudent&#13;
government in relation to th&#13;
propo ed judicial truc!~e at 1:11&#13;
niver ity of \\ 1 con m,&#13;
Park id . Thi teenng committee&#13;
I chaired by Thomas B.&#13;
Wei s. also chairman or the&#13;
tudent Court and Arbitration&#13;
Committee and a member of the&#13;
Wiscon in Bar Association The&#13;
committee also ha a membe .&#13;
Thomas Haack, P GA-Pr ident.&#13;
Joe Harris, P GA-\'icePresident&#13;
.&#13;
. . Wed., Dec. 6, 1912 THE P.ARKSIOE RANGER 3&#13;
Cartooni t&#13;
We get letter •••&#13;
( o matter N,w much of r pu:za .. chteken, potu and salad cat, the pnce on! S 1.7 S)&#13;
Children under 3 Free-Qlildren l-9, 10 Cents a Year&#13;
Imm nm,,11,111&#13;
Ye Pusllc house&#13;
Lothrop and 21st (Almost) &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Dec. 6, 1972&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
A mleo-tape of Tony. Jumbo&#13;
nd Garry i available (or&#13;
\ Ie" log In the Le mlllg Center.&#13;
Ttu year' Lecture and Fine&#13;
rt Cemrmttee wooh.. like to&#13;
kn.... II&gt; hat types 01 programs you&#13;
.. auld like us to ponsor Cor the&#13;
11173-14 hool year We have&#13;
m d qo uonnaires for this&#13;
purpose Pie ase p,ck one up in the&#13;
f1umamll !lice on GR lower&#13;
I , 12&#13;
The Eucharist will be&#13;
celebrated at the Newman Center&#13;
on Friday. Dec. 8. at 11:55 a.m.&#13;
Faculty. stall and studenls are&#13;
welcome.&#13;
The Center is located at the&#13;
southeast corner of JR and E,&#13;
ju t south of the new physical&#13;
education building. Parking is&#13;
available there, or take a fiveminute&#13;
walk from the physical&#13;
education building.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
Music students will present a&#13;
free public concert at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday (Dec. 7) in the Kenosha&#13;
Campus Fine Arts Room. Harmony&#13;
Foundation and Dairyland&#13;
Organ Society scholarships will&#13;
be awarded Lanine UW-P music&#13;
students at the program.&#13;
Dec. 10 at 8 p.m. in Greenquist"&#13;
103. The performers are from&#13;
UW_Milwaukee and are directed&#13;
by John Downey, composerpianist.&#13;
This ensemble was&#13;
organized (or the purpose ot .&#13;
permorming music by composers&#13;
who are currently in Wisconsin or&#13;
who were born there. The ensemble&#13;
has given concerts on&#13;
several campuses in the state.&#13;
This is their first appearance at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Works to be hard are "Fantasy&#13;
and Fugue" for piano by Thoma's&#13;
Trobaugh, j'Passacaglia for&#13;
Woodwind Quintet" by Alan&#13;
Guss, "Three Songs" for soprano&#13;
and piano by Fred Zahnos,&#13;
Clarinet Variations by Truman&#13;
Hayes, Ecstasy for piano by&#13;
Vincent McDermott and&#13;
"Movements" for eight instruments&#13;
and tape by Joseph&#13;
Laspisa Included in the program&#13;
is "Movement" for violin,&#13;
clarinet and piano by August&#13;
Wegner, Parkside faculty&#13;
member.&#13;
FOR RENT: Madison apartm&#13;
campus local ion, newl ent, el(Cfilq&#13;
bedrooms for 2 or 3 wom Y furniShed, J&#13;
en. 608.256.5992,&#13;
ORIENTAL GIFTS&#13;
R &amp; A Enterprises&#13;
P.O. Box 26&lt;1, Kenosha&#13;
Call Robbie6S2·'U4S&#13;
I need a ride to and-or Iro&#13;
Carolina or Florida. Will shar m NorTtl&#13;
and driving. Call 634."665. II! ell.pen~&#13;
A . concert of contemporary&#13;
m.uslc by Wisconsin composers&#13;
WIll be presented at Parkside on&#13;
Any guy or gal interested In&#13;
Ranger Be"r Mascot for home wi bell'llil The&#13;
events should cont"cl Barb ntet ~&#13;
Physical eeocettoo. 5SJ.22S1 ~rl5 1ft&#13;
Burch, 554·9507. No experience Vkt"&#13;
and we provide the bear CO$!lJrn:~'&#13;
THINKING ABOUT DROPPING&#13;
you are not sure why yOU Shoul OUT? I(&#13;
school or you are looking lor career&#13;
d&#13;
If.y III&#13;
~nd y~u can be in Milwaukee Jan. :Irectlon&#13;
InfenSlve program desiQned 10 1'1 I -'for ...&#13;
fhequestions: "Who am I?" and ,e..;.,anlWtt&#13;
, going'?" call collect or e.... tf!l&#13;
MOTIVATION TO LEARN CENT WfUt&#13;
W. Forest Home. Milwaukee WI ,ER.6OIS&#13;
1000. • S··W!I,&#13;
STUDENTS- TOUGH SE&#13;
DO YOU FIND IT HAIlDT~~STUr&#13;
We can help you gel vee-sen OUtTUOYr&#13;
on the path 10 academIc succ Of al'"lllll'G&#13;
be in Milwaukee Jan. 2.6 ande:~ If YOUtill&#13;
immerse yourself in ace WIlling ..&#13;
program designed 10 fit YOUomPt~, ....&#13;
collect or write: MOTIVAT10~~' (tIl&#13;
CENTER. 6Of5 W. Foresf Ho 0 LeAl!:"&#13;
Wis. (AU) 32\.\000. me,Mllwa.&#13;
Travel Center issues international IDs&#13;
The ouncll on International&#13;
Edu aucnal Exchange &lt;CIEE)&#13;
ho r enll) approved the&#13;
P rk ,de tud nt Acuviue&#13;
OlrlC&lt;, ompus Travel enter. to&#13;
n t n oUlc:i I, umg -center&#13;
lor th Internatlon I tudent·&#13;
" 'holar 10 ard Th cards are&#13;
no" 8\' II bl in Room 0-197&#13;
IJ,&#13;
Il '-A 111 (Of\" the general&#13;
It IDCKenoh ar a student&#13;
popUlat,on IncludIDR tudents&#13;
from urrourxhng commuNties&#13;
Card&gt; 11&gt;,11b&lt;&gt; ava,lable to both&#13;
coli Re and h,gh school studenls&#13;
'10\ no '10\ Ish to purchase th m&#13;
Bo ·,call) the Internallonal&#13;
:Iud nt·· holar Identit) ard'&#13;
. tud nr pn port to low-cost&#13;
trav I u' also a ke) to meeting nd tra,·chng WIth other L.. ....&#13;
tudcnts. European as well as&#13;
m{Oncan&#13;
The International tudent&#13;
Id ntity Card's lor lull·time&#13;
students in higber education&#13;
Ccoll ges and universities and&#13;
vocational schools) while the&#13;
Intcrnational cholar Identity&#13;
Card IS lor lull-time high scbcol&#13;
tudents The only difference&#13;
between the tudent and the&#13;
holar Card is that scholars,&#13;
between the ages 01 16 and 22.&#13;
may not use the intra·European&#13;
student charter !lighls to or lrom&#13;
candlnavia Scholars are,&#13;
however. eligible for all other&#13;
night and d,scounts.&#13;
UlI&gt;ouldb&lt;&gt; impossible to list all&#13;
th d,,,,,,"nls available with the&#13;
I 1 Generally. the card entitles&#13;
'Is holder to reduced or Iree&#13;
admi. "00 to museums. theaters.&#13;
em mas. concerts and places of&#13;
cultural or hi torical in~rest&#13;
abroad For example. most&#13;
museums tn Pari have a student&#13;
rate which is haU the normal&#13;
entrance fee. i.e., regular admi.&#13;
~Ionto th Lou\'re is 3 francs;&#13;
the . tud nt price is 1.50 francs.&#13;
IfffiRNAnONAl STUDENT IDENTTTYCARD .,",".~..n~_~.~~,..-,.n~&#13;
................... __ .. _.-.__ ~l&#13;
,,'-.........&#13;
,&#13;
"&#13;
I \&#13;
,- \&#13;
, :",'..... I&#13;
\.....,_ I&#13;
\ I&#13;
, ,&#13;
... -' --"&#13;
---_ .. -&#13;
-_.-&#13;
---.. -&#13;
.N"gC2&#13;
076953&#13;
,....._.- .&lt;- Pvna c. \&#13;
!J/t;!JG", ~&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM•&#13;
-'''--- ~.. _.&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
.- - ,-_........_.- Cooonril_llOUrfY-dona.l EdUC:"'IOonI;Il&gt;t~&#13;
IJJ UHlno HAno". "t..AZA.HlW yOlllll001l V.lid from oet\. 72 ._------ -_.- ....&#13;
To save the most with the ISIC, a&#13;
student should always show it&#13;
and ask if student rates are&#13;
available before he or she pays&#13;
for anythingl Many places oUer&#13;
student rates which they do not&#13;
publicize but will make them&#13;
avaUable if asked.&#13;
The European student travel&#13;
organizations also offer various&#13;
money· saving services and&#13;
lacilities to holders 01 the ISIC.&#13;
For example, in Paris a student&#13;
can eat in a student restaurant&#13;
for approximately hall the cost of&#13;
a regular restaurant meal.&#13;
Student hostels and restaurants&#13;
are described in detail in the&#13;
·'Hostel List:' available lor $1&#13;
from The Council on International&#13;
Educational Exchange.&#13;
777 nited ations&#13;
Plaza. ew Yor, . Y. 10017.&#13;
With the ISIC. a sfudent can&#13;
also take advantage of the intraEuropean&#13;
student charter flights,&#13;
trains and ships within Europe,&#13;
as well as low-eost tours. He can&#13;
ny from Rome to Tel Aviv for&#13;
EXECUTIVE&#13;
paperweight&#13;
Imaglnal'\'~ gifl 't~m.&#13;
Good-natur~dfun. Gr~al&#13;
~om'~rsat,onp;U'~.r'toll.&#13;
olisjoctlon xuorontud&#13;
ACI 'on' $3.50 ppd.&#13;
EXCLUSIVE PRODUCTS&#13;
827 YOUT ST. RACINE, WIS. 53402 ... ::JI,.;:lII .....&#13;
• BEER. SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS. WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
OPEN DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P.M.&#13;
SUNDAY TlL8 P.M.&#13;
CAU ----'-=-----~&#13;
632-1565&#13;
7t..r SMI-'.&#13;
UIE·D.&#13;
L&#13;
I&#13;
Q&#13;
U&#13;
o&#13;
R&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE.&#13;
-&#13;
RACINE, WISC.&#13;
approximately $67.50 or from&#13;
London to Paris for approximately&#13;
$15.60 - saving :;0&#13;
percent or more compared to the&#13;
cost of a regular commercial&#13;
night. II you prefer traveling by&#13;
train, then you will find such&#13;
bargains as the Student Railpass&#13;
(your ISIC wUl he acceptab1e -'s&#13;
prool 01 student status&gt;.&#13;
The International Student&#13;
Identity Card is sponsored by the&#13;
International Student Travel&#13;
Conference OSTC) whose&#13;
members include ClEE and&#13;
major student travel&#13;
organizations throughout the&#13;
world. Representative agencies&#13;
in Europe, Africa, North&#13;
America and Asia currently issue&#13;
the ISIC.&#13;
~F~EE-F~EE-FREE-FREE::;-]&#13;
~ Good for One ~&#13;
~ til I FREE Glass til&#13;
~ of Beer ~&#13;
~ at ~&#13;
~ Geno Rome ~&#13;
~ 120052 St. ;J; ~&#13;
~ ~&#13;
&amp;: "This is Where It's Happenin~" t'l1&#13;
I&#13;
Orfer Expires Dec. 13, 1972 til&#13;
_FREE-FREE-FREE-FREE~&#13;
FOR RENT _ 4 bedroom apt.&#13;
overlooking Lake Michigan.&#13;
N. Sheridan Rd. Prefer 4 girls&#13;
for January occupancy.&#13;
Contact 652_6988.&#13;
Phone 654-5032&#13;
Pipes&#13;
Roach Clips&#13;
Candles Oil Lamps&#13;
Incense Jewelry&#13;
Block lights Papers&#13;
Posters Tapestry&#13;
and /vIore&#13;
-&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Dec. 6, 1972&#13;
l&#13;
I&#13;
Q&#13;
u&#13;
0&#13;
R&#13;
IT S WHAT'S HAPPENING CLASSIFIED&#13;
Ton~. Jumbo&#13;
,·ail ble for&#13;
mi en er.&#13;
.1usic tudents will present a&#13;
free public concert at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday (Dec. 7 ) in the Kenosha&#13;
Campus Fine Arts Room. Harmony&#13;
Foundation and Dairyland&#13;
Organ Society scholarships will&#13;
be awarded to nine UW-P music&#13;
tudents at the program.&#13;
. concert of contemporary&#13;
music b \ isconsin composers&#13;
.,.. ill be presented at Parkside on&#13;
nt • u international IDs&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
\&#13;
, ----...&#13;
- ' t&#13;
I&#13;
\ I&#13;
, YSA _,_,.. ____ .__,,~&#13;
2C2&#13;
076953&#13;
----.,&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
To~ \' the mo t.,.. 1th th I IC, a&#13;
·tuden hould al ,·ay show it&#13;
and ·k 1f tudent rate are&#13;
a\'ailable before he or she pay&#13;
f r nythmg! . lany place offer&#13;
tudent rat which they do not&#13;
publicize but will make them&#13;
a\·ailable if a. ked.&#13;
Th European tudent travel&#13;
organization also offer variou&#13;
money- aving ervice and&#13;
facilitie to holders of the ISIC.&#13;
For ample. in Paris a student&#13;
can eat in a tudent re taurant&#13;
for approximately half the cost of&#13;
a regular re taurant meal.&#13;
tud nt ho tel and re taurants&#13;
are d ribed in detail in the&#13;
''II t 1 Li t,.. available for 1&#13;
from The ouncil on International&#13;
Educational Exchan&#13;
. 777 ' nited • ·ation&#13;
Plaza. , ·ew Yor . ·. Y 10017.&#13;
With th I IC. a fudent can&#13;
al:'O ke ad\'antage of the intraEuropean&#13;
tudent charter flights,&#13;
trams and hip within Europe.&#13;
~ ell a lo\, -cost tours. He can&#13;
fly from Rome to Tel viv for&#13;
EXECUTIVE&#13;
paperweight&#13;
lma,ina11 itil tern.&#13;
Good-natured un Great&#13;
comer 01,on pieu. y roll. ·011 ,Jacuon ~uaranteed&#13;
Cl So.,._ $3.50 ppd&#13;
EXCLUSIVE PRODUCTS&#13;
827 YOUT ST. RACINE, WIS. 53402....._~....,-&#13;
•BEER• SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS • WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
OPEN DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P.M.&#13;
SUNDAY TIL 8 P.M.&#13;
CALL-------&#13;
appro. imately $67.50 or from&#13;
London to Paris for approximate!&#13;
$15.60 - saving 50&#13;
percent or more compared to the&#13;
cost of a regular commercial&#13;
flight. If you prefer traveling by&#13;
train, then you will find such&#13;
bargain as the tudent Railpass&#13;
I your ISIC wi1J be acceptable as&#13;
proof of student status).&#13;
The International Student&#13;
Identity Card i sponsored by the&#13;
International Student Travel&#13;
Conference (ISTC) whose&#13;
members include CIEE and&#13;
major tu dent travel&#13;
organizations throughout the&#13;
world. Representative agencies&#13;
in Europe, Africa, 'orth&#13;
America and Asia currently issue&#13;
the I I .&#13;
FOR RENT - 4 bedroom apt.&#13;
overlooking Lake Michigan,&#13;
• Sheridan Rd. Prefer 4 girls&#13;
for January occupancy.&#13;
Contact 652-6988,&#13;
Dec. 10 at 8 p.m. in Greenquist·&#13;
103. The performers are from&#13;
W- 1ilwaukee and are directed&#13;
by John Downey, composerpianist.&#13;
This ensemble was&#13;
organized for the purpose of&#13;
permorming music by composers&#13;
who are currently in Wisconsin or&#13;
who were born there. The ensemble&#13;
has given concerts on&#13;
several campuses in the state .&#13;
This is their first appearance at&#13;
Parkside. Works to be hard are "Fantasy&#13;
and Fugue" for piano by Thomas&#13;
Trobaugh, " Passacaglia for&#13;
Woodwind Quintet" by Alan&#13;
Guss, "Three Songs" for soprano&#13;
and piano by Fred Zahnos,&#13;
Clarinet Variations by Truman&#13;
Hayes, Ecstasy for piano by&#13;
Vincent McDermott and&#13;
"Movements" for eight instruments&#13;
and tape by Joseph&#13;
Laspi a. Included in the program&#13;
is "Movement" for violin ,&#13;
clarinet and piano by August&#13;
Wegner, Parkside faculty&#13;
member.&#13;
FOR RENT: Madison apart&#13;
campus location, newly m~u, f'Xtttl&#13;
bedrooms for 2 or 3 wom Urnfsh•d, , en. 608 2S6 5992&#13;
ORIENTAL GIFTS&#13;
R &amp; A Enterprises&#13;
P.O. Box 264, Kenosha&#13;
Call Robbie 652.:1.145&#13;
I need a ride to and-or lro&#13;
Carolina or Florida. Will sharo m Nortn&#13;
and driving. Call 634-466S. •X?ens.,;&#13;
Any guy or gal interested in&#13;
Ranger Bear Mascot for home Wi be,ng&#13;
events should contact Barb ll1er """1s&#13;
Physical Educallon, 553_2257 ~,,&#13;
Burch, 554-9507. No experien ll,c&#13;
and we provide the bear costuce n~r&#13;
met•!&#13;
THINKING ABOUT DROPPING&#13;
yOU are not Sure why YOU Should OIJT} I&#13;
school or you are looking for career ' 1•r&#13;
and y~u can be in Mllwauk~ Jan :;ec1&#13;
mtens,ve program designed 10 h I for&#13;
thequestions: " Who am !?"and·~·&#13;
I going?" call collect or erea&#13;
MOTIVATION TO LEARN CENT ''" 1&#13;
W. Forest Home. Milwauk~ w·s (ER, 601S 1000. ' I 4141 nJ&#13;
STUDENTS - TOUGH SEM&#13;
DO YOU FINO IT HARD TO ESTE111&#13;
W e can help you get yourself °"'STuov, on the palh to academic succ 01 •' ....,&#13;
be in Milwaukee Jan. 2 6 and"'"' If \'Ou&#13;
immerse yourself In • •re w,111ng&#13;
program designed to flt Y~omprct,&#13;
collect or write: MOTIVATIO~ ;ffOI, CENTER, 6015 w. Forest Ho OLEA• Wis. (414) 321 -1000. me, M .. ,. '&#13;
r,::FREE-FREE-FREE-FREE-&#13;
~ . . I ~ Good for One : ~ ~&#13;
~ FREE Glass ~ J of Beer i ~ at ? ~ Geno Ro,ne ~&#13;
~ 1200 52 St. il i ~ ~&#13;
~ "Th" · Wh I ' ~ IS IS ere t s Happening" l:!l&#13;
I Offer Expires Dec. 13, 1972 l:!l&#13;
-FREE-FREE-FREE-FREE~&#13;
Pipes&#13;
Roach Clips&#13;
Candles Oil Larnps&#13;
632-1565&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC. Phone 654-5032&#13;
Incense Jewelry&#13;
Black Lights Papers&#13;
Posters Tapestry&#13;
and t,l,ore&#13;
-&#13;
., " ,"&#13;
Audience asked to&#13;
in Sunday concert&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
The audience will be invited to&#13;
join in a carol concert to be&#13;
presented by the Chamber&#13;
Singers, Chorale, Chorus and&#13;
Brass Ensemble at 3 p.m. on&#13;
Sunday (Dec. to) in the&#13;
Greenquist Hall Concourse. The&#13;
program is free and open to the&#13;
public. .&#13;
Familiar carols 10 the "sing&#13;
along" portion of the program&#13;
will include "0 Come All Ye&#13;
Faithful," "Silent Night," "It&#13;
Came Upon a Midnight Clear,"&#13;
"Hark the Herald Angels Sing"&#13;
and "Joy to the World."&#13;
The combined choirs of almost&#13;
90 voices will sing Johann&#13;
MichaelBach's "Be Not Afraid"&#13;
andSamuel Scheidt's "A Child Is&#13;
Born in Bethlehem,"&#13;
The Chamber Singers will&#13;
present Costeley's "Allon Gay&#13;
gergeres" and Praetorius' "A&#13;
ChildIs Born in Bethlehem" and&#13;
"Psallite" and the Chorale will&#13;
singUlysses Kay's "A Wreath for&#13;
Waits."&#13;
The Chorus will sing&#13;
Praetorius' "In Natali Domine,"&#13;
Hyatt's "Sing Noel" and Cory's&#13;
"Carol"; a women's chorus will&#13;
sing three Christmas carols&#13;
arranged by Alice Parker; and a&#13;
men's chorus will sing three&#13;
carols by Alfred Burt and a&#13;
Fenno Heath arrangement,&#13;
"Deck the Hall."&#13;
""••""'.... -.":~II,&#13;
","'."~. ... '."...&#13;
Pre-med meetings&#13;
here for preps&#13;
The "Facts of Life for PreMeds"&#13;
will be the topic of two&#13;
informational meetings for high&#13;
school students considering&#13;
careers as physicians, their&#13;
parents and high school counselors&#13;
today and Thursday, Dec.&#13;
6 and 7. at 7:30 p.m. in Room D173&#13;
of the Library-Learning&#13;
Center,&#13;
The sessions will be conducted&#13;
by Anna Maria Williams, an&#13;
associate professor of life science&#13;
and academic adviser to&#13;
Parkside pre-medical students,&#13;
and junior and senior pre-med&#13;
students from The Parkside PreMedClub.&#13;
Topics to be covered include&#13;
high school preparation for premed&#13;
programs, most common&#13;
majors for pre-med, specific&#13;
Parkside programs for pre-med&#13;
stUdents, extra-curricular activit.ies&#13;
and work, financing&#13;
medical school, opportunities for&#13;
womenin medicine and alternate&#13;
careers.&#13;
Parkside presently has about&#13;
60 students enrolled in pre4&#13;
medical programs.&#13;
A .. photographic display&#13;
detailing Ute Parkside pre-med&#13;
program and an exhibit on&#13;
~edieval medicine will be on&#13;
VIew.Persons who wish may also&#13;
to~r the Greenquist Hall life&#13;
SCiencelaboratories where premed&#13;
students will explain actual&#13;
laboratory procedures on which&#13;
~ey are working and laboratory&#13;
IOstrumentation.&#13;
Interested persons may attend&#13;
the program on either night No rese .&#13;
rvations are necessary,&#13;
TERMPAPERS Rt~nched Alt wr I and professionally typed.&#13;
Degrt~.ers have a minimum BS, BA&#13;
CALL COLLECT: 202.JJJ.0201&#13;
OU ALSO AVAILABLE&#13;
R TERMPAPER: CATALOG&#13;
~t W'1l (OVER J,GOOON FILE)&#13;
lam, 1 ~ot send the same paper to the&#13;
Sltoc;~ Oottwic::e.-oRDER NOW! Send&#13;
(.Ialog. tr postage and handling for your&#13;
lERMPAPER lIBRARY,INC.&#13;
J160 "0" Streel, N.W.&#13;
WaShington, D.C. 20007&#13;
• •&#13;
.lOIn&#13;
The 13-piece B di rass Ense.mbl rected hy Robert e,&#13;
who joined the Parks~omason&#13;
faCUlty last fall, will I e mUSIC&#13;
the aUdience p ?y dunng&#13;
portion of the participation&#13;
program and will&#13;
p~e~ent ~~oy Anderson's "Suite&#13;
o arols and a postl d&#13;
FrankM I u e.&#13;
Parksid hueIer is director of the&#13;
e c oral groups. Mueller&#13;
who came to Parkside last yea;&#13;
from the Universtty f ill and' 0 1n0iS preVIously taught at two&#13;
Pennsylvania colleges, bas been&#13;
invited to be a lecturer and&#13;
~nductor On Dec. 21 for the&#13;
hll~delphla Renaissance&#13;
Madrigal FestiVal, v.ilich ,,'ill&#13;
mclude a performance and&#13;
workshops for high school a.nd&#13;
COllege madrigal groups in the&#13;
PhIladelphia area.&#13;
Your horoscope&#13;
By Prisci lIa Schwei&#13;
December 6-12&#13;
FOR ALL SIGNS, Sun opposite Saturn in effect Dec 11-10 causes&#13;
delays, dIsappointments, lessened ambition lOwered· vitaUty and&#13;
s~sceptibility to colds and flu. Moon moves' through cold northern&#13;
SIgns, so expect colde~ weather and greater sensitivity to It. la)' at&#13;
home and cuddle up WItha good book or a good friend Moon ConjOUlS&#13;
lucky Jupiter the 8th and forms several aspects the 11th, indicating&#13;
stimulating experiences.&#13;
. ARIES: Sun-Saturn aspect indicates conflict between immediate&#13;
interests and more distant goals, and travel problems. Moon unfavorabl~&#13;
to travel the 6th; favors career and ambitions the 7th-3th.&#13;
favors friends and club activities the 9th-11th, favors rest and privacy&#13;
the 12th.&#13;
. TAURUS: Sun-Saturn aspect indicates conflict between personaJ&#13;
fmances and public benefits or partnership funds, Moon unfavorable&#13;
to partnership deals the 6th; favors education and long trips the 7th8th;&#13;
favors career and ambitions the9th-l1th; favors friends and clubs&#13;
the 12th.&#13;
GEMINI: Sun-Saturn aspect indicates conflict between personal&#13;
goals and close relationships. Moon unfavorable to marriage and close&#13;
friends the 6th; favors mutual funds the 7th-8th; favors education and&#13;
long trips the 9th-11th; favors career matters the tztb.&#13;
CANCER, Sun-Saturn aspect indicates conflict between health&#13;
needs and work demands. Moon unfavorable to work effort the 6th;&#13;
favors marriage and close friends the 7fu.8th; favors partnerslllp&#13;
funds the 9th-11th; and favors education and long trips the 12th&#13;
LEO: Sun-saturn aspect indicates conflict between private desires&#13;
or love life and club or friendship responsibilities, Moon unfa\'orable&#13;
to Jove life the 6th; favors work efforts the 7th-ath; Iavoes marriage&#13;
and-close friends the Vth-lIth; Iavors partnership funds and loons the&#13;
12th.&#13;
VIRGO: Sun-Saturn aspect indicates conflict between home tile and&#13;
career demands. Moon unfavorable to home me the 6th: favors love&#13;
affairs and creativity the 7th-8th; favors work efforts the 9UHlth~&#13;
favors marriage and partnerships the 12th.&#13;
LfBRA, Sun-Saturn aspect indicates conflict between immedJate&#13;
interests and educational responsibilities. Moon unfavorable to&#13;
meetings with siblings the 6th; favors home life and family the 7th8th;&#13;
favors love life and creativity the9th·l1th; favors work efforts the&#13;
12th.&#13;
SCORPIO: Sun-Saturn aspect indicates conflict between personal&#13;
funds and outstanding debts, Moon unfavorable to e.~pense for personal&#13;
items the 6th; favors short trips and visIts the 7th.,8th; favOl'S&#13;
family and home the 9th-11th; favors love hfe and creaboo the 12th&#13;
SAGITTARIUS: Sun-Saturn aspect indicates confl,cts bet"een&#13;
personal goals and marital or partnership responsibilitie loon&#13;
unfavorable to personal aims the 6th; favors personal fmances the ith8th;&#13;
favors short trips and writing the 9th-11th. favors (ami)' and&#13;
home life the 12th,&#13;
CAPRICORN: Sun-saturn aspect indicates conflict bet~een "'ark&#13;
demands and health or private interests. Moon unfavorable to behind·&#13;
the-scenes activities the 6th; favors personal goals the 7th-8th. favors&#13;
personal finances the 9th411th; favors short trips and n Its the 12th&#13;
AQUARIUS, Sun-Saturn aspect indIcates confllctbetv.een onecurity&#13;
in love life and desire to join clubs and make a Wider Circle of&#13;
~riends. Moon unfavorable to friendshi~ on the 6th; favOr'S,pn\'aC")&#13;
and rest the 7th-8th; favors personal alms the 9th-11th. fa,Ol'S per'&#13;
sonal finances the 12th.&#13;
PISCES: Sun4Saturn aspect indicates connlcts between ramll)"&#13;
'b'I't' s and career ambitions Moon u.nravor.able to career responsl I I Ie ' th-8th&#13;
efforts the 6th; favors club activities and fnendshlps the 7 ,&#13;
. health and rest the 9lh·llth· favors personal alms the favors prIvacy, '&#13;
12th.&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thursday 11- 8&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER 15~&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball lachlDe&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go •&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••&#13;
•••••••••••&#13;
Wed .• Dec. 6. 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
THE&#13;
The Par de Film ecy "ill P&#13;
t&#13;
It&#13;
II&#13;
una"..... of the P ,1m&#13;
The Ra en&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
t:nahHeep&#13;
The. 'aRlcian's B,rtbda.y&#13;
bombard you&#13;
on • IMP"*' ILh •• 'llo l&#13;
It W m&#13;
"m not&#13;
' . ~ . . '&#13;
Audience asked to&#13;
in Sunday concert&#13;
• •&#13;
]OID&#13;
The audience will be invited to&#13;
join in a carol concert to be&#13;
presented by the Chamber&#13;
ingers, Chorale, Chorus and&#13;
Brass Ensemble at 3 p.m. on&#13;
unday (Dec . 10) in the&#13;
Greenquist Hall Concourse. The&#13;
program is free and open to the&#13;
public. . " . Familiar carols m the smg&#13;
along" portion of the program&#13;
will include "O Come All Ye&#13;
Faithful," "Silent Night," "It&#13;
eame Upon a Midnight Clear,"&#13;
"Hark the Herald Angels Sing"&#13;
and "Joy to the World."&#13;
The combined choirs of almost&#13;
90 voices will sing Johann&#13;
Michael Bach's "Be Not Afraid"&#13;
and Samuel Scheidt's "A Child Is&#13;
Born in Bethlehem."&#13;
The Chamber Singers will&#13;
present Costeley's "Allon Gay&#13;
Bergeres" and Praetorius' "A&#13;
Child Is Born in Bethlehem" and&#13;
"Psallite" and the Chorale will&#13;
ing Ulysses Kay's "A Wreath for&#13;
Waits."&#13;
The Chorus will sing&#13;
Praetorius' " In Natali Domine,"&#13;
Hyatt's "Sing Noel " and Cory's&#13;
"Carol "; a women's chorus will&#13;
si ng three Christmas carols&#13;
arranged by Alice Parker; and a&#13;
men's chorus will sing three&#13;
carols by Alfred Burt and a&#13;
Fenno Heath arrangement,&#13;
"Deck the Hall."&#13;
Pre-med meetings&#13;
here for preps&#13;
The "Facts of Life for PreMeds"&#13;
will be the topic of two&#13;
informational meetings for high&#13;
chool students considering&#13;
careers as physicians, their&#13;
parents and high school counselors&#13;
today and Thursday, Dec.&#13;
6 and 7. at 7:30 p.m. in Room D173&#13;
of the Library-Learning&#13;
Center.&#13;
The sessions will be conducted&#13;
by Anna Maria Williams, an&#13;
associate professor of life science&#13;
and academic adviser to&#13;
Parkside pre-medical students, and junior and senior pre-med&#13;
t udents from The Parkside Pre1ed&#13;
Club.&#13;
Topics to be covered include&#13;
high chool preparation for premed&#13;
programs, most common&#13;
major for pre-med, specific&#13;
Park ide programs for pre-med&#13;
tudent , extra-curricular activities&#13;
and work , financing&#13;
medical school , opportunities for&#13;
women in medicine and alternate&#13;
career .&#13;
Park ide presently has about&#13;
60 tudents enrolled in premedical&#13;
programs.&#13;
A photographic display detailing the Parkside pre-med&#13;
program and an exhibit on&#13;
medieval medicine will be on&#13;
view. Persons who wish may also&#13;
lo~r the Greenquist Hall life&#13;
c1ence laboratories where premed&#13;
students will explain actual&#13;
laboratory procedures on which&#13;
~ ey are working and laboratory instrumentation.&#13;
Interested persons may attend&#13;
the program on either night. No&#13;
reservations are necessary.&#13;
TERMPAPERS&#13;
: ~"'•rched and professionally typed.&#13;
Otg~~ters hive a minimum BS, BA&#13;
CALL COLLECT: 202-333-0201&#13;
ALSO AVAILABLE&#13;
OURTERMPAPERCATALOG&#13;
'N (OVER 3,000ON FILE)&#13;
,/ Will not send the same paper to the&#13;
\I~· School twice. ORDER NOW ! Send&#13;
o,:,:; ver PGst~ge ~nd handling for your&#13;
TERMPAPER LIBRARY, INC.&#13;
3160 " 0 " Street, N .W.&#13;
- Washington , D.C. 20001&#13;
diThe 13-piece Brass Ensemble rected by Robert Th , h · · omason w o Jomed the Parkside mu .&#13;
faculty la~t fall , will play duri~&#13;
the . audience participation&#13;
portion of the program and will&#13;
present Leroy Anderson's "S ·t&#13;
of Carols" and a postlude. Ill e&#13;
Fra~k Mueller is director of the&#13;
Parkside choral groups. Mueller&#13;
who came to Parkside last yea;&#13;
from the nive Jh or Ill&#13;
and pre\iousl} ta ·&#13;
Penn ylvania coll&#13;
invited to be a 1&#13;
con_ductor on Dec. 21 for 1h&#13;
Ph iladelphia Rena i ance&#13;
. ladrigal Fe tJval, " · h&#13;
mclude a P rformance workshops for hi J&#13;
college madrigal gro&#13;
Philadelphia ar .&#13;
Your horoscope&#13;
By Priscilla Schwei&#13;
December 6-12&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thursday 11 - 8&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER 15'&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sand iche&#13;
b II 2 Pool Table Foo a .&#13;
d .. nino P inball • tachine Air Con mo "&#13;
Cold Six Pack ~ o• ~ o• •• • • • • • • •&#13;
•••••••••••••••••&#13;
I&#13;
1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
Th R&#13;
n&#13;
A Very erry Berry Ball ~&#13;
EDEN&#13;
STONE&#13;
Sat,, Z'ee, 9, 9-,00 p,,,,,,&#13;
M&#13;
Student &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANG~R Wed., Dec. 6, 1972&#13;
~~The~.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Sports&#13;
Cagers win twice,&#13;
face N. Dakota&#13;
By Kris Koch&#13;
The Parkside cagers will face&#13;
North Dakota tonight at Fargo&#13;
and North Dakota State Thur~&#13;
sday night at Grand Forks as&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens' young&#13;
team puts its 2-0 mark on the line.&#13;
The Rangers opened their&#13;
season here Friday with a win&#13;
over the Luther College Norsemen&#13;
by a 69-62 score.&#13;
Top scorers for parkstde were&#13;
Chuck Chambliss with 23 points,&#13;
Joe Hutter with 17 and Bill&#13;
Sobanski and Mike Hanke with 10&#13;
points apiece. Top scorers for&#13;
Luther were Greg Vieth with 16&#13;
points, Tim O'Neill with nine and&#13;
John Lowe with nine.&#13;
Stephens played only seven&#13;
players during the course of the&#13;
game, but received some impressive&#13;
showings from freshmen&#13;
Gary Cole, Bill Sobanski,&#13;
Hanke, and Don Snow, who all&#13;
played well in their first&#13;
collegiate games.&#13;
After leading 35-30 at the half,&#13;
I go rreshman Bill Saban ki (52) wasa big raclor in the Rangers' two wins last weekend as he and&#13;
t mmate Gary Cole dominated the boards. Parkside beat Luther College 69-62 Friday in the opening&#13;
gam in us new racility and rollowed up SBturoay night with a come-rrom-behind 72-66 victory over a&#13;
tough tJssoun-RoIIa squad Photo hy David Thomton&#13;
leers extend streak with&#13;
Th Ranger pucksters extend&#13;
their Yo mrung streak at&#13;
hom to IS gam last night with&#13;
a thnlhng 6-5 overtime victory&#13;
0\' r tarquette University at&#13;
\\.Ison Park nus leaves the UWPh&#13;
ke\ team With a 4-1 season&#13;
record . nd rour wms in a row&#13;
Iter- dropping Its opening game.&#13;
Marquette scored first with&#13;
anI) 30 econd gone. but&#13;
Park Ide came back with goals&#13;
h)' Gordie Bradshaw and Dave&#13;
Dougall to give them a 2-1 lead&#13;
arter one period The second&#13;
penod was all Marquette's as&#13;
th .scored tv.Ice to give them a&#13;
3-2 I d going into the third&#13;
penod Joe Rooko hed up the&#13;
gam Ior the Rangers with only&#13;
645 left In regulahon time on an&#13;
unassisted goal. The game ended&#13;
this way and under college rules&#13;
a single 10 minute overtime&#13;
period is then played.&#13;
The overtime period was a free&#13;
skahng one that saw Marquette&#13;
score the first goal with only ,';05&#13;
gone. Joe Rosko scored his&#13;
second goal or the night at 4:32 to&#13;
tie the game again, this time at 4-&#13;
". Marquette scored again at 6:44&#13;
to make it 5-4 and things began to&#13;
look dark for Parkside. Dave&#13;
Tilly brought the Rangers back&#13;
even with a hard wrist shot at&#13;
7~28 of the overtime. Gene Rosko&#13;
scored the winning goal with only&#13;
I:Il-lleft to give V-P one or its&#13;
most exciting victories in its&#13;
three year hockey history.&#13;
Gymnasts claim dual win&#13;
The Park. Ide men's gymna&#13;
uc- learn won their dual meet&#13;
agal t Eau Clatre Saturday&#13;
1I1~ to93IS&#13;
Pa'k .de took hrst in every&#13;
eve&lt; .,cept All Around. IndJvl&#13;
J.11 \l, mners m each event&#13;
'" tl 'hke Miller, side horse;&#13;
C Dey, itz. "suiting; Steve&#13;
la )'. high bar Brian Petshow,&#13;
000 e~ertlse: Kevin 0' 'eil,&#13;
n and parallel bars; and&#13;
as Help&#13;
Men&#13;
---&#13;
52-3287&#13;
\&#13;
Petshow and Brad Grunewald&#13;
took second and third places&#13;
respectively in All Arounc.&#13;
The next meet will be Wednesday&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. against&#13;
Madison at Parkside. The team&#13;
will go to Stout Friday.&#13;
r··j\·S·O"RT·ioNS····1&#13;
; FREE Referral 10 N.Y. Clinic.;&#13;
· '&#13;
: 12 weeks or less ;&#13;
Tolal cosl :&#13;
$150 1&#13;
CALL&#13;
· CONTROLLED&#13;
~PARENTHOOD~&#13;
(a Don-prOnt organiZation)&#13;
SUITE 1006&#13;
DAVID STOTT BLDG.&#13;
· (313) 964-0530 :&#13;
a •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
:&gt;&#13;
1I&#13;
3&#13;
\'&#13;
• WIn ~ m'lJlf&#13;
Sell &amp; Trade&#13;
Parkside dominated the shots&#13;
on goal statistics, outshccting&#13;
Marquette 42 to 23.&#13;
The Rangers' final game of the&#13;
semester is against UWWhitewater&#13;
this Saturday, Dec. 9,&#13;
al Madison. The Rangers&#13;
defeated UW-Whitewater 11-2&#13;
early this season at Wilson Park.&#13;
1517 W. 6th Street&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Ph. &amp;33-8&amp;20&#13;
~'~4-,&#13;
o1d~,&#13;
~,~,&#13;
dtJd4" ~.&#13;
HOURS; 1 - 6 Daily&#13;
9 - 6 Saturday&#13;
1 - 4 Sunday&#13;
a~." - ~.. -.a;&#13;
!1"9' ...... ) 624 'i6"S1:&#13;
The House of&#13;
Fine Diamonds&#13;
Famous Brand Watches&#13;
Rings - Jewelry - Gifts&#13;
Repairs&#13;
I&#13;
" . WHITESKELLAR&#13;
.....H~:~~ ~du(a, Sfted4U .:'&#13;
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 6th&#13;
Nickelodeon •••11 A.M.&#13;
Live Entertainment •••1 P.M.:~&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
PIZZA KneHEN&#13;
J&#13;
Chicken &amp; halian Sausage Bombers&#13;
Frtt Dtlwtry to Parksi •• Villag.&#13;
IOIt 1Dt11_ •• , 'II,n, 6$7-$'91&#13;
the Parkside quintet opened a 10&#13;
point lead, its biggest orthe night&#13;
at the start of the second period'&#13;
but the cushion disappeared&#13;
when the Norsemen fought back&#13;
~o within one point with 6:05 left&#13;
10 the game. A quick basket by&#13;
Hanke. however, gave the&#13;
Rangers a three point margi&#13;
and from then on it was a~&#13;
downhill for th~ Norsemen, The&#13;
Ranger-s recerved some out.&#13;
standing rebounding from Bill&#13;
Sobanski and Gary Cole wh&#13;
t&#13;
. 0&#13;
many rmes went above the rim&#13;
to snatch rebounds away from&#13;
the opposition.&#13;
The game was one of COn.&#13;
fidence building for the Rangers&#13;
who are trying to improve last&#13;
year's 4-18 record.&#13;
AT FIRST NATIOUL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
• No minimum&#13;
balance required&#13;
• No limit to the&#13;
number 01 checks&#13;
you write&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
QQ&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open your free checking&#13;
account soon al&#13;
First National Ba~&#13;
and Trust Company of Rae&#13;
__ "'F_,~At_So&gt;"'"&#13;
_.,_.'OO-'--'-~&#13;
500 Wisconsin Ave. Racill&#13;
6 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., ~ . 6, 1972&#13;
,:. The l'lfklidl&#13;
RA GER Cagers win twice,&#13;
face N. Dakota&#13;
By Kris Koch&#13;
The Parkside cagers will face&#13;
. 'orth Dakota tonight at Fargo&#13;
and . 'orth Dakota State Thur-&#13;
. da\· night at Grand Forks as&#13;
Coo.ch teve Stephens' young&#13;
team puts its 2-0 mark on the line.&#13;
The Rangers opened their&#13;
. ea on here Friday with a win&#13;
o er the Luther College oremen&#13;
by a 69-62 score.&#13;
Top corers for Parkside were&#13;
huck Chambliss with 23 points,&#13;
Joe Hutter with 17 and Bill&#13;
Soban ki and Mike Hanke with 10&#13;
points apiece. Top scorers for&#13;
Luther were Greg Vieth with 16&#13;
point , Tim O'Neill with nine and&#13;
John Lowe with nine.&#13;
tephens played only seven&#13;
players during the course of the&#13;
game, but received some impr&#13;
ive showings from freshmen&#13;
Gary Cole, Bill Sobanski,&#13;
Hanke, and Don Snow, who all&#13;
played well in t heir first&#13;
collegiate games.&#13;
After leading 35-30 at the half,&#13;
the Parkside quintet opened a&#13;
point lead, its biggest of the nig~~&#13;
at the start of the second period&#13;
but the cu hion disapp areti&#13;
whe~ tJ:te orser:nen fought bac&#13;
to w1thm one point with 6:os left&#13;
m the game. A quick ba ket&#13;
Hanke. however, gave lb.&#13;
Rangers a three point margm&#13;
and from then on it wa 11&#13;
downhill for the Nor em n. a&#13;
Rang_ers received som out.&#13;
tandmg rebounding from 8.&#13;
11&#13;
Sobanski and Gary Col ...,h1&#13;
t. 0&#13;
many 1mes went above th rim&#13;
to snatch_ ~ebounds away from&#13;
the opposition.&#13;
The game was one or 00•&#13;
fidence building for the Rang&#13;
who are trying to improve la t&#13;
year's 4-18 record.&#13;
le extend streak with • win ~ 13'1J?(&#13;
mna t claim dual win&#13;
as Help&#13;
en&#13;
---&#13;
52-3287&#13;
P t: ho\lo and Brad Grun wald&#13;
too ond and third places&#13;
r ·p("Chvely in II Arounc.&#13;
Th ne. t meet will be Wedne.&#13;
da::, at i :30 p.m. again t&#13;
ladi n at Park ide The team&#13;
ill go to tout Friday&#13;
r · ·A· s ·a ·R =ri a ~is···=&#13;
: FREE Referral to N.Y. Clinic.: . . 12 weeks or less ~&#13;
Total cost ~&#13;
s150&#13;
CALL&#13;
CONTROLLED :&#13;
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(a non- profit organization)&#13;
SUITE 1006&#13;
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. (313) 964-0530 . .....•....................... ;&#13;
n13I\\&#13;
l:I&#13;
3&#13;
\'&#13;
Par ide dominated the shots&#13;
on goal tatistics, outshooting&#13;
. larquette 42 to 23.&#13;
The Rangers' final game of the&#13;
eme ter i against UWWhilewater&#13;
thi Saturday, Dec. 9,&#13;
al ladi on The Rangers&#13;
defeated W-\ hitewater 11-2&#13;
early thi ea on al Wilson Park.&#13;
a.r1,,,nJ&#13;
fl!Mi .a • 1 614 rest&#13;
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Ph. 633-8620&#13;
~,&#13;
o-U~,&#13;
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HOURS: 1 - 6 Daily&#13;
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Nickelodeon ••• 11 A.M. . Live Entertainment ... 1 P.M. :Q,.&#13;
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Wrestlers win&#13;
4 titles&#13;
in tourney here&#13;
Koser 4th&#13;
in sabre&#13;
in Illinois Open&#13;
Don Koser placed fourth in&#13;
sabre for the Parkside fencing&#13;
team in last weekend's&#13;
prestigious Illinois Intercollegiate&#13;
Open at Cham.&#13;
paign.&#13;
John Tank, top man for the&#13;
Rangers in foil, placed seventh in&#13;
the large and talented field.&#13;
Parkside will not get back into&#13;
action until Jan. 13 when the&#13;
Rangers again travel to&#13;
Champaign to vie against Indiana,&#13;
Illinois and Purdue.&#13;
PREGNANCY TEST&#13;
AVAILABLE&#13;
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arranged within 24 hours&#13;
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Wed., DeC. 6, 1972 THE PARKSIOE RANGER 7&#13;
Speaking of&#13;
25 Gorgeous Dancing Girls&#13;
(appearing on our stage weekly)&#13;
CONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
7P.M. TIL?&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
The Parkside wrestling team&#13;
claimed four c~mpio~s he~e&#13;
saturday in the First ~ISCO~Sln&#13;
Intercollegiate ChampIOnships.&#13;
But tile Rangers finished third&#13;
with 511h points behind&#13;
Marquette's 681h and UWSlevens&#13;
Point's 62. Lakeland By the time you are reading this, two basketball games will have&#13;
placed fourth with 13. . come and gone. Sorry to say, I can't give you any results in this&#13;
Rico Savaglio (126), Bill West column, because I wrote u on Thursday. Look elseWhere in this issue&#13;
(134) and Ken Martin (142) for InformatIon concermng the games.&#13;
showed Ranger strength in the Now I'd like to pass on Some words that Ireceived in propaganda&#13;
middle weights as they won on from the two schools the Rangers are playing tonight and tomorrow.&#13;
decisions. Kyle Barnes, at 150, North Dakota has good shooting, quickness, an excellent attitude and&#13;
won on a pin. Only Rich hustle. But their prospectus also says that the Nodaks have a lack of&#13;
Schaumberg, of the five Rangers experience and a shortage of an experienced big man at the pivot.&#13;
who advanced to the final round, However, the paragraph ends on an optimistic note. It says that their&#13;
failed to win his bout. head basketball coach, Dave Gunther, "has a knack for producing&#13;
MarkBarnhill and Rich Barron crowd-pleasing, Winning teams, and the ouUook may not be as bleak&#13;
took consolation championships as it appears. "That makes me tend to wonder what it would be like to&#13;
for Parkside. have no returning lettermen and the whole team be under S·6". It will&#13;
Parkside will compete at' be interesting to hear whether the Rangers will spcil tbeir games at Whitewater Saturday in the North Dakota.&#13;
Warhawk Invitational. The other school that the Rangers will be flying to this week is 'orth&#13;
,;,:,,:;;;;;,;;,,;;,;;,,;;,.;,,;,..;.------ Dakota State. Its propaganda says that its team is rated only r'\o. 7 in&#13;
the North Central Assn. The Bison, as they call themselves. are not too&#13;
optimistic about their season. They have the only flrst-year coach In&#13;
the league. But that doesn't mean he isn't experienced. He bas&#13;
coached five Winning seasons at Moorhead {Minn.) tate. They will&#13;
also have some big men for the Rangers to contend with. Phil Carlson&#13;
and Chris Curfman are 6-10 and 6-8, respectively. They are expected to&#13;
do something great for their team. They also have a guard. Willie&#13;
Austin, who carries a 25.9 point average into this season.&#13;
On Dec. 12 the Ranger cagers will be host to the Northern Michigan&#13;
Wildcats, and on Dec. 15 they will host the Southern IUinois University.&#13;
EdwardSVille Cougars.&#13;
Now, to change the subject somewhat, I want to go into the sports&#13;
department of the Ranger. Some people come into our offiee or phone&#13;
us asking why their team isn't covered. (This is good, because it at&#13;
least means that someone is reading what we are writing, or not&#13;
writmg.) To be honest, the sports staff, as well as tbe rest of the&#13;
Ranger staff, is short handed. There are only three people who do any . .:=~=:::::?=':'(::'..:.:.==:::...sports writing. This makes it terriblr hard ro~ us to .cover aU of the&#13;
.-, athletic events that are scheduled. It IS almost Impossible to Cover the&#13;
club sports. If you would like to have your athletic ev~t covered in the&#13;
Ranger, have the copy into our hands no later than Friday noon, typed,&#13;
double spaced. If the event is on the weekend, have the copy. In OUr&#13;
office no later than 8:30 Monday morning belore the paper IS ISSUed&#13;
We will not guarantee that the material will get into the paper, we will&#13;
try our hardest.&#13;
Also, for you great photographers out there, if you have any&#13;
photographs, have them into our office by noon Monday. We WIll try to&#13;
get them in also. They should be at ~easl.S~. If you can. write a caption&#13;
for them giving the names of all Identifiable people.&#13;
Sports&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night&#13;
By GeoH Blaesing&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
424 lake Ave" Racine 637-8467 Dancers Wanled&#13;
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DDDS"&#13;
ludent AetiVlll BUIlding&#13;
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and&#13;
,unday. nee. '1. 7:31p.m&#13;
Adml.. Ion&#13;
7Sc&#13;
Board&#13;
- II 1111110111111111111111__ ,• • ..&#13;
;; !!FREE-FREE-FREE-FREEU ~&#13;
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Offer to:XPlr S MII~" I Wllk Deco 12. 1m&#13;
~Atll~~ STARTS FRIDA Y .aR"~ On Our Screen&#13;
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.. =--=- plu. "\\lS" History of Pornography&#13;
New Selections of Adult Books At·&#13;
riving Daily! Theatr. Open Noon 'til&#13;
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TRY OUR HOME COOK/MfJ!&#13;
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One Mile North&#13;
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Open 7 Days a Week 8 a.m. 10 8 p.m.&#13;
SUNDAY'S SPECIAL: Roast Beef &amp; T.rkey&#13;
Hwy. 31 - 1/, Mile North of Petrifying Springs&#13;
. Wrestlers win&#13;
4 titles&#13;
in tourney here&#13;
The Parkside wrestling team&#13;
claimed four ch~mpio~s he~e&#13;
Saturday in the First \\:1sco~sm&#13;
Intercollegiate Championships.&#13;
Speaking of&#13;
Sports&#13;
By Geoff Blaesing&#13;
But the Rangers finished third&#13;
with 51112 points behind&#13;
Marquette's 681/2 and UWStevens&#13;
Point's 62. Lakeland By the time you are reading this, two basketball games will have&#13;
placed fourth with 13- come and gone. Sorry to say, I can't give you an,· re ults in thi&#13;
Rico Savaglio (126), Bill West colu_mn, bec~use I wrote it on Thursday. Look elsewhere in this i ue&#13;
034) and Ken Martin (142) for information concerning&#13;
showed Ranger&#13;
the games.&#13;
middle weights as&#13;
strength&#13;
they won&#13;
in the&#13;
on&#13;
Now I'd like to pass on some words that I received in propaganda&#13;
from the two schools the Rangers are playing tonight and tomorro ..&#13;
decisions. Kyle Barnes, at 150, North Dakota has good shooting, quickness, an excellent attitude and&#13;
won on a pin. Only Rich hustle. But their prospectus also says that the odaks have a la of&#13;
Schaumberg, of the five Rangers experience and a shortage of an experienced big man at the p1Vot.&#13;
who advanced to the final round, However, the paragraph ends on an optimistic note. It say that their&#13;
failed to win his bout.&#13;
Mark Barnhill and Rich Barron crowd-pleasing&#13;
head basketball coach, Dave Gunther, "has a knack for producing&#13;
, winning teams, and the outlook may not be bleak&#13;
took consolation championships as it appears." That makes me tend to wonder what it ·ould be Ii e to&#13;
for Parkside. have no returning lettermen and the whole team be under 5'6". It will&#13;
Parkside will compete at be interesting to hear whether the Rangers will spoil their game at&#13;
Whitewater Saturday in the North Dakota.&#13;
warhawk Invitational.&#13;
----------~-Dakota&#13;
The other school that the Rangers will be flying to thi wee i . ·orth&#13;
the North&#13;
State.&#13;
Central&#13;
Its propaganda&#13;
Assn says that its team is rated only. ·o i in&#13;
optimistic&#13;
. The Bison, as they call them elve . are no too&#13;
the&#13;
about their season. They have the only first-year coach m&#13;
coached&#13;
league. But that doesn't mean he isn't experienced. He ha&#13;
also have&#13;
five winning seasons at 1oorhead L 1inn.J late. They ·ill&#13;
and Chris Curfman&#13;
some big men for the Rangers to contend with. Phil Carl·on&#13;
do something&#13;
are 6-10 and 6-8, respectively. They are e pected to&#13;
Austin&#13;
great for their team. They also have a guard. \ 'illie&#13;
On Dec.&#13;
, who carries a 25.9 point average into this sea o .&#13;
Wildcats&#13;
12 the Ranger cagers will be host to the • 'orthem • lichigan&#13;
Edwardsville&#13;
, and on Dec. 15 they will host the outhern Illinois ·ni\'ersityCougars.&#13;
&#13;
department&#13;
Now, to change the subject somewhat. 1 want to go into the por&#13;
us asking why&#13;
of the Ranger. Some people come into our office or phone&#13;
least means&#13;
their team isn't covered. (This is good, becau e it at&#13;
that someone&#13;
writing.) To&#13;
is reading what we are writing, or not&#13;
Ranger&#13;
be honest, the sports staff, as well as the rest of the&#13;
sports writing.&#13;
staff, is short handed. There are only three people who do any&#13;
This makes it terribly hard for us to ~over all of the ___ iiiiio _________ -ithletic events that are scheduled. It is almost impossible to co,·~ the&#13;
Ranger,&#13;
club sports&#13;
have&#13;
. If you would like to have your athletic e\·E:"t covered m the&#13;
double&#13;
the copy into our hands no later thanFr1day noon, ~~-ped&#13;
office no&#13;
spaced. If the event is on the weekend. have the copy_ m our&#13;
we will not&#13;
later&#13;
guarantee&#13;
than 8:30 1onday morning before the paper 1 1 ued.&#13;
that the material will get into the paper. we ·111&#13;
Koser 4th&#13;
in sabre&#13;
in Illinois Open&#13;
Don Koser placed fourth in&#13;
sabre for the Parkside fencing&#13;
team in last weekend's&#13;
prestigious Illinois Intercollegiate&#13;
Open at Champaign.&#13;
&#13;
John Tank, top man for the&#13;
Rangers in foil, placed seventh in&#13;
the large and talented field.&#13;
Parkside will not get back into&#13;
action until Jan. 13 when the&#13;
Rangers again travel to&#13;
Champaign to vie against Indiana,&#13;
Illinois and Purdue.&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
PREGNANCY TEST&#13;
AVAILABLE&#13;
An A bortion can be&#13;
arranged w ithin 24 hours&#13;
You can return home&#13;
the !&gt;Ome day you leave.&#13;
CALL TOLL FR EE&#13;
(800) 523 - 4436&#13;
24 HOURS&#13;
-' Non -Profit Orgoni zotion&#13;
try our hardest. Also .&#13;
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for you great photographers out there, 1£ you have any&#13;
get&#13;
have them into our office by noon tonday. We ~-,u try to&#13;
tion&#13;
them in also. They should be at )east _5~7. If you can, wnte a capfor&#13;
them giving the names of all 1dent1f1able people.&#13;
~J.tfl$k STARTS FRIDAY&#13;
WGRI.~ On Our Screen BOOK'S Marriage on the Rock&#13;
~-.. -=--&#13;
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,,\\ls H istory of Pornography&#13;
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.. ' ' . .. Wed., Oec. 6, 1972 T~E PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
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Every Thursday&#13;
Night&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
424 loke Ave., Racine 637-8467 Dancers&#13;
DUSTIN H DFFMAN&#13;
ID&#13;
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I&#13;
I&#13;
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Ope 7 Days a Week 8 a.11. to 8 p.m.&#13;
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NOTEBOOKS. REPORT COVERS. FILLER PAPER, BINDERS,&#13;
DIVIDERS AND INDEX COVERS... PENS. PENCILS,&#13;
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POSTERS IN AN INSTANT RIGHT BEFORE YOUR VERY&#13;
EYES. CUSTOM IMPRINT MACHINE •&#13;
COME VISIT US SOMETIME ...&#13;
FOR THE&#13;
ANIMAL LOVER:&#13;
THE TREASURY OF DOGS.Colorfulflf'I&#13;
book that describes &amp; iIIusln'es """&#13;
aspect of living &amp; working dogs. Fw&#13;
famous experts contribute lively .. dO&#13;
formative text on puppy care, brefdilllltr&#13;
breedS, new breeds, muc:h more. Oyer lIS&#13;
utus.. 35 FULL COLOR.&#13;
Only51"&#13;
THE TREASURY OF CATS.The COIllpk't&#13;
Book of COl'S_ancient, modem, larve•.m'"&#13;
ordinary, rare _ with a whole SfCI.....:&#13;
kittens. Contributions ~y 7 nOI.ed~~~Itt'&#13;
provide new Insights mto fehne p"""'- II&#13;
&amp; describe all breeds. Over I~Sdll/l..&#13;
FULL COLOR.&#13;
THE TREASURY OF BIRDS. 8'( WI\J~&#13;
Eastman. For bird lovers of ,11 av:_&#13;
fascinating &amp; superbly illustraled sur 1"-&#13;
the wide range of bOth lam'l1a~"", ••&#13;
known species, those nearing edln IIIP'-'&#13;
particular ornitholo.gical !nl:r:~l :tY, _&#13;
on migration, habits, bIrd III"" "&#13;
birds, much more. Over 50 phOlOS,&#13;
color. onl1U.&#13;
SedgwiCk.ft"&#13;
EARLY CARS. By Michael .",&#13;
d&#13;
' MontagUl' ..&#13;
curator of Englan s d pIIOto.. .tt&#13;
Museum, a superbly presenl~ 5 Ell,''''&#13;
tour of old cars from Ihe .~ "kl"'"&#13;
France, German.y, Italy, S~~:c~1t..al~&#13;
Austria - their hlstor'(,. lec mort. OYfl'&#13;
early motoring &amp; raCIng,&#13;
photos, JS FULL COLOR. OIlIY""-&#13;
Ed"&#13;
HE WO.v t"'f&#13;
TRAVEUN' ON WITH~ for pi.no_~ It&#13;
The Weavers. Arrange vers repc""",&#13;
the best songs in The Weill llle gfOllll , ~&#13;
selections thaI repres~n &amp;- rt"olll ..J,&#13;
many different countrieSdifferenl",.~&#13;
U S &amp; from as many ,.&#13;
. ., S'lt&#13;
Paperback.&#13;
PUb. OIl U.9S&#13;
• HE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed., Dec . 6, 1972&#13;
cou RY BE UTIFUL&#13;
00 S&#13;
°" 1&#13;
E ATION&#13;
VISITING HOURS:&#13;
Mon. - Thurs&#13;
9 a.m. - 7 p.m.&#13;
Fri. 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.&#13;
Sat. 10 a.m. - 1 p.m.&#13;
DECEMBER 4 THRU DECEMBER 16&#13;
HU&#13;
VERY SPECIAL!&#13;
DREDS OF TITLES&#13;
FOR THE&#13;
ART LOVER:&#13;
AMERICA ART Exc.tlent gu,de to the&#13;
Mtishc dtvelopme of American pa1nt1ng &amp;&#13;
•re , &lt;1ure M 1ntluencH of Europe &amp;&#13;
IMO-C au,c,sm on early examples; discusses&#13;
mootrft Amfflc•n pa1nt,ng &amp; 1rt1sts. 17&#13;
FULL COLOR ,uustrat,ons&#13;
SaleSl.91&#13;
A!tT OU EAU , T e Style of the 1-- Au tahve u1de presenting brilliant&#13;
«••mplH or Art ouv au·s precursors &amp; the&#13;
s te ,tsett palnt1ng architecture~ sculpre.,&#13;
sta,ned lass, ceramics~ more. 91&#13;
FULL COLOR Jhnlratoons&#13;
SaleSl.91&#13;
ART and the Art of Ceylon, Central&#13;
•od Sou hust Asia . Engrossing survey of&#13;
bt grea sp,ntual movements - Buddhist,&#13;
H nd &amp; Moslem • that 1nsp,red India's&#13;
•mplt&gt;s &amp; mosques, sculpture. frescoes,&#13;
m, •~tur•s~ etc I net the, art &amp; architecture of Mt boring ands, '7 FULL COLOR&#13;
ti vstrahons.&#13;
SaleSl.98&#13;
BULFINCH: MYTHOLOGY. The complete&#13;
age of fable, chivalry and the legends of&#13;
Charlemagne in one volume - all of the&#13;
traditional tales of adventure &amp; romance&#13;
from the Trojan War to Robin Hood, from&#13;
the classical through Medieval times ; 679&#13;
pp ; index. Special Import Sl.98&#13;
NOSTALGIA THE OLO WEST : PEOPLE AND PLACE S.&#13;
By Elsie v. Honauer. Pic:torial history recreating&#13;
the heroes &amp; villains, Indians &amp;&#13;
palefaces, that helped to create the legend of&#13;
the Old West . James &amp; Dalton gangs,&#13;
Cochise, Geronimo, Gen. Custer, Buffalo&#13;
Bill, et al. 64 illus., with mini-biographies.&#13;
Pub. at SS.95 Sale Sl.49&#13;
THE UNIVERSAL SELF -INSTRUCTOR&#13;
and Manual of General Reference. Facsimile&#13;
of the classic 1883 edition. 6,400&#13;
unhurried articles comprise this informational&#13;
cornucopia - reams of general&#13;
reference on education, home and society, amusements - illus. with hundreds of&#13;
drawings; maps, insignia, flags, arms, etc.,&#13;
(1n color&gt;. &amp; much more . 672 pp. 834 in. x 11&#13;
in.&#13;
Pub. al 522.S0 Sale S4.98&#13;
FOR THE&#13;
ANIMAL LOVER:&#13;
THE TREASU RY OF DOGS. Colorflll&#13;
book that describes &amp; illustr1tes "&#13;
aspect of liv ing &amp; working . dogs. F""'&#13;
fam ous experts contri bute hvoly •&#13;
formative text on puppy care, breed !IS IC!&#13;
breeds, new breeds, much more. Ovtr&#13;
illus., 3S FULL COLOR.&#13;
THE TREASURY OF CATS. The Com&#13;
Book of Cats - ancie~t, modern, 1,rg , i •&#13;
ordinary, rare - with a whole sectiOII&#13;
kittens. Contributions by 7 noted wr•':!,&#13;
provide new insights into feline ptflll\ Ji&#13;
&amp; describe all breeds. over 145 ,&#13;
FULL COLOR. OnlyU.!I&#13;
THE RANGER STATION IS MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE.&#13;
WE HAVE THOUSANDS OF ITEMS SPECIFICALLY FOR&#13;
YOU... WE HAVE TRADEBOOKS, STUDYGUIDES,&#13;
NOTEBOOKS, REPORT COVERS, FILLER PAPER, BINDERS,&#13;
DIVIDERS AND INDEX COVERS... PENS, PENCILS,&#13;
ERASERS, ART BOARD AND SLIDE RULES •.. STATIONERY,&#13;
ENVELOPES, GREETING CARDS, BEAT NORTH DAKOTA&#13;
POSTERS IN AN INSTANT RIGHT BEFORE YOUR VERY&#13;
EYES, CUSTOM IMPRINT MACHINE.&#13;
COME VISIT US SOMETIME ...&#13;
. 1 sed&lt;Jwick I "" EARL y CARS BY Micha• .. IM" · d' MOnl19 curator of Englan 5 1 d pt,ott-' Museum, a superbly pre•:; ~.s., E~&#13;
tour of old cars from 1 5 iin !It&#13;
France, Germany, Italy; ~nic;I e:Yfi _,&#13;
Austria . their history,_ ec mort- o,e&lt; early motoring &amp; racing, .&#13;
photos, 35 FULL COLOR- °"''"&#13;
THE weAVf-S I&#13;
TRAVELIN' ON WITH d for piano' ;rt, The weavers. Arr•": avers ,.pe(1" ,-. the best songs in The :nt the ,...., t,&#13;
selections that repres . s &amp; rt9' ... ,.,-"&#13;
many different countrie different&#13;
U S &amp; fr om as manY 11' . . , ~&#13;
Paperback .&#13;
Pub. al S2.9S </text>
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